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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1969-12-08 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa• DAILY PILOT Freed Lag11na Man Says * * * 10' * * * MONDAY AFTERNOON, DECEMBER i, 1969 China Prepari.ng for War VOL. U. HO. JtL J llCTIOHS. • PA•IS • • 1an I ore aves • ' :;tt'J!!!:f•tl'>esw•+ ,,."l: -::';;Zl<rnrmm•m••..,,mm..,,..,,.,._,_.,.,, _______ ,.."'l Street Slwotout , Street Ends Flooded -3 Marines Shot In San Clemente ~ Camp Penclleton Marine ~,aatldactory condition today ill Coast Community Hospital in tJautll'Lojplaa . aftor uridOrioing llll1'll"'"Y lor an abdominal gunstwt wound sus- tained in a San Clemente &hootout late Friday. J!onniJ Fiaher waa ooe of Uvee YOUllll lrllrlnta wouMed in ·a street fight in- Police Subdue Pa11thers after 5-hoilr Battle From Wire Services volvtnc five Marines and a l5-year-0Id Lo• Angeiff g&i. Also wounded wert!'hts brotl'trr, Gary Fl5her1 ·arx1 lcihn J. Flore. ,JJolh •:ert taken to the Camp Pendlelon hospital for treatment of pllb<t. woonds in the arm. Booked by San Clemente police on charges of attempted .murder was Leon Brown, 21. His girl companion, whom police say was reportedly his cousin, also was placed under arrest on suspicion or carrying a cooceaJcd weapon. Police said the JO: 15 p.m. shooting at El Camino Real and Avenida Granada apparenUy was sparked when Brown and the girl walked past a group or four Marines standing out.side a liquor store. One oI the four made an insulting remark and an argument &tarted, leading to a fist fighL Brown is accused of pulling out 1 .%2 caliber revolver and firi111 several shols, three ol which inflicted the wounds. DAILT PILOT l laff ,...,_ LOS ANGELES -Police using dynamite. tear ias and hand guns fought a ftve-hour pitched battle today before subduing a group or Black Panthers bar- ricaded inside their headquarters with automatic rines and hand grennades. When police arrived, the report states, the girl was holding the wea}Xln behind her back under her sweater. SPECTATORS TAKE TO HIGH GROUND AT NEWPORT'S 31TH STREET TO WATCH WAVE ACTION In Low L"fing Aree1, •Miner Flood•• Str~t Endt Become S•lt Water Riv1r1 A handful oC eight to 10 panthers held off a 300-man police force from the open- ing of the assault at dawn until late morning before surrendering. n... d: thooe inside the Panther hea~· quarlerl were reported injured, none oertoualy. Nixon to Face My Lai Questions On TV T()night C.hina Frees Lagunan; He Tells War Readiness A hice of 300 officers surrounded the building. Po~ said two were shot as . they fll'St .tried to serve a wirr3nt. The WASIDNGTON (UP I -President From Wire Service• They were later Incarcerated at tv.·o other was hit ID later gunfire. . Nixon holds his first news conference in . Maifiland China authorities released a dif!~t Cohtmunes, where the treatment A ttandoff of morv: than-four •hours 21,A, mootns toni1hl at 6 q'c!ock .and is Laguna Beach•ma':l held as a possible spy ·W'al ·.-netally good, with one minor ex· ensued. certain to be as ed of his views of the for nearly a year Sunday and he and a cepUon. 1be raid was one-oft lhree on. locations reported My Lal massacre. traveling companion brought word to the "In one commune, there were some of the militant Negro organization. Police 1be major. television networks-NBC. outside world that the regime is prepar-threata made apd the guards stared at ~ Qiiesr had infcnnation that tnachine CBS and ABC -Will carry President ing for total war. you through the ~WI for houri, .. said gt111 mkJ othell' weapons had .been ~ed.-Nlzon's news conference live from Simeon Ba~win, 56, oi 1359 Cliff Drive. Baldwin. "They followed you evuywhert. then and they wanted to Serve warrant. Washingta.i at 6 p.m. PST. and Mfs: 'Bessie H. DonaJd, 47, a Even Into the blthrooms. m "two persons. As usual, Vietnain · ts: exjlected to secretary •· 1th his Hong Kong manufac-''There was no privacy. You lived in a At 'illlt point officers issued an dominate the meeting with reporters. luring company, said the Chine.le Com-1lass cage." \llUmat.um tty bullhorn to those In the Asked this morning if the President munists ge,1erally treated them wen. He said the reds built screen.'! arOtZ.id tie.dquarters: "Corne out wilti your mighfmilke any anoounceme,nt of • new The pair, captured last February while them each time they were moved. hlndl Up or we'll come in." One m~n. , troop withdrawit, press tecreC8ry Ronald on a '6-mile yachting expedition f~ "I asked-if they expected the Seventh CIJl)t'out .. Finally the othersJollowed. L. Ziegler said, "No.:• . . Hong Kong to the Portugtiese island col· 'Fleet to steam up the Pearl River and The wounded officers were not im· When the quesUon continued to <»me ony of Macao. had ao tpte of life com-rescue us," he contl.nued, "but they didn't 111edl1tely identified. up, Ziegler put it flaLly: "The President mune·style fturing,their captivity. think that was very funny." One was reported hit in the che11t and will not r.1nounce a troop withdrawal Mri. · Ooiiald was even offered ' a Generany, he said, they -.wete well grotn. Another Wll.'I reported hit in the tonight... teaching position at canton University treated and their captora stressed tbey do foot and the third in the leg. The White House issued a 1tatement when she claimed she had been tm-not dislike Americans u 1Uch, only the A ti-block a'rea WB!'I sealed off during several daya ago-saying that if .the prboned so lo:ig her job ln Hong Kone U.S. government .iteelf. the confrootatkln. Police d,.e PI o Ye d report& of heavy civilian deaths 1t My would doubtlessly be gone. ''Tha'e sre preparaijona for war themlllyel along wide, shop-lined Ctn Lr al Lai were true, k wu abhorrent. But Nix· Baldwin. who owns an atrcran Com-' everywhere," he added, "there are Averme and stayed under cover. on has not commentec1.d~y7et on lhe ponents manufacturing firm in Hong l'Oldblocb and militia training. The Thi! area is s-Outh of <lowntown Los . iacldent. · K°"B, called his wife. Marjorie, at the Qilnese to1d me they were preparing Angelefl, neat Wrigley Field, former ' Laguna family home Saturday (PST) against American and Soviet invasions." home of 'the Callfomia Angels baseball . . . • • • after reaching Tsing Yi island aboard He had ~lng to read during ·capiivi ty tea!"~ ·Homes line adjoining stre~ti' and ·PJllJ;t!S 'lJE'/4.'t::J.l their yacht, the Morasum. but 1 J,500 paie volume on navigation, rtsJdents chntered on lawru .to-ii.sten-to · ., .., She said he told her nothlna: she hadn't whlle Mrs. DonaJd, estranged wile or shot! and blasta. . id : A "'F1·•c· E MO J'JNG ' . pretty much imowl1 sh""' the aelzure.at-television act« Peter Donald, was fiven About II peno"' were arrested, in r~ • . u.r . . • , oea ol Ille Moruum and two other yacbll IUckl " f!"'Plllanda materlab. at twro other JocaUons, ..,ne.re . no • • ". · c· last. ·Feb. 16, but she expect, him to One condition 1-1 releue by Peking Mlstance was encountered. The DAILY Pupl' .Ja moving to·ntw' return to Laguna Beach quite toDn 'f '°Thoee' guys beve automatic we1pons Juid1arger quart.efs in'Huntington Beach.' Others in the group oC 15 yachter~ wrfe 'Jlen "' ldmillion of guilt f~ ~ and. tljeJlre 'll\lt>Wing l!l"'R•des." a police 'Ill..,... addr ... ·191' the HlnJUnrton quickly rele11ed alter" beinf htited by -opd crime" ICCldentally otray R lnspe&r &okl newsmen during the mom-Beacli-Fouritain Viney Office ~I.be 'DAI· Chinese gunboats, but the two Americans lo .. Matnlanck.'onU'oUed coastal watm. Ing. LY PILOT. as ol nut Monday, will be -who· it lint tried lo hi<le their DI• We ._tedly ....... coof'!"- Olflctn said that homemade grenades 17875 Beach Bvd. • tiOnality -lllC<d longer detention. beoaUll the Olln<oe aaJd llley winted were then tossed toward poli ce Crom the Telephone-numbtt will be the same _ They were kept at first at a location rewctdlna ~ the confessJon1 to their bulkling, bursting In the street. No ooe M2-432l _ and Ute office, located on the about 10 miles rrom Macao while technJ· understanding," he told newsmen afttr tru hurt by thci grenades. tint floor or 8 new office bulldlnr. will clans metictllously dismantled and ex· reachlnc freedom SUnday, Hong Kong A pollct spokuman laid the building offer the same aervicca as al the pre&ent ambled navlgatlonal equipment •board Wnc. . had been sa~18~-~t doors and win-location. the boat as possibly for espionage ao-"After the Chinese 11ulh0rillc1 o;m- ISee p~ P11e !:) ' t.ivltl cs. (See LAGUNAN, P•ae •• ' ' • Storm-born Surf Gives First Test To Newpo.rt Groin Six·foot breakers rldh:ig a high tide gave West Newport Beach's groin and mvdhaul area Its first t1cid test this morning and the beach held up relatively well, officlal1 aaid . But the surrounding streets and homes, well used to the surges oi brine, were flooded as usual for teferal hours, and it could well happen qain tomorrow morn- ing. The surf, pounding" the beach during a seven-foot tide, chewed Away the turn. around road near Sdth Street uaat by the heavy sand hauling equlp~t. That will' have to be restored before the rigs can drive agaln. City marine officials 11id tomorrow's morning high tide ahoulil reach seven feet. again, but reporta ailCI the surf ls ez· poctal to IUbside I bil. They rated the possibiitty d: more heavy !loOding as a toaeup. The (>Oltlon hll'dest hit in Newport this morning was near 31th Strtet, where about 4G feet of buch was eaten awty. Wllh It wmi: tona of new sand dumped by the haulers in recent weeks. High aand berms built at t!W: ltlrf line to protect the haul l'Olld and the street.I gave w1y in that area, and Stasb<re Orlve and several cro.u streets were clogged with aand. City creWI bad removed moot ol the und by midmomlni. "We're really glad we had 80 -much annd on the belCh lo atart wlih," City Tidel1ndl Coon!laat,.. Gforl' Ila,... aid. "We all agree that the ma find pM- 1)1 wt.II under 30111e rtlalively txtmne condlUons," be 1dded. He said a speclfic time acbedult for rt)>'lr of the end o« the haul road would II< worked out by the Ar1117 COrpe oC En1lnecr1 lhi1 morning. ue Beach Areas Flooded By Tides Monster waves driven by J. ~ el Alaska storm combined with bigb tides. will continue to ravap the coast ol Southern Callfomla for at lea& a few more day11, the U.S. Weather Bureau warned today. Police, firemen and even private citizens banding l9Sether to Ttnt herty equipment .and 'cons€ruct. 'sand and earthen barricades were bracing for anothei:.ooslaught Tue:&bay.mcrning. Breakei's ranging up to 11 feet high In llOnle places caused extensive l'Joodlng in 1t least five communities, causing eevere damage at picturesque Rincon Beach near Ventura. A total of 39 hemes were flooded 'thfn -two sustaining major damage -and a fire station was evacuated by 38 men aa the tidal waters surged over normally dl'1, and protected land inio the buiJdini. Sand, seaweed and foam littered. lengthy stretches ol Pacific Cout Highway and traffic was bocked up for miles throughout the length oC lho. affl icted coastline. The four-lane !Mroughfare was hit hardest along the low-lying stretch between Ventura and Santa Barbi.ta,. which is separated from lhe surf ibel! bf only a low concrete retaining wall Cltiuns d: Oxnard joined together to rent a bulldozer and quickly put up a waD. of sand aa a barrlcade against the bit;.. tering force of the unusual tide and wa~ cornbinittion. . . , · Foi'ecasters for the U.S. Weather Bureau predict new eeven foot Uclel about 8 a.m. Tuesday and again on. W-y, .while the ex1raordlnary m i1 also schedt,ded to continue • 'Mle high waves are caused by a ~, In the Gulf of Alaska, the second one ln a week, reaultlng in dleattrous, so..foot breakers wNcil lmllhed the w1ptota.ied coast of Hawall mt week. r · <:out . ' ' • ......... ' t Weiu .. ei-· That sliver lining beltlnd Tue. day 's clouds may be 1· damp one. Temperatures. when the 1U111n1k• its appearanct, will be. in the low 70'• along the Orange Coasl. INSIDE 'l'ODA 'Y You ma11 1t0£ bt able to cfe. 1crribf '..-Oil! Calcutfa/11 a good. cl ta• fun •. but mo1i of it aln. k tobaled good dirty fun. Sec t<>- day'1 review on Page J a. l"''"''""'""--1 l.~ .. .... .. " " • " .... " .. • 1 I I s Eight Flee Beached Boat, Escape High Waves -. By TERRY COVIU.E Of .............. ... -Ten-foot wa•ts aod a dead Cflllllt fore,. ~ es.ght ptraom to jump from their zg.. foot boat Sunday momt"tlU btforc heavy !arl ptabal Uw craft lhroogh Hunungwn l!<ach Pier l"hcp MIO !ht b<adL Mearr:!J. rald<nts ol Seal lleadl, &ad and Sllrf1ide •a\Ched lhl!: ocean run UJrougb tht alleys, Jtrttta and ~ hr.mes •s big waves and high tides nlfllbirmf to cive I.ht~ ptrt of the Oranp Coast • """""" "°"'"'' ~· The boat beldWia otemTtd about l : :II p,ra., Sundoy, abonly lllttr H11D11z>110n 8eadl lifegumls warned those on the cri/t not to come near \he surfline. Co-owner ol the modified landing craft, Bob Hayes, 31, IOld ru....,.,., "We ...,. fishing with the motor ium- ed off. When we tried to Mart It t.o IDO\'e away the: battery failed.- Fl,.. lllquardl, led by C.p<. Dou: D'Amd~ entmd the hea>7 IUrl """ talked the boat p;wtl'..gen into lbe water 1.1 the IUrl be..,. puohiq it toward lhe pi<T. "'They were afraid. at first... said O'.Vnell, '"bu\ 11 woukl have been more dangerous to ride tht~boat a.shore." All •l&J!t ptrtOOS, btlpod by lhe li.leguards. rwam lO the end of the pier where they climbed a ladder lo the top. ··TI>e IUTf wu &oo hr.a')' and dangerous to N im for shore," Jaid D'Arntll. Rescued were Hayu , hu lhrct ~More Questions on My ·Lai • ' 2 Army Office rs Called by S pec ial Pentago1i Board 8)' t.:aikd Prtst lnt.erutioaa1 : A spectaJ Pent.-.gon board caIJed two more Anny officen today for secret , 1enunooy as pan ol Ill effort to deter· mint •htthcr there might ha ve been a coverup of the t.: S acuon ett 1\1y Lai last ytar. Today's witnesses were fl1aj. Yredcrkt Walke of the l23rd Aviation Battahon which furnilhcd the helicopter lift for the weep ol' Song My village, and Capt. Den- nis R.. Johmon. one: of the intelligence of· n~n aJ!iitnfd Lo the ~ration. A spokesman for the board declined to .,ay what roles Walke and Johnson played in the March 16, Jgf}S, action 1n ··~•hich acores of .... omen, child ren and old men .t11egedly were ma!sacred at tbe hamlet f')f ~fy L.a1 4, a part of Song 1\ly. But \liatke~eotly "'a!i a groond controller for tht licopter! brVlging in troops. The: prt11.1mably wanted to que!f.ion J ohnso about a statement last wttk by Capt. . est L. ~led1na. com· mandt.r of the company th.al made the Song ;\fy 11'4'ttp. that faulty inLtlligence resulted in lhe death3 of at 11!a.st some Cl '.'ilians. With tht alleged ma!l53Cl'e continuing W have repercu.!Sions both at home and abroad, President Nixon v;as ct!rtain to be asked about the incident at his 6 p.m. PDT new1 conference. Jn Saigon, Sen. Tran Van Dong .said the Sooth Vietnamese Senate may order bodies of victims exhumed if and v.·hen gra\'" arc found. Dong also said he: had completed a report on the inci~ent based Indictment Due Today For 7 Tate Suspects LOS A.~GE:LES I UPI J -S even cnembers of the mystic hippie "family" linked v.·ith the savage Sharon Ta~ k.ill- Sng and seven other slaying! were ex· P,ectec1 tn be indicted today al the con- 41usion of county grand JUry delibera· lions. : Deputy• District Atl.Orney1 Ailron H. Slovitz and V~ T. Bugliosi reported they will sttk an eighl<ount indictm ent charging seven members <.1f the ~do­ religiow; euh Jed by Charles M:r:uon with eonspiracy and nwrder. A do'Un witneues were to testify 11t today's secret hearing but it was bel )eved most of the evidence against the suspectl already had been !'lupplied by altract.ive SUJan Atkill5, a member of ''the Manson family ." Three of the wi~ lo bt called were 11ld to be fingerprint experts. Autboritie!I f11ve indicated one of the l'luspttl5 cpec.:ifically charged, Charles 0. Wal.!lon. z.t , who is bcln( held in Texas, allegtdly left a fingerpri.1t at tht Tate home . Another witneS!'I scheduled to be called Wa! Daniel De: Carlo, a former motorcy· ('le gang leader v.·ho recently te.<;ti fied in ft murder trial in Santa ~lonica. lie testified ManiOn directed the sl aying in July of musician Gary Hinman . De Carlo reporttdly lived for a short time with .l\1araon and his "family" Miss A.tki.u, also known~ Sadie Glut1. tes tified rot two hours and lS minutes Fri- day, telling of. her relationship with the 3.l-year-()ld Manson and others in hi~ group who are accused slayers of ~fi.c;s Tate and .even other persons. Her lawye:r, Richard Caballero, Kays she 9tilJ regards Mamon "with 1 mi1ture of love, tear and hatrtd." Cab1Utro Ja!d although '-lanson is in jail in ~e.. Calif., pending ac· tion lo bring blm he.re, Mis.\ Atkins fear~ he could "conjure up a vbion detrimcn· tal to her in his mind then transfer it to her · mind and then she would be ma rked." f'rom P(lflf! 1 PANTHERS BATILE POLICE • • • dows by the Panthers. A contingent of police blocked off the entire area. Classes were. di!lllissed for the. day at a nearby school. The down""'·n police building was put tµlder heavy guard . Officers with llhotguns were stationed at every en- trance a..s .a security precaution. ·Diaries Garry , legal counsel for the Black Panther group. denounced the police act ion. Of !he! police statemen t that tht raids were unconnected with lho!>t made on Panthers in other cities he said · "That ls an unaduJttratcd lie . This is all part and package of a nationa l scheme by the various agencies of government to rlestroy and commit genocide upon members of the Black Panther party." When a newsman called Panther head· (luarten by telephone, a voice that llOWKled like that of a \lo' Oman saKI : "The pip ate attacking us. Send the prt!sll and stnd Ull people.'' DAILY PILOT N...,... .... M.,...., .. .._. Let-Ii..... ,.,.... ,...., --ULlfOatllA Olt~Gt CO,..St •1.1lll~HO COllll"ANT ••lt•fl N, w,,4 .. ,....,.. ..... hllllllltf J•t• I . C.rl•t Vl(e ,.,...._,. -Geftt<M Mltit9'1 Th•"''' 1e.,,..11 ··~ Th•"'•• A. M1r,lii"• Me!IH'"' ...... -C•l1 lrM•t: 00 WHI 1 1¥ I I .... ,._'1 lee(~ 7111 "'-'t ......... ....... 1.-l •ecto t'IJ ~ .... ti•-"""'""ltlfl leKfrt, M fl" lfPHI Today's confrontation was the first of 11!'1 kind in Los Angelu, although there have betn individual clashes betwetn of- ficers and Panthers during or after 1lrcet. arresl!'I. Common Market Stud ying Four Applications BRUSSELS (UPI) -Common 1.1arket foreign ministers today set up a y,·orking Ji!roup to study the applications of Britain. ireland, Norway and Denmark for membership in the six-nalion European Economic Community (EECJ. The min isters acted sv.·irtly on the decision by Common 1i-farket heads of government meeling in lhe Hague lasl 'Attk to open membership talks with !he four applicanls by July I, 1970. Speaking lo newsmen at Lhe end of th' 1noming session council. Ch airman .JQ!eph Luns, Foreign minister oi tht Net.herland:o1. said. "things ha\•e gone much quicker than I expected. We have made gralifying progress:. ·'There. is no reason why negotiation~ (with the four applicant state s) cannot begin befo~ July. Talks can start the d'oy after we agree on a joint negotiating position." They instructed permanent represen· tat.Ives of the six in Brussels to draw up a joint negotiating J)Olitlon with the ap- plicants and report back to them in f·"ebruary nc1t year. Se nate Approves F w1d s for ABM WASHINGTON IU Pll-The Stnate ap- provt'd 82 to 0 today a $1.7 billion military constn1cUon •pproprtatlons bill Including $15 million for the S1feguard •nliballistic missile (A8M ) iystem. 1be money measure, to provlde funds for m!Utary P'OJ«I• · at horn< ond O\'Cr'SC81, contrasts v.·ith a $1.$ blllion measure approved by tht 110UM: •nd 11 $2 billion request by lhc Nixon ad· ministration. Tht-Senate bill contain~ $12.7 1111Jhon for development nf AB~f rcse11rrh <'IJ'ld drvelopmen t faeililic1 on Kw1tj<ile1n l.!il;.nd In the J)acllic. ' ' on a three-day \'isit, lo the ~ly Lai area, bot declined to discuss the conleflts. In \\'a.shington, Pentagon offtciaLs at the request of Rep. Richard H. lchord 1 0 -;\fo.,' .showed Army photograph.! of South Vietnamese civilians killed during the 1968 Communi.tit occupation of Hue. scene of some of the bloodiest action of the \lo·ar. '"The&e should be made available to the press jwit a.s the photos of My Lai were made available to the work! pre&'!," Jchord said. "I'm deeply concerned about the treatment of the ~fy Lai affair by the worid press." Chainnan John Stennis of the Senate Armed Services, Committee and others sugg~d President Nixon appoint an in- rlepeodent. nonmilitary commission to 1n· \estigale lhe ci\·ilian deaths. -{:( Britain's Wilson Warns of My Lai Condeinnatio11 LONDO~ <UPJ\ -Prime Minister Harold \Vilson. interrupted by angry ~hoots or ··~o" from left\\·ing Laborites. told Parliament to<Jay the alleged '·massacres by American troops y,·ill not me.an an end lo his govemmen!'s support ol the United Stales over Vietnam." But he said if the charg~ pro\•e true. '·it would be Britain's duty not ool}' lo dissociate ourselves from them but also to condemn.·• Wibon s:poke at the beginning of a tW\r day parliamentary debate. lie provoked angry leftist shoots ol "No" when he said Briton.!I should not jwnp ~ premature conclusion., "about a friend and ally." ll was then be weiit on io say even If the massacre charges prove true, his ~overnment woold not change its support for the United St.ates over Vietnam. \Vilson blamed the Communists for the deadlock in the Paris peace talks. "lbe advance made by the American 1ide calls for a matching advao« from the other side," he declared. On the general JX>!ilical situation in Vietnam, Wilson said "I have not ~n evidence ()( a move by either iide suf· ficient to bring aboul a peaceful and honorable settlement" Murder Charge s.0~~~"~~ tcn~:'"~~:~gh'" I Anaheim hair stylist with murder in the i;hooting death of a colleague at a Gardrn Grove sa lon is being sought today fron1 the Orange County District Attorney. Michael .J. Sefvers, 23 of 913 Valley St .. \lo'SS jailed Friday after the death of T{ichard W. O'Neal, 23,·of 6051 Mahogany St.. \Vcstminster. The victim was fatally y,·oo nded al the Playboy Beauty Salon, 9762 Chapman Ave ., allegedly following an argument and then a struggle \\'ith a female cmploye. Seivers. who also used the alias ~1ark R. Challen, was cut down by three shots from a .38 caliber' revolver -reportedly after refusing Seivers' order to leave - 11nd died later at Orangr: Counly fl1ediral t:cnter. Pike's WUlo w Reveals Vision PASADENA (UPJ)-The widow of Dr. .James A. Pike, former Episcopal bishop of California. said Sunday she had a vision the morning her husband's body "''a!'I discovered in the Judean ~·ilderncss or Israel. .. Mrs. Diane Kennedy Pike. J2. told 11 hundred at a forum al All Saints Epis- f'Of)al Church here, ·•inc morning thc!:y found h11i body, I s:tw a vision-and I had never had one before-and r saw ii happen. I saw all the people 11\'M tiad1 previously died) waiting ror him. It was \'cry s1ra ngc. "It filled me with such J fantastic sense of joy for him. It made me .alm<>.$t <'nvlous." The Pikes had gone to lsratl last summer "'hlle Pike was researching a book when they became stranded Jn the desert . 1'1r.s. Pike became separaled from her husband and managed to reach safety The \\·oman deScribcd th(' vision dur· lnq a talk on "The Hr~urrcction. Psrchic Phenomena and Our Nevi Ex:pcctatlon!." The fnnun ~·as lo have fl!atured her la(r husb;ind, oaiia,bttrs. 1.faraattt. t, Rtbecu., ' and Lila, I, ol !!<II Gordenl; l!.tyff' falher, C.0.ge, 75, ol lnClewood : Eddie Broils, 34, co-owner 'OC lhe: craft; his brothn', Harry, 43, and Harry'• 14-)'eat-()Jd son. Tony, aU of North Hollywood. The bolt, 1llgbtly baUend. WU still resting on the beacb Olis momlog. The o•ntrl are ClC'pl!Cted to ret&U'n lo saf~·age it. No RriOUJ damage or injuries \lt't.rC counted ln Sunday's poundillg surf, bul more t.ban 511 b:Mntl .,..ere reported nood- ed In lbe Seal Beach, Surfaide and Sunaet Beacllaius. Ruklf:nlJ ln Seal Beach sakf U>f WIVC'5 11en: breaking O\'tr lhe palm lrec:s planted in the sand and water ran lbrou&h nearby alleys and homes. Clly crews and residenls undba&&ed the beat.h front area, but lhe. tint wavt.1 broke through the dikes, sakl residents. ~wattr wa:i: reported flowina in Stal Beach as far a.'l Electric A.venue, five bJoc:b inland. OA!LT f't~OT S11U li ... 1- Collided With Slide Freak accident late Saturday night on Pacific Coast J·Jigh\\·ay at 1n· famous El Morro curve left Los Angeles couple shaken and injured. Lynford, 28. and Susan \Vile y. 27. \\'ere northbound on Coast !Jigh· ,~·ay about 11 :40 p.m. v.1hen they ran into a landslide \rhich covered northbound lanes. Highway Patrol officers said \Vileys must have ;:i rrived at point of .slide just moments after dirt and rocks from cliff tumbled onto pavement. Fro1n Pagf! 1 LAGUNA N FREED • • • eerned had examined and verified the fads, the two Americall5 admitted their mist3k~ of trying to conceal their iden- lity and intruding into China's territorial Bethlehem, Conn. Braces for Mail BETHLEtlE~f. Conn. <UP I) -The post office in thi.'l western Connecticut town y,·as open for business Sunday to handle the traditional avalanche of Christmas mail from all over the northeastern United States. A quartt.r of a million Christmas greetings were mailed from here last year, bearing the ''Bethlehem '' po5tmark. Postmaster Earl Johnsoo said the pos1 office y,•jJI be open &e\'en days a week from 6 a.m. to 7 p.m. until Christmas. sea ." said the Xew China Nc\\·s Agency cispatch. \Vord of lheir release came from the NC'\A and lhe couple -com)X>sed. but tired and underv>'eight-arrived at Hsing Yi isli.!nd a few hours later. Bald~·in . and fl1rs. Donald $,a J d authorities In Canton l\'ete prepared !() release them much sooner, but approval "'a~ required Jrom Peking and this de· Joyed teh process considerably. Each \\'as kept .separate from the other ri uring capllvily. lirst at Heung Olau. fltar ~1acao. then at a place called the Happy Peoples' Commune, 60 miles north of Canton. They were imprisoned at the Red Star Peoples' Commune just prior to being freed. The Baldwins have. three children, Si· moon. Ill, 20. Lynne, 24, and Jam~. 20, \\'ho lives at the Cliff Drive home and at· tends Saddleback College. •·11 was frl&httn.l.nl," ukl one woman. who saw can: ah11ted by the suriing water. \\1avet were breaklnR from llve to sil feet hiah around Seal Beach and Surfaldl'! with a tide o( i.boul oven feet. Wavell reached ten feet In hCllMht alon& )tun- llnctori Bc1ch, but lon,t 1frtt.ch11 of lilncl protected the area from·1ny dam~. Poundj!!c. 1urf broke ...i filllened M:veral palm th1tc:bGd •Ulllh•~ at Surf1idc, mo•t t4 Uiem 1t1ndlrw •Ix feet hl&h abovr. tht UJld , Drug Ped~le~~ • < Not Immune, Court Declares WASHING TON (UPI) -The Supreme Court ruled today that drug peddlers may be p:-osecuted under a federal regfltra. lion law even though narcotics buytn' are exempt Crom punishment. The court last term held that purchasers C(lllJd nol be prosewled on grounds of possible self-incrimination ir they filled out a form on a narcolics transaction. &t the court refused today to revene lne COn\·iclioo of t\\'O sellers y,•ho claimed tht same constitutional grounds. In other actions. the court : -Declared that an indi\'idual may be prosecuted for perjury for making a false statement lo the government e\·en though he had a basic constitutional right lo re- main silent. --Set aside the 1964 conviction of a con- fessed killer, 1\felvin Morales, and ordered lower New York courts to determine il he was illegally detained by police. The court however said that the state appeal courts had correctly found that Morales'confession was voluntary. At issue was whether Morales, sen· fenced to life imprisonment. had been taken in custory when the police had ho probable cause lo suspect he had com:: milted the crime. The court ruled last term tha t the registration requirement could not be. w-·· cd against narcotics buyers because it \\'Ould tend lo incriminate them . But lo today 's ruling. the court said that ruling did not extend to a seller. The coort, v.·ith Justiti!s Hugo L. Black and \\'illiam 0 . Douglas disSenling, said "there is no real and substantial possibility" the requirement would sub- ject selier1 to self-incrimination because they will "seldom if ever'' be c:iotronted by a buyer willing to accede ·to the registration requirement. ' Firemen Probing Fire at Voit A fire o! Undetermined origin at W-.• J. Voil Rubbei Corporation. 3801 S. Harbor Boulevard. is under investigation" ·today by the Santa Ana Fire Department. . .~ttording to Ray Batchell of the fire department, the blaie \\'as reported at 5:42 p.m. Saturday. The fire caused more than $10,00) damage ta stacked packing materials in the warehouse. area, he said. BachteU said the probable cause of the fire 'is suspicious." "\\'e have turned it over to a (ire 1n- vestigator,'' he stated. THE BIDTIQUE HAS SOMETHING FOR EVERY WOMAN ON YOUR CHRISTMAS LIST , ... if she's a teenager, consider a kicky outfit by Tooti que c t Jody, c.omplete with a frin ged scarf, boutique jewelry and a floppy hat. m.iybe she's a young woman-about-town ... Denise clothe s are the right thing to help her conquer the world. •... perhaps she's a more mature type ... Do n So phisticates' name descri bes the look·easy ele gance, ~uiet sophistication. and don't lor9et 9randma. Our BIDTIQUE acce•sories, from cameo brooches to frin ged shawls to llama •lippers, will help her bridge tho fa•hion gap. SPECIAL I HADLEY CASHMERE SWEATERS -40,-, OF F Jk BIDTIQUE H67 Via Lid o -Newport Beach-Tolophont 673-451 0 Parking for as many c1rs as yo u own ' I I I I -----·---.:a~~: -' . ... ----'. . . . . . ...,.,., "" .. . . . . ...... ............... .... ' • Huntington Beaeh * VOL l.2, NO. 293, 5 SECTIONS, :.a PAGES ...., Eight Swim To Safety From Boat By TERRY COVILLE Of tll• o.I,., ,1191 ltlff T~foot waves and a dead engine fore· ed. eight persons to jump from their 36- foot boat Sunday moments before heavy surf pushed the craft throogh Huntington Beach Pier pllings onto the beach. Meanwhlle, residents of Seal Beach. Sunset Beach and Surfside watched the ocean run through the alleys, street& aod tome homes as big" waves and high tidea combined to give the northern part of the Orange Coast a thorough dousing Sunday. The boat beaching occurred about 3:38 p.m .. Sunday, shortly after Huntington Beach lifeguards warned those on the craft not to come near the surfline. Co-<1wner of the modified landing craft, Bob Hayes. 32, told lifeguards: "We were fishing with the motor turn· ed off. \Vhen we tried to start it to mov1 away the battery failed ." Five lifeguards, led by Capt. Doug D'Arnell, entered the heavy surf and talked the boat passengers into the water as the surf began pushing it toward the pier. "They were afraid, at first," 1ald D'Arnell, ''but it would have been more dangerous to ride the boat ashore." All eight persons, helped by the Weguards, swam to the end er the pier •re they cnmbed a ladder to the top. ''The surf was too heavy and dangerous to swim for shore," said D'AmelL I t Rescued were Hayes, his three daughters, Margaret. 9, Rebecca, 6 and I Lila. 4, of Bell Gardens: Hayes' father, Geol1e, 15, of lnglewood; ~die Brofis, 34, co-owner of the craft: his brother, Harry, 43, and Harry's 14-year-old aon, Tony, all ct North Hollywood. I The boat, 1lightly battered, was still 1 resting on the beach this morning. The ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, DECEMBER 8, :J96t a e an DAILY PILOT 1'11119 lr Art~ur VlnHI lowners are expected to return to salvage ll SURFSIDE COLONY LIVED UP TO ITS NAME EARLY TODAY AS GIANT BREAKERS SWEPT ITS BEACH ·No serious damage or Injuries were counted in Sunday's pounding surf, but more than 50 homes were reported no00. led in the Seal Beach, Surfside and Sunset Beach areas. l Resident5 in Seal Beach said the waves § breaking over lhe pa1m trees I.anted in the sand and water ran gb nearby alleys and homes. City :rem and residenU sandbagged the lbeach front .ma, but the first waves oroke through the dikes, said residents. Wat.er was reported flowing in Seat Oeach as far as Electric Avenue, five hiocks Inland . "It was frightening." said one woman, (Set STORM, Page %) Police Rou1ul Up 3 Drug Suspects In Huntingto1t Three Huntington Beach detectivet raided a Warner Avenue residence at 1:30 p.m. Friday and arrested foor men on suspicion of selling marijuana and dangerous drugs. The nld followed several weeks of in· westigation which centered on a popular (:' Huntington Beach bar and nightclub, ac· cording to a SJXlkrsman for the J1un- Ungton Beach Police Department. Booked on charges of sell ing marijuana were David K. Bodine. 23; Steve Vogel, t3. alld Robert D. Boyer. 21. Arrested on ruspicion of furnishing dangeroos dru gs was Ovido A. Cozzi, J7. All are residenlS of 7&11 Warner Avr. ,.. Police· confiscated onl y 11 small quan- tity of drugs during the raid, but ex- plained that the arrests were prompted by alleged sales over a period oC time. Sailor Eleclroculed F1 ying l\lodel Plane LONG BEACH fUPl) -Frankl in Pi'ea\'er. 22, a sailor stationed aboard the USS Passumpsic, 'i''as electrocuted Sun- lay "''htn the control "''Ire on a model tlrpJat)(! he was flying touched a 12,000 volt po"'·er line. . \\'caver was pronounctd deAd at " tcsrby ho!pltal. JtJs wife, Patricia, 22, tnd a grou p or flrcmcn pr11cOcing In mother aectlon ot the park where the tn-- rid•nt O<CUIT!il, wltno-Ibo occident, kJt elforta to revive Wt.aver failed. Council Studies Givi.;g Sl1oppers Holiday Break Christm as shoppers ln downtown Hun- tington Beach will not have lo drop money tn parking meters if the City Council approves a rccommendalion tonight. City Administrator Doyle i\1iller. al the request Qf the downlo\\•n 1ncrthants, ha s proposed that Merry Christ1n as cover:-be placed en parking meters th rough Dec. 25. A request to increase the rates or the Yellow Cab of Ne\\·port Beach and Costa Mesa which has been studied by the ad- ministrative staff '"ill also be before th• councilmen for approval or rejection. Proposed increases would jnc\urle en edditiooal 10 cents for each mile to $1 per mile, and an increase from $5 to $7.20 per hour for waiting time and lraffic delay. Other business before the council tonight Includes' -Aq appeal from a dcci~ion by Oil Superintendent Herb Day declaring a "'ell near 20th Street. and Pec11 n Avenue an "idle \rell'' and asking that the prll- perty be cleared. Making the appeal is Edward N. Frisius of Oxnard. -A petition for renewal of the bu~fness license of t.he Cave ba r at Adams Avenue and Beach Boulevard by 01vner J\1ichael J. Nuben. -An ordinance banni ng certai n games tn city parks except in areas provided for such games. Included in the ban are baseball, archery, tackle football, golf. moterbollting, water likilng, use of firearms or fireworks, and model airplane nying. PILOT'S BEACIJ OFFICE MOV ING The DAILY Pt LOT is moving lo new and lnrger qua ri.ers in Huntingt.on Beach. The new addresJli for the Huntington Beach-Founta in Valley ofllCi!: OI the DAI· LY PILOT. M ol next Monday, will be 1787$ Beach Bvd. Telephone number will be the ~ainc - 542-4321 -and the office, located on the first floor of a ne.w office bujlding\. w111 · offer the same services as at the prci'ent locaUon. Indictment Due Today For Seven Tate Suspects LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Se v en members of the mystic hippie "famil y'' linked with the savage Sharon Talc kill- ing and seve n other slayings were ex· peeled to be indicted today at thr con· c:lusion or county grand jury delii>cra· lions. Deputy District Altorncy:o; Aa ron JI. Slovi tz and Vincent T. Bugliosi rrporlcd they will seek an eighl<oun t indict1nenl chargi ng seven members of 1he pseudo· religiou s cult led by Charles r.1<r.15()n witlt conspiracy and murder. A dozen witnesses were to teslify at today's secret hearing but it was believed most of t~e .e".idence against the suspect5 already had been supplied by attractive Susan Alkins, a member c1 ''the Manson family." Three of the wilneses to be called were Stork Jllnrket NE\V YORK (AP) -Stock mark et prices fe ll sharply and broadly IO\\•er in moderatr. trading late tJ1i.~ arternoon. tSce quotations, Pages 24-25 ). said to be ringcrprint experts. Au thorities have indicated one of the suspects speci fically charged. Charles D. Watson, 21. "'ho is being held in Texas, allegedly left a rl ngerprf.1t at the Tate home. Another witness scheduled to be called \1·as Daniel De Carlo, a former motorcy- rlc gang leader ~·ho recently tes lilied in ;1 nlurdcr trial in Santa r-.1onica. He 11'.~tified .Manson directed the slaying in July of musician Gary Hinn1an. De Carlo reportedly lived for a short time \vith r.1anson and his "family" r-.liss Atki-.1s, also koown as Sadie Glulz, testified for two hours and 15 minutes Fri- day , telling of her relationship with the 35-year-old t.1anson and others in his group who arc accused slayers of Miss :rate and seven other persons. Her lawyer, Richard Caballero, says she sUll regards A1anson ""·ith a mixture of love, fear and hatred ." Caballero said althou gh ?tfanson is In jail in Jndependt>.1ce, Calif., pending ac- tion lo bring him here, 1t1iss Atkins fears hr. could "co njure up a vision detrimen· !al to her in his mind then transfer U to hrr mind and the n she would be marked." Huntington Urges Schools, City to Build Togethe1· • A joint powers agreement between the City C>f Huntington Beach and the llun- lington Beach Union High School Dlstrfct has been proposed as a means of finan- cing project5 planned by both entitles. In a letter to Matthew Weyu ker, pre,,f. dent of lhe school district's board of t n1stee~. f\1ayor Jack Grffn suggested the agreement to facilitate fina ncing, or the civic center and a new h(Jh scl\ool di.strict hetidqui rters. ''A mutulll finance bcneflt would ac· crue to the city and the district, .. Green said through the formation o( ·the JGint powers authority. · Green said the sale or bonds by tt Joint powers authorit~would result in a e:aving In Interest rates. "Other advantages are that bonds Issued by an authority are t1:1igible for pledge collateral for public dePoSlls," the mayor continued. The autholrty is ,in a better position to file f2i-fllliefol assistance as the project dr,·elops. the mayor also Pointed out. The school dlstrk:t offices arc located en the southeast lide of 17th Street. ad- jolntha the f2·acre cl.vie ctnt~r sltil on up- per ~fain Street. Green pointed out that the city ·cnjcys a good credit rating which could facilitate the Joint J>l)Wtrs plan. He said tht city I! now revlewlng the flnanclal and legal aspccls or 1>ay-as-you·go Cir !ease b&ck agr~1nents= Traf fi e W reek Takes Life Of Youn g Woman A maUunclioning traffic signal at a busy \Vesbninster intersection claimed the life of a 23-year-old woman early Saturday when she crashed into another vehicle. Police sai rl Donn;i .J. Kennedy, 23, of 7221 . Plaza SI., \\'cstrnin.~tcr, died at \Vcslminster Comtnunity llospital about three hours after the 2: IS a.m. collisi:ln at Beach Boulevard and Trask Avenue. The driver of the other car, James Ray Fol ey, 36, of 19745 Inverness Lane, Hun· tington Beach, was treated and later released at the same hospi!al. Officers said tbe signal was put out or commission dtning en earlier accident at Golden West Stcttt and Trask Avenue, but that uniformed policem en were direc· ling traffic at the time of the fatal col· lision. MlM Kennedy was traveling "''estbound on Trask Avenue while Foley was hear!· Ing south on Beach Boulevard when the smashup occured, police said. A rosary service for Mls~ Kennedy. "'ho was -etn'{lloyed as a nursing aide at Huntington Jntercommunity Hosptal. has been scheduled for 7 p.1n. tonig ht at Dilday'.s Mortuary, liuntlngton Beach. Burial will be held at 10:30 i\.m. Tues.- day at Good Shepherd Cemetery, also in Huntington Beach. Murder Ch arge So_ug·ht in Death A>.,,srlmlnal complaint charging an Al'la~m hair stylist v.·llh murder In the shooting death of • colleague at a Garden Grove 11aton ts be tng sought 'today from the Oran!e County District Attorney. Michae J. $elvers, 23 of 913 Valley.St.. wa11 jailed Frld111 11fter the dtath of Richard W. O'Neal, 23, ot 6051 Mahoginy St., \\~estmll\6ter. 1'he victim ·WIS fatally w.ounded"lL·the Playboy Beauty Sa'lon. 9762 Cha)>man •. Ave., allegedly fOlldwing ' In argument " and ttien a 1truggle Wlth a . femalt em~yc. _,., • ..... ..... ···#• •• , ...... -. . Today's-Fl•al N.Y. St.eeks TEN CENTS ers ~- Grenades, Gas Used . -·-·~·· In Skirmish From Wire: Servtce1 LOS ANGELES -Polle& using dynamite, tear gas and hand guns fought a five-hour pitched battle today before gubduing a group of Black Panthers bar. ticaded inside lheir headquarters wiUi automatic rifles and hand grenades. A handful of eight to 10 panthen: held off a 300-tnan police force from the ape~ Ing of the assault at dawn until lat1 morning before surrendering. Three or those inside the Panther head- quarters were reported injured, none 1eriously. A force of 300 cfficers surrounded t~ building. Police said two were shot ar; they first tried to serve a warrant. The othcl' was hit in later gunf ire. A standof£ cf more than four hours ensued. The raid was one of three on locations of the mi!Jtant Negro organization. Peli~ 5aid they had information that machine guru; and ether weapons had been stored there and they wanted to serve warran~ on two persons. At cne point olficer11 issued an ultimatum by bullhorn to those in the headquarters: "Come out with yo~ hands up or we'll come in." One man came out. Finally the ethers followed. The wounded officers were not Im· mediately identified. One was reported hit In the chest and groin. Another was reported hit in the foot and the lhiro in the leg. A 16-block area wl§ sealed oU durln« the confrontation. Police de p Jo y-e-d themselves along wide, shop-lined Central Avenue and 11tayed under cover. The area is south of downtown Los Angeles, near Wrigley Field, former home oC the California Angels baseball team. Homes line adjoining streets and residents clustered on lawns to listen to &hots and blasts. About 14 persons were arrested In raid'I 11t two other locations, where no resistance was encountered. "Those guys have automatic weapon• Md they're throwing grenades,'' a police inspector told newsmen during the morn- ing, Officers said that homemade grenades ~·ere then tossed toward police from the buildini, bursting 1n the street. No one was hurt by the grenade!. A police spokesman said the b.Jilding had been sandbagged at doors and win- dows by the Panthers. A contingent of police blocked off the entire area. Classes were dismissed for the da y at a nearby school. The downtown police building was put under heavy guard. Officers with shotguns were stationed at every en- trance as a security precaution. Bor1nan lo Vietnam WASHINGTON' (AP) -Astmnaul Frank Berman, commander of the first spaceship to orbit the moon, left today, for Vietnam as President Nixon'• emissary to the troops. I Orange C:oast Weather That silver lining behind Tucs- dsy's clouds may be a damp one. Temperatures, when the sun make.." its appearance, will be in the low 70's along the Orange Coast. INSIDE TODAY You may not bt abl« ·to dt · .scribe .. Oh! Calcutta/" Cl pood cltan j un, but most of iC can bt lnbtltd good dtrtu fun. Stt to- da y's rtvi «w on Poat 18. ,.----1 o.~11 ~ i CHRISTMAS ·-~--------.! Ct11.Wlll1 .. ...... " Cln tlfltll ••• "'-'"" .. """ ... Ctfl'llcl " °'-'-" " , __ " ''""'• ,.,,., " Dt•fll Nttlett " '-'' 11•1t .-111trtti1 ..... • '~ Mtrtlttt J4.U l'llttrt•-' " l•lfrillel\ .. "~~· ... """" .. -~· " ....... .1 A11t1L ..... l"I " WNW N .... -... • w_.,,.....,,.,, I • ' ' ,.. .......................... 9111!" ............................. ----.................... _... __ ....... ,..,._~-.,.....,....--~~--·1 .. -· M • Campus Militants 'Using' Media • Ill Protests? Do lelc,i!ion, radio and newspapers rpreMnt 1 dhiorttd picture or campus disturbances becaU!e they are being "used" by mi!itanls? This question v.•as debuted Friduy by nesrs · represent.alives 1111d college pro- Jusors f'riday during a conference in Anaheim. Some news.-rc.presentatives readily in· dicated they felt they had been used. But tOey also took the professors and college itdministrators to ta sk, asserting I.hey failed to provide information that could balance the news picture i Don Mozley, mana1ing editor lor CBS radio 1n San Francisco, said, ''Ont: of ttw. intst.ak-es· of mode rn journalism is if somebody says something provocative h STORM:' .. ... who saw ca:r!I shilled by the surging water. ' \\18\'CS were breaking from five to six feet tUgh around Seal ·Beach and Surfside \\•ith a tide of about seven feet. \Vaves reaehed ten feet in height along Hun- 1 ingtOrl Beach, but long stretches of sand protected the area from any damage. Pounding surf broke and flattened sever1 I palm thatched su nshades al Surfside, most of them standing six fet't high above the sand. * ·~ ·/:r Storn1-born Surf Gives First Test To Newport Groin Six-foot breakers riding a high tide gave West Newport Beach's groin and sa:.idhau l area its first acio tl!st thi~ morning and I.he beach held up relalively well, <lfficials said. But the sun-ounding streets and homes. "'ell used to the surges of brine_, were flooded as usual for several hours, and it could v.•ell happen again tomorrow morn- ing. The surf , poullding the beach during a ~even-foot tide, chev.·ed away the turn- around road 'near 36lh Street used by the heavy sand hauli ng equipme.1L Thal will have to be restored before the rigs can drive again. City marine afficials said tomo rrow '1 morning high tide should reach seven feet again . but reports said the surf is <'X· peeled to subside a bit. They rated the possibilily of 1nore heavy fiOO<iing as a tossup. The portion hardest hil in Newport this morning was near 36th Street, where Rboul 40 feet af beach was ealen away. \Vith It went tons ()f new sand dumped by the haulers in recent weeks. High sand berms built at the surf li11e lo protect f.he haul road and the street~ gave way in that area, and Seashore Drive and several 'cross streets v.·ere clogged with· sand. City crews had removed most of th!' land by midmorning. "We're re.all y glad \\'!' had so much 5;md oii the beach fo start with," City Tidelands Coord inator George Dawe's &ai d. "\Ve all agree that th<' area fa red pret- ty -v.·e!J und!'r some relatively Cf".tren1c conditions," he added. He said a specific time schedule for repair of the end of the haul road \\'Ould he worked out by the Army Corps or Enginl?ers thi.!I mor.i.ing . Bob Hope Opens Tour Of Bases in Bel'lin BERLIN 1 UPll -Comed ian Bob Ho(>f' "'ill open his annual ov!'rseas tour of Amer ican military overseas bases \\'ith " perforn1ance at \Ves! B c r I in ' ~ 11tutschland Hall llt>e. 17, the Arn1y an· nourn:ed {oday. His troupe of 36 pcrfor1ners 11•ill inchid<' i;erman actress Rorny Sch~ider, ~inge1 :onnie Stevens. Jl.1i.ss \\lorld, and Les Brown and his band. DAILY PILOT . Cllt.loNGt tO.lo~T f'Ul l 15MIN~ (0 M,,l.l.l'r !lob~·• M. Wttfl rr-1 d•n• -Jl11~1o1n•1 J.c~ ll. Cwtley \ <t f'1• ·~tn! •nf Gtt>t••I /,"'"'I"< T)uim •• K11 vil Ld•Tr.r T~'"'"' A. M"'fl~;"• l/onoQ><t ld• Or ,i.ti.,,t W, R.•••1 ....... 1 .. , (~""' H•111tl11111•"' l t•ch Olfl~• 101' !.!~ Sl•••I M1il;1119 Adfn1n r.o. 1111 190, 12641 Other Ofllct • ,,.~ """'" l :tl """' ••ttr-11!..,lfv11il Ceo!• Met•: no Wut l•v S!fc•• LMV,... f.-;h1 l l! f..orqt A•r•~t DAIL"' •1~or, ... .,. ...,,IUI "~t"'''""" , ... t.ir-l'rtu. It .,, .. ,.,._. dt ll• I •c .. 1 S•JI" ftY "' •tfllrlle 1t11-.1 191" +tw~l"'t't"I flt•<"· ·'M1•lfl V•twr. Ctll• Nru. IU•• r0<t 1111tn .,... L~t fl••c~. ··-w It> ,.,. •;."QIOMI tdl111f1>. O•lrott C..11 '~~··•~· '"9 (011'1,."Y prlo\! "'I •"<Ill ou •I ~!I V.~t l!t lUt !llVf "''";>!:•! l oltll, O~t ut l'.tll "'•~ $l•ftl, (0~141 I.In.I r .. 1.,Mi111• 11141 142-4321 fft111 W11t11d"'1ttt Cell 540-1220 ClfltlflH Aftertkl111 HZ·5•7t C..1r .. ~t. 1 .... <ltll'tt (tl~I ""~OiP\lf t C-l ro "9 ,.,,_,. •IO f ·, • 1, MIV1trllltflt. t•l!'-<•t l '""'" fl' 1dot1111.....:"h M'ftll' .....-1 ee r1.-HWM -.!IMlr.11 10«1.tl ,.rmltliG!t _. «•JYrtnl ~·••••. '""«~ r•u1 HJ·-,.. 4 •t "'' e.rr te"' •~J (.(llf -t .. Ct h•;•n 1 \l ttto.tt•t.~ b p ~-.... ~· U IQ -~H!ry, ~" ..,,II l' Te .._,.,,~, rr ""•'1 lit •--· l r tc ,_,.. • y. • is J\t't\'$, even If it is wroni. "It is human nature that reporters and cdltors can be lazy and submll llke la01b1 to news C<>nferences that Contain no ne"'s." Managing editor of the Sant& Monica Outlook, R. D. Funk, said his ne"·spapl'r "re sponds lo e:lues lhal something is going to happen and there you are. tNl!)<\ ped. and you kno"' it." The self crilicisn1 "'as offered by news nlen at California Teachers Associalion·s annual conference on higher education. titled thi~ year ''Revolution and Resp0nse.·· But the news men also pointed out they do \1•ant to pre sent balanced reports or campus occurrences and they need more • help for prQfessors and admin.istrators to do sa. Oavid Horowitz. education reporting speclallst for NBC television in Los Angeles, said to get balanced stoties he must i:onstantly fight an "academic defense mcchanisin .'' ·"fhe problen1," he said. "is ad· min istralors refuse to talk w h 11 e. tnilitants. \vho are the "'ould-be campus leaders, do talk. Where are the educators "'ho could place the conflict or con· troversy in perspective ? They are unavailable," Horowitz said. FWlk told the profeSiors, "You people are part of a political process. You rriust slate your case clearly or you lose the ballgame." . - BATTERED BOAT BEACHED IN HUNTINGTON Shootin g the Pier Pilings Is for the Board~ Sto1·m Surf Scours Sand From South Coast Beaches An 'Cight·foot i;torm surf acoured sanrl from southern Orange County beachc!'I and senl waler up under Laguna's Main Be.ach Board'walk this morning but t1p- parentiy did little or no da1nage. El 1'.lorro Trailer Park. occasion ;ill.v 1nenaced by high \\'ave s in the pa:;:t, rar1'ri \\'ell. Bill Peyton. one of Lhe O\Vners. said the angle of !he \\'aves seemed to ha1·c been extreme enough lo miligale tl11:ir Jorce. "They either get us good nr they don't eet us at all and "·e've been holding our PANIC ·nwn pretty wei\ this time." said Peyton. Laguna Lifeguard Lt. Eugene DePauli s sa id the waves were eroding the Main Beach and other Laguna beaches but this is no rn1a1. The sa nd returns lat.er. \\'fives ll'Cre running ;ibout eight fe<'t during the niorning high tides. Capt. Philip Stubbs·. San Cle1nen\e guard . reported no damag<' and little i.u rfing ac· 1i1 ily there . Mc sa id 1·ery lillle surf n1ade it O\"Cr the break"·ater al ne~· Dana Point Harbor where guards \\'ere keeping tl \1•atchful eye on "'eekend Hshermen . Spreads Anti-clru.g Gro11 p Gains Y ol11.ntee rs B~' TEHRY COVILLE 01 I~• Ooll1 ,llct Slftl ,\!rs, Carl!on Hin?, 1s a Fountain Vall('~' 1.1othcr "'ho recently launched 11 new ;inti-drug group ailed PANIC (Parent s Anli-NarcoUcs Inrormation Center ). lier gro1:1p came oul sv.•inging againsl lhe local schools for allegedly allowing a heavy flow of narcotics on campus. She pro.posed such tactics as taki'.1g children tron1 the local schools. picketing scliools. payin g school taxes under protest and ex- erting t'.lilreme pressure on school boards. "\\'e did resort lo n hllle sensa- tio nalism di !irst." llhc now admits. ··but 11 served the purpose or arousing citii('ns to lhe need to light the qrug problen1:· Al least 10 Fountain Valley ciUicn~ \YCre sufficiently aroused lo give full sup- port to PAN IC and another 50 htn·e pledged .at least partial help. says Mrs. l!inZ. , "My complain! 11gai".11il the sehools." says ~lrs. Hinz. •·is ool that they nrll! allowing drugs on c:irnifus, but they re- !u!re to admit they have a drug problem.·· She has now merged Iler group wiU1 tht lluma n Outreach Council af Santa An11. lounded by Jl.lrs. Dan Duncan. and their OrSt order ol business is the cstabllsh· mtnt or Jobs for Teens centers in at least &e\--en different Or1r.1ge County cities ··rr we can gi ve thtst youths someth 1n~ to do. that might 11 least help :' sars htn. Hinz. The Jobs for Ttcns Centers arc now optratlng -out of the living roo1ns of seven dHft.rent molhcrs -In Fountain Valley, HuntJngton Beach, Santa Ana. Garde.1 Grove. Cypr~. Anahehn and Buena Park. J1ours are from l-4 p.m. The Fountain VaJ\ty phone number ls ftl&-7297. Mrs. Hinz. and Huntington Beach. 839--4574, h1rl. Lols Londcan. "Th~ reponse his bctn very J:ood , ~nit 'l\t' onl,v 11tartrcl last 11·rrk." says ~11'• • ll1n1. a \10rnan rrr·~ srrious about hrr f)u rsuil , '·Next projects \\'e'rr looking to arl!: llrnblcn1 t'enters for the teens and a hot li ne for telephone help and advice." \Vhcn asked "'hy PAN IC doesn't join many of the simllar group! already established. Jl.lrs. Hinz et.plained: "The current Help Line in Huntington Beach already has more phone calls t.han it can handle. but \\"e have been talking 1vilh that group. The Jobs for Teens is an outgrowth or YES (Youth Employment Scrvicr) ,1·hich no longer exist!\ under gnvernn1enl sanction. I also think !he Youth Coalition in Hunl1ngto n Beach is a lre1ncndous eHOT't ·· ;\:rs. ll 1ni. also look note of the p!'0- 1>0.sed t·o1111nun11y hospital u1 Fountain \'alley and ciprt'.S!t'd a desire to sec a '·('rash 1>ad" in it to handle ha rd narco!ics cases. ··You knov.·. lhe only place so rneone 1tho needs medical attention for drugs ca n go is I.he Orange County ~ledical Center·~ crisis cmter." she noted. ~lrs. Hinr. states her goals in a straighl· forv.·ard n1anncr: "I \\•as llK'ky lo raise one child wiU1out lier taking narcotics. I have three niorc. ages 9. 7 and 6. and I don't \vant them lo be in a position or being forced into narcotic s. It 's already a big problem, 1 just wan1 lo st,'lrt. Oghling it bc(orc it gets too big:· Booster i\leeting Se t ~tarina tllgh School Booster Club mem· bers will meet 3t 7:30 tonight In the teacher! cafeteria. Basketball and 'v.TtsUing coachc!.s 'v.·111 lit: prts~nt 3nd refr~sllmcnt~ will bti ~erv. "' I ) One proleasor 11id, "A lot of us are <lid· ra.shloned sissies. "'e ttavtri't the coura1e to stand up and speak like the militants. We worry about our house gel· ·ung bombed." Another professor remarked, "ti.tany of us ~till have the suspicion the meQia are sensation seeking. This suspicion is deep- ly ingrained in us." ''If you concentrate on what you say and what you think there is no reason you shouldn 't say it with the press around.'' ~lorov.•itz responded . "You talk aboul academic freedom, freedom to speak. \\!hat we are dealing v.·ith is derensive f'ducators.'' He said, "I go on campus and l'm like a Fuller Bru_sh man . I have to spend Harbor moro U... aelJl!!i Ill< l<!ea rm &oing to be objective and f1ir then doing repoMJ.ni." "\Vhy should you leave your desk and compete to be heard \\'iU1 peaple af no responsibility?" W.ozley posed a que$lion. '"The ansv;e r Is beca use that is the way things are done today," he advised. ''People lie to the nf?ws 1nedla mo re than they did a generation ago. They play us for suckers. You should be prompt and l'olunteering with the truth. You are com- peting with apponenls of no moral substance." "One problem is the <'aliber of men you .send out tG cOver stories,·• complained a pro(essor. Position "'A reparter may come in unprep1red, this is not unusual,'' said Mozley. "\Vhen dealing v.•ith him put yourself in the same po.sitk>n he i.s incommuniceting 11•ith I.he public. Don't give him a 25-page press release. Pra~tic.e the art of con- densalion, simplicity and get to the heart at the matler." "You cause more troubles for U! al schools than you help us," challengW a professor. "• "\Yell, people thought the F~ch revolution might die down if it w1s tell alone, but it didn't.'' said M.oiley, "The same goes for the unrest on campus, it isn 't very ilkely any more that it will die down .'' Asked Huntington Mayor Presents Ttvo Alternatives Orange County c!Ues are being asked to make a decision by Jan. 8 <ln a future League <lf Cities position an the Orana:e County .Harbor District. Huntington Beach Mayor Jack Green, president of the eoonty league section, has proposed altematlves to the city councils. They are: -Developing and promoting 1 t at e legislation for a vote by the people <ln dissolving the district. -Joining with the Board ol Supervisors in promoting the e.!ltablishment of an in· tegrated special District of Harbors. Beaches and Parka with responsibility for 1he total recreational procram in the county. Green points out that Assemblyman John V. Briggs CR-Fullerton)' told the supervisors Nov. 5, "In the event you gentlemen turn a deaf ear to the recom· Valley Police Probing Mystery Telepl1one Caller A rash of phone calls in Fountain Valley; with the mysterious caller asking for infotm4lion on children , is in no way connected wi th the schools. says Mike Brick. Superintendent of the Fountain Valley School Distr ict. Several re sidents reported such calls 1asl "·eek. said Brick. The caller, they said, refuses to identify himself, only 1aying be .is cooducling a survey. When askerl for whom, he hangs up or simply doesn't reply, added Brick this morning. The. guise used Is that a survey for the schools is being conducted. The caller then prGCeed to Inquire aboot children of the household. Son1e pare nts who refused to giv!' in· ronnation found later that th e i r neighbor5 had been called and had given 1nfor1nalion on all the neighboring children. said Brick. Brick suggested that no information should be gi\'en to callers "'ho refuse to identifv themselves. '"\I/hen our district uses "the phone \\·e alv.·ays identify ou!"1lelves," he said. Police are currently investigating the mailer along with a report from the Fountain Valley Boy1' Club that someone is fa lsely using their name to sell magazine subscriptions. mendaUon of the Local Agency Forma-Green also suggests three additional tion Commission (LAF!=> and the league ·~ steps that could be taken by th1 . plea then r am committed to put this to supervisors: the legislature in January. -The Harbor Commission membership ··However I will do this only at the re· could be expanded to nine, \vilh five ip.. quest. by formal resolution of the League pointed by the supervisors and four bY of Cities." the league. ., Gretn points out that lhe second -The independent taxing authority <lt alternative. "might, at fir st glance, ap-lhe di slrict could be removed, rll!quirin' pear to be a reversal or the league's posi· funds from the counly general fund. ~ lion , but certain advantages might be ob--The district could be required=-19 iained should lbe city councils consider follow the provisions of stale law -1"fi'o this approach in depth.'' quired or the county for incurring bonded lie points out th at the supervisors debt through a two-thirds vote, instead ol adopted a resolution Nov . 5 which in---a majority. eludes two objectives in line with the The league president concluded, '"l'bis league position. They are including the three-year problem needs lo be sett]!d... entire, county in the t.axing area of tht \\le have too many other matters that rlti!.: Harbor: District, and . consolidation or quire. city and county cooperation ~o harbors, park.!1 and beaches in an in-pennit this dispute to further pre-empt tegrated ope.ration. undue tune and energy." ' Deadline for Christmas Decoration Contest Near Entries are now being accepted for Huntington Beach's annual Christmas decorating contest. Deadline is Wed- nesday. Dubbed "Christmas City" this year·s contest i! sponsored by !he city and coordinated by lhe \Vomen 's Division af the Chamber of Commmerce. Entries may be made al the Chamber office, 962-6661. Information needed in· clu~ entrant's name, •ddress, telephone number and category entered. Mrs. Lorenzen Funeral Slated Funeral services for Mrs. Minetta Lorenzen, Ti, a l:>ng-titne Huntington Beach resident \\'ho died \Vednesday, were held Saturday at S1nith's Jl.lortuary. lnurnme11t follO\\'ed at \\'estmin.ster ~lemoria\ Park. !llrs. L<lrenzen is .survived by her daughte r. Dolly Fiddymenl ot Roseville, Calif.: her brother, Lester Ritter, of Illinois, and three sisters, ~!rs_ AUanta Fuhrman ol Kansas. ~fiss Gladys Ritter of Arizona, and Mrs. Chancie Kaye of lnglev."OOd. Thirty-eight lrophies will be awarded ht 10 divisions at a special banquet to be held at a date to be announced later. In addition to 12 grand awards and %! special awards. a single entrant \\'ill be selected for the sv.•eepstakes award . 21c· carding lo Wome n's Division chairman, Carole Ann \Val l. · • Categories include b<'st o u t d o t'I r Christmas theme (two grand trophies): best outdoor children's fant asy Ctwn grand trophies ); best ootdoor religiorui· ..., display, best outdoor tree. best mobile' home display, best indoor display visibit rrom the street, best neighborhood. group, best merchants window, best com· mercial. school-or civic display. · ~ - Judges for the contest are Mrs. Helen Stewart, past president of the Women's- Division: Bill \Voods, president of:the- Chamber or Commerce ; and Ollin C. "Jack" Cleveland, city director or ' building and safety. ·, The contest is sponsored by local businesses v.·ho will finance the purchase of trophies and stage the winners ban-· queL 1 - Part icipating are Signal Oil & Ga s Co .• J\-lcrcury Savings & Loan, Southern California Edison Co., Huntington Beach. Co.. Huntington Center, f\Iontgoriitry Ward, J olly Ox restaurant, Harbour Volkswagen. Rainbow Disposal Co,, 1'.lcDonnell Douglas Astronaulicll Corp. THE BIDTIQUE HAS SOMETHING FOR EVERY. WOMAN ON YOUR CHRISTMAS LIST , , if sh•s • tHneg•r, consider 1 kM:ky outfit by Tootique or Jody, eomplefe with 1 fringed sc.arf, bo utique jtwolry •nd •fl oppy h•+ . m•ybe she's 1 youn9 wom1n-.111bout-town .,. Denise clothes i re the ri9ht thing to help her conqu1t the world. perh•ps she's e more mature type •.. E>on Sophistic1tes' name describes the look-easy eleganc.e, qu iet sophistication. ..• , i1nd don 't forget grandma. Our BIOTIQUE 1cc.1ssoriei, from c:1meo brooche1 to frin ged she wls to llarn1 sli ppori, will help her brid90 lh e lo1h ion g•p. SPECIAL I HADLEY CASHMERE SWfATfRS -40'!. O~F ~k BIDTIQUE H67 Vi• Lido -Newport Buch-T elepho,• 673.-4510 Per~ing for 1s many cars es you own . . - I r -2 3 _,.,:· ~ Ul'l ltMll~ BESSIE PUFFS CIGARETTE AS SIMEON MAKES CALL 'F11llng Fine' After 10 Months Behind B•mboo Curtain China Frees Lagunan; He Tells War Readiness From Wirt Suvlce1 MalnlODd Chlna auth«iU,. relea.ed a Laguna Beach mlD held as a possible spy for nearly a year Sunday and be and a traveling companlon broogbt word· to the outside world that the regime is prepar· lng for total war. · Simeon Baldwin, 56, ot 1359 Cliff Drive, and Mrs. Bessie H. Donald, •1. a secretary with his Hong Kong manufac- turing company, said the Chinese Com· munists ge.ierally treated them well. The pair, captured last February while on a 40-mile }'achtlng expedition from Hong Kong to the Portuguese island col· ony of Macao, had a taste of life com· mune-style during their captivlty. Mrs. Donald was even offered a teaching position at Canton University when she clainied she had been im· pri!oned so lrog her job in Hong Kong would doubtlessly be gone. • Baldwin. who owns an aircraft com- ponenU manufacturing firm in Hong kong, called his wife, Marjorie, at the Laguna family home Saturday (PST) after reaching Tsing Yi island aboard their yacht, the r-.torasum. She said he told her nolhing she hadn't ptttty much know.1 since the seizure-at· 111ta of the Morasum and two other yachl'i last Feb. 16, but she expects him to return to Laguna Beach quite soon. others in the group or 15 yachters '>''ere quickly released aft.er being halted-by .Chinese gunboat.s, but the lwo Americans -who at first tried to hlde lhei r na· tionality -faced longer detention. They were kept at first at a location ut 10 miles from Ma cao while techni· cians meUculously dismantled and ex· ike' s W idoiv eveals Vi.sion PASADENA (UPI)-The \•:idow or Dr. rames A. Pike , former Episcopal bishop pr Callfornia, said Sunday she had a Hsion the morning her husband's body 1\·as discovered in the Judean wilderness ~ Israel. Mrs. Diane Kennedy Pike. 32, told a ~undred at a foru m al All Saints Epis· ~opal Church here, "the morning they ound his body, I saw a vision-and I ad never had one before-and I saw it appen. I saw all the people (who had reviously died) waiting for him. It was very strange. "It filled me with such a fan tastic sense of joy for him. lt made me almost envious." The Pikes had gone ta Israel last 1Ummer while Pike was researching a book when they became stranded in the desert. Mrs. Pike became separated from her husband and managed to reach lifety. ambed navigational equipment aboard the boat as possibly for espionage ac- tivities. They were later lneaJ"OO"ated at two different communes, where the treatment was generally good, with one rn1nor ex· ception. · . "In one commune, there were some threats made and the guards stared at you through the windows ror houn;/' said Baldwin. "They followed you everywhere. Even into the bathrooms. "There was no privacy. You lived In a glass cage." He said the reds built screens aroo.1d them each time they were moved. "I asked if they expected the Seventh Fleet to steam up the Peart River and rescue us," he continued, "but they didn 't think that was very furuty." Generally, he sald, they were well l reated and lheir captors stressed they do not dislike Americans as such, only the U.S. government itselr. "There are preparation:-for '11;ir ever;'\\'here," he added, "lhere are roadblocks and mililia training. The Chinese told me they \\'ere preparing against American and Soviet invasions." He had nothing to read during ca pti\'ity but a 1.500 page volume on navigation, \vhile Jl.1rs. Donald , estranged wife of television actor Peter Donald, was gi~·en stacks of propaganda materials. One condition or release by Peking rulers was admission of guilt for the -alleged crime ()f accidentally straying in- to Mainland-controlled coastal waters. "We reJSeatedly wrote confession~ because the Chinese said they wanted rewording or the confessians to their understanding," he told newsmen arter reaching freedom Sunday, Hong Kong time. "After the Chinese authorities con· cerned h;id examined and verified the facts, the two Americans admitted their mistakes of trying to concea l their iden· tity and intruding into China's territori al i;ea," said the New China Ne\\'S Agency dispatch. Ward of their release came from the NCNA and the couple -composed, but tired and underweighL-arrived at Hsing Yi island a few hours later. Baldwin and r-..1rs. Donald l!I aid authorities in Canton \\'ere prepared lo release them much sooner, but approval was required from Peking and this de· Joyed teh process conside rably. Each was kept separate from the other during captivity. first at Heung Chau, near Ma cao, then at a place called the fl appy Peoples' Co1nmune, 60 miles north of Canton. They were imprisoned at the Red Siar Peoples' Commune just prior to being freed. The Baklwins have three children, Si· meon, III, 26, Lynne, 24, and James, 211, \\'ho lives at the Cliff Drive home and at· tends Saddleback College. -... ~ .... • Mondly, -·"" a, 1969 H DAILY I'll.ft 3 Law Won't Shield Drug Sellers Supreme Court Says Ruling on Purchasers Doesn't Apply WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Supreme Court ruled today that drug peddlers may be prosecuted under a federal reglstra· tlon law even though narcotlcll buyers are e1empt (rom punishment. The court last tenn held that purchasers could not be prosecuted on groundl!I or possible self-incrimination if they filled out a form on a narcotlcs transaction. But the court refused today to reverse the convicUon ol two sellers who claimed t.he same constltuUonal ground5. ln other actions, the court: -De<:Jared that an individual may be prosecuted for perjury for making a false statement to the government even though he had a basic constitutional right to re- mBln .Uent. More Questions on My Lai -Set aside the lllM cmvtctlon ct a""!' feosed killer, Melvin Moralu; and ordered lower New York courts to determine If he waa Illegally detained· by palice. The court however AJd that the state appeal courts had correctly found that Morales'confesslon wa voluntary. At issue was whether Marales, sen- tenced to life imprisonment. had been taken in custory when the police had no probable cause to suspect he had com• milted the crime. 2 Army Officers Called by Special Pentc1gQn Board The court ruled last tenn that the regist ration requirement could not be us-- ed against narcotiCl!I buyers because it would tend to incriminate them. But In today's ruling, ~ court said tNt rullnc did not.extend to a seller. By United Press International A special Pentagon board called two mare Army officers tooay for secret testimony u part of its effort to deter· mine whether there might have been a COVeRij) of the U.S. action at My Lai last yllli>. Today's witnesses we.re Maj. Frederick Walke of the 123rd Aviation Battalion which funllshed the helicopter lift for the sweep of Song My village, and Capt. Den- nis R. Johnson, one of the intelligence of- ficers assigned to the operation . A spakesman !OI' the board declined to say what roles Walke and Johnson played in the March 16, 1968, action in \\'hich gcores of ,women, children and old men allegedly wei.:e,..massacred at the hamlet of My Lai 4, a part of Sang Jl.1y. Bul Walke apparently was a ground cont.roller for the helicopters bringing in troops. 'Ibe board presumably wanted to question Johnson about a sta~ment la:-t week by Capt. Ernest L. Medina, e<>m· mander of the company that made the Song My sweep, that faulty intelligence resulted in the deaths of at least some civilians. With the alleged rna.!S8Cre continuing to have repercwlSians both at borne and abroad, President Ni.Ion wu certain to be asked about the incident at his 6 p.m. PDT new:! conference. In Saigon, Sen. Tran Van Dong said the Souf.h Vietnamese Senate may order bodies of victims exhumed lf and when Reagan Refutes Unruh Charges Over Influence Gov. Ronald Reagan said person~ who helped elect him to office did so \\'ith no !ilrings attached, he said Saturday at Santa Ana College. Jn anS\vering Assembly De1nocratic leader Jesse Unruh's charge that Reagan operatc!i a government. "of the elite, by the elite and for the elite," the governor !iaid no one has asked f'Or "repayment or any sort o( campaign due bill." Reagan spoke to more than 500 college students attending a conference !iponsored by the Soulhem California Center for Education in Public Affairs. Unruh announcing Thursday that he is a candidate for governor. slngled out oilman Henry Salvatori as one of tJ1e wealthy members of Reagan's "kitchen cabinet." ''I think Jess knO\\'S better," the governor said. Reagan quoted his supporters as telling him after the elccUon, "All right, all"''' have ever asked is good government. There is no string or claim upon you "'hatsoever. The job is yours and all we ask or you is good government." When asked alxlut the possibility of. sludents being turned away at state col· leges due to lack d. space, Reagan said, ''We nave the aboolute declaration by both Uie university and the college system that there Js n o t h I n g in budgetary limitation that's prevented them fro1n taking the ~ents." !\1 iss MacLaine Picked Best Ac tress by 'Film' LONDON (UPI) -The British magazine Films and Filming named Shirley MacLaine &! its choice for the year's best actress Sunday for her role In "Sweet Charity." Jt named the movie "True Grit" as the best western for 1969 and 1'The Night They Raided ~flnsky's" as the best comedy. graves are found. Dong also said he had completed a report on !he incident based on a three-day visit to the ~fy Lai area, but declined to discuss the contents. ''These should be made availat-1 '1 the press just as the photos of My ' rere made available to the world ..:ss," In \Vashington, Pentagon officials at the request of Rep. Richard H. Jchord (0.Mo .. ) showed Army photographs of South Vietnamese civilians killed during the 1968 Communist occupation of Hue, scene of some of the bloodiest action of the war. Ichord said. "I'm deeply concerned about the treatment of the J\1y Lai a!!air by the '>''orld press." The coort.. with Ju.sticea Hugo L. B1d and William 0. Douglas dl...,,tlng, lllld "there is oo rW and 11UbstanUal possibility" the requirement would -.ib- jed sellers to self-incrlmlnatioo became they will "seldom if ever" be coafronted by a buyer willing to accede to the registration requirement. Chairman John Slennis of the Senate Armed Services, Committee and 0Uter3 suggested President Nixon appoint an in- dependent, nonmilitary commission to in- vestigate the civilian deaths. \ Christmas is for giving ••• The "feast" iu fe stive happens when you ~s.;:r..,'i.!i~ offer family and friends all those special good things that make Christmas at your house so very special! Pecan Nut Meats ........... 79• Nut Rolls .................... 4 • '1 Laura ·scudder .•• halves or diced •.. 5 oz. pkg. Crosse & Blackwell ••• your cholCe!-: •• g-oz. Glace Cake Mix ............. . . . 69 ' Cookie Mix ........................ W S& \V ••. choice fruits, heavily coated ••• 16 oz. Nestle's Toll House or Sugar •.• 13~ oz. pts. Date Bar Mix ..................... 43° Shredded Coconut ............... W Betty Croc.ker,. for festive fruit r:i!;c .. 11 oi. Bakers ••• mow white and sweet ... 8 oz. 79 c IOUND 98c .. BOllE r • • • • • • • • Veal Chops .. s~~~::R .. Fresh and young and tender! Enjoy the del icate f Javor that makes veal so ape<:ial! Breast of Veal ........ :ru.~.. .. . . . 69~ Ready for the oven ••• deliciously stuffed v.·ith fil rs. Cubblnson's dressing .•. just bake and l!lervef Veal Cutlet ..................... $1.29 lb. Veal Rib Chops ................ '1.29 .. Leao .•• lork tender and flavorful! Breaded ••• and seasoned just so ! Super fresh. produce nt El Rancho! S11per vn.riefy in our Delica.fU$ert! Bananas .................. 2 Lb> 2Ec Shrimp Cocktail ............... 3111 $1 Chiquitas ••• Central America's finest! L..'lssco ••• 4 oz. ••• just chill and serve I • Banana Squash .......... 4:. Gelatin Salads ................... 3 .. •1 Public Def ender Praised Golden meat . , , serve baked and buttered r Nalley'a ••• choice of shimmering favorit.ea! Grand Jury Applai.tds Legal AUl for Ju ve niles Chief Public Defender Frank L. Williams won a tribute today from the Orange County Grand Jury as lbe 1n- ve.sUgativt panel Issued the first of a Jeries of reparta summarizing it.a 1c- tivllles for 1969. Th< Grand Jury urg<d the Bo.ml of Supervlwrs lo recognize the effort& of Williams s.id his part In establishing the Bar Panel -a roster of attorneys who provide private leg1d Aid through the presidlng juvenile court judge to accused juvtnlles. 111e Bar Panel be'an operations this year under the organu:atlon of the court, the Orange County Bar lwn. and the public defender's of[icc. tt ha.a been hall· ~ by all three pertlcipanll as a succeaa .. and has been batrumtnt.al tn con- aiderably cuttlng down the workload cl. the JJl.lbllo defenda'a office. Also noted by tile Grand Jury !1 the "signilic>at dlon expended by Ille public - defender's o!lice during the investigation of evidence retaUng to the fatal shooting of a santa Ana police officer in Jlr.le, 1969." All age.ndes involved acknowledge th11t the work of the public defender'• office In that slaying cleared Daniel Michael Lynem of any Involvement tn the killing of Officer Nelson Sasscer and led to the prosecullon of Arthur DeWltte League. League is cumnUy a~·aitbg Superior Court trial on UI05e charge.s. "To process th~ evidence," the Grand Jury report notes, "the public defender'1 staff worlred more than 443 houri of at· tomey Ume and IH hours of lnvestlgaUve t.lme ••• from June 14 to July 3.'' The Grand Jury calculaw that tM: tf. fort amounted to 11 weeks of eUomey Ume .and five weeks of lnvestigaUve t.lme expended by a limited department In the period of two 3nd u.ie half weeks. "The tmpact of thls/' the rfPOrt itresses, "is even more 1lgnlHc.ant when it is realized that much of this was volun· lary overlime wllboul pl,!'." • Changes In the structure of the Juvenile Justice commission also meets with the approval ol the grand jury and the panel strongly endorse.~ recent pro- cedural revisions which will limit the terms of the group's seven lay members to two four-year periods. Equally acceptable to the grand jury is the change r.1 the method of appointing commission members. And It bacb tl't., decision to have a oommittet of judges, rather than the juvenile court presiding judge alone, 5elect those who terve on the group. The report suggest., that the probJUon officer should no longer serve u the e1- ecutlve secretary of the com.mission. "Since the Juvenile Justice Commisston Is supposed to advise the juvenile court judge on tho appointmeot ct tho pro- batiro orfictr and b .uppOSecf lo be a watchdog over Juvtnlle JusUco hi tho county, there ls 10me question u to the advisabtllty of having the probaUon or. fleer serve as the exeeuUve ~tary," the report notes. I • HAPPY SOLUTIONS TD GIFT BUYING ARE YOURS AT R IWICHDI ' 1 , ... A galaxy of gift baskets ••• each show your appre~iation to mem· bers of a group. Pick up your copy of our Gift Guide .•• you'll find a wide selection ••• one ot which will be your ideal choice I ARCADIA: Sunset and HunUngton Dr. (El Rancho Conte~ PASADENA: 320 West Colorado Blvd. SOUTH PASADENA: Fremont and Huntington Dr. ltUllTlMUDM BEACH: Wimer 1nd Al&•ncPa (Boardwlll Cente~ "EWPDRT BEACH1 'll'lJ N~ Blvd. l!ld 2555 &11lilalf Dr. Jastl>lutf Wll&t Centlfl • Pricu U. •ff rd Mtm., Tu.u., Wed., Du. a, 1, 10. No .aZu to tkokn. ' •• ........................................................................................................................ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--~-----. DAILY PILOT Violence rPanel Divided Over Protest ~ ~ ~ ,, Narrow Majority Warns of Anarchy if Demonstrations Continue •' " lt ~f. ~~) 0. .;.._ -:=:, %~ :}_ s .. ... ~ ·The University of Delaware's , · art department has discarded its .-:. ban on nudity and says it will al-r. low nude models to pose for its :.: classes. Charles M. Dorn, execu- " live secretary of the National Art ~ Education Association in Washing· lt ton, D.C., said that Delaware is the last state university in the country to disrobe its models. Nudes, he --added, are a basic part of the training of the artist. Raymond J. •. Chin. a s~homore art major, said. .. · ''You can t operate an art school ... _ :.nthout nude models any more : t.~ you can operate .an engineer .. . ~;Ing !Choo! without slide rules." -: . . -..-: A ticket scapler came out on the ~-short end Thursday at Fayetteville, • • Ark., when· he attempted to sell t'vo tickets to Saturday's Arkan- i;;as-Texas football gan1e. The scal- per a3ked $50 each, but the pro~· pective buyer persuaded him to lower the price to $35. 'Dien th e ~ten l:ial customer. a deputy sher- iff, arrested the scalper. • President Nixon gave particles of the surface of Ute moon to each of the governors attending a con· ference the President ca1led on narcotics and drugs. Since time immemorial, Nixon noted, it has been said that "Politicians promise the moon. J 'm the first politician to be able to deliver the moon." the President joked as he personal· ly handed out the specially mount· ed particles. },~. < • Snow 1hoveling n1ea11s shoveling drioeway1 and struggling with chains. • Twin Fall.$, lcf.aho. snow meant scrap- :.1na off a· Wtnd!hfeld for 'pretty Jan ;Burton -but it makes an attractive ~:,ttting for her. • .. The U. S. Custom Burea1' iii New \Vork i.~ givin g its ouni , Christmas sate th is year. It wilt ,, auction off confiscated goods f:l ·j begiluiina Dec. J 1, i'11cludi11 g ll ! 1 iu.ch th i11g.~ as 11 bairs of wool. 700 field liockty sticks, } J 58.000 screwdrivers and a "veru f' i 1 ~ soiled" bl.ue beaded dress. II. "f:<l;;t,...\!5Z!ttj,,1 f 1i \W ,#J 5t91! ;;,;.J • Cottage Grove, Ore .. City Jail prisoners, with the blessings of Po- lice Chief Barney lssel, h a v e painted the cells and hallways in the psychedelic hues of 5Wl•yel· Jow, · sea-green, citrus.orange, mint-green and tomato red: There aren't any windows and the n c 'v pa,jnt ¥ives tbe jail a "little sun- shine,' according to Jssel, v..-ho .~ays a jail doesn't have to be a ''drab, dark place." WASHINGTON (UPI) -A narrow ma:. jority of the National Violence Com· Plission declared today that the United Stat.es faces anarchy if civil disobedience ~ntinues on the scale practictd by the cJvll rigbts movement in the 1960s. The all-while, seven-member majority urged that laws be tested o:1ly by small ~ymbolic groups or .individuals and thaL all others abide by them until they are declared unconsittutional. They ll'Cre represented by a flouston lawyer, Leon Jaworski, as spokesznan at a news con· ference. The six-member minority, including tl1e only two Negroes on the presidential 8,800 More Troops Out Of Vietnam SAIGON (UPI) -U.S. headquarters said today 8,800 GTs have left Vietnam in addition to the 60,000 involved in Presi· dent Nixon's pullout program, reducini; American troop strcnglh to its lo\ve st level in 25 months. This coincided \\'ilh reports or nlnc clashes along the ~ambOOian border Saturday, Sunday and today. with U.S . troops counting 153 Viel Cong and North Vietnamese killed against t h r e e Americam gJain and 16 wounded. The troop strength report 1;aid 4,300 U.S. &erVlce.men left the war zone last \\'eek to drop the nwnber of Gls in Viet· nam to 475,000, tbe fev•esl since November 0£ 1967. It meant the nwnber of war zone Gls i! 8,800 lo"•er than the 484,000 ceiling authorized by President Nixon once his two-phase withdrawal of 60,000 men is completed by Dec. 15. Those 8,800 troops left the war zone at the end of their tours of duty and V.'ere not replaced. A spokesman for the U.S. Command Jssued this statement in answer to speculation that the withdrawal of American troops was continuing past the 60,000 mark w!Ulout an announcement from the White House: "This decline ln strength below the authorized 484,000 results from a tem- porary slowdown in the replacement flo'v and does not represent an additional redeployment i~rement.'' Cong Demand 6-month Pullout Fo1· U.S. Forces PARIS (AP) -A Viet Cong spokesman said today Omt U the United States and its allies agreed to an unCQnditional withdrawal from Vietnam over a :;ix· n1onth period, the parties would then discuss "guarantees for !'iafely during the \\·ithdra\\•a1." The mentioning or a six-n1onth period was a new element in the Paris peace talks scene but the demand for an un· conditional \l,'ilhdrawat -a stumbling block -rentaincd. Previously lhe Viet Cong and North Mietnamese had 11poken of a rapid \Vithdra\\'al over a period of a few n1onth~. The Viel Cong position was put forward by Ly Van Sau at a news conference. He said, "lf the United States says th at it will unconditionally \Vithdra\v all its troops from South Vietnan1 in a period of six: months and the members of lhe American camp follow suit, the part ies will discuss the calendar for the \vithdraw11l and guarantees for security d'uring the withdrawal." panel. disagreed that nonviolent. non· coercive disobedience to law should not be used to test the laws or to dramatize individual conscientious objection. U.S. District Court Judge A. Leon }Ug. ginbotham, a Philadelphia Negro spea~ ing for the minority, said, "l do not be· 1ieve the Voting Rights Act <o f1965) would ever have been passed U \.\'e had gone on a test case basis." Higginbotham, vice chainnan or the commission, was joined ;,, the minority by Chairman Dr. Milton S. Eisenhower, Negro Lawyer Patricia Harri.~. Terence Cardinal Cooke of Ne1v 'York, Dr. \V. Walter ~lenninger of the Topeka, Kan., clinic, and Sen. Philip A, Hart ID-Mich.), 'Whose wife recently was arrested for a Pt'nlagon demonstration. The majority suggested: "That if in good afilh the constitutionality of a statute~ orUinance or a court decree is to be challenged. it can be done effectively by one individual or a small group. \Vhile tJ1e judicial test is in progress, all other dissenters should abide by the law in· volved until it is declared uncoostilU· tional." The majorily asserted : ''lf personal or group selectivity of la\\·s to be obeyed is to be the yardstick. we shall fa ce nation· wide disobedience of many laws and thus Deserters Meet Press a:.1archy." Joining Jaworski in the majority report \Vere Sen. Roman Hruska (R·Neb.), Rep. Jfa1e Boggs (l).La.), Rep. William M. ~1cCulloch ( R. O b i o ) • longshoreman· philosophei-Eric Hoffer of San Fran- cisco, Chicago lawyer Albert E. Jenner Jr. and Judge Ernest W. McFarland of Ariiona . Higginbotham contended in a minority statement that recent advances in civil rights "have not come about-and could never have come about -solely through judicial tests made by 'one individual' while all others in the silent black ma· jority waited for the ultimate constitu· Ul'I Ttl•,ho11 A panel of U.S. deserters now living in Sweden tells newsmen Sunday that 1nassacres, such as al· leged killing of civilians at My Lai. South Viet· nam, occur daily. At ne,vs conference are (left to right) Jad Doucet.le, of Jackson, N.lf.: Jerry Dass of Lake\vood. Calif.: Ray Sansevero of Long Island, l\'.Y., and U.S. author and attorney !\lark Lane \\'ho played a tape recorded interview 'vith a much decorated deserter identified as Ken Stil,vell of Oregon \vho said a search and rlestroy mi ssion in village of Bau Lai in 1966 claitned lives of 399 of 400 inhabitants. Dad Doesn't Believe Susan Tate Killing Informer 'Trying to Talk Her Way Out'? SAN JOSE (UPI) -The father of Susan Atkins, the 21-year~d woman who turned informer .on the "Mamon fan1ily" last \\'eek , 1>aid Sunday he doesn't believe her story she v.•as under 1·hypnotic in· fluence" during lhe Sharon Tate slayings. "l think she is just trying to talk her \l'ay out of it. She's sick and she needs House Committee Slashes Foreig11 Aid to New Low \VASHlNGTON (AP) -President Nix· on's foreign aid program was slashed to a ne1v lov.· of about $1.6 billion t:>day by tl1e house Appropriations Committee. The c01nm.ittee al.so as.sured another brisk battle by approving $54.5 million to sup ply fighter planes to Nationalist China. Economic aid look il on tl1e chin in U1e deep cul~ of about $1 billion inflicted on Ni~on·s original spending ceilings i;ug· f!esLed for the program lllat covers 99 countries. Funds for the Peace C:Orps, foreign military cre<lit sales and an array of other programs bring the overall total in the bill to about $2.5 billion. But outs ide or the direct foreign aid programs the cuts \.\'ere not con.sidered hl':avy ones. help," said f\.1iss Atkins' fath er, who agreed to talk only if promised anonymi· ty. ~1iss Atkins clai?ns Charles i\fanson, leader of the hlppie family, could "con- jure up a vision." }1er attorneys said she v.:as kept under the "hypnotic influence" during the ki!Jings, \1·hich she admitted taking part in. Susan's father sa id she and at lea sl two other members -0f the cult now charged \',;ith n1urder i11 Los Angeles stayed at his ho1ne for 10 days in September, 1968. ··1 thn11ght 1hey \1·erc just a slap-happy bunch of kooks, dun1b hippies -not ki!Ters." he said. "And no\v the horror has come. And I know "·here she's been. Everywhere people died when they \\'eN! there.lam afraid she must be invoh·ed." The father blan1ed his daughter's in· volvement \\'ith drugs and the leniency of U1e court system for her e\'entual escapade v.·i!h the nomadic cult. fie said he tried for three years to have various courts ke<'p his rebelli ous daughter "off the streets." It's Hard, Wintry Weather "She needed help," he saict. "She should ha\'e been put away some¥.•here \\'here help could be given, not turned back out on the streets to go through it all again." Despite his criticisrn, the father said he \1•ished he had a second chance tO direct Su~an's life. He told newsmen: ··1 silOl.1ld have been more finn. deman· <led more. I loved her. , ,and still do. She once did some very beautiful things. but that was a long time ago. J don'l know 1vhat went. wrong. I guess J never will." Take Y ou.r Pick: Snow, Rain, Sleet, Everything Callfarnha PR[Vl[W OftSS.&WEATHE• llJREAU fOR[C&Sr TO J;DDA.M. EST '.l'en1perat11rcs ~I'" l2 Hltf~, !. v. IE1'1V f!IOMll"'f C0111!1I (~di IP'l#d Hith Low Prl(. •lbU~!Jllt~UI •• " •"{P'lo"Oll " " ·" /\tl1nt1 " " ·-·-"-· . , e1~t•sll•ld • • tional determination." Eisenhower streased In a statement to reporU:rs that all 13 commlssioners agreed that violent or coer~lve acts or disobedience to law lL! a lactic to further a political goal, or to force concessions, "are !o be c0ndermed as endangl':ring tlie • vitaJ processes of a Democratic society and its institutions." The disagreement -the first reported In the 18-month life of the panel created after the assassinations of Dr. Martin Luther King and Sen. Robert F. Kennedy -was "solely on the question of non· \1iole-.1t, noncoercive disobedience to law ,'' Eisenhower said. Sirhan Begins -ltunger Strike At San Quentin SAN QUENTIN (UPI\ -Sirhan B. Sirhan, condemned assassin of Sen. Robert F. Kennedy. iS on a hunger strike in his death row cell at San Quentin StatC' Prison . Prison officials announced tlte develop·. ment today as Sirhan completed more than 611.t months awaiting the outcome of appeals on his conviction and sentencing last 1t1ay 21. Sirhan has spent the time in lonely fsolation in Cell 331 a stark CQncrete and steel enclosure on the prison's sixth floor, between two empty cells. Two mesh stttl screens barricade the cellblock corridor 15 feet a~·ay. Sirhan was found guilty of first-degree murder in the shooting of Kennedy last, June 5. 1968 at the An1bassador Hotel In Los Angeles . ·No execution date has been set. pen· ding automatic review and appeal pro· cedures \\'llich are expected to talcl': 1.! least another six months. \\'arden Louis Nelson said Sirhan began refusing his food Friday, after sendin1' him a note saying, "This place ls worse than a concentration camp. I'm going ou a hunger strike." Tn Los Angeles, Russell Parsons, one of the three veteran attorneys who defended the Palestinian immigrant, said ht had nol heard of Sirhan's hunger strike. "I'll call the warden and see if there is anything I can do," Parsons ~id. ''He did that once when he was in the jail here. too. He's sick. The man is ill, you kn?\\'." Parsons, who became somewhat of a "father figure" to Sirhan during the long trial. said he had not visited the prisoner for two months. · Stork Disrupts ~ Vietnam War 1' I •·· .J '" SAIGON (UPI) -A P ai.vvn ti t; fro1n the U.S. 9th Infantry Division u,, ,, recently called off a nigh t ambush r! ! • of lhe Viet Cong to help deli ver a 1, t baby. ~ Spec. 4 Theodore L. Brown of Ballin1ore, t-.td .. \vas a medic ()O duty with the platoon on ambush (' about 3 a.in. Thanksgiving morn· ing when a rifleman told him a f1 peasant \.\'Oman 11•as in labor in a : • nearby hut. I Bro1vn, \\•ho said he had about ~ three hours' instruction in child· ~ birth techniques in medic training in the United States, \\'ent inside i·.: and did the honors. He pul the rest r.~. of the platoon to \\'Ork boiling 1 r.:. \vater to batl1e the baby. { tr· Once the child arrived, Brown " r· called for a medical evacuation ~'. helicopter \\'hi!e platoon members took turas shooing qi.osquitoes ~ a11.•ay from the bab v. f= Brown said lhe Platoon develop-~ I ed an attachment for the baby and I tl several of its members had v.·ritten ~ home for baby clothing. fl "After the baby had been born, t • T \\'Cnt outside and son1eo11e a9ked r l r~ me \1·hat it \1•as ," said Brown. "I 1· l~ didn't even knO\\'. J had to go back I· inside to look. It was a boy." l l \,_i-:. Ma *1<&ft-;:~1p;;;1yry r.. Missing ;,-llll•l'ld ro COMtlt """""lltn •IOP•• te· (11v te )!,"" .SOUlhern C1T1IO'nt1 t.<•~· ~ coe>I Ind Nr1h' ti...,.. L!Kll IJtol• tlf'I 1-. .. "ettd lhroutheul the 1r•~ ,,,.,Ith!. followed l:IY """'' cloudi on Tveodt'>'. e• Tiii LOf An111ti 1rt1 '"''' !!tr!lv ' lt!f Ind .,.r11y clwd\' t001v. wl!h • ~ ' tlte tlo\ldl 1"4 drlu11 ln(rtt•lno In ,,_ 11flirnoot> Ind tvtftl"". Tht hlth '°''' Wll Ol'll't' ,,, Ull ont dl'<Jll'I '"'"' lu""'· The ov1rnlthl low 11 r-lr-....._..J .~:£ .. ,~ '-,-~~---f~~i'.~t:::~~::; 811M•f~k 8ol•• Bo11on " " ... " " • " ... Sol.dier 'Disappeared' Near Hospital ~$<' '°' , 't"' Alf' "1'l'll!Jtton contrtll Ol1trkt I l"fll&"'° U6hl t'°"" ht fl>t bo1ln ' TM u.s. w .. lhtr Bure1 u 1..,.1 •• , .. , .· .. 1;..1rv prtld!t;tt'lf no 11•1cl11!111~11 lh!'0\1911 S1"1nlfy, bl.It tl'!itr11 1, • cllilft(I (ff """""° drlnl1 O!' r1tn 11!•• Jn lhl w"'6i:. T..,.,llettl\/n. lhC'Ullf ,.,..,.,,, _, w 1H1t!lll' 1l!Ortl !lClf• ""'· 'l llMel'>lt 'Wlf"' •M11V tl<Mll' todR'f, l<lth• ''"'"' 19 ,, ~ !ti• ..,,.., ""' t' with medtfliHIMlll"I' turf. Meij"i.;1111• --motflJ' tilt w1tlt ",.ii\ '""" .. to "· OtMr11 _. 11to ""°""' fll1r I I "It"• , ....... f>'efl'I ""' 611 '" """" Vl!lt'fl fe f!letl tl\llt 10 lft fowlr" v1n..,t. $el~lod hl•llt $undlY ll'lf P,.._ e~t.o rn1ri"'""'' ~'' IM.llldt lOlll 81tch +M1. ?t11T11 Monie:• 6'<64, l ur• bllllt ...._ Ml. Wltwl 1:1-S,. 1'1IM• li1l1 J&.,.,. Rlvtr1ld1 , ... ,. Pt!M $...i~ 'iW'f, llllttrtlitld '°'''' ~II °'-~ tlld 51n11 l1rl>t11 •t-U. \.O• ANOfLfS AND VICOUtY- MotllV c~,, wl!I! IC•ll••·H dtlUlt w II.tit ••lfl IOf'lltM llld T11t1d1, """"'"',,. tlttOl'l'll~• Nrfl~ '~""' Tun· ci1v thttllOOI\. LOii' ton11l!I W. Hl11! l UtMl11 6$, Caut•I Mt1.1ltv Ill"~ ... lod•'· Lit~! v1rl•bl1 wt""' 11lehl Ind l!'M)l'lllnt ~ bffl!IM• Int ft'IO'l!IV WhltflY I to 15 1'.llOll Ill IM •IT"-"' t.dly tM lu.1d11. "11tft lodl'f ... CNtt11 ''"'"''turtt r1ftM from 4 '° ... 1"11nc1 len'l"rtlufft ••flit lrcm .. fO 7t. Wtttr t1m1t11tu.-. .0. S11n, /IJaon, '.l'ldes MO,.OA.Y ..... •·1111m. l.1 , 2:4 '"'"I.) TUlSOAY Fltll tlltll ............... I °' 1.m. 7,0 l'lr1t IO• ............... 1:42 1.1"1. 2.J 1.teOl'IO 1!1111 ...... ,,.,,. l~·lttill'. ).I stc:Ottd lllW ,, ... .,.,.., J ·M o.m. l.S Sv11 lltll'" •·O t m, 5tt\ 4·U 11"" M"ll '"'"till 1 m. Stll J.l1 "·'"· ... V.S Sttmntary M11ti of 11>1 MliM l!td wlnt,.,. WWlM• lodlll" •• v>ON Of ~II(!·# ll~t· ,;u t((UIT#d from !ht IOullle'~ Jlox~­ lh t(rotJ !!It Pl•ln1 IO 11'11 UOl!tf Mld'w9tl. A "'l•lult of ftin, l!HI •"'1 lt,tl· I"' r1ln 1111tc1 1111 Nortl'lta'' •Ml ••I" •"'1 fllOW ll"l•d IMO 11'>1 Pttltlt Ntrftl.,,_,l, kllltted JlloW••t r.ltmotntd l•·,1s •"d l'lerl6t, wtlllt ,iter Of' Mrtly CIOvd't' Rl'!d dry W't<lllltr PrtV•litd 11sotwhtr1. Trm11~t8l11.-.1 Jlr(loJfld. Ille nt!lon Wt't 11ner111v cold. wlll'I 1 cot1 front •-!fftdlnt lrom """r Mlcftlf111 t c,•1• n«ff\ffll Llltt H\/tl;Pfl ID Wf\1tlll Vir• t l11I•. AllClll•• cold '~""'' i.ovrrf'd ov1r lh• flOr!l'I P11(lllt <flt" •'WI ll third tt1llt'd ff"Off' '•1t•1ltnd IO 1119 IOl,l!~ffll 1 1~ ol l r•et. Bf"ll'NlllY!!!t CMc11~ C.IP'l(fnnt!I C9nv•r 0.1 Molnu Oetn:ort F'llrb1n~;• For! Wor!I! ~•tine 1-itltfll 11onolul•J "'"''' cu, ... V•tt~ LOI •nttlet Mltml Mi""t.!~11 Ntw OrlMM Nirw Vetk 01kll"d Okl1"Gm1 ''" Orrllhl '·~ ltotl!tl r11~1• Pll!1bu•11! Perlltlld Jttold C:ll'I' ... II tun ·~ $t t •1rT1ento Stl! Ll~t "" "' Oltto j~11 • ftll(ll CO i~tllr ~"""'"' ll'>•r...,~! W11~1~'!t'" .. " " ~ ~ "' " " •• " ,, "' " ' .. " " " ,. ' " " • " " " .. " " ,. " " .. .. " " .. " " " • " " ~ .. " p " " ~ .. " .. " " " " " " " ~ " ,, " •• .. ,. " .. .. , " " "' ·" " ,. ·" .n ·" ., . ... ... .~ !ipa4'e Q11cc11 f\·lelanie \1incz of Jndianapolis,' Ind. bec11me first l\lls~ Outer Space An1erica at \veekend in competition at J~udson. Ohio. She won Sl,000 and right to be first girl to go to 1noon if gov- ernment alllo\\'S it during her re ign. ATLANTA. Ga. (AP ) -A 21 -year-old f\larine from Atlanta, who disappeared a.her he stepped out of a helicopter near a field hospital in Vietnam Sept. 21, is the subject or an intense search. hlrs. James W. Jack.son of marby Alpharetta, mother tlf Lance Cpl. James \V. Jackson, Jr .. !iaid she last heard from hl"r son Sept. 12. and that he sent her a ''cheery. happy-go-lucky letter.'' Jackson i;tepped from a helicopter less lhan 100 yards from a field hospital at Quang-Tri. Vietnam. 11: spokesman for thl': J\tarine Corps reportrd . Col . L. L. Herzog, 6th Marine District director. who is keeping Jackson's family infonned of the progress of the search. said today. "We can't find htm. It's as :simple as lhat." The htarlnC' Corps spoke11mnn !'aid lhe ~arch was hqiun OC't. 3. but hfrs. .lacl<son told newsmen she ri~t ltamed ()f her 50n's Injury Oct. 29 and was noi. 101d or hts disappearance unu1 Nov. 10. Th~ Marine Corps reported that Jack· son was injured during a "nonhortile ord· nance mission" explosion. Jle suffered superficial back lacerations and wa~ removed fron1 the site of the eicplosion by helicopter with three other injured Afa rines . · Henog said three corpsml!n. includ ing ~ne who knew Jackson personally, told 1n''l"SUgatQrs they sa w Jackson as he was led from the helicopt~r by twO mcdlc.5. But he said the field .hospital has llO record of his admittance. Mrs. Jackson said her son had btt:n In the Marine Cwps since .Tune 11158, and that he hid bttn In Vietnam about six months whtn he disapprared. Sh'e said s~ belitves he surtertd shock and wandered away without kno~·ing v.·hat he v.·as· doing. · }fenog said M clues: is' tO lhe Marine•;)" dh1appearance ha\'e btrn rrportcd. • Stitching a Sock for Santa ' JOD EAN HASTINGS, '°'4nl MtMn. '*""""'" ,,. • • ... ,. Chris tmas Gather in g _l'nspirational Topic ' Picked for ·Meeting , . "It Came U~n a Midnight Clear" Is the topic which the !!!!:,;· Fred M. Judson will discuss when he speaks to members of the'Myr. day Morning Club of Huntington Beach 'Monday, Dec. jS, in the She,.. ' ton Beach Jnn. ' Dr. Judson, a humorous and inspirational 1lecturer, 11 •a wetJ. known platform personality in the Southland and during the.P,&W15 years.. has spoken 2,000 times before business, civic and educational groups. He lilis served as minister of lhe Trinity BaptlJt Churdl, San. · ta Monica, for the past 30 years. C.Iub members and guests will gather for the Christmas· meet- ing at 10:30. followed by an 11 :30 a.m. luncheon. · · · · · Mrs. William Summerfield, first vice president, will ,~~uee~ both the sJ>!Bker and Mrs. LeRoy Benson , who will present vocal'se-. lections in keeping with the holiday meeting as she bas done for ·Uie past several years. Accompanying her on the piano will be Mrs-.1'.aul . , Richardson. . · · · · Mei:nbership is open to all area women, and additiomfl ·i.nfohlna.. • lion may be-obtained by calling Mrs. Sherwood Olson, 116U647. Club members ar~ inyited. to bring guests for the program and reserva-· lions may be ll!8de by calling Mrs. William Gillette, 116l-4550. , • · . Mrs. Edward Olsen, bridge chairman, bas announced that tho . For youngsters it \vouldn't seem like Christmas wit hout a stocking filled by Santa, so: as their con· tribution to Operation Merry Christmas, area Girl Scout s are making socks. Assisting Mrs. Melvih Penhall, Assistance League Welfare chaiman, are (left to right) Debbie Hannegan, Terri Thomas and Robbin Sass. The citywide project, sponsored by the league and the Huntington Beach Recreation Cent· er, will supply boxes to more than 200 needy area families. In addi~ion to fund s, a building in which to pack the boxes ts needed for two weeks beginning Wednesday, Dec. 10. Bridge Section is meeting at 10 a.m. the first Monday of ·each month in Sir George's Srnor~asbord and couples meet for 'brid'-e the firSt Friday of each month in the Mercury Savings and· Loan building. Mrs. · Olsen may be 'contacted for reservations at 968-2770. The Prowlers Section plans to tour NBC Wednesday; Jan. 28. A no-host luncheon and a studio tour at a no~al Charge are being ar- ranged by Mrs. Frank Curtis, chairman, who is accepting reserva. · Sem,ifinalists Scan Mailboxes for News Four outstanding stud~nts ·from Huntington Beach and Marina high schools anxiously are· watchin g 'their mailboxes these days. 'They are the semifinalists whose applicaiions for the Americans Abroad program sponsored by the American Field Service have been sub- mitted to New York headquarters for final selection. Contestants from Huntington Beach High are 1'.1iss Gwyn n Geig~r, 16, dau~hter of Mr. and Mrs. William Geiger, Huntington ~ach, a!ld Miss Ellen Lichenstein, 16, daughte r of Mr. and Mrs . Henry L1chenste1n, Seal Beach. Marina High candidates are Miss Linda Weronko, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Chester J . Weronko, Huntington Beach, and Miss Janet Storey, whose parents are Mr. and Mrs. Jack H. Storey. Miss Weronko, a ·senior, is a member of the AFS Club, plays cl~ri· net in 1he band and piano in orchestra. She is a member of the Sparush Club and California Scholarship Federation. Miss Storey, a junior, is president of the Equestrian Club, Girls' Athletic Association, the swim team and CFS. Members of the Marina High selection committee were the Messrs. and Mmes. Albin C. Pearson Jr., Gerald Peasley, Bruce Pickford and Mrs. J ack Kelly. Miss' Geiger. janior class president, is a Candystriper at Hoag Me- morial Hospital , Presbyterian, a volunteer at Fairview State Hospital and captain of the school's drill team. She sings in the youth choir and is ac- tive in youth fel)o\\•ship in the United Methodist Church. She shares her. home wilh her sister, Chris. 14, and brothers Greg, 9, and John .7. Her father is an engineering test pilot for Autonetics and her molher is' president of the Huntington Beach Family Service Auxiliary. Miss Lichenstein is vice president of the AFS student chapter a n d historian of CSF. She plays cello in the school orchestra, plays gwtar, sings and is laking trombone lessons. She is a member of the Girls' League and Youth At"Mon Corps, and served as a volunteer tutor at Oak View Elemen- tary School. . Her family includes her father, on a special teaching assignment at Franklin Junior High School, Long Beach; her mother, who teaches edu- cationally handjcapped, and sisters Jan, 20; Karin, 12, and Martha, 10. Final selection for placement in hom es abroad is contingent on the availability of host famili es. Last year 1800 Americans. were sent to 44 coun- tries in the Americans Abroad program. • -• I.ions at 1142,2839. . Mrs. Fred McCarl Is golf chairman, and golfers tee off ·at th o Mil .. square C<>urse. She mey be contacted at -7 for infonnation.; AFS is su pported by student and adult chapters in each of the area high schools. Thi'! grou ps meet regularly and in addition to raisi ng funds to support the AFS program, their principal duties are selecting American young people to study ab road and hosting the forei gn exchange students who visit this country. UP AND AWAY-Hopes are soaring as semlfina!l!ts from Hunt- ington Beach and Marina high schools wait for the final an- nouncement of selections in the Americans Abroad program spon· sored by the American Field Service International in New York. Ready to take off for unknown destinationa.are (left to right) Ellen LlchenstelD, Janet .Storey, Linda Weronko and Gwynn Geiger. Last year 1800 teenage Americans were sent to 44 coun- tries, based o.n. the avallabWty of foreign host lamille1. · • ' De·n·tist Bites Off More Than His Patient Can Chew DEAR ANN LANDERS : Several years qo my mother went to a dentist for a set ol upper plates. 'Ibey worked fine. Two months ago she began to have trouble wllh her remainina .teeth so she went back to the same dentist. He extracted all her lowers. She paid him $175 in cash. He asked her to leave her uppers ao he could adjust them to the lowers. She was to return in five days for both the uppers a.ld the lowers. Five days later my mother returned ind was shocked to see a 'For Rent sign on the denUst's door. His phone had been disconnected and the receptionist in the ofrlce acl'1>Ss the hall said he had been talking about moving to Alabama. ANN LANDERS ~ My motheT would like to gtt her uppers back. Alao htr t11$, Please answer as soon as possible. A.'1D. 1b1s is an emergency. V .S. DEAR V.S.i AdYIR yoar mot!ter to co.tact tlte local Dtatal Society, eitlltr dty or county. 1'be dt1Ust · wtll bt report.ed to tbe etlllc1 committee. The committee may or may not be 1ucce1sful In belptq your modteT recover btr cbop- pen ud the money, Sbe aboakl DOt waJl, however. Tbe wornaa Deeds teeth aad abe ltffdt them NOW. Uf&e lter to Co to anotlter denU1t at ooee. DEAR ANN LANDERS: Add my name to lhe list of people who never thought they'd be writing to Ann Landen. r •• . . . t wu a widow who manied a widower. I had known him 15 Y<'"'· Arter we married, I discovered his 21· year-old daughter didn't believe In work, and hJs JS.year-old son came home only to change clothes and sleep. I refused to Jet them run me like they ran their father. This cauaed trouble between us. The boy mouthed off at me roce too often and l &old tum to move. His fatbf.r said - "II he goos, I go, too." 'lbal Jlliht Ill three of them lefl _ I bougbt this beautUul home with my first husband'a money. It is a lovely but a Jonely castle. My , pastor 1ald we all flhould have had counseling. t was willing but the others were noL 014 I make a mistake somewhere along the line? JI so, what was Jt? -GRIEVED DEAR G.: You mad< lllne -· Your flnt mistake wu no& kmwtltg ~ chtldren better befwe yoa minted ttitlr father. ne tee0nd mtltake .......... , the boy to move. ne Ullrd mlltalle waa not 1eU1n1 eoanselln1 for f•nell - even~ the othen rtfall!d. And DOW, don't • foartll mlsllke b)' 1•Wll& • dlvewft ore J'OG dt'evtr)'Udas • ,_,. ,....... .. tffed • .......W.llol. 'l'lle lldt w!D lie -before 1oo, .... ,.. ood ,.... hatblad ml1ht llave 1 lli• io...-,r Iller Ill. DEAR. ANN LANDERS; Stttle 10 argument. J say a bridesmaid should be a maiden -oot -.rlly 1 "'Pt. lea.st unmarried. My slater is her wedding and she has uked . friends to be bridesmaids. Three ol, live are married women and ·two children. Whal about thil? · -D DEAR DIX: A bridamold eu linp, • vlriff>, .... vtrpi, Dlll'rled, divorced, a _... -HI, .. Ion& ........ ,_ Aod -MJI d•1 lie -II 1 -.... lart4tomlll. 'l'lle -• wwtdlo1om1H'aplto-..a. Ann Linden will be alld IO help )'00 With your problems. send them to her Jn care of the DAILY PIWf, -~ • stll·addf'tllaed, stamped envelope. -• ~LY PILOT PREC IOU S FLOOR COVERING -Oriental rug expert Karan l\!ehla and Sears &tore manager Joseph Metcalf examine $30,000 Halwai-Bidjar rug cur- rently touring Southland stores. Station Wagons , Vans Carry T 6ys to Needy Station wagom and vans replaced Santa's sleigh when the Huntington Beach Tri- teens loaded 50 new toys of all kinds for delivery to the Imperial Valley Mission last Saturday. Assisting the Tri-teens were members of the group's s po n 1 or Jn g organization, Junior Woman's Club of Hun- tington Beach. Serving as drivers were Mrs. Barbara WJlllams, president; Mrs. Dale Bush, Tri-teens' advisor, Choral G roup Every Monday at 7:30 p.m. memben of the Prospective Aliso Valley Chapter of Sweet AdeUnes convene in Mission Viejo ffigh School. and Mrs. Daniel Drageset, in- ternational &Hairs chairman. The toys, donated by Mattel Toy Corporation, will be distributed to children who before had very little reason .to believe in Santa Claus, ac- cording to Sherri Jensen, Tri· teens president. The young women opened their fall schedule with thelr annual fashion show, a major funding event. They made gifts which were sold by their sponsoring club during its Champagne Boutique, and also made tray favors for the children's ward at Huntington Intercommunity Hospital for Halloween. They assisted the Juniors in their project to stuff Hope kits for the hospital ship, and are planning to &• caroling before Christmas. ,,,,,..-... LOSE 1or2 DRESS SIZES for the Holidays! ........ wllifbi """ _, ,,,,_,.,. _ "" _, tttM-r foctor.. Hono red Artist En tered Field At Early Age The December Artist-or -the- month honored by Junior Ebell Club of Newport Beach was directed into her chosen field by her seventh grade teacher and has gone on to win awards (or her work. Mrs. Henry H. Hill, the honored artist, will present a show in Mariners Library this month. A Newport Beach resi- dent, Mrs. Hill received a degree in commercial art £rom Sa:i Jose State College. The artist utilizes watercolors, oils and acrylics for landscapes and ski and· aaillng scenes. Mrs. Hill is a former top prize winner in F a s h I o n Square Art CompeUtion and llas staged numerous one. man shows in northern and aouthem Calilcrnia. More Dear by Year Orienta Is Prove Visible Asset Today, with ru&m a kin I being replaced by better If you appreciate It, It ap-paying jobs due to economic preclates for you. advances in the Far Eaat, By BARBARA DUARTE ot lfle O.llr '"" llaff Tb.ls bit of Orienlal-90UM1ng Orientals are making a c:Ome- wlsdom, if a shade ungram-back. matical, was inspired by a Describing the United Slates rug. u a "forest for collecton," Or, mort preclaely, Oriental Mehta adds prospect Ive rugs: _ some l,300 o( them. buyers or sellers should make Possibly the most attracllve it a point to trade with reliable dealers. feature about Oriental ru,gs, 1 besides richness and color, ls He cites, as an exampl!, the Giving to Oth ers In Se ason Ag ain The season for giving ls upon us again. HW>dreds of Orange County youth are laced wlth W1certatn futures and a dubious holiday season. But area residents can make Cluistmas truly merry for those in the Al· bert Sitton Home. Contributl0os of clothing and money will be accepted for those in the shelter. Mrs. Kenneth Boston, s~pervisor ot the receiving home, asks that gifts: be delivered. unwrap.- pod. Donations should be made from ThUI'S· day, Dec. 18 throu~ Tuesday, Dec. 23, at Ille home's reception Oesk. A film on procedure, schooling and Sit- ton Home activities has been prepared for showings in clubs and schools. Appointments to view Ute movie. may be made with" Mrs. Gene Peebles at 545-6366. Stanford Graduate To Marry Mr. &id Mrs. P..1ilan Chiba announced the engagement ol their daughter, Kathe r In e Chiba to Frank Norman Man- nen of Del f\.1ar during a cocktail party for 50 friends in their Lagunita home. The prospective bride waa graduated. from S t a n f o r d University and served 11 president of the Associated Wome.:i Students during her senior f'!aT. She attended UCLA and California State College al Long Beach and teaches In the Long Beacb Sehool District. touted by Oriental rug expert, case of a yotmg New York genial and garrulous Karan couple who decided to get rid Mehta who ls accompanying 8 of an old Orle:mat rug given to unique collection currently them as a wedding present by louring the Southland. an awrt. '----------------------' A native or Bombay, India, A dealer was summoned Her !lance is an alumnus o( San Diego State College and served as an officer in U. U.S. Coast Guard . He now is assistant to the city manag« of El Cajon. In somnia cs Preoccup ie d and bolder of n\mleTOU.S film who was glad to give them aed.its as actor, producer, $900. 'Ibe couple were ledmlcal advisor and lecturer, delighted; they rushed oul and 'f1le trouble with Insomniacs, Brain Re9eardl Institute. Mehta .,.,.;,.taim a quality purchased wall-to-wall Whale th 'f1le coople will be marNd iii St. James Episcopal Churcb ooFeb. 7, ........ .,,.._....,,.. ""-· d I wa says a UCLA l'llnlchiatrist, is ver e problems are, Oriental rug should increase in c ... ~ ... '6· 'uc ea er s ,..._. I . all f value at the rate of 11_ ........ even more delighted; he they tend to become preoc-thensc;imruacs gener Y OCUS on ~ ,.. Id th f " 800 t d I h ir Inability to sl .. p and • cent per year. reso erug or,...l, · cup e w t their show little concern for their Re 6e ka h Lodge Thus, a rug can double in Price of rugs depends on sleeplesme.ss. emotional difficulUes. value in 15 years; in 50 years many things including quality Studies on ln5omnia suggest The most common variety Triple Link Club of Mesa it should be worth 3 to 9 times of wool (the higher the grazing that chronic sleeplessness is of insom:tJa is characterized Rebekah Lodge has meetings its original price,. and from the slopes, the better the wool ); associated with moderate to by chronic inability to fall the fourth Monday at 8 p.m. age of SO to 85, It appreciates number of hand knots per severe per s 0 na11 t y asleep readily. Other victims in various locations. Mrs. 11 to 50 times. inch, ranging from 16 to 820; "disturbances as reflected by of the disorder may fall asleep Douglas Morgan at 548-1931 Rugmaking, described as a design, and dye quality made psychological testing, reports easily but have persistent dif. may be called for additiooal "dying art" by Mehta, began from roots, bark, Insects and Anthony Kales of UCLA's ficulty staying mleep. infonnatlon. in the 15th Century as a form other natural sources. 1.""=;;;;;:..;;;;;;;;...;;;....;.;:;;.;..;;...;;;;;;;:..;.;;;~:.;;;;;;.:;;.. __ ..;;;===-----t of social security. D.lring lean One of the most interestin[ winter months, farmers work-rugs 1n the $800,000 Con· ed at their looms, adding to a noLsseur Rug Collection beinf creation that was to take from clrculated among ·Southland rive to six years to cmnplete. Sears stores is an IO-year-old The finished product was Halwai-Bidjar from I r a n added to others in ttie storage valued at ·'30,000. closet, where they remained The rug. was hand knotted in until a monetary crisis arose. Kashmir by a son, his father Undergoing a 90rt of acld and his grandfather over a test, newly-woven rua:s were period of 19 years. The 23-foot placed outside the doorway, in by 171-foot rug is made en- the street, or perhaps thrown tirely of natural dyes with into a muddy lake for a period variation of color from year to or four to ·six months. After year barely discernible. 'The washing. true colors were dtsign, kept entirely ln the revealed and the rug was head of the weaver, continues ready for the mar~tplace. with a natural flow. Rugs reflect the feeling of Rugs in lhe collection, at an the locale in which they are average price range from $800 made, both in color and to $1,200. were gathered from design. The rug also is named Afghani~n. Iran, India and after the area, hence such Pakistan by Mehta and his familiar names as Kashmir, associates, Dilip Mewawala Afghan, Kinnan, Sarouk and and \Volfgang Gu tske. Pakistan. The Halwai-Bidjar and Once utilized as a sort <lf native wea ver Hassan Zadeh traveling king-size bed by will be on hand at Sears. Soutfl desert annies and nomads, Coast Plaza, from Saturd ay, Oriental rugs became popular Dec. 13, throogh Thursday, In the United St.ates after the Dec. 18. tum of th• 19th Century. But ~========;11 war years and depression days sounded a death knell to th e formal drawing room of the Victorian era. ALSO IN Weary, Dearie? Read Bill Leary SF~CIALS your "littlest angel" will love t he tiny tot des igns, a great selection for teens, ideal for granny gowns cuddly soft and warm cotton REG. 59c to 69c YD. VALUES 36" wide 37:d guar. washable RED COTTON FLANNEL great for Christmas decor· ating mantle stockings, stuffed l<>ys, cul-outs. available in vibrant Christmas re<!. 36" wide guar. washable PRINTED SLINKY . KNITS bold, mod designs in vibrant new color combinations on c:ingy, slinky t ri acetate knit jersey. a sophisticated dress up fabric ~«-·-·µ_s_"w-id-th_•~'~~~~~-1-9_8_1 Suittttqs ! BONDED AND UNBONDED VALU ES FROM $3 .98 to $4.98 YD. wools, wool blends a~d synthetics. some bonded to acetate tricot. • PLAIDS • NOVELTIES • FANCIES 221 ! :~~ ... "~~-;,, •i~·=•~~ ........ .......,.....a..~ ; ~~::-.;"··· . • i· RED 15 FOR CHRISTMAS f • 4>--~· , . • ' ' 0 • ., .• RED COTION VELVETEEN ............ 5291 0 . RED BONDED ACETATE CREPE .... sr•, •. ~ • • RED DEEP PILE RAYON VELVET .. 5379 ,.. .: . RED WOOL & RAYON fiELT .......... s2'', •. RED WOOL FLANNEL .................... s2", •. • . . •UT IS 7'r' WIDI, O~IRS •ROM ... to 54" WIDTHS • f '·••:I~~···~~· ····~·~:: .. , .... •~.'!'1--nA,lfM, Q i'1...A .,.. .~... * o ~~i;:~w.,~e""ifll~ •• ·~· NEWPORT BE A CH 430 PACIFIC COAST HWY. 642-3630 (2 Blocks East of Balboa Bay Club) Afffr*lll. ~ Hllll, C..._ CNt'llHw, D....,., 01-..., a..-.. woM, le"f '-':II, H"'°"-a..dl. N. H•llfWoff, OtlltOM, ,.....,_., IOll DI .. •, hftt9 AM, S... ~ S111d1111d, T~ Wlllttlff. 1.i..., .tt. I• ,.._, hcN~ Soll J..e, S111111y.ol•, Wot111t Cl'Ml. () f.: A f' l h. I f-_ ':> s .. th c ... 1 r1ora -c-M... """''"''" lltGdl -H .. 11 ..... lwdi IMO W. 17th STREET 543.9457 SANTA ANA Crlttol •t S•n DI .. • fwy, -545-1516 ,...., et..., .. IM. -lff·llll o,.. Mw&.y nni Prw.i, 11 'tfl t S-..d9y 'tll 6 o,....., ,,,., Tin.. •. -------' \ --·~---fl' •• .,,. ,.,, .... ~ ·---..... ..- Fountain Valley VOL. 62, NO. 293, 5 SECTIONS, 48 PAGES ·= Eight Swim To Safety From Boat By TERRY COVILLE ct ttif O•IY Pli.t Stiff ' ... Ten-foot v.·aves and a dead engine fore· ed eight persons to jump from their 36- root boat Sunday moments before heavy surf pushed the craft through Huntington Beach Pier pilings onto the be:ich. Meanwhile, residents of Seal Beach, Sunset Beach and Surfside watched the octan run through the alleys, streets and aome homes as big waves and high tides combined to give the northern part of the Orange Coast a thorough dousing Sunday. The boat beaching occurred about 3:38 p.m .• Sunday, shortly after HunUngt.011 Beach lifeguards warned those on tht craft not to come near the surfline. C.O.Owner of the modified landing craft, Bob Hayes, 32, told lifeguards: "We we~ fishing with the motor turn- ed off. When '9'e tried to st.art it to mov1 away the battery faJled." Five li!eguards, led by Capt. Doug D'Amell, entered lhe heavy surf and talked the boat passengers into the water as the surf began pushing it toward th• pier. "They were -afraid, at first," said D' Arnell, "but it would have been more dangerous to ride the boat ashore." All eigbt persons, helped by the lifeguards, swam to the end or the pier l't'here they climbed a ladder to the top. "The surf was too heavy and dangUOUJ to swim for abcn," said D'AmelL .Rescued were ~ell, .. Jti&. thrtt.h. ~aughters: Ma'fgattt, §, lte~iiil LUa, 4, or Bell Gardens: Hayes• father, George, 75, of Inglewood: Eddie Brofis, 3.f, co-owner of the craJt; his brother, Harry, 43, and Harry's 14-year-old son, Tony, all of North Holly\\"ood. ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, D~CEMBER 8, '1969 ate DA ILY r 1LOT r llolt ._, Artllw VIP1"4 The boat, slightly battered, was still resting on the beach this morning. The owners are expected to return to salvage It. SURFSIDE COLONY LIVED UP TO ITS NAME EARLY TODAY AS GIANT BREAKERS SWEPT ITS BEACH No serious damage or injuries were counted in Sunday's pounding surf, but more than 50 homes were reported flood· ed in the Seal Beach, Surfside and Sunset peach areas. Residents in Seal Beach said the waves . .,-ere breaking over the palm trees planted Jn the sand and water ran through nearby alleys and homes. City crews and residents sandbagged the beach front area, but the first waves broke through the dikeS, said resldent.'J. Water was reported flowing in Seal Beach as far as Electric Avenue, five blocks inland. "It was rrightening." said one woman, (See STOR~f, Pag' t) Police Round Up 3 Drug Suspects In, Huntingto1i • Three Huntington Beach det.eciive~ raided a Warner Avenue residence at 8:30 p.m. F riday and arrested roor men nn suspicion ()f selling marijuana and dangerous drugs . The raid followed several weeks or In· veS.igation which centered on a popu]ar Huntington Beach bar and nightclub. ac- cording to a spokesman for the Hun· Wigton Beach Police Department. Booked on charges of selling marijuana were David K. Bodine, 23: Steve Vogel,· 23. and Robert D. Boyer. 21. Arrested on M1spicion or furnishing dangerous drugs \\'8.s Ovido A. Cozzi, 37. All are residents of 7831 \Varner Ave. Police conriscated only a small quan· Uty of drugs during the raid. but el"· pta.lned that the arrests were prmnpted by alleged sales over a period ol Ume. Sailor Electrocuted Flying l\lod cl P la ne LONG BEACR (UPt) -Franklin Weaver, 22, a sa1lor stationed aboard U'lfl USS Passumpsic. was electrocuted Sun- day ·when lbe control \lo'ire on a model airplane he was nying touch!d a 12.000 \'Oil power llne. Weaver \\'as pronounl'td dead at a ne.arby hospital. llis wlft. Patricia, ~ Mid a group or firemen pracUcin1 in anothtr section or the park \\'hert the '""' cldent occurred, witnessed the accident, but efforts to revive Weaver failed. Council Studies Giving Shoppers Holiday Break Christmas shoppers in downtm\•n Hu~ tington. Beat'h \\'ill not have to drop money in parking meters if the City Council approves a recommendation tonight. City Administrator Doyle Miller, al the request of the downtown merchants, has proposed that Merry Christmas covers be placed on parking meters through Dec. 25. A request to incrcai;e the rates of the Yellow Cab of Nev.1>0rt Bearh and Costa Mesa which has been studied by the ad· ministrative staff will also be before the cooncilmen for appro\'a l or rejeciion. Proposed increases would include an additiooal 10 cents for each mile to $1 per mile, and an increase from $5 to $7 .20 per hOOT for waiting time and traffic delay. other business before the council tonight 'includes : -An appeal from a decision by ·Oil SuP,erintendenl Herb Day declaring a well near 20th Street and Pecan Avenue an "idle well" and asking that the pro- perly' be.cleared. Making the apPeal is Edward.N. Frtsius (){Oxnard. _ . -A· petillon for renewal ol1!i<li[sm.s. license of tbe Cave bar at Adams Avenue and BeaCh Boulevard by Owner ~1ichacl J . Nuben. -An ordinance banning certain games in city parks excest in areas provided for such games. Included in the ban are baSeball, archery, tackle football, golf. moterboating, water sld.ing, use of fire.arms <Jr flrewcrks, and model alrplane nying. PILOT'S BEAC ll OFFI CE MOVING The DAILY PILOT is moving ti> .Mw and larger qu11rt.crs in Huntington Bea<'h. The new address for the Huntin gton 13eachtFounlain Valley otfict of the DAI· LY PILOT. as of next ~1onday, \\'Ill be 1787> Beoch Bvd. Telephone number will be the same - , 642-4321 -And the office, located on the first. floor of a new office building, win offer the 311rne services as at the present location. Indictment Due Today ' For Seve1i Tate Suspects LOS ANGELES 1UP l1-Se vt'n members of the mystic hippie "fami ly"' lin~d l\1ilh the 53\"agc Sharon ·r;"11c kill- ing and seven other slayings \\Cfr ex- pected to bel ndic(ed 1oday 11t 1hr <:on· c\usion or county grand jury dclibcra· lions. Deputy District Attorneys Aaron H. Stovitz and Vincent T. Bugliosi reported they will seek an eight..coun t indictn1cnl charging seven members of the pscudn- relig ious cult Jed by Charles l\t8'.lSOn ""ilh conspiracy and murder. A dozen "'itnesses were to testify at toda y's secret hearing but it was be]i('vf'd mosl of the evidence against the suspect.\ already had been supplied by attractive Susan Atkins, a mem be r of "the t.Ianson fam ily." Three of the witnescs to be called were ~"ork ~larket NEW YORK (AP) -Stock market pric!es fell sharply and broad1y, lower in moderate trading late this afternoon. (See quotations, Pages 24·25). said lo be fingerprint experts. Authorilics have ind icated one o( the suspects specifically charged, Cha rles D. Watson, 24. who is being held in Texas, allegedly left a ri ngerpri'.1l at the Tate home. Another witness scheduled to be called \1·as Daniel De C11rlo, a former motorcy- cle gang leader who recently testified in a murder trial in Santa Monica. Jle testified Manson directed the slaying in July of musician Gary Hinman. De Carlo reportedly lived for a short time with r.tanson and his "fam ily" ~liss Atk r.1s, also known as Sadie Glutz, leslificd for two hours and 15 minutes Fri· day, telling of her relationshi p with the Jj.year-old J\fanson and others in his group who are accused slayers of Miss Tate and seven other persons. Her lawyer, Richard Caballero, say:i · she still regards Manson "with a mixture of Jo ve. fear and hatred." Caballero said although Manson Is in jail in lndepcnde.lCe, Calif., pending ac· lion to bring him here, t.1iss Atkins f~ars he could "conjure up a vision detrimen- tal to her in'hls mirtd then transfer it to htr mind and then sl1e would be marked," Huntington U1·ge s Schools, City to Build Togetl1e1· A joint J>0"'ers agreement between the Ci ty of l-funtington Beach and the Hun· linglon Beach Union liigh School District ha5 been proposed as 11 means of Hnan- cing projects planned by both entitles. In a letter to Matthew \Veyuker, presi- rient of the school district's board or trustee~. l\fayor Jnck Green sugg~ted lhe agreement to rocilitate financing of the ch·Jc center and' a new high school di!ilric't hea~q\i11rters. ;, A mutual rinance benefit would nc· crue to the city and the distri ct." Green s11ld throu gh the formation o( the joint powers authority, Green 6flid the sale of bond~ by 11 jl)\nt power,; authority \\'Ould re5ull in a saving . In Interest rates. "Olher advantages are that bonds i5sued by an authority are eligible for pledge collateral for public deposits." the mayor continued. The aulholrty is In a better position In rue for federal 8.S!i!lstanee as the! project develops. the mayor also pointed out. The school di strict offices are located on tbc southeast side of 11th Street, ad· joining the l2·acre civ ic cen tff' site on up- per M11in Street Green pointed out that tJ1e city enjoys 11 good credit rating which could f11Cilltale the joint j>owers plan. l·le 8ilid the city is now reviewing the rlnBnclal and lega l ;ii;pect.s or poy-&s·you·go or lc<tst back agreemcnt5 . 1 Traf fie \V reek 'fakes Life Of Young Woman A maUunctioning traffic signal al 1 husy Westminster intersection claimed the life of a 23-year-old woman early Saturd ay "'hen she crashed into another vehicle. Police said Donna J .. Kennedy, 2:1, or 722 1 Plaza SI., \Vestminster, died at Westminster Community •I06pital about three hours after the 2:15 a.m. collisk1n at Beach Boulevard and Trask Avenue. The driver ol the other car, James Ray Foley. 36, of 19745 Inverness Lane, Hun· tlngton Beach, was treated and later released at the same hospital. Officers said the signal was pot out of commission during an earlier accident at Golden West Street arid Trask Avenue, bi,it that unifonned policemen were dlrec· ling tcaffic at the time of the fatal col· lision. , Miss Kennedy was traveling weStbound on Trask Avenue while Foley was head· iOJJ south on Beiich' BoUJevard 'wtien the .smashup oecured, pebCe' said. A rOsary service ,for Miss Kennedy. who was employed as a rrursing ak:le 1at Huntington Intercommunity Hos-pt.al. has been scheduled for 7 p.m. tonight at Dilday's Mortuary. Huntington Beach . Burial will be held at 10:30 8.m. Tues· rlay al Good Shepherd Cemetery, also in HunUngton Beach. ' Mtrrder C4arge Sou ght in Death A criminal complaint cb~g~: an Anahejm hair. ~yll~t W,i~l mur~er 1n. t~e shooting death of a colleague at a Gar'den Grove salon-is being .sought lodly from the! Orange County Oistr'ct Att.orney. ~Ochael J . Stivers. 2.1 of.913 Valley St.. \\'RS jailed Friday after the death of JUchard W. o·Neal, 23, of liOSI MRhogany St.. Westminste r. The victim was fatally wounded at the Pl111yboy Beauty Salon. 9762 Chl\pman Ave., tillegM\y (0U-0wln.g An arguntent Rnd then a stn1gglc wllh R lc1nale <'mploye. ·Today's Flaa) N.l:'. Stoeks TEN CENTS Grenades, ' Gas Used In Skirmish From Wire Services LOS ANGELES -Politt U!inC dynamite, tear gas and hand guns fought a five-hour pitched battle today before subduing a group of Black Panthers bar- ricaded inside their headquarters with automatic rifles and hand grenades. A handful of eight to 10 panthers heJC off a JOO.man police force from the open· Ing of the assault al dawn until lite morning belore surrendering. Three or those inside the Panther head- quarters were report@d injured, none seriously. A force of 300 ofhcers surrounded the building. Police said two were shot u they first tried to serve a warranL The other was hit in later gunfire. A standoff of more than four hours ensued. The raid was one of three on locations ()f the militant Negro organiiation. PoliC9 said they had infOrmili<ln that macltlne guns and other weapons had been stored there and they wanted to serve warrants on two persons. · At one point officers issued an ultimatu1n by bullhorn to those in the headquarters : "Conte out with your hands up or we'll come in." One man came out. Finally Lhe others followed. The wounded officen were not Im· mediately identified. One was reported hit In the cheat and groin. Another was reported hit in the foot and the third in the leg. A IS.block area was sealed off during the confron lation. Police de p Io ye d themselves along "'ide. shop-lined Central Avenue and stayed under cover. The area is south of downtown Los Angeles, near Wrigley Field, former home of the Califomia Angels baseball team. lfomes line adjoining streets and residents clustered on lawns to listen to .. shots and blasts. About 14 persons were arrested in raids 1t two other locations, where-no resistance was encountered. '"Those guys have automatic weapons 11nd they·re throwing grenades,'' a police inspect.or told newsmen during the morn· ing. Officer& said that homemade grenades were then tossed toward police from the building, bursting In the 11ree:L No one was hurt by the grenades. A police spokesman said the bu ildlnl had been sandbagg@d at doors and win- dows by the Panthers. :\ contingent of police blocked off the entire area. Classes were dismisaed for the day at a nearby school. The downtown police building' was put under heavy guard, Officers with shotguns were stationed at every en· trance as a .security precaution. Born1a n to Vietnam WASHINGTON (AP) -Astronaut Frank Borman, commander of the first spaceship to orbit the moon, left today for Vietnam 11 Preaident Nixon's emissary to the troops. Orange Ceu& Weatlter That silve'r lining behind Tues- day·s clouds may. be a damp one. Temperatures, when the sun makes ilS appearance, will be in the low 70's along the Orange coast. INSIDE TODAY You may not bt able to dt· 1cribe "Oh! Calculta!" as gQOd clean fun, b1&C mose of it can bt labeled good dirty fun. See to- doy·1 reuiew on Page 18. l!"'"""'"''""--'R I Only 17 °ri; I l .. ~~!~~!J C111twt111 11 """"' 11 (ltMl!lff , .. 12 c-1r1 11 Nl'*'M -.... W °'-c-f'r 11 c ...... _, 1• l'i.11 "'"" M Dutll ... tic" II '""" t1·ll 1:•1i.i.1 .... ' JIKll Mlrtl ... ff.11 lfl!trtmlllllltlll " '""''-""' II ""'-' ,..,, Ti..ltf'\ 11 -" W'Mlfltt • AMI l."""1 11 M41111tl1 ' W"N...... W w-·· Htwt1 .. lr --------- , -.. 2 DAILY PILOT H MtndlJ, Dtttmhr 8, 196~ Campus Militant·s 'Using' Media • In -. Do teitv1sio11. radio and newspapers preKnt a distorted picture or c•mpus disturbances because they are being "used" by n1iUtants ? This question v.'as debated Friday by J.l'"·s representatives and coJlege pro- 1essors Friday during a conference in "-Anaheim. :·· Some nt\\'S representatives readily in· .Gcated th ey felt they had been used. But _;lflcy also took the professors and college !,administrators to task, asserting they fail ed to provide infom1 ation that could J;i.alance the news picture. • .' ~ Don Moz.ley, managing editor for CBS ~.'r.adio in .San Francisco, said, "One of the ·wstakes of modern journalism is if somebody says something provocative it ;• ·~·- 1•'1•0111 1•nt1e ~TORM • • • ... ' . I ... ':Who sa w cars shilled by Lhe surging ·~ ·}l·ater. -;;_\raves \Vere breaking from fi ve to ~ix :f.ffl high around Seal Beach and Surfside with a ·tide of about seven fee t. Waves ·reached ten feet in height along Hun - lillgton Beach, but long stretches of sand pJ"O!ecled the a_rea from any damage. Pounding surf broke and flattened several palm thatched su nshades at Surfside, most of them standing six fee~ high above the sand. .. ' " Storm-born Surf Gives First Test To Ne,vport Groin Six-foot breakers ridlng a high tide gave Ylest Ne\vport Beach's groin and uulhaul area its first acid test this moriiing and the beach held up relatively "''ell, officials said . But the surrounding streets and homes. 'tl'eil used ta the surges of brine, were flooded as usual for several hours , and It f.:ould well happen again tomorrow morn- ing. The surt, pounding the beach during a 1e.ven-foot tide, chewed away the turn- around road near 36th Street used by the heavy sand hauling equipme.11. Tha"t will have to be restored before the rigs can drive again. City marine officials said tomorrow 's morning high tide sh'ould reach seven feet 11gain. but reports said the surf is ex- pected to subside a bit . They raled the possibility of more heavy flooding as a tossup. The porUon hardest hit in Newporl thi-' mprning was near 36th Street, wher• 11bout 40 feet <>f beach was eaten away. With it went toM oI new sand dumped by the haulers in recent weeks. High sand berms built at the surf line to protect the haul road and the street_, gave ~·ay in thal area, and Seashore Drive and several cross streets were elogged with sand. City crews had removed most of U1e land by ntidmorning. "\Ve're really glad we had i;o muc:h 1and on the beach to si.art with," Cit.v f idelands Coordinator George Dawes 1aid. "We all agree that the area far ed prel- 1y well under some relatively extreme conditions," he added. He said a specific time schedule fnr ~epair of the end of the haul road t,•:ould be worked out by the Army Corps tJf E:iigineers this mor.iing . Bob Hope Opens Tour Of Bases in Berlin 'BERLIN (UPJ) -Co1nedian Bob Hope 111-ill open his annual ()verseas tour of Afnerican military o\'erseas bases with a performance at West B e r I i n ' ~ Deutschland Rall Dec. 17, the Army an - aounced today. His troupe of 36 pcrfor1n ers \.\'iii include r.erman actress Romy Schneider, singer ::Onnie Stevens. f\.1 iss \Vorld, and IA~s Brown and his band. DAILY PILOT ll obe rl N. W11d rrto•d~nl •rid P\oltlhl~tr J1tk R. Curley \!t<t Pra•otf'll i nf Genttfl M1n1tCI TJ.•111lt k r1vll Ed1tw T~o..,11 A. >J11rpl.;nt M 1111tfl'it (Gl•or >lhe•t 'W. •~i., A"o<>lll f<111e1 H••tl"9t•11 ,,,,11 Ollie• l tJ9 5th Str1tt µ.;1;.,9 Addr•1i= r.o. I;• 170, t~•~• OtMf Offl,11 "''""" ~~1c11: ~11 1 w.,, e•lll'I• •oi.••f'oo•·• toot• Mftt : 1)11 Well 81v si, .. , LnlfN aA<ll: 2'2 f-'1Cll ••t'•• 041V•' fl!L,.O f, .,,11'1 "MUI 11 t c;.ml!<1'lfl ••• /...wo·P<CM. .. o.yl>l•tflt11 ti••'• t•t~•I _;,w lllf on -••If dll .. •· fDt Hun"~'"' 8t.-di. J -1111 Vll"Y• COii• MrU. N~1'· JAtl •u t fll I r.II L1~u11<1 9•~~n, •" woln 1,.. ,,.1eno11 tO•I ..... O•tntf Cff\I P\>&11•~· '"" C-llY prlntlnf ''""'' lff •I 1'11 Wt>I 8 -ibrll •1•11. IO Wt't" e "6Cft, 1~0 J)t l'>ftl llov ~lftt!, (fl~ll MUI T.,tflli.n• 171•1 642..(l!l frem Wn1tt1ln•I., C•ll 140-1220 Clet•lrl•f A4rwtltlt1t 641·1471 (WYfltl'll, "''· Or1nor .(NII 1'wbl1~n1nt '-"""""~ ~· _, 1 •11• 1to,"Oiii/11•11<ent. t<f1tofl•I mot!•• ~ td•tr'~f""n!• "'"'" '"''V "° .... u111 .. •'"'°"' Uf("'I ~ff"'•n­CI te~•ll•nl II •'"• ~"" ••••1 ter°""' <>• 11 •• •i. .. ur• l f ot'I o"<I CU'• ,_,,U C1l •v• t t.lf t<tr C.• "'''"'' V(t '"l•ll'IV I Ir• ••ll I', .. ""'°''"'Y' ,,.a1•••' 11u•i..111r,_, ~'.:I "" 1•· •- \ • Is news, even if it is wror1g. "IL Ls human nature lh1l reporters and editors can be lazy and submit likt lambs to news conferent-es that t'Ontaln nG llt'i\'S." Managing editor or the Santa Y..1onlea Outlook, R. D. Funk, said his newspaper "responds to c!ues that something is going to happen and there you are, trap-,. ped, and you know it." The self criticism was offered by new:ii n1en at Califomia Teachers Association·s annual conference on higher educa tion . titled this year "Revol ution an d Response." , Bul the news men also pointed out they do want lo pre sent balanced reports of campus occurrences and they need more • help for professors and administrators to do so. David Horowitz, education reporting speclallst for NBC television in Los Angeles. said to get balanced stories he must constan tly fi ght an .. academic defen;;e mechanism." "t he problen1," he said . '•is ad- n1inistrators refuse lo talk w h i I e militants, \.\'ho are the \\'Ould-be campuli leaders, do talk. \\'here are the educators "·ho t'ou!d plaee Lhe conClict or con· troversy in perspecti ve'! 1'hey are unavailable," l!orowitz said. f'w1k told the professors, "You people are part ot a political process. You must slate your case clea rly or you lose the ball game ." • BATTERED BOAT BEACHED IN HUNTINGTON Shooting tke Pier Pilings Is for the Boards Storm Surf Scours Sand • From South Coast Beaches An eight-foot storn1 surf scoured san~ fro1n southern Orange County beaches and sent waler up under Lae:una's Main Beach Boarch'l'alk this morning but ap· pareot!y did little or no cl amage. F:l ~1orro Trailer Park, occasionally 1nenaced by high \\'aves in the past, fared \\'ell. Bill Peyton~ one of the owners, said rhe ang le of the \vaves s~med to have been C'Xlrcme enough to mitigate thei r forcr. •·They eil her get us good or 1hey don 't £el u.5 at all and we've been holding ()Ur PANIC ()Wn pr etty well Lhis time ," said Pey ton . L11guna Lifeguard Lt. Eugene DePaulis said the \\'aves \\'ere eroding the ~1ain Beach and other Laguna beaches but this is normal. The sand returns later. \\laves were running about eight feel duri ng 1h<' nlorning high tides. Cap!. Phili J> Stubbs, San Clemente guard, reported no da111age and little surfing ac· tivity there. He said very litLle surr n1ade it ove r 111e breakll'ater at nc1v Dana Point Harbor where guards v.·ere keeping " 1\•atchful eye on 1veekend fisherm en. Spreads Anti-drug Group Gains Volunteers By TERRY COVILLE 01 ·~· 0•11, ~lltl $11tf J\1rs, Carlton Hinz is a Fountain Vall e~· 1,1othcr \.\'ho recently launched a new :inti-drug group ailed PANIC tParents Anti-Narcotics Jnformation Center). Her grou p came out swinging against ~he local schools for allegedly allowing a heavy now Cl! narcotlcs on campus. She proposed such tactics ;i.s taki·:ig chil dren from the local schools. picketing school~. p:i ying school taxes under protest and ex- erting exlren1e pressure on sc hool boards. "\Ve did resurl to a ll tlle sensa- tionalism at first." she now admits. "bul h served the purpose of arousing citizen~ ta the need to fight the drug problem ... At le~t 10 Fountain Valley citizen~ "'ere suffi ciently aroused lo give full sup· port to PANIC and anoU1e.i· 50 ha\'e pledged at least partial help, says ~1 r~. Jlin:.:. "~ly co111plaint aga r.isl lhe schools.'' says ~1rs. Hi nz. "is nol that they are a\IO\\'ing drugs on can1pus. but they re- fuse to adrnlt I.hey have a drug problem." She has now cnerged her group \l."ilh the Human Outreach Council of Santa Ann. founded by ~1rs. Dan Duncan, and tht lr first order of business is the establish- ment of Jobs for Teens centers in at least seven diffCrent Ora-.ige Coun ty citi es "1/ we can give these youlhs ~01nething tn do. tha t might at least help,:' Sl!YS f\lrs. Hinz. The Jobs for Trens Cr.nters are no"· vpera ling -out ()f the living rooms of lle.ven different mothers -in Fountain V:illey. J~unUngton Beach. Santa An3 . fiard~., Grove . Cypress, Anahrlm and· Buena Park. flours arc from 1-4 p.m. 'l'be f'ountal n \'alley phone nu mbtr 13 839-7297•. to.1rs. Hinz. and Hun lington Drach1 839-4574, i\1rs. Lois Londe"n. "The reponse hss been very good. i!J1d 1' ... only started last \\Ccl.:.'1 ,so~s ~lr~ lhnz, a woman very serious about her µursuil. "Next projects we're looking to are problc1n centers for the teens and a hot line for telephone help and advict!.'' \Vhcn asked ·why PANIC doesn't join n1any or th e similar groups already established, Mrs. Hinz explained: "The current Help Line in Huntington Beach ah-rady has more phone calls than it can handle, but we ha ve been talking \\'Ith that group. The Jobs for Teens is an outgrowth of YES t Youth Employment Service) whi ch no longer <'xis ts under ROVem1nent sancti on. 1 also think the Youth Coalition in Huntington Beach is a tren1endo11s effort. .. !Y.rs. llinz al so took note or the pro- po~cd cornmunil y hospi tal in Fountain Valley a11d expressed a desire to :sec a "crash pad.. in it In handl e hard narcotics cases. "You know. the only place someone \1'hO needs medical att cnlioo f()r dn.igs t'an ga is the Orange County Y...1edical Center's crisis center," she noted. i'otrs. Hinz states her goals in a straight- forward manne r; "I \l'as lucky to raise ()lle child without her t11king narcotics. I have three morr. -Ages 9, 7 and 6, and I don 't \\•ant them to b~ U) a position ()f being forced into 11arcolics. If s already a big proble1n, I JUSt want to start figh ting lt before it get.s 100 big." Boo~ter l\Jeeting Set ~l arln~ lllgh School BOO.'iler Club mem- b~rs "111 mret at 7:30 tonight in the: tcachi!rs caftlerla. Haskctt-1111 a.od 11Trs11in.i; coache! \\'ill hr present and rtfr ... ~hments "l'.i U be scr1·- "' One prole1aor satd, 11 A lot of UI are old· fuhloned siules, We haven't the courage to atand up and speak like the militants. We worry about ou r house &•t· Ung bombed." Another pr.ofe.ssor remarked, ''Many <1f us still have the suspicion the media are sensation seeking. This suspicion is deep- ly ingrained in us." •·1r you cooetntr,11te on what you iiiay and v.•hat you think there is no reason you .shouldn't say it with the press around ," Horov.'itz responded . "You talk about acacle:mic freedom, freedom to speak. \Vhat we are dealing wtth is defensive tducators." He said, •·1 go on campus and l'm like: a Fuller Bn.ish man. l ha\'e to spend Harbor more time Milin& the idea fm &olf11 to be objective and fair then doini reporting." "Why should you leave your desk and compete to be heard with people of na responsibility?" N:ozley posed a question. ·•'f'he anS\\•er is because that is the way things are done today," he advised. "People lie to the news media more lhan they did a generation ago. ~Y play us for suckers. You should be pt'ompt and \•olunteering with the truth. You are com· peting with opponellt! of no moral substance." ''One problem is the caliber of men you send out to cover stories," complained a professor. Position •·A repott.er may come in unprepared, thia is not unusual," said Mcnley. "\Vhen dealing with him pu t }'Ourself in the same position he is incommunica tins: 11.'iUl the public .. Don't give him a 2S.page press re!N.Se. Practice the art of con· clensatlon, simplicity and get to the heart of the matter." "You cause n1ore troubles fo r us al schools than you help us.'' ch allenged a pro!es"sor. "\Veil, people: thought the French revolutian ntight die down if it waa1 lefl alone, but it didn't," said 1'1ozley. "Thtt same goes for the unrest on <:ampus, it isn't very ilkely any more that it will die <IO\.\'n.·• Asked Huntington, Mayor Presents 'f.!f!o Alternatives Orange County cities are being asked to make a decision by Jan. 8 on a future League of Cities position on the Oranie County Harbor Di$trict. Huntington Beach Ma)'.or Jack Green, president of the county -league seCtion, has proposed alternatives to the city councils. They are: -Developing and promoting s tate legislation for a vote by the people ()n dissolving the district. -Joining with the Bnard of Supervisors in promoting the establistµnent of an in· tegrated special District of Harbars, Beaches and Parks with responsibility for the total recreational program in the county. -Green points out that Assemblyman .John V. Brigg! "(ft..Fullerton) told the supervisors Nov. 5, "In the event you gentlemen turn a deaf ear ta the recom- Valley Police P1·ohing Mystery Telepl1one Caller A rash of phone calls in Fountain Valley, with the myst.erious caller asking for information on children , is in no way connected with the schools. says Mike B1i ck. Superintendent of the Fountain Valley School District. Several residents reported such calls last week, said Brick. The caller, they said, refuses to identify himself, ooly saying he is conducting a survey. \Vhen asked for whom, he hangs up or simply doesn't reply, added Brick thi~ morning. The guise used is that a survey lor the schools is being conducted. The caller then proceed to Inquire about children of the household. Some parents who refused to gi ve in· formation found later that t h e i r neighbor s had been called and had given inforn1ation on all the neighboring children, said Brick. Brick suggested that no information should be given to callers who refuse ta identifv themselves. ''VY1len our district uses i.he phone we always iclentify ourselves,'' he said. Police are currently Investigating the matter along with a report from the 1-~ounlain Valley Boys' Club that someone is fal~Jy using their name lo sell magazine subscriptions. mendalion of the: Loca1 A1ency Forma- tion Commission (LAFC) and the le•,Ue's plea then l am committed to put this to the legislature in January. "However I will da this only at the re- quest, by formal resolution of the League ol Cities." · Green pointl out that the second alternative, "might, at first glance, ap- pear to be a reversal of the league's posi· tion, but certain advantages might be ob- tained should the city councils c·onside r this approach in depth." He points out that the supervisors aclopted a re salution Nov . S which in- cludes two objectives in line with the league po11ition. They are including the entire county in the taxing area of the Harbor District, and COl\S()lidation of harbors. parks and beach~s in an in· legrated operation. Green also suggests three addition al steps that could be taken by the supervisors: -The Harbor Commission membership could be expanded to nine. with five ap. pointed by the SUJM!rvisors and foOr' by the league. -The independen t taxing auth ority· (')f the district could be ren1oved. requiring fu nds from the county general fund . -The district could be required tn rollow the provisions of state la~ re· quired of the county for incurring bonded debt through a twi>thirds vote, instead of a majority. The league president concluded, hThis three-year problem needs to be settled. We have too many other matters that re-- quire city and county cooperation l() pennit this dispute to further pre-empt undue tim\and energy." Deadline for Christmas Decoration Coritest Near Entries are noW being accepted tor Huntington Beach's annual Christma:i; decorating contest. Deadline is Wed- nesday. Dubbed "Christmas City" this year'!{ contest is sponsored by the city and coordinated by the Women's DivJsion of the Chamber o! Commmerce. Entries may be made at the Chamber office, 962-6661. Information needed in- cludes entra11t's name, address,.telephme ~umber and category entered. Mrs. Lorenzen ' Funeral Slated l"unera\ set\'ices for Mrs. t1 inetta l,orenze11, 77, a long-time Huntington Beach reside nl ~·ha died \\1ednesday, \1'e.re held Saturday at Smith's Mortuary. J.nurnment followed at \Vestminster !\femorial Park. I\t rs. Lorenzen iJ survived by her daughter. Dolly Fiddyment of Rose ville. Calif.; her brother. Lester Ritt.er, oC Tili nois, and three sisters, Mrs. Atlanta Fuhnnan of Kansas, ~liss Gladys litter of Arizona, and Mrs. Chancie Kaye ot lnglewood . Thirty-eight trophies will be awarded ln 10 divisions at a special banquet to be held at a date to be announced later.: , In addition to 12 grand awards and 2S special awards, a single entrant \Viii be selected for the s .... ·eepstakes award, i c· cording to Women's Division chairman Carole Ann Wall. Categories include best o u l d o a r Christmas theme (two grand trophies); best outdoor children's fantasy (two grand trophies); best outdoor religious display, best outdoor tree, best mobile home display, best indoor display vislbl"e from the street, best nflghborhood group, best merchants V.'indow, best COfrt' mercial, school or civic display. Judges for the contest are f\.1rs. Helet1 Stewart, past president of the Women 's Divisi()n ; Bill Woods, president of the Chamber of Commerce: and Ollin C. "Jack" Cleveland, city director or building and safety. : The conlest is sponsored by loc•1 businesses who will finance the purchase of trophie s and stage the winners ban· quet. Participating are Signal Oil & Ga'S Co;, J\lercury Savings & Loan, Southern California Edison Co., Huntington Beach Co., Huntington Center, Montgomery Ward. Jolly Ox restaurant, Harbour Volkswagen, Rainbo\v Disposal Co .• J\fcDonnell Douglas Astronautics COT}). THE BIDTIQUE HAS SOMETHING FOR EVERY. WOMAN ON YOUR CHRISTMAS LIST lf shai 'i a te•n•9•r, consi der• ~icky outfit by Tootique or Jody, compl•t• with 1 fringed sc1rf, boutique . . . . jtwtlry •nd • Ooppy h•t. meyb• she's a young wom1n-1bout•town ..• Denist elotl':es ore tho right thing to help hor conquor tho wor ld. perhaps she's• more mature type •.• Don Scphistic1t1s' nemt dascri~11 the look .. 1sy •le91nce, quiet sophistication. . . . . •nd don't for gtt grondmo. Our BIDTIOUE occouori•s, from cam•o brooches to fringed shawk to llem1 slipper" will help her bridge the f•shion g•p. SPICIAl 1 HADLIY CASJiMERE SWEATERS -40'/o OF F ~b BIDTIQUE 1467 v;, Lido -Newport Buch -T elepho•o o7l-~5 I 0 Parking for 11 meny c1rs ., you own ' • ,, .. .. ... .. ( •/ •• •, ->• .. •• ·-# • ,,. ••• 4 . • . • • • ....... ~J . ...., ... •.; ... .,. .,..,...""" ~ .... Laguna Beaeh , :YOL. 62, NO. 293, 5 SECTIONS, 48 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONO>;Y, DE.CEMBER r,. '.1969 a e ant .,·· China Releases Lagunan Reds 'Preparing for Total War,' Captive Says From Wirf: Sen1cet Mabiland. China authoriUes released a Laguna Blach mR.1 held as a poeaible spy for nearlJ a year Sunday and he and a traveUnc cunpanion brought word to the outside world that the regime Ls prep&r· ing for total war. Simeon Baldwin, 56, of 1359 Cliff Drive. and Mrs. Bessie H. Donald, 47, a secretary with hiii: Hcmg Koog manufac· turina: company, said the Chinese Com- munisLs 1e.1erally treated them well. The pair, captured la.st February while on a 40-mlle yachting expediUon from Hong Kong to the Portuguese island col- ony or Macao, had a taste of life com· mune-style during their captivity. Mrs. Donald wu even offered a teaching position at Canton University when sbe claimed she had been im- prisoned so lo:ig her job in Hong Kone \\"ould doubtlessly be gone. Baldwin, v.·ho owns an aircraft com- ponents manufacturing firm in Hong Kong, called his wife, Marjorie, at the Laguna family home Saturday (PST) after reaching Tsing Yi island aboard thei r yacht, the· Morasum . She said he told her nothing .she hadn't pretty much kno\v,1 since U1e selzure-at- liea of the A1orasum and two other yachts last Feb. 16, but she e:xpects him to return to Laguna Beach quite: soon. Others in the group of 15 yachters v.•e:rc quickly released after being halted by Chinese gunboats. but the t~·o Americans -who at first tried to hlde their na- tionality -faced longer ,detention. BESSIE PUFFS CIGARETTE AS SIMEON MAKES CALL 'Foolintt Fi,,.. After IQ Manthe Behind S.mbao Curtoin Tb'ey were kept at first, al a locatiow about 10 miles from A1acao while techni· cians meticulously dismantled and u:- ambed navigational equJpment aboard -. the boat as possibly for espionage. ac· Three Marines Wounded tivities. They were later incarcerated at t\\·o different communes, whtre the treatment was genera1ly good, with one minor ex- ception. In San ·Clemente Battle "In one commune, there were some thre~ts made and the guards stared at you through the windows for hours," said Baldwin. "They followed you everywhere. A I9-year'1ld Camp Pendleton A1ariM ts reported in satisfactory coodition today a-t South Coast Community Hospital in South Laguna after undergoing surgery for an abdominal gunshot wound HUS· t.aJned in a San Clemente shootout late Friday. Dennis Fisher was one of three young Marines wounded in a street fight in· volving five Marines and a 15-year-0ld Los Angeles girl Doctor Assails Orange County Medical Board By TOM BARLEY Of 1M DllllY ~1191 Sl•ff A Sacramento neurologist who claims he w~ drlve:i from Orange County by restrictive practices ef the Orange Coun· ty Medical Association today alleged the group is "a sinister organizatlon 1uf· fering rrom several forms o t IChliophrenia and afflicted with delusions of grandeur." Al.so wounded were his brother. Gary Fisher, and John J, Fiore. Both .... ·ere taken to the Camp Pendleton hospital for fl"eatmenl of gunsh<f. \\'ounds in the arm. Booked by San Clemente police on charges of attempted murder was Leon Brown, 21. His girl companion, whom J)olice .i;ay was reportedly his Cousin, also was placed under arrest on suspicion or carrying a eonctaled weapon. Police aaid the 10 : 15 p.m. shooting al El Camino Real and Avenida Granada apparently w~ apark~ when Brown a.nd the girl walked past a group or four Marines ltandlng outside a liquor store. One of the four made an insulting remark and an argument started, leading to a fist fight. Brown il accused of pulling out a .22 caliber revolver and firing several shots, three " which inflicted the wounds. · When police arrived, the report states, the girl was holding the weapon behind her back under her sweater. Stork !tlarket Even into the bathraonu., "There was no privacy. You lived in a glass cage." He aaid the reds built screens aroo.id them each time they ~~e moved. "I asked if they expected the Se venth Fleet to st&1n up the Pearl River and rt:3CUC us," he continued, "but they didn't think that was very funny." Generally, he .sajd, they v.·ere \\'ell treated and their captors stressed they do not dislike Americans as such , only the U.S. goVernment itself. "There are preparations for war everywhere," he added, "there are roadblocks and militia training. The Chinese told me they were preparing against American and Soviet invasion!." He had nothing to read during captivity but a 1.500 page volume en navigation, while Mrs. Doriald, estranged wife of telev:lsion actor Pettt Donald, was given stacks ()( propaganda materials. One condition of release by Peking rulers was admission of guilt for the alleged crime cl. accident.ally straying io- to MainJ.and.controled coastaJ waters. "We r.epeatedly wrote confessions ~ause the Otinese said they wanted reWt'.rdirlg ol ·the confessicns to their undentandlnc," he tokl newsmen art.er -------------" reachini ;"fteedclm Sunday, Hong Kong NEW YORK (AP) -Stock market llme. .• prices fell sharply and broadly lower .in ••After U1c Chinest authorities con- moderate trading late this afternoon. cerned had n.amined and verified the (See qootatioos. Pages 24-25). facts, the two Americans admttted their Stocks dropping in price outnumbered mi.takes of trying to cmceal their idefl. gainers by more than 3 to 1, a w:icterunc lity and intruding into c:runa11 territorial cl the earllef' margin. (See LAGUNAN, P11e l} DAILY ~It.OT Sti ll ,Mt• Collided lt'itla Slide Freak accident lalc Saturday night on P acific Coasl l·lighu·ay al In- famous El .Morro curve left Los Angeles couple shaken and injured. Lynford, 28. and Susan \Viley, 27, "'ere northbound on Coast l·ligh· \vay about 11 :40 p.tn. \vhen they ran into a landslide 'vhich covered northbound lanes. High,vay Patrol offi ce rs said \Vilcys must have arrived at point of slide just 1noments after dirt and rocks from cliff tumbled onto pavement. Storm Surf Scom·s Sa11d F1·om South Coast Beacl1es An eight-foot storm surf scoured sand from southern Orange County beaches and sent water up under Laguna's Main Be!t.ch Boardwalk this morning but ap-- pan!nUy did little or no damage. El Morro Trailer Park, occasionally menacW by high waves in the past, rared well. Bill Peyton, one oI the owners, said the angle of the waves seemed. to have been extreme enough to mitigate their force. "They either get us good or they don't get us at all and we've been holding our O\\·n pretty well Otis time," said Peyton. Laguna Lifeguard Lt. Eugene DePaulis said the waves were eroding the Main Beach and other Laguna beaches but this is normal. The sand returns later. \\'aves were runnine about eight feet Exposure Charge Jails Marine An 18·year old Camp Pendleton ~1arine was arrested In a Laguna Beach restaurant early Sunday Ql1 charges of In· decent exposure and suspicion of being under the inOuence of drugs . Ans\\·ering a 1:30 a.m. call to 1600 S. Coast Highway, officers found a witnes! holding on to the suspect, Carmine John Ycdice, who police 18.ld. w;is nude from the waist down and struggling to remove the rest of his clothing while talking in· coherently. The ycung Marine was book· ed mto the Laguna Beach jail .• during the morning high tides, Cap!. Philip Stubbs, San Clemente ·guard, reported no damage and l\Ule surfing ac- ti vity there. lie said very Jillie surf made it over the breakwater at new Ot1na Poinl Harbor where guards \\•ere keeping a watchful eye on weekend fishermen. Waves Continue To Ravage Coa st; Beaches Braced Monster waves driven , by 11 Gulr or Alaska stonn combined with Ngh tides. will contiriue to · ravage the coast of Southern California for at least a few more days, the U.S. Weather Bureau warned today. Police, firemen and even private citizens banding together to rent heavy equipment and construct sarid and earthen barricades were brac{ng for another onslaught Tuesday morning. Breakers ranging up to 12 feet high in some places caused extensive flooding in at least five communities, causing severe damage at picturesque Rincon Beach near Ventura. A total of 39 homes were flooded there -tw o sustain ing major damage -and a fire station was evacuated by 38 men as the tidal waters surged ovei-normally dry and protected land into the building. Dr. Ted Thompson tesuried be.fore an Assembly aubcommiUee in Santa. Ana alleging lhal Or. }farold E. Day of Capistrano By The Sea Hcspital has for iBOme years been the target or a cam· palgn by the OCMA lVhlch has succeeded to the point that the Dana Point psyc hiatrist is restricted to practice from his own home. Thompson allegrd the OCMA 1s being ••controlled by an inner sanctum "'hich has climbed over a mountain of sick peo- ple." Seven Facing Indictments Sand. seaweed and foam littered lengthy stretches ol Pacific Coast HJghway and traffic was backed up fer mlles throughout the length of U1e afnicted coaslllne. The four-lane \horoughf1re was hit 1'ardest aloog the low-lying stretch (See WAVF,S, Page ll And hie predicted as the hearing gol un- der way today that "It will t11l;c more than Clrial lawyer) F. Lee Bailey to bail them out of this present me56." He~ring evidence drslgncd to prov! that or. Day was the v1ctlm of an OCMA boycott are two members of the Msembly aubccmmlttce on me:rtal health l(M'lcrs -Assemblymen Frank Lm- U!l'man (R-LI Canada) and John Burton (Wan Fr1ncisco), Prese nt al the hearing In the capicity of ol>Jtrvors are Sen. John Schmitz (R· TUstln) and Assemblyman John Quimby (Jt..Sal:i Bernardino). • Quimby is lhe author of the •~embly resolutlon which led to I.he calling or today's hearing. Tbe Santa An• hear1ng Is the fl~t of two legt11la llve in- vtsUgallons lnto the complalnt.11 ralstd by Dr. O.y. ' Grand Jury Probes Sliaro,._ Tate Slayings LOS ANGELE.~ (UPI) -Se H n member'1 of the mystic hippie 1'famity " 1lnk'ed with the savage Sharon Tate kl11- lng and uven other 1layins1 were ei· pected to be indlcled today at the coo- clu~on al county grand jury cl<llbera- tions. Dtpuly Dlstrlct Al&omeys Aaron ff. Stovitz and Vlrant T. ~gliosi reported they wUI seek an eight.count indictment chargina seven membera of the pseudo-- rtlJcious cult led by Charles McrJ.soo with conspiracy and murder. A dozen witnesses were to testify lit today·, setret hearina but It "''' believed most of the ev1denct 11alnst tht SU!pccl:I already had been supplied by attrtctive Susan Atkinr, • member-of "lhe ft1flTllOTl family." Three of the witneetfl to be rilled were 11id to be fingerprint experts. Authorltleii have lridlcaltd one of the au1pects 1peclflcelly charged. Charles D. Watson. 24, who Is being held in Texas, allegedly left a Ongerprbt at the Tate home. Another wltneu scheduled to be calJed wu Daniel Oe1Carlo.-a former mc>Corcy· cle 1an1 1eadtr who rtetnlly tesUned lh a murder trial in Santa Monica. lie tauned l\faruon directed the 1!aylng in Ju!Y of musician Gary Hinman. l!>e Carlo rtw-dly lived for a ,abort Ume with ftfamon Md his .. familv" Miss AtkmS. also known 111 Sadie Glulz, testlfled for iwo hours and 15 mlnutes ·Fri- day, telling of her relationship with the 3~ytar'11d Man!Ol'I ind others In his group who are accused slayers ef Miss Tate and ae.ven other perA<ms. ·Her-lawyer, Richard CabaUero, says she st.Lil rigards Minson "with a mixture of love, re9r. 100 hatred." C.balltro said illhOugh P.fanson la In Jail. Ill lndepend<:lce, Calif., pendiog ac· lion to bring him here:, Miss At1':1n.!i leara he could "conjure up a ,vl~lon detrlmen· ta! to hef in his mind then transftr it to her mind and "then she would be , marked." I 2 . Huge Fires Erupt In Snu Jose Swulay SAN JOSE {UPI J -Two spccU.cular firc:5. one ln a rutaurant and the other in a supermarket. erupted here Sunday . Within a fj'tte·hour .. per\Q(I . Damage was c~timated at nearly s4oci,ooo. · A one-a1am1 blatt (aU5td about , $100,000 d.amagc at Caesar'S Dining Room. where two previous nres have oc- curred In recent month5. Lt!!.! lhAn five hours lotor, a three·al3fT11 fi re brought • mnrt (han 100 firemen to the Purity Markt!l. v"h4'.!rt damag~ was t 5tlmatro 1t "betwcan $200,000 anci $300.000." ' Today's Flnal N.Y. Stocks .TEN CENTS ers Grenades, Gas Used 111 Skirmish From Wire Servlce11 LOS ANGELES -Police using dynamite. tear gas and hand guns fought a five-hout pitched battle today before subd uing a group ef Black Panthers bar- ricaded inside their headquarters with automatic rifles and hand grenades. A handful of eight to 10 panthers held orr a 3©-man police force from the open- ing of the assault at dawn until late morning before surrendering. Three or those inside the Panther head- quarters were reported injured, none seriously. A force of 300 officers surrounded the building. Police said tv.·o were shot a1 they flrst tried to serve a warranl The olher was hit in later gunfi re. A stand off or n1ore than four houn f nsued. The raid v.·as one or three on locations er the militant Negro organii.ation. Police said they had information that machine gun.~ and other weapons had been stored th~re and they wanted to serve warrants on tWo persons. At one point officers Issued .111l ultin1atum by bullhorn to those in the headquarters: "Come out with your hands up or "'e'll come in." One ma n can1c out Finally the others followed. The wounded efficers were not lm~ medi;:ately identified. One was reported hit In the (hest and groin . Another Wa.!1 reported hit· in the root and llle third in the leg. A JS..block area was sealed elf during the confrontation. Police de p Io ye d themselves along \\'Ide. shop-lined Central Avenue JJ nd stayed under cover. Tht area is south of downtown Los Angeles. near Wrig ley Field, former ho1ne of the Catifomla Angels baseball team. Homes line adjoining streets and residents cl us tered on lawns to listen to shots and blasts. About 14 persons were arrested in.raids at l\vo other locations, where no resistance was encountered. .. Those guys have automatic weapon:'! and they're throwing grenades," a polic e inspector told newsmen during the morn- ing. Officers said tha t homemade grenades were then tossed toward police from the building, bursting in the street. No one was hurt by the grenades. A police spokesman said the building had been 5andbagged at doors and win- do-w·s by the Panthers. .&, ccntingent of police blocked off the tntire area. Classes were dilimissed for the day at a nearby school. The downtown police building was put under heavy guard. Officers with shotguns were staUoned at every en· trance as a secu rity precaution. Charles Garry. legal counsel for the Black Panther group. denounced the ix>lice action. or the police statement that the raids were unconnected with those made en Panthers in other cities he saJd : ''That is an unadulterated lie. This is all part and package of a national scheme by the various agencies of government lo destroy and commit genocide upon (See PANTHERS, P11e l) ·Orange Weather That silver lining bchilld Tues- day's clouds may be ,a damp one. Te1nperatures. when ttle sun makes its appearance, Will be jn the low 70's along the Orange Coast. INSIDE TODAY You may not be able to dr· scribs "Oh! Calcutta!" a.s good clean fun, but most of it can br ll'lbrltd ooQ<J. dirty fun. Srt to- dn11's ret1lcw OH Page 18. It _____ .......... I 0·~ 11 ·~· 1 ln<~ .. ~!'!!!J <1Mlwltlt It crtulflt41 •n C-kt II CNM"'4'1i' H OMlll Ntfktt II 1:•1i.ri.t ''" • 1[11!1rtlllf111Mt!t u Plfl-t ll·U H$!'tKtH 11 A11• L"'"n ll Mtllbe• f " Me'lln H N111t11• Ntwt +I Of¥tt e-,., 11 S¥hi1• rwm t4 '"rt' tl·U 119(~ llNI""" f4.n Ttltvhleft It TM•t-It w .. ''"' • ......... , .. , ·-·· frttwt1)-.11 ,_.,, DAILY J>JLOT --L ,_ ;,Campus ·Militant·s 'Using' Media • Ill Do television. radio and newspapers prtsent a cllstorttd plclure of campus <Jlsturbances beciuse thry art belng .... ~sed" bY 1nilll<1nt !>? • -This qu'es tion w;i~ debated Frida)' by 1iews represcnl:Hil'f'S ilnd college pro-f essors 1'"ridllY during a conference in :1'naheim. ~ .... Some news represent&llves readily in- -d1ca1ed they rell lhey had been used. But _ tbe)' also took the professors and college administrators to task, asserting they failed to provide information that could •balance the news picture. • Don t.fozley. managing editor for CBS • radio in San Francisco, sai d, ''One of the ·mistakes or modern journalism is if Fon1cbody says something provocali~ it ;• Dowta the :'Missio11 Trail POW Center Opens in Toro EL TORO -lnlerested residents and representatives ol organizations arc 1n· ~·ited to an info rmation center on how tn help American prisoners o[ war. The one day progran1 v.•ill take place f uesday. beginning at 9:30 a.m in lhe home or Mrs. Lee Kellogg, 24116 Birdrock Drive, El Toro. Mrs. Stephen llanson. Orange County eoordinator for the National .League of ,f amilies or American Prisoners in :SOulheasl Asia, will explain how help can tie oblained. :. Wr11ppi11g Shom Sel .. :: tAKE FOREST -A Christma s glfl ;~rapping demon st ration will take place .-\Vednesdayin the Beach and Tennis Club . The use of unusua l materials and fl'\V J\'ays to use old ones will be shov.'n at th~ :J p.m. event. Refreshments will be serv\. )'d after the progr am. . ~Card Club C:o•• ve11e." ' : ?\1JSSION V1F.JO -Bridge players are .... ~ovited to join the Recreation Center's Ord group on Thursday aIT::ID' p.m. : ,'Visiitng hOEil and hoste!\S will be T\;lr. ~ Mrs. Bud Bradbury. Games ar"' ~ayed on Ute seocnd Thursday of each irtlonth. For joining information call the ):enter at 837-4084. • Y11le Deror Offered ~ SADDLEBACK VALLEY :\ tlemonstration or 1naking Christmas :rieCf>f'ations "'Ill be the prog ram at the :meeting of the Saddleback Valley t'ie\vcomers ClutrWednesday. : :The event will be a noon luncheon ;:it lfte Revere Jiouse restaurant in Tusti n. :Mrs. J<'rank Cleworth . of 1.targee._!! Art $hop ln Laguna Hills \viii present the pro-- ~am. .· From l'age I WAVES ... :ti@tween Ventura and Santa Barbar:i . ·~hich is separated from the surf itsel/ bv :only a low concre te retaining "'all. ' :;:citizens of Oxnard joined together to :Ctnt a bulldozer anci quickly put up a "'all ~t sand as a barricade against the ba!- ~!ring forct of the unusual tide and wave {bmbination. " Forecaster! for the U.S. Weather ~au predict new srven foot tidt:oi tboot 8 a.m. Tuesday and again on Wednesday, whJle the extraordinary surf l~ also :ichedule<I lo continue. : 'T'he lNgh. \vaves are caused by a i;ton11 In the Gulf of Alaska. the second one in a l ·eek. resulting in disastrous. 50-foot breakers "''hich smashed the unprotocted ~ast of H:iwaii la.st week . ' DAil Y PILOT ftolitrt N. Wt1l l'rn_,, ..-f'IM•tl'otf Jttk •• c:..1,., VIC* ,,._.,.. Gotlltr~ llltl\I"' 'th•111•• tc"vil Elliilor n ...... "· uM,,i..;~, ~.....,.ldltOt fti&lit•' '· Noll Ltt""t lleo~l'I c11, Edlltf L••• •••ch OUlt t ?1? Fo••\I A~1 . Mt1ll•1 Mlll1e.11: r.o. ••• 66•, •2•s2 ...... _ (•• 111 ... : tM tltnl I•• S'""'' ",....... k-cfll :1711 ~· ........... ..... llull"l!\tl• k&a: JOt ... ~ , .. ... ls news, even if it Is wronc. "IL ls human nature that reporters and edltors can be luy •nd submit like lambs to neWs CM.fertnces that . contain no news." t\-1anaging editor of the Santa Pt1onicn OuUook, R. D. Funk, said his newspi!.per "responds to clues lhnt something is goi ng to happen and there you are, trap- ped, and you know.it.'' The srlf criticism \Vas offered by new s n1en al Califomia Teachers As90eiation's annual conference on higher education. titled lhls year ··Revolution and Response.·• · But lhe news men also poinledJ>ul they tlo v.•ant f.o present balanced reports of campus occurrences and they need more Plan Studies Set help for professors and administrators to do so. David Horowilz, educ.alion reporting speciallsl for NBC televl!lon ln Los Angtles, said to get balanced stories he 1nust constantly fighl an "academic defense mechan ism." .;The problem." he snid. "is ad- 1nlnist.rators refuse to t.alk w h i I e militants. who are the "'ould-be campus leaders, do talk . Where are the educotors \\•ho could place the -conflict or con- lroversy in perspective? They are unavailable,'' Horowitz said-r,: Funk told the Professors, 'You peopl~ :ire pa.rt of a political process. You musl state your case clet1rly or you lose the ballgame." Laguna Beach Council • MeetingTwiceThis Week Laguna Beach councilmen meet twice this v.·eek in special sessions to consider : -Tuesday, an economic analysis of l~aguna by the city's general plan ca.1· l'Uitant, Da niel, T\;1ann, Johnson & t.1en- denhall. -Wednesday. a city-financed study on development ol a hotel and conference facili ty on the 1.laJn Beach and alt ernatives brought forward since the report. The city had nol yet made public the economic analysis study but City J\1anager James D. Wheaton said planner Ab raam Krushkhov would go through lhe sludy point by point Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. Councilmen called ror the \Vednesday study session last month after receiving copies of the $4,000 report from Bud Holscher proposing a 200.room hotel and ccr.1ferenre fa cility on the city--0wncd f\1ain Beach. Councilmen criticized the report as un· sophisticated and Jacking specifics and tisked that Hoscher be on hand to go throug h it. The Laguna Beach Hote l -Motel Association then criticized the study Leisnre World Gronp Or ganized To Fight Radicals A relired Army colone l who has served in two \Yorld \Vars heads a grO\ving organization in Laguna Hills Leisure World formed to fight what it considers a grave threat to colleges and high schools of An1erica . Col. Robert A. Ellsv.•orlh. 70, said lht 152·mcmber ''Leisure World Fricrxls of VIVA, Voices in Vita l America" is aimed at far left, revolutionary influences in t•ducational institutions in Orange County. Ells\vorth, founded the friends group recently. II supports both VIVA and Campus Studies Institute, a San Diego organization involved in distribution of patriotic literature to the nation's cam- puses. VIVA is a research and informal1on RTOUP providing conege students \\'ith material about comrnunisn1 and com- munist agitation activities. F:\Jsv.·orth has said lhe camp11~ situa · tion is "dlsgraceful'' today "'ilh •·revolu- tionaries and the \\'hole dirty crO\\'d" lrying lo underm ine !he educa tional systems. I-Te singled out Students ror A De1nocralic Society (SOS) as one of lhe rar left groups 111ost deplorable. The Leisure \Vorld Friends. formed Nov. 4, e)[pecls Lo have 500 metnbers by late December. said Ellsworth, a !926 \Ve:-t Po.in! gradual.!>. Ten fund raising 1eams or !'c1·r11 rnembers each have been established with a goal of $250.000. Committees ha\'f" been established in every Orange County (·ommunity, said Ell swo rth. EllS V.'orlh and Rich:ird Theis, cxccuth·e director of VIVA. hope e\1entually to have all segments or society and industry. service clubs and veterans organiaztions involved in the patriotic on-campus drive . Does Ellsworth think bis group can reach students? ''You bet \\'e can," he said. Theis, a Los Angeles resident, ad · ded. "These young people are our hope." He referred to "students in the middle·• 11 nd ''impassioned, marginal students" \'o'ho could be brain..,.•ashed by the far le.fl revcilulionaries. l·'rona Page I LAG UN AN • • • !iea." said 1he Nev~ China r-.iews Agency c.:Jspatch. \\'on:! of their release cam~ from the NCNA and the couple -coml>O'ed, bul tirtd and under.veight-arrlvcd al I-Ising Yi island a few hours later. Baldwin and Pifrs. l1onald s 11 id l!Uthorities in Canton v.·ere prepared tn releast them mu<:h sooner. bol ~pprov11 I "'·as required from Peking and this di"· toyed teh proctss considerably. Each was kept se~r1te from the other durini; capt\\•lty, flrst at lleung Chau . near Macao, then at a place calltd the ll appy Peoples' Commune, 60 miles nonh ol Canton. They were impri.soncd al the Hed Star Peoples' Coolmune just prior to being I reed. • 'The Baldwins ha\'' U1rce children. Si- mt<>n. Ill, 26. Lrnnc, 21. and Jn1nes. 20, \l'h:> lh•cs at the Cliff Drh•e home and Al· lends Sadd lcb:ick Coilc:£r.. claiming ii was both· inaccurate and unusable. Association members claimed the bulky report coold have been con· densed to about four pages or i'.1formation thal was readily obtainable fron1 knowledgeable members of the com· munity. The report.. had suggested financing of the fa cility with tax-exempt munic.ipal bonds. "Members o! our association certainly don't see the city buying a pa rk and then entering into a venture with a hotel chain usr.1g the city's bonding capacity even rurther to :iccomplish something il has been denying private enterprise. Not on this or any other ground ," the hotel peo- ple responded . Laguna Beach Taxpayers' Association. 1nc. criticized the report also and said local taxpayers don't want to finance a hotel as well as the 3 million beach purchase. Since the Hol scher report six civic organizatia.1s headed by acting chairman Bernard Syfan have attempted to come up \Vith precise recommendations on development of the beach. Ten ta tive recommendations have been for a hotel of not less than 100 or more 1h:in 200 rooms to be buil t with con- lcrcnce space equal lo two seats per l'oOm; \1ith shops in the structure: max - im um vist.a of the ocean maintained : and adequate parking included, The Hotel Laguna has also come up \\'Jth general suggestions that it might ex· pand usi ng some of the ajacent city land. Cat Biu·gar Hits 3 Lagu11a Homes, lnjw·es Man, 71 /\ cul burgla r \l'ho entered three l..:i~una Beach homes over the \11eekend \Yhile occupants were sleeping injured a 71-year-old man and made off \vilh cash, credit cards and a clock . On tw o of his visits in the pre-dawn hours of Saturday and Sunday, the burglar, described as a young man about 19 or 20, was frightened a .... ·ay by aroused householders before he could take anything. lfis first victim. Pttaurice Carroll Fletcher. 59, of 1991 Ocean \\Tay, told police he a\1·:ikcned about 4:30 a.m. Saturday, reached for his alarm clock on the night table beside the bed where he and his wife were sleE>ping, and realized it wa s gone. Searching further. Fletcher found his \Vallet CQntaining $49 and credit cards also was missing and that $12 had beE'n laken fro1n his wife's purse. At :1:10 a.m, Sunday. Ruth Ernily Pr;1thcr. 40, or 330 C!Hf Drive. "'as 1-1wa kened by a noise and thoughl slie he11rd someone "'nlking in the house. /\ search Jed her to the kilchen \vhcrr she surprised the suspect al the rclrlgera1or and screamed loudly as he rled. Police said he apparently had en- tered through a living room window after pushing in a screen. The third victim, Frank Howard Bin- ney. 71. of 1885 Ocean \Vay, said he heard 11 clattering noise at approximately 4:40 a.m. Sunday got up and surprised the thief in another room going through hi.'i v~ife"s purse. The startled thief swung at Binney with the purse, infl icting a severe facial bruise and a cut on the elderly man·t head . ~le then ran out through a sli ding glass door \1•hich he apparently had opened to gain cnlry. Nolhing "·as taken rrom the houst. Binney told police. and cash "'as left ln ~he purse. In 11 third weekend burglary, $120 ln c!!~h "'as taken from an apartment at 5591~ Catallna St. ~t"·ten the hours or 8 p.m. and midnight f'rhJ;i,y, The "·ielhn. Marsha Ann Vreeland, 20, told police she returned home from 11 dance lo find au dresser drawers and t·loset doors standing open and the cash missing Crom a jewelry box. Police said the burglar apparently pried off a scrttn to gain entry lhrough a \\'lnd OW. !\!is:· i\facLainc Picked Best Aclrcss hy 'Fil1n' LONDON !UPI) -Tbo BrlU>h magazine Films and filming n<lmed Shirley T\;fact..alne as its choice for the yl!:ar's ~st actress Sunday for h~r rolt in "51vecl Charity." It named the mo1·ie "TiliJe Grit" as the best 1\·estl!:m for 196!1 llnrl "The Night They Raided tiUnsky's" nf tlic bc..<;t cQn\ccl)'. One profea30r aald, •l A lot of ua art old-- fashioned sissies. We haven't the coureje to stand up and speak like the militants. We wol'l')' about our house get· ting bombed." Another professor remarked , .. Many of us still have the sU!plclon Uie media are sensation seeking. This suspicion is deep- ly ingrained in us." "If you concentrate on "'hat you say and what you think there is no reason you shouldn 't say it with the press around," llorowitz responded. "You talk aboul academic !reedom. freedom to speak. \\lhat v.·e are deal ini;: \\'ilh ls defensive educator!!.·· He .said, "I go on can1pus and I'm like 1 FUiier Brush man. l ha ve lo spend OAtLY l"ILOT Sit t/ P"91t JABS AT LOOK MAGAZINE San Franc:isc:o1s Alioto Police Turn VJJ Little Dr1ig Store In Ca.1nper T1·uck Serving a \\'arrant on ! suspected 11arrotics violator Friday night , Laguna Beach officers alleged they turned up a miniature drug department st.ore in a eamper parked on Fairywood Walk in J~aguna Canyon. 1\!ter locating John Edwar d Gilbert. 32· year-old transie-.1t. ln his pickup camper . officers searched his mobile abode and claimed they found a pipe containing 1races of hashish, a p\astiC bag with fr agments of marijuana and seeds, " plastic ba g containing 2.8 grams ()f opium. a foil pack of LSD, a piece of toilet paper containing pieces of peyote, a plastic bag with seven capsules of mescaline. and a quantity of LSD tablets in varied colors. The assortme1l was tagged as evidence and Gilbert \Vas booked into the Laguna Beach jail on the $5.000 v.1arrant. v.•hich l'harges him "''ith the unlawful .sale of dangerous drugs. To the original cha rge. arresting of· ficers added a few o! their own, including charges of possession of opium, peyote and mescaline. possession of hashish for :rio a I e, possession of marijuana and 1 pos.~ession of da.1gerous drugs. more time selling the Idea I'm aoln& to be objective and f1lr than doin' reporting .'' "Why should you leave your desk and compete to be heard \vlth people of no responsibility?" Plozley posed a question. "The answer is because that is the way things lire done today ," he advised. "People lie to lhe news media more than they did a generaLion ago. 1hey play us for suckers. You should be prompt and volunteering v.·ith the truth. Yoo are CXlm- peling ~·Ith oppooenb of no moral substance." "One problem is the caliber or men you send out to cover stories," complained a professor. ''A rtporter m1y come In unprepared. this i.s not unus ual," said t.iOi:lty. "\\'hen dealing with him put yourself in the same pos ition he i:s lnCiJ mmunicating "'Ith the public. Don't give him a ZS·page press release. Practice the art of con- densation, simplicity and get to the heart of the matter." "You cause more tl'ouble.s f.o r• us <t l schools than you help us." challenged a professor. "\Veil. people thoughl the f'renc:h revolulion might die down if it was left alone, but it didn't," said t.!ozley. "Th e same goes for the unre:it on cam pus, it isn't very i!kely any more that ll will di1t do\vn :• Stresses Libel lss11e Alioto Attacks Magazine fu Tall{ to Newport Youths ... By JOHN VAL TERZA 01 tlle OlllY Pli.t Sitt! San Francisco's Mayor Joseph Alioto took some hefty jabs at Look 1tfagar.ine during a weekend appearance before a gathering of journalism students in Newport Beach and the recipients of the pokes weren't very far away. Alioto, plucky and aggressive, spoke to the students and their teachers at the l'\ewporler Inn and had just missed Look photographer Earl Theissen aid an aide speaking to other students in a room directly below. "'I'm sorry I missed them , because it's always a pleasure lo meet some or my future employes," Alioto. wbo is suing Look for $12 million in libel damages, told the 100-or·so students. The cracks set the tone [or Alioto 'ii hour-long appearance in which he dwelled fln the case involving allegations of Mafia tics . He blamed the national pictorial magazine for falling into lhe "trap which ki lled the Saturday Evening Post." "It's obvious that the magazine has been losing money and is ruMing behin~ Time-Life, and in order to make up for 1t lhey took the dangerous plunge into the sensation market. Their trouble with that story about me is that they relied 0.1 two basically incompetent writers,'! he said. He charged that much of the content or the article implying his ties with the underworld was "totally false.'' One part of the story, he said, related 10 a. meeting he was alleged to have had \Vith Syndicate operators at the Nut Tree. "Thal i:oi the Bay Area's equivalent of Disneyland, so can you Imagine Alioto n1eeting with a bunch of ?-.1afia hoods :it Disneyland? It's ridiculous," he said . cepts o[ a free press and the recent court decisions making public officials even n1ore vulnerable to press criticism. ''But the \11hole thing shou ld stop "'hen the issue comes to direct, blat ant character assassination," he said firmly. Alioto, even though he was subjected to the potentially d:imaging Look article, at- tacked \1ice President Spiro T. Agne\~"'!\ criticism of both ne\vspapcrs and lelevision stalions for their handling of nev.·s. "His comments, particularly those on the three television networks' practices, \\'ere partieul:irly insidious, especially 1rhen he implied a direct threat on the networks' very Jucrati\'e government licenses," he said. Alioto's defense or lhe pres~ ended I here, however. He said everyone should fight pending federal legislation giving newspapers Im- munity under anti·lrust Jaws. One student asked the Democratic mayor if he believed the Look article and the nationaJ attention Jl has received had helped him in any way. "I could think of a million things that could have helped me better. ll did one thing, though. ll cured the problem of name identity and no1v Alioto is not just lhe name of another fish restaurant at Fisherman's Wharf." He added one significant drawbaclt o[ the controversial article. "lt doesn't bother me so much until l think of a 73-year--0ld mother, a lovely \vife and children t have at home, and they have to put up with the problem. It really hurts." Alioto. who spoke t.o the journa.ILsts G! Beta Phi Gamma in between .ap- pearances at Santa Monica and Santa Ana, said he still hasn't decided if he will run for governor. "I'm barn.Storming up and down the state now just to take some .soundings to see if I should run or not," he added. Fro•n Pnge 1 PANTHERS. • • members of the Bl:ick Panther party." \Vhen a newsman called Panther head- quarters by telephone. a \·oice that sounded like that of a.woman said: 11'he pigs are attacJting us. Send the press and send us people." Today's confrontation was the first Gr Its kind in Los Angeles. although the re have been individual clashes between of· ficers and Panthers during or after street arrests. Astronaut's Brother l\1issing Over taos \\TASHINGTON (AP) -Air Force Capt. James B. White. a brother of one of the astronauts killed in the 1967 spacecraft' fire, has been lost in an Air Force mission over Laos. it was learned today. The Penagon listed him Al mis.sing Nov. 26 as lhe result of hostile action, but pro\'ided no further details in line with a policy pertaining to captured and missing men , It was understood, however, that \Vhite went down in a mission over Lam. THE BIDTIQUE HAS SOMETHING FOR EVERY, WOMAN ON YOUR CHRISTMAS LIST . ... if she's • teenager, cortsider • kicky ouHit by Tootique or :Jody, eornpfftte with• fr inged starf, boutique i•welry end 1 floppy ho t. maybe she's 1 youn9 wom1n-1bout-town .•. Denise clothes ere tho right thing to help hor conquer the world. p•rheps sh.'s •more mature type ... Don Sophis+ic1tes~ n1rn1 Cl1scrib1s th1look-e1•y1l191l'tc:t , quiet 1ophistication. and don 't forqet 9randma. Our BIDTIQUE acc11sories, from cameo bro.xh11 to frin9ed sh1wl1 to llama slipper" will help hor bridge the fuhion gop. SPECIAL I HADLEY CASHMERE SWEATERS -40% OF F CJk BIDTIQUE 347 Vie lido -Newport Buch-Telephone o7J.4S I 0 P1rking for •s m1ny Cir& IS you own ' ; • Marina Oilly Victor By ROGER CAID.WN Of .... Dtolb ''"" ll•ff The fifth annua l Westminster -Marina Rot.ar.y Invitational basketball tou.ma~ ment ended similar to results of the quarterfinals a n d semifinals for Orange Coast area teams -with only one victory Saturday night. ~Iarlna came up with a 7G-61 win over Long Beach Wilson fOr fifth place honors. But Westmlnstei-dropped a 73-71 decision to Long Beach Poly for third place and Huo- Ungton Beach was nicked, f5.. 63, by Santiago. It was the second straight toss for Westminster and the third in a row for Huntington Beach, last year's fina11st. Coach Er.ra Van Hom's classy Los Alamitos quintet captured the tournament title with a 7M2 victory over War· ren. In consolation games Satur- day, U>ara defeated Bolsa Grande, 71-41, and Valencia trimmed Garden Grove, 76-59. Westminster's bid for a third place finish in the tourney was erased in the final quarter when the Lions ran into foul trouble and lost all-tournament selection Dan · Broderick on fouJs -then moments later lost forward Steve McLendon with 2:05 to go. Poly quickly upped its t'I\~ point margin from there to win easily. Marina'& Rick Mosier ta11ied 17 to go · along with Kipp Baird's 23 in pacing lhe Vikes to their win over Wilson. Jn a11, Mosier tallied 90 for the four games and set a tournament record, breaking ?f.ike Contreras' mark of 86 for the four .game set. r..tosier and Lee Walters 0£ Huntington Beach also made the all-tourney team. Walters was high for Hun- tington Beach with 19 but it was the completion ol a one- and-one attempt from the free . throw line with six seconi:ls left in the game by Santiago's Ed Sheely that dumped the Oilers for the third time. Los Alamitos' Don Soderberg was named outstan- • ding player of the tournament ; following the Grllflns' clutch win over impressive Warren. ~ Other Griffins to make the all- ,..tourney team were Randy , Christense n and Mike : Grimwood. MA.RIHA (101 fG l'T .. " Mosler , ' • " Str•l!Wd ' • ' " 81Tr"CI .. ' • " '"' ' ' ' ' C"""'rlh! ' , ' • f.:1rlt ' ' , , Tluirm ' , , " Tol11t " " " ~ Scwt ~, 0111rtm M1rl,.. 12 21 " ·--~ WU1cn 20 12 16 ·~, HUMTIHGTOH 81'.l.CH IUI C1rl1en Wisc Cite W11!1r1 DeBr!nen H1rrfll Tl'lom•1 -To1111 l"Ci l"T f'I" lP 2 0 2 J l 0 ' ' 1 • J ' J ' l 1• 0 ] 0 J J 2 ' • ' $ ' 17 1 0 0 2 22 ,, ,, 6l SAHTlAGO U.SI 0.nltlt Kitlch Dllo;kef L• M1ster1 KYi. Dl11 SM.eltY 'T1k•h11hl Tot1t1 l'Ci f'T ' ' . , , . , , ' ' ' , , ' ' . 23 1• .. " . " . " ' " . , ' . , " , . , , " " SCIM'I .,. O~rltrl Hulltl1'191or+ 8H<:l'I lJ 17 16 S1MIH0 17 lt 1' 11 .... J ,,__., WllTMINITIR on H1w!1' PMrlOll 8roder!ck --..... ·-" ·-6(!utl!wlrt Ta!1ls fG l"f' f'I' T .. ' 0 ? • • 2 l l 1 I S It ' • J 10 l J 2 11 J 0 2 ' ' 0 • ' 1 I I l 2!1211171 '"'' ~ °"'*1trl WHl"'l~llitr 71 1) 1, 1'-71 Lono ... di Pool' 17 2J 11 V 1• Hornets Bag State Crown DAILY PILOT J:J After 2 Losses Mustangs, CdM Seek to Rebound • 1rvine League baskelball teams Corona del Mar and ~ta Mesa's Mustangs will be trying to get back on the 11;i1r- ning ·trall this week after suf- fering losses Saturday in a doubl~eader at Long Beach Millik an. Corona de! Mar will meet Dominguez Tuesday afternoon at 3 in the Lakev.'OOd Jovita· lional while Costa fi.t e s a travels with Newport Harbor this weekend for doublehead- ers St Las Vegas. Corona dropped its second game of the year Saturday at Millikan as the Rams posted a 58-46 win over the Sea Kings., And Mesa was the recipient\ of it., second loss in as many games with an 82·7 1 setback at the hands of Cal High of Whit· tier. Mark Grigsby and Dan Killian were high for Corona del Mac, with 12 apiece but it wasn 't enough to offs e t Millikan's third-quarter surge. Mesa ~·as done in early by Cal High ·s Condors. The ~·inners ~ted an 11- point margin at the end of the first quarter and extended it to 14 al the half. Ken Deaton led Mesi with 13. COSTA Mii.i. (111 Au11l~ SWHHl~d .... M s.1101 ~CLt1n . °'"""' Nnl!11 C11m11 M1rdl!or•!fttl Brld•ts Woll Tofth 1'9 l"T .... Tf' J ' ' 11 I 4 t ' , ' ' 11 J 0 • ' l 0 2 ' l 0 t 1 s I I 1,0 . ' , 1 • t 1 • • 1 • 0 t ' 1 l, ,, ,, 71 CAI-tOGM In ) '"eri1ii. ·~ Mo"~ P..,lleld L1moshlr1 Sllntmtn K••ust\4'1r G1tl WC1D<1w1rd CdlCD~ To!1l1 l"Ci l'T f'll T'" u ' ' .u ' ' 1 I I 4 1 11 I 1 t J I 0 J 1 I I I 1 1 • l '' I I I 1 1 2 2 ' o 1 I I .u ,._ n u Scw1 'Y OU1ri.n Co111 Mu• TJ 17 U ,.._,, Cll Hlth :M :Ill . It 17 .... 2 COllONA DIEL MAR 14') Holl•noer Conroy Go.l!tr Grla1bY Kllllan ·~' S.YI•• Toitll Fro•! Pl•nlc Schw1r M1rU....c~ P9terl Oerl1n Glr1H'Ck To1111 l"G l'T "" T"' ' 0 t t l t I I 0 0 • 0 i 2 1 11 , ' J 11 l a 1 I ' ' s 10 11 n 10 ,. Mll-1-IKAN Ull l"G l"T '"" T" ' ' s 1& ' ' 21 ' . . l ' ' • l 1 t 1 0 ' 1 • 0 ' ' 1 11 16 20 .. '""' ~, Ollarten COl'Ol\I "" Mir 12 1, 1 13--16 Mllllk1n lJ U 1• lJ-JI IMPALA PASS PROTECTION -Dan Troup (11) of the Hunting· ton Beacil Jmpa1as youth footbaJl team , gets set. to throw a pa::;b against Lawndale Buccaneers Saturday afternoon on Orange Coast College field. He is afforded excellent protection by team DAILY PILOT f'hllol '' a,kMnll KMtllef' mates Ben Dodson (23), Dave Sigler (51) and several others. The Impalas lost on tie-breaker ru1e after regu1ation. play ended in a scoreless deadlock. NEAL'S 3 SllPll SHIT SHOPS Pro Grid Standings NATIONAL Ll!ACiUE: WESTEltM COMl"l:llEMCI CMlll l DIYlliOll . WLTf'<t ... l" .. A Lei Anteles 11 l o ·"' llS :m 8•111mlM'e 1 ' I .6?6 25' :tl-1 Att1nt1 ' I o .lll m 261 Sen FrlrKIKa 3 1 ? .:KIO 25d 'lff c ... tr•I Olvl11N WLT .. cl.f', .. A Mlnnescttl 11 l O ,tll 366 116 Oelroit 7 • 1 .136 111 215 Gr"'n Bay 6 I 0 JOO Ml lOO Cltic1~ 1 11 o Jiil JIM 2" £ASTl!:ltN COH,EllENClt: CtnlurY OIYltlon CltYell!ld St. Louis Nirw York Plnsburg~ W 1-T '""· f'I' ..... •21 .S11l1'02S2 ' 7 I .3'4 :NS Jll ' • 0 .331 216 217 1 n a .Oil 1n 35' c1,uo1 D1yl11111 WLTPct.Pl' .. A 0.1111· ' 2 1 .111 m 201 W1"'1l1111ton ' J 2 .600 210 7tS Phll1delP~!• ' 7 I .U-1 '7l JJI New Orle1n1 • I G .lll 170 352 Sunday'1 11 .. wlh Mlnn11ot1 :Ill. Los Anoe111 n C.11•• 10, PlllsburOh 7 DetroO 17, 81lllmore 11 Cl~tl1nd :Kl. GrHn Ray 1 Atl1nt1 ,5, New Orie•~• 17 New York 4t, SI, Louil ' W11hlnvton 1'. Phfi..delo~lt H S1NnllY'S Oll'r\t 011111 •I eammore Sul!dlY'S CilmH Phil11telpl'lle 11 Al11n•• sr. Louis 11 C....,el1nd ChlCIDO II Grttn S.Y O.!<Olt at Lc.s ~Its Wl1h!nD1ot1 If Nirw Orlttn• P IU1bunrl'I ar. Nll'W Yor• MlnMtOt• II S.11 Fr•MilCI AMl:lllCAN Ll'AGUlt: E•1teNI Dl¥11111\ N~ YIM'• Ha<ISIOl'I eut11tfl "''M M!1ml w L. T rc1. '"' f'A ••o.,nm11oo S 6 2 .•S5 251 l.S6 • ' 0 .JO• 211 114 ' ' 0, lOI 2"3 7!t J ' ' .2'0 12' 105 We$1itr11 DIY!tloll 01kl1nd K•nNI City S•n Diego ClrKlnottl ,,.,_ W L T l'<t. '"" PA 11 1 l .197 :Ml 236 11 2 G .1'6 l51 117 1 • 0 .Sla 11' 110 ' • 1 .lll 26' l4(I • I I .Jll 270 311 Su11d1y•s Rlllllrl K1nu1 Clt'I' 22. BuHtlo 19 Sert Dleeo 2'. Boston U 01tld1nd 37, Cl!lclnna!I 17 Ml1ml 27. Dtnver l' Onlr g1r.11s S<.heduled S•lllnlllY'I G1me$ 01kl1nd 11 K•nW• CU1 Sun41J"S G•m" HOU1loll I I 80llGll Sin Dina •' e ut1110 Dtnwt" •I C1111:lnMll M11ml •I New Yort Blair, Amat • I SPOITll& &GODS Impalas in .0-0 _Deadlock, Rustlers Can't Buck Lose Verdict on Tie-breaker Brah111as By RON EV ANS Of ttM D1llY f'llllt 1111! It seems cruel, almost in- humane, lo watch youthful athletes in the 11-13 age group bracket, struggle through four ss:oreless periods of hard-nos- ed football only to lose by the margin of less than a yard under a new tie-breaker rule. That's what happened to the Huntington . Beach Impalas Saturday af'temoon after they batiled the Lawndale B~c­ caneers to a standstill on the Pro Cage Standings ... lt:11tern Dl¥1tlllfl N" Yer~ e111lmort M!!w•u~H Phllldelpl'lt1 Cll\CIMITI Ottralt lkn!on A!l1M1 Sin Fr•ncisco C~tc100 Los AnetlH PflOlnl~ Son Ditto $111111 • WOii Lflf f'U. oa 2• 2 ·"' 17 10 .'30 '"" " 1l .$71 10 UHM!ll 11 • 16 .">7 "'" 10 15 .400 1'1'> • 17 .320 16\t Orange Coast College Fi~ld during regulation play. The win gave the Bucs the Southern California midget division championship in All- America football . Under rules of the new tie- breaker, a coin toss is held at midfield and the losing team gets possession with the bail in its territory, the nose on the so. Each team ls given four alternating offensive plays and here's what happened Satur- day to give a coveted cham· pionship to Lawndale after the torrid 40 minute regulation struggle. Huntington Beach moved the ball one yard into Lawndale territory and the Sues brought it back to the 50. Oo second dm\'n, the lm- palas went only a half yard. The Bucs roared back with a 211.2-yard gain to put the ball on tht HB 48. Third down found t h t Impalas moving tht ball back to midfield with the Sues com- ing back to the HB 49. The crucial fourth down play for the Impalas was stopped short of the 50 11nd a quarterback fall play gave the decision to Lawndale although the ball was less than a yard from its original starting posi· ti on. D¢ensivt standout for the 1mpalas was Toby Bonwell. young brother of the Golden West College quarterback. II.I.Ml! STATllTtCS First d0wn1 rulllln t Flr11 daw"' P1t1l~g Firs! dOWll o.n1ll!n Tot1I flrll <krw"I Y•rdl ru1~lll'I Yard• Niii,.. Y•rG1 lost NII Yl•dl lt1"9d Pun!1fAv ... 11t dl1l•l\Ct Pe,,.. :~:n/Ycfl. ....., 111!-d Fumbl11/l"umbl11 lost RUSHING HI IMl"AUS " ' ' , • • ' . . ' 5d 110 .. . . " tS 1l '116.0 7121 .• 110 '1"> J/I l/1 TCI YO YL ••• '·' '" '·' "' "' "' '·' '~· T. 8.ititr R""*'lortl EOW1•ds Prlct ..,_ Tot1ll 1 " " • 1• 1 ' ' . ' . . ' ' ' , , . " u • '"AISINO HI IM .. ALAS PA P'C l"HI YI l"d . 20 • a " .:a Pierce handed Golden West Its fourth setback in five outings Saturday evening, 74- 85 to take the consolation championship of the three day Moori>ark Invitational basket- ba11 tournament held on the Moorpark campus. A 37-point effort by Chris Thompson went down the drain as the Rustlers were able to pull within two of the Brahmas, but never any closer. With five minutes left In the game Thompson hit on two free throws to close the gap to 71-69 .. However, two minutes later 6-8 center Dave Harding fouled out of the game and it was all she wrote. Thompson was n e a r I y perfect from the field sinking an almost unbelievable 13 of 16 attempts. He was also 11 of 13 from the charity line. GOLDl'tl Wl!:ST OSI l"G l'T f'I' Tf' Grnf• 1011 P111llc Jl1t Wede G l ! l . B1rnn J I I I 'Comb• 0010 GIVE THEM THEIR HEADS 1~!~\s THIS XMAS • The most wanted skis in the world- All new models In 1tock now Love affairs (with skiing) start here. We're famou! for malchmaking. We'll match you to the abeo- lutely right Head Ski! and Poles ..• and everything smart to go with them. Or, if you're 11~ady in love with skiing, chO<llle your own more advanced new Heada. Our 'aki service, like our 11tis, keeps everybody happy ever after. -SHOP AT MEAL'S AllD SU THI TOP IAllES •SANTA ANA 219 f. 4111 St. Kl 7·5723 • FULLERTON • NEWPORT BEACH SC Awaits Tourne)' ~i.7:°" :; :~ l~ :~ .;1~59ia ;;;:~;.~~ l,;i"~'~'"~'·=·~·~:;·~'~'~":':"~~~·~"":;':·,~:::;:;:;:~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ I I: lnCIA.l HOLIDAY Pl:ICll '117" .... _ . Sl69.tl NfllllMI lml•l'l•I .... CM•tt Ju1t pUJh ,,,. button a .nd drive 1 1;pht In I 11 OitEN • ClOSE ·LIGHT · •LOCK YOUR GARAGE AUTOMATICALLY SAM CL•MINTI (611 WHI 31. FG l'T Pf' T'" lombt,dl.,. ' 1 J 19 Scoll IO'•' M11011 I 0 l 2 Andi.-1 I 2 S Mltctt.11 ' I 1 $ ClorMnldllnf l I 2 . ' 01ukhn ' 2 ' ,, McC11tl11 I I 5 ' T011l1 'H 11 7' 11 ""' ·-Wlllltms l"ldl:.,lne Cl'INlll . .._. DtllM ""'"" ,. ... Vitt. Tot1l1 5111 Cltm11ttt S•11t1 Anl PG FT f'I" Tf' I 11 2 V 2 • 1 ' ' l ! " ! ! : 1~! I I I t • t • t ' 1 I 1 S I I ' I '2 75 1i i, n ,, 16 10 l'-41 '' t 1J 20-n ENJOY "LOCAL" SERVICE ~ SAFECO INBURANCli S1f•co will tr•n1f1r v•11r fil1 to our oiflc1 et 111 ch1rt•· Nolhih9 ch111911 1J1c1pt th1 p1r• 101111 1tt111lio11 "'hlch ye~ ce~ now r1c1iv•l Bob Paley end Anocl•t.. 1 INSURANCE I l'fiilio MT-6500:--' ' IT'S NATIONAL DECISION WEEK Simplify your last-minute gift selections with an enduring gilt of time bfllolex. left to right: Date with 14 karat dial markers, bezel end crown on 1 stool case. $345. GMT-Master with date. Tells time in any two time zones of the world- • simultaneously. $256. Day-Date. Tells the day, date. minute. hour and second, 1 ~ ~arat gold case and bracelet. $1, 150- SLAVICK'S .J1w1l•t1 Sl11c:1 1•I1 II fASHIPN ISLANO ~EWPOll.T l~CH -H4· I J80 y..,, CM'11• Acc-r ~ -••n•A,.,..,le•r•. M••"" Cht'11•· *· o,..~ M...., ttn S..."'9y 11ttU 91JO ''"" • • %4 ~.lll.Y PILOT L Mondq, lltctmlMt 8, 1'16' Your Money's Worth Christmas Party Costs Can Be Cut By SYL\1A PORTER lf you are planning to throw a Christmas party this year, from a sin1ple punch party to a gala dinner, you surely are starting to organize It. Cori>0r:ilion after corporation has been cutting back or cut- ting out the tra.<lltional alcoholic, adulterous ofti<:i! party, leaving the bulk of par- . ty giving to us. , lf you have given Christmas ' parties in the past, you also mus t be aware that costs easi- ly can run double or even trl· Pie the amount you have budgeted - a real blow at the time of year when your pocketbook is most severely pinched. YET THERE ARE many ways in which you can save t.-ubstantial sums without com- promising the gaiety or quali- ty of your party. Assuming you are not among the wealthy who can ignore the steep costs of food and services associated w i t h • parties today. you can hardly afford lo ignore the savings which are possible. Here are my own rule! for saving on your Christmas partyo -Whether it's a cocktail or a dinner party, set a per· person budget, and stay with it. Liquor, hors d'oeuvres and other trimmings probably will run you between $2 and $& a head; a dinner party can C06t you from $3-5 on up, but it's possible to put on a fairly elegant spread for around $10 a person. How much can you ; really afford to spend? How ' many people do you really wanl to invite? -Buy quarts of liquor in-- . stead of more cost1y fifths. A • quart RTVtS 16 two-ounce drinks. ao if everybody drinks an average of three drinks, one · quart will serve between two ' and three people. Ask your Ji. quor deaJer if he will take : back unused bottles ; many . will. Buy the largest available · bottle! of mixers and the least expensive varieties o{ soda, mix, tomato juice, etc. Have Appralaer Burleigh 0 . Bursbem of Costa Mesa has be en elected to a three year term on the board of governors of the In- ternational Society of : Real Estate Appraisers. • He \vill supervise So- • ciety activities in South- ern California, Arizona : and Southern Nevada. ~"'''" ~ ' •./ ~ • ' '·J ) U r; ' HEARING AIDS ginger ale and olber noo- alcohollc beverages available; some people do prefer these. LOOK FOR liquor sales and considerable savings on name-brand liquors. U you try out lesa: erpensive house brands -which run the gamut in quality -te!t them on yourselves in advance to see how palatable they are. Note: Consumers Union ha.! done comparative tesUng on various types of liquor and CU'• literature can tell you which are lhe best buys" in major categories. -lostead ot hiring a bartender, have your husband miJ the first drink for everybody and then suggest that everybody miJ hia own after. that. People tend to drink less, incidentally, if an overgraclous host d o e s n ' t plunge for empty glasses the instant they are dratned. Or hire a college boy or girl to tend bar with the help ol a few notes and advance lessons on how to mil: what. Jf it's a din· ner party try to hire a reliable, mature teenager ia' your area (or your own daughter) to help with preparations, and cleaning up afterward. You'd be iurprised how many kids are eager for small paying jobs during the Christmas season. -EVEN IF you're the type who tnsista on flowers for every table in the house, con-- sider buying just a dozen or so well-chosen ones, plus a bundle oi pretty greenery. One or two Dowers in the righ t size vase Can look just as good as a profusion, if you arrange them right. -Save on hors d'oeuvres by serving on I y made-in-U.S . jtem1. Don't feel you must of- fer a full-scale delicatessen. One beautifully pre 1 e n t e d wheel of a good dome.stlc cheese or a plaUer of well- chosen cold cuts 1\DTounded by a variety of crackers will be economical and will avoid the inevitable waste of a big variety. -And give 1 brtak to the millions of us who are strug. gling to keep trim figures. All we want is the simplest, lowest~al crackers and rabbit lood. YOU PROBABLY can dwarf my list. The point ls that rtal savings are possible: all you need do ls plan a litUe. Irvine Tells 2 Promoted Promotion of George C. Keiser to manager of finance and Wil liam H. Bivens to audit supervisor was announced by Manuel J. Annendarit, direc- tor of finance for the Irvine Co. Keiser was fonnerly I.he in- ternal audit manager. In his new position, he will be responsible for various areas of financial planning and analysis and overall corporate audit program. He will also serve as assistant to the direc- tor of finance on various special projects. Bivens, former sen Io r auditor, will now supervise and coordinate the internal and external audit program and be responsible for the training of staff aduitors. Complete-New York Stock List HEW YOit;l(Yil") • Monda¥'• QlllOlflt .... Ne! Stl~• Htl Ntw York $1 EllctHll'IM arlcH: CNi-1 ... &.w 0.. a. 1 ..... 1 Mltill LN 0. Cllf. ... .. (~WW a-c•· 1:rr.c: 'fl. r. ~ I~\ llt ..... l"'/.~SJ1.l1 ,,J ff:: ~ ff~~-;~ ~~ 't'io ~ rJ? ·~ = ~ :.~( ~ ~J ·lit~ = ;: ~:b F;t:,.&ir;~ 1i! ~~ q~ ~ = ~ ACF''1:1 t.• ~ ~ .ilyt if\; _ t; •• IOctt · !rn JS\.'I -I~ Ftrro ~ .10 J J)h !th ih -I' ~rtMCI kt...,. \lo 11\lo 22 + "' = ~-1 IJ~ H~ ::··~ ~1:::r I~ 2l it'· r ' -lt =r 1 .• r. n::m· P.m r.~· ::.~ :~" .... • ... •• • ... , .... ·1 I ~ :.:··; A4 Mlllb .211 41 H 1 l -,.. r1tdl 1... ~ ~ 26111 16 -ll F" Fed"''" 1 1'1 ~ M '+"i,· Mdr,.._ 1.40 ff IHI -~ Hrle!'C• M >11'1 )I ISi\ -._ Flr;?IM I"' a Adrnir.. "' _ ~ '"tl'W .-. 2"' '"' 29'4 -1 F•:N/"~' .2'1r 1)0 JJ -11 ~IJ:1 'j ·~~"~"I !~ :t~'-4' 1:t ~ :.Z :t ::.~~fltiJ'2~·~ 1 j t li14 11)~.t~ :~ .... ~oc1,,ffl 1 1 i.'z 1 1 l% ::n~' ~\ c~°':.1.u ~~ 2114 ~ 11' =1" F!l~kl · • :C t:' ,l~I! • !"'• =+ ,:,, A~ l.1~ 1.U ~ " -VJ c,~ ,iQ l 22'4 nit. ... -\\ F1•ml;f, · ,, fl! ·i.·~~"tn I~,,,"' I +tz :l:~ ~J 51 n~ tt: ff~::~ St:n'[:co;r1 !: ffli ffii thi=~f ~ '·· ,2' IU !SJ.'! -\-\ ~ ~\1)0 n fi\li '1~ 'f~ -" '" --·,... " ... .. ... I• ,..,. "'1.20 '5 ~ -~ ""''" 11 I Y!. ''~···· Fie~! 2 $0 .. ... ~.~~ 11 Htt ~+-~ ... ud l. II~ 101' ~-=lt F1• SNtl I 'ym r111 § =~= : ;~ ~ ~~~~=a "':~:01::; ·~ trn i:e ;;.~ ~l?f~~h ,~in: ~a~·~~ ~1~~~ Y11 ,~,· i an j-=a :r~~ ~'.k u ~· Im 31\lo = ~ ~:~ ~r 'f $6 ... n~ r =,"' A lclM11t !I.qi} 11; ' -'tll t 1 _. n -.i. · ~ -'!o'I F-Flk' JIO 1!40 1'10 19'9 lN. + \o A!IMMlll ,1S t +\Ii TI U tll:I JJ "" _v,F-C9.llO 30 1Uo 111' lllli-\• ot.I ocl ~ " ,, ~\lo 1'tlli -" rfl'rO l.61ii 11111 ,_.\lo !,._ -4-F_,. Miii lJ lft: U U -'I.I ~~·:=r~ f'.J J "tli ib im.::·"' ~~ l'1 ll i~ Ji,. =~ ~~:i,,:i" ,:. !"' ~i ~.::·~~ : 11:~!.oPf J 11IT ij n~ fff: = ~ ~~ f.: ;: 1m 11··~ !"' .:.::" ~:~Kc~n-.e {1 ~~h ~ !!!t I ~t '°' 1''"' M 2~ 2•1.4 1'"' •" llal'r\p$ I 20 S. Y 2 T\lio -H• l"Oll Wt.I Mii 61 j7 Hb ~ ;; "m1P . .a. 1 1,.,, 1tlii t\li -"' 111n1rNv· 2 ,.n 'ill'I 1! ... ov.lill -t ~ ,••.,l~g' • . .,' Ii 4\11 1• 1•~ \o A " '·'\ "! ff\.\ Ill Ill\.\ -~ 11tM11 I.It l'I ...,.. .. .. '""' 33tf :tJ l1 -~. Aml1Su9 . .0 ftV. n\4 J•V. -V. hitdltr Mot I Mj, Im I V• l'rtllk tr .:: l ilb ll" ll~ -\o ~~ ... ~ f.20 ro1 ~~ 21~ ,fU = ;; ::=~rlii~11 n 12:11 u~·· fi""" =•~ ~~~1 :.10 1~ Jv. ~ ~ =• ~· A1'!r t "'2.'0 ,, :39 ,. .. ...., " Hl 10 "' -~ PIXllll In ..,, IO jilt JOlt9 lO'lo -w Am "' .15g in 11~ '°~ lilt+ "' v1 "° J ll 111 ..... --V-~lr I~~ :i b jtYI~ n:+l._ fla ~lo '1 n n: \lo~+'~ GAC,..~1.JO JI Sl\'o 57'0 PU -•• Am Alrlln .IO 20:2 30111 n · -" ,,Mu 4 ti 12 * GM: ......... M 22> 16,,. ls>ot 19'o -'• •AmSlc:Nol•I I J) 261.1,2 ••. SPDl~S , 41'1-v.C.mSkol.:iG 12 21Yo21 .... 21"'-"-· 1 A••• .75-lt 11 12 1 -" 11 tPP e1 ,. ~· l}"" I~.:::~ GAF .... n .20 16 11\.li n~ mi. -•· , AlftlJc.alld• ' ts ~Vi 3'\f; :MB -:: Ji M...tJc I '' l'I 2nli -v. Gt.ms Dfl.]j lS :lS\1 ,.,,.. 2•~ -h 1970 OPEL GT COMBINES AERODYNAMIC STYLING WITH PERFORMANCE ~ c.-i: 11.'f: ~ .,,: ~ ... :::; :"'.'. ~Al"ntvlP~T 3'" 2J 1:~ i! 't111 = ~ 9:"~="° t~ n~ 2ltt 21,1 + tt It Has 4 Cyllndtr l~lint Ovorhood v i1lvo En•i·no AC•11 p1 .15 1111 f5 2•111 U\li -'4 tiA P e1Nw M f.-. t l'I tfl'I -~) ~do.n 1.:io u ,,.. » -1-. • Am C.-n . .0 •2 1 10'° l!Wo -'II -Fllll 60 ... ,,~ '" 10\ll •1 Gtrlf;lcll: .90 • ~ ~ -~ ' #J'ftCr'ldfl ,ta 1S ?)~ 2J\' """+'\II ltt cvpf.llld 'i 22\lo ~ 22Yo •·1 ~ O.mllli C.o ll 1 \.4 l U"' + h In Higla Gear A Cl'ltln 1.60 1t ,,'4 21v. n v. -1 11r11ctt .O)d ... 1 " ~ ll4i -• G•Tw¥1n .u.. " Ii J• t• +" ACfYS<lti 1.40 'l1 23\ii ~ ~ + 14 " -o• 1 2 l J''-lM -GnAI'"' 2-.. 2' 21 • 21l'J !"' -• A•C~n 1.:lS 211 l*! fS 2S -1 tvon\&ll -"' S2 2JU 21•• f"' :.:.· .. GMIOU ,6ot, 3J :II l l\'a 1\11-1 AE lt!IH 1 • m 10'4+~ l'lrv;tltr 't 10a rn:"" .. , ·--~~g:;G--:·~i:.c··~ 06 ~ il" r.,'.~.--·~u A I &I .'!IQr 4 2 26 2Mii .... , l"nGE 1.60 .:, 2Mtl ., It U';t 114 : I '°':l!: ": lff0~ 1~ 1m: ="" 1~GEeP~t'7~ mg ff -2 "" ~ •45 11.. "" ···~w 1.u 1'J ~ nv. -t: I" Miii l 40 J ff ~,,.. ~ .... ::·~ ~iJ!T }u 1~ ~:z ~: r =1~= ~~ :xr:•,r:.r .. 1~ r~ r~.:!:,~ 1~fi!•1,:i,Ao 1k ~7' mt R =l .... ~~~t~~"t.Ji 310 J:1,, 11 M=,~: A!iK nd pl,\6 !IC 64 63 ffii-> ~IT F DIS 50 l '4 f4 94 , , .. Gn Flrol .3.Co I 1111> 12 It -~~ A(!:~IM ,.!(I .. 2~ 2l'li -.... 115" Svc '2 ni 41'4 40 "°"' -l'A G.n FM 2.60 1' ·~ 1''' 7m _,,. A nln .Pil.tfl 47 ~ loAli -\4i ITV hw >Oii 61 2'1'o UYo 26 -... G4n Hot! lt! lf;!i 11,•, 11_. -\J AmHOlfl .10 21 13 12V. 2~ -"" l!~lnw 11j IU l:lS .. _.,'Ill tS'ii -~'o G.t.n hut .SM u• ..,.... 21 21'4 --21·~ A Home 1.C '9 6J\? ..,._ UV. -YI !ltv ~lri 0.4 2 10111i lllllli lorll. + \.t Genlmtr pl l l .olA )tl'J )tV. -... A Horrof' l)f 2 1 t6\4 9'V. ~ -\4 !•rkfq 1 c 41 'J.IVt 3J\fa Ullo -... G.eft M.1111 .U 611 3S 3A~ JJ -'" Opel GT, Kadett Reviewed By CARL CARSTENSEN The 1970 0 p e I Kadetts, featuring numerous .styling refinements along with tome 'tllgine improvements, are now in dealer showrooms. New features include ig- nition system, new tail lamps, new front and rear side marker lights, and optional wood grain appllque siding on the wagon. Opels a r e manufactured by G e a e r a I Motors in Europe a n d distributed in the U.S. through some 1,900 Buick-Opel dealers. Six models, like last year, are offered. Th ey are: two-door sedan, deluxe wagon, sport sedan, s u p e r delu:re sport coupe, Rallye Kadett, and the popular Opel GT. The 1970 lineup offers three engines. The 1.1 R liter engine, standard on all models but the Rallye and GT, has been in- creased to 6.1 horsepower, up from 60 last year. It is a four cylinder, Jn-line overhead valve -engioe with an 8.2 to l compression ratio, and 65.8 cubic inch displacement. It has two single barrel carburetors and uses regular fuel. Standard engine for the Rallye Kadett and GT is the 67 horsepower, 1.1 SR with two .single barrel carburetors, 9.2 to I compression r a t i o , operating on premium fuel. The optional 102 h'orsepower cam·in-head 1.9 liter US engine, has a 9.0 to 1 com- pression ratio, 115.8 cubic inch displacement, and 1 single * * * two-barrel carburetor. TRANSMISSION Opel's three -speed automatic transmis.!!ion, in- troduced last year, will con- tinue u an option on aJI Gadett and GT models powered by the 1.9 I i t e r US engine. Power brakes with front discs are included with the two higher horsepower engines. Ride and handling have been Improved as a result of wider wheels along with a change in steering gear ratio. Seven new exterior body col· ors are being introduced with the new models. Two colors GT Chartreuse and S u n b u r s t Yellow -are exclusive with the GT. Other colors are Flame Red. Aztec G o I d , Chrome Yellow, Copper Bronze and Rallye Orange. RESTYLED Other.. new 1970 features in· elude dlw seat belt retractors, new buckskin trim, a new simulated black leather steer- ing wheel on Rallye and GT models, a new ignition warn- ing buu.er, and larger license plate lights. All interior trims have been restyled. All cars will be equipped with the new Opel emission control system, aod California cars will have the new evaporation control system conforming to s t a t e re- quirements. The Opel GT. which was in- troduced last spring in limited * * * Am Kotp .24 IOl .,,,. .w,, "'4 -~ l•rk Oii '«I 2' V'A '6\'o 2'1'1 -I'll. GMlllJ pfl.7S I 5' $1\~ S1Vi -'II'~ Aml11r,1 1.10 12 16'6 ~ I'°" -~ leYllln 1'60 J ~ ri~ ri~:.:," ~ s!t_,, 11°' 10 m~ 61~'1 -I'.~ numbers, has been given a ~~1~ 1'.:i il k~ ~ ~ +·~ ~~ ~11~··~ 1100 ~ 21,,.. Hl'I ..... g.,, ~ ~J.15 1~ ~i~ flt: ill:=,~ number of refine.meats for~· ,_:tof:. 15f •:;.. "4. ';!:" ~ lorox la I~ jl~ Jl"' u= !,ao GP.{.,u'f"1.~ 2~ ~~i! 2~ ~m = ~~ 1970 The lmnl"ty two -AmN•tG•• ' 111 J1~ • Jl~ = l4i ~J:::;uotr' , 1-. :IM'I ti _ ~ ~ R.rr1c1 21 11~ 10~·· iim. _ \': • ¥f"W• Am l"hohl .12 :ii:1J2 J:M IJ 13 ~A '11!1 .311 to 2'N, ~ nv, ..... Gen 51• J.:IO :1'6 50 """ .. Ill -'·• passenger GT f e 4l tu re s ~.·~i,;,·"", ',', •,,. '•"· ',"' _.:.:i~ NA 111A1.10 1 ~ v. t11.1t -~Gen 51t p1 4 4 if 11~ 11¥1-\, od ml ~ Un w! h f • .,. ?It ~ ti 51 Gat IN 41'111 lit '21'1-1..., GenS!Hnd .m ll20 l•~ 14 1•14 -•.~ aer yna e ~Y g t a ~m._ 1r ,.60 ll •~• 1''"' n~ + \\ 11sGs 0111, 1 ,. ,. ,. _ v, G Te1 e1 1.J1 )DJ J011 30 .10 _..,.. I I · hood d " .,,,,1 .fO ti JO 2~ 11~ -1'111 octCol 1 j7 1U Im 11 11\11 + \~ GTetEI l>f?.~ 5 tl14 «t~ 41 '4 +I~ Ong, S Optng an AmSoAlr .70 1116 J.5111 "l'I :tt~ --3 ocillkl j 10 f """ n .... -\~ GTtl QfB1.ll 11t l•l'o 111'1 n· + • Short-·• rear d-k Am$Afr fn .11> 2 3A .... 32 :r.! !'~ P1I 1'20 41 4 ,,_ tS tS\'1 .. GenTlme .IO (t Jiii.ii 7'\'1 l~ -o~ 11;11..u "'"' • Am 51d l '61 32%. ..., ...,~,, +"·;,: 0 0 ' ,,,:~ '" 0 ,~ .... ~ •A• ,,,_ "'•n Tiro '' , .. 'f'" ,_ "' o• W.th h lb f 95 7 • AmS!d P".15 5 104\~ i0i1't 1Q;1h -2\i 0u;ns Alki Y 2' 24 " fl~: fl•~ = \; G' Tire pf s z'H 1 ... 111"' ,.i,~ =2 • I a w ee ase 0 . In-Am Sler!I .•• ' )014 3111''• lO'I• -!'o Coltinll:Ad .IO 1~ ll 36''o 'l6V. -1\> ~ICO 1.60 " 21\.'o I"" 11'\i -··~ ches an• overall heighl Of '8 2 ~.S~er ,1.60 16 24\1 2111 14 -~ CoO!lntst 1.60 11 151~ 34 .. 34'• -l''t Getu1tr L"' I 11._ I~ 11~ -'• u ,,.,,..i;pl,.2.6S 141 .... ,V.41'h .... ,ColoSl>l/Qf 4 lli:!!? Jllio51\.li-'iG«IYIMPl51 ~1J1 37 ,, -!Jo '·nches the GT is powered by AmSut ~ .•• 13 t •\ ' • 1011 1N1 la n u.. 2lllo t.Ml -11~ Gt Pac .&Ob 16l .!(l\.io "Yll .,,,., -11 • . ...,., T&T 2.60 105$ 50\o!t 50 501~ :.:·.,., oll ln a14.25 ' Sl SJ 53 -VI G•PK p11,i4 2 ,, n 11 the 1.1 hter SR, 67 ~. with :i::~· 1~ 11= 1;~ 1;:t 1;~ +·~ =~ !f? '1 •1~a ~,,., ~'t'<:: ~ &!:'.: r.lo40 J ~ llv. ih, :::~ the l.9 S 102 HP available as Aw prff l,H uoo lS'llo is'" u .\!!-.,,, 0111G•• 1.'<! :I ~ L~ U\11 ..... Gelf't011 ,,.. " <ftt\ "' ,. + •,.. an option. Opel's automatic~= 4z11':c i . .a 11, r/ ~Y JC: -\'J cg:~"1.7f '' ~ iJ~ ~ +·~ &r:n~ ~~ .~ I~ 1~ 1~ :.:·ti transmission console-mounted Alne!elt .60a 13 22 ... 21"' n•• ....:·v. ra~So~ 2-:: H ll~ ,,., i7k· =1~ &l~1l1 ... 1~. ll 1~~ i"~ t~ = ~ shill I ' I · ·1 bl ~~:tct,•,c ~ ,!! ,•,e ,",',. •"';--,"1 c~wec1 i 10 '' 31.~ 1 + 1~ Glrr.it. 1.40 111 4tl'o 411,. ..,.. .... ever a so I! ava1 a e ""' "" • ~ •-. -c e n'•2 1t 14•1 23''• 2.w. + •• G1tntot1 er 1 :10 41lil 41 ~ ,,,. _ ,., ·1h th 9· Se . AMP I~ .41 Ill Sri~ 55•1 5J>, -... c°'" ofi ''° 1S.S ~ 10~· 19~ -~· GJel\ Aid~ 1 • w1 e l . ng1ne. Am~~ o•P " •4 41'• •3'~ -"" c~~' sd 1p 29~l 11~" ,. + "• G1eM1 013.1s '! Jl'I ,f111 1t,,., ~11 Amile<I 2.C 21 3Hi 33'~ lll'o --~ comsal 3711 60' S8\'J "'M -1'' Glollel Mtrln 7-11~ 11111 I' \.<, Slandard transmission is_ the :~~"1.to 2~{ !l!• ~(: ~~=~cane Miii• 1 40 1~1 • I• 141/o + ,,. G1ot1eun .IO 21 ,,,,. i• 16~ =ll• four-s,.....d. fully synchronized Anc!'IHo~k .IQ xl.S jil"' ,1 42 _ l• ,c~r,",<,,• ,·"• v ll'·' 3Ht J1-. -,,., Gaodr1e11 1.12 201 lH1 301'1 :iot'I -~\ alyw~ , . An~Dl'f.NSY 1 6 7 71>1~ 21)>,1, , ~· . , 3tl Jlll 2S 75'.'o -~; Goodi.rri1r .U 276 2'"-~ 21 -1''• ma nu Shift with a short And c IY 1.20 11 «I'' •O'I '°'" : ': : ~::~:i~ :: 6s ilil 4 "~~ If"' IJ:Z .!.1 \lo ~Cito l:t: l~ m: ntt )tl/o + ~ throw gea -h,·11 ADICM~D .10 74 70~1 u i·, !9''o -""' Cone P!C4 65 60 60 60 -l'h Grtn •.•• • ~·a: """· !l!'! .,, , ADCo011 1.471 17 3.S JJI, J.S~< -V. ' " _,.. ..,,,. ARA Svc .96 Ul ii~411•~l11H~-"· ConFll ~4.» ,107 101 101 .,, t"lleC Ju 1"3 11\i II" li\li-•• A~UI Chem 11 41'1< 4l\i o1'lr. + V. C<>11Food 1.lQ 41!0 "3V. 41 .... + 'iii ~tlld n IO It \Ii 241" 21111,1, .:_:·" • • • ArchO•n 1.~ 57 Sol'~ 54 s.i _ \: CanFrelahl l lfl 71~ ~ jAl -~• tnl...., 1 c • I"" 17\11 in.-\\ BUICK DEALERS Alj•PSwc 1.0I 78 :!O\~ 10 :20'~ _ it. COii l.f•ll" '5 ICPll 10"• Ol't .. IGr1nlW 1 . .iro JS 504' 4" '1t -t Ar tnl 0$ .10 S7 21v. ltl'J l'\IJ _2,L ~anNtlG 1.76 17) 251'• 24~~ 2•11 -Vi GraM Pl J 7J 210 $4 ... ~ ~ + ~ GOING STRONG ArmcoSt T 60 104 1m 26 26 _ ~ oniPWI' 1.90 164 3.ru ll\ro :U•t -'llo Grt~Oro 1.lo .111' 21\1 2~ 2' -1 Armour 160 • •l~ IJ'.:t 43V i:; onPW DU.~2 150 61\'I '2\1 'l\1 +l .... GI ..U.P 1 2rO .U 7!!; J1i~ 17¥, -"' Buick dealers just flnished A,,,.r of :i.1s 4 51'o W l $1. = ·~ ~::iA'i'ri'.'1'5f zm 'u2 f~ f3~-: \I g~1!p ti~ it ID: Rti ll~ =i"'··· lb bes N ·--. lb Arm1tC1t .IO )51 3A\.o J].1' JHt -1\1 Can! C1n ; 11 "' 1 ... 1w. 1S"'o -•• GI Nor "' . J 4t "" • e t ovem..,... 1n e Armc01t 1>1J.1s u» s.i111 51 s1 --1 c1 Ct" .,.;25 .,10 v. 6JI.<, 11 , ... G• •.. _, •,,1 ,,, '•'•"<• !!!l!' «1\.'I -1 d. , . , h. d. I Arm ub 1.60 10 :M Jl~ ~4 1_, ,_ "' " > >O' •• 1, .. ~. F ,,\& 11i,r,, -,,. 1v1s1on s 1story accor 1ng o Aro. co ... ·'° n 1•·~ 111o 19 _ ,. ,-,-.,-,,·, ,, "" • -·' Grw11un11 '° "' 11 . lt u -2•,· Arv" Ind l 31 '' 7 ..... ls ~y 15 15 + ..... GWU" r:i ·· ' n~ :121.(o 27\to + .... 0 . Franklin Frost, general A•hld 011 1.111 111 1s1~ ~~;~ ~:~ =:: c~"c'. '•'.!·~ li 4,'• :~'• 3" -,:i GGrwn11 n :SO 12 u 1Ao u .. I AHd llr1w 15 1-. 11 .. fit;, ao l M J' -"'" r«nGnl •6 J6 111\ 27 2~ -i:lli sa es manager. Aud OG 1.10 1 ~~'• ,41'1 44,., :"'.'. r:!,,.~." '°" n ., '' 41 -11• Gr-.sn 1io s 20v. 20•t 20'1i _ l. . Alld SDq 1.:~ 5 :!?'• " 32 -• ,. o•• .,I-'! ,~,, ln' l' ' ',914. + Grt~l'l<lund I 101 16'• I•~ 1611, __.,, Last months sales of 59,218 Au11rr1n .40 74 "-''• n ui> _ i•, ',",', 0 ,, , '" ... • .. , -\\ Gro11er ,., n "°"' ,. 2"4 -'• A!ICIVEI 1 u :I? 11 1 ! ... ;u.i, 1··· ..... G'llmmiico I •1 2S~ l •"" 2.,. ... Were 5.2 ahead O( the previOUS A!Cl!wEI o'r4 170 MJ'li ?! n ~..-.,· Coo,0•,.,'," .. ·',', lt>O p., ?ll• ll'J-\;, Glfl._fHold 40 ~ j5 :S..14 24'/• -All 1111 kl!d 2 ""' "" '" C ' lll'I llJ>:. lH'h 11~-+ ~' GllMOh l to1 !< ' 6J\'t .. ~ .:.:,5\l best November. Deliveries for Atl'1!(hc lrlJ.7s 1fJ i~.~ ;I :~ =1~ ~~c::!ct "/~ 11,,, ,ffil,9'? ~~ ~ _+,·~~ ~:~ f.'J 1 """ 13,,. 11,,. _ !1 the calendar year to date were :::R~1~" ~W.»' ,! 1~:1 1jf 1jf ='v. ~:"'e>e~r~' ·, ·~ 11 """ H~ w,; ... Gulf '11es•cts ?ii 2~ 2f"" ':v.. = ; 625 585 for an OVef'aJI gain Of Ailts Che"' I 1!I 2tl'.;. 19'" 20 -\oi !oooer TR ' l )r:19 H'O 16";, H'' +·;~ Gul!Ats ~.20 10 Hl'J lJV. IJV.-1 ' At111 Coro ltl ••o 1'1 J~~ -111 oopT pfl 25 s6 IN U'ii 1714 -h &:!~~J":l:~ 11 1'¥. 11'/1 11':1o -II 6.4 percent. ~TO Inc .Oh ,,, lN 12 12 -·~ Pl>"land i.:io 4 3t','I 31''1 31 .... -•• g::-~.... 61 21\0 211'1 21V. -,, ·nc1 .. urorA Pit• J6 lS'lt 1•1.4 l•"• -1'~ -~ ~, ,_ n '''' '' + •~ "~ "' ·-JMJ l"' !1'14 SN -V. November sales J uded :u1omt" ~n,.d 1s 1,u 1ru 111~ -\I eo'DW1 , ('• 4i 1, 11.: IN ..• ~ Gui;:1"...n1: u1 "• ' n1.11 -~~ 19 001 Skylar•-3 5 7 6 5 1r1:a a · 61 t:PI :J\O 2.1\.'I -\;, Corin a 30g Mt 29"~ 2th'> ~ -·~ .-.. ~~ ..,,·,, ,,• ~:1 Im mt --3\'o • A.1, ' AVtD of3.20 ll S7ao 51 5''~ +" !Ol'GW 2.'.5o8 ai5 2$11'1 JSli 25' + 4\ ._ ...... ,~ -.. 4.51'1 .. • .... lars and •• 52 Ri ·, r S A,...rv Pd .XI l ~ J2\li 31\li -" oronelln .n 10 21 2rv. vv. + 14 GurtW p15)5 4 •1"°' '1 61~ -"" regu , v e a · .1.w .. 1 tnc AO U> 12'111 11.u 11'• -t.. owle• 10 1o 1iw. lD'h 1~ _ v. GI/lion ll!CI '' 11\.'o 17\.lo 1"" -\ii Calendar year to date sales iJl. :='p,;' l,l(t 14 1P,i~ iI::! 1!;~ =l~ ?c~~· ,.J: 1 4' o o -~• -H·l- cluded 213 664: sty I ark 5 A?!K. 0!1 Gt 17 12~ U\• 12\.'o -VI r•n• '•'°" 11: ~~ ~: ~ = = ~:if'":~ ?~ r Joi~• ~ »Ill+ 1" • • -8--zrtdlll! In 1 l 18'111 I~ 1~ + \.'o H•lllllllrt l 05 12 i:v. ,W\\ 2t '" .. R36.7 ·~ regulars and 44,289 ll1bdr. w 1.3.S 2n t«~ "•'• 13'~ -"' 1~=:~~r<1·"l ~ ~v: k.1. !1~ = ~ ", .... w.1 .561 2 12 11:i. ff~ !_ !'! 1v1eras. ll•krOllT .6S \JJ n t.ii 2J~ + \, lllWCOI l.G71 10 2/Hi fM ru -.,, amm Pep I ~ fM9 :w~ ~ +"' l ddil ' B • k d al 81!IGE l,1Q 2' 31 '~ 30\1 31'Jo .+IV. rown Cor-1116 16 S'-1 I' _ \.t Hammnd .)D 16 1'1• 1,1, ""' -•• n 8 Ion, U!C e e?S BtlG l)f94.SO 11~ 6l~i 62 62 -l., lrow~C'o: DI 2 2 •ll~ •3'rl ~ -~ Ha"lllm" .MJ lJO 3' .J ... 31 * I Id 5 518 0 Is · aallG PIC4 l1!1 JS ,•,>,._ 5S -1o rwnZell l 6Q 172 ;u.,.,. ~ ).I~,_~~ Hand Her .11 1 2'V. 11:W. 21"4 + '"' a SO SO , pe In B~n9P.,n! .Ml 11! l~•o ., 16\< _ 1, rn z pU.'20 Hane.Cp .90 1 16'1< lt H -"" N be I b · lend Bank of NY 2 ll "''~ 47•1 ~1\o t \~ 1Hat1 51 s1 $1 +1.,, 1-1enn1M 1.30 2S )t ll'~ Jl'h + ~ ovem r O ring ca ar ea"~ Tr 2.14 ?J ~2'< '' ,,.1 1~ crs coro . .-G 21 17 ,it~ 1•1/\ _ •:. HtrC011rl l ti j'l\'J "''"' Srl'!I. -''o "tat deliveries to 87 641 SarbOil 2.JM ' s11 Sl"• 5H't -•, Cuda~v ca 4.5 1' ,,., uo,·, + 1• H1rr1s 1n1 1 60 Ju nv1 ~ -1•1o ., ' • ft•rd C'11 .1S 11 57\li 11•;, ,,.,., -,., Cudhv Pt1 .jS s 11''> 11" 11'1t Hers.co Cp I 32 1••· 11\~ 111'1 -~ "'jc Inc .m 13 15\'o •V. 14'1* -\4 Culliaan .2 14 '"'i 111~ lt~ .:;:~; H•t™rw .l(t JO l0•1 JOV. >04li -I• At1 c pl 2.50 1100 «t 4(t 4(t + ,_, Cummin .lt!b l<• 111'> :m'o 171• + v. Herv Al 1.20 IJ9 2"• 2•l• 24\'ii -l' s.111 Mio JO '''t ''' tV. -\~ cunnDrua .70 1 21'4 11'.i. 78\;. + ·~ ~I Corp AO l I!• •~• no -"' B11H Mf pf 1 ~ lJ\;, 13'1 lJV, + ,,. C11rtlH Wrt 1 SI 11>4 11 II -•; H1w!I El 1.12 l 29 11\.o ~ -V, llal'I> llld ' 66 19""' 111:. 11'1 -~'o C11rl Wr A 2 1 lt'rO 11 ,.,,.,. . H.vet Alb l 11 U'O lf\.'I 1"' + \ .. lltrhln l>f?,30 S 411~ '''" •I'~_·~ Cutler H 1.:IO 44 l7 :it•it J1 +·iii Htlelllne l1 U•o 1 \o U'ho + l~ * * * BtutCllLb .ao 1-10,,. 11&'111 """ -l'ft Cwcll>llS LIO Ii :M ~ ll\'J + 10 ~ltM"' .70 ~ 11;~ 21 27 -1~ Si~lrLAb .ID Jt'll4 Xll~ rr-'"" + \oi CVPl'U$M LC II 5m Jlh $211o + \Ii ~nz HJ ·"' 11 l5 l<l'lli lS + •• R::~l~g iSQ i !2~ ., ~ = ~: -0-~~"leif~ 10d11 ~~~ ~~ 11l~ -_-L.l Be,.! Flis 1 31 lt"• 3t )t1\ , Dan River 10 ll61 l)l'o 11"14 11llo -\'-Ht"-" In! .60 5' :20 1e+1 '4't ..,.. Beckma" .~ •1 •1 .i. 4'1"•....:. ,, Da"a Cp 1.25 1 2l'lo n ,l •. .. H~lmt Pllt 1 " 1111 !•to I'"'+ l• Beel Oldr .:io 7Q 591~ Jl'k sa•, -'0 01r1 Ind .lOti 179 ~ " 49>,a ->; HermrhP .10 1l 16"1t 15\1 S\l:t -1'1o BHcl'IAr .15b "so 17~1 11 11 -•• Dan Ind pl 2 1110,1 ,s!.~ 521/• j5i"A· -,,. Hm!IS?fl c.. 100 Siio SI.. ~ -~ GM Man Cites Smog Controls fttlco P~r .so 2SI~ ll\\ 7•'4 -'·l DaYCoCP 1.1-~" 2•'4 .~:~ .·.·,·;,:_ !:!,~., ... ~ •. !1' ,•, ~.~. JV. 71'1 + ,,.. B~111ntH 110b t 1~11i 19'~ 191<1 o .. vco a".25 1l•o IJ 14VI .. ,, ., " f1 '"" ,. ,. 31 -~ The 1970 model "ear in model emits 567 grams per Bell How· .60 <11. ss·.~ s~·.~ 50.., :.:11;. oevinHyd .so 34 :it1.1o 31\/o Ja\~ -v. Htrsh~d 1,10 lt 22'11 21l'o n .... ii B11t lnterton lJ 9h 91.1 tV. _ ~-O•v!nPL 1.b<I d ll"' 15 15 -VI H'Ybleln .111 lS .i»I lf'h 4(1\~ ->A Callfomla is a m a 1· or day, and the average 1970 Bomlt co 1 i1 11"' ,,,., n•1. _ ._ o0~L ,., ... , l.JJ 1» 50 ~ so + 1~ HfWP«.k ·'° 10 101 1oov, 1~• --. •••! •ls 04 I 81rnll• l 6fJ 5• :J6''• J.S JSV:i -1 rl pl J.to 130 52''t 52 52 -I Hll~ Yol!"t 41 11''1 11"' ll'ho -I<. milestone ii\ automotive smog m\IU'C em1 I grams -ess ee .. cH• iit , 1 6n., 611~ ,1,1, _ •• oPL i>10 1.u ~» n •• 911 .. HI IOf!Ho1e1 1 2J 11•-, i1"" 'l"' +1\.li lh f.flh" Btne!Fln 1 6fJ 10• tt•1 'l~I 3"' _ ~ Otert Co f 37 "°" 39'" 391/\ -lV. Hl!co .rs .o ur., 26V. 2...., -""" control, General Motors' top an ooe 1 . 8..,11F PIS.~ 2 us 1,5 10 _, DelmArP 1.ft " 201; ltl't 1'1'1' -~ Hllco Pi A .t2 • 2Jv. lJ\1 ~,,_ -~ emissions control enlrineer He said that emissions Bt11llF pl•.50 1100 SI Sl''I S1\~ -\ g::,~..r1~e S.OG '~ rn: ?!;,!' ~.11 = t =t~:V~i~n ~ :~~ ~~.·· •• 4~ = <L o-• BenflF ~1.30 • 76 7•>.:t 15'~ -·~ • "" "" .,. .... ,1 ' •• • said in Los Angeles. measurements on thousands of :enqyf1 1 Jn "'' ,,"' i1t. -'• g:~~Mi~~· 60 ~ ~1' ~fl: ~?~ ~ ~ HOi1dv1~.;"o ;s:;!l l?.:: ,lg.,., ~ .:.;·* Dr. Fred Bowdl.lch, d•·r-Jor cars ·m lbe • -Aogeles area rMufl " 51 11¥. 12'~ nu. ··· oennMlw iii 1 5 ,.20 ,.,,,. 111'» + 10 Hol1c1A 1.ltlb 1 "'"' u .. .,.,,,. + 1-o. L... ....... llertrPllD .711 .. u 13 .. 15\11' ->.:. Oe.1n¥Rtl l)t Sl 1 .... IN -114 HDll'l"S.... 1.20 17 21V. 1H' 21V. ... -I · · tr I G I f · k nd llermec Corp 121 6'~ I I -Ill 0 , , > ~ > ,._ H.,...... I• •A ,~ ''' o emw1on con o, enera -o vanous ma es a B•'" 511 1 80 ,.. ,,., ,,,. ,,~ _ ,, o",,','•'-.,,,• o .... "' "'"" -v. -·"'' • .... .. ' 11h ,,,,,. -,_ •·• , • 5 U•1 11>'o 11•At -.... iofolltVWI 1.20 lit 1.W 1'B't l.f)i,r,, -W.. f\.Jotors -en'"neering 1 ta ff , models, of various ages and BHM Ind l.1G 31 1•:i. 19"" ltVI -" oer.co 01'A ,,' 'lv. s11.0 SI" -1 HOOw 111 1.»a n 30h JO"• ~ + <<i f>' • . , Bii T!'lrtt .<IO l1 '5 '4•1 .,,, .. · Orr.co DI B 5 11 52 52 , . . Host IJlll .)l I 4J t l>, 41"' -\Ii spoke at the annual meeting of mUeaVPS and 1n varying states 1111ckDk 1.10 x•J 14 11 n + ·~ 0es1101nc ,., 109 J1 •1 J01't ~ -""' Hotel C1> ""' 1s 11 1. 10o\li 10o\li _ 1j 9-d lb B!elrJQf\n .~I 16 71'-' 7l'~ 72'" -lo Ott dl1 1 ~ \U tt\• j'W 11" ~I Ho!el pl I 25 3 11 11 1' > the r.fotor Car De a I er s of maintenance -showe at e11~, 1.1111 i ~'' '''~ 2s•. 1N -•4 0,1 Ed p1j 50 s 13 1n 114, ~-Houo '"" ·.IO 20 H•., l•''t ·~ +, •··-,·ation of So u I her n th overall output of Black Hll ·'' u 56'.'• ~4'• S•'p -,,, o"s1ee1 .XIP "' nv. n" 11'' -4\ HOU<I pt 1.2.1 2 '' 21r, 211~ -~ ~ e Blue Bell 1.loO 11 51'11 SO"' 50>.;, -1 OeKlor .2' 41 33\'J ll'4 3JV. ... Hout MUI _.G 1f 12'~ 21\o 21141 -l~ Cal'.fornla. automotive hydrocarbons in l obblt B1ks :is It Ul'll 11t'I +''I 0111F1n•n .50 11 11Vo 1ov. 10\l:i -"' Hou,ettF 1.10 ,. •J11 47\lo 4Jl'o _., Dl:'ll><I 1.20 7M JO''o 7'11) :itl~ -~, Dl1mlnt1 I IO JI 41~'o 4! 41 -~~ Hou11" l)f•.• • Ullit. 118 Ut -3\i He said 1970 model cars Southern California passed its 1101•c11 .Hb 112 m.:. 1m 1s1\ -1:it 011SM•m 1:'° 1,5 u11 111~ 11•A -..,, HoosF 1112.11 •I 6s i4 1•'" _, • . . llond S~s l IO 20~ 201.'J ~ OlaSh 11 C2 21'4 2t\'o 28~ + ~ Hout1LP 1.lt "' «I'll! .\.\ :M•• _,.., manufactured for sale in peak m 1966 and is declining BookMtn 1.11 4 n .. 12 l -•• 011s p 01.20 '1 u>M u~ 15.,, • Hl!lllilNG• .111 .s1 .i,,., ~ .... •~ -" ' !ll)fcltft 1.lll 12' 74'4 1~1A; ~ -'~ Olc•~Pl'o<l" 41 :U 24 12'n 72~'1 -11A; HouG1 pfl.51 l ilh l1 ~ + ~1 California achieved two im-steadily. llDrQWar 12.s ·~ 2s>1 2•1.1t ''~ -\, 01ebo1<:1 . ..ab .,, 60\'o 60'" 60\1) -~ H~w Jolln .2, 6 111,., 11 11 _ w H ·d ,_ J d h ed llarm•ns .llO 51 14 lll~ 3~1 -~ OIGIOt'Ola 6fJ 12 ?2 21l'il 22 .•. Howm•f .10 60 2$V. 2o:W. :U~• _ ,, port.ant smog control goals: e sai :..-1e s u Y s ow Bos Ed:1 '·°' •I J1 ~ JO'i• -"" 01111"911m :.00 ~ 2''• 1n-27"1 -"' H1>111na '·'°" 10 eo\11 n ,, _1 .. , I F lb f. · II lb t h ~-· bo -' Bour~• ll'IC If 1'l.I 71•-1210 -"' Oiiing DI B 1 1 4J 61 63 ,,, Hl/llll HIT ,40 11 17h 11'0 IP.O _ \~ . or e lTSt llme, a a ywui;ar n em1ss1ons R•~1111 .. 1r .511 n 11 101-o ltl't -·~ 01110t1Ca ..sob 1• 161.11 ,~ l6'" + "~ 1.,.M,..,.. 1.60 ,. 31 JC•• 31 + "• '""'tees of unburn e d from automobiles in the Los 11'1QQSt 2 ii>< ,11 in\ sri~ 5'" _.. :~ 01"'rC1ub .!(I 16 16,,. u•,;, 1si... -1 111e11 a111c 1 1u 11•1 111~ 11~ + N """' Brl'1 Mw L20 T7 ~ it\I Jn\~ + ~ 0 11"'' Xiii 10 n n. llt)~ 12Gl~ -21•, toealB pf4,7S 1 "'" 11\>2 .,.... h y d r o c a r b on 1 on the Angeles basin reached 1 830 flr1stMv 01 2 11 "" •5 45 -'\ o •IStaf i 111 ' •9'1 .., • ..,\, .. . 111 cen1 1.1• l6 :ic>-1 Jtt JO :.: ·•• d lb " ' I ~~Htlt1 ~l 222 Jt.u'l'J "=•~\ 1:o -): Dlverilnd ::i. ,5 11'• I~\~ 16'• -~' lttC1t1 ofJ.14 t 511' 4tV. ..,.... _1., automobile are brought under tons. per ay at e pea •. ou_-ari::nUc; 01.11 n 24ii ,."' 2,,, + ,,: R!!:.'!',.:r~ ·!!! u ,.,~ 41l~ •t• .. 111 Pt:IW•r 1 c ,...., lll\ :tr:v. _ 1- con•-1 -crankc•••, exhaust put >n 1~• By now he said 1t ll•o-r.o is 16"' 101.1t 10"" -•, g::·:::.-,, , , . .,-23 ''lit. 4111' 41'" -1r. •mD CP ... ,,. 11>6 lll• •J u111-'" wu u..... llUV. t • llrow" Co p1 S ll 11,, 14 .. _ 1, -" • 12 12'l 12\;i 12\li ,., INA C• 1 . .0 2.ia 3:t'I Jl 33\11-\, and evaporation from fuel is down t.o around JJ,370 torui R-. !ltarii 1 16 1 ,~ 1514 11v, -•• 0or/(1~: ~ ,., ff:: J7~ r.(~ -1(: 1rocom1 CtDlt ,, h \, 14 u -\' d Swl!SllQe 1.511 10 311 "'~ 7'~• +\\Dorr Otlve'r 1, U\.'I ll"' 1\>,i -1 lnCCum .14" 1 t\, t f'\ + .... tank and carburetor. ~r ay. •run•"'k lOl.I 111C1 11 l•''t ,.,..._.,,0, .. ,.,, ,, 3 •-1nc11anHd . .a as.s 211~ 2~ M+~' 0 S ,,-n e 110 ..a lt'< 1t "" + 1 • • • •j '3 ... , lndp~PL 1 Mi n 2.M 'l 2ll HAL AlllSCHIR 2. The resulting reduction Is LISTS SMOG G AL He added that automotive~~ Co .eo., ll 1tv.. 16 1i -,i &~:'v~~ f·:2 ft ~~ ~~ ~t + ~ :"~re" .s~ ; l~. ,~ .. ~ ;:·,i All MIL-'II Models 80 ""rcent. compared to un· GM'• Bowd•'tch controls also have reduced 11::Jg~t1n171:6, ,. 1.1~ ill!~~ ,.'! = ~:' O•etslnd 1'.40 101 '~ 2•11t 211.1o -~· t 111"' · 1 j1" 21 " -'• -~ boo ·d I I b '""'''' ' 10 ''' " -'" + gr•ur of1.l0 21 J?~ J[ 3 ~ •• 1 ,"",r •!'Id ' 32 3' "' 31'--'• Ir lied hlch ls Car mono'' •• m SS Ons Y . --I 82 1 211'1 2 21 I "~ d Pn.Js I 31 3l'l JJV1 -1 A11t1m1111i. -,,.._ con o cars-w mee . B~tow• w .'f 1l l1 lN l6 -1•t ~essr t0 !b 46 n;v. 71 = ,• rnltnd s11 2 t'6 21•1 1111 111~ _.., HEARING AIDS the blltial target &et by \ 65 ""'rcent and that 1970 B1111t Aa"'" 111 lJ 12'1 n1.1i -~ °"tW! l 40 , »'• -• tnmon1cp .76 21 U\ii 1s~. ui.:. + ·~ "Wh S . I'~ • lluntlt pfl.311 S n"l ff Jt~ +1 gvkeP p16·15 s 1 1oi I02'!11 .:i;.·1.;i 1n1!~0 .TOb 16 u 23,,., 2JV.-I• c11111m AYrll Amplllltlllff .,.. •""•c• California smog authoriUes for hydrocarbons -key smog-model GM cars with fliwl Ind 140 '' ~ U.'o uv. -1\.11 1111B•d l io. c ~ v. SJl\ !S,,. +1v. 1"'p" COP :i. s• u u-. .mi+'• fllO SAl.•SM•fll M•k•• tht Dlff1rtllC•" automotive hydrocarbon con-forming ingredients -than transmission-controlled .spark I~~ ·,~ .ti: l~,~~ 111'"' 1W~ ~~ o::Oi::i7 f;Sa 1U ,~~ 1im 1&i~ ::,,~ :~:~~f:sr'·~~IO ~~ ~~ ~~ ~" ~ r: 3409 E. COAST HWY. trol I 970 od I I t II II lihUnv .t11 r .JO lN 1"'1. -~du Diii oi4.so ! ,S~ .. ,, •S +••IBM , 21' JSlt ~"'I nn'-l\lo CORONA DEL MAR 0,.1111 c-iy 4l1t (•"'"' Dr. -ive average 1 m es. ea ures are genera Y mee ng _c;_ du Ollt ~3:511 U~ fl'-1 5l" "i" ., 1n1F11Fr .«ill lO• •211.i •i"' """ _ h ... A~'"'""""' N._i ~ U1'1 MWIU He pointed out than an "On the standard California th e 1971 Californi standard for 1•11111 c~ ·'° ;. ll'• Xt't ~:·· -~ R_llCI 1:1~.of tl~ 17.J: iri: ~,: = ~ :~:.:.·~ 1.'i:: ~ ?Ji: n 'ff'.:.., . 67 .3933 Lit...,.,.._ "'s. W•"'9 average 19&0 model car, smon test," he said, ''the control ol oxides of nitrogen-:t,.h~~k ~ ,,•1,: ~ .. 22..: -._ 0'11C1Lt "" t itMi ,~"' ,." 'Hl't -·~ 1n1 1nou11 '' -. »'4 l'l"4 -1'' (ftll ,...1'11 f> · 71 I•>• 16-'l -1\~ ~ J,7Sofl,f1 llOll 2 ... 2•\'t 74\'t-\I lftl 11'111 pf1.1' 11 n\'t '1'6 J2 -1" !~~~~~~~~~~~~~5555555555~~~-~~~oo~t~~~n~lr~o~~~·~-~·~•~m;~~·~~a~v~e~r~a;~~·~u~n~~~l;r;~~~~d~l~~;~•~Y;•;•;r~a;h;•~a;d~o~f~U~m~e~.===~:~~~·~\~L~I~~~·=~"~•;·~·=·~··~-~~-, ··-~-• • • ·~·--• ••• ·-~ -• rnolnd .•1'1 41 IP-lo 1$\11 1!14 -'ii lfl!Mlner l)f 4 1 A """4 a •t -1'• ---~n• Am .40 U 11\li IH4 10~ -._ Int Mng o10t C U" lol1" U\O -1;, -E·~-IM NIU 1.70 lJ1 '11'ii 41'\ 411~ -b l~t PIP 1.50 17J """ I ... -\~ . . • Huntington Beach Office: Located at 91 Huntington Center at Edinger Ave. & Beach Blvd., adjoinin g the San Diego Freeway, in Huntington Beach. MAUI O'f!C:lt TA~ 1111 .l Hl!I, ~ Allttln • fn.1•1 11111 VlllW!'l lt.,.,•~Mt14 Olflfl tlfltH! WtLIMlll\I OFP!Cl: lt.UW+lth1111 114 •JU.12~ LA. CfVtC CIJrfTtlt! 211• 1 lio•awtr• ..,,,. IAlfl& llOlllCA.I 11t Wltlfll/'911'111. • Wl-OTU ...... •ltll(h 111111 ''•clno • a1~1 WllT COY!ltk 1..-...r ...... ,.Ctl.•~l<UOt IN YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD... . Huntington Beach Office of Coast & Southern Federal Savings, where your account is SAFE • CONVENIENT• AVAILABLE Marktt nuctvaUons don't worry Cont end Southlm 11ver1 ••• their captlal I• lfWl;)'S rlelng In value. And ,ou•,. sure <>I the highest e1mlnQJ COl\llla:tent with utety When you ••ve at Cont and Soulhem. Fo'9most 1aaur1nce of thnfl benefits ls the outstanding fln1nc:l1l 11t'lngth mt lnttl* through the }'tars hy ttt. man· •a•m1n1 of Cots! •nd Sovthem Fedt,.I Savlngt. INSURANCE TO $15,0DO/A!SOURC!S OVU IDD MILLION ••JrtORAMA e1n: Nll Van Nlf1't l lvd. t m-1111 LOMG llACM: ~ HIGHEST PREVAILING RATES 5.:2,~~ l .~~ .. ~ .. ~,I ~.:~2" DIVIDENDS TO DATE OF WITHDRAWAL COAST lrd A Locu11 • .CST·74tt AND SOUTHERN FEDERAL SAVINGS IAlflA AAI,\ LOAM lllltVICI &OllliC'V; . ' "' ' . ' 1t06 Nt. M1111 It,• (Tl41 MT4:5"r Jl 11'1• if ti -"' Intl Rttetll Sl U 1 lo\ 14 -i' 4U i~ f1l1tt !~;~ = ~ l~I ft~ \'t 1os! B"" ~ f:" =i ' ,'I lllol 2 \I 2"' •. l""tl ~IC • T.)O I "' I "' IUV. -6\\ lfl.lt lt\11 \t\1 , . n!T T PID 4 zi > " y 1121', --1\'I 2.~ 1"' 1J\1 11 +\Ii n1T&T pl~• j \.t lM -2 11 :r ~ .IOI,-\II Jn1 T&T plH4 1 1111 • .: !''' n'l ::~ ='>\ l!iTa."11 ~51 I 1l 1t',\; l~ 1tm ::;ji, " J~ ,,~! ~,•, -+ •, ln!T&T 1111(• .o f:M n l! -< n ~\ -. \ lnTT Pll. I~ l20 ll.. ~ _, ~ '?" »Ill 2JM. -•• I"' U!lj 1 • 21 2411i -260 I~ .," 1Tft + t "1 Ut1 i. 10 ,.,,. lfi.. :.::"- 'f J:~ \:ti ,.~~ -. "'-:~::-=· J 5 f P." ~ t = ~ •,,1 't? ,•,.. • ,~ '•"' 91'"'6 ·" " »" Vi 1 -.. ,,. .., -n1eros1r .60 d ., -\.t :! 11"' 11n l~: = tt l"lertPw 1.24 lj 1h I \ . _lo ~ w ~\' ff"' -jllli I.OWi let! I » ~ -11 ! F" • ll~ + • 1n1 ~n.11 r. ir.: 1111 l!!: t tt '-'°_\Ii 1-IPl.f l.IO n ~ 111 14\'o -1\• I 1-•PSv 1,32 " ,,.~ + \o '', ?!!~ ~~ ~·-· ·.~ 11~: '!:: :ft '~ U.'1 ~ _,. ,,-. -" -.. 11t11 Cort '! •1" ti« + ·14 ~ ~\ ,,. ~+\'! lTlw "''.JI ll!I Ill I • .,., '~ "t :t " -\' -J-K-l1 4\ 4 ,!io -'II J1o;.nA11 .)-41 ljti 1~ tJ'.4 -1, ll ~ ~ ::f~ J'.='1.:·IG 21 1!h. ,. 1= ,',' ,' Jn 2• 11::\ =I\ J-1" 1:..... '' g"' n-'• ~ t~ n~ n -1u ~=!!1.~~ ~1 Jl"4 ""..:. '• ~J ~ ''"' ·~=a jJ:rPL ,,., I U" m l!.1'111 :.• •Jlll~ t,.-co,,. "" ""-~ ~,.., 1, ''+"J;mw1~11 . .o 1nm.r 11 -tt ~ , :.:.·~ 'ir.lm=tft _ .J J~ ~ IE ~ =t .. I • -" J w "'·" 1 lOIM I 1GO"' -N .. K' " 7't -11 J mw11t "' I rXlll 1Jlli lPll -ll r. ffi 1~ ~-: = :: )j:..i~ 1: 1tt ., 1utt int~ ;:,~~ ;f ta -1 Ollnt Svc m -.if f. «"' -t\ ti " 4 -l'I jDIWISVC Ill 2 cl 'Ill + I\ F. !I ~H\' .. .! :: ,,:;..o::n 1:1t :i ~ ~, ._ .,u 1 1 " ••-iz '-~L r.s ,,,, CJ ., -~ ... 1'!t '.!11\ 1="' . .o·• ' 1f ~ ""'.:.::,, 1n, I ., I'• 1 '91Jcor /11\tt I.. t) lf'l \' It:;+~ " . ' . '. ... ' I -.,, Die•..., I , llH L Mon~ay's Closing Prices-C'A>mplete New York IWL Y I'll Of ff, - YOUR PO<XET s~u unwanted 1Wmt l with • DAn.Y Pn.OT; I Claslitled AL ., PHONI 642-5671 Final Stocks In All Home Editions -----------------------------·-----------...-, ......... --... ~--..~-_.,,,,... "'-~------------------------ HOUSES FOR SALii . . . HOUSES FOR SALE RENTALS RENTALS 1000 G1n1r•l HOUS!S FOR SA~ I llOUSE~'.,OR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE · HOUSES l'OR SALE G.ntr1I -1000 1,...1.. 1238 !,...ine l:UI, Hunll)ltlon llNch 1400 Huntington Beach 1400 HouH1 Furnished Hou1U Untumlshod Mesa Del Mar _ Big 4 lltrt is a gleaming lril!ndly f&mily1 borne in a choice area. Newly painted and caf"JX'led. Texas i>ize bed· rOOn1s. 1 ~4 baths. d r e a m 191chen with relinished satin cabinelS-. Best of all only 129.400. Colesworthy & Co. ''Agent" "For A \Vise Buy" BUILDER'S CLOSE.OUTlll $1,500 Down = 5"!. COLLEGE PARK to LOW, LOW lntorest in $26,950 Beach area! MASSIVE (.t Ken Koll home) 'BEDROCTh1S plus 991'3\Vli.ng . . . Jiving & FAMILY RooM _ ~orntr lot with specutl park; "'ith floor to ceiling FIJtE-1ng area lot ~at & cam~r. PLACE! Bright u sunshine Adult occupied .home \Vllh Califomla garden ete·ctfie near new carpeting. Vacant kiichen & dishwasher! Plush & ready for your Oiristmas -,hag carpets from BEAM· occupancy. Call now fo see. ING CEILING living room lo secluded master bedroom + scrumptoos pullman mar- 2 BEDROOM bto bath,. POOi.. s1zrn Hardw.....i Floars block "'lilied back yard with "'("""' Pl'Of('ssionally landscaped $20,700 front \Vilh sprinklers! FROM Clean, sharp home on R·2 lo!. ONL y S27 900 Near new cpts 1n th ls adul1 WE s£Ll A HOME occupied tiomr. Call now • EVERY 31 MINUTES tomo1TOw couJd ~too late. Walker & Lee Newport TURnE ROCK HILLS In The Master Planned co·mmunity f . I . , o rv1n1 ,.. Aie now offering for sale, their award win· ning 3 & 4 bedroom MODEL HOMES. These model homes are magnificently ap- pointed with the finest of carpets -drapes -wallpapers; plus every model is profes· sionally landscaped with special walkways & patios. These homes are placed on quite large & very. private· view sites that may be ·purchas- ed on' either leasehold or fee tit I e owner· ship. NEW HOME IMMEDl41E t(OVE IN 4 BDRMS 11/z BATHS 1/4 MILE FROM BEACH $20,990 HUNTINGTON BEACH _Call Now 962-1353 Corona dtl Mar 1250 Fountain Valley 1410 -------EASTBLUFF-VIEW 3 BR. 1% ba. Nice fpl, Din. area. Shows unusually \veU. Call for price &: terms. --------ASSUME FHA LOAN tl43/per mo. PITI. N e w home. Owner disabled \\'ants out. 3 bdrms 2 baths, built. ins. You finish landscaping. Near new 18 hole golf course, 2 swim pools, _N_ew_po'--r1_Ba_1e_h __ 2_2_oo Newport BNch OCEAN front lx>UBe, Tops! Lg 2 BR, 2 BA. Frplc, crpt.s, drps, yard, patio. $250. win. ter, 673-W38, Corona dtl Mar 2250 Lovely Ful-n. Home 2 Bd, ronv. den, 2 ba's. TV, hi·Ji, wa.sller/dry,er, lanai, ))titl9. 1.Blk. to BloUs. 6 mos. or more. $350 mo. R . C. GREER Realty 3355 Via Lido 673-9300 OCEAN VIEW 2 bedroom, convertible den, 2 baths, fittplace, 1 blk to beach, references. ;350 1ease, &12·7777 B•lboa ADULTS ONLY 2 bdnn, 2 baths. New paint, new cpts, nc1v drape1 - Available Jan. bl. $225. 3 bdrm. 2 baths, split-level. F.P., Bit-ins - 2 car ga.ra1e, faces pool. Avail Jan. 15th. $215. 3 BDRt.1, 2 ba~. split-leve:I, Available Dec. 20. $265. 3 bdrm, 2~i bath!. New paint, nc1v Cl'pts, 1 new drapes. F.P. Blt·ins. Facer; pool. Avail now. $Zl5". Bay & Beach Rea1ty, Inc. 901 Dover Drive, Suite 126 NB 64>200J EVes. ~ 1iiiiiiiiiiiiii64ii2ii-7iimiiiiiiiiiiii-/ ~rrro Harbor ffivd. at Adams I' 5-15-9-191 Open 'til 9 iPM at Victoria Follow the sig ns to TURTLE ROCK HILLS, one mile east of the UNIVERSITY of CAL- IFORNIA at IRVINE, just off the i.ritersec· lion of CAMPUS & C.ULVER DRIVE. Telephone: 833-1102 for further Information. CORBIN-MARTIN REALTORS 675-1662 3008 E. Coast llwy., CdM BEAUTIFQL 3 BR Home plus new _1 BR luxury apt. Or use as 4 BR, family rm. Crpts, drapes, ? tropical palios, no yard work. $49.900. O\VNER. 67~(1312 G.l. RESALE 4 Bdnn., 2 ba., room for trailer and/or boat, beautiful yards;' close to schools, $7,000 dov1n, 6% o/o loan. S:J!l-6081, U882 Wisteria F .V. · 2300 $275 lse. Custom 3 BR, 2¥2 ---------Ba. Family, dining, new SPACIOUS 2 tilocy, 3 Br, 2 crpts, intercom. All elec kit. Ba, bayview, family. $10Ci Lge Jot. Many xtras. 2215 ">inter or $325 yrly. KI Anniversary Ln. 642-2228 6-9574 Newport Shores 23S1 3220 VIEW Lo~·c!y large 4,000 sq. fl. home \\"ith outstanding view Or the entire had>0r. Thi;; spacious home can either be a 6 bedroom or 4 bedroom ''ith studio & playroom : family toom. CUs!om built by O'>''llt'J', \Villi electronic oven, 3 fireplace.~. elega111 Karistan carpeting. \Valled front-terrace encloses Cl.IS· tom sil'imming pool. Asking $155.000. Call for app't. OCEAN VIEW 646-8811 ___ !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! CAMEO SHORES Anytime Geo.oral 1000 Newport Heights 1210 Linda Isle 1306 HUGE POOL . LOW PRICE OF No expense \vas spared /;-:=--:=--:l:-Z--=::::!l::::i:=::lZ:l::~ ---------- • '~,~~ ~1~;;;:;,. Commercial Sleeper place to live. SANTA 1 linda Isle Drive 4 BR. 5 BA home in final stages or completion. Palos Verdes stone entry&. frplcs. Has Arrived Early Fam Rm :~ -~illiard rm . Ne1vport .Heights 2 bedroom ~.eaut. dee. $155,000 home. Priced at ground val· L1n~a Isle Development ue alone . Zoning will permit Bill Grundy 675-3210 4 units _ To settle estate, quick sale value. Lido Isle 1351 Lido lilt IMMEDIATE occupancy. 2 Br, 2 Ba. Sunny patio. 2 Jots from beh/bay. New crptg & decor. OWner. 642--&t24 Santa An1 Hgts. 1630 RENTALS ~1 ACRE. 2 Br., frplace, heated pool, rm for horses, $33,5()0, Owner. 54.5-6948. Laguna Btach 170S Houses Unfurnished Gtnerel 3000 -----Rtnt or lease Option Large home, Mesa Verde. New shag carpi;t & paint. BEAUTIFUL $250 mo. 3 BR. 2 Bath, carpeta & drapes, clubhouse & pool priv!. \Va1k to beach. $275 mo. Eves 714/96S-4004 Bay Shorn 322S FOR Lease. Large 4 bdrm, tanlily room, formal dining, etc. J ean Smith Realtor 64&-3235 Corona dtl Mar 3250 john macnab .3 Spacious bedrooms, family room with brick fireplace formal dining roon1 S!ep.down living room. 17x35 Pool $109,500 Listed Exclusively \Vith Ouf..nanding Jocallo11 at Ollf' oJ Costa ~lcsa"!I busiest intersections. /las residential income unit~ at present. 122's frontage, excellent com· mer1.."ial potential ! it is zoned C·2. S20,95o for this great 3 bed- roont v:ith 2 gorgeous baths. Huge family room oil lhis modern queens kitchen. SJid. ing doors leading to lovely covered patio and sun deck which surrounds this 15 x JO pool, heated & filtered. Sub. mil $:.!,000 down w~ total payments $180 total. ll8.ooo l--10_7_V_l_A_E_B_O_L_I _ 646-7171 BEACH HOME 546-9521 or 540-6631 EXTRA Lge. 2 Br. house. 1;~ I 714 ) 642-8235 ~COATS . 4000 SQ. FT. in lovely Laguna condo. com· Ba., lge. Hv. rm., formal 9!Il Dol\•er Drive. Suite 120 Nl'\\o-port Beach ~WAL~ACE REALTORS -54&-4141- (0pen Enningt) 4 BR, 3~ BA, 3 car garage. munity; fronting on magnif. din rm .. tpt. Priv. 30 x 30' Crpts. drps, unusual featur. icent heated pool, 10() steps encl. patio. $275 mo. yrly WE SELL A HOME EVERY 31 MINUTES es. Built 1967. Owner c . R. f.rom priv, bch., tennis cts. Scenic Properties 675-5726 ---~~=~~-'--I Gangi. 213 / 244-3101; eves etc. Comp, attractive furn. LARGE 2 story 3 or 4 BRs 2 BR, So of hwy, Frplc, A LITTLE 213 / 246-0700. ()pen. include "'"/\v crpt'g, drps., 13x21' rumpus roo1n, bit-ins. crpts, drps, bltns. Beam PRIVATE WORK SHOP $22,000 PRICE REALTORS 673-4400 Walker & Lee kgsz maste1· bed; location newly decorated. $270/mo. _cl~",c•;c'c.· 6_7_3-6904~~~-~-7682 Edinaer PRIVATE KINGDOM • · _._ decor. 2 BRs, 2 BAs, sep. 551l"S "'"l15l o 842.••= r-A,·~til-9 PM Walled patio, 3 Br. + din, + Huntington Stach 1-1 a· 1 · /d · '" .... ,,.. 2 BR, sundeck, nit:e patio; In excellent CoS'lA Mesa area. 3 Nice sized bedl'oo1ns and a house 1ull of fresh carpet Over sized lot wilh .BIG. BIG 14 x 30 WORKSHOP for Dad! Towering trees otf huge custom covered patio! $1.T;,iO DOWN for any buyer 01· NO DOWN VETS! """'::~~~~1 2 ON LOT $23,500 'HiJ;J "'!"' v., 1n. rml!; aun. with w , $21 I UESA VERDE. family + 20x22 ft. all pw·. $20,850 Is Tht Price ltor., 2.car gar. lower Jev· $165. 3 BR, fenced yd, frplc. gardener. 0 mont h y . SCREAMING EASTSIDE fJ"I pose room $49 000 el. See to appreciate. Shown RIO, w/w, children & pets 6=75--0~13~1~~~~~~ · ' This home is a i\Va1ker &. OK Bier 534-6980 ::-$24, 95'0 Walk~r ~lty. 675-5200 Lee Cuaranteetradeandit's by oivner, call tor app't. · · 2 BR, l~~ BA dplx. Pri bch. HIGH COSTA MESA CEILINGS ' . • 1WO (2) SEPARATE. ' B<d- 3366 Via Lido NB Open Sun "'-y 499-2152 0"' 83i·.u791. $175. 3 Br separate house.-Vie\\', frnlc. Adults, no pets. 4 BEDROOM+ ' · a ut:aUty!! ou young • .,. t• ~ t. d HANDYMAN'S Family welcon1e. Blue $225 mo. 646-2290 Jn this exquisite J Bd. hrnne, room homes on a CHOICE with family room. formal LOT with alley access. TWO dining room and shag car-for the price o{ one at just peting that y00 may want to $23.500 for both. $2350 Down mO\v. $39,800 and it's youn. will handle!.! GUEST HOUSE Dover Shores 1227 peop "•.,,op ren ing an sec Be ~ l C 2 baths, built·in kitch£'n, cov. this one. 3 Queen Size Bed. Special! .J. Income units 120 =~·~"°~"~· ~°'-;;--O_ll_. -"-'·~-I $250 mo. 2 BR. frplc, bltns. cred patio. Garage + car-1 ----------1 rooms with gorgeoUs bath. yds. to beach. Patio&, decks $150. 2 Br, hard\\'OOd, drps, Ne\\·ly deCorated. \Valk to WE SELL A HOME EVERY 31 ·MINUTES port. r.:•n 1720 *Irreplaceable View-A' I-luge kitchen. New carpets ,\'/ocean view. Nds paint, nr town. Blue Beacon beach & to\vn. 675--7488 ~ Bay & Mountains! & d E •· k 69-· 6'0 "Ill CM TARBELL 2955 Harbor . rapes, normous U<IC £'IC. ' '70 Cross $9500 yr. ··~ • · · DUPLEX · 2200 sq. ft. 4 BR, Walker & Lee WE SELL A HOME EVERY 31 MINUTES Regal "Old World" Contem-yan:l. NO DO\VN G.I. and Pr. $69,000. Consider trades. $225. 5 BR, 2 Ba. Redec. 2~~ BA, bltns, frplc. Gar. \VANT to buy duplex or porary picturesque home w/ Small oO\vn F.H.A. i1ISSION REALTY 494-0731 Frplc, bltns, \V/\\'. drps. S32j mo/\se. 54G-7573 '.!TOO Harbor Blvd. at Adams 545-046.'> Open 'til 9 PM ....... Chicago Bound Owners have opportunity in Oiicago; so you have opportunity hel'C'. 3 good !!li:red bdrms :t bath s, for ... mal living room and larze !am. rm. Be<iutiful •shag carpets. Near JOU l'.'QUl'llL', Asking $27,500 FtWVA • really anx- • • """· DOVER SHORES SELL! ' Owner translerred, will sell oi· lse/oprion. lge. 4 BR., faro. mt. hon1e. Pool,. View or Back Bay & hills. Loan at 6i% % assumable. $69,500 ...... Coldwell, Banker & Co. 550 Newport Center Or. Newport Beach, Calif. 133-0700 644-2430 ORANGE COUNTY'S LARGEST 2629 HARBOR BLVD. S46 8640 OPEN EVES TILL 1:30 Walker & Lee 2043 \Vestclill Dr • 646-7711 $25,000 FHA • Assumable lo1v inlerest loan. Open Daily 1-5 1;-«aled on beautiful tree 1220 Dolphin Ttrr, CdM lined street. This home is a Formal dining room, 3 BRs real value. W\v down pay- 2 baths, hu.ge living room ment -room for boat or with fireplace _+ family ~iler. No credit qualifica· room overlooking large pa. hons. tio. 2500 sq ft living area. 546-9521 or 5404631 small house in Eastside unobstructed view • nlost WE SELL A HOME Costa Mesa. Principals on-rooms. 5.00o ~· ff. 4 Br's, EVERY 31 MINUTES VIEW, 3 BR, 2 BA, all elec., Avail no"''· Bkr. 534-6980 ly. 675--0617 or 642-1863 41,'a Ba + maids qtrs. Easy w beam ceiling's, crpts, drps, ~taint. Immed occup, F~rn· alker & lee Jg cor lot. $36,000. Owner Costa Mtsa 1100 ishecl. $178,000. Oinsider 494-4726 trade/vac. lot. Assume 6¥.1% 7G82 Edinger RENTALS """ LARGEST loan. 548-7249 S424455 Open 'til 9 PM Hou1t1 Furnlshtd Costa Mesa 3100 4 BR. 1'4. Ba., elec. kitch. Fam. nn .• frpl. Fncd. yard. Choice Joe. $240 Mo. 548-7260. PROPERTY IN Un'versity Park 1237 Owner Desn..rate Rentals to Share 200.S MESA DEL MAR ~,;;;;',;;;;;;:;;;;;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;;:;;;,1 Must !!ell . transf~ out of ---------2 BEDROOM, $135 mo. N~w By Owner 4 BR, 2 BA. dbl ,tale. Take ov-~"' ~ G.I. \VOMAN '>''/~cured income paint. 1 child, no pets, Ca11 I d · · + WEIGHING VALUES? .. -~" · t 54&-2802 . gar, enc o.<ie main pa\10 loan. Neat 4 & fam. rm \i•/ \Vil share lovely, new 2 Br 2 open palios. Unique en· Looking for your inoney's fully -.......1. Anthony poo. I. aµt w/sanie, over 30, C\f. Ira Sh •· I M worth'? Then take a ""'~k at ~""I..,.. "A" ""'"' R f nee. ru.,,,, rees. any .-~~ $191. inc.l's. taxes & iru;. ,,_.,,,J eves e s. e•t••·• 134 000 n-•t rn '161 this 2 Br., tile roofed bung. "'""'· · .vu .nv--> Wideopenforoffcr onlist-SHARE My e legant Over 1700 .. Very Lrg. Liv. • Man 35 to 60 yrs. $150 mo. * COTI'AG.E 1 Bdr. Stove, retrig. Util pd. $140. No Pets. 545-6294, 557-8400. 3 BR,& den. l~.i: ha, crpts, drps, frpl, blt·ins, clean. No. C.M. $215 mo. 842-7153. LIKE New, 4 bdr., 3 ba.: a.low. FP $34ed,200. h 11 ing of $34,950. waterfront home w/dock. Rm. & M•"-lxlr_ Kodell r I ~,,..;::~, 61'>-4331 'prpi_ng. Ndb't"' OCC •,3"4 ~· LLEGE REALTY 2 BR $65 per mo. S.A. Ir.1MACULATE 1 BR duplex aoo, · gar., · ,J.JV. REALTY .i500Adllmsatttarbor,CM. area Grand & 1st w/ gar. Apt B, 131 E. 21st Lachenmyer Rea ltor l..MJ , ' .. "'"°15 540--8376 Univ. Park Center. I rvine 673-5920 or 5434307 St. cr.t 548-8584 SANTA ANA HEIGHTS NE\V 2 BR. 1 BA. shag crpt. Call Anytime 83:J.08'20 1 :,!'!!0'!'!D'!'!E~L~H!'!O'!'!M~E:'.'?~?"'?~lt ... '"" ... " i.R~00=',".1 M~A~TE~S~:.w".'",""•ed~-t-o -'-~,.cB=R~•"ne~.",=200~-m-0- 1860 Newport Blvd., CM $23,900 excel terms. 3 BR, Drps, dish\\·hsr, patio, beani I ~~~-~~-!!!-!!.~~~~I looks like it. Absolutely share apt. Male or fema1e. F'enccd yard. CALL 6.w.39'28 Eves. 644·1655 hd\l'd flrs, cptd, frplc, patio, t,.'Ciling, frplc, gar. Adults, Corona del Mar 1250 gorgeous 4 bdrm {3 & den) Blue Beacon &15-0111 * 546-6068 * bl no pets $16.). 2650 Elden, condominium in a I most ===~--~~-·------t·in R&O, Lg cor. lo!. "'~1 ~2 ft 7 & S ROOMATE wanted: male on 3 BR. 1 ..... ]c, cpts, drps, 2 car '"'.........,,, a er pm ' un. 0 E f • unbelievable condJtion. "'Y PR-ESTlGE A • • • • ur xc us1ve Bal. Isle. Call 675-2569 art. garage, $200 mo. Lg fenced REA 4 BR 2 ha, n r \Vestcliff OWNER-A good buy. 3 BR 01vner transferred -priced 5 yd. S45-2Sl3, 540-6975 Ne"'·port Beach, nice 3 BR shopping $27,!:.()0, Cptd, house, West side. CpLs, Enjoy f.rom evl!cy room for itnmediate sale at ==p.=m=.======= -========== home in beautiful Westcliff. screened patio, sep. block drps, stove, gar. $19,950, an ocean vie\v and $26,950. Call 545-8424 (open Newport Beach 2200 Mesa dtl Mar 3105 \Vrought iron fenced for house "·orkshop. award 546-8026 sunsets over Shorecliils eves) South Coast Real ------- rourt yard entrance. Large \\'inning child 's tree hol.IS!: 3 BR house on \Vlifon $23.500. wooded area Estate. TOWNHOUSE; 3 BR, 21,~ 4 BR. 2 Ba. Crpt &. Drapes. Lanai. Spac rooms. lmn1ac "e e e e O\vner. By appointment. from this spaciou~ ~M~ov-e~ln~B~y-C=h~ri~s~tm_a_s BA, frplc, patio, pool, 2 car $225: Qne year lease. Call throughout. lmmOO poss F .. Kingaard Real Esta\e 5-IS-2039/646-4760 '.1 bcl.i·n1., den homr. Shai·p 2 story 3 bdrm 2~2 gar, all bltns, cpts, drps. 5-14-8~ eves. avail. PMced below ma rket ' r.11 2-2'122 OLDER 2 BR house, 2 car The only floor plan bath. On corner lot. Carp. Lse $325. mo, unfurn $300. ''t-000 l'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;; of Its kind /d ·1 ·1 12 871 ~· ... ,. Verde 3110 a · J, · 1· gar. Lrg lot -suitable for ets rapes, all but I-ins. For. Ava1 /1. -oo..u. or mw -----2 HOMES 1 LOT on Roxbury ln al d' · · ...... 2491 building. 545-6001 111 ining room, service <rt£-VACANT, 3 BR. 2 BA, <0v e.l(ciusive Cameo Sho\'es po:'Ch, fa mily room. Assume PAUL•WID'l'E 3 Bdrm 2 bath, fireplace, $16 •.IV'I FIREPLACE, Pool, 2 bdr., 2 patio, fncd yard. Bltin TV. M V rd 1110 •""" 6 "l~ GI loan . price $35,900. CARNAHAN bu ilt·ins + a 2 Bdrm hon1e, esa t e ba., patio, adults. Bayside $235. Call after 6 833-3139 ••&L TT co. fireplac(" • $32,500 with $6000 Paul Jones Realty Village. Until July tst. $200, .. L 847·-u&; Eve. 847-·8919 C ll (2!3) 222 A~nn~,.673--5'1l9. 4 BEDROOMS. VACANT down 011•ner will carry @ -w<I""' 1 year lease $260/mo. Huntington Beach 3400 $155 )'l'ly, 4 BR, 2 BA, crpt!, drps, very small fenced yd. Dbl gar. 1st & last &: dep. pd. Van Buren & Newman (213) 248-1921 LEASE $275 per mo. 2 story 3 Bi;t, 21,; BA. Shorttrest tract, H.B. ~ 548-4905 aft 6 or wknds. 2 BR, 1 Ba, lge Jenced yd , crpts, drps. garb disp, 2 car gar. $150 mo. 962-8537 4 LARGE BR, 2 BA, frlilc, .new cpts & drps, dbl gar, fencd back yd. $250. 962-8994. Lagun• Stach 3705 LARGE, nev.·ly redec. 1-Br. duplex. Ocean view. Adults, no pets. $175 mn. yearly. PLACE REALTY 494-9704 For rent or sale 4 BR. new, in Laguna. $300. mo or $41 ,500. 830-4079 Dana Point 3740 Overlooking Marina Beautiful executive home. Spacious, ltL"urious. N e w carpets, draperies. rcdecor. thru-out. P hone for appt. to Set'. 496--3959 4 BR, family room, 2 BA, carpets, drapes, pool. $275 mo. 4~1445 NEW OFFERING l093 Baker, C.?-it. 546-5440 7'ho/n SZ?i/mo. 118 years). $40,500 BY Ov.,ner -Assume 514 BAYt~RONT 3 & den, pier & Agt. 546-4141 Wtttcliff •rea ZZZZ~z-:;:;:;~:\\:-i!l-:I W•.ll1·McC1rdle, Rltrt. Largest & tines.t 4 bdrm. din. Loan. 3 Br. den, lrg. fam. floa t. Furn or unfum. $600 I==="'======::. loupltxe1 Unfum. 397.S °'8.nning 3 bdnn family EASTSfDE. l BR . 1810 Nev.1>0rt Blvd .• C.11. ing & family roont, homt: rm .. lrplace. 2 ha. 1sland mo. No. 2 Balboa Coves Newport Beach 3200 home -A delightful place ;)48.7729 644-0684 eV{'s. value no\v on market, kilchcn, bh·ins, 2 pantrys. 675-4331 2BR, Urps, crpts. fenced yd, to emeratin. Family room, Fixer upper. vacant & \\'ail· _ Roomy & comfortable exe. Boat gate. Covered patios. 2 BR, 1 BA, l,J blck rrom bay CHOJCE Ot 3 lovely 3 Bdrm gar, blt·ins. Adults. no peU I·~. f . ing for an ofier. Attornoy $26,950 cutive .._""" lionie. Large EZ care landscaping. OOie & ,_8,_11_ !I'"+ utit. \\'inter homes nr. ocean. $250-$275 $140 mo. 548-4573 ' 2 i. .. .-.ces, Pl'O es.sionaily for client says sell this prop. •J,..... 1 to all scbciols. shoppng, bch. "" .... w yl'ly. Caywood R I ty · JandSC"aped patio & garden. 5 Bed rm • 3 Bath corner location. Roo1n or S H rental to July 1. 675--2539 S4S-l290 ONE gift -many v.-onders e11y NOW! Try fllA, VA / 1 & tr .1 A ho you'll 2828 E . COA T WY. S33.450. 962-855.1. &xclusive • ~.500. FHA tem''· ·pop at er. n1e. C d I M Blg Jo'iesta pool, Full dining enJoy seeing & 0,vning. CALL orona e ar $24, 950 ' Asking $23,500 room . Rich paneling, hand-~lljl Jlt!ritage Real l:s-673-3770 ,_ "---==-===--r.1usr SEU. 3 large BR l t. B ett R lty some ""l'. ot:St buy on to-tale {open eves) BEAUTIFUL ba, dining room. Adult eo.:· arr . ea ~~.-:~ai·ket! Prime area. I ~~~~~~~~~~ EXECOTIVE HOME cupied only. LO\V down to I&>;, "\Ve_stcliUDr.,NB "-... · TARBEll 2955 Harbor College Park 1115 \Vifh a truly spacious ocean presenttinancing.Quickpos. ~ viC'w, Absolutely in1n1acu. BRASHEAR REAL TY 642.5200 .,__ LIDO SANDS Open Deily 1-5 PM late! On(' of •he finest 3 847-8507 431-3769 968-1178 ~::=zzzz=:zzz:j •. 642-lnl Anytime* 5 BEDROOMS LG . 4 bdi1ll 2 ha. Assum;1ble Bd rms .. farn rn1. hon1es.1~~===~s=~o== ----___ ____ 2 Baths. • -~, yant. F orn1al din, ~n1 ., :t~·:i baths. LO INTERE Tl AN! .. ........ low int loan, 2339 Colgate La 4 Bd 2043 Paloma Drive 2341 I • A N B $29,950 o,.. For information call. &au~. carpct!n~ & drapes. rge rm Attractive 3 -f-ffU11lJy room rvint Vt., • • Georg• Williamson P.iftRON RLTY 6-12-1771 Lanai overlooking Corona Lovely home in very desir- ln beautitUI Nf'"''PDM Beach rabulou~ Back Buy vit••v REALTOR -dcl i\tar. Dbl. dct, gar. \v/ able at·C'a. Better hurrv~ ! ne~. llAs (abulou11 home. Lovely 4 + faniily 673-4350 673-1564 Eves. Newport &tech 1200 electric door opcll{'r. Xlnt HAFFDAl REAL TY 5~% U"'Wllable Wan. O\VN-roon1, rambling JO\\', Call· ------landscaping & fencinc. Jr. 142-4405 ·ER ABsbLUTELY r.1tif:IWZ' lomia ranch slylc, no:it QUIET STREET STEPS TO OCEAN rr11lt1.ceablc 111 $59.500! Onlyo----~~---SEi.iL. Qutck ipo~ssion • 11tora.gr ai~. 'Pool ~i1.td Joi. 3 BR, 1'.& ba . 27 ft , !iv. r111, I.ik(' new 4 Br. 2~~ bath!!; J \1 yrs. old. Stop by our off -4 BDR, 21.i Ba, kitchen • \'<icant -owntr'ir ~xtrcmrJy CJ>ts, drps, bttns. 4;r. lot, Ice at the Jamaica Inn for fam. Lrg den w/bar. 2250 Oon't dclay. boa bltns. Sll"t"el ·to · street lot, f 6 " GI anxlOllS foa· o({cr • .. divorce cov. t stor•gr>, $27,200. Roo1n for bo&l, Only $3.3.500. yuur inspecUon ol rn an Y sq t. As..orume •,c ' . By S4,·588G cndinc:.. CORBIN~MARTIN CAYWOOD REAL TY 01her honici:i or ('1tll. anytime 0 \\•111.'r. 962-8923 or :>16-7770. (MWcirlmlltheltrt) REALTORS • 673·32ll or 541..0013 ~EGE REALTY ~ 541·5110 61S-1662 557-9595 E". 6306 w. Consi Hwy., NB e BILL HAVEN Fount1in Valley 1410 • -11-.c.v. ot'.l't'G~RE~ 3036 E. Co"t ""~ .. CdM BEST•B>U'8-Yt'.'°VA•CANT REALTOR CHATEAU BLANC 00>-at-CI& LOW INTEREST 2111 E. Con•t, CdM 613-3111 MESA VERDE [ !"!!'~~~~~~~!""/Vl:D' nice 4 bdrm. ,vith 1% S33,000 • POOL 101s s. ~1ain S.A ~l -li613 $500 Movt~ You In · ... , Bl"''' $4' mo a '" f-3 -~~-~· --· - -Clos Ing cost & impounds In. Rail• your Family uo ...;, < BAYCRESJ SPECIAL-ball,._ N•wly painted ;"';de • •· · ' "' E • BR. bolnfo-on • large Jot. & out. Air-cond. \,\•/cl~tron· Br. 1323 East Bluff Dr. . xclus1vely Oun eluded i~ rin~ncing 71ii% in· 1-...... .. '-...... •. --'--'· 6Ta-60-14 2 Bedroom Md ch·n, 2 baths !crest. 7:.4 % 1ntt'1>est w/ 10% c~ to ·,,.~ "' ..., . .,.,,...,., ic air filtt!r: auto, doo~ in ~~~=~-==~ d 3 lkd 2 A 3 °"mr le-ate option. A9dng 4 hdrn1 + f\11mal dining + 2 car garage. Lge. 101. ~lesa CHEAPEST IN ILUFFS qu1tllly CUlltom built hotne 0\\11', rooni, ,$211,500. pool, ~1ovc-1n rond1Uon, Call Nonh Rl'f"a. 1.ow dow n. $31,9j(I • 4 BR on ~1arigold plus ·11 1 Bed-· Baths. tno sq. fl, 420 j:('(. ft . Graham R lty "'°"14 us todR,,). '30.500 Qi\·ncr dt'spc111t{'. must lof'll· room Q'.llrACt 11pnrhncnt. finished bonus room a:m:e 2 Near Newport POet Ott!ce DAVIDSON R•alty R iddlt & Ro11 67S.7225 ea11y terms. 64+64.58 . ~=rt~::._~~81il;6.. · ~·va~=1~~~f?" ~!1 b~~:: New VIEW HorQ1.1 . li46-5460 E\'~ . .)H..!$33 BY Owner -lri:; assun1abl~ FORECLOSURE: 3 BR, 211 67l..a.550 $23,34.i tu $2.l,930. IS&)'Ci'f'Al Jn 'pover 6iiJ:tt11 3 BR 3. bflU1 hOmc, 1.:on~t GI loan 3 Sr, 21 ~ ba, din BA. TO\\'nhO\lse, rrplc, pool, Cl fATEAU BLANC Inn Wt.Ill' 3 btand new lot 130X180 • add 5 nlCll"C nn. lam nn, v111.lk to 11Cl11$, Nt{'(ls paint. $27,5(11). 18650 B1'00khUnt Sl bomQl 4 ,bctrftu!, J be, pow· unlti, Dri~ by J.M;; Sant• beh, prlnc. o n I )'. Sl3.SOO. Liaison Co. 6-16-0T.U 1,, mllc $, of the der rm, tarn . rm w/frplc, Ana Ave. lhtn t'all l~-~l-1111---:-~,..-,--l!'s "FAIR SrtARE" Time San Dil'go F'rftc\l'"iY General 1000 General 1000Gtntr•I S@~~lA-~r..~s~ The Puzzle with the Built-In Chuckle O Reorronge letttart of 1he fa..i r scrambled words be- low 10 form four ~imple words. I I I' ISAYDI I j h-.' .,.,..I' ...... 1 ...... 1.....-1 i • ISOPiE I i Minl&t er .to policeman: ~ ""Young man, pleaae do not 1$ I I give me o ticket. I om.. fult 0 L-.L....J.-t......L.-'.1i·t poor p~cher.• I ff UC N 1 It I '' Polic:em~n: .,Yes, I kno·t1 , I' I I' I 1 fJ (;m-piitt• ti• t hud.le quotad by liU!ng Tn th• t11IUiriQ words ' you develop from step No. 3 ~!ow, 8 r~~:R~~sE®~~ES I' r r I' Ji I' I' ,. I _o_~ __ ~l" .... .Jt"" __ • _lf_•0 .... ·1 ....... 1 ....... 1 _.1 ....... 1 .... m I I I 1000 OJOl"lyanf pool&. F)'om II .. £ lt NO nl<IHc:r '""'', ll I . )'011 \Vh1tr elephan1s: Dlrnc.;i..f =====~=~-i~-=~""=®=i~~~- Clfl6,000. l!oy J, Wan! Oo. llltlll tit !l ...... u ;1 wHh • DAILY lino DAILY PILOT WANT TJIE QUICh."ER YOU CALL. DAILY PILOT C!a .. toed SCRAM-~m ANSWER IN '"LASSIFICATION 8800 t.mCala:()'Or.6j6.J.j5(). Git~ ,_P_ILOT __ ,_._AN_IT,-AD_l_l_6_li.56_1_3,_A_D_s_, _____ ~_,n __ ,-'-~-Q,_U_l_cCK--'-EJt'-Y'-O'-U~S"E"LL'-'-''"-""'-t-'lo-•-'N-''O_W_! _____ ,_ _____ -''----------.. ..;..----------'-----I • r I ' I \ I Saddlebaek VOL. 62, NO. 293, 5 SECTIONS, 48 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MOND AY. D6C.EMBER .8., '1969 a e ant China Releases Lagunan Reds 'Preparing for Total .War,' Captive Says BESSIE PUFFS CIGARETf E AS -SIMEON MAKES CALL 'F"ling Fine• After 10 ·Mol'lth1 a.hind Bamboo .Curtain · Three Marines Wounded ln San Clemente Battle A 19·year-old Camp Pendleton Marine ii reported in satisfactory COfldition today at South Coast Community Hospltal in South Laguna after undergoing surgery for an abdominal gunshot wound sus- talned . in a San Clemente shoolout late Friday. Derutls Fisher was one of lhr~ young Marines wounded in a street fight in- "1\ting five Marines and a 15-year-old Loo Allgeles -girl Doctor Assails Orange County Medical Board By T0~1 BARLEY ot lllM Dfitr ,UM Slaff A s.cramento neurologist who claims he was drive.1 from Orange County by reetricti~ practices of the Orange COUf}o fEMedlcal Association today alleged the p is "a sinister organization iuf. ering from several fonns o f tchizophrenia and afflicted with delusions of grandeur." . Also v.·ounded were his brother, Gary Fisher, and John J, Fiore. Bolh Y•ere taken to the Camp Pendleton hospital for treatment of gunsho~ 'vounds in I.he arm. Booked by San Clemente police on charges or attempted murder was Leon Brown, 21. His girl companion, whom police say was reportedly his cousin, also was placed under arrest an suspicion of carrying a concealed weapon. Police said the 10:15 p.m. shooting at El Camino Real and A venida Granada apparently was sparked when Brown and the girl walked past 11 group of four 1r1arines .tending outside a liquor rtore. One of the four made an insulting remark and an argument started, leading ta a fist fight. Brawn ls accused of pulling out a .22 caliber rtvolver and firing several thols, three al whleh inflicted the woonds. When police arrived, the report states, the girl was lkllding the ~:eapon behind her back under her sweater. Stork Jtlarket . NEW YORK (AP) -Stock market prices fell sharply and broadly lower in moderate trading late this afternoon. (Set quotations, Pages 24--25). Stocks dropping in price out.numbered gainers by more than 3 ta 1, a widening of the earlier margin. . From Win Servlcn Mainland China authorttiea released a Laguna Beach ma:i held as • possible 1py for nearly a year Sunday and he and a traveling companion brooght ward to the outside warld that the regime is prepar- ing !or tot.al war. Simeon Baldwin, 58, of 1351 Cliff Drive, and Mrs. Bessie H. Donald, 47, a sec.Mary with his Hong Kong manufac· turing company, said the Chinese Com· munists ·ge.ierally treated them well. The pair, captured last Febru ary while on a 40-mile yachting expedition from Hong Kong to the Portuguese island col· ony of Macao, had a tasi.e or life com· mu·nHtyte during their captivity. Mrs. Donald .,,,as even offered a teaching position at Canton University v.·hen she claimed she had been im· prisoned so l<r.ig her job in Hong Kon1 would doubtlessly be gone. Baldwin, v.•ho awns an ai rcraft com. ponent.s manufacturing firm in Hoog Kong, called his wife, 1tfarjorie, at the Laguna famlly home Saturday (PST) after reaching Tsing Yi island aboard theit yacht, the Morasum. She. said he told her nothing she hadn't pretty much knov.·,1 since the seizure-at· sea of the 1t1orasum and two other yachts last Feb. 16, but she expects him to return to Laguna Beach quite soon. Others in the group of 15 yachters were quickly released after being halted by Chinese gunboats, but the two American!'. -v>ho at first tried to hlde their na- tionality -faced longer detention .. They were kept at first at a location about 10 miles from MaaM1while feclmi.. · clans meticulously ·m.m'antied Ind e'x· .Bpll;ted navigational equipment aboard the boat as possibly for espionage ac- tivities. They were later incarcerated al t~1ft diffetent oommunes,-where the· treatment was .generally good, with orie minor ex- ception. "In ooe e-0mmune, there were some threats made· and -the guards stared at you through the windows for hours," said Bal<rn·in. "They followed you everywhere. E\'en into the bathrooms. "There was no privacy. You lived in a glass cage." He said the reds built screens aroo,1d them eac h time they were moved. "I asked if they expected the Seventh Fleet to steam up the Pearl River anO rescue us," he continued, "but they didn 't think that was v~ funny." Generally, he said, they were 'veil treated and their captors stressed they do not dislike Americans as such, only the U.S. government itself. "There are preparations for \\'ar everywhere," he added, "there are roadblocks and militia training. The Oilnese told me they were preparing against American and Soviet. invasions." He had nothing to read during captivity but a 1,500 page volume on navigation , while Mrs. Donak!, estranged wife or television actor Peter Donald , was given stacks of propaganda materials. One condition of release by Peking rulers was admission of guilt for the alleged crime of aecldentally straying in- ta Mainland-controlled coastaJ waters. "We repeatedly wrote confessiom: because the aunese said they wanted rew«ding of the confessions to their understanding," he told newsmen after reaching fJttdom Sunday, Hong Kong time .. , "After t11c Chinese authorities con- cerned had examined and verified the facts, the two ArnericaM admkted their mistakes of trying to cmceal their )den. tity and intruding into China's territocitU jSee LA.GUNAN, Pase I ) Collided Witfa Slide Freak accident late Saturday night on Pacific Coasl lligh"·ay at in· ian1ous El Morro curve left Los Angeles couple shaken and injured. Lynford, 28, and Su san Wiley, 27, were northbound on Coast ~Iigh· \\·ay about 11:40 p.1n. \vhen they ran into a landslide which covered northbound lanes. High\vay Patrol officers said \Vileys must ha ve arrived at point of slide just 1no1nents after dirt and rocks from cliU· tumbled on1.o pavem"ent. ' Sform Surf Scours Sand From South Coast Beaches An eight-root starm surf scoured sand from southern Orange County beaches and Sent water up under Laguna's Main Beach Boardwalk this morning but ap- parently did little or no damage. El Morro Trailer Park, occasionally menaced by hJgh waves in the past. fared well . Bill Peyton, one of the owners, said the angle or the waves seemed to have been extreme enougti to mitigate their force. "They either get us good or they don't get w at a11 and \\'e've been holding our O\\-TI pretty \\'ell this time,'' said Peytan. Laguna Lifeguard Lt. Eugene DePaulis said the waves were eroding the Main Beach and olher Laguna beaches but th.is is normal. The sand returns later. Waves were running .about eight feel Exposure Charge Jails Mar.ine An l&-year old Camp Pendleton Marine was arrested in a Laguna Beach rest.aui-ant early Sunday on charges of in· decent exposure and suspicion oI being under the influence or drugs. Answering a J :30 a.m. call to 1800 S. Coast Highway, affieers faund a witness holding on to the suspect, Carmine John Yodice. who police said, was nude from the waist down and struggling to remove the rest of his clothing while: talking in- coherently. The young Marine was book· ed into the Laguna Beach Jail. during the morning high tides. Capt. Philip Stubbs, San Clemente · guar<1, reported no damage and little surflng ac- tivity there. He said very little· surf made it over the breakwater at new Dana Point !-!arbor where guards were keeping • watchfcl·eye on.weekend ·fishermen. Waves Continue ' . . . To Rava ge CO ast;· Beaches Braced Monster waves driven by 11 Gulf nr Alaska storm combined with high tides. will continue ta ravage the coast or Southern California for at least a few more days, the ·U.S. \Veathe:r Bureau wamed today. Police, fire.men and even pri vate citizens banding· together to rent heavy equipment and construct sand and earthen barricades were bracing for another onslaught Tuesday morning. Breakers ranging up to IZ feet high in some placts c;aused extE!flsive flooding in at least five communities, causing severe damage at picturesque Rincon Beach near Ventura. .A tctal of 39 homes were flooded there -two sustaining major damage -and a fire station was evacuated by 38 men as the tidal waters surged over normally dry and protected land into the building. Dr. Ted Thompson testified before an Assembly subcommittee in Santa Ana .11lleging that Dr. Harold E. Day o( C.pisCrano By The Sea Hospita.1 has for .ome years been the target of R cam· pa1gn by the OCMA which has succeeded to the point that the Dana Point psychi,atrist is restricted to practice from hi.! own home. 'l1lc:impson all eged the OC~fA as bcini:: •;conlrOUed by an inner sanctum which has cllmbed over a mountain of sick peo- pH!." Seven Facing Indictments Sand, seaweed and foam littered lengthy stretches cf Pacific Coast Highway and traffic w& backed up for mile.'! throughout the length or the afflicted caastline. The four.Jane thoroughfare was• hit hardest along the low-lyini:: stretch (li<e WAVES, P•&• %1 And he predicttd as the hearing got un- der way today that "it will take morf': than (trial lawyer) f . Lee Bailey to bait them out of this present mess ." Hearing evidence designed to pro~ that Dr. Day was the victim of an OC~1A boycott are two member~ of the Assembly subcommittee on mc:ital health Rrvi<='s -Assemblymen Frank Lan· t.mnan CR-La CanadaJ and John Burton (0-San Frand!co). Pret.ent •l the hearing in the cnpacity of observora are Sen. John Schmitz (R· 1\istin) ind Assemblyman John Qu imby (R.S...1 BemardJno). Quimby h1 the author or the assembly nsolutlon which ltd to the calling cf today's hearing. The Santa "na hearing I! the first cf t\\'O legislative In· ''estlgaU0111 Into the complainU raised by Dr. Day. Grarul Jur y Probes Sharon Tate Slay ing s LOS ANGELES (UPI) -se·ven members of the mystic hippie "family'' linlred with the sa vage Sharon Tate k111· Ing and seven other 11laylngs were e.x· pected to be Indicted today at the con- clulilOTI of cou nty grand jury dellbera- ttons. Deputy District AUorneys Aaron If. Slovltz and Vincent T. Bugllosi reported they will seek an tight-count indictment chargins seven members of the pseudo- religioos rult led by Charles 1tfao;ison with conSpiracy and murder. A do7.cn wltneues we.re to testify at today'& secret hearing but It was believe:d mos~ cf the evidence •&ainsl the suspects already had been supplied by attractive Susan Atk ins, a member or "the Man.son family." . Three of the witneses ta be called 'fll'ere 'aid to be fingerprint experts. Authorltle11 have indicated one of the auspects ipeciflcally charged, Charles D. Watson, 24, who is being held ln TexlU, allegedly left a flngerprbt at the Tate home. Another witness scheduled to be called wu Daniel Dt Carlo, a former motorcy· cle gang leader who recenlly testJ ned In a murder trial ln Santa Afonlea. ·Jle tesUfled Afanson directed the slaying in July of.mus·iclan G1ry·H~1n. De Carlo reportedly lived for a abOrt time witll Pilanaon and hJs "famJly" \ Mip Atkins, also )l;:nown as Sadie Glutz, ttsUfled far two hours and 15 minute• Fri· day, telling cf her relationship with the $-)"ar-old ManllOn and others in his group who are accused sl11yen of Aflss Tate and Reven other person11. Her ·i.wyer, Richard Caballero, says !he still regards Manson "with a mixture cf love ·rear and hatred." Cabi.llera said although fi.fanson Is In )a.U in lndependelce, Callr., pendil'Jg tc· tton to bring him here, Miss Atkins fears he could "conjure lip 1 vision dctrlmcn- t11l to her In his mind then transfer it to her mind and then she wauld be marked." l __ ,,_., 2 Hu.ge Fires Erupt I n San Jose Sund ay SAN JOSE (UPI) -Two iipect.acular fires. one In a restaurant and the other in 11 supermarket, erupted here Sunday within a five-hour pei:iod . Damage v.·as estimated at nearly $400,000. A ane-alarm blau caused abqul SJ00.000 d11mage at. Catw's Dining Room, where two prevJous fires have oc- curr~ in recent months. Less than nve hours lattr, a thr.ee-elarm fire-broUghl more thon JOO firemen ta the Pnrlty M11rkct, where dem11ge wu estimated al 1'between P00,000 and $390.000." Todlly's Final N.Y. Stocks TEN CENTS ers Grenades, Gas Used In Skirmish From \\'ire Sf:rvi«w LOS ANGELES -Police using dynamite, tear gas and hand guns fought a five-hour pitched battle today before .subduing a group of Black Panthers bar- ricaded inside their headquarters with automatic rifles and hand grenades. A handful of eight to 10 panthers held off a 300-man police force from t.be open. Ing or the assault al dawn until late morning before surrendering. Three of those inside the Panther bead. quarters were reported injured. none seriously. A force of 300 officers surrounded the buildJng, Police said two were shot as they first tried to serve a warrant. The other v.•as hit in later gunfire. A standoff of more than four hours ensued . The raid was one of three on locations of the militant Negro organization. Police said they had information that machine guns and other "'ca pons had been stored there and they wanted to serve warrants on two persons. Al one point officers issued an ultimatum by bullhorn to those in the headquarters: "Come out with your hand~ up or we'll come in." One man came out. Finct lly the others followed. . The \\'Ounded office rs were not lm- medi:itcly identiried. One was reJXlrted hit in the chest and groin. Another wa.s reported hit in tbt foot and the third in the leg . A 16-block area was sealed off durlna the confrontation. Police de p Io ye d themselves along wide , shop-lined Centr.al Ave nue and stayed under cover. The area ili south o! downtciwn Los Angeles, near \Vrigley Field, former home of the California Angels baseball team. Homes line adjoining streets and residents clustered on lawns to listen to shots and blasts. About 14 persons \\'ere' arrested 1n raids at two other locations, where no resistance was encountered. "Those guys ha ve automatic weapons and they 're throwing grenades,'' a police inspector told newsmen during the marn- ing. Qf[icers said that homemade grenades were then tossed taward police [rom LI)~ building, bursting in the street No one was hurt by the grenades. A police spokesman said the building had been sandbagged at doors and wm.. dows by the Panthers. A contingent of police blocked off the entire area. Classes were dismissed !or the day at a nearby school. Tile downl9wn police building was put under heavy guard. Officers with shotguns were stationed at every en· trance &S a securily precaution. Charles Garry, legal counsel for the Black Pant.her group, denounced the JX!lice action. (){the police st.ateinent that the raids were wiconnected with those made on Panthers in other cities he said: "That is an unadulterated lie. This is all part and package of a naUonal scheme by the various' agencies of government to destroy and commit genocide upon (See PANTHERS, Por e %) Orange Weatller Thal silver llning behind Tues- day's clouds m111:y be a damp ane. Temperatures, when the swi mak~s its appearance, will be in the low 70's along the Orange Coast. INSWE TODAY Yo" m4tl not be nble to dt· $Cribe "Oh! Calcutta!" a.t good clean fun. but most of it con be labeled gnod dirty fun. Stt to- dau's rtvitw on Page 18. "' ..................... '!! I Only 17 ~I , I CHRISTMASj ·-~----~-C•lltwlll1 ClflMllf'll c-1c.• Ct'Mtwtnl O.~tll Netlc-. E•llffi.I ..... lnl1'1llllMMlll .... ~ tt. ... 1"" """ '-"'"" Mt!*'• r -----------------------....---------- ~ 2 DAILY PJLOT _...,.,.. l -------------MondlY. Dtctrn.btf' I. l96CJ Campus Militants 'Using' Media • Ill _ . ...J)o _ Wevi&lon, radio and newspapers ~ a distorted picture of camp!ll :itfistUrba.nceS because they are being "'Used'' by n11litants'.' This question was debated Friday by ..pe11·s representatives and college pro· lessors Friday during ll conference in Anaheim. 1 Some ne"'S representatives readily in- ·Gicated they fell they had been used. But they also took the professors and college -idministrators to 1ask, asserting they ~led to provide information that could -balance the news picture. ~ Don 1'101.ley, managing editor for CBS ·fiidio in San Francisco, said, "One of the 1-rnistakeii. of 1nodern journalism Is if :1-:0mebody says something provocative it .·. Dow1a the ·Mission Trail fOW Ce nter ppens in Toro : EL TORO -1 ntere.sted residents and fepresentatives of organizations are in· "ited to an ioforination center on how to belp American prisoners of war. .' The one day program v.1111 take place t'uesday, beginning at 9:30 a.m in the flome of f\1rs. Lee Kellogg, 241 16 Birdrock Drive, El Toro. • Mrs. Stephen J~anson. Orange County t:oordinator for the National League of .f~milies of American Prisoners in .'.llj>utheast Asia, vdll explain how help can ~obtained. ~ "'rapping .~/1om Set 7;~1.AKE FOREST -A Christmas gift tirapping demonstration will take place ;St,ednesday in the Beach and Tennis Club. '...The use of unusual materials and ne\v ;jtays to use old ones will be shown at the ij;p.m. evenl. Refreshments will be serv-·'f:tt after the program. ,. • Card Club Conve nes ·~~.~lISSION VIEJO -Bridge players are 1!vited to join the Recreation Center 's,_ i;ard group on Thursday at 7:30 p.m. ~::Visiitng tlost and hostess will be f\lr. 1-ttd Mrs. Bud Bradbury. Games are ~ayed on the seocnd Thursday of each ~ooth. For joining information call the ~enter at 837-4084. • Yule De eo1· Offered • .· ' : f I ' ' ' • ' ' . r . ' DAllY r11or OAAJtG~ (Qllll l'U•L 15~tlolG c;Q#~,OjY •e~M N. w,,, P1t1......, 11'1f '°~11-"tr J e<\: I . C••'•v V°"oct ,.f'h ..... I , ... Glooott1/ Ml<'lttlf '1111111•• ••• ,11 ••ter 1"trrl•• /.. M.,,~;,,, _.....,..IUllor Ric'-t '4 '· N11$ L-8'.cll Cltf Efllllr ~ hec11 Offtct 122 F••••I Avt . M1ili111 Allid•t l'I ,.o .••••• ,, •2•St OMIK OfllUt. Ctllt "'"-: -"'"' ··~ , ... , ~ ... di: 1'11 Wft! ......... IMI~ ........ .,,..,.,, .... :.JlllJllWI ls news, even 11' il is wrona:. "IL ls human hature that reporters and ecUiors Cl.rt be lazy and submJt llkt lambs to news conferences lhat contain no news." t.fanaglng editor of the Santa Monica Outlook, R. D. Funk, said h.is newspaper "responds to clues that something is going to happen and thert! you are, trair ped, and you know it." The self criticism was offered by news n1e.n al California Teachers Association's annual conference on higher education, tilled this year "Revolution and Re,ponse." But the news men also pointed out they do want to present balanced reports of campus occurrences and they need more Plata Studies Set help tor professors and admlnLstrators to do so. David Horowill. educaUon reporting sptelalist for NBC television In Los Angeles, said to act bilanced 11tories he musl constanl1y fighl an .. academic defense mechanism." ''The problem," he :1a1d, "is ad· ministrators refuse to talk w h i I e n1ilitants, v.•ho are the would-be campus leaders, do Lalk. \Vhere are the educators \Vho could place the conflict or con· 1roversy in perspective'? They are unavaih:1ble," Horowitz Said. Funk !old the professors. •'You people are part of a political process. You must state your case clr.arly or you lose the ballganic .. , · Laguna Beach Council Meeting Twice This W eeli Laguna Beach councilmen meet twice thi.s week in special sessions to consider : -Tuesday, an economic analysis or J.oguna by the city's general plan ca.1- sultant, Daniel, Mann, Johnson & Men· denhall. -\Vednesday . a city-financed study on rlevelopment of a hotel and conference facility on the ftiain Beach and alternatives broughl forward since the report The city had nol yet made public the economic analysis study but City lrlanager James D. Wheaton said planner Abraam Krushkhov would go through the study point by point Tuesday, 7:30 p.m . 'Councilmen called for lhe \Vednesday study session last month after receiving copies of the $4 .000 report from Bud Holscher proposing a 200-room hotel and CCQference facility on the clty~wned l\iain Beach. Councilmen criticized the report as un- sophisticated and Jacking specifics and asked that Hoscher be on hand lo go through il. The Laguna Beach Ho le 1-Mo le I Associotion then criticized 1he st udy Leisure World Group Org anized To Fig lit Radicals A retired Armv colonel who has server! in two World Wars heads a growing organi-iation in Laguna Hills Leisure World formed to fight what it conside rs a grave threat to colleges and high schools or America . Col. Robert A. Ellsworth. 70. said the 152-member "Leisure World Friends or VIVA, Voices in Vital Ameri ca" is aimed at far left •. revolutionary influences in educationa l institutions in Or ange County. Ellsworth. founded the friendii group recently. Jt supports both VTVA and t:ampus Studies Institute, a San Diego organization involved in distribution or pati'iotic literature to the nation 's cam· puses. VIVA Is a r esearch and information woup providing college students \1•ith 1natcrial aboul con1munism and com· munisl agitation activities. Ellsworth bas said the campus sltua- llon is "disgraceful" today with •·revolu· Uonaries and the ·whole dirty cro\\•d" trying lo unde1mine lhe educational systems. I-le singled out Students for A Democratic Society (SOS) as one of the far left groups most deplorable. The Leisure \Vorld Friends, formed Nov. 4, expects to have 500 members by late December. said Ellsworth, a 19Z6 \\1e~t Point graduate. Ten fund raising team! of seven 1nembers each have been established 1vilh a goal of $Z50,000. Comm ittees have been C'Stablished in every Orange County community, said Ellsworth . EUs"•orth and Richard Theis, executive director of VIVA , hope eventually to have all ::;egments of society and indu stry. ~ervice clubs and \'eterans organiaztions involved in the patriotic on-campus drive. Does Ellsworth think his group can reach students'.' "You bet we can," he i;aid. Theis, a Los Ange les re sident, ad· ded. "These young people are our hope.·· lie referred to "students in the middle" 11 nd "impassioned, marginal students" ,,.ho could be brainwashed by the far left revolutionaries. /' J<'ro11a POfle 1 LAG UN AN • • • ~ca." said the. r-.1e.n' China Nt\\'S Agency cispatch. \\lord of their release c.aine fro1n tht: NCNA and the couple -composed. but tired and underweight-arrive d 3t Hsing Yi Island a few hours later. R:!ldwin and "frs. Donald s a i ri authorit.ies in Canton were prepared ID releast them much sooner. but 3!l'Pr.'.lv81 t.ras r'Gulred from Peking and tliis dt· loyed teh ptocess considerably. Each was kept. sep:trate fron1 the. othtr during captfvityf Hrst <1t lleung Chiu . near llfacao.-then at a place <"Siled the HapPy Peoples' Commune, 60 miles north of Canton. _ They wort lmpruoned at tht Red S111r Peoples' C.Ommune juSt prior lo being Jretd. The Baldwins have three children, Si· mtoo, III, 2&f Lyn nt, 24. and James. 20, \\'tto Uves at the curt Drive homt and 11· ttnd! Saddltback Colleg~. • c:lailning It was both inaccurate and unusable. Association members claimed the bulky report could have been con- densed to about four pages of i:.1tormation that was readil y obtainable froni knowledgeable members of the com· munity. The reporl had :suggested financing of lhe facility v.rilh tax-exempt municipal bonds. "~1embers o! our association certainly don't see the city buying a park and then entering into a venture with a hotel chain usi:.1g the city's bonding capacity even further to accomplish something it ha~ been denying private enterprise. Not on this or any other ground," the hote l peo· pie responded. Laguna Beach Taxpayers' Association. Tnc. criticized the report also and said local taxpayers don't want lo finance a hotel as well as the 3 million beach purchase. Since the }iolscher report six-civic- organizaU<r.1s headed by acting chairman Bernard Syfan ha ve attempted to come up · with precise recommendations on de\'e\optnent of the beach. Tentative recomn1endations have been for a hotel of not Jess than 100 or n1ore lhan ZOO rooms to be built vdth con- rcrence space equal to hvo seats per l'oom ; v.'ith shops in the structure; max- imum vista or the ocean niaintained; and adequate parking included. T.he Hotel Laguna has alsr> come up '"ith general suggestions that it might ex- pand using some of the ajacenl city land. Cat Burg ar. Hits 3 Laguna Homes, Injures Ma11, 71 A cal burglar \vho entered three Laguna Beach homes over the weekend 1vhile occupants "'ere sleeping injured a 71-year-old man and made off \vith cash, credit cards and a clock. • On two of his visits in the pre-dav.•n hours of Saturday and Sunday, the burglar, described as a young man about 19 or 20, was frightened away by aroused householders before he could take anything. His first victin1. l\laurice Carroll Fletcher, 59. of 1991 Ocean \Vay, told police he a\''akened about 4:30 a.m . Saturday, reached for Jiis alarm clock on the night table beside the bed where he and his \Vife were sleeping, and realized it \Vas gone. Searching fu rther. Fletcher round hi., \va\let containing $49 and credit cards also v.·as missing and that $12 had been 1.aken from his wife's purse , At 3: 10 a.m. Sunday, Ruth Emily Prather, 40. of 330 Cliff Drive. \1·a.~ a'ol'akened by a noise and thought she heard someone walking in the house. A search led her to the kitchen \~here she surprised the suspect at the rerrigerator and screamed 16udly as he rte<l. Police said he apparently had en- tered through a Jiving room ~·indo1v after pushing in a screen. The third victim. Fraok llr>ward Bin· ney, 71, of 1885 Ocean Way. said he heard a clattering noise at approximately -4 :~() ;:i.m. Sunday got up and surprised the thief in another room going through his wife's purse. The startled lhief swung at Binney with the purse, inflicting a severe facial bruise ""d a cut on the elderly man't head. He then ran out through a sliding glass door ,1·hich he apparently had opened to gain entry. Nothing was taken rrom the house. Binney told police, and rash "'as left in the purse. In a third \veekcnd burglary, $120 in e11sh \\'as taken from an apartment at 569' ~ Catalina St. bet1veen the hours of 8 p.m. and n1idnighl ftrlduy. The ''lC"tim. Marsha Ann Vreeland. 20, told police .she returned home from 11 dance to find all dresser dra'A'ers and closet doors standing open and the casl;\, missing fron1 a je'A·elry box. Police sRid the burglar apparently · pried off a scrttn tr> gain ~lry through a \vindow. -~I is~ i\f acLa ine Picked Best Ac tress by 'Filu1' LONDOll IUPTl Tho Brlll•h 1nagazine Films and Filming named Shirley l\facl.aine a.'i lt.s choice for the ytar•s be~t actrti1s Sunday for her role in "Sweet Charity." It narned the mO\'le "True Grit'' as tho btst ¥•estern for 1969 •nd "Th< Night They Raided Mliuky's"' -at tlit: btsl con1edy, Ont professor said, "A lot of us are old· fu:hloned glssiea. We haven't the courage to stand up and speak like the mllltants. We worry about our house get.- Una: bombed." Another professor re1uarked, "~lariy of tis sllll have 1he suspicion the media are sensation seeking. 1'his suspicion is deep- ly ingrained in us .'' "IJ you concentrate on \Vhat you :say and whal you tl}ini.there is no reason you shouldn't say it with the press around," Horo1vitz responded. ·'You talk about academic freedon1, freedom to speak. \Vhat 1ve are dealing ""iU1 is defensive educators.'' He said, .. I go on can1pus and I 'n1 like a. Fuller Brush man. l have to spe nd Police Turn Up Little Drug S tore In Ca1np er Truck Serving a v.•arranl on a suspected n1:1rcotics violator Friday night. Laguna Beach officers alleged they 1.un1ed up ii rniniature drug department store in ii camper parked on Fairyv.·ood \Valk In Laguna Canyon. Af~er IC)C~ting John Edward Gilberi. 32· year-old transie'.1t, in bis pickup camper. officers searched his mobile abode and (_·!aimed they found a pipe containing lraces of hashish, a plastic bag ~·ith fragments of marijuana and seeds, a plastic bag containing '2.8 grams or opium, a foil pack ot LSD. a piece or toilet paper containing pieces of peyote,, a plastic bag with seven capsules or mescaline. and a quantity of LSD tablets in varied colors . The asso1·tme'.1t \vas lagged as evidencr and Gilbert \1•as booked into the Laguna Beach jail on the $5.000 warrant. v.•hlch charges him "'ith the unlawful sale of clangerous <lrugs. To the original charge. arresting of- ficers added a few of their o-n'TI , including charges of possession of opium. peyote and mescaline, possession of hashish for s a 1 e. possession of marijuana and l possession of da·.1gerws <lrugs. more time selling tht idea I'm 11>in& to be. objective and !air than doing reporting.'' "Why should you leave your desk amt compete to be heard with people or no responsibility?" JV:ozley posed a question. ''The answer is because that is the \vay things are done today," he advised. '·People lie to the news media more than they did a generation ago. They play us for suckers. You should be prompt and volunteering with the truth. You are corn· peting with opponents of no moral .substance." "One problern is the caliber cf men you $Cl\d out to cover stories ," complained a professor. "A reporter m•Y come In unprepared , this is not unusual,'' aaid Mcnley. "When dealing with him put yourstU in the sanie position he is incommunicaUng v.•lth the public. Don't give him a 25-pa&e press release. Practice the art of con· densation, simplicity and get to the heart or the matter." "You cause more troubles for us at. 11cl100ls than you help us," challenged a professor. "\Veil, people thoUght the French revolution rnight die down if it was left alone, but it didn't," said Mozley. "Ttu't l!atne goes for the unrest on campus, it isn't very .ilkely any more th.al it v.·Hl die don•n." Stresses Libel Issue Alioto Attacks Magazine 111 TallitoNewport Youths Bv JOHN VALTERZA • Of !ht 0•111 Piiot Sti ff San Francisco's Mayor Joseph Al ioto 1 r,ok some hefty jabs at Look Magazine during a weekend appearance before a gathering of journalism students in Newport Beach and the recipients or the pokes weren't very far away. Alioto, plucky and aggressive, spoke to 1h~ students and their teachers at the t\ewporter lnn and had just missed Look pholographer Earl Theissen a:.1d an aide speaking to other students in a room directly below . ··J'm sorry I missed them , because ifs always a pleasure to meet some of .my future employes," AJioto. who is suing Look for $12 million in libel damages, told the tro.or-so students. The cracks set the tone for Alioto·~ hour-long a~pearance in which he dwell~d on the case mvolving allegations of Mafia ties. He blamed the national pictorial magazine for falling into the "trap which kil led the Saturday Evening Post." "Ifs obvious that the magazine ha~ been losing money and is running behin~ Time-Life, and in order to make up for it 1 hey took the dangerous plunge into the sc-nsation market. Their trouble with that ~tory about me is that they relied 0.1 two basically incompetent "''Titers,''· he said. He charged that much of the content of 1 he article implying his ties with the underwo rld was "totally false.·· One part of the story, he said, related to a meeting he \.l'as alleged to ha\•e had 11·ith Syndicate operators .at the Nut Tree. "That is the Bay Area's equivalent cf Disneyland. so can you imagine Alioto 1neeting with a bunch of lo.1afia hoods at Disneyland? It's ridiculous." he said. cepts or a free press and the recent court. decisions making public (lfficials even n1ore vulnerable to press criticism. "But the whole thing shou ld stop when lhe issue comes to direct, blatant character assassination," he said firmly . Alioto. even though he \vas subjected to the potentially damaging Look article. al· lacked Vice President Spiro 1'. Agne,v ·~ criticism of both ne\vspapers and lclevision stations for their handling of news. "His comments, particularly those on the three television networks' practices, \\'el'e particularly insidious. especially "'hen he implied a direct threat on the networks' very luc.rati ve government licenses." he said. Alioto's defense cl the press ended there. however. He sajd everyone should fight pendins federa l legislation giving newspapers im· munity under anti-trust laws. One student asked the Democratic n1ayor if he believed the Look article and the national attention it has receiYed had helped him in any way. "I could think of a million things that could have helped me better. It did one thing, though. It cured the problem of name identity and now Alioto is not jusl the name of anothei fish restaurant at Fishennan's Wharf." He added one significant dra,vback o[ the controversial article. "It doesn't bother me so much until t think of a 73-year-old mother, a lovely wife and children I have at home, and they have to put up with lhe problem. It really hurts." Alioto, who spoke to the journalist.! of Beta Phi Gamma in between air peatances at Santa Monica ~nd Santa Ana, s&id he still hasn't decided if he will run for governor. "I'm barnstorming up and down the state now just to take some soundings t.o see if I should run or not,·• he added. F l'ona Page 1 PANTHERS. • • members of the Black Panther party." When a newsman called Panther head· quarters by telephone. a voice th at sounded like that of a woman said : "The pigs are attaCking us. Send the press and send us people." Today's confrontation was the first or its kind in L-Os Angeles , althoagh there have been individual clashes between of· ficers and Panthers during or after street arrests. Astronaut's Brother l\1issing Over La os \\'ASHlNGTON (AP) -Air Force Capt. James B. \Vhite, a brot.her ot one of the astronaut.s killed in the 1967 spacecraft fire, has been lost in an Air Force mission over Laos, it was learned today. The Penagon listed him as missing NO\'. 26 as the result of hostile action, but provided no further details in line with a policy pertaining to captured and missing men. It was understood, however. that White went down in a mission over La0-1f. TH E BIDTIQUE HAS SOMETH ING FOR EVER-Y W OMAN ON YOUR CHRISTMAS LIST •' . ... if she's a teenager, consider e kicky outfit by Toot iqut or ~ody, complete with a frin ged scarf, boutique jewelry and a flop py hat. ... ' meybe she'1 a young woman-about-town ... Deniie clothes <1re the rig ht thing to help her conque r the world. per h4ps she's • more m1ture type •.. Oon.Sophistic 1t1s ' name descri bes the look .. i sy el19an~1. quie t sophistic1t io11. and don't forget qrendma. Our BIDTIQUE ecetiSOries , from cameo brooches to frin ged shawls to llama llip pers, will help her bridge th1 fash ion ge p. SPEC IAl I HAD lEY CASHME RE SWEATERS -40'.• OF, CIL.. BIDTIQUE 3467 Via lido-:-Nowporl BHch-1Tol1phon1 67l-4SIO Parking for as many C."!t ~s you ow" ' • .. • i I • . I YOL. ~2, NO. 293, 5 SECTIONS, "8 PAGES ORANGE COUllll:Y, <:,'.l,JFORNIA a. e But.Jfomes flooded Sand Haul Passes MONDAY, DECIMB~ f, ;196t an N.Y. Steeb TEN COOS ers· Grenades, Gas Usefl High. Surf Test ·In Siege DAIL y r1i.Ot· s• ....... WADING OUT STORM SURF Newport Council;nan MclnN1 Former Newport Doctor Brands . OcMA 'Sinister' By 'TOM BARLEY ot nte DtlilY Pli.t Sltlf : A Sacramento neurologist who claim!' he W<l.1 drivr.i from Orange County by restrictive practices of the Orange Coun· ty Medlcal Association today alleged the 1roup is "a sinister organization · suf· fering from several ronns of Eiizophrenia and arnicted with delusioru of grandeur," Dr. Ted Thompson testified before an Asumbly subcommittee in Santa Ana alleging that Or. Harald E. Day of Capistrano By The Sea Hospital has for some years been the target of a cam- paign by the OCMA wltich baa: su~ed to the pohlt that the Dana Point psyctllatriet i5 restricted to practict from hi> .... home. · !:"Ji"'" alleged ihe OCMA u being .. led by an Inner 8&ndum which haa climbed over a mounta.ln or sick peo- ple." And ht prediCted as the hearing got un- der way today that "it will take more than {trial lawyerJ F . Lee Bailey to bail them out of this prcseot mess." Hearing evidence. designed to prove that Or. Day was the vict im or an OCMA boycott are two members of the Assembly subcommittee on me.ital health i;ervices -Assemblymen Frank Lan· terman (R-La Canada ) and John Burton (D-San Francisco). Presenl at the hearing in the capacity of ob8ervon are Sea. Ji;hn Schmitz (R· Tustin) and AS1Jemblyman John Quimby (R-Sz1 Bernardino ). Quimby is the author o! the assembly resolution which led to the calling or today's hearing. The Santa Ana htarfng ii the fltst of two legis lative In· vesti&ations into the complaints raised by Dr. Doy. Thomp&On testified lhat he practited In Newport Beach from 1963 to 1966 as a neurologist and that he was 8Ubjected lhrougltOUl hil residence there to pr .... l'tt from OCMA. The 'anirY j>oyclilatri•t blasted the physk:lans ' group as 1 network which controls appoinime'.111 at many eounly 00..llals_ and which dictates .Uie coune • and appOcation or Ofin&e. CO(l,MJ'a m~ tal hri!th progr1m. Or. ThomJ)90l'I, who served on the 1taU1 of South Coast Community Hospital lo (Sol DOCTOR, P114 II Sit-foot breakers riding a high tide gave West Newport Beach's groin and str:ldhaul area its first acid t£st this morning Md lhe beach held up rtlaUvely well, officials aaid. But the IUmlW1ding streets and homes, well used to the $W'gel of brine, were flooded as u1t1al for aeveral hOurs, and it could well happen again tomorrow mom- ~ turf, pounding ihe be.ach during a seven-foot tide, d"R?wed away th• turn- around road near 36lh Street wed by lhe heavy und hauling equipme.1l That will have to be restored before the rip can drive again, City marine officlal11 said tomorrow's morning high tide should reach aeven feet again, bul reports said the !llrf. ill ei:· peeled to subside a bit. • They rated the possibility of more heavy flooding as a tossup. Tbe portlog hardest bit in Newport tlril m<rning wu near 36th Street, where about 40 feet of beach was eaten away. With it went tons of new sand dumped by the hau1er1 in recent weeks. lllgb aand berms built at ~ surf line to pr<Jl«t tho haul road and ihe slreel! gave way ln that area.. and Seashore Drive and 1everal crosa streets were el~wilhuM. City crews bd mnovejl moat of the land by mldmomini. ·:~w.·re -reaU, glad .,,., had ao much laDd on the bUCh tQ start with," City 'nde!llXll Coordlnltor ~sO Da,... llid. . No New Noues Heard in Bay; Banger Scared? Newspal]'.'.r publicity appears to have chased off ·the Back Bay's tin-can-bang· ing duck-chaaer. That I! the finding of the Newport Beach Parka Commission, according to commission Chairman A. C. "Sandy" Cameron. Cameron noted that one month ago Mrs. Bet Longley, 283 Morning Canyon Road, had compl8ine0 that 110meooe was JXl.lndinl on a tin drum and lelXling nesting ducka 1nto flight with the noise. 'The ducks, Kid Mrs. Longley. then be· came prey fir nearby gun club mem- bers. "Since then we've contacted local gun clubs and no one. would accept respon- sibility fOf' lhe disturbance ol the ducks," ' said Cameron. "Also, the problem now seems to have been corrected through publicity .in local newspa~J.'' As a result, said the parks official, the. commiuion is recommending that no action on the matter be taken b1 the City Council ll'• probably just as we!~ ·City Allor· ney Tully Sey..-indicated. He llid the only way the city could prevent 11thl1 type of condud" I! throolh ihe Slate Leai.slature. The state., he e:iplained, his pre-empted the field for prolectlon · of wild ll!e. DAILY ~tl.OT tteff ....... SPECTATORS TAKE TO HIGH GROUND AT NEWPORT'S· JITH STREET. TO WATCH WAVE ACTION In Low Lying Aree1, a Minor Flood•• Stf'M'f Inds Become Salt Water Rivers Polic.e Arrest 15 at Estancia e ,... " ~ \ •:. 1..._~ w i- Jn Drug Roundup --Information supplied to police led lo • wholesale roundup or . 11.lspecttd drug users at Eltancla HJgb School in Costa Mua Friday, one a l ... year-old boy who said he had tripped on LSD 10 times. Ranging in age from 14 to IS, a dozen youngsters were arrested on charges of lack of parental control. questioned and then released to their families pending juvenile court action. Only two of ~ arrestees, one a girl- denied using drup at all, while the bulk -d them admitted to sampllng or regular. use or marijuana, LSD, hashish or pills. One said he had stopped taking drugs after discussing it wilh his parents, wh.ile another said he quit after being arrested earlier in the yea;. Detective Carl Jackson vi.siled the campus Friday afternoon to make the arrests, folJowi111 · an incident earlier in the week, in which. an alleged mescaline dealer was apprehended. School authorities used a pass key to open the suspect's locker, where 17 pur· ple pills believed to contain rnem:all~ were teized. The youth was reportedly carrying a quantity of hashish when confronted by police later, arrested and admitted to Orange County Juvenile Hall. ·Apparently no contraband was fou nd as a result of the dozen arrests Friday, involving mostly youngsters from the Mtu. Verde area, plus the son of a well· known professional man. .s-k Market NEW YORK (AP) -Stock morket pricos fell ·aharJ>ly and b..,.c11, ·1owor In modnte trading · 1ate this iftelooon. (See q-u.n.. Pages 24-15). · Stocki dropping In p•k• ..itnumber.d gainers by more than 3 to I, a Widening of the earlier margin. Indictment Due Today For Seven Ta:w Slispect,s LOS ANGELES (UPI) -seven mmiben of Ult m)'!tic hippie "'amlly" linked with the 1lva1e shiion Tate kill· ing and seven other 11.ylnp: were ex- pected to be . Indicted todly at th• con- clu1ion of county eraad jury dtlibera· tiom. Deputy District Attorneys Aaron H. Stovits and Vincent T. Bugliosi reported they will .seek an elght-eount indictment charging se.ven members of the pseudo- rellgiowi cu'Jt led by Charles Ma::i!On with conspiracy and -murder. A dozen witnesses were to testify at today's tecttt hearing but it was believed most of the evidence against the suspects already bad been supplied by attractive Suaan Atkins, a member of "the Manaon family." Three of tbe witaeeea to be called -were said to be fingerprint expertt:: Authorities have indicated one of the suspects specifically charged, Charles D. Wataon, 24, who 11 being held in Texas, allegedly left 1 fingerprtit at the Tate home; ~ )rilol!S scheduled to be called wU t>amti" De Carlo, a former motorcy-~1e cint lt•der who rteenily testified in •· murder trial in Santa Monica. He testified Manson directed the slaying in July of musician Gary }Jlnman. De Carlo reportedly lived for a short time with Manson and his "family" · Miss Atkf.is, also known as Sadie Glutz, testified for two hours and 15 minutes Fri- day, telling of her relationship with the ~year-old Minson and othtn in hill group who are accu.sed slayers of Miss Tate and seven other persons. Her laWyer, Richard Caballero, say! she still regards Manson "with a mixture of love, fear and hatred." Cabollm> Mid although Mall""1 la In jaU in Iadependen<:e, Calif.; pending ac· tioo to brine blm he.re, Miu Atkins fears he coo1d "dlnjure up a vi11ion detrimen- tal to her in hla mind then transfer it to her mind and then !ht would be marked." Light 'Plane Crash Kills Cameo Shores Resident A retired Air · Force · a:enual from Cameo Shores waa killed a?er the weekend in the. crutr.ol. h15 Bekbcraft Bonanaa near Tucumc.ari, N.M. ·Maj. Gen. John .II; llalle.u ,..13, -· 0rrtncton Roed.-Corana del Mar,·died in- l)an!IJ· when· hi! lllbl pi-,1oot .pcnre1' Md ... ~ Into· the llOOnd me. llOll' the. 1m1.U New MtlicO town Sifurday. - Geo. Beatie, who -had · moved to . the HarbOr Area •' year ago from Maaaachuaetll, w1s vice president of Mareo Systems Auooiates, a Newport · lluch.c:omputM llrm. · . 'Jn bis 'JI 1nta In the .Air ·For.., O.n. llallF ape. il!"'<d II clepul}', chJel·of lhl Defenoe CommwUclllona Agtncy. Reports .a1c1 Gel!· BeAle ~ ~·fore· ed to•make an eme,.,.,,ey 'lailding ei.<t·ol · Tucumcari e11ller in the day . After he took off, the p14ne aa:ain.ran lnto power troubJt Ind Smashed .into the YES Get~. Too M.any No's Jield. ' Afr.er the Initial Impact the plane vaulted into the air momentarily then slammed into ij'le a:round aga in. Moment~ before the era.sh he had·radioed that he was JOling power. Youtlt, Employment Service Seeks More Job ·Openings An angel of sort.8 11 finding work for willing hands in. the Harbor Atta-but not •nougil-and .the dtvllbh J>Ol~bllil}' 1, th•t 111t IOOn ;,,.., g,; out·., fiUs&i.ss due IO public apathy. She Is Mn. Jean Riss, director ot the 11.-Am Youth Employment Service (YES ). which ope.ratea in donated apace. at the Boy1 Club of the Harbor Area, 594 Center St., Costa Mesa. This l• the Orst year Ute: YES hai1 fWIClloned be)'Olld summer Into fill, pro. viding jobl for younptera-mll\Y of them •teady wnlnC pos!U-..but the 1oiog Is lOqb Md geting toui!Jer, ' .. ,,,. job<~ ., .. , coming lllJt " the eommunlty,' II.YI Mrs •. Rbl, who hts placed teena1era in lit IPOI! sln<e , school began, still lffvtng bundn!ds who / are on file without earnina: poWtr. Jlm Wl.IOd, YES board c:halnnan. warna that the office ·may·be forctd to close up . without help.. from .the c;oriUTIU- nily, Including a boost Jn operafln( hmd1 from loci! service cluba. The budget is now.ICheduled 'to nm out by nest Monday. Wood explains that the decision to try to operate all the way around the cal· endar instead of only in_ Jhe traditional sumrner months ltd to dtp1etiorl '11 thie treasury. , •. D).zrl~ th' vac1tion mont~1 YES reg-.~. 1118 yooncater1 •ad l\llded ·t11tm to llO& jobs, 'both steady part·Ome' emptoy. ment aod ODMhot chonil1 Me> as yard· won Ind baby-tilting. But pt09le can use i n ~ hlnil dur- lnl th .. JVl<tld< ""'°" • ....,.n,-...,,..ta Mrs. Rlll1, rrom ~ pi10f' to entertaining friends to' 1'darebfn1 Christ- maa cards ii your addreUt book iJ up to date. : To give an idel-whlt "IOl't'al capab~ ltiea are on file 1t 'the' YES Oftlee, thue 1 jobs were fllled durinj tl!e IUl1\nier mooths and mO.. recently, lince school openod ' ' Babys.itttr, factory worker, w~ washer, saletl penonnel, mot.ti maid. cafe hand, carpet cleaner. bolt reflnl&her ,. aardener, delivery boy, stenogapf'lfr, ·dishwasher, carpenter, draftiman,·i\lltar lnsll'\lctor and even Joblter. bake aulst~ · ant. . , _ 7 The applicants are al.0 br>Wed wilJ1 ,'a fact &heel on all upecll of betni frikr.' viewed for a job, ~.a1 how.W dr.eil · and~·· .. ~ to u.~· employer. \ The number ,to ca11-ir you . nttd • a wUllng Worker lot •lmoll any~ Job-ls 642-004, apd YES even Hai an ansWttiD& ......... il·Mr•. ru .... awiy, ' . Gen. Best le leaves his widow, Frances, and three ·ION,.Air FetrFt-Capt. Joba B. Bestic IIJ w1'o hu flown th from ~; lat u .. PhiliP Bestlc and Jef· ll'ey Batie, 1 student 1Mlollina Collqe . in Flirida. . . . ; . . He al.lo .lel"'.tl •·ll'andchild. . Funeral ltfVtct1 hive ft9l yet been an-. nounoed. ~tiff Haven Happy With Re~ain~g . Wnll The Cllff HaVen Communtty Asa0cia· 1 tr.a !Oday :f"Ol.ed tho. ~1 for lnilallln« 1· rtlalnlni will a\ the bast cil 11!1' Cliff Haven Wu!f at ~ver Drive . '1111 Cout llilbw•r· : . · M. ~ J. Stimer, presldeiit ol. the hOmo-· owiiUi'. group, uid ,tii< receq Uy .c<lll-. pilled WOl'k lf"ily i~.es. ~n ; tnfliC 'ulety In lhl netahborhood: "Ai\d 1 I\ ldda to th• 1i•lhtlic ,q•alUy of U.. ~Vtl."·hetaid.: '" '· .. ' From 1"re &ervkel LOS ANGELES -Police using dynamite, tear gas and hand guns fought a fiv~bour pitched batUe today before subduing a group of Black Panthers bar· ricaded inside their headquarters 'Willi oulomlltic rto.. and hand grenadeo. A handful of eight to 10 ponthen held off I !Oiknan pollco f"'l"' fnllJI the ....... Inc of ihe uaault 11 dnn uaw Ille morning before 1rurrendering'. • Three of thole Inside ihe Panther.,....; quarters were reported injured, DODI lerioualy. A force of 300 officers llU!T'OWtded tht building. PoUce said two were llhot as they first tried to aerve a warnnt. The other wa1 hit In later gunfire. · A standoff of more than four hours ensued. The rald was one of three on locat~ af the militant Negro organizaUon. Police said they had information that machlnt guns and other weapons had been stored there and they wanted to lel'Ve wmanil: on two persons. -. At one point officers lsaued. ari. ultimatum by bullhorn to those in tho headquarten : .. Come out with your, bands up or we 'll come in." One man IS.. PANTHERS, Pip I) Bay Oub Wanf.8 Ballot Lease Issue Reworded The Dalbo< Bay Club la unhappy •bout the propoeed wording ol the leaae IX• tension question on the Jan. l3 munJci- pal special eleetlon ballot. Ralph'Berke, general manoger for tho club, today a1ked the city to add inore infmnation to the question, which now reads : "Shall the City Council or the city ol Newport Beach be authorized to enter into an amended lease with the Balboa Bay Club which would extend the term ol the existing lease from 28 to 55 years~" A 1imple yes or no response 11 requir· ed of the voters, a simple majority of whom wlll dec;lde the fate of the issue. Berke aaid he would like to 3ee added to the ques:tion the fact that the revised lease would hJke 'the city's minimum rent from lhe 13-acre site from '45,000 to S150,000 aMually. In a letter to City Manager Harvey G. Hurlburt, Berke also recommended the inclusion of other points in the ballot queation "for the benefit of tho.se voters who don't read the lease." Among the points suggested by Berke~ -JnCreased sales and property tax revenllt!ll for the city. -Architectural design control by the city. -The amended lease Is subject !o cost of Jiving adjustments. -The new lease contains compulsory renegotlaUon clauses. Berke plans to talk to city councilmen •bollt the ballot question woedlng might. 0r .. ,. That silver lining behind Tutll· day'! cloudt may be a damp one. Temperatum, wbeo the sun makes its appearance, will be in the low ?O's alone the Orange Coast. INlimE TODAY YoU ma u not be able to de: scribt "Ohl Calcutta!" °" good cltan fun. but most of it can b1: labtltd good dfrftl fun. Sec to- da1111 review on Page 13. ,.-------1 I ~11~ 1 CHRISTMA, -- -..-----------------....---------------- t .J' . I~,,,, 1 •• ,• 2 D~LY l'ILOT N •• MmlQy, -I ; ltl>9., €amp lf s. Miiitalii s 'Using' Media ·in Protests? oO·ttle:vtskip. radio •nd newipaiitr' prtHJ1l· a ·di.ltoMe:a-picturt "of campus disturbances because they 11re being ··used" by militants? This Question was debated f"l"idaY. by news representatives and college pro· felJOrS Fri.day-during a cOnferencc 1n ~eim: ' ~e. news representatives readily in· di~ted lhey fell they had been used. Bui thti · a!S;o ~ook the professors an~ colleg;~ '1dmin.istrators to task, asserting they failed to provide inform~tion that couJ~ ba:tiillce the news picture. fJon Mazley, managing edit.or for CBS rai!IO ill Sin Francisco, said, "Ot'le oC lht ml!laXes o[ moderru journalism is If 1omebody says somet hing provocati\•e it "' More Waves 9ue to 'Strike ~ ~ong Coast .. . Monster wa ves driven by · a Gulf ot · Ai&Ska stor1n combnied -With high tides. will ccntiilue to ravage1 the coast or Southern California · for" at least a few more days, the U.S. \Veather Bureau v.•arned tocfay. Police, ' firemen and even private citizens banding together to rent heavy cqu\pment and construcr sand ~and earthen barricades were bracing for another onslaught Tuesday morning. Breakers ranging up lo 12 feet high in oome places caused extensive flooding in , at least five communities, causing severe flamage at picturesque Rincon Beach near Veritura. A total of 39 hOJTies were flooded lhere , -two suslalning major damage -and a hre statfun was evacuated by 38 men a~ the tidal waters surged over normally dry and protected land into. the building: · Sand, seaweed and foam tittered lengthy stretches ol Pacific Coast Highway and traffic was backed up for ' mil~ thrOOghout the length of the afOicted coastline.. ·· . The four·lane thoroughfare was lut hardest along the low-lying stretch between Ventura and Santa Barbara. \vhich is separated from vie surf itself by only a low concret!= i~~itllng wall. -. Cil9,zenS of Oxnard Joined together-to rent a bulldozer and quickly put up a wall nf sand as a bil1TiCade against the bat· tering force of tb_e unusual ti.de· and v.·ave combination. Forecasters ror lht U.S. \\leat her ~urfieu predict new seven foot _-.tipes. i:i.hoUl ft a.m. Tuesday and aga,19, on \Vednesday. while the extraordinary surf is also scheduled to continue. , Groundbreaking For Expansion Of Hoag Slated Ground wttl be broken Tuesday at Hoag ~fei:ooria;t ·H,ospital fcir phase one .of. ~he hosPital's •·Reach Years" expansion pro&iram. . Phase one calls for construction of a cenP'al poi·er plant and conpect.ive tun· nel -which v.·ill service the present hos· pita1 and the proposed 11-story H?ag ToWer, said A, V ~ Jorgensen, hospital pretident.: , . Hug Tower js slated for coostrucuon In late 1970 or early 1971, he noted. ,1.,, $2.235,000 contiact for the power pl~t was awarded to South Coa~ ~on· gtruction Co. of Costa Mesa. The f1nn u•ilf begin work immed iately, according 10 Jorgensen. Civic leaders trom U1roughout the l~ar­ hor Area are expected to v.·ltness tht> J;?roundbreaki'ng cerem9i:iies, scheduled 10 ge~ under v.·ay at 2 p.m. The general publi c is invited. Jorgen· ~n urgOO all interested Ne'A·porl Beach and Costa !\1esa citizens to attend . The graundbreaking \\"ill mark the: firs t major construction al the hospital since Its 1966 Pediatric Pavilion expansion \Vhich added 46 bed.~. DAILY Pl lOT (ILt.'81 °""'1 P'Ull. lS"IMQ Cb\U'AH't a,\ • .t N. w,,4 ~H•'""* W hll!lol'I,, Th'"''' .c,,~;1 &o.i.• lh'"''' .A. M~,,~;,., Moftt~"" Ef•.., J,,,,.., F. Co-IHft• "'""'""' .,"~ (lit l•llOf ,.....,.., ... d11 om.. 1211 w-.1 t•I••• l •ul•••r' Mtill111 Af4r•u: r.o. ••• 1111, '2&&>. --(Mf9 ..,, ..... 1 "" J.lf-tOol .._..,,.. ._,., m ,,_, .. _.. tWllf1 ., •• .,.,.! ;tOI' ,,~ s ..... ' . ' ' Is neWi, even .if li h wrong. . \ , "It b hUIQP nature that feportm and editors can • .J>e latjl and submit II~ lambs to news c.'Onferences O\lt contain no news." . 1· • • Managing edltOr of the Santa Monica Outlook, R. D .. Funk, said his·fl4:1W6paper "responds to clues that something ls going to h.appen and there you are, l11tp- ped, and you know it." The selt criticism was offered by news nlen at California T.eachers Association 's annual conferenc.-e on higher education, titled. tbis year ''Revolution a nd Response . .t• But the new~ m~n al.set P.Ointed out lhey do want to present balanced reports of campus Occurrences and they need more ' ·'help for prof~JOrs and ad.m\nist.rators to do 110. r -. • . D>~ld Ko;owitzJ. educa4on r•Porling spe'Ctallst' for NBC te levl.alon in Los Angeles, said to get .batanc;ed stories he must constantly figbt an "acaOemic defense mechanisin. ·· ;'The prob!ein," he said. ''is ad - ministrators refuse to talk w hi le militants, who are lhe \~lould·be· campus leaders. do talk. \Vhere are ihe educators who CQUld place the conflict or con- troversy in perspective? They are unavailable," Horowitz said. Funk told the profe~rs. "'You people are part or a political process. You mu~~ state your case clearly or you lose the ballgame ." · One profeuor 11id, '1A lot,oE u1 are olO. fashioned silsie.sr We haven"t tht courage to stand up and speak like the militants. We worry about our house get· ting bombed.'' Another profe:Ssor remarked, "~fany of us still have the suspicion the media are sensation seeking. This suspicion is deep- ly ingrained in us." "If you concentrale on what you say and what you think there is no reason you shouldn't say it with the press around," Horowitz respo nded . "You talk about academic fteed<nn, freedom lo speak. What we are de8llng with 1s defensive ~ucators." . He said, "I go on campus and l 'm like a Fuller Brush man. 1 have to spend - ' more Ume ,.llin; ibo,.ldea I'm aoin& I<> lie Ol>itc!i>e anc1 liir than doing reporUng." "\Yhy should you leave your deiik and compete to be heard with people of no responsibility?" W.ozley posed a questipn. "THe answer is because that is the way · thidgs are done today," he advised. "People lie to the news media more than they did a generation ago. They play us for suckers. 'You Should be prompt and_ volunteering with the truth. You are com· peting with opponents of n() moral aubst.ance." ''One problem Is the caliber of men you send out to cover gtciries,"' complained a 'professor. '!..A ttporter may come ln.JfDerepared, lhla ls pot un"'111l," 1lid ~.~'1'ley. "When dealing with him put your!le1f in the same pasition he is incommunicatini:: \\'ith the public. Don't give him a 2>page pre&S release. Practice the art of con· .densatlon, simplicity-and get·lG the hearl or ~Uie matter." · •·You cause more troltbles {or us at schools 'than you help us," c:h~lenged a Professor. ' "Well, people thought the Fr1;11ch revolution might die down if it was left alone, but it didn't," said Mozfey ... 'Mle same goes for the unrest on c&.mPlJs, it isn't very ilkely any more that it Will dle down." Stresses Libel Issue 'Alioto Attacks Magazine ' ' In Talk to Newport Youth s By JOHN V M. TERZA 01 lh• O•UJ .. 1111 ft1tt San Francfsco's Mayor Joseph Alioto took some herty jabs at Look Magazine during a v.'eekend appearance before a gathering of journalism students in Newport Beach and the recipien ts of the pokes weren't very far away. Alioto, plucky and aggressive. spoke to the students and their le athers at the Newporter Inn and had just missed Look photographer Earl Theisseo a-.1d an aide speaking to other students in a room dir:ectly below. POLICE CONDUCT SEARCH AT ROADBLOCK SET UP IN SOUTH CENTRAL LOS ANGELES . 16-Block Ar•• S••ltd Off During Pitched Bett le BttwHn POlic•, P•nthers "I'm sorry I missed them, because it'~ always a pleasure to meet some Of my future employes." Alioto. who is suing Look for $12 miltion in libel damages. told the 100.or-so students . F rom Page 1 PANTHERS ... came out Finally the others followed . The wounded officers were not im· mediolely identified. One was reported hit in the chest and groin. Another was reported hit in the foot and the third in the leg. County Cities' Decision On Harbor District Due The cracks set the tone for Alioto'! hour-long appearance in which ht: dwelled on the case involving allegations of Mafia lies. He blamed the national pictorial magazine for falling into the "trap which killed the Saturday Evening Post." "It's Obvious that the magazine ha!: been losing money and is running behind Time-Life, and In order to make up for it they took the dangerous plunge into the sensation market. Their.trouble with that story about me is that they relied a.1 two basically incompetent writers," he said. A 'l6·blodt area was sealed off during . the con fron tation. Police de p Io ye d th emselves aJong wide. shop-lined Central Avenue and stayed under cover. The area is south of downtown Los Angeles. near \Vrigiey ·Fiekf', ·former home_ of the California Angels baseball team. Homes Ii~ adjoining streets and residents clusterii on lawns to listen to iihol.s aod blasts .... 1t.'boUf i4 persons were arrested ln r'aids 11 t lwo other locations, where , no resistance v.·as encountered. ''Those guys have automatic weapon~ 11.nd;they're throwing grenades," a police inspector told newsmen during the morn- jng •. Officers said that homemade grenades were then tossed toward police from the building, bursting"in the slrect. No one was hurt by the grenades. ·A police spokesman said the building had been sandbagged at doors and win - do11,·s by the Panthers. A contingenl of police blocked off thl' ent.ire area. Classes were dismissed for the day al a nearby school. The downtown police building was put under heavy guard. Officers with ;.1hotguns were stationed at every en- trance as a security precautio~. Or ange County cities arc tieing ~sked to make a decision by Jan. 8 on a future League of Cities position on the Orange County Harb or District. 11untington Beach t11ayor .Jack Green, pt'esidtnt of the county league section, has proposed alternatives to the city councils. They are: -Developing and pro1noting s t a l e legislation for a vote by the people on · diss.olving lhe district. -Joining with the Board of Supervisors in promoting the establishment of an in· tegrated special District of }!arbors, Beaches and Parks with responsibility for the total recreational program in the county. Green points out that Assemblyman .John V. Briggs (R·Fullerlon) told the supervisors Nov. S, "In the event you gentlemen turn a deaf ear to the re com· n1endation of the Local Agency Forma· tion Commission lLAFC) and the league's plea then l am committed to put this to lhe legislature in January. "However I will do this only at the re- 11uest, by formal resolution of the League or Cities." Green ·points out that the second alternative, "might, at lirst glance. ap- peai:. to be a reversal of the league's posi· l'rom Page ./ DOCTOR BL ASTS OCMA • •• Sot1th Laguna and Hoag Memoria l Hospital in Newport Beach, tolcl the com· r.11!~e Iha! he was warned by sever:tl 1nen1bers of the OC!\1A that he would lose his practice in Nev.·port if he did not join lhe. group. i\1embership, he said, would mean his su bmission to unwritten rules and regu!a· lions lhal would determine what he did ~nd how he d.id it for every moment of his -medical practice. Thompson testified that he became in· crt asin&J.Y aware: of the • 0 C M A • s determination to dri ve Dr. Day from the t'ou11ty and his 84-bcd psychiatric hospital <•I Dana Point and how the ori:;an1zation w;i~ lnslrun1cntal in 1hr l'i!ing of a number ol malprac tice suits against the µh~·sician. Those suits suc<.:eeded in barring Day !rom his own hospital. Thompson said. and the Capistrano By The Sea facility i!> now being run by Or. Day's deputy under Day's supervision. "ft has taken me nearly five years to bring this incredible. story of harassment and victimizaUon to public -noliet but I am here. today to ask that action be taken." Thompson said. Get Date at OCC Students· Suggest Co 1npu 1,er Cupid Orange Coast College's student gov· M"nment is planning lo go into the com· puter ~ating business. This Is a first project picked from suggestions ol what 1tudent government might be doing solicited from students Jut week. Steve Koppes, student direetor of pub- lic rtlaUons said 260 suqstions v.•cre 11ubmitted In three days with problem~ as~~ lo be cured ranging from finals to parking to SOS on campus. A number of students sugges ted 11 computer dating service. Koppes said. and he has embarkrd on researching how to 'o about Jt. H.e smd. "We might charge 50 cenL" and tarn » little money for student gov- rmment. But the main thing Is to get ~le to know caeh other around campus M we Cl!ln tu1ve a studrnt body instead of little groups." Koppes aaid the Idea or solic:iting stu· dent sug~stlon'1 '"8~ Stud<!nt Body Vlr.e '. President Roark Oourley·~ ''ho ran hi~ cleclion ca mpaign last spring around the :-logan "communication .'' ln addition to asking-suggestions. Gourley has ~ed a Communications Center, an office staffed through the day hy studenls willing to help out other stu· dent5' with a problem. "Students come in and discuss their problem and meYbe "'e get a counselor to help out where he wouldn't think to go see a counselor on his o~·n.' Koppe:f said. Along "'ilh suggestion~ dropped in boxes set out around campus students \\'t're asked to include their name and student identification number. The reason for that. Koppes said. Is lo get logt'ther peop le with the same problem so 1hey might discuss it. He !!Did the student government still I~ working on priorities to glt•e the \·ar· lous suggestions. but he hl'ls l1ecided ptrsonally lo get going on lht computer dlltin£ srrvirc. " tion. but certain advantages might be ob- tained should the city councils consider Lhi.~ approach in depth." l le points out th al the supervisor! adopted a resolution Nov. 5 which in· eludes two objectives in line ~vith the league position. They are incl uding the entire county in the taxing area of the Harbor District. and consolidation of harbors, parks and beaches in an in· tegrated operation. Gree n also suggests three additional ~1eps that coUJd be take n by the supervisors: -The Harbor Commission membership could be expanded to nine, with five ap- pointed by the supervisors and four by the league . -The independent taxing authority of Hie district could be removed, requiring funds from the county general fund . -The district could be required to follow lhe provisions of state law re- quired of the county for Incurring bonded debt through a two-thirds vote , instead of a majority. The league presi den t concluded. "This Lhree-year problem needs to be settled. We have too many other matters that re· l'fuire city and county cooperation to permit this dispute to further pre-empt ! undue limo and energy." He charged that much of the content or the article implyiQ.g his ties with the underworld was "totally false_·· One part of the story, he said, related to a meetlng he was alleged to have had v.•ith Syndicate operators ·at the · Nut Tree . "That is the Bay Area1s equivalent of Disneyland, so can you im.agine Alioto n1eeting with a bunch of Mafia hoods at Disneyland? It's ridiculous," he said. cepts of a free press and the recent court deeisions making public officials even more vulnerable. to press criticism. "But thf whole thing should .stop when the iss\)e comes to direct. blatant character assassination," he said firmly . Alioto, even ihough he was subjected to the potentially damaging Look article, ~t· lacked Vice President Spiro T. Agnew's criticism or both newspapers and le!evision stations ror th,eir handling of news. "His comments, particularly those· on the three television networks ' practices. were particularly insidious, especially \vhen he implied a direct threat on the networks' very lucrative government Jicen3es," he said. Alioto's defense of the press ended !here. however. OAlLY ... Lor '""·",.,. JABS AT LOOK MAGAZINE Sen Francisco's Alioto He said everyone should Hgtµ pe.ndinJ. federal legislation giving ~spapers im.·· munity under anti-trust lav.·s. One student asked the Democratic mayor if he believed the Look article and the national attention it has recf)ived had . helped him in any way. ._ "I could think of a million things th*-. could bave helped me better. Jt did ont-' thing, though. ft cured the problem of: name identity and now Alioto i.s not just the name of aOOther fish restaurant at. Fisherman's Wharf." He added one significant drawback ol the controversial article. "It doesn't bother me so much until l think· or a 73-year-old mother. a lovely. wife and children I have at home. ann-- they have to put up with the problem. It really hurts." Alioto. ""'ho spo~e lo the journalists n(· Bela Phi Ga1n1na in betv.'een aµ"; pearances at Santa Monica and Santa Ana. said he still hasn't decided if he will run for governor. '. "I'm barnstorming up and down the state now just to take some soundings to 5ce if I should run or not." he added . THE BIDTI QUE HAS SOME THING FOR EVERY WOMAN ON YOUR CHRISTMAS LI ST • if she's • teenager, consider • kicky outfit by Tootique or Jody, complete with a fringed sca.tf, ~)outique . ' .. ' ... . ' . jewelry end e ffop py hot. m.ybe she's 1 youn9 woman-about-town ,,. Denise clothes ere the right thing I<> help her conquer the world. perhaps she 's• more m•ture fype ... Do n Sophisticate~' name de.scribes th1 look~•sy tlt9anca, qu iet soph istication. arid don't forget gr•ndm•. OUr BIOTIQU E.11cc1ss.ories, from c•meo brooches to frin9e d sh•wl1 to llame slippen , will help her bridge th o IHhion 91p. SP ECIAL I HADL!Y CASHMERE SWEATERS -40'/o OFF ~L.. BIDTIQUE 3467 Vie l ido -Newport Beech -T olephone 6 73 -451 O Pa rking for as many cars as you own • ----------- • l l I J .. ' " BEA ANDERSON, Editor· Ni...,., eec-Mr .. 1Ht " ""' 11 Elves Finish Year's Work ' • Santa's elves'have been going quietly about their work this pa.St year in-'·a Newport Beach workshop, supplement- ing the North •Pol~ operation, and now are showing off thei r storehouse of sparkling toys and dolls. The elves, members of the As si stance League of New- port Beach, have bfen busy repairing and repainting toys of all sizes and shapes to be sold in the Assistance League Thrift Shop for Christmas gift giving. In addition to the renovation 'vork, the toy committee has gathered a wardrobe of handmade clothes for many of the dolls. Bicycles have t>een cleaned up and spruced up as well, 4ccording, to· Mrs. John M. Webster, toy project chairman. ' . ' Other elves frequeliting the shop have been the Mmes. Lawrence Pfister, EynOn White, James B. Taylor, William Ritter, Howard S. Petersen, Everett S.j(iardiner, Walter Spicer, Orrin W. Wright Jr., Robert Unger, Robert Lucas, John Lleb and Edward Brooks. The current toy sale, an annual project of Uie league, is a dual community service. It offers quality Christmas gi fts ior those whose finances for Christmas shopping are .Ji mil- ed, and is a benefit for the Chil dren's Dental Heal th Center. \\•here dental care is offered to children who otherwise would not have it. The thrift shop is open we.ek days from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. and Saturdays from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. It is located at 505 32nd St., Newport Beach. FULL OF SURPRISES-Many happy surprises are In store for senior citizens in the Harbor Area as th ey open Christ· mas gifts from the Thursday Morning Club of Newport Beach. On their ~·ay to the Balboa Bay Club, where the ' ' ' . gifts Will be collected during an annual holiday brunch Thursday, Dec. 11, are (left lo·rll(ht) the Mmes. Darrell y, Cole, Daniel E. Westbrook, and. John A. Osborne. Music by Bob Mitchell's Singing Boy• Will highlight the progra!"· · . . Admiring some of the many toys that have be~~ r~pa,ired aqd-re-. painted are Mrs. John M: Webster, (left),, c~a1nn·an of . the·t·o y· · comz.nittee, and Mrs. Lawrence Pfister,· cCKhllinnkn. '' Christmas Spirit B'ig as Gift List Armed with the k'nowledge that Christmas Is a time for giving, ·members of the Thursday Morning Club of Newport Beach have given themselve_s to the task of gathenng gifts for senior citlzens of the Harbor Area. -, All of the gills, brightly wrapped and tied, will · be brought to the club's annual holiday brunch ln the Balboa Bay Club Thursday, Dec. 11, at 11 a.m. MemDers also may contribute to the Silver Tray col .. lectlon during the brunch; according to Mrs. Lloyd A. Wil· . son, president. Mrs. Carl R. Andersen, community service chairman, will act as Santa -Claus and, with her committee, will de.o li ver the gifts and visit seru,or citizens during the holiday season. The visits will continue throughout the year as one ot the clu b's philanthropic projects. Continuing in ,lthe spirit of givi ng, the table decoratioos will be 'provided by the Cerebral Palsy Association of Or· ange Cow:ity, as arranged by Mrs. Jack K. Wager, decor .. atlons chainnan. The fe stive deco rations, made by volunteers and pa .. tients, .will be ayailable for purchase at a separate table and all proceeds will benefit the. Cerebral Palsy Association. Adding to. the holiday mood will be the program high• light, .a performance by the internationally knoW!I Bob Mlt· chell's .Singing Boys. The versatile group will pres-ent a program· titled Christmas In Song, according to Mrs. Will• -iam K. Vance, program cbairmar1 . Further making the party• a gala· one will be a collec- tion of fashions in the Holiday Mood, -to be shown by Lor .. Taine Sutherl and and modeled by'the mannequin section of the club under the direction of Mrs. James C. Stamper, chairman. l • • . . • . . • • . '· .• -: :: •• .. • Dentist Bites ·Off More Than H.is Patient Can Chew DEAR ANN LANDERS:.Several yea rs ap my mother went to a dentist for a Set of upper plates. They worked line. Two moolhs ago she began to have trouble wilh her remaining teeth so she went back to the same denUst. He extracted all her IO\\·en. She paid him $175 in cash, He asked her to leave her uppers so he coold adjust them to the lowers. She wu to return in five days for both the uppers a:MI the loWers. Five daya later my mother rtturntd and was shocked to gee a For Rent 11111 on the dentist's door. Hla,phooe bad been djJCOMeded and the recepUonlst in the olfic< 1C1W the hall llkl he had been t.alkin& about moving to .Alaba ma. . _., I ANN LANDERS a.ty mother Would like to get ber uppers back. Abo her $175, Pleue answer as 500ft ai poaaible, .bn. This is. an emergency. V .s. DEl R V .s,, Al!Vtot '°" molkr to -.ct U.. local Deotal Soddy, eltb<r d ty or ct1nty. The deatlst will be ..ptl1<d .. tlM! -c:ommlU... ,.... commlUec may or may not be aaccessfal . tn helping your mother recover lte:r chop- per• and Utt money. Sbe aboullt DOt .wait, howtver. Tbe woman needs teetll ud site needs $ent NOW. Vrce ber 1 to 10 '° aaotber dentist at once. DEAR ANN LANDERS: Add my nome to the list of people who never lhou!bt lhey'd be writing to AM Landers. t was a wJdow who married a widower. J had known him ts yean. • After we married, I discovered his 21- year-old daughter didn't believe in work. and his 18-year-old son carrie home only lo change clothes and sleep. I refused to Jet them run me like they ran their father. This caused trouble be~ween us. The boy mouth~ off at me a.ice too often and I told him "I move. 11!1 father said - "If he goes, J go, too." That night all th~ of them left. 1 bought thla be>uUful home with my first husband's money. It la a Jovely but a lonely· castle. ~IY. pastor said we .an should have had coonseling. 1 was wilhng but the others were not. Did 1 make a ~ mistake somewhere along the line? If so, what was It? -GRIEVED DEAR G.: You made three ~tt. Your flr1t mistake waa not bowlq the cl\lldren better before you married tllelr fatber. 1be aecond m11take •• •nlerioC tOe boy to move. Tbt Ullrd mbtab wu n,ot setting mailaeling. for yoanelf -even iboagb the odten rtf•aed. A!ld now, dm1't m.ake a fourth mistake by 1etUe1 a divorce before you do everything II your power to effect a rtCODclllatloa. ne kNt win be gone hefo.,. loq IM ,.. oacl ,.... husband mtcbt have a 1Ue lo&etHr &tier all. DEAR ANN LANDERS: Settle on argument. 1 say a brtdesmaid shou1d be a .-11 maiden -Mt -1y a v!rpi, blih"."!11 least unmarried. My sist.er is ~ her wedding and ahe has asked fi friends lo be bridesmaids. Three of. the!:~ five are married women and two ~Y~ children. What about this? -DIXI& ~ DE;AR DIX,.A bridesmaid-· ,, 1lngte, a vtrgta, u eI·vtrcf9, prep~f~ married, divorced. a mcKber-It~.· ·~ 10 Iona 11 de I• femtlt. Md .. tlltae daya doo1 he nrprlaod • a Nia. = ....... LMlleimaW ...... .., .... :; 1o1•111•1p11o...... '' . Anri Landen wlll he &lad lo ~ ""1 with your probiemo. Send them to f>eil 1u care of the DAIL y PILOT, -1o<lnc • 1<if·add.......t, 1tainpod en,.lope. ,,.._"_ i--.... ~·~·-.-,.~----------;,._---:;_ --... ~ . . ~ . . .... ~ . _, ,_,..,,,..,.,., _,,,_,..,_,-, "" -,,,-..,._ ~ . ....,.,.,,,...-.,......,,,,---· .. ---~-----. ~--· , _ _,,_ . ~.-...----~-------~ .. - PRECIOUS FLOOR COVERING -Oriental rug expert Karan Mebla and Sears store manager Joseph Metcalf examine '30,000 Halwai-Bidjar nig cur- rently touring Southland stores. Station Wagons, Vans ' Carry Toys to Needy Station wagom: and vans replaced Santa's !leigh when the Huntingtoo Beach · Tri· teens loaded SO new toys of all k1ndl for d elivery to the Imperial Valley Missicm last Saturday. A.aisting the Tri-teens were members of the group's s ponsoring organlzaUon, Junior Woman's Club of Hun- tington Beach. Serving as drivers were Mrs. Barbara WIIllarm, president; M rs . Dale Bush, Tri-teens' advisor, and Mrs. Daniel Drag~t. in- ternaUonal affairs cbainnan. The toys, donated by Matt.I Toy CorporaUon, will be distributed to children who be.fore had very litUe reuoo to believe ln Santa Claus, ac- cording to Sherri Jemen, Tri· teens presldenL Honored Artist Entered Field At Early Age The DecMtber Anlll-o!-the- month honored by Junior Ebell Club of Newport Besch was directed Into her chosen field by her aeventh grade teacher and bu gone OD to win awards for her work. Mn. Henry IL Hill, the honored artist, will present a show In Mariners Library this month. A Newport Beach resi- dent, Mrs. Hill received a degree in commercial arl from S<r:I Jose state c.o.llege. More Dear by Year Orientals Prove Visible Asset By BAJUlAftA DU AR.TE Today, with r u gm a k 1 n I Of .. 0.llJ l'ltlt Stefl being replaced by better II you approciate J~ JI ap-paying jobs due to e<onomle preciates foe you. advances In the Far Ea.st, Thls blt ot Oriental«lUlldlng Orientals are making a com .. wbdmn. tf a shade ungram-back. maUcal, WU inspired by a Describlng the United States as a "forest for ·collecton," rug. Mehta adds prospectiv e Or, """" lftdaely, Oriental .... _,,_ ..... Id ~ rugs _ llOllle, l,l'.IO of them. ll'Ven or ~ o ouuu ma11.oe; P<>cslbly the. most attractJve it a point to trade with reliable dealen. feature about Orient.al rugs, Giving to Others In Season Again The season for giving is upon us again. Hwidreds of Orange County youth are laced with uncertain luturn and a dubious holiday season. But area residents can make Christmas truly merry for thole In the Al· bert Sitton Home. Contributions of clothing and money will be accepted for tbo5e in the shelter. Mn. KeMeth Bostoo, supervbor of the receiving home, asks that gifts be delivered unwrap- ped. Donations should be made' from Thurs· day, Dec. 18 throul!h Tuesday, Dec. 23, at the home's reception Oesk. A film on procedure, schoollng and Sit· ton Home activities h~s been prepared !or showings in dubs and schools. Appointments · to view the movie may be made with Mrs. Gene Peebles at 545-6366. besides ridme8s and color, is He cites, as an examplt, the touted by oriental rtli expert, ease of a young New York genial and gBJTUloos Karan couple wl>o decided to get rid Mehta who Js accompanying a of an old Oriental rug given to unique colJeetioo currently them as a wedding present by loorlng the Southland. an aunt. '------------------..! A naUve ot Bombay, India, A dealer was summooed Insomniacs Preoccupied and holder d nlmlel'OUI film who was glad to give them c:redita as actor, producer, $900. 'Ille couple were tecbnical advilor and lecturer, delighted; they n&abed out and The trouble with in50Jlllliacs, Brain Research Institute. Mebta maintal-• q ... "ty purchued w a 11 • t o • w a 11 Wh •• the bl .... iw.u u.... ....._ d aler was says a UCLA psychiatrist, is aucver pro ems are, Oriental rug ahould incTtaae in carpe ... '5. J.U.::: e insomniacs generally rocus. on Stanford Graduate To Marry Mr. a:ld Mrs. ~lilan Chiba announced the engagement of their daughter, Kathe r I ne Chiba to Frank Norman Mm- nen of Del Mar during a cocktail party for 50 friend,., 1n their Lagunlta home. The prospective bride WU graduated from S t a n Io rd University and served as president of the Assocl1ted Womeo. Students during bet senior year. She attended UCLA and California St.ate C<illege at l..ong Beach and teaches in the Long Beacb' School District. Her Ha nce is an alumnus ol. San Diego Stale College and served as an ofrice r in th8 U.S. Cout Guard . He now 11 assist.ant to the city manag11; of El Cajon. The couple will be married i'.1 St. James Episcopal Church OQ Feb. 7. Value al the ra'· of alx per• even more delighted; he they tend to become preoc-th . bill ic ld the e1r Ina ·ty to sleep and cent per year. reso rtli for 141,800. cu Pied w Ith their show little concern for their Rebekah lodge Thus, a nlg can double in Price of rugs depends on sleeplessness. emoUonal difficulties. ~ value in 15 years; in 50 years many things including quality Studies on insomnia suggest The most common v Triple Link Club llf Mesa it should be worth 3 to 9 times of wool (the higher the grazing that chronic sleeplessness is of insormla is characterize ebekah Lodge has meetinp ltsorigtnal price, and from the slopes, the better the wool); associated with moderate to by chronic inability to fa11 fourth Monday at 8 p.m. age of 50 to 85, it appreciates number of hand knots per severe per s 0 na11 t y asleep rtadily, Other victlms in various locatioru. liotrs. 11 to 50 times. inch, ranging from 16 to 820 ; disturbances as reflected by of the disorder may fall asleep Douglas Morgan at 548-1931 Rugmaking, described as a design, and dye quality made psychological testing, reperts easily but have persistent dU-may be called for additional "dying art" by Mehta, began from roots, bark, insects and Anthony Kales of UCLA's ficulty staying asleep. information. in the 15th Century as a form other natural sources. 1,..;.;;;.;;~~=:;;...:::.,.::,::::;:.;:...;;;;;;;;,,;;;;~:.;;;;;;:~--...;;;;,;;,;;;;;;.;;;;;~----. of IOCi.al eecurity. During lean One of the most intereatin[ winter moaths, fannen work· rugs in the •.ooo Coon· ed at their looms, addlng to a nolsse<lr Rug Collection being creation that was to take from circulated among Southland five to six years to complete. Sears stores is an S>-year-old 11'e finished product was Halwai-Bldjar from J r a n added to others tn tile storage valued al $30,000. closet, where they remained The rug was hmi knotted in W!ti1 a monetary crbts arose. Kashmir by a son, his father Undergoing a tort of acid and his grandfather over a test. newly·woven rugs were period of 19 years. The 23-foot placed oot.!ide the doorway, in by 171.foot rug is made en- the street, or perhaps: thrown tirely of natural dyes with into a muddy lake for a period variaUon of color from year to of four to sir: months. After year barely discernible. The wash.int. true colon were design, kept entirely in the revealed and the rug was head of the weaver, continues ready for the marfttplace. with a naturaJ flow. Rugs reflect the feeling of Rugs iin the collection, at an the Jocale in which they are averag~ price range from S«lO made, both in color and to $1,200, were gathered from design. The rug aJso is named Afghanistan, Iran, India and after the area, hence such Pakistan by Mehta and his familiar names as Kashmir, associates, Dilip Mewawala Afghan, Kinnan, Sarouk and and \Volfgang Gutske. Pakistan. The Halwai-Bidjar a n d SF~CIAL..S ·. you r "l'.ttl .. t angel" )l'ill lo~o tho tiny ~ t ot designs, a great selection for · teens, ideal for granny gowns cuddly so~ and warm cotton REG. 59c to 69c YD. VALUES 37y~ 36" wide guar. washable ... ,, ...... The young women opened their fall schedule with their annual fashion show, a major funding event. They made gifts which were sold by their sponsoring club during Its Champagne Boutique, and also made tray favors for the children's ward at Huntington Intercommunity Hospital for Halloween. They assisted the ·J uniors in their project to stuff Hope kits for the hospital ship, and are planning to go caroling before Christmas. The artist u t i l izes watercolors, oils and acrylics for landscapes and ski and sailing 11Cenes. Once utilir.ed as a sort of native weaver Hassan Zadeh traveling king-size bed by "'ill be on hand at Sears. Sooth desert annies and nomads, Coast Plaza, from Saturday, Oriental rugs became popular Dec. 13, through Thursday, in the United States after the Dec. 18. • Choral Group Every A.fonday at 7:30 p.m. members of the Prospective Aliso VaJley Chapter of Sweet AdeJi.nes convene in r.J.ission Viejo High School. ~-··· LOSE 1or2 DRESS SIZES for the Hol idays! ... , ,......,.,., ... _,•,..arc ... illldofMr/odM. Mrs. Hill is a former top prize winner in F a s h I o n Square Art Competition and has staged numerO\ls one- man shows in norlhem and southern California. turn of the 19th Century, But ;:::========;IJ war years and depression days sounded a death knell to the formal drawing room of the Victorian era. DGURE (;O.NTBOL SALONS Weary, Dearie? Read Bill Leary •AttY .... Ur•·• •A1fll.Ul•atCAM:• A~ MAIJttJI OA.IJO W'S.CC.II« NEWPORT BEACH ALSO IN. A1191'1itilft. .. ,.,,., Hilb., C--' ... C.1...._. De.,..,, ., ......... ~ WM4, lMt IMcll, N""'°" ....,_ N. Holl.,...cf, o.mr .. ,...._, S. Dlote, s.t. A ... s-t. ~ SllOlllMll, T~ WMftMf. .W.. olto 111 ,,_,, Sec,......, S... .IOM, S1111•J"f•I•, w .. .,.,.CrMl. 430 PACIFIC COAST HWY. 642-3630 (2 Blocks East o! Balboa Bay Club) 18.W W. 17th STREET 543.9457 SANTA ANA • RED COTTON FLANNEL : gre at for Christmas decor· ating mantle stockings, stuffed toys, cut-outs •. avoilable in vibrant Christmas ro<I. 36" wide 49:. guar. washable PRINTED SLINKY KNITS bold, mod ·designs in vi brant new color combinations on ciingy1 slinky triacetate knit jersey. a sophisticated dress up fabric 44"/45" widths BONDED AND UN BONDED 198 VALUES FROM $3.98 to $4.98 YD. wools, wool blends and synthetics. some bond.d to acetate tricot. e PLAIDS • NOVELTIES • FANCIES 22s ! ~--~·-• lllsq ... 1til • _._...,."-"l""·~@Al .,.,JI IJi~ ·,'·~~-....... ~.i..~ I .-11'~~~,.... . I • • . , .• RED IS FOR CHRISTMAS t ' RED COTION VELVETEEN ............ 52", •. RED BONDED ACETATE CREPE .... 52", •. RED DEEP PILE RAYON VELVET .. 5379 , •. RED WOOL & RAYON FIL T .......... $2'' YD. RED WOOL FLANNEL .................... 52", •. FILT IS 'Ir' WIDI, OTHlltl P•OM M" f'9 W WIDTHS ~ • • • • • • . -. .. .. • •• . ~ .. ,. Sooot1i COC11t ....... -Co1t9 11.,. Hatl---Hllllli-IM<li 8rlttol •t l•n Dloto '"'· -JU..15" ~ llt heP ltN. -lt7 .. 01J o,... Moo4ey n,. Mil-r 10 'tll t -~ 'tll 6 o,_s.w., tJ.1111rt Do .. 'or --~-~~~~~--~-~~--'~~~~~~~~ • , ~osta Mesa-• • _, ' ' ·- ' \IOL 62, NO. 293, 6 SECTIONS, ~8 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, DECEMBER 8, '1969- • o ice a e Get Oate at OCC Students Suggest Compu ter Cupid Orange Coast College's student gov· e.mment is plaruling to go into the com· puler dating business. This is a first project picked from liuggtStions of what student governmenl might be doing solicited from students last week. Steve Koppes, student director of pub- lic relaUons said 260 suggstions were &Ubmltted in three days ·with problems a!ked to be cured ranging from finals t.O parkinc to SOS on campus. .A number 'of students suggested a ~r dating service, Koppes aaid, arid he has embarked on researching how to io about tt. · · He said, "We might charge 50 cents and earn a little money for student gov. emment. But the main thing is to gel people to know each other around campus so we can have a student body instead of little groups." Koppes said the idea o{ soliciting stu· dent suggestions Wa.3 Student Body Vice President Roark Goorley's who ran his election campaign last spring around the slogan "comnn.inication.'' Jn addition to asking suggestions. Gourley has opened a Communications Center, an office staffed through the day by students willing to help out other stu- dents with a problem . "Students come in and discuss their problem and maybe we get a coonselor to help out where he wouldn't think to go see a counselor on his own,' Koppe$ said. Along with suggestions dropped in boxes set. out around campus students were asked to include their name and student identification number. The reason for that, Koppes said , i~ to get together people with the aame problem so they might dlscus.s it. He said the student government :still is working on priorities to give the var· ious suggestions, but he has decided personally lo get going on the computer datin& service. Golf Course Get s First Starting Time at Council Another in it.s newly begun series of q· tn work !eS!lions is scheduled by tfie Costa P..tesa Crty Council tonight, with municipal coif course o~rttlon and downtown redevelopment on the qenda. Councilmen will also ainsider taking a policy stand on the propoged expansion o{ the Southern Calilomia F,dison Como pany's 1tearn gerierating plant Jn Hun- tington Beach, near the city'1 west side. The session begins at 6 p.m. with a closed personnel discussion on hiring one of three applicants for operation of the Costa Mesa Goll and C()\lntcy Club. A wealthy Costa Mesa businessman, a restaurant·inn management team from Arizooa and three golf course and clubhouse executives based in Los Angeles want the assignment. Councilmen will convene at 7 p.m. in business session to annOunce the outcome or th e golf course management talks and for dellberation on urban redevelopmenl of the downtown area. Several CQllSUlting firms have offered broad outlines for what they would do if hired to engineer the job expected to span at least a decade, but further talk s are required prior lo choosing one. Experts say t.he job -massive h} Costa Mesa's past standards of un- dertaking -won't really be too difficult, Former Newport Doctor Brands OCMA 'Sinister' By TOM BARLEY Of f"9 Dllltr l"llfl Sti ff A Sacramento neurologist who claims he wu drive:i from Orange County by f'e9t.rictive practices of the Orange Coun· ty Medical Association today alleged the IJ1lUP is "a sinister organization auf· fer1ng Crom several forms or 1ehiwphrenia and afflicted with delusions of grandeur ." but proper plaMing is essential to its success. Undir i>rocedures of the s l a t e Redevelopment Act or 1947, lhe project. would be financed by lax money generated from within the area In ques· tion under a temporary freeze.- Some of the businwmm and property ownttS to be affected have expressed coooem that the area proposed for the project may be top large as now en· visioned. One of the applicants for the job of organizing and guiding the downtown rede'relopment ls former Costa Mesa City Manager Robert Unger. C.OUncilman George A. Tucker recenlly suggested taking a stand on the etin· troversial expansion of the nearby Edison Company steam plant when state of· ficia\s called a hearing on it for next week. The Public Utilities C o m m i s s I o n meeting will be Dec. 17 at 10 a.m. in the Fountain Valley Civic Center auclitoriwn. Sit ter Splits; Kid Com plains The voice was :small and so was the speaker. ''Where'a my babysitter?" Where indeed?, wondered authoriOO al the. Pacific Tele.phone Company office in Co5ta P..1esa. So an unJdentificd supervisor called lhe local babysitting bureau a f l ' r determining the. origin of Ule call. Officer Robert Berg was dispatched from 99 Fair Drive to the reside.nee in the 2000 block of Wallace Avenue, knocked on the door and told the caller why he had come. No one was home but the 4-ytar-old boy, who was take.n to police be.adquarters for care and custody un til hJ1 parents found Officer Be.rg ·s note and came down later Friday to pick him up. • POL ICE CONDUCT SEARCH A~ ROADBLOCK SET UP IN SOUTH CENTRAL LOS ANGELES l ~Block Ar•• Sealed Off During Pitched Battle BetwMn Poll et, Panthar1 Police Arr est 15 at Esta ncia In Dr ug Ro undup Information supplied to police led to l'I whole:sale roundup of suspected drug users at Estancia llig.h School in Costa Mesa Friday, one a If>..year-old boy who uid b• had tripped• l,SD JO Ii~ Ranginc in a1e from 14 to 16. a dozen youngsterii were arrested on char1a of lack of parFJtal controt; queslloned anrl then released to their families pendin1 juvenile court acUari. Only twC) of the arrt.!ltffs. one a girl- denied u&ing drugs at 1Jl, whilt:· the bulk ol them admitted to sampling or regular use of marijuana, L.50, hashish or pills. One said he had stopped taking drugs after discussing it with his parents, while another said he quit after being arre:sted earlier in the year. Detective Carl JackSon visited the campus Friday afternoon to make the arrests, following an Incident earlier in the week, in which an alleged mescaline dealer was apprehended. School authorities used 1 pass key lo open the suspect"s locker, where 17 pur- ple pills believed to Contain mescaline were seiud. · The youth wu reportedly carrying a quantity or hashish when eonfronted by police Later, arrested and admitted to Orange County Juvenile HBll. Apparently no contraband was found as a result ol the dozm arrests Friday, involving mostly youngsters from the Mesa Verde area, rlus the son of a well· known professiona man. SK IERS 'Ji'INALLl' GET SIERRA. SNOW RENO (AP) -Snow was !ailing today · in the Sierra and across 'Northern Nevada, and the weather bureau said snow.starved Sierra ski resort.a could ex· pect 8 to 10 incbes. S~k Mark et NEW YORK (AP) -Slock market prioes fell sharply and broadly lower in mode:rate trading late this afternoon . (See quotations, Pages 24-25). Stresses Libel Issue Alioto Attack s Magazine In Talk to Newport Youths Jly JOHN VAL TEl\ZA ·Ot tflt'otltr ,,.. 11.it San Francisco's Mayor Jcee.ph Alioto took some hefty jab! at Look Ma1azine during a weekend appt:arence before ll gathering of joumalllm students In Newport Beach and the reciPlent! of the pokes weren't very far away: Alioto. plucky and aWeaslve, spoke to the students and lhelr teachers at the Newporter Inn and had just mi~ Look photographer Earl Theissen m an aide · speaking to other students in a room directly below. "I'm sorry 1 mlssed them, because it'11 ah\·ays a pleasure to meet some of my futurt: employes," Alioto. who is suing Look for $12 million In llbel damages, told the ICIO-or·so students. The cracks set Ult: tone for Allotds hour-long appearance In which he dwel\ed on the case in volving allegations 1?f Mafia ties. He blamed the tiational pictorial magazine for falling Into Ule"~trap' which killed tht: Saturday Evenini Post."' "It's obvious that the rriagaz.ine has been losing money and ts running behind Time-Life, and in order to make up for It they took the dange~us plunge Into Uje sensation market. Their trouble with that story about me is that they relied m two basicall y incompetent writers,"~ said. He charged that much of the content of the artlcle implying hi! lies with the underworld was "totally false ." One part of the story, he said, related to a meeting he was: alleged to have had ~·ith Syndicate operators at the Nu t Tree. "Th<1t ls the Bay Area's equivalent or Disneyland, .so can you Imagine Alioto meeting with a bunch of .Mafia hoods at Disneyland? It's'ridkulous," he said. cepts of a free prus and the recent court decisions makh1g public OffJCials even more vulnerable ·to press critJclsm. .. "But the whole thing lhould stop when the luue e«nes • lo direct, blatant character U11sainatlon,11 he'aaid firmly. Alioto, even thoogh he was subjec(ed lo (Set ALIOTO, Pa1e Z) OAIL Y ,ILOT Ir.ff l"Mt9 J ABS AT LOOK MAGAZINE S.n Francl$co's Alioto 90 .Feared Dead I n Greek Crash ATHENS (UPI) -An Olympic Airlines four.engine plane with an estimated 90 persons aboard -crashed tonight near Athens ori .a flight 1from the Mediter· ranean ·island of Crete. : · The· plane was a·DC8B non-jet OO'A·run frQJll .the Greek Is land fu. the ·capilal. Police said there appare.hUy were nn survivors. Dr. Ted Thompson te:i;;tifled before an Assembly subcommittee in Santa Ana alleging thal Dr. llarold E. Day ol Capistrano ""By-Tfiil Sea Hospital has for &0me yt:ars been the target of a cam· ~ign by1the OC~1A which has succeeded t0 the _point that , the Dana Point psychlatrist is restricted to practice from his '1W'TI home. YES Gets Too Many No's • Estimates of the number a.board \\-ere made al the Athens lnlemaUOO:it Airport. Airport sources said the plsne crashed about 25 miles south of Athens while ap- proaching the city in rain. The sources ~d visibility was poor. Thompson allel'd the CX::MA as being "controlled by an Inner sanctum which has' climbed over a mountain of sick peo- ple.'' And he predicted as lhf: hearing got un· de'r wey today thal "tt. will take more than (trial lowyerJ F. Lee Balley Jo ball lhem oul ol lhis present meS5." lfearing evidencr: designed to pro\'e that Or. Day was the victim or an OC'~1A boycott are two member, or the Msembly subcOmmlttec on me.ital hulth 1crvlces -AMemblymro Frank Lan· terman (R·La Canada) and John Burton tD-Sln Francisco). • Prese.nt et Ult: hearing In lhe capacity or observors are sen. John Sctunill (R· Tuotlnl and A!s<mblyman John Quimby ui .. s..1 B<rnardlno). Quimby l, the authot ol the assembly resolutJon "·hlch led to tht: calllna or (See OOCTOR. P111e 21 t ' Yout h, Emplo y ment Se rvice S'ee~·More Job Openings . An angel of som Ji finding work for willing hands in 'the Harbor Area-but 1191 enough-and' !ht d•vilish po"lblltty is that she .!IOOn may go out of buainess due to public apathy. • "' She l.11 Mrs. "Jean. Riu, 4~ of the Harbor Area Youth Employmt!1" Service (YES), which operates in donated 1pac~ at the Boys Club of ~ Harbor Area, SH Center St, Cost.a· Mesa. This is the first. year the YES has funcOooed beyond 1umrMr Into fill, pro· vidln& jof>s for YOU{ISSten-many of them '1eady •amllic poi!Uons-but th< going u toogh ... gdlni loughtt. ' "U.. jobs~ areni comlog out ri the communlty/ say1 Mta.~ who· has placed teenager• ln 141 •Poll 11~ school began. autl Je1vitla hundreds ¥irlio are on file without tamfng pow'r. Jim Wood. YES board cha irman. ) warns that the office -may be-forntd to close up without help from tl!e commu-o nlty, Including 1 boost Jn operatJna fund.11 irom kcal service clubs. · The budget is now sche:duled to run out by ne1t Monday. · ' Wood explains that the decision to try to operate all the way around -lhe · cal· endar instead of only ht the ltlditlonal summer months led to deplet.ion ol the treasury. ~ • During the vacation months, ~ reg· lstered 898 youngsters and rulded them Jo IOO Job.!, bolll ""dy pan.11.,. •rhploy. ment and one-shot chores aucb &I )'&rd- -• and baby·sllting. , · But people can UJe •n ulra band dur· Inc th< yulellde ,.,.., W'ordl, 11111<11' Mt1. Rlaa, from housecltlbina prlOr to entertabtln& friends to addressing Christ· mAS card.s H your addri'si book I• up Jo d•te. ·To·1lve an t6ea0 what IOl"tlo{ ca1>1bil- 1 ~:: :::n ~~~~at!~~ :c:~:= . months and more recenlly, l1nce school opehtdo Babysitter, facti>ry worker, window washer, 1a.lcs perllonnel, motel maid, care handp carpet cleaner, boat reflnlshtr, gardentt, delivery boy, .i..•te.nographer. dishwasher, carpenter, dra.mman, gull•r in.stru<:iOr Ind evm !obiter bike 11Jlst· anl. • The appllcanu are also briefed with a fact sheet on all a.11pec1l ot being Inter· viewed for a job, such u how to dress and pre.stilt one's self to tbt JJl".OIJ*tlve tmploytr. T}le number to. call-if you need a wllUng worker r~ 1tnmt. any job-is &12-&174, end YES even ha$ an "115Werln1 service if Mrs. RW ls aw111y, }: • .B·urglars Take $3,294 in ·Sound ' . - · 1'iieves 111ing ll Ure iron to 1mash • gla~ door ~lied a weekend buralary at Fashion Island· In Nowport 8,each a.nd made off with $3.294 ln1 cat rad'los and ttereo set.II from Penney'& Tlre Cent«. Police said the ttiert occurred "'ilhln a half-hour period Salurday between 7 and 7:30 a.m. Manager William Ver Welrt of Ihm· tington Beach, tokt officers ht discovered tile th<(t at 70!6. Th< building at Number 24 Fashion Island had been ch«ked ·at 1 ' a.m .• be SIJd. · . Tbe burglar5 took e'xpeosive auto tJlereot alon1 with aevual radios arld piecea of auto speed equliment •. ' .· Today's ElnaJ'.,. . . N.Y. Stoeks TEN CENTS ers Grenades, Gas Used In Siege From wtre St:rvtcet LOS ANGELES -Pollet. using dynamite, tear gas·~ hand guns fought a rive-hour pitched J>atUe today before subduing a group of·Black Panthers bar- ricaded inside their, headquarters wttb automatic rifles and hand grenades.· A handlul or tighf to 10 plintller• htld . ' olC a 3CJO.man policre f~ Crom the open- ing of the m ault at dawn unW late morning before surtendering. Three of those inside the Panther bead· quarters were reported injured. DOM ~rioUsly. A force of 300 officers surrounded the building. Police said two were -shot as they ftrst tried to serve a warrant. The other was hit in later gunfire. A standoff of more than four hours ensued. The raid was one of thrtt on locations of the militant Negro organization. Police :said they had information that machine guns and other weapons had been stored there and they wanted to &efVe warrants on two persons. At one. point officers issued an ultimatum by bullhorn lo those in the headquarters: "Come out with your hands up or we'll come in." One man came out. Finally the others followed. The wounded office rs were not lm- medi;itely identified . One was reported hit in tht cheg and groin. Another was reported hit in Lhl foot and the third in the Jeg. A 16-block area wa1 aealed off durlnr the confronta tion', Police d e p I o y e d themselves along wide, shop-lined Ceulral A venue and stayed undf!r etiver. The area is &OUth of downtown Lo! Angeles, near Wrigley Field, former home of the California Angels baseball team. Homes line adjoining streets and residents clustered on lawns to listen to :shots and blasts. About 14 persons were arrested in rai<h .e t two other locations, where no resistance was encountered. "Those guys have automatic weapon!'! and they're throwing grenades," a police inspector told newsmen during the mom· ing. Officers said that homemade grenades were then tossed toward police from tM building, bursting in the street. No one was hurt by the grenades. A police spokesman said the building had been sandbagged at doors _.and win· dows by the Panthers. ' A contingent of police blocked off the entire area. Classe:s were dismissed for the day al a nearby school. The downtown police bu1kling was put under heavy guard. Of(icers w1th shotguns were stationed at every eh· trance as a security precaution. Charles Garry, legal counsel for tHe Black Panther group, denounced ttie police action. (){ the police statement that the raids were unconnected with those made on Panthers in other cities he said: "That is an ufi811ulterale,d lie. This is all part and package of a naUonal sche me by the. various agencies of government lo destroy and commit genocide upon (See PANTllENJ, Pll' ZI Orange Weatloer That silver lining behind. Tues- day's clouds may be a damp one. Tcmperatw-es, when the sun makt3 .its appearance, will be in the low 70's along the Orange Coast INSIDE TODAY You mo11 not be able to de· .scribe "Oh! Calcut14!" 01 good clea1l fun, but most of it can bt lobeled good dirty fun. See to- day's rtlrltw on Page 18. _, _____ _ • C•lflnll• It CltMllltf M-D (-'ft ,. er-~ " .,...,.~ n lfltlfill ,_ • .."'........... -lt l'lottflC;• HU *"'M-tt AMI """"' IJ Mfl•• • -----·~-~--. . . ...-. . . ~ ~ . z-OATlT PlltlT c • . ' ' Campus Militants 'Using': Media • Ill < oa.•.tetevb\ol\ r1diO and newapape~ a present g ~is\Orted picture or 'C:ampu! disturbance s betause they are belng "used'' by n1ilitants! • This queslion was debated l'riday by ifCll'S rcpresent:ilivet ;µid college· pr(). Pe.'i.!ors Friday during a oonfereoce in "'18)1e!m. :;$ome news representatives ·readily in-. mtated they felt they had been' used.· Blit lbf!y also took the professors <ind college administrators to task. asserting they failed to provide information that l'OOld billance-lhe ne\lJ\.ptcture. t'.poo Motley, m•nagtn~ edilor for CBS r;KiiO .lrf. San F'l"aneiSco, said, ''One of the nl1Stakes 'ol tnodern journalism i.s if ~ebody says something provocative it . • .. . l b news, even lf it ls~· 1,,,. ''Il fs human fl•lure tl\at nporteil inc1 tdlton can be luy and submit Ullt Iambi to news conferences that cint.alri no news.'' ~ e ' Managing editor of the Santa Monica Qullook, R. 0. Funk, said his newspaper •·responds to clues that somelhlng Is going to happen .and there you are, trap- ped, and YOll know it." The self criticism was offered by news men at California Teachers Association 's annual conference oo higher education, tilled this year "Revolutioo and Response.·' · But the news men also pointed out they do want to present balanced reports of campus occurrences and lhey need more help for prafetSMS an(t a'drh.inistrttors 1·0 i do so.T , DI vld Hol'Qwib:, iGucation r(J>Ortinc 1peCl1lbl lor NBc t.levlilon 'In Lo5 Angeles, said to" get· balanetd stories hi nlust constantly fight an "aCademic defense mechanism." "The proble.in," he sald. "is ad · . mlnistrators refuse to talk w hi I e milil4nts, who are the y.iould·be ~ampus leaders, do talk. Wh~re are the educators who could place the conOict or con· lroversy in perspective? They \ are unavailable1" Horowitz said. Funk told the professors, "You people ~re part of a Political process. You musl· state your case clearly or you I~ the ballgamt." DAILY "IL!rr Sr.fl .. Mii SPECTATORS TAKE TO HIGH GROUND AT NEWPORT'S 31TH STREET TO WATCH WAVE ACTION In· Low Lying Areas, a Minor Flood as S_treet Ends Become Salt Water Rivers From Page l DOCTOR BLASTS OCMA • • • today's hearing . Tht Santa Ana hearing is lhe first or tv.·o legislative in· \'CStigations into the complaints raised by Dr. Day. Thompson teslifil'd that he pra clictd In Newport Bt"ach rrom 1963 to 1966 as a neurologist and that hr .... ·as subjected lhroughout his residen<.-e there to pressures from 0Ctt1A. The angry psychiatrist blasted tht physicians' group as a network which controls appoinlmt".1ts al many county hospitals and which diclates the course and applicatio~ _or 91"ange County's men-- ta! health prog~am .. Dr. Thompson, who served on the slaff11 nf South Coast Community Hospital in SQ!Jlh Laguna and Hoag Memorial Hospital in Newport Beach, told the coin· rnlttee !hat he was warned by sever.ii n1embers of !he 001A tbat he \YOUld lose hi& practice in Newport if he did not join lhf. group .. t.lembership. he said. v.·ould mean his submission to unwritten rules and regula- ll011s that would determine what he did arid how he did ·n for ~very moment of his medlcaJ praclke. Thompsoo testified that he became in- rreasingJy awaie of the O CM A 's detennination to driYe Dr. Day Jrom the tounty and his 84-bed psychiatric hospital at Dana Poi nt and how I.he organization v.·as Instrumental in !he filing of a niimber of malpraclice suit! against the physir ian . Those suits succeeded in b~rring Day lrom his own hospitaJ. Thompson said. ~nd the Cap istrano By The Sea facility -,s 11mv being run b,Y Or. Day's deputy under J)ay's super\'ision. "ll has taken inc nearly fi Ye years to bring this incredible ~tory or harassment and victimization to piiblic noti~ but I am here today to ask 1hat action be taken." '111ompson said . DAiii e1,QT Olll>Jti:tl COA.'l" .. utlUl'lllM (OMl'Arn llelMrl M. Wtt4 l'rHl9H>I ..... l'ytl!""f J tc\o •· C..rlty ¥let .. , .. ~ .... Cicf>tltl ""-'" y~ ..... , 1Ctt¥il "" ... T~t,;.,, A. Mwt,~I~• Ml ..... ". t•liet c .. ,...._OM.. :J]O Weil 1•¥ S+.1el M1lr+111 .AIUr•n:·r.o. ••• 1160, t261• o--.. ...,......~_,,,,_, ~......,. "--.c•i 711 .......... _ llllft•H'"IM a.G'll ... 1111 S"'"' DAILV N.p1, .. ..._,. 11; ~ .. ~l>t'll. .... ~toMol ••Ito ,"'I:., ,... • ., .. ...,. ..... """' "" C..11 ...... ..._, -..ca. u.-. • .adl, ,....., .... 8.-d> .,,, fl ...... ""*'· ..... •1111 -... ~ ....... 'Dnllfit C-1 ""*""""' . (-"'1 """""" ..... ._. M ftll -} a.ttet .......... _. ... , ..... -~ .. , •"91t. CMM. ,..,., ''"'''' • ''''' Ma~1a1 . C•••• Ma•• .... wa.SlJI ~. , ... a. ... C-1 ............ :;........., ... -""'"" •llw!f'"""'-...r:twt.1~ _,.., .. ..,...".........,. ...... """ "" .-....:.. ....... -""" -..... "8.~ ... ,-~ (lfM """'"' ... w t i """"""' .... w -t.tre ._ .. , b llte,.,,. ~ .. 0 ...... 111.dt """*'!~/ .. ,...h 0,9 -lflfrl ,......,., •1trw1.....,, 11 M -"'ily, Among those he linked .,._,ilh the OCMA "inner sanctum " and involved in the "un· derground mo\'en1ent " against Dr. Day v.ere "Dr, Harry Slickler and his gan& .al Newport Beach, _f;verett Bm\nister, QC. MA direct.or and Hugb Plumb Jr." He de$Cribed Stickler as "the Joe Bananas of Neoiport Beach." 'MlompSOn defended Day as "the finesr pH~laii · I have ever met"r<Jlld. ,a: man who knows more about his dlosen voca· lion than all the other psychiatrists in Orange County put together. " He coodemned as "utterb'. ridiculous'' ..the allegations by OCMA tha1 Dr. Day was unfi' io practice psychiatry and he called on the committee to "imrilediatcly take steps to remedy wha~ i~ nothing fnore or less than a cntntnal con· spiracy." From Page l ALIOTO ... tbe potentially damaging Look article, at- tacked Vice President Spiro T. Agnew·~ ~riticism or both newspapers and television stations for their handling of news. "His comments, particularly those on the three television networks' practices. \~·ere particularly insidious, especially \vhen he implied " dirtct thrtat on lhe nel"'ork s' very lucrative. government lice nses:' he said. Alio1o's defense or the press ended there, however. He said evcryohe should right pending Federal legislation giving newspaper~ im- munity under anti-trust laws. One student asked the Democratic 1nayor if he believed the Look article and the national attention it has received had helped him in any way. "I could think of a million things that could.have helped me better. It did one · thing. though. It cured the problem of name identity and now Alioto is not just the name of another fish restaurant at Jo~isherman's Wharf.'' He added one significant drawback or the controversial articlt. "ll doesn 'I bother me so much until I think of a 73-year-<1ld mother, a lovely '"ife and children I have at home. and lh.ey ha\'e to put up with the problem. It really hurts." "-lioto. "'ho spoke to the journalists of Bl'la Phi Gamma tn between !p· pearances at Santa Monica and Santa Ana. S.Ud·he still hasn't decided ir he will run for governor. . "I'm barnstonning up and down lhe ~lalt now just to take some 80Unding1 to sre iJ 1 shoo Id run or not," he added. Bethlehem, Conn. Braces for Mail Benn..EHEZ.t Conn. (UPI ) -The po6l office iJ'I Ibis westcm Conn(!(tlcut town was open for business Sund•Y tn handle lhe traclitional av1l•nche or Ch.ristm1s mall from all over !he northcastmt United States. • A quarter of 1 minion Chrislma~ greetings ... ert~ malled rrom here 111is1 year, btaring lht ''Bethlehem'' pos\mATk. Postmasttr Earl Johnson said the post nff1cc will be open uven.daya • week fro m fi 11.m. 10 1 p m until Chri.st n1a~. \ Storm-born Surf Gives First Test To Ne,vport Groin Six4oot breakers riding a high tidt gave West Newport Beach"s groin and srt.ldhaul area its first aci<1 test this morning and the· beach held up relat ively well. officials said.. • Bui the surrounding, streets and homes. \\·ell used lo the surges ol btint. were flooded as usual for several hours, and it could well happe n again tomorrow morn· ing. The surf. pounding the beach during a seven.fool tide, che"'ed away the turn· around road near 36lh Street used by the heavy sand 'hauling equipmt".it.. That will have to be restored before the rigs can drive again. City marine officials said tomorrow's morning high tide should reach seven feel again, but reporls said the surf is ex· pected to subside a bit. They rated the possibility of mort heavy fiooding as a tossup. The portion hardest hil in Newport Utis morning was near 36th Street, where about oW feet or beach was ea\en away. \Vith it went tons of neW sand dumped by tht haulers in recent week"s. High sand berms bujlt. a~ the surf line to protect the hau l road ~nd the street~ gave way in that area. and Seashore ' Drive and several cross streets v.•ere clogged with sand. City crews had removt'd most of tht sand by midmorning. "We're really glad we had so niuch S<:.nd on the beach lo start with," City Tidelands Coordinator George Da"·es said. "Wt all agrtt that the area rared prel· ty well under some relatively extreme conditions," he added. He said a specific time schedule for repair or the end of the haul road would be worked out by the Army Corps or Engineers this mor:ling. Senate Approves ' Ftu1ds for ABM \YASl11NG1'0N {l:Pl)-The Senat~ a~ proved 82 lo 0 today a $1.7 billion n1ilitary construction approprialions bill including $15 million for the Safeguard antiballistic missilt I ABM ) system. The money me·asure. to provide fund~ ror military projects at home and oYerseas. contr asts with a $1.5 billion measure approved by the llouse and a $2 billion · request by the NlJ:on ad· ministration. The Senate bill contains $12.7 million for development of ABM restlltth and dtvelopmtnt facilities on Kwajale1n Island in the Pacific. Centaiu· Boys Clear Sidewalk of Dehris Six membtr\ of the Orange Coast ~1· CA Centaurs· boy'! group swc>pt 1 le~h ol asphalt skfewalk on Estanda Ori\·e Sunday, ·clearing it of mud and debris left by r~ent rains. T'ht group, whlcl) decided on the.pro· jecl because neither city nor count y crews had Jurisdiction, nYcpt !he \\11.lkwaj near Swan Drht One proleioor Nld, "A '91ol ut Wt o!ll- fllhlnnad ~. · We haven't !ht courqe to Sti}td up and speak like the militants. We worry aboul our house &et.- Ung bOmbtd.'' . . Another professor remarked, "Ma ny of us still have the suspicion Lhe media are sensation seeking. This suspicion is deep- ly ingrained in us." "If you con~ntrate on what you :say and what you lhink there Is no reason you shouldn't aay It with the press around," HorowiLI responded . "You talk about academic freelfom, freedom to speak. What we are deaUng with is defensive educators.'' He said, "I go on campus and I'm like 1 Fuller Brush man. t have to spend more time ,.llU.. the ldt• f'm 1ot11 to be objective and fair than dolnf reporting." "Why should you leave your de:sk and compete to be heard with people of no responsibility ?" W.oiley posed a question. '"The answer is because that is the w•y things are done today," he advised . "People lie to the news media more than they did a generation ago. They play us for suckers. You should be prompt and volunteering with lhe truth. You are com- peting with opponents o! no moral substan~. '' ;'One problem ls the calibtr of men you send O;Ut to cover stories," complained a professor. ."A "'"°""' ma,-cocne tn·unp,,;..r<d, UriJ is not lll)USUOI." .11id Moiley_ ''\Vhen dealing wilh him put .,yourself in the same poslUon be is incommunicaUni with the public. Don't give him a Z.S.pq• press release. Practice the art ot con- densation, simplicity and get to the heart or the matter." ''You cause more troubles for us at schools than ~ou help us," challenged a professor. "Well, people thought lhe Fretich revolution might die down if it Wfl,l.\cft alone, but it didn't," said Motley.:~ same goes for the unrest on campus. it isn't very ilkely any more that it "'lll die down." Seven Facing Indictments . ' Grand Jury Probes Sharon Tate Slayings LOS ANGELES (UPI) - S e v e n members of the mystic hippie •~ramily" linked with lhc. savage Sharon Tate kill· ing and seven other · slayings were ex· peeled to be _indicted today at the con· clusion ot county grand jury delibera· lions. Deputy District Attorneys ~n H. Stovltz and Vincent T. Bugliosi reported they will seek an tight~ indictment char,ing seven members of the pseudo- religious cult led by Charles Mftlson with conspiracy and murder. A dozen witnesses were Lo testify at today's secret hearing but it was belieYed most of the evidence against the suspects already had been supplied by attractive Susan Atkins, a member of "the Manson family." Three or the witneses to be called were said to be fingerprint experts. Aulhorilies have indicated one of the suspects specificaUy charged, Charles D. Watson. 24, who is being held in Tex.a:;, alltgedly left a fingerpri'.1t at the Tate home. Another witness scheduled to be called was Daniel De Carlo, a former mot.orcy· cle gang leader who recently testified in a murder trial in Santa Moruca. ~He testified Manson directtd the slaying ln July of musician Gary Hinman. De Car)o reportedly lived for a short tim e with tifan.son and his "family" Golden Tri.angle Zoning Miss Atki'.is, also known as Sadie Gfulz. testified for two hours and 15 minules"Rri· day, telling of her relationship with the 35-year-old Manson and others In his group who are"'accused slayers of P.1iss Tate and seven other persons. Htr lawyer, Richard Caballero, ·say:" 1he still regards ~1anson "with a mi'tt1>r~· of Jove, fear and batted.'.. · ·1 Before Planners Tonight Caballero said although Manson Ir Jn jail in Independe.1ce, Cali(., pendint..ac." Lion to bring him here, Miss Atkins fear& he could "conjure up a vision detrirdel'I• ta! to her in his mind then transfer it to her mind and the n she would 'Oe marked.'' ··• · A rezoning petition and conditional ust. permit for a .seven-building compleX or apartments in the so-caJled Golden Triangle sect.ion or Costa Mesa goes be.fore the Planning Commission tonight. The 167-unit project by Fullerton developer S. V. Hunsaker Jr. ts viewed with enthusiasm by the city staff, which recommends approval by commissioners and the City C.Ouncil. Location of the proposed ty,•o--story development is on s.a acres of land south nf Paularino Avenue. betv.·een Bristol and Baker streets. Hunsaker wants lo rezone it from in· dustrial and manufacturing lo multiple residential use, then build the complex, grouped around two recreational areas, under tenns of the city's high-rise ordinance. Costa Mesa officials 1ay the HWl!aker apartment project more than meets the requirements and would be a definite step in the beautification and value of the relatiYely undeveloped area. The property involved was owned by the Santa Ana Heights Wat.er Company and still includes the private system's primary source well . Completion of a. lengthy city study on the Golden Triangle area-envisioned as the hub of metropolitan Orange County in decades ahead -is also expected quite soon. Planning Director \Villiam Dunn said last week . Attempt.s to begin developing the lucrative property over the past year- and-a·half have generally been stalled pending completion ol the land. use study. Besides the Hunsaker package of one and lw~bedroom apartme.nli, the 7:30 p.m. meeting agenda incl~es a petition by an Irvine firm for an identical zone change in the same area . The Don Koll C.Ompany Inc .• 17755 Sky Park Circle, is asking to rezone land at the southwest corner of Baker Street and the Newport Freeway . A zone exception permit for a Here'11 Johnny's Restaurant at the southwest comer of Bristol and Baker streets nearby is also on the agenda. Kathy Investment Company , 445 E. 17th St ., Costa Mesa, is the appllcanl. Fairview to See Circus Perform The circus I! coming to Costi Mesa Tuesday, but the only perlormanct will ~ for a vuy special audienct, patients at Fairview State Hospital. · Elephants, ponies, trapeze arUsls. acrobats and, ol. course, jolly clowns will be featured in the I p.m. stlow in lhe hospital auditorium, according to Don Heaston. He is p!'e.s.ident of the Paul Eagle:ii Circus Luncheon Club. founded nearly .11 decade ago and named for the lallt cf the famous circus general agents. The sole job of the club is lo irovide circus entertainment at Christmas time lo children who must live under cir('umstances that keep them from en· joying the life of normal youngsters. This is tht first time it will appear at the local hospital and Heaston says the all-volunteer circus rivals the most pnr fessionally planned shows on the road circuit. Firemen Prohin,g Fire at Voit A fire cf undetermined origin at W .• T. Voit Rubber C«poration, 3801 S. ~bor Boulevard , is under investigation t.od.ay by the Santa Ana Fire Oeparlm!!nl. · . According to Ray Batchell of the .hr« department, the b!az-e was ~por1ea··~L 5:42 p.m. Saturday. The fire caused.inor• than $10,000 damage to stacked paci:irik materials in the warehouse area. he ~d. Bachtell said the probable cause ~--~ fire "is suspicious.'' . "We bave turned it over-to a fire in~. yest.igator," he stated. Fron• Page J PANTHERS. •• members of lhe Black Panther· party:." When a newsman called Panther htad· quarters by telephone, a voice that sounded like that of a woman said : ''TM pigs are attacking us. Send the pre5! and send us people." Today's confrontation was the firs\Or Its kind in Los Angeles, although Oiere have been individual clashes betweeJ\ of· fi~rs and Panthers during or arter 1trect arrests. · ' THE BIDTIQUE HAS SOMETHING FOR EVERY WOMAN ON YOUR CHRISTMAS LIST lf sh8s 1 tHn19er, consider 1 kic:ty outfit b'y Tootique or Jody, complete w;th e fr;nged surf, boutique jewelry end e floppy htl. rntybe she'i a youn9 women-1bout.town ... Deniie clothes ""the 69ht th;ng to help h" conquer the worl d, perhaps she's• more mature type ... Don Sophisticate~· n1me describ1s the look -easy ele-gance, • qu ie t tophisticotion. ind don't forget grtndma. Our BIDTIQUE •ccessories, from c1rn10 brooches to frin9ed ,h1wls to llam• .1;ppa~s. wm help h .. bridgo lh• f11h;0n 91p. SPECIAL I HADLEY CASHMERE SWEATERS -40'.4 OFF .:571.e. BIDTIQUE H67 Via Lido-Newport Buch-Telephone 673-~5 IO P1rkin g for as m1ny c:1rs 1s you awn ( --. DAn.Y PILOT·lhft l"Ml9 TESTING -Gene Adam< takes b!ood ·J!res~e of Mary_ Ellen Clark after she has pedaled. a while on exerctse bicycle. Medical exeI'Clse program born in Leisure World has been exported to Laguna Beach through YMCA. Jogging Spreads Laguna Adopts Oldsters' Program By RICHARD P. NALL Of rM Diii¥' Pl'-f ll•ff You Jog a bit, walk for a bit then you measure your own heart rate to see what's happening. · 'I1le medical exercise program born in Laguna Hills Leisure World two years ago to gain scientific data about exercise effects on older males has been exported to Laguna Beach. This time the program -sponsored by the South Orange County YMCA -embraces both sexes and a different q e range, 20 years to 69. In the acclaimed program at Leisure Worki-now being carried on by private f~-the oldest male participant wm'l7, Gelle Adams, who is ruMing the Y ex· erclse program, said it got underway Oct. 8 with 18 participants who had approval ri jheir physicians and additional medical tests conducted by Adams. He was technician for the Leisure World program conducted by USC on a grant from the National Institute or Health.. Adams said the exercise program Is to Improve physical conditioning and take oft or control weight. Men are also in- terested in improvement of the cardio· vascular system which has been pu1 under Increasing stress by changes over the past ~ years. A side effect, he said, has been th· comraderie and friendships formed b, the group exercise. participants. Jogging and other exercises are heJ( Monday, Wednesday and Friday at I p.m. at the Y's rumic Camp Dolph in South Laguna. The group turns to swimming and exercise-at the high school-on Thursdays and Fridays at 4:45 p.m. Taking Over Bar Adams fs 1hootlng for an enrollment of 2S In daytime activiUes and ZS in the evening session. He recommends ~hat participants try to rilake three sessions per week. Participants pay a $12 fee and If over 30, they pay $30 for the medical testing that pins down the results. Adams puts his people on an exercycle and takes an exercise electrocardiogram , and an exercise blood pressure. He measures the heart rate at rest. the resting blood pressure, body fat percen- tage, girth measlJJ't;ments, height and weight and predicted maximum oxygen conrumption. The second aeries of teal! begins next week for the group of 18 who began· the program nearly two months ago. Adams said the tests are given every two months. A beginner starts by jogging for a hall minu te and walking for a minute. He stops during exereise to take his cwn heart rate and mark It en his own ex· ercise card. The jogging increases and \\'aiking decreases as physical condilion improves. After two tests, said Adams, you have ·1 pretty good idea of what the participant s capable of doing safely. Participants spend ts minutes w"arming p with light exercises. Adams said the Leisure World program 1as drawn to Laguna Beach by request. It was being conducted strictly for olunteer male residents of Leisure \lorld. Three persons asked YMCA dine- .or Roger Cart.er to start it locally. One of the men was sufficiently serious abQut the program's need, said Adams, to donate $1,000 to buy the necessary equip- ment. Laguna Teen Center Wins City Council Okay A La.gima teen center will rise like a Phoenix from the weathe~d boardwalk building that once housed the namboyant Barefoot Bar. Laguna Beach councilmen hav' put their stamp of approval on an agreement to take over the premises, oow operalinj' Laguna Bowlers Builrung Okayed By C.Ouncilmen Lagma Beach lawn bow1trs have won city council approv•l or thelr propogal to build their clubhouse on the ocean side of the Ht!Jler Parle: grMN Instead cf on the previously approved sit< at the nor1h end o( the greens. Coundlmen abo agreed ta 1n fn. del<ralinate """"1sloo of time Oii the pro. Ject, -had been -to llart in J.-ry. Tho -req...u.! modification of lholr .,,....,ent with the city ta pennlt balldlng oo a 1-dllflcult sit<. A-al ol the MW atte was recommended earlier by the planning commi91ion, but with the provision that final archttectiral plans be irubmltted for review before 1111Uance c:I a build!~ pcrmU. P1'11Mra had ~ concern that lllo sl~ cha~• might lnvoll'I! • higher mil line lllon thel arl&lMll1 appmed. as a beer bar .on a trial basl.s until P.fay IS for youth use. Under the agreement, the present les- see of the city-OWT!ed building at 11 l Ocean Ave., will surrender his beer end wine license from Labor Day to Memor- ial Day and the city will waive il! month· ly rental for the eight-month period when the teens take over. Recrealion Director George Fowler Is meeting with junior and tenior high 8chool students to plan the transforma· Uon with Jan. 1 as the target date for the teen move-In. Tenative plans for the center include a food and soft drink concession, dances with live bands and records, and in· stallation of equlpm,nt for games. "It can use some cleanlng up and perhaps a little paint," said Fowler, .. but we won't go to too much e.1pen5e because we'll have to surnnder the building again after eight mODths. The kJds probably wUl do the clean up 1'0rk •nd form com- mittees to talte care of decontlng, en- tertainment and sptclal programs." Houn of operation have not yet bef111 establlsbed, Fowler aid, but some thought had been given ta using the premises for adult actlvltlt.s during the morning hours when school la in session U that can be worked out. The one time Bttrefoot Bar made headlines during Its heyday u a night spot and alleged gatht!rtng place 1or homosexualt as the city fought to have It closed down . The property ,.., Included In lilt cUy'1 '3 million Main B<a<b purcb1se. ' -------------... MONIJY, Dtcembtr 8, 1969 S DAIL V P!lllT ;p Special Skill• Program Laguna Class Aims at 'Problem Kids' By BARBARA KRl!IBICH Of "'9 O." ,UH Iliff Typical or a new educatlonol eppniach that ls restoring children once ::onsldertd "unteachable" to their rlgbl!ul clusrcom roles is the Laguna Beach ,llCbool dlstrlct'a Special Skills program. Tho •ight Special Skills classes oow In operation in Lag\Ula are among many launched throughout California In the past half dozen years, thanks to the research of ~cbologlsts and educators who diacovered that the "problem kids" disrupting classrooms of~ are among the brlgbteat In the cw... Formerly abunted of! dita EMR (educable mentally retarded) claws, these youngsters now are able to get the training their lively young minds deserve. Once their individual learning problems have been Identified and corrected, a ma- jority are able ta return ta normal classroom work. thelr fellow student.!. Half Of the Special Skills students now spend twl>tbirds of, their &ehool day in regular cla.ssf'()()ms. "Usually math ls the tint regular cJau they attend. Some of them are very good at math,'' says ?r.rs. Cunningham. ll'lllZ AT SCIENCE ' and 1tsrtlng nghls with oth<r cblldttn would bave been lllOd ~ the .,.... and n?actlng adversely to eny attempt clultl, about ball the amount needed to make them conform to normal dll-for full coverqe of the quaUfled a. clpllne. de Once Identified as~ chronic "problem" .: .i.~ diatrict tea.chert handl"I by his classroom teacher, the student ~· may be c'rUfied fOr a Special Skills t.he dusts hive had regular tuclw class after careful scret!ning by a com-tralnlnc and experlerx;e. p•, A:tl Mrs. mittee that includes his teacher, the CUnningham, "a speclal interllt In 1-Jp. One of her students_.. who refused to school psychologist, a medical doctor, a Ing these aludenl.I." have anything to do with learning to school administrator, the school nurse, 1 tn addiUon tO their own good Judi- read, ls a whit at science. the special skills teacher and, in some ment, they have deviled 1 number or "He apparently picked up his know!-cases a speech teacher. methods to catch and hokS the attentloD edge !rom talking to his parents and If the committee feels he would benefit of their pupils. Thelr attitude ll calm and their friends, watching television and from the specia l training, his parenta are firm . There are no railed volca, acc:uu- looking at plcture books," his teacher offered the opportunity. Usually they tfons or argummta:. The autpmtnt ii e1.pla.tns. "We're finally getting him confirm that is "bard to handle" at placed on the desk with tbe ~ Interested in learning to read by wing home too. ment that ''thia: ls our wort for today.• little paperback books on science. He has When the class first started, parents The teacher always stands bthind tbl enough curiosity about the subject to put up .some resistance, apparenUy studmt's desk, leaning over to ap1a1n make an effort to understand them." feeling their child was OOng identified the task alongside him, Instead at frdnl The Special Skills children usually as in some way abnormal him in an attitude of confront.at.Ion. She have handicaps that are not easy to iden-DIFFERENT STORY seeks to lmpresa him with the feelblc tify Mfore they llart school. Typical is that they t kl'"'" the Job ~.._ mlJTor vision, a trick of the brain that Today it's a different· dory. Of some art ac .,. ..... .,; .. -· · oo chi.ldr•• who quallly for certification As soon as he reallza·there ii no wq • r • o~c CENTER makes them see plctur's and the written .... , n .. ~t and «-~ ~·~• 1·nto a S-1·al Skills claS& In "·-Laauna to start I· •aeu , t:asps ~ .,_ ~"-• 1--,_ word as if in a mirror. Once identified r-.. ic e¥ --i-h A Special Sa.Uui c~sroom ~ a ed District, 56 have been placed In lhe eight of rewouuo, • Ui on way. { _,__, learnin t by testing, this usually can be correct . care ully dC)llS'"""' g c e n e r • classes operated at four schools. The Most of the children In the Spedal apeciflcally created to rombat specific MOST HYPERACTIVE remainder are on a waiUng list. Skilb: clusea are boys and mort baWJ problems conh;onting students who are Characterlslically they are hyper-A cut in &late funds this year deprived been disruptln,: classes with •areufve classified, after careful 3Creeninl, as active, given to talking a blue streak the district of an estimated $41,000 that behavior. 1'educ8.tionally handicapped.~' -,...:::::.:.:::~::.:::...:::...::::::!...:.=:...:=.::::::........::::...::::::::::...::..._:_.....::::....;..;.::... ______________ _ The students, it is emphasized, are not retarded. In Jact they mus\ display at least normal Or above-normal intelligence in order to be admitted to the classes. At Top of the World Elementary School, for example, two cf the 11 e;b.tdents now in the upper division (grades 4, 5, 6) Special Skills class art classified by their IQ tests aa "definitely gifted." . Their problem hu been an Inability to adjust to group learning situation.. in nonnal classroom1. The same problems are faced by the 1even young:ners in the lower division class, from grades one through three. Similar classes are in action at Aliso Elementary School, at Thu r~o n lnt<nnedial< and at the high ochool but the best chance of rescuing the ca. tionally handicapped children probaif''i11 in the lower grades. SPACIOUS ROOM The Special Skill! class at Tep of the World, ·presided ever by Mn. Pat Cun- ningham and a teaching aide, meets in a spacious room with sections devoted to art mo\or skills, reading, and scien«!. A large table on one side is set up for work in clay which has been found very beneficial to the students. usually hyper· active and having problems learning motor skills. Regular classroom desks are in the center, spaced well away from one another lo permit better ctincentration. There is a phonograph and a tape recorder, a blackboard and many shelves with a wkle variety d. games and puult&. Cupboards contain stacks of dittoed sheets with simple exercises that le!t the progress or the students. In ooe corner there is a punching bag on a stand (good for working of( excess energy.) To one side are two individual study corrals for students who work better when completely alone. On each desk is a little paper cup. "They're for the M & Ms," Mrs. CUn- ningham explains. The manner in wh ich the little sugar coated chocolate candies are used in the classroom typifies the Special Skills ap- proach to learning -immediate recogni· tion and immediate reward . "Just as a physical therapist can 'pat- tern' defective er injured muscles until they are re·trained to accomplish cer· tain motor actions," explains principal Al motor actions," explains principal Al llave n, "so neuorlogical 'patterning' can be accomplished." The child who has: been unable to learn to read is rewarded with an M & M for each line he successfully enunciates. At first he munches the candy, then reads anolhf'r line. Then, watching ethers, he realizes it is better to go on reading as fast as possible and collect. the little can• dies in his paper cup to enjoy later. He has learned to wait a little for his reward. Gradually he will learn to wai t longer and longer, until at last he can comprehend and wait for the abstract rewards that leamlng will ~ring. TEACHING INDIVIDUAL All teaching In the Special Skills claSI ls individual. No two children work on the same thing at the ume time. The action is changed as often as every 15 ~utes, from reading, to art, to math, to .. huildlng bloclcJ, to science. "These students," ex· 'Plains Mrs. CUnningham, "have an ex· tremely short interest span, but it can gradually be extended." All papers are corrected immediately and each child keeps a "check chart" recdrd of his work. He gets two checks just for sitting down and starting to work three for concentrating on his work' five for completing each task. The number of checks may vary according to the difficulty of the task for the in- dividual child. Every Friday, the Students with a completely filled out check· chart are allowed to select a Jillie toy gift from a treasure che.c;t In the corner of tht: room. ''They work for reWards a~ Individual~." says Mrs. CuMlhgbam. "There is no comj>eUtion in the room. they are com- peUng only with themselves, trying: to improve their own work and knowlni, for sure, that they wlll be rewarded.'' The reward& are nol onl1 for the atudenl!. In the &ing:le )'eat that the upper lt:vt:I clw bu been -•ting at Top or the World, one s1rth grader's reading level cilmbed three years. A year ago, all the children spent the entire school day In the special class. Seporate lunch &nd recess pertodl were scheduled because the student& were unable to cope with the exclttment o( auociation with large groups ol ether chlldren. Now, alttr a YW' of re-training, they art able to enjoy lunch and reoeu wtth Christmas is for giving ••• The "feast'" in festive happens when you offer family and friends all those special good things that make Christmaa·at your boUAe IO very apecla)! Pecan Nut Meats ........... 79¢ Nut Rolls .................... 4 .. '1 Laura Scudder ••. halves or diced ... 5 oz. pkg. Crosse & Blackwell ••• your choice! , •• 8 oz. Glace Cake Mix ................. 69' Cookie Mix .. .. . . . . .. .. . .. . . . . . . . . . lr- S& \Y , •. choice fruits, heavily coated .•• 16 oz. N ... u.·. Toll Rous• or Sapr, •• 18'>i OL pq, Date Bar Mix ..................... 43~ Shredded Coconut ............... 3r Bett.y Crocker .. for festive fruit cake .. 14 oi. Bakers ..• snow white and IWee'f. ... 8 oz. Veal Chops .. :!~~ .. 79~ ... ~~ ... 98t Fresh and young and tender! Enjoy the delicate f Javor that makes veal so specia.J ! Breast of Veal ........ ~....... 69t Ready for tile oven ••. deliciously stuffed with ?rf rs. CubbiMon's dressing ••• just bake and aene! Veal Cutlet ...................... '1.29 ~ Veal Rib Chops ................ '1.29 .. Breaded .•• and seasoned j ust so! Lean • , • fork tender and flavorful I Stt.per freih JWod!Ut a.t El Rancho! .-Bananas .................. 2 u.. 25c Shrimp Cocktail ............... 3 .. '1 Chiquitas ••• Central America's finest! LaMco • • • 4 oz. • • • just ch.il1 and serve I Banana Squash ........... 4r. Golden meat • , , serve baked and buttered t Gelatin salads .................. 3 .. '1 Nalley'a ••• choi.., of shlmmerinc favoriteol HAPPY SOLUTIONS Tl! GIFT Bl1Yll16 ARE YOURS AT El llMCHOI A galaxy of ~t basket& ••• each show your appreciation t.o mem~ ben of a group. Pick up your copy of our Gift Guide ••• you'll find a wide selection ••• one of which will be your ideal choic. t I ARCADIA: s ... et and Huntfntloa Dr. (D Rancho Ctntt~ PASADENA: 320 Wut C<IOlldo lllid. SOUTH PASADW.: frtmont Ind ltmtinatan Dr. RUllTlllSTOll llEACtl: Warner and All,... OJoltdWllk Caiteil llEWPOllT lfACff1 27Z7 Newport Biid. 11111 ....._. 2555 Elslbluff DI', ~ '111111' "'"':"'I p,;,,., IA •ffld Mon., Tuu., Wed.. Du. I, I, IO. No llGlu to ~ s::;::~~;-;-:~-~~-,,--,,-~~~~--~-----:-:-7777~~-::--~::-;:--~.,-,-~~~--~~~~~~ --........... -................ , ........... ··~-... -..... ~ ...... ,'-1 .. ~.~ ................ , .. ? ···~ ,. , ..•. ,~ . . . • : 5 ;c:•. O S ; r --~~-- Dl!LY PILOT Vio -lence Panel Divided Over Protest Narrow Majority Warns of A narchy . i f Demonstrations Continue ... ••• ,, ~ '• · •tC-llMI lllf' .. Dlllw f'llll lt•MI ~ Th.e University of Delaware's ( art department has discard~ its •· ban on nudity and says it wdl al- ;: Jow nude models to pose for its i: classes. Chari•• M. Dorn, execu-~ tive secretary of the National Art ~ 'Education Association in Washing- ~ ton, D.C., said that Delaware is the ~ last state unlversity in the country to disrobe its models. Nudes, he ~ added, are a basic part of the .; training of the artist. Ray_moncl ,J. ~ Ch in, a sophomore art ma1or, said, "You can't operate an art school without nude models any more ~th.an •you can ·Operate an engineer- :ing school without slide rules." • :; ' -A tick el &eapJer came -otit on the ~ :r;hort end Thursday at Fayetteville, ~ Ark., when he attempted to sell -! two tjckets to Saturday's Arkan- ~ sas-Texas football game. The scal- per asked S50 eacli. but the vros· i>ective buyer persuaded him to i Jower the price to $35. Then t h e potential customer, a deputy sher- ' iff, arrested the scalper. ~ . • . President Nixon gave particles of th~ surface of the moon to each of the governors attending a con- • ference the President called on • na rcotics and drugs. Since time immemorial, Nixon noted, it has been said that "Politicians promise the moon. ~·m the first politician to be able to deliver the moon," the President joked as he personal· ly handed out !be specially mount- • - ~ • . • . • ed particles. 4 Snow &hoveling means shovelina drivewoys and s!ruggling wi!h chains . .,.win Fol/.$, ldaho . snow meant scrap-::t._-.g of/•a windshield for pretty J an -; purlon -but it makes an attractive :.•ettiia for her. · · · -; . ' The U. S. Custo m Bureau in New Work is giving it1 own Christmas sale t his year. It will auction off con fiscated goods beginning Dec. 11 , including auch things aii I 1 bales of wool. 700 field hockey stick.!, 58,000 screwdrivers and a "veru 11oiled" blue beaded dre ss. . • . ' Cottage Grove, Ore., City J ail prisoners. with 'the blessings o! Po- lice Chief Barney .11111, h ave · painted the cells and hallways in the psychedelic hues of sun-ye!· Jow. sea-green, citrus-orange, mint.green and tomato red. There aren't any windows and t~e n e w paint 'ives the jail a "littl~ sun- shine,' accordin g to Issel, who says a jail doesn't have to be a "drab, dark place.·• WASHINGTON (UPI) -A narrow m•· jority of the National Violence COm· miislon decl~ today that I.he Unlled Slates faces anaret!y it civil disobedience continues on the 11eale practiced by the civil rig.ills movement in the 1960s. The ajl-white, sewn-member majority urged that laws be tested o.ily by small i;ymbolic groupii or indlvidua1s and thal all others abide by them until they are declared uoconsittutional. They were represented by a Houston lawyer, Leoo Jaworski, as spokesman at a news con· ference. The sit-member minority, including the only two Negroes on the presidential 8,800 More Troops Out Of Vietnan1 SAIGON (UPI ) -U.S. headquarters sajd today 8,800 Gls have left Vietnam in addition to the 60,000 involved in Presi- dent Nixon's pullout program, reducing A~erican troop strength to its lowest level in 25 months, This coincided with reports or nine clashes along the Cambodian border Saturday, Sunday and today, with U.S. troops counting 158 Viet Cong and North Vietnamese killed against t h r e e Americans slain and 16 wounded. The troop strength report said 4,300 U.S. servicemen left the war zone last week to drop the number of Gls in Viet· nam to 475,000, the fewest since November of 1967. It meant the nwnber of war zone Gls is 8,lK>O lower than the 484,000 ctiling authorized by President Nixon once his tw~phase ·withdrawal of 60,000 men is completed by Dec. 15 . Those 8,800 troops left the war zone at the end of their tours of duty and were not replaced. A spokesman far the U.S. Command issued this statement in ans""·er to speculation that the withdrawal of American troops was continuing past the 60,000 mark without an announcement from the White House : "This decline in strength below the authorized 484,«KI result.a from a tem- porary slowdown in the replacement flow and does not represent an additional redeployment Increment.'' Cong Demand 6-month Pullout F.or U.S. Forces PARIS (AP) -A Viet Cong spokesman u..id today that lf the United States and it.a allies agreed to an unconditional withdrawal frcwn Vietnam over a six- month period, the parties would then discuss "guarantees for safely during the withdrawal." The mentioning of a six-month period was a new element in the Paris peace talks scene but the demand for an un- conditional v.·lthdrawal -a stun1 bling block -remained. Previously I.he Viet Cong and North Vietnamese had spoken of a rapid withdrawal over a period of a few months. The Viet Cong position was put forwan· by Ly Van Sau at a ne"'s conference. He said , "If the United States says th.:I it will unconditionally wi thdraw all it · troops from South Vietnam in a period o si:t months and the members of !hf' American camp follow suit, the parties \\'ill discuss the calendar for lhL withdrawal and gu arani.Cu for security during the withdrawal." . pan!l, disagreed that nonv1olent, non- coercive d.isobtd.lence to law should not be used to test the Jaws or to dramatize individual conscientious objection. , U.S. District Court Judge A. Leon Hig· ginboth am, a Philadelphja Negro speak· ing far the minority, i;ald, "J do not be- lieve the Voting Righta Act (o 11965) "·ould ever have been passed lf "'e had gone on a test case basis." Higginbotham, vice chairman ot the commission, was joined i:1 lhe minority by Chairman Dr. Milton S. Eisenhower, Negro Lawyer Patricia Harris, Terence Cardinal Cooke of New York, Dr. W. Walter Menninger « the Topeka, Kan ., cllnlc, and Sen. Philip A. Hart (D-Mich.), whose wife recently was arrested for a Pentagon demonstration. The majority suggested: ''That if in good afith the CONtitutlonalJty of a statute, ordinance or a court decree is to be: challenged, it can be done effectively by one individual or a small group. While the judicial test is in progreiis. all other dissenters ahould abide by the law in- volved until it is declared uncoostitu· tional. '' The majority asserted: "It penonal or group selectivity of laws to be obeyed is to be the yardstick, we shaH face nation- wide disobedience or many laws and thus Deserters Meet Press a:larchy." Jolnlng Jawonld In the majority rtporl were s.n. Roman Hruska (R-Neb.), liq. Hale &ggs (D-La.), Rep. Wi!Uam M. McCulloch ( R -0 h i o ) , longshoreman-. phil011opher Eric Holfer of San Fran- cisco, Chicago lawyer Albert E. Jenner Jr. and Judge Ernest. W. McFarland of Arizona. . Higginbotham contended ln a minority statement that recent adVances In civil rights ''have not come about -and could never have come about -solely through judicial tests made by ·•one individual' while all others lo the silent black ma~ jority wailed !or Ille ultlmalo collltJIU· U"I T1"""9te A panel of U.S. deserters nO\V livi ng in s~reden tells ne\vsmen SW1day that massacres, such as al- leged killing of civilians at l\1y Lai, South Viel4 nam, occur daily. At news conference are Cleft to right) Jad Doucette, of Jackson, N.H.; Jerry Dass of Lakewood, Calil.; Ray Sansevero of Long Island, N.Y., and U.S. author and attorney l\tark Lan e \vho played a tape recorded interview wlth a much decorated deserter id entified as Ken Stilwell of Oregon \Vho said a search and destroy mission in village of Bau Lai in 1966 claimed lives of 399 of 400 inhabitants. Dad Doesn't Believe Susan Tate Killing Informer 'Tr y ing to Talk Her Way Out'? SAN JOSE I UPI·) -The father of Susan Atkins, the 21-yea.r~la woman "'ho turned informer on the "Manson family" last week, sald Sunday he doesn't believe her stor y she was under "hypnotic in- fluence" during Ole Sharon Tate slayings. "I think she is just trying to talk her \VAY out of it She's sick and she needs House Committee Slashes Foreign Aid to New Low \VASHINGTON (AP) -President Nix· on's foreign aid program was slashed kl a nt'w low of about $1 .6 billion today by the house Appropriations Committee. The committee also assured another 'lrisk battle by approving $54.S million to ~upply fighter planes to Nationalist .:hina . Economic aid took tt on the chin in the icep cuts of about $1 billion inflicted on Nixon's · original spending ceilings sug- gested for the program that covers 99 countries. Funds for the Peace Co~, toreign military cred it sales and an array of other programs bring the overall total in the bill to about $2.5 billion. But outside of the direct foreign aid progr~ms 1he cuts were not considered heavy Ones . help." said Miss Atkin.~· father, who agreed to talk only if promised anonymi- ly. ~1iss Atkins claims Charles Manson, leader of the hippie family, could "con- jure up a vis ion." Her attorneys said she \\'as kept under the "hypnotic influence'' during the killings , which she admltted taking part in. Susan's fathtt said she and at least two other members of the cult now charged with murder in Los Angeles stayed at his home for 10 days in September, 1968. ··t thought they were just a slap-happy bunc h of kooks, dumb hippies -not killers." he said. "And now the horror has come. And T know where she·s been. Everyv.·here people died when they \\'ere !here. I am afrai d she must be involved ." 1'he father blan1ed his daughter's in· \'olvement \l'ilil drugs and the leniency of the court system for her eventual escapade with the nomadic cult. He said he tried for Uicee years to have various courts keep his rebellious daught er "off the streets." It's Hard, Wintry Weather ''She needed help.°' he said. "She should have been put away somew here 1vhere help coukl: be given, not turned hack out on the street.ll to go through It nil .aga in.'' Despite his criticism. the father said he wished he had a second chance to direct Susan's life. He told newsmen : "I should have been more firm , deman- ded more. I loved her ... and still do. Sht once did some very beautiful things. but that was a long tlme ago. I don't know what went wrong. I guess I never will.·• i . Take Your Pick: Snow, Rain, Sleet, Every thing C•lltornl• ••rlY "'°"''flt co.•••1 c1o1H11 ...,.,,4 Jfti.nt te cmt"I ll'ICllU!l,.I,, •letlft to- .. y It Ir-Sovl!wm C11tf0f",,11 r1ftl. "" «"" 11'0! "rtly t~. loc•I d rtr- ttfol .... -~-•ed ·~llOlll the .... "'"""''' fvllOWllll " -· clovdt 1111 Te mpercatur"-' Alllu11uerQUt A"-Cl'ltrttt AU•fll1 Hltll Lew '"« . ,. 3t :n .Ol " " M < Marine Uonal delermlnatlon." Eiaenhower •\felled in a ttatement to reporters that all lS commiaioner1 agreed that violent or coercive acts of disobedience to law as a tacUc to further a political goal, or to force ~uionii, .. are to be condentled as tnclanluirlg the vital processes « a Democratic society and its Institutions." The disagreement -the first Teported In the l&-monlb life of the panel created after the assaaslnaUons or Or .. Martin Luther King and Sen. Robert F. KtMedY -was "solely Ori ·the question of ftop. viole:lt.' noncoercl\te dil;9bedience to law," Eisenhower said. Sirhan Begins Hungec Strike At San Qu~ntin I SAN . QUENTIN (UPI) -S~han B. Sirhan, condemned assassin of Sen. Robert F. Kennedy, is on a hunger strike. in his death row ~u at San Quentin State. Priso??. Prison officials announced the develop~ ment today as Sirhan completed more than 6~~ months awaiting the outcome o~ appeals or. his convict ion and sentencing last May 21. Sirhan has spent the time in lonely isolation in Cell 33. a stark concrete anci steel enclosure on the prison's sixth floor. between t"·o empty ~lls. :rwo mesh stee'. screens barricade the cellblock corrido:· 15 feet away. Sirhan \1'8 S found guilty of first-degree murder in the shooting of Kennedy las~ June 5, 1968 at the Ambassador Hotel 1~ Los Angeles. No execution date has been set. pen· ding automatic review and appeal pro- cedures which are expected to take a: least another six months. \\'arden Louis Nelson said Sirhan bega r.. refusing his food Friday, after send.in~. him a note saying, "This place is wor.Y. than a concentration camp. I'm going or a hunger strike." In Los Angeles, Russell Parsons, one o· the three veteran alklrneys who defende:, the Palestinian immigrant, said he ha~ not heard of Sirhan 's hunger strike. "I'll call the warden and see if there i!. anyUUng J can do," Parsons said. "He did thal once when he was in the jail here, too. He's sick. The man is ill, you know." Parsons, who became somewhat of .t. "father figure" to Sirhan during the long triaJ, said he. had not visited the prisoner for two months . Stork Disrupts Vietnam War SAIGON (UPI) -A platoon from the U.S. 9th Infantry Divhiion • recently called off a night ambush of the Viet Cong to help deliver a b."l baby. ti Spec. 4 Theodore L. Brown of t.~ Baltimore, Md .. ""'as a medic on M duty with the platoon on ambush R about 3 a.m. Thanksgiving morn-.. ing when a rifleman told him a ~! peasant woman was in labor in a ~ F nearby hul. :-" • Brown, who said he had about : !/. three hours' instruchon in child· ~· I bll'lh techniques in medic training . in the United States, went inside ~ and did the honors He put the rest or the platoon to work boiling l water to bathe the baby. - Once the child arrived, Brown ~ ~1 called for a medical evacu ation 11 •. helicopter whil e platoon members ~ ~ took turns shooi ng mosquitoes ' away from the baby. j Brown said the platoon develop-1 ed an attachment for the baby and i ~ several or its members had v.Titten !'1 home for baby clothing. T \ "After the baby had been born, . 1 went outside and someone asked e. me "'hat it wa s." said Brown. "I didn't even know. I had to go back inside to look. ft was a boy." Missing TUHHY. ~ Tiie Liii .. ,,...., l ftl Wit Plllll r.1r eN N rtly C:1"11<1• tllda¥, w!!h tl'lt colluch 11'111 111n n 1t •~•li'll' Ill ""-'""""'°" '"" ......,1 .... """ hlt h tudW "" eMY '1, VJ\ o,,. dtt'" ,nm l llrldlY. Tiit: ~..,,1,M •ow 11 ll•k .... 119'd 1111mtrtk llolt• OM ... Brow11$vl!lt CMclto (lntJn"911 Otn•er H U .~ J) ll JI JS .Ot 6l •J SoW.ier 'Disappeared' Near Hospital •• Tiw Air "111111.111•11 Cefl!rel 0 1ttrl(I rl"flOrftd It"'' -lot ""' "•lfl. T1'W U.S. WMlf\el" 1\1,..u lftl'll• 11 .... 'I' ,,....ltltd M ..-t<lll1111lorl fllf'lll.llllil llol'llnllllY, )IVt 1t111rf 11 t d'W'tCt fl ,....,,.. •r1n1• er r1111 1111r 1,, n,. ...... TflYlllt1"11--Id t •-... -ot 111'1!\tt' tl:IO¥t l'OI"· -·· ~ --.. ,,1Y (loudY ,.,..,, l'litilll ,..... .. ., l l'ld tht Wlfff ..... u wlfll ""'°"""'""~ avrl. INl.lflt.iM _. "''"" ftlr •l!Jt fll9'1• ,_.to p. ~ wtrt l lM.,...,. ft)r II 1111111 ''"'" fl'Ofll _, • "' wew •tllf'rl .. ,,.,.,. """ ~ Ill ......,. 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'·"'· ..... f·tf ""'· M-. fllltl 1•11 I.fl'\ Ith 3 S1 I .I'll, V.S. Sum-r11 Molt of ''" fltli(tfl ht<I win!!"!' _,,,., ICldlV I I lrtlHf or I-llUf· r1n tc<V•"'4 ,.,.... lilt .outritrft "OC:I · ltt llC,.I 1"' Plt lttt la tltt """'° Ml4"Wt1I. A mll!tu11 of r1ln, sl~t .io"ll l 1H t• '"' r•ln •l•lto:I !l\t N011Mftll .~1:1 ••In 111ct ,,,.... .M>•tto 1~10 "'' P1c111< Nortllwftt k t ll-'"°"," dl!llHllfli Tt•tl tl'lf P'lorldt, w~!!t (!tit Ill' ""'Y ,loud'I ,..., d,, w..,,,.,, "''"'"td 1t11wltlr•. T"'"'tlt lvl'tl t •Oll"!I tllt M ll(!ll _., ..,,.ltllv f~. w>tll t <Old lrOftl t lli.tldml lrfll'rl ~tOtt Ml<lli.tft tcrou 1'111'111tr,, l.1~1 Huren ie W111ttnl \Ill'· ,1,,11. •11e!tl,. atld ,,..,, "'-•'4 0""' '"' flOl"I~ '°ttlhC Co.ti! t M I l~lrd tr1Utd fr'Oll'I Muylf fld lfl fht MUll!ml Ill el T1•·11, Pt• MOl""'- Cttrolt f1lrtltoM• f ert W.rlfl PrttllO ··-H-IUIU KtnM • (l!y l•• v-..1 Lt1 A-It• Mllml Mlf1Mt fl0!1' Ntw Orl .. ,,t Htw Von; Ot -ltllod ~ltJIOIM Clty ....... P11-e lltOOlct ·-· ""'•OVf'toll ,.111'111 ... ltttld Cll't lhd Brun ·~ Stcr1me<11t S11! 1..t1tt (ll't St~ CH-.e ~,,., l'rt "-Cltc• !f<l lllt SMJll1ft• """"" W111!lflt~" JI :II .ft 50 )I •1 " .. ~ " n J•. 11 " ' It l\ " " " ' 11 '"' " " ,. " . " " . .n ,. .0 ,. ,, » JJ .JS ,. " " " .. .. ,, ,, IJ ,11 ~ .)JI .n H < '' n ,n1 .. ~1 .10 J1 1' J1 ., .11 }j .al ~ .. J' SJ '3 u .en 11 " • u •1 " " Spnt'e q,..,en hfelanie Vincz of Indianapolis. Ind. became first f\.lis!I Outer Space r\mcrlca at \Veekend In competition at Hudson, Ohio. She won $1.000 and right to be lirst gi rl to go to moo n U gov4 ernmcnt aJllo"'S it during her l'('i~. ATLANTA, Ga. (AP) -A 11-year-old ·Marine from Atlanta. v.·ho disappeared after he stepped out of a helicopter near a field hospital in Vietnam Sept. 21, is the .11ubjet1 or an intense search. Mrs. James W. Jackaon of nearby Alpbaretta, mother of Lance Cpl. James W. Jackson, Jr., uld she last heard from her son Sept. 12, and that he sent her a "cheery, happy·g~tucky letter." Jackm stepped from a helicopter· les,, than IOO yards from a field hospital at Quang-Tri, Vietnam, a spoke!man (ar the 1'-farlne Carps reported. Col. L, L. Herzog. 6tl1 lttarine Dlstrk:t dirtelar. who ll keeping J1ckson'11 famil y lntonned or the progress of thti ttarch, said today, "We can't find hlm. It'• as simple u that." Th e ,_farine Corpe spoke1man 1ald the starch wae . bett1n Oct. '· bul ~frs. Jacltm told ne\\'!lmtn she flr5t learned of her son's Injury Oct. 2!l and Was not told or his disappearance until Nov. 10. The 7'-tarlne Corps reported that Jack· son wa s Jnjured during a "nonhostile ord· nanct mlulon" e:a:plosion. He suffered 5uperliclal back lacerations and "·as removed rrom the !lite of the explosion by helicopter ~·Ith lhree other injured t!fartrfes. Herzog said thrtt corpsmen, lncludln& one who knew Jackson personally, told invesUgators thf:Y saw Jackson q he was led from Che helicopter bY two medics. But he said the rleld hoapltal lias na n:cord bf his admltt11noa. '· Mr11. Jackson Aid htt son had been In the ltta rlne Corps since June J9Sa and that he had been In Vietnam a~t 11lx 1nonths when be dlsa pi>eared. She sald she belie\'es he suffered lhock and wandered aw•y without knowinz what ht was doing. Heriog said no clue1 u to the ltfarlne's disappearance have b~n reported, i:-.......... ,,,.. .................. ...., .... ""'!O!!I'"" ................ """"""' ... """"' .. ""' .. "" ................................ .-. ...... ~.~~~ ................... ~ ... ~ .... ~~~~~~~·~ ~--~~~ ~· _, ~--· --------· ··--·-- W.German, Ru ssian ~ Talks Open ~. • MOSCOW (UPI\ -The Sov iet Union and \Ve s t Germany today opened talks on a nonaggression pact, L marking a new phase in east- west relations. \Vest German diplomatic ~ sources ssaid the negotiations -..I. y,·ere the most important 1.1"1 TtltJllll1 between the two natioos si nce 3 ltlore fo1• ltfOOJi the late Chaacellor Konrad Adenauer came to fi1o:;cow in 1955 to open diplomatic rela- tions with the Kreml in. Info rmed . sources revealed at the weekend that NASA has chosen three Air fi?rc.e off1cer:s as crew tor Apollo 15, An1erica's fift h scheduled moon landing m1ss10!'! late m 1970. ~ey ar e (left to right) David R. Scott of San Antonio, Tex., comma~der; MaJ. :\lfred \V, \Vorden of Jackson, Mich., and Lt. Col . .James B. Jnv1n. \\'est German Ambassador Helmut Allardt arrived at the Soviet Ministry of Foreign Af· ------------------------------ fairs at 3 p.m. (4 a.m. PST) to begin the talks with Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei A. Gromyko. Free-loa.ders Hurt Alcatraz The discussions were con- sidered to be preliminary formalities prior to detailed SAN FRANCISCO <UPI -\l'ishes the '·free • loaders'' made the crossing across San negotiations later. Individuals, business firms ll·ou\d get lost. Francisco Bay to the Tndian- The talks, signaling a thaw and even members Of the The latest gift-giving came held island. in the 20-year-0Jd East-\Vest Sunday when members of th,c Dr. Steven r,affin said the Cat 011t of Bag freeze in central Europe, were American J ewish Congress expected to open the \Vay to have donated tons or food and American Jewish Congress -gesture \\'as part ()( the bilateral neg-0tiations between goods lo keep alive the Indian in commemorati11.1 of their Congress' celebration or the II' 1 G d th E celebration ()f Chanukah -eight-day festival of th c' Ambassador 1-lenry Cabot Lodge, back in Beverly J\fas.s. after resigning as U.S .. .i\mbassador to th~ Paris peace talks, play.fl \Vith French alley cat "Rascal," a yello'v and \vhite striped tom he es ermany an o er ast •·invasion" of Alcatraz, but a I I E!Jroj'>ean nations. oaded a fishing boat \1•ilh liberat ion of Jerusalem from spokesman for the group lraditional Hebrew food and the Syrians. The Bonn government had --'------'-'---"---_;.;:..-=::.:.:c=-.:.c.:.=::.:.:c'-::'.:....:::.:.:C...:::::..::z.:.:::.::_ ____ _ brought home from Paris. ' F or111er Lover Murders Ne,vlvwed, Husband ~ BING ll AMPTON, N.Y. (UPI ) - A newlywed \voman pleading for help ovC'r the lelcphone watched in horror Sunday as her former lover killed her husband. Then the jntruder shot and k·N.lcd her and turned the shotgun on himself, police said. Deputy Sheriff John 'Vest \\·as talking to f\1rs. Charles J arrard, 3~, shortly after 2:30 a.m. when she screamed, "My God, he shot him~" \\"est cl~scribcd the last n1inute of life for Mrs. Jarrard ;ind lhe murderer, Arthur Reynolds, 37. who b r o k e through a door of I.he rural home armed \vith a shotgun F a11ious Cast Si1igs Along For Love Ad and a c]ay,·hammcr : ''The next thing we heard 'A'as some screaming, a couple more shots ... and then you c:ould hear him cursing and swearing and a kind of poun- ding and hammering noise." Deputies who arrived at the home in Porl Crane, eight miles northeast of here, found all three dead of shotgun y,•ounds. The tfdy of Charles .Jarrard, 37, lay next lo his 11•ife, v•hom he manied Dec. I in a civil ~remony here. 1'11rs. .Jarrard. the former llclen Bowman, was the mother or-four children bom oi1l of 'A'edlock. the sheriff's office said. Authorities declin· rd lo say whelher any of th11: cl1ildren were fathered by either Jarrard or Reynolds. The children did not. li\'C 11·ith the Jarrards. Sen. Schweiker Beeo1nes F a ther proposed the talks to Moscow 1 No\'. 8 as part of its dip lomatic campaign to bring about an improvement in rela· lions Yi'ilh Communist East Europ:. The speed with ll·hich the Kremlin accepted the \\'est German proposal surprised \Vest German diplomats in Moscow , diplomatic sources said . The ea rliest they had ex· peeled Soviet acceptance was in early January. The Soviet move came only three days after the seven \Varsaw Pact nations held a ~1oscow summit meeting and issued a vaguely worded com· munique authorizing contacl.! between pact nations and any European country, including \\'est Germany. \Vestern di p l o ma t s In· terpreted lhe communique authorizing contacts bety,·een pact nations and any Euro- pean country, includin g \Ves t Germany. Prize Set For Critics NE\V YORK (APJ -.4. new Pu litzer prize for criticism or commentary in A m e r i c a n newspapers has been ·an- nounced by C o lu mb ia University. Andrew \V. Cordier, the university president, said Sun- NEW YORK IAPJ -''Love day the new prize will be WASHINGTON !UPI) -awarded ne I c f th -tt cimes in all colors," is x Y ar or e the message from the Urban J\1rs. Richard Schweiker, wife fi rst time. Coalition. of Pennsylvania's junior U.S. The prize with a certificate !\-tore than 100 pub 1 i c senator. Sunday gave birth ot and a $1,000 cash award for figures. including f 0 rm e r the family's fifth child, a the winner, will be the 10th Supreme Court Justice Arthur daughter. prize in the field o t Goldberg, forn1er w 0 r Id The baby. born al Sibley journalism. heavyweight champion .Jack ~femorial Ho s Pit a I in \Vilh the exception of Dempsey. Johnny Carson and \\'ashington, 1vas named Laura editorials, all forms of critical Ed Sullivan, got together Sun-Kristi. 111e Schweikers have writing. columns on public af- day to film a television com-l\1·0 other daughters. Lani and fairs and other forms of com- mercial aimed at putting the ~yle. and two sons, l'lfalcolm mentary \\ill be eligible, message across. And ·Richard Jr. Cordier said. The \\'OUld-bc ~in S: c r s!iiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil ~:~~ti1~~;i:~il~~~~ra~~1 SPECIAL OFFER ruchard Hatcher of Garv. Tnd .. actress 1\1yrna Loy. Chet Huntley. opera star Leontyne Price and jazz musician Can-ir--------------------, nonball Adderley we re also in the chorus. FREE Men'• or WATCH L1di1s' Gold The cameras :o:canncd the group as it sans "Let the Sun Shine In." from the rock With the Purch1sa of 1ny musical "'Hair." 5 EE Q The words. ··Lovo-it comes P D UEEN In all colors." wil l flash on WASHER O• DRYER the screen after the song. The Urban Coalition. a OR 2 WATCHES WITH A PAIR. priva te. nonprofit corporation. ·-..;..~~'M_!,...,.. ____________ ...J seeks to belter niinority ~ employment. housing. health AT services and educationa l op-DISCOUN T portunities in 48 localities. PRI CES Filming took two hours, alter v.•hich the cast, y,•hich had donated its services, held a buffet. FIRST . PAYMENT MARCH 1970 10 Year Warranty Transmission on 1877 HAUOR IOULIVARD COSTA MESA 548-7808 OPEN 6 NIGHTS FASHION:) ISLAND >fGWl'O&T CJ:KTl:11. P"°if1c; to.st Hi&llWI)' between J•mbor .. •nd M1cArth\lr. Fr11~•>' mfnut" 11w1y. FIRST with the NEWEST ! NOW ••• month SIDDD Savings Certificates pity you --interest per annum COMPOUNDED DAILY- PAID (OR CREDITED) QUARTERLY! Yo u earn t he nation's newes t and highest dividend on insured savings at t he · LARGEST ... FIRST ... STRONGEST independent Federal in Orange County ... Lll60Nll FEDERllL SllVIN6S AND LOAN • ASSOCIATION L11una 811cll, Callfomla, 260 Ocean Avenue • Telephone, 494-7541 llfllRI Nlp el Broncb , 3 Monarc h Bay Plaza • Telep hone, 499-1840 • 496-1201 San Clemente Branch, 601 N01lh El Camino Real • Te lephone, 492-1195 Monda)', DKtmber S, 1%9 DAll.Y PILOT 5 PUBLIC NOTICE Corltons, ·costo Me1a's Finest Men's Stor•, must close Th door forever, due to the possi•UJ of Mr. Carlton. We must sell all our fine stock of notiona lly odv.r· tlsed brands In men's cJothinq, sportcoats, slocks and In fine furnishln9s of shirts, sweaters & knits. In ~rder to clear all our obliigations, all our prices have beett sloshed drastically from 30°/o to 70 °/o. Come prepared to bwy, this Is Oronige County's bi4ige5t igoin4 out of busi ness sole. MRS. CARLTON Selling Our Entire Stock To The Bare Walls MEN'S SUITS Our Reg. Our Reg. Our Reg. $55.00 $69.00 $79.0P Suits Suits Suits . • NOW NOW NOW s25oo $3500 $4500 ~ Our Reg, Our Reg. Our Reg. $89.00 $100,00 $150,00 Suits Suits Suits NOW NO W NOW $5300 $7800 $3900 MEN'S SPORTCOATS Our Reg, Our Reg. Our Reg. $55.00 $69.00 $79.00 Coats Coats Coats NOW NOW NOW $2500 . $3200 $4400 MEN'S SLACKS Perm. Press Flares & Imported Nat. Adv. Bells Fabrtc Slacks Val. lo $16.00 v.1. to $3S.OO $650 $700 $2000 Cardigan Nat. Adv. Nat. Adv. Sweaters Short Sleeve Suede Front Our Reg. $16 Dress Shirts ' Sweaters NO W NOW Reg, $28 NOW $1200 s4oo $1900 RXTURES FOR SALE CARLTON'S 270 E. 17th ST., HILGREN SQ. COSTA MESA OPEN DAILY 10-9-SAT. 10·6 OP~N SUNDAY FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE! 12 to S • j - • ' • • . .. ---.. -.-...... .. ... I'' : ~ ~ ~ ~ • ........ -• .-. .. ·--.~-.---.-. ~~=""""""'·"-•··:":-~c:-.--;--:--.,.-,-,.,.~c-::-::..,.r-~ ---· I ~ "., C ' • • \ • .__-1 h 7, •• O • '\ ~ \ , t ,1J , '• .. 0 !I ~, ·,-J $ £ P , , pp;s::_ _, . . . .. DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAG~ I • What's Unruh'·s Angle? Assembly Democratic leader Jess Unruh surprised no one when he announced his candidacy for 1overnor last Thursday. lte bas made no real secret of his burn· Ing ambiUon lo hold lhal office. But professional politician • wwtchers are wonder· Ing about his reasons for challengin~ Gov. Ronald Rea· ga.n in a race few believe he can win. Unruh will have to run on a 14-year Assembly record with a lot of vul· nerable targets in It, whUe Reagan wilt have only three years of apparently generally accepted performance to defend. Even some Democrats a re doubting his wisdom, despite the heavier Democratic Party regii;tration in the state. Jn the present political climate. a great many Democrats of conservative stripe feel more .. at borne '''ilh Reagan's brand of Republicanism. . The polls indicate tremendous Reagan strength at this time. Unruh has no national Democratic candidate to ride with in an off.year election. And he doesn't even have the advantage of strong stage or TV impact. But he's smart and realistic. The intriguing ques· tion is: Does Unruh know something that no one el se li:nO\\-'S? End Approaches for DDT Its jaw-breaking full name is dichloro-diphenyl· trichloro-ethane, so it's no wonder it is known every· where as DDT , the potent contact insecticide. . batUearound• -as an unmiUgaled ble11in1. All any· one knew waa that it worked for the immediate pur· pose of kllllnf pests. Long term fide effects weren't known or v.:orrled about. ' For iome years~ now, stientists have known that DDT is indeed gomelhillg to worry about. They found lhat DDT in particular contains cancer-inducing chem· icals which enter-the human body as residues on food· stuffs and are stored in fatty depQsits. Beyond that, DDT has upaet the balance of nature in various ways. By destroytni the natural enemies of pests along with the pests, proliferation resulted instead of eradication. And drain-off from DDT-dusted crop- lands into rivers and on into the sea, ends in destroying \vildlile and endangering man. Most recent nearby example was the withdrawal from the market of thousands of cases of mackerel canned in San Pedro because they contained up to t\\riCe the maximum level of. pesticide (derivatives of DDT) ptrmis$,ible by lhe Food and Drug Administra· tion. Apart from the immediate loss to the ca1U1ers the industry is seriously threatened. Thousands of 0 jobs are at stake. And all because of a pesticide the indus· try doesn't even use. Scientists have been hard at 'votk on the problem and have come up with a variety of answers which are more difficult and expensive, but do not involve long· lasting, toxic insecticides. DDT was first widely used in Switzerland in 1939 to control the Colorado potato beetle, but its worldwide fame resulted from its use in \Vorld \Var II to protect military forces from typhus, malaria and other insect· born diseases. The Nixon Administration has announced it intends to phase out all domestic uses of DDT over the n e x t two years. But Orange County is moving faster. Agri· cultural Commissioner and Air Pollution Control Of· £icer \Villiam Fitchen announced last week that he 'viii ban both DDT and, DDD effective Jan. I , except for three crops for which no substitute lS yet available. 'It's an. annual lwman ritua(called deer lwntiJlg.' l t "'as received everywhere -in homes and in the fields of farmers and ranchers as \Yell as on jungle Fitchen is acting in the public interest -and none too soon. Comrnercial Sports a Kind Of Na1·cotic Rebuttal by Chiropractic Society Preside1at Dear Gloomy Gus: 'Put ~Jl End to Medical Monopoly~ ( Sydney J. Haii;!~, . ..... -··· Before T proceed a line further, let me make it clear that I enjoy physical ex- erelse and sport as much as any man. I like to bat a baseball. dribble a basket· ball. kick a soccer ball, and, most of all. !i\\'al a tennis ball. A man who scorned physical activity \\'ould hardly build a tennis court on his summerhouse 1rounds, or use il every day . Having made this obeisance, let me no\Y confess that 1 am puzzled and upset -and have been for n1any years -by the almost obsessive interest in sports takf'n by lhe averacc adult American male . ATIILETICS JS ONE strand in Ufe, and r..ven the ancienl Greek philosophers recognized its importance. But it is by no means the whole web, as it seems to be in our society. If American men are not talking business. they are talking sports, or they are not talking at all. 11tis strikes me as an enormously .adolescent, not lo say retarded, atlitude on the part of presumed adults. Especially when most of their passion and enthusiasm center around pro- fessional learns "'hich bear no indigenous relation to the city they play for, and con· sisi of mercenaries "·ho \\'ill v.·rar any to"'11's insignia ii the price is right. ALTHOUGH I LJKt: to play, and •ometimes like to watch , I cannot see tt used to be "Spiro \VHO ?'' Now it's "Spiro \YHY!" -E. S. Thll ff1t11r1 rtllttl• ,.. .. .,.. ......, l'tf 11~1ts1r11, l~'ltl .. Ille .......,,,.,, SIH ,_ "' '"" .. Ol'9fl'I, o ... OtllY Piiot, v.·hat possible differenct it makes \Yhich team beats which. The tactics are sometimes interesting, and certainly the prowess of the players deserves applause -but most men seem lo use commercial sports as a kind of narcotic, shutting out reality rather than heightening it. There is nothing more boring, in my view, than a prolonged discussion by laymen of yesterday's game. 'fhese dreary conversations are" form of social alcoholism. enabling them to achieve a dubious rapport without ever once having to come to grips with a subject \YOrthy of a grown man's concern. IT IS EASY TO SEE the opiate ciuality of sports in our society, \vhen tens of millions of men will spend a splendid Saturday or SW'lday fall afternoon sittlng stupified in front of the TV. watching a ''big game," when they might be out ei- ercising their own flaccid muscles and stimulaling their lethargic corpuscles . Ironically, our obsessio n V.'ilh pr~ fessiona\ athletics not only makes us mentally limited and conversationally dull, it also keeps us physically inert - thus violating the very reason men began engaging in athletlc competitions. It i~ tempting to call this national malaise of "spectatoritis'' childish -except that children have more stnst, and would rather run out and play themselves. To the Editor: Once sgain the American f.fedical AssociaUon's party line on chiropracUc has found its way into public print .. this time under the by·line of Norman Nixon.11.t.D., in the DAILY PILOT'S Nov. 28 ediUon. And, once again, the spuriou:oi accusations must be. set right by the facts. First of all. no responsible doctor in any discipline claims to be able to cure all diseases. 1:'-l A "WHITE PAPER" issued by the chir09l'actic profession in America a few months ag&, the profession's viev.•polnl on "Cause o( DiJeaae" was spell~ out quite clearly : •·, , , Chiropractic care ls primarily concerned with the Well be· ing and recovery of the patient and with the restoration and maintenance of good health. Present day chiropractic does not hold that the su blUJttion is tht only cause of disease. Whatever may have been said in chiropractic litereture years ago, today's chiropractic education and practice recogniz!s multiple causes or. and multiple methods of, treatment for diseaat. " -.. over 90 percent of practicing doc- tors of chiropractic rtport thit they reJer to other practitioners and that almost 90 percent of such rtferrals are to medical doctors.'' DR.. NlXON"S CLAL\I that chiropractic ls universally condemned a!I faLR by scientists and reaearchers both in and out or the medical profession is em· barrassingly at odds with the statements made by many prominent physicians and surgeons and by the establislunent in many medical schools or courses in physical and "manipulative" medicine. Prince Philip's Candor In fact. the medical as.50eiatlons in Canada and many European nations have. indeed. acknowlettctd the validity of chiropractic and have stopped 1ooking after the dollar and •tarted Jooldn& after the public welfare. Buried in the pages of medical journals are lhousand• of ex- preslilons of opinion by mtdlcal doctors ind.icatina their confidence in the methods and principles ot chiropractic. Queen Elizabeth ti has an annual sti- pend, called the Civil List, o( $1.t mllllon. ln her pr:vate capacity she is also one of the richest women in the world. bul this wealUt is not conCt'rned with the quiver of British feeling occasioned by her husband's recent pleading that the royal family is SQmc"·hat on the shorts. Prince Philip has long been given lo verbal indiscrr tions, which may· be term· ed stable ,·erbosity, since he is a horsy fellow, \\'hich sults the Queen, "''ho also adores the ponie~ So '"hen he doesn't like something in kuigdom or common"·ca1th he has not !ended to keep his counsel, and this drives the old boy:s in the London clubs rlght up the v.·a U, and puts politicians in a lather. THIS IS ALL RlGllT in the American colonies. Not that the colonials dislike the Queen or other monarchs of this century, Bnd indeed they had reason to like Vic· torla because, wtlh the loving aid or another consort, she kept her malicious ..ministers, like the afterward-salnted Gladstolle, from meddling in our Clvll War . Anyway, here was Philip on American leleviston mcnlionlng U1al umes wert so hard he mighl have lo gl\'e up palo. But that wasn'l what had the llouse o( Com· mona quivering. or fl uttered the ~eart of Prime Mlnlatcr Wilson. 1'be Prince also dashed off ~ good.le, to "'·Jl. that abdlcatlon In (avor ol Prince Quotes P. &1. Linn . Sanla Rou -"Any per&0n "'Ith aW:rage lntellJgencc should knqw that by openly cng11ing In an!l·war ac· UvtUea and coercing the Administration to end the war by 1etUn& a deadlh'lt, one I• bound to encourage the ene.my lo rtnevtre; thereby prolong1n1 the war .'' ( -· ' ! ~oy.ce Brier ' \ ,1 I. w ' 11..0.~.--~-. -~ Charles "has its attractions, ob\'iously." AFTER ALL THF.sE years the Quetn certainly is inured t& the Prince'!\ candor. but this was enough to cause Buckinghcim Palace. to issue an Jl·\\'ord comment: "At no time has lhe Queen'11 abdication arisen." The Queen hasn 't had a raise in 17 years. 'o\'hich you'll atlo,.,, is do,vnrigh t quaint. Out of her budget she must pay household salaries of $i40,000. and ex· penses oC $292,000. Administrative ex- penses run $144,000, and she has a sup- plemental budget of f-100 ,000, disbursed to individual members of the royal family. including $96.000 to the Prince. Thus the several princes and dukes are on htr honorarlum payroll, •O to speak . A"tERICANS CANNOT understand the Inner feeling of the Briti5h abouL their mon archy. It is one of the worst cl\thcs to say l~ symboltzts conlinulty, but it is rnorc. Excepting an aberration in the 1600s, "'hlrh wat1 a failure . the British have: alway• upheld the monarchy a1 an il\SUtutlon. thoug1l not alway11 admlrtn& the monarchs. Nor have they worried unduly about Ole cost of monarchy. Manifestly its In· ta.ngible value to them far ueteds the tangible. In 500 years of European history. even prodllal monarch!!: have not eo5t much compartd with the nluy.grltty of gov~mment expenditure. Despite Voltaire"s ''itrlol, and all the. royal mlst re ssts, Lools XVI had 3.f million Uvres out of a general budget of 6<lO million. So let'• gi ve the Queen her rai". and at the same tlme kacp Philip on 1elevislon . ., DR. NIXON ALSO took the traditional A1ifA 11lap at the chi1'1:1practic coUeres .. _ and acaln hil comme.nts rerleet if· noranct or the facts. For example, he obviously does not know .th~t Amtrican Chi ropractie Assoc1at1on aCCTeditPd colle1es require more hours and are more demanding than mosl medical schools. Jn fact, a llU r\'ey Of the CWTiCUla at Califotnil'! leading medical .chools and the Lo:s An1eles Colle1e of Chiropractic resulted in the discoveJY that chiropractic students were rtqulrtd to take more hours of study in anatomy, physiology radioloty, dit(l'IOlis and treatment nutri: tion, 'biochemistry. microbio lo,Y and patholo1Y than their medical coon· terparts. IN DR.. NIXON'S refe~nct t" the A1ilA 5~~sidlzed book by Ralph Lee Smith he 1,,. c11lng a book 50 full of in1ccuracie11 •nd outright untruths and deliberate halr- truths that it \\'OU.Id take four volumes lo 811 Geo,..., --- Dear Gtorgt: Tell tlle truth now -dOlt't oth<r adritt columnltt.s hate you for . &1tlr1iing tht idea or edVke col- WM11 Do they write )'OU nuty te~ tu• for making fun of them? JOHN H. Otar John~ Hmmm. Actually. I lhouihl the other advict cclumnlaLS were mak· ing fun of rilE ! You mean they'r~ strious with that stuff~ f\Vrlle to George, exptrt on evr:rythln1.) Mailbox ' . ~ , Lette·r.t from rtader.t arC' welcotnC'. Normally ivriters sl•ould convey their messoges iii 300 words or less. The riQht to cottdeme letters to fit SfXICr. or eliminate libel is reserved. All let· ters must include signature attd niait· ing address, but 11a1nes 11wy be wit/I ... lield on Tequcst if sufficie11t TeDSOll 1s apparent. Poetry will not be pub- lished. explaJn away this paperback pap. rm surprised that Dr. Nixon wasn 't lipped off to the book's inaccuracies by its very cover ... which has a photo of an x-ray . .. up11ide down, like n1ost of the fac ts in· side. As to the HEW report on chiropractic earlier this year ... Dr. Nixon must kn o\Y that five or the eight members of the advisory panel conducting the •·study" \Vere medical doctors and another \vas a medical college professor. llE l\fUST Al.SO know that in citing a Louisiana court decision he is using as an example one of only hvo states <the other is Mississippi ) that do not legally recognize chiropractic. lie must also 'know that nearly 70 bill!! h:ive 1'!en introduced into this session of Congress by responsible and respected senators and representatives calling for the Inclusion of chiropraclic care under the Medicare Program. He must also know that such coverage is already a fact und1r Medical. He must know that, by law. all health insurance policies written in California must now include chiroprac- tic coverage. HE MUST KNOW that. more than 40 million Americans are chiropractic pa· tients. 11e must know that chiroprActic is: the u:cond large5t profession among the healing arts. Surtly, he realizes that In hill ef£orts to support the AMA's dogmatic efforts to 11uppreaa chiropractic, he is working qainst the publlc,s best inte.rcsts and is cot1Unulng the suppres.sion not onJy nf chiropractic (which is suceetding on its merits despite the A~IA ), but of the freedom of all Ameri cans to choose that branch or the healing art~ which has pr~ ven. for Lhe.m, most effective. his viewpoint. This does not always mean it is a correct assumption. 3. Chiropractic treatment ls covered under Medlcade. This leads me to tielieve it is of significant value. 4. 1 cannot place any value on a book written to damage chiropractors. The book "At Your Own Heallh," by Ralph Lee Smith, condemns chiropractors, but t.lr. Smith is not even a doctor; therefore on what medical basis does he choose to condemn? IT APPEARS TO me that the doctors and Dr. Nixon refuse to acknowledge a sci ence because it constitutes a threat to their incon1e. Dr. Nixon's Interest should be in helping mankind and not in trying to discredit an organization which would possibly lake some or hU patien~,-thua lessening his income. I thank you for the opport.wiily to ex· press my beliefs and lo present a dif· lerent side to a controversial subject. PAUL J. BOYD Dr. J\1ixo1t s:tands by Id., colnn1n, declare.~ "no ch iroprociic 'white po· per' will cllollge tl1c true picture - that chiropractic is on 11riscietttific cult 1vhose practitiont rs lack the 11ec· essa ry training and educatiun to dioo agnose and treat J1un1an disease." r>r. Nixon. referred to the U.S. S it· p,.en1.e Court's offirmation of a lotve r federal court dccisio1l holding thot a sra.te, to protect tlte health of its peo- ple. can refuse to license chiroprac· tors unless !hey meet Ilic sa111e q11ali· fications o& doctors of medici11e. "11~ spite of Dr. Chessen's stnte· ment, chiropractors simply do no t meet these q11ttlificatio11s in a11y state,'' lie co1lclt1ded . Editor 'Aldrlcl• Smoke' To the Editor : There you go blowing "Aldrlch Smoke'' up v.·e Orange Countlans agA\n! (editorial Decembu 1). What the good doctor did not say in Word, to Town Hal\ last month, he has •·said'' over and over again irt deed on the Irvine campus. To use one or your trite flhrase~. ''consider the: case of Dan Aldrich and the four·leller·word episod l!."' \'es, CQll- sider : He permitted "Four Lelte.r Word'' Cleaver to lecture lyes, LECTURE ) at least twict on the UCI campus, glaring four-letter \\·ordli arid all ! HE PER.i\UTIED "Four Letter <D.O.P.E.) Leary'" -"Doctor-of-Pot" ta lecture at UCI al least twi ce. rr IS, 1NDEED. time for action by our leg Isl at.ors ... but not as Dr. Ni>:on sug- gests. Jt is time our legislators put an el\d to the medical monopoly and the AMA put its Wllimited funds to work poattlvely tnd begilll cooperating \\'ith it.! brethren in related health fields for the benefit or the public. DR. ERWIN CHESSEN President Oran1e County 1 Chlropr1ctlc Society He pennltt.ed admitted red, Angela Davis, lo pour forth her anli·An1erican venom on our br1Jnodrained •tudenlB at UCL ' And. he even appointed ••. an wi!lbnt profe8Setr with no other qualifications than his bachelor's degree and a falrly ''brllllanl" record as the campus SOS leader the previous year. Reader'• Reb111tal To the Editor : I 1.m writing In ~sponse to the article, ''Chiropracilc is a Fraud,'' "Tlllen by Norman Nixon, f\t.D. 1. Chiropractors do not cl aim that M:Br· ly all Mown physical dlseasrs can be cured by chlropnctic treatment. i. Dr. Nixon rtpOrled thal the U. S. Departrntnt of Health , Eduratlon and Welfare listed A chiropractic degree as "!lpurlous." Fonner r.ommlssione r of lhe Food and Drug Administration. Dr. .Tames Goddard. was quoted as saying, "lt would dilturb me less if my daughuir tmoked one marijuana cliarette th111 II "!ht drMk an alcohollc be\·erage.'' ONE CAN USE any aovernment official or &ovemment body lo lend credence •o LAST l\IAY DAY v.·e: had our first full scale t'Ornmun!stlc t.!a)' 1 ··memorial" in Orange County, on the lJCI campus! Admittedly, Dr. Aldrlch didn't speak on r.ta)' Day. but the epl!Ode was permitted in Orange County and on our UC Cam· pus! By whom? Or. Aldrich! Now tell me, Sen. James Wbttmore, Ille Tustin High S<hool board, Ind tlle Orange County Board o( EducaUon MORE about Or. Aldrlch! RICllA!Ul H. MA;l:Y Tittl Bit Lie Tec:ltnl411e To the t;d\IOr: St\•era l !\1811\>o:r C!Of'llrlbutor11 have brouaht attention to llit! Bia Lie techniqu.e as practiced by the Birchers. A beautiful example of this technique now stands before our eyes; it makes an interesting study for those not yet acquainted with its insidious methods : (1) A vicUm is selected (in this In- stance. Chancellor Aldrich of UC Irvine.) (2) A Big Lie is told (the chancellor condones dirty la nguage). (3) A hue·and-ery is raised. Fellow travelers in the publishing industry help spread and enlarge upon lhe lie. Speakers "''ho have infiltrated the service clubs and churches and PTAs. masquerading as honorable citizens, beat the drums al loud a.s they dare. (4) THOSE \VH0:\1 they ha\•e installed In public o{[ice repeal the lie and attempt to give it c.redence. (5) The victim is bullyragged b1 repeated accusations unt il his character is blackened in the eyes of an unrrilical and apathetic public. at "'hirh Jl(l1nt a rnove is made against his office. To say that this kind of de spicable plot \\'i\1 nol succeed falls to 1\JOk critically at some of our political 11'.aoers. who now pretend lo represent the majority. THOSE WHO KNOW the chancellor universally name him one of the. finest ol men , thoroughly honest, courageous, clean-living. and. most important 1 possessed of a rare ability lo reach and instruct our youth in this period Cl( upheaval. 'The best defense against the right-wing bullies who ha\'e set out to crucify hjm i:t for the people to cast them out of societ.1 and deal with their generals at the polls in the next election. JOE SCHEDHOLT 1Uun'• Beginning To the Editor: There are two major accepted theories on man's beginning. One i~ based on religion and the other one is based on 8c.ientiflc investigation. Evtn though these two theories are like black and v.1hlte when compared with each other the real problem is how should this subject be taught in the public school? Just because man's beginning ls con· lrO\'ersial one must not ti-y to remove this subject from the curriculum, That would be so much like an ostrich v.·ho buri('s his head in the sand at the ap. proach of a lion -and sti ll ends up as tht lion's illllch, !'\OR. SHOULD educators decide thnl one or lhe two theories is correct. an~ then force the students to memorize th4 theory because that is so much like pre> gramming a computer. Thus. if we really want to educate OtJI youth, then both theories should be tauch and then each student will be able t1 decide what he or 3he will believe. HARRY B. McDONALD JR ------ Monday, December 8. 1969 The editoriot pagt of the Dan, Pilot seek& to infonn and s-Um- tlla.tt ree<Ur1 b11 prrsenting thQ 1H!wrpap1r'.1 opinfon,s ond com.- rnentarv on topics of t11trrt1t a1ld 1ignificancr, b11 providing a forum for the C'ZJ'Ttuion of our readers' opinfoM, ond b11 presenting the diverse vi~ points of hi/ormtd obserwrr and spokesmen on topfci o/ t.llr dov. Robert N. Weed, Publisher What Happened? Manson Family Ended in Clo set By JACK V. FOX llllltM ,,.. .. 111m11tllt11tt It was almost nightfall, the dulik making even more eerie the crags and cactus of Goler Wash in Death Valley when a handsome young highway p.a. trolman &hoved op en the kitchen door of the <.:d mining cabin and stood there, pistol iJ1 hand. · There was a single candle burning in the room. It was a few moments before James Purcell could make out a dozen hippies seated around a planked table starting on an evening meal of sugared rice puffs, caramel popcoru and candy bars. Purcell ordered them out- side, hands Jn the air. where other officers arrested them. Then he began looking around !he three-room Barker ranch for more suspects in what he thought was a car-theft ring. He went into the bathroom and beam e d a fJashligJit around until his attention was caught by what i;eemed to be a dirty mop hanging out or a tiny cupboard beneath the washs:tand basin. Purcell opened the door and found in a closet 36 by 18 by 20 inches a tiny man with his knees buckled up against his chesL A beard that covtrcd his tntire face and...a shoulder- length mane of dark hair had given him away. 1t was the end of the road for "The Manson Family." The man in the cupboard was Charles 1.filler 1"fan30n, 35. Manson had played the part of an evil Pied Piper for almost two yurs, leading a changing band of restless young mtn -and particularly young women-from San Fran- cisco's Haight Ashbury to a .handsome Pacific: pad to an abandoned western movie lo- cation and finally to Goler Wash. In the end, some had turned against the man they called .. Jesus'' and their accusations were not of car theft but of mass, sadistic murders. Thrte of them this week stood aceuaed of the slayings of actress Sharon Tate and four other persons at her Benedict Canyon mansion plua the killing the next-day-to "keep up our nerve"--0f a wea lthy ·grocery chaln owner and his wife. The list or accused and tht list of murde rs is expected to lengthen leading to another of the sensational trials that are becoming a Los Angeles baUmark. At the vortex ls Manson . To look at him now, shackled in chains and handcuffs v.ith a weak smile and a body so frail that he seems childlike, you would think he could not hann a cat -and in fact one of the girls who still idolizes him remembers she was first at- tracted when stie saw him gently stroking a kitten. This, then, is the story of Charles Manson and h i s "Family.'' (See l\IANSON, Page %0) THESE PENNEY STORES J ....... -~"··-··· WILL BE OPEN SUNDAY AFTERNOONS 12 TO 5 P.M. •AZUSA • BUENA PARK 0 BURBANK • CAN.OGA PARK •DOWNEY •EL MONTE ° FULLERTON • GARDEN GROVE •GLENDALE • HUNTINGTON BEACH •INGLEWOOD •LAKEWOOD •LONG BEACH • LOS ALTOS •MONTCLAIR • NEWPORT BEACH •NORWALK • NORTH HOLLYWOOD • SAN BERNARDINO 0 SAN FERNANDO • SANTA MONICA •TORRANCE •VENTURA 0 WESTCHESTER • WEST COVINA • WHITIWOOD • WHlmER DOWNS -· Give him a Penn Prest® Ivy styled sport shirt ... A handsome price for a hand· . 1ome never-iron shirt of Fortrel• polyester/combed cotton. 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Those arc the st.ates with the g r e a l e s l 1ridower populations, he re- ports. States wilh the fe"·est v:ido"·ers. he says, are Alaska and Hav.•aii. PUT HUMrifl NGBIRDS in C'ages. That's 1vhat one pet ex· pert recommends. He says they're cleaiier and classier than canaries and parakeets. Isn't something all wrong with I his notion to cage those free fliers, Cynthia. or am I just developing a sweet streak'.' . , . ONE OUT OF THREE . restaurants established in this country fails v•ilhin the first year. Such is the sad facl. mister. So. if you're so proud of your wife·s cooking thal sou're thinking about opening a cafe, better consider it carefully. INVENTIONS -\\I h t n you're away from the house, do yoo find yourself fretting over whether lhe furnace 1s working all right? Apparently Paul Griem Given Post FestJval of Arts director PauJ D. Griem of Laguna Beach has been re.elected to the board of directors of the National Association for fllen - tal Health et 1he organiza- tion's annual meeting in the Shoreham Hotel , \Vashington D. C. Currently president of the Orange County Associ ation !or fllental Health, he has served on the board of the Californiil a.ssociation and on the national board since 1966. Fountain Valley·s recreation department is seeking the sound -of music from v.•hate vcr bands might supply it. The search is on to find young bands to play for the departmenl'1 monthly junior high dances. in the community center. Dance night is the fir st Fri- rlay of each month from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. Interested bands should call 962-2424. many citizens do so concern then1selves in this matter. Because a New York City out- fit called EMA, lnc., has found a lively 1narkel for a telephone gadget that watch· dogs your furnace. You phone home. If everylhing·s okay. it rings. If not. the line is busy. Excellent idea . But they ought to d eve lop something like th is to hook up lo the freezer, loo. \\lhat the gas that spontaneously com- busts in a dead freezerful or \rarm beef can do lo the household atmosphere. well, it would k.iU all the sheep in Ulah. CUSTOMER SERVICE' Q. You wouldn't know about this, I'm certain. but when a woman puts on a knit dress. the static electricity make s her slip slick to it, and ... " A. Sure, enough , I didn't knO"' about that. But the ladyfriend says you can fix it by n1nning a wire coat hanger -swish - around the inside of your skirt .... Q. "'ARE THERE illORE boys than girls in this country?" A. Up to the age of 19. Older lhan that, the re are more girls. TAK E THOSE MOTHERS of youngsters v.·ho collect Aid to Dependent Children money. In only about one out or 20 such families is the father dead ... . T\VO DOCTORS in Nev.· Orieans seriou sly c o n I e n d their studies indicate bald men do not seem as apt to get cancer as men with full heads of hair. ICE CREAft1 -A client asks v.·hen ice cream first \\'ent on lhe market Just don 't know. Do know, however. a certain fiir. Cove ran an ice crea1n parlor on New York City·s Chatham ~treel 179 years ago. Thal summer, hi s records sho\\', G e o r g e \Vashington's ice cream bill exceeded $200. Your questio11s and conr.· 'tn euts are wel.conicd and will be used t1ihenever pas· .~ible in. "Checking Up ." fJlea:ic address your n1ai/ lo L. 1\1. Boyd, in. care of Dnil!I Pilot. Newport Beach . Calif., 92663. Helene Curtis Springtime Wave $10 W19let "' foll deaned, styled 4.44 USE YOUR PENNEY C"AIGE CARD- NO A'POINTMENT NECESSAIT •ULLllltf"Ott 0r•f19•l•lt ""''~ "" ''"'· 111.Qd MUMTO•QTOM ll:AC:M Hllfltl"llt'Ot! C""1tr Inf ••!IOI'. tt1-1m MIW,OlltT l lACM l"ti,llltft .. ,.,., ht tteer, tt• tt!t • ~ • .• • ! ' ~:--:.-:-~.-:-. -:.-:-.-:.:;,...----·"·"·"'-~ .. ;"..::-: .. :-:: •• -:-. -:--~~-.:::-:.-::-"'"'·"'"""'·'....,...,...---,,...--,....,,,...,,.,,,.. .. ..,,.,. ; .j • --.... 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And although t h e ad- m in i st ra t i on wouldn't acknowledge il publicly, its lieutenants made plain the resounding 333 to 55 vote v:ould shore up Nixon's stan- ding in the arena or domestic opinion. ANOTIJER BENEFIT But Republicans picked up another benefit. They drove a deeper wedge between the House Democratic leadership and many of the party's rdnk and file. Liberal s and some of the mid d I c-of-the-road Democrats are said to be furious with Speaker John W. i1c0:irmack (D-Mass.), for push.ing the resolution. ~fany CQ!ldemned it a.s a meaningless but potentially dange rous generalization. The President, they contended , might use il to justify an escalation of the military ef- fort. Although spon s ors vigorously denied Utls. cri tics bluntly told McCormack they didn't appreciate being put on the spot -damned as being oppj)Sed to peace if they voted no or labeled a n ad- ministration supporter o n Vietnam if they voted yes. SIMPLE IS.SUE For the speaker's part, the Issue was si1nple. He had FUJ>' ported Democratic presidcnls Jolm f, Kennedy and Lyndon B. Johnson on Vietnam and it \\'as hls duty tn support a Republican -Richard M. Nix- on. Aside from Southerners, many older. middle-of-the-road colleagues felt the same \Vay. They cooldn'l understand the resentment on the part of the liberals . Nevertheless, after Ute \'Ole the scars were visible. "They're seelhing," said one member of the libt!ral bloc. Another said that the ~mocrats already in favor of dumping ~tcCorn1ack a~ epeaker in 19il were n1ore solidified than ever in their ln· tenlions. "Everybody ha s escalated." he went on. "The ones ·who were lukewann for the idea are now avidly for it. And the ones \\'ho \\•ere neulral are no\V casually toying with the _<_hou_gl~~·-· ____ _ r . Pe nny Pjncker Ads Turn Sense -Into Do~lars D.iLY •llM· 9 ' . 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KTOK news director Larry LaMotte said the ·caller was an awfully good imitator" of a man who called a San Fran- cisco television talk show on Ocl 21. daiming to be Zodiac. Authorities in California said they are convinced t h e October caller was not the Jody's Mom Gives Birtl1 To 7th Chi1d BAKERSFIELD fUPJ) - The mother or a 5-year-old girl who y,•as abandoned on a freeway near here six weeks ;igo gave birth to her seventh chikl Sunday. A Kem C.eneral Hospital ~pokesman said Mrs. BeUy Lansdowne Fouquet.. 26, o[ Bell Gardens, gavt; birth to a nine-pound, three-ounce boy. Both were reported doing well. Mrs. Fouquet and her com- mon. law husband, Ronald F. Fouquet, 31, face charges or felooy chlld abuse in the aban· donment of her daughter Jody, who was left beside a bu sy rreeway Oct. 25. They v•ere arrested a week later when the girl was iden- t.lfied by a neighbor .. Jody then poinled her parenls out ta police. I\.,,,!!~,,. man "'ho has claimed seven killings in a series or letters and cryptograms to police and newspapers. Newsman Tony Garrett of KTOK said he reported Sun- day night's call to Oklahoma City police, "'ho felt that call may also be a hoax. Garret said a portion of the telephone conversation was recorded and would be available .. to police. The man was breathing heavily and spoke emo- tionally. He sounded excited but did not appear to be talk· Ing in a joking manner. "You're going to try and trace it (the call) aren't you," I.he man said. La Motte said "Yes" and the caller answered, "then I better hang up." Before ending the con- versation that was being replayed on a delayed broad- ('::ts1 system, the caller said there \\'Ou\d be more killings before he was captured. "There are plenty of parking lots," he said, mentioning at least one large Oklahoma City shopping center by namt. 'No Siglits' Trip Costly LOS ANGELES !AP) -A 29-year-0\d law student's trip on a jetliner from California to London and back \\'ithout a ticket ended Sunday night - ~·ith his parents footing the $710 bill. Kenneth M. l.eSS<>r was found aboard a Trans World Airlines night to London when the plane was over the Atlan- tic, an airline ~kestnan said. $piKioliil"O Ill. fifte D~'• DMi"'°'"' a.-11ti"', w.~,., •11tl ••polr Sent.1, THE PERFECT GIFT FOR MOTHERS HER VERY OWN SPECIAL RING l-A11 DIUVIRY-NO WAnlNO Colorful synlhtfic blttNfOMS, OM fOt' .,.ry '""'ber of tM fomlly, ot'll set 1,, 9'egant 'WC gold. Aor.nt\n.e .. X1ured. 15.95* -= ~~ PLUS A PEN~EY'S EXCLUS!VEI ~ ~-\~ A LOVI~ 1118UTE •• -::::::.-·;::...... j~· IAOTHEI 'fl ~,;::~"':,:._.;. ,. A .buvtltul dtdlcat!Olli to t1*t !llOlt ~ -:--~-"jfl (' dlerftllld af 111 I 15" -i [J:pttllld "' poetiy tnd dlCOl'lttd ) (i buut/Mlr ••• this fine ~ cllt fron. '• ... .,, '"" bl dlel1Wd by .u -1 • "°"" k. hrltct fer hnilll Absolutely no cost Ip yoo Wilen you purchase any of Penneys special Rings for Mothers! --·--· ..................... CHAaGE tr AT YOUR. l'ENNrY'S flNE JEWEi.RY Dll'All.TMfNT ..... --11--'ffOOI 11 ... , ... TRACY, Calif. (AP) -"It "Christmas and Chanukah gilt would have .been auclfled," men who died were : the &peedway 5lte Saturday v.•as supposed to be lovely, not to American youth." Jagger said. -MerediUt Hunter, 18, Of night after the COflcert. The uptight. What happened? lVbal Instead, he noted §!Idly, ~ A young fan, listening In, Berkeley, stabbed in the back two were lying on the ground went wrong?" asked a forlorn four died, many freaked out assured' Jagger that he, at and face duflng a scuffle in In a group bedding down Mick Jagger, leadtt of the on drugs and Hells Angels least, was "beautiful." front oI the stage, where Rolling Stones, ol the .monster "guards'' rooghed up spec· "I don'L think ao," Jagger members « the Hells Angels around ooe of the many weekend rock festival here.· &aton and musicians. murmured. ••J wish I was, motorcycle clan guarded Lhe campfires. The free festival that police Jagger said an ullldentiiied then there wouldn't have been featured British Rolling Stones 'I1lousancb ol yaungstm had estimated drew 300,000 young youth lunged at hhn Saturday any trouble." and other rock groups during polU'ed into the area near the people to the dry brown hills as he stepped off his The babies that arrived at the six-hour concert. Altumont Speedway auto race east of here, featured Jagger lielicoptEr at the festival site. the festival were premature. -An unidentified youth who track on Friday, the night and the British rock group. "I hate you! I hale you!" They and their mothers were toppled down a bank into a beJore the concert, and hun- Today it left behind a blanket the youth shouted . Three taken to medical aid tenls can.al and drowned. dreds stayed over Saturday of litter. four violent deaths, guards reslrained the yooth staffed by 19 doctors and six -Richard Salov, 22, of night rather than fight what and four new babies. and took him a.way for psychiatrist3. The staff also Elizabeth, N .~.. and Mark hlghway patrolmen called one It was Jagger "'ho arranged medical treatment. treated the drug overdoses. Feiger, 22, of Union, N.J .. who of the Bay Area's most the colossal turn-0n as a .. "If Jesus·Jiad been there, He Authorities said the four were run over by a car l~aving massive traffic jams. -~~~~=--~.:,___.:;~~~~~=---~~~~~~~~~~~ SAVE $51 PENNctAf?• ~-. • VARIABLE SPEED IE· VERSING DRILL 0-1000 RPM, 2 stage gearing. Y4 HP. R..,. 24.99 .. NOW 19.99 SAVE S51 PENNCUFT• VARIABLE SPEED SAHE SAW. full 1 ft. strokes, tUts 4'5" right« left. ~eg, 24.99 •. NOW 19.99 .\t,, ,. l ,<->\ l ,{"" SAVI S71 PENNtu.n• SAVI S71 • CIRCULAR SAW. Ill HP PEHNCRAFT16.PLANll. motor delivert up to $200 6 amp. motor l 0(500 "-PM. RPM. Sien• and needle 21i• cuttin'g widtfl, deprfl bearMQL odlustoble to }(t, odjU1b Reg. 36.99 ••• NOW29.99 to .c.5°. THESE STOtlES OPfN SUNDAY TOOi 12 to 5 P.M. ("Jl ..... R ... 36.99 ••• HOW 29.99 CANOGA PARK LAKEWOOD REG. 23.99 AND 24.99 ••• NOW REG. 36.99 •• , NOW • SAVI t71 PlNNClAfT !• ROUTH. O.J;,.,, 20,000 RPM. 1 • depth of tllf in i~ trcmtnts of 004". R..,_ 36.99., .NOW29.99 OPEN 6 NIGHTS A WEEK FOR YOUR SHOPPING CONVENIENCS / SAVE m PINNCRAFT' 4 SP'EED l&" lEVElSllLE Dlllll, 6 -Spoodo "I' to 2400 RPM. Rog.36.99 ••• NOW'29.99 \ ...... Ji . ""* ~-. SAVE $71 PENNciAn• SANDIR POLISHER. 2 ....... "" oandi.. and buftlno. 6 amp. motor. R..,.36.99, •• NOW29.99 ® SAVE Ml PINIK:IAn- MlClO WOIXSHOP. ,._ grinding, drWing., ,,..... ing, sanding,. qr~ carting and deaning.. Rog. 23.99., .NOW 19.99 SAVE Ml PENNCtAFT• DUAL ACTION SANDEL' 2 amp. motor de !Mrs AOOO orbital SPM, 8000 in-line SPM. Rog. 23.99 •. -'l<:!W 19.99 DOWNEY-FULLERTON HUNTINGTON BEACH MONTCLAIR NEWPORT BEACH VENTURA ' ' I ) ' • 1 1 --· --~----------- Long Heads :Fair Home Council SANTA ANA -Boyzy Long, a captain_ In the Marine ~rps and a re!ldent or Orange has been elected chairman ol U1e Orange Coonty Fair ~lousing Council <OCFHC). The nonprofit organl.e11tion \\'as formed in 1964 t o establish and maintain an at. mosphere of open housing and NAMED TO BOARD to assist minority citizens in H•rald Williams obtaining housing of their ----------- choice in Orange County. Other officers elecled are David Walther or Fullerton, vice chairman; Beverly Fre· monl ar Orange, secretary; Robert Johnson of Tustin, treasurer and Member al Large Don Mohlstrom of · Garden Grove. Glenda \\'alther is Executi ve Director of OCFHC whose of- fices are located at 1405 West Fourth Streit, Santa Ana . tn- quiries abou t th e t.'Ouncii may be made by calling 835-0174 or 835-0160. Rep. Utt Wins Atvard TUSTIN -Rep. James B. Utt (R·Tustin) is among the \\'inners of the Liberty Award from the Congress of Freedom. Inc.. a voluntary nrganization headed by Brig. Handicap Oasses Set \VESTMINSTER -Parents or pre-school age children \\'ho are visually handicapped, Ueaf or aphasic, may send them to special classes at the First Presbyterian C h u r c h of \Vestm in s ter, 7702 \Vestminsttr Ave. Sponsored by the Orange County Department of Educa· 1 ion, the classes are held daily from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. There are no charges for instruction. Persons desiring further in- formation about the project. or possible placement of pre- school handicapped children may contact Dr. Jim ~1illiron at 893-7073. The progran1 is open tn children bet\veen the ages or 18 months or five years. Gen. Richard B. Moran (USA------------- Ret.) of Kemrille, Tei. The award ls for "outstan-.-----------. ding service toward restoring BOAT BUFFS Individual freedom and states Almen lcck•b•y ;, 1h• only tights as originally guaranteed full·1ime bo•fi119 edit11r .... crki119 by the Constitution." 1111 •ny .. ,.,..,P•P•• i11 Or•n9• Other winners are elate County. Hi1 1•clu1ive cov•r•9• Senators Jack Schrade <R-S:i.n ?f bo1!i119 and v•chti119 ne.,..1 D. ) d J·" Sch .1 IR 11 • d11rv f11iltr• of th• DAILY 1ego an "''n mi z . · PILOT Tustin), Mr. and Mrs. \Valter !~--·--------· Knott and the Santa Ana----------- Register. DEATH NOTICES BRADLEY Edith IE'. 8r1dltY. $0<!..., M1rklold, c11ron1 11<11 M.r. 01!e ot dNtn, O«. I Survlvtd bv son, J111tt1 N, ll•ad· ley Ill, COlll MtUI mot!W:r, Hlllll Winer. COl"Ont dl l M•r; brother, Jl u11.1ll WltlW, C1111 COii, M1nKhu- 1et!1, S.rvk•1, Tu1Jd11', I PM. P•· cine V!tw Ch111et. lnt1rm1111t, P1cUlc View Mtmorll l P••k. F1mllY wo111b tho!ie .,..lllllnt to meltit memorl1I aw>- trlbu!lons pl1111 eonlrlbulit to 11>1 ,.,merfc111 (1...ctr Sclr.ltly. P1clllc Vlt • Mortu1ry, Dlrocto..1. COFFIN -County-Sends Man To Coastline Meet SANT A ANA -Orange Coonty supervisors h a v e decided to send a represen- tative tG a Los Angeles meeting that has been descri~ ed by at least one member Gf the board as "a vital cGn· · ference fGr all th<>Se who are concerned with lhe future of CalifDmia's coastline.·• A member of County Counsel Adrian Kuyper's sWf will be on hand Dec. IS and 19 at the Department of Water and Power building, Ill N. Hope St., Los Angeles for the hearing called by t h e Assembly Commitlee o n Natural Re sou rces and Conservation. Chaired by Assemblyman George W. hlilias (R-Los Gatos), the conference is call- ing for citizens' views on "ac- celerated action to protect public interest in l he Cilifomia coastline.'' It will also seek -Opinions on the organizalion that would be re· quired for protective actio n and the machinery that \\•ould be required to S\4)ervise land changes. Prominent on the agenda is the commitlee's proposed ex- amination of the role of power plants, refineries, offshore and other CDmmercia l developments in the shoreline areas. The hearing is open to all interested citizens. County OKs Expansion Of West Cottntv Co11rt SANT A ANA -Or ange County super visors have com- mitted themselves to enlarge· ment of the \\'est Orange County municipal cou rt with appro\•al of the sale of bonds totalling $1.7 million. Revenue from the bood issue will be used to finance expansion or the Westminster court building from six to IS courtrooms. A n es timated $1.28 million of the funds "''iii be used to finance con· struction and the balance \Viii be applied towards purchase of furni shings, bond repay· ment and minor capital outlay expenses. Security Pacifir. National Bank 'vas the successful bid- der for the bonds at an in· terest rate of 6.94 percent. The bonds will matu re in 1976. Annual rental ar th' facilities will climb from the present $142,250 to more than $320,000 with completion of the additional construction, the board noted. It is expected thal con· struction will be con1pleted and the enlarged building ready far occupancy in mid· 1970.- teld1 V. Collin, l~ Tu1tln AYt., Co1t1 Me11. 011e of dMll!, Otc. J, J;urvlv~ by MPl\ ..... 1,, WIUltm M. McCune. Hunllntotn Bttcll; 0.11 Mc· (une, GltMltle: S!IPIOI\, H...,ry W. CoUln, P1IO$ Verd11. Strvlc11 w•r• held lod8Y, Mond•v. 10 ,.,M, Ptclllt VI-Ci..1>tl. ln!trm.,,t, Forni l1wn fiol•vwODd Hiiis. OlrecTed bY P1clnc Vl1w Mortu••Y. COU RREGES Jc.lln E. Courr111n. A;t 11, "' 13111 Mtrn>r Or., W11tmll'llltr. RDHrY. Tu19d1Y, I PM, Smlllls Cllt~I. Rt • nulem Mi n , Y<fodNsd•v, t l>M , l ln1td S1cr1m1nt Chutch, Weslmin. lftr. Interment, Good 5hel'loc•d Ctm• t ltrY, Smlll1.1 Mwlu1ry, OlroclOM. Wall to wall · carpeting completely installed before Christmas! NOWAK P1m11i. Now1k. A" :ts, ol 100t1 SPruc1, CDll• Mn.. Otlt of dHlll, Oecemtlotr S. Sutviwd bv hu""'1cl, Jo .. 1111 H-•~: d111oht1r, Sh1wn1 Pl•· en!J, Mr. t MI Mr1. How1rd Alhtrtt brother, a lll Alhbv. ROIJIN w11 reo::ll· ""' Sundey, 1 PM. W11klltf Ch11>1I S1rvlm Moncl1y, 11111 morntn1, t AM, Wts!cU!I Chtffl. with F1!ht'r1 Mc- Gow1n 1nd Joflf\IOn of SI. John lllt l1•tl1t C1lhollc Church, oftkl1t1ne. lnltrmtont. P1cllk Vit w M1m11rl•I Ptrll'. OlrKllHI by W11tc1lll Cllli>el MD<'t111rv, "'6·dll. TRAVIS Mihu~o Tr1v11. O.t1 ol d11!~. Oe· cembtr S. SUrvlvlHI bY llu1blnd, Oon-~ld Tr1vlu dtuon!tr, Mr1. 1<11uml M1!1Ud1, LO$ .... "9tlti; lwD 10n1. S!e- len C, 1nd M•rt: l . Tr1v!1. of !he "°"''· BuOdlllst 11rvlc11, Wtdn11daY, I PM. we11cntl ChlPt l. Olrocle-d by Wntclltl Cllu••I IAor1u1rv, ~aaa. ARBUCKLE • SON WtstclW Mortuary 427 E. 17th St.. Costa l\lesa 616-4811 • BALTZ MORTUARIES Corona dtl Mar OR 3-9f50 Costa Mesi A11 '°'UU • BELL BROADWAY MORTUARY 110 Broadway, Costa lites• LI 1-3431 • DU.DAY BROTHERS HunUnp Valley l\fortaary 17111 Belch Blvd. HunUniton Beath W.1771 • PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK Cemttery e Mortuary Cllaod ~ Pacific Vie• Ori,•e NeW?Ort Btacll, Catifornt. '44-!790 • PEEK FA.ULY COLONIAL FUNERAL HOME 71Cll Bola A•e. 'tl'..-itt m.ms • SHEFFER MORTUARY Laguna Bt1cll .fM-1535 8111 aemente •twIOt • S~llTllS' l\10RTUAR V 5%7 l\lal1 St, llualln11ton Btac• - "Sal-" pattern 100°/o nYta• loop pile carpetl1g. 6.59 SQ, YD. INSTAWiD C~!., ~.,_. .SOot. Mbel'ized.MeC..!Mon. This stvrdy carpeting is a great buy for its ability to foke ha rd wear. Continuous filament nylon comes in tweeds or iolids, 6 decorator colors. Lash 100°/o nylon shag "Athens" solids or tweeds 7.59 SQ. YD. INSTALL.ED c.or..p...}y .-tolled owr ~O or. tvbberiz•d Jule C~-o~ . Sink inlo deep piled shag car· peting! Choose from our selec- tion of 6 beautiful decorator colors. Priced for savings! "Churchill" pattern 100°/o polyester pile c:arpeHn9 8.59 SQ, YD. INSTAWD c~ .. ,· .. ,, ~~.sooi.~.MI C--. Now you can :have our cvt and loop pattern carpet in 5 beauti- ful colou. Now available at Penney's low, low price! UKE IT , , , CHARGE IT! For Shop at Home convenience, Phone the store in your local area • w. bring ....... , .. • frw .....,Jtatjon. • frM estimat•. • No obllgallon. CANOGA .PARK (813-3660) DOWNEY (9!19·"541) FULLUTON lAXlWOOO NEWPORT lfAC!t (871-"3'3) (6U7UOO) ' (833.07113) HUNTINGTON BUCH MONTCIAIR VENT\JRA (tm·m1l (621.3111., n~121 7) (642·7'92) .. • t.". DAILY PILOT :JJ OPEN 6 NIGHTS A WEEK FOR YOUR SHOPPING CONVENIENCE! Sh~pe up with exercise equipment for a new you! ' Great for spot reducing, firming ... variable speed belt massager Powerful '/• horse power motor! All sleel con· struction . .4" web bell . Vari able molar control. 1io• high, UL listed. fine Penney quality, low Pen.;.y prices I LIKE IT ... CHARGE IT! ' 99.99 Look at these 'shape-up' prices ... great .•• for the whole family Wheel bicycle exerciser ••• Adjuif· oblo handlobor end seat. Full chain action drive. 39.99 3 woy bicycle exerciser ••• 3 way boll bearing action on cronlcossomb)y. 19.99 Foremo•I 110 lb. weight set. For odult• end school level oihlotes ••• plastic jockeied. 21.99 6 way exercise 11t value ••• aar-.. bell combo, chest pull, rowing moc.~ine-,·wall pull, morel (nohhow") 9 .99 '• ' ".' ~ ·:.~j~ 1 .. ' • • •• ' ·.·~ .. ·~ ' ·: .. ,. -. ' THIS! CANOGA PAFjK DOWNEY FULLERTON li_UNTI NGTON BEACH STORES OPEN SUNDAY TOO i 12 to 5 P.M. LAKEWOOD MONTCLAIR NEWPORT BEA H VENTUR ·1 \ For the Record Marriage .Licenses ttov. 11 P:ITICflltALD-~O!IRTSON, TM!M-J.. ti. « _, Clwllnll Pleet. .....,..,,, s.dlr•llll Mlrlotlt J .. ,., Ill S1'SI ~n hmc. 4-11 JU111 '~~·-~ -J~$TON, S.nfonl, :W, ti tl2: .,. Drlv• NtwPOtt e..ai •11.d 1'1, t1 GI 1'2f IOtll SI., s.&'ltl le.II. <.111. WHITIAIC.fll-MOllll9', ~le I., 31, of 1«11\,\ N. er.; l'rant, 1111boe t•lrnd Ind 1.llrlbfll! J,, 7i, ol SM& Sffsl'Wlre Drl..,.. Ne.--1 lt«ll. 1MtTH-Xli<>eTTt.1N. DtMI• 11,, ti, el nu Allrnl• Av1. mnd D..,,,,..,. A .. 10. el ~-AllMln Drive. bolll Ill H""'1llOllllOrl IMUI. ,ITZWATER-CUNNINGHAM, tl1rcld l .. :11, ol 1 .. 1 Fulltrttlll $1., (Ml• MllH and 0.111 I(.., N, ol IW Sr~ll (!VI, l.l9Ufll kld'L f UHRMAl'f-OOtlM. OK1r J .• n. ol 11' -rel Line Ind t+ldwlf E .. '6, o1 1'611 Motllef't'r RoM, ltlofll el Sell ·-MARDY-CONICllN, C.rl L .• 2'l, Ill lfH p-cooi. MtH 1n11 Su"'41 o .• ti'; el .901 fr1'*!ur'I• Hunllnglon Pl~li:-GAY, CMrle1 N., .,, Ind R1111'ile1 Jo. bclll " ta c. ..... uie l.IM, 1;.mt• Me&!!. lEGU!.-GEER, JGl'lll V .• 15. of ,11 Ctdlr St. Ind .,_, M. ol 111 Teri Gl•tlt. bolll ef N-siort etlKll. (AllPENTEll-WIESL DoMtd J,1 l'-111 lml CMlttft SI,, Whllfil', 1;.1111. 11'1d s1nv A. :n, ef n1 Mlml'!lla. Hu,.. tlnvt"" BH<fl. DAVIS-OUNCAH, Jdwl E,. 25. el l2jlf 5(1ndl1 st .• Gllnlttl Cf,.... mftll H91en A .. 7J, 01 +.72 ttow1rd AV'I.. LOI At1mltos. NOY. l t I EA:GH-vtm ALBERT, H•rr¥ E .. 10. ol 5H W, El Ncrlt P1rkw1y, EK°""' dldO, Catll. 11111 Dorl M,. SS, DI 44 SNwenl. CCronr dtl Mir. I ARNtlARDT-WIM:HNEF, '1111111 C., n. Ind K1thv L. It, bot'h ol 1710I Lrurel Sl.Lf_<!Un!a\n V1lln. k l!AMM-COl.Jf\IAN, ICtnntlll II., ''-11111 Deborth A., 211, both ol 1?21 ver1no Place, trvlne. I AKE R-L YLE, Roblrf W., 21, of .M6>J Hcwtrd 1nd Tertct. 21, ol 1144.1 H1r. rl1burg, both ol I.Cl Altmltm. GUNOERSOff-OA\llDSON, JOh!I H.1 tt, cl •11 Jornn, (ml1 Mnr 1na P1mel1 J., ,,_ d 11'1111 Blyparl St., GrrOtft Grow. MELLER-8ALLOU. 1111¥ I., Jl. D'I ne M"'""'111 1nd lv1 M., .SO, GI ""1 Memo "'l•, both DI Hllf'lll'IQIOll l'ltldl. I ONNIHG-Gll:OETSCH ll:Dbct1 E., :io. ef N7 111! 51. 11111 Etien P .. 2G, al Z201 •-• SI .. bath D'I Costa ~ "~DEE-LOWRIE, Geoffrey C .. 7S, 212t'h Vt r<h TefTICt, LlflUM i nd Dtklr• v.. Jt, of •n Ena nd SI .. Hunt!ngl911 ka<l'I. I Y•NE-PlllCE. P1lrk.-M., tl, <JI nu F-•r Drive, Wntmlm1rr '"d llri>ectl A., 1t. of 12.ll ~. Rtmbl.-od. Or1nte OOW'-DAVIS, l.1wrenq L , '5. et f:!S Jo.nn 1nd Sl'ltrrt ,.;., 25, Ill 2911 OCJC District Forms Faculty Fefloivships Births SOUTH COAST" COMMUMl'fT HOSPITAL .._ .. Mr. •rid Mra. Wlltlem I . Wooderd, tll C Puenlf, Sin CllfMftlt, tlt'I Mr. Ind Mn1. G1r11d I", Giiiin. 3Jtl0 ""'""" Lin"""' Cfltlt Polnl, t l•I Mt. Mid Mrl. P.ul .... Flnorlo. 2•n2 P"'ll1 Drtw, Ml11lon Vlelllt tlrl Oc,.., ll Mr. and Mr$. Geo. L. fl_, II. 1'13 C1ll1 Mlr1dof, (., S.n Clerneoil1, boY '"''· 11\d M'11. ROMld P, llOllrnwon. C1pl1!r1llCIO'&fl.Ch, bor Ol;lebtt" 17 Mr. Ind Mn. Loren K. T~, 2~7'1 !elt'ftft P!t(e, El Toro, 1lrl Mr. 1nd Mrs. Joh" A. Sottvner1. m MlsMwl Slr"I' $an JlHln C1plllr1r>0. "" Oc ....... ,. Mr. 1nd Mn1. Ilk.hard G. El\Kh, 01 (ftn.,..., "''" Orlv., L11una lle1(h, ... Oct ..... ,, Mr, Ind Mn.. EdWlrd W, G111t~h...,, ,,,., (.1111111 LIM. /,0.lnlo<I V11Jo. "' Mr. 1nd Mr1. G••~ld L. ll il~1u. ?11! A Cnmerclo, $an Cll!m1n1t, twin tlrl Ind bo~ Oclobw 1t Mr. llf'ld Mr~. Go<llOll lo•I, Xll Avfnld1 Vkfcrl1, S..n ci.,m..,.lt, boY Mr. 1nd Mr1. 8r.,;ti.,y E. P'-c•,.Jr,, lJ'l CIDl'lllo. S." Clemtl'!f, 1lrt Mr, ind M,,., ,£rneo111 llvi..t. C1pls1r1ne Btacll. t lrt Oc .. blr 11 Mr. •nd Mr1. Ron11d S, Jock. 7417 Monie Vtrdt, L"u"• Niouel, bov Mr. Ind M", E1,191!nf l'llroWIV, 1l1 A Pt11vo Avrnut, Sin Clffl11ntr, girl Od•blr U Mr. and Mr1, Ernf.sl o. Tignor, !'Of Mlram1r, L1111un1 Beith. alrl M•. arid Mrs. M1cll1tl W. Ltn<lorol, 106 OomlnoufI, S•n Cltmontf, oltl Oclolllr ll Mr. ind Mrs. Ellis L. G1rc!1, ll6'h W. M1rlPOS1, Sin Cltment1, boY Mr. 1n<1 Mr1, Oon11d II. Billard, lllO No. I Nortll El C1mlne Re1I, S..n Clell\lnl1, bov "'-n Mr. 1...i Mrs. Frink E. ~rttne. Jln6 Vlroln!1 Wa'f, South L"una, bov Mr. arid Mri. P111I I, tl1ven. l:JOll C1mlne C1olllr1ne, Sin J u • n Capistrano. bov Mr. Ind Mrs. Mlchttl G. c~. ,,, c Ar111on Avenvt. S,,n Clemtnlt:, girt Odobtr H Mt. 11»d Mrs. G1rold II. 51trn.er, 1176 11 El Cimino Rrat, kn c~"""''' "' Divorces M• •nd Mrs. Edw1•d J, C•oll. J•., WtlQh!. Alll'I M, Y\ LIHV w 167., Las P1t"'1~ C11>islrl<>11 Bea•"· tlan~. f;!o<tma•v E. v~ Garv w DIVORCES bcv \llc~er<, Jt"Y J. v· 2"'1 Hor11<e Mr •nd M•\, F•rl F, l'lcl(rv. 3109 El Co••ll', E ·•~•r F v• Cft•I Crmlno. San Cl•ml!fl!e. 9lrl """'"'~kl Yvo~..-P~e "' R ~•m'>nd G. oct~ JI ~~~:;...~:ane.~~h."r. v~:a~a"~,"'·~1.d,,,o Mr .,,<I Mr1. Th9m~' L. T~vlor. 21!dH H~rvtY Ortt9~ tllollw1v, Siii J U In Wc~1. H,!en M. v' MIQia~I L (1Pl•lr1no, bov 5clll!'CM. Dolores M vs Jolln W, 0c10~•· 11 A~i~~!~. A.;Jrm1.:· l:~~r~" ,!',-va1m1 Mr. 1nd M'1. Arthu' L. Gr1nvill1, 11' P•m'I~ C San Pablo, San Cltm~11le. bov (hanev. Margar•t "' Ro~rl II. Mr. ftnd Mrl. Adrl•n G. Garcia, l~S Nolin. ~allv vs ROtltr Harlon Victoria Awn~e. San Clemente, vlrl ~:;~~~; ~nif:~~~li "4~ ~~r"'vll~Qra l<tPVM!Hr I l1•1d, Robfor! WHllam YI Nanc• Ja1111 ·M•. atld Mrs. William A. ~th•amm. 1i~ Solomon. Barb~ra J , vs Arnold J. Cllloul!ft S!rf~I, La;yna !!tac~. 9lrl Dillon, N•ntV J. •~ We•l<W Adrlel Mr. '"d Mrs, Darr,11 Morrow, !?~ B fl.•av, Haro!~ G. "' Helen L, The Orange Coast Jun1"or ren h' d D I Wen M1rl110>1, Sftn Cl•mtn!•. qlr! H·"M, PlthDrd L. vs Robin ~. ov.·s 1ps arc \IC ee. . Mr. 1,,.i Mr:t. Larrv J. Helm,,•••1. ~~·~~cqi;'.·r!JirJ'e;, "P~~r~:·w~· College Districl ha!I SCl Up a brought lo OCC trustees In 16111 Bonacl><!ft, Ml:s•~n Vl•le, ~Id 1·~r<,1. Ola~~ E v• Thoma• E. J Mt. rnd M"· Wllll•m J B•~na"~' .lle f,toft•';, Gl•nft M v• Lort,,;ftf K. program or '' Fa cu 1 t y1 __ an_u_a_"f~·----------~'c'-' c"-'c'·c'c'c"c'c"c~~"c"c·c"'~-----"c"c"·c'"c''c· c"c'c"c''c"c'c·c'c'c'c'c"c"'c'c'c.,="~.1 Fellowships" under v.·hich in· structon can secure runds to dewlop innovative programs. District trustees recently approved 1 t such programs - four from Golden \\test College and seven from Orange Coast College. The instructors will begin work immediately on the projects. One will be developed by businw instructor Richard Howe. It will involve using the mnputer on campus to create l-----------------------------------1 an accounting sy11tem for. the · Wlndjammer, the 1 t u dent . ' fashion store which serves as a laboratory far v a r i o u s bwlness a n d advertising courses. When completed, the system 9.ill feature a comp ut er terminal in the 1tort upon which studenls will enter all of their transactions. 'This will give them an accounting system and a running in· ventory. Hlstory instructor Norman Lumia(l v.111 prepare material In U.S. hi story and political science. Lumian has Identified more than 200 different areas within these. fields which lend themSelve11 t o spe:cialized study: The purchase of Louisiana. the origins or the Monroe Doctrine, 11lavery as a cause of the Civil War, and others. Students having dlf· ficulty with these artas will be able le get special help throogh 1tudy carrels. audio- 'isual material and booklets prepared by Lumian. Other courses will include a nwlli·medla slide rule course, le be developed by math in· structor Ron Schryer; a single concept fil m series in math by math ln1t r uctor Jeff Dimsdale; a psychology Jee· ture·semina r development led by counselor·inslructoi" Dean Burchett; a nd psychology tapes by instructor Lee Bradley. History instructor Henry Panian will develop Project Feedback, which will allow Social S c I e n c e instructors from OCC to visit four.year IChools lo Interview OCC transfer 1ludents. This feed· back will allow in.stnictors to evaluate their methods le sec how effecUve it i11. Dean of Instruction Dr. Jomes S. Fllqerlld .. id lbt bulk ol 1he ,.....rd! will be done an s.turdays and Sun· dlys. 1' D n d 1 for lht leU°""1ipo, sllchlly more lhan $20,000, wn: budgeted earUer in the year for the Im· pr°'m>ent of student learning ol1d lmlnlctlcn. FllJienld 1ald U.. first ldlofthipl were Hlected from JnM1 appllcatlons by 1 com· mluee ot thrtt ln!tructon. an evm!Jw coUege 1dminislr1tor nd a day colle1e lid· mhdltr•1or. Morr proposals ror l\nne'IJ Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday AUTO C•NT•ll . Don't let this ••. happen to your car! 'i ~ Professional tune~up! (Volkswo9en) Here's what you get: • New points, plu9s, rotor, con• denser cind distributor cap 9.88 (6 cyl.) • Expert adjustment of cam• dwell, timln9 and carburetor • Result ••• more pep, better mileage 14.88* (8 cyl.) 19.88* • More enjoyable drivin9! •Most Amerle.1n u t• THESE STORES OPEN SUNDAY TOO i 12 lo 5 P.M. BUENA PARK(0·:::::":.:"') {CLOSED SUNOAYSJ DOWNEY CHULA VI STA HUNTINGTON BEACH NEWPORT BEACH CANOGA PARK FULLERTON MONTCLAIR VENTURA -MR.MUM ' H '! <. .. ·YOll PIOILEM: Yeu _, hi •II -item !hot yw ... ....,., ..... but llOMIWt elte an v. for HOT OVER $50 1 1 7 ? 7 ? YOUI ANSWER: You call THI DAILY PILOT, Olk for Clatlfled Adnrtlllnv, •nd pl•.. • PILOT PENNY PINCHER AT OUR SPECIAL LOW RATE 3. uins 2 TIMIS 2 DOLWS .AND YOUR CREDIT IS GOOO I DIAL NOW DIRECT! 642-5678 Nearly Everyone Listens to Landers l\nne111 OPEN 6 NIGHTS A WEEK FOR YOUR-SHOPPING CONVENIENCE! AUTO C•Nftll Slip-on vl:rryl hea cf.rest. 6.99 MSE STORES. OPEN SUNDAY TOOi 12 to 5 P.M. • Mtnl blkfl ·.,. not ifttlll\ded lor r.clnt or for \IM o~ highwO)'t, \i'dewolkt or t!•ttls. Your diab .•• l'llfl or D;a,,,.... qullt seat covers 27.88 AJA/FM liftout porlablo car radio. <4<1.95 Happiness ·is ~··a , little something 1 for his car BUENA PARK (0"::ff!;":.~'9 CANOGA PARK CHULA VISTA (Q.OSEO SUNDAYS! DOWN EY FU LLERTON HUNTINGTON BEACH MONTCLAIR NEWPO RT BEAC H VENTURA ---·- --------------------------------· -.. -· . . ---------,----~. --. -.. . .......... --.. ., BARBARA QUAR:rE, --' ,_...,, '*"""" .. I"' I ''" II Social S~tting Jeweled Trees , Sparkling Christmas centerpieces on luncheon tables will add a fes- tive air for the gathering of Riviera Club and their guests in Balboa B a y Club on Wednesday, Dec. 10. . The centerpieces were fashioned by a decoration conunittee headed by Mrs. Everett S. Rowan for the holiday affair. The Woodlandaires, a choraJ group noted for their renditions of Christmas music, will entertain the group which will gather at-11:;30 a.m. for a social hour. Lunch will be · served at 12:30 p.m. foll&wed by .a short business meeting before the afternoon's entertainment. . ReservatiOns may be made with Mrs. Vasco Batschwaro!f, 494-0317, or Mrs. Daniel D. Huston, 497-1012. . . On the 'following week, a Ch'istmas v.arly In the Laguna ~c!t resi- dence of Mrs. James N. Martin will contribute to the holiday mood of ru .. viera Club's Boo!< Section. CE N.Tfi RING ON CHRISTMAS -Riviera Club members (1e1t to right), Mrs. Everett S. Rowan and Mrs. Paul Garman' show off colorful.hdtiday centerpieces destfued for luncheon tables lrr·t he Balboa Ba)'. Club. The trees will add a gay holiday touch to t b e annual affair which will be hejght~ned by a rendition of Christmas music provided ·by the Woodlandaires, a choral group. Meeting on Monday, Dec. 15, members will bear a book review . of, "Jenny" presented by Mrs. Virginia O'Breen at 10 a.m. with a spectal boli .. day luncheon party to follow. Reservations for the Book Section may be made by phoning chair- man Mrs. Orville L. Harper, 494-1853. . · ··--·-• ! The I Laguna Li ne 2,QO f rie Qds P .r~pose HGusewarming Toast . By BARBAl\A DUARTE 01 ffle D•llr Pli.1 Sl11f THE LOVELY new home of f\.1r. and Mrs. Rick Allen in Emerald Bay resembling a Swiss chalet was filled with guests who gathered to warm the happy home. Two hundred friends or the couple arrived for h or s d'oeuvres and cocktails ill- cluding Dr. and Mrs. Edward Nell, Jack TenEyck (his wi(e Sue stayed home in case their soo~xpected made 8'.1 un- timely arrival ), and the Messrs. and Mmes. Robert Turner, Horace Fritz Ill, Richard Wheeler, Robert Hug· gins Jr. and Roderic Daly. WITH THE HOLIDAY season in full swing, more parties are in t.he news with the Leslie Weldons welcoming friends to their Heather PlaCe residence Friday Dec. 12, for cocktails. ROUNDING UP the troops. reminiscent of Girl Scout days, will be.bpth the duty and honor accorded to Lag\Lla Beach Mermaid Mrs. Jack Rowe who 'vas recently ap- pointed regional director of the Southern Division o f California Women in Chambers of Commerce. row eventig, In the ·Laguna Niguel home of Mrs. Richard Schell. Social hour will begin at 7 o'clock with dinner served at 8. A RAY ·or light wa s presented to Mission Viejo Swim and Racquet C I u b recently. A projector and screen were given to Charles McK"af, .president of the club, and manager William Beck by Robert Darling of O c i o Amigos. Contributions f o r purchase were made b y 11ission Viejo Women's Club, Missio.1 Viejo Mens' Club, Teen Club and Ocio Amigos. NEWCOMERS will be Y:elcomed to Saddle back Valley at a noon luncheon Wednesday in the Revere House, Tustin. As an added at- traction . Mrs. Frank Cleeworth of Margee's Art Shoppe, Laguna Hills, will demonstrate C hr i s t m a s decorations that can be made at home. WITH THE HOLIDAY season providing Christmas parties galore, one of the mu sts a,1· the list will be a luncheon and afternoon of (ards staged by ttie Woman's Club of Laguna Beach next Thursday at 12:30 p.m. If you don't play cards, members still would like you to attend and enjoy lunch. Mrs. William Carrillo and Mrs. €ha:.1Cellor J. Madin with Mrs. Beatrice CrlSt presiding at the tea table. Proceeds of the tea will be contributed to support of the fourth annual parade schedul· ed for Feb. 21 honoring the an- niversary of the birth of the nation's first President. The tea will begin at 2 p.m. and continue until 5. ELEVEN PROVISIONAL members were welcomed into Assistance L e a g u e mem- bership during a h.r,icheon to- day at the Towers. Mrs. Paul Beemet, m.embership chairman of the Laguna Beach league, will introduce the Mmes. Donald Arvold, Robert S. Burnside, Jack V. Caldwell, Jack Downer, Charles H. Fishburn, Morris C. Porter, Jack Reynard, A. D. Scott, Rolland B. Sigafoos, .Jeffrey R. Townsend and W a 1 e s. Wallace. At the same time, the previous provisional class will be granted a c t I v e mem· bershlp. Mrs. Thomas H. Jones, league president, will congratulate the M m e s . Robert Blacker, Ray Hen- dersa.1, William-Lynn, Paul Newell, Aloysius Spaulding, Theodore Taylor, W i 11 i a m Ullom and Henry S. Weber. ""'-- / • Mistletoe Magic Brightens Holiday Hom e Tour • ·:;: .. ~ .. .:: ·-~ --·-I-::: .. ~ •• -, ~ :· ~:' :;. t!'! !p' ~ _,, :;J .. ·:· . .., : '1 The active Mermaid will help organi z e women associated with c h a m b e r s from Newport Beach t o Oceanside and looks fonvard to a district workshop next April in Pasadena . TAU TAU Chapter of Bet.a Sigl!la Phi sorority will enjoy a Christmas party tomor· TOASTING the 1970 Patriot 's Da,y parade, membe.1"3 of Cavalier Chapter, Colonial Dames XVII Century, will host a silver tea in the home of htrs. Lowrf Galli- nger. Assisting the hostess are ENJOYING thelr second visit ·to Flying E Ranch near Wickenburg. Ariz., are the Robert W. Emerys of Laguna Beach. One of the delights of early rising at the resort are hearty breakfast c o o k o u t s with sausage, ham, eggs and beer biscuits. The lovely Monarch Bay home of Mrs. Th'1ffia• Fleming who adds a brlgbt touch to the lamp will be Included in the Holiday Home Tour being given by the Opera.League Supday, Dec. 14, from 2 to·s p.m. Mrs. Jayo. Pyle Iooks·on .. the wliinen prepare towel- come visitors to homes in Camel Point, Niguel West, Irvine Cove. Emerald Bay 'and South Laguna. Tickets may be purchased at Mary Maxwell'~'l'l'easure Chest, 1516 South Coast Highway, La· guna Beach, for f2.50 including maps. ~l :f ! !j l 'l' ~i • < :": • I ' Dentist· B·ites Off Mo·re Than · His Patient .. Ca.n Chew ·n· •• • . .. : ~ii j~ ,.f; DEAR ANN LANDERS : Several years ago my mother went to a dentist for a set of upper plates. They worked. fine. Two months ago she began to have trouble · "'ilh her remaining teeth 80 ·she went back to the sa me dentist. He e1tracted all her lowers. She paid him $175 in cash. He asked her to leave her uppers so he could adjust them to the lowers. Sire was lQ return lfl five days for both the uppers a.id the lowers. Five days later my mother returned and was shocked to see a For Rent sign on the dentbiL's door. His phone had been disconnectea and the receptionist In the o(fi~ across the hall said he had bttn talklna about movine to Alabama. ANN LANDERS ~ My motber·wou!d Uke to get her uppers back. Abci her $175. Pleut. answer as soon as possible__ A.'10. 'Jbis . is an emergency. V.S. DEAR V.S.: AdvJae )'IMlr mother to coa&act tM local Otl&al Society, ellber city or .... .,.. Tbe dendot will ht rtport.ed to the e°'1cs committee. The committee may er may not be aacceuflll \ Ill h<lplag your molber ......,. ber cbop- pen tnd the money. Sbe tllollld not will, however. The woma1 needs tettb and sbe -needs lhem NOW. Urge Mr to 10 W anoU>er denLltt ll Olct. DEAR ANN LANDERS : Add my name to the list of people who nevtr thought they'd be writing to Ann Landen. I was, a widow who married a widower. I had known .blm 15 yearS. After we married, I discovered his 21· year~ld daughter didn't believe in work, and his 18-year-old son came home only to ch.ange clothes and sleep. I refused to Jet them • run me like the)' ran the.Ir father. ntls caused trouble between us. The boy mouthed off at me o:ice too often and I told him to move. His father said - "If be goes, 1 go, ~·" That njght all three of them left. I bought this beautiful home wllh my first husband's money. It Is a lovely but a lonely castle. My pastor said we alt should have had counseling. I was willing but · the others were not. Did I make a mistake somewhe.re along the line? If so, what was it? -GRIEVED DEAR G.: You made tbrtt mlslaku. Yoar fint ml1t.ake was not knowb'I& the .:ldldren better beforf yoa married their fatber. Tbe aecond mlltake wat orderfn1 tbe boy to move. ne Wrd ml1trike was not getUng coa1t1ellag for yoanelf - even lbeagb the ott:ien refused. And now, don't mate a foarth mistake by &tttln& a divorce before yoa do everytblo1 ' your power t,o eUeet J rec:oodlfatto.. fte kkls will be IOtte btfore loag ind you and yoar husbend might b•ve a llfe tocetber after all. • DEAR ANN LANDERS: S<tile on argument. I say a bridesmaid should be a maiden -oot necessarily a vlrgtn, but a~ least unmarried. My sister is plannln1:l her wedding and she ·has asked five~ !rlends to be brtdesmald!. Three of tbf~ five are mairrl~ women and two Mv•. ~ children. What about this? -DIXllt'.'J DEAR DIX: A brld,.mlld~" lln&le,~ 1 vtr&111, aa ex-vlr&fn, · · marrltd1 divorced, a motber -~· · not, to 10ng •s 1be· lt female. • tlleJe ·"'Yf doo'I ·be ,,..,..... I a ~ lboWI IP II a brklennakt. 'l1le "1 ...... world II P•l 11'• 1ol to ~. AM Landers will be glad to· belp )'Oil with your problems. Send them to her In care ol tbe DAILY PILOT, •ocloeloa • sell-address~, &lamped envelope. .. . DAllY PILOT PRECIOUS FLOOR COVERING -Oriental rug. expert Karan Mehta and Sean store manager Joseph Metcalf examine $30,000 Halwai-Bidjar rug cur- rently touring Southland stores. Station Wagons, Vans Carry Toys to Needy Station wagons and vans n!placrd Santa's ~eigh when the Huntington Beach Tri- teens loaded 50 new toys of all kinds for deliver y te> the Imperial Valley Mission la.st Saturday. Assisting the Tf'i..teeru were members of the group 's a pons or in g organization, Junior Woman's Club of Htm- llngton Beach, Serving as drivers were Mrs, Barbara Will.lams, president: Mrs. Dale Bush, Tri-teens' advisor, Choral Group Every Monday at 7:30 p.m. members of the ~Uve Aliso Valley Chapter ol Sweet Adellnes convene ln Mission Viejo High School. and Mrs. Daniel Drageset, in- temaUooal affairs chairman. The toys, donated by Mattel Toy Corporation, will be distributed to children who before had very little reason to believe in Santa Claus, ac· cording to Sherri Jensen, Tri- teens president. The young women opened their !all schedule with their annual fashion show, a major funding event. They made gifts which were sold by their sponsoriDg club during Ill Champagne Boutique, and also made tray favors for the children's ward at Huntington Intercommunlty Hospital for Hall~n. They assisted the Juniors in their project to stuU Hope kits for tbe hospital ship, and are planning to go caroling before Christmas. LOSE 1or2 DRESS SIZES for t he Hol idays! Honored Art ist Entered Field At Early Age The December Artiskl!-the- month honored by Junior Ebell Club of Newport Beach was directed into her chosen field by her seventh grade teacher and has gone on to win awards for her work. Mn. Henry H. Hill, the honored artist, will present a show in A1ariners Library I.his month. A Newport Beach resi- dent, Mrs. Hill received a degree in commercial art from S2:l Jose Sta!.e College. The artist utilizes watercolors, oils and acrylics for landscapes and ski and uillng scenes. Mn. Hill is a former top prize winner in F a 1 b l o n Square Art Competition and has staged numerous one- man 11hows tn northern and 80Uthern California. More Dear by '(ear Stanfo rd Graduate To Marry Orientals Prove Visible Asset Giving ·to O.thers In Season Again ·The H810D for glvin& iJ 1!pOl1 UI a&aln. Hundreds of Orange County youth are faced with uncertain luturea and a dubious holiday season. But area resident. can make ChriBtmas truly merry for those In the Al- bert Sitton Home. Mr. ICICf Mn. Milan Chiba """""""1 the •lllaaement oC their daughter, Kathe r In e Chiba to Frank Norman MJJto nen of Del Mar during a cocktall party for 50 frilndl tn their Lagunita home. ' By DAllBAllA DUARTE Of .... o.Hr ...... '"" II you appreciate I~ It ap. preciates for you. This bit ol Orieotal-eoundlng -· if a shade ullgram-maUcal, was inspired by a rug. Or, more precisely, Oriental rugs -some 1,300 of them. Possibly the most attractive feature about Oriental rugs, besides richness and color, is touted by Oriental rug expert, genial and garrulowi Karan Mehta who is accompanying a unique collection currenUy louring the Southland. A native of Bombay, lndia, and hokier of numerous film credits as actor, producer, technical advisor and'lecturer, Mehta maintaim a qusllty Oriental rug should increa6e in value at the rate of six per· cent per year. Thus, a rug can double in value in 15 years; in 50 years It sbou.kt be worth 3 to 9 times Its original price, and from the age of 50 to 85, it appreciates 11 to 50 times. Rugmatlng, described as a "dying art" by Mehta, began in the 15th Century aa a form of social security. During lean winter months, farmers work· ed at their looms, adding to a creation that was to take from five to six years to complete. The finished product was added to others in the storage closet, where they remained until a monetary crisis arose. Undergoing a sort of acid test, newly-woven rugs were placed outside the doonvay, in the street, or perhaps thrown into a muddy lake for a period of four to sii: months. After washing. true colors were re vealed and the rug was ready for the marketplace. Rugs reflect the feel ing of the locale in which they are made. both in color an d design. The rug also is named afler the area, hence such familiar names as Kastunir, Afghan, Kirman , Sarouk and Pakistan. Once utilized as a sort of traveling king-siz.e bed by desert armies and nomads, Oriental rugs became popular in the United States after \he lum of the 19th ~tury. But war years and depression days sounded a death knell to the formal drawing room of the Victorian era. Today, with rug: ma kl n a: being !<placed by b<tler paying jobs due to economic advances in the Far East, Orientals are making a come- back. Delcriblng the Uolted States as a ''forest for collect.on," Mehta adds pro 1 p ectl v e buyers or !ellen lhoWd make It a point to trade with reliable dealen. Contributioos of clothing and money will be a~epted tor lhooe In ihe ahelter. Mra. Kenoetlr Bosloo, supervisor of the receiving home,_ aak• that gifU be-delivered 1mwra1>- ped. tK>nations ahould be made from Thur.- day, Dec. 18 tl!roul!b Tueaday, Dec. 23, at the home's reception d'"esk. A film on ,Procedure, schooling and Sit.- ton Home activltlea has been prepared ftl< showings In clubi and schools. Appoinbnenil to view the movie may be made wllll Mrs. 1 Gene P-at 545-Q66. Th"1' prospective bride wu graduated from St an ford University and served as president of the Auocilted Wome:i Students during her senior year. She attended UCLA and Califonia State College at Long Beach and teaches in the Long Beadi School District. He cites, as an example, the case of a young New Y ort couple who deci~ to get rid of an old Oriental rug given to them as a wedding present by an aunt. '--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~..:;...~~J Her fiance is an alumnus of San Diego St.ate College and served as an officer in the U.S. Coast Guard. He now b assist.ant to the city mana1er of El Cajon. A dealer was summoned Insomniacs Preoccupied who was glad to give them $900. The couple we re delighted; they rushed out and purchased w a 11_t 0 _"a11 The trouble wilh llllomniacs, carpeting. The deaJer was says a UCLA psychlatrlst, is even more delighted: he they tend to become preoc- resold the rug for Ml,IMXI. cup I e d w It.ti the Ir Brain Research Institute. Whatever the problems are, insomniac1 generally focu.5 on their inability to sleep and shcrw little concern for their emotional difficulUes . The couple will be married In St. James Episcopal Church oa Feb. 7. Rebekah Lodge Ttlple Link Club of Mesa Rebekah Lodge has meetings the fourth Monday at 8 p.m. in various locatiom. Mrs. Douglas Atorgan at 543-1931 may be called for addiUonal information. Price of rugs depends on sleeplessness. many things including quality II!' Studies on imomnla suggest of wool (the higher the graii.n~ that chronic sleepleamess is .slopes, the better the wool), associated with moderate to number a! hand knoU per severe personality inch, ranging from 16 to Dl; disturbances as reflected by design, and dye q~Uty made psychological test.Ing, reports from roots, bark, 1nsects and Anthony Kales of UCLA's ether natural sources. !!A: The most common variety of insorrr:Ua b characterized by chronic inability to fall asleep readily. Other victims of the disorder may fall asleep easily but have persiltent dil- ficulty staying aaleep. . ' One of the most lntereslin( rugs in the $800,000 Con· noisseur Rug Collect.Ion being cireulated among Southland Sears stores is an M-year-old Halwai-Bidjar from I r a n valued at $30,000. The rug. was hand knotted in Kashmir by a son, his fa.the? and his grandfather over a period of 19 years. The 23-foot by 171-fOot rug is made en- tirely of natural dyes with variation of color from year to year barely discernible. The design, kept entirely In the head of the weaver, continues with a natu ral flow. ,\\f}L\DAY· SALE Rugs in the collection, al an average price range from $800 to St,200, were gathered from Afghanistan, Iran, India and Pakistan by Mehta and his associates, Dilip fi.1ewawala and Wolfgang Gutske. The Halwai-Bidjar and native weaver Hassan Zadeh will be on hand at Sears, South Coast Plaza, frorii Saturday, SFECIAI..S your "littlest an9el11 will love the tiny tot desi9ns1 a great selection fo r teens, ideal fo r 9ranny gowns 36" wide cuddly soft and warm cotton REG. 59c to 69c YD. VALUES guar. washable 37:d ~: 1: 3 • tb!wgh Thursday. RED COTTON FLANNEL . Weary, Dearie? Reed Bill Leery 9reat for Ch ristmas decor· ating mantle stockin9s, stuffad toys, cut-outs. available in vibrant Christmas red. 36" Wide 9ua r. washable • PRINTED SLINKY KNITS bold, mod desig ns in vibrant new color combinations on c:ingy, slin~y t riacetate kn it jersey. " a sophistica ted dress up fabric «"/45 " widths 198 BONDED AND UN BONDED Suitt.tqs VALUES FROM $3.98 to $4. 98 YD. wools, wool blends and synthetics. some bonded to acetate tricot. • PLAIDS • NOVELTIES • FANCI ES 22s ···=~·-.. 7'111 .. ·~ f --~·-"··...,....-.. J ., .. '1 .,~. ·:·"$~~ ;· RID IS FOR CHRISTMAS t • 4;. ,R. i:r! ' • . • ,; . .. • RED COTTON VELVETEEN ............ s2",0• RED BONDED ACETATE CREPE .... sr•, •. RED DEEP PILE RAYON VELVET .. s31\0• RED WOOL & RAYON FELT .......... s2'', •. RED WOOL FLANNEL .................... s2n,._ 'ILT IS 7r WIDI, OTHlll FIOM H" ti 54" WIDTHS .~ ... ~ • . ' • I -. ) DGVBE OONTliOL SALONS ... .... ,...,ul' .. • -.~A,,.MAna auaa W'lrl.ONfl' NEWPORT BEACH 430 PACIFIC COAST HWY. 642-3630 (2 Blocks East or Balboa Bay Club) 1840 W. 17th STREET 543-9457 SANTA ANA ' . ' ALSO IN Anaflelm, lffetly Hiii&. C...._, CNMlrlow, D---.,, 81..,.., L-t .. wood, Lettt .._., Ntwptft hKJrl, N. Hellywood, Oitterfe, P•odffct, Sn DI.,., ~ AM. s.t. hfboN, 5111dlrltd. TtlmlllO, Wflltrler. SoloM .... 111 Pt ..... , Soct.......,., S•11 .101•, 5'1111...,.•le, W•l11•t C,.... • . • ~ Coe11 Piao .._ Cosl<i M-Hunth•1too l oocfl -HUfttlotteto 8-h trl1t°' •t Sen 0 1 ... ,wy. -MJ.1SN 141..., • IMdt IW, -m.n11 o,_ M .... .,. T1rtr9 frWtlr 10 '"' t ...., let..., 't11 6 o,.. ~ 1 l-1,.,. ......... , ----·~--------·----------------------~------·----··-··-· -----.. --·--~ ·---··~-~--~~--.. Not Hunt ancl Peck Typing Method Devised B7 THOMAS 1'0llTIJNE Of •Dell• ........ Maud Ellen-Cllllcoat bis been ,........, 11J)twrlllq - her .... .,,.,, not by lll1l>odJ else'a --fw D ,..,._ Eicbt yur olds. Gia, the unemployed, Fairview State Hoopilal pall<nU, aloag with . thooaands al olhen ha .. teamed to type by the ·"Chilcoat Name the Fingers" ·method. Now Ji.1iss Chilcoat of Costa •Mesa has decided to retire. She is 79 years old. . The Chilcoat 1Jstem diUer1 from traditional typing in- struction, !he says, in that it teaches the keys up and down by fingers rather t h a n crosswise. The right lndu: finger, !or Instance, she calls the jumpy linger because il hits the "j," • ••u" and "m" keys. A drill will be to type about 50 word variations with .. jum" ~ the first three letters. Similarly, the left middle finger is called the December finger. Traditionally, Miss Chilcoat said, typing students learn first drills like "fjgh" and • ''vb'.1Jl1" with not a vowel in the bunch and no way to make -words. Teaching for a national · typewriter concern she wasn"t · 11atisfied with the system, so devised her own. "Neceaity is the mother of invention," she 18.id. She has written f o u r typewrlling textbooks a n d taught for the Army aDll !or Fairview HOlpital and now her system is bebg used in a Las Vegas pilot program to teach the Negro unemployed. Garn-Anon Proving Worthiness By CHAllLOTl'E SI.ATER (AP) -The 17 women sat around a cafeteria table in the kitchen al a downloWD church. They bad come for a weekly meeting of Gun-Anon, an organlJ.atlon for relatives of compulaive gamblers. This -nlgtlt • WU _,1pedal. There was a new eirf '-~ chiki·faced pt with uh blonde hair, enormous gray· blue eyes and a matem.~y dress that fell in folds around Ii• months ol pregnancy· The meeting was called to order by the member cbolen u leader for the night. The newcomer waa: tormally welcomed to the grQlP. She said nothing. Her on l "I response was a small. non· committal smile. Each woman nt'llde I state- menl Some told e'lpetiences; others ga-Oe bits of adviee. But whatever the statement. It always started with the one sentence by which every Garn.· Anon member tdent!fles herself: "My name is-, and 1 am the wife of 1 compulsive gambler." Story after story was told - stories of trust.ration, sepa.ra· lion, attempted s u l c id e, threats against children and psychiatric counseling. LitUe Mrs. New Face nid nothing. But slowly, as some of the stories began hitting close to home -her eyes fluttered or lowered quickly. The child within her .... 1d be her third to be bom into the hellish world cf compulsive gambling. 1bere were tried and true tips for the new girl: "Try not to scream at your husband anymore. You only hurt yourself." No response. ''If you feel depressed, no matter what lime, can one of us -please." Mrs. New Face raised her head and looked at the 1peaker. The discussion leader said, "You are not responsible for making your husband 1.m- ble." Everyone was Cinisbed, Mra. New Fitee sll11 had not said 1 W'Ord aJI evening. 'Ibere wu a moment of st~. Would tbe become part rl. Gam·Anoa? Finally, in a~ voice that lttmbled only alightly, she aald: "My name is Amy. and I am the wife of a compulsive gambler." TEACHER OF THOUSANDS Maud Ellan Chllcoot Miss Chilcoat says she has !aught 500 student.. ages 8 to 88 in her home since moving to Costa Mesa 10 years qo. DINERS FUGAlY TRAVEL Her plans now are to write poetry, to paint and to remain active in the Costa Mesa Chamber of Commerce Women's Committee, Costa Mesa Historical Soc I et y, Newport Harbor Business and Professional Women's Club, Costa Mesa Women's Club and Friends of the UCJ Library. Th• Fun N•v•r Seti On, Our Crui1e1 • lt1S 1.1,N .IOA--UIN HIL\.I IUMD NIWl'OltT IUCM, CALI!". nut . PHONE: 644°4600 SALE!· Pretty-up· for the holidays ••• Buffmns' permanent wave 17 • 5 0 reg. 35.00 permanents 2 5. 0 0 ~ ~00 Jl"Mll'llls l..cdt!'!I' pelliestfcr all !!lose special halidaj parties, Tbis &IRl value illdldes sassy "sat.Iii Cllt" 3Rd stylh(g (~Sanla Cat" alaie, 3S) Bemly Slidlo, all slo!es mept llarina BuftUm<)· Mendoy thru Saturday 10:00 A.M. t;i 9:30 P.M. N•wport Ctnt•r #I F11hion l1l1nd 444.2JOO .- DAILY PILOT JS rrhe ~p"lendrous lfCrld pf@lristmas at_, I f I I • YOU'RE INVITED TO VIEW AN OUTSTANDING DESIGNER'S FINE JEWELRY COLLECTION EXQUISITE EXAMPLES OF THE J~'s ART FOR LOVELY, atERllHED GtF'TS1 IN PRECIOUS METALS WITH DRIU.IMn' STONES AND PEARLS DCUGH1" FRO.M THE FAR CORNERS OF THE.EARTif. AU. CREA.TED BY' THI: Gltl'.AT KALPAKIAN, A nnRD--GENEAATION DESIGNER OP PRESTIGIOUS JEWll.llY WHO BRINGS THC ARTISTRY OF OLO-WORU> CRAFTSMANSHIP TO HIS DUl~S• MR. KALPAKIAH WILL. BE DELIGITTED TO SHOW YOU Hl9 COU.'EC'l'ION MID TO .DISCUSS NEW SEiTlNGS FOR YOUR TREASURED HEIRLOOM PIECES A't HIWPORT • DECEMBER 8 -DECEMBER 13, FROM II AM - 6 PM; Oft AT YOUR COHVIDIJDICC 8'/ SPECLAI.. APPOINTMENT. SEE OUR £XHIBIT IN ftOBtHSOH'S f'INEJEWIUIY• SHOPTONIGHT UNTIL9:30 • '· NEWPORT CENTER • FASHION ISLAND I . • 644-2800 line Curls Flow Softly Contro1J are oU colUures for the holidays as at least some ol the hairs on your head get a chance to do their own thing. In a pffiude to what may be the artful evening tumble of the early 70s heads are shak· inl out of the tlgh~ skimmed back look that characterized lonnal styles this past fall. The seventh seasonal coif. lure-couture match by Helen CUrtis turns up "tousled" and "carefree" in the headline talk by Geoffrey Beene, BUI Blass, Stan Herman, Luba and Chester Weinberg. The five designers still 11ke hair moving away from the face , but they stress the word natural in de sc ribing halrstyles they want to see with lheir ·own holiday fashions. Geoffrey Beene says he likes the look of longer hair that hangs softly to the shoulders and curves in genUy al the neck. He also likes the up- sweep for some of his evening dresses. Stan Hennan wants his look at the top to "be natural and undone with a sort of artful disarray." No matter how EASY-CARE Uni/orm6 simple lt looks, softer ltyling or tumble-at-the-top ls n o t something that readily drops into winsome waves. lt is, as Luba comments, a look of "calculated casual." The holiday luxuriance and adaptations for spring depend heavily on hairpieces that pro-· vide the extra height, length and versaUHty'. Designer fashions have a tum~f-the-decade air, com- bining fabrics of thi 19th Cen- tufY with glitter of the 70s, in- troducing' n e w proportions along with old-fashioned floor lengths, meshing modem with costume touches. · Hair helps make the switch from daytime to evening, and is paradoxically one of the most nostalgic and newest ex- pressions of the couture think· ing. Chester R. Weinberg likes his glittery coils in the hair for holidays. These loops of hair twisted with embroidery embody old·fashioned elegance with new fashioned know-how of the 70s. They're clip on decorations that shimmer off a short cut, and decorate wiglet <lr fall. "JUST FOR YOU" .. < • Smart fashion1, care.free fabrics fea· turin9 BARCO and other famous brand names. Many 1tyl" to choon from. 18 98 Some a• low•• • Cathy's Uniforms 1767 Nowpo<t llt.d. Costa Mesa 646°5381 llARCO "Yo1lll Find Everything 111 tht Lemon Frog Shop" Snowy Soft Holiday Knit •For fit •nd flair just the way you like it! • White •crylic crochet dress f<lr hippy holi· day wear •Pearl button trim •t neck opening and on eleevee • Joniot' high sises 6J 10 14.J CHARGE IT on Sean Rnolving Cbuge UPS AND DOWNS - Hairstyles (a b o v e) combine coils and falls for two variations. At left, a fall is pinned in- to coils on top of tile head, and at right, a wiglet secures an up sweep set off with a coil. Below, a fall is in- verted to allow a rush oU in a soft flow of cllrls. Ming Tree 7073 ~take this e:rquisite lrea1ure so expensive to buy made. Easy! Make elegant, beaded Dower "Ming" tree with pearl centers. Use pink beads (cher· ry blossoms ) or white (apple). Pattern 7073: directions fl owers, lotus bow I ar- rangement. FIFTY CENTS (coins) for each pattern -add IS cents for each pattern for first~lass malling and special handling; otherwise third-class delivery will take thtee'weeks or more. Send to Alice Brooks the DAI· LY PILOT, Ul5 Needle<rafl Dept., Box 163, Old Chelsea Station, New York, N.Y. 10011. Print Name, Addrtu., Zip, P1ttern Number. BIG tm Needlecraft Cata101 -40 pages, over 200 designs, 3 free patterns! Knit, crochet Jnstanµ:, · a r g y I e sweater, hats. dresses, swim suit. Quilt, en1broider, weave. Make toys, gifts, gay afgham. Send 50 cents. 50 INSTANT Gllt1. Make to- day -give tomorrow. 60 cents. "II Jiffy Rugs" to ll.nit. crochet, Wf!ave, sew, hook. 50 cents. Book of 12 Prize Af1b1111. SO cenll. . Bargain! Qullt Book 1 ha1 JG beautiful patterns. 50 ctnt.s. Ma....., Qaltt &oli I -pat- terns for 12 superb quil t.a .50 ctOU. Book 3. •IQante: rer Today'1 Llvlll1". II pattema. IO cents. ' • ' . • " ' ' Complete 12 WHk Holiday Progra111 NOCOlnUC1'S OfflR LIMITED CALL NOW YOU WILL GO'FROM SIZE 1• .-10 '" 30 Doy. ,, to 12 ill 31 0o,.. 11 '914111 31 D<iyi SHAPE SHOPPES INT . FIGURE SALONS • WISTU 477·1122 Jl l?S•!"'* SAMl& •tOCA 39~ . 1ll li1Yir1 MITllllllE 349-4711 llUl...Ull.._ llSStol RN.L$ 341-1714 11111 Sij•h• . A BRAND NEW DRESSMAKER ZIG ZAG ;~~~N6E SIMPLY UNSCRAMBLE WORDS AND MAIL NOW/ 1ST PRIZE fll Br1nd Ntw 1229.95 DRESSMAKER ZIG·ZAG 24 CAM Sewina MKl'l int. 2110 PRIZES SIJO.ID Discount ·certlflc1tts. TIMM 1r. IOOd tow.rd the purci\as• of Int S229.95 DRESSMAKER Sew· int MKhiM.. ,. --==~.o...--"1 I • TIHS lNTllE fllD.DY[t .......... ...,..,. ..... u IUllMOS.. I IH'l.f lllYUD'1.. fill Ill YOUI MAME ARI ADnD1 , , , Tillll CUT 0111' Alfttl I oomo LINES ••• n11.a, SUL • MAL I I Enter the "SMART MONEY" I I CtlU~n;i PUZZLEuaWIN PRIZES! I I ENTRY FORM Urm:n1mblt lhe1e Worell-Hint: n., All Pert.I in to Sftinl I I DON'T WAIT! ENTU TODAY! I I I wtSNCI ..................................... CT11TH -............................................ I AMII[ ...................................... ,, UOTTIN .................... -....................... . MHI .......................................... l(PZIP' •••••• -...................................... I LINIDIE-............................... t·•• MltlTTA,. ............................................ . I IMDM -··•·· .. ··-"•·····••••••••••• ....... IJtDSStcl ........................................... . NAME .. ·-·························----· .. --····-··--·············-···-- ADDRESS ...................... -........ -......... -........ -- CITY .................. -............. STATE-................ ZIP ... _ .. _,_ NO STAMP NEEDED Do Not Cut Here 'ohf Here YOlil M4i1t h•I '!kok1' Ttp9 or Glue) end Mill * -I -BUSINESS ~LY MAIL -I --I '1r.t ct ... "•""'' Ne. 122 Mlr,••tllo, 11---I --I CITY SIWllO MACll!NI COMPANY --I -......... ., -I --I Mooywllo, 1too ... 61501 --I -I . -~---------------------- 1 " •• • ~ I • l, , -... ' ; ; • • ; i • i ? • • I $ • $ ! • • Reason· . .. Peering Around To Strut ---.__- ' Monday, Dtctmbtr I , 1%9 TV ·Stars Cast • Text In NEW YORK (UPll -J1.1lia Ughrbehlnd the reader series, girls identifying so strongly , Baker, Corey .Bllkct and.EBrt Is credited with spotting how wilh whal they 'Jaw QD J. Waggedom, three wtU· J h Je 1s· H · di J ' known cbaracters frOm the the Ju ia c aracters relate to le v 100. e 1mme ate y JU.Ila television se ries, nciw are ghetto youngsters. lhought of ways to use this cast In a book1sb role. . lie is director or the ijtentiflcaUa.1 to help the MR. AND MRS. Walter The new , culing aims to Educator Training Center and youn1sters in reading. help ht:lndttd.s of •'--··--nds of a consultant to the Los 'l1le "Money Walk" tells bow They'll -~ Jo attmUon DeMers of Hlr.ld""'"n Beach uNUN .......... '"'"" disadvantaged . yoonpters to A·.1geles public school system. Corey and Earl start out one and you'll have reason to celebrated their 48ib wedding improve their reading ability. The center publiahes the day to play and follow a strut with Blk1's front panel· aoolversary by renewing their They slar betwee-.1 the readers. mysterious trail of shiny new · ed piece of art.eslry. ' wedding vows in St. Bonaven· covers.cf "The Money ·Walk ," It was while working wilh coins to an unusual adventure. Th.ls tailored dress with its ture's Catholic Church. th e newest booklet in the Rele-public school pupils who reside Most of the first printing of snappy tabs. and pockets ls The same evening the ccuple vant Readers series. The in disadvantaged areas or Los "Money Walk'' was put into .really quite soft and \\'ere ft.led at a dinner party readers attempt to provide Angeles lhat he began to hear use at the start of the school . atten~ed by 34 guests. They ghetto-area cl)ildren with the children talk more and year. In Los k1geles it Is feminine . Tr¥ it in cran-were married in 1921 in Min· reading matter that ls more more atx.>ut Corey and Julia being used tn the fourth, fifth, berry wool for· winter and nesrita, and tlave b e e n meaningful to them than most and Earl. and sixth grades, where the butternut Uzren for summer, residents in Huntington Beach regular school texts. He thought It amaling to see students have only & third- . Other · fabric suggestions: for Ute past five years. Dr. William Glasser,.guiding so many ghetto.area boys and arade reading Jev,J. double knit, raw silk, flan-i----------~-------~=~;~~~====~;~~------------------- nel, gabardi~1 broadcloth, pique:, syntheucs. 62339 is cu~ in Misses ~s 10.18. Horoscope ..... · .... ·. - ················· '°"Tl' ·--11 SUe 12 req·uires ap- prGJCimately 3~ yards of 54" fabric for the Jong version and 2~ yards of 54" fabric for the short versioo. To order 62339) state size, in· elude name, address and 2lp code. Send $1.25 plus 25 cenl.s first~lass postage and handling for each pattern. Send orders rOC books and patterns to SPADE,\, Box N Dept. CX·15, Milford, N.J. 08848 • Grain Leathers Simulated grain leathers with an antique or· "euir sauvage" finish look like ge- nuine leather and are far less costly, the National Institute or Drycleaning says. Virgo: Take Pl.unge TUESDAY DECEMBE~ 9 .BY SYNDEY OMARR PbUOIOPhlea DUI)' duL Two leaden, botb ~e, could lay their vtews tn• tlifi· line. Key la lo bow tbe t; truth can be: abstract. ARIES (March 21-April 19): Be recepUve. Some ide:as v.·hich appear unorthodox may be key to your succtss, Day when you make real gat1s thr:ough reading, w r i ti n g , publ~hlng. TAURUS (Af!ril :J!>May 20)1 Coram with what is nebulous is featured. You wonder about money, reliability of others. But real conctm should be ability lo be truthful within. Means don't try io fool yourself. GEMINI (May 21.June 20)' Bigger they come th e harder they fall. Remember this tcr day. Some may ,try to pressure you. Stand your ground. Da.i't sign an y\papers until contents are lupy ex- plained. understood. .. CANCER (June 21 .. h~ 22), New mOQn posiUon cr.tncides with your ability to handle basic tasks. Don't be sidetracked by associate who has get-rich-quick scheme. Ob- tain hint from Gemini mes- sage. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22), This ~uld be the st.art o f something big. New moon is in area of chart related to roma:.ice, creativity, relations with children. New program fa vors you. R e s p o n d ac· cordingly. VIRGO (Aug. 23-&pt. 22), Avoid tendency toward undue delay, Putting off what must be dme is not wise. Take co1d plunge. You will fmd this is best course today. Message becomes increasingly clear. UBRA (Sept. 2.1-0ct. 22)' Money and relativu may not mix too well-be fair hut firm. Spotlight is on your ability to be selecUve. Choose· the best -take quality over quantity. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Avoid bei'.1g possessed by possessioil6. Be . .!'.P!ing to . relinquish the o u t m o d e d . Stre:aml'ine methods. Moderniz:e your basic ap- proach. Don't be weighed down by trivia. SAGl1TARIUS (Nov. 22· Newlywed Tutt/es Honeymoon in Mexico ·Dec. 21): Cycle continues high; very goo1ffor new starts in new direc\.ions. Stress originality, Put ideas to the test. Ta"ke a chance on your own abilities. You will come out ahead. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): No one can hurt yoU - except yourseU. Means see persons, situationtjn realistic light. Much illusion surrounds you. Rel~ to fear the unknown. Be direct, frank - and truthful. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20·Feb. 18): New friends are featured. People who come into your We: today can play important roles. Know this -and res. pond accordi1gly. Accent on your dreams. They can come true. . PICES (Feb. 19·March 20): New moon is in area of chart related to prof essio nal achievement If detennined, you succeed. Otherwise. major opportun ity could evaporate. Know this; be ready for big chance. IF TODAY IS YOUR BIRTHDAY you attract persons with the ir problems. You are refreshingly frank. When you don't know, you ask. Many who do not al first undersl.8'.ld you end up as your close friends . You are abobt to M"\iark upon an adventure. To lfnd ovt Who'I ~'l lw ,,.,.,. '" Cic"Tli.'~s!:~I ~1~1 1or,.,....M~·~~ Wom9t!." Send birtlldl!I a'ICI 50 cents lo Om1rr Astrology S.-treh, !lit DAil Y St. Cross Episcopal Church in Hermosa Beach was the setting for the evening rites uniting Jeanne Colmery and John Howard Tuttle. Miss Alice McFadden served PILOT, r.ox :mo. Gr•nd C9fltr11 s11. u...., N..,. York, N.Y. 10017 The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. David William Colmery o! Herrnosa Beach and the bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. John Joughin Tuttle of Newpori Beach. To repeat her vows after the Rev. Richard I. S. Parker. the bride chose a full length c:-epe. gown with embroidered lace on the bodice, sleeves and hemline. Her veil was shooJ. rler length and her bouQuet "'BS fashioned o( white rose- buds and atephanotis. Forum Meets as maid ot honor and brides-. -;;;;;;;o;;;;;;;;;;o;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;"\I maids were J\fiss Patricia ll Martz and Miss Barbara Tut- tle, sister of the bridegroom. They wore 1imelight crepe gowns and carried daisy porn· pons. Dr. Wayne L. ruchey was best man and guests were seated by Jerald D. Colmery, brother of the bride, and Mi· chael B. Cox. The couple received 250 guests in the Westport Beach Club following the ceremony then left ror a honeymoon trip to Acapulco. They will reside in Torrance. The new Mn. Tuttle: is a graduate of Galilomia West· ern University. Her hu sband received his BS THE N-E·W LQQK mal~ej for HAIRSTYLING by the area's TOP STYLISTS! * * and MBA degrees from the University of Southern Cali- fornia. litrs. Albert Launer Y.'111 Both are fourth general.ion discuss the Other Wise Mani Califomiaris. before U'le Orange Countyl;=;=:;==::=:======I Speakers Forum tomom>w ih WE'RE IN ' the Orange home of Mrs. Ernest s. 11=. KAHOOTS Compllment1ry Mike-ups SMOKE CHOKE CROAK! or •• , QUIT, and UYE • UYE • UYE Learn how. rnE& consult-•lion and details. Spon• 110~ by N•tl..W Alltf. l1Mklnt C.vncll. can for appolnlr11f!nl Mt-416.1 er 471·5127 Gua.ra.ntctd to help you quit wiUlln Pf'Obltrnt! 10 d"YJI No • WITH SANTA CLAUS _ ... -·~­,, ... "" .,.,,,_ "" -. ..... ·-~ _ .. -- • F1cl1ls M1nfcur11 ond Pedicures By Appointment VIYIANI WOODAlD cosMmcs malhe~ WIG & BEAUTY KNIT WIT SALON 50-3<M6 •SOUTH COAST l'l.A%A Lowwr wt o,_.u, woe~m·a 2SO·D I• 17" ltfnt '-9t Sn ot.p ,.,,, HllLG•EN SQUARE I ,,._.1 141·211 j COSTA MDA 1!:::;=========='1~~ ........................ ~ • ' ' • ••'II": • I •, -~1( 'f ;< ~ tr-.. .. . ' ~ ~·-' • ' ; • ~}· .. .' ,~~ " . " .J ·."K Diamond solitaires from left: Emerald cut. S2.450. Brilliant, $1,650. Brilliant, $750. Pear shape, S 1.850. Marquise, S2, 100. Brilliant, $550. Oval, $850. ladies 14 kerat gold diamond Glycine watches in all the latest atyles. From left: $395. S595. left 10 right'. Cltmer. $550. Swirl, S425. Ma<qUise cluster; $300. Flower cluster, $850. With turquoise dial, $795. S295 . Free form cluster, $1 ,250. , SLAYICK'S J•w•1•rs Since 1917 18 FASHION ISLAND, NEWPOR! BEACH -6#-ll80 Y1•• Ch•rt• Acco11"t W1lcoM1 -l•~kAm1ficor4, Metfl' Chtrt•• *••· Op" MOftdoy t~rv Saturday .. 111 9,30 p.m. -- ------------------------------------------------------- II O.ilY PllOT TUMBUWllDS By Tom K. Ryon SALLY BANANAS MISLEWEEDS! SWESTIE!! MONDAY OECEMIOt I l :M86)(j)Hlirt'1 l_, (C) (30) LllC)' 1in1 J.lm 11111 CrtiS t111 tMIM idtl for their 1M111al school II 'l '• WEI.I.. R:l! ONE Tl!IN<1, I DON'T CARR'<·COU.ISrON COVl:IV\GE I :• II lie"*-(C> (liOJ J•IY Dunphy, 111111-·I-(C) (30) • .... All• .. (C) (90) Gfflh I ll Pit K.rrinfhlll. Sftl!I· w1tw, MontJ Hill, Hotnrd St&rm i nd lloslll1 ""'411t . •"""' PERKINS By John Milts ·-. -!Cl (JO) ... 1 .... ----------, ~---,,.,.-_,.--------. ~----------. ----------Utkll 'itftlithll. -.,:,.~ ~: .. ..... , ....... (CJ (tO) J . "'' ...... • n. 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(C) {60) Silll Cl•r it rMst•• air An111 M11il AIMl'lf'lttti, ltb Nl'l'lllrt. >Ny Mt-. fr111t f111hi11t, Ltl'lllJ hrr •Ml H""f ltll'IMcl D tlll CJ) D n. -(C) {Ii)-..,.. ii tzA p 11 .... tlltifJ '""" .. ,.... ...... S.•· twn IN.; ..,.. .,_ DMltlll " """" • lfflif wtiti ..... • Im ...... (9J) .,., SM T• "*""'·" .,,.. Nlllllilitlll:llll " 111111· I :•. W •s1uviw (C) (le) t1l!y IM ffulta II dlrcnldM. G lll1 llM• C1111t (Cl ilO) • L11 btr .... J Utltttl (30) Cu11b 1rt E1rth1 llnt. Jth11 F1r·1 't'(hs 111• Douc Mc:Clu11. t:M IDT• T .. ltle Trlttl ft) llDl •TONIGHT'S BEST BET! ·-" '°' ,,_ (30) *THE DORIS DAY SHOW! U Cll -~-(C) llO) eero ...... .., !Cl (30! ., ... a.. ...... fC) (30J .,,.. ii ........... lrllr ... ,..., °""· I "llriflltll •• ..,.... .,.rtn1111t. Ill Cll • ..... (JO) .... fq (JO) lutw W1rl. ...... J4 ft) (IO) • • Wll. ... llW IC) (lOI ·-iC)(lO) ·--('°) , ..... - -(C) (30) .-. .. ""'' (C) (lO) ... a.... t., (le) ......... ~ (ti» Dick .,-.,_ ••• 9'/a.i ... (IO) 9(1)...., .. fl> tt 111) •w.fi ,._. ,..,_ Sll'll~." ·-(JO) 8 (I) Trwll tt "'-"•"' IC) ID C--1 ...., IC) (30J !l'l n.t ... !Cl (lO) '"'llQ!I CIJ •-(t) (60)1 '1Mld:r111.-l'loJI• MlljtlCt •·1un· fililtl1 .W MICGnw 1111 llltlrie1 A'!OtiWlwt.lltatta1)e.1111 Ji•• ""1W ill tM LMf lnflc:ll SaloDll ..... .., ,.,. ill ""911. .L D. '-, lltiAMI Umil 1111 Dilu ('lfl( ... ..... "-" !Cl (IOf """'' Drllff ...U •I I killlfiM, I Cf\ar• ..... 1llllLllllpCMlrt. ........... (.JO) ew ... , (JO} WllJ Liwi111· U.•Mwie: .,. ... Will .. "'"7" llOM, 0.1111 °'' tnl IN CJWy ~ '41 -hr,_ M1rlditll, llHll. Gill .. blh, ·-"' • .., (Cl (30) ·--/1-(IO) ·-.... (C) llO) llJ Ml ·-(C) ('JOI TUESDAY DAmME MOVIES t:98 ...... ...,-Cotltl-.. (M · N) 'Sl-l tlt• DtlllwJ', Elf1 ltliMa, r111U1 Tuel«. 1Ul8 .,....,_* (iffllMI 'lS -'"" 1111111, Nh Dfitil. ti.1•1r1 ... (~ '34- w. c . .-......... . n ) '33-Cnt• Cal'tio, John l11ry· Vt•..... Mii 111111' {...,_ 1111*"'> ~ ~ ..... c,.,..,, Otrit Dq, Gerd1111 I• .... '""' ........... tMttl} '3! t ... -IJlll ~. louitl ~11'1,.dl, 4:l0. (ct ...... .... ttmi" ,, .. IW s~u. ..,..., ·~i• • .,..,... Diet: iD..,.. ~ c.r <••· '"""11. """' r,.;s. PERH"PS WE SHoaLD WAVE LET Ml55 JASPER' TALI:: wttl-1 PAU t ! WMY DO YOU SUPPOSE-HE CALLEO? MOON MULLINS . ROD'S 7HllEAT 10G070 THE POLICE HAS BllOIJ6HT AN IWSTAWT REACrJON FROM •cHIM- 5W~P.I '"' L,ADY PLUSH· BOTTOM·· WHEN WE MIRl'D YoU, 'JOU ~IP YOU WEfl!E: r PUNCTUAL- OK~Y, 80')5! <,;IVE MR:. M:Ai.ORE A. SAMPLE OF 'fVH..tlT MAPPEWS TO PUNKS WHO T.ALK TOO MUCH/' Mun AND JEFF MISS PEACH l 'DON'T WANT NoTtl1N'/ I GIVE! I MAKE PEOPLE +1APPY! REALLY? +10WCAN YOU MAKE ME +1 PPY? ™ING WAS MOW6: EASY! YOU PAL AROUND WtT+1 ME AND YOU'LL LOOK TEN FEET TALLER!r/~:-ol,. • ' l• W';j ~ WM.AT OOES 'YOUR: FATHER DO Fett.A LNING FRAt-4Clt:U;.; I DON'i KNOW, Bui /Ill MOTHER SA'IS HE MAKES A FEW PHONE CALLS1 TAKES 3·MOURLU~ES, l\IAP.S AT HtS DE'S~~.DTHEN COMES HOME GKDU,M'i_ ! ;, Ii • By-Harold Lt Doux By Ferd Johnson YES-ISN 1T "THIS MoND,AY? By Al Smith BUT LETS STAY AWAY FROM MU1'r! '7A'I ! IF HE. Ge:T$ 'SLAVE-WAGES,' I'LL BET HE WORKS FOi< °™E SAME U>MPl'NV AS lllY FATHER! .. w /J ·B . mE\<. I ; By Charles Barsotti By Charles M. Scihulz ACTllALLV, I Cl'.l'IT 0141CRSTAND MATH AT ALL LET'S FACE ff ... l DoN'T EVEN "11DER5TANO SCHOOL ! TELEVISION VIEWS Leslie Uggams Hm1s Show :;-,, l'!EW YORK (AP) -CBS ne<work executive• hope that the replacement of ~'The Leslie Ugga~ Show" with Glen Campbell's variety hour .. \vi)l ~etp the ratings of the program that follo\vs. M1ss1on: Impossible." AFTER SEVERA'L fairly successfu~ se?sons. the adventure series seems· to be dropping 1n tlld ratings. One view is that the weak Ugganms "lead-in .. allected the program's popularity. Another is 1.hat the angry departure of both ~lartin Landau and Barbara Bain, in a salary di~· pute, has something to do witll the smaller aud· iences. A THIR'D opinion, offered here, is that the for· mat of "Mission: lmpossible' 11s so rigid and the story lines so much the same that viewers, after plenty of exposure to them, are losing interest. Sunday night's hour was th usual complicah:d skein of disguises and fakery )n which the heroic team saved the throne of a food king fro1n the plotting of his evil brother. lt featured a phony kid~ ney transplant operation, but 1at was only a sliiht variation of a familiar theme. : THE GREATEST disaster tt sho\v business_!;_ a comedy-fantasy that doesn't f l}me off. Satu~y night's "The Littlest Angel" hfd the hard luck tdibe a musical-fantasy<ornedy and 1vas so cute and ~oy about heaven and Christmas til must have turged a way a lot of viewers. ' This ~minute '1Hall of F'ame" adaptation of a well known story received a lavish production - heaven, \Vhere most of the scenes were played, wa! beautiful, all soft clouds with backgrounds of stars and angels 'vith fine \Vhite robes, big wings and golden haloes. JOHNNY WHITAKER of "Family Affair" seemed uncomfortable playi.Jlg an 8-year-old shep- herd boy who goes to heavec and doesn't like it The musical score was bouncy. undistinguished and, like the dialogue, tended to,vard the saccharine. Some very talented, attractive performers were mixed up in this -Fred Gwynne, E. G. Marshalt Tony Randall, Connie Stevens. They \Vere \vasted as \Vas Johnny. PRESIDENT NIXON 'S ne\vs conference tonight at 6 PST will upset the network schedules in various 'vays. CBS will skip uMayberry RFD" and, if neces. sary, •'The Doris Day Show." ABC will follow the cerference with 41The Sur-- vivors" no matter what the time. After that broad~ cast. "Love, American Style," may run through the late ne"'S period. NBC will Just get a late start on its 11World Pre- miere movie, Jack Webb'3 "The O.A.: ?\1urder One." · De1a11is the Me11ace .. ' , ........ ------------------------------~---..-.,,..·~---. , -,..., .... -.. ---··----7 • ' . ' Revival , New PlaY. Applauded in NY B1 WIWAM GLOVER NEW YORK (AP) -Two very unlike shows with a com- mon aim of provoking laugh- # ter opened around Broadway Thur>day night. Both scored strongly. The elegant frivolity o( British drawing room comedy came back to the Billy Rose Theater with revival of Noel Coward's vintage dain ty , •'Private Lives." The murkier thrust o f present-day ab!urdist satire went on di~Jay at Lincoln Center's Forwn. playhouse with "'lbe Increased Difficulty -<1f-C o n centra t ion'' by Czech o s lovaltia's Vaclav~ Havel. Porter's affectlon1te direction they give the lines split-second dash and romp with lusty abandon when a bit of action is needed to gloss t h e charad~'s essenUal inertia. The production originated with the Association o f ~ucing Artists, which lost its New York base last season. On the basis of road tour raves, David Merrick has taken charge of the local presentation. Byplay between the sexes looms large aJso in the Havel play, but is treated with a lot of diff@rent mood, style and purpose. It was seen at a matinee preview )eceuse of the opening conflict. The Czech playwright serves Perfect _M~rder Robert Conrad is a deputy district attorney faced with solving an almost perfect murder, tonight at 9 p.m. on Channel 4 in the world premiere of "The D .A.: Murder One" colorcast movie. Mol'ldly. bectmbtr 8, 1969 DAILY ,ILOT J 9 At LA's F airf a x ~oh! Calcutta!' Mostl y Good Dirty Fun By TOM Trr\JS Of ttM Dtlly Pli.t Iliff The best way to enjoy "Oh! Calcutta!" is to check your hangups at the door._but don't forget to bring along your sense of humor. ard whether It ls hls work or the last bast.ion of puritanism. not, will dlsgust even 'the Whether it Is or not, it re .. broadest minded playgoer. mains, tf not good clean fun, The most talked about scene at least good dirty fun. inevitably will be the "sex· 1-:;iiiiE~i='i~~~~ijjj;: It's not a show for every- body. Those easily offended should give the Fairfax Thea- ter in Los Angeles a wide perlment" skit which closes the first act-and just a few years earlier would h a v e cl05ed the show as well. This one is a curious mixture of "OHi CALCUTTA!" " music•• utlre aw1...i br K.rvw111 sexual satire and blatant bur. Tv111,., written b'f s-mu.i llecktlf. lesque, and one comes away J11le1 Fi ll,..., 01n Gr~rt, JOl'lll h th h L ... -. J1cQue1 Ltvv, LeoMrd Me111, from It not certain W e er e 01vkl N1Wl'Nln ,..., Jtot.oui fl1n1.,,,, en~· yed it or not. $Im $h9P&r(I, Clovll Troulllt, Ktnntth 0 well Chor-graphed bal-Tvna.n 11!11' S'-'"""" Y10en. '"°""° "v Oll••l>hr bv ~roo S1PP1,....1011, ,,_,v lets in the buff highlight the 1no:1 uati11n1 b\I J•"'" T1t1011. "'"d s-nd act, the second unfor· b'f Ml(he;ll ,.,.,,,,,,,., Cl)ll(tlYt(I ll'ICI di· """v rec:ted tw J1cQ11n Levy, Pf'11 ... 1.a '' sketch in lhe first act lnvolv-tunately backed by a countri-tt.. F1lrl1x Ti.e.11r. 1'07 Btvr<tv fied rock ballad with lyrics a1v11., I.OJ ·~:·c.&sT ing a middle class couple who like "They sent him up to Ann1·L" A111t1n, L111 cr11e111. Ml· ~ enter, with no little trepida· Fol-m where they teach you cntll• ~rsll, Sltnar\ McQu"n, Te~v , , <>v MlnlYln, Si.etdlln Pffneo, M1r90 S..P-t1on, the world of the swmger to be wholesome." It would be ~~=~: M•"1" s-'"" Geo•o• -and draw a pair who appar-far more effective with ~n in- ently invented the pastime. · strumen~I accomparument berth. But for those who revel . . . . and pos1Uoned further from 2001 .... oct,w.I)' ClNll!'A SC•l .IN 1.lETROCOLOR Details first on the Coward piece, the premiere of which attracted a combination of elderly nostalgia sighers and youthful hunters-of campy fu n. up another of his mordant--------------------- comments o n increasingly in the riotous ribaldry of a The fuM1est bit In this scene the first ballet numbeF·.---' good dirty sho~·. "Oh! Cal-comes when the husband, who Finally, and most appropri- cutta!" is it. warns his wife not to tell ately, comes a scene in which The key word here is where he works. blurts it out the actors strip. down while Each coterie found plenty of mirth in all tt¥iSe brlttily witty -comments: about romance and matrimony which have surviv- ed repetition and a g i n g remarkably well. Performing the quadrille of marital mixup are Tammy Grimes, Brian Bedford, Suian- ·ne Grossmann and David Glover. Under Step be n ---ONCE UPON A TIME IN THE WEST nowy .. cuSIE anylliD&·y~ WIDI ~en RESTAVRANT" ..... ARID tlUTHRIE COL.OR ~·/Deluxe UIMtld Art1tlt ~ • ""~A 1". l mechanistic h u m a n rela· tionships in an era of com- puterized efficiency. Using a fractured technique in \Vhich time and events unreel, rewind and entangle, "Increased Difficulty" relates the affairs of a scient.ist- philosopher with four pursuing . women. The Lincoln Center com- pany, supervised by Mel Shapiro, works at the elusive parable with s o m e in· consistency but Is highly com- mendable in general. 3rd BIG WEEK Call 673-6260 For Information Alto Playing -''THE FIRST TIME'' "good." U "Calcutta!" were offstage comments are heard, I · · himself in a stah at making mere y an exercise in pornog-conversation. presumably from outside the raphy, of mixed doubles per-theater. Jt is. after an evening Spanish Plays Next Production at SCR forming in the nude purely for Terry Southern, the author of sexual satire, a lampoon on shock value, then the show of ·•candy," is not on the list "Oh ! Calcutta!" itself, a re-I-======= would be an abysmal failure. of contributors, but the dia· minder that it's all in fun and But the material-or· at least Jogue for the "Delicious lndig-that comedy, however ap- two-thirds of it-is genulnely nities" scene, in which a Vic· proached, is the name of the furuiy, and therein ties its torlan era rake is caught in game here. "An Evening of Spain's Most Controversial Playwright" is the subject of South Coast Repertory's next production, a trio of one-act plays by Fernando Arrabal. The triumverate will open Dec . 1 2 for seven perfonnances, through Dec. 21 at SCR's Third Step Theater in Cos ta Mesa. Milt Rogart, a ne\vcomer to the repertory company. is directing two of the plays, ''Guernica" and "Picnic on the Battlefield." SCR actor Hal Landon J r. makes his directorial debut with the third offering, "The Tricycle." Cast in "Guernica" are Ellen Ketchum, Jim Waring, Bill Brady, Darrell Kitchell, Don Castle, Lynn Y.organ and Jeff Park. Appearing in both *'Picnic" and "Tricycle" will GW C Choir Cuts Album Golden West College Singers have just produced a 12-inch stereo album with which they hope to finance a spring con- cert tour. "Oh Happy Day" features the A Cappella Choir and Madrigals in a dozen selec- tions ranging from classical numbers to the title track, a recent Negro spiritual hit. It will be available to the public in December through the college book store and music stores along the Orange Coast area, according to choir director Gerald Schroeder. be Jim Baxes, Martha McFarland, Charles Hutchins, Harvey Kahn and Bob Strick!· ing. The evening of Spanish plays Is the first project in SCR's New Theater Series. Othe r l esser known playwrights from other coun- tries will be presented in future productions .. Tickets may be secured at the SCR box office. 1827 Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa, or by calling 646-1363. 'Birds' Set In Concert Resphigl's "The Birds,'' a musical composition of highly descriptive themes written by early European composers describing such birds as the Hen, Dove, Nightingale, and Cuckoo, will open the program when Cal State Fullerton's Symphony Orchestra presents its fall concert Tuesday. Cooducl<d b y Prol"'°r Daniel Lewis, the Symphony On:hestra is the s e c o n d largest musical ensemble on the Cal State Fullertu.1 cam- pus, comprised of over 70 pieces. The 8:30 p.m. concert will be beld in the Little Theater, located in the Music Speech Drama Buildlng. Tickets, on sale for ,1, can be pur.chased at the campus theater box of- fice , open daily from noon to 4 p.m. Further t i c k e t in· formation may be obtained by calling 870-3371. measure of success. his own girl trap, must have "Oh! Calcutta!" may prove Being of various authorshi p been inspired by that notor-to be a harbinger of theater of (the credits range Crom Sam-iOQs novel. And, while no au-the future, a breaking down of uel Beckett to John Lennon), thor is linked to his material, i--======= "Oh! Calcutta!" is naturally, the "Dick and Jane" segment almost necessarily, uneven. involving sexual hangups and There are moments of romic techniques. certainly reads brilliance -coming, by the like a Felffer cartoon. way, when you least expect On the less impressive side, them-and there are times the choral exercise "Suite for \1·hen one feels almost ember-Five Letters" is a waste of rassed for the performers. But time and talent, staged early these moments are int e,1. enough in the show that it is changeable, for what might be forgotten by intennission. most appealing to one person "J ack and J ill," which bears might be totally reprehensible the sick stamp of Sam She~ to another. For this viewer, the most screamingly funny sce ne s come back to back in the sec- ond act, and involve no nudity at all (in fact, most of the show is played fully clothed). These skits are a father-son "chat" on the back porch of a rural home and a stag club HELD OVER 3rd WEEK meeting that comes on like Gangbusters -or rather, like the Lone Ranger. Both defy description, at least in this newspaper. Th e r e is an uproarious 'Luv' Comedy Held Over Orange County audiences are falling in love with "Luv" -and as a result, the Murray Schisgal comedy is being held over at the Sa.1 Clemente Community Theater. Originally scheduled to close its three-weekend run last week, the MurTay-Schlsgal ' comedy will be extended for two additional perfonnances next Friday and Saturday, ~:=i "die ~letftd ..._.... ___ _ ALSO J•ckie Gleaton In "DON'T DRINK THE WATER" • -""'°"°caoo .. ..._. (!] Plus Dick Vin Dyke In plANEr ..ApES Dec. 12 and 13. lrvi Ch P t The show is being staged at fie orus resen S the Cabrillo Playhouse, 202 Eve Show Starts 7 p.m. Cont. Sun From 2 p.m. Avenida Cab r 11 Io . San I;;:=::~;;:~~;;, i Holiday Music Program 1r=~=:·=E=it=~~=by=· ~=~='li=~~=·i=~~=·:=h·=~=1:~;1111 The 64-member University Chorus of the UC Irvine will open its fifth season with a program of sacred and secular Christmas music Saturday and Sunday, Dec. 13 and 14, at 8:30 p.m. in the Science Lecture Hall. The chorus will be ac- companied by the 92-rnember University Orchestra. Con· ductor will be Dr. Maurice Allard, assistant professor of music. The program will include "Gloria" by Antonio Vjvaldi and the "Gloria in Excelsls Deo" portion of Bach's "Mass tn B1Minor." Guest harpist Elizabeth Tur· rell will perforin with the Chorus in presenting Benjamin Britten's 1 •Ceremony of Carols," a rarely performed 1943 work written in LaUn and Mldd1e English. The program will conclude with a medley of traditional and new carols. The final part of the pr~ gram will spotlight several student conductors. Chorus president Steven Warner of Lofl8 Beach wil l direct the Shaw-Parker arrangement of "Hacia Belen Va un Borrico" (Towards Bethlehem Goes a Donkey ). Sharon Y.artin of Sunset Beach will lead the choir in a Swedish folk song. "Now It Is Christmas Time." Eve Evans of RJalto will be both conductor and soloist for Jester Hairston's "Mary's Llt- tle Boy Chile." Associate Conductor Carole Boelter will conduct "Sweet Baby Sleep." Soloiats will In- clude Judy Edgerly of WhltUer and Tom Anthony of COsta Mesa, Jack Millet of Tustin will make his first appearance as accompanist for t b e Chorus. Tickets to the program are free and may be obtained In advance from the UCI Fine Arts box office on campus 0t by calling 833-tlt7, IAUOA-, 673-4048 o,.. 6!45 1lf I ... lkl .. , .... ,..,.," .... NOW SHOWING The Best Double Feature Eve ry Presented! ond ,,ITS_,., 1HS 111151'. ..... Ill• --CONTINUOUS SHOW FROM 2 p.m. SAT. And SUN. -DICK VAN DYKE .... OC)I .. ~ Ul514 ........ -"'""'°' .... _ ..... _____ ..., __ Na1ional Gener at Pictures Ptewnll LU VAii Cl&U. •DAY OF AllG&ll" ·---SecolMf Popid• Anractio• and from tht stars of ''Born Fr•' comes "RING OF BRIGHT WATER" STA.Rn CHJllSTMAS DAY 81rb1r1 Strelund Omar Sharif "FUNNY GIRL" stereo103FM ·the sounds of the harbor ~==1~:--7 youve never· heard it so good I .. , . \ a_ DAii. V PILOT Monday, Dectmbtt 8, 1~9 ~Manson Family' Life Ended • Ill Desert Cupboard • • • (CoaUnaed from Pagt 71 He WU born Nov. 11, 1934. In Cinclnnati to a 16-year-old unmarried girl who went to priaon s h o r t I y afterwards along wilb ber brother, con. victed ol robbing men she busUed in riverfront bars. Charles was fostered off on unwilling relatives until his mother took him again at age eight and he Jived with her and a succession of men until he was put in a school for boys when he was 13. From ' that time on il was an unrelenting series of refonnatorys, jails aod prisons durin& which time Manson became a n ac- complished car thief. He also • learned to play the guitar •nd :.:Ing in a pleasanl tenor. He had studied mysticism in prison and although he had ooly a seventh grade education his I.Q. was exceptionally high and he had developed a mastery .at in- fluencing people, particularly girls. In 1967 he came out or Terminal Tsland prison in San Pedro, Calif., and di scovered an entirely new· world -the world of the hlppies. A young Wisconsin girl mov- ed in with him in a hillside pad in Haight Ashbury, a place the girl described as "a luxurious hobo castle" with Arabian Crossword Puzzle ACROSS 51 Lease • 51 Stake 1 Greek 54 Decree !titers 57 Annoy fi Innkeeper 5'J Showers 10 Strike-61 Bases breaker loaded 14 Kind of homer: I educatlon 2 wo1ds / 1S Ended b4 ···-pole lfi Napoleon's 67 Water body ~ exlle site 68 Quantlty '17 Burn 69 Means of slightly ll'ltl lhood 18 -Harl 70 G1Nt 19 Close Barrier Island 12 /8/6'1 20 Abrupt 21 Make 71 Le'le l 7 E1111·shaptd 38 Underwr ite, lnteltlgiblt 72 Glacial 8 Constitu!ion in a way 23 Ph1M111clst's ridge 9 Followed 39 Extensi'le fltld 71 Iii ade 1n 10 Enthrall 40 Tr lal 25 Throogh exit 11 Weather· 41 Power: 211 Man's 74 Notch man's word Preli- nickname 75 Former 12 Do away -4b Debaik 27 Calendar Dodger wilh 50 Assembled I abbrevlition great 11 Made public 22 Flower amusemenl 52 Sound of I 29 Roote ! 31 Nol bright DOWN 24 Alllre 54 Burning I 27 Record 55 Container 33 -Island side: 56 Captured I .or Beach 1 Fish 35 Study 2Correcl Slan g 58 Covering for 37 Senst ) Eaves-28 Journeyed the hand 41 Subject or dropped: JD Ont having 60 Of Kini) ' I veneration 3 word s a strong Olav's j 41 Dimin ished 4 Writer aversion country ~4 Factual of boy's JZ Hand hZ Trim co~trinq bl Verily 4~ Klnd of stories ' code 5 Accelerate: 34 Flower: "b5 Greek ' l-41 Challenge 2 words Informa l resistance 48 Pulls 6 Ancestral 36 Draftee's I 49 Obstruction home hope goup 66 nly I 2 2 Holiday Shoppers useourmoney- and save! Treat yourself to a happier holiday with extra money from Morris Plan. You may borrow from $100 lo $5,000 for holiday shopping, bill clean· wp, a winter vacation, any good reason. Just phone 0< come In and tell us whal you need. We'll tell you what your loan will cost and schedu1e the payments ·to flt your income. Compare our services with other lending companies. Chances are you11 save at Morris Plan 613·3700 f!riport Beach -3700 Newport Blvd. tapeitrtes on the walls and goatskJn rugs on the floors . Their e I e g ant "flophouse" became a gathering place where "guests'' whiled away the hours acting out plays. singing and beating bongo drums. By· April, 1968. H a l g h t Ashbu11y was becoming a drag and Minson led a following of about lS people, mostly girls, jn a green and white school bus ht had bought and con- verted into living quarters down the Pacific C o a s t Highway to Los Angeles .• A baby was bOrn in the bus on the trip. Jn Los Angeles, he struck up a friendship with a musician named Gary Hinman. Hinman \\'BS killed a year later and one or Manson's female followers is chal'.ged with bis murder. A-l~n began moving in a circle in which he met Dennis \\'ilson, leader of f.t\e Beach Boys, and Wilson pe"rmitted Manson and his "family" to live tor a time in his opulent home on Sunset Boulevard in the Paciric Palisades until they had a disagreement over payment for songs Manson had composed for the Beach Boys. In some still unexplained manner, Manson blamed Ter- ry Melcher, son or screen star Doris Day, for failure or his songwriting career. P..lanson several times visited young Melcher when he was living at the Benedict Canyon home where the Tate murders OC· cun-ed. Man.son and his followers moved on. this time lo an isolated area in the Santa Susana mountains n e a r (,11atsworth on the fringes or Los Angele.s, a place known as the Spahn Ranch. In the 1920s it had been the setting for the William S, Hart Western movies. The facade of the main street ol the set, with Its saloon and stable, still re· mains but nearby are trailers and shacks · and caves. The place is littered with the upper portions of Volkswagens whose undercarriages have b e e n removed for conversion into dune buggies. UPI photographer visited the ranch alone recently and said it was a sinister place, still infested by hippies who could be heard in the isolated shacks. He bad not been there Jong when a man dressed in a loincloth and riding a white horse rode up and drove him off the premises. It was while the "family" Was staying at the Spahn Ranch that the Tate murders occurred. A girl now in custody told police that Manson directed . his followers to go to I.he home previously o c c u p i 'e d by !1.1elcher and era4icate the •·pigs," not knowing that Miss Tate had since rented the -estate. Five of the hippies are said to have carried <>ut the slayings .....:. one man and four girls, all dressed in black. The murders of supermar- ket chain o\\ner Leno LaBi· anca and his wife followed the next day on Aug. IO. A few \\"eeks later the Manson group board~d the green and white bus and drove to G-Oler Wash where Manson got permission Irom the owner -0f the Barker Ranch, Mrs. Ar!Eine Barker, to stay for a noating around the case and one is that the informer told police everything because she learned the gang.had a list or persons .st.ill to be'killed. rew days. They remained for knew you wttt stealing a car Sandy Good Pugh, 26, and more than a month. and yoµ thought that was the Lynn Fromme, 21, both ~rls , One of the "famlly" at that very tbiQg you shOllld ht from mlddJe.class families Ume wa.s 1t-year--0ld Paul doini·" who lefl home and joined tlle Wjtkfns who testUled last .80(1a Watkins and Poston !1.1anson group. Mrs. Pugh was · wtek at the preliminary hear-refuaed to say whether they at the Independence hearing 1;:::=========. ing ln Independence, Calif., had 8ny suspicion of the Tate with a 4-mQlllh-<>ld baby in bu A THOUGHT where Manson was ordered slayinp or anything beyond arms. , betd on "cbarg<s or receiying car th<I~ They both un-M..,.. ·smiled al them FOR TODAY stolen automobiles pendJng act d<>Ubtedl)' will be witnesses if when he entered t h e Uon by Los Angeles a trii1 ia.~d. . courtroom afld they beamed authoriUts in the Tate case. Purcell; the officer who ar· back. After the court hearing, rested Man.son, said he drove "They (the police) have got Walk.iris talked about bow into the 'Goler Wash area a lot o( love q&anson) locked MaMOO operated. aboot a maoth before 1he two up in there," Miss Fromme He was aluays saying that final raiiis' which' neUed 27 said. Ge11lus b 1 •1. lnplmi•11 ad 99"1'• penfllrotloe. -Thom~ ·Edison PllESENTEO AS A. PU&llC SERVICE EVEllV DAY IY1 LEE · ROOFING CO. '4 YMr1 .. Cnt1 Mell IW SllPWlet" Awe. '42-Jttl ours waa a democratic: setup adults and ·elaht children. But it was aoother or the and that everyone bad an Purcell sUd he came upon girls who tunied infonner. eq\.W voice but that he was seven girls lytng on rocks, sev-There are many wild and, ~ reeeptale who was receiv· eral oC them nude, and others u n s u b s t a ntiated rumors 1 ing instructlom from God," in "various st.ates -Of undress." 1======:;=:==~~;;~~========= Watkins said. There was ooe man present,1----------""~-=·"~·~-='----------- "No one moved unless no' 1'-i""~"n Charlie knew about. it. You :'Th;;..,..didn't seem at all Marriage ·· ' woke up in the morning at the embarrassed," Purcell said. ranch ~nd yotr dtdn't know ·"They "!Id . me they were Counselor Whether you should get out of just out en]oy111g,lhe sun and . bed or go outdoors or anything getting out ·0r the smog. O Off' until he told you what to do. p 11 l k. r pens ice lie would t-ell us stories and urce was not oo tng or there \vOu\d be key words he nudists but for car tJ:iieves and would implant. He was always On the same trip he found a Cllirlft o. Ltvlk>n, M.A., lntlruclllr Jn stolen 1969 green Ford Hertz .'M••leg• 1nd F1m!ly Life 11 0••""1• talking about love and we all rental car which led to the coa11 couee• 1nd 11c1n111d M•rrl•ge, Yer. Caught The g I. r I s -F1ml1y Ind Chl'-1 Coun111or, 1111 ·-\ · final raid. ec1 • prlv•t• coun••llno pr•ctl.:. with particularly -and they still · ofUc• In sune J 01 tM M•ta v1.u. are." Two or the "family" who MedlCll·Oenlll -ProfntloMI Bul'-llng, have remained faithful are 2&50 Mmi verd• e.11, coi11 M-. Another or those w h 0,------------IMr. L ... llOll b !ft hit llrsl yur ti the testified against Manson at the Adverti.tmeni loc•I coll•, h1v1r.g T•UQhl bait! 115Y· car theft hearing was Bruce M S H With -~~:11.;zii of,..,.~~·g~.~ !:r F•Pi::~ CHAltW t . LIYITON p t or• ecur y Sp.~ tor llle 1>4111 '-yNrl. During • ' OS on. r•Ls lllk lime 11!1 dlHft more lhln doubled ltud.nti ltld fdullt, lhl 1woed1 DI "The first time J ever saw rft E TEETH In ti•• ...., '" •ISO ~ I very 5UC(e$i-•h~ belle entoi..!er group btl,,g mat we Charlie he came into a room 1111 ptlv•R prictlc•, INrn to P~Pl<IY ir.i111 to 0111.,., ..,. where Dennis (Wilson ) was At Any Tim• BltfOl"e lffdlln9, Litvlton w1• w1111 "'' =dlno to 111e1r ,,, """" •tld IHllnQs LOI. Anlltlts County Prob6tlon Dlplrl-only 11 -llrtl 1Hrn Olll' own true sitting and went over and kiss-Don't be., arn.1d t.bt.i row-tt.l.M ,,,..,.,,, IOI'" 11w v•1rt, 11n1 11 • c-. ieeunos •tld nmi, 1nc1 becOll'09 •w•re d h. ~-( Li ll kis d h" t.eeth will corn. lOOM ot drop JWlt t.t "'°' lo 111\dtrprlvlllgotd ind pro-de!ln-e IS ux . lera y se IS \he W?OnC Um•. Por rnon H<:Urltr Qlltfll youlll Ind lllln II • Dl'puly Pro-of Olll'Stlvn II unlqut Ind VllUlble feet. aad mi:n comfort, Jwit ~rlntle e betlon onk.,. 11 In e<Sutl lr"•ntlptlon ll!Jf!'Yn btlngl. little PASTZETH OD J'OUZ" plt.1.et.. Ind 111,.nlllon. Ht 1111 I tolll of 17 "He W33 an insane genius. PASTUTR holda both uppen end VN,.,, ex111rlenc• 111 youltl 1nd 11mny An mter11lnbol ll'ICI lnforrftltlv. •PHk· lie was insane but he was a = J.1:.T"zk."flui9 ':t11;~':'.'1:! coum111ng. er, Mr. Leviton 11 1v1111b11 to •l'M~ genius. Somehow he would irummr. O&atJ tutel De11turM tl'tt.t Bnkln lnd\vldual (:Ol,IMttlllll ""11ons, 1 on i.mlly r1t1a11on1111115 lo criurcllft end keep planting . thoughts ·wi'"' IU. are -ntlal to h-1th. See~ full.Ire of tn11 n1w unoke w\11 be service ch.lbt. •P110lntmm!1 ~II bt I.II donU.\repl&r1.J.G1tJ'ASTUTB. SELF AWAllENESS GllOUPS for botn made ~y c.alllr.g ~4. you and. the next tt)i.ng you Good &hints ••• - Come in 1flatl?ackajes ••• and at the Grandest ?.1all of All t1·e've ·already pul on our winter coat and readied ou nielves for tJ1e Christmas season. All of our stores ••• and tl1cre are 86 lo be exact ••• have just what you're looking for-the . Wg i.mportant gift,t and the small thoughlful ones, too. All South Coast Plata stores make il possible lo use their conve nient layaway. Sho p th is Christmas al Santa's Home Away From Home in the sheltered comfort of our enclooed mall. Alwo yo open nightly 'til 9 :30 ••• and Sunday 12 to S • - South Coast ?lua lllllOL A.J iAN tlilOO ftll"WAY, COSTA JlllU. ------·-·--·-·------~----------·-· . ·--·-·-···----------·--------~--. Mondty, O«rmbfr 8, 1969 DAILY PILOT 2J Losing Never Relieves PreSSure, Says Allen A ONE-HA ED INTERCl!PTION-Earsell Mack· bee (46) oLihe Minnesota Vikings, intercepts a Roman Gabriel pass, basketball style. The pass . wli~ Intended for the Rams' Wendell Tucker (14) but fell short of the mark. The interception was ~ulli· tied on a penalty call. The Vikings won, 20-13. In Sunday's 300 Car Trouble, Andretti Too Much for Gurney By DEKE UOULGATE Of ~.oanr P11t1 s11!f RIVERSIDE -Standing apart ~rom ; the crowd. Costa Mesa's Dan Gurney 1~ took a moment for himself Sunday. He had just driven to within 10 miles of his third victory in the Rex Mays 300 QS 1 Auto Club championship race at Riverside Inlemational Raciway. Gurney unbuckled himself fr om the driver's co1npartment and step~ out of the car without a word to walk 1nlo ~he turn-9 infield . His wife, Evi, followed h~m and.s~ aloogside f~ a rru;>ment while Gurney coinpleted his private com- munion. she took his hand and they talked quietly, unnoticed by nearly all o~ the 18.500 spectators. crew mef!\bers, dr1v~rs and official s. who "'ere still numb. with the realization th at Y..tario Andrettl. not Gurney. had won the final Indianapolis car race of the 1969 season. . Andretli roared past Gurney wtlh ~ tJuin three laps to go in the 120 lap road race to 'A'in at an average speed of 109.44.f rnph. His vi ctory was as s!"eet for P'te 1969 national driving champwn as de~at was sour for Gurney. For all but the first 13 laps of the rate, Andretti \\"asn't. e\'en in contention, burl!e never gave up. • . . .. ··tt was a miracle winning like th1~, Andretti said al his po.st race news q;in· ference. Gurney qualified, as expected, on fhe pole at .an average speed of 118.515 llWh and t.oek a quick lead as he out-raced the other front row drJver, Mark Donoh\le11lo the first turn. lpe leader to put himself on the same: Tap with Gurney. at the 95 lap mark. ·Soon aftern•ards Gumey's Olsonite Eagle started giving him trouble. "I could feel the rea r end going sour with 211 laps to go," Gurne y said later. Foor laps from the end-a half shart lhat transmits power fro1n the differential to one of the rear wheels, gave up the ghost and Gurney slowed down to save his car so he could finish the race. On the 118th lap Andretti drove his STP Hawk Ford past Gurney, who by this time was struggli ng lo stay out of U1e way of the other cars on the track. Later, when Dan was able lo talk light· ly about his misfortune with friends and admirers at the Olsonite hospitality tent in the infield, Dan called his car a "one. wheel drive." Andretti WOD $19,250 for his ninth USAC championship victory of the year. He also crepl. closer to A. J. Foyt in the: alltime championship point standings with a total of 19,414 to123,S45.2 for Foyt, \\'ho's been racing seven years longer than Mario has. Andretti became the first man in the 61-year history of championship racing lo score more than 5.000 points In a single .season. After Ri verside, his total was 5,025. Flnishing the race lhin:I behind Andret- ti and Al Unser, Gurney ended the USAC season fifth In the standings behind Andretti, Al Unser, &bby Unser and Gordon Johncock. Baylor Back, West to Rest, Lakers Lose LOS ANGELES (AP ) -Now that the Los Angeles Lakers have Elgin Baylor firmly off the injured list, it appears that they may have to play for a while \vithout Jerry West. \Vest. the all·pro guard of the National Basketball Association team, scored "only·• 19 points Sunday evening as the Lakcrs dropped a 104-103 decision lo the Detroit Pistons. West appeared sluggish and not as quick as he normally Is. "The doctl'>r has suggested we rest West a wh.ile," said coach Joe Mullaney after the game. "I know Jf!!rry v.•on't want to sit out a game completely so I guess we'll use him sparingly 'on the road next week ." The Lakers were pleased with the play of Baylor, who polled 36 points and was "ilal in a fourth quarter Laker surge that closed a 14-point three.quarter margin lo one at the buzzer. \Vest may see act\on Tuesday in Philadelphia but "he just got over a siege of injuries and he's pooped," said Mullaney. The Lakers also play ;:it Boston Wednesday and at Atlanta Friday before coming hime. ATLANTA lOl ANOlllllS • ' ' • ' ' Hlit~rd • ... " ~arreu ' ,., " Hl,ldion • ' ' • WhO ' ., " Oe~I~ ' ., " R-•!~or1 • ••• ' Cr~• • " " Hain•on ' .. " 8r1<1Gr1 • .. , " ll•YIO' " .. , • , C1ldw.I! ' " " Counll ' . ' .. 000 ' •• ' l';d(klOn ' •• ' MtCer1er • •• • TOl&I• " 19·1~ 1tt4 Tolll• " 11·l1 IN A.!llM!I • • " 11 -104 l.01 A.n11e1,, " " M lO -11)] F:ou!fd out --· 10111 foul• -Allan!f 11, LOI Ange1n 11, UP IN THE AIR -Clinton J ones (26), ki ck return s pecialist of the MinneSO't.a Vikings, is upended by two Rani defe nders in an NFL gan1e Sunday in the Coliseu1n. Bob Kl ein (80) and unidentified Ram make the tackle while Nate Shaw (44) and Izzy Lang (39) come in to help. Ron Vary (73), former USC star, is the other Viking in the picture. Rams Like Decked Fighter -Have ~o Get Up Again By HOWARD L. HA NDY Of 11•• D1i1w Plllll Stitt LOS At\GELES -George Allen wai:; the quiet man with little to say af\er watching the Los Angeles Rams suffer their first defeat or the 1969 season at the hands of the once.beaten Minnesota Vik· ings Sunday in the Coliseum, 20-13. · A crowd of 80,430 sat in on the first of two December confrontations between these t\VO league champions. The next one (Dec. 27) will eliminate one of the teams for the season. It will be played in r>.1innesota and is for the Western Di vision championship. "We jus t didn 't play emotional foo!ball today," Allen said after the game in the subdued Ram locker room ... We didn 't get one big play du ring the entire game." Ai;ked if the defeat would relieve some · of the pressure sportsll·riters have said was bu ilding up with the undefeated season the Rams were enjoying before Sunday, the Ram mentor declared : "Losing never relieves pressure. Pea. ple who don't want pressure should be buried ." The Ram CQaCh praised the kick return job of his own Alvin Haymond e\'en though it 'A'as a sensational ki ckofr return on the opening play of the ga1ne that set 1he pattern for the ·day. Charlie \Vest of the Vikings returned the kick 78 yards to the Ram 22. Minnesota coach Bud Grant felt the gar. • .: was an important one to both teams. "Tin!re "'asn't anybody on ei ther side holding back at any time. These twG teams are very similar and we didn'l take many chances today. The Rams cbanged Lheir tactics during the SCCQnd half and so did we. They had to beat us with a short game. "'11le kicking game was a treal for everybody today," he added. obviously in re"'gard to the opening kickoff return and several of Haymond's o u t s l a n d i n g maneuvers with punts. P..fiddle linebacker Lonnie War'A•ick <>f the Vikings, played an outslanding game on defense and said this : "Getting hit in a football game is just 95 ror Alworth Lance Al1A·orth or the Chargers lied a pro football record by catching a pass for the 95th consecutive game. matching the mark of 27 years ago by Green Bay's Don Hutsdn. like a fighter being knocked down . You have to get back up again and that is what the Rams must do when we play in Minnesota on the 27th." Asked if he felt the Vikings would ha\·e a psychologica l edge in tbe championship game, he added : "U lhe score is the same as today, I would say yes." The Vikings took an early lead and held It following the opening kickoff return by West. Dave Osborn scored fi ve plays later on a four ya rd run with F'red·cox conv~rting. Bill Brown then scored on a one-yard burst and Bruce Gossett put the Ramil on the scoreboard with a 37-yard field goal late in the second quarter. Cox added a J9·yarder just before halftime to bring the count to 17·3 at intermission. Gossett kicked a 27-yard three·pointer in the third stanza and after Cox made Rallies for Wita his second (rom 29 yards out mldway through the fourth stanza, the Rams drove to their only touchdown. Larry Smith took a Roman Gabriel pass over the shoulders or tv.'o defender~ from four yards out for the score with 12 :01 of the period gone. Gossett'• kick made it 20-13. · Lester Josephson, Ram running back, suffered a shoulder contusion but x-r.ays proved negative. Jim Nettles, Alvin Hay· mond and Jack Pardee had minor head injuries but all will be ready fqr the Detroit game this Sunday in the Michigan city. Finl 0g,.ns llu•~lt'lll v•rdege P•••1nv v•rd•gE ~eturn y1rd1gt PtUtl Pun Ii Fu"1tt!n iu.1 Yerds peii•!ll911 Ml1111. L." ... 1S I! 11' '1 71 lK " u 1-1'4 21·>1-I 1·lt,J +J2.t • • U M Win11it1g Is Everything, Says Victo1~ious Palmer r>.t!AMJ (AP) -The charge was there:, the shouling, stampeding gallery was there and it was the Palmer o! old. "Charge, Arnie, Charge," they shouted, and Arnold Palmer grinned that in· fectious grin, hitched up his bri tches with a characteristic gesture. and responded. He responded like the Palmer o[ year.!! gooe by, charging up from six strokes off the pace with a seve n·under·par 65 that brought him the title in the $125,000 Dan- ny Thomas·Diplomat golf classic and ,left Gay Brey,·er -the front-runner for three days -panting In the dust of Arnie'.!! whooping army. "This thing, this winning, means , everythi ng to me," said Palmer, a non· winner for more than a .. year and now author of consecuti ve triumphs, the only player to score that feat this year. "Getting it going again is probably the thing I wanted most In my life. I knew I was going tG play again. but 1 didn't know how 8llccessfully. There were some doubts In my own mind." If anyone had any lingering doubts, any thoughts that last wek'a victory was a nuke, the old master dispelled them with a game from out of his pMt, a game in the tradit!on or the dramatic style tliat was his trade-mark in the decade he dominated Lhe game. He started to move on the fifth hole, caoning a 10 • foot birdie putt while Brewer, with a six-shot lead going into the day's play and playing one twosome back, took the first of three consecutive bogeys. Palmer put a wedge six feet from. tht pin' on the next hole and canned the putt. He juSt missed a hole in one on the ninth, tapped in for another bird, and turned just one shot back . "You have a feeling, a sixth sense sort of thing when it's going to happen,'' Palmer said. "I thought at six, when 1 birdied and Gay bogeyed, that I might have it going." Andretti got around both of them and Jed for part of the seventh lap, bul Gurney took over again. The three faste~t drivers. Gurney. Donohue ~ Andretti. "'·ere staging a fantastic duel when Mario detoured into the pits on the 13th lap. O'Doul Dies; Lauded by Stengel Brewer, who finished with a 73 for 272, ard Palmer parred the neit Une holes but Gay went one: more ahead with • birdie ·oo 13. He might as well have Wav· ed a ffii flag al a bull. Palmer put a four iron eighl feet £rom the hole on 14 and made the putt. He was Ont' stroke back. A nJne Iron to four feet on the 15 and it was even. "I almost crashed because a wheel w11s coming off." he said Inter. "At about the start of the race I lost my brakes. When I came into the pits 1 had a very hard time gt.opplng e.nd Scattered my treY-'." Replacing the left rear wheel cost Andretti a lap. He look on some fuel as well and charged back into the race to begin the catchup procedure. Oooohue stayed within Gumey'l! very ii;hadow for the neit 125 miles. llnally pac;sing him on the 64th lap, but Mark slowtd on the 67111 lap nnd retired from the race with a eracked cylinder. hcJl.d. By this time the fut.est man in the race was e:lcarly Andrttti, who passed I From Combined Y.'ire Servlet1 SAN FRANCISCO -Frank Joseph "Lefty'' O'Doul, who l'A'ice won the Na· lion.al League batUng championship dur- ing his 40 years in baseball and helped lJi... troduce the game in Japan, is dead at 72. He was coming along fine at a hospital here where he had . been since Nov. 12, recovering from a sb"oke, when a maasive heart att.:K:k ended his life Sun- day afternoon, Dr. P. Edmund Stalter! said. Only a half hour before the fatal Hllack he tmd tJlkcd at length by phone with friends, telling them he \\'anled IC> visit Japan again "as 8000 as I get out of here -probably in the spring.'' Casey Stengel learned of the death of his old friend and managing rtval and said, "baseball has lost a•great man." SlerJiel. former manager of \he Ntw YOrk Yankees and New York Mets, call- ed O'Doul "one of·the-greatest hilt.en and one of the ~eat.est hitting lnslnJctors of all time. "Lefty and I managed In the Pacific COa.!ll League together and he was Ml h11rd to beat," Stengel continued. "Thi,, wai; a tremendous 111an and 8 terrific teacher of hitt Ing. ~le <lcve\oped r.on1e grtat hitters such as Joe OiM1ggio. "He stayed out on the Pacifk Cout 1 loog time but he still had a reputalion all over the country and he had a very good reputation with his players. He was so wtll liked:" It wu in 1931 on a tour with Babe Ruth that be helped ~ baseball started in Japan, and he hadbeen ·ba<k thete 30 times to promote the game'a growth. O'Doul had the highest lifetime battinR ~vcrage of any Jiving major leaguer .349 for 10 seasons. The honor now pass~ lo Trf1 \Vlll lams, "'hose lifelime average is .34<1, O'Doul's bnscball ca reer began In 1917 with Des hfolnes of the Western Leag\le and he started in the nlajor leagues ai 1 pitcher ror the New York Yanke<!s ln l!U9. He batted 11nd threw left.-handed. After a 1923 season with the &ston Red Sox he went back .to the minors with arm troubles, but returned In 1928 with the New York Giants. In the following year, as an outfie lder, he won his first National Ltague batting crown with PhiladelphJp. ltc won the batting title age.in Jn 1932 u·lth the Brooklyn Dodgers, \\'ho traded him to the Gl;ints In the following season. After ending hi.~ playing career, O'Doul ttturned lo his nalive San f'ranci5CO to manage tht Snn Francisco Seal• of .the PaciUc Coast League from 1935 to 1951. ' Gay bogeyed the 16th from the \\-wds and Arnold •'as alone in front. ..Nothing 'A'ent right," Brewer said. • JJ OAllY •llOT 2 Plays Did It In Saddlehack's 24-19 Re versal By GLENN WHITE ot -. n.u., "lltt '"" MARYSVD.J..E -It was I08t on two by pity>. . Slddleback Gollege had its shot at foot- ball glcry -and fell 69 scronds short Saturday night at Marysville High School Stadium as 6,fOO chilled followers wat ch- ed Yuba Col.1ege edge tht Gauchos. 24-19. in the state smaJI school!! championship flnale. The two deciding plays came al con- truting points of the exciting duel In "'h.lch the lead changed hands six times. The first was moments after the open· lng kickoff as De&ert Conference cham- pion Saddleback moved 81 Yards to the .fkr one. 1ben lvilh fourth down and a yard to go for the score, nifty quarterback Rod Graves was spun for a yard ioss and the ba.lJ went to the beefy Golden Valley c.onfertnce Utllst.s. Secondly, with time running oul in the same and coach George Hartman·s chaps 1 nursing a lt-17 lead, Saddleback got off a I p)Or (16-yard) punt. That set the winners up with at least a ; &hot at a field goal as they took over on the Saddleback 32. Only 4:25 separated the Gauchos from • state crown. But it might as ""ell ha\·e ~ been an eternity. It took Yuba seven , plays to move for the touchdown as Willie I ' ' : Gaucho Boss ' ' . , Revielvs Lo ss • • l Philosophi call y i MARYSVJ.LLE -Goorge Hartman. the ~ toach. had just y.·atched his battle weary \ football warriors fall to Yuba College, 24· 19. And . moments after the disappo inting aetbaCk in the state jayCee (small xhools) tiUe decider, George Hartman. l the man, took over. He greeted a platoon l of tearful well-wishers, patted disap-f pointed Gaucho "Qlayers on the posterior I and coogratulated them for a fine job. 'Jben he became George Hartman. the I phllo,..pher. "That's life," he told the DA LL Y f PILCYI'. "You've got to be man enough lo get off the floor. Physically we had nn business being on the same field with t Yuba." - Going through an aulopsy of \1•h<1t · I, transpired just a short time earlier on the brown grass of Marysville ~Jigh ! ) School Stadium, Hartman continued : "In a game like this. home field Is l'I big advantage -especially when you·rr talking about areas as far apart as their!! and oun. The cold y.·eather (29 degrees\ bothered us. But lers not use that for all bis. "'J'hey ha ve a fine team -the best "·e> met all year. They overpo\l'ered us n1orc than I thought they would . And being the , physical team they were, they hurt us.·· l' Hartman \.\'as then interrupted a.~ jubilant Yubans triggered a cannon shooting off a red smoke bomb. And a ' Saddlebaclt player's mother came up to Hartman to say, .. You're one hecku \'a coach.·· The interviey.· resumed. ''I thought our running ganic "·oulrl go better and we made too many 1nislekcs ff our fumbles and one pass interception ~. Vle got hurt y.•hen we didn't score early in !he game (Saddlcback had rourth and goal at the one and then lost a yard and the ball ). "'But we have nothing to be a.~hamed of - t'm proud or the kids, 1 thought they did a fine job," he said. "And I think \li'!'ll be strong next year. \\'e lose 14 sophomort1 but we have se\'en returnin~ first stringers on derense and five (In or- fense next season. Jr "·e can fill a few key positions, y.·e should have a good year. .. We went • lot larther this year thnn we ever hoped fer." he said ~·hi le shUting the huge state runnerup trophy he had j\L1t received. Then he went out to con!!Ole a tearful Wife and daughter and to start thinking about his foremost proje<.'t : Saddleback football, 1970, and probable escalation to large schoOls raUng as a member of !he Mi.ssion Confen!11«:. j AREA C11GE 1'EAi\1S DRAW TOUG H FOES Wll'ml High School 's burly Bears i,1·111 bt favtftd to win !he first annual LakewOOd basketball tourna1nent !hat a:ets: under way l\fonday "·ith \\1·0 Orange Coait area team.~ conipe1ini;. San Cle1nenle fllgh plo ~s lhe hci;t Lancers in first round ar.1ion Tu ci1day nifht at 1:15. 1'be Corona del Mar Sea Kings langlt J wttb ~ favorite, Dominguez High or Cot•'*""· 'l\le9dey atternoon at J. fte Bein, boMUng A front Unt lw112 411e .averagtng 6-7 per mAn. will 41pe tht tournamnK Monday 1rternoon .,.met Rolling Hiiis with tipoff at 3 Other flnt raond p1lrlngs intludo.: S1t r- ra va. St AnlOOny; JlarA n111unt 1 .~. M•7f1ir; Ml . Carmel vs. Wll!On. S:11 1111· na vs. Plonea ; 8nd Downrv '''· ll•wthome. Tat.e scampered over from the 11even afler It appeared the 49ers would be: cal~ ing on the field goal proficteocy ol Bruce Porter to decide the final outcome. However, Tate slammed over to makt It 24--19 wlth 1:09 left. Rod Graves tried to get his mates Ul)o corked in that last minute. And aftu moving them from Its 31 to the Yuba M in less than a minute, it appeared Sad· dleback would pull it out. However, with fourth and one on the Yuba Collese 34, Graves tried to sweep le fl but was hit by one of those many .49er earthquake tackles and was spilled for • ieven-yard loss, Yuba took over and ran out the clock after that. Saddleback had struck first. The Gauchos went 53 yards In seven plays with Graves dashing the final seven yards with 3:40 to go in the first quarter. However, Yuba struck in the second period for a touchdown and tleld goal to make it IG-6 with 2; 17 left in the half. But Saddleback rallied, getting behind Graves' snappy passing. The Gauchos covered 74 yards in 14 carries as Graves passed nine yards for the tally to Rick Day and John Stewart covered to mike it 13-10 with 38 seconds left before the half. Yuba moved back in the lead by taking !he lhird quarter kickoff and going 42 yards in 11 plays \\'ith talented Fred Riley passing six yards for the touchdown . However, then it was Saddleback's turn lo move into command as the Gauchos cruised 66 yards in 10 plays with Graves hitting Whipple for 13 yards and a score on a fourth and 10 situation. That made it 19-17. But then came the short punt and the 49e.r touchdown. Time had expired on the spunky midgets from Mission Viejo. It was a crowd pleaser or the first magnitude with aee tailback Fred Riley repealedly tearing off nice gins after being checked early in the contest. And his efforts y.·ere matched by Graves' outstanding passing, plu!I the receptions of Day and Gary RGS!lman. The la1te1· \\'as picked outsta nding line- man of the gan1e. Saddleback outgaincd its conqueror, 3il·313. But in the final analysis it was Yuba 's versatility and its ~pound per man weight advantage that decided the game. G_.,ME ST .. TtSTIC$ l"ir.t downs rus~lnG Flut down1 1>1Hlf1!1 l"lrs1 aownJ pen11!1t1 l oMI fl•>I downs Y1rO. ru•~h,g Vard• 1>1UlllO V11d1 lot! N(! yAr<h Ql•nflf ,,,,,.,,, •••• ~. dls!l""f r,n1lt1u/Y1rds lli!n•llnd Fum1>l••!Fum1>lt1 k>ll s~dc11~i..•ck Vul>ol Co•l.-gP 5c1rt by 0 11•rt..,. . ' " " llUSHIHG G•••~· \llUllflif To1111 P.oleV Pofle• IM• 1<1p~~m ;11111 ..... Pl)rld~n~ 101111 5•ddlt ... Ck "' " " " " '" ' ' ' ' .. Jt_.,SSIHG S>1lcl!tb•tk .. v ... ' ' " • • • " " " "' m '" • " "' m •'1!.0 JIH.C l/10 J/I, .,, " • ' -lt ' 1 -1• YO " •••• " ~ -0.1 ~ • " " • " "' " ., " • ' ' ~ • 11.0 • • ••• " '" ·10.0 " " 00 '" " •• '" ,C ~I'll YGi II(!, J•201m .su '<H •>.1•r Pone ••ro To••I• 1 I 8 ' 1000 )ft 11 I 111 .SU n 12 1 121 .s11 Too111ey Bu sy: SeeJ\.s Record , Pla11 s lo Wed Olympic rleeathlon champion Bill Tooniey again \\·ill take aim at the world record OY.'ned by \Vest Germany's Kurt Bendlin in a special ty.•o-day meel al UCLA \Vednesday and Thursday . Action is due to begin each day al 10 a.m. y.•ith the former Laguna Beach resi· dent matching talents Y.•ith Barry King and Dave Thoreson. y.·ith a couple or other entrants possibly joining the field. Toomey also announced plans lo marry 1964 Olympic long jump gold mcdalisl tilary Rand later this month in Santa Barbara. where Toome y now is employed in education, P.liss Rand. a Britisher , l' 28. Toomey "'ill be 31 next mon!h. Jokingly. Toomey loht the DAILY PltOT he'd celfbrate his honeymoon 11dth another decathlon . Actuall y he docs hope to get another pair of the gruelling evenll before Up· coming business negotia tions void his amateur status. "I've been training hard and I'm still In vrry good shape," he relates. "Actually. J\·e goll en a Jot out of these last few con1pctillons. t'\'en though I missed lhe 1rorld record . "I l\'ll!i \'Cry Jllcased lo long juinp O\'er 26 fee\ aOl't lo run the hi~h hurdles in 14.2 1 both lifelime bests I. I'll be going all out for 1hc y.~kl record in lhe.sc last couple of competitions. "The high jump will be very imporunt and I hope to get somewhere around 4,JSO points the first day," he says. Jn his last two outJngs at UCLA, Toomey lost \·Ital ground 11,ith 6-1 % leaps, nearly three lnchc.! under whal he hoped to do. a luss of abou t $0 points. Sllll , he rn:inage<f 1(1 score an Amt:r1C'an record 8.277 -thi rd highest total or a!\ lin1e. l!f h:id a \11orkout at UCLA la!lt \\'etk :ind plnn11 lo stage another there before •cl.ion opens \VedneSday. I NIFTY RETURN -Saddleback College's Paul Cox (20) streaks away from Yuba College defenders on his way to a 55-yard kickoff r.eturn in Saturday night's sometimes foggy, always cold state football champ- ionship decider at f\.1arysvi1le. Seen for Yuba is Jim Sakota (60). Yuba scored with 1:09 to play to take a 24-19 victory. Also seen for Saddl& back are Cbuck Lockwood (63) and R.<iy Tyler (73). Bob Whitmarsh (63 dark) Is a Yuban. DAILY PILOT Pllt .. " •ldo•tt ll!;ffl!Jtr GRIMACI NG AN TEATE R -Steve Sabins (24) of UC Irvine gains possession of ball \Vhile closely guarded by Cal State (Los Angeles) guard Murray Rodney. The Antealers lost a 90-87 overtime de- cision to the Oiablos Saturday night in Crawford Hall. Cage Battle Becomes That Elb o1.vs Fl y, Te1n pers Erupt in VCl 's 90-87 Lo ss By llO"'ARD L. l1ANDY OI lftt Diiiy ,lltl llffl Even the scoreboard clock lost its cool in the heal of battle Saturday night as thr UC lr\'ine. basketba ll team dropprd ii~ third straighl tl('('ision of th<' ~·01111~ i;eason to !he Cal State \Los Angeles 1 quintet in (;rawford Hall, 90-87, in o~·eMlme. Scoring progress nf lhe game. along with tha Ume rtmaining to be played, is reconl<d In Ugbts al both ends cl Ille hall. With 2:25 Jeft following• time out. pl ay resumed but the clock on the north ~·111 failed to itart and \he Dlablo bench unloadtd Jn a rage only to find the south clock In operation . This \\'Iii !he srcond !iml' the LA ieam had ron1f off the hench during tht torrid action that found rlbolVI thrO\l'n \\'ilh rt'WJl11rit y. In ll'lc: first ln!ltincc, en altercation under tht Dl1blo ba3kct on a foul call brought both players off the floor swinging . No blo\\"/I landed and by t.he time players from both sides rcnchcd the ~ccnc. order had been restored. The Anteaters opened in front and held the lead throughoul !he first half and \li'ell inlO the second half before the visitors knotted the count at 76-i& then wenl ahead iS.76 and 81}75. The tie came on a free throw and the go-ahead basket on a layu'P by Morris Thomas with 2:43 remaining. ·- Brad Baker brought UCI lo a t.Y.-o-point de.flcll at I :42 and Je.fr Cunningham drop- Ptd a pair of free throws v.·lth 32 seconds re1n11inin11: to stnd it Into Ol'trllmt. 1·ho1n:is hit on a tl1ree·polnt pla.v c8rly In the fh·c minute extr11 stanza and ~-l°"e fldolph scored a.pair of {ield ioals to give the Dlabkls 1 cushion. Coach Tim Tift. y.·hile disappointed In his team's third straight loss, isn't discouraged. U( lrwint !17) II It Jll IJ Cunoii"'tn•m • t J U MCIOtr 1 J 5 t OfQfVt ! I • 1 B1r11tS J ! J 11 $1blnt' 11 I I 19 INn 1 0•1 l'lrwtM 0 0 I 0 Burllnth•m 1 I s r Fo~ 0\1 O lllkt-r '''' WIU .. llMl'I 0 0 1 t Ctl 5111t ILA) 1111 ltllpf l~ I I • 70 j • S I• , l j J 10 r J n , j j ' I 1 1 I • l I 11 l 1 I I 1 .... ..,., l(n19n1 Artt •btrry Adotf>!I M11rr~, O•lnn Gr Hilt DeLNcn TOll ll ll IJ 11 11 lel1l1 a )0 V to H11111,._.: UC lntlnt 4, (II Slli. ILAJ JI. UCI ,,.... llJtl LI V-JV ("l ... ~ ... ~ w..,,tn I I l It l !t i t I I 91~' I I I 1' 'klftfy 1 I 1 II I Jrt U J I ;n S~rnpmskl 0 ' ? 1 Jo,.:t• I J >\ II Dl•!r. J • I 10 Sv"'•i<ll! ' 0 • OI,,.. ry 1 I I I M~"Ar 6 I • 11 ... lllC~~' t I f 1 $m1111 S o o 10 Muc,11 ' o • 11 L•,.•v~ J O S IAgnrw lljll Pt~l.e~ I 0 0 Jl ··~·· 100 1 ff!j l\ 60 11 Jl l:IO 'To••11 »IS If n "'•ll!l"'f UC.I ,.,Olli 6l, U Vtr,.. JV )t, FULLERTO.N HOSTS FRESNO SA TURDA Y Defending California state (large schools) junior college champion Fresno will face coach Hal Sherbeck's Fullerton Hornets for the 1969 champio·.ishlp Satur. day night in Anaheim Stadiwn followln~ victories by both teams this pa!t weekend in semifina l action. Fullerton advanced to the finals with a &eCOnd hall scoring spree that took U from a ~7 deficit to a 25-16 victory over the Bakersfield Renegades. Fresno, alter losing three ol its first four start.'\ this season, has come on 1trongly behind the passing ann ol quarterback Mike Rasmussen. The Raru defeated Chabot College of Oakland in lht 5emis, 23-7. Saturday night's outing will pit the Hornets' f>.1arv Owens against Rasmussen in what cou ld develop into an out.standina passing game. Crazy Bounces For Leaders In Cage Poll By ASSOCIATED PR™ The basketball marked No. 1 is already taking crazy bounces after only one week of the college season and now that it seems headed for Kentucky or UCLA, coaches Adolph Rupp and John Wooden aren't too certain they can hang on. Either the \Vildcals of Rupp or the Bruira of Wooden appear headed for top ranking in the wttkly Associated Preas major college poll after No. I South Carolina was beaten by Tennessee 55-5~ and No. 3 Purdue lost to Ohio U. SG-71 Saturday night. Kentucky, No. 2, enhanced its standing by clubbing Kansas 115-35 while No. 4 UCLA nipped Minnesota 72-71 I n overtime. "Come to think of it," Rupp said y.·heo giving South Carolina·s loss some thought. "That doesn·t make me too hap- py. We ha\'e to play Tennessee twice." However, tonight Rupp must worry about seventh-ranked North Carolina. which routed Mercer 100-52 and has beaten Kentucky In their last four meetings. \\looden also sees rougher times aheltd, calling his team overrated by noting the loss of three regulars, including Lew Alcindor. to graduation. "\Ve're playing a different style than what we played wlUt Alcindor," he said. "This will take time lo develop." He felt his team was ltkky to beat the Gophers on Henry Bibby's basket wtth 44 seconds left In overtime after Sid Wkk1 had tied the score with two seconds re- maining in regul ation lime. Meanwhile , Frank r.fcGuire, South Carolina's coach, looked at the bright side of a deftat to the unranked Vola •. "'Losing \\'as a heartbreaker,'' he said,: '·but it relieves the pressure. we·u· bounce back." Purdue got 29 poln~ from Rk:k ~tount, but never caugt't up after John Canlne'1 , basket put Ohio ahead 77-16 with I :57 l<I\.: Hoping to move up at the expenM of: South Carolina and Purdue are Oavid90rt,; New f>.1exieo Stale, North Carolina. Mar..: quette and Villanova -Nos. 5 thrrugh t: -after \'lctories Saturday night. , Davidson had the roughest time bef~e ­ sub<luing ,tifichlgan 91-85. New r.1cxlta; Slate rolled pasl B~yk>r 102-83.~tarquclt•· _,1an1n1td \Vlsconsln·Milwaukee 86·!11 and: VIiianova. topped Prlnctton 60-46. ' ' . ., ' .. I' • 1: .. t· . .. -· I. ,. ,: • I• 1: ·-------------~---·--·--· Marina Only Victor 8~ RQGER CARLSON Of Ille 0.11~ PllM Slftf Th e fifth ann u a l Westminster -Marina Rotary In vitational basketball louma· ment ended similar lo results of the quarterfinals a n d ~mifinals for Orange Coast area teams -with only one victory Saturday night. Marina came up with a 70-82 win over l.4ng Beach Wilson · for fifth place honors. But Westminster dropped a 73-71 decision to Long Beach Poly for third place and Hun- tington Beach was nicked, &> 63, by Santiago. lt was the second straight J<& for Westminster and the third in a row for Huntington Beach, last year's finalist. Coach Ezra Van Hom 's elassY"" Los Alamitos quintet captured the tournament title with a 7~ victory over War- ren. In consolation games Satur- day, Loara defeated Bolsa Grande, 71-41, and Valencia trimmed Garden Grove, 70-59. • Monday, Dtctmbrr 8, 1%9 DAILY "LOT 2 3 After 2 Losses Mustangs, CdM Seek-to Rebound Irvine League basketball team11 Corona de! Mar and Costa Mesa's Mustangs will be trying to get back on the win- ning lrail this week after sUf- lerlng losses Saturday in a doublehf..ader at Long Beach Millikan. Corona del Mar will meel Dominguez Tuesday afternoon at 3 in the Lakewood Invita- liona l while Costa M e s a traveb with Newport Harbor this weekend for doublehead- ers at Las Vegas. Corona dropped its second game of the year Saturday at 1'-1illikan as the Rams ~ a ~-46 win over the Sea King s. And Mesa was the recipient of IJ.s second loss in as many games wilh an 82-71 setback at the hands of Cal High or Whit· tier. Mark Grigsby and Dan Killian were high for Corona del Mar with 12 apiece but it wasn't enough to off se t J\f iliikan's third-quarter sur ge. J\1esa was done in early by Cal High's Cood on . Ken Deaton led Mesa with 18., tOITA MISA 1nl • A111tln Swff!llM ""'M Slllo1 MttLltn Otlm!I . N•v+ll1 _ce1m11 M1rc~lor111nl l rid .. I Woll •o •T pp T .. J • 4 11 I l 1 6 1 ' 1 II ' • 4 ' J 0 J ' 1 O J I ' • 1 11 ~ I J t ' • 2 1 0 I I I 0 J I t " Tol1l1 17 17 2f 71 CAL NION lttl ,.rr!1ti. •u Morctr p..,fltld Lttno.rol•• St-mi n kr.ouon.1r Gill WOOdwl rd Crl1eon1 Tetll• l"G l'T PP Tl' 14 1 ,,. . , . 4 2 IJ I I I J 1 • 3 J I I I 1 7 0 J 14 I 0 I J I 2 2 4 I 1 I 1 :M 14 t2 IJ kw1 •r OU1rttn Cot11 Mtll IS 11 1S 14-11 Cal Hltll H 20 11 17-11 CQflQNA OCL MAil. (411 HO!ltndt r C'"ror GOll l11 Grl91tw k llll1n , .. Sevl.,. Total$ Frost Pltnte 5chw1r Mer!lnt'Ck p.,,,. Ot•kln GlraH'<k TOii it l'G PT PP TP' I o 2 I J 2 I t 0 I J I s J I 11 l I J 12 I 0 I t 4 1 J 10 11 n 20 ..- MllttKAN Oil l'O l'T '°" Ttt I 4 J 16 I I 4 1! I 1 J I l 1 ' • l I t 1 a a 1 o 0 1 I I 111120M S~r1 W Olllr'-" CO!'°"I del MM 12 14 1 lJ.-46 MUll~tn IJ lt 14 1S-.W C>AIL Y .. ILOT l"tlttt •r •1ct111111l floelllH l~=====:;;::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~-=;,;;;;;;;i The winners posted an 11- point marr,in at the end of the first quarter and extended it to 14 at the half. Westminster's bid for a third place ftnish in the tourney waa erased in the final quarter when the Lions ran into foul trouble and lost all.tournament selecUon Dan Broderick on fo uls -then moments later last forward Steye McLendon with 2:05 to go. Poly quickly upped its two- point margin from there to win easily. IMPALA PASS PROTECTION -Dan Troup (11) of the Hunting- ton Beacil Impalas youth tootball team, gets set to throw a pa:.:s against Lawndale Buccaneers Saturday afternoon on Orange Coast College fiel d. He is afforded excellent protection by team mates Ben Dodson (23), Dave Sigler (51) and several others. The Impalas Jost on tie-breaker rule after regulation play ended in a scoreless deadlock. NEAL'S 3 SWll SPORT SHOPS Marina's Rick Mosier tallied 17 to go along with Kipp Baird's 23 in pacing the Yikes to their win over Wilson. In all, Mosier tallied 90 for the four games and set a tournament record. breaking 11.'ike Contreras' mark of 86 for the four··game set. Mosier and Lee Walters o[ Huntington Beach also made the all-tourney team. Walters was high for Hun- tington Beach with 19 but it was the completion of a one- and-one attempt Crom the free throw line with six seconds left in the game by Santiago's Ed Sheely that dumped the Oilers for the third time. Los Alamito s' Don Soderberg was named outstan- . ding player of the tournament following the Griffins' clutch ' win over impressive Warren. Other Griffins to make the all- " tourney team were Randy Chri s t e n se n and Mike -Grimwood. MA•INA Ot) •• " " " Mc sit • ' ' • " S!rt!lcrd ' • , " &tins " ' • " 8 111 • ' ' ' Crc11~r1tt ' ' ' • l!.trlt • ' ' ' T~~'"' ' , ' " Tottll ,. n " • sc .... lllJ 0111rltn Mtrl,.. " " " lt-111 W!IWI M " " ,._., HUNTINGTON •llACK (6SI C1rlt011 Wil t Ca lt Wtlttn 0.flrlllDll Htr .. 11 TllOft'll ,,.,. Tot1l1 l"G FT "" T" 1 a 2 4 l a 4 • t a s ' 5 ' 3 lt 0 l (I l l 2 4 • • s 4 17 1 (I 0 1 22 19 26 '3 SANTIAGO CU I Dlnitll ,ktlcn Oelt-•· lt Mtl!lf1 Kylt Dltl S ..... ltY T1k1~11M Tott II l"Q l"T ' ' . ' ' . ' ' 0 • ' , , ' ' . 23 l t "" T .. . " . " ' " . ' ' . , " , ' , ' U IS s~o•• '' 011•""" HunllP'lt!Cll ll11cll lt 17 11 ll-'J S.nU190 17 1' 14 15---0 WISTMllllST•ll (Tl) HtWlt'f ..... ,.,.. • ercoerlck ' Mcletldolt M•M 'N...iiouM 00M $autnwick Totfl1 l'G l"T '" T' ' 0 2 • 0 7 I 2 1 I S Tt 6 • 5 20 J s 2 11 ' 0 1 4 1 0 0 • I I 1 J 15 11 11 71 11;9'9 lty O....rhr1 W11!m!nllt• 11 IJ 17 lt-11 Lant &ttcn .. OIJ 11 1) 11 11 11 ·Hornets Bag State Crown Fullerton JC "''°" its first- ever state jaycee water polo cham pionship, dunking San Mateo, 6-4 , Saturday at West · Valley College in Saratoga. Coach Ernie Polte's cham- pions hit two goals in the last ,18 seconds to br eak a 4-4 tie : Boo salt away the tltle .. FMday 'the Hornets edged DeAnz.a, 4- 3. to make the finale while San :t<.1ateo ws tripping Long • Be>ch. 4-3. Pro Grid Standings NATION.Ill lllAGUE WEST!'.ltN CQNl'fltENCI CHllll Oilfll loft WLT,.d ... l',.A l cs "nge!H 11 1 o .917 l tl J01 8~1llmore 7 4 1 .436 75' ?:U ATl1nl1 4 t a .m 131' ?6' S1n F rtnc~ l 1 1 .JOO I M 19'1 l•tl 0 1v111 ... WLT,.ct ... 11 .. .l Mlnnesol• -\J 1 o .TIJ l6' 111 O.troil 1 4 1 .11' 111 7U Green 8•1 1 • o .500 10l 100 Chk 11PO 1 !I o .Oil :io. 1" l:ASTE•N CONl'EIEl+Cll Ctflhll'V Olrii*I WLTPc!.Pll .. A Cl•v.t1nd 9 2 I .111 llO ?S2 SI. Loul• 4 7 1 .JU 715 3!1 Ne'W Yo-'. 4 I 0 .JJ3 211 717 ,.l11$bUrDll I II e .OU '" 3$1 c.-11oe 01v11i... W LT I'd . "" ,. .. 0..llts f 1 I .111 JTl 2(1) W15hlnvlon 6 t 2 .toO 71G 715 PM!1d1ll>lli1 4 1 1 .:Mt 71l J:W Ntw Orlt1ns ' I a .l ll no 352 Sund.lly'J lles~lh MlnnHO!.O 2(1, LO!I Anlllill lJ 0..1111 10, Pllbbllrvh 1 Delroll 17, 81lllmor1 17 Clevel1nd 2(1, Green 81¥ 7 A!l1nll 4S. N-OrlNnl 11 New York 49, SI. LOUIJ I W11111P'l91Cn :U, Phl).iidell>llll tt s.,.. .... , .. 01,,,. Dalltl •t !laft!more Sulldlo1'1 G1mn Phll16el!llli& •I All1n11 SI. Louis 11 C~v~l1MI Chlc;tltO ti G•etn 81v Otlroll tt LDt A!"1t les Wttlll"l!IOll ti New Orltt nl ,.lllsbu'911 11 Nf'W York Mlnntlll!I I t Stn Fr1nclKI AMl:lllCAN Ll:AQUI: ••• ,.,~ Dl\lllltfl MeW York i..cu11cn 8vff•lo '°''M Mlt ml W LT ,.d. Pl' "" •4 ommuo 5 ' ' .455 151 2SI ~ ' 0 .lOt l!7 Jl4 4 ' 0. :JOI 2.Q '" l ' ' .15G 27' »5 WtJI-DIYlliln 01t!1nd K•l\llS CITY Stn Dl6o Cincinnati Dtnver W l T ,.ct. Pl' ti.I 11 I 1 .197 J.17 1» 11 1 0 ·"' "' 117 7 ' 0 .loll 1JI 11'0 411 .:W 76":UO 4 I I .n J 11G l1t Sund.111'1 •nu111 k.,>Jll City 21, 8uU110 It Sen Olt!!o ll, 8os!o1t 11 O~kltnd J7, Cln<lnJ11TI 17 Ml1mi l7, o.nvtr 24 Onty D•mes Khedulftl 51tum,•1 G1mn Dlk!1MI ti k1nw1 Cllv SUnd11'1 01mn Hou1ton 11 &ml'" Si n om.a 11 l!lulf1lo Dtrwtr 11 Cincinnati Mltml 11 tfcw Yortl Blair, Amat DELTA SUPER QUALITY Tires Cost Less C""P'•t. Li111 •f Fihrtl•l1 lohM Tir11 Av1il1bl•. Prkel Stert 19t tit.ti pl• P.l.T. Flll1r9l111 Witl1 O v1 l1 -S11p1r Pr•'"hn•11 - Rotl1ol -SF-ortt -S•iw.i l 119tY - A 111 Si-.1 Truck Tlrn ' BERG'S DELTA TIRES 141 E. 17th St •• Ca.ta Mesa. 645-2010 l1"lt~m1ric1.,f '°''-''• ....... ..,., Mt1t1r Ch1rt1 Jot1Wilt11"-SANTA AHA-1~1 ·6fM \, • Impalas in 0-0 Deadlock, Lose Verdict on Tie-breaker By RON EVANS Of lt>I DlllJ Pl"' Slltf It seems cruel, almost In- humane, to watch youthful alhletes in the 11-13 age group bracket, struggle through four scoreless periods ol hard-flOS. ed football .only to lose by the margin of less than a yard under a new tie-breaker rule. That's what happened to the Huntington Beach Impala! Saturday afternoon after they battled the Lawndale B~c­ caneers to a standstill on the Pro Cage Standings ... l:11twn DhllM!o Ntw Yorll: l1lllmcn MllWluktt ,.hllldtdPlll• Clnd nnall O.trolt W1111 IAsl .. d . •• 7'1 .m - 11 10 .'3111 ·~ 11 n .sn It It l4 M1 ll ll 16 .'107 14'11 Orange Coast College Fieid during regulation play. The \Vin gave the Dues the Southern California midget division chanipionship in All- America football . Under rules or lhf! new lie· breaker, a coin toss is held at midfield and the losing team gets possession with the ball in it,j tertitcry, the Jl06t on the 50. Eaoh team is given four alternating offensive plays and here's what h'.appened Satur- day to give a coveted cham· pionship to Lawndale after the torrid 40 minute regulation struggle . Huntington Beach moved the ball one yard into Lawndale territory and the Dues brought it back to the 50. On second down . the Im- palas went only a half yard . The Dues roared back with a 21..;..yard gain to put U!e ball on the HB 48. Third <!own found t h • Impa1as moving the ball back to midfield with the Buts com- ing back to the HB 49. The crucial fourth down play for the Impalas was slopped short of the 50 and a quarterback fall play gave the decision to Lawndale although the ball was less than a yard from j~ original starting posi- ti on. Defensive standout for the Tmpalas was Toby Bonwell, young brother of the Golden West College qu arterback. OAM.-STATISTICS l'Jrst llow~I ru1hln11 Fl<l t OOWNI N H IM Flrll dewn 01n.o!tles To!1t llrol "°"'"' Yt rdi rutMnt Y1rd1 ,_Hfllf Y1rd1 IOI! Net J l •OI 111>\ed PU!lfo/AYHI" dlSll"l:t Pen1lt1111Yds. P111ellnd Fumbl11/Fklrnbt11 !011 IUSHINQ NI IM,.ALAS .. ' , , • • ' 0 ' ' S6 11a .. . . " •s 12 A/U.O 7/17.( , 10 •140 J/I 311 Trou11 T , 8tlttr R111t>1r10rd E<twtf'dl Prlct TC• YO YL 7 11 " t ,, 1 ........ ••• '" ••• "°'"M Tol1l1 ' . . ' . . ' ' 0 , ' . ~ M • PASSINO Ht IM,.ALAI PA PC PHI T• JO ' .. ., "' ... u ••• ••• .... Rustler s I SPOlllllG GOODS Can't Buck Brah1nas Pier~ handed Golden West 1 its fourth setback in five outings Saturday evening, 74· 85 to take the consolation championshi p or the three day Moorpark Invitational basket- ball tournament held on the Afoorpark campus. A 37-point effort by Chris Thompson went down the r drain as the Rustlers y,•ere able to pull within two of the Brahmas, but never any closer, With fi ve minutes left In the game Thompson hit on two free throws to close the gap to 71-fi9. However, two minutes later 6-8 center Dave Hard ing fouled out o{ the game and il was all she wrote. Thompson was n ea r J y perfect from the field sinking an almost unbelievable 13 or 16 attempts. He was aiso 11 of 13 rrom the charity line. GOLDCN Wl!ST l'JI l'O l'T '°" Tl' Grevfs I O I J P1s1lk S l 1 t Wide 0 I J 1, GIVE THEM THEIR HEADS T~:~5 1s THI$ XMAS • The most wanted skis in the worlcl- All new models In stock now· Love affairs ( witli skiing) start here. We're fumou1 for metchmakins. We'll match you to the ab&o- lulely riGl1t •lead Skis and Poles ... and everylhing amart to go with them. Or, if you're already in love with akiing, ehooee your o~·n more a<lv11oce<l new Heads. Our 1k.i tervice. liq our slds, keeps everybody happy e\'er after.- SHOP II llEIL'S lllD SU lllE'IOP lllMES •SANTA ANA 219 r. 41h SI. .... M A!lt rllt Sin Fr1nclsc.1 Chic two 10 U .C!O U'.\i I 17 .320 1'\.1 81rnts J 1 1 1 I NEWPORT BUCH SC Awaits Tourney ~~~-:l :i .i :l ,;;~;;;, • :;~;.;'j" · ~~"~'~"'~'m:•,,;;•:M:",,;'~'':":•~•:·::•o:>O:•:·~:::::~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Kl 7·5723 •FULLERTON LOI Anttlts P~o.nlK St n Ol- Snt!l1 e Flh YWr Pl'fltnl 1•• ... '°°'· SPICIAL HOLIDA T n1c11 '117" llG. ,,,,,,, ' Mlfrllall IR .. llllfilll CIMl,.t I l1 l ' J""pushth<lwtttllt ,, MddrMtigMinf II Ol'tM -Ct.Ott • UGHT •I~ YOUR GAAAGE AVTOMATICAUY Seacoast Builder• Supply 16S1 P\ACINTIA AVI. COSTA M15A 642·3490 SAM CLIMl~11 ~1.p "" Tf"i·~ West l!. LOfflbtrdl I 1 5 19 St0tt 1 o 4 , 7 M•-101 2 Allde!'IDI\ 7 1 1 5 Mflcllt!I l I I S Domenlcnlnl l o 2 • G1uldtll I 1 ' 14 McC11i111 I 0 J 6 Tottlt • 25 11 '' '! .. , . -Wlllltmt Pldlorlnt Cf'lnlllll Kuclllr• "'"" ""''"' P ... 1111'9 Tot1ll St" Clt<Mnl9 S.nl1 ",.. l'O l'T '°" TP I 11 I 27 2 I I 4 4 l , 11 t • s • ' ' 2 1, 1 a • 1· t • • 4 I 1 I l l 0 • 1 '1n11n lt 16 10 14-11 lf ' 2S lD-1l ENJOY "LOCAL" Bob Paley tnd -··-INSURANCE Phone 642-6500 .. S46-320S "-North Or•nge County 474 E. 17th St. COSTA MESA r IT'S NATIONAL DECISION WEEK Simplify your last-minute gift selections with an enduring gift of time by "Rolex . Left to right ; Date with 14 karat dial markers. bezel end crown on a steel case. $345. GMT·Master with ~ate • Tells time in any two time zones of the.world- simultaneously. $255. Day-Date. Tells the day, date, minute. hour and second. 18 karat gold case and bracelet. $1, 150. I· SLAVICK'S It FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BE"-CH -644-1380 I I ..... 0 0 • ·-~ A , 24 ~All Y PILOT ' ' s Your Money's Worth Christmas Party Costs C.an Be Cut lly SYLVIA PORTER 1( you are plasming to throw a Christmas party Lhis Y.ear, fram a simple punch party to a gala dinner, you surely are starting to organize i t • Corporation after corporation has been culling back or cul· Ung out the tra-<litional alcoholic, adulterous olfice party, leaving the bulk of par· 1y giving to us. • If you have given Christmas parties in the past, you also must be aware that costs easi· ly can run double or even lri· pie the amount you have budgeted - a real blow al the lime of year when your pocketbook is most severely pinched. YET mERE ARE many \1:ays in which you can save su bstantial ~urns without com· promising the gaiety or qu ali· ty ol your party. Asswning you are not among the wealthy who can ignore the steep costs of food and services associated w i t h parties today, you can hardly afford to ignore the savings which are possible. Here are my owo rules for saving oo your Christmas party : • -Whether ifs a cocktail or 1 dinner party, set a per~ , person budget, and stay with -it. Liquor. t:ors d'oeuvres and ·other trimmings probably will ~run you between $2 and $6 a head: a dinner party can cost ,you from $3--5 on up, but it's possible to put on a fai rly ietegant spread !or around $10 I.a.person. How much can you \tally afford to spend? How pnany people do you reaUy :Want to invite? ! -Buy quarts of liquor in- :-stead of more costly fifths . A •quart serves 16 two-ounce !drinks, so if everybody drinks 1an average of three drinb, ooe ·quart will serve ~een two .and three people. Ask your Ii~ quor dealer if he will take back WlUsed bottles; many will. Buy the largest available bottles cf mixers and the least µpensive varieties al !Oda, .miic, tomato julct, etc. Have ' ; ' , ;' Appraiser : Burleigh 0. Burshem of 'Costa ~1.esa has been 1 elected to a three year • term on the board of . governors of the Jn - . ternational Society of Real Estate Appraisers. He will supervise &r ·-ciety activities in South· ern California, Arizona '.and Southern Nevada. , HAL AlllSCHll HEARING AIDS CfttMI •wit -.m,IHlr1llMI MO S•LllMEN 3409 E. COAST HWY. CORONA DEL MAR for AppohU"'911t 675-3933 ginger ate and other non- alcoholic beverages available; some people do prefer these. LOOK FOR liquor sales and considerable savings on oame.t>rand liqoon. H you try out less expensive house brands -which run the gamut in quality -test them on yourselves in advance to ~ how palatable they are. Note: Consumers Union bas done comparative testing on various types of liquor aild CU's literature can tell you which are tht best buys" io major categories. -Instead oC hiring a bartender, have your husband mis: the first drink for everybody and then suggest that everybody mi.J: his own alter that. People teod to drink less. incidentally, if an overgrar.ious host d o e 1 n ' t plunge for empty glasses the instant they are drained. Or hire a college boy or girl to tend bar with the help of a few notes and advance lessons on how to mii: what. If it's a din· ner party try to hire a reliable. mature teenager in yout area (or your own daughter) to help w it h preparations and cleaning up afterward. You'd ht surprised how many kids are eager for small paying jobs during the- ChriStmas season. -EVEN IF you're~ type who insists on flowers for every table in the house, con· sider buying just. a dozen or so well-<:hosen ones, plus a bundle of pretty greenery. One or two flowers in the right size vase can look just as good as a profusion, if you arrange them r ight. -Save on hon: d'oeuvres by serving on I y macfe..ln·U.S. items. Don't feel you must of- fer a fu11.scale delicatessen. One beautifully p r e 1 e n t e d wheel of a good domestic cheese er a platter of well- chosen cold cuts surrounded by a variety of crackers will be economical and will avoid the inevitable waste of a .big variety. -And give a break to the millions of us who are strug· gling to keep Uim figures. All we want is the simplest, Jowest<al crackers and rabbit food. YOU PROBABLY can dwarf my list. The point is that real savings are possible; all you need do is plan a little. Irvine Tells 2 Promoted Promotion of George C. Keiser to manager ol finance and William H. Bivens to audit supervisor was announced by Manuel J. Annendariz, di rec· tor of finan~ for the Irvine Co. Keiser v.·as fonnerly the in. ternal audit manager. In his new position, he .,..·i!J be responsib le for various areas o( financial planning and analysis and overall corporate audit program. He will also serve as assistant to the direc. tor of finance on various special projects . Bivens, fonner s e n i o r auditor, \\'ill now supervise and coordinate the internal and external audit program and be responsible for the training of staff aduitors. All M1k....-.All Modelo A.._., .. -TNrb "Wlitr• St"ict Mi••• th t Difftr•"c•" Or111tt C-9Y 411t C•'""" Or. N...,..-t a&L 11141 ..... JIU ..... ~"' ,.. s. .",.,.. 121)) Ja.1'7' 1970 OPEL GT COMBINES AERODYNAMIC STYLING WITH PERFORMANCE It Has 4 Cyllnder ln-llne Overhud Valve En9ln• lta High (iear Opel GT, l(adett Reviewed By CARL CARSTENSEN The 19'70 0 p e 1 Kadetts, featuring numerous styling refinements along with aome engtne improvements, are now in dealer showrooms. New features include ig· nition system, new tail lamps, new front and rear side marker lights, and optional wood grain applique siding on the wagon. Opels a r e manufactured by G e n e r a I Motors in Europe a n d distributed in the U.S. through some 1,900 Buick-Opel dealers. Six models, like last year, ar~ offered. They are: two--Ooor sedan, deluxe wagon, sport sedan, s u p e r delui:e sport coupe, R.allye Kadett, and the popular Opel GT. The 1970 lineup offers three engines. The I.I R liter engine, standard on all models but the Rallye and GT. has been in· creased to 63 horsepower, up from 60 last year. It is a four cylinder, in·line overhead valve engi ne with an 8.2 to 1 compression ratio, and 65.8 cubic inch displacement. It has two single barrel carburetors and uses regular fue l. Standard engine for the Rallye Kactett and GT is the 67 horsepower, 1.1 SR .with two single barrel carburetors, 9.2 to 1 compression r a t I o , operating on premium fu el. The optional 102 horsepower cam·in·head 1.9 liter US engine, has a 9.0 to I com· pression ratio, 115.8 cubic inch displacement, and a single * * * two-barrel carburetor. TRANSMISSION Opel 's tbree~s peed automatic transmission, ~ troduced last year, will con-- tinue as an option on all Gadett and GT models powered by the 1.9 I i t er US engine. Power brakes with rront discs are included with the twn higher hor s epower engines. Ride and handling have been improved as a result of wider wheels along with a change in steering gear ratio. Seven new exterior body col· ors are being introduced with the new models. Two co l ors GT l::hartreuse and S u n b u r s t Yellow -are ei:clusive with the GT. Other colors are Flame Red, Aztec G o 1 d . Chrome Yellow, Copp e r Bronze and RaUye Orange. RESTYLED Other new 1970 features in· elude new seat belt retractors, new buckskin trim, a new simulated black leather steer· ing wheel on Rallye and GT models, a new ignition warn- ing buzzer, and larger license plate lights. AU interior trims have been restyled. All cars will be equipped with the new Opel emission control system, and California cars will have the new evaporation control system conforming to s l a t e re- quirements. ' The Opel GT, which was in· troduced last spring in limited * * * numbers, has been given • number ct. refinements for 1970. The sporty t" 0 - passenger GT features aerodynamic styling with a long, sloping hood a n d sho rtened rear deck. With a wheelbase of 95. 7 in. ches and overall height of 48.Z inches, the GT is powered by the 1.1 liter SR, 67 HP, with the 1.9 S 102 HP availablt as an option. Opel's automatic transmission, console--mounted shift lever, also is available v.•ilh the 1.9 Sengine:. Standard transmission is the four.speed, fully synchronized manu al shift with a short throw gearshift. • • • BUICK DEALERS GOING smoNG Buick dealers just finished the best November in the division's history according lo 0. Franklin Frost, general sales manager. Last month's sales of 59,218 · were 5.2 ahead of the previous best November. Deliveries for the calendar year to date were 625,585 for an overaU gain of 6.4 percent. November sales Included 19,001 Skylarks, 3 S. 7 6 S regulan and 4,452 Rivieras. Calendar year to date sales in-- eluded 213,664 S k y I a r k s , 367,632 regulars and 44,289 Rivieras. In addition, Buick dealers also sold 5,516 Ope.ls in November to bring calendar year deliveries to 87 ,641, * * * GM Mru1 Cites Smog Controls The 1970 model· year In Ca lifornia is a ma jor milestone in automotive smog control. General t>.1otors' top emissions control engineer said in Los Angeles. Dr. Fred Bowditch, director of emission control, General Motors engineering s t a f ( , spoke at the annual meeting of the Motor Car Dealers Associat ion of Southern California. lie said 1970 model cars manufactured for sale in California achieved two Im· portanl smog control goals: I. For the fir st tlme, all sources of unburned hydrocarbons on the automobile are brought under control -crankcase, exhaust and evaporation from fuel tank and carburetor. 2. The resultiog reduction is SO percent, com pared to un- controlled cars -which meets the Initial target set by California smog authorities for automollve hydrocarbon con· trol. He pointed out than an average 1960 model car. without controls, em1ts more LISTS SMOG GOALS GM'1 Bowditch hydrocarbons -key smog- formlng ingredients -tha n five average 1970 models. "On th e standard California smog test," he said, "the ave r age uncontrolled 1960 model emits 567 grams ptr day, and the average 1970 model emits 104 grams -less than one fifth ." He said that emlSS1ons measurements on thousands of cars In the Los Angeles area -or various makes and models, of various ages and milea"s and in varying states of maintenance - show ed lhat the overall o u t p u t of automotive hydrocarbons in Southern California passed its peak in 1966, and is decllning steadily. He said the study showed that hydrocarbon emissions from automobiles in the Los Angeles basin reached 1,830 tons per day at the peak out. put in 1966. By now, be said, it is down to around 1,370 tons per day. He added that automotive controls also have reduced carbon monoxide emissions by 65 percent, and that 1970 model GM cars with lransmlsslon.controlltd spark reatures are generally meeting the 1971 Californl standard for control of oxides or nil.rogen - a year ahead of time. IN YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD ••• Finance <Briefs PHILADELPlllA (UPI) PhUe<>FonJ C«p. bu ob- lalned a flU mlllloo Anny contract !or ground 1111ppon equipment for lhe ChaplZTal mllllle' IYIWD. ST. LOUI8 (UPI) - Checltetboard Properties, Inc., a sublldiary of Rat 1 ton Purina, Co., bl. a1Tlflled to borrow $18 mUUon fw ~ ye.rs at 1% preceot to expond ita Jack·l.n-tbe BG restaurant chain, from • group of It ... ltltuliooal IDveaton. NEW YORK (UPi) Norfolk and Weotem Rallway and auoclated c o n t 1 t a e r trl!llpOl'!aUon, USA, h e 1 reached an agreement to create a pool ol cllaslil far .shuttling !roller contaners to and lri>m ahlppers' daoka and rail yards. nus means, the companies saJd, that shippers wiU not have to supply chanla for the trailen aid 11 mlllly u four 20-foot trallera can be carried on a Bingle railway Oat car, thereby ·exceeding previous weight limits. LOS ANGELES (UPI) - Global MjUine Co. laid Tues· day its contract to operate ib drillship, Challenger, for the Scripps Oceanographic lnsli· tution of the University of Call· fornia has been renewed for 30 montbs starting next Fe~ ruary at a total prict of $11 million. DALLAS (UPI) -LTV Electrosystems, Inc., announc· ed it will establish a new di- vision in Greenville, Tex., to engage in modifying and ma- jor maintenance of commer· cial aircraft CLEVELAND (UPI) -Ac· thur G. McKee le Co. agreed to sell ils process machinery division to Envirotech Corp. of Palo Alto, Calif., for more than $5 million. The division makes environmental pumps and similar equipment for the food processing, chem ical, plastic and textile industries. NEW YORK (UPI ) -Gr .. cuy itaoulacturers of Amer· ica, Inc ., announced at the conclusion of Its armual COO· venUon in -New York that it wUI move its headquarters to Washington, D.C., next July !. CINCINNATI (UPI) -Trail· mobile Division of Pullman, Inc., has taken an optioo on 130 acres at Charleston, Ill., for a new trailer factory .. The option was obtained from the Charleston Chamber ol Com· mer~. The factory ultimately will employ JSO. LAS VEGAS (UPI) -Na· tional Data Commun.lcalions of Dallas has contracted to buy $56.3 million worth of computerized accounting and communications equipment from Honeywell, Inc., for SO Real Time Hospital Man· agement Systems. NEW YORK (UPI) -Tbe Skandia group of Stockholm will assum e most of the direct reinsurance business in the United States o[ Prudential Insurance Co. of Great Brit· ain. Skandia has resources of about $1.5 billion. NEW YORK (UPI) -Bank· ers dollar acceptances out- standing in the United States rose $24 million In October to a new high of $5.256 bl!· lion, with acceptances COV· ering imports accounting for the rise. Interest rates on ac· ceptances declined slightly in the final week al October to range of a to av, percent. WASHINGTON (UPI) - Economist Herbert Stein, a member of President Nlxon's council of economic advisers, told the conv~on of the Jt.!. sociated General Contractors he upects the economk: re- sults of the current quarter to show a significant reduc· t1on in the rate of inflation. Re said he ei:peets a further drop in inflationary pressure the first quarter of 1970. Huntington Beach Office: Located at 91 Huntington Center at Edinge r Ave. & Beach Blvd., Huntington Beach Office of Coast & Southern Federal Savings, where your account is • • • . adjoining the San Diego Freeway, in 1-luntington Beach. Ollwr tlTldt : WIL.H!fll 0'"CI: :.a» Wjl"'I" •t•d. • 3&9·1 ""5 •ANTA llKlliOCAf lrt wr1M1,. •M. •~'.ores ..,.. ''°"-01 1 011'1 I ,KlllC •1i1~4 f SAFE • CONVENIENT• AVAILABLE Market fluctual ioris tlon·t worry Coast and South"m aava111 HIGHEST PREVAILING ""'T!S •.. their capllal Is •hw•r" rising in value. And ro•'r• au re ""' :!v~h~thc~~:~'.~~~IM~~siat•nt witn aafety wnen you S;g.._~,." 12,;..1~ .... ".I 5~32" Foremost assurance of these benefits ts IM outstanding financ ial atrength malnt1 lned !hrough the yeat1 by Ute man--egemenl ol Co1a1 and SoutMm Fedt,.l ,Savtngs. INSURANCE TO $15,000/R!SOURC!S OYU IOI MILLION DIVIDENDS TO DATE OF WITHDRAWAL ,ANOl!.AMA c1n: &611 V•ri Nurt l lvd', • 1'2·1171 COAST lCMO 11-.CK: Jro I l.Mull • •J,·1•11 AND SOUTHERN FEDERAL SAVINGS LA. CIVIC: CINTlfll 21111 1l101d'wt~.111·1,0! IAflllA -.NA • ...... WltT COVUtA! lOAN llllt'tlCll AOlNCT: ... ''' . E• .. ltM IP1oPDl"9 C:tr •• 3l1.J201 '1905 No. M•ln SI.• {71•1 l41"2~r~ ... .. THE NEEDLE IS MIGHTIER THAN THE PEN And ~ MG1' to1'o kftoloo full MIO to i1n tM p~rase to oet tM moll 01d of llU ...,.b u . DAILY PILOT -Uc Svcfnev Harril. Ht 1w bcn eallld th< modma---:_ dq Ht",. v ll1no1c1n. 11 ~ou'rc nad• /M hb 1'1e o/ the odd adj1etfo1 and Uo•g~I • pt01>0ldfto P'°'' to ¢ot rou ""' need!< ••• if vou ..... 1 to find '°"'""""' to think GboW in toMt MOK read ••. if 1'0" Moc a ltnJf o/ humor, vau b 1 l o n g ioiU. f"eadt"r1 '°"° delight fft ulllng other• whet .. SJJd Jaid• tn OM o/ the notion't moll • q1&0Ud "'""""'- Some Sample Barbs Recently Thrown By Sytlney Harris: • ''One of the highest p1ld jobs In America consists of standing up Jn front of a mic~ t'ophone, HjMrating the good records from the bad ones -and playing the bad ones." "It'• sad but true that while alcoholics are the tat argument for abstinence, IO many abstainers are equally effective ar- aument for a little drink now and then." "Most of the IO<lllled 'incompatibility' In m1rr1.,. springs from the fact that to most men, 11x is an 1d; while to all women, It is •n emotion. And this differ· ence in 1ttltude an be bridfed only by love."' '"The 101e difference between a 1dedica~ ted crusadei ' aod a 'nosy refarmer' con.- sista in our agreement or disagreement with his objettives." "The most expSotlve combination In the workl con1ltt1 of slncarlty added to Ignorance.'" 11Wbenever 1 am the recipient of an e:r:· ceaively hearty handshake, J suspect lit. Muscles is trying to !Sell something. hidt sometblng, or prove somethi.na.• Th·e Editorial Pare For This Signatare , ..... A'll Nelp You Find The Latest Q1otables Created By 'The Needler' For His Col· umn, A Regular Feat1re of the DAILY PILOT Your Hometown Delly Newopoper (, ·' • 3 LINES 2 TIMES · 2 DOLLARS (Any Item Priced $50 Or Less) Pin~h You1•self A Pile Of Pennies (Or Even Dollars) Penny Pinchers Pile Up Profits r Dial Direct for Details 642-5678 North County, 540-1220, Toll Free DAILY PILOT PENNY PINCHER . WANT ADS '• ' I -.-----·-~-~-----·~-~----·---------------... -----·· ----~-----~-. -----------------------~-------~---- Monday, Duembff 8, 1%9 HOUSES FOR SALii HOUSES FOR SALE ~ HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES,F.OR SALE HOUSES POR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE -1000 lionor o 1 IODO Gonorol 1000 lrvlno 1238 lrvino 1238 Huntington ~ch 1400 Hunll!!!!!" llNc:h HOO RENTALJ I RENTALS Houlff Furnished HouM1 Unfvml"'9d: Mesa Del Mar Big 4 Here 11 a gleaming lricndly ran1ily hOme in a choice are-a, Newly painted and carpeted. Texas i>iu bcd- roorn's, J ~,j baehs, d r e a m kitCht'n \\"ith rclinisbcxl satin cabi~ts. Best o( all cnly $29,400. Colesworthy & Co. "Agent" "F'or A \ViiSt Buy" &12-m1 VIEW Lcvely l:iri;e 4,!XXI sq. tr. heme \Vith outstanding view ol !he entire harbor. This spacious hoinc can either be a 6 bed1-001n or 4 bedroon1 "-'ith studio & playroom - tamlly room. Custom built by O"-'ner, with electronic oven, 3 fireplaces, elegant Karistan carpeting. Walled front terrace encloses cus- tcm S"-'imming pool. Asking $155,IXXI. can for app't. john macnab (714) 642-8235 901 Dover Dl'ivc, Suite t.>o Newport Beach PRIVATE WORK SHOP $22,000 PRICE In excellent Costa Mesa area. 3 Nice sized bedrooms and a house run cf fresh carpet. Over sized lot with BIG, BIG 14 x 30 WORKSHOP for Dad! To1vering trees off huge custom l.'Ov<!ttd patio! $1,Z-:XI 00\\'N for any buyer or NO DO\\'N VETS! WE SELL A HOME EVERY JI MINUTES Walker & Lee ~~ Harbor Blvd. at Adams 545-046.'i Open 'til 9 Pr.1· IN Vf S,<. .-r ""' IJll 'Ill Chicago Bound Owners have oppol'tunity in Chicago; so you have opponunity here. 3 good Aiud bdrms i baths, for- n1al living'-room and large tam. rm. Beautiful ;.. shag carpels. Near goU t.'OW'SE'. Asking $27,500 F~WVA really anx- ious! ' •'11···1'"·r' 1·., ·· • •' ; ' \I ' ' " '• ' 546·59 9C boVER SHORES SELL! Owner transferred, will l(!ll or lse/option, lge. 4 BR ., lam. rm. homf'. Pool. View of Back Bay & hills. Loan at 6% % assumable. $69,500 ...... Coldwell, Banker & Co. 550 Newport Center Dr. Newport Be1ch, Calif. 133-0700 644-2430 NEW OFFERING Westcllff area l:!larming 3 lxlnn family home -A delightful plact lo enf(>f'QUn, Family room. 2 fireplaces, professlona!Jy landscaped patio & ganll'tl. Exclusive -Sjl,500. Barrett Realty 161),) \Vt'atcli.tf Or., NB 642-5200 2041 Paloma Drive Altrac1jve 3 + family rooin in btauti!ul Newpo11 Beu~h ntighborbxld. Has labuloo" ~% anumable Joan. O\\'N- tR ABSOLtrr'ELY ~J\;ST SELL. Quick 'jX),S.<;llSSi<»l - don't delay. M l-!!IO ,,.. cMrrN tl!etbt) OLLfGERfALTY •~Adlmi ltH•rbor,GM. MESA VERDE P.a.\se your Family iD this ~ BR. home on a large lot. CIOilC 10 ishop~ t: 8Chc>Ols. Owner lease option. Askin( !28.IOO. lir•h•m Riiy -2414 Neat. Ne"J)Ort P'Ol!:t. Oftloe Now VIEW Homff S.>"CIUI. in l:>oftr Shotts Jvan. \\1t.lir' 3 brand new '!pnt.s: <C bdrm!, l ba , P'\'" Om' nn, r~m. 1'11'1 1\1/frplc. murtyanJ po -o I s. f1wn fJOO,lm. Roy J. \\."ard CO. JUI ColAA)I Dr. $46.J;;c>. BUILDER'S CLOSE-OUTlll COLLEGE PARK NEW HOME IMMEDIATE MOVE IN 4 BDRMS 11/2 BATHS Nowport Booch 2200 Nowport Booch 3 $1 ,500 Down = .5% It> LOW, LO\V lntemt in $26,95-0 Beach area! ,,.IASSIVE (a Ken Koll home ) TURTLE ROCK HILLS In The Moste r Plonned Community of Irvine Are no\V offerfn·g ror sale, their award win- ning 3 & 4 bedroom MODEL HOMES. 1/4 MILE FROM IEACH $20.990 OCEAN front hollSe, Tops! Lg 2 BR, 2 BA-Frplc, crpta, drps, yard, patio, $250, w~ ter_ 673-8C68 Coron• del Mir 22SO --~·- Lovely Furn. Home Z Bd, conv. den, 2 ba's. TV, hi·li, washer/dryer, lanai, ADULTS ONLY 2 bd1'ln, 2 baths. New paint, J1e1v cpta, ne\v drapea Available Ja;1. ht. S2'25. 3 bdrm, 2 baths. split-level. F .P., Blt·if\11 -2 car garaze, faces pool. Avail Jan. 15th. $275. BEDROO~!S ptu.~ ~rawling Come 1 f itl 'al k · Jiving & FAMILY· ROO~-f _ . r O \V l llpc<:I par - with tloor to ceiling FlltE-tng area tor ~t & cami>".'1'! PLACE! Bright 111 sunshine Adult ~pied _hon1e with Calif(>l.iila garden l'll'ctJic near new carpeting, ~acanl k. h & dish , ·her• Pl sh & ready for your Christmas itc l'tl "'as · u occupancy. Call now to set' These model homes are magnificently ap- pointed with the finest of 'carpets -drapes -wallpapers; plu s every model is profes- sionally landscaped v.~tb special \valkways & pat ios. HUNTINGTON BEACH Call Now 962· l 353 patio_ l Blk, lo Shills. 6 mtM>. · or more. $350 mo. 3 BDRM. 2 baUu;.~split-leveJ. .shag cnrpel.5 from BEAl'A-' ING CEIL.ING living room 2, BEDROOM R . C. GREER Realty Available Dec. 20· $26.5. 10 secluded master bedroom + scrumptoos pullman mal'-Corona de l Mar 1250 Fount1in V11l1y 1410 3355 Via Lido 673-9300 3 bdrn1, 2~; baths. New bl• bath•. POOL s1zED Hardwood Floors T hese h omes are placed on quite large & very private vie\v sites that may be purchas- ed o n either leasehold or fee ti t J e O\vner· ship. ~~-~--~-~- EASTBLUFF-VIEW 3 BR. J ~ ba. Nice fpl. Din. area. Sho\\'s unusually weU. Call for pl"icc & terms. ------OCEAN VIEW pain~. new Cl'J!lS· n ~ Z bedroom convertible den drapes. F .P. Blt-101. Faces block "-'all~ back yard with $20 700 professionally landscaped ' ,, front wilh sprinklers! FROM Cl;an, sharp ho~t on_R-~ lot. ONLY $...77,000. Near .new cpt11 lti tlus aduH ASSUME FHA LOAN $'243/per 1no. PIT!. N e w horrie. Owner disabled 1vants · out. 3 bdnns 2 baths, built- ins. You linish landscaping. Neal' ne1v 18 hole goU course, 2 s1\in1 -~ls. 2 baU1s, til'eplace, t blk t~ pool. Avail now. $275. ' beach references $35(1 lease Bay & Beach Rea1ty, Inc, 6-12-77TI ' • 901 Dover Drive, Sulte 126 645-2000 Eve~. 548-6966 WE SELL A HOME occupied hon1e. Call no'v - EVERY ll MfNUTES tomorrow could be IOQ late. Follow the signs lo TURTLE ROCK HILLS, one 1nile cast of the UNIVERSITY of CAL~ IFORNIA at IRVINE, just o ff the intersec- tion of CAMPUS & CULVER DRIVE. CORBIN·MARTIN nEALTORS GT;,-1662 ::ms E. Coas1 Hwy., CdM Bl::AUTIFUL :; BR l-lon1e plus nc1v I Bf{ luxury apt. Or use as 4 BR, ramily rm. Crpts, <ln•JX'S, 2 tropical patio.~. no yard 1vork . $~9.000. O\VNER. 67~,_0312 2300 $27!> lse. Custon1 J BR, 21,!J ----------Ba.". Family, dining, ne SPACIOUS z S{Ol'Y, 3 Br, 2 crpts, intercom. All elec kit. Ba, bayvie1v, family. $195 Lge lot. Atany xtras. 11•inter or $325 yrly. KI Anniversary Ln. 642-222.8 6-9574 Walker & Lee I' mt441:i~JVf!I ~1 = 1Dl Newport 2790 Harbor Blvd. at Adams J45-9491 Open 'ti! 9 1PM •• Victoria OCEAN VIEW 646·8811 Telephone: 833-1102 for further information. G.J. RESALE 4 Bdrm., 2 ba., room for trailer and/or boat, beautilul yards, close lo schools, $7,000 dO\\'n, 6\~ ~;, loan. &39-6081 , 11&12 \Visteria F. V. L.d 1 1 2351 Nowport Shorn I 0 Se CAMEO SHORES AnyUmo No expense 11•as spared /i-~~~-=~-~-=:-i-i-i~~=-=-== • t~0:;~ ;~~,:~::1• Commercial Sleeper placl' to live. 3 Spacious bedrooms, family room \vlth brick fireplace formal dining room Step-dmvn living roo1n. J7x35 Pool Sl09.500 Listed Exclusively \Vith OuU;landing lxa1ion at onr of Cos!a l\1esa'!I busiest intet'Sectionli. H8s residential income units at pn>~nt. L"2's f1'1Jntage-, <>Xce!lent con1- n1<>l'cial potential & i1 is zoned C-2. 16/Ja.. co~ rs ~ WALLAC! Gerer1I 1000 Newport Heights 1210 Linda fsle 1306 1 Linda Isle Drive HUGE POOL SANTA ·I BR, :1 BA ho1nr. in final Low PRICE OF -"''" oi complet ion. Pal°' Verdes stone entry & frplcs. Santa An1 Hgts. 1630 1,; ACRE. 2 Br., frplace,, -----1~1i\o1EDJATE occupancy. 2 Br, 2 Ba. Sunny patio. 2 lots from bch/bay. Ne1v crplg & decor. Chvner. 642-5424 RENTALS Houses Unfurnished $20,950 !or this great 3 bed-Has Arrived Early I F'an1 Rm .: -~tlhartl t•m. roonl with 2 gorgeous baths. Newport Heights ., bt>dtoomJ Beaut. dee. $1;);),00J heated pool, rni for horses. General 3000 I-luge family room oU this homl'. Priced at ~rC>und val-Lin,da Isle Development modern queens kitchen. Slid-ue alone_ Zoning will permit I 8111 Grundy 67S-3210 $33,500. Chvner. 545-6948. --------· ing doors leading to lovely 4 units _ To ~cl\lc estate, Laguna B11ch 170.S covered patio and sun deck quick sale valur. lido Isle 1351 BEAUTIFUL "-'hich surround!! this 15 x :«> pool. heated & filtered. Sub.. SlS,OClO 107 VIA EBOLI BEACH HOME mil $2,000 do\vn 'vith total 646-7171 4000 SQ. FT. In lo~ly ~gu~a condo. com- payn1ents $180 total. 4 BR, 31-{, BA, 3 car garage. munity; rontlng on n1ag11if- "WE SELL A HOME C111t.~. drps, unusual featur-iccnt heated pool, 100 steps EVERY 31 MINUTES es. Built 1967. O"'·ner c. R. Iront priv. bch., tennis cts. Rent or Lease Option Large home, r.1esa Verde. New shag t'arpc.l & paint. $230 mo. 54&-9521 O• 5411-6631 flll J il"NICHOl.5 W lk & L ---~~~~~--I Gangi. 213 I 244-3101; eves ett'. Comp. attractive furn. LARGE 2 story 3 OI' 4 BRs a er ee A LITTLE 213 / 246-0700. Open. include w/w crpt'g, drps., 13x2l' rumpus roon1. bit-ins, REAL TORS r PRIVATE KINGDOM kgsz master bed; location newly decorated. $270/mc. 673 AAOO 7682 Edinger H · 8 h 1400 '"'''· 2 BR,, 2 BAs. "'P· 557·7&18 5'().ll5l REALTORS --'54'4Ml41- (0pon E ... ingsl -rt 842-4455 Open 'til 9 PM Walled patio, 3 Br. + din. + untington IBC Iv., din. rms; Jaun. with ,v/d, ""'!!!!!!!'!!"'!!!!!!!!!!!!! ... !!!!!!!!!!!!!'l2 ON LOT $23,500 family + :.!Ox22 ri. all pur-$20,850 Is The Price stor .• 2-car gar. lower Jev-$165. 3 BR, fenced yd, frplc. 3 BR. 2 Bath, carpets drapes. clubhouse &: pool privl. Walk to beach. '275 mo. Eves 714/968-4004 Bay Shorn FOR Lease. Large 4 bdnn,' Jamily room, formal dining, etc. Jean Smith Realtor 646-32'";>5 Corona del Mar 325 EXTRA Lge, 2 Br. house. l 'h Ba., Jge. !iv. rm., formal din rin., fpl. Priv, 30 x .30'. encl. patio. $275 mo. yr!:{ Scenic Properties 61.5-5 2 BR, So of hYI)'. Frplc, crpls, drps, bltns. Beam clngs. 613-6904 2 BR, sundeck, nice patio, gardener. $210 m o n t h l 1 . 675-0737 SCREAMING ,_ MESA VERDE· pose roon1 $19000 1 1 <-· t Sho R/O, 1v/1v, children & ....,ts EASTSIDE · ' ' This home is a \Valker & e . =e to apprecia e. "-'11 .-- HIGH $24,950 Witlk~r ·~lty. 67.S..5200 Lee GuarantCC' lradc and H"s by owner, c:tll !01· app'I, OK. Bin-. 534--6980 2 BR, 1!: COSTA MESA 3366 Via Li~NB Open Sun. a beauty!! y 0 u young <199-2lj2 or 837 -0791. $175. 3 El' separate house.-Vie\v, frplc. CEILINGS • • • TWO t2J SEPARATE, 2 Bed-~e~~:~i~s"t -~ pr.op lr, stop renting and ~ec HANDYMAN'S 1--amily il"<:"lcon1c. Blue $22:i nio. 64~2290 In 1his eXQ\lisite 3 Bd. boine, room hon1es on a CHOICE z baths, built-in kltchr.n, t;ov. Dover Shores 1227 this one, :1 Queen Size BOO-Special! I Inconie un its 120 ~B7'~·-"'~"~·~'-'~CHl_IJ7l~, _C7·'_1_· ~-1$250 rno. 2 BR, frplc, blbis. with fainily room. fornial LOT \Vith alley access T\VO 't'd. r G + l'OO!llS 1vith gol'geous bath. yd-s. to Ucach. Patios, decks $130. 2 Br, hal'd\\'ood, drps, Ne1\•ly decorated. Walk to dining rooni and shag car-lor ·the price of one ~I just ~rL ~~720 ara~ car--A-Irreplaceable Vie,v-t:f Huge kilchen. New carpets \\"/ocean vic1~·. Nd~. paint, n1· to .... ·n. Blue Eeacon beach & to\vn. 675-7488 peting that you may ,vant to $23.500 !or both. $2~ Do11•n TARBELL 2955 Harbor Bay & Mountains! & drapes. E11ormou.~ back ere. '69-"70 Gros~ S9500 yr. 645-0111. C.i\I. DUPLEX-2200 sq, ft. 4 BR, mo1v_ $39,SC9 and it's yours. will handle!! Regal "~I~ \\lorld "' 1contcin1-yard. NO 00\\'N G.r. and Pr. $69,000. Consfde1· rrades. 1225. 5 BR, 2 Ba. Redec. 21 ~ BA, bl bis, frplc. Gar. WE SELL A HOME \VANT to huy duplex oi· porary pie urcsqul' iome w Small Do11•n F'.H.A. t.1ls.510N REALTY '194--0731 Frplc, bltns, \\"/\I'. drps, $325 n10/lse. 540-7573 EVERY 31 MINUTES small house in Eastside unobstructed v1e1v • most WE SELL A HOME Avail noiv. Bkr. S?A--6980 Costa l\fcsa. Pl-inciPaJs on-~ms, 5,000 ~· I!, 4 Br's, EVERY 31 MINUTES VIE\V, 3 BR, 2 BA, all clec., I========== Wa Iker & Lee ly. 675-0617 or 642-1863 4~~ Ba + n1a1ds qtrs. Easy beam ceilings, crpts, drps, Huntington Be1ch 3400 r>•int, lmmed occop. Fum· Walller & Lee lg,~, lot. $36,000. Owner ORANL~~~~~:TY'S 2{143 WestcliU Dr. Costa Mesa 1100 lshed. $178,000. Consider ft. 1 "494-4=oc"'..-.,,----- ' 2629 HARBOR BLVD. '-,"'°=&'&16-~7c.7:.:ll==~ r-,---------trade/vac. 101. Assume 614% 7682 Edinger RENTALS Costa Mou 3100 ---------1$155 yrly, 4 BR, 2 ~ crpts, 4 BR. 1;4 Ba., elec. kitch. Fam. r m., frpl. f ncd. yard. Choice Ioc. $240 r..r o. ~8-7260. d1-ps, very small fenced yd. Dbl gar. 1st & last &: dep. pd. Van Buren & Newman {213) 248-1921 ~8640 . 1 $25,• f HA ""' LARGEST I::'"'="·=""=·="=''='==== s.J:Z-44j..i Open 'Iii fl Pi\f Houses Furnished OPEN EVES TILL 1:30 PROPERTY IN U_n~varsity Park 1237 Owner Desperate Rentals to Share 2005 •--bl I 1 MESA DEL MAR .;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.1 i\rust oc\J. transfcn·ed out ot 2 BEDR00:\1. $1Jj n10. Ne\v LEASE $275 per mo. 2 1tory 0 Dail 1 5 n=uma e ow ntei'Cltt loan. B O 4 BR ' BA dbl " o P'•."t 1 ol>•.ld no _,, Call 3 BR. 2','• BA, Shorecrest · pen Y • ':-ocated on beautiful fl'E'{' Y wner ' -' WEIGHING VALUES? slate.-. Take over 5%.% G.I. \V MJ!!.N \v/secured inco1ne ". ' ,.~ . tract, 1-1.B. Call 548-4905 aft 1220 Dolph T I --" Tb gar, cncloSE"d main palio + Joan. Neal 4 & fain. rm. iv/ will share lovely, new 2Br 1 _54_8-=""='~------ln err, CdM 1'""' street is home is a 2 t. u · Lookin"" for your inonry"s · 6 01' ,vknds. al al Lo open pa 10s, n1que en-.... fully C'Qpd. Anthony pool. a1it ~·/same, ever 30, Cr.I. * COTIAGE J Bdr. Stovc, 1 ,.:.,.:.:_.=:::.~---~ Formal dining roont, 3 BRs re v ue. iv down pay-trance". Shrubs, .trees. Many \VOrlh? Then tak<' a peek at 1191 · 1. 1 -545-8729 eves Refs. refrig, Util pd. $140. No 2 BR, 1 Ba, lge fenced yd, 2 baths, huge living room m~t -room for boa t or 134 000 Call r.•'" "1G1 !his 2 Br., till' roofed bung-• inc 5• iaxes ,. ins. 'th + •~•ler N ~·1 al 'fi extrM! • · .......,.,. \\'ide opco for oiler ,.,. li"L· s HARE •1 y , I< g a nt Pets. 54:>-6294, 557-8400. crpts, drps, garb disp, 2 car WI fireplace family ~.,. • 0 C•a>I qu I ca-alOI\"_ FP $3•1.200. " ., .. room overlooking large pa-lion!!. LIKE Ne"'· 4 bdr .• 3 ba.; • d h 11 ing of $3~,950. wa!erfront home iv/dock. 3 BR & ilcn. 11,; ba, crpls, gar. '$150 mo. 962--8537 ,,_ '500 ft I' · •••9571 Over 1700'. Very l.rg_ Liv. • t>.1an 3.':i to 60 yrs. $150 mo. <lrps, fl'pl, bit-ins, clean. No. 4 LARGE BR, 2 BA, lrplc, uv. ·-sq 1v1ng,area. ~ ar ~31 Rn1, & l\1ast. bdr. Kodcll re I ~ 546·5880 . N OCC & hi (near cinemathelh!\ 67H331 C.i\.f. $215 mo. 842-7153. ne\I' cpts & drps, dbl gat. ~rp,tng. d~lar ·,,',·',~~· LLEGE REALTY 2 BR .$6."i per mo. S.A. Iil·Jt.IACULATE I BR duplex fencd back yd. $250_ 962-8994 Lachenmyer ' - J tl NIClfOl.5 a 10· · gar., ' ""· REALTY l500Adams atHlrbor,CM. area Grand & Jst w/ gai·. Apt B, 131 E. 2lsj ~176 . Univ .. Park Center, lr•;inc t~~~~~~~~"'""'"'J,=~6~7~:>~5920~~o~r~>l~3-4~3"~7 __ St. 01. 54S-S584 SANTA ANA HEIGHTS N'E\V 2 BR, l BA, shag c:rpt. Cali Anytime 833·0820 1i110DEL HOi\.IE??? JI sure ROOMf.fATES \Vanted to l-~47B~R~&~Oc~o7$~200~-.,-,- 1860 Newport Blvd., CM S23.900 excel terms 3 BR Drps, dishwhsr, patio, beam j '!"~~~~~~~~~•J looks like it. Absolutely share apt. !\tale or female. fenced yard. CALL 646-3928 Eves. 644-16.>5 hci\\'d firs, cptd, f.rplc, paU~, ctiling, frplc, gar. Adults, -----gorgeous 4 lxh·1n (3 & den) Blue Beacon 645-0111 * 54&-f.i068 * ~~=====,~~~ii bit " R&.O ,,. no pets $165. 2650 Elden, -Carana del Mar 1250 l'1Jndominium in alinost • -in • '"""" cor. lot. 53l-0062 after 7 pn1 & Sun. unbelievable c 0 n di ti 0 n. ROOMATE "-'anted: male on 3 ER, irplc. cpts, drps, 2 ear • • • • Our Exclusive Bal. Isle. Call 6T:)-2569 aft. garage. $200 mo. Lg fenced 4 BR 2 ba, Ill' Westclifl O\VNER-A good buy. 3 BR Ownc1· transferred -priced 54• 28 97- Realt or ' .. PRESTIGE AREA 3705 LARGE, newly rede<:. 1-Br. duplex. Ocean view. Adults, no pets. S175 mo. yearly, PLACE REALTY 494--9704 For rent or 18le 4 BR, new, in Laguna. $300. mt 1 l" t ·d C t E•"oy fro•>> "''"'~ •·oom r · di I 5 p.m. yd. ~ 13, 540-6 a Newport Beach, rutt 3 BR shopping $21.900. Cptd, iousc, ·vCS St c. p s, " ~. L ~ OJ" imme ate sa e at or $41,500. 830--4019 Newport B••ch 2200 Mesa del Mar 3105 1=========1 ----------------Dina Point 3740 home in beautiful "'estclill. screened patio, sep. block drps, stove, gar. $19,$0. an oeean vic1v and S26,9JO. Call 54~8424 (open Wrought iron fenced for housc 11·011<.shop. a11•a1'd 54&-8026 aunsets Ol'er ShorecliUs eves1 South. Coast Real court yard entra11c~. Largt winning child 's tree house 3 BR hous<' on \Vllson $'l3.~i00. "-'oodcd area 7E>~t'-"-·~=~"~~~-TOWNHOUSE; 3 BR, 21.; 4 BR. 2 Ba. Crpl & Drapes. r ---------- Lanai. Spac roo1ns. fn1n1ac • • • • O\vnrr. By appointment. froni th is ~f"!a<"1011~ Move ln"By Christmas BA, frplc, patio, pool, 2 car throughout. ln1111rtl poss F. l\1ngaard Real Esta\e 5-1~-20'.l!l/646-1760 ~ txlnn' il('n hon1~·. Sh•1rp :: s1ury .1 bdr,r1 21 1 gat", all bltns, cpts, drps. avail. Pri("t>d be!O\V mnrkt't illl '1-'t!.21 OLDER 2 BR house-, 2 car The (inly Ooo1· plan l.Jalh. On cOl'llCl" lot. Carp-Lile $325. mo, unfurn $300, " ,.-000 ,___________ ur 11~ kind ' ;i, • 1-'"'al". Lrg lot -suirablc fo1· rts/di•a pj'S, all bu1ll-ins. F"vr. Avail 12/1. 871-88ll or 2 HOMES 1 LOT ., on Roxbury 111 t 1· · · 2 2497 PAUL•ll'Bfn: CARNAHAN ••.a.LtY co. 1093 Baker, C.l\I. 5-16-5440 building. 5'1~1 111a ! 1111ng roon1, service &I - 3 Bdrn1 2 bath. fil'cplace, f'Xclusivr$;'6'a~~10t'O Shores po:'Ch, family roon1. Assun1e FIREPLACE, Pool, 2 bdr., 2 M ••• V.rd. 1110 •"" 6'1~ GI loon -prire S35,900, builr-in.<; + a 2 Behm home, ba., patio, adults. Bayside flrrplarc _ S32,500 11·ilh $6000 -;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;:;:;;;;;;;.I P aul Jones Realty Village. Until July 1st. $200. do11·n 011·ner wi!I carry @ ·• 8·17-1261: Eve. iM7-8919 C II (213) 2"22-4309or673-5419. 11 i~ $2'l5/mo. 118 yrarsl. $40,500 BY 01vncr -Assun1c 5\6 BAYFRONT 3 & den, pier & $225; One year lease. Call 54.i--s.;;so eves. Mesa Verde 3110 -'--- VACANT, 3 BR, 2 BA, cov patio, fncd yard. Bltin TV. $235. Call a.lier 6 833-3139 4 BEDROOMS. VACANT 1 year lellS(! $260/n10, Ag!. 5-16-4141 Overlooking Marini Beauli!ul ~xccutive home. Spacious. luxurious. N e w cal'pet!I, draperies. redecor. thru-out. Phone for appt. to sel'. 496-3959 4 BR, family room, :oi BA, carpets, drapes, pcol. $215 mo. 496-1445 :~~=~====:I Wells-McCardle, Rltrs. Largt'st & finest 4 bclrni, dln-Loa.n. 3 Br. den, lrg. fan1. float. Furn or unfurn , $600 1810 Ne11·por1 Blvd., C.ill. ing & lamily rooni, hoinr rn1., frpl11cc. 2 ha. h;lancl nio. No, 2 Balboa Coves 5.JS-7729 ti·l·Hl68·1 f'\"l'S. valut' n 0 11• on niarkC'1. kitchen, bll-ins. 2 panlrys. 675-4331 EASTSIDE 3 BR Newport Be1ch Duplexes Unfurn. 397S 3200 Fi.'\el' upper -vacan! & \1•aH-1.,,.,..,.,...,....,...,,.,..,..., 1 Boat gate. Col'cred patiol'. I ~=~=,_.,-,..,--,..-.,-. 1~ n.00111y & 1·on1lortab r l•xr-2 BR, 1 BA, ~, blck rro1n bay .1ng ror an oUer. Atton1ry $26 950 i·utive lypc honir. Lai>gc I-~Z car-r landscaping. Clo:;r & •-ach. $l"" + uli\. \.\'inter CHOICE Of 3 lovely 3 Bdrm homes nr. ocean. $Z"JG-$275 yrly. eay ..... ooc1 Rlty. !"148-1290 2 BR, drps, crpts, fen~ yd, gc.r, bit-ins. Adulta, no pets $140 mo. 548-4573 for clil'nl says sell this prop. • to all school!', shoppng, !)ch. "" uv r11y NO\V! Try FHA, VA/ 5 8edrm • J lath <-'Orner lucAlion. Rooin for 2828 E. COAST HWY. S:l3,4;1(). 962-SjJ.3. rental to J uly 1· 61~2539 ONE gift -many wonders F pool $.· t1·al!C'r. A hun1r you'll llA '"!"nls. Big Fiesta pool. ~·uu dining l'njo.v srring s, 011.11111g. CALL Corona del Mar $24,950 Askrn9 $23,500 roon1. Ric h pRncHng. hand-'HO-J1 ·1 ue1·1 ,..e Real i::s 673-3770 son1l' bar, BeSl buy on 10-;ate i~Pf'n r~C'~~~ · 1--~B~E~A~U~T~l~F~U~L--~!UST SELL 3 large BP. 11~ day"s market! Primr al"t'a. bn, dinini:: roo111. Adult 0• . .'- 540-lTlO EXECUTIVE HOME t·upicd only. Lo\v down 10 TARBELL 2955 Har bor, College Park 1115 \\'ith a ti•tlly spa~ious OCt'nn present financing. Quick pos. v1c11'. Absolu1ely in1n1acu-BRASHEAR REAL TY LIDO SANOS Open Daily 1·5 PM late! One of the finest 3 847-S:;o7 431-3769 968-1178 5 BEDROOMS LG.<\ bd1111 2 bit, Assun1abli: Bdrn1s .. fain. rm. hon1es. LO INTEREST LOAN• :! Balhs. Lal'fl.C yard. ·loiv int loan. 2::.1!1 Colgalc Fon11,1l din. rn1 ., 2'"i ba1hs. • $29,950 Dr. For 111fornia1iun call. Beilul. t'arpC'ling & drapes. Large 4 Bdrm Gtarge Williamson PERRON P.l-1'Y 612-liil l.:in11 1 ovrrlookit1g Corona Lovely ho111t' u1 1·cry drsir- F&bulous &ck Bay v1~11· R1'::At.TOn tkl i\lur, Obi. dr1 ;:al", \\/ able t11·r11. Bctt,..r IHllT\"!1 honie. Love!~.' 4 + famil~ 673-4350 67.J..15'4 Eves. Newport beach 1200 rlrctric rloor opcnrr .• '\:lnl HAFFOAL REALTY roo n1, r a1nblini:; 1011", C:i.h---•==-,,==~• landscaping & ft·nriu:;. ll"-842•4405 ro1i1ia '"anch style. Boot QUIET STREET STEPS TO OCEAN rl'placcablr at $59.5CO! Only1,-=~=-oc--7CC7'- stora&<o: 8.l'CB. P ool sizN."I Jol 3 BR, 1 ~4 ba . 27 ft. liv. rn1 . 1 1~_ Y'"'", Old. Stop by our oU-4 BDR. 2': Ba. kilchen C d •1 Lg Llki• ne1v 4 Or. 21~ bath.~: '" Vac;i.nl • owner's cx1.1·rm<'ly Pt11, rps, "Ins. e lot, ic" at ti•" Jamaica Inn -for tam. Lrg den \1'/bar, 2230 •--2• 200 bltns. Sll't'<'t -f()~ slrect Jot. " ' anxious lor offer -"dlvorct' cov. """'' sro1·agc. $ 1, • ..11ur ins""ctlo" ol ma " y sq ft. Assun1e 6';"r GT. By CORBIN MARTIN Roo1n ror bont. Only $33,500. ,, ,.., • CAYWOOD REAL TY other ho111c11 or call, any(imr (}.v~r. 962-8923 or 54&-n7o. REALTORS • tl73-3211 or ;ttl-ti61.3 St&-Sl80 , 67;)..166:! :~;7.9595 Ev<'. O:«>G \V, Coast lhvy .. NB e BILL HAVEN Fount1in Valley 1410 fntarcintrMthnt!t1 3036 E. Coo~! llwy., Cdl'll e ~MS-1290 e ltE L 0 OLLEGE REAL1:'! A T It CHATEAU BLANC .1500Adlm5.tH1ri...,....... LOW INTEREST BEST BUY . VACANT 2111 E. C011$t, Cd:'lt 673-3211 $500 M y I !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'!!!!!!'!!!!'!!•IVC'I')' niet> 4 bdrm. 1vhh I~ $J:l.OOO -POOL 1 01~ S. iltain, S.A ().11-6613 Cl 1 ov&e~ au,,, n . hath!. Nt>,vly paln!~d inside 8h1(f11, S~:l. nio, 8.Si'ill fer 3 -~--~-· ----ns ng cost 1111pou1,.,.5 111-BAYCRESJ SPECIAL & our. Air-coild, "'/electl'on· 8 1". 2323 East Bluu Or. Exclusively Ours eluded in nnancini 71~~,;.. in- lc air filter: auto. doo!'ll in 67!)..60.14 2 Bedroon1 ~nd den,~ btuns lei'Cst. 7~% incerest \l"/10';.- ( lxlrnl -lonnal dining + 2 c•r garage. 4;1'. lot. P.1csa CHEAPEST IN ILUFFS qu;1.IHy custom built hon1e dO\\'n. 3 Bedrooni, 2 & 3 pool , ]it~-in condition, CaU North atta. l...Qw do\\' n. $31,9j(] • o1 BR on Marigold plUs A 1 lJtd. 81.111111~:._!i30ho ,q, ft. <120 ~_'. ft2, •• loday. "".500 ~ I room '"''' •p11.1·1.mcnt. in su...... "Us 1-oom avvv(' D SON R I R+:'ddl ...,..,•ncr dtl!l)<'ratcr. musl $(' 1. car i:a.rage!'I. All bullt·ln~. AVID ti ty 1 e & Ross 675--7225 easy tenn$. 6'14-&IB!!. Clw to Beach and shop&.· Pri1,111, Pill.in< w/ 0 6-Q'•· 546-5o16o Evet1 M4-l8" -" 01\'0('r Y.'ill carry 1$t TD. .... -· BY 0\vf"l('r -lrg assumeblc FORECLOSURE: 3 BR, 21" 673 8550 $23,345 to S2S,900. 3 BR 2 bll lh hOmc, con:ier Cl lonn :l Br, 21, b11, din BA, To"·nhousc. frplc, pool. • C:HATEAU BLANC Jot J30xl80 • add 5 matt nn. fam rn1, Y"alk to .ljChls, Nttdio: paint. $27,5CKI. l86ii0 Brookhu111l !it, unit!!. Dril'fl by lS.IS Santa bch, princ. on If , $33.500. Liaison Co. 616-0i32 12 mile S. of !he Ana A\•e. th<'n ctllJ 96S-Tl09 ll"s "f"AIR S!i-4,RE" Ti1nc San DiC'li:O f't'Cewny '=~-~-~----"" s""tll 2't If NO ma lier Wllill ll 1,,., you \Vhitc clcrihants! Di111c-.i·, =±-===~=::....,:::,.,_ 962-300'! _..._., a a 1J csn Stll ii with it DAILY line DAILY PILOT \VANT r; 1~0-A~tL~Y~~Pl~LO=T-C~l-..,.~U;-cd PILOT \''ANT ADI! 6'12-567! ADS! ttetion NO\V! .. ,PEl=ll=ION "-71 ¥ ....... ....-• ..,~. * 642·1771 Anytimo * 2341 Irvine Avt., N.B. endln;;:."' (j 12-6.";GO Gen1r•I 1000 Gener•I 1000Gener•I \ . S@\\~lA-1'£tfS" The Puzzle with fhe Bui/f.fn ChucHe O l!e9rronge letle~ of 1he four scrambled wcrds b .. low to form four simple words. ISEYRUT I I' I . I I I' . . . ISAYDI I .i ' I' I I ! ISO PiE I } Minister ,to policemon: I' I I ~ :ovng mci~, please do not _ _ give me a t1cke1. I om just o ~~~"-"'--'-'t~~t poor preacher," I Hu c NI R I r Policem?.n: "Yes, , kno\'1 • I' I I' fj c.;;lete ltie c.hucld• qvo!1Jd l ._I by filljn;o In the rnlulng wordi • • - - - -'I® dev•lop frcm step No. 3 btilow. 8 r:~lR~8i~~~RES r r I' 1· r _ I' I' I' I e UNSCRAMCJlf m•I ANSW!I! I I I I • I I I 1000 SC RAM·LETS ANSWER IN CLASSIFICATION BBOO ' ' f - I I T --~-----·--- , LEGAL NCYrJCE ·-NOTICI TO Cll•DITott• IUPllllOll COUllT Of' TN• ITATI 01' CALll'OllNIA l<Oll THI COUlfTY O" OlllANGE .,. ............ El11lt ol INl!l WILLl°""S. fHttMtd. NOTICI! IS HEllEIY OIVEN lo lht Cr.cllton _, tM etiov. ll9metl Mfllltftl 1 ... t ell Mttoft:t hl'llnt cltlrnli INlntl lllt Nld dtetdtftl ltl FltCl\llttcll IO fl .. 11\tm, w!ltl JM 11tt•1 .. ur voucllen., 111 IM offlu ol tM clld oil TM 1tiov~ 1nllllff awrt, or t. pt-I lll1m, wllh Ille , ""*_.,., ~ to ""' 111'1dtrllfl\ld 11 tl>f ortlt• of NEIL S. llEZAlllE, JH 1!11! Mitt'°"' Drlv1, Suite A, Stn G1bl"l1I. C1llhlml1 t1J16, ""'lch 11 IM 1l1ce ol bvslne11 of t!le ulldtttllntd In Ill m1t11rs i>e•lllnlftf 10 !Mt e1t1te of Miii dectlknt, wllt!ln tout lnOlllfti •ftw fht' fir" '""blfc1Uon ot tMs not la. 01tlfd Novtmber 21, 1'69. TMrtu Fo...•aon EKrcutrlx ol fl!e Wiii Qt Ille lbDvl nlm.O OK.Oent Niil S. lllAlllE 111 '''' Mi..l.., or•~•· Suitt A SI• ~1~rlel, G1HI. tU16 , .. t 11111 JU.11fl Ait.rMY tv l•Mulrl• PubHJh .. ·Ortnet CNll Dtil~ Piiot, "'"*"'* 1' Ind DK.embel'" 1, I. lS, Ifft 21ff·ff LEGAL NOTICE P_,,.H Cl!llTll'ICll.TE 01' COlt~ltATIOH FOii TflAHSAtTION 0, BUSIHl!SS UNOIEll 1 .. ICTITIOUS NAME THE UNOIE"llGNED CORPOAATION ~ her"" c:tfiUY ttltt It It condl.ICll .. 1 bullntts locflHI 11 •111 IE. 171'11 Strff"I, Coslt M1$.11, Q lltornla, under 1he fk- tltlou• firm Mf!!t ct PRIME All lNN NO. l ·1nd 11111 \&ht firm 11 corn~ 9' th• tollewlnt COf'POrt!lon, whcu prlnclPll pl1ct of bus!ntu !e 11 followi: Prime -Cot!a Ml™, •21 E, 11th $1....,1, Cosll N,lw, Calif, WITNESS I" Ind lhil lflh d1V 01 November. 1•n. (COl'P0r1r. SHI) ' ,.rime • C~• Ml Y M•C ROM~. PrtslClrnl STATE OF CALIFtRNIA, COUNTY OF LOS "NGELES, 111. On tills lftl! dtV ot Nov•mWr, A.O. lfff, IH!fat• me, 1 Nollry Publ!c In ar.d for ,.Id Counf'f 11111 star1. ,perJ.Ont!IY 111- pe1nd M•c Ro~n k')OWn lo me lo be the prtsldl!'fll of lht (OrlOr•llllll !hit txecut.-d 111e within ln1trum""I on bfhtlf ot Ille Cotl'Clf'fllorl Ille"~"' n1med, Ind 1d<110Wltdetd to me ir..r sucn cor0Dr1llon •••culed tilt 11m1. (OFFICIAL Sf.All E1tell1 JudQ f N111trY Public M• comm!~sl°" ••Pl••• Juno 71. lt11 "ublfl.hed Or1"'r f011l 01l1V "ilo!, November 24 Ind Dttembtr I, I, IS, 1Mt 2161-ff LEGAL NCYrJCE ,_,,.M CE .. 1'1,ICATE 0" BUSINE51 ,ICTtTIOUS NAllll" 1'11• llnder.lpned c1ot1 , • .,11, h~ Is ton- lllKllflll 1 buslllt" al :'1171 Soon Remo Drlvt. l911un1 8eech, C1!ilornl1, undPr Ill• flctllloul firm ... ,,.. ol SEALANO COMPANY IMPORT -EXOORT 1nd lhll said tlr"' !1 comOC11ed 01 •l<t tollowlno 11tri.on, ...tlo!A! 111mt Ill lull t r>d pl1ce ol rel!.!l•nce I• 11 l11lloWI: ltch E. C1.,nltc11ow1-I. 2'011 Sin ll:emo Orlvt, l 19U"" lltlCh, (II, Oiled Novembe~ 11, 19',, lecll E. Crer11!1c"""' ~r St111 d C111lornl1, Oril"!IO CwnlY: On No-bet 10. 1•6'. before ...... t.lot1rr Public In <1t'td for 11ld 511te, ~11111111¥ '""''''d Lech E. C1ernl~1kl l<nown 111 mt to be 1111 llf!•son whose llftmt rs sub1cr;bftt 10 t~• wl,,.,!n ln1lrumrnt 1"'1 1cknow.·1Mgl'CI ~e ••e<uled the 11mt. (OFl'ICIAL SEALI Ti....,..•1 w. Soult Nolery Pub!ic-Ct!llo•nla Orenae Countv MJ Commluion Exolr!'I S~I. lS, 1'11 Publ!>i'l<'d Or1n~t Coest rMllY p ,mt. N.,...embtr 7, 1nd 0 11<.tmbtr I, ~. 15, 1Mt 1143-61 LEGAL NOTICE "·UOl Ct:llTll'ICATE OF IUSINE55 ,ICTtTIOUS NAME Tht ...,,.,..,.1,ned ctrlUled lhlf Iv Is t.onductlno t DU1lne1i ti Hl WtSI ~ Strtti, Coslt M...,, C1lltorni1. unGer ll'lt llcl!llous firm name et Vis!• Orvts 'nd V1rle1Y Incl 11111 111G flrm 11 comPl)l.t(I of t"-lollovflng otl"IOfl, ,..l'lolt name in IJll I nd pltct of r111dfftee It II fol~: l1wrmce W. Rllns, '" Fulltr1tfl Avt-. N-r't Beac.h, Ctlll. OATEO: Novembfor lt , lfft. /1/ L1wrtne1 w. R1i~J STATE OF C"LIFORNIA 1 COUNTY OF ORANCiE l 011 No-..-ber lt, 196t, before m•. 11 tfol•rY Pllbllc In IM fot" $llCI Slalf, pt.rSOfWIJIV &111>tared l•Wrenct W. ll:1Tns kn~n lo mt le be !ht 1>1rson wllost n1>n* b subscribed 111 lhe wlth111 In. strumtnl 1nd 1cknowled1ed he t~1cuted 1111 time. LEG,U. NOTICE SU"l!•IO• "'cou•T QI! TMI STATa Ofl (ALl,.OllllllA .... _ HOTICI 0111 MIA•IMO °' llllTITIOJi(, 1110• "•OU.Tl 01' Wll.L AlllO 1110• LfTT••I TlnA· MINTA•Y IM>HO WAIYliO) E.11111 ot WW114m loll. DecHMd. NOTtCE IS HEll:E8Y CilYliN Tll.lot Je1M HlrlT*I 1111 tlll'CI hlnl11 • 11ttltlotl for 111'-te ol ,..iu a1111 klr 11.u.-ol L111trt T1.ia111t1n110• 10 P•lll'-' I &Olld WflvM), ,..f~e lO wll!cll It 11\adl !Or lurl1'141r 11tt1!1;11i.r-. allll 11111 Ille 1;,,.,1 lllCI Pit!« of n•1rl111 th• 1Ml'll 11,u bff" 111 !or Dlc:tn'lbtl'" Jt, IMt, II t:'° ....... In Ille COUt1rOOll'I ol Otoatl,.,.nl No. , ot Mid cowt, 11 100 Ch.le Ce11ltr Ot"lv1, In !I'll Cllr ol $.an1a Allot, (.tllk1rnl1, e>.!td Dlc1mt11r l, 1t6t W. E. ST JOHN Countv ci.rk Tttom11 W. 1Wn0t"9n, Jr .. W Ell! Ultl Strul, 5utlt NumMr 111 C1111 Mfta. C1Ulornle nu1 T11 1 l,u i ,....nu .. , ... ,,..., .... ""1"-Pvtitl~ Or1nH Co111 Dtliv Pl101, Dlc:embtt 2. l, 1, Utt m1-•t LEGAL NOTICE 1-~~~~~~~- .... tltJ SUPIEll:IO• COUllT Off THI STATE 0, CALl,Oll:HIA 1'011: THE COUHTY 0' OltANGE "''· A~'" NOTICE 0, SALE 01< llEAL ,.llO- "l!ltTY AT "ll:IVATI! SALi! 111 the Mtlltr ol llM Et.lftt ol: tEONA MATTIE ALE)(.&NOER, fl!.O known 11 LEONA KENNEOY ALEXANDER 11\d 11 LEONA M. ALEXANDER, 1,1111 MATTIE LEONA ALEXANDER, 0tc:NM4. NOTICE IS NEii.EBY GIVEN 11111 ,lllt ullder•lvned wl11 sell II ptlvllt Hit, 10 tl'lt hlgl'lt•t tnd bt1t r>ldder. wblect 10 111e c""llrmeuon o1111e •Do11•·thtl1l1d Superior Cout1, Cll'I or •lier 11'141 11111 div ol DK•"'~" 1969. at IO:Oll A.M .• al th• of• nee of PLUNKETT .. PLUNKETT, •11 OUvt Avenut. Hun!lnglon II •I t II , Calilotnit, Counlv ot Ora"P"• Slllt ol C11Uornl1, 111 Ille rlgf'lt. 11111. In"''" 1nd e1111te ol ""Id c1Ktcttn1 11 tile llmt ol deell! ar>d all lllt right, t!t!t 1'1od ln le,t•I 111a1 •aid e~111e 1111 1cqu1red bY Ollt••Hon ol law, or olherwlse, olhtr lh•" or In .td· dl!lan 10 11111 (ti WIG Mceden1, 11 ll'lt time of dH!h, In 1nd to 111 11111 ctrltln retl ptDPtriY >itu.'lltd In the Cou11r11 ol 0<1nge, Slale ol CaUlornl1, and mort ptrllcul1rlv deKrlbtCI "~loll~•. IC wll ; LOI~ 2 tnd •In Block «JJ, M1ln SlrHt Stdion of Hunlir>pton ae1ch. •• Pt'' !Tito recotCled rn Book l, Page •l o1 M!>eellantOU• M•P5 !n tile o!llce o1 ri.e Cl)unlY Recoratr for Orange County, c11ilor11l", commonlv known •• 802 llh StrHt, Hunllnglon Beach, Ctlllotnl1: SUBJECT TO: Current 11•e1 , covtnilnls. cor.dllklfls. r • 11 r I c I Ion t, res.ervlllons. rlOhls, rights ol w1y Ind eaHmtnl1 OI rtc:ord. All bidl or of!t"' tnlt!ol bt in wrlllng 1nd wlll be rtc:tlved 11 tl'lt 1tlW'e1TWntio..t(I of- tlct or ,,..Y bt filed w11n Ille Clerk ol ll>e allOYt 1nlllllld Court al lnY lime 1t1er IM rlrst po,iblktllOll of lhl~ Notl~. •roe! bttore m1Klng ..aid ..ale. TEii.MS ANO CONDITIONS OF S•lE: (a>l'I In l1wful monn ot the Uniled Sl1te1 of ArMrlt;ll, or ptrl c1th •nd Pll'' crtdlt, !lie te-rff!1, of such uedlt to ~ 1cctp11ble !o UM e•e<:ulrlx, ten percenl ClO"ol ot 1he amou<'ll bid In lhe fqr.m ot I Cf>hifr'1 or te•llUed cnttl!: fl8Y1til1 to the undersigned exec11trl1 to 1ccO/nP1llV tl'lt ct!er 1nd I~• tlfollnct lo bt ptill UPO" c0<1flrm1!1on of >lie try Ille Suoerlor Courl. The t>« aml.,,,llon ol ll!lt, termite lnlJJtClkln and 1nv other mlKtll111e011s ch 1 r g e 1, recording ol conveyal'Ct, t!l(row end 11111 c"n1rgt1 end any t!Ut lnwr1nce POllCY lha-11 bt at th• tMi>eni• ot tM purc.h111r. Said pt~rlT ID bt SOid ., It. TM execulrlx t KprtnlY r1so.rYlt lhl 'lght to retect 1nv alld 111 bldi., OATEO: November 16, 1969 Eunke Ethel Marcum Execulri• of tM WHI of the 1bove-n1med Otc~nl "LUNKETT .. l'LUNKIETT AllerntVI 11 L1w 02 Ol!Yt Ave., ,.,0 . Bt• 219 Hunll119r1111 Bffth. Cllllorni. '2"41 Ttl: 1114) !U·lOlf er JM·f011 •tt1rntv1 tor IExecutrix Publiohed Orange Co.st 01ilY Pil•t, Dectmber 2, 3, I , 1969 2~9 LEGAL NOTICE BAii: nn SV,.EllOll COURT 01' l'Mt: STATE OF CALIFOll:HIA l'OR THf COUNTY 01< OAANOE No.. 1.-'Ull NOTICE OF OUAflOIAH'S SAL£ 0, ll;EAL ,RO,f:ITY AT PlltVATf SILE In the Mitter ol 1he Gutrdl1Mh\P of the Ptrion 1nd E1t1lt ot MILOll.EO H. PYll.TT, ln<omoetf<lt. LEGAL NO'l'IC~ ' LEGAL NOTICE HOT1C• 01' "UILIC Hl!All:IMO Bt,011:1! TMI! "LAHHINlt COMMISS10/\I Olt THE CITY Oil' f'OUNTAIN VALLEY NOTICE IS HEREBY GIYEN .... , on Wtdnndlv. Oe<tmblr 17, 1969, •I l ::!O P.M., 1n 1t11 Counc:ll Ch1mber. City Htll, 10100 Sllltl Avenue, Fovntlln Vlllf:'(, C1llfornla, lht Pllnn1"9 CommlHlO<\ will hold 110011< h11rln9 an lllt lollowlnf IP· p!lc1t111111: ·01 u'J Yt rllMI "'· 11 APPUe1!111n 1ubml11td by F1mltv H0jjl!h Pro11r1m P•oPOll~• lo ulebllsh, UM ar.d mal,.l1ln 1 1r1ller •• 1 temPOtirr c1!lce on pro· perry loctl•d on tilt •111 1ldt o! aroolthur1I 5tr11t, 21! IHI mort or leu <!Orth of T1tbert Avtnue In ltlt Cl Dl1trld . U l Ctllllltlltltl UM 1'trmH Na. 5S AP· plktllon 1ubmlttl!d bT R•11ubllc MOl'l'>tO Coro tor c0<11!ructl11n ol """ slruclurt In t •CTH of 2 .!ilotY Mtlghl \] 5totltll on ~rOl!frlY 1oc1r•d South vi W1rnH Ettl of lll"OOl\llurl! In Ille R_. District. Thi• m.ner II ~In~ oroceued PUr\utnt to !ht Pt1nnlmi l1wi o! IM Stale of Ct ll!Ornlt iGov'I. Code: 6!,000 et'"·\ and llw Fountfln Vtlley Mu11lclo1I Cede, T!tle 21. The ionlnv code. 1110! olliu •nd e~· h;ii;h ilrt on llt1 In tht Pi.nnlng Ot1>1rl· rntnl ar>d ire 1v1lllb\e tor P<lbllc if!.. ll>fdlon arocl e•1mln1!I011. ThOM! delirlnt ID ttsllFY 1n lavor ot In CllllOl!llon lo 1'111• ,...,ut•I t nd Ptooostl will bl 9lven 1n OPPOrtunllv lo do .o. It f~rrner lnf0tm•U11n Is lltslred. YOU may contld tne Plannlne Oe1>1rtm1nt 11 962· 2•1• a'ICI re!fr 10 U1e V1rl1nce No. 77 i nd CoMillontl Ult PPrmlt Num~r u. Pllnn!nt Com.,,1'111>" o! 1ht CllY of Fountel11 v~11e, SMnltv R, M1~1lltld Plannl"ll Olr«tor 1nd .!itcr~••rv to l~e Fount1ln Valley Pl1nnl~9 Commlnlon Pubtl~l'ltd Or1ng1' Coe1t D1!1Y Pilot, Ot:cemblr I, 1116' 1171-69 LEGAL NOTICE HOTLCIE Of" INTl!NTtOM TO l!NGJ.OE IN THE SALE 01' •lCOHOLIC &EY· ER AGES Otcemblr S, 1969 TO WHOM IT MAY CONCEPN: , S~bl«I to lu uancr ol tl>t l!cenw •"· olitll IQ<, nollct Is htrctv given thal tl'lt! urd1t1i•nt1 pro1>0t• IO "Sell -t tcel>ollc btvera111s 11 ll>e Prtmil.,, described 11 IDl!ow1': 1\0-4117 Weal 1'111 Slref'I, CO!ll Wit . Pur1u1nl to 1ucn lnlf"'iO<I. lht un- dtrslqned II IPOIVIM fro lite 01io.rtmen1 or Alt;oho!k ··~••M Con•ro• IQ!' h1u1...:e on o•lill11al IPOllcetlotl ol an 1lcotio1lc beverave llc...,M tor lhtst preml1t1 11 totlowl: ON SALE llEER Any-d•1lr ln9 to ""'"'' !he LS1U1nt.P ot svt.11 tlcen'll tn11¥ Ill• I w-rilled 11rotnt ,..,,.. anv etllct of !he Ott11rlmenl et AlcohOllc: 111v1r1vt Conlrol, within :.0, dtv1 ot !ht date f~e ~~d 11rem!1u were llr1! llOl!ed. 111111119 grounds l<H' denltl 11 11rovid..i bv ltw. T~e oremlser. trt now llcenu:d for 1111 s!lle ol 11COfl.O!ic bev111<;1q. TM form el ver111Ctt1on m•Y bl> obtalnPd from IM olllct ot lhe Oeo1rlm.nt. Oon111d H. S•n1o<'I Ll!!11n E. S11n""" Publlthtd Or1"9t Co11t OellY 111101, Dec..,.ber I. Ifft 2213-M /1/ !lrtr>dt l . Gt'f Nolt ,..,. Public HUllW1TL HURWITZ I lll!:MIEll AlltrMfl NOTICE IS HEREll'I' GIVE N ll!tf 1he under1l9ntd, JAMES IE. HEIM, Pvblic Guardian, u Gu1n:ll1n cl the Ptrlotl Ind Esllle cf MllDAEO H. PYAT7, lntomllf!lent ... 111 U'll .iot privA!t wle lo the hlgl'ltsl 1nd bul net blddtl, tller deduci!on of any re<iUf51..., broktr'1 com- mlulon, uoon !hf term~ end cOndHIOll' he"ln•lttr meritloned, 1ublecl lo con-•1r~ll011 bv l~e 1bovt tnllll~d Superior C!1"r1. on Oecernber ~). Ifft, 11 12:00 c'dock noo,., or thtre1tter within lllf time 111owl!d bY 11w, el the office ot the Public l--------------Guar"dl1n of Ille CounlT of Or1119e, •I 11'1 Ei!I Cht11nut Slrttl. Santi Ant . G;;"lllor!'lla, 111 !ht rlghl, title, ln!frtsl and tl'l!t ol 1.iold MILOllEO H. PYATT, lno:ompttelll, I" 1nd !o that cer111n re1! ,, I I •se • 221111 Slrttf HtWlllrt lllcf'I, Ct llltrRit TIEL ('111 ,,,.mt Publlthad Or1119e (-1 Da•IY Pllct, Novtmbtr 1ol •nd December I, I. U. lt6t 116'-ff LEGAL NOTICE .. ..,, •••·2167 Ct:llTl,ICATt: 01' IUSINt:SS .. 1CTITIOUS .. lllM HAME The uroaersl1ntd 6ots herebw ctrlllv 11111 ht Is condu<Hnt 1 ublnet shoo bulintll 11 I n lndlvldutl 11 1100 S""erlor Sir"°'' Cost• lo\HI, C1!1forn!1, under !tit flcl11I0111 Plrm n1m1 ol JACK'S CUSTOM CA811<tETS tNI th1I 11ld llrm 11 rom- llC'Md ol ll'lt followlnt H~-WhOSt n11••t 111 full IM plKI et rtllden<• II 11 tollowl, 10-wlt: Jartson R. Mosle11tr, 41• F!~e-r Slrtel. Co1!1 Mts1, C1111orn\1. Otted Novrmber 11, 196f J8Cli.lotl R. Hosl•rltr STATE OF CALIFOllNIA, I COUNTY OF ORANGE l ~ O" Novtmbtr 11, 1Ht, btfore mt. a No!arY ,.ubt!e In 11\d tor said County 1lld Stele, oerson1llT 1pp11red J1tkt<)fl II:. Mo$1!1ltr known lo me to be the P•r~o" wllo1t ntme 11 tubM;rlbed !o l~t wl!hln 1n11rument, tnd ad<nowled1ed to ,,.., rh11 lie e•tculed tht 11m1. WllntH m¥ hlr>d lflll 1e1I IOFFICl•l SIE. ... LJ P~vlll1 M. S1tyer No!trv Publlc-C1!!lornl1 Or1119e County Mv Commlulon E•11lr11 e>«. " 1tn JONM (, SALYt:ll, AHY. 1t4J Weslt11ff Orin. Sul!• JtJ N-...t ltac~. C11!tornl1 nMt Publl.i.td Or111'11'1' c,,.s1 o,;1~ Piiot, N-mbtr t• 1nd O.cembl'r 1, I, 1$, 1Nt Jl70-ff LEGAL NOTICE tU,.l!ltlO«l COURT OP THIE STATI 0 .. CAllf"OllPOA f"OR THI COUNTY 01' 011:11.MOE Ne. A"'4141 NOTICE 0" Hl!AIUNG 0, "IETITIOH ,0. "IOIATI: Of" WILL AHO FOii: llTTl"llS Tl!STAMEHTAllY (BOHO WAIVEOI E1t1te of 81EN I", I.OGAN, Jlt .. alto kno-It IEN F. lOG•N, DKlll-td. NOTICE IS MEREllY GIVEN Thal Nttllt G. lot1n 1111 flied ~ertln t oetlllon tor of"OM!t ot wilt 1r>d tor h1u1nc1 ot lftlf<I TntlMtnltrY lo Prllllontr lllor.d W•lvettl. rtltrtlK• lit Whlcl! 11 !fl.Ot for ""'""' oerl1cu11rt. •nd 11111 f~t ll"'t 11'!1 11l1t1 Of 11e11r11>11 tllr t•m• 1111 be1n "'' for Otcttnbtr U , lff•. 11 •:xi t .m .. In th• courtntCm ot Oeptllmtnl No. J ct Mid court. 11 ,DO Civic Ct nt.r Orlvt W•"· In th. CllY ol S1n!I An•. C1IUornlt. 011&<1 Otttnibef '· Ifft W, IE. S"I' JOHN, Counl'Y Cltrli:. DUlt'l'IA, CAll,.lHTEll: & SAflNlL •Y l!INl"ST J. SCNAO, , ... •ns MMAl'lllur Mt.11tY1tll, "· 0. ... !JM. .. _, ""'"· (t i!""'"' """ Ttl: ln•l Q1·,... Allw""' 1w h llll1111r l>'*rlllled Ot"antr Cots! D1l1Y Pllot, '*-"'"" .... 12. 1161 ,,, .. , Pf't~rtv described 11 follows, "'wn: AN UMOIVIOEO ONE-HALF !' 1) 1,.. t<rtsl In re1I prOPrriY loc.tled el 63U l•dl1n1 Street, 8uen1 P1••· Ora~at CaunlY, Ctll!ol'nl1, • more ii.rtrculor\J' at1cr!Dtd. •S !ollowi: Loi 1 ol Tr~d No. 391 1 In Ille CllY ol fhl'!'l'\ll Pltll;, Count¥ ot Cringe. 5t1le of (1'llor11l1, 15 ff!' "''' ft<;erdPd In boolC 11.1. o111es 74 and ,5, M1K11lantoU1 Ma>!, 111 the Off1.ct ol 11\t County ll;tf(l•der ot uld Count~. a ld1 Of' offer~ •~ Invited tor 11ld "'°" perN tnd must be !n wr'llh19 on • blG form turnl~hecl bV the Hiier, wll!cll .. 111 be ttcelYed ~t the Qfllce of the Pub11c Guercl1n, 11'1 E11t Chettnvt Street, S•n· I• Ara, Ctll!Of"nit, or m1Y be fllt'<I wl!h the Clerk ol ~ 11>ovr enllll..., Su11eflor Cour! 1t "nv llmt aller ll•s! oubllCllll>" of tnh Notice and be!c~ making 11ld 11~'£1111,S OF SALE: C1sll ln ltwlul ""°"" vi ll'lt United st1te1. A u •h i1e0011l ot five MuN!rtd !J!OO.OOl 00111•1 must 1cc-anv pACh wrllle11 b!d er ol· fer, ltoe blllnce of tll• nurch1se P•lc' lo be Paid l~ !vii w\1~111 slXIY dlYS 1fltr Court con!ltm1tl0<1 ol sale. All bid• ~r olltr• mu~! bt tvbmi!led on 1 torm furrlt hed bY !~r s'ller. 'Tiie ,19hl lo rtll'd l hV I nd tll bldl 11 11tr!'bV ~•~Yed. OATEO: Nov. 'H, lfft J~IAES E. HEIM, Pul>llc Gu1rdl1n, Gu1n:111n of !two Pt~ Incl Ellllt of Mlkl•l!d M. Py1tt, lnumotttnt AOllAH. KUYl'EI, COUNTY COUNSEL 1!111 JONlll M. '""llSOH, OEl'UTT IUI Ettl Cht,lftvt Sl,ttl t1nt1 Ant. Callftrllla '2111 Tll: t no *"" Allwlltl't fOf" ~ubll( Guertl1n IY J.rn1 /IL .. 11111'"1111 All_.,t fir Jrtlltft. II. Mtim. l'ui.lk G•••l1n Pllbt11!1tt Or1n;e CC11I 01ltv ,.ltot, 2, J, L lfft mt"' LEGAL NOTICE IAI 1117 SU,.llllOI COUltT 01" THE STATI! 0' (All'O .. HIA 1'011: Tift COUN"l'T OF OltAHOl No. A-'OU NOTICE 01' MIE•llHO l<Ofl "IOIATli 01' Wil t AND ,Oil LETTElllS Tl!9TAMEHTAllY Elllte qt JEA.OME I.. NISHllAll, Dftffstd! NOTICE 1$ HEIEBY GIVEN T~1! SHIRLEY M, NISHBALL na1 llttd htrrln f llfllllon fOf' l/\e' 1>~11 of .. m Ind lor 1u.vanc1 di 1e111.,. h'~t1rnent1rv to "'' •tlll(Olltf • ..,....._, " ...tilcll 11 "'"' for tur111tr •t'1Jcul1"' ind lh-t fh• tlfM 1nd lltte of ,...,..,. tht "''"' 1\11 tliffn It! tot oec. 1,, itit. 11 t ::llD 1.m .. 111 "" COlltll"OOf'I fJI D11t1l'lmtnl Ma, J of wold OWt1, 11 ltO C1¥1c Cen!<Or Otlvt Wnt. In IM C!IY of S.nll An1. C1lllornlf, Olllld Mil¥. , ... Ifft W, I!. rt JOHN, Ca'OllY Cit•' OONll.lD l(l.llH, 150 .. "'· Mllll ""'' 111111 AU. (l'.o '2111 Te11 en•) l*NU ll."91!111 ... "'"''-" ----,..,-,--,.,.-,-,,-,,,-,.,,.,,----1 f>1,1bl4hH 01111111 Cc .. I Otitv Pllof, NOTICIE 01' 01tSOlUTIOH Ot<itrlDft' t, a, I, '"' 111f_.. LEGAL NOTICE 0' ,.AlllTHElllSHll' f>Vl\.IC NOTICE tt htrt&ot •"""" '"-' G, '· lludd. l,,_, W 5n'tlth Ind Jt""1 A, H11Tl1, hl-.lolart OOI"" bllll"l'l5 unOtr flW llc'ltiovt tit,., nlmt •1111 \tylt of H. II, 5. ENTEll:PllSEt. 61 B1!boll CO¥"" Cl" f!l N-.«t lltKll. CounlT ot or..,,.. Sit" (ti ~Ulo'"lt, did Oii !hi )l'l dlY OI' D<::lollfr, 1"9, ~ multil'I ~'""· dlnoi... "'' Miii ,..,_,..,la and 1trmlrlllt lhl11 <tlttloM ff Nr1M'1 ltlt'f"tfft, f'urlhtr notice If "'1'ttlY ''""" thel .._ ~ lfl9 '°""'' ,.,,_, wllt bt "'•-•11119 fr°"' ""'' d1r °" lor anr o01i.t11on1 ,,... cvr.... 1W •11, o1 llle °'""°' 10tf'ltl' ltl•t""' In !Mir -11amn or In !ht n1'1'1f ol ~ firm. 011td fl Cetlt Mt ... C1lltort1i1, !hit h i N1 ol Otumbtf. '"'· G. II', fll<dd E•moo'I w. Srnl!ll J1mt• A. H1r1!s "llblllhtd Orlntt CN1f 01111 P\101, o..;.,,...,. .. ,... 2211-ff • LEGAL NOTICE LEOAL NOTICIE NlW,.OIT·Ml!SA UNl,11!0 SCt400L OISTlllCT NOTICE INVITll'IG BIOS tlOT1CE 15 HERIEllY GIVEN tlltl 11\t Soe•d ol IE.d11c11H011 ol Ille Ntwr>0rt·Mt•• Un!l!ed Stllool Dl11rlct ol Orantt CounlY. Ctlllornle, wl!I •«rive Hlled bid! UP to 11 :Oii A,M. an t~e 111n dey of Oecemt>tt Ifft. 11 !he oH)(e of 11ld School Ol1lrlcl, loc.tled et 11.!7 Pl1cen111 •YenlH'. Coslt Mff,I, C1lllornl1, 11 whlCll !l"'t Hid bl0'1 wlU be 1>ubllcl1 Oll!ntd 11'1<1 read tor: INDUSTRIAL ARTS EOUIPMENT All bld1 ere to be in accordell(t wl!ll Condlllons, l11drvcllon1, •l'l<I S!>KIP!ctll°"' which l•t now on II~ In tl'lt olllcf ol !he Purc1>11lno Aqent 11! ~•Id Scl!Col Ol!lrltl. 111·1 Pl1ctntl1 Avenue. Co:;11 Mew. C•llfornl•. Eacll bidder m111! tubmlt 1 bkl dHIC~ll ln I~ for"' o• 1 certlllrd· ar c11hler't check or 11 bid bond e<iu•I !o tlv• ~ercenl (5.,,) ol 1M 1mount 01 !ht bid. ,.,.d1 ptv~blt lo the order ol IM Ntw1>11rl·Me<1 Unllltd School Ol1trlcl, • Pertor..,..1ncr llOnd may be re<iulred et !Pit Olscrttlon ot lht Dhfr!ct. In !~t event 111 lt!lurr to '""' lnTo such conlr~d. !ht 11rocted1 of Ille check will be lorlellftl, or In c111 et 1 bond. the lull sum !~r.a\' .. 111 bl lorltlltG II MIG School Ol1trlC1 ol o ..... Counly, No bidder m1v ,..illwlrrw 1111 bkl tor ' ~rlocl ct loflv-l!w (451 dev1 1l11r Iha dalt oet /or Ille ooenln!I thtreOI'. T"-llD1rd ol Edltc1ll11n al Ott Ne""'l'Orl· MttH v..i11td School D!•trlct reserves the rl!ir.t fa •ti~ en1 or 11! bl,,,, tnd n(I! ntCl'lltrllY l (Ce.>t the lownt bid, ar>d IQ waive 1nv lnform11!1'1' er rrr11ul1r1tv 111 1n1 bid recelvrll. I NEWPORT-MESA UNIFIED I SCHOOL OISTAICT of Dr•ll'll'I' County, C1lllllf"l'lit llv Oorel~v 11-'"" ,l~r Purth11lf111 """' 6'!-1100 011.., O~ember l, lfff Publl~hed Or111ge CDl•I O•llv ~li,,t December I 1nd Otctmber a, lff' ml" LEGAL NOTICE ATTEND THE CHURCH OF YOUR CHOICE THIS SUNDAY 6 4 2 -s 6 7 8 D A. I L y p I L 0 T c L A s s I F I E D 6 4 2 - s 6 7 8 ' ,-I ' 0-• .,. • .,..,.._ •-·-·-~~~---, .... ~.'7,--~,~.~ .•• SAYH l:i\SH! I~ • c L A s s I F I E D 6 4 2 • 5 6 7 8 c -- IS8ST ISIYSI • I DAILY '!LOT ,z7 RENTALS Apt1. Furnl,,,... RENTALS Apts. Unfurnl"'"" RENTALS Apts. Furnished ~ENT AL$ Aim. Unlvrnl,,,... . 4000 Coron• d•I Mor 4250Cooto-. S ICICI Corono 0.1 Mor 5250 LRG allrac l 8R-f'lk:t loc . The GORGEOUS New Na palnt Ir. crpta. iioo. 2530 ' VAL O'ISERE S<av~w Aw. \Yl«b'S all Slnclt--l br-2 br. FUm.-unr.1:';:'.,;:•;:6'!3-=:%823:;;====;1 NEVER BEFORE Sauna, Act'y Rm. Billiards bj•--4300 Therapy &:; 45' pool, BBQs ::a -llW(f in. Brand n e w apt 200J Pa.riOl\8 Rd. 642-8670 CLEAN Bachtlor Apla. homes. Pr1vate patio livinJ. II.. I BR •-·· Ul All u1U ind 111" up Newr beach 4 ahopplng, All . IU~'t'r, u pd, ..,.. I -''"• d , bit I d Avail 31S E. Balboa Blvd. w w ..... rpe-.. , rapes, pr .. ns, w w, rps, BALBOA 67~9945 vate Jiving. now. Bkr. 5.34-6980 • 3 BR·2 BA·trptc. plus ---------ll BDRM, furnished apt Utll e 2 BR·2 BA·patlo~ 4100 ~~~·ins~:g1eo~1r:38J.~ •co',.".,R-.1 BAA-dollw«Hsloa:Je --;::;;-;;;;--:;;;:;:---;;::-\Jill~25~.~67>-~7'89~~at~t~5~. ==I c: n p. ome5 $30 00 Wk U -SUNfLOWER AVE. ' • P Huntington Buch 4400 BMn S. Main • Bri•tol • Studio ¥ 1 Br Apli;. •• · -· · --Located ~; mlle E. ol South • Kllchen & TV Inc l. e Poone service &: Pool HUNTINGTON CAPRI Coast Plai.a ~pPing Center •Maid service incl. For Slnglo Adults Cill 540-1973 Coit• Meu e Day, wook & Month NEW 1-1·3 BEDROOMS MARTINIQUE .. -~~.:!. ON TEN ACRES I A 2 BR. 1'm> " l/nltlrlt Fl.replace1 ./ prtv. pttkw I Pools. Te.Ml.. Ccntnt1 J.kr.st, ~ Sea Lane, 001 144-26.ll (P.fac.Arthur n:r, O»st Hwy) NEW DUPLEX I UNIT LEFTI 2 BR. 2 Ba. ($250). Priv. ))a· !lo, cov. garage, cptd., dra~ ed. Con1p, blln1. Beat Joe. i07\i OROiID >< '7S.&o50 0 -·· •u•ca..a 2376 Newport Blvd. 5'18-975.S From '140. F\ltTl le Unt ~ * LOVELY APT8. Very lo\..· Tennill, Gyins, Saunas GARDEN APTS 2 BR. Apts. Frµlc .. deck, v.·kly rales. Ideal for singles 63XI Edinger Ave., HB Exctllent park-like surround. cpts, drpl;, Wlns. i190 to or married cpl. Linen, Phone 846-0619 ings w/heated pools. Extra S260. maid, laundry, TV, all parking, Near shopping. NEW1 3 Br. 3 ba., cpls, dl"pS, utll's. Steps to b c h., BACHELOR & 1 BR tum. Adults only. e ec. buiU-ins, di&hwas~r: LAJuna, 494-9436 $140 up. Adults, no peb. 2 & 3 BR APTS firt'placc, patio. Unu.sua.11 17301 Kee~ Ln. 842-7&18 im Santa Ana.Ave crit close 1.:. storqe space. $25. Per Wk. & Up (West of Beach nr Slater}, ~fgr, Apt 113 'Gw-5542 Don V. Franklln, Realtor Bachelor & 1 BR. hid pool, 2 BR & bachelor apta. -F • ' v·11a A t ~0 E. Coast Hwy. 673-2222 , mllid sen•lce. Kitchens & Heated pool. Util paid. airway I p S COROLIOO AP':'S. 2 Br.' TV avail. 450 Victoria {Nr Viceroy Apts. 1014 Georgia Lower levels, studios, pent-' Jlarborl. SI. Apt A. H.B. 536-2914. Near Oranr · Co Airpoi1 & house, Frplcs.. Pool, dbl.' $150 & up • A'ITRACTJVE, 1 NEW QUIET 1 BR. nr oceen, UCI. Adults only. 20122 carpot·ts, patios. $1.80. $220.' bdr., pool, utU paid. garden $14.5 prl deck or patio Santa Ana Ave. 540-2796 _,s~n~~-'-"-------' living. adults, no pets, 1800 Singles & cpls only. ~14th l;;;;;;;-;;o.;:--;-;:-;-,--~ lf_Nl~. Duplex. 2 BdT. \Vallace Ave,, C.l\I. 536-1319, 673-1784 NE\V 2 BR. 1 BA, shag crpt. Frplace, range & relrig.I SUNNY 2 BR. Partly furn. STONEHENGE APTS. 2 BR. OJ:~s. dishwhsr, patio, bean1 Adlts, $175 mo. 620 Acacia,' \Viii complete for employed 2 BA. 2320 Florida, nr ceiling, Jrpl:_, gar. Adults, CdM. couple. Infant OK. 646-8226 Beach & Adams 536-2730 no pets $165. 2650 Elden, I 'N"ICE°",-,lac,c.gc•'"'Jo-~B~R:-u-p-,..-,_ I 537-006'.l al!er 7 pm & Sun. r-is d 1 · I BR 1ie1v carpets, bltns, $136 '"'I' · rps, re rig, ran6e mo. \Vestliide. Adults only. Or•nge County 4600 :?_ BDRi\1 tl,i Ba .Bit.ins, Util-gsr. New ·decor. Adults. 548-2897 1ty nn, gar. pal10, ne1v crpts Lease, $170. Owner 613-2755. -'-----------ISINGLE Adults, I u x u r Y ne1v drps, 1 mi. OCC No QUIET ~ Bedroom: $158 mo, ga1'den 11pt1, w/full recree-petll 5160 n1o. + $5Q dep. Incl. util. Recreation rm. & . tion facilities & complete 968-7m or 546-4767 pool. Call 646-650-5. priva<..')". Soulh Bay Club BRANO New l & 2 BR 2 BR furn apts. Avail now! l.pt1, 277 So. Brookhurat, W/\V 11 . ' Adult li\•lng, hid pool, m:: Anaheim C714l 77.!-<ISOO cpt~, a blt.ns i~cl. self clearung oven. Pat10s, room, good loc:. 646--5824 -g11ragcs. Adull.5. 64a-2los. Bacht'lor apartment G.1rd1n Grove 4610 377 W. 'VUson. 174 ~tonle Vista, Costa Mesa SINGLE Adults Lu xury TWO 2 BR apts, l Iov.·er floor ga1'tlen apts ll'ith country & 1 split Je\•el. Crpts. drps, club atmosphere and oom. bltns. No J)etJi. 2885 Mendoza B•lboo 5300 BAOI Bayft, sofabl!d, patio yd, W/w crpt, util pd $125. Prof perwn only 673--6765. Huntington B11ch 5400 1 2 BDRMS. -2 BA TH 4200 plete pri1.1acy. SOUTH BAY Dr. 545-3421 SlW?iJo. llEATEO POOL CLUB APTS 13100 Chapmsn .-. fnccl, cpl/drps, Kids OK Ave,, Garden Grove (714) Newport 811eh 5200 DELA,VARE STUDIO Apta. New·port Beach 636.3030 -'""""' ..,_, ff B . •=v ...... aware, .. GRANO OPENING 642-2'121 anyUme 53&1816 IMMEDIATE Ltgun• ~'"'h 4705 SPACIOUS new 2 bdrm LARGE 2 BR apt, unturn. OCCUPANCY Luxury garden apartments* LOVELY APTS. Very low 2 b•th. Nr. shopping. Clean. Upstairs. Laundry offering complete privacy, ·wkly rate~. Ideal lor slnglel! $240 per mo. rm facil. Closed gar. No beautiful landscaping &: u~ or married cpl. Ll~en, children or pels. $135 per pru:alleled recreaUonal facil-m~~d, laundry, TV, all M1rlri1r Squ•r• Apts. mo. 29J.I England. 536-9593 itics in a country club at· util s. Steps to b c h.' 1244 Irvine Ave., N.B. ~~~l~ 2698 Ellil'.land aptl mosphere. Now leasing in Laguna. 49-l-9-l3G I Nv"'(Xll1 Beach. CHARl\1ING Partly l urn NEW Qui<'I 1 BR, nr ocean. Furnished or unfurnished seaside studio bungalow. WESTCLIFF SIE. Prt deck or patio. Afodels open 10 anl to 8 pm gard<'n selling. Lease $170 R IVIERA Singles or cpls only. 20Z ~nta from Sl55 to $310. inc gar, all utilittl'.s, Spacioua 2 Bedrooms 14th. 536-1319, 673-1784 I OAKWOOD Tele-elear. Reis. 49-1-m:i Heated pool NICE 2 & 3 bdn. Crpted 1c;I GARDEN BACH. Furn. Close in. Util Carpets A Drapes drped. N"·ly decor. 3 blk1 incl. Pref. settled man. $85. Adults • No pets lrom bch. 3 bdr •·•/dbl Ill· APARTMENTS 494-2211 1800 WHlcliff Dr. tachO<! gu • b-pfare. 536-1111 17tlo 16th "Stroot RENTALS EAST BLUFF CHEZ ORO APTS. 8231 714 : 642-8170 Apia. UnfUrnithtcf 2 Br, 2 Ba. viP1V 11pt, Fire-Atlanta; H.B: Nu, I, 2,_ 3 .... ........... o;,;; ....... ...,1::-==:-=~-'-"'-;;;;;;;I bt'<. Prlv. gar, pool. UUI NEED an Apt. Jor the Gen•r•I 5000 ~aw~·745d1t;;;;~:1~r·0r~':: rm. 536-3038 or 5.16--2717. holldays? Bayfront 2 BR 11· n10. No ehildren or pets. 1200 1 BOR. Apt. ~'tilt A~a. King sz., 1-twinl Comp. VEN DOME sq ft Call 645-1260 675 5535 "'ashr/dryr. Bit-ins, rc.lrif, rurn. \V/linens, etc. $550 mo ' or ~ -$135 mo. 96Z-Ja76 aft ' It. (Wltl consider a lease). Call 3 BR, 2 BA, near oeean. wknds. 54~7602 or &l~G4l 11\.tMACULATE APTS! frplc, dish1vh1·, cpls, drps.11 ~-~.~.~-.~b-tk--~.---1 ADULT & FAMil.Y $235. tno. yrly, no pets. . II to ll'l:llCh. SINGLE SECTIONS AVAD..ABLE 548--0897 wkdays. College students ok. $100. Adults Luxury mo. lst & la.st reqd. 962-1961 garden apts 1vith country Close to shopping, P.1rk 2 Br Luxury apts 1';1 & 2 club atmosphere and com· * Spacious 3 Br's, 2 Ea Baths, tireplace. $170 & up. 2 Bl~· 1 N Bl.Be~~ Drpa. pletc privacy, SOUTH BAY * 2 Bedrooms Mrs. Kilen, l'tfgr. 4151 Hilaria C jj11;:2~ • mo. CLUB APTS. Irvine al 16th, * Swim PooJ, Put/llft'n Way. Apt. C ~·~~~---~--I Newport Beach. * Frpl, Indlv/lndry lac'la STEPS be h 2 BR be 2 & 3 BDttMS. 2 BA, pvt. 1n 4) 645-0550 1145 An.1holm Ave. 10 ac • • am patlo, heittd pool, wuhl!rl COST A MESA S42-282-t cln.g. Crpt~, dl'Pl!, stove. hook 962-3994. *LOVELY APTS. Very low Quiet work1~ coUp{e, No =~-"~P--~~---- 1o1·kly ra1e~~ldea1 1 for fiui~g1es • RENT e pets. ruo yr1y. sr;>-0115 Sl!·pe:. b=s~· carpets.1 or . mam.,., cp . IX'n, 2 BDRMS. 2 baths, ,,_l"'S maid, laundry, TV, all 3 Rooms Furniture cpts/drps,. dlshw11sher .....,... '" uttt'<. Sl•P< to b ch.. $19.95 & UP $165/mo. Adult.. SU-<381; Laguna. 494-!H36 642--0596 \VATERFRONT \VI boa I , dock. Lovely 2 BR. patio. Yrly lse. 673-9060 or 697-5918 ? :ontti. To.l'ttonlh Rentals .:.::.::;;==-=c=-c=--WIDE SELECTION 3 BDR~1 2 BA TH NO DEPOSIT 0 .A.C. cpt1/drps. fir eplace, lf}~RC rumlture Rentals d I 11 h w a s h e r $210/mo. 517 \V. 191.h, 0.t 548-3481 642-4381, 642--0596 rURN. 1 Br._ Dplx. 11,; blks $l25 2 Br, bltns, OC\\'IY NICE 2 Br, pool, garage, bit- to ocean. $13.l mo. yrly. d i-• Ch'ld 0 K in!! crpls drps Adults no Call 548 21-2 ecora ''"· I nin , . . . ' . • -· a Blue Beacon, 645--0111. C.M. pets. $150 mo. 642-$Xll or LARGF. 1 BR. nr ocean. 5135. 1 BR lo"-er, ulil pd. Bil· :64=...00S~~c--~,---~ Upstairs. Sundeck, $140 yr-in R/O, w/w, drps. Avail 3 Bl', 2 Ba, (rpl, p•tio, blk ly. Students ok. 673-8088 t10\v, Bkr. ~ beach, ve1y nitt $250 Avail 2 BR, Ocean front rear. l/10. 213: 622-9193 Garage. $160. 'Vlnter. Cost1 M•1 5100 4 BR, 2~~ BA. Dishwhr. * 673-8088 * -Studio &pl. 1 blk from $150 t BR turn apt. Crpl1. NEW A'PTS beach. $300 yrly. &n.2455 drps, bltns. Pool. 1525 3 BR, 2 BA apt. View ot PlacenUa. ocesn. l blk from beach. 4250 $150 & $175 2':~.:: =Palk> LOVELY I Br 1 Ba. Crpt1. drps, dlspl, d11hwhr. Retrig & din set opt. 842-570.i 2 BR. crptl!, drps. range. Closed gsr. Children Ii: pets ok. $I la. 962-7637 ATTRACT. 2 Bdr All Xtras. $135. 17442 Queena Lane, H.B. 96S-7510 or 847-1594. L1gun• B••ch 5705 ----APTS TO LEASE New 1 or 2 bro1'00m, pr1vate sundeck, \vall lo w a 11 csrpet. ocean vtew, kitchen furn. Underground ~ridng, clqsP to beach. 4~7447, Mr. Brack. REAL ESTATI Gen•r•I UTILITIES PAID .Ii pool. CrptJi:, d.rpll & bllnll. Rentals W1nted ;iss SPACIOUS furn. sgl l & 2 Bdnn, 2 1wim pools. 1525 Placentia. 5990 trplc. privacy. 50 of hwy. Adults onl)', no pPU, Furn No pets, bwilnewnan. 675-il desired, &12·3T.?2 Newport ShorH 5220 ~ -1859 301 A\·ocado St, C.P.f. ~ See Mgr on preml&e9 2 BR 2 BA DuplPX. Crpb, ftENTAL FINDERS .•••••• ,. NOW'S THE TIME FOR QUICK CASH THROUGH A HARBOR GREENS drps, bllns. Nr ocean. $1.85 ~ ,.,.. T• l11 P11• nlO, 548-8190. 1 !:: -UI •• ,,... c.'9 ---J-~ MW111 ~.....-~APU1110ll•m.llhl,_ BACHEWR unturn from East Bluff 5242 11---:;::::;:::::; •t«Qjtt •rt"n $110. Al.90 avail l • 2 1.:: 3 --------- Bdn'n. Heated poob, chlld e NEW DELUXE e care center, adj to shopplni. 3 Br, 2 Ba ept. tor leefiE' No peta. Incl. spac; mastr. suite, din 2700 Peterson Wa.y nn. &: dbl. gar~. aulo. Costa ltle5a 546-0070 door opener avail. Pwl &. LRG 1 Br. Crptl, Drp11, rec. area. Nr. Catholic Re!rig. Range. Victoria St. Olurcb. Nr. Shops, ~lature Adlts. No e ONLY $2'5 e RENTALS WANTED *HOMES *DUPLEXES *GUEST 1;0USES fir APA.RTMENTS FREE SERVICE GOLDEN WESf RENTALS .,.,._ pets. $100. 543-2407 8& Amla:0& Way, N.8. 3 LOCAL, cltan-cut college LARGE 2 BR. crpls, drps, NEW 2700 sq fl '3 BR & tam 1t11denl1 want 3 bdnn tum carport & pool. K.lds ok. nn. 3 BA. Owner's.Ju:c apt HOWie or Apt In Newport 2214 Collete, Apt No. 2. 752 Amigos Way. 6'JS.«m, Bch. C.M. All are employed. 'MS--7Q9..i -Rave t"f!f. Parent' 11, .. in Pvr. Jivlr11, Tll!W 11pac. 3 Br Coron• del Mir 5250 area. WUI be pe.rmal'll'T!t & DAILY apt hotne. Walk-I~ clOM!ll, 3Z2 HELIOTROPE. 2 DR. :l~~p to UIO. S33401t lrpl, channlng pauo. nr hi')' balcoey, real frplc. 3 blb•-=~-------1 Pl LOT S2SO. 546--4016. from ~n. $190 mo. Call APT. Winted to rt.nt for 2 BR Studio apt, tti bfl. encl. 61~5 ptrm. mkltnce. 2 &:tr unr gar, patio, cpls/drpt, bJ1 •. l;2;'-;BR..;;i'"-,So'=","""or;-;11"•-Y--"'Y"rl""y. ~ ne= woman. WANT AD =-Ol,YI S42-352t Eve•. ::~.,:n~ Mo. i --0~...,-.-..N-D~L-o'°R=D~s-e- 2 BR. + tn be, cpl/drps, Mr. Fom!'Y. Bkr. ~ FREEB=~=Yla: bltl'UI, Wlhr/d)T, nr ahps Ii: LARCE New 2 BR. 2 BA 1-========:- bch, pcta ok. $1m. 545-7747 plua drn. O'pts, drpg. bltns. Rooms for Rent 599S 642. NEAT ~ btdC'OOITI& Carpets, View. m.o361, 5J5..3864 or _.,z;:J~I -5678 drapes, bullt·ln.. Quiet. $130 8.11...tltf, SlS WK Ii 11p w/ kitchen. ~ , mo. 91)2..38116 NEW. So. oC H"7· 2 Bdrms., $30. wk t ludio a.pt. 2Ji'6 to • t BR UNF'URN ~I. prqie. btamed t'l!ll., "'·itb <kck I Newport Blvd, 54S.9n.5, l ••••••••• Qui•!, rdlnd only. No !>'ls. rl"1'1•« 11.lQ Mo , TIIE QUICKER YOU CALI. , -~.-------, 1Q 1'fcaa D~\"I!, Of-,•_ Don V. F'lukJ.ln Ritt 61"222 TJ:IE QUICKER YOy_~ • • t ' ( ' • • .\ " ' ,, ' • ,. L . ~---------• OAll.Y I'll.OT M"'4q, l>e<tmbtr 8, 1969 _____ ll!lll_ll!l_mj*m-.. l!lilifAiL ESTATE 1r * * * G.ntrol BUSINESS ond FINANCIAL JOU A IMPLOYMINT JOIS A EMPLOYMENT Jobe -. Wom. 7100 Jobe Mon, Wwn. 7100 Offlc1 Rent1I 6070 AttUlate LAGUNA BEACH Air Condlllonod ON FOREsr AVENUE 0c£k apace avall.ible ln nev.·e1t office building al prime locotion in downtown 1.a&una Beach. Air condi· 110~. carpeted, beautiful en~s: Frontage on Forest Ave., rear lead& to Munclpa.J parking Iott. $50 per month for space, Deak aOO chairs available for $5. Business houn answerin&' service available for $10. All utilities paid ext-ept tdephone. · CANOY SUPPLY ROUTE (No Kllll>1 involved) Excellent income for ff:!w hOurs Wtf!k!y work. (Daya and Evenlnii:s>. Retllllna and collect~ money from coin ope:rated dlspenaera in Or- ange Co. and surroundini a.rea. \\''e establish roule. !Handles nan~ brand cvxly and snack&), $1515.00 cub ~oired. l'"or pe:rson&J inter.. view in Orarwe Co. arTa, When You Want it done right ••• BABYSITI'ER wanted. 2 hoy1 qe1 21rS. Start Jan 2nd. S <la, wk. S-S: SO my ;.::.~:,;.:14o;.:.:;_M"'_' b&-ve-own_""""_ 1CH ECK HERE Bankinri ""' * COMMERCIAL TELLER £xp'd. Apply in person Newport N1tion1I Bink Whocltlya Wont? Wh•dclyo Got? SPECIAL CLASSIFICATION FOR Call one cif the experts listed below!! Superior .k Placentia, N.8 . BARMAID ni&hts. e:tp'd. Ap- NA TUR.AL llORN SWAPPERS Special Raio ply in penon Hillh Tide, 1'l1 w. 19th St., c.~r. > SEllVICE OIRECTORY SERVICE OIRECTORY SERVICE DIRECTORY 66IO send ~. addtt'&S and 81byaltting 6550 Gardening P h I phono numbe:r to MULTI. --'-'--"'-----'-C: •per ang ng BEAUTICIANS S Llne1 - 5 11ml'I -S bucks "ULIS -AO MUST INCLUDE DAIL\" PILOT STATE DIST., INC., 1681 W. BABYSITTING, near New 1---------_P_•i_n_ll_n.;;g _____ 61_50 3 NEEDED AT ONCE. '-""'' '" ntVI> .. ,,.... ~lllt """ .. "' Ill ....... 222 FOREST A VENUE UGUNA BEACll .,,._ Broadway, Anaheim, CalL. Heller Park. Lg. lncd. yd., GARDENING I: landsca.plni. TOP Pa.inlin&" Company nov.· FE:lldALE· . '-YOUI tP'*'-,,,.,., .odrl'I.. 4-' •rw. ef Mv1rtL11,... fornia 9'JSCQ. (TI4) m.5060. Bal. lunch. XJnt. care. l~ yrs ex P ·Cle an-u P , m"'""'"'"' , -·-•t Pao"•Li·• W..:. are turning way bustneu I-NOTHING l'Olt SALi! -tlt.IDli:I DML'rl &1>2'5l sp1.'inklers inst'd & repaired, .. --· ....., .. ., " " _,... N--bl PHONE 64W671 NE\V Frtt stand~ng drive tn 673-1166 Prices on Acoustic ceilinp eve:iuay. ~ capa e To Pl•c• Your Trader's P1r1dl .. Ad PRIME CORNER re&taurant, hi traUlc loca-\\'ILL babysit by the 1\·eek or k~-~------& Exterior Painting due to opr s. 10 take care of tt- tion, aood busine5!1, Owner eves. You furn ish trans. AL'S Garoefllna & Lawn d e velopment ot Ne~· quest customer&, R!:!.c ent 32 x 11 x 5 • Sailboat huU. Tdeal Fem> Cement Form. Trade for machinery, tools, '"'· Call &12-8961 Anytiml! Lovely home & swim pool & family st)'le cale (help run). Next to golf l.'OUtse. Near Valley Cenler. Trade for acreage, Owner 644.1721 '6.l ltfKX Jag. 4 dr. F.P. Lo ml. Auto-air-new rad. tires, brks, AM-FM. stereo. Trade Sl200 rq. !or late P .U., auto. 642--1574 &.side 3 br hm & 2 rear apt. $29,950 val. or 2 hms w/ 5 rear apt.s, mo Inc S788, s;;9.SOO vat. Trd S33tll ,.q for S.CaJ hm. Ownr/bkr 646-3T;i(l 8 acres comm. in Atuca- dero for Riverside prop. Ta. hoe lot for Big Bear lot. Tuatln hse for Rivenide area home. 962-0027, 8J8.3284 HA VE: 50 acres F /C Ott-ron land. WANT: Unilll, houae or ? ? in Oranie Coun- ty area. Nancy J. lt1oor, Rltr, 642·700> Trade up • hOuse Y.ith back bay v~w at 2l53 Jrvint: Ave., for vacant or 4 to 100 units. Agent 675-6252 or 67'3-a323 art 6 pm. C-3, Store1 & Apta La Sierra Area Want 3 BR home or ? C.OnUMntal Co. Rltn SU.-1006 or 838-2896 24' Glass cruiser; F'B, RD1'~, SS, OF, dinghy w/3 HP mo- tor, xlnt cond, sips 6. Trade $1500 ~· for clear camper or st& wag, &464619 Trade 1%. Acre, vallJ(! S:l49a or $250) equity in 5 acre tract Both nr Palm Sprgs. For Chev, Ford or Dodge Van BUI. 536-1131 3.9xGr. FP. $135M 24 unit Motet · -ith manager, Lon& Beach, equity $76,000. Trade for home or '! '!?? Broker * 54.NT'lS Res VU lat Hemet val S71XXJ. 170 Acs Yucca Valley val $~00 ac, 25' Ov.·ens CM.Ill, val $4200. Trade one/all, clear. for TD or T 673-3045 P.M. AKC Dobermllfl Pups. Avail. O~ficc or store in Lido shop. able for trade of tools, furn. ping area (surplus space of iture. etc. Good borne. Lido Realtyl. must sacrifice $3,500 dn. Call 642-140~. l\faintena.nce. Commercial, pressure airleu spray gun. grads 1velcome. Che.ntelc, TitE industrial & resident. not nece•~""" CalJ Viola Prime consideratiOll. Call LIDO REALTY INC. REAL ESTATERS EXCELLE.i"l.:'f cliihl care * 646-3629 .,,. Ceill.np $14 per room. Ex· r:.-1 • &~7171 Ask for Van. done in my horne days. t ---~----'--teriors $230. ilalris Painting Loving, 548-99l9. Or apply mKE SHOP Exp'd ~·ith inlants. 642-28.13. TREE SERVICE, ged'I yard 642-1558 In person, 26T E. 17th St., BAY LIDO BLDG ESTABLISHED -r • BABYSITTIN", cleanup. Sp RI 1"' KL ER INT /EXT A E t t"!!C!!.,!!!.!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!- 642""61 33n Via lido 67J.7300 HAVE clear North Laguna ' • ..,we arc. " REPAIRS. 646-5848 · • ver. x ·1~ 3 BR J100 Newport, N.B. or ll.B. Net over $15,000 yr. My honie Jwin&' the day. I---~------$127.50 labor only. 8 yr. · & den, 1~ + 1'~ ba. Olllces available. Rm 301 Agt. Call 548-4139. 642-12'21 JAPANESE Gardener. guar, painting avail. Also. \VANT beach income 675-2'4&1 or 5'1l-!J032 EUROPEAN Del' 1 exp'd, comp. yard service. ApLS &: Comm'I. 548·1!'>46 642-2"152 · ica e~n. F~ e,;llmate. 968-2300 Call anytime, Bi'Okcr \\.'ANTED: desk space by repossessed sale. l\Iust sell Brick, Masonry, etc. HOLIDAY SPECIAL, Int. i.: ------'-----1 real estate broker & notary. all or part. Rea&. 17214 6560 Jl1'1'S Gardening & lawn Ext. paintlng. Llc & insun:I. 200 ac fine fishing & hunting Beach area prel. 536-0131. Beach Blvd. H.B. 847-2151 maintenanCI:!. Res & com-Free es11. Locnl rels. 30 yn1 .+ ~lor movie film + mail. NEWPORT OFFICES ========="-• BUILD, Remodel, repair mercial. * 540-4837 exper. "Chuck" 64!>-0lkl9 BOAT CARPENTERS EXPERIENCED 1ng hst of names for llunt· Lg & 11nl, beaut bid&" .. Coast Investment Oppor. 6310 Brkk, block, _concrete. CLEAN-UP SPECIALIST SUBURBAN Painting/Dec tng club. Trade: 4 1vhJ dr. """' •>.tl. •1~ .,.1~.,., carpentry, no JOb 100 small. ~1 · -odd · b Ex... -G"·-·t··• W-k O'DAY YACHTS I "cl • 962 °0 71 "1 • ............, '"· o.><>-......., Lie. Contr. 962-6945 " oivlflg, ...... ging. )0 s. '' ........ """ .,. ve 11 e or · -oo P•rtnert $ Investors Reasonable. 548-6955 Fn!e esL No job too laJ'i'! 3090 PULLMAN Appl,y STORE, oUlce &: deak space 1967 32' Chris Craft, twin 1842 Newport Blvd., CM Activf:! or inactive participa·C ·~•~r~po;:.:;n~lo~r~ln~g._ __ =65=90::.: ~-nirol •·rvo"cn or too small. 494-3190 , ---.=~CiO~S~T~A::,:M~E~S~A:: eng, folly equipped, very 548--0588 lion. 10% ·retw11 & growth -._ on 6612 * PAINTING -lnl./Ext.1• BOYS 10 .. 14 clean. Will trade equi1y tori ··~-~-~-==::====== potential in successful re:al CARPENTRY Loca! references. Immed. Carrier Routes Opeo home or cs.r or anything. Commerci•I ... "85 esta1e & buildin& Vl'nture. f.1INOP. REPAIRS. No Job Expe:ricnl'E'd BARTENDERS service. 646-5242. 64&-3657 tor ... "' •-------.....:-= "'"~145 T Sm·" Cab ...,...1..,., days, 642-4741aft6.1-...._, oo ...,., inet in gar-sPrvini; all Dunce County. EXTERlOlt-INTERIOR. l..aiuna Beach, So, LaiWW LEASED Stores for Sa.le, ages li: other cabinets. 639-2233 •-•tAINTEN 'CE DAILY PILOT ?-.fus.t trade my 2 cabin 19th St. No·. "·th•I To"''''· M L 6320 "' ,. i AN . nd 23, & .,.,. " oney to oan 545-Sl'n, U no ans\ver leave • 646-3!85 e 642-4321 cnJlSl'rs, mint co . 540-1768 or 64&-7414 Agent _,. msg at 646-2372. l-1. O. Hauling 6730 JO'. Fine/Insurance avail. _ .. ' · 2nd JO L Anderson =.::.::.:"'------...:.;..:.; PROFESSIONAL Painter BUSBOYS: 1 da.>·s, 1 Trade for Car or Real Es-Industrial Rintal 6090 08 n y A R O IC a r, Cleanup. will trade work tor turniture nights. Apply ln person, 329 tale. Call Ven& 66-1442 Prompt. confidential service ~:n~c!:i~~!R10• ~· 1;,a:~n:111s. $10/load. S;Jlvageables free. or ?'! 642-4558 E. 17th St., Costa ?11esa. Neat cottaa:e rear of R-2 NEW BUILDING 642·2171 S45-0611 qua! \l'Ol'k. C'.all &16-2576 Renio\'c ivy; grade. For Better Painting, Inter· Burrouths Oper"to $500 lot Cdf.I. Equit .. SS~. Take 1260 1 ~an Ave., Co•ta Me'"'" Serving: Harbor area 20 ..,.._ 9GU745. ior & exterior, acoustic ffi. Typist 1o $425 •1 .......-;, .,.. 1 '"' R~PAIR, Partitions, Sn1all 1· cll!'ar late model air cond. Each unit 1725 "" fl, 2 ofr. Sattler.Mortgane Co. HA ULING. Have %T P/U ings. 646-4077, 541-3502 Ship/Rec Clk. $450 -. -• Reinodel, elc. Nite or day, car part eqty, balance $135 ices, 2 rest rooms, U0/220 :l3G E. 17th Street P..eas~ Ca"il KEN 540-i1679 Anything· ti·ush to furn. $8 RENTAL READIER Store Mr9. Tr. $600 per mo, 61~%. 673--0173 electriC'. Ample parking. l ·A=N~N~o=u~N~C=E~M~E=N=T~S~-load + nilg. 49-1·1003 540.3924 ABILITIES C R •-t N R REPAIRS, ALTERATIONS G H G UNLIJMITEO AGE 12 unils ~to Ifarbor & · Ou• .. 1' attress ealtor •nd NOTICES CABINET. Any size job, MOVIN AULIN PAINTING-Ext.-lnt., 18 yrs.. . NCY Newport, CM. Valu" $95,000, Costa r-.tesa 642-1485 25 yrs, exper-. 5"18-G7\J j•1 Ion van, reas. ~126 Exp. lns., Lie., Free est. 4M E, 17th St. SUite 22~ Want home. Owner will car-Found (Free Adi) 6400 Clea n Up and Haul Acolliil. ceiling. 675-4938 Costa ~fesa 642-1470 rY fin. chgs. Leon Vibl:!rt 30CXl to 7000 sq fr. \Ve&t 17th CLERICAL FINANCE S ~ BLAC' & h"t 1 Cement, ·concrot1 6600 ~=S='=' =·='"'=d.=646-=252=8 = -Rltr. uo ~·· a•ytl•t•. t ...... 1:11a M{'SB. 9~;c ""r sq ft "' w t e ma e Pl I · R · 688 .,..,,""'100 " " ... ~ s I I B a1 er1n9, •P••r 0 Secretary -cashier. Minimum S"-clil'-3 Bro• lee land. W11fs.McC1rdle, Rltrs. pane or ird dog. Vic, CE'l 0 1 . ,~,. ~ .. 8 y0 ,,., Sho · C 1 " ENT W P.K, no job too Housecle•nlng 67•5 *PATCH PLASfER!NG year finance co. exper. $25'! 1 , 1 115,1 1 10 Newport Blvd., c.~. pp1ng en er , ,. " -y -c ear •t Ila •. aJ•-V small, reasonable, Frtt -----~----. Xlnt start1n~ sal"""', good ' "'I ' I 548-7729 644-0684 .. .. &gllO -T ut:rl, 1'~. . All ........ free '"'-At "'6 ~1 Glendora lot \\'/oaks. \Vant e¥es. 847-0660 e stin1. 11. StuUlck 5-18-8615 BAY &. Beach Janitorial .,,-.,..s. . es ...... ,.,. e working cond. Ca 11 f.1r. inc prop, trlr pa.rk or ranch F~o=u=N=o-o7ld-,-,-1-em-•l_e_m!_._d_;_'"_ t PATIOS • ORJVE\VAYS Serv. Cpls, 1vindows, floors, Call 540-6825 Blasche tor app't. %1140 nr coast. O\vnC'r 67:1·0176 Loh 6100 Cocker type dog. Grieving. Planters_ Bltck 1"cnC1Js etc. Res & Commc'l. 6190 Fortune Financial Co. H d d I d Roon1 arldltior.~ 642-9a52 _64 76-"' '='='=' -~----~ 1 Plumbing College Cent'lr a1.1 ma e unusua carve HAVE $43,000 in fl·I Fee Need owner or rte\V hon1e. == 2T:i J.I 11's1n coveo•d t•bl•' b•-."'" •= * CON'Cl'.E~E F"I ~·RS, \VANTEO -Housey,·ork, vie PLUJ\IBING REPAIR :!() ai•bor Blvd., 0 "' • ..,,, \'iC'111 lot. 11 2' x 70.·. l..oc•t•d ,no-"""" ~• .IVV C I I I C "I & cradles T de f c " pato·~.· ... t ... Rea·-·· blc, CaU orona f c !\ ar. Ne1vport No job too small osta " E'Sa ' ra or ac or 2118 Lee1vanl L Do BF.AlIT. lonn,hai~d fcmslc, ' " -· nna h Call 61°'~" It 6 e 64""128 boat n., \'er . .., J)on, 642-&1 I ~ c · ,,...,,f,)J a M-.l e COSTA l\l.ESA ?.IANUFAC· -~ZJ.12 . 1 S Shores area. \Viii sell lo calico cnt 11·it h Ilea t'Ollar. pn1 I ==========c\ · t'XCl:!P un. down, !rd for gd trust deed, Call J.1:>-7260 or Sot:>-1161 · ===~==--1 TURER, starting ne\\I 6 10 \'ALF ACRE · 3 Controclort 6620 ,. WINDOW.> DIRTY? l~R~o~o~fl~n~9:_ ____ 6~9~5::0 10 pm shill, 1\'ant f'xp"d . -• with S 600 an. or make cash ofler. H. C, fron1 g.'j pn1 11ual income Back Bav for Erickson, 547_,019. E·"""· C CO. · · J<Tee est. J5 years exp. ALL TYPES· k ood & Lathe Machinists, Grinders, · ... ,, ALI cat, long haired, vie Additions • Rcmtdclin<> Johnl'IY Dunn 642-2364 • roe , '" · l\fill O""rs .. etc, who '" clNr land San Diego Coon. OR 3-0758 .. s I lt h' I LEAKS .-- ' TO, i'=========.o Nev.·port & Mesa Drive, C~f. frerl II. Cerwick, Lie, * ·~ CLE'"!NG * 8 Pia s ing es. already employ'd. and \Vant Y or 5. "··'1-TJ4t ""l"' * "J"' 7 /'\rl ,..... REPAIRED. Work "''"'~. t k 4 hr ,,, ti1 ........ ~1 :1 .,.. .. 1 o •--o \VOr • •• ·o·ght for Jlal Pinchin, Rltr 6iS-4.392 Acre•ge 6200 'Fast & UJOrough &12-8164 847-1136 · · " BLACK Poodle "'ic Falcon \VllLIAMS Cleaning Scrv. ==========lxtra income. Only exp'd 18' DUNPHY CABIN CRUI. 40 A ~ Caltr $2'5 Avt', F.V. Call to idenlUy, Carpet Cleaning 6625 men ~·/own hand tools nttd SER: !5 HP. Evinrude. Nice oo~~~s°s25. Pe:R J\10NTI{,· 962~841 CARPETS, Windows, fil'l'I, s._w_i'?l .... _____ 6~960'""' apply. Please call 54S..715t concl1t1on. $1000 value. Trade iM,<9S. FULL PRICE. L.1""'=='========= CARPl'..I' & upholstery 1tcam etc. Res or Comc'I. Xlnt ror further informallon. f vw <>., .. ., .,. cleaned, also car""l in-\\'Ork Rras! Refs. 548-4111 • Dl-essmaklng • Alterations• c::.,;,;::.;;;=.:;::.::,:;:_:;;.;:;:.:,~ or • 0~y,_m She\1•te11. 326 \V. Third st., Lost 6401 sta!lation. Results g~~.For RENTAL READIER Specla.I on coa~ hems i · COASTAL AGENCY L.A. Phone; (213)623-5101 1----------"'"' c•t, call &1"5911 .,.,m4 * 61&6446 * Profession•I GER.\1AN Shepherd . 2 Yl"6 " ~ .HV-»J"' Whatdoyouhavetotnde! 18 Acres mature xlnt pro-old. Answers to "Shadow'', A-OK shainpoo Christllas Alterations.642·5145 Employment List 11 here -ln Orqe ducing avocados + cit1us. c .M. area. 548-6618 SJX'Cial $7.50 rni-lcss 'for Ironing 6755 Neat, accurate, 20 yrs. eXp. As1i1tance County's !~est read lrad· View i1ite11, sf:!11·er & all util. PRESCkIPrJON sun glasses, halts {'!C. Alw co tr. p A member of ln£ post-aD':I make a deal \Viii divide. P. O. Box 473, plain black frame. REWARD housceln'g 827-::ti-:2 IRONING In Tny home, TILE. C1r1mfc 6974 Snelling: & Snelling Jnc. Fallbrook. Calif. 92028 675-1479 RENTAL READIER exp'd, You deliver & pick· 1.;.=o.:...;;.;.:..:::::.:_;_..-":.::.:..; 2790 Harbor Bl, CM ~ 1\ * * * * *TAKE over s acres., near ========= up. *Verne, The Tile Man• Harbor Blvd. at A<l~ms l'!!J!!i!!!!!!!l!!l~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!!'!!!!!!IJ!!~![l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!ll Lake & town, $15 mo. P1rton1l1 "05 f>.10.3924 * &12--020;; * Cust. .work. Install&. repain. * COSMETIC 1~ ~ No JOb too small. Plaster ltEAL E51ATI .REAL ESTATE 7t.t/894-4743 PALMISTRY & Carpet Laying & IRONING In my hon1e Sl an patch. Leaking s hower SALESWOMAN G.no.r•I Gener•I R · "26 hour: also alterations & re""'lr. 811-19'71"'° "206. ExJ>(!rience preferred. Per- L.k. El.I.no o· 6202 CARD READINGS ----...::•;,P::':.:".o~:.::.:: -'="~===·=:~;~:=i:I r babysitting. 54~7641 ... manent full time positions. Rooms for Rent 5995 Income Property 6000•3 ADJOINTNG h i llside· Bring Your Problams to FOR CARPETING IRONING Tree Service 6910 Xlnt company benefi~. 1---------1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;'"'1 lak"vieiv lots, near casino Me -I Will Help You OR CARPET LAY ING Bring 011'" hangers J . W. ROBINSON ROO~f WITH KITCHEN, $3,000. 536-2449 Solve Them. c. A, Pace 6~2-2070 -====64=6-=1="='==="" TREES ,pru'!'1· t 0 pp e d ' Fuhk>n Island, N.B. BATII -PRIVATE ENTR. I give advice on all matters -remove . ..u yrs exper. Equal oppor1unity em1>loyer CALL -548-2'720 IN SMOG FREE 3 ACRE;S 40 miles north 01 of life, such as love, court· ,_E_le_c_t_r_ic_1_1 ____ 664.c;..;.:O Jinitorial 6790 A e r i a I tower e qu i P . P V 11 R H Lak ship, maniage, divorce. bus. -493-5405, 6J8.1234 COOK N~~~e~~e/~~~ ;~i~~~~ auma a ey tC:,':°otn;i':rras~~vel, c~ea~~ incss transactions of all ELECTRICAL £el-vice &: SPARKLE J.anitorial & ~In-TREES, Hedges, topped, cul "' • • $3 000 .,.24.... kinds. Reun.it• ••-separ. rep11ir. 24 hrs. 7 days. Ko dtv.· clean. mg Scrv. \Vin-remo"od, 30 yr, o•p, FUiiy & ba. SIS a wk. 548-5750 Goorf lnvestmf:!nt. Unusual · · ""'°"' .,;o uie · b -" R od I ' • ated, cause speedy and hap. 10 too sm...... c-n1 e !: dct.vs, t'E'!ltd., coml, const. insured, Big John 6424CCO ROOM WI shower, $85. family s I YI e restaurant, R E W ed 62 O PY marriages, overcomf:! rL addition~. If it's electrical, Cle1nup. Free est. 968-2691 GENE'S TREE SERV·. Experienctd monthly. Weekdays caU aft beautiful patio. Next lo 9 • • ant 4 \l'e fix it! 646-4772 < ~ -1 hole • II I I -• vals, lovers: quan-el&, evil M , S 6840 T""· •hrub'--..., "'-'mm·•, ~ •·~"' h 0 1 COUJ'llc, a 50 ove.y NEED MONEY? habits, stumbling blocks of ov1n9, torage &I ··-~·1,,_.,.,u,·•359 ~ omc or owner, Bat'ns fo r all kinds. Thel'(' is no heart Gardening 6680 -·-MO-V-IN~G---. or remo""" ........... 6990 THE RIGGER• Apply in perecn only Mot.la.. Trlr. Crt&. 5997 horses. Ali on 5 beautilul To buy a ne\v hOmr ': lnvf:!~ti. ta _.. ..,.,. so bad or home so dreary GORDIE'S L U hot~ uusca,-..u acres. gale our guaranteed trade • a\\' n \\laulo Local. l\le<lium distance. c~P--·~··~•~r~y ___ ....;;:..c.; SANDY'S TRAILER COURT GRO\VTH AREA in plan. Let us ans\vcr your ~~~~ ~t~a~no~a~~i~,u~:~~~~ lenent>c l\tO\v. r.:dSf'. Po1l'r r Rca~onable. 536-6116 - Spaces avail now. f.!ax 26', BY OWNER 644-172.1 questions with no obligation. ., Vacuu111. I~! phone 968-19i0, Call 646-96Sl F" . h ~ whal may be your hope, lllf'n 5'1."1-S734 aft 5 PJ\I IT'S Bear.h house time. Big. air enoug · fear or ambition, gest selrclion ever! See the WEEKLY rates Sea Lark '!"'~'!"'!!!!!!!!!!!!..,!!!!!!!!!!!I SEE THE DAILY PlLOT WA."n" ADS? j,fotel, 2301 Newport Blvd., LOVELY Home plus lncom!:!. PALPlflSTRY READER Costa ~1 New 4 unit. \\'alk to beach. esa Fast growing area, See to I ~'ill tell you jus1 11•hat you ORANGE COUNTY'S '\'ara to know. CZYKOSKI'S Custm. Uphol. European Crafts manship 100% fin! 642--1454 1831 Newport Blv, CM. # 16 f'1shion Tsland Newport Beach DENTAL OFFICES -ASSISTANTS- • Insurance girls G·-t Ho-5-1 appreciate. 746 f.olain, JtB. LARGEST 1 ••• "-·:...--=~".:....-B h · Ava i . for parties PRIVATE room & bath for l =53&-~y~257S="~'td~•~r.-L_;""_bo_r_g_c_o. 2629 HARBOR BLVD. \Vi!h This Card and $3.00 ambulatnrv ..... l'C/\n. Lovt>ly DOWNTO 546-8640 RfX:f!t1•c $5.00 Read ing ANNOUNCEMENTS ond NOTICES JOBS & EMPLOYMENT ---·------1 Job W1nted, • Receptionist. Prepared ttSlllne must have h\'o yrs. dental experience. Day hours. A1I union bene- fi~. Salary S3.f4 per hr. Call for appointment 633-Tolt. home. ~;~ r-;,;rrounding,;, WN LAGUNA OPEN EVES TILL 1:30 Open Daily 10 A..'f !o lO Pr.t Fully Licensed &ood nutritious meals. Costa 2;;• coast J-hvy frontage ~·/ 8USINES~ ana orr. (Zll) 697.927'!_ 'Mesa. 548-4i;;J FINANCIAL re!l11.urant, 3 uni!s & extra 210 \V. \Vhiftier Blvd., R-2 lot. $51,00J S7,SOO down B Op La Habra Mite. Rentals 5999 STORAGE L<>t: Trucks, trailers, campers. boals or " N~r. cau Lon 646-2486 ENCLOSED aarai;::es n r. airpor1, llUilable boat stotqt or ? Broker 5"0-3862 TJ-lE HUNTS)fAN 496-126ii UI . portunltlet 6300 NE\\'PORT Beach -High on High Profit Potential Ille Bluffs over the bay. 8 F1 •nchise Opportunity 1v1th <leluxe un its. new, all leas-Goodwa,y. a 40 year old na. <'1. firepla<.<t!I, many )(lnt:o;, tional printing companv. Call owner 64:>1260 or 675-Proven (_"(lnC<'pt • r\prrit>ttCe 55.35 not necessary. You may \l'OL"k In Center or be an ab- Bu1lnea1 Rental 6060 sen!t'(! investor. Pnn1e I~ lncom• Property 60001--------cation now available in 1hl~ 1;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;IST'ORE or OU1t'f'. Bayfront area al S29.'r>O, fina ncing 11 Balboit I&land, \Vlll dt>corate available, Reply to: Robo'rl NEW INDUSTRIAL 1st uaer depl"l'CiaUon. \I/ell located 18,000 flq f'I building. Seller will aettPt $12.000 pre. paid tn~rnt + principal All down. A l k i n i $160.000. s~ tC-"'1lftl \l'ilh a good )'itld l.UW'fd, Tor more 1n. fOrT11tUon pl.eu" call K. W. Small. Eckhoff & Al&oc ., Inc. 1818 \V, Olapman A\'C. Orance. CaJit $41·~ Evtt-wlmd• ::.3&05.9i1 to t>uit . Lo Rent. 673-4300 Loew, Hegional Director, 670 STORE or DUice. N!:!\\'port & South Vt>rmont Avenue, Los Bay Center." 2052 Nc~'Jl0(1 AnaeJes. C.alil01·nla, or call Blvd. 646--1252 .:21:.;';.·,;3S3::;;· 1;;3S;!.:-:-=~~ ROOf.I Suitable ~r gllt shop, CLEANING PLANT men'a shop or ladles shop. iw,ooo CMll Jim Berkshirr. 673-9405 Lncludes 1-hr. ~l"\;Ct', plus ======:=:::==:11t1undry Wt!~. 8 yean; same Office Rental 6070 location. lllnt..:o; fo1'Cf's sale. ;,;;;;.:;;..;.:::;c::.:::_ _ __;::;~ Call· ~1R. ROBINSON r-.100ERN J room sui1e, 0ftV1s n~11lty 642-iOOO ~Pis., 11.ir cond, j1n1tor H r. COIN laundrle~.t-')"Jllldture. '.let'. ample parking. rro1n ~.SOC! to $4 2.:iOO :iO. Calif, Ut Na!. Bk Bid£'. Ana"-•!m ,., __ 1 •i ' n>E. l7th Slnltt eue'"' · ~a "t:Aa , Costa Pi!t:sa &42-t48S na Park. Fullerlon , t0% PLUS NETI Gantcn Gro~. lluntlngton Bu.!nlfial ' plu wHh o~·n. f.T ARINER'S C&NTER &:aC'h, Sani.t An°" Tustin, .,.-1 unu. buill·U. indudipg Office In Store Bldg. Rt'nt or La f.llrad"- dllhwuber, carpettd. drap. Le. S7S-$ll5. Beauty ~hop. c.aIJ Charlie S:ZS-783.1 ~ _,. -• ---• ,..mt' "Qui p. t.t9 Rlvenlde BOAT )"llrd Ir 1\I rine Sal '<Vo •---A\<t! N B 646-2414 I a e1. • near actm. ' ahopp.irc. ·• · · · Take m·e.r opt'rat1nc boat"'" Cutt IO ~000. price nelJ 200 • Jim SQ. Fl'. Ntv.'JIOrl pjlr, hflrd\\'lt\' s111lcs &. boat 0~ ]<Kio. Brarh Ci\'lC Cir, JJn>.rt. ~Its. Bu,ll'K'~ In f11~1vport Pad.De Shortt l\e9Jt)' Secn!lllrW 1''Tvlcrs. J3.N Bench. f\.o 1nvt5lmt!nt JT· ~ or 141.assi& Nev.'flOrt Bl\"d, P.:. B . 11ul11'{1. \Vrltt Daily Pilot l~!!!!!'!!!!!!"" ... ~-..~~1,f71>~~·~~1~~-~~-la."~"~·~"~~""''""'~ Sl1PPORT JOUl' Un!ted ~ GIVE ·w -Unllt"d fWlrf D.\ll.l PlLOr \\'A.~T ADS: LOSE WEIGHT I "ant lo women v.·bo are _10 po11rlds or 1nort O\'C'rn·clght lo takl:! p;irt in group 11•rlght loss pl'ogrnm of ~pec1alized reducing, All inquiries con- fidential. A~k for ~fr. Ken. nedy 537-541:!. + L!Ct:NSED • 3plrttual Readlna, lldvlce on fill matters. Love, ri1111Ttagr, Bu-"int'i;11, :11i N. F:I Cam ino P.r11I. Slln Oen11:ntc. 1!12-9136, 4!12-0076 10 A ~t -10 PM LICENSEO Spi1i t1111l Readings, 111ch·1C'e on all niatten, 312 N. El Camino Real. Sen Clemr:nte 492·9136, -192-0076 JO AM • 10 P~I SINGLES dance every \Vcd. 8;30 to 12, fox trot, awlna-, latln, ~leadowlark Cub. l[.B. 3 nil. \\'. of Beach, oU \\\rttlfr. Adm, ~ Aficlofl8do11 de! Torro tnicl'tsted in Jf'OUP U1rr<1py N.11 fi7l-01'9 llANO\\ RITING nrn.ily&1, . know )·oul"St'lf k others. Call Gin(;t'r. S.1~"6 Personals 6405 C1metery Lota Mt8 Womtn 7020 ---ACTING FOR Salo by ownor. 6 Dti you 11•ant to be a full tin1e Paciflc Vic1v (('metery lots. W'Orking professional? Do Call morningll f..12-1323 you have the self disriplirre PRJCf:D to sell last! 2 Jots. to i;ubject yourself lo a rig. Pacific View f.!emorlal irl British traini"R l'(IUl"!e & Park. '."149-0674 th(' artil'!!ic hum iliry 10 ec-1---------- ttpl niinor ro\('s until t h e JOBS & EMPLOYMENT 1rainlng ~riod i.~ 1''1tllf)IC'I"! Tf !'lo THE LONDOM LA· Job Wanted, Meri 7000 GUNA ACT 0 RS \\'ORr:.1 --------- SHOI' might be a ~lr Jo hel p you. No p1Tviou~ Pxpc1•irnl'e nl!ct'!snl'y, no ar.c barrier. r.1rmbc.r~ (If !hi~ cx\'l11s1ve grou p v.ill only be accepted upon a satisfactory personal inlt'rvit>iv with the dln!ctor. CaJI .f94-44lM for Rppt. *Don't! Ca.T\ U! if you still bclie\'C in ca1·c slyl1 datif1$: 2~ I-fr rcconh11::, ORANGE CO. ~fi-6ti68 College Erlucation, ?>ranRgt'· nicnt r~pcriencc ll'ith Aet'O- nautical Sy~lt'ms. P.l'll!"f"d Air }~orcc LI. Colonrl de· ~lre)l rn1ployn1f'n t with Or. ange O>unty finn. 5000 00ul'3 flying, including jeU;, bul \l'illlng to work in 4)\heor fields. Could fit into your rrr. gan!zarkln. Ava.liable for 111- lt'l'vlcw~. \\'ri le Royal Cirubh :! Ill Blackthorn, Ne11•por1 Brach or phone 6 H~lS Job Wanted, Women 7020 ALCOlfOLICS Anonymou1 I--------- Phone 542-7217 cir.· wrilo to CRl::ATIVE \\'riter dt'Sll'tl P.O.Box1223Cosla?.le5L pern111ncnt po5lf1on. Bstc.kgrouncl experlenee I~ NOT Responsible for any eludes l:.'xec. Scty, Adve:rtis- blll• other than my own. Ing, Publli: Relallons, sales, \\'m. P. Dougla!I Promotion. Pleue c.iU Dot· 1if' at 6-16-1587 Announcements 6410 ·_;_,.;..-"';.:.:;:;;.;;.::.:::__::.;.:.:111on11! CAl'C 8\•all. :W.-..jiO SENSITIVIT\" '!'RAINING \\'ORK SMOI' A pt'OIJram ol 1ntf'rp1·1.,.on.1l exercl1ts !or i1m11ll ~'lt-<11· rtc1ed aro11p•. :\flnlm11.I l"ha~t: call &n-8730. 10 A1'1· ;, "·'' e Allit'd NU1"3C5-& Akte1 e Of 0.C. Nursoe_s R!:!Ristry Zi"i!l \\'. Linitan L:111e, S.A. JT'S Beach heme llmt'. Big· ~e ~lttlion ever! ::ct the DAILY PILOT Clua!rltd ~!Ion NO\\" • f!IOVING INTO AREA. Ex· tens.ive exper. in 'vriling. DENTAL Receptionist, t.lohon piclol"t" s I or y Laguna Hiiis El Toro area. analysis. Looking for job In All phases mastered. $550 to P/R or 11lled field. fi75..1676 st.art. P. O. Box 32::., El Toro, Cal., t2630 replie.9 Jobi-Min. Worn. 7100 confidenlial Advc1•1islng Dlsplay IMMEDIATE PART TIME HELP WANTED DENTAL AS S I STANT wanted in Newport lkach, lo start Jan !. lnlv. now, 548-5602 DENTAL RECEPTIONlSf. Exp'd. for n\Odem dental offlC1!', Hunt. Bch. 962-3319. Large.' national company, ex· D' ,.1 T lntt1 _ ~IALE panding Jn Orange County, 15,...ay ra .., ""'"" m'"' ,,.,;.,.,, IMMEDIATE "' "'"'' & !em.al" to w ... k HELP WANTED Pll"!-lime evenings. No ex. OMSION prr.ience necessary aa "'t EXPANSION tJ•aln. HIJ;b. ~hool dlplorna aM 0111: IN year rt'sldenct< required Or.ANGE µ:>UNTY Cill for appt. · Provides !mmtdlate r:mploy. 774-7251 mcnt for ~lde~t~ ol the: .,..,===~~---I atta, &xpencll.'!e ts.n't nece!- ASSISTANTS & Ml'Y JJI compM.y tnlnln: ~ECEPTIONIST Is Jurnahec!. Plv-pat'f'd rcqime must h111ve START t<Ao )'?'&. dtntal expuitnt1!. AT f:t.,, ht5. AU 11nion ~fits. $4IO PER MONTH Saltry Sl.44 pcor hr. Olll for rf qualltled ant aceeptltd, KO llppt. for Interview. 6..'.3-Tall. on payroll thhJweek. Advert.I I A .. t HIGlt SCHOOIO GRADUATE 1 n~ ~-. ncy AGES ~ TO 40 Sharp Secret•ry f o r 1 YEAR j\EStOENT fut • p•ced Newport JN ~ Be1ch Agency, Type CAu. ro.rd , or 'l'Ue!. 6S-70. Shorthand 100, 77 2SJ organlte & f ol l ow thru . Under 35. Phon11 642-3910. 425 N. Newport Bl\'d, PLANN1NG mO\'t! '\t)u II fi.nd an arndrur: numbl!r or homes In ~·· Classltltd Ad&. Check ~m no11'. I - WITH · THE JOB KINGS! MALE Commercial M1n•9•r Tr•I"" $675 4 )'I'll college-Cegree. '2 yrs \1'0rking w/ public. Train to be district mJ11l'. tor large compaey. M•n•ger Tr1ineea $500 College. DWI exeml)l. TECHNICAL Design EnginMr SIOK lnjer:tion Mold Forem•n To $4.50. All sbifts. ?tfu~t know 1etllp& and materials. Mainten•nce Mech. from $3.:iO hr. 3 yrs. expel' as a mill right. M•inten•nce Mech, Electric•I from $3.50 hr. Be able to 'o•:ork on hia own, Penetrant lnsptc. from $3.00 hr. Cov 't. Certified. Grind•r & Shop Mech. $3.50 hr. 2 yn exper w I lrinding mach. Shipping/Rec. Clerk Jl50 mo. Must have knw•ledge of electroniea. UNSKILLED . Factory trainees trom $2.10 1· hr. Truck Driver Cius I. $4.05 hr. Mold·Ra,,.ir For1m1n To $850 mo. 4 yrs. expe:r. ' Prod. Cl1rk' • lo $550 mo, 2 yrs colle;ge ~ 2 yrz. exper. \Vlll tram to be a buyer, FEMALE Accounting Cl•rk lo $600 Good bkgrnd in accls. payable. Knowledge cf cost I helpful. P1rsonnel S.cty. $400 r Sharp gal. Will be boss'• I right arm. ~lust !mow in. , surance. i c.shier to $34& Mo. 1 Some exper helpful. ; NCR Proof Opor. $400 Mo. Good bJ<irnd In NCR. MEDICAL X·Rey Tech from $375 Mo. 2 yrs. exper. Front & Beck Office Girl $400 Mo. Expto:r w/ back ofc. fll'Oo ced.ures. Nurta1 Aid•a All shifts, $1.65 hr. Coding Cl•rk $400 Mo. ~lust be exper in hospital. Factory Tr1inH1 ?-.tany Sl.SJ hr. ·E'PF-EmplO)'tT pay. fl!t-. Fee jobs alact &~I APEX Employment A9ency !1/J Wk So. ril lftltl 1873 HARBOR BLVD., C;M. 548·3426 ! r ' • • • I ' , r • • " • r :o t. n. ii : • '" .... ,., I lO ' !I'll l .... • .... lo. ... r... II 11 R l • i I ' ;-# -,-v o ,, t=-ri!~,-,..-,-.. -.----T--~---~~~- • M"'4ay, l>tffiobof 8, 1969 SI. EMPLOYMENT JOBS I. EMPLOYMENT JOBS I. EMPLOYMENT JOBS A EMPLOYMENT JOBS I. EMPLOYMENT JOBS & EMPLOYMENT JOBS I. IMP LOYMllll'I' ........,.n. Wom. 7100 Jobt-lr\on. Wom. 7100 Joilo-Men, Wom. 7100 Jo~n. Wom. 7100 Jobo-Men, Wom. 7100 l•lio-Mon. Wom. 7100 Joilo--Mon, Wom. 7100 Lob Toch $550 Xlnt. company. Tt!rrlfic ad- vancement potentltJ. Top benelhs, call Dob MS-5410 J ASON BEST DITAL otfict? needs eXp'd Employment J\&:ency t desk flrl, typing, 2207 So. Main, Sant. Ana oolcworlc. Plea1lng •LADIESfr Pk. up nallty. N.B. area. Ca.II Ouistm.u money. Put out :::::>-8395:::::::,,,~==~~-I cat. & pk. up orders tor * DRIVERS * '""" -. $3.00 ·~ " qual'd. 64.2-1403. MEN (2) fur g roun d m&lntenance a t Newporter Inn. Pe.rmanerit. See Head Gardentr, Ellis mi:J:J l xec Agency fo r Career Girls 1.fanul&cturlfll F:l(PLORER bu immediate openings for; * 1-Cablnet.Maker * 2-ShcUers • 1-Dctall !.Ian • 1·1'"1"mica Man * t-Jland Saw Oper. No Experience Secty to $600 Necessary! T ~fl J Mork.Ung good. Com. * 2-Femafe Auemblers * 2-Fibera:lus Men * I-Back wall Bldr. turt have clean Call.tomia -penionnel ii ,YOUng. Good drMna record. APPIJ' ..1:: ~ . slr.1111 also act as recep-• l·Fiberglus installer YELLOW CAB co, V lloni.st temporarily. -\Vlndshled. * 11).Flnlah r.t~Exp'd. * 1-Milt Man 186 E. 16th St. uz 11111'101111 • ,__, .c,._,, Gen. Ofc. to e:_.M. 4M c_. Dr. • "'",-t ._.. ~ Costa ~ .c-,._ O•-• c~ A..,_,. No SH. Cen. Ofc. exper. RU~1ER starting gTOUp; PhOM .546.Jlll Billing & Y.'Ork into payroll • l·Electricl.an (ll2 volt) need bass, guitar and tor ' 'iiZZZZZZZZ:t I f..fust like phone work. Ex· organ. No ~angups.I • eel. Co. morale. PLEASE APPLY -OR CAU..-673-3910. ESCROW CK Local co. needs sharp young gal with some ~crow back. ground, call Loraine, f.1er- chant,s Personnel Agency, :lCM3 Westclil! Dr., N.B. 6'>-7710 * ELECI'RONIC TF.cHS * Overseas Opportunities can Smitty 714: 774-2610 FASHION \Vant your fr e e Fashion Wardrobe by Chrisunas? Be- come a Fashion Consul!ant! No Investment • l~ighest Earnings • 6bmplele Train- ing. Full or p/time. Call Mf.. Han.sen for interview {714) ~. 10 AM-6 PM Daily .. Fashion ~tirror, Corp. FEMALE for Pie Shop work. No ex~r. necess. Apply 1510 Baker, C.osta Mesa. FEMALE factory packagers, 5·5" or over. $1.65 per hour lo start. ~8-5125 * FIBERGLASS LAMINATORS Experienced. Top pay, Large custom yachts, \Villard Boat Work!, 1295 Baker, C.l\f. Foreign Car Mechanics Good co. benefits. incl paid vacation, group ins. uni- forms furnished free. Good comm. schedu1e. Ask for Joe Moore Ph, f>40..l 76t. $500 SALARY Jus! out of military servl~. train as service mgr. Small parts mfg. firm. Fee ncgo. Call Ann, Merchants Person. nel Agency, 2043 Westclirf Dr., Newport Beach 645-2770 *FULLER BRUSH* 642-14ffi General Office to $525 Beautiful NWpt. Bch. oUiccs, Established, stable company. Friendly ~workers, to p benefits. Call ~rley 516-5410 JASON BEST Employment Agency 22tJ7 So. Main, Santa Ana Ge"'ral YOUNG man 18 or over,.de,y · lime \\."Ork, Laguna Hills Gun Club, 9601 Valencia, l.agUna Hills. GIRL FRIDAY Typing, phone & genernl cler- ical Please call 673-196()_ HOUSEKEEPER Ii v e ·in molherl<'SS home, N.B. area. 2 teenagers. Woman with l sml child ok. 531-1450 HOUSEKEEPER • sitter, live in or out. 2 girl!! 2 & 4. Spanish 0 .J{. 493-1706 HOUSEKEEPER N ceded . Live-in. Motherless house. 3 schl. children. $200 month. Hunt. Bch area. 968-3629 HOUSE-KEEPER, Live-.ln. Free board k room + salary. Call betr 4 pm, '43-1214 HOUSEKEEPER. live-in, 2 school-agers. 6i::i-0310 or 548-7197 HOUSEKEEPER & child care, 51Ai da. wk, $50 wk + rr1 & brd. Pd , vae. 540-9212 Inventory Clerk $110 a v.-eek + overtime. En. try level posi\'.on w/ line company. Xlnt. advanC\!• ment opportunities. OUict' deks job, not warehouse. All ~its. Call Johnny 546-MIO JASON BEST Employment Agency 22C17 So. Main, Santa Ana JANITORS, \\.'axers. Part & full time. Experienced only. Good pay & v.-orking con. diUons. 54~9393 Key Punch $450 up Advance to 11upervisor. Pll'tls- ant working pond. Nlee new NPB offict's. Top benel:its. Call Kay 546-5410. JASON BEST E mployn1ent Agency 'lliJ1 So. i\fa.in, Santa Ana \Vhite Elephants! ilnewport . personn~ agency 833 DOVER DRTVE NE\vPORT BEAOi 642-3870 PR Seely to $650 EPF Skills and ability in the art of human relatlorui must be tops. Some interesting trav. el involved. Logal Socty $625 EPF Ca1U. & corporate cxper. \Vork for sharp young al· tomey in N. B. Socty to $500 EPF Sharp young gal v.·/ 90 SH, dictaphone, & accurate typing. \Vorlt in an ex· citing, b'l'OWing bU!iness. Gid Friday $500 EPF T h r e e fine gentlemen combining their offices need a sharp girl w/ geq, insurance kno\vled ge , Sala?Y may be more depending on exper. E xec. S.cty to $625 EPF TOJ'I secretarial Ski 11 !I req'd. Prefer college + min. 2 yn, exper. Work in beaut. offices of t he president! Land devel. & builder . Secretar y $550 EijF ~1ust have ability to set up and organize new offices for busy Young Exec. If YoU are a winter sports buff w/ good skills, thia could be your cup of tea. Secretary $525 ERF Btlildlng &tor R.E. bkgrnd helpful. Must have fast ac- curate typing + liJtht SH. Accounting Clerk to $550 APF AtP, AtF, payroll. gen. ofc. Must be accurate, neat. wt ability to meet publi c plus some knov.·ledge of acc t g, machines. Excel. benefits, Bookkeeper $550 EPF NCR 395 exper, for beaut. offices at Fashion Island. Sec retar y $525 EPF Construction bkgmd for prestige company w I many benelits. MTST Operator $433 EPF Expl'!r preferred, bu1 will train good accurate typist Salary higher w/ exper. G irl Friday to $450 APF Assist wt f inancial statements, etc. Statistical t y pln1 exper, plus knowledge of CPA helpful. i\1ust be non-smoker. IBM Keypunch $450 EPF \VI minimum 2 yrs ex per. Will !rain to Sllpervi2, Y.'ith more exper ~ more money. Bookkeeper Tra inff $450 EPF Prefer college grad w/somc v.·ork exper. Start Jan, 5th. G eneral Office to $425 ERF l~or a mature person, whO can type aceuratety. Some insurance b~ helpful. \Vork in wngenial .ur- roundings. I Fre iden Auto. Tyrwr tter ()per, $400 ERF Prefer Frelden txper. but will In.in w/ 1fmilat ex· per. Jobo-Mon, Wom. 7100 Joils-Mon, W°'!!'.21~ *EXEC. SECRETARY* Must be able U> take shorthand at llJ0.110 "'pm. Experience at the executive level in a sales or marketing activity preferred. \Vill also handle phones & travel arrange-- ments. Excellent opportunity. Salary com· mensurate with background. Please apply in person or call Mr. Kuechler for appointment, 83$-4804. • GENERAL AUTOMATJON 1402 E. CHESTNUo ST., SANTA ANA An Equal Opportunity Employer M/F Wiii be moving to Irvine complex 1970 Secreta ry to $525 Coruitruc. or Arc h I tee. bkgrnd. SH and typing. One of Orange Co. '5 leading companies. Motel M anager For 22 units in Monterey, Cal i f . No e xper., neCl'ssary. Prete r a couple; nice accommoda. tions. Explorer 1'.fotor Homes 30'll Ncv.•port Blvd. Costa i\lesa. Calif. en•) 546.3300 AIATERlAIJ HANDLERS PLASTICS l\fALE. o\l'Cr 18 for graveyard shill. ~1ust be neat arxl dependable. o~ portunity to advance. Apply 84 p.nl. Resort Mana g er Orange Coast Plastics For Lake Arrowhead. 19 850 W. 18th St, C.M. cabins &. 5 units in lodge. 1,~,-,.-,-----'---- No exper. Prefer a couple. * OVERSEAS * A beaut. resort that \Veneedyou! overlook! lake. Call Smitty, 714: 774-2S10 Seely. $500 \Vorking for several PH.D's doing med. research. No presSW:_'e. A relaxed atmosphere, Secty to $500 Cood SH and . typing. New and growing company af. fllialed ..... t a leading Co. Must be a self starter. Legal Secty. to $625 No SH. heavy dictaphOne. 'f.fust ha.\·e corporate bkgrnd. Familiar w/court procedures. Bookkeeper Either FC or assistant. Salary commensurate w/ exper. and ability, EXCEL. C0?.1PANY. 410 W. Coast Hwy. Ne wport Beech 646-3'39 NO matter what it is, you can sell it with a DAILY PILOT \VANT AD!! &12·5678 * MOTEL MAID * Part Time Over 30 494-9'36 e e NEEDED Two Office Girls Mll!t be 25 and able to drive -APPLY - 186 E. 16th Sl, C.M. NURSES Registered ~ evm- ing & night shifts. Ex. benclilS, Apply Peraonnel Director, So. Coast C.Om- munity Hosp., 31872 Cout Hv.y., So. Laguna. 4!19-llll, ext. 356 Restaurant * DAY BUSBOYS *NIGHT DISHWASHERS Apply In person Reuben E. Lee 151 E. Coast Hwy. Newport Beach Jobs-Men. Wom. 7100Jobs-Men, Wom. 7100 * PERSONNEL * GENERAL AUTOMATION has an opening In its Personnel Depart· ment, reporting directly to the Employment Supervisor. . Jnitial duties ''·ill involve screenin~ appl1~ cants, typing correspondence. handling tele-- phone inquiries and making travel arrange-- ments. Secretarial skills, including short· hand \voul d be helpful. This is an excellent opportunity with a growing company. Apply in person. GENERAL AUTOMATION 1402 E. CHESTNUT, SANTA ANA An Equal Opportunity Employer lobs-Men. Wom. 7100 Jobt-Mon, Wom. 7100 MACHINIST PRODUCTION \Ve manufacture scientific instruments, sys· terns and components. We offer air condi· tioned shop, up-to--date equipment, ten paid holidays, and other "Blue Chip" benefits. If you consider yourself qualified for any of the following we wo uld like to discuss em~ ployment possibilities. BENCH MACHINIST \Vill do hand fitting, machining & repair and re.work as necessary. !vtust be able to read prints, use all normal hand tools and have knowledge in the use of mp.chine tools. 2nd shill. · '· HAND SCREW MACHINE \Viii set-up and operate hand screw ma· chine. ~1ust read detailed prints, foll9w op-- eration sheets and work close tolerances. 3rd shift. RADIAL DRILL PRESS Will set.up and operate the No. 2 Burgmas- ter. A1ust be familiar with the use of j"igs and fixtures. blue·prints and close to er· ances. 2nd shift. DRIL L PRESS \VilI sel·Ull and operate the single spindle drill press. Mu st be experienced in the use ol tumble jigs, fi xtures, taps and reaming. Isl, 2nd & 3rd shifts. TURRET · ENO I NE LATHE \VIII set·up and operate the turret or engine lathe. Experienced in the use of blueprints and the holding of close tolerances. 2nd & 3rd shifts. MILL SPECIALI ST \VIJI set-up and operate vertical mills. Ex· perience in the interpretation of blueprints, holding of close tolerances. Ferrous and non·ferrous metals. 3rd shift. BECKMAN INSTRUMENTS, INC. 2500 N. ~arb o! ~'t'd. (No rlb of lmperl<1l Jli ghway) Fullerton An equal opporlunlty employer Proud to be an Am . rn er1can ••. Glad you're a GIRL??? Join up with u1 Ill AMERICAN GIRL ALL NEW Red, White & Bluo temporary service Marching along w ith TOP RATES MAJOR ASSIGNMENTS TOP BRASS COMPANIES We're recruiting NOW for: Newport Bei1ch Office & i1ll Ori1nge County & Beach Cities, "Keypunch " Oper>. 118ookkeeper-Secy11 11Master11 Stenos 'First C lan" Typists "Private" Sectys • AMERICAN GIRL needs YOU Coll our NEW Newport S.ach No. for appointment 673·4176 REGISTER NOW! AMERICAN GIRL Order Desk to $500 Ra1·e opportunity. Entcy l!M'l potltlon, with XJnt. com· 91Jl.Y, Advtnct.mrnt ~J>Olent. la! unlbnlttd, Top btnetits. Call Bob M6-6f.10 JASON BEST Employment Agency 22Cl'1 So. Ma.In, Santa Ana OPPORTIJNITY Unlimited: Lookin& tor a career In sales? J1ere it bi! Sell Shaklee products to home and industry. Call 8»-0776 PAINTER ** BOATS Experienced only. Top pay. Large custom yachts. wtu. anl &At \Vories, 1295 Baktt, Costa Mesa. P L ASTICS WectJon Moldlnr Experienced OR tralneei (II':. malt' I tor gTaveyard shift. Ovcl' 18. App. 8-4 pm, Morr Fri. Orange Coast Plastics 850 W, 18Th St., C.M. 'P/TIME: Increase you r Rece pt/ S.cty. $600. Lovely new olf1ce. Ir· vine area. Vety pltuant worklnr cond, N.iet boss. 1 Top btndits. Call Ka)' "'6-5410 JASON BEST Empl.,..,.. .. -mT So, ?tlaln. Santa Ana Rest.aurant e e WAITRESSES e e BUSBOYS -APPiy In penon - SNACK SHOP M46 E. Coast Hwy. Corona del Mar $500. SALARY Just out ol MUit.ary Service, ttain u service Manager amall parts Mtg. Firm, fee Ne;otlable, call Ann, Mer. chants Personnel Aaency, 2()U Westclill Dr., N.B. &15-2710 pn-sent el'.lJ'Tiings from SALES: A'M'ENTION Mobile $200--$500 a ino., p/time. TV hm. ownen. Ledh?I that leads lurn. Call for appt. want to supplem~t Yo\IJ" ln- S46-4680. come. No phone aolicitlng. PLUMB;;lN;:;G;:---;&,-cH"'e7a7t"i n:-g: I Do not have ta leave Your Servic e Man. Fully hm. Ptllme wrk. For info, Qualified. $12,0CO + hrly call 8J6....M41, 10-6 potential. Earls Plumbing, SALES: Att~tion Beaut!· Inc., 1526 Newport Blvd. clans and X-Beauticlans C.M. lhat want to supplement P"'RE=SSM="AN,,,..-w-an"'te"'d:;---;!c:oc:r I your Income • to style &: sell Mieltle vertical. our fabulous Treu-Oilc Wf&, Ask for Beryl 5(8-2071 For In!ervw. call 836-5«1 PRINTING PLANT SALES: $300 v.-eek in wtg NEEDS Delivery ~1 an, fashion tleld. Need 5 C:.eanup & misc. Over 21. 581cspeno111, pot e n 11 a I Apply847W.16thSt.,NB. unlimlted. Call Mrs. RECEPT • Knowledge of Robln8on 842-4449 Med. Ins. Sharp gal who l!I ~.,...,Sal=,:-, 'M"ana=::.,::,:-;:fo::r-ne=w neat can go far. Xlnt: loc., dress shop Laruna Beach. Pleasant v.-orking rond, To Must have previous salts A $375, Raise 3 mos., Call Jean w. a n a 1 er i a I el(J>erience. Brown, 540-6(65 ~tcrences. 213: 72&-014' COASTAL AGENCY SECURITY DIRECTOR Snelling&: Snelling One ol So. Callfornla'1 Z790 Harbor Blvd .. 0 1 largest land developen hu Receptionist an Immediate opening for a YOUNG dynamic firm has director of Its SttUrlty pro. an opening for a bright girl gram. The position offers with front o f f ice ap. challenge, future and good J'learance, p leasant workl n1 condit i o n s. telephone voice & good~ lndlvlduals ma k ing a~ lng skills. Knowledge of plication must ha~ ex- "call-dirtttor t e I e phone perlence In 1 a w en- cort50le" beneficial Xlnt op-forcemenl, ellher civilian or p o rtun i ty. Contact military. Salary com· Karen t Vanguard Data mensurale with experience. 3)'slems TI4: 540-7640 Send resume to Box ?tl..t33, OAil~Y PILOT WANT ADS! Dally.Pilot Jobs-Men Wom. 7100Jobs-Men. Wom. 7100 -·---.. --.. ·· ····------ MACHINISTS Experienced lathe Opers. Sr. Mill Opers. Sr. -- Profile Drill Press Operse Sr. CADILLAC CONTROLS DIVIS ION OF EX-CELLO CORP . 1866 Whittier Blvd. Costa Mesa 646-2491 AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMl'LOYER SHEET METAL We manufacture scientific instruments, sys· · terns end components. We . oiler air cond;i· tioned shop up--to-<late equipment, ten paid holidays, a~d other "Blue Cb~p" benefits. If you consider yourself qu_alif1ed ~or any of the following we would like to discuss em· ployment pos'sibilities. DUPLICATING PUNCH (Wiedemann) Will set.up and operate Wiedemann numerl· cally controlled duplicating punch p re s s. Must read detailed prints and work to close tolerances. 3rd shif.t. SHEET METAL WORKER Set-up and operate standard s.heet metal machines. Do lay.out, use precision measur· Ing tools, read prints. 3rd shill. SPOT WELDER Set-up and operate spot welding macllines. Set heal and pressure. Ferrous, non.ferrous and stainless materials. 3rd shill. SANDER/FINISHER Sand, file degrease, !Ills and smooths vart· ous materials In preparation for painting or plating. 2nd shift. To •pply, visit our Employment Offlco BECKMAN INSTRUMENTS, INC. 2580 N. Ha rbor Blvd • (!\or.:1 er lmpe.rlal Highway) F ullerton An equal opportunity employer Ji5i! i I MP[i5YMENT Jobe-Mon, Wom. 7100 -. -· Premier PIRSONNR AIH NCY 441 ·-17tll ltTMt c ...... ..,. 14MU 1 1114 ... 17 .. Street -·-14709721 . FEMALE Legal Secretary Lera l Ea11e needa Take--charge pl Fabulous optor. Jor career type. $600 Secty0Advertl1ln9 Bou .)ob for a groovy pl. Top &kill1, copy/nev.'I ex. pe:r. ~ and usi · Socty Gal Frldoy $ale1 or Markt. exper. Top ottlce sklUa. Great hours. Clamorous comp. $500 +. Acct'• Pybl•Gon. Off. Clork Type-10 ke)' by touch. Mature.. $400. General Offlc•Ml.ture Fliure appt. Ins., comp bkirnd· b<lp!ul. $400. Dellnq ... nt Loon Clork Typing-some sales or tel. Upl'.l', Beaut. bank. $390. Food Checker-C11hl•r Hotel or 11mllar lood ex· per. To $390 Joba--M•n, Wom. 7100 SECRt.iARY to Mid: In estate admlnlatration, typ- lnR 60 wpm, light ahorthand, salary ('Omrotnl!D'ate-wtth ability. Matuni 23 &o 45. Ability to UM initiative .l work wltb mWmum ot 1upervlslon desired. Estab. llshed local law nnn. $30-0150 for appt. SECRETARY Young gal wHh good skills, beach area, call Loraine, Merehantt Ptncmne.l """en- C>', 20t3 WestclW Dr., N.8. 64$.Zl10 *' * * SECRETARY* * * Local Mfgr. needs comb Bookkeeper & Seeretvy w/10 or more yrs. exper. in off emploYlng 5 or mon! people. 111ust be exp'd in payroU, Box M-514, Daily Pilot SECRETARY Good SH and typ~: skills. New & irowinJ: Co. ;Hat· ~ w/ a leading Co. be a self-starter. MISS EX~C AGE,_..,.....,. UO W. ·C.OUt Hwy., N.B. By Appoint. 646-3939 * SECRETARY lhoapital 6. d ministration}. 1-JOl'lpital exp. required. know medical t ermlnolo1y. take l!lhortha.nd, accurate. tfplst, mature and well groomed. Ca.II for app't. We8tmlMter Community Hospital, 214 Hospital Cir- c1f', \Vestminster. 894-4082 SE RVICE STATION ATI'NONT. Full time eves. Exp'd. Neat in appearance. See Jim, 2590 Newport Blvd., C.M. SILK FINISHER at Expert Cleaners, Costa Mesa. Call 646-SUO STOCK Clerk: Shlppln1, Receivtna. Filling orders, dellv. No Exper necns. $500 per mo to start. 5 day wk. Chance to advance. Write QuallHcaUons, ....vetght A: height to P. 0. Box 145, Costa Mesa. TEACHER'S CHilDREN need mature woman to babysit at their home. Driv- ing required. Re!s. needed. 842-Ul7 HB. WAITRESS . Cocktai ls, exp'd. Apply 1703 Superklr Ave., C?i1. 646-3993 YOUNG lady for assistant to Inside Sales president. Free to travel, some typing. Send resume & Coordinator photo to 1310 Plaza Ala + dep, on ~xper. l ~P~lay~•::,· :;:San;:Cl:::;•m::••:;':;':==I Type, 10me sales or phone. Schools-Instruction 7600 Great cximp. Underwriting Clk-Shorp Swttt thlnr for career position. Some typing, oft I~;~~~~ expu. $325. MALE E x per. Arc Welder Some a:u ex.per. lmmed. openJna. $3.75 Hr. MEN & WOMENI COMPUTER PROGRAM· MING IS THE KEY TO YOUR PROFITABLE FUTURE! Oasse1 st.art soon. Pilot program offering the flnest equipment and faciJ. !ties available! Real:time computer pro11"ammln&o The Academy Eloctronlc Toch. fl Co!nPm Opening for a man W/ TcchriolosYm caHbration bklrnd. To ""· Union l•nk Square South Tower Suite 40 Foremi n ?rarip, C•llf., '2661 Coll 547-9471 Sheet metal layout. Shop [!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!""'""'""'""'~' nttds foreman. lit or 2Dd 11 A MAN GIT A MAN'S JOI ahllt. To $700. OPERATING Physicist r.R. Exper. qua.llfle1. Degree req'd. $12,000 up . DOE Radio Toch. Ltaht nper wU1 lead to new carffr on marine equipment. To $3.50 hr. Q.C. EnglnMr Top loca.J. comp, needt ~ "' chem. b-llo.<OOyr. Driver Oau I llc<nse R<q'd. 42.65 hr. Accounti1nt ---· 2 )'l'L nper. puts you. In a new carttr. 112,CXli Atany othlr rm It '" Jobi &va.Uablo. HEAVY EQUIPMENT Train NO\V to operate earth·movlng BUU.OOZ· ERS, BACK HOES, GRAD· ERS, DRAG LINES, CLAM SHELLS and SCRAPERS. TM Cen1tructlon IMlustry 11 Seomlntl You can earn top money In this fast moving, action • packed field! Keep present job and train at home In your spare tlme followed by Resident Training in the actual operation or heavy earth·movlng equipment undf'r project condlUol'll at our school owned facllltle1 near MIAMI , fl.ORIDA. Nationwide employment aaalatance. Fer FREE in· formation fUI out coupon and mall today! For prompt reply write to: UNIVERSAL HEAVY CONSTRUCTION SCHOOLS. INC 0.9< 121)3 P.O. Box 470 El Toro, Call!. 92630 Name ··-·-·--··-·-Att.e ····-·····-----·--·· .. ·-·~ Address -·--·1···-····-·---City ·-···-······-State·--· Zip ······-·-·-·· Phone _ ...... JOIN T!IE FIELD WITH A FUTU'R.E! i\p/educttlon no tlflrrlm • '1 us help YoU qua.Illy. U0 K!:E!'ERS INSTIT1.JTE INTERf<ATlONAL Mcttl/Holtl/ Apt MgmJ Sehl A L>JVlStON' OF A VTHONY SCH00~.3 17 7 S. BROOK'HUR!."1' AN1\Hl:IM, CAUFORNJA Oum fllrm ewry Wftk PHONE FOR AWr. AM for S.tty ~ ' • ., . " ·' . ' . • ' I I ·--·-----·-·---..-· . Monday, Dtcembtr 8, l 969 Nl MERC IS FO MERCHANDISE FOR M!RCHANDIS! FOR SALE AND TRADE -FR_E_E-TO_Y_O.,.U-1 TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION ':'RANSPORTAT ION fRANSPORTATION ,_ ,_ SALE AND TRADE SALE AND TRADE ,..1n1tructlon 1-Boots & Yachts 9000 Mini Bibo I 9275 lmPorted AlltOI 9600 Imported Autos 9600 0fftce Equipment IOI I P ieno1 & Ort•n• 1130 MJ1cellaneous ' * AIRLINE & TYPEWRITER, Adding l600 AUSTIN AMERICA KARMANN GHIA FREE to b"OOCI home W/ fenced ya.t'd, Lab r a d 0 r l\!OST bea1.1liful Trl~b RODDY l<.flnlbike. Exoellenl TllAVEL CAREERS * machine, cakulator. ,...,, SALE Stat1oa Aaent ~'llcktt sales Air'~;~t~rgo Communications Tnl.vcl Agent AIRLINE SCHOOLS PACIFIC Inquire Today ,,.,._ 610 E. 17th St., Santa Ana reuonable. XJnt co nd. Trea1urt1 & Junk ~23 11o· you a1"e bu,ylng a Plano Sever.al "antique pltces, oil or Organ tllis Chtistmg & paintings, Polaroid camera, 8022 are intt-restcd in some real. blond wig, 30 cup percola- ly great deal!!, pl!!'ase shop tor, paint spraytr, banjo, \YARD'S BALDWI N STUDIO copper & brass planters 1819 Newport, C.M. 642-8484 Cmade from old coffee J)Qts) Open Every Nltc Chmtrnas decorations wall 2406 SIERRA Vlata, NB. (at'ross st. 23td & 'l\lstin). Gura.ge & fum sale. Pineap- ple +.poster bed $50, Drexe.I dresS<!r $40, 100 yr old cuckoo clock from Jesse Ja1lics home, pwr mo1ver $40, p\\T edger $35, dishes, oil paintings, decorator bric brae, Span. wrought ii'On dinette set. etc. From 9 til 9. & SU!lda.y Afternoon tapestry, hand made Christ. mas table cloths, hundrt'd'!I ol other hand made glts, !!!~~!!'!~"!'~~'l'!!!!!'I ttnter pieC'ell, tilfany shades, ORGAN SALE 11 Rnd oak tbl & chr11, secre- TREMENDOUS SAVINGS? tw-y de1>ks, library tbls, All Large selection o! prc~wned very reasonable. 350 Old organs. Spec!al. discount on N'!\\•port Blvd, NB. sun only new models. S-5. Shepherd mi.'<. Blnc.:k \V/ liv ... brd in bay, 45' TIS, condition. 31-IP B&S tong, wbt chest. Loves children. f!B\. top condition. (Br) $155 hew. Best Offer . 646-2$74. i219 i :;;r;or.n111yi';i$23'i;:;,ooo;;;,•.;~;;:;i;1 s;;;,1~'43-.fl563========i U -MONTH old male black '65 CtJRJS Craft Cavalier ?r ;;;;--I 9300 Labrador AKC reg. Needs hd. top. XlnL cond. S'5., orcyc " I a r g e yard. Xlnt wllh Dfo~ .• DJ, dinghy, etc. 325 ~::l-:AHA::--:-2.,---Good­ chlldren, very good dog. hi"$. $5950. c7t4> m.2455 condition $300 belo~ 3 P~t &16-6268 12/8 Sallboata 9010 on ~·eekda.Ys, all Wty "'lrnda, ABSOLUTELY ad o rable.1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1i~89~7 .. i'i969~\$Aj{{'Sj<;O;;i;;J,; loving, 2 mos, old J>UPIIY I 1 '69 KAWASAKl Sidewinder reM:ued near fwy. Truly CAL 25 250 CC, best ()ffer. '69 .needs home. Please: phOnc Bultaco El Tigre 250 CC alter 5, 54~ 12/8 LOADED best ()tter. 544-9123 MATCHED pau-of Calico ff Wllh Sllp * 1968 YAi'\!AHA 250ce Enduro. AUSTIN AM ERICA Sales, Service, Parts lmmediate Delivery All Models _!1rtuport 3\in on~; ~· AUSTIN HEALEY tiger kittens & buff & "'hite in Newport $525. Call Ton\ 546-6100 male kitten. Net.'CI special 64S..Q.810 weekdays or 646-S432 eves & 1-------- bom es. 5<1 6·3 5 66.l~":!~~~~"."'"''!l'':!'I \vkendi; '62 SPRITE, r>e\V eng, new KARMANN Chim Convt, Red w/ \Vhl lop. Nu paint, top, ires. Cus. Int. $995. 548-6348 '68 Convertible. beige, radio, automatic. $1935. 494-9446 9l' 497-1666 eves. SINGING LESSONS FREEZER $75. Elec Dryer, Buie technique for any slyle. $40. Elec sto\"e, $25. desk FREE * FREE Cassetle player w/purchase o1 any Organ. · POOL TABLES Secartl Pool BRUNSWJ~K-AJ\.tF Custom Slate Table From $289 ]00% Fln,ancing 549-1846 12/8 24' ISLANDER sloop F.G~ *°'6? BSA Lightning 650 cc, 1.'<lmpetitlon dutch, much · b more ne\v equip. Must :;:::::;;::;:::;::::::::;::::::::::1 F R E E to good home in · aux. Pulpit, head, very clean. $825 or best ol· sacrific.-e this ~'Cek. $650 or 'nie pe1·lect gift!' $25. 2 fol~. bds $10 ea. 548.7002 ot 545-3118 Crib & mattress, $ 5. COAST MUSIC NEWPORT & HARBOR Co6ta Me~a * 642·2851 Days lG-9 Sat 10-6 Sun 12·6 w/lenced yard, smaJI mixed galley, bilge pump. Full fer. Call 646+7385. best ol.l'. 592-5358. bl'eed terrier, 10 lbs. smart covers and C'JShiQi;s. Sleeps .67 YAMAflA l()(i Twin & cute, 9 n1os. ()Jd, loves 4 . $3995. Am leaving town, -RUNS GOOD! Before 5: M_E_R_C~H-A-N~D-l_S_E_F_O~R-1 Rccorrls &: misc. Eves, & SALE ANO TRADE Son. 3Z1 Driliwood Rd., 673--roT4. Furniture 8000 8" TELESCOPE, nuugahyde sofa, king slze bed, blond 17 Pc. King Size dresser, commode w/nlir· •-..1 ror, good cond. ROil a1vay ~room bed, dbl mattl't'SS. $1797 Large 9 drawer dreSser, mlr. ror, 2 bedside stands, king GARAGE Sale. Washer tJ.5 size headboard, lrarne, quilt. Pictures $.i. Lots more Cheap! 1513 Orange, CM ed mattress, sheets, blank· &12-561)6 ets, etc. -'-=~-~~~~--lboice of Spanish Clothing & Appliances or Modern Style 132 \V. \Vilson All For $249 Space 43' c .. ta ""' children, 846-3818 shp avallftble. 714: 833-13ll S4&-5.'i72 Art. S: S40-S308 Ext 221 wkdays. DON'T BE MISLED! * SECARD POOLS * 532-1992 FREE to loving horne, CAL 20 N ~ I '67 DUCATl 250cc, Uiied vecy adorable &hnauic.r/Poodlc o. ~. c au race litle, like new $350. mix, !r.nla.le, 3 mos., has gear, class champ. Out-545-2'297 &hots. 968-6002 12/8 board. Desperate! OUert !-=="'===-===== by fictitious "'·as-is prices. POOL CUTE Christmas kittens, ~i: ~-.030Days 673.-2050: Eves. Auto Services Shop where the selection is Siamese Call 83().-0$47 after 0 ·~ & Parts 9400 greatest & the prk:es are TABLES 6 pm or wkends. 12/9 17' O'OAY Daysailer liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii right! Choose fron1 Conn, Demo $1595 Used $U95 \\o'urlitzer, Knabe, Everett, FREE Christmas puppies, 4' 0 "-bJc.N•l'°"• Christmas S""'cial $275 up, darling pai.1 Beagle, part 1 'DAY, used $495 .._... " ,... !un Zone &al Co. BalbcY 0{X'n Eves & Sun 'til X-mas CHUCK'S Poodle. 833-0:>55 ]2/9 GOULD MUSIC 2750 Harbor a t. Adams, CM BEAUTIFUL Grey ]Q \\'eek old J\Ian.x Kitten bo x 204a N. Main, S.A. 5-l7..oo81 JUsr in lime for Christmas! trained 540-5958 12/9 323 S. JI.Iain St. Orange BEAOI Auto Supply Wholtsole SA COTS '64 A.H. Sprite, good uew paint, $850. • 644--0350 * cond., ALFA ROMEO '65 ALFA Ron100 1600 vloche Spyder, Red w/ blk int. Ab s o I utely in1macula te! AM-1'1\f, 5 spd b·ans. Dual \Veber carbs, dual ove1'11ead can1s, new top & tonneau . Asking $1300 Ph. days 646-2486 & eves 646-1588 DATSUN No down Pmts. ()nly $9 mo. WELK'S WAREHOUSE Appliancff 8100 PIANO SALEI Rnd drp leaf pine table .41" GERl'olAN Shepherd, 8 mos. WE ARE $8. _\Vht vinyl s"."ivel saucer (good \V/childt'E'nJ 968-7957 The \Vorlds Best $2(.X')() Car OVERSTOCKED' chair. $6. Fixer upper 12/9 new complt>I<! .• , ••• $249. TRAN SP AC * 64~0222 16' O'Day fiberglass sailboat. Good condition. * 675--0737 * Prices th All Complete Machine Shop SPEED EQUIPl\fENT REBUILT ENGINES 600 \V. 4th St., Santa Ana Open Daily 9-9 Sat. 9-6 Sun. 11-6 NE\V 2 dr. GE relrig., from ' Sch"·inn bike, boys 24" $1. $ model home ........•• $178 r.lholst make ~~ ford•.•,w Elec wall hung frplc 24x42 ~B~LA=c~K'""M~in~i~a-. ~F~,.~.~,~.h-;;P~..,.~ S --,Ski •·-t ~30 2 dr. Refrigerator, Jrost-lrce, s pments arriving ai y, $35. Board exerciser $4.50 dlc. Good w/children. \Vant P-uve s "'" IALJ.I DATSUN wva bof ' !l's Prices s.lashed on .. , .•.. ,., 64 , •g-ood h 83, ~,1 1125 Victoria, CM 5-JS.65j() tom reitzer · ··''''' Spinets, Consn!es, Grands _7"4_=~~=~~,-.,-g oine. .)'""VO.) 1969_ BOSTON \Vhaler, 40 hJ.l ll8361 Beach Blvd, HB 847·0991 Refrigerators ••·· from $ 38 Christma~ delivery guar. * AUCTION * FREE KITTENS Evtnrude & trlr 13', 2 mos * OPEN 7 DAYS • "Leader in The Beach Cities" FURNITURE retumM from Console Color TV, ronteinp COAST MUSIC 64&-5943 used, push-button starter, ZIMMERMAN display studios, mode I cab., nt'v picture tube • $248 U you will sell or buy xtras $117'5. 644-4774. homes, deC()ra1ors cancella· \Vhirlpool auto washer •• S 50 l\'E\VPORT & HAHBOR give Windy a try PET RABBIT wilh cage 2845 HARBOR BLVD. tion. Spanish & Mediterran-GE Washer/Dryer •••• $100 Costa l'ol£'sa * 642-28:il Auctions Friday 7:30 p.1n. 644-2562 12/8 13' BOSfON Whaler. immac. Trailer, Trawtl 9425 540-6410 ean elc. DUNLAP'S Days ]0-9 Sat 1°"6 Sun 12·6 Windy's Auction Barn FREE 1956 Buick needs 40 hp Johnson iV:ith elec.1:c:--------- RD FURNITURE · 1815 Neivport Blvd ., C.M. 1 work, 540-6919 11/8 starter. boat rover. $142S or FOR Sale: Brand New Tag-NEW! " OPEN EVENINGS 207511~ Newport, CM 646-8686 make offer. 675-5535 a-Long Fiberglas$ Trailer. MG MG Sales, Servic.!, Parts I111mediate Delivery, All b-fodels J1rtuport Jlinport s ~100 \V. Coast Hwy, N.B. 642.9405 54G-1764 Authorized JI.IC Dealer 1950 l\'IG TD. xlnt shape $900 thm. 5'1:>-5216 after 5 pm MGA '62 IVIGA, MARK If 1600 Drafted must sell!~ Good c.'Ondition. 671-3512 MGTD 1844 Newport Blv'd., CM 548-7788 AND SUNDAYS Behind Tony's Bldg. J\.Iat'L 2 OlITCfl RABBITS. 646-7908 ==°"'======! B1t for Sports cars. Set up '70 PICKUP every night "Iii 9 PRIVATE . Party, Beautiful Until Christmas SAMPLE SALE!-Jr, Sports-==~-~====12~1_9 Boat Trailers 9032 for V\V ()r Corvette. (TI4J W/c;am{X'r, 96 hp overhead =====-c=====I Wed., Sal. & Sun. 'Iii 6 O'Keefe & J\.1ertitt gas GOULD MUSIC ""ear-Sat lOam-4 pm. D!'ess-PETS and LIVESTOCK 847-6577 <:a.m. 4 spd, dlr, 6 ply tires, PORSCHE '53 MGTD. X111t Con d. \¥htlblk. $900 Priv. Pty Eves & \Vkends 673-3489 ranie $75. Refrig $45. Small e• Spo 1 c · T"" ----------SEA OF CORTEZ or Lake ·O.·ururnccv-;::::::.,,:;:;--, back up ligh1'. Yo11 name ·---------3 ROOMS of SPANISH Refrig $40. 2114 Continental, 20~~ N. !1-Tain. SA M7·0681 '" r swear. apris, '"" -J\.1eade, Tandem trailer to 'l9 HOLIDAY travel trlr, 4 it! Full . pl'ice t'lr.QQ. Take e 8' Divan + Love seat ics, etc, Sizes 7 & 9 only. ~= Pets, General 8800 transport up to 30, TS mos old, all xtras. Must +<-v"" • 5 Piece dining room set CJ\.t ~P~R~fV~A~T~E~'~P~A~R~T~Y""l~V~ANT~~SI PRICE. Excellent Chrsinnas -~--------cruiser or ocean racer, elec sell, best oUer. 644-6197. sn1all dn or trade. call Phil, e 5 Piece Bedroom set LARGE 2 dr GE refrlg. good TO BU values. 11631 Flan1ingo Dr., SCRAM LETS 494.9773 or 545-0034. cond .. "'°4 England St., Apt y PIANO FOR Garden Grove. 539-J790 • brks. xlnt concl. $li00. C?l4> T k 9500 I ~o=R~A~N~G~E~C~O~U=N"TY='"S~ FULL ""'RICE $388 CASH. 542-00451 "'o-o=,.--,.--~-827-0968 rue s Use our ,;tore charge plan! D. 536-9593 or 2608 England "'"°"=~-,----~-DO YOU need a shopping ANSWERS NO 1 Approved Furniture SL, Apt A, 536-12(6 ~~~~~~ne~rosonic piano. companion'.!' I have good Marine Equip, 9035 CAMPER TRUCK DATSUN DEALER 21.59 HarOOr, CM 5-18-9660 \\'ltrRLPOOL Gas dry('r, 646-l .1 taste in selection of clothes, ---~~-----1970 G.~1.C. ~ H.D. equip., DOT ·DATSUN BED lat(! model, xlnt cond. $65. E~~~~t;;j~~"::~ lnt. decor., gifts & have Surety -Daisy -Poise -DECCA 101 radars. 0 11<! yr VS. Ser. # 2250031. S: Twin $44.95• FUii 546-8672, 847-8115 BABY Grand, t. ,\·h, Xlnt refs. Will aJso chauffeur. Urchin -HEARD YOU old, removed for larger $2995 · 18835 Beach Blvd. :::: H~~nBOl89AR.!15D-S'.. KT·~ FREEZER chest 10' $7S. cond. $ or t'Cas offe1·. Betty's Shopping service. Minister io policeman: radar. 12. 24 & 32 VDC UNIVERSITY }Juntington Beach ""' C I Rf . 140 Both 540-1964 Sun & Mon. 673-S606 AM "Yo11ng man, please do not $1950. Installed wit h guar. OLDSMOBILE 842-7781 or 54G-Cl442 $4.95, Full $10.9.l, Queen ross op e ng, · 1~~==-~----· r k t I · t $12.95, J<in""" $15.95. Gd. Cond. 536-46:>4 -2 C0i11PL HO train sets give me a ic c · um JUS 8 Newpol't Marine Eng. 714: 2850 Harbor Blvd. l67 DATSUN • ...,,M Teli:i,vision 8205 poor pl'eac:her." 548-26.~5 Costa 'le<" SIESTA SLEEP SHOP KEN~tORE Washer & Gas \v/xtra cart:. 4.x8' HO layaut Policen1an: "Yes, I know. " .,.. PICKUP 1927 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa Drye!', OOth in :dnt cond, -Le-.-. .,-. -c-.-,,-r-TV--0-,-.-,-ac_k_ thl \1·/tracks, switches & I've HEARD YOU," 6 CYL diesel eng. 3 to 1 540-9640 645.2760 s7o. 546-8672, 847_g115. .~ i • .iire. Uplion to buy. transfmer. 1 i;et barbells. ---==~=,---reduction unit. Fresh v.•ater ,68 CHEV 4 X 4 All original inside & out. 4 Bx of Christmas Jghts. \VOT'S NU? c:oolC!i.I. Brand new, still in s~, dlr, ~·ill fine prvt prlY. USED assorted occasional' KENMORE washer, con1-Free service. No deposit 540-2030 !:anta Oaus Specials at crate. Factory cost. 673--2910 Suburban Van Full ptice ,$107i:i. Call Ken chain $12. Used walnut step plctely rebuilt, perlect con· A-Active TV Rental Co. '°"";,--,,.,,..,-----.,.=~ 'TIS TROPICAL FISH alter 4 pm 3 seats, V-8, dlr, 8pc 700xl6 494-9773. tables $5.95. Assorted bed dition. $65. 540-6539. 1 ~=~='=l7l~'="-~1l~5.1"---NE\V, ~ver \VOI'll, nat~fal 9080 Edinger (at Magnolia) WANTED: Johnson or rit"Cs. All original. Take I========== headboards $7 ea. Lge col-A'==. ======8=11=0 USED ZENITH TV set $25. =~~: Ro~:!in:.~o~ F.V. * * 8424530 Evinrude 10 hp, •61_.63 cash h·ade. J4413M. Call Pat, ENGLISH FORD ored TV, Salem maple nt1ques Good rondition. PARAKEETS · FOR SALE: or trade J ohnson 5 'h, 494-97T.l or 545-0034. !;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; cabinet, works -s9a. 646-Sl-s $1595, sell $975. All 6 Pl'of, The Factor,y, lS85 Harbor, ALJ\1A·s A N TIQU ES 1 644-0578. too n1any to feed. 0~ or a &12-2079 '63 FORD ~i Ton, Wigwam 540-6842 REOPEN srter i 11 n es s. 18" PORT. black & wht ·wu"=i=R7L=P=oo=L-=o-..,,-,-,--,,..,1nl doz. Dealers invited, 535 Trail 6 mos old, good c.'<ln· camper, butane stove. ORANGE COUNTY'S Present stock includes Magnavox TV \V/stand ' llamilton SL Ot dition. storage, icebox, 9x9 al· VOLUME ENGLISH DON'T GIVE UPI •-t t t ·1 •-& 6 XJnt cont!. ~99 842 °014 . cond. P3:ymaster check P~ -========= !aching room. Ve ... , cl•a" FORD DEALE·R ..... au · (';U g ass, fll cucr · ~===~··=·==~=== tector, hke brand new. Se t · 833-2-127 •J " You may (ind it at America's tumblers, compotes, goblets --8210 of antique s i 1 v er ware. Cats 8820 .,,==~.~ .. ~-~.====~I ~5. 830-6324 after 6 or SALES .. SERVICE largest, most unusual un-& wines: child's needlepoint Hi-Fi & Stereo 642_2805 --------Boat Slip Mooring 9036.1 ;ew7k_'0"d~'=,-,,..-=-c-c-OVER 60 IN STOCK finished ful'nitllJ'e store. Cor. rocker; unusual pine chest: ABYSSINIAN KITTENS '64 CHEV ~.._ Ton pickup. • 2 & 4 Dr. Models Redhill & Santa Ana F\vy , Ke"'Pie doll; beaut. gre<'!l P.lAGNAVOX Stereo, pt'can FOR SALE Only 2 left, 10 wks old 31)' to 40' BOAT for sale that Radio, heater, air cond. e 2 & 4 Dr, Oeluxes Tustin. l mi So. of Newport onyx c.lock; rare canieo console, r.tC'dit. slyle. Tape, Collectors Item 0rig1"a1 646-8226 needs slip. $2.00 fl. Call Slde tanks, 0 verh e ad e 2 & 4 Dr. GT l\lodels Fwy. Open 362 days per yr. glass. \Ved thru Sat 10-4. Ar-.t/FM. )(Jnl cond. Best "MICKEY r.10USE" ~'8.lch Chuck Avery 673-5252 or springs, cainper e q pt, • Station \Vagons 544-5470 Appl. anytime. 823 \V. 16th, o!r. 675-7i09 -perfect running condition D_o~g-• ______ 8_8_2_5 eves 494--3916 548-8-779 aft 4 Pl\1 r<.tany with fully au!o1llalic N.B. ~~ bl \V. of Placentia. =========~I -$150 837-4239. z:-i· ti·ans., air, radial tires, ra. USED 5 pc warnut bedroom Ta pe Recordert 8220 NEW tape recorder Sony COCKER Pups (\KC. Perm SLIP WANTED for 69 CHEV 108 Van :i07 cu in, dio, vinyl roof, \\'S\V tire.~. set $60. Used 6 drawer S48-4280. -''---'-M r $7S N K I k OHL shots, Tr1 -co lore d SAILBOAT V-8, auto trans, hvy duty BRAND NEW Sl'D. 2 DR. modern dresser w/mlrror '1 NORELCO Stereo 1 track, c:i·~~sel sOO & e~lide ~r:y male pet 6 mo. $75. ./ Call 548-3955 ./ springs, lo\v mi. Best offer $l?S5 FULL PRICE $34. Used 5 pc white & gold ANTIQUE CLOCKS 3 5{X'Cd . l\tany ex lras. $75. $75 673.-2078 Blk/\vht male show qual. BALBOA Slip. 40' boat. \Vith over $2500. 545--0612 ORDER NO\V French Provincial bedroom 962-874.1 · $100. 546-3839. shower & head & parki'!.g '57 CHEVY If.. ton PU, new Theodore set $89. The Factory, 1885 20 Antique clocks incl., '1 CB Radio W/Hi Gain Anten· CHRISTI.IAS Pups, AKC til6/Th/70.$80.mo.OR 3-7950 engine, tires, radio, good Harbor, 540-6842 G1·andlather clocks, Cuckoo Sporting Goods 8500 na & 1 Mobile CB radio Dobern1ans. Good Honics, body $400 Call 8.30-2902 aft ROBINS FORD SPAN. Carved Chest. Nu. clocks, old School clocks & iv/anten. Call 493-4677 alt Prime Consideration . Flying Lfftont 9150 6. ' ' 2000 Harbor Blvd. Lr& 9 drwer. 37"x89" $300. European wall clocks, Orher 1967 91~ JiP Evinntdc, US 5· 642-8961. Costa Mesa 642-0010 43 yds "'hile nylon shag misc Antiques. No junk, Sale Divers t"·in ~2 cu in tanks,l.2c-=B=E=o=R~OO=M.,._~....,.ts-co-,oc~h-:&c I ~"""""""""-::=;,,---LEARN TO•FLY '67 FORD Ranger. stic~ crpt., $60, K-Sz Beauty Rest Fri & Sat: Dec 12 & 13, at J-val~c. ~h\\'inn ~O spd Gibson refrig. 226° Knox Pl., CHRISTMAS poodle pups, 50 Flite hrs $495. 28 dual&. 22 w/OD, very cle~, low mi, Matt. & Springs, $40, Jnlaid 2'26 The Grand C'\nal. Little Varsity bike, All in xl nt APt B, C.M. wkdays aft 6 AKC, Chrunpion si 1 ve r solo. 1969 four seat Cessna see to apprec, $li50, 842-l69-I cond. 673-61'18. pn> minilitures. Also toy & gm<! --•• & 1. aft S. Antiq. Tble, make offer. Balboa Island, inc, • '""" supp 1es. -,,""°-,,_-,:-::--;=;--;;"' ''7=.,--,.,,--.,---,.,.,.-:-1 teacup. 842-4742. "9 F'ORD " P/U l650 646-1513. l~ \\'00~ sr.::rs. cable bln-1MJNK s tole, autumn haze, Estab. Assn. Kl 5-6203 J ,2 ton • USED 5 pc beige dinette set TO settle estate. Oriental arl ding~. $1a, 210 HEAD SKIS, also brown squirrel sjo!e AKC Afghan Pups. Male & Minney 548-4192 or 548-5039 ()bjects, dol ls, b oc.ks, Salo1non hindings. $55. v"-gd. co"d. Rea s ' .. Female. $200 & up. \I/ill MobiloHomes 9200 NB $19. Used5pcanlique~·hite ~·J " h Id ·1 ·1 Cl · t of •--· -·=.,,,.===,,.--jc"·elry, period clothing, 962-7813 Eves, 644-2758 o I 1r1s mas. n Y 4 1 '56, ~ Ton ChC'vy dining room liet $39. Used 5 I -,,=-.,-~--.,-,-,,,:-I left. Ca!J-5'10-9589. IUY J• NEW pc walnut dining mom set crysta' i;ilver, linens, etc. B.RO\~ING 12 Ga. autom. HUGE s"•lmming pool 5 mos SELL Im USED Pickup, :'I spd, $350 $58. The Factory, 1885 Dec. 8 lhru 10, 9:30-2. 5019 h~hhve1ght, cast. parl & vent old il'lt::l filter, pump, ladder. REG. SL Bernnrd pup. 11 C 962-7813 Eves Harbor, 540-6842. Bruce Crescent, Lido Sands rib. $175. Days C2ti ~ 645-&140 skimmer & life jacket New ivks. must !lC'l\ $180. 309 00per "66 DODGE PICK·UP, long A BEAUTIFUL ...-ift for your 8120 Ni!e!> f7l4l 63.1-8256 $595 sacrifice $200. 893-3306. Edgei\·atcr. N.B. 543-5165 TRAILER SALES bed, good cond. stk shift 6· ... Sewing Machine• T Poodt y ,. •1 I f 1000 1 0033 home. CARPETING for -----DIVING Gear: Scuba tank 72 BALBOA Bay Club meniber-oy r.s, or 1cs or" a· "Buy from a man cy . $ . 54 • Christmas -or the New SINGER Automatic zig zag, $45. Single hose regulator ship foi· "sale. Ca l l 1213) tccse, 2 lb stud service. who lives in one!" DODGE Truck t i'~ Ton. Xlnt FERRARI FERRARI Newport lmporU Ltd. Or- ange County'• only author- ized dealer. SALES-SERVICE-PARTS 3100 W. Coast H"'Y· Newport Beach 642-9405 54~1764 Au\horizl'd Ferrari Dealer FIAT '57 PORSCHE. New chrome rims, fog stereo. Best offer $1350. 673--8593 tires, lites, over PDRSCHE '63 Su{X'I"-i\tueh Nu Equip. $2500. Call Phil, 962--5521 or 847-1090 '66 PORSCHE 911, xtras, new eng. J\.tusl sell, best o!- fer. 675-6171 ROLLS ROYCE 54 ROLLS ROYCE SILVER DA\VN SUN ROOF Concourse condition. This beautiful auto will be sacri· riliced for qulck salf . 541~09 TOYOTA BILL MAXEY · ITIQIYIOITIA).: 111881 BEACH BLVD. Hunt. Beach 847-8555 3 mi N. of Coast Hwy. on Sch TOYOTA 1970 HERE NO\V LO\V PRICES ON REJ\.tAINING '69's Your Besl Deals Are Still Al DEAN LEWIS 1966 HarOOr, C.J\.1. 646-9303 1968 TOYOTA Corona dlx 2 Dr. Hrdtp, AM-FM. 4 spd. 10,000 mi. Orig owner $15/a. 545-U41 TRIUMPH TRIUMPH GT6. 1967 $1900. Whitt', good condition. Days 833-5149; C"ves 673-8249 VOLKSWAGEN Year. Shags -Hi-Lo Nylons 6 n1os old. No attach oeedC!d !~"='=·=64=2-54==1=3=====' I ·'~7~2-84:;::;8~2~o~r,;.f2~13~)~3~1;.3-585;;~1"' I Lease or sell 54$-2100. WE SERVICE for Plumber or elechician. etc. Lie. contr. Free est to do designs, monograms, ./NF;WPORT BEACH TEN· "B'L~A;;CK~·,.--,m=;,~ia~t~ure::,.--,.pood-..,~l•-, I \VHAT WE SELL! Cab lli Ulil bxes. 838-2613 1967 FIAT 850 Coupe, loaded '69 VW Camper, 5.000 miles. 546-4478 blind hems etc.: auto bobbin Misce~laneou1 8600 NIS MEMBERSHIP. Make AKC, 6 months, good papers. 324. So. Hal'OOr, Santa Ana with xlras $1150. See at Like new? $3.150. OWNER USED 3 pc turquoise sec-'v\ndcr. 5 \'ear g u a r . RIC PLANES: Falcon &• ~·'~'":::.:.· ~Ca::::t1~5'="-~l:3.13::.__~-l;Sa;;;:oc~d;;-fl~e0c,s;;;"';c·~OOS.c-;;;n~09:-;::::= I e ;ck So. of Bolsa 531-1066 Jnps 9510 Richfif'ld. 19th & Newport &14-5158 tional $7S. Used blue-green Assume pymls of $5.Z7 or ~1ambo ready to fly. Orbit'PooL table & accessories WEIMARANER Pups born BAY HARBOR ----------Blvd., C.M. 54~1407 '64 V\V 7 pass Bus, good con· sofa only, $35. Used patina $42.00 cash. -526-6616 lO Channel 'v/5 Bonner good ..... -.. ition, •"" 9/22 no papers. $25 ea. Co.II Mobile Home Sales EARLY J\.Iodel Jeep hody & dition, $!!95. -n ••fa bed & c•-•· $49 -·~ ~ 642 0223 frame \v/ne1v springs, seat JAGUAR * 642 •11s * iro·~-'""" · ,..._.. · 2 Servo/!, $250. 111HP * "'" 7432 • -o Ulsa Loma Roll. Away · _, T~ Factory 1885 liarbor, Musical Inst. 81 5 7 ...,..... frames, transn1ission & 540-6842 --.'----Evinnide O/brd, $50. King. GRUNDIG Sic~ console AFGHAN HOUNDS Sheraton 1'Janor . Homctte · transff'r caSf', plus many ,66 JAGUAR XKE Rdster. '69 V\V Bug. just like new, ELECTRIC Gu I tar , 2 o-la\vn frnt throw HvDty 1200 ·ih 1 4 1 ck tape r.tales ,"< fen1ales, rea.~. AI\C Kit -Prestige • Sahara oth"r lcat"-s $l?r>. ~-•o ,.,,..72 ,1 XI 1 . h 1 n1any extras $1800. SAVE $300! Used tros:t tree 2 pickups. St. George $55. like nu $150. \\lards 28'', lo s.m' ~'o..~ 0 ra reg. 962-9989 AU. SIZES ;ift ~5Pr-.l "''" "' "'ll""Vl.I "aroon. • 11 • .1ust over au· 54s.455..~ door GE Relrig. W-lce Vibra-Champ ampllficr $70 sp boys bike, $20. GE port.1 ,;,~·==-~~-..,,-~ I=='========= NOW ON DISPLAY ed. $299S. S46-S04l or ,64 VW Sed Gd Cond maker $11!}. Brand new 30" 1223 Dorset Lane, C.M. stereo, $50. 847-3444 , FOR SALE -Irvine Coast Horses 8830 1425 Baker St., Costa ?.1esa ""' . 644-4221 kitchen range, Below 546-0397 PROMISE HER ANYTiilNG Country Club _membership, ---------~blockEastofHarborBlvd. wune Bu991e1 9525 * 1968 J AGUAR XKE. $750. wholesale, Sll9. Used 3 dr --A-C~C-O_R_D-IO=N--But give her CARPETING for Contact 548-7056. 2 American sad d I e. bred Costa l\fcsa (TI4) 54G-9470 V\V Dune-;uggy $.'i9a XL.NT COND. 54S-7Sl9 antique green credenza $29. Cliristmas .•. or the Neiv PLAY HOU S&s"·ing M"l geldings, I ex-sho11• horse. 24 :ic 60 2032-0 Placentia, C.Jlil. 53&4875 or 536-s.J32 For Daily Pilot \Vant Ads --Fact"-•0~ H-~r Beaullfu\. 9 mos old Conte!-bo H s I dd sl'dc now plcas""C 1 '"0.>lcd 2 77 SOCK IT TO ·~•1! Q'oal 642."-':-03 ••"'° -~· .LOOi.l ..... ..,., Year. Shags -Hi-lo Nylons com · a a er~ • · · "' • ,,....., A\1•nings. raised porch, fulll====="';o-="====J.;==:=====""2".'==J.;==="="='===-==:::::~I M0-6842 lo, Beal Offer ta.kes iL el" Lt'c Co"I". F-• est. etc. Good cond, '""· 675--0737 sho\\' horS(', 49 4 -2503, ~m ._ " • •" 'fVV skirting, shag crpts th1·uout, NAUGAHYDE 12' Sect. . 541J.1162 546-4478E LE CTROIN1 C TEST 49-1--7l75 bl1 -lns. Set in 5 Star Park, Sofa: Sac. $100. Stud io 1969 FENDER Vibro Chomp BEAUTIFUL hand painted EQUIPl'\1ENT for sale. Call H=O~RS=E~,~,-,b~l-es~fo-,-,-,-n7t,~l~ge one niiJe. fron1 oeC'an in CJOOCh. mahOg Governor a.mplifier. xlnt cond. $70. oil portrait of )'Oil or your -"'~&.<068--~------t arena $.ti n10. 1616 Orchard, Costa J\.leAA. stl.900. Winthrop deskbkcse. Gold 548-?t3t aft 6 pm. children Crom a ph()IC>gt"aph. RELAX·A-CJZOR, like tie\Y S.A. Hgts. 549-0068. 8 642·1352 • armchr. 6(2.....3669. OSCAR Schmidt·lntemational A v.-ond~l'ful idea tor that instruC'tlon booklet. $8 0 , CUSTOM FURN IT 0 RE ll'K'. Auroharp. f.todel 128. Epccial Chri.stn1as & I f t . Shoe skates $S. 673-6071 MADE TO ORDER: Repair Like new S40. 540-2330 "&l~G-3~629=. ·=~~~~~-' 5 Louis Roth suits size 42 ~pl•.• ~ .. ~e?· ~ \V. Pi•not & Ornans 8130 JIM BEA\\1 Collector &ttle11, $3.')-.$50, 3 suits size 44 $35 Livestock 8840 Rare opportunity, l\IOfilLE LIVING on the BEACH. Lin1ited spaces, in new Ad· d1Uon to DrHt"'OCld Beach Club • r-.1odelit on display 500n, 21;162 Pac Hl\'Y, H.B. ~7~13 2 J\.1ARES 639..aoot v•-~ •-11'\d('; selection, Elks, Rel'IO tAch. ~7429 PRE HOLIDAY SALE & etc. Sl9.9S. ~neral tl·I~-======== For Sal(' or Trnrle For'! 531-4410 or 673-1459 BEAt.n'IFUL Kine bed ~ quilt. eel mattress. CompJek, Ut\-- used S1'6, worth $T'10. 842-6S36 e\1('5. EASI'ERN Hardrock Maple Bed is>. bunk bed• •Ith htd- der $35. 64z..699L 1845 Anabl!im. C.M. MOVING! All p>CS. Bdr set, Cl"lCb, chr, atenio. port TV, •nd Ibis, .............. m-&!74 HANDMADE UntllUal CllJ'Wd ftlin tables, ban & cradles. Pl up. U a.&\12 SECY • .QIU. cab. $300. or nu. Offer-Antiq. waO ph. $-t!i. ~19&4 sun. Mon. NO matttt' •'hit H ii. )'OU C!llft .ti H with a DAILY " quor Store. 7200 1-larhor Ml1c. Wanted 1610 Bl\'d, C;\l. ~la-.~ TRANSPOk rATION Boats & Yachts 90C~ PIANOS & ORGANS Carpel ln.y.:r has Hi Lo $ WE BUY $ Son1e ot the mo~t p.Jpular nylons $L9!1 yd. Shag!! '6.1 -4. SPEED. low mUertge, models including: llan1mond from 3.50 up + my labor, $ FURNITURE $ vinyl 'I'· $2000. KI !)..2002 or X77, 1-f·lOO, E-100, B·3, T·200 !Xlc pc1• yard. 847-1519 494...S7:W. e1c. FR.EE 3 DAY LAS ==='°=~=--"'~ , APPL1:4-NCES "1!164.,--29;;;o-. --,,u"'N"IF"L-;;IT;;;E"°,-;;:-Oy VEGAS HOLIDAY with pur-BEAtrrlrUL KiCong bed.quilt. Color iV•-P1•"01-S1•••01 bridge. T. S. Loarled! Xlnt ert ma Uresi;, mp\Ctt"-Un· 1 PIK• or Ho••• lli'.1111 _.. SI, 100 6J2.2=, Motor Homn 9215 -~-----·---11' 1969 EXPLORER Motor Home. Exlr.'lll! $849:'.i. * 6'12·8740 * BicyclH 9225 cl.aJe!!! us<'d. $100, "'orlh $250. CASH IN JO MINUTES co,.,., ... · """' Trodc·ifl.tl accepted & tmns. 842-6536 ev~.t. • S' I ,53 I • 4r.3;-: 'M;:a"1u"'"'=",_.,r;-ty"'to"g-B"'r"id'.:'.'.".ge Several Frtnch Peuirot J~AMA!OND " ..., cd 1-• $40 000 b' cl JO~ -01 In CORONA DEL 1ilAR \VOOL Braided OV11.I rug, 121;:;;=,.-;=,,,---,::-= 111 An """· · gas ot icy <'S, "II"=• ..., ~'. E. "--,, u~ ~ ~30 x Jj, good col'!dl!lon, In· NEED bricks one to um, $50.CK>O Diesel. 894-4094 AcceSll., U!ted only 5 wits. "-OV, .....,.. ~~ 1;1 ,.,_, bl riced 64-1-4687 $75 each. 714: 540-8814 Open E\'es & s un. afternoon eludes Jmd. 1ilust 6Ct! CaU rr,&sooa Y P · . ]7' Chcy111ler. 2 )'Ml old. CHRIST~f AS gills -Ham- mond. Stei n1v8.)', )'«m3M. New I. tJ~ piano!! or most n1ake-a. &-11t b!J)'5 In So. Calit at Schmidt !'.1u11\c Co. 1907 N. l\lain, Santa Ana. 549-1485 120 hp, .'(Int mntl. lttany MEN'S SCHWINN 3 SP CARPf."T rn~tnlleor has one Machinery, etc. 8700 extnts. $1493. 673--0311 lllKE. LIKE NE\V. $3.i. roil, 11\"0C'lldo nylon C'arpet, f:oRKt'JrTS: Pnct1 & solid ?tfUST SC!ll 10' GLASPAR l=CA=LL=·=B=l.).<!<=o:"===-.: double Jute-tracked. \Vfil Mil tirts. Financing if iwedt'd. BOAT $85. 1111 or fl{lrl $3/y..rcl. 540-12'1~ All machinc11 guar11nteed.1 ~=~·-"~•~r~m~·-,.6~<&-_;~J~28 __ 1o·or Sall!, F irt1\'00d. T83 NC\\'lon \\'II.)'. C.i\t. off 'Vh:ltc l'lrphant11! Dhne-a- On.11£c l F.urt1.l.)'ptu1 J>J11ctnHn, btl11.·11 ]71h & line. DAJl.Y Pt:LOT \VANT Mini Bikes 9275 PJ1'0l'WANT~~8 -----------~!'! ISth. 642-&Slc~· ____ .,_•_o_s_1 ------ 3 ?i1tNr Blk .. ~. l·Heti thkll. 1· ?llicke)', I-Cat. All perf cond &. very 1-e.u: 6iffi-7fi12 • ' • • ------ TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATI ON TRANSPOR TATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPOlTATION TRANSPOllTA'ffOA · lmporhcl A-'600 fmportocl Autot -Import°'! Autot -lmportocl Autos -Au1 .. w1ntld 9700 Autoo W1ntocl 9700 Auto L111ln1 9900 U•d C1,. ~ VOLKSWAGEN VOLKSWAGEN VOLKSWAGEN VOLVO WE P>.Y • . • WE PAY WH LEASE ANY MAKI CASH OR MODEL 1962 CORVAJR •door, 1ttck. 9110 Utod C1n CORVAIR DUNTON FORD 'rt VW Sqbck. AM/F'M VOLVO FOR YOUR W Lei our teue expem thow New brake1, carb BUG, Duk Grie:n. new car "dlo. Xln't radial tlre1. t!l70 HERE NOW )'OU the best pl&n for )'Out overhauled. )f.000 mt. $350. YW BUGS guar. tranferable, wlde:r Prlv pty. Best off OV11.r LO\V PRICES ON penonal DOtdJ wltbout obU. 6f6..3431 0000 ml aulo, •tick, ndlo, F!tOM 11400. 833-2932. REMAINING '69'• lor -earl ~ trucU Juol CONNELL pdon. =:;======:tll on/off lug. raok. R.,. c:199 VW "" S.ml-CamP''· Mint Your Best D,,.1, A" SIU! Al call 111 for .... ..umai.. CHEVROLET UNIVERSITY CORVETTI m-110~ll!S8. Bua Gts-1992. .,.. Cond. Only 12,415 ml. Fae DEAN /LEWIS 6ROJH CHEVROlfT OLDSMOBILE """' GOOD SELECTION re-bit eng. Ster/n.dio, pri . 1 2821 Harbor Blvd. 2850 Harbor Blvd. '5.1 SJ'lNGRAY. 2 Tope. J4CI '66 VW Sed. Green. Xln'I ply, $1495. (TI4) 84fr1017 or 1966 Harbor, ,C.M. 646-9303 Alk for S&lc1 Mane.pr Costa Mesa ~12(JO Colla Mesa HP, 4 IJl(I .. ill POii., lthr. Cond. $1175. ?!loving Out Of Office <n J} 439-00:31 l!2U Beach Blvd. A L I fllO -~-;:,Slo.""""'*.;,;,, __ ~ aeals, AM/FM. 52.CKXI Mi. The Country. 897-MOS, H.B. '67 V\V Bug, xlnt cond. Ask· ~ntiquft, Cl1nles 9615 Huntlniton Beacb 1;;;";;;';:·";;:";;;';;;';;";;';;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1 tlfll LEASE II"' Outatandln& oric· c·ond . 2240 s. Mahl 546-7076 'fl VW SWlrool 1625. ;ng 11300. '57 MORGAN + ~ IO ""3ll LEASE. RENT 1970 FORD Torino GT, a~•-="='.....,,==·=====:11 ~--~ ----~ ~~~ I' 84 .. 38.14 =-=~-----" lmmHl1te delivery power brakes It sleeriTlJ', COUGAR 1964 VW Bus, wide oval11, ceUent con d l t 1 on, $1500. DOLLAR radio, wide oval wsw, 351. _----·---II Hltl '64 VW Good Condition S850 ,, headen, ins!. \1.'0od panel. 6~2-1724 after 6 PM. fur IOO(!, clean ~ can, on all 4 v encine. $99.50, 24 mo.. '69 CHIV. .. Call ~7 fl.fake oiler. 548-3660 all makeL See George Ra,y 1970 FORDS & SOUTH COAST '69 COUGAR, tac. air, stereo C•111•r• Henl't.,, v.1, ••· '66 VW Sunroof, xlf\t I~91~0~V\-V~Bu-g-4-.0Xl~-m-ile-s, Autos W1nted 9700 Theodore Roblns Ford FORD TRUCKS CAR LEASING ~~ .. GT pkr, ti!t whl, 4 te111ri!e tr•11• .• pow•r i t .. ,. 2060 Harbor Blvd. -..,cu cub. Priv. Pty. Bnit 1,.., t•llile, h••t•t. u.._ YCL cond. Many, ritru. ~ 3031 Ext. 66 or 61 pl'ivate party. Belt oUer. IMPORTS w ANTED AU popular ma.k~. Ford ltl W. Cst Hwy, NB 645-2182 oH owr $3.150. Call -21 ·;.;'~====-==' ~ * 846-5257 * 1970 HARBOR BLVD. SJ&.7848 0ra.np Comities C.M. 6f2-0010 authorized lea.sine system.I=========< I 838-2932. c TAN~ ... 91 Will B Get OUr Cbml)'titive Rates U··..1 C1-9900 69 MUS • ..... '61 vw SQUAREBACK COSTA MESA '66 vw sedan, good clean roP $ BUYER I uy -.• M•th I. v.1, ••• ,.ed, ,OW• Excellent condition. $1550 1964 vw $750 oondition. $1100 Call after 6, BILL MAXEY TOYatA Theodore DODGE •r b1•k••. lt1dlo a 11..ter. &13-ll32 alto.-7 PM 61>-4305. 18881 Beach Bl•d. ROBINS FORD "U!;"..:';.•;• ;.";;';,,· =-==·II 833-6818 ff. Beach. Ph. 847...m Your Vo!Jtswtgt:n or Porsche ...., 1961 'l\V, completely o/haul· 64 VW BUG & pay top dollan. Paid IDr 2000 JW'bor Blvd. 'i3 SPORT Fury, hdtp, '64 CUSOOM 11111, 4 Dr. New '66 ,CORONET ·$1195 ed enx, xJnt cond. Rea] sharp '62 VW. GOOD CONO. PERFECT CONDITION' GfVE Now -United Fund or not, Call Rlllph O>sta Mesa 642-0010 dlr, aoocl runner, tun prlce 383 eng. P/11, air, new tire1. 4-•oor, v.1, ,11t11111tic, fie• !Ow~ne~r~ .. ~M~31<~,~6~75-0~1~'4~:.'.:I~""'~· ==~*~=~846-~8~19~1.!1B~y~o~n~g~in~o~I ~--~""'~'_'644-~~21~28~.~d~o~oo~be~<~I ====~:J===~"'-~~===:!.!~~~~~~~~~1 ~!9;......!'l°RTI? Call . Phil -"'c:"=',,'°=""=· ="'°==54S-6054~==; ll tory 1ir, pow•r ••••rl"f, ''' I" .........,,.... ... dio, 1!11t1r. Uc. SUH 661. FORD '67 MUSTAN• $14'5 Only Eleven 1969's Remain We still have 11-1969 Mercurys, Lincolns, Montegos & Cougars -H you thought we had big savings before -Come see what we have left for you now • • • We want these sold regardless of loss THAT'S RIGHt! We are down to our last few 1969 brand new or near new Executive Montegos 2 More Brand New MONTEGOS To Select From At Similar Savinqs Plus Some Near lilew 1969 MONTEGOS With Low Mileaqe At Even Greater Savings! Be11utiful madium hlua, popular 351 Vt angina, select shift, white side walls, power brakas, power steerin g, whisper air condition ing, AM-FM-stereo radio, tinted gla1s, deluxa belts, remot• control 2 Handmirror. Wlnd1hlelcl Sticker Price $4017.20 now reduced to $3390. Stock No. 3162. Ser. No 9H 11 H606460 SAVE Sfi97.20 On This Brand New Carll ORANGE COUNTY'S FINEST USED CARS • CONTINENT Al '61 CONTINENTAL COUPE RDy•I Maroon -11111<: llnlJlt wl!lt ""'ltlt!ng lnttrlOt, blaCk 11Ma11 !WI. L111111ry ~u!pped. Comp!etelv 1111 1tNrffl9 wi."1, t1c10ry 1lr, pow- I!' dODt IOCkl. 11<:. VTP 741 $4195 '67 CONTINENTAL 4-DR SED. siavtll11I H1tron 111111 m1t1lllc lln!11t wll!I nll!Ch· Ing lffll'llr Interior. !l l1cll l1M111 rODI, fully lv•lrf'f eQ11ll)Oed •rd llCID•Y tit carditlonl119, AM·FM rldHi, •ttrlO llPI dKk. ()ne.owntr c.er. eN11lll11Hy n11lnt1tntd. TTN010. $3395 '61 CONTINENTAL 4-DR. SED. Attr1cll\1 1~111 tl'lroml yellow will\ 11\edi; lftlll- ., l!IMriO&' tnd 1....0111 roof. Full pa-tQUi. ptd, lldofY 11r, tie. WXl'D5 $4395 '67 CONTINENTAL (on¥1!rf1b~ DNullM 0<.e1n T11•1111Dl11 tlnltt! w!ll'I m1klllfll lnl9rkw Ind ""'""" tea. Comollt•IV Iv•· ury ICllllpCltd, 11,111 paw.tr. AM·FM rldlo. IKIOrY t ll'I Ill! -!, "'° ' MW llrn,. UOAll._ $2795 '66 CONTINENTAL CONVT. INl/lll11I C111lln1I rtd 11111111 Wfth blldt top 111111 bl.tell ltoilfll!' lllttrltr, Alt lfM Mtury ,.._ fw•. 1\111 """'"· flciOrY 1lr o;ondltienlnl ....... !111« 1y1ttm. •lltll'"'ttc U\llte control, lie. 1!11• c111tn1 conc11t1o11. &OAtn $2695 Johnson & Son Has The Reputation or Offering The Finest Selection of Vied Cars in the Co11nt11t MERCURY OTHER MAKES '61 MERCURY COLONY PARK '67 PONTIAC GTO 2-DR. H.T. f P111rngl!'. Popvt.r ttrdlnal rte! ttnlth wl!h Gold mitt '"'"Ille tlnt1h w!lll bfftll bl.d!1t bt•ck c:omltrt -v1 v1ny1 Fn11r10r, ll/l'O., ll&H, '"""· •I/ID. 1r•111., rlldlO .. !ltaT1r. PIWlt llNf· lllfto llPI d«k, l1clory llr condlllonlfllll. P.S., Ing, l1ctory 1lr. IN11llhll tondll"-1. TRJ.911) P.!1 .. dutl ecnon 1111 11111. Only lt.000 mllr•. $2295 (Tht Conll ..... 111 Of St1tlon Wagom.I No. J614. $3295 '67 MERCURY MONTEREY 2-Door H1'11top, IUIO .... llc tr1111mlt1lor1. rNlo, 111111•. llOwef' 1lttflng ind brt•l'I. 1tr tondl· 67 COUGAR 2-DOOR lllnlng. L1'1(11u lllJI. Lie. IJOGOPJ li1Tl'I lro1t wflll mttcl'll1111 vlnyl borttll, 11,1!0., $1795 ?It lnt !nt, P.S,, R&H, n1w car 1rae1 .. 1nR on1 0,...,... tnO 11rvlct'd ll'Y rwr COfnPfony. VO Ul. MUSTANG DR. $2175 1967 2 H.T. Brlll1n rtcl"ll grttn llnl$1'! w/bt1cl1 IM,ockt! '"''· m VI -!lie. (ontole, rid .• "''f PDWl!r •trg., PWI'. br1u., 111la. lrln,., lie. WYflO '67 MONTCLAIR $1795 2-00al' H1rdtop, Arcllc Wl!ltl with bl.ocll lnl'I!'> Jo.r 111111 L1rd11,1 t<IOI. Full pawer eqylpi!l!d Intl '61 JAGUAR XKE-2 COUPE l1ctory 1lr «llldlllonf"ll. One o-. Ctrtf"u11Y mefnlltntd. UOF~. AUr1cr1... tlrlllllt ft1cln1 GrNn llnltl! wlll'I $2~95 bl1tk lffll'ltr lnlerlor, wltl whtlll, Rldllt 'IY !Im, •It:. &taul!f1,1I tondlllof!. WIC*l. $4595 '66 MERCURY PARK LANE '66 MERCURY MONTCLAIR 2·Door lteratoo. Arctic white wilt! Ivy rid In• lerHir '"" bl~t-llnd111 root. au10., ll& • JI.$,, .. oeor 31<11n. Truly OOWll" t1111IPP111 lncllllllnO P.$., l1c!ory 1lr c"'1dltlonlng. ReM 1u~11r~ 11 leclOr~ •lr. Lie. UCUlt1 fMIOlllbll prlt1. VZLll'll! $1595 $1995 '61 CADILLAC SED. DE VILLE M1r-. llnltl'I Wilfl blldr. llndtll l'OOt 11'111 bllCk '6S FORD "" TON i.1111er 1"1trlor. L"1111tY eou/o9tll. Full ,.wer, l1c10ty 111' condlllalnlnlJ, AM-FM l~fto, "Ii. I' lllU'"'· Lit. $PI01 ttll •""i<lg ~J. Clf!I owner, bHlllllllllY rMl/lo 111Md, 2t* '"Ila, vnm BARGAIN CORNER In Our S.r91ln Corner, we have numerou1 u1ed cars. Some cl11n, s o m e not so cle1n. Some that •re dudllc• tions, some we've h1 too long--ln 1ny event these c1rs are real barg1fnt. LOOK 'EM OVER I 186 I UICIC IUVl lRA , .. -168 T·tlAD .._..,, aTltU. $121& $161& $131& $201& '88 '°"""'"' $111& •Dr .... L.k. '"" "' $181& 1195 4695 $ $ J'OhDSOD•SOD n. a OO©® n. oo ©®OO'ii'O oo rn oo 'ii' £l!. • I 2626 HARBOR BOULEVARD, CODA MllA NEW CARS 540-5630 642-0981 1 Mile South of the San Diego Freeway ., USED CARS 540-5635 '63, RAMBLER Amer, hdtp, dlr, runa eood full price $299. D0.1.n>, call Ken. ~ • 'SB -4 Speed, low mileage, vinyl tp, $2000. KI 9-2002 or ~M-6'154. BUICK ----'H1rdtop. 6 cyl., .tick thlft, '65 COUNTRY Sedan Wqon. r1di•, h•1t1r, •hit.wt lli. lfi p&aseftltt with· popular Lie. TUlt 4SJ. &Ide facing 3rd ll!at na.cuo,1..,·6"s""'•"A"LAX ... "ll:--;$7o;t"I heater, powa> steering, 500. 4-doof 1.4111, Y-1, 111• !°Ilg~. b~:; :ii in!! !::ri:~ici: •• :.~~fl",,1·;r.~!: 1· before th\1 weekend. $1000.11 ,L_I'~· _U~l"='·"~·=~== 644-1142 Pr!""' Party '67 COUGAR $1H5 -,~66~F~o"l~con-.OF,-'U!U::..;::r_l __ ll y.1, 1utom•tic tr•111111t.. •' Fully factot'1 equipped, Dlr. 11011, pow•r •t••ri119, pow. ; •r ditc br1kt1, r1dio1 h•tt• : '65 BUICK, xlnt cond, will P.ho ~·., ~ er. Lie. UEU 651. • 1 111! '7U"VU.i..l I sell or trade for amallerr~~='~~-~--·11'66 MUSTANG> $1291 I' V\ 6~ ~lo '62 FORD Van. Jine; shape, f car-V, etc. ,,,_.,., . 310 Slh S H 6 cyl. t 11lom1tic tr•111., r1• t., untlngton j h I ·1 L' 1962 BUICK Special Convt. Be -• _.,_ 4 olo, ••t.r, ow m1 11. 1c. 1·. ••:.u, •uo::r p.m. SIN 201 Needs repair, SZJS or oner. ,69 FORD L~ " door · ; 54!>-1632 ·~ • '68 MUSTANG $1H5 •· Hardtop. Air. f 11th1ck, 4·tp1t d, ,o••r !' CADILLAC =-~.;.$2~,91_;_54~34684,-~-~11 •'••rln9, pow•r .. lie \lr•k11, I '62 ,Falrlane 500, 2 dr, 6, wh1!1w1ll fir••· •id• e't1I 1 -6--E-1-----I stick, radio, heater. tlr11, 1tvl• 1t••I whMl1. I ' 7 dorado 1225 * • -1 u,. uw• "'· ! '61 GALAXIE 500 • Dr. HT. '61 TOilNO $Z4H !· Factory air. $1500. Private GT H•rdtop. Y·I, e11tom1fic j Owned by litlle old teacher from Laguna Beach. FUU pwr, fact alt, dlr, extra, ex· tra clean~! Take trade or !!'.mall down. YO. s.M. Call Ken, .fS.J-9173 or 5-tS-0034. '66 IMPALA 2 dr. Air, pwr, R&H, • auto. Xln't cond. . $1595. Will take clean trans. tradt!. 496-3441 or 496-2500, Dr. Winesap. '67 EL DORADO. FuU pwr & air + $1200 extru. Pl!rf cond. LG-Lo ml Make oUer ·fi44....4265. '59 CAD. Convt. White. lo ml. Xln"t cond. Best oiler. Call 1213) 596-6106. '68 Eldorado, one owner, Iully equipped. $5800. 642-0000 '63 CAD. Convt. Good Cond. Air Cond. Fully Equipped. $995. Call Craig. ~2753. _... _.,.. tr1111., f1ct1ry e ir •ol'Mil· porty. ~-... tionin9, po••r • •r•llt· I (4) 1988 FORD C.ountry powtr br1k11, whit.will ' Rdan wagons. Loadied! tlr11. l ie. WID 664. 1' 12100. * 534-""'1 '6f. FAIRLANE $2H5 =========11 500. ?·door htrdtop. v.1, i MUSTANG f1ctory •Ir c0Mlitio11J119, ; ---------llpowtr 1f••rln9 , radio, h••f· J, 1967 MUSTANG CONY. ,,, low mll11. Uc. YCS t 7t. I Yeilow w/bJack top. v.a, 3 '68 FORD $20M I rpeed man\IAI trans. 4 good G11t•i• 500 t doo, h1rd· wide oval tires, rum excel· top, V-1, •11tom1tic frt n1· j lent. $1095. 673-4493 '"l11ion, pow1r tfMrin9, I ;;65,-u,,.;:-;-;;"'"-';;:-=-ll vinyl roof, whit•wtlll, Lie. ' MUSTANG 2 Dr . WACJJI Hardtop. 34,00J act mi. 1 owner. R/H, auto, P/S, 289 '64 FALCON $1t5 V-8, fac air cond. 613-3244 Sq11ir1 w•9011, V•I, 1vto'"•· MUsr sell 1967 b I u e ic tr1n1mi11ion. ftctory •ir, Fastback, xlnt cond .• xtraa pow1r 1lt•rin9, lu9119• $1689. S48-645l or 646-932S rick # IVV '66 CHEY.. $8'5 '68 MUST. 2 + 2. mue, alr Cott• H11d lop. 4 tp1.d, cond., power, fulUy loaded. r1dio, h11!1r. Uc. TTS 6J6 Very clean $D'.l0. Dan HUion. S43-M81 '61 FORD $2Zf5 M·-=u~sr=AN=G~ .... =---.,~_,:--11 .... 100 4 Dr. H.T. CHEVROLET .. ...,,.~ top. v.1. •uto'"•trc, ,.di•, h•••· air, 21,00J mi. New tires. ,,, power •'••ri119 f1ctory '65 IMPALA CONVT. See to apprec. $2395 646-1974 1ir cond.. tint•d ,1 •••. WTE 516 CHRYSLER Ambu&ador 990, full pwr, feet air, dlr, loaded. One '67 Chry-, "300" 2 Dr Landau. owner. Wlll take oldl!r car l i1c•v111, 1uto1'111lic tr1n1· all pwr-e.lr, new tires $2950. tn trade. PDW138LB. Call '"hilon, f1ctriry •ir, pow•r 644-4265 Ken, .f!M.97'13 or 545-0034, 1t••rl119, pow•t lir1kt1, ,,. ,64 Rambler Cusic '770. V-8, dio, h1tttr. Lie. IOS60Sll '66 CHIYY $14'5 r.s O!RYSLER N•wport. 2 '67 PONTIAC $1H5 dr. H.T. Auto. New radlal pwr steering, Xln't C.Ond.-..... "'' I Um • 1hocks $1500. GG-1948 Belt Offer. 4M-M25 ==========:;:.1 •=========11 2 doer h1rllltop. •ute'"11lt T•llRD htn1'"hllen, f1tlory •It, CONTINENTAL r1dlo, httltr. TUL 042" 1966 CONT'L < Dr Con•I. '66 T·Bl.RD '68 CHIYY $16'5 Now1. 4 l!lr., 6 tyl.,. •ulo· RUSM!l w/ blk top, blk 1thr 2 Dr. ln', tun pwr, air, dlr, '"'"' frt ni111l11!011, rtdlo, Int., 1tereo tape, air, full -,. It •-k _,_ .. _._ h11ttr, •tt. Lie. YMl16t I I Lo I r~• a , "'·• es, wulUVWll·•• ;~;:,;;,;;;,.:;.;;...,;_..;~=II JraT, uxury Pus. m · Biue Book S2SOO • SACR.1·1• 161 FOID $2295 Orig owner. Xlnt cond. n~ n-~ $1850 &44-0772 ....... •"-J• «' w111ign car Tori11• Fe1tlt1ck. JtO" v.1, ' ' In tn<Ie, NPV132. Call Pbil """'"'• '""" ''" ,... ( 63 JMMAC. Paml)'rtd, Ex. 494-9T13 or 545-0634. 1r 1t•6ri"f, ,..,, br••••· cond. Leathn'. Factory Air, ,67 T.SJRD 2 dr. Landau, Juli r1dlo, fl••t•r. U1. ZDX 1 16 All pow.r. 842-1.122 att • A pwr, alr, nu w.., g Irk 'H MUSTANG $12'5 c"="""~'~===~=~· r stereo. wlfet car. Call H1rllltrip, 6.cyl .. •11ftl111•tie, 1966 CONTINENTAL. 6~1 . t1dle, h••l•r, vi11yl top, Lie. SEDAN 1 ,LAD~=1E=s~MAN==·===D~. ~60oll TFX Jt7 Loaded! :\in't Cnnd. CONVT T·BlRD. ALL ==11="'°=· =C=ol=I =· =S46-=™=' =I PWR. NU TIRES, PERF __ c_o_R_V_A_IR __ 1 .!:~~N~D~·~;..·~•-•-_,_~a_•_o_Rll DUNTON '63 C011VAJR. °""' minor * '61 T·BllLD. 2 dr Landau, """' -would mal<e &ood &lr, all .,....., lmmaatla,.., Dune Bu8I)' Olasat-. $100. '°" mun. 142-m74 FORD !l.l6-<9!0 '!! T·BIRD, lookl &ood. niiii 'M roRV AlR SPYDE.R wtU pgs. 131).6324 aft tr ' ot wkend1 ""°· 9fi8..48= 1961 T-BIRD. port holes. D0-A=lL=Y~P-lLOT~ • D I M E. A . fl.f11s t ste to apptteiatel LINES. You cen UM \hem 11800. 138-'16'15. PlLOT C11t.ulfled ad. Plcdp Enough -Give for Just Jl(':nnles a day. Dial Ycur "Fa.tr Share" 2240 s. Main ~ 546·7076 , • Mon4ay, Otnmbtt e. 1%9 UPI Te1-phoN Not a Bullet, a Train The world's longest and fastest "Bullet Train" leaves Tokyo Station for a trial run. The 1&-coach, 1300-foot long, train can carry 1400 persons at speeds as high as 125 mph on the Tokaido Line \\'hich expects its ne\v super express to begin service soon in time for tile 1970 World Exposition in Osaka. Ocean View ~:~wi~~~~arly\ 1795 LAGUNA CANYON ROAD mcCo,.micl LAGUNA BEACH MORTUARY • 494-9415 • this yt!4r to students of the Ocean View School District in the form of a musical pr<>- gram, scheduled for 7:30 p.m . Dec. 11 in the Meadow View School cafetorium. The district-wide Christmas l'==========.=-=,.=_=.,========='I celebration will feature '15 vocal students and 50 In· strwnental students currently enroOed in music courses at each of the district's schools. The . public ts invited to at- tend without charge. Fair Warning Science Shrinks Painful Hemorrhoids Stops Itch-Relieves Pllin Fmds Way That Both Relieves Pain and Shrinks Piles In Moat Cases New York. N.Y. (Special): Sci· age) took place. The MC?tt ii JOHANNESBURG S ence bas 1ound a special 1or· Prepa.ra.tio11. H~. There is no • . • 0 u .th mula with the ability, in most other formula for hen1orrhoida Africa (AP) -One attractive cases-to shrink hemorrhoids, like it. Preparation H also yoong housewife has found a sto/i itching and relieve pain. eootbea lrrilated tissues and j way to keep the wolv~s at bay. ~J:'~h~l~t~:~;e ;li~iJ-~ helps prevent further infection. She wears a sweater em· pain actual nducUon (shrink· Inointmentor1uppo&itory!orm. broidered with the words:1 --=·~---..,--o=-c----=-=-----~~--1 ;;:PP.uy mamed. Please Dime-A-Lines _Mean $$$ Is. I Enjoy the Luxury of ·Soft Water with an _ ears. Automatic Water Softener Sears Automatic Takes the Work Out of Softening Water WITH SOFT WATER f!llJ S.ve oney soap and c1oth-You Wort I.iss er without effort. M I on detergents, I I Keeps things clean- ing lasts longer e!iminates bath tub '--~~~~~~~--' ~~~~~~~~~rings • FREE Estimates! Phone Sean Today! [Sears) ...:-.:oem. SAVEf50 ThisWeek Aok About Sean Oonvmk!st ~· ...... So. Coast Plaza, 3333 Bristol St. Phone 540-3333 ' .. ' Last Pearl Harbor Ship Still DoingDuties By PHILIP KADIS WASHINGTON (UPI) CorustGuard Comm and er Louis 8. Olson was having a pleasant Sunday mo r n i n g breakfast in his h t I I s i d e Hawaiian home 28 years ago Sunday when tie was in· iemrPte<t by the sharply in- sistant ring of the telephone. He wondered who could be calling at 7:20 a.n1. When he answered the phone, a voice at the otber end or the linP. urgently reported the sinking of an "enemy" submarine by a U.S. destroyer. Olson, then 46 years old, swiftly ordered recall of his ship's company and sped off on the four-mile trip to Pier 6 in downtown Honolulu where the ship - A Coast Guard cuter called the Taney -was berthed. By the time he arrived, . Japanese torpedo pl apes and · dive bombers assisted by minisubs had begun what was to be a crippling assauYt on the U.S. Pacific Fleet anchored at Pearl Harbor. The Taney's' crew tOQk bat· tle stations but ritost of the ac· tion was beyond the range or the ship's 3-inch guns. By noon , the Taney's guns and SO.caliber machine guns had warded off an attack: by five Japanese aircraft intent on destroying the Honolulu power plant. It's end is still not iit sight. The Taney is now on dutY off the coastal waters of South Vietnam, the Jone U.S. ship present at the Pearl Harbor attack that is still on active duty. The day after Pearl Harbor, the 327·foot Cl.Jtter took on an enemy sub entering t h e harbor. An oil slick following the antisub attack indicated to Olson and others that the sub was de stroyed, although it was ne ver confirmed. The ship was under way for 88 of the first 98 days of the war. It later saw service in the Atlantic but returned to the pacific in early 1945 to take part in the Okinawa cam- paign. It's luck held out as the ship survived altack by · a n estimated 1,400 Japane se aircraft in 250 assaults without major damage while inffictini great losses on the enemy. memory of the Pearl Harbor "Jt was during a luU after In addiUon to World War Jl att.ack, Olson remembered the most intense action that service, the Taney was used that a party had been planned day." he recalled, "that the as a support ship during the aboard ship for that fateful cabin boy came up to ask if Korean War. 1-;;is~u;;in~da:y:oiieviie~ru~·niigi;. -----•'h;;•;;P;;';;';;'Y;;W;;a;;s;;s;;ll;;ll;;sch_ed_u;;led~.~· She is now serving a year's1;-- deployment with Coast Guard squadron 3 in Vietnam under the command of Captain Rob- ert E. Ogin of Minneapolis, 1'.1inn. Thirteen of the 23 oUicers who have commanded her during 33 years of service have at least achieved the rank of rear admiral. accord· ing to Coast Guard press offi. ccr Jim Hunt who has studied the ship's history. Reflecting on his most vivid WEIGHT CONTROL .,. GLANDULAR THERAPY RN I. THOMPSON, MD Cati for opp•l•tin1:111t 64'·0251 Opn Mo!Hkiy thni Prld., 1827 Westollff Dr. Newpon looch I SEE BY TODAY'S WANT ADS e non·t sit on the dock at the bay \\"ishing for this 2-1' lsland<'r Sloop -fully l'qnippffi, sleeps 4 .•. it \\·ill bt> going \\'ilh you for only $3995. e Good job for ofld job man, over 21 , prin ting: plant needs n1an for dC'livcries clean-up and 1nisccllancous chores . • Favorite life.saver! Scuba tank and single hose l'CK· ulator, $100. The NEWEST • GREATEST 5-Inch \X·atch your favorite program while traveling! Just plug into your Aoto Cigarette Lighter Adapt- er. {lncJuded). Tltls "Happy Wanderer" Will Entertain You Anywhere! • Transisloriied chassis, keyed AGC Personal Size Television Weighs Only 9 Pounds . •• a p0rtahle you can really carry Guaranteed l Ye:ir" Special nickel cadmium battery pack (co~t approximately 2c per hour of operation) USli EVERY DAY TO RE. CE-:JARGE. Just plug inro your 110 volt house currenL Ideal To Take Along, While Enjoying 1"hc Sun At 'fhe Beach! e lnstanl start, lighl diffuser, antenna· .\·lonopol!', llllfo~ loop. Earphone •Pia~ <>n nie"krl 4'od1niu1n recharge- abli:: nm;hligl11 h:1rr r rics ... fit~ in:dclc •Ba tteries are iu-ldc the ~rl, no ~ep­ aratc case. fine-I personal portable made! 14995 •one year uneonditional guarantee on bat· teries •. , if you wear the~c out in on,e. year bring them in. we will gi•e you replace- ment~ ••Whr "'ai1?•t Buy Now Oo Sears Deferred Easy Payment Plan. Your monthly i>aY· menu begit't in Februarr. :;: ]U$t the right idea for Dad while Working in His Workshop! , _________________________________________________ , I WfNA PARK rt MONTE lONG BEACH PICO ot limpo1,1 POMONA SOUTH COAST PlAZA CANOGA PAllC ClENDAlE OlYMPIC & SOTO S~TA ANA TORRANCE I I COMPTON HOllYWOOD ORANGE Is I SANTA f[ SPRINGS V.A UEV I COVINA INGl!WOOD PASADENA ears SANTA MONICA Vl RMONT ol Slov'o" ,__________________________ _ ___________________ , Aep N..,_._.., threutlt S"""'"r 9-.lO A.M. .. 9'.30 P.M.. s-dor J2 Ne... M ~ r M. .... ___ "Sati1laction GworontHd orYovrMOl'ltrlac.k• , . ____ , __ \ 2-RCA Supplement to THE DAILY PILOT, 1he C.ptlvlUnc VIRTUOSO 1CA New Visf.94' Portlble TV A streamlined Sportabout With ad~nced automatic '\ocked·in" fine tuntnc (AFT)l Lllhted channe.J lndlc• tors. 21,500-v. New Vis~ ColorTV chassis Incorporates solid state dtvll:es. Super· l>r18ht Hi·Ut• Color p~re tube. Special alft for • special someone! , December 19S9 81111 'Note for Christmas DeH"erlf Tiii WOOO IUllts lier• lllNllk StJllM ..... moot' Computer Crafte4 luxurlou1 atereo tound • RlOM Stereo Module from Computer Crafted r1dio, '] 99'5 · ~uxe changer, 4 speakers, System-from RCA 100 watts peak power. ' BIJOGET l'ERMS Tht Qlare.ftroll WHrrrt 1U:A Tallie Model ColarTY lnstant·Plc, automatiC ''Locked·ln" fine tunlnl (AFT} Ind ll&hted channel lndlcatorl. 26,500-v. Trans Vista• chassis. New 100% 'briatiter Hl~UTE '70 picture tube, t>.lanced sound with s• oval speaker, SALES & SERVICE SERVING BAJl•R AJIEA SINCE 1948 KIRKP-ATRICK'S ........ ,.,,,, ........... , ................................. __ AOvt r1iHnwtlt . Computer Brightens Color In 1970 Models for RCA Big-screen television b y the home viewer a picture RCA, now with the new m-brlcbbless unparalleled 1 n LITE '70 picture tube, gives RCA history. 'lbe HI-LJTE '70 Picture Tube has been computer. designed and engineered to give 100 percent m o r e bri&fJtness to some 1970 Trans Vista models. 1be ID-LITE '70 screen has c o m p u t er-specified color targets -1.2 million of them -surrounded by RCA's new black m11trix which helps keep colors sharp. Inside the HJ-UTE '70 tube RCA has installed its secret weapon • . . a computer. designed eleclron gun which actually shoots 36 million beams-per-second through Its shaoow mask. For bright, vivid color in eelected Trans Vista models, RCA bas created the "Little Monster" to boost beam r.ur· rent and deliver a bonus of picture power. ~ "RCA bas also designed its mo8t accurate, dependable auoomatic fine tuning. This is achieved by a com- puter-tested integrated circuit that now h~ps replace twenty- four other parts. Automatic fine tuning is available in most of RCA's 1970 models. "Computer Crafted Color," said one RCA dealer, "is the greatest technical advance the ~ny has ever offered the home viewer. Even so, it wouldn't gi ve nearly as much pleasure if it were not for the fa.ct RCA is now producing its most elegant and beauliiul cabinets. Styles range from Mediterranean to Swedish and Early American traditionals to RCA's greatest color creation -1be "Two 'Ibousand." FRONT, BACK -Here are both sides ol the RCA Cbeerteader "story." Front view offers hint ol its picture darity, easy-to-handle controls. Back view . ahows how portable new .,personal TV" model . really is. An RCA television with the new JD-Lite '70 color screen is apparently America's favorite al}.family gift for <luistmns. A "soon" visit with your RCA dealer might be a wise Idea • J MODULES FOR MOD WORLD -It's RCA'! newest dimension In soun<I, the four-piece Stereo Module System (sho.wn with Studiomatic turntable open, top, and closed in bottom view.) System has 100.watt peak power receiver, sealed speaker units. . . . l' l ~ ) I! t ·. Jl r, 8 '• s e l• it '· " e e e it 11 e s tl 11 d 0 11 e s e . .. \ 2 RCA Supplement to THE DAILY PILOT, . l>ecember 196t-3 -..,_,.... • TONIGHT FRI JAY, DEC. 5th 7-10 P.M. ALL RADIOS & STEREOS have been priced down to clearance prices, inost AT or BELOW cost. If you plan to gi\'e stereo or radio, here are un- matched values. (Quantity limited.) Fantastic COLOR SET VALUES on one.of-a-kind models in stock. Such as: MODEL GL 692 -Beautiful moorish design console with overhanging top & massive plinth base, vertical overlays with half-turned pilasters adorn richly-patterned fabric speaker grilles. Same size as GM 681 below. Fea- tures automatic fine tuning, 25,000 volt chassis, new vista tuner. specially priced $599.00 MODEL GJ 737 -Big screen (23") television in cabinetry that calls to mind the stateliness of 18th century en glisb lnanor house furniture. Rolls on concealed easters, automatic fine tuning, 25.000 volt chassis. Sale Priced $5n.oo AM PORTABLE RADIOS RLG 34 ........ ".':. Reg. 29.95 Now 19.00 RLG 20 •........• Reg. I 0.95 Now 5.50 RLG 12 •........• Reg. 7.95 Now 4.50 AM/FM RADIOS RLM 68 ........ Reg. 41.95 Now 30.00 RLC 20 •......... Reg. 24.95 Now 15.00 RJM 36 .......... Reg. 26.95 Now lt.00 RJC 50 •......... Reg. 89.95 'Now 69.00 RJC 36 .......... Reg. 64.95 Now 49.00 MANY OTHERS AM/CLOCK RADIOS RZD 415 ........ Reg. 19.95 Now 1'.00 RZD 19 .........• Reg. 24.95 Now 11.00 RZD 422 •....... Reg. 26.95 Now 22.00 3 .' . ALL RCA Color TV prices reduced for this 3 -Hour Sale -Below our regu- . lar low price. Includes all orders placed during sale. Examples: MANY OTHERS CONSOLE STEREO VLT 33 •......... Reg. 349.95-Now 270.00 VLT 52 •........• Reg . 479.95 Now HS.00 Model GM·639 23" diag., 295 sq. In. plcturt The Captivating STEFANO RCA New Vista ' Color TV A ""agnificant c.ib111et in !he fined Sponisli trt>dil''>n. Hiddnn conl.·ol pare! with Aul,.,,.,,.,., Fin,. Tuning. Ad· ViHICe:l Vi1l4 Col"' 25,000-v. ch.issis. Supttr·brighl H. l"t Color P1d" 11 Tube. Put it r n I h the f~mdv Ch tSIM.H •• ~ ' SALE ,~s ALVtJ ,~vs . \ / PROM1 s~ .. H VLT 49 ............ Reg. 479.9~ Now 365.00 Modtl GM-681 23# di1r.1 295 1q. In. platu,.. •one tube rectifier The Cl assft BELLINI RCA Trans Vista 1 Solid State ~ Color TV fe~lures RCA's advanced automdlic "Loc~Gd·i11" fine funin9 IAFTI end ln114nt-Pir.1 l i'f·out control pan.,1, 1uper-bri9ht Hi-lite C olor picti.re tube, 26.500-v. color chau·s. Two- spitd~e•, o~•endod soun.J systt'm. The "for,.vor" Chris In a' 91 ft! SALE REG. $750. BEST $~ V1 c~ YOU HAVE EVER HAD." - ' I ~ 1 ... I I ;&-RCA Supplement to THE DAILY PILOT. , DecelnMr 1Jl8 . 11Je lasting gift -of RCA ., .. a/.t~ A(gftiA and Af>UIUt al IN HARBOR CENTER • 2300 The Captivating STEFANO RCA New Vista• Color TV A magnificent cabinet in the finest Spanish tradition. Hidden control panel with Aotomatic Fine Tuning. Adva~ced Vista Color 25,000-v. chassis. New 100 % brighter HI-LITE '70 picture tube. Put it right next to the family Christmas tree! The luxurious lANZANO RCA Trans Vista' Color TV '649°0 I ; A solid state 26,500-v. chassis sets a new standard· 1 for performance and reliability. New super brite HI· LITE '70 picture tube • , • 100% brighter than any previous RCA model and automatic "Locj(ed-i n" fine $69500 tuning. The Dramatic KARLSBERG RCA.New Vista• Color TV Scandinavian styling in a custom-designed cabl· net! Electronic/automatic fine tuning on VHF/ UHF channels. 25,000·v. color chassis. Two 6• ova l duo·cone ~peakers. Santa's choioe for the all-family gift! The Thrilling TONSBERG ' Mo.kl GM-SH 23" diJJ.1 295 lhe Cftssic tlNARES RCA New Vista• Color TV Advanced automat!c ••tocked·in'' fine tuning (AFT) -with the most powerful tuner in the TV industry. 25,000·v. new Vista color chassis. RCA super·briaht, Hl·LITE picture tube and ton• balanced sound system. The sensational all· family. giftl RCA Computer Crafted CoforTefevision Scandi~avian-insptred cabinet with louvered twin speaker grilles. Trans Vista• sohd sta~,500 volt chassis with Instant Pie and RCA's fiddle·free tuning (AFT). The brightest big-screen color television you can buy thanks to the Hl·LITE '70 color tube. Detent tuner makes UHF as easy to tune as VHF. The most sparkling gift under the tree! n RC ·T~ mi co Ch pr RC $695°0 ...... BCA Suppletn!nt to THE DAIL V PILOT, _J. December lNl-5 A Television and .. rm iA.; UuA ~--- lOO HARBOR, COST~ MESA dl•r.. 295 sq., In. plct11r• The~FAIRWAY llCA .... Vlltl• PlftalH lV Vivid color ••• blc screen with famous RCA color quality. 21,eoG-v. Sportabout color chassis end super·brilht HM.rrE Colof: picture tube · provide top perfom1nce ind ' Jona·l1st1n1 dependa~llty. On everybody's "most wanted" aift list! s34500 ~ ..... Df.417 0 • ·\ 1r ..... 110 1q. 1n. pkt.- ....... YMT• The Incomparable JATIVA $45500 RCA Computer Crafted Stereo A wedding of bold Spanish and romantic Moorish design! Computer Crafted AM·FM·FM Stereo Radio; 200-watt solid state amplifier. Automatic manual turntable with feather.action tone arm. 8·speakers. Santa's best Christmas buy! ~ARES >lorTV :>mat:c tuning ! most the TV ti, new s. RCA !HITE I ton .. fstem. ial a ll· 1y_aittl The Gier....._, WHITBY RCA Tllllfe Model COllrlV ln.stant·Plc, IUtomltic "locked·in" fine tunlna (AFT) Incl liahttd th8nnel Jndlcators. 26,5()().v, Tr1nt Vista• chusls. Ntw 100% 'bfl&hter Hl:UTE 70 picture t@., Mllnced sound with s~ oval spttlwr. Me4't nMlS 13" dlec., Z95 sq, In. plcture . s39500 '599°° Terms of Course 540-7137 Th6 Contemporary BREMANGER s57500 RCA New Vista' Color TV ihe Nordic beauty featuring RCA advanced auto. matic ''Loeked·il'l" ·fine turun1 (AFT)! Tilt-out control panel. 25,000·v. New Vista Color 1V Chassfs. Hi·lite Color picture tube ••• &fare- proof and dust-proof. Make Christmas day RCA dayl ~ Motltl AY.115-Ch Ja• cliaf,, 172 sq. In. picture Top Convenience and Excelent Pwfennanee· Bia screen black ind white port1b1e with m1tchinc roll· •ut ltand It no extrl cost! 17,000-Y. chanla with .Wire.ult VHF; IOlld state UHF tuners. A special RCA for the.holiday} STAM ..... ATM EITIA CIMCE '.11500 RCA Computer Crafted 4'-pc. STEREO MODULE SYSTEM r our piece ensemble module incorporat-. 100.watt peak power receiver includlnir Computer Crafted tuner. Studiomatic turntable and sealed speaker units. Duralife• Diamond Stylus. The superb Christmas &lft for all ages! Ultra-grand GRANOUERS RCA Computer Crafted Stereo M~nificence in the Spanish tradition of design. Mark I Studiomatic automatic/manual turntable. Tub~:ar feather-action tone arm. Duralife9 dia· mond stylus. 500-watt peak power amplifier. 10 speakers. Perfect present 'tor music Javers of all ages! $69500 e TERMS OF COURSE e HARBOR CENTER 2300 HARBOR BLVD. PH. 540-7131 DAILY 9:00 to 9:00 SAT. 9:00 to 6:00 SUN. 12:00 to 5:00 COSTA MESA -6-JtyA Supplement to THE DAILY PILOT, December 1969 LOOK who's gone: to LO BONI Desk, typewriter and notebook-Hugh Mulligan, Associated Press special correspondent, has switched his base from New York to London. From there, he roams wherever the news takes him -the British Isles, conti- nental Europe, Africa, the Alf idd le East. Not that there is a lack of stories on this side of the Atlantic for this talented reporter. It's just that Mulli- gan's uncommon touch, his insight, his humor, 'his in- terest in people, fit ri ght into plans of The Associated Press lo bring you more stories about the people -not neces atil y the governmen ts -tha t make up the wor ld. I\1ull iga n is recog ni zed a one of the great reporters of our da~'. H e has brought us eyewitness accounts of the war in Vietnam and the fighting in Biafra. On the plea- sanh·r side, he has told us what it's like to carry a spear in an opera con1pany. to fly on a Navy blimp to the North P ole, to ride a truck frorn Ohio to Alaska, to travel with Louie; Anr·;t r ng's lnnrl on one-night ~lands. I n his n c..\\ c :;~11·~ .~t. ~'~ldlig-~n dnc_n't hesitat.e t o drop in lo a fotrig n 'ni ;1 i~l ry, if nC'Ccs.,ar~·. BLtl gen~r· nlly, he lulf\\' s that Lyp0 0i ~to1y to AP'ti hub\.! L1.t1.011~:.u1 ................................................... , .... staff. Usually he ge ts his story from the guy or gal on the street in London, the housewife of Toulouse, the factory . wo rker in Zurich or Milan, the shopkeeper of Cairo. I\ luch of the world has urban problems, educational crises, t raffic headac hes. Like us, p0oplc ~·~ek new forms of leisure, new cultural channel~. ne.': L·t nds away ft\>m 1 r~dition. ~'hi'::, nczcspapcr !il .. uz-; lo tdl .''OU more about human. a:· •I' c:, :1,: t ,1!" i.,.,,.,/ (!;'" "11 s··c,'~ V",,l1..'1'f:,.C'iUling i\P I .:·.,,~ ("' 7[t, ', !' ·,,., • • ' ••• f THE RICHELIEU, LATEST IN LONG LINE OF RCA FRENCH PROVINCIALS Wit/J Computer on Team,. TV Designs Improve ·Speedily "We believe the viewing: public Is entitled to have more. dependable color TV features • •. faster ••• and that's why RCA is proudly announcing its Computer Crafted Color!" After viewing RCA's 1970 color television sets, this statement by an R C A' spokesman may become an- actuality rather than mere· wishful thinking !or some con-. StUners. 'l'he 1970 RCA . color TV is the result of harnessing the speed and accuracy of the computer to bring home au- diences l m p o r t a n t ad· vancements in color television. Better color, they say, with m<re solid state dependability and features than even tht>.lr highly skilled and ploneerini engineers couldn't h a v e brought about ECs soon as they did without computers. Computers admittedly work millions of times faster than men and, RCA confirms, work mote accurately. This promp. ted . engineers ·to ·use com• puters often to help solve their design problems. In a number or actual chses RCA has found computers cut considerable time from color TV develop.. ment s c h e d u 1 e s • ''Conse- quently,'' RCA states, "they ·art bringing home audiences more dependable c o J o r television features faster than ever before." Compute!' Crafted Color, RCA believes, ls responsible for its new standard of quali· ty. To be more specific, RCA is using computers to specify, test and inspect a num1')er of vital color TV elements. This, · they have proved, means greater assurance of more consistent TV set perfonnance with much less likelihood of repairs. The purchase or c 0 t 0 r television often represents a major expenditure for .the average family. And, since RCA finnly believes no one should want to wait another year to own color television, t h e prospective purchaser should certainly visit an RCA dealer and see RCA's Com· put.er Crafted Color in action. Chances are strong, this reporter ls convinced,, RCA television will make a mer· rier, all-family Christmas gift in thousands and tousaf14f s of homes. RCA Supplement to THE DAILY PILOT, December 1969-7 Model Ql..flO 23" clltt., 295 aq. In, pktvre The CaptMtlfta YIWTUOSO RCA New Vista• Par11ble 1V A streamlined Sportabout With ICMil1Ctd automltic "Locuct-ln" fine tunlna (AFT)I Ltchted chlnne.1 lndlc8-tors. 21,50()..y. New Vitt. Color1V cMs111 lncorporltt1 IOllcl state~ SUper. brleht HH.Jte Color plc:tl(re tubt. Speclll lift fOr ~ spedaleomeonel $419.95 Tht ..,_....,WHITBY llCATMleModel Colol'TV lnltlnt.Plc. llUtomltic "Locked-In" tine tunlna (AFT) Ind lflhttd chlnnel lldlcators. 26,500-v. Tr1ns 'vista• chassit. Hew 100% briahter HHrTE '70 pictuN tube, bllanced sound with S-oval sptllcer. $599 The streamlined .SANFORD ~New Vista• Color TV A consolette with fresh, clean s~llnJ. locked-In color purl~, 25,000·v. color chassis with transistorized 3TF VHF tuner; solid state UHF tuner. 6" ovat duo·con• tpeaker and lighted dials. A St. Nick speclall $459.95 ''Our 22nd Year In 1be Harbor Area0 DA¥1S·BROWN 411 E. 17th St., Colta M ... 646-1614 l Hur1 y ! While the limited supply lasts it's first-come, first served! 7·ft. Royal Scotch Pine Tree -Artificial, long· needle Christmas tree will last for.years. Flameproof, non·t oxlc, non-allergic. Easy to assemble, dis· assemble and store. Price includes heavy-duty, all· metal stand. $ g •SS* Res. $23.95 29 pc. Holiday Gift Wrap Kit -Six rolls of bright paper, two rolls of.patterned foll, one roll of luxury paper end twenty ready-tied bows in a big color variety of high-sheen colors. A fantastic, money· savipg value! 9 9 C * Res.$3.60 RCA Cordless Mini Sci$sors -Smooth and fast cutting with extra $harp replaceable, carbon steel bladet. Battery' p6wered, ·permanently lubricated motor. Extra set of blades free. Battery not includ,ed. $2.49* Rec.$4.95 •