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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1969-12-24 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa7 ~-,--~--......---. _...._.,..... -----------------------~~------- (Y~llow)' Goes Black • • • • P&raly~edMesa Wrestler WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON, DECEMBER. 24, · 1969 Sags He~s Not Beaten VQ_L. '2, NO. .,, S SIECTIONJ, 21 l'AGIJ .......... oun Cops Seize Sex Movie In Balboa . By JOHN VALTEllZA 'Of .... ci.lly .., ... ,,.., They were mQl'e thli.n curious and more tha'I) yellow, too. So a. municipal judge, a Newport vice detective and two District Attorney's in- vestigators turned yellow to black Tues- day night and seized a copy or the Swedish sex film arter its final showing at lhe Balboa Theater. And today. a print or "I Am Curious (Yellow)" silS idle on a police depart- ment office floor. Its next showing will be delayed inde!initely. The judge, J. E. T. "Ned" Rutter ttt, Detective John Simon and the two DA 's men sat patiently through the graphic Scandinavian sex saga, then at 9:15 p.m. moved into the theater projeclion room and took the print. Today, Newport Beach police were i.eeking misdemeanor complaints against the owner of the theater. William AUord of 1234 La Mirada, Latruna Beach, and the manager, Mrs. Eleanor Blackburn of 514 E. Ocean Front. Balboa. , Simon said the charges sought woul.d be for alleged exhibition of obscene matter. Chief James Glavas said one con- tribu'ting !actor to the seizure o~ t~ Ulm cnntaining yards of footage depicting sex <irts was several complaints-from Citizens who had see n the film and didn't like its content. •·\Ve aren't trying to act as censors or th e conscience of the community in this case," Glavas said. "but. we tiuly bel~eve that we re entiUed to do 1t under the lines drawn by the U.S. and California supreme courts." He cited one letter and several phone calls from persons who saw the film and who complained bitterly that it was obs«ne. . , A local doctor wrote a letter damnm.g. the sex epic. .. · · · .. "}l's obvious that the exhib1~ or these types cf films are notoriously careless about their control of und~rage persons entering the theater. W1thout much effort we found one unescort~ t?; ,·ear-old Rirl in the theater last rug~t. Glavas added . Glavas char~ed that film makers anrl (Stt cmµous,. Page !) IN!l1 .4TES GETTING BIG YULE DINNER They may be in jail, but the inmates or Orange County Jail wilt have-a Christ- mas dinner that's "everything and more that a home-cooked holiday dinner would be." Authorities at the jail said the holiday .tinner will consist of turkey and stuff- ing, two kinds cf vegetables, cranberry aauce. mashed pol.aloes and pumpkin pie. "I ate out here over Thanksgiving.'' the Spokesman said "and it was qulte good. AJ a matter o~ fact, it was a bigger dinner than I wotlld have goUbi at home." -,,;..,..,,..,,...,,,,.,,,...,,_Mm•~<imz·S!m '*""~~ . il D•wn~ Not Out ~ .. \·:' .. •. ;(i.:i;., ~ ,,.,l..,~ 'f '~i"<J(r '1 •if\~ '; • /j "t'il ' jf,~ f;j; /') \:"'\., 1 l\,\r,. }<) ft:·-· ,J .tt ·~··'< . ' • ,' {l · ,.,., "~·: oJ~i· .. ,..;-~ I (¥ l •::;, ~ I '·J: t;ll, ,. , r ·'J' :l> DAil Y Pilot ,.. .. ., ·~"~~ P.ROFILE IN COURAGE: A WRESTLER WHO REFUSES DEFEAT Justin Ogata and.Mother, Str1ngth1necl by Christmas Hopi • •• " ---. • • ' • ,! . -' . .,. Not Beaten_ Paralyzed Wrestler H~ Hope . . By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of 1a. *1 Pfllt ·tt.rf Medical science cannot grant Justin Ogata's Chri11lmas wish this year and he refuses to believe that perhaps it never •·ill. Because he is a 'IVT'tstler. And a wrestler may lose 1 mattji, but he is never beaten, Justin sat up· Tuesday /or the tint.. time in 19 dayll. ' Propped fn 1 whetlchair, the 1&.year- old ~ta M~ High School junior smiled and talked· Ol his last brut, the ofte he won't accept as the last in a ahort career. Paralyzed, lie can do little more than that: smile an4 talk. The second son of Mr. and Mrs. Hitoml Ogata, of 3116 Roanoke Lane; Costa Mtt11. Is virtuatly Immobile from th& neck down, although he can move his up. per left arm sli1hlly. Chantts fQr dramatic Improvement IS.. WRl!'3Tl$R, Pare ti on Succeeds Gardner Judge Rutter .Gets Po$t · On OC Supli riO r ,eourt .. Municlpil Court Judge J. E. T.; "NOO'·'" Rutter ol. Newport Beach today was a~ pointed by Gov, Ronald Reagan to suc- ceed Justice Robert Gardner tci the Orange County Superior Court. Judge Rutter, 38, will move from his Harbor Judicial District Court to the higher bench after the holidays. He will take over the court vaca ncy created by the elevation la.!it week of Justice Gardner to the F"ourth District Court of Appeals in San Bernardino. Judge Rutter got the news of his unique Christmas gift in a telephone call fr-am the governor's press secretary. "'fhe governor was on his way down here for Christmas vacalion but he very typica lly figured that I might like lo hear cf the appointment n-0w rather th'an wait for him to call," JudgP Rutter said, ''I will take over my Superior Court duties with a very deep sense of duty to the governor and an appropriate degree of terror," Judge Rutter commented. "It will be my aim to t;iv£ the people or California and the governor my every ef- fort and their 'full money's worth in this challenging appointnient. "I plan tc be a fairly quiet judge for some. time until J·have had the chance let sssess my new duties and work my way into the court." Judge Rutter added. "Qut I hope that I will soon be able tG make a substantial contribution to the administratiPn of justice. As a new boy I have, of course, a great deal to Je3rn." Married with four children Judge Rut~ ter mak es his home at 121 Via Havre. Udo Isle. He was aJ>t>Ointed ti> tl'ie Harbor District bench by Gov, Reagan on Nov. 19, 1968. An activ.e Repu~lican, Judge Rutter came to ' the municipal bench from private prilCtice in Los Angeles and Costa Mesa . A 1955 graduate of USC law school, he is a member of the Costa Mesa Rot'\ry Club •. One of Judge Rutter's final actions as a municipal court judge was to participate ln a raid Tuesday ~night on the Balboa theater· where police and district. at.- tomey's officers joined him in coo- f'5cating reels or the. controvf:lrsial Swedish film "l Am Curious (Yellow)". Judie Rutter and Officers moved in on th;e', eirthy European movie after wat· cbing the early evening showing. . . . Mrs.; Nixon Hostess For 'Diplomats' Kids WASHINGTON CAP) -Mn. n ichard M. Nixon was hostess to 400 children. ot diplom~tic families Tuep-Jay nJ1ht at the laet of this year's White House Christmas parties. The children, aged 4 lo 11 and many in colorful nat.ional cootumes, s a w Tchaikovsky's '1N u t c r a ck er Sllite" perfotmed by >to student! ol tho Washington School of Ballet to music by the Marine Banc!. WINS SUPERIOR COURT P.OST Judge J. E. T. 'Ned" Rutter School Lunches Program Vowed WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Nixoo ad' ministration pledged today. tD make .school lunches available to virtually all needy children by next .TlianksgiVing, Dr. J~an ¥aye_r, speci~I .consultan't to the· President on fbod, health and 1nutri· tlon,'told neWsmen a progfam lo flihlish f~ aOO red~ed-price lunches Would be extended to benefit. approXima(ely 6.6 million needy children in the 1970-71 fiscal yeai. This vrould be three times the numb!i of children ~vered dUring tht fiscal ~car ended last June. Mayer, who headed the White Hoose conference on food , nutriti<>o and hynger JtetH • eiirlier 'th.is mdnth~ presented the ~-volume repclft of the C(!l'd'ereoce t~ Pres~dent Nixon ~ and then met wJtt) newmien. The 't~t contain!: tnmdreds of recOmmendatiooS for dealing with the bl'Oad · problems ol hunger tlirough leg\slaU've action · ·and admintstrlttve changes. . . YULE EDIT!ON OUT BY NOON The Chris Ima. Edi lion ol lbe D.AIL Y PIWI' will be pubilshed and delivered early Thuraday (before noon In most ar~as) and all DAILY PILOT offices will be clooed for the Holiday. 1 Friday ,-111 'be • nonnat ,,-ork . day at the DAILY PIWI' a!Mj all ofllces will be open for bus.lneSf as Ul!J-AI. Last Minute Amendment ·Try Fails By TOM BARLEY Of 1119 'Delly Plllt SI"'' Orange County supervisOrs clamped I tight lid on non-vehicular smog producel'! Tuesday with a tmanimous adoption o stringent air wllution contro l melllW'tl that brought a capacity audience ip tbl board's hearing room to ils feet witb· 1 sustained ovation. Last minue attempts to ameDa the p{9 posed action and delete wh.at weri described as "only doubtful" contributori to the county's 'mounting smog probler:i were swept aside by a determined bc>ard urged on by Supervisor David Baker. "We have a legal and 'mo r a; responsibility today to add t h e 1 ! measures to our • air pollulon c;ontrei regulations," said Baker. "We havt heard abundant testimony from medij:a experts and the fanning community 14 know full well by now just what· the111 freely emitted pollutants are dolng le ow environment and to us. • "Public health should take second plact to nothing," Baker warltd.' "lt is Im perative that this board act upon thU recommendation at this time and do. so h a manner that reflects our prompt reac tion to the calls made upon us by tht public." . Only Supervisor William Phillips seem 'ed doubtful when the roll'was called. Bui 'bi.i q'uiet "yes,!' offere(I after.a Tnoment'1 IS.. SMOG LAW, P•fO I) We•tller -• ' t • J Someont; forgqt . to . wish the weatherman a. tnerry Christmas. and he's' retalllting in ki'nd-with low cloodB, ioe~mid '• fight drlzzlo to dampfn t11e y'u1et1ae · spirits, while temPerafUm remam in the mid &o's. INSID~ TOl»AY Fif101icidl 1 columnUt SutvitJ Porter gives 10 rMle1 for invest· ots to follow in buJ,rl11g art works in htr column on Poot 12 today. I ·~·.1 ·~· CHR~STMAJ ·. '·w-- CtNftnlll 1 ~·"" u, , CrnMtlW '"" ~· 11 ·-. --. .•""'1.11• ·-' " .,.,.,,....... 11 t ll'hlli9Ct lt-11 -" ,,,.. l....,. • -. ""YI'' 11 ,....., ...... lt IUtl9llel ...... .., Of'll.... a.tr • • S'l'Mt ,..,... It 5Mff\ ,.,, .......... Q.11 Tttwlelll II -n -. ...... .... ,, .,,_., ...... M ............ I I t DAILY PILOT s Piiot Log book Judge, Lawmen Curiou s; 'Yellow' Showmen Blue By THOMAS KEEVIL Of .... o.ltr Pl ... Staff I DIDN'T THINK I'd ever get to see "I Am Curious (Yellow).'c I almost didn't and wish I hadn't. In the first place, the short subject that preced ed it at the Balboa Theater Tuesday night was interminable and even more curious than the movie. Jt really was a commercial for Colonel Sanders' fried chicken. IT SHOWED the dazzling-white form of the goateed drumstick king patting one horse, feeding another horae, mugging with another horse, talking with another horse, betting oo another horse, congratulating anothtr horse and just standing there with a lot more horses. The second reason I almost didn't see "I Am Curlooa (Yellow)" was that, unknown'"to me, my companion movie criUcs Included Judge J . E. T. "Ned" Rutter, several deputy district attorneys and some badge-totin1 represent- atives of the Newport Beach Police Department. THEY FOUND the film appealing to prurient inter- ests and confiscated it. T don't know if they took the Colonel Sanders film. There was a third reason J almost didn't see "l Am Curious (Yellow)." I could not stay awake. This chubby girl did run around a lot with no clothes on. So did her boy friend . A cou ple of times they di splayed more th.an ca.sua1 means of expressing affection and thei r celebrated athletic prowess (In a tree, on a balcony and in a pond) was an intriguing manifestaUon of cinematic imagination. WIUCH MEANS I stayed awake during that part. But the rest of the film was a drag. T felt to finding typographical errors In the English subtitles, then began rewriting the plot as it unfolded, only in my version I worked in a ro le for Colonel Sanders. That version would really have sent Judge J, E. T. "Ned" Rutter on hls ear. But even this mental uereise failed to susWn my interest and by the film's end J had nodded Jnto a semi-sleep. I haven't the vaguest notion of what happened to the chubby girl and her boyfriend, except that their forms are no longer being displayed in Newport Beach, California. OH, I l\USSED all the action. Judge Rutter et al were boxing up the fil m while I was making a furtive ellit, hoping no one would see me pursuing my prurient interests. Most unhappy man in town is Max Dillman at the restaurant across the street . "Man. did we have a blast of business while it lasted," he said. "You couldn 't believe the activity down here." From P .. e 1 CURIOUS BUSTED ..• exhibitors "are always trying to produce someUting which will push and test the lines set by the courts and Utis i.s a good example of It." * * * 'It's Dirty Film,' Says Hurlburt- He Read Report I Newport Beach police confiscation Tuesday night of lhe Swediah film, •·I Am CUrious (Yellow)," has the aupporl of the city administraUon. It does not have the su pport of the operators of the Balboa Theater, how- ever. They're confused. ''I've bttn here almost 10 years," said a member of the theatu staff, "and this is the first time anything like this has happened. We've had many films like this. We've had a lot of war films, too." City Manager Harvey L. Hurlburt is 1esa: confused about why further showing.s of "I Am Curious" were banned. Glav as said he hadn't seen the film, "but I read the complete report detailing the scenes and I'm convinced we did th~ right thing." He said he hoped the line between clean and dirty films would soon be more clearly defined by the courts. •The film, soorces said, will face' some tough sledding elsewhere in the cou nty, too. Stanton Police were reported to be plannin& a raid aometime early today on a theater 1howin1 I.he movie in their city, Ex-interned Japanese To Erect Monument LONE PINE (UPI ) -Ja-who were interned at the Manzanar Camp near here during World War II will return this weekend to erect a memorial to those who died durtn& their stay at the camp. Two buses from Southern California were opected to arrive Saturday 1nd depart the lollowin& day. U"I '''°"""'" She Cares: Happiness for this young South Korean girl is clearly express· ed on her face as she receives CA RE package. HQ!iday gilts \Vere from Americans. Coroner Probes Death of Woman Found in Street The Orange County coroner ls con- tinuing his invest11ation today into the cause of death of a young Santa Ana woman whose body was discovered Tues- day morning lying in a Garden Grove street. A coron er's spokesman said the cause or death of Janet L. Summerlin , 26, or 2006 W. Monica Lane, will not be determined until toxicological tests have been completed. There was no obvious in- dication of violence, the spokesman noted. The woman"s body was discovered Tuesday morning on Dawn Avenue near the Garden Grove Community Church at abou t 6:15 a.m. by two newsboys. Garden Grove police said the boys saw the woman lying partially in the street and amuned,she was either drunk or sleep- ing. They tried to awaken her by tossing a few of their newspapers at her, but when she didn't stir, they noUfied • neighbor who examined the body and called police, officers said. Clad in a blue mini-dre.!ls, the woman's body was covered with bruise.!, which has led Garden Grove detectives to speculate that her body was taken to the area and dumped after her death. Police abo noted that the woman's ca r had recently been involved in an accident leading them to believe she may have sustained the bruises there. Uneasy 'Truce Begins 12 Enemy A ttacks Repelled in Early Hours SAIGOll: (AP! -The alli• beg&o a 24- hour truce Chrlstmu Eve and bJ early Thunday lZ enemy attacb, molt or them small, were rep«ted. The Viet Cong hid begun a ii.hour holiday cease- fire early today. The U.S. Command aaid eJ&ht amall at· tack1 hl6 been reported by midnight and they caused SOJilLCasua/tJes on bottl sides. - The South Vietnamese Comm and said the altack began shortly aft.er the allied ctue-fire ftnl into effect and resulted in two enemy and two regional force soldiers killed. Five Vietnamese soldiers were. wounded. The U.S. Command said that "preliminary report. indicate lhe litua. lion ls relal.ively quiet" for American F',.om P .. e 1 WRESTLER • • • 1eem poor. "He's been told," :said Coach John Sweazy. The tough, spirited, 130 pound division c.ootender hit. the mats dur:ing an eJlmina· tion bout Dec. 5 to decide who would face San Clemente High School the following v.-·eek. He just lay there, victim of a fluke a one-in-a-milllon tragedy. ' "I didn 't wrestle," he said Tuesday in Room 113 at Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital. ''It was an unlucky accident But we won against San Clemente ." A steady stream of iChoolmates has visited the sturdy Japan-born wrestler since his condition stabilized and X-rays plus neurological studies began to in· d.icate the extent or spinal damage. Coach Sweazy marvels at him. "I'll be down to 123 by the end of the season," he said, in relerence to weight class, when Sweazy and teammates drop- ped in reeently. "That's a hell or an outlook," said hi1 instructor. "Coach .• .I'm bored ," Justin had ad- ded, with less humor. Boredom has been alleviated somewhat by hundreds of get-well notes, Christmas cards. letters and t~ almost-endless stream of visitors, a fact th e Ogata fam i- ly accepls with deep thanks. "It's really groovy," Justin sai d Tues- day. "some of the guys I've never eve n met before. , .everybody wants me to get ·well ." Top physical condition prior to lht tragic _accident, however, couldn't pre- vent a minor case of laryngilis re1ultin1 from too much eonversalion. One nune confido that 10 Colt.a Mesa lligh School friends dropped in oo the special paUent with the special Christmas season needs: at one Ume, crowding into his room. "We don't break rules," she said solemnly, "but sometimes they get bent 1 little." Justin Ogata believes he will recover - and many other dedicated athletes have struggled back from disability on a torturous road the experts warned wa! just not there -but one thing is certain. "It's going to take lime," said Coach Swea.iy on Tuesday. force) with "very few Incidents reported. The South Vietnamese military ~om· mand aald It had suspended as many as eo offensive operaUona of battalion s1zt or lqer throuat>out the country. Spokesmen said the allies were keeping up kM:al patrols and recoMaissanct flights and WOtJld. fire first ii il appeared that enemy troops on the move were threatening them. A U.S. communique said American forces "will maintain an alert posture and will take necessary security precau· lions to protect friendly forces or in- stallaUons." Although air attacks on targets in Sooth Vietnam were suspended for 24 hours, sources said U.S. planes were con- tinuing their attacks on North Viet- name.st infiltration routes In Ea$lern LaOI. In the hours between the rtart or the enemy Ind allied cease-fires, a period in which the Billed commands said their forces corilinued operations as usua l, the U.S. Comll'!and reported one serious in· cident which it cons idered a Viet Cong violation of the enemfs own cease-fire. A claymore mine went off, apparently detonated electrically by remote control, killed four American soldiers, and wound· ed five American troops, two South Viet- namese soldiers and two Vietnamese civilians. The troops were sweeping a road 2tl miles northwest of Saigon and three miles from the headquarters or the U.S. 2.Sth Infa'ntry Division. Two women suspects.»·ere being questioned. DAILY lllLOT 51111 ,.llOIO Last Load of Christ11ias "It's a completely dirty film," he said. ••rt is without any redeeming &Ocial fea· turp whatever. Il's as bad as any naa: film." From P .. e 'l Money is another consideration and a group of family friends met Monday night to organize Justin Oga ta Booster Fund. Depasils will be made into the fund - estimated to require hundreds or thousands of dollars before Justin's ordeal Is over -at the Bank of Tokyo, 510 N. Main St., Santa Ana. Newport Beach Mail Carrier Fred Fuller, 25 , decided to spruce up the old mail cart this year and to top off his heavy Christmas cargo struck on the idea for a mini-Christmas tree anchored in a conven- ient pop bottle. To crown his carrier's hat Fuller decided on a nice sprig of mistletoe, but he's mum on whether the girls have noticed the green leaves. He was asked whelher he had seen It. "No. But J read the police reporL" No Postal Delivery Slated for Friday WASHINGTON (UPI) -There will be no regular postal delivery or service Fri- day. President Nixon gave all govemmenl emplayea the day alter Chriatmas off. Special delivery servi~ and mail col- lections wUI be rovided, however. tv DAILY PILOT ""' .... lhMk t4••riittt.• ·._.~ ....... .... h ••'-'• .... ,,.,. c ......... C:UlNiGE. COAST r u•L1$H!NG 'Ql,\llAN'( ••'"'' N. w ,.,..f ,,.,~ .,.,. l"llllolk"V J.,\ JI. Curl11., Viet ,ralf...i .,.. "9MAI Mtl'lftt" l~ol'l •I 1t'o1•il E'•i.t Tho"'•' )., M u•11hi~1 ""'"''"" 1Efl11r Offlc" C..1•• Mt11: ,. WHI ••r Sir ... Ml...,, Int,., tt!I WH I S•!i.o. l..,lt~t•f ut..,.. SM<ft ; ,n 1"t1-nr ..,_ >1111"1 .... IOft IMtft: 11'/J 11.Cll llJU..:w••f .. , • SMOG LAW OKAYED . • • consideraUon, made the vote unanimous. Phillips had objected to the banning of the chemical age nt lrlchloroethylene and argued - a contention supported during the h e a r J n g by representatives of manufacturers ol the agent -that there was insufficient evidenct to support ban- ning of the controversial chemical, said by its indicter$ to be a key component of smog. The board refu sed lo eliminate the chemical from the adopted Rule 66K but consented to a study of the role played by the chemical in smog emissions and promised to consider an amendment to the newly adopted ordinance if test& es· lablished that the agen t plays M part in smog production . Adopted by the board over the vigorous objections of William R. Gould, senior \'ice president of the Southern CAiifornia Edison Co. was the ~ddlUon of Rules 6Z, 63 and 67 to Orange County's air pollution control regulations and the amendment and sub!lanUal strengthenlng of Rules JJF and 66K. Rule 62 requires the burning of natural gas whenever il is available. At all other Limes, the new county ordinance wlll specify, low sulfur oU must be burned. cedures and have been clescribed by air pollution control officers as "sup- plementary rules designed for producers who might be looking for a way to skirt the major rules.'' Supervisors ignored lhe Edison Co. v.·arnlng that they "were ta king a. very grave risk" if they approved the Fitchen recommendations and "inviting a si tua- tion which could result in a black-OUt in Orange County and the failure of the company to provide vitall y needed power for a rapidly growing area." Gould told the board that his company "is determined to go nuclear but lime is not on our side when we relate our plans to the rapidly mounting demands being placed upon us by this fast growing coun-ty." Expansion at the Huntington Beach plant Is vital, Gould said. to "bridge the gap'' until the com pany CBn expand its nuclear power facUilies at San Onoh'e "and t have to tell you now that it will take. literally. what it took for us lo build that rilant -an act or C.Ongress." So far, the response is phenomenal, ac- cording to City Councilman William L. St. ClaJr, whose son was a teammate. "I've never seen the community get behind anything the way they've gotten behind Justin Ogata," SL Clair added. citing a number of benefit programs now in the planning stages. The muscular little wrestler worked as 1 deckhand at Davey 's Locker in Newport Beach, where owner Phil Tozier has planned a Jan. 15 fishing trip at $10 per person, donatin& his entire fleet of vessels. The date Is a school holiday and tickets are being sold primarily ta Costa Mesa High School faculty members, while all profit from the first Milne Bros. motorcycle rice promotion at the Orange County Fairfrounds next April is pledged to Justin's f~d. Those two events could bring $6,000 or more easily, St. Clair estimated. Mrs. Ogata stressed Tuesday that pro- per thanb must be extended to ~ churches and the people who offt:r help in a time or trouble, especially Dr. E. H. Thomassen, the boy's physician. Vietnat11, Middle East ludge Restrain s Police From Raids 011 'Calcutta' LOS ANGELES {UPI) -A restraining order barring Los Angeles police from ar· resting ca st members and other persons connected with the controversial sex satire "Oh! Calcutta!" was issued Tues- day by a federal court judge. U.S. District Judge Wil1iam P. Gray Issued the order halting the arrests until the constitutional questions involved have been decided. The ruling came aftC'r hearing arguments by attorneys for the poductlon and for lhe city and county . Gray ruled that in view of the arrests already made and the threat of further arrests, police should be restrained. He aaid a constitutioaal problem was in- volved because "Oh! Calcutta !" was a theatrical performance v.·hich could be entitled to protecllon under the (irst amendment to the Consti tution. The jurist did not rule on the quest!on of whether or not the production was obscene because the malter was not before him. He said this was a matter to be passed on first by state courts. He did set J an. 19 for a hearing to determine where the case stood in state court. Twice last week the cast members (l[ .the production and producer Louis Shaw were arrested on charges of indecent ex- posure. The arraignment of the defen· dants tvas set for Jan . 5 in Municip11I Court. Rule 63 will regulate the specifications of gasoline sold al'ld d!1tributed in Orange County. "Although Orange County has no refineries and all our gasoline is im· ported." Air Pollution Control Officer William Fitchen told the baa.rd, ;'this rul e could deter the dumplna or gasoline in the county. W Jrs Mar Season of Good Will Rule 67 wlll control the emission of ox. ides o£ nltrocen from non-vehicular sources in the COWlty, "It doe1 not outlaw power planta, 1' Fitchen as.sured the board, "but it doe1 limit tbe amount ot pollution that may be emitted from any tar1e fuel· buming oqulpment." The rule has betn parti c ularly challenged by the Eclbon Co. and 11' adoption would appe•r to encl the utility's hOf>"S of further construct.Ion at end ex- pan.sion or Its Huntington Beach power plant recent testimony by EdiSOn of. flclals has betn t.o the effect lhat Rult: 87. smog·productnc emlsslon1. wlll limit the facility ta Its pre.stnt range of electric: power output. Rules l JF and 86K spell out · ehtmlcitl agentl whleh c:an not be u.sfd In the manu!acturt of powtr aod related pro- , By The Auoeiated Preis ~Ulllon1 of pcr110T1s around the world made last-minute ireparations today to celebnte Chrillmas. Although the message or the birth of Jeius Chtiat is •·Peace on Earth," the wars the world hBd with it last year re- mained In Vietnam and Nlgula. The Mid· east 1ituation remained unsettled. Thrtt loud eiplosk>ns rattled windows lodoy in Bethlehem. the birthplace of Christ. One I~raeli orficial said thty could have been caused by supertonlc alrcratt. It la !ht hilltop cily's third Christ1nas under Israeli rule. ancl In the shade of the Church of the Nativity scores ol Jaraell M!Curity agenl$ mingled with t he Christmas pilgfims. One 1.1tim1ta 1ald more than 1.000 troops and police were on duty in tile tov.•n. In VleUlam, the allied commands and the Vtet. Cong obsmred cease-fire11. Fighlin1 had been al a low level for several weelts, and arter the lruct began Jt dropped olf even more. Radkl Hanoi b&gan broad c 1 1 t In a: recorded mesaag's from American prisoner• of war to their families, as It has done In past years. Soldiers in Vietnam and al other U.S. military lnstaUatJons In the Far Easl, Europe and the United States gave Chrislmas partle1 ror children at orph1n- age9 and hospitals. - Chtlllmu In the United States is quieter lhls year lban Wt. In 1161, th• Apolkt I astronauts were circling the moon, and the crew of the spy shl p Pueblo was coming home after 11 months of captivity. As usual. shoppers jammed the stores to mike those down-t<>-thc-wire purchases from !locks that have dwlndled steadily since Thanksgiving. Department store of- ficials said revenue was higher than last year, but many attributed the increase to higher prices brought on by Inflation rather lhnn addilJona.I volume, Hundreds of thousands flocked to airports, railroad staUona and b\1$ tf!nninals. heading home to siea rie latlvts and fam[\les or taking vacations. Among the ttavf!lers will be. President Ni100, his wife 1od daughler Tricia, who are going to San Clemente Frtday after spending Chri&tm~s at t.be While House. The Nixons' olher daughter. Julie Eisenhowtr, is in Brussels with her hus- band David, whose father is U.S. am- basaador thtre. Nixon wenl to Capitol Hill Tuesday ta lunch wlth congressional leader' 5hortl,V before they adjourned the firat session ti the 91 st Congre~ and headed home. Many ol t~m wit! find a while Chrl slmas. A 11nowstorm blanketed tht: ~lldwest and the U.S. Weather Burieou forecast snow for the Northeast. The bureau al.lo said there was snow In the Pacific Northwest, northern Ca!Uorni a and Inland l.o Utah aod the ftocklu. • I I I ,I ! I .1 I , Huntington Beaeh' E t11·!).01)1 Today's Flim•I .r y s.-:--•r-!'W•. ~ .. ' . , • ! • ' . V0L 62, NO. 307, 3 SECTIO NS, 28 PAG~ ORANqE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 24, 1969 • TEN CENTS •• ·- DAILY PILOT 11.tf ,,_.. Best in Huntington This scene. outside the home of D. F. Wadsworth. 16101 Melody Lane, won the sweepstakes prize in Huntington Beach's Christmas decoration contest. A complete list of winners will be published Mon- day. 10 Orange Coast Residents An1011g Jury Candidates Ten Orange Coast resident s are among the list of 30 ~rson~ from whom the Orange County c'rand. Jury of 19iO will be selected on Jan. 5. · · 1nt1u&ed' ·;n the li.~t compiled· by Superior Court Judge James F .. Judge - the' crimirial ·tourt presiding jtidge for lYIO and ·me court '.!! liaison with the grand jury-are two residents from Hun- tingtOn Beach, one from Westminster, fo1:1r from Corona del Mar, one from Balboa, one from Newport Beach and one one from Capist~ano Beach. Their names will be among 30 to go into a. drum at the annual selection of the grand jury. The first 19 names to be drawn by Judge ·Judge·s clerk will com· prise lhe new panel. A~ong the notTiinees ror ~he 1970 Jury are : A. C. Achey "of fil5 8th St. and Charles ~tashbum of 503 13th SL both of Hun· linglon ·Beach; Raymond f\-1. Schmitt, 8121 E. 19th St.. West minster; Pi.frs. Audrey .Cotton, 1509 E. Bay, Balboa and Pi.trs. Harriet Ben1us, 2631 Waverly Drive, Newporl Beach. Also, Mrs. lrmeli Desenberg , · 2231 Bayside Drive, ~1iss Marian Louise Parks, 2.33 Morning Canyon Road . Dr. Ralph Gerard. 1007 Goldenrod and l\trs. Alice Remer, 210 Goldenrod all of Corona de\ Mar and David Clark, 35685 Beach Road, Capistrano Beach. All those named were nominated for service on the Orange County Grand Jury by the 21 Supe riar Court judges. Judge Judge today scheduled the nam· ing of the panel for 2 p.m. on Jan. $ in Department 5 of Superior Court. O,range Coast Weather Someone forgot to wish the \\'eatherman a merry Christmas, and he's retalialing in kind-with low clouds. fag and a light drizzle to dampe:n the yuletide spiril."i, while tem'peratures remaiil tn thi!: mid so·s. , INSIDE TODAY Financiat columnist Sylvia Porter (/ilie1 JO .rules /OT invest· ors to follow '" buying arc t.oorks .it,i hn column on . Pagt IZ today. l"""·-··----1 °"~ 1 Doy •. CHRIST~~ r . I i•llfWDllWW.•---s C11iltrfll1 ""-.. Cltl111fleill ,_., c ........ Dt1ftl Httic.. ...... 1.i ,._ lfttwfll-' ,..._., -· Alll L_.... MlllWx Mlo"1•• 1 MvhNll ""'"'' 1 HfllMll ic.WJ ,,.,. °''Hf °""' II S'l'IYl9 ,..,,.. ' ·-I llKl ~th ' T11MhlM 11 TIIHt.n ll·U , WfftW .. 'It ,Wiiii. Wltll ' w_.. """ 6 w.rtt Nrwl ·" " •• ' " 1 .. 11 11•11 .. " • " ,.,. •• • Season of Peace on Earth Marred by World's Wars By The Associated Pre11 ~1illions of persons around the world made last-minute preparations toda y to cele\>rate Christmas. Although the JJ'lll58ge of the birlh .or Jesus Chri!t is "Pea,ce on Earth," lhe wars the wOrld ·had with it lalt year re. mained in Vietnam and Nigeria. The.Mid- east' situation remained unsetUed. Three loud expioskla1 rattled window11 today in Bethlehem, the birthplace of Christ. One Israeli official said they could have been caused by .!uper900i~ aircraft. lt is the hilltop city's third Christmas under Israeli rule, and in the shade of the Church of the Nativity scores of Israeli security ager$ mJngled with . t he Christ.mas pJlgrims. One mimate sakl more than 1,000 troops and police were on duty in the town. ' In Vietnam, the allied commands and the Viet Cong o~rved cease-fires. Fighting had' ~ ~t . 1 low level for. several weeks, and after the truce began it ,dropped off even more . Radk> Hanoi began broadcast i n.g recorded messages from American prisoners of war to their families, as it has' done in past years. Soldiers in Vietnam and at other C .S. Trustees Delay 'Body Awareness' Probe at Edison An investigation into "body awtreness" expertments at Edison High School was temporarily delayed Tuesday through the absence of Trustee Matthew Weyuker from a meeting.of the Huntington Beach Union High School Di.strict governing board. The probe was to be asked for by \Veyuker in connection with a complaint by Huntington Beach resident Joe Ferm. who charged two weeks ago that sensiUvity training sessions had no business in an English literature class. During the meeting, however. trustees ~·ere told that the completion date of Ed- ison High School had been extended unt il April 4 .. 1970, Th~ school, although occupied, was not finished in time for the September school opening, due to bad weather and con· struction industry strikes. Contractor Jack · Shirley Bi'SUred t~e trustees that everything wu being · done to finiSh all construction work earlier. He · -predicted that the school w~d be com- pleted by Jan. 15, mo. . , : - INMATES GETTING -. BIG YULE DINNltR.. They may bt in jail. but the lnma1n of OraJ!ie COuslty JaH trill have a Christ· mas dinner that's .,everytbin1 ind more that a homKWked holiday dinner woukt be." Authorities at the Jail &aid lhe holiday dinner will corulst of turkey and 1turr. Ing, two ttnds of vegetablea, cranberry aauct, mashed potatoes and pumpkin pie. "I ate out here over Thanksgiving." the spckesman said "ud tt w11 qulle good. Al a matter of fact, it was a bigger dinner than I would have aotten at home.'' military installation~ in the Far East, Europe and the United Stale.! gave 'Christmas parties for children at orphan.. ages and hospitals. · ' ChriStmas in the United Slates is ctuitter this year. than Jast. In 1111~ the A~lo I astronauts wS-e ·circling the mOQn, and the crew of the spy ship Pueblo was t'Oming home after It months of captivity, As usual, shoppers jammed the st!>res to make those down-UHhe-wire purchases from stoCks I.bat have dwindled. steadily since Thanksgiving. Department store of· fkials said revenue was ,higher than last year, but mJ!;ny attributed the increase to higher prices 'brought on by inOation rather than additional volume. Hundreds or thousands flocked to airporl."i, ·railroad stations and bus termlnllls. heading home 'to See relatives and families or takiRg vacations. Among the travelers will be .Presi~ent Nixon, his wife. and-daughter 1'ri<:ia, .who a~e .going to San Clemente Friday after spending Christmas at the White House. The Nixons' other daughter, Julie Eise nhower. is in Brussels with her hus· band David, whose father is U.S. am· bassador there. Nixon 'went to Capitol Hill Tuesday to lunch with congressional leaders shortly before they adjourned the first session of lhe 911t Congress and headed home. )..fany of them will find a white Christmas. A snowstorm blanketed the ~tjdw~ and the U.S. Weather Bureau rorecast snow for the Northeast. The bUreau also said Ulere was snow in the Pacific Northwest. northern California and inland to Utah and the Rockies. F orge,ry Suspects Sought by Police LOS ANGELES {UPI ) -Seven persons, including four me.1 and three women , were booked Tuesday on s:uspi· cion of forgery by police V(ho sooght 50 more su~ts in a>-Credit card ring. Sherifris deputies said the countywide ring allegedly manufactured phony drivers' licenses to aid In passing bad checks afl(I used stolen credit cants to bilk store1 out o{ ne"arly $500,000 in cash and merchandise: The raids on Owe· dlfferent homes cli,maxed. ~ f~r·month lr!v_estigaUoq ~y deputies who said.the operation had been in ·action tpr severaLmontm, · l>eputlet confiscated (!ti klrged licenses durinl: t.be ·rakls .. PliJa-cameras,. Ughttnc. equtpmenl,-blank lorms ·~ printuig equipment, : -. . The· ~ ,suspocll allegedly helped pau the cards al vtrious rnat.kels, gas 1taUons Ind department Mes. . , . To Erect Monwnent I.ONE PINE !UPI) -Japa,_ who were interned at the Manunar Clmp near here during Wor'kt War II wlil r~um this· weekend to erect· a ml!!Jl'Mrl1l to U-who died durtna .their stay at \ht! camp. Two bu!Jfs fiom 'SOUU'lern C.lif<rnl1 were upected to arrive &turda7 ind deparL the following day. • . ' Douglas Gets Fl5 Beats N. Anierican in Bomber Bi.th Fnlm Wirt Servtcts Surprise ulectton of M 'c: Do n n e J t Oouglaa Corporation to create the Ft5 jet bomber, an $8 billion investment in the next decade, was announced by the Ait Force Tuesday in Washington. The pre.C h r is l m a s announcement comes as a crl!shlng blow to North Amer· ican Rockwell Corporation, which had retied heavily on landing the huge con· tracl in ~ts future operations planning. No great impact was immediately foreseen on either firm 's Orange County· based subsidiaries in Huntington Beach and Anaheim, but the North American work force in Los Angeles County will be hit hard, Officials at North American Rockwell 's Autonetics plant in Anaheim could not be reached for comment on impact of the contract loss on their giant new facility at Laguna Niguel,~ largest electronics pb1nt In the. worrld. Aulonelics employes were off for the holidays, with only a token crew on duty .and executives who might be able to ex- plain it further were out doin1 last. minute Christmas shopping. Larry Vitsky . public relations direcctor for the McDonnell Douglas Astronautics Corporation western division in Hun. lington Beach, however, confirmed that the FlS job won't affect the west county fa cility. "We won't be involved in any pro- duction of the airplane, but anything that contributes to the h!?slth of McDonnell Douglas is welcome." said Vltsky . He estimated 2S percent of the prcr duction will be done in California. The contract to build the smgle-seat, twi~ngine supersonic jet v.'as the fir st such past Jet during the Nixon . ad· ministration, and will eventually be one of the biggest io Pentagqn history. TM selection.of 1,tc.Donn~ll was~ boOp far ~t .. Louis· Where. the firm employs abOut 33LIXX)· 'f/Orkera and where nlost of the work will. be \lone. . Fairchild Hiller -which ••as' ~ 1n the bidding, faces 1 big Joss. 1'11 lnltial contract, released Tuesday, Is for JO aircraft for development and tesllng purpos~s at a ~get price of '1.146 billion. The first funds to be .co~ Public Invited To See Nixons Arrive at Toro. milted amount to Slk):24 million. 11te pro- ject. 'is P\811Jled .for S20 Planes over five years-at a CGSt of '6 bi Won, and the long range projection could bring it to 700 planes at a cost of $11 billion. In St. Louis. James S. McDonnell. chairman ·or· the winning company; said the .contract would not r~ult jn an i.n· , ._ , . cttase in employment at the firm's m1in plant. But he' said the firm would have had to lay off 10,000 workers if tt bad not won the contract. The firm will do an but 25 percent of the work in St. Louis with the ~ance going out on subcontracts to Cali(ornia plants and smaller amounts in (See CONTRACT, Pap !) ·r -< • ,.,1 ,j ' ' j; The ·publlc,!s invited to see President Nixon tOuch down in Air Force One at El Toro' Marine Corps Air Station on Friday for the start ol about a I0-4!ay stay at the ,,. ~,~:. D~ll"f•l'~O'!° ~·.,,,_~ PROFILE IN COURAGE : A WRESTLER WHO REFUSES 'OEFl!AT . . · \Vestem \Vhite House. The President's arrival is scheduled for 3:30 p.m. with the gate to be opened to the public at 2:30 p.m. Justin ·0g1ta and Mother, Strengthened by Chri1tm1.s Hope'" · The President will spend the post· Christmas holiday with his wife and daughter Tricia at their estate in San Clemente. Television viewing of the Rose Bowl game and preparation of the State of the Union message and 1971 federal budget are on the agenda. Not Beaten Greeting the President on his arrival at El Toro will be 25 members of the San Clemente Dons and a mariachi band. Paral,yzed Wrestler Has Hope To get to the Marine Air Station take either the Sand Canyon or Culver Drive turnoffs from the Santa·Ana Freeway. Tonight a Christmas eve peace vigil is scheduled at the ·San Clerilente Western White House as a war moratorium ac· tivity for December, Persons laking part ~·ill march In 11ilence by candlelight from 9 p.m. un~il midnight, following an II-block circular roule around the Cyprus Shore neighbor· hood. Yule Carolers Sing on Horses By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of -'~· 0.11¥ "1!-f lltll Medical sciel\Ce cannat gr:ant Justin Ogata's Christmas wish this year and he refuses to believe tbat perhaps it ne Ver will, Because he is a wres tler. And a wrestler may Jose-a match, but he is never ~aten. JusUn sat up Tuesday (or the first lime In 19 days. Propped in a wheelchair, the ts.year· o!8 Costa Mesa High School junior smiled and talked of his last bout, the one he won't accept as the last in a short career, Paralyzed, he can do little more than that: smile and talk . The second son of Mr. and Mr$. Hitoml Ogata, of 3128 RoanOke Lane, Costa Mesa, is ·virtually immobile from the Downtown Huntington Bearb residents neck down, although he can move his up. found their eyes more surprtsed ~an per left arm slightly. their w1 by a young group of Christmas Chances for dramatic ·Jmprovemerit carolen TueSday night. seem poor. Twenty YOWll girls and two chaperones •tHe's· been told,''· said (:oach John treated lhe-.itown fold to two hours ol Sweazy. ooncf<o! -from°" top ol li>eir hones. The toogh, spirited, 130 pound divi~on The group was composed ol. young contender hit the mats durinl an elimina· eighth grade girls who stable their honu lion bout Dec. s to decide who would face at the Hundniton Beach Horse Ranch San Clemente High School the following and eKh Christmas come ~t on horsebtick to seranade the town. w~:·ju!t lay there, \lie.Um of a fluke, a 'lbls year'• venture was the most JUC• o*ln·J-miilion ttaiedy. ctllful, ,according to L)'lln Battlmore, "I didn't wrestle," he said Tuesday in one ol:'lbe chaperones. Room ·113 al Coa:ta Mesa Memorial . llOlpital. SCeck M•rk~U "It was an unlucky at!cidenl. But we won asaif1$l Sin Clemente." ..NEW YORK (AP) -Most st.ockt cm-, A 1te•dY stream of 1ehoolmat.e1, has Un~ed their climb in fairly actJve ttad· . vl&lted the 1tu~y Japa!H>orn wrestler in& todiy, .. , •<t"tances widened their since }11s cond1Uon 1tablllzed and X·rays tead over dec:llnts by ~ l plus neurolog\c1J tip.dies 1 ~1an ta ln· quotaU0111, Pagu 12.11) \ l dicate the extent or 1pli>al damago. it Coach· Sweazy marveb at him. "I'll-be· down to 123 by the end of ttie se~son," he -said, in reference to weight class, when Sweazy and teammates drop- ped in recently. ' "That's a hell of an outlook," said 1bls Instructor. "Coach .•. l'm bored," Justin had ad· deri, with less humor. Boredom has been alleviated somewhat by hundreds of get-well notes , Chrislma" cards. lelters and the almosl-·endless stream of visilors, a fact the Ogata Jami· ly accepts with deep thanks. "It's really groovy,'" Justin said Tue!- day. "some of the guys I've never even met before .•• everybody wants 111.e to get \\•ell." ' . Top physical condlUon prior to the tragic' accident, hoWeVer, couldn't pre. VE9l a minor case of laryngiU. re~ultlni . from too riiucb conversation. · One 'nurse confides thet·lO Costa MR High School friends' dropped in on the special paUent with the special Chrlstmai sea.son needs at one time, crowdini into his room.. ..... "We don't break rules,'' she 11id (S<e WllESTLEll, Pop S) YULE EDITION .OUT BY NO ON The Chri•tmas Edition ol 11>1 DAJLY PILOT will bt pubillhed and• dellvtrod early Thursday (before noon In most area!!) and all DAILY Pll.01' off~ will bt clo!ed fo< Ille holiday. ~ Friday will be 1 norm11 work day al \he DAILY PILOT and all offlcei will bt open for bushtee1 as usual. I •' ' ' _, • II Beach Wants Own, Not State Coast Co,itrols· ' HunUnaton Beach has la.ktn 1 1troni otaad Usat 1oa1 c•vernh>i aatncJea should bt raponJlble for cukllnt COl.W developmenl . At a hearing of the Assembly Com· mitt« on Natural Resources and ConMCVaUon he1d in Los Angeles last wet.k, city Director of Beaches and ltarbors Vincent Moorhouse opposed the crution of a state super agency lo con· trol ahoreUne development. Jn this move, Huntington Beach joined WINS SUPERIOR COURT POST J ...... J. E. T. 'Ned'' Rutter From Page 1 CONTRACT. •• many other !tales. North American Rockwell had warned that its 80,000 employment level would drop to 40,000 by 1976 unless it landed the contract. The firm has been a major con- tractor in the Apollo space program whid! is nearing an end. Fairchild-Hiller, of Germantown, Md .. was the smallest ol the three companies left in the bidding, lt esUmated that it would have farmed out more of the work -u much as 60 perCEllt -than the other two firms, and had argued that mere widespread economic -benefits would have resulted. 1be plane will replace the F4E Phan- tom which is now nearly 12 years old. It will carry both short and long-range air· to-air miasUes, plu& a powered fa.st·flrlng \•en.ion ol the old Civil War gatling gun for 111e in air combat against ground ,.,,.i.. 1be Air Force has said the Russians have twice u many fighter planes as the United States and are developing a new fighter called "Foxback" that would be 1uperic.-·io anything pouessed by either &I.le. The F15 is designed to counter that threat and guarantee continued U.S. air 1uperiority. The ~ Soviet MIG2! ls reported ~ual in many respects with the F4E Phllltom. Tbe cantndor for the plane's engine will be decided on nezt March in a com- petition between Geoeral Electric Co. and Prall u4 wbltney. Family of Seven Dies in Blaze PARSONS, Kan. (AP) -A family cf seven persons died early today when dense smoke from a kitchen fire crept through their two-atory home. They were Jack Moler. 45 years old, his vdfe, Rosemary, 40, ruchard.17. Ann. 15, James, 11, Jane 4, and David, 3. A spokmnan at a hospital where the bodies were taken said the deaths a~ parenUy were due to suffocation. A cor· cmer's report is still pending. DAILY PILOT Ol.AltGI: (Q.t.ST l"VIL1$MING COM,Alff ll:oh1•+ N. w ,,d ,,. ...... , .... '""!!1!'4." J ock ~. Curl1f Voci l"rM1Hn1 ln4 C.-r•I M"'1;1r l~ ...... "''"" f.•(JOr Tl.,,,.,, A. M ~,,i.:~1 lo\llllClirolt ,.1 ... >.!b1rl W . 11111 .11.utci.11 £•"w H•lltl•• .._. Offlc• 17f7S l11lt. levl1•1•d ,..;n,,, Md••••: P.O. a.1 7,0, •24141 -..o-l..,... tMtllt m ,_, "- c .... .111 .. , Jlt """..,'"""' .....,,a.ui, ZJll ~ .............. ·- 1)1.llV ~ILOl, .;lilt -!di Ill ~'fie H_,,,,_,. 1, Pll~:llf>UI 111"'1 .,-e._,,. """· .. , In -r111 lftl"'°'• 10r L ....... ltlU\o Ht....eiort t11cto, C:oo11 McJI, H11"1"":1it tMtll •Ml F-i.'" V••lly, 1:1'11 •!IP! tw~ ,.,ir.o.I! t lfllll.-.. 0<11'1ff (·Mt! l'""!ltl\l"t C-tftt •Ir>.!"" IN1nto. ... 11 111 I w,u ••""• I i..,. Ntw,._1 11:<11. "" )» Wta.I lfr S!<H !. C.llJll M .. I. T ......... (1141 '41-4)11 f.-w .. r.l .. f'ef C.tl S40·lllf c~ A.4"'"""' •4:t·••11 ~-r. ""'· c>t,,.1 ~on! l'lltl!IP""' c-y. • ,..... ,.., ... , n11n1"'''"""'- d1ttri.t _" .............. "'_" .... ... """' .... "9rdll<.. wltNout '"''-1 .... . .,.,.,_ .. _._... -· ~ c:.._ _,.,.Hill ti ti..._, ._.. .... C.lll ~ C.ltlllnlt. "-<rlfl!llfl ., <MW UM _..,,, ., -SU. ~ ""lltwr ....... IMI. tt.• _1,. with Newport Beacl>< San Clemente 10d Seal Beach. Propooonts cf the auper alency ••· villoo a --OD projects alone the -aad ... ball to ... m1le 1nWld ~·hlch mlght bt ~nsidered irreversible. ~1oorhouae took the position that through the coast.al cilies and county govenunent the safeguards to en- ,·ironment and eeology along the coast already exist and that what is needed urgenUy is not st.ate interference but financW ualltan~ la buyin1 as much or of beach owned by the Huntington Beach the eout1lne u -1hle for the )lllb!lc. Co. oome three miles Iona and varying In . Tho .~ cfllclll OU1U11e11 the eilht aad· width !tom 100 feet to jOIJ feel. on..UU.mllel al beachiroat la the city > The comptny h"' built an apartment -Bo1aa Chica Stile Beach la two and • development on this beach. but the ,city one-hair miles of relatively undeveloped has retained adequate public access to public beach on the. ocean side of Pacific the beach seaward of the project. Coast Hi&hway( Full development of the -The city-owned beach from the beach with adequate parking and safe ac· municipal pier to Beach Boulevard has cess will hopefully be a joint state.city been developed at a cost of $3 million in a project over the next five to seven years. parking facility and lan~aping. Private --Southeast from Bolsa Chica ts a strip firms were stimulated to invest some $500,000 for new beach conctssion bull4inl•· Tbe clly plan for llhoft1toe develi>pmont includes a pol.fey of preservation Q( ecological balance, preservaUon or open i,pace and scenic vistas and providing the amenities for full enjoymeilt o( the resources as Hrst priorities, accordinc to litoorhouse. Future plans include the joint city-state development of Bolsa Chica State Beach, Ct1nstruction of a surfing park in an area now heavily used for surfina including the developmlllt of artitkiaJ reef1 to improve ourilllc llld flahlios.. Also contlnuaUon of negotiations to ac- quire oceanfront now privately owned and insistence that any private beach de\'elopment be in line \\'ith the city's shoreline policy, and continuation of ef- forts to improve fishing facilities at the pier and broadening of a 60-year·old policy to obtain public access on a perpetual basis to all privately awned beach. Succe eds Gardner Routine Road Stop Brings Drug Arrests Judge Rutter Gets Post On OC Superior Court .... Muniolpal c-Ourt Judge J. E. T. "Ned" Rutter of Newport Beach today was ap. pointed by Gov. Ronald Reagan to sue· ceed Justice Robert Gardner to the Orange County Superior Court. Judge Rutter, 38, will move from his Harbor Judicial District Court to the higher' bench after the holidays. He v.•ill take over the court vacancy created by the elevation last week Of Justice Gardner to the Fourth District C.ourt of Appeals in San Bernardino. Judfe Rutter cot the news of his unique auutmu gift in a telephone call from the governor'• press secretary. "The govf!l'IQ' was on his way down here for Christmas vacation but he very typically figured that l might like to hear of the appointment now rather than wait for him to call," Judge Rutter sakl. "I will take over my Superior Court duties with a very deep sense of du.!y to the governor and an appropriate degree of terror," Judge Rutter commented. "It •dll be my aim to gi ve the people cf California and the-governor my every ef· fcrt and their full money'J worth in this challenging appointment. "I plan to be a fairly quiet judge for some time until 1 have had the chance to aSX&5 my new duties and work my way into the court," Judge Rutter added. "But I hope that I will soon be able to make a substantial contribuUon to the administration of justice. M. a new boy I have, of course, a gre.at deal to learn." Married with four children Judge Rut· ter makes his home at 121 Via Havre, Lido Isle. He was appointed to the Harbor District bench by Gov. Reagan on Nov. It, 19&11. An active Republican. Judge Rutter came to the municipal bench from private practict in Loa Angeles and Costa Robert Buchanan Services Slated Funeral services ffX' Robert Buchanan, '4~. of 21771 Impala Lant, Huntington Beach, will be held at 11 a.m., Friday in Smith's Chapel He died Tuesday at Hoag Mem«ial Hoopital. Mr. auchanan had been a private con- tractcr and head of Buchanan Develop. ment Co. for 20 years in Huntington Beach. Survivors include his wife. Mrs. June Buchanan ; four sons. Bob and Bill Buchanan and Robert and Phlllip Byrnes. 11.ll of the home : a daughter. Mrs. Susan Hughes of Laguna Beach: his parents, ~tr. and ?itrs. James Brinkley of Cres- cen t City, ri.lesa. A 1955 graduatt of USC law school, he is a mem ber of the Costa Me!a Rotary Club. One of Judge Rutter's final actions as a municipal court judge was to participale in a raid Tuesday night on the Balboa theater where p:>lice and districl a~· torney's officers joined him in con· !iscating reels of the controversial Swedish film ;,I Am Curious (Yellow)". Judge Ru tt.er and offi cers moved in on the earthy European movie after wal· citing the early evening showing. Judge Allows Draft Objections To Specific Wars SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -A Federal judge today ruled unconstitutional a sec- tion of the Selective Service Act \\'hich prohibits draft resi sters from declaring themselves conscienlious objectors to the Vietnam war without opposing all V.'ars. U.S. Dist. Judge Stanley A. Weigel ac- quitted Leslie Charles Bowen, 24, who refused induction at the Oakland Induc- tion Center June 23, 1968. Bowen's refusal was based on his understanding of the Roman Catholic religion, which he interpreted as dif- ferentiating between just and unjust wars. Bowen said he had decided for himself that the Vietnam war was unjust. '"There is no question of his religious motivation," Judge Weigel's nine-page opinion said. The objectionable section (6.J of the ?itilitary Selective Service Act of 1967 ) pro\•ides exemption from "combatant training and service in the armed force s'' shall be granted to any person "who by reason of relig ious training and belief i.• consCientiously opposed lo participation in v;ar in any form ." \Vei gel 's decision said this amounts to a "serious and unjustifiable discrimina· tion " in violation of the due procw por· tion of the fifth amendment. \Vei gel said that the section in question generally exempts members of tradi- tionally pacifist religions a wch a~ Quakers and Jehovah's Witnesses and does not exempt others, i;uch as Roman Catholics. "In denying conscientious objector .status to Bowen, based upon his religious opposition to the Vietnam war but permitting it to one whose religious op· posiUon is to all wars, the effect of sec- tion 6J is to breach the neutrality btty,·een state and religicm required b.v lhe mandate of the first amendment," \\'eigel said. Gun Crews Relax But Fi nd Little Joy in Yule THAI CAM, Vietnam (UPil -The big guns bellowed for the final time and \\'hite sn1oke curled into the mist from tne muzzles. Some~·here out by Charlie Ridge. amid the bomb-ravaged jungle now obscured by foi; and rain, !he 42·pcund rounds ex· ploded in rolling, rumbling echoes. Then silence. It \vas 6 p.m. \Ved.nesday and Christmas Eve had come to Hill~- r-.tarine Sgt. Brian O'Connell and hl~ fix.man gun crew stripped off their flak jackets. They set them in a neat stack on the knee-high sandbagged parapet sur- rounding their I OS mm howitier. ;'This is the third Christmas over here for me." said O'Connell, 29. of Mont.real. Que ., "SO il doesn't get to me much. But some of my younger people, well, they're kind of down and homesick today. "Sure, there's a cease-fire. That means nothing. Last year our truce lasted three hours -from 6 to s at night. We had to Contract Awarded To ·La ndscapers Landscape spe ci alists James and Peterson of Anaheim ""ert named Tue.¥ day as de sign consultants for the 336:acre University Regional Park. Beaten oot in the lxlard of supervisors' consideraUon of four contenders for the planning of tht ntw S3 rnll lion park were Lang and Wood of South Laguna. The design phue of the park Is ex· pected to conaume $814,000 of the funds alloltod to the project. 1t Is trpected that work wtn begin ear\y In mo. ' I fire unlit dawn to bail oot Kilo company. The Christmas befGre that, 1 wa.s in Khe Sanh." O'Connell sloshed through the mud to check on lhe beer supply. Because il was Cllrislmas Eve, there would be an extrtl ration for each man. Three cans instead of two. Behind the 2.S·lon howilzer, Pfc. Ji1n ~reade. 19. stacked canisters near a y,·aJI nt dirt·filled ammunition cases. He would have 100 high explosive round s on hand just in case the cease.fire docsn 't \\'Ork out. It y,·as ?ifeade·s first Christnlas a\1'ay rrom home. "Weird, really weird ," was how he felt. His parents and sister live in Philadelphia. Not even !he 1\\'0 rruit cakes from home could bridge that gap. "from ·what the family \\'rites, though, 1 guess it's harder on lhem thao me,·• f\1eade said. "I just got a card from my sister yesterday. You really appreehlle being remembered over here this time of year.'' Throughout the night, the men would stand thrte·hour v;atcMs. tf nothing ha~ pened. Sgt. Pablo Acosta, 22. of Odessa. Tex .. "'ould have "a couple of extra beers ;ind get to the midnight mass on Lhe hill." The ra.in fell harder. A chilling do\.\·npour that splatleted aga in.st the ply\\·ood bungalows on Hi\1 55 outside the 11orthcrn city of Da Nang. ln a while. Charlie Battery's men 1\'0uld each curl up In four blankets and one poncho line r in the mud of their un· to\·ere d gunpit. They had been up for 24 hours afte r firing 1111 night Tuesday. E\·en so, a full night's sleep would be an unac· c:ustomed luxury. But why nott lt wa.s. after .1111 Cbristmu Eve. • ' A routine traffic stop due to a fauJty brake light Tuesday led to the discovery of 30 ounces of heroin hidden under the hood of a car, Hunlington Beach police alleged tpday. Three men were arrested at the scene, on Warner Avenue near Pacific: Coast Highway in the Sunset Beach area, and about $750 worth of the drug powder, plus a quantity of pills seized as evidence. Booked on charges of possession of dangerous drugs and possession of dangerous drugs for safe were James A. Holliday. 25, of Artesia, as well as brothers Ronald L. Kilcolins, 27, and Gary D. Kilcolins, 23, both of Cypress. Investigating officers said the haul was not the largest heroin seizure in California history -Chinese sailors were ca ptured in Long Beach with $6 million "'orth two years ago -but it was a big one. Police said the car carrying the three suspects was stopped at I : IS p.m. by Of· ficers Larry ?i1ay and Sgt. Jack Smith, who questioned the occupants. The driver of the car \\'as on probation for a prior offense and had consequently lost his constitutional rights against search and seizure "·ithout a warrant. The hunt throughout the vehicle led t«' discovery of alleged heroin contained in 10 balloons and stashed next to the bat- tery, while some barbij:urate and am· phetamine pills were also confiscated. New Old Glory Flying F rom Page 1 J\1onica Es pinoza, 13, (center) wrote a 1etter to State Assemblyman Rober~ Burke (R:Huntington Beach) (right) telling him about the old. dirty flag flying over the St. Francis of Assisi School in Hunt· ington Beach. Burke and his assistant, Matthe\v \Veyuker (left) re- cently responded to the letter by giving the school ~ new California and a ne\v United States flag. WRESTLER. •• solemnly, "but sometimes they get bent a 1ittle." Justin Ogata believes he will recover - and many other dedicated athletes have .struggled ba ck from disability on a torturous road the experts warned was just not there -but one thing is certain. , Newport Cops Curious? "It's going to take l ime," said Coach Swe·azy on Tuesday. Money is another consideration and a group of family friends met Monday ni ght to organize the Justin Ogata Boost· er Fund. Swedish Sex Film Seized Deposits will be ma"de into the fund - estimated to require hundreds or thousands of dollars before J ustin's ordeal is over -at the Bank of Tokyo, 510 N. Main St., Santa Ana . By JOHN VAL TERZA Of tfll 0.11)' 1"1111 Sllff The y were more than curious and mort than yellow, too. So a municipal judge, a Newport vice detective and .two District Attorney's in· ,·estigators turned yellow lo black Tues· day night and seized a copy of the Swedish sex film after its fi nal sho1ving at the Balboa Theater. And today. a print of '·I Am Curiou! (Yrllow)'' sits idle on a police depart· men! office floor. Its next showing y,·ill be de layed ind efinit ely. The judge. J. E. T. "Ned" Rutter II!, Detective John Simon and the ty,'o DA '5 1nen sat patiently through the graphic Scandinavian sex saga , then at 9: JS p.m. moved into the theater projection room and took the print. Today. Newport Beach police were seeking misdemeanor complaints aga inst 1he owne r of the theater, \Villiam Alford of 1234 La 1'.1 irad a. Laguna Beach, and 1he manager, Mrs. Elea nor Blackburn of 51'4 E. Ocean Front. Balboa. Si nlon said the charges sought would be for alleged exhibition of obsce ne matter. Chief ,James Gla,·as said one con· 1rib11ti ng factor lo lhe seizure or the film containing yards of footage depicling sex <'C'1S 11·as several complaints froin 1·itizens \1·ho had seen the film and didn't likC' its con1ent. "\Ve aren't trying to act as censors or 1hc conscience of the community in this l·ase." Gla vas said , "but \\'C truly belie ve lhat we re entitled to do it under the lines <lrawn by the U.S. and California supreme courts." -1fe cited one lcltC'r and several phone calls from persons who saw the film and \.\'ho complained bitterly that it was obscene. A local doctor wrote a letter damning the sex epic. "It's obvious that the exhibitors or the!e types of films are notoriously careless about their control or underage ptl'!ons entering the theater. Without much effort we found one unescorted 17· ~·e:a r·old girl in thl' theatrr lasl night ,'' Glnt·as added . GJ3vas charged that fi hn makers and c:chibitors "are aly,·ays try ing to produce su1net hing \\hich 1111 11 pus h and test the lines set by thl' courts and this is a go;od example of it.,. Cla,•as said he hadn 't seen lht. film. ;,but I read the complete report detailing the scenes 'nd I'm convinced WI' did the right tt\Jng.'' He said he ho ped the line bttwetn clean 11nd dirty films would soon be more clearly defined by the courts. The film, sources said, will face some tough sledding elsewhere in the county, 100. So far, the response is phenomenal, ae· cording to City Councilman William L. St. Clair, whose son was a teammate. Pilot LogJJOok Judge, Lawmen Curious; 'Yellow' Showmen Blue By THOMAS KEEv1L OI ti.. DlllY 1"1111 Sti ff l DIDN'T THINK I'd ever get to see "I Am Curious (Yellow)." T almost didn't and wish I hadn 't. In the first place, the short subject that preceded It at the Balboa Theater Tuesday night was intermina ble and even more curious than the movie. lt really was a co1nmercia l for Colonel Sanders' fr ied chicken . \ --IT SHO\\'ED the dazzling-white form of the goateed drumstick king patt~ng one horse. feeding another horse, mugging \vith another horse, talking with another horse, betting on another horse, congratulating another horse and just standing there \\'ilh a lot more horses. The second reason I almost didn 't see "I Am Curious (Yellow)" was that. unknown to me. my comp.anion movie critics included Judge J. E. '1'. "Ned" Rutter. several deputy district attorneys and some badge-toting represent- atives of the Newport Beach Police Depar.tment. THEY FOUND the film appealing to prurient Inter· ests and confiscated it. 1 don't know if they took the Colonel Sanders film. There was a third reason t almost didn't see "I Am Curious (Yellow).'* J could not stay awake. This chubby Cirl did run around a lot with no clothes on. So did her boy friend. A couple of times they displayed more than casual means of erpresslog affection and their celebrated athletic prowess (In a tree, on a balcony and in a pond) was an intriguing manifestation of cinematic imagination. WIUCH MEANS I stayed awake during that part. But the rest of the film was a drag. I fell to finding typographi cal errors ln the English ltlbtitles, then began rewriting the plot as it unfolded. only in my version I worked in a role for Colonel Sanders . That \'Crs.ion \\'OU!d really ha\'I' sent Judge J, E. T. ''Ned " Ruller on his ear, But even this mental exercise failed to sustain my interest and by the film's end I had nodded Into a semi·sleep. I haven't the vaguest notion of what happened to the chubby girl and her boyfriend, except that their forms are no longer be.ing displayed in Nc~·port Beach. Califomia. OH, I ~flSSED all the action. Judge Rutter et al were box.int: up the Olm while I was making a furtive exit. hoping no one would see me pursuing my pn1rlen1 lnttrtsts. Most unhappy man In lown Is ?ifax Dillman at the restaurant lao&S the street. "Man. did \\'t ha\'t a blast or business wh.lle ll lasted," be said. "You ~uldn'l believe the actJ\1ty jlown hn-e." , I • ., ' I I I ( Ii ' ' -..,. -~---~--------~~---~------~---·--------·-·--· ·---- ---~ ----·r---o:---------~--· Wtdnud1y, Dtct.mblr 24, l ~6' H OAJLV mot :; County -Okays Tough Law on Smog 'J;ruce Opens As Attacks Mar Holiday SAIGOt\ (AP) -The allies began a 24- hour truce Christmas Eve and by early Thursday 12 enemy attacks, most of them small, were reported. The Viet Cong had begun a 72-bour holiday cease- fire early today. The U.S. Command said eight smaD al· tacts ,,... been .. ported by midnight and they call2d aome casua.IUes oo both 5ides. The South Vietnamese Command said the attack began shortly after the allied 1 . cease-fire went into effect and resulted in two enemy and two regional force so ldiers killed. Five Vietnamese soldiers were wounded. The U.S. Command said t h a t "preliminary reports indicate the situa- tion is relatively quiet" for American , j loT,ceh, wSoithth"VV'!'J'lnfew incidmilier;t~ n!ported. e u 1e amese tary com- DAILY PILOT lllN ...... mand .o;aid it had suspended as many as 60 offensive operatioru; of battalion 6ite or larger throughout the country. Spokesmen said tbe allies were keeping up local patrols and reconnaissance Uights and woold flre first U II appeared that enemy troops on the move were threatening them. A U.S. commtmique said American forces "wUI maintain an alert posture and will take necessary &ecllrity precau.- OUTSIDE COUNTY COURTHOUSE, STAMP OUT SMOG MARCHERS SUPPORT CLEAN AIR Inside, the Orante County Bo•rd of Supervisors P•11td Tough, New Air Pollution Regulations 1 liom to protect friendly forces or in. 1:tallatiora." Although air attacks on targets: In I South Vietnam were suspended for 24 Oil Slick DrifiS East I hours, sources said U.S. planes were con- tinuing their attacks on North Viet. I namese infiltration routes in Eastern I Laos. I\ In ate hours betv.'een the start or the enemy and a1lied cease-fires, a period in ~·hich the allied commands said their forces conUnued operations as usual, the As Dilling Ban Sought I 1 U.S. Command reported one serious in· cident which it considered a Viet Cong violation of the enemy's own cease-fire. \ A claymore mine went off, apparently detonated electrically by remote control, killed four American soldiers, and wound- ( ·, ed five American troops, two South Viet. namese &oldiers and two Vietnamese civilians. The troops were sweeping a I road 20 miles -st of Saigon and three miles from the headquarters of the U.S. ~th lnCantry Division. SANTA BARBARA (AP) -Crude oil from ocean floor seepage in the Santa Barbara Channel drifted easterly today toward sandy beaches as political leaders pushed for an end to offshore platform drilling blamed for the trouble. The Coast Guard reported the surface oil from around Union Oil Co.'s Plat.form A -site of a massive blawoot last January -now has broken up into four slicks. . . But aerial observers Said thick 011 represented only about 25 percent of the DAll.T PILOT llfff l'llttl 'Happening' Happitaess The HOLIDAY HAPPENING <»-sponsored lfy the DAILY PILOT and Harbor Shopping Center Me rchants Assoc!aUon "happened" and a look at the faces ol Brent Carlson, 7 (lell), and Mark Kuehn , II, proves It was happy occasion. Bren~ son of Mr. and Mrs. Don Carl· son of 1381 Galway, Co..ia Mesa, and Mark, son of Mr. and Mrs. Greg Kuehn , 314 Villanova. Costa Mesa, eaclt won a Taco Mini·Bike. Ros .. anne Wallace of 10121 Pua Drive, Huntington Beach, won the 11-loot- tall "stuffed" Christm .. stocking given l)y the DAILY PILQ.T, but coul dn 't he there !or the picture. &click areas. The rest, they said, was a filmy, shimmering layer. Some oil touched beaches this week In Ventura County, Santa Barbara County's neighbor to the south. Except for the Carplnterja area, Santa Barbara area beaches have thus far not been affected. Police Chief John Carpenter at Carpinteria was quoted as saylng he feels the oil pollution there was worse than last winter. Carpinteria State Beach is popular with recreationists, sometimes tenned "the safest beach on the roast." The Coast Guard said the four slicks were floating two to seven miles offshore in an area approlimately three miles north of Santa Barbara to ~even. miles south of Port Hueneme in Ven'tura Coun~ ly. Union Oil Co. floated booms across the Santa Barbara Harbor entrance to pre.. tect it from the oil and was prepared to do the same if necessary, at Channel Island Harbor. The slicks were from an increase In norma l bottom seepage blamed on buildup of pressure in underground oil pools after Union Oil Co. shut down its platfonn pumps for four days last week to fix a broken pipeline. Jn Washington, Sen. Alan Cranston (0. Calif.), urged an immediate halt to oil drilling in the channel. State Assembly Democratic leader J es.se M. Unruh, alter becoming oil· splolched touring beache.s, said Gov. Reagan "ought to call on ?resident Nixon to ell:ert his influence so the federal gov· ernment stops drilling out here." Unruh, an announced candidate for the governorship, promised to dedicate his campaign in part to the elimination of all drilling in the channel -on both federal and slate-controlled tidelands. Cranston called on Interior Secretary '-'alter J. Hickel to determine whether Union Oil had injected water under high pressure into the ocean floor and, if IO, v.·hether this caused last week's seepage. Corky Carroll Seeks Surf Title In Hawaii Meet From wire Servtces HONOLULU -Dana Point's Corky Carroll v.·as in the runnlng today as California and Hawaii finalists battled It out in the International Surllng Cham· pionshlps, riding the powerful waves at 1itakaha. The 23-year-old defending Wr.st Coast champion who won at Huntington Buch in September was joined by Californian Ralph Amas, son of actor James Arnau, star of tel.evislon's Gunsmoke. Arneas ,. .. the Judgos' favmte ., the points narro-1. Four of the six qualifiers ln the senior men 's meet live in the islands and are us- ed to f\takaha'1 high surf. They are George Downing. threMime Mak•ha win· ner; Fred Hemmings, two-time winner; Paul Strauch Jr., averal times a close runner.up. and Jimmy Blears. Joey Cabell o( Hawali, defending: champ and tw-winner, seeded Into todays finalJ . Amen was the judgt1' favortte as low ICOfer at sll potntl with a five-judge panel. In the first belt, only I II points made the dlflerence betw«11 top man llllCf diaquallllcaUon. Allllralllllll Norman Mcintyre, Pa Ben- dall and Andrew Short were dloqualllled earUer. 1 Airports Set For Annual Holiday Jams By JANICE BERMAN Of flle 0.llJ' PH .. St.n Congestion increased today at local airports u people left and people arrived for the holidays. Orange County Airport officials seemed confident they could cope with the Increased traffic, while at Los Angeles Airport, the siluation lackid holiday cheer. New parking lots, complet.ed before the Christmas rush, will make th! traffic situation bearable at Orange County airport throughout the holidays, even thrvugh the N,ew Year's weekend, when traffic traditionally peaks, said airport spo kesmen. The number of spaces available for cars in the concession parking lots at the local airport has doubled and then some. New parking lots have brought the number of parking spaces up from 450 to 1,050. Los Angeles International Airport had a '''eekend crunch of a total of 100,000 autos. And a spokesman said it's getting worse. "The weekend after New Year's will be the biggest of all," he said gloomily. The problem, he said, was not due to a lack of available parking spaces. Instead, the probem is motorists who go to the airport to meet airllne passengers, and try to park in front of the UckeUng buildings and along the strttts Instead of in the lots, where plenty of parking is available. "The lots have not been full yet. and. 've have more than 12,000 spaces," be said. Vl'I , ....... She C.re• Happiness for this young Sollth Korean girl Is clearly e.ipreu- ed on her face as she l"Cei•e• CARE package. Holiday glfta \\'ere !rOm Americans. , • Amendment Try Bru·shed Aside By TO!ll BARLEY "and I have to tell you "°" that ft will 0t • Dtltr l'l11t lttft tate, literally, what It toot for us to build 1 Orqe Coonty supeMlon clamped a that ,,..,., ~ an act QI ~·". . tl&bt lid on noo·veh!cular mnoe producers Tbe Edi.son e:iea&Uve. promped the l • Tuadar wiUt a unanimous adoption of board .that refusal by the auporvtson to "'"'••ent air ..,:,.M •• ~-i -··-• pus the Fitchen rules 1'0llld only mean , ...... ....,._ ~•• ·-· a "furlher brief period of aJr poffutallt t that brought a upadty audience In the manulf<lure" on the ocale praeDt'1 c:on- board'a bearing room lo Its feet with a demoed bf !be cowily. austalned ovation. "I -:an pr:ornlse you today," he laid, • "that our f011U.bumlng plants will march Lui minute allempla to amend lbe Jlf<> on to oblivion and that lbe proceao will be poeed action 1114 delete what were In effect as they are being bullL But we deacribed as "only doubtful" contributors must have more facllltiel now if we 81'11 to the C<1W1ty'a mOUlllil>( smog pn>blem going to produce the ,,...... you .-S. • were swept aside by a determ1ned board, But apan.sion of p:nrer JrOductkm bJ' San Onofre or any other out-of-countJ urged on by Supervisor David Baker. source would not be possible "before-1971 ''We have a legal and mo r a I and possibly by 197&," Gould said:"'Givl • re1ponslbllity today to add t h e s e wi time that will enable us to wor)I measures to our air polluton control together for by working together we can regulalions," said Baker. "We have solve a problem thal deeply concerns both of us," Gould pleaded. heard abundant testimooy from medical eiperts and lhe fannin& ccmmunity to LI'ITLE EFFECT know full well by now just what these Gould argued that the emlllicna o1 power plants bad ooly an "insignlHcaot'' freely emitted pollutants are doing to our effect upon the environment and are environment and to us. responsible "foc less than 2 percent of. the "Public health abould late second place total quantity of aJr pollutants em!Ued In to noUUng," Biker warned. ••1t Ls lm-this county. peratlvo that tbla boonl act upon t1tJs "U thla board warn. lo do aomolhlng recommendatlon al lhla lime lltd do ao In aignlficant and mean1ngful abM air a manner that rellecls our prompt ....,. pollution, then H llboufd urge that action Ucn to lbe ca1fJ mad• upon us by the be taken by the appn>prfate .-11e1 public." for a moralorimn In lbe llcenslng ol acf. Only Superv!Jor William Phllllpo ....,,_ dlllonal aulnmobllea In thla aru, at leosl ed doubtful w1ten tbe r<tff waa called. But with lhooe with bor&ef'O"U HCM!illl! . his quiet "yes," offered after a moment's that reasonably required," he said. : comlderaUon, made the vote unanimous. But his testJmony was refuted by Dr. Phillipe had objecled to the bannin( of A. J . Haage..Smi~ a CafTecb blocbomlat the cbemlcal agent tricbloroethylene and whose comments were hailed by argued - a cont.enUoo supported during Supervisor David Baker as "perbaPI the the h e a r I n g by representaUves of most vital and conclu&ive testimony we manufacturers of the agent -that there have heard today." was lnsufficlent evidence to support ban-Dr. Haagen-Smit, recognlzed naUonally nlzll of the controversial chemical, said for his research on smog and the factors by Its lndicteni to be a key component of that create it, urged the board to ''bold amot. the line on these power station emissions The board refused to ellmlnate the whatever you are told about &be chemical from the adopted Rule MK but automobile. conaented lo a study of the role played by "Because the power pl.ant ta. en paper, tbe chemical in smog emi.ss10D1 and ooly a minor ccmtributcr to polluton promiled to c<l\llder an amendment to figures you sboold not allow any luity In . : the newly adopted ordlnance u tests ea· applying the rules to it," the cbemlst t.bllabed that the agent plays no part In aaid. "Thia numbers game la mfaleodlng 1mog production. and very often Wied to dlstrad your at- Adopted by the board over the vigorous ... -tfll'ltiOQ to eucUy what elementl U., Ire objections of WllliaJn R. Gould. senior lhrowin( Into lbe envlromnenl. • vice president of the Southern Cllifornla RULD EXCEU.ENT Ediaon c.o. was the addl.Ucn of Rules a , "The rules you propoee are f"ICellmt." 63 llJld f;T to Orange County's air polluUon Haage!>Smit aald. "They apec11y ift'i. control regulaUons and the amendment that must not be exceeded and they and substantbl strengthening of Rules specify pollutantl agaiMt wbich we must · JIF lltd eeK. guard and which mull not bt burled Rule 62 requires the burning of natural _ broadcast into the atmosphere. Tbey gas whenever It is available. At all other should be adopted " time~. the new county ordinance will Dr. Haqeo.sm.ti tater offered the opi· specify, low sulfur oil mull be burned. nlon that 0 the war against smoc ii being Rule 63 will reguJate the apeclflcatioos won. of gasoline sold and distributed in Orange "We have the automobile mmmfac· County. "Although Orange County has no turers on the run and they are becoming . • refineries and all our guoline is im-ooJy too ready to comply with the publlc"s ported," Air Pollution Contro1l <?fficer demands." he said "I foresee a period of WllliaJn Fllcben told the board. 'tbia rule our bokilng amor production to its could deter the dumping ol gasoline In preoent level and then a gradual re<fuc. the county. Uon of the menace to the point that we Rule fl will control the emJlliOJJ of ox. can all aee a clear borlzon--again. Ides of nitrogen from non-vehicular "But Jt i.s vital that people 1ih Che sources Jn the county. "It does not QUtlaw &:ail<lft Co be forced to comply with power plants," Fltcben assured the board, these very ~Dlible regulationa," Haagen-~ "but lt does l~t the amount of pollutian Smit said. "For 1 can see the time fast that may be emitted from any large fuel-approaching wben the automobile. the ' bumlng equipment." major culpri~ baa been bl'CIQlbl into line ' The rule has been P a r t I c u 1 a r 1 Y but the power plants have c:ontlmled to challenged by the &!Ison Co. and lts maintain the same levels of smog ezni1.. adoption would appear to end the utility's sions \ hopes of further construction at and e:r-"They won't do anything about It until •. panslon of its Huntington Beach power they are forced to do aomething about it," plant. recent testimony by Edison of· the environmental etpert aa.id. uAnd ficlals has been to the effect that Rule tu, mark my words today your 11.1pervbors smoc-produclng emissions, will limit the will do aamethiog aboot It." facility to Its present range of electric Fifty minutes later, the board voted $ flOIVer oulpul to O to adopt the Filchen propoaala. Rules 11F and 66K spell out chemical agent.. which can not be used in the manufacture of power and re.lated pro- cedu:ea: and have been ck!scribed by air pollution control officerl u "aup. plementary rules designed fa< producera who might be looking for a wJy to skirt the major rules." Supervisors Ignored the Edison Co. warn.In& that tbey "were taking a very grave risk" If lhey approved the Fltcben recommendations and "lnviUng a situa- tion which could result-in • black~t In Orqe County llllCf the !allure of the company lo provide vitally needed power · for a rapidly growing area." Goold !old the board that hia company "is det.ermined to go nuclear but time ls not on our aide when we relate our plans to the rapidly mountlng demands being placed upon U1 by this fast flJ'OW llt( c:owt· ty." Elpuslon at the Huntington Beach plant la vital. Gould aaid, to "bridg< the gap" until the company can upand Ill nucl~ power facWUea at Sin Onofre School Lunches Program Vowed WASIUNGTON (UPI) -'lbe NIX1l0 ad- mlnl1tralion pledged today to make IC!tool lunches available to .trwally all needy children by nm Thanbllvlng. Dr. J1111 Mayer, special conJUftant to the PrOlldenl on fond , health and nutrt· lion, told newsmen a fll'OflJ'&m to f\lrnlJh (roe and reduced price lunchel would be extended to benefit -Olfmately I.I mllll«t needy cblJdren Ill the 19'10-11 filcal yur. 'lbla woold be threo tlmtl the numbor of children covered dorlll1 the fJJcal year ended fast June. Coroner Probes Death of Woman Found in Street I· The Orange County coroner 15 con-' tinuing hls investigation today into the cause of death of a youna: Santa Ana woman whose body wu dJsc:overed TUe,.. ·• day morning lying in a Garden Grove street ·' A coroner's spokesman &&id the cause of death of Janet· L. Summerlin, 218, or J()l7' W. Monica Lane1 Will not be ·• determined unW toxlcol"lical teats have : been completed. '""'re wu no obvioul tn. dlcaUoo <t violence, the lf'IJk- noted. : '"1! womlD'I body WM dia:dtered " Tuesday morning on Dewn Avenue near ... the Garden GroYI Qmmaunlt1 Qnzrcb at "' about 4:15 un. by two newaboya. Ganltn : Grove police said the boy& aaw the """""' lying partially Ill the -and aasumed abe wu either drunk or sleep- ing. They tried to awaken her by toatng a few of the1r nenpapen at her, but w6tn she didn't stir, lbey nolilled a neilbbor -examined lbe booly and called polfcl. offlcen said. ) . • . • . • • ·Clad In a blue mini-. the -~ < booly WU covtred with brulaa, wi1fdl baa " led Garden Grove deloctJva to~ " , that her bndr WU talion to Uta ... Df I dumped Iller her death. ~ Police abo noted that the woman'• ear ; bad =-nl!y been lnvolffd In ID ........ leadlng !hem to bellevt Illa ma:r flav• sustained lbe bruises !hen. '· .. r;_ .f Dlll.V Pll.DT w ... ~ 24, 1'96't •. ' . . " 1 ) ' • . . : ·: . .. .. :; PNSldent end Mra. Nl•on and their daughter Tricl• will have - ml• Eisenhower, widow of the for- mer president, as guest at a White J1ouse turkey dinner Christmas day. After the meal the Nixons will telephone some friends to wish them a merry holiday. Nixon'} daughter Julie and her husband o .. vkl, Mrs. Eisenhower's grandson, are •pending the holiday wilh his parents, Amb.11•dor •nd Mrs.. John Eisenhower, in Brussels. • S•nt11 Claus saw double when he went · ·to the Sigmund Stem Grove Clubhouse. Twins-15 sets of them, ranging from a few months to 12 years old -greeted the surprised Santa Claus. The event was the an- nual Mothers of Twins Club Christ· mas party in San Francisco. 132 POWs'· Names Bared Women's Group Visits North Viet Prison Camp e The 28-member Davia Police force ~ volunteered to driv, home anybody who hcu imbibed tqo much Christmaa or New Year's spirit' in an effort to lutp drvxk driver• Dff the road. Po- lice said anybod~ who called for the 1 e r vi c e would remain anonJITP1-01l3 and that -no recordl would bt kept or arrests 1'UUU. .. ' U'll'I Tt.,..._ WOMEN TELL PRESS D,,VlSIT TD NORTH VIETNAM Mn.. Cer• Wi.i11 · (I.ft) ·•·Mrs. ·MaC:leline Duckies . . : ... '·1 Texan Sends Families -~ ' .. ·· ~. ~~i Of Pri-soners w P ari,s •• ·'· 1),.' ~-l .. ) ... ~ ' '! • ... -. A Russian child learns quickly that the onl11 way to stay 10arm in Moicota during the winter U to Bundlt' u~ with a capit.al "B." MO$C01D's children have real Christmas trees and thankl to the sub-freering temperatu,.et - they'U have a white Christmas too. 8 Bill Parkhurst, 27, watched a small plastic box move along a con- veyor belt leading to the Cbertsey, England, dump's crushing ma- chine. On a whim be picked up the box and opened it. "I was stunned when I realized the value of what was in the box," he said. Parkhurst found $1,100 worth of bonds and savings certificates which he gave to police. DALLAS {UPI) -Billionaire H. Ross Perot baf chartered a jet to ..00 about 150 wives and chUdren of. American prisoners in North Vietnam in the hope that the children can "learn more about their fa then."' . The jet, charteied by United We Sland. an organizaUon founded by Perot to sup- port President Nixon's Vietnam peace program, is scheduled to leave N~· York's John F. Kenoedy International Airport tonight. The families wlD spend Christmas Day in Paris to try to learn more about theil miuing fathers and husbands. Their search c.ould include a peace vigil at tht: North Vletnamese Embassy. A jetliner left OaDas at 6:55 a.m. PST today bound for New York and carrying part of the group. The entire group will leave fOt' Paris at.3:40 p.m. PST aboard the plane chartered by Perot. '"nme after time when we have asked these children what they want most, they have said they wanted to know something about their fathers," Perot said. 'Mle computer company ~1iu..a Mk! he :bartered the plane, "The Spirit of ::hri.slmas," to fly families to Paris who ·la.Vt! not been to see the North Viet· 1amese. United We Stand has sponsored other '.rips by wives of American prisoners. All lf the women's efforts, however, have ·ailed to give them any new information about their husbands. On each visit, Hanoi's representatives ~ave told the women their husbands are criminals and do not deserve the same treatment as prisoners of wr. Perot said he hopes to visit Hanoi lo explain that in America even criminals are allowed to correspond with their families. SAN FRANCISCO {UPI) -The names of 132 American prisooers of war have been released by two members of a pexe group who were the first American women to visit a North Vietnamese pJison camp. The women told a news conierence: Tuesday they brought back 138 kiters from the prisoners and malled them in San Francisco Sunday on their return from a twi>-week visit to Hanoi. Some of the prisoners' families had not heard from them in years. Mrs. Cora Weiss of New York City and Mrs. Madeline Duckies 0£ Berkeley told newsmen they and Pifrs. Ethel Taylor of Philadelphia spent about an hour talking to three prisoners. They jdentified the men as Mark Gartley, 25, of Greensville, Me.: Paul Gordon Brown, 26, of Newton, Mass., and Bill Mayhew, 'l1, of New Manchester, W. Va. The women released a photo o[ the three prisoners. . The women, members of the Women's Strike for Peace, said the prisoners . "spoke ~gh1y of the antiwar movement and spoke militantly &gainst the war." They said they were not allowed to talk to any other prisonrs. Mrs. Weiss oatlined an apP,3.I'ent change of poHcy by Hanoi in regard to mail for prisonen, who up to now have rarely been allowed to send or receive letters or packages. It has been estimated that about 1,361 Americans are missing or prison;ers of war in North Vietnam, but fewer than 100 of the known captives have sent letters that were received Jn the United States. However, Mrs. Weiss said Hanoi would now allow families or prisoners to send one letter a month and a package of less than six pounds every other month . Sbe said mail should be addressed with the prisoner's name and serial number in care ol "Camp of Detention for U.S. Pilots Captured in the Democratic Republic o( Vietnam, Hanoi, DRV ," with "Via Moscow" written on the envelope. nie chief of North Vietnam's delega-• tion to the Paris pear.e talks said Monday that Hanoi would notify prisoners' families "directly" from now on about captives because the , U.S. was withholding information. Mrs. Weiss called on the State Depart· ment to release all the names of prisoners that are known to be held by North Vietnam. of confirmed prisoners," she said. "I "I challenge them to release the names understand the State Department has a list of nam~ it has not released." Southland Skies Are Sunny The women. who said they paid for the trip to Hanoi via Parts out of their own pockets, said that all the prisoners in North Vietnam would receive Christmas dinner. Hanoi Greeting _Urges Protests Pacific Northwest Braces for Another Storm ca1u ..... 1a St:i.t _. NrtlY loUMY !Jnutllaul Sou111tr11 c.llfornlol todn loOowlft9 .,,., "*"""" """ Olollch wllh -1.aontrtd drli.N. ,,.,..... wts Ill! .. l_N,tlu .. tM .... w!ltl tM hlth ti IM ls Aftftln Civic Ctrtfw H, -dtfr.. ·~ Tuu-CIW't -""'1trl, leedlt'I -• ITIOlllY dOlldY wll!I hltol'!t l'lffr iS. Moun1,1ru. Md v1rl• •bl• tlovdlo With 1'1.ltlll '" Ult !QI. °'""11 _,. rno.!IY 1IU!WIW Wiii! "'9111 r11 ""' '°' ~-........,, 11111 111 tM Jiii loww v1lln1.. u!;",;;:,~ ~~ -~ llllOl'I wl"" """"t•l!Jr9 "''' ...-m•I. """ MtM TMldrt Md ..... ~ hlthl fatly lnduOt ~ !lt9cf'I ...... S.11!1 Monlc.t ~ 9"<t>lflt '1'4o6. 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" " • • " • '• " " TOKYO (UPI) -Nguyen Huu Tho, president of the Viet Cong's National Liberation Front, sent a holiday greeting today to Americans, urging them to con- .1, tinue protesting against the Vietnam war . .01 The message, addressed to "Dear Friends" and monitored in Tokyo, said .o, the "ol:minate ahd crany attitude" of the ·" Nixon administraUon has increased the m tempo of the war and caused needless .,, death and destructlon. The -e aald In parl' "Particularly convey my regardl to the ·" families of --peneorted and Jt repressed for tbelr protest against the unjust and immoral war conducted by the U.S. government In Vietnam." He urged that <auch protesta c:ootlnue. " Unions Won't Strike ... .., Until T alks Resun1e WASHINGTON (UPI ) -Four shop ·'• craft unions have pledgtd not to strike .n lhe naUon's railroads unUl Uity resume ·" talks Jan. 19 in their wage dlpute. ·'' The machll\1N1 electricians end boiler~ :~ blJck!mith unlons atttpted a presidential racUinding board's reeommend~tions ror ·'° a scUlement earlier this moath. But the .u M 5heet metal worken turned down the proposal. 'Love tuMJ ·sppath1' ' I Arab Summit ·Ends • Ill RABAT, M«oc:ce (UPl)-The oummlt ..-.. called In -lhe ""'b ""'Id .,.Wt Isael d!Dnded today ,In llllun, ...,,,,... and di""'1er. Pal.-Inlan goer· rWa leader Yasser Arafat aald fell0\11' Arabs gave him "love and aympatby" but Vfr/ llttJe ebe. Speaking at a news conference after the 14-nation Arab amunit meeting ool- lapoed In chaos, lhe fiery head of lhe Palestine commandol said be will never agree to a political settlement with Israel despite lack of mat.trial aid for his cause. Arafat aougbt to JllitUnUze the breakup of the fifth Arab·suinmit over demands by Egyiilian Pr.-i.n\ Gamal Abdel Nasser for a vastly stepped up con· tribution by the wealthier member na- tions such as Saudi Arabia and Kuwait, to lhe anti-!Jrael struggle. "'!be most important .thing we got at this conference wu the love and sym- pathy we saw for our cause," Arafit uid. Asked wheUier he had received all Ole material and financial aid he had asked, the broad-faced, stocky Palestinian leader said with a shrug: "1lle outcome of a conference never determines the fate of a people. "When we came here, we expected _lo get zero. Anything above zero is a gain for the Palestinian revolution. But revolu· tionaries do nol expect victory from con- ferences. Victory comes only from strua:- gle throogb the barr~ d' the gun." Five Children Die in Flames As .Home Burns MONTREAL (UPI) -Flames swept a house where a family of 12 was sleeping early today, killing five young children. The parents, Mr. and Mrs. Albert Dow, surfered severe burns rescuing their other five children and were hospitalized along with three of the rescued children. Neighbors said the family had moved to the artificial brick home in the suburb of Sl Hubert only three weeks ago. The Dows lost all their possessions. GeneUe Blanchard, a neighbcl', said Mrs. Dow, bleeding and in a nigtitgown, was hysterically trying to get back into the house to reach the children trapped inside· but her husbend stopped her.. "The mother wanted to go back' Into the house but Mr. Dow wouldn't let her,'' Blanchanl aaid. The neightxn had been preparing Ouistrnas baskets for the family because Dow, 36, and employed a. a Janttor at 1 number of schools ip st. Hubert, had dif· fieulty ... pporting his large family. Chaos Well·informed IOW'tes said the discord over how: much money to spend on a new militant anU-Israeli 1tratef>r was'° large that the problem of organizing effective measures against the Jewish state was not even tackled. Collapse of the summit, seriously en- dangering Arab unity at a time ~·hen JSTael was involved in a dispute witb the United States, its traditional friend, was highlighted by angry scenes Tuesday in· eludi ng a walkout by Nasser, then by olher Arab delegations. . Apparently undismayed by the summit failure Arafat ru)ed out any political sel- Uemeni with Israel. He said the summit had "reafJinned the viewpoint ci the Palestine revolution." Roadblocks Seal Off Betlilehem BETHLEHEM !UPI) -Isra~I locked a security chain around Bethlehem be- fore dawn today to insure no Arab guer- rilla violence mars the festival cl the birth ol the Prince of Peace. At 4 a.m., Israe1i troops and. l'Olice closed roadblocks around the Judean hilltop town where the new testament says Jesus Christ was born in a mangtt. The area was virtually sealed off to all but "men of good will." . An estimated 10,000 visitors and Chri.!-- tian pilgrims -more than hat~ the total tourists visiting Israel for Chnstmas - passed through the roadblocks in bus convoys from nearby Jerusalem t~ take part in Christmas Eve . ceremonies . Each had to have an Israeli govern· ment-issued permit. The Roman Catholic patriarch of Je· ruslilem. his beatitude Alberto Gori, was leading the procession to Bethlehem and the Church of Nativity. The church rest.5 on Christendom's holiest shrine, the grotto, where, accord ing to the New 'festament. Jesus was born in a manger. 1'1ore than 1,000 Israeli troops and po- lice were on guard in and around Beth· lehem to prevent any attempt by Arab guerrillas to mar the festival. Although gue!"rilla organizations have never struck here during Bethlehem'• two Christmases under Israeli rule, this year as In the pest they warned that Christmas pilgrims are not immune from guerrilla attack. Israel will not relax its security guard on Bethlehem until the last pilgrim is safely gone Christmas night. Viet Peace Demonstration Broken Up By Policemen SAIGON (UPl)-Fourte<n Americans and one Vietnamese demonstrated for peace tonight in a carnival-like atmos- phere before the Saigon cathedral. The protest ended with the lone Viet- namese being beaten up and arrested by policemen. He was identified u Nguyen Long, an antiwar youth leader. During the scuffle with Long, a police- man slapped Tom Marlowe, a corre- spondent with Ole Oversea! Weekly Newspaper. The demonstrators staged their pro- test amidst more than 4,000 Vietnamese celebrating Christmas Eve. Prior to the protest, its leaders said they expected about 500 Vietnamese and 50 American soldiers to show up. Long appeared to be the only Vietnamese and s..ix soldiers, who joined the demonstra· lion early, left after being told to do so by U.S. military police. Richard Boyle, 27, a former newspa- perman who helped organiie the pro- test, blamed the poor turnout on security measures adopted by the Vietnamese police and . U.S. military. These meas- ures, however, were similar to the crowd control tactics used by the police last Christmas Eve. althoUgh there did appear to be a few more officers in s..ight. The cathedral grounds are tradition- ally crowded with Vietnamese ca Cbr!st- mas Eve, celebrating the holiday with party hats and sparklers. Penniwss Cons Freed From Jail CINCINNATI (UPI) - A Hamilton County common pleas court judge, caught up in the spirit of Christmas and an Ohio Supreme Court ruling, today released about 140 penniless prisoners from the county workhouse. Judge Robert V. Wood ordered the men released after the American Civil LibertieJ Union filed a writ of habeas corpus Tuesday to free all workhouse in- mates who were working off unpaid fines at the rate of $.1 per day. The Ohio Supreme Court ruled last week that the state's $3-a-day rate was unconstitutional because it was "grossly unreasonable." ' But Wood said that was not tile only reason for his action . "l am doing this because It b; Christmas Eve," ne said . "'Rudolph" No"tv 30 Writer's Brainchild a Classic CIDCAGO (UPI) -One of the world'a most famous animals It )I) yean old ti> day but he has not changed a bit since be was ''born." Rudolph lhe red-nosed reindeer, lhe creaUon of adverU&ing copywriter Robert fl.fsy, first stirred children's hearts In 1939 and has continued to have his atory translated and sung since then . lay, who was assigned to write a Christmas verse that would 1ppeal to children for a Montgomef')' Ward & Co. Promotion, says about 10 million copies of the Rudolph story have been publish· «J In var~s languages. . But, says May. Rudolph ·WIS almost kllled In the "test-tubt'' sta.ga because the mM Who commissioned the 've.rse thought Rudolph's red nose Would frighten children . ll. E. MacDonald. then retail sales manager for Wards, auoclated the ~lmal's red nose with a W. C. F1flds. type drunk, Moy lllYI. MacDonald thought children would think Rudolph a red-nosed monster Md nearly killed the .idea before it wu publlshed.. But May came up with art work that showed Ule red nose could be cute, and Rudolph was born. Barbara May, now 35. 58YS she v.·as S v.·hen she first heard the story and ~he liked it then. She and the five ot~r ~181 children who ha\'e gone through collef9 on the story·s royalties PY they st.ill like it. And for mosl ch)ldren. Christm as wouldn't be the s•me without the image of. Rudolph guiding Santa's sleigh. Said one sociologist. "Rudolph·s story is the firs! permanent addiUon lo Christmas ift this century.'' I I I' I ---·----------------------------~---------~----.--~-~·--~~ ·-~·-~ --·---~ ---------~~~-------~-~~,,.----.---,-,-. .· Going llp to nd \Vorkmen on the 24th ~oor of a ne\v 26-story office tower in Manhattan ga at an artist's recreation of a World \Var r bipla e as it makes its fll'St and last flight Tuesday. Tue plane, work of artist Wu- liam Tarr, weighs 6,000 pounds, is 22 feet long and has a wing span of 28 feet. Jt was placed on a facsimile of a permanent landing strip on the roof of the new office tower. ress Cwses Up ~hop, U.S. to Quit Wheelus AB 111 Tripoli .epares for Election Year WASHINGTON (UPI! - With an election year directly ahead, congressmen t o o k home for preliminary voter in- spection today a m i x e d Christmas bag flf successes and failures. House GOP Leader Gerald R. Ford, perhaps In a harbin· ger of Republicans' campaign tactics for 1970, labeled the year-long session a "do little" Congress. He said it had done alm06t nothing about Presi· dent Nixon's legi.slati•e pro. gram. But S e n a t e Democratic Leader Mike MansOeld called the session "mo.st productive." He &ave Congress &ood·marks not only for its legislative at-Some Republicans hOpe Nixon tainment.s but its start toward stands firm on his threat to redirecting national priorities show he means business about from the Vietnam war to keep ing the costs of govem- homefront needs. n1cnt down an d halting in- The battles of the election flation. year -during which all 435 But should Nixon veto the representatives and a third of bill, Democrats are sure to ac- the Senate must stand before cuse him of turning down the voters ...__ are sure to get funds for such things as heated up quickly. The cancer research, grade school Senate's fll'st order of business children and the b I i n· d • is ~e . highly:Charged SP-Democrats already ~ere pie· propnatiom bill fo.r th e _ turing Nixon as Scrooge, departments ~ Labor and claiming he was ~cril'icing Health, Education and WeUare the sick and the poor while ap- (HEW). proving other big ·money bills Nix?l1 baa threatened.to v~to fot weatnts systems and the bill .because ~gress Jn-planes that will carry aeased it beyond his requests. passengers three timas faster than sound. WASHINGTON (UPI) The United States has agreed to abandon Wheelus Air Base in Tripoli, Libya, by June 30, 1970, and ·withdraw its 4,500 military and civilian person- nel. Announcement of the agree- ment was made in a joint communique issued in Tripoli and Washington T ues d a y night. State Department sources said negotiations would con- tinue ·with the new revoJu. lionary government of 'Libya on disposal of equipment at the baSe. Hijack Attempt Foiled; Man Returned to U.S~ ~ The fll'st Session of the 9lst Congress, which ground to a halt at 3:10 p.m. EST, Tues- day, accomplished -more than most observers thought likely when it convened Jan. 3 with Democrats in charge on Capitol Hill and a Republican about to take office as presi- dent. The communique followed the third meeting in Tripoli between U . S . Ambassador ..Joseph P..almer and Capt. Abdul Salam Jalloud, the second-ranking of!icer of the military regime that seized powey-. Sept. 1. NEW YORK (UPI) - A passenger who bied to barge into the cockpit of an Icelandic Airlines plane over Scotland, 43 Czechs ' Ask Asylum STOCKHOLM (UPI) Forty-three members o( the first Czechoslovak tourist con- tingent allowed outside the country in a month left the group Tuesday night and ask- ed for political asylum in Sweden. A spokesman for the Aliens Police said about 10 more of the Czechoslovaks -there were a total of 80 persons in the group -were expected to make similar uquests before Christmas Day. Government sources predicted asylum would be granted, for the Stockholm government b a s sheltered Ciechoslovaks since th e Soviet-led invasion of their na- tion Aug. 21. 1968. The Czechoslovak tour was arrang!d by the state-run toorist bureau. According to the members seeking asylum, it was also to be the last of- ficially arTanged travel to western nations. claiming he was Defense Secretary Melvin R. Laird, was returned here today and freed without charges. "I wanted to go to Russia to talk about cond:itiorui i n America," Anthony Pascan::io. 28, said on his •r etur n. Pascanio, who lives in Queens and described himseH as an actor and musician. said earlier he had intended to radio the Sovtt!ts about "how bad a country A·mertca was." Fearing an attempted hi· jack, the crew of the four- engine turboprop. flying from New York to London, subdued Pascarzio oulside the cockpit door and held him down until the craft could descend from 30,000 feet and make an emergency landing at Glasgow Tuesday night Two Scottish detectives returned to New York with Pascarzio aOOard a n o t h e r Icelandic plane and, after questioning by the FBI and Port of New York Aulbority police, he was released. Authorities said the United St.ates had no jurisdiction in the incide.nt and that officials in ScoUand did not want to press charges a g a i n s t Pascanio, who was unarmed. Some political standoffs did develop and for a time ·threatened to keep Congress in session through the holidaf.s. The State Depar.tmen t authorities had given their assurances of cooperation in making the withdrawal order· ly. Human Bomb GI Doctors Defuse Woman. > ' ·SAIGON (UP I) -Surgeons to meet my wife on leave.'' at Saigoo's 3rd Field Hospital related Dr. Mortlos. . successfully removed a live ri-An M79 round is about three fie grenade round from the inches in diameter and is fired chest fivlty of a Vietnamese from a grenade launcher. Ml woman in the second such Sgt. Charles McCrary of ''human bomb" operation in Louisville, Ky., one of the Vietnam this month. bomb disposal experU present The operation was perform-at the operatioo, said Jt was ed by Maj. JOl!le F. Morelo111 of "just luck" that tht grenade Baltimore, and Maj. Willis did not detonate. McKee of Louisville, Ky., "These types o( rounds can under the guidance of Lt. Col. be armed a,t any point from Thomas Witchi of Wading the time they leave the end o( River, N. Y., who one month the weapon until they ha ve ago remo.ved a similar round traveled a great distance," he from the head of a Viet Cong. explained. "When we have one The surgeons declined to wear on our han& we have to flak jackets and helmets. assume it ~ armed and take "We figured they would be the necessary precautiOns." cumbersome," said D r . The patient was reported Jn l\fcKee, "And besides, at that good condition at the hospital, range .. _ well." located just out.side Tan Son "All 1 could lhink about until Nhut Airbase. She was ex- U-.e operation began was that peeled ta be released in about in Jess than .a week I'm going three weeks, doctors said. Signe~ by Nixon WASHINGTON (UPI) -S.Crttal')I Ronald L. Zle&li r, Pretldent Nixon ~ signed ques1looed about prospect.o for ' --~~~~~""~ with aated ieludtance a bill . the President to use this r 1ivlnc ,him the authority to in-authority, .said, •:1 assume vokt volWltary and mandatory these stepa ·would not be taken credi.t Contiols -1 step which although the authority baa he CWTerilly does .not plan to-been Jll'8nled ." take. Proxmirt said that, despite The legislation was desig,led a year of the income su rtax, primariJy to preserve the corporations Increased their capital expenditures by $7 authority of a f e d e r a 1 bUl!on this year. J{e said this supervisory agency to regulate represented an 11 percent in- lnterest paid by .banks and crease over the previous year. savina:s and ~ associations. • • M 0 reover, government The ,:hief executi ve bad no ob-' sufr.-~Y.S, for l970 indicate jectlon to this ~peel of lhe another • huge increase Jn legislation. .,_, nd-I d 17 1~..-.. He did object strongly, ca p1wu spe 1ng o aroun L;::?:::.:~:::!~=i:;....lil.2~=~=:!::.:::::..:::;:.::::.:::.:::. however, to sections of the bill billion er $8 billion ," he sakl. authorizing voluntary a n d A government survey report mandatory credit controls. released Tuesday said cor. These sections, he said in a porations planned to incrflase "' statement, would, if invoked, spending for plants and equip. -----------1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; "Lake the naUon a long step ment in 1970 by 10 percent. . The Cmsumer Price Index toward a directly controlled his gone up 5.8 percent over a CCQnotny and. . .we can weaken the will for needed year ago. f is ca I and fi nanci a 1 "Clearly, monetary and . fiscal policy has been a dismal discipline." failure in restraining business •t th• Or•n9• County The president signed the bill · borrowing which many APPLE VALLEY (UPI) -1 ... Co u.uterfeit Bills Fo11Dd WOutD YOU BWEYE REUBEN'S shortly after Sen. William Airport i' tall'in9 Proxmire (0-Wis.), chainnan economists feel is the most in-Three 8'lti£reezc cans cram-RESERVATIONS Of the con ~«;onal 1-ot-nt flationary sector of 0 u r med •"th more than $100 000 •---economy" Proxmire said "'' ' for New Year's Eve Pa rty? economic committee, released ' · in rounte rfeit currency were -~· of the te-of a letter he "Instead, tight money has DON 'T MISS OUT .--" -ntered on the hom• buyer discovered .in a backyard here wrote to Nixon urging him to '-" '"~ • sign the bill and apply govern-the small bu.sinessm8fl, the Tuesday, sheriff'• deputies Cal 540·2475 ment credit controls over· _Ioc~a~l_:gov~~ernme~~n~ts~.'~' ___ _'l'eJlO~~rted~:_· ______ __'.!~~~~~~~~~!!!!!!! business spending in the fight' ain8t inflatioo. ~ called the ad· mi.nistrali,on's monetary and fiscal policies "a dism_al failure" in curbing capital outlays by big business. But N I x o n said "these aspects: of the bill made the decision to sign it a very dif- [icult one, but the need to pre- vent chaos in our interest rate situation has made mY ap- proval imperative." White Hou se Press Wife, Son Visit Hes s In· Hospital BERLIN (UPI) -RudoU Hess , Adolf HIUer's former aepuw.-saw his wue ana··-, for the first time in 28 years today when they visited him in . West Berlin's British Miiltary Hospital. _ Ilse Hess, 69, and son Wolf Ruedlgerliess, 32, arrived at the hospital shortly after 2:30 p.m. for the visit. Hess, 75, was taken to the hospital Nov. 24 from nearby Spandau War Crimes Prison for treatment of a stomach ulcer. He was sentenced to .spend his life in prison by judges at the Nue~g War, Crimes Tr:ibunal. A British military official said the wife and son wert given the Spandau prison regulati<>M to read before they were allowed to see Hus. The olficlal said two guards were present in Hess' hospital room as the ttio met. He sai they wert not allowed to kiss, shake hands or otherwise touch the beetle-browed Hess for !ear that they would P8JS poison to him. Long Weds Secretar y WASHINGTON (UPI) Sen. Ru81eU B. Long, ID-La.), divorced by his first wife earlier this year, Tuesday ma rried the blonde ~ or a fellow senator. The bride is the former Carolyn Bason. daughter Mr. and Mrs. Sam M. Bason of Yanceyville, N.C. Blonde and fortyish, the new Mrs. Long was a secretary to Sen. Sam J. Ervin, (D-N.C.) ' ' stereo103FM the sounds of the harbor r ~d.~~7 youve never hearditsogoo.d • ' l ' J I, • ----< . • D AILY PROT EDITORIAL PAGE Real Christmas ·Spi r it -Santa comes in stranee shapes some years. This year's model features a large body -two of them in facL Both are the student bodies of Fountain Valley and Loo Amigos High Schools. And the gilts they bear are for retarded youngsttrs at Fairview State Hospital in Costa Mesa. Instead of shrinking oft to £ar corners and blowing pot -as some parents claim is the typical action of today's high school student -these youths are digging into their pockets and hearts to bring Christmas spirit to those who might not enjoy it otherwise. As one-young coed said, "Everyone deserves a good Christmas" and they mean to prove it. The students of Fountain Valley's two high schools have collected several hundred dollars and donated nearly as many new toys to give Fairview youngsters Cltristmas Day. And some of the students want to spend their own time on Christmas day and share it wtth Fairview patients. For a generation that is allegedly going to pot, they •eem to be doing a lot for somebody else this Chri•l· mas. Valley's Code of Ethics The ethics of a politician -from city council to national level -always seem to be in doubt. at least in the eyes of some citizens. So anything done to re- move that doubt must be applauded by those \vho are watching. We do applaud the efforts of the new Fountain Val- ley City Council in adopting a code of ethics and con- Unually emphasizing the importance of ethics In public oUice. The council bas recognized that men who hold pul>o lie office must not only be ethically correct in every action, but must also apptar ethically correct in every acUon. The eye of the public can .be sha 'ti.cal as proved in the city's recent recall ele n whe an apparent lack of understanding about such a ule brought down tbree councilmen. Fountain Valley's new code "'""'thl'c covers mat- ters fro1n use of city vehicles to confli interest and acceptance of gifts. But more important than it! actual content or restraining effect is the faC't that the new code of ethics shows the people that the new dty council is aware of and very much concerned with. the problem of being and &Jl!>"aring ethical. The code is not a conglomeration of generalities which could leave many loopholes. And it covers city employes as well as councilmen. It specifies that coun- cilmen or conunissioners should disclose their interests, personal or financial, and refrain from discussion or· voting on conflict matters. The same rule applies to city employes. No official or employe, the code states. should ac- cept employment that will impair hi s independence ot judgment or induce him to disclose confidential infor- mation acquired by him in the course of his official duties. The code defines personal interest as one arisin~ from blood or marriage relationships or close business association. The new councilmen of Fountain Valley have there- fore put themselves on record. It is a conscious effort to avoid the disturbing situation which resulted in the recall election and cast doubt on government officials. -=---- H ' The Man the U.S. Needs To Lead It Dear Gloomy Gus: Revolving Door of Critne, Prison, More Crittie One <>f the reasons I dislike most political writing -and do very Utile of it my11elf -is that it forces ooe to pretend to be objective. But hardly anyone can be • truly objective about politics. Our political orientaUori is detennined by a dozen dilferent factors over which we have Utile conscious control -our background and environment, our educa- tion, .our income-level, and our tem- peranlent. Then we rationalize these fac- tors in our "polilicaJ philosophy." I am more interested in what men are 1111.e, rather than what they profe11, or what party they belong to. If Nixon strikes me as a plastic man (as he does), and Humphrey as a rubber man (as he does), l am not going to support either man, regardless of what he says. BUT IF I WERE engaged in writing about politics, or arguing the matter, J would have to marshal objective facts about programs and policies. and deal in ~vague abstractions like "liberty" and "peace." My arguments would fotlow from my prejudices, and be tailored to fit. Most people a r e stuck with their nceptions, and vote for a man they not like, simply because he promis- carry out what seems to serve their interest. But a plastic man, or a rub- man, cannot do much or anything that is worthwhile. THESE PRECONCEPTIONS art what perpetually, betray us in choosing the Our local re alt ors aren't such heartless moneygrubhers as some woold have us lbink. Look what they did for the underprivileged pr~school kids-a breakfast Christ- mas party and a visit from Santa Claus, with gifts. Now if they'd just sell my house ••• -T. R. T. nit '"''"' ,-.,*" ,....,.... -wi.... -_." ......... ----· .... ,_ .......... M ...... , .... Dllltr Pl.._ "lesser evil'' -and art whit teep the political machines confidently picking St· cond -and thlrd·rate men -for the par- ty bosses know that we are so much the \•ictims of our rationalizing that we would rather elect a baboon who seemed to agree with us lhan an angel who didn't. I happen to think the way a man looks and smells and expresses himself in speech and gesture and general com- portment is a good deal more important than the poliUcal statement& he exudes, \Yhich have been written by somebody else to make the best impression on the largest segment ol the electorate. BUT THIS AD HOC approach to can· didates is condemned by all the polltical doctrinaires, who delude themselves that a devious or flatulent man will make a satisfactory president because he .utters~ campaign platitudes that flatter their prejudices. The man we need to lead us ls not necessarily the one who tells us whit we like to hear, but what we must be made to hear; who makes us uncomfortable with ourselves. and forces us to re-ex· amine our smug and easy'preconceptlons. But that is the last man any party would no1ninate , and the strongest argument of the politi cal dropouts. 'Adulterers ·Anonymous~ We all have our little crusad~ to make this a better w<rld. And today we pay tribute to a courageous l!We band of al· tractive single girls who art out crusading f« just such a cause: Adultery. ln San Francisco. where such things happen, these dedicated young ladles have been parading throogh the financial dislrict promoting their organi:r.aUon, "Adulterers Anonymous," along with a new book. ''Suceessful Adultery for !ht }fappily Married ~tan ." "As long as a wife gets her !\hare or love," says the group leader. a beautiful brunette named Cecil y Kal l. ··v.·hy should she begrudge her husband an extra n1easure. of happiness"" · WHY INDEED? Of course, like all foglcJl crusades aimed at disentangling our Purita n hangup!, I.his one faces obstacles. For one thing, a man needs an understanding wife. Taite the cm of my friend. Kis.sin.cr. Y.'hO is blessed with a wife of incredible tolerance and understanding. .. CutSS what, dear," ht: said on ar· riv ing home that evening. I'm thinking or laking up a new hobby." .. That's nice. dear," she said. "\Vhat! .. 1·\\1ell you know ho~· much \lte love cacll other." he said, taking her in his arms. "And you know the pleasu rt .\\'e find in -well -''OU know. Now I Was thinking that becaUsewt Jave each other. you wouJdn't begrud£c me an extra rtltu\lrt of happlnt:u • • • " '11VE G<n' A ROA.ST l.n the: oi;en, dear. atld lht children aren't in bed yet and .•• " "NI); no. 1be hobby I'm thinking of l&k· lnl up ls adultery." "That does IOlmd fntttelUnc. dear,•• 1t>e 11id tolerantly. "But you know ""nt 1 cruture oi enthusiasms you.are. Look at all those flies )'CXI bought and nt!ver tied." "Oh. T think T'd stick with UUs one. That is, if you didn't mind.'' "Mjnd'!" Mrs. Kissinger was shocked , "But the very essence of loving ill tht desire to see your loved one happy. A'ld if adultery would make you happy, it WC\Uld make me happy, too." "Are you sure you've thought this lhing through ?'' asked Kissinger with a fro"'l'l. "BUT IT'S SO LOGICAL. dear," :.he ~aid with great understanding as she disengaged herself frOln his Jrms to check the calendar wilh obvious en· lhusiasm. "Let's tet, 1 think we're fr ee next Thunday night." "We?" be asked suspicioualy. "It's so nice Co have a hobby ~·c can pursue together.'' sbe said happily. "Do you remember the name or that reJlow we met at the Grommets, the one with lh05t dreamy eyes, v1:ho. , • ·• "'You $0 much as look at an o4her man." thundered Ki$singer. "and l'JJ break every bone In your body!" At lltls . Mrw. Kissinger dissolved into tears. ''Oh. I ltnrw il," .she sobbed, "you don't love me any more." THE SP At OAS &Ince been patched up. Kissinger ha.s decided to take up bowling instead. Ht sUll appreciates lhe Ioele of the justlfieatJon for adultery. And he ad- mlrts the worthiness of young ~1141 Katz' cnisado. "But -lt comeg to disentin1lin& ~ Purttati b~ at my aae." he u.yi wtth a sigh. "h's a hell of a sigbt easier to hve "1th thm Instead." • • Correctional System Is a Disgrace To the Editor: Columnist Sydney J , Harris comes right lo t~ point in discussing the ominous riso/in crime and "the revolving door of crime, prison and more crime." Confinement in unnatural surroundings cannot cure or teach criminals how to live according to society's rule.s, so why not leach them how to behave in a natural atmosphere? Why not put them all in an isolated community where they can't be discriminated against because they'll all be tarred with the same brush. just as were the earlier settlers ln Australia and Georgia? POSSIBLY WE could find a ghost town, or an island where they would not have acces.s to weapons and could learn a use£ul vocaUon. There would be a few non-criminals who would help them to establish laws and to administer them. Many or the criminals will prefer to stay there. That's fine because they can help the new members rehabilitate. Those whose conduct warrants it would be allowed to return to the "other" world. There would be expert medical and psychiatric care which is woefully lacking in jails, according to the superintendent of the New York prison syatem. As Mr. Harris says, the correctional system is a di sgrace, and few care enough to correct the correctional system. BERNARD BARTON Playing for /IJoney To the Editor: ln answer lo Alice Brownf l t!l d (Mailbox. Dec. 19), we are not sacriricing quality for quantity. We are sacrificing quality for money. As long as there is any o~n land in Orange County, and as long as no one stops them , the large developers will conlinue to alter this land for commercial use. They are playing the game for money. When the question comes up whether to keep a section of land like it is, or to build factories or apartmenls on it. the developers reason: "lf we leave it like it is, we can't make any money on it, so let's build!" TAKE SANT A BARB ARA'S off short oil situation. A huge oil spill last year, water POiiuted and animals killed, but the drill· injl continued. Now we have another oil 3pill. ts this contamination of land and sea to conUnue! Will ""keep sacrificing beaulv and wildlife for dollars? What can ~'e a's By fie orge --~ Dear George~ rin a loneso1ne blonde divorcee who really digs your sense of humor. Georgie, and l wonder Jf I might hive a personal consul lation, if you know what t mean"! LONESOME AND LOVING Dear LAND L: That wasn't exactly the kind of problem I had Jn mind, my wile said tell you. Dear George : How far S~uth do polar bears rome? SAMU EL 8. Dear Samuel: Now, u'hatever you do, Sam . don't panic. Just look him In the eye. De•r Grorge: l\'lly are the days shorter ln winter? And lonaer In $1lJM)ef! WONDERING Dear Wondert111: o..-This ls due to the lad Iha! heat expands and' cold contrads, (How"1 that, Finnin?) Ma ilbox Letters from readers are wel<:ome, Nor11Ulllll writers should convey their messages in 300 words or le ss. The right to condense let ters to fit space or eliminate libel is reserved. Alt let- ters mu.st include signature and mail· ing address, but names may be wi th- held 01i request if sufficient reason is apparent, Poetry will not be pub- lished. citizens do to prevent man's greed from polluting our city, state and rountry? STEVEN C. LAUBLY Ocerpop1datio11 To the Editor : I am a sophomore at UC Irvine and have just completed a biology course en· lil ted "Population -The Vital Revolu· lion ." We have studied the worldwide problems or famine, pollution, and disease and the politics involved in trying lo solve the problems. We have asked what could be done and come up l'.ith very fe1v satisfactory answers. The first thing that must be done is to inform the general public and that is the reason for this Jetter. J HAVE BEC0~1E aware or an inl· pending crisis caused by overpopulation and human destruction of the en· vironment and I would like to see the pro- blem related and discussed in nation"·ide ne"·s media so that more people could kno1v the facts and do something about them . The U.S. will be the last country to suf· fer severe results but "'e will su rely feel th e reverberations soon. Leglslalion must start immediately with programs of sex educa tion for belter birth control .and to legalize abortion, etc. JANIS TAYLOR Co1n11a1111is t.1' Goals To the Editor: Just read Tom Barley's article, ''Musi· clans Sound Sour Note With Viet Peli· tion''. The last two paragraphs o[ the arlicle are, "We reel that there is no area of American life so sacred that protests against the United States' parUcipation in the Vietnam war are in bad taste or in· appropriate. .. Hold that note, ladies and gentlemen. You're playing my kind of music." Mr. Barley and I don't seem to enjoy the same kind of music, THE COMMUNISTS are trying to take over South Vietnam. then all of Southeast Asia and eventually the whole world . They like nothing better than to hear that the people of the United States are pro- testing our involvement in that war. They feel that those protests will hasten the withdrawal of the U.S. from Asia and leave it an easy prey to their takeover _ Personally I "·ould rather die resisting than to live under a Communist die· tatorship. And that is their avowed goal. SO JT IS A question of where to stop their takeover of the entire populated area of the world. In Southeast Asia or should we wait until they start marching up th e street where Mr. Barley resides'! It's time to Jet the voices of that so- called "silent majority" be heard. TOM RHODES Orgnnl.:ed Crime To the Editor: Whal are v.·c going lo do about organiz· ed crin1e ? Thi s question has stumped the experts since the days of the rum runners and the experts are still groping around in the dark for an ansv.·er. Perhaps some light can be shed upon the problem if we examine what keep s organized crime in business. Organized crime is ju st that. it Is a business that is involved in the field of services. They furnish services that the customer is not only willing to pay for Police and the Panthers Black Panthers say that poli ce across the nation have killed 24 of their mem· hers and jalled many more. One sy1npa- thetic account states that "20 have been exiled from the United States: 98 are cu rrently in jail ~ and a\ least 27 others are u n de r indictment for various charges ." Editorial Research ' ~ne or seveta\ groups looking in~o ~members by Cflicago police on Dec. 4. police harassment. of Black Panthers 1s They were the charismatic leader of the an ad hoc comn111te~ of U.S. congress· Illinois BP party. Fred Ha1npton. and men that wlll meet t.n Chicago. }leaded a leader from Peoria, Mark Clark. by Rep. Charles C. ~1ggs, Jr. (0.Mich.). ~leanwhile. forme-r Supreme Cour t the ~l.l·Ntgro group includes Augustus F. Justice Arthur J. Goldberg and Roy Ha"k1ns (0-Cailll.J .. John Conyers (~ \Yi\k ins, executive director of the Nation· ~lch.), Shirley CIUsolm (O.N .Y.). Wll-al Associa tion tor the Advancement of ham ~ Clay (0.Mo.), and Louis Stokes Colored People, are launching a private (D-Ohio). investigation into violent incidents be· THE BLACK PAl\'THERS were formed tween Blatk Panthers and police across in 11166 aft.er a srries of conflicts bt\wetn the country. Sen. Charles H. Percy (R· Negro youth and the police of OakJand, JU.) hall suggested that the U.S. Civil Callr. They began to receive nationa l Rights Commission should in vestignte the ;i.ttention after one of thei r leaden. Hue y Chicago kll llngs. "There's a strong feel· P. Ne\\·ton, was charged wi1h murdering ing 1hat lhtre must ha\-·e been $0me kind an Oakland policeman. Once the Pan· of p\oL Involved,"' he declared. thers' minister or defense, Newton Is now Jn jall. Eldridge Clta,·rr. "uthor or Soul On lee. disappcarfli on Nov . 27, 1968, when his parole on a ll·rear, assault sent~nce was revoked alttr a gun batlle. He was most recently reported ln Algiers with se1/tta1 other Black Panther leaders, seeking papers to let him return to tht United States. THE U.S. DEPARTMENT of Justlct uid on Ott. 12 that Its civil rights dlvf· sion would make an JnvrslJgation inlo the .shootfng (If t\\·o Black PanU1t!r INDEED. AN UNEASY feeling ls abroad that the nation's "J)Ollce may be conducting a planned or sponlaneous war against the Black Panthers. FBt Director J . Edgar Hoo*r told a }louse. Appropriations su~mltlee last April 17 that the .. rtvoJ!ltfonary stahtfrt-"t.tlien by the black nationalist groups ''has made It necesury for the FBI to Intensify ita lntelllgenct operaUons in this !leld through the peoet<aUon of these groups wtth Wormanta and source., In order to keep 4ware of thf:ir plans and objec- livts.'' .. but will knowingly break the law to utilize. These include gambling, drugs, prostitution, loan sharking, etc. Even though the appearance o( such words in print may shock many. there are in- dividuals who literally live so as to in· dulge themselves in one or more of these activiUes. These individuals that live to indulge themselves are keeping organized crime in business, THERE SEEM to be two logical methods of combating organized crime. Those that indulge themselves tn th• services could be punished to such an ex- tent that they would no longer buy !Uch services. Society could provide some of the services that are now being provided by organized crime. The punishing of individuals for buylng services from organized crime bas never been successful. Nor has any kind of crime been eliminated during all of recorded history by punishing the. criminal. Those who believe that this is the only solutJon to the problem of organized crime are really impeding any progress toward a solution. When society finally decides that they have had enough, then and only then will they eliminatC' orp;ani7.td crime by providing organized crime·s services. HARRY B. McDONALD JR. ;l gflinst tlae V.lV. To the Editor: A lot of people arc wondering what the United Nations is doing here. The U.N. appears to .have something good aoin& for it, but is it good for us'! The U.N. gives UNICEF money to foreign CtlUnt ries \Vithout the slightest de- mand for records showing what was done v.·ith the mo11ey . A1nong the recipients ot UNICEF are the sheiks of Araby, the Dons of Latin An1erica. and many a little "king" of a hungry bunch of vertebrates (also members of the U.N. with one vote, don't you forget) who, after getting theirs, rind little money left for the poor children. UNICEF IS A shady outfit, and I quote Stanton Evans' column tn the In- dianapolis News for Jan. 26, 1962 : "When the U.N. was out of money ror its Congo aggression, it borro-·ed $10 million, earmarked for UNICEF, from the U.S. government. This was UNICEF money - handed over with UNICE F's e"IJ)ress con· sent. In short. UNICEF money was used to subsidize the Katanga "aggression" In "'hich. as we aJI know, civilians were kill· ed . many of them being children whom !he UNICEF apparently forgot about dur· Ing that little. fracas. Tht United Nations is a thorn in the side of every American. be he patriotic or revolu tionary -there is no difference -Americans are being duped by the United Nations, and the sooner we get rid oI the parasites, the better off "'e will hr~ S. G. UNDINE --~-- Wednesday, Dec. 24, 1969 The edftorio: poge of tlie Daily Pilot seek"-S to inform ot1d strm. 11late TtOdtrs bu presenting tllis 11ew1paper's opinions 011d com· 111e11tott; on topics of interest und signi flca11ce, by pTovidtng o forum for ihe txprts1ion ot our rtackr~· opinlon.s, ond bd prtlt11tJnr tP'lt dititrSt tifew. pointt o infon'J1id-obstrver• and ipokumen Oft fQpiu of IM do~. ' Rob•rt"'N. W•ed, Publisher I \ '( I " I I .. ~--·----·-----.... -------------------------------·--· -----------·~··------------------------·----~-.··-~ ' • I ! • ! I I I I • • • I • l I 11 JOPEAN HAST INGS, '42-4311 • Christmas Spirit Continuecl ' ' Gifts Given. Year-·aro·und Dec. 2.5 may be THE day of the year for giving, but the spirit of Christmas thoughtiulness is continued on a year·round basis by members of the Women's Fellowship of the Fountain Va lley Presby· terian Church. Each month of the year finds the women busy with a variety of projects. For this holiday season they baked coOkies and wrapped gifts for teenage girls confined in Juvenile Hall , but they al so give bi- monthJy .birthday parties for the young women, complete with birth- day cakes and surprise presents. Another continuing project is the supplying of clothing and toys to an orphanage in E nsenada, Mexico, and also the support of two missionaries in West Irian and Kenya, Africa. The group meets at 7:30 ,.m. the second Thursday of each month in homes of members, an the fourth Thursday of each month it gathers between 9: 15 and 11 : 15 a.m. fo r a work party at the church. The women made drapes for the church and sponsored a ki t- chen sho wer to stock the new facility. New officers recently were elected to guide the group's activi· ti es during the coming year. Replacing Mrs. Calvin Ri i:e as presi- dent \\•ill be Mrs. Dari Hicks. Serving with her will be •the Mmes.. .James Strelow. vice president ; Ron Bishop, treasurer, and William Cl ayton, secretary. Al so appointed were chairmen incl uding th e !\1mes. Gerald Partain, hospitality; Ben Sauceda, missionary: Clayton Sharpe. cir- cle: Don Stinson, projects; Raymond Hicks, Juvenile Hall, and Alex Patterson,. publicity and historia n. Planned for tbe.new(yfN ,are a spring mother a nd ,daughler luncheon and a fathel' and son~ ~rbecu e taking place in June. ., -,,; . . - SENDING A CARD OF HOPE -El Toro res- idents (left to right) Mrs. Leroy Kellogg and J\.1rs. Steph en Hanson write cards to prison- ers of war. In the background is a pi cture of .:.:.-r ,, • • • • • • ; ' • • -~; ' PARTIE·S FOR ALL SEASONS - Girl.s in Juvenile }Jail are r e- membered e~~.h m onth of the year by members of the Wo1nen's F el lowship of the~untaln Valley Presbyterian Church: Icing a cake ·for the bimonthly birthday parties fo r the young women are (left to right) Mrs. Dari Hicks. incomi ng president; Mrs . CaJ .. vin Rice, retiring president, and Mrs. Raymond Hicks, Juvenile Hall chairman. POW Fam ilies' Cont in"b1ng Praye r • Please God, Bring Dad Home By BARB ARA DUARTE 01 ""' D•H1 l'llof 1111! The women sat quie tly at card tables and on the floor around the coffee lable addressing Christmas cards. A seasonal occupation? Yes, but one that carries far more thrUst lhan the usual two-hour penning of ·Christmas greetings to friends and relalives. The women. like 1nany others in are:is :such as Upland. A7.usa, San Diego •and tow ns across lhe United Slates, were spending a morning in the El Toro home of Mrs. Leroy Kellogg in order to address Christmas cards to prisoners of wa r in Vietnam. ' Posters and infonnalion on how to help 'thost: prisoners line the walls of the living room ; an American flag flies outside the home as it does every day. Yet another flag flies across the street al the home of Mrs. Stephen Hanson, 30. wife of a Marine Corps flyer who disappeared in Vietnam on June J, 1966. • Afrs. Hanson. a ·tall, attrictive hMJneue who speaks softly and without bitterness, t.as aUended many card-addressing sessions in the hope communication with the Vietnamese may speed the day when her young lieulenant husband returns home ... to see !or the first time his son Todd, now J years old. JfUSBANO SHOT DOWN LI. Stephrn lfanson \\'as shot do11·n as hf piloted his helicopter over North Viet- nam territor y. Although the governn1ent listed him "missing in action," his wife later recognized him in a picture of American prisoners published in a Norlh Vietnam· newspaper. As added proof to her belief her hus· band is sti ll alive, a military passenger on the £light who was rescued reported the pilot and co-pilot !\urvived the crash, although he didn't know what had hap· pened to them . Carole H an~n spent nne year awai ting \VOrd of her husband, then decided to do :«>1nething about it. As one of 1.355 Amer ican women whose husband s or relatives are listed as prisoners or missing in acti o n !whereabou ts of only 401 are actually known ), she joined forces wit h others in a campaign to pressure Hanoi into observ- ing rules ·of the Geneva convention : list- ing na mes of prisoners, opening camps to impartial inspection. repatriating the sick and wounded and pennitting cor· respondence. Wive, are allowed to write monthly let. ters, limited to six lines, accord ing to Communist rules. None are answered ; none are returned. And a pattern of uncertainty Is established in a day-by.(lay pattern. a pattern that has been interwoven into the life of Carole Hanson for more than three years. COORDI NATES EFFORTS As Orange County coordinator for lhe National Le ague of Families of Am erican J>risoners in Southeast Asia. she has circulaled petitions, designed bumper sticker:1, correspOnded and personally ado .... dressed congress men and is ready to toe ' . the biggest step she has taken so far ia an effort to find her husband. ...: As a forerunner,. s~ made a second ~ · trip to Washington, D.C. I.his month to ·~ make known the plight or the wile of a missing serviceman. She and four other ·: _wives whose hus bands are presumed POWs appeared on nationwide television <ind were int rod uced at the President'• .• news cohference. On Jan. 3. she and fou r Los Angele1 , \l·ivcs will fl y to Paris accompanied by a / '.: television commentator. . : Once there, they will seek a personal confrontation wi th Xuan Thuy, head of the North Vietnam peace delegation. She \ . agrees efforts made to release prisonen should be government to government, but is too well aware that Nort~ Vietnam. doesn't recognize normal chaMels ot communication. WORLDWIDE JUNKEr Fi-om Paris, the junket will visit ~ government officials around the world, ·: hoping to stir up sympathy and po$sible •• recognition for the "forgotten" men. Since that J une d8y, more than three long years ago, Carole Hanson has writ· ten her husband every month in care of the post cffice in Hanoi. No one knows "''hel)ier the letters arrive ; If they are ever received. Bui Mrs. Hanson "''ill continue to write, and fight. for the day whe n her young IOn will no longer ask her, "When Is my dad· dy coming home ?" • • I I Wife Must Make Move or She'll Lose Stakes at Home DEAR ANN LANDERS ' I 1m 1 midd1e-a ged man who has just been of- fered the promotion he"s been dreaming about. Tl means moving the family ~veral hundred miles from here. · My wife refuses to move. She says the kids att doing well in school and moving 4 Woold mean leaving friends they have ifrov.•n up \•.'ilh. She also is cHlse to ):ler famil y. 1 • What can a man do when he is faced with rebellion like this~ My •ife says, : ~1oney isn't evel')'thing." I agree, but lhi1 isn't just money . lt't what I've been ahning for. It's satisfaction and progress. I'm 37 years old. If I tum down this p1'1)- motlon. I'll be stuck tn this spot the rtlt of 111)' llfe. Please he lp me. -BETWEEN ANN LANDERS THE DEVI" AND 111E DEEP B"UE SEA DE~R BETWEEN: If .Ute devil wln1 thl1 bltUe 1he 11 1ol11 lo b1ve . a fra1traled, unb1pp)' hu1b1nd on Hr h1nd1 for m1ny )'e1r1 t. come. Maybe fon:vtr. le my oplnlM, yDW1r wtle 11 ltl· tin& yoa down badly. It 11 the womaa·1 • mponalblUty &o make a home for btr man wlttrevtr lte can best panue Ms profeslion or ply lri1 trade. Rtmlnd her nr illoH bta11&ifel words: "Whltbtr tboa I Mlt-1 lotll. '1 DEAR ANN LANDERS~ I'm a 31 -yeaf'o cld divorcee .who has been going with a man 37, He also is divorced. The problem: I'm in love with him but he can"t. ma ke up his mind about me. After 10 months ol being together aJ~ every night, he still needs lo play around with other women. I should tell you , in all candor, we are not engaged. We have talked of marriage but no commitment has been made. The protlem bolls down to this: I am satisfied with one mB.1 but he is not satisfi ed with one woman. Last night f told him he'd have to make up his mind. He called me "Unrta50r1able'' Ind "Un (J i r." Am I'! -A.T.K. DEAR A.T.K.: ln•tmuth M you are 11nl ea1a1td and no eom,.fLment bu bctn m•de. tlte renlleman hi• a richl lo do •• H ple11e1. By the 1ame token, since you bave devoted yourself ft· elusively to him for 10 moalbl, yoa Uvt the d&bt to tell bJm eitbtr -or. Don't be surprtled If It'• "or.'' A m•• "ho cares deeply for a woman ud wants lter for hit wife dota not pl•y around, -unless lbtte'1 1ometbln1 wroo1 w1tll him. Have you constdered tb•I po11lblllty'? DEAR ANN LANOERSo Re«ntly you told a 16-year-old boy to join Alcoholics Anonymous. 1 didn'I know AA took in kids that young. What are the re- quirement! for Joining AA? -INTER· ESTED FOR A REASON DEAR IN : Tbe tnly requirement for memberUlp In AA It tht destre to 1top drlnkln1. There art no dues ind no fee1 • AA Is not. allied wfth Uj ltd, dl•c h> llon. polldcll porty o,. orpoli-. ~ pj:lllllr)' )lllrpoo< of AA It to lotlp l!"'J!t: stay oober ud lldp odltt ~ arbieve that 1oat. · ~ . Anyone lntemltd In dw:lr H~ oboald wrllt to AlcokUca A_,,,,., Box ut, Gl'llld C..lrll POii Ollke, ~ York, N.Y. ll017. ..~ • Anotbtr orgamuUoa lllat dotl tre mendous Jtb for alc:offlle1 ll: Tiie ~ tional Council on Al~m. I Pelt: • • • A\·e., New vor •• N.v. Ann Landers will bt glad lo help y;,i, with you r problems. Send them to her tn. cart of the DAILY PIWT, enc:IOllnl 1. self·addressed, &tamped envelope. . : l • • . •' . . : l I I '~---- ,.-;::.,-••r~"''-'-.,.,, .• , ... ---.--~- Jll DAI LY PILDT Happy Holidays Christmas Spelled Out By GAY PAULEY NEW YORK (UP I) -Tis the eve o! Chrl st's birth and wha t better way to wish ell of you the merriest of holidays tha n to spell it out. ~f -is for the music of Chris tmas, the maddening crowd s doing their last minute shopping, the magical spell the seeso!1 casts and for the precious moments of families and friends together. ~- E -is for the eve itself. the eagerness o{ the tiny ones nosing around . the tree ~d the inevitable exchanges the first shopping day alter the 25tb . R -is for the fabled reindeer including Rudolph. for the rosy red cheeks. of the little children, for the reverence ot Him born in a manger nearly 2,000 years ago. FETED AT RECEPTION Mr. and Mr1. Sidney Young Mesons Honored R -is for the rewards of work, for thr. riches of a bountiful nation. for the personal riches of health, family and hearth. Y -is for all the young in hea rt 'vho loo k on each Christmas with new spi rit, for the Yule log. Golden Date Marked C -is for the cheer of the season. the carols ,and carolers, the caring for o'lhers, the naine of the day itself, Christmas. H -is for the hope of peace on earth one day, and unfortunately for the holiday highway toll that c·.Jcb year seems to grow. R -is for relatives to be remembered with gifts and cards, for the Christmas rose which blossoms at this season. I -is for the new ice skates for the chi!· dren, for the imagination of those whose skills turn our store windows and streets in· to incredible fantasies, for the inn in Bethle- hem. S -is for the smell s and the sounds of the season, for the shepherds \vho watched their flocks, and for Santa Claus of course. T -is for the Three \Vise Men . for th e holiday table laden wi th lurkey and all the trimmings. Friends and relatives of Mr. and Mrs. Sidney Allen Young of Costa Mesa gathered in the home of their daughter, Mrs. Charles A. Smith to con· gratulate them on their golden wedding aMlversary. The couple were married in Los Angeles Dec. 11, 1919 and made their first home in Olin· da . They have been residents of Cotta Mesa since 1921 with the exception of two years spent in the Dutch East In~les. Assisting with hostess duties at the reception was the Open House couple's other daughter, Mrs. George Spink of Costa Mesa. Fl vc grandchildren and three great·grandchildrtn also were present at the festivities. Honored guests were Mr. and Mrs. Oiarle.s Young of Pico Rivera, Young's brother and slster·ln-law, Mr. and Mrs. Th e o Ragland o< Oakhurst, Mrs. Jessie Swaa. gerty of Montebello, Mr. and Mn. Lloyd Perrin of Lodi and "-frs . Charles TeWlnkle and Mr~. Lula Collins of Co.sta Mesa. M -is for moderalion mixed \Vi th th e n1erriment. for the midnight church serv· ices, and for the too much money u•e all \Vii i spend on gifts. Engagement Revealed A -is for old acquaintances ne'er for· got, for the ageless s'lory as told by St. Luke. for the Chri stmas angel s. During a holiday open house in the Costa Mesa borne of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Oliver Wh ite, the 100 guests attending learn- ed ()r the engagement or the Whites' daughter, Patricia Marie Whi te lo S I e v a n S -is !or "Silent Night, Holy Night.." the Christmas carol now known and sung around the world, one which had its beginnings in 1818 in the tiny village o( Austria, when ,Joseph Mohr. a paris h priest, and Franz Gruber. a schoolmaster. wrote the simple hymn for a guitar after mice had eaten the bellows of the church organ. I Akerley. Among those attending were , the bride-to-be's grandparents, f Mrs. Joseph St.ephen Con- l-----~------~-==-~,~==~r carrnon of Livermore and Mrs. Robert While of Manhat tan Three Versions January Day Chosen For Rites Los A n g e I e s Latter-day Saints Temple will be the set- ti ng for the Jan. 29 ceremony or Karen ?11angwn and Russell E. Fox. News or the forthcoming t'VCnt has been announced by the bride-e\ect's parents, ~1r. and ~frs. Clarence. L. Man gum of Costa Mesa. Beach. ~'Liss White, a Lhird-genera· tlol'l Californian. is a graduate of Mater Dei High School and no1v is a se nior at California State College at Long Beach where she is working lov.·ard her elementary edu c a t i o n credentia l. Her fian ce, son of 1.ir. and Mrs. William Kenneth Akerley or Capistrano Beach. is a graduate of San Clemente High School and will receive his BS in industrial technology in January from CSCLB. · The betrothed couple are Peering Around PATRICIA WHITE Summer Wec:ldln1 planning a summer weddin g in St. Joachim's Catholic Church, Costa Mesa. Horoscope Sagittarius: Emotions Strong ·: THURSDAY DECEMBER 25 By SYDNEY OMAllll BDT BUYS lacl'Mie cbil· dreo'• c1mt1.~ lportl elodles. tna&er Ueket1, arUcla aimed al enltrt1hunenl, luxury Items. ARJES (March 2l·A°prll 191: Fun and games at home wou ld be ideal prescrtptlon. Day to smooth over rou1h edges. Listen to those with problems, complaints. Know that you do have a unique kind of 1ppeal. TAVRVS (April 21>-May 20): You break through restric· · lions. You are able t o coordinate holiday p I a n s . Emotlonal restrictions rall by wayside. You come alive in that you revel in ha ppiness of others. GEM INI !May 21-June 20): Much conljCt with neighbors, l'elat1ves provides real hollday at mosphere . Hunch p ays dividends. Share knowledge. Give of yourself ; that Is most significant gi ft . CANCER (June 21.July 22 ): Flurry of excitement may be interrupted by mental calcula· tion or costs. Key is to enjoy yourself. Know that every mo. ment is precious. To avoid di sappoint1nent, prosp~ti ve brides are reminded to have rtheir 'vedding stories with black and \vhite glossy photo· graphs to the DAILY PILOT Women's De· partment one week before t.he \v edding .. Pictures received following the wedding will not be used. For engagement announcements it . is imperative that the story, also accompanied by a black and white glossy picture, be sutr mitted six weeks or more before the wedding date. If deadline is not met, only a story will be used. To help f ill requirements on both wed· ding and engagement stories, forms are available in all of lhe DAILY PILOT offices. F\urther questions . u•ill be a nswered by Women 's Section staff members a t 642-4321 or 494-9466. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Cy· cle high; you brea k through barriers of restriction. You are in limelight. Your manner or dress, expression attract al· tenlion . You n1ake others ex· perJenet joy. VI RGO 11\ug. 23·Sept.22 ); Work you did in aid ing persons v.•ho were hosplta llted or in· capaclteted make s you feel glow of happinea.~. Yoo are present ed with tokens or ap· preciation. You feel good-and fu!Dlled. · LIBRA (Sept. 23.Qet. 22 ): Friends. spirit of good will could prevail. You a r c delighlfully surprised by con· slderatlori others display. Be especially appretlative toward family members. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Your sense or diplomacy is put to test . You learn that one you doubted has been savi ng to surprise you .. Strive to un- derstand-and appreciate, SAGITTARIUS iNov. 22·DeC. 21 J: You arc able to rc·r rstablish communications with one who has been at ,a dist·1 ance. Your emotions arr strong. Express them in ton·1 structive manner. You arc touched by display or concern . CAPRICO RN (Dec. 22·Jan. 19): You know now that money spent to make others happy was wisely expended. Special relationship is spotll&hted. Listen and learn. Mini Scissors To e as e cutting chores; there's now available mini scissors, battery-operated . Stetk and llghtweighted, the !cissors cut quickly through cloth and paper . Be sympatheUc, open to love. AQUARIUS (Jan. 21).Feb. II): You rediscover one clo&c, there is chance to strengttien special relationship. If mar· ried. be especially considerate of ma te. 1£ singlr, know that individual in question is serious. PISCES fFeb. l9·J\l<1rch 20): Puform specials e r v I c e.i . Show others that you ap· preclate their special needs. By giving, you also receive. Surprises a r e featured - mostly or pleasan L variety, lF TODAY IS YOUR BIRTHDAY you are entertng cycle wh ich brtngs widespread recognition. Recently y o u established pattern which ii. demanding and represe nls: challenge. Odds are favorable for success. ' · To llnd wt wllo'1 1uckv !or vw J" m-v ol\d lovt. oroer St!lllf~ Om•rr'• l>Doklol, "!.ttrtl H\n!s .fof Mtn •"II Wi>men " Send blr!~dlll 11'1d so cent~ 10 Om1rr A•lrohK1v ~etrllJo. mt DAILY PILOT. 60• n•. Gr1,.il (tn1r11 St•tio~. New Yett, 11,V. 1001,. 'A. HI! HAVE HAPPY CHRISTMAS \llR61NIA'S Snip '" Slilcl1 3l34 I . Co••t Hwy. Coron• del M•r Mesa Mayor Among Guests At Judging ;{; ·t'ef)fft-[mt THIS 15 Costa Mesa Mayo r and Mrs. A. L. Pin kley together with Mr. and ~1rs. Claude Johnson and Mr. and l\1rs. Claren ce Sorensen. all of Costa f.1esa, were invited to the Regal Mobile Club Estates by Mr. and f\1rs. Charles Nau, man- agers. All were guests at dinner and served as judges or lhe best decorated homes in the Costa Mesa park. Firsl prize was award ed to the Earl Dumonds, se<:-0nd to th e Dave Mltchells and Billie Gwynn and his mother, and third to the Bill Wrl&hts. J\1r. and Mrs. Joe Jamet won honorable mention along with l\1r. and Mrs. Fred Henry and Mr. and Mrs. Earnie 1-~ield. Prizes were aiven by John Cropp, club president~ ~- O:R ANNUAL The BIG ONE!' AFTER CHRISTMAS SALE & CLEARANCE u •• Your Wot S11I Ch1r91 M11tlr Ch1r91 BankAmerica rd · SAVE 40°/o to 70°/o OFF RECiULAR PRICE Doors Open 10 a.m. to 9 p.m.-Frlday, Dec. 26th Tremendous Salectlon All Knlt·Polyett•r IETIER DRESSES Sales PANT sm $8 •• $35 Final $10 •• $35 Rogular to $75 R11ul1r lo $70 Crepe-Dacron Wool and Orlon 9434 SIZES 2.a ~1iss Mangum, a graduate of Newport Harbor High School, attended Ora nge toast College and now is a student at Brigham Young Universi ty v.·here she is maj oring in elementary education and !s a member <>f SPURS. , Good Cheer Circling I LOUSES $5 •• $9 Extra Cashiers SWEATERS $6 •• $16 Which "'SV will she have 11"' Smooth all ihc \11ay or flii)ped out by pleats or gathers. Sew th is pacesetter in ~·ivacious solids, plaids or chteks. Printed Pauern 9434 : NEW Children's Sizes 2. 4, 6. 8. Size 6 lakes 1~ yards 3a-inch . SIXTY-nVE CENTS i n Ct'JiN for eadl pattern -add 15 cent! for each pallern for fi rst-class mailing and sp«:lal .handlln1 ; otherwlst thlrd-clial!is 'delivery wlll take thrct \\'ttks or more. Send to ~1arian Martin. lhe DAILY Pll.OT. ••2 Pattern Dept., 232 \Vest 11th St , New York, NY. 10011. Print NAM E. Al). DRt:SS "'ilh Zif', lilZE and STYLE NIJMBER. · NE W FALL-WINTER PA T- TERN CATALOG -over 100 stylts, free patlfrn coupon. !JO cents. INSTANT SEWING BOOK ltW todly, wear tomorrow, SI. INSTANT FASHI ON BOOK -what-tt>-we;ir 1n1wers, AC· ceasory, flsure Ups! Only 11. I •1er !lance. son of ~1r. and J\1rs. Ell is J\f. Fox of Green River, Wyo .. is a senior, ma- joring in physics at Brigham Youn&: Un iversity, where he is a member of Phi Eta Sigma Scholastic Honorary Society. He spent t~·o and on e-half years at an LOS J\lis5ion in Japan. Yule Pa rties Continuing EXCHANGING Christmas !\!rs. ~1. J. Bengochea, at girt s and enjoying a leisurely Desert Shores on 1 h e coffee and 1 reaplle from Salton Sea. Daughter Cheryl, home from shopping were the 1'1mes. the Uni ver1lty or Southern Wa llace Short , Robert Moss, California for the holidays, Edwin Booth, Elden Haskell , v.•ill be packing along the \Villiam Ballard. Lorin Lam· books -"We're lucky to 11et a mers. Allen Brookout, Wil liam day off." she complains. Pulford and Richard Gillum. Ron and Gret.a "-1urphy ope ned JOAN ANO ANDY Yeiser of 1heir Founlain Valley home Huntington Harbour are keep. for the part y. ing their fingers cr<>1sed and hoping Andy's business v.•ill IT \\'ILL BE the children 's free them fo r a few days In Christmas In the Huntin gton Y<>&emite. They will open the ir Beach home of Cmdr. and home for a postCbristmas par· l\1rs. Edward Casey. With Ed ty for his office staff Sun· A memorable Ch ristmas awny at sea. Liz is planning a day, Dec. 28. party is being planned by the quiet holiday which will be mother . Mrs. Vida Mae Coons from Palm Springs, for the Christmas weekend. T h e Hughes al'° entertalned their square dance club, Lace 'n Leather, durlna 1 prehollday part y. HOME FOR the Chr\stm1s holidays are Mills College cOeds the ML!ses Mary Hodor, Janet Wri11ht, Mindy Miller, Elizabeth Pierce and L.oren1 Emerick. They will b e hostesses at a Holiday Brunch Saturday, Dec. 27, in the home of f\lrs. Ellner Sproul of Orange, for prospective and current J\lills students. South Coast Chapter, Parents brightened by a vi.sit from her LOS ANGELES-BOUND will \Vithout Pa rt n e r s for pnrents. Col. and l\trs. Edward be !\Ir. and ~lrs. Robert Kerr. CRUISING aboard the Pr!n· mc1nbers' famil ies. !l icks from Wynnewood, Pa. They will spend Christ mas ccss Jtalia recently were Mr. A gill exchange ar ound the Wives from Cmdr. Ed's ship v.•ith Bob's mother·a·nd fath er, aOO Mrs. ruchard Gippl e of tree. games and the breaking also v.·il! lfl.ke turns e11· Mr. and Mrs. Leo Kerr. Diane Hunting ton Beach. During of pinatas will follow a buffet tcrtainlng Ol'l a "round robin" la anticipating a busy yc•r as their 11.<fay cruiM! from Los dinner al 7 p.m. Saturday. basla to keep anyone from chairm1n for the I 9 7 O Angeles to Mexico they vi,. Dec. 27, in the Laguna Beach being too lonely durtn1 the Mermaid B111l sponsored by itcd Acapulco, Puerto Vallarta home of Mrs. Dee AM Weber. holidays. the Little Mermaid Guild of and Mautlan. Other famlly activities are lluntlngton Beach. Highllgh~ of their trip v.•ere planned throughout the ye ar. J UDGE ANO MRS. Charles lhe f11mous high divers of LI Those lntereS1ed In furt her In· Bauer of Huntington Be1ch l'tfR, AND MRS. JAMES Quebrada. viev.·ed in Aca· formation may write Parent" ~·Ill spend Chrisunas with Hufhe! of ltuntlnaton Beach pulco. 11nd the flying lndlao \Vllhout Part.1ers. P. 0. Box D11rltine·s parent s. f\tr. and wll be enter1alnin11 Barbara's Birdmcn of Papantla. 122, Laguna B'ach. ----~-----------~--------~---- Ward Pa rty J\lr~. Douglas \Vard and J.lrs. ~1arvln Brov.·n of Cost• ~-le58 v.·ere amona members of the Rlvt'rVit'W Women's Golf lub ·entertaining pa tlenl! In ,\1etropolitan Stat e Hospital, Norwalk, f\1ore than 25 packages. Jewelry Items and cartons or ctgareLtes were contributed to tht ~bmc1f5 ward ~18. ••WPOa'I' ftWTI& PK!tlc Cont Hlrmwu 1MitwMn J•~ "'" M.CAf'ttl'"' ~--,_,~ .... Regular to $11 · Long and Short NICiHTCiOWNS $6 ,.$9 Rotulor to $10 Orl on.J1r1ay TOPS $4 to $9 Regular to $18 Extra Sales Ladles f' AN'l' ASTIC 2·PC. Suits Regular to $30 Cotton and Nylon ROllS $10 •• $18 Rotulor to $35 Wool & Poly11ter PANTS $6 .. $1-2 - R19ul1r to $21 Wool Knits ond Cotton Knits S9 to $30 Regular to $70 r\ ¢. ~f,~;;g cf~t ,,_ \ AT OUR SIX SOUTHLAND LOCATIONS lolltM ltlaod South C-1 Piao Ce1te M ... 270 I. 17th St. 204 M•h1e A••· JJ3J l rf1tol Hulttl•ttoft Center 7777 "'"'" II Sot•ndo JZl Molo Stroot L0<1uoo-h 140 lroodwey ~, I I ,1 I I .. ~,,.' I I I ' I I I • Eouniaiu:· Val TodaY's ·l'hlal • N.Y. Stoelu YOL. i.2,.NO. 307, 3 SECTIONS, 28. P,AGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDN ESDAY, DECEMBER 24, "1969 DAILY ,ILOT llelf , ..... Douglas Gets FIS ·Beats N. AmeriCan: in Bomber Bills , From Wire Servlce1 Surprise selectlon of M c Do n n. e 11 Douglas CorporaUon to create the FIS jet bomber, an $8 billion investment in tke n~ decade, was announced by the Air Fo~ce ·ruesd.ay in Washington. The pre.Ch r Is t m a s announcement comes as a crushing blow lo North Amer- ican Rockwell Corporation, which had relied heavily oo landing the huge coo- tract in its future operations planning. No great impact was immediatelt foreseen on either firm 's Orange County- based subsidiarie!I in Huntington Beach and Anaheim, bu! the North American work force in Los Angeles County will be hit hard . Officials at North American Rockwell's Autonelics plant Jn J\naheim Could not be reached for comment on impact of the contract loss on their giant new facility at Laguna Niguel, largest electronics milted amount to $80.24 milUon. The pro- ject is planned for 320 planes over five years. at a cost of '6..blWOn, and the long range projection co\ltd bring it to 700 planes at a cost of $8 billion. In St. Louis, James S. McDonnell, chaipnan of the winning company, said tl~-contraet would ?10t ~rc_SJJlt Jn an in· crease in employmml at tke firm'fl·maln plant. But he s!.id the flnn would. hive had t.o lay off 10,000 workers if lt'bad not won the contract. Tbe firm will do an but -25 percent of the work in SL Uiils with the balAnce golng out on aubcon~ac~·to California plants aOO smaller ainou:ta in (Ste ~CT, P!gt ti_ -- Best i11 Huntingto11 ~ plant in the worrld. - Autonelics employes were off for the holidays, with only a token crew on duly and executi ves who migbl be able to ix· plain it further were out doing last.- minute Christmas shopping. This scene, outside the home of D. F. Wadsworth, 16101 Melody Lane, \von the sweepstakes prize in Huntington Beach's Christmas decoration cqntest. A comple~ list of winners will be published Mon- day. 10 Orange Coast Residents A1nong Jury Candidates Ten Orange Coast residents are among the list or 30 persons from whom the Orange County Grand Jury of 1970 will be &elected on Jan. 5. Included• in the list·" cori1ptled by Superior Court Ju,cJgt:.James.F. ~'°'dg1 - lhe ·criminal cOurt presiding judge. for 1970 and the court's liaison with the grand jury-are two residents from Hun- lington . Beach, orie from Westminster, four from Corona del °Mar, one from Balboa, one from Newport Beach and one one from . caPisfraoO B.each. Tht?ir narries wiD be among 30 to go into a drum at the annual selection · of the grand jury. ·The first 19 names to be draw!! by Judge Judge's clerk will com~ prise the new panel. Am'ong ·the noniinees for the· 1970 jury •re: · · · · A .. C. Achey or 615 8th St and Cf:Jatles ~!11sh~um oI ~ 13th St. both Or Hun- tington Beach; Raymond M. Schmitt, 8121 E. 19th St., Westminster; Mrs. Audrey CoUon, 1509 E. Bay, Balboa and Mrs. HarTict Bemus, 2631 Waverly Drive, Newport Beach. Also, Mrs. lrmeli Desenberg. 2231 Bayside Drive, 1'.iiss 1'1arian Louise Parks, 2.13 Morning Canyon Road, Dr. Ralph Gerard. 1007 Goldenrod and Mrs. Alice Remer. 210 Goldenrod all of Corona de l Mar and David Clark, 35885 Beach Road, Capistrano Beach. All those named were nominated for ,ervice on the Orange County Grand Jury by the 21 Superior Court judges. Ji.ldge Judge today scheduled the nam· Ing of the panel for 2 p.m. on Jan. S in Department S of Superior Court. Orange Coast Weat.lter Someooe forgot to wish the weatherman a merry Christmas, and he 's retaliating in kind-with low clouds, fog and a light drh:tle to dampen lbe yuletide spirits, while temperatures remain in the mid 60 .. 1. INSIDE TODA 1.' Financial columnist Sylvtn Prrrttr giCti 10 rtde1 for inveit- ors to follow in bu)/ing art 1oorks in hrr columtt on Paoe 12 <odllu. ,..,..,,..,. .. ..,.. • Ooly 1 ii.., I· . . Tl•. I CHRISTMAS !-----------· '. ' 11·11 " • • • II 11·1J .. • • ll • Season of Peace on Earth • Marr.ed by World's Wars 1 :By The A1aocbled Press Millions or persons around the world made last-minute preparations today to _. , ' • • • j ' celeb~te Chri:stmas. · . . Al . gh· tl'ie mNUge of t~e ·birt h "'. Jesus ist is "Peace, on Earth. '1 the v.•ars: the 1warlljt had. with jt.Jast 'year re- mai~ in VietnJjn and Nigeria. The Miti- east ·situation remained 'unsettled. Three .loud explosions rattled. windows today in Bethlehem. the birthplace of Christ. One Israeli official said they could have been cau~ by supersoni~'aircrail. It is the hilltC?,P ci~y''s third Chrishnas under Israeli rule, and in the shade of the Church of the Nativity scores of Israeli sec~rity agents m~ngled with. I he Christmas pilgtims. One estimate said m<r~ Plltn t,<m trool>s and police were on duty irt the town. ' In Vietnam, the allied cmimands and the Vi~ Cong oj>served cease-fires. Fighting had · been . at ·a law level for several Weeks, amt after the truce began it drilpped off eVen more. · · · Radio Hanoi began b r o ad casting recorded messages from American prisoners of war to their families, as lt has done in past yeani. Soldiers in Vietnam and at other U.S. Trustees Dela y 'Bof:i y .(\wa reness' Probe at Edison An Investigation Into "body awarenes:;'' experiments at Edi90!1 High School we!. temporarily delayed Tuesday through the absence . of Trustee Matthew Weyuker from a meeting of the Huntington Beach Union High School District governing board. . · Th~ probe was to be asked for by Weynker in Connection With a ccxnplaint by Huntirtgton Beach resident Joe Ferm, who charged two weeks ago ,that i;eM.itivity trainlng sessions bad no business in an EnglishJiter.ature class. t>Jring the meet\ng, however, ti:ustees were told that the completion date of Ed- ison High School had been extended unt.il April 4, 19'10. Th~ achoo\, although occupied, wu not finished in time for the ~ber school apening, due to bad" lt'e1tbel' and con- strucPon industry itrikes.• CoQtractor Jeck ·Shirley •ured the trustees.that eW:ryUt\ng was beini 'dorie to nrilsh all consllbCtt'qii work earlier.1J!e predicted lhat lhe achool would be com- pleted by Jan. 15, lt711. . INMATES· GET TI NG military Installations in lht Far East. Europe and th' Uiiited Statfl gave Christmas parties for chlldren at orphan- a1a aod holpitals. , Chri!tmu in the ·united States is quieter Ltll• year than last. In 1968, the Apollo I as\fOnauts wtre circling the m~. and the crew of the 1py ship Pueblo was coming home after 11 months of captivity, As urual, shoppers jammed the stores to make tMse down-to-the-wire purchases • from stocks that have dwindled · steadily si'nct Thanksgiving. Department store of- ficials said revenue was higher than I~t year, but many attributed the Increase to higher prices brought on by inflallon rather than additional volume . Hundreds . of thousands flocked In airport.... railroad stations · and bu~ tenninals, heading hOme to see relatives and ram'ilies or taking vacations. Amoog the travelers will be President Nixon. his wife: and daughter Tricia, who are going to San Clemente Friday after spending Christmas at the \Vhite House. The Nlxons' other daughter, Julie Eisenhower, is in Brussels with her hus- band David, whose father is U.S. am- bassador there. Nixon went to Capitol Hill Tuesday to lunch with coogre.uional leadei's shortly before they adjourned the first session or the 9lsl Congress and headed home. Many of them Will find a white Christmas. A snowstorm blanketed the ~fidwest and the U.S. Weather Bureau forecast snow for the Northeast. The bureau also said there was snow In the Pacific Northwest, northern California and inland to Utah and lhe Rockies. F org ery--S uspects Sought by Police LOS ANGELES' (UPI) -Sevtn penons, including four men and three wqmen, were boo:ked 1\iC5day , on suspi- cion o< forgery by polict ~ 90Ught 50 m0tt suspects in a credit card ring. Sheriff's depulies aakt the oountywide ring 11legedly manu.{actured phony drivers' licenees to akl in Pfll&ling bad checks and, u3ed stolen credit cards to bilk stores out of nei.rly $500,000 in calih and merchamtise. . The raid1 on three different. home~ climued a f~r-month , lnvesUgation by dqiutles who Mid the operation had been in ·action for: several.ITlOD&hs. Deputies confiscated 180 forged li«n~ during the rli4s,, plus· cameras, llghUng equipment, blank Jonns and printing . equipment. BIG YV·LE DINNER, The· ou~ndinl '"'pe<\I allegedly J • • 1 helped paa the cardl at various rparkets, Thty may bt In jail, bu! ihe lnon1~1 , I" ~tiqnl l!1CI clepartm"1'8l«ts. of Orange County Jail"triU have a Cbriat- mas dinner lhat'1 "ev~g a.od •more ui.t< a hom....,.ked.bolldoy dinner would be." AuthorlUcs tt the Jail llid the bolid1y dlnner wtll conei1t of turkey and •1ulf- ing, two kinds of vegetablel, cranberry 11uce, mashed potatoe. and pumpkin pJe. ''I ale out here over Thanksgiving,'' the spokesman said "and it waa qllite good. Al a matter of fact, it was a bigger dinner than I would havt 1otten at home." • To Erect Monument LONE PINE (UPI) -Jap1ne1t who were intemfd at the Manz.soar Camp near here during Wcrld War II will return thi1 weekend to erect 1 memorial to~ who died durin1 their lla.y 11 the camp. 1\vo buees from Soothe:m California wtte expect.lit t4l arrive Sllurday and 'dtpart the followlng da y. Larry Vitsky , public relations direcctor for the McDonnell Dooglas AstronauUcR Corporation western division in Hun· tington Beach, however, confirmed tha t !he Fl5 job won't affect the west county facHity. •·Y,'e won 't be involved in any pro- duction of the airplant, but anything that contributes to the health l'lf McDonnell Douglas is welcome," said Vitsky. He estimated 25 percent of the pro- duction will be done in California. The contract to build the slDgle-seat. twin-engine supersonic jet was tha first such past }et duf1ing : the Nixon . ad- mlnlstroti.., oll!I will •'1nt\Ulljy ~ l'Ot of the biggest in Pentagon biStorf. The selection of McDonnell was a boon for SL . t.Ou.11: mre the firm erOp\oys 1bout 33.000 ·worker• i nd where mmt of the "'ork will be done. f'airchild Hiller -which was also Jn the bidding, faces a big loss. The initial contract. released Tuesday, ls for 20 aii:craft for development anrl t.e,sting purpose• at a tfu:get price of $1.140 billlon. The 'first funds to be com- Public Invited ' To See Nixons A1·rive at Toro. The public Is invited lo see President Nixon touch down In Alr Force One at El Toro Marine Corps Air Station on Friday for the start of about a IO-day stay at the \\'estem White House. • The President's arrival is scheduled for 3:30 p.m. with the gate to be opened to the public at 2:30 p.m. The President will spend the post- ChrisL"71as holiday with his wire and rla ughter Tricia at ,.r.elr estate in 5an Clemente. Television viewing of the Rose Bowl game and preparation of th~ State of the Union message and 1971 federal budget are on the agenda. Greeting the President on his arrival at El Toro will be 25 members of the San Clemente Dons and a mariachi band. To get to the Marine Air Station take either lhe Sand Canyon or Culver Drive turnoffs from the Santa Ana Freeway. Tonight a Chrisbnas eve peace vigil is scheduled at the San Clemente Western \Vhile House as a war moratorium ac- Uvity fOI" December. Persons taklng part will march in silence by candlelight from 9 p.m. until midpigbt, following 1n 11-block circular route around the Cyprus Shore neighbor· hood. Yule Carolers Sing on Horses Downtown Huntington Beach residents found their eyes more surprised lhlo their ears by 1 young group of Christmas carolers Tuesday night. TwmLy young gira and two chtperones trealtd the downtown fold to two hwrs of &ongfest-from on top of.their ho~. The group w•• CQmppoed o1 young eightll grad• (Iris who 11t1bl• their bones at the Huntlngtof\ Beach ijorst Ranch and eaCh Chtl~t ~e out on bonet>.ick to ..ran.ode the town. Thls year'• venture wu the ~ ltH:· cesslul, accordln( to Lypn Blt)in)ono, one of the chlpaones. ·"'•"" Mulceu NEW YORK (AP) -Moot atoW con- tinued their climb in fairly actlvo tr.td- ina: today, •I•· advances wtdtnfd: their lead over dec lines by 700 l1sues. (Ste quot1tlo111, Pages 12-1,) • ' I •; -~ • DAIL 'Y'-PfLOTPMle .. P• ~· l'ROF)LE IN CO\Jl[IAGE : A WRESTLER WHO REFUSES' DEFEAT· ' . . . . . . Juitln Ogata·and Moth1r, Str1ngthenld by Chrltftn•t HoPC • ' ) ' . . . . . Not Beaten . . . .Paraly zed Wrestler Has Hope ,: By ARTIIUR R. VINSEL Of ..,. D9ny ,.11o1 '"'" Medical science cannot grant J ustin Ogata·s·Christmas wish this Year and he refuse~ to believe that perhai)s it never will . Because' he 111 a ~·restler. And. a .wrfftler may los1: a match, but he is never beaten. Justin sat up Tuesday for the first time in 19 da)'fl. Propped in a wheelchair, lhe Ill-year-· old Costa Mesa High School jUnior smiled and talked of hi! last bout, the ont he won't .accept l! t.be last in a short carttr. - Paralyied, he can do little more than that: smile and talk. The second Sbn of Mr. ancf Mi:s. Hltoml Ogata, of 3126 Roanoke Lane, Costa Mesa, Is virtually Immobile from the neck down , although he can move his up- pe,r left arm slightly. Chances for dramatic 1m·provemeril seem poor. "He's been told," Slid Coach John Swe1:ey. • The tough. 1plrlted, 130 paund division contender hit \be ml\.1' cturiJt1 an elim lna· lion bout Dec.$ to.decide wbo,would face San Clemente High SChool the foUowin& w~k; . Ht jtilL lay there. victim ol a ,nuke, • one-ln-1.million trag<dy. "I dJdn't wresUe," ht llJd Tueeday In Mom 113 1L · Colt• Mesa Memorial H111Pltal. "It 11'0 an unlllck)' accidenL But we won 1gahwt San Cltmente." A 1teidy 11tttam of 1 achoohnatts has v111l«l the sturdy J1p10-bom wrestler sl~ hls condition a~bili&ed and X-rays pfu1 neurological 1tudiH , began to in- dicate the extent of 1p:n11 d1m1ae. Coach Sweagy marvel! 1t· him. "I'll be down to <23 by the -tl\<l.·of th< season," he-uid, tn reference· to we.lettt class, when .Sweazy and teammates drop- ped in recenUy. "That's a hell of an outlook," said hi! lnslructor. · · :'Coach .. .t'm bored," Jusiin had ·ad· ded. with less hUmor. · 'Boredom has been alleviated soniewhat by huadreds of ·get-well notes, ehristmas cards. lcUers and the almosl-endleu stream of visitors. a fact: the Ogata ranu. ly accepts with deep thank!. "It's really 11roovr." Justin sald Tues- day. "some of the fUYS I've never even met before .•. everybody want.a ine to a:et well " T~P. physical tjOpdition prip'.r ·to ~he lr1g>c accident. however, couldn't pre- venl a minor cue o('lii')'niitis resultint from too much conversation. 1 One' nurse confides tliar tft Costa' M!sa High School friends dropped In on the spe'clal patient wilh Che ..,eclal Christmu seison needs al ooe lime, crowding into his room. "We don't break rules." ., 1aJd !See WR£8TLER, Pt(< 2) Y:V LE EDITION . . OUT BY NOON The . Cbri!lmu Editioo ol llit DAILY PILOT will be publbhtd and ti<~ ea~ly 'niursdl)' (before noon ht mo.l ' areas! and all DAILY PILOT olli<u w)U bt clooecl roe the holld1J. FrldlJ wlll be a normal WQr~,doy .al the DAIL y PILOT and tll oUlces wUI be npeh ror buslneA as U1Ual. • J DlllY •TtOT • -6each W ant.s· OWn, Not s ·tate Coast ·controls· •• l • ' Qllnlloitoa lleoch lw l&l<en a M>ac -tloat 1-1 P""1nl •a-le< ahould be mponslblt for £U)dlng coarul development. At a htarlng or !ht Assembly Com· mittee oci Natural Resources and Con1trvatlon held ln IM Angeles hast \\"ffk, city Diredor of Beaches and Harbors Vlnctnt Moorhouse opposed the auUon of a state aupcr agency to con· trol ahorellllf' development. Jo lh1s move, HunUniton Beach joined . WINS SUPERIOR COURT POST Judft J. E. T. 1Necl" Rutter From Page 1 CONTRACT .•. many other states. North American Rockwell had warned that it! 80,000 employment level would drop to 40,000 by 1976 unless it landed the contract The firm has been a major con- tractor In the Apollo apace program which ia nearing an end. Fairchild-HUler, cf Germantown, Md., was the miallest of the three companies left in the bkkling. It estimated that it would have farmed out more of the work -M much as 60 percent -than the other two firms, and had argued that mctt widespread economic benefits would have resulted. Tbe plane will repl1ce the FtE Phan· tom which is now nearly 1% years old. It will carry both sMrt and Jone-range air- to-air missiles, plus a powered fut-firing version ol the old Civil War aallln( gun for Ule in air comblt again.rt ground Wpll. 'l1le Air Force bu said the Ru.saian! have twice as many ,fl&hter planes as the United Stat. abd Jn developing a new filhter called "Foxback" that would be fiUperior to anything pouesaed by either adlt. The F15 is designed to counter that threat and l\lll'lntee continued U.S. air auperiorlty. 1be preaenl Soviet MIG21 ls reported equal in many respecta with the F4E Phantom. The CGDtractor for the plane's engine will be decided on ne.xt March ln a com- petition bet....., Geoeral Electric C.. and Prati and wllltney. Family of Seven . - Dies in Blaze PARSONS. Kan. (AP) -A ramily of &even persons died early today when dense ·smoke from a kitchen fire crept throogh their two-story home. They were Jack f\toler, 45 years old, his wife. Rosemary, 40, Richard, 17, Ann, 15, James, II, Jane 4, and David, 3. A spokesman at 11 hospital where the bod ies wen taken said the deaths ap. parenUy were due to sulfocatioo. A cor- oner's report is sUll pend ing. DAILY PILOT Ct.utOl CO.UT '1J•Ll'"l'f5 COMl>AHY leliort N. w,,, ,., ... ~, -l>llbl,.,... J •tlr "· Cwrl.v V«• l>r•'Olrll 1H "4Mrtl M ...... r Th."''' l<•••il 1:11 .... lhe111 •t A. Mw,,~;~, M ..... 11>1 lfl"' .Alllttt w. ,,,., -11•• lllltr H ...... •8"1l0ffice 11175 a.,,h lowle•tr4 M1lfi11t M''"': r.O. l•.c 790, tl6~1 --.L....-SHU!: nt I>-• A-c .. 11 ""-1 iao w..1 ..., ,,,.. .,,....,, twcri: nn w.s1 a.u.. teu'-"t•• I ( with Newport Buch, San Cl<Oltnte and l5eal Beach. l'ropooenil of tl\e IUptt qonq ... ~ a moratortwn on projecta aldn& the ~ and ane half ta one mile lftland wlUch might be considered irreveralble.. r-.toorhouse took the position that through the coast.al cities ind county Government the safeguards to en- vironment and ecology along the coast already elist and that what i' needed ur1enUy is not 'late interference but filwldal aaalltance in h<lylnl u much of 1 tbe COMlli!le u poaolble lcirlbe ~bile. 111'«i11 llltdal -lhc tl(l>t •t>d °"""°u mllel of biaclllronl In the city : -Bolaa QUca State .Bdcb is twa and ont·half mile! of relative!)' undeveloped public beach on the ocean side of Pacific Coast Highway. Full development of the beach wi th adequate parking and safe ac· ce.sa will hopefully be a joint state-city project over the neit five to seven years. -Southtaat from Bolsa Chica is a strip Suc ceeds Gardne r Judg e Rutter Gets Post On OC Superior Court ... Municipal C.wt Judgt J . E.T. "Ned" Rutter of Newpi:rt Beach today waa ap. pointed by Gov. Ronald Reagan to suc- ceed -Justice Robert Gardner to the Orange County Superior Court. Judge Rutter, 38, will move from his Harbor Judicial District Court. to the higher bench after t.be holidays . He will take over the-court vacancy created by the elevation last week of Justice Ganlntc to the Fourth District Coor! of Appeals in San Bernantino. Judge Rutter got the news of his unique Oriatmaa gift in a telephone call from the governor's press secretary. "The governor was qn his way down hert for Christmas vacation but he very typically figured that I might like to hear ot'the appointment DOW rather than wail for him to call,'' Judge Rutter sakl. "I will take over my Superior Cou rt duties with a very deep sense ct duty to the governar and an appropriate degree of terror," J udge Rutter commented. "lt will be my aim to give the people or California and the governor my every ef- fort and their full money's worth in this challenging appointment. "I plan to· be a rairly qWet judge for some llme untll l have had the chance to assess my new duties and work my way into the court," Judge Rutter added. "Dul I hope that I will soon be able to make a substanUal contribuUon to the administration of justice. As a new boy I have, of course, a great deal to learn." Married with four children Judge Rut· les-makes his home at 121 Via Havre, Lldo Isle. He was appointed to the Harixr Dtstricl bencb by Gov. Reagan on Nov. 19, 1968. An active Republican, Judge Ruller came t.o the municipal bench from private practice in Loi An&elea and Costa Robert Buchanan Services Slated Funeral servicet b' Robert Buchanan, ~5. of 2tnl I-la Lan<, Hunlinllon Beach, will be held at 11 a.m .. Friday 1n Smith's Chapel. He died 'I'uaiay at Hoag Memorial Hoopital. Mr. ~anan had been a private COi'\· ti-actor and head of Bucbanan Develop. ment Co. for 20 years in Huntington Beach. Survivors include his wife. 1ttrs. June Buchanan: four sons, Bob and Bill Buchanan and Robert and Phlllip Byrnes. "II oC the home ; a daughter, Mrs1 Susan Hughes of Laguna Beach: his parents, Y..fr. and Mrs. James Brinkley of Cres- cenl Cit~. Mesa . A 1955 graduate ol USC law 1ehool, he is a member<if the Costa Mesa Rotary Club. One ol Judge Rutler's final actions a.s a munkipal court judge was to participate in a raid Tuesday night on the Balboa theater where police and district al· tomey's officers joined him in coo· fiscaUng reels of the controversial Swedish fibn "I Am Curious (Yellow)". Judge Rutter and officers moved in on the earthy European movie after waL· citing the early evening .showing. Judge Allows Draft Obj ections To Specific Wars SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) .:_ A Federal judge today ruled unconstitutional a sec· tion of the Selective Service Act which prohibits draft resisters from declaring themselves conscientious object.ors to the Vietnam v.·ar without opposing all wars. U. S. Dist. Judge Stanley A. Weigel ac- quitted Leslie Charles Bowen, 24, who Tefused induction at the Oakland Indue- tion Center June 23, 1968. Bowen's refusal was based on his understanding of the Roman Catholic religion. which he interpreted as dif- ferentiating between just and unjust wars. Bowen said he had decided for him.self that the Vietnam war was unjust. "There i! no question of his religious motivation," Judge Weigel's nine-page oplnioo said. The objectionable secUon (6J of tht Y..tilitary Selective Service Act of 19117) provides exemption from "combat.ant training and se rvice in the armed forces'' shall be granted to any person "who b~ rea.ron of religious training and belief is consci enliously opposed to participation in war in any form ." Weigel's decision said this amounts to 11 "serious and unjustifiable discrimina· 1ion" in violation ol the due proce&s por- tion of the fifth amendment. Weigel said that the section in question generally exempts members ol tradi· tionally pacifist religklrls a such as Quakers and Jehovah's Witnesse!I" and does not ea:emtt others. such as Homan Catholics. "In denying conscientious objector status to Bowen, based upon his religious opposition to I.he Vietnam war but permitting it ta one whose religious op- position is to au wars, the effect or sec- tioo 6J is to breach the neutrality between state and rtligion requirt.d by lhe mandate of the first amendment." Wcigd said. Gun Crews Relax But Find Little Jo y in Yule THAI CAM. Vietnam (UPI) -The big guns bellowed for the final time and white smake curled into the mist from lhe muzzles. Somewhere out by Charlie Ridge • .amid the bomb-ravaged jungle now obscured by fog and rain, the 42-pound rounds tX· plod~in rolling, rumbling echoes. Thtlfsilence. It was 6 p.m. Wednelday and Christmas Eve had come to Hill ~. Marine SgL Brian O'Connell and hi:o; ~ix-man gun crew slripped off their nak jackets. They set them in a neal stack on lhe knee-high sandbagged parapet sur- rounding their 105mm howitur. "This is the third Christmas over here for me." said O'Connell, 29, of Montrtal, Que .. "so jt doesn 't get to me much. Dul .some of my younger people, vlell, they're kind or down and homesick today . "Sure, the.re's a cease-fire. That me-ans nothing. Last year our truce lasttd three hours -from 6 to 9 at night. We had to Contract A lVal'ded .To Landscapers Landscape specialists James and PetttlOn ot Anaheim were named Tues. day 1s design consultants for the SJ&.acrt UnJvtrsily Regional Park. Beaten out in the bo1n:I or SUptrvlsors• C'On,ider1Uon of four contenders for the pl1nning or the new $3 rnllllon park were Lana and Wood or Sauth Llgun1. The design phase of the park Js e1~ pected to consume $884,000 or the funds allotted to the project. h Is e•pected th1t work will be&in early In 1970. fire unUl dawn to bail out Kilo company, The Christmas before that1 1 v•as in Khe Sanh." O'Connell sloshed through the mud to check on the beer supply. Because it "as Christmas Eve, there would be an elllra r;ition for each man. Thrtt cans instead of two. Behind tht 2,S-lon howilltr. Pfc. Jim ?-.feade, JU, stacked canisters near a wall of dirt.rilled ammunition cases. He would have 100 high explosive rounds on hand iust in case the cease-lire doesn't work out. II v.•as f\feade's first Christ mas away from home. "Weird, really weird," was how he felt. His parents and sister live in ' Philadelphia . Nol even the two fru it cakes from home could bridge that g1p. "From what the family writes, though. T auess it's harder on them than me," ti1eade aaid. "l just got a card from my sl!.ter yt,terda~. You rtally apprttiatt IJelng rcmembtred over here thb tlmt of year." Throu1hout the night, the men would stand lhree-hour watches. tr nothing hap- pened, Sgt. Pablo Acosta, 22, of Ode~11. Tex .. woukl have "a couple of extra beer~ and get to lht midnight mass· on the hlll .'• The rain fell hardtr. A chillln1 downpour th.at splatltrtd aaatnst the plywood bungalows on Kill " outside the northern city of D.a Nang. In a while, Charlie Battery's mtn "'ould each curl up in four blanktts and one poncho liner in the mud or their un· covered gunplt. They had been up for 24 hours after firing all night Tuesd1y. Even so, a full night's sleep would be an unac· l·ustomed luxury. Bu~ wh,v not? II was, after ill. Christmas Eve-. of btacn owned by the Hunlinlton Beach C.. oom• three mllta loq and v~ lo ~ldth from 100 f..t to 400 f .. i. ' The company hal built an aparbnent development on l.hls beach, but the ,city has retained adequate public acte5S to tbe beach seaward of the project. -The city-owned . beach from the municipal pier to Beach Boulevard ha11 b~n developed at a cost of $3 million in a parking facility and landscaping. Private firms were stimulated to invest some $500,000 for new beach concea.sion bulldlJIP. The city plan fcrr shoreline development Includes a Policy·. of preserYatioo oC ecological balance, preservation or open :space and scenic vistas an.d providin; the amenities !or full enjoyment of the resources as flnt priorities, according to ti1oorhouse. Future plans Include tht joint clty•state development of Bolsa Chica Sl.ete Belch, construction of a surflna park in an are.a now heavily used far 1urlinc Including the development ol arUllclal ..ia to Im pro" •urllni and flllllnc. Also conHnuatton of negotlatlons: to ar- qulre oceanfront now priv11tely owned :and insistence that any private beach .development be -in line with the city 's shoreline policy, and rontinualion ()( ef· forb to improve fishing facilities 1t the pie r and broadening of a 60-ye11r-old policy to obtain public access on ,. pvpetual basil to all privately owned 11e,_cb. .. . -Routine Road ' Stop , Brings Drug Arrests .. A routine. traffic stop due ta a f1ulty brake light Tueaday led to the discovery or 30 ounca of hetoln hidden under the hood of a car. Huntington Beach police alleged today. Three men were arrested at the scene, on Warner Avenue neaT Paciflc Ca1st. Highway in lhe Sunset Beach are1, and about '750 worth of the drug powder, plus • quantity of pills seized as evidence. Booked on charges of possession of dangerous drugs and possession of dangerous drugs for sale were James A. Holliday, 25, of Artesia, as well a.'I brothers Ronald L. Kilcolins, 27, and Gary 0 . Kilcolins, 23, both of Cypress. Investigating officers said the haul wa.o; not the largest heroin seizure in California history -Chinese sailors were captured in Long Beach with $6 million worth two years ago -but it was a big .... Police said the car carrying the three 11Uspect.s was stopped at I: 15 p.m. by Of- ficers Larry f..1ay and Sgt. Jack' Smith, who questioned the occupants. The driver or the car v.·as on prDbaUon for a prior offense and had consequently lost Ills constitutional rights against search and seizure without a warrant. The hunt throughout the vehicle led to discovery of alleged heroin contained in 10 balloons and stashed next to the bal· tery. while some barbiturate and am· phclamine pills were also confiscated. Ne1v Old Glory Flying Fron• P age J J\1onica Espinoza. 13, (center) wrote a letter to State Assemblyman Rober~ Burke (R:Huntington Beach) (right) telling him about the ~Id, dirty flag flying over the St. F rancis of Assisi School in Hunt· 1ngton Beach. Burke a nd his assistant, Matthew \Veyuker (left) re- cenUy r esponded to the letter by giving the school a new California and a new United States flag. WRESTLER. •• solemnly, "but sometimes they get bent 1 little." Justin Ogata believes he will recover - and many other dedicated athletes have struggled back from disability on • torturous road the experts warned was jusl not the re -but one thing is cerlain. Newport Cops Curious? Swedish Sex Film Seized "It's going to take time," said Coach Sweazy on Tuesday. Money is another consideration and a group of family friends met Monday night to organize the Justin Ogata B~t­ cr Fund. Deposits will be made into the fund - estimated to require hundreds of thousands of dolla rs before Justin's ordeal is over -at I.he Bank of Tokyo, 510 N. Main St., Sant.a Ana . By JOHN VALTERZA Ot t1te Dally !>Itel 11111 They were more than curious and mort then yellow. too. So a municipal judge, a Newport vice detecti ve and two District Attomey·s in- \·estigators tumrd yellow to black Tues- day night and seized a copy of the Swedish sex rilm after its final showing a! the Balboa Theater. And today. a print of "I Am Curious (Yello\\'1 '' silS idle on a police depart- ment office floor . Its next showing will be delayed indefinitely. The judge, J. E. T. ''Ned" Rutter III. Detective John Simon and the two OA 's men sat patiently through the graphic Scandinavian sex sag.a. then al 9: JS p.m. 1noved into the theater projection room and took the print. Today, Newport Beach police were seeking misdemeanor complaints against 1he owner (If the !heater. \Villiam Alford or 1234 La fitirada. Laguna Beach, and the manager, Mrs. Eleanor Blackburn of !114 E. Ocean Front. Balboa. Simon said lhe charges sought would be fo r alleged exhibition of obscene matter. Chief James Clavas said one con- tributing factor lo the seizure of the film containing yards of footage depicting sex ac-ls was several com plaints from citizens ~·ho had seen the film and didn't Ilk' its content. "\Ve artn't tryinfl to act as censors or !he CQn11cience of the community in this case," Glavas said, ''but 11.1e truly believe that we re entitled to do it under the lines drawn by the U.S. and California supreme cm1rts.'1 He cited one letter and several phone cti lls from persons who saw the film and v.·ho r.ompleintd bitterly that It \\"as ob~l'.'ene. A local doctor wrote 11 letter dt1mning th' srx rpir. "ll's obviou~ that. tht. t!Xhibilors of I he~e lypes of films are notoriously rareless about their control (lf underage pcr.5ons enlerinf lhe thester. \Vithout much effort we ound one unescorted 17- ~ic~r-old f{lrl In lhe theater l1sl night ."' Olivas add~. Glavas cha rged that tUm maker& and exhibitors "11re 1tw1ys trying to produce something which vdl\ p~h and teat lhe liMs set by the coura and this ls a &ood cx1mple of 11."' Glll'IS said he h1dn 't 'een the him, • but I read the complete r~rt detailJng the scenes and rm convu\Cid we dld the r1~ht l hinit '' lie s.11Jd he hoped lhe line between cltll\ i nd dirty hims would 1000 be moni clearly defined by the courts. The film, aources said, will face some toush sledd ing elsewhere in the county, loo. Pilot Logbook So far. the response is phenomenal, at:· cording to City Councilman William L. St. Clair, wbo6e son was a teammate. Judge, Lawmen Curious; 'Yellow ' Showmen Blue By THOMAS KEEVlL ot "'-DellT l>lltl ttoff I DIDN1T TinNK l'd ever gel to see "J Am Curious (Yellow)." l almost didn 't and wish I hadn't. In I.he first place, the short subject that pr~ed it at the Balboa Theater Tuesday night was interminable and even more curious than the movie. It really "'as a commercial for Co lonel Sanders' fried chicken. IT SHOWED the dazzling-white form of the goaletd drumstick king palling one horse, feeding another horse-, 7 mug&1ng with another horse. talking with another horse, betting on another horse, congratulating another horse and jwll standing there "''ilh a lot more horses. The second reasoo I almost didn't Stt "l Am Curious (Yellow)'' was th1t, unknown to me, my companion movie (rltles Included ,Judge J . E. T. ''Ned" Rutter, several drputy district attorneys and some badge-toting represent· atJves of the Newport Beach Police Department. THEY FOUND the film appealing to prurient inter· ests and conf11eated It. 1 don't know if they took tbt Colonel Sanders fUm . There was 1 tNrd ream 1 almost didn't see "I Am Curious (Yellow).'' t could not stay awake. This chubby girl did ·run around a lot with no clothes on. So did her boy friend. A couple: of Ume1 they dbplayed more thin casual me1ns of expre'51ng affection Jnd their celebr1ted 1thletlc prowess (in a tree, on a bakony and In a pond) was an intrlaulna: manifestation Of cinematic imagination. WIUCB MEANS I stayed awake during that parL , Bui the rest of the !llm wag a drag. I fell to finding typograr.bical trrors In the En,Uah subtitles, then began rewriting the plot as it unro ded, only in my version I worked in a TOle for Colonel Sanders. That version would really have !enl Judae J. E. T. "Ned" Rutter on his ear. But nen this mental e1erclae failed' to sustain my lnttrttt and by lhl fflm 's encl J had nodded Into a :Mml41eep. J haven't tht VICtJtSt nollon of wh.it happened to the chubby girl and l!tr boyfrlond. except that their fomu are no Jonaer being dlspl1yed In Newport Betch, CIUfomia. OH, l MISSED 111 the action. Judge Rutter et al were boxing up tht mm while I w11 makln& I furtive exit, hoping no ane would He me pursuln1 m1 prurient Interests. , MOit unhappy man In lown Is ti1ax Dillman ti the reai.urant 1tT011 the sttttt. "Man, did we ha,·e • blast of bu!!inw ffhile It lasted.'' M 111Id. 11vou cauldn't believe lht 1ctlv1ty clown he.rt.'' ' L • •• -. . J I I I I I I Laguna Beaeh EDITION ' VOL. 62, NO. 307, l SECTIONS, 28 PAGES ORAN6E COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 24, 1969 r I . I I • •• Jack in the Box Loses His H eud In Lagunu Beuch Laguna Beach police have issued an all-points bulletin for a large plastic head, 18 inche:s in diameter. orange in color;. with green hair. a yellow cap and trim· n1ed with .a multi-colored CTJJlar. The inissing head was taken during the night from the soon-to-open Jack-in-the· Box drive-through restaurant at 1201 S, Co~st Highway. The thief, possibly seeking somelhing really special to compleie his Christmas shopping list, ripped the colorful head from its electrical moorings on a stand at lhe rear of the restaurant bet'A·een 1 a.m. and 6:54 a.m., police aald. Valued at $300, the head C'ontains a 11peaker for greeting customers as they pull up to place their orders. O\\urs of the restaurant chain. after hassling with the Art Colony's esthetic buifding department, designed a special building for their Laguna branch, eliminating the gaudy box used in other areas. But ii. still retains one shred or identily. There·~ aoother head.,also orange, green and yellow, atop a pole sign in froril of the building. Al leasl, it "'as still there this moming. Na1neChangeBid By Dea11e Fails . A bid by Deane Brothers Inc. lo change the name of Canada Road_ to Lake Forest Parkway y.•as turned dOY.'n Tuesday arternoon by the Orange County Planning Commission. A spokesman !or lht ccmmtssion said 11 "no" recommendaUon was given the request because of e3tablished comznis.. sion policy. "\Ve had similar cases with Laguna Niguel and Mission Viejo," the planning commission rtpresentalive said . "It is Ule feeling of the commission that an amrlal highway is regional in naturt and will extend beyond the bounds of any given development and so should not bt named for the developmtnt." he said. ada Road was part of the Rancho la 41 de los Alisos, the spokesman ti· :td. "30 the. rommisslonel'! are sug. g the road be renamf:'d La Canada way Jn keeping with the original name." • IC ·nvite 0 ee Playhou~e, . . Hits Ballet GroupOaim · By. RICHARD P. N~LL Of 1111 Deity P'li.t. Sl•tf In the wake or criticism that they had been uncooperative and had rouled up i;cheduling or Laguna Beach Civic Ballet Cothpahy. Officials of the 1..3.guna Moulton Playhouse . today ~ad a decidedly dif· ferent slant. · .. At 00 tiine wtre We' c8.lled to Work the problems out," ,aid' Playholfse Bo!rd President Geoffrey Riker, "All we have is a call from two newspapers and a copy of the Jetter. They've ever even .spoken te> us about it." Riker referred to a letter from Douglas Reeve, general director of the ballet company. The Dec. 20 letter mentioned that ballet members and others had given many thousands of dollars "in the name of the Ci\'ic Ballet Company on the un· derstanding that the Playhouse would be ours to use for our four membership pr1> J:rams each year \\'ithout charge except for nominal expi?nses." Reeve wrote that Playhouse use would cost the ballet more than twice as much as the high school auditorium. Riker said use of the theater costs the ballet $50 per performance and $30 for a rehearsal. . Riker said Playhouse construction ('()11.t many e1.tra thousands oL dollars "lo cOh· struct a stage m1·rehtarul room idesllJ. suited to bal~t." '11lis, he said, was the result of numerous conferences bel\\'een the design consultant and Llla Zali, ballet artistic director. DAILY ,ILDT SttH Piiot• OUTSIDE COUNTY COURTHOUSE, STAMP OUT SMOG MARCHERS SUPPORT CLEAN AIR Inside, the Ortng• County Boerd of Supervisors Passed Tough', New. Air Pollution Regulations '· t ,1 Siorm Channel 1 ExtensiQn Set County Approves Tight Controls on Pollution "The Playhouse continues to want I() make. the theater a.vailable to any com· • n1unity group," sal~ Riker. · Of the changes in fiCheduling of b811et performances, Riker said "any organiza· lion is going lo have scheduling problems ir. its first year. I ,did not ~et the im· pression this was a prohibitive problem. \Ve are constantly re.evalu11ting what \\'e are offering to get the best for the com·. inunity." A 950-foot extension nr the 1\1arquita Storm Channel ' in San Clemente is no\v • • • j co1nplete and ready, Lo play its role in the • Riker. agreed that tiallet _members had giv~n thousands toward. Playhouse con·· struction but said it had been given In the names of indlvidt)als nol in the name of the ballet company. Jack Seymou r. playhouse publicist. said Playhouse officials "had been work- ing like mad with the ballet people trying tc set up acceptable schedules." As to the recent benefit for the p\ayhous~ in which the playe rs did not participate. Seymour said, "they never asked ·us for assis tance as far as staf· ling .. It was understood they would pr1> vide thf'ir own ushers and ticket takers and you can't expect the (Playhouse) board to come to every event in the ~ ate1. fa sl approaching rainy se<ison. Built under the joint powers agree1ncnt of the Orange County Flood Control District and lhe city of San Clemente, the $57,7°' ,project is a continuation of the downstream section completed. last year through Lin~a Lane Park. Installation of the 48-inch -reinforced concrete pipe conduit has hailed steadily increasing erosion along the natural Y.atercourse, officials said. Completion of the project , it y.•as pointed out, remuves the danger to homes in the area . More Bulbs Stolen Christmas bulb-napping continued in J.aguna Beach as police took reports on 17 flashing outside ligh ts filched from 2995 Alpine Way and another 10 snatched at nearby 2985 Alpine \Vay. . . NigueVs Best Decoration 8)! T0!\1 BARLEY Ot the 0111, P!lal Sl•ll , Orange County , supervisors clamped a tight lid on non-vehicular smog prod~cers Tuesday with a unanimous adoption of s~rin~ent air pollution control meaSl.lres Lagw1a Post Office To Be Closed Friday The Lagu,na Beach Post Office will be closed Friday. the day after ·Christmas, except for special delivery and handling or perishables, it was announced tpday. There will be normal .post office.service Saturday, with windows et the Glenneyre Street post office open from 9 a.m. !() noon and al the Laguna Avenue office from 8:30 a.m. to noon . Regular Saturday schedul~ for dispatch and home delivery will be maintained. Engineer Santa finds polar bear on track at home o! Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth A. Bloom. 23922 Stillwater Lane in La Veta, judged Tuesday night •• best Christmas decoration for Laguna Niguel. The Co. ordinating Council picked the winners to receive i.J<>phie& from Monarch Bay Merchants ,.,.sociaUon. Runner-up was the home of Mr. and Mrs. Charles V. Dixon , 31UI National Pork Drive in Niguel We;t. Mr. and Mrs. Maurice C. LaVigne. 25171 Arma- gosa Drive tn Crown Point placed third. 1 that brought a capacity audience ln the hoard's hearing room to il.5 fert with a sustained ovation. Last minute attempts to amend the pro- posed action and delete what were described as "only doubUul" conlributors to the county's mounli."lg smog problem were swept aside by a determined board, urged on by Supervisor David Baker. "We have a legal and mo r a I responsibility today to add t h e s e measures to our air polluto n control regulations," said Baker. "\Ve have heard abundant testimony from medical experts and lhe farming community to know full well by now just what these freely emitted pollu.tants are doing to our environment and to us. ''Public health should take second place to nothing," Baker warned. "ll is im· peratlve that this board act upon th is recommendation at this time and do so in a manner that reflects our prompt reac- tion to the calls made upon us by the public." Only Supervisor William Phillips seem· cd doubtful when the roll was called. But his quiet "yes," offered ·after a moment's consideration, made the vote unanimous. Phillips. ~ad objected to the baMing of tbe chemical agent trich\orocthylene and argued -.a rontention supported during the hear: Jn g by represen tatives 'of manulacturers or the agent -that there was insufficient 'evidence ·to supporl ban. ning of the eontroVerslal chemical, said by its· indicters to be a key component or i;mog. The board refused to eliminate the chemical from the adopted Rule 66K but consented to a study of the role. played by the chemical in smog emissions and promised to consider -an amendment to the newly a'dopted Ordinance If tests es· tablished that the agent plays no part in4 &tnog production. · · t ·Adopted by the board over the vi.gorou~ abjections of William R. Gou ld, senior vice president of the Southern California (See SMOG' LAW, Pip!} IN~1:4.TES GETTING BIG YULE . DINNE R . . They may~ be ln Jail, bUt "the Jrimates of Orange County J ail will have a Olrist· mas dinner that's .. everything and rnore that a home-cooked holiday dinner would be." Authorilie1 at the jail said the hoiiday dlMer will consist of turkey and stuff. in&, two kinda of vtgetablu, cranberry sauce, mashed potatou and pumpkin pie. "I ate out here over Thanksglvlns," tbe spokesman said "and it was quite good . >J a matter or fact, it was a blgger dinner than I would have aotten at home." Today's ~lnal N.Y. Stoek.8 TEN CENTS • . IXOll President Due Friday Afternoon The public Is invited to See Pre~dent Nixon touch down lD Air Force One at El Toro Marine Corps Air Station on fridaJ for the start or :ibout a Jo.day stay at the \\restern White House. The President's arrival is scheduled for 3:30 p.m. with the gale to be opened to the public at 2:30 p.m. The President will spend the post· Christmas holiday witii his wife and daughter Tricia at their estate in San Clemente. Television viewing of the Rose Bowl game and preparation of the State of the Union message and 1971 federal budget are on the agenda. Greeting the President on his arrival 111t El Toro will be 25 members of the San Clemente Dons and a mariachi band. To get to the Marine Air Station take either the Sand Canyon or Culver Drive turnoffs.from the Santa Ana Freeway. Tonight a Christmas eve peace vigil l!l scheduled at the San Clemente Western White House as a war moratorium ac- tivity for December. Persons taking part will march In ~ilence by candlelight from 9 p.m. until midnight. following an 1 I-block ci rcular route around the Cyprus Shore neighbor- hood. Lagu11a Service Station Robbed A Laguna Beach service station al· tendant was interrupted in his task of counting tlut a cash box early today b~ a visltor "'ho U1rust a "sharp object'' intn his back and de1nanded, "Give me all the bills-pass it back!" AltE!ndant Leonard Braverman of Santa. Ana complied~ y.•ilhont turning around, but he did glirnpse the robber a~ he fled on fool from the Union Oil Statioo at the c:orner of Broadway and South Coast }lighway, shortly before 2 a.m. The man. he told police. was about six feel tall, appeared to be in his early 20! and had a regular, not ''hippie," haircut topped with a black beret. He was wear· ing a green fatigue jacket and blue denims, Braverman said. Amount of cash taken has not yet been determined, ac- cording to police. YULE EDITION OUT BY NOO N The Christmas Edition or the DAfLY PILOT will be pubilshed and delivered early Thursday lbefore noon in most areas) and all DAILY PILOT offices will ht> closed for the holiday. Friday will be a normal work day al the DAILY PILOT and all offices will be open for business as usual. Orange Cout Weather Someone forgot to wish the weatherman· a merry Christmas, and he's retaliating in kind-with low clouds. fog and a light driule lo dampen the yuletide spirits, while temperatures remain in the mid 60's. INSIDE TOD,\ Y Financial columnist Sylvia Porter gives 10 rults far invtst· or! to folloto in buying ort toorks i1~ htr column on Page 12 today. l""'''"'"'"" .. "''""-'j I Only 1 Dery • Tll I CHRISTMAS • ____ , ___ ll C•Hf9ntl1 t C11«kl111 Up , CllnHlW INt C'""ln 11 Cf't11-t1 I Dt•lft NttkH I Etlll•rl•I P'tH • ..nlwl111•f'llellf 11 "''IMC9 lf.1! Ht"toi:'" II """ lfMtn • ""'"""~ . fMvltl 11 \ ' . ' L Viejo Christmas Champ . Judges for the grand prize in Mission Viejo's third annual home decoration contest admire the win- ning home of Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Reader at 24322 Chrisanta Drive. From left are Glynn Brown , P . Woodward Dike, Rally Pulaski and William Gard· ner. McDonnell Douglas Gets $8 Billion Jet Contract Corky Carroll Seeks Surf Title In Hawaii Meet From Wire Services Surprise selection of Pi.I c 0 o n n e 1 I Douglas Corporation to create the FIS jet bomber, an $8 billion investment in lhe next decade, was announced by the Air Force Tuesday in Washington. The pre-Ch r is t m a s announcement comes as a crushing blow to North Amer· ican Rockwell Corporation, which had relied heavily on landing the huge con· lract in its future operations planning. No great impact was immediately foreseen on either firm's Orange Counl y- ba.sed subsidiaries in Huntington Beach 1nd Anaheim, but the North American work force in Los Angeles County will be bil hard. Offidals at North American Rockwell's Autonetics plant in Anaheim could not be reached for comment on impact of the conlract Joss on their giant new facility al Laguna Niguel, largest electronics plant in the worrld. Autonetics employes were off for the holidays, with only a t-Oken crew on duty ind eiecutlves who might be able to ex· plain it further were out doing last- minute Christmas she>pping. Larry Vitsky, publi~ relatioos dirccct or tor the McDonnell Dooglas Astronautics Corpe>ration western divisie>n in Hun- tington Beach, however, confinned that the Fl5 je>b won't affect the west county Facility. "We won't be involved In any pro- duction of the airplane, but anything that County Okays Trac t In Dana P oint Ar ea County planning commissiooers Tues· day gave their approval to the creation or 11 housing tract. in the Dana Point area by the Thunderbird Capistrano Company. A planning commission representative said the 2111 single residence tract wlll be the first increment of a planned com- munity in the area. DAILY PILOT Oii.ANGE CO.UT f'IJIL15HtNG C~l'AN'( ll:e>bt rt N. We:>d '""Iden!'"" P.otill1h1r J 10\. II:. Cu1l1v ""' "'""""' •rd Get11'1! Mt"•ter Th.,..,, k11•il E<lltor T~'"''' A. M11,,1'i;~• ...,•Mlllnt ldllor 1ti,h1•ol '· Nill L• ....... IHt fll City E411W contributes to the health or 1.fcDonnell Douglas is welcome," said Vitsky. He-estimated 25 percent of the pro- duction will be done in Callfomia. The contract to build the single-seat. twin-engine supersonic jet was the first such past let during the Nixon ad· ministration, and will eventually be one of the biggest in Pentagon history. The selection of McDonnell was a boon for St. Louis, where the firm employs abot:l :13,000 workers and where most of the work will be done. Fairchild Hiller -which was also in lhe bidding, face s a big loss. The initial contract, released Tuesday. is for ZO aircraft for development and tes ting purposes at a target pri~ or $1.146 billion . Te first funds to be com- mitted amount to $80.24 million. The pro~ ject is planned for 520 planes over five years at a cost of l6 billion. and the long range projection could bring it to 700 planes at a cost or $8 billion. In SL Loui s. James S. McDonn ell , chairman of the winning company, said the contract would not result in an in· crease in employment at the firm 's main plant. But he said the firm would have had to lay off 10,000 workers if it had not won the contract. The firm will do all but 25 percent of the work in St. Louis with the balance going out on subcontracl$ to California plants and smaller amounts in many other states. From wire Services HONOLULU -Dana Point's Corky Carroll was in the running . ti>day as Californ ia and Hawaii finalists battled it ou t in the International Surfing Cham· pi onships, riding the powerful waves at Makaha. The 23·ycar-0ld defend ing \Vest Coast champion who won at Hllntington Beach in September was joined by Californian Ralph Arness, son of actor .lames Arness, star of television·s Gun smoke. Amess was the judges' favorite as the point~ narro1ved. f our of Lhe six qualifiers in the s~ninr men·s meet Jive in the islands and ;ire us· ed to ~1akaha's high surf. They are George Downing, three-time Makaha win· ner : Fred Hemmings, two-time winner: Paul Strauch Jr., several limes ~ close runner-up. and Ji1nmy Blears. Joey Cabell of Hawaii, defendin g ch amp and two-time winner, seeded into today 's final s. Arness was the judges' favori te as low scorer at six points -n·jth a five-judge panel. ln the first heat, only 11/i p?int s made the difference between top man and disqualification. Australians Norman Mcin tyre, Pa Ben· dall and Andrew Short were disqualified earlier. Ten From Coast Selected As Gr~nd Jury Candidates • Ten Orange Coast residents are among the lis t o( 30 persons from whom the Orange County Grand Jury of 1970 will be selected on Jan. 5. Included in the list compiled by Superior Court Judge J ames F. Judge - the criminal court presiding judge for 1970 and the court's liaison with the J:"rand jury-are two residents frorry Hun· tington Beach, one trom Westminster, four from Corona de\ !ltar, one from Balboa, one from Newport Beach and one one from Capi strano Beach. Their names will be an100g 30 to go into a drum at the annual selection of the grand jury. The first 19 names to be drawn by Judge Judge's clerk will conl· prise the new pan<'I . lington Beach; Raym'Jnd ~r. Schmitt, 8121 E. 19th St., \Vestminstcr; Mrs. Audrey Cotton, 1509 E. Bay, Balboa and r.lrs. llarrict Bemus. 2631 Waverly Drive. Ne"·porl Beach. Also, Mrs. Lrmeli De.senberg, 2231 Bays ide Drive. Miss Marian Louise Parks, 233 Morning Canyon Road, Dr. Ralph Gerard. 1007 Goldenrod and Mrs. Alire Remer. 210 Goldenrod all of Corona del Mar and David Clark, 35685 Beach Road, Capistrano Beach. All those named were nominated for service on the Orange County Grand Jury by the 21 Superior Court judges. Judge: Judge today scheduled the nam- ing of the panel for 2 p.m. on Jan. 5 in Department 5 of Superior Court. Cops Seize Sex Movie In Balboa By JOllN VAL TERZA OI llHI 01111 '1191 st.n They were more than curious and more than yellow, too. So a mun icipal judge, a Newport vice detecti ve and two District Attorney's in· vestigators turned yellow to bla ck Tues- day night and seized a cOpy of the Swedish ses: film after its fi nal showing at the Balboa Thealer. And today, a print of "'I Am Curious (Yellow)" sits idle on a po lice depart· ment office fl oor. Its next showing will be delayed indefinitely. The judge, J . E. T. "Ned'' Rutter Tit, Deleclive J ohn Simon and the two DA's men sat patiently through the graphic Scandinavian sez saga, then at 9:1S p.m. moved into the theater projection room and took the print. Today, Newport Beach police were seeking misdemeanor complaints against the owner of the theater, William AUord of 1234 La Mirada, Laguna Beach, and the manager, Mrs. Eleanor Blackburn of 514 E. Ocean Front, Balboa . Simon said the charges sought would be for alleged exhibition of obscene matter. , Chief James Glavas said one con- tributing factor to the seizure of the film containing yards of footage depicling sex acts was several complaints from citiz..ens who had seen the film and didn't like its content. "We aren't trying to act as censors or the conscienct of the community in this ~~=~~e~~~~~i:l~~i;·~~\~:n!t~;~~~~~:: drawn by the U.S. and California supreme courts.'' He cited one letter and several phone calls from persons who saw the (ilm and whc> complained bitterly that It was obscene. A local doctor wrote a letter damning lhe sex. epic. "It's obvious that the exhibitors or the~e types of films are notoriously careless aboot their control of underage persons entering the theater. Without much effort we found one unescorted 17· year-old girl in the theater last night," Glavas added. Glavas charged that film makers and exhibitors "are always lrying to produce something which will push and test the lines set by Lhe courts and this is a good es:ample of it." Glavas said he hadn't seen the film . '·but I read the complete report detailing the scenes and I'm convinced we did th~ right thing." He said he hoped the line between clean and dirty films would soon be more tle¥1Y defmed by the courts. The film, sources said, will face some tough sledding. else.where in the county, too. Stanton Police were reported to be planning a raid sometime e:a;Jy ~ay_ on a !healer showing the movie 10 their city. * * * 'It's Qirty Film.,' Says Hurlburt- He R ead R eport Newport Beach police confiscation Tuesday night of the Swedish film , ··r Am Curious (Yellow)." has the support of the city administration. It does nol have the supporf of the operator~ of the Balboa Theater, how- ever. They're confused. "I've been here almost 10 years," said a ntember of the theater st.a ft, ··and this is the first lime anything like this has happened. \Ve've had many films like this. \Ve've had a lot of war films. too." Cily Manager Harvey L. Hurlburt is less confused abou t why further showings of •·1 Am Curious" were banned. "It's a completely dirly film," he said. "It is without any redeeming social fea· lures whatever. It 's as bad as any stag film ."' He was asked "'hether he had see.n it. "No. But J read the police report." To Erect Monument LONE PINE (UPI) -Japanese who v.·ere interned at the Manzanar Camp near here during World War It \vl\I return this weekend to erect a 'memorial t.o those who died during their stay at the camp. Two buses Crom Southern California were expected to arrive Saturday and depart the following day. \. .. ~•• hecll Offlct 111 For11I Avt f11111 Among the nominees for the 1970 jury are: A. C. Achey of fil S 8th St. and Charles 11-Iashbum of 503 13th St. both of llun· l'iet1ua11a, Middle East Meiliftt A4ol•t111 P.O. 101 ••6, t2651 Pilot Logbook ~ Jµclge, Lawmen Curious; 'Yellow' Showmen Blue By THOMAS KEEVIL 01 !fie OtllY ''191 Sf11t I DlDN'1' TlDN K J'd ever get lo !ff "I Am Curious (Yellow)." 1 almost didn't and wish r hadn 't. Jn the first place, the short subject that preceded it at the Balboa Theater Tu!.Sday night was interminable and even more curious than the movle. lt really was a commercial tor CoJonel Sanders' fried chicken. · JT SHOWED the dauling-wbite form of the goateed • drumstick king patting one horse, ft:edlng another horse, 1 mugging with another horse, talking with another horse, betting on anolher horse, congratulating another horse and just standing there wilh a lot more horses. The second reason I almost didn't see "I A1n Curious (Yellow )" was that, unknown to me, my companion movie critics included Jlldge J. E. T. "Ned " Rutter, several deputy district attorneys and some badge-toting represent- atives of the Newport Beach Pollet Department. THEY FOUND the film appealing to prurient intt:r- ests and confiscated It. T don't know if they took the Colonel Sanders film . There was a third reason I almost didn't see "1 Am Curious (Yellow) ... I could not stay awake. This chubby girl did run around a lot with no clothes on. So did her J:loY friend. A couple o( times they displayed more th~n casual means of express~g ~ affection and their celebrated athletic prowess (1n a tree:, on a balcony and m a pond) -n•as an intriguing manifestation of cinematic imaginaUon. WHJCH MEANS I stayed awake during that part. But the rest of the film was a drag. I fell to finding typographical erro~s ln the English subtitles, then began rewriting the plot as il unfolded, only 1n my version I worked in a role for ·colonel Sanders. That version would really have sent Judge J. E. T. "Ned" Rutter on his ear. But even this mental exercise failed to sustain my interest and by the filnl's end I had nodded into a semi-sleep. I haven't the vaguest notion of what happened to the chubby gjrl and her boyfriend, eicept that their forms are no longer being displayed in Newport Beach, California. ' OH, I MISSED all the action. Judge Rutter et al were boxing up the film while I was making a furUve exit, hoping no one would see me pursuing my prurient interests. . Most unhappy man in town is Max Dillman at the restaurant across the street. "Man. did we have: a blast o( bllsiness while it lasted ,'' he said. "You couldn't believe the activity down here." President Eating Dinner. AtEI Adobe By PAMELA HALLAN Of ""' Oll1r '"illt Steff Rumors are afoot tc>day in San Juan Capistrano that President Ni1on will be e.eting at the El Adobe restaurant Frid.ey night. * * * Press Corps Due In Laguna Friday The Whit e: House arrive in Laguna their Yuleti d e watching. press cqrps will Beach Friday for stint at President Merrill Johnson, owner ot the Surf & Sand Hotel, where the press corps lives and works, sa id he had about 60 rooms ready for the political wrilers and an- other 20 for Press Secretary Ron Ziegler, his staff and others. "A lot of the press People: are bring- ing their families along for the holidays,'' said Johnson. He said the press com· municatlons equipment, including direct lines to the White House and teletype equipment, is ready to go. The city is restricting four parking places in front of lhe Surf &: Sand on South Coasl Highway for parking oI two buses used by lhe press. Freewa y Wreck Injures Woman The condition of a Tustin woman in- jured Tuesday morning in an auto ac- cident on the Newport Freeway remains guarded today following surgery in Santa Ana Community HOlpitaJ. California Highway Patrol officers said tile woman, Linda M. Crawford, 29, of 13187 Gwyneth St., suffered chest injuries when the car which she was driving left the freeway near the Edinger exit and struck four con.struction vehicles parked In the cente:r divider . Her passenger George Wat.son of Norwalk suffered a broken 1eg and is in saUafactory condition in the same hospital Capo? • m The restaurant's manager, Elias flfesa. will neilher confinn nor deny the rumor bt.lt a hostess and waitress standing at the reservation desk glance ani:iously at one another when the question is asked as it they share a secret. · If the President and his party don't dine on Friday chance.s are they will be there another night during their stay at the summer ~te House. The historic restaurant which has been standing as long a1 the mis.sion h~ played host to the President on several occasion!. _ One publicly announced visit resulted In s~ial cuisine which now appears on the me·nu as the President's choice. It cxin- sists of guacamole with tostaditos. chicken enchilada. chiJle relleno. beef taco. grated cheddar cheese, spanish rice and frijoles with refritos. "But the President doesn 't usually or- der anything s~ial," said Mesa. "He usually orders right off the menu. The manager said the President's visits don't create any special problems. No special section of the restaurant is de:signated for hi use although one chair is marked the pesident's .chair. This ill! the chair he Occupied during his official vi sit on March 22. . Will he occupy it again. Fridy':' Elias Mesa says "I don't know ." If anyone does know , he isfl't telling. Volunteer s Sough t By New Playhouse Theater buffs who would like to serve as volunteer ushers, backstage : .elpers or box office assistants at the Laguna Moult.on Playhouse are: asked to stop in and sign up for assignments. The playhouse is preparing a file: Gf names of volunteers who can be called upon to help out during rehearsals and productions. Mrs. Nixon H os tess WASHINGTON (AP) -Mrs . itichard M. Nixon was hostess to 400 children or diplomatic families Tuesday night at the last of this year's White House Christmas parties. ... Ottott Officn c..11 NI.,.., "'w .. 1 ••r • .,_. l"-Dt<t IMCfll' '?11 W"t lttl:oN -.VI"''" "'""11"410.; I Hcfll: 1,.11 l111eh l :ly.-v111 F rom Page 1 Wars Mar Season of Good Will ~11..V '"11..0T, "'''~ _.,llll lo c-llWoll "'-NC'l'l·"'•~ " ..,~·,.l'l:f ••111 o ct,i '""' ''" "' ....... ,,,, """"' tor ..... _ ••••l'I. N....,...I .. Kfll, Cotlt -· Hl#ll""""" ... --l'-ll ir! Vtllty, ,..,.. wllfl I .... ,.....,., n 11'°"'· 0<'1"111 Co1o1 l>ul>llofl .... C ...... llJ' "'"''""' P''"ll •rt ti 2711 Wt!•I 8tll9t •M,. ,,,,_, l1:t11, ..., J» W•I .. , $,,.,I, Clot• Mnt. T•a,a1 .. 17141 "''·''" ~1-hpt. ••2:-4121 ~. l fff. 0r6'1tf Con t 1'1•1111'>"'1 C-'flr. "" ,,.... ,,.,1n , hiv..tr1ti-. .,ueri.f -ner er 1d-.•llM-tt """"' '"'' "' ,...,........ .. -.,, lJl'tCltl -· ......,.,.,~,..,.,- ...... ~ .... plid •t "'~ ... -C.N M9t, C.lller"'-S.-•lft'.,1 tf' t •nlw Utt IN'!'lltll'l'I ltf "'"1 "1.M ..-1!11\tl """"'' '"'"''""""' OGO ..... 1~.1. .. SMOG LAW ... Ed ison Co. wa s the add ition or Rules 62. 63 an467 to Orange County's air pollut lon control regulations and the amendment and substantial strengthening of Rules llf' and 66K . . Rule 62 requlrts the burning nf natural ga$ whenever it Is available. At all other tim'5, the new toonty ordinance will specify, low sulfur oil must be burned. Rule 63 will regulate the spectllcatlon~ of g1solint IOld and distributed Jn Orange County. "Although Orange County has no rtflnt rlcs and all ou r gasoline: is im· ported." Air Pollution Control Officer \YUliam Filchen told the board, "th l' rule could deter the dumping ol 1asol lnc in lhc county. ' By ne Associated Presa flfi!Uons of per90ns around the: world 1nade lasl·minute preparations today to celebrate Christmas. Although the message or the birth of Jesus Christ Is "Ptace on .Earth," the \Vars the world had with it last year rt- mained in Vietna m and Nlgcrla. 'Mle Mid· t.ast situation remained unse!Ued. Three loud eq>losions rattled windows today In BM.hlehem . tht. blrt hplaee of Christ. One: Israeli official 5'1id lhry could havt been caused by supersonic aircrl\ I ll ls the hilltop city's third Christmas under lsrarll rule, and in the 5hade of the Church or lht Nativity seorcs of Jsr11eli ~~urlty a11,ents mingled with I h e Chrl~1mas pilgrims. One estimate &<lid more than 1.000 troops and police were on duty in the to~·n. In Vietnam , the aUitd commands and the Viet Cong observed cease-fires. FlghUng had betn at a low level for several week s, and after the truce beg•n it dtopped off even more. Radio Hanoi began bro ad ca s It n g recorded messages from Amerlc1n prlsont.rs of war to their fa.m!Ues, -as !t has dont in pa$I. years. SOidiers in Vle1nam and at other U.S. military insta llations In tht far Eas t. Europe and the: United St•tes gavr Christma s parties for children at orphan· age9 11nd hos plta ls. , Christmas in the United Statts 111 quletrr th is year thnn last. In 1968, the • Apollo I astronaull were circlin1 the moon, and the crew of the spy shi p Pueblo wu comin& home after 11 months of captivity. As usual, sboppen jammed lhe stor~ to make U>09e down-to-the-wire purch11cis fnm stocks that have dwindled 1teadlly since Thank.sgiving. Depart.tnent store of. ficla ls aa1d revenue wu higher lhan 111t yt:ar, but many attributed the Inert•~ to higher pritts brought on by inflation raU\er than additional volumt:. Hundreds of thousand• floe ked lo .airport!. railroad stations and bus terminal!. heading home to see rrlativcs and fa mili es or laking v.acatkmJ. Among the trave:len will be President Nixon , hlJ wife and daugfl1er Tri~i11, who . . are going to San Clemrnle Friday after spending Christmas at the White House. The .Nis:ons' other daughter, Julie Eisenhower. i~ in Brussels with her hus-. band David, wfJo.ile father is U.S. am· ba!sador there. Nixon went to Capitol Hill Tuesday to lun<:b with congressional leaders shortly before U..y od)Oumed °" r~st .... 1on ot Uie ltst C<>n(Ttss and h••d<d home. Many of lhem will find a white Chri1tm1s. A lnOwstorm blanketed the Mld-n·est and the U.S. Weather aureall forecast snow for the Northeast Tht bureau also u .ld there v.·as snow in the Pacific Northwest, nort.hrrn Californlt and inl and to Utah and the Rc>ckju, • • I EXCLUSIVE ENGAGEMENT! STARTS TOMORROW THI; REIVER is a SCOUNDREL, an OPERATOR and a BRAWLER. • • • . Wi lliam Faulkner!> Pulitzer PrizeWinnins Novel 'The Reivers. is now a fi lm! Steve McQueen plays Boon in 'The Reivers" A 1MERW. PtCnJI[ • TtOlllCOLOR" /PANAftSKJIP SECOND BIG HIT PAUL NEWMAN -JOANNE WOODWARD IN "WINNING" CONTINUOUS SHOW DAILY FROM 2 FREE PARKING . -SECOND BIG HIT - GEORGE SEGAL ROBERT VAUGHN "THE BRIDGE AT REMAGEN" Col°' IMl -"Uaddffted" 2:00-6:15-10:20; "l rld.-" 4:11·1:2J ArlO Ciut~r•• "Al.ICE 'S RESTAURANT'' t10 T~t ltal!tl ''Yt'l.l.OW SUIMAllNE" i1*4ff<' FOR THE FI RST TIME I: I *' •• i I : • i . : DRIVE-IN MATINEES! STARTING CHRISTMAS DAY! , ATTENTION PARENTS! SPECIAL HOLIDAY SCHEDULE ALL DISNEY PROGRAM "l 01 ot FOUNTAIN YALLIY Dlt lYE·I N 1 lrookhvrst ot tfle Se11 DI ... Fr11w.y DALMATIONS" & "DARBY O'GILL" $,To .ccomodote tM tt•otnf 1111'"1Mr of fe'"Uin wlrh ''"•II chlld· ,...., 011r holide, wffll K lltd•I• wlll be , , • . i ' "Darby O'Glll and the Little People" • Show11 ot 1:30 P·"'· .. ~ "101 Dalmations" i' Sh•w11 .t 7:30 P·'"· i a: S.. this complete All Disney show late as 9:15 p.m. t • BOX OFFI CE OPENS AT 5,00 P.M. f :,. .............................. ****'********..: LATE SHOW TOHIOttT -Al.L THEATlllEI SEE aOTH ,li.TUltlS •s I.ATS AS lt:JO l'.M. Wiii DlllltYI• "101 DALMA1 IOM$,. ... "DAll:l'f O'OILI. ' "fMI LITTLE 1'101'1.E~ Dini"' Motlrnlft Mii ,-.,.,.. "JOHN & MAll'f" lltl ,-,.,.. s1 .. 1r1 111c_..1 W1lc:ll "\.ADY IN (l!Ml!NT" Jlll'lff ..... SI'*• Atlll\ "OH MBlll MAJl!nv•s SE(:ltlT St'lllVICl" IM) Cll•rlMfl Mtt"11 "HUMllll OHi" (Ml f'ttty Dll•• "Ml NATAi.ii" J1111t11 OIPYltr Oetlt "llflftlcwtt "MAii.i.OWi" --- . ~ -·--.....--....----~-----·-~~---.~ --· ·-·--. ~-· --~-~~-~---------~----... ______ ... ..,. _________ ..,.,....,i-"I .. • • • DAIL V Pllcn' J I · ~ . Top Performers Due Honors NOW AT POPULAR PRICES! Broadway's smash musical now the most e11.cl\l ng m011ie in years! Slt/EBT CHARJTJ'.:i, ' Daily Pilot Award Winners Announced Fr iday Exc lu,iv•! LID 0 , N•wport B••ch. Excluiivel Christmas will come on Frl• day too for four Orange Coun· ty community theater actor1 and actresses. That's when the winners of -Qfln • M4· PAUL NIWMAN "BUTCH CASSIDY AND THE SUNDAN CE KID" "ME, NATALIE" c..t. 1'1l•rs. & S.1. I :10 P.M . the DAILY PILOT'S D i stingulihed Performance awards will be «nnounced by entertainment editor To m Titus in his "Intermission'' column in the newspaper's Weekender section. Following a tradition begun in 1965 -and heightened In 1968 by the presentation of ac· tual trophies -Titus, who ai.; tends every little theater pro- duction in the county during the year. will list his selec· lions of the year's best actor, actress, supporting actor and supporting actress on a coun~ tywide basis. These four, along with the top director of the year -Jn this case, Thor Nielsen for his staging of "Stop the World -I Want to Get <:Wr' at the Costa Mesa Civic Playhouse -will receive their DP awards at the opening ni.qht of the next production at their respective theater. The DAILY PILOT'S recognition of a m a t e u r performances and productions on the county level began in 1965. That year the honors went to Leslie Day (Anaheim "~ •····•· ................. . f WALT DI SNEY'S i ! ~ s,or,,,,,., ,.rroon l••t11r• • HIT WALT DISXEY ,_.,, .. ..J HfEG:JJ/D Ollf TECHllCllLOI' ®• Penny Pincher Ads Turn Sens e Into Dollors EXCLUSIVE AREA SHOWING SHOW TIMES 7:00 & t :JO MATINll SUH. 2 MGM,_....,..,, STAHLU KUlltlCK l'f!OOUCTION 20~._, aspace-7 -7 CINERAMA , .... ..,. ... _. 11,..,1,..KllR OULU.I.• GARYlOCKWOOO '""'•""v 11 ITANlEY KUllllCK allO AltT"Ult C. CLAllKC $Ulltlt 'AfllAVISION·a~lilfTROCOlOR CINEDOME ~-:...-· §) ... '!il•Vel•<" 1•'1'1'"•-11 • .,,, ------- ing Jn, 1987 were . Alan Hart (Orange), Iris Korn (Laguna), Cene BenedJct (Co.1ta Mesa), Judy Hirsh (Rancho Playen) and director Kent John.wn. The DP (Dlstiogulshed Performance Award) was in- augurated in 1968 and the win· ners were Ralph Richmond (Laguna), Patty Broderick (San Cfemente ), James E. Smith (Huntington Beach), Pat Neederman (Costa Mesa) and director John Feriacca (Laguna). Friday the fifth annual selections for co mm unit y Playhouse) Duke Far I e y theater's ~ n 1 y countywide ll '""'~.-'i'i! ' . awards will be announced, (Orange Studio Theater), Ed • alang with four honorable Greenley (Huntington Beach mention winners in each Playhouse), Gini Sh a r p category. (Anaheim Playhouse) and Eligible for consideration in director Warren De a con this year's DP awards race (Orange Studio Theater). are the cast members of some In 1966 the winners were 40 Orange County liUle theater Walden Leeclng (Santa Ana), productions presented in 1969. SHOWS DAILY 2!td FUN SHOW Mary ?t1acy (Costa Mesa ). Three other shows which1-""';;;;;; Bob Wentz (Laguna}, Bell entertainment editor· Tilus Ellig (Anaheim) and director either directed or appeared in Doug Rowe (Laguna). Follow-are disqualliied. INDS TONt•HT e "ROM EO AN D JULI ET" ALSO "WESTSI DE STO RY'' Al8£RT SHARPE . JANET MUNRO Open End to Stage Ju.les Feiffer Revue • • •EA,CM o. A,T 11.lllO • • ••T. coA•T MW"' •• aAN Dl•DO ....,..,. •47·•DDa • HUHJINOTON •11.Ae-11 The satirical pen of Jules Feiffer will provide the basis for the next prodcution at Newport Beach's Ope n End Theater, a musical revue en·· tilled "A Smile is a Frown Turned Up.side Down." Dire..::ted by Thor Nielsen, winner of the DAILY PlLOT's 1969 Distinguished Production award, the show wUJ open Jan. 9 for a six-weekend engage· ment, playing F r i d a y s , Saturdays and Sundays. The material for the show is Opera Tlvin Bill Slated In Fullerton A double bill in opera, featuring ''The Magic Chair'' by Eugene Zador and 'Gianni Schicchi" by Giacomo Puccini, will open a four-nig ht run Jan. 8 at Cal State , Fullerton. The comic -operas, to be presented in English, will be staged in the Recita l Hall of the Music Speech Drama Building on campus uclner the co -s po n sor s hip of the Associated Students and the Department of Music. Curtain time is 8:30 p.m. Tickets are <111 sale for $2 at the Theatre Box Olfice on campus. Ticket reservations may be made by calling 870. 3371. Group Seeks Directors T h e Westminster Com· munity Theater is seeking directors for its third sho\v of the season, to ~ selected at the group's Jan. ·a meeting. Prospective directors are in - vited to submit a resume and the synopses of two plays to president Jim Allen. Th e meeting will be held at Allen's home, 5866 Allison Circle, Westminster . derived from Feifler's recent columns. with original songs contributed by Warren Deacon of the Open End Theater staff. The show will be similar to a long-running revue staged three years ago at the Orange Studio Theater, and will in- clude two or the longer sketches from that production . These are "Mun ro." in which a 4-year.old boy is drafted into the Army, and "Passionella," the saga of a chimney sweep who becomes a movie star. Included in the Open End cast are Robert Vaught, Saun- dra Mathews-Deacon. Jayne _ l lamil, J oe Del Rosso, Joe Bland, Dennis Wheeler, David Wheeler and Paul Graecy. Nielsen. who mounted a si1nilar revue at the Edin- borough Festival in Scotland , was named best director of 1969 in community theater by the DAILY PILOT for his pro- duction of "Stop the World -I Want to Get Off" at the Costa Mesa Civic Playhouse, in which he played the role of Littlechap. "A Smile is a Frown Turned Upside Down" will be staged at 8:30 Friday and Saturday evenings and 7:30 p.m. on Sun· days at the Open End, 2815 Villa Way, Newport Beach. ReservaUons may be obtained by calling the box: office at 675-1120. Yule Music In Newpo11 Ralph Vaughn Williams• "In Dulci Jubiol" and the Hallelu· jah chorus from Handel's "~1essiah" will be highlights of a choral program to be presented Christmas Day at Mount Cannel Church, JSth Street and Balboa Boulevard, Newport Beach. Direct.or Karl Bonawitz will lead his 36-voice choir in a program that will also Include the Lalin High Mass. The con- cert ls schedule<! for 10 a.m . Also on the program are Palestrina's "Puer Nat us Est," You's "Jesu Bambino" and the Mass by Harrison Millard. The chorale has been augmented for this Christmas concert. ()arol Dramati%ed James Mason and Claudia Butenuth appear In the dramatization of the celebrated Cllristmas Carol Jn -''The Legend of Silent Night," at 9 p.m. (onight on lchannel 7. II Is a special presentatfon of the Wed· nesday Night Movie with Kirk Douglas as ho st-nar· rator. NOW! AT PO,ULA.lt. CONTI NUOUS DA ltY PltlCl S No( tllll It mnrs. but most or n 1s'"'" ~0th ClNTUR'f.fOI PRESENTS PAUL NEWMAN ROBERI' A£DfORO M11tARINE ~­BUTCHCASSIOV AND THE SUNDANCE KID "WHY 1$ lVIRYTHI Nli Wl'll Q.OOD AT ILLEGAL? ------------·---~--~~- E1tdu1 iwe Oren9e County En919em1nt Now •f PDpultr Prit11 -CONTINUOUS- 1-4-7 I 9:•S e WHk Nit .... 71JO & t :JO s.t.•S111.' Hollde'f' e CO NTINUOUS e "'Joh11 •IHI Mety' fs • .. 1, • rl11ctlwely 111w t .. hl•11 ,,. 111•11t•. Hoffmoa !1'" o ,.,. fDrnlOllCI flDt • .,,.nod °'" by his tovr•de·forc1 111 'Mid· •lt ht CowM y'. Miu P1trow 11 lllt to Hoffm111't perf•rlll• 1tteo. U111M1ti•oftly, 11 Is Ont' Of ffle 11p~ OClOl'IP" 11111....... .. fll11t •f ,.. ,..,, .. -Loi An9el11 Her1ld E1t•mi11tr .. 'J•h• •11d ,..,.,., • "'°''• •••r lo dell9ht "' ••dfettc.,, Ir It • pel91t111t, ,,_, ... ,.. :. ·, of tw• ,..,1, who fllfft ht • "'· 1 .... tototW lvtt ,., tflo Ml of It Ml, nd et1ll ,,.,1 .... ..,.. ., ......... ••" othtr. A cr:1p, m .. 11, Ml f9Ke," -Lit Smith, Co1rnopol!t111 M19111nt "A teH.f, tortlf f1111f fll•. hy ..... tlrl • ..., .... .. ..... ''"· 1\h .. .... c ... ,..,.,.,., .... •f .... ... 'Jill• _, Mory' Mt. .t ltl "" lttort." -K1thle1n C1,,oll, Dilly Ntwt .. ! . . . , .. ,, fr h ~·,. , . ., .. • " ... ... ". :i .. .. .. .. ... " . " " , • • ' I I: • •• ' \ • ' .. ·. ,• " " .. -. . • It DAILY PILOT L Yoar Money'~ Worth Follow 10 Rules In Buying Art IDITO•'I MOTi• Tiit k tll.-UC• .... Iii • l«1" .. '"'" •rtkltl • t r1 ,,_ H llrffftf .... 1tt..,..i11t. I• 1t1M tMM!• Srhllt ,._,,_, 111~ If ""' .... Ille lll'fftfW M ... ..._ By SYL A N>RTER There's a ag making the rounds of th Madison Avenue art gall~ rld which has an ag wager actoStlng a ga Jery dln:ctor wtth the demand · ''I'd like to see your crowth palntangs" Actually, the gag isn'l far off. Record numbers o I Americans -both artistically sophisticated and amateurs - are now investing all-time ru,h swns in paintings, S(:}llptures and d r a w 1 n g s strictly for proflt. Dozens of art "mutual funds" are sprlng- 1ng up and inviting investors to chip in for the purchase of paintings to be kept for future re-sale O.K. LET'S . SAY you have extra cash to invest and "art" Is your choice. Here are JO rules to guide you. (I) Before you Jay out a penny, inve.sl as much lime as you can reading art auction catalogs in a field which in- terests you, vis1tJng gallenes to see what works are available aod how much they cO!it, 1nspect1ng art works before auctions, aUending auc- Uons to get the feel of them. You might even subscribe to irt auction catalog! published by ma1or galleries m the field of your interest ~1any of these catalogs give aftei each auc· tion, prices paid for e~ item which appeared 1n the pre. auction catalog. Keep these catalogs for later compansons of prices for various items ~%) WHEN YOU DECIDE to buy, do so cauliously at fi rst. Don't spend all you have on one item you think is a good buy. (3) Make sure you have, also before you buy, a really special feeling about a pauP ting or sculpture -a sense which tells you it has greatness. Or have somebody who has this type of instinctive feeling represent you as a buyer or bidder at an art auc- "•" ( 4) Deal with a top gallery or art dealer. Don't be afraid to frequent the very best: at the world-renowned Parke- Bernet gallery, nearly two1 thirds or all pieces sold at auc- Uon go for under $300, and a 's1gnif1 cant 15 percen~ for under $50 Also. as Victor Ham1ner of New York's Ham- mer Gallenes, says, "A top gallery is interested 1n holding your patronage. If you are sallshed. 1l will always 'trade back' anythmg you bought tor at Jeasl what you paid or more " (5) BE WARY of works by modern artists in current LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE OF INTENTION TO ENG.I.GI! IN TNE U.LI 0, ALCOHOLIC •EVl!ll.1.CillS D•C@nll>i!t 11 1fK 10 WHOI,\ IT MAY CONCERN SuDlllCI IO l11u1nct ol llW lkt,,lf 10 •lied 1or, nollct 11 ht•tbv glv•n lht• '"' undfftl9Md o•~ to ,...11 1 leollolk be\le•••tt 11 tr.t ..,..,.,11.et. oeoc•ll>e<I -~ """" un Ntwi>Otl &!Yd Stort C & o. Cotll Miit ,.11nu1nt lo 'UC~ IMtn!IOll llW 11n ,,.,.,,Md Is IPPl'l'lllt Ill '""' D•ptrtmPn! of Akoll011c Btvt•tll'f! Con!rol •or luu....:.t bv lrtnllf• of II! t lcollollc bevtrt•t llctnM (or llAnH'IJ fof ll>t5or •~ml1e1 11 lollow, ON-$.1.1.E BEER .l.llVOllt dnlrlng to ~rotnl lh~ IHutr>ef .i wch llctnM(Sl IT\tY Ill• I vt<lfl~ oro- 1"1 wllfl t nJ onlct of !ht Qtp1r1mrnt ol AltOllOllc Btvt•"9' Control, wllh<n lO d.,. of !ht dllt. ltlt "'"""'<!11 "'""'!~•' ,..... llrsl oot!td, 1!1llng 1rou~ lor t11nl1I 11 1rovldtd !II' llW 1"1W ar1111lM1 ••• "°""' ncPll•td tor !ht 111t ol 1lcollollc btvt•"et The form ol v.,-1/ltttloft m•Y br DlllalMd rrom 1nv onlc.e ot "" OeNrl"'t!ftl I G-ff H W11vt1. Jr. Gtotldlrw: Wetwtr Pu111itl'lecl Ortntl C1111t Dt>1J P1lo! ~ , ... 19'f ,],.. ... LEGAL N011CE ,_,,.. CEllT"ICATI!: OF IUSIHl!SS, l'ICTITIOUS N.l.MI! T"" vndfl"lltntG dOl:I ctrll..., lh!N ltt f!Olldl'(fl... • bu•IM$S ., no N• ... pev1 llilvf,. Co.II Mfl• c .. 111ornl1 und•• 11.e "cll!loul fl"" t'l•fM ti QUEEN II tnd -I 11111 "'"" 11 ~ ol "'• lol-"'9 ,...,_, """°" "'"'"' Ito 11111 •1111 •ltce o/I rftldeftct ,.,, IS IOllOWI <;_,. HtnrJ Wt....,rr Jr, G~••!Gln• WHwr. 111 :I'll• SI, Newoorl &ltcft, 0.1*1 ~r 71 Ifft ~Ot Htfl.,. W1>1vl'I' Jr. Gtr11dlM-Wt1wr S11"t o1 (l llltll"nlt Ot-t CouMV' Oil Dtc9!!obtf" 11, Ifft, lwfort mt I Noll"' Pvllll< In Ind for ••ld Sll!t, .,...._.11., .,'"''"' c ... .-ve H '" •' WHver. Jr •• tl!CI Gert lllhw WttVt'f" -no"n to 11\t' ~ bf ..... --· """°" fll .... I II~ ~1119d to lt>t w!tnln ln1trvm111! •rid ~tf>dttd ftle'f tllffVltcl !flt lltr\t fOftPICIAI. SEAL) JOSEPH E DAVIS Nll'ltn> Pvb1lc-C1!ltott'll1 Pr!ncl1>tl Ollkt In o. ..... CoulOIJ M<t Coonml11'1on E.oplr•I Junt fl , H>t ,.1*119'1H O!'lfltt t Dll'I DtllY "!IOI, ~ t•, 31, Ifft _..., Jt11Utf'V 1 I~ ,,,. , .... LEGAL NOTICE fashion. lnOated prices can easily be the result of an ex~ hlblt by a single m1jor museum; after the excitement or the show has subsided, prices tend to drop as well ("Pop art" Is now rading on the market ) Buying art works because they -are a current rage ls akin to buying stocks on lips at a cockt.all party. (•) II, there is a museum director or curator m your commwuty, ask for his advice on buying. Or use the servit"C¥ of speoally assigned personnel at large art galleries whose 1ob 1s to guide you. (7) Unless you are an ex- pert, spread your fmanoal risks by investing in the works of a vanety Qf different artists. (II) BUY THE BEST ex· amples you can aUord 1n any category. In the words of Louis Goldenberg, president of the famed Wildenste1n Gallery 1n New York, "not every Rem· brandt 1s worth $2,300,000 and not every Monet is worth $1.500,000 .. For buyers w i t h con- siderably more l1m1ted funds, Goldenberg advtses, a good drawmg by a given artlSl may be a better buy than a poor painting. Hammer suggests, "You'll fmd contemporary artists of the greats who were overshadowed m their era a better buy than new artists who have not been tested by time." (9) Decide, before you bu y, how much money you can af· ford to invest and shck to that ce1hng, If you find a more ex- pensive work irresistible, ar- range to pay for Jt over a period or time. (10) HAVE AN understan- ding with your dealer or gallery about trading up -so he'll repurchase works from you as you have more to 1n· vest m high quality art. NEXT: What's "bot" in art Aerospace Governors Pick Lawson The Aerospace Industries Associatton, Inc • ha s elected John B. Lawson of Laguna Niguel as a member ol Its board of governors. Lawson IS a vice pres1denl of Philco-Ford and general manager or the company's Acronutron1c 01v1s100 a t Newport Beach He v.as elected tn the new post during a mttting of the AIA Board of Go,ernors 1n PhQenix, and will serve a one year tenn or o(f1ce beginrung Jan. l, 1970. The Aerospace Industries Association is the national trade association of manufac- turers or aircraft. missiles, spacecraft, propulsion. naviga- lit'.11"1 and guidance systems and the components used 1n the nianufacture, operation and maintenance llf these.. pro- duc1s. Vanguard Picks Pair Gravu R. Afumford Jr has joined Van Ruard Dat1 Systtms, Irvine, as southern re11onal district s t r v I c e managrr. Prior to joining the com- pany, Mumford was v;lth Mohawk Data Sciences as customer englnetr supervisor, aod prior to that he was with National Cosh Register as technical srrvlce rtprestn· La!lvr. In an o I her appointm.-nt Charles Adamei. wu nam~d dlslnct service man:.gtr for Vaol"ard Data Systtms. SENIOR MANAGER T trtnc:• W•lsn Irvine Co. Projects Mesa Fii·m May Gai.J.1 2 Companies • • I ' OVER THE COUNTER NASO Listings for Tuesday, Docamber 23, 1969 Coiirity Growtli Pace To Slacken in 1970 EC<1nom1c acltv1ty in Orange County in J970 is expected lo advance beyond the 1969 levels bul the ra1e of growth will be skl\ver, Wells Fargo Bank said toda)". The slower pace '''iii rcfle< t !he cont1nucd v.•eakness 1n the a rea·s aerospace-electronic industry, !he bank reported As a result , the unemployment rate .o;hould edge up to 4 percent, compared. to 3 a per· cent 1n 1969. Acwrd1ng to James R. Gibson, vice pre$.idt'nt and manager of the bank's Santa Ana 0U1ce, Orange County business is still expected to be buoyant, bolstered by con- tinued growth In income and total employment. Underlying this grov. lh will be the non-defense mnnufac~ luring JndUJlries, includlns metals, machinery and tex.· tiles. Additional investment is expected In the trade and service Industries and 1n public education as the area's economic and population base expands along with the tourlst- convention sector. TolaJ employment should climb to 475,000 an increase or 4 5 pertent over 1969. Hou.s ing 1tarts for 1969 are expected lo total S3,000 units, an lncttue ol 40 percent over 1968. the bank sajd, But wuh tight monty the autlook Is for a decline In housing starts lo around 25,000 un lS next year. Atoro lhan half or thr~e wlll b e apartmenl3, conl1ottlt1g the 1969 trl!nd. The hanlc CX[)('Cls ton!urnrr Bertea Wins Pact From . Complete-New NIW YORJt fAJJI WMMtGtW"' COIN)ltN Mtw Yori! ISOCk Elthlnu DrkN, York Stoek List SeU unwantt'd ltl!T'"t1 wilh a DAILY rn...ar Classlfl~ Ad. PHCN£· 642-5671 \ • • • • • • • • • ' • • • • • • • • Prices-Complete New Complet~ Closing Prices , .. I • L 11.llL Y l'ILOT J :J . York Stock Exchange List .. -... -.1-u.ca..a. Final Stocks In All Home Editions -American Stock Exchange List .---·~· . .. . . . ........... , .......... 1 •••• ...-. ...-.. ... . . . . ~ . . . . . -. -. Onl y Tiger Witla Clatvs OAIL'I' PILOT """ n Dile S1IMll• Pistol P ete Maravich, the nation's most publicized college basketball player, dribbles toward the bas· ket with Newport Beach's John Vallely (40) o( the UCLA Bruins in close pursuit. In back is Henry Bibby (45). The Bruins set school scoring record in 133-84 victory while holding Pete to 38. Vallely hit for 14 points before a record crowd, of 12,961 in Pauley Pavilion. Swaps Grid To g s for Cr.os s Deacon Dan Tali es a Snooze ?i.1uch a.s yoo mlght expect from a man of the cloth, Deacon Dan had a Bib!e in his hand. However, closer examination revealed that he was catching 40 or 50 v.•lnks while passing the time at the Rose Bowl press center in Pasadena. He wasn'l there to pray for reporters or for the teams com peting in the annual New Year's football classic. He was an offlcial rece?tionis t for t~e corps of scribes covering the USC. ~fichigan clash J an . 1. You raay recall the man. He y,·as known as Deacon Van TO'Wler wh?le star- ring for the Los Angeles Rams (1950-SS). Now he's simply Rev. Towler, hea d of a 2(15..person congregation at the Lincoln Avenue Methodist Church in Pasadena. 11le Deacon, still lroking like he could bust a tackle with his 6-2, 251-pound frame, ls one fellow who retired from t:1e game with no regrets ... and there is oo looking back or melancholia ~en he goes to the pro and rollege football bat- tles. "l spend a Jot of my tJple at that eating place in the press ·.box, socializing wJth friends J haven't seen for awhile. In fact, last Sunday at ttie Rams-Baltimore game I missed the who:e first quarter, just talkin' to an old friend," the Deacon reveals. It was tough to get the 41-year~ld Negro to talk much about his playing ' days, but he finally did touch on what he Do11ie A dvantage feels were his two most memcrable performances. The first came In the 1952 Pro Bowl tiff. "I was playing with Bob Waterfield (Rams quarterback), a man who ranks as one of my favorite people. "It was raining and the field was mud- dv, making it hard to throw, so Waterfield just kept feedin' me the ball _,,,.....,.... ....... """"'" .... . WHITE WASH _ ................ . and I wound up with more yards rushing than the ot:1er team (East all-stars )." · Deacon didn 't bother to menUon it, but records reveal that he was chosen the game's most outstanding player. The second occasion was in 19$3 at Baltimore when he rushed for 205 yards (second highest single game total in Rain history -the highest is 223 by Tommy Wilson against Green Bay). The Deacon carried 14 times (Wilson had 23 aUempts) and he avcra:::ed It6 yards per try that foggy day in Mary]pr,.1 Landry Spreads Psych e; Co,vh oys Await Brown s DAU.AS (AP) -Don't try to sell Tom Landry any of this "psyche'' business when it comes to playing the Cleveland Browns. Tbe Dallas Cowboy coach comes right Brown has played the last two games In the Cowboy secondary, \\'hich has jell- ed for the first time Uiis year. HJ guess they jmt couldn't see me in all that fog," he muses. "The funniest thing about it was that I had been moved from fullback to right halfback. I hadn't played the pi>sitlon before. But my gilt was the ability to fi nd an opening if it was there and I had more speed than most of those defensive guys figured. "Jn fact, a Jot of times I used to nm off tackle, come back through the hole and make an end run out of it." The Deacon played six years with the proo, but he spent every spare moment stud.ving for his long range goal -sen .. ing Christianity. He even went to school during the playing season. Finally, he completed studies in June of 1956 and with that quit football. "Football was good to me,'' he says. "W:thout it I wooldn't have had a chance to be a person. I'd have never gone to college iI it weren't for football ." Towler left his native Pennsylvanla to attend WashJngt.on and Jefferson, where he majored in history and minored in Greek and English. "When I was a junior Jn high school I t'lecided to prepare myself for ChrisUan service. My father was a preacher, my ~ther was the president of a women's church group . And so I got to know the Bible pretty well. "Originality I toyed with tbe idea or be-:oming a mlsslonary. I believe that faith can Improve the quality of rom- munity life." Deacon Dan says footbaU teaches a valuable lesson, too. "You've gqt to be ready and able -that's also the game of competitive life. And you learn that the greatest competition is within yourse!f." Towler, the man who now traded foot- ball togs for a cross on his lapel , is still the second leading career rusher of all time for the Rams with 3,493 yards -an average of 5.2 per try. He trails Dick Bass with S,416 but a lower average -4.5 a carry. Jack Pardee now wears Towler'! old jersey number (32). But fl lllng Deacon Dan ToWler's shoes, on or off the fie!$!, is something that takes a lot of doing. ~ LA, Minnesota Open Psychological Battle MINNEAPOLIS-ST. PAUL (AP) -The Minnesota Vikings and Uis Angeles Rama wasted little time in touching «f a pgycholop:al baWe for S a t \I r d a y ' 1 We>lml Cooleren« playoff Jn lhe Na- tional Foolbalt League. C<orge Allen, Rama coach, mpped off a cbartered jet Tuelday nlghl alter the Loi Angeles arrival and said: "A little snow never hurt anybody. And Sports In Brie f It feels a lot warmer than 11 degreee." The Rams are in the Twin Cities early to attempt to get uaed to the weather, which is expected to be 1n the »<legrl!e range with a slight chance of snow by garnetime. lt was 70 degrtts when they Jell lhe West Coast. Minnesota coach Bud Gr an t , meanwhile, said Minnesot.a.'11 preparation "has been animal-like. By the time the Santa Anita Opening . , ~ Threatened by Strike SANTA ANITA -The threat of a labor dispute threw uncertainty todsy over Friday's scheduled st.art of the winter 9e8SOfl at Santa Anita. Negotiations between the t r a c k' s management and the AFL-CIO Service Employes International Union, which represents most employes at the track, are reported deadlocked. The union has given notice it will strike Fl'lday unless the negotiations are set· tied. Management says its offer of a $2 daily wage and fringe benefit package is final. · The unioos says janitors make around $30 a day, cashiers $35 to $40 and a few parl-mutuel clerks up to $S0 a day with premiums. • LOS ANGELES -Coach John 'dcKay put his Southern California Trojan foot- ball aquad through a double workout Tuesday in preparation for their en- coonter with Michigan at tlle Rose Bowl J an. 1. "We have tried to stcess conditioning in our practice sessiQns so far," said McKay Tuesday. "But begining tomorrow, we will start actual game preparation for Michigan." The two practice sessions of 90 minutes each in the morning and afternoon were capped off with a 15-minute offensive &crimmage that concentrated on passing. The Trojans were scheduled to practice this morning, take Christmas day off, and then resume Friday afternoon. • LOS ANGELES -use, combining an airtight defense and hot shooting, routed St. John's University 9s..59 in a battle of nationally ranked basketball teams in the Sports Arena Tuesday. . Alternating from a man·l<rman to a ' u.ine press, USC forced St. John's intO many of their 28 turnovers and put the game away early in the second half. USC had Cour men in double figures, led by Dennis Layton's 24 points and followed by 19 from Paul Westphal. Joe De Pre led the loser's attack with 20 points and hlgh scoring Bill Paultz was held to IJ. • LOS ANGELES-Quar t e rbacks Roman Gabriel of Los Angeles and Joe Kapp of Minnesota today were named to guide the West against the. East in the 2oth annual Pro Bowl football game Jan. 18 in Memorial Coliseum. Eight Minnesota Vikings and seven Rams were selected on the 34-man team by National Football League coaches and the game management. • DES MOINES, lowa -The· football Writers Association of America has awarded its armual Coach of t.he Year award to Bo Schembechler of the University of Michigan. Schembeehler, winding up his first year as \Volverine head coach , received 202 of the 541 votes cast In the balloting. Nearest to him, with 64 votes, was Joe Piitemo who coached Penn State to a se- cond straight undefeated season. • PALO ALTO -Stanford linebacker Don Parish has been named winner of the Glenn "Pop"' Warner Award as the most va luable college senior football player on the Paciflc Coast. _ Parish, a 6-£oot..2, 215-pounder, was named Tuesday by a panel of 50 sportswriters and !iporlscasters who cover West Coast football. He won in a close vote over quarterback Dennis Shaw of San Diego St.ate and halfback Greg Jones of UCLA. weather geta: cold an animal's fur bis gotten thicker. We're the same way." The Rams brought along a variety of cOld wet.her equipment including 1lov~. hand wanners, special shoes and belt blowers. Grant said the Vikings will not wear gloves, but have various shoes for a bad field . Eacl!. club plans to work outdoors thlt week. The Rams are headquartered at h-iacalester College In St. Paul. The Vik· lngs are based at the University of Mln- nesotll. The playing fi eld at Metropolitan Stadium has been covered by an In- sulated pad and tarpaulin, and is dry, underneath . Both clubs appear to be at almost full ·strength physically. Linebacker ~laxle Baughan is the only Ram doubtful, and he said Tuesday he would be ready to play. Jim Purnell would start if Baughan isn't ready. Minnesota cornerback Bobby Bryant has mi!.!led several games, but he is working in hopes of playing. If not, Ed Sharockman will :i;tart. Both players have sprained knees. Minnesota ended the regular se850n with the best record in the NFL, 12-2. Los Angeles was 11·3, including three ~raight kisses starting with a 20-13 setbac k by the Vikings in Los Angeles . There has been a great deal of talk about momentum, or loss or it. on both clubs. The Vikings dropped a lG-3 game to Atlanta Sunday while the Rams fell t.3- 7 to Baltimore. "Momentum is a nice word," Grant said Tuesday, "but it's hard to define. Because they've 106't. three games in a row, It doesn 't mean they are less of a club than they were a mooth ago. "We can only go by facts ••• what they can do. What they are capable of." Grant said it also was hard to judge Minr"esal.a last month of the season. "We play better football as we go along," he said. "But three (If our last four games were played in stonns and it's hard to judge if we're playing our best. Against the Rams we made a minimum of ml.stakes. "We didn't gain anything In the snow against San Francisco and the rain in Atlanta," LAKERS DOWNED BY SAN DIEGO The Los Angeles Lakers handed the San Diego .Rockets their bi-annual Christmas present a couple of days early Tuesday night when the border city quintet copped a 11$-109 NBA decision. Jerry West hit 30 points for the Lakers whilJ Elvin Hayes had 32 for the Rockets along with 26 rebounds and five blocked shots, WOLVERINES AT WORK -Rose Bowl-bound Wolverines from the University of Michigan go through their paces at East LA during a closed practice session Tuesday. Seen are Glenn Doughty (22), Garvie Craw (41!) and Jack Harpfing ('{I). ·out and says "J think we'll p'.ay a heckuva game. We are very alert and determined. We certainly don't feel psyched." This reaction came from Landry Tues· day when someone sugge!:l?d the Browns may be developing some sort of a hex over the Cowboys. "\Ve were In a slump and you have to do someWng to ma!:e Jt a new ball game," said Landry. "We had to make a change and Brmvn has done a good job." Free !afe ty ~fel Renfro will be giving Brown help in wal."hing Warfield while veteran left cornerback Cornell Green and Gary Collins will hookup ln their usual duel at the other comer slot. Passing Sputters; Dougl11y Hori Cleveland soundly defeated Dallas Jl-20 Jn the Eastern Conference playoff last year and followed it up with a 41·10 win In the regular season. Both games were played ln Cleveland. B:ut Simday's National Football Learrue Eastern Conference playoff Is ln t'a!las -where the Browns have dropped three str .. <'ht. "It's always 11 t:lg t1vanta::e t:> play at hMle" Lar.t.ry g :· ~ !, i~:e.:a~ing arour.d a UtCt 1'psyC:1e" (If h·i C".\'TI. Cleveland lort U;e ir ·i Ea~·em C-1· fettnct pl2ycff 5?-14 in the C:a o:i Bowl. Landry ~eclC:ed Tues :iy t' -:t rc:"le C't. to Brown will get t:>e nc: at L.:e ri.·:1t c· r· ner back stet. Th:1 will i;ut the Prrur:e View AttM product h~ad-up a5aln!t slick Paul Warfield, who bas caugbl 10 touc~11 passes thla season. Landry said the trou ble with the. Cleveland game ln November was "\Ve got so far behind "'e couldn't run on them. We hope not to get behind 21..0 io the first quarter again." Calvin IDU, the NFL's offensive roo1do- of·the-year and a mem ber o( the All-NFL backfield, st.ill has poiin in his jammed b:l toe. LanCry &D.ld "Hill is learning to play "'" '1 pt: n. He appeare:i to be rounding in· to his cld fonn against \Vas;tin(;t'lfl." Jl''I is elven a s'.lot of pain killer in lbe t: ! b::ore k:cko:f. Lantry said injured quarterback Craia M ·;·ton was also bea~r each week. "He was throw:ng t:1ose s\dellne pn.sses against \Va.shington \\1th some zip on them," Landry &aid. Morton has I sore shoulder. By GLENN WIDTE Of nit o.11¥ ,li.t Sl1H No blood wao spilled but tailback Glenn Doughty had a Jell elbow the size of a gnpelrull and a hail dozen olh<r players were swathed in tape as the University or Michigan Wolverlnes went thl'tlUgh their paces Tuesday afternoon at East Los An-:e!es College. It was another of tht cl~ed workout.I ~::::h Bob SChcmbe::.Iler'1 Dlg Ten co-• champions are going through In prepar11· t:::in for their Nc;w Year's controntllllon w·t.i USC in t'.1e Rose Bowl. Do1•;;hty "as belted during the 70- m 'ncte workout and had to get the unb::lievnbly swollen elbow taped and p!!~ded by a Wolverine trainer. The Jattzr said a bruise h•d bunt and although l& lookN bad and was somewhat painful, It was notbJng of major con- &equence. Prime concern for Michigan is the recovery of defensive · back Barry Pierson, who is still wearing a cast after having hls arm racked up in a scrim· mage before the Wolverines departed from Ann Arbor. The cast is due to come off Saturday and at that Ume • determination mny be made as to whether Pierson plays against the Tro:ans. He wa$ suited up and made sever3l spectacular r eceptions of long p:-:scs-.,.,•ith one hi'ln.:I. It was a less t::an s;:ectacular drill for the \VolverlnM at least as far as their passing attack v.·ent. Starting quarterback Don ~foorhead connected on 11 of 24 tosses and had twG intercepted. A few of his: throws Wttt ~ but most misses were clearly off target. Reserve field general Jim Betta made good on 15 of 25 aerials and had only one intercepted. But he was also guilty of a fwnble on a rollout. Junior end BUI Harri.s c1ught seven passes while All·American Jim Mandich hanled in i;ix. "We look better on defenoe lhan anythln~ else," Schembechler u i:t. "Our paaslng was not good today.'' :P.ilddle guard Jie nry Hill ls still s1tf· fe ;-l.ng from a leg Injury and isn't quite 100 pcrcenl. Mean,vhile, Schernbtehler so.Id it is doubUul that standout defcn!ive ha If back Pierson whos e right foreann has been In a cast since a scrim- mage in Ann Arbor before lhe trip, would return any punts in the USC game. He wwldn'l say li the cast would pre-- vent him from playing Jn the defenslve secondary, however. Pierson returned a punt 60 yaids against OhJo State to set up a Michigan touchdown. Bo spokl! with USC coach John McKay by way of Jn ampl ified telephone Tues- day and said: "This Is my firs\ bowl game but you musl be getting pretty tired of them by now." "111 11ever get borl'd with tllem,'' responded McKay, whose leam11 have be=n the Paelfic-Elgtit Conference's Rose Bowl representative for the put four yetlJ's. "Each one of them ls a great ex- pe:lence." "Yeh, the Rose Bowl ls just like the 11th game of your schedule," Scbem· bechler sald. "Wt try to recruit our plnym wflt that ldea,·1 McKay replied wryly. ' ' 7 ( . l I I I I 7 I . . . - Saddleha~k • VOL 62, NO. 307, 3 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES ORANGE C!lOUN'TY, CALl~Rl'!IA u ~ ·-~ r I t -· ' ' .. , , • ' '-}, !». i DAILY PILOT ,St.tt ,.,.... LAGUNA JACK 'S BACK . Heads·up· on Coast Highw1y Jack in the Bo x Loses His Head l 11. Laguna Beacli Laguna Beach police have issued an all-points bulletin for a large plastic head, 18 inches in diameter, orange in color. v.·ith green hair, a yellow cap and triin· med with a multi-colored collar. The rilissing head was taken during the night from the soon-to-open Jack-in-the· Box drive-through restaurant at 1201 S. Coast Highway. • The thier. possibly seeking something really special to complete his Christmas shopping list, ripped the ·colorful head from its electrical moorings on a stand at the rear of the restaurant between I a.m. and 6:54 a.m., police ssid. Va1ued at $300. the head contains a 11peaker for greeting customers as they pull up to place their orders. · ~'tlers of the restaurant chain. after hassling with the Art Colo!ly's esthetic building department, designed a special building for their Laguna branch, elimi~ating tbe gaudy box used in other areas. But it still retains one shred or identity. There's another head. al!O orange, green and yellow, atop a pole sign in front .of the building. At least, it was still there this morning. Name Change Bid By Deane Fails . A bid by Deane Brothers Inc. to change the name of Canada Road .to Lake Forest Parkway was turned down Tuesday afternoon by the Orange County Planning Commission. A spokesman for the commlsslon said a "no .. recommendation Will! given the f't!quest· because of · esta~lished commis· sion Policy. "We had similar cases ~ith Laguna Niguel and Mission Viejo," lhe planning commission represent1uye said. "Jl iii Ille feeling of the qmunissloo that an 11rterial highway is regional in nature and will extend beyond, the bounds of any given development and so should not be named ror Ole development," he said. Canada Road was part of the Rancho la Canada de Jos Alisos, the spokesman ex· plained, "so the commissioners are 1ug· gesting the road be renamed La Canada Parkway in keeping with lhe or!llnal ' name ... ' ' ~ . ' ' . • • IC IlVI e .0 . Playho11se Hits ·BaDet . Gro.up Claim ~y RICHARD P. NALL Of ""° CMlllV ,.llOI ''•ff Jn'the :wike ·of criticism that they had been uncooperative al)d had fOuled ·up 6chedulipg o{ J..8iuna Beach Civi.c .Ba,llet Cor'npanY, officials·o~ the 'Laguna Moulton Pla}'bous:e · today, ·ha~ •a idecidedly dif· ferent slant. : · .. At no· utile wen W~ dt.tted. tO work the prOblems" out;'' ·saKt ~PI8yhouse Bo:U.d President Geoffrey Riker. "AU we have is a call from two nev.1spapers and a copy of the letter. They've evey-even spoken to us ·about it." Riker referred to a letter from Douglas Reeve", general director· of the ballet company. The Dec. 21) letter: mentioned that ballet mem~rs ,...and others had ' given · many thousands of dollars i·in the name of the Civic Ballel Comp3ny on the un- derstanding that the Playhouse would be ours to use for our four membership pro- grams each year without charge except for nominal expenses." ReeVe wrote that Playholise· Use would cost'tlle ballet more than twice as much as the h_igh school auditQrium .. Riker said use of the theater costs the ballet $50 per performance and $30 Tor a rehearsal. · --Riker said Playhouse construction cost many extra thousanp.s of dollars "lo con· strucl a 'stage and rthearsal room ideally . .suited to ballet." This, he said, was the result cif numerous conferences between· the design consultant and Lila Zall, ballel artistic di rector. "The Playhouse continut..s to want to make the theater available to any com· munity group," said Riker. , or the changes in scheduling of ballet performances, Riker said "any organiia- tion is going to have scheduling problems in its first year. I did not get the im- pression this was a prohib itive problem. \Ve are constantly re-evaluating what we are offering to get the best for the com· n1unity." Riker agreed that ballet members had given thousands towa rd Playhouse con· struction but said it had been given in the names of individuals not in the name of the ballet company. Jack Seymour. playhouse publicist, said Playhouse officials "had been work- ing like mad with the ballet people trying to set up acceptable schedules." As to the recent benefit for the playhouse in which the players did not participate, Seymour said, "they never asked us for assistance as far as staf· fing. It was understood they would pro- vide their own ushers and ticket takers and you can't expect the "(Playhouse) board to come to every· event in the~ ater. . . . • • " -. -• DAll.Y"PILOT 1!11f P~ . OUTSIDE COUNTY COURTHOUSE, .STAMP OUT SMOG MARCHERS SUPPORT· CLEAN AIR _ lnll~•'.. th• ~r•ni~ .c_~ ~·[~.,~·:$:"~~\ti.tort ~•111c1.· T\ou~,' N•"!··~li\ ~~IJ~!~~·Mi~~9:tl~1 '. · ... I-~. . • ' .. • ' ' ' t I •. ~ \; ' . • . -, . , • i • ' , ' r . . . Stotm Channel Extension Set A 950-foot' -extensiOn or the . Marquita Storm Channel jfl San Clemente is now complete and ready to plaY its role in the· fast approaching "rainy season. Built under the joint powers agreement of th~ Orange County Flood Control District and the city of San Clem-ente, the $57,702 project is a cOntinuation or the dowii.stream section· completed last year· through ·Linda .Lane Park. Installation of the 48-inch ·reinforced ' concrete pipe conduit has halted ·steadily increasing erosion along the natural '"atercourse, oHlcials said . Completion of the project, it was pointed out, removes, the d;i.~ger to hOmes in the· area. More Bullis Stolen Christmas bulb-napping continued in Laguna . Beach as police took reports .on 17 flashing outside lights filched from 2995 Alpine Way and anothq 10 snatched· at nearby 2985 Alpine Way. County Approves Tight Controls on Pollution By TOM BA RLEY 01 1111 0.l_ty Piiot Stiff . Orangt! County. supe rvjsors claniped 11· tight lid on non-vehicular smog producer! Tuesd11y with a .unanimous a~optiQn of stringent. air pollution control measures La guna Post Offiee 'I'o Be Closed F riday The Laguna Beach Post Office wiJJ. be closed F,9day, the day after Christma!, except for special delivery and handling or perishables, it was announced today. There will be nonnal post office service Saturday, with windows al the Glenneyre Street post office open from 9 a.m. to noon and at the Laguna Avenue office . from 8:30 a.m. to noon . Regular Saturday schedules for dispatch and home delivery will be maintained. that brought a capacity audience In the board's hearing room to its feet with a sustained ovation . Last minute attempts to amend the pro- posed action and delete what were described as "only doubtful" contributors to the county's mounting smog problem were swept aside by a determined board, urged on by Supervisor David Baker, "We have .a legal and mo ra t responsibility today to add t h e s e measures lo our air polluton control regulations," said Baker. "We have heard abundant testimony from medical experts &id the farming community to know full well bf now just whet these freely emitted pollutants are doing to our environment and to us. "Public hi!alth should take second place to nothing," Baker warned. "It' is im- perative 1that this board act upon this recommendation at this lime and do so in a manner that renects our prompt reac· tion to. the callli made upon us by the public." Only Su_pervisor William Phillips seem· ed doubtful wheh the roll was called . But ~is.quiet "yes," qffered after a moment 's consideralion,'made the vote unanimous. · Phillips had objected to the banning of" the chemical agent trichlo~hylene.and argued -a conten~on supporf:ed dur~g !!le h e a r l n g by representativeii of manufacturers of the. agent -that ther-e Was insufOcient evidence' to support ban· ning of the Controversial chemical, s3i d by its inClicters to ~ a key component of smog. The board refused to eliminate the c)'lemlCal from the adopted RuJe' 66K bqt consented to a stuffy" of the role played by the Chemical In smog emisSjons and promised . to consider· an arheridinent to · the newly adopted ' ordinance· if tests: es· tabllshed th&;t the agent plays nn part in smog production. · '•Adopted 'by the board over tHe vigorous objectJons of William R. Gould, senior vice president. ot the ,Southern ,California CS.. SMOO·LAW/ Pop ti INll fATES ·CETTING ' •-• • ' ' I • ' • f • BIG Y ULE·DINNE R · ' • ' I 1 'They ntay be ln ·Jall, ·biil'ih• lnma\es Of Orange County ~ail. will Pave a Christ·· ·mis-dllinef'tf¥it~·0ivtryu.ung 8.itd ·more U,.t • homei-cooktd 'holiday dfnner' w6tlld J>e,"'' ,. ' .. Aulhorllies at the jail said the hbliday Niguel's ·fl~s.i D~iion , . ' • J : ' • , dlMer wilt consi!t' of turte'y and stuff· big, tw.o kinds ol vegetables, criilberrY uoce, mashed potatoes and pumPkJn pie. ... I ate out hftt over Thanksgiving." Engineer Santa !irids p(>l@r beer;on track ·~t homo of Mr. and Mrs. Ktntteth A. Bloom. 23922 Stillwater Lane in La Veta., Judged Tuesday . night as best Christmas decorlrtfon for Laguna Niguel. The C<>- ordlnating Council pickfll-tlle winners to rceeive trophie(fr'o.m lllonaltil Bay Men:han!S Association.: Runner-up '2i 'tlle,'ho)lle of Mr. and Mrs. Chii'les · v. DixO!I, 3lt~fNatlo~t ·~ark Drive in J'ltguel Welit. Mr. and Ml'! · M~an e. c. L;iVigne. 25171 . \\riba· gosa ·Ort"11·1n·icrown · oint pla'ced tllird. · ·· r the fPOkesm1n laid "and. it was ' quite good. Al « l!Jittel of fact, II wu • bigger =:",than I, ,wpuld havt ·gotten at • = -• ; T..tq'• Fl•el .; fl .. , , . • .. 4' ' • N. Y. S'• ii±• TEN CENTS •• ' IXO :President , Due Friday Afternoon .. The, public ls: lnvile<l to see Pre&Jdenl Nixon touch down in Air Force One _at :gi Toro Marine Corps AJr Station on FridaJ for the start of about a 10-day stay al tht \Vestem White Hou.se. T!le President's arrival is scheduled for 3:30 p·.m. wilh the gate to· be opened h the public at 2:30 p.m. The President will spend the post· Christmas holiday with his wife and daughter Tricia at their estate in San Clemeote. Television viewing of the ~ Bowl game and preparation of the Stale af the Union message and 1971 fe®ral bUd get are· on lhe agenda. · • Greeting the President an his arrival 81 EJ '.J'oro wil l be 2:; members of the Siu: Clement~ Dons ind a niartachi bind. , To get to the Marjne Air StaUon take 4!:ithl'!t the Scind Canyon or Culver Orin turnoffs from the Santa Ana Freeway. Tonight ~ Christm~s eye. peace vigil If ~c~eduled at the San Clemente Westert Wtu.1e' HOuse as a •war moratmiiun ac- tivity fOr December . Person! taking· part will march tr silence _by candlelight from 9 p.rit. untJ: midnight,· following an 11-block circula1 route around the Cyprus Shore neighbor· hood. ~guna . Service • w ' • Station Robbed A Laguna Beach service station 1t· tendant was interrupted in his task ol counting out a cash box early today by 1 visitor who thrust a "sharp object" intc hls back and demanded, "Give me aJJ the bills-pass it back !" Attendant Leonard Qraverman of Santa Ana complied, without turning around bul he did g!Jmpse the robber 33 he fie(! on foot from the Union Oil station at the! comer of Broadway and South Coasl Highway, shortly before 2 a.m. The man, he told police, was about E1· feet tall, appeared to be in his early 20! and had a regular, not "hippie," haircul topped with a black be:ret. He was wear- ing a green fatigue jacket and blu• denims, Braverman said. Amount of casl taken has not yet been delerm.lned, ac· cording to police. YU LE EDITIO N OUT BY NOO N The Christmas Edition of the DAIL 1 PILOT will be pubilshed and deliveret early Thursday (before noon in mo!! areas) and all DAILY PILOT offices wil be closed for the holiday. Friday will be a normal work day al the DAILY PILOT and all offices will bt open for busines! as usual. Orange Weather Someone forgot to wish the weatherman a merry Christmas, and he's retaliating in kind-with low clouds, fog and a light drizzle to dampen the yuletide spirits, while temperatures remain in the mid &O's, . INSIDE TODAY Financial columtWt Sylvia P~rter gives 10 rules /or invest. ors to follow in bu~ing art wo rks in lier column on Paoe 12 today. r--~--·1 I °"" 1 o;r. I CHRISTMAS L......:..;... . ! C•lllwrlifi ' I (!Mdll.._ 1,1, , Cllllt•lllH 11·" c-1e1 11 c,.._. ' °""' ,.'""' • t:.itwltl ..... I •t1H>rllfft!Mlll 11 "l-t 1._1) .. _ " A11tt.._.. ... t Mli .. 1 I Mlwltt 11 'MWIMI ....... tt 111.-.i ..... .., 0'11"-(_,, I ''"""..... ,, ._., , .. 1. St.ct ,,_. ... IS.It ,......... .. ,.,....... 11 w..iw • Wflllt Wl "9 11 W-'t .._ f.11 ...... ,._ ... l - I -' l DAil Y I'll.OT L Viejo Christmas Champ .Judges for the grand prize in Mission Viejo's third annual home decoration contest admire the win· ning home of Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Reader at 24322 Chrisanta Drive. From left are Glynn Brown, l>. Woodward Dike, Holly Pulaski and William Gard- ner. McDonnell Douglas Gets $8 Billion Jet Contract Corky Carroll Seeks Surf T itle In Hawaii Meet li'rom Wire Se.niets Surprise selection of M c D o n n e 11 Douglas Corporation to create lhe FIS jet bomber, an $8 billion inveslment ln the nm decade, was announced by the Air F'orce Tuesday in Washington. The pre-Ch r i s t m a s announcement comes as a crushing blow to North Amer· \can Rockwell Corporation. which had relied heavily on landing the huge con· tract in its future operations planning. --· _r~o great impact was immediately loreseen on eiUter !inn's Orange Counly- oased aumidi&ries in Huntington Beach ind Anaheim. but the North American ' Work force in Los Angeles County will be kit hard. Ofricl1ls at North American Rockwell'.11 ~utonetics plant in Anaheim could not be reached for comment on impact of the tonlract loss on their giant new facility 1l Laguna Niguel, largest electronics pl"nt In the worrld. AutoneUt:! employes were off for the ltolldays, with only a token mw on duty ind exeeutive5 who might be: able to ex· plain It further were out doing last· tlinute Christmas shopping. Larry Vitsky, public relaUons dire cctor /or the McDonnell Douglas Astronautics !:orporation western division In Hun- tington Beach, however. confirmed that the FIS job won't affect the west county (ar.Jllty. "We won't be involved In any prn- ~uclion of the airplane, but anything that County Okays Tr acl In Dana Point Area County planning commissioners Tues- day gave their approval to the creation of 11 housing tract in the Dana Point area by the 111underbird Capistrano Company. A planning commission representatlvfl uid the 207 single residence tract will be the first Increment of a planned com· 01unily in the area. DAILY PILOT Cll,•N<.E ~t ,U.LLSH!lt~ COM,AN'I' 1, .. ,,. N. W.,4 ''"111"'1 ,,,_ l'l!lln~ J.,1i 1. c~.1 • ., \'•U •rtt>CIW>t er.cl ~ti Mt•i.t'' n,,,..,, Kee•il 1.1tw T~'"''' A.. Mv•1'hi~1 "''""..,. wi.r J1;cl11r11' '· Nell l-SHd~ contributes to the he•llh of McDonnell Douglas is welcome,'' aatd Vitsky. He estimated 25 percent of the pro- duction will be done in California. The contract to build the single-seal, twin-engine supersonic jet was the !int such past Jet during the Nixon ad· ministration, and will eventually be one of the biggest in Pentagon history. The selection of McDonnell was a boon for St. Louis, where the firm employs abo1:t 33,000 workers and wh~e most or the work will be done. FairchHd Hiller -\ll hich v.•as also in lhe bidding, face s a big I05S. The initial contract, released Tuesday, is for 20 aircraft for de velopment and testing purposes al a target price of $1.146 billion. Te flfSt funds to be com- mitted amount to $80.24 million. The pro- ject is planned for S20 planes over five ye ars at a cost fl $6 billion , and the: Jong range projection could bring it to 700 planes at a cost of $8 billion. Jn St. Louis, James S. McDonnell, chairman of the wiMJng company, said the contract would not result in an in· crease in employment at the firm's main plant. But he said the firm would have had to lay off 10,000 workers if it had not won the contract. The firm will do all but 25 percent of the work in St. Louis with the balance going out on subcontracts to California plants and smaller amounts in many other atates. From wire Services HONOLULU -Dana Point's Corky Cam>ll was in the running today as California and Hawaii finalists battled it out in the International Surfing Cham- pionships, riding the powerful waves at Makaha. The 23-year-0!d defending West Coast champion who won at Huntington Beach in September was joined by Californian Ralph Arncss, son of actor James Arness. star of television's Gunsmoke . Arness was the judges' favorite as the points narrowed. Four ol the six qualifiers in the senior men's meet live in the islands and are us- ed to Makaha"s high surf. They 11re George Dcr.vning, three-time Makaha 'vin· ner; Fred Hemmings, two-time winner; Paul Strauch Jr .. several times a close runner-up, and Jinlmy Blears. Joey Cabell of H~waii, dcfe~lng champ and tw~time mnner, seeded into today's finals. Amess was the judges' favorite as lo'v scorer at six points ~·ith a five-judge panel. In the first heat, only 1 Vi p:lints made the difference between top man and disqualification. Australians Norman Mcintyre.. Pa Bcn- rlall and Andrew Short were disqualified earlier. Ten From Coast Selected As Grand Jm~y Candidate s Ten Orange Coast resident3 are among ihe list of 30 persons from V.'hOm the Orange County Grand Jury or 1970 will be selected on Jan. 5. Included in the list compiled by Superior Court Judge James F. Judge - the criminal court presiding judge for 1970 and the court's lfaison with the Jl,rand jury-are two resident.g from Hun- tington Beach, one from Westminster, four from Corona del Mar, one from Balboa, one from Newport Beach and one one from Capistrano Beach. Their names will be among 30 to go into a drum at the annual selection o( the grand Jury. The first 19 names to be drawn by Judge Judge's clerk will com· prise the new panel. tington Beach; Raymond 1'.-1, Schmitt, 8121 E. 19th St .. \Vestminster : Mrs. Audrey Cotton, 1509 E. Bay. Balboa and l\trs. llarriet Bemus, 2631 \Va vl'rly Drive, Newport Beach. Also, 1.1rs. lrmeli Desenberg, 2231 Bayside Drive. Miss Marian Louise Parks, 233 Morning Canyon Road, Dr. Ralph Gerard, 1007 Goldenrod and Mrs. Alice Remer. 210 Goldenrod all of Corona de! fi.1ar and David Clark, 35685 Beach Road, Capistrano Beach. All those named were nominat@d for service on the Orange County Grand Jury by the 21 Superior Court judges. Judge Judge today scheduled the nam· ing of the panel for 2 p.m. on Jan. 5 In Department 5 ol Superior Court. Cop s Seize Sex Mo vie In Balbo a By JOHN VALTERZA Of 1111 1:1111r 1'11e1 Stiff They were more than curiou s and more than yellow, too. So a municipal judge, a Newport vice detective and two District Attomt,y's in- vestigators turned )•t!llow to black Tue&· day night and seized a copy oI tht Swedish sex film alter lts final showing at the Balboa Theater. And today, a print of "I Am Curious (Yellow)" sits idle on a police depart· ment office floor. Its next showing 'viii be delayed indefinitely. The judge, J. E. T. "Ned '' Rutter llr, Detective John Simon and the two DA 's men sat patiently through the graphic Sc"andinavian sex saga, then at 9: 15 p.01. moved into the theater projection room and toot the print. Today, Newport Beach police were suking misdemeanor complaints against the owner of the theater. Willlam AUord of 1234 La Mirada, Laguna Beach, and t.he manager, Mrs. Eleanor Blackburn of 614 E. Ocean Front, Balboa. Simon said the charges sought would be for alleged eihibition of obscene matter. Chief James Glavas said one con- tributing factor to the seizure of ·the: film containing yards of footage depicting sex acts was several complaints from citizens who had seen the film and didn"I like its content. "We aren't trying to act as censors or the conscience of the community in thi$ case," Glavas said, ''but we truly believe that we re entllled to do it under the lines drawn by the U.S. and California 6upreme courts." He cited one letter and several phone calls from persons who saw the film and who complained bitterly that it was obscene. A Ioca1 doctor wrote a letter damnh1g the sex epic. •·Jt's obvious that the exhibitors or the~e types or films are notorious ly careless about their control of underage persons entering the theater. Without much effort we found one unescorted 17- year-old girl in the theater last night ," Glavas added. Glavas charged that film makers and exhibitors "are always trying to produce something which wiU push and test the Hnes set by the courts and this is a good example of it." Glavas said he hadn't seen the fi!n1. 1·bul I read the complete report detaillng the scenes and l'm convinced \Ve. did 1he right thing.'' He said he hoped the. line between clean ;ind dirty films would soon be more clearly defined by the courts. The film. sources said, will face some tough sledding. elsewhere in the county, too. Stanton Police were reported to be planning a raid sometime early today_ on a theater showing the movie in their city. 1:r fl ./;{ 'It's Dirty Filrn~' Says Hurlburt- He R ead R eport Newport Beach police tonfiscation Tuesday night of the Swedish film, .. T Am Curious (Yellow)." has the support of the city administration. It does nol have the support of the operators of the Balboa Theater. how· ever. They're confused . "I've been here almost IO years:· said a member of the !heat.er staff. ··and thls l.~ the first time anything like this has happt>ned. We've had many films like lhis. \Ve've had a lot of war films, too." City !\tanager Harvey L. Hurlburt ill less con fused about why further showings of "I Am Curious" were baMed. "It's a completely dirty film." he said. ''It is v.•ithout any redeeming social fea· lures n•hatever. It's as bad as any stag fHn1." He v.·as ai;ked whether hr. had seen it. ··No. f!ut 1 read the police report" To Erect Monwnenl LONE PINE (UPI) -Japanese who were interned at the Mantanar Camp near here during World War n will return this weekend to erect .a memorlsl to those who died during their stay at the camp. Two buses from Southern California were expected to anive Saturday and depart the !ollowlni day. Cllf Ed•lllr l .. 111111 h •• Offlc1 211 f111tl Avt ftMt Among.,lhe nominees for the 1970 jury are! A. C. Athey of 615 8th St. and CharJe! 1'.iashbum of &OJ 13th St . both of Hun· l'letnana, Middle East Pilot Logbook Judge, Lawmen Curiou s; 'Yello w' Showm en Blue By TH0~1AS KEEVIL 01 ll'lt OtllY l'li.! Sltfl I OlON'T 'Im.NK I'd ever gel to see ··1 Am Curious (Yellow)." l alme»t didn 't and wish l hadn't. In the first place. pie short subject that preceded it at the Balboa Theater Tl.le.sday nlght was interminable and even more curioo1 than the movie. lt really was a commercial for Colonel Sanders' fried chicken. IT SHOWED the dazzling·white form of the goateed drumstick king patting ooe horse, feedlng another horse-, mugging with another horse, talking with another horse, belling on another horse, cOngratulaling another horse and just standing there with a lol more horses. The second reason I almost didn 't see •·1 Am Curioll!'I (Yellow)" v.•as that, unknown to me, my companion movie critics included Judge J. E. T, "Ned" Rutter, several deputy district attorneys and some badge-toting represent- atives of the Newport Beach PoJJce Department. THEY FOUND the film appealing to prurient inter· csts and confiscated i'A. I don't know if they took the Colonel Sanders film. There was a th.iui reason I almost didn't see "l Am Curious (Yellow).'' I could not stay awake. This chubbz girl did run around a lot with no clothes on. So did her '?DY friend. A couple of times they displayed more than casual means of expressing afreclion and their celebrated athletic prowess (in a tree, on a balcony and in a pond) was an intriguing manifestation of cinemaUc imaglnalion. WJUClf J\fEANS l stayed awake during that part. ( . --· But the rest of the film was a drag. 1 fell to findingrtypographical errors In lhe English subtitles, then began rewriting the plot as it unfolded, only in my version I worked in a role for Colonel Sanders. That version would really have sent Judge J. E. T. "Ned'' Rutter on his ear, But even this mental exercise failed to sustain my interest and by the fihn's end I had nodded into a semi-sleep. I haven't the vaguest notion ot what happened to the chubby girl and her boyfriend, except that }heir forms are no longer being displayed in Newport Beach, California. Olf, I MISSED all the action. Judge Rutter et al were boxing up the film while I was making a furtive exlt, hoping no one would see me pursuing my prurient interests. Most unhappy man in town is Ma·x Dillman at the restaurant across the street. "J\1an, did we have a blast of buslness while It lasted," he. said. "You couldn't believe the activity down here." President Eating · D~ner. At El Adobe in . Capo? By PAMELA HALLAN 01 "'' a111r '";i.1 St•lf Rumors are afoot today in San Juan Capistrano that President Nixon will be ~ating at lhc El Adobe restaurant Friday night. Press Cor ps Due In La g una Friday The \\'hite House 11rrive in Laguna lheir Yuletide "'atching. press corps '"'ill Beach Friday for stint al President Merrill Johnson, owner of the Surf & Sand Hotel, where the press corps lives and works, said he had about 60 rooms ready for the political writers aod an· other 20 for Press Secretary Ron Ziegler, his staff and others. "A lot of the press people are bring- ing their families along for the holidays." said Johnson. He said the press com- munications equipment, including direct lines to the \Vhite House and teletype equipment, is ready lo go. The city is restricting four parking places in front of the Surf & Sarni on South Coast Highway for parking of two buses used by I.he press. F1·ee,vay W reck 111 jures Woman The condition of !I Tustin 1vom1n In- jured Tuesday morning ·in an auto ac· cident on the NeY.'port Freeway remains guarded today following surgery in Santa Ana Community Hospital, California Highway Patrol officers said the woman, Linda M. Crawford, 29, <>f 13187 Gwyneth St., suffered cheJt injuries when the car which she was driving left the freeway near the Edinger ei:lt and struck four construction vehicles parked In the center divider. Her p&S!enger George Watson or Norwalk suffered a broken leg and ia in 3atisfactocy condition in the 11me hosp I tat •. The restaurant's manager. Elias ifesa, \\'ill neither confinn nor deny the rumor but a hostess and waitress standing •t the reservation desk glance anxiously at nne another when the question is asked as if they share a secret. If the President and his party don't dine on Friday chances are they will be !here another night during their stay at the summer White. House. 1'he historic restaurant which has been standing as long as the mission ha.o: played host to the President on several occasion!. One publicly announced \'\sJt resulted In special cuisine \\•hich now appears on the menu as the President's choice. It con- sists .of guacamole with tostaditoa. chicken enchilada. chille relleno. beef laco, grated cheddar cheese, spanish rice and frijoles with reirltos. "But the President doesn 't usually or- der anything special," said Mesa ... He usually orders right off the menu. The manager sa id the President's visits don't create any special problems. No special section of the n!Staurant i!f designated for hi use although one chair is marked the pesident's chair. This iit the chair he occupied during his official visit on March 22. Will he occupy It again Fridy~ Elias llfesa says "I don 't know." If anyone does know, he isn't telling. Volunteers :Sought By Ne w P layhouse Theater buffs who would like. to servr. :111s volunteer usher!, backstage :ielpers or box office asslstanl.5 at the Laguna ?tfoullon Playhouse are asked to stop in and sign up for assignments. The playhouse is preparing a file <>( names of volunteers who can be called upon to help out during rehearsals and productions. Mrs. Nixon l fos less W ASHJNGTON (AP) -Mrs. <ti chard 1.f. Nixon was hostess to 400 childrtn of diplomatic families Tuesday night at the last of lhi3 year's \Vhite H~ Cui.stmas parties. M •• r;,., "''''''' r.o. ••• •••. t?•12 Ott. OHie. C:•lt ll'ete: UI Wt tl lier I"'"" ,._., .. f<fl, n u WHt ••lllH lfo¥ltv•,.. ,,..., ...... a..dl; 1't1J •tKfl IWofYllf From Page 1 Wars Mar Season of Good Will'- .. ,J , DA'1.Y '"II.Of, .,,\~ ... !do It """""""' """' Ill ............. It M 'ltll!f 1111J1y t.otl>Jt s ..... 4tr In _ .. It ... U"°'l f9r l.lf UM •tttll.1 ......... , ··~ ,... ""-· ............. ,°'\ ~ .-, ........ Ytl....,, ,,.,.,. wllll ''"" .._..., • ...._ ~ C..t1 MH•llllll (......., """''""' .......... " '111 W.fl •••• •rw. "'--' ••ai.. ,.,. m W.1 ...,. J.b911. c.i. ..... 1'11 ;I n 17141 4t4°t4'4 ca...Mie. hpt. MJ-4Jll "'"1 .... t. 1,.,_ Or-. CM•• ""911...-. C-."''' "'9 """"' 1ltl'lft. illwoll'•f...,., .......... --II' tf-'~11 ....... _, M ••""""" •;"'4vl ~I ~ ........ l l Clft'rilJ!t -· ..._ ci.. •"-,.11 •I JffWJt'l'f .. tdl _.. c-11 Mllft C.U. ..... k*K•I~ .,, h' ··""*' ... ....,.,.,, l'I' '"'" ., .. -·~·" ...... , ............ p.oa·-1111:-r. SMOG LAW ... Edi.son Co. was I.ht addition of Rules 61, '3 and 67 to Orange County's air poUuUon c:ontrol regulation$ and the amendment Md 1ubst.antiaJ 1trengtl11~nin1 of Rules 11 F and &&JC. Rule 61 rtquires I.he burning of natural gas whenever it ii available. At all other limes, the new county ordinance will sptclfy, low sulfur oU must be burned. Rule &3 will rtgulate the spedlications of 1uoline aold and distributed In Oran11e County, "Altbouih Orange County has no rtflneries and all our gasoline is Im· ported." Air Pollution Conln>I OffJ~r William Fltchtn told the board. '1bla rule could deter tho dumplnc of ,..,.ilne In lbe county. ' By Tbe A1aociated Pre11 Millions of persons around the world made last-minute prepar11ions today to celebrate Christmas. Althoogh the message o( the birth <>f Jesus Christ is "Pe8ce on Earth," the wars the world had with it last year re- mained In Vietnam and Nigeria . Thti Mjd. east situation nmained unsettled. Three loud explosion' rattled windows today In Btthlehem, the birthplace of 0,rlst. One Israeli official said the:y could ha,·e bctn catJ~ by supersonic alrcr11lt. • It is the hilltop city's l.hlrd Chrlsllnas under lsn11ell rule, and in I.he shade or the Church of the Nativity scores ol Israeli security agent.s mingled with t h fl Chrl.stmas pllgrlms. One csUmate aald more than 1.tXX> trooP111 and police were on duty in the town. ln Vietnam, the allied e<1mmancts and the Viel Cong observed cease-fires. Fighting had been at 111 low level for !CVttal weeks, and after the truce began it dropped oU even more. Rad~H1noi btgan bro a d e as I Ing reconled messages from American prisoners of war to thtir lamllles. as lt his done in past years. Soldll'rs in Vietnan1 and at other U.S. militory Installations In the-Far Eas1, Europe and the United Statc.s gave Christmas partle11 for children 1t orphan· age! and hospltal11. Christmas In the United States is qulel.e.r W. )'ear lhan last. In 1068.. lbc Apollo I astrcmul4 were clrcllng the moon, and the crtW of the spy ahlp Putblo was coming home after 11 months ol captivity. AJ usual, shoppers jammed the stores to mak@ those. down·UH:h~wire purcha.seR from stocks that have dwindled steadily since Thanksgiving. Department store: of· ficlals said revenue was hlaher than lasl year, but many attributed the lncreate to high~ prtces brought on by lnflaUon rather than addl\ionaJ volume. ffundrcd s or tho\1$ands nocked to alrporL11, railroad stations and bus tcnninals, heading home to see rtlatl''Cll and f31nllics or taking v1catlon1. Among lhe trivelers will be President Nixon, his wife aod dauSbter Trlcia, who ' • are gctn.g to Sin Clemente Friday lfttr 1pending Christmas at the \Yhite Houst. The Nixoos' other daughter. Julie Eisenhower, i!I in Brussel!! wlth her hus· band Oavkt. w~ father is U.S. am· bassador there. Nlxon went to Capitol Hill Tuesda y to lunch wttb congrCMlonal leaders shortly before they adjourned the fir5\ session ct the 91st Congress and headed home. Many ol them will rind 1 whitt Christmas. A snowstorm blanketed lh• Mid\\-est and the U.S. \\'eather aureau forecast !!now for the Northeast. Th• bureau 1!90 said th~e was 1now In !he· Pacific Nonhweat, northern Californil and inland to Utah and the Rookies. 7 7 ' ·1 I I •• '. 1 • -.1 •• Ne~ort ~-:IJarhor Te#wytli l"hid EDITION VOL i.2, NO. lOJ,..3 ~EctlONS, 21 PAG"ES ORANGE COUNTY, CAl.IFORNIA" WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 2~. ·i.69 TEN cENiS - . - Cops Close 'Curiou.s' Judge , Lawmen Seize Swedish Sex Movi.e DAIL T P'U.01' ttliff "'9fe Last Load of Chr,istnw Newport BeaCh Ai ail Carrier Fred Fuller,. 25. decided ~ spruce up the old mail cart this year and to tQP off his. heavy Chr1~tmas cai;go struck on the idea for a mini-Christmas tree anchored m a conv~n. Jent pop bottle. To crown· his. carrier's hat FulJer decided on a ~ce sprig-ol mis.Uetoe, but he's mum on wheth~r the girls h~ve noticed the green (eaves. Judge Rutter Gf!ts Pos't On OC Superior Court ?tfunkipal Court Judge J .E. T. ''Ned" RutUr ol Newport Beach today was ap. pointed by Gov. Ronald Reagan to suc- ceed Jul!tice Robert Gardner to the Orange County SuperioT Court. Judge Rutter, 38. will move from his Harbor Judicial District Court to the higher bench after the holidays. 1-Ie '\'ill take over the court vacancy created by the! elevation last week ol' Justice Gl{dner to the Fourth Di9trict Court of Appeals in San Bernardino. Judge Rutter got the news of h.is unioue Chrlatmas gift in a telephone call from the governor's press secretary. ''The governor was on his \.\'ay down here for Christmas vacation but he very typically firured that I might like to hear <'f !he appointment now rather than wait for him to call;" Judge RuUer said. "I win take over my Superior Court duties wtth a very deep seme of <1111y to the ~ and an appropriate degree of terror.'~Judge Rutter commented. "It wi.U be my aim t.o give the people 1'£ California and the gOvernor my every el· fcl't and thelr full money's worth in this challenging appointment. "J plan to be a fairly quiet judge for pne Ume until I have had the chance to asseu mi · new duties and wotk iny \.\'BY into 'U\e \ourt," Judge Rutter added. ':.Bui f ·hope that I will ~ be able to make .a substantial contribution 't.o the administraflon of jultict. M a new boy l have, of eotirie, a great deal .to leam." Mirried •Ith four children Judge Rut- ter mak es his home at 121 Via Havre. Lido l$Je. He waa , appointed lo the Harbor District bendl by -O<JV. Reagan on Nov. 19, 1968. An aCt.ive ' ,Republican . Judg' Rull er came to lht munl~pal. benCh from private pnc.;.fct_in,l.A_lll! Angeles and Costa Mesa. A 11&5 graduate ol USC law sehool, he ii a member of Ute eost..Me.sa Rotary Club. One ol Judge Rutter's final actk>nl as a muruclpil rourt judge. wa1 to partlclpate io a raJd f\le:9day. nf&ht on the Balboa theater where _police and distrkt et· tome~·· omctra joined him Jn COO· fiacatirlc reels ol tbe, controversial ., Sri!lah fllm "I Am Curious (Yellow )". Jud~ Rutlft and ol'lices-1 moved in on tht urtt\y 1 European movie alter wet· chin& tbt early evening lh0wln1. \ DAILY l'ILOT lt1" ~· WINS SUPERIOR COURT post Juda• J. E. T. 'Ned"~ Rvtter • New.port Plans . . . f~ck_up of Trees Newport. Beach homeowners "'iii be able' to get rib of their Christmas trees on regularly scheduled tr.uh pickup days, General Services Direttor Jake Mynderse aMOUnced today, • • Trees pul out for ~Uection, Jle,eJ?lpha· sized, mu.Sl bt cut ii\to foW"-fool ltngtlis. For most household trees. that mean! a whack riptt acros.! lhe mid_dlt. · t.1yndene said ~tuse Cl'"t!Wl will Issue chits which can be. turned 'Jn at lire, st.a· tions: for tickels enUUing you.na:sters ~o ch:J.nccs for prizes at tree burn sltis on Jen. J. • Trees can alM be hauled w~Je to the burn sites on that date. he added. The locations are Newport Pier, tllh Street at , Dover Drive, Eastblufr Drive Mar the teMf., cl\lb, Big torona beach and Neptune Street in West Newport. ' -I .;• r J ' By JOHN VALTERZA· Of JIM Diiiy 1'1191 SIMI They were more than curious and more than yellow, too. , . So a municipal judge. a Newport vice detective and two District Attorney's in· vestlgators turned yellow to black Tues· day night and seized a copy or the Swedish sex film after its fihal showing at the Balboa Theater. And today, a print ot "I Am Curious (Yellow)" sits idle on a police depart· 3 Wars Belie Yule Season Of Good Will By The As1ociated Preu Millioos of perms around the ~·orld made last-minute preparations today to celebrate Christptas. Although the message of the birth nf Jesus Christ is ''Peace on Earth," the wars the world had with it last vear re-- mained in Vietnam and Nigeria. Tht Mid· ea.!lt situation remained unsettled. Three loud eq>losions rattled windows today in Bethlehem, the birthplace of Christ. One Israeli official said they could have been caused by supersonic aircrait. It ls the hilltop city's. third Christtnas under Israeli iule. and in the shade of the Church of the Nativity scores of Israeli security agents mingled \.\"ilh t h e ChristlJlas pilgrims. One estimate said more than 1,000 troops and police were on duty in ~ to\.\'n. ' In Vie<nam , the allied command~ and the Viel Corii obeef\.-ed ~a!!Mireti~' Fi°ghtiftg-had been at "'a loW iJevef fmi • several weeks, and after the lruce began ft dro~ off even more. Radio Han<M began bro ad ca 1 t In g recorded messages from American prisoners of war to their families. as it has done' in pASt years. Soldiers in Vietnam and al other U.S. military. installation:r in the Far East, Europe and the United States gave Chrislmas parties for children al orphan~ ages and hospitals. . . Christmas in the United Slates l!'I quieter I.his year than last. In 1968, the Apollo & astronaut.s were circling tr.e moon, and the crew of the spy ship Pueblo was coming home after l 1 months cf captivity. AA usual, shoppers jammed the st~res to make those down-lo-the-wire purchases from stocb that have dwindled steadily since Thanksgiving. Department slore of· ricial.s said revenue was higher than last vear, but many attributed the increase to higher prices brought on by inflation rather than additional volume. Hundreds of thoosands flocked to airP.PrtS. railroad staUons and . bus tef-minals. heading home to see relatives and families or taking vacations. Among the travelers will be President Nlxoo, his wife and daughter Tricia, who are going to San Clemente Friday after spending Christmas at the White House, The Nixons' other daughter, Jul ie Eisenhower. ls in Brussels with her hus- band David , whose fat.h er is U.S. am- bassador there. Nixon went to Capitol Hill Tuesday lo lunch with congressional leaders shortly before they adjourned the first se!Vlion of the 91st Congress and headed home. Many o( them will find a while Christmas. A snowstorm blanketed the ~Udwest and the U.S. Weather Bureau forecast mow for the NOrtheast. The bureau also said there was snow in the Pacific Northwest, northern California Md Inland to Utah and the Rockies. INMA.TES GETTING BIG YVLE DINNER They may be Jn Jail, but the inmates of Orange County Jail will have a Christ· mas dinner that's "everything and more that a home-cooked holiday dinner would be." Authorities at the jail said the holiday dinner will consist or turkey and stuff. Ing, two kinds of· vegetables, cranberry sauce, ma.shed potatoes and pu mpkin pie. "f ate out hete over Thanksgiving." the spokesman said "and it wu quite good. A3 a matt« of fact. it was a bigger diMer than J would havt gotten at home." Stec:lc Markel• ' ' . ' NEW YORK (AP) -Most atocka con-- tlnue4i tbtir climb in fairly &ctJve !J'ld: in& toda,y, '' adva.nc:es Widened thtir lead over declint1 by 700 iasues. (See quotaUons, Pages IJ..ta)'. Analysts said there was evi4ence nf ~me arttmoon pfoOt·takin& aft.tr tbt Initial aurgo ·ln tlir m<>mlnf. · men! office noor. lts next showing will be delayed indefinitely. The judge, J. E. T. •·Neef' Rutter lrl, Dttective' Jc.iu1 Simon and the tv10 OA 's men sat patiently through the graphic Scandinavian sex saga, then at 9:15 p.in. n1oved into the theater projection room and took the print. Today, Newport Beach police o,11ere seeking misdemeanor complaints against the owner of the theater, William Alford o{ 1234 La ldirada, Laguna Beach, and !ht manager, ~frs . Eleanor Blackburn of 51 4 E. Ocean f'ronl, Balboa. Simon said the charges southt w<>uld be ror alleged exhibition or obscene matter. Chief James Glavas said one cpn· tribuling fa clor"to the seizure or tht film containing yards of footage depicting tel" arts was several complaihts from citizens who had seen the filin and didn't like its content. .. We aren't try ing lo act as cen90n or the conscience of the community in this OAIL 'f PILOT lleff ,.,.,.. LADY NORA COOK OF BRITAIN AND, S.ON, PE~E.R, ~EUNITED Y11cht Skipper's Pa ls P'illl Off Surpri•t Chrl1tm11 MHfi".19' •Mu1n" Drops ln Neivport Yacltter Gets Surprise Lady Nora Cook. 74, lives in ~fary"s \Vood near Co\.\·es. the Isle of Wight yachting center in the British Isles. Mrs. Cook. mother of a Newport Beach yacht skipptr, usually puts up Newport·s yachtsmen if they 're campaigning in Bri- lain and even reaps some vegetables out of her garden to whip up a good stew for them . So the yachtsmen here decided lo pay her back. And they threw in a few surprise twists as they did it. They chipped in $20 apiece and brought her to Newport Beach Monday night by jet. Bul her goo, Peter, knew nothing of the plan. He was kept in the dark on the plot un· til the surprise was sprung at noon Tues- day at the Ancient ·t.fariner Restaruant where Cook's scores of yachting friends and bis mother waited for him. As Mrs. Cook sat gazing at the bay , her back turned on purpose, the slightly bl.lilt ~kipper waved as he noticed his friends seated for lunch. Then Lady Nora turned around. He still didn't notice for a few more mlnu~. then his expression changed dramaUcally .. He stared for a second. squinted hard, then ran to kiss h,ls mum. Hundreds of ffi~ds in the restaurant roared with pleasure. "We kept this pJan from him for Family·of Seven Dies in Blaze rARS6'Ns, Kon . (AP! - A famlly o1 ;even penons died early today whtn clenM smoke from a kitchen flre crept through t.htlr two-story home. They were Jac:k ~1ole:r, 4S years old. hi! wife, Rosemary, 40, Richard, 17, Ann, 15, James, 11 . Jane 4, and Oavkt. 3. A 1!1poke3llliln at a hospital where the bodies were taken s81d the deathl a~ parently were due t-0 suffocation. A cor- oner"• report J1 still1pend1:n&. \.\'etks," said Pete Siracusa, one of the restaurant's owners. Cook's friend.$, several hundred members of Newport's yachting fraterni- ty, kept lhe Idea a well.guarded secret. "I honestly didn't know a ,thing about it." Orient's helmsman said as he tc>Mted. his mother with French champagne. Yacht broker Tom Garvey, one of the hat chers of the intricate plan, described a l.ady Nora as "a wooderful woman whose little house Is always home to our sailors \.\'hen they'~ in England." "'About 13 or 14 of us have stayed at her home at one time or another, usually during the TransatlanUc race. She always cooks up good stew and makes us welcome, ao we decided to repay the favor." _ Garvey and his mates deveklped the $20 apiece plan. even though . one yachtsman offered to pay for ,the enlirt adventure. '"Ibis was a joint effort. w, all wanted to do a part," Garvey said. ~ _ The rellnion was an elaborate aetup. Lady Nora arrived in a bolTO'lrid 1137 Rolls Royce convertible and anived at the restaurant In calm, rtpl.atyle. She smiled coostanUy and cheerfully greeted U1e scores ol ,uests. From the reunion the p r I in English woman will stay at a Lido Isle bay£ront home for two weeks. Besides a few more social functions ~he'll watch the Rose Parade New Year's Day f1'>m the VIP's box. Ti.. ls her third lime oft tht scenic Iale of Wight and her" first trip to America. It also is her first expelie:nce bt travel· Jng by air. Her only audible comment when her son's eyes met hers •as a awee.Uy In· toried, "Poor chap!' YULE EDITION OVT BY NOON The Chrl•tmu Edition ol !ht DAILY PILOT will be Jl"bibhed and delivered early Thursday (befOT'@ noon In moat areas) and all DAILY PlbC71' oWcts"wlll bt closed fot !ht hollcloy. F,rlday will be a. normal wor-day at !ht DAILY PILOT and all olficu will bo crpen for buslneq a.ru.~u'al. ct_se," Glavas said, ''but we truly believe that we re enUUed to do it under the line! dr:awn by the U.S. and Calllorail. supreme courts." He-ci ted one letter and. several phone calls from PV50ru who aaw Ille film and who complained bitterly that it wu obscene. A local doctor wrote a JC!tter damnlftf tht sex epic. ''lt's obvious -that the exhlbltort of !See CURIOOS,.Pa.11" I) * * * 'It's Dirty,' Says Hurlburt Via Hearsay Newport Beach police confticatlon Tue>day night ol .tbt Slredbh ftlm, "I Am Curious (Ye1Io~)." has the aupport of the city idminiltr'aUon. It does not have the support GI .the operators of the 'Balboa Theater, how· ev,er. They're confuaed. · "I've been here almogt 10' yeer1," aid a member of the theater staff; "and tNs la !ht first linie anythjn1 like thJ1 ha1 happened. We've had many filml like th.is. We've had a lot of war fibna. too.'' City Manager Harvey L. Hurlburt II less confused about why further 1howlna;s of "I Am Curious" were banned. · "lt's ·a completely dirty fllm," ht aaid. ••ft is without any redeemm, IOcial te. tures ·whatever. It's as bad aa any Ital film.'' - ' He wa11 asked wl'lelher he hid lffn tt. ''No. Bul I read the po1iCe.rtp0rt." LA Judge B'"ars -. . . ' . Further Raid8 On 'Calcutta!' , LOS ANGELES IUPIJ -A ........W.1 order barring Los A'.ngele1 police trorn ar- resting cast membert and other ~ connected with the ci>ntrovental .ex Mtire "Oh! Calcutta'" was ts.sued T\Jeil.. ' . . day by a federal court judfe. · . U.S. Di!lrict Judge WUliam P. GriY blued !ht order hakinJ the· armU ·l!lldl the constitutional quMklnl involved l)tv• been de<:ided. The rullnf came alter hearing argumento by attorneys for tbt podu<tjon and for the dty and COWJtl'.. • Gray ruled that Jn view ot u.e.-ll'Nltl alnady made and the threat« f\lrther arrests, police should be -;, He Uid I constitutional problem' WU~ fn. volved becauSe "Oh! Calcutta!" wu a lhtatncal perfonnanoe ftlch coilld-Joo .nti1Jocl lo protedko1 ·-Ibo· liral amendment to the Constitution. · The jurist did not role on tbt' ~ of whether « hot tht produdkln' ·:ns obscene because the m1Uer wa not befcre him. He Aid thll wu •· matcir W be paJ>ed on lint by stale couril. He did aet Jin. It· for a Mlrinl to del<nnlne wheft lhe a.. -ill llate court. 0r..,. w•d.er Someone . forp" lo 'lrialt !ht weatherman_ a 11!'"'1 ~ and he'• reWlatltl& Jn tincl-- low clnuda, I• and a lt&ht drfDlt· lo dampen lhe yulellde apirll<, whUe lemperatwW rem~ in tht m!d IO's. INSmB TGBAY ·Financial columnUt SrlN Por~r gives J O r11ll1-fot inw1t· or1 lo follo10 hi &II~· art workt in her coJMmt& °" Page J2 toda~. ' . ' . ' , ...... Oedllllt .,, c--~.=·:: .... ........ ,_ ·-, I ·--:.:::: I I - -' . , .............. ,. 1 " ............ N ,,... ...... Cl9lllltr • ': =· ......... k3 : =-----•:r ,, .,....... t ,, ..,, ....... . . ............ ltl ': ~-·~ , n • ~· • • t • ' I If l . -. ' N V/tdntMlay, Dtumbtr 2f, 19,t C&ILY "ILOT Steff "'"'• Gray Skies, Lonely Beach at Ytiletide Jf you're looking for a bi t of solace during the Christmas holidays, the Ocean Front beach near Newport Pier seems a likely spot as ,this student bones up on a bit of homework reading aJon ( the nearly deserted strand. It may not look like sum· mer, but it desn't look like the snowy Midwest. either. Rogers to Seek Re-election ' To City Council Newport Beach City Councilman How· ard Rogers or Balboa will run again. He said today he will seek re-electio n Jn April because "I'm ve ry interested in the many city projects now going on." Rogers, an ex·school teacher, is we!!I· em regional con!!ultant for Wang Labor- 01tories, developers of industrial calcu- latcn. He aaid his job provides him with enough "flexibility" of lime so he can continue hi! municipal service with- out problem. He said he welcomes the challenge of e1<00ncilman Al Forgit in the Districl 1 ract. Forgit disclosed last week that he wouJd be a candidate. He last served on the council from 1964 to 1968. ''l trunk Al's running is just fine,'' said Rogers. Forgit said he wan~ to be back on the cooncil to intensify the campaign to shave inland the Colst Freeway, west of the Upper Bay. Rogers said he would like to see the fr~way moved inland, also. "But there are many very important things that transcend that Issue." he said ... If the state won't agree to any new studies _ riert month, then I say. hell, let's resolve il and make the but of what we've got." Rogers agreed with other councilmen earlier this week to work with state engi· neers in ironing out problems along the adopted route, should the Highway Commiaaion refuse to reconsider a new alignment at a Jan. 16 meeUng in Sac· ramento. Rogers, who.st district embraces the Newport...BaJboa peninsula south of 32nd Stttet. said his entire family is pleased with his decision to run again. "Trudi thinb it's a real good idea and the kids are delighted," he said. "They think it's exciting." Donors Respond To Hoag Appeal Residenta of Costa Mesa and Newport Beach responded to the local Red Cross' emergency call for blood by showing up al Hoag Hospital in force Friday. Local induatriea as well as individual dmors donated enough blood to keep the supplies within safe levels during the critical holiday periocJ. Blood program direct.or George Hyde !'laid that the successful blood drive will enable all normal emergencies to be met Md will not make it necessary to cancel or rest'h@dule any surgeries .. DAILY PILOT O••NGI: COAST l"UlllSHING COMl'JoN'f •••••' N. WtMI ,., .. lfttlf ..... "'*lltlltr J•clr R. C11rlev Vkt ~Id.,,! •~II "-ti MentOW Tli•""'' k1t.,:I Eft .... Tloe"'•' A. M11r,!rti111 M• ... lllott I.ill!" J1•o"'t F. Celli ~• NIWPIOl'I 111(11 Cllt EOfllH' ,,....,.,. '""' OMc. 1?11 Wttl ltllltt ltult .. ••" M1ili"t Al4•1H• ,,0, 101 1111, fJ•fJ ! -0-C..!t M-; llO Wn! l l f S-t Ltfl#l9 IM<ll: 212 '"'"A-~""' lttdll J~)J ·-" '""""" f, Ten F1·om Coast Selected As Grand Jury Candiclates Ten Orange Coast residenb are among the list of 30 persons from whom the Orange County Grand Jury of 1970 will be selected on Jan. S. Included in the list compiled by Superlcr Court Judge James F. Judge - the, criminal court presiding judge for .1970 and the court's liaison with the grand jury-are two residents from Hu~ lington Beach, one from Westminster. four from Corona del Mar, one from Balboa, one from Newport Beach and one one from Capistrano Beach. Their names will be among 30 to go into 11 drum at the annual selection of the grand jury. The first 19 names to be drawn by Judge Judge's clerk will com- prise the new panel. Among the nominees for the 1970 jury are: A. C. Achey of 615 8th St. ind Ch¥1es ~fashburn of 503 13th st. both of Hun· tington Beach; Raymond M. Schmitt, 8121 E. JW! St:. Westminster; Mrs. Audrey Cotton, 1509 E. Bay, Balboa and Mrs. Harriet Bemus.,2631 Waverly Drive, Newport Beach. . Also, Mrs. Irmeli Desen'oerg, 2231 Bayside Drive, Miss Marian Louin Parks, 233 Morning Canyon Road, Dr. Ralph Gerard, 1007 Goldenrod. and Mrs. Alice Remer, 210 Goldenrod all of Coron• del Mar and DaVid Clark, 35685 Beach Road, Capistrano Beach. All those named were nominated for service on the Orange County Grand Jury by the 21 Superior Coo.rt judges. Judge Judge today scheduled the nam- ing of the panel for 2 p.m. on Jan. 5 In Department 5 ol Superior Court. Huntingto11 Urges Local Control for Coast ~ork Huntington Beach has taken a strong stand that local governing agencies should .be responsible for guiding e-0ast<fl development. At a hearing of the Assembly Com- mittee on Natural Resources and Conservation held in Los Angeles last \veck, city Director of Beaches and Harbors Vincent Moorhouse opposed lhe creation of a state super agency to con- trol shoreline deve lopment. In this move. Huntington Beach joined \\'ith Newport Beach, San Clemente and Seal Beach. Proponents of lhe super agency en- vision a moratorium on projecls along I he coast and one hair to one mile inland which might be considered irreversible. !\1oorhouse look the posllion !hat through the coastal cities and county government the safeguards to en- vi ronment and ecology along the coast <ilready exist and that what Is needed urgently is not slate interfe rence but financial assistance in buying as much of the coastline a!! possible for the public. The city official outlined the eight and one-half miles of bea:chfronl in the city: -Bolsa Chica State Beach is two and one-half miles of relatively undeveloped public beach on the ocea n side of Pacific Coast Highway. Full de velopment o! the beach with adequate parking and safe ac- cess will hopefully be a joint state-city proJecl over the ne1t five to seven years. --Southeast from Bolsa Chica is a strip or beach O\vned by the Huntington Beach Co. some three miles long and varying in "'idth from 100 feel to 400 feel. The company has built an aparunent de\'elopmenl on this beach. but the city has retained adequate public access to the beach seaward of the project. -The city-0\vned beac h from the munici pal pier to Beach Boulevard has been developed at a cost of $3 million in a parking facility and landsc aping. Private fi rms were stimulated to invest some '500,000 for new beach concession buildings . Winning Parade Decorations A-:1ra. Gerald Thompson adjusts garb on one of several li!e-siz.~ Holt· day figures on the family •portlishcr Pacific Clipper which won first prize In lh ca\cgory Jn Newport Beach's 14th Annual F1oatlng Christma s Tree and Boat Parade. -~---· ~ewpori Yule Message May or Lis t.s Highlig hts of 1969 for City i!>ITOll'S NOTE : IV•wporl leach Mo11or Doreft Mor1haU wrote the /o~ lowing G1°a Chrbtmca mt11CQt to citt1 · empZOV••· l t alto 1erve1 cu one for the entirt c:ommunicv. By DOREEN MARSHAJJ, Me,....,,.._,...._. SUddenty we rind ourselves in the midst of the fe1tive holiday season. The light- ed tree in our City Hall lobby, Santa and his reinde~r prancing overhead on the roof, the waters of our Bay reflecting colorful li&bb which outllne the shore- line -theae all remind us that Christ- mas Is almost here. And, after that comes the ef)(I oI th.11 year of 1969, the close of this decade of the sixties, and, with 1970, the start of a r.ew year. a new decade. As we extend seasonal greetings and our good wllhes to all Newport Beach citizen!, city employes, members ol our fine city team, it is appropriate to men· tiotJ just a few highlight• ol the year now ending. This year, the city acquired the New- port Center site fot a new CJ vie Center: jo!ned the Santiago Library System: worked with iU neighboring city of Costa ti.fesa by endorsing joinUy with the New· port.Mesa School l>lstrlct the bond elec- tion whJch carried decisively last Feb- ruary, by agreeing on a mutual future boundary, and by su pportlog jointly adoption of a realigned Newport Free- way. 1969 was an eventful year for West Newport, a year begun with floods bring· ing massive debris and beach quaran· tine; a year ended with near completion of the Eroeion Control Channel Project -a rocky, bumpy and rackety program in several ways. We hope West Newport will sit calm, high and dry during the 70's. Newport Island got a new brid1e : West Newport h<ls improved alleys; Newport Beach construction cont.inu@d at an all Lime hich-sln1le famtly homes, apart. From f'age J CURIOUS ... ... these types ot filml!i are notoriously careless about their control of underage persons entering the theater. Without much effort we found one unescorted 17· year-old girl in the theater la11t night:• Glavu added . Glavas charged that lilm makers and e1hibitor11 "are always trying to produce somethlna: which wiU push and tut the lines set by the. courts and this i!! a good example of it." Glavas said he hadn 't seen the film, "but I read the complete report detailing the scenes and I'm convinced we did the right thlng ." He said he hoped the line between clean And dirty lilm11 would aoon be more clearly defined by the courts. The film. sources said, .wi ll fact somt tough sledding elsewhere in the county.; loo. Stanton Police were reported to be planning a rai d aometime early today on • a theater !!howinc the movie in their city. Judge Allow s Draft Objections To Specific Wars SAN FRANCISCO (UPtl -A Federal judge today ruled ureonstltutional a sec- tion ol the Selective Service Act which proh.lbits draft reaisters from declaring themselves conscientious objectors to the Vietnam war without opposing all wars. U. S. Dist . Judge Stanley A. Weigel ac- quitted Leslie Charles Bowen. 24, who refused induction at the Oakland lnduc· tion Center June 2.3, Hl68. Bowen's refusal wu based on hls understanding of Ult Roman Catholic religion, which he interpreted as dif- ferentiating between just and un just wars. Bowen said he had decided f('lr himse.U that the Vietnam war was unjust. •·Tueu is no question ol his religious moUvation." Judge Weigel's nine-pace opinion said. The objectionable section 16.J ol the Military Selective Servict Act of 19671 provides exemption from "combatant training and servict in the armed forces'' shall be granted to any pc!nOll "who by reuon ol religious training and belief is conscienUoualy opposed to participation ·1n war In any fonn." Welgel's decision said this amoonl'l lo a "serious and unjustifiable discrimina- tion" In violation of the due prOC!6S por- lion of the fifth amendment. Weigel said that the section in question generally eii:empts members of tradf· tionatly pacUist religions a such as Quakers and Jehovah's Wll.nes$u and does not exsnpt others. such as Roman Catholics. "In denying conscientious flbjector 111.ttus to Bowen, based upon hil religiou~ opposition to the Vletilam war but pennittlng It to one whose rtllfious op- poaiUon is to au wan, the effect of se<:· lion 6J is to bre1ch the neutrality beC.wtf!n st.Ile And relition required by the mand1te ol the first amtndmcnl," WeigeJ said. • To Erect Monument UJNE PINE iUPll -Ja-Mio Wete interned It the Manzanar Clmp nMr twe durtna World War II will return this weeke.nd to erect a memorial to ll1oK who died durlna !heir slay at the camp. Two OOsts from Southtm California were tXP«ttld to arrive S1turda1 and depart the following day . l menta, a~cular commercial develoi> mtn1 .la Nnrpcrt Center, especla)Jy in the Jl'ln1nclal 1>1ua with Its lwln towm, 1969 saw the completion of NewPort Tomorrow's goals and objective.! study. The succes.!ful accomplishment or this Important citi1en i11 program wu. due in no small part to the exceptionaJ support given by the many city 1talf members lnvolved in the study. For our city per· ilOMel, the Newport Tomorrow Project meant many exlr• hours of research, meeUnas and production. A valuable by· product of this effort was the opportunity f<r many Newport Beach citizens to know and work closely with many at City Hall. I've mentioned only • few of 1969's highlightJ, omitting many, many others of equal or greater importance. It is im- portant to stress that our city employes have had a vita.I part, in one :way or another, tn all the.st evenu, develop- ments and achievements. The 1164 have brought tremendous pop- ulation and geographic growth to New· port Beach. The JlUmber of city empll)y- es, the siu of our city family, bas grown accordlngly. We can be proud that our peraoMel has succeeded well in meeling the new demands and challenges of our changing city. · LOOKING BACK, AHEAD Newport's Ma ya~ Marsh•ll I hope that during the Inevitable growth of the 70s we will continue and improve ezisting qualities of service and competency at City Hall-not just techni- cal and profesiiional know-how and intel- ligence but concern for the ciUzen, pa- tience with .his gripe, a feel for our com· munity, iU speeial character and iden· tity. We now turn to 1970 with a wish for genuine peace in our community, ou; nation and our world-not a sell-satisfied apathetic peace, but a vibrant, construr· live peace based on understa.nding, 10: erance and progress accomplished h~ practicing the brotherhood and goodwil which we revere at this time of the year "I AM CURIOUS (YELLOW)" AT REST ON POL ICE OFFICE FLOOR Newport Police S1i1e Film Charging It's Far Toa Blue ' Pilot l Logbook Judge, Lawinen Curious; 'Yellow' Sho\v1nen Blue By THOfllAS KEEVIL Of tM D .. ff l'•ltl Jl1t1 I DIDN'T THINK. I'd ever gel to see "J Am Curious (Yellow).'' I aJmost didn't and wish t hadn ·1. In the first place, the short subjecl that preceded it at the Balboa Theater Tuesday night was interminable and even more curious than the movie. It really was a commercial for Colonel Sanders' fried chicken. IT SHOWED the dazzling-white form of the goateed dru1!15tick king patting one horse. feeding another horse, betting on another horse, congratulating another horse and mugging with another horse. talking with ano ther horse, just standing there with a lot more horses. The second reason I almost didn't see ··t Am Curlou." (Yellow)" was that, unknown to me , rny companion movie critics included Judge J. E. T. "Ned'' RuttC'r . several deputy district attorneys and some badge-toting represent· alives of the Nev.·porl Beach Police Drpartm&:nt. THEY FOUND the film appealing lo prurient inter-1 Hts and conflacated It. 1 don't know if they took the Colonel Sanders film. , There was a third reason I ,1most didn"t see "I Am Curious /Yellow\." ~ 1 could not stay awake. . J This chubby glrl did run around a lot with no clothes on. So did her boy fr iend. A collple of limes they displayed more than casual mean~ of expressitlR affectlon and their celebrated athletic prowess <in 11 tree. on a balcony and in a pond) was an intri1Uing manifeJtatlon or cinematic imagination. WHICH MEANS I stayed awake during that part. But the rest of the film was a drag. I fell to find ing typographical error!'! In the EngUsh subtiUta. then began rewriting the plot as it unfolded. only in my version I worked In a role for Colonel Sanders. Thal version would really ha\·e sent Judge J. E. T. "Ned'' Rutter on his ear . But even this mental exerciu failed lo su$1ain my 1ntere11l and by the film's end t had nodded into a semi-sleep. I haven 't the \'aguest notion of wh at happened to the chubby girl and her boyfriend. except that their form!J 3.re DO tonier being displayed in Newport Beach , Californii. OH, J MJSSEO all the acllon, Judge Rutter et RI v.·cre boxing up lhe fllm while 1 was maltlna 1 furtive c11t, hoping no one \vould see me purmung my prurient lntere5t.s. Most unhappy man In town Is ~lax Dillman al the rt!stauranl acro.1!! the strett. "ti.fan. did we have 1 blaat or business while It l!'sted ," he 11aid "You eouldn't believe lhe acUvlty down here." • • l • • • .. ' . ,---~-~--:-.-- Going llp to Land, Workmen on ithe 24th floor of a new 26-story office tower in Manhattan gape at an artist's recreation of a World War I bipl~ as it makes its first and last flight Tuesday. The plane, work of artist Wll- ,·~~~ ....... ~.,.-, ....... ~ ........ ~ ....... -.~-...... ~ ....... -.,...,. ........ .,..,..., ........................ ~ ....................................................................... "" .. .. Jiain Tarr, weighs 6.000 pounds, is 22 feet long and has a wing span of 28 feet. It was placed on a facsimile of a permanent landing strip on the roof of the new office tower. Wtdntslfay, tltctmber t4, 1969 President Relaetant '.Cr edit Curb Bill Signed by Nixo.n WASHINGTON (UPI) -Secretary Ro!l!]d L. Ziegler, President Nixon toaay signed questioned about prospects for with ltated reluclance • bill the President to use this aivlng hlm the aulhor:lty to in-authority, said, "I assume vote voluntary and mandatory these steps would not be taken credJt contro2s -a step which although the a.uthorlty has be currentty d~ not plan to been granted." take. ProxnlJre said lhat, despite The legtslation was deaigiltd a ,year of the income surtax, · ariJ to the cotp0raUons increased their pnm Y preserve capital expenditures by $7 authority (If a fe d er a 1 billion this year. He said this supervisory agency to regulate represented an 11 percent in- interest paid by banks and crease over tbe pre.viouJ year. savings and loan associations. • • Moreover, government 'lbe chief executive had no ob-surveys for 1970 indicate jectioo to tbis aspect of the another huge increase i.1 QUEENIE DAILY mot j legislaUon, capital r;peocting of around $7 i -r- ffe dld object strongly, billion or $8 billion," he said. l,..::::::!:~~~~:!:...£J~:=::.!:=:~~:::;.::=~=;== however, to sections of the bill A government survey report t1Wouldn't an. ordinary wbidshield wiper· have dQJll authorizing voluntary a.n d released Tuesday said cor-aa well!" mandatory crertlt cootrols. " I nned t 1 These sections, be said ln a porawons p a 0 ncrease . statement, would, if invoked, spen~ng for plants and equip-~,----------1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; ment in 1970 by 10 percent. ' "take the nation a long step Tbe Q:Nurner Price lndex toward a direcUy controlled has gone up 5.8 ~t over· a economy afld. . .we ca n g weaken the will for needed year 8 0· fi sca l and financia l "Clearly, monetary and fiscal policy has been a dismal discipline." Counterfeit Bills Found bill failure in restraining business The president signed the . borrowing w h I c h many APPLE VALLEY (UPI) -shortly after Sen. William f · Proxmire ()).Wis.), chairman economists eel is the most in-Three alti!reeze caris cram- of the coogresslonal joint flationary,, sector . of 0 ~ r med with more than $iOO,o00 . ----••-1 sed economy, Pro1m1re SB.Id. . count rf .1 -economic 1,,v111uu~~. re ea "Instead tight money has 1n e e1 curr~ncy wet,e WOULD YOU BELIEVE ' REUBEN'S , I ' • •t t~• ·Orang• County AirpQrt· is · t1 ~in9 RESUVATIONS 'for New·Yea r's Ev'e Pe rty1 DON'T MISS OUT Congress Cwses Up Shop , U.S. to Quit Wheelus AB In Tripoli parls of the tei:t of a letter he centered' on the home buyer, discovered in a backyard here wrote lO Nixon urging him to the small b~man, the Tuesday, sheriff a deputies Call 540:.2475 sign the bill and apply govern-local -vermnents." reported • ment credit controls over·1_~'.'...!·~-~~~:..._ ___ _'.~~:'.:._ ______ .....!!!!!!!"'!!!"'!!!"'~~!!!"'!!!"'!!!"'!!!"' busine., spending in the fight against inflation. Prepares for Election Year Proxmire called the ad· ministration's monetary and fiscal policies "a dismal failure" in curbing capital outlays by big business. But N I J: o n sald "these aspects of the bi.II made the decision to sign it a very dif- ficult one, but the need to pre· vent chaos in our interest rate situation has made my ap. prov al imperative." . WASHINGTON (UPI) ' - With an elecUon year directly aheaQ, congressmen to o k hcime for preliminary voter in- spection today a m i x e d Christmas , bag of successes and failures. House ·GOP Leader Gerald R. Ford, perhaps in a ·harbin- ger of Republicans' campaign tactics for 1970, labeled the year-long r;ession a "do little" Congress. He said it ·had done almost nothing about Presi- dent Nixon's legislative pro. gram. But S e n a t e Democratic Leader Mike Mansfield called the session "m~ productive." Ht gave C!oogress good marks not only for its legislative al- Lainments but its start toward redirectin'8: national priorilies from the Vietnam war to ·homefront needs. The batUes or the election year -dUring which all 435 representatives and a third of the Senate must stand before . the voters -are sure to get heated up quickly. The Senate's first order Of business is the highly-charged ap. propriations bill for t h e departments of Labor and Health, Education and Welfare (HEW). Nixon has threatened to veto the bill because Congress in· creased it beyaad bis requests. Hijack Attempt Foiled; Man Returned to U.S. NEW YORK (UPI) - A passenger who tried to barge into the cockpit of an Icelandic Airlines plane ovl!I' Scotland, 43 Czechs Ask Asylum STOCKHOLM (UPI) Forty-three members of the first Czechoslovak tourist con- tingent allowed outside the country in a month left the group Tuesday night and ask- ed for political asylum in Sweden. A spokesman for the Aliens Police said about 10 more of the Czechoslovaks -there were • total of 80 persons In the group -wert expected to make similar requesl!I before Christmas Day. Government sources predJcted asylum would be granted, for the Stockholm government h a s sheltered Czechos1ovats since th e Soviet-led Invasion of their na- tion Aug. 21, 19'8. The Czechoslovak tour was arranged by the state-run tourist bureau. According to the members seeking asylum, it was also to be the last of· ficially arranged travel to western nations.. Claiming he was Defense Secretary Melvin R. Laird, was returned here today and freed _without charges, "I• wanted to go to Russia to talk about conditions i n America," Anthony Pascarzio, 23, said on ·rus return. Pascarzio, who lives ln Queens and described himsel( as an actor and musician, said earlier he had intended to radio the Soviets about "how. bad a country America was." Fearing an· attempted hi- jack, the crew of the four- engine turboprop, flying from New York to London, subdued Pascarzio outside the cockpit door and held him down un·u11 the craft could deseend from 30,000 feet and make 'I an emergency landing at Glasgow Tuesday nighl . Two Scottish detectives returned to New York with Pascan:io aboard a n o t h e r Icelandic plane and, after questioning by the FBI and Port of New York Authority police, he WU released. AuthoriUes said the United States had no jurisi::lictk>n in the incident and that officials in Scotland did not want to press charges a g a i n s t Pascan.io, who was unarmed. Some Republicans hope Nixon stands firm on his threat to show he means business about keeping the costs of govern- ment down and halting in- flation. But should Nixon vein the bill, Democrats are sure to ac- cuse him or turning down funds for such things as cancer research, grade school children and the b 1 i n d _ Democrats already were pic- turing Nixon as Scrooge, claiming be was sacrificing the sick and the poor while ap- proving olher big money bills for weapons system s and planes that wi ll carry passengers three times faster than sound. The first session of the 9lst Congress, which ·ground to a halt at 3:10 p.m. EST, Tues-. day, accomplished more than most observers thought likely when it convened Jan. 3 with Democrats ,1 in charge o n Capitol Hill and a Republican about to take office a~ presi- den t. Some political standoffs did develop and for a time threatened to keep Congress in ses!ion through the holidays. WASlllNGTON (UPI) The United States has agreed to abandon Wheelus Air Base in Tripoli, Libya , by June 30. 1970, and withdraw its 4,500 military and civilian person- nel. Announcement of the agree- ment was made in a join t commurµque issued in Tripoli and Washington Tues d a y night. State Department sources said negotiations would con- tinue wilh the new revolu- Wh ite Ho u s e Press Wife, Son Visit Hess 111 Hospital tionary government 0£ Libya BERLIN (UPI) -Rudolf on disposal or equipment at Hess, Adolf Hiller's forme.r the base. -deputy, saw his w~fe and son . for the flr!I: time in 23 years The commuruque followed today when they visited him in the third meeting in Tripoli West Berlin's British Mliltary between U . S . Ambassador Hospital. Joseph Palmer and Capt. Ilse Hess, 89, and son Wol Abdul Salam Jalloud, the Ruediger Hess, 32, arrived at second-ranking officer of the the hospital shortly after 2:30 '!'ta . lh t 1 d p.m. for the visit. rru I ry regime a se ze Hess, 75, was taken to the power Sept. I. h . I N •• f by The Slate D e p a rt men t ospila ov. '" rom near authorities had given their Spandau War Crimes Prison fer treatment of a stomach assurances of cooperation in ulcer. He was sentenced to making the wilhdrawal order- spend his life in prison by ly. . judges at the Nuernberg War Crimes Tribunal. Duman Booth A British military official said the wife and son were given the Spandau prison regulations to read before f.bey were allowed to see Hess. GI Doctors Defuse Woman SAIGON (UPI) -Surgeons at Saigoo's 3rd Field Hospital successfully removed a Jive ri- fle grenade round from the chest cavity of a Vietnamese woman in the second such "human bomb" operation in Vietnam this month. The operation was perform- ed by Maj. Jose F. Morelos of Baltimore, and Maj. Willis McKee oC Louisvl lle, Ky., under the guidance of Lt. Col. Tbomas Witchi of Wading River, N. Y., who one month ago remo ved a similar round from Utt head of a Viet Cong. The surgeons declined to wear flak jackets and hellll'ets. "We figured they would be cumbersome," said D r . ~lcKee, "And besides, at that range ... well." ''All I could think about until the operation began was that in less than a week I'm going lo meet my wife on lea\'e." related Dr. Morelos. An 1.-179 round is about three inches in diam e«?r and .is fired from a grenade launcher. M/ Sgt. Charles McCrary of Louisvill e, Ky., one of the bomb disposal experts present at the operatioo, said it was "just luck" that the grenade did not detonate. "These types ol rounds can be armed at any point from the time they leave the end of the weapon until they have traveled a great distance," he explained . "When we ha ve Ofle on our hands we have to assume it is armed and take the necessary precautions." The patient was reported h1 good condition at the hospital, located just oulside Tan Son Nhut Airbase. She was e1- pected to be released Jn about· three weeks, doctors said. The Official said two guards were present Jn Hess' hospital room as the trio mel He sai they were not allowed to kiss, shake hands or otherwise tooch the beetle-browed Hess for fear that they would pass poison to him. Long Weds Secretnry WASHINGTON (UPI) Se n. Russell B. Loog, (0.La.), divorced by his first wife earlier this year, Tuesday married the blonde secretary of a fellow senator. The bride . is the former Carolyn Bason, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Sam M. Bason or Yanceyville, N.C. Blonde and fortyish, the new Mrs. Long was a eecretary to Sen. Sam J. Ervin, (D-N.C.) . stereotos~M ' the sounds of the harbor ~d~~-;,;_youve never heard it so good \ ·, . ' .. • .. ,. - •••• -- --·-----~-----~--~~ ... -------...... --....... ~ .............. 111111 ................................ . ••• • DARY PILOT EDITO~ PAGE Meeting Respo·n·sihility ' Newport Beach city government has al last laid to rest the Udelands use fee controversy. It is Possible, of coune, that we may yet see il res· urrect.ed. Some toes of the ordinance adopted under ttre by a bare majority of councilmen last week left city ball muttering about legal action and political rtpris- al s. The prospects ol legal action are dubious; of pol· ltical action, mo~e Ultely. · Be tbal as ii may, tile tbreat of both mattered very lltUe to the four council members who voted for the fees. Despite unprecedented establishment _pressure, they did not yield on pMnc iple, as they saw it. As a consequence. 5tartiJlg March l , for the first time in the city's hiS'IOry virtually 100 percent of the private individuals and firms whose piers occupy city· administered tidelands must P,ay direct -and token - payments for the exclusive iise of that public land. Until now, only about 20 ·percent of ·the piers lo- cated in such tidelands have been subject to fees, mostly in the form of lease payments. That inequity is now corrected. • '.l'11e newly adopted ordinaiice le vies a maximum charge of $25 annually against residential -piers. This includes a $10 administrative or inspection fee. Com- merci:al pieN>wners will p ay more. based on the size of their slips. The fees \Vere approved after two years of study and two months of fitful debate -in and out of the council chambers. Arid they were approved in the face of overwhelming \Yritten and spoken protests against them. City Hall received about 300 letters on the su~ ject. They ran 1()..1 against the ordinance. \Vhy did the council majority choose to ignore this expression of public opinion? Mayor Doreen Marshall. \\1ho voted "'ith the major- ity, Jast week gave this as the reason \Yhy: ••one of the primary elements of this \\'hole issue I• !bat it is not o~ to be raised by cilizem. We can't lool: lor a big man of people to wage a campaign to levy a tax on their neighbors. We can't expect a loud, rousing campaign for the fees . ll comes down simply to a question of the respon>!ble adrninistralion ol public lands." Tbat is also 00-.v Vice Mayor Lindsley Panons, Councilman ll<>bert Shelton and Councilman Paul J. Gruber felt. Their colleagues. Ed Hirth, Donald A. Mc· Innis and Howard Roger., d.lsagreed. And Jost. But tbe minority wasn't bitter about It. The entire council, in fact, handled the isiue throughout the weeks of agonizing, exhausting deliberation and discussion with laudable reason and maturity. When the subject was finally closed, council mem· ber& -winners and losers -promptly turned in good spirits to oilier matters. Witbout looking back. Everyone else shouJd do the same. Merry Christmas, Newport Beach. Uprooting Students Families ori the west side D! Upper Newport Bay which have had school attei'idance-boundaries shift from under them a couple of times already may be spared another such uprooting. A couple of Nt'\vport-Mesa school board members have said they think these families have borne too much change. Let students from son1e other area - perhaps Balboa Island -be the ones bounced this time from one school to another. if that has to be, they say. But it doesn't have to be. If voters approve the in- crease from five to seven percent for the school bond interest rate Feb. 10 there will be funds to expand Cor- ona del Mar Hi gh School. Then no student will have to start one year at Cor- ona de! Mar High and finish up the next three years at Newport Harbor High. -.\ • • • • • • • • t • • . ........... _....-:t ...... - IN) The Ma1i the U.S. Needs Dear Gloomy Gus: Revolving Door of Crinie, Prison, More Crinie To Lead It One of the reasons I dislike 1nos t poliUcal wriUng -and do very litUe of it myself -ls that it forces ooe to pretend to be objective. But hardly anyone can be truly objective about politics. Our political orientation is dettrmined by 1 dor.en different factors over which we h.ave little coD1Cious control -our background and environment, our educa- tion, ·our income-level, aod our tem- perament Then we rationalize these lac· tors in our "po!iUcal phllotopl\y." I am more interested in\ what men are Uke, rather than what they profe11, ar what party they belong to. U Nixon atrikea me as a plast.lc man (as he does}. and Humphrey as a rubber man (as he doe!), I am not going to support either man, regardless of what be says. BUT IF I WERE engaged in writing a bout politics, or arguing the matter, 1' would have to marshal objective facts about programs and policies, and deal in vague abstractions like "llberty" and .. peace." My arguments would follow from my prejudices, and be tailored to flt. Most people a r e stuck with their preconceptions. and vote for a man they may not like, simply because he promis- es to carry out what seems to serve their self-int.ereist. But a plastic man, or a rub· ber man. cannot do much or anyllling that is worthwhile. THESE PRECONCEPTIONS are wl\at perpetually, betray us in choosing the Three cheers for the ONE major department store in Orange County to resist competitive and monetary pressures and remain closed oo Sundays. -D.R. Tiii• fMlur1 tlfllcn r-n · •llw., 1111 MetlUfltr ................. ,... ..... ,..,., ... '"" .......... , .... .,. .. , ,, ... ''lesser evil" -and are what keep the pollUcal machines e<1nf:idently picking Je· cond -and third-rate men-for the par- ty bosses know that we are so muc1't the victims of our raUonalizing that we would rather elect a baboon who 11ttn1ed to agree with UJ than an an1el who didn't. I happen to 1hlnk the way a man looks and smells and expresaes himselr in speech and gesture aod general com· portment is a good deal more important than the political sta tement.s he exudes. which have been writttn by somebody else t.o make the best imprenion on the largest segment of the electorate. BUT THIS AD HOC approach to can- didates is condemned by all the political doctrinalre1, who delude themselve111 lhat a devious or flatulent man will make a satisfactory president because he utten cam paign platitudes that flatter their prejudices. The man v;e need to lead us is not nectssarily lhe one who tells us what we like to he ar, but what we must be made to hear : who makes us uncomfortable with ourselves, and forces us to re-ex· amine our smug and easy preconceptions. But that is the last man any party would non1inat.e, and the strongest argument of the political dropouts. 'Adulterers Anonymous' We all have our little crusades to make lhis a better world. And today we pay 1ribute to a courageous liUle band of al· tractive single girls who art. out crusading for just such a cause : Adultery. Tn San Francisco, where such things happen, these dedicated young ladies have been parading through the financial district promoting their organlutfon, "Adulttrers Anonymou.1." alon1 wllh a new book, "Successful Adultery for the Happily Married Man." "A3 lon1 as a wtfe gets her !!hare of love," say1 the group leadtt. a beautiful brunette named Cecily K11tt, "why should she begrudge her husband an extra measure of happiness?" WHY INDEED? Of eourJe, Hke .all logical crusades almtd at disentangling our Puritan h&ngupg, this one faces obst.1cles. For one th ing, a man needs an understanding wife,, Take the cas.e of my friend, K1sslngcr. \\'ho Is blf!sed with a Wlft: or incrtdible toleranct and uodmtanding. "Guess what. dear," he: said on 3r- riving home that evenlng. I'm thinking of tall:lng up a new bobby." "T'hal'1 nice. dear," aht said. "What~" "Well, you ll:now hoY.· much we lovr Hoch other." he .sakt, tllk ing her In his .arms. "And you know the pleasure we find in -wtll -you k~·. Now I WIS t h~ that because we love each othtr, ,\'OCI wwldn't belJ'Udae me an ertra meiuure. of bl~ .. · ." "!'VE OOT A llOAIT In the oven, dnr. and lhecb!ldren-\ln =and ... " "~o, no. The hol>by I'm I ol uk· ln(up ii ldulttry." "Thal doll JOUnd lnltralin&, • de.ar, '' i.he aaid toleranUy. u91Jt yOll know whit a c:rt1ture ti mOuWuau you are. Loot l j l 111 all thMe flies you bou1ht and ne\•er Uod." .. Oh. I thihk l'd stick with this one. , That is, if you didn't mind." "Mjnd?" Mrs. Kissinger was shocked. !'But the very essence of loving i! the desire to see your loYed one happy. And if adultery would make you happy, It v.•rold make me happy, too." "m you gure yoU've thought this thine through?" asked Klsslnge.r with a frown. "BUT IT'S SO LOGICAL. dear,·• :;he said with great understanding as she disengaged herself from his anns to check the calm6ar with obvious en- tl'IUalasm. "Let's see, 1 lhlnk we're rree: next Tburaday ni~ht." "We?" he asked suspiciously. "It's :io nice to ha ve a hobby we can pursue together," .she ta.Id happily. "Do you rtmcmber the name or that f!!llow we met at Lhc Grommet!, the one "'Ith tho9e dreamy eyes, who •• :· "Yoo so much as look at another man." thundered Kissinger, "11nd 1111 brtak every ~ In your body !" At lhll, Mrs. K.JsCnae:r dissoived into tears. "Oh. I knew It." aht aobbed, "you don't Jove me any mort." THE &PAT HAI ai.nct been patched up. Kllslnl• baa doclded to uh up bowling -lie .wI lppnciata the Joete of Ille jultlllcldaa !or lldullory. And he 16- mlra u. -ol youna Mill Katz' aiulde. "But when lt comu to di1tntan1llng GUT Puritan hall(llpt at my a1t." be 11ya wtth a rids. 1'it's, a hell of a sight •euler '° li\•e wflh \Mm lmtead." Correctional System Is a Disgrace To the Editor: ColwnniJt Sydney J, Harris comes rllht to the point in discussing the ominous rise in crime and "Lhe revolving door of crime, prison and more crime." Confinement in unnatu ral surroundings cannot cure or teach criminals how to live according lo society's rules, so why not teach them how to behave in a natural atmosphere~ Why not put them all In an isolated community where they can't be discriminated against because they'll all be tarred with the same brush, just as were the earlier settlers in Australia and Georgia? POS.SIBLY WE cou ld find a ghost lO'A'n. or an i.!land where they would not have accea to weapons and could learn a UJefu1 vocation. There would be a few non~imlnals Who would help them to eJtablish laws and to administer them. Many of the criminals will prefer to stay there. That's fine because they can help the new members rehabilitate:. 11lOle whose conduct warrants it would be allowed to return to the "other" world. There would be expert medical .and psychiatric care which is: woefully lacking in jails, according to the superintendent ar the New York prison system. As Mr. Harris aays, the correctional system is a disgrace. and few care enough to correct the correctional system. BERNARD BARTON Playing for /llone 11 To the Editor: In answer to Alice Bro wnfield (Mailbox, Dec. 19 ), ?r'e are not sacrificing quality for quantity. We are sacrificing quality for money. As long as there is any open land in Orange County. and as long as no one stops them . the large developers \viii continue to alter this land for commercial use. They are playing the a:ame for money. When the question comes up whether lo keep a section or land like it is. or to build factories or apartmentl on It. the developera reason: "lf we leave it like it Is, we can't make any money on it, so let's build!" TAKE SANTA BARBARA'S orf~re oll situation. A huge all spill last year, water polluted and anim als killed. but tht drill· ing continued. Now v;e ha,·e another oil sptll. Is this contamination of land and sea to continue? Will we keep sacrificing beauty and wUdllfe for dollars? \Vhat can we as ...---By Ge orge --., Dear Georg e: rm a lonesome blonde divorce~ 11o•ho really digs your sense or humor. Georgie. and I wonder If I might have a ptl"IMll consult1Uon, l( you know what I mean? LONESOME AND LOVING Dear LAND L: That V.'19r,.t exactly the kind flf problem I had in mind, my wife said tell you. Df'ar Georgt : How fir South do polar bcarR eome'! SAMUEL B. Dear Samuel : Now, "'hale \'er you do. Sam, don'l panic. Jus1 look hlm in the eye. Ollar George : W1>y are tho d1y1 lborter In wlnttrT And longer in summer? WONDERING Dur \\'onderlna:: Ttilt i• due to tht fact that heal eipands and cold contractc. (ltow'1 lha.t. Finnin!) (.~-,·. <· ~')ii ;' . ' . ' ;M,a'i.lbo~ I . . r , • i. .-a ' Letters from readers are welcom t!', Narmo.lly writers should conve11 their message1 in 300 words or less. The right to condense letter• to fit space or eliminate libel is re.1erved. AIL lt!t- ters mwt in.cludl! .signature and mail- ing addre.ts, but namei may bl!' wi th· held on reque.1t if sttfficient rea.!on is apparent . Poetry wilt not be pub- lished. citizens do lo prevent man's greed from polluting our city, state and CQuntry? STEVEN C. LAUBLY (h,erpopulatlon To the Editor: I am a sophomore at UC Irvine and have ju!t ctlmpleted a biology course en- lilled "Population -The Vital RevoJu. tion." We have studied the worldwide problems of famine, pollution, and disease and the politics involYed In trying to solve the problems. \Ve have asked what could be ckine and come up with very few salisfac tory answers. The rirst thing that must be done is to inform the general public and that is the reason for this Jetter. I HAVE BECO~IE aware v( an im· pending crisis caused by oYerpopulation and human destruction of the en· vlronment and I w.ould like to see the pro- blem related and discussed in nation"Wide news media so that more people could know the factl and do something about them. _ The U.S. win~ the last country to suf. fer severe results but we will surely feel the reverberaUons soon. LeglslaUon must start immediately with programs of sex educalion for belt.er birth control ,and to legali:r.e abortion, etc. JANIS TAYLOR Comnaunl1ta' Goab To the Editor: Just read Tom Barley's article, "Musi. cians Sound Sour Note With Viet Peli· Uon". The last two paragraphs of the articlt are, "\Ve feel that there Is no area of American life so saettd that protests again.st the United States' participation in the Vietn am war are in bad taste or in· appropriate. "Hold that note, ladies and gentlemen. You're playing my kind of music.·• Mr. Barley and I don't seem lo enjoy the same kind or music. THE COMMUNISTS are trying to take over South Vietnam, then aJI of Southeast Asia and eventuaUy the whole 'W'orld. They like nothing better than to hear that the people of the United States are pro- testing our involvement in that war. They feel that tbose protests will hasten the withdrawal of the U.S. from Asia and leave it an easy prey to their takeover. Personally 1 would rather die resisting than to live under a Communist dic- tatorship. And that is their avowed goal. SO IT IS A qu est.ion of where t.o stop their takeover of the entire populated area of the \Vorld. In Southeast Asia or should we wait until they start marching up the street where ~fr. Barley resides? It's time to let the voices or that so. called ''silent majority" be heard. TOM RHODES Organi%ed C rime To the Editor : \Vhat are we going to do about organlz· ed crime? This question has stumped the experts since the days of the rum runners and the experts are still groping around in the dark for an answer. Perhaps some light can be shed upon the problem if we examine what keeps organlud crime in buslness. Organi zed crime Is just that, It is a business that is involved in the field or services . They furnish serviceg that the custamer is not only willing to pay for Police and the Panthers Black Panther1 say that pdlice across the nation have killed 28 of their mem· bers and jailed many more .. One sympa· thetic account states that "20 have bee:n exiled from the United States; 91 are currently In jail; and at least 27 nthers are: under indlctmrnt for various charges.'' One oI several groups looking into police harassment or Black Panthers Is an ad hoc c<>mmittee ot U.S. congress- n1en that \Vil\ meet in Chicago. lleaded by Rep. Charles C. D111s1 Jr. (0.Mlch.), the all-Negro group includes Aul\)stus F. Hn1,1·kJns (0.C..lit.J, John Conyers (~ f\tich.), Shirley Chisolm (D-N.Y.), WU- liam L. Clay (l).Mo.), and Louis Stokes ID-Ohio). TllE Bl.ACK PA~THERS "'ere formtd in 19&6 after a 1erJcs of conrucu between Negro youth and the poUce ol Oakland, Cafif. They an to rlee:lve: national att.entlon aft.er of thdr leaders, Huey P. Newton, \11as argfd with murdtrlng an Oakland an. Once thr Pan- thtn' minister of de tnst, Newton ii now in jail. Eldridge Cleatl!r, author of Saul On Ice, dluppcarcd on Nov. 27, 1968, when his parole on a 13-year amult sentence was revoked after a IUR battle. He was moet rectntly reported in Alliers with M\'etal other Bfaek Panthtr ludm, 1eeklne paper1 to Je:t him return to the Unlttd,. States. m~ U.S. DEPAR'li\IENT or Juatlco uld on Dec. l2 that Ill civil nahu dlVl- slon would make an lnvutlgatJon Into lhe shootin& or l\\'O Black Panthtr ( 1 Editorial R - 'h esearc • members by Chicago police on Dec. 4. Tht!y were the charisnlallc leader or the Illi nois BP party, Fred Hampton, and a leader from Peoria, Mark Clark. Meanwhile. former Supreme Cou rt . Justice Arthur J. Coldberg and Roy Will!:lns, erecutlve director of the Nation- al Association for the Advancement or Colored Prople, are launchlng a private Investigation lntG violent incidents ~ twren Black Panthers and Poller across the country. Sen. Charlcs H. Percy CR· tll.) ha s suggested that the U.S. Civil Rightl Commission should lnvt.!ligate the Chicago killings. "Therc.'s a lltrong reel- ing th11t there must have been some kind of plot Involved, n he declared. INDEED. AN UNEASY fetUng is abroad that tht naUon's police may be conducting a planned or spcntaneous war against 1he Black Panthers. FBl Director J . Edgar Hoover lold 1 House Appn>prlatlons subcommlllt< Jut April 17 that the "revolutJonary stand" taktn by the black nationo llsl ;roups i•Nia made tt ... .mry lor "' rm lo lnlalllt)> itJ inltlllltnce ope.raUon.$ in thll fle:kl lhrou1h the penetratJon or theat gTOUJll With Informant.. and soure:e.s In order to keep aware of their r.lons •nd objec- tives. '' but will knowingly break the. Jaw to utilize. These include a:ambling, drugs. prostJtution, loan sharking, etc. Even though the appearance of such words in print may shock many. there are in- dividuals who literally live so u to in-- dul1e themselves in one or more of these activities:. These individuals that live tG indulge themselves are keepin1 organlied crime in business. THERE SEE~t to be two logical methods of comballng organized crtm~. Those that indulge themselves in the services could be punished to such an ex- tent that they would nG !anger buy such servltts. Society could provide some of the services that are now being provided by organized crime. The punishing of Individuals for buying servltts from organi:r.ed crime bas never bef.n• successful. Nor has any kind of crime been eliminated during all of recorded history by punishing the criminal. Those who believe that this Is the only solution to the problem of organized crime are really impeding any progress toward a solution. When society finally decides that Lhey have had enough, then and only then will they eliminate organized crime by providing organized crime's services. HARRY B. McDONALD JR. Agahut t he V.N. To the Editor: A lot or people are-wonderin1 what the United Nations is doing here. The U.N. appears to have something a;ood l olni for it, but is it good for us? The U.N. gives UNIC EF money to foreign countries without the slightest de· mend for records showing what wu done with the money. Among the recipients or UNICEF are the sheiks of Araby, the Dons of Latin America, and many a little "king" of a hungry bunch of vertebrates (also membera of the U.N. with one vote, don't you forget) who, after getting theirs, rind lltlle money left for the poor children . UNICEF IS A shady outfit, and I quote Stanton Evans' column in the In- dianapolis News for Jan. 26, 1962 : "When the U.N. was out of money for Its CongG aggres1ion, it borrowed $10 million, earmarked for UNICEF, from the U.S. government. This wes UNlCEF money - handed over with UN ICEF's express con. sent . In short, UNICEF monty was ustd to subsidize the Katanga "aggression" ln which, as we all know, civtlians were ldll- ed, many of them being children whom the UNICEF apparently forgot about dllr· ing that little rracas. The' United Nations is a thorn tn the side or every Ame rican, be: he patriotic or revolutionary -there is no difference -Americans are being duped by the United Nations, and the sooner we gel rld of the parasites. the better off we will be . S. G. UNDINE --~-- Wednesday, Dec. 24, 1969 Tht editorio! J)QQl!' of thf Dailu Pilot 'teks to inform and 1Um- tdate readtri by presenting thi.t mwpaper't opfnion.s and com- mentary on topics of fnterei& and signi/iamce, bu proWdftao a i""'m tor 1111 nprurion et our rtodtrs' oplnionr, and l>v pr11t11ffno Ille dlume ....,. pojntl ol informed oils,,..,. ...s IJ'Ok•,,,..,. °" topia of U11 day. ... Robert N. Weed, PubUsbor I I I I ' 1 I l ' i I I I I • I • • I I I ; ' I • • • I ' c l 1 ' ' ' ! I ( I : ' l : • • ; I • I ' l • ,. 'I • ' • I I , ~ I . .. .. ,. '. ... • • BEA ANDERSON, Edilo• w-...r, Dec9111Mr 14.. IHt M •tM I Generosit,Y Appl -auded Once again, the Assistance League of Newport Beach has taken time out to say thank you lo those who assist in its dental care program for children of low income families. The occasion, an annual Christmas luncheon. look place in the league's Service Center in Ne \v· port Beach and was attended by 85 guests. · Occupying 'Places of honor were school nurses and adnunistrators-who were guests along with Dr. \Villiam Cunningham, superintendent of the New- port-Mesa Unified School District and Dr. Norman Loats, associate superintendent. Other guests were Drs. and l\rtmes . Norman Von Herzen. Donald Anderson, Tom Robinson. Richard Mehren, Frank Curry, Paul Johnson and Dr. Eric Stice. Assistance League members '''ho serve ... ~ \'O lunteer dental assistants at •the center also '''ere invited. Mrs. Joe Earhart is chairman of the Dent.al Health Center and she is assisted by Mrs. Edwin \Vachter. co-chairman, and l\1rs. Porter Durkee, executive secretary. ,.j I { CHECKING PROGRESS -The care of chiJdren o~ low-income families is the mission of the Children's Dental lieaith Center maintained by the Assistance League of Newpqrt Beach. Support· crs of the center, including Dr. Richard Mehren (right), were hon· ored a1. an annual Chri stmas luncheon hosted by t he league. As- sisting Dr . Mehrcn is l\1rs. Joe Earhart, cpairman of the Dental llealth Center. • ~·~ •. .. ·:r .. \ • POW . Families' Continuing Prayer Please .God, Bring Dad Home By BARBARA DUA RTE 01 1111 hllY Pli.t Sltfl The women sat quietly at card ta,bles •nd on the floor around the coffee table 1ddressing Christmas CifdS. A seasonal occupation ? Yes, but one that ca1Ties far more thrust than lhe usual two-hour penning of Christmas areetings to friend11 and relatives. The women, like many oLhers in ar.eas such as Upland, Azusa, San Diego and towns across the United States, were spending a morning in the El Toro home of Mrs. Leroy Kellogg in order to address Christmas cards to prisoners of war in Vietnam. Posters and infonnation on how to h<:ip those prisoners line the wal!S of the living room; an American flag flies outside the home as it does every day. Yet another flag flies acroS.'i the street at the home of Mrs. Stephen Hanson, 30, wife of a ft1arine Corps flyer who disappeared in Vietnam on June 3, 1966. Mrs. Hal150n. a tall, attractive brunette who speaks softly and without bitterness. has attended many card-addressing sessions in the hope communication with lhe Vietnamese may speed the 'day when her young lieutenant husband returns home ... to see for the first time his son Todd, now 3 years old. listed h.im "missing In action ," his wife later recognized him in a picture of Ame rican prisoners published in a North Vietnam newspaper. As added proof to her belief her hus· · band is still alive, a military passenger on the flight who waa rescued reported the pilot and co-pilot survived the craih, allhough he didn't know what had hap. · pened to them. Carole Hanson sperlt one year awaiting word of her husband, then decided .lo ·do something about ii. As one of 1,355 Ambican women whose husbands or relatives are listed · as prisoners or missing in a c t l o n f whereabouts of onJy 401 are actually known), she joined forces with others in a campaign to pressure Hanoi into observ- ing rules ol the Geneva convention : list- ing names of prisoners, opening camps to impartial inspection, repatriating the sick and wounded and permitting cor· respondence . Wives are allowed to write monthly let. ters, limited to six lines, according lo Communist rules. Nooe are answered; none are returned. And a pattern of uncertainty 111 established in a day.by-day pattern. a pattern that has been interwoven into the life of Carole Hafl.50a for more than three ye.an. COORDINATES EFFORTS ttJtickers, C<lrresponded and personally ad· dressed ·congressmen and is ready to take the biggest step she has taken so far in ·an e[fort to find her husband . As s forerunner, "she made a second trip to Washington, D.C. this month to make known the plight of the wire of • missing serviceman. She and four other wives whose husbands are presumed PO\Vs appeared on.nalionwide television and were introduced at the Pre!ident'1 news conference. On Jan. 3, she and four Los Angeles wives will fly to Paris accompanied by a television commentator. Once there. th~y will seek a personal confrontation with Xuan Thuy, head of the North Vietnam peace delegation. She agrees efforts made to release prisoners should be goverilment to government, bul is too well av.·are that North Vietnam doesn't recognize normal channels of communication. WORWWlDE JUNKE!' Fro'm Parjs, the junket will visit gover:nment officials around the . w6rld'. hoping to stir up sympathy and"poisJblt recognitioo'for the "forgotte n" ~rl. . Since that June day, more than °three long years ,ago , Carole Han90n has ·writ-ten her husband every month in care· of the Post o(fice in Hanoi. No one knows whether !he Jette.rs arrive; Ir lhey art • ever· received. SINDING A CARD OF HOPE -'El Toro res- ldenti (left to tight). Mrs.-Leroy Kellogg and l\1"rs. Stephen Hanson write cards to prison· ers of war. Jn tl:ie background is a picture of Mn. Han.son's son Todd as be appeared on a 1967 Christmas card sent to her· husband who is "ntissing in action." HUS BAND SHOT DOWN Lt. Stephen Hanson was shot dov.·n I! he piloted his helioopter over North Viet· nam territory. Although the government As Orange County coordinator for the National Le8gue of Families of American Prisoners in Southeast Asia, she has. circulated petitions, designed bump« . But Mrs. Hanson will continue to write, and fight , for the day when her young so n will no loqger ask he.r, "When is my~· dy com.Ing home?'" Wife Must Make Move or She'l·I Lose Stakes at Hom:e DEAR ANN LANDERS ' I am • middle-.1aed man wtio has ju!f. been of- fered the promotion he's been dreaming about.~ lt mtans moving the family ieveral hundred miles from here. . f\ty wife re!u1e.S to move. She says the kids are doing weU in school and moving «oold mean leavln,g friends they ha ve rrown .up wilh. She also Is close to her lamlly. ANN LANDERS THE DEVIL AND TIIE DEEP BLUE SEA • respon1lbfllty-to mUe 1 home for lier man wltere\'tt bt can but panut .i1 pl'1)fes1lor1 or flly bl1 tradt. Reml9CI Mr of tMrtt beaattral wonil: "Wlll&ber .._ 1oe1t-I aoest." The problem: I'm In love wilh him but he c1n'l make up his mind about me. After 10 months of being together almost every Nghl, he still needs to play around with other women. I should tell you, in all candor, we are not tngaged. We have talked of marriage but no commitment has been made. The problem boils down lo lhls: tam satisfied with ooe mm but he ii not saUsfied with one woman. Last night I told him he'd hive to make up Ills mind. He citied me "UMUsonable'' and •·u ri ! a 1 r." Am. I? -A.T.K. since )'09 have deVfletl yourttlf e1:- cla1ively &o llilm for II moellui, yo. Uve lite rtpt t.o tell blm eltlter -er. Doll'& be 111rpriaetl If k'1 "or." A m•• wbe cam deeply fo~ 1 womaa and wanU Hr fer 1111, wile does not pl1y around, -an"11 Utere11 1omethlng wronc wttb )Im. Have 1• conlldered tli•t po11lblllt7? DEAR ANN l.ANDERs: Recently yOU told a JS-year-old boy to join Alcoholks Anonymout. l didn 't know AA Ull:!k in kids that youna. What are the rt· quiremenu for joining AA 1 -INTER ESTED fllll A REASON > Ann Landers will be 1l1d lo help faci DEAR ~ The only ·re..1llrernet1 for with your problems. Send .Utem to btt: lo memben•lp In AA .. die ~aln; t.o t1tp ,-care of the DAILY PILOT, enclOllnl a What c•n 1 man do when he b faced With rebellion like thll? My wife Ays, t'Money isn't everythlne." I agree, but this isn't juat money. ll'1 what I've been aiming for. Jt's sitlsf1ct.lon and progress. I'm 37 years old. tr J tum down this pro- motion I'll be Muck in this spot the rest of my lire. Please help me. -BETWEEN -' DEAR BETWEEN : tr &ht devil Wini this battle 1be 11 going to .b1ve • fn11trat.ed , unh1ppy bu1bud Oft her , bands for m1ny ye1r1 le c:eme. Maybe forever. In my opinion, your w11e 11 let.- tine yoa down badly. It 11 the woman'• _.. DEAR ANN LANDERS : l'm a 31-year- old divorcee who has been 10M1 wltb a man 37. He also ia divorced. t>EA.R A.T.K.: l1t1antcll u yoo art not en1.,ed dd '° commitment Mt bcH made, llM , .. uemu !oU a ril'I tO do 11 IM ,i,u.1. B1 llM ...,. 141teo, drlDJdaa. nere art DO dues ud to feta. atU·addr~ued, stamped envelope. \ \ • • • • • " ·, I t t c t t ' .. • I ~ t s ' J, • • • ri II •• • n II • ~ • -• .... ---·------•'-•• • • ··•••l•l l••··••o-•-4•..-•· .. 1 •~4 '""'"' ' • J 11 DAIL V PILOT Horoscope Happy Holida ys Christmas Sagittarius: Emotions Strong Spelle d Out By GAY PAULEY NEW YORK (UPI) -Tis the eve of Christ's birth and what better way to wish all of you the merriest of holidays than to s pell it out. M -is for the music of Christmas, the maddening crowds doing their last minut• shopping, the magical speJI the -seas~!1 casts and fo r the precious moments of families and friends together. E -is for the eve itself, the eagerness or the' tiny ones nosing a round the tree ~ the inevitable exchanges the first shopping day after the 25th. · R -is for the fa~led reindeer including Rudolph , for the rosy red cheeks . of the litUe children, for the reverence of Him born in a manger nearly 21000 years ago. R -is for the rewards of work, for the riches of a bountiful nation. for the personal riches of heal th, family and hearth. Y -is for all the young in heart' who look on each Christmas with new spirit, fo r the Yule log. C -is for the cheer of the season. the carols and carolers. the caring for o'lhers, the name of the day itsell, Christmas. H -is for the hope of peace on earth one day, and unfortunately for the holiday highway toll that each year seems to grow. R -is for relatives to be remembered "'ith gilts and cards, for the Christmas rose which blossoms at this season. I -is for the new ice skates for the chil· dren for the imagination of those whose skil!S turn our store windows and streets irr to incredible fantasies, for the inn in Bethle- ~em. S -is for the smells and the sounds of the season, for the shepherds who watched their flocks, and for Santa Cl aus of oourse. T -is for the Three Wise Men , for the hoijday table laden with turkey and all the trinimings. M -is for moderation mixed with the 1nerriment, for the midnight Church serv- ices, and for the too much money \Ve all will spend on gifts. A -is for old acquaintances ne'er !or· got, for the ageless story as told by St. Luke. for the Christmas angels. FETED AT RECEPTtON Mr. end Mr•. SH:lney Young Mesons Honored Golden Date Marked friends and relatives of Mr. -~nd Mr11. Sidney Allen Young of Casi.a Mesa gathered in the home of their daughter, 1t1rs. Charles A. Smith to con· gratulate them on their golden wedding anniversary. The couple wen married in Los Angeleii Dec. IS, 1919 and made their first home in Olin- da. They have been resi den U of Costa Mesa since 1921 Y!'ilh the excepUOn of two years spent in the Dutch East ln:lies. Assisting with hostess duties at the reception was the Open House couple's other daughter, Mrs. George Spink of Costa Mesa. Five grandchildren ind three great-grandchild!'fn a1so were present at the festivities. Honored gue:its were 1t1r. and Mrs . Charles Young of Pico Rivera, Young's brother and silt.er-in-law, !\Ir. and Piirs. T h e o Ragland of Oakburst, Mrs . Jessie Swag- gerty of Montebello, Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Perrin of Lodi and Mrs. Charles TeWinlcle and Mn;. Lula Collins of Cotta Mesa. Engagement Revealed During a holiday open house in the Costa Mesa home of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Oliver White, the 100 guesl.s attending learn- ed of the tngagement of the Whites' daughter, Patricia Marie White to SI e v an Akerley. THURSDAY DECEM BER 25 By SYDNEY OMARR BEST BUYS lachlde chi!· dru'1 p mtt, aportl cloehes, thealer dcket1, articles aimed at entertalameat, luxury hems. ARIF.s (March 21-April 19): Fun·and 1ameii at home would be ideal prescription. Day to sr:noolh 1 over rough'--edges. Usttn to those with problems, complainll. Know that you do have a unique kind of appeal. TAURUS (April 20.May 20): You break through restric· lions. You are able to coordinate holiday p I a n s . Emotional restrictions fall by wa yside. You come alive in that you revel in happiness of others. GEMINI (May 21 -J unc 20): Much contac::t with neighbors, relatives provides real holiday atmosphere. Hwtch p a y s dividends. Share knowledgt. Give of yourself ; thet is most significant gift. CANCER (June 21.July 221: Flu rry of excitement may be interrupted by mental calcula· lion of costs. Kty is to enjoy yourself. Know that every mG- ment is precious. To avoid disappointment, ~rospect~ve brides are reminded to have their wedding stories with black and white glossy photo- graphs to the DAILY PILOT ~Vomen's De· partment one we~k before t.he wedding .. Pictures received following the wedding will not be used . For engagement announcements it . is imperative that the 51.ory, also accomparued by a black and white glossy picture, be s~b-­ mitted six weeks or more before the \Vedd1ng date. If deadline is not met, on1y a story will be used. To help fill requirements on both 'ved· ding and engagement stories, forms . are available in all of the DAILY PILOT 0U1ces. Further questions will be answered by Women's Section staff members at 642--4321 or 494-9466. Mesa Mayor Among Guests At Judging Costa ?tfesa 1t1ayor and Mrs. OUR ANNUAL t.t:O (July 23-Aug. 22): Cy· cle high; you break through barriers of restriction. You are in limelight. Your 1nanner of dress, expression attl'act al· len lion. You make others ex- perience joy. VIRGO <Aug. 23·Sept.t2): Work you did in aiding persons who were hospitalized or in~ capacitated makes you feel glow ol happiness. You arc prese nted with tokens or ap- preciati on. You [eel good-and fulfilled . LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Friends, spirit of good will <'Ould prevail. You a r e delightfu lly surprised by con- sideration others display. Be especially appreciati ve towa~d fanlily members. SCORPIO (Ocl: 23-Nov. 21 ): Your sense of diplomacy is put to test. You learn that one you doubted has been saving to surprise you . Striw to un· dersland-and appreciate. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 211: You are able lo re- establish communications with one who has been at a dist· ance. Your emotions are strong. Expre ss them in con- structive manner. You are touched by dis play of concern. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): You know now that money spent lo make others happy was wisely expended. Special relation s hip is spotlighted. Listen and learn. Mini Scisso rs To ~as e culling chores, there's now available mini sc issors, battery-operated. S!eek and lightweighted, the scissors cut quickly through cloth and paper. Be sympalhetic, open to love. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fe~. 18): You redi scover one clos~, there is chance to strengthen specia l relationship. lf mar- ried. be especially considerate of mate. lf single, know Uiat indlvidual in question iS se rious. P.ISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Perform special s e r vices . ShOw others that you ap- preci ate their special needs. By givin&, you also rec eive. Surprises a r e featurtd - mostly of pleasant variety. IF TODAY JS YOUR BLRTHDAY you are t'nterlng cycle which brings widesprtad recognition. Recently · y o u established pattern which is demanding and represents· challenge. Odds are favorable for .success. TG lln(I out wl\o'• lu(k1 for ..._, In mooiev af\d love, order SyaneY Omerr'• ballkl1t. "S.C•tl Hln11 kl~ Meoi end Women." Send blrt~dllt Ind 50 c~h 10 Omt rr A1trolovv S.C•t'11, t~e DAILY PILOT, Bo• lHO, Grtnd Centre! Sla!ion, Nl!'N Yorit, N.Y. 10017, HI! H AV E A HAPPY C H RISTMAS VIRGINI A'S Snip '11 Stitch 3334 E. Coast Hwy. Corona cl1I Mar THIS IS AFTER CHRISTMAS SALE & CLEARANCE S -is for "Silent Night. Holy Night," the Christmas carol now known and sung around the world. one which had its be¢nnings in 1818 in the tiny village of Au stria, \vhen Joseph Mohr. a parish priest, and Franz Grube r. a schoolmaster. \\•rote the simple hymn fo r a guitar after mice had eaten the bellO\YS of the church organ. Among those attending were the bride-to-he's grandparents, J\.frs. Joseph Stephen Coo- can11on of Llvermore and Mrs. Robert \\'hite of Manhattan Beach. A. L. Pinkley together with Mr. and Mrs. Claude Johnson and Mr. and 1t1rs. Clarence Sorensen, all of Costa Mesa, were invited to the Regal Mobile Club Estates by Mr. and Mrs. Charles Nau. ma~ agers. All were guests at dinner and served as judges of the best decorated homes in the Costa Mesa park. Use Your Wei Soel C harge Mester Charge BankAmericard SAYE 40°/o to 70°/o Off .REGULAR PRICE Three Versions 9434 SIZES 2.a 'Vhich \\'Cl y u·ill sht ha\'C it? Smoolh all the u•ay or fl,ippcd oul by pleats or gR thers. Sew this pa cesetter in \'lvacious solids, plaids or checks. Printed Pal\ern 9434 NE\Y Children '5 Slzes 2, ~. 6, 8. Size I takes I\• yairds 35-inch. SlXTl',io'JVE CE~iS i n coins for each patte rn -add 15 cenl.\ for each paucrn for first-class malting and spe<:ial handlln1: otheni:lst lhlrd-claM dellvuy will take three \lt'etks er more. Send to Pitaria n t.fartin,; the DAILY PlLOT, 442 Pattern Dtpt., 232 West 18th St.. New York. N.Y. 10011 . Print NA~tE, Al). DRESS u·lth ZIP. SIZE and STYLE NUMBER. NEW FALL-WINTER PAT· TERN CATALOG -over 100 11tyles, fret pallern coupon. 50 ttntl. INSTANT SEWING BOOK scw today, wear tomorrow. $1. INSTA NT FASHION BOOK -"'hat.to-wear an11wtrt, 8C· cusory, figure Ups! Only $1. \ I January Day Chosen For Rites · Los A n g c l e s Latter-day Saints Temple will be the set- ting for the Jan. 29 «remony of Karen Afangum and Russell E. Fox . News of the forthcoming event has been announced by the bride-elect's parents, Pi1r. and Mrs. Clarence L. f\.1angum of Costa ~1esa. J\fiss White, a th ird-genera- tion Californian, b a graduate of Mater Dci High School and now is a senior at California State College at Long Beach ~'here she is working towa rd her elementary e d u c e t i o n credential. •Ier fiancc, son or 1\fr, and J\.1rs. William Kenneth Akerley of Capistrano Beach, is a graduate of San Clemente High School and will receive his BS in industrial technology in January from CSCLB. The betrothed couple are Peer ing Around ....... Pllet1 PATRICIA WHITE Summer Wedding planning a summer wedding in St. Joachim's Catholic Church, Costa 1t1esa. F'irs t prize wa11 awarded tO the Earl Dumonds, second to the Dave Mitchells arid atllie Gwynn and his mother, and thi rd to the Bill Wrlght!. Mr. and Mrs. Joe JameJ won honorable mention along with J\.fr. and Mrs. Fred Henry and A1r. and Mrs. Eamie Field. Prizes ~·ere given by John Cropp, club president. Miss ~1angum. a graduate of NeY.'port Harbor High School, attended Orange Coast College and now is a student at Brigham Young University y.•here she is majoring in elementary educatio n and ls a member Or SPURS. Good Cheer Circling Her fiance . son of l\lr. and r-.1rs. Ellis f\-1. Fox of Green River, '\'yo., is a senior, ma- joring in physics at Brigham Young University, where he Is a member of Phi Eta Sigma Scholastic Honorary Soclelv. l{e spent two and one-h31f years at an LDS Mission in Japan. EXCHANG ING Christmas ti1rs. M. J. Bengochea. at gifts and enjoyin~ a leisurely Desert Shores on t h e coffee and a respite from Salton Sea. Daughter Cheryl. home from shopping y,·ere the 1\tmes. the University or Southern Wallace Short, Robert J\.1oss, California for the holidays, Edy,•in Boolh, Elden Haskell, y,·ill be packing along the \Villlam Ballard, Lorin Lam-books -"We're lucky to get a mers, Allen Brnokout, Wi\llam day off," she complains. Pulford 1ri1d Richard Gillum. Ron and Greta l\1urphy opened JOAN AND ANDY Yeiser of their Fou ntain Valley home Huntlngton Harbour are keep. for the party. ing their fingers crossed and Yule Pa rties hoping Andy'• bu~ .... wm IT \VILL BE the children's free them for a few days in Christmas ln the Huntington Yosemite. They will open lht'ir Continu ing Beach home of Cmdr. and home forapostChristmaspar· .i\!rs. Edward Casey. With Ed ty for his offi« staff Sun- A memol'able Chri~1mas away at sea. Liz is planning a day. Dec. 28. party js beh.1g planned by Oi.e quiet holiday which will he mother, Mrs. Vida J\.1ac Coons from Palm Springs , for the Christmas weekend. T h e }lughes .also entertained their square dance club, Lace 'n Leather, during a preholiday party. HOJ\1E t'OR the Christmas holidays are ~!ills College coeds the Misses 1\-fary Hodor , Janet \Vright, tifi ndy Miller , Elizabeth Pierce and Lorena Emerick. They will b e hostesses at a HoUday Brunch Saturday, Dec. 27, in the home of l\1rs. Elmer Sproul of Orange. for prospective and current Mills students. South Coast Chai>ter, Paren1s brightene<I by a visit from her LOS ANGEL~BOUND wlll \\'ilhout Pa rt n t' r s for parent!, Col. and J\frs. Edward be Mr. and Mrs. Robert Kerr. CRU1SING aboard the Prin· 1nembe rs' families. Hicks from \\1ynnewood, Pa. They will spend Christmls cess Ita lia recently were 1i1r. A gift exchange around the Wives from ·Cmdr. Ed's ship with Bob's mother a/'ld father . a!Jd f\.trs. Richard Gipple of tree. games and the breaking also will take turns C'l'l· Mr. and Mr1. Leo Kerr. Diane Huntington Beach. During of pinatas will follow a buffet tertalnlng on a "round robin" ia anUclpating a busy ye11r as their 11-day cruise from Los dinner at 7 p.m. Slturday. basis to keep inyone from chairman for the t 9 7 0 Angeles to .i\lexico they vis. Dec. 27, in the Laguna Beach being too lonely during the Mermaid Ball sponsored by itcd AcapulC'O. Puerto Vallarta home or f\.f rs. Dee Ann Weber. holidays. the LiUle l\1ermaid Guild or and Pi1atatlan . Other fami ly activi ties are Huntington Beach. Highlights of their tri p were planned throughout the year. JUDGE AND MRS. Charles the famous high divers of La Those interested in fur1her In· Bauer of Huntington Beach rtfR . AND MRS. JA~t~ Quebrada, \•le.,.,·cd in Ae&· formation may ·write Parenti will 1pend Christma1 with Hurhes of Huntington Beach pulco, and the flying India n Without P1r1ners, P. 0. Box D1rlene'1 parenU, ti1r. Ind v.1ll be tnterta.ining Barbara's Birdmen of Papantla. 122, La1unaBeacll. _:...;.;.;.;.;.......:..~~'--~~~~~~~-~~~~~-~~---~---- Wa rd Party Airs. Ooujlas \\'ard and Mrs. ti18rvin Brown of Costa l\1esa "'tre among memben or the RIV"entJew Women's Golf Club cnteKaining palienl1 In J\.tetropoUtan State IJospltal, Norwalk. l!fort · U1an 2S packages, Jewelry ittma and cartons of cipretles were contrib\Jted to the women'1 ward 411. Doon Open 10 o.m. to 9 p.m.-Friday, Dec. ~6th • Trt1TH11ndou1 Selection BETTER DRESSES $8,.$35 Regul 1r to $75 Crepe-D1c ron BLOUSES $5 •• $9 Regul•• to $11 long and Short NIGHTGOWNS $6 .. $9 Reg •lor to $20 Orlon-Jer1ey TOPS $4 to $9 Rt9ul1r to $18 All Sales Final Extra Cashiers Extra Sales Ladies F.>\NTASTI C 2-PC . Suits . Knit·Poly11ter PANT sm $10 •• $35 Regul•r to $70 Wool i nd Orlon SWEATERS $6 to $16 Re9ul1r to $30 Cotton and Nyton ROBES $10 •• $~8 Regul1r to $3.5 Wool & Polyaster PANTS $6 to $12 Rtgul1r to $28 Wool Knits and Cotton Knits $9 to $30 Rt9ul1r to $70 ~.:~:.q 1f{t-&at AT OUR SIX . SOUTHLAND LOCATIONS ,. .. _ l•lcmd 204 Merine A••· Huntlnttofil Clftter 1111 u1.,., South Coett Plan 3333 l rlstol El Sttundo 321 Melo Stroot Cetta M..,. 270 I. 17th St. l..... •-h 240 ._ ... , I 7 Today's Fl•al \ • EDITION N.Y. Stocks * * VOL. 62 , NO. 307, 3 SECTIONS, 28 l>AGES * ORANG~ COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY,'DECEMBER '2•)"'1969 TEN CENTS '"?'IJ?iO •• I I Wrestler •-ID Big Mai'.~h . 1- Balboa Theater Raided Mesa Y outli Fighting ·p~rman:ent ' Paralysis . . -. .. . By ARTHUR R. VI NSEL ' Of 'tlle O.lly Plllil St.rt ~fE.<lical science cannot grant .Justin oa:ata 's Christmas wisb this year aod be refuses to believe that perhaps it never • Newport ·Police Seize \\'ill. . Because he is a wrestler . And a wrestler may Jose a match , but he is never 0bealen, Justin sat up Tuesday for thr first lim' in 19 days. Propped in ::i wheelchair, the 16-year- old Costa Mesa High School juriior smiled o:1nd talked of his last bout. the one he won't acrepl as tbe Ja~t In a short career, Paralyzed, he can do little more than that : smjle and talk. The second son of Mr. arid Mrs. Hitoml Ogata, of 3126 Roanoke Lane, Costa ~fe.!;a, is virtually immobile from the ' neck down, although he can move his up- per left arm slightly . Chances for dramjltic improvement 5eem poor. ''He's been told,'' said Coach John S11;eazy. The tough, spirited, 130 pound di11ision contender hit the mats during an elimina· tinn bout Dec. 5 to decide who would face San Clemente High &hoot the following week. He just lay there, victim of a fluke, a one·in·a-million tragedy. ··1 didn"t wrestle." he said Tuesday in Room 113 at Costa Mesa Memorial l~ospital. "It ~·as an unlucky accident. But we \\-'on against San Clemente." A steady stream of schoolmates has visited the sturdy Japan-born wrestler since his condition stabilized and X-rays plus neurologica l studies began to in· dicate the extent of spinal damage. Coach Sweazy marvels at him. '"I'll be down to 123 by the end of the 5eason," he said, in reference to weight class. whtn Sweazy and teammates drop- ped in recently. "That's a hell of an outlook." said' his instructor. "Coach ... I'm bored," Justin had ad· ded, with less humor. • Boredom has been allevialed somewhat by hundreds of get-well nites, Christmas cards, letters and the almost-endle!s stream of visitors, a fact the e>sata fami- ly accepts with deep thanks. "It's really groovy," Justin said ~es­ day, "some of the guys I've. never even IS.. WllESTLEll, Pago Z) 10 Orange Coast R.esidents Among J11r y Candida.Les Ten Orang!' Coast residents are among the list of 30 persons from whom the Orange County Grand Jury of 1970 v.·ill be 5eJected on Jan. 5. Included in the list compiltd by Superior Court Judge .fames F. Judge - the criminal court presiding judge for 1970 and the court's liaison with the grand jury-are two residents from Hun- tington Beach, one from Westminster, four from Corona de! Mar, one from Balboa, one from Newport Beach and one one from Capistrano Beach. Their names will be among 30 lo go into " drum at the annual selection of the grand jury. The first 19 names lo be dra\\·n by Judge Judge"s clerk y.•ill rom· prise the new panel. Among the nominees for the 1970 jury are : A. ,C. Achey of 615 8th St. and Charles Pifashbum of 50.1 13th St. both of Hun- tington Beach; Raymond M. Schmitt, 812.l E. 19th St., Westminster; Mrs. Audrey ·Cotton, 1509 E.-Bay, Balboa and P.1rs. Harriet Bemus, 2631 Waverly Drive, Newport" Beach. Also, ?ifrs. Inneli Desenberg. 22.11 Bayside Drive, Miss P.farlan Louise Parks, 233 Morning Canyon Road, Dr. R8Jj>h Gerard, 1007 Goldenrod and Mrs. Atlee Reni.e r, 210 Goldenrod all of Corona del Mar and David Clark, 3564S Beach Road, Capistrano Beach. All those named were nominate(! for ~fee oti the Orange County Grand Jury by the 21 Superior Court judge~. Judge Judge today scheduled the' nam· Ing of the panel for 2 p.m. on Jan. 5 in Department 5 of Superior ewrt. YULE EDITION OUT BY NOON Thfo: Christmas F.clition of the DA?L Y PILOT will be pubilshed and deUvered early Thursday (before ncxm in most area!) and all DAILY PlLOT otflees will be closed for the holiday. Friday will bf: a nonnat work rS1y at Ill< DAILY PILOT and all ollicts will be open ror business as usual. · I •• ,, -- PROFILE IN COURAGE: A WRESTLER. WHO REFUSES DEFEAT Justin Og1t1 and Mother, Strengthened by Christm11 Hope Manson Wins Judge's 01{ To Act as Ow11 Attor11ey LOS ANGELES (AP) -Charles ?-.I. fl1anson won a judge's re I u c t an l pennission loday to act. as his own at- torney .at his trial on murder<0nspiracy charges. in the killings of actress Sharon Tate and six others. Superior Court Judge William B. Keene tried for .an hour to persuade Manson to accept defense counsel, then graqted MansOn's self-representation request - telling ·him he was making • "sad a"d traglc mistake." · "l'Ve considered inriqceilce and guilt ;rnd 1 know lhe difference between them," Manson said, "and J have no guilt. And that will show during the tritil." Manson, 35. leader or an occull-orientrd NEW YORK (:APl -MO\"lt stocks COO· -\tinued their climb Jn fairly acUve. trari· ing ·today , as advancu wldenred the.ir lead over declines by 700 issues. (See quolatio~, Pages 12-13). • hippit type clan \\'hose members are ac· cused of the killings, had talked Tue.sday with a court-appointed f'Uorney who f1miliarized Manson with the problems of acting as his own attorney. Manson was not dissuaded. INIUATES GETTING BIG YULE DINNER They may be in jail, but the inmates or Orange County Jail will have a ·chrisl· mas dinner that's "everything and more Iha! a home-cooked holiday dinner would be." Authorities al the jail said the holiday <tinner will consist of turkey and stuff. ing, two kinds of vegetables, cranberry ~auce, mashed potatoes and pumpkin pie. ''I ate out here over Thanksgiving," the spokesman said "and it was quite good. As a malter of fact. it was a bigger dinner than I would have gotten at home.'' 'I Am By JOHN \r AL TERZA Of I~• CMlly ''* Matt They were more than curious and more than yellow, too. So a municipal judge. a Ne\vport vice detective and two District Attorney 's in· vestigator~ turned yellow to black Tues· day night and seiied a copy of the Swedish :iiex film after its final sho\\•ing at the Balboa Theater. And today, a print of "I Am Curious tYellow)" sltJ Idle on a police depart-,,, 3 ~' ar5i Belie Yule Seaso11 Of Good Will By The AsRociated PresR Millions of peroons around the world made last-minute preparations today to celebrate Christmas. Althoogh the message or lhe birth of .Jesus Christ is "P,ace on Earth,'' !he wars the worlrl had with it last yea r rl'_· mained Jn Vie.lnam aOO Nigeria . The Mid- east si tuation remained unsettled. Tilree lood explosions rattled wiOOow:iii today in Bethlehem, the birthplace or Christ. One Israeli official said they could have been caused by supersonic aircrait. It Is the hilltop city's third Christmas under 1.-a1ll·rule, and in the INde of the Cl\urch of the Nativity score.! of Israeli security agents mingled with the Christmas plllJ'lm!. One ' t!tim1te said more than 1,00ll troops and police were on du ty in the town. In Vietnam, the allied commands and the Viel Cong observed cease-fires. Fighting had been at a low level for iieveral weeks, and after the truce began Jt dropped off even more. Radk> Hanoi began broad cas t Ing recorded messages frotn American prisoners of war to their families, as it ha'.!i done in past years. Soldiers in Vietnam ;ind at other U.S. military installation! in the Far East, t-:urope and the United States gave Christmas parti's for chiklren al orphan. 11i;:e!I: ;ind hospitals. Christmas in the United Stales is (luieler this year than last. fn 19611, the Apollo 8 astronauts were circling the moon. aod the crew of the spy ship Pueblo was coming home afler 11 months of captivity. As usual, shoppe rs jammed the stores to make those down-to-the-wire purchases from stocks that have dwindled stea'dily since Thanksgiving. Department store of. ficials said revenue was higher than last year, but many attributed the increase to higher prices brooght on by inflation rather than additiOl'lal volume. llundreds of thousands flocked to airports, .railroad stations and bus terminals, heading home to see relatives and families or taking vacations. Among the travelers will be President Nixon, his wife and daughter Tricia, who are going to San Clemente Friday after spending Christmas at the White House. The Nixons' other daughter, Julie Eisenhower, Is in Brussels with her hus- band David, whose fa l'.1er is U.S. am- ba53ador there. Nixon went to Capitol Hill Tuesday lo •lunch with congressional, leaders shortly bet'ort the-y adjourned the first session ol the 9lst Congress and headed hvme. ·Best Decorations Qted Mesa Chooses Christmas Contest Wi1iners .Homes deoked with holly,, lights and San!a Clauses, arh~g ,others, were 1lngl- ed out for Costa Mesa01 outstanding Christmas decoraUon b?noi-1 Tuesd~. Me~ber1 of the Com{J'IUl)ity Projects CommlUee, representing itervk:e clubs and agencies throughout the city. toured the community 5electtng dlspl•)'s. . RecognjUon plaques and awards •i ll bt presented to the winners by lhe Costa 1'tesa City Counci l In January. Awards for outstanding Chrl!itmas dceoratloru will go to : Mr. and Mrs. 8111 P.fay. 1311 St. Clair St.: .Franct1 Ktentt, 111111 Drake; Jim • Jordan, 2269 Senta Ana Ave.; Mac Freed, 21 t Palmer; >.l9 Roblnhood 1..ane (name not given): 1515 Santa Ana Ave. (name not given): 2431 Monte Vista (name not atv'enl'; 'Ft'td lhrrlngton, Ml Seal: f>iper'a, W Damll; Earl Achlin. 2208 ., , Al"laheim St.;· Paula Didu, 1985 Arnold; Len Richie, 2345 Notre Dame; ·Cline Waug~tal , 2433 College~ Charles Brady, 2449 College; 287 Nassau (name not given); Donald Berkman, it03 Fordham; Don Slocum, 3265 Colorado; 3 2 7 0 Wa.shingtoo (name not given). Also, Gary Palmar, 2873 Nevis Circle: James D. Broochway, 1695 W. Palm Place; Htrry Hammerschlog, 3 I S 2 Simoa; William P.tiller, 1624 White Oak ; L. A. J11umnd, 1815 S.amar Drive; L. D. Longwell. 4131 Boston Way. Special mentions went to Colleen Place Jn· county territory off Santi Ana Ave. wbett the entire sueel joined ~elher IO decorate. A "Gbod Neighbors' award was sugptted. Al.so singled out for special mentJon Lwu a nativity scene at Trinity B1ptist (.;nucrh. at the corner oi F'airfiew Road and Fair Drive. > Honorable mentions went to : J\fr. and ?o.frs. Ungrodt, 927 Presidio; R. C. Boyer and Mr. and Mrs.· Herrick, 1102 El Camino (viewed together); Sam Stroiche, list Augusta: Gerald Cllappele, 3107 Coolidge; Grover Nutt, 3116 Monroe Way ; 2149 Pemba, 1113 Tahi U, 2992 Jav1, 1954 Balearic, 2966 Boa ~'bta, 28SS Euro- pa, 1988 Ltml"IOS, 2842 ChioS, 20.12 So. Cap- pella, :mi' Gibraltar, XIII Gibraltar. Alto. 3074 Mo)okal, 3151 Samoa, W Samoa . 1172 Madag~car. 1739 Labrador, 31U BennUda. 3075 Mad.eira, 2917 Redwood, 2l80 Redwood. 2834 8eran1 and 11163 Pitcairn. AllO awarded T'eC'OgJ1ition were : John llutton, 8911 Oak; Josephine Heodricbon, 21a American and 17'6 JoWa Street ; Mr. and Mrs. Roben Frick Jr .• 1055 San- t• Rosa Ave.: Mr. and Mrs. Edward W. Noack, 1065 Vallejo Circle. ment office floor. tts next showing will bt delayed indefinitely. The judge, J. E. T. "Ned" Rutter III , Detecuve John Simon and the two OA 'l'l men sat patiently through the graphic Scandinavian sex saga. then al 9: IS p.m. moved into the lheatcr projection room and took the prin t. Totlay: Newport Beach police were seeking misdemeanor complaints against the owner of the theater, William Alford or 1234 La Mirada, Laguna Beach, and Film . lhe manager. f\lrs. Eleanor Blackburn of 514 E. Ocean Front. Balbo.I. Simon said the charges sought would bt ror alleged ei:hibilion of obscene matter. ChieJ ·James · Glavas said one: con· tributing factor to the seizure ot thl film containing yards of footage depicllhg RX <"l'ts was several complalnl.5 · from citizens \\'ho had seen the flbn and didn 't like its content. "We aren't trying tD act' as censorl or (See CURIOUS, Page l) Jndge Rutter Get,s Post ' On OC Superior Court hfunicipal Court Judge J. E.T. "Ned " RuUe r of Newport Beach today was a~ pointed by Gov. Ronald Reagan to suc· ceed Justice Robert GardnC':r to the Orange County Superior Courl. Judge Rutter, 38, will move from his Harbor Judicia l District Court to th' . higher bench after the holidays. lie \Viii take over the court vacancy crea ted by the elevation last week of Ju3tice Gardner to the Fourth District Court of Appeals in San Bern11rdlno. Judge Rutter got the news of his unique OlristrQas gift in a telephone call fro1n the governor's preu secretary. "The governor was on his way d0wn· here for Christmas vacation but he very typically figured thal I mlah( liq lo hefl!' f'l lh• appointment now ratbei lhah wait for him to call," Judge Rutter said. "I will take over my Superior Court duties with a very deep sense of du~y I» the governor and an appropriate degree or terror," Judge Rutter commented. "(t wlll be my aim to give the people of California and lhe governor my every ef· fort and their full money 's worth in this chaUenglng appointment. "I plan lo be a fairly quiet judge for Mme time until I have.had the chance to aSliess my nrw dutie~ and work my way Into the court," Judge Rutter added. ''But I hope that I will soon be ahle to make a substantial contribution to the administration of justice. As a new boy I have, of coorse, a great deal to learn .'' .f\tarried with four children Judge Rut· ter makes his borne at 121 Via Havre, Lido Isle. He was appointed to the Harbor District bench by Gov. Reagan on Nov. 19, 1968. An active Republican, Judge Rutter came to the municipal bench from p11ivate practice in Los An'geles and Costa Me~. A 19$5 graduate of USC law school, he is a mem ber of the Costa Mesa Rotary Club. One O{ Judge Rutter's final actions a! ;r munici pal court judge was to participate in a raid Tuesday night on the Balboa theater where police and district at- torney's officers joined tiim in con· fiscallng reels of the controversial Swedish rilm "f Am Curioos (Yellow)". Judge Rutter and officers moved in on the earthy European movie ' after wat· ching the early evening showing. Burglar Gets Cash and Booze A cat burglar slipped Into a number of units In a Costa Mes.a apartment comple.1 w~ile the occupants slept Tuesday, lfll?ling wallets · ind trousers of nearly 1150 in cash ind escaping wlth a bottle of whiskey. Christmas gifts In the homes at 2700 Peter~ Way were largely undisturbed, but police noled the case should serve as a warning to olhcn to take e.1tra care thi,s season. • The intruder wandered freely in and out, leaving door1 open behind him, ac· cording to invesligatort, but none of the viclhns 1aw or heard anything. Donakt L. Kleeber, who lost $100, told Officer ~rge Sperling he had bern up ill most of the night. EHc Erdman aald he lost '40, but a' gift taken from uodl!!r the family Chrlstmaa t.ree wu discarded ln the blck )'ard. Robert L, Biller could find nothing mWlng. while Stlla t.abarasky said a holld1y•tm1pped bottle ol whlokey wu gone. Enll'J "a' attempted unsuccessfully at gevtral other unlls. ) • WINS SUPERIOR COURT POST Judge J. E. T. 'NH" Rutter ' Forgery Suspects Sought by Police LOS ANGELES (UP I) -Seven persons, includlog foor men and three v.·omen, were booked Tuesday on suspi· cion of forg,,-y by police who sought 50 more suspects in a credit card ring. · SherifrS deputies said lhe countywide. ring allegedly manufactlU'ed phony drive rs' licenses to 8id iil pa~.ng b8d checks and ,used stolen credit Carl;is to bilk stqres out of nearly $500,000 'in cash' and merchandise. ' The raids' on three different home! climaxed · a rour-monlh invesUga~lon bY, deputies lvho said the operation had been in· action for seVeral months. Orang" Coast Weadaer Someone forgot to wi~h 11\t weatherman a merry Christmas. and he's retaliating in kind-with low clouds, fog and a light driule lo dampen the · yuJeUde spirits, 1''hile tempe111tures. remaln in the mid 60's. INSmE TOD~Y Financial cOlr.l'mn"i.!t Sj/lvfll · Porter givts 10 rult1 for tnvt1t- ors to follow in bu~ng nrt · 1oorlt.r In htr coiumn on Pau• i; today, r·------- • O.ly 1 hy I CHRISTMAS L---..i e111t.n111 ' filWfMI """" '" Ctitc'l"' u .. ., NlfllMI ...... .. ,_ '''" --• C..k• " :::: ,.,.. " ,_ • 1 ... 11 0..... 'Netk" • lltdl ....... , .. , • ··~ , ... i' ·-.. IMWt .. ...,... --" ··-lliot) -,, -.. -· ... .. &1111 L...., • .......,.. ...... '" ...... • --.. -ti ) : ·I ..... .---------••• .. f OA!l V PILOT c WRESTLER. • • met befort .•. eveeybody Wllltl me to 1tt ftJI." Top pllj>•ical c:ondiUon prior lo tho trqlc accJdont, bowmr, -·1 .,... VWlt a mlnor ee11e of l1rynctU1 raulttni ··'- from too much conversation. One nune con!iOes that 10 Costa Mesa Hilb School fl'itnds di:opped in on the 11peci1l patient wll h the spteial Christmas season needs at one time, crt1wdlng Into his room. "We don 't breek rules." sht :iaid :solemnly, .. but sometimes lhty ~t bt.nl a little." Justin Ogata believes he will recover - and many other dedicated athletes have gtru1altd back from dlaabllity on a torturous road the erperts warned was • just not there -but one thin& Is certain. ··trs going to take time," said Cotch Sweazy on Tuesday. Afooey is another consideration and a group of family friends met Monday ni&bt to organize MW: Justin Ogata BOOlt· er Fund. • Deposits will be made lnto the fund - estimated to require hundreds of lhousands or dollar~ before Justin's ordeal is over -at the Bank or Tokyo, 610 N. Main St.. Santa An1. So tar, the response is phenomenal , ac· cording to City.Q:iuncilman William L. St. Clair, whose son was a teammate. "J've never seen the community 1et ht.hind anylhing the way they've 1otten behind Justin Ogata," St. Clair added. citing a number or benefit programs now in the planning stages. The muscular little wresUer worked 11 111 deckhand at Davey's Locker in Newport Beach, where owner Phil Tozier ha<; planned a Jan. 15 fishing trip at $10 per person, donating his entire fleet o[ vessels. The date is a school holiday and tickets are being sold primarily to COl!lta Mesa }figh School faculty members, while all profit from the first Milne 8!'08. motorcycle race promotion at the Orange County Fairgrounds ne1t April is pled1ed tG Justin's fund. Those two events could bring $6,000 or more easily, St. Clair estimated. Mrs. Ogata stres5ed Tuesday that pro-. per thanb must be extended to the churches and the people who oUer help in a time or trouble, especially Dr •• E. H. Thomassen, the boy's physician. Mrs. Ogata does not speak Enalilh as "Well aa she would like, so Mrs. Kumlko Koea translated her Japanese word.I u they seemed best lo fit. "Dr. 'I'homauen has been taking,care (}r Juatin just like his own .ori," !he <1uot.ed the burdened mother, "He has really given her strength and she is very grateful." "&he is very t.ooched and overwhelm- f!d," Mrs. KOia continued, explainlna: her friend's raction to the flood of earth from penons unknown to the family. Mrs. Koga paused at that point. "It is very, very difficult to translate her emotions." she coo.Unued, ipealdaf for herself, instead of 111n. Ogata. ''I try to put myself in her place ." Good Humor Man Humor Isn't Good A Santa Ana Good Humor ice cream man is in a bad humor today after being held up Tuesday night while attempting to do a a:ood deed, Santa Ana police reported. Jerry A. Heydon. 413 S. 111ountain View, was driving his 111el.()..0ce ice creiUTl lruek (it used to be know n as Good Humor) in the 600 bloclt or East Central Street at about 7:45 p.m. Y-'hen he saw a man trying to wave him down, police Eild. "App;arently the victim thou1ht the man was into1.icated or in trouble and \\'a5 going to aid him," ofUctrl 1;peculated. When he pulled over the 11uspect told Heydon he h;ad I run and toolt "" lrom the Ice crean: man. "Th.1l's prnbably the lasl good deed he'll do for a lonf time.'' police com· menled. DAILY PILOT II •\.••' N. w,,, "'''"'""' •flll ,.u1111,~tr ti.. ..... , k•t•il """ lh•"''' A. M11r11lr.:111• Cntll M ... Offlc• 310 W•1t 111 Stt .. t M1i1:119 All1lr1111 ... 0,1111 tl•O, 'J'1' """'°""* Jl.-.-f IN<ll: HH Wnt 1•1-iloll1tw"ll ~ I••~~; nt FWfll A- fl1;11toltlf ......... : 1'fl' hl<ll ............ "~II. Y l'll Ol, wl"' '#111(1\ it t-lrit'll 11\e ,,, ........ -. It "'* 11111·· •1111 .,t#'I """· •1y M IAlll••" •11i..,. ,.,. '-ttvN l"t~. l"t-• a.cti, Clotlt "'"'' HVftl .... ••., l••fh .... '-"'"' V•lltJ, a C"' WI"' IW~ '""""' c1111i.,.. o~ c ... , •11t>1•"*"1nt t-•~• ""'""' .1 ... tt '"' .. n11 w.11 ~•(bll1 ...... _ "'---' ........... , »t W1$1 l tr ••m lt (•II Met•. T...,.._ (714') 64'1°4121 Cl-Hl-4 .61¥wlhl .. "4J016Jf ~""'· ,"', Ot ..... (11114 ''*""' .... ~.... ... -ti.tr:. ...... , ..... ""*'-' ""'* .. ,, . .rtt.......... ... .... -· .. t~ -~ ~,,.. .......... "' unr1IM' -· ~ UM _..,.. •If •I Ml'"_, ltldt ... , C.11 """.. (•1"'"'19. $•/!It(,.,.. ., o•ri.r I< II """""'tt'I IY ''"" ti.-_,,,.,, fl!!tit.r' .WW.11-. t:.• ,,.,.·:t.ly. LADY NORA COOIC OF BRITAIN AND SON, PETER, REUNITED Y1cht Skipper'• P1l1 Pull Off Surprise Chri1 tm11 MHtln9 •Mum~ Drops In . Newport Y achter Gets Surprise Lady Nora Cook, 74, lives in Mary's Wood near Cowes. the Isle or Wight yachting center in the British Isles. Mrs. Cook, mother of a Ne""·port Beach yacht skipper. usually puts up Newport's yachtsmen ir Lhey're campaigning in Bri· lain and even reaps some vegetables ouJ of her garden to whip up a good stew for them . So the yachtsmen here decided lo pay her back. And they threw in a few surprise twists as they did it. They chipped in no apiece and brought her to Newport Beach Monday night by jet. - But her son, Peter, knew nothing or the plan. He was kept in the dark on the plot un- til the surprise was sprung at noon Tues- day at the Ancient Mariner Restaruant where Cook's scores of yachting friends and his mother waited for him. As Mn. Cook sat gazing at the bay, her baclt tufned On puip<ise, the slightly built skipper 1Yaved as he noticed his friends seated for lunch. Then Lady Nora turned around. He slill didn't notice ror a few more minutes. then tlls expression changed dramatically. He stared for a !econd, squinted hard . then ran to kW: his mum. Hundreds of friends in the restaurant roared with pleasure. "We kept this plan from him for weeks," said Pete Siracusa, one of the restaurant's owners. Cook·a friends , 1everal h u n d r c d tnembers or Newport's yachling fraterni· ty. kept the idea a well-guarded secret. "f honestly didn·t know a thing about it," Orienl'5 helmsman said as he toasted his mother with t~rench champagne. Yacht broker Tom Garvey, one of the hatcher~ of the in tricate plan, described a Lady Nora as ''a wonderful woman whose little house is always home to our 1;ailors "'hen they·re in England ." "About 13 e>r 14 of us have stayed at her home at one lime or another, usually during the Transatlantic race. She always cooks up good stew and makes us welcome, so we decided to repay the favor." Garvey and his ma les developed the $20 apiece plan. even though one yachtsman offered to pay for the entire adventure . "This was a joint erfort . \Ve alt wanted to do a part." Garvey said. The reunion was an elaborate :'letup. Lady Nora arrived in a borrol"·ed 1937 Rolls Royce convertible and arrived at the restaura.nt in calm, regal style. She smiled constanUy and cheerfully greeted the scores of guests. From the reunion the p r i m Englishwoman will stay at a Lido Isle bayfront home for two weeks. Besides a few more social runcUons she'll "'alch the Rose Parade New Year's Day from the VJP's box. It is her third time off the scenic Isle or \Vight aod her first trip to America . It also is her first experience in travel- ing by air. Her only audible comme,nt '\'hen her ~on's eyes met hers was ·a sweetly in- toned, "Poor chap." Station Owi1er Suspicious; Anaheim Couple Arrested A lone attendant who feared his Costa carrying a concealed weapon, plus con- Mesa servlce station was being cased for ·spiracy to commit armed robbery, the a robbery called police early today. h I I leading to the arrest of a young Anaheim c arge on which his wife was a so he d. couple. Investigators said they received word a James L. Smethers, 22, and Janice L. suspicious car had been Into a service Smethers, 19. or 15$0 E. Ward Terract, station at Newport Boulevard and West will spend. Christmas in ja.il. pending a \Yilson Street twi~ and the occupants polygraph test for the husband and acted suspiciously. discussions with the Orange County Officer Wayne Harber was en route to District Attorney. invesligate when he received a radio Smethers wa5 booked on a charge o! 1· broadcast of a si milar i n c id en t <'lsewhere, changed route and stopped the Countian Dies 111 Canyon Wreck An 'Anaheim man was Killed Tuesd11y night and three Norco residenls se verely inj ured in a headon auto era.sh in the San- ta Ana canyon, according to California Highway Patrol officers. Pronounced dead ·on arrival at 8:$5 p.m. at M1r1.ln Luther Hospital was John Carr. 23, of 1126 Gramercy Place. Patrolmen 11id Carr wa1 westbound on the Santa Ana Canyon Road when his car CTOSStd the center divider and met a se- cond car heldon. Offictr1 uid the drivtr of the second car. Sharon Cobb, 26, and two of her passengers. Ch:arle1 Cobb, 28 and Ver· veen Bryant , 13, received major injuries. Twyn1an Wins Pact For Utility Sys ten1 Noel H. 'l'wym1n of Newport Beach, president of Twyman Engtneerlna Com- pany , announced today that h.ls firm has been awarded a conlfilti for the design and comtructk:Jn of an undtT'gf'CM'!d ullli· ty tyJttm for Loyola Unlvmity ln l..01 AngtlH. 'Ille ll'•lem wlll aupp!y 111 buildings en .t JOO«rt_i!tpus In the Univen:lty't 10. )'tit jl _ on Jl'OITam. ' Smelhers couple at f.1esa Drh·e and San- ta Ana Avenue. Detective Capt. Bob Green sairl Smethers wa s carrying a gun and two knives in his boot. Questioned throughout early morning hours. Smethers was being held at Costa f\1esa City Jail, "'hile his \\'ife ·was transferred to Orange County Jail pen· ding further investiga tion into the case Friday. Auto Equipment .Taken by Thieves Auto body repair and painting equip- 1nent worth nearly $2,000 •·as stolen from a CostA l\tesa shop ••here lhe burglar! maliciou5ly splashed the walls ""'Ith enamel the. o"·ner told police Tuesday. Robert J. F'ranco. o•-ner of R & B Body Shop. J719 Pomona Ave., discovered the J~s and dest.rucHon when he arrived to open up, but Police could flnd no clues \o the method of entry. Officer Harlan Pauley :'!laid the shop had been locked ;ind secured at closin111 time !hi!: night before and it was not determined just where the Intruders cnttttd. A cutting torch had been • to melt ~orne or the mlssinr equipment from its mounUngs, while the bura:lars rolled a huge commercial trash bin ac::rou tht street for unknown reasons. ' \ ' . . .... ~ ... • • • .,. ... ;-· ... ~--· ......... -· .. -··-· .. Draft Resisters Ba·cked · Judge Rul£s Objectors Law Unconstitutional •' SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -A Federll jud1e t.odly ru1ed unconstltuUonat a nc- tlon ol the Selective Servlct Act which prohibits draft resisters from declaring themselves conscientious objectors to the Vietnam war \Yithoul opposing all wars. U. S. Dist. Judge Stun ley A. Weigel ac- quiUed Leslie Charles Bowen, 24. who refused induction at the Oakland lnduc. tion Center June 23J 1968. Bowen's refuaal was O.sed on hit undergtanding of the Roman Catholic religion. which he Interpret~ as dif- ferentiating between just and unjust wars. Bowen said he had decided f(lr himself that the Vietnam war was unjust. "There is no question of his religiOUs motivation," Judge Wel1el'1 nifle.pqe opinion said . The objectionable section r 6J or !hf ?-f1litary Setectlv1 Service Act of 1967) provides exemption from "combatant training and 1;erv\~ in the armed force s ' shall be granted to any persan "who b~ reason of religious !raining and belief I! ton.scientiously opposed to participation in war ·in any form." President Eat~g Dinner At El Adobe in Capo? \Veigel's decision said lhis amounts to ii •·serious and unjustiUa~le. discrimina · Hon" in violation oI the due proceu por· lion of the fifth amendment. \\leigel said that the section in question generally exempts members of tradi - tionally paclfisl religions a ·such a11 Quakers and Jehovah's WitneMes and does not exempt others. such as Homan Catholics. "In denying conscientious objector status to Bowen, based upon his religious opposition to the Vietnam war but pennitth;ig it to ont whose religious o~ position is to all wars. the effect of sec· tion 6J is to breach the neutrality betl"·een stale and religion required by the mandate of the firsl amendment," \Veigel said. By PAMELA HALLAN ' ot rllt OtHy ,llei Slttt .. Rum0:rs are afoot today tn San Juan Ca pi5trano that President Nixon will be raling at the El Adobe restaurant Friday .. night. The restaurant's manager, Elias Me5a, will neither confinn nor deny the rumor but a hostess and waitress standing at the reservalion desk glance anxiously al one another when the que5tion is asked as if they share a secret. If the President and his party don't dine on Friday chances are they will be there another night during their stay at the summer White House. The hl5toric restaurant which has bttn standing as long as the mission ha,, played host to the President on several occasion!. One publicly announced visit resulted in i;pecial cuisine which now appears on the menu a5 the President's choice . It con· LA Judge Bars Further Raids On 'Calcutta!' LOS ANGF;LES (UPI) - A restraining order b.vrlng Los Angeles police from ar- resting· Cast members and other persons connected with the controversial sex satire "Oh! Calcutta!" was issued Tues· day by a federal court judge. U.S. District Judge Wiiiiam P. Gray issued the order halting the arrests until the constitulional questions involved have been ~eCided. The ruling came after hearing arguments by attorneys for the poductlon and for the city and county. Gray ruled that in view of the arrests already made and the threat of further arrests. polite should be reslrained. He sa id a constitutional problem was in- \'olved because "Oh! Calcutta !" "'as a theatrical performanCe which could ~ entitled to protection under the first amendment to the Constitution. The jurist did not rule on the quest:on or whether or not the production '\.\'as obscene because the maUer "'as not . before him. He said this •·as a ma!ter lo be passed on firs1. by state courts:. He did set Jan. 19 for • .a hearing to detennine where the case stood in state court. Fron• Paye I CURIOUS ... the conscience of the community in this <:ase ," Glavas said. "but we truly believe that "'ere entitled to do it under the lines dr<:wn by the U .5. and Calirornla su preme courts_'' He cited one letter and several phone t:alls from persons who saw the film and \VhG complained bitterly that it was obscene. A local doctor wrote a letter damning the sex epic. "!l's obvious lhat the exhibitors or these types of films are notoriously careless about the ir control or underage persons entering the theater. \Vithou t much effort we found one unescorted 17- year-old girl Jn th e theater last night ,'' G!avas added. G\a,•as charged that him makers and ('Xhi bitors "are ah\·ays trying to produce something "'hich "'ill push and test the lines set by the courts and !his is a good example of it." Gl11vas said he h:.idn'l seen the film, '·but I read the con1plete report deta ilin i;:- the scenes and I'm convinced we did lh:! nght thing :· He said he hoped the line between clean and dirty films would soon be more clearly defined by the courts. The film. sources said. ·will face some tough sledd ing ehie,vhere in the county, too. Stanton Police were reported to ht planning a raid sometime Cflrly today on a theater showing the movie in their city. Donors Respond To Hoa g Appeal Residents of Cost.a ~tesa and Newport Beach respoocled to the local Red Cross' emergency call for blood by showing u11 at Hoag Hospital in force Friday. Loca l industries as well 1s individual donors donated enough blood l<ifketp lht ~upplits within safe levels during the crlUc1J holiday period. Blood program director George Hyde said that the sucerssful blood drive will enable 111 nonn~I emer1encfea to be met and will not maltc it necessary to ca.n«I or reschedule any surgeries. sl sts ' (lf1 guacamole with tostadlto!, chicken ellchilada. chille relleno, betf ~co; grated cheddar cheese, spanish rice and frijoles with rt!ritos. "But the Preaident doesn"I usually or· der anything special,'' said Mesa. "He usually orders right off the menu. The manager said the President's visits don't create any, special problems. No special section of the restaurant is designated for hi use although one chair is marked the pesident's cbair. This is the chair he occupied during his official visit on Maich 22. Will he ~PY it again Fridy? Elias Mesa says "I don't know." If anyone does know, he isn't telling. To Erect Monument LONE PINE (UPI) -Japanese who were interned at the Manz.anar Camp near here during World War II will return this weekend to erect a memorial to those who died during their stay at tht camp. DAILY "llOT st11f ""919 "I AM CURIOUS (YELLOW)" AT REST ON POLICE OFFICE FLOOR Newport Police Seize Film Charging lt'1 Far Too Blue Pilot Logbook ~udge, Lawmen Curious; 'Yellow' Showmen Blue By THOMAS KEEVIL 01 Ille D1Ur l'Utf Sl11f I DID~'T TJilNK I'd ever get to see "f Am Curious (Yellow)." I almost did n·t and wish I hadn 't. In the first place. the short subject that preceded ii at the Balboa Theatl!:r Tutsday night was in terminable and even 1nlorc ~urious than the yiovie. Jt really wa s a ~mmercial for Colonel Sander!' .fried chicken. IT SHO\\:Eo the dazzling-white form or tht go;atetd drumstick king patting one horse, feeding another horse, betting on another horse. congratulating another horse and mugging with another horse, talking \l'ith another horse, just Standing there with a lot more horses. The second reason I almOISt didn't see "f Am Curious ~Yellow)" was that. unknown to me, my companion movlt criUcs included Judge J. E. T. "Ned" Rutter, several deputy district attorneys and some badge-loting represent- atives of the Newport Beach Police Department. THEY FOUND the film appealing to prurient inter· est! and confilcated It. T don't know if they took the Colonel Sanders film. There wa5 a third reason I almost didn't see "I Am Curioos (Yellow).'1 l tould not slay awake. This thubby girl did run around a lot with no tlothts on. So did her boy friend . A couple of limes they displayed more than casual mun1 or exprtssing affection and their celebrated athlelic prowess (In a lret, on a balcony and in a pond \ was an intriguing manifestation of cinematic imqinatlon. WJilCH !\JEANS 1 stayed awake during that part. But the rest or lhe rum •·as a drag. I fell to flnd lna typographical errors In the Engll~h subtitles. then beaan rev.'rltlng the pl ot a11 it unfolded, only in n1y version I worked In a role for Colonel Sanders. That \'trslon would really havt sent Judge J. E. T. '·Ned'' Ruller on his rar. But t ven this mental esercise fail~ to sust11in my intere st and by the film's· end t h8d nodded into a sl!:mi -sleep. I havrn·t lhe vaguest notion of WblL happe:nl!d to the chubby girl and her boyfriend. except that their forms arf: M longer being dl.splaytd in Newport Beach. California. OH, I P.flS.SED all the action. Judge Rutter et 11 "·ere boi.1ng up the film while I was making a furtive exit. hoping no one would 5et me pursulni my prurient lntereau. ~1ost unhappy m;in in town Is Max OO!man •at the restaurant acroes the 1trcel-. "Man, did we ha\1t a blast of business while It lasted,'' he said. ''You couldn ·1 beUeve the activity down hue." , I • ' I \ I Goitag 'V p to Land \Vorkrnen on the 24th floor of a new 26-!tory office tower in Manhattan gape at an artist's recreation of a World War -1 biplane as it makes ·its first and last flight Tuesday. The plane, work of artist Wu- Jiam Tarr, weighs 6,000 pounds, is 22 feet long and has a wing span of 28 feet. It \Vas placed on a facsimile <¥ a permanent landing strip on the roof of the new office tower. 'Congress Clnses Up Shop , U.S. to Quit Wheelus AB In Tripoli -' Prepares for Efuction Year_ WASHINGTON (UPI) -riot only for its legislative at- With an election year direcUy talnments but its start toward ahead, congressmen took . redirecting na_Lional priorities home for preliminary voter in· from the Vietnam war to spection today a m i x e d homefront needs. Christmas bag of suc~sses The battles ol the election and failures. · year -duJ.'.ing which all 435 House GOP Leader Gerald representativ~ _apd a third of R. Ford, perhaps in a harbin-the Senate ~us! stand before ger of Republicans' campaign the voters -·are sure to get tactic a for 1970, labeled the heated up quickly. T h e year-long session 1 "do little" Senate's fir!t order of business Congress. He said it .had done is the highly-ciw'ged. ap.. almost nothing about Presi-propriations -bill for t he derit Nilon'1 legislative pro-departmenti c!. Labor and gram. Health, Edu~ and Welfare But Sen ate Democratic (HEW). _ Leader Mike Mansfield called . Nixon has threatened to veto the sessiOft "m~ Pf'OducUve... the bill because Congress in-He~P.ve Q>ngress iood marks aeased it beyond his requests. Hijack Attempt Foiled; Man Returned to U.S. -NEW YORK (UPI) - A passenger who tried to barM'e into the cockpit of an Iceland1c Airlines plane over SCoUand, 43 Czec~ Ask Asylum STOCKHOLM (UP!) Forty-three members ol the first Czeclloslovak tourist con- tingent allowed outside the country in a month left the group Tuesday night and ask- ed for political asylum in Sweden. A spokesman for the Aliens Police sald about 10 m-0re of the Czechoslovaks -there were a total of 80 persoM ii'! the group -w .... expected lo make simll&r requests before Christmas Day. Government sources predleted asylum would be granted, for the Stockholm government h a s sheltered Czechoslovaks since t h e Soviet.led invasion of their na- tion Aug. 21, IMS. The Ctechoslovak tour was 11rranged by the state-.run tourist bureau. Aec«ding to the memben seeking asylum, It was also to be the Jut of- ficially arranged tnvel to western nations. claiming he wa~ Derense Secretary Melvin R. Laird, was returned here today and freed without charges. -"I Wllnted to go to RuMia to talk about condiUons in America," Anthony Pascanio, 23, uid ·oit his return. Pascarzio, who Jives 1n Quee~ and described himself as an actor and musician. said earlier he had· intended to radio the Soviet! about "how bad a country America was." Fearing · an attempted hi- jack, the crew of the fou r- engine turboprop, flying from New York to London, subdued Pascarzio outside the cockpit door and held him down until the craft could descend from 30,000 feet and make an emergency landing at Glasgow Tuesday night. Two Sc o t t l 1 b detectives returned to New York with Pascanio aboard a n o t h e r Icelandic plane and. after questioning by the FBI and Port of .New York Authority police, he was released. Authorities uid the United States had no jurisdiction in the incident and that officials in Scotland did not want to press charges a g a I n s t Pascanlo, who was unarmed. Some Republicans hope 'Nixon stands firm on his threat to show he means business about keeping the costs of goven1- ment down and halting in- flation. · · WASHINGTON !UPI) The United States has agreed ·to abandon Wheelus Air Base in Tr_ipoli, Libya, by June 30, !970, · and withdraw its 4,500 military and civilian person- nel. But should Nixon veto the ·bill, Democrats are sure to ac- cuse him of turning .down Announcement of the agree- lunds for such things . as men t was made in a joint cancer research, grade scj:iool Communique issued in Tripoli children and Uie b t i n d • and Washington T u e s d a y Democrats already were pie-night. turing Nixon as Scrooge, claiming he· was sacrifici!Jg Stale Department !Ources the sick and the poor while ap-said negotialions would con- proving other big money bills tinue . with lhe new rtvolu- for ·weapons ~stems and Uonary government ·M Libya planes that will c a r r y 1 . . pa:ssengtrs·three times faster on dJSposal or equipment al t'thari''sOUnd: . . •... -'. .tbe. base. ·, The fint session -0f -the 91.!il Tbe . communique followed Coogress, which ground to a the third meeting in Tripoli hal~ at 3:JO l?.m. EST, Tues-between U.S. Ambassador day, .accompll.!ihed mQre then . , most observers thought likely Joseph Palmer and. Capt. when it convefled Jan. 3 with Abdul ·Salam Jalloud, the Democrat!: in charge o n s~-ranldng officer .of the Capitol Hill and a R~publican military regime that seized about to 1ake office a.Ii pres~ power Sept. I. dent. The State Department Some political standolfs .d.id authoriUes had given their develop and for a time assurances ol cooperation in ihreatened td keep G<>ngeu in making the withdrawal order· session through the holidays. ly. Duman Bomb GI Doctors Defuse W oman SAIGON (UPI) -Surgeons at Saigoo's 3rd Field Hospital successfully removed a live ri- fle grenade round from the chest cavity of a Vietnamese woman in the second · such "human bomb" operation ln Vietnam thi.s month. The operation was perform- ed by Maj. Joee F. Morelos of Baltimore, and Maj , Willis McKee of Louisville, Ky., ur1d~r-the guidance of u_ Col. 'l11omu Wl\chl of Wading Ri ver, N. Y., who one month ago removed a similar r0un4 from the head of a Viel Cong. The surgeons declined to wear flak jackets and helmets. · "We figured they would be cumbersome,'' said Dr . McKee, "And besides, at that range ... well ." "All 'J could think about until the operation began was that in less than a week rm going lo meet my wife oo leaye. '1 related Dr. Morelos. An M79 round is about three· inch& in diameter and is fired from a grenade launcher. M/ Sgt. Charles MeCrary or Louisville, Ky ., Olle of the bomb disposal experts present at the operation, &aid It was "just ·luck" that the grenade did _llQI_ detonaie. "These types of rounds can be armed at any point from the time they leave the end of the WHpon until they have traveled a great distance," he explained. "When we ha ve one on our hands we have to assume it is armed and take the neeessiiry precautions." The patient-l"'rut. reported M good condition at the hospital, localed just outside Tan Son Nhu1 Airbase. She was eJ· peeled to be released in about three week!, doctors said. Preside n t R e lactant QUEENIE C~dit Curb Bill _ Sig ned by Nix on - ' ' WASHtllOTON (UP[) ·-S.Cretary Ronald L. Ziegler, '~ Nixon today aicQ..r· queJtloiied about prospects lor ~~~"/ wltli ~ rel~~ a i,ttiJli the Presi,dent · to use thi~ t---. ' ~ ctvtnt hlro 'the autho.rlt}', to ih-11-authority, Aid, "l assume ~~ 'i>lwltaey and mandat6r_)' lhese .C.ps. wOuJd not be lak!!' cr<dlt controla -• slep wl)lch -~ the authority 'has be .. ...,.Uy c!Qes. not _plaJ! lo beOn granled." · -·-· tab. · Prdxmlre said that, despite The legislation w&s· deSig,1ed a siear of .the. income surta"t; prifuartly to preserve the corporations 1~reased their . capl\al expenditures by $7 authority ot a fed er a I 6illion this year. He said lhl.!i SUP,ervliorY. agency t.o regulate represented an ll ·percen·t ·in-· lnte:est paid by b~ . and crease over the prtvious year. sav1~ and~ associations. ,, M 0 reover, government . 11te chief ex~tive had .no ob-surveys for 1970 indicate jecUon to this aspect of the another huge increase tn legislatJ~. ob. t stron ly capital spending of around $7 Ile l~ g . ' billion or $8 billion," he said. OAILV 'MT 3 ly Phil klterlandl however, to sections of the bdl A government survey report authorWng vo!untary a n d released Tuesday said cor· mandatory credit con~ols.. porations planned to increase These sections, be D;<ild 1n a spending for plants and equip-· ---'---------fo;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; ~tement, would, U invoked, ment in 1970 by 10 percent. take the nation a long step The eai1sumer Price Index. toward 1 directly controlled has gone up s.a percent over a economy and. . .. we can year ago \ / Counterfeit ' w.eaken the will for nee.ded "Clearly. moneta y and f .1 s c ~I ~ n d fin an c 1 a 1 fiscal policy has been a dismal d1sclpbne . 1 ·r · -· b -C The resident signed the bill ru ure .1n re~trru~tng us1ness •t the 0r1n9• ounty p , 1. borrowing w h 1-ch many f..PPLE VALLEY (UPI) A' .t -t k" BiUs Found WDULD YOU BWEYE REUBEN'S shortly. a~ter Sen. W_1l 1am economists leel 1.5 the most In· 1rpo 11. • 1n9 P 10-wl ) ch Tf'lree antifreeze c~ .cram-RESERVATIONS roxmire '-.' a1m1~nt flationary seclor ol o u r of the. coogre_ssional JOIIl economy," Proxmire said. med with more than $IOO,OOO for New Y11r's Eve P1tty7 ecopomi.c committee, released "'""tead tight money has in counterfeit currency were ~ oi ~ text ot. ~ ·let~r. he ~lered' 00 the home buyer discovered in a backyard here DON"T MISS OUT wrote to N11on urgmg him to · ' h -·" a.ign the bill and apply govern-the small b~a11, the Tuesday, s erifr1 ..... .,..o.ies · Cal 540-24~5 m.nt credit -controls over"~loc~al~ro~ve.~~,.~,,.,,~ts:__. ___ ____'.:reporled~~:__-_____ _:!~!"'!'~!"'!'!"'!'!"'!'!"'!'!"'!'~ bustne.. IP'ndlng In Ille fight qalast lnflltlon. Prnmlre called the ad· ministration's monetary ind fil!ICal policies "a dismal failµre~ in curbing capital outl.,s by big business. But N Ix o n said "these aspects ot the bill made the decision to sign it a very dif· ficult one, but the need to pre- vent chaos In our interest rate situation has ma'de my ap.. proval Imperative." White Hou s e Pres s Wife, Son Visit Hess In Hospital BERLIN--(UPI) __: Rudoll Hes,,, Adolf Hitler's fonner · deputy;· saw his wife llbd son for the first time in 23 years today when they visited him in West Berlin's British Miiltary Hospital ·• Ilse Hess, 69, and son Wolf Ruediger Hess, 32, arrived at the hospital shortly alier 2:30 p.m. for the visit. · Hess, 75 .. was taken to the . hospllal Nov. 2.f from nearby Spandau War Crtmes Prison {or . tA!etment of a ·Stomach 'ulcer. Hf: was sentenced to 1pend hi• life in prtwn by judges al the Nuemberg War Crimes TribwlaL A British milltar)' olficlal aaid· Ule wife and son were 1lvtn the Spandau prisOn regulations to read before they were allowed to see Heu. The o«iclal said tws> guards were present ~ Hess' hospi~ room as the trJO m·et. He said they were not allowed to kiss, shake hands or otherwise touch the beetl~wed Hess for fear that they woold ·pas.$ poison to him. Long Weds Secretary. W ASH!NGTON (UPI) Sen. -11 8 , Loog,-(0-La.), divorced by his first wife earlier this year, Tuesday married the blonde acretary of a fellow senator. The bride is tht former Carolyn Bason, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Sam M: Bason of Yanceyville, N.C. Blonde and fortyish, the new Mrs. Long was a secrelary lo Sen. Sam J. Ervin, (D-N.C.) )l'llWPOa'l' ClllfTll'll Pecillc Coi1t HJghWI)' b1tween Jembo,.. ind M1cA.thur. frel\v1y mlnut•s •W•l'· .. ... stereo1oa~,,, the soundsof the harbor Jd.S~~youve never hearditsogood ! I F •. • ... ~ ---· __ .. _.,. ____ _ • . ~ -. ' . • DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE Repeating the· Tidings "F•ar not: for, behold, I bring you good Udings ol ireat joy, which shall be to all people." The season ol repeating tllose tidings brought by the angel in the second chapter of St. Luke is here again. bringing a variety of Christmas observances in community churches. · Although we see little In a troubled world to gfln- eratf! erea{ joy -beyond the mes-sage delivered nearly, 2,000 ye~rs ago -the celebrations serve as a reminder to us . Not only regularly devout Y.'Orlhipers need to re- member what happened in Bethlehem th-at wlndy night, but those of little or even no real faith; the man sitting in a bar \\'&tching television tonight; the scientist wbo helped put men on the moon and-questions what mor- tals cannot prove \vith visible facts; the busy eop on his beat. the frazzled housewife. There's a Christmas program for each of them near their homes in Costa Mesa tonighl It could be a warming and worthwhile invesbnent of a few moments. A Novel Concept IC they don't want 'lo hear the. people who have found ~leaven, let them ·listen to those who have been to J..fe\L This is one angle in the philosophy of a unique ne\v Costa Mesa Police Dtpartment approach to snti·nar· colics education for the young. Patterned on ·the rock festival format. a day-long event will feature a variety of bands and speakers. including 1vell-kno\vn personal· ities. Young people themselves have been drawn into the planning by Lt. Austin "Smjtty .. Smith, community re- lations officer. as a method of turning on interest among those who might not otherwise attend. Some of them have found the key to getting off drug use through faitlj In God. Some have fOUnd what Utey can only hope now will be the key, through voluntary or involuntary commit- men\ lo calilornla'a narcotics rehabiUlaUon cen\eT. It is not a prison. But 1t has four walls. "If they don't care for religion, they can come and hear the guys from Chino,'' explains Lt. Smith. Tentatively scheduled for February, the anti·narcot· lcs production is a novel concept In reaching the com· munlty's young, through a means of communication. Programs that have a narrow. no-no-on.narcotics at· mosphere simply defeat their intended purpose. The people who need most to attend won 't go. You get about as much constructive ellect when a narcotics officer tells a grdup of Rotarians over lunch that heroin kiJJs its users. ·'The answer is to just try to reach the kids and communicate," says Lf. Smith, adding a very pertinent point -that the only thing that will sell the new al>" proach is results. So le\ the kids who c~cize that vague, but pow· erlul entity, the community establishment, respond to ils efforts to use some of that criticism constructiveJy. Smitty, at least, is trying. Uprooting Students Families on the west side of Upper Newport Bay which have had school attendance boundaries shift from under them a couple of times already may be spared another such uprooting. A couple of Newport·Mesa school board members have said they think these families have borne 'loo tnuch change. Let students from some other area - perhaps Balboa Island -be the ones bounced this time from one school to another. if that has to be. they say. But it doesn't have to be. If vO'tcrs approve the in· crease from five to seven percent for the school bond interest rate Feb. 10 there will be funds to expand Cor- ona de! Mar High School. Then no student will have to start one year at Cor- ona del Mar High and finish up the next three years at Newport Harbor High. (Cl ~ ........ ,• . I .,.u, The Man the U.S. Needs Dear Gloomy Gus: Revolving Door of Crinae, Prison, More Crittae To I~ead It -One (){ the reasons I dislike most polilical writing -and do very little of it myself -Is that It forces one to pretend to be ob)ective. But hardly anyone can be truly objtct.ive about politics. Our polltical orientation is determined by a dozen different factors over which we have little conscious control -our background and environment, our educa· tion, our income-level, and our tem- perament. Then we rationaliie lhest: fac· tors In our "political philosophy." l am more interested in what men are like. rather than what they profeas. or what party they . belong to. If Nixon strikes me as a plastic man {as he dbres), and Humphrey as a rubber man (as he does), I am not going to support either man, regardless of what he says. BUT IF I WERE engaged in writing about politics, or arguing the matter, I would have to marshal objective facts about programs and policies. and deal in vague abstractions like "liberty" and · "peace." ft1y arguments would follow from my prejudices, and be tailored to fit. ~1ost people a r e stuck with their preconceptions. and vote for a man they may not like, simply because he promis· es to carry out what seems lo serve their self·interest. But a plastic man , or a rub· ber man, cannot do much of anything lhat is worth\\'ttilc . THESE PRECO~CEPTIONS are \\'hat perpetually, betray us in choosing l he When the Russians sent up their fir:;:t Sputnik years ago, tlle criUcs pounded on the schools, blamlng them for .. falling to educate stu- dt:nts for the Space Age." But when Americans were lhe first tc> \\'alk on the tnoon, few voices were heard in praise of what and how we teach. -R L. F. 'hll ......... Rfllim ,.....,.... ........ --"" .......... ___ ..... ~ "' _ ........... , .... Oeltr , ..... ''lesser evil" -and are what keep the political machines confidently picklnc ae-- cond -and third·rate men -for the par· ty bosses know that we are so much the victims of our rationalizing that we would rather elect a baboon who seemed to agree with us than an angel who didn't. I happen to think the way a man looks and smells and expresses himself in speecli and gesture and general com· portment is a good deal mo re important than the political statement.! he exudes, which have been written by somebody else to make the best impression on the largest segment of the elect.orate. BUT THIS AD HOC approach to can- didates is condemned by all the political doctrinairts, who delude themselves that a devious or flatulent man will make a satisfactory president because he utters campaign pl~titudes that flatter their prejudices. r 11ie man we need to lead us is not necessarily the one who tells us what we like to hear. but what we must be made to hear ; who makes us uncomfortable with ourselves. and forces us to re-ex· amine our smug and easy preconceptions. But that is the last man any party would nominate. and the strongest argument of the political dropouts . 'Adulterers Anonymous' We an have our little crusades to make this a better world. And tOday v.·e pay tribute to a courageous little band of at· tractive single girlJ who are out crusading for just such a cause : Adultery. Tn San Franciseo. \vhere such things happen. these dedicated young ladies hav~ been parading through the financi11l di.strict promoting their organb.ation. ''Adulterers Anonymous." along w11h a new book. "Successful Adultery ror the Happily ~tarried f\1an." . "As Jong as a "'ife gets her share <'f love," says the group leader . a beautUul brunette named Cecil,v Katz. '"1~1hy ~hould she begrudge h<>r husband an extra measure of happiness ?·' Y.'llY ll\'DEED? Of rourse, like <111 logical crusades 3imed Ill disentangling our Puritan hangups. this one face! ob.'itecles. For one thing, a man needs an understanding wUe. Take the case of my friend, Kissinger, who Is blessed with a wife ol incredible tolerance and understanding. "Guess v.'h:it. dear." he ~id nn ar· ri,·ing home lhal ev nin~. I'm thinking o( laking up a nev.• hobby:• "Tha rs nice. denr:· she said. "\\'hal!'' .. W,11. \OU kno\\· hO\r much v.e lo\·e eac:h othe·r:· he said. taking her in hi$ ~rms. "And you knO\\' the pl<>asure v.·e find in -well -)'OU know. No\v I ,,·as thinking lhat bttau!le we klve each other, you wouldnl btgrudgc me an ('Xtril mulW't ot hlpplneu .•. " "'rVE GOT A ROUT In the oven, dur, and Ille cblJdren ...,,, In =;"4-.. • "No, no. The~ I'm of Ill· lnt up Is -..,.... ' "'lbat ----... -·· Ibo aid toloranlly. "Bot,.. to... wllat 1 t1'eat~ o( colhuslamu you are. Look /, . ·-;; 'n>".ri~--:-r-r " ! ; > . •' ' An Hop~ ' l j at all those flies you bought and ne\'er tied." "Oh, 1 lhink l 'd slick with this one. That is. if you didn't mind.'' ··~t lnd?'' Mrs. Kissinger was sh~ked. ''But the very essence of loving i~ lhe desire to see your loved one happy. A')d 1f .adultery would make you happy,1it w(lldd make me happy, too." "Are you sure you've thought this thing through~·· ~sked Kissinger with a fro\\'n. "BUT IT'S SO LOGICAL. dear," :.;he said v.'ith great understanding as she disengaged herself from his arms to check the calendar with obvious en· thualasm. "Let's !et, I think we're free nut 'nlanday night." "We?" be asked suspiciously. "Jl'1 IO nice to have a hobby \\'C can pursue togelhe.r," she sakt happily. "Do you remember the name or that fe llow· v.'e mtt at the Grommets, the 01'1C \\'ith tho.~ dreamy eyes. "'ho .. , " .. You Ml nn1ch !'IS look at another m1111," lhundt:rcd l\i.ssingcr, "11nd rll bi.::ak t \'try bone In your body?" Al lhi1. ~trs. Kissinger dis.soh·ed Into lear5. "Oti, I ):nev.· ii," she sobbed, •·you don"t lore me any more." TIIE SPAT 11.AS since been palctied up. Klss.infer has dedded to take up bowling ins\Nd. He llill appr«lates lhe l>Jic ol the JtllWlcallon for adulttl')'. And he ad· mltM the -1hlnftl ol fOWll Mill Kati' =-. "Bat •""1 u ....., to dJJen11111un1 OW' P&dtaft ~ at my a1e. •• he a:t• , wtth I ...,,, "lt'1 I hetJ of I light talitr lo Ji"'e with them instead ." Correctional System Is a Disgrace To the Editor : Colwnnist Sydney J. Harris comes right to the point in d!Scussing the ominous rise in crime and .. lhe revolving door of crime, prison and more crime,·· Conrinement in unnatural surroundings cannot cure or teach criminals how to live according to society's rules, so why not teach them how to behave in a natural atmosphere? Why not pu t them all In an isolated community where they can't ~ discriminated against because they'll all be tarred with the same brush. juat as were the earlier settlers in Australia and Georgia ? POSSIBLY WE could find a ghost town. or an island where they would not have access to weapons and could learn a useful vocation. There ~'ould be a few non-criminals \\•ho would help them tn establish laws and to administer them. Many of the criminals "'ill prefer to stay there. That's fine because they can help the new members rehabilitate. Those whose conduct warrants i t would be allowed to return to the "other" world. 11>ere would be expert medical and psychiatric care which is woefull y lacking in jails, according to the superintendent of the New York prison system. AJ Mr. Harris say!, the correclional 1ystem is a disgrace, and few care enough to correct the correctional system. BERNARD BARTON Plaul119 for /IJ011e11 To the Editor : In answer to Alice Brownfie ld (Mailbox. Dec. 191. "'e are nol sacriricing qualltf for quantity. \\·e are sacrificing qusllty for money. As long as there is any open land in Orange County. and as long as no one slops them. the large developers v.•ill continue to alter this land for commercial use. They are playing the game for money. When the question comes up whether let keep a section of land like it is, or tG bulld factories or aparlmenls on it. the developers reason : "If we leave it like it is. we can·t make any money on it, so let's build !" TAKE SANTA BARBARA'S offshore nil situation. A huge oil spill last year. "''aler polluted and animals killed . but the drill · ln,i continued. Now we have another oil spill . I~ this cont11minalfon of land and st:n In continue? Will \\'C keep sarrificing beautv ancL wildlife for dollars., \\'hat c11n we n's ~--By Ge orge --.., ~ar George : I'm a lon<>so mc blonde divorc<'.! "'ho really digs your sense of humor, Georgie, and I wonder if l might have a persooal consultation, If you know what I me.an~ LONESOME AND LOVING Dear LAND L' That wasn't exacUy the kind or problem t had in mind, iny v.•lfc siid tell you. De~r Georg<': HO\Y f11r South do polar btars :iA~Wf.L 8. Otar Samuel : NO\\'. \vhaterer you do, Sam, ~on 't panic .. Just look hint In the eye. Deir Ceorgc· Wh,y are the d1y1 shorter In wlnttr? And k>nger In summer? WONDERING O.ar Wondtrlllf : Thi! Is duo to the lact that hut expands and told contr.Ctl. (How'• th11t. Flnnln?) \ l\lailbox Letters frotn readers ore welcome, Normally writeT1 should convey their messages in 300 WOTd1 or leis. The Tight to condense letter1 to fit space ur eliminate libel is reserved. All let- ters must include signature and mail- ing address, but 11.ame1 may be with· held on Teq~s t if sufficient Ttoson is appare nt. Poetry will 11ot be pub· lished. citizens do to prevent man's greed fro1n polluting our city, state and coun try? STEVEN C. LAUBLY Ove1·populatlo11 To the Ed itor : I am a sophomore at UC Irvine and have just completed a biology course en· titled .. Population -The Vital Revolu· ti on." We have studied the worldwide problems of famine. pollution, and disease and the politics involved in trying to solve the problems. We have asked \\'hat could be done and come up with very few satisfactory answers. The first thing that must be done is to inform the general public and that is the reason tor this letter. I lfAVE BEC0:\1E a\varc or <in in1- pcnding crisis caused by overpopu lati on and human destruction of the en· \'ironment and 1 would like lo see the pr~ blen1 related and discussed in nationwide n<>ws 111edia so that mo1·e people could kno\v the !acts and do :something about them . The U.S. \\'ill be the last country to suf- fer severe results but lve v.·i\l surely fee.I ttie reverberations soon. Legislation must start immediately with programs of sex education for better birth control ,and to legalize abortion, etc. JANIS TAYLOR Co•••111u•1i1•s' Goals To the Editor: Just read Tom Barley's artlele, .. r.tusi· cians Sound Sour Note With Viet Peli· lion". The last two paragraphs of the article are. "We feel that there is no area of American life so sacred that protests against the United States' participation in the Vietnam war are in bad taste or in· appropriate. "Hold that note, ladies and gentlemen. You're playing my kind of music." Mr. Barley and l don't seem lo enjoy the same kind o( music. THE COMl\1UN ISTS are trying lo lake ove r South Vietnam, then all of Southeast Asia and eventually the whole world. They like nothing better than to hear that the people of the United States are pro- lesting our involvement in that war. They feel that those protests 1,1·ill hasten the withdrawal of the U.S. from Asia and leave it an easy prey to their takeover. Personally I would rather die resisting than to live under a Communist die· tatorship. And that is their avowed goal. SO IT IS A question of where to stop · their takeover o( the entire populated area of the world. In Southeast Asia or should we wait unUI they start marching up the street where Mr. Barley resides? Ifs lime to let the voices of that so. called "silent nlajority" be heard. TOM RHODES Orga11l:ed Crl111 e To the Editor: \\'hat are 've going to do about organiz· ed cri1ne:' This question has stumped the experts since the days of the rum n1nners and the experts are still groping around in the dark for an answer. Perhaps some light can be shed upon the problem if 1,1•e examine what keeps organized crime in business. Organized crime Is just that, It is a business that is Involved in the field of services. They furnish services that the customer is not only v.'illing to pay for Police and the Panthers Black Panthers say that police across the nat ion have killed 28 of their mem· b('rs and jailed many more. One sympa· lhetlc account states thal "20 have b<>cn exiled from the United States; 93 are currently in jail: <ind at least 'l1 others ~re u n de r indictment for various charges." One of several groups looking into pollce harassment of Black Panthers is an ad hoc committee of U.S. congress· men that will meet in Chicago. Headed by Rer.. Charles C. Diggs, Jr. {0.Mich.), the al ·Negro group includes Augustus F. Ha\\'kins CD-Calif.), John Conyers fD- l'i11ch.), Shirley Chisolm (0.N.Y.), WIJ.. liam i..; Clay (D-Mo.). and Louis Stokes (0-0hlo). THE BLACK PANTltERS \\'ere formed in 1966 after a series of confllc:::t.s between Negro youth and the poUee or Oakland. Calif. 'they beg11n to rccei\'e national atten!lon after one of lh('_ir leader~. Jlu ry P. Newton. ~·a~ chnrged \\•ith murd('rJng Rn Oakland pollecman. Once lhe Pan· lhc!'i' minister of defense, Nev.·ton is OO\\' in jail. Eldridge Clca\·er, aulhor of Soul On Tee. disappeared 011 Nov. 17. 1968. when hit parol e on a 13·y<'ar assault senttncc. was revoked afler a gun baule. He was mosl recently reported in Algiers with aeveral othu Blaek Panther leaders. seeking papen to Jet him return to the Uoll<d States. THE U.S. DEPARtlllENT ol JU!lleil uld on Dec. ti lhat Ila civil rlghl! dlvl· slon would make an tnvestl11Uon fnl1> the shooting o( two Black Panther ' Editoria l Research members by Chicago police on Dec. 4. They were the charismatic leader of the Illinois BP party, Fred Hampton, and a leader from Peoria, l\1ark Clark. Meanwhile, formrr Supreme C o 11' r t Justice Arthur J . Goldberg and Roy Wil):im, executive director of the Nation- al Association for the Advancemen~ ot Colored People. are launching a priv1te: lnvestigaUon into violent incidents be- tween Black Panthers and police across the country. Sen. Charles II. Percy (R- 111.\ has suggested that the U.S. Civil Rights Commission :should invc!l ligatc the Chicago killings. "There's a strong f<'Cl· ing that there must h~ve been some kind of plot Involved," he declared. INDEED, AN UNEASY fetllng is abro;id !hat the n111ion's police may be conducting a planned or ~pont&MOus war against the Black Panthers. FBI Dirtctor J . Edgar Hoover told 11 Houst Appropriitlons subcommltlee last April 17 that lhe "revolutionary stand" tlktn by Ille bleck naUonallst groupo "h8' made It neetS$1ry for the FBI to lntensif,y 111 lntelllgence operatloM In lhLI field through Ille penetration of thele groups with Jnformants and aources In oriitr to keep aware of their plans and objec- li,•es." but will knowingly break the law tG utilize . These include gambling, drugs. proslilution, loan shar):ing, etc. Even though the appearance of such words in print may shock many, there are in- dividuals who literally Jive so as to in· dulge themselves in one or more of these activities. These individuals that live to indulge themselves are keeping. organized crime in business. TIIERE SEEM to be twG logical methods of combating organlz.ed crime. Those lhat indulge themselves in the services could be. punished to such an ex· te nt that they \vould no longer buy such services. Society could provide some of the services thaL are now being provided : by organized crim<'. The punishing of individuals for buying services from organized crime has never bttn successful. Nor has any kind of crime been eliminated during all of recorded history by punishing the crimin"al. Those who believe that thi.!1 is the only solution to the problem of organized crime are really impeding any progress toward a solution. When society finall ,v decides that they have had enough. then and only then wil' they eliminate organized crime by providing organized crime's services. HARRY B. McDONALD JR. Agulns t. t/1e If.IV. To the Editor: A lol of people arc \\'Ondering what the United Nollo11s is doing here. The U.N. appears to ha ve :something good going for ii, but is it good for us? The U.N. gl\'es UNICEF money to foreign countries \\'ilhout the slight.est de· mand for records showing what was done V.'ith the mone.y. Among the recipients of UNICEF are the shei ks of Araby, the Dons of Lat.in America. and many a little "k ing" of a hungry bunch of vertebrates 'also members of the U.N. with one vote, don't you forget) who, after getting theirs, find little money left for lhe poor children. UNICEF IS A shady outfit, and I quote Stanton Evans' column in the tn .. dlanapolis News for Jan. 26. 1962: "When the U.N. was out of money for its Congo aggression, it borrowed $10 million, earmarked for UNICEF. from the U.S. government. This '"as UNICEF money - handed over with UNICEF's express con- sent ln short , UNICEF money was used to subsidize the Kalanga "aggression" in \vhlch. a:s we all know, civilia ns were kill· ed. many of them being children whom the UNICEF apparently forgot about dur· ing that little fraca s. The United Nations is a thorn in tilt side of every American, be he patriotle or revolutionary -there is no difference -Americans are being dul)ed: by the United Nalions, and the soonet we get rid or the parasites, the better off we will be. S. G. UNDINE --~-- Wed ncsdoy, Dec. 24, 19-0D Tiie cdftorfo! page of lhc Polly r ilot sccJ.·1 to i11/orm nnd stim· ufots rc.oders bu presenting Lhf! ·newspaper's oph1fo11! and corn· mcntary on topics of it1fc:re1t 011d sfg11i/ico11ce. b11 providing a fo~m /or the upr11.rion of our rtadtrt, opfrUon.t, and bf presntfng tht dlt11r1e tMtOo poj~ll o/ ln/ormcd obs.,,,.,. and IJJOM"""n °" lopkl Of I/le dou. Robert N. Weed, Publisher . I' By Phil lntorlandl • 1'Don't Tell Me -Let Me Gue ss'' Laguna Student Launches Attack on Athletics By FRED SCHOEMEHL 01 lllt Oall'f PllDI $1•1f I S'!,IJDENT MARK SIZELOVE has started to lead an attack on the Laguna Beach High School physical education program, claiming it does not meet the objectives set up by the administration and is putting extracuITicular athletics above the regular program. "The objective or the program," ac· cording to Gary Norton, division ad· ministraior for the PE department, "is to have a total program over the four-year period. W.e want to give some flexibility to the program and insure that those athletes who are out for three sports a year, say baseball, football , and basket· ball, can still receive education in sports such as badminton and swimming. Many or our athletes have never been in the pool." "Fonnerly in the classes there were kids of all grade levels doing the same things for all four yea;s. No'(I .We have the ninth and tenth graderf.Jn1'oi\e tinit. with the lltD and 12th gradfi-s.in another. The stress in the ~ two years will be the learning or b~sic skills; in the later years, developinj tl:tose skills and irr troducing things such as golf, archery and soccer." · · TO ACCOMMODATE those freshma n and sophomores who are out fo? athletics into the regular PE program, the ad- ministration adopted a plan which re- quires any ninth or tenth grader who is out ror athletics to take a regular physical education class during the day. Jn this manner, it is hoped that those students will still benefit from athletics and have a chance at the varied sports the PE course includes this year. Sizelove, along with many other students, has leveled criticism at the "double period" PE plan, claiming that iC a student is out for a sport , that is the sport he is interested in and not regular PE activities. Therefore. if he wants to specialize in just one sport, that is his right. They also argue that the additiona l period of physical education per day could be better spent pursuing a more academic longing. . The adminislralive reasoning, ac- cording to Norton, is that to have a well· balanced program of both athletics and physical education, the school needs a program to give both. "It is our hope that i£. we have a strong PE department, we w1~l get a strong alhletic depa rtment ," said Norton. ANOTHER CRITICISM Sizelove has leveled on the PE de partment is that many coaches are using the PE classes as recruitml':nt grounds for the athletic department. "To my knowledge, only two of the coaches, both from the football department, have roached sports other than their own. In other words. the coaches are teaching their particular Sp<_>rts in U1e PE class just so they can bwld manpower on their athletic teams " said Sizelove. ' Instances have been reported where coaches have not given the choice to a student in whether or not he wants to come out for a sport, rather, an ulti· matum. Darrell McKibban, director of athletics said. "that's a bad thing to do. If a kid d?fsn't.'!ant to rome for a sport, lhafs his dec1s1on, Some coaches will be great ego-boosters to encour age a kid to rome out and then knock him doll'n the first day of practice." J\fcKIBBAN ALSO said that b<o ing forceful to get a studl':nt out for a sport can lead to a poor team. "Sometimes a kid has great skill, but as caring for the team or winni~g game -oolhing. People who dOi about the sport even though g at it, are more of ~ detriment than hl':lp." La guna Teen Corner contest~t in a way, another form of recruitment above the physical education prograi!l. Sizelove added, "The time has rome to- day for the community and ad· ministration to evaluate the true worth of physical education at Laguna Beach High .School." LOOKING AT POSSIBLE changes. Gary Norton has given the green light to a proposal by varsity football coach Hal Akins, to include a seventh period PE class which would fit the administration policy of varied sports and then rontlnue after school with athletics. With such a class, the need for an ad- ditional period of PE for the ninth and tenth grade students would be eliminated through the combining of the two classes. THE ADl\11NIST RATION hopes to make 12th grade physical .education and elective program ·where students rould pick the activities tht:y want, similar to the programs at many colleges. The en· tire district is working on establishing a total PE program so that athletics could begin at the junior high level, so tha t by the time a boy gets to high school, he would have some experience in sports and competition. California legislators are considering a bill which wou ld make physical education voluntary. As to how it would be accepted at Laguna High, if passed. Norton said, "I think it's a sad bill. This state has been honored for its fine PE programs. To destroy it now, would be a bad thing." Bad or not, it seems the physical education department is due for some changes. It also looks like Mark Sizelove and some of the coaches may take the in· itiative to make them . Parks Sought; Funds Lacking Santa Ana Clty Manager Carl Thorn- ton said Tuesday his office plans to start acquisition of three proposed park sites, in spite of the fact that fedt:ral funds have not yet been granted to • the project. Thornton said two of the three parks have received tentative OK from the Deparbnent of Housing and Urban De- velopment (HUD). One is located near Raitt and camille streets and covers 10 acres and the other is located near 7th and Jackson streets and is about fjye and one half acres. The third park site is on Edna on the west side of the Santa Ana River, the city manager said. "We arc asking $834.- 000 from the federal government which will be matched by a Uke amount from tht' C'lty for the development of these parks." Leather Artist Loses Her Hides .. With three accidents In recen t weeks 'fl?tably one student hit by a discus: Festival of Arts exhibitor Anne Chast, Sizelove questions ll'hether discus, pole known 1o Lagunans as an "artist in vault, or any other activily whi ch rt· leather," has reported the loss of four quires a degree of finesse ls suitable for bundles of leather hidel'i, valued at $300, the regular PE program. from her workshop at 1427 S. Coast "THE HUNTINGTON BEACH School Hi~:lbed as "prime sbtepskln," the District hasJoun<f the disrus dangerous hides, 48 in all, were colored white, tnough to elhioate it from all sports ac-black, pink and light blue, the artist told th:ities," said Sizelovt. "And I hope we police. can db the same here." The bundles apparently were pulled He argues that these skills 111ch as from a shelf by a burglar who rtached di scus are being Introduced so that in through a small window some time coaches can find students who are between i\30 Jtm. Monday and 10 a.m. car>able of performing them at athletic ~• Wednesday, police said. . -----------------. - Down tlae Mi~sion Trail This Ad Didn't Bring Results MISSION VIEJO -If ~ has the Chriatmas spirit It's Mr. and Mrs. Frank DeGrood ::if Mission Viejo. Believing in "peace and good will toward men" they placed the followina classified ad in a newspaper: "Will the person that smashed the door of my •. car (Toyota) while parked in Safeway Center please call me at 8J0.:0483 within five days." No one called.' e Snow Trip Slated MISSION VIEJO -Teen·age re~idents of ~fission Viejo are invited to go on a snow trlp Tut?.$day. Sign up at the Recreation Center for the all day excursion which begins at 9 a.m. 'vhen the bus pulls out. Bring a sack lunch and be prepared for a giant snowball fight if there's snow. The fee is $2 for members and registered guests. CHRISTMAS WINK Robert Joh1t Schmid, voung Lake F?re~t resi~nt, seems to be taking h~s Jirs( Christmas in stride. Held by hts mon1, the young ma1t arrived i1' O~tob~r without help of a physician, Hzs birth was a planned horne deliv. ery for Mr. and 1\-frs. Everett Schmid, t~e seccrnd for them but probably the first for Lake Forest. e Lights Spark Fuss SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO -Tho bright glow of San Juan Capistrano's first municipal Christmas decorations is already beginning to fade . Councilman Tony Olivares reported ~1onday that he had heard several com· pla_ints about the plastic light filled globes \\'b1ch are strung along Camino Ca pistrano. The complaints were from some merchants who had agreed to allow the Chamber of Commerce to put up the decorations but hadn't bargained for the holes drilled in their buildings to hold lag screws to keep the globes in place. The City Council agreed that although · they had rontributed funds for the purchase of the decorations, the city was in no way connected with the installation. '"Whtlever put them up could have at least stuffed chewing gum in the holes," joked htayor Ed Chermak. 0 Bu11k l'ule Wh111e 1• CAPISTRANO BEACH -The Security Pacific National Bank in Capistrano Beach Plaza is the grand prize winner for overall decorations in the business division of the annuaJ Christmas lighting contest. Three additlona1 businesses selected for awards by the judges were Salms Dress shop and Kent's Dry Cleaners in the Plaia and Village Hair Fashions on Doheny Paik Road . Awards will be presented at a Jan. 14 banquet. Swells Preve nt Damage Assess Ocean swells remained too heavy Tues· day to permit divers to make a full asses11ment of surf damage to the San C.1emente pier, but the facility has been reopened to pedestrian traffic sinly. The pier was dosed Friday when heavy surf knockl!d oot two pHlngs:, 11everal stringers and some cross braces. Chier Llleauard Richard Hazard said TueAday that initial reports of more sevtre damage were erroneous. "We've only lost two pilings " said Hazard, "but a third one was hard' hit. We'haven't tent dlvm down yet because they woukln't be able to &te much anyway. As Koon as the swells subside, the divers wl~}o down. s DAILY PILOT :J Viejo Citi%e1is Atvarded for Service f\.1ission Viejo's leading citizens, selected after bal· ]~ting of all residents, receive the community's first Emvee Awards for outstanding service. Win· ners have been active in community activities of all types, from parent-teacher organizations to 1he s"'im team . They are (left to right), Jim Toepfer, Jeanne McGowen, Kerry Beichtel, Ladonna Ruk· stalis and Vince Esposito, with Harvey Stern m ak· ing the presentations. Not pictur~ is a sixth win- ner, Helga Ricker. Laguna Banl{er Switched To Leisure World Office Albert Eccles, Jr., civic leader and manager of United California Bank's Laguna Beach branch, is being transfer· red to the Leisure World UCB branch.· Eccles ls president of the boards of directors of both Boys' Club of Laguna Beach and Laguna Beach Community Chest. He is also a direclor of the chamber and Lquna Beach Rotary Club. RecenUy re-elected to a second tenn as Boys' Club president, Eceles wlll remain with the post Urough cmnpleUon of the new facility and a smooth year of opera- tion. A resident of Newport Beach, Eccles and his wife Faye have three boys and two girls ranging In ages from seven years to 17. He will be assistant branch manager and assistant vice president ot the Leisure World branch. Joe Lewshenia has become vice presi- dent and manager of the Laguna branch. A resident of Orange, Lewshenla has been managing the UCB South Anaheim branch for 6~~ years. He was manager of a Los Angeles branch for 21h years and has been with UCB since 1952. He and wife, Vickie have four children, three boys and a girl, ranging in age from two years to 22 years. DAILY PILOT ll•H ....... 'Happe 11i t19' Happiness The HOLIDAY HAPPENING e<>-sponsored by the DAILY PILOT and Harbor Shopping Center Merchants Association "happened" and a look •l'the la ces of Brent Carlson, 7 (left) and Mark Kuehn 11, proves it was happy occasion. Brent, son of ~Ir. and Mrs_ Don Carl· son of 1381 Galway, Costa Mesa, and Mark, son of Mr. and Mrs. Greg · Kuehry,, 314 Villanovo , Costa Mesa, each won a Taco Mioi-Blke. Rose. • anne wallace of 10121 Pua Drive, Huntington Beach, won the II-foot· tall "•luffed" Christmas stocking given by the DAILY PILOT, but couldn 't be there (or the picture. I Arcli Beach Prob-Wms Tour Subject Laguna Beach planning commissioners were given a guided tour, by map, of Arch Beach Heights assessment di.strict SS.I Monday night. Purpose, said City Planner Al Autry, was "so that you may be aware of pro- blems than can come up." The hilltop area, he explained, with Its 25 by 100.loot lots, subdivided in 1911, has been the subject of constant variance a~ plicaUons because of Its narrow bulldin& 5ites • A "deluge" of additional probleml can be expected, he aald, as some loll are pared down and some eliminated ~the process II Installing ~ uWll1 Ind drainage improvements. In 'lrder to acquJre necessary rlght-of- Way fU!d to maintain street gradea, 1ht city 'will ·have to purchase some Jota outright. QI.hers, deemed unlikely to benefit Crom the improvements, will be · given a "nil asseesment" when bills for the improvements go out. Extension of Balboa and several other street.s will require the building of cut slopes: and fill slopes to maintain grade. Some streets will have to d~ when they reach steep arroyos, the planners were told, and this will require ac- quislUon of property for tum-aroundJ. 8 From Laguna Named to State Realtors Groups Eight members of the Laguna Beach Board of Realtors have been appointed to statewide committees of the 00,000. member CaWornia Real Estate A.ssocia~ tion, board president June Englund announced this week. The Realtors Were appointed as repre- .!lentatives of the 32nd Dlstrld of CREA, which encompasses realty boards of Huntington Beach-Fountain Valley, New~ port Harbor-Costa Mesa, San Clemente· Capistrano Valley and Laguna Beach. Lagunans and the rommlttees ori which they will serve ire: Georgia Hill, prop- erty rnanagement; Joe Hom, ethJcs and professional standards; Lloyd Milne , public relations; Madeleine Milne, resort and recreation ; Martha Ray, polltical affairs; Louise Turner, education; Rob- ert Turner, make America better; and Donald Ward, broker-salesman relations. White House West Prompts City Aid Request "Extraordinary demands" placed nn the city or San Clemente by the preeence af the Western While House ha v e prompted a bid for federal funds to fi· nance expansion of the ·pollce forct~ The city council has approved an ap-o plication for $264,9$1 1n federal law en-- forct:ment as.nstance fUnds to help • three-year project to bnprove the stcurl· ty of the Western White House and the President wbe1'I he ts in San Clemtt'ltt. To complete the project the city wOllld contribute $1721899 and the state and county $99,713. Funds would be ustd to train and <quip addltiollal police and to lr'"ll'OVe Jaw enforcement facllltiea W ltehnlques. '•ile city cooncU. -Informed by city ma11a,iter Ktt1ntth Carr that m<ft than $20,000 alrtady has been 1pe11I on utra police com blcUTT<d by Pnoidenllal visit&. The,. included overllme, ed. dltlonal iquipment and oxpanalon al ...,.. muoicatlons facilWes. ' I , i ' 1 I I -' . • .. ' 1· " \ . ' . :· -. ' i· I ' ' -. I • ' '' 1 • I I I •• • -. I_~ • ' ' . -.. ' • . ·, • , • .. · ., I ' • I 5 4 ''"'5li&J t ( DAii. Y PltOT l~--~-........ PNll-and Mrs. -NI"°" and their daughter Trlcl• will have - mie li~er, widow of the for-- mer president, as guest at a White House turkey dinner Chrisl!nas day. Alter the mta1 the Nixons ~ill telephone some friends to wish them a merry holiday. Nixon's daughter Julie and her husband o .. vicl, Mrs. Eisenhower's grandson. a~ speeding the holiday with his parents, Amb.ss11dor 11nd Mrs. John E INnhower, in Brussels. • S11nt11 Cl11u1 saw double when he \vent to the Sigmund Stern Grove Clubhouse. Twins-15 sets of them, ranging from a Jew months to 12 years old -greeted the surprised Santa Claus. The event was the an- nual Mothers of Twin! Club Christ- mas party in San Francisco. 132 POWs' Names Bared Wom en's Group Visits North Viet Prison Camp • Tht 28·member Davis Polict force has oolunuertd to drive hom.t anybody who has imblbtd too much Christma.! or Ntw Yea.r'i spirit in an tffort to keep dntnk driver.! off tht road. Po- lice said anybody who cal.ltd for tM s e r vi c t would remain anonymoll.T and that tlQ rtcordi would bt kept or arrt.!ts madt. • '· • • ' . . \ A Russian child Jearm quickly that tht onl11 way to stay warm in Mo.!COW during tht winter is ta Bundlt up-- with a capitol "B." Afoscoto's children have rtal Christmas tret.s and thank.s to the sub-fretring temperatures - they'U have a white Christmas too. 8 Bill P11rkhurst, 27, watched a small plastic box move along a con· veyor belt leading to the Chertsey, England, dump's crushing ma- chine. On a whim he picked up the box and opened it. "I was stunned when I realized. the value of what was in the box," he said. Parkhurst round $1,100 worth of bonds and savings certificates which he gave lo police. I " j UPI T ........ 19 WOMEN TELL PRESS OI' VISIT TO NORTH VIETNAM ..Mrs. Core Weill (left) end Mrs. MadeliM DuclcS.s Texan Sends Families Of Prisoners w Paris DAU.AS (UPO -Billlonalre It Roos Perot has dlartered a jd to aend about ISO wives and clilldren of American prtsonen; in North Vietnam In the hope that the chi1drm can ")earn more about their fathers." The jet, chartered by United We Stand. an organization founded by Perot to sup port President Nixon's Vietnam peaa program.. is scheduled to leave Ne¥· York's John F. Kennedy International Airport tonlghl The families will spend Christmas Day in Paris to try to learn more about their missing fathers and husbands. Their search could include a peace vigil at the North Vietnamese Embassy. A jetliner left Oallu at 6:55 a.m. PST today bound for New York and carrying part of the group. Th< entire group wtll leave for Paris at S:40 p.m. PST aboard the plane chartered by Perot. "'Mme after time whe.a we have asked these children whit they want most, they have said they wanted to inow something l bout their fathers," Perot said. The computer·company ~.;i. aa1d be hartered the plane, "The Spirit of llrtstmas," to fly families to Pan. who UlVt: not been to see the North Viet· iamese. United We Stand bas spomored other trips by wives of .American prisoners. All 1f the women's effort&, however, have .'ailed to give them any new informaUon obout their husbands. On each visit, Hinoi's representaUves have told the women their husbands are criminals and do not deserve the same treabnent as prisoners of wr. Perot said he hopes to visit Hanoi to explain that in America even criminals are allowed to correspond with their families. SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -The nameo of 132 American prisoners of war ~ve been released by two members of a pexe group who were the first ~an women to visit a North Vietnamese prison camp. The women told a news conference Tuesday they brought back 131 letters from the prilonenl and mailed them in San Franctsco· Sunu.y on their return from a tWo-weei visit to Hanoi. Some of the prisoners' famllies had not heard from them. in year.i . Mrs. Cora Weiss of New York City and Mrs. Madelint Duck1es of Berkeley told newsmen they and Mrs. Ethel Taylor of Philadelphia spent about an hour talking tn three prisoners.· - They identified the men as Mark GartJey, 25, of Greensville, Me.; Paul Gordon Brown, 26, of Newton, Mass., and Bill Mayhew, 27, of New Manchester, W. Va. The women released a pboto of the three prisoners. 'The women, members of the Women 's Strike for Peace, said the prisoners "spoke highly of the antiwar movement and spoke militantly against the war.'" They said they were oot allowed to talk to any other prlsonrs. Mrs. Weiss ouWned an apparent change of policy by Hanoi in regard to mail for prisoners, who up to now have rarely been allowed to send or receive letters or packages. It has been estimated that about 1.361 Americans are missing or prisoners of war in North Vlet.aam, but fewer than 100 of the known captives have sent letters that were received. in the United States . However, Mrs. Weiss said Hanoi would now allow families of prisoners to send one letter a month and a package of less than six poun& every other month. She said mail should be addressed with the prisoner's name and serial number in care ol "Camp of DetenUon for U.S. Pilots Captured in the Democratic Republic of Vietnam, Hanoi, DRV," with "Via Moscow " written on the envelope. The chief of North Vietnam's delega- Uon to the Paris peace talks said Monday that Hanoi would notify prisoners' families "directly" from now on about captives: be.cause the U .S, w a s withholdin' information . Mrs. Weiss called on the State Depart· menl to release all the names of prisoners that are lmov.11 to be held by North Vietnam. of confinned prisoners," she said. "1 ''I challenge them to release the names understand the State Department has a list of names it has not released." Southland Skies Are Sunny The women, .mo saJd they paid for the trip to Hanoi vla Paris out of their own pockets, said that all the prisoners in North Vietnam would receive Chrimnu dinner. Hanoi Greetin~ Ur ges P r otests Paci fic Northwe st Braces for Another Storm C11Hfe rtol11 I -·----"''"A.am ....... ' JZ R~m 11:· • c ... , .. Molltf CIMtP" .....,.. _,,,. - .r...--. llltrt ·-'"" wflldli 111tl'tt ...,, "'°"""' ........ ~ll'lf ..-.. _, ti _. • ,. 1f "'"°" ••• ,,... -"°"' ~ '"""""· Hi.II tooia'f ... INN ...,_.Ill,_ , .... '"""' A " ... w., ... twm-•llll'f '°· S11n, /!l oon , Tides WaOHllDAY s_... """'-1•:ti1'·"'·1.1 1etW ..... •:If •J'l'I. t.1 THU•IOAY l'li'it hlth ............. •i.!~ ........ . "''" .... • ............. , •• 1.m. l .6 ....,,. fl!fll ·············""'° '·""· 1.6 1i1cON1 ... ,.1, ••• , •• ,. 4:0 I.II\. 1.6 ,._ .... f :B lftl, hh l•ft .,.,.... """-."'" '"'1 • ""· kll 1"."' • ·-·--""-"'' llell:enll•kl ., """"' .... .... ·-· ClllQ .. CIMI-" ""'"' ... -..... " a d .. ~ a .. " M • " .. " .. " • " .. .. • " .. • • ll " " " u " " • .. " • " .. " • ~ .. • " " .. • .. " " " • " " • " • a " ~ " • • ~ " n " .. ~ .. M .. n . .. • .. .. " • .. " • " "' ., ... ,, .. ·" ·" ·" TOKYO (UPI) -Nguyen Huu Tbo, president of the Viet Cong's National Liberation Front, sent a holiday greeting today to American:i, urging them ta con- tinue protesUng against the Vietnam war. The message, addressed to "Dear Friends" and monitored in Tokyo, said the "obsUnate ahd crafty attitude" of the Nixon 'administration bas increased the tempo of the war and caused needless death and destruction. The message said in pa.rt : "Particularly convey my regards to lhe families of ~ now persetl!Ud and "'IX'""" for thejr protest qainst the unjust and immoral war conducted by the U.S. government in V.etnam." He urged that IUCb protests cootinue. :: Unions WQn't Strike " Until Talks Resume WASHINGTON (UPI) -Four shop ·" craft unlotl$ have pled&W not to strike .n the nn:llon's railroads unW lhcy resume Al talks Jan. 19 ln tbeJr,.,.age dlpute. """ The machlnlsts, electriciw and boiler· f. bl.acktmllh unkml •ocepted a presidential .JI factflnding bolird's reeorilmendations for ,, a tettlement .wller tbls month. But the "' Mffl metal •ork<rs turned down the proposal. ' 'l..ooe and Sp napf,1t'll9' Arab Summit • Ends Ill llABAT, Morocto (UPI) -The •ummlt meetinc called 19 unite the Arab "."orld againa Israel dllbandtd today in fatlure, confU3ion and discrder. Paleetinlan guer· rilla leada' Yas8er Arafat aakl fellow N'abl gave him "love and l)'Jftpllthy" but •"Y liWe el!e. l!peaking at a news conf~e after ttir 14-nation Arab aunmit meeting col· Ja)Pd In chaos, the fiery head of th< Palli'tine commandos sak! be will never agrfllt,to a political settlement with Israel despite lack of material aid for his cause. Arafit sought lo minimize the breakup of the flth Arab summit over demands by Eg)'JJ'ian President Gamal Abdel Nasser for a vastly stepped up con· tribution by the wealthier · member na- tions such as Saudi Arabia and Kuwait, to the anti-Israel struggle. "The most important thing v.•e got st this conference was the love and sym- psthy we saw for our cause," Arafat said . Asked Mlether he had recf.ived all the material and fina1"1Cial aid he had asked, the broad-faced, stocky Palestinian leader said with a 11hrug: "The outcome of a conference ne\•er determines the fate of a people. "When we came he¥. we expected _to get zero. Anything a~e zero JS a gain for the Palestinian revolution. But revolu-- tionaries do not expect victory from con--- ferences. Victory comes only from strug- g1e through the bane! of the gun." Five ChiJdr Die in Flam~ As Home Burns Chaos Well-informed sources said the discord qyer haw much money to cpend on a new militant anD·lsraeli strategy was so large that the problem m organizing eUective measures against the Jewish state was not even tackled. Cotlapse ol the summit, seriously en- dangering Arab unity at a time "'hen Israel was invoiYed in a dispute with the United States, its traditional friend , was highlighted by angry scenes Tuesday In- cluding a walkout by Nasser, then by other Arab delegations. Apparently undismayed by the summit railwe Arafat ruled out any political se1- tlemeni with Israel. H~ said the summit had "reafHnned the. viewpoinL of the Palestine revolution." Roadblocks Seal Off Betli lehem BETHLEHE~t (UPI) -1srae1 locked a security chain around Bethlehem be. fore dawn today ti! insure no Arab guer· rilla \1.olence mars the festival o( the birth of the Prince of Peace. At 4 a.m .• Israeli troops and police closed roadblocks around the Judean hilltop town where the new testament says Jesus Christ was born in a manger. The area was virtually sealed off to all but "men of good will:' An estimated 10,000 visitors and Chris- tian pilgrims -more than hat~ the total tourists visiting Israel for Chnstmas - ept passed through the roadblocks in bus MONTREAL (UPI) -Flames SW a convoys from nearby J erusalem to take house where ~ ~amil_y of IZ wu sleeping part in Christmas Eve ceremonies. early today, k1lhng five young children. Each had to have an Israeli govern- The parents, Mr. and Mrs. Al~~·\ ment·issued permit . suffer~ se'.'.ere burns rescwn~ l~ear The Roman Catholic patrian:h of Jc· other f1~e children and were hosp_itali~ rusalem. his beatitude Alberto Gori, was a~ with thr~ of the ~ued children\.. leading the procession to Bethlehem and Neigh~ said ~ fam1tr had movca the Churc.h of Nativity. TI1e church rests- to the art1f1clal bnck home m the 5U~.X,.<1n Christendom·s holiest shrine, the ol SL Hubert onl_y three w~ks ago. alfP'/.»<>grotto, where, according to the NN Dows lost all their possess!Ol_"IS. . , Testament. Jesus was born in a manger. Genette Blanchafd, a neighbor. said h1ore than J ,000 Israeli troops and po- Mrs. Dow, bleeding and in a nightgown, If~ were on guard in and around Beth· - was hysterically trying to _get back into lehe'rtt.tQ. prevent any attempt by Arab the house to reach the children trapped guenilla?\to mar the festival. · inside but her husband stopped her. Allhough \~lla organizations have "The mother wanted to go back into never struck l{eTe during Bethlehem 's the house but Mr. Dow wouldn't Jet her," tWo Christmases~ Israeli rule, this Blanchard said. year as in the pas( 'they warned that The neighbors had been preparing Christmas pilgrims are 119' immune.from Christmas baskets for the family because guerrilla attack. ~. • . "-. Daw, 36, and employed u a janitor at a Israel will not relax ils s~gu"ard munber of schools in St. Hubert. ha:d dif· on Bethlehem until the last pilgrim .js ficulty supporting ms large family. safely gone Chrisbnas night. \ " Viet Peace Demonstration Broken Up By Policemen SAIGON (UPI)-Fourteen Americans and one Vietnamese demonstrated for peace tonight ill a camival·like atmos- phere before the Saigon cathedral. The protest ended with the lone Viel· namese being beaten up and arrested by policemen. He was identified as Nguyen Long, an antiwar youth leader. During the scuffle with Long, a police- man slapped Tom Marlowe, a corre- spondent with the Overseas Weekly Newspaper. The demonstrators staged their pro- test amidst more than 4,000 Vietnamese celebrating Christmas Eve. Prior to the protest, its leaders said they expected about 500 Vietnamese and 50 American soldiers to show up. Long appeared to be the only Vietnamese and six soldiers. who joined the demonstra- tion early, left after being told to do so by U.S. military police. Richard Boyle, 27, a fonner newspa· pennan who helped organize the pro- test, blamed the poor turnout on security measures adopted by the Vietnamese police and U.S. military. These meas- ures, however, were similar to the crowd control tactics used by the police last Christmas Eve, although there did appear to be a few more officers in sight. The cathedral grounds are tradition- ally crowded with Vietnamese on Christ· mas Eve, ct!lebrating the holiday with party hats and sparklers. Penniless Cons Fr eed Fr o1n Jail CINCINNATI (UPI) -A 11amillon Count y common pleas court judge, caught up in the spirit of Christmas and an Ohio Supreme Court ruling, today released about 14-0 penn iless prisoners from the county workhouse. Judge Robert V. Woo:! ordered the men rel eased after the American Civil Liberties Union filed a writ of habeas corpus Tuesday to free all workhouse in- mates who ~·ere working off unpaid fi nes al the rate of $3 per day. The Ohio Supreme Court ruled last week ~at the state's $3--a-<loy rate was unconstitutional because it was •'grossly unreasonable.'' But Wood said thal was not the only reason fcir his action. "I am doing this because it is Christmas Eve," he said. '"Rudolph~ Now 30 W rite r's Brailic1iild a Classic CHICAGO (UP!) -One of the world's most famous animals is 30 years old to- day but he: has not changed a bit since. ht was "born." Rudolph the red-nosfld reindeet, the creation ol ad'lertising copywriter Robert May, flrst stirred chlklren's hearts in 1939 and bu continued to have his story translated and sung since then. May, who was auigned to write a Christmas verse that would appeal to children for a Montgomery Ward & Co. Promotion, says about 10 million copies of the Rudolph story have been publish· ed In various langua.get. But, says May, Rudolph was alm06t killed in the "tesl·tube" stage because the man who cnmml5sloncd the Vt rse thought Rudolph 's red nose· "\\'OUld frighten children. H. E. ~f&cDonald, then retail sales I manager for \Vards, associated the tnimal's red nose with a W. C. Fields-- type drunk, ~tay says. MacDonald thought cbildre.ri would think Rudolph a red-nosed monster and nearly killed the idea before it was published. But May camt up with art wor\: that showed the red. nose could be cute, and Rudolph was bom. Barbara May, now 35. says she was I when she flrsl heard the story and she liked it then. She al\d the fh·e other Mi11 childrtn who ha ve gone through collegw on the story's royalties say they sti ll like 11. • And for mOrSt children, Christma! wouldn 't be the same without the image of Rudolph guidjng Santa's sleigh. Said one sociologist. "Rudolph's story is tho Orsi pem"lanent addiUoo lo Chrti;unas !ft this ctntury." £J ... ... _, ' Goi1ag Vp to Land \Vorkmen on the 24th !Joor of a ne'v 26-story office tower in Manhattan gape at an artist's recreation of a World War I biplane as it makes Its fin! and last flight Tuesday. The plane, work Cf an;st Wu-· Jiam Tarr, weighs 6,000 pounds, is 22 feet Jong and has a wing span of 28 feet. It was placed on a facsimile of a permanent landing strip on the roof of the new office tower. Preside nt R eiuctant QUEENIE Credit Curb Bill Signed by Nixon ' WASHING'l'ON (UPI) Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler, President Nixon today. signed questioned about prospects_for 1.-...,~~....:~::"-r wlLb stated reluctance a. bill the President to use this r givin1,blm the authoriJy to in-authority. said, "I assume ·, voke voluntary and 'mandatory these steps would not be taken credit eontrols -a step which although the authority has he e1,1rrenUy.does not plan to , ~n granted." fake, Proxmire said that. despite . The legislation was desig>1ed a year of the incotne surtax, primarily to preserve the corporaUons increased their DAllY l'll~t S cilpital. expenditures by $1 authority or a f e d er a 1 billion this year. He said this supervisory agency to regulate represented an It percent in- interesL paid by banks and crease over lhe previous yea~. savings and loan associations. , , M 0 reover, government The chief·execuUve had no ob-surveys tor 1970 indicate jeclion to this aspect of the another huge increase i1.1. legislaUon. · 1 00· r d 17 He di'1 object strongly. ca1»ta spe ing o aroun 1.;:::::::.!:~~:=::=....:i!.!:'"""'-',.="="-=--"~:::·=·~""::::;":.:"~'·.:"::"";:.;"::"'":"'-;:.'-.. .. ' •·wever, to .,.,,lions of the bill billion or $8 billion," he said. d :Uthorizing °";oJuntary 8 n d A government survey report "Wouldn't an ordinary windshield wiper have on• mandatory credit controls. released Tuesday said cor-as well?" These sections, he said in a porations planned to increase statement, would, if invoked, spending for plants and equip------------!,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; .. take the :-.atlon a Jona step ment in 1970 by IO percent. e Tbe CM.sumer Price lndex toward a direcUy controlled has gone up s.8 percent over a economy and. . .we can weaken the will for needed year ago. !is.ca l and financia l '·Clearly, monetary and Counterfeit Bills Found WOULD YOU BELIEVE REUBEN'S discipline." fi scal policy has been a di smal The pres.i<lent signed the bill failure in restraining business at the Orange County shortly alter Sen, William borrowing wh i ch many APPLE VALLEY (UPI) -Airport 1, taking Proxmire (0-Wis.), chairman economists feel is the most in-Three antifreeze cans cram-RESERVATIONS f th . 1 .. 1 flationary sector of our med with more than $100,000 · 0 e coogreSS1ona }Otn economy," Proxmire said. for New Ye ar''s Eve Party? ecmomic conunittee, released in counterfeit currency were parts of th~ text of a letter he ''Instead, tight money has DON'T MISS OUT centered on lhe home buyer. disco\·ered in a backyard here ~ Congress Closes Up Shop , U.S. to Quit 'Wheelus AB In Tr~poli \\Tole to Nixon urging him to the small businessman, the Tuesday, sheriff's deputies sign the bill and apply govern-Cal 540-2475 -ment Credit controls (lVer,...:''.""":'.3'.'.l__<g<>~ve~rnm~'.'.'·~·t~s::_.":__..:_ _ _:•s•port~~ed~. __ _: ___ .....:~~~~~~~~~~ business sper.iing in the fight a.gain& inflation. Prepares _fort Election Year Proxmire called the ad· ministration's monetary and fisc;al policies •·a dismal failure" in curbing capital ®Uays by big business. WASHINGTON <UPI) - \Vith an election year directly ahead, congressmen to o k home for preliminary voter in- spection today a m i x e d Christmas bag or successes and failures . House GOP Leader Gerald R. Ford, perhaps in a harbin- ger of Republicans' campaign lactlcs for 1970, labeled the year-long session a "do little" Congress. He said it had done almost nothing about Presi- dent Nixon's legislative p~ gram. But S e n a t e Democratic Leader Mike Mansfield called the sess.ion "most productive." He gave Congress good marks not only fot it.S legislative at- tai~nts iji t its start toward redirecting 11ational priorities from the !Vietnam war to homefront 1eeds. The bat tits of the e1ection year -du!ing which all 435 represenlal.ji;es and a third of the Senate must stand before the voters -are sure to get heated Ip quickly. The Senate's f"rst order of business is the highly-charged a~ propriations bill for t h e depart.f.ients of Labor and Healtf\ Education and Welfare (HE~ Nix has threatened to veto the1 because Congress in- crrased k beyond bis requests. 1 · - Hijack Attempt Foiled; ·Maii Returned to U.S. NEW YORK (UPI) -A passenger who tried to barge into the cockpit or an Icelandic Airlines plane over Scotland, 43 Czechs Ask Asylum STOCKHOLM (UPI) FoM.y-three members or the first Czechoslovak tourist con- tingent allowed outside the country in a month left the group Tuesday night and ask- ed for polilical asylu~ in Sweden. A spokesman for the Aliens Police said about 10 more of the Czechoslovaks -there were a totRI of 80 persons in the group -were expected to make similar requests before Christmas Day. Gover nm en t sources predicted asylum would be granted, for the Stockholm gover nment h a s sheltered Czechoslovaks since th e Soviet-led invasion of their na- tion Aug. 21. 1968. The Czechoslovak tour was arranged by the state-run tourist bureau. According to the members seeking asylum, it was also to be the last of· ficially arranged travel to western nations. claiming he was .Defense Secretary Melvin R. Laird, \\'as returned here today and freed without charges. "I wanted to go to Russia to talk about conditions i n America," Anthony Pascarzio, 28, said on his r eturn. Pascarzio, who lives ln Queens and described himself as an actor and musician, said earlier he had intended to radio the Soviets about ''.how bad a country America was.'' Fearing an attempted hi- jack, the crew of the four- engine turboprop, flying from New York to London, subdued Pascanio outside the cockpit door and held him down until the craft could descend from 30,000 feet and make an emergency landing at Glasgow Tuesday night. Two Sc o t t i sh detectives returned to New York with Pascanio aboard anot h e r Icelandic plane and, after questioning by the FBI and Port of New York Authority police, he was released. Authorities said the United States had no jurisdiction in the incident and that officials in ScoUand did not want to press c~arges a g a i n s t Pascarzio, who was unarmed. Some Republicans hope Nixon stands firm on his threat to show he means business about keeping the costs or govern· ment down and halting in- flation. WASHINGTON (UPI) The United States has agreed to abandon Wheelus Air Base jn Tripoli, Libya, by June 30, 1970, and withdraw its 4,500 military and civilian person- nel. But should Nixon veto the bill, Democ rats are sure to ac-cuse him of turning down Announcement of the agree- funds for such things as m·ent was made in a joint cancer research, grade school communique issued in Tripoli children and the b Ii n d • and Washington Tuesday Democrats already Y{ere pie-night. turing Nixon 3s Scrooge, claiming he was sacrificing State Department source! the sick and the poor. while.ap-said negotiations would con· proving other big, roor;iey bills . tinue with the· new revolu- But N i x o. n iiaid ''t.he:SC. aspects of the bill made the de<iision to sign it a very dif- ficult one, but the need to pre- vent chaos in our interest rate situation has made my . ap- proval imperative." White House Pre ss Wife, Son Visit Hess l,n. Hospital for wea~s srstems and tiona,ry government of LlbJa BERLIN · (UP1) -. Rudolf planes that w1l! car r Y 00 disposal of equipment at H~. ~ Hitler's f~e~ passengers three limes faster . .. -~puty saw 'his wife and son than sound. . the base. . · · fOr th~· first time in 21 years The ftrst se~s1on of · Lhe _ 9Ist The communique followed today when they visited him in Congress, which ground to a the third· meeting in Tripoli • West Berlin's British. Miiltary halt at 3:10 ~.m. F.ST, Tues. between U .-S, AmbassadOr Hospital. day, accomphshed more .than Ilse HeSs, 69, and son Wolf most ~bservers thought lik~Jy Joseph Palmer and Capt. Ruediger Hess. 32, arrived al when 1t conv~ed Jan. 3 with Abdu l Salam Jalloud, the the hospital shortly after 2:3tl Derr.iocra~ 1n charge . o n .second-ranking officer of the p.m. for the visit. Capitol Hin and ~ Repubhca~ military regime that seized Hess, 75, was taken to the about to take office as pres1-power Sept. I. hospital Nov. 24 from nearby dent _ . . The State Department Spandau War Crimes Prison Some poht1cal standoffs . did authorities had given their for treatment of a stomaah deyelop and for a li~e as.'lurances of cooperation in ulcer:· He was sentenced to thre~tened to keep Congress 1n making.the withdrawal order-spend his lifr in prison by session throogh the holidays. ly. judges at the Nuemberg' war Human Bomb GI Doctors Defus e Woman SAIGON (UPI) -Surgeons at Saigoo's 3rd Field Hospita l successfully removed a live ri- fle grenade round from the 1 Chest cavity of a Vietnamese woman in the second such "human bomb'' operation in Vietnam this month. The operation was perform- ed by Maj. Jose F. MOl'elos of Baltimore, and Maj. Willis McKee of Louisville, Ky., under the guidance of Lt. Col. Thomas Witchi of Wading Ri\•er, N. Y., who one month ago removed a similar round from the head of a Viet Cong. The surgeons declined to wear flak jackets and helmets. "We figured they would be cumbersome," said Dr . McKee, "And besides, at that range ... well." "All I could think about until the operation began was that in less than a week I'm going to meet my wile oo leave." related Dr. Morelos. An M79 round is about three inches in diameter and is fired frolll. a grenade laur1cher. Ml Sgt. Charles McCrary of Louisville, Ky., one Of the bomb disposal experts present at the operatioo, said it was "just luck" that the grenade did not detonate, "These types al rounds can be armed al any point from the time they leave the end of the weapon until they have traveled a great distance," he explained. "When we have one on our hands we have to assume it is amled and take the necessary precautions." The patient was-reported in go6d coriditioo at the hospital, located just out.side Tan Son Nhut Airbase. She wu e14 pected to be. released in about three weeks, d«.'ton gajd, Crimes Tribunal. A British military official said the wife and son were given the Spandau prison regulations to read before fhey were allowed to see Hess. The official said two guards were present in Hess' hospital room as the trio met. He said they were not allowed to kiss, shake hands or otherwise touch the beetle-browed Hess for fear that they would pass poison to rum. . Long W eds Secretary WASHINGTON . (UPI) Sen. Russell B. Long. (0-La.), divorced by his first wife earlier this year, Tuesday married U)e blonde secretary of a fellow senator. The bride ·is the ronner Carolyn Bason, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Sam M. Bason of Yanceyville, N.C. Blonde and fortyiah, the new Mrs. Long was a secretary to Sen. Sam J. Ervin, (0-N.C.) JfCWPOaT CCKTCa l"Kllio;: Co•sl Hi1llw&y blltwun Jimbo.-• and M•eArthur. fr11ew1y mlnut'" &w1y. stereo 103FM the sounds of the harbor · · J&~--"7you\re never heard it so,.._ ' • -· I a DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE Planning the Future t•When you go for a general plan, you had better go for a staff that can handle. it.'' f\1ayor Gle~n Ve<ider's com.Jnent to fellow council .. men last week pretty well summed up Laguna's need to upgrade the city planning function. LagtWa has more than $60,000 invested in the gen- eral planning study to blueprint desirable future ac- tions. There are also countless staff and citizen man hours invested. lnform atiori and conclusions from the long-term study are being returned to the dty now at an accel· crated rate. 'fhis phase of the general plan program should be wound up completely by March. Laguna will have its blueprint. The next phase ot the program -a Iong-tenn phase -is implementation, taking the steps the plan· ners have outlined. This means money and many more staff man hours to seek federal and state funds and to coordinate in making it a Teality. Without that step, a general plan is just so n1uch paper. The city has decided to retain college-bound City Planner Al Autry on a part-time basis to work exclus- ively on the general plan and the funds to support it. He will be respon sibl e directly to the city manager. The planning department \Vilt be separated Irom the building department. A new director of planning 'rill be recruited to fil l the position that Autry has held. The expanded plannJng staff is to cost the city about $12,000 to $13.000 more annually. Autry will receive $3,200 annually for part.time \vork and the new planning director will have a salary r ange of $1,064 to $1.276. which is comparable to other department heads. Autry's current range is $888 to Sl.064. The move makes sense. Autry. because he's dedi· cated. has been \vorking 50 and 60 hours and longer eacb week to try and keep up with the planning load. Tbat load is going I<> expand greatly next year. The \mly part that doesn't make sense Is that the city waited until Autry stewed down from his full·lim• planning post to upgrade the job four pay rangeo. He bas done a fine job. It's closing !be barn door alter !be thoroughbred bas departed. Imaginative Teaching An imaginaUve teacher and an oceanside location add up I<> plenty of excitement in !be science depart· · ment at San Clemente High Scllool. Students of science instructor Philip Grignon con· tinuously involved in comtructive project,,, aren't likely to complain about lack of "relevance'' in their school work -the favorite plaint of today's teen-agers. Using the vast Pacific as their working ·~Jab," Grig· non and his budding scientist& manage to learn all kinds of fascinating things about life under the sea, while making definite contributions to consmration and re- storation of the balance of nature's patterns, in the face· of man's destruction. Particularly intriguing is their upcoming effort to "r&forest" the ocean floor where· destruction of kelp beds has reoulted in depopulation of marine lite. At the same time. community teams led by Grig- non and his students will be starting their "census" of mlgralin~ whales from a V11ll!age point on the cliffs at Dana Pomt -the first of its kind ever conducted, and one likely to yield valuable information on this vanish· ing species. ,Educators coil(erned about the high school drop-out rate would do well to ponder the lure of programs ot Ibis type . s . I "'th Revolving Door of Crittae, Prison, More Criuae The Man the U.S. Needs To Lead It Dear Gloomy Gus: Correctional System Is a Disgrace Sydney .f. Harris ""' One of the reasons I dislike most political writing -and do very little of it myself -is that it forces one to pretend to be objective, But hardly anyone can be truly objective about politics. Our political orientation ls determined by a dozen different factors over which ~·e have little conscious control -our background and environment, our educa- tion, our income-level, and our tern. perament. Then we rationalize these fac- tors in our "political philosophy." I am more interested in what men are like, rather than what they profess, or \\'hat party they belong to. If Nixon strikes me as a plastic man (as he does), and Humphrey as a rubber man (as he (!oes), I am not going to support either man, regardless of what he says. BlIT IF I WERE engaged in writi ng nbout politics. or arguing the matter, l '\'Ould have to marshal objective facts about program s and policies. and deal in vague abstractions like "liberty" and "peace." My arguments would follow from my prejudices, and be tailored to tit. 1.1ost people a r e stuc k with their preconceptions. and vote for a man they may not like, simply because he promis· cs to carry out what seems to serve their sclf·interest. But a plastic man, or a rub- ber man. cannot do much of anything that is ~·orthwhilc . 'fllESE PRECONCEPTIONS are 1\'hal perpetually, betray us in choosing t he A1erry Christmas! You have been given a meter-reeding ticket while shopping in Laguna. Happy New Year! Remember to support your local police and patronize the hometo\11n stores. SCROOGE fl'll• IHl\H'• n fltnt .....,.,. 'Vltof.. 11t1 _ ..... .,. ,... .. " ..... ., ... , ..... ,_. "' ,.. ....... ......., ........ .., ,lllL "lesser evil" -and are what keep the political machines confidenUy pickinl Be- cond -and third·rate men -for the par· ty bosses know that we are so much the victims of our rationalizing that we would rather elect a baboon who seemed to agree with us than an angel who didn't. I happen to think the way a man loob and smells and expresses himself in speech and gesture and general com- portment is a good deal more important than the political statementJ he ei:udes. which have been written by somebody else to make the best impression on lht largest segment of the electorate. BUT TmS AD HOC approach to can• didates is condemned by all the political doctrinaires, who delude themselves that a devious or flatulent man will make a satisfactory president because he utters campaign platitudes that flatter their prejudices. The man we need to lead us b not necessarily the one who tells us what we like to hear, but what we must be made to hear; who makes us uncomfortable v.'ith ourselves, and forces us to TMX· amine our s1nug and easy preconceptions. But that is the last man any party would nominate, and the strongest argument or the political dropouts. To the Editor: Columni1t Sydney J. Harris comes right .to the point in discussing the ominous rise in crime and "the revolving door of crim,, prison and more crime." Confinement in unnatural surrounding.!! cannot core er teach criminals how to live according to society's rules, so why not leach them how to behave in a natural atmosphere? Why not put them all in an isolated community where they can't be discriminated against because they'll all.be tarred with .the aame brush, just u were the earlier settlers in Aultralla and Georgia? POSSIBLY WE could find a ghost town, or an island where they would not have access to weapons and cou ld learn a useful vocaUon. There would be a few non-c:rlm lnals who would he lp them to etlablish laws and to administer them . Many or the criminals will prefer to stay there. That's fine because they can help the new members rehabilitate. Those whose conduct warrants it would be allowed to return to the "other" world. There would be expert medical and psychiatric care which is woefully Jacking Jn jails, aceording to the superintendent of the New York prison system. As Mr. Harris says, the coTTtclional system is a disgrace, and few care enough to correct the correctional 11yttem. BERNARD BARTON Playing for Money To the Editor: In aruwer to Alice Br own f l tld (Mailbox. Dec. 19). we are not sacrificing 'Adulterers Anonymous' quality for quantity. We are sacrificing quality for money. As long as there is any open land in Orange County, and as long as no one stops lhem, the large developers will continue to alter this land for commercial use. They are playing the game ror money. \Ve all have our little crusades to tnake this a better v.·orld. And today we µay tribute to a courageous llttle band of al· tractlve single gi rls v.•ho are out crusading for just such a cause : Adultery. Jn San Francisco. where such lhinp:s happen, these dedicated young ladlEs have been parading through fhe !inancial district promoUng their organization, ··Adulterers Anonymous,'' along with a new book. "Successful .Adultery for the Jlappily Married Man." "As long as a u·ife gets her :rihare or love." says the group leader. a beautiful brunclte named Cecily Katz. ··v.1hy :iihould ~ht' b<'r,rudgC' hl'r husband an extra rnc:lstJre of happiness:·· \YJIY INOEEO? or course. like all lo~1c:i l crusadts aimed at disentangling our Purit.:in hangups. thi! une faces ub.q aclrs, For one thing, a m3n needs an undcrstn11d1ni: 'll'ifc. Take the case of my friend, Kis5in~cr, l\ho Js blessed ~·Ith a \\'1fe of incr«hble to!cr«ncc and understanding. ;,Guess what. deor," he said on ar· rh'lng ho1ne that evening. I'm thinking of t:.ikini; up a ne\v hob by." "Thars nice. dear," sl1c said. ''\\'h.1t~" "\\'ell. you knov.• how much Wt' love rach olt\Cr," lie said, taking Iler in his arms '·And vou know lhe plrasure v.·t rind in -wefl -you know, No-.v I ws~ thinking that b<•cause we love each 01h,r, you wouldn't begrudge me an extra mtasure or happiness .•• " HJ'\11!: GOT A ROAST In the oven, dear. nod the children artn't In bed ~t and, •• " "No, no. The: hobby J'm thinkirtg or 1alt· Ing up is adultery." "That does sound interesting, deJr." •I~ said tolerantly. ·•out you know what • cr1:1ure of ettlhusiiunu-you o.r~. Look When the question comes up whether tG keep a section of land like it is, or to build ractories or apartments on it. the developers reason : "If v.·e leave it like it '1 is. we can't make any money on it, so .,,.. • let's build !" at all those flies you bought and nt"cr tied." "Oh. 1 think T'd stick with this one. That is, if you didn't mind." "Mind ?" Mrs. Kissinger was shocked. "But the very essenct of lovin1 is the desire to see your loved one happy. And if adultery woold make you happy, it wrold make me happy, too." "Are you sure you've thought this lhing through?'' asked Kissinger with a frown. "BUT JT'S SO LOG ICAL. dear."' ~he said 11•lth great understanding till she disengaged herself from his arms to check the calendar with obvious '11· thusiasm. "Let's set, I th.ink we'rt fret next Thursday night." "\'le?" he asktd suspiciously. "It's so nice to h3ve a hobby v.·e can pursue together," she said happlly. "Oo you remember the nan1c <lf that ftll ow we met at the Grom1ncts, the one \Vith thooe dreamy eyes, "'ho .•• " "You so much as Jook at another man.·• thundered Kissinger, "and I'll break every bone in your body!" Al this. Mr&. Klsslnaer dissolved into !tars. "Oh. I knew Jt." she sobbed, "you don't Joye me any more." THE SPAT IWI ~nee bffn patched up. Kisslngtr hu decided to take up bowling inste:ad. lie still apprteUtes the k1glc of the ju.stlficaUon for adultery. And he ad· mlrts the worthlnna of young Miu Kali' cnisade. "But when It ....,.. lo dlsentangliJll our Puritan hanpps at my 11e, '' ht 11y1 with • sl~. "It's a hell of a sllhl easier to live with them lnsttad.'' ' TAKE SAI\i'TA BARBARA'S offshore oil By George --- Dear Georg,: l'm a lonesome blonde dlvorcea who really digs your sense er humor, Georgie, and I wondtt if l might have a personal consultaUon, if you know what I mean? LONESOME AND LOVING Dear LANO L: Tha t wasn't exactly tht kind or problem I had in mind, my wife said tell you. Otar Georgl'; HO\v far South :ome? Ot8r Samuel: do polar burs SAMUEL B. Now, whatever you do, Sam, don"t panic. Just look him In the eye. Dear George: Why are the days shorter ln winter? And longer in 1Ummer? WONDERING Otar \Vondering : Thls is due 10 the fact that hf•t expands and eold contracta. (How'a lhat, Firmin ?) (Troubles keeping you awake at night? Let Georgt watt the Door [or you. Ask about qur inlll'nniae l'IJging couroe. Speclal ""'1J) ntu., F'ret ringHnail bitina:.) ., Lttter.f fr om readers are welcornt, Nomwlly writers should convey their messagt:s i11 300 words or less. The right to condense letters to fit spact or eliminate libel is reserved. Alt let· ters must include signature and mail· ing address, but names may be with· held on reque1t if sufficie1i£ reason is apparent. Poetry wiU not be pub- lished. situation. A huge oil spill last year, waler polluted and animals killed, but the drill· ing conllnued. Now we have another oil spill. Is this contamination or land and sea to continue? Will we keep sacrificing beauty and wildlife for dollars? What can we as citizens do to prevent man's greed from polluUng our city, state and country? STEVEN C. LAUBLY Public Teo1nis Courls In a December 10 letter to the editor Signe Fische r expressed misgivings about the appearance of the three-acre tennis center recommended by the Laguna Beach Tennis: Association. Her objectives are built L1p0n the incorrect assumption that acres ol virgin timber will be Jost \l'llen the tennis center is constructed. This is not true! THE LAGUNA BEACH Tennis Associa· lion feel.!! that a public tenni s center located at one of several suitable sites in the canyon would beautify the entcance to Laguna Beach. A prDperly configured and landscaped group of public tennis courts ser\•ing the recreational needs or tax· paying residents would be absolutely compatible with the aesthetic standards of our beautiful community. NORMAN J, POWELL Con1mu11isl•' Goals To the Editor : Just read Tom Barley's article, "1\tu.;t. cians Sound Sour Note \Vith Viet Peti· lion". The last two paragraphs or U;e article are. "\Ve feel that I.here is no aren of American life so sacred that protests against the United States' participation in the Vietnam u•ar are in bad taste or jn. appropriate. "'Hold that note, ladies and gentlemen. Yor,J're playing my kind of music." Mr. Barley and I don't seem to enjoy the same kind of music. THE COMMUNISTS are trying to 'take <lVer South Vietnam, then all of Southeast Asia and eventually the whole world. They like nothing better than to hear that the people of the United States are prir tesliii.g our inVolvement in that war. They feel that those protests \\'ill haste!\ the withdrawal of the U.S. from Asia and leave it an easy prey to their takeover. Personally I v.·ou!d rather die resisting than to Jive under a Communist dic- tatorship. And that is their avowed goal. SO IT lS A qu estion ()f where to stop their takeover of the entire populated area of the world. In Southeast Asia or should we wait until they start marching up the street where Mr. Barley res ides? It's time to let the voices of that so- called "silent majority" be heard. TOM RHODES Or9n11l::ed C1·lme To the Editor : What are V.'e going to do about organiz· ed crime? This question has slumped the experts since the days of the rum runners and the experts are still groping around in the dark for an ansv.·er. Perhaps some light can be shed upon the problem if we examine what keeps organized crime in business. Organized crime is just that, it is a business that is involved in the field of services. 'They furni sh· services that the customer is not only v.illing to pay for Police and the Panthers .. Black Panthers say that police acros.!I the nation have killed 28 , of their mem· bers and jailed many more. One sympa· thetlc account states that "20 have been e:riled from the United States; 98 are currently In jail; and at least 'J:1 others are under Indictment for various charg,s." One of several groups looking into police harassment of Black Panthers is tin ad hoc committee or U.S. congress- m'n that will meet in Chicago. Headed by Rep. Charles C. Dlgp. Jr. (D-Mich.), the all-Nell'O group includes Augustus F. Ha"·kins (f>.Calif. ), John Conyers (I). Mich.), Shirley Chisolm (0-N.Y.), WiJ.. liam L. Clay (O.Mo.)1 and Louis Stokts (D-Ohiol. THE BLACK PANTHERS were formed in 1966 a.fler a series of conflicts between Negro youth and the poUce of Oakland. Calif. They began to receive national attention aft.er one of their leaders. 1-fuey P. Ntwton, was charged with murdering an Oakland policeman. Once the Pano then' minlsttr or defense, Newton la now ln Jall. Eldridge Cleaver. author or SOul On rce. disappeared on Nov. 27, 1968, when his parole on a 13·year assault sentcn« was revoked alter a gun battle. lie was moe:t recently reported In Algjeri with 1ev11ral other Black Panlhtr Jeaders. seeking papers to let hlm return to the United States. 1llE U.S. DEP~RThlENT of Juatlct uid on Dec. II that its t.ivll rlgllts divi- sion would make an investigation into the shootina: -' two Black Paruher ( Editorial Research • i members by Chicago police on Dec. 4. They were the chari smatic lead er of tht UUnois BP party 1 Freel Hanipton, and a leader from Peoria, Mark Clark. ?o.1eanwhile. former Suprenie Court Ju.slice Arthur J. Goldberg and Roy Wiikins, executive dlrttlor of the Nati on- al Association fer the Acl v1u1ccrnent of Colored People. are launching a pr1\'ate ln\'estlgation into violent incident s be- twt>en Black Panthers and pellet across the country. Sen. Charles H. Percy (R· Til.} has suggested that the U.S. Civil Ri'111s Commission shGulcl investJgate the Chicago kUllngs. "There·s a strong feel· ing that there must have been some kind of plot involved," he declared. lNDEEO. AN UNEASY freling is abroad that tht nation'.!! police may be conducting a planned or spontaneous war aaainst the Black Panther~. FBI Director J. Eidear Hoover told a Housr Appropriations subcommittee last April 17 that the ''revolutionary stand" lalten by the blaek naUonellst groups "has m•de it necessary fot tht FBI lo Intensify its intelllgtntt operaUonl In this field throulh the penetration ol the,. groups with Informants Ind sources in order to ketp awarr of 1hetr plans and objec· tlvcs.'' 1 but will knowingly break the law to utilize. These include gambling, drugs. prostitu tion, Joan sharking. etc. Even though the appearance of such words in print may shock many, there are in· divlduals who literally ll\'e so as to in- dul ge themselves in one or more of these activifies. These individuals that Jive to indulge themselves are kee ping organized crime in business. THERE SEE\f to be two logical methods of combating organized crime. Those that indulge themselves in the services could be punished to such an ex· tent that they \vould no longer buy such w .vices. Society could provide some cf the services that are now being provided by <lrgarifzed crime. The punisOiflg of individuals for buying services from organized crime has never been successful. 'Nor.· has 311Y kind of crime been eliminated. during all of recorded hislory by PllI!lsRing the criminal. Those v.'ho believe that th°Th lil · ,, ·., the only solution to the problem of • organized crime are really impeding any proflress to1vard a solution. When society finally decides that they have had enough. then and only U1en will they eliminate organized crime by providing organized crinu:,.s services. HARRY B. lvlcDONALD JR. A,9ui11st tlie 11.N. To the Editor : A lot or people are \\'Ondering \\'hat the United Nations is doing here. The U.N. :ippears to have something good going for it, but is iL good for us? The U.N. gives UNICEF money to foreign countries without the slightest de- mand for records showing what was done with the money. An1ong I.he recipients of UNICEF are the sheiks of Araby, the Dons of Latin An1erica. and many a little "king" of a hungry bunch of vertebrates (also members <lf the U.N. with one vote, don't you forget) \vho. after getting theirs. find litlle money left for the poor children. · UNICEF IS A shady outfit. and 1 quote Stanton ·Evans' column in the In- dianapolis News for Jan . 26, 1962: "When the U.N. \rhs out of money for its Congo aggression. it b<lrrowed $10 million, earmarked for UNICEF. from the U.S. government. This was UNICEF money - handed over with UNICEF"s express con· sent. In short. UNICEF money was used to subsidize the Katanga "aggression" in which, as we all know, civilians were kill· ed, many of them being children whom the UNICEF apparently forgot about dur· ing that Httle fracas. The United Na tions is a thorn in the side of every American, be he patriotic or revolutionary -there is no difference -American.~ are being duped by lhe Unit{'d Nations, and lhe sooner we get rid or the parasites, the better orr '"e 1\'ill be , S. G. UNDINE ----- Wednesday, Dec. 24 , 1969 The tditoriat page of the Dairy Pilot setk.t ro i nform 011d stl~ ulate readers b11 eres enting tl1is newspaper~ opin1011s a11d com· metitary on topics of i»tt rtst und slgniflconct, by providing o forom for the ezpreulon of our rtadtrs' opiniom, and btt prucnUno tht dititr.tc triew- pofni, of informed ob.servn1 and .tpokc:nnen on topica of tM dav. Robert N. Weed, Publisher DAil Y l'Tt.M '7 LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE CHECKING •UP• Navy Pilot In Crash lNI JllU.HCI WOlllO ~ MR.MUM Cl:ll'tll'IU.T• OP' aUlLMISi l"*'1 l'l(TtTtOUI lll,llMI ClllTl,.ICATI O" au\1 .. us. ,~ .. unoer111in.td .. (t'11tv "'-" ••e l'l(TITIOUS NilM• conduc!lnf • MIM.U at 11,... 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L•tu,.,. ... t,., c.n1o11111. 011 Dec. 1•. lHt, 114'fro,.. me. • frfot11Y lie•• ot F••flkllll '"" "••nlilln. ,,7 l!••' Wisconsin Girls , Ot ltocl Dtumblr n. ,... ll'~llllC In tnd for 11111 ll1t1, "™"""" ltlh St\"'' Ce11tt MtM, Cil!wlllt. ti•11, \\'ho eJecled from his crippled •1u.erc1 F, "'"11"" •-""' 0or111e •1c11moN1 ~-ft 11 ~ llll'llth , iiw _.~ 11 bullMl.i 11 111, fighter Plan. mom.n•· •·fo•e •*" •· ltollrtr tv bt 1111 Pt!"o" "."'(1' "'""" 1• •uti.crlb undtnl•* 111 111 11'11lllr"l "r11t11IM 10 wt vi:; , ltlcller4 PtrlY Joi-fd lo th• ""'"" n ln11rvm1nl tr\CI lilt 1 tt 111 tlf """""'' within IOI.It I hed I h h S1'ft -' C1llloNll1, 0,.11t• c-,,~ 1t•nov11ec19t<1 1he ••tc11!tll th1 11m1. ~11 fl ,': fl t 1 ll'llllll~llO!I o1 11111 t smas nto a uge angar 0n Otc•"'"' 1l. uu, ._._ ,.,,, , 10,F1c1""L sE-.L1 ::;'(,' • •r • • f•IJ d ·Jh t t d" Not1ry Publl( 111 •nd fO( wld Sltl1, ,,...,llY l(, HINltY Oitfd Dectmblr ll. lNt 1 e WI n1en no o 15CUSS --uv '""''" 111 1c11t.,, F, l'r•1lel'4. ~e••rv l'u.!:!_k · c111f.,,1111 ~,., A•Lc:i J-•· 1.t.,.1""'1,1,11( th · bl" ltoben e. ltellrlf', AIC111td ,.,,,... JOl'\1111111 •lncl1111 ""'"'' In O! 1'hl 111111 tf e cai;e tn PU IC-khOWll " fl'M le bl ,,,. MflOfll WllaH o ...... e c-1v Mlklf'td Jtc•ll CO!lllY, <M<.f11":"d. Buy Most Peroxide By l.. t.1. BOYD BLONDES -Why Is It \Visconsin has more artl!icial blondes per capita than any other state? That's what a client wants lo know. Believe it's because so many girls in Wi.!ICilnsin start out as re.al blor1des. But when lhe.ir locks tend lo darken as they grow up. they attempt to restore the fair hair. N.ation"•ide, it is the )'oung ladies of Scandinavian <lescent who buy the most peroxide. I T H AS BEEN approximately four out of five American families eat in the dining room only when con1· pany turns up ••• DO YO U KNOW bow much money you've got? U so, too bad. J, Paul GeUy contends nobod y who is able lo count his money tan be considered really rich . , . AN IS..YEAR·OLD BOY in good shape ought to be. able. to do 80 situps, say the physical fitness experlS . • IN THE SENATE DIN ING ROOM in Washington. D.C., Republican senators don 't sit w i I h Democrat senators. and lady senators don't siL lhere at all ... OUR LANGUAGE r<.tAN has been informed the word "hobo" is a corruption of "hey, boy,'' bul he is skep. ti cal. MEMORIES -Arc you quelUied to join the Borrowed Time Club? Members are those citizens who sometime somewhere escaped a most likely death. Believe f qualif}'. not once but twice. This <.'Omes up because a gentleman subscriber inquires if I am that stranger who was severe- ly injured with him in '3 two. car collision. No. si r, do not recall ever being in a serious traffic smashup. Am not \\"it hout credentials for the Borrow e d Time Club, however. Years ago on a mountain trail I disagreed with a griuly bear. Another time I woke up in a crowning forest Ii re . OCcasionally something happens to a boy lhat exalts him lo angelic speed. He runs like the wind . He does not feel his feet touch lhe ground. In complete Uber· ty, he flie s, a liltle like Superman goir.g the wrong way. That is bow it was. BEAUTY As lo 1he whereabouts of the most beautiful American women, pollsters <.'Ofltinue lo claim New York City ranks first. With Los Angeles second , San Francisco third, Dallas fourth and Atlanta fifth. An in· teresting contention. But er- roneous. New York CHy does not house the most beautifUl women, On the contrary. Nor does Los Angeles. As Vice President Spiro Agnew pointed out. in effect: New York City and Los Angeles are least ~presentative. The women in both tend lD be too affected. There was a time when the beautiful -women mecca was Minneapolis, but most of Lhem moved farther wes t No\v it's a tossup between Seattle and San Francisco. The doorman in our building es.plained Lhis to me. CUSTOMER SERVICE: Q. "Any idea how much money the pro football players -t don't mean the lop stars, just lhe regular men -make every year?'' A. It's said at least half get beller than $20.000. Your questio11s and co1n- ments are tvt'lcomed a11d 1vill be used to llt'tever pos- sible in "Checkitig Up." Address mail to L. lrl. Boyd, iu core of DAILY PILOT, Box 1875. Newport Bcacl1, Cali/., 92663. The pllotltss F8 Crusader "'""' ••• 111ti.cr111111 fro '"' 1111111111 111-Mw Commlulo!I '•111rn ,ltANkLltt Mii 11'111.t.NIC.Lllf tirvmtfll ,.., 1<k-11<11td ,,,., •~e<~lfd ,. .... 11 ~-'o• ltn c 1 0 111 ,.1101 "' 1111 111~ str..i )·et plough·" th•ough the bay '""' 1•rne ~~ ,,,... ''"'' "1 ' · cnt• Met.111 c111t fltJt cu ' IOFl'ICIAL SE ... Ll Ot<embtf" 17. 2•. Jl, lfft Ind JI""''"' '· Ttl. llU) Ma.ml doors Of the repair building at Wllll1'" It, Hvder 1'lll llll"'t Alfot"lllYI 1W AMllN1..-1trl1 N<llttY Publlc-(11110!'1111 P\lblllhtd O<"tMt (Out Oellv PUit, Miramar Na\'al Air Station at Pr1~11111 OHi<• In LEGAL NOTICE DKen>bl<' n, )i, ~1. ,,., ...-Jtnu•,.,. '· 225 miles an hou r r<.1onday, ~;7:..,~~1i:,. t:-.111rt1 1'" "'"•' killing l I men and injuring 12 ~ rou1111J:'''g~~!1· ~~~~' Q11i.,. Ptlor!. c1111T111tc•~~~ aus1N1ss LEGAL NOTICE olhers. 0.(W!lbef". 2•. JI, 1Ht •1'111 J1"u1rv 7, u. t"ICTITIOUI flAMl P•HIM The Navy said Tuesday Lt. 1'7' 7Jtl.tt The .,,,11.,,1,,,., 11eet cmlh! ~ i, co,.. c1111Ttl'ICJ.Tl Cl' •u11N111 " Cvru M Rl.d"·I 27 San • ·1:, LEGAL NOTICE •ucu111 •11u11 .... 11 1111u1 c.11101111 Cl•. l'ICT1T1cu1 N,..M• • S • rn:; • • ~ cle. Minion Vl1lo. C1lllU1"11i., !Mlkr "'' "1'1\t ll!ldtt11tllld do nrtlt'I' ~, 1,. Diego, who ejected from the t Uctfll~ 11rm 11•"" If H-.T "· KLtt"PE• CONluctt1111 , hl•h·~" ,, 110 Ollt 1•, I d • • Cl!ltTll'l<ATe QI" •UllNIS I tl'ICI 11111 11111 firm It ~ tf tfte Lt""411 ll•tdl, C1lllot11l1, lll'Mltr '"' Ut fa~~ng :prpl~~ac~~ w~~~~~~~~ 11 l'ICTITIOUJ NAME ="'~:. :ri:·1e1.::i, ::n:11 .. ~ •. tull ~~~·oi:~~ffi:A°'.~~~i.s!klH~l~~T~ ~ """"'~ "°'' nnlt>r hi It Cot\• ,.. .. , .. 1, T. IC tlHtl, 144.51 C1!1~n11 <oml>Oled ot lh• lol-!119 ~"°"'· Wllc>t• nqt lo talk about lhe case pen· I ,ducllrt11M• "'c'M,,~!', 11 i5 s11vaoo,. ,'..','' .... ~~· c,"..,'l•.0M111:c"', ,'..,••le. n•met 1,. tun •nd •1,, .. "',,1111111(1 '" d'"g •n 1·n,est,·gat1·on by a ~~==~~~~============~===~"'~·~=··~_J ''" •••· 1 ..,.11 •· uNltr' ... tu-..1 1 ec. · · 11 1ai1-ow1· ,., • llrm n""' Of OUTDOOll Lt\!ING -.uroll1 T, ICll01><1!t Jol\ll .Br•~I 11 So E"cl"" Soul~ Board of Inquiry. DESIGNS •1'4 11111 11111 II•'" 11 comPoted St1!1 e1 c1ntorn11, Or1,..r Ceu11ty: ltvuni. ci t11or'n1, ' ' Th h nd t . . ol ,,.. IOllowlll• '"'"°"''' who•• 111m11 II\ On Otctmblr 16, im, before "''· • 0 Mlcn111 Hort(• UIO KlMI "d ' e eras a exp osions II 1u1111111 1111c,1 of re1kle11C• 1s 11 fOlie....1 · No11rv Public 1 .. 11111 lo• ••Id 311•1. N•.,;POtt ••itll. Ctlit~nll, caused severely d a mag e d K-oe E. 01w111, 1us Sttv1oor st., 11e•1011tll't 111Pe1•rd -.v•ellt '· ICll•P•• Lrroy M•r•r1. uio IClnti Illa . h h . d d Cost• Mes1, Ctlllornlt, tl•M ~ROWl'I to ~ le bf Ille Ptl'IOll ""'°" Ne,,.o,ori Beicll Cfll!Ot'lllt t ree ot er Jets an deslroye H p l s tit. 1<1111,.1.,. oewut. 1i.s s11vtdor 111m1 11 1ub•crlbld le 1111 wllh!11 In· Ottfd Novem.,.;r '" Ifft · five F4 Phantom i"ets in the . ungry eop e eek SI,, Cost• Mtw. C11i!or11!1, t1•H 1tr\lmtnl Ind •C-rw>Wlrdted •"• llCttuttd Jelln llfrmrl • Otltd December 13, Ifft !ft• s1me. ltllov Mtvtn hangar. Navy s p 0 k e s In e II Kempe E. oewu1 !OFFICIAL SEAtl 0 Mlthttl HO<'btck d rt 1C11f'1erl11t oewht Jo.e11h E. 01v11 · 0 c estimate the damage at $25 '" ~ c· ''' , 0 c , Nott•Y Pvo1k . c1ti1ornt1 s1111 °1 ce111or11!•. ••Mt """"'1 t t"' • Orn I, r1n11 c~n v On Oecember, '· 1,.;, bllort mt. ~ million. s l F d Oii Doc, ,,, 1Ht, bttort "''· • Not1rv PrlrKIPal Olllct '" Nollrv Pub!k In Ind lor 11ld Sitt•, Riddell was bringing the $3 urp us 00 Release =:;~' . .:," ~~m!:' ~•.Id J:~~t 111::,:"11~~ ~·:Tri'm~:~ E~11lre1 :r;::,11~or:~r:~edL1~0:V11 ~::~~~" million jet in for a landing 1C1t~rln1 DeW!lt knov111 to ,.... to bt !ht t"ublllhfd 0;'"" Cotir Ot l!v f'llet, 10 m• to bl "'' 1>er111n. w1101e n•mn '" because Of 10,y Ol•t pressuro. """'"' whoet nimt• Ii iubtcrlbo:d 10 Ifie oectmbtt 11 11 JI not tnd Ji nu•rv 1 1ullKtlbla le tilt ... 1111111 1~1rrvm1111 1..a wltM11 lnslrumtlll •l'ld IC-1\0Wltd&ld ht 1t10 ' . • •311-69 ICkllOWIMttd ll'leY tXtCl/lld IM 11nw. Minutes after he took off with r<.100ESTO ( U PI ) Rural Legal A s s Is tan c e e•ec111"' ""' ~•mr. · COFF1c111L SEAJ..I (QFflCll.L SE.I.LI LEGAL NOTICE Jmeoll E. 01~11 three other F8s for routine Thousands or hungry people Organization, in the court M••Y IC. Hf~.... Not1rv Pubtlc-C1llloml1 n1aneuvers over the Pacific. Nort•'t' Pu1111<·C•1110•111• 1u11'11111011 cou11T ol' THE 1>11M1,.1 °'"'' 1n today hoped the rirst delivery fight to reltase the food , "'111tlPi l Olflt• 111 STATE 0., CALtl'O•N•• ll'o• Or""' C1111nt>r he radioed his oil pressure o,."" Counlv Mv Co<NT1lulon E•,,lr•• I d d he of federal surplus food com· argued th1:1I the emergenci• M~ comm1u1on E•ol•1• THI couHTY OI" OlllANGI Ju11e n. 1t7t Was 0\V an Sai V.'aS November 11, lfn Ht. A.+l•>t l'llbllllle<I 0•111111 (Diii Dl ll't l'lle! returnl·ng accord'ing to the modilies in Stanislaus County hunger conditions in the coun-"ubll•lled °''""f C<Mtt 0111v r;1Gi. OrcrmDr• J, 10, 11, 10. 1m u:iu; ' Otcttnbet ll. ll. lt .. trlCI Jtn~iry 7. 11. NOTtCt: 01' HIA•ING 0' t"ITtTION l--------------Na 'ly, ll'Ould come in time fo r ty o\'erruled the food stamp 1t10 1111-tt l'o• P•o•-.tE oir: Nc1..0G111-. .. N1c LEGAL NOTICE "I ,. cted at 400 f-t WILL -.HO 11"0111 LETTEllll OF -.o. Je 1 h..... Christmas. regulation. They noted the LEGAL NOTICE MtNtlTlll,..TION w•TH TNt: w1LL -.H.1------------ because the oi pressure ad The nearly four million surpl us food was sometimes N11x10 l'·UUI gone down dangerously IOY.'," (lltTll'IC ATE QI' •USllfllJ Elltle DI w-.LTElt M. ZAISS, OfCtll• Ct:ltTlll'l(-.TI OI' IUSIHISS Riddell told newsinen follow· pounds or food became sold or given away as animal l'ICTtT1ous HAMI! "'· ll'1cTrT1ous HAMI •• 'I b\ T sd h LJ S food The unOrt1hlfltd 608 <trtllY r.. t1 <Otl· NOTICE IS HElllEIY GIVEN Tftt l The ul>der1\tntd do urllly th11 ••~ ing rne crash. He did not avai a e eu ay W en · · · oucllne, busr,,,. .. 11 7u0 ll u• 0, c • ..,.,,, OorQ!h•• to. 21111 his tMfd 1>1rll11 1 <el'411<11.,. • 11u11"'u 11 111 $11'Mk1111t elaborale. District Judge Robe.rt fi'_ Tht surplus food in to~t• Me11, CA!!lor1111, u...ier •M lie· 1111111on for pr11~11 ol holot•tolllt will Or,. cor-1111 Mtr, c1111or11l1, undt• tft• !!llous firm ntme o1 ll'IZZA HUT OF lftd for IUultl(t of Ltl!•tt of llcllllto.'I firm ntfl'lt o! COMMODITY Cmdr. J _ P. Vinti, skipper of Peckham ordered the Depart· Sacrament.a lncludes about ORANGE COUNTY •NI 11111 i•la 11,.., 11 ....,,.,1nl11r111o11 .... 1111 ""w111 •nne~rd 10 TllENO set1tv1cE •...S 11111 ••Id nrm 11 R.dd II' •• d sa·d th I t'!Wll"°'td ot Ills lel!O'*!lll 111,10!\ wllO\I! !ht 11et111-r, rettte!'>QI lo wl'lldl 11 1111de <ornP01rd of lht lollowl111 "rton•. whcHr I e s '"'lua ron, I a ment ot Agriculture to give 117,000 pounds of turkey, plus n•mt 111 tu11 •nd oi•cr et rt11RnU '' •• lor lu1111tr p1r11cu11,., •1'111 11111 Ills i:me ll•m•l 111 iuu '"" Pl•<•• ot ruldt~• •r• as the jet got about a quarter follows: ''"' 1>1tce 01 11r111111·""' HIM 1111 111e11 11 1011CW1: Of • ml'Je from the runway "a fhe food to the poor· Of this dry milk, JentJ!S and peas. Y!ttll• Wlfrlft C11111rd, 7l50 ltur Ot "'' tor J1nutf"r 7, 1'10. " t::» l.m., In $11Vtll I. Tl41,111'1, 111: l1111k11lll Or., C111"4!L Coil• Mic!I. c1111ornLt. fl6t1 lht courtroom t! 0111er1mlftt No. 3 O! CorO!lt dtl M••· t1111. couple of explosions'' on board central California fann county At best, the attorneys said, 011.0 OticttnlNlr n. 1t6f. uld ~"''· •' 100 civic cen11r or1v1 H1r1ie11 A. 1C11111, Jr., u1n ,.,r~• Vlrill Wlr"°n COtllr<I W11l, flormtr!r WHI Elellll'I StrMtl tn ~I., Gtrlltn Grovt, C1lll. led the pi lot to believe he was \Vhere an estimated 10,400 the poor people in Stanislaus 511,1 o1 ,11110,,.11, 0,.,,., ceun•r: '~' en, ot S1nt1 -.n1. c111tor1111. Q1t10 OtttmlNlr "· Ifft. t · l I C t Id I 'l d" Ofl Oicemblr 11, \Ht, Mlo•e me. 1 D1t.O Oec1rntier 11, Ifft. s11v1 a. T•lum os1ng con ro • persons face a hu ngr y oun Y wou ge a ' ra I· Noli,., P\lll!lc 111 ""11 for ••Id Slit• w. E. ST JOHN, Mtl"IH!r• R. K11eu. J•. lional" Christmas dinner Only PtrlMl llY IPPttred Vlrpll Wlf'ln CO!llf,j CO\lnl\' Cl•rk, St~tr O! Cttllor11l1, Dl'll>tt Ceunh!! 20 Million Now Living In State Chrislmas. known IO mt le bt lht ouse" wtl~• QU•VrA, CA•l'IHTElt & .,..ltHll On Otc~bfr ''· "''· bela•• mt, - S be r Id lO the CXlenl they Can perpare lllmt 11 IUbl(rlbfd lo !~ wllllln In· •1 •r1111t J, ICllll Jr. Noll"' l'ubllc In t.w:I l!!r •tld S!1lt, Leve Ha r e , Community it from the canned turkey and $tn.ime111 tnll •cknaw~ted 11, •~e,ui....i 011 M1cAr111ur i i..• .. PO "• uw HtlOll~llv 1p911r..i s11v1" •· Tttum • ...,, A · • · th lllP ••rnP. . N1w~ert ltlcll. Ctllf, nUJ Htrl>trl II, KtltlJ, Jr., kl\OWll le mt le ti-ClJOn organizer In e county. other dry goods. lOFFICIAL sE-.LI '"' 11u1111-HM 1~e "'"°"''..,.,,,_,..mt• •rr •ubtcrlbfd 'd food Id be M ...,. I( Hrnrv All lf"lltYl tor l'1tltlel\tr to l~t wllllln ln•trumenl 1nd tckflO,,.lf<I•• sat caravans \\'OU N:11rv Publlc·Ctlilorn11 ll'ubllll>td Ortnw Co•sl OtllY Pilot. f<I lhtr t~ttu!td '"' Mmt. set up using any vebiclt!.."i P•lllclo•I Oftlc• 1~ oec•mblr li, B. lll, tt•t 1JJl·t' <OF F1c1-.L SEAL! H H ho D••"'t CoimT• LEG'L N·-O-TICE M1r't K. He11rv available. The food noY.' stored onest 0 MY c-mh!lltll E~•lrt• "' "loltrY ll'ubllc . Ctlllornlt Prl11Clp1I Ol'llct In in a Sacramento warehouse. Nev. '•· 1•n ,..,wn or1n,t county s t an is I a u 5 c 0 u n I y o!'c~~~:d1~.0;~,n~~. ~·:;1J.~~~·;,, f11f:: Cl!•T ll'IC•TI Of I USINl.SJ ~:..c~\;;;1"' Ex•l•H supervisors a few weeks ago To Collect '"0 2>1~·" "1cTtTioui ,,.,..Mt: 1>ubt11ne11 1>1n .. C0t•t 0111y P11o1. LEGAL NOTICE Tftt unlltrslgntd do ctr11h 11\tY tft OtcffTlbtr 11, Ji, JI, lt6t tnd J1nu1rv J, declared a ''state of emergen-I----"== co..aucll110 , bllllnnt 11 10£12 c"'* ci r-ltJV )l2:1-1• cy"' in Lhe county because of T·IUU cit. Hw1111111t011 11K11, c11itor11~. un11or1 ---~,,-,----~----NOT1e1 1'0 Clll£otTO•i ~ lldttlou• llr m n•me e! ,.. &. E LEGAL NOTICE widespread hunger and $'25 Re\"a1·d IUt"ERIOlt COUltT OF THI!" I UltOtNG MAINTENANCE •1111 ""'' wld, ____________ _ I t 'f STATE 01' CALll'O•H l.t. l'Olt firm It comHltd el lllt f000...,11\0 --· unemp oymen • TNE COUNTY 011' OlllANGE wf!e>4 ""mt~ In full •1'4 pllcn ol P·lUJt Last Christmas? SACRAMENTO tUPJJ-{;a\. ifornia, already the nation's most inhabited state, hit the 20 million mark in population. today. That's what state population experts say, although nobody pretends lo know just who the mythical 20 millionth Califor· nian is. ''Things are very bleak," · Pff. A-'4472 rt1!atnc• •••••folio~~ Haberfeld said. "It is much LOS ANGELES (AP ), -o!.!~::.i.01 ROllERT M. SHERWOOD. 11~.ii1:::r!t oii,:~~~·g;u!~' G•110• er,, worse than other years. There Preston Tingle, an honest NOTICE '' HEREBY GIVEN '" th• i:tw•rd "· Torrt•. 1o.u Cook Cr.. "Tiit ufldV11,....,. oon OHllt-t ,.. 11 _,_ "·bo h · crfdllctt$ ol thr abav1 ntmt<t decedent ti~nllOfllOll llHcll. 11uc111111 • butl"l'H •• 515 So. Br1cl'I ll!Yll., l'ICTIT10UI NAMI are tremendous hardships. •IV , as received • $23 ""'' ,11 ••r.on1 111v1111 c111m1 11111111 '"' l!dw1n1 11. T"''" An•l\tlm, c1u1orn11, urMtH ,,.. l•c- Disease Stalks Family "Based on our growth the past two years, California passes 20 million on Dec. 24," said Nels Rasmussen,, a pop.. ulation expert with the State Department of Finance. R ts 35 •· .. t reward for Lhwartlng 11td d1Ctdr111 1rr ~vl•fd 10 lllf' 111em, Anlt>Ot11 o. Pucct'ftl lltlcVI """ ntmt of "H" Ne: IM en are up iu <N percen . a ,,.11" IP!I .. ec•n••v voucMri, 111 lht o111a1 s11t1 o1 ce111ornl1, Les -.n,.111 PH-.tltMACY 1nd thll 11tt 11,,.. 11 com· Construction is al a slandstill. warehouse theft, but who O! Ill• ctertr. 01 me tbove e111111111 court, er On OuttnlNlr 11. JNt, bl1'r• m•. 1 POied er '"' 1a1iow1111 '"'"°"' WM.v W 000 needs it? Not •rtngle, to ,.,.Hnt 111em. wltl'I '"' ntc•"'"" ttol•IY Publlc rn '"" lor ••Id 511tr. ntmt: 111 lull end 1111c1 01 r11ldt10C1 Is 11 t have 6, . Or 7,000 voucl\tr1, to the unde,.Jgned 11 lllt Olflr.e Pf•IOf"&ll'( IPPttrtd A11!1'rc11Y 0, l"uCctllt IOI~: unemployed." . Tingle, 50, Jives rent-free iTl ot HUGH J, lt lTC HIE. -.11or111V, 3'00 8nd Edw~rd -.. Tcrl"fl •nown lo mt le bt Ge•Y -.. Oreytul, 3101 MOtlf"OI, Co1t1 th de I nl f h 7 h WH1htrt l!louleu8rt. Sul!e lot, t o. !he Plfton1 ""ho•t n1tnt1 e•e IUtlSC!'ILlell Mtll, C11U. The Agriculture Departlnent e un rp n ngs 0 I e l A11oelu, C1ll!ernlt 90005, wlllcll ,, t~e lo tl\r wllftln ln11rumtnt •nd •ck1111Wledo· Dtttd Dlc1mber 11. "'' had Prevl·ousty wi·thheld the Street bridge ac~s lhe Los pl8te ot bu1tne11 01 the un<1..-110111c1 In 111 fd thev ~iecut.o '"' 11me. G1r.,. A, Or1.,.1u1 A1AOERA (UPI) The give up his job in • service surviving members of the Ira station and the family has Cheatham family must subs.ided on weUare since celebrate Christmas with lhe lhen. I m~Uors Pllt1lnl11g lo tht 1•t1!r cl 1~ld !OF1'1CIAL SEAL) STA."l'E OF C-.llFOltNIA, food saying that it CQUld not be Ange e11 River. dt«ile111, w11~1,. •cur rnonlll• 111er lht Jolln c. Rlckttts OitANGE COUNTY: Food? 'Ir<! Publlcnllon ct !hi• 11Clltt. Ncl ll"t l'ubllc -C1tllcrnl1 On D1<lfl'M• 1$, 1119, btfOl'f 111•, ~ given away becaU5e the COUn• Oiled O...:tmbt• 11. !Ht. lo. ,-.Mftltl County Nol•,.., Publl< In tnd for 11111 Stel•, ly had a food stamp program "'Why, there's plenty of food Ju11e w. Sh@rwood, My Comm1u1on E•~l•r• pfrlOMllY .-011e1rr<1 G••v -.. or,rfu\ fear Lhat it might be Lheir la.st. This year, the disease has That means one out of every IO Americans Jives Jn Cali· fornia. d Th I . E•ec~tr!• ol the Wiit "' N•v, •. ltll -ft0\1111 IO mt ,, bl ""'" perlOft Wl!oS• tO help feed the hungry. arot.1n • QSe Ca ering COm· lhf •hrovr n1m.O dtcedtnl Publl11Wld Ortnl• CCIII 011lv PllO!, n1me 11 111bu:•IDr<I lo I"" within In. A deadly disease called struck two more children, a glomerulon~hriti1 hu killed married daughter, Mn. Betty t\vo sons, dJSabled Cheatham Collard, 19, and a second son, and left a ho s p It a Ii zed Ronnie, 17, who died Dec. 8. Los Angeles is by far lhe state's biggest city. The lasl time a census was laken (March, 1969), 2,929,000 per- sons lived there. Next came San Francisco, 706,700, and San Dlego, 700,100. "But," said Haberfeld, "only panics can't keep sandwiches NUON J. 1t1TcH111 OfcemDr• 11. u. ll, 1"' •l'ld J1nu••v 1, .1rvmen1 • ...., 1c~new1td9t11 11~ ,,ecul~ after a few days, you •·ow.·' uoe wu1111,, 11Y11 .. Suitt •" 1t10 ''*tt "" 11mt. !he richest of the poor can a[. llJ.I L11 ""''"'· Ctllf. ,..,, IOFFICt,..t SE,..L1 Also. there are the cans of Ttl: uu1 111-su1 LEGAL NOTICE N•-•oe1""'" ford to buy Lhe stamps." food d d . -.11..-111y "' l!•""''rl• No••rv P\lbtlc · c11uor1111 Attorneys for the California ente during delivery Pub1w..cr orirae co.1111 o111v 1>l1Gt. PrlMIDtl Ottk• 1" daughter in critical condition. Mrs . CoUard is; in critical and Lhrown aw a y by orcembtr 11, ll, U6t •nd .11nu1•1 1, Ii. T-4'"1 o'""' Count>r "It appears to be inherited.'' condition in Fresno General said Dr. John Tilslfa Tuesday. Hospital. She has not been told But he added that such a pal· of her brother's death because tern is ve.ry unusual for the doctors (ear the ef(ect it LA Taking Steps to Ban Rock Fests lt7t tJH•'t NOTIC I "1'0 CltlOIJOlllS Mv Comm1H'°1! Eulrtl \\'arehouses ifl the district. 1Ull'lltl011 COUltT 01' THI: Ju..e II, 1'11 "Th ' food d LEGAL NOTICE sT.t.TI 011 CALIPOl.H tA l'O• Publl1h.O o""" C0t1t 0111v Pllet. th ere s more "aTr?Un, •• ,,c ••• ,, .. ,,,,., •• ,. THI COUNTY o~ OlllANOI[ Decf'mber 11, 1•. "· .... 11111 Jtl!Ult't 1. an a man can use, 1ng e v "'· A-Q611J 1•10 1:111-1• d I ....i Ne, >tSJ E1l•!r ef t EOH JOEL PETERS.1 -----,----,,.-----ec arcu. on J1nu,,., ?J, 11111, •' 1i;oo -..M .. Dec••~fd. LEGAL NOTICE disease, which causes failure might have on her morale. Dr. Rasmussen said hi! slale- wide ca.lculation1 are based on California's net migration and natural increase, which he called the "most rational way" of forecasUng population. ''All I got's my cat and he COLONl,..L MOitT G,..GE 5EltVICE co. NOTICE 15 HElllEBY GIVEN lo th•·--------------of the kidneys. Tilstra said it was hoped she. It all began in 1966 when would be able to recover suf- Cheatham's son, Jack caught ficiently lo lead a normal life the kidney infection and d ie~wilh the aid of an artificial 1.k ff h ' OF C-.LIFORNI,-. II !NIY 1-lnlrd crtllllors cl lllt lboYt "9mlod dtclodtnll 1 es stu l e caterers lhrow TrU11l•e ulldfr •nd punu1n1 lfl DHt et '"'' 1u Hrtonl lli vlf'll ci•!mt Htilllt '"" 1'·'"'9 away same as me " Tr\lsl dtl•d HO\l'trnbtr, 1• 1"" e•ttui.o ••kl 11ecfd1nt ,,, r1<111l•td 1e tne tMm, c1•Ttl'1c-.TI! OI" •USllflSI • " br Johll E Miii AMI StrlClrl II. Hiii, hUI· llh 11\t he j lh ol!I Tingle saw thieves steal $600 "'"" 1nc1 W11e and rttotttd Oectmblr 1. : "'' cli~:.'~:~r1;:~ e~:i'ne~ • ....,,,, ~: l'tCTITtoui HAM• in January, 1967, at the age,m kidney machine. worth of lingerie fr 0 m ""· 11 1n1tr. Ho. 3901, 111 boak 1101. P•o~ 10 Prtstni ll'ltm, with "" MCH••"' Tlot' 111111•,.l•tlfd ee c1rt11Y 111.., 1ro Ml, ol Ollltl1t 111.Kerd• tn 1111 oltlce el """'""• 11 !ht Ulld•nlentcl 11 1111 ollic• <e11ducllrtD 1 bu1l1M11t 1t 11' w. Wiiton, Veltman Terminal Co watch· the co~ntr Rtcorder ol Ortnt• c1111"1y, 01 PH•l L SILYEtlt end ROllERT M Ap1. 3G·W. cc1•• Mtw, c1111or11i.. ur\Cltr ed where lhey hid it. 'i..nd told ~~b1~·;~·H"tb~E~~ti1.:tie:u~5~c c-.,..us;; siLvE•. 1~ Nor1ft . vine ~,,,.,; i":Ni~~'k11i:u~ J~~vi~:~..o°' 1,.~fT~~: 16. About the same time, Meanwhile, the remaining Cheatham discovered he also Cheatham children -Marilyn, suffered from the malady. .IS, Jo Arm. 13, and Phillip, 3- Last January he was forced to wait. "Our estimates are based on methods that are as flear· ly accurate as we can make them," he told an interviewer. "What the real figure is we won't know unlil the census comes out in June." LOS ANGELES (AP) police t11•v•ble 11 U"" ot 1alf 1,. ltwlul mo"lt'I HaHvwood, C•llfornl•, ""11'ch 11 the place firm 11 cemftDltcl al 11\t lol~wlrtD .. ttcni, ' cl lhe Unl!ecl Sl&lfl\ al lh, Solllh lro11t or llllilntH ot lllt u""9r•l1ned 111 111 m.i-wr.ase n1mt1 111 lull 11'4 11ltct1 tt Declaring that rock concerts Whal \viii he do wilh the '"''~"(' 1e thr Old Or111111 ceu11tv 1"' "''111"111' lo l"e eita!e O! 1•10 ll•c•· •Mlaen<• 11 '' 1011o11111: have "resul"~ 1·n health and 12~" "B I b t C1111rthouse, Cllv of Sanll ,.."'' Stile cl de~!. wl!l'll'I 100' "'°"1"' tfter 111' 11''1 Ralpll "· Hltlu"4!n, nt w. Wilton,,.._._ I.ell "· UY SOJne 0 il.CCO, Calllcrnll, tll ~1~11!, lltl i '"11 lr1tt11st con· eub!ltallon or t~ls llOtice. 30-W, Colli Meit. Ctllf. narcotics problems and evefl guess. Maybe some new vev1111 10 and llO"" het<I by 11 u..aer 1eld 0•1t<1 °~·~~·0~5p~:l tt11s M. Hl1tun1n. 11t w. W!IJ1111, -..i 4 Young Women Plead Innocent to Stabbing Since lhe tum of the cen· tury, California's population has doubled every 20 years. dealb to -some participants," jean! " Dtfd cl Tru11 '" '"~ p10Qf'r1V tltu~tHI 111 ,..dm1n111r11r1~ er Ille •1t110 et JG·W, Cotl• Mn1. Ct llf. · lh~ City of Co1!a M~11. 111 ltld Counh lhr abol!1 lllMld dt,tlltnl Oiled Otcttnblr 11, Hat the Board of Supervisors I! and sr11e de1crlbe11 111: l'HILL ttLVllll ""1 111111h A, HHtuM n k• .t.11 lh1I terl•I" land ollvt11d tn I~-ltOllltT M llLVllt L!l11 M. Mll!UMh ta 1ng steps lo ban the1n In S•••• cl C1lilornl t. CcunTy Of Dr1119•, IHI Nt '" V1r11 "'"' ST.I.TE OF c-.L!FOll.Nl.t., Los Angeles Counly. Pa11ll1c· 1· Get . ..: (lty ol Co.ti M•••· descrlbC'd II Htt!y~ Ct•I ttUI 011-.wGE COUNTY; .-, 1011ew1: Tth uiu'..,..n1i or1 o~. 16, Ifft. Ntor• mt, 1 Net1 ... Aller a statement by Loi 113 c1 Tr1c1 No. 1111. 11 1ha ... n "" All••""' ltr -.i1rnlflli•r•lrh Publtc 111 •1'4 1or 11111 s1111, •1r1ot1111~ Supervisor Burton w. Chace, J S • '"'" •tt~•ll@d 1n 11aoO. ,l, •••~' 11, •• Pul)lltfted 0,,,..1 cou• oilt"t ,11,1. •PH•ted "''"" •· Hfl1un111 lftCf Lll•1 M a I• 1 CJJle JJCC •1'4 '9 of Ml1<ttllnlQl/I Ml~ rttercls O•Ctmbfr 17, l(, 31, lt'9 IM JlllUI,..,. 1, Hlltimt11 know!\ le rnf' lo IHI IM HrilOll\ absent because CJf Illness, was • 01 Or'"'' Cou111v, c1rnern11, lf7t llH·H wi.o.1 Nl'l'lll •11 wmcr!btd to'"' within Seit 1111 ,,.;u bl mllll•, bell wtl"""I ln11rumt11! Ind 1c•,._1M1td ll>l't ff• read to the board, I he cov1"1n1 o~ ••rr•"'~-•••''" tt Jmpllfd. LEGAL NOTICE tcut~ '"" 11mr. WATSONVILLE £UPI) four young Seaside women have pleaded innocenl to murder charges in the multi· pie stabbing death of Karen r<.iickens, 22, Watsonville. Lydia Jayubo, 25, and her sisler. Cannen,. 20, along with Joanne t'..una, 22. and Judy Sory , 21, appeared before !ltunicipal Judge Harry Brautr ·ruesday_ He set Dec. 30 for a preliminary hearh1g. District Attorney P c l e r Chang said he \\'ould seek in- d1ctmenls on all four from the jlr<ifld Jury before 1fte end of the year. ,\Uss Mickens y.•as foun d ln he r Watsonville apartment Friday nigh!. She had been People's Park Soon Car Lot BERKELEY (AP) -The Parking Company oC Amuica haoi Ie.ased a commtrclal park- ing lol on the wut port.ion of the controvtrslal "People's Park," Univer s ity of Cal ifornia officials said Tues- d1y. JUchard Hartsook. universi· ly real Ktale officer. said tOn· vcrsion of the vacant loC near !ht university a .mpu! (]lied a publle .need. " l . I stabbed IOS times in the upper part of her body. Detectives said jealousy •P-- ptared to be the rnotive for the killlnf. Armless Girl Gets Lice1ise Stale lo Gain Only 4 Solons supervisors instructed r -unty BERKELEY (AP) -Black -.1«11"' 11111, -•tsslon. e• en· !OFF1c1-.L sE-.LI ~ p h h' f rr D d c ....... brl.W:H. to P8V Ill!! •tfnlllnln• prln· M•rv IC .... ,.,., Counsel John O. Maharg Tues· afll er c 1ef o Sta avi c1011 1vm ,,, 1111 r10te 1K11•~11 11. 111<1 .,... 1m No11ry P111111c -c11H.,,~•• J{i\llard received a !i1. monttls OWi e< Tru1t, ,_II; tU.s:i1.1e, ... 1111 1... HOTICI 0, TltUITll'I SALi! l'rlll(!HI Offk.t In day to recommend methods of . 11,~, 1,om ,..,,11 1, 1Ht, 11 111 11111 nc1e N1. Jl·H Or•ntt COU111v Preventing such events. jail terr.i and $500 fine Tues-•'°"111..i, 111v1.w:e1. H ,...,, und•• 1111 011 J1,...,1rv 1s. ""· " io:oo 11.M., M• CotN11IHie11 E~•itn d f I f II · "'''"'et 11ld o.td of Tru1t, ltt1. clllr1t1 Crodd't EKrtw Co. 11 duh< -ln•td Nov, 1•. 1m SACRAMENTO (AP) -A Chace said that a recent ap.. 8Y or un aw u Y carrying a •Ml t•.entt1 o1 1111! Tr..,,,.,. Md of 1111 Trullft unllt• 11•111 eu•w1111 10 Offll o1 Pu11111"'11 Or•rtDe Ce1ll 0111-t Piiot, Slowdown I n C.11.forru·a•s plication for a rock concert weapon the maximum 1rv111. c1••"" by i11d Dttd"' Tr1111. TtV11 1111e<1 Ftt>ru••v 1t111, ,..,, ••«"'"' 01o:emw 11, ,., J1, 1Kt 1nc1 J,_..., '· • d II Tiii btn~ld•ry 11111111 111411 Ottd DI br J.,,, w. -.uen Ind ll•11M111 D. -.11e11, lt10 n2'''' growth rate may hold the pennil in MaUbu had been mis emeanor pena Y • Trv1t, tw ,..11ot1 o1 • ti••K" or dtt,..,H 111 Hu1btN1 1nc1 w111 •NI •1Cerdr<1 Mt•tll s, Attorney Charle! Garry said iM o111111t1on1 1otr:urec1 111 • • • bv · 1Mt, •• 1"'''· No. 1n1. kl booil .,.,, .... LEGAL NOTICE state's gain in U.S. House or withdrawn. But he s a i d hfrtlo/ore fatcultd Ind dtll'teflll lo !ht "" °' Otll(Lll lll~cll In ,,. Olllct el •-p-•n••tlv .. seats to four residen•· of that area he would appeal the case after undlra......., 1 wr1tt111 Otcltrlllon of t111 cou111r 1tte0tftr .. 0r.,.., covnt-r,1-------------n.c '""" .., "" arc ap--M · · I J d M · o•ou11 •NI Dtm•NI 1or s1i.. 1nd Wl'Ltt.., e1t11or1111. WILL sl!LL AT PUl!lLIC AIJC· ""'" · h Os 1 d r th · b · th t ·1 · h be un1c1po u ge a r 1 o ... In t e 197 nstea 0 e !;IX pre ens1ve a J mtg t fl(lll(t el brttCl'I •Ml ,,, tlt<llOll to CIUH TIDH TO HIGHEST •IOOElt F'.llt c-.sH CEltTll'IC.t.TE 01' COR,OltAT ION ~0111 d f th E Barsotti denied a motion for a '""' ufllltf'll•lltd 1o t1n 111d at"OP1r1v 1o l••~•bll 11 Hmr e1 1111 111 11wiu1 "'°,,.., originaJl.y e x p e c It d , an renewe or c ester-week 1•11.,., $tld obl1••11.,.1 ind me,11111, "' 01 "'' u ... i1tc1 11,mi •11,.. ,....111 1.,,,1,." Tlll-.NSACT10111 oll" 1us1H1:11 utto11t h I.• new lrla t. ... ~ rod II •d . ' c .. _ l'ICTITIOUI fl,..M. Assemblymtin reporls. 0 I ays. l@OlfmCl~r 11· l ' u ,,, II , CIU .. °' "'• rtodJ Gl'Po••1-Bw!ldlf'e, l(ll 'THE UNOllllSIGHEO COll:POlt-.TION Hilliard was released on .., 111d IWlll<:. el brt•<" •ncl o1 tllc•hlft •o teuth 11n11,,....1v ceor"'r o1 lrot<tw•.,. " 'Mle report came Tuesday "In a county of 7 million bl! recerdfd r11 book'°"'"'' 1ot, 01 ••kl w.~uu. ''"'' A.111. c,111orn11 111 rloh1, -~ ne,.b\' <trtlfr 111•1 It wit• conc1 ... e1 • r b P I r · I 'd ts " 'd Ch $1 ,000 ball pending appeal. OlftclNI Rtc0rd1. 11111 •fld 11111rt11 '°"""Ylf 11 ind now tM.11 nen loc1tr<1 11 Int SOUll'I M1ln !\iOUNT G £ rOITI Repu lican au r1 0 o reiu en . sa1 ace. "such1 ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;I 0,,., Dtc•mbtt 11. "''· httll by 11 uNl•r 1411d offd 11 ''"" 111 $t•ttt, s.1111 AM. c1111or1111. n101 und11 IL AO, N · C · of Pacific Palisades. ch11irmnn gatherings presen t critical II co111111e1 ,,.,.,,,,.,, s11vic1 tht "'°"'tor lllv11tc1 111 111t CitY of N...,., the 11<11110U1 '1'"' 11•mt 0' 11 c-.t-MEo j AP\ -The State of Norlh AUXILIARY POWER ,e. ct c1111ornl1 POr! a11c11. 111 ••kl ca ... n!v ind S!•lt "• "~•rm1cr or 0•1111. n MEo-c-.L •• or the Assembly Elections and problem5 of health a n d 11 111d Tru•ttt. d•K•lbtd 11, P~•rfl\1cv 0t O•u••· ~l Ml!.0-('.Altl! •• Carolina gave Carol Burton, Co nslitulionnl Amendments narcotics enforce.ment." ::.~'.~~;: ~i.~~~~·11 Lot 11, =k1' :'cJ'~ ;'· ·~ °".,'; ~~:~=~ eO: 0~::1•~nd·1111fi· .:d ~;.., 111~ 16-year--old daughter of Mr. Committee: Y:hich "'ill draw up ~upervisor Kenneth flahn Sailboata, Dlnghiei, '"' ,,... ~:~.:!!~, M: ••. 1,. 111; °'~~et 1111 tGm•011d of '"' 1011ow1"" c•rPD••11en. and '!rs George Bu to f a reapporlionmf!nl plan in 1971 commented: "Lel them gQ to Trolling, Etc. ll'ucil1!.,..., O•-• ce111 o111y _:,11o1. c....,..v •-•••el u 111 cwn•v. :,.••lftl:l .. t •1fCt '' bu•l~u It it I> ' . r n 0 Otet ... 1111 u. ,i, ll. 1Ht .. ,... Ulll wlr w)ll .. Wiidt. b\11 Wtll\OUI c-Mllltll E11~r···~· t'IC. CHud OtUctt "1ount Gilead, an ear 1 y based on the 1970 federal the wide open spaces of COMMANDO """'"' or -"•nt>r, nt1rtn .-•m•llPd, 1100 Do.,., 0,1.,.., N""'"°" ltte~. ,.,11_ census. Nevada or Idaho." LEGAL NOTICE ,.,,,111111 11111, Hua11on. •• '"" .,..., Ch ri.!itma.s present . Jl was 3 Outboard Motors ll ·-----~~~~~~--1 tvm11t•11e ... to,..,.""' •tm1ln1.,. 11r111-w1 THE'S 111 h1M 11111 11111 If•• .i 1;;;,;;;;;;;a.o.;;;:;;;;;;;;o.;;;:;;;;;;;;;;a,;;;:w;;;;;n;a,;;;"''";;;"';o;;,ll IUPl!lttOlt COUllf 01' THI (IHI Mn ol !Pit IWll MCllrH lw Wld 0Ktmblr, 1 .... driver·s license. r:••••••••••JtlllMM'lllllDlll~Mllllil NOW ! -Only 26 Lbs! sT-.TI OI' tALt,OllNIA 11011; °"" " lnar. 10-wn: SlJ . .oo.oa """" MUMll 1:111.,..,1..., •M. THI: COUNTY 01" OlllAHO• t1111r1U lrtrn A."'11 1. ltllf, 11 Ill Oterff Oki T. Ltl For a girl without arms, It WE WISH YOU H I h Th t N• . ..,_..,u 1111c1 11C1t1 .,.ovldoH, ld>l1fH:ts. 11 1...,, 1.ctfllt l'm111tn1 was a unique pre~nt. ' " • rus HOTlce 0, HIAltlNG 01'" t"ITIT!ON \lllffl" l!lt llrms °' lllcl °""' " Trvtt, STATE 01" c-.Lll'OltP•ll,.., ~ THE HAPPIEST Of HOLIDAYS I S Horse Power 110111 '11otAT1: otr w11..L ANO 110• f9tl, ~.,.. ..,.. ,.,.,. .... , 111 ""T'"""" couHTY 0, LOS AHGEtES. u, A spokesman for the state I Afr Cooled • ond • uint1t• TtsT•M•NTAlllY ..,.. tf"" tn1111 •··~"' Hhf °"" t1 °" 111J1 u111 -..v " o.c.mtror. A.D. ll<parlmtnl of •1~-Vehicles • ..... ~ "'"" 'w•P ,,. ___ '~'· '"'· ....., -00"'4 •· «•"" • " -Re I 0 a Ta k Oec:u1M. nw brlltllct1,., """"" wl4 °"' .i Hollrv ttvMk 111 ,,.. fllr Hid CIWltr _. sa id Cerol btcame the first 1 mo • • n NOTICE 1s HE11e•v GIYEH T1111 T'"''· ..,. ,.._ • • b•..cfl or lilef1u11111 Jhltt. midi"' 111er1111. """ ~,.......,. f c.i.tild Tl'lofn,-I'll~ lllf>d lltl"lt!ll 1 .. 11. 11'1# ebllf•"-HC\fl"1lf I h t r, II r, 1lftlf' ._.,, .,..._,,, ... , ... o.r.. emale congenital amputee In * * * IDEAL t1on,. ~"of wm 111111 tor mu•""'" ...,..tot_ 11ff'(~fH _, *ltvlrlcl ''"" 01" ,., L• ~-"mt 11.,. 111t M-11,.. the state to reeei ve a license GIFT *** 1.ttttrt Ttt'-l•rv '' PttJtlontr, v!ldlrll•nH • "'It'"° O.Cltrttlofl ., "'"*""' ti Mll lllf """,..,~ inc. ti ~ ft ""1<11 It ,,,... tot IUllMr Del•~" •NI Dt<N"" tor S•lt• WICI wr1tllft lltf' ~Tlttt 11\.11 U9tlllfll IM Willlln lo drivt. fi: LOW Pfllt.I s19411 ••"'lc\llll"lo '"" met ""' 1im. 11111 •lite .. ,k, tot llrM<ll •NI of fllelltfl le c..u" /flf,lnM\tflt "" lllMlf ti 1M ~tit"' Th .(tr ct. J Jo ( tf f'IM•L'1 t11t ttfT>f 1<111 llNfl Ht ror IM undl,,~ to "ti Miii -IV 't ~Ln 111,.,.., ,,.. ~l'IOWtoclltd •e -e a J\'e un r a or-ONLY J_1,~ , ttl'O. 11 fl» 1.111 .. 1n ""' wtkf'I Hid ot111,111on1..,.. ""' .. '"'· ot1 "'•' rlltll ttotMr•llot< ••l'«llllf 1111 tll!N. \Vest P.1ontgomery If jg h A\I'"-e1 OtN""'"'' ,.._ > ot ''"' '-''"'"' n, ,,.., me r.r!'ftr•lollfd <•Ill> '" •"-wi.a ...... 1 Mw 111.._fro '" School . w•· was born w·ilhout COii' "'RS IENCH ll11t•t1 i\'I ni1, •1• """· ...., ctrC111. 11 1111 Ovk Ct111•• D•lvt Wtl•. 111 H 11i. 110tk.t e1 btttcfl "'' ef tltcllefl fro my llfnd •"'II lfflltc1 ..,, offkll• "'" 11w uu ~ prt_. 11'111' ... ~ •1-Mdl. !flt Cti.. tf leh!1 -.11., C1lll11tnl t, llf rMOrdlll ltl llOOk tllJ. Hit tu. o+ llllf 111¥ •nd w.r 111 11111 (llrfMlurt n11t 1blhl arms, ob(,1\ned htr learner's Otflel Ot«mi.r ft, lftt Olflclll ltetlntl. wrin .... permit on Oct. 16. At lhet time Boat Island, Inc. ~ .... :.;. sll .. ~HN Ot!t" c~~t;· .,'lc~:i co. !Ol'l'IC.IALJ.~~L~. ,,_ site. was examined by the WESTCLIFF PLAZA HA lllllY 111. c•1tt,.TON ., ••Id Tr111lfp, Ht1t1v ,11t11tt . c.11ttr11i. state's •s&ls:tanl chief license 1108 Irvine Ave. Newport 611ch 1 711 W1•7•14-1 ~!'2-,~!''' a.11. ;:'..,.'!:;;T..~':'t.1£",:~ :rc~P7ttT:!.':"' ~O: ~~'j'_.[:'11~.1"' • th t ( • · 541..COSl ---Ttl 1110 t.tMW "~b!ltrltd N-rt Mtf'W Nrw' "~u Juff ''' 1t'1 exatruner, t 8 a e 5 senior tOtltn ,.11 °""''· ~10..it.,,, • ""-"'' ,... lfflltifl'I• <Oll'lbtfllll wit~ 0111¥ 1'11111. tow1t1tt ,.11111\tl'lld 0t111t, eo.11 0111, ,t,_ examlncr and 1 former local o,..~ M•l'IMr Y-..fll11). Pw11n....,. O(•nt• c..tt t>11111 •11o1, a.1c11. <•l!io.n11. 0ec""~ , .... 11, 1tu O.c111'!1lltl'" ''· u. 11, ,,.. .,. J111u•rv ,, examiner. ww••1111CWblll'WWt.w:1Wt11ww .. wwwllllls-w11 1~===========~l:~o~-~!"''.'..'~'·~'~·~"'.:.·~··~·'.._ __ c'~"~·~ff'.l ~'~:!.'~·:~~·~~'....'.'·~"~n'....._:_ _ _:»'.'.'.;:''·'~'l'~'~n:_ _________ ,~,~-'.!'. " "· I. • I ' " f DAILY PllDT JOBS. Plan Working C11urches Ce.lebrate Birth " .. 2,100 in County Get E1nploynient Three festl\lal Christmas servlCl'S \viii be held at Prince of Peace Lulberan Church , 2987 ht~sa Vertie Urive, Costa Mesa. T-A'O candlelight servlces will be held Christmtis ~ve: al 5 and 10:4S p.m~ The s o'clock services is designed f o 'r families with yow1g eh~dren, Mark Wikstrom, student at Luther Theological Se.mioary. St. Paul, Minn., \YiU bring the message. At the close of the service, worsh.ippers wiU sing ea.rols around the lighted Christmas tree on the patio. Church, 20*3. Orange Ave ., Costa ~1 esa, will present a program in WnJunction l':iU1 the youth groups pageant Christn1as Eve, 7 p.m. On Christnl3s Day the festival service is sc heduled for 10:30 a.m. and com1nu nlon service is at 11 :SO a.in. Pastor Tingle y \VII I p r e-itc h ··olscovering What Is Oet'p in a.m. followed by th t rom--- munion service at 11 a.m. ts'. set for Christmas Day . By JOANNE REYNOLDS t-iAB was b1·oughl to I.he coun-°' .... 0.111 """ s .. ., ty in April, 1969. i.s whether or not a person qualifies fh1ancially for our help." In Jan1.1a..ry, 1963 President S. F. Eyestone, President of JohDson proposed a major in-Autonetics who was appointed dustry • government coopers-chairman of the office when it live ~•m to find jobs in opened, explained ils 01>cra· pri\'ate business for the na· tlon. Once a 1nan ls taken into one .of NAB's jobs, there are spe<:ial problems that have to be faced·. according to Gewin. A congregational caroi sing wilJ follow at 10:30 p.m. The service will include a com· munion offering. ' Beginning with a baptism· cere1noi:iy at S p.m., SL. George's Eplscopal Cburcb, El Toro, will also hold a family service, 7 p.m.: musical prelude to Cllristmas Com· rpllfllon, II p.m.; and choral celebration of communion, 11:30 p.m. for Christmas Eve. Christmas." •1 Uon's • •hard-core unem· FlJU STAFF ployed." '-~we ... have a full -time staff ··You have to understand," he ~:-:plained, "some Of these people have never held a job before and may require a IIUle special handling since they may not understand the idea of showing up for work on time and things of that na ture. Christmas day cilebratk>n of communion is slated for JO a.m. Family candlelight service is planned for 5 p.m. and a communion "'·orship hour at I I p.m. for St. Mlcbael's and All Angels' Episcopal C h a r c h , 3233 Pacific View Drive, Corona de l Mar, Christmas Eve. Two years later the proposal here. I appointed retired has become working reality MarinP. Corps Maj. Gen. John for nlore thnn 2,100 dlsad· P. Condon, also y i th va.otaged young people, setk· Autoiietics, d i r _e-e1' o r , · ' ing jobs in Orange County. . Eyestone said. Bandit, 23, Gets Tern1 A C·hr !S tn1 as Eve Candlelight S e r v i e e for families will be conducted at Central Bible Church, 23rd and Orange, Costa Mesa, at 6:30 p.m. On Christmas Day com· munion will be o!fered at If a.n1. According to Carroll Ge"·1n. · Tite county "'as divided into .!ipokesman for . the Orange five districts. each with a Coonty !Detropohta.n area ofl chairman and job pledge cam· the . Nat}()llal A 111 a n c e ~r paign manager ... Our purpose Businessmen,. 695 people ~a' e is to go around and perso;t:dly been pla~ed 1n fu1J.~1me 1obs call on the better than 500 and 1400 In summer Jobs Sll'lCC businesses in Orange County the JOBS program run by that. employ SO or more. and "I'm not saying we coddle anyone. but we try to make their supervisors understand a few of the problems involved here. "The average man we place is about 26 years old, never held a job before. bas about a sixth grade education and most likely has some· kind of police record. These are the people who don·t even get past the front gale if they go job hunting." In Prison SANTA ANA -A Gardena man convicted or armed rolr- bcries or Orj(lge c 0 as t restaurants is iTo\V serving a five years to·life term in state The 10:45 p.m. candlelight service will feature the story of the nativity. Pastor Andrew. Ant:er son's tncssage \\·ill be ··Away in a l\1anger." "\\1lu1t Child ls This?" \\'ill be the theme of his message at the worship service at 10:30 a .m. Christma s Day. Inspirational music y,·iJI be provided by the adul t a n d junior choirs. and t he high school madrigal group known as the Gospel Sounds. Folio"'· ing a communion service, a candle lighting ceremony will be staged as the congregati~n files out of the sanctuary to the front lawn of the church for caroling. A chorcll communion sp'V-iCe will be presented ChdStmas day, 10 a.m. Chora l music y,·i\I l1ighlighl the Christmas Eve. 7:30 p.n1 .. se rvice at Fain·iew Baptist Cbureh. 2525 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa. The candlelight service "'ill also feature carol singing. Child care for infaots \Viii be provided. First Christian Churt b or Co~ta ~1esa, 792 Victoria St. will conduct a Christmas Eve Candlelight Service at 7:30 p.m. This service will ofter communion. The Rev. James E. Piercy will speak on "The Meaning or Christmas." Births DEATH NOTICES BUCHANAN R.,.. A. t!lud11n1n. Age '3, ol 11111 lmp1l1 Lint, Huntln91on 8eacll. 0.1~ of dNlh. ~CHnber 2l. Suryjv~ bv wile. Jun~; lwo loot. t!lol) Ind 8111 11uch1nsn; three 51tPChildren, Mrs. Su1an Hu9""•· A<>9•• •nd PhilHo Bvrnt11 morMr and •!eplalher, Petri 1<\d Jafn6 Brlnkl•y; 11r1Mlmo1her. Mrt. Olbome. VlsH•llOll, Tllur1d••· Dec. 25, I ~ • PM. Services, Friday. 11 AM. SMllh• Cll11>tl. SMllhl Mer• lu1rY, Olrt<ton. CARTER Jphn G. C1rter. Age 6-1, of IMO tlew· POrl 81v6 .• •lt, Costa Me11. Dale of dNlh. Oe<::emt>er 2J. Surylv~ bv w!lt , Viole!; two lQnl, Don tn6 Rot.. .,..,, ol AtilMI: d1"9h!fr, Mrs. WtYM ROiif, Arl10111. Seryi(fS and 1n1trmt nl will be htld In (e>olid~e. Arl1on•. Btll llll>•dw1• ,\\ortuarv, 1o•· w1rdjne dlrt<,lor1. FRY Mid" Frv. Avt 70, cf ~S67 Eldon "ve .• Co••• Mt••· 01!~ of dtalh. 0.-c. 21. SoJrylY td bv dauvht~r. Mr>. Donna M. !lltc110t; thr~ 11s1ers, Mrs. Ru1h Lenk1lroo, ol Camino: JostPlllllt La« lenkskron. of C1ml110; Josephine l•r- 6Nch: pr1n&<>n, Chrl1 Robl,.son. Saryl(t l. FrldtY. ' PM, Ben Broad· way Cht..el. lnlermtnJ. Harbllr Rest Mtm0rl1! Par•. Bell llll>llclwl Y Mot· tuarv, Oirl'etors, ARBUCKLE & SON Westclllf l\tortuary U1 E. 11tll St .• Cosll A1esa '46-4811 • BA.LTZ l\10RTUARIES Coron• del Mar OR 3-9-150 Coslli ~1esa Ml 6-ZU4 • BELL BROADWAY l\10R11JARV 110 Broadway. Costa l\lesa LI 1-3433 • DILDAY BROTHERS UunUngloll Valley J\lortuary 11111 Beach 81,·d. HunUnrton Buch IU-'ITll • PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK ceme1Uy • l\1ortuary Chapel liOI Pad.lie View Drire Newport :r:.· Califomi• ·" • • PEEK FAMILY COLONIAL PUNERAL HOME 7181 Bofu Avt. W<stml-.. m.= • SHEF~~MfME~R MORTUARY Lapno Budl IH-1131 Sao Cl<maite OUlM • SM1'111S' MORnJARY C7 Mala S• 8.111Un~ Bead - Make a Sharp Trade; Use Dime-A-Unes get them to pledge jobs for the previously unemployed.'' he explained. "Qur goal is to get as many people o(f welfar e aod out of lhe unemployed sector as possible by finding people \\'ho wlll hire them, train them and then keep them on the job." ACCQrdi,1g to Gewin, fro1n April to June last year, 69 job soliciters were able to find 1400 summer jobs for high school students who might have become drop out s because of lack of mon·ey. "\.'le're pretty proud of that summer program." he said. "all 1400 of those kids "'ent back to school this fall." prison. Michael S~ane Guiles, 23, "'as sent there by Superior SENSITIVITY Court Judge Robert Gardner Ge"'ln said this ofrice, like with the comment that he was most of the 13!' NAB offices "an a,1tisocial creature." But The Sunday school at St. John the Divine Episcopal Students Aid Indians across the nation, coOOucts h · d · •·-' t •t' ·1 t . . I t e JU ge l'eSIS..;u argumen s FULLERTON - A drt've lo sens1 1v1 y raining cou rses or by the prosecution for con- The Rev. Albert Burke will conduct a Christmas Eve candlelight service. 7:30 p.1n. for United Church of Religious Science of NeWport Beach. The service will be held at the Ebell Club of Newport Beach, 515 \V. Balboa Blvd. the first line supervisors who secutive sentences on three collect books,. food and bed- will work most directly with holdup counts and a\lowed ding for the ~lopi Indians of JOBS hirees. c:uiles to c.c .. ve them con-northern A r i z on a "'ill ~ I · t 1h· k h th Festival of Light services "The p r o g r a m "'as currently. cu n11na c is \Vee · w en e I d b H n-I A th I · \ So · t r c 1 for Christmas Eve will begin dcve ope y um an uo;vc op· Guiles was convicted of, n ropo og1ca CJC Y o a 1 h n1ent lns!itute, \':hich is part h .__ . h State f u I l er I on , ships at 10 :45 p.m. or t c I 8 ·11 d H II " h .d ::imong ot er1 robU\:ncs. I c thousands ol pounds of SUP· Neighborhood Cong regational o e an owe • e sai · ~254 hold"p o· t the Toco Bell, Th · d d I , • 1· t lh · · h d Church, 340 St . Ann's Drive: "From Deep Darkness to Glorious Light," the tradi· tional Christmas Eve service. will be held at 7:30 p.m. at Newport_ Harbor Lutheran <;burth, 2501 Cliff Drive, Newport · Beach. Pastor J ames G. Blain \Vill preach "Shhh! Don't Wake the Baby" at the Christmas day service, 10 o'clock. • 6 to P,erf onn At Pavilion Six Estancia l-ligh School music stl.idents will perlonn in February in the Pavilion of the Los Angeles ·M\)sic Center. They are members of the All Southern California Honor Orchestra, ctioSeii. during audi~ lions in Long Beach last PI ymooth Congregational November . Church of Newport tlarbor Thcise ehosen were. D.a\'e will hold services Christmas Muhonen. French horn; Ani h SchwarlZ, v i o I i n ; Suzi " ey came tn an con uc e., ~14 Pac•'fie Coast Highway, p 1cs o e 1mpover1s e I · · · d lh t . .__ Laguna Beach. The infant so n l,400 JOBS 011e raining session an en Seal Beach and the Kentucky nuo.:. of l\lr. and i\1rs. Do n \Vhen the JOBS program our staff took over fron1 F,t.ed Chiekcn outlet at 18575 Coordinator of the drive is Eve at 7:30 p.n1. T e Schwartz. vi ola ; Guy Fabre, candlelight worship ce remflny bassoon : Guy Hardy, oboe, i.vill feature an open com-and Andy Lage rq1.1ist, French munion offering. The congre· 0 C ti .. Ed \" d 22 Id Pccarovich of Laguna Niguel started in range ounty. 1ere. Beach Blvd.,.H 11·n ling 1 0 0 _, .a c, a -year o an- G ed I r G · 'd 250 · h 1· d t t d r will be baptised dur ing this 'e\vin comment , a goa o ew1n sai superv isors Beach, whe re he look $J l2. t ropo ogy gra ua e s u en J.400 permanent, full -time jobs have take,1 the course \Vhich Both occurred last July 12, from Anaheim and president service. gation meels al 3262 Broad St ... -=h=o='=n=. ==========. Newport Beach. Ir by June 30, 1970 was set. So lries fo give them an idea of of the society. Arter the ll'orship the con· far the NAB staff has been \vhat it is like lo be in the Guile 's compania.i in the The 5,500-tnember tribe is • gregation v.•i\I gather in t~e Mount of Olives Lutheran able to place 695 in jobs and hiree ·s shocs. series . of holdups, Bar r Y located on an · 80,000-acre patio to sing "Silent Night'' Ch urch. 24772. Chrisanta Drive. A THOUGHT FOR TODAY about 530 are still there and '·\Ve use glasses \vith prism Eugene Wilson. ,20, of Harbor reservation siluaieq ab_out 100 and to receive the Christmas ?o.1ission Viejo will h 9 Id "working out very well," he lcoses so the person· wearing City is already serving an ·1 r lh rth 1 "" ed'c1·0 services Christmas Eve and identical · sentence in state ml es rom e no eas ern ui.:n 1 1 n. Sa'.d. them is throv;n into a disorien-t. r A · ___ Christm as Day. A family and Prison. Both men were ar~ 1Jl o r1zona . 1 cooc1 111c1i: 11 1 111y '"1"'' 1111""'"' "We have a retenlian rate of ting world , rather like that the rested by Los Angeles COlUlty "During this time .of year. at Christmastide v.•orship at ctiildren's service of caro s, o1 • ..... :t•r•' "''''"· 76 percent which looks good train ee fa ces. We also have a II · 1t·t d r 6 ooo I t ·1· n e , u r r ec ti on Lutheran scripture. candles and the -AllOnymout sheriff's two weeks after the ieir a 1 u e o ' ee · 1 s t compared to the national role-playing session where one July 12 robberies. about five to IO degrees belo\v Chu rch. 9812 Han1i\ton. Hun-lighting or the Christmas ree,I PRF.SENTEo •s A JOBS average of 54 percent . It person puts on a white.face zero," Wade said . Lington Beach, begins \\.·ith the decorated with 75 Chrismons l PUBLIC SERY-ICE EVERY DAV IY: II r II h k d th I r Guiles and w,·1son unsuc· I 1· hi ·s slated far Chr•·stmas Eve at ~~~1!i :ploy~:~~s t~r~o~:; ~:s e~~lo:.~~ui~~~ t~e r~~1~r cessfu!ly attempted to escape He e~lim~ted the Indians' ~~;~~~~na:t 7~;0e p.~.ndPea~~or ; p.m. At 11 p.m. a cand elight I Lee Roofing Co. rate," he added. puts on a blac k.face mask and fron1 their guards last Aug. 25 ~er c?.p1ta !ncomc at. SSOO ~ Arthur R. Tingley "'ill speak chora l communion service is1 ius su11!~:rta~~.1~ lu11n"' '42·Tm Gev.'in said the NAB has set assumes the role or the as they \V ere on their ivay to ) ~ar. They re ~n agr1c_ultura on : ··. , .To All \Vho Rece ived planned. I their goal {or 197(}..71 even cmploye, It really opens their W~stn1 inster municipal court. tribe .. but their,, subsistence Hin1 .. , A n;iorning brunch at 10 l---~f i;:~'s!E;1~:i~{;~~~~~~ ;;t~:~~:~~~:~~~f 1~:~~1~! L:::::.:·:.:~, ""I """ f ;.,01.e "nr TLe nn mer .'' disadvantaged people "' h 0 .I I I '"i I H . ur ••• Finding the people to go want to work we'll keep Read Bill Leary • ·. l\'ith the job is the work of,_!g~o;~o~g~.'-' ~h''.'.'.'~'i~d~·-----"============'11 Dell HB'l1an, of the California l Slate E1nployment Service . According to Gewin, J-Ianan 11·orks very closely with many community organizations such as the NAACP. the League of Latin-American Citizens, the Youth Opportunity Council and others, in finding people "'ho qualify for the jobs .• BELOW POVERT\' In order to become qualified as '·disadvantaged," J-la,1an said. a person must be living bel ow the povert y level defin- ed by the federal govern1nent -a famil y of four 111ith a in· coine of $3,200 per year or less . ·'This is not a mino rit y oriented organization." Ge1vin said. "\\'e·re color blind. The only thing we 're interested in Cal . State Art Ce11ter Occupied I ' Cross,vord Puzzle ACROSS 1 Pa la tab le 6 Ori11k Ilea vi ly 10 Man's name 14 Mi ss Astaire 15 Not odd lb Japanese sh ip name 17 Sig ns 18 To? vand~· ville ~ct 20 Bad ••• 21 Dock 23 Hole -···: 2 words 24 In a state of ab eya11ce: 2 words 26 Hung about 28 Heal thY state of mind ;o Stop sleeping 31 Hardware i tern 32 Canadian cabinet members 36 Part of ''to be" 17 Make clean :iii Word used after "Ready 1" 39 Assist- ants 4Z Is under a compulsiori: 2 wo1ds 44 Streaked will1 color 45 Motley crowd 46 Con tented 49 Kind of boat 50 Obtalns for labor 51 Specie5 52 John11y •· · 55 Reduction 58 Musical direction 60 Rouline 61 Mold inq &2 Correct &3Watk ed 64 Old b5 Flower ar1angemenl DOWN 1 01110 2 ---· Bede ) Employees 4 Class 5 Notwlth· standing b Sound of amusement 1 Surplus BSweet--· 9 • ·· use 10 Notewortliy 11 Dwelling 12 One ol the Hora e ,, Jl •• NCWr'OftT CIJN'TER. P1.:c1flt Coatol Hl&hWI)' b11w'f" Jimbo,., i nd MltArlhu•, rtttWIJ IT""Ultl l '"'I)'. Yesterday's Puzzl e Solved: , ' 0 ' ' , ' ' • • • • ' • ' ' • .. • ' ., r: • , ' • • ' ' .. " ' • ' • • ' . • ' ' . " • ' ' • ' ' • ' ' • 0 ~T • " " ' . ' ' " "' " • • 'I -lJ ~ 4 I;" ~~p ~i;'.:. Lfr..j' r 4 (; ' ' • . . ' . ' • " ' 13 Entic ed 1'1 Ex1s1s 22 Freezing 25 Cut a ' , ' 0 " ., r . ' cc' • ' ' • ' ' ' ' ' " ' ' • • ' . ' " • ' ' • ' • • ' ' • • ' ' ' • ' ' ' • ' ' '· ' "' • • ' • .. . • . ' ' 12 24 b9 40 Prepa1ed belcrel1a11d 41 Billiard shot coin's edge 26 Suspends 42 Manipulates 1 43 Past 27 Native of Tu.Isa : Informal 28 R11 l ~r 29 ~11g l1~1i 11v er 30 D•d electric~I work 32 Muffled jJ New Yo1ker or Nova Scotian 34 "Rio---" 35 AtmCI· sph~ric cond1t1011 37 Step • ' '° .;. \4 " ll 4 5 F ltd 4b In g(lcd spirits: Dial. 47 ll'or( 48 M1H e of love poetry 4<! Quoted 51 Joint 53 r~cuntairT cf Europe 54 G1oup 5h E'(ti11ct bird 57 Bie<tkl.is t item 5'1 kion~1cli: Abbr. " " " l l.l4,b'i ' ' 'I I •• • Applause for The 'DP People' There have been "OP People'1 around for a :ong time in Or· ange ,County's community theater circles. And, though Tom Titus, the DAILY PILOT community theater c:.ritic, had been selecting the ones he thought were ihe best among the Distinguished Per. formers for four years, it wasn't uotil last ye•r th•t the DAILY PILOT got °'ouod to creat:ng a tangible award fer them. The DAILY PILOT DP made its debut on the tho· etrical scene just a year ago. And now, with a wh ole crop of new performances to re· viow for the year just past, it's time for the OP to do an encore. The O scar or Emmy it iso't. But t he DP's DP means a lot to the ha rd.work· ing pa'rt·time thespians who win it. And the DAILY PILOT, whoso coverage of community theater is the most comprehensive in the county, is proud to have the honor to name the "DP Peo· pie'' for the second consecv· tive year, Five trophie s ri\e those above will be award ed for l~e cal. ender year rapidly nearing its close. Eaeh recipient of the' "Dist inguished Perform- er" title wiil be given a tro· phy. There will be one for Best Actor, for Best Actress, Best Supporting Actor and Be s t Supporting Actress. One special "Distinguished Production" DP w i 11 be given to the year's Best Di- rector. Titus, in his lntermis· sion column next Friday in the WEEKENDER, will "opeo tho envelope" •nd announce the I 9b9 DP winners. . ;· ,. I I I . l ·f ' 0 r s ' l ,, n ,, e r ;. ,, e u :i .. . .. h -. ·------- • ~ BARBARA DUARTE, 494-9466 'lr•MM•J, ~ H, Ifft I ,, .. I . • • • • • i I . •• • • • ~Camelot' Stars • Silent Knight -: l I I f ( ~ I f .. t ! ' I ' • I ! • ( ' l I l I I I "Christmas at Camelot" came to Laguna Beach as a preseason treat. and left Aliso Elementary School youngsters enveloped! in the \vraps of pageantry for tomorrow's original drama. The Arthurian legend starring Alex \Varrack as King Arthur and Julie Ritchie as Queen Guinevere \\•as played in Ye Great Hall to a ·1nusical background provided by the 31-piece Christn1as Orchestra, Blue Tide Singers and London To\vn Mummers. Even tile audience was allo"'ed to get into the act \vith a coin· munity rendition of the old favorite "Silent Night." Operiirig with "Christmastide'' set against the histori cal back· ground, °Camelot" traveled through favorite Christmas carols and the "Twelve Days of Christmas," each scene depicted by a primary class. · As directed by Deane Bottorf and Mrs. Richard J\1udge, the glittering drama featured Norman Quijano as the bi shop. Knights, ladies, monks and nativity players were Anita Orlandella, Mark Spe- ciale, Curt Chastain, Margaret Bland. Gretchen Van Deusen, Sher· \Vood l\1cMillion, Randal Bryson and Nancy Surface. .. Also in the cast was Jvlary Boyd, Mark Weaver, Christy Brun· ner, Janis Proctor, Bruce Moreton, Donny Arndt, Irene Bowers, Chris Kinne r, Tangy Matzinger and Billy Thomas. Narrator was Leyna Bernstein: stud ent director, Christy Brun· ner, and court musician. Nancy Surface. An able production staff of Tod Beane. Ken Clark and Steve fl.·Judge handled details. FEAST BEF ITTING A OUEEN -Page Anita Orlandella helps Queen Guinevere (Julie Ritchie \ prepare a feast of \l'i~d boar as Bi shop Norman Quijano extends his bl essings. The royal feast \vas one serVed in Camelot as A1iso Elementary School -students pre-- sented a Christmas pageant in Ye Great Hall. Also appearing in the Arthurian drama were nine primary classes. :>,-·;r: ~·ii:r.~ ;-. \,. -.. ..... ·,··-'. ~.;.. : . ~ .• .. ,.,,~ ~ .... f" • ....... • SEND ING A CARD OF HOPE -El Toro res· idents (Jell. to rig\>t)'.l\frs. Leroy.Kellog g and Mrs. Stephen Hanson write cards to prison- ers of waT. In the background is a picture of Mrs. Hanson's son Todd as he appeared on a 1967 Christmas card sent to her bU sband who is "missing in act.ion.'' · · Wife Must Make Move DEAR ANN LANDERS : l am a middle-aged ~an who has just been Of· fered the promotion he's been dreaming about. It means moving the family several hundred miles from here. My wife refuses lo move. She says the :kids are doh1g well in ICbool and moving ~ould mean leaving friends they have JfO'vn up with. She abo is ~ to ber family. What can a man do when he is factd ANN LANDERS THE DEVIL AND TilE DEEP BLUE SEA or POW Families' Continuing Prayer Please God, Bring Dad Home · By BARRAllA DUARTE 01 tM D•!lr ,.!!ti 51•11 The wo1nen sat qu ietly at card tables and on the floor arol!nd the coffee table addressing Christmas cards. A seasonal occupation? YeS, bul one that carrie& far more thrust than the usual two-hour penning of Christmas greetings to friends and relatives. The won1en, like many othe rs in areas such as Upland. Azusa. San Diego and towns across the United States, were spendi ng a morning in the El Toro home of Mrs. Leroy Kellogg i_n order to address Christmas cards to prisoners of v.·ar in Vietnam • Posters and information on how to help those prisoners line the walls of the living room ; an A.merican flag flies outsilie the home as it docs every day. Yet another flag flies across the street al the home of Mrs. Stephen Hanson, 30, wife of a Marine Corps flyer who disappeared in Vietnam on June 3, 1964i. 1'-!rs. Hanson. a tall. attracti ve brunette v.•ho speaks softly and without bitte rness, ha s attended many card-addressing sessions in the hope communication with the Vietnamese may speed the day when her young lieutenant husband returns home ... to see for the first time his son Todd, now 3 years old. HUSBAND SHOT DOWN LL Stephen Hanson was shot down as he piloted his helicopter over North Viel· nam territory. Although the government listed him "missing in aclion," his \\'ife Inter recognized him in a picture of Aine rican prisoners published in a North Vietnam newspaper. As added proof to her belief her hus· band is sti ll alive, a military passenger un the flight who was rescued reported the pilot and ro-pilot survived the crash, although he didn't know what had hap- pened to them. Carole Hanson spent one year awaiting word of her husband, then decided to do something about it. As one of 1.355 America n women whose husbands or relatives are listed 33 prisoners or missing in a c t i o n (whereabouls of only 401 are actually known), she joined forces with others in a campaign to pressure Hanoi into observ- ing rules or the Geneva convention: list· ing names of pt:isoners, opening camps to im partial inspeclion, repatriating the sick and wounded and permitting cor- responde nce. Wives are allowed to write monthly let. ters, limited to six lines, according to Communist rules. None are answered; none are returned. And a patttrn of uncerla.inty J:o; established in a day-by-day pattern. a pattern that has been interwoven into the life of Carole Hanso n for more than three years. COORDINATES EFFORTS As Orange County coordinator for the NalionaJ League of Families of American Prisoner:-; in Southeast Asia, she has ' circulated petitions, designed bumper stickers. corresponded and personally ad· • dressed congressmen and is ready to take • the biggest step she has taken so far in• an effort to find her husband. As a forerunner , she made a second trip to 'Vashington, D.C. this month to · make known the plight of the wife of a missing serviceman. She and four other wives whose husbands are presumed POWs appeared on·nationwide television and were introduced at the President's news conference. On Jan. 3, slle and four Lo6 Angeles wives will fly to Paris accompanied by a .. television commentator. · • Once there, they will seek a personal confrontation with Xuan Thuy, head QI the North Vietnam peace delegation. She agrees efforts maOe· to' release prisonerS :1hould be government to,_goverrunent, but is too well aware that North Vietnam doesn't recognize normal channels of communication. WORLDWIDE JUNKET From Paris. the junket will visit government officials around the world, hoping lo stir up sympathy and possible recognition for the ''forgotten" men. Since that June day, more than three long years ago, Carole Hanson has writ· ten her husband every month in care ol the post office in Ha:noi. No one knows •. whether the letters arrive; if they are ever received. But Mrs. llanson will continue to write, , and fight. fol the day WM-n her young son ' will no longer ask her, "When Is my dad- dy comlng home?" ' She'll Lose Stakes • at Home • • The problem ; t'm In love with him but he can 't make up his m~nd about me . Alter 10 months ol being together almost every night, he slill needs to play around with other women. since you have de voted yooradf tt~ elusively to him for It moa~. yoa Uve tt.e rlabt to tell him ettaer-or. l>ae't bt surprised If It's "or." A man •cam dttply for 1 wom1a ud wull Hr for 1111 wfft doH not pla1 around, -••"91 there'• something wrong wtt.k ~. Have yoa eonsldettd tbt poutbWty! AA It not lilied wtlll 110Y Nd, ........... don, Polhk•I pony or erpn&-. ~ prim4Q' p.rpoee of AA It to ·Wt ,..,1e stay 1sober ad 1letp MW afaiWca oddeve lllot saOJ. • . A-lat.rated la lllelr lflerll!n aliaaW wrti. to Al'*llcs ..__ Box 451, Grud Cttltrli Poot Oltlee, Nn York, N.Y. ltl17. ; ~th rebelijon like this! My wife says. ·'Money lsn't everything." I agree, but this isn't jwt money. It's what I've been .aiming fot. It's saU:1facUon and progress. 1'm 37 years old . If I tum down this pro. motion. f'll be stuck 1'11 this spot the rest I my Ille. P1e1se help me. --JlE1WEEN DEAR BETWEEN : If tbt: devil win• this battle she 11 1olng to haYe a ln1s&ra&ed, unhappy ba1band on ber hands for many ye1r1 lo come. ~ayb9 forever. In my opinion. your wife 11 lei· tllf,... d"'11 bdf1. Jt 11 tt.e WOIDl•'I f'f'1pon1iblUly to make a home for her man wbtrever be can best pun ue bis profession or ply Ills trade. Remind her or those btauliful word1 : ''Whllbtr thou 1oe1t-I goe11." I DEAR ANN LANDERS : I'm a 31-year· «ild divorcee who has been gotllg with a man 37. Ht also is divorced. I should tell you, in all candor, we are not engaged. We have talked of marriage but no commitment has been made. The problem boils down lo this : I am satisfied with one man but he is not satisfied with one woman. La.!t night I told him he 'd have lo make up his niind. He called me "unreasonable" and ''u n fa Ir.•· Am 1 ·~ -1\.T.K. DEAR A.T.K.: Inasmuch ., you are not e.n~agtd and no commttmenl bas bctn made, tht ctntle.man ha! • rtght io do ai; he pleuea. By the sa me token, DEAR ANN LANDERS : Rec,ntly you told a 16-ytar~ld boy to join Alcoholics Anonymous. t didn't know AA took ln kids that young. What are the re- qulrementa for Joining AA? -INTER• ESTED FOR A REASON DEAR IN: The only requirement ror membenhlp In AA It the dt!lrt to •lop drinking . There are no due~ apd 110 fee1. Anotlttr oi'gaalaatlolt ~ '°'9 a tttmendoo1 job for ako--let ti: TM N•· lloaal c.aacU oe AlcoWtsrn. I Park Ave., New York, N.V. Ann Landers will be 1\ad lo help 10ll with your problems. Send them to htr ia care of the DAILY PILOT, tnclollinC 1 sclr·addresscd, stamped envelope.. ·~~-·-·~-~-........ """'="",.."'11'"""'""""""' .... l!!I'!! ................................................... --..... --------......................... .. JI) DAIL V PILOT Horoscope Happy Holidays Christmas Sagittarius: E·motions Strong Spelled Out By GAY PAULEY NEW YORK (UPI) -Tis lhe eve of Christ's biffh~ 1and what better way to \vish all ol you the merriest of holidays than to spell it out. M -is for the music of Christmas. the maddening crowds doing their last minute shoppi ng, the magica1 spell the seas~~ casts and for the precious moments of families and friends together. E -is for the eve itself, the eagerness of the tiny ones n'osing around the tree and · the inevitable exchanges the first shopping day alter the 25th. R -is for the fabled reindeer including ,, ·Rudolph for the rosy red cheeks of the little chiidren, fo r the reverence of Him born in a manger nearly 2,000 years ago. R -is for the rewards ol work. for the riches of a bountiful nation . for the personal riches of health, family and hearth. y -is for a ll the young in heart \\'ho look on each Christmas with new spirit, fo r lhe Yule log. C -is for the cheer of the season. the carols and carolers. the caring for others, the name of the day itself, Christmas. H -is for the hope of peace on earth one day. and unfortunately for the holiday highway toll that c.lc.h year seems to gro\v. R -is for relatives to be remembered \vith gifts and cards. for the Christmas rose \l'hich blossoms a1t this season. l -is for the new ice skates for the chil· dren. for the imagination of those whose skills turn our store windo\vs and streets in· to incredible fantasies, for the inn in Bethle- hem. • FETED AT RECEPTION Mr. •nd Mrs. Sidney Yvung Mesons Honored Golden Date Marked Friends and relati ves of Mr. and Mrs. Sidney Allen Young of Costa Mesa gathered in the home of their daughter, Mrs. Charles A. Smith to con- gratul;ite them on their golden wedding anniversary. The couple were married in Los Angeles Dec. 18, 1919 and made their first home in Olin- da. They have been residents or Costa Mesa since 1921 with the exception of two years spent in the Dutch East ln:1ies. Assisting with hostess duties at the reception was the couple's other daughter, Mrs. George Spink of Costa Mesa. Five grandchildren and three grea t-grandchHdren also were present at the festivities . Honored guests were Mr. and Mrs. Charles Young of Pico Rivera. Young's brother and sister-in-law. Mr. and ~1rs. Theo Ragland cf Oakhurst, J\1rs. Jessie Swag- gerty cf Montebello, Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Perrin of Lodi and Mrs. Charles TeWinkle and Mrs. Lula Collins of Costa Mesa. THURSDAY DECEMBER 25 By SYDNEY OMARR BEST BUYS Include chit· dren'1 g1me1, 1porta clotbe1, 1beaitr Ucket1, articles almtd al t nttrtalllmeal, luiury lttm1. ARIES (!\larch 21·April 19): Fun and games at home would be ideal prescription. Day to smooth over rough ~dges. Listen to those wit~blems, complaints. Know that-Y'ou do have a unique kind of appeal. TAURUS (April 20-May 20 ): You break through restric- tions. You are able to c:oordinate holiday p I a n s . EmotionaJ restrictions rail by wayside. You corne alive In that you revel in happiness of others. GEMIN I \May 2l·June 20): Much contact with neighbors, relatives provides real holiday atmosphere. Hunch pays dividends. Share knowledge. Give of yourself ; tha t is most significan t gift. CANCER lJune 2l·July 22): Flurry of excitement n1ay be interrupted by mental calcula- lion of costs. Key is to enjoy yourself. Know that every mo- 1nent is precious. To avoid disappointment, prospective brides are reminded to have their wedding stories with black and \vhite glossy photo-- graphs to the DAILY PILOT Women's De· partment one we~k before t.he \vedding .. Pictures received lollo\v1ng the wedding \vill not be used. For engagement announce1nents it is imperative that the S'lory , also acco1npanied by a black and \vhi te glossy picture, be sub· 1nitted six \veeks or more before the \Vedding date. If deadline is not met. only a story '"ill. be used. To help fill requirernents on both 'ved- ding and engagement stories, forms are available in all of 'the DAILY PILOT offices. Further questions \Vil\ be answered by Women 's Section staff members at 642-4321 or 494-9466. LEO !July 23-AIJ&. 221: ey. cle high ; you brtak through barriers of restriction . Y{IU are in limelight. Your manntr of dress. expression attract a.l· len tion. You make others ex· pel'ience joy. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept.12): Work you did in aiding persons v•ho were bospltalii.ed or in· capacitated makes you feel glow of happiness. You are presented with tokens of ap- preciation. You feel good-and lullHled. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 221 : Friends, spirit of good will could prevail. You are dellghtfully surprised by con· sideration others display. Be especially appreciative tow"ard fam ily members . SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Your sense of diplomacy is put lo test. You learn that one you doubted has been saving to surprise you. Strive to un- derstand-and appreciate. SAGI'li'ARIUS (Nov. 22·Dec. 21 ): You are able lo re· esta!Jlish communications with one who has been at a dist- ance. Your emotions are strong. Express them in con- structive manner. You are touched by display of concern. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jan. 19): You know now that money spent to make others happy was wisely expended. Special re I a ti o n ship is spotlighted. Listen and learn. Mini Scissors Be sympathetic, open to love . AQUARIVS (Jan. 20·Feb.: 18): You rediscover one clo.st:,: there is chance to st rengthen: special relationship. If ma.-.. ried, be especially considerate or mate. U .single. know that individual in question is serious. PISCES (Feb !~March 20):, Perform specials er vices.; Show others that you ap.; preciale the ir special needs.· By giving, you also receive: Surprises a r e featured - n1ostly of pleasant variet,y;. IF TODAY ~ YOUR. BIRTHDAY you are enterihg. cycle which brings widespread recognition. Recently y o ll established pattern which is demanding and represents challenge. Odds are favorable 'for success. To find out who'• lutkv tor '!'OU 1~ montv •114 IQ'!'t, nrder S'ydntv Omerr'l bODl<ltt, ''Sttret Hints l~r Mtn end Womff ," Selld blrT~d•!t tnd 50 ctn!l to Omarr As1rol<>11Y 5tcrth• tnt DAIL'!' PILOT, Bl)x .17..0. G•tnd c1ntr11 s1111on. New York, N,Y, 10011, HI! HAVE A HAPPY CHRISTMAS To ease cutting chores, VIRGINIA'S there's now available mini scissors, battery-operated. Snip 'n St.itch Sleek and lightweighted, the ll34 E. Co••t Hwy. S -is for the smells and the sounds of the season, for the shepherds who watched their flocks, and for Santa Claus of course. T -is for the Three \Vise Men. for the holiday table laden with turkey and all the trimmings. Open House scissors cut quickly through Coron• cl•I M•r L.~~~~~~~-:: ... "i~:::::::=:-.:ii=:-.:i:=~~c~Joith~and~~paipe~r.iiijiiiiiiiijiiiiii~~=::-=~~~~==~~,.::: Mesa Mayor Among Guests At Judging M -is for moderation mixed \vi th the n1erriment. for the midnight church serv· I ices. and for the too much money "'e all \viii spend on gifts. A -is for old acquaintances ne 'er for- got. for the ageless story as told by St. Luke, . for the Christmas angels. S -is for "Silent Night , 11ol y Night." the Christmas carol now known and sung around the \VOrld, one \Vhich had its beginnings in 1818 in the tiny village of Au stria. '"hen Joseph Mohr. a parish priest, and Franz Gruber, a schoolmaster, 'vrote the simple hymn for a guitar after mice had eaten~ the bello\vs of the church organ. • ... ~~~~~~~~~~~ ............ _._J Three Ver$i ons January Day Chosen For Rites Los A n g e I e s Lattcr·day Saints Temple will be the set- ting for the Jan. 29 ce remony of Karen Mangum and Russell E. Fox. News of the forthcoming even l has been announced by the bride..elect's parents, Mr. and r-.trs. Clarence L. Mangum of Costa Mesa. Engagement Revealed During a holiday open house in the Costa Mesa home of fo.1r. and Mrs. Robert Oliver \Vhitc. the 100 guests attending learn- ed of !he engagement or the Whiles' daughter, Patricia h1arie \Vhlle to Ste v a n Akerley. An1ong those atten~ing were the bride-to-be·s grandparents, 1'.trs. Jo.<>eph Stephen Con- carroon or Livermo re and Mrs . Robert While of lo.1anhattan Beach. J\1iss \\'hite. a third.genera- tion Californian, is a graduate or Mater Dei High School and now is a senior at California State College at Long Beach where she is working toward her elementary education credential. Her fiance, son of fllr . an.<J.. ?-.1rs. \Villiam Ken.i1eth Akerley of Capistrano Beach. is a graduate of San Clcn1ente High School and \Vill receive his BS in industrial technology in January from CSCLB. The betrothed couple are Peering Around PATRICIA WHITE Summer Wedding planning a summer wedding in St. Joachim's Catholic Church, Costa Mesa. Costa Mesa tvlayor and r-.trs. A. L. Pinkley together with htr. and hirs. Claude Johnson and ?11r. and Mrs. Clarence Sorensen. all or Costa Mesa, v.•ere invited to the Regal i\fobile Club Estates by Mr. and Mrs. Charles Nau, man- agers. All were guests at dinner and served as judges of the best decorated homes in the Costa Mesa park. First prize was awarded to the Earl Dumonds, second to the Dave Mitche\ls and Billie G1vynn and his mother, and third lo the Bill Wrights. !11r. and Mrs. Joe James v.•on honorable mention along with Mr. and Mrs. Fred Henry and !11r. and !11rs. Earnie 1'"icld . Prizes were given by John Cropp, club president. 9434 SIZES .2.a Miss Mangum, a graduate of Newport Harbor High School, attended Orange Coast College and now is a student at Brigham Young University where she is majoring in eJementarv education and is a member Of SPURS. Good Cheer Circling 'Vhich way will she ha\'!.' ii 't Smooth all the v.•oy or flipped out by pleats or gathers. Sew 1his pacesetter in ,·ivacious solids, plaids or checks. Printed Pattern 9434: NE\\' Children's Size~ 2, 4, 6. 8. Si~.e 6 takes 118 yards 3S..1nch, SIXTY·FIVE CENTS in coins for each pauern -add 15 cents for e3ch pattl'!rn fur first-class mailing and special handling ; othet\\•lsc third-class delivery will take three wee.ks or more. Send to f\iarian Martin, the DAILY PILOT, 4<% Pattern Dept., 232 West 18th St., New York, N. Y. 10011. Print NAl\tE, AD- OR&SS with ZIP, SIZE and STYLE NUMBER. NEW FALL-WINTER PA T· TERN CATALOG -over 100 1tyln, fret pattern coupon. 30 tents. INSTANT SEWING BOOK e w tod1y, wear tomorrow. $1 . INSTANT FASHION BOOK -what·l~wear •nl wtn:, IC· cwory, flgure. lipi! Only SI . I, • Her fiance . son of Mr. and Mrs. Ellis M. Fox of Green River, Wyo .. is a senior. ma· joring in physics at Br igham Young University, where he is a member of Phi Eta Sigma Scholastic H.onorary Society. He spent two and one-half years at an LOS fl.fission in Japan. Yule Parties Continuing EXCHANGIJ'liG Christmas gifts and enjoying a leisurely coffee and a respite from shopping were the ?-.Imes. \Vallace Sho rt . Robert ?11oss, Edv.·in Booth, Elden Haskell. \Villiam Ballard. Lorin Lam- mers. Allen Brookout . \Villiatn Pulford and Richard Gillum. Ron and Greta ?11urphy opened their Fountain Valley home for the party. ?IIrs. r-.t .J. Bcngochca. at Desert Shores on th e Salton Sea. Daughter Cheryl. home from the Unive rsity or Southern California for the holidays. will be packing along !he books -"\Ve're lucky to gel a day off." she complains. JOAN ANO AND\' Yeiser of Huntington Harbour are keep- ing their fingers crossed and hoping Andy 's business v.•ill IT \\'ILL BE the children 's free them for a few days in Christmas in the Huntington Yosemite. They will open their Beacn home of Cmdr. and home for a postChrlstmas par· Mrs. Ed\\•ard Casey. With Ed ty for his office staff Sun· A memorable Christmas away at sea. Liz is-planning a day, Dec. 28. party is being planned by the quiet holiday \\'hich \Vill be mother, J\1rs. Vida ?11ae Coons from Palm Springs. for the Christ1nas weekend, T h e Hughes also entertained their square dance club. Lace 'n Leather. during a preholiday party. llOME FOR the Christmas holidays are Mil ls College coeds the Misses Mary Hodor, Janet \Vright, Mindy Miller, Elizabeth Pierce and Lorena Emerick. They "'ill be hostesses at a Holiday Brunch Saturday, Dec. 27 .'in the home of Mrs. Elmer Sproul of Orange. for prospective and current Mills students. South Coast Chapter, Parents brightened by a visit from her Los• ANGELES-BOUND v.·lll \Vlthout Pa rt n c r s for parents, Col. and ?o.trs. Edward be f\.1r. and Mrs. Robert Kerr. CRUISING aboard the Prin· nlembers' familie s. Hicks from \Vynnewood. Pa . They \viii spend Christmas cess Italia recently ·...,.ere ~lr . A gift exchange around the \Vives rrom Cmdr. Ed's shl p 1\·ith Bob's mother and f;i1her . and !lirs. Richard Gipple of tree. games-and the breaking also v,·iil take turns e·,1· r-.·lr. and f\.1rs. Leo Kerr. Diane Huntington Beach. Dur ing ot pinata s will follow a buffet ler taining on a "round robin.. is anticipating a busy year as their Jl-d;iy cruise from Los dinner at 7 p.m. Saturday, b11si11 to keep anyone fron1 chair1nan for the 19 7 o Angeles lo Mexico they vis· t)cc. 27, in the Laguna Beach being too lonely during the Mermaid Ball sponso red by Hed Acapulco. Puerto Vallarta home of r-.trs. Dee Ann Weber . holidays. the Little f\1crmaid Gui ld of and Mazatlan. Other ramily activitlc:c. are Huntington Beach. Highlights or the ir trlp were planned throughou t the year. JUDGE AND ~11\S. Charles the famous high divers or La Those interested in furtht.J in· Bauer or Huntington Beach ~fR. AND MRS. JA~I~ Quebrada , vJev.·ecl 1n Aca· formation may write Parents \\•ill spend Christmas "'ith Hughes of Huntlngton Beach pulco. and the flying ]ndlan \Vllhoot Parb'lcra. P. 0 . Box Darlene's parents, Mr. and v.•111 be entertaining Barbara's Birdmen of Papanl111. JU, LagtJna Beach. .-"-'-=-"'---'--'---'---'------"-----------'-"..;.;.'-'--- Word Porty Mr1. Dougla~ Ward and M'r1. t.1arvin Brown of Co.sta r.1es1 ~·ere among members of the Riverview Women·~ Goll Club entertaining va tlenl.s in i\letropo!Han State Hospitol . Norwalk. f\forl' than 2~ packages. jewelry llems and canons of cigaretl&s wert N>ntributed to the wo1nen's v.1ard 418 i'' ~~·~ rf@t THIS IS .. : . o:R ANNUAL The BIG ONE! AFTER CHRISTMAS SALE & CLEARANCE Use Your Wet Seal Charge , M .. ter Charge BankAmericard SAYE 40°/o to 70°/o OFF REGULAR PRICE • Doors Open 10 a.m. to 9 p.m.-friday, Dec. 26th Tremendous Selection BmER DRESSES $8t.$35 Rqul1r to $75 Crepe-Dacron BLOUSES $5 t• $9 Regular to $11 long ind Short NIGHTGOWNS $6 to $9 Regular to $20 TOPS $4,.$9 Regular to $11 All Sales Final Extra Cashiers Extra Sales Ladies F.41\'TASTIC 2-PC. Suits Knlt·Polyeste,. PANT SETS $10 to $35 Rogufor to $70 Wool ind Orlon SWEATERS $6 t• $16 Re"ulor to $30 Cotton ind Nylon ROBES $10 to $18 Regular to $35 Wool & Polyester PANTS $6 to $12 Regulor to $28 Wool Knits and Cotton Knits $9 to $30 Regulor to $70 Balboo ls~nd 204 Marin• Av1. Huntlntton C•ntff 7777 ldl•9tr AT OUR SIX SOUTHLAND LOCATIONS South Cocnt ,..... Jl33 ltlstol El s .. und• 321 Mol11 Str•et • Cos:tll M ... 270 I. 17111 St. log• ....... 240 .....,...., T ' • l ' " " .. . .. l 1. I J ' ' ' ' , ' ' " ' " ·-----------·----------~ ., -.-__....,,.~-------------...-~-·· .. -----------~--~----~ ..,---.,-·~--~--~----·~· -.~·..,........,--' "" ' -ts e . v •-• -. e; w EXCLUSIVE ENGAGEMENT! STARTS TOMORROW THE REYER is a SCOUNDREL, an OPERATOR and a BRAWLER •• ,. William Faulkner!> Pulitzer PrizeWinnin~ Novel 'The Reivers. is now a film! Steve McQueen plays Boon in'The Reivers" DAIL V PILOT J J T P I! D D I NOW AT POPULAR PRICES! op er .. ormers ne onors 81oadway'ssmasl1musicalnow the n1ostexcitingmovieinyeart! Daily Pilot Award Winners Announced Friday ~~~'l~!f!!!!!':f!Ji. Christmas will come on Fri· day too for four Orange Coun- ty community theater ac tors and actresses, That's when the winners of -PAUL NEWMAN "BUTCH CASSIDY AND THE SUNDANCE KID" "ME, NATALIE'' Cont.•Tlu1r1. • Su•.1 :30 P.M. the DAILY PILOT's D i stinguished Performance awards will be announced by entertainment editor T om Titus in his "Intermission" column In the newspaper's Weekender section. Following a tradition begun in 1965 -and heightened In 1963 by the presentation of ac- tual trophies -Titus. who at- tends every little theater pr~ duction in the coonty during the year. will list his selec· tions of the year's best actor, actress. supporting actor and supporting actress on a courr tywide basis. inc tn 1987 were Alan Hart (Orango ), Iris Korn (Laguna), Cene Benedict (Costa Mesa), Judy Hlrsh (Rancho Players) and director Kent Johnson. 1be DP (Oistingulshed Performance Award) was: in- augurated in 1968 and the win- ners were Ralph Richmond (Laguna), Patty Broderick (San Clemente), James E. Smith (Huntington Beach), Pat Neederman (Costa Mesa) and director John Feriacca (Laguna). Friday the flfth annual selections for c o m m u n i t y thealer's o n I y countywide awards will be announced, along with four honorable mention winners in each e INDS TONIGHT e "ROMEO ANO JULIET" ALSO , "WESTSIDE STORY" E•• Show Stem 7 p.m. Contl11uous Show Sunday fro111 2 p.M. I Sati Dieco F.-y at 8ri51ol • 5'6-27°12 These four, along with the top director of the year -in this case, Thor Nielsen for his st~g o~ "Stop the World -I W8'11t~et Off" at the Costa 1tiesa Civic Playhouse -will receive their DP awards at the opening ~ht of the next production at their respective theater. Pla~house). Duke Far I e y (Orange Studlet The'ater), Ed Greenley (Huntington Beach Playhouse), Gini Sh a r p (Anaheim ·· Playhou se) a nd director Warren De a con·· (Orange Studio Theater). category. Eligible for consideration in this )"ar's DP awards race are the cast members of some 40 Orange County little theater productions presented in 1969. Three other shows \l'hich entertainment editor Titus either directed or appeared in are disqualified. AtBE~l SHARP£ . U,Jll[T MUNRO -~l'f>(SIHT~ EXCLUSIVE Now at regular prices BROAD'NAY'S SMASH MUSICAL NOW THE MOST EXCITING MOVIE IN YEARS! A l.M'CflSAl PICTURE • TEOVllCOLOR• tPANAnsKlfC9 SECOND BIG HIT PAUL NEWMAN -JOANNE WOODWARD IN "WINNING" CONTINUOUS SHOW DAILY FROM 2 ArlO Gulhrlt "ALICE'S RESTAURANT" (ltl Thi &HllH "YELLOW 5U8MAR1NI!'' FOR THE FIRST TIME ;••••• ..... ~ : DRIVE-IN MATINEES! i t STARTING CHRISTMAS DAVI ~ r As!!c~~T!~~DA ~ ~~!~!~ ! fi ~ ALL DISNEY PROGRAM • ct FOUNTAIN VALLEY DRIYE-IN i "tllt DAL0MATION~ ''& 01~DARBY., O'GILL" : :. ; i l• occomodot• ttl• 9rfftftt "''""' of f•mllin with smell chlld· : : ,..., our llolldoy wffll sclled•I• wlll M •• , :f :: . "Darby O'Gill and the Little People" • it:· Sh•-.. S:JO p.M. ::: "101 Dalmatians" i ~. Sh•-at 7:10 p.m. t :· SH this complet• All Disney show lite as 9:15 p.m. ; " BOX OFFICE OPENS AT 5:00 P.M. • , ...................................................... ~ -·-__ , Sot-5-IJIJ '"Ill OAl.MAftONS" .... "DA•IY 0'01\.l I. THI LITTLE "IDl'Ll" D\11011 Mtflll'I... Ml• fl•rrtw "'OHM t. MAltYH (Ill ~Allll: Sl111lrl 11~1 W11tll "LAOY IH CliMINT" 'I'"" ..... Slrlkn A,.llt "OH HE• MA,llTV'S llClllf llllV!CI" iM) CMtl'IM H•fOn "NUMllll ONI" (Ml "•llY °""" "Ml NATJ.Llt .. '•mes 01rn., O..ylt H\lftllktlt "MAltLOWI'" - STARTS TOMORROW Betx Office Open at 12 Continuous Daily From 12.30 In 1966 the winners voere Walden Leecing (Santa Ana), Mary Macy (Costa Mesa ), Bob Wentz (Laguna), Bell Ellig !Anaheim) and direclor Doug Rowe (Laguna). Follow· i; The DAILY PILOT's recognition of a m a t e u r performances and productions on the county level began in . 1965. That year the honors 0 E d s ..:·,::::;:~~:i: pen n to tage ~ Ju.les Feiffer Revue • * Bl!AC t1 B 'I . .O.T l!l.~IS • .. •• T. eo.o.•T HWV ......... O•l!OO ,...,.,,_ 947 •91108 • HU,..Tl"'GTOl'I lll.ACH -Penny Pincher Ads Turn Sense EXCLUSIVE AREA SHOWING SHOW TIMES 7:00 • 9:10 MATINEE SUN. 2 ·ONL YTWO MEii HAVE WALKED ON THE MOON. FOR THE REST OF U§, "2001" IS AS CLOSE AS WE'RE l/Ktl Y TO GET. MOM mw1111• STANLf'Y KUllllCK llltOOllC'llON . ·2001:' a space OdYueY CINERAMA , ..... _ .. -... ,,. •• ,,..K[IR DULltA • GAllY lOCKWOOO t(•tt•,.,A• t•SlANl[Y KUllllCI( 10DAlll HUll C. Cl.Allll[ $UPIR P.t.N.t.VlSION'"'' M[lllOCOlOll CINEDOME #!¢;..~ fill ' ', •Ill 1>1>1"' h\, ,IOll l•l "•1 11' ""', ~ ------ The satirical pen of Jules Feiffer \Viii provide the basis for the next prodculion at Newport Beach's Open_ End Theater, a musical revue en· titled "A Smile is a Frown Turned Upside Down.'' Directed by Thor Nielsen, winner of the DAILY PILOT's 1969 Distinguished Production award, the show will open Jan. 9 for a six·weekend engage· menl, playing F r I d a y s , SatUrdays and Sundays. The material for the show is Opera Twin Bill Slated In Fullerton A double bill In opera, "reaturing "The Magic Chair" by Eugtne Zador and 'Gianni Schicchi" by Giacomo Puccini, will open a four-night run Jan. 8 at Cal State, FulleU,on. The comic operas, to be presented in English, will be staged in the Recital Hall of the Music Speech Drama Building on campus udner the co-sponsorship of the Associated Students and the Department of Music. Curtain time is 8:30 p.rn . Tickets are on sale for iz at the Theatre Box Office on campus. Ticket reservations may be made by calling 871J. 3371. Group Seeks Directors T h e 'Y._estminster Com- munity Theater is seeking directors for Its third show of the season, to be selected at the group's Jan. a meeting. Prospective directors are in- vited to submit a resume and the synopses of two plays to president Jim Allen. The meeting will be held at Allen 's home. 5866 Allison Circle, Westminster. derived from Feirfer's recent columns, with original songs contributed by Warren Deacon of the Open End Theater staff. The show will be similar to a long-running revue staged three years ago at the Orange Studio Theater, and will in- clude two of the longer sketches from that production . These are "Munro," in which a 4-year-old boy is drafted into the Anny, and "Passionella," the saga of a chimney S\.leep who becomes a movie star. Included in the Open End cast are Robert Vaught, Saun- dra Mathews-Deacon, Jayne _ Hamil, Joe Del Rosso, Joe Bland, Dennis Wheeler, David Wheeler and Paul Graecy. Nielsen, whe mounted a similar revue at the Edin- borough Festival in Scotland, was named best di rector of 1969 in community theater by the DAILY PILOT for his pro- duction of "Stop the World -I \Vant to Get Off" at the Costa Mesa Civic Playhouse, in which he played the role of Littlechap. .. A Smile is a Frown Tu med Upside Down" will be staged at 8:30 Friday and Saturday eVenings and 7:30 p.m. on Sun- days at the Open End, 2815 Villa Way, Newport Beach. Reservations may be obtained by calling the box office at 675-1120. Y11le Music In Newport Ralph Vaughn Williams' "In Dulci Jubiol" and the Hallelu- jah chorus from Handel's "Messiah" will be highlights of a choral program to be presented Christmas Day at Molint Carmel Church, 15lh Street and Balboa Boulevard, Newport Beach. Director Karl Bonawitz will lead his 36-voice choir in a program that will also include the Latin High Mass. The con- cert is scheduled for 10 a.m. Also on the program are Palestrina's "Puer Nat u s Est," You's "Jesu Bambino" and the Mass by Harrison Millard. The chorale has been augmented for this Christmas concert. Carol Dranaati%ed James Mason and Claudia Butenuth appear In tho dramatization of the celebrated Chrislmas Carol in "The Legend of Silent Night," at 9 p.m. tonight on Channel 1. 11 Is a special presentation o! the Wed· nesday Nigh\ ,Movie with Kirk Douglas as bost-nar· rator. NOW! AT POPULAR PRICES CONTINUOUS DAILY Not !hat It maners. but """of It ~ tru< 20tll C!:NllJRY.FOX PRESENJS PAUL NEWMAN ROBERT R£DfORD KA11tARINE RO§. BlTl'CH CASSIDY AND THE SUNDANCE KID fW.'llStOll• COi.OR BY IXllJJE «£Dllllll=·:.s=I "WHY IS EVERYTHING WE'RE GOOD AT ILLEGAL? FASHION ISLAND * NEWPORT CENTER •••••••e••··················· ••• • •• • • • • • • • • • • •e. .e• ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• * COAST HWY. AT MACARTHUR BLVD. * NEWPORT BEACH * 644·0760 ' e LAST TIMES TONIGHT e "KlAKATOA, EAST OF JAYA"-Ma~milli•n Sch•H Al,o "RING OF IRIGHT WATER" -Rat•d "G" Exdu1i"'• Or1n9• County En9191_m1nl Now •I Popul1r Price1 -CONTINUOUS- 1-4-7 l 9:~5 JiCAO!MY i:.wARa BEST ACTRESS 8J\RBRA • SIR!ISMO • Wtok Nl9htt • J~lO &-'110 s.t .• 51111. I Holldort e CONTINUOUS • "'Joll11 011d Mol"f' 11 o di•· tl11ctl•1I., 11•• fosllio11 ro· mc11c•. Hoff111011 ql•n o ,.,. for"'a11e• not ~11011-4 ... " by his taur-d••forc• lfl 'Mid• 11i9llt Cowboy'. Miu Forro• is up 'o Hofftno11'1 perlorfl'I• MC•· Ut1q11ntlo11•bly, It ,, O!M ef tff 111,...b CICCOll'lp• lltllfl'l•llh Oft filfll of th• yoor:· -lo' An9tlt i 1-ftfald E11•ml11,r ·•. "'John •nd Mory·, o 1110•1• _ •••r 'e dollcrht o oudlette1. II 11 o pol90011t, ful',.y lf'tiry of two '"''• who ,,..., 111 11 ber, IHV• t09•tlwr j111t for ttio HI of It on. lllHI or.fl lo•i119 •nry 11111111'-end oeclt otfler. A crlq, 111offr11 H• ,.,,._ .. -Li1 Srnitt., C o1mopolll•" M191,il'lo "A '-•dor. tertfy foony fll"'. 1-,. bed• 9 f1I. loy 9n N know 9lrl. This h "'• c••• to111perory woy Of l••• 0114 'Joh• irild M•ry' hlh 9' In •• ,., "-rt.'' -Ka!lllt•~ C11roU, o.a., Ntw' .. ·' .. , ., " ' ' ' •) :i •• " ., " •1 f, ' ~ ti .. •' . ' ' .. " " ~ " .. ' •. " •.' ' " .. . ' •· ~ l" .. .. " ' ' " ~ ' .. • -:.~ ·' ' ' .. ' ·' . " .. ~~ • '-' ' " :- "' ~; " .. ~ ' • ~: . ' " .. ... " . ' .. •• "' •' ' .. .. " " " " f " " ' " .. .. ' . " ';, , " ., " .. '• .. .. ·; :1 , I " J 2 Dlll Y PILOT Your Money's Worth Follow 10 Rules In Buying 4rt t.OITOll: S NOtl Tlll1 II lht llt( .... i.. • """' Ill '""' ... ,( f l Oii •rf lrtm Ill lllYtUOt'l !Jll ltl'l ... lnl I" tllll <OllHl\11 Sy v 1 Ptt"r Of~J 10 "''" for !I'll nvt•lor IO frtUcn11 By S\LVIA PORTER There s a gag making U1e rounds of the Madison A~enue art gallery "orld which has an aggressive dowager accosting a gallery director with the demand I d like to see your growU1 paintings Actually the gag 1sn t far off Record numbers o f Americans -both art1slicaHy soph1slleated and amal<'urs - are now 1nvest1ng all hme high sums in pa1nl1ngs sculptures and d r a w 1 n g s stnclly for profit Dozens of art mutual funds are spring 1ng up and 1nv1t1ng investors to chip m for the purchase or paintings to be kept for future re-sale OK LET S SAY you have extra cash to invest and 1 art 1s your choice Here are. IO rules lo guide you (I) Before you lay out a penny invest as much hme as you can reading art auction catalogs an a field which 1n terests you v1s1t1ng galleries to see \\hat works are available and ho1v nluch they cost 1nspecl1ng art works before a uctions attending auc lions to get the feel of them You might even !llbscnbe to art auction catalogs pubhshed by maJor galleries m tbe held of your interest Many of lhese catalogs give a fter each auc t1on pnces paid for each. item which appeared 1n the pre auction catalog Keep these catalogs for later comparisons of prices for various items j%) WHEN YOU DECIDE to buy do so cautiously at first Don t spend all you have on one item you tl1111k 1s a good buy (3) Make sure you have also before you bu} a really special feehng about a pain ting or sculpture -a sense which tells you 1t ha s fashion Inflattd prices can tasily be the result of an tx h1bll by u single mt1Jor museum afler the excitement or the show hall subsided prices tend to drop as well ! Pop nrt ' 1s no\v rud1ng on the market ) Buying art works because they are 3 currenl r age ts nk1n to buying stocks on Lips at a C'O<'ktall party (6) If Ulere 1s a museum director or curator in your commuruty ask for his advice on buying Or use the services of specLally assigned personnel at large m galleries \\hose Job 1s to guide you !7) U nless you are an ex pert spread your financial n sks by mveshng in the works or a variety or different artists (8) BUY. THE BEST ex amples you can afford 1n any category ln the words or Louis Goldenberg president of the famed W1ldenstein Gallery 1n New York not every R em brandt 1s worth $2 300 000 and not every Monet is wo1 th $1 500 000 For buyc1 s w 1th ton s1 derably more hm1ted funUs Goldenberg advises a good drawing by a given arlist mav be a better buy than a poor painting Hammer suggests You II hnd cqntemporary arllsts of the greats who were O\ ershadowed m their era a better buy t han new artists who have not been t esttd by lime 19) Decide before you buy how much money you can ar ford to invest and stick to that ce1hng If you find a more ex pensive work 1rres1st1ble ar range to pay for it over a period or time tlOJ HAVE \N un<lerstan ding \v1th your dealer or gallery about trading up -so he 11 repurchase works from ~ou as you have more lo 1n 'est 1n high quality art NEXT What s bot ' 1n art greatness Or have somebody ----------- who has this type of 1nslinctJve feeling represent you as a buyer or bidder at an art auc lion (4) Deal "1th a top ga!Jery or art dealer Don t be afraid !() frequent the very best at the world reno1vned P arke Bernet gallerv nearly two thirds of all pieces sold at auc IJOn go for under $300 an<I a s1gn1f1cant 15 percent for under $50 Also as Victor !lammer of New York s Ham 1ner Galleries says A top gaHer v 1s interested 1n holding ) our patronage If you are satisfied it \\ill always trade back' anything you bought for at leasl "hat you paid or more (5) BE WARY of "orks by modem artists 1n current LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE OF IN TENTION TO ENGlGE IN THE Sll.E OF Al.COHOllC 9EVEll:AGES Oe<tmbl'r 1$ 1969 TO WHOM T MAY CONCERN Sub td 10 l11u1nce o! 1~ I cen1e I D D •d ID nD!lc• 1• ~ e~• given !h~! 111• unoe s ~ned o -~ o "' n cone le btv• •tt• 11 11'\e 1>tem ~s ottsc ~ .u !O lo"'I 15t1 Ntwoort Bvd So e C &. O Co•!• Mt•• Pu~u•nl 10 suth In en on l l'le un dt<tltntd 11 IPDIY ng lo ll'le OtDI menl 01 Al(oho t sev1 "" coniro lo• nuonce IW I an•'• of an a cohol c bo'tt! aoe I Cl'<lW (or I censn !or thew D tt!'lJ!J I• IOI OW\ ON $ALE BEER Anvo:>e dfl ["'II lo D D l!l I~ JUYOnCt ol sud\ I ctn1t(U ..... I • I Y!rlf Ml p O- nt will'! •"Y onlce ol 111 Dep" 1m•I\ of 4 co"<I c 8ewrqe Con o w '" n :'IO div• of flit daro lhfl o QDOle<I oreml~u ,..,. ' tl~1 oe1!e<I 1!t1 ""' 1roun01 10• <1en .i o• PfCW Ota by tw lN o em '"' 11 • "PW I tet1>e0 1or the u le ot .Jlco!m! t beve &9•~ The o m M \'l!r I ctlh)oi ,,..,, be otl!11 n"CI ' om tflY 0 I Ct of ht Oe1>11r1fY'1<1! Geo P• H Weaver Jr G'rtld ne Wetv• P11bll•hefl Of'.""'" Coast 01 Iv " 101 DttHn~ ~· 1911f )J19 •t LEGAL NOTICE l'-n&•T CEll:Tl,ICATE 01' &\JS NESS ll'ICTITIOUS NAME Tl'I• \lllMl"llgne<I dOe1. ti! I Iv lllev I t ronocluct.,. • bu\!n•u "' 1~1 Ne...,POrl • "" Coda Melt Ct1 lorn ~ r>d•• "" flt H!ous f I'm norM Of QUEEN B •nd 'vi uld ln'm II comoaH<I oi "'• tollow 11 l>!l'loO<!• "'"*' fllm"'l n lu ~nd n •c .. of r11ldetlce • • •l lo a"'' Gear.:" ""'"..., W11ve• J Ge 11 d nt •nvt ll 3' h SI N-1><1 t Botch Ot e<1 CIY.tmt>tr n 1~ GtO•O• Htl'I..., Weover Jr c;..r~ d,,.. W~1wr ~!• t OI C•IUorn • Ortnoe Count-. On Otttmbtr n '"' betort "'' , Nol• y Pub!k In IMI lo •t d Sttl• ~-Hy •O!>etttlf 0.0 .. • Ht~ r v Wtavfr )r tnd Ge t1d1M W11v•r k~wn O "'' to ht llw fft'....,I W!IO\e 111"'"1 ~ ~ $UbKrlMd lo IM WI~ fl '\.> ru-1 1"6 • kft!IWl<!detd tt.e., ••twle<I "" ~•me fOF FICIAl SEJi Ll JOSEPH E O.r.VIS NCl•rv l"ubl c C1l lpr111 P II( Ptl Off '' 111 °''"'' Counl' M'I (em,,..1,,t1111 t:"" 11. J"""' '1 lt1~ Pvbl •llM Or1n11t Cct tl tl1 IY I' "' O...tmber ti 31 196' •nd JI/WO~ 1 ,~ 1fl'O nlll ~· LEGAL NOTICE NOTICI! 01' SAi.i: l'lllfkl ., l"llltllc St ilt • ., l.ittl ~ .... HOTlCIE IS H£Rll1Y GIVEN TMa,T """""' fO fl'll llW lllllfl' 4111(1 D~~ 11'11 \lflCl...,Jpntd w ti 11 I IM 11\ib ( •• I' •I "" olflqt " Torbit Alw.n IOtJl lH •• "" Ot ....... C-lv Jil"IMITT Sallll '"' C•lffllnll• 11 1 30 I" M. Cf! MOl'ld~V ,,_,.,. $ 1t10 Ille follcNI,.. d!'1<; lt!tll .,........, 1'11 w I Tl'tt ll!'lt vJ.ded flllt'•l •I DWfltd IJy "'11-• ,_,_,.., Inc In 1'141 ~l'r!~1n Altv'tf'I d6«11it•d l't f0!18'101 01'C 111 It" twr (41 P11Cr Ctt1n~ 1fJ ... 1,tr11;i,., NV't'lbtr l'I 1•t I" k< 11 Hu..,..., 111-Ul.fS ""'rsu111I 111 1 I.,. ffl'1fll "'"""'' Col lorn1e \..,. 10 I~ ~ ..,tn1 t9 T,,,.,..I Afr r11t ·~ S.ttl ..... I for It.I 11111'-ff U"I Jl .. I~ lien ot 1ht ..,..,,,,1,!Wd ltwf~ff\6f ff1'l'll '°''' !If "'°""tine 11111 I' ~ rf U le OATio 0~8' U, ltff TOltlE"T Ji!!tC".AFT INC l'lltllbllflll or-c-1 o.n~ • 1111 ~ n, 11. , .. It 11. tt » '' n. l)t ,.. "!!:" NEW POSITION John B Lawson Aerospace Governo1·s Pick La,vson The Aerospace Industries Association Inc has elected John B Lav.son of l.agunfl Niguel as a me1nbe r of 1\s board of governors Lawson 1s a vice president o ( Philco-Ford and general manager of the companv s Aeronutron1c 01v1s1on a \ Ne"port Beach He was eletted to the 11c11 post during a meeWng of the AJA Board of Governors 111 Phoenix and w11l ser\e a one year term of office beginning Jun l 1970 The Aero.space Industries Assoc1ahon is U1e nal1ona l trade asliOC:1aUon or manufac turers of a1rcran ml1;s1\es spacecraft propulsion nav1ga lion and guidance systems and thf' components used Jn the manufact11rc, operauon and maintenance of these pro- duct! Vangua1·d Picks Pair Graves R Mumford Jr ha! Joined Vanguard O:ita System! Irvine a s-soothern regional district 11 e r v I c c manager Prior lo 101n1ng the com pany Mumford was with 1'1ohawk Data Sc1encC'S as c.'Ustomer eng111etr supervisor and prior to th.a t he 1~as wlth National C:ish Regis ter ns ttthn1cal servu.:e reprc!;cn tahve In 111 not her a1,no1n1rnC'nt Charles Ad3mC1 was n:imed dastr1cl 'ervke 1n1nagcr far Vanpard Data Systtms SENIOR MANAGER Terence W tl:l h • NEW Y0111( iAP) lutd1¥ ' con llltlt hlef tMI ltl• N• w,w Yort 'todl f•'11•nte: flt 'ts (It.-) Hllll Ltw C'-t Ql6. llfl.) Mlell ""° C._ c-. OVER THE COUNTER Complete-Ne,v Yorli Stock List 1 ...... ~ .. ·-··llr.~--••E,.111'11i8' .. ..,...Jl Stitt; Htl ~11:11' CINW ll Ull 11\.'t 17\llo A~ Cl If I l 31~ ~[" 311' -~~ tlld• I Hllll lt'll' crow c111 l'lockFull .o ·~ JQ, '•I' i + \• ~" c:,•:f'° l\~ \\~: il~ ~7tla :. '(; NASO l istings fol' Tuetdav, December 23, 1969 rltCtl ~ 1t1 = ~ I ~ -u -~c I !lO ..s,, "" " ll" -• l -A-hrf. 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Co• !Idell 60 12 4?'11 '81/t l&V, -1 • e1 llfl 30 I '"' 11'\ 17\lt _lo general according toe11< HI 31 31.,.,H••",,,G•,• IS u AmSuaof u 14 •• 81.:i tv. co~6dc't wl lo 14 '> 1cv. 1flh Gut1s11ur 96 6J 21¥o 21• ''" a El 1 0 16V.1 7• AmT&T 260 1)50 ..,, 4'..,, lll't +~cPClnl 110 156 JI ... 30'1> :JO'll-'l\G11lrSUpf4 44 tJO 51 SS 55 =1 ..... Auer Welshv.illmsurethat11~11"eer 1n 1~~rrJi1"G•;o ~~· AmWWk• 56 it 9'• ,.., t'lo+V.can-e l60b 1~«1 .o.+~Guusupf4.iomo !7'11oUlli.56~-i. c 0 nl m ercial de>elopments •,oo",• c 25v. 26V:i lno Nud 3.51.-'r 3617 AWWSor 1 is i100 16 • 16'1:1 16:\i -~creel 1n F n 1 12 "" 1711, i1 , _ i,:, Gv11W1n •11& 315 11 17111 17~ _ ,0 OS ap ll»t HI~ nfo O'C lV. ' AW 0 el 1 2s 1120 lS V. u 15 -"c om~Kll 81) 51 IJ~o 13\.':i 13~ Gw fW pll 15 1 511 511 SI ~ keeppacew'lh r es'dentialand '•'°'••·"G' ~. •,•, '"'' S"-5'A FUNDS AW' ol 143 z210 19 l9 1!.,-~Crou..,Hr.O 1 39 11'1.I 21 21111+1 G1>!IW pf350 J 7•\; 7~ 14 _,• , , u "" 13, Am Zinc ) 19;,. 11~. 1""' -• crowCol l D7f 110 27 ~ 761'1 + VJ Gu IW 01l t7 23 c7 46 46 _1 lndUStna) developments at llrkl SCI 2• '> 2S\li 1~~tl(~lt 11~ J2o,I, Ametek 40I n ll ~~· ~i -1~ Crown Cork -'Cl'/ U~o l6V. 16" -Vo gulfW p!S.75 J ~ 60 60 I Brw~ Ar 12\llJ~ lnrm In 100,.",i,.. ~k"cc':': 20J 26 ~ 25~, 25,.,=\•Crw00,Zt!!._.,•,.M .~ "••"" ~~ ¥,:,,,_1, ulon lnd 121 Ui<o lS\io 151'i-lo rvm 1 e a 1 ccord1ng to the 11,ru,,~,,,'' n,, •,•,•, ,'',,' '•"•'' .. ,, .. ,,, ,,.. , c '" .... _,...., _,.,. w 26 27 AMP Inc.It ..,'!\ • vo-.. crscoro.O s914,13'.~1c1o+,;. -HI-mas er pan llutnup s 26\lo 27 , "1 Nclr 1" 1 • L&.i•-'"CI'*!" Zit?$~~ Amoe• Coto 161 '4 •l • •1"1fi -t1 tvdehv co 61 11\0o 11 • 1;4 v. W I h h C!C Le~• 1\~ • I t s 22\'t ,. ,, Am~!td ~ 40 ,11 ~.lb ~.7t~ ffu -+ ~ CUOhy pll 2.S I 16~ li!l~ I~ -H1ckWlf 2 20 7 ll W1 3J es 101ned t e company 1n Cal w sv 2• ,,~ 1 •,, ,,",, ,, os•-0 '' Amtel n • cu oan 11 lo lt • 11 't ,,,_ _ ·~ H• J Prt 1 60 1 37 4 , .. , '', I=< d f I Cam'o 19 1 2111 ITioe "' K IOSfldlSa.~SlArwoC<:lf\ll l llO 353'9 •1Na2n•-CummlnlOI> 536 JSV.3111>-"'Htlburl l OS ~,~1o..@;C9q+) ~..... an was o r m e r y cen°" M n is 1~1 kl 7\ 8 NEW YORK (API Mut 'n 10.u Al'IChHock IO <16 " .., ..O\o cunnOn,q 10 2 21 i.. 21 1e -Vt Hamw11 561 4 l 1"11 1~ manager 01 C 0 n' m e r C I a I ",',',"• , a, 1 5, 1 ,:'l',,'uo ~~~ ~ -The lo klwlnft """ P Oii • 93 s lo\ Anco oNSv 1 30 1Q 1 1'3 '~ • + 1 Ci.rfb~ Wrl 1 59 11 , 11 11 _ \~ Hllmrn Pip I 1 2ffi 23• j'l\? --+ ~ I Ill 0<1• ""'"II"" bv Stock 1198 'lO 63 AN! (l&Y 11Q l 38-. l8 I ll I Curt W• " 1 6 27'11 ,.,, 21 Hommnd 1a Sn• •"••' ·"·~ .!..,.. =1,, d I h .' 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H '"" M •v 11 15 14 ~ '"' -1 E~ )' Sn 11 , ~l i:::~v F l~ '> 27!h these •f(yr t es VY I OJ I DI A cnn.>n 1 60 a 56 SS ~ S.\ 'ii =1 • -0-H:n~~•I \JO 1~ ~t )9-\{j '°~• + • "'c NG 1 111, 1 11., Fds 1j~ l3 could hove been J f-lncQl:k vn~v~ Ar tPSvt l 08 11 ?!l 1 ltl 20\1 + Oan R.IYtr 'l 16t 11 • lllo 11 • t I t'!•' Is !nl l 1'1 74 lo j~ 1 ,",• :'_0" tnte~ •• , •9 , l<oOoo• 5 7 16' 'IOld (b d or l>ollgM Johf\5'.!n 1 t2 ll t2 Jirlan• OS 10 11 17 • 11 11 -1 • Oana CD 11 )5 11 /t 13 1 Jl" _ l~ na •Co (p J 79 19 "n VPS 11 11 ,,,0,50 00 ,,,, 6 •1•Jkedl Tue•dav KtY!IOn<' Funds AmcoS l•O 591 :tt 211 7~.1.-;'j.'Oetlnd :IOb 10 q ~ '7 >•0 '-kanSMr~.,. 111" 19 + • na I PA 5~1 6 ~ ~•Ivor .; 19 Id Al~ Cus Bl 7961175 Armovr 160 7 "2 ~ .i . •2 1 Oart lrw:I pfJ 3J SCI, .fll: d + 'Harv A 1iQ' 29 30'1 30>, JCl\.':t +Ill hart 0 7 J L K ••• G' "• 'c L Abe dn 128 1•9 Cu5 Bl 1° J?!llll A1mr pl 171 1 .U• 5) S2 . -~ Oa;coCo 1 !4 19 16 2 ... ,,, ., .. H.JI Corp -sa, '1"-2JVr 211"-• hm I.ea l 1 ~j J(aysm ~ 4 1 Advfu~ 7 0'1 1 6f CV• 114 8 79 9 60 Arms!Ck IO 7& :lli I) 35\• ll\• -OavGo p!l 25 zXI IS 8.5" 85-. " Htwll El i j2 13 2'~ 2';~ ,•,,• t hes Ind so,;, ~•Kear T 1!\ol:~Affllald )10 768 Cus IC 76? 1:17AmCkt!J7S l'.lOD S2.., S! 51 2 OlvnHud SCI 26 ll• l.ii 35 _ 1Haze1111t $} ll'\4 l~"• T••' ' hs u ,, 15 Kellen si.:. 6 Af'ul•e 1001 oo Cus K2 513 S60Armll:ut> 160 u 3S • 3S ~s.+V.oavnPl 160 87 2lt 23" 21>~-\1Mec"Mrt1 10 40 2IV. n Br&I 5t'lt Sl'h "oOOwO " .. ..._,,_ All Am I' ti 89 Cus SI 17 79 ~ •1 Ao (Orl> 90 >>l ,!!,.. •'•"' ,'.~ ~ -+ _,. OPL DIA 3 IS :t:IO •9 4 c. 4IV. -1, He nz kJ 9'2 '12, , •->1Mro 21 -• 111 sts 95 91 iCeullE ll"i'l:i! ll'l'l•Fd1116195 Cv1S196110S7Ayln 11111 •vn • ~•OtereCa2 U •l-ft(l""A l•i -l~HteneCu .,.. 11•31•-' nr st or tS 99 Ktve Flo Amccp 5 '' 6 ., Cus Sl 1 3oS I OJ Aihld O 1 )0 lll 1s • l••l 2C • Oe m~rP 1 Ill » 19 11tt. 11 • _ •o Hell Coll eo ~ 1~'(!. 1/j,f 1017 + ' !•d•I 6 \ IV. Kevi cu~ ~~ ~s • Am llu1 3 01 J 26 Cu• S4 S 11 S 60 A~s<I ere,.. JO 11 • 11 " -"• 0e1 Mnte 1 10 J8 1S • 2s 2s•o + ~• Hel "' 1~1 60 76 19li> 1,> 20,4, .. -11 ft z U A 74 • 14~ Ko••O ,, " 'o Am 0 Yln 10 05 10 99 Pol" •.(17 4 46 A•Sd OG 1 ?0 6J 44 • 41 o •3~1 -l•\ Pe a A r '60 208 ~ :19 • 30'!• + ti H•ller pf4 01 .,. "' tlz UB 7•'4l4~•Kno Int 9·•10 '-AE• •ol 97$ 915K11dct> 6'70 7l.IA•l.llS!KI 170 l l1 l • 3 1-••0et1ec Int Ill 10,.. 9 0 iOl•-\iHemePds I 1 12 1'1 '""" 12\'t-~U ,,~rl< Mr 23 '' Kina• El ,a 7"" Am Qrll'I 5 1s 618 IC nick GI 111212 11 AsodT•~n lll 18 I 1' 10•1 1010 -lo Dtnn Mfa 60 91 2l 2J • 23 +l HlmerhP 21> l~ H~ 16~ 1,j% + ~! ... '11an 2 21h l(lrlt Co lS 16 Am Inv 7 ll 7 31 UK Gr1h 9 10 D 60 Al c vE ']..o l(I n 11~. 111.< 0tn'1MID Pl J 4 1, 11\'• JI -'II. Hrrn 1111'1 (1p II m l W. .... ,. lntM.tr 10'>11V.l(,..n Vot 20\li 2:2 Al'l'I Mut 87' t6tlO• lnv•I 977t01J41 Rlchlld2 134 791'1 n\'I 7'1">+1 Otnnvlbl 04 11 llh 11 llo + ~Hemlnc Mg I M'o ~ .~-1 Mesa Firm May Gain 2 Companies 11ton o IV. ·~ Kre 11, 6 • 6'\lo !::i:N P Gll'I 1 tS l n ~e~~vsch l~ i} 1~ g A! II.ch Pll 15 Ill.SO S? 51 , 51 ~ _1 h ~Py 1 :20a • 11 ~ 4 _ ~> Herein 1 10g lSO )l\li XI\\ :!O'h -l~I Standard Pacific C or p ~~r c!o l~ l~ ~~e 01-,: 2Jh 2J:-A...ctio ''Gro'!iPll 1 03 1..1re snc s 21 s 16 All 11 ct1 Pf l ' n1•. i:io '> 1» • -1 0e ~~r P) l0 T ~ w. !tii. + v. ~~t:l~~ 1~0 so ,.,_. 2:w. 2•~ + '• C••ta Mesa announced today olem E '1 s1~ Lindt 1n 2t4 2~ c1oi1 • 11 9 SI.,", '"' ,1 l! ', •,•, •,1111ci'l,,1112 ao, '2? ~ ~ sm,, ~, -,,_ Otrrco 01 B 21 so~ SCI t so11 _ ,_, MewP.JCk 20 2l: 1ffi! 1~ ,~,, ~ + '• ,_,.. o ns ~ ,, '> ?O\'i l•"'! Wd 12 r, 1, GrWth 171113 tG '-n •• 81 em "" .. • "~ -" OeSo olnc 90 AC 211' 27 4 Jl\lo _ \I kl11h voltaue 53 2 • • that an agreemenl ln Pr'nclple ofon s1r n J. 13 Lar5cn •' s '> !nc;mo I 11 9 06 Loomis S1vl11 All•s Coro 119 3 • 3" ' -lo Oe!Ed • 1 40 HI ll h 21\1 ll t _ t'o HI lanMmtl I 111 J~ ?! 21 omcet .u 41 ~ Lirwn M lJ • 16 Fd l~v 9 (1 o 3 Canad unaval At ~SCP Jlf lk zl:!O II i 11 lo 17 • Oe1 Ed cl5 ~ 1 11'1.o n>ti. 71~. _1 HUco JS 159 2'"'" ~··~ 2><,1, -+"• has boen reached lo acquire om c r ,2.,,, " l.f.'IOV l.d 201 2 " Auoc • 1 20 1 31 C•o 1 1112 H 11 ATO Inc °"" :io1 1 'o 1~11 1111o -\'I 0e sttel ~ 62 11 10~ 100• \'I H1>1>"r' 1 20 17 •• .. o om ntl l 11 t.eh Coal • 1 Astron SIO d34 Mui 1'3111438 Auro ft P es 69 14\1 1' 14 Oe•ltr ~' 6 32 \ 31llo 3 , He.e w 1 .., •211> 42'ill-V. all 9 of the assets or Beauchamp •:i: ¥:5 ~\>'! £\' L::~ T~ Ji:; 3j,Z A•F•u~ou1M:i1 , 13 ~:r~'"Fd 1~ i; ,, 1: ~~~mL~ ,"fo 41 ~~1• ~~! Jr1 = ,1 g1:~1~~t" 1fo M ~~ ~~ ~~ = t! ~g:~:~::•r~ ~~ 1~12 2~ '~ :!:1 '~ & ro\' n Properties Co a nd com 11 h ic'h 1S\'I tew , ""' 19 19, Fund 8 7.63 1111 Mou Git. 2 19 l 3:2 Avco pl3 ~ l2 J7' • s1 ''' -11 o 1Sh1m 1 40 1116 11"l1 11;11 1a~ _ v. Hol dA 1 l'Ob 271 :~ ~'Ii< «i,• -• ~ ,,, ,, •• ,, ''' EO ,,, ,,, Sl«k 5 98 'S4 Ill Tr 00 4'1115 Avtrv P<I 20 11 311 ill ll•• ~,..., -+I ,. 0 tSh ... '' ''' '' • .. '' _, •• Ho,,,,, ' ,, ,, " Beauchamp & Brown Invest 'omP A 1"' 4 1.o1>v1,.. M\ 6 Sci Co 471 s11M•tes 533 Sl:lAvMl lnc "° 341 11• 10'• ll!'fo-~•oespfo120 ,•,2 lS'• ~ u,-"Homestkt "° 11~ 21'19 21"-'rli mp Cm :it 31 Cd 'll•Dson 113 113MllMr111611161AVonP<l110 ••111 1/o lJ'(l\'0 171 '2 -fl Ocl5Phon 41 13\ill t.z>~ -·~ kon , , .. 267 161h 16 161" ment Co for approximately m11 1n<1 24 ; ~S A 11i1 ~~ 1: ,1:v. Be u K~t 9,... 9,... Mct>on 1 •l 9 7• Ai'"' on Gs 11 11 ~ 11 4 11'h + v. o1ebord 481) 32 66~ 66 ,. 66~ + -i koo!T 1 ,of lil 1'2\lo 1.io 1«1 -••· 400 000 shares Of S!andard Ommoo •'"'-100~ ',°", •• "!°'o "Gro 31V, ll e air F<I 11 311 M ~.I~ M,o ', l', ,', \3 -8-D G Ol'<I o 60 IS ,'°"', 20 20\.4 ->;. k"'ll Intl ~ i: ~ ~ n~ ~~!',:: ~ .,, " .,.~ ~ n n Z Bcnd•lk 6 4 103 .,.,.,y D O Ollt l)Q~m 10 1• 26 • 2j~ _ t; Hotel Cp Am :u lt:i * ...," ,. P ac'!' t-k (mp r~ 15,,10 .. o c• '")I Bo.1onSI 79• 1611M«>'Ys 133J HSSllabctWll6 Jll U 2s• 'i"-l•Olll>O ofA2 l Sl"h ,,,. >'"+'"°""' '"" '° ..,.. 'II 10t'll 1°"6 +<i. C S "'-Comr•s •• 9 1 10 ; y;~0 <II: 1~· 1 • ~ e~1 Fdn lD st 11 S7 Morton F1,1nd5 Sa~ O T 65 76 21~. ;1 • 2 lo -"' 0111no ol 11 2 1 •n• .ov: ,ru _1~· Hoo.! Pl l tt "' 14~ 1.Mt l•i. -Vo The prO""Sed acquisition IS ,'~s llotk 21 211 ~ v.a lkrt 59 ,, 61 Beston 1 ?t J r.i Grwlh 'JJ a 12 !111tGE 1 10 ~1 3011> )Q l0"1 + lo 011 onto S6 b 1 1~ 15'1'1 15 ~ _ ~1 H.,..g M 11 '° 6! 71 21\.'ll 2t + 1i b ••·S d d I l•a!i n,.1,111nm!~• ,~2"11 BrctdSru111 5'.I' lncQm 1a3 •208111G o!S4501S060 S'l /.i 59 '>-1\'>oneClvbSO .t4J~l5 1S>!o+foHOV•ehFJlami"'A2CV.25 +'• SU iect to tan ar Paci IC Con!rfO • • • II.an n M •• 4 811 IOCk l• 2n 15 56 ll•Y• 7 89 I 6S B1nuP11nl M 1:19, IS H~ 1•'\1 -:I;, 0 ll'ltV JOI> 74 1m. 12A'1 ))4~ _. .. MousF p" 40 l l~I~ lll'lli Jf\.li -1~1 h I Id I (Dn!an 3 13.,.,...,~nc c n.i.lol!<CGFd 111tstMFFcl 166tl)ll8ntPP11 25115 n >+10oo1Sea.a120 7d'Ai 41:i.o•ai.:.-\l.IHoosFptCwr 34 6V.l76 126 _,,.. s are 10 ers approva at a Coooe L 1 n v.ar M!q 15 'i 1~;. c.n .. 1111 18 63 70 H MIF G!h 5 56 6 01 BaJP ~n zs J 18 11v. 11\'i o verslllCI J6 69 lN IS'h 1Hi _ ~1 Hou•F on 37 s ~('; ~ • ~.~ = ~,,• I t t I (!lrD S 30 32 ,,,..., Gr ll IJ C1p1m 199 171 M~ OmG IOI' SS3 lllln ol 'I' 2 21 .<a I .l..S•o 46 -\ Ol~•M o J6t1 109 29 18 1t~ + ... MouilP I If 96 ..0\., 1 ... ,.. speCl8 mee Jllg pr C S e n Y Co~M Yr 33~4 J4 ~ Brow :u :1-4 Cap I Inv l 19 ,t S9 Mu Omln t 6 10 '5 !lank T 2 S. 131 64'h 6.3>.0 d3 I -Vo 0.-Peooer 90 19 '7\'ll '6V. 46\1> _ v, HOVslNGs 90 16 Sl :19~ ~ -o hdldf I J Crwfd 17'1-28 Aa~ 0 "''"'//Ct11US11r unav11Mwl ShslOl 6ltllabO 2l61 •A•5o~444CI) 1'11<Qom~!n80 ~l1~'19 lS cm V.HwQ~ !151\ ~$1 +\~ SC e II e or ate anuary C•tat Mii 11 n lllcOuv .,1 ,, Cenl Shr 10 99 12 01 Mui T st 1 4S 1 .i..s &a•d CR 1} 3t SJ'li 54'• 54~ -.,., OomFd 1190 s 111o 121-\ 1211o -, kow Jo,:',, ~' 3 .iav. 47v. '814 + ,,_ Arthur E Svendsen c,ro5s co )II 40,.~ """" c H l• 1~ Chan~ ,,9 ~Fn ds NEA Mui 10 '610 ,, Bo• c inc &o !Cb 11,,. "'" + v. Donne iev 44 77 2•11 l,j'• l•I~ Howmer 10 122 1 • 17-\to 11~ lllCh R ' 9.\4 Mftl rn A• "', 8el111 11J611 "2 Nat WSec 9 61 D «l lies c ~I 1 Sf> 110 38. 38 ]II -1 Do ( Co l l ls u. Slli 26 -r, 111141~ Hat "' ': 1•' 2•1'1 ''"' " chairmanoflheboard andCv1>esc 1s\16 lll•n~r ,....,~,, comst1 681&4Nat I>(! ID4lln•1satesMl9 11 7o a -V.0or 01ver 1611\ 101 l O'o "'-dahP 1 J7 lt!o 16\lt-1 Ch'elcxeculo"enllocernlStan 8~"a1 o':a 1~"'11 .... -..:~.d.,C• l~'-1~ f'..'c~ ~:1:f~~::1r;l~r 8s~•t:i::~%pf) 1: ~~. ~~ 1~'>+Vi ~~~~,~ 2 •1,; Al~ 41 •-\'o!o:.?e:'51c'{' ,~; rr:: n~. m?tt: • 08llln p I'• 9 "'.:, CT ,~,;>_ 1 ~ Sptcl 7 11 2116 Ba 111 lfl lJ 11 U Bt l'l!n Pl2 50 3 5, > SC 5•\1 + )'J Or•voCD l 4o '1'12 691;. 6l>a 61 • -l dtelll pl4,7J 1 6S 6.S 6S dard Paclf1c said that assets O•" s Fd 10 , 11 , •I~'• r:~~ ,":~ i1 -, c~ase Gro...11 llDl'ld 5 lJ s &l B1111chlt> ao I~ 721n 1 » n -1 orenlnd 1 •O 16 2fllii 21 211 , -" 111 Cent 1 1' 2• 11~ 27\'1 2a 0 '' ",-• ''"" '''''' 5 Ovid 408 ... BoxtrLot> 10 u 29!1 1t 29 -v.0 ,, .. , o•>>O •0 14 '" 7P~ '~' _..,.rn ce~ otJSCI 9 .10• "'• ••••+ of t he Beauchamp & Brown o~:orM~ 1ii li ~o"R~r~ ~~ ~·-\ Frnt f4 3991Sll Gwth 190 •1JB8~ukC11 so 18 o t~ to -oreSir ofB2 ~~ ~v. fl ,, :'IO -i• Power~ :ia ]..o~: fl ~+.! o " , 0 • 10' ,,,. '' Sl!r!ld 10 9t n DO Pf Stk 6 C9 1 09 Bear no• l 2 •7 11 41 -r. ore'''''' '' '' 11 J... ?6't -.\ tn Pw p17 JS tlOC 19 i 2f ~ ,.,. _ firms Include p r 0 p e f I Y o:iu. "tn so th s1ih 1,1grt..,Jt 11; 11'~ 11 ~ SP« 9 11 9 J7 ll'ICDm S 17 5 6.S 8•11 Fd• 1 )QI 31 lli Jr + ~-OukePw I 40 11 ,?!!~ ,~ ~ + ~? n:,Pp'tp 1'11~4 iS6G 27\t, 24 ! 21 /: + 1, l'old,ngs on Lo• Angeles o,',,",'•'•' ,!,, ',5~ ""•~•• "'• '"• 141/o C~tmcl "35 u1 2 Slock 190 8 63 Bedlman SCI t.10 •7 ~;1-, .. -J\ oukeP o16 75 7 ...,.. 00~• ion~•_ ,. , .. , ,, , _ JU ll\1 l7¥o 11 _ , ·' .,. " ~ ~Vt 9 Coktfllal Na! west "172 I 19 Brei 0 ck JO ~l 56 SS • SSV. + \ Ou~Srcl l 10,, 46 511:r,i, !I SI " ..., 391 32 :JOV. 31\lt _ 10 Oi ange Riverside and Ven ,°', .. •,•,, o's'•• ,•,•, •• •oo, ,,• Ms 171, 131,1, E<1utY c 51 4 t:i Nel Grlll 9 "2 10 2c SotcllA 751:1 '' 1 1 11.. 1'• -\.I ouD!in CP ss 14 13,0 73 ., ,, ncom~ C1pfl n u 1, • 15 + 1 • ' tV. 7 Fu!>(! 10 C2 1 39 Nt11wlh 23 911 23 911 eek.I> Pel so 66 25 2• , 2S dUPOtlf s 25<1 141 llll 106~ IOOV. -itt. l~cCum 1 169 11 .,,. !"" t'lo + • tura countoes oewey E 6 ,.,,, M , c ub ll"<o 1,~ Grwr11 6 is 6 11 New Wkl 13 11 14 lJ ll1kln11M 60b s 19 19 "" dlJPant ou sc 9 61 '"" ,,_ -1n011n Na 60 51 ''~" , ~ , •• , _ C Oern( 19!?0 M~t e l0;,11 Ven! •.tS70SNYVenlll7'l(IS}BepHow.6tJ 6251 SO .SI -~dUPO<ltolJSO ~ ~h-lo 1fld11l1PL1;l.O ll'l1~21V.7f(!._, SlalldardPacihc orp is a o.c '"' 4-, •1Mu1R1 E• 112 • co1 Grllt 13371l11N.w1"" 16J011B1 Bel •nit con u 8"1 '" 1 0, ovo 1.11u s~ ~~~. n~ 2J:--4ilnd,,r.',,'",,',s n w 90 90 +•• d'"ersofoed Cal1lorn1a hoonc o,~',',', M •'••• •'•"' t'!c,,o ,,"', ,. ! Comll'IC tis 10 n ~oreest 14 56 u 56 e,~., '1"',.' ,", ~! • 2Jt:. 2' i + ~ oc A 10011 05 1 o 26 u 2' 1 J 1 61fo , + "' • ~ ,. 1• 25 , ComS Bd 4 3 S'IBS Ocn9llll 7 31 I 01 e• .._.v, 32 32'11 -"'o \.! 4pf 1 -lnOetnc;o 80 1] 10~ 20141 20'-' -, .. bUlldJng flrlTI Oa v l>M 9 fllHt llrnd 3\~ :Vo Coml'nO!lwlth Fd!. O~'J~ l~ ~ 111 ge11F~ 011 lo 2i: ~\(o ll'h ll ~ -1'11 U'I 11030 26 '> 16 26 _ l'o l!'llerllllnd 1 12 JS$~ 3S JS'lt _ 'a CtP I'd t .it 10 l1 101 Fd u:Jl e~uF" p!S sa 8 lo!O 136 lJ! -,~1 Dvmo od t11 f1 1p1 15 , 15 'I no Rd 1'12 35 11 31\li 32' 3'lV. + " I~~~ ~ ~ : ~on@ wms H ~~~ tl llenllF o •:in s 10 69 09 '=1: Oyn1 Am -IO ln 10 I 9~• 91 = 'h 1~,:~1l;1 J6 '!} T~~ Tt~ T6••' _ •~ Sock 1 SJ 9 l'1 0 Ne U 9215 11 llenF Son S<I l780 JO-? JO lei 'i + 'h -E .. _ 1,,...onf pf4 ~ l3SO S1'4 ~.. • Cou1ity Growth Pace To Slacken iii 1970 cwt~ All 1 l• 1 •S Op1>enh 1 <Ii 115 lle1t11v~1 Jn 1110 1l 1 -\> e 0 , 00 3, 2 •• , ''. ''I"' -o 00 '' 5,,1°1 ~,,! _+ , l':wl!n CD l 60 'n PtCt Fncl 10 •1 11 J8 Ben11uet In Jl 11 11 111' .JO. c ,.. .• '"i -,, ,. ,. ;r Comp Al ''17161tP~nll Sq ,,, 11tllerkPno 17t lSI 16• 1Slo lS'h -"E··~,'.',•,,90 ] ll\\ 21 211-+lt 1"~rc p!AJ25 5 25\ ~ 15~ C ' ) •• 004 Pt Miii 115 7 6S 9ermec CO!"P 221 5"' S ~ !.\-\ IS " II 2'1'D 15"o ''°" 14 • -1' lnsP r (CD 3-Jl Jll1 SI~ Sl~l -(0 comoe lld 1 ;'; 1 99 P~lll 14 26 u 6] a11n s I 1 eo '60 2614 2S'4 16 E.Jsl GF I'll' &I 2~1 16 71 lnterco 110 <Ii 16"' 2S'\t 29.' + '• c:::: Fd • 00 9 11 Pllorlm 9 >O JO lt a ' Th••• 60 12' .U\'t ... ·~It -1 Etit u ' l -IO 16 16'1$ 114' la" ntulll.St 1 '° '1'I 25" 25'4 154~ + .. com!lk 419 534 p1o1 7311os Bl1c-Ok 1MI 21 77 71'\ 11••-,Ea,Koa1k 18 l06 71"-76\lr. ,'!.•,_+1~,i~l'tia~r ... , JB5360 lSlolj\.')-t C0<1co d 17 51 l1 Sl P ne SI 10 0 10 (] BI rJohn '8 19 72>t 72 • t2 ~ Ell on'l'1 I 40 200 C°"' 3911! ., , _,.. l3C 661<1 ISIA 66\lo • > Con•ol n UIMIYI Plllll Ent 1 36 • 04 BllU l.IUlil I t 15~. 25 lS"4 + :u ElllOtl P!l 9 2 Jtl. 311>:. J9>ol -• Int Mtrv 1 IO 2!l 2.S '~\(o lt:fo -., Coolu In I ll c 14 PIO<> FM! 119~ 1306 Block HR .ll 48 St!. 51J.0 Sl~I 1 ~ Ech ..Ml 72 l'9 7.Ji1 25~ 2S'to-1,<i lntMcd J l()g J l11t 111.1; 11>, cont Gtn 9 •• 9 1, pan Inv 1 n7 12 10 Blu lltll I so 15 ., • 48 ~ 49 -'h Eclttfd J 20 151 l.iV. 31V. JJl'i -1 !nl l"6u1t 166 "1 4 \'t •1~~ Corp 1.d t ) 911 ll :19 Pr ce Fund 8 uBt pl4 15 J 97b 97 tN -~ Ed SOll8rO> 1 11 25\'\ 1S 15 -~· 111 Ind ol110 I S6 , SS\'I 56 C:nty Cap 13 16 14 ?1 G Wlh 25 56 25 56 Bobb t 8r~1 l9 11 • 11 h 11 -\II EG&G 10 142 20>.• 20 1 201~ + •I.I ln!Mlntr tl!> SOS 11 IJ l 14 1 !~ I conom1c activ1ty 1n Orange County 1n 1970 1s expected to ad\ ance beyond the 1969 levcls but the ratC' of growth will be sloller Wells Fargo Bank sald today The s\oY.er pace \VJ\l reflect the conunucd lleakness tn the a rea s aerospace-electronic industry the bank reported As a result the UJlCmployn1ent rate should edge up to 4 percent compared to 3 8 per cent ln 1969 According to James R Gibson vice president and rna.nager of the bank s Santa Ana office Orange County business 1s still expected to be buoyant bolstered by con Llnued groy;th 1n Jl'lcome and total cmploy1nent Underlylng this growth w1U be the non-defense. ma.nufac luring }ndustr1es tnclucltng metals machinery and lex tiles Add1t1onal mvtstmtnl Is expected 1n the trade alld service 1ndustr1cs and 1n pubhc edueation as the area s et.'Onomlc and population base expands along with the tourist conyention sector Total employment should chmb lo 47$ 000 an increase ol 4 6 prrcent over 1969 llouslng slarts !or 1969 are expected to total 33.000 unll.s, an Increase of 40 percent over 1008 lhc bank said But wl\h tii;:h1 1non('y the. outlook is for a decline 1n hous1n_g start~ to around ~ 000 units nett .rtar 11.tott tha n half or these w ill be apartm<'nts oontinulng the 1969 trend The bank expecl! consumer C<llWOv 618 615 HEr1 950950eoeng120 3'11 ?7l• 2114 2,,..-\.EIM11slc ~ 1'11 6~o •1' 6~-v..ntMlntrp14 1 4t 41 41 -1 CrnWO&I054115? NHor 2IS0'8SOBos(81l5b •il5'111l n\4 -)1Eo:c!A"oc 1610~110 11>'1.+,ntMl'llilAQg 11611 12 121+\ n1arkets to grO\V a t a shghtly dtVlilh M 611146l64P o Fvnd 0121031 llond S•• 1 193 •,•,,•, ",, 20 -•o EM•mMo n t! «:11,,, ",,.~ ~,, _+~1,,", ',,',','.,20 259 41~ •H'o 411•-1 OKI!! nc 10 IS 1 116 Provdn! c l1 • n BOOkM h 1 21 :n -• EIMM,,.g pl I ... "' .,.. 130 ,, 36"'i 36'!1 + ., Slower r ate rolJOWlng a year Of Oeltwrt l12S l l'I Pu1 !an 9 52 10 lll Borden 11Q 1U )31'. 1)\lo 23 ~ -"-Ell! nN1t Ind 147 1~• 7\li ,·,~ -'A 1,,",, ',',',,',,' ~ l 0 59 St St -'• Otlt& l t 05 9 80 Pu!narn Funds Sor~War I 1i 69 1• t 14 14'-'I -•1 EIP1111NG l 1&1 1"1 17 5 IJ 1 131.\ ll'I\ _ • \lgorous expansion R eta1l ovldSl!r l51 1 14 E<1u1 9 SO o:iaeoman~ ao 76 110 J2\o 1n'f -~E t1Cp11Q 19 21~ 26~ ,,, ntSat 40 2135• l.l~ lSV.i ' Oownl F 57• 679 Geotl 1l &l15l08111Ed• 201 32 J21 3H• 31"11+'.<Ella ol1•0 llO 2JV( 211o 211lt ln1T&.T 101 '75 5~1 ii,, sru 4 sales are expected to reachortl!tl 1s 91 u 9 Gr111 '<n10 .. eou•n1111< 72 2s•-24W 2411-JV.Elllll Eli!c 1 21 m 1 57 57 , 1 1n1T&T11•ct 120196 l96 196 , 12 bl! or,vf Fd l)63Ua4 lncom In IUll~nlfAr SO 251 IOh 10\'t 10~-,EmEl11f810 I 3'4 3'• J9 -l•~ln!T&T p!F 4 ?IU'>J~.4166~ Jll 17 11on a 9percent1n oreYll.vl1«1llSt 1 .. ve11 1s212:1Br1Qf!S12toa 65~•S2""5""-:;;,EmeYAlr9<1 12sa .sa-,sa ,-1 lntT&TatH • •1<411109 109~!' crease Nearly hall t •• g••n Earon&Howar<I y I a 10 1511 09 B l!I M~ I 20 lt9 11. llllt 11'4 -~-Emf\a t I l(lti 29 ,, ~ ., +1 ITT p!I c 50 9 109 101\.1) lCll'J " 111:: "" Be ~n 1n JI 1 '1 Vovag 8 ?0 S '6 llr slMy pt 7 I 46 'II 46 ~ .al.Ii +Vo EmpO ti I 16 C 16~0 26 ' 1~o --I o ~!T&l DIJ 4 J 102 10'1V. 107~ ~ however Wl\l r eflett higher G~ 1! ~ 1: ;~ ~=eer1eO'Ch ltii 1~1: 3~~~·: '-~ J~ ~; ~ ~~ i; +1 V.. i;::l1::~ ~l~ 12~ ~..,. i;~ !;'"' = ~ i~:Ttl t p1f";; :: :: , ;;'-::~:: : Prices Specl 101111 as RC$tnlll t .01 119 81<lvnuG 1 n 21 241'1 ,,°" 2cv. E"!ll~Mln .o 2.w u 1• 21., 2l l + ._.. 1111 urn " 2• 2•, 1, 2• _ , Sloo;lt 1• 23 U SJ 5.Jlem Fd 5 .. 6 39 Brpw~ Co S7 9 8"' 8... Eno M Pl4 25 J ll~ 1 lll ,,. 13111 -a > lnlUIU PIJ 31 l 1 •1 21'11. 2J'• + '• Ebe111 3 13 1 lS Scnu•lr 15 62 17 09 6rtwn Co of 21 lllt'r ll lJ\l -+ Vt Enflhllu1F 10 It ti 19 1n1e101tt 6.S 20 ~ lf\li 20\1. + h Eorel 11•1U10 Sc\ldder Funds llwn Sha r 1 34 l• o 14 • l•W ->4 Eju!Gas 11'3 11 30 t )QI, 30'lo -\.lo njtrPCt p/ 5 I 11 -, 70 70 Emrt Sc 7 23 1 ti In! Inv lSIS 1610 Bwns.!loe SCI JO 19!• ~, 1t\oll -lll. E II ~e l l'O 10j 27 • 21'• )l'• -\Ito Int B a"6 '° ll lS\lt l5 lJ _ 1 W Energy 12 tt U 69 SPCI n 75 3:2 15 Br11n1-..k 12a 113 171'1 16"" 11\0 -lt Et<1uJrt 30 1 21'4 t2\-. n •o -+ 'II •nte osir 60 61 211\1i 21''" Bertea IDO s En!Prte 1 ff I 6-2 lal lO ll 1114 But~Er l 20 -16 11 1 11.\\ llh EsH~ nt I 20 52 l4 1 ll ~ ll\4 -\"' ln!t iPw 1 2( 56 16... 1•;7 1f.i. + ~ ElllJI Giii 1) lol 1' D7 Com SI 10 8' 10 16 Budd Co 10 5! 1~-., IS 't UV. -'l'I Ell'lc>! Cp I• .0 7)~ 12\0 ll\'1 IOWI BMI .56 30>-'o 30 \4 l t -' Ene• 110 Se-c:O!v 1n ... 11298ud!;tFol60 7 7"" 1Y• 7'9 -t.11E!~vl111l .m 7136135'•36 -lriifiEILPJ)Q lll1\'lll"'i~=: Evt11••~1]411 4 J]Secf""'I llit4..0'1Blldott ln 64 l& l6"' 11M l•\4-\1E11rolndl:JOt> 11 17\111"· 11~~ latllGE 31 36 21 20 Pact F1·om Lockheed F1lrla 1Dll611&15e< lf\V 69' 1~8ufO:oro110 60 ... \~ ., ..u\,+t~Ellrldlnl~ 1 16 15\~ 16 111-..•PL! 160 11 IC' .... ~.'•'···+' FtnTI Bu lOf!l lllW Selet Am 10071090 BulO'voW 60 10 37 .. 31 31 -~ Evan•P 4Cb 31 411• 41\(o All\+ 111 ) " " • Fed Gr!h lt"l•0tSel SPO'CS 1607i151 &unk Romo _ 10 ll' I~ 1.)\!t Everm1rP 39:1 29 17~ 29,_. !OWl!PSv 12 ... !'"' ,,.,, lt~-w Fld Cec> 1! 11 , ,. Sh O••n 11 76111' BunkR ofl.50 I •I "° " E•C• IO l 7S SI 13'1 23 21•11 • IPCD Ho•P 34 1121 ~ :JO~ lll'> +1 • F!lf Fund II 41 !' 9J s °' • t3 10 .. Bu I nd I "° tJ lJ'4 :n,., l3'fo + ll Fat>erirt ..., 121 lJ • J2 .. 31 • -\I. ,rJ ,''!'!, .lS l6 11 ~ 1' 26 -1 ' F d 'rrM! 2c 34 6 ilCI S!1mo t IS 10 71 eumav 70 11 21\~ 11 •<i 21... -1-'' F•ctor A JI c 46"--16 -, 16'< "' l-16 5' !alto 55 M -• F n~Ml•I """' !" Inv 11..SO n S7 Surfllhl 60 l~l 161\, 160h 1611'1 -l F• rtnC so 'll4 11'4 IJ~ ., • 12 ITT Sv Pl4 so J lttU. 129V• 17'1" -1 .. DYnm •-55 111 10111• Tr 9 C7 9 tl 8'1'1UllY \ ltt' ' 1~ ""' lRI. _ VI F~lr M fl U1 196 Ul'r H:i.i. 16\l! 1 • -J K lndl/$1 aoo CJ9 mth B t62 t62 --c;_ F1,.n<>nl I 3 lt IT"-11 'II • - Vent ISi 134 Sw1"v Gt 710 I Cibof Co 10 14 )0 19'4 2t\4 F1 sr1!1 olO l:IJ 101 9~1 91\-aiJi,~All toolO 11 B>J I'\ lll(Om • 10 6 69 ""' lnv I II tr. F• mnr ol I 3 20 20 20 J•dltn'-11 ,4 1S lJ 11 17 _ \II "If. V1 10 ii ll olJ SoYI!' Inv lt96 I• t c11 Fin.n1 ,fi n' ,! ,,•,,_ IV. ~ F1m Ftn 1 )CL 46 16 • l•'h 16" J ,:o 1 ,,,. t"1 ~ Bertea Corp Irvine has~~ 1n8t~ f~1~~i~•Gt ~~I~~l•hM ~ 13 ,.. ... lt16='·~:i~1 1;'n ~JU: g" ll111,=~J:::F 1 ~1 21 o131, nl.i 1J1-1~ been awarded 3 contract lo r:-s1 l11S!k ''' 9d$11i.~so ,un1v•ll~;:i:S~1.1 1o • 111 1'' Y~ F&rthMf tot> l!ll »'> !l • 1>+ ,Jo"' lnl lfo 13 21~ 37U 31>Ji Fil MUlll '"" t.55 s... Of\ Vfldl II 4ba: ln 'i"' 31-': 1 ~ FAS In! l.lO! •16, 2Ut ,~. 2l\~ -\f 1~;:;,1: .: u .... 11'• 11\'i -1 \ des1gndevelopandmanufaCF•1 N" 1»•01 A'dunc110D 1~11 1~·,n~311\ 11, ,•:-Ftodd11«1 ll J1 i,31 3•-"'Jrt:PL ,, 21 tl\1 11"11-1., lure the elevator aileron and ~=(le'~: ,~·¥· t:.: !n '" =~lltdt ??: 3~ ~ ~ ~ ~ +2~ ~~t ~~ y il~ t: t l~~ -,, j~Y701~1-: ·;g r~ ~ ~ ... \ rudder fl1ghl controls for the~1A l~ tl11.-.5]';, 11:0t,fU1,'° :f11r~n81c.:J 11 WP ::;:+t\~ec11~PGi.1~6 ,~ ~¢ 16~ ~'-*J1:::w !i1t.0 1, "' J.S i.s~-•1 Navy • 'A ti' b r Fnd Ott. JM ~. •• 011 ,,,,,.,, ~ l~i. '° .: 1~ m! 13 \It F f'a11""15 llCIO ,1 .. ll\' 11~~ Jol111Mlfl. :0 1$7 '9111 ... ~;i -1, s o>-v a n u ma 1ne F01111Cfr1 7 tl 101 •otk 1• "u u 1i-o Cf Oh s JO 434 61,,. 6314 -,, F.Os11ns AO 31 ntt ,,,., 2~ _ * JollflJhn 161 6, t&S 163 l&S -1 \\arfare alrcrafl F,Qll''" 1nt111tst'•'s'o•• •,n,,'le 1r1>PL I" 11s ,,,,. 311'1 Jl'\= ~Ffl!t>e111s1r 1 "l 'I S\11 :i. 1o1m1svc., 11,1 1JV. ,"" •"•"+• ranMnn Gro..,t P 11 "' :P ••oTc~ 60 2' 17'~ ~" ,... \t Fed M11 lnw I'< 9 JohnSvc Pl ' ~, ~' The C () n t r ,a C t from C~ SI '·ls 1 n nf GI 10 7c 11 14 irrlerCp 60 10 • JU !, +i ~trro Cfl 70 n 27''1 71\l 22lt + f'l'I JanLottn IO l!St .S6 ).o 4 5$1\ -\ Lockheed-Othforn1a: Co calls eri. c t J 10~ ,v.'ICll~.· 1:_,tn)?J~H :·~~J ~ .. ,' ,i;..,.1• ll-, • i~ + ~ F,:i:,,: 1~ 1J m:"" Jl21~ J..~ ='v.1:\:;l( ~.31 tl~ ~~ M~ ~llo =''~ OM~ , .. ! 4 f'tlll'I(: j I '''~" OI !! -F llrOl f .C "-to ))\-\-lo jOl'otn1n I )0 1 Jl\O 714 ""' for systems to be 1nstal\~d 1n F ~ ts • frct1ftCI• , ' '"' ke 60 ,, :io Ji • 'I" Fede••'" '°' 1 h 1:Pt 16 -1 01ftm 60 ,, Vi 11~i 31\6 -,~ th 1 lu I de ol sl FCI lrMwt 100$10 01 ...,D GI 21 rJ 2& to 1 er r l.ll) Ht lO(; 1, lfo -tll• F 'tl!MI I 60 1'4 <68 ._ •1 4 -I~ I# Miii 'i. M J?I\ 31\to ii t > e n a or r a: pro-F11M Arn •n1•~ •,-· r:1: ·~ 1•1 c• c-107 '·· d•'•i •u .,_ Fsic:~" 'i7tt ,,1 11 ... Js J6Q + ._ 1e1J1., Al 1u ~ iMt l., -. to! fl G!lll Ste__ 11110 a 10 ''" Ill 1., I Ol Cl Cp "n"s ' n.. ""' -"' F1!HCl!y "" 34,) IS~ ,,.v, ,,,, -~ l<.•1· ""'It i '"' !Ii! 11" l-'-1 ype alrcT8 G~Jlr 14 07 1' 07 Tr&Y II t 94 10 9' •!•nneCo 2 10,1 1! ~ • .,,, ... , --S, !111Wt1$tr lt 130 -1, ; ,,1, >, 3'0); + '~ K,",,15!!', 'o 1714 \i 17!t _, .. Currently Ber tea IS Gl'IUPSO'C TudolFdlS6tltlS tl1no+'M..SO "''"" ~~="' IKl!l)(!l ID ~· .... ••"••"-+.;:_~-·-c--= f.f.li •• 1\,i-J Aero St t ?I tinf'Wl!C Gt ~?t tit tl!Q!!I.;. ,JO 51 "'"' 41 ~ 1111rFd Osd .-,. , ......... ,. ~" :n-1 11~ 12'*'+ 6 dtvtloplng and m;inufaeturing com st n " 11" rwne inc ' :..-,'.,., .,.,Fo, tcid ,, 1, u 11 I '""'d 1' ,, '"• 1t 1•lt + \II !!"' PwL1 2 1 »~ 3'11 3~~ -"' f'YI Ad Ill 11tUnl Miii 9t1 D!'O 1t11HIJd \• 21 22 ,1t,, 2lU h '"'11119 30 ~1 121o. lt 11 -1'1 "\. Pll.Ji t n ... lJ.., » -1 the control system for the GWt,,.~!111 ll.,..l1 ]..o H~if:.i ,v,J,211001 '7u' ,L1 ~~ ,..E ~ '°" '°" = l• 111~;~011Al ,11f ri1~ !nu ~ 2:1~ •n._~'j . .i,, w,; iii; ~ ~ ': bor11.0ntal 5 t a b I I 1 z e r of 8111rd11 n n ,, ~ Attm •l" •' n •11U~Pr1 I -fl 11\\ ~I! -ttt .. ::.11, i; 1111 =Ill n ,, ~~~ n'" !!" --! '•' 1;'3... ,,,.. 11'"• ft" -'Ii "mu1on lnCOl't'I Cl ' ... , LI ll , l' 23i. ;&\? ,,. F11 E C"'f!I -11' •• .... J,~ II', '" -• LockheedsL-JOllTr1Star O~' 4 u,1s ~"2 111 !tonM"P-...11t ~ ''• 1•• 11t =i..F1G••n !t 19. ;;, 1t14+UI~ '' fi ' ffi' ~-"" comme.rclaJ jetllnet &rtea H•,:..• 'fl T' ~.:..i 'Cine 11411 •-• 1 :1 \:'111 I 1U = ~.·•: ~ ! "' ~=~' ,.,, tf :,f;l,.' :'!~• :'!lu -_',~'. ,~\o,..,. l.! ff~ 311 • i~ -•• I r I t.a ~trtlor 1!7 t.Jl Vi-11.lfl 1 fj' ..,ft1V.Mt> lff jl\'> I ~ t.-1-t f.i. Slffl I "' \ ,(;, ,. '~ 1(1 'J ' JTij -•I 3 so m I n u a c u r f: s t.I\'. "1~·1·4-l' S1 IS., lflCMI • ' 1 •rro l.f(ID -'. rr.• .f!\ -~ ~ O/OfC~ 20JI 10) 2•ll 1 "' • -h IS-tlt..r l"f.J' I! "~ lO\ "=··· primary 01ght controls for the ~;JD 0:-• :i 'il n V~~s s,~I f i; t ~ c:~.y-r I. q if,! ;;!: G _ t. ;\':°f1f 8 ifG 1J ~.: ~tt r,~ t ~ ~:.;:: 1 ?J fl ~,,Z ffi ~ -.. Lo~:kheed built Navy p 3 Orion ~~;:( '; :; ' °' ~:::i'' : tt '1··1~~ fi: Jfi n' !W wt +~ F~~ ;r, 25s "J fill D't l"!lt -" ~~ , 1 ,,, g\,o :I. :a~_, andA1rForceC-5AGalaxy H ..... ~~n ISlf!6e1v11• IMP'' \ 1'111-S 120 21,.. tt•• _,,,ooaFa • '° !J ff'•'•',!.•, 1·'-i''§' v100~·1· -~ ~q" ~ 4l +11t Hub~" I~ 6 M v1•1n~ • ~· U 111•te•NY ; n * ..i ~ 1" v, ll0111t C9 IO "' .. t-. A rN J,7" Other altcratt for which the :i: ~: 4 1 ~.~w:rn ,_:~ //,.}/JJi c~::t:"~ ff w"'1 ~I! Jll~t.1 ~=: ~"° li ~~ ll~ ~ 1: :i~Jk.f:J :r• i,. [~' ='~~ company design s and ln'IOICT I' 11 91Jw11 1n111n Cr-..,."~Ill 115 ~ ;;, 'o-,fordMol 240 ]..o •11.t. tfv. il' skrrtte.1,,•,> m '' il +•• 11'1• Cao 'N •ti' ~.orr f• 46 2' 01 l'll<T1 NY t,~ u 1 !I 'I l -1 ForMtk1 eo " 11 211, ; • I"'"'' • manulacturts flight ceintrols 1""P,_~1~ !ff j~ ;,..~ ,1':ltij ~~ -r; ~ ll lli! k t"' t:~~h'I"~ U ~-t ~f~ , t~ -! ,~~fl, J _, 1 include Boe-lngs107 727 737 I~~ •li10 • reci. .. 11 f 1 11u Ohio • •1 :r.1"' :1 -"'fi=atwh '1o1 (i 1""' '"• ,t~,+ ... ~1:r.,~ ;oj PH~ r.: !%\•!'!; 7~7 McDonntl~Oouglas DC ~11:""' 1Z:i 'l n =-r..::~ • .: i~ Wl\~11 1 n ~o:r ~I 10!\ :' '~::~,, .IQ : ~' ll,t. ~ii ::'.:~·= :IH ~:I 'IF 1f.' ,. 1~. tt',~ 10 DC-t DC4 A..f Skyhawk l~:8ll.,111 n¥ITT,\1 "'"11..:t~ ,',~ 1't ~s~~,. 11fl j ~' ~in. 11"' -"~~Jt~1 : t: ~'ff .J: lO,:·, l!,,ff +:: ,!=,r..,,:r. .,. .,. ~ ... F • Phantom and the Grum '1~= 11141~ 1!1: 10 , '1-!! ~fr.111" !-., h s~ .. ~(Cl1S • n~1 +: ~ ''""'' If! "' ., .. !L..tr,.,2 lh ... 4 l l •• m' ••. Gull<!r•·-If nvn ,.,. ll I :ii IC rrt t.1s h ,~·+ ' :,JI) " t~,. +" I" 1-!J :r • a~ '"" ., .....,.. lnVttl0'1 0 ..-111 2,5 J(ll) ll:IP(I UI' ll 1lt ... r. QA( (II I~ If Jf\11 S' JI -I rM _,,, l•ll 111 • • I • • • • .. .. • .. ~ • ,, • ,, '• " " • ' " '• ' " .. I .. " • •• • .. • " '• " • •• • ,, ~ ' " ' " " ,, ' , •• ' " ~ ''• ~ • " " '• •• v, " ~ ~ • • • • • ' ' " " ' •• " ' ' '• • •• " .. • ' '•' • ' • • '• .. • • ' ' • • • • ' ~ ' ' ,, • •• • " • '• ~ ,: " " • • '• .. " •• ,, • ~ Tuesday's Closing - ---,~ - Drumbtr ,. .. DAILV PILOt Prices-Complete New Yori{ ~StoclC •Exchange List Final Stocks Jn All Home Editions Complete Closing Prices -American Stock Exchange List • . -··----··· -------· --- I ~Kff~ ';,,~j 'ot't i~f I , ' I .. ·' .. Only Tiger With Claws Pistol Pete Maravi ch, the nation's most publicized college basketball player, dribbl es toward the bas- ket \Vith Newport Beach's J ohn Vallely_J .40) of the UCLA Bruins in close pursuit. In bad is Henry Bibby (45). The Bruins set school scoring record in 133-84 vi ctory while holding Pete to 38. Vallely hit for 14 po ints before a record crowd of 12,961 in P auley Pavilion. Sivaps Grid Togs for Cross Deac{)n Dan Tal{es a Snooze ?i.fuch as you mlght expect from a man or the cloth, Deacon Dan had a Bib!e in his hand. However, closer examinatio D revealed that he was cats:ning 40 or 50 winks while passing the lime at the Rose Bowl press center in Pasadena . He wasn't there to pray for reporters or for the teams competing in the annual · New Year's football classic. He was an official receptionist for the corps of scribes covering the USC. ?1-lichigan clash Jan. 1. You may recall the man. He was known as Deacon Dan Towler while star· ring for the Los Angeles Rams (1950-55). Now he's si mply Rev. Towler, head of a 205--person congregation at the Llncoln Avenue ?ifethodist Chu rch in Pasa dena. The Deacon, slill lroklng like he aiuld bust a tackle with his 8--2, 251-po111d frame, Is one fellow who retlred from t:1e game v,i lh no regrets ••• and there is no looking back or melancholia when he goes to the pro and college football bat- tles. "I spend a tot of my time at that rati ng place in the press box, 50Cialiling with friends I haven't seen for awhile. In fact, last Sunday 8t the Rams·Baltimore game J missed the who'.e first quarter, just talkin' to an old friend," the Deacon reveals. Jt was tough to get the 41·year-o\d Negro kl talk much about his playing days, but he finally dJd touch on what he Dome Jt.dvniitage feels were his two most memm-able performances. The first came in the 1952 Pro Bov1I tiff. "I was playing with Bob \Vaterfie!d (Rams quarterback), a man •Nho ranks as one of my favorite people. "It was raining and the field was mud· dy, m@.king it hard to throw, eo Waterfield just kept feed.in' me the ball _,,. ........... _ WHITE WASH Ill••. • .......... , •••••• """"' and I wound up with more yards rushing than the ot.1er team (East all-stars)." Deacon didn't bother to mention it, but records reveal that he was chosea the game's most outstanding player. The second occasion was in l'.153 at Ba!limore when he rushed for 205 yards (second highest single game total in Hain history -the highest is 22.3 by Tommy Wilson against Green Bay). The Deacon carried 14 times (Wilson had 23 auempts) and he avera ged l~.6 yards per try that foggy day in Marylaf'•l. Landry Sp1·eads Psyche; Co,vlioys Await Browns DALLAS (AP) -Don't try to sell Tom Landry any of this "psyche" business when il comes to playing the Cleveland Browns. Brown has played the last two games In the Cowboy secondary, which has jell· ed for the first time Uiis year. ''I guess they just couldn't see me In an that fog," he muses. "The funniest thing about Jt was that I had been moved from fullback to right halfback. I hadn 't played the p'silion before. But my gift was the ability to find an opening if it was there and I had more speed than most ol those defensive guys figured. "Jn fact, a lot of Umes I used to run off tackle, come back through the hole and make an end run out of it." The Deacon played six years with the pros, but he spent every spare moment studying for hia long range goal -serv. Ing Christianity. He even went to school during the playing season. Finally, he completed studies In June of 1956 and with that quit football. "Football was good to me ," he sap. "W:thout it I wouldn't have had a chance to be a person. l 'd have never gOIJC to college if it weren't for football ." Towler left his native Pennsylvania to attend Washington and Jefferson, where he majored in history and minored In Greek and English. "When I was a junior in high school I ffecided to prepare myself for Christian servlce. My father was a preacher, my 1 ~ther was the president of a women'• church group. And so I got to know the Bible pretty well. "Orlginallly I toyed with the ldea of ~oming a missionary. I believe that faith ean improve the quality Of com- munity We." Dea con Dan says football teaches a valuable lesson, too. "You've got to be ready and able -that's also the game of competitive llfe. And you learn that the greatest competiUon Is within yOUJ'M!lf." Towler, the man who now traded foot· ball togs for a cross on h1a lapel, is still the second lead.Ina career rusher of all time for th e Rams with 3,493 yards -an average of 5.2 per try. He trails Dick Bass with 5,411 but a lower average-4.5 a carry. Jack Pardee now wears Towler'& old jersey number (!2). But filling Deacon Din Towler'& shoes, on or ofr the fl~kl, is 10methtng that takes a lot of doing. LA, Minnesota Open Psychological Battle MINNEAPOLIS.sT. PAUL CAP) -The MIMesota Vikings and Los Angeles Rams wasted llttle time in touching off a psycbolog1cal batUe far S a t u r d a y ' a Western Conte._,. playolf In the NI· tlmal Foolball League. George Allen, RamJ coach, stepped Off a chartered Jet Tuesday night after the Los Angeles arrival and said : "A llWe lllOW never hurt anybody. And Sports In Brief It reels a lot warmer than J 1 degrees." The Ranus art In the Twin Cilles early to attempt to get used to the weather. which is expected lo be in the »<tegrtt range with a slight chance of snow by gametlme. It was 70 degrees when !hey left the West Coast. Minnesota coach Bud G r an t , meanwhile, aaid Mlruiesola '1 preparation "has been animaJ..like. By the lime the Santa Anita Opening Threatened by Strike SANTA ANITA -The threat of a many of their 28 turnovers and put lhe labor dispute threw uncertalnty today game away early In the second half. over Friday's scheduled start ol the USC had four men 1n double figures, winter se.uon at Santa Anita. led by Dennis Layton's 24 points and NegotiaUons between the track ' a followed by 19 from Paul Westphal. Joe management and the AFL-CIO Service De Pre led the loser's attack with 20 Empk>yes IntemaUooal Union, which· JX,>inl& and high scoring Bill Paultz was represent! most employes at the track, · held to 13, are reported .deadlocked. The union has given notice it will strike Friday unless the negotiations are set- tled. Management says it& offer of a $2 dally wage and fringe benefit package iJ final. The unions qys janitors make around $.1£1 a day, cashiers $35 to $40 and a few pari-mutuel clerks up to $50 a day with premiums. · • LOS ANGELES -Coach John '1cKay put hls Southern California Trojan foot· ball squad through a double workout Tuesday In preparation for their en- cowrter with Michigan at the Rose Bowl Jan. l . "We have tried to str~ conditioning in cur pr act.Ice sessiom 90 far," said McKay Tuesday. "But beginlng tolllOITow, we will start actual game preparation for Michigan," The two practice sessions of 90 minutes each in the morning and afternoon were capped off with a IS-minute offensive scrimmage that concentrated on passing. The Trojans were .scheduled to practice this morning, take Christ.mas day oU, and then resume Friday afternoon. • LOS ANGELES -use, combining an airtight defense and hot shooting, routed SL John's University 95-59 in a battle of nationally ranked basketball teams in the Sports Arena Tuesday. Alternating from a man·~man to a zone prtss, USC forced SL John's intO • LOS ANGELES-Qua r le rb ac k: 1 Roman Gabriel of Los Angeles and Joe Kapp or Minnesota today were named to guide the West against the East in the 20th annual Pro Bowl football game Jan. 11 in Memorial Coliseum. Eight Minnesota Vikings and seven Rams were selected on the 34-man team by National Football League coaches and the game management. • DES MOINES, Iowa -The football Writers Association of America has awarded it! aMual Coach of the Year award to Bo Schembechler of the University of Michigan. Schembechler, winding up his first year as Wolverine head coach, received 202 of the 541 votes cast In the ball oting. Nearest to him, wlth 64 votes, was Joe Paterno who coached PeM State to a se- cond straight undefeated ~ason. • PALO AL TO -Stanford linebacker Don Parish has been named winner of the Glenn "Pop" Warner Award as the most valuable college senior football player on the Pacific Coast. Parish, a 6-fool·2, 21S-pounder, was named Tuesday by a panel of 50 sportswriters and sportscasters who cover West Coast football. He won in a close vole over quarterback Dennis Shaw of San Diego State and halfback Greg Jones of UCLA . Weather gel! cold an animal's fur has gotten thicker. We 're the same way." The Rams brought along a variety o( cold wether equipment including gloves, hand wanners, special shoes and heat blowers. Grant said the Vikings will not wear gloves, but have various shoes for a bad field. Each club plans to work outdoors thls week. The Rams are headquartered at Macalester College in St. Paul. The Vik· ings are based at the University of Min- nesota. The playing field at Metropolitan Stadium has betn covered by an in4 sulated pad and tarpaulin, and is dry underneatlJ. Both clubs appear to be at almost full strength physically. Linebacker ~laxie Baughan is the only Ram doubtful, and he said Tuesday he would be read y to play. Jim Purnell vtould start if Baughan isn't ready. Minnesota cornerback Bobby Bryant has missed several games, but he is working in hopes or playing. 1! not, Ed Sharockman will start. Both players have sprained knees. Minnesota ended the regular season with the best record ln the NFL, 12·2. Los Angeles v,·as 11-3. including three straight losses starting with a :W-13 setback by the Vikings in Los Angeles . There has been a great deal of talk about momentum, or loss of it. on both clubs. The Vikings dropped a IG-3 game to Atlanta Sunday while the Rams fell lJ.. 7 to Baltimore. "Momentum Is a nlt-e word," Gt'ant said Tuesday. "but it's hard to define. Because they've lost three games in a row, it doesn't mean they are less of a club than they were a month ago. "We can only go by facts ••• what they can do. \Vhat they are capable of." Grant said it also was hard to judge Min!'lesota last month of the season . "We play better football as we go along," he said. "But three of our last four games were played in stonns and it's hard to judge if we're playing our best. Against the Rams we made a minimum of mistakes. "We didn't gain anything In the snow against San Francisco and the rain in Atlanta." LAKERS DOWNED BY SAN DIEGO The Los Angeles Lakers handed the San Diego Rockets their bi·aMual Christmas present a couple of days early Tuesday night v.ti.en the border city quintet copped a 115-109 NBA decision. Jerry West hit 30 points for the Lakers while Elvin Hayes had 32 fur the Rockets along with 26 rebounds and fi ve blocked shots. WOLVERINES AT WORK -Rose Bowl·bound Wolverines from the University of Miclrlgan go through 111eir paces at East LA during a closed practice session Tuesday. Seen are Glenn Doughty (22), Garvie Craw (48) and Jack Harpring (71), 'lbe Dallas Cowboy coach comes right out and says "I think we 'll play a heckuva game. We are very alert and determined. We certainly don't feel psyched." 1lW: rucUon came from Landry Tues- df.y when someone 5\lggett~ the Browns may be developin g some sort of a he:t over the Cowboys. ''We were in a slump and you have to do 90ll1tthing to make it a new ball game," said l..andry. "We had to make a change and Brown has done a good job." Free safety Mel Renfro wiU be giving Brown help in watching Warfield while veteran left rornerback Cornell Green and Gary Collins will hookup in their usual duel •t the other corner slot. Passing Sputters; Doughty Hurt Cleveland aound ly defeated Dallas Jl·20 In the Eastern Conference playoff l1tst ytar and folJowed it up ,.,,ith a 41·10 win t:n the regular staJOn. Botb games were played In Cleveland. 1lUt Sunday'• N•tional Football Leaf'\le Eastern Conference playoff is In f'allns -where the BroWI\$ have dropped three strall(hL .. It's always a big advantage t:> play at homt" Landry ,,.ln:lt:!d, spreading around a Uttle "psyche ' of hLI own. Cleveland Jost lhe 1937 Eastt.m CCln- fereice pl•yoff 12-11 In the Cotton Bowl. Landry C:eciC:'<f Tues~y Ll!:1t ro:i"<!e Ot- to Brown will act the no:I at t.:1e rl,'.';it r· nu back stet. Th "• will put lhe J>rr:lr,e View A&M product h ~aj-up against allck Paul Warfiek!, who has caught 10 ""'r ,,..... th1I -· Landry aald the trouble with the Cleveland game in November was "We got so far behind we couldn't run on them. We hope not lo got behlnd 21.0 In the first quarter again." Calvin HUI, the NFL's offensiv e rwklc- of.tJle.year and a member of the All·NFL backfi eld, st.ill has pain in hls jammed big loe. Landry 11'1.ld ''Hill Is learning to play wi::t pain. He appeared to be rounding in· to hls old form against \Vashington." llill is given • shot ol pain killer ln the tee before kic koff. Landry said Injured quarterback Craig 1tl ::·ton was alto bett?r e41ch week. "lie was throw;ng t..1ose sidellnc p:i.sses - agaiost Wa!hlnglon ~1ith some 1.lp on them, If Landry 1a!d. Morton bu a '°"' ohoukler. By GLENN 'liRITE Of 1119 Olllf Pllilt Jltff No blood wu sp111ed but tailback Glenn Doughty bad a left elbow the alu Of a grape!rult and a haU dOl.el'I other players were swathed In !ape u Ule Unlvenlly Of Michigan Wolverines went through their paces Tuesday afternoon 1t East Loa Angeles College. Jt was another of the closed workouU coach Bob Schcmbechler's Bil Ten co- champions are going through In prepar1· tlon for thelr New Year's confrontation w:th USC In ll• Rou Bowl. Doughty ,.,as bel ted during the 1Q.. rn ·i l'le workout an d h>id to get the un t:z.llevnbly swollen elbow taped and P""dt d by a Wolverine tr•iner. The latt~r sald a bruise had burst and 1lthou&h 11 looked bad Ind wu 10n1ewhat I palnfUI, It wu nothlnf Of major con- sequence. Prime concem for Mlchlgan ts the """'"ll' Of defensive back Ba'Jl' Plenon, who Is atilt wearing a cast after haviq his arm racked up in a sc:rim· map before the Wolverines departed from AM Arbor. nie cast is due to come of( Sa.turday end at that time a determln11tlon may be made as to whether ?tenon plays asalnst the Tro!ans. " lie was sulted up and made sevtr31 spectacular r e c e p t Io n 1 or Jong ))1.sses-wJth ont hand. It was a less t:~an sj)tctllcul!1r drill for the Wolverines &t lea.st as fnr as theJr passing atta-:k went Starting quarte:baci: Don Moorhead connected on 11 of 24 tosses and had two Intercepted. A, few of hls throws were dropped but most misses were clearly olf target. Reserve field general Jim Betta made 1ood on 1~ of 1S aeriaJa and had only one Intercepted, Bul he WU Ibo guilty Of a fumble on a rollout. Junior end Bill Harri! caught seven P8=' while AU.Amerlcon Jim Mandich ha uled ln six. "We look better on defense than anything else," Schembechl e r said. "Our passing w1s not good today." Middle flllard Henry lllU 11 .Ull suf· ftrlng from a leg Injury and isn't qu ite 100 percent. Meanwhile, Schembechler said ii is doubl.fu1 th1t standout defen~h-•& ha Ir back Pierson whose r;ght forearm has been In a c•sl 11lnce a !lcrlm- mnge In Ann Arbor before the tri p, would return any punts ln the USC game. Jle wouldn't say ll the ce.st would pre- vent him from playing ln the defensive tecondal)', however. Plenon returned a punt 60 yards again.st Oh.io State to set up a Mlchi1an touchdown. Bo spoke with USC coach John McKay by way of an ampllfled telephone Tuet- day and sakl: ''This Is my first bowl game but you must be getting pretty tired of the m by now." "1'11 ne\'er get bort.d with them." responded tifcKay, whose teams have b(!(!n the Pacific-Eight Conference's Rose Bowl repre.sentat.lve ror the post four years. "Ea ch one or them Is a great ex· pc :-lence ... "Yeh, the Rose 8ovd i11 just like thr t llh game of your schedule," Sche.m· OO:hler said. "We try to recruit our playen wit' that idea," McKay r<piled wryly. ·- Rio Hondo Outlasts Bucs, 90-89 By CRAIG SHEFF 01 "'• o.ur l'litt s1.if If Orange Coast College's basketball team could have kept the ball away from Rio Hondo guard Dave \Vallers Tuesday night , the Pirates would have won by 39 point&. Jn.stead, OCC dropped its eighth game in 11 outings this season, 90-89. Walters. a S.10 sophomore, dazzled a sparse crowd at tile OCC gymnasium with his brilliant outside shooting. For the night, the Roadrunner dynamo hit on 19 of 24 shots for an amazing 79.2 percentage. He added a pair of free lhrows for 40 points. In the (irsl half Walters chipped in ! l of 12 alten1pts to lead Rio Hondo to a 45- 43 halftime advantage. Many of his first half points came on lay-ins. In the second half he hit on eight of I? r rom the field, with all bul one <1f the bucketa coming from long range. Orange Coast grabbed a 57-56 lead with 13:57 remaining in the game and held a me-t.>five point advantage until Rio Hon· do tied it at 77-77 with six minutes left. The two clubs then traded 10 points each to run the score to 87-87. However at this juncture oiange Coast missed a shot and Walters quickly con- verted it into ·an 89·87 lead with 2:50 left. Coach Bob Bland's Roadrµnners pro- ceeded to get the ball back on an OCC turnover and lhen went into a stall. With 12 seconds left, \Vallers hit a free throw for a three-point lead. The Pirates' Jim Kindcton hit on a drive shot seconds later lo cut the final margin to one point. Orange Coast in- tercepted the ball at midcourt. with ')fie second left. but couldn't get off a shot bet' ore the final buzzer. Forward Phil Jordan led the Pirates' scoring attack with 29, including 11 points from the free throw line. Jim Kindelon had 24 and guard Troy Rolph pushed in lB. The Pirates will now take a break until next Tuesday when they host East LA. Orange Coast has two other non-league outings before the start of South Coast Conference play. They travel to Riverside on Jan. 3 and then host Chaffey the following night. o, • ...,. ,,,,, lttJ It II pl Ip Rolpll • l I 19 Tu!Mll Rio H~O\do 011) 1,11,r 1, 4 2 I 10 lt 2 ' <ill 2 s ' ' ' 1 J 1' ' l J ' 2 0 • 4 Stkk11m1l1r I S 5 7 W1Utr~ Holmes l 0 0 ' Miller Jcrd1n • 11 S "19 F1rwy~, Pl•U O ~ 2 1 Jen1en ll>i'ldtlon 11 2 • 2• 01ty 0111'-o 1 2 I Gt>atr 0 ' 1 ' lOYI 0010 R Id ""°""' o 1 1 1 Tol1 I~ 3J 71 21 It T11t1l1 l7 1' ~ fO H•lfllm• scor1; Rio ~ndo d , OCC 41. Estancia Five Stops Kennedy In Tourney • By HOWARD L. HANDY 01 lht 1)1lty f'llll Stiillf Estancia's Eagles may be headed for a second straight tournament champion- shi p game after winning handily over Kennedy High Tuesday night in first round play al the Troy tournament, 46-36. Utilizing a full court press from the opening tipoff, the Eagles fell behind early in the action, S-0 and 7-2 . Mike Hays then hit a pair of field goals and Steve Valiere added another to knot the count at 9-9 with Kennedy pulling ahead, 11·9 at the quarter break. Coach Bill Wetzel's Eagles then took command in the second stanza and held the lead for the balance of the night, The victory moved Estancia into the .semifinals Friday night at 8:30 (two days off for the Christmas holiday) against Troy, 80.:sJ winner over El Modena , on Tuesday. Also on Tuesday Servile edged Santa Ana Valley, 59-58, and Katella ham· mered Buena Park. 73-60. "We were a little sub-par tonight.'' Wetzel said following the Kennedy en· counter. "But that is to be expected after our game with Los Alamitos in the finals at San Clemente the other night.•• Wetzel felt the two-day rest period would do his team good. When asked about the full court press employed against Kennedy, he sald: "That's our bread and butter. Without it, we're dead." The Eagles pulled well in front in the third period with a 14 point barrage while holding the erring Fighting Irish to six points. At one point, the Eagles scored nine straight points while holding the Jrish scoreless. High point man for the Estancia team "'as Hays \\'ilh 12. Don Wheeler of the . Irish hit for 13 to gain game honors. In shooting percentages, Estancia held the upper hand throughout the ac- tion. In the first hall they hll for 31 per· cent to 26 for Kennedy and in the over· all picture, Estancia had a 34 percent mark to 25 for Kennedy. Neither team was able to score consist.- ~tly at the free throw line. Each team In the tourney win play three games with action at 4, $:30, 1 and 3:30 Friday and Saturday nlgbt.s. l1l111tl• (441 ... _... tJll fl II Jlf t. ' s ' 1J ' ' t • I ' J & 1 ' ' 1 , 0 ' t 0 0 I o O'-'" w.,.,., Wllil1lfll .... ,.,. k•VI MlluthfteM\I l ulltt TO!tlt l " " "' .. 1 ' ' 1 • I J I l t 5 I I t ! I ' 0 ' 12 ' 0 1 ' O , I 2 W"Mft• Kl"""'r!l'l\I w.-1tov Slfllll'I ..... Alw•tl l\1411M 11 10 2t 4' To!•lt ktinl •r ONlftH ' •11un -"' 11 11 n-U ' OILER POWER PLAY -Huntington Beach's Tony Cates (52) and Lee \Vallers (54) seem to have things pretty well to themselves \vith San Clemente's Greg Domenichini (32) taking a rear seat in fight for ball. Play didn't help, ho\\•ever. as San Clen1ente scored a 66-54 upset over 11untington Tuesday night in the first round of •the third annual Rancho Alan1i- tos Interact Invitational basketball tournan1ent. Tritons Stagger Huntington Bl ROGER CARLSON 61 t111 Ollly Piiot Stiff Time out for rest, relaxation and holi- day festivities are in order for prep com- petitors in the 1hird annual Rarrcho Alamitos basketball tournament after the first round yielded a major upset Tue s- day rrlght. Huntington Beach, recent conqueror of Rancho Alamitos, was bitten hy San Clemente Tuesday in the opener, 66-54. Host Rancho Alamitos slaught ered Leuzi nger, 95-28, in the finale to qualify for Friday night's semifinal test with San Clemente at 9. Mater Dei and Los Alamitos meet at 7 in the other half of the semis while Hun- tington Beach and Lcuzinger square off In the consolation bracket at 5 p.m. Huntington Beach failed to come up \~·ith any resemblance of its Jinc attack in Tom G..1ulden, a 6-5 senior center, ad· ils recent win ove-r Rancho Alamitos for ded 18 to the Tritons' cause. third place honors in the 4lsl annual Hun-Huntington"s inside game never came tington Beach classic. into focus as San Clen1ente's ~agging 1'he Oilers fell behind quickly as the J xone .tfefense against Lee \Valters held Tritons of coach JOOn Baker opened up a !he Oilers' top scorer to five points -his 9-1 lead early in the first period and ex-lowest output of the year by a con- tended the margin to 3~25 at the half. siderab!e margin. Coach Elmer Combs Oiler crew came Only Tony Cates of Huntington p11t in a alive for a moment or two in the fourth heller ihau average performance for the period to pare the edge to 53-52 with ·i :;;s losers. remaining. Cates tallied 15 for high point hor1ors However, guard Garth Wise fouled out for Huntington . shortly thereafter and the Tritons oul together eight points to shoot into a cOm- fortable 61-52 lead with 2:17 to go. Sal Lombardi was the chief exec:.itioncr for San Clemente, tallying 20 points in all along with a fine floor game and he con· sistenUy broke up Huntington offensi "e drives with thefts. t<11n!lnglon Bt~<h Ull lg 11 pf 1? W1lltr• 1 I I i Cate ~5 ,15 Wl5e 1 4 5 8 Ca111on 1 l • 1 Tllom•• ~ J 2 11 HdH•ll l 2 l 8 0.8rl!lo" a o 1 o T11Tt11 11 1. 10 !' Hunl•noton llH'h Son (lemenTe S~n c1~m1ntt U•> ,, If /If ,, s Lo"'b~ro! • I J 20 ) ' ' 11 1 I 1 J l'ndor;on Mllthtll Domenltlllnl Gtvldtn McCa1ill'I 8 •110g ToT1h 9 M l~ 11 21 11 7 1 3 ' • 0 s 11 1 0 s ' 1 1 l ' l'!l?l'6 ,, -54 H -I& O.ILV PILOT II Around Area Greens .. .. Five Aces Posted f •· . . • ;; At El Niguel CC . ·.· .. . :. " El Niguel Country Club In Laguna Beach ha s become a golfer's pa_radise if recent hole-in-one activity is any in- dication. In one month's play, five aces were recorded, four o[ them on the same hole. And to top it off, one each was made by a husband and wife team on different days. First of Lhe n1iracle shots was achieved by Ray Baily, the actor who plays the banker Drysdale on the CBS television show, "Beverly Hillbillies." He hit a two- tron shot on the 145-yard fifth hole into the cup. Baily's \1·ife, Gaby, wl10 would have to wait nearly a month for her ace, watched and reported the happening. .• On the 17th hole, which is about 165 \'ards straight away with an elevated, iwo-tiered green, is where the rest of lhe holes-in-one happened. Tbe fairway here is f\nnked by two sand traps and a lake providing waler for another trap lies just below the green. Les Heald used a three-wood for his ece. John Hendricks poked a five-iron ghot into the cup. Harry Bouchier used a Westminster Nips Laliewood Cagers, 61-59 LAKE\\'OOD -Westminster's LiOM tuned up for their television appearance Sa1urday afternoon against Santiago with a 61-59 decision over Lakewood High Tuesday night in th e losers' gyn1. The S;intiago affair at Westmlnster wilt be on Channel 4 wilh the tipoff at 3 p.m. Coach Don Leavy's ouUit came back from an eight-point deficit at the half lo c·h;:i.lk up its seventh \Vin in 11 tesls and the fourth straight success Tuesday nig\1!. Da11 Broderick was the big noise for 1ha Lions 1vith his excellent shooting: ancl rebounding . The big bucket can1e v.•hen Broderick connected on a tip in to make it &G-57 1vtth Jess than a minute to go and then he added a free throw on a one-and-one situation to give the invaders their t\lo'O- point margin. Lakewood had one last shot at it, but niissed a 20·footer \Vilh four seconds re.: maining. ~le accounted for 29 points in all in· rluding those final three tallies that scaled the verdict deep in the final per- iod. And he pulled down 32 rebounds Ill pnce \Vestminster in that department along with eight blocked Lancer shots. J1e's now averaging 20.3 points per gan1e after scoi'ching the nets for 98 counters in the last fou r Lion victories. Steve McLendon chipped in with 11 points lo back up Broderick. Wt1lmln1ltr 1•11 L1k1wll0tl Cit) tun~ Broatrkk McLt~dan Hawley Pear1on Ntwtlou•~ 5ou!~Wjtk Minn lg II pf Ip o o o o s.s11vtn1 9114?9\Vic~ l s ' 11 He~lon 1 o 4 4 (a"'pt>~lt o ! o 1 lla~o.11 l 1 1 1 M 511~tns Ol !lGrl!lrl 3117G111llJ Gr119ctr'( :10211S U 101111 w .. 1m1~11~r l•JctWDO<I Score DV Q~1r1t1"S 17 " 1' 2S lg II /If II> • o 1 a 1 1 J 6 ~ I • 9 0 0 1 0 ~ 1 1 9 ~ 6 l 16 2 0 l • 2 , t 1 G 0 I 0 2l!J2lSt 17 ll -61 13 1 -5J .. ·. five-wood into a strong wind for hi! third ·~· lifetime hole-i~ne. :· Mrs. Sally Ulen completed the amazlni :· round ol aces when she teed of£ from the ··. ladies tee, nne 140 yards away and ~­ watched the ball sail into the cup. Seaclltf Ray Conlon won a low net sweeps event ·: for the Huntington Seacliff men's club ~! with a 64 Jast weekend with Ray Cline in ;. second place with a 65. ;~ Nick Sweetman and Nonn Buck tied ·: for Ui.rcl with 67 followed by E. P. ::: Corntassle, Bill Ross, Jim Thompabn, -: John Oellesso and A. Gardner with 89 .. Art Brownell was next at 71 with Hal Hinderer and Herb James follo\ving at n, Me•a Verde In a partner's best ball event held last ~·eekend at Mesa Verde Country Club, four teams Ued for low honors with sis. Rolf Miller and Frank Fanner teamed together along with Nat Robins and Jbn McDaniel; Al Nichols and Bob Buekenhizer; Banks Wanamaker and Joe Kray. In a mixed foursome best ball event on Sunday, the team of Joe and Billie Sparago and Keith and Jackie Neal won with a low score of 57. A tie at 18 edited between Al and Dottie Jones and Don Meder and LU Williams on one team. Don and Edie Gow tecuned with Brlb and Maree Buckenhlzer on the other team. Rancho S.J Marilyn Jones won a low net ladies club tournament at Rancho San Joaquin Country Club early in the week with a 73 and came back for a low gnm win later .•. the same week with an 89. :· Runnerup in the low net event wu: Boonie AtldlllOn wlth 74 followed by Vj. vian Troutman, 77, and Darlene Bouse', 18. Zola Bartholomew fired a 76 for low net honors on the day Marilyn won the knr - gross award and three days later, Yvon. ne Haig had a 75 with Cappi Petenon a 76 in another low net tournament Gauchos Face Trade Tech In Tourney With the only winning record among '..' the three area junior colleges, Sad- d1eback's buketball team treks to Palm • Desert Saturday to compete in the , . College of the Desert -The Gauchos CfH) face LA Trade Tech ., at 4:45 Saturday. If they win they will meet the Laney-01endale, Ariz. winner on Monday at 7:55. If they lose Saturday, : they wiJI play at 3 on Monday. In other first round games, Barstow tangles with Butte and Victor Valley .. meets C.OJlege of the Desert. Coe.ch Roy Stevens' Gauebos dropped a pair of games in the l-'babot tournament . Thursday and Friday, but bounced back to defeat Cuesta, 72-60, Saturday to earn seventh place honors. Forward Cam Smith and guard Eric . Olristensen have identical 17.2 averqes through the first nine Saddlebad: pmes. Both have scored 155 points. Christensen was named to the Chabot all-tournament team . Randy Lawrence, a forward, has a 10.3 average with 93 points. Last year's leading scorer Bill Noon, who played the firn four games on the Gaucho 5Chedule before being declared . ineligible, has tossed in 63 ix>ints for a ~ . 15.7 clip per outing. Noon will be eUifb1' after the first of the year. Forward Ben Mahar has hat! a pair ('If outstanding efforts in the Gauchot last two games, with back·to-back 16 Point perlonnances. The pairings: I lop bracket) Barstow vs. Butte (3) Victor Valley vs. College of Deoert (1:10) (lower bracket) Saddlebaek vs. LA 1'-ade Tech (1:1$) Laney vs. Glendale, Ariz. (7:!0) Pirate Wrestlers Fourth; Gleason, Curry Win Titles Orange C.out College wreatlen Bob Curry and Dave Gl..,..11<11 polled llnt . place finbhes In the annual Pi<nle lnvlla· •. tional tournament Saturdty to lead the Pirates to a fourth place opot ln the JI. team tourney. Both OOC wresU= defealed four op- ponents on lbeir way lo lndlvlWIJ crowns. In the 11111111, CUrry defealed Hertzler of Fullerton lf.7 for the !Sf.pound tiUe · while Gluson declalon<d 291).powid Bill : Ramos of Cuesta, 14-4, f~ the Ilea vywelght crown. Santa Ana College won lhe Coomer, · followed by G.....,,001, Fullenon aod ooc. UP FOR GRABS -It's anybody'• ball In Tuesday night's action al the Rancho Alamltos JnviUltlonal basketball tournament. Huntington's Lee Watters (54) and San Clemente's Sal Lombardi (10) and Tom Gaulden (44) gird for11 collision. San Clemente won the first round lest, 66>54. Other Oilers are Brad Churchwell (12) and Curt Carlson 124). Mike Walczyk, a llf.poonder, .. mod 1 .· third place flnbh for the Bu<s while Norm Mar1Jn, wmtllng ln Ult 114-i>ound divilion, was fourth. Oranre Cout i. Idle odll Jan. I wbeft tt travels to Cypress for a 7:30 match. \ \ ' • THEO~OIE THEODOIE IOllNS, SR. IOllNS. JL ,, ~NBEATAB L E VO LUME I SAVINGS I AT THE HOME ~ ~.~.·~ ... OF THE · ~-' I lit "Sharpest Pencil ' · In The W est" A GIFT FOR EVERYONE AT A PRICE FOR EVERY BUDGET! FREE L~k Per TIM Dl .. -ric C..m s..I H tM Wl!Mbtrl .. d. FREE 100°/o PARTS AND LABOR WARRANTY 4000 ·MILES OR 90 .DAYS FOR SUPER ECONOMY TRY A • • • ~ .\--M-AV-ER .......... IC~K-Olt.;.....;.E_NG_._:LIS-H-FO_R_D I ~~ TRUCK. VIRTUALLY EVERY COLOR AND MODEL MADE, NOW IN STOCK AT OVER 60 IN STOCK STANDARDS -DELUXES -GT's STATION WAGONS. MANY w;1h FULLY AUTOMATiC TRANS., AIR.COND., RADlllL TIRES, 'RADIO, Etc. BRAND NEW STANDARD 2·DR. SEDAN s17a5 INCLUDING ALL THIS ! I t~~ ~ ~ '""' .; I ~i 9i Autcmetic, r11dio, heater. IOQH2~6l VS, factory air, auto., R&H , power steerin g. IYTS 1941 ... ROBINS VOLUME SAVINGS! fOlf '"· tfOM., ,, •• , 41K k .. M. ,.11"4 .,. '""· IM. li9ht, hHYy 41ry better,, eeroflo• Yflttilotlo11, h""' Ill•· ty linter, 2 s,...i wipers, wi11chhlold walten, "" 9411. br .. ", p11dded •h1yl •nh & tri111, i...d rfttr11l11t1, 1t•rul shelf. ~~ ~ ~ "'"· ~.i.(l '65 FORD ~ CAMPER I TO CHOOSE FlOM ·~rn~ .., ..................... ,.. .. N.,w .. ,•,v•.•.,•_ ........ N.EW .. •1•9•6•9 ... ,~~~ ELDORADO ~ '66 FORD XL '6 7 Chevrolet NEW 1910 2 Or. H.T. Automatic, rad io, heater, A!R CON- OITIO N!NG, power 1feerin9 . ISVY 512 1 $1090 '64 CONTINENT AL 4 DOOR SEDAN Full power. FACTORY AIR CON DITIONING. IULF 7791Sto<k1600 $1190 '68 FORD CUSTOM 390 VS engine , power steering, cruisom atic tr•nsmi$sion, radio •nd heater. Costa Mesa Police Car. 114q17 IMPALA Z Dlt . H.T. YI, •ulom•ti,, P.S., ••dio, h.il••· <TSM 966) 510,k P8l l l $1390 '67 MUSTANG HAIDTOP 190 \18 , 11110., P.S., R&H. "THE HOT ONE" I FOZ J ~S ) Slock 8287A $1590 '64CORVmE tiAlDTOP Rtm ov1bl1 fop. 4 1p1td, rt dio, h1 1f1r, pow1r wi"· dow1, AM·FM r•dio. I RHC 901) ' . , ie.)j/ Q./ '/ . ' : , : I 1'i ... ;; ; SAVINGS! SAVINGS! '69 COBRA S"orl Roof, P.S., Pow~t dis' br•k11, crui•om•lic, -428 VB, "oly91•1 wid1 ovGI tire1. tZLH 88 11 ';r .-_., ·•II• ,.;; 'I :· , . 2060 Harbor CAMPER BRONCO ?J.'.~J "" '2014 POICE $2882 11 •-" .·.~~~ '1395 ~E. DISCO.UNY FULL PRICE ~,~~ $619 SIEJI. •UUl'Ll'tJJU it:~ . ,No. "" LAST CALL! I f OR . A SAFE' LEASE A NEW .. 'ct~ HOUDA Y 1970 ~ .. F-100 PICKUP $2235 FUl.:L PllCI OIDll TOD,\Y ·JOIN OUR DRAG ALL POPUU.lt CLUB 1 JO ,.Itel tftt 111 Se. Cell· ,,_,.le's flrtt Ferd di .. lloe· tic c""tw·t.•" Int JO Mill• .... , MA KEi AND MODELS AUTHORIZE D FORD LEASING SYSTEM I • FULL s9n Pll:ICf ............... ~. ... ...... 1-............. ~; ~ ... : .. •AINING . RENT ~llt 1969's A NE\Y 1970 ~ NOW AT FORD • t DAY, Wlllt 7.1.~ FINA L CLOSE OUT . .. DISC OU NTS 011 MONTH, c:fi:',... CHIClt ~":_ OUlt COMPfltf'IYI "1'e" RATES ~~ ~===!====-~ ~ SHELBY AMERICAN CLOSE OUT! Now, c.n.cter's pltc;" Mcene ftley •r• tfte l•t ef • IMt Ii .. ef cl•slc ~erM•ce cenl 3 -ONLY -3 ···~ Gii.~ ~~ ~{'; '<l,1i~ DISCOUNTED TO CLIAlt THIS WlllllND! I~~ '1111 Tre<ff Fer Teer r,....t Cer! ~" ' --~ -~~~:-~-,=~~~"' fi""' ;r;r '/I .. ~"' ., -· -..... 0 111:.t.ND NIW 1969's ' .,..\SI , ,.,,,,nl '.j(,\',~,~ I o 1'~J4. f 1• '·' ,(.;' M MONDAY fP .~AY . SATURDAY 8 AM TO 6 PM PARTS & SERVICE HOUR~ PARH ONLY Su.,rL~1\ I0,1m lo6pm /,\~~ Tt.1' fM MONDAY •7AM T06PM lUf;[)t...YfRIOAY RAM l06P~4 ',ATLIP[)A.Y • • :· :· . ;. ·t • • ·1 •' -. .. . -·~-' ., .. .. ' • EX<;;EIJ.ENT SELECTION·: OF MODELS . &'.:COLORS AVAILASLE FOR LEASE OR PURCHASE· .. ' . ' . Even when measured by Cadillac standards of ex· eellence, the 1970 Cadillac is sure to exceed Yotir great,nt expectations. Let's get together 500D !or a ' demonstration drive. · • • • -. ~-~ ..... ~ ' ....... ._...._ c • Over .80 Quality Cadillacs To Select. From!! .. , • f • SALE . • PRICE . •, .. ' • • -·· . .. ~ . ' ' 1 ' . •• 1966,~0LDS STARFIRE . , H1rd!OP (O\l!>I. MJHlln tur11uol11 w!lfl ¥111119 vlnyl Interior, Full powtr, l1ctory 'J. ~...,r.dltillflil'lll, blll;ket Hiii, consalt, llU 1rurll!ll Wll .. I, 111 oprlOl'll, UG 0911 ' , --~ ....... ....., ""''1 .. ·: .. >,'"" Sale · , , Price 1967 FLEETWOOD lrOUll~•"'· $ntrwOOCI o•een wllh bl1ck too 1MI bl1ck lultler lnh!rlO!' • Full ·paw~r. flctory 1lr, lilt Wl\eet, •'-AM/FM, pOWtr dOO!' 10o;k1, power trunk relH)I, "'·•et~. (UPS 111) SALE ~344 4 PRICE 1966 CADILLAC. 1965 CADILLAC Sedfl! DIVIH•. O!Jnlplc bronlt Wllll Whlll foll 91'111 b!"..,11 cloth •nd Convt. O.Vlll•. CM~~ Wille wllh llmlle foll' •Ml 1>ei91 le111>tr IHIMf" "''.,.lo<. 1'11!1 po·#Wr, 'tKtorr 1Jr, llll·t.lt~I( 11Mr1119 ln!.,-lor. 1'1111 powff equipment Pkl> 1ignel •Hlllng rlodlo, 1t1ret1 ...me.i. INIM1" c1oor,1oc:~ •• lli!'l"IO """''M fl\ID "7) ~ l1pe. Law mlln. !NOP 11!1 SALE $1 666 . . .. . ,, /I F t1 SALE '" 1~'nlt' PRICE PRlCE 1968 CONTINENTAL 1968 CADILLAC Sale Price 1'65 CADILLAC 1968 EL DORADO .SALE PRICE Sale Price ' 1965 CADILLAC 1967 CADILLAC Sfd•n 0. \/Ul t . Pop1111r Ntwport lllv. W/dl.o:, lft,_rlor, fKtorr t lr • Door hardtop, Mini .,."" ••ltriot' wi!ll m11d1Jng clotll &. le•lller cond., fl.oil pow1r, 1lgnel 111111.l,,g redlo, lllt & h lnCOPlc wllHI, 1H lnttrlor, Full pl>Wlf, l1Clllrr 1lt, tilt""'"'· po-door 1Dck1, cr11M O~. X!rts. OWD '°"J ton'lreL f>.M.FM, twlllghl 1tnlln11. (VCL TM! SALE ' , I' _,,~: PRICE 1968 CADILLAC SALE $2999 PRICE 1969 JAVELIN H••ll!cp COUl)9; LI,,,. ,...., Wlll'I ~119 Y!nyl lnltrlor. R1dlo, h .. , ••• 1ulom1tlc, bvr.~el '"'"· MW 11 •••• ••C•ll"'t condllkl!l. CVCN W ) SALE $2222 'PRICE .. . USE~., LOW MILEAGE SeGao De Ville. Ermioe white with exquisite •quo doth ood leather Delphine interior. Full · power, factory eir conditioning, AM!fM 'radio. (ZRF 112). " . ;. ~-,,"J '/ f t?tv ..---------· --.---. 2600 Harbor ~1J· :,d., NABERs cADILLAc Costa Mes~; LEASE DIRECT • t .. )~ I J ' • • ,, ". .. I ' ·1 .. ' ' SALES DEP J\RTMENl' OP~N 8:30..AM to 9:00 PM Mo~. thru F~i. • 9:00 AM~(;:·· P.':MSat. and.Sun. . ' ' ' ' lmmedl1te deli .. ry e , Exc1lltnt S1llCllon Ov• fMr acres of factory author· l1tcl tofal Cadflllic facUltles design· •ii ta better sell and Mrvlct MW ·and used Cacllllac allfomabllts. ' . ' ' . .... .:_. ..... ., All CAR~ SUBJECT TO PRIOR SALE. ALL SALE PRICES EFFECTIVE THROU !;l:ll TUESDA Y, DECEMBER lO, "+' ' ( • ... '-·· .:~--]J OAllY PILDr ..... - ' ~~TUMILEWEEDS ·- ;. ::PEANUTS " SO! SOLICITING-FUNDS wrrnour A PERMIT, EH!. .. I HEREBY FINE YOU ONE roi.t.AR FOR FRAUDULENT CHICANERYOFlllE . WORST SORT! · · By Charles M. Sehulz AN'IOllE t.l<O WOULD FL~ AROUND rnl\l l{O<)OE T0 111<15€ IN A 5l!l611 WITH A l!!hlCH OF RE~, AT Nl6HT '/ET, HAS lll et OVT OF HI~ MIWD ! IJ»'/ PLAIN JANE ~LEVISION VIEWS ly Tom IC. Ryon ... ' ·=:-,'. Movie Full Of Suspense WM'/ ARE VOii · ST-'LLING, ~ATflE? I 01 t>tff HEA!i: 1·11\ UOT SrAWMG! I -THOUGUT I HEA.Rt' . . ~'. : By CYNTHIA LOWRY :.'. · NEW YORK (AP) -An old·lasbioned suspense /rj:hriller with an improbable plot, gorgeous Spanish ·ti>ackgrounds. black-died villains, murder and ~;inoney was the "Movie of the Week" contribution J1,o TV entertainment Tuesday night. "' M JANET LEIGH starred in "Honeymoon \vith a ~·ttranger," playing the American bride of a Spanish :.:.itilllionaire. The happy couple 11rrives al a crumb· ~·Ung old palace for their ho_neyploon. Then the bride ~flwakens alone the next morn!ng. and after l\\'O ::.daYs reports her husband's disappearance to police . l:°jbereupon his family lawyer arrives with a man :~"fntroduced as her missing husband. She screams ~that he is a stranger whom she has never seen be- ·~iore. ~: After this titillating start. the plot thickened to ~-point where it was impossible to wind up the story .;with a plausible solution, but the one that 'vas used ~ :JJ3S ingenious and a surprise. Rossano Brazzi wa s ::appealing as a bewildered and amorous policeman. · !. t}anet Leigh, convincing as the bewilder~d bride. :•llso was pretty good as a madwoman. It wa s fun ~··aod a fast ~minutes. ., :,;l EARLIER, the durable and delightful Maurice :·£vans played an irresistible .con man in a light· .-hearted 11Mod Squad,, episode. Posing as a retired .; rear admiral, the lovable viUaiD. fleeced suckers :\\ltith promises of instant wealth. lo the story. his ',.,:crimes paid - a unique and vivid \Vay of making ·.the point that a con man can fleece only those \vith ·~Jarceny in their ·hearts. ... .. .. ••. \Vben Eleanor Parker, unhappy \vith her role in ;~BC's "Bracken 's World," decided lo quit the show, ;.the producer was in a spot that often confronts : producers of daytime serials. Jt was handled in :-~oap opera style: they wrote her part out. " i~ IN AN EPISODE to be broadcast early in .Jan· J.liary. Sylvia -the powerful executive secret<1ry of ': µie studio bead, Miss Parker's role -\vill suddenl y ~.,nsign to get married. Dennis Cole. \rho has been ~laying a stuntman in the series. 'viii suddenly be f ,Fromoted to Bracken's administrative assistant, and ·;J\f!ttye Ackerman will join the cast playing Brack· ~ ~rf's new executi ve secretary. ,• · Cole played. a young detective for a couple of ·: tie3Sons in "Felony Squad" and Mi ss Acke1111an 's ... last regular TV role was as a v.1oman doctor in .·"Ben Casey." ~ .~ Nobody plays Bracken. An associate producer ·_Of the series explained that the head (1f a major film : fitudio is such a powerful figure that he \\'ould ::Cfwarl all the 0U1er characters. -· ,, ;~ THERE WILL be much music on 1elevision ;-~ate Christmas Eve and NBC \viii cover the mid· :-liight Mass at St. Patrick's Cathedral. A Chri stmas :'l>ay special will be an hour's concert 4:3().5 :30 p.m. : :j>ST on CBS with pianist Emil Gilel s and cellist ,•·""1'stislav Rostropovich playing Tchaikovsky. :.3. De1a1ais the Menace ,.,....~ ! ' ' r A WOIM"" !:l.r9M •. !==::::--' AWYTHl""G! ' STEVE ROPER COME ON, ROOCO.' COOL IT! -ANC> LE rs fi>ISll (U! STEN<S! Mun AND COMET I!. DOWNWITJ.I T"1E'R.IJ GORDO MISS PEACH MA!CCIA Wf: THJHI(. .A!lTMU~i.leRE, 5HOUL17 ee INV11 i:o TO VOUR Bl~HC7AY PAlttV Ui<:E ~ llEST OF us ... ·. SALLY IANANAS o.i. ............ s~ lt&C~E w.! G,;,... -. .. -·-• '". 'M~C~ ••• • • o• ~~~T~. l'T~CU~!! By Ferd Johnson W>l.AD!>Y,A MOAN ~f:15 NOT IN? IT'S A f:MERGENCY ! By Cliarl•s BarsoHI • --------. DCCEMIER 24 DECEMBER 25 MORNING ' .. ! \J • ; {' 6:25 0 EdllCltiN Eldlaitp (C) "Cllli· ,., I~ Nrn (C) (60) Je1ry Dunphy. act er in the Arts S«ies.... : SIM Allt11 SIMw (C) {90) I IJIC~ I Prlnct ti ,_ ·~ . m H1111thy·lrinll•J (C) (30) 6;lO I Ttn St!ps .. Moder• ~ . Sit O'Clodi Movie: {C) "Kint • Law !tr tu u,_11t (C) Willd. of IU1p" CGnclusion {~11m1) '6Z 6:55 I) Giwt Us This Dey (C) -.ltffny Hunter, SIObllan MtKenna. O llNBC''Jhwllmct (C) Hurd H.atfiold, Rita Gam, H1rfJ 7:00 I CIS NfWI (C) Josaph lllnti. Guardino, ltip Torn, Rollort Ry1n. @(!)a;, Tiit ledtf ... ltl I Didi V11 Dtlll (lO) The Hb •-d "'1 et ff ~ TM~ (t) (30) C) :;,~; ."~ Coclclft ~w:~ :c, r,_ ttit lllalc Clntlr: A li¥1 ttlt· -.. strMI. (C) east of twel¥t hours of muslut 7:JO.llllll Slllrf (C) ni. niltlteMI ~ Ct1*8tion. t..i ·llldMI ... ~ In ' .......... (30) "--v'-' .... (C) (60) .lad White. 1:00.QICl}C.,..ill IHpnt IQ' S:JO 1111C tll .. ('C) (60) • DepllM's _CINM Cllll (C) 1 n. c-a-(C) <30> mmm Jo•"" • ..... My r ..... """"" (30) 111111 (C) Off'ttt tf 1111• P'rtsident (30) Q) Gu111bJ (C) Jhticlol't 34 (C) (60) 1:25 O Community l ullttift ...,.. (t) • llMIR NeWI (t) (30~ . 1:30 0 M1. Ma100 (t) . i IHCIM I no M111c ti Christ· 0 Extrcist With Gloria (C) IMI (CJ (60) ID Rotktl Robin Hood (C) 7:00 CIS [Jtnint Ntws (C) (30) 9·00 0 ~ (l) Tiit Lucy 5aiow {C) Mafs My l iflt? (CJ (30) ! ' 0 @@ €E ! 16Clll I Qdt,. I lM LllcJ (30) mas D1y Special (C) 1•1 tile Cled (Cl (30l 1 , 0 11"1"0 '""" o1 ,_ ~ C.•MditJ/lllh1hl1I fund (30) 0 MovM: ''The SHJ •I · Wlld«lut (C) (30) drit•" Conclusion (1elitlou ..... 7:30 9(i}Mle .H.tw (C) (60) '44-Je11nifer 1onts. Willi!"I . m n.. Y'll'Jlllll" <C) • c90> 1 Debbie .,,. tllllclft.iZe A "C1ime Wa'l't in Buffalo Sprinri." ! IJIC1l' I v.a. .t Qil '& l I su., .. ._.. (C) (30) UnderOo1 (C) @(j) m .... f'lrtli• .11111 (C) Tiit forlfl• S.S:•! MIAH f Merit: "llndl "' t:lO 1J Q:t (i) 1wettJ Hillbilllll J4t11 SIM!'" (drama) '47-:M•llfMll ' 0 w.tlm St.r Tlleltrr. -wltti O'H1nr, .llM P1ynt, Hlt1ht Wood, Hontitf and Jnl11ri!y." [dmund Gwenn. m MIWM: (C) "1111 Girl Mid laa-m TruQ tr ~uMCtl (C) ~30)( ly" (1omante·musical) '57 -... m []ml&] Cllriltaln Crfftin1s1 Powell. CHff Robert30n. ·1 rrw~titJ" lM Anttla (C)I m Mino1itr Con111111nity (C)/F~· Qudlt .tl lot• (30) . . • I TldllllCll C«Mf (lO) 1111 Utcutivt INrd (C) • 1:00 lad; ltlln, (lO) Dinny Thomis 10:00 6 Andy liritlith (C) ,.-..,_ I 1uests. I O ~ ~ m ~.11 " tt11. _,,_,, O @(])O)nt toirtMliJ er QMov:'!· (C) "!llen lrislll '!"' Eddie's fatNr (C) (30) "Who Pulled Are _S.1hn(' (mu~Cl1·comtdf) 44 ihe Slues Ri1ht Out of the Horn? .. I -Dick Haymes. Junt Haftr, I Tt Td .. Tnrtll (CJ (30) Q) i IJIC1l!;I Oral htl«tl Qlld- SW MarUl/feltwt (lO) ""' Sllow (C) ,.,...., lllnkalu (30) 110:300,,:i: ti Litt (C) 1:30 ~([)TH kM1J Hillbltlit1 fiJ (iJ • H.itJwo911 ..... R111u llityptl (t) (30) I 0 Qrilban ~ @())ti) .... 2tt (C) (30),11:001 9 (j) .,._e Q1 Hllft~ ............. (C)(90). I . ~@.~'.-!(Cl ID I S•IClll I Onil Ro!Mrts Chnst· Moti11: Holi41J 11111 ( mas Sltft (C) (60) j ·42 -Bina: Cr~r. f1ed Allllt fl!IHCIM!no W1rd Jhs Y•l•ll :25 fl ~ffi C8S Ntwt. (C) ' (30) A Chrbtfllll sholl'. l 1J :30 1J ~(i)Stafchforlo...,..fC1 I S..rllll (30) 0 fi) 'ii er;, N11H ~ (t) Ht 9(1} lllllcal t.nt11 (CJ (60) 0 ijj') (Ii (D NBA lnbtbll (t). D KRAFT MU5'C HALL Tr1~t1 Fil111 (CJ §Tempo (Cl 81-ltf Wtrd holtl. • * Wayne Newton, The s.u1111 Strttt (C) {II) . Cowsills, Jack Wild 11:55 0 ® ~ m "9C ,._. (CJ R !lJ m llll lnft MH< ... (C) ~ ~s-as and Stunda ti' QrhtMn (C) (30) T~t lamous A F T£R N0011. M""'°" ~1betn1de Choir is lea· l2:00 0 loutiqlJt: (C) tured will\ .lk11nder Schre\ntt ti fl QJ C!J €E TOll'f1 ,... .. tho orpn. On (CJ D @mfBAIC W1d1111d•1 msi.iiff Jotln (C) MM: oinil u,.I " Siient El Nws (C) Bill Johns. ...... . m•• C4U119 Us. Qild h 12:lOR B~b tM W«'d r .. cq I•• (l)''g;rimnas ihow. {Cl Macd~~ ~~ ~1r~ '!"' fD i IHC!A ( Md~ (C) (60) m Dillln1 tor Dellan (C) The orirrtholoiial l1nd1np of Amer· ic1's llNI naturtlilt·1rtist John J. l :OOOQf!CJ)Lm Is•.._, ....... Audubon are ~rtstnled with 01i1i~all dored Tiunr (C) clr1win1s fl'1lm his c.Dnwmma1e O ill(6)€ET11t ~ft)• . work "lht Bi1ds of Amt1lca." 0 l sPICIA\ I Mtrnti"S\111. tr.ii m s, .. ia 1 Ellril!lll (60) I Ch1id1!11• lint ,.,. (C) 9:l0 0 ! IPiC1A\ I Cllristlnas Our W1y ~ Pt1nt1 ol PffCI (C) M Gl'lliMI (C) (JO) S.lklt HoncMrMn i• ho~I 1au ca nta1a. . . of this l'l•lf·hour th1t l1at11res !)er· l:?OOQ!J ~Tlll 'wid•n( Lillll (tf torman 11'1lm the Air Fo1«. plus 0 ~ 6 €E WtMr W«MI ~ "l!if.r&.:.1!fill ' settcltl 1uat M1rilyll M1ye. 0 @ (D NCAA ,..... (Q '-· 1 I Ml'n (t) (iOJ Buter W•rd. North·Soll!h Shrine Af!.star pme. "' s.w. n. kid ct> (30) m MoN: ''"" ao, w1t1i t111 ..., lO:OD I Ci) llfinli r....o (C) (60) H11r'' (dr1m1) '4&-.0e1n Stocl'lftH, :~~~ @ lel'kltC...lrornon t :~IDFl$Mon1lrts..ri111(C) ,..., (C) (60) ..... I (t) (60) ... , .. ,;,.,, ~ .... Qt[J)'"""· """ (C) Th• Tri enitrs., and Jtff'J Shin• QJ@m lrillrt "--(CJ --------~Lf),t-....,_ A VER.Y MEAAYC"~ .. T By Gus Arriola By MeD Ol./4.Y. -HOW DOES ONE I'LL. W!2:1Te WOltO AN INVllATION HIS WMEN V0U l:t>N'T RIAMT Ct:i/'l'E.1 0UT YOU DO 1NV1TAT10NAwANT so~EONe TO NOW. WP>NT HIEN\ 1l) $END ----...AGIFT~ T 111est. H1•111 JMc't t])!IPIC@;!llt lrl'«Matio1 (CJ 2:.JOOQIOOEdtl tf .... fC) m ,,....._ (C) (60> "BtK-a ca oo m Lltllfs • ......,. Pridt." (C) Glf., Owtns llosls.. Im Clrtllf .. llljns (30) 0 I lflCIAt I QriltW ltld lO:JO II> CriltiN C1n111n (30) I f11111 St. luil'1 Cllll!'dl {C) 11 .. unmmm"'"' 1c1 I 0"""' 1c1 .,., ..... " , 9 tJWn.«Tlllt btl Jowl -BrUdw1(' (l'llll!icti) 'Sl-Ylrslnil ,,......,,. ti n. All (C) This' Mayo, GM11 NtllOll. fr1nk 1.Mjay, one.hour spteial ex1mifllS th e llis· J:OO. 9 Cl) S.• ,,... (C) lOf'J ol th e 1'1s.1dtn1 Rott Bowl , lt'1 '* M (C) •~d Tour111mtnl of Roses Plfadt. a.r0•1 lit; 1., .._ (Cl I £fR~,"(: :~ny fox. l :lO 1J ,twt: "DNM!r' ~co"*" 'fl .... JMnlfJ ti ltttllth1111 David Jtnmn. 1'1tli P1" Wl!Wt Mn Jownial (C) .. Gh1ndi's 1n.1 w:llChtll. Mldwy stwt ;. I d .. !RI 0•1 .... _ (C) 11. 0 I SffC!IJ.l $q1 ... ._., 'll:lSl)Q!l (j)llfitiAJ I Sp•• Can· ol Chmt.• (C) (RI 11t1 (C) Music sptdal Ml to oflici1I m r.,.,. ... F"'-* (q NASA film of m1~·1 lint fli&M m llobrt II.., ~ 1round tht moon. ll:JOl)Q!CIJ !lflCtMI lei IM Dt1· J:'4.S fll111MtM ........... t'C) ttt. lo Jt,fll (C) (R) Tht T11c:son 4:001 N_, (C) T11111 lt1C1dl1t. Boys Ch11rus 111 IH!n petforminr in MltMJ' M-(C) •nd aroun4 lht d•1sle I Tth·C•nlufJ M Sttdlt S11tNSll miulon Sin X1vitr Dtl Bat. 4:15fJ:!Tllt FliMIJ lr..t Bro1dW1y st11 ANttd Onkt n11 fl) Mi• Fflllllliflt (C) nits. 0 @ @ m I IPIC!Otil I Tht Hurt 4:30 llinp Moct11 (C) of Cflristlllls (C) Sllitch Hend er111n Ntws (Cl Bilt Bondi. cenducts tnl1 1p1ci1f 111oa11m or Tiit C1twJ ,... IC) lloticl1y mus.c. Tht Robert Sh1w Haiti ('I Cho111t 1nd JOIG ~a1pl$! Robtn The ...... , Mtu•tH aR ftalurtd. (RI Sal .. Slltlll (C) (R) o @()) m n.. J.., 111h°' · a ~ ._ ('C) Reels Philbin hosts. r....,. (t) 0 lllMll: "llliradt .. Mll ,..... 5:00 R cmm:o s. RN ,, cul (dr11111l '47 -Maur.n O'K1ra, ~ ~ hOllf wltti tw-"" ))tin '""'· Edmund Gwtn11, Ntl•· ltmtd lll4.llicitl'lt, pf•nl~ Olli IJ lit Wood. 11!1 1!\lf c.llltt lllltltln ...... .. Adlell T1llth {90) "1ht Alli· Yid'!, •lll*rill fifth ......... m.tll..'' H111f>l. U:OO R 9())116!iiL!l...,_h 1-·--l<I tiii1it. Heaor ltfliot' enitorlo-1r•· • ...... (Cl Orf ii Rb"'*tll for !ht fourtfl ..... t'C) '-it rutfltll. time. ..... (C) 0 m @ mI1p1e1gLI Cllfb1· U11 c.. .. ltleill mn {ft .... (Cl livo fl'Ol'l'I Now Clltl(l1'1 1•111 ~ .,oit City's St. Pat.lid's C.lhed1tl S:JO 0 Mni1: (C) "Dtllll4rilt ..... 0 cmmD Qri1tn111 Mldnlatll Clldltt.n" (rtlitiao.11 4r11111) 'II• Min (t) Llvt coto1cast from St.I Vlttor M1111rt, Su•11 H.,...,. 81tl1's Clluith in itowMOWl'I los IC111dld Ct111tt1 Anftlll. wllh His Eminentt, Jtmts Cilll111•1 1111*11 (C) rnnci1 C1rdin11 Mctfflt, 1!""1 · . Mitllf•11"' N~~ ti;!Jhop of L•1 An11lts"tl'ttidln1, Vlrvb r C..•11111 • • a..M: ..,., Hit" (fl'lu.ic.I) 'l5J , ... r.-(C) -r,.. Mttira. G111rw "°"" .... cq 3 3 ----.........-·------~~ ------·-------~----__,,.~----·---------------..---------·--~---....---.,..-_,,....,...,.._..,......,.~,...~~ ............. ~ ........ -.... ;v~ -,,. MERRY CHRISTMAS HAPPY NEW YEAR 361 Cliff Dr ive Le9un• S.och, Coll!. 1714! 4M-M77 Season's GrHtings from The Darn 2001 Harbor Blvd. Cost• Men, Ciillf. (7141 541-'l!Ot HAPPY HOLIDAYS! ·-·--lQett:te on <fartb! Lltti. 81varl1n .Hofbrau ZOS:t N...,_.. ""4. .c..t. M ... C.llf. 646·ttJO and the 8t1t Pie1 From MARIE CALLENDER'S HAPPY HOLIDAYS HARBOUR REAL TY 5042 Warner Ave. Huntington Beach I 846-1311 ' • JI • I . Seasons Greetings ·- SULLrS COFFEE SHOP · 2273 Harbor Blvd. Cost• M.1a, Calif. 642-0438 • Sant• Says Merry Christmas end • Hippy. New Year * 10 do all of us af ~rs LANDING J03 I. Edfewe~r Bolboe. 675-0550 Mr. Crawford and Staff Glad holiday gi-eetlnp to you Md youn!'We'tt wish· ing you the · beat of every- thing, from merry times to quiet joy, as you celebra(e this joyous Yuletide season. I . • ....... . .. '~ . . ~ Season's Greetings \ :: ' :~ H~TIME LIQUOR ;;:~ 495 E. 1711>-Costa M..;;1 17th & Irvine 541-9314 GERARD FRENCH RESTAURANT • 751 Saint Clair Cott• Mesa, Calif. 540-3641 - Glowing good wishes go out to' you from ell ' I 0~;~·Fi;1~ Chips : ~ Coron• def Mar 4242 Campu1 Drive ~ Newport Beach ~75-2051 l 546-6711 The Pirates Inn . . . 440 Heliotrope ----.J-----,-o: *· I . *~·I I YOUR HOST Ml W. 19th St. Cosio Mou, Coll!. 642.0712 Have a Very Morry Christmas one! • Happy New Yur. IT'S TIME AG'AIN TO WISH AL~ OUR MANY FRIENDS I CUSTOMERS HAPPY HOLIDAYS Kings Sto11 Far Men ZJOO Hlllter llY4. t H11Der ~11.t.rl C-M-MM242 l "31 F- A JOYOUS YULETIDE! Expert Cleaners 333 E. 17th St. Coste Meu, Callf. 646-5.110 c ..:.. . Hore'• hopin9 llio hoGdays -mony : · days f ... overyOl)el ---..._-~~~-----.,....----~----~-----·---~--- .. • . ' ' -. ·~ . . . • '----------------------- Hohd1y Greetings To You All From - -------------,----·--------~ ....... ,........------..-.-,--------~-----~------~ ....... ..,..,. .............. • DAILY PILOT 21 HAPPY to Our Friends and .Customers. •'. " •' ·" -' l ""-,~--.~---..,--..,,.-.-~ -~-----_,-~,---·~,-~.,.....~-·--~ -·-··-•T•r, ._e;: •-·-~-·---.. --•-----·-------?"'"-•,-----_,---:>-.·--~-----------, ". " g OA1L'f PILOT Wtdnt!day, Dtcernber 2•, 1'9&• ~~~8'#.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ' I .\ l. f •' I '" '· ' ~I ' 546-1200 COSTA MESA1 :n:n;;1~n,n.~:n::n:'B-:n:'B.:n::p~:n::n:'8.3:~'11:'.iJ~~~~ -·-------------------• HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALi HOUSES FOR SAL I HOUSES FOR SAL~ HOUlll POR SALi HOUSIS POR SA~I HOUlll POR SALi RENTALS RENT ALI Gerttral 1000 General 1000 General 1000 Gonoro1 1000 Gonor1I 1000 Hunll""°" INch 1400Huntl"I'°" llooch 1400 HouH1 Furnlshod Hou-Unfumlohod : i~FO~R~EST~E~.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i~~F~OR~L~E.U~E;;;:;~ NO DOWN VETERANS LOW DOWN OVERBOARD 'OciANiT.VOT Newport llo1ch 2200 N•wport llooch 3200 , ; 0 L S 0 N Sharp ! + l..nlt room In Homtin(t°" a..d!, weat ol Newland nor1tl ot Hamilton. ''But .... "'''"ht .,. would VIEWS be hm "f<w" at l<ut lO ) .. an:· n ·. all been done. ~eltinr view from C:U:ft Cla!Omlied ~UL 4 Orfve in Newport J:lefahta, -3 ...... formal 3 bedroonu. -...... dinine MOm, 2 tirtpJ.ace1, dtluxe built-in kitchen plu; paneled oversized fa.n\111 tremendowi buement rw-n- room with friendly wet bar. pus room -'s.,1:11)) down. Luah carpets, drape:• and "9,900. Pancnmic v 1 e w tile finest wall coverinp. fmn Macco Hilands de· Fant.aa:tlc rock work ml the lilfhttul 4 bedroom and form. Jut word Jn & pool, $62,000 al dinln&: room,· ta..stetulfy invested, SI.critic pr i c e deoorated-term....,.P7,9:i0. NEW HOME IMMEDIATE MOVE IN FillEPLACE. Pool. 2 bdr., 2 LOVELY -2 Bl!, 2 :; bl., patio, adults. ~e BA. f'llllc, new qita. c iza •• ;. Vllllot. UnUI July IJl. DJO. med. -. $ZIO. A.1 t. ' call W3l. m-4.10ll or 673-646--0732 • Inc. ~alt.ors TRIPLEX EAST SIDE EARNS $5 .800 $220/mo. Lease 11 S3M with opUon to buy. Lovely Newporl Beach 4 + family room + dinlnr room with view ol Back Bay, Vacant now. 11.H.A. 4 IDRM5 11/2 IA TH5 l/4 MILE FROM BEACH $20,990 11419. N•wport Shor•· Coron• dol Mor ~50 1 -.....:..------ 1 Bit. 2 JSAi Y-leuo, ii BR, 3 BA $400. lmmtd. i350 mo. avail. Lie or Mo. or unlurn. ~~2991 or go.7519 601 Bt&oniL 675-0033 Trtm•ndous value!! 3 1ara:e units. 2 ~roam and 2 baths each. Deluxe kitchen with built-ins. Only $9,00o down 1nd just 7 years )'OWl&'.. t;ux. 111·y carpeting and drape1 throughout, Manicured p'OUnd.I. Enclosed farqel. Priced now at $36,9W, See today. Dial 645--0303. Quick poue!Slon. 2 bdrms complett:ly fumithtd Con- dominiwn $113/.nio. Three bedroom, two bath. tuUy carpeted and draped. Built-in kitrllen witb laundr)' facilities. Double a:araae, fenced yard. " acre ranch· ero at end of cul ~ de-AC 1treet only q'J,900 -HUNTINGTON BEACH Call Now 962°1353 ,.,6',,,•~•-486_._,,_-.,,-...,..--I Unlvonfty lllrk 3237 ·. Vacant clean 4 bdrm. $265/mo. $57.000. 646-7171 Colesworthy & Co. "Apnt" .. ror A \Vise u. ..... '-0 THE REAL '"\.. f:STATCRS -------·----------- Wutcllfl 1230 Huntlnvton llo•ch 1400 2 BR. comp. furn. Conv. loc. So. ot hw;y. ~mo. Don v. Franklin Rltr 673-2222 Bilbo• l111nd <BR home, Turtle llock.1331) ·: mo. incl aardner ' . ! BR Uni. Puk T/H 1335 . incl \YID, reL ' 2355 3 BR new Uo!. PIL T/H PJ0 w-rm ~~ EXPIRT STYLING Priced to s.n WITHIN WALKING ,,. ................ 1 .... ---·--•1Thru-out this~ ... fl 2 I" · win&ed home. 4 Bdnn, mu. ASSUME 61 LOAN OUTt Sincerest 'I'twlb and ter, & den !rt North wing. Best Wiw• "" the HoliOay Bldot rm . lnoulated. 169.000 Seuon to our many friend1 R. C. GREER, Realty --------mo. Mo to mo. 3 bdnns 2 baths, 1S1X1 sq tt, $375 mo/yrly. Avail Jan. 3 BR Vin.aae m home $400 ; • cpta/drpc, blt-lnl, boat door 3rd. 2 8R, :J BA. Frplc, 2 Brand new!, - in double &:&rlie to feDCt'd patios, dock. AdultJ only. 2 BR VU!aee·m Brand New.;; back. yard. 60x.120' lot. Be-675-78SJ. Just $216 mo. : 645-0303 at Harbor C@nter 1299 Harbor Blvd., C.?tf, 1969 Volume $145.5 Miiiion ----- 3 bdrm. 1 % bath, Immedl· ate poueMiM. Good street. GI Joan with low payment • try 10% down. who made thil one ol our 3355 Via Lido 673-9300 flMlt ;years in Newport low market $26,500, Submit 3 ~Rhome Univ ~-k HM on tenn1. RENTALS 0 ' • ..--.. _,., · • Paul Jones Re1lty Hou•• Unfurnished ;wft.ed HW Rulty 83.l-OIXI • : 3 UNITS $23,500 $29,950 Newport Beach. 1---------jOhn macnab (714 ) 6424235 90t Dovtr Drive, Suite 170 Newport Beach University Park 1237 SITUATIONS MAKE BARGAINS •.•. S..7·1266 Eve,~ COiii Mn.I 3100 Bock lloy 3240 Christmas Gift IMMACULATE 1 BR <1up1ex ----'----~ EXECUTIVE Home .5 BR. LARGE 4 Bedrooms w/ pr. Apt B, 131 E. 2111 Ba. Cpts, drp..-elec bltu. CUSTOM • $34,900 Be1utifully 1ppointed home in a prime Bac-k Bay location with 3 huae bdnns &: Iarr• family room. Exterior enhanced by exception- al landscaping, Larr• patio with large outside built • in table & a SHAKE ROOF. Loads of 1lorap gpaces 4 built • in cabinet.ii. It'1 our exclU1ive so call for details. $23,000 He~'• one. 3 br. 2 ha witb family m:im. Pr i c e d at $30,960. Vacant. Owner will comider all oUers. Low Intettst loan. l.A~l;y St. CM. 5'8-8584 $300. 546-6740 home in "ery desirable area. CHEERFUL. aean 2 Br. m 2 51, .. _, Colonla1 4 n• 'UL • Hurry! \V. Wilson. No pet1, 1 clrlld. .,..,.., ~ •7' HAFFDAL REAL TY 1135 per mo. Call 513-21m · BA 1325 mo. Re!~ dlpoolt. 142-4405 2405 Bonnle Pl. 151-0m I BR, 2 BA, cp~. drpo, $:nl 51/4 °/o LOAN mo. Qulot deod •nd stnet. Coron• clol Mor 3 •red hill •• Vlclorl• Fantaatlc Ocean View Very attractive homt-with many handy work feature•. Hu£:e lfOllnd• • offers IU• preme privacy I: serenity! HITCH YOUR U..._tructe<! vlew of all t.a- WAGON TO A STAR """'-I> mile to new Ma-~ lq ft of etherial beauty rma. On a lovely street! REALTY Univ, Park Center, Irvint Call Anytime 833MO to auume. Pymnts ns7/mo. 787 Joann St., C.M. 675.7483 ·•"'----" 3 BR. Ia fam nn, Ia. lot. l BR. Fenced JWd. 2 car HUGE 2 BR. Din. rm., bI\rm, , ~ Prioed below market Su~ llll'lP-2 childttn OK. No 11,J ba., frplc. New cpts .. mit down • 2nd TD a~. pets. $165 mo. 642--7939 FantuUc patio: 2 ear ~- 646-1111 (•nytim1l -=---.-oo extra ,.,.., .new ,,. ..,. 830°6060 Tarbell erlookinr the ~ & cli;Y. Thtre'a 4 bdnn1, dininc room, lllJ'ie rumpus room, 2"' bath•. Relax & enjoy the stunnin&: pool, For your pleasure & entertainmenf this i1 the complete an!'Wtr. COLLEGE PARK * BRASHEAR RLTY * UNF. 3 br. 2622 O Santa Ana, =· $2T5 Morith 16952 Beach Blvd., H8 C.1\1. AvaU Dee. 28. $145. Properties ' 847-8507 Evet. 968-1178 Call 962--.5050. 2 BR, 1~ BA dplx. Pri bc:h.' Corona del Mir 1250 ·DOWNTOWN P I FOR Ch . Vi..,. frplc . Adult., no pell • COATS Family Expansion Dovtr Shore8 with gpect.IC• WA&.~CI ular view of Back Bay • Rll! a 1 ..,_,.. mountalns. 4 b:irm$, one for &"'l·SllO C.M. Oote to City Park &: ahoppin£'. This cute 2 bdnn & den home features . lara:e fenced lot, hardwood 11oors, Heatila.tor f:ireplacr , fl'ult trees etc. Priced right at 4 BR. -2 B•lh• A11ume 514% Loan Price $29,c.:1 # $3500 Down George Wiiiiamson REALTOR 67M350 '73-1564 Ev11. -·-mrw·· OF THE BLUFFS A sp&clolll 2°bedroom home with rustic beam ceilina:. CU1tom decorattnr. A pano- ramic view from the livin&: oo r11tma1 3 Bdnn hOUll!I $140 mo. $225 mo st&-2290 HAVE 2· 1hMp J bdrm Carpet1, drapes, f enced DUPL~ mo 4 BR.. AND 1· sharp 4 bdrm yard. 546--.54ll 2% BA ·bltnl ~ Gar· Beat buy1I GI or FHA 3 BR. 2 BA. la fam rm, pxil $325 moitte. ~7?173 ' " HAFFDAL RLTY & maintenance. New =======:=1 142-4405 Avail now $715. 642-2'71S Huntington IMch --• ..,... the maid or ruest. 1onnal ;M $22,750 Coot•Mou 1100 room and bedrooms and I Apt1. For Sal• 19'0 Ml .. Verd• 3110 4 LARGE BR. 2 BA. prl .. ~· d k ~-~··I'-'='--'.;.;....;;.;=--'-';;: -----new cptl 6 drpt, dbl pr, va ""' IC u • .,, ........ ,. ~ 2-4-6-12 or 24 units, 4 Bedroom home, 2 bath, fenced baclr yd. $2StJ . 546 4141-dhti"< "'°"' & f.,.;iy room. -Gr.i°E~ tDperi ~ Also a rame room1 ~e ....,;CM, jiiijjij;'I enoU1h tor • pool table, .w..• ' EASTSIDE the Bay. All th11 plus swim· i.tesa Verde. Vaca11t. $300. ...,., ......._. m~ p:io1 and tennis club. Walk to beach Appree.. Ase t 54Ml.4l ...,.....,""" Call u1 about thia ouutand· t.tfnc area. By Owner/ mo. n · NEW 3 BR. all bltm, eptl .- 1"' valu.. ~~~'2·-Lindborr Co. N-rt Buch 3200 la• yd. walk "' beod>. $205' . ~ is adjacent to swimminc % story CaPe Cod a1y1e home. ~ltl•9'1'1' pool. _ Unboll1vobl• V•lue Well located neor shopp1"'. ' l * '42-1771 Anytime* Only 124."'1 to the hoart of 2 bdrm. with..,.. kitchen 673-1550 -,., 514-9506 ADULTS ONLY "R'"E""N'"'TA"'L7S---·;~ B Calta Meaa. Imrnaculate all a: tttinc area. Full ·Price FinHI Pr111nt arrett Realty NEED MONEY? ""''Y painted io. out. Hiah 118.950. submit"""'· CALL RENTALS What could be a nicer pres-quality w/.w carpets thru· Sf0.1151 Heritaae Real Ea-Houses Furnished Apt1. Fumlohod ent than the fine&t_ home . in 1605 Westclitt Dr. NB ._ To buy a new home ? Invtstl-out. 3 bdnns 2 baths tam· ~t.o.~te5";'1~ope~o ~'":-''Tl:;.-'~: l l!!~!!!l1!!!!!!~ 3 Bdnns 2 bat.hi, 1Pllt level, ~lesa Verde? This is 1t! • ~--iate our pranteed trade ily room, aU built·lns.'Beau. Rentila to Share 2005 2 car la.ra&e. Avail. Jan. 15 HU&"e game room. large liv-642·5200 in plan. Let us answer your titul lava rock fireplace in OLD style Span, 3 Br, 1 Ba VIEW THE BEST or F~b. 1. $275/mo. General 4000 .: lng room \vith "suspended quertions \\<ith no oblitation. hse on dbl Jot Reduced to • RESPONSIBLE man wtth Bty &: Beach Realty, Inc. THE NEW VILLAGE JNN,' conversation pit" bu il I Fait etloUi'h! L/R, Walk to schools. $17,IXXI for quick sale by Theflnrit in CdM with 3 Br., rttommendatlons, 1hare 901 DovtrDrive, Sultel26NB former Saddltblck I nn , 1• around a fireplace. quality Stuffed with Extras & owrwr. s.&-3767 den, formal din. 6 2~ ba. house or riv te &45-~ Eves. 5'8-6966 1 ·-·-·, from -. a -· • P'-'Tl'r -· H111 everything An ocun P 1 room MG&W>A _. appo1ntment1, beautiful pool. Bright as a Cranberry Au ... Wlll'l6 A REAL 'bUYr 3 BR. 1~ BA. view from kit.: din. rm. a: w/bath. 536-6300. BAYFRONT Lovely apts. AU ut1r1, • Perlect for entertaining. Ov-3 bdnns, 3 baths, fonnal CARNABtl.' home. 2 unll1, 2 BR each. mstr. Br. Plush cptl It drpi. 4 Br, 2-1tor;y house to lhare 3 Bdnn, 2 bath. family home. llniens, maid, pool. la erlooks the lakes & fairways dinina:, h111e living room, ORANGE COUNTY'S ••A&.T1' C • 521-3871 or 827-7694 Beaut, lndsCJ!i;. Lanai for with 2 or 3 IUYI· Lacuna Sandy beach, Private com· rm. Steps lo beach, now ae- 1 ~u~e ~i~enieat 1~'oootry breatkfl2xut25~dm PLUS 1•tP· LARGEST 1093 Bakff, C.J..t. 546-5440 -========= Jeilurr. Have a look, you·u Be1ch. ocrlllview, 1undeclc munity, $500 mo. yrly. • crpttne applications. 69S S., ,.. • '""' .I.JU, • are. e en or poo ta-2629 HARBOR BLVD. Mesi clel Mir 1105 be happy U you do. $50 mo. 49f...8773 675-l!Xl.5 527-6567 Coa1t Hwy., Lacuna 8-ch, 1 Chvner ilf gtttlnr anxiotJl'I. hie room. Near all .choole 494-9436 ; includini:' Parochial. Shon.. 5461640 MERRY ------P!'.,!ldQI e BILL HAVEN, Rltr. DIAL direct 642-5678. ChaJp l BR. 2 ba .. den, din. room. =-~------I pine k ttc. areas, J u ,rt OPEN EVES TILL 8:30 VACANT 2111 E. Cout, CdM &7J..32U your ad, !Mn rlt back and In Clltthawn. $300 NO matter what H ii. Yoll ' 1018 S. Main, S.A. 541~3 listen to the phone rin&:I Georre WilllamlOn, Realtor can Mil It with & DAILY ·J .~ \ -,, 'I' · i \ r' 1, · · • · ' . ' '' painted. Ready to move Into. NEEDS PAINT CHRISTMAS Foat lup bedroo"", sepa-==='==== Now! 673-43lO 67>-IS6< E,.. Pll.OT WANT ADii &l2a1I :· _ Too many extras to lilt rate muter, !arp eovrrect Linda Isle 1306 -521,950! hett. Askioi 139,ooo. Well built 2 bdrm home.,.. patio for lamlly li..UW, <=J --·.;;.. __ ....;.;;;.; G1norol 3000G•norol 3000Gonorol 54 b-59'iU •• ~ly atrimn entry home. tra la?Je dOUble prqe, •C· JJvtne room with atone fire. 90 Linda Isle Dr. 1-----;======:::===========-----Beamed ceilings. Brick BBQ, 1S1""·SllO ceu to ttar yard. R·2 mne place, aprtnkltn tmit and Exquit:itel1 decor. 4 SR, 4 I OObbUlli; waterfall, HUge c--.__, ·room to build, $19•750. nt.r tor ruy maintenance. BA home. Opt'd •draped, d..11Q-Q Jl"t.. f _ /) "C. 'hlQ.• -• patlo.30!lworkohop.Doc· ..e~= DUPLEXCZONE Itwlllho1Joyto"•UU. landscaped. Boat slip. P~ 1.'QU):VJI. 'bP<f'v Irle kitchen. 3 bedrnonu. 2 bdrm. each side, 2 """'" ""'for on1y <m.950.oo>. 1135•000 The Pun/e with the Buifl./n Chuckle 540-tm $29,750 with terms. 546-2313 Linda Isle O.velopment TARBELL 2955 Harbor Open Dally 1·5 Woll•McCerdl1, Rllro. REALTORS Biii Grundy 675-3210 SEASON 1220 Dolphin Torr, CdM ~:i;ewport ~~,c~~'-l ""''!'!'!"!6!'7'!"3'!!·44~0l"O~-Lido 1111 1351 GREmNGS ~":'1tm. ~::. ";~ 3 .=I ""!!!!!!"'!"!'!"'!'!'!!mlB!!!' SANTA'S PEARL BAY FRONT SOUTH COAST wlth llttplae< + family $25, 960 Exclw>re •""' • your Inc. Coll11• P•rk 1115 HOMES REAL ESTATE ..,.. ov<rlookinr ..,., pa. 5 BEDRM .-prop. or I !or iae., mod. dU· 1-~~-----New or older. with pieno 1500 Adam c.o&la. M sa tic>. 2500 ft u .. ;._ plex on Pearl, Bal. le., w/ Give The Car A'Way? a: llipl. 3 BR. tog BR. ~ e 111 ..... ,. area, TRI.LEVEL xlnt rental rtcon:I. Will sell You ..u:i't need It here! Near From $149,51)1) Now VIEW Hom11 ! .botho. Plu.h ...-. 1iiddl~&'R0:'·":is-722S """"th""' -"'°"" W•lk1r Riiy. 675-5200 Dover Shores Ivan w~ua• 3 Fireplace, Parle like profH-plna:, ~P eti:. Save the 3.166 Via Udo, NB Open su.n. brand tif.lv homes: 4 bdrms. 11ional landscaping! 540-1720 $22 ,500-POOL e?at expense a: look what _ 3 be, powder rm, tim. rm TARBELL 2955 H1rbor Covered patiol. Spacious bed· ellf! yo1I°ll 11t: Early OCCU· Huntington S..ch 1400 w/frplc, COlll'tYard pools. 1860 Newp'.lf't Blvd., CM 524 9501 room•, 2 baths, "Award" pancy of bla 4 bdrm 2 bath --·#---- CALL 146-3928 Ev 6'<-1655 ' ' home lo "'ctn."' ant&. low m FroCo. m $106~~· Roy J. Wan:! . es. 4 BE ORM + DEN . built·in kitchen. Full dininl lntertst Joan, no points 10 1430 Ga&axy Dr. 646-lfi50. OViR-&UIL T MeA Verde? 2 baths. BuiJt.fn room, PIU5h carpefinr, pay. C a I I Perron Realty , SFr'f 4 Bedrm-$19,950 UNDER-VALUED "'-"·covered patio. Own-Tarbell 842·6691 612-1"17! ""· ......... Spac1ous family home. Baycrest. CUstom·blt. larp er helpg with the financlna. BY Owner -lrJ auumable 1200 /?/..; .1.fm-, Or@am kitchen with luxury 3 BR. 2'ii ba .• formal DR. 54Q..t72Q GI loan 3 Br, nl ba, din N!!flOrt leach Lh,-&-U u..u btd1tin appliances. 2 bath.I. w/island kitchen plua tan-TARBELL 2955 Ha rbor rm. fam rm, walk to achla, FIREPLACE & pool for Eleaant Y.'OOd burnina fire-tastk: eXtras! $69.950 To Buy or Sell bch, princ. 0 n) Y. $33~. Chrlstmu. Dlx 2 Bll. 2 BA plllt'e. Orah1m Rlty. """2414 ~7109 townhlet•nns. ;_ .. urt"~~;._ Xlnt lfM§l@iMtl 146 0604 TARBELL N.., Newport""'' otnce REAL ESTATE BEACH LOT _ ... ~·~ "\d2111'TJr!113!1i THE SUN. NEVER SETS o' 3 BR, 2 BA, lamlly room. 675-1662 35""9!!". Steps from ooean. DW. dinct S1Um. Chall' ==__,-,.,....--= C1Ullfled'1 action powu. prof decor. 2 ;yr old--xlnt CORBIN·MARTIN $22.IXXI, put may be aubor· your ad, thtn lit back and DON'T live it away, cet O Rearrano• letter• cf the lour 11erombltd' worcl1 b.- low to form four slmp,le wordi:. ISUTAL'E I _ I I 11 I I' ' 8 PRINT NUM8EREO LETTERS a IN THESE SQUARES ., UNSCRAMBIE l!llfRS TO I G!T ANSWER • . . ' • . ' ' I ' I . ' Foranadtoeallaroundthe cond. S!l,OOO. 21382 l'1fft REALTORS dioated. Submit ·-· 11'1'" "'the pbooo rlnil qukk CUh tat it with 1 5CRAM·Lm ANSWER IN CLASSIFICATION 9500 clock, dial 642-567!. Lane, HB. Owner M6--432S 3tJ36 E. Cot.St Hwy., OS.'i 6"tWe83 Now! Daily PUot want Ad, ~ • 1 ::.==:====::~=:=====:~==:=====:='::-==;====:::~=-:=====::=:=-.:=:=====::==~.:-==.=====::==::==;;;-=====:==:==:=======~­-r•I 1000 Gonoro1 1000-ral 1000 Gonor•I 1000 -r•I 1000Gonor•1 1000 0-r•I 1000 O.nor•I 10!)0 9•norol t . '. . . fi7Hl?i-?iii3]¥iT .. tioWis-fiii*fiMETOBUY-~~ ~ NEWPORT BEACH OFFICE 646·7711 HUNTINGTON~~.H Off.ICE 842-4455 COSTA MESA OFFICE 545-9491·545-0465 I 2043 W11tcll!f Dr. •I Irvin• O,.n Evtnlnp 7612 !WI"'" ~':1tot11 . Opu ........ 2790 HAUOR Ill.YD. OP.II ...... 't!1 t P.M. i We at Walker & Lee, Inc. Wish to Extend to our Many, Many Friends a : and : a Most Joyous Christmas Happy and Prosperous New Year!! • ' .... _ ' , • ; • . -·~ I ' ,. -----.------.-~~.-..-~.~.~.~.-~~----~--~---~~---------·----- \Vtodr'lesday, December ,4, 19~t R~Nl AL• KfNTALS J•--11'!'--ll!I---------REAL ESTATI AptL Fumlahod Aptt. Unf\lrnlahocl II: 1c * 1c * :If Gtn•r•I 1--~-~--~ 0011'"1 4000 C....,, dol Mor 4250 Coato M... 5100 R. E, Wonted 1;..~------Single Adults 1 BR, blk to ocean A bay. Ad"'"'· .., pel.$. 1155 .>TIY· MERRIMAC WOODS 613-7629 Just completed, l or 2 BR, 2 :::==:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::=I 8.4. furn or unfurn with atr Bolboo 4300 o.EAN Bachelor Apti. All util incl $8."i up :USE. Balboa Blvd. BALBOA 673-9945 BACHELOR APT· Util paid. $80 per mo. 310 E. &!boa Blvd., Balboa ...., Anxious To S.117 Commercial properties want. etl for strong buyer. Prefer good Orange Co. location. Should have some financing or seller willing to carry T.D. I! you \vant to scU, plra5e call K. \V. Sma.11 Eckhoff & Assoc., Inc. 1818 \V, Chapn1an Avt" • Orange, Calif, 541·2GZ1, Eves-wknd.is 5J.S.5971 When Yov Want it done right ••• Call one of the experts listed below!! Luxury single. I & 2 bedroon1 apartments, f urnished and un!ur· nished, with complete privacy and landscai; ed country club at- mosphere Including $750,000 wo rth of recreational facililies designed and operat. ed just for sing le people. Huntington &each 4400 cond, compl soundrp1'001ed, &eU cleanirlJf ovt>n.,, wood ceilings, ds'~'hrs, lush land· fteaping \Vll11 streiuns &. \\'B· 1erlalls, e!evatol"s, BBQs, elu.bhouse. saunas, jacuz:ti & swim pools, p:·iv gar. \V/ storage. Everythini: n e v1. Starting al $140. Adul ts please. Just East (JI 2600 Harbor Blvd, ncxl to Nabers Cadillac at 425 ti1errlmac Whoddya Wont? Wh1ddy1 Got? SPECIAL CLASSIFICATION FOR NATURAL"110RN SWAPPERS Special Rite BUSINESS. •no FINANCIAL SERVICE DIRECTORY SERVICE DIRECTORY SERVICE DIRECTORY HUNTINGTON CAPRI I .,w,,ay,,·,, 54,,5-6300"""""""""'1 5 LJnes -5 t imM -5 bucks llULES -AD MUST INCLVOE "B..;;•.;.by:..:•c.:itt.:.:i.:.:ng,,_ __ ,:65:::50 Corpot Loylng & Poporhonglng Bus, Opportunities 6300 BABYSITTING, my hon1e Repiir M26 ~9' 6850 ·---- For Single Adults MART1Nl""UE NE\V 1-2-3 BEDROOMS .,, t-Wlllt ""' .,..,.. to ll'llle. ~11 yo1,1 w•ltf In tr1da. ~YOUR llllOM 111'!11/o, edd~.. ~ NMs cf •dvertlSlnt. weekly, daily, eves. FOR CARPETING INT EX E SOMETHING NEW: Reasonable, reliable, OR CARPET LAYING $J.i/.fJJ Tb.borA'::i~. 8 x,~: }'rom $1"1. Furn & Uni GARDEN APTS ~OTHJNG FOR SAL~ -TP.AOES ONLYI RENTS FROM $145. Tf'nnis, Gym! Siiuna..,; Excellent park·like surround- 6200 Edinger Ave., HB ings \V/beated pools, Extra 642-6037 1 ==-=~~-----C. A. J>agt" 642-2070 guar. painting avail. Also. n this day when franchising EXP'D Babysitter by the --~-Apt$ & Comm'!, 548-1546 PHONE 642-5678 To Place Your Trader 's P1r1dis1 Ad ANAHElf.1 2i7So.B~t (1 blk. So. <1f LtnColn) (714) ITl4500 Phone 846-0019 ki N · par ng. ear. Mioppuig. 1967 32' Chris Crall l\\•in i11. reaching the good lTP'" k v· · & El · 1 '~""===,-----,,1 . 1 v.·ee, 1c1011a · 11arbor ectr1ca 6640 1EX·PAJNTER. now •chi 4 Br home ·rustin. Trade tnr ta11on t enjoys -it's great c t M 6 ;::.::.:;c:.:;:;:: ____ .=::; Adults only. 1 n · ' BACHELOR & J BR turn, 2 & 3 BR APTS cng, u r equipped, very t I d I area, os a esa. 4J.J<J73 teacher wlJI pa•·n1 ... ,,,., & lot or acre in Redlands Al· o in a tru Y good inv1>st· ELECTRICAL ~rvice & .... .. $140 up. Adults, no pets. ' clean, \Vill trade cqty for 17301 Ketlson Ln. 842-7848 lm Santa Ana Ave., c~r._t. home or car or anything. (West of. Beach nr Slater). ~f.gr, Apt 113 64G-a542 5-18-2434 alt 6. 6424741 aft 6 sci have Tahoe lot 10~ Rcc1. ment. One that offr.rs hitn 8 • k M 1·cpa1r. 24 hrs, 7 d'"'!'.". No wknds. Xlnt workmanship, • rte , 1sonry# etc. '".J F'ree t 64" '"19 ••0 ~ lands property or v j c. a ve!'y high and fast rctlU'n 6560 job loo sma ll . Re-model & es · o-tJ ' .............., .. F1JRN. 1 & • Be "" Fairway Villa Apts .{(38-3284 or 962.-0()27 on his invesrn1ent dollal' addilions. l( it's electrical, PAINTING, paperhanging, Scuba equipm('nt, tank, reg· ...:.:..;:;3~a~,~.,,~,-=.,~.,=R~e-no_;_· -1 'vilhout tying np the cno1~ BUILD, RemodeJ, repair _w='='';'='="=646-4==17='"===~ I 25 yn: exper. Old cnll"Y GARDEN GROV E 13100 Chapman Ave. downtown H.B. No children Or' pels, 536-7396 ula1or, Jf.P. gauge, knife & v'iilue $3.IXXI. Will trade mous capital !hat n1osl .fi:an. Brick, block, co n c r e t e , : workmanship. Reas. Free Near Orange Co. A1rporl & sheaf, ett., value $200. Will for late model Dodge chise~ do. 1'his WP have un. carpentry, no job too small, _F_l_oo_r_s;_ ____ ..,c.666=5 1 ",_,_ .. _°'~""-1_322~=----(4 hlk.s \V. Santa Ana Fwy.) 111.4) 6."'6-3030 UCf. Adults only. 2lli.22 trade for smaU tra.nspor. v Cam qucs!l(lnably the best oppor. Lie. Contr. !l62-69-1j HOLIDAY SPECIAL, Int, & . '" .,,,...,. an per. tunity for the small investor CARPETING Santa Ana Ave. 540-2796 tat1on car. 4'1't-<1'1'ro 536-2449 . lo r~rre e,t;mat• L•·c. '"•Ir. ExL painting. Lie&: in.surd. NEWPORT BEACH ffiVINE AND 16th (714) 645-(6;)0 rn a ng time, You can Bu1ine11 Service 6562 .... ""' rree ests. Local refs. 30 yrs CHARMING 2 ~-, n•'t -----------I ./ S140,000 lsl T.D. E-s1de 3 Br hm & 2 rear 1vork either pai·1 or full time ,:::::=::5'().:;~1"~2.~!>l~&.44==7~8=::: .. ~ ....... "Chuck" 64, o~ Laguna beach 4705 U1.U•u. 1 · Trad,. for lncmne. 0 ·ach· ~ 9· al ........ ~. .rvo>J;J Newly re dee.; \v/w ... ""' apts ~"''" 50 v . or 2 hms and earn Px<.·cptiona!ly high INCOME Tax -Personal & South Bay Club Apartments . & 2 Bed rooms Ranch home, i;l~k. or ? ? \v/5 t't'a.r apts, mo inc $788 earnings, You do need ut Corporate Returns: A via· Gardening 6680 * PAINTING • Jnt.(Ext. carpeting dre.p ei;. 01>.·ner $59,500 val. Trd $331\il cq fo1'. least $1.495.00 cash !o staet. lion, Medical & fl.'Iarinc a c..;:.:_:::.::,c.;::._ ___ ;;:.: Loca! references. Immed. Completely furn. Lge. ircl? (114) ·1'"3103 SC I GARDENING & I nd . se1·vi"" 64"'"42 64"3657 shaded patio. 120 yds. h'Om * J~t balh."i ~ · a hm. Ownr/bkr 6~3750 F' 'l r fu!'ther information Specialty, Pub I i c /\c· a scaping. .. .... , ,,....... · ..,.. \Voods Cove Beach $175 n10. * Carpets/Drapes 1vrile intluding tbiephone to countant. 67:>-1196 1··01· Ap· J.-yrs e X P · C 1 ea n- u P • For Better Painting, Jnter- HOLIDAY P LAZA . Mission Realty ~94--0731 * Gas Built-ins i * * * * * Nor1h American, 4t·) .East point1ncnt. ~~~~~:rs inst'd & repaired. ior & exterior, acoustic ceU. CHAR!\iIING Partly r u r 11 * $160 per 1'1oolh l'!!'!!~!!!'!!!!'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'!!!!!!!!!!!~~!!j!""!!!!!!!i!!i!j 2nd South, Sui Ir ::3, Salt ~========= ings. 6'16-4077 . DELUXE. !ipaclous 1 8dnn · Furn apt $135 plus util. 11'eated pool, ample parking. No children • no pets. seaside studio buntalow, 546·~0 549'1~ RENTALS REAL ESTATE L<ikc City, Ur.1'1 Rill I. Carpenterin.g,,_ __ ~6~59'-'0 AL'S Garo~ning & Lawn 1 "v=o=u~s=,-,-,~,,-T=h-,-P=a=;~.-t.-l~b-e. garden setting. Lease $170 Apts. Unfurnished General Associate -J\laintcnance. Commercial, 11pt paln1ed $30. :z br $40. ::i · 1965 Pomona, C.M. LUXURIOUS NEW CARPENTRY industria1 & residential. b· ·~. '~70·16. Inc gar. all ut il it ies, H · 8 h 4 ' -~~ Tele-clear. Refs, 494-2775 unt1ngton eac 5 00 Office Rental 6070 J\IANUFACTIJRER ~f<JNOSR allREi:_~IbRS. No Job * 646-3629 * EXTERIOR·1NTER IOR tosto M ... 4100 2 M 2 117-.nn Jn"c't t · h 00 m · ..... inet in gar-JAPANESE c~rd e•-., SEE NEW VJ Lt.AGE INN l ! 2 BDRJ\t, beautiful S\\'im BUR S. • BATH LAGUNA BEACH •.JW • men into 1 e & th " ".._' & MAINTENANCE no 1 "''''"' f th d 2-ages o er cabil'ets. exp'd, comp. yard o,.,..,,·-. • 64'3185 • Steps to beach. $35. \vk pools. Adulls, no ""ts. A1'r Cond1't1'oned · ss 0 e ay. 'J "·'"' "175 U ""' • ..... .,. .. -yl'. history of success, now """"' • no answer leave Free estimate, 968-2303 I ======:::::::=== * SUNNY * * ACRES $145 mo. LAGUNA 4M·7201 ALL UTILITIES PAID $l50l!lfo. lIEATED POOL ON FOru::ST AVENUE exp•nd;og o-·at·io·· 10 So. msg at ' 646-2372. ft O. 6 307 A·•ocado St c 'I 0 -, De k ,... •• And-·n JI~1·s Gardening & la1vn Plaster;ng. Re~,·r 880 ~ ' "' • .x· toed. cpt/d'"""'. K'•' OK 5 spact available In Calif. Contpl<t• factory ,·"· "''""' ~ Mge Apt No 5 "" ~ I 11· b il " " maintenance. Res & <:om· ., ' DELA\VARE STUDIO Apts. ne\ves o u:e u ding at stalled & ready to go. \Viii GEN, Repair. Add. Cab. mercial. * 540-4837 e PATCH PLASTERING TOWNHOUSE 2620 Delaware, H.B. prime location in doivntown I.rain Principal of Mgmt. :Formica Paneling. flfarli!e. All types. Free estln1ales 4740 Dani Point * LARGE. !11odern 1 BR apt. Pool, $145. mo. 499-2055 or 496-2409 Ne1v 2 BR, 1!: BA & 1f..:26~2-2221 anytin1e 5J6.1816 Laguna Beach. Air CQndi· abilities. Conlact immcd. Anything! Call Dick, CLEAN·UP SPECIALisr C.ill 540-682.'i BR. Crpts, d1'ps, self c!ng tioncd, carpeted, beautllul Onl.'c in a lifcllme oppor. to 673-4159 f\lo1vi11g-, edging, odd jobs. I:::==:======:'.": * Motel·Apts * ovt>n. 6'15·2'1C6 377 \V, \Vi/son NICE 2 & 3 bdrs. Crpted & entrances: Frootag~ on n1ukr. that high income n1ost RcawnabJe. 548-69:>5 Plu b• 68 · drped. Nwlv decor 3 blks Forest Ave., rear leads to REPAIR, Parti1io11s, Sniall I c===:::::==:::::== _ m ing RENTALS sruo. IO ap!, 2 BR. 1\!r BA. •·um bch. 3• bdr ,,;/dbl at-Mun · aJ kin 1 t $"'n people rlrcan1 of. ~tarting ren10dcl, ere. Nile or rlay J ·gn I So r 0 C p · u eip par g 0 s. ""' salary $12,000 + subs1a.ntial Ha uling 6730 PLUMB1NG REPAIR !I a "' · o · • Apts. Unfurnished a110._ 1.:losed garage, nr tached gar & ft·place. 536-17U per month for space Desk . . . Reas! Cali KEN 540-49679 Fairgrounds shopp1n~. Adults, no pets.1---''---'-"'-C.::;:.:..:..: and chairs available .for $5. proht!i. Ca~! J-.en Chflord REPAIHS * ALTERATJONS Stuclto & 1 Bedrooms General 5000 $145. 6i2·2389. CHEZ ORO APTS. 8234 Business ttours answering <7141 774-70.)0 * CABrNETS. Any siic job No job too small YARD1Gar. Oeanup. Re-e 642-3128 .e $30 WK. & UP QUfE.I J & 2 Bi· garden apt. At!anfa, _ 11.B. Nu, 1, 2 .. 3 service available for $10. LTQUOR llc's. LO\\' PRICES~ 25 yrs exper. 548-ciTJJ movr t!'ees. ivy, trash. =====:::::=:::::== Day, Week, Month VEN DOME Bltns. patio, htd poo 1, br s. ,Pnv; gar, pool. Util All utilities paid except ON SALE -fnr OR.l\NGJ:; and 1 -~C~A~R~P~E;· N;T~R:;::Y~. ~C;a~b~,.,~,,~,,- .. Kitchens & TV's ind, adults, no pets. $160 mo. r m. 536-8038 or 5.16-2727, telephone. f;AN DIEGO COUNTIES. , •Phone scrv., hid pool 516-5l63 COZY, 1 bclrm, cpls, walk to DAILY PILOT Gtll colle«t for bcs1 pnce! Retnod. No job too small, e Maid setVice avail. IMMACULATE APTS! "-t & 222 FOREST AVENUE (2131 2"•.'-'219 'J.ual 11'0/'k. <;a!J IHG-2576 ADULT & FAMILY 1558 CORIANDER Dr.; ""ac l · low~~ !.:11. yard. ~ 2376 NEWPORT ILYD. SECTIONS AVAILABLE Deluxe 2 BR, 2 BA, garage, Avail Jan. 1. ;,30-3507 LAGUNA BEACH Cement, Concrete 6600 Investme nt Oppor. 6310 Grade, backhor. 962·8743 e l{auling. Have ~. ton pickup, licensed & i11sured. 4n<1.-1003 Clean Up And Haul $10 a load. 646-2528 Roofing 6950 ALL TYPES; rock, wood & asphalt shingles. LEAKS REPAIRED. \Vork guar. ~7-1136 S48-t755 Close to shopping, Park $155 mo. Adul!s, no pe1s. 2 BDR:\'IS, 2 BA. pvL patio. 49+94S6 i ~25. Per Wk. & Up *Spaclous 3Br's,.2Ba 546-2044. hea1ed pool, '''asher & ~IA~~.INER'S CENT!'.:R TAX SHELTER 'Bacht"lor & 1 BR, hid pool, * 2 Bedrooms 288:> ll!ENDOZA DRIVE dryer hook up. 962-8994 O~ce in Sto~ Bldg. Rent or FOR ~ALE: Real Estll!C CEi\llENT \VORK. no jo;tb too s111all. l'C'l'Oll<•b)r. Frr cstii11, H. Slulliek ;,,1,'·8613 BLOC 8 T.11• .,,s:-o~i';1~'ays Pat i ri s~l 'l.'r'1•'1'~-P.c111odcl­ i11i; Lil:. <i !.:{ti'·::' Housecleaning 6735 Sewing ====-"--= 6960 maid i:;ervice. Kitchens & *Swim Pool, Put/green l & 2 BR apts. 2 splil-level.1-----------· $154~. Bt>au•r sh?P· Corp. 1v $230.000 lax Joi;:; TV avail. 450 Victoria (Nr * Frpl, Indiv/lndry Jac'is Cl.D: bl!ns. No pct s. Laguna Belch 5705 sc·nie equip. 149 Riverside next 5 yrs. so~;. in I crest or Harborl. 1845 Anaheim Ave. 54r5421. See fo.tgr, Apt A Ave,, N.B. 646-2414. nio1'l". Box ... 1 876 Dai ly Pilot 2 BDRl\f, 2 BA, ~unken liv. COSTA MESA 642-2824 VILLA MESA APTS OCEAN FRONT 2 BR, 2 BA. 200 -1000 SQ. FT. Newport!-===~====~ room. f I 1 d 2 BR unfurn, pri pat ios, htd Yrly $250 or $18.'; furn, Yi'IN-Beach Civic Ctr. area. Money to Loan 6320 rp c. cps, rps, e RENT e ·~n only' N"I d Secrrtarial i;cr1'i'""'· 0·3,1,·, ---'------.:C.'-' patio. Nicely furn. Gar poo l. 2 car encl'! gar Chi!· '"' . · ·1 Y ec. .... "' d I . Adul1' "'-t• ''18-'°'' ::,"-'-"1""00"1. Blt'd., N' B. 2nd TD Loa n avail. Arlults onl:v. SJT.i l'llo. 3 Rooms Furniture ren 1vc conic. no p <' 1 s ' .. ~ · · · ' ..,,::,... -.-c-o~-., .. -1'.t··.·, ...... c -~-­i:.. FJ.t)OHS. j•Jllos. ,•t1· 1 :rj'1j:c}ll~lbh'·, c~111 l'i•ll, 1;12-~~11 ==-·--- JACl\.S l!OUSEl\EEPJNG COMPLETE 1 IOUSECLEANING :1 18-121:; <i~2'-89:ll * i\PT CLE.<'\NING * F11~! & lhorough 642-816"1 \l'il11an1!' Cleaning Ser'" HAY S: Bc;n:h Jani tonal l:lii Baker. $-10--0896 eves, $19.95 & UP please! $160. Ali-;o furn SJS5. CLEAN, spacious l BR, on MERRIMAC WOODS 7l9 \V. \Vilson. 6~6-I2Jl. i;('cluded stn>et. So. Laguna. AIRPORT CENTER Prnrnrl. conlfrjenli;o l .,,~1.11 .r Contraclors 6620 carJ>l.'IS, windo1vs, lloo1·s. elc. Ne1v 1. 2 & 3 rooin Jcluxe 642-2171 545-0611 H«~ .~-Con1111i·'1. 6h>-1 •101 :~onth·T~Mflnth Rentals z BR. 11., BA. Stu<t••. N·.w SIJ5. 49!l·ll15 Furn unlls avail Sc>P ad 11n. " " der class 5100." 125 l\1crri· ~\O'IDDEE'POSELSIECTION cpt:§ & drps. F an1il Yl---------- \V "-'"' ""00 T 0 .A.C. welcon1e · . r.l)U\J Add1tJtu1i; -Pal tos-s u l I es· A cl J • 11 e '"' Srrv1n£! lfa\'l:.or a1·r.t '.'(< .,.,.,, C1\HPETS, \\'inUows. firs. i\J A f Bl I r· .. Bluel; Vrn1T,;..Drh·1•\•;;iys- 1' ac rl 1'1r vc · ro rn Sattler i\1orfga ge Co. PlonlC'rs. ti!:!-!:18:J2 C'lr. P,,r.s ul' Con1r'1. Xlnt • Drcssn1aking -Alterations . Special on coal hen1s * &IS.6~46 * TILE, Ceramic 6974 * Vl'.'l''l(\ The Tile Man* Cu~t. "·ark. Install & repair~. Nu .job loo :.1nall. Plaster pal('h.' Lcetking ~hower 1·cp:111·. Sli-l:"!Ji/846-0200. Tree Service 6980 mac ay. •"'.J"VJ l1FRC Furniture Rental! . Dana Point 5740 $143 & up -ATTRACTIVE, l Jl7 \V. 19th, O f 548·3481 ____ "1_7·_294_3 ___ l"-'=c...:..:.;.;::_ __ _;;:..;.; bdr., pool, util paid, garden LGE. 1. BR. Pool. Crpts & 2 BR & den, S1J;'}. mo. _s_12_;_. Call ;H6-7S43. .1::6 E 1"ith :-ill'Cl'I \\'Ol'k Reas: Rrr~. j 1$-4lll /\dditions il~cn1odcli11i; TREES Pruned, topped, 600 SQ. FT. 2 offices & -• WIN"'O\VS DIRTY'. d '" living, adults, no pets. 1800 di-ps Kids ok. 1998 Maple Heal<'d pool. ocean vie1v. · d' M J'rrd fl. l,;cr11•ick, Lie. ..., remove . ~" yt'S exper . re0ceptionci;11"Ci;; a 1.1acenl lo ortgages, T .D.'s 6345 oi:;.6olt * ;).19.2170 Free csl. 15 )'C1t1'S rxp. Aerial ioive1• eqp'd. Wallace A\'e .• C.l\l. _c_.,_t•_M_.,_• ____ 5_1_00 _::A~p~t !3,~s~<:8-~28~08:_:o~e~64:6~-~709:'~·._ 1_<_,...,...'"~'-'~•~e_<~96-'-"24~09-. __ _ range ounly a rport. l=~===-c=~==~= Johnny Dunt1 642-2364 494-4:JOJ and 638-1234 540-8814 ~EASONED l"=°"===cc--"'"--·I AOI. apt. older male $80 2 BR. sundeck, gara~e, REAL ESTATE ·mo., comp. fu rnished Call BRAND NEW --~E~·,~id:'~·~A~d~u~l~"~·:S:l~"'~·-·l--G_e_n_e_r_ai _____ _ Silt ALL au· h . , 4 -l~t TD's: SJ.237 1\pp!'O\. Carpet Cleaning,_.....;6~6;:.25: TREE SERVICE, gen'J yard i " ice on usy c.01. hal «·1ch· S'' oil r . -Ironing 6755 cleanup. SPR I NK LER after 5. 278 E. 23rd St., c.r-.t. ::.40-4431 or f>.1~3776 * NASSAU PAL.\1S * 2 & 3 BR. AdulUi only, no Rentals Wanted 5990 77 E. 'k~d2S~R. Poo~Z.364J $150 & $170 r~;: ~~;ll Camino Dr, ner Costa i\1('sa. $53/nionth · · , ' '' _ r ur .i~ A-01\ shan1poo Christn1as utilities included. 642-6560 inn~. IQ ,,.. Di~·. 491·l21U srecial $7.50 rni-lcss for IRONING Jn rny home, $1 REPAIRS 646-584'"'°8==- $j.JIJIJ ls1 TD. S"(, 6 1i10~. halls cic. /\!sn <.'omp hr. /\Iterations. Also GENE'STRE'ESERV: HUNTINGTON BEACH Sca~onrrl. Dur 2'~ yr~. 12--;, housecln'g 827-3181 babysitting. Call :J45-7641 Trees, shrubbery trimmed, ' Atkinson·Peebler Apt& UTILITIES PAID 3 BR, 2 B.~ upstn. Hui;C' Air Conditione d D1~c. ·l~~-8100 HJT-1021 evl". C,\P.PET & iipholstci:v stc<im &/or retnoved. 549-1359 ON BEACH BLVD. ANNOUNCEMENTS ric3 nc<I, "J~o carpet in-Landscaping 6810 l BR. laundry. 8dults. 1 & 2 Bdrm, 2 S\\'im pools. roon1. New shag cpl. Bltns. • 691 Victoria -548-6138 Adults only, no ~ts, Furn $179 per n10. 5.>1-6151 if desired. 642-3122 ~=c...,~-:=~~~-4ll w. ,""· C•)TI M.s• 301 Avocado St, C.t.T. 2 BR. studio $165. Crpls, Qrps, r: 445·0111 Sec l\lgr on premises bl1ns. Pvt p11.lio, encl gar. ~.""'"l•!l «•l'lllrinit MESA MOTEL , . -~=~=-===~-Adults. r>49-0·133 ~ ~' ~1.,1er' .. LOW WEEKLY RATES * HARBOR GREENS • LANDLORDS • ·I<;nchen, TV's, maid ser· BACHEU)R unrurn 1r 0 m Newport Beach 5200 FREE RENTAL SERVICE . vice. Heated Pool. $llO, A1so avail 1 • 2 & 3, I ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~! Broker 5.'W-6:l82 64&-9681 Bdrm. Heated pools, child \VANTED TO LEASE; Vcty Newport Bea ch 4200 .I & 2 BR furn & unfurn. $150 care center, adj to shopping, SPACIOUS new 2 bdrm O.C.C. ~Br unfurn house. • $11:5. Cpts, drpg, bltns, No pets. 2 bath. Nr. shopping. Occ~py J~n 20 .. pvt ply. Box pool. patio. 1525 Placentia 2700 Peterson \\'ay $240 per mo. :'>I 817 Daily Pilot. \>.,"ATERFP.ONT w J boat ~~C..=~"'=M-"ca~~546-0.1==70~ NEED 2 BDR APART!llENT · riock. I.o""IY 2 BR, l"tio. HACIENDA HARBOR Mariner Square Apls. foe ""de' IHJO Mo. ca 11 Desk space availablP In and NOTICES ~lallarton. rtr.sults g11nr. For TAKATA NURSERY nC\\·est officr buildin;: at . fl'f'r "~'I. Call &10-~971 tk>;.;l Design prime location in f-luntinl!· Found (Fr@e Adsl 6400 c ·-,,-R-P_E_'I_' -&-· -t·.;.·,.~rn-'-,-.1c-,-.,-m-g: Sprinklers Installed ton Beach. Ah· conditioned. -:-----,, • , < 1 d • 1. D · p · ·1 1 II d beauLiful entrancr. fJ·onl· 3 ·\LL hu.f 1·11hll' du;::. 1·udy or "Y ~r1·.11·r -x. 11ua 1ty rai n 1pr ns a e age on Beach Blvd .. rcai· la!I, h:q·iit·~,;. l"ot111d .~nn. 1101·k .. Cali ;>1,.r!in& foi· Tree tl'1n1 & Clean-up leads lo privatl'.! 11arkin:;. night on CtJhSt l111•y. r1r Mon· bnghrnr~s! fi12-S:i:?O 516·0724 lol. $50 per n1onth fat' ;11·•·!i Bay, :-i. Lag u n a. Diamond Carpet Clrancrs PLANNING to movc't You'll spact. ~sk 11no c11a11·.;. ·l":l-:;!'io 1li7 21st SI, Costa ~\C'sa flnd an an1a:dng number of available for S5. Bu~inrss -. -.-~~------houi·s answering ""rvirc :;i.\J.\LI .. Blnl'I< f!•1nale rlog lfon1r & Apt Clc11ning home!' in loday's Classified available for $10. All iitili· 11/hr"11 n1 rkg:;. \Ve I l 6~5-1 317 Free e~hn1atr~ Ads. Check them now . ties paid except telephonr. l1 11111rd. Collar ha~ br«n DA ILY PILOT 17875 BEACH BLVD. ... UNTINGTON BEACH t'P111u11'd. Vic Bay S!. Ci11. fi 12-:':l'i.I ANNOUNCEMENTS and NOTICES ANNDUNCtMENTS ond NOTICES Upholstery 6990 CZYI<OSKf'S Cusbn. Uphol. European Crp.ftsmanship l00!7o fin? 642-141>4 1831 Nt'\Vporl Blv, CJ\f. BUSIESl' marketplace in to1vn. Th!: DAILY PILOT Classified section. Save money, time & cfiort. Look now!!! ANNOUNCEMENTS and NOTICES Yrly lsP. 6'i3·twl or 697-5918 1244 Irvine Ave., N.B. 842-6920 aflrr ~1 P~l. NEW Adult living 11n1ts. l &. 2 Bedrooms. Bltn~ & dsh1,hr. Pool, G11n1ges. ll:il.$1711. All ut1] ri<I. 642-4321 FOUN.cU~.-B~J~,-,,-&-· -,.-h-it_c_k_H· 1r11 11· enllar near ?200 block 1;f rl ~··ent1a Ave. S31-2:ii~ •·r i; 12-::r, r:: :L::o::sl:_ _____ 640l _L_o.;.at;_ ______ .;;6,;,40.;.1 Personals 6405 · Corona del Mir 4250 ' 2 BR, l BA, h\lt/oct:'an k h.<t ~'. Vie1v. Pri flat i o, ,\dulti't. no pets. $200 yl'ly. 67:<:-7629 No pct~. 2·1l .1.vor.11do SI. (')'.[. &12·29'15, 6~2-.).101 Newport Bea ch 4200 Newport Beach 4200 Grind Opening -Immediate Occupancy OAKWOOD The best of two worlds • your home end your country club For your homt, seltct from i inqle, one a nd two bedrciom apartments. Furn ished o r un · f urnished, each is professionally decorated a nd includes carpetin9, draperies, all-electric Westln9hous'e appHences, st o r a g e space aplenty and pri ... ate bale.any patio. Just steps fro m your door is • whole world of exclusiv e country club recre at iori : • Professio nal site Tenn!i Courfi • Res ident Te nnis Professional •nd Shop • Olympic size Swimming Pool • Whirlpool Baths • Paddle Tennis, Volleyball, Basketbtll Courts And a 20,000 squi re foot clubhouse offers t hese features: • Separate Men's and Wom1n'1 H ealth C lubs w ith Seunts • Indoor Golf Driving R•"9'• Billi ards Room • Theatre TV Lo u"9t, Art Studio, Party Rooms Models Optn 10 A.M. To 8 P.M. Otily UNTS FROM 5155 ro SllO OAKWOOD GARDEN APARTMENTS 1100 • 14th Sftut, N1wport Ptione: 642~1 170 811ch l ~~~~~'i\':;';''l'lVi1:J;;l ~R~oo~m~s~f~o~r-R~e~n~t-~S~9~9~5 1._n_d_us~a_I_ R_ ·-~!_•1_6~_0 'YUL·,-..l; 1,. 111 a I e t'''"· l~RACIOUS ADULT LIVING ------' ,. 2 Br. 2 Ba. hi·l'iSf' bld.s-. i-:,.. $15 \\'!\ S.: llP 11·/ ki1chr.n ~:io. NEW BUILDING blk/g:ry, f\'1'nr1· i'r f)OC'dlf' citing bay & ocean Vl('ii. \\'k ~t111ho •tP1• 2376 Nc11porl 111\:o.;, 1'ic, 1\!Csa tlrl l\lar. ,!(lt'lllri J100l, <' 1('va1 or!'-. Bl\'d .. »,IS-91'.i:i 1260 Log1111 Ave., Co.sta l\l~i:.a ;H.)-420/:: ~ublcn•;,ne11n t'k'g. 11 o ;it ------Each l1nit li25 sq fl, 2 orr. C1\Lrc·-o'~-"o~l=·-t_«_t -,-t-k · 2 110 '"' "' " ,, '· 'ac ' ~Jin~ 11\'ail f111· 1t'11anls. Motels. Trlr. Crts. 5997 lC"l's, . l't'~( roonis .. · 1-0 11'hllc & orange, 491-55:!1 or 612_2:?\'12 -.~--f'lel.'ll'lt. 1\mp!c parking. 191.6600. \\'EEK.LY 1·ntrs Sea I.ark C. Robert Naltress Realtor 1 ~==~~-----1\F.1\I~ Ct>llch SH;~, f't'l' n10 j\lotcJ, 2301 Neivport Blvd., Cos-la l\1csa 642·1~85 YELLO\V & \1h11r k1lr••n, LO:-i"T SIAi\.lESE C,~'f LOST: f'r1nale Irish ScttC"l'. PrizC'd 1~t Ins! llf'<l'r I loai; Fir.a Collar \\'Io 1v n f' r ' i: tl\'lspila l Sa lu rrlay, na1nr. Vir. Fairview . & Drcf'111brr 20111. Vnur yrnri; Avocndo. 6~1-384:> old, d(irk ('olor, 111:11" llad 1·oll;ir \\'ilh nan lt· "Cvgnac" CAi\1EO Blond part Persian 1>1u! nan1r Qf l'l\\ll<'r. lloi·st fem 11lc cal. l yr olcl. Nr.ed5 Ch1rsi, 11 .11:1 1':. Bay A\r .• 111edicution. Lost on Avon Balboa. 67Z.-232~' or 675-;11:;:; _S~t~··_N_.~B~·-"'~1_-~27~6~5----1 ~Tl~·. Cozy 1 hdr .~ den. Cos1a i\ll"~a !nni; l1t1ired. \i1·. Col!cgc & t'qlla('c. Bcaincd trilln~~ .. 's'A"N~D'\~,.~s~·=rn=A=I"L~E~.R~C~O== Lott 6100 \Vil~n Sts. 5118-391jj LOST: Red t. a br a d or l"l'plrd. <lrp~. i;tovc & rrfnr.. . URT ~"'----·---'-'-'IJRISI-£ Sctll'r, Tu;;tin & ~i Reh·icver male, l\1is~inn Adlrs Only, no pets. 6i.l-Ul9 ~~~1c';ifj.8;~~I now. i 1ax 26·. :ISO DEGREE VIE\V fllar. Cilf. s.tS-J.34T ~ Viejo area. Reward. LOST or stolen "Duke" Male .Irish Setter. S mo. 12/20. Vic Redlands & Santa Isabel C.M. &IS-13(1.) of ocean & c:oa..~tline, smalltl~=.:..:::::;..:c:::..:::.;.:___ 837·39Zl' East Bluff 5242 Income p;;perty 6000 but bldablC' lot, Laguna Bch. DAILY Ptt.OT D 1 flt E. A. OLD Engli!'.h sheep dog, GREEN Parakeet '"' yellow r>atch on head, friendly, ''ic l'\1esa Vei'cle. Rew. 54~3833 Paving & util in an. 1.st of LINES. )'ou can use them male. appx 8 mos old. vie • NEW DELUXE • DUPLEX CD;\f. 2 hon~~-)T, Lci\v dn \~·/tnw nl0 · pyt. for ju:§t pennies a day Dial Fairvie\v Dr & Avocado, " Bl', 1 Ba arr. for lra.c;.e SSJ.000. $3,000 down, Income 491-8100 or 491-11~7 642.s673 • C.l\t_ 642·38~j SOCK rr TO 'E~T! Jnrl. ~par. mai;tr. ~uitt', din $415 ?-.lo. 675-00·1'1 BEACH LOT 1-==========~=2'=======~'===~~~~=~== nn. &: dbl, izaragr, :111111 !=====:::::==::== .... e.~· s r ,),? x.....,. . trps rom ON'nn. door opener avail. Pet "k ~~-s.!_n~ Property 6050 $22,000. part n1ay be ~•11Jn1., r oot i 11'f", a~a, Nr. Cath· (l lniifcd. Su o 111 It ofll'l's olic (lua'C'h. rt!-:SlDl':NCE. g<1r11ttr. on 673.56!)3 • ONLY ~4J e l11r;:1• t-1·1 lot. S2LOOO. ~22 '°'~--------SGJ Amige$ \\'ay, N.B. Sunsl't Ur. C)t :J.11-909"1 S: 0131. lot I\'/ old Sr;111. ~1~·lt' ===='==='====I 616-<l'i-'R h~r. 3 Br. I na. RcriuN:"rl 10 Corona del Mir 52so1I========== S17.000 for OHICk :i;;i!e bv 8usine5s Rent al 6060 Q\l'nC"r. \~6-.1767 · ROOf\1 Suilahle for gUt shop, • -men'" shop or ladles shop. ~ Call Jim Berk!'.hil'e, 673-9405 STORE. Ole., de!k spact. ON TEN ACU::S 1842 Newport Blvd. C.J\I. 1 & 2 BR. Furn 6 Unturn $50. mo. 518--0SS.11 F'ircpla~• I prlv. patil;$ I Pool.-;, Tennli-Contnt'I Bkrst. Offic-e Rent1f 6070 900 Sea L&ne, CdM 644·26ll a !Mac-Arthur nr. ea.at Hwyl FINE STORE/OFFICE For Ltase COROLIOO ,\p;s. 2 Br. On Vl1 Lido Lake Elsinore 6202 3 ADJOINING hillside lnkf'vie\v Joli;, near casino $3,IXXI. !i36--Ul9 3 ACRES 40 miles nonh of Rtono ~ar l·toney Lake al foot of S1emu1. Le\'el, clear, $3,000. 5.16-2449 R. E. W1nted 6240 I.Q\\1'r ll',·els., ~tudios.. pen!· Approx. 1500 Sq. Ft. hougc, f'rpl<:11.. pool, dbl. 50c Per Ff. S'IALL llon1*' Or 0 \IPIE"x. Cllf'Tlt)l'I~ pattOS, $1*) • $220. LIDO REALTY INC. Corona ri~l ~lnr. By Pr1n· 67.'\.lJiS 3377 Via Lido 673-7300 ciplc. Call 67~1Sll, $HIS mo .. 11til\tlf'~ pi.Id ~IODSRN 3 rnocn suilr.. TI-IJ:: ~N NEVER S~ 2 BR., R•rage. Yc~rly. cp!~ .• air cone!, jAnitor i;er. Class.ifJt'd·s ac:11on JYIWl'r. "'r F~y. Dkr. !WG-3S6l \1r.(', :1mpJe p;irklng. Jo'or lln 11d to i;rl1 11round 1IW!' J150 mo. 1 BR. l blk l'l So. (,.'nhl 1!1 Nat. llk Bldf. dcx:k. dial fl,12·5678. markf'I, avail Jan 1. Adult& 230 E. 17th Str'Ct'I only, no rt&. 6J3..8936 Coeta 1'1esa 642·1.W DAILY PILOT \\'ANT ADS! I ·,;..;..;.;;.;..;..;,;.;..;.._~.;.;;.:.;.ir_~~~~~---,r--~~~~~......,~ FANTASTIC VOYAGE Thr l\'ol'lds 1110~1 beauti.fu/ ship !hr. 1~· Clipper Barque ;\I 0 NT I:: CRISTO leaving MOn foi· aiuund !hr 'l'ol'ld. Rooo1 lrft for fi\'I" tontribut. lng n1c11 or 1l'01nl'n c r cw n1embel's. Also needed; Doc. tor, Cook, Ship's ca11"'nter. i\fARJNA CORTEZ, San Di· ego_ 1714) 291·8259. *Don't! Ca11115 if you ~till believe: in ca1·e s ly!c rla!ing. 21 Hr 1·ct.'Q1d1n; Of:A:"\GE C'O. 517·6668 .. Llq'.:NSEO * dpu·11u.i l R~ing, advict on all rn11ner~. Lcivr, Jlf11n·h1J.!C, B11sincs~. :112 N. 1::1 Ca1111n11 Real, San Clc111rnrf", '192-9136. 492-0076 10 A,\T -10 PM ALCOHOLICS Anoeymoua Phone 542·7217 or write 11o P.O. Rox 1223 Q>Sta Mesa. Announcements •r ___ _ 6410 f"REE b1111ic bo11Hng count offered to public by Balbol ~\Wt Squadron (!Vl'l)' J\fon. hight for 13 wcck11 b('&:innll'IJ( 7 pin !\Ion. Jan. 12 111 Ni>11port Ji<'rbor y •th 1 Club, 720 \V, Ray Ave .. Nt"1vpor1 Bfo;ich. No IHlVAnct rc i;::i!lfr11tion need~. IW2'tl'lf'r at ch111~. Rrin: notebook l\Nt ni)(h l. Que.'!· llon~: Call 67:1.-18.'.~; Pt.ANNING lo mov!!? ''ou'U find an •mazing number c home!ll in tod3y'a Cbinified Ad~ Check !Pem l'lClW. • Are You Letting Cash Slip Through Your Fingers See If You Have, Any Of These Things A DAILY PILOT WANT-AD ' 1. Stov1 2. Gult1r 3. Boby Crib 4. Electric S1w 5. C1mer1 6. Wi11her 7. Outboord Motor I. Storeo S.t 9. Couch TO. Clorlnot 11. R1frlg1r1tor 12. Pickup Truck 13. Sowing Mlchino I 4. Surfbtord 15. Machin• Tools 16. Dishwasher 17, Puppy 11. C1bin Cruiser 19. Golf Cort 20. B1remet1r 21. Starap Collection 22. Dinette Set 23. Pl1y Pin 24. Bowling 1•11 25. W1ter Skit 26. Fr1111r 27. Suite••• 21. Clock Will Sell Fast! • 29. Blcyclt 30. Typowrlttr 31. Bar Stools 32. Encyclopedia 33. Vacuum Cl11n1r 34. Troplcol Fish 35. Hot Rod Equipm~ 36. Filo Cablnot 37. Goll Clubs 31. Sterling Silver 39. Vlctorl1n Mirror 40. Btdroom Sot 41. Slide ProJ1ctor 42. Lawn Mower 43. Pool T1blt 44. Tires .CS. Piano 46. Fur Coit 47. Dr1pe1 48. Linens 49. Horse SO. Airplane Sl. Org1n 52. Exercycle S3. Rare Books 54. Ski Boots SS, Hi"h Chair 56. Coins 57. SI. Eltctrlc Tr1in Kitten 59. Cl111ic Auto ~o. Cofftt Tobit 61, Motorcycle 62. Accordion 63. Ski1 64. TV S.t 65. Workbtnch 66. Dl1mond Witch 67. Go-Kirt 68. Ironer 69. Camping Tr1ll1r 70. Anl iqut Furniture 71 . Tape Rtcordtr 72. S1ilbost 73. Sports Cir 7 4. Mlttr111, Box Spgt 75. lnbo1rd Sp11dbo1t 76. Shotgun 77. S1ddlt 78. Dirt G•m• 79. Punching Bag 80. Baby C1rri1g1 81. Drum1 82. Rifl1 13. o .. k 14. SCUBA Ge1r d_ :. . Ii Thne or any other extra things aroun .. the oUH 11111y be tumid into cash with a DAlt.:Y. Pl lOT WANT ·1iD so Don't Just Sit There! DIAL DIRECT 642-5678 -------.----------------·-~-~----------- ANNOUNCEMENTS ind NOTICES JOBS & EMPLOYMENT JOBS & EMPLOYMEN r M•K~HANDISE FOR DAILY PILOT lf!J. MERCHANDISE l'O• SALE AND TUDI 'obs--Men. Worn:. 7100 Jobs-Men, Wom. 110<> SALE AND TRADE An.OU -monts "10 -• Furniture IOOOFurnlture ... n..... -* DRIVERS * SERV ICF~ $talion Attend: Fi iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiijiiiijiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil' $1'.:NSlTIVITY TRAININC or p/lln1t> 1·rnpl. 7 A~l-IP~·I [ • \VORK SHOP No Experience & 11Pt.l-7AJ\1 ~run11 open, A program oI Interpersonal Necessary• Salary + .Comm. t.1u~l he exercises Lot 11mall self-4J. • local . rcs1denl. Apply rectfd croup11 Minimal Must bav. dean 0.Ufcrnla Richfield, XlO W. ec..st HW)' _ .. ·-.;... ... drMnc -Apply N.B. "'-•~ ~~·~· 10 -· YELLOW CAB CO. l;;-;;'O'U=;-=.,--.-; 5 PM. lll6 E. ltth St. SE RVICE STA. At· .161S I IMPLOYMENT o.ta Mesa tendant-Saleaman, tun timt> '-'--:------·I----==..::::::. ___ , eves, Exper, only. Apply al JobWanted, FRY Cook, f;xper . 2590NewportBlvd.,C.~I. Women 7020 Gravt'yard & relief llhilt, SERVICE Station Attendant, DAY WORKER 1-lonest, depeMable $2.30 hr. rAi2 ~\'. 19th ,s1., FUU time. Union Oil, J64j " C.?tl. Adams, C~f. 54~1206 Call anytime 541.zm FINANCIAL Planni ng , SPRAY Man r·or Roo f =========I JnsuraJ'ICf!, Real Ea late, Coatinr. One who '"ill take JobWintM, lnve1tment Counselor. pride in his work. Apply in Me>n & Women 7030 Guaranteed Leads. Better pmon, 837 w. 17th St., C.M. -'----'---than $25,000/yr. lncotnt-, TEEN Director to plan & JAPANESE Schoolgirl. Live Box 1863, N.B. direct daily k speelal event! In mother'• hl'lper. Ph: Foreltn C•r Mec:h•nict for girla 'Jth thru 12th grade 962-7171 c--' benefit Incl paid 35 In wk. Prtv, youth work .....,... ~· 8• dcs.irable. Over 21. Cail Jol»-Men, Wom. 7100 vacation, ~roup in.!, uni-f.li~ Rustenb:lcll 646-7f81 ----~----! fom1s furnished free. Good1==~=----­Adwrtialng Agency comm. schedule. Ask for TIRE ~11\N, txperienced 011- Sh•rp Stc:retary f o r Joe Moo~ Ph. M0-1764. ly, for changing til'es. in- f•st -p•ced Newport G R • . CTORY ~talHng shocks, etc. Good •-h • A n1t.NT 1'A * working conditions. Paid iri= ue•c Agency. Ty-· All 1 C il r-expenroce. p i11scs. a surantt, fringe benefits. Ap-65-70. Shorlh•nd 100, &12-3<7' NB ~ · · ply in penKln. org•niz• & f o 11 ow SHIPL'"'"' h U d llAIR STYLISI' A. It . ~ • t ru. n er35. CE \V/Fot!o11·ing. Ex c I 11 s i vc TIRE SERVI Phone: 642-3910. 425 Shop. 420 \V . Lincoln, Anaheint N. Newport Blvd. Cull -642-63.J? WAITRESS, need an attrac· AIRCRAFT 1\.IECHS. HOSTESS five one, for food, cocktail!>. Y,'ork ovrrseas. Co111acl Tom 21 or ovt'l'. Start $7.JO pc1' hr. Apply in person. El ?11oro Gasper. 714-774-2610 Don Josr' Rt s 1 aura n I t665:i Pac. Coast Hiway Sun. Alsen1bly. 962-7911 srl Bch alter 5:30 EXP'D. ELECTRONIC HOUSEKEE PING & \VE have an opening for a .. ASSEMBLERS . l\Tanagt>n\t'nl of 2 young beginner in circulation W1nng & P.C. Board rabr1ca-boys. Afternoons. 3PM-5:30 n111 nagcmcnt. Permanent lion. Appl. in person PM. i\'.lon-FrL Call 546-46i1 situation for h igh school TRANSICOi\I CORP. all 6 Pl\1 , gradualt whO has completed !ril \V. 181h SI., C.i\t. HSKPR .. 24 hr care. light his mil itary obligation and ASSISTANTS & hskp'g & meals. Terms to is looking for a business RECEPTIONIST be ucgoliatefl. Call Long with a bright future. Con- Prepared resume mu~t ha\·c Beach Conimunlty Hospital. tact Benton Willi11.n1s at the !wo yrs. dental r..\'l>('ri..-nt•f'_ l!at[i('ld sl'ction, room 107. DAILY PILOT for an in· E\'e. hrs. /\JI un ion bl'ncfils. 1IOusrKiJ.:PER & childl ="="'=''=w=.=====o=_:: Sala1·y $:!.4·1 fWI' hi". Call ro1 i.;a1·,, a·~ da ll'k $50 \\'k + s h I I ,. 760Q app1 , roi·~"~ir~::_ O::~·i.·iJ~ rni .~ brci. Pd. vac. 540-9212 ~~ n1truc ion BABYSl!fER for lr1JChrr. LEGAL S.•c-rrtary, n1ui,;I be r<'Spon:-;1bl~, lo takr ca re of cxp'd. good skills. salary 6 yr old g:1rl, 91 ~ Yt' old hoy. open Cd~l s7;,..2577 aft 1Jt:hl lron1 2:4:. 10 ~i:JO ,,;"°"'=n.o-;o:;;;;;;;::;;---;::11. beg. Jau. J. Call K:\{)....6484. ior LANDSCAPE roren1an .or intervil'll'. Reis de~ ired. labor 11·/forcman pot~nt1al11~;;.;~J Lake Forest area. to 1vork for cxtabhshed ====;;-==c;--;;I company w/new branch ot-BABYSITTER \V1u1ted : 2 fi e(' in El Toro area. Boys 2 &: 5. Star! Jan 5th. 5 1131-0926 or SJO.MlO eves. day \l'k 8-:l. l\ly home. l\lusl -~=-=o~~-=,..,-~­ havr. 01vn trans. 6'1~140.-1 i\1ALE COOK -PM. Jlosp, ====~~~~.-f!Xp, pttf'd. Contact Person-lb,;!;;;;:;;:"".:: BABYSITTER, full 11111 I' nel Director. So. Consq1 6:30-4 p.m. Thru-l\1on. 1 Comm. Hosp. 31872 Cl'l. child. \Vil! prod . trans. l\f! H\l'Y. So. Lnguno, 4!19-1:111 4:30 p.n1., 64G-1!2·l} E:xt. 3j6 =-------1 • BAP..BI-:R * to .111a1111gc P.1ECHANIC nrcdrd IO fi:-; new B:irbrr~hop; Shl'ralon nly Rllnlhlrr k ~'alcon s111- 8<'ach Inn: ror • "l111ls, call r Prvt party Lo F ~:16 l4'lJ ion 11a;::<ll\ll, , · u ~vans. ,,. ..:_ _ ~36-:l:i~i:, MEN & WOMEN! COi\IPUTER PJ!OG!lAr.f· l\llNU JS THE KE.:Y TO YOUR PROFlTAP,LE fUTUflE! BANK Pcr.sonnt'I t.: x p • --·-=~~""'== 1 .· 1 · .1 ... 1 NCR MECHANICS & SALJ::!:il\.tEN Classes start soon. &eere ai 1a, 1 rnca · , _ · · n · Ir 11 San Diego 1 ff · \I . 450 p1'00t n1achinr operator ..... ,rin s IC 1 ic t ~i ot prog~an1 o er1ng ie. 496-57--. 34061 Doh p k F'rwy. RI Harbor 613-3344 finest equ1pn1ent 11.nd facd-;l.J: cny ar · . rsea.<; More ities available! Real-lime Dr. Capistrano Bch. ~~EN, v.ork o\I\! · computer programming. . . -Jobs than people. Contact ~~~1:°N~1t~ik~;1r~ !~~~'~ Toni Gasper, 714-174-7610 Th A,...,...1-, cine. Apply in person 11-2. * MOTEL MAID • e cv...4U\d.UJ Little John's Inn, 2.0072 N. Part Tin11' Over 30 of~=== Santa Ana. s:.nta Anl!I Hgts. 491 .. 9.136 -n h ...a..-.m <eo:ricr Red Hill • & l\10TEL assistant mgrs or l •ctrrk-waJ Pahsade!'I.) trainees &: maidA 1~·antf'd , a BARBER. Vr'l'.V progressivr shop in brautiful Laguna Bearh. 494-j()~14 2176 Ne1vport Blvd., :-M&-9755 Union lenk S~uer• South T•w1r Suite 4D '>r1ng1, Callf,, 92666 Coll 547-9471 PUBLIC NOTICE DfCOllATOI Gm CAHCIUATIOll OF 11 LUXURY Al'AITMENTS Sponisli & Mediittr-• Funiiturt AU MAND NEW •·pc:. MecHterranean leclroom Suite in Pec.n • IR•9. '!4'.001 ·--.............. _ ••. NOW $161.ot : Gorg1ou1 s,.ni1h Cu1tom Built Sofa with : m1tc:hin9 Love S•1t-Choic:1 of b11utiful l1br;os, IR09. $41t.9&1 ............ NOW $22S.OI . Speni1h Dinin9 S•ts _, ................................... $7LOO Solid Oak End T1ble1 ind Coff•• T1bl11 .. $1t.IO Till D•c:or1tor Tobie lamps IR09. $49.HJ .. _ ........... --... NOW $11.00 Sp1nish Han4Jlng Sw19 ;..mps IR09. $49.951 -.......................... NOW $22.50 · A decorator dream house on display -J rooms of gorgeous Spanish furniture (waa reg. $1295. SACRIFICE ..•..• CREOIT AVAIL. NO MONEY DOWN ht PAYMENT NOT DUE "TIL 1'7C mm RIRNITURE 1844 Newport Blvd.H .. bo~·t.,..,.,;. Costa Mesa Only . Evo~ Nitt 'Tll t -Wtd •• Sit. & Sun. 'Tll 6 · ==----------------- Furniture llOO Pianos & Or9an1 1130 20 PC. "MADRID" 3 Room Group ~'ROi\I l\JODEL HOMES Includes: Quilted sofa •nd chair -2 end !ables I: cot· fee tablt -2 lamps -dreS!- er -mil'rot' -headboard - quilted box 1pring I: m•tt- t'!S!I -S pc, dining room; lable & 4 hi-baek chain. COMPARE AT $7'9.9S $399 WELK'S WARBIOUSE No do1~l'mts only $16 mo. 600 \V. 4th St .. Santa Ana Open Daily g..9 Sat. 9-6 sun 11-6 FORCED to sell 8' Medi!. sofa , 7 pc Basset din nn set, 5 pc Ba!!<srl BR set, coffee &. end thlr. tll 826-09SO Office Equipm•nt IOI I TYPEWRITER. Adding machine, calculator. very reasonablt, Xlnt cond . 892-2423 I022 SURFBOARD -misc. items. hse. hld, good. F'ri. &r: Sat. 6762 Flint, l!B. !!42-2820 Appli1nce1 1100 NE\V 2 dr. GE refrig._ from n1odcl home .......... $178 Relrigerator111 .•.•. Irom "8 Con&Ole Color TV, conternp cab., n(".v picture tube • $248 Whirlpool auto \vashcr •• $50 DUNLAP'S . GRAND PIANOS: AU New .. 10 Ye&r Warnnti : Prices rood until Dec llat ·• Knabe 5']" smo now ntM Knabe 5'8" s.3190 now $2'100 Knabe 6'4 " J39.>0 now $32otl 1'~ischt'r 4'7'' $11'9S now $150Q Yamaha S'S" $2445 now $185Q Wurlitzer S' $2245 now $1890 These ~ legitimate ttdUC-: lions and are ex~J.1 good values at theee pnc., 90 Daya cuh, low 1.nttrellt on _inatallment Mle1, X-mac delivery 1\1&1'. GOULD MUSIC· 2Gl5 N, Main, S.A. 547.(1611 IF you are buyin; a. Piano: or Ora'an this Chriatmu ·a: · fire interested in somt rial~ ly rreat deals, µleast sOOp \VARD'S BALDWIN STUDY 1819 Newport, C.M. 64l~ifj Open Every Nile -' li Sunday Altf!rnoon .. ' fIANOS &: ORGANS • NEW&: USED •Yamaha PW10I OII&r11 • Thomas Orpns e Kimball Pia11Cl8 • Kohltt &: Campbcl.J COAST MUSIC NEWPORT &: HARBOR c.o.ta Men • f.U.2851 1 Open 10-6 Frt 10-! sun ~5 HAl\1~t0ND Steinway, Yl.Jl'): , aha. New It usM pianos oi mo~t makes, Best buys Ja : BEAUTY OPf'ralor, frn1a!c, prefer 1\·/rl ic ntclr , Progressive new s a I on . <!94-0054 newport . personn~ _agency * AIRLINE & 1815 Ne\vpon Blvd., C.M. TRAVEL CAREERS* 1---..,-;;541-~7;;;711'7;;;;­ So. Calif. •t Schmidt Mus"i~ ' Co. 1907 N. Main., Santi. A'.Da' ' BOYS 10-14 Carri.er Routes ()ptn tor &:'3 DOVER DRIVE NEWPORT BEACll 60-3870 S1ation Agent Ticket Sale!'L Reservations * COLOR TY SALE *l ~ .. ~OP~E~N~EV~E~N .. IN ... CJS'"' AND SUNDAYS • Until Chrl1trTN11 LlaW>a Beact>, So. Lq\lJ\I DAil..Y PILOT .....,,, Wishing you abundance in 1970! Air Freight • Cetio Communicationa Travel A&Tnl 1970, 73" Color TV, hand· aome walnut cabinet, while they lut $299. Perfect for CJuiatmu. First payn1Mt GOULD MUSIC B kk F/c <See IL~ for March 1970 at Hendenon'• 214,!i N. Main, SA S.7.(UJ · oo-r =--.~----A t h ('I Co I bl "pn,,perity insurance.") AIRLINE ~-...-~-· r .. uu, top-no c na . s a e 548-7808 baby crand, wttb Ampi &. reliable. Beaut. NB 01f· SCHOOLS KENMORE Auto wuher, 11 e xp re11lon , Heif k". Top "'"'""· Call Shk· *********** PACIFIC cycl•~ la" mod•!, xlot RaohmaninoU play h I 1 k>Y, 546-5410 NURSES Registered • even· corxl. $65. 546-8672 0 r music hl1 way. Alk qu• JASON BESJI" ing & night shifl!l. E:ir. Inquire Today MT~115 tloM! 419'-6261 .. , l:n1ployn1cnt l\gcn1·y benefit~. Apply Personnrl r..o~ ,,,,..., ,...,,.,~ <'A M · < ' 1 • o· t "-c 1 C" 1 '"".....,_ HOTPOINT Eltc d""'"t, late SACRIFICE, Wu r 11 t z er ""' .,.,, ain. '"an a :.na irec or. ,....,. .oas . ull • 610 E lllb SI Sa •• A .,. j I COASTAL A.GENCY-munity Hosp., :11872 Con!ll ~. ·• n... na model, xlnt cond '6-'). Also 1p net P ano, beaut. cond. I So ' -·~tlil 1~="":...:=:":::=::"'=' I Hamll-o ''' dry•r $4c Make offer. 673-3646 Prof•lsional t wy .. ' · ..... guna. ,,,.,, .. · ·1· JOIN -·E FIELD '" ' 'I' rxl 3j6 in 546-8672 or 847-8115 UPRIGHT Practice Piano, EmJ1oym1nt .. P.UNCH PRESS WITH A FUTURE! anticf. blue, Gd cond, $100. A11i1tanc• .&.~/education no ~.rritt! Clll 54(}.1647. A member of SETUP OPERATOR Let us help you qualify. s.wt"I Machlnff 11201=========1 Snelling &: Snellini:: Inc:, $3.00 per hr. Mln l yr expcr. INNKEEl'ERS INSTITUTE T•levlilon 2790 Harbor Bl, C~l ~ Xlnt. benefits. /\pp. in ptr-INTERNATIONAL SINGER Autom•lic zil: zar, Harbor Blvd. at Adams !!0t1, Z.D. PRODUCTS, 3190 Mofel/Hotel/Apt Mgmt Sehl 6 JllOI old. No attach needed Leue Color TV or Black nos OMt.1UNICATJONS TECHS Pullman, Costa Mesa . A D1VJSJON OF, ~i,: h:~.:r:=~ Ir White. Option to~. 'Vork overseas. Con111cl Tom ~PHONE WORK ~o::oo~ winder. 5 Year i cuar . Free 1el'Vice. No de~. Gasper. 714-774-2610 \Voml'tl & Girl11. Pleasant A~nkIM CAUFO~IA Assume pymts ot $5.2? or A-Active TV Rental Co. • :-~===,..,,-:-=c;:-1 tr.JephOne \\'Ork fron1 our of· A · • 42 c"" .,,.,,. (1) S:Z-1153 , • COMPANION for r.ldC!rly ,: N F ll & Classes form every w~k cl;,;;r.00;;;;;',-"..,"';;·,,-'::::,--'a=;:;:;: ~,,...=.;;;,,;:;~:;;.-~~I lady & light housl'keeping ice,. 1. 0 t x1P2 "'sc; ._u, .. _ PHONE FOR APPT. SINGER z1 .. _.,._., portable ll" GENERAL Electrli I 2 dull I · R I par 1me. • ·1 ,,~, '" · n-71"5800 46 -personal portable, like ne-1 or a s, 1 ecp tn. e · Apply 230 \V. \Varner Suite Ask for .oclty ,,.. ~\vin( machine. Xl.nt cond. "" f!rencf!i;. 494·7786 205, S.A. LOOKING for a .alid future Call 548-7938 ~~04old. VHF Ir UHF $Zl COMPUTER ~!ECHS t but aetttng \\lork overseas. Conlact Tom Restaursn NOWHERE! 2 GOOD <:and. 21'' TV' .. $lS Gasper, 714-774-2610 * NIGHT Look lnto a catter •• a Mvt.:;:lc::•;.1.:;1•:::11:::·:__...;;1;;;125:: Ir $Z, • COOK. Exper. For Pt·e-RADIO ANNOUNCER CAMCO drum 111t, a taut:y! 6U-tl5&9 • School. 5 days. Lunch only. DISHWASHER 772-3800 i yr old, natrt wood. Bua, 21" c.oruioie COior TV, wiD. Call 64&-0077 Tnstitute of INJ"t, 11 a: am tom'. 2 demo in )'001' home, )'NI * COOK • .. Apply The Flying Butler 67:1-0977 N.B. 18 Ycan or older REUBEN E. LEE Broadcast Aria matched 14" A two 21" suar. $250. 53)..2010 1601 N. Bristol, S.A. Zlldjen cymbals ·W/fioor .-......,19"'·'"· ""ro=R~T~ABLE=~--'1 AUCTIONEERING i ,;',;";,nd:;;•;:;·,::l500~i:' 833-::;;;;;-"li7.040,-;;:::; Excellent condition. REGULAR 2 WEEK TERM GIBSON Guilar, Les Paul $25. 54WTOt COOK wanted. Exfl(t'. Apply Bt '" buaineu for --·nelf! Cu u-~ " • '"'--! :========::! Odie '!li Relltaurant 2l2 E 151 E . Co•st Hw.. Lea;'.;. to be an a~l~neer. ~1:$65-;:. ~is:: F.; HI.fl & Stereo 1210 171h St .. C.:\1. Newport Beach wESt-BEST School of Aue-tonr. It \\'ahwah pedal. "".:..;..::..;:.;;:::..:=....-...::::.:.: • COOK *· Expcritnt'f'd,l .. iiiiii ... =iiiiiiiii-I ttoneertni. ~ W. 4th, Senta Sacrifice all $450. 891-4816 BEAtmnJL Bouk Apply Surt Ir: Sirloin, 5930 set Be1ty Bnice at Ana, 835-ll•T t~aken, model P ·fi C t H N 8 '--'-'--------BARITONE Uke (Favilla) -•-· aCI C II • wy., . , m l o· condi Wounwf. $315, 642-SS14 Y ~ •SSES tor uJe. Excellent _ tion '7'==:====="?:~1 EXPERIENCED ........... • STITOll!:R """"' $(iO 642-1.84Z .: ........... , COUNTERAlAN ti$4 XeC Sewing. flelp whh Ouialmas ' ~IJ! It~~ City Auto _Parts Agency for Career Girl$ Ideas. 645-l400 Pl • "-• II-WOLLEN SAK T ape . 2012 Placentia, C.M. 410 \V Coast Hwy., N.B. M!RCHANDISI POR IMI • -•rftl . -~. allo Vo)'qtt' a f'AM ILY WANTED to -By 1ppoinl, 6'6-1939 SAL! AND TRADE vr•• EllD SALE• lrlCk Ci r ,. .. -* boy, aie 11, ln Harper .. tuuti • am-.fm radio. 11••k •r1~ School area. Salary open. $7,IOI Pumttvre IOOO 548-ml Pleue 1end phone no. le. Salary plua et.r plus t'X))e~ -Ult l'O'U' X·mN money_ tor .;....:...;.;"'------~1 family description to ~ es, £.xcellf!nt btnetit•. Pre-PRICES SLASHEDI one of thelMl' HAMMOND -------'-- M693. Dally Pilot fer Qra:na:e County tttddent. up to 11>~ Savlnp BARGAINS! M-3, $675; S.112. S,.rtl"I o...fa UOI Mutt have a dtgrtt l'nd c• 8' Sola le: love .eat $1$9.95 $61S: T·200. $~; £.JOO or FOR Salt: Scuba 1tar. rtcr futurt.. Oill Ann, Wt'st-5" Pc Span llft'lfi itl $169.93 A-100 $18915; RT 2 w/PR 40 Stand new. Never uM!Cf;. clW Pu.>nnel, 20C3 West. Klnr Sz quilted m.atttta11 Ir: St~: alto BALD\VIN O"' 9681410 befott: 3 pm.. TIME FOR (jlUICK CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOT cUU Orlve, N.B. 645-2nO box 11prlnas ........ $99.M rUG!lic IC9.i; GULBRAN• SKlS I: bll'ldlnai, Kr)tit&l IJQ SECRETARY \Vanltd, pl'lrt a Pc 8R Kln1. Spell $179.9.> SEN \v/rythm ~; AU.EN 460. $100. time. Yachl Bier. off. 3 day Approvtd Furniture dlx·tneater $2630. • M~im • wk 1\111.rincr Yachta 67>13~ 2100 .Harbor, CM 548-9660 HAMMOND StaVICE STA. i tAN. BE.trUT1F'Ul..Kinabed·qUUt. In <?JR.ONA DEL l'i6~~MO IS YOUR AD 1M · ·-' ~·1 · ~· matmu r-.-.. 1tte un. 28M E. Cotsi ftwy. •-a.o Q.ASSJ:TIEDY SomfODt .. i. EXJ>tt'lC.r~. Lr-.. hme. """ • ""'"..,. ·...,. ()prtn Evea I. S!,in atttrnOqAp brt Aoolclns b' u .• OW m. WANT AD Top -" .. oomnuuloo. uoed Sllli, "'q,r th •-Odirr !16!1 ..,.. --------· foOI S.{'' Hwy .. ur S.h. 8'2-65.16 '""· ~ONE;:::..!c!ft:::..:-:..:'":::""':!!...:-=:::::..:._;..=;,_-----, I ' ' I :- ' '. ' . . . . ' . . ' ! I : ' ; i : I ·-·~ ·-... ----------·------------------------------------------- ' 3 LINES 2 TIMES ' 2 DOLLARS <Any Item Priced $50 Or Less) Pin~h You1·seli A Pile Oi Pe11nies (Or Even Dolla1·s ) Penny Pinchers Dia l Direct for Details 642 -5678 Pile Up ~rofits North Coun ty, 540-1220, Toll Free DAILY PILOT PENNY PINC HER WANT ADS l..:'.-....lL========::::;===============··=---------_...._,_ ___ .,,~_,,, .. ,...~--..,,,, ..... ...,,..-----,====-==···=~=~=~~=~------- - W~.sday, Oe«m~' 24, 1•6t DAILY Pk.OT T~RA~N_S_P_O_RT_A_T_IO_N"'.'."'."'.~ITllAN·~""'"".Sl'O,..-ll_T_A_Tl_!~~~~~~!!~~!!:::f'~llA~N~~~~~~ MlllCHANDISI FOii -------TAANSPORTATION TAANSPORTATION TRANSl'OllTATION SALE AND TRADI Sallboltt 9010 Dune Buggies 9525 Imported Autos 9600 lmoort.-ct 1'utos 9600 Autos #anted 97CO Ustd C1r1 9'00 UMd Cars 990G O\\'NER JU. mullt part \\'ithl --L-IK--'-E-SA-IL-IN_G_?-~1 1'-IEYRS r.tANX mo 2389 FREE TO YOU Sporting Good• 1500 6'10'' f\10SS SURFBOARD Blue pi&;mirnt on bottom &nd b!ue on rails. Excellent con- dition fl'S. Call JAY 5'9-1574 Ml1cell1neou1 '600 ROCK SHOP Christmas Spoci~ls 6" trim saw $17.!IJ 6'' comb. saw & grinchna & polishing units fJ'Om $49.95 l lb. tumbler $26 6 lb. tumbler $29 60 12 lb, lumbler $Ii.90 Also have wme used equip, FREE load of 1na lcrial \\"Ith IL':ach tumbler !"REE cuttini n1atcria1 wiU1 each U\V Supplies, rou.:h inalC't'•al, CO\."'OOU~ {U\l'IL':d fl'~ ~·/pUrchasc) Sig dh;counls on comp. li11e of lapidary r.1achinery 'Lil Jan. lsl. STONECRAFT 179'11 Altamirano Lil.rte <at my ho1nr) H. B, Oprn 9-9, also Christmas eve. S47-tp20 POOL TABLES Christmas Special $275 up, CHUCK'S Z750 llarbor at Adams, cr-.r POOL TAijLES Secard '1ool BRUNSWICK-A i\fF Custom Slate Table From $289 JOO% Financifli: * SECARD POOLS * 532-1992 l23 S. i\lain SI. Orange MERRY CHRISTMAS HAPPY NEW YEAR TO ALLI! beloved Jl('I, med. breed DISLIKE Tl'ESEot 1'~orc1ha1n Ave. :YOUfl&' !l~·t'd I t' r:n a I ll · -.. ' hou.eprt, good hunter-ty pe: • Pay~1enls, hl&h ln!crelt, MS-2729 lows chlldi'f!n frt 10 perm deprec1Atlon. .s 11 p ~otal, • <" • cleanln&'. ln11urt.nct, etc Imported Autos 9600 or temp. borne. 846-3818 PREFER TtiESE ! , ==-----1.2-/'3 e Low OO•t, no WORK ~ AUSTIN AMERICA AFFECTIONATE. Swtet & CAREFREE SAILING! lovable cats. nlOthtr & son. Cal 25 little u $14, ~, da.y AUSTIN AMERICA calico lt blk/wht. need good Try Our Club Plan homes. 673-J314 After 6 NEWPORT SA.ILJNG CLUB Sales, ~rvlet>, Patti Pi\I 12/26 • 675-TIOO • Inuuedlate Delivery All l\fodels J1flLIPLlll 31111 orts FERRARI FERRARI Newport 1mpor11 Ltd. Or· at1a• Oowl11'• only author- b.ed dealer. S.ALES·SERVICE·PAltTS 3100 W. Cout Hwy. Newport Beach 642·~ 540..1764 Authorized Film.ti Dealer KAJUAA NN GHIA 1965 Karmann GI-ii• 2-Goor Coupe, Xlnt Cond. Imn1aculate lt1sldt' and out! One owntr. $ll95. See at 480 AKC Beagle -ti.fa.le, Older. EXCALIBUR 26' SLOOP Top Full trained cold l'J05f! Cond. N<'\.\'p()l'I Slip. A steal hunter. i\lust hr. counlcy at $611>0. Q\\'l'ler f».18-7991 hom•. 1.o .. , cnild.-." -** SABOTS 962-8'!15 12123 ** LABRADOR Retriever.free t\ev.., con1pletc $2--19; 6t>-02'22 to gd home. 8 mos old. 3100 \V, Coast Hwy .• N.B. BroadW11.y, C.P.f. 642-940.i 540-116-i I===='"'====="' 111trong l: healthy. Lots o( Speed-Ski Boats 9030 character. Call 551~10 Sat ------ or Sun. 12123. 14' Ski Boat. l\lerc 4:-ll motor VERY friendly dais)'-lypl' & trlr, nc1v 11·indshic\d. ~ni­ doi:'-11 mos old. very que h<'l~s-\vheel. Leaving: playful. Family \\'/ch.Udren arf'a S•l;icl or best o!r. only. 548-6452. 12123. .~',.73--,"="==,_,,.-.,-,-= KITTENS, 1~ Aby&t;inian & lj' ANTHONY Ski boat. _80 don1est.k, 2-8 mos. old. hP, n1c1·c, !l'g. v.•h.l. tr, $000. 897-5480 or 836-4493. 12/23 frt6-l 181. DARU NG black & \vhitc kit·,Boat .Slip Mooring 9036 tens, nl&le, 1ra1nt>d, good ----- IV/children. 646-4241 12/23 SLIP \VANTED CHILD'S s1ving set-sv.ing:s for 26' &\ILBO,\T -'"hori<Od MG Deator MERCEDES BENZ BMW e BMW e All t>.1odels in Stock for Immediate Delivery. SALES. SERVI CE -PARTS T&M MOTORS. INC. Sffil Garden Grove Blvd . l14·228-l Open Sunday 892-5~1 COOPER ' Q , .1n~~ County '<.. l Jtge~! St!ll'.'ll1011 New & u ~Pd Ml'.'rc('d•_ ~ B('111 Jim Slemons Imps. Wa1rH•1 & M.11 n St. Sanla Ana 54641 14 ?-1.B. '63, 250 SE sed. Every :..tra inc radial 1vf\v, lcathE'r int. stick. 10,000 m i . glider, slide. gsi..J429 12-24 644-2363 or 644-1391 '62 l\llNT Cooprr 997. Reblt Spotless. Priced to .!iell. Pvt PETS and LIVESTOCK Boat-Yacht :~1~:)$1200. or tradc673-9183 ~!~~2442714: 64&-5375 or Dogs · 1125 _chart•~ 9039 1 -;;==~==== :-======= CHARTER A BOAT DATSUN MG * HAPPY SOLUTION TO and sec~ DOG ENJOYMENT?? t\e,1·port Ch.!'istmas Parade '67 DATSUN Tl'aining gift ccrtifica~c!. Parties of 6 _ $20 per hr 4 door, radio. hC'a1cr. aulo- Puppy classes SW. Novice Irie boat. skipper. niixel"!I'. matlc. Excellent condition. obedience. $20. 546-0'389 R 1· ti ""0000 Low mi. (VWJ 1071 ?-1ARTINCREST KENNELS ese1va ion ca v-to-,., $1295 AKC Red " \l'hile male DA.Y & 1-;v1-; CHA~TERS Harbour v.w. Cock S iel Chr1stn1as Parade. $J5 hr. up er . pan ~ u PP Y · inc. skipper. 12 people '10' Beautiful Cbr.1st~.as houseboat. Holiday t.1arine AtrrHORIZED present. Xlnt d1spos1Uon, 642-522.l SALES • SERVICE has had shots. 197-1088 all£'-========= ~ Pt.l k I ' 18TI1 BEACH Bl... 842-4435 • w . da,)'S. Mobile Hom•s 9200 HUNTINGTON BEACH LOVE FOR CHRISf~1AS! * Great Dane Puppies YEAR ENO NEW! * Miniatutt &hnouu" CLEARANCE SALE '70 PICKUP e Tenns Available • ALL SIZES MG Sales, Servlc~. Parts Immediate Delivery, All Modelt J1rtupon jl111po11~; :SlOO \V. C<>ast Hwy. N.B. 642-9405 '5~0-1754 Aulhorizrd ~IC Dealt'r OPEL MARTINCREST KENNELS NO\V ON DISPLAY \V/camper, 96 hp overhead 'Gj Opel, l:'ood condition. 5'16-0989 BAY HARBOR cam, 4 spd, dlr. 6 ply tires, fl.1ust sell, l'ICW lires $700 STOCKING STUITERS Mobile Home Sales back up lights. You name negot. 673-4272 eves. Precious Poodle Puppies, 1425 Baker St., Cosla l\1esa it! SeriaJ # Pl.52120S873. ====--===== VOLKSWAGEN WEP.i'Y , •• CASH fl!UST sell '66 Triumph Spit· fire itk II, rt<ll, tonl'lt'aU , (."(I Urea, orig o\.\'UCf, only ll,000 rnl. 5.28-8783 tor Uled "Can & trucb just ========\call uo lo< .... -to. VOLKSW.(GEH GROTH CHEVROlfT VW BUGS f"RO~t $399 AU: I« S&lea Mu.pr 1rJll 8aM.h mvd. flunUna;ton Beacb KI &-33Jl WE PAY CASH GOOD SELECTION FOR YOUR CAR Q &>.. &I CONNELL ~\~so" ~~~?!~ •e~,~p· ·:-_-_°"---·~·:.-'_,_._ .. ____ .. __ ~:.1200:. ____ _ Auto Le11in9 9810 :>~!!. 3031 Ext. 6& or 67 --· ------ 1970 HARBOR BLVD. , LEASE ANY MAKE COSTA MESA OR MODEL ---;-;,-~=;;,---Let our 1eage experl.s thaw 50 VW 5 )'OU the bc:o;t plan for your 1960 T!u-u 1968 persona.I needs without obi~ J.'rom gatlon. $495 UNIVERSITY OLDSMOBILE Harbour V .W. 28'" Ha.·bo, Bl•d. Costa P.lcsa. 510-9640 V LEASE V AlIT~IORIZED SALES & SERVICE 18711 BE,\CH BL., St!-4435 HUN1'1NC",TQN BEACH 1969 ?-fustang Hardlop, V-8, ,62 VW GOOD COND air, p1~r dis<" brakes. pv.·r $600. • * &J6.Sl9! ~!~~. $19. P<'r mo. 24 mo 1970 V\f B11g 4.000 miles, SOUTH COAST private party. Best oiler. CAR LEASING 536-7848 ~ \V, C!lt 11\.\>y, NB &l;).2182 '68 V\V, am/fn1, other c.'(- tras. BEST OFFE R. LEASE. RENT .494--2208 or 675-5937 eves. Immediate delivery BEST Offer -Illness. '68 V\V on all Bug. Call -64,_,.,,. 431 1970 FORDS & Rivrrside, N('v.·port Bch.. FORD TRUCKS '67 VIV Bt1g, Ian EXCEL. All popular makes. Ford C'OND. EMPl .... xtraclors. authorized lcasinJ; system. $119:> £~.f-1506 Get Our Competitive Rates '69 v\v Bug, diamond blue, Theodore 2,000 mi, perfoct $1995. Mu" ROBINS FORD srll immed. 642-s:lS'I. 2Qi0 }la.i·bor Bl~. CADILLAC '63 CAD Elden.do Convt. A Rtal BcauUful Car. 1 CM·n.er. Prlv. Pty. Full pll.T, lo.ct air, vtbruonlc, aold color, bela'e • vinyl Inter. -'67 EL DORADO. Full pwr & a.Ir + $1XIO xtrls, pert oond, lo ml: P.IUST SELL! 644-<'65 CHEVROLET FALCON '&4 rALCON Sprint, low mileage, XJnt oond. SICll. 64$.2380. 'FORD '67 FORD CORTINA GT , Hard Top Cpl'.'. V!, 4 1peed trans. RW\$ super new IM looks areat! Lie. VTY 527; $1299 MUST SELL ~ \\'agon, 15.000 miles. radio-k.., . 1969 C:Oncour [!If.ate Station 0 ~ heater, dillc brakes, luggage , rack. ' way toil ..... pow. 'e .. r" er steering, $700 under high ' JI book. LI 8-4SC6 or 637·3155. .,,, Holiday Special Fully !quipped 1965 Chl!v Caprice. 4 Dr. sedan. Lo niileql'.'. Pe r f ~ e I cond. Drove out from fll. Need to fly back. 'Vill sell for Blue Book retail value. 642-1563 '6' CHEV Nova Wagon 283 cu. In., 4 &pd, new rear end find trans .. brakes and llre1. Very clean. $925 or best ot• fer. 544-3246. 1960 CHEVY • Greenbriar Van * f.fake offer 642·5172 Aft 5 ~9-3031 Ex!. 66 or ST 1!170 HARBOR BLVD. C'OSTA MESA '66 Falcon Futur• · Fully lt.ctory equipped, Dlr. $695. Phone &12.fiO'll '65 Ford Van-Bus. radSo Ir big engine. Perfect condition. $1400. 516-534! '$ FORD \vagon, good tranaportatlon. $150 or best ofil!.r. 1)46.2576. MUSTANG 1967 El Camino, White, auto. ---------·I R&H. to mi, U750. Call 1965 MUSTANG CONY. 64~1691. Eves 546-5348 \-dlow w/black top, 289 WI '64 MALIBU, xlnt cond, new 3-spttd manual tn.n&.. runs tires, 1 O\\'ner $850 firm. •""='-'·-1-1025~·~·-"'-""-"-· -~ 673-366.1 or 548-6203 1968 ~fUSTANG. Dark Bkle fastback. Lo\v miles. Xfnt CORVAIR cond. $1900. &l>-2419 · l!>;I CORVAIR Statlo" OLDSMOBILE \Vagon. Original Owner. ---------$2.\.). Call 5-18-6728 Orig l\1ile!I 28,000 '62 Corvair Monza, bucket '66 Olds Cutlass $1550 lmmJc seats, 4 &pd. xlnt cond. Priv cond. Pvt prty. 675-66.51 . ~"":::";:;':;:· "=,..=':="::':'====. '54 Olds -Good trat1spoefa--tion $150 or best <>lier. Aak CORVETIE tor Bob: 54~1690 Windy's -Auction Barn 207.)l;" Newport, 01. 646-8686 Behind Tony's BJd&". Marl HO & N-GAGE TRAIN BOARD, Ne\l,r. lncl, 1 2 trains, bldg's, landscapes, etc. $100. 642-5663 <> r ~1544 PORSCHE just in time for Christmas 1,~ block East of I-Tarbor Blvd. Full price $2099. Take small $25 * 549--0844 Costa Mesa C714l !'>40-9470 dn or trade. Call Phil, 494-9773 or 54,;)-063t --------- '62 V\V ~n Roof. Con1plelely Costa Mesa 642.-0010 CORVET"l'E }968 4 Spd, .. 427 .. --------~·I re-bit, like nu, $850. Day Trl·pwr tstbck w/removable PLYMOUTH * * * * FArt11LY l\lembership l n FOR Christmu • Silky Tei-· MODEL SALEI ·59 Porsche. Xlnt cond. ,;., puppi'5, "'" '"" • $ Chrome whcds, Ski rnck. 642-4391, ~ 642-2789·. J>IUlels. Silver ,vfblk lnter.1----------t '6-1 V\V. !\lint cond .. bochly & Ust d Cars 99CIO Am/Fm ster. Nu polyglas '65 PLYMOUTH Valiant 2 Irvine Coast Country Club for sale. Pvt. pty. 67'3·9131 lovable. Male $150, Female ONE iMJLE FR01'-1' O('l::AN s.u.u DATSUN UIVICI Ne1v paint. 6'7l-6613 $2)0. Phone 962-7057 COSJ'A l\IE~i\ PORSCHE '68 !IJIL. l nicctlanically. $1000. Phone fires. 23,00J mi. Under \\·arr. dr, 3 spd, •225• six, ntw J.43-8009. Jmmac. Comp! serv records. lirei, paint, chrome wheels, GQ.Karts, xlnt cond. \1·ith r.rceulloek engines iv/spa~ e.ng $22:>. Nl'.'w i\lac 100 never run $ij. 613-illi GERMAN Shepherd, male, GREENLEAF OWNER. XLNT CON O . papers, 5 years, needs good MOBILE HOME "Leader in The Beach Cities" $j8{)(), CALL 61~4CDO '63 RAMBLER Amer, hdtp, $3895. 675-7304 ('V('S. $7jQ or best offer. 544-ll74. VOLVO d:.I'. nins good full price $299. ---tovi"g hom• & •pae<. SALES ZIMMERMAN ----·--------------OOL920, all Ken, 49-1-9773 VOLVO _...._iAs:;:NJi.!R;;'.ki<;;"-;;;;;;;;i;,,\---71~1,~6~42:':·13>!~· ~-2845 HARBOR BL VD. LIDO 14 1v/L'O\'Cl' k lrlr. BASENJJ &rkle,u puppies 5-40-6410 Re&uJalion sz pool. \bl. Off from Africa. Champ. stock, 1----------TOYOTA wht naug. couch, like new. ~I mk'gs, terms. 64:>-0533. Bicycl• 9225 '67 DATSUN 6T::>--7316 BASSET PUPS1 AKC 10 Speed Raci ng B i ke . PICKUP TOYOTA SEl: & ORM: THE 1910 ALL REMAINING 69'S i\IUST BE SOLD NO\V! PRJCED t'.ROM $:2678.21) '63 SPORT Fury, hdtp, dlr, good runner, full priee $499. ?-IDR717 Call Phil 54.>"634 GORGEOUS Furs: Tourma-847-8204 eves & v.·knds French Jaubert. Like Brand 4 spd, dlr, xlnt cond in l: line Stole. Autumn }faze SCHNAUZER pups. rare Nev.•, $40. Call 540-2945 ouL Local. \Viii finc .. prvt SEB & DRIVE T!IE 1970 ALL REMAINING 69'S fo.IUST BE SOLD NOW! PRICED FROi\f Sl 780.60 Coat_ Priv. Ply, Wkenda <>r black&: salt&: pepper. party. Take small do1vn. Aft 6 PM, call 642-5612 * 2!3/JJ0..6595 * Motorcyclff 9300 UET152. Call J{cn 494.9773 or Ser. # nR3o Your Bes! Deals Arr Still Al RAP.ml.ER &: Falc<>n sta DRESS rinr, 5 rubies, 13 diamonds, setting in J8K 1oJd Value $900. Scll for i650 cash. 962-8372 Carpet layer has Hi Lo nylon1 $1.99 yd. Shags tron1 3.50 up + my labor, 90c per yard. 841-1519 BEAUTIFUL Kin&: bed.quilt· ed mattress. Complete.un- used. SHE, \V 0 r l h $~. 842-6536 ever. FOUR ROSE BOWL BOX SEA TS. BEST' OFFER!! 54.5-0197 or 6'13--8086 f1RE\VOOD For Sale. Ory Eucalyptus. DeHwred le stacked. Ca.II 546-9881. HONEY 1, 2 &. 5 lbs-E:<- tractl!d, cut. comb-I lb. Comb t: creamed. 548-1088 21 ·· COLOR TV, late model $229. B/\V port. 'IV $35. \\'ork xlnL 64&-1525 8' POOL table, wht \\'/&old felt. Brand ne1v. $200 cash. Call 642-3237 FIREWOOD 637"843 54.>0634. WEIMARANER puppy, pure SUZUKI 80CC. All new over. bred female. 3 nlos old, no hauled Engine, expansion ORANGE COUNTY'S papers $25. fi75405 chanll>tr clc Xlnt cond &. NO. 1 TEACUP Sz. Purebred Toy Beautiful'. $175. Call g42.J159 DATSUN DEALER Sci·. # 14;icl '.tour Bcsl Deals Al'C' Slill A1 DEAN LEWIS 1966.llal'lior. C.M. 64$-9303 DEAN LEWIS wag•"'· Tran1portot<>n "' C i\f 646-9300 can. Need some work. Best I Harbor, . . offer lakl'.'s. 536--3555 '57 Volvo. Rebuilt engine. * '67 Dodge Sportawag:on Needs "urk. * •6£ vw 673-0727 or 536-1203 Make offer. 613--0068 Poodle. Blk l•m•"-8 wk>. NEW '69 I<awa,.kl 2SO cc DOT DATSUN BJLL MAXEY Groomed, shots. 644--0841 Side1l'inder. undtr $600 . 18835 Beach Blvd. ~ntlgun, Cl1ulC1 96151--------- TINY Toy Poodles 847-76ll or 841-2981 lluntlngton Beach ITIOIYIOfTIAJ BUICK Sale 't Price! 2SOCC YAMAHA Endural, aa.m1 <>r 54()..(IM2 • ·-- -'57 MORGAN + '4 646-336.5 lik~ nu. Call altE'r 6 PM or 1 ""''"'67'"D"A'"'T"S"U"N'"R"D"S"T"R.-New T,p, new brakes. Ex. '67 RIVIERA 11111 BEACH BLVD. cellentconditio n.Sl500. \Vhite Poodle \1·cckends. 837--3969. Ne1v top, ne1v clutch, 4 spd', Hunt. Beich 147.&555 &U-li24 after 6 P~I. Full power, includlllJ' air, 1 yr, lernale. All shots '69 KAWASAKI 30cc MINI-dlr, bl\Jt' book $1800. Sacri· S ml N, or Coast Hwy. on Bell =========I strato buckets, «J,000 actuaJ PAPERS $25. Ph. 646-4580 BTKE Xlnt co~ good dirt flee Sl400! Small dmvn, will ---------· 1 Rica Cari, Rods 9620 miles. NEED H0l\1ES. AKC poodle bike must itll. 54&-7511 fine prvt prty. TYl\1412. Call $2'95 puppies-silver & cham· '67 TRitn-.lPH 500 Jo miles Roy .f.94-mJ or 545-06.14. TRIUMPH MODIFIED Midget racer, pagnc, shots. 5-1f>-.3502 under $700. m9781 Apt: new eng,, tire.i;, tach. Xtra -~ SILKY T~era, AKC, shols No. s before U am. ENGLISH FORD ·59 TR-J, Br. grn, 'vire lire11, lt eng parts. Asking ft • dewormed. Ready tori-========== ·;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; "'httls, nu tt-blt e n g, $1200. "'itl consider reas. of-~~ ' Christmas. 835-7165 Auto Services • clutch, radiator &. brake&, fer. 1.lusl :o;ee to apprec. 1961 & P rt 9400 ORANGE COUNTY'S all Jess than 500 mile&. $850 Harbor. C.M. or call 6'2-0C8J 1 • ,o Scbipperke puppits, AKC, liiiiiiiiiiioiii!siii~iiiiiiiim VOLUME ENGLISH or trade + eash for 1a1e ,,. " 6 mOl!I., 2 males. all shots. FORD DEALER niodel domesti c iicdnn or Autos Wanted 9700 •l.{fi * :>-16-4928 * BEAOi SALES . SERVICE 11'Bgon. Pvt Pty. 833--078.'i "\ TINY roY """""· ,,m.,,. Auto Supply ovER .. m srOCK wE PAY TOP ACK 6 wks. old $75. 540-7126 e 2 & 4 Dr, Models NOW'S THE DOLLAR 549-3031 Ext. 66 or 61 wkends or aft 6:30 pn1 Wholesale e 2 & -4 Dr. De.luxes ror cood, clean u&ed can. 1970~~~vo. 6 MONTH old male, half • 2 le -4 Dr. GT 1'lodel& all makC!'I. See George Ray P 1 Lo Prices to All e Stat ion Wagons TIME FOR Theodore Robins Ford Beagle & hall oo ee. vcs ,..._ 2~. Ha<bo< Blvd. hlld ' • 837 •239 .....,mplete Machine Shop Many with fully automatic """ ENGl.ISll Bull, 8 \\'ks, AKC REBUU.T ENGINES dio, vinyl roof, wsw tire11. U.fPORT:s \\'A.NTED \Vagon. Clean, aood cond. $200. 644-2866. GIRL'S ~ jacket frlna;t. Site med. $15. 546-45.18 c ren. rec. """ SPEED EQUIPMENT trans., air, radial tires, ra.. QUICK CASH C.~J. 642-00tO champ stock. 1125 Vlctori., CM i:.1a.~::.~ BRAND NEW ~o 2 OR ~.. I 1o1•ith s;;1•9102 '"""""'-"" ~· . • ..,, ... .,,e <:aunt et 18361 Be•cb mvd, HB 847-0991 $1785 r~uu.. PRICE THROUGH A TOP s BUYER CADILLAC DOBERMAN PUPS * OPEN 7 DAYS * ORDER NOW BlLL MAXEY TOYOTA '62 CADILLAC F'or Sale f"1re11'00d. TRANSPORTATION Troilor. Trovol 942S ROBINS FORD ff. B•acb. Pb. 1117.-"'""Ing""""· Car W<lt tak· COUGAR '68 Cougar XR7 Automatic, air, power atttr• inc , vinyl roor. etc. !2399 PONTIAC '67 Lel\tANS OHC-6. 2 dr, p/a, p/b, bucket aata, ooo- ~si:-ooo ml. S1915- --1··~ T·BIRD ft~ " LADIES Manicured 'liO Conv .. s0" T·Blrd. All J>wr. Nu Tll'H. ~ ti; Pert. cond. $500. 644-6538, •e '-p &12-8235 L, ·'" 0"6~7 ~Lo-,.,~.-u.-30=,ooo~-m71.-A~lr~, I '' full poWt>r, new radial tlrn. ~9-3CC1 E.xt. 66 or 67 lmmac. Fae. warr. 2 yr or 1970 HARBOR BLVD. 20,000 ml. 642-0514 COSTA MESA 1969 COUGAR XR·7 TORONADO 351 e!li'ine, P S, PB, Air, 1 ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;I 1vhite wlblk vinyl top. Un.I 1 dcr 10.!ro mi. Best reason· ablr offer. 549-0iO-I DODGE '69 Dodge Charger 2 Door Hardtop. V8, Pl"''er steering, pow e r brake1, automatic trans, bu eke I seats. vynl roof. Abllolutezy like nf:'\Y. Lie_ YWS-279 $2699 '~r 1968 TORONADO, white with black vinyl top, Top COQlil. tion. low mlleare, equipped with every faciorJ' optloMJ available, lncludlnr II tn.ck tape deck. First $3500 take• it!! 67J.l252 VALIANT Oranp I: Eucalyptus 833-<670 AKC * * 642-8961 Theodore DAILY PILOT 18881 Beach Blvd. \Vhile, rebuilt eng., dlr. xlnt 2060 Harbor Blvd. w·111 Buy en care of. Nttd foretan C&r 519-31131 Ext. 66 or 67 Boeh & Yachts 9000 '69 HOUDAY Travel Trlr. Costa i tcsa 642.ooto WANT AD in trade. WU! fine prvt prty. 1970 HARBOR BLVD. WHAT A DEAL 19' 9eU-aint, tandem whls, NPV82l Call Phil 494-9173 or C'OSfA MESA '60 VaUant Sta. Wq, Mis~. Wanted FREE sips 6 all xtras. Q\\•ner sac· 1 S Y 0 U R AD I N Your Volkswagen or Porsche 5"5-0634 ;;;;-;-..,;,""O;;-'-";;':::;-= ~93 or 675-0l3'I' $ WE B Uy $ Ba&ic Boating Cour;se orfertd must '.,eu $3800. &44-6!9? ' CLASSIFIED? Someone will 642-5678 &; pay top dollars Paid tor ' 1964 DODGE Dart 170. ~'-"":;:;."'"°,:,,;;.:.;:c.._~ '610 PJ). to public by Balboa PO\.\'tr\===='='====:=== be looking for it, Dial 6.(2.. or not C.aU Rll1pb. ·ss DE Vll.LE ConVl. All Automatic transmiasion. '60 VALIANT, Good c:oad. Squadron evl!ry ht~n. _ni ght Truckt 9500 ~""::;~~~:::=::;.~:::=;~:=~~~~~~~673-"900~~~~;'=j,~pwr~,~.x~tro~~~·~m~/~fm~. ~11~7'0=.:.,;M~u~"~~"'=tl=.=M=ili==o=!=!e=r.-=18:5=.=~~~~~==-I $ FURNITURE $ APPLIANCES for 13 wttks beginning 7 __ .._ _____ ..;.;. S5.'50 dn & T.0 .P. 892--5620 5't6-8886 Ph. 548-1800 C.l•r rv-''•"•1-$t1t••1 1 Pi.. •r H•wte ft.II CASH IN JI MINUllS pit! on Mon., Jan 12th at SCRAM LETS lmportM Autos MOOlmported Autos 96l'Olmported ._1,1to1 9600 .._ .. _ Newport Harbor \'acht • ;. Imported Autos 96001mport9CI Autos MOOlmport.d Auto. nw· aub, 11.o ,V, Bay Ave .. Nev.•- • 541-4531 • Mach in•r;'!, etc. 1700 Al R COMPRESSOR 10 H.P. Call Oorsa '-folon, 18621 Beach Blvd .. 1-funlingo ton Bt!ach, 842-&40. ::s:~~h-n!;ed_ad~; ANSWERS ter at clu5, brtna: notebook Salute -Quall -Frame - first ni&bt. Questions: Call Truiam -QUARTER ,- 67.J.1855. Moon~ trevel tip: "Be 1ure 18' THOM PSON J..a.patnke. t.n take along: plenty ot mon- Johnron SO, FaUt, bow rail, eY with )'tlU on yoor lunar elect anchor winch. Nu can-excunlon, The moon may be vat cov. Tilt trailer. $179S. down to iti last QUARTER." Conaway, 51&-5551. ill w. CAMPER TRUCK Co1st H\vy, NB 19'10 G.M.C. % lf.D. equip., FREE TO YOU CHRISTMAS Id"' 12 It "'· S<r. # 22!0031. fiberg\a.<is, outbrd hull. 1''wd $2995 SMALL O.rislmu pu.ppiea, st:rg 1 contJ"ol . 673-6:il8 UNIVERSITY to r el iable homes. 2j' OWENS 0til w/moorina OLDSMOBILE 54&-9'39 Ul23 in Newport Bay. $3950 lncl•1 2llO Jfarbor mvc1. CHRIS'ThlAS Kitten11, fluffy mooring. Call -S!l-0500. Cos~~csa. (l"ty, hi.Vt. nice manntn I Sollboat 9010 ;;,;;;:--,=-ii,i~::;..-,,--M.11 trained. 54:>-1818 12/23 I J'OR Sale '69 Dodp Van O\" ********.** l"lk for VW. Phone KITI'ENS, 12 "'k5. old, 'ii . :»l-672> afltr 6. Sl a ml!te, Burmese. Chrlstm.111 511-9576 li/23 SABOT l!IM GMC II ton P.U. A•ki~ ~5,, Call '4~1691. Ewa. rREE To p>d home sp9yed fem a I a Collie/Shepherd. 516-6337 W2I ..... S:i9I> •••••• -• • .. • • • • • • • 5t6-&4fl ···~·~~~ =~ete ;-UJl;;;;G;;E,,..., ...... ..,CH=EVY=-=wm=. le detu~e DOW VAN. B1c I. aulo, xlnt 4 Puppies '• po o d 1 e · 2912 \V. Cout """' cond., oenter sta.t. 642-6574 Adorable M7·9847 12.123 , Newport Beach * ~tl'JlO C PLYWOOD 1u'ld mahOgany I.JOO 14 su9:-, •mpers 9520 .llCl'llps, &46-2311. 12~. ..., "" Salls S' A Mnl co . . h1vy lrlr. n! LL g· Crun~r ~- 2 Cock·a·poo half ll'O\\'n, 1 &!e flt 901 Udo 1''ord. Cabover. Buutlful l\'OOd tn. 1ilver, I bl'Olvn ~1 21 • 6T>-Ol38 • Irr. Sleeps l 1dult11. $27j. I Ji' O'\)AY D&)'Milcr 1;;;;"-;l-;;:9!!;;. 9:;;';;;;.-a;:;;:tr::;::;:: ~ $15'5 Ul!.d $1l!U 10' CAMPER But• ttbii. PUPPIES. 7 w~ old. 14' O'DAY: US<'d $495 $COO. 2430 W. Coast Hwy, atteT s pm 12125 """Zone Boal co. R.lbor NB. ~ ot 6TJ.-46U. 'H VW IUS $27'5 7 pt.ts. Radio, heete.r, f'xtrt. clean, low ml., fact wan-. (QL748.1 ) 'H VW PANEL TRUCK $2l1S 6.SOO actua.J mt. FacL warr. Great deltvery truck. (23633E} •n vw CAMPlll $1 ns Equip. w/Sundial camper, Excel· lent cond. (TWL 832) '67 WISTPALIA CAMPll $24'5 Radio, heater, 2',000 m1. RNdy 10 co! ems• ' •1•11 i 'H VW IUG $1JH Radio, heater. bumper ;uards, mt.ny extf'Q, (ROW 3881 l l I '61 VW IUIO $1715 Automatic Rt1ck 11htft, R.. H., 1 own., fnct. Yo'lrr. fXDZ099) 'H OUNI IUGGY H.T. $HS R11.dlo, tide curttlns. Excell eond. lXA8371). 'H SCj)UAll JACK SIDAN $22'5 n., lf., bump.. sruarW. 1\.taay f!X- trfl$.. IO'v ml. (?.SP8881 NEW BUGS 1970's ON DISPlAY & READY TO GO CHOICE OF COLORS AND MODE!S AT ••• CHICK IVERSON Harbot Aroos Only Authorized VW. Porscho Dool•r TWO LOCA110NI TO Sllft TOU 445 EAST COAST HWY. •I BAY.SIDE DR IVE, NEWPORT BEACH 67J.Oto0 " l 1'70 HARBOR BLVD., COSJA MESA HOME OF lHi LOVE IUG SPECIALS ' . --------------- --.. -· . "''" ~ . . ~ ·;~if,'.., .•.. 4 • • • .... "".l. .<'~-~-..... ~--.. • -· . __ ... _ ,,.,. . • ~.l.... .... ~c~., .... ~,. . . ,, , '. "' j ;. . .:. ""7'• ·;·''41't ..,.., .. ~ . ~ ' , ' . . I • ... ~·.t·•t:r• MERRY · CHRllTMA' ('1 HAPPY HOLIDAY SEASONS GREETINGS.. 0 i WI WISH YOU A VIRY MEUY CHRISTMAS AND A HA,,Y NEW WI Will II CL051D CHRISTMAS DAY, IUT FRIDAY MORNING WI WILL II ON ·HAND TO SllVI YOU IN ALL OUR DEPARTMENTS. YEA.RI , , • ALL YEAR! • BRAND NEW '70 GRAND PRIX Turbt hydr"'"fit fr11111ni1aio11, fiber• 9l1n tirff, buclt1t 111h, pwr. 1f1•ri119, pwr. cli1c br1k•1, tint1cl 9l1H wi!IJ1., f1ct. 1ir co!ldifion. 12765702· 116615) 2 "'' WlfOl'I. Turbo liydr1m1fic, pu1h b11tto11 r1dio, remote mirrer, power 1t11ri11t a ,..., brtkn, ti11ttd' 91111, pow1r window, pow1r ••••• air conditio11i119, whil1 willt. 1tc.. 1256l69Cl2l2291 NEW '69 CATALINA I "'t •9f'Mo TUl'lio hych•m1tic, pu1h,butto11 r1dio, d1l11.-1 L1lh, pow1r •l11ri119 I 4iM llf•ba, fi11tM tl•n, pow1r t1il 91t1 window, 1ir condilionin9, wh ile w1ll1. IJS2169CI 21.6161 NEW '69 BONNEVILLE H.T, c,., Cord..,, top, twb.t hydr11111tic, p111h b11Ho11 r•dio, r11110!1 1T1irror, power th1rl"9. ,......,. llf••ff, ti11tt4 9l1n, power wi11dow1, 1ir col!ditioning, fro11I & re1r "'''"' wfriit1 will., du1I 1xh1111h. (262l19CI 161451 NEW '69 BONNEVILLE 4 Of, H.T, Cer4••• top, turho lly4r11111tic, push buH011 r1dio, du1I 1llh1u1h, pow1r wiMows. •••4 f'fftt, 1ir c0Nitio11i119, whit1 will•. (262l99CI065751 R1dio, h11t1r, 1uto111•tic, pow1r sk1ri11; I ilr•lc11, f1ctory 1ir. IJ3137SMJ71597l '66 GRAND PRIX R1dlo, hc1f1r, 1utom•iic, p1w1r 1f11ri119, •h•vl top. lSl04121 '67 LE MANS 1 Door h1rdtop. R1d io, h11t1r, 1utom1tie, f1ctory 1ir0 IWX6106) '67 CATALINA 6 ,...._ ••t•tt. R1di., h11!1r, .vfo1111tic, pow1r 1t11ri119, f1ctory 1ir. ITEYI J9l ~.;~~~T.~~~"''" ·~···•;" $ 2 7 7 7 1-:'°:·=·~·~fl:~::;;:··~·.':·:·•:·~~:_:·;:··~•YI:.:;:•:':''~'~~~...:::::::::::::::::::::· '67 BONNEVILLE 4 Dr. H.T. R1dio, .,,,,,,, 1utoll'l•fit , fun ,.....,, f•ctory 1ir. IUJCl'lll '67 BONNEVILLE 4 Dr. H.T, R1dlo, h11!1r, 1ufolft1lic, powH 1f11r.1 pwr. wiNows .. fief. •ir, ITll.H6101 '68 FIREBIRD JIO. R~dlo, h1ot.r, eutoM1tic, pow1r 11 .. ,.. l1tto ~llyi roil, f1ct.ry 1ir. CWIC6711 • BRAND NEW '.70 LE MANS 2 door h1rdtop, au· tom•fic, pu1h but• fon r1dio, power 1t1•r i119,d1- cor troup, F781d4 fib•t9l11• w/w1ll1, cullom 111f b1lh. ( 215702600721 l 4 Or. H.T. Cordov• top, turbo hydr•111•tic, !•'l'lohi mirror, d111! ••h•u1h, pu1h b11t- to11 r1dio, pow•r 1l1•rin9, pow1r br•k11, tinted 9l1u, pow1r wlndow1, jlow1r 111t, 1ir conditioning, front & r11r on1h, whit1 w1ll1, f261)99CI05l65) NEW '69 GTO 2 Door H.T. Tur bo hydr11111tlc, p111h bulto11 r1dio, remol1 mirror, d1hr11 b1lh, wir• wh•1l di1c. con1ole, pow1r 1!11rin9 & br1k11, tinted 91111, •ir conditio11i119. 124217 921261011 DEMO. '69 CATALINA 2 Or. H.T. \'inyl trim, d1 cor 9roup, turbo hydr11111lic, d•lu.-1 belh, pow1r 1t1er- i119, br1Ji:11 , ti11l•d gl1u, •it co11ditioni119, while w•ll1. (252319Cil0217) DEMO. '69 BONNEVILLE H.T. Cp1. Cordovi top, turbo llydr•m•tic, pow1r 1111111111, push button r1dio, ••· molt mirror, d•lu.-1 b1li1, pow1r ll11ri119, pow1r br1~11, tint1d 91111, 1ir co11di· tio11i119, whit1 w1ll1, t ilt wh11I, du•l 1xh1u1h. (262l79Cl2474ll Rcdio. h11t1r, 1ulom1ti1, pow1r lf11ri119, custom trim, (\'HA.631) '68 LE MANS Cp1. r•dio, h11t1r, 111!0, pwr. 1t11r., v1n'11 fop, feel. 1ir, Oth1r1 to choo11 from. XEW'll9 • IT'S NOT TOO LATE TO CHOOSE A V!RY SPECIAL CHRISTMAS PRESENT AT ROY CARVER'S! '68 GTO ll.1dlo, h11l1t, 1ulom•fic, pow1r 1!11rl11q, ¥inyl top, f1ctory oir. IWXEJ7SI '68 CAT ALINA 4 Or. SM111. R1tlio, h11f1r, -011lo1111tic, po.,... 1r 1t11ri119, f1ctory 1ir. IWfE920J B!tA.ND NEW '70 CATALINA H1rdlop Coup1. Turbo hydr11111lic, ra ••• ,r.11, whit• w•ll1, p11h hutto11 r•dio, pow1r 1t1er• i119, pow•r br1•11, r.u1fom 1111 b1lll. I 252370C I 07 t 691 2 1111 w19on. Decor troup, turh hvclr11111tic, r1mol1 mirror, d1lu.-1 b11!1, power 1!11ri119, pow1r d i1c hr1•11, finltd 9l1H, f14w1r f1il '9111 window, 1ir condilio11i11t, whil1 w1lh, 1tc. 1252369Cl2lll4) DEMO. '69 GRAND PRIX / Cordov• top, '121 1119., turbo hydr11111tic, 1!1r10 r1dio, tlfl'lof1 1T1irror, lll1lr.nrt1 bolh, power 1!11 ri119, pow1r di1c hr1••t:o tilt wh11I di1c1, 1276S7,P26f941) DEMO. '69 CATALINA 4 Or. H.T. \'inyl 1,;,.., decor troup, turbo hydr11111tic, pLRh liut!on r1dio, r1,..ot1 mirror, d1l11x1 b1lh, pow1r tl11ri119, 1ir conditioni119, tinted wi11cl1hi1ld, whi11 w1llt. 1251)99Cl2074JI DEMO. '69 BONNEVILLE H.T. Cp1. Turbo hydr11111tic, p111h huHon r1dio, d1h1•1 iiclh, pow1r tl11rin9, pow1r hr1lc11, tint1d tl•11, p•w•r wl11do..,., 1ir conclitio11int, front & r11r "''' .. whit1 w•ll•, du1I 1xh1u1f1, (262J19Cll6lJtl '65 BUICK WILDCAT Con .. 1rfibl1. f ull pow1r, fectory •ir Coll• dilio11 i119. I RPU 404 I '67 CADILLAC Cp1. 01Vill1. loc•I 1 own1r, Full pow8r, f1clory 1ir. (TW\16661 '69 PONTIAC E.-1culiv1 6 p111. w190~. R1dio, ll11l1r, 1u+o• "''lie, pow1r d11ri119, f1ctory 1ir. !XSSl761 '67 COUGAR VI, 4 1p11d, pow1r 1t11ri119, rtdio, h11!1r, whif1 w•1l1. !TR HS921 '68 FORD TORINO 2 dr. H.T., \II. 1ulom1lic. pow1r 1l11ri119, f•clory 1ir, whil1 w1llt. IXOE202l '68 BARRACUDA Co11v11tible. A1clio, h11t1r, 1wtofl\1fic, poWOf' 1t11ri119, \II. IWIC017l '68 MUSTANG \II, cufo,..1lic, pow11 1l11rin9, t•dio, h11l1r, f•clory •ir co11clitio11r11g. IVHA2J4) '68 VOLKSWAGEN Autom1tic tr111t111i11io~. r1di1 •11d h11!1r. l1i91. IWJE9241 I [[] ROY CARVER PONTIAC Iv/~ I 2925 HAaBOR BLVD/COSTA MESA -.......... • Kl-64444 I