HomeMy WebLinkAbout1970-12-15 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa. . . . .. -------..... -~ -·--·-.... _...,_.._. ......... ~-~-....---. ----.... .------,...-....---~-...... ------·~--~..,--~~--------.,.--------..-..---·---~-~ ..... ··· .. ~ ~ ~ ~·
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Nadie· Dancers File Suit
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TUESDAY AFTERNOON, DECEMBER· IS, 19J O •
A .gainst Co.,er•llp--o~ders
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\'OL. ,,, NO. m, s s•CTIOlfl, 21 ........ ' ·.
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·8Il-I ·a1n -
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Soldier Claims Medi·na
~illed My Lai Woman . . . . '
-. . . . . ..... " -..
·\,~·/~'.;"~"\!:~~ u~"·;~~::au.,.b ,;:.:' i.' ; ' ~ .... ,,.r"" · ·~ ·~··· · ~·..-.. ..,. .... ... .... -~~.;;-· a:·-11~ .. ol . ..1 · ~'l"' . l ,. • • l • j ' ' ' (... .h . lll.VlllUl · . .I ~ · , . · . . . . tJiilintian8 S'liift :uown · l·s~y~·:11e ::·saw · . · ... , .. . , · · · . · . · N~t~,s~~d w~~~'Huntjng for Car
A cooNltd ·Anllwdm .couple . lnmting s~ stadium, two ~n drove up and .
their car after' -MOndiy night's Los one ~ked ibout die time, ·then slarted
LAS Y.EGAS,.ljeY •. (UPI) '"° A.pel'l!)n>I Angeles Ramo football ·iime ' me cut shooting.
~ aide of Howird Hughes, who claims be . down bY'gbntirt near the<loliseam in an !Police slid they sped off, leaving the 1 m. ""'1 .lbO my;tery b111Jonain almost unpro\-oked· aliack ·by lwo men who· stop. bside~alk. Vicllms sprawled on the
daily .tor the pa.it fiVe years: says he· saw ped to~·~.~~· "' the industrialist sign a doCument· ·firing . Police ~ no robbery a~mpt wu ' ...
the bead of his Neyada operatlona. , .made and .del!crlbe.d the .incident u . , ff?w~ver, a handwriting · expert and 5e~:!f5:iorgan, 20, of 2102 Harl! Ave., Nudie Dancers f~er • ~soctate, of fw~rt ' .Maheu, was looking at his watch when one
Hugbel. · Nevada chief, Claimll the stranger p~ a ,45 caliber lutomatic F'} S • A •
•ignalure on !he letter of dismissal Is a ptato1 and tiepn 11>oolhig at polnt·blank I .e Ult_ gamst
. forgery. range. ·
Both men testllied Mondliy ln the Morgan, wounded in the stomach and C 'C '
Nevada District Court hearing i!lA!mn\Jng right leg, was listed In serious condition OUDty OVerup
from the attempted ourUng of Maheu by at County.USC Medical Center today.
UfllT.-h."'
exea.itives of Hughes Tool Co., the Mrs. ·Audr.ey &ckett, 37, of 1934
Houston-based parent firm' of the Lullaby Lane, was hit in the len arm and
bllllonalre'• glanlbu!biea empire. ·1elt'leg·by the heavy caliber slugs and ·ls
Ralph Bradford; now rellred but report;d In fair condlllon loday.
. preVioully.a bandwrHIDg apd fingerprint Iovestigaton said Morgan ·1 and Mrs.
e%pert for 21· yeah on the Long Beach Hackett were unable to find their parked
· P;!ic< lleparlmen~ 1e,jtlll0d al the hear· car In the aflermat.h of the Rains-Delroil
ing today that Hughes' signature w'as ge-Lionil garhe 'ahd were Jfanderlng around
nutne. the darkened area. ,
Bradford allo said he was satisfied that Several · blqcU away from the 'bjg . . " ' . .
. ' Yvonne Posso, 19, departs for. Buckingliam Palace f9r one Qf he"f ot-:
ficial chores as the most beautiful girl on·the Rock of Gibraltar. $he
presented Queen Elizabeth1 II with flow~rs, f6>ni Gitir~ta:r ~oll;daY..
The flowers are a traditional gift from the people of Gibraltar.
a three-page handwritten letter urging
the execµtl'lf!I of tbe tool company to get
·ahead With the job of firing Maheu' WU
• aleo written tty HUfhoa. _ Food · Swindle
'Levar B. Myler, whcridenllfied htm..,11
as a "apecial llllltant" to .Uu&hes, said C D 1 -d HugheJ sip>ed a• prmcy N .. ,-ll llrlng ase eta ye
Maheu, who but6eeri tM blllloaaile'1 No. • 1
Born. h R. ip', s,R. ~h.u, iJ ... t, 'B_anl.f.. !~~.~=::~~~~~...::~. In County ,Court
-,nt~. lloof pe""-ipalnl.jlned by Bolh •ides in the Orange Counly , • .Hugbes In the lleoert Inn llolel In Lu
From Wire Services
ISLA VISTA -:-A tossed bomb blew a
hole in the roof of a Bank. of America
brance here Monday niabt, showering
i
'S1nile' To~ Late
1n Certain Towns
Vegas. The wltneas al.lo testified Hughes· Superior •cOuit'trtal of' tour men accused
the street w1lh" maaonry · Wes a(ld In-. sUbsequenUy Went to the Brituhia '.Qea~h of swindling •collf!ty, ~eowners in a
naming emoliOns Of · street n..np1·e ind H •·t Jn N the •-•--and f , trm.:en food-sallff'tcheme· have--agreed·on r~¥ . ow: usau, .1;M.11S1n81, rom a ai1:~y dflay of the pioceedlngs. .
1awmen again. 1 tbre~·.1!". ued instruct. '°?' tbe pro1y be J•-'•e Raym' ond v•-~nl •·•·y --•·•uJ •. No. serrous :damqe .Was repor-\t_ .' d, lijit -~ ..... """'"' WWI ~,,;u cirller In the dat, Charles Appel Jr., a Od Mdn<iay is· u..-ileil appearance -for the blast caused by an unidentified device former FBl agent with Maheu, testified William J, Wooll, 131 of 2014 Wallace
left a ~ie several feet arrol. bi.:the on behalf of' 'Maheu that Hugbes' Ave,. Costa Mesa, hls son Phllfp F., 31, of
overhanging eave of. Qie str\lcbu:e. ~ pUrported iiplturt •CIC ~u. -iocument Norih H~, Johri' M:. Tfunert 40, or.·
A cr"'d ·o! UC Santa Barbara ·students presented by• the Huglia 'l'ool Co. was a =!·11>f·H.wtll-. B:_ Masey, 46, of '
and other ~oung people rlifing ~tbe·unln-"simulation or imitaUon.''
corporat.ed commuriity g'rietec( aberitf'a "lf's a very,•good reprumtation," Ap-All four defendants were indicled by
It may be too late to "smile" in your deputies w~·arrived on the ~e wit.b :e~~"= :=. ~00:1: :r:~:.zno:ind ~i.~~:
home lj>Wl). , • ,. • • • w)loopa """ Jeeq., · ~' cept k, but H'a dellclenl. It'• extreme13 They are rr.. '"' ball. • · Already several ~;,/ the of a 11 y />...¥"'1iai! 'bolUet were , <-..,. ~killfod bul H'I d-...1." . • The in.lidmerit, lollOired Jnvesllgallon .
sponsored contesls-Nading tp l'l'"!'\i.Uon ~Y wu·hlt Jn the hip blil l )nj~ Wll!O ukod H It wa a forgery, Appel of .an 0""'81lon. In. wl>Jch 8alesmen for
In the "40 Miles cl .Christmas ;:miµes"~ ....,: whUe~ autboriUes ~ ~.'catm;r ...nptled, "lt ii a lorpry." Fami~ COnrmner Afflliates ·eorp.
Chris tmas de<0ratirig"'°"lesl·.lhr0upout, young "'°"Je7Withnel1iliii p 6idel"ln ' , The.IOol-repr•led by Chief and en 5ervbo i!lgned mor.
th e Ora:nge Coast area:.have c.,sed. the' .~:1 " 1 al ,L · . . · <q11e1 a.ester W: Dula, calltd M)1er •• Ulan 3lO families for Ume parment·pro=
Polential entrants in tbe contest stiould · miu. t11 mu u -... on. ' • Jts' tlrat Witdtll to rdatt Appe1'1 '1lea•· grams
contact local sponsors to .find out ahOUt •· 'lllf: ~nk -~IC~ o( ~ capltaltst: • tiobs.
1Author1Ues dlJtn subsc:rtben were pro..
deadlines and rules, it wa5 announced to-~wer structure to radiclls-was rebuilt· .Myler1 a btavyeet, 1ref haired man ln mlled , 880 pOwada ot , frozen' meats and
day by Cap BlackbUrn, pr~ident of the on lhe sc:ene fl. one buined: last Feb. 2S his SOit waa 40e of few perlllni ever to other products for tm.
Orange Counly ~ As;oc;iaUon. His during .-clall\ wi·teucbtd off a serie1. admll they bad" much as ...n Hughes lnv..UCalora·ay.CGOlfA<ll -blndlng,lhe
group, along With thC DAii,, P.LLOT; is of Incidents. · -in recent year1. Myler ukl he was in , \lictlow '-·• llQllPUl'lt ~us illterwtftre
renewing the nearly_.40-ybr-Oftt''40 Miles Bustn&s,Contlnued as . t today, but ••(ac;e to •f.ce-•\act with him almo1t then' sold to ~&..ertJ Lou Company of
of Christmas Smiles" contest this year. (See BANK, Pap %) dally Jn~ past f'!_'o'e years. Anaheim whet"t Maaey 11 the DWNtt·
,A Los Angeles Federal Court judge will
be asked early ii\ the new year to dismiss
as uncons'titutional state, county an'd city
laws currently being used to combat nude
dancing in Orange County taverns.
Gardena attorney Berrien Moore flied
his complaiQt, Monday on behalf . of
Sarong · Gals and the Chee Chee Roc>'m,
both of Santa Ana, and the Tuscan Room
in Tustlp. . ,
He named as defendants District At·
torney Cecil Hicks, Sheriff James Musick
and Santa Ana Police Chief Edward
Allan together with five polite and sh'er•
iff's Investigators. , • ~
Moore took his action fn the wake of a
series of ~vel'sal8'. ofi h1s 1al'guments in
Orange County courts and the· apparent
stepping up of district attorney Hicks'
campaign to clean up or close up all
taverna featuring nude entertainment.
.All three bars represented by Moore
have been the scene of many arresta dur-
ing recent months stemming frorp com-
plaints of nudity and obscenity.
.Moore argues in his federal court ac--
tton ,tllat the •Santa. Ana anti-obsce;nity or-
dinance. together with county and state
measures violates U.S. Supreme Courl
rules. , .
.F"'luent,, .•~""" ~I ,Iii.• three bari "'.ere not to control obsCerilty but to put
the baiil out of busineSI by forclng them
to pa)" legal fees, MoOre said.
First 'Beer, Now Gls . . ~-
Will Get Own Rugs
WASHINGTON (UPf) -The Army
privale lw been given the rltlht lo drink
beer in the barracks, SOO:i he will have a
rug of bis own and be will be able to
choose beige, rose or green.
Penlagoo -... said Mondax .three by , f\v•· fool ~ 1111\ i,, allow!"! IOI!!' ranly
When "lro<iil< cOrnlorl'' regulatJOOo are
revised 500n. The nip Jn barrackl
pmioual)' were reservld. for sera;eants.
t
Soldiei-s· .
'l(eep· Qlliet'
FT. BENNING, Ga. (UPI) -A ooldier
who served at My Lal test,J.fied ·today the
company commander had cooducted aa
"lnflammaiofy" ineeUng the nigtit before
the strike, hail ordered the village ·
destroyed, and had ·persona Uy killed a
woman picking rice.
The testimony concerning the com·
mander, Capt. Ernest L. Medina, was
g'iven at the court-~artial In which one of.
his platoon leaders, Lt. William L. ca.IJey
Jr., Js charged with · murdering 10%
civilians during tbe mi~ion.
Michael A. Befnha'rdt, 24, of Tarpon .
Springs, Fla., surveyor, was one of eight
Witnesses called by the defense 'in two
days to say that Medina had left' him with '
the impression '[1at all inhabitanta -·in.
eluding women and children -were' to be
killed in the Vietnamese hamlet of "My
Lai on March 16, '1968.
Three days aftel' the sweep, he ·
testified, Medina "gave an addresl to tb8
company" ·in which· be said an m,
ve,~ll~a;~~~ ~!::-~~-UI to be quiet'
-(See CALLEY, Page I) • ' . ,
Oruge CezlC
Wealller . ' , ''. . There's a 60 percent chance
you'll nned 'your·umbn!lla on Wed··
ne§day.· Temperatures . will 'tumble
too, ~pp~g into ~ J~~, s~es
along the Orange Coai!I. I
. INSIDE .TODAY.
flow does 11our annual in.
come fit into the 1uitional scale1
Sylvia Porter has all the an.tWers o" Fina?tct Page 10 today.
Onfy9~
CHRiSTMAS
(Ill"'"'.. ' Clltdtffll u. 1
Cl•WltM 19-lf Ceintt. I
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01--11
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Or ..... CWiitY 11 Srkolll ,,,.,,_. It '""" 1•1• SMll MarMh ,.11
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s Tlltldlr, Dttt111Nr lS, 1970
Who Neem a Truck?
Sikorsky S-ME Skycrane lifts a home to demon·
strate its capabilities for delivery of assembly line.-
produced dwellings from factory to homesite. Test
was one of a series conducted recenUy by Sil<orsky
near Stratford, Conn., to evaluate feaaibWty of
aerial lifting system.
V.S. Freighter Hijacker
Surrenders in Cambodia
PHNOM PENH (AP) -"I only rellf't
I didn't sink the ship," one of the hi·
jackers of a U.S. ammunition freighter
said today as he walked into the
American Embassy in Phnom Penh to
surrender.
"I still believe in the revolution in
America and in the revolution in Cam·
bodia," Alvin L. Glatowski, 20, Long
bodla," Alvin L. Glatowsld, :IO, Long
Beach, told aewsmea. But he said he felt
he would get a fairer deal in the U.S. than
in Cambodia.
Glatowaki and Clyde W. ?t1cKay, 25,
Escondido, took over the l~,tXlG-ton
Girl From Chile
Seeks Area Hom e
For School T,erm
A young girl In Chile is looking for a
home ill Huntlngton Beach -j\ilt for
nine month!.
Tereaa Hidalgo, 16, is set to attend
Edison High School otarting in F ehrwiry
aa an Jntmi&Uooal FelloW!hip Exdwlge
atudent.
Her trip may never get oU the ground,
however. Edison Principal Ernest Pascoe
reports that Teresa has llOWhere to live.
U there a family in aoutb Huntington
Beach that would like an adopted
daughter for the nlne monthsJ
Spokesmen in Chile report that Teresa
II already paoklng her OOUV.nlfl, family
photos and mtmentos to show ber fOlter
family here.
COiumbia Eagle In the G1111 of Thalland
Jut March and forced the crew Into the
Cambodian port of Kompong Som.
They have been indicted by a federal
grand jury in Los Angeles on charge5 of
mu.tiny on the high seas, assault,
transporting kldnaped persons in foreicn
commerce, and neglect of duty. They
could get the death penalty on the mutiny
charge.
The ship and the rest of its crew were
released and completed the voyage to
Thailand.
McKay got away frnm a ~an
guard in a Phnom Penh restaurant 1D
Oct.ober and disappeared with an
American deserter from Th a 11 and.
GlatowsJd said then he believed they
were beaded for the town of Siem Reap
to join Communist forces fi&htin& in
Cambodia.
Glatowski and McKay were kept on a
prison boat on the Mekong River for a
few wee.ks after the hijacking. They com~
plained about the conditions there and
were put in the servanta' quart.en of a
government guest house in Phnom Penh
and then in a hotel.
The Cambodian government paid their
hotel hil~. and they technically hid
poliUcal asylum. But they were actually
under a form of arrest. free to move
about ln the city but always escorted by
Cambodian guards.
Glatowski told newrme.n today he had
received good treatment at first but that
it had recenUy deteriorated. He Wd his
guards had pulled iuns on him and had
tried to force him to escape so they could
kill him.
Judge Sentences
3rd Garden Grove
Shootout Figure
A murder file that opened when three
bandita pot and killed Fountain Valley
market manager James W. Oates has
closed jn Orange County SUperior Court
with tbe sentencing of the third member
()f that trio.
Herman W. "Tiki" Grant, 2.1, of Santa
Ana, was sentenced to six months to life
imprisonment in state prison for bis part
in the killing of Oates last Aq. 12 at the
Tic Toe market, 9457 Hell SL
Judge Kenneth Williams sentenced
Grant after accepting bis plea or pilty to
second degrff murder. Grant's two com-
panions in the Oat.el murder received
stiffer tenna" from the same judge after
ple1din1 gu!lly lo charges of finl dellf'O
murder.
Robert Woodrow Clemenla, 22, of 14811
Alceater St., Wes:tminl1er, drtw a life
term when he chose to waive his penalty
trial and offer Ille ple1. A jury had
llttady found him gu!lty.
Jerry Lee Johnaon, 13, of 1'471 Titus
St., Westminster, identified throuahout
the investigation and prosecution 11 the
gunman in tbe Oates klllinJ, also drew a
life term.
Pruecuton today consider th a t twc>
factors saved Jobnson from the gas
chamber: medical evide~ that be was
an epileptic and tbe fact that there was a
bair trlQer on his aem.1 .. utom1Uc rifle ..
All three men were arrested after a
prolOlllf:d sun battle With police · in a
Garden Grave orange crave. HWldredl ()f
nearby homeowne.ra watched a duel that
ended wllh Ille lhackliq of all lhrte
wspecta.
From Page 1
BAN K ••.
'High Court ·
Toughens
On Crime
•
WAJllllNC7!'0N (~) -Belpod by ljll'-
ry llldm••· lho -julllco, the
Suprat COurt tool: • touaher atand to-
day ai ·the ri&llta.al cfelaiduU In .W.
-triall. • . ,
In a s to 4 ru11a1: lb; aiurt UFb1J4 lho
murder mtviction of a GeorJi.a mu even
though he did not have a chance to croas·
exa.mlne an alleged co-conspirator whoge
lfftfmony OOed him to the crime.
The decision split the jll!llc:ea liO!I&
COOJUVative-liberal lines and :\INficated
lhat Blackmun'.1 elevalilln to the bench
by Proaident Nisoe produced a con-
servaUve majority.
'Jbe four diasenters, left over from the
oldllberal majority of the Warren COW1
that produced s.4 rulings going the othe.r
way complained that the decision is
"completely incoosistent with recent opi-
niona of UUs court."·They la.id the defen·
dint'• rflhll . had. been clearly viollled
and that he wu enUtled to 1 new trial
without use of the dam11ing testimony.
The case involvea the fir!l«gree
murder coavlctkn of Ale1 s. Etans in tbe
1989 alayln& of Gwinnett County poUce of·
fleer Jerry Evereu. 1be dispute wu over
the use of a single aentence of testimony.
Lynwood W. Shaw, a prMeCUtion
witness, wu: permitted to tell the jury
what be claimed ~ had heard from a
fellow priloner who ..-, bad been in·
dieted n the crime. According to Shaw,
the tiNoner, Venson Wflliams, had told
him: "Utt hadn't been for that dirty eon~
of-a-bitch, Alex Evans, we wouldn't be in
this now."
Evan:i:' defense lawyer objected to in.
trod.uction of the sentence since Williams
was not in court to be cro58-examined.
The U.S. Circuit Court in Richmond, Va.,
agreed with the defenae in 1968 that
Evans' rigbta bad been violated. And trial
wu ordered but Georp appealed to the
Supreme Court.
Lut year, the ttrst time the Supreme
Court heard the case, there were only
eight justices. Obviously divided 4-4, the
court announced it was unable to reach a
judplent and that the Evans case would
be reargued in the 1'70.71 terms. By
then, Nixon had named. Blackmun to the
court and he WU COlfirmed by ,the
Smale.
Customers Keep
Clerk Too B.us y
To Be Robbed
.1, UPrT ......
GETS HIS OAY IK COURT
My L•I Fleu--. Colloy
From Page 1
CALLE Y ...
and he would back up anyone .if they Jot
in trouble." Bernhardt slid.
Bernhardt added that Medina later took
him aside and sa;ld "that be personally
dimi't feel It would do any good if I made
a report to my congre"man or to the IG
(inspec;tor general) or anybody else. and
oot to do it."
Bernhardt's testimony followed that of
another fonner soldier at My Lai who
said he fired into a group of 10 women
and children in the village because he
had the impression that Medina, n his
briefing. bad ordered the killing of tbe in-
habitants.
Medina ls accused by the Army of
ovarall responsibility of the killing of "at
leut 175" civilians that da y, but no
formal charge has yet committed him tt
court-martial.
Al Koch R esig ns
County Position
On Road Panel
annce County Roid COmmisalooer Al
S. K<M;h today resi&ned hi11 po1t1 effective
Aprll &. lip.
Koch lias been with Orange County lor
25 years and.baa held the·politton of road
comm.iaaioder since Aq. 1, 195.S, more
A hooded. would-be bandit who lll· than 15' year:a. • '
terrupted a card aame .on a slow nigbt at • In acce~ Koch's raiini'Uon with
a Costa Men liquor store Monday fin:aIIY regret: ~s of the Board of fled in frustration when a series of . ~
C~arge Set
In Talent
Theft Case
Criminal chargea have been filed
agalnat four principal.a of a child talent
agency closed by an Orange Coll!1tr
superior Court judge in earlier civil
litigation.
Scheduled to appear Jan. 12 in Santa
Ana munJcipal court to face charges of
grand theft. violation of the state's cor.
pora tions code and conspiracy are at.
torney Richa rd R. Murphy of Orange, and
brothers Jerry, 41, and Don Hegg, 40, of
Tµstin . •
A fourth defendant is bei.ng sought on
Identical charges.
The Hegg& brothers are free on Sl,ISO
bail. Murphy was released on his own
recognizance in i:arlier court action.
Authorities allege all four were in·
volved in the Orange Coun~y llpef atlons 1 of a child talent syndicate first regist~red
a1 Take One and later linked *itb Na·
tional Video Corporation. Civil action was
t1k1n against the operators after hun~
dred.!: of Orange County parents com·
plained of bei"g bilked of fees ranging
from $90 to $6S9.
Many parents told investigators they
were assured of "excellent chances" for
their children to land contracts in TV
and movie work. None of those inter~
viewed were ever again contacted by the
operators after payment of fees, in-
vestigators claim.
Judge Harmon G. Scoville effectively
ended the operations of the agency \Vith
the signing of a preliminary injunction
aga inst its principals. 'I'bat order ban the
group's contracting and promoting of
child ta1e.nt for movies, TV and com·
mercial!.
Undersea , Leases
Opened for Bids
After W arning
NEW ORLEANS (AP) -The In terior
Department opened bids today in a long.
delayed sale of off!hore oil leases after
warning oil men they mu.st improve their
safety record for wells drilled in the bot·
lorn of the sea.
The multimi!Uon~ollar sale w a 1
delayed two years by mounting concern
over p61Jution from offshore oil well ac·
cidents.
"The department is not completely
satisfied with the safety record of
offshore cperations." said Orme Lewis
Jr., deputy assistant secretary for public
land management.
"The 111afety record oa the tiuter co1>o
Uneatal shelf must be improved."
About 500 oilmen and bankers crowded
the downtown ballroom where the sealed
bids were submitted, opened and read
over a loud speaker system.
customers came iD and kept. the clerk toe SuPerVfaora: 'praised. him for his con·
busy to rol). tribuUOlll to the county· B lli T k Ov
Robert P .. Roy, o• duty at The Likker Supa:v!Jor William Hfroten poinUid lo e a es er
store, 2I02 Newport Boolevard. •lid Ille the "highly llU<Xl<Mful" arterial hi1hw•Y1
red-haired, lrectled. 201.h '"'pect 1e11 fillancin(' program. •. joint COW>ly<ity Srr' han's Appeal and sped away in a car with the lights project odpated by Koch.
ofioy and a friend. John M. Rudenskl, The retlji_ttig Jroad commilsion~ wa1 SALT LAKE CITY (AP) -Melvin
said they were playinc cards when the uktd by "~r David Baker to Belli, flamboyant San Francisco Bay
man came in at 8:20, browaed around and prepare!.~ r~ "on ihe possible COP· trial lawyer, 1aid today he is taking over
finally pressed a awltcbblade knife to solldatioD o( ·.u engineering departmenta the appeal ln the case of convicted
Rudenakl's neck. • .. assassin Sirhan Blshara Sirhan.
He demanded money, threatenln.I to in the cowrty n •money saving move. Sirhan currently is on death row iD San
1tab lht victim. Baker said be was thinking of mads, Quentin prison for the 1968 shooting death
Customera began entering too, flood control, buildinc and safety and of Sen. Robert F. Kennedy.
however, they told Officer Hf.rlan harbor engineers as e:s:amples 0 f Belli told a news conference he was
Pauley, wbo said the suspect toUCbed deplrtments which might be consolidated taking over the appeal at the request of
nothing in the store that could be t:s:· Sirban's family. He was in Salt Lake City
amined for finguprinta. undtr one rounty engineer. for a speech to University of Utah law.
Tbe youth wa.& described 11 having a. Koch wu also prailed for bis years of students. U someone can give her a temporary
home, phone Pascoe at DGl-1356.
School officials also say m,.ny other u~
change students would like to visit the
U.S. If any family wanta to provide a
home for thrff, sb: or nine months, phone
aru. code M2, 282-7353 in Sedona. Ariz:.,
for information on the International
Fellowship program.
GlatowaJd walked into the Embassy
and told Robert Blackbum, a political of-
ficer, that he wanted lo give himself
up.
.. Fine. Come in," Blackbum said.
Blackbum said the youth would be
flown to Saigon and then to the U.S. as
soon u the Cambodian government
canceled hi.s asylum.
liaht. day<ild growth ol burd and we~· wort which led to the. approval of an He &aid he would take over the Sirhan
that Is all Bank of America. officiah ing a full·lengtb olive drab civercoat with Orange County Transit District which case next week. He did not say
would say about. the newett UN.ult an a parka hood attached. waa approved by the voters last Nov. 3. specifically who hlttd him.
DAILY PILOT
Ntwport I•.. Hwllb;;I• ....
....... IMQ h•llli• ,...,
c.te "'"• s-a. .....
OltAHGE COA5T PUtLIS\.llNG COM.rANY
Jto'Dtrl N. w,,,J
Pre1ill•11t 1r,d PW!l.iwr
J.ck II, CurltY Vice Jtr.1111111 U4 a..trtl ~
TI!orrit• Ktt vll
t:dllw
Tlio111H A. Murphi11a
Mtlllllttl !dltor
l.iclt1rd P. Htl
--~ GDulltr E41'llr °"'-ca.. Matt * w .. 1 a.v ,,...
....,.,. a.a.di: m1 Wt1! ,,..,, '°"'"°""' UfUM .. di: m 1'1-t A¥ttlllf ~ tt.dlc 1'11J attcJi ...,.ltlltl'll &Iii ~ :m Nor11i El c:.tr11rit ll•I
Gal Hitchhiker
Takes Side Tri p
To Mesa Jail
A suspected lady of the niaht alleaedly
advertising in broad dayli1ht lost her
first customer Monday.
The statuesque Glendale resident fla&-
ged down a motorist on Harbor
Boulevard in Costa Mesa, quotini a $15
price for certain services to tbe astonlab·
ed man.
"This officer assumed she had oble"·
ed bis 11niform hanging in the side win.
dow and needed assistance," wrote off·
duty Patrolman Dick De Francisco.
He said the 32-year<ild woman hopped
into the car and they drove to a nearby
school campus, where he allegedly of>.
tained enOl.lgh evidence to support an ar-
rest on vice charges.
"I know 11 better place," he"i.td. felp·
Int modesty at the idea of a tfYst in sight
of a.n elementary school with claues in
session.
Tbey arrived at police headquarters
jUJt in Ume for hll regular pall'OI ohllf.
Guerrillas, J ordan
Act to Restore Calm
By Unllod Pren llloraalfooll
Govemment ofUcials and Palestinian
guerrlllu be&an diurmlna t b e I r
p1ramilitary forct• lA>day 1n a major
move to restore peace to Jord1n.
thehwlding. ·~;i;;;;;;;;;i;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;"i No incldeni. had been reported and the II
community was quiet up unUI the blast,
ponlbly organized by five ptrl!Ofll
witneaaes reported teeina: on the 1oene
momenta earlier.
•
The Isla Villa flareups of lut oprinf
ended with more than 100 peno111 jalled
and one st11dent -tryin& to preaerve
order and calm others clamoring for
violence -shot to death.
Investigators said several small firta:
were set ln trash bins around the area.
where residentl said lht bank blut could
be felt two block& away, but were quickly
e1tinguished.
A crowd estimaited at eoo gathered. «i
the scene. .
Terrorist. struck ln Orance County
during October, caUJing $125,000 dam.a1e
to a Bank of America facility near tbe
UC Irvine campus with a put molotov
cocktall thrown throuih the door.
The incldmt followed by a few d1yt the
bombing of a Sllnford Reeearch lnlUtule
agricultural and environmental research
centtt in a remotb comer of tht rural
campus.
Thouaandl of dOllll'l in dlm11e
mulled. alq with io.. of prosreos on
dozens of uperimenll lnvolvlq peacefw
production.
Famed French Si.te
Named for De Gaulle
PARIS (UPI) -ParlJ' limed Pl•ct de
l'Etolle becam< Place Charles de Gaulle
today.
The renamlnc of the famed pl11ct.
where lbe Ate de Triompbe and tbe tomb
of tM unknown t0ldler are located. was
greeted with aometh!n& Im thin t.n•
thUJlum Jn some socton. The chanl'
w11 un1nlmou1ty paled by the Par1a cf·
ly council Nov. 13, hut bee•""' of the
re1u!Un1 protest& ft decided to
reconalder.
THE PRICE IS RIGHT
• (or is i t?)
HAVE YOU EV!R GONE INTO A STORE, AND BEFORE A SALESMAN
APPROACHED YOU, TRIED TO DETERMINE PRICES ON GOODS NOT
MARKED?
MANY CARPET STORES DO NOT HAVE PRICIS INDICATED ON
THEIR SAMPW. THE T H E 0 RY IS THAT THIS WAY THEY CAN
CHARGE "WHAT THE TRAFFIC WILL BEAR."
I
AT ALDEN'S PRICES ARE POSTED ON ALL OF OUR SAMPLES SO
THAT CUSTOMERS CAN BROUSE THROUGH THE SELECTIONS AND
KNOW WHAT THE ARE LOOKING AT. TOO, THERE IS ALWAYS THE
POSSlllUTY OF A L 0 WE R PRICE IF CONDmONS WARRANT.
U.NTA AMA. OlAN•I
TUSTIN'C.11 , ••
ALDIN'S
llD HILL c.A.IPITI
~tu.m1a 1U74 . ......_ T ..... Cefff.
IJIJJ44
ALDEN'S
CARPETS e DRAPES
1663 Placentia Ave.
COSTA MISA
646-4838
HOUltS: Mon. Thru Thurs., 9 to 5:30 -Fri., 9 lo 9 -Sat .. 9:30 to S
,,
I
1.
I '
\
I
'
Bu:oiinlton Beaeh
, , ~~ ' EDITION .. .
. •
Today's Fl•al
N.Y. Steeb
VOL. 6~. NO. 2?9'.3 SECTIONS, if PA&ES. ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, DECEMBER IS, 1970 TEN CENTS
~~~-'----~--~--...~·~·.~----..,..:_.;__~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~,....;.· ......... ~~~~~~~~~---.
ChuFCh }'.teaders 'Fighting Beer Sale at Pier
. . '
By ALAN DlltKIN
Of .. Dlllr "" liitff
Church kaden·ue flghtill&·a•plan to
1ell beer on the Huntlngtqn JIUcll pier,
An olflcia1 prote&t to 'an on-premises
beer license for a sandwich bar on the
pier bu been. filed with the state'•
Aloobolic S.verqe Control 'Deportment
The . department'• 'legal. ill.vision, in
Sacramento has !mind the protest of Rev.
E;ctward Em~ of the.First Unilecl MtlhO-
di>t Church · ol Hwrt!J!iton, Beach to be
Policman ,.
Resumes .
' " ' . ~.
.
Bid·To~ht
,
By TEl!llY" (:9vµ.LE
Of tM o.1tr< P• ltllM
' . , .
Fired HunliJ11toii' !Sf.ach. police .officer
Gllb<!rt Coeiper will .continue' \m-battle to
Win bacl<.his Joi> w)l>n tlieJIO~ com-
mission meets at 7.o'cloct·tQnigbt.ia'the
admlnistraUve .annex to .city ball.
Coerper's hearing ··will aJso ftn;ew the
verbal Clash betWeen Cit:( Attor;ney Don.
J;kinla, sefvtng a;,. headng. offica-, ~
defense attorney Cecil RickS.
Both at~ys fifed ang_ry aalvOs at
each other in Saturday's• ..non of the
Coerper · cue p.s they continued to
disagree on the )gal proceedings. ..
Saturday's seulon began at I a.m.,
with Bonfa, who set lhe Ume, the Jut to
arrive.
He and Ricks squared cf{ early.
A! •James Walker -the officer wh>
conducted the internal iovestigaUon into
Coerper's ·alleged mlshandllnl ol goods
received for charity -related his taIU
with other -IUcb ob)eeled.
"He can't relale -olher·-10 Aid
to ~b other. 'Iba!'• .. ~·~ ~· ~
"It .....td he a 11ttle too clmmJ·tD Jlm!I• the officer and not peiln~'11lm. ... tell tlit
court what he did,""' Bonfa replied. .
Ricks was to objed: to.beenay evidence
neatlY' a 'doz.en .umea. u Walker testtfi:ed
for' four hours Saturday. · . . ;
Ea.Ch time he wu overr;ultd; by Borifa.
Mld-w•y through .the hearln&, Mtchael
Miller prosecuto"r and assistant City at.
tornef, lntrbdtftd I Jett.tr al1egedly llS
evidence that Coerper had lled•lild refus.
ed. to coopf:rate with inv~igators.
Ricks explained the letter wu from
him and was merely an ·outline of the
defense case ·as required by the pro-
ceed"ings. He did not object to its sub-
miasion as evidence. . .
llowever, 'When Bonfa titled the
evidence as a "letter from Coerper,''
Ricks spoke up.
"I object to lhat title. lt's. my 1etter."
"The letter will stand on its own as
fact. I've' never beard anyone object to
the way a hearing officer described a let·
ter." "As 1 understand It," Ricks began.
"this is the first time you ever sat a:s a
flearing officer so it's not surprising you
never heard the objection before."
"You're overruled, .. ' Bonfa &aid, ending
the discussion. •
Testimony continued, with Ricks·1ittillg
~Ack In his chair, silent
Flnally the defense attorney asked to
qtake a statement for the record.
·"rm trying to be polile as I can to Mr.
(See llEAJllNG, Pqe II
los Alamitos
To Fight Nary · ' . Over _ J{qush.ig. , . . ' Lo• Alam)tos ts ready_ tq ~lllt. tl)e
Navy over plans to convert tbe Los
Afamitos Naval Air Station into a 10,000.
person military housing tract.
City officials charged at a ,c»uncll
meeUng Monday night that ttie con-
,J,!rsion would "bankrupt" the' city with,
the additional burden on city services'.
f''We 'U fight this aU;tbe W'IY to ~·top,••
City Manager WUftam ·Kraus said today.
'The first aa1vo · In the fi.W -911M with
t~e city council .. ung unanfmoualy lo go
ori record as "unalt.erably.oppc.ed" 19
tjie plan and to Inform local -ts and
ranking naYal personnel ol its position.
The council was told ll woold Cost lu·
P!!l'ers an mimatecl fl,tll!O to j><ovjde the
pi'ojecl Wtth sud> oervl<11 ao pollce and fl!! f>rotecltoil and ,._. nne...
Gounctllnan Dale K°'""11 lermed lite
Navy's plan "a financial~" for tbe
city, . ' •
l,ut week the Navy annouti«d its plan
to build a ISU mlllloo housln& ... jed.oa
the facility encompassing all but 200 of
the: l,300 available .:res. '
Councilmen claimed the ho u s l n g
development would be U• exempt and
thu! mull Jn lhe extra..bur~ ~ tax·
payera.
I•
. le(o)~ -and the appeal wW oow be stveo JI ·Pobllc hearing,
· "N""beaiing has been scheduled yet, · l>Ol.'Wflen It'll held It wW probably be In
!lml~Ana." iald Mri. Evelyn Gray, who
proceUel ABC. liceme epplicatlons. ~=,.1!9 ~ion on tbJs for
· 'f!ii aiieal il·a-ck to.the plans of ~ ,smtth fO """"" • !rah fish .... ~<h;abop' iil",the pier lntO a sandwl~ bat.,'11>'-i-srantec1 penni..ton . -.
by the city council to make the con·
version and se.tt beer.
The vote was 6-1 with c.ouncnmao
Norma Gibbs casting the oniy "No"
vote.
"What we believe is happening here ls
a trend that will set off a chain reaction
of establishments · selling beer in the
beach area," ReY. Erny said today. '"This
Is not an isolated incident but a trend
that will start. We relt we should take a
s~d at this time."
Rn, Erny ls supported ill bis proteot by
hb c:hurcll boord, the Metbodlsl Women's
. Society for Christian Service and1 aeveral
· membera of tbe Huntlncton Beach-Foun-
taln Valley Mlniltuls! Aasoclatton.
'l1le mlntsten signed a pell\an that was
""" to the ABC dePIMD*t objectln( to
the licenle requat and Rev, Erny signed
the official protest that was later )odged.
'l1le mlntsten who ligned 1he petition
serve .the following churches: Crace
Lutheran Church, the First Ba~t
Cburtli ol Huntlnglon Beach, the Frist
Baptill 'Church of Fountain Valliy, the
Evangelical Free Cliirclt of HUnttnP>n
Beach~ the Flfst. · United Methodist
Church ol Fountain , Valley, the cOm·
munlty Urilted Methodiat~Cliurch of~_ffim..
tlngton Beach ai\d the C h r lo t
Pre~rtan Church ol Huatlngton
Bellch. -The president or the ministerial
woclatlon, Rev, K e n n • t b McMillan, . . . . .
emphaslud that the paston olgned their
objecilons as individuals and n o t
necessarily as representativa ol those
churches.
"The association has not taken a posi-
tion on it as a body simply because we
haven't had a meet,l.r:ll," the Rev.
~1cMillan said.
ReY. Erny said that several beach con-
cessionaires had also approached him
(See PIER. Pap II
Hole Blow~ in 'Isla Vista Roofwp
·' ' • '"'· ' -. . ... ' -. . Sejl•tor Edmund Muskie (D·Me,) met for_~ min?te~ today wi!h ,fol'J?l~r"Pres~ent Hatry'S. Truman at Trwrian's Independence, ~10.,
home. Muskie, generafly regarded as the leading contender for the
.l~OtlmoCrJ1tic pres1dential nomina~i<>n,,said they talked about-poli··
· ties"-and ·M~skie's·upcoming ·trip to tbe .Midate Easl .. .
•• t •• ' .
(j~~ Freighter Hijacker
Su·rrenders in Cambodia • ,
· PijNOr,t ·P,ENH (AP) -"I only regret
I. didn't sink the ship," one .of the hi· jac~ers. ~{ a U.S. ammunitljm · fl'tighter
said · foday 1as he ' walked · into the
American Embassy in Phnom Penh to
surrender. ·
, 4'1 still believe in the re.volulion in
America and in the revolution in Cam·
bOdia,"' Alvin L. · GlatoWskl, '2o,. Long
boditl, ... ~lvln L. Glatoi;yskl, 20, Long
~. told aewsmen. But be said he felt
he would get a fairer deal In the U.S. than
in Cambodia. .
Glatowskl ' and Clyde W. McKay. 25,
Escondido, took ·over the 10,000-ton
COlumbia Eagle in the· Gulf of Thailand
last March and forced the crtw into the
Cambodlan port of Kompong Som.
They have been indicted by a federal
grand jury in Loa Angeles on charges of
rriutiny o"n the high seas, assliult,
~ting kidnaped persons in foretp '
~. arid ' neglect of duty. Thef '
coilld .. the death peoalty on the mutiny
cbarga: 'n»e !hip and the rest of its crew were
rekmtdr IDdi COD'fPleted the voyage ·to,
~iJibil; .•
M'cW~ ~~l!.~Y from 1 a Cambodian
I (SH JUJACK, Pa1e J)
~ T f • -. .
U'IT....._
HEADING FOR .HOME
, -Ship Hlloc:kor GlotOwskl
. '
From Wire Servtcea
JSLA VISTA - A tossed bomb blew a
hole in the roof of a Bank . of America
branch here Monday· night, showering
the street with masonry tiles and in-
flaming emotions of street people and
lawmen again.
No serious damage was reported, but
the blast caused by an unidentified device
left a 1 hole several feet ~ iD the
overhanging eave of the !tructure.
A crowd 0£ UC Santa Barbara students
and other young people living ln·the unin-
corporated community greeted sheriff's
deputies who arrived on the scene with
whoops and jeers.
Last of Trio
Sentenced
•· . ' • F: or . ·Slaying."
'" ' ' i. 1l1llriler' inO . tiiot .....ci wtien tlftt
baridits llhot' •and kiDed F/toptaln Villey
market manager James W. Oates "bfa
closed in Orange County superior C-olat
with the senteDcln& Of the third member
of that trio.
1-lennan W. ·''Tlkl" Grant, 13, of Santa .
Ana, was sente11Ced to six months to li{e
imprisonment In state prison for his part
in the killing of Oates last Aug, 12 at the
Tic Toe market, 9457 Heil St.
Judge Kenneth Williams untencecl
Grant, after accepUng bl! pleu of guDty to
second degree murder. Grant's two com-
panions in' the Oates murder rectJved
stiffer terms from the same judge after
pl~ding guilty to cha~geo of first degree
murder.
Robert Woodrow Cements, 22. or 14811
Al~ter St., Weslmins1er, dmv a life
term when he chose to waive his penalty
trial and offer the plea. A jury had
already found him guilty.
Jerry Lee John.son, 18, of 14471 Titus
St., Westminster, identified throughout
th e Investigation and prosecution as the
gunman in the Oates killing, also drew a
life term.
Prosecutor! today comider th a t t1''0
factors saved Johnson from the gas
chamber : medical evtdeoce that 'be was
an epileptic and the fact that Qlere was a
hair trigger on his semi-automatic rifle.
AH three men were arrested after a
prolonged gun battle with police in a
Garden Grove orange grove. Hundreds of
nearby homeowners watched a duel that
ended with the shackling of all three
iruapecta,
Orders to Wipe Out
Viet Hamlets Denied
WASHINGTON (UPl)-Brlg, Gen. w~
nant Sidle, chlef of Army information.
Monday denied rtports Gen. William C.
Westmoreland had ordered Viet Cong-in.
fested villages outside Saigon "leveled"
after the Tet offemJve of 1968.
·_··P .npils St11dy Maehiite
_(;ill.er Students Lear1ii1ig on Teletype 'Educator' ...
' By TERllY COVILLE
Of M D9flr '"' "-ft The kid< at Gioler Intermediate School
In lfunting1on Beach bave a con!etU mak·
Joa mocblDt.
1It dCI dniw1 a gOOd outline of SllOOPY'• f~. .Aitd ltc.can40l ... a malh.qull In a oplit ......is. ;, . '
'll>etr modllne' Is a teletype hooked Into
a Malina lflgh School busineso eta" and
lnto·the large eompaten• el UC Irvine.
It's on loan for two wee.ks from General
TeleJiw>fie cOmp111y as an experiment.
The compaey wants to know if it's a g'e! .,ctucauoiiat tool. 'The llda'reaUy like 1t," reports Glsler
principal Tohn Wyatl
Confetti and Snoopy are two of the
reasons why.
They pick up the pieees of the punched
out tape for 90ft, yellow conletU. "We're
saving Jt for basketball games," said one
yOW!pter.
Snoopy w .. llrawn by a shth grade
teacher who typed leU.rs In the correct
form , put Jt on an automatic tape, and
ran It through the teletype produclilg a
completed picture,
On a more serk>us tone, the teletype of·
fers a fast, accurate means for the older
stude nts to study math. They can type
out programs for the UCI comput.ers,
•end them over the teletn>< and await
lhe results.
"It tells -... when a program ii wron1
too," Dan Trubovib, ll, ukL He
dilplayed rolls ol "Wk" with Ille UGI
compala' in which moth Pflljecla wao
wriUm out and anowmd cmr the
telolype.
'!be longtll ll<oblem took C mt...tes to
transmit -that OOlll the school' 11.M,
Flw minutes of computer Ume nonnallJ
costs ti cent.a.
slxtli gr1der1 don't work math pro-
blems, but they are Introduced to the
teletype as a heavily used form of oom-
munlcatlon.
Rocks. IDd. botUes were thrown -ooe
depaty wu hit In the hip but not injured
-wbrie auth«itiea ttediteCI' calmer
YOWll! Jie<!l?le with helping ~p Jtrder •In
the midst of mutual tenlkn.
'l1le bank -symbolic of the capllali&t
power structure to radicals -was rebuilt
on the scene of one burned last Feb. 25
durtn& a clash that touched· off a. series
of Incident!.
Busa-cooUnued u lllUal today, bul
that , ts all Bani< of America offlclail
would say &boot the newest wault OD
the building,
No Incidents bad been reported and the
Dismissal Letter
• community was quiet UP,•UDtil the blast.
possibly organized by five penom:
witnesses reported seeing on the scene
moments earlier.
'l1le r..la Vista flareups ol wt sprtnc
ended with more than 100 persons jailed
and one student -trying to preserw
order and calm others clamorinc for
violence -shot to death.
Investigators said several small flra
were aet in trash bins around the area,
where residents said the bank blast could
be felt two blocks away, but were quicklY,
exUngulshed. .
A crowd estimat.ed at 800 gathered «1
the scene.
Aide . ._S~ys !le Observed _
-. ' . ' ' ltaghe$;Sign Document·
LAS VEGAS, Nev, (UPI) -A penonal
aide of Howard Hughes, who clatms he
has aeen the .. myatecy billionaire almo<t
daily for the put five years, aaya he saw
the induetrialilt" •lgn • docume•t firing
the bead of his Nevada operations.
, HQWever, a handwriting 'expert and
former auoclate of Robert Maheu,
Hua1*1'· Nevada chief, claima the
algnfture, Oii the letter of·dianlual Is a
forgery,
Bot1t men le!ltfled Monday In the
Nevada District Court hearing atemming
from the attempted ousting oL Maheu by
Yule Decoration
Contest Nearing
End in Valley
Only hours remain today for Fountain
Valley residents who want to compete for
prizes offered In the Fountain Valley
Chamber of commerce C h r I a t ma 1
deeoratlng contest
Entries In home, mobile home and
buslneu divisions all must be postmark·
ed by midnight tonight -if malled -or
they can be delivered (by midnight) to
the home of the conteat .chairman, Mrs.
Barbara'Gillum, 17111 Santa Rita, Foun-
tain Valley, CA mos.
Jn addlUoa to the 12 awards offered by
the chamber ta the local contest, the top
two entries in the Fountain Valley contest
will be eligible for awards in the
aruwlde "to Miles of Qirlatmas Smiles"
contest OHpomoied ' this year by the
Oronie County Coaat Association and the
DAILY PILOI',
Valley reotdents and btist .... operators
who haven't obtained an "official entry
blank" llll1l can enter the local contest.
All they need to do. Mr, Gillum ea-
plained, ii to lum1lb her with their
names, addreaea and , telephone num-
bers. '" ·
(Judge! will decide ID which categories
eich entry best Dta, m, caM of ovetlap-
plng, m It llD'.&. even MCellll')' for con-
lalt -to-1111 the catqorltl,)
WU-. ol a-In ihe 1oC8I <'ClllleSt can eol1ec:I _. priRfl at the cl\y
Chrtltmao cefolnllon and tr.llPllilr .,....,..., ~ ror 1:10 p,m..on'
SUndaJ • c.amm.riy c.nw. . • ea.....-o1 --1c1ua., HOME DM8IOl!I -Bat Qlrlolm11
SOene, -ltellglollJ, -Speclat. -u--. _. Effactlve u .. ol
1.....-.,Moal U..-l,afl!IS~ .
MOBILE HOME DMSION --
Crlltmu -· -Religloul and Santa Spodal, ___
1 BUSINESS DIVISION -.,... Window
DecontlOlll and, -Indoor and O\lldoor
. Decorations. ,
For further 'delallo, palelltlal , COi>
testants ahould contact Mrs. Gillum at
Ml-1475.
'
executives ol Hughes Tool Co., Iba
Houston-baled parent finn of the
billionaire's giant bu!iness empire.
Ralph Bradlonj, now retired but
previously a handwriting and fingerprint
expert for 7.8 years on the Long Beach
Police Department, testified at the hear:
ing today that Huahea' signature wu 1•
nuine.
Bradford alao said he was satisfied that
a , three-page band written Jetter urginC
the executives of the tool company to get
ahead with the job of firing Maheu wu
aJ90 written by Hughes.
Levar B. Myler, who Jdentified himaelf
as a "special assistant" to Hughes, said
Hughes ligned a proxy Nov, 14 firing
Maheu, who has been the billlonalrt'i'No.
1 man In Nevada for the past four years.
Myler said the signing took place In the
ninth floor penthouse maintained bJ
Hughes in the Desert IM Hotel in Lu
Vegas. The witness also testified Hughe.I
subsequently went to the BrltaMia Beacb
Hotel in Nassau, the Bahamas, and from
there issued instructions the proxy be
released.
Earlier tn the day, Charles Appel Jr,, a
fonner FBI agent with Maheu, teatlfted
on behalf of Maheu that Hughes'
purported signature on ihe document
presented by the Hughes Tool CO. was a
"simulation or imitation."
"It's a·very good representation," Apo
pe1 said. "It would pa.u any bank teller
and other business asaoclates would ac-
ctpt it, but It's deficient. 11'1 eltremely
skillful but It's different" ·
Wead&er
There's a 60 percent chance
you'll nned your umbrella on Wed-
nesday. Temperatures will tumble
too, dipping in.lo the low sixties
along the Orange Coast . .
INSIDE TOD/\~
1 How dot!r your a11nual fn-
come /it into the national scaUit
Sylvia Porter ha.s all the anawer1
on Fina11ce Poge JO toda11.
°""9~ .
CHRIS'i'MAS
~·
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•
. l_,, Do<-II. 1'70
Service Stations
Waging Gas War
J\llt in llnl• f6r Clltlltma&, Mrvlce Iii·
ttoos .illlllg Ibo Oran1• C.oat m •lll•ftd
izi a prlOe eutuna au war.
bropt from ncW•r priCff as mucb ii
two t.o' !oor cODtl a 1alloo wero reporlod
by •aJen trom eor ... 4tl Mar to FOWl-
tain Valley.
MilliOn Viejo and El Toro a:•• stations
bowever, have ytt to 10 along with the
prloe ..,,., probably becaute tbe ttbat..
oil compaoltl bave olftnd to other
. doalen ba"" not been eztendod to Soulll
County lla!loat.
Fl'OM P .. e I
HEARING ...
Bonfa." Ricki Aid. 1'And he's becom1ng irritated ...
"You're out of order," Bonfa snapped.
Lat.tr, whtn Ricks be.Ian quizzing
Walktf on his method.a of lnvati1ation,
Miller ol>jecled to the Implication of alop-
Pintll on Walker'• work.
"l'tn enUtJed to IDqutre u to the con·
duct of th1I man in hi• 1nve1U,1tion,"
Rieu wwered.
"I bbjeCt, Mr. Ricks." Bonfa spoke out.
"You're ovtrrul«I, Mr. Bonfa,'' JUcks
snapped back.
"Don't mate any mare off tbe record
r:otntnentt," Bonfa warned.
Tbit wu tbt last angry exchange
between the two and the seuion ad·
journed at _,_
Girl From Chil.e
Seeks Area Home
For School Term
A younr IU'l in Chile II looldni for a
homo Jn lluntlqtoo Beach -JuJI lor nine monthl.
Teresa Hidalgo, 16, is set to attend
EdiJon High School starting in f ebruary
as an tntemaUonal Fellowz;hJp E:a:ehange
student.
Her trip may oever get off the iround.
however. Edison Principal ltrneat Pucoe
report, that Ttrt!aa b&i JtOWbtre ta live. . ·Ia thtre a family In south Huntington
Beach lllat would JU.. an adl>p!M
daughter for the nine months?
~ Spolloimen in Chile report that Te .....
,. alNd;t JllCldni bet .... ven1n. fll!llly
pboloa IJld ....,..too 16 obaw het footu
bmlly hero.
-U tomeont can aive hir a temporary
home, phone PalCOe at 98).11111.
5cllool olllcltll allo AY mtny other n·
dlange lludenfl would JIJce to ViJit the
U.S. II any family w .. 11 to provide a
lw>me for thrtej ifx or Dint monlhl, phone
area cOde 802, 283-13&3 In Sedona. Ariz., tor JnlomiatlOn on tbe JntetnaUonal
PellOW8hlp prbgtam.
Zone Change Set
For f.ommission
A publio heatl!1g oo a iooe cbanae in-
1\llled by tbe plaMlng commlallon ls the
t.op ti.m on Jnnl&llt'• apnda of Ille Foun·
lain Valley City Council.
Tbt city wants: to ruone t4 ams on
the northwtlt . and IOUthWest aides of
Bt6othurlt Street and !dlnaer Avenue
from JI.I, Po.e!OO CpilMed development
wtlll lllllll Iota) to llrtifl!t IH (7,lllO
&qUlre foot Jot!).
In other actions the eouneil will con-
1Ider an offtr <.1f financial aid to Teen
Help, the anU-dtug, youth counsetlnc
organitatlon and look at a contract with
the architectural firm ol Bluroct &
Auoclatea for expansion of the police. cl·
ty haJI and community ctnttr faciliUea.
DAILY PILOT
OAAMO& COAST ,UILllMlNO CCIM,Alf't
lo .. 1rt N. W ...
l'rni.IMI ar,d l'VM ......
J 1(l: l . C11rl1y
~ f>rw,111 .. t 11'111 Ott.nl ~
Th111'111 k'11vil .....
,,.,,..,, A. M11r,J.t11e
MfllltflfllallM
Al11t Dlr~l11
W•t Ottlltt Clwlry ...
Al .. tt W, l1t1t
Mocleft l.iMf
"""" ... --17171 .... h .._, .....
M1ili11t A.44re•11 P.O. hx 710, t2MI
Otllor-
....... &Nell:.~ .... , ........ QiH M-! »I WW.I .. .., 11""' ........, 9IK:fl1 nn w.1 .. ._......,. tM ~II: al ,..,_ II Cln!IM bM
. .
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J. IJIClkel!lWI at Grant's Gulf In C.O.la
Mes:a said "we Just 4r0pped another pen-
ny yesterday" bring~ their price for
low-lead resular to 30.8 and prernium
&rade to 3'.9 cents.
\Vb.tie matt . dealers r1ndomty In·
t@rviewed seemed resigned to the renew·
ed gas war, a Newport Beach Chtvron
,station owner expreoed disgust, refusins:
to say wh;at be was now charging, wbUe
ootiog be was participating.
Ken's Mobile Service Station. Qirona
del Mar u.Jd "We're very mucb into 1
.11s war. We dropped lwti cents a 11llon
over the weekend," the owner reported,
bringing hiJ prices to 34 .9 cents for
1taular and 38.9 for premium.
He recalled that the last gaa war lasted
air weeks and ended just thrtt weeks
ago.
"I think they are terrible," he said.
''but people are very selective now about
gasoline prices, probably because of the
~nomy. We have to go alona."
By contraat, Milslon Viejo Mobile
rtpottl no price drop and contin11es to
cbll'ge 38.9 for regular and 40.9 ·for
pren\lum.
Fivt Points Texaco ln Huntington
Bead! has been lowering pricet for a
WMk an4 atanda at 29.9 for r""'4r IJld
311.1 for PAmlum.
Larry Mead, operator of a Shell station
in Fountain Valley, said pri1..-es had drop-
ped four cent.a a gallon in a week.
"the gas companies give me 20,000 dif·
fettnt rea50ns for a gas war." ht said,
"But I sllll don't understand why."
"I have to stly with them to be com·
pet.itive," be said. noting that be believes
"people are !hopping more now than they
wed to."
Howard Yarborough, operator of a
UniOll station in El Toro 1aia the gas war
had l'IOt rtaehed bis corner yet, but noted
that a station across the street was
cbareing 40.9 ceDts for pl'flmium com-
pared with his 39.9.and 38.9 at a third sta·
tion.
"I'm not ready for another gas war,"
Yarborough said. "They hurt profits both
ways, for the dealer and the oil coa'I·
PIDY-"
"We caa get a call in the morning to
drop our price," he explained, "but then
it i& the. dealer 's choice whether or not to
go lions."
If dealers don't go along. they may lose
customers to another station. If they do.
they ~Ut the ~ned revenue from
sale.s on a prearranged rebttt baiafl with • Ibo oil company.
From Pag~ I
HIJACK ...
guard in a Phnom Penh restaurant ln
OC:tober and disappeared with an
American deserter from T h a 11 a n d •
Glatowski said then he believed they
were beaded for the town of Siem Reap
to join C.Ommunist forces fighting in
Cmibodia.
Olatowski and ri.tcKay were kept on a
prison boat on the Mekone River for a
few weeks after the hijacking. They com·
plained about the conditions there and
were put in the servants' quarters of a
governmmt guest house in Phnom Penh
and then in a hotel.
The Cambodian government paid their
hottl bills, and they technically had
political asylum. But they were actually
under a form of arrest, free to move
about in the city but always escorted by
Cambodlan guards.
•
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High Motn
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DAILY ,ILOT lttH ~lllfO
Devil Cult
Trial Case
Under Way
8y TOM BARLEY
01 !flt DellY '''-' Jttll What Steven Craig Hurd described to
his psychiatrist as Mrs. Florence Brown'a
1'queenliness and goldlneu" and what he
believed wu her "derogatory attitude"
toward! him may well have cost the
Miuion Viejo teacher her life, It was
alleged in testimony today in Oran1e
County Superior Court.
Dr. John A. Guido opened the sanity
trial of the accused 20-year~ld transient
by telling deft!\.9e attorney William Gam-
ble that Hurd told him that he slashed
ri.tn. Brown in the neck "to warn her"
that he would not tolerate her auperlorl·
ty.
Hurd could not recall lhe actual killln1
of Mrs. Brown, Guido testified but he
could recall "1tabbing her once or twice_
Then he remember1 that he drove around
Santa Ana with her body -sort of like
they dld thing! in Vietnam, he told m~. ''
Hurd is accused of being the ringleader
of a group of drifters who police clalm
pulled Mr1. Brown, 31 , of El Toro, from
her car lut June 2 u she left the San
Oiego Freeway at the Sand Canyon elt-
ramp.
MORALITY PLAYERS USE OLD MIDIUM FOR NEW TWIST ON A RECURRING MESSAGE
Gl1ler Students (from left) Jonn• Hin••, Amell• Zaff•r•no, Brend• Cook, Sh•r·on L•n• (gult•r)
Poliu allege that the woman wu
mutilated and subjected to a series of
devil worshiping rites b e fore she was
finally killed in an Irvine orange grove.
Gamble told the court tOl:lay that one of
those rites involved the eating of her
heart by Hurd. From Page 1
PIER ...
and voiced mi!givings on the beer
Ucense.
''They feel they will be undtr pressure
to compete," he .said.
The minister! also believe that a beer
license would cause policing problem!.
"There is even the possibility of mob ac-
tion. U there is beer sold on the beach.
people would be more susceptible to
violence and spontaneous group action."
Smith was supported in his application
for a lease change frotp the council by
Harbors and Beaches Director Vince
Moorhouse who told the councilmen that
the change would be compatible with the
city's Top of the Pier plan.
The r!quest also was discussed with
Police Ohief Earle RobitaUle and he rais-
ed no objection at the council meeting.
Smith, who al&o operates a bait and
tackle stand on the pier, remains COO·
!idtnt that the license wUI be granted.
"I have a tremendous amount of
money invested in this." he said. "I have
to press on with my plans. I would have
had the license last week if the objectioa
hadn't been ra.ised."
The businessman said that he operated
the stand as a fresh fish market for a
year and lost money.
"But our best line was smoked fish and
people kept asking us for some form of
beveraae. That's what made me decide to
make sandwiches too and convert it into
a small restaurant.
"I don't think people understant that
beer will only be drunk on the premises.
None will be going out the door."
Smith argued that the diange fits the
Top of the Pier plan in that it will help
the city determine what bwines&es will
be auccessful in the beach area.
First Beer, Now GJs
Will Get Own Rugs
WASHINGTON CUP!) -The Anny
priva~e has been given the right to drink
beer In the barracks. Soo:i he will have a
rug of his own and be will be able to
choose beige, rose or green.
Drug Play Set
Stlldents Stage Morality Production
An old fashioned morality play will
tackle a new faniled problem -drug
abuse -thla Cliriatmas season at Gisi~
lntennedJate School, Huntington Beach.
The play baa been written by a 7th
grade 'h.lstory class for the belellt of
other Glaler clauea.
It dreuea modem day narcotic.a: .pr~
blems in the vocabulary and clothes of
the middle ages.
The atudenll took ao old play
"Everymaa" and turned it into "Every· teen .''
The main fea ture is a rousing sword
batUe with &ood triumrblng over evil.
The first .few lines o the play read like
this :
Hooked Tee:o: "Why don't you try it?"
Ano!htt booked Teen : "Don't be
chlcken."
Everytee.n : "Ah, I'm a little scared. I
don 't want to."
Hooked Teen : "Let's split. This guy'1
just a clilcken."
Everyteen: "No, wilt a minute. Don't
leave." (Everyteen walk.a to front of
stage and speaks to audience ). "I don't
know' what to do. Shall I take the stuff or
not. II I don't my friends will chop me. U
I do !Ike It they'll think I'm a cool CUY·
But I might get booked. I mtgbt even die.
If I just had someone to tell me what to
do."
That someone appear• later ln the play
and with a litUe help from h1s real
friends Everyteen makes the right choice
and beats back the dreaded dope: devils. •
Former Huntington Beach
Aide Newbold Succumbs ,
A former parking s14perintendent In
Huntington Beach. Roland A. Newbold,
who re.!lided in the city for 13 years. has
died at the age of 64 .
Famed French Site
Named for De Gaulle
PARIS (UPJ) -Paris' famed Place de
l'Etoile became Place Charles de Gaulle
today_
The renaming of the famed place,
where tbe Arc de Trlompbe and the tomb
of the unknown soldier are located, wa&
greeted with something less than eD·
thustasm lo some sectors. Tbe chanae
was unanlmously passed by the Paris cl·
ty council Nov. 13, but because of the
resultln& protests it decided to
reconsider .
Services will be -conducted .at 1 p.m.
Wednesday at Smith's Mortuary, 82'1
ri.tain St.. Huntington Beach. with in·
terment following at the Good Shepherd
Cemetery. Thomas W. Ovtrton. putor of
the First Christi.an Church, will conduct
the service.
lt1r. Newbold, who died Swlday. was the
assistant manager of the Huntington
Beach municipal parking lot for 10 yeara.
He was a past master of Masonic
Lodge Ml, was a membu of the Shriners
and a pa11t patron of the Order of the
Eastern Star.
Mr. Newbod .. who lived at 1023 Lake
St .. ls survived by his wtfe , Luelle, two
daughters, a brother, a sister. four
grandchildren and one graatgrandchlld.
THE PRICE IS RIGHT
(or is it1)
Mrs. Brown was burled In a &hallow
grave off the Ortega Hlihway_ Her
di&membered body was fOund June 15.
Guido is one of five psychiatrists who
examined Hurd in Oran1e County Jail. rt
is expected that . at least two more
psychiatrists will follow him to he
witness stand in Judge Robert L.
Corfman's courtroom.
Judge Corfman will rule after hearing
counter arguments from Chief Deputy
District Attomey James Enright If Hurd
is sane and competent to stand trial.
Guido's written opinion w1s that Hurd
was iMane at the time of the Brown kill-
ing.
Four other psyciliatrl!lll have ruled the
Jong-haired defendant to be sane but all
doubt his: ability to aid oowuel in bil:
defense.
Police Discover
Wandering Tot
In Huntington
A sha,uy-haired moppet wanderrn, Jn
Huntington Beach had pollce baffled for
three hours Monday, in more ways thu
one.
Oaniel Claire, 3. was found about I
a.m., toddlinf down Frankfort Avenue in
only a pair ol yellow flaMel pajamas.
Knocking systematically at houses and
apartments, officers Stephen Balloch at1.a
Wllllam Vancleve spent U fruJUe11
mlnutu trylog to find someone mlnua
one child.
Ht v.·as taken to police headquarters,
where several clerks got a break trom.
the more mundane aspecta of keepln&
crime files straiaht by entertainin1 lht
youngster.
He was finally taken to the Albert SJ~
ton Home in Orange, where his relieved
mother finally clsimed him Mol'lday
afternoon.
"She works night.s. She came home,
went to sleep and didn't wake up until
noon." explained a spokeaman for the
foundling home.
Sy the way, little Daniel Claire baffled
Police In more ways than one, It wu
disclosed today.
He was listed as a &lrl ln the found
child report.
HAVE YOU MR GONE INTO A STORE, AND IEFORE A SALESMAN
Al'l'ROACHID YOU, TRIED TO DETERMINE l'RICES ON GOODS NOT
MARKED?
MANY CARl'ET STORES DO NOT HAVE !'RICES INDICATED ON
THEIR SAMl'LES. THE THE 0 RY IS THAT THIS WAY THEY CAN
CHARGE "WHAT THE TRAFFIC WILL IEAR."
AT ALDEN'S PRICES ARE l'OSTID ON ALL OF OUR SAMl'LU SO
THAT CUSTOMERS CAN BROUSE THROUGH THE SILECTIONS AND
KNOW WHAT THE ARE LOOKING AT. TOO, THERE IS ALWAYS THE
l'OSSlllUTY OF A L 0 WE R PRICE IF CONDmONS WARRANT.
ALDEN'S
,......,-.. -,.-•• -.-. o-,.-•• -,-, CARPETS e DRAPES
lUITIN C.tl •••
uo .t~~·u,""' 1663 l'lac•ntla Ave.
& DlAPllld COST A MISA 11174 ,,... httl .. Celtf. ........ '46•4131
• •
JUI , an 85-pound alrafle, nuzzles her mother, Liz, at the Denver Zoo.
The baby was live feet tall at birth Dec. 12 .
HOU~S: Mon. Thru Thurs., 9 to 5:30 -,,J,, f lo 9 -Sat., 9:30 lo 5
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DAILY l'!lOf :J
Laird to · Vietnam; Troop Cut Eyed
~~~~~~~~~---,--,-o--~~~~-"--~-==--~___:_·~
•,
Ul'I T.._119 ..
GETS HIS DAY IN COURT
My Lai F igure Calley
Supervisors
To Air Two I
Hot Issues
By JACK !ROBACK
Of IM 0.llY Plitt S~ft
Jt won't seem like the jolly Chri.sbnu
season Wednesday when lhe board of
supervisors holds public hearings on two
highJy controversial sutijects.
Starting off the day at 10 a.m. is a con·
tinued hearini{ on proposed tide1md! fees
in Newport Harbor. At 2 p.m. the Ralph
hf. Pal"SOfls Company report on the coun·
ty air transportation plan is schPduled.
The possibility that the tideland.!
arguments may be J>9Slponed IS sffn ln
the recommendation· by the county
harbor cummissionerl that further study
be given before fees are assessed to
docks and marinas on county tidelands.
However, supervisors voted Oct. 7 to
levy fees beginning Jan. I . Wednesday'•
hearing is supposed to determine the
amount or the .·ental fees .
Last July Stanley Krause, county Real
Property Services director, recommend·
ed that fees of $6 per foot a year for
docks and 12 cents per foot for com-
mercial marinas be levied.
The first two sessions on the subject
brought forth large scale and vigorous
opposi,tion fro:n boat cwners and marina
operators in the harbor area.
DAILY PILOT SMff PNll
Paris-Stop
Included
On Journey
WASHINGTON (AP ) -SecnLary of
Defense Melvin R. Laird announced to-
day he will go to Southeast Asia early
next month to view the military situation
first hand and discuss future troop
withdrawals from Vietnam.
Laird said he would be accompanied by
Adm. Thomas H. Moorer, chairman of
the Joint Chie[s of Staff.
The trip will take them first to Paris
&nd discussions with the American
negotiators in the peace talks with the
North Vietnamese and Viet Cong.
Following the slop in Paris Jan. 5 the
secretary will then · Oy to 11laUand and
South Vietnam.
In outlining his plaris during a news
conference, the secretary de(:lined to say
whether the rate of withdrawals would be
alowed during the coming weeks.
He said he would not discuss monthly
figures or tie himself down to specific
~ilings but declared, however, that
"we'll beat or meet the troop celling of
May l" when U.S. forces In Vietnam are
to be reduced to 284,000 men under Presl·
dent Nixon's timetable. As of Thursday'
American for~s in Vietnam numbered
343,700.
Soldier Says
Capt. Medina
Shot Woman
It is also indicated that the air
transportation hearing will not be any
happier than previous sessions on that
controver::· ·J subject.
GOOFY GIVES LAURIE HANSEN A SOUVENIR BOOK DURING HER DISNEYLAND TOUR
It Wai Just One of Many Gifts for Winner of Uncle Len's Chrl1tm•1 Card Contest
During bis stopover in Saigon, Laird
said he would assess the progress in the
Vietnamizalion program, the over-au
military situation in Southeast Alia and
the military assistance program. The
visit. he said, will also give him a chance
to confer with Gen. Creighton. Abrim.5,
the U.S. commander in Vietnam, "on
what lies ahead" in fu tll'e troop reduc·
tiorui.
FT. BENNING, Ga. (UPI ) -A soldier
who served at My Lai testified today tbe
company commander had conducted an
"inflammatory" meeting the night before
lhe strike, had ordered the village
destroyed. and had personally killed a
woman picking rice.
The testimony concerning the com-
mander, Capt. Ernest L. Medina, was
given at the court-martial in which one of
his platoon leaders, Lt. William L. Calley
Jr.. is charged with murdering 102
civilians during the mi ssion.
Michael A. Bernhardt, 24, of Tarpon
Springs. Fla., surveyor, was one of eight
witnesses called by the defense in two
days to say that Medina had left him with
!he impression flat all inhabitants -in-
cluding women and children -were to be
tilled in-the Vietnamese hamlet of My
Lai on March 16, 1968~
Three days after the sweep, he
testified, Medina "gave an address to the
:ompany " in which he said an in·
vcstigation was under way.
··tte said he would advise us to be quiet
And he would back up anyone if they got
ln lrbuble," Bernhardt said.
Bernhardt added that Medina later took
him aside and said "that he personally
didn ·t feel it would do any good if I made
a report to my congressman or to the JG
(ins~~or general) or anybody else and
not to do it."
Bernhardt's testimony followed that cf
ancther fcrrner soldier at My Lai who
said he fired into a group of 10 women
and children in the village because he
had the impression that Medina . n his
briefing. had ordered the killing of the in·
habitants.
Medina Is accused by the Army or
overa!J responsibility of the killing of "at
least 175" civilians that day, but no
formal charge has yet committed him to
rourt·martial.
Bernhardt testified that "Capt. Medin3
was very passionate " in tone at the brief-
ing t.he night before the assault: "He
iaid there were no innocent civilians in
the area -if they were not combatants
they were involved in support" of a Viet
Cong unit.
· During the operabon, Bernhardt said
he followed Medina most of the day·. '
Adding to the confusion and giving
strength to objectors is a Federal Avia-
tion Agency report opposing BeU Ganyon
as a jet airport site.
The Bell Canyon site in the southeast
section of f,he county was recommended
in $140,000 Parsons report. It has been
greeted with outraged cries by residents
and developers of the area.
A series of sessions held by the County
Airporl commissioners in Brea, Los
Alamitos and Mission Viejo to IOWld out
public reception of the Parsons report
has resulted in almost 100 percent re-
jection of the ;ecommendations.
Talent Agency
Principals Hit
With Charges
Criminal charges have been filed
against four principaJs of a child talent
agency closed by an Orange County
Superior Court judge in earlier civil
Ii ligation.
Scheduled to appear Jan. 12 in Santa
Ana municipal court to fa« charges of
grand theft, violatlon of the slate's cor-
i>orations code and conspiracy are at-
torney Richard R. Murphy of Orange, and
brothers Jerry, 41, and Don Hegg, 40, of
Tustin.
A fourth defendant is being sought on
identical charges.
The Heggs brothers are free on $1 ,850
bail . Murphy was released on his own
recognizance in earlier court action.
Authorities allege all four were in-
volved in the Orange County '>peratk>ns
of a child talent syndicate first registered
as Take One and later linked wltb Na-
tional Video C.Orporation. Civil action was
taken against the operators after hun-
dreds of Orange County parents com-
plained of being bilked of fees ranging
from $90 to $659.
· Many parents told investigators t~y
were assured of "excellent chances" for
their children to land contracts in TV
and movie work. None of those inter-
viewed were ever again co ntacted by. the
operators after payme nt c4 fees, in-
vestigators claim.
Supreme Court
Upholds Murder
Conviction, 5-4
WASHINGTON (AP) -Helped by Har·
ry Blackmun, the newest justice, the
Supreme Court took a tougher stand to-
day on the rights of defendants in state
criminal trials.
In a 5 to 4 ruling , the court upheld the
murder convi.:tion of a Georgia man even
though he did not have a chance to cross-
examine an alleged co-conspirator whose
testimony linked him to the crime.
The decision split the justices along
conservative-liberal lines and indicated
that Blackmun 's elevation to the bench
by President Nixon produced a COO·
servative majority.
The four dissenters, left ove'r from the
oldliberal majority of the Warren court
that produced S.4 rulings going Lhe othe1
way c.omplained that the decision is
"completely inconsistent with re«nt opi·
nion s of this court." They said the def en·
dant 's rights had been clearly violated
and that he ·N:is entitled to a new trial
without use of '··e damaging testimony.
The case involves the first-degree
murder conviction of Alex S. Evans in the
1969 ~laying of Gwinne tt County police of-
ficer Jerry Everett. The dispute was over
the use of a sinile sentence of testimony.
Lynwood W. Shaw, a proseciltion
wilness, was permitted to tell the jury
what he claimed he had heard from a
fellow prison~· wbo also had been in-
dicted n the crime. According to Shaw.
the prisoner, Venson Williams, had tol d
hkn : "If it hadn't·been for that dirty son·
of·A-bitch, Alex Evans, we wouldn't be in
th~ now."
Evans' defense lawyer objected lo in-
troduction of the sentence since Williams
was not in court to be cross-e1amined.
The U.S. Circuit Court in Richmond, Va.,
agreed with the defense in 1968 that
Evans' rights had been violated. And trial
was ordered bnt Georgia appealed to the
Supreme Courl
~udi e Dance rs
f ile Suit Against
County 'Coverup'
Al Koch Resig.ns Post
As County Road Chief
• I A Los Angeles Federal Court judge will
tJ! asked early in the new year to dismiss
~ unconstitutional state, county and city
1,ws currently being used to combat nude
~ncing in Orange County taverns.
1Gardena attorney Berrien Moore filed
t;s complaint Monday on behalf o(
~rong Gals and the Chee Chee Room,
IJ>th of Santa Ana, and the Tuscan Room
iD Tustin.
r He named as defendanls District At·
ltrney Cecil Hieb, Sheriff Jamea Musick
iwid Santa Ana Police Chief Edward
..\llan together with live police and sher·
iJf's investigators.
1 Moore took his action In the wake of a
~rlcs of reversals of his arguments In
Orange C:Ounty courts and the apparent
iAepping up of district attorney Ricks'
dlmpaign to clean up or close up 111
tivems featuring nude ent.ertainmenl
1 All three ban represented by Moore
tfave been the SCf;ne of many arrests dur-~g recent months stemming from com-
~laints of nudity and obscenity.
tMoore argues In his federal court ae-
on that the Santa Ana anti-obscenity or-
nance together with county and state
ipeRsures violates U.S. Supreme Court
ft!les.
1 Frequtnl 11.rrtsts al the three i»lri
V\i(e not to control obscenity but to put
the bars nut of business by for cing th'm
!., pay legal feei;, f\.1oore said.
)
Orange C:Ounty Road Commissioner Al
S. Koch today resigned hi:I post, effective
April 5, 1971.
Koch hU been with Orange County for
25 yean and has held the position of road
commissioner since Aug, 1, 1965, more
than 15 years.
Jn accepting Koch 's resignation with
regret, members or the Board of
Supervi.son: praised hlm fw his con-
tributions to the county.
SulM!n'isor William Hirsten pointed to
the "highly successful'' arterial highways
financing program, a jolnt county-city
project originated by Koch.
The retiring road commissioner wai~
asked by SUpervlaor David Baker to
prepart a report "on the possible con-
M>lidaUon of all eiagl.neertng departmtnll
in the county as a money saving move."
Baker said ¥ was thinking of roads.
flood control. building and safety and
harbor engineer• as examples o r
departments which might be colfsolldated
under OM county engineer,
Koch was also prai3td for his years of
work which led to lhe approval or An
Orange COun tv Transit District which
•-·11s approved by the voters lest Nov. 3.
M ILY Pll.Of Steff ,,_..
YI ELDINO RIGHT.0,·WAY
RNd Commls1loner Kodt
Day at Disneyland Waits
For Holiday Card Winner
The Magic Kingdom created ln
Anaheim by Walt Disney became "Laurie
Land" for a day just before Christmas
last year.
That was the day Laurie Hansen, then
!I years old, and her &-year-old brother,
Mark, took mom and dad (Mr. and Mrs .
Mark Hanse n of 2024 Aliso Ave., Costa
Mesa} to Disneyla nd fo r the "payofr' on
Uncle Len's Christmas Card Contest for
1969.
Jt was a day filled with surprises and
fun for Laurie and her family'. They
rompe d through Disneyland with some of
the world-famed Disney characters.
Laurie met and talked with nearly all
of them. She had her picture made with
Goofy, Pluto, Wlnnif: the Pooh. Capt.
Hook and Mr. Smee and with Snow White
and some of the dwarfs. And that still
wasn't ·all.
During that one dey that the Anaheim
amusement park was "Laurie Land,'' she
and her brother had the opportunity to
ride just about all the rides they wanted
to in the entire magic world of Disney-
land.
They also watched the special holiday
parade which is one of the season 's joys
at Disneyland, And the whole day was
reported in pictures· and words published
in the DAILY PILOT on Christmas Day.
On that same day, Laurie's Christmas
card was published on the front page of
the DAILY PILOT holiday editions as
Uncle Len's greeting to his young
readers.
And the point or all this is that
Disneyland and UJJ;:le Len are jusl
waiting for another boy or girl, to come
up with • prize·wiMing Christmas card
tor this year's contest.
The deadline is coming up fast. Uncle
Len just announced in last Saturday '•
column (his column appears every Satur-
day in the DAJL Y PIWTl that he cannot
accept entries In the 1970 Uncle Len's
Christmas Card Contest any later than 5
p.m. on Dec. 16. {That means cards must
be delivered by mail or in person to the
DAILY PILOT office in C.Osta Mesa by $
p.m. that day.)
Any boy or girl up to 12 years old J.s
eligible to enter the contest.
All Christmas cards should be designed
so that pictures and words lany kind of
message or verse the children want to
use ) are all on one side of lhe same sheet
of paper.
Use white paper up to B'h by 11 inch~s
in size. Do not use colored paper or col-
ored ink or crayons, etc. The entire
design should be in black and white.
Frozen Food Swindling
Case Delayed in Court
Both sides In the Orange County
Superior Court trial of four men accused
of swindling county homeowners in •
frozen food sales sCheme have agreed on
a six-day delay of the proceedings.
Judge Raymond Vincent today scheduJ.
ed Monday as the next appearance for
William J. Wooll, 63. of 2014 Wallace
Ave., Costa Mesa, his son Philip F., 31 , of
North flollywood, Joh n M. Turner, 40, of
Glendale and Harold B. Massey, 46, of
Anaheim .
mised 860 pounds of frozen meats and
other products for $682.
Investigators say contracts binding the
victims to that amount plus Interest were
then sold to Liberty Loan Company of
Anaheim where Massey is the manager.
It is alleged that a frozen food supplier
was then hired by the defendants to
deliver the produce to customers. It Is
alleged however, that each contract
holder only received 300 pounds of food
stuffs adding up to a tote! financial lpss
of between $70,000 and '130,000.
Anaheim Couple
Shot Leaving
Ram-Lion Game
A confused Anaheisi couple hunt.in&
their ,car after Monday ni&ht\I Loa·
Angeles RamS footba'U game were cut
. dgwn by gunfire near the Coliseum in aft
· u,npr9voked atuic.k• by two men who stop-
ped to ask the time. ' ~
Police said no robbery attempt wu
made · and described the incident u
senseless.
Paul Morgan , 20, of 2102 Harle Ave.,
was looking at his watch when one
stranger pulled a .4:) caliber automatic.
pistol and began shooting at point-blank·
range.
. Morgan, wounded in the stomach an<l
right leg, was listed in serious cond.itlO!t
at County-USC Medical Center today. ·
Mrs. Audrey Hackett. 37, of 1934:
Lullaby Lane, was hit in the left arm and
left leg by the heavy caliber slugs and ia
reported in fair condition today .
Investigators said Morgan and Mrs.
HackeU were un able to find their parked
c.ar in the aftermath of the Rams-Detroi t
Lions game and were wandering around
the darkened area. ~
Several blocks away from the lq.
sports otadium, two men drove up and'
one asked about the time, then started'
shooting.
Belli Takes Over :
Sirhan's Appeal
SALT LAKE CITY (AP) -Melvin,
Belli , flamboyant San Francisco Bay
trial lawyer, said today he is taking over,
the appeal in the case cf convicted.
assassin Sirhan Bishara Sirhan.
Sirhan currently Is on death row in San
Quentin prison for the 1968 shooting death
of Sen. Robert F. Kennedy.
Belli told a news conference he was
taking over the appeal at the request ct
Sirhan's family. He was in Salt Lake City
for a speech to University or Utah law
students.
All four defendants were Indicted by
the Orange County Grand Jury on
charges of grand theft and conspiracy.
They are free on bail.
The indictment followed investigation
of an operation In which salesmen for
Family Plan, Consumer Affiliates Corp.
and Consumers Servbs signed more
than 200 famWes for time payment pro-
grams.
Hughes Clamor
Authorft~ claim subscribers were pro-
Edison Workman
'
Electrocuted
A Southern California Edison Co.
worker was electrocuted Monday when a
construction crane touched a high voltage
Une in Garden Grove.
Charles H. Gray, 29, ol La Crescenta
was dead on arrival at Pa1m Harbor
Hospit.aJ sborUy after he had been Injured
at Garden Grove Boulevard and West
Street.
Police said a heavy metal plate was
belng lnsUilled in an undttground ehanntl
for electrical wlrea. Gray was assiJUng
two olher workers In holding the plate
but he was standing In a puddle of water,
the coroner's nfflce said. The other two
ftre not Injured.
r.
I
Recluse Creates Stir in Bahamas
By DON ROTHBE RG
A.-clltM ,,.... Wtlttf"
PARADISE ISLAND, Bahamas -A
pretty girl in the tiniest of bathing suits
can stroll by the pool at lhe Britannia
Beac!i Hotel and find all eyes fixed not on
her b6t on three ninth-floor balconies.
It happens whenever a curtain tetms
to stir, or when a figure 11 spelled on the
hotel roof.
For whether Intentionally or not.
Howard Hughes still is Jn the apoUlght
arter more than two weeks ln'secluston ID
the~·~
No one who might J'eCOlnize Hugh6s
admits to ,..Inc him. Yet everyone i.
certain he ia hert due to the four guarded
suites on the top Ooor of the Britannia. .
Few people have seen Hughes In lhe
past 12 years. Bu\ at this rtSOrt, lt is
ea•Y to find many who say they saw him
during the past two weeks.
Walttrs and busboys in seYeral hote1
restaurants swear they saw-a:nd served
Hughes. Each one hu • different
If
description of the billionaire recluse.
And there is the guest who says he saw
a man at 6:30 one morning, bundled up in
a sweat suit jogging slowly around the
hotel tennis court. The guest is cenvlnced
it was Hughes. I
A photographer aimed a powerful
telephoto lens at one of the ninth Ooor
balconies and found himself• look.Ina: at a
camera atmed at him by 1 man standing
in front ol the ever-drawn curtain.
A brief sttr was created by the •Po:
pearance of three men on the hotel roof.
Were they ma.kins prepar1tion1 fOr a
helicopter landjng? Perhaps. But a nlaht~
long vig!Lpassed with no helicopter.
The betting is thal It wm lite •
helicopter landing on the roof to pt
Hughes out of the· hotel undetected -H,
in fact, he Is here.
A, locaf pilot sold ~ b cen.m 1
helicopter capable of carryJna up to \t
P3Slell8'.etS could land on the roof with m
advance prtparaOon.
Whal brought Hughes here, if be ta, n-
mains a mystery.
'
,.,...;~ ....... 1 ··---""' > .....
fl DAILY rlLOT
llfldu
-.41<1<>
'l'ue cleciclecl to
economize•• here 's
your farewell present!'
Timing Off
Tlltld&y, Otctmbor 15, 1970
For Writers
By DICK WEST White House Christmas
WASJ:DNGTON -Yo11 may have notic-
ed that President Nixon's televised newa
conference last week moved along at a
rather berky·jerky paco and bad a rag·
(eel endln(.
Mrs. Richard Nixon led new smen on a guided tour
ot the state rooms at the White House that have
been decorated for Christmas. The fir.st lady called
attention to this gingerbread house and said the
President tried to nibble a piece of the cake before
she stopped him.
I noticed thll too, IO I uked Hathaway
Scrlbtndl, a veteran White Houae cor-
respondent. what caused it.
0 Tbat wu Nixon's first full dress oewa
conference alnce last summer and our
timing wu badly off," Scrlbendl replied.
U.S. Quarters Bombed
Saigon Blast Laid to Anti-American. Bitterness
"A lot of UI just didn't have that split.se-
cond reacllon llat keepa Ille queatlom
flowing smoothly.''
I uid, "I realile a White House cor·
respondent must conUnually polish bis
timing to function at peak efficiency, but
don't you 1uy a get a chance to practice
between news conferences?"
"SURE," BE said. "We usually work
an hour or two a day on what we call
'recopiUOn drllll.' This involves spring·
tng to. your feet and trying to attract
the President's attention so he will give
you the nod for the not question."
"Well, if you have daUy workouts, why
WU )'O\lt Umin& ofJ?"
"No matter bow often you practice
leaping from your chair, i< 1lmply 111\'t
the aame as doing it under game con-
ditions," the corrupondent uplalned.
"Your Umin& depends a great deal on
developing a sense of anticipation -an
lnsUncL for knowln& when the President
Js about to flnllh a reply so you c~ be
nady to bop up the exact moment be
11Dpa.
0 SINCE EACH President hu his own
tempo, you can only get the feel of it
through actual exposure. You have to
seftse whtn be is going on a short count
-that ls, give a terae 'yes' er 'no,'
answer -and when he's gctng to be
discursive.
"Yoo may recall that when Preaidi!nt
Kennedy was holding frequent new1 con-
fe~. we had our timing dcwn to a T.
'Ibe entire press corps would spring up in
unlson, like the Radio City Rockettes, and
bellcw 'Mr. President' as with one voice,
llke the Mormon Tabernacle Choir.
"We became lesa synchronized under
President Johnson'& fitful sessiorui and
J'll be frank to say that on Thursday
evening we were downright erratic.
"Being unable lo anticipate Nixon's
finishes, some corre3pondenl! were
caught flat-footed by them . Others. afraid
cf reacting prematurely, be came
cauUOUB and hesitated too long."
"I said. ''What happens ir a cor-
respondent jumps up too quickly?"
"He gets penaliz.ed for illegal motion."
-UPI
SAIGON (UPl)-Young stud<!nt.. bomb-
ed a U.S. officer1' quarters in Saigon
tonight and attacked two American jeeps
in a new outburst of anti-American feel·
lng. 1n the war, six Amer icans were kill·
ed in a mlnerield and 10 were feared dead
in a Navy plane crash.
Fighting in Cambodia stepped up in an
area 45 miles northeast of Phnom Penh
and the Cambodians said they had killed
2,000 North Vietnameae in beating cff
three days of Communist asaaults on
Highway 7. A terrorist bomb also ex-
ploded in Phnom Penh, wounding eight
soldiers.
UPI correspondent Kate Webb reported
from Phnom Penh that 2,000 South Viet-
namese troops were flown into Kompong
Cham en Monday to relieve the critical
route 7 situation. ~ompong Cham, Cam-
bodia's third largest city, is 50 miles
nortlteast o( Phnom Penh.
Freelance reporter-photographer Fran-
cis Bailly, reporting (or UPI from route
Pressure on Reds
Unilateral POW Release
By Allied Forces Urged
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Senate
Republican whip Robert P. Griffin said
today the United States and South Viet-
nam unilatually should release 1,500
able-b<>died North Vietnamese w a r
priaoners, as well as all sick and wounded
prisoners, before the Vietnamese new
year. ,
Griffin told a news conference the Nix-
on' Administration had been in!onn~d of
his suggestion. "I believe that there wilt
be some sympathetic response within the
Nations Agree
On Hijack La,vs
THE HAGUE (UPI) -An in·
temational conference on air law today
approved a proposal demanding pro-
secution "without exception" for aircraft
hijackers and severe penalties for those
convicted.
A 14-day conference of 76 nations
adopted the "convention for the sup-
pression of illegal seizure of aircraft"
with only Chile and Algeria ab!lltalnlng.
The Hague convention, as the agree·
ment will be known, will be signed
Wednesday by the nations who agreed on
it and will be open lo other nations later.
"Each contracting party (nation)
undertakes to make the offense (of hi·
jacking) punishable by severe penalties,"
the qreemeot said.
admlnistrallon," he added .
'Die second-ranking member of the
Senate GOP leadership said, however he
had not talked with President Nixon
about the maUer and 1'I'm not prepared
to be more specific."
The Michigan Republican held the news
conference Monday but all information
from it was embargoed until today.
•·such a dramatic, humanitarian in·
tiative would create, worldwide, an ex·
pect.ation of response in kind by the Com-
munist side," Griffin said. "I believe it is
appropri'ate as the holiday season ap-
proaches, for our side to demonstrate
through this dramatic and moving
ge!ture our deep conviction, expreMed by
President Ni.J:on, that all prisoners have
suffered too much."
Griffin emphasized he was not ad·
vocating forced repatriation.
He said a body such as the Interna-
tional Red Cross should be asked to in-
terview the North Vietnamese and
determine which men wish to return.
He said there has been no response.
from the North Vietnamese to a proposal
he made to Mai Van Be. the North Viet-
namese ·delegate general to the Paris
talks. in Paris on Nov, 1.5.
That proposal was to release all sick
and \VOUnded American prisoners by
Christmas.
Griffin also said the North Vietnamese
rebuffed an cffer by the United States
and South Vietnam Thursday to exchange
8,200 North Vietnamese captives for a far
fewer number of free world pertonneJ.
Storm Pounds New Mexico·
Hmf-i1ich Hail Breaks Un,iversity Windows
Calltomla
TM ~1uH fA t •lorm -• Sou!Mr"
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V.S. Summary
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lllCI N rll' tooll',
Temperature•
Al!MICl111._
All•~!•
81k1t1/!1ttf
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7, said the C.ommwtists had almost en·
tlrely occupied the town of Prey Totung,
45 miles northeast of Phnom Penh and
that 20 Cambodians were killed and 150
woUnded In attacks there. Bailly himsell
was slighUy wounded when the command
post at O.Dar received a direct bit.
Tonight's explosion in Saigon ap-
parenUy was the latest in a aerie& on an·
ti-American incidents stemming from the
shooting of a Buddhist high school stu-
dent in Qui Nhon by an American soldier.
There alao have been firebomb attacks <.tn
U.S. military buses and jeeps.
The explosion ripped doors from
hinge&, blew out windows and hurled a
parked jeep across a street onto a \1iet-
namese boy, injuring him. The Saigon
command crdered "100 percent security"
ini!"igon area to guard against
furth tbreaks.
Uy alterwards youths h u r I e d
-plastic bags filled with gasoline at a U.S.
Navy jeep and one uaed by tbe U.S.
Agency for IntemaUonal Development.
Damage was slight and the two vehicles
did not catch fire.
Viet Cong terror was reported in the
Mekong Delta where two grenades were
hurled Into a temple jammed "'ith
praying Buddhists, killing seven persons
and wounding 87 ethers. The incident oc-
curred in the town of Long Trung, 44
rnJlea southwest of Saigon, Monday night.
;
Seattle 7 Given
Contempt Terms
In Court Melee
TACOMA, Wash. (AP) -Defendants in
the Seattle Seven conspiracy trial clashed.
"·Ith U.S. marshals as a contempt cf
court hearing erupted into chaos in the
wake of a court order to silence one cf
their number.
When It was all over Monday, five of
the aceused each faced two six-month jail
sentences and the other two single
sentences cf six months apiece.
At the height of the disorde r, four of
the defendants were forcibly evicted
from the courtroom and taken to a cell
area where they were handcuffed.
Further incidents occurred outside the
courtroom where police arrested 10
persons from a group of about 45
demonstrators and courtroom spectators
who had b~en ousted from the building.
Those arrested were charged with fail-
ure to disperse and with reslstina: arrest.
lf.S. District Court Judge George H.
Boldt hand ed down second contempt of
court citations against d e f e n d a n t s
Michael Abeles. 19, Jeffrey Dowd, 20,
Charles Ma..,hall lll, 21, Roger Lip-pman,
22. and Joseph Kelly, 24. Each drew two
l'lix-month sentences.
Tu•o other defendants, Susan Stern, 27,
and Michael Lerner, 27, were sentenced
to one six month jail term.
The hearing was called to set sentences
for contempt cf court citations issued last
Thursday when Boldt declared a mistrial
after the defendants refused to enter the
courtroom.
Mrs. Stem was 111 and absent Friday
and the judge nld Lerner stepped back
from Monday 'a disorder •
Union Ratifies New
Ford Auto Contract
DETROIT (UPI) -The United Aulo
Workers today ratified a three-year con-
tract with Ford Motor CO., Jea.ving onJy
Chrysler anlona: the Big Three auto
makers left to agree on a new pact wi.lh
the unJon In the united Stalta.
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The Ford agreement. similar to one
·• reached with General Moton after a ST·
.ot day UAW strike, btcomes effective Mon-'°' day. The contract coven about 1&0,000
I
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'4111 Al'" •:51 '·"'· tttt •: .. 1.111. ,,,_ Al• J'JJJ J>.f!I, Stlt t:21 t ,m,
t
Sl!t l.tkl (lly
S111 Ol"a
51" '••llCIJC• ktltlt
'"'°k'"' Tl\tNl"ltl
"
• w " .. " " •• •1 .H l2 ,. ,u n n
Ford hourly employea. NegoUallons,
meantime, conUnued between the UAW
and Chrysler wit h 11. target deadline -
but not a atrlke deadllne -of Friday.
.. .,.,..., •• -.•1.," • .,.,
l20-dli11 lourne11
Russ Say Luna 7
Drops for Venus
MOSCOW (UPI) -Ruasla 'a unmonned
ipaceshlp Venus 7 parachuted today
toward the surface of the planet Venus
aft.er a 120-day flliht from earth, the
Soviet News Agency Tau reported.
Tass said during the 3! minute descent
the spaceship broadcast information back
to earth and that the informaUon waa
being procesaed and evaluated.
1be dispatch did not aay whethtr the
space probe was expected to broadcast
from the surface of the planet, or
whether it had made a safe landiq.
The progress report I e ft the globe-
shaped entry capsule swinging beneath its
red parachute -just the situation in
which the world last heard from the
previous Soviet Venus spacecraft.
Venus 7, a. 2,SOO-poond instrument
-pack.age, blasted out of earth orbit en
Aug. 17 to begin Russia's fo~ attempt
at a soft landing on Venus.
The earlier efforts failed because
radios stoppad funct ioning while lhe
ca psules still were flcatlng downward on
parachutes. Soviet scientists said uiat in
one case, that of Venus 4, the enormous
pressures of t h e Venusian atmoephe.re
crushed the capsule.
The distance from the earth to Venus
varies from 24.I million miles to 70 .6 mll-
Jion miles because of the eccentricity of
the orbits of the two planets.
Ta11 said ""'flen the space station had
covered about 19.I million miles it
transmitted an enormous amount of
telemetric information.
It wag when Venus 7 waa within about
700,000 miles from Venus prtparaticfl!
Franco Suspends
Civil Liberties;
12 Arrests Made
MADRID (AP) -Spanlah police ar·
rested 12 persons in raida in Madrid to-
day as a goversiment enter 1u1pendin1
civil liberties throughout the country
went Into effect.
Sources aaid police all ever the nation
were rounding up cpponenla of the
regime cf Gen. Francisco Franco.
Government critics were threatened with
six months in jail without char1es under
the near state of emergency.
The regime ordered the clampdown
Monday nl1ht In efforts to stop a tide of
protest and violene@ ever the trial in
Bifrgos cf 16 Basque nationalists. Civil
liberties are to remain au1pended until
next June 15.
Verdicts for the 16 Basques were ex-
pected by Wednesday, and there was
speculation that some of them would be
sentenced to death for the murder two
..years ago of a political police chief.
The Vatican said it has appealed to the
Spanish government not lo hand down
any death sentences in the trial and re-
ported that it has played a role in seek-
ing the release of Weal Germany's
honorary consul In San SebasUan, Eugene
Beibl. whc was kidnapped by Basque ex-
tremists.
The situation represents the worst
government crisi& in Franco'& 31·year-old
dlcta!Drahip.
POW Letters
began for the closing staaea of the Olaht
-the staUon'a entry into the Venusian
atmosphere.
Temperature in the descent craft was
lowered to minus I derees centigrade.
When the station entered the Venusian
atmosphere at 8:02 a.m. (12 :02 a.m.
EST) the orbital compartment was
separated from the descent craft. it said.
An aerodynamic brake slowed the des-
cent craft and a parachute system wu
activated. It was then that the craft be·
gan traNmitUng for 35 minutes.
The Soviet Union has concentrated Its
space studies on Venus while the United
State& hu concentrated on Mars and
plans to launch two Mariner television
spacecraft in Marcb to orbit the red
planet for three months and photograph
the Martian surface.
In 1976, the United States -plans to
]and two automated laboratories en Mar~
to search for Ille there. Russia has
not had a succeasful Mars misson.
250 Missing
In S. Korean
Boat Sinking
SEOUL (AP) -More than 2SO South
Koreans were feared drowned todny in
the sinking of a ferrybcat in the Korea
Strait.
The Namyung Ho, with 256 passengers
and 20 crewmen aboard. went down on il!
4-hour run between Cheju Island, south of
the Korean peninsula , and the southern
Korean port of Pusan .
Japanese ships picked up eight
1urvivora, and a Korean police patrol
boat picked up three others. A Korean
fishing vessel reported picking up a 12th
survivor who was Uken to a hospital In
Pusan.
A Korean pOllct plane reported sighting
two persons clinging to debris, and a
Korean pollce officer who flew over the
area said he saw oil slicks and floating
wood .
Maritime authorities said they feared
most cf the boat's occupants had perish-
ed, however. because the rescue opera--
lion was delayed and the weather was
very cold.
Transportation Ministry officials said
they be lieved the boat sank because she
was overloaded. In addition to the 278
persons aboard. they said, the U3-ton
vessel carried about 250 tons of cargo.
Police said a preliminary Investigation
Indicated that the ship had also left Cheju
Island without the skipper aboard
The ferry went down between 1:30 and
8 a.m. but Korean authorities were not
aware of the sinking until aroilnd noon,
when they heard news dispatches from
Japan quOting Japan's Maritime Safety
Agency. The agency 's office Jn
Kitakyushu, southern Japan, said it
learned of the sinking from radio mes-
1ages from other ships in the area.
The Japanese agency assigned four cf
Its patrol vessels to help Korean boab
and planes in the search. Several
Japanese fishing boab also joined tbe
operation.
Miss Dianna Green, 20, one or six members or a delegation from
Colorado Spring•, looks at some of the 125,000 letters protestinR POW
treatment which were not accepted by the North Vietnamese cm·
bassy In Paris. MiJs Green'• father has been missing In action for
three years.
I
I
I
11
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Valley
I DI TIO
' '
VOL 63, NO. 299, 3 SEcTIONS, 2t PAGES' . ,._. . . -.
ORANGE CvUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, PEC,EMB~R 15, 1970
( ."" .
Chur¢h '~eaders Fighting . Beer .. Sale
' I . ' ' t • • '
By ALAN DIRDN ' lepJJy ~ and the appeal 'irUI llOW be by the city council to make the• COil· Ref. Emy is supporjed Jn hll protelt by Cburcb ·of. Hqntlngton llelch.· the Fr\'! °' .. DMlr" ,..,..., ~ afvfn a 1pu'11c bearfng. version and Jell beer. hi8 clmcb bloatd, the Methodllt Women's BapµJt ~ch 0{.Fountain ,v&itey, lljie
Chutch leaden m figlilma a plap tO ~!lo· tiiaring-~ been llChedulcd yet, The vote was &-I •with Councilman Sociely for Chriltlan Service and'Mveral
'!<JI· lieer on tlieHunthlgtOO Beach· pijr, bl!!: when !tp lield it will probably be in Norma Gibbs casting the only "No" members of the Huntington Btacl>Foun-,EvqeUcal f'.ree · Qmrcb iic ~
An official protest to an' ..-premises 8'-la ~;"U.ld Mrs. Ev.11u Gray, who vote. lain Valle~ • Mli>laterlal AllocifUon. Beaoh,: the · Fjrl!! Uni~ · Method1't ~.license for a sandwic.h bar on µ>e ~~rise ~· applications. "What 'We believe is happening here is 1bt_miN'aters signed a peltii.G that was Church of f~.ta!n Valley,; ~ .eom-
pier has ·&en ·filed wfth the state's "Tbefe:JniYl be DO declslon on 1'lis for a trcfld that will set' off a chain read.ion sent to the ABC department objecting to muni,ty United, Methodist Church of~Hun· AlcohblicBevif~eGohf!ol ~ment: ~~!' ~ of establishments sell!ng beer in ·the thelicemerequestandRev.Ernyslgned linP>n 'Be4ch au(!. the Qtirtst
The i'lepartmtlnt's legal· ~Ctlvisioo in ."'lbe ~ls • letback to the plans ot beach area,'' Rev. Em;•said today. "This lhe offl<;ial protest'that,was later lodged. Pi'tsbyterii.n Church of HIDltlngton
Sacramento has found ·the ~of Rev. ~ .. _J.!nitl\ ~ CCl!!ert a fresh fish Con· is not an isolated incident but a · trend 'f'ht ministers who signed the petition Beac;h.
Edward ~Mly !>f'the: 'First '\(~ Metho-~ shop 4P rlbt .pief into a sandwjch that will start. We felt we should take a serve the following churches: Grace The J)re&l<tf!nt' of the ministerial
dist ~butch of_ Huntln~on BeiCh to be iijr; lle~'i'flll granted permission stand at \his time... · Lutheran ChurCh, the First Baptist association, Rev .. K e n' n e t b McMillan,
-' J
Teay's' l'IJ¥d :
N.Y.S~-
TEN CENTS
emphJSl2cd thal u.e. i-stors signed lbelr
objeCUoJ\s :1s indiViduaJr and not
necesllarily as representatives · of those
churc hes.
"The association ha•-~· taken a posi-
tion on it as a body simply because we
haven't had a m~tfug,'' the Rev.
McMillan. said.
Rev. Erny said that several beach con--
cessionalres ·had also approached him
(See PIER, P~1e Z)
.
Policman
"
Resumes
.,Bo·mh Bl·a.sts BofA
~... .
..
Bid . Tonight·
By TERRY COVILLE
Of .... 0.11"., ...... l tsff.
Fired Huntington Be~h pOiice officer
Gilbert Coerper )"ill continue, his battle to
win back his job when the ·penonnel com-
mission meets at 7 o'clock tonight in the
administrative annex to city 'ha1l.
·eoerper'~ hearing '.Will aim rt.new the
verbal clash between City Attorney Don
Bonfa. serviilg as hearing officer, and
defenoe 11110rney Cecil Rjci<s.
Both attorneys fired angry 'salvos 'at
each' other in Saturday's session .of _pw
eoerper cae as · they continued ~to
disagree on the lgal proceeding~ · •
Saturday' a aession bllan at ·I a.m.,
with Bonfa1 who 1et•tlil;,11rne, the· last·to
arrive~ . ~ ·
. .
Ho~ .1J,lown . in ·Isfu ;Vis ta Roof.tqp
"""'·win smic<.
ISLA VISTA -A tossed bomb blew a
hole :in the' root 'of' a Bank ot America
branch here Monday . night, showering
the street with mlso(lry tiles and in-
03ming emotions of street people and
lawmen again. ·-
No •iou:s damage was reported, bul
the blast caused 'by an·unidentified dtl"ice
left a bole several 1 feet arrou .iD the
overhanging eave,of the ltiucture.
A crowd of u p $anta liar~• students
and,otber ~.people Il-.jJlg in the unlJl.
corpqrlM cominunlty llfeete\I sheriff',. ~ who ll!TiVed <O . tJie icene with
wbf>9j>t~ jeers.
Last of Trio , -. ' .
Rocki and botUa wtre~thrown.-one
deputy was hit in the hip but not 111jUreil
-while authorlUes• credited calmer
. young people wl_th_ helPfllt!' kOep 'Oider in
the midlt of m~ _ teoston.
The bank -eYnlbolic of the ,capitalist
pow~ atructure to radicala--was rebuilt
,on. the scene of. One. burned laat, Feb. 25
during a cJash that touched off. a series
·ot incident!.
Bus(ness.COf\linued a& -1 today, but
that la ~ llanlc 'ol America 'o!!lclals
would aay abcNI the liewest uaaWt oa
~=ta bad been ret¢cd ~ U..
.. '
community was quiet up tmtit the blast,
possibly organized by five persons
wi~s . reported seeing on the scene
moments· earlier.
The Isla Vista flareups of last spring
ended with more than 100 peraons jailed
and one student -trying to preRnO
order and calm others clamoring !or,
violence -shot to death.
Investigators · said several small fires
were set in trash bins arowxl the -area.
where residents said the bank blaal muJd
be !t!IMwo blocb away, but...,. 'qulckl!
eXllnl$bed. • J
A crowd estimated at 600 gathered ex:
the aceoe.
' ,,
..
I
He and Ricks ·squared off early.
As James· Wolter '-".oJllcer wlio
condljCled the _. . , , inti>
Coel1!<r'• alleged Of ·~
rece!Ved !or ~ .;;:,.__, ...,.b!, ~ -with ddlet peiaons;.,....... ~ -
~.entepl'ed,,-,., .·,. '.~· .. ·• · '·~· · S, ff~·Qbsei _ <·," .• ,,,:11.,,. " • ' . "·'' ; . _,!<' t ' < :r, I t ,J 1J .1 I;; f:'J ~·l"l."f f' 1 t ,) ;)~~;~1.~~·.-.~~flfiEilleS.sig·;-itDocunw ;;t · · "He Ci.•1..-i!llol alliJl!;·-.W '° eacJi ohr.r"lb&'I'••· 9'j:r. .. -. ~
. "It .... Id 'bi! a llltie b>1'4:lmd IO fhllit
tlie of!ker and oot tiermtt lllm-1• tall !be
coyrt '!h~t .he did," ~nfa ~1 •• ."
IUckS was to· object to hearsay e~
nearly a dot.en Umes as Wilker testified ·
for four holll'! ·Saturday. .' · •
Eai:h time be wu overruled .by Bonfa.
Mid-way tbrou_gh the hemnl· Michal
Miller, prosecu!Air .. J\d ·-c;ty at-totney,•ln~1a. letter;.~ as
evidence that Coerper had lied ani! refU:a.
ed 'to coopOr&te Wi th invest!Pm., ·
Ricks .expliined 1he letter wai ·from
hlln and was merely an oqtUnt· of 1be
defense Case as ·required · tiy 'thi pro-
ceedings. He did not object .to Ill sllb-
miSsiOn as evidence. , ' · _
However when Bonra titled the
evidence 8s a· "letter from Coerper',"
Ricki spoke up.
·.1 object to·that'title. tJt's my letter."
''The letter will 'Stand on •ita own ·as
fact. J'Ve never heard . any.one object to
the way a hearing officer descritiied a let.. ter." · · ., · · ·
".'M I· understand : lt,''· Ricki ·tie'gan.
4'this is the first time you ever' sat as a
he8rittj officei So· h's mt Surprising you
never heard the· objection before:"·
· "You're· overruled," Bonfa.said, eqding
~ di3Cusslon·.~-.~-... -._._
Testimony continued, Willi Rick# sitting
back in his chair, silent.
Finally the defense attor:riey. asked to
make a statement for the record .
· .. I'm trying to be polite as l .c.an to Mr.
(See HEARING, Page Zl
Los Alamitos ... ~
'J'o Fight Navy
Over Housing
Los Alamitos is:; re'ady · to' baWe the
Navy over 'plaDs to convert the Lbs
Al8mitos Naval Air Station into a 10,000.
person military housing trad.
City officials charged at a councp
~ting Monday . nlehl·· that.,the; .con-
vhsion would ''bink'Npt'')tlie ·city witb
the additional burden .ob city, aervi<:es.
"We'll fight th~ ail the way to the top,"
City Manager WJIJ~ Krau,s sa;d \048y.
. The first .YIYO.in~~6"'1-came with th'e city coUncil voti.ng ,unanipiqus!~ .to 10 o~ record as 0 i,malterahly o~" to
tlie plan and to Inform local mtdent.s and
ranking naval personnel of its posttJon.
The council was told it would cost lat·
payeri an eatlm'ted fl/!" to ptoVlde '!'!
project With such ~rvices u pOtlce anu
fire protection and se'wer Ube& • , '
Councilman D~ Koresen termed tbt
Navy's plan "a fibanciaJ disater" for Uie
city. , Last week the Navy announced its pi·•n
to build a 159.2 million hoUllng project on
t)1e facillty encompossinc all but • 200 of
the t,300 available .:res.
COuncllmen clainled the b o a 1 i n g
d<velopment would be tu eumpt af10f
thlu result in the extra burden on tu.
payers.
..
A murder Di• that opentjl when -~ • ·
... ~. I., ' ,' ~ ! c .. ::
I)~~·~ ~'F.t~ighter . Hijacker
.,
' ' ~ .
~;Y:.t.~e ~ders in Cambpilfu
' ' ..
. PHNOM P.E:i;H 'f,U.r -"I 'only ;e~et.
1 ;dfan't sink the ... smp," 'one of the hi·
jackers of a u.s; ammunition freighter
said today as he walked into the
A~rican Erqbassy~ in. Phnom Penh to
sarl-~nder. ·• • ~·I' sWI believe' ln the revol ution 'In
Aftl'eflca Snd-in' ~ revolution · in Cam· bodia~· 'Alvm · L. ~oiatow•ki, 20, Long
bodla 11• Alvin L.it Glatowskl ·20 Long
Beach,'t6ld 11ewsn)eJL 'But he 'said' he felt
~e woul~~~a'f~~~eal in t_h~ u.~. th~n 1n.Camuuu1a , i •
Glldowaki and ICl;yde W. M.cK>iy, ~.
Escondido, took, 9ver the 10,000-ton
Coluln~ia EagJ_e, Jp, the GuJf of ,Thailand
lagt 1'f~rch and ro·~ the crew into the
Cambodian port ~of Kompong Som.
·They.J~~~e ~-ihdicted by a,federal
gr'and·J~Y in· LbS Angeles on charges of
muUny. "po the high seas, assault,
trailspdrtjng kh!napcd persons in foreign
commetce.. ahcj nea;lect of duty. They
could get the death penalty on Uie mutiny
charge.
,'fhe.ship and•tbe rest of its crew were
ref eased ,lftd. conlpleted tht voyage to
ThjlUa~. . . , .
McKM«t>t ·awity from a Cimbodian
· · (lee-liuACK, ,Pep Z) . ' ., ' ' _,, .
" '
UPI T ....... ~
,' HE~DIN«; FOR HOME
. ~Ip Hi jack•': Glatowskl
bandits shot and kUlcd Fountain Valley
market. tbailager James W. Oates has
closed in Orange County SUperior Court
with the"sentencing of the thitd member
of lhal trio.
Herman W. "Tiki" Grant, 23, of Santa
An&;' Wal seritenced to six months to life
impfilonment Jn state prison for his part'
in the killing of Oates last Aug. U at the
TiC' ToC market, M57· Heil St.
1 JuClge Kenneth M'llllams sentenced
Crarirafter accepting bii plec of· guilty to
second de11ree murder. Grant's two com·
panions in the Oates murder received
stiffer terms from the same judge after
pleading gail_ty to charges Or first degree
murder.
Robei:t Woodrow Clements. 2;, of 14811
Alcester St.. Westminster, drew a life
~rm when he chose to waive his penalty
trial and offer the plea. A jury had
already found him guilty.
Jerry Lee Johnson, 18, of 14471 Titus
St., We'strnlnster, identified throughout
the investigation and prosecution as the
gtinman in the dates killing, also drew a
life term.
Prosecutors today consider th at two
factors saved Johnson from the gas
chamber: medical evidence that he was
an epileptic and the fact that. Ulerie was a
hair trigger on his seJlli·automaUc riOe.
All three men were arrested after a
prolonged gun battle with police In a
Garden Grove orange grove. Hundreds Of
nearby homeowners watched a duel that
ended with the shackling of all three
suspecis.
Orders to Wipe Out
Viet Hamlets Denied
W ASIDNGTON (UPf) -Brig, Ge n. Wi·
nant Sidle, chief of Army information,
Monday denied reports Gen. William C.
Westmoreland bad ordered Viet Cong·in·
tested villages outside Saigon "leveled"
alter the Tet offensive of lllSI. ,
::::ra .pils St••dy Maehine . ' '
-, '_Cu.let . S.tudents Lear'!:i ng on Teletype 'Educator'
' ' ...
By TERR:V COVILLE
OI flM OM1Y '""" l•ff The kids at Gislir intermcdl4te School
in Huntington Be8~ihave a confetti mak· me machine.
~also draws a good outline of Snoopy's
face:.
Aod;Jt can solve ll math quiz In a split
•& ..... _.a • -~ RUJttQ,. •
Their rMclitO. 1~1 teletype hooked Into
a Marina High'SctmOl 1busJntss class and
into the large corilputera at UC !fvlne.
It's·oil loen 'for t..; . ..,ea·frorii. qenerai
Telepbone Company Is an experhrient.
The company ••Ptls to knolf ii II'• 1
goOd cd"°'tional iieOI. '. '· '
"The kids~ JJJie It," reports Gisler
principal John Wyatt.
Confetti and Snex>py are two of tbe
rea:!19ns why.
They pick up the pieces of the punched
out ta~· for soft, yellow confetU. "We"re
saving It for basketball games," said one
youngster.
Snoopy was drawn by a slxth grade
teacher who typed lettera in the correct
Corm, put it on an automatic tape, and
ran it through -the teletype producing a
. "!'meleted picture. '
On a more seriOus tone1 the teltl)lpe of·
fer~ ~fast, aceurate rneans for the older
• atai!entls· lo study math. They can type
out programs ,lor tile UCI '!>mputeo ,
send them over the teletype and await
the results.
''It tells: us when a program· is wrong
too/' nan ' Trubovltz:, 13, Aid. He
displayed roils of "talk" with the llCI
computer in which math project.a were
wrJtten out aild answered over the
leletyPe.
The longest problem toot 42 mh11ks to
lransmll -that coot the achool $1.16.
Five minutes of computer tlme normally
cost& 11 cerit.1 .
Sixth graders doli't work math pro-
bietn1, but they are introduced to the
teletype u a beavlly uacd form of com-
munlcatlon.
LAS VEGAS, Nev. (UPI) -A personal
aide of Ho~rd Hugbea. who cialml'be
bas seen the m1y1tety blllionaire almQSt
daily for theJ)Blt five yean, says-he saw
the ibduitrlattsl !if11 a document ftrlng
the bead of.bis Nevada operations.
· However, a handwriting expert and
Conner amclate of Robert Maheu,
Hugbes' Nevadi chief, claims ll)O
11patUre on the letter of ~al ii a
(org~ey. . . . · • ,
Bdth men testified Monday . tn the
NeVadi. Dl!trlct COUrt hearing stealming
froni ,the rttempted ourizlg of Maheu by
' ''
Yule Decoration
Contest Nearing
End in Valley
Only hours remain today for Fountain
Valley residents who want to compete for
prizes offered In the Fountain Valley
Chamber of Commerce C h r i 1-t m a s
decorating contest.
Entries in home, mobile home and
bualness divisions an must be postmark·
ed by midnight tonight -if mailed -or
they can be delivered (by midnight) to
the home of the contest chainnan, Mrs.
Barbara Gillum, 17111 Santa Rita, Foun-
tain Valley, CA 92708.
Jn addition fo the 12 awards offered. by
the chamber 'In the Jocal contest, .the top
two entries in the Fountain Valley contest
will 6e eligible for awards in the
areawide "40 Miles of Chrlstlnaa Smiles" contest co-sponsored Ulla· year by the
Orange County Coast Association and the
DAILY PILOT.
Valley resldenta and business operators
who haven't obtained an ''official entry
bla'nk" atil1 can enter the local. contest.
All they need to do, Mr .. Gillum ex·
plained, 11 to !urnisb her wtth their
names, · addressea: and telephone num·
bers. ·
(Judges will decide in which categories
each entry best fits, tn cate of overlap-
ping, so it isn't even neceaary for con-
test --to lbt the categories.) Willnen of awards .u. the local coolest
can collec\ their i>mes· It the city
Chrlatmas celebration and tree,llgbting
ceremony .achedoJed. for 1:30 p.m. on
Sunday at Community Center:
categories of compeUtlon lcludt:
HOME DIVISfON -Best Chrillmaa Scen<, Moal Religious, Santa Special,
Moal Ru-. Moit Effec!tve Ute ·of
Lighting, Moal U°"'""J. and Sweepetokes.
MOBILE· HOME DIVISION ~ Best
Chrllt1!>11 S.:-, -·Re~ IDCI
Santa Spocial.
BUSINESS DIVl5ION -llelt Window
Decorations and Beal Indoor and, Outdoor
Decorations. ,' • For further detaU1, potenUal con-
testlnts ahould cimtact !ti. Gillum al
147-1171. '
executives of Hughes Tool Co., the
Hciu.'Jton-based parent firm of the
billionaire's giant business empire.
:Ra!ph Bfadford, now retired but
previously a handwriting and. finPnn:int ~xpert for 28 years on the Lc?nl ~
Police Department, testified at tbe,l!far•
Ing today th.at Hughes' signature wafle-
nuine.
Bradford also said he was satisfied that
i three-page band~lten letter urging
the executives of the tool company to get
ahead with the job of firing Maheu wu
al.SO ~ltten by Hughel.
IAVar B. Myler, who identified himself
as· a "~ial assistant" t.o Hughes, said
HUghes $igned a proxy Nov. 14 firing
Maheu, who has been the billionaire's No •
1 man in Nevada for the past four years.
Myler said the signing took place in the
ninth . floor penlhouae maintained by
Hughes in the Desert IM Hotel in Las
Vegas. The witness also tesUfied Hughes
subsequently went to the Britannia Beach
Hotel in Nassau. the Bahamas, and from
there · issued instructions the proxy be
released. ,
Earlier in the day, Charles Appel Jr., a
former FBI agent with Maheu, testified
on behalf of Maheu that Hughes'
purported signature on the document
presented by the Hughes Tool Co. was a
"simWation or imitation."
"It 's a very good representation,'' Ap..
pel said. ''It would pas,, any bank teller
and other business associates would ac-
cept . it, but it's deficient. It's extreme!J:
skillful but It's different." ·
We•tller
There's a 60 percent ·chance
you'll nned your umbrella on Wed·
nesday~ Tem~atures will tumble
too, dipping in'to the 'low alxlies·
along &he · Oranle Coeat. •
INSIDE TODA'Y
' How does your annuai in-
come fit into the natianal stole?
Sylvia Porter has alt the annoers
on Finance Page 10 todau.
' CHRISTMAS
.·
" TllllilJ, ~ lJ, 1'70
IF I •
l'al.e Glft'I
I
Service Stations
Waging Gas War
.~
J1Ut In Um• f6t Cbrlltm ll. Mflllce ata-
lfans llOlll tllt Ora.,. Coast ,,. •nc11ed
In a price cutt1nt 11s wit.
Drw>s from rtplar prlcts 1s mµcb as
two In lour ceota a &alloa were rtpOtled
by dealert from Coroaa de! 1111r In Foun-
laln VaU.y.
' MJM\lln VM!l• •i>d El T<ln> &H tlati<>lll
however, have yet to 10 aJOn1 with the
price Cflta, jin>bably be<a"" tllt rtbalta
oil companies hi.. offered to *" deolero have not been extended In &>utll
COullty stallcm.
Fret1t P .. e I
HEARING ...
&n11," l\i<:i1 Slid. "And he's bt<Omlng
irritated."
"You're out of order," 80nfa snapped .
Later, when J\icks began quizzing:
wanter on his methods of b\ve1t1&ation,
Miller Objected lo the impllcat\oa 4f slop.
pi.-4ft WaJIW'I w0rk. "rm oilUUod to lnquJr• 11 lo tile con-
duct of Ulla mtn In bl! lllvestJsaUbn,"
·Rieb ...... rod.
"t object, Mr. Ricks." Bonfa rpote out.
.. Yw'te overruled. Mr. Bonfa," l\ickJ
·snapped back. 1
· "Don'I make 1ny mor• oU tllt recor<I
mrnmenll," Bonfa warnect.
That wu the lut angry exchange
between the two and the sta:slon ad-
journed .......
'Girl From Chi'le
·Seem Area Home
For School Term
A )'OW1I 11r1 In Chlle Is lookin( for a
home ·lo HWIU.,lon Blach -just for
-montlla. T<rtaa Hldalgo. 16, is set In •!\Md
Edison Hi&h School starting Ill February
as an International teUowahip l:xcbanje
1tudent.
Her trip may never 1et off tbe sround,
however. Edison Principal Emtst Pascoe
rtperta that Terua baa aowbtrt to live.
, la lbm I family ID IOllth Hllfttington
:J!>acb 11111 -4 like .. ld4pttd
·daughter for the nine. monU\S'!
Spokesmen in Chile report tl'l1t Teresa
la aJieeay paUJq lier ....... 1n. 1.mtlY
Jli>otGI ~ -••tot In .... her lolW" ·lamily here.
· . If someone can give her a temporary
home, phone Pascoe at ~135$.
school offlcilla al10 11.y many other ex·
change atudenta would Uil lo v\111 the
U.S. 11 any family wanta In provide a
homa for thrff, •Ix or nlnt months, phone
area code 802, 212-7363 in Sedona. Arll., tor infonnaUon on tbe International
Fe\IOWlhlp J>l'Oll'lm. '
Zone Change Set
For Commission
A public htarin& on a zone chana:e in·
ltiated by the pllMini commluion i1 the
top item on tonl&ht'1 1gend1 of the P'oun·
lain Valley City Council.
The city want& to rezone t4 acres on
the northwest and southwest sides of
Brookhurst Street and Edinger Avenue
from R-1. PDQOO (planned development
witll small Iota) to llrallht IH (7,200
1quare foot lota).
In other actions the council will con·
sider an offer or financial aid tb• Teen
Help, the anll-drua. youth COUMe!lng
organization and look at a contract with
tbe architectural firm of Blurock &
Alaociates for expansion of the police, cl·
ty hall and community center facll1Ue1.
DAILY PILOT
OltAN~I COAST ,UILl'"ING COM'AICY
Ret.•rt N, WeM
'rnlde11t eM P'wltltt"-t
J•c~ R. Cvrl•y
~ '™le..,! •r.f Ge"~rtl MIMflf'
Them•• K•••il
•e111r
The11111 A. M~rphh11
M""llnl 11111 ..
Al•n Dirll11
W•t 0rtf'tl ~ llflltr
Alhrt w. l•tM
~letea.1 .... " ................
17175 le••• a.wt."'"'
M•rtf'I AJJreMt P.O .... JtO, t2MI
Otlm-i...... ae.dlt t2t ..... , ,,._..
C..M ,,._I JI& W..t lfY It .....
"""" ltffdlt 2'tll W.t ..... teur.wnii IN CJlrNllM: * Ntrlft II CM!IM .. ,
... • ' t'
A •J>Ok•lm•n 1( Grant's Gull In C.1ta
Mesa said "we juat dro'pptd another pen·
ny yesterday" bringlr\¥ their price for
low-lead rigular to $0.a·1nd premium.
grade In 3U ceuta.
While molt dealers randomly in·
terviewed seemed realgned 'to the reoew ..
ed gas war, a Newport Beach Chevron
itation owner e.iprtl!td d.isg~. refuling
fu aay wblt be was now charging, while
nottna be was participating.
Ken's Mobile ServiCf: StaUon, Corma
dtJ Mar said ''We're very much into a
111 war. We dropped two Cf:nl3 a gallon
over the weekend," the owner reported,
brlnJing his pri~s to 34.9 cents for
rigu}ir and 38.9 for prem ium.
He recalled that the last gas war la1ted
six wffks and ended just three weekl
aao.
"I think they are terrible," be said,
"but ptople are very selective now abOut
taS6Uftt prices, probably because or the
ttc'.IGomy. We have to &o Ilona." By Contrast, Miuion Viejo Mobile
reports no price drop and continues to
charge M.9 for relUlar and 40.9, for
pretn.lum.
Five Points Texaco in Huntington
Beach. has been lowering prices for a
~ and a~ at 29.9 for regular and au for prenuum.
~Larry Mead, operator of a Shell station
ln Fountain Valley, said pricts had dto~
ped four cents 1 gallon in a wetk.
"The gas Companies elve me 20,000 dif-
ferent reasons for a gas war," he said,
'1But I still don't understand why."
"I have to stay with them to be com·
peUtlve," he said, noting that he believes
"people are !hopping more now than they
Uaed to."
Howard Yarborough, cper1tor of a
Union station in El Toro saJo the gas war
had not reached his comer yet, but noted
that a station across the street was
cbar1in1 40.9 cents for premium com•
pared With hJ1 39.9 and 31.9 at a third .tta·
tlon·.
"I'm not ready for another ga.11 war,"
Yarborough said, "They hurt proflta both
ways, for the dealer and the oil com·
pany."
"We can get a call In the mornln1 to
drop aur price," he. explained, "but then
it is the dealer's cboict whether or not to
go alona."
If dtaler1 don't go along, they m1y lose
cu1utmer1 to another •tati<in . If tbey do,
tbey split the Jesaen"ed revenue from
sales on a prearranged rebate blsil with
tbe oil company.
From Page 1
HIJACK ...
guard Jn a Phnom Penh re1taurant 1,_
October and disappeared with an
American deserter from T h a 11 an d •
Glatowski sald then he believed they
were headed for the town of Siem Reap
to join Communist forces fighting in
Cambodia.
Glatowsld and McKay were kept on a
prilon boat on the Mekong River for a
few week.a after the hijacking. They com-
plained about the conditions there and
were put in the servants' quarters of a
government guest house in Phnom Penh
and then in a hotel.
The Cambodian government paid their
hotel bills, and they technically had
political asylum. But they were actua lly
under . a form of arrest, free to move
about 1n the city but alwa ys escorted by
Cambodian guards.
High Mom
De~Cult
I •
Trial Uise
·Under Way
By TOM BARLEY
Of 1111 0.1" Piii! l!tilt What1St!ven Cral1 Hurd descrlbf<I to
his psythlatrist as Mrs. Flore.net 8tt1wil'i
"qi.atenllness and goldiness" and what he
bellt.v~ wu her "derogatory lttltude"
towards him may well .haw: .co~t the
Million Viejo teacher her life, it was
alleged in testimony tOday 1n Orange
County Superior Court.
Dr. John A. Guido opened lhe sanity
trial of the ICCUled 20-year-old transient
by telling defense attorney William Garn·
ble that Hurd told him th1t he llulled
Mrs. Brown in the neCk "tG warn her"
that be would not tolerate her superiori-
ty.
Hurd could not recall the actual killlnl
of Mn. Brown, Guido le•Vfled but he
c6uld recall "stabblnt her once or twice.
Then be remembers that he drove around
Santa Ana with lier body -sort of like
thty did thln11 in Vietnam, he told me."
. . .
Hurd is accused of being the ringleader
of a group of drifters who police claim
pulled Mrs. Brown, 31, of El Toro, from
her car last June 2 as she left the San
DiegG Freeway at the Sand Canyon elf.
ramp.
DAIL V !'ILCJT Iliff l'fllM
MORALITY, PLAYERS USE OLD Ml!DIUM FOR NEW TWIST ON A RECURRING MESSAGE
Gl1ltr Studtnt1 (from left) Jonnti Hin•, Amtl 11 Z1ff1r1no, Brend• Cook, Sh1ron Li ne (9ult1r)
Police . allege that the woman wa.s
mutilated and subjected .lo a series of
devil worshiping rites b e r or e she WIS
finally killed in an Irvine orange grove.
Gamble told the court t.Oday that one of
those rites invG!ved the eating or her
heart by Hurd. From Pqe I
PIER ..•
.
and voiced misgivings on the beer
License.
"They feel they will be under pressure
to compete," he said.
The ministers also believe that a betr
license would cause policing problems.
"There is even the possibility of mob ac-
tion. If there is beer sold on the beach,
people would be more susceptible to
violence and spontaneous group action."
Smith was supported in his application
for a lease change from the council by
Harbors and Beaches Director Vince
Moorhouse who told the councilmen that
the change would be compatible with the
city's Top of the Pier plan.
The request also wu discussed with
Police Chief Earle Robitaille and he rais-
ed no objection at the council meet.Ing.
Smith, who also operates a bait and
tackle stand on the pier, remains con·
fident that the license will be granted.
"I have a tremendous amount of
money invested In this ," he said. "I llave
to press on with my plans. I would have
had the lictJlse. Iut week Jf the objectjop
hadn·t been r11sed." '
The businessm.11.n said that he operated
the stand as a fresh fish market for a
year and lost money.
"But our beat line was smoked fi.sll and
people kept asking us for some form of
beverage. That's what made me decide tG
make sandwiches too and convert it into
a small restaurant.
"l don't think people understant that
beer will only be drunk on the premises.
None will be going out the door."
Smith argued that the change fits the
Top of the Pier plan in that it will help
the city determine what businesses will
be successful in the beach area.
First Beer, Now GJs
Will Get Own Rugs
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Tbe Army
private has been given the right to drink
betr in the barracks. Soo:i be will have a
rug of hls own and be will be able to
cboose beige, rose or green.
Drug Play Set
Str.ide'nts Stage Moralit y Production
An old fashioned moraUty play will
tackle a .new fangled problem -drug
abllle -tlt1a Christmas seaaon at Gisler
Intermediate School, Huntington Beach.
The play has been written by a 7th
grade hJatory class for the benefit of
other Gisler claases.
It dreaaea . modem day narcotics p~
blew in the vocabulary and clothes of
the middle 11ea.
The students took an old play
"Everyman" and turned Jt into "Every. teen... .
The ll'll;in feature ls 1 roualni sword
battle with 1ood triumphing over evil.
The flrat ftW lines of the play read like
tllis :
Hooked Teen : "Why d"''l you try it?''
Another hooked Teen: "Don't be
chicken."
Everyteen : "Ah, I'm a little scared. I
don't want to." ,
Hooked Teen : "Let'a split. Thia glly'a
just a chicken."
Everyteen : "No, wait 1 minute. Don't
leave." (Everyteen walks to front of
stage and speaks to ,audience). "I don't
knGw what to do. Shall t take the stulf or
not. If I don't my frlenda will chop me. If
I do take it they'll think I'm a cool auy.
But I might cet booked. I ml1ht even die.
If I just had someone to tell me what to
do."
That someone appears later in the play
and with a little help from bJ.11 real
friends Everyteen makes the right choice
and beata back the dreaded dope devlla.
t F~rnie~H~ntington1B~ach
f • I ' Aide Newbold Succumbs
A former parking superintendent in
Huntin&ton Beach. Roland A. Newbold,
who rtllided In the city for 13 years, has
died at the age of 64.
Fa med French Site
Named for De Gaulle
PARIS (UPI) ...... Paris' famed Place de
l'Etolle became Place Charles de Gaulle
today.
The renamiDg of the famed plact,
where the Arc de Trlomphe and the tomb
of the W'lknown soldier are located, was
greeted with something less than en·
lhuslasm Jn some sectors. The change
was unanimously passed by the Paris Ci·
ty council Nov. 13, but because of the
resuJUng protests it decided to
reconsider.
Servlce1 will be Conducted at 1 p.m.
Wednesday at Smith's Mortuary, 627
Main St., Huntinaton Beach, with in·
terment following ,at the Good Shepherd
Cemetery. Thomas W. Overton, pastor of
the First Christian Church, will conduct
the service.
Mr. Newbold , y,•ho died Sunday, was the
assistant manager of the Huntington
Beach municipal parking lot for 10 years.
He y,•as a past master of Ma.sonic
Lodge 541, was a member of the Shriner•
and a past patron of the Ordtr of the
Eastern Star.
Mr. Newbod., who lived at 1023 Lake
St., is survived by his wile, Lucile, twG
daughters, a brother, 1 sl&ttr. four
grandchildren and one greAtgrandchUd.
THE PRICE IS RIGHT
(or is it?)
Mrs. Brown was buried In a ahallow
gr 1 v e off the Ortega Highway. Her
d.i!mtmbered body was found June 15.
Guido is one of five psychiatrist.a who
e1amined Hurd in Orange County Jail . It
is expected that at least two more
psychiatrists will follow him to he
witness stand in Judge Robert L.
Corfman's court.room.
Judge Cotflnan will rule aft.er hearin&
counter arguments from Chief Dtputy
District Attorney James Enright if Hurd
is sane and competent to stand trial.
Guldo·s written opinion was that Hurd
was insane at the time of the Brown kill·
Ing.
Four other psychlatrlsts have rul@d the
long-haired delendant to be sane but all
doubt his abWty to aid oounael in bis
defense.
Police Discover
Wandering Tot
' In fl untington
A 1ha1gy-ha1red moppet wanderln& In
Huntington Beach had pollee baffled for
three bour.11 Monday, in more ways than
one.
Daniel Oaire, 3. was found about I
a.m., toddling down Frankfort Avenue in
only a pair of yellow flannel pajamas.
Knocking systematically at ho\lses and
apartments. officers Stephen Ballocb ana
\Vllliam Vancleve spent 4S fruJtleu
minutes trying to find aomeone minUI
one child.
He was taken to police headquarters,
where several clerkJ got 1 break from
the more mundane aspect& Of keepln&
crime files straight by entertalnina: tbt
youngster.
He was finally taken to the Albert Sit.
ton Homt in Orange, where his reli!Ved
mothtr finally claimed him Monday
afternoon.
"She works nights. She came bomt,
went to sleep and didn 't wake up until
noon." erplained a spokesman for the
foundling home.
By the way, little Daniel Oaire baffled
police in more ways than ooe, it wu
disclosed today.
He was listed as a girl ln the found
child report.
HAVE YOU EVER GONE INTO A STORE, AND IEFORE A SALESMAN
Al'l'ROACHID YOU, TRIED TO DETERMINE l'llCES ON GOODS NOT
MARKED?
MANY CARl'ET STORES DO NOT HAVE l'llCES INDICATED ON
THEIR SAMl'LES. THE T H E 0 RY IS THAT THIS WAY THEY CAN
CHARGE "WHAT THE TRAFFIC WILL IEAR."
AT ALDEN'S l'RICES ARE l'OSTID ON ALI: OP OUR SAMPLES SO
THAT CUSTOMERS CAN BROUSE THROUGH THE SELECTIONS AND
KNOW WHAT THE ARE LOOKING AT. TOO, THERE IS ALWAYS THE
l'OSSIBIUTY OF A LOWER PRICE IF CONDmONS WARRANT.
ALDEN'S
....-.. -NT-.-.-... -0-.. -•• -,-. CARPETS e DRAPES
TUSTIN C•M •••
11• :.t~~.,.,. 1663 l'lactntl• Ave.
• DlAllllU COSTA MISA 11J74 ,,..._ , ... c.llf •
....... 4 646-4131
JUI, an 85-pound airaffe, nuzzles her mother, Liz, at the Denver Zoo.
The baby was fi ve feet tall al birth Dec. 12.
HOU RS: Mon, Thru Thurs., 9 to 5:30 -Prl. 9 to 9 -Sat., 9:30 to S
• •
•
' ' .1
"
I
(
•
. .
"'"!'"*···· I " ' ' ~ ' ' . . ' VOL. 63, NO. 299, l SECTIONS, 21 l'AGES·. •
' ' ' .. ORAN~E ..COUNTY, CALIFORNIA .. TUESDAY, Dl!iCEMIER 1.5, 1970
'
: ' •• •
Move to ~aes;cind·· Tideland Use. Fee : ~ . ; . . .. . . ' '
A move to rescind the city's Udelands'
use fees was tabled Mondaiy.nigbt by.tbe
Newport Beach City 'Council pt!ldin1 a
ruling from the state's 'attomey·gerietil
on whether or nqt the fees are.:man·-
datory.
The council then adopted a resolution
calling on the city to take similar action,
pending the Je~l nillrig. . ,
The county Board or Supervisors
WednescJay is scheduled to establish the
county's first~er fees. for private ale' Of
the shoreline. The' County Harbor· Gom-
' .
ii '"' piblle bearlq alter .the attorney 1enerar1 oplilion wJJ received. ·
~en arlljled the active. st.a~ of. the
ordinance would serve ,as an tn!trument
of pre0.UreJo ae! the rullog.
He' c0ntended that citizens want ~ ,.., i:UClniled ,and, 1p table the mea'""'
· woUld · lltn:t. "\O liang lb~ people Out to dry " . .• • .
· ~ocllman ·ruibai-~ C/"Ol\1 ,maln~
that It would be a daJi&erow1 move for the
cilt.1<>·reaclnd the le<t at this time.
"'!be ata)e. ls look!ni ljlward complete . . .
• •
iaao-ol tha IJdel-." QouJ aa1d,
-~t liff blUa dellgned lo ae-ci>mpl11lf tllll ,ve;y, thin& l1ad been In-
troduced· lo the last aesslon of tha
Legislature. l
"They aro lnsi..tlog that local lfO'lem-
ment is 1Deon1peteat to manage the
Utlelands " be said "and if the clly mctnd's. ' itS . Grdift~ .,Kt 'the state
passes a law, where will the. ·residents
along the bay be?"
. {togen caDe( tr.e dialoeue~'a replay"
of lbe council'• or1&inaJ actions and said.
1'Tbe!e threats aJwaya elllted -we will
IW'Vive them."
Coo,oJcllman Mltan · DollaJ · Nld he would ' ~ introducilon of the ord.lnanCe "if it woUld IUVe to slow the
county dawn.''
H~ aa1d, bow"~· the ac:tfon ~t be
mlSi:onllrued by aome wbo mlgbt think
the. fees Jiad actually been re~ and
be felt ~ resoluUon would ·get the city.'s
feelings aeross.
The rt.aolulion calls upon the county not
to take any action unW at least July 1,
•
TEN CENTS
Shelved
1971, the data llrl!ed by the llarbO< Com-
mission.
AllhOU811 the discussion Monday nlgbl
was not a pubUc hearing, several
members of the public appeared to
speak.
Larry Miller, chairman of the Newport
Harbor Oiamber of Commerce 'ndelands
and Beaches Committee, reiterated the
chamber's opposition to the fees while
several residenta and businessmen,. said
the incrtase In local taxes was forcing
tbem out of the city.
Bomb Blasts Bof A
ot ~""'....,. . . .
' . ' •' I . . ' .. . .. ,
• , .rt' 1' : •
i 'i •• : :.t :''! ( ·~~: , ... ~ ,•-·\' ~1·11 ,_
o;'rl''•1f'I ·'•' '' 1~lt ',"·•t,i I
Hole Blown in lshi Vista Rooftop
. .
From Wire Service•
ISLA VISTA - A tosaed bomb. blew a
hole iD , the roof of 1 Bank of America
branch here Monday nijht, .showering Uie: street with masonry Wes and ln-
narbing emotions of 11.reet people and
lawmen 1ga~.
No seriOua damage was reported, but
the blast cawed by an Wlidentilied device
left a hole . several feet arross in the
overhanging eave of the sb-ucture.
A crowd of UC Santa Barbara students
and other young people llvlog In the unm.
corporated community greeted lherlff's
deputtea who aITived on the acene wllh
.. ~ and jeera.
ltoclcl and bolUes ...,..thrown -cme
deputy .... hit In the hip but not injured
-while autboriUt.s crecllted calmer
young people with helping keep order in
the ~dst of ~utual 'tension.
The bank -aymbollc-ol the capitallJt
power Jtruclure to radicahr-wu rebuilt
on the scene of one burned last Feb. 25
during a cla,m that touched off a &erlea
of lncldentl.
Buslneas .conUQued as usual today, but
that ii all Bank of America ofDclals
would aay about the newest assault on
the !>uildlni· No lncld!nll bad boon reporiod and the
community was quiet up until the blet,
possibly organized by five penons
witnesses reported seeing on the acene
moments earlier.
The ISia Vista flareups of 'last spring
ended wllh more than 100 peJ'sOlla jalled
and one student -trying 1jl preserve
order and calm others clamoring for
violence -shot to death.
Investigators said several small ftre.s
Were set In trash bins around the area,
where re1ldents sal~ the bank blast couJd
be felt two blocks away, but were qWcklt.
eningulshed.
A crowd estimated al IOO gathered ..
the ......
3-maa Paael Formed {louse Okays
., ~~p~rit :COJJT:lCil OltifyS, $21 0 Million . l ~Q •• ,§., ., '"~ '
-r l • t ...... : ' ' ' ' '
.. ' ~.-· I ' ... .... fl • -~ •• '. ,. "" . -.. -... -
· ·:nilrbo~ Court C.~nt'ract · SST Funds . ;, i..!'. ~ jJ·~ f>fl l • I • ..
... ~~ ... ,:.· .. ·.
• . • • •. ' ' • ' ' • f . ' I:• FaUow aae :BofJbtag ao.t• · . · · . -. . . . -" . '
Newport Harbor's armu\\1 Festival of Llgbtl Jl9lll .,, ~lioa 'Island Ferry lan4lng. i;:aat1ve parade Is
Parade starts Friday. Map gives parade.ll>Ule.~ • -IOjf by Newport Beach Ci~ Employes Ar
timetable colorfully decorated craft .will .fOIJoW. AOC!ation and. Ne~ Harbor ci.mber of Com·
n\ghtly through Dec. ·23. ·Sl/lrt·and '11$.h a~•·.qff · .merce. · ·
'.
School 'Hot Ideas'· Ullit ... ,·: ''. ' .
Cools Off 'N.ewpQrt ·fl~'
' .
Newport-Mesa Unified SChool District's
"hot ideas" review panel has thrown
cold water <!fl th,e "flewport Plan" for
Harbor High School.
Trustees tonight will review recom-
mendations of the four-memb:er patiel.
One calls for rejection of a 1$14,500 expen-
diture for ·the Newport Plan. Trustees
may or may not accept the panel's ad-
vice.
Under the proposal, tt,yo teachen
'S rnile' Too Lare
11 ri Ce rtairi T owris
It ma y be too late to "smile" in your
home town.
Already several of the Io c a 11 Y
sponsored contests leading to competition
in the "40 Miles of Oristmas Smiles''
Olristmas decorating contest ~t
the Orange Coast area have closed.
. .
...,,td.. in. • year .-.i a ·i."11. 'ifye atu·
dent! credJt. equivalent to five ,counes.
N'oting t11ey -the basic -i<lea ac-
ceptable, the pone! ·aaicf•plns for catry.
Ing it out are not .,,tUed out , , .• 'ia suf.
ficicnf: detail to warrant the cost re-
quest..i.
Members of the Hot Idea rtview pone!
are Dr. Norman R. lA>ai!:, associate IU-
perintendent for tnstrucUonal operi-uons;
Dr. Leslie E. Shuck, aasistant superi11oo
tendent for m;arcb aod ci<veJQ-.t:
Mn. Scottla· Evana, mth l[nlde teacher
at Newport Elementary, and Art Chrls-
tenaen, principal of Qalearic Elementary
Sctiool.
The· panel · ~ two allemlllves
10< the'Newport·Plan·Wtiidllifl abarln&
of lundiac f«·the Pl<>Jecl·wftMhe 1Jm.
vers.ity Ot Southl!m CIIifornla ·ind/or
carrying out "the plan during aurnmer
school 1o reduce com.
Chamber Clioice
' Ineligible
For Str,ul,y Group
The COropa del Mar Chamber of Com·
· merte nom.tnee to the Citize•ir'!hnspor·
tation · Study Committee bas been de-
ctaied ~ble 1o· aerve by the Newport
Beach City CouncU because be 'J'e!ide1
in l.aguni S..ch.
Tbe chamber fast week designated
H:aroJd Pincb1n, who l\u offlces in Corona
del Mir,· 11 its ·representative ·on the
panel cruted to W'CW'k with a conaulta1t
informJng 1 new city traltlc plan.
In ~ the appointment Monday nigb~ however, the council stlpul1t<d
an panel members mu.st be Newport
Belch ruidentl.
PindUn this mornlJlg confirmed he does
ll•e In Lag{:ana Beach and said he was
sorry to bear the news, OOt said, "I guess
the (chlmtier) presJdent 'frill have to 1p-potnt ·someooe else:" ·
· 'Die cowcil Monday directed the city'•
Public Works Department" to bring two
or three COOIUltanta .. before the cltir.eu'
panel for consideration.
The comm.ittee will review the co11oo
llJ!taqt.s' ~ls •nd make a recom· mendltlari &o tbe council.
The Newporl Beach City Coancll Mon-
day ni&ht eommttied the clly lo ~ .
more than !700,000 oa the ·planned
Newport Center civic ceriter by ap-
provll)c , a cootract for the Harbor
JIJ!licial Dlslrlcfcourt..
At the amt time, the COWlcil formed a
three man spedal committee to work
•1th an:hilects in finalizing costs of the
entire project, and to prepare a bond wue to liilance u.
The -ract with Oraoge • C....ty ,...
quires the city to bclild '"""' than 1111<1,0o»
in.facilities, most of which will even wally
be uaed by the city, too when, aild H, a
. .
new poflce builcfin& Is ereded ln the com-
plex.
The oontract, which -ti ealled a ''humdinger -for the county,. wu 1p-
proyed by a 1-1 vote, Mlh Vice Mayor llowar!l Hogen oppooed.
'I1>e councll took no formal action to
-the com of the entire project, · wblcb .Jt \'OWed it Will do after learning
. the .pricelwlll be IJU mlllian-U the com-
plez 111 built .. plaMed.
1qty Manager Harvey, L. Hurlburt
oottiDea ·several cost-cutttni alternatives
durlq a t1Jre<.houT deliberation ol the
(See COURT, Pap I)
Personal Aide Saw Hughe s
Sign Dismissal. Document
LAS VEGAS, Nev. (UPI) - A per10!1al
aide of Howard Hughes, who claims he
has seen the mystery billionaire almo11t
dally for the past flte· yeara, says he saw
the industrialist sign I dOcumenl firing
the head of his Nevada operations.
However, a tiandwrttlng expert and
former 11soclate of Robert Maheu,
Hughes' Nevada chief, claims the
signature on the letter of dlsmlssal ls a
for(lery.
Both men testified Monday In the
NeVada District OJurt he1ring stemming
from the alttmpted ousting of Maheu by
executives of Hughes Tool Co., the
Houston-based parent firm of the
btruonaire'1 &!ant bu.slneu empire.
Ralph Bradford, now~ reUred but
prevlooal,y. a band writing and fingerprint
eipert for 28 years on the lA:!ng Beach
Police llepartmen~ !<stilled at the hear-
ing today that Hughes' 1Ia6ature was ge-
nuine.
Bradford al&o saJd he was satisfied that
a three-page handwritten letter urging
the executivea of the tool company to git
ahead wllh the job of firing Maheu wu
also written by Hughes,
Levar B. Myler, wlio ld!otlfied hllbaell
as a "special uiiatant' tO HUgbes, sald
Hughes 11p\d a P""'Y Nov. 11 firing
Maheu, who has been the blllionaJre'a No.
1 man in Nevada' for the past foor yean.
(See HUGHES, Pap I)
WASlu!iGT.ON (AP) -'!lie' llou!o
approve<1 ·1Z10 \nintO. for the lupeiaon!e
transport program Tuesday over' Objeo-
tloni ttiat 'the lower comgfom.Jst alDOlD'lt
wiD dilay deVelopment ol ~ plane •Ind
boost tls cost.
The vote was 319 to 71.
The compromise, which' would keep the
SST alive but cut $80 million off PrtsJ .. ~
dent Nl1on'1 request for $290 million
this year, now gets to the Sena.te. where
opponents still hope to delete all money
for the plane. ,
Rep. Sidney R. Yates (0.UI.), told the
House the MO million cut would ultl·
mately add $180 million to the SST'I development cost and stretch the pro-
gram out over a longer period.
The House action was dependent oo lls
later approval of. a number of technical
House-Senate disagreements in the rest
of the $2.S.billion transportation ap~
priation containing the ~ money.
A motion by Rep, Mark Andrews (Jl..
N.D.), tO send the whole bill ba'.ci: to the
House-Senate conference for recons!der·
ation or the SST issue was defeated by
voice vote,
P ar ks Commission
Meeting Set Tonight
The regular meeting of the Newp<l(I
Beach Parks, Beaches and RecrutlOD
Commission Is 2'Cheduled for 7 o'clock
tonight in the city council chambers.
Awards for studenta whO partlci,ated
In the Recreation Department's fall pro-
grams will be given out at the meeting.
Weather
Potential entrants in the contest should
Contact local, sponsoN to flnd out:a~t
Jeadlines and ruJes, it wa.s announced to-
day by Cap Blackburn, pusidenl ;of. tbe
Orange County Coast Association. His
group, along with lhe DAILY PILOT. i.!I
renewing the nearly 40-)'Ul"Old "• Mlltl!i of Christmas Smile!" cOOtest this yell ..
Other bot ideu to be "COMidered are a
16.ooi> ..... I by ·i>luw'!oo JClementiry
Scl\ool .I~ eJJJO)!lloa . of Iii llbrarx. a
~~'that lJte· puel IYQelb1 ft~"dupl.lc .. "°'!· ; a 1137, l[nlllt. to ~ Elementary
5<jli>ol >for ·a Jltlt. _,ade matbemaUcs
"diacovery" proeram, recomme~ed by
the panel, and a 11,no ,reqoett by Costa
Mela!. lfllh Scbool r~:• "ltlfr ombudo-
man, allO ctven panel · 1pProV'af. · ·
Zone Ordinance Created There's a eo percent chance
you'll mied your wnbrella oo Wed-
nesday, Temperatures will tumb)t
too, pipping into the low sbUu
along the Orange Coast.
• Judging for "40 Miles" awardl1wW be •
bandied Monda v nighl throughout the
area from Seal Beach io Su Clemente.
Mink Coat Taken
}\t Banque~ Hall
•
._Newport Beach police today al'i .etk·
tog inlonnatioo In the disappearance of a
$2,500 mink coat from the Pavilion ban-
quet ball Monday night.
The full length coat, which DOllcfe re-port belong, to Marllyn F. Smfth, of Ill
E. Balboa Boulevard. was .apparenUy
Jrung on a coat raci. DW" tbe ult to the
ball.
The woman !old police the lllt aaw the
coet at 1:25 p.m. and when she .checked
jt again at 1:30 p:m., It was gone.
'lbe • omhMlanu WOlikl ~ act ., com-
mu.nk:adooi l1bk between· diltrtct per-
aonn<I aod· HnilnlJlnlm, , -ally ,.rvll!J Ill a pl'obten\ ilol•lnlt capacity.
. ~ -allo Wiii hur1 the. roqlllred
• IJOCOlld, l'Udq ol, •· nvll<d ..rJmtct i>ol·
Icy an .lllldent eonduCI ddrfng' tiietr 7:11
p.m. meellll( II Coota Meaa .HIP ~I.
~Q UNCIL WOR KS
'.41lOUND CEOCl(."
' • • •
The Newport Btach a,. Council niay
not tie paoctual, buUt He1111 awtUtly well
reglmeaie.t , " , I( ;
1be councD l-:Q:w11ened Its afternoon
study -al'hll p.m. -,, i.,-.
lar' cllmer ......i hourt lalw, -met'
in rqular ..-·,..mt:• Lm. today.
I • 'II• ' '
Neiv port Council: Pas ses Lockheed Property Law
' .
of the property,.lbould be giveo far moro
lludy. •
Emuy officials, who have promiled a
l2llO mllilon combination industrla1 and
bualneu office pniject In • tamPll'"IYl>e
comp5'x, cou~ thal the1 proJ>OSed
ido::1:fll!enl ls logical -·and not delrl-m . ,to· the ~tty., . , .
Emkay'a plans, which .also call1for 11
fOt<Dll[ boCel iinih number of.automobile
dealenblpl; had...., the approval of tha
Plam)lilg Commlllion lat mooth on a
.. 1 vote. '
Jam.· Taylor,· ge~al' planning ad· mlil!strWtoe for the Irv In e• Company,
Rkbltd A. Reese, tbe ttrm'1 vice prnt.
· derit !or pl.n1ng and Cbort.s ca,.,.,.. Jl"!'lfdoitt of the chamber, •all llrl!ed the
projtci, be Ki•eo man atudJ. • · ·
Erqkay apokemlen have aaked for .x .
pediUous aclfon, aaylog the .deal with
Lockheed Alrcra!I to purchue the prop.
erty wlll la)! throulh If approvals aie
not. received by .fan. l.
Currey~• comments d l"'e" fire from
Vice Mayor Howard Rogen,. who ·nid, · •rm 1very Jntet'elted to ,.e the ICtiont
· of· the Olambef of Commerce -,you're · a non-r"'1den\ ot N'1'JIO<I Beach, am't
you." •. I . .
Jlo(<n cbargelf I h I diamber w I I
clatmlng the Plailrlln& Commlaalon Is not dolni Ila job.
CUmy potnled oot be la representing
•the opinion of the ..Ure chainber board
of dlt<clonl, "wl!lch Isn't cha?Jlof any·
lhinf,' jol!I aaytng not enough time was
(loo LOCllHEED; Pi&' I)
INSWE TODAY
ffoiD d0f1 11our annul irto
come fit into the national acaleP
Sylufa Porter ha$ all the anawer1
01l Financ.e Page 10 toda11.
Owly 9 ~.
CHRISTMAS
'
, t DAILY PILOl " Tuttda, Dt<tmbtr 15, 1!70
Y•le Gift:,
Service Stations ·
Waging G~s . W~r.
J1ltl la Umt for Olriltm1s, 1ervice st.a-
Uaol o!Olll tl>e Orani• coast are •niaaed
in a price cutting gas war.
Drop& from rtgUlar price• as mud> 11
two.to f«lr COllll I lllJon """' ttPOried bf dolleri !tom COiona «kl Mar to FOWi·
laJn Valley.
Mission Vie~ and tl Toro a:as stations
however, have yet to go along w~tb the
prlct tull, ptoblbly beclUJe tl>e reblt ..
oil companies have offered to other
· dealers have not been extended to Sautb
COtmly allUooa.
A tpOtelrnan at Grant's Gulf in ()»ta
lllt11 aald "wt juat dropped another P.•·
111 yeoltrday" ~ tl>elr price for
Council Maps
Underground
Utility Area
The Newport Buch City COUDcl1 Mon·
day nigbt direct tbat the city 's second un-
derground utilities district be formed
aloog the Mariner'1 Mile area of the
Coast Hl&hWIY and approved a priority-
list for five other districts. No timet.able
1J1$ set. however. The first district was created last
month on Octan Boulevard, between Pop-
py and Heliotrope Avenues, Jn Corona del
Mar.
Also reoolv111g top priorlly is a distrlct
, In tl>e vlclnlty ol Hoaa Memorial Hospital
• I.bat wUl be created in conjunction with
'tl>e wftlenlJll ol Hocpltal Road a11d Ill ex·
tension to Superior Avenue.
Pourtl! OD tl>e total liJt Is • district
along El Paseo Drive, from Bayside
Dt1ve to the Co.st Higbw1y aDd on
Bayside Drtve, from. El P1eo Drive to
Marine Avenue.
Newport Boulevard. !tom 30th Slrtet lo
McFadden Place, wu delllfllted llfth
and a section of Balboa Boulevard, from
'3rd Street to McFadden Place, Wu plac-
ed sl>th.
Once an under&round utilities dil~'s
created, property ownm therein
the coirt of underarouDding werk for In
line utilities, although they must pay for
&ervlce recormecti0111.
Diltrictlnl. however, requires the work
be performed within a specified period of
tJme.
Atta! eli&lble I<>< dislridinl ai.tus
must mttt certain restrictions.
'Ibey must be areas of unusually heavy
coticentraUon of overhead facilities. be on.
a street extensively uaed by the general
pubUc and ca.rryinf a heavy volume cf
pedeatrlan or vehicular traffic er alcng a
street 1djoinitlg a civic . area or public
rtere1Uon area er an arta of "'unusual
scenic interest."
From Page 1
HUGHES •..
Myler &aid the •iln!ll& took place Ill the
ninth floor penthouae maintained by
Huabea in the Dmrt Inn Hotel in Las
Veau. The witness also testified lfuahes
su~uenUy went tc the Britaania Beach
Hotel in Nassau, the Saham.11, and from
there iMutd in1tructioos the proxy be
released.
tarller in the day, Charles Appel Jr., a
former FBI agent with Maheu, testified
on behalf of Mehtu that Hua:hes'
purported aipaturt on Ult document
presented by the Hughes Tool O:i. was a
"'simulation or imitation."
"lt's e very good representatiOn, '' Ap-
pel said.. "It would pa'5 any bank teller
and other business anociatea would ac·
cept it, but it's deficient. It's utremely
aklllful but It's different.'' ·
DAILY PILOT
OlAHGI C0.6.ST ,UILISHING ~,ANY
Rob•rf N. W•M
Tho11u11 K.,,,a
fOlltt
Tllo"'•• A. Mutpki11•
M~'I"' tOI.,_
L Pettt Kr1eg
N""'1IO<" hKt! City l"l!Gf"
Nca P"'lf ..... ~
2211 w .. t lell••• l•ul•"•"'
M•lll119 A44retti P.O. low 1171, 92661 --Qlft M-! »0 Wftl 81Y lltel!
""""" lfMf11 02 llff'W't AYMU. Mu!lllNlltill 8tKft: ,,.,. •..c~ lollltv•l'"f
S.11 ~: * Nwtll t i Ct'"lllO ~·
•
low·ltad t'llUlar ti> 3o.8 and proinlwn
ir.adf. to 36.9 cent!.
~e most dealer' . randomly In·
terviewed seemed f~&iped to the re.new-
ed gas Wfr, 1 Newport Beach Chevron
station owner expresi&d diJgust, rtfuslnc
to say what be was now Charging.. while
noting he was participating.
Ken's Mobile Setvict Station, Corona
del Mar said "We're very much intc a
aas. war. We dropped two cents a aallon
over the weekeM," the owner reported.
~ his prices to M.9 centa for
reauler and 38.9 for premium.
He recalled that the last gas war lasted
ail wetk& aDCI ended just three weeks
IJO.
"l think they are terrible," be said.
"'bul people are very select.l.ve now about
gasoli.De prices, probably because of tbe
eeonomy. We have tc go along.''
By contrast, Mission Vlejo )..tobUe
reports no price drop and continues tc
charge 36.9 for regular and 40.9 for
pre~um.
Five Points Texaco in Huntington
Be•cb ·bas been lowering prices for a
.... t and standa at 29.8 f~ regular and
3U !or premium.
. Lariy Meal!. cperator ot a Sbeti station
1n Fountain Valley, said prices had drop-
ped four cents a gallon in a week.
"'The ps companies live me *1,000 dif.
feret reasons ·for a gas war," bl!!: llid,
"But I still don't understand why."
"1 hive to stay with them to be com·
petiUve, .,·be said, noting that be believes
"people are !hopping more now than tbey
used to."
Howard Yarborough, operator of a
Unlon station in El Toro saia the gas war
had not reached his corner yet, but noted
that a station across the: street was
charging 40.9 cents for premium com-
pared with biJ 39.9 and 38.9 at a tl'IJrd sta·
ti on.
"I'm not ready for another gas war."
Yarborough said, "Tbey hurt profita both
ways, for the dealer and the oU com·
pany.''
"We can get a call in the morning to
drop our price," he eXJllained, "but then
it ii the dealer's choice whether or not to go along.''
Unive rsity Hi gh
Students Become
St.amp Colle ctors
University High School student! are
collecting saving stamp books in both
popular colors, in order to purchase a
$2,400 weig~t training machine for the
new school's athl etic department.
Dick Caneday, athletic director, said
the stamp book.s will be redeemed for
cash to buy the 15-station weightlifUng
machine which most other schools use to
train their athletes.
Alter the Christmas holidays move Into
the new school at Culver Road and Cam-
pus Drive. near UC Irvine, the stamp
drive will be ei~nded, Caneday said.
PresenUy, students are bringing the
books tc school, but after the move, the
Boosters Club and athletic teams will
beg.in a door-to-door tanvass seeking
1,200 books.
If the campaign is successful , excess
books will be cooverted to cash and the
funds given to the associated student
body fund. Caneday noted.
The machine being sought provides 15
stations for weighl training exercises.
wit bthe weights attached by cables to
each pl1ct. "This is the safest form of
weight lifting," Caneday noted.
Besides use by team athletes. the ap-
paratus would be useful in physical
education classes and possibly for "slim-
na1tiCs" classes for adult education even·
ing students.
Caneday estimated that "9S percent cf
area schools" have such equipment. most
purche.sed by special fund raising pro-
jects. "Being a new school, we haven't
had Um6 to accumulate the money t-0 buy
cne. W6 need it in order to compete with
the other schools," Caneday said.
The books are being collected at the
Mis&ion Viejo campus btrout:h the re--
m1inder of this week. University High
opens in Its own building on Jan. 4, bar·
rinc Uflforeseen delays.
Active Jurist
Takes Position
With YES Group
A busy Harbor Judjcial Diat?I~ Ccurt
Jud&e with titles In other community se.i:·
vice organiu.Uons bas accepted e Jl!>!l·
UM as sparkplug of the Herbor Area
Youth Employment Service.
Judie Calvin" P. Schmidt has been nam-
ed director of community iffalrs for
YES. which is currently placln& entr·
.retie young people tn full and part·tlme
Oui.stmas season jobs. His new c1pldt.y lll'ill Include encour·
aaln& young people and bwineasmeo to
make use of YES for employment and
job opportunities.
Judge Schmidt, of 324 Cameo Shorts
Road Corona del Mar. 15 active in a
vatieiy of clher !trvice or1aniza1.lons.
He Is c:<>dlalrman lor the 1970 Chrl!l·
mu Seel dr ive, 1s we.JI '' serving on
the board of dir~ctors of both the East.tr
St1J Socltty for Crlpplod Clilldr<n and
the Girl Scout Council ol Orani• County.
UPIT .......
HI ADING FOR HOME '
Sh ip Hlf•ck•r Glatowakl ;
Ship 'Hijooker
From Long Beach
Give s Self Up
PHNOM PENH (AP) -"I Ollly rtfret
I didn't s1nk the llhlp,• on< Of tl>e hJ.
jac"'rs ol a "1.S. ammllllitioo frelihler
saJd today as he walked Into the
American Embassy in Phnom Penh to
6Ul"r'ender.
"I still believe tn the revolution ln
America and in the revollltioo in Cam·
bod.la."' Alvin L. Glatows'tf, 20, L<ing
Beach, !old 1tewsmen. But he said hr felt
ht wouJd gel a !airer deal in the U.S. than
in Cambodia.
Glatcwsld end Clyde W. McKay. 25,
Escondido, took ovu the 10,tXJG.t.cn
Cclwnbia Eagle in the Gulf cf ThaUand
Jut March and forced lhe crew into the
Cambodian port Of Kompona: Som.
They have beell indicted by e federal
grand jury iD Los Angele.! on c:b&r&e.s of
mutiny en the high seas, awult,
transporting kidnaped per!IOns in foreip
commerce, and neglect cf duty. They
could gtt the death penalty on the muUny
charge.
The ship and the re1t of its: crew were
released and completed the voyq:e to
Thailand.
McKay got away from a C-ambodian
guard in a PhMm Penh reataur1Dt in
October and disappeared with an
Amerlcan deserter from T h a 11 a n d •
Glatowski said then he believed they
were beaded for I.ht town of Siem Reap
to join Communist fortes fighting in
Cambodia.
Glat.CJwsld and McKay were kept on a
prison boat on the Mekong River for a
few week.! after the hijacking. They com-
plained about the conditions there and
were put in the servants' quarters of a
government guest house in Phnom Penh
and then in a hotel.
The Cambodian government paid their
hotel bills, and they technically had
political asylum. But they were actually
under a form of arrest, free to move
about in the city but always escorted by
Camtx>d.ian guards.
From Pqe 1
COURT •.•
•
Te~cher .'Ups~t' Hurd
'Slit Her Throat m _ Warning,' Doctor Says
By roll BW.EY .. ·•
Of .. ._ Pll .. )left • . . '
Wbat S!Oven Crill Hurd desl'l'IWd. le
bla poychittrill II lln. l"lolOnco.:ar.,.,,·1
"queenllneu. and pldinesa'' and what he
believed wu her "derogatory atcilude''
towards him may wtll have coet the
Misslon. Viejo teacher her life, Jt was
alleged in lfftlmony !<><llY in .. Orf11e
Counly Superior Court.
Dr. Johll A. Guido openod tlle amlly
trlal· of the accu&ed ,,_year-0ld'trutitnt
by Jolllng ddtnse attorney WWlam Goin-
ble that Hurd told him !hit he alulled
Mn. Brown in the neck "to wam ber''
that he would not tolertte ber wperiorl·
ty.
Hurd could not recall the actual klllllll
o1 Mrs. Brown. Guido teltllied but he
could recall "atabblnl her cnce or tMca.
Then he remembers tbat twi drove arot.lnd
811111 Alla wttll her body -aert of Ilk• Ibey did thina• 111 Vietnam, It< told me."
Hurd Js accuaod.of boiJ!I the rin&leader
of a iroup of di-lttera who police claim
pulled Mrs. Bl'OWll, 31, of El Toro,. from
her car lot June 2 u she left t1>e Siii
Die10 Freeway at the Sand Canyon Off-
. ram p.
Police alle&e thal the woman wu
mutilated and aublected to a 1trles cf
devil worahipl.na rltfll b e f ore lbe wu
lillallY 1111led In 111 Irvllle orlJ!P ~ve.
Gamble told tlle court today !hit o.. of
lhooo rllo involved tlle ealiJli of her
bear! by Hurd.
Mr1. Brown WU buried in • ahalJow r rav e ott the 0rtep Hlil1w•Y· ji..-
dismembend body WU -Jwie !I. Guido is ooe of five paycbtatrilt.s who
ei:UlllMd Hurd in Orange Ccunty J•il. It
11 expected that at lwt two more
payclliatrllll wW follow blm to he
wiinell staJ!d Ill Judie Robert L.
Corlmall's courtroom.
Judie Corlmall will rule a!Ur bearinr counter arawnentl from Chief Deputy
Dlatrl<:t Attorney ~amea Enrl&ht U Hurd
ls aane and competent to at.Ind trial.
Guido's written oplnk'cl •11 that Hurd
was lnlane at the time of t.ht Brown kill·
1"J:our other paychialrists have ruled the
long.balrecl defendant to be sane but all
doubt bla abllity to aid OOUJ!Sel ill bla
defeNt.
Hurd, man.cled hand and foot. ap-
peared to have no real interut in this
momlnl'• proceedinaa and antched what
appeared to be 1.octiac signs while Gam·
ble atl\led in his defense. His cnly con.
tact with h.i..!l lawyer was to ask Gamble
on several occasions for a cigarette.
The psychiatrist's doubt s were ap..
paren!ly raised by a series of con·
versatlons in which Hurd commented
that he liked to drink six cups Of blood ,a
day, acknowledged the de.vil as his
father, believed in the invincibility of
Satanic worship and the inevitable rein-
carnation of the evil doer.
Guido testified Hurd recalled during his
interview that he was a member of a
group which drove into a Santa Ana
service station on the night of June 1 -
the aame nl&bt of a $50 robbery and tht
hatchet killing m attendant Jrrry Wayne Carlin, 21-
"Acain ," Guido said, ''Hurd be.lieved
that aomeone was behaving in a
'Can't Take It'
At CdM School
derolatory mlMll' lewlrd.s blm." The
paychlatrlst IftUl!ed -that Hurd told him
be gave orlkra !fir the lrllliJ!i ol Carlin
itter heartni someone e&U bim "'a
tramp."
Guido'• J;otlmony indicated that Iha u
used to mike Carlin unrecognizlble wu
takeJ\ from Hurd's car and thf: defendant
•pP1te11Uy indicated to Ollldo·that he had
bffn carrytq; tbe . weapon ifOu.nd for
aeme time.
Guido leatlfltd that Hurd had I IOJ!I
hl!tory of narcotics addiction and a
particular fondneas for berbin. His search
for drugs and tha money lo purchase
them led Hurd lnto several encounters
with the law before the killings of Mrs.
Brown and Carllrl, the l>S)'chl.atrl5t'1
report indicates.
Hurd 11 one cl three youths lndicted by
the Orange County Grand Jury tor the
killlhgs of Mrs. Brown and Carltn.
separate Jury trill.ls have been ICheduJ-
ed fer his co-defendanta. One other defM·
dan~ Arthur Crai& "MOOll" HUise, II, of
Garden Grove faces tr1al for the kUllnc of
Carlin and being an accessory to the
murdtr of Mrs. Brown.
From PGfe l . '
LOCK.HEED PROPERTY • • •
siv.n In atudylni tl>e project."
Taylor said the inlect would have
tremendous bnpict in the dty, t b a t
"could retult Ill a lhift of Newp:>rt's com·
merclol emphasis to the airport m a."
The tract la located oppoalte the Callins
:Radio Company property on MacArthur
Boultvard and is also bounded by Jam.
bone Rood, Pollsadel Rood and Bird>
Street.
Taylor pointed· to his firm's ~t re--
qutll for ruoo!n&: cf a major nearby
tract !!om !J!dualrial to ~al-busi
neu and iaid then have been indic1tions
other major property holden in tl>e area
includinf Colllrll an thlnJdng about fOI·
Traffic Signal
Priorities Set
For More Study
A recommtndtd Us! ol lrlflle signal
priorltlts, prepared by the ·Public Works
Department. wu tabled for furthtr con-
slderatlcn by the Newport Be1ch City
Ciouncil Monday night.
The priority list puts the intersection
of Newport Center Drive, wt and wes t.
at the entrance tc Fashion l5land, at the
top. ..
Seeond Is the intersection of Dover
Drive and lrvlne Avenue. followed by
the intersktion of Jemboree Road and
Bayside Drive.
This ranking ma~ draw criticism. since
Traffic Engineer RGl:>ert Jaffe told Bal·
boa Island residents recently the Bay.
side-Jamboree corner would be number
two.
Fourth on the list 11 the tnttrsection
of Irvine Avenue and Marinen Drive.
The othtrs, in order are :
Balboa Boulevard and 47th Street.
Highland Drive and Irvine Avenue, Dove
Oriv" and 18th Strttt, Placentia Avenue
and Superior Avenu!, Irvine Avenue and
18th Stree.t and Avocado Avenue and E.
Coast Hil!hway.
Also, Cliff Drive and Dover Drive. Bi-
son Av!nue end Jamboree Road. Har"OOr
View Drive and MacArthur Boulevard.
the Balboa. Boulevard·NeWtlOt't &ulevard
crossing and the intersection of Newport
Center Driv! and Sant.a Rosa Drive.
lowin& ault.
The entire uu he apoke ol Is o11o cur-
rently master planhed for lndustrtal we.
Reese, uking for more 1tudy, sa!d tho
council Is obll&ated to change dlt muter
plan before acting on e specific zonfn&
request.
Among the other opponent.s was Daniel
Emory, hoad ol tho Airport Nol,. Abate-
ment Committee, who urged the council
consider the impact of the development
on the airport. •
Emory dJplayed a brochure published
by the Irvine Induatrial Comple:r that
pOinled out the prox!mlty of the airport
aJ a mefor feature of the lnduatrlal part_
Robert Cromm.elin, an Emkay consul-
lant," 1ald studies show there would be
minimal use of the airport by tenants of
the development.
Robert Alleborn , E rn k a y president.
nid ihe project i• not beinr ~
ClOlltingent upon the airport.
Emory, in his testimony, also had cited
a city consultant's report that sald there
is already 1ufficient commercial devel~
ment near the airport.
Afl!hom s11id. hoprever. "The market
Is existing. Businessmen in Los Angeles
are tired of working In that city.''
Cooncilman Lindsley Parsons. w h o
cast the lone dissenting vote. urged a de-
lay pending a study of th! economic im·
pact of the project on the entire city.
City Planner Laurence Wilson. who had
endorsed the project. said that the eco-
nomic impact and the overall effect of
the project en the traffic circulation sys.. tern arr not known.
Wilson did note, however , that an ed-
joinlnR section ol the Irvine Industrial
Complex. in an industrial ?.on! that does
allow lighter uses, is shifting ln character
from an lnduatrial park t.o a business
elf ice center.
Newport Woman
Freed on Bail
In Hit and Run
A Newport Beach woman is free en
$250 bail today fo\lowinr her arrest Mon-
day night on charges ol felO!ly hit and ruzi:
driving.
Police said Kath.leen Sumner. 23, was
arrested at her home at 1242 Rutland
Road, number 3, at about 9 p.m.
center during the aftenoon study se.uion. Coron.a del Mar Hiah School students
The counc ilmanic committee, con-will present "You Can't Take It With
Jn t1resentina the list. Jaffe explained
that the Jambore.~ay•lde ranking w:1s
based nn .ttie fact tnat 1lthouAA It rankll
Jn need ~u!l to the Dover "Orive--lrv!ne
A venue int,rsectloa. the latter h a s a
he•vier tratflc volum~-
Officers 1Dege Miss Rutland hit a car
parked at 200 Amtthyst Ave ., Balboa
Island. The car is owned by Ina K.
Eastman, 23. cf 1204 Park Ave. sisting of Donald Mc!Mis, Richard CrouJ You" tonJaht. Wednesdey end Friday
and Milan Dostal. was aSlligned to work nights at the school's LltUe Theater.
with Welkin Beckett Allsoc:.iat.f:!. th! Directed by drama inatructor JoAMe
.artb.ite(ls. to review proposed costs and Blick, the play stars Janice Hart. Rick
make recommendations to the full coun-Yorba, St.an Wlasick, Kathy Eby, Kim
cil. Bat!S, Jim Luce, Ken Nelsaer, Jeff
He atreSMd that the first four inll.r-
sectlons all ahould be oonsidei'ed to be
of thl!! hlfhest priority .
The ranking of Newport Center Drive
at the too drtw criticism. al Vice Mayor
Howard Rofers who indicated he felt the
Irvine Ccmpnay. developers of Newport
Center, should be requited to pty for in-
stallation cf the light.
Polite allege Miss Eastman suffered
1braisons to her feet and kllees when
Miss Sumner dro"e away while-Mtss
£.t.stman was still holding on to the door
handle.
Croul, himself a contractor. was l..clubet and Coreen Strelsky.
especially critical of the B@ckett gquare Curtain time is 8 p.m. Tickets art prlc-
Hit and run acciden ts, when there art
no injuries, ar~ mlsdemeanor v!Olationa.
When an ln:jury results lhen it i.s a felony
chargr..
footage cost project.ions , which everaged ed at $1.50 for adult.I and Sl for students
about $37 per foot, who have Associated Student Body cards.
He vowed the project "never will get t-0 , -p;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,~;;;;;;;;;~
a bond Issue if it's Joing to cost $12 I
million to $13 million -or it'll be over
my dead body."
Rogers. the lone opponent to e:recution
of the contract. c.harged that approving
the expenditure would taint a aeneral
obligation bond election.
"We wouldn't be bringing e clean
package to the people," he. said, "we
need both the city hall and pclice
building, hut Oley should stand alone."
Rogers said he doesn't think the court.!
are "necessarily good for our com-
munity."
The council directed that should a bond
election fo rth6 remainder.of the project
be defeated 1t a bond election the funds
far th court fa cilities would he deriv!d
from sale of the city dump property.
Under the contract, the city Is required
fo build certain prisoner detention and
transfer areu and ottice space totalllnr:
"up to 5,000 square feet''
Hurlburt assured the council that the
needs of the county will be no more than
approximately t ,700 square feet.
During the afternoon study se5sion. the
c:ounclt beard an hour.Jong review o( the
history of the civic tenter, which is plan-
ned on a ts.acre tract south of the
NeWJ)Ol't Center and Fashion Jaland
developments. from Ernie Mayer, fcrmer
Newport Beach plaMina dlreetor,
Mayer w111 patd $100 for his ·~
pearance and forwarded tran!ICTlpts of
hi!! talk lo council members afterw1rda .
He had been Newport Bt•ch planning
director during the early planning stages
of the projed.
Hurlburt then ouUlned the various cogt
reduction poulhilit.le.. which include cut-
ting back M sr..ce nqulttmentl by erec-
tln~ exp1nd1b e buildings.
He 1aid the number of park.Ina spacr:s
could be reduced from 111 to 671 for tl>e
enUre project and 1ald Ule totll needs of
the pollct department had betn lhaved
from 7~,000 square feet to 67.000 aquare
I eel
•
THE PRICE · IS RIGHT
(or is it?)
HAVE YOU EVER GONE INTO A STORE, AND BEFORE A SALESMAN
APPIOACHID YOU, TRIED TO DnlRMINI PRICES ON GOODS NOT
MARKED 7
MANY CAR'ET STORES DO NOT HAVE l'RICES INDICATED ON
THEIR SAM,LES. THE T H E 0 RY IS THAT THIS WAY THIY CAN
CHARGE "WHAT THE TRAlllllC WILL BEAR.''
AT ALDEN'S l'RJCES ARE l'OSTID ON ALL OP OUR SAtuLIS SO
THAT CUSTOMERS CAN IROUSI THROUGH THE SILICTIONS AND
KNOW WHAT THE ARE LOOKING AT. TOO, THIRE IS ALWAYS THE
l'OSSIBIUTY OF A L 0 WE R l'RICI If. CONDITIONS WARRANT.
ALDEN'S
~ ... -"'-•• -... -0-... -.,-,.... CARPETS e DRAPES
TUSTIN Cell •••
u• :,tr=:.,.,. 1663 l'lactntla Av t.
11111 t..::: c.IN. COSTA MISA
........ 646·4831
HOUll: Mon. Thru Thurt., 9 to 5:311 -,,f, t to 9 -S.t., 9:30 to s
-.
• I
.,
I
i
f;os-U.. Mesa Today's Flllal
\
' VOL 63, NO. 299, 3 SECTIONS, 28• PAGES . . , ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORl'!)A TUESDAY; DECEMBER IS, 1970 TEN CENTS
Mesa ,Rede-Velopmeht Funding to he Discussed
A, preliminary rinanctar report on the
cost of Costa Mesa Downtown RedevelOp-
ment ·and · sOUrces ftom which the an-
ticipated first $9.t million may Come will
be discussed at a Wednesday meeting.
. Merch~ts and city officials . will
meet at 7:·30 p.m. in the first floor con-
ference room behind city c o u n c i I
chambers in the clvk: center. ·
The ,lal!u will center around a financial
fact sheet prepared by consultants Wilsey
&: Ham, hired. to engineer the downtown
fl -tr -tr
Mesa Pair
Asks Return
To Old Era
A Costa Mesa couple bave advised the
city council in no uncertain terms that
they want a return to the iood old days
along the Orange Coast.
Henry J . Niemes, of 1800 Viola Place.
also speaking as a former Laguna Beach
homeowner, writes:
"We are positively against urban re-
newal in any form and are against city
inanagers."
He recalls Laguna Beach's first city
manager (Jay Mercer) in a letter to be
received by Costa Mesa City Qluncil
members next Moftday.
"AH he did was keep raising bis wages
and the employes' wages ·in comparison
with other city managers," Nlemes
char1es. "The cost of funning the city 'Is 10
times greater and the city was run bet·
ter before they . .had a manager."
"The same t.blng: will hippen with this
urban renewal thing aM ll'lere ~ pJenly
or prOO( of it in other ci es," 'Ni~es
continues. · ' • . "In Cincinnati, Ohib, they tore down
thoosands of houJel In the~. ioC End, forcing the Negro population , ~e _in
to other parts of the city a then· lilt
the land vacant," be co_nclu~.
Mesa Planne~
Approve. Bid
For Apartmen~
A rezoning application for a 11.s;acre,
high density apartment complex wa1 rec·
ommended for approval Monday· bJ the
Costa Mesa Planning Commission.
A zone exception permit request for
an eight.unit aparUnent building. in a
single-family zone on the east side, of
to\vn was held over. however, until the
commission's .Dec. 28 meeting.
Recommendati ons of approval were
p:iven for all 10 other items on the agen.
da.
The large apartment complex at 630
Paularino Ave., is owned by Peoples I~
vestment Corporation of Beverly Hllls.
It is currently 'zoned for ,single family
and institutional and recreational use.
The city's new general plan prepared
tn connection with downtown redevelop.
ment program requirements shows the
property located in the so-called Golden
Triang)e for dense building.
Ralph Bonds. 312 St. A:ndrews Road,
Newport Beach, will come back before
the commission next meeting to discuss
his eight-unit apartment pr:oject. ·
lie v;ants to build on 13,500 square feet
of land al 2027 Orange Ave., in.eluding
10 feet of I.be reQuired z5.f0ot rear yard
sctback.
· Commissioners recommended approv.
al of plans by Harold T. Sege.rstrom &
Sons. 3315 Fairview Road, for a Rlchlleld
Service Station at the northeast corner
of Fairview-Road and Sunflower Avenue.
'Smi'le' Too Late
~ n Cerwi1t Towns
Jt may be too late to ••aml]e" in your
home town.
!ready several of the I o c a 11 y
~ored contests leading to compeUtlon
In the •140 Atiles of Christmas Smiles"
Qlristmas decorating contest throughout
the Or.ange Coast area have closed.
Potential entrant.I in the contest r.hould
c;ontact local sponiors to find out about
d,adlines and rules, it was announced to-
day by Cap Blackbum, president ol the
Qrange County C'Mst AslociaUon. His
~P· along with tile DAILY PILO'I', is
rtnewing the neatly 40-ytlQ'--(lld .. _, Miles
ol Chrisunas Smiles" contest this year.
Judging for "40 Miles" awards wUI be
bandied Monday night throughout the
arta lrom Seal Beach lo san Clemon!<.
·!
•
~-ol 1he 1980s. • Pl;,~·-. .... broken dQwn ~lo •l• ~ of dncrete facililles" to be In· . ~""11ln the re-desjgnea·center of_the ci·
ty{ \'{Ith para, ma~, plazas !fld im·
proved.Jraffic flow.
Stftets wil! require · $4;300,000, more
than half the total packag<.
: Par.king racllitles, at '$3,600,000, com·
prise the next" largest capital outlay.
:Park development and improvernenl is
eijected to cost $800,000, "'ith an ad-• -' -
djtio')'I $225,000 for Plazas .within '4he
pedeitrlan ·shopping and strolling area.
.Trefflc signals -:are; . ~sUma\e<f 1t
$150,0; with an addltlonal $i5,tltl0 for
related utiliUes. , • ,
'nle WilSeY &·Ham fact sheet coversi10
various categories or anticipated income
from various annual sources such .as
county and state allotments.
Estimated. city gasoline tax appor·
tlonment earmarked for street l.rn-
provcmenls, as an example, is $400,~
'
. -. _ J DAILY PILOT' It.fl• ...... Christmas ·0me1et . Mrs~ MarlfBaumes, a r~sident or Costa Mesa's Betpel Towers, mad~
ttiis~decor tion for her apartment door from 40 eg~ cartons and· a lot
of'Jn'g:eni.i" y, proving that even apartment dwellers can share their
Cbristmaf spirit with their neighbors.
'
Sehbol 'Hot Ideas' ltrnit
I
I . '
Cools .Off ~Newport Plan',
Newport·Mesa Unified School District"s
••hot ideas" review panel has thrown
cold water on the "Newport Plan" for
Harbor High School.
Trustees tonight will review recom·
mend'ations of the four.member panel.
One cads' for rejection of a $14,500 expen·
diture-. for the Newport Plan. Trustees
may or may not accept the panel's ad·
vice.
U0nder the .proposal, two teachers
would, in a year and a half, give stu-
dents credit equivalent to five coursefi.
Noting they found the basic idea ac·
ceptable, lhe panel said plans Ior carry·
ing ,it ·OU~ are not spelled-out ... in suf-
ficient ccfetaiJ lo W'_a rrant the COSt TC•
quested.. ~
1 Members .of the -Hot Idea review panel
are Dr. Norman R. Loats, associate su·
perlntendent for instructional operaUon s:
Dr. Leslie E. Shuck, as&stant superin-
tendent for research and developme"I : Mrs. ·Sc:otti1 ·Evans; sixth grade· teacher
at;-Newport Elementary, and Art Chris-
tensen, principal of Balearic Elementary
School.
The panel suggested 1wo alternatives
for the Newport· Plan including a sharing
Of funding for the project with the Uni·
versity of ' Southem' talifomia and/or
carrying out the plan 'during summer
1chool to reduce-costs;
Other hot ideas to be considered are a
$6.000 request ~Y ·Paularino' Elementary
School'for expansion of lta library, a
plan that the ·panel suUest! it "duplic.a·
lion"; a $%3'7 grant to W1lson Elementary
School 'for a first J(Tade mathematics
"discovery" program. recommended by
the panel. and a $1,290,request by Cosla
Mesa High~ School fof' "a staff ombuds-
man, ·also given p3neJ approval.
The ombudsman would act as com·
munlcations link between district per-
sonnel and admini;fators. generally
serving in a problem 'iolving capacity.
Trustees also will hear the required
second reading_ or a revised dislrict pol·
icy on student condUCt during their 7:30
p.m. meeting at Costa Mesa HJgb School.
•
for the year.
Under the county'• Arterial Highway
Finan<"'« Plan, •.ooo can be upected
as 8ft. appartlomnent for street Im·
ptO\lelnints. Another •.IOO· annullly f0r..c1~ IJld lloplJsbb comes from
Traffic Safety P'and ftMIW"Ct!. ·
'The !beet also includes u.essed valua·
tions 'from Coda Mesa's total of
$172 loo,000 for 19'76-71, broken down to
· the-boulivard commertlal strip itself.
Tbe lattel" ls $1.1 million, while the area
encompuaed !Of ~1~.meot .ts-~!
mii11Gn. lncludlng frillce area rtaldenllal
districts., . . . .
Bouhd~ries are roupiy between' 17th
and' 19Ui ltreets, marked ~off on the eut
and wQt by FiiUerloo A....,., Ind tbe
~.Newport· Free:_..y, route. ·
Prtliminaey ·renderings.. , by the con-
sultant!,_ p~ for the $50.000 study.
actua'lly show three' distinct areas set off
for i-edeveJopmenr. ·
By Jmposing a tax freeze at the ex·
isling cumulative downton tu rate
shown as roughly 10.7 cents per $100 of
assessed valuation, some revenue could
be obtained the report aays.
The state's redevelopment act o£ 1941
provide! any subsequent tax increase
revenue over that 19.1 cents per $100
would go into the project.
The financial fad sheet to be reviewed
Wednesday also mentions four possibl•
sources or outaide funds to assist in tha
(See FUNDL~G, Page Z)
Bomb Blast·s Bof A
Hole Blown in lsl:a Vista Rooftop ·
From Wire Service•
ISLA VISTA .!.. A tossed bomb bl<w a
hole in the roof of a Bank of America
branch here Monday night, showering
the street with masonry tiles and in-
flaming emotions oC street people and
lawmen again.
No serious damage was reported, but
the blast caused by an unidentified device
Jen a hole several feet arross in the
overhanging eave of the structure.
A crowd of UC Santa Barbara students
and other ~ung people Jiving in the unin-
corporated community greeted sheriff'•
deputies who arrived on the scene wilh wboopl and j<ers.
Rocks and bottlea were ~ -one
de'puty was bit In the 'hip but not injured
-' while auU.iUes credited calmer
fOUlli people with helpiJI« keep onler· in
the midst ci mutual temiOn. .
· The bank -symbolic of the Capitalist
power structure to radicals -was rebuilt
on the scene of one burned last Feb. 2S
during a clash that touched off • aeries
of Incidents.
Business continued u usual today, but
. that ii all Bank of America offlclals
would aay about the newest assault op
the building. , ·
No Incidents bad been reported and tho
Testifies In Court
Ai~e W!~nes,~ed H~ghes
~ ....... ~ ~ -~· "~~. ~ o).' l'tr . ·.,;~· • l ·~ .. ~· ... ~ Sign·DiStnissal.I)acument
LAs VF«JAS, Nev. (UPI) .!.. A perional
aide of Howard Hughes, who claims he
bu seen the mystery, billionaire almost
dafly for the' past five years, says be saw
the lfidilstrlalbt sign a document.firing
the.head of bis Nevada operaU9ns.
HoWever, .a bandwritlttg expert ind
former associate of Robert Maheu,
Hughes' Nevada chief, cl~ the
signature on the letter of dismjwJ is a
forgery.
Both men testified Monday in the
Nevada Diltriot Court hearing lll<mminl
Gal Hitchhiker
Takes Side Trip
To Mesa Jail
A suspected lady or the night allegedly
advertising In broad daylight Jost her
first customer Monday.
The .statuesque Glendale resident flag-
ged down· a motoi:lsl on Harbor
Boulevard in COsta 'Meila, qlioting a $15
price for certain services to the astonish·
ed man.
"This officer assumed she lJ,8d observ·
ed bis uniform hanging in the side Win-
dow and needed assistance," wrote off.
duty Patrolman Dick De Francisco.
He said the 32-year-<>ld woman bopped
into the car and they drove to a nearby
school campus. where he allegedly ob-
tained enough evidence to support an ar·
reSt on vice charges.
"I know a better place," he said, feign·
Ing modesty at the idea or a tryst in sight
of an elementary school with classes in
Sf!sion.
They arrived at police headquarters
just In time for bis regular patrol shill.
from the •itempted IJl!S!lng of Maheu by
ezecuUvea of Hucbel: Tool C.O., the
Houston.baled parent firm of the
billlon&ire's giant business empire.
Ralpff Bradford, Dow retired but
previously a handwrltlnf and fingerprint
ezpert foir 28 yeart ~ the Long Beach
Police Departmen~ teetifled al the hear·
big IAlday lbat l!Ugbe>' signature was ge-
nlline.
, Biadlord allO said lie was salisfled that
a u.r.0-page handwritten letter urging
the. executives of the tool company lo get
aliead with the job of firing Maheu wu
alto written. by .HuJttes:
Lnar B. Myler, who identified binuelf
as a. "ipecJal a.s.sistaat" to HIJ&hes~ .said
HughU signed a pro:.:y Nov. 14 firing
Maheu, who has been the billlonalre's No.
1 man In Nevada for the past four yea rs.
Myler aakl lhe signing took place in the
ninth floor penthouse maintained by
Hughes in the Desert Inn Hotel in Las
Vega1. The witness also testified Hughe•
subsequently went to the Britannia Beach
Hot.el in Nassau, the Bahamu, and from
there isaued instructions the proxy be
released.
Earlier in the day, Charles Appel Jr., a
former FBl agent with Maheu, le!tlfied
on behalf of. Maheu that Hughes'
purported signature on the doc,ument
preseilled by I.he· Hughes Tool Co. was a
"simulation or tirutiUon."
"It's a very good representaUon,'' Ap-
pel said ... It would pus any bank teller
and other business associates would ac-
cept It, but Jt's deflclent. It's extremely
skillful but it'1· dilferenL"
Customers Keep
Clerk Too Busy
.To Be Robbed
commwtity was quiet up until the blast.
possibly organized by five persons
witnesses reported seeing on the scene
moments earlier.
·The lsla Vista flareups of last spring
ended with more than 100 persons jailed
and one !ludent -trying to preserve·
order and calm others clamoring for
violence -shot to death.
Investigators said several small fires
were set in trash bin.s around the area.
where residents said the bank blast could
be felt two blocks away, but were quickly
extinguished.
A crowd estimated at 600 gathered oo
the scene.
House Okays
$210 Million
SST' Funds
WAslliNGTON (AP) -Tbe HOuse
1pprovec1· 1110 million for tile supel'90olc
tr*rt program Tuesday over ob~
tions that the lower compromise amount
will delay development or the plane· and
boost its cost.
The vote was 319 to 71.
The compromise, which would keep the
SST alive but cut SllO million off Prem.
dent Nixon's request for $290 •oa
this year, now goes to the Senate Where
opponents st11l bope to delete all money
for lhe plane.
Rep. Sidney R. Yales (0.ill.l, told the
House the $fKI million cut would ulti-
mately ' add $180 million to the SST'I
development cost and stretch the 'pro.
gram out over a longer period.
Tile House acUon was dependent on it.9
later approval of a nwnber of technical
House-Senate disagreements in the rest
of the $2.6-billion transportation approo
prialion containing the SST money.
A motion by Rep. Mark Andrews (Jt..
N.D.), to send the whole bill back to the
House.Senate C<1nference for reconsider.
ation of the SST issue was defeated by
voice vote.
I
Orders to Wipe Out
Viet Hamlets Denied
WASHINGTON (U PI) -Brig. Gen. w~
nant Sidle, chief or Army inforination.
Monday denied reports Gen. William C.
Westmoreland had ordered Viet Ccng·ln·
fested villages outside Saigon '1eveled''
after the Tet offensive of 1968.
Orange Coast
Weat•er
·csanity.· Trial ":,.Under Way
N . hooded, would-be bandit wbo l11>
terrupted a qird ga'DM! on a al°" nlgbt at
a Colt.a Mesa liquor store' Monday' finally
fled in froatraUon when a aeries of
...tomen came ln and kept tile clerk toO
busy to rob. '
Robert P. Roy, on duty at 'Ibe Likker
Store, 2102 Newport Bouienrd. 811d the
red-halftd. frttkled, lOish suspect "ft
and sped ·away in a cat with the IJ.ihts
off,
There's a 60 percent chance
you'll nned your umbrella·on Wed-
nesday. Temperatures will tumble
too·, dipping into the low sixties
along the Orange Coast.
INSml!l TODAY
How doer 11our annual in·
come f it into the nation.at !Cale?
St1lvia Porter has all the aniwsri
on Finance P~e JO today. By TOM BARLEY
OI' "" O..IJ PIM Stitt
What Steven Craig Hurd described to
hi.s psychiatrist as Mrs. Florence Brown's
"queenlincss af\d goldiness" and what he
believed was her "derogatory attitude"
towards him may well have cost the
Mission Viejo teacher her ,Jlfe, lt was
alleged In leslfmony lQday in Orariee
Counl)' Superior Co.urt.
Or. John A. Guido opened the sanity
trial of the 9CCUled 20-.,year.old transient
by t.Ulng defenoe attomey William Gam·
hie l~t Hurd told him thal he •lashed
Mn. ·Brown in the neck "to ' warn her"
that lie ,...Id not tolerate her superlori·
ty. '' I ' • >
Hurd could not recall the.actual kJU!ng
of Mn, Brown, Guido t'estified but he
could recall hstabbing her once or twloe.
Then he remembers that he drove around
Santa Ana with her body -sort or like
they did things ln Vletnam, he told me.''
Hurd Is accuaed,ot being the ringleader
of a group of drilten who police clslm
pulled Mrs. Brown. 31, of El Toro. from
her car lost Jupe I u ·llhe lelt the Sin
Diego Freeway (II the sand Canyon off.
ramp.
Police allep that the woman was
mutilated and ~bjecleil to a series of
devil worshlplRg rites b e for e >she was
flnallY kill~ !!} ,an Ir.vine orange gl"OV'e.
Gamble" told Ilic court today that one of
those rites Involved the ealio.g of her
heart by Hu[d.
Mrs. Brown WIS buzie<I In a shallow
grave off the Ortega Highway, Her
dismem6erea body Willi found .J~ JS.
' Guido ls one of five psyclhiatrists who
exam!~ Burd In Orange (:o11nty Jail. Jt
18 expecled that at Jeut two mo~
psychiatrists will foUow him to he
wl~ stand In Jlidge • llobtrt L.
Corrfman'1 courtroom.
Judge Corfman will rule artef heartn1
counter ~ts from Chit! Deputy
Dlalrlc! AU«ney James Eorlgbt li Hurd
Is sane and oompetent to ltlnd trial.
Giildo'a written optnjoii wu ·lhBt Hurd
(Ille Ill.A YING, Pqe J)
Ror and a friend, Jolin M. Rudemkl.
said they were1 playinf eards when the
maQ ~ame In at 8:20, browsed around and
finally )>ri&Rd a awlldlblllde lrnUe to
RudeMl<l'i neck:
He demanded money, threatening to
stab the Vlctim.
CU.lo111'!" bqan ~terlng to o , however. they told Offktr Harlan
PauleY. who. aid the suaped touched notbhil Jn the store that colild "' ...
amlned for !Jncerpri!ita.
· Tbe 7uuth will clucrlbtd a l>nlnl a llshl. doy.old .,.,.ui. of beml anol'wear·
lng ~ fub,lehath <>lfv• drab. overCOll with • para 6oo4" lllil:bed. •
°"" 9 ~,.
CHRISTMAS
<•"""''' , _ .. • ClltckllOt Uit , """"''' '""" .. CltHlffM , ... ··--.. <M ... • Otllltl '-" " , __
• ~l'l'la """"' " DHtll ""'le" " ·-1 .. ,. -" I ttct """"""' "' 11 . ....... ,.,. • ·-• ....., ....... • ., ...... " . • ·-1•t1 ·-• H .... mc••• " --" A• L_.,.. .. WlflWlll':I Ntwt lt-14 ....... • --.. MMlftt UC-11
e
o ,I "
Y•le Glf t1
Service Stations
Waging G~~ W.ar·
Just in time for Cbriiilmai;, aervlce ata·
tions along the Oranse Coast art ena~&ed
ln a price cutting ias w1r.
Drops from regular price& as rnuCh as
two to four cents a aallon were reported
by dealm from Corona deJ Mar to FOWl-
talo valley.
Board Wants
Some Windows
:In Library
By G!:ORGE LEIDAL
Of .. OellY ,llM Steff
Situated in the rolling tlills of the
Mission Viejo campus with potential for a
270-degree view, the Saddleback Collete
library will be windowlets.
Truste!s Monday ni&ht instrucwt the
. architects, Ramber1 and Lowery ot San·
ta Ana, to revi&t the etteriOr ~Jans,
removing the second and third floor wtn·
dowa.
The library, the first permanent sttue-
ture planotd for the Mission Viejo cam·
pus, la eswnat<d at $3.7 million and ii . uJiect..i to 10 to bid nen March.
President Fred H. Bremer, taid,
''From an atstheUc viewpoint I fee1 a
certain amount of windows are desirable,
even in a Ubrary. Otherwile the building
would h;ave a priaon like appearance."
BOard President Hans W. Vopl of San-
ta Ana argued against windows in the
library on two grounds, maintenance and
Insurance costs [or possible breakage.
• "A library Ls a leaminc ctnttt with,•
function to perform," Vogel said, ''.and
that fuoction is best performed if there
are no distractions. A student should be
able to escape completely from reality.
"A fortress without windows ii the
ideal environment for library study since
whell you go to the library you are tryina:
to reach the depths of your own mind."
Vogel further argued that the savin&s
of maintenance and insurance that might
be projected for a windowless library
could be applied In fittini the building
wit.b more ~ulpment.
Robert Lowery of tbe archittetural
firm noted trustee, had alrtady ap.
. proved the interior floor plans for the
· Ubrary whi~b will initially h o u s e
1 cla~ 'that later Will be converttd to
· library space.
Noting the aestheUc val .. of -
''becaUSt human beings like to know
what's coin& on outside even if they only
• ... a pat.ch of sky or clouds," L<>w.,y
suggested library stacks would not re-
quire use of outside walls. The plan sub-
mitted to truslffs lnclud<d slant<d bigb
. windows on the second and third Doors.
Alyn M. Brannon, trustee from santa
Ana., concurred with the breakage argu-
ment against the windows and added,
_ .. I'm opposed to high windows, they are
haNly ever washed, anyway."
The slant of the windows, Lowery said,
was to discourage breakage by rock
throwing . Brannon countered, that v.·lth
the slant "they'll just collect more dirt."
Responding to a question by John B.
Lund, Laguna Beach trust~. Lowery
noted the re would be little difference in
construction coat of the library with or
without windows.
Vogel said it was not the con1truction
cost that concerned him, but said "from
a seCW'ity standpoint I would question
high windows and would favor solid
walls."
Security precautions callfld for by
trustets al an earliu meeting. Lowery
sald, had already been included in the
libraty plan.
"We cut out the second floor outdoor
·re.a.ding balconies," be said, "in order to
eliminate the chance student& will throw
boob down from them to other student&,
·as you suggested."
DAILY PILOT
OU.NOi!: CO.UT f'lllLISHIJrtO t.CMll'AN'f'
lob.rt N, Wt.4
J•ck 1':. CYrl1y
\'kt ll'rtt:d.,I t !ld Gtntr11 M•M,_.
Til•fllltl Kotvll
m:tlllr
'11!.M&I ~ Mi.trpl'liy
MlMlilWUH .. c.... .. _.,.....
J)O W"t loy StNtt
M•11rwt AM,.111P.O.In:116', t Z6t6 --,,....... 1tldl: •n ""'-..... ~"
~a.ctii m,....,,,_._
HfMllW1IJill ._,,l ,,.., ... l..i-c
llfl CJeiMnlli as Nlrtll m c.tfllM ... ,
'
' Mlilloa Viejo eod. C11'oro 1a1 statiOftJ
howeve.r. have yet to go &Jona with tlle
price ctJls, probably heeeu&e tbe re!iatel
oU etmpanies have offllrtd to Clber
dealt.rs have nOt been extended to SOl,itb
COW!ty atauon..
A· 1pokeim•n fl Grant'• Gulf In Coata
Mesa said "we Just dropped another ptn-
ny yesterday" bringink t.Mlr price for
low-Jud rqular to 30.8 and premiwn
grade lo IU ceJlll.
Wbll< mM dealers randoml1 fn·
.1erv1ewed oeemed reSl&Ded lo the renew·
ed gas war, a Newport Beach Chevron
&talion owiw expressed disgust. rtfUaln&
to say wbai be was now cbargin&, wblle
noting be was participaUng.
Ken's Mobile Service Station, COrona
del Mar said "We're vtry much itlto a
1as war. We dropped two cents a gallon
over the w~kend." the owner rtported,
bringing his prices to .34.9 cents for
regular and 38.9 for premiutn.
He recalled that the last gas war lasted
&ix. w~ks and ended just three weeks
aco.
"I lhiak ·they are terrible." be said,
"but people are very selective now 1bout
1as0line prices, probably because of the
eeonoiny. We b•ve to go along." • 'y contrast, Mission Viejo Mobile N!ports no pr~ drop and continues to
chl(ae 3U. for regular and 40.9 for
pnriuwri.
tjve Points Teraco tn Huntln,ton
~ch bas been lowering prlcta for a
week and stlnds at 29.9 for regular and
3S.9 for premlwn.
Larry Mead, operator of a Shell station
.fn Fountain Valley, said prices had drop-
ped four cents a gallon iD a week.
"The gas compa:n.tea: gtve me 20,000 dif-
ferent rusons for a gas war," he &ald,
''But I still don't Ul'lderstand why."
••1 have to stay with them to be com·
petitlve," he said, noting that be believer
"people are shopping more now than they
used to."
Howard Yarborough, operator cl a
UniOft &talion In El Toro aaia the gas war
bad not reached biS corner yet, but noted
that • station across the street was
charging 40.9 cents for premium: com-
pared with bis 39.9 and 38.9 at a third st.a·
lion.
"I'm not ready for another gas war.'1
Yarborough ujd, ''Tbey hurt profits both
ways, for the dealer ed the oil com-
pany."
"We ~an get a ·call in the mortting ta
drop our price," he expliioed. "but tben
Jt is tM dealer's choice whether or not to 'o 1long."
From Pllffe l
FUNDING •••
project envislontd for 1985 compleUon.
Tbty inelude:
-Federal Aid through Secondary
Htghway Alsistance Fwtdl.
-Federal Aid through Funds for Joint
Development of Hi&hway Ccirridors and
Multiple Use of Roadway Properties.
-Opep Land Space Proaarm. also fed· era!.
-Urban Beautification and Improvement
Program federal.
Mayor Robert M. Wilson enthu-
slaalically greeted the initial renderings
of what dcwntown Costa Mesa may even·
tu1Uy look tlke, comparing it to com·
merclal 1howpl1cea elsewhere in Amer-
ica.
He pred~ts It will eventually be 1 $24
to $30 million transformation.
No matter what course of action is
chosen, city officials stress. tt will be
subject to lenatby public hearin1s and
none of these are even in the scheduling
i;tages yet. •
Newport Woman
Freed on Bail
A Newport. Beach woman ts free on
$250 bail today following her arrest Mon-
day night on charges of felony hit and run
driving.
Police said Kathleen Sumner. 23, was
arrested at her home at 1242 Rutland
Road . number 3, at about 9 p.m.
Officers allege Miss RutJand hit 11 car
parked at 200 Amethyst Ave .. Balboa
Island. The car is owned by Ina K.
Eastman, 23. of 1204 Park Ave.
Police allege M1&a Eastman., suffered
abraisons to h.er feet and lu1ees when
Miss Sumner drove away while Miss
Eastman was still holding on to the door
htndle.
Hit and run accident5. wbtn tbett are
no injurles, are mi&demeanor violations.
Wben an injury results then It la a felcny
charge.
Man Found Dead
By Neighbor
A Coata Men man whose netahbor
htard a single shot early on the mornJna
btfore Thanksgiving and thought nothing
about It was discovered dead i11 hia home
Mond1y.
Wali>r O. Timm. 44. of 131 Albert
Place. ap~ntly took bis own lift, IC·
cordinc to police, who found a pistol lying
on bis ebest.
Gene Gaudreau, Of 136 Albert Place.
~d lnvnU&ators be became worr~
about Timm and cilteked the bouS< afi.r
petking lnlo the locked 1or•a• to be""~
the victim's van was there.
t
\ -.
-16-
lj.S. Ship
Hijacker
Surrenders
PHNOM PENH !AP) -"I oiity resrit
I didn't alnk the ship," !)ne ·or lha hi·
jacke.ri Of a U.S. ammunition frei&httt
said today as he walked into the
Amtrlcan Embassy in Phnom ·Penh to
aurraoder.
"l slill believe ln the revoluUon in
Amer ica and In the revolution in Cam·
bodia." Alvin L. GlatowSki, 20. Loni
Beach, told 1ewsmen. But he said he felt
he would get a fairer deal in the U.S. than
In C!mbodla.
Glatowski and Clyde W. McKay, 25,
Escondido, took over the 10,000..ton
Columbia EaeJe In the Gull of '!balland
last March and forced the crew into the
Cambod.11.n port of Kompong Som.
They bave been Indicted by a federal
grand jury in Lo.s An1eles on charaes of
mutiny on the high seu, usault,
transporting kJdnaped persona in foreign
commerce. and ne.a;leet of duty. They
could get the death penalty on the mutiny_
charge.
o•hlng Boat•
The ship and the rest oi its crew were
released and completed the voy11e to
Thailand.
McKay got away from a Cambodi an
guard in a Phnom Penh restaurant in
October and dlsappeared with an
American deser~r fr(')m T h a I I a n d •
Glatowski said then he believed they
were headed for the town of Siem Reap
to join Communlst forces fi&hting in
Cambodia. 1
Newport Harbor'• a I Festival of L!Jhts Boat
Parade &tarts Friday. "'Map 1ives parade route and
timetable colorfully decorated craft will follow
ni&hlly through Dec. 23. Start and fiJllsb are oU
Balboa II Fem landin1. ·Festive parade Is
1ponooreil y Newport Beach City Employ•• A•·
aociation and Newport Harbor Chamber of Com·
merce. r. (
Telemetering
System Set
For Mesa
Malfunetlons anywhere in the miles and
miles of Costa Mesa County Water Ols--
trict (CMCWD) lines will be monitored
Within seconds, when a new telemN:rlng
system ls ccmplet.ed.
Bids are bein& solicited by the CMCWD
and will be opened in March. E111ineers
fiaure the job will cost about $87.000.
The telemetering network will be cost·
ty, ($2,000 per month to operate), but well
worth it in the long run, CMCWD offi·
cials predict.
One break in a 12·incb line during N~
vem.be:r went uodetected for about fi ve
hours. resulting h1 a S2,500 ttpair bill
and the Jou ol four acre-f~t Of water.
Spewin; from the ruptured line in
ftortWelt CostaJ'esa wi th sledaehammer forct, the Jet water emptied conveni-
ently into an Orange county FlOOd Con-
trol District ehannel.
The impact, however, shattered the
concrete wall aid undermined the earth
benuth II.
Complaints of low w1ter pressure at
nea rby South COest Plaza. plus .an un-
e..-plained, constant flow of water down
the channel into Newport Harbor led to
pinpointing of_ the problem.
U such a break occurs with the new
telemeter system ordtred by the CMC-
WD. a rM Ught will !la1h 911 at two lo--
cations. One would be manned around
the clock.
Telephone lines tied Into -point! within
the wate r SP.tern will earry the alarm
to CMCWD headquarters on Plae!ntia
Avenue near West 19th Street and also to
the pollce and city communicatioftJ cen-
ter.
From Page 1
SLAYING ...
was iMane at the time or the Bro'll"D lcill·
Ing. Four other p!yehlatrlsts have ruled the
long-haired defendant to be sane but 1.U
doubt his ability to aid counsel in hi1
defense.
Hurd, manacled band and foot, ap-
peared to have no real interest 1n this
morning 's proceedings and sketched what
anpeared to be Zodiac signs while Gam-
ble argued In hi..~ defense . His only con-
tact with his lawyer was to a1k Gamble
on several occasions for a cigarette.
The psychiatrist's d o u b t s were ap.
parently ra!Rd by a series of con-
versations In which Hurd commented
that he liked to drink six cups of blood a
day, acknowledged the devil as his
f1tther. believed in the invincibility of
Satanlc worship and the inevitable rein·
carnation of !he evil doer.
Guido tesUfied Hurd recalled during his
Interview that he was a member of a
group which drove into a Santa Ana
service station on the night of June 1 -
the same night of a $50 rObbery and the
hatchet killing ol attendant Jerry Wayne
Carlin, 21.
"Again,'' Guido said, "Hurd Oelleved
that SOrMOnt was behavin& in 1
derogatory manner towards him." The
J'ISychiattist testified that Hurd told him
he gave orders for the killing of Carlin
after hearing someone call him "a
tramp."
Guido's testimony indic1ttld th1t the ax
used to make Carhn 'unrecognizable was
taken from Hurd'1 car and the defendant
apparently indicated to Guido that he had
bffn carrying the weapon aroond for
some tltne .
Ciuldo testified that Hurd had. a Iona
history flf narcot1e1 addiction and a
particular fondness for heroin. His search
for drua1 and the money to purchasa
them led Hurd lnto aever1l encounters
with tile Jaw before the klllin1s of Mrs.
Brown and Carlin. the paychiatrist'•
report lndlcalel.
Kurd Is one of three youtha lndlcted b~
the Orange County Grand Jury for tht!'
kllllnp of Mrs. Brown and Carlin. •
' '
3·man Panel, Formed Glatowski anlf McKay we.re kept on a
prison boat on the Mekeng River for a
few weeks after the hijacking. They com·
plained about the conditions there and
were put in the servants' quarters of a
government guest house in Phnom Penh
and then in a hotel.
Newport Council Okays
Harbor Court Contract
The Cambodian government paid the.tr
hotel bills, and they ~nically bad
political asylum. But they were actually
under a form of arrest. free to move
about in the city but always escorted by
Cambodian guards. The J:iewporl Beach City Collncll Mon.
day ru1ht committed the city to spending
more thin '700,000 on the planned
Newport Center civic center by •P-
provin& a eontraet for the Harbor
Judicial Diatrict courts.
At the same time, the couqcll formed •
three man special comm.tttee to work
with arcbltecta In flnaUzlng costs of the
entire project, '1td to prepare a bond
isaue to finance iL
Tbe contract with OrlJl.le County re--
qulm the city to build ...... tban 1700,000
1n faclllUea, meat of which will eventua..Uy
be oiucJ by the city, too I.hen, and H. a
new police bulldin& is erected in the cbrn·
ple1. ,
'Ibe contract, whlch oppoaents called a
''humdi.npr -for the county" was ap-
proved by a 6-1 vote, With Vice Mayor
Howard 1tocers opposed.
The C<>uncil took no formal actlon to
reduce the C()Sts of the entire project.
whlch it vowed it will do after learning
the price will be $13.2 mlllion-if the com-
ple.x ii built ~s planned.
City Mma&er Harvey L. Hurlburt.
cutlilled several eost..cuttin.r alternatives:
during a three-hour deliberation Of the
center during the afternoon study session.
The councilmanie committee. con·
sisting of Donald McTnnis, Richard Crout
and Milan Dostal. was assigned to work
with Welton Beckett Associates. the
architects. to review proposed costs and
make recommendations to the full coun·
cil.
Croul, himself a contract(')r, was
especiaUy critical cf the Beckett square
foot11e cost projections, which averaged
about $37 per foot.
He vowed the project "never will get to
a bond issue if it's going to cost $12
mUlion to $13 million -or It'll be over
my dead body."
Rogers, the IOl'le opponent to erecutlcn
of the. eo11tract. charced that approving
the expenditure would talnt a 1eneral
obllga,tion bond election..
"We wouldn't be bringing a clean
package to the people," he said, "we
need both the city ball and police
buildini. bu t they should st.and alcne."
Rogers said he doesn't think the courts
a.re "necessarily 'good fQI' our com-
mWtity."
The council directed that should a bond
election fo rtM. remainder of the project
be defeated at a bond election the tunds
for tb court faciUtiea would be duived
from s¥e q_f ~tbe dty , du,np property.
Under Qte cpntract. Pie.. c)ty it.required
to build certain prlsonef detention and
trana!er areas and or( Ice, space totalUng
"up to 5,000 square lee\.", '
Hurlburt assured the council that the
needs of the county will be no more than
approximately 1,700 square. feet.
Baby Jane Doe
In County Home
A brOWJ'-ha.lred baby &irl abandoned
shortly after birth five days ago In Costa
Mesa is now in Orange County's Albert
Sitton Home for foundlings and foster
children.
The infant was picked up at Orange
County Medical Center Monday by !)e...
tective Linda Glsler. of the 1uvenlle bu-
reau. and taken to the more homelike
.facility.
"They tt.11 me . she's 1 fine. healthy
baby.'' said Detective Gisler. who added
there are no leads to identity of the
eight-pound infant's parents.
A male · tipster called a Garden Grove
telephone operator-last Friday afternoon
to n!port. the newborn baby was in a sand
bum in the 700 block of Center Street.
Glatowsk.i told newsmen today he had
received good treatment at first but that
It had recently deteriorated. He said his
guards had pulled guns on him and had
tried to force him to escape so they could
kill him.
Glatowski walked into the Embassy
and told Robert Blackburn, a political of.
fleer, that he wanted to give himself
up. . . "Fine. Come 111," Black.bum siud .
Blackburn sald the youth would be
Down to Saigon and then to the U.S. 11
soon as the Cambodian government
canceled his' asylum.
Active Jurist
Takes Position
With YES Group,
A busy Harbor Judicial District Court
jud&e with titles in other community Stt•
vice organizations bas accepted a posl·
tion as sparkplug of the Harbor Area
Youth tmp\oyment Service.
Judge Calvin P. Schmidt has been nam·
ed director of community affairs for
YES, which is currently placing ener-
getic young people in full and part-time
Christmas season jobs.
His new capacity will include encour0
aging young people and businessmen to
make use (')f Y£S for employment and
job optxirtunlties.
Judge Schmidt. of 324 Camec Shores
RGad, Ccrona del Mar, is active in 1
variety of other service organizations.
He is co-chairman for the 1970 Christ-
mas Seal drive. as v.·ell as serving on
the board of directors of both the East.er
SeaJ Society for Crippled Children and
the Girl Scout Council of Orange County.
THE PRICE IS RIGHT
(Ori• it?)
HAVE YOU EVER GONE INTO A STORE, AND IEFORE A SALESMAN
APPROACHED YOU, TRIED TO DETERMINE PRICES ON GOODS NOT
MARKED?
MANY CARPET STORES DO NOT HAVE PRICES INDICATED ON
THEIR SAMPW. THE T H I! 0 R Y IS THAT THIS WAY THEY
CHARGE "WHAT THE TRAFPIC WILL IEAI."
CAN
. AT ALDEN'S PRICES ARE POSTED ON AU OF OUR SAMPW SO
THA,T CUSTOMERS CAN BROUSE THROUGH THE SELECTIONS AND
KNOW WHAT THE ARE LOOKING AT. TOO, THERE IS ALWAYS THE
POSSlllUTY OF A L 0 WE R PRICE IF CONDITIONS WARRANT.
"
ALDEN'S
..--.... -.-"-•• -a.-o-.. -•• -, .., CARPETS e DRAPES
TUITIM CeN •••
ALOIN'S 11• ••LL c.ums 1663 l'locentla Ave.
1U74 ~ ... "!!':.:: c.111. COSTA MIS A
., ... ,.. 646-4131
~UU: Mot.. Thru Thura., 9 19 5:30 -Fri., f to 9 -Sat., 9:30 It 5
,.
I
I
I
•
Saddlehaek . . •
Today's F liial
N.Y. Steeb
•
VOL. 63, NO. 299, 3 ~ECTIONS, 28 PAGES ORANGE CQl,/NTY,, CALIFORNIA • TUESDAY,. DECEMBER 15, 1970 , TEN CENTS
•' -.. -.. .
San Clemente Probes New Fire Fig hti11g Setup
Proposals to build a new fire depart-
ment headquarters capable of housing an
eventual full-time department w i 11
resume before city courw:ilmen in San
Cle11Jente Wednesday.
City.Manager Ken Carr will discuss the
first official steps for a new departmept
headquarters near civic Center with coun.
cilmen who two weeks ago received
detailed s9ggesttons trOm Fire Chief
~lerton W. Hackett..
The intitial proposals Call for the ex-
penditure of about,~$110,000 to build an
8,000-square-foot, tw0-story headquarters
building next to the existing offices •. The
$1~2 Jtfillt on Bid
money exl!ts ln tbe city budaet.
Carr will di1cusS1he feasibility of turn-
ing the project ·over to planniiig com-
missioners for examination, plus the San
Clemente Civic Building Company, form-
ed in the lease-purchase arrangements
for the existing civic center.
The proposed headquarters, call for a
new garage, plus dormitorifil .'meeting
rooms and olher'lacllilies !or,a fulJ.time
staff.
€onstruction of that buUd\Jlg would
mean expansion or the Police head-
quarters as well. ~vacated fire depart-
ment·q·uarters ~d be coi:fverttd to bad-
Council Studies
Bond Vote Plans
Proposals to set a bond election to seek
perhaps '1.2 million to cove! a breadth of
San Clemente city r,ecreation projects are
expected to re.sch the formal stage before
city councilmen Wednesday.
Armed with data gathered in two re-
cent study sessions, Councibnen will ex·
amine the amount or the bond pr'Qpo6!J. a
possible election date and the list of proj·
ects to covered by the funds if voters
give two-thirds approval.
The proposed new c o·m mun l t y
clubhouse would be at the top of the
priority list with an estima~ cost rang·
jog up to $400,000.
A ·new municipal pool, parks, a recrea-
tion program and parking facilities also
might be included in the bond proposal.
If the election were to suceeed, the
city's entire parks and recreation picture
would be complete for several years.
The council, however, also has pon·
dered the effects of clumping ·several
projects into one vote - a plan which
sometimes hurts passage of bond issues
because a voter could cast a negative
vote because he does not favor a specific
item.
Councilmen also have mapped
preliminary contingency plans in case an
election should fail.
If the measure were to win more than
a simple majority, but less than a. legal
two-thirds passage, several councilmen
have hinted they would favor raising the
recreation tax· rate to pay for at least the
clubhouse project.
Working drawings on the replacement
to the fire-ravaged community landmark
will be finished by mid~anuary by San
Clemente Building Designer E r i c
Boucher. That plan involves use of one restorable
portion of the existing Spanish building
and blending with a new auditorium, art
gallery, meeting rooms and a c e n t r a l
kitchen.
Two aspects which have yet to be com•
Oroge Coast
Weatlter
There's a 60 percent chance
you'll nned your umbrella l'.ln Wed·
nesday. Temperatures will tumble
too, dipping into the low sixties
along the Orange Coast.
INSIDE TODAY
How doe! Your ann1'al in·
cnme fiNnto tl~e)i.ational scale?
Sylvia Port.tr has au the answers
on Finance Page JO today.
Only 9 ~
CHRISTMAS
Cltlfamlt ' M1vlt1 • (~Kkl .... U!O ' M~tllll l'llll'h ..
CIHtlflttl ,,.,. N111'flll "'" ..
Ctflllcl • Or81111 Clu"" " ,,.. ....... n1 • Srl'lll Ptrlll' ..
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DIWr<H " Slldt Mlrltth 1•11
ldlMrltl f'ln • TlltYlt*I • Ellltt'lllft!Nftl • -·~ • f'lftMCI ... 11 w..-• ··-.. M IN Wldl " Allll Liii*" .. w-'I '""' 1>14
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MltTIHe Lktllld 11
t
-'
\·
pletety ~solved in the buildinl plans,are
the location of tbe··kitcllen and the basic
fnrmat for 'the parking areas.
The latter issue hinges on the city's
choice, of either a parking structure.
whidl coukl.have more than one level, or
a stariaardJ!av<d kit, which iB lesl coolly, 'l'lfe:.,.. Will'tilio the pia" +f· exliillii
tennis courts 00 the 'clubhouse site. '
'i'hooe'-U ,wi!l'be iilov«t ..,..<Jtlll1'
to San LulS 11.,i Park or ano°* part of
lhe city.
Parks conunisSioners in recent weeks
have surveyed fallow land at the city's
water reclamation plant as a possible
location for the new Courts.
State Eyes
Was te Water
Regulation
A policy to regulate discharges of
thermal waste -industrial cooling water
-will· be considered at a public hearing
Wednesday in Sacramento before the
Stale Water Resources Control Board.
Kerry W. Mulligan, chairman, said,
11thermal wSSWS are potentially damag·
ing to our waters and the State Board
must act now to ensure that no future
problems will arise."
The major portion nf thermal waste is
contributed by electrical po w e r
generating plants, Mu11igan s a i d •
"Estimates indicate California's demand
for electrical power will quad"ruple in the
next 20 years."
"This will require the expansion 'lf ex·
isting power plants and the iri'stallation of
new nnes. The board Intends to make
sure the increased waste load will not
cause a threat to the environment,'' he
added.
The propooed policy would regulate
discharges into coastal and interstate
waters of cooling and industrial process
water which is used to transport waste
heat.
Hearing notices havt been sent to
Pacific Gas and Electric Co., Southern
California Edison Co., Los Angeles
Department of Water and Po~'er, San
Diego Gas and Electric Co., and to scien-
tists · and· ·marine biologia1S w i t h
knowledge of thermal pollution, Mullignn
said.
The hearing is set ror t :~O p.m.
Wednesday in the auditoriwn or the
Resources Building, 1116 Niqlh Sl.,
Saaamento. , ·
School Concert
~lated Tonight
S:.n Clemente High School's music
department will present its annual
Christmas concert tonlgbt al a o'clock in
Tilton Center ...
The coiicert hand will open lhe P'°'
gram with ·two selecUons, followed by the
mixed chonls and madrigal •ln8ers .
The school's orchestra and choir will
per!onn together la< !he lira! Ume in
tonllht'l coocerj, •
'!be public "Ji welcome me of charge.
,,
1y needed detention. areas J!ld office could be stationed at a fire scene. to~
space for the cramped piOllce department. sure blazes 00 not rekindle themselves.
In another fire ·department-related "We Who live in 'the area are quite cOn-
matter Wednesday councilmen will of-cerned," she said, "that the fire was ap-
ficially receive a critical letter from a pareptly k;:ft .unattended before it )V4S
neighbor of the RaJph Annstrong family totallf.:.ptiJ-QUt." · ·
which lost its $45,000 home recently in In.other items on ·Wesridesay•s packed.
one of the city's worst residential fires . agenda councilmen will consider:
Mrs. Joseph E. Hall. of 'ISO& S .. Ola -A leller !rom Christopher Brougbion
VUta }ias askel:l for / an explanation· of or 320 Calle,Slbta Margarlti '8*~ that
three blazes which f!Upted ~h the the~clty,piOVide two large tt&!!h ~ins-for
Dight ·at the "Armstrong ·home. · the depoilt · ot Mwspapei's,' glass Rnd
Praising the city's volunteers higbly, tither items Capable of undergoing recycl-
Mn. Hall nonethe~ss ~ks if the existing .ing. One .biq he ~ested, "'ould,be:~
departmionl h..,• .. 1·paid personnel who fur bundles: of paper; the olher !or
--
.an
,. -·----~ .. . ---... -~ ":-:t
l
.... u.salile gl .... Fundl· collectecHn1111·.oale
of the bulk items could coVtr· tne citts
cosl ln lhe project he said,. · I · ,_
-A ~port: from Can:.on propos,als-:to
set up· a .street imPf9Y_ement distrttt-oa
several thoroughfares in the • cit)':'.1 ... in·
dustrlal district. Imprpvement -~.con
templated for can vane~ ·~triii,
·Navarro,.Laa Vegas 'and Loa·MqUnofl • ..-·
-Information on the JK*ible -•le of lhe old"city hall . ancl city ro81n~
yard Nu(llber One .along El Camino ~al:
. '"'Pl..., a!)<! and, !he· dal<!'for .t!I~
dedication of the city's new, $2.S-milliQn
·water r<clamatlon plant. ·The datelllas
,·' • I
, · ' J' ' . 1 1 ( , 1 . l. 0:.ll "I" PILOT Slllll ""'9r
PHOTOG.RAPH 0 1" RCHITECl 'S REND ERING SHOWS PROPOSED 'COLLEGE LIBRARY , . !""~"' .~•reCI Rev~~ions; TG ,£1i_mlnete! ~, 'f;h!rd '.Stofy:W1nd0"'1 . _.. . ,· y i •
Lihrarj Windows Asked
Saddleback Tells Archite cts to Revise Ex~rior
By GEORGE LEIDAL
Of JM DlllY f'Jltl Stiff Situate~ in the· rOlling hills. of the
Mission Viejo camp~ with P!>,tenfial for a
27Megree view, the Saddlebick College
library will be windowless.
Trustees Monday night Instructed the
architects, Ramberg and Lowery of San-
ta Ana, to revise the exterior plans,
removing.ttie second ~third Door win-
dows.
The.library, the'firl!I\ perinanent struc·
lure planned for the Mission_Vlejo cam·
pus, is estimated at $3.7 million and ta
expected to, go to bid next March.
see a patch of sky or clouds,'' Lowery
suggested , fibrary stacks would not re-
quire use of outside waJls. The plan sub-
mitted to trustees included' slanted high
windows on the second and third floors.
Alyn M. Btannon, ·trustee fn:im Santa
Ana, concurred with the breakage argu·
me'nt· against the· windows and added,
"I'm ·oppo&i to high windows, they are·
Survey Loomi1ig
On Sign Code
In San Cle mente
President Fred H. Bremer, said,
"From' an aesthetic viewpoint I feel a
certain amount of windows are desirable,
eveh in a library. oth,erwise the building
would have a prison like appearance."
Board President Hans W: Vogel nf San· A six·Qtember committee W i tb
ta Ana argued against windows in the members Crom the San Clemente Plan·
library on two grounds, milntenance and ning Commission, City Council and
insurance costs for possible breakage. Chamber of Commerce will hold an in-
"A litirary is a lean\lng center with a l''al meeting soon to launch a survey of , function to perforni,' .. Vogel said, ·"and u •-· I d H ,. lhe ewting city code covering 111Jns and that. function ls ugt pe11inne w1ere other adVertlsl••"•. in the cit~ are no diltracUon1. A 9tudent should be u-& .,.
able·to·ucape 'tomJ!leteJy from reality ... • The commlttee'a railks beCame ®11>-1
"A .fortress without ,Jrindows is Ule plete , .receDUy 'with 1he .• INUJ1ing 1'of·
Ideal environment for lftirary study l!lince ebamber·members Bob Kutcbm'1 M!f Ray ·
when you go to the llbr~ you &r! trying <;am~U tq !he llludY, pan<!. , •
to reach lhe d<ptlla of your own mind." f>lanning eom-.im Ari. Holmes .•
Vogel ftirther argued that the savings and Ed Lesneski ·.and' Counctfmen ClW
of maintenance and msoranct that mtgbtt M:yerS ind Tom O'Ketfe aisO will serve .
be projected for, a Windowless library o_n the pp.nel. '. .-..
could he applied" In ,ll!Ull( th• building Goals" of !he study have oot Y•! ~
with more ~quipment. detailed, but the 8l'OllP I! .e~pe:eted to
Robert Lowery ct the archltecturat · scan 1the cod'5 fbr inconsistencies and ,
firm nOted tniatetjl · hiKI already ap-reevaluation of ruleS governing sign ,
proved Ille lnleriol:. Ooor plans for lhe heigh!, slfle and size. • ·. ,
library wli1Ch wfJ! ,Initially house The city, in recent monlha ·'¥d Tlrtped 1 dasotooms that Iller Will be <OOmted to Uo ltl pOllcfa on sign helght al\d s'4e.
library space. • • The' ; put aever~ applications lor
Nollng the aeslheUc value of windows varlA11«!1 to algn r.;uiatlool'lor,freeway
"~ bumadj beings like to know · orlenled coverage had beea t0und!y.1um-
what'1 going oo outside even il tlley onl7 eel d6Wn by councilmen and~ -'
hardly ever 'wasbed, anfway."
The slant of the windows, Lowery said,
Was to discourage 'bteakage 'by rock
throwing. Brannon countered, tbat with
the slant "they'll just collect more dirt.'•
,Responding to a question by John B.
Lund, Laguna Beach trustee, LOwery-
noted ; there would ,be little difference in
construcUon cost of the Ubr8ry with .or
wllhout. windows. ' .
, VogeI .aakl Jt.>wu 1 not the~oonstrucUOn
cosf that· concel'ned· him, but•Aid "tr0m
a security standpoint I Would ~ qllesiion
high windows and would favor solid
walls.'' \
SetUrity precautions ~lle<J fo~ by
trustees at. an earlier meeting, Lowery
said, had already been included in the
library plan.
"We cut out the second floor outdoor
readin8 6a1Conies," ht said, "in order to
eliminate the· chance students Will throw
books down from them to other students,
as you suggested."
The present' plan requires students to
check out books before go{!tg outside, to
®tdoor, l!leCODd. level terraces, Lowery Id ' ' . ' aa . • , .
r Features or .!he pfao 'accep!lble to
frustees were. tfle be~, aandbWted coo-
itete ellrelor that ~1 no J>ainlfnC.
•:1 sliouJd ndte tbll I ,1\3ve no .recom·
mendaUon abouf what y011..could ·ao il a.
strident dee~ tO llj>ray Mint an in-
llM'ipUob on this swUce,~• LoWery said.
•!But. there will be• coostdefable 'mllft.'
tens.nee savings if it la ·~~ P.tntecl. 1' · v°'ei · sal<\ be bop<fd dial inH:li del1ciiig
tactlCI ...Wd 'ndl OCC\11',
>Lcrim portions of !he facade will be
dbne' lnu dobe brick ·and an lmftallon
quarry We made of. cobU'eta will aUrlace paliol. • .' : • • '
. Vilflel noted be' bad ujfd lie\91 libraries
at Cl1 Sta~, hlllrton. ! UC' .fntne and '
UCLA fncl fi>uod all ..;re, boDt wllhodt
windows. "'1'llea aren't old • librlries.
not yet been set because city of(iclals
were awaiting an answer froqi President
Nixon, who has been )nvJted to dedicate
the nonpolluting facility.
-Proposals to !et an extra city~
sponsored clean-up week bringing to two
each year the number of programs in-
volving extra rubbish pickups and ap-
pointments to collect bulky, castoff
items.
-The ·declaratioo as surplus of m
parking meters removed earlier this year
In the city's commercial district. The
meter heads currently are being stored'in
lhe city lofts.
Explosion
Blows Hole
In Roof
From Wire Servleta
ISLA VISTA -A tossed bomb blew a
hole in the roof of a Bank of America
brance here Monday n.igbt, showering
the · street with masonry · tiles and in-
flaming emotions of ,street people and·
lawmen again.
No .serious damage was reported,. bu'
the blast caused by an unldenti(ied device
left a . tr<>le several feet arross in tbe
overhanging ·eave of the structure.
A criMd of UC Santa Barbara ifud~
and other young people living in the unio.
corporated community greeted sheriff'•
deputiea who arrived on the scene with
whoopa and jeers. •
Rocks and botUrs were thrown -one
deputy was hit in ~ hip but not Injured
-while authorities credited calmer
young people w.ith helping keep order in
the midst of mutual tension.
The hank -symbolic of !he capltallsl
power 8trUCture to radicals -was rebuilt
on the scene of one burqed last Feb. 2S
during a clash that touched oU a aeriet
of . incidents.
Business continued as usual today_, .but
that js all Bank of America official11
Would say about the newest assault oa
the building.
No incidents had been reported and tht
community was quiet up until the blast.
possibly organized by five persons
witnesses reported seeing on the scene
moments earlier.
The Isla Vista nareups or last spring
ended with more than 100 persons jailed
and one student -tr)'!lig to preaerve
order and calm others clamoring for
violence -shot to death.
Investigators said several small fires
were set in trash bins around the area.
where residents said the bank blast could
be felt two blocks away, but were quickly
extinguished.
A crowd estimated at 600 gathered on
the scene.
Spencer Kids
Want Mother
For Christmas
The Davis Spencel" children of
Capistrano Beach palisades may have a
tnerry Christmas after all.
Their mother -under in!f:n_slve care
for a week after an auto accident in tbe
storm Nov. 2.8 -is recovering rapidly.
Fears or brain damage were not
substantiated by electroencephilographs
taken Slinday, family members said, and Mis. Spencer, who also suffered a broken
toe and serious leg bruises, ta expected to
return from the hospital next week.
Mrs. Spencer was injured when ahe lost
control of her car in the rain, craahed in.
to a center divider. She then was struck
by another autO U she attempted to nee
the.roadway.
Her children : Davey·, 13; Sluar\ 11:
Philip, 10 and Shelly, 8; just want their
mother for Christmas.
Their falher. Davis Spencer, managed
the household unassisted for a week, then
capitulated to firat his mother·ln-law
Mrs. Margaret Pet.er&,. last weekenc:, !hen his [11Clher, Mn. Davis Spencer St.
this week.
T)1e il\lured mother, Libby Spencer. ha1
had 1 string t'lf misfortunes ln recent
weeks -'a fire in her home and a ~
hery of her~p, The Thread Shed ta
Dalio .f'alnt pfl11 her auto 1ccldell&.
Libby llpen Ult Wlnts I change or
lllck f(r Chri •
I
. . . • • • -·
I 11.1.lLY PILOT SC '"""'· -u. 1'70
'
J
DA ILY PILOT fl•ff hlflt
YIELDING RIGHT.OF.WAY
Rotd Comml11ioner Koch
-Road Official
Al S. Koch
Resigns Post
' Orange County Road Commissioner A!
S. Koch today resigned hJs post, effective
April 5, 1971.
. KbCh has bttn with Orange County for
2S years and has held the posiUon of road
commissioner since Aug. 1, 1955, more
-than lS years:.
Jn accepting Koch's resignation with
-regret, members of the Board of
..fiupervisors praiJed him for his con-
~tributions to the· county.
Supervllor William Kirsten pOinted to
the "highly successful" arterial highways
financing program, a joint county-city
project originated by Koch.
The retiring road commissioner was
asked by Supervisor David Baker to
prepare a report '.'on the posalble con.
solldation or all engineering departments
in lhe county as a money saving move."
Baker said he was thinking of roads,
flood control, building and safety and
harbor engineers as examples o f
departments which might be consolidated
under one county engineer.
· Koch was also praised for bis years of
.wort which Jed to the approval of an
()range County Transit District which
• ,wa1 approved by the voters last Nov. 3.
'Meters for Sale
;.. , ~· , 1, I I
·:In San Clemente
San Clemente's bu!iiness district park·
... Ing meteni which went on.Jhe beheading
block earlier this year now are destined
• for the auction bloc.Its.
City Councilmen will hear a recom-
.mendaUon Wednesday from City
Manager Ken Carr that I.he 422 meters
eliminated from business area streets un·
der a sucx:essful experiment should now
be sold as surplus.
Since their removal last April the
meter5 have been stored in city loft.9.
Metered parking was replaced by tw<>
hour·limlt :zones which hive worked well
In controlling parking, officials said and
also have helped the area's small
busleness owners.
The city's recreation area meters,
however, are not affected by the parking
changes.
.First Beer, Now Gls
·Will Get Own Rugs
. WASHINGTON (UPll -The Army
private has been given the right to drink
beer in the barracks. Soon he will have a
rug of his own and he will be able to
choose beige. rose or green.
•
' '
' -
.•
DAILY PILOT
Robert N. We" Pr1~1•hnt •r.cl Jt11bllolhtf'
J1clr: R. Curl1y
Viet 1"ra:o1n1 •~.d ~l M•MIW
Thom1s Ktt Yil ••itor
Jhom11 A. MvrplllRe
M~gl1'12 1E•11or
l icl11rd '· H'1M hvHI OtMI09 C-ly t:dttitr
OfflHI
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Mvnlll'lllal'l ll••Cllr 11115 IHtll IOvlt¥11'd
Ifft '111n1nt1; m Ntrlll ll Ctml!IO ll:MI
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ctrtW UJJ -rlllfr 11¥ rllfll tl)J IMlllflfYI
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•
'Devil Cult' Sanity Trial Be·g.ins
-Suspect Says Mrs. Brown's 'Godliness' ·Disturbed Him
Bt TON BAllLSY ........ '*" '"" Wbat Stovtil Q-alg Hurd described lo
bis pi:ychletrlat as Mrs. Florence Browols
"queenllneu ahdi goldlneu" and whaa he
beljtved-wu her "derogatory attitude"
towardl him may well have cost the
Mlaslon Viejo te~~r her 11fe, it w,s
alleied 1 in· ,iesUmOJUr today tn Orange
Olw\ly Superior Cowi. ·
Dr. John A.· Puldo opened lhe· HnilY 4'llJ Qf the 1~ ,20-year~ld tra11&1ent
tiy telling defeR&e attorney Wiiiiam.Gam-
ble that Hurd told him that he slashed
t,.1rs. ltrown in the neck "to warn her"
that •be Would not tolerate her iuperiorl·
ly.
Hard could not recall the actual killing
af Mrs. Brown, Guido testified but ·he
could recall "stlbbing her once or twice.
Then he remembers that be drove around
6anta AM with her body -!Ort of likt
lhey did things In Vietnam, he told me."
Hurd Is a<cW>ed of being the ringleader
of a group of drlf'ten who police claim
l>Ulled Mrs. Brown, 31, of El Toro, from
her car last June 2 as ahe 1e!t tbe San
Diego Freeway at the Sand Caoyon off.
ramp. . Police allege that the woman wu
mUtilited and subjected to a series of
devil worshiping rites b e for e she was
finally killed in an Irvine orange grove.
Gamble told the court today that one of ~ rites involved the eating of her
heart ~y Hurd.
• Mrs. Brown was buried In a shallow
· 1 rave off the Ortega Highway. Her
di&membered body was found June JS.
GuidO is· one of five psychiatrists who
examined Hurd in Orange County Jail. It
is expected that at least two more
psychiatrists will follow him to he
witness stand in Judge Robert L.
COrfman's courtroom.
Judge Corfman will rule after hearing
counter arguments from Chief Deputy
Diatrict Attorney James Enright if Hurd
is: sane and competent to stand trial.
Guido's written opinion w1s ;that Hurd
was insane at tbe time of the Brown kill·
ing. .
Four other psychiatrists hive rule$f the
long-haired defendant to be sane but all
doubt his ability to aid counael in hi!
defense. .
Hurd, manacled hand and foot, ap-
Capo Council
Votes to Oppose
Canyon }etpor~
~ Juan Capistrano's City CmmciJ,
responding to pressure ftof!1 Jf.s ctttzens
' to take a itlnd oo'1he propi!sod Bell Can·
yon jetport. voted Monday to op~ the
plan.
Councilmen Jim Thorpe, Josh Gam·
mell, and Mayor Tony Fol'!ter voted to
paas a resoJuUon oppoSlng the Bell Can·
yon site on te grounds that It would de..
stroy public and private land : add to
already heavy air pollution caused by
military aircraft, and hive a major ef·
feet on the city which was not even con·
suJted concerning the use of its utilities.
Tbe three council members also streS&-
ed that a regional air study, being done
by the SOuthern California Association of
Governments, halJ not yet been com·
pleted.
"I jLLSt don't think it would serve the
best interests of San Juan Capistrano."
said Gammell . "I think a jetport wou1d
make the city bigger but not necessarily
better."
Initially voting against the resolution
were Councilmen Ed Chermak and Bill
Bathgate who stated they didn 't have
enough information. They later changed
their stands to make the resolution
unanimous.
The city's planning comm 1 s s j o n
recently indicated their opposition to the
jetport site and had urged the council to
do the same. The council had postponed a
decision then to give them time to attend
the Dee. 7 public hearing in Mission Vie·
jo.
Act to Restore Calm
By United Preti lnteraaUonal
Government officials and Palestinian
guerrillas began disarming th e I r
paramilitary forces today in a major
move to restore peace to Jordan.
poartd... ..... ,,. Ital ... In U!!s
lnomlllf'• prooeedlnlotand Uetdled. wbat
appeared t& be Zodiac signs. while Gam-
ble ~\led in his defense. ~ only con-
tact With his lawyer was to ask Gamble
on aeveral OCCAsions for a tjgarette.
The psychiatrist's do u b t s were ap.
parently ralaed by a 1Jerie1 of con·
versations in which HW'd commented
that be liked to drink sir· cups of blood a
day, acknowledged the devil as his
father, brtieved in the invincibility of
Satanic worship and the inevitable rein·
carnation of the evil doer.
Guido testified Hurd recalled during his
interview that he was a mtmber of a
group which drove into a Santa. Ana
aervtce siaUOn oo tbe n.ighl of JUne 1 -
the 11m6 nl&ht ot~i IGO ro6bery and the
hatchet killing of attendant Jerry Wayne
C&rlin, 21. • · ,
"Aaalnt ' Guido said. "Hurd beUived
that somtone .-was behaving tn· a
derogatory manner towards him." The
psydllalrlot t.slilted that Hurd told him
he gave orders for the killing. o_f C!_rlin
after he'arlng eomeone call him "a
tramp." • · ~
Guido's f.e.ltimony Indicated that tt2: ax
used to make Carlin unrecognizable was
taken from Hurd"s car and the defendant
app&renUy ind.i~ated to Guido that lie bad
betn carrying the weapon around for
some time.
Guldo testified that Hurd had a long
history of narcoUa addiction and a
particular fondness for heroin. His search
for dru gs and the money to pur,dl:ase
them led Hurd into seve ral tncountera
with the law before" the killings ol Mrs.
Brown and Carlin, t.he psych.18trlst's
report indlcates.
Hurd is one of three YOl.lths indic ltd by
the Or,ange County Grand JW'y for tbe
killings of M(s; Brtnim and carlhl. ~
Separate jury trlal!I have been schedul·
ed for his ro-defendanta. One other def en·
dant, Arthur Craig ''Moose" Hulse, 16, of
Garden Grove faces trial for the killing of
Carlin and being an acCes!Or)' to the
murder of Mrs. Brown.
Hughes Aide Saw Signing Uf'I T•i.M• GETS HI S DAY IN COURT
My La i Figure Calley
LAS VEGAS, Nev. (UPI) -A penonal
aide of Howard 'Hughes, who claims he
has seen the mystery billionaire almost
daily for the past five years, aays he saw
the industrialist sign a document fir ing
the bead of his Nevada operations.
H6Wever, a handwriting expert and
foimer associate of Robert Maheu,
Hughes' Nevada chJef, clai.ma the
·Signature on the letter of dismissal Is a
forgery.
Both men testified Monday in the
Nevada ·District c.ourt. hearing stemming
from the. attempted ousting of Maheu by
exeeuUves of Hughes Tool Co., the
Houatoft.based parent finn of the
bilUonalre's giant business empire.
Ralpb Bradford, now retired but
previously a handwriUng and fingerprint
expert for 28 years on the Long Beach
Police Department, testified at the hear-
ing today that Hughes' signature was ge-
nuine.
Bradford also said he was satisfied that
a three.page handwriUen letter urging
the executives of the tool company to get
ahead with the job or firing Maheu was
aJso written by Hughes.
Soldier Says
Capt. Medina
Shot Woman
Consulting Eirm Hired
By Saddleback College
Levar B. Myler, who identified himself
as a "special assistant" lo Hughes, said
Hughes signed a proxy Nov. 14 firing
Maheu, who has been the billionaire's No.
l man in Nevada for the past four years.
Myler said the signing took place in the
ninth floor pen thouse maintained by
Hughes in the Desert 1M Hotel in Las
Vegas. The witness also testified Hughes
subsequently went to the BritarnUa Beach
Hotel in Nassau, the Bahamas, and from
there issued instructions the proxy be
released.
FT. BENNING. Ga . (UPI) -A soldier
who served at A1y Lai te stified today the
company commander bad conducted aa
"inflammatory" meeting the night before
the strike, had ordered the village
destroyed, and had personally killed a
woman picking rice.
The testimony concerning the com·
mander, Capt. Ernest L. l\ledina, was
given at the court-martial in which one of
his platoon leaders, Lt. William L. Calley
Jr., is charged with mu rdering 102
civili ans during the mission.
Meeting tn executive se!!ion trust.eta of
the Saddleback Community College
District Monday night approved a '5,200
to $6,200 lee and hiring of a consuJtant
finn to help the di.strict with purchase& of
computer equipment.
President Fred H. Bremer said the
closed door session wu in keeping with
provlsiona of the education code allowing
the board to meet privately when
discussing personnel.
The member of the firm of Non-ls and
Gottfried Inc. of Los Angeles "who will
spearhead the on~pus survey ii a
Falling Brid.ges
· Highli'ght Tests
In San Clemente
The bridges wilt crumble and fall at
San Clemente Higb School tonight •
Scores of balsa wood spans, built in an
annual contest by students, will be tested
to·their breaking point in the campus Lit·
Ue Theater in what promises to be hours
of suspense starting at 7 p.m.
The compeUtlon will be tough, because
of the third annual entry Jim Kelly,
whose twO-OUnce creation last year bore
more than 400 pounds of weight before
shattering. Kelly has won the contest the
past two years.
The winners this year will share cash
awards parceled out from fees donated
by each bridge builder.
Professional design engineers using
special equipm~t will squash the entries
and measure the weight borne by each
span.
. The measurement stops and is record·
ed at tbe first sign of collapse.
The project is the brain child of math
teacher Alan Pierce and Physics in·
structor Don Scbwenn.
Both in!itructors supervise the program
whicb has strict rules on materials, but
none at all on construction techniques
and design.
Balsa wood strips measuring three·
thirty-seconds of an inch in the cross sec-
tion are the only material used -save
for common airplane cement.
The competition Is so keen, that the
secrets of the previous year's winners
are hoarded .
Schwenn and Pierce lock up the win·
ning entries so students won 't "borrow"
the winning ideas.
resident or the district," Dr. Bremer
· sald. "Since the board was discussing an
lhdivldual, e.1ecutive session w as
nece~!lfy."
Bremer noted that a James Anderson
of Mission Viejo is the member of the
firm who will lead the evaluatiOn of
district needa for computers.
The consulting firm's fee of $5,200 t.o
16.:KIO wouJd be paid to the firm whJch
employs Anderson, Bremer said.
The contract presently provides no date
for completion of the study, but the
firm's offer to do the work is valid "only
through Dec 31," Brtmer said .
Anderson contacte:Me superintendent
following a board meeting at which
truatees .said they needed information on
the types o( computers desirable f o r
.dtstrld we. .
Bremer said the eomput.en chosen will
r.erve both administrative and in·
slrUdlonlll purpo<ea,
Saddleback OKs
Use Policy
Saddleback Commwtity College Di.strict
trustees Monday night approved a policy
on public use Of district buildings and
grnund.! requiring application 30 days
prior to u.se. and requiring board approval
of a group's request.
"The public use of groW1ds is limited to
those recreational activities which will
not caust damage to the property of the
district,., the policy states.
Among prohibited "activities" are "use
of goU ba\IJ and clubs. fi ring of weapons,
driving vehicles off the roadway onto the
grounds . and bringing dog.s or other pets
onto the grounds."
The policy gra nts the superintendent
the power to approve individual use re·
quests of buildings or grounds.
Earlier in the day, Charles Appel Jr., a
form er F'Bl agent with Maheu. testified
on behalf of Maheu that Hughes'
purported signature on the document
presented by the Hµghes Tool Co. was a
';simulation or imitation."
"It's a very good representation," Ap-
pel said. "It wouJd pass any bank teller
and other business associates would ac·
cept it, but it's deficient. It's eltremely
skillful but it's different."
Viejo High Seeks
Adtil~ Volunteers
To Aid Teachers
Missio n Viejo High School is seeking
adult volunteers to begin an instructional
aide program that has been adopted by
the Tusti n Union High School District.
Mrs. Ruth Mader, coordinator of stu-
dent work experience at Mission, said,
"aides will work under the direct super·
vision of teacher, counselo rs. clerical
staff and administrators in classrooms
or other locations ."
"Our adult comm unity has a wealth of
experience and enthusiasm to contribute
to the educational program ,." she said.
Volunteers will work on a regular
schedule in specific areas of instruction.
Assignmenll may include preparation of
teaching aids, setting up demonstrations ,
operating language laboratories and
listening center equipment. typing or
rep rod u c in g classroom material,
assisting in libraries or helping students
with assignments when a one to one
teach ing basis would be beneficial .
Anyone interested in volunteering time
to the project may call Mrs. Mader at the
s::h90J, 837-7722.
THE PRICE IS RIGHT
(or is it?)
Michael A. Bernhardt, 24. of Tarpon
Springs, Fl a .. surveyor. was one of eight
witnesses called by the defense in lv.'o
days to say that Medina had left him with.
the impression \'1at all inhabitants -in·
eluding women and children -were to be
killed in the Vietnamese hamlet of l\.1y
Lai on Ma rch 16, 1968.
Three days after the sweep, be
testified, l\1edina "gave an address to th e
company" in u·hich he .said an in·
vestigation was under way.
"He said he would advise us to be quiet
anO he would back up anyone iI they got
in trouble." Bernhard t said.
Bernhardt added that r..1edina later took
him asi de and said "that he personally
didn't feel it would do any good if I made
a report to my congressman or to the IG
(inspector general) or anybody else and
not to do it."
Bernhardt's testimony followed that of
another former soldie r at My Lai who
-said he fired into a group of 10 wome n
and children in the village because he
had the impression that Medina. n his
briefing. had ordered the killing of the in·
habitants.
l\.1edina is accused by the Army of
overall responsibility of the killing of "at
least 175" civilians that day. but no
formal charge has yet committed him to
court-martial.
Bernhardt testified that "Capt. f..1edina
was very passionate" in tone at the brief·
ing the night before the assault :. "He
said there were no innocent civilians in
the area -if th ey \\.'ere not combatants
they were involved in support" of a Viet
Cong unit.
During the operation. Bernhardt said,
he followed Medina most of the day.
"At one time the re was a woman in a
rice field picking rice, or making the mo.-
lions of picking rice," Bernhardt said.
"Capt. f\.1edina fired at her and she fell.
He 'A·ent over and fi red a few more
rounds and killed her ...
HAVE YOU EVER GONE INTO A STORE, AND BEFORE A SALESMAN
APPROACHED YOU, TRIED TO DETERMINE PRICES ON GOODS NOT
MARKED?
{Dana H·ills High Funds
May Come From Bonds
MANY CARPET STORES DO NOT HAVE PRICES INDICATED ON
THEIR SAMPLES. THE THE 0 RY IS THAT THIS WAY THEY CAN
CHARGE "WHAT THE TRAFFIC WILL BEAR."
The proposed Dana Hills High Sehool
ml&ht be financed by local bOJ'lds, Instead
ol a state loan.
Trustees of the Capistr&no UniUed
School Di.strict voted Monday to authorize
the sale of lhe dLStrlct's remaining
$4,230,000 In ldlool bonda, becau.o of a
slight loosening of the money market.
superintendent Truman BendiCt gald If
the boods are sold they <00ld be llled to
build Dana Hills Hlgh School, which w11
lo be funded from the state school
bulldlng fund.
Benedi<I said lht bonds probably did
not repreatnt enough money to build the
entire school , bul lht proJ<ct could be
wrtttfn so that a mtjority of the school
..Wd be contlrUcted.
"It apptars we're in a favorable posl·
Uon to ,.11 the bonds." ••Id Benedict
"'The climate Is temporarily favorable
within the le1al llmltaUono authorized by
lbe voter1.'1
The district had not sold them
prevlou1ly because they carried an in·
terest rate maximum of 5 pucent.
However. Joe Wimer. Director of
Administrative Services. has canvassed
bond b1zyers and has found them willing
to pick up school bonds at this lime. He
tol d the board that Sin Diego sold some
recently at 4.3 percent
Btnedict emphaslztd that tven If the
bonds are sold , he did not feel the
district's ability to acquire st.ate buildln&
loans would be jeapordJzed. The state
W1u1Uy loam: only to distrlcta '"ho on
bonded to capacity and ire unable to .sell
their bonds.
The superintendent aho said If the c<>n·
struetlon Of Dana Hills High School
proved unfeasible for the amount of mon-
ey available. he mlaht rtcommend the
bulldlng of an Intermediate scllo.11 IOI
ninth graders. relieving the overcrowded
condllfons at San Cleme:nte High SChool.
AT ALDEN'S PRICES ARE POSTED ON ALL OF OUR SAMPLES SO
THAT CUSTOMERS CAN BROUSE THROUGH THE SELECTIONS AND
KNOW WHAT THE ARE LOOKING AT. ·yoo, THERE IS ALWAYS THE
l'OSSIBIUTY OF A L 0 WE R PRICE IF CONDmONS WARRANT.
ALDEN'S
~ .. -.-,.-.. -.-.o-u-•• -.~ CARPElS. DRAPES
TUSTIN c.afl •••
ALDIN'S
111 ""' c.1ms 1663 Placentia Ave.
1U74 ~~:.,u:: c.m. COSTA MESA
........ 646-4838
HOURS: Mon. Thru Thurs., 9 to 5:30 -Fri., 9 to 9 -Sat,. 9:30 to 5
•
'
Lagurra.~.beaeh Today's Fl•al
N.Y. Stoelu EDITION
VOL. 63, NO. 299, 3 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TEN CENTS
' ....
Board 'Ey~ng Lobbyist for Laguna Schools
' '• I
Laguna Beach school trustees· tonight
"'ill consider a propo!!al to· contribute
$1 ,000 a year toward the salary of a sta~e
legislative consultant to .,help protect
Laguna Beach tupayers' pocketbooks in
Sacramento.
The consWtant would be hlred on behalf
of the 15 school districts in the stale that ~~~s ... sla'te , funds aS "ba!iC aid
' -~ 1$ are so"li of the weallhler &ebool
distrlcts ·in the sta;e-and the move to hire
the tonsultant \tas organized by the
B<veilY ijilb Uniijed School district.
"Somehow all tlie bills that come up in
Sacramento -suppo&e;dly designed to equali~ state·aidjo ~1 districts ~m
to have. the effect of ,peoo,lizlng dislrJcls
like ~ ~~,'.say• board ptt>i·
SOPHISTICATED LAGUNA TRAFFIC CONTROL CONFUSES SOME
Molly Cronin Pl1n1 a Crossing at P11rk Avenue ' '
Bnttons B,affling
'
Lagu1ians Wonder A&out'W alk' Sig1i
By PATRICK BOYLE
01 flle Dill' ,Utt Steff
Laguna Beach residentll are finding out
there is more lo crossing a street than
just pushing a button and waiting for the
"\Valk" signal.
An Art Colony pedestrian must know
what to do when -half-way acrost Coast
Highway-"Don't \Valk" or "Wait'! signal
flashes. ·
Ac'cording to William Hahn, tlfe elec-
trical contractor finishing the traffic
signal rejuveilation along the .highway,
many pedeslrians are turnini . back
before reaching the first white line.
Hahn says these residents, particularly
elderly women, apparenUy do not un·
derstand the new system of traffic con-
trol in Laguna Beach. Under the old
system, pedestrians simply crossed the
street when the light turned green.
"Before. there weren't any buttons to
push." Hahn says. "Now, you will never
get a "Walk" unless you push the but-
ton."
What is causing the confusion, ac-
cording to Hahn, is that 1 about_ seven
seconds after the "Walk" signal is
given, the "Wait". sign be&lns to fl ish.
"Some people are misinterpreting the
flashing 'Wait' signal." Hahn says. "The
'Wait' romes on and they imediately turn
back to the curb."
Hahn says the Oash protector, as it ·is
called, Is onJy·to warn a pedestrian not to
begin to cross the street. Persons cross.
in& when the "Wait" signal begins to
flash should continue across the atreet.
Hahn says.
Installation of the new traffic system
was begun in July to replace the an-
tiquated street lights controlling the Art
Colony. However, due to summer traffic,
the Art Festival and the weather, the
project ha~ been ~eld up, Hahn says.
He expects to have the work completed
by abQut the. mjddle or January, weather
permitUng.
The new traffic control system hinges
on a computer located on the Coast
Highway at Broadway, Hahn says. The
computer measures the amount and
direction of traffic flo)¥ on the Coast
Highway and adjusts the trafiic lights ac-
conilngly.
Traffic lights on cross streets entering
the Coast Highway will never tum green
unless an automobile activates the signal
by passing over a sensor buried in the
street.
The pedestrian signals are activated
only by pushing the button , Hahn says.
Contrary to popular belle£, the maximum
waiting, period for ar\ auto or pedestrian
after 'triggering the signal is a minute
and a half, ))e adds.
"Wberi y.&.l are tn_a hurry, it may seem
like five minutu," he admits, "but it is
not."
Uildersea. Leases .. ' '
Ope~ed for Bids
'Smile' ·Too Late .. After Warning
\J1i Certajn Towns
It may be too late to "Sf!llle" in your
home town.
Already several of the 1 o c a 11 Y
sponsored contests leading to competition
In the "40 Miles of Chris tmas Smiles"
Christmas dtt0rating contest tbroughout
the Orange t.oast area have closed.
Potential entrants In the conle3t 1hould
contact loca l sponsors to find out about
deadlines and rules, it was announced to-
day by Cap Blackburn, president of the
Orange County Coast Association. His
group, along 'With the DAILY PJLOT, is
renewing the nearly tO-year-old "to Miles
of Christmas Smiles" contut this year.
Judging [or "IO Miles'' awards will be
handled Mondav night lllroughout !he
area from Seat Beach to San Clemente.
_ NEW .ORLEANS (AP) -Tbe Interior
•Department opened bids •tbday in a long·
delayed sale ol offshore oU leases after
waining oil men they must improve their
safety record for wells drpled iD the bot-
tom of the sea.
The mu!Umlllion.dollar s.ale w a s
delayed two years by mounting concern
over pollution from ofl1bore oil well ac-
ciden\s.
"The department is not completely
satisfied wJth, the safety record of
offshore operations," uid Orme Lewis
Jr., deputy aWllant secretary for public
land manag~ent. ·
"The aafety record on the outer con-
tinenlal shell must he Improved."
About 5IJO oilri>eo and banken crowded
the doWntown ballroom wbere the 1ealed
bids ...... submltttd, opened and read
over a fou'd speaker syatem.
dent Larry Taylor.
A recently defeated tax ref9f111· bill, he
said, would hav£ deprived the 15 basic
aid districts of a major IOW'ce of their in-
come.
"The funds lost," aald Taylor, "would
have had to be replaced by local tax·
payers. We are not oppoaed to helping
districts with financial problems, but
We're not interested in paying 'DlOt'e tu:
and getllng less money hert."
The. ""''ultant woold he :chll'(ed with drawing up a tu: refoim propogal for the
legislature that would protect basic aid
diltrlcta.. • I ' •
La-~cit ¢1qol district busliless
superin!eiMieftt lli. Charles Hess said the
district cwmrt1y receives $5171000 a year
from the state, $381,000 of. which is
classlfled 11 blsic aid, bued on average
·dally attendlnee, The ·balanee rs !lpedal
gi;ant;s for driver educaUoo and .~ciitl
educltton ti{tigram. -·
Had Gov. lleagan•1 1recent tu reform
measure paUed, · Dr. H.S. said, the
dbtrlcl would have lost II& bUic aid funds. ' . .
The musur'!, tn. an effort to equllize
slate supi*t cir all ~l dlstricl&, w.oul~
have dlminaled basic al<! on the pmplse . '
that wealthier tcbool districts do DOI need
as much state financlal ~t.
Hess said the JegislaUve consultant
would provide services for all 15 school
districts hiring. him.
"These districts need someone who
understands thelr proble~ and can
present it correctly in Sacramento for the
protection of our ta1payers," said Taylor.
Laguna Council Unveils
Revamp£d _Canille Curbs
Hano Blasts Roof ·Blasted Panel Views
Newest Plan
As 'Fraud'
Another.B.ombExplodes p al · . . . ropos
At Isla V~ta B of A F p king· . or ar By BARBARA Kl\EIBICB or .. n.1tr '"" '"" Frem Wire Servleet dlirln& a clallh that touched oft a teriet •
Laguna Beach's -·,..nowned clol ISL"-•VISTA -A tosseil bomb blew a ol lncldenlJ.
&rdinance-will make a mum engagement hole in tbe roof of a Bank of America Bullness continued u usual today, but .
on the city council agenda Wednesday branch here Monday night, ·showertn1 that 11 all a ....... of America hfficials night. · the atreet with muonry tiles and ln-.&HU....._
The ordinance banning W,; !rom flaming d)Olloaa o( streel people .OO would AY about !he n<wesl 1111ult on ~ Ad flOl8 ·Plfte -a. "'' .,,.,. . ,..., -. -~,,.,,,.,. ;._;' .:;.. ·,. .
addjJtOll"" ibt ~· . .1. ,·li"aml r~ ...... -.... ·~ . 11a1qc11·, .. bad-rwjlortedal!lllllo
r-ltii' 6cl ,fl 'fOlloWin< a llbrln7 the blastJia-by an un-llled -"!l"mun!IY -qlllel lap IJnlll ~blf,O~ refer..-. ballle, will he present..i to left,,. bolt -feel .,,_ In lllt -1blf .....,.....,_... ,._. lb6---ilitlionlj.--........... ·111111""-.. " • ' 'lliiartecl a.
jor ctwige;.lhe new ordinance lfmltii· the A c:Md al uc Sant& 8arba1a lliidents ~'ur)lir. · .l'P ~
beach ban to !he sun\mer monlhs. aad Other )'OWi( peirp!e llYing.ln the unJn. . Tlre bia'. V)rrta n.._ or last ljlrklg
"'Ibis Js a fraud on the rererendum pro-cOrporated community greeted aherlff'I ,ended with.more thaa~ioO per90DI jailed
cess and I don't think the pewle ~II di!pullea. who .arrived 00 tbe sctPe with and1 one ~nt -tr)'iDI to preserve
•land fe< I~"· said writer Arnold Hano wlioopo anil jeen. · · ~ and· calm .U.S clamoring for
today. ~ and botUes were thrown -ooe .~ ,... ahol to death. ' Hano, a leader or !he rererendum deputy was bit in the hip bot nbt Injured . jnyelllpton said several $mall finl
crusade that forced repeal or the original _ while aulbor!Ues credited Cllmer .wwe 1tl 111 lrllh bins around lbe area,
ordinance added "This i.. not a "subltan-YOWll people with !>elping keep on1er tn wirer. mldenl& said lllt bank blast could
tially dlffer:e~t·' ordinance and I doubt the midlt of mutual tension. · be felt two blocb away,.but wue quickly
very much if 1l rs legll. · _ Tbe bank·-'tymbolic or the caplWisl a\lngullhed.
"The only change 11 lbe ... lbat llmill power itrudure to radicals -WU rtbuill A ~ ullmated al IOO fathered Oil
the beach ban to lhe summer; the part on the 1cene· of one burned Jut Feb 2s the acme.
ban Is still in an~ unchanged." '
At the Ume of tbe referendum ft was
pointed out that lta~ law problbitc the
adoption within one year of an ordinance
"similar" to one that has been rescinded
as the result of a referendum.
The ordinance to be presented to the
council would ban dogs from beaches and
parks, whether or not confined by a
leash, as follows:
"At any and all times within Bluebird
Park, Top of the World Park and Boat
Canyon Park, which parks are primarily
used as childr':!n's parks and children's
playground parkll."
"At sucb timea and within tho5e areas
of Heisler Park as the city council may
from time to time fix and designate by
resolution."
"Upon all bt!ach areu within the city
between the boun of 9 a.m. and 6 p.m. of
every day of the period beginning June 15
and ending Sept 15 of each calendar
year."
The ordinance also provides that the
restrlctions shall not be applicable to
dogs enrolled and participating In obe-
dience classes sponsored by the city
Recreation Department.
These classes have been held on the
basketball courts of the 'titaln Beach.
Following the referendum, members of
the Laguna Beach Dog Owners Associa-
tion (LBOOA) met with cwncllman
Edward Lorr, author of the original
ord\nance j.n an efrort to work.out a com-
promise animal control ordinance.
At that time Ute LBDOA members said
they would 'support 1 strictly enforced
leash Jaw, higher dog license fees and
higher penalt.lt:S for violaUons to help pay
for enforcement costs, but could not
agree wllb !he park"anit beach ban.
They added bowt9er, that, U 1be coun-
cil were adamant, a beach b!n from the
hours of 10 a.m: to I p.m from July 1 lbfboP Labor Day, 'liould be tolerable.
The orhtlnal ordinance called for a
year·round beach ban.
Fained French Site
PARIS (UPI) -Paris' [amod Place de
l'Etoile became Place Cllrlel de Gaulle today. •
Tbe ..,,amine or the fained place,
when lhe Art de Tliompbe and lhe tomb
c( 1be uakrKrwn IOldier are •located, was ll"Oled wttll -111111( leu lban en-
thaslum .tn -teeton. The chanre
Wll unaniD*JllJ pwed by the Parts ci-
ty COW1cil Nov. U, but because of the
~!Ing pntem " decided lo reconsider.
Festival Board ~Approve~
Raise in Ticket Prices
Pageant of the Masten viewers will be
paying a little more for tickets during tbe
1971 sbOw.
'lbe Laguna Beach FesUval or Arla
board ol directon Mooday , night ap-
prQved.a measure to raise Ucket prices to
the popular production.
Under the new price scbedu1e the
festival will receive a net increase of
'47,000. Ticket prices will remain tbe
same both during the week and on
weekends. In past years, the weekend
prices had been higher:
Directors David Young and Hal Akins
voted against the Increase.
"1 don't think that we are justified in
raisng the revenue by any more than we
Sale Still On
Despite Tlieft
Of Merchandise
Tbe ~rlalmas ll8le at Laguna's
Coln Chest, 214 Glenneyre SL II sUll on,
despite· a slight ,.tback by uninvited
weekend "cuatomers'' owner Billy J .
Willlanu said today.
A !urther cl1eck o[ c:oios lib• by
burgla111 who [orcod !heir way inlo lbe
shop bas atablisbed the loSI at ap-
proximately 14,114 WIDlams said today.
"But,'' be added, "I still have plenty of
the good et;ilns. Jocked .up In the aafe ao I
can.r..stoc~the dlsplay coonten and the
sale I• stln on, lncludln1 the 30 i>er<enl orr that we've been advertliing. .
Williams .. Id he piano to lfooe O!ll the buslnt!I Dec. 24, boperutly to cash
c:ustomen. ' Finl rtporls Indicated the loos, which
cleaned Olll coins. from d~y counters,
could han amounted, lo f!0,000.
WID!aml said the burl!an, who ap-
parenUJ scooped roins ·at tandom into a
w..,.b11ke~ spilled qulle a row on the
noor u well u overlookblc lbe 11re,
• 1
need to" Young declared. "Al the last
meeting we decided to raise the ticket
prices to bring In an additional $35,000 to
Dieet productlon'cost!. Now we've added
another fl2,000 to lbat [lgure."
Under the new schedule, loge seau will
sell for f&. Formerly those seats were $5
during lbe week and II on weekends.
Center llCals will sell for $5, while left
center and right center will be '3.
Upper center seats will be priced at $.'!,
wblle upper left and right seal& will sell
for $2. Director's row seats at the top of
the bowl will sell for $3.
Under the new proposal the city, which
receives 17'12 percent of festival receipts,
will receive an additional flO,ooq /rom lbe
1971 •fxrf· .
No 'Happening'
Permits Issued
-'
·By Laguna Police
Laguna Beach Police Oller Kenneth
Huck Aid today that ''no permits have
been requested or Janed" for the widely
publiclz<d <;:luillmu Day "baP!""inl" In ta.,.,:. Beach. '
"'I UDdantand that wwd hu been
ipl'Ud around that permlll !or the
galhertng are all '~ order,' " aakl Huck. ·
"This ,q bOl the cue. We· haven't been
asked for any pennlts and none has been
-· I mentloo this enly,because I'd bate to ... ...,. kid who thliits this thing
has .clty •Jlll'O'll pt mlxed up in
aomethlng we know nothing about."
• Poole'1 'and rull·Pll• i4s In !he Loa
Anceloa Free -ba .. heralded lbo Jn.
VitatJoo lo a """'""' t41tlber" In ~ ,Beach Doc: » to "celebrate lbe
birth or J.,.. the Cbrlat 111 w1111ea to lb•
New Ace."
. Police ban ldenUfled'a-Lqunan
11 ~tor ol lbt adt't11~loin& bot have
been uoable to mal<e cootact wllh the
orpnlzalloo, u ..,, behind 1111....n.
•
<:oncrete can be beauttflll..as well u
practical, Laguna Beach p~corn
m\asjone,s were tol~ Monday nigbL
They were viewing still another pro-
posal from a firm interested in
parllclpatlng In lbe Glenneyre parkinC
itructure.
The cornmlssionen viewed aUdes pro.
jected ,by Gordon McWllllams, npre"°"
tint the Rockwln Corporallon ol Santa
Fe Sprlhgs, ipeclallst.s in'decorative pre-
caat concrete work.
The firm, currenUy contracting the
Soulb Coast C.mmunlly Hoopllal parking
structure has done 90 peri:ent ol the
"package" concrete work for UCLA,
along With buildings for Cal State
Fullerton, Ambassador College I a
Pasadena, and such Los A n g e 1 e 1
landmarks as the Equitable Insurance
Building and the 42-story Crocker
CIUzens Bank.
McWUU'ama said the pre-cast concrete
seeUons, which can save both time and
moriey serve both a structural and
ornamental architectural purpose. 1 Cost of the flnn's parking structures,
he sald, can run from $1,350 to as mucb
as p,500 a 1pace depending on the
building style and amount of ornamen-
tation.
He said a four-level structure such as
the one proposed for the Glenneyre site
would take fi.ve to six months to com-
plete.
The planners asked the city staff to
provide the firm with criteria for the
Laguna project so that more detailed in-
formation as to cost can be prepared.
Orders to Wipe Out
Viet Hamlets Denied
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Brig. Gen. W~
nant Sidle, chief of Army information,
Monday denied reports Gen. William C.
Westmoreland had ordered Viet Cong-in-
fested villages outside SaJgon "leveled"
after the Tet offensive of IMS.
Oruge
' There'I I 90 -chance you'll nned your umbrella on Wed-
nesday. Temperatures will tumble
too, dipping into the low lixtles
along the Orange Coast.
INSmE TODAY
How dots your cnnwil fn.
come fit into tM notional 1ccl.c?
S11lvia Potter ha.a all th.e anawerl
on Finance Pa.ge JO today.
CH~llTMAS
\
--. M-'"': ..... tt --.. Or-. c-r.t)' lt ,.,,,,.. .... 1• '""" ... ,.
·-Mef'lltlfl .. ,, -. -. -. Wlln. .... ,, --.... ...... ,.Ml --..
. .
r
•
Qll~Y PILOT SC TlllMo!, -1'1 19!0 w
'Devil Cult' Sanity-Trial Begi.ns
Suspect Says Mrs. Brown's 'Godliness' Disturbed Him
'7 'n»i 1Aa£1l "' ' ' ~ to bavl 1ft6 ~ -kt tldl Htvtee ttlUen on the nij:ht of June 1 -Guido te1Ulied that Hurd had a long
• • •....,,........ Jlll!lnljg't ~ iid'Qttt.Mtwhat the qme n.tpt of a '60 robbery and the history of narcotics addiction and a 1 -What istevtn Craia HUrd de!&tbed tO 1pi)etrtd fo be Zodile Signs wJlllt Cam· hatchet killing of attendant Jerry Wayne particular fondness for heroin. His search
bispeycMlt:riJtuMn.Florenct8rown'1 ble argued In his defense. Hi.B only ~n· Carlbt, ·21. • • for drugs and the money to •purchue
.. quetnlinei& Ind iolitlneas" and wh4t he t1ct'with his 11wye·r was to ask Gamble "Alain."' Guido said, "Hur~ believed them Jed Hurd into ~vera_\ ~11counters
beUWed wu""htr .. derogatory attttudt" on"ieverat occasioris fOr a clt&rette. that someone was behaving in a with the Jaw before tt, killing! of Mn. towl~ hlin may well have ooit the The psychiatrist's doubts were ap.. derogaoory inanner oowards hlm." The Brown and Carlin, the psychiatrist's
.Mls&lOn Viejo teacher her life, ·" was parenUy raised by a series of con· psychiatrist testified· that Hurd told him report indicates. •Ptced in tesumo~ today tn Orange versaµons in which Hurd ~mment~d he gave Prdeta for the, killing of Carlin Hurd is one of three youths indicted by
County ·Suptrlor qourt. that fie liked to drink eix cupa ol blood a after hearing aomeone call blm "a the Orange County Grand Jury for the ·Dr. John A. GU:ido opened the Pn!ty day, acknowledged ~the devU as bll tr1mp." ' killings of Mrs. Brown and Cai'lin.
trial o( the accuaed. ~~Id tnnment father. believed· in 'the invincibility or GuJdo's teJUmonr indicated that the ax Separate jury trials have been schedul·
by telling defense attorney William Garn. Satanic worship and the: inevitable rein-used to makl Carhn unrecognizable was ed for his co-defendants. One other deien·
ble thlt Hurd told him that he sll!hed carnation of the evil doer. taken from ~·s car and the defendant dant Arthur Craig "Moose'' Hulse. 16, of
Mrs. Brown in the netk "to warn her'' Guido testified Huni recalled durin,; his apparenUy indicated to Quid(> that Pe had Garden Grove fares trial for the killing of
1bat-be would not tolerate her &Uperiot'I· interview that he was a riwnber of a been carrying the weapon around for Carlin and being an accessory to the
»'· group which drove Jnt.o a. Slnta Ana aome time.. murder of Mrs. Brown.
Oilft.Y I'll.OT...., .....
YIELDING RIGHT.OF-WAY
ROid Comml11loner Kod'I
:Road Official
Al S. Koch
.·Resigns Post
• : Oranae county Road Commisskmer Al
"'Ii. Koch toda7 resigned his pcot, effective
April S, 1971.
Koci> hu been with ~anp County I«
25 years and bu held the poatllon of road
~commls!ioner ainee Aug. l, 19$5, more
~·than 15 years.
In accepting Koch's resignation with
·fegre't, members or the Board of
~'Supervisors praised him for bJs con-:
~\ributiom to the county.
· Supervisor WIDle.m Hlrsten pointed to
the "l)lghly llUCC<SSlul" arlerial highways
·financing program, a joint c:oonty·<lly
project orlginated by Koch.
The retiring road commissioner was
asked by supervisor David Baker to
prepare a report "on tbe posafble con·
solidatlon or 111 engineerlng departments
1n the county as a money saving move."
Baker said ht was thinking of road!:,
flood control, builditlg and saf!ty and
harbor engineers u examples of
jlepartmenta which might he COlllOUdated
'Under Ont O)Unty engineer.
Koch was also praised for his years of
· -k whlc:I! led to the approval of an
• Orange County TrlNit District which
" waa a_..t by the vottta last Nov. 3.
·Meters f ot Sale
: In San Clemente
Hurd could not recall the aclual kl111ng
of l\ln. Brown, Guido ltstifled but he
coµld recall "stabbing her once or·twice.
Tben he remembers that he drove uound
saiita Ana with her body -sort ~f like
'1ley did things In Vietnam, he told me."
Hurd is aCOUltd ol being the ringleader
of a group of drifters who police c:Jalm
~led Mrs. Brown, 31, of El ToN>, from
her car last June 2 as she left the San
Diego Freeway at the Sand Canyon off.
""1P· Police allege that the woman wis
mutillted and subjected to a series of
devU worshiping rites b e fore she was
finally killed in an Irvine orange grove.
Gm'tble told the· c:Ourt tOday -thit one of
tbose rites Involved the ealing of her
wrt. by Hun! .
Mrs. Brown wu buried In a shallow
grave off the . Ortega Highway. Her
dismt!pbertd lx!<IY. WIS found J~ JS. '
Guido 1111 one of five paychJal.ri&tl who
exal:nlned Hurd in Orange County Jail. It
ts Upected that at least two more
psychiatrists will follow him to he
witness stand in Judge Robert L.
Corfman's courtroom.
Judge Corfman will rule after hearing
counter arguments from Chief Deputy
District Attorney James Enright if Hurd
i!: sane and competent to stand trial.
Guido's written opinion was that Hurd
was insane at the time of the Brown kill·
ing.
Foor other JIO)'dliairist& !Jave rulad the
Jong-haiied defendant to be l!lane but •ll
doubt his ability to aid counsel in h1s
defense.
Hurd, manacled hand and foot, ap.
Capo Council
Votes to Oppose
Can yon Jetport
San Juan Capl•trano's City Council,
respoodjng to pressure from its cltizeu
to take~ stand .. the propoaed Bell Can·
)'On jetport, voled Monday. to op-the
plan.
Councilmen Jim Thorpe, JOl!lh Garn·
San C1emente'a bwineea diatrict p.vk· meU. and Mayor Tony Forst.tr voted to
· Ing meters which went on the beheading pass ' ;uoluUon opposing the Bell Can·
block earlier this year now are deatlned yen site 9n te grounds that it would de-
for the audion blocks. stroy public and private land; add to
: City Councllmtn will hear a recom--already heavy air pollution caused by
· lnendation Wednesday from C 1 t Y military aircraft, and have a major ef·
·Manager Ken Carr that the UZ meters feet on the city which was not even con·
1Uminated from busl.ness area streetJ un-l!tulted concerning the use of its utilities.
der a sucx:es.sful eiperiment should now The three council members also stress-
be !"lid as s~rplUl!I. . ed that a regional air study, being done
Smee therr removal last April the by the southern California Association of
meters have been stored In city lotu. Governments, has not yet been com.
Metered parking was replaced by two-pleted
hour-limit zones w~ch ba~e. workt:d wtll~ j~t don 't think it would serve the
1n controllina: parking, officials , said and s interests of San Juan Capistr.ioo," ~ have helped the area s sma said Gammell. "I Ulink a jetport would
blWeness owners. k th ·t b' b t t ·1 The cit • --auo 1 a mete ma e e c1 y 1gger u no neeessar1 y . ya ......... n re rs, bet~r "
bowewr, are not affected by the parking Initi.ally voting against the resolUtion
changes. were C:Ouncilmen Ed Chennak and Bill
First Beer, Now Gis
· Will Get Own Rugs
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Army
~f)rlvate has been given the right to drink
"'?!beer In the barracluJ. Sooo he will have a 'lug of hls own and be: will be able to
_choose beige, rose or green.
DAILY PILOT
Bathgate who stated they didn 't have
enough information. They later changed
their stands to make the resolution
unanimous.
The city's plaMing commission
recently indicated their opposition to the
jetport site and had urged the council.to
do the same. The council had postponed a
decision then to give them Ume to attend
the Dec. 7 public hearing in Mission Vie.
jo.
Act to Restore Calm
Hughes Aide Saw Signing
LAS VEGAS, ~v.1(UPI) -A pttsona1
aide .ol Howard Hughes. Who Claims he
hu seen the mystery ;billlOnaire atm.01t
dally for the put five ye'a.rs, says_ ht Uw
the •industriallst sign a document firing
the head of his Nevada operations.
However, a handwriting expert and
former associate or Robert Maheu,
Hua;bes' Nevada chie1, claima the
signature on the letter of dismiss.al la: a
f6rCery. ·
' Both men tutifled Monday in the
Nf!vada Dl1trlct Ccw1 hearing ttemming
from· the attempted ousting of Maheu by
executives of Hughes Tool CO., the
Houston-based parent firm of the
billionaire's giant business empire.
Ralph Bradford, now retired but
Consulting Eirm Hired
By Saddleback College
MeeUhr In executive session trmtees of
the Saddleback Community College
Dllltrlct Monday night approved a 15.200
to $8,200 fee and hiring ~f 'a consuJtant
firm t.o help the district with purchases of
computer equipment.
President Fred H. Bremer said the
closed door setisioo was in keeping with
provlsiOns of the education code allowing
the board to meet priva(ely when
di~ing personnel.
The member of the firm or Norris and
Gottfried Inc. or Los Angeles "~·ho will
1peatbead the on-campus 1urvey is a
Falling Bridges
Highlight Tests
In San Clemente
The bridges will crumble and ran at
san Clemente High School tonight.
Scores of balsa wood spans, built ln an
aMuaJ contest by students, will be tested
to their breaking point in the campus Lit·
tie Theater in what promises to be hours
of suspense starting at 7 p.m.
The competition will be tough, because
of the third annual entry Jim Kelly,
whose twCK>Unce creation last year bore
more than 400 pounds of weight before
&battering. Kelly has won the contest the
pest two years ..
The winners this year will share cash
awards parceled out from fees donated
by each bridge builder.
Professional design engineers usina:
specl1l equipment will squash tbe entries
and measure the weight borne by each
span.
The measurement stops and is record·
ed at the first sign of collapse.
The project Is the brain child of math
teacher Alan Pierce and Physics in·
structor Don Scbwenn.
resident of the district," Dr. Bremer
said. "Since tM board was diseWising an
individual, execuUve session w 4 1
neoesaary. ·•
Bremer noted that a James Anderson
of MlS!lon Viejo is the member of the
firm who will lead the evaluation of
district needs for computers.
The consulting firm·s fee of $5,200 to
$6,200 would be paid to the firm which
employs Anderson, Bremer said.
The contract presen tly provides no date
for completion of the study, but the
firm's offer to do the work is valid "only
through Dee 31," Bremer said.
Anderson contacted the superintendent
following a board meeting at which
trustees said they needed lnfonnation on
the types of computtrp, desirable f o r dlsttlct use.. . ..
Bremer said the computers chosen will
~rve both administrative and in·
,atructlonal purposes.
Saddleback OKs
Use Policy
Saddleback COmmunity College Di!,trict
trustees Monday night approved a policy
on public use of district buildings and
grounds requiring application SO days
prior t.o use and requiring board approval
of a group's request.
"The public use of grounds is limited to
those recreational activities which will
not cause damage to the property of the
district," the policy states.
Among prohibited "activities" are "use
of golf balls and clubs, firing of weapons,
driving vehicles off the roadway onto the
grounds, and bringing do~ or other pets
onto the grounds."
The policy grants the superintendent
the power to approve indivJduaJ use re·
quests of buildings or grounds.
previOU!ly a handwrlUna and fingerprint
expert for 21 years on the L«I& Beach
Police Department, ttaUfied at the hear-
ing today that Hughes' algnature was ge-
nuine.
Bradford also said he WIS satisfied that
a three-page handwritten Jetter urging
the ei:ecutlves of the tool company to get
ahead with the job of ftrinl Maheu wu
alao written by Hughes.
Levar B. Myler, who Identified him.sell
1s a "special asslstant" t.o Hughes, aaid
Hughes· signed a proxy Nov. 14 firing
Maheu, who has been the billionaire's No.
1 man in Nevada for the past four years.
Myler said the signing took place in the
ninth floor penthouse maintained by
Hughes in the Desert IM Hotel In Lu
Vegas. The witness also testified Hughes
subsequently went to the Britannia Beach
Hotel in Nassau, the Bahamas, and from
there issued instrudloils the proxy be
released.
Earlier in the day, Cttarlei Appel Jr., a
fonner FBI agent with Maheu, testUled
on behalf of Maheu that Hughes'
purported signature on the document
presented by the Hughes Tool Co. was a
"simulation or Imitation." ·
"It's a very good representation," Ap..
pel said. "It would pass any ba.nk teller
and other business associates would ac-
cept It, but it's deficient. It's extremely
skillful but it's different.."
Viejo High Seeks
Adult. Volunteers
T'o Aid Teachers
Mission Vieja High School is 1eekil)t
adult volunteers to begin an instructional
aide program that has been adopted by
the Tustin Union High School District.
Mrs . Ruth Mader, coordinator of stu-
dent work experience at Mission, said,
''aides will work under the direct super·
vision of teacher, caunse1ors. clerical
staff and administrators in classrooms
or other locations."
"Our adult community has a wealth of
experience and enthusiasm to cQ11tribute
to the educatlonal program," she said.
Volunteers will work on • regular
schedule in speclfic areas of instruction.
Assignment.5 may include preparation of
teaching aids. setting up demonstrations.
operating language laboratories and
listening center equipment, typing or
rep rod u c i n g classroom material.
ass isting in libraries or helping students
with assignments when a one to one
teaching basis would be beneficial.
Anyone interested in volunteering time
to the project may call Mrs. Mader at the
a::hool, 837-7722.
Both instructors supervise the program
which bas strict rules on materials, but
none at all on construction techniques
and design.
Balsa wood strips measuring three·
thirty-seconds of an inch in the cross sec·
tJon are the only material used -save
for common airplane cement.
THE PRICE IS RIGHT
(or is it?)
V"IT ........
GETS HIS DAY IN COURT
My Lal Figure Calley
Soldier Says
Capt. Medina
Shot Woman ·
FT. BENNING, Ga. (UPI) -A soldier
wbo served at My Lai ~stified today the
company commander had conducted an
"inflammatory" meeting the night before
the strike, had ordered the village
destroyed, and had personally killed a
woman picking rice.
The testimony concerning the com-
mander, Capt. Ernest L. Medina, was
given at the court-martial in wbicb one of
his platoon lead.ers, Lt. William L. Calley
Jr.: Js charged with murdering 102
civilians during the mlsslon.
Michael A. Bernhardt, 24, of Tarpon
Springs, Fla., surveyor, was one of el•bt
witnesses called by the defense in two
days to sa)' that Medlna had left him with
the impression tiat all inhabitants -in·
eluding women and children -were to be
killed in the Vietnamese hamlet of My
Lai on hfarch 16, 1968.
Three days after the sweep, be
testified, :Pttedina "gave an address to the
company" in which he said an in·
vestigation was under way.
"He said he would advise us to be quiet
and he would back up anyone if they got
ln trouble," Bernhardt said. ··
Bernhardt added that Medina later took
, him ~de ~ said "that he .per!OOally
didn't feel it would do any good if l qiade
a report to my congressman or to the JG
(inspector general) or anybody else and
not to do it."
Bernhardt's testimony followed that of
another former soldier at My Lai whC)
said he fired into a group of 10 women
and children in the· village because be
had the impression that Medina, n his
briefing, had ordered the killing of the in·
babitants.
Medina. is accused by the Anny ef
<Werall responsibility of the killing of "at
least 175" civilians that day, but no
formal charge has yet committed him to
court-martial.
Bernhardt testified that "capt. Medina
w~ very passionate '' in tone at the brief.
in the night before the assault : "He
sai there were no iMocent civilians in
the area -if they were not combat.ant.I
they were involved in support" of a Viet
Cong unit.
During the operation, Bernhardt said,
he followed ~1edina most of the day .
"At one time there wa s a woman in a
rice field picking rice, or making the mo-
tions of picking rice," Bernhardt said.
"Capt. Medina fired at her and she fell.
He went over and fired a few mort
rounds and killed her."
_ .. ..
~ ..... ~.
C-M.,.
O•AHGm=: CO.UT PUat.ISMlHG UJM"Alt't
Ro\11rt N. 'W114
""'11•11111 ., .. P\llllWllW
By United Prt11 1Dtern1Uonal
Government officials and Palestinian
guerrillas begin disarming t h e i r
paramilitary forces today in a major
move to restore peace to Jordan.
The competition is so keen. that the
11ecrets of the previous year's VriMers
are hoarded.
Schwenn and Pierce lock up the win·
ning entries so students won"( "borrow''
the winning ideas.
HAVE YOU EVER GONE INTO A STORE, AND BEFORE A SALESMAN
APPROACHED YOU, TRIED TO DETERMINE PRICES ON GOODS NOT
MARKED?
•
J1clr: R. Cu1l1y
Viet ~llllrlt •r.C ~fl M•lllf'I'
Tlt•lftll tt'11Ti1 .. , ..
7"011111 A. Morithi11•
M1111tt"' I.itw
tticft•r4 P. H1M
""" OrMtl COUl'lly UllOr -Celli M ... : :t» Wal lly SI ....
N..,.,.1 a.wi: nil W.t lllN1 90lllMI .. • LAellfll IHCll! tn P .... I AVtl'll.11 ~111\llnl'Oll .,,c~: 1m1 llKll 8ou11¥11'f 11~ o.rn.nM; al HOl'ttl &I C.IN A .. I
;
Dana Hills High Funds
May Come From Bonds
The pro)!Olled Dana Hills High S<hool
might be financed by local bondJ, Jn.stead
of a state loan.
Trustees of the Capistrano Unified
SChool District voted Monday to authorize
the 58.le of the district's remaining
$4,230,000 In school bond!, hecauso of a
slight loosenJng of the money market.
SUperintendent Truman BendlcL uld if
the bonds are sold they ~Id be used to
build Dana Hilla High Scllool, which WIS
to be funded from the allte school
building fund.
Benedict said the bonds prob1bly did
not repment •llOIJllh money to build the
enlire school. but the project could he
\Ol'ltten '° llllt a majority of the ocbool
..Wd he CONtructed.
"It 1ppe1rs we're In a f1vor1ble po1I·
Uon to aell the bonds,• .. Id Btnedlct.
"The climate ii temporarily favor.able
within !he lepl limitations 1uthorlied by
the volers1 •• .
/
The district had not sold them
prevlO\lSl:Y because they carried an . in·
terest rate maximum of s percent.
However, Joe Wimer, Director of
Administrative Services, has canvassed
bond buyers and has found them willing
to pick up school bonds at this time. He
told the board that San Diego sold some
re«ntly at 4.3 percent.
Benedld emphasized that tvtn tr lht
bonda are sold, he did not feel the
diAtrlct'1 ability to acquire state bulldtng
loins would be jeapordited. The st.1te
usually loan.s only to districts ''ho are
bonded to capacity and are un1ble to sell
their bond>.
The superintendent also tald U tht con·
ortructlon of Dana Hllil High School
proved unfe1sible for the amount of mon-
ey av•llable. be might recommend the
building of ttn intermediate school for
ninth graders, relieving the overcrowded
conditions at San Clemente High School.
MANY CARPET STORES DO NOT HAVE PRICES INDICATED ON
THEIR SAMPW. THE T H E 0 RY IS THAT THIS WAY THEY CAN
CHARGE "WHAT THE TRAFFIC WILL BW."
AT ALDEN'.S PRICES ARE POSTED ON ALl OF OUR SAMPLES SO
THAT CUSTOMiRS CAN BROUSE THROUGH THE SELECTIONS AND .. '
KNOW WHAT THE ARE LOOKING AT. TOO, THERE IS ALWAYS THE
POSSIBILITY OF A L 0 WE R PRICE IF CONDmONS WARRANT.
ALDEN'S
.--.....,-•• -•• -. o-....,-.-• ..., CARPETS e DRAPES
TUITIM CeH,.,
ALDIN'S Pia la A u• HILL c.ums 1663 cent ve.
11114 ~,.::: c.nt. COSTA MESA
........ 646-4838
HOURS: Mon. Thru Thurs., 9 tO 5:30 -Fri .. f lo 9 -Sat., 9:30 lo S
4 •
t
I
. . .... -.... 4 •• s .-a; St ,, 4 a
San f;leplenie.
-t
• • .. . . '
• tq p 4
-. Touy'• Flllal ... -Capisti-~llo ED I T•IC>N · N.Y~ Steek• ,
* .. * ,4 : ; ' ... ,_ • .
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VOL 63, NO. 299, 3 SECTIONS, 2f PAiKS · .
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' I ' . ' ,TUESDAY;,, D~ER. I 5, 1970 , TEN CENTS
_. • .,,., , r .. ,. . " ... j • ~ •• • • ' ' . , ' , • •• "::r.._f-l.. ~ -.. ...
San Clenlerit.e· Pt.oh:e·s· N~w . ' Fii-e Figlililtg Setup
' '
Pl'<lpOll)s ID build a new fire· deport·
ment headquarters ca~ of•houahlc an
eventual full.Unie depanment' w 1'11'
resume before city COWEilmen in· San.
Clemente Wednesday.
City Manager Ken Carr will discusa·tbe rini official 1t.ps· for a ..... de~
Headquarters near civic ctnter with coun-
cilmen wbo' · two weeks ago reCeived
detailed suggestions from Fire · Qllef
Mer:ton W. HackeU.
111e intltlth proposals call ror the ex-
penditure of aboat f170,000 to build an
8,000-square-foot, two-story headquarters
building next to the existing otflces •. Thi
$1 .fl Millioa .id
'. """'"l ·~ In !be c1ty·budl<t.
Carl' wW .... the i...lbWty of tam-
ing !be project ..... ID. plam\t"8 COM·
mi.ssktnera for examination, plus the San
Clomonte Civic Bulldtrig Company, form·
ed. Iii the , leue'-pwdwe arrangement.I
fpr the ezisting civic. center.
The propoaed headquarten call for a
new garage, pl~ donnitories, meeting
rooo>1 and olhei JaclliU. for a. lull-time staff. I'
. ~ of that building would mUn..· ·expamion of the police head·
quarters, as well. Vacated Ore depart-
m<J)t.~\llfl<~could bo·coovutod ID bad-' . .. •
' ,
Council Studies
Bond Vote ·Plans
Proposals to set a bond election to eeek
perhaps $1'.2 niillion'to ~ver a~bre.dtlrof
San Clemente city recreatiOQ pro;ects are
expeCted to re~ch the fonn~l.tiaie before
city ·couilcllmen Wednesday.
Armed with data gathered in two re-
cent study aessiom,. ~lrhen wlD ex·
amine the amount oi the bond propolll, a
possible election date and thO lill ol ri _ecta: to roverei 'by ~-,U;rVf,fw,
·lift two-thlidl """'°' ·The propoafd new comJD1u.a'Jt7
clu-woukl ·be ·ot .. !be· top ol tho
pciol'lty liBt with an esthnaild..CCJ1t ._l'lft"1
Ing up ID !400,000. •
A new munlelpal.~I/pilfks, a 'recrea ..
llon program and. J>&!ting ficlllilili alao
mlgM be Included In the bcxid propoei>l.
. J[ the .election ,were to . suceeed., 'the
citY'i enUre parks .apct recre_alion pictu(e w~d be com~lete (or several year1.
'The council, however, also has ·pen.
dered the effects of · clwnping several
projects Into one vote -a plan which
S(>meUmes hurts pasaage of .bbnd Rues
because a voter could cast ' a nelative
vote because he does not· fi:YOI>' a specific
item.
Councilmep also ha.ve-. rtl a·p,p e d
preliminary contingency plans in CaJei an
election sboUJd fail. ·
If tbe·mea.sure were .to win· more than ·
a 1iiJlipte majority, but lels,than -a le&il:
two-thirds passage, .aeveral. ~ilmen
have hiilted they wOuld fa'vor raising "the
recreation 'tax tale to pay .for· at least the
clubhoUse project. · · . ' ·
·Working drawlngS-on! the. replaceinent·
tltthe fire-ravaged community landmark_
will be finished by mid-January by San
Cltn:iente Building Designer E r l c
Boud>er. That plan Involves use or one restorable
portion of the existing Spanish building
and blending with a new auditorium, art
gallery, meeUng rooms and a c e n t r a 1
kitchen.
Two aspects which have yet to be'COm-
c ... ,
Weat1ter
There's a · 80 peicent chance .'
~ you'll nned your umbrella on Wed-
; ne!iday. Temperatures will tumble
1 too, dipping into the low sixties '
1 along the Orange Coast.
: INSWE TODAY
llow dot1 your .annual f~
-1 come fit inW tl1e nattonQl 1ca~r
Sylvia Porter ho.s aU the aniwerr
on Fina11ce Page 10 toda~. •
O.ly 9 .,.,.
TI•
CHRISTMAS
C•M'9ntffl ' -• (lie(~"" v. ' .... ,.,.... ,.
c"'tlfltf 1•M ·--•• Cllftlcl • .. _._ .. -• ,.,,...,..,.. .. °""' ... lk" .. -,~, . -.. IMO,_...... l .. lt
•fl!Wlel ''" • ·-• ................. • --• ...... 1•11 ·-• ~ .. ,. .. _ .... .. ,. .._. ..... , .. ,.
""'""• ' --..
Mlf'rlnl Lkt11M• 11
•
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' ..
$·tµ;te Eyes . '
Waste Water . . .
Jtegulation .. ' . ' : . . .
. A , policy ID rqulate -dildlarf!., of
tl)ermal waste -IOdUllrlal eoottng wat.r
-wJll be .,.,.lderecf at a public bearing
Wedneeday. in Sacramemo before the
Stote Water Reoourca C<lotrol Board.
·Kerry W. M"ulltian. cbalrman, lllid,
''thehnal -WUteil .are potmtl:atly damag·
Ing to our fttei's and the State Board
niu~' 8ct DOW' to ensure that no future
pr9blefns will· arlee,"'
n,e; .mQ."jor portion of thehnat waste is
eontDIDuted . by electrical po·w er
gei\eraUng plants, Mulligan s a I d •
•'Estimates Indicate California'• demand
for electrical pOWer will quadrUple in the
next 20 years."
"This will require the ea:pansk>n of ex·
lsting power plants and the lru:taUatlon of
new ones. 'I1le board intends to make
sure the increased waste load will not
callie a threat to the environment," he
added.
'Ibo piopooed policy, would regulate
discbara:es into coastal and Interstate
waters of cooling and industrial proce91
water which ii used to transport waste
boal
lloaring noticH hav> --to· Pacific Gas and ElectHc CO., Southern
Caltfornia· Edllon O:t," Loi Angeles
o.partment of Water arid "Power, San
Dteao Ga'and Electric Co., and to·sctcn-
tisto • and marlbe blologl>ll w I t h.
lmpwledge ol thermal pollution, Mulllgon
sai4·····~ . 'Ibo ·hearing Is , set for 1:30 p.m.
Wedpelday In !be auditorium oi the
Reaources BUiiding, 1411 Nlnth St.1 Sacramento.
SChool Concert
Slated Tonight
· g.,; Clemente High Schoo1's music
department ,. will pre1a1t Us amual
ChriatmM ...-t lonilht II I o'clock in ·
Trtloo eptter •
'Ibo -band wtll -the pro-gram wtih two ..iecticlns, followed by the
mind c!lorua and midrtpl •tncen.
'Ibo sd>ool's .n:i...\rl arid choir will
perform 'topther for the first time In
toQtgbt's·a>ncptt.
'the "pabbC ii wtICome tree of cbarae.
ty 'needed detentton areas. ind office
space for the cramped police department.
In another fire department-related .
matter Wednesday counclhnen will of-
ficially receive a critical letter from a
neighbor o{ the Ralph Armstroog family
which lost its $45,000 home recently in
one of the city's worst residential fires.
Mrs. Joseph .E. Hall of 1S011 ~s. Ola
Vista. bas asked for ,an explanation. of
three blazes which 'f"Pted tbroilgh the
night at the Armstrong home.
Praising the city's volunteers highly,
Mrs. Hall nonetheless ub if the existing
department bas •any paid. personnel who
could,be stationed at a fire scene to make
sure blazes do not rekindle tbemsielves.
"We who live In the area are qWie con-
cerned," she said, "lhat the fire was ap.
parently left .unattended bef.ore, it wu
totalij' put.(KJt."
In other items on Wemdesay's packed
agenda coµncllmen will consider: .
-A letter from Christopher Broughton
of 3:1> Calle, Santa Margarita ·asking that
the city provkle·two large trlsh bins for
' the deposit of newspa,pers, glass and
other items capable of Undergoing recycl-
ing, One bin he suggested, would be used
'for bundles 'of paper; the other for
. '
--gtW, Fundt col!«ted irom .sa1e of the bulk items could cover the cit)"•
coat In !be pro~ he aakl. · ,
-A report from Carr on pre;~. ·to
set up a s~ im~t diltrid on
several thci.roughfllrel. io· the' citJ'l':ilt-
dustrlal dl!tricl lmpl'Oft!bent U. ....,
~mplated for Call Valle, lndmtrtu,
Navano, t.s Vegas and.Los M~.-
-lnformAtlon on the po11lblt Ille of
the old city hall and city maintenance
yard Number One alo'ng El clmino.Real.
-Plans and and . ~ 4'-te ·for-. the
dedication of the city'• new, $2.8-rptllion
water reclamaUon plant. The date. bu . -. .
not yet boon Ml IM<•• dlJ -were awattinc an IDIWll'fnm Pr11ll 1t
Ntxoo. who bu been illft1ocl ID dedlcoto
the nonpolluttq lociltty.
. c-Proposala ID oet on Uln .cilY·
lpomored cleao-ap -k brtmClllc to two
.. ch .year the -•-ot ....,_ tn.
voiving eztra rubblab plckupo and op-
pointmenil ID c:olJect ballcy, c:utoll
items.
-The decloratton u -of GI parking meten tenlO'Nd _.lier WI JUI'
in the city's commerdaJ dWrict.. The
meter heads currently 11'1' beiDC stored in.
!be city lofta.
•• an a1n
Explosion
Blows Hole
In Roof
From Win Smrice1
ISLA VISTA - A tossed bomb bin 1
hole In the roof of • Bank " -brance. here j\londay nllbt, showerlq
the 1treet with masonry tilu and .tn-
fiaming emotlona ol street people and
• li.wmen again.
N1> .aedous .damqe wap ~.1 bat
the blast caused by an unidenUfled device
left a hole several feet arrou in the Over~ ., ... "!be~ r · Acr....iofu<;~-
and other young people living in lhe·l!llll>-
;; corporated . ....,munlty ~ aborllf'•
deputtto wbo orrfyed Cl! !be ..... -
whoopl and jeen.
1locb and bottlm ~re thrown -cae
deputy was bit tn !be hip but not IDjured
~ whllo authorlll., credited calmer
young people with holping keoi'"ordor In
the midst of 'mutual tenalon.
The bank -l}'Jnbolic of !be capita~
power structure to radicals -· wu rebuilt
on the ieene o( one burned last Feb. 2S
during a clash thaf touched off a teries
of incidents.
Business C011Unued u usual today~bul
that Is all Bank of Amorlca olliclala
woul~ say about" the newest ailaull en
!be building.
Library .Windows Asked··,.
No-Incidents had been reported and the
community W81 qu!.;,, 1!P WIW the blall,
possibly orgaoiled by . five penons
witneases ·~ported seeing on the scene
moments earlier.
The Isla Vista flareups of ilst apring
ended with more than 100 penons jailed
and one student ~ teying to pre1e1 ve
order and calm others clamoring for
violence -ahot to. death.
Sadilleback T ell,s Architects to Revise Exterior
By GEORGE LlliDAL
04 "" OlllJ' ~1111 lllH Situated bl the rqillng hills of the
Mission Viejo campus wHh potential for a
27lklegree view,the Saddleback College
library will be windowless.
TrwJtees Monday night instructed the
architE!cts~ Ramberg and Lowery of San-
ta Ana, to revise the exterior plans,
remo*1g the second and tblrd floor win-
dows.
11le Ubiary, the first permanent struc-
ture planned for the Mis.lion Viejo cam-
pus, ii estimated at $3.7 .million and is
~ t,o go ID bid next March.
President Fred H. Bremer, £aid, 11Frofu.~ah ~ viewpoint I feel a
certatn amount of windows are desirable,
evp ' il,'a UJnrj. oth~ile Ule building
woWd have Va prilon I~ appearance."
~rd Presi(leni Hani w: Vogel of San-
ta Ana argued against windows in the
library on two grounds, maifttenance and
inwrance coats for po!!Jible breakage.
"A nbrary is a learning cente r with a
function to perform," •Vogel 11aid, "and
tliat function Is best performed If there
are· no diJtractions. A• student should be
able to escape completely from reality.
"A fortc'ess without wlodows is the
ldeal· environmellt for library study since
when you go to the library you are trying
ID reach the deplhl of your own mind."
Vot1d fia:1her argued that the uvtnp
of maintenance and insUranc< that mlght
be Jirojected for a wlndowieu library
COllld be appll<d: tn Otd11t the building
with more equipment.
Robert Lowory of the archiloctural
firm notod 1nm.., had alreedy ap.
pmtd the lnlorlor fioor pi8IJI for the
library wti1cft will inl~IJy h 0 U S e
daarooma that later will be coo1'd1ed ID
library opace .
Noting the w!hetlc value of wtndow1
·~ause h\tman beings like to know
what's 1oln1 oo "'illde even U they only
see a patch or sky or clouds," Lowery
suggested library stacks wbuld not re-
quire uae of outside walls. The plan sul>-
mitted tO trustees included slanted high
windows on the ~cond and Uiird floors.
Alyn M. BraMon, truStee from· Santa
Ana, concurrtd with the break.age argu-
ment against the windows and added,
"I'm opposed to high windows, they are
Survey Looming
On Sign Code
In, San Clemente
A • sJx-member committee w i t b
members from the San Clemente' Plan-
nlng Commission, City Council and
Chamber , oC Commet;ce . will hold an in-
Jtlal meeting soon' to launch a survey of
th e existing city code covering' signs awl
olher advertising In the city. '
The committee's ranks became com-
p\ele recently with the naming of
chamber members Bob Kutcher aod Ray
Campbell ID the study panel.
PlaMlng Commissioners Art Holmes
and . Ed Lesneski. and Councilmen 1,..Clif.f:
Myerr and Tom O'Keefe aleo ·will serve .
on lhe panel. '
hardly ever washed, 8nyway."
The slant of the windows, Lowery said,
was to discourage br'eakage 'by rock
throwing. Brannon· rountered, that with
the slant "they'll just collect more dirt."
Resportding to a question by ·John If.
Lund, Laguna Beach trustee, LOwery
noted .there would be JIU!e difference in
construcUon cost of the library with Of
without windows. •
Vogel said Jt, w.as not the constnictiO!l ·
cost that. con~ him, but said "from
a mecurlty standpoint I would question
high windows and would favor solid
wa its."
Security incauUons clllicl for by
tr..i... at on earlier mmtng, LoW.ry
.. kl, had alreedy been Included In the
library plan. .
"We cut out lhe 1econd floor outdoor
·re'ading balcontes," he tald, "in order to
eliminate the chance students will throw
books down from them to other students,
as you sugges~." ·
The pre.sent plan requlns students to
check out books before going outside to ,
outdoor,. ~nd level terraces, Lowery
said.
Features ol the plan acceptable to
trustees were the beige, sandb~ ~
crete .. ~ that requtm no palnttnc.
"I shookt note that I hive no recom-
mendation about what you could do if a
student deckled ID spray paint ao : In,.
scripUon on this surface,'' Lowery s&kt.
"But Ihm wllf be COOliderabte main-
tenance savings If It l;s never painted.",
Vogef ,.Id he hoped that such ddoctng
tactics would not occur. 1
Lower portions of the faaode wtll be '
done In .adobe brick and an lmi;t"9n
quarry tile made of concrete wil111Utface •
W> Iii policies on sign height and alu. • patios. • '
The p"'t several. app~catlons for .., :Vogel noted he hod tiled new llbroii,.
varlrnees to algn regWations tor.freeway at· Cal State, Fullerton, UC lrvl~ and -.
Goals of the sWdy have .not yet been
detailed, b1,1t the group la expeded to
scan the codes for i.Dconalstencies and
reevaluation of rulea ·governing sign
hell!ht style .and size. Tile ctty In recent monlhl had firmed
oriented coverage had been SOWktly tW'n-UCLA and .found all were .built wtthout
ed down by COUllCilnjen and planners. wliidOWI.. ''ThcOe aren't old llbrlriel.
·~·
•
Investigators aaJd several small flra
were !let in trash bins around the area.
where residents said the bank ~aat could
be felt two blocks'away, but were quk:ily
extinguiihed. .
A crowd estimated at 600 gathered on
the scene.
Spencer Kids
Want Mother
For Christtnas .
The Davia Spencer cblldren e I
CaplstranO Beach ~ may have •1
merry Christmas liftor all.
The.ir mother -under inteullve care
for a week after an 8utO acddent in tbe
storm Nov. •-ii recovering rapidly. 1 Fears of brain damage were not·
substantiated by electroen1;ephllompba
takon Sunday, family momben salil,1"1!11
Mrs. Spencer, who alio nU'ered •' brokeaf
toe and llel'lous leg bnlila, ii apecltd lo
return from the hospital next weet.
Mrs. Spencer wa1 injured when she lolt
control of her car In the raln, cruhed in-
to a center div~. Sbe then was struck
by another ·auto-a llhe lltompted ID n ..
the. roadway.
Her chlldron: Olvey, 12; Stuart,, II:
Philip, 10 and Shelly, I: jllat wont tbeft,
mother for Cbriltmu. I
Their father, Dam Spenc:or; manaaec1
!be household ...... -for ....... then capitulated ID lint h"il mother-in-la..-
Mr3. Margan! Poton, tut -tend.
then his mother, Mn. Dlvil Sponcer Sr,
this week.
Tbe inJured -·Libby si>a-. llu
had .a llrln~ of mlsfortunM .ln reconl
:::: el i!. ~ ~ ~s:::;t
Dona Point -plUI bor auto occtdenL
Libby Speocor full wonta a cbanp of
luck for Cllrtllmu •
'
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I
5t '-· -15, 1970
, • DAILY ,ILOT ...., ,.._
YllLDING IUOHT.0~-WAY
Rood comm1111..,., Kodl
Road Official
Al S. Koch
Resigns Post
0t1n1• County Rold commJaloner Al
S. Koch today r.,ilned hll pool, ellecttv•
April 5, 1171.
Koch lul• been with Orance County for
25 years and has held the position of road
commissioner since Aug. 1, 19!15, mort:
than 15 years.
In accepiln& Koch'• rt1.lpUon with
regret, member• of the Board ol
Supervisors praised him for his oon·
tributions to the county.
Supervllor Wllllam l!irlttn pointed Jn
the "hl(hly llllCCOllM" arterial hJlbway1
fmanclnl procram, a Joint COW1ty-city
projtet origiJlated by Koch.
11Je retiring road comminioner was
asked by Supervlaor Dav1d Baker to
prepare a report "on the poaible con-
JO!idation of all en&ll*rlnl ttepartmenta
in the county as a money saving move."
Biker said he was lhlnkinl of roads, nooc1 control. bulldln1 and 1at•ty and
harbor en11neer1 11 a1mplet o f
deparlmtnta which mllht be COlllOltdated
iinder one COW1ty ...in.er.
Koch wu alao praiiea· for hll ywa of
'""k which led Jn the approval of an
Orang• County Transit IMllric:I which
WU approved by the vcter1 lut Nov. 3,
Meters for Sale
In San Cleme11te
' San Cloalute'• -dltlrlc:I park· lnl ...wn wbich wtOt on the bllludJn(
bloclc u rller 11111 yu r -are dutlned
for the auction blow.
City Councilmen wlll bear a ncom-
rnendaUon Wtdnelday from CI t y
Manqer K•n Cm that the 411 matars
eliminated from bullneu ana 1ti0tta un-
der a 1U..,..1ful uperllnent ohould -
be sold a1 1urp!U1. .
SJnct their nmoval WI April the
mttars havt -sJnrad In dty toltl. Metartd parkJnl WU rtpla<td by two.
hour·Umlt zones which have worked well
in contn>llln& parkln&. offiClala lllld and
alao have h<tped the ar<a'1 small
bualene11 owners.
The clty'1 rtere1t!on aru meten,
llowevtr, are not ellec:led by the porklns chanl••·
First Beer, Now Gls
Will Get Own Rugs
W ASlilNGTON (UPI) -'l1le Army
!Jrivate hu been atvtn the npt Jn drink
beer in the barrackl. SOon ht will b1vt a rus of h11 own and he wlll be able Jn
chcme beige, rose or gree11
DAILY PILOT
N..,.., ..... N--
i..t'M ..... ........ ,...,
c:.tti M"• S. Cls:e1 ...
OlAH~I co.t.$T PoU•L.lSMINO C0M'Nl't
Wollert N. W•N ,,.~, .,.. ""'..,..
J•c.k l. .C111rl•Y Viet P._lMlll •A 0-11 MllllllW
11itffl•• Ktrtll .....
J1I01'1111A! M~H _,._
IJ1h1t4 P. H1I ..,.,. o.r...... (Nlly llltlr -Cltfl M•1 Sii W.I MY.,,_
,...,.,, ....,., un ""'*':.,.. ........ ,. • = lltfffl: -,......,. ..... leltR: T"1J I M(lrl ... ....,. ... ... C*Wlll: aM N9rtll II CllNM ... ,
'Devil Cult' Sanity Trial Begin .~
Suspect Says Mrs. Brown's 'Godliness' Disturbed Him
I r TON aAllLIY ..... , .......
What Sttvtn Crsli Hurd described Jn
his peychialril& aJ Mrs. Florenoe. 8rown'1
"qUt<rillneu and 1old!Ma" and wlult he
belie.eel wu her "dero11tory a&tltude"
towards him may well have cost the
Misalon ViejO teacher her U!e, it was
alltced tn ttstlmooy to4ay Jn Orlnl•
c..nty superior Court. Dr. John A. Guldo openad the sanity
trial of Iha llCClllld :IQ.year.old transient
by tetltng: deteme auomey Willlam Gam-
ble that Hurd Jnld him that be stashed
Mn. Brown in the neck: "to warn her"
thl.t be would not tolerate her superiorl·
ty.
Hurd could not recall th• actual killing
of Mra. Brown, Guido testified but he
could rteall "1tabbtna her once or twice.
1ben be remembers that be drove a.round
Santa Ana wtth "her body -sort of Uke
.they did thinp In Vietnam, he told me."
Hurd 11 accuaed of being the ringleader
of a group of drifters who police claim
ptilled Mrr. Brown, 31, of El Toro, from
her car lut June 2 11 ehe left the Sin
Diego Freeway at the Sand Canyon off.
ramp.
Police allege that the woman wu
mutilated and subjected to a series of
devil wonhiping rites b e for e she was
finally killed in an Irvine orMl&e grove.
Gamble told the court today that one of
thole rites involved the eating of her
beart by Hurd.
Mrs. Brown was buried In a aha11ow
I r av e off the Ortega Highway. Her
di,fmerpbered body was found June 15.
Guido ii one af five psychiatrists who
e'lamined Hurd in Orange County Jail. It
ls expected that at least two more
psychiatrists will follow him to he
witneu stand in Judie Reibert L.
Corfman's courtroom.
Judie Corflllan wlll rule alter bearlnf
countar ArlW'\tnla from Chit! Deputy
Dtatrlct Attorney James Enrlihl U Hurd
is ,... and corn1'9tanl Jn stand trial.
Guido'• written optnlcm waa that Hurd
"u lnaane al the time of !ht Brown klll·
i"J."our otber Pl)'chtatrllts have ruled the
lon1·ha~od dlfandanl Jn be llne but au
c!Oubl hta ablllty lo aid counatl In hll
dafanM.
Hurd, manacled band and foot, ap-
Capo Council
Votes to Oppose
Canyon Jetport
San Juan cap11trano'1 City Council, rtlJIOlldlnl Jn ptellure ttOm Ill dt!Jena
Jn tab a stand on the propoatd Boll can-
yon jetport, votad Monday lo •-the pltn.
C<lundlman Jim Thorpe, Joah G11n·
mtll, and M1yor Tony torslA!r voted Jn
-a rt1oluUon oppoaln& the S.U Can· yon 1lta on te around> that It would de-
stroy public and prlvatt ltnd: add lo
already beavy air polluUon cauaed by
lllllliarY alr!'ralt, and lulve a major •f·
feet on the city which waa not evtft con-
sulted concernJnl !ht Ult ol 111 UltllU11.
The U... !>OWICll mambers aloo 11re11-
•d that a rertonaJ air 1tudy. beln& done
by !ht Soulhtm CalUornla AooclaUon of
Govtrnmanta, bas not Y•t bean com·
pleted.
"I juat don't lhlnl< 11 would MM> !ht
belt 1ntereltl af San Juan Capiltrano,"
said Oammtll. "I thtnk a jttport would
make the city bigger but not necewrlly
better."
Initially vating against the resolution
were Councilmen Ed Chermak and Bill
Bathgate who 1tated they didn't have
eno111h lnfarmaUon. 'nley later changed
their stands to make the resolution
wianimous.
The city's plaMing c a m m I s s i o n
recently indielted their oppo1!Uon to the
jetport site and had ur1ed the council to
da the same. The council had postponed a
decision then to give them tlme to attend
the Dec. 7 public hurtn& Jn Mlulon Vie-
jo.
Act to Restore Calm
By Ualted Pre11 lilt.enaUoul
Government officials ed P1lutlnlan
guertill•s began dlsarmlni t h e I r
paramilitary foret1 today in, a major
move to reatore pe1ce ta Jordan.
,;."4 Jn bavo no rUI llitomt In lhll _,., proclodlnp and 1ketdliod •bat
appe.ared to be 1.odil.c rl&rus wblle Garn·
ble ar1ued in his defenae. His only con-
tact with his lawyer was to ask: Gamble
on several oceasloos for a cigarette.
Tbe psychiatrist's daub ts were ap.
pare.nlly railed by . a series of can·
versaUofll in which Hurd commented
that he llkod Jn drink six cupe of blood a
day, acknowltdjed the dtvtl 11 hb
father, believed in the lnvincibllity at
Satanic worship and the inevitable rein.
c1rn1tion af the evil daer.
Guido testified Hurd recalled durin& his
interview that he was a member af a
&f'OUP which drove into a Santa Ana
""1ct sta\lon • 1"' night of Junt t -
·the aama n!lht of a tlO robbery and th•
hatchet kllllnl of attendant Jerry Wayne
Cartin, %L
"Al•ln." Guido 11Jd. ''Hurd believed
that someone was behaving ln a
derogatory manner towarda him." The
peyohlatrlst tesUfled that ·Hurd Jnld him
he gave orders for the killing of Carlin
after htarlnl -call bJm "a tramp."
Guido's test.ltnony indicated that the ax
used to make Cartin unrecognlr.able was
taken from Hurd's car and the defendant
appareoUy indicated. to Guido that he had
been c&rrylD& the weapon araund for
aome Ume.
Guido testified that Hurd had a Iona
history of narcotica add.lclitn and 1
particuJar fondness far heroin. His &Urch
for drugs and the money to purdi.,.
them led Hurd into several eocounter•
with the law before the kUllngs of Mr1.
Brawn and Carlin, the psycblatrlst's
report indicates.
Hurd is oae af three youtha lnd!cted by
th• Oranse County, Grand Jury lor the
kruJngg Of Mrs. Brnw11 Ind Car!Jn.
Separate jW")' tria!s have been achedul·
ed for his co-defendants. One other defen·
dant, Arthur Craig·"Moose" Hube, 16, of
Garden Grt)Ye fleet trial for th!. klllina: of
Carlin and being an acceasory to the
murder of Mh. Brown.
·Hughes Aide Saw Sig~ing
LAS VEGAS, Ntv. (UPI) - A perJOnal
aide al Howard Hughes, who claims he
has seen the mystery billionaire almost
daily for the past five yean. 11ys he saw
the industrialist sign a document firing
tbe bead of bis Nevada operltk>ns.
However, a handwriting e1pe:rt and
former associate af Rabert Mlheu,
Huabes' Nevada chitf, c1aima the
1llJ'l1lure on the letter af dlamlual IJ 1
fargery.
Both men testified Manday in the
Nevada District Court hearing stemmin g
from tht attempted OUIUng of Maheu by
executives af Hughes Tool Co., the
Houaton-based parent firm of the
billionaire's slant bUllness empire.
Ralph Bradford, now retired but
privioualy a handwriting and Ungerprint
expert far 28 years on the Lang Beach
Police Department, testiUed 1t the hear·
in~ today that Hughes' aign1ture wu 11-
nwne.
Bradford alao aaid he was satisfied that
a three-page handwritten letttr urging
the executive• of the tool company to get
ahead with the job of firing Maheu "'as
also written by Hughes. ·
Soldier Says
Capt. Medina
S hot Woman
Consulting Firm Hired
By Saddleback College
Levar B. Myler, who identified himselt
as a "special assistant" to Hughes. said
Hughes signed a proxy Nov. 14 firing
Maheu, who has been the billionaire's No.
J man in Nevada for the past faur years.
Myler .said the signing took place in the
ninth floor penthouse maintained by
Hughes in the Desert Inn Hotel in Las
Vegas. The witness also testified Hughes
subsequently went to the Britannia Beach
Hot.el in Nusau, the Bahamu, and from
there i!sued lnstructioos lhe prozy be
released.
F'T. BENNING, Ga . (UPI ) -A soldier
who served at My Lai testified today the
company commander ,had canducted I D
''inflammatory" meeting the night before
the strike, had ordered the villa1e
destroyed. and had personalty killed a
woman piclting rice.
The testimony concerning the com·
minder. Capt. Ernest L. Medina, wa!I
elven al the coort·martial In which mie <l(
his platoon leaders, Lt. William L. Calley
Jr.. Is charged with murdering 102
civilians during the mission.
Mtellnl In executlv• Miiion !rultata of
the Saddleback Community Coll•I•
Dlstrld Monday nl&ht approved a 11,200
Jn 11,200 f., and htrln& or a COlllU!tant
firm Jn help !ht dt1ttlct with purchaau of
computer equipment.
President Fred ' H. Bremer Aid the
cioeed door ltllion WU Jn kffpln& with
provlttona of !ht education code allowlnl
the board to meet privately when
dllcuaalnl perlOMet.
Tb• member of the firm of !lorr!J and
Gotllrled Inc. of Loa Anaeles "wbo wlll
1pearllead the on<ampua IW'Vey 1a a
Failing Bridges
Highlight Tes.ts
In San Clemente
Tb• brldse1 wlll crumble and fall 11
San Cl•m•nte Htab Scbool Jnntat>t.
Scores of bal11 woad spen1, built ln an
annual conte1t by 1tudents, will be tetted
to their bttaklna point Jn !ht campua Lit·
tle Theater 1n what promllt1 to be bour1
.of auapenae atarttna et 7 p.m.
The campetltlon will be touah. becauae
al the third IMUll entry Jim Kelly,
whaae tW<M!Unce creatlan 11at year bare
more than 400 pound& af welabt befare
abatttriq:. Kelly baa wan the contest tbe
p1st two years.
The wlnnen this yell' will share cash
awarda parceled out from fees don1ted
by each bridge builder.
Professional design engineers using
special equipment will squa1b tbe entries
and mtaslU'e the wei&bt borne by e1cb
span.
The me11urement stops and is record·
ed at tbe first sign of collapse.
The project is the brain child of math
teacher Alan Pierce and Physics in·
structor Don Scbwenn.
Both instructars supervise the progr1m
whicb his strict rules an materials, but
none at all on construction techniques
and deslan.
Balsa wood strips lnea!W'ina three-
thlrty·seconda of an Inch in the croas sec·
tion are the anly material used -save
for comman airplane cement.
The competition is so ketn. that the
iecrets Of the previous year's wlnnera
are hoarded.
Sch\venn and Pierct lock up the win·
ning entries so students wao't "harraw''
lhe wlnninj: ideas.
reatdtnt of the dltlrlc:I," Dr. B"'mer
II.Id. "Since the board w11 d1acusain& an
lndlvidual, e1ecutlve aeaslon w a 1
nect111ry."
Bremer noted that 1 Jame1 Anderson
of Mlulon Viejo It the m<mber of the
firm who wUl le.ad the evaluation of
dlatrlct need> for computtn.
Tbe consulting firm'• f .. of l!,200 to
$8,200 would be paid Jn !ht flnn which
employ• AnderlOll, Bremer said.
The contract presenUy provldea no date
for ccimpleUon af the study, but the
flrm'a_olfer to do the work 11 valid "only
through Dec 31," Bremer aald.
Anderson contacted the superintendent
followin& a board meetln& at which
tnutees aaJd they needed lnfarmaUon on
the types of c:omputera deairable f o r
d!ltrlCf we.
Bremer aald the. c.omputer1 chalen Wtll
aerve boLh admlniltraUve and in·
lllrUCllonal purposts.
Saddleback OKs
Use Policy
Saddleback Community Coll•&• Dlttrlct
lrultata Monday ntlht approved a policy
on publlc use of diatrtct buildings and
around& requltlna appllcaUon 30 d1y1
prior Jn Ult and requlrJnl board approval
al a aroup's request.
"The public uae of around& ls limited lo
thoae recreaUonal activities which will
not cause damage to the property of the
district." the policy states.
Amang prohibited "activities" are "use
of aoll bllla and clubs, flrina of weapons,
driving vehicles off the roadway cmto the
grounds. and bringing dogs or other pets
onta the grounds."
The policy &rants the superinlendent
the power to approve i.Ddiv idual use re-
quests of bllild1na1 or grounda.
Earlier In the day. Charles AppeJ Jr .. a
former FBI agent with Msheu, testified
an behalf of Maheu that Hughe.s'
purported signature on the dccument
presented by tbe Hughes Tool ca. was a
''simulation ar imitation."
"It's a very good representation,'' Ap-
pel said. "It would pass any bank teller
and other buainess associates wauld IC·
cept It, but It's deficient. It'a utremely
sk.lllful but It's dlfferent."
Viejo High Seeks
Adult. Volunteers
To Aid Teachers
Mission Vieja High Schaol Is aeeklna
adult volunteers to begin an Instructional
aide program that has · been adopted by
the Tustin Union High School District.
Mrs. Ruth Mader, coordinator at 1tu.
dent wark experience at Mission, 1ald,
"aides will work under the direct super.
vision of teacher, counselors.,. clerical
staff and admini1tratars ln cfl1aroom1
or other locations."
"Our adult community has a wealth of
experience and enthusium to contribute
to the educaUonal program," she uld.
Volunteers will work on a regular
schedule in specific areas af instruction.
Asslanments may Include preparation of
teaching alda. setting up demanatr1Uons.
oper1tin& language 11baratories and
listening ctnter equipment, typing ar
r e pr o d u c I n g cl111room material.
assisting in libraries or helpin& studenta
with assignment.I when a one to one
ta1chlng bast& would be beneficial.
Anyone interested in volUtlteerin& time
to the project may call Mrs. Mader at the
s:hool, 837·7722.
THE PRICE IS RIGHT
(or is it?)
rwlichae\ A. Bernhardt. 24. of Tarpon
Springs, Fla., surveyor. wa s one of eight
wltneases called by lhe defense in tw&
days to say that Medina had left him with
the ~·m resslon ~at all inhebitants -in·
cludin "'omen and children -were to be
kille in the Vietnamese hamlet al My
Lsi March 16. 1968.
Three days after the aweep, be
tti:tified, Medina "gave an address ti) the
company'' in whlcb he u.ld an in·
vtstlgatlon was under way.
"He said he would advise us to be quiet
and he wauld back up anyo ne ii they got
in trouble ," Bernhardt said.
Bernhardt added that Medina 1ster toak
him a1Jde and said "that he personally
d.ldn 't feel It would do any good ll I made
a report lo my congressman or to the IG
(Inspector general) or anybody .else and
not to do It ."
Bernhardt's testimony fofibwed that cf
anatber farmer soldier at My Lai whet
said he fired into a group af 10 women.
and children in the village because be
had the Impression that Medina, n bis
brleflna, had ordered tbe killing of the in·
habitants.
Medina ls accused by the Army o1
ovttall responalblllty af the kllllna Of ".it
least 17S" civilians that da y. but na
formal char1e baa yet committed him ta
court·marUal.
Btrnh11dt testUJed that "Ca}'t. Med.in•
was very passionate" in lane at the brief4
ln& the ru1ht befare the assault : "He
said there were no lMocent clvi.Han1 in
the are& -if they were not combatants
they were involved in su}'port" of a Viet
cang unit.
During the operation, Bernhardt said,
he followed ,_.1edina moat of the day.
"At ane time there was a waman In &
rice field picking rice . ar making the mo-
tions of plckln& rice:' Bernhardt said.
"Capt . ~led.Ina fired at her and sbe fell,
He went over and fired a few more
rounds and killed her."
HAVE YOU EVER GONE INTO A STORE, AND BEFORE .A SALESMAN
APPROACHED YOU, TRIED TO DETERMINE PRICES ON GOODS NOT
MARKED?
Dann Hills High Funds
May Come From Bonds
MANY CARPIT STORES DO NOT HAVE PRICES INDICAilD ON
THllR SAMl'W. THE T H E 0 R Y IS THAT THIS WAY THEY CAN
CHARGE "WHAT THE TRAFlllC WILL IEAR."
Th• proposed Dana Hlllo Hiah Schoel
mlaht bt financed by local bond&, lnat11d
of a 1t1te lOIJl.
Tru!teet of the Capistrano Unified
school District voted Monday to authorl:e
the 11lt of the di1trlct'1 remalnln1
SU!0,000 In school bonds. bto1U1t of a
slltht loountna: or the maney market
Superlntandtnl Truman llendtct "Id II
tha bond> ar1 IO!d thty could be used to
build Dana HUia Hlab Scbool, which w11
Jn be f\ulcled from the 1tatt 1ehool
bulldln& llllld.
llonodlct lllld the bond& prob•bly did
nnt represent •nouah money to build the
enUrt tehool, but the project could be
wrlttan II> that a majority of !ht 1ehoel
could be c:on1trucled.
"It appears w.3're In a favorable p<111I·
lion Jn 1tll the botlda," llld Benedict.
'·Tb• cllmal6 ta tamporarlly f1vorabl•
within the 1•111 llmltaUOna authorlted by
the voteta.••
(
The dlttrld hid not sold them
prevlauely becaUH they carrltd an ltJ.
terest rite mulmum af 5 perctnt.
Hawever. Jae Wimer, DlreCWr of
AdmlnlttraUve Sen1et1, has canvaued
bond buyera and h11 found them wlllln1
to pick up achool bonds at thla time. He
told the board Lhat San Dle&o eold aome
recently at 4.3 perctnt.
Be.nedlct emphasized that !Ven If the
bonds are sold, he did n.,t ftel the
district's 1blli\y to acquire state buildtna:
loans would be Je1pordlzed. The ttate
uau1lly Joana anly to diatrlctt wbo are
bonded to CIPfCity and are unable to 1ell
their bonds.
The suptrlnttndent allO old If the con·
structloa of Dana HUia lllah School
proved unfe11lb)e for the amount of mon-
ey 1v11!1ble, ht mlaht recommend the
building of 1n Intermediate 1chool ror
ninth crader1, rellevln& Ult overcrowded
condiUona ti San Cl,_tt llllh School.
AT ALDIN'S PRICES ARE POSnD ON ALL 01' OUR SAMPLES SO
THAT CUSTOMERS CAN BROUSI THROUGH THE SELECTIONS AND
KNOW WHAT THE ARE LOOKING AT. TOO, THIRE IS ALWAYS THE
l'OUlllUTY OF A L 0 WE R PRICE IF CONDmONS WARRANT.
ALDEN'S
.--.. -NT-•• -.... -0-.. -•• -.-. CARPETS e DRAPES
T\1$TIN C.tt •••
11D ~~r~."" 1663 l'lac•ntla Ave.
11174 ~,!!!~~ c.111. COSTA MISA
.,..,... 646-4131
HOU O : Mon. Thru Thurs., 9 to 5:30 -,,1., 9 to 9 -Sat., 9:30 to !
I •
_,
I
TUESDAY
DECtMl£R 15
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HuJh Grilllltt. StQfJ' follows tllt
kw•·lilltd tr1il of • Cfrtfree 18th·
eentuiy JOl!hl min llom Ill• tit·
11nt country tlonl1 tllrouati hi• 111·
counters 111 londo11. D !CMtc ....,..rvk1 (C) (60)
8 TM All• Sltow (t) (90) Schtd·
ul1d au•sb, 111 Eddi• Allllrt, Stub·
by K1y1, 0.111 RetSI, Doft White·
ll1td.
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D Sil O'Cllct Nwl1: (C) "The
t•rdtft ti [VII" {1dwtnlurl) '5'-
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lion Iii • d1S011t1 nioun11ln 1r11
Is bein1 ustd 101 sinistK purJlllltS. m Dftld fmt Sbew (C) (90)
Guests: L0tltt1 Lynn, Fri nk Min·
kit•icz, Slnd1 Biron. .le•ntttt
Kihn 1114 .lim RoblMOft, tlndtct
lowt ind Matt Alonio.
Ill°""" IC) (30)
fm I l6C14LI DlllCIS 11 SMCI
(30) (kl Tht Grnk H1tlon1I Fofk
D1nu Company petfOfms i11 lrt111t
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t :OO 8 TIM f111ftin (C) (60)
Ill flliNry $4uM (C} (30)
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th• UnUtd Shiu llftl to • COiii·
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"'1 to ttlt test. m Ttl• hMrt leport Ct) (30) D ""' (C) (JO) .Saxttr Wirt. mu. OWldta 1301 •.....,, .. _ (&O)
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9 (I) Tunday MOYil: (C) '1nfWI 8 lit 5 Nnl (C) (60)
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OJ Jut "' (C) l!Dl m HAL FISHMAN JOINS
7:3011 9 (j)1ntrtJ Hlll~Ullel (C)
(lD) The Hlllbilllt1 h11d for Cllrtll·
fl'llS In Hoohtvll11 ind I PQSl!blt
weddln1 for G11nr11 ind atorfflepi1
\
Sim Drucker.
Cl FUNNIEST TONIGHT!! ' * DON KNOTIS-GUESTS
RAYMOND BURR &
JIMMY DURANTE!
01?:'!1.n Klltb (C) (l!O)·Guuh
111 Jimmy Dtl111rrt1, Rtyinond !lwr
i nd Conni• Stmn1.
IJ lfYl'D (C) (30) "I.Jilt Port ol
Call." Louis Zorich 1114 Allai Spivak.
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hro11kattl locusinc: Oii Ille IY'Nltl
1Udin1 to the A!Mriclft RMlutio!li.
!'tier lhtino¥ alld [tic 5"'1r11d 111
th• eomm1mlten.
tll 1111 Jill• ..... (C) (30)
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D1vld NIYln, CJTil Ctlwk. Dodor 8 OJ R ... (C)
pttriotlutly Jtts lrom London ttl fD TMlb'I t: (C) .,,.,,.. (eollltd)')
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Frandsco Roell: 'At lllt F1mll1 @(])""' llHofl
Doi'.'' Th• Jtf111so11 Alrpl1nt, m 1..W. (C) (R)
Jtluslc Center
Youth Symphony
Well Presented
By TOM BARLEY
01 !Mo Otl" •UM lltll Concerts designed t() convert
many of our more music-con.
sclous youngsters into music
lovlng concertgoers became
the vogue under such gifted
communicators as the New
York Phtlharmonlc
Orchestra's Leonard Bernstein
but the happy trend never
caught on in any discernible
form in our part ot the world
-more ia the pity.
Jt may now, howev er. if the
premiere offering of the
··symphonies For 'i out h •'
series now being staJi!ed by the
1.m: A n g e I e s Philharmonic
Orchestra faithfully depicts
the standard aimed at by the
dedicated people responsible
for Its inauguration .
That concert Saturday
morning drew a near capacity
audience to the Los Angeles
Music Center and it was
hcartwannln$1 indeed to sec
the exceptionall y good
behavior and deep Interest of
so msny young {and some of
them were very young!) con-
certgoers. Our forebodings
that an all-Beethoven program
might prove a little too much
for some of the tots within
eyeshot proved groundless and
a.delightfully informal concert
got what should be a
worthwhile aeries off to a
flying start.
"Beethoven Is Almost 200
Years Younir'' was ()ur theme
and much ()f the music offered
by the orchestra under the
direction ()f associate eon·
ductcr Gerhard S a m u e I
faithfully stressed the youth
and freshness inherent in so
Fo1-ida Wins
Sour Apple
HOLLYWOOD (AP) -Jane
Fonda has "won" I he
Hollywood Woiiien's Press
Club Sour Apple award for
1970.
The club presents the award
annually to the person "M'ho in
ill opinion presents the worst
image (){ Hollywood l() the
world.
The club's more posi tive
awards went to J a m e s
Stewart, Robert Young and
Carol Burnett as stars of the
year. and Carrie Snodgress
and Flip Wilson as newcomers
of the year.
BALIOA
673-4048
OPIN
6:41
7" I . •elMa .. IMa hftlntule
ENDS TONIGHT
"Z" -~
&
"THE GRASSHOPPER"
STAITS WIDNISDAY
"STRAWBERRY
much of the great master's
work. And It's nice to be able
to let our y()ulb know In
such a pleasant manner how
music written by a man born
in 1770 Is ~ pertinent l() the
soul and conacitnce of 1910.
Youtih iUelf was weU served
with the performance of Gita
Karasilt, a brilliant young
pianist who rtcently w()n the
San Francisco Symphon y
Foundation Aw a rd and
deservedly ao if her rend ition
of the Piano Concerto No. 4
represented he.r form on that
occasion.
We got only the finale of thill
glittering work but It was
enough ti> show us that this
young lady has a bright future
before her in music.
Delightfully !Wkward and self·
conscious tn her approach to
the audience. she is guilty of
no such misdemeanor in her
approach to the piano.
We get from that piano what
Miss Karasik determines we
shall get and her force and
authority were very, very
good to see in one so young.
Beethoven 's stirring
"Egmont" overture, his ex·
quisitely gay and enchanting
"Three German Dances" end
that vital, insJ)iring first
movement of hi!: F I f t h
Symphony comprised I h e
balance of this extremely
entertaining and absorbing
program.
If it had a flaw it could be
found in the person of con-
ductor Samuel but not, we
huten to add, in that In·
dividual 's prowess with the
baton. He was flawleas
throughout this program and
left us with the determination
to see much more of his in-
teresting work on the podium.
Our comment woold be that
Mr. Samuel does not have an
easy rapport with the younger
members of his audience and
this, ~'e would think, is vital to
the conduct of such pr ograms.
Whatever some might have to
say, it is not easy to get down
to the level of children and
discuss matters ·musical as
they should be discussed in a
child 's world.
By all tneans. retain this
fine conductor for his splendid
direction of the orchestra. But
let someone with a gift for
communication with children
take over that department and
give, 0 through his narrallon,
the last Wuch ()f polisti.IP an
otherwise excellent iMovation.
lido
EXCLUSIVE
HaD OVER
NO ROOM TO RUN
NO PLACE TO HIDE , ,
Gr1tdu1 D11d and Sal'll.1111 per1011n
durln1 1n 111.nlthl 1ock party,
I!!) 10ftfll•tn1 Fll• (C) (30) 11,lO 8 Qt Cll ""' '"'"" <CJ "'*'· STATEMENT" ut14 (lllsts; Dr. Benjllfllft SpoQ, Fiimed in ~and MttoccQ
Cl) No a-. 111 i. Kombm (30) Pat BooM, John C.rr•din•, Tammy & 1111 AUO
Grimes and Brl•n B1dfo1d. "PASSIONS OF ANNA'' & "MEDIUM COOL''
o u CJJ m """'' c.n... CC> \~~~~~~~~;,;~~!!!!ll!!i!!!!!!!!!!!i!!!!!!'.\ GuNts scheduled .,, Ol'l'id frost,
1nd Roblrt K11ln. 1:001J a (JJ '""' Aerts (C) (30)
LIM Dou1l11 dlscov1rs tht Wom111's
libtr•lion Mov1m1nt.
IJ Vl11t11ll Cr1h1111 (C) (60) Gv••I•
0 Mom llM (C)
0 Ill ... """ (C)
art Colone! S1ndu1, Glenn Var· 12:00 0 Nn ll: "UllHretnr M11" (mys.
borou1h. Dom DeLulst, K111 B•I· t11y) '4t--G\trin ford, Nin• Fodl.
ltrd anll Asher Snider. Q!l ()) Dlcll emtt (Cl m To Ttlt lh• Tnrth (C) (lO)
El Full ,. l 111lnU111t11t
&I LI Co!ldftalot (30)
(C) ll:JO m All·Mlctit tllor. "'Sim lllil'. •
'1MJ lldiwl lidu .,.,... 1/111
"LU M111 ff fl.itt."
1:05 IJ!l Ulla Lill (55)
1:00 fJ NM'lt: "MJ Sh Ceft'l'leb" (dfl·
1:30 8 8 (I) Kt1 Kd (t) (60) m•) '52-M1rih11 TllomP901t.
Guts!J h1dud1 W1ylot1 .ltnnlnp, D D Nnn (C)
WEDN~SDAY
I
DAYTIME MOVIES
t:Oa 8 "nll wo .. 11 I• Niii"' (•4v•n·
tur1) '41-C.n:d I~•· fr1nchol
Tone. '"Wiid Hlt'ftll" (advlllf:ure)
·•7-A!in ltdd. lloJd No!tn. D .,.. r1t Ml•" <m>11•1Yl ·st
-Rod HudSOll, Cmmttt llelley.
t:JO L'J (C) "nit Liit CMrl"' (td'l'tll·
tvrt) 'M-TOl'IJ Ruastl.
CD (C) "Hunt• .r tfl• U11Uorn"
(dfllM) '6~toflt AndUIOll.
1:00 QI "Ollr MIR II Hm11a" (COl!ltdy)
'6o-Altt Qull1nw.
?:DO O (C) '1h Litt v.,.,. .. (drama)
'60-Rohtrt Stttll:, Dototl!J M1lo11t..
•:001J "Tiit Dellait. ~··r (Cdo •dJ) 'S7-.ltN'J Lnl1.
e JOB PRINTING
e PUBLICATIONS e NEWSPAPERS
Qu•ilty Printin9 •nd O•p•nd•bl• S,r.,ic•
for mora th•n • qu•rt•r of • cantury
PIL C1 T PRINlltJ(,
H11 WIST ULIOA IL'fD .. HIWPOIT IU.CM -1'42-4J21
MET1'0-00lDWVN-MAYER Pr1t1nt. '..
A s>.Ol'J of lcNe. Rimed i:rf David Lean
Ryans
~ R:lERTlrMTDLM ·~l«MMD
-,..---, ~..QES ~KL.S·
Sllrt"' h<l••l•1 l11""" s.t OrMtt er="I ~ ..... --Owillml0.,.0.-W U!E.I
HltMil9fl«IPlll.
SXCWSIV..El 1-~•
M'A'S'H' (R) !~
• • •
7111sday, DKtmbtr 1.S. 1~70 DAILY PILDT L
Uninvited Guests
Talk Shows Draw Trouble
Censor Out,
Had Enough
Sex Movies
By JERRY BUCK
NEW YORK (APl
Network concern ovu dlsrup.
lions 1nd uninvlttd guesLll on
late-night liilk shows h111
resulted In the p08tlng of extra
guards when controversial
guests are bookl!!d or when
trouble is suspected.
"You alway' have that fear
-that someone ls aolna to
jump onto the stage from the
audience," said one talk show
spokesman. Another said, "We
have to have guards. It takes
a lot of brtad tD stop t1ping or
cancel a show."
Every network talk show
LONDON (AP) -Britain's has had intcrTuptions or unin -
official film ctnsor is quitting viled guests. Two such events
because he's had enough oI has had interruption! or unin-
sex movies. vlted guests. Two such events
"I'm tired of the stuff weft in the past few weeks ii·
getting now ." Sir J 0 h n lustrate their concern.
Trevelyan told the Dally Opposing l a c t i o n s of
Sketch. "I've had enough of homosexuals threatened to
American, Germ 8 n , Scan· break up the Dick Cavett
dinavlan and Italian sex films. show the Friday after
"Sex is a marvelous human Thanksgiving. A leader of one
activity _ but merely 10 faction had been booked &s a
watch othe r people doing It is guest ()n the ABC sh()w and a
not my kind of entertainm'!nt. leader ()f another facti()n had
"I think people are sex mad. not been.
Perhaps they have bee 0 Members of the second
PORT THEATRE
673·'260 -CORONA DEL MAI -fOI ADULTS
ALSO PL.A TIN6
his best contacts
.ire in bed'
She's woman enough,
~ · are you man enough 7
ARLENE TIGER· VASSILI LAMBRINOS · ANORE LANDZAAT
IC."""'"" , "'"""' • .. PINl~SmN" IV\I MADRID / ROME· CINEMATION IMOUSTRIES Col~ bi DoLUxE ~.
·~. . .
deprived of lt." group threatened ii\ advance
Trevelyan, who al 67 has lo break up the show unless1-;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;,
twin sons aged 11, took over they too were heard . li
Britain's Board of F 11 m A compromise was reached
Censors IZ years ago. A at the last minute and both
former educator, ~ quickly sides were represented on the
won friends in the movie in· show. dustry with his liberal at· "We had no problems," said
titudes to such then-c<Jn.o a Cavett spokesman, "but we
trovcrslal pictures as "Room did have plenty of studio
at the Too" and "Saturday security and policemen were
Night and Sunday Morning.'' ()l'I call in the vicinity.'' On a talk show a few weeks
Trevelyan and his team 5ee ago a comedian walked onto
each picture proposed f()r the stqe and complained on
release in Britain and give it a camera that he couldn't get a
rating, ranging from U for booking on the show,
general exhibition to X, only Instead of having guard!!
for 18 year olds and above. llustle the m&n offstag e, and
Sometimes the censors order erasing It from the tape before
cuts. air time, the talk show host let
"Nowadays in parts of the the man give part of his com-
world a\m()St anything goes," edy r()utine. ft was the n pass·
said Trevelyan. ed ()ff as a planned !!lunt.
"Aldous Hus.Icy once defined All three network talk shows
an intellectual as somebody were interrupted by black jar.z
1ometimcs occasionally in-musicians who contended they
terested 4rl something other were being excluded from
than sex. There don't seem to television.
be many intellectuals in The Merv Griffin show was
Europe by the films I've seen disrupted in August when it
recentl y. Some of the stuff was sUll in New York . About
around London Is terrible. 40 black musicians and sup-
"But Jt's still not as bad as porters blew horns I n d
New Vorlt. t hope it never gets noisemakera . The taping was
like that -it's a jungle." hailed for the day and the
Trevelyan said he feared sex studio was cleared. Police
plcturis could destroy the were called In to stand by, but
movie indu.stry. we~ not geeded .
"If the mone y Is going Into In September the musicians
them there will not be better briefly interrupted the Cavett
film.!1 " he asserted. "There 11ho)¥. Leaders of the musi·
will be fewer better films clans met with ABC officials
made." and a booking on the show was
The censo r had been under arranged.
NATIONAL GENERAL THEATRES
LAST DAY
1111Uf--· iiiaii 11.ICY mn mITT "IT'S A MAD, i.roii;r DEl Slt.IWI MAD. MAD,
• CAWll Ml IUEllS MAP w-LD" _, lllC«£TT TEllY·TllOIAS 1111
ETHEL .-M .IOllATllAll WllITTIS
Theatre Closed Tuesday
WALT OISNE~'S
''WILD
CO ·UNTRY '' altack lately. Directer Roman The muiilcians also showed
Polanski castigates Trevelyan up at the "Tonight" show, but
for snipping 15 seconds from ne ver got into the studio. They
()ne of hill pictures, and he was did hold up the taping for 10
also criti cized for cu tting the minutes, then they met with
scene in "The Killing of Sister NBC officials. That meeting
George" in which one woman resulted in an appearance on
made love to anoth~r woman's the "Tonight" 11how &nd two
bare bosom. appearances on the "Today''
Trevelyan said he had ()ffers ahow, I~;=;;:;=;;:::::::;=;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~ to become a movie consultant.I-====== '=
and ''I want to write a...book
about my kind ()f work."
ond
Lucille Ball
"YOURS, MINE
AND OURS"
Starts Wednesday
llARBRA OMAR
Sffi£\SAND · SH.ARIF
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Aleo
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Si\Nli\ VITTORIA
'~ ..
IARGAIN MATINEE
Every Wednetday, 1 p.m.
A411ftt 11.M CWltitl 71f
"****~ITS ALL SO-FUNNY!"-• l~MTWtOI '-Nt•r11•0t!,.,,__
.. WIW MDonmtlllMGmliJ ..........
'LUS -l•11y Mut111t-S111v K111dtll l11"THE lllD WITH THI CIYSTAL PLUMAGE" IG'J
CALL 546°3102
EXCLUSlVE ORANGE COUNTY ENGAGEMENT ' ' w u s A ' 1!P1 PAUL NEWMAN end JOANNE WOOWARD
ANTHONY ,!RKINS
''' '0' ""_.. .. ,.. '"""'' "ZIG ZAG" Ill W•llKll I J.-J .. k.-1 hi 101'1
11th RECORD WIEK -EXCLUSIVE ENGAGEMENT
Elllatt
Gould
Dent Id
SUthtrland
••• ••• ~11\S ·ll .
"Rabbit, ran"
James r.aan ·Arl~nene Ccrner·Jock Albertson ,f.arrie~hur Hill -·-·,_,.~
J 111•11Hrl •t• ••••rt .... ,"•'" r•11 •!ft r. it.y .. h wff•
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18th Record WHk Elliott Gould, Don Sutherland
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2114 F111w,•: "THI OUT•OP..TOWNlll" cet HELEN HAYES
'reel MacMurray 'lnd HIT
I ~1 Nancy OIMn In he~ w1w '•
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HELD OVER!
3RD 118 HIT •• ,, .. _.. "llN& OF THE GRli71 IES" <G>
•
•
•
JO OAJLV PILOT SC
Your Money's Worth · · Complete-New 'YorlC Stock List OVER THE COUNTER How Doe s Your h1come l..,...1111 ................... M -.n1d• ... tv f ..... ,._ MAIO. ,,.. ... IM ..... ,... ........... _,..._ w Cllll I ba
Mii 1.-Net '&:.J .... L.-CS,. ca. 1ilililJ ._ UW Cllllil (Ill·
~ .. , 1• H ~ ....... + 14 ,., ..... i;r .• ,, ~ '"" ,, .... $flfl' U• l!M 11\11 + -,,_, M IW Slot U ~ ••
Rank on National Scale?
' 'V,""' 61 llV. ~-L~ =t1111 ~=II\·~ ,:("" .. r.4 m; + \• NASO Listings for Monday, December 1C, 1970 -A-~it171 3,. , tt.,.. i:t.ot ~ -; -
9ll1>, ... ..,,.. .................... ,=r. l 41
I• J.lh J~ :r = tz •,\I I; ,J 1i'6 1
"" ."+\a i~~ t'.-,11' •r ~ ll"' 11: = ~=
-
.... ~-.. YO•IC (A!"I~!!, "' 15 fl' fl'lMrtll 1\li '"" ~\.·.l~ ¥. 41~ ~.~ tt .. :t. u ~I w if»r 11: r-: ~ l ... ! t A! ti' 1-l! i1 IWi.t J: Ullo
1, '-"" ~ f~ ~ ... ,1 ,..," HI( ,': ,~=· 1
; ~ !!t ... -.i~ _,;: J n"" ii: ~=I! i=:r1:,, .. r ~ Jt~ lia ~t~ :.:.1" ~~:, 1.i! ~i ~~ t~ H:: ~ tH:~~;:r~~1i-I ~ itl ~~:.~ ut ~ •~~1'4! 1;i.,111:~~~1 1!. ~ \~~ v: ~m i·~ -~1(.u·'t. n: :iv.!~~~~ t ~g=·lf" IS •Ji nil: re ~11;
!y SYLVIA l'ORTER
llow does your inconie
r t1nk!
''ou are actually typic1l If
the income o( your household
members totals betw ee n
•to.ooo and $~,000. Nearly 2.1
milllOn -an astoundinl? 36.5
percent -have attained Utls
rank.
You are actually In the mit·
jorily or U.S. households if the
income of all members of your
household ex.ceeds $8,000. Out
or the 63 million households in
the U.S. today. more tMn 33
rnilllon -or 52.6 ~rctnt of
lhe total -are above WI in·
come level.
You are in •!l lncruslilgly
important minOrity If your
houaehold Income ls $15,000 or
more . Out of every six U.S.
bousehold3, tne ls In this
Penn Central Fiasco
Top Financial Stor y
lEdilor't note: The .aulhor borrow and al the same time
of the following is a partner Jn extremely d i l f I c u l t for
the Investment bond firm of I Salomon Brothers and is the tnargina venture enlerprises
author of several books on to borrow.
bonds and interest rates. This The effect of all this on our
al'ticle was written at the in· financial markets. was pro-
vitation of United Press found. During the first five
International) and one half months of the
By SIDNEY H,OMER year, bond prices had declined
NEW YORK (lJPI)'-What to new lows, at times precipi-
was the most important finan-tately. Most reached their low
clat news event in 1970 00 prices and peak yields alrriost
date? on the.(fay of lhe bankruptcy.
My answer is the Penn Cen-Ever since the bankruptcy,
tral receivership announced on prime bond prices have been
Sunday. June 21, but threaten--rising much of the time and
ed for a week or two earlier. lately they have been soaring
TUI importance stems not so so that yields are down sharp-
much from the huge losses in· Jy.
volved to holders ol the com-The effect or the bankruptcy
panys securities or from the on high-grade stocks was
threat to transportation, simiJar they had be e'n
although both were severe. declining precipitately In the
This one news event did more second quarter ol the year:
to di!J)el the boom psychology they stabilized in late May and
that had built up over the within a week of the
years than did two years of receivership they began their
fiscal and monlary restraint. impressive recovery. It was
Jt did more to make the not ju.st that the bad news was
government's po Ii c y o( out. but that a soberer,
restraint "'·ofk than any of. sounder business psychology,
ficial action. It was a warning free of the spec u I a I i v e
or abuses in our credii romance of 1963-6!1, .seemed to
markets. offer 'ihe possibility or a
The policy of lfndlng of. healthy economic recovery
ficers and invtstors suddenly free of speculative excesses.
became conservative. The rale Th e pen n cent r a I
of' Ulflalion began to decline. bankruptcy was a I a r g e
Exuberant business plans for disastrous financial calamity.
record expansion began 00 Jt was much more than that it
slow down_ New investment was a symbol and a signal -
funds were redirected con-a warning (l believe in time)
servatlvely and began to eon--and alsO a threat I am not at·
centratc on the very highest tempting to balance up the
grade of .commercial paper. of good with the bad re.suits -
bonds. and of stOcks. Ven· there were plenty of both and
turesome loans a n d in-both will be with us for a long
veslments, which had been the time. However, whether we
style for three years, suddenly emphasize the good or the
became Ou1 of style. It soon bad. it was the big financial
became much' easier for the news of 1970.
large prime corporations lo ,i'iiii:a:<iii~iiiiiiii;miiliimiiiiijJ
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TOMORROW IS THE
FIRST DAY.OF THE
REST OF YOUR LIFE
M .. I MKI VOii know whtrl ,.. 1r11
go1no. IDS dots -11\11'1 why WI ttll
offtf you lht 11p1>Drtunity to 11n1 11
lllUCh IS you W~lll to.
look 111heM: 111tlstlct °" 400 ttpr•
sen11ti~1s who 1tc1"tly t!ttnlltd M
IDS t11e1r tonflf1nt1.
h1tOM« Av1ra0t l111t ytlr tomm1!-
11ons S 12,293 101 !ht 400, Avt1191
toi the 1op 24 111111 wa$ $22.400, •n
i11C1tt11 ol $9.618 ovtr prevlwt i~
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Forlllf 1ca111d111c S1tt1 1nd s1l1t
mtnta1111ent 136~01. Sffl1!1 buslntst
own111I1&'t.), lt•tkei~. 111llit1ry, •1141oU.111 149%1.
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category. '°'°' ·~lw1 1r1M1 tPMt 1111 ......... ~ !"' v com 1o,• ,.1\4 ~i='•l: 'g' ~·· !. •• ;~ ~ ~ ~ •14 111! ff~ ~ ff~ ,~ ~!.:"'/.,~ ,l 10"' It: :11 = !:
T•• h tloru. INI 1r1 ,... r. 'Wl'lll I~ Im ur~ '"' .. ''"""' 1' ,, .. •, ~ PJOO ·ill: 11~ 41\i -It. l~111''1l6• 1li ~ 4 at. -I" C11> II , ... 1•~ 1..,. -~ IK.:re are l,760.000 oter=··::~,::1':i~"'i<r, m ~~M' 21 21v. ......... , ~ """""' ' Jl'4lj•i 1t.1Tr1IS.Jlll ll01V.\07"'-101V. ... !T"'"1~ tJ 1'4 11 ll Vi+I.
ouse o ~ t vour1 your •-.... t ,... .. o~ J~ •II\ " A~•-lf ""' """ I r s :Ii " '"" ,_,, l' J4\0 .l411i. J.IV. "" ~ ' 1-"'~ ~I WM(ll '\:13 °''"I? 1 4 ~lolr ll!IO\oiiT nf In -,,,._ 1\~ All G1J .II ff H S 11 1:•1::.i.• ~ ff:! ff:: 1f -ATr1n I... t 41\lt 4J"° 4~ +lo h b I •• Ilk ,..Ir ,_. ,, • ·-·· 0' I• I .~~.!" <•' IWI 1,•• !lll·'m, ,•. 10'" I' AJ 1"""91r.. , i . ~ IT ofS.J.O( 4 101 101 101 .... _,,v,, l~ ' ,. llMO 211'io -'"
cat.egory Is 825,000 to $49,000. ~::: "iim.,,1c=:.: E;:r. ~: 'I ... : Ml1B r,1si~ l~ ,i~ l!:::,cG~ 1!~ la ~IS~~~!' IN ~ ~ n~ ~ 1~:2;,fz ,j, ~~ r ~~ ! ~ ~;(r.~:i: . ~{ ~1:~ tfiv. \1~ ~ ~
That's2.8percentofthetotal.Mld (blcl), nl••-Frn••11 IE ... ffl;w •Tt. '1~'·"' lllUll ~ Nii m.a.rgrc"" •·1 ll ™' \Ii --\lo tt\:~11140 µ ""' -)S -\loGfflClt .,. '"""'""' 1'11 -'•
n ere art -, o t:r ~. "111, 111v. ,.,i.;.1 FQi iiOW >M •~di • " w. ....... ,. ..... ,f~ s~ "lr;;c' ·• .. It• c 1 1.eo '°' ,,. ......... SI Gtti Oyn .-:it 11y, 11o 111,;, Adib "1000 th "::":. ==~·,:::Wnw l" '!~ i 24\lolf Tli ..... oJ irn1l~"'!!~l'lf• iii•• ~ ~m".:..:·•~ iar11 H.4o )0 !~ Ht.'l +v.GnOev.1 .m "u~ ~-u l.4+t ..
h •·Jd J'k If oe not 111c:lude Ill Cm. j•jW •'l'l'l'I 'l! ~4~~.1,• i ~ ... :11telfJ "l• »ttj~'~'t ~NvEfh!J.16 M 1•0'4Jll'jOlf~l ·· .. ·~Fdo1 ... IUUI', 1'<1.1'4 .:..:.l'i. QUleMU S I e YOUrS YOU -.1111 r11•rk1.IP, ar'fniil 1 Iii I "' It tc,'t;,:: •lllo 42\l TY\611 F• 1'-~ "'lllllL.lld ltl 1 3 ~ 1¥ .-11 1,75' t.0 llU 11'4 .:.,:.· l~ ~ Elec 1... 11' ti ~ -1~ b8'0 achieved the •~.OtltJ Or m"'ro~--. n or COin• ,""f!S" It.to 2\lo ltP.r_r l"<I 16~ 16" UllllK 2 tl'o A I I I"'!! I.» I . it\\ 1' t···~ 101111 1, 41,1 ri"' w~ ~;-. = ~ 1111 p_!!Dl~.lO ~ ~ J"° ~ :.._·,, . _, "i"'~ 11:: I~ It~ 11· " 2' Uft ill-tt\4' ,, ... .111utc1 c~ ,,,. l:Q ill! -It' \'I t: ~n~·1 ,.. J\.t 14i. l•lo'I + \o'I 1111 R~!lller " 6 sa "'
more level. ~ c~~ .~ l"'" ~.,'E': '"" ta ::t .. ,,% Jr-1Jt>1 ~i ~~ :t ~ :,~1e1 -:11 "1~ ,, 111Jo. Ult. 2 '" -t "" ;a,' Fl~.~ m l~I: u 11~ \"'i'tl '~s .., .mo 411 . nv. :+ :; .fljl".flPrS lf'lli101't'""' \lol~ltMtlOll ~U.1¥oUjEnwl11 It H P•.K 111• .... l,\Oi14V. ..,.lolA.-tAl.10 Jl421 .... ~2H1 +'Al 1111 Q 4 ''°j~l6J 'jfi'-'• I• do YOU k' Witho t .1110 IM I.ii,; Moll ltlM IYo )>,la 11;.., C•i• ,., 1 u s ... :r.r ~ ""'AH Sir lM 1..-,7 " ""' -Vt .... $1 C11 n• '6'4 ...... •• 7 ,l'i '~~Ttl ro• : '"' $4Mo'o UG'°J 1 -,,. 10W ran ' u ,,., ,_ •• , •• ,.,,,.. .. .... 26 • ' -' • • ... •• ''~~ ,. 11• •• • • .._ " C•tlC•J'1 II I ... 51 ...-1 " " -~. · .... ~ .. .,.. ., .. ,. ,... '" , ..... ..... -..... • ..-.. c · ... _ .... "" ,, .. I'"' 11 ,.lll , '"" .. ~ , '" lantallzing you further, here is •'"' '•'"• '•~ ,•• ,..~,.! ""•• "",u_ • .,.., H• "'" """ U• ~"" 11 11'4 "' • '"'"' 11 1s1t. u..., u to -Ki c 1... llli'' .., !1.:'l -.-i"! "'T" oiJ 4 4 .,..., !b .. _ ,_ SG "' "" .. 5"11""'" 21• ,_ u1.., SI.• l'4 S\li Allr l1!Aul .lie 'l :IU\.J 2014o w.o. + v. EIKll 1111 .W ""' ,.. .. -" llltT& t. pfK• !1 .. --•
a new Ctnsus Bureau tally .a.vM c1 ri,, • oo11 ~1 JR:01.~ lt!~fl~•'•~ ~ ~:tv~\1 t'.: ~ o1~ "l:::Pf..o"°' 90 l.~ ~ ~ +·..,.liifi ~1111~i 1,: ... ,.52.~ ~..., ~ + ~ l~l~ifNLf:: ;f: if~ \'I ! t which will show you where. you =.11 ~~ ~ f:.Z ,. \:c r c 1"" '"' vanea "' 1• 1 .., ....... is..,. 1... 1 n 2n. inli _ ~ e• 1"1 A• 1 " -3Slli ~,~ .. -n 111 u111 1...0 .. J4'-lll4 -J41,(, _ , • I A" $hr ,...., tl'o •1 11 Incl '"° J l&lrcw• tto ?It SAC .51 :a. 1~ 1°" 1..... Cf11U11 I J'tr> ll !!!'.." U" .... -"" 1111 Ull A 11 ll.... Jn. '{/' •· pace. Al~ 1"""1. l~l" ,,•.. ',, .... ,. 1511. lfllo ~ UV. 25 ~ "" uo;, u · ...,.,,,.. E1 I.,. .. lfl,I; 11~ ,,~ + ..r.: Colfll1111t 1... " -31!0. ,, ..... ..., '"' l'DIC• I JI -.. Alrbt F _,, .. "'M 40\.'I "2 krll tt Ullo If\~ ac!IW P IN 11 .... Alli E1 llfJ.60 1 .1' J16 JI + '-" Colt 111111 11 U\, 14to 11'4 + '4 l"llltjncl .tO ~ p I + '' Hshld. No. % of .a.1~11 tt J,~ !.~ ~!t" 1,1 ii1111 H•L k•.:I': .11 ,!!t ~ w11,•,.,.•• 1,pr; 11\lio ""'1+e» .:. ui 44\lt .... .,. u u. _ ~co" '" ••.u J 4lto ',"', ... 4•• -~ "..,. .,. l.l• ?l l/: 1/ \E1/i! t (: AINl11 ••• ·~• Wo _.;Se1•le el ... .,..,. • ,,._ Jh AIMM ltl..JD 11 t7\i; ffh tHa _ k C< lft ..,L... 1 11\o\ ·• 11V. . I"'"' $Ir• ,611 IV Ill!. '115 • h Income bsblds. bshlds . .111ce1ac 1•1.• ,•,~ = ~~ ~ '"' 5•1• c'" S'-1 •'"""" w. 1;-. .11.a.1rFft1r ·'° •• s1" .w\ii .w~ _ \'J 11 1.-121 ,, .. ,, .. 1n . ,,,,. + \.ti -1 811f ,• n,,,,._ :-: , U d St 000 'Oil 000 3 2,.,. A!~ L,., ... ~··cl c ' ~IE''" 5"' •..:. N&Jkt HG ''"' 1~"""' Alrllll .IO II! 70'.a. ~ Jo:w. + .... IS t. I 11 .--.-11\lo llV. .... klw• El 1.:11 I • ' .. •
I n,,!:., i.·999 ,·.~·.ooo ,·,,~ :,:,~1.r". l..,,,v. l,~ ~U':.1, ~ ~ ~111<>'&1 JJ~ ~ w:r,~E :" i:v. ~~ {t; ,l: !.~ !Iu. r.11 -.. coiu •• ~'/! 1~ i'~ t.tt ~~ = ~ 1:::~~ 1': i• ;~1 ~'i~ ~; ~ ~ ....,., ''O -· '• "--" It 20 llCIClll '" •V.WIOb Ill• lNlTI.IAni5«1t 1.}t )1 )oA4 ,,_ ....,:.:.· \·~· 241 JI-\\ 21 21V.-V.:-•P5v :W. 'Kl'-ft ~+•7 2 OtltJ. 2 999 3 -5 000 • 2% .a.m.c1c: , 'lo'I ".~.:· '" • 1• !'illl' M "" 1111 w•m"• .Ill.·,· ,,•• ,•m,-"'~',·.•,, " _. Jttlo ,,.l _ . 1411 ,,.,. so ~· t • i=J •,-~ /,' '!"" 1 "" 1tl.li _ ,, • ' ,oo • '' •m I••• It'• '' H .... ,. '"' '' g I" > W ' ., IS ., > ·••-~ •••• " TE -· "' " I•• ~" >•" , w~• Hf lllo I 4~ \lo " I flt "' ~ 2'11,(, 2'' -·,.•w _,, -_,. W ••-·->o .,, n -"' 3000 3999 3886000 62~.flElL•t. l~~ • ... ~,.,. !~~,fWll )(\f1I Will''' If 11\liMC.mAS. ''IV. Ml ,.._\lo 111• 11~11"'-'"T$v11l•Jo lllO IG lie ~I
4·000: 4999 3·603•000 5·7~:::::l~~ ':t:';~~~r,c. J 2"'rwfT11r:JI\.\11e11 .. ~'""ci..1111." 1,,, .. ,.~24\lt .... tr~ .~~--~ .... ~"'-1i.~~c~.~.:if .1, 1i/3fMl"~lJ'MI -~~
. ' '. ' AGIMI "·raH1:r:•n• .V•J"'!:frsC..~ 1i~:m:!;:.:!~ Jt: ... !~~'t:1':t! ,:JlJ:lJ ... &.~v.~-1."": •• )ILS\li lU\lo1 15\.:o .···j=•JJ·"° '6111 /\lo ~w +•. 5,000-S,999 3,795,000 f .0% "•m~ok• ',1 •• 1,, ~:.;..,El" 1v. ~ 'tc«V i.. .>w. W.111 f"Ub 1~ U\lo Joni 0111111 1 •4 n Nfl 16~ _ l'I ""' •fl."2 ' ,.,,\ 2• 1'1'1 + Vo J•nlre11 • ,f 1•,1111 1"' Vi • 6006-6999 4011000 IS4%An....;.·'a 1~16 ~OOVt• .. "'-41 ''~" 21 21i;w11111 Wll ~Vo ~ADIUTll ·*" 3J Jt , ""' Jt _.,,c~:,:.,,0~1" 115 """ ISV. l•""-'-JtDlnFll ·.~ UI .~ lt"': v~.::i:
7.000. 7.999 4'29s'ooo 8·.6"' ',"",,,",,." ',l't iv, H~:, "ti ·~ ,,,A s::""-~~ ~~ l: =~~ ... P~ 2,~ 212'Wi :siv~~~l.~ 11 1h ""' "" -"" f1f1'111• so ::? J~ "'~ 4::: t ~ JaoFd fn.C. llG iv. ''~ 1"-.•. • ' ' ' .,,, ···-, •• ,,· .... , •. Howm lft ,:Ioli 1ffi Slttl9 Sir 11 llftl, W•llht w 32\lo " AmEIPw l.1t 4~ ~\lo 1,.,.,.. \JV. -"' -Mitb 1 n toV. i""' 201'r +1'4 JelfCnPPro1 .IG ~ Jf'IO 2llh 21\\ -\o
8,000-9,999 8,106, 12. % .~.-. ··'·' ",,• '1•t"' H~k p~1 ,II,(, 1''to ... Ge I ~ 12 I -Oftf.C lie IS 100 141'r 14h + \'o Jr.;elv1fr 1-: !! + ~ 000 9 """' ...... 4V.4'1!$1r-CI iii' ll Yrd~YE J'llo •'4AmEXP lncl lGllO~ :i~i:::-~OllllC"1.,.. '62.j 2l'lli21"9 'l'ojU Cllllt llG,.li::" ~···i ·
10000-14999145240002.'JIM. ...., •\lo HG l'Y.,lS'h ~Gnl'n~l.Jll • ;ti'~ll\lt +l,(,S.on~dl1'11ct '°724V.20illol U. .. JlmWolilO 14 !f" -\o ' ' ' ' ' .'n A.r-H 1l\.'I na. 1-1:.r J" 6\4 7 Am HDlll .40 I~ 2 l :wi i; 211.% t 1\t ~on ldll pj ' I 111/t ""' 1tv. + V. Jlm Wilt pi 1 1211~ ~~\! ~JI,(, ~ !. l: 1~.000-24 ,999 8,425,000 13.4~& ~~1c"•ot ~\.'I~ .... t+Ytn Cl 'U\'I,. ... Hom• 1.ioO UI 1otlo 10\olo 1t\/o "' .... 1111 pl J • ""4 631'r M'l;i .... JOhnMfll 120 Ult ,,,~ ''"" ~ ' ., Ot1tJ. 49 999 l 760 OOO 2 S% Aulo Sd 4 .,,., 11Ylll tnl l'h l \olo A tto-e Pl 2 l 1°"" 1~ lt4illl = v. S"" Fd1 1.20 113 43'4 d "'° 42li + 't Jolln John '" 110 ilV. S4\lt ~ iit w , • , , . laird Al 2:U. 314 HYlll All! 2"4 3\!o A1'1 H<>S• .16 1•6 ~ Jl.'9. 3'1ft +\lo(°" I'll l'f4.Je lG 102V. 101 1021/o ····· J~~~c :to lt 1'¥1 1f f '>
50 OOO-and-0ver 251 000 0 4% aa•e• isv. 1''* I""" 'T Jill Ii MUTUAL .a.m '""'•t .JO J1 lllli ""'-11v. .. c!:: (;..'fi~.' ,u 11\o\ :ll'fl ''"" -\.,, i~~ .to " »..., ftV. "" h · I ' . · . 1:~:·~11 ,: ,:t 1~r1:!ill( 2~ 2t'"' ~ ~ic~',:~ 2~ JI';; F' ~~ :!. U C1111Nt!G t.N· 6~ ~ :,"'J, :t,. ':. 'b, G~!~ttv~i.,,~ 1sJ !~ ~ 4~= 1 ~ Why are you n your income ll••ln p •V. • .,., •n1 c .. 1 :tu 1~ " Mt JC tr .,• 1~ 11 . 11 l l\lt t 1ro C0111 P1tV1er 2 tin n"' :Ill> ;o..., -10 Cr•nl II 3.1J r'r. 5J s2v. »
bracket -whatever it ls? ::= ~ 11~ :;l'';w~~ ~ m :;r /t;;'~i'10 I~ S\11 ""' s: .... t::: :::·: J~ ::\:, :;~ :;:: -t ~ g~:'~'J \:1: y J~~ nl: Jn:+~
Among 'he Crl·1·,cal factors •,-,,,,••,,. 'i'• 'i"',.'l",I "",,,utt 20 21 FUNDS .._m1P11c1~ :1, ,.
4l\t 'r.;: ·~ = t: Cor1Pw 11•'.11 rlO """ !1Y:i J7V. + v. GINorlron 1e ,. n.. '"' '"' 1' JOV. Alllt:t0¥ .)3e 1fl ® •Tllo 41!.li -2 COii! Air .2,,. 11' 11 11~ 11"' + "' GtNONe• l.H 10£ 4! OV. ., t '> d t • ' k · 8tlni Incl J S\lr 1111 Sf Pl IS 1'V. AM $11111111 I I 1114 16 16 _ v,, ~fl<\I C1n l.iMI 13' 3'!'1 Jf" ~ -\lo GtrtN DIS 1.'41 l 71V. 11\'o Jl \11 '• e erm1n1ng your ran are. lltnl M'" '"" 11y, 111•••1 1 IYt .a.m Ship .t1111 , ,.. ZJl4I nu._ ..., 1 Ctn "'·'' 1'.!00 '° ,....., .., +1 GtNN DfA . .iG 1 ,, , 11 ,,_
Y k. I Th ll•rk Ha Cl •• l""lo !!16 ll,... A Smtll I.to 154 ~ »\Ir. 161' \.\ Otll COJ> .:llt SJ l•o n;, 1V. -•,; 8' W•1I ~1111 17 !l\O T.I" m -OUr S In CO Or. e Bett Lall ~•!'!lo 1,0-Sl>UI~ )\0 ~ OPJf eeu9ft!lli1• M !1!11i AmWi. ,7t U 4114 4.1\o'I a"'+ y, Kol pll.fl 1100 lJ!.O 1Sto 15'. + ~ fWnUnll .IO li lJ.'MI 2CIA 2CV. -l'ii
' ag .a I ·ncome or a ,,,, .. _ w J" •• ·-'''I 1• -· -• -IL 111111 Carp , u lo'•• ·-· •• . &w.,u" Df 1,11 1 l'O\' -L •'· -.. ··er e y r y I ,,,,···.... .. -,•-c • • -·· -"CC ..,.,. -••L' -• .. ....... ' ,,. ~ '" S A Shi l!f4,1J 7 16V. !11'!! U V. -l't I P llA?.10 11 ,,..., JI~ lt\lo + "' ..,, n ,,... tl1 ~ tllo ,
white American heading a :::r-HI 3f" Jf'* 1::..wJ' J ~ trtEW vo1111e tAP )lt"'• i:ao 1 • .i t-.u :n~1e,u1 • 1 ~ fa"' m.. "'!' C• ..,112·51 11/ ;r:,,, r.I,(, r._. ~:: g~ ~' i.M JO 74 U~ u .+ a,
h hold ' $91198 ' II El lh , .... .-MllY ~ ',1' -,."f!°!. fol.~ ... , .. -•• ·,~· ,o,',' ....... ',·_!! ~ fil t._~ l~ ~ .: ... 1l_l!o -t 1• ~::: m:•,:;: 1'1 !Hit .»>4 n\oio + \; C•,•r~ 1 1~ ~ U ~--= :-! ouse IS , agarnst an S:::. c 1 ~ 13.,, lffY "'"" iv; ~ ....... -.... 1-·--....,,, ...... ..... 24 U'-13~ iih on• 011 Pl 2 J u 'lVt io + ..., G °'"'' -'"' s1 1•14 nn 11;1o average ol '".539 for a black a..... c""H 1»-,,. 1 ... , .. '•""'• .~ •,•, • r. TM ""1-1 ""-1"""""" l.ll '·12 .a.w .. ,.,, 1 a 1100 '°"" 10\lo -.-. :.:. • M !" .IO l 1~ 1tl'l ,,,,. -v. G•UfTll'r>rlCo 1 4J .,,,. 11'1'1 1t\ll ··· ·· .., Bos IP .. ... :11i.., ;n '''°" OI hct;tltl• lnclsl•~ ,.311 •• n f',m z'"' . J "" Ail ·;~ -,,. II ,ICI 111 1.SV. ,, ""' + YI f;lfll'lkl ·"°"' II Hli ""' 2111' • •• household head. Th_ at's 3 11,:>,"',-·,' '" .·,.· .·.~ ',"', •• ', pl IW. , ""°"""''· llK.. .,. INTCN 1·•1 ... , AfnetOll to I 174\ 1111\ 11'9 ··-.on!rol tllt~ /511 JD1'w ... .,.. .-•••• GllMDri 1.ICe I tlh 411'r """ -..... "" .. 1• 211 "" .,1c111 aJ wl\!Cfl '"" ~IA n.u n."I .a.mer"' ·.., 11 13~ 1~ 13h + ,,_ Cno.t 11•.Jll t so J1v, SI'-" .s11.:1 + •\ <>ufl 011 1.so m 30v. 1'V. :Ml + \oo $3,359 yearJj gap Which yawns llrlu k • 11\lo ln!o ,",• 6111 ,,,. m llMtt HOltllla Inv ukl I.If #it AMF 1,,C to 16'1 in. Tl\li 171111 _ V. (f::M-U ,,l.IO J l4'IO :»i,;, :?J~t _•lo ~II llt1fce J4 1'-I'll> ~ _ 1, , 1. , a .... n ,,.,. 1\~ t 'W; • ..., ~ \.lo uulll Mv• lift,. lflv lnclle 6.50 •JO Jifl'lf•c eo· 37 ~ .., 40\lo + "' " .50 •1 29-" 11\'I ,.4 + n llllts 111.10 1 17'11. IJ u _ " into a 4~yeai 1fetime g•p of 1 ·~ 11 1~ is"' I"' T '"" '" r.:d 1bl•J..:.llol>t"' lllY" 1<11 11.K 12"3 AMP 1"!· .so -" •• , l'" _" -i•~ 1.• • n l2 n _"' &:!'s1u111 1 ~ 1• 1•\• :z:u. -i. _ '•
St,1155 •~~.-.·, ....... ,.. ... ' .... , •• ·-···-· ··-· ' --"!-. '' I• '' 1-· ,. -su ••'• •• t '· " -,,. .. U • "' -' m!)e~ •• , .. 1~ llV. t'4 -'llo -'p 'lo 11~ 1N,_. U ., .. s.iv. $.C\o'l+\O . . l1o111n Cp l )Vt Klllwdff f 2.00 ~ I M .... 105 ncil J." 4,ll AJfttfllr I 1t 4' ~ Ullo l5fi -I _, pll.lS I "'°' 1"• I~+ V• Guff,,,'!f~ .so,•• 114 lh 11\t 11• Bu• .... P ' ]1"' 11~ ... N ... """""" 1 Jtf 1.t1 Miii ,.2S lo.GS Amil•• rif 411 I ... -"" -l•NI 1.l'e n llV. S4\<I .S•"' -lj, Gu'"... ..... ] n ~ , .. -Your sex. The average In· ~.", w'"••' ,t., ,m ~. c',", 1s 1.w. A<'"'lr•llf F"'1d1: P•" 3.13 •.11 "'""'" 2.Ci " ''"' 2nr. 21u, .:..:·v, ooollot .Job 1,. lN. :1111. v~ _,.,., G0ul!'r. 111 J.11 , 03"" 4:l"" ~ _ '-,,.. ...., •• 11"'-I~ Crwll'I 5.12 6.31 $111(-11.5l lt.05 Mttl Ji ll ,,_ '"' ·~_\II C-klSll .llG 116 lM-o lfl'to 1,... -•o o"' , .. 115.15 I Sol~ .SI"' 1"'" _It come for a household headed ..,Wt! N '"" ~,•,~,',~ iv.' 1ncorn J.11 .. °' s.11c1 1.n t.44 .11n~'1to 220 " '°"" 21 + v.for1n1~• .»-: ,. 2111r 21v. 21"-"' ul!on 1nc1 •1 1 7-. ,.,.,_.., _.. Ctnen M 4t n h 7\.'I 2~ lnour 7.ll I.Doi V11 P!t U1 1.DI Andi Hoc~ 1 IJ JI J0'4 :JO'-'It. ~orCtW 1.!Gli 1l 1~ U:Z\.'r lil.4 -J -H·t-by a man is Sl0,795 as against C1MM 8 .. 1fl ""', • c'.' !!,<., >W Anl1r1 ~.n J.:U lnv ltlh •.33 •.1] A""<:oro Svc I l 1•• 1•• -...._u~ u 4 :.sv. 2JVO 2S'4 C 8d l'h J~ irk '4 ~ Attnt I"• I.ti tJ~ 11111 11.17 lf.-00 AllCI Cll y 120 . ln'f ..... ewi-1 com •1 P4 JV, ,...., ,. " H•dlWI! tlO I li 3,~ J+\jj _ 1, $4,878 for one headed by a c:~'M11, 16-.11v.,'"'',"°' u J6 .11nrna111 '·" 1,M•vv •.11 '·*'.a. .u..c, · 1 J1'1i. 31 Jn.+~~ ••c1c11 • ,, u v. 11"'" 11"".:.:.·\; li•11111ur1 1as ins .uv. cs.. Sii
Tb t• I th b U CIP Sow 1..., I r•ll• I'~ l\1..11111!•• 7,lt 1.ttJ MMll(k J.lJ J.f7.Jcoo 1111f5 ?t l1" 13' l.N -1t~PC 1n111:10 121 :wy. 3411 :i.i:w..;.l\Ma,..HW .rlt J) •:i.t. •"' ~ -'4 woman . a s eS! an a . c~p 1niA ,,~ w. LMC 0..1 ,.. .a.u .a.m • .st .•• Jell'••"'" it.:it ''·" A Pl co•• '" n~ ~ JJ -.... ••n• 1 60fl 11:1 l3\lo n:v,, n1<o + .., 11tm"' P11> 1 11 2i>"i Nt.11 ~ ~ · ,10 C1PT•h ra 1'14 LIM• In ""'{< )0 ' Allllllt•\ •.•110.n Ktr'1o ... f\lncls: A~L. II er°' "' " :ZIV, :tl Y., -Vo ledlltt Ffn 1 l6 24'11 ll"" 11"' -•/, "'"'"'llCI .'(I JJ& !D '"' 1~ .... + \. -Your age. The average c ... 0ev 1v. •1,1, Lind "w'•' 2"1 ,.! Alllfl• "' 10,1t11.1• Ail'flllD 1.n •.3s ,,.111,,. sv, 1.,.. 3 ,..,., """ 11\.\ -"" rodlNrl 1 to u nv. JJ 331,o1 _ ,,, H~llCltmn .61 l6 l•'-' 3,3"" 1.,. _. ,1• C••I• II IV. , ... LIM JV. v AmCIP 543413111111 lt!Olt31 ·-'J1117>h11!\li116'4 -1 rompK aO 6 15 l.f.b 140,---H•n<!Htr ,n l ..... "'"l"' for 8 household headed by an Carlt GP lf 11:w, Lar..,.. M 10••. ,,II_ Am lt;1 l'.10 01:u , ~ lo' ",:~20,:~ :~:::N·'!1t 2(1 U !&Vt U + ~\ 'IKISJH1,;., I 2 1t~0 lt"' 19t' H•nes Co .50 \CW llV. 1,:11 Ullio -','9
'
"G , ••• 1.~L•""" •mt.'" 10001 'l -...... -·. 0 ,'JO JO :ie •..• r!IWCDU 401 llll '''I' ,,.!. ····~ Htllfl•M 130 1, so " ; • 'nd· 'd I d 45 t u · l!I< ,. "' ''" C l•'JO l"-' •-... i•U ,·., us Kl 7.J.t 1:01 •<" •n I ' Jl l1h l1~ -Vo -ca~~ I" , ••• ''" "" -"" H1rcour1 1 31 ,. T
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1
12"18'2 uaTh~ge . th 0 '". ids c:!:~.C•• 1~11 3}~ t!ri"'Coor 2:w. 1 A" 't'' · .... us 10 •SJ s oo "'11 P5v 1.o1 .o J3 \lt nto nv. -•i. ~rowne-Pl t i ;;-41.... ~"--Vo 111rr11 1"1 1 ,, ssl! ~in llv. -~· . ' IS IS e peno Cen VPS 11" lt lellur G .-. 1av. ~~II ... ,t,~~ 1,u us SI 11:0,,.11:sa !~·11 j1.0!' 1)(1 nlo '"' nr. -. rw"Ztll '·" Ill ~ ,,,~ JO~ .:.:.·v;, H•rn:o Co ' 11! 11\t f6:: 1'Ni :t '.'f:
h A . k ' Ce<!I Lab '~ 1 Ltwll Ill' 10 .... 11'-'I lnant I JO '.5' UI S2 .17 10.n IV 0 ',., J1t lt:U. IHll lt4io i · "' TS Coro .• It ,. 11~ 11~ -'Ao H•rlSMr, .IO n 14.., 24\/o ,...,, -v. w en an mer1can wor er s Ch<l•llT• 2v. 1w 1.1"' Ml• 1i. •u. 111 ... 11 , .• , t.lt 111 SJ 1.n 1.,1 ,,.,~. • 1 -,1 " '4~ Mtt> ""' -'4 Ull•hv .'81 1ot ""' ,, .. 11 _ v. HarvA1 1.20 71 " 1~ tt\lt _ ,6 · II b k f" , 0 •• , LDIH•.,. ,..., J _, ,·-"'' Sol J.t7 4.u ........ ·-15 4114 4110 41 -" 1111toa:11 .21 s 14 1,c ,, _ ,, Ht ... u El 1.44 1, 31 r,,:: ... _ Income Usu. Y re.c es a Pea '"m'. •• , •• 10•• • "• c" ' >• .... .. '''' '>• ''' .,_, ''' '' ' "" -"" E " •• ,,. ,,_ ' -· -• n '-~• .,. ,......-14 StDCk 132 lot ' • A'" I c•" >< ~.,. -.Sl:tli -.... ""'"' ".U •J t.r0~ llV. 1m + .... " '"' ?J 1114 )1\iO + V. d th ch. l d ( Clln tllfll Nii 4\Ai L09 Et•" 11"' 121'> A C Ml 5''2 io Ki,k~I> l.Jt 1.22 rmi .IO ..,..,, n\lt ll -~ 11<1110.-o ,JM i "' IV. 11.\ ~ 1.(; Htltll lne -1\'J 11, 1'it an t! a 1evemen war s c"" uiJI 1314 i.v. Lv..ct> c 11 11\.'I m 1 s'ot 5•09 11kk Gt 7.tl 1.u "'"' ll:u J.llG 1 »~ 32\lo ~ _\lo C11rtl1<Wr .llG .w lOI'> 1014 IO'llo _ ,,_ Hecl•Mn .11r lJ u n v. --~.
th "686 f Chl II.I 1C1 f.2 M""' GEi l•lt.14\.'I :: ~I 1'50 ftt t~ GNll T.tJ l.•1A"' Coro .te 4 lnl. 11 1~+~C11rtwrA J 1 ''"' 1• t• _..,.HelnrHJ I 41] JIV. l~ }I .t ~ e .... average or a 1hri11 '5 11111 111 Mil 111rtv Siii ,v, A!lltrt Giii in Jo.i •• l'ltdl H.0111·• :3;1" _,!,no, 1 , 14\1, ,.,.. ,._. + ,,. r.ur~rH 1.a ~ 21 n2~ 11 + \.'I H'lene Cun :n ,.,, 1...., 11 .. _ ~ household headed by •n in-"''",., " 101 M•Mk•'• 1'V.10l't .11""'°' Gr-· · lberh '·" ·" 111 "' 1·1'11 111 1•14 ""° 231'io -c~ 1.to • 14 .. 211\-H~ Htlltt 1111 • .o 2n u .. "" n.,, +1 . . 11.11et ' 6\~ 714 Mi"ln )\.ti m Caoll '~ • ,, lie 511r 4.:11 S.11 AJllJ() p'2,40 , 41'111 • 4\0 + ~ (YP•llSM IM 11 n:u. """ .Sll,I; -~ H•lltr Df4.07 • 1111 100 IOJ +2 d1v1dual between the ages of c111r Ml• 11&1o 11" M•""' c 1sr; ;F c,.,,,, 10:14 u:n I::. ''7:t ~:~ 1:;~ r.!~ 8G'"l.10 R JV. '* 1:w. -~ -0-~:i::,:;.11• ~ :io 1011 ,','~ 1,!.~ --:+ 14and2t ~1::; tl~ g:z~=~"'M~~ c ' lllQM '·'1 l .4! 1,,. ).jlJtlAICIS.., IXlb • 311 ~'a 4Hi~V.o.111111~r .Uo J7 , .. nt.-v.HHnlfOllCto lT 1J,., .......
C''''' Ml Ub 1•1o M lrowr ,:= 71~ F• 1""'· I.II 1•'i1 L.oolnil S.rr.s: . AllGTran ·.115D lS II• IV. 1nf \oil Dllna Ca 1.ti SS Jl!i 16\~ lf\!j. + ·~ H..m fM A?~ s '"" 1'°" )'>It -'t Y U. n. Vt~ ""IYI ClnH 12.41.ft •JAll'llonf 11111 111 UW \~ m:· ·····o..r11nr1 ,JOI! 191 llV. l)'" ll\.'>-"i Hercu!t 1.lOe tJ •l'i> ~ .~:_:._·;,· -our surroundings. Even ~l:~~"" Mf n~ 2f~ ~:~ L~ 27\'• 1n. ::~· l~ ~ ~ CtPn 10.DI' 1o:DI' ~:r:"ti'k 1.:w. -111 ni. m.. i. +·°' o..r1 1nc1 .,, 1 it :it"4 JI.vi ,..,., _,"" H1r111F 1.M ,, ,..,, uv. :i.v.:: ,,. !hough the average r 0 r c11n1 Mer 12:i.1 lJY> °"" 1~ '°"'Ax Het;tl>tot. • Mu1 u.se 13.ji ,,. 11tc11 l'lf111 J "' 63'19 •Jllo j!! -""Dlt• P••u• 111 111'\oo 10\'o ,0..., ..... Htublel" .1J 11 ,,.,,,, 41 ov. _.., . l".ll"!on 0 J'W; 4 MINlk H J,,. sv. :-... s .. S.» Lulh Ire 11.1• U.1) "~ l'llcrlU.IS 1100 S4 U lfr j -11,j, DflvcoCa l.U 21 171-\o u 11"' -\1 ~l:ih P,;ck ,10 111 "'• ~ """ -"' farmers is swelled by the c-c. 1su. 1~'"' MM Mii n 111 21"'.' ,..,..., 1 7:0, 1"5 ~n 1n :·.l,' •,·~ Alll'ld'I :,Ii.~ 11 101 101 io -"'O•Yca ll4.l5 r:ioo,, .,._, '"'••L ~~~ --1~ HHi ... Hoi•'r, t! !V. 1 i v. + "' . . Coeii• o '"' 5\lo tOt•n 31 lll.l, ~IKl s.u s.n ""'r 0 _ , n ,-;:: Attis C'1lnl 1 •I 51 50 SO'-' -Iii O•,lnHUll .50 .. ,,.,_ .,. ., ., •ltio •I~_\• earnings or our argr1-coo1r C• 11 s.i Merkl •" 11:i:. 1• ~ Sci c. •.Ot ,_.o "'•·· ;·,·· 1,.,· .. ,, ·:: ,,.11,1 Corp 1~ J•U ,.\I 24VI • . . g~""Pt ,_,. 51 14..., 14'1'1 '~ Hoti.r1 1.10 11 OMO ll'4 ._ _214 'IJ " , h ( Calem i v IV. 1 Mlclld C• 1!1 !""It-1-'7 1,•7Mojj lftC i.,J;lff:iAllllCOel lk 21111 !'JO t\r.-\,1, PL plAJ.15 l2'0 SO 49'n ...... t 'y,Ha.rnW•I .to Ji J:i... 1110 ~+ .... m1 1ona1res. t e average arm comn1 F 101'1 1111. 11111• 1"' ll•Yrdl 1.11 1.n ,, ,,_ ••n 11·n ,,. ro ""' .111 zng '•'•• ','!'(: 1,•,•, -"' tll~!.' c.i, 1, ,, ,•,•, ~,.~ ".,~. ~ t!!ff •. ,•,1ec1ri. ~, 11, 6llo R ,, _ ,,. h h Id • od . Colon Sir 1ru. lt1'ii MlclW GT !! l!. IHClll 12.n UAJ " T~ 14.Cll ,,._ ... ,,, •• Pfoll ,--, -"'Ot .... lr •• .. lnli ,.., "" ''° II 37~ ..,.. :16\'o + ... ousc o income. t ey 11 on-comc:e• •It. s Mi>I• G•s ... ~· 1.,., K"' ,,01 1•01 1_ , ~ ,·.· AllllWn 0~1• ~ !1a • o ·•t~ + "' 0.1 M"I• 1.10 ,•,•, ,•,•,•_, ,1,, .• , isw + " Hor 11. LIOti • " Soll\ 5~\!t _1 ~
I 17 2.. · i oo "9 f Com Cir Jll »j Min VIG 16>~ ,,,~ 81.t. Giit j·2' 5.1' ,,,,-,, 1C.U 1,·.s """°"'"' 1'10 12' ,~ 41~ -~· :C ·~~',!.Al,•.-• '' s•~ " 31,v. -,.'-< _!uo,,-'·.~ ,", ,1!!2: 17\lo I~ -~ Y • as aga1ns ..,,O"t or corn G•• 11v,-i v,Mo Rxll \• .. ,, , ,, 1, ,~, ... A'IC•~ .,. ,,, -.-~ -s -,. -·...-. ~ ....,. 24\l. ''""" + ·-ro:1 Jl:\ro , • ..., ~ .,.. • r . .... Id.fl Niu I.~ l..t,I • 11 .... I -'"n Mt• .• 12' 11\lo ?O'lt,,,,. 10V. -,,.., Hfll'V ... Jl 1.JC :Ht ~ ICI ..... _,~ non-farm households• corn n "'Mod sci 4 1onc1s1k s.JJ '·" v c. 11 lt.'11 """<e wt s.i J\'o 1 l -v. 11M1, p11 , ,....., ... ""' _. '·~ ~',!' 1.10 15 H;-. ,. .. ... • Corn HI!"' ~ -~ It 1• 20 llol!Qrl SI 1.SJ 1.11 s ii ll.l~ Ava Oll.10 lf UV. l! )~\lo .. tMYA1I .0, 1111 1-\.o 1'4 7:W. nOID ,,..p Am 11 mi. 2~ rm"~ tt _ But m 0 , 1 ;-portant. c,~, ',•v 1~ 1,'. ""'•.....!.. c,•, J'llo 1'"' 1011 Flln 11.1111.ll IF "'" 1 Oi 1 n A,v.,.., '" .10 1~ u,~ Jt._ JSJ?_ _• ~ "'"• IPl'l'l"I 1 11 2sv. >s11o 1..<v. ,. ~ Ha.t 1n11 • .:w. ,.1, ,,.. , "'" _.. ., -·" lll'lli 11\lt .. llOll I .OJ I.» ,, •• -,_ s'>O VMI '" .l'llD •• -'"" '"' ~ G ''' ff··-,,,, •• >> ' ., I -V. d t' II h CmP CM ·~ Alo"'-' p •n ' S1,, m ...... AYPltf nJD J 40\lo ~·JO «I" , . J !~ IA 1~-""" • ...... lO:W. IOV. 10\11 your e uca ion . I e c ... P 1Mr , '"' .. ~, 1 iev. 11 1,_. $t 13,·..,1 •,·.. ...u~~.!' 10.s1 10"1 .,...,,., Id 1 ,~ '" u•-" ... ,er:e ,.. a l ,, 41l'llo .1!)'14 _ 14 ~~ ~,"',·"° JJ 1•io ""' ,~.:.: ·~ T ,,. 4"4 ......... a ... " jl"d .•• ........ J 03 1A7 ... I " ., .... -\lo li!io lnc "° 36 J5't lS'.lo J~ + \~ ,, ..... e,, .JO •• (] •N 47'\i \~ household head has finished ~=•u « ~ '"" ,..,M',~,,,';: r,: 1~ 1uucck c11v1n 11 Omtft '" 10 :1:1 AZIK on .m 51 ,..,.. 1,14 1u., -"' g"' 01, 1 io " 19 1,1,1 l4't. _ ,,, t!owF 111•.e 7 17,,~ 12,""' 1""' = ~ c A k ,. Jt · '"'" • aullc.k U,fl 14.4, Sl'lr• lJ:n U.IJ -a-ti 11 "9 » am no 1ot1,1,; 1cm .--.ou•I' Df2.i0 41 '"'.\lo "9-'!. •t.V. COiiege. the average in<."Ome is,~.,,,« ,,., o•"•'•'"'C,,M0 ,·,~ 11,',\ C•""" ll,~20.21M Tt1t l,t4 1 .• 4 l ob<•W -,,, tt" n~ et Ed 1115'.JD 6 .. ,,. -•• _,~ ... ,, HOUJF Pllll SI •••~ •• ., ,.., ···,; "" ,•• •• ~ OlvlCI Ii.SI l .I• NeA Miit t.71 t.•I 1,.-.,• ·~. .,. D\'o -\Ii, ~rrer ,J, " '"" "'' -'HD1.11LP 1 )o ..,.,. ..,.,. ..,.,. -• more than $15 000 but if he or c.n1•1ft i:i. ''°' -111!• N•IW s ,.n 10.11 ,, 11111 '·" t.M ,,.., • .... n 7'fl M:U. ... felFln•• ,, 11 1''"' 1111o ii -'I! Ho •HG · '° " '4"" ••:it •4'0 + ., • ' ' E"""er L B'lt u Mvt I Et 2ltt ,:~~ trtY v"t 1 .13 1 .. sJ~ At t~~'' 1.00 1.u a:~ ~Erl~ ,11~ ll"" 31 ~!~ -\i 10..,1n11 1.IO .~ ll~ ~:~ .jil? =;; HO::h oil.Xi 'S i~lt 1~ it~ t ~ she hai1 failed to complete an c~~~ 5-y, J.,., r Mu• ILE l'il l\ 11\i!M Fcl J.t4 _'J "•' &tcur $$<': 1•119Pn 15• II s~~ ~\.\ ..... +I I'''" Shom I "' l-9',\ lt T-9•4 ~aw JOl!n .14 116 ·lJV. n ll \-\ elementary school educat<'on crw1rd i.•n 1s'lt ~,,.,1111c 13 1~! ~G "' f." ' ' 11.1.., 10.1111.2:1 ""'W,'' , llli 1 1 -"' It Sh .rc 1 u n v. 21 2114 +·v. owh,1 .10 31 Ul\ 1,v. lf<\li = t'o ' C•ou Cfl 32 Sl N~IC•r II: n~ " IPlmr t" I.I» llMcl •.16 s.:nl 111111 I fS 10 • I"' ,..., -\Ii 11$ •• 01.10 lO 16 1~ H .•• Hubbr l.71t 41 22!.li ?l:v. ,,,. + ,_
VP•tl -N.1 •ml • Ct1>!Shr s.'4•.z 0.-wth ··~•.17a llfNV J%; ""-' 1ebolll •lb .. 61\lo uv.+·v.HllilhHl!.«I "'ll . IJ u =1 the average;, less than $5.500. cC•111th 11c "• • •, •• "Cm~'' "' 1•1 •11• Inv .iw. l.3'1 Olbld ).t.l '·• ••~•• 01.u 5 ,,1:v.. •"•• 1' ·· ·· c•cit.o.i ,MP 1111,,' .,•~ •"' t H\ld Say 1.lO 1 1tt1o ltvo u v._ 'l
Ad I " I 11ro•n.lbt 5'1\S'IO o'f'~''i•c1nSllrll.41ll. fOfSlk •.537.IAI: Tr2ti Il 014 ~ ... CIOfl ,to >11~11"'-UV.114-+l'ot:i"",,.''".·,·!! !1!!1'o ll"'lt ... ._,
-n as a og1ca resu o . o.."" M i, ru ~:I lfb ',l~·,'1t~ '"::1':::' ~~11.n ~=' ~:IT tlf I~ ,J·l~'s. ;a = !:v. !lf: t1~ ll~l::i'h~""J: ,1 fl:"" tr~ ~.~ -~ll ·.~·1, ~•1 ,:60 illi ~ fl~ ft~+~ our education, y o u r OC· 8:1: ~ ,:~ 1~ Nill ,MM ,.,. • com st 1.G 1 ... ttot GNli •,211 t.1111 • ,, '' 45 "" +'"' 1111,.. Pl • , 1 ,1v, 11,,,. ,.,,,. _ 111 """' ... •. s • 13 n\'J 1l ,..1 t' II th h hold b d 0 , p 1 t'4 trt11 et•, l'h n1 Crwlh '· 1 s.1s N-Cet 4.•t 5.115 0••, c lrK .ID J 11\'io 11 ll'>lt + Vo ltloll co N ll ltt. ,.,~ '::I_ ,. ','I'' c•'"' !;1,'.. D ~' 'l'' ,,,. _ '.! cupa 1ort . e ousc ea o'",,",, ,,. ,,.trttl $•ell • t 'll> IMllfTI '·l 1.11N""" "'" •o.i !..,. ••• M" · 11 nv. 11 11 _,.. I::?: :JOli -1 1.. •• •• "" .. , ... 6 "· .. •v '" .,.. ~ ' s"°"' 1,• ' ,_, >.1 1.n •-w~ 1>·.·,, 1 .• •"'•" •, 1 01 1 11 IS"' , .. ._ ,,,, _. ,, •-' ,,~ •• .... v. n•\ii 1Mi -l , I , · • ... •51' -ts ' Ser .. ,.,, worker th• o,. """ 1111o 16 ,•, ,,,., ~ "~" "' · •• " ... "' •• ·~ 1 SO'llo JO .._.._ + • , """' .20 111 ""' e \'J " + ,, • ~ ''-" Ch•H Gr &e1: trt.wi1111 11.n JS.OS • "" '1 10 lt\lt lt\o'I -"gwer111111 :w. 6J IJv. n1t J"" _ ~ • Pow ltl2.10 1110 27!1> 21Vo 11\it average income com.,' 10 ~1: l: ,;~ .,:v. ~,E11.;,G! 16'1:. n CtDlt ,,VI 1.:11 Hlch Sir• ,,,...,ft.q l """"'n·""• .so s "' """ "' • .. tvM.., 1J.. !' 12~ U\.'I """ 1 \to1morrco .\m 1111 ,2,,, n 1,1, ""' · · ·
I . . Deihl Int • "":::,,. ", '"• lnl. ltl\.:o Funa t.D' I.I' NOf1111 11.•' H.44 tu " .to 7t o 41 4111 -\i 51-r 1' 1 ! 1n• 7l\lo 2,,, :w. I!!:"" Co 1.«1, 111 :.."" n,. l•i. + "
7 ,063. But If the head IS a pro-Olhlll Cit 63 ... "1.·,·.· ' 71~ ?tl-'I F'"' ••.J1 11,J.f "'°" 6,41 ,,., t:~ lab ·11 n 2S~ tJ JJ.... . . . eMl\J '.to t1 "" " Sf\lo +I 1o<-c, " ... ·I ll IOJA. '* 1011. _._ .,. . Der c1.,T 1«11 1s"'" ''" :llV. l"'l'od 10.1111.n • 1.1, "°' 81 Cl• ·• ,. ,,._ fllo t4l I 41 Fna .tre n jlll t\.lo ,.., _ v, 111111,,~.· 1 t.\~ '"" flll ress1ona1. the average will be °'' 11r 10 . io:w; ~,"'•,,•,, :>11,(, Jt P1CI 1,16 •· IOI 'd 11.61 U.1' '''1?• 1 • ew 40.,.. ... ,. o...-11w •• '' 1 -,,_, ''""-l'I 11111 H,-,,,-ll 101 1w. n~ 11'-' . Dewey E Pi • .. 1•1 1l~ CllMICI 16,1S 11.l 101 "'" '-'~ t.55 '"' 111 I lM lift Ullo llllo Iii Oarlc Cit .JJ Sl ldl(; ,~ 16V. .. I .. ·-·· ''n"' !!. It II --4to Sl4,702 -morethandoubleo1amC• 1s 1s~!'!ce""o',, 10..11~c111on111• wmSll.MU.SilfflFl!!l'l.19 1 11 llG\.0 1\ 1 r:;:oHw< 1 n•' 1 -\.'I r' ... (,,i.:n""'11i1o +•" 01 l"C l 1"I,. ut J l U. E11u1v' 3.'3 J,t7 trttit 11.JI 11.211 ~m..n JO Ji 2W. 15'11 ts>I -•.r. llm J.'9 1tt 10\o 1!1V. 70V>-:II, '*'•IL I~ 17 141., """ lll.t -"s and A difference mounting up 01~ CM ,,,. J~ ~!.!',G!! 1~ ,,,\ ,.-111111 11.1111.os 1.J1 1.os -..r Olck .JO 11 11'\t. n Jiiii + "'" r1...Cp 1.• 1 32"' J7lt 11,,,. _ v. :ncr-111 N,•~~·'°, u 111,1, u~ 1~; _" I ID'I> 11 ,... I•,. ti,, "• G,.,.,111 S.4 5." Al¥ f,'5 lo.51 leec" Al' .15 lS 11\'o I!"" IR1 -V. 'Uslncl:t 00 111 ~ 311,(, :JJ"' _ \0 1 . .., 11 44 4ll41 O'll + 1;. lo a huge lotal of $345,755 over ~i:;: L ,..... 10 NW P11h 11v. 21 11 tMorn t.1110.n OTC Sec •.u 10.M ke.;1 ... h cni 11 121 IJ\t. lJ"" ,,.._ or111 p1 10 n ""' l5.\i. :1r111o + 1,1, r:::r,1t11 ..n.11 •• l ,,,.. 3,04 l"' f •
k. 1·11· Dow Jfll\ ll,.,.,,.Nvcl RK J JVt >,(Ml •.11 4AOP1Ctl'ncl '·'' 7.611 1::,0 Pet..SO Jt n lN IN +·;,..0r11o,,.p , • Jlt~ ll'h 31'1.i:i -\,1n_ ... ,s1w .. ll\lo 11 1 -t•
0 NL l ll.:i Ollle Wit 23 ,,v. om5 •• c:SO ..., PeM SI! 1.$4 1.54 eklnaH .IClll I 1u,;, 1#\11 U\'9 -It. Dv-1""' 1.40 '' 1•'11; 2(1/i ""' = ~ 11\Sllco .70 Ul'o U V. ,~ = \' a wor 1ng· 1e1me. 0ov1e 01 1,,,. 10u. 1e ,,.,, 1V1 111o !°' Gn11 11 ,.11,Jt 1v• 11. ... 1.ot 1.1s !:"'"' 1... • n ll'A ll'I<. _"' o,,.,,.,. c, , ,, ""' 131,1, 7'V. ,,. ..... s.i,, •i.. •v. '"' ~
Each .successive census tally ~'" o 11 11.,., OoT Sc,•" 13v, 'l wt"' .111 '" 1,3' 1 Miii l." 3M a." "-.llG » 11.._ JOv. 3'tit I"' Olli• i>l'l.J'O. rtea 101v. lOI 10,"' 1n~k 01.a.1.11 1 11 """' 11:w _ ·~
dramatizes anew lhe extent to ~~'1'P':'in• 1:~ 1~14 8:'::t"TP. ,f,~ 11~ ::.i:: i.. lfi ::t: :r:,'" 1i~ 1~i1 e.1 ::.i1•.,~1C~~. fl 1:,.r. ,~ ,L.. ~ g:;,:6i~lo. J ;J~ ~'1 R~ ::·:.; l~:~ .. c~10111 l~ ~~ ~:: = = ~
IC wt • ·""~""tit.a. ]\lo •l'leom .. r ,·n •12Pln1 SI ID,7'10.1' ""'"I.to Ill 2~ '"" 2f" It. DI.Jolin ·'°' uo """ lM'o ,, + a:n,••lklnc I.to ll Ullo "~ 11v. .... which we, the world's leading ~::, ~ 1No lO'!li •Y<•t 111~ n Comp Bd 1·59 ,;~ Pror1 F.nt ~.,.,.; ·~ er1111. p1 1 1 .e" 4th .,..., -" 11vP11111 Se 1" 171i. 1ni. 171 M i.111 "' 111v. :rotw l 1 + ,4
middle-income economy, are ~ ·.se. , m 2" P11111 1r " .,..,, ,... ·,. iJ1 '"'~" hw •.n 10.41 8t!>fl• ou..JD 1111 s. 51 ~ .. duP11111 PU.JO • s.t\.\ ss v. s.s..., +1 1n,, .. ,, .Ml!) •1 61"' 65 4111 + ,.._ Lb 2SYt~• EC Ii.rt 11\lt UV.!omp jl"d l ... tHPIDn Fncl I0.7:111 ,'31entflC1> 1.611 t2 Jl Sl J2 +l,(,lluPOl'llpf(~ Ill 11 '/o 10-\o 11 :,.·,~lll!CllM Net~ « .. :w. 41. 41.,,_,Ar.
. ~ Ptt.EI li ... lJ Ptc .a.ui. •I~ J\lo ~cl i 't:11o'aP1lc~ Fund1: a. ... ," 111•.JO l 11"11 11 .... 11\lt-I Dll'ILI '·" 11• 11"' nh »1"+'11]ntHH•,, .. ,'·!! Al<i 11\~ '"" l7•J;+t~ surpassing even our own Elba 5,st ~ ~Pie '•E 11 ,, 11nSC11 1" 101111 ·31 c,...,,. n .1121.:tJ Blnt 5al2.JO liO 11 11 31 .... f:;L.'•'' 1.111 '8'Mlo 1ta1. 184'-·-. n o .4.... • 1:n~ 13'Ho 1ii.
asp'·rat,·ons , n d m 0 •• 1. n g ',"', .r,~&• ", !. ',',~, ce m 1v. c111111 M• •'.ts 4'.I! trt E•• '·'• '·'' 1•no,,..1 17' no S'o u\ -•1. 3.1So11.11 ""° 11 11~ is +1,,., J~,' .'.nJ1111,,... Jia •v. tl,I; "" + ·14 • ,., ,.. ~ ·~v !Vi I'll> Cc.nl Giii I u 1 )1 N .liflt J.1.15 2J,7S t1ktv PhD Ttl 1\1 1"" ~ ••• 'l'l'l'IO 11111 ti J"-I V. .._ '"' P ,,w :U 11"' II ll:W. 1 ·• tov.:ard the world·s first upper-El Hwc 1wo 1•'4 ,'•~,· OJ 1'1\ '" Cor• 1.c1 1i221s'63 ••° Fur><1 1·"-~ '·"Ir.th ~u 1.1a Jta " w.-. 10l'I -v. v,,.,,..., ,20p "' s~ PO sv. :.:.·;-' l"1 MM!.,.••1 1u uv. 1;m u ~ EklCll'I' f!' IV. ., .,. " t"ll 10"" !"'Y CtP 11'1112'111 Pre Po.II '·~ 7,tt Q Tlllee . .O It "' 4~ '4"-t1'4 -£-F-I~ NI~ i·... ,,", \!h •"<s '•''•' '' m.,ddle · c A d •r •iii s,,_ p...,1., .. "''" 1• '" w0 ,. ,·,1 '"' P•ov1111• 4-IM '-"' 11ttk 0tt ·" 21 51 ~ ~ 111 c ... tnomeeconomy. n e'r"svt nli 2 iw•llt 10141 ~ , .. woai ,,.,·n••u11sn 1,,110.Si&l•,lrJflhll .• .I' 14>.I 1~~ ••~-'l'l!••l•Plc .to • n~ "'" ""'-Ge<1i'"f'·JC• '° u:w; 16 1111t :...·,4 even though infiall r cent! °"' '° 61 Peor1 Mt lllliol1W111ev•" M 611·,,'°·"p"'"•"' 1<ur><1~, 1111 L.111111 11 ~ 10\lo :iov.
1
111:oco ·" 10 '"" 11 1~+·•1.i'"111 ' oi l 'fi'~ :itv. M~+~. on e y E ~r ~ •1.4 P11t1n T 15 ,,.,,., Otlt ... llt G•O..o· . Fot;ll 6,t5 f,611 llotkHA .u il 41 \lt Jt\ti 11\'o +ii~ ••I Air Lin ,,. IJ>.. 13\.'I 131/, ''''' '~1~1!} .II IS6 l\lt ni: lJ'lto -\I has been cutting deeply into ~~S OH I'™' 15 Pp• Entin II,', '"" o 1 10 14 11 fJ t.enr1 l~.u 14.:lo! ll::r.l•ll 1.10 '' Jl\11 JG'h SD"' -\'o li!GJ 1,CWt St l.!V. 3l 35 -~ '--.. l,1S I 111 n UV. -\' ""' c 2$ 16 • Ga.w JM:.11'.i. o:f"'r 11·tsn·s1 GrTh •.11'·''~ le trk1 "1.s"" '"°Uh -"" 111,u1111.t0 I! tlli i•v. u v. •. ::~;'°! ',",, •t"" "11+1 -~ "real" incomes. we still come e,~:.. '" 1~ Ptl'H'l 'Pic 1h J\1 ... ,j, .-3• 1·,3 1ncorn 1.~ 1.26 1.,. n1 co .-111 111 ldo u u11o -v. .11 oc1111 1. 4 13..., 1"" 13v. -"'° M , 1 , 1 1 71\4 + ~.
II h d he t f'~t.:.,f,1 a l PU.I W1 1V, n; r::'"' Col n 'n 13Al l•ov,st i ,11 1.~) aolsC1s ,lSll 241 c.1'4 •t'l'I 4"1 -I;, •tol'IYI l,ICI « lSlr> l<l'I< .1$1/. + '4 GenoPCD ·'lo J .S7•1o .Sl'.'1 51\11 .... out wt a ea over l ong ,._ CCM'• 114 "" Pt1felfl ,31'1 ,, , ,1· ts 17 ts v111~ 1.~1 1.:io Iona 1" .l l p I 1y. '"' 1 + v. c111111 Mf .u 15 .10 Jt4I 1111-\ -"'G p b m · ..,. :ion Jt\.\ JG + ~ -·, .,,.,, l"hl•Df 51 ,, '111' • • Vfl\'11 •'••ll4•-Mtn1 '1 It 1t 1' _.,,e-c•trllJ .11 $43' ,Js ""•-1 .ttiuMUf l.olG' l1't1Yt11•1o 11t1 -'-" Pull. So: "How ;;ire you keep-•,:',' To:J jVi ~ P~I! Sub . •ff Fcl 11.0112.111 """~'' ~· .. ''' Barden 1 70 10 26l!i 'I"' »oAi 7cllJCH1B•o~ 1 1 :1111;. ··~ 1p;, _.,. g • ••t :to 11• 111 ,., t " •l ... fJ ~ 20t. Or1vl L~ 12.11 U.JI lllnlrll 1•)• li1o.1 l11ttW•• ·1,1J SI 2"lio 2 y, 11''° .:.,:.·~ l!C, &Gl':..10 61 Utt. it•.il l'A' -""'~~~fon,1,1110, O 0i!;1," SS'lo s~·, .,_ Ing up with the. Joneses?" Fl CKo " '"' 111111111 * • E11on&H-1•d· ""'""' i ,,1 6.1~ 1er"'1ns . .-o • .,. ~ 10"' 1~ f! Mill"' .?t• :M 4~ • .,,., + ,., i • 1 ... •iv. ''"' -• .. 11111" t,f)IO,Jt!.r: ..... 11• 1J.I015,t1 8osEOk 77• ·1 »\'I tt :ie.1t.+·~1IMu ln.11• • J~~ J',• J'a .. :. ~qs1,1~? .SOo, •• JG u;n: 11" II _ ..
'
,.,!:!::::Z::::::>:: ....... z:-:C.:"'E!"""' ........... "'...... G,..llo ll,1S UM Sc:llflcltl' '"ncl!' lour111 IM l '" f'lo it· IKI ""'cc '*' 4\> 4 i " ..., J7' lCi'oi 194;, 7'h -lo IMorn 6111.67.5 lrll Ill• IS.•l l~,11.11 lr1111 All' .St " 1 '* 6~ .:..:·'"' 'Mt/ti Mii Ut f\~ P.o 1(~ .:.:.·{, g: fr.~ \\,lb j JU 2111 ?l'4 2t:i. .. ·-lff<I 7.tl 1.31 ~l>CI 29.4{,..41 5,lol$1 1.• J Sl .JO"ll ~""-' "-lt.\Mat If JI' 10!11 N 1019 + "! ' l -W ,.. 6) -I
! I«-,1>,.•,, 11•1·!! Ill H.71 U,,7 Sr!if MY 1.10 Ill t4VI _... -.,. 1,lft trt1t U ••,1 .... l'l:o tnnco · 160 21'l> '6'4 11\'t .f. "
M'11 · ·"" Cot'I $ft.IM t.Ml•lllMY Ill !6 <IA ~r'i t"'-t~ 1 t111NG I 131 11'" II 11 ··:··ge.;::,\•p,·':'1 ~4 llt II,.;, I""-'o lttl 11.SI I ... Serurl!y l'IH'lcls: Srll Pet ."3t 111 lh' );\' ti..-•• tr.C-11 1.lO 16 u:i,, 16 :l•l1 1 '" G p " · I J.i ll'°' lJ .... -1:0 Emr• le J,U $,,I E....i¥ '·'' J.JI er Pel fn.~ J 1~ .... ,...,. Et I.II '° U\.'I &J'i ~ \, I ai;ll .IOI! •!I 5l'li S)\lt Jlllio t '
'
tl'9V 11,$411.14 l~lff:lt 7.l'O 1.4' lldwv Hiit l 4 34 l.IHli l,CAli ··· · mEI II I f!I l t5tlo t.(Jlo t5i o G•~CI Pl 1.w I 14tl )41,,, 1~ ;\o nlP•lf: S.Sl 6.IM un.. ..111 t..tJ Ill•'"•' P'l1 1 Cl.\'io 41 •1\lt +·"" ........... ,.1 j~ J.1\1o Sl'\\i ··:. g:,~01,~MJ I si1. jJ" .S2WI t '• 111111y I.JO t.n ~IK Am l.t,\ '·" lrt!"" Gt .ICI 71 31•4 1'!" jlf.li + y, ml'11rt 1110 H llllo ll._ 11~ -llo !,ienyl) 1 ·..., n~ 11~ fot.t = Jot. Finance Briefs
YOUNGSTOWN.Oh;oC UPl)
-General Fireproofing Co., 3
maker of office furniturt and
equipment, s~id It has filed
suit in federal court in Ne.w
York charginR A mt: r i ca n
Seating Co., of Grand Rapids.
Mich .• with \'iO\ating the anli-
trust law&. The company dld
nol reveal details of the C'Om·
plaint.
MlA~fl BEACH (U PI 1 -
First Really Investment Corp.
ha!J bougllt 6,$00 additional
acre~ of ranch land in Park
county, Colorado. The com·
pany bought 42.000 acrts Jn
the same gtneral rr:glon last
month. Plans ;u•t now being
m11de to develop and market
the property.
HAMMONDSPORT. N. Y .
(UPI) -Taylor Wine Co. ha!
negotlttted a $15 rn i 111 on
revolving c.redit with e:ight
b1nks. led by Lincoln
Roch~ttr Tru~t Co. o f
Roclluter. Interest lhrnugh
1973 wlll bt ~ of 111 poinl over
the prime rates.
N&W YORK CUP!) -Com·
bustlon Engineering Inc., said
Ill miner1ls diVbk>n will
1ptnd SS million lo expand lls
' ::: ~~ i;; ~;:f t!,11S~: 1}...'f It~ l~"Ut 1.1t 5f 2~ •1~ ~b '.; ~ ;:~I~ ·.i !: n,~ n'4 ~ + ·;~ g-l~~o·'.~ s/ ~/}; lfi:: U~ +-:: •lrlll 1.7' tAI "" jl"t!f UNwlll 1-Sll•• .» I tV. t m + ¥1 llfl I IUI .)! 10 10h lo>. ltlllio -V. G IJ<'.it Fl" I 13\lo -... clay and bauxite processing 1•.., s.. t.1• 1•,-•,• "91f A• 2s..w 21.t1 Bwn$1\0e I.JG n "" u"' »Ill_ 11o Wh ~1 1.10 ' »'• 1.N1 D1o1 -v. & llCILew 10o 111 .~\"' f1 f•'4t -,.. , ... Crllo 11.IJ .•. " ON" ,f4"2 l• • .n. BUCY Er'·" '° "~· HI\ )lh i "9 -r d .IO.-1~· 7JV. J) n>~ .;. ~ lll•Uc l 0.IO 1.164 4''11 ' !t -"' Plant at Ande-'nvllle Go Fkl 0t1t ,.11 ·· 1&1 t.14 •·5' IUH c .. -~ •1 n,,. 10\i 1111 ss 11c: 1-10 JG 2t1 11"' ,, .. -"' 1 ... ""1 a. 1 u 11·~ ;,.." ··--""' '"" ' ' fkltlltv Gra...p: Ito"" F\111111: SUClll Co lfJ 11jl JI 50' 51 llUltt .:Ill ' lU1 11',-, 11"'1 -~ Glnos Inc f'l 1I' _... -~ 11011 la.ti 11.n C1~n 1.6' l.P ludtF pf... 1 ,.,. ,,. 6\'o ~ n••l"t 1.7t 5' n'll )11• n•·, +1 Glen Alelell 11 ~ 'l:! 'l..., ,
1sn 11"3 13.111 llWfll 1&.to 11..S. 5111191 '" .41D 4 ' S'h Slit "' HIX rtn.M I 41 d 47 Glln"-1 ol1 JS I 1IV, ,. .... ,..., -'° LOS ANGELES (UPI) ..._ •ol 11.ll ll.tl ,. .... 11 ··" , . ., lul'I'•• 1.1• j ll l2 V. 31\'J -~ EiterN" .:JOt ,, .... ... '""' -•• , eob.t M.i1n "' lll.ii ll nv. .. "" kl•I 14.M la.OJ ~"' II 1,75 ,7J 1u ... 1w ,.o .. nv. H »'• +..,. '""''Co M •1 111'1 20\l 20'11 -1~ 1111e un .40 14 j5'-" 14._. j•"' = ~ McCulloch on Corp and lds • p,,..,.. '·" 10.JO ~~ t11w , .• f.06 e ...... , 11.,.., n• "'" t\i ·~ Ellrrt 1112.40 "' ,.,~ ;I.I )41,(, -"" rkll , uo lh 111, "" + 'II · S•Mlfl'I t,to i,lt ~1nv Gt ''I l:l! BUllllll: .,1.5'1 1 llU. Jl '4 11:ii, t' ·14 flll'Dfncl ·'°" I u•~ Ut~ 11'!. -\1 , 5.1 m JC\o'o /l"° Jll\$ _ ~
Oil P 1 b T•encl 21 ,11 u.u 5llYer 1,,,.. ll.O l l &url lflf' Cl ,,.. « ., « I !:¥tn1P ... ,, •1 "°" ., +1 g;:JWIYA J.4 d 1J.lo. '" ,~ + ... rograms, nc., ave tom-,1!l,i"'1.1 Pro.! :k>«lr1 '·" t, 1 11.,,.,1 trtp 1 ·"' 61 ,._. ,., , ENC111D 1.1s 1,. 20v. 11 JO>.to + \' 1<11"' 1.t0 J1 JI" " "
Pr.ted.ndtested.g"welll•n -,.II (.JIMI'"" Ill I.JI '-!?.Slll'Nor Pl.~ 1' .._ .: ~+~fllltrft .411 111:1 11,,_ Jj\, ltl.o -V. rtc11 .i.(I $91 ... :11~ 2f :.:.\,; • nctu1t .Jt 3.U ltlM SI ., ... a .•• Bu•flfv .1'11 s ""' 161'1 ,. I fKllt'A .60b " Jtl.I )tt\ lt'h 1 ~··~¥ 1.llG 11 11i. 11\oi Hilo
the Hemphill County Texas lncPM s.11 s." 111•"'•" FuMsl· ,,,.,.1hs ·'° "'1 I01\o'I lim.i tte~~ -U F11rc" C•"' m 23" 1l\'l tlo,, :1o r11111u" .to 4 1610 :i.n ~tk +·t... • ' V•nt s." •. v Am Ind 1J1 ·'' .... ,,, U"fv ' 11111; " II -Fiii' HIH . .1111 •l ~ .... • ... + v. r111llCIY St! SI JI~· IQ'> "" -... portion of the Anadarko baaln. ;:1r .. ;:g1, 1::~ 1;:1! si1~11e.111a. ~;, 6-" -c--···· ~:11~r.r,1,,~ J 1~ 1\~ 1U~ _ 1, -J·K-'
TheweHwas.drllled101deplh =:1 11\S,': l:n t:tt c!~ °' 1 ;:,.'~:'2~:::'11(~•1;: J: ~1"" eo>~ •1 -1-~:;:-:i:,~11~ ~ ~~ ~lt '~=~j:'~~. ":JI:~ ,t..-"'· of 16 990 feet and nowed at a,,, Mu111 1.11 1.11 1 Stec•.,. 1n-» u.,. c11 Fln1"1 11 l.. ~ '~ t ~rFtr w111 F1" 10 17\'t 11~ lH• -.,. 1"''""• .Jt !! u~ ,,.,.. ,.,,.. .:..:·.,. , • ''' N•l f,15 1.n -v· ft•: Ct:ll1h11 Mry .i llltii 10 1 P'1r111Mlt .11 1'11 tl" ,J.., 6Jlll -"' °' "' 1.40 " •t 41111 Bl.II + .,.. d;uly rate of 20., million cubic 1111 si.r. s1.• 40.ff i""u t·1' #·C ctm•RL 'i:l~ 11 ,, 71~ ,; -1: FAS 1~1 .1't ,,. ••i. J'lo '""' -1., K•! .. st"'u'" 1 6J lJ\• JJ "" + _..
feet ~\:' cc= lU ... T:'.. ill 1°'1 c.i "'~ Sti . 0 1tt Jr-• -~ .. :i~ t -.. f: ;:'fo 1:1 ~\'.-?ri: \~~ ! ;: ~:: u':. ::~l I u,,. Hv. ·~ =·~ . ,,• • ,.,. ,,.s,ncr GI iN , ••• e111., ,•N,~~ • .. ..... F--'MfJ!'" .. -,., "'+ .. K11Alllf •,12 1· S9 )f\O M•
.. .:. 0111 ,:03 .:.o TMR ,,. 11'..tt 1 '.44 11p~ •fn;: 4l ~ to tttt ..... ,;:NM :,, 11i't i;1, ,;,;.. 4N + 1;::;' ~·~.i;if~;n,:: 1t 1tv. ,,,. ~-I •
PHILADELPHJ.A 1uP1) -F~::"n\'' ~r!~is.1• t!::Zt0 ,•1:lt ;':H :r~~i 1, r, · • fN .., ·1~ ~~Ptc 111,,J '1 1:.1-o 1~ 11:; .= ~ " IYPL• tot n n:~ ht: i 14 =:
SI•• Kil ,_ F b 1ntt111 1 ttllJJ"""" ' ·• ·• 1•u11eM f1 16111 rt~ fm+111 Ft<tr,P.., f 1j \,\ii \1., \~,-.,.~PL ~c,10 ""°• ~-fi "' ~ ,.., m ...... ne • re n c M11i.1 1.'11 •:ls -cM• 4.Jt .1)2' ~MOCa.Oll s rJ.ia n r , ··· F..isttnS ... ,, u ui~ '\ _...,. ~ !Id 2 n~ '"' 1 l'I _ ,. '•bo t ... 1 .... _ -"' ,_, ... II',." ... l·I' JI .,. PllJM 161 f , .. l~:+:U Ftc1tr1ll lrK u '"' ""' i ; .. ~ ..... ,.,,,, ... l~ u. lj -• l..lll r1 MK:a, nc.. IMQ '-"" ,_~ .:n t:n •IW £11 ' I '· ··-fl( ·" " ~ + FND191Slr I ,,, • Jt 2'1.r. -~ I ,. 1W , + .... ••lned 1ppr-~ Food •-l'r• 111 COr!l"I"· l~ Fd 11,M lt •"'le<'tfl It 119 J1h _ = Ptderal O•• 1.f ''"' '"' 1'l• , ~:;"i."'1 ,·", '! !!~• j,1~! ls'\li a "-..., Y• • s: TC 1.Si •,k ~ GI 1i_t!, l,ti ~arr Ill~ 11, ~ ftrrl Cl .II • JO 7t JO -\lo '-.1 ,,,. "' V. 'T' '• D r u ' Admin 1Uon . to Ull~ tJ:tl 1':1'15 u~I M::f fi! iii ~·~~2 .«M u im 14\a '~ ::·r: :l:'~i! I~ JI lr~ ~~ jJ;z = .~ s::;, ~r ;: 11. ~: J~ u't: : :: market Ill ntw Uqukl antacid,,,_~... 1., .. , ,·:!l 11 111ftt 1:.,. ,: .... ~!!!.. , 1·!!' "" · •V. Jtn -~ Ft11r111 l ,411 11 n·~ 1111> ""' -'• 1<:;:::,11;0• .. •J j't" ll"' U'I • "" n.-( ----'pt• ' · t.trllllf fllM\,i, •--... ,.,,._ 11 -.. Fin fedtrtl" 7) H ' • 1~;• U + •~ 5!.TOI~ I ft I ,,_, ... 21 -\It .,. ....... .,.., or l.:._J,---1""'-' Kln~~'f"~ Gr: t. ~cm 1f:fi1J·IJ 1(r:.1." JI 111'! 11~·····~~i',1:, ti :f: ;:.~ :n.·.~-"'iii/"hlll .M 41 ""' n\.'I i'°"'.:..:.1~ USt:. ~In amaary. c~ •.• •.'1 s:' .,., 1'.l.i Kt~... J lf: !!; tr .:...." Ftt~..-l.Jl i " n·· 1)., n-. -\I, i=:= 1,,. E t· n n~ _I .... ~ l,tl 1,51 'll"11 ,,. t.U Ill • IM J,,... __ l'slttcltv 1'4 141 IN •1 411-•-'> ti 611 11 ' -lil
I r• 11.tt 11.J.t Uf'• c Jt. 1A$ tllfl DI I \'I Jtll -" F•ltrtS!r 1.tl. •J l7Vt " l'7'' +l:W. -II '.toll 4 ~\'I ; .. NEW YORK fUPI ) -Cities '" '·5' •11 "'1"" t?..., ' .,. ,. 'llflll ""' J·1• ·" va1 l'lil sn :ti -Strvicf Co, Uld I wtll it ha!18i!'Y.c ~.~~ ~ t-P. f! :111;-1 Ji: 1J1 11n t ;:f'_IMt(Jll t.i,1 ,~ ;;11 \i~ ~">::.~ r.=G~l\.M l'fl,~l't r.,::1~~-1~
btfn drllJ Jng for a lfO'lp of ii:~"'1to1:: '-<O '·"~=~ ... m';~ f~ ~f!\'f'f· 1
,. 'I! + ,,_ ~:;:i~:_ f .~ zn :" :' _ l(.,.t~ ',10 f uui i1~ ~'t: = •1
COMpanlta ln the JIVI Sea off APU'' •'• 1~ 1·:: llll'f p J ~?! ~i&:l 1.ll jJ 1· -. ~I~ Dil• ''9 16fl 7•~1 t 4 7•lli -... ~=-*'aj~ Jll 11~ ~ ft:-1 .. ' t, '-' ll'ICI ....--. ~SW1tl ~ ! ···" lll'fl'f&J,U 1 D\.'I .!l.\\ 33'\+~IU I.JO b ~ -:• tbe CO&St Of lndontSll hU "';11 SJ, I '!I~~ •1"irl I 6.11 :;a $ot<1'1--i.t: C-t 11 ?llio ip;:l t<'"\ +"" J(:lfigs l M ~1-l 1, -•
been c1ppe.d temporarily ~ ... lialt.: :m' ~:·lfJ H:l: ::, ... ~ .... -I .. .., ~ ~ :.i: ~ r61 ':: R n l\ ~ = ~: ~="~.:ll 1'l , I 1D11 ltr; t l2
ding furth$!r g II O IO g IC! a I tl~fi•orn '-" .~ l~'ft ~~1·1.-111:t:flr~.. 11. 1 · t!; ~=~ f·" •: n:t ~ ~~ -"'~~ :l~l' ~ ~ i:"'-i.; =l .
studies. Although the Mil had 0111 J.-n i;tt ~~ 1\:U1l:U •,::...,.1 • \, ..... :~;.1•1-1 1~ ~~ ~~ 2~ :!: :~ t~A.' J '-:i~ • '-t \1
fl ed lndl l• of M•rber -.,,:If 1.1t fl:tw 1 o I "£. ltf. ~ n• l?-+'i' f~~flir .• 1 59 ,. 'J\I 2' + \t IC . fnJ~ 1 q Ui.T d ill ow al catcu rates ••lw~ "J.11. ~' 1•.'.»1l:i; •'I°'• ' ~1: -~' co"' ,., """ 11u " + '>1i k11 1N 1 • '• •1.., ,,,, .. ·' 22 .. •·rrlsor ·1•dayr !.f."' • · WDI" !..,I 'll -·, ot · ". --." -'"·" • ,~ .uo.t ~·-Kot11r1n1.,. ,. '"" 11•1 JJ::' , w un e 01 rom 1· !· WtJ"ft .OI . eMT Jt 1 ··. l'ftlld r1•r .IO n '' 1~•\ 16'11 -"'II IC'""" l.ie l 'l'• 111• .._ , •
'
WO'"-· rurtberstudlcsa-•• . I . Wf""" t.ltlll. ~ ... ell I J•.t ' -"~<:•Ml u • m I + IClt'tcOl'l" ll!CI l "' '" -··
-·-· ·
1 -'ttl•ll,. . I!· 'Ind f·· i·" n.... • * l}li,1'\\ I\ + "'""" Mln-l~ 111\ "!', .. , + u.k'.rti!CO 1.10 lt! t it, ~· 111· ol '• needed to determine If the~v:~" 1;:11'1:~ llt:llr.'~d 1-1;:?'::J =:"1;r,.:. t"'. w -tt~""'" Ii.~ ',,. ... ~ JS"-le"'""' ,u no ll ur. , .. _ ...
•' ICM I'! I II Id 31' 4 p lwl'! 11' \I 14< ... :: ••• ~=It:-:. ~ ff~ ~ 70'1 -'t ~':rler1 .:-' 1U 1,,'1l ,'• "'•'• -'' reservoir i.s large enou ... to be ll G111" '·uUna-:~?11w11e •,..« tiJ. 1: ~ '1.t0 • m. ,1 1n. , ~fl( •"·• J " s'l'I ,. -lo\ · y L ~ ,,. · economJc inc •. 1.uwar111 1 , 0ti1e' 1• """ tit>• n l.'O -"I '""I .111 ,.... 11 u11 - -' I Tf'y•I J, .•. tllllff Jt ·'' Mill I.~ '' 4fl G>,t ~ -"''• W11 -' I Ti'<\ !J lJ -\o L1c1 Ga• 1..iJ J 2'1:o t''ii Jflt _ ...
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Tutsd&J1 Dtctm&tf U, 1910
Tuesday's Closing Prices-Complete New 'York Stock Exchange List -.. ...... lfllfll U. CltH Qe
IC
Complete Closing Prices -American Stock Exchange List
• • •
DAll Y fllLOT ! J
..... ....
(Mt I Mltll '--CIMI ttf,
II DAILY PILOT
For the
DlssolNtions
Of Marriage
Death Notlf!e•
EaE•TH
ICtllltri.,. E~rlll. 132 W. WUSOfO. Co1ll
MIJMI. Cele of cie.111. Dec. u . Suryl11ed
bP hlllbal\d, John: Nfe!'t!I. Mr. Incl Mn.
Vlnc:enl Reed Muroti.I, ldtho; lhret
bfol,.,.,.11 two 111ren. ~ces, Thl.lrNI•'· Dec:. 17, 1:JIO PM, Wnlcl!ff ClltPll. In•
f.mltflf, El Toro Cemel«Y. W11tcllff
c111 ... 1 Morfull'''" ~. Dll'Klon.
MUllPHY J""""' o. Mu,,,,...,, Att n, IJf 2101 ....._,Ir.er, 0<1111, N1..,._.1 Beach. O.te
or del'lh, December u . sur1lved. bY "°"' Wllllaf'! MurPllY, of Newport lk1dl;
fhrff 1 .. nc1Chlldr1n, Services 1nd In·
ftmie11I prl111t1. 111111. Coron1 del Mir,
DlrKIOl'I. Nl!W&OLO
ltoland A, N-ld. "''' 6" .ol 1071 U~t St .. Munllfl!llOn flt l eh. 0 1!1 ol dHth,
Decltf'l'Ober ll, $ur11l111d bv wife. Lucille; two dluollten. Lindt lnoley 1nd J,..nne
9001; brother, P1'1r. Nl'WbOld; litter,
lleslw O.wlson: tour 1 ranochlldrtn and
-orut..,rtnckhlld. Setv!tt• w!U be
held WednndtY. 1 PM, Smllhs ci.e ... r.
l~tfo""91'1, Goad Stle<llwrtl Cemt'l....,,
gm11t11 Morluarv, Dirtdors.
SCOTT
"-••. U~ry Sc.ol!. Ate 13. of 1"° Ntw•
_., 91...t •• Colt• Mnl. 0111 of ~·"'· O-C-• I~. Suno,.,111 b'f husbend, Mer·
•i!I; ion. Wllll•m W. Anclen.on; o.wn.
t"', Mrs. MltH•" Freed; Ind lh•t
••...&l'lllOren. Gr1veslde oenolctt. IOCllY,
Tue.day, J PM, Wutmlniltr Mtmo!'lll
,,,.. Morlu1,., 1Pld (-!en'.
WEL.U
cri1rlK E. welts. A91 "· ol !JI Av-S1n D!wo, Sin C~e. 5'.orvlwtd IPr
w!tt. 1Mrber1; son. Ali.ii; mo!~. Mrs.
&«nice weu .. 111 of San C'-'-' 11 ...
l~r. Mfl. C"9r11t<:t AinatOI, al 511111
A111. Stn"1.cft, lo01Y. T\leid1Y,• t PM,
flt!! 8f'OHWIY (lllH!. l"t.,-menl, El Toro
Clt"Mltno. 81!1 8~w•Y Mortv1,.,. l)l..
tectors.
ARBUCKLE & SON
Westcllfr :rttortuary
C!7 E. 17tb St., Costa Mtsa -• BALTZ MORTUARIES
Corona del Pttar .... OR s.st!il
Cotti Mtsa ........ ml Will • BELL BROADWAY
MORTUARY
llt BIWdway, Costa 1ttt11 u HQ3 • M<CORMICK LAGUNA
BEACH MORTUARY
17'S Lllpa1 Cu.yon Rod.
4K-1411 • PACIFIC VIEW
~IEMORIAL PARK
C.mekry Mortury
Clllpd
UIO Pacific View Drive
Ne..,.n Beoclo, c.ulomil -• PEEK FAMILY
COLONIAL FUNERAL
llOME
7111 Btlal Ave.
We1lm1D1ter ... m-3W • SMlTllS' MORTUARY
lt7 Mola SI.
Huntingloa Beodo -
Tuesday, Dtcember 15, 1970 .. -
Record
ti!:tif M1re1rtt M.trlt 11!d Ciltnn
Sl l'll., <.tl~·~..{e~ k.
CltTlel11, Nancy JNn and Miron ·-Nerd, G.ll'Y N, end Ykkl Jt1n c_,-. Jeni~ A. 11111 Larry l!'d~AI
Lvwtl*', Rober! C. 1nd Ann LN
Stll, Tlf'rll AM aNI Franke. PFIHliPl. G""llOl'Y W. Ind AIYI L
F", EOll/I Ind llotlert H.
c1r11111n, Mlrltrn L .11111 ltobltt Neel. Ciro! S, llnd AnJ!_lol?.1' 0.
8utl'll<I, I. GtM 1ncl 'P1al.I 8 ,
Wtbb, Ileen ClfMr\1111 Ind Ammon
Wo~ 8roob. Mlchelt ll'M'Mll ttecltt War· -Gr11'11m, k.Mnttfl llll'/d end Glor•l• '" ' Oawnoort, Allcl M. 1fld JesH M. sriekll:on.. DlrltM L. •Ml E.1,111ene M. Wll.on, 01vld H. Ind Mirth• Carol
Reon, Marv Elleft Ind J1me1 D11n Grem, S.rbe~ Siii ind Gm 11..llldolpll
WlbCWl. (harlM. S. anlll 8dtl' A.
Dltr, D11111 Cerel .lrlll·G•,., Let
DIMI" llobttll R. Ind WINltm D. Wlllll'lm. P1tnel1 K11ri,.,n 1fld P1ltld.
Pltlllp
Browl'I. 1YI Lite I"° Flo'lll Rll' H1rrl ... M•llnda Kii' Ind Thol'r\ls Kelltl Bt.ana, Clara Ind Oonllcl WlrrM
Hevw.rcl, Guclrun K.1...n and A:ld'l1td •• N1lr11, ...,,,. Mlrle lnO D1rret1 E...-
Nnbltt, Vlr11lnl1 ARn and Jimmie
Wll'llfl
Cox, Oon111 M. 1Pld HwbeN E'. S t o e ri. Mlcf1111 J oh n 1 nd Sh1ron ICllF1111n
Gkt>11k, JMtY JOHPl't Jr. ind Pllrld• ....
M1Un, Anita L111.1Ji,_. Ind CMsftr W11nt Van.lier, WllU1ms Conntr1 Ind Lindi ,_
OoNIFluti, $anclr1 S. Incl Joi.tl>h MlchHI
8.11eu......,1, EllWlrO Cl1rll: 11ld Ml,.,
'~ Fl ... ~Mr l RlcMrd11111, S1ll'f Mii' Lkl Ind OU1ne c. Dlekmln, Jolln R. Ind Marthl Thertst Pre.tan, Mttlon A:oullt 1nd Arcllle
LOPel. AnlllOfll' FrllOe!'ld< and M1rlh1 "M Allllrum. J1«1ut1llM Miidred and .. -..
Natt'"'' J1net Evl end S~llln YlllOI' H1mlltot1, P~l'tnl M. Incl 0.1r1e1 D.
Wood, Larllllfl M. 11!d Cll1rlts H.
s~ ..... Ru!FI """ lllCI II.OU OewlO 61rre1t, RaWl'l'!ln' E. 111C1 Jem11 ,_,
De Groff, 8onnll and Mld>1el Frink ,,,
QwlM, N1rw:Y AMI Ind Oonnle L11 aec~/lam, Ftavo Ind N1Jlle FINAL DECllEIS
Ellt1rtf DK1mMr 2
McPh1rson, K111!1ten $. IPlll Thllmli A.
MurPhl', M1rlorle L. ll'ld Rlth1rO T.
Lwn1, Adtl•~ •ncl A1tx11MHr A.
L11111lord, J1me1 I. Ind EUii #AH
6oul1fllltr, Ewtlvn M. 111C1 8erNOr0.LfCI H1nlon, C1!herlnt J . Ind Wendell F.
Mltl'llnl'. crie,.,1 11'1d OoNold A. Crult, Krbflll.I J, 111d Notl J,
Flovd, L111r1 Lorr1l111 1nd EUitnl
LOUii
Lll'IOll, K11her1111 J1111 Ind ltld>lrO
,~
Ll'l'lt. Jt!Slka AM 1nd GI,.. Allttllrl
FotO, S1Mtnn1n A. 11\d Saroclr1 C. Hirst. Lind• c. •Piii D1vld J.
Use Cautio1i
In Cutti1ig
Yule Trees
ORANGE -Santa's helpers
in the Christmas tree cutting
division have been reminded
by state forestry officials that
nati<f!!l forests, other public
and private lands are off.
limits.
The warning from the
California Division of Forestry
ant Cleveland National Forest
officials notes t h a t in·
discriminate tree cutting ts il-
legal.
However, by dialing "0" and
asking for Western Union
Operator 25, anyone wishing tn
cut his own tree can find out
where there is a nearby
"choose and cut" tree farm ,
that, for a fee, encourages
such Yuletide activity.
"The only legal way to
choose and cut a Christmas
tree is from a Christmas tree
grower," they note.
SA City Hall
Ceremonies
.Scheduled
SANTA ANA -tnfonnnl
ground breaking for Santa
Ana's new $6.2 milHon, eight·
story city hall will be held
Wednesday.
~1ayor Lorin Griset will
wield the shovel to start con-
struction of the civic structure
by J. B. Allen and Co. of
Anaheim.
The site is 500 W. 6th Street,
adjoining lhe present city hall
anncL
Cit y counci lmen and
members of lhe joint city·
ccunty Civic Center Com·
m i s s I o n are expected to
participate in the ceremonies.
T h e 1 O B , 000-square-foot
building is scheduled for com-
pletion in July 1972 .
Avoid
the
·Christmas
Crush
Jta.1llnht ;
W1stcliff Pl•u
OPIN •nL' P.111.
fHltOU°'H CH•ISTMAI
. .
Countians
To Face
Jury Trial
SANTA ANA -Four
Westminster r e s i d e n ts in·
dieted by the Orange County
Grand Jury on various drug
charges have been ordered to
face jury trial March %9. All
have been freed on their own
recognizance.
Superior Court Judge James
F. Judge set the date for Ken
neth D. Donahue, 25, and bis
wife, Debra Kay, 21, James
Alexander Sebastiano, 22, and
Jack Amold Todd, 23, all of
5582 Walter Circle. They will
" --
face pretrial action March 16. IUIL.WllLiillll• Judge Judge se t tbe same
date for co-defendant Edward
George Metro, 24, of 411~ 6th Fat Cat
•
St., Huntington Beach, but Though they'.i:e among' the best fed animals in the
ordered ~tetro detained in world, tlfe cats at Lion Country Safari-especially
Orange County Jail. The Hun-this cheetah 0 mugging the camera" ....,. can give
tington Beach man also is ac-you a pretty good idea of what a steak feels like
cused of violating parole. sitting lielplessly on your plate. Also, in case you
The five defendants were ar-hadn't noticed, lb·e pic~ure was shot through tlie
rested Aug. 3 by Westminster windshield 'of a car ·with IOcked doors. The cheetah
and Huntington Beach police is running free in 350 acres or realistic African set-
in a joint raid on the Donahue ting at the• Laguna Hills animal preserve.
Storm Benefits
Rains Replenish
Soil Countywide
SANTA ANA -Orange cbes of rain over the entlrt
County's first storm o( the county, most ef which entered
Kids! Free!
Christmas
Show
season Nov. 28-30 was a -the soil where it will nurture Mitchell M1rlo11ett11 bonanza f o r underground plant growth or will filter into pre•111t th1ir f1f!'lous
water replenishmeni and the underground table. puppeh 111 • •p•ciel
molsture-sta---' soU that had About 8,000 acre feet was Chri,tm•• pre11nt1tlo11 1 "~ Th11r1,.f ti.·S1t. been without significant rain· diverted into the' underground Die. 11.11.1t .i1ily
fall (or nine month!, according water supply th r o u g b noon· I pm-2 prn·4 pm-7 P"'
to George Osborne, chiel percolating beds In the Santa 1nd Sit. noonl-2·4 pm.
engineer of the Orange County Ana River maintained by the fr•• to ckildr111 itt
Flood Control District. Orange County Water District, our toisly warll'I ""'"·
filtr U •--· ol the H1111tingh1n C.nftr 1t Osborne estimated that of 8 on &H1a!ns flood •••ch 111d Eding1r
130,000 acre feet of water that control dislrict and other on Sin Dieto f/w1y .. HI
fell on the county, only 13,000l;=pu~b~ll~c~w~a~t~e~r~co~nse~rv~a~tl:••~~~~~~~~~~~ was Jost to the ocean while reservoirs, Osborne said.
117,000 was retained in the
ground or evaporated.
An acre foot of water Is
equlvalent ot 326,000 gallons ,
enough for an average family
of five Cor one year.
Tbe engineer said the storm
spread an average of three In·
FOR $10,000
IN PRIZES ANO
I See by Today's
Want Ads
The DAILY PILOT-SPORTS FUN TOO SEE PAGE 17
residence. --"------"-"'-'-'---';=:=:=::========:;-II
• \Vhat do you get, when you
put, "TONY CURTIS &
JO~lNNY MATHIS" To.
gethf'r?'? You iet "CUR-
TIS. fl.1ATIUS" good-look·
ing combo &: great !Ollnd! !
See classified .• .lor fUrth.
er Wo. ~~H~!OA~e~~!:~~~im~~'~=T~he~O~n~e~T~hel!llC•e•res~~==T:O;O:A:Y:'S::P:A~P=E:R:~
270 acres in the Santa An a developing the surrounding DANISH fUINITUll SWIDISH CIYSTAL
I
e SORRY! NO "BLtJE.
SKY" PROf.11SES! Just
actual "FACT" ... NEED
XTRA $$$$?. , .OUT OF
WORK ? Here's a chance .
lor "UNLUrilTED $$$"
Ck noo ...
Canyon to Anaheim has been area. . · lllDAL llGllTIY CHINA • STUL
approved by the l«al Agency Tbe develQper will also
Formation Commission. finance a clubhouse and build
The city owns the property a swimming pool, tennis
upon which it plans to build a courts and other facilities at
second municipal golf course. . an estimated cost of $200,000.
Location is in the Walnut Can. City Manager Ke i 1 h
yon area of the· 4,200-acre Murdoch 'said the golf course
Noh! Ranch property. land purchase and develop.
The land was purchased' ment would be paid for from
Crom the Robert H. Grant an annual revenue of $16'!1000.
e "TO ALL ASTROLOGY
LOVERs! ! " Relierve your
very own. "SCORPIO"
(8 or n 11116/'lD) lor
CHRISTMAS , •• Scorpio
what???' The answer is in
class 8825.
GRAND OPENING CELEBRATION ' ' ~.;
GET A FR·EE SAFE DEPOSIT BOX
·•
WITFI · A $500 ACCOUNT
AT DOWNEY SAVINGS' NEW COSTA MESA OFFICE
at the 'corner of Raymond Ave. and E. 17th St. ...
No Rental Fees
IMPORTANT •
Only 603 safe deposit boxes are available
inside Downey Savings' new, specially de-
signed, fireproof vault. Many of these are
now taken and boxes are being issued
daily! You are invited to get one now,
FREE, while there are still some left.
-A safe deposit box protects your impor-
tant pap~rs, receipts, and other valuable
possessions. Your police and fire depart-
ment strongly recommend a Safe Deposit
Box. They have the reports that prove you
need one.
Complete
Protection
Vault
BEST DEAL IN TOWN!
Eam The Highest Savings & Loan Interest
Rate In Town With Your Money At Downey Savings
5°/o-.$1 or more 53/4 °/o -$1000 or more
-1 year
51/4 °/o -$500 or more
-90 clays
6d/o -$5000 or more
-2 years
AND GET THESE SERVICES FREE, ONLY AS A
DOWNEY SAVINGS CUS10MER
FREE Check Gashing Service
!FRtt Use of Photocopy Machine
FREE Notary Public Service •
FREE Up to $250 of Travelers
Checks without Service
Charge
FREE ·Trust Deed Collection
with each $1000 Account
I
DO NEY
SAVINGS
and Loan Association
Of course a few other places occasionally
offer Safe Deposit Boxes. Most of them re-
quire a rentol fee or want you to keep a
big account. But we do things differently
at Downey Savings. We make sure our cus-
tomers get the best service in town!
Get your FREE Safe Deposit Box TODA YI
But please hurry . The supply of boxes is
limited and will be issued on a first come
first serve basis.
t
N
Th• Cotti Meta offi(.e It loc1ft4 1t l 6D E. 17th Stte1!, 1t tht corner of 1!:1y'""".
Awenue. We ••• op1n to 1e••• you froll'I t :OO to 4 :00 Mond1'1' through Thur1d1y,
1 MI frall'I 9 :00 to •:OO 011 f ri41y.
~
I
• T,.!dlr, Dtcembtt 15, 1970 S OAltY PILOT 3 -
Laird to Vietnam; T.roop Cut Eyed
Theft Charge
Former Deputy
Gets Court Date
Paris St4?P
Included
On JourneY,
WASHINGTON (AP) -Secretary or
Defense Melvin R. Laird announced to-
day he will go to Southeast Asia early
next month to view the military sltuatlon
first band and discuss future troop
withdrawals lrom Vietnam.
A former Orange County sheriff's depu-
ty accused of the burglary of the Mission
Viejo County Club has been ordered to
race Superior Court trial April S.
Judge Byron K. McMillan set that date
for former deputy Frederick B. Irvine,
Supervisors
To Air Two
Hot Issues
B~ JACK BRODA.CK
01 Tiie O.lly ,.1191 111tt
It won't seem like the jolly Christmas
1eason Wednesday when the board of
supervisors holds public hearings on two
highly controversial subjects.
Starting off the day at 10 a.m. is a con-
tinued hearini: on proposed tidelands fees
In Newport Harbor. At 2 p.m. the Ralph
P.1. Parsons Company report on the coun·
ty air transportation plan is schf'duled.
The possibility that the tidelands
arguments may be postponed is seen in
the recommendation by the county
harbor commissioners thal further study
be given before fees are assessed to
docks and marinas on county tidelands.
However, supervisors vo ted t!:tct. 7 to
levy fees begin~ing Jan. I. Wednesday's
hearing is supposed to dete rm ine the
amount of the ,·ental fees.
Last July Stanley Krause, cou nty Real
Property Services director, recommend·
ed that rees or $6 per foot a year for
docks and 12 cents per foot for com·
mercial marinas be levied.
The rirst two sessions on the su bject
brought forth large scale and vigorous
opposition fro:n boat owners and marina
operators in the harbor area.
It is also indicated that the air
transportation hearing will not be any
happier than previous sessions on that
controver!::::l subject.
Adding to the confusion and giving
strength to objecto~ is a Federal Avia·
lion Agency report opposing Bell Canyon
as a jet airport site.
The Bell Canyon site in the -southeast
gection of the county was recommended
in $140,000 Parsons report. It has been
greeted with outraged cries by residents
and developers of the area.
A series of sessions held by the County
Airport commissioners in Brea , Los
Alamitos and Mission Viejo to sound out
public reception of the Parsons report
has resulted in almost 100 percent re·
jeclion of the ;:ecommendations.
The FAA report stated that hilly ground
near the north end of the Bell Canyon site
would preclude jets from landing or
departing there.
It was added that a prohibited air zone
nver the Western Wh ite House and two
other areas restricted to military planes
only would be violated by the flight pat·
tern from the proposed jelporl
Univer sity Hi g h
Students Becorne
Stanip Collector s
University High School students are
collecling saving stamp books in both
popular colors, in order to purchase a
$2,400 '>''eight training machine for the
new school 's athletic department.
Dick Caneday, athletic director, said
the stamp lx>oks will be redeemed for
cash to buy the 15--station weightlifting
machine which most other schools use to
train thei r athletes.
After the Christmas holidays move inlo
the new school at Culver Road and Cam·
pus Drive , near UC lrvi~. the stamp
drive will be extended, Caneday said,
Presently. students are bringing the
books to school, but after the move, the
Boosters Club and athletic teams will
begin a door·to-door canvas.1 seeking
1,200 books.
1r the campaign is successfu l, excw
books will be converted to cash and the
funds given to the associated student
body fund, Caneday fXlted.
The ma chine being sought provides 15
stations for weighi training exercises,
Mt hthe weight! attached by cables to
each place. "This is the .safest form of
weight lifting," Caneday noted.
Besides use by team athletes, the ap-
paratus would be use.rut in physical
education classes and possibly for "slim·
nasties'' classes for adult education even·
ing students.
Caneday e!'ltimated that "~ pertenl of
area schools:" have such equ!pment, most
purchased by special fund raising pro-
jects. "Being a new school , we haven't
had time to accumulate the money to buy
one. We need it in ordtr to compete with
the other schools," .Caneday said.
The books are being collected at the
Mission Viejo campus htrough the re-
mainder of this week. Univt.rsity High
pens in It! own building on Jan. 4, bar·
inc unforeseen delays.
42. of La Habra. Irvine pleaded not guilly
to charges of burgla ry , grand lhtft. auto
theft. receiving stolen property'and con.
spiracy, all conlained In an Orange Coon·
ty Grand Jury indictment.
Irvine was one of two deputies
assertedly seen in the country club's golf
shop Sept. 20 by a witness who called
sheriff's officers to the scene .
Officers said former deputy Arthur B.
Duncan, 34, of Huntington Beach im·
mediately surrendered but Irvine com·
mandeered a patrol car and led his
former colleagues on a wild chase that
end ed in Riverside County after shots
were excha11ged between the vehicles.
Arresting officers said Irvine repeat·
edly threatened to commit suicide while
they tried to persuade him lo surrender.
Duncan. apparently distressed at the
grand theft and burglary charges filed
against him and Irvine. took his own life
three weeks later, officials said. He was
found hanged from the rafters of the
garage at his home.
Laird said he would be accompanied by
Adm. Thomas H. Moorer, chairman of
the Joint Chiefs of Staff.
The trip will take them first to Paris
and discussions with the American
negotiators In the peace talks with the
North Vietnamese and Viet Cong.
Following the stop in Paris Jan. S the
secretary will then Oy to Thailand and
South Vietnam.
In outlining his plans during a news
conference, the secretary decl ined to say
whether the rate of withdrawals would be
slowed during the coming weeks .
He said he would not discuss monthly
figures or tip, himself down to specific
ceilings but declared. however. that
"we'll beat or meet the troop celling._of
May 1" when U.S. forces in Vietnam are
to be reduced to 2&4,000 men under Pre!i·
dent Nixon's timetable. As or Thursday
American forces in Vietnam numbertd
343,700. Both men were employed by lhe
Mission Viejo Company as security
guards in their off-duty hours. Charges
against Irvine include the theft of heaters
belonging to the Mission Viejo Company
and the Anah :im Plumbing Company.
GOOF Y GIVES LAUR IE HANS EN A SOUVENIR BOOK DURING HER DISNEYLAND TOUR
It Was J ust On• of Mt9ny Gifts fo r Winner of Uncle Len's Ch ristmas Card Contest
During his 1topoVt!r In Saigon, Laird
said he would assess the progress in the
Vietnamization program, the over.all
military situation In Southeast Asia and
the military as.sislance program. Th•
visit, he said, will also give him a chance
to confer with Gen. Creighton Abramt,
the U.S. commander in Vietnam, ''on
what lies ahead" in future troop J'Ruc-
tions. Surfing Movies
Set for Benefit
Of Greenbelt
Day at Dis11eyland Wait s
For Holiday Card .Winner
Surfing fans will have an opportunity to
support the proposed Laguna Greenbelt
this week when the Conservation Club of
Laguna Beach High School presents a
benelit performance of two top surfing
movies.
Producers Fred MacGillivray and Jim
Freeman have donated their full length
feature, "Evolution'' 8nd the 45--minute
"The Performers" for the benefit show·
ings at 7:30 p.m. Friday and Saturday
nights in the high school auditorium.
Proceeds from a tax-deductible dona·
lion of $2 per person will be given to !ht
Laguna Greenbelt fund to help purchase
open space lands around the Ari Colony.
Tickets are available at Sound Spec·
trum. 1264 S. Coast Highway, Lllguna
Reach; Dilley's Book Shop, 46() S. Coast
Highway. Laguna Beach and LiCQrice
Pizza, 1916 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa.
Powder Puffers
Clash in La g una
Undeterred by rain or holiday hassle,
the tenacious athletes of Laguna Beach
High School's Powder Puff football team
will have at it again Wednesday night at
8 o'clock on the high school gridiron.
The annual classic pitting junior girls
against seniors was rained out a fe.w
weeks ago, but the girls claim to have US·
ed the extra practice time to further
their extensive tactical and physical ron·
ditioning programs.
Tickets for the game are priced at ~
cents for students and $1 for adults.
'Dan'J Boone' Visit&
Troops in Vietn an1
SAIGON (AP) - Actor Fess Parker
arrived today aboard a chartered plane
laden with Christmas trees and turkeys
for U.S. troops ln South Vlelnam.
"I just wish we 'd never gotten in over
here," Parker told ney,·smen. "I'd just
as soon we loaded everyth ing on trucks
and moved home." Parker will tour U.S.
bases distributing the plane's care:o.
The Magic Kingdom created In
Anaheim by Walt Disney became "Laurie
Land'' for a day just before Christmas
last year.
That was the day Laurie Hansen. then
9 years old. and her 6-year.old brother,
l\1ark. took mom and dad (Mr. and l\1rs.
Mark Hansen of 2024 Aliso Ave., Costa
Mesa) to Disneyland for the "pa yoff'' on
$4,200 Allocated
For Verner Beck
Memorial F und
The Festival of Arts board of directors
Monday night unanimously appropriatci:I
$4.200 to be set up as the Verner Beck
Memorial Scholarship Fund at the
Laguna Beach School of Art and Design.
Under an agreement with the school a
maximum scholarship of $260 ca n be
a"'arded to a qualify ing student each
quarter lo cover costs lo lhe school. The
schola rsh ip would CQver the cost of lour
da ys of instruction per week al the school
for one quarter.
The scholarship the agreemenl states.
would be "the highest award attainable
al the School of Art and Design." The
11greement stipulates that if there Is no
student qualifying for the award . then the
funds shall not be drawn from the ac·
rount that quarter.
Director Hal Akins praised I he
scholarship in rememberance n{ lhe late
Beck, a festiva l director, as "an award
whi ch will be give strength to studerls
and give them the desire to achieve ."
Tear Gas Devices
Stuf fed in Cu rrency
ATLANTA. Ga . fAP) -A robber ha!!
lo be careful with the money he gets in a
stickup these days -it may suddenly
haul off and squirt tear gas at him.
A tear gas device about the length and
width of a dollar bill is bein g shuffled into
stacks of currency kep~ in places favored
by holdup men, such as banks and lunch
stands.
""' -.... #•#~ D•ILY ll!l.OT Slllf ,.M!I
J UDGES SHOW PRIZES FO R YULE DECOR WI NN ERS
Mr1. Charl11 Orr, Mr1. J ohn Bell Jr., M rs. Denni• Cleaver
Uncle Len's Christmas Card Contest for
1969.
It \WIS a day filled with surprises and
fun for Laurie and her family . They
romped through Disneyland with some of
the world-lamed Disney characters.
Laurie met and talked with nearly an
or them . She had her picture made with
Goofy, Pluto, Winnie the Pooh, Capt.
Hook and f.1r . Smee and with Snow White
and some of the dwarfs. And that still
\\'asn 't all.
During that one day that the Anaheim
ani u.sement park Wa!! "Laurie Land," she
alld her brother had the opportunity to
ride just abOut all the rides they wanted
to In the entire magic world of Disney-
land. .
They also watched the special holiday
parade which is one of the season's joys
at Disneyland . And the whole day was
reported in pictures and words published
in the DAILY PILOT on Christmas Day.
On that same day , La urie's Christmas
card was puQlished on the front page of
the DAILY PILOT holiday editions as
Un cle Len's greeting to his young
readers.
And the point of all this is that
Disneyland and Urrle Len are jusl
y,•aiUng for another boy or girl to come
up with a prize-winning Christmas card
for this year's contest.
The deadline is coming up fast. Uncle
Len just announced in last Saturday's
column this column appears every Salur.
day 1n the DAI LY PILOT) that he cannot
accept entries in the 1970 Uncle Len's
C...:hr1stmas Card Cnntcst any later than ~
p.m. on Dec . 16. {That means cards must
be delive red by mail Or in perso n to the
DAILY PILOT office in Costa Mesa by 5
pn1 thalday.)
Any boy or girl up lo 12 years old is
eligible to enter the contest.
All Christmas cards should be designed
tiO that pictures and words 1 any kind ol
n1essage or ve rse the children want to
use) are all on one side of the same sheet
of paper.
Use while paper up to 81/i by 11 inches
in size. Do not use colored paper or col·
ored ink or cra yons, etc. The enlire
de sign should be in black and white.
Ink , pencil or crayons can be used, but
the pictures and words shOuld be drawn
and writ.en heavily and riarkly on lhe
paper for best reproduction.
Uncle Len will be sole judge of the en.
tries. No entries can be returned.
All cards except the prize-winning en·
try will be given to patients at F'airview
State •losplt.al . For many of the Fairview
patients, the Uncle Len cards will be the
only cards they get for Christmas, so
Uncle Len today urged h.is reader!! to
enter the contest.
Yule Decoration
Judging Tonight
...
Judging teams from the San Clemente
Junior Woman's Club will tour the city's
business and residential districts tonight
In an annual holiday decorating contest
llandmade copper serving trays will be
~ivcn to thr~ win~rs each in the
residential and business divisions.
Only residentia l entries subm itted by
phone In advance "'ill be judged by the
team. Businesses will be en t c r ed
automallcally, however. The project is
11pon.sored by the Chamber of Commcrct.
Tho winners will be determined on Iha
basis of most oriitinal theme, over·nll
art istic effect and !he lime and effort In
prcparalion of the decorations.
Bad Check Passer
· Gets Co1nmitted
For Diagnosis
An investment counselor convicted of
writing S37 ,000 worth of worthless checks
on a San Clemente bank has been com·
milted lo a Department of Corrections
fa cility for a 90-day, pre-sentencing
study.
Superior Court Judge Clarles Bauer
shelved Monday the scheduled sentencing
or Darrell Graf Hafen, 43, of Salt Lake
City. Uta h. and accepted the Probation
Deimrtment's recommendation t h a t
Hafen, convicted by a jury last month on
grand theft charges, undere;o the
diagnostic study.
Judge Bauer, who commen'ted that he
had "noted the behavior o.-.ne defendant
from time to time during trial," will con·
sider his sentence in the light of the com·
p/eted repOrt. Hafen faces a pdssible
state prison term of up to 14 yea rs.
Hafen intetrupled the. se nt enc I n g
session Tuesday to ask Judge Bauer ''to
dG something" about the "conversations"
of the jury foreman and a womao juror
outside the courtroom during trial recess.
It was not clear what Ha'fen intended to
convey by his comments and Judge
Bauer did not seek further clarification·
before accepting the Probation Depart·
ment·s recommendation.
The jovial. balding Hafen was arrested
last July l3 by FBI a.gen~ and San
Clemente police after a probe into ac-
tivities described by the defendant as
''\\•orldwide inves tment counseling and
expert advice on a million business op.
portunities."
Officials of the Bank of America in San
Clemenle sparked the Orange County
charges lthen they advised the district
attorney's oflice that Hafen'! name was
on $37.000 worth of worthles.1 checks.
A .probe into many other enterprises
and banking arrangements in which
Hafen was involved is still in progress.
Orders lo Wipe Out
Viet Ha1nlets Denied
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Brig. Gen. Wi·
nant Sidle. chief of Army information,
Monday denied reports Gen. William C.
Westmoreland had ordered Viet Cong-in·
lested villages out.side Saigon "leveled''
after the Tel olfensive of 1968. ·
Extended Hours
For Boys' Club
Listed in Laguna
The Boys' Oub of Laguna Beach has
announced mended opening hours ef·
fective this week, along with a special
schedule for the Christmas vacation
period.
Instead of closing between 5 p.m. and 6
p.m., the club now will remain open con-
tinuously from 2 p.m. to 9 p.m, Monday
tllrougb Friday and from 10 a.m. to l
p.m. on Saturday, manager Bill Cook an·
oounced. . .
Dlfring Christmas vacation, L>ec. 2J
through Dec. 31 , the club will be open
from IO a.m. to 9 p.m. daily, Cook said.
December specials at the Canyon facllf..
ty include Friday night movies, weekly
table tennis tourQ.aments with trophies
and prizes and the formation of a basket.
ball program , along with the usual ac-.
tivities in the crafts shop, gym, library
.and games room . .
Boys interested In film making are in-
vited to join the Raw Stock Film Com-
pany wh.ich views creative films every
Tuesday night and makes its owa pro-
ductions,
Man Faces Trial
On Murder Rap.
A man accused of klc!Ung and killing a
baby left in his care has been ordered to
lace trial Feb. 8 on murder charges.
Superior Court Judge James F. Judge
set the trial date for James Davtd
Broady, 29, of Santa Ana. Broady pleaded
innocent at his court arraignment.
Broady was arrested last Oct. 27,
shortly after he carried the body of 17·
monlh~ld Bobby Dean Ral eigh to the of·
!ice of a Garden Grove physician. He is
accused of causing the little boy's death
by repeated kicks to the stomach.
Officers said Broady was a lodger at
the Raleigh home and the child bad been
left in bis care while the parents went ti
work.
Hughes Cla1nor
Recluse Creates Stir in Bahamas
By DON ROTHBERG
A'*lt l .. ,., ... Wrlltr•
PARADISE ISLAND, Bahamas - A
pretty girl Jn the tiniest of bathing sui L,
can stroll by the pool at lhe Britannia
Beach Hotel and find all eyes fixed not on
her but on three ninth-floor balconies.
It happens whenever a curtain seems
to stir. or when a figure iJ spotted oo tbe
hotel roor.
For whether inlenlionally oi-not,
Howard Hughes still Is in the spotlight
after more than two weeks in scclll!ion in
the Bahamas.
No one who might recognize Hughes
admits lo seeing him. Yet everyone is
ctrtaln he is here due to the four guarded
suites on the top floor of the Britannia.
Few people have seen Hughes in the
past 12 years. But at this resort, It Is
easy to find many who say they saw blm
dur ing the past two weeU.
Walters and busboys In several hole.I
restaurants 1wear they saw and served
Hughes. Eacb one has a different
descriptio n of the billionaire recluse.
And there is the guest who says he saw
a man at 6:30 one morning, bundled up in
a sweat sult jogging slowly around the
botel tennis court. The guest is convinced
it was Hughes.
A photographer aimed a powerful
telephoto lens at one of the ninth noor
balconies and found himself looking at a
camera aimed al him by a man standing
in front of the ever-drawn curtaln.
A brief stir wu created by the a~
pearance of three men on the hotel roof.
Were they making prepir1tlons for a
htl\copter landing? Perhaps. But a niaht•
long \'lgtl passed with no helicopter.
ibe betting is that It will take a
helicopter landing on the roor to pl
Hughes out of the hotel undetected -if,
in fact, he Is here.
A local pilot uld be Is certain 1
helicopter capable of carrylag up to 11
passen1ers could land on the roof with no
advance preparation.
What brought Hughes here, If be ls, re-
mains a mystery.
l
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t
41 OAILY PILOT
,.JI<» --
'I've decided to
economize·-here ·s
;your Farewell pruentl'
Timing Off
: For Writers
I
By DICK WEST Wlaite House Claristmas
WASHINGTON -You may have noUc.
: ed that President Nixon'• televised news
: conference 18.!lt week moved a1ong at a
• rather herky-jerky pace and had a rag·
ged ending.
Mrs. Richard Nixon led newsmen on a guided tour
of the state rooms at the White House that have
been decorated for Christmas. Tbe first lady called
attention to this gingerbread house and said the
President tried to nibble a piece of. the cake before
she stopped him.
J notJced Olis too, so J uked Hathaway
1 Scribendi, a veteran White House cor· i respondtnt. what caused il
.. That was Nixon's first full dress news
conference alnce last summer and our
tlmlng wu badly off," Scribendl replied.
U.S. Quarters Boll_lhed
Saigon Blast Laid to Anti-American Bitterness
••A lot of ua just didn't have that split.se-
cond reaction that keeps the questions
flowing smoothly.''
I said 111 realize a White House cor-
, respond~t muat continually polish his
• timing to function at peak efficiency, but
' don't you guy s get a chance to practice
· between news conferences?"
"SUJLE,'' HE said ... We usually work
an• hour or two a day on what we call
, 'recognition drills.' This involves spring·
ing to your feet and trying to attract
1 the President's attention so be will give
you the nod for the next question."
"Well, if you have daily wt>rkouts, why
was your timing oH?"
"No matter how often you practice
leaping from your chair, tt almpty isn't
the ame as doing it under game con-
dltiona,'' the correspondent explained.
"Your Uming depend! a great deal on
: developing a sense of anticipatioll -an
:instinct for knowing when the President
lts about to finish a reply so you CM be
.: ready to bop up the exact moment be
stops.
1 usINCE EACH President has his own
tempo, you can only get the feel of it
through actual exposure. You have to
sellle when he is going on a short count
-that is, give a terse 'yes' or 'no.'
answtr -and when he's going to be
discursive.
"You may recall that when PreBJdent
Kennedy was holding frequent news con.
ferences, we had our timing down to a T.
The entire press corps would spring up in
uniJon, like the Radio City Rockettes, and
bel!Ow 'Mr. President' as wlth one voice,
like the Mormon Tabernacle Choir.
: "We be<:ame less synchronlied under ~·President Johnson's fitful sessions and
; I'll be frank to say that on Thursday
: evening we were downright erratic. ' ; "Belng unable to anticipate Niton'a
, finlabes, some correspondents were
• caught fl•t·footed by them. Others. afraid
"'of reacUng prematurely, became
cautioua and hesitated too long."
~ "l said, "What happens if a cor-
• respondent jumps up too quickly?"
"He gets penalized for illegal motion."
-UPI
SAIGON (UPl)-Young students bomb-
ed a U.S. officm' quarters in Saigon
tonight and attacked two American jeeps
in a new outburst of anti-American feel·
ing. In the war, six Americans were kill-
ed in a minefield and 10 were feared dead
in a Navy plane crash.
Fighting in Cambodia stepped up in an
area 45 miles northeast of Phnom Penh
and the cambodians said they had killed
2,000 North Vietnamese : in beating off
three days of COmmwust aasaulta. on
Highway 7. A terrorist bomb also ex·
ploded in Phnom Penh, wounding eight
soldiers.
UPI correspondent Kate Webb reported
from Phnom Penh that 2,000 South Viet·
namese troops were flown into Kompong
Cham on Monday to relieve the critical
route 7 situation. Kompong Cham, Cam-
bodia's third largest city, is 50 miles
northeast of Phnom Penh.
Freelance reporter;photographer Fran·
cis Bailly, reporting for UPI from route
Pressure on Reds
Unilateral POW Release
By Allied Forces Urged
WASHINGTON fUPt) - S e n ate
Republlcan whip &beri P. Griffin &aid
today the United States and South Viet-
flJJD Wlilaterally should release 1,500
able-bodied North Vietnamese w a r
prisoners, aa well as all sick and wounded
prisoners, belore the Vietnamese new
year.
Griffin told a news conference the Nix-
on Administration had been informed of
his suggestion. "I believe that there will
be some sympathetic re&ponse within the
Nations Agree
On Hijack Laws
THE HAGUE (UPI) -An Jn.
temational conference on air law today
approved a proposal demanding pro-
secution "without exception" for aircraft
hijackers and severe penalties for those
convicted.
A 14-day conference of 76 nations
adopted the "convention for th e sup-
pression of illegal seizure of aircraft"
with only Chile and Algeria abstaining.
The Hague convention, as the agree-
ment will be known, will be signed
Wednesday by the nations \\'ho agreed on
Jt and will be open to other nations later.
"Each contracting party (nation)
undertakes to make the offense (of hi-
jacking) punishable by severe penalties,"
the agreement said.
administration," he added.
'Ille second·ranklng member of the
Senate GOP leadership said, however he
had not talked with Presldeilt Nixon
about the matter and "I'm not prepared
ta be more specific."
The Michigan Republican held the news
conference Monday but all infonllatiM
from it was embargoed Wltil today.
"Such a dramatic, humanitarian in-
tiative would create, worldwide, an ex-
pectation of response in kind by the Com·
munist side," Griffin said. "I believe it Is
appropriate as the holiday season ap-
praaches, for our side to demon:strate ·
through this dramatic: and · moving
gesture our deep conviction, expressed by
President Nixon, that all prisoners have
suffered too much."
Griffin emphasized he was not ad·
vocating forced repatriation.
He said a body such as the Interna-
tional Red Cross should be asked to In·
terview the North Vietnamese and
determine which men wish to return.
He said there has been no response
from the North Vietnamese to a proposal
he made to Mai Van Be, the North Viet·
namese delegate general to the Paris
talks, in Paris on Nov. 15.
That proposal was to release all sick
and wounded American prisoners by
Christmas.
Griffin also said the North Vietnamese
rebuffed an offer by the United States
and South Vietnam Thursday to exchange
8,200 North Vietnamese captives for a far
fewer number of free world persoMel.
Storm Pounds New Mexico·
Half-inch Hail Breaks University Windows
Temperatures
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IJ.S. Summary
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1, said the CommWlists bad a1most en-
tirely occupied the town of Prey Totung,
45 miles northeast of Phnom Penh and
that 20 Cambodians were killed and 150
wounded in attacks there. Bailly himself
was slightly wounded when the command
post at 0-Dar received a direct hit.
Tonight's explosion in Saigon ap-
parently was the latest in a series on an-
ti.American incidents stemming from the
shooting of a Buddhist high school stu.
dent in Qui Nhon by an American soldier.
There also have been firebomb attacks on
U.S. military buses and jeeps.
The explosion ripped doors from
hinges, blew out windows and hurled a
parked jeep across a street onto a \1iet·
narnese boy, injuring him. The Saigon
command ordered "100 percent security"
in the Saigon area to guard against
further outbreaks.
ShorUy afterwards ·youths h u r 1 e d
plastic bags filled with gasoline at a U.S.
Navy jeep and one used by the U.S.
Agency for International Development.
Damage was slight and the two vehicles
did not catch fire.
Viet Cong terror was reported in the
Mekong Delta where two grenade! were
hurled into a temple jammed \\'ith
praying Buddhists, killing seven persons
and wounding 87 others. The incident oc·
curred in the town of Long Trung. 44
miles ·southwest of Saigon, Monday night.
Seattle 7 Given
Contempt Terms
In Court Melee
TACOMA. Wash. (AP) -Defendants in
the Seattle Seven conspiracy trial clashed
with U.S. marshals as a contempt of
court hearing erupted into chaos in the
wake of a court order to silence one of
their number.
When it was all over Monday, five of
the accused each faced two six-month jail
sentences and the other two single
sentences of six months apiece.
At the height of the disorder, four of
the defendants were forcibly evicted
from the courtroom and taken to a cell
area where the7 were handcuffed.
Further incidents occurred outside the
courtroom where police arrested 10
persons from a group of about 45
demonstrators and courtroom spectators
who had been ousted from the building.
Those arrested were charged with fail·
ure to disperse and with resisting arrest.
U.S. District Court Judge George H.
Boldt handed down :second contempt of
court citations against d e f e n d a n t s
Michael Abeles, 19, Jeffrey Dowd, 20,
Charles Marshall III, 21, Roger Lippman,
22, and Joseph Kelly, 24. Each drew two
six·month sentences:.
Two other defendants, Susan St.em, 27,
and Michael Lerner, 27, were sentenced
to one six month jail term.
The hearing was ca11ed to set sentences
for contempt of court citations issued last
Thursday when Boldt declared a mistrial
after the defendants refused to enter the
courtroom.
Mrs. Stem was ID and absent Friday
and the judge said Lerner stepped back
from Monday's disorder.
Union Ratifies New
Ford Auto Contract
DETROIT (UPI) -The United Auto
Workers today ratified a three-year con-
tract with Ford Motor Co., leaving only
Chrysllir among the Big Three auto
maker11 left to agree on a new pact wltb
the uniOn in the United States.
The ford agreement, similar to One
reached with General Motors after a f7·
day UAW strike, becomes effective Mon·
day. The contract covers about 160,000
Ford hourly employes. Negotiations.
mcanUme. continued between the UAW
and Chrysler with a target deadline -
but not a strlke deadline -of Friday.
i20.a11 .Jot.nae11 ..
Russ Say Luna 7·
Drops for Ven us
MOSCOW (UPI) -Ruui~·· unmanned
spaceship Venus 7 parachuted today
toward the surface ol. the planet Venus
aft.er a 120-day flight lrom earth, the
Soviet News Agency Taas reported.
Tass said during the SS minute descent
the spaceship broadcast informaUon back
to earth and that the information was
being processed and evaluated.
The dispatch did not say whether the
space probe was expected to broadcast
from the surface of the planet, or
whether it had made a safe landing.
The progress report 1 e f t the globe-
!haped entry capsule sWinging beneath Its
red parachute -just the situation in
which the world last heard from the
previous Soviet Venw: spacecraft.
Venus 7, a 2,500-pound instrument
package, blasted out of earth orbit on
Aug. 17 to begin Russia's fourth attempt
at a soft landing on Venus.
The earlier efforts failed because
radios stopped functioning while the
capsules still were floating· downward on
parachutes. Soviet scientists said that in
one case, that of Venus 4, the enormous
pressW"eS of the Venusian atmosphere
crushed the capsule.
The distance from the earth to Venus
.varies from 2C.6 million miles to 70.6 mil-
lion miles because of the eccentricity of
the orbits of the two planets.
Tass said when the space station had
covered about 19.8 million miles it
transmitted an enormous amount of
telemetric information.
It was when Venus 7 was within about
700,000 miles from ' Venus preparaUort!
Franco Suspends
Civil Liberties;
12 Arrests Made
MADRID (AP) -Spanish police ar-
rested 12 persons in raids in Madrid to-
day as a government order :suspending
civil liberties throughout the country
went inta effect.
Sources said police all over the nation
were rounding up opponents of the
regime of Gen. Francisco Franco.
Government critics were threatened with
six months in jail without charges under
the near state of emergency.
The regime ordered the clampdown
Monday night in efforts ta stop a tide of
protest and violence over the trial in
_Burgos of 16 Basque nationalists. Civu-
liberties are to remain suspended until
next June 15.
Verdicts for the 16 Basques were ex-
pected by Wednesday, and there was
speculation that some of them would be
sentenced to death for the murder two
years ago of a political police chief.
The Vatican said it has appealed to the
Spani:sh government not to hand down
any death sentences in the trial and re-
ported that it has played a role in seek·
ing the release of West Germany's
honorary consul in San Sebastian, Eugene
Beihl, wllo was kidnapped by Basque ex-
tremists.
The situaticm represents the worst
government crisis in Franco's 31-year~ld
dictatorship.
POW Letters
began for the closing' Stages of the fli~ht
-the station's entry into the Venusian
atmosphere.
Temperature in the descent c.rart was
lowered to minus 8 derees centigrade.
\\'hen the station entered the Venusian
atmosphere at 8:02 a.m. (12:02 a.m.
EST) the orbital compartment was
separated from the descent craft. it said.
An aerodynamic brake slowed the des-
cent craft and a parachute system was
activated. It was then that the craft be-
gan transmitting for 35 minutes. .
The Soviet Union has concentrated its
space studies on Venus while the United
States has concentrated on Mars and
plans to launch two Mariner television
spacecraft in March to orbit the red
planet for three months and photograph
the Martian surfac.e.
In 1976, the United States plans to
land two automated laboratories on Mars
to search for life there. Russia has
not had a successful Mars misson.
250-Missing
In S. Korean
Boat Sinking
SEOUL (AP) -More than 250 South
Koreans were feared drowned today in
the sinking of a ferryboat in the Korea
Strait.
The Namyung Ho, with 256 passengers
and 20 crewmen aboard, went down on its
4-hour run between Cheju Island, south of
the Korean peninsula, and the southern
Korean port of Pusan.
Japanese ships pic;ked up eight
survivors, and a Korean police patrol
boat picked up three others. A Korean
fishing vessel reported picking up a 12th
survivor who was taken to a hospital in
Pusan.
A Korean police plane reported sighting
two persona clinging to debris, and a
Korean police officer who flew over the
area said he saw oil slicks and floating
wood.
Maritime authorities said they feared
most of the boat's occupants had perish-
ed, however. because the rescue opera·
tion was delayed and the weaUler waJ
very cold.
Transportation Ministry officials said
they believed the boat sank because she
was overloaded. In addition to the 278
persons aboard. they said, the 263-too
vessel carried about 250 tons of cargo.
'Police said a preliminary investigation
Indicated that the ship had also left Cheju
Island without the skipper aboard
The ferry went down between 1:30 and
8 a.m. but Korean authorities were not
aware of the sinking until around noon,
when they heard news dispatches from
Japan quoting Japan's Maritime Safety
Agency. The agency's office in
Kitakywhu. southern Japan, said it
learned of the sinking from rad io mes.
sages from other ships in the area.
The Japanese agency assigned four of
Its patrol vessels to help Korean boats
and planes in the search. Several
Japanese fishing boats also joined the
operation.
Miss Dianna Green, 20, one of six members of a egation from
Colorado Springs, looks at some o! lhe 125.000 letters protesllng POW
treatment which were not accepted by the North Vietnamese em·
bassy in Paris. Miss Green's Cather bas been missing in act.ion for
three years.
-
Octuplets Odds:
I in 20 Trillion
JUST ABOUT every ~'Om11t
knows her bust measurement.
But hardly 1 man knows his.
chest measurement is a rari·
ty. Most· any woman knows
her hip measuremM.t, also.
But harlly a man knows hls.
Tell a woman her hips outtape
her busUirie by two inches and
&he will not regard It as news.
Such is average in the
feminine figure. But tell a
man his hlpe art two inchell
bigger lhan his chest and he'll
probably contradict y o u ,
although such too js average
in the male body build.
IF THE GENTLEMAN Is
from Korea, chance1 run 19 to
one his family name is Chong,
Ahn, Choi, Lee, Pak or Kim
• , • WANT TO MAKE a little
room look bigger? Nothing tn
It. Paint the ba!ieboards the
,;ame C1llor as the carpet •.•
THE DETROIT BOYS ~ay the
gestation period of tlie new
car is two years, just about as
long as that of an elephant.
WAS UP ON the river this
morning. Digging a hole.
Fellow comes along, sits down
on stump, rolls a cigarette,
and says, "Outhouse?" [ say,
"Yeah," and kept at it. The
soil was sandy enough to make
the digging easy. but the roots
kept getting in the way.
Another old boy comes along,
hunches down, and says.
"You're going to havt lo 10
deeper than that." I ~aid
''Looks that way." Couple
tnGJ'e men showed up pretty
soon. One says, "You'd be bet-
ter off putting in 9i septic
tank." t agreed. The other
says, "Know a guy !with a
backhoe who'd come l n
cheap." 1 was abouS waist.
deep by then, First felfw with
the roll-your~wn i; a y s,
''Believe the phone mpany
might do that for y free
with their posthole a er." I
hoisted myself oul of die hole
and uid, "Gue• I'll take a.
bteak." 1 headed up tbe r!Yer,
thinking, "These guys. don't
get it. A man. can dig a hole
juat becauae he wants to dig •~
hole, but they don't ·aavvy!'
When I got bee~ a couple of
hours later, the bole was three
feet deeper than I'd Jeft It, the
walls smooth· and true, the
foundaUon rocks perfeclly in
place.. And JKtbody W a I
around.
CUSTOMEl\ SERVICE -Q.
"What are lhe odd• aeainst a
woman havin1 eiaht babies 'at
once?" A. One In *> trillion.
Don't know exactly how many
a trillion is, but it's quite a
bucketful. So far in this cen4
Lury only three sets of oc-
tupleta have seen the daylight.
Twice in Mexico, three yeara
ago and 49 years ago; and
once in China, 36 years ago.
None Jived long. ·
AMONG RACEBORS&'!, the
record book list.a: "Whoa," a
fUlyootof ''Stopsign '';
"Complacency," a filly out of
••smirk"; "Forevtr After," a
colt out of "Happy Ending,"
and "ln Our Time," a filly out
of "Appeuement." It was tha.t
movie man Louis B. Mayer
who owned these animals, and
IO named them . . . THE
HARBOR WATER cf
Venezuela's Puerto Cabello is '° calm, It's said, a sh\p can.
be anchored by a single hair.
And that's how the port came
to identified, too. Puerto
Cabello means Port of the
Hair. The Spanish speak in
nifty flavors, don't they?
Your que1ti07L'J and com-
mt"nt1 ar• welcomed and
wiU b• wed in CHECKING
UP whtrtUtT pouible. Ad-
dress letter• to L. M. Bottd.
P.O. Bo• 1875, Nn>porl
Btach, Calif., PUMI.
Medi-C l Cut T~ay;
Hearin s Under Way
SACRAMENTO (U~! I
The Reagan administr11tion's
10 percent Medi-Cal aitback
goes into effeet today ts it
holds a public hearing on
further cuts in the health care
program.
The Department of Realtl1
Care Services called the hear-
ing on proposed regulations
cutting back payment rates
from $14 to $13.54 a day for
nursing home patients. The
proposal is expected in be.
hotly contested by nursing
home operators.
Drug Supplier
Gets Sentence
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -A
man alleged lo be the "Nt1. 1
1upplier of illegal bennie5 in
the western United· State! in
J967 was sentenced to four to
23 years 1n state pris<ln Mon·
day.
John Darby Blair. 52. was
given four consecutive prison
terms on two counts of
manufacturing danger o u s
drugs, one of possessi n g
dangerous drugs for 11ale arid
one of violating parole on a
previous grand theft co114
vlction.
Going into effect today was
a 10 percent cutback in
payments to health care pro.
viders such as doctors, drug4
gifts and nursing homes. Of4
ficials have promised it will be
only "temporary."
The redUC'tion, which in-
cludes delay of "nonessential''
patient servicts, was ordered
Dec. 2 as a step to avoid a
threatened $140 million deficit
irt the current Medi-Cal
budget. In4 patient hospitals
are excluded from the cut.
The Califcrnla Association
of Nursing Homes Monday
failed In a last-minute attempt
to block tbe 10 percent cut4
back as it applies to nursing
homes.
Superi(}f' Co1,1J'l J u d g e
William Gallagher rejected a
request from nursing home
operators for a terl'!porary
reatrainlng order and ins~ad
set a hearing for Dec. 29 when
Medi-Cal oUicials will be ask4
ed to show why the cuts are
necessary,
The suit by the aSM>CitUon
was b1sed on a court action
fjled in 1967 when operators
charged that the state wasn't
paying them reasonable COIUI.
Last February in that cue,
the 3rd Dislrict Court of Ap-
peal directed the: state to hold
public bearinp on the fee
issue.
SEASONS GREE'l'IZWGS
fl NE
WINES ORDER
FRESH
TURKEYS
ANO TllMMIN•S •Alt~Y
_.,_
..._,., .....
Delivery
botJlna
1 p.m.
673-3510
-.J
~No Surplus
For Reagan
Vote Fund
sACRAMENTO (UPl)-Gov.
Ronald Rta1an•1 1% mllllon·
plus 1enerd re-election effort
flnllbed '911.000 1n· lhe ·red in-
stead cl proclucinC I surplus,
campalp f 1 a a a c • 'o(ficlals
,.port.
'.'We're a litUe ahame-f1ctd
about it," reported onci cam·
palp·alde .. wbo utacf.nol lo bo
named. .
"Sa,,to Claus. DOfSN 'T live at tho North Pole I
He I 1v•s at th• shoppingcmlter
'cauaa I SAW. him.•
DAILY PIL!Jt.11 . ... . . . . ' . . ,., ' Another Murder Rap Souglat
.Secrecy Veils Manson Study
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -
Fourteen witnesses testified
Monday at a secret grand jury
h,earing as the state sought
another murder indictment
against Charles Manson, ac4
C'USed mastermind of the Tate•
LaBianca· slayings.
Two ol tbt flnt witnesses
were the mother and wife or
movie 'tunt> man Donald
"'Shorty" Shea. 36. who di>ap-
peared In Augui;t. 19St, ahorUy
after the Tate killings. Neither
would speak to newsmen.
Deputy District Attorney
Bur ton Katz, who ls presen4
ting the case, reportedly told
the jury that Shea waa: 1ltln at
the Spahn Ranch at the time it
was the stronghold of the
1'Manson Family.''
week~ aictms 1n a desolate
mountain area north ot here.
Sheriff's · deputies were to
re'wne a search for the
bearded lawyer after aeuonal
raiM sub6ided. ·
Maxwell Keith. the attorney
appointed by the court lo
substitute for Hughes. was to
inform Superior Court Judge
Charles H. Older whether he
wu sufficiently backgrounded
to proceed wllh the case
Wednesday.
For1y4Jve witnesses have
been called to testify, in-
cluding five former members
of the 11Manson Family" who
appeared at the 36-year-old
Manson's trial for the killings
of actress Sharon Tate and sil
others.
Sheriff's perso~nel dug up1piiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimjj
the grounds of the old movie
lot ranch after repor13 that
Shea has been killed,
decapitated and buried there,
but the search revealed no
trace of him.
Avoid
Dul Ed Milla, a lop-level ol·
llclal o1 Ille J\ •·P u· b II c a n
1overnor'1 campaian ftnarn:e
cqantution, Aid M o n d a y
tbal the lull lil<I ol lhe deficit,
won't be known ftr some time.
He predicted . lt will bo
••retaUvely. amall." "We will· work on getting -----------------~----
Cab Firm
Chief Takes
First, Fifth
Katz was reported seeking
lndictmenLs agaim:l Manson
and two or his followers ,
Bruce Davis, '11, and Clem
Tull!, 19.
the
Christmas if
Crush contributions to pay it oU, ••
ukl Milli, Reaaan'1 Southern
California finance chairman
and a co-cbairman et the
1cvemor'1 lnlUl'Ul'atlon ·com·"
mittee. ''We can use 1eme cf
the lunda from die lnauaural,
if neceisary_"
Fiprea filed with Secretary
ef State H. P. SuWvan la11t
....i: dllcJoaed that Rtaaao'•
heavily bankrolled fall eJtclicn
campaign received an
estimated $2.2 million and
spent '1135 million ·-produc-
ing: 1 IW'plus of more than
IM,000.
But the cums were reported
before all the umpalgn bills
had been received lnd all tbe
late contributions tallied,
Mills said a special bank
Joan of $90,000 was obtained
during the final hectic day1 of
shutting down the campaign
crg1riizltlon "'to have the
money en hand to pay 111 the.
bill s on hand."
The sum showed up en the
financial report as income but
because it hadn't been repaid
failed to show as an expense.
When the campaign's finances
become clear, an amended
atatement will be tiled, Mills
said.
By law, candidates must file
their financial reporll within
35 d1ys of the general election.
Office WiMers who fail to de
10 will be barred frem taking
office until a report is filed 1e.
companied by a special C<IW"t
•rder.
Long Beach:
Councilmen
Face Recall
LONG BEACH (UPI) -
Four city councilmen who
backed expansion of the Long
Beach airport and the costly
Queen Mary project find eut
today whether their stands
have cmt them their jobs.
Loyalty O~th Reversal
Pleases · San Jose Prof
During the Tate tr i a 1 .
former Manson follower Paul
Watkins testified the hippie
SAN DIEGO (AP) -The leader once told him about
former president Of Yellow "killing this guy, Shorty."
Cab Co. whose testimOJlly Jed Watkins' testimony en that
to bribery conspiracy indict· subject was hailed befure he
SAN JOSE (UPI) -A San fend them against 1 ' a 11 men~ against public officials could elaborate, but tie was
Jose State Colle&e professor, enemies, both fortip and has invoked the First, Fifth scheduled to appear before the
whose belief• resulted in the dome1tic." 11nd 14th Amendments at the · Jury.
Supreme Court declaring the Und..-the DWworth Oath trial of Mayor Frank Curran. The Ta•· trial , .••• 11 was ,,. C.!1"fornia •eachers' oath un· ' B t 1 t M d Ch I ~ ~ ~ whkh has not been court4 u a er on ay, ares pected to resume Wednesday
constitutional, uys: "I feel tested, they" must also swear A. Pratt answered Questions after a nearly tw~week break
very happy." or affirm that they have never about a fare increase sought caused by the disappearance
", • 4 The bill of righlt i1 knowingly been 8 member of by the firm after he was told of defense lawyer Ronald
upheld at least ill certain the Co . t Part immunity from proseeution Hughes.
cases,'' continued Kenneth mmwus Y· does not extend to perjury Hughes ls feared to have
Weatcllff Plaza
OPIN "TIL f P.M.
THROU•H CHRISTMAS
Mackay, who teaches meteor4 Thrown out by the Supreme charges. been killed In Thanksgiving
oJogy. Court was an oath ~manded Pratt, whose testimony ledJ~~"....''.".'.:'.'...~~'.".'.'~~':!"~~~~~~~~~~!
MacKay, 31, added that he before teachers could obtain lo the Oct . 8 indictments of 1Anert1Jerntno
had no objections to taki"' the credentials in this state. Curran and eight ethers. Revoluti·oni·zes levering oath, which with the MacKay's suit contended It startled the courtroom by
Dillworth Oath, still ls re-was "unduly vague, uncertain refusing to give more than his
quired. and broad" in·, a part whi ch and his attorney·s names D t w •
.. I think loyalty oaths are demanded thal teachen swear under questioning by Depuly en Ure ea r1 ng
kind of dumb anyhow, but an lo "promote, respect foc the Dist. Atty. John A. Hewicker.
oath simply pledging to uphold flag, and respect for law and He said further answers might The nureiit thint to havini your tect sum• from bruilint. You_,. the U.S. Co•stitution and itate order, and allegiance to the incriminate him. own teeth .. pcmible no• with a bitt'hardtf'. clietr bttttr, •t man pla1tit cream diKOYery that actu· naturally. constitution is not olr government of the U11ited1:;iii0iii0iii0iii0iii0iii0iii0iii0iii0;;;J elly ho!d1 both "upper•" and F1x00t:NT m.ay help 1'111 ..,.t. jectionable.,. State!." II .. lowen" •• nevtt btf~ po11ihle. ftlD!l: elarl7. bt mott at eue... l · Ungth 'ph h FOR $10,000 ll'1arevolutionaryditc0ver1 ThttpecialP!lldl·point~ Wilton Riles, incoming State n ?eJtt a~ rase, t e ca11td F1xoo•~. f(N" <lloily home let• you IPOt F1xooam •itll ~ Superilltendent of Public Supreme Court found it was IN PRIZES AND u1e. (U.S. Pat. 13.003,988) With cilion ... whereo~I
lnstruclion sa.ld he be.lieved "euentially illdiatingulshable" SPORTS FUN TOO ~xy00!':': .::f' 1!;~~;J"T{~ h~~,~~:t~~t8A~'.:e'~·
one oath WU enough. from a Wuhington State oath SEE PAGE 17 •OITY of dmturee comint loc.. tial to health. See your ckntiat
"I aee no need for three which previwsly tiad been Fixoos"" form• an elutlc man· MU111ly.Gt1_,.·to-u.l'lxoosNT TODAY'S PAPER tnne that hdoo ah.m'b .... ,.._. o,,, .. ,, '''''''' r • ..., ,, ... oaths," he 1aid. ''l dOll't found unconstitutional. of bitin1 and tlmrini-~ ;;;. mu, ~ten. ..... -
believe you can solve all your,j·~~~~~~:;;;;~--~iii:iiii:iiii:iiii:iiii:iiii:iiii:iiii:iiii:i~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~i;;;;;iiiOiiiOiiiOiiiOiiiOijj
problems by having 10meone
take an oath."
"Honest people will etve you
an honest answer; dishonest
people will give you a
dishonest answer. But in
general, I aet nothin1 wron1
with reqW,ing a teacher or 11d.
miniltrator who works with
young people to it.ate their in·
tent to· suppmt the 11"1 and
conslitulloo of the stale eel
nation.',
The levering oath, which has
been tested in court, is re-
quited cf all 1t1te, county' and
dty emp]O)'es and requires
that they iwear or affirm they
will "bear true faillJ and
allegiance" to the state and
laden.I constituticna and d~
STARS
$y411" 0111•Pr ,, •it• ., th.
••tl4'1 tr••t ••tr•lo1er1, Hi1
c•l1111111 it •11• •I ffi• DAILY
11LOTS tt11t fe•ture1,
weeksOnlY
PAlft'\Utl
1\I'-.~:·· •preft'llUlll ndlfd ~
The four, Paul Deats, Bert
Bond, E, F. Cruchley and
Ruuell Rubley, are t be
targelt el today's recall elec-
tion. ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii:ill A group ca 111 n I ltlelf•i
i'\dU'l>l'Y •tll
GLASS-BELTED "Citizens for Recall" collected
about 18,200 1i1natares on its
recaJI petition charging that
the four were "arroeant and
unresponsive" in iregard to the
Queen Mary pro/<J-1. airport
expansion and a n "im-
neceuary" five percent utility
tax.
DIAMONDS
AND
ESTATE ~EWELRY
~URCHASED
"These people (the coutl4
cilmen) just don't, give a damn
a~ut 'boW (be pei>ple feel,"
group campal;ti chairman
Saul Stolzberg chara:e<t "Ycullr---------.1
wouldn't belleve~hat Joa on s.u+h C•ast ''•••
down here. Jl'• the •covern-lrlltel •• S•11 Diet• fwy.
ment of the few, for 1the few c .. 1. M••• 140·t066
and by the few.'~
.......
llTAfL ITDiD
1222 $, IROOKHURST mo I. COAST HWY.
ANAHllM COAONA DIL MAR t• • • v-.. c.tw) .... , fl ..... ,,.... C-) ~
• DISTIWCTIVE THAEE·AlNG
WHITEWALLS
• FA"40US OUAL·TAEAD
DESIGN
30%
' OFF ,
Rl!QULAR
PRtCI!
ANYSIZI! -
3 ~IECE
Wl,ND 'N
RAIN SUIT
"''' J .......... .. • ww ...... ,., .. .
• """ hty ..... 1c
• """ WlalWllty
ON~Y
SIZE
E78·1-i (7,35-1-i)
F78-1-i (7.75-14)
G7S.14 (8.25·1-i)
H78·1-i (8.55·1-i)
J78·1-i {8.85·1-i)
F78-15 (7.75-15)
REG. SALE PR ICE PRICE
$-i7.75 $33.-i2
$49.90 $34.93
$54.95 $38.48
$60.70 $4 ~.49
$68.80 $<18.16
$49.90 S:W.93
FEO. ex.
'AX
12.25
S2.-i4
$2.60
$2.80
$3.01
$2.-iO
SIZE REG.
PR ICE
G78·15 (8.25-15) $54.95
H78·1S (8.55·15) $60.70
J78-1 S (8.85·15) ......
9005 (9.00· 15) $69.85
L78·15 (9.15-15) $70.90
GTW.
• 2 Abergf$$S Betts
• 4 Ply Nygen• Nylon
Cord BOdy
SALE FED. EX.
PRJCE TAX
$38.-i6 S2.60
$.42.49 S2.80
$-i8.1 6 $2.93
$48.89 $2.87
S-i9.53 $3.2\)
NO TRADE NEEDED -SALE ENOS DEC. ti
General.Jet
~I ·-
•Dual T,.ad 0..igll
• 4.p1y NylOn Cota
• Our.~RubbtirTl'hd
'l',1'$t4
7.1$.lf
$21.2.5
1,2$-14
•.is.11
$24.00
$1 ,.99 Tubel•ss Ythil&w1n prices plus $1,78 to Sz.s.3 Fed Ex.. Tax per tire,
depending on aizt, plus •xchenge casing.
nu
Doo Swodhiol
COAST
GENERAL
TIRE
• 515 W. ltllo., C-M-
540·1710 646,JOU ~
AVERY
GINERAL TIRE
SERVICE
16941 a-h ... -. H•••"'lott~,.. .. -M7-st50
O!frf!.i.AL TiftlS ••• WOATH OfUVING ACROSS TOWN TO an----------
I
l
•
•
j
I
I
. •
•
•
,
~ ;. •• ~ ..
• • ~
• DAJL;y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE
Horse Racing QueStio:µ ·,::
Will thoroughbred horse racing be added lo Orango
County's stellar list of entertainments?
Already the home of some .big attractions -Disney·
land. Knott's Berry Farm, Lion Country Safari, not to
mention 40 mil~s of beautiful ·beaches -the county
could indeed be offering horse racinl? as well. The
Orange County fair board will take up the iss ue this Thursday night. •
The idea is anything but new. For almost 20 years,
various members of the !air board (officially the 32nd
District Agricultufal Association) have been tossin~ up
trial balloons as they eye hungrily the potential income
a race track would produce. Jn each case, up to now,
the ball oon has either been shot down or has simply
disappeared.
The local fair board began a detailed study o!
adding horse racing to its yearly calendar last monlb
and presumably will tackle the topic in earnest this
week. If they vote to proceed. approval wiU be required
from the .State DivisiOn of Fairs and Expositions and the
Caliiornia Horse Racing Board. Public hearings also
would be required. -
The board might find diffiCult y in· stirring up any
Rreat enthusiasm for horse racing in Orange County.
ln the first place, approval presumably v.·ould be re·
quired from the city of Costa Mesa , in \vhose bound·
aries the 160-acre facility is located. Even if -and
this has been discussed previously -the Costa Me sa
tiite is swapped fof acreage· elsewhere in Orange Coun·
ty, the city of Costa Mesa would govern the new own-
ers' use of the fairgrounds a&reage and thus could nix
the deal .
Certainly a massive investment would be required
U thoroughbred events were expected to rival tho se
itaged at Santa Anita and Hollywood Park.
But beyond that. it probably would be difficult to
convince an ordinary Orange County citizen that horse
racin~ is really desirable. Racing has a reputation of
attracting certain elements that are not always \Vel·
come in a community.
Moreover. many citizens are .going .,to ask . thls
gimple question: \Vho really needs1'horse racing? 'Whom
does Jt benefit?. .. •. . '
The fair board is Hkely . to reply that it is under
strong pressure to find new sources of financing and
that horse r_;icing js ah easy mean~,., of brin&.in& ,in
revenue without going to the taxpayers. But> we'd. l\less
the average Orange Countian is ·&oing to quest.lets. 1er~
iously if the annual fair and the other uses of the prop-
erty are that important to him. '
The fair bOard wllr hav.e to ·com~ith some'ex~
ceptionally stron'g arguments if it is to obtain any teJ.l-
. ing show of support for gambling and horse racing ih
Orange .County. The ql)estion, again, is a diiect one:
Who needs it? · · · '-·
Early Decision Urgent ·
Voter revolt over school taxes Continued tn 1969-70,
but eased up slightly on school boridS~ according lo a
ne\v statewide survey by the California Teachers Asso-
tion. ·
There were 3.9 percent fewer ta): elections carried
in 1969·70 than in the previous.year. Bu\ s.uccessful bond
elections increased by 4:5 percent.· ·
The bond election~ were tJ1'1ier the tw~thirds m~
jority vote rule. which the California ·Supreme Court
'struck do\vn last June 30 and ·is n<:>w being .tested ln.~e
U.S. Supreme Court. . . .
Had the bond elections been decided by a simple
majority, 85.8 percent of the bond elections w9uld have
succeeded. Among these is the Tustin Union High &;hoot
Di strict. which looks to the U.S. Supreme Co1.1rt.for final
approval of a $25.8 million bond issue approved by a
simple majority. · .
The issue can't be settled too s.oon-for the sake of
bond sales for school facilities now held up pending de·
cision on pending appeals.
' t . ...
I
l'igoi"ous Attack on Chic · Radicalisin •
Reappraisal on
Something s t r a n ge -and . perhaps
5ignificant -is happening in the rarefied
almosphere inhabited by trendy in·
tellectuals. For the fltst time in years,
some members of the in·group have
adopted a nat-all·is-rotten·in·America
line. A vigorous attack is being launched
on the chic radicalism that per\'ades
some inlellectual salons.
Editorial
the Left
-radicalism of the 1950s had much in com·
mon with conservatism, he notes, in·
eluding the bias against government in-~
lervention and the belief that the
theoretical and politic.al structure built by
the liberals did not work. But the 1960s
saw radicalism taken over by those
.. square -in the succession to the sim·
pie-minded, grotesque, freedom-denyirtg
radicali sm of the Leninists and Stalinist!
of th e J930s."
Power of the
President to
Wage War
Still They Call It
'Delivery Service~
j
Research·
•·sub-literary genre of pornography.''
This new development can be seen in
10me of the small but' influential IN RECE1''T ISSUES, Commentary has
magazines that are the Bibles of the co m· described radical talk about political
munity. In Commentary, Prof. Nathan repression as nonsense , labeled the Black
Glazer, a Harvard sociologist , states that Panthers a menace, called the women·s
1tudent radicalism has caused him to liberation movement silly and branded
switch from ''mild radical" to mild con· The New York Review of Books, a major
&ervative. At the same time, Norman in tellectual publication of the New Left,
Podhoreti. the publication's chief and as anti-American. The December issue
author of "Making It," writes that he has mount! a massive attack on the youthful
fallowed a similar path. counter-culture, including Charles A.
And Phili p Rahv, founder in 1934 of the Reich ·s "The Greening of America.'' In
one-time Trotskyi~liiie Partisan Review, his column, Podhoretz calls some of the
Cismisses the ••vacuous couflsels of the aUiludes surrounding the counter-culture
Old Left" and attacks the NeW Left as "t~ new hypocrisies" al)d d1!scribes
uan inchoate m881 ... ol~paliUcal group-them a9 "insensitive, t n curia us ,
bigs." Writing ii\ the "'first iS!Ue 1 o( unimaginative and smug."
Modem ~ions, his,. new paUtical-Writing of his own ideological shift.
literary .. quarterly, Rihv says that Glazer said one explana Uon for it was
"'revolution is a process, not a hap-,.\ that ''the character of radicalism chang·
,pening, '' and goes on to• denawice the · .. ed over the course of lbe decade." The
GLAZER 'S ARTICLE led to COD<
siderable soul-searching by some of h.js
fellow intellectuals. Dwight Macdonald,
the critic, says : "I'm not a radical no"
in the sense <>f believing in a revolu·
tionary solution, but I . don't fee l
particularly. ~aUve." I r v I n g
Kristo\, et>.f.dilor ef The Public lnj.erest.,
observed : "I started moving right a long
time ago." .
Michael Harrington, author vr "The
Other America'' and chalmi.an of the
Sociallst Party, replied lt,lat what Glazer
saw as conservatism i1 mt.rely "a reac-
tion to pseudo--radicalilin." And Irving
Hawe, the editor of DWent, declared: ·~I
can't tell the difference between the
revolutionaries and the counter·revolu·
tionaries."
Last .April the M~~sachusetts
legislature i~pted. a law denying the
·power · o( the President lo wage war
"".ithaut !! declar11Uan by the CongreSs, as
provided by, three bare wards in the
·Cons~ttition, Art. I, Sec. a..11 .
The ··Mass8Chilsetts , :Attorney Gener~
was empaWered to-rbflnt aUil In the
, t happened lo be borne a little later
than usual Ye!t.erday morning,. when a
big-truck rolled up in front bf the house
with the six new dining room chairs we
have been waiting for since mid-Sep-
tember. \ '
'· The driver rang lhe bell, and when I
answered the doo(,
he laid, "I'll unloa9
these six cartons on,
the curb for you. The ,
rest.is up to you.''
"You mean J1ve ,
got tO carry ·ti)ase ·,
six heavy boxes a.II
the way up into the
boll!e by myself?" l
.asked. He shrugged . .
"That's up io yoo : .1 Jtm drive the truck
-1 'm not a in over.''
.U nlted.Stii~ Su-
preme Court ~k· inj:to.eri~ {he
Presidem trom pur·
suing the · Vieqiam·
war. In his pleading,
the Attorney G.ener· '.al. said: "Notll:ng In "WHAT IF I HADN 'T happened to be
the inherent power home, as I'm usu.ally not ~this lime?' I
of the Exkutive, in-asked. "'You don·t expeci my wife, or any
ls wha t th cartage companies call
"delivery se ·ice.''
BOW DOE! ONE justly apportion the
blame for this absurd situation? It was,
in all fairne~, hard to blame the truck
driver, even though his attitude left mucll
to be desi red )·I~ was all alone on tht
truck, 'and had. a schedule to meet.
Besides, a trµ:iJt driver is not a moving
man.
But what iii Jhe customer lo do, wbo
orders samet~1ng in good faith and t.htn
finds it dumw~ on the curb when nobody
but a frail wife i!1 al home? The cartage
trucks won't1dellver at night, when the
husband returns. You can't keep the
truck coming bick day after day.
ducting the poWer to woman, to be able to ha'nd1e those, do
repel sudden ·attacks, justUies the extent you?" •;WHY 00£.SN'T the company hire a
of our milit8.ry CQmmitment in Vlet-.. I don't e~t anything,' be shrugged second man lo help with the moving ?" I
·llam." .· again. "I'm a union driver. and all the asked the driver. "Then your cartage
The Supreine Court ref~s~· lo hear ;his, 'union rules corilpel me to do is deliver · charges would -go up a lot:• he said.
P e f J l • R h the load to your address -how you get it ''Look, I just drive this stuff around and suit, as. it has.several similar suits in lhe into your house is none of my business ." collect my J)Cly." raise Or Op In ·an"-past. ~s~ d,is:se~~g1 fromHthe . ~usal And the c:irta.ge company collects its
. . .U were us '" ·~gas, arlan amd "WELL, WHAT would a hou-.wife do, fee. And the •ibUc, as usual, get ilo5 royal Stewart. S.ix. 1'uslices upheld the ban. h 1 •-
To the Editor:
ln the Nov. 28 edition of the Di\JLY
PILOT, you had an article on the front
page entitled, ''Grand Jury Raps the
Quality of Joplin Ranch Program ."
hfy son spent six months at Rancho
Potrero, the Junior High sectii>n of Joplin
Ranch .
Ray Stripe is a marvelous person who
has every qualification to be where he is.
The Grand Ju ry .mentioned in its report
that he lacked imaginativeness. This is-
not true. While my son was there, many
improvements were made. 'Ve saw a
library, school rooms. and more supplies
far the recreation room brought in. also
preparations for parking; ball courts, etc.
HE PROVIDED the incentive for the
boys, because it's their ranch. He gives
them the opportunity far creativeness,
and good solid thinking. Many of these
bays have never had the opportunity for
either .
The teachers and principal are of the
highest caliber. 'M1e counselors are ex·
ccllent. Not only do they teach well in
their fields of education, but they work
11;ide by side with .the boys individually.
'This is-very important to bo ys who have
felt rejected. They need to koow that
someone ca.res in every area of their life.
These teachers have given lhe boys in·
ceotive In every area.
Mr. StrJpe works personally with these
t>oys. He is ~ 1n constant contact with
-----
Tuesday, December 15, 1970
The ed itorial -page of t he Dady
Pilot 1ee'Q t4 inform and 11irn .•
ulate read.£r1 b11 presenting this
newspaper'• opinions aiut com·
mcntary on topics of interes t
and significance, b11 providing a .
forum for the e:tpre11f1tn of
our r eader•' opinioru, o.nd bl/
presenting the dii>er&e uiew-
pointl of inf~d ob&ervtrs
and 1poke&men on t·ojnc1 of the
dog.
. Robert N. Weed, Publisher
t en?" pursued the matter. "She"d prob-shafting. Jn this age of magnificen t "'~ Many _Opponerils of the Vietnam war ably tell us to come back the next day," technology ~nd bland assurances of •· .... ') the boys to read. the Bible or Christian will agree, "'Vith tbe Attorney General'! he said. "By~ what if the husband is away "se.rvice," the housewife is forced to drag
literature if they dioose to? pleading i;:tause, nrMd abote.:~ t.he at work all. .day ~nd can't be there?" around hea ·y cartons in a way that
Mailbox AS 'FAR AS the construction is Ct>n· passa&e ,!s"amJ>.iguom,' founded in the' "Then she ought to hire a mover," he would have been unth inkable irt her "extent ' of the commi. tment, and seem· , 'd · cerned, the boys know the ranch is their · &a1 · grandmother", time, when "delivery '' .. ranch. They've built it along with the Ing to question the power of a President 1 The cartage bill was· $34. Hiring a meant into the house, not to the curb. ff ~"' evtn lo -.-·' .... ' jnvulon of. American · t to l · h 00· men. They built the most beautiful chapel ·~ ·mover JUS ug six eavy xes from this is progr('SS, only the surgeons who ~~ ~°':1y~~1',' :::!..~·~0:;!~ :;'1i!:. !\re ever seen, along with .the other soil, though that, too, is an .. ambiguous the curb into the house would probably specialize .in hernia operations would
TM r1th1 ta conotflH 1e11e., tG 111 '""« er e11 ... i. buildings. They are rehabilitated and sentence coMlructlon. ·cost the.same amount, or ma~. And this think so. . . n•lt llbel It ~serYed. 411 l~l'N!rt m11sl !1>eH11le t lg-
n•ll.I._ ,ncr m1111119 1ddrwn. b\11 n•mi!• m1v be given ntuch incentive, knowing their wcrrk IT IS NOT• ~~LY •-th th ' wl!~lwld Dn reci111s1 n sllf'lldent r"'°" I• 1pparen1. will help some olher boys in the fut ure. ..,,iu:: , uuwever, at. e
Pottrv .... 111 no1 "'pub11s~ec1. This gives them respect and admiration . Attorney General intended to qu t~_n"l i.. \t: • •
Baloney with the state bullding standa<ds .. P•~sident's power t<l re~l "SU~ n"~t·. \~illy Haircut Regulatw· ns the educators and olher men. and the
parents, walehing tbe progress of each
boy.
IF THESE qualities are what the
Grand .J ury means when it says Mr.
Stripe is •·Jacking full commitment to the
educational program " then they have lost
!rack cf what the ranch program is all
about and its purpose.
The ~hoo1 rooms are quite adequate,
conside ring the bciys do betler al the
ranch than in regular school. The rooms
aren'l beautifully carpeted and.fancy. if
this is what the people of the Grand Jury
expect. Jf !his is what is ex pected , then
the board of eduCation and superv isors
tihould provide funds.
In case the Grand Jury has forgotten,
our great nation \\1as founded "under
God ". What is wron g wilh havi ng lhe
greatest work of literature available for
the boys to read , il they so chaose. This
book has exceeded all others in sales, and
provided the greatest means for the right
way to llvt, the book tha t provides more
education, ~st present and future,
ithan all the educator:s in the world, UJe
Bible.
ntE BOYS JIA \'E a rounded out life at
!he ranch, and everyone that s11ys th at
part of a fully rounded cut hfe. does not
include rtading the Bible, or at leest ha v.
ing· It available to read, must live mosi
unsuccessful lives themse.lves. It is the
most educational book In the world. It
prov ldts wisdom and understanding. In
m_y opinion, e\'idcnlly the Grand Jury Is
left \\'Bnllng in this area. TeU me In the
quiet or the night. tha t none of yoo has
ever thought about God. and what He has
Jn mind for your lift? Y.'haL Is wrong and
what is lacld ng in imaginatl_on, whtn the.
~·a.vward boys can roaUze •re Is mere
to Ufe tha n man·i; ways? It Is not 1na11·
datory. but is there l!lnyone ~'ho c11n
bon,.tly say It's not aood and belplill for
in this case. I challenge anyone to co111· tacks.'' All Presidents Have _ the .
pare !he quality 9f building these boys right in an emergency to preserVe the ~h-·•
and men do to any bd'tlding in 6range vlolability of American soil. and have . Coun~y. They do a t.errilic job, and the been upheld by tradition. This Ji>:"'~ ~.a.s . f More time ls wasted and more silly .P ~,. __., ·-· .. ., ~ .... ..-.
buildings are attractive. • beten extended lo include Amer1ca:n·'1• · b" k . . d th t f f • · 1 , , • teresls ·as well u -soil very earfy in th8-ic erlllg 1s one over e 111a ler o en-:
. OUR SON WAS given .a new outlook.on c~ of ~iratrJHl t!je 'hi&h ~· ' ~~ing dress regulations than almost f t est Editorial ·J
hfe, thanks to the _ranch pr_ogram and All Pr 'd t L.ncol ·u d ...... I anything ooe can think of. 1' "\ the workers theretn. This 16 the purpose e.s1 en . 1 n commi e -..... o . . '-.
cf the ranch. is it not? His grades lfl· war 1mm~ly u~n the: f~ll of Fort , A few months ago 15 Marine Corps --· .. --~ ..... -.
schools are and ha ve been elevated ever . Sumter, by rei.nforcutg. cert.a~ arsenals . reservists in San Diego rebelled when an featuri ng ri:ore hair and made some pru.
since he left !he ranch. '• under ~a\ cf. ~ by the. ~n· order was given that they get haircuts dent adjuslmj!nJs.
Ne one can tell more than the voice er federate ~rredlon. In the past .cen· cooform ing exactly to the type spelled
experience so the people of the Grand' tu~, Pre~idents haw: repeatedly com-ou~ i'n the military rulebook.
l.d h h d r · milted mmor· acts cf war --to protect ' . · . Jury sh~u go up tot e ranc an 1ve \"American inttrests abroad, notably in , Sance they were r~~.:v1sts only twD
for awhi le and walch the!ie boys, lh~ · Lath•' America · 'Ibe.se interventions did tl1ys a month, and c1v1 hans the rest of
make another .report . It . would ~ qu1t& no.t lnv'blve aihrtatened invasibn 'of the ~time, the men argued that it was I\. di.ffere~t , that ts for .sure. tM:r. StJ:ipc and ~United 'states, and .. a.ome were .doublm logical and unconslitutiooal that they be
ht i~ atssd1st~nt tths .•nkre doing aldsu.pf:rb job,1:"!1 . unwise. but none resulted in curtailmenl '. uired to have military.type ha ircuts.
JUS an 1 you cou improve e1 r f t•-Pre ·d tlal y were willing to compromise to a work ! c 1~ . s1 en power. . .
P h th l h Id · With Korea a hew prjncl..n• ·emerged int, I.e., kef!p their longer·than-allowed
Ct aps, We e peopc, SOU Jn• ~ · Y.' ' ... I ti tr' ed b t th f ll 'l \'estlgate the Grind Jury, for the kind of · It was an action instigated by the Securi. ,.. r ne~ Y 1mm , u_ ~Y .. e 1 was
rt th · b ltt' and th ·r ty Councll of lhe United Nations and A> infringement oo their c1v1han status repo s ey re -sum mg e1 • d · ouldbe d tr' t oil ·es' ~sident Truman believed he was bound .. f. in some cases w a e 1men
m \ \ . NAME WITHHELD to Auppo It in what he called 1 •1pOUct to aming a livelihood, fashions being
action." wlr•' they are, if required to 0 b e y the
/!ear
Gloomy
Gu.s:
,.
t I A PoX on the big land develcper
"'ho preaches environmental con·
trnl w11h ooe hand lln~ bufi bill·
board :space wllh the other. " • I -P. Jl D.
• •
WITH VIETNAM arose another prirto
clp1e, and th1t'1 where the trouble f:ELL, THE MARINE Corps got lt.s &tarted .~ Unlted:Slltes was not bound wt6,1'he reservists were.court-marUaled
by treaty. to "!.gu•r~tff ille aecurity of an Punished for insubordination.
S!>uth. Vietnam bY military forct, and ybe this ls Ute way lt had to be,
President Eisenhower did not do so. Ma Corps tradltlons being what they
lt remained for 'Prffidtnt Johnson and are, ·1ways triumphant. But maybe it .
Secrelary ol State Rull tO deVise a quasi· was · a paper victory, too. We wcNld •
11!:gal basis tor . direct military in· wag that mosl of the IS reservi11b are
tcrvention in lltdochina. Thi!' basis, nol ~~·ho Marines any longer, if they
elaborated with .dub1ous argument of ever: ere. .
"eornmitment'' and "hoilot" was never A ter w1 y to keep in t~ch ~llh the
penuasiVe with a large aegment of the times. ~ a:t\11 maJntaln the neces.s•ry
.AintrJcan peoplf, t?Cf1wbeti.il.eyolved as miUta ,discipline, w;is demonstrated by '
full«fle WV which waa fai.lin&. the rls-Admir . .E. R. ZuTJlwalt Jr., chief cf
Jng tide otopposillon ntVtt ceased. naval atiOns. who· wu confronted ..
""" 'tt•l•!'t .. '*'' ,....,,.. ""-..., The people are no" CJPpostd to· dr ifUng with a ilar problem:· "~'"'"' .. "'"' •' ,,., ,...._.,.,, s."' lnln large, in!CflS!I~ wars like this one, lnst of going by the book, a military
l'IV' '" '"v• " olH!ll, ''" o.u., l'J1tt. ind· thl~ I~ wW1ttan:uY be ,lost 011 custom t;· (requenUy ustd • .Ad1pi.ral
'------------;;..,"' ····PreaWoafl'~~-C---Zumw bitk'.-n>t-Jll·~·.iylu
\
"t WILL NOT countenance the rights
er privi!eies or any officers or enlisted
men being abrogated in any ·way because
they choofe 1to grow sideburns. er neatly
trimmed ~eards or mustaches or because
preferen<J>s in neat clothing lityles are at
vai-ia.nce with the taste of their seniors,••
Admiral :Wmwalt said.
This coocession can hardly be describ-
ed as having tlnderm ined or weakened
the U.S. :'>l'avy. Quite the -<:entrary .
By being rll!asonable instead or itic-
tato rial, Admlr11l Zumwalt has fostered
e.ven grtatcr loyalty and convnltment to
Ille Navy among those who cherish a bit
cf personal freedom in an organization
which, ' ,or nccesg ity, must b t
aothm-IJarian ia 1ts operation .
' The Dally C1l\fornl111
El CajOl
..---•111 George ---.
De.r \leorg•
So thlit ls 'mJ. prnblem. Pica~ • give me you~answer 1s soon as
possible, or me ''here I can go
for l>elp wlih y problem .
HOPEFUL
Dear Hopeful:
Never mind your problem ~ My
problem Is I c;"ilnl find tbl!: first
pcge 1or ~our le\ter. ,.,.
u
• .,
k
It . -
• n y • • •
• I • • .
I
' I
t
!
! t
'
I • I
;
I
..
TutMt1y, Oecembrr lS, 1q70 DAIL'( P'ILOT 1
Children
Del.egates
Rebelling
.11 "'" 1rt1e1i-n Gross National PrOdRt .
,..-; ....... ~--------.;......~~--...
. .
WASHINGTON (AP)
' ~ dlle11tea lo the
'Whita HOUtl Conference .n
Olildren are tM11temna a
rev°" un1e1& chan&ts are
~la the carefully struc-
tured bm1t they say is
........ to muffle criticilln •f
the Nlull AdminlJ!ntlon.'
Leoilln, G( the dlllidentJ,
wbe· ....... to npteltnt •
alpifl<MI mlaorlty of the
4,tol dofePla, nkl they
wGUld meet Way with con..
ference cbal."lUD S t e p b e n
Hta3 t. preteDt t h e I r
demuda.
CIUCUlel el day-care ~ •ocatea. blacb. s p a ft I 1 h •
· tpe•kiDI delq1W and other
:l::.r~~":.r.~..J': ... ~----... ~~ .... ~ .... .,...;;~------~~ ....
lo -atratqy. . "Well,it'oni<:etoknowW'C'noeoivent.•
A maJa< grinard' la the
lact of proviaion for a 1enera.J. --------------------
leUion ef the wbe1e eon-
-lerenc:e to "apress Judlfnenl!I
en issuea el' naUonal social
policy."
Nation Economy ..
Hits $'l Trillion
WASHINGTON (AP)-Sad·
dJed by Jnflatlon and spurred
by a fut-paced irowth Gver
the lut decade:, the n.aUon's
economy reached a $1·trillion
rate today.
The official estimate for the
exact moment was noon EST,
with President Nixon marking
the eccuion by unveiling a
new Gross NaUonal Prodoct
clock that Ucks eff the
estimated GNP rate minute by
minute.
The President, ~f:r, was
enly commem05atlttg an an·
nual rate o£ trowth tn the
GNP, wbi~h me:1sures the na-tion'~ Output or goods and
~lees ln terms of current
tlollars.
Tb!'! money GNP has doubl·
ed in the last 10 years,
whert11 in pre.world War
d1y1 Jt took' an average Gf <JS
yean for 'tbe mone y eutput te
double.
But the money GNP Is de-
ceiving,
While real output has step-
ped up markedly since ~
early 19505, so has inOaUOp..
Prices have increased bf.
about 50 percent in that Ume.
It will be some tlme: befote
the nation's real o u t p u J •
me1Jured in terms e f
noninflationary 195& dollars,.
will reacb. the $1·trillion maq.
FOR $10,000 '
IN PRIZES AND
SPORTS FUN TOO
SEE PAGE 17
TODAY'S PAPER
. ' THE REVERENDS DANIEL (L) AND·PHILIP lllllll••
Th1r Are S..klnt P1iml11Jon te ''Pr•Cttc. lefli
Ul'IT ......
(Cl LEAVE COURl' .... ,,,_ ~-of the er1ani1.1.tion1
ha'Ve mdicated they want the
(GafereQCe as a whole to act
e111 resohd.iom calling on Ni.Jon
to rearrance natien11
prioritiea. and put • 0 c j I I
Welfare ne.eda ahead of spen·
ding for defeme and such pro-
jects u the SST •.
National Coronary
Program Proposed RND
OF THE
VvEEK B.errigans Ask t~ ~ntinue
Sermons From Inside ~ail
OoJy once durlag the five-
day meeUna was pmvision
made for br1nfinC ill the
dele1atea llplher. 'lb1t was
the form1l open.inc Sunday
nipl at '!bich Nl>on apeke.
NEW YORK IAP) - A com-constitute, the greate!L health
mittee of 100 medical experts threat to the developed coun-
calleCI Tuesday for a massive. tl;id or the modern world,"
fec;itrally flnllt>ttd program to Said commiJslon chairman Dr.
prevent corooary , b e a r t/ Irving S. Wright, professor
aileaae-the nation s No. 1 emeritus of Cornell University
health problem. Medical College.
Predicttng that the disease 'im--------;;;;;;,I c1n be Jicktd, the Inter-Soci~ll
ty CcJmrhission for Heart
Disease Resources of 'the
HARTFORD, Conn. (AP) -
Even a priaooer has a
message which he m a y
rightfully cast to the out.side
world. attorneys for the Revs.
Daniel and Philip Berrigan
argue.
The brothers, held in federal
prison in Danbury, came
before U.S. Dillrict toori
Judge T. Emmet Cfarle! .....
day to plead r... the rtpt to
aend termons to tt.e oullWe.
They aald their lflorll lo do
so have been fruatrated by
correctlona ollicia!1. Th•
bmther1 are 19:1ulllinc an tn-
juoctiGn wbJcb -forbid
Boy Flees Spanking,
Dies from Exposure
tlte pernment from preven-American Heart Auociation
llnr prilonera from oendiq Ax. M d proposed a far-ranging pJ'Oo writllliJI and tape reairdlnp or er gram that wooJd revamp the
to the other side of tbe:'walb. U.S. food industry, make ma-
The two .Roman Catbol~ Sttspecl, 17 iDr changes in the average
priest.I •ere eo11victed cl. . ' American'J diet, eliminate
destroyJnc Selective Service cigarette~ smoking, and aeek
records In Baltimore, Md. Surrenders ... and treat victims or high "Became men are priamer1 blood pressw-e.
doesn't mean their words, The commission said its
thoqbt< and ideall are loot FORT IMmf, Art. (UPI) rtcommendatioM grew out of
forevtr," Aid one ol the Ber· -O:mnedlcut autboritiet ~e a government fil;ianctd 1tudy
rt1ans' •ttorneys. meeting todl1· With Jahn Rice ol heart diseaae rtsearcb that
Both Berrla•ns took the Jr., 17, wanted ln New Ca-p In pointed atherosclerotic
wltneq stand Monday to tell Man, Conn., charled •ith diseases, or diseases of the
how they were r e f u 1 e d murlferlng his moth e r • arteries, as lhe principal
pennlulon to aend out a brother, lister and JTlnd-cauae of coronary heart
M'DXft they bad written Oft ~. · disease . P r•ven tln " the IUbject of pesce. Botti. uid Police laid Rice walked Jnto atheroaclerolic diseases, U: ,...,._ -deoled by the Fort Smith ·Police Statlan tbelr "cwMllbn" within around DDOD. ·MoQday· and tum-commbaion said, c o u l d
die prtoon, but Philip Berrlpn, ed"himael! in. He aald be -alcnificaotiy reduce the U.S.
admtUed be Jmde no attempt up that ~ about 20 coronary. heart ·dJseaae rate.,
to follow ap the lnlt1al retuut, -milu outside of town, and had particularly among t h o s e.
altlloaP bla cw-m bad .... recolledlon "' how he 1ot Wld" eo .
Avoid
the
Christmas
Crush
We1tcliff Pl11111
OPIN "Tll t P.M,
THIOU.H CHllSTMAS
Sympallco in silverpl1te. A del'ightful
trivet on wtiich"to aerve yqur delicjous. '
holiday tidbits warm. $3,
Cll•"" AtCMl!lt lll'rilM. A-1ca11 h,,_, ••llllA~ 111111 IMdw CM""' ...
SLA.VICK'S
Jewelers Since 1917
11 FASHION ISLAND
NEWPORT BEACH -644-1380
DpH Moo. nru Sat. 10 ..... to 9:30 ,_...
1nvtted him to dilcua IL from Connectic\lt: to Arkanua. ''Cardiovascular diseases,
-He 'Wal drlYinc a l t t 5> ,-.::moa=t:...::mta:::b:Cly~a::lherooc::'.:'.::'.le'.'.'.""':::'.is'.'.,~~~~~~~~~!!!!!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Tbe "'""""· in queltion, Do ,,__.. .• c written ftl(' the F-al SL -._... to beloq
Fralldt Oct. 4 and Yam Kip-lo hlll lata ~ .
~Depresrion of Yo•llfl' .
Oct. 10 included the Rice's father, a cook in the pur • prolperOUlsuburbanc:om-
followin& puuie: munJty of New Can a an,
• returned home Thunday lo
find h1a wife J1ne~ 44, and h1a
daughter, Nancy, 14, lying
Unemploymentllits Youtlls
deall on the living room Door,
covered with blood .
Mr1. Rice had multiple knife
wounds in the chest and neck
and an ax 'WOUnd In tbe head .
Nancy had been alrangled .
In U.S. ~ob Force Hardest Jn a aeconcl-llo<r bedroom
WU Stephen Rice, 18, dead of
ax wounds about the head. The.
grandmoCller, Edith Fitzpa~
rick, w1s found half
CMaCtom and moaning 111 a WASlilNGTON -Whe:R male teen-agers WIS 25 per-for the 1ncreue. WU the dDwnltllrl room. She had
unemployment hits the work cent; for black fem1le:s 40 per-discharc• ol. half a mUllon. been belWI with a h1mmer
force, it hi ts youn" workua cent. men from the armed forcM u and dltd a short time liter.
11o One out of every siz teen-the. military cut met its mm-Officials from ConMCticut
hardest, and some uperts are age:r1 seeking empklyment power strqth, a side effect arrived in Fort Smith late
1aying the country may be In can't find a job, say officials. or windlng cknm the war in Monday and planned to talk
for a depression among the: "People who have never Vietnam. with the 11.1sptet today, young unless the economy worked before or who are re-
1
p;;;;;;;; _________________ _,
takes an upward turn. entering the labor force are
"Not only could we have • ha•inl a tough time," said BIBLE THOUGHTS young people's depre~ion," Harold Stam.bier, chief of
said Ely E. Cohen, executive Labor Department's Division ..W.,. ftnt,.. ...,._ tf ....._ .. _ D•
secretary of the National of E mp I o y m e n t and tliii1 •" ~-' t••r•11t.•• Y••t •tllli11•f"f. r ·' "And RM41 •ft.fa (M•tt .. l :JJ, R-. 1:21), It Committee on Employment o Unemployment An .. yaia. PAYS•• •• ,... Sat!!
Youth in New York City, "in I.here isn't much hope on tbe s.,.. ••• ,.. • ._. hiiti•lly ••c.1111• a DOES
fact, we do already have 1 horizon for improvement." , • ., lh•r• 1...ii h•r••f11rl. l11t l•t1r, tt. • .,
depression among minority Stamble:r said yoon1 people .,,.,.. t• 1•1'• lrti1111 •11111 ••r1'• h•••••• •f
youth." seeking fUD-time career jobs thi• hi•"'' 111•ti1'•, 111'•. 011e •"•111111 •'•w
Cohen said unemployment are having more trouble thin '" CStrl•ti• tree .. c&.l.1122.21, 2 '••· 1:2-IOJ , lta1•"'i11• 1111r1
among ghetto youths. blatk! thole looking for pert-Ume &.fl·lr•• -"&M i• 1 ..... II J •• 4:16J.
and Put.rto Ricans, already is positions.. Part·time job1 have l•t HOW llloe• 111• "S1•l: fir1t th1 ki....,.,... •f &-4"1 •••'· '" running 25 to 3S percent. Jncreased by 150,000 and full· tfrte l ir..le, the r•c•r4 •f Clriri1f'1 lif•. H• w•1 &OD '"•11ife1fM
''In the 1930s, when 25 per· time jobs have de:creued by 111 th, fl.it. IJ11, J:I, ''• J11, 14 :7·11 , H•r... 1:1.tl. n. f111r
t of ~-I ti0!1 Wll the a-•·t he oald &OSPELS, M.tt .• :M•., l\., J1., t.tl 1f Oti1t. •••' fti•"' f1 ••• ctn un:: popua ume .,...,..., • • FAITff IR•m. 10:171. Tlte11 r1•4 "ACTS .. t. 1111t flli1 f.:ith hit. unemployed , we defined this Part of the diffJculty, •c· ACTION, 1, 11.,ti-' 111t• Chrli~. ltn•"'l...i 1 Chri1tien. n,,.,
as a depression," be aid in In cording to ~Labor. Depart-r•M "'• r•••iMlet •f n.. N•w T••t•1111...t •• 1.,,,. h1w t• 1;.,.
interview. ''At the rate which ment, ii an UOUIUal growth in tit, Orl1ti•1t !if•, VISIT Clii11rch <If Chri1t •• 211 w. Wil••11 St ..
we're going. J fear. we could the size of the work force al a C••te M11•, c •. , • ...ii ... , will 111i1t .,.. i11 .,_ •••rch fir ...i.
very well have • 25 percent time: when the economy is In • ""'i• lif1 .n.,.. r..vt TWO CHOICES ••• ,..~ &M ., SATAN,
unemp)oyme.nt rate for all slump. The work force irt-CM.tt, 6:24, J•a. 4:4, 1 J11, 21111. A ,;""'•!tat.re 111 II••-"
b I mllli a Chii•ti••· i1 i11 S•t•11'1 •11tf4101111, 111.+ i• tr11nl•te4 l11t• Christ'• leen..ager1." creased Y .t on, con-•1-..."' ., "• ""-" , Clirhti111 (Cal, hlJI. YOU ••• When the. n•'t Ion al 11iderably more than uual, in ""•-SOD ,, SATAN! Chur•h •f Chri1t, 211 W. Wiit•• It-.
unemployment ra ... ~ to 5.8 -~11?11~·~The~~n111al~~~gro~wt~h~r1~i.~~C~·~·~··~M~·~·~··~C~·~··~"~'~'~'·~-!!!!!~•~·~··~11~1~1,~1~•~•·~2M~l,~•~·~··~"~'~"~i percent last montb', the figure Is, 1.4 nµilion . A major reuon '
for teen-1gen bit tf.l •percent,
up 6 percent O¥er 1 ,ear 1go.
Nov e m b e r uempkJyment
figures for ~ite a.le and
female teen-qrfd ftl 11 per-
cent. The lfaur9 r... black CaliforniaColletJ.,e
of Commerce
CONTINUOUS ENROUMINt
TILE,_11 436-9767 or 4U-SM7
"DAY 01 EVENlll CLASSES"
...._.A:LJ1 1M ......... •1
···~ ... -"",,....., --
SHOlf.IWI COUHIS • YUi COUISIS
This is one -.wy out of 1~11Y. •
} ... . •.
But, like evaty shortcul, it's o long·
shot
A mon's real hope is to leorn. He
needs the basics that will get him o
decent job .
A group of Gas Company employ·
ees have volunleered to help. They've
joined volunteers from other bu si-
nesses working al tho Soulh Cenlrol
los Angeles Service Confer. Olher
Gas Company people a re~elping 01
service centers in East Los Angeles
and Venice.
They work evenings, teaching,
Business English. Arilhmetic. Anything
lhal will help solnobody gel a lo b.
And 1hey'll 1each·on ybody who
wonts to learn.
·:
Gos Com pan y poople don't g~
any poy for this work.. Except sotis •
lion. But they believe
that avetybody ought
to hove a fighting
chance.
s.dlsrl Csliliflio lill ~
"~ .,,.... ,""'"" ,.,._
-~ .;
9S!I W•'N lmntlftl Ni,.,,...,...,, .. __ ..
. ,
. . . ... . . ~ ... .. .. ' . . .
f DAILY PILOT T-. Declmbot 15, 1970
•
DICK 'IUCY
••• 10 ·---n ---.:::.-'O
<:;~
TUMBlEWEEDS
•NI! WHAi A &OllfiOUS MORllJ: PEWl'R:ll'5 DAI.Ill !HE PESSRI
l'RA99ERV{!!NY Wl~P'!WNGS fl.ITrm A·1wn'TER AS 0C SOi'S
UNSULliED SNICKER
SOCX5 SllFFRON TO 'M'SC~E!
Mun :A.ND JEFF
GOSH! Pl\V5 LIKE 'TlilS MAKE ME :
WN!M. RUN R\6tfT001; Hrf A 1W.ON
TRAlt:Ji. CJ?P A aNF( (1t-COIFFURES, NI S1'Cl'J. AWM L.E'AVIN' A 1KAJL.OF
MAVHEM I# HA\()( ,,.:-· --.--.rf
IN MY WAKE!
ly Cliester Goul4.
"fl.llS KIO NEEDS A
FATllER. ~.J'RE TNI! OHi! "TllATS eLJNO.
By Tom K. Ryan
GU~S ~M
..UST AN INCURAlll.E
f!.DMANllC !
By Al Smith
GOSH··I JUST+!AD1tl
GET A SHOT AT .
SOME1ll1NG100AY!
. . .
SALLY BANANAS
.
GORDO
JUDGE PARKER By_ H~ld Le Dou_ MOON MULLINS
llOPENTAU.Y, SAM... I'M AFRAICJ
MfBE~ Et..MO t WMEN I COULPN'J"
I COILPW'T IEP\CH YOtl. KEEP I.IP
I TllEP TO 6ET' HUt! WITH EUW!
I JUT A5611MEP HE
-.._.,, 'ltll ™E TOWN!
PLAIN JANE
AS A IAATI"Ee Of: Fief, I WA.S ¥0U'IE
&USMEO AFnR 'fl.IE TR1P A.WP A .14.\M
TWE Vl!tll" WITH ~. lOCKET ! A.Fl"R
I IE66EP OFF ANP mt.P ELMO MV OWN
I :rasr WANT'EP TO COME HE~ MEART!
TO TME MOTEL A>IP RELAX !
12.-<S L=~:...L~3.__J~
PERKINS
IAll y CROSSWORD ••• by ..... POW~
ACROSS 45 -lk Ynte.drr's PuuJe Sotv1$1:
8-f'fft•C l t..rt 47 Pot Into tod •otlcwt r' ...... h " ..... of W it s growing 110 food flowtrs
I .. ,,ottening ~l Nt91tlYot
9"' contraction ~4~~... 5Z--"" j --..-u 5' tar11t t.sKt
WMA.T rQOM'S r l4 SORRY! t OM'r 6f\lf
S"M u1t1veg "°"THAT INR:>RAAATIOW! IF
IN ? VOU'U. PICK IP TME. MOUSE
PHONE. TWE OPERATOR MU.
RING MIS KOOM!
By Frank BacJinsld
~W'9enct 60 Color ,.....d
Zola 41 Slot SOUf(.t
tkle M fttt11 of TWflf bak.,y MISS PEACH
... ,,...._.... t-ctai~ ~...,. • 65 Train 1VJ.5n o
•ltllbot; ••king 1.U i 11 E;.cut1li011 40 Destroyable 2. Wi:inlS stops "( o( Sll'ptfSt by tiling
blilfl 6' OtitiboM• 12 Pltr away '~C099•lt1 city lJ l ta<Mr· 44 Of tqual °""' 67 Gn•t or 1111an's powtr ~trt houHOy word 46 Not In
•on:i 61 C011it0s iticM 11 Goddess of •tttndmct
) Ln110 ''Turn dow11 discord 41 Footba ll Fn•'I Z2 Critic lzt player
......... DOWN hwshty 4'1 Single D6s:as 24 Wltl!Out thing -Of 1 ctftaln l tlonns 111 unnecessary S2 Kind of
wne •Irr "Born Fret"' 't'erbl•g• plane : Col10Q.
Of Ult •• 2 Ef19rosud 25 Awt1S Sl Ralllb1e hfl•tls ) "SlPn 27 Of 1c1tn1d S4 PUis into 1.a. MicanKt - -_Jr•: 21 Nelghber of SNYlct All!~ •tr 2 words SwK1trl1nd S5 Mass r.-...g, 4 ~on\c 29 Rl't'tr ol 57 Vtry oood:
•·I· 5 To t""-t Africa 2 wGras
I
i
I
!
YOU'ffli Nl!XT, llfA !
•
By Joh11 Miles
By Mel
fe ... iltt 6 Cuttlltg 31 He-td 51 B1lbn river
I •• tool t o\Oe!'lnf S'I OM of
E d• 7 c"' 32 Clloltf lc h!Hd rtdlo
STEVE ROPER By Saunders and Ov•rCJCll'd
r-=-:~,.,...,.~or-~~__,;
8ACKFJllE, MV l STllL TH/>jl(
AUNT ROSIE, "JOO'RE lw.61
France a p~ of ll Syste• or tta.i
SUfp the foo t bttltf 62 Needle: ...at• 'Ill~ stab It )6 Bloodsu:tlng Prefix
rldft 10 Wreath for •ot• '' Unpinc.lpled W4 Alfot .. tM btH 3' E•opqns fellow
' ...
. .,, ..
• ••
' ..
IQUf LAST/HA / ....
1 Tiilt.11( I MISSEP •A GREAT P!TY.'-N0\11
LUTCHER, MANMtE/ WE MUST Pl.AV THE
.. GOIN' SO FAST lW IW«l PIFFERENTL Y!
THE ~RK /
'TIGEll/-THAT THINGS, Mll<E.' WJ.S A So+OT I 8tfT ...
'
r.
u
I
MR.MUM
,.
•
ly :Al CGpp
. I &AlO-??-!!-eA8'f. DON'T
LEAVE.ME!!
By Charles 8-ttl
@1
-
-111 m:l£.
I.I"" IS A
\OOl!Ll) lllAlt lt
~
FMCK!..
A.~ ~H U
~o.
~ofl
I~ IN
DENNIS THE MENACE
----------~----~---~-..,---·---.,......._.--------
TUESDAY
DECEMBER 15
rvF."llNL
6:00 U 111 Ntw1 (C) (60 Jerry Dunphy.
0 KNIC NtwMl'Ylct (C) (60)
0 T111 Al1111 Show (C) (90) Sehed•
uled ruuts ire £dd11 Albert, Stub·
by Kaye, Della Reese, Den Whitt•
head.
0 COLOR-GARY COOPER * "GARDEN OF EVIL"I
0 Sit O'Clotk Mofle: (C) '1'he
G11d1n ol Efil .. {adventure) '54-
Gary Coc'per, 5us1n H1ywud, Rich·
1rd Wldm1ni.
0 Did! Vin Dyke (30) m Thi fllpbtonts tC) (3ll)
fl)@@ Stir Trek (C) (60)
fl:) HOdi:tPOdll lod11 (C) (30)
f8 ([)CBS New1 (C) (Jtl) cm nihtr f1mJ!7 (3D)
el Hotiti1ro 34 (C) (30)
a;) JaJ1nds in !flt Sun (C) (30)
ail LI Hort famltitr ton l'ltrlclt
fI) Ntws In the Roufld (C) (30)
l :JO O Candid C.11er1 (30) m T~t Flyln1 Nun (C) C30)
@ ({l NBC News (C) (30)
ED l S•ICtA' I Buraundy tlld Mor.
nt (C) {30) A visit io the ra1ion ol
Bur1undy, tnd 1n 1r11 In lh1t
re1iof) cAilled Mcl"'lan, 1 mounttin·
ous triangle belwetn Avalon ind
Nevers.
9 @ My fmrltt M1rti11 (30)
€i) Scci1I Stcu1fty {C)
(D Thi Desert R1port (C) (3D)
ail lo1 Olvld1dot (30)
aJ ABC EVlflin1 Ntwa (C) (30)
t :45 ml Musical•
1:00 II CBS E~tnin1 Nin (C) (JO)
O @ l]J l!llNIC ,_, ....
It: (C) '1'111 Jonu .. (comidy) '63
-Albtrt Finney, Sutann1ll Yllfk,
H111h Griffith. Story follow. the
loYe·IHled 11111 of 1 cu1fr11 18th·
'4!ntury Jl)una mtn from his tie·
Jtnt countiy home throu1h bl• en·
count111 in London. O @@ moc Mowit et 1111
We-.; (C) "TM M1t1 Wllt Wtnlld
T1 I.ht fttMf" (dr1m1) 70 -
Stuut Whitm1n, Sandy Deni.Ii. Burl
lwes. A het rt su11eon dfscovt11 !hit
• priv1tt madie1I rese11ch laundt·
lion In • duol1t1 mount1ln 1111
II beln1 used 101 s!nlste1 purposes. m D•rid rrost Sbow (C) (90)
Guests: locllla Lynn, fr1nk Man·
~lewiu. Sindy Baftlf'I. J11nelt1
Kihn 1nd Jim Robinson, C.nd1e1
low1 ind Marc Alonso. m 0r111111: (C) (3D)
@!) LJm!!U Dlnus ol rtr11111
(JO) (R) The Grffk N1tlonat Folk
D1nc1 Comp1n1 performs In front
of Stn frtnciK0'1 P1 l1c1 111 fin1
""· fl!) l'lttm lor LMn1 (30)
ED La Crildt Bien Crl1d1 (C) (30)
9:00 B The fwallWt (C) (60)
ID ftlony Squid (C) (JO)
tD Tbt Advoutu (C) (60) ~should
!ht Unlhd Sl1tas 111~ 1 coil!·
tion aovernmtnt in Sai1oni"
£!) Chtlltnl' (C) (30) m CoKllrtl cit Alm•s (JO)
till) N1tach1 (60)
9:30 IJ ~ 00 To Rtlfllt, With Lon (t)
(30) Gr1ndp1 Pruitt's vtte rlnary skill
and Alison's artillic h lent 111 put
to the test.
0 Kin (Cl (JO) Badtr W'rd.
QJ Perry Muon (60)
El Muslcalt
£m Musk.I J Estrtllts (C) {3ll)
9:45 @[!) Ptstor't DtK (C)
CJ m NBC Hia;hUy Newa {C) (30) ID:OO 1J MXT RtpOl'b (C) (JO) "Alien
0 What's My Lint? (C) (JO) and 1111141." An u amln1Uon of tht
m @CIJ I lovt Lucy (JO) economic ind social costs Ill Hleg1l
1!J But Utt Clock (C) (30) Mexiun im1t1i111lion into C1Hlo1nil.
@ @ Tuesday Movit: (C) "SnfW B 811 5 Ntws (C) (60)
Queen." Art link!eller. fJ @@ m M1rtW1 Welby, M.D.
fD Kukla, fr1n and Ollit (C) (30) (C) (60) ·:~1 the Gnlde_n D1nd1!10ns
9@ Tri/th or ConstqUlllus (C) Ari .Go:nt. A father with mononuc-
lens11 11nores Dr. Welbr'• ac!Vlce to (ID Christ tht l lvlnl Word (C) (JD) stly in bad for 1 month.
ED Rourlo (JD) 0 I SplC1Ai i 1111y 1ira1Ni11 lit.1
ail Simpltmente M1ri1 (~) RMI&• Cruudt (C) (60)
ID !hot '" (C) (30) m HAL FISHMAN JOINS
7:30 fJ ~CJ) Beverly Hlftblllies (CJ
(30) The Hllll>llliu head lar Christ·
mas In Hooterv!lle ind • pcmlb!e
wtddin1 for Gunny tnd stonketptr
Sim Drucker.
0 FUNNIEST TONIGHT!!
* GEORGE PUTNAM News
GJ ltlll'I' htn1• N ... (C) (60)
EE) The San fnincita1 Mil (C) (60) a (I) CBS Nnn (C) (JO)
tel La f•111llll (30)
fl!) flllhll Mllictn• (60) * OON KNOTTS-GUESTS 10,. t> CIS "'"' """' IC) !30l
RAYMOND BURR & Ml770." Th• first in 1 serlts of
JIMMY DURANTE! brotdcasts foc11$ln1 on. tha mnts
CJ a;) Don Knotts (C) (60) Guestt ltadlJJI to tt11 American RIVOlutlon.
i re: Jimmy Durant e, Rrymond s11n Peter Ultlnov 1nd £riC Sev11eld 11'1
I
"i:;';--ympho~y
Well Presented
By T0~1 BARLEY
Of l~I 0111'1' PllOI $tiff
Concerts designed to convert
many of our more music-con·
scious youngsters Into music
loving concertgoers became
the vogue under such gifted
communicators as the New
York Ph l l harmonic
Orchestra ·s Leonard Bernstein
but the happy trend never
caught on in any disce rnible
form in flUr part of the world
-more is the pity.
It may now, however. if the
premiere offering of the
"Symphonies For Yo u th''
series now being s!aited by the
Los A n g e I e s Philharmonic
Orchestra faithfully depicts
the standard aimed at by the
dedicated people responsible
for its inauguration.
That concert Sa l u rd ay
morning dre w a near capacity
audience to the Los Angeles
Music Center and it was
heartwarmin~ indeed to see
the exceptional l y good
behavior and deep interest of
so many young {and some of
them were very youn~ ! ) con-
certgoers. Our forP.bodings
that an all·Beethoven program
might prove a little too much
for Jome of the tots within ey~ot proved i;troundless and
a dt'llghtfully informal concert
got what should be a
worthwhile series off to a
fly ing slarl.
"Beethoven is Almost 200
Years Younll:'' \\'as our theme ·
and much of the music offered
by the orchestra under the
direction of associate con-
ductor Gerhard S a m u e I
faithfully stressed the youth
and freshness inherent in so
Fonda Wins
Sour Apple
HOLLY\VOOD (AP) -J ane
Fonda has "won" l he
Hollywood \Vomcn·s Press
Club Sour Apple award for
1970.
The club presents the award
annually to the person who in
its opinion presents the worst
image of Hollywood to the
world.
The club's more positive
awards went to J a m es
Sle\vart, Robe rt '\'oung and
Carol Burnett as sta rs of the
yea r, and Car rie Snodgress
and Flip Wilson as newcomer!
(Jf the year.
much of the great master's
work . And It's nice lo be able
to let our youth know in
such a pleasant manner ho.,.
music written by a man born
In 1770 is so pertinent to tbe.
soul and conscience of 1970. Censor Out,
Had Enough
Sex Movies
Youth itself wa s well served
with the perform ance of Gita
Karasik, a brilliant young
pianist who recently won the
San Francist-o S y m p h o n y
Foundation Aw a rd aiid
deservedly so if her rendition
of the Piano C:Oncerto No. 4
represented her form on that
occasion. LONDON (AP) -Britain's
We got on ly the finale of this officlal film censor Is quitting
glittering work but it was because he's had enough or
enough to shoW us that this sex movies.
young lady has a bright future "I 'm tired of the stuff we're before her in mu sic. Deligh tfully awkward and self· getting now ," Sir John
conscious In her approach to Trevelyan told the Daily
the audience, she Is guilty of Sketc~. "l·vc had enough of
no such misdem eanor in her American, G e r m a n , Scan·
approach to the piano. , di~avia~ and Italian sex films.
We get from tha t piano what .Sex 1s a marvelous human
Miss Karasi k determines we activity -but merely to
shall get and her force and watch other people doing It is
aut hority were very. very not my kind or entertainment.
good to see in one so young. "I think people are sex mad.
Bee t hov en 's stirring Perhaps they have been
''Egmont" overture, hi! ex-· deprived of it."
quisitely gay and enchanting Trevelyan, who at 87 has
"Three German Dances"' and twin sons aged 11. took over
that vital, inspiring flr!t Britain's Board of F I I m
movement or his F i f t h Censors tz years ago. A
Symphony ro~prised the for mer educator. he quickly
balance or this e1etremel y won friends in the movie In-
entertain ing and absorbing dus try with his liberal at.
program. tHudes to such then-con4
If it ~ad a (law it could be tro versial pictures as "Room
found 1n the person of con-at the Top" and •·saturday
ductor Samuel b~t not. !'c Night and Sunday Morning." h~s.ten .to add, 1n ~at 1n-Trevelyan and his team sec
d1v1dual s prowess with the h 1 t propo ed for baton . He was f I aw I es s eac ~ c urc s .
throug hou t this program and rel~ase 1n Br~taln and glve 1t a
left us with the determination· rating. ran~t~~ from U for
to see much more of his in-general exh1b1tlon to X, only
teresting work on the podium. for 18 year olds and above.
our comment would be that Sometimes the censors order
Mr. Samuel does not have an cuts.
easy rapport with the younger "Nowadays In parts of the
members of his audience and world almost anything goes,"
this, we would think, is vital lo said Trevelyan.
the conduct of such programs. "Aldous Huxley once defined
Whatever some might have lo an intellectual as somebody
say. it is not easy to get down sometimes occasionally In-
to the level of children and terested in something other
discuss matters musical as than sex. There don 't seem to
they should be discussed in a be many intellectuals I n
child's world. Europe by the films I've seen
. By all means. retain th_is recently. Some of the stuff
fine conductor for his splendid around London Is terrible.
direction of the orchestra. But "But It's still not as bad as
let som~ne with. a gi~t for New York . I hope u never gets
commun1 caUon with children like that_ it's a jungle."
t~ke over that department ~d Trevelyan said he feared sex
give, through his ~arrat1on, picturts could destroy l h 6 the las~ touch or ~ tsh to. a.n movie industry.
ind Connie Steven:r.. the commen\llOl'L
0 HYPO (C) (30) "list Port of CD Biii Jell111 NfWI (C) (30}
Call." Louis Zorich 11 nd Alite Splv1k. 9 (I) f1atllr1 (C) (30)
otherwise excellent innovation . "Ir the money Is going Into l.:===~~iiii~~ii!lf~~~~~~~~=~I them there wiJl not be better II. IALIOA films," he asserted. "There
0 IIlJ (I) a> MDd Squad {t) (30) @E Hq (30)
"Fever." Julie ,ivu ~ ride to • ,
man and his yount son and finds 11:001J a ([J @El Mm (C)
hersell 1 kidn ap victim. O fa (I) m Ntws
O Mill ion $ Movie: CC) "'WMrt
tht Spies °'rt" (suspenu ) '66 _ 8 Cut Yov Top • CC)
David Niven, Cyril Cus.tk. Docto1 0 (f) lflWI (C)
patriotka!ly jeb from lnndon N 0 Thtltn 9: (C) "'D,_.,-(comedy)
Beirut !or the fOfllign otlice after '57-Hany Sea>mbe, Ron R1nde!I.
lht di$1ppur1nce of I key t rtnl. m Movlt: "Mtnill Clllln(' (dr1-m Truth or Consaquencu (C) (30) ma) '42-Uo)'d Nolin.
ffi It likes 1 Thief (C) (60) OJ Movie: '11lt Ntktd StrNt"
ED f1n!11t (C) (60) (R) "San (mystery) 055-Al'ltllony Quinn.
f ,,ncisco Rock: 'At th e F1mi!y @(]) h ny M110n
Dog'." The Jeflerson Airplane, fD R11litl• (C) (R)
Gra teful Dead and Santin• perform
during 1n all .night rock puty. 11:30 IJ 9 (l) Mt!'V liriltln (C) Sched·
fii) Government fil m (C) (30) ultd auests: Dr. Benjamin SPOCk.
el No Creo en lol Hombres ~0) Pit Bocne, .IOhn Ct111dine, Timmy
Grimes tnd Bri1n Bedford.
6734048 ~m ;~~-?:' rew•r better mm•
OPl'N l 0 The censor had been under 6:4$ • 70t r. ••tbM attack lately. Director Roman
l•llHN ll•nlnMila Polan ski castigates Trevtlyan for snipping 15 seconds from
one of his pictures, and he was
also criticized for cutting the
scene in ''The Killing of Sister
George" Jn which one woman
made love to another woman's
bare bosom.
"Z"
&
"THE GRASSHOPPER"
STAltTS WEDNESDAY
"STRAW BERRY
STATEMENT"
&
"PASSIONS OF ANNA"
•rw.oft IUiClll -• ... -.. 1.Mt ......... Ide -~ .,...,.
EXCLUSIVE
·HELD OYER
NO ROOM TO RUN
NO PLACE TO HIDE
I Trevelyan said he had offers
to become a movie consultant,
and "I want to write a book
about my kind of work."
1:5S all Cl.lestlon dt Sei!Jndot B @ (])mJohnny C.r10n (C) I~~~~~~~~~=
GutJts seti1duled •rt D1vid Frost.
ind Robert Klein, l :DO 0 9 CJ) Green Acres (C) (30)
L!sa Doua:las dlucv~rs the Woman's
liberation Movement.
O \llr1lnf1 Gr1h11n (C) (50) Gu.Sb
1J Movie rt1m1 (C)
0 CD Oick Cnttt (C)
are Colonel S1nders, Glenn Ytt· 12:00 O Movie: .. Undll'CO'ltf Min'' (mys.
borough, Dom Deluise, Kly• 81!· tery) '4~1enn Ford, Nini foci1.
lard end Asher Snider, @())Did C.....tt (C) m To Tell tt,1 TruUI (C) (30)
(ID Full Go1J11I Bu1lnessm1n
al LI Constltucion (30)
(CJ 12:30 m All·Nli:frt Sflow: "S1m Ship,•
"LldJ' ltOd lVI Rlclu Aa:•in" tnd
.. l•st Mtn on tutll."
l :OS a.\) Uli1 llto (5~)
1:00 0 Mo'lir. "MJ Sir Corrvld1" (dr•·
1:30 0 9 ([) H11 H•• (C) (60) m•J '52....,M111hal Thompson.
Guests fncluda Waylon Jennin1s, D 0 Htws (C)
WE DNES D AY
DAYTIME MOVIES
t :OO 0 ''This Wo111111 11 Mln ... (1pe11·
turt) '41-C11ol Bll.ICt; fmiehot
lone. "Wiid H1NUt" (tdvtnturc)
'47-Altn L1dd. l!oyd Nolin. 0 "The fll MIN" (1111$ttl}) '51
-Rock H~d$0n, Emmett Kelley.
t:JO 0 (C) "Tit• Last Clllra1" UdVtfl·
turt) '64-Tony Russel. m (C) "Hun11r ti It'll UnknOW11"
(drama) '66-<itor1t Andtr.9(111.
1:00 m ''Our M~n 1111 Mlvln1" (comedy)
'60-AI«; GuinflUS.
2:00 0 (C) '1111 l1Jt Vort1t" (dr1m1)
'60-Rolltrt St1ek. Oorotl!y M1ta11t.
4:00 8 "nit OtUull Ddlnqwnr. (a>m·
tdy) '57-Jerry ltwiJ.
e JOB PRINTING e PUBLICATIONS
e NEWSPAPERS
Ou t ilty Printi ng end Otpendeble Service
for more th•n • quarter of • century
PILOT PRINl ING
2111 WISl IALIOA. ILYD., NlWPOIT IUCH -M2-4J21
~ • MrnO-GOLOWYN-MAYER Pr1c1nta -.....
\ A story of iov9. Fil med by David Lean
Ryans
9rioJ Fal:R'Tf.fftH..M TRE\OR ~
Ofl5ltftER .x.lES .Dr-l MUS .
and
Lucille lall
"YQURS, MINE
AND OURS"
---~-.,---,---
Start• Wednesd•y
8AR8AA OMAR
SIRBSAND • SHARIF
\). ,I,1Mi~ tf'&~ ~-Also
\ I ' ' ~I'
Ult SEfRET or
Si\~ Ii\ \'lllOllli\
IARGAIN MATIN IE
Ivery Wednetd1y, 1 p.m.
A411tb S.l .IO a..... 114
Tuesday, Dttembtr 15, 1970 D.AILY PILOT I
Uninvited Guests
Talk Shows Draw Trouble !:
By JERRY BUCK
NEW YORK (AP)
Network concern over disrup-
tions and uninvited guest.! on
late-night talk 1ihow11 has
resulted in the posting of extra
1PJards when controversial
guests are booked or when
trouble is 11uspected.
"You always have that fear
-that someone is going to
jump onto the stage from the
audience," said one talk show
spOkesman. Another said, •·we
have to have guards. It takes
a lot ot bread to stop taping or
cancel a show.''
Every netW-Ork talk show
has had interruptions or unin-
viled guests. iwo such events
has had interruptions or unin-
vited guestll. Two such events
in the past few weeks iJ.
lustr att their conce rn.
PORT THEATRE
673·'260 -CORONA DEL MAR -FOR ADULTS ·-
Ins best contacts
are m bed'
lll"""J
She's woman enough, -
1: are you man enough?
••
'l! r I!
1:
Oppo!ing f 11c tions of
homosexuals threa tened to
b r c a k up the Dick Cave tt
show lhe Friday a f t e r
Thanksgiving. A leader of one
facUon had been booked as a
guest, on the ABC show and a
leader of another fa ction had
not been .
Members of the second
group threatened In advance
to break up the show unless
.~ill!§ TIGE~S:IU lAMBRINOS :fl:N~~f~~~OZAATI
MADRID I RPME • CINEMATION INDUSTIUES Col0t f>t llelUXE @. ;~
they too were heard. I.=====================;;, A compromise was reached
at the last minute and both
11ides were represented 'on the
show.
"We had no problems,'' sa id
a Cavett spokesman, "but we
did ha ve plenty of stud io
security and policemen Were
on call in the vicinity."
On a talk show a few weeks
ago a comedian walked ()Oto
the stage and complai ned on
camera that he couldn 't get a
booking on the show.
Instead of having guards
hustle the man offstage, and
erasing it from the tape before
air time, the talk show host let
the man give part of his com-
edy routine. It was then pass-
ed off as a planned stunt.
All three network talk shows
were interrupted by black jazz
musician11 who contended they
were being excluded from
tclevi!ion.
The Merv Grif fin show was
disrupted Jn August wh en it
was still in New York . About
40 black musicians and sup-
porters blew horns a n d
noisemakers. The taping was
halted for the day and the
studio was cleared. Police
were. called In to stand by, bu t
were not needed.
In September the mus ici.a.M
briefly interrupted the Cavett
show. Leaders or the musi-
cians met with ABC offi cials
and a booking on the show was
arranged.
The musicians: also showed
up at the :·Tonight" show. but
never got into the studio. They
did hold up the taping for tU
minutes. then they met with
NBC officials. That meeting
resulted in an appearance on
the "Tonight" show and two
appearances on the "Today"
NATIONAL GENERAL THEATRES
LAST DAY
STAlllEY IRAm ·-i'i11cerrwr MICIEY 1110m "IT'S' A MAD,
i."ii."iiiii.t lllCl SHAWM MAD. MAD,
3111 CAES.111 ,..., !llJ!RS MAD WORLD" 1U111JY fl!Cl(ffi mllf.THllW
ETllEl. -JlllATlWI WJllTEllS
,.;~~S~T~A:;....R~~:S:"~~~~:~DAY "\'\
George Sega l -Ruth Gordon
GEORGE SEGAL· RUTH GORDO~
"Where's Poppa?''
RO\i LEI~ ·TRISH YAN DEVERE
-...;;;;;._._iiiiiiiiiiiiiiRated (RI
''
Theatre Closed Tuesday
WALT DISNEY 'S
WILD
COUNTRY
Invitational Premiere
~-
''
1how, ===~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~==
"ONI OP THI YIAR'S •UNNllST COMDIU. • ltichertl H1 ,m1i-L.A. free '''" -~
"*-*-**T 1rs'Au.'so FUNNY!"~
• I NtlHltT MTWG I \-HIW Ywi 0.1~ ~
..... ...:..~ ... ,·· WUW • cma SIAMGalJ -. ..., .....
PLUS -T•ny Mut•nt-Suiy K•nde!t ln"THE llRD WITH THI CIYSTAL PLUMACil'" IGPI
CALL 546-3102
EXCLUSIVE ORANGE COUNTY ENGAGEMENT
' ' W U S A ' 1!;) PAUL NEWMAN and JOANNE WOOWARD
ANTHONY PERKINS
''' '0' Hn-o .. .,. '"""' "ZIG ZAG" Ill W•llM• & A-JMkHll I• IGl'J
18th RECORD WEEK -EXCLUSIVE ENGAGEMENT
Elllott
Gould
Don1lcf
Sutharland
... . ,. ~I·1lS ·ll .
~. • •11AC>t .AT•U.111 ~ •1 -''Rabbit ..... eo•tt !fW'I. • .,.,. --
.. ., ..... • HVNTIN•TON -~·
Also ' run''
James f.aan ·Anjanene DJmer·JackAlbertson
Durie SrOO:Jress:Arthur Hill -·,,,....•""""""'~
, "'"""" ... l•lllllt A1191tr•"' Ult! •llf •• b•Y 9111 wff•
cJteratt ... He li•11't c•-h•-v•t.
18th Record WMlc Elllat.t Gould, Don Sutherl•nd
RATED '1G" -IT'S FOR EVERYONE -Exclu•lve Wtlk·in Run
" ......... ,... ~ ·~ ..,_ .,.... ~ 1M DIM '"';
AIRPORT
' -BURT LANCASTER • DEAN MARTIN '.~
211d F11tur11 "THI OUT..OP.TOWNlllS" ,., HELEN HAYES
HELD OYER!
3RD 818 HIT
Fred MacMurray
Nancy Olton in
2nd HIT
J..U. Wiid 11
"KING OF THE GRIZ71 IES" C 8)
' •
' ' •
' .,
.-
• J \• ,
'
•
•
•
•
' Yoacr ltfortey's lt'ortla Complete-New York Stock List
How Does You1~ Income OVER THE COUNTER u
••-ll•c I ... •nt1r II lbW • -M ..... • a.a."'-llMD. l'l'km .. Mt .... ,.... W ---... _. .... W I I 11te
NASD Ll1ti.,.1 lw -.t•y, Dec""''-14, 1'70
Rru1k 011 National Scale? HEW ;:.s:..K W'l1P'•" 'rlk -'TM 1111 111'111 • .,,1,. 1J10 •illH ...... 1"11111141., • lktnl -lkd av l'IMf:l'tl '"" N111o11ot ...._,. ','' ... ,
:;q;r. !i ~ I:.':~ I~· l~=I T;_ ~ '~ N;9 'i J~ =-;~ ... ,.. ~ !" ;::_."• ,J ;: ~1$1,1·;t ~~ • :~tt ti: ,:,~.,I,~ 'M=t::•, w W' k~ Mn;r:. 1
By SYl.\'lA POHTE R
Jlow does your income
r ankf
You are Aclually \n lhe 1na·
jorily of U.S. houstholds if the
income or all n1embcrs of your
household exceeds $8 000. Out
of lt\e fi3 mll\lon households in
the U.S. today , n1ore than 33
million - or S2 6 percent nf
the tolal -are above this in·
come level.
You are. actually t¥J>lcal it
lhe lncoltle of your hOu.schold
members totals b e t w e c n
SI0,000 and SlS.000. Nearly 23
mllUon -an astounding :\G.S
percent -have attained this
rank.
You are In an Increasingly
h'nportant minority If your
household income l!i $15,000 or
morr. Out or every six l(S.
households, one ll in 1his
Pe11n Central Fiasco
Top Fi11ancial Story
<Editor's note: The aulhor borrow and at the same Ume
of lhe following is a partner In cxlremely d i fr i cu It for
the investment bond finn of marginal venture enterprises SRlomon Brothers and is the
aur.hor of sevcral books on to borrow.
bonds and interest rates. This The effect of all lhis on our
article was written at the in· financial markets was pro-
vitation of United P r es s found. During the nrst five
lnlernational) and one half months or the
By SIDNEY HOM~R year, bond prices had declined
NE \V YORK l UPI I -What to new lows , at times prec ipi-
was lhe mosl important fin an-lately. Most reached their low
cial news event in 1970 to prices and peak yiekls almost
date'.' j)n the day or the bankruptcy.
My an.sv.·er is the Penn Ccn-.Ever since the bankruptcy,
tral receivership announced on prime bond prices have been
Sunday, June 21. but threaten. rising much of the time and
eel for a u•eek or two earlier. lately they have bee n soaring
lLs importance stems not so so that yields are down sha rp.
much from the huge losses in· Jy.
volved lo holders of the coin· 1·he effect (lf the bankruptcy
panys securities or from the nn high-grade stocks wa s
threat to transportation, ~imilar they had be en
although both were se\'crc.. dee.lining preci pitately in the
This one news event did more second quar1er o( the year:
to dispel the boom psychology they stabilized in late May and
that had bu ilt up over the within a week nf t he
years than did lwo years or receivership they began . !heir
fiscal and mon!ary restraint. impressive recovery. ll was
It did more to ma ke the not just that the bad news was
gove rnment's po I ic y of out, but that <I soberer,
restrain t work than 11ny of. sounder business psychology,
ficial action. Jt 1va.s a warning free of the s p ec u I a t i v e or abuses in our credit romance of 1968·69, seemed to
markets. of(er the possibility of a
The policy cf lending or-healthy economic recovery
ficer! and lnvtslors suddenly free of speculative excesses.
became conse rvative. The rate Th e p en n Cent r .a 1
of inflation began to decline. bankruptcy was a I a r g e
Exuberant business plans for disastrous financial calamity.
record expansion began lo It "'as much more than that it
slow do\\·n. New investment was a symbol and a signa l -
funds ·were redirecled con· a v.·arning ~I believe in time )
servelively and began to con· and also a l.hreat. I am not al·
centrate on the very highest tempting to balance up the
grade of commercial paper. or good "'ith the bad rcsul\s -
bonds. and of stocks. Ven· there we re plenty of both and
turesome loans a nd in· both will be with us for a long
vestments, whic h had been the time. However, whelbcr we
.style for three years, suddenly emphasize lhe good or the
became out or style. It soon bad. it 1vas the big financial
became much easier for the news of 1970.
large prime corporations 10 --~ilazOiiiOiiii<'iOi'l l "'-,,, ..
If yo11o .,. ,.., nl"g A111we1i11g
5-Ylc:.t, Yo11 or• ,.., 9ett1n1 oll
of yo11r collL "lw.
1,000':i OF Oil PAINTINGS
WHOLESALE WAll:lHOUSI
OPEN TO THI PUILIC
lELEPHONI '"'
ANSWIRING IUREAU
835·7777
$5 and up
\llf £.EDINGER, SAHl.ili AMA ,.H014E IJ!-'60f DEALERS WAHlE D
"Your Real Estate Problems Can Be Solved"
Sy A Specialist in Exchan9es
Solv11111 1-~ p•oDl~m,, 1vaod A <•o•'~' (IA•n •1~. red11Cir lnv11I-
"'""' or lnd<!btedn~••· <tta•l'C•llkHI PfflDl!m,, l~<rf•s.t Ille""", •wld
A oo~n•• ....,., •. f"'I~• 1 11'llf1t, ,,,emDlt jlrOPl!rly, u cll11191 t r<I ltt1tbfct. O• pyr1moe1 •~ ti!tlt.
'A Certified Reol Esta te Broker
For Appointment Call (714 ) 673.3101
NANCY J. MOORE
Real E1tal• lnHstm•lltl
3471 Via Lido -Suite 200 • Na ncy J. Moore Realty
TOMORROW IS THE
FIRST DAY OF THE
REST OF YOUR LIFE
M1\1 'ute you know wh1r11 y111 ,,.
111'1ng. IDS doe• -lhaf1 why wt tllt
olt11 you Ille: oppon.unily to 11tn 11
m11th 11 you want to.
look 11thtse1t1tis1itt on .too repr1-
s1Mati~es who ftttntlY atlenftll 1n
IDS t81eef ccftlerence.
l11eomr. Averag1 liti! yenr commi1·
i1ont Sl2,293 tor the 400. Ave1111•
lor lhl top 21 min was $22.400, &~
lncretn ol $9,6'18 ovtr 1n1v1oos in·
cc me.
rofllttr owi,1tio11t: Siles tnd w!••
1111n1Qtment t36\I, ilt\111 b11Mnts1
awners ( 15%1. teethtrs. m1h11ry, tnd ot~tis !19%/, .'*' ... "' et 1M 1ot 1t1111din1 to11!1111110tt 39
Eluutit1: Col11g1 01 t1111iY1ltnt wtirk ei~nancem
A,ri!vd1: 011r 1CJ11n;ttg 1esu 1n4 •Pt1T11d1 •n•trsis rtn 1id rou "' Yo\111' d1e1Ucn.
Ut tOtJ .. ,Ht,? \Ye •r• u1kin; 1T1n and women sutc1sd1A now, whOH Hrirlngs 1111110v• 1Y1r1g1. 11 ou1ht1H. th1ne1
lo.< .sucuss. se111!Klic11, tuglllr 1arn1ng1 ltt 1u1ll1n1.
tNTEAUTEDl
INVESTORS DIVERSIFIED
SERVICES, INC.
1100 N. l1111d·•~
Stt\I• J,.,.,, C1Hfor~i1 1•1-s•o1
(~
•
ca tegory. ~I or $1Cv!'tll" 110 -ltn Itri. htc:., Of' F1tfl Ml• itelull lr1-· F!PMI llfl tloll& but 1r1 ...,.. FsllWl'lfl There are l ,7li0,000 other =:,•'!,"fc..u :":i F~ne,~
hou~holdJ llkt yours j f your :':"~:n:.'~lti 1_.: ~~,.Oil
C!llegory JS m,()00 tO $49,000, :i<illlel ~ p~tflf
• e~Md ~ldl or frllkl Cp That s 2.8 per~nt of the totaJ. ootid !btdi'." ,.,.,, ,Fnifi1n E dMltr IOIO•klli ul-
And lhere ere 2$1,000 other ~"t"r:. d•1~~~ ~f.: I::
households like yours ir you ~.11 11111 ~~= ,',Jr--
ha ve achieved the $50,000 or ::::r:,=.w11 °' ,..,,.. :='1c
AAA E111 111 1\lo GLtll"" morr level. AAI C•P 4\1. s •1 E11 AFAPr S 1,.. 20J1 ti
How do YOU rank! Without :rfs '':' t~ 5~ ~~" ~an~~~ii~e~~sfu=3uhef!ui; :et i ;~ : =lll~~
which will show you where you ~~11 ~~ 1,, l:Z n;:-1:'
Pl 'c. All SI, 6V. 6111 ,,.. ' · Air Indus JV. ' ,,-Mio
H hid Alrbrll F 1'111 U V. •Hfl Ml ' . No. % or Altlft ~ '"" )Y, r11tl RE
Income hshlds. b~blda. :l:f!;: ~" m ,..,, ,.r 'lkt L1Wll 11'\lo 11\li rwtll I" L!nder Sl.000 2,016,000 3.2% A !fl 11... 1v. l \t u1n111 c Altiel El ~ 114 vii llll $ J.000•$ J,999 4,289,000 6,8/ib Alllll Geo t'Mo 2~ yrodfl
2,000-2,!)99 3,895,000 6.2% ::::•~u... 111/o 1~"' ~r ,: 3 ~ J ~ 3886000 02% A El lob J""' ~Mol1l1t1 •111
'........... .;,~;, • 1 • Am E•Pf' '11" 1'V. HIN'ld f<
• ~ 4 ~ 3 603 000 • 1"' Am Fur11 6"' 11.<o Htrll \' ........... ,;,;,;, ' ' "' ·io A GrMI 11 61'14 ~ldoc: nl s.ooo. 5,999 3,795,000 S.0% ~ ... ""1.'1: liv. lJ~ ~=EP
6,()00. 6,999 4.011,000 6.4% ArllleUJ I 7lV. '~Hori• llt
7 ~ 7 999 '298 000 6 !"' Ar1•e11 In l \.'o l \111 Howrd GI ,.......,.. 1, ,, , , ·10 Arts Ind 71.lo 1"" Howm In
8 000 9 999 8 106 {l()(l 12 9% Ardell M 7"'° J:it. UC:k Ml ' . ' ' ' ' ,,. :~:"'~ ~1a 1~\t Hiid "'° 10,()00. 14,99914 ,524,000 23.1 .~ ArrtM H 2tl'I nv.~U9 1GJ•
15.000-24,999 8,425,000 13.4% :~~'1o1 ;:..., ~~ H~~~ C11
25,000. 49,999 l ,760,000 2.8% :~:~d ~t, 1'"" ;~~~ l'I~
50 000 d ••t 000 0 '% laker l \II lJ~ 1"*0t sr . ·an -over "" , ,, 1111 ,.11111 6 ,..., 1nc1 Nuc:
Wh · • Bt&'" Jiit l1t ~ lnlr1rd y are you 1n your income 8111" '" '"' 4"' lftt cont
b h · · ' 111umr1 •1%i 43111 1111rm In racket -w atever It 1s . 111~1.,,, 1''11. 1514 111 1w111
A th It. I I ct lleec:hm n ?l• •1111 Mullll mong e er 1ca a ors 1•11, 1111 1t 1,~ 1n1 5,,
di .. k . &11'"111<1 J s.,,111 s~o1 e ermin1ng your ran are. !lent Mtt 1n11 11'h 1111!j!'
Y ,., I The '"'-.... '° " ion • -our :!!IUD co or. llelf t.•" ~ •1lllt 11 Ut~
average yearly inC{lme of a 11111--w "-1'-J= c llllrd SClrl l' » j•,. W I white American heading a ::z\"' Ht 3r" ,::v. 11J1H J
household is $9 ,898 against an :=:. ~ 1~ 1n? rt1;11>~d1
average o( $6.539 for a -black ::' c~~ lf~ '::t ~':1:-"~~
household head. that's a l'tr" 1 ..;~ .,~ ~=~~~ "'
$3,359 yearly gap which yawns .~. 1k ; 11Y. 1~ ~:~G'"
inlo a 4~year li(etime gap of I~ ~ l~ 1~ ~:r~11T
$151,155. l="c· r 1~ •llwd lur""' S l1'.lo Jl:W. lull I!
-Your sex. The average in· i~ ~':! ,~ 1'"' ~ [:! come for a household headed ......_ H J"" :12: t:' 1:.c
by a man is $10,79S as against = "': .. ~ ~r,r c~t
$4,878 for one headed by a ::"'~1 .. 1m ,JU: ~~1,v111
woman. That·s Jess than half. ~:: ~ ;:z f-. ..Mc o.,' llTClh ~ '"° Ltntt n - Your age. The average ,,, ow ·~ ,v; ~:;:: ~":
for a household headed by an l:r;:~ ~~ 1: 11: t:"°" "'
individual aged 45 to 54 is l:~1 ~;. 1ftl'. 1~ ~~:,"
$12 ,82 Th. . lh .00 Ctn!t• 31 l™ ~1111 ooi ( . IS JS e per! Cen YPS II\\ ' Ltl~r G
u•hen an American worker·s ~~~,.,'tb ttz ~ .... tt.:_ 1 Ji:
income usuaUy reaches a peak ~::ir1 L~ ~ 1~" t:i1·~d.,
and the achievement dwarfs ~:::: i'i'fi ,f,Z 14~ ~:'nc:11E1C11
the 1!1: 686 average for a Chi 1ra.1 '° 62 Mto GE• .... Cllr!lt S IOI 111 Mii lllty household headed by an in-Christ 01 ,. io1 M•ll,•rt ClllOl!I •'.to 11.11 M.11111 M dividual between the ages -0f c1111 Mt• 11* 11111 M.tllOI" c C1tl1 U A ?SV. l6 Mir Mlt 14 and 24. (1111 U I 25'4 ~ M1rm Gr Cllvln Mt 1~ 11""' lrewr -Your s urrou ndings Even Cl••" Ml "* uv. Mtul L" ' Cl1Vl(l!'I "" 1~ M1y1r 0 lhough t_he average f o r lli~I.,.. ~ 1~ 1~"" =-" H
/armers JS swelled by the c iow C• i s11o 1~ M"' ""''' . • . Cotvr 0 •'" J\li '" earnings of ou r argr1· c ... ~ c. st s.. Mtrlll In ·11· · Colem Sv 11/i 2 Mklld C1 m1 1ona1 res, lhe ave rage farm camm F 101'1 nv; Midi••
h h Id · od · Calon Sir JN 71"1111 Mlclw GT ouse o nicome t ay 1s on· comce• ''"' s M•ll G1•
ly $7.244 as aga inst $9,&49 for ~= ¥~1 n .... f;y, w.!".~
non-farm hoUseho\ds. ~::::; w~in ~ 1~ Md>wt:sc1
111·
B . Com P1w lOV, 11 M011f Col -ul m o s t important, com-A • '"" MMtn ,.~
d I. If h Cn'IP Cm ll' ~ -• ,. your e uca inn. t e c""' 1mt • '""'Moore s
household head has finished ~m-Tee m ~ Ml19 TrA ,omr&• k " JI Mt11Tr wt co llege, the average in~ome is ,::.,!doc: 1,.r. '"' ::ik"c1~
more than $IS 000 but 1f he or con1••11 ' 1"' 1.,. Mueller • • Caooe• L 15\o'J 16 MutRt E• she has (ailed to complete an ~~~~ 5y, Jv. r" :t~· 1~
elementary school education crw11d 1•Vli 1s'h .... ,,., c , ' Cron Co » » NllCll JI the averag e is less lban $S,500. c,•utt~ ~ J"' 1¥> NCm• c,. yo•e• H•~ EQUI -And as a logical result of g:~ .. L-J: r' ~ "''' G•o ·" I' 0111 Oft ..... ,.._ Htl l ib ou r ~uc.a ion. y-o u r OC· 0111 Gen ''"' ,,,., M111 ,,.,...
cupation. If lhe household head 00"•,111 F~ ~\lo ~~ ::\ :~R I • k I'll "''' 5t>Ow s a se~v1ce wor er, the ~or"'I~ 1!~ l~\IJ N11 suvr
average income come~ to lkklb Ao >'"" ,. ~~n,,. G,,~ · . Deihl Int t 9\'t $7 ,063. But 1f the head is a pro· 0t11t• ch fJ " :1~r•11,'
I · . Ot• c~nT U¥o 15"' ... 1 ession.al. the average will be °"' 11r io 20'ilo =~··R:.C
$14.702 -more than double ~ c~ 1j" ,;\Ii NC,•r NG
d d·11 . DiK Int J m H ur 011 an e t crence mounting up oiver CM 11.11 j"' "".., G11
to a huge total of $.145.755 over 8:1<1~' L-1i~ lo t: ~~
k. 1·1 1· 0ow JOll 141""' ltV.. NIKI Jl.K a wor 1ng 1 e 1me. Po-r1t oa 1,,. l'lt"" oi.11 Ar1
E h · Ortw NL ! ?>;l.S!:':!la W1t ac successive census tally Ou11kln o 1 i1111 ~' Sc:111
dramatizes anew the extent to ~1i;::"1n1 1:: l~"' 0:1'::"~,.
which we, the world·s leading ~::lc s:' 1~ 1~ 2!.':c.,rA
m.ddle 1 Ect111 ub 11\lo u , ~EC 11'1 1 · ncome economy, are Eouc $w• m 2w. Pu11 I•
surpassing even our own ~lt:'l~ 1:%: 11.i. ~: ~~~
••plrations a n d m o v I n g El6fr I• 4y, s .. ,•kco C-11 'I NUt ? ?'I\ 11\COI towa rd the wo rld's first upper-E N..c: l:NI> 1•'4 ,"~,• o,• . EltlCIY 11i 1\li It W middle inco me eco nomy. And E11rom ~YI stA ,"11rlff P . El C Sn 1'1111 2 1.,.llt even though Inflation recently El 0111 '° " ,. .. rl M>
h be · EI MOC111I Wt •Y. PNr II T as en cutting deeply into E'"•S on u-is ... !l!flll~ •• 1·• · t•tt Enertv C 1J U Pl Gl.W rea incomes, we s 1 come El'llf'• Rt 1v. •~Penn Pie
I II h d he I £r1lwt1I • J P-1 WI (Ill , we a ea over t ong F.1111 cor11 111o 1~ ,.11ra1t1
pull. So : "How are you keep-~~~11 ,.~ '~ '~ :~:0U"
Ing up with the Joneses?" FS Ceco f~ 1 .... l'lla•on
I~ e~.· S NC. 1 .-. " 4b ~ Ae!NLli I .• t V. r 1MW ~ • Y tfll .,_ '" A lrre Ct 1Rt 1i!';~ur-l\l'lll ,1-,? :='"As 191it.'f .. :~.:.~-
1nt 11:Z ~II~ :I.I lJ'°' 1Jt,\ m'• A •• ·~)ti ,.,dKl"':fD,.71 >• • ~ C• ~ .,_ T t'I\• C. " lndu I In "" i ~ttM ;~ 1= t": d: t~ m 'A t: :Mio 'lo ff'' S~ !.~ !~Trac; CJ. '\olo 7'11 A G•I \,IO
1'li 14' lll111110 1· '''h U 1111.11 0 I l2~ 1;;';; Ai=t1111 .M ,i ' 1:::.1r~·,11 1iil I.a T~:::; 'Rl 1~ ~".'oe'11'.~"
I'"' ~I''"' • n fk T:~,.r ,f ... J= ~~ ':J:
I ; 111:? f:M:snm ,:3 !t\lo ~~ =Ir H J,_ ~ :t:it: :Jt
l,,K '1~• I l': l~1t lf'" ~:11Tii~ J.. Jr: :JI:~ ~~ _,. I :1111111 t:,: Ir" J'! ~~ ~~ t :~ Alt'-0 ~ti 1:1 '° 114' 111-loll S\lo :Jlit., "ul e:""'!,! lf It A.1111 Ml II AO J\'11 3"' lllot i'" l" Slit~· ' 4 .... eneldMIH .1st 2'"' !!., • .,. ,.... ~ ...... s l111:t. "" "''.(, Al' ,. ...
""-· " •• •• ',._,. 2I 21'111 AllNSlr 1.411 1"6 l it ''" • .... ,.., A111edttr "" • 1l Y! 1'YI ~-'"', < :th :Mio \lftih M.I "' i flo Allllkop .Ho 111/o 1l'lo Ni 2'Mi Ulll lrocl ttl<I J::ll'I Allis Cllolrn In w. "' .,, •• L-0 ,.= 1~ Al"~'""' ... 1i~ 1l\i $(: f.:'' ;:: 1'"' ~r.~ .. SI ~ ri~ ::="f .. «lt *"' ,1 kof kw11 1•V. l ~ 11111 IN ljYI AmttS... lAI
16¥1 1' ~Ill :r: r 1Ut 1Ui w:fi\w,: 1Jt.1< \ I'> AMIAi JO
11 11Vr '"' •• 1~ :IO'A "'"' ~ 2,~ ~. 1.J:l: !!; ::i. tll Cm• j'll • W•r-... " ...... H~ 30r -~11r11 5"' IV. ill-.11 HG l•YI '"' AmtH p1i.10 ; ~ vc: Grp SW. .Fl' '#1111 lllE ',"-IO,~ MltFlltr .ID l'4 1111 ...,itll U1 J1V. 51\'I 11 Tr •-" ,!~ Am Alrlln .• lllall '""' 6.... .ob llt •-...,. A 1111 .bl It M lltl M 7'o '"'° W.iott11 .$\li f lli ml > <o 1'o ltt Id~ S l\lt 1 Wt~ ... M If "' It A rlllh 1 0
.... • ~&I fl )(""° I(~ WtllF •I 11 I"" ='r-'' 2 1-;o• 1 Vt E 11 1t ,..,., 11(Sf P ~ flolo A C ·~·11 "' J\'J w G1C1 U \'11 Uh .Vllll HA :i.., ' Ml ~n :.S JO "' EISVC: 1'40 ""' w1111 Ml, "" 61\o A c11a-r' 1" '"" 1~ INttfV ~ !"" I II P11ll 11'/0 12V. ACrt"S..0: · .• .01'1 'I l1ndV11 11 2 'ol !M Wll ,nt 'IJ~ ACrY~<-"' I~ 1fv; f!~,. "~J.'~ ~~ ~Vt w~:i."'£ 2v. m ~c"'111 1111iu1 ''"' ,,_. tltrlt sir 11 ll'lt wr1"'1 w ~'! :P,,,, Amil ,1 .• '"" •1oli Strow Cl :M 21 Yrdny e: ...-,. NI'! Ou.llVeit 'Hlli 2t'4 AO...Yt Df.toll l'YI U\11 JomEl,.w 1.70 .!'• ,', LJl'C AffWS:f PW Am E•11 lrocl ~ :"'~rt~ i~ !~ MUTUAL :"'G~!\1.r~ 2~~ J~Y, : ':.=. .:ttt
JU ll'o Am HDl'll .26 nt ~ :m~:!i~1 " "'" FUNDS • M'"" .... 1' 30,, A MllCht Df •
IJ 1•1'1 AIJI MO!On I IYI AHllGll J.10 14 l J Am PlloM .16
"1:! »"•'" :~i~11~Je1 Ml $.11111 .. J J~ NEW YOllK {A .. 1 Imo C•• I.~ •.25 !m-\::1~ 1:;1 IV. t~ -lM i.l'-lnt -lll'lt Gltl l . .cl ,,!:! Am$Alr !11.JI
J1I ~ ::!~'i1.:T11t:~r. '1~~· t1: .:ii :::"sJ':tl.1s n :b · 1111111 o1 Securlltn roc11lrv •.lO •,71 Am s11rU A
11 .... 11 .... 0.1ltr1, IM., 1rt IHTGH 1S1 I.fl AT&T wl H 20 -wkt1 al wrilUI !11v Colt U.1J 1?.J' Atn T&T J.MI 1111 ~ ft'lese 1to1rl11111rw Guld 1.lt ,.,, Am ww• .5'
2-Wi JI\ uiuld htVt "°"" 11¥ lnd l< 6.SO 1.511 AW •.lpf 1.Q ,..,, ""so111 1111d1 .,. """911• 111"'" '°' 11.5' 12."l ....,...,...., .60 ~ J (•111•111 Moftd••· nuntor1 Gr-: Atmltlt ·'°" 2J¥11 ~ •M AM. IOS ndl l ." •.ll AMF IM to ~ 1\1• Abtrdfl 1 lf J,01 . Miii f.25 10.11:!1 Amfic It'
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1\11 9 IMonl J 13 '119 S1locl l .n f.64 Anuru I 1t '"" ,.,. ,....,, ::u 1:CM V•r P)' '.s? 7.Cll All'litr l'li.tJ l \lo J'IO A1ul1n ''1: J.3' ,.., lh1ll (.;Q 4..13 Armllr Pl Ml IV. J'lt AtlM F• 1:t1 t.1' tltl 11.U lf,.olll All'llltd 1..C, 2 2' Affllllll ' '9 2 3' IVY l .tl '-11 Amit! J2
1"4 1\lo AIUI•• 1'19 1:1tJ H11c:ack 1.1/ '·'' A-·1.te ~ ' •11 Aft'I I' j, .'-I Johnllll l t . lf.:N AMII Hodo; I
"""' :JO A 111111 •• ., 10.n Kl~ll-Fl.lfldl: AllCOl'I Svc 1
"',,, ·.~~Aid!• Fd 111.Jt 11.u, ... ,,_1'\1 11"' .:.Js Alld C~· 1.l'Ct -.. . Atnc:t~ S.U I .I •• ,$11 .32 AH< 11 ,25 I~ 1 I Am u1 l IG 1 U lu' 82 11.M 2Cl.5t AIM:IO ,)11 ll!-11 11• • Am 111 11:!)0 1o:fl Ill fl( 1.M 1.U APL-Carp
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11""' uv; Am Grlll s'.n 1:n ~~"Gt ~:fr t'·" ArnK 111 2.11 1~""° l:~ Am 1""' :·°' :·f: u Gr111 1:n ·., ~:::"'~r,11r'
s .... i"' ~ .. ~"' iP. s:M •• tt.c:ri 1•.01 ts.ll A•""' c i< .• .,,..., '°"' ,_ Gr-· lbtrtf J.~ J.97 Arm llu 1.60 J~ :Jil4I • I 21 Ill Siii .I.II S.11 Art Coro to
J'4 W ~~ 1l·ft n·IJ lft 111¥ l.H '·" AfVlft tlld i
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'"" 7~ llllr Fd .n 6.5' ldA M11 '-" !·" A"'-" O~ll 1~ J" &olldtlll ' ',·•,, '1·~ CP 11.20 I ·'' Automt11 ll!CI lolloll S • · 11'1 IJ.1! I.US Avco Cp .o.
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'" 10 .... "'' C10 11 :.i 12.•0 =~~:r1"!"" ~-11 !·L Bentuet '" •"" 1'111 rrl WOIY J.51 I.Of ' ' lltrlo;ey ,.,. ltnlo 11.,.. rn wo11 a.II l.'l ~;:,,~~"'Fu~il':. lO . .U Beth 511 1.1111 1~ 10'Mi Vlh M 60.11 60.tl F.~ull 6 t i J 60 ll lt TllrH .60 15 lt\I> Ckl1wu1 Group: Gtart 11"1• 1i'111 Sltdt Ok .U l\'11 l:io OICll 111.14 11.IJ Gr!ll f 12 ff7 8l1lrJOM .d ~ JHlo Dilwr 11..U 1J·jl 111eam 1:.q 1'.26 &llH L•ut r "' 1""° Oi!11 4.l• • lrlWtSI I 11 1 ll lloOHR ,)6 1\r.i 1\l OOdtl co~ 1s.•2 11. 1 v1it• , . .ff 1·:io 111111 1111 1.111 •!Vt "5 0••~•1 12."5 n.•j VoYtt ,·,. .-.. Bobbit Irk• 51 61 0rt v! [d 11.01 lt.o lttv•r• ,· .. t'n Botlnt Co . ., ~"Jo~ Or1Y1 v 12.11 ll.11 Rlnfrtl 1,:161l:63 SollC11 .Hb 1.. . E1ton&How•rd· llllllflth 5.63 I.I.\ floncJ Ind .. , 1111111 '·!,",',·"· lluslr 1J.t0 IJ.n IOl)ll;Mlh 1.H
il"'OC:JllZ<=!r."la:;..oo:;D::;o:,,.O:"' ..... .., .... ::D ••• Grwltl 11.:. · Scllddtf' "lllld"' llarotn 1,1' tncom Mll .. J.S Int tnv ll.•113." 1orm1,.1 .oltl ,_, ,',·il ,1.)6 S.C-1 2t."5 ttA-' lol EdJJ 2.1• Stoc~ .... •,OJ 811 l•.J11•.,1 8our111 IM EMn l 11.f71l,lil Com SI •M t.IM lr111t Air .50 E1rtl 11,Sll 17.ff Jec.,.llv Flollllk: 8rlftl$1 ) . .0.
Em•• Sc ,'·'•' ,•,·•.1 E~tr '·'' ,.21 llrlll Mv 1.111 E lftY l, • l"Vtll 7.10 1.(1 BrlllM~ "t E.,,..,.,,. J:ll •.•. IJnrt l.IJ I~ lrit l>tl A !wltr I t . I« Am I.ff t Br ,.,, 111.4..ll Finance Briefs
''OUNGSTOWN, Ohio (UP I)
-General Jo"ireproofin g Co .. a
m11ker of office furn iture and
1111 Gltl 1,11 l,IJ I Sl«S U.ff lS. 1ewy H11t 1 E1111r "'' J.J, ,,tl I Glh 1,11 .... 8d~1t ""7 . f'1lrld I." ,,11 m f'G UNYlll If•'"' GI 60 clay and bauxite processing Fir,.. Bu •·j' ,,, Mir A• 7S..M 1,.,, llclYllUG 1'.11 Fld Gr"' II.) u." DNll ,U.Q 14..'2 Br-Co
Plant at Andersonville Ga "lcl 0t1• '"' ·· 1.,. t .st 11WT1Slw'1 .20 • • Flcklllv Grw p: ltf!'ll f'unds: 1-s11ot 1.511 ilf'll 10.fl 11.'7 C11ll 1,'6 ,.3, lf'Ul'llwt 10 nt« 1'.63 '!·'° l""tll ID.60 I .Sii O E ,. -LOS ANGELES (UPI) -w•11 11,u 1 .•1 Tr1111 1.11 t '' ~ c: ~ equipment. said It has filed P1c111 i..11 16.02 !'"1"' 11 , ,, 1.7s SUOlf•F .,,·,66 suit in federal C{IUrl in New MeCulloch 011 Corp. and Ids = :~ '1..sar, :t111u'"G1 t.:T I:" •llftl '"' .4P
Y h Ip Trend 1111ns~~·111vlJ011•.M9\lltFor1 1 ,11 ork c arging A mer I c a n 01 rograms, Joe., have com-"'""'""111 Proe: · nTr"' 1.'ot '"' t,i;:•u;..;:,
Seating Co .• or Grand Rapids, pleted and tested e gas well In ~:d:'i ~:t tUl11::'s?1 .J~A:n ~~...rr:
Mich .. with violating the anh· the Hemphill County. Texas, ~~'I"' i·U !·;; 11~-,i: "s~\,, eun No 1.n.
trust la ws. The company did portion of the Anadarko basin. ~'If!! v~, 1:~ 111 l~ s1i1~oe ~:: '·•1 ::::::;r .::·ss
nnt revea l details of the com· The well was drilled lo a depth~:: '\~1': 11;1; :tt l:~ °" '~::: '~.:: t;'~'W,,1-:0
platnl. of 16,990 feet and flowed at a F11 Jtultl .11 , ~ su '~~IMI 11J:.~ u.:11
dally rate or 20.5 inillkln cubic ~E si:,. 11:~ •:" ~!:11 t.~ ::: i:m:1:
MIAMI BEACH (UPI) -feel. • ~ •• : f: j:r: :::: S\'1K~ GI i·:. :·u :: •• ,,,, ..::,,
F irst Realty Invtstment Corp. =~ 'b~ ,:~ l:.= TMJI. ,... 1o:n 1l1· 11"•"} i~
has bought 8.500 additional PHILADELPlllA IUPI) -"=• jjiil~1• :=-'G J:l! '· c::~~: lf~
acrts of ranch land In Ptlrk Smith, Kline & Fre n c h ~~rt' 1:u 1 :Il 'f:: ~i f.lt ~ ~ ll~nfJ:
Counly, Colorado. The com-Laboratories, lnc.. has ob-,.~ tl'f :ff ~:: ~· f:~ J:# :,.:~ 1.i•
pany bought 42,000 acres In " tained approval of the Food & "'if;r,I~" Orfj'i. •" ~ ~ 't.1i 1 ft ;!~ Mf'.I
1.M same general rtglon last Dr u g Adminb:tratlon to e:;r-' ' i•r ~i:l:ct,J: ~::t t:'' :!il:Jfr ... s
month. Plans .trt now being market It! new liquid antacid, ,.1ncorn t~ j:bu~ C..llJ' til ;~ -~,. T 'lJ
made to develop and market Oucon, fur non-presc:rtptlon .. ~. t'.si :S uir!!"_ 111111~, , u '"""' '.4
the property. use , Starting ln January. Fi::~111: a~-. •,11 e 1!1, 1J'.n ;~, 1:1' I~,. , 1'1'.t u:'J'l.,. ~: i:tt ~I c-:.,.
HAMMONDSPORT, N . V . NEW YORX fUPI } -Cities ..:J.i""' . , 1:U tl:T L'i,."" ~d: s. r,t~·if
(UPI) -Taylor Wtne Co. has Strvlet Co. said a well It has g:!'Y.c '-:!..!.'11 ~'711 Hi tff =~:';:
negotl~ted a SIS m 1111 o n bttn drilling for 1 group of 8~'="s : 1·" '·" v~11tw1 I,/: 1.t1 1111 J:: i.•
rcvolvt11g credit with eight companies In lbt Java Sea ofr ::r•,f ~C i:T: :""1,...,. 1:1 tll :i'1~~u.,!;
banks, led by L t nc aln the coast of Indonesia has t;,~"l l 'l:~'ti; "IT' ,,·t.1'-l? •:[P\,1·r
Roc hester Trust Co. o f been capped ltmpor1rUy pen-"'' 1,... lftt'~" :,~'J; 11J1l:i: ~~ 1.1t
,,..., 4A •• tJ.• w1111M111 Gr-· ""'If.'·" Rot.hester. Interest through ding furlhtr I t 0I011c a 1 H~l/111111 ·ll • 5' . ••Ir "-!I it·! ell!T 'ti.
1g73 will ht! ~ of a pohu oVer studies. AlthoOflh the wtll had S1t1 i:a f~ lm~ 'l:i ltn r,,." .•
the prlme rates. Oowed al Indicated rates ot . f :i:!'1 l{j*i: ;:mr 1lJ1r.n m='~S
2.2M bin-els or oil "d!'y from~~ ic · f =1111 lj';; ll:tf ~/,~~~
NJo:W YORK IUPll -Com· 1wo zone~. further studies are "':'r... . 11. ,wwrir :'''~ ~J /~
bui;Uon £ng1neerlng Int., laid needed to· determine If the SW~,:,~ 1:: ·~:~w~~1h. 1.:!1!:fi ~=~,,.H,~ u, ml"'r•I• d!.vlslon wilt rtaeryoir is large enouab to be I r ~~"1 '·g·:.'";wf=:1'\?'0 1 ~:: t~ ~ ... ~ •!end '1 mJUlon to expand Its economJc. I •. ' 4.•s W01"1• M ' hlht• .u rv11 a. • ... 1t1111r .• 1o.c """''1'1111 1
•• • • ,
' --• • 1970 OllLY '1~0T
' Ex~h~ge
' ·---:·---------Monday's Closing Price~Complete ,. New Yor~ Stoek List •
•
..... Nit I••·························· .... ... Ultt ...
CMa.J lllffl i,-. a.t• C11t. l•J JO .. U. C"-C... IW1) ...... U. C-. 0-.
t: ' 4 DCW JON•S AY••AO••
e "I' OI~ 1:11 'i ~ 1 "'I 1ii11 ITOCl(I V1 If •f1 J 11..:1 00 7J liM +I liJI »" ;M Jl4 -D [h Lead.in "'VI " 1 It n JI!: jj"' Ult -\\ ~tw Yor~l•"Jl'1'1• Dow J-• ..,. .. " V•!r,w , ,,, m ,,., ,n\• Ji1'---
'" 5;;;: ••• > -.. ec I es ·. g .~.t·Jf l! 11, ~ .!~~~a l"l ril11i!' r!!'nftM rf1,1r = r~ :~.!.r. iS ~ lilli~ ~~:: » .. lit. M *'"' wl"C• 10 l,. ;i\• ;I ., , IS litl 111 " 11117 1n fi w -09t y'1 t or• A /I 1 \6 +"' II U''t IJ ; " ytire11 .60 11 11~ M -y, ll Ilk HJ ''1 ~ d 1.0 H1 41 -l .1,1 Vwl(a11 Mii I I 1 • JT" I! ~ ~\lo ~~~ • ~ s k M ' k ~:,:':, ~ r "' S\l~ 1\~ + '1 [,:.:111c1lon1 11 "oo:i:1 uHa In '1 ;:,•• vwllt y~n ,, s ! 11"' ~ -~
111• 'flt, 1Ho .. On toe Ol]J... et "r .,., .. -hr11n uo -W x y I-ll ::~ 1:. 1 .. -" a.Al' --~'!.. ,If.' ........ ,. " !l 'l i' 'f l t > »'-1 _ T1lt • ot 1oO ll0 1~ 11 11 ~-W1(1>0w1 1 7' ! » o I S ' a '" t> f.: • ' j •ICO!f I .. 11-. , o 1/l'I '-._ """'-" "1 2G t1 li" i!1: I -• 1U.v I'd H \°" t~ U 1 lo. • .... •• Wiit •!'II 1 1 ""° \'J .. 1 n ~n) 1 " -NEIV YORK ("Pl) Ptof ! ta••-• lorned lhe t• ••~ ot• ' .:is 11\Q 11 1i" o.. 111•*'" 110• ' ,... ~ \'\-to 11 1p-1/1.o 1~ "° 0,0 6.1 -I l\.UI,; latt\N (I M
1
1n ltt. u 1Jlo 1 0 (Ml I Mltll ~t• CINI C .. Wt Mw , .. IJ !ti') U~l I~\? m ~. ~\t ~ = (: stock market lower on moderate turnover tod.•di t:=:..t:r·.. , ~ .... r. t: = ... u••co. I It ' ,. 'I ' H -Vo :z:.:-iJ:J: I! 11t: I~ ~ -.. ~ 'l ~ ''" -" Shortly before lhe close declines were lea Jnn '• "'" 11 • 3• I"' s ~ un11 Lid .., I fl" j -... "' wi ,..... '° f, •~ ,. • 1• • -,_.
!.I g",' ~"·~· -_" \ ,. I'll ltc:l'>ll (Oft Ct SS "' • • ~ -11-1 UnllNV 'JM • I ... I I 1-• W1 Lam I 2G 1•1 .... .. n -.. advances 892 to 494 with 1 67l issues on the tape ,.._,,.,. • '1 ' ' I' '' un1<1~ 1n1-. u iii! " ll w. ~ sw I'° 11 211.1o H"" !4 -• f tltctv "'' 11 7'11o '4 U -""Un omp I J:f •, "", .... I i, W11~ Gt 116 60 2'•1 \lo -" .~ u _,, The Dow Jones Industrial Avera«e the blue chip t•" ,.,. •"""'II•• 11011t -l'tun ••10., •• >t "• .,....,~5'1 10. '1?~ j• !l"-"
!. l -,~ 1 -\0i Iii !""""~ ... t """' ""',,,II u~ Ct• I s ,,,. '"'-,w.,~wP .:Iii ,. f~· l -V.
I.,.. .... 411 barometer was ofJ 2 74 at 823' 18 .. !!!', ."r ,, n• ff" 1"' '!.,, -~. un 1( 1 11 m 10 • ,.. :g + • ::~kn 116 .f..,.IJt ; ,,-. l:: 1;: -~
f 1 • 1''"' n•• ='" Turnover of a ound 13 000 000 h' s p ed ·~.. 1 ._ non l " 0 11 1 ,. .. ,so 1 1111 • .o>o .. -w •n u11 • 1 ~ I I • ,,,. I" 1,,., s dre com •r I-• 1 n U2 t"' t1.., 1 ~ -• u c.1 tt »i u • u u ... -w,.11 01..,1,. 1 1 .. :i.. ,1 + \• ·~ 1• • • + " with 15 790 000 snares Friday ,·,--~1 ,•. w ·~ AO -'"u " "11 M )I ~· ._.._ 'l • w•• M >10 1e '°'""' j" ~· -• "I'" I' I -• .. 1' ~ ••. ~. ti4oo U11l'~C• 1 '°' .,.., ~ ... ~ ~-o. e , "' "' ., 11 Ito I I -"' Clos1n• pr1c~ tnclud..t . A'! T 'T •• 1/8 up 1 j••Ko .. ... .. -lf" -Unlo<l l'Klf 2 ' 40'• '° ... ' 1' • w.1,_IMI ., 2 1"~ i.., .. "' lfll 1•• 2-f ?•--vt "' '!)"~ ~~ JO CIC ,;'tO tol!fll 112 212 41 fOl(o ..O"i U11 1'•(~ .. 4 Uo llt '"° Wt lll l II tt ff, ~ -14'
'1 •"• ~ ..., -'-Belh St 21 oU 1/8 Chrysler 27 1/2 off l/2 DuPont , • .c •• T 1.. 64 lf:' •~ 31"" -'"union."' 1"-'° 11 .," "'• " -.. w, .~. 1.0 ' 11o1 11 1 • 'I Sl~) 'i O -" j ••G pl\511 ,.J •" ~. l\ »l• -l\ Uni ••• "' In JI.., 7"-JI -l\wff< ~ 'fi: I T'loi 1..., '" _.,
'"' ~ • 1 1 "' 128 off 1 Ford 54 up l/8 Ge n El !Kl 718 of fl /8 Ge n •) o s..1 " •• ;ti ""' -• u1111..,•1 l'f • w~' • 20 i "' 'II +"' 191 61"' fi\ f.! -1' Motors 78 3/'1 off 1/4 and IBM 310 3/4 off 6 1/4 l:::; :.."1 J 1J =~ 19~ lf1t! ~ ~ \Jll lo'\Oel •• '"~ ;:..~ ;; ' ;: \ -( :,1,,": IL n \ ij w.: '1G"' = = i': ,,. " 'l " 1••01 G1 G' 24 f' t\'9 t 1 -'Unit,. I ., IN ui... )I~ 3' Wll &tnl I >O J9 ~ l6' W • + •• ,, 1 ~ t U -1 'uc1en !looper analyst for IV E Hulton • Co ,. P!,_d AS. ' \!\i 1'~ ,. ... -~I u .. a ..... '° ., 1·~ \flt • • • W• n M '° l ?t,,, .,..., 20'"' 4, 12~. "" l'" _','1 " " ~ 1·· UI I.to ., ii '~ M u 1·1'11:!0 no ,..., .S.\lo ,,.,,, -_,w, ... Pt( 1, 1, S\lo " -... u "" ~ ' sa1 dsome profit tak1n " expecled after the markets ... ()ti to 1,n ,',"" ?l?' !!"' -o.. _u • .,., 20 ' •h 1•"-11 • wnun1on 1 t0 101 1• • 111\1 •v. -''!. 't.,,, "•'~ 1',"' -:. , . ir. T••' "'1 M i.; .,.., "" -, \In/• C• 1 11, ., t i.. •~ ,ai, W'1'11 E to ,_.. ".. ,,.. .. ;;~ ~·y••-•~ ree sharp 3dva nce The1narketwentuptoo rn1rot1 .o »1.,,.u1412 .. ~-"'un 1,n c• • ,,.. '"'ti.. w.1 eofJ tolloou ~'i.11.1o -'ll '" • • •. -r .. 1o1101 "° S1 I ,,,. '~ ' • Ullll G11 • 171' II•• 11 . Wtl Vtl I ti II ttloi n ""' -' .... st a used un a lot of its steam Hoo per added n1otn••• .., • ~ ll ... >l"o -+ • u1111 1114 ,. 10 •~ • • t wt11-. 111•10 Jo ti " u 1)2 .i , •I ., .. _ • "" ~,,. iO 1t Jl '°" lo>-o -.. UnJ•dh~ 1 •• 11 •1 o~ 1 Wt~t..o?, 10 13 11 Ji ""1\11
'",• ' r. • 10'1. ... Elec n1cs were among the sorest issues while Jw * • » n"' n • -+ .. u1111 MM 1 lO o ''1• "" ,.,. w,.,,,., '"1 11 . s1 ~ /I'll -.1; 20 I\;, 10 Or .0 N 101' It._ 10 Un N..clt' )0 10 t ll t•o -lo Wtvh 1>16 ' 11 I I~> I , .. I N. ._ ':>'., 1:1 ... 1:,., _ ·~ oils also owed marked weakness 1n spots l' c ... 110 :JO ,, 1.,,. '' u .. u P• """ 11 1 • ' 1 -• wr...o l"Jn su i ' 10\' •ll 10,,., -,,.
6 :I "'1o 1111.,.llM .0 t ~ lO'Jo 10'~ -U! FktG 1 10 1 t2 >II~ 11 .. J1 o WhlP DI t11 IJO fl l •Y<t ff\\ ,. 'i':Z '• .. 11,t!-" Trad1 £ narrow ranges we re steels motors Time"' "' 1u H"I n •l -• u{F11ts lhe •' 11 •• :n \ /I '-+ w11P1111 '" r1o0 »"" ,, ll"" n ~ U\ 1 .. -~ chemicals con•lometales rails airlines and atr· I mo M r ~ ,. "" 3t ~ 11 ~ -'u F'" 1 oio 1:1t 2'" u\li. -+ .,, w11 c., '.. 01 ·~~ '6'-"" -" ••,•1·,~-~·-> 1m11..,,110 .O ~'o ~ U '<+b UGvPltn l 1611'•H-,,,,le o -Wll/"~,.o 11S J\l !Jl)U 4-~ • , rt t11RI•¥ fOll l "'* I !' -1 u Gvo 1111 IO 1 u )1 :u wr C 11 J 1 l't~ 'lf\'1 ,.'4 + • 1 11 , 0 ,,. n•. era s l"'l" l 'lO • n 1.., .,,_ ul 1""11' so m ,,.., I'"' lt)-1 • w11 .,,,. u 11 10\t M 20 -,. IJ 43, ,,.., ,µ,, _ 0ol0d <t 1 n ~ 3<11, ;i..v. I•• -, u l 1154 21 » '"" •'-11 1 w~ '""' 50o 1u H 14 • l' "• .!~! •' • •' _ ;Jr.io;:zoe,.•oi::c,.,r a"'"'"'"'"'•"'""",;,•.,•m•'ll"'"''"'I ~ • .. J u" u.., '" u P vCh •• • .., 211<1 j•I;: u -w11111 •• , 1.., 1 •h 110 _ • ~ , J•tM (I 11(1 SJ"' ~ Sil~ U P~plj SO "1!! -1J 21 .• IJ ~ \0 Wtc:-llCOtD I 1'0 :110,.. Jlllj JI -'I
"•O t4 ... fl\.o n -"•••D '--•"••·~·· • ·--•o • r111t U :It UJS ... 3'\.t j!\li.-(UP11Dfl2GJ 'l~lt"'-11~.j W;elttS Ult 11 '•I\. .... _ .. l t l'9 t~llJ 6 ~ l ·• -" -··· U 4'1 •• ••i..-••Trt"'W •fr· t!ii ''"' J "' U " I • II• , .. _,,.WI llou # n »"' H '4 ,,..,_ .. OI J U -Stt-J !<II) 40 »'-» l2\1 l-,,_,.,...,lot p1 J 0 " f'," 0 11 Tr11W.tJr l>f1 11 ,.,,.., lto 13\• U Smol lb :JI 11"' 11"' l '4 -W ltmt 11 o Sl lJ > JJ ll'-110 !.~ u !,1 _"°S~t l lO H1'o ,. 11 .... -;~!0HrvA ·-MIO w lf _..,TrnWl'11 00! ll '"'I!-t ,.+ U Sffl!# JU IO'-' 2tl1 1t1 + oWft tfl DIO J l't o ,.._ l'tto ._I 11 ,. .. 11~ _ 19 jtot• V•t>l 1 " M,,,. 20 10 \1 Pl'toavt 1'flo lll r. n, t '-' T 1nom • 11 4.111 •, 11 • 1 ~ -• u T-t 1 tG 11 ,...., H • ,,.... ~ • WiM o. 61 /' l6fo »l'o lt '-+ \ •• :1 J"' ,.. .... )Ill.lo -"' olt vc o• I 1110 11 I J -+ • f""l""W l 1 21 J • u • ' "" f l f\1.(11<\ 0 I J J . !)' -U!!h Ut . 11 ,.. t. II I 1• -• w """" •no • 11. ,, .... ,, , -• ,,.~~•J\l tl -1~!~,.w to., 0Jllh:lt.,,.:Nl!!o -hou•rtOIC. t!D 1:1 ,11 ""''"'c 11• o •• s . Jl\ UntUt wt ll ,., 6 1 ->o w,fll•w oa ?'I JJ ~ttl't tti•-'" :U 1~ t ... 11 -'<!/~"'"°" -' 1"4 1\,.-loo lllbb8 1 ~ ..., ll )0 101;~ + , 111~1 on 1' H• .... I -oUnU I 'll 21 7t JSl,I, l~I + 0.. W tc PS 1 i. 'II '" f6l\ 11,., .+ '• lO'llYI '"l •• -1 ortllrcl lO lll t.1,!lialtll +\to!(!UbbBDIJ •I 1,0 1 T•vtriiO l•t ?t ?I 1t\'>-~ULt1llO t n•~n"J2 ~" W lto (~l'I t1U 1:J.!')lf
11 \11 '"' U\lt l l9!!uaw(ll' 110 11(1 s . S \t !•1e~Mr 40 'll\\ I :II -•'·~···r 1 • :u ~ JI u:w. .. UnjvG Pd IO lQS 11:1. ,,,, '! -•Wa.ww 511 :).'! •• ll'o Ito -+ I• lA 7\.t 17 ,._, w!uWo ollU 19 ~ "" lf.'o-'1V.j!B•ll!dt 160 11 .. lo~. •ll•-"'' ton I t JI Jll Jl'lt 71/o -Unv• Comp ''' l ~ 1 •-'•womt co u 1/ ._..., Ul~ 1 1 ~-o
4,. 1 , 4..., 5 W ot1' l # 10 >Io lTh l~o -~ 111a <t I'll SC lfO J,6 S6 Tr/Coll !) .It JS /15'1 JS\11 J5~ f. Uolonn 1 llO t2 ''"° At• If -•1 WOIJl:I~ Co 11 I•~ 1•... .._ -\~
10$1•o1J•i 1J -11t i:bv•Co61 1:1111"1 ·~ ''-~!'''P•l11 » 1lj1 ••1W •j <:o-\.tTt .... 1 II> 1 .S...lS., ,.,_,U•B"ll CI lil?~) 1 -.. waetwhl70 ?'ll Jl'4 Jl.ll j' +• • ) 11-.111. ub P OO>l lO 'J.l"'U~J.I --d ... lr'lt ff! ) .. IJ I -'4T ..... ,~ Pit J !l•$,'-!J ... -.. u1LFl!MI ))J l,..1 1"1'11 WOllW PIJ l'O "" 51\~ '"' 11 lJ " Jl .+n n cn .... .00 •' ............. ,l!~Ko ........ 1' •Iii t\I, 1·->.tTll W <. 31 :u .. ljo;, J2 J.-t '-UMCPl 60 1 JI 'u .... ,! ~"WorlCIAwy ... 'i,; '"' Sllo-\1 11 15 1 U l 5 ,_ .. su..oi b ... ., ... ~·-\• !Ct , .. :t70 $3,,, µ, ,,,.,_ lllW pl•5'0 , 111" 11,,, J'llj-l11 UjMPIJIG ~ lJ\I "':i:.-.f w ttv,. •I0',,,101,,..,lllt\11 \~, l" ,.\I "'t -"'11111 011 tnli ii .>I • S7._ JI -\'oS l""l'° !14 l' '11 ... -AW l>filO l? U It I ~-J .. U M 111150 11 '6 2G +"" Wvr ''' 4G 10 .... I ' -· Dt~ lJ lJ -1" W.ObtfrTI M 1tJ U\.i H~o -14 S !NJ 'l. l'tl ~ 1... "'a -.. TllW off 2J J 1'0S toJ 20! '°I(; U!tl'ICor< __161 '2"' n"' ~· \ K""t • Cl' IO lH 17-., ~ I \lo -+ '4 4 ni. '"'° U 0 _, '-lu"°11 "° IO M 11'4 ?'I ff .. jldOllOll J 1t IJ nl'o ~ 1':>;. + \'I 111C5~ GE' IJ jl 1" 11'-' JI.> -\lo U Ml PL -f'1 7t .r.I"' 1• """ t • Kt I llC U J!li. h j•lll -1 • l' ,.. ... " ,. -I Ul!Ch pl) !Cl , ""' • \J ..... +"' IO°" .. ,., IJ t ilt ,. .... M\4 u.... TWt ... c ... 1 l 1 1\9 ,.. 1 -~ v,11111 -..-t!l a-"' 1n . ' ........ SD I 70 10 • 161.o ....
• , lt ~ r:~ r. .... I~ t"'"' :t 110 Jl1 l • J.... l~ -+ lo l'J"".. no 11 J.'! n: ,.... t yll't '"'" JO 14 131' lll'o -' V~" Ct • .00 " itvt , JJ • .. i·i. c.... ... tJ Jf ft" f . ~ J~ 39 ,:, ,~ -··1=:rG~:"',: : 1·,,.~ ri .. !!11 -"1111:"...X':: I• 51)).~ so~ ~-\o -U-V-~~·-:Oki .J 'i D~ rr~.:1~,:~·.•1" ... ~ ,.~ J:iZ ,.:: =·1' Sl<I ,., , •• lfl .j.l,i, ..... "'J11 ~ 2 • '4'-lo ..... .a sf., • ,,. U•L llC Ill :i.tt,, ,,. !'' l ~'-' Vtll<lo to '° lJ '"" ,,..._ ....... ltor orJ , ;t u -lV, 1n ,. .... 3•. ' -... 1-1 PS II ,, l ',,, l -14 ! I f fll IG t f 11~ • ~ ~ ... U1'L Of .0 20"1 '\ "~ -\lo VF Cot• 1 0 l ! " \! lt'~ -l-~ IV' i o . "1 1' ,...., H~'i -~ '~, 51 ... .Y Sl'--\.'I OI .,,, 4)o 19 o .. 1 o -.+ \t •ll!Cn 11e l l »• l, jl'o -'-UG CP ll 10 H~•, "'"' 21"'-V1cl!l"I )"'« lf ~ •-I ~ tn ~ 1.0 ll' JI )th f'"' -• J.4 , ,. 1 ,, _ • !"' '"" "5o>" 'f 1,.n, I\> ,.., j 1ut1 or lll ~ ll,, 'I:' J; .. t., UMC 11111 ,11 lt It 1j~ 1'" -r Vlc!COll"t » '' 'I ?v, 1>,;, -• 111 n Ir.cl 2t ti U!>t 111 "'-1~ 4S $1\, JT'11 I~.+ \o Ill !Oft iiO U f\i 0~ +IV. 11 <~ '' 4 I ,. "' tl..o -,. 1Jft1rco oo .Ji t~ •• ·~ vifl .... r 60 f\.'I '"-l • -\\ Oii~ t~ltd IV Tht AU« t td "rtu l 10
Contplete Closing Prices -American Stock Exchange List
..,.. lftl
(l'ldt I Nit-l-Cltw C-9o
JI DAILY PILOT
For the
Dissolutions
01 Marriage
............ is
-~=~,:.. ~1:rnia:r.:.:· l A1W1 lllCI FreM: All'moncl
IMn 11n1 M. 1nd G-F. 1011. Mtfl' lrld H-d Lont, J1nt S:wnd Oontld M. l(uriceL C~lortt M. Grwum.n Ind Er""t Emil" K1nt1!tr J .. '11111 Ptlvlll1 Ind Oonlld -~~. Racca A. Ind EdWlrd p, ~ Ev1 M. Ind WllU•rn 11.. '""'r Jfin DI•• Inf ICll'tn Lt y,,,,.,,.
Mor no. =· Mt~~·~ """' HH!dtnon. C~ln1 M . •rid '°""-"
w fit..ir, Ols11t M1tlt •nd Aldl•rd Elvin Ovdi"-Mll. Ken J, Ind Soo)l1 Alt
JOllft, ll:itl AM 111d Hf!'rY ll:ICl'llrd M.odllr. Jr .• Sllld•• KIY and JtmH ~~1:,~lkl Mlt Ind 11_.t LH •IMny, C~I 111d Doneld II. ullY. Jr .. ll:urn Joanne 1nd 1tusst1r AllMflder WIM Oontlll F. I nd Junt C1'111
J-. Tl!lodor1 ""' J-M. Welllnll\, PIMlll Pll lfllll HIU¥ Onllllc f«1wtri. Ll.n« L. l nO lllWll'lls SUI "'1'«'· Oolorn LN •1111 J1mn $c1~.fif,11 Ttr111 51-Ind N11Nft if.f.~. Joflrl J ltld 0..-tt C1rol1 Je,,; Ind ll!llitll EdWln 1'111. LlflM 5'11.tn I nd J1Y Dwlonl Hicks, CNrlo114: C. Ind Nell A.
~-· llllllt J1J111ll1 •nd 1•~ "'1111.1• tton. l¥ndl c •rid S.mull c
•-Lindi t llnd WUl .. m M. HAM'/, n;;.;.;::•h IC1¥ Md Ftlnll G ••1.,,, lflfdVj 1 L. tnf G1rll!od C •. ll:ut tOol! l"lft E. Ind Mll"Qlrft M. Alltft, 5,lv 1 Jn~ Ind Aobttl 11<1b Clll11mtn, M.trct111 N. trld ll:1~mond A.
A-s. Vlrolnll Ruth Ind Alfrld LH fn1'1rN fil'l¥1111lllr •
Tut$day, Otctmbfr 15, 19~
Record
-~· '[j;Y'Q' Ml'"'" Mlrle 1114 0111111
S.vllt. ":;l:J·-=-~=" It
Cl"l"n. Nt!ICY JNll 11111 Mm:lll
"""' Nord, fl.Irv N. lftld Ylclll Jt.,I
C-., J1nlC9 A. Inf Ltr,., l!:lhN/'f
Low!,_, ltotim C. 11111"""' Lff
Bell. Ttrri. Ann 1M Frint; •·
Phlnlcls. Gr...., W. 1fllll Al'V• L.
Ford, Edl!h 11111 ll:ol:lfrl H,
C•ll•hl"' M•rllYn I.. •nf ltDbert Niii. C1rol .s. ""' An"*" 0. 8vrrn•"· I, ~ 111<1 Pl~ll II, Webb. llMn C11h1rlne 11111 Ammorl'
W•~ troo1t1, Mk ti.lt l~nn 1od Jlld" W1r· -Grf/lun, Kft!IMth l!OJ"d 1nd GI0,..11 '" . Dtvenport, ..,11.., Ni. 11111 J1u1 M.
Sl>ehlon, 0.rltllt L. Ind Evt-M,
WHIG!I. 01vld H, 1tld ""-""" UnW ltton. M1nr Ellfft 1...J J-Dtln Green. 81rt>or1 Sile 111<1 0.,.., alllfol!Dll
Wll.on. Ch1rlef S. 11111 •atty A.
01rr, Oline C1r1I and ~l'"I' L.ft
Dtnnl1, 11.oberll It. 11111 WIHl1m D.
Wlll>tlm, P1<ntl1 ~tllnrll Md P9trld
Plllllcl
BrOWft. 1¥1 1..ee Incl FID¥d JllY
H1rrlL Mellfllil ICirY 1NI llloniM k'llh
8t-1nt. Cllr• and Donlld W1rm1 H1vw11'11. Gudn.otl KINl'I llnd Jtldllrd .. .
N1lrft, AnM Marlt: ~ Dt"tll 1!-
Nftbltt, \ll"lllni. MR llld Jlmmls
W1vne •
COii, Donnf M. Incl liubert E.
Sk111h, Mlclll't JOhR Ind
SMron Kllhlffn
Glov1k. Jenry JOH9'h Jr. •NI 1'1trk11 Ellen
Milin. Anita lovlw 1od Clllster WIVPll
Yoswllu, Wlllllml COllllln Md Lindi
,,~
Donlllve, Sandra S, and JOW'Ph MLchMI
8ttumont, Ectwtrd au'k. inf ,,....,.,
Countians
To Face
Jw·y Trial
SANTA ANA -Four
Westmlru:ter r es I d e n t s in·
dieted by the Orange County
Crand Jury on various drug
charges have been ordered to
face jury trial March 29. All
have been freed on their own
recognizance.
Superior Court Judge James
F. Judge set the date for Ken
neth D. Donahue. 25, and his
wife, Debra Kay, 21, James
Alexander Sebastiano. 22. and
Jack Amold Todd, 23, all of
S58Z Watter 'Circle. They will
face pretrial action March 16.
Judge Judge set the satne
date for co-defendant Edward
George Metro, 24, of 411lfl Sth
. . . . . . . . .
Fat Cat
St., Huntington Beach, but Though they're amon~ the best fed animals in the
ordered Melf'o detained in \vorld, the cats al Lion, Country Safari-e specially
Orange County Jail. The Hun· this cheetah "mug,ging the camera-" -can give
tington Beach man also is ac· you a pretty good idea of what a steak feels like
cused of violating parole. sitting helplessly on your plate. Also, in case you
Storm. Bene fit$
·Rains Rep~nl$h
Soil Countywide
SANT.\ ANA -Orange ches of rain over lhc entire
County's first storm of the county, most of which entered
Kids! Free!
Ch rist mas
Show
season Nov. 28:30 was a .. the soil where it will nurture Mitch•" M11lon111,,
bonanza for underground plant growth or will filter into pr111nf th1lr '•'"ovt
water replenishment and the underground table. pupp1h In • 1p1ci1I
moisture-starved soil that had About 6,000 acre feet wa~ Chri•*"'•1 p•t•intition Thurl .. F1i.·S1I, been without signlflcant rain· diverted into the underground o.c. 17-11-19 doi!.,
fall for nine months, according water supply through noon· 1 pm-l P"''" pm-7 pm to George "Osborne, chief percolating beds in the Sant.1 •nd S11. noonl ·l -<4 pm.
engineer of the Orange County Ana River maintained by lhe fr •• to children In
Flood Control District. Orange County Water District, ou• tofity ""1'111 111111.
fill II bas. f th flood Hvnling!on C1"t1r 11 Osborne estimated that of ra on ins O e B11ch ind Edinger
130,000 acre fft:t o( water that control district and other on s." Oi190 f/w•v .• HB
fell on the. OOi,nty, only 13,000,[i~pu~b~li;c~w~a~l~•~r~co~nse~~rv~a~ti:••~~~~~~~~~~~ was lost to tbe ocean while reservoirs, Osborne said.
117,000 was retained 1n the
ground or evaporated.
An acre foot of water Is
equivalent ot 326,000 gallons,
enough for an average family
of five for one year.
The engineer said the storm
spread an average of three in-
I See by Today's
Want Ads
c1rr. M1rv 1(1t1>er1"' •nd w11111m
Ji;trm1n Cl>.~oN.t MlrY Vlralnll •nd Allred
l1rr, ll:1vrncind Clllrltt 1nd C1rol
'""
'~
The rive defendants were ar· hadn't noticed, the picture was shot through the
rested Aug. 3 b_y Westminster windshield of a car witfi locked doors. The cheetah
and Huntingtml Beach police is running free in 350 acres of realistic African set· •rt-r~~~ .... C:.":"t:.'.lld Du1n1 ~s~d!::. raid on the Donahue __ u_·_ng::.._a_t_t_h_e_L_a~g~u_n_a_H_il_l-;sr=a=n="=im=:a::I ~p~r=•::•:;•::rv=•=·====:; II IN F::,:~~°:No
Dlcitm1n. John It. •nd Mar11>1 ThlrtM
PrHton. M••lan ll:oullt 11111 Arch!• Th DAILY PILOT SPORTS FUN TOO
• \\'ha1 do you get, wht"n you
put, "TONY CURTIS &
J OHNNY l\IATHIS" To-
gether'!? \'ou get "CUit.
TIS -MATH IS" good.took·
ing combo & great sound!!
See classified. , .{01· furth-
er info.
Mll111kl, Heru-v Aklr• llld 111111 M•rle Hu1Jtv, Cll.HltPle It. Ind WI iltm O W!tt, Miry JUdllto Incl J1dl: D1nlt( 81111y, Miidred L. •nd ~lnl•Y M. Sutton_, Ntl'ICV L ...... r ... ,11 LYnn I:·i"oto:' E•rl ·~ M1ro11111 lltne v?nc ... t ,.. Htrm M 1nd Antr.onv
L'f:;; Anll>onY Frtdtt"lck. •rid Martlle c A . OK . e -SEE PAGE 17 '"'~· '~~'"" "'"'" '"' nnexatlOfl The One Jhat Ca res TODAY'S PAPER ~~~r.:rJir:11~v~·rr111'b-e-.:.y~~ anyon .!=~~~~-~--~=~~===~=~
I
e SORR Y! NO "'BLUE-
Phcher, Suun A.Jnd KtMl!llt W. Wood, Ulrllnt M. '°"" Cllltlll N. ~~:1':. P°rler: f.'i:J"11:'::;,)•i~ S.
"1ol!ln1. ~-rill Mir' Ind J1mtt "''""'· ltvtti """ 11111 11:., °'""' ANAHEIM -Annexalion ol Company of Anaheim which Js 111rr.e1t, Rostm•Q' E. 1/ld J1mt1 DANISH FUl NnUIE SWEDISH CIYSYAL JDM"Ph • 270 acres tn the Santa A n a developing the surrounding
Sl\Y'' PRO~lJSES! Just
ar!ual "FACT'", .. NEED
XTRA $$$$? ... OUT Of-'
\\'ORI{? Herr's a chance
!or "UNLIAfI1'ED $$$"
Ck noo ...
~· Flrrvd. LCIWll, Jr~, Ind Ol1n1 LH CtrPlno. Suwn . "'" Thomli M. Trwlll. Gract , I"" Merton A
Slondr.INI, DDrMn . -Flo\ld f.· MOIW'111. F111111 ... P. 11111 llelftl . e ..... T1'otnu Mlcl'llll Ind M•r I 'lrttn, Pllrlcl• l. Ind M1d11el E
o. Groff, 80M1e an11 Nlldlnl Frm I RIDAL REGISTIY CHINA I. STllL
Jr. Canyon to Anaheim has been area.
I( !Pie, Dorlt J0otnne 1nd Pauf HkiifMn JIClllOll. 11.ablrt llrvc:1 1nd Gl.,,.,1 -Knowllofl. f,=111~:.!f:F~llklln Glln
0tr. J""" .. T.;J"'t.A"" •
Schnelder, JOAnn E. Ind Alie E. Loaldon. Olborn !(,.. tnd M.trOlrtl G. A¥er<, l lncil ... 1v 1nd Nwm1n
Diii WUIOn, Thoml1 T. Ind WtndY F,
ltOACh, ~I L. Ind P1trldl J, Lvnn, E ll'NI 11111 Ltrov E. Grtlbrlnll, IWTll'ICI John Ind Jinll!lt •oo Allfn. Chi•'" 11:. 1MI So!l't M. Beth:, IMll't' Lor9ft1 Ind Chtrlts Eow1'11
Quhw1, N11'1CV MM •nd Dennie LH ;P,.....,ved by the Local Agency The developer will also 8Kkhlnl. Floyd iltld N1llilf ,.. "
FtNAL. DK•••s ormation Commission. finance a clubhouse and build
1!111tn111 Dtctfll• t ""'"-'t · th rt I McPt>e,_, IUltlMI s. Ind TMmll A. J uc Cl Y owns e prope Y a swimming poo . tennis
Mvrs>11.,., MMtorit: L"" ttkhl"' T. upon which it plans to build a courts and other facilities at LllM, Adeltlde and A1tx1ndlr A. l.M9bWd, J•mes 1. 11111 Eull M1e second municipal goU course. an estimated cost of $200,000.
~1~ti:.r"'t:: J~.!:w~f'dF~ LoeaUon is in the Walnut Can--City Manager Ke i t b
N.tlllen'I', c1WY1 and Dlnlllf •· yon area of 'the 4,200:acre Murdoch said the golf course
Crvlr.. ICrtstl!'I J. Incl HOil J . Nohl "·nch property. land •---d d I F'°"'d, UY•• L0tr•I"' •nd E1191n1 n4 purc11ill>C" an eve op-
Louii The land was purchased . ment would be· paid for from L~':" IC•thtrlne J•ne •nd Jtldl•rd ' from the Robert H. Grant an annual revenue of $160,000.
l.nt, Jeulc1 -.,.,,. 1rlll Gin' Rolllrl
Ftrd. Shl~n. A. Ind Sooftdr1 C.
Hll"ll, LI~ C. 1NI 0.¥1d J,
e "TO ALL .t\STROLOGY
LOVERS~!" Reserve your
ve1y o"·n, "SCORPIO''
lB o r n 1 V l6/70l for
CHRISTl\11\S . , , Scorpio
\\"hat??? Tiie ansv.·er is in
cla&s 8825.
Wt!ISlll" J-Flo\I Ind l.._rd Chlflll
ll:1!"w1ler, Cti.rl A. tl'ld J11ik '· 0.Yll, M•rl•n I(, Ind Clt1r .. J . M.KMann, Ctwllllln F,_1nd ldllrd F. Lov1, M1rel1 11. 1nd P.red 11.
McM•llln. JOYCI Ann Ind llUcklY lH V•n Denltr. Vemt M. Ind N'Jik'Y
Use Caution
In Cutting
Yule Trees
GRAND OPENl·NG ~ELEBRATION
~::~~· A~!:-,1 Lb.1~Glf~'7o C'. X~fs/:.~J 11:oti.-l Pt~1=lo ~ T~1u:~ler~ K:.J~ Ar!hu; IC.
llurli;in. F'J'it::f1tf.,:.:;...:'1~11'\'\ A.
Lab!lzkt. Hll'mt!WI G. •nf 81rbtr1 ,_
Sl!,ld!tY, P11'1'I Loul1e I nd Henn< Wiimer
Gotu1ln LIOMrdo Ind Pall'lclt Prlchll'd.. ll:Ollolld D1vld 11'1d Ch1tv
'"~ Lt P,r~, W11111m E. •nd Ju111 Mllouff, Goiorot Edwtrd. Jr, tnd C1rltnt G1wnn
S1l1gl'llr, l!ll11bllti J. 1rld 11,llrtd G.
l"lltd Dl'C""lllr 1
ORANGE -Santa's helpers
in the Christmas tree cutting
division have been reminded
De-G1~1Rv Jr~ Jec-11"' c. •net by state forestry officiala that
s. ........ , M•nr ~r111Cl1 •net~ '-" · al the bll T-o. N•M"I' A. •net H• d 11. nahon forests, o r pu c
Cr1wtord, I'"" L8U 1nd •vne C. nd I I nds U H1111111on. °'"'"' ..,. J1mts P. a pr vale a are o • ~·=-~:u" C':'::J'"' •""F/~ Allen limits. J1~n. ~1rt>or1 'r. I nd ~In l . Th · f h Ml"l'kk Rldllrd Dtv~ 11'1d Jun M•rlt e wammg rom t e t:~~-=i:e1:'. .~l~rdo California Division of Forestry ~:idJ.~t1~~\.ov~!:i•;:,r~~~" anl Cleveland Nattonal Forest
Gl'VPI, Alltn Lts r 1nd H;!°1~ ofl' 'al •· I h I •-Tocld. ,,,._ Lorr• " 1nd 1<r1<111 !Cl S ll01oJ1::S a 1.1r
Citric, ICtnMlll s. •nd l!!lolM L. ·d 'iscrlllllll' • ··-~ cut' ling ·-il =-~¥ I!. ""' Murri' A. • u:: u ...i:: UI • m, Jin 1 Dt•I~ •nd All>! Dltmb 1-gal Ill', II I II. Md ~Ul1bllh Y n: · Gumr11, N•ncv Dtrllnt 1rid John However, by dialing "0" and
Death Notices asking for Western Union
Operato r 25, anyone wishing tn
cut his own tree can find out
where there is a nearby
"choose and cut" tree faMJI,
that, for a fee, encourages
such Yuletide activity.
•l ll!RTH
K•ll1tr!M Eblrttl. ltt W, WllSGll, Co1t1
Mt$&. 0.1• of $th, De<:. n. Survlvtd
by hu1bllf>d, .klhn1 P•'tnl1, Mr. •nd M,,,.
Vlnc"1tt11 RffCI Mur1h1t. ld111c>; lbt<ll
br'ottleru two 1l11~n. Services, Thu•ld1Y.
Dl>e. 11, l :JO PM, WH!cllll Ch101I. ln-
lennltfl!, El TorD c .... a1,..,. Wt1lclltf
Ch1Ptl M<wtutrv, U£.4..,., Dlreclon.
MUllPHY
)HMllf 0. M urplly, AIM 72, of 7\0J
M1r1Mr1 Drive. New-I 811d'I. 0.te
ot <tnlh, D«emblr 14. S<lrvlved ltY '°"'
WllU1m Murptov, ol NIWPOff 8ffdl:
''"" 1r1Nldllldrtn, Servlcu Ind I,.. teftnt.nt orlv11t. ltltz Coron1 del Mer.
DlrKtorl.
Ne'N'IOLD
ltol1nd A. N~d. Aee ... ,of 1023 L1~1t
s1., Hufltl11<1ton 811e11. Dair of ci..th,
December n . Survived 1tY ,.11,, L1Kltlt 1
1wo d1u•ll1•t1. LI"°" 1111111y 1nd JNnnt
Boor; brother, Ptrll; N...,.bolcl; 1l1lrr.
11.slse Otv!son; lour 11r1nctchlklte<1 tnd
mne O•Hl·t r1!'16c:ll!ld. S.Nlctl will bl
l'leld WedneldtY. 1 PM, Smlllls CIMPll.
lnterm.,,!. GllOd Shtplltrd Cemtlfrl',
&m!lht MOr1u1rv. Direc!ofl. SCOTT
,,. •• M•ry Scan. Ape ll. ol 11MO New· "°" lltvd .. Cent• Mt••· Oatt al de1th.
D"ttmbolr 10. Survlv"" by hui.b1nd, Mtr·
r ill; Mtl'l, Wllll1m W. Andtraan; d1u9P,..
ter, Mri. M1rg1rel Freed1 Ind l!vt
vr1ndch1ldr~. Gr1v11ldt Mrvlc19. todt Y.
Tutld1v. ) PM, W11!mln1ttr Memorl1l
P1rto; Morlu•rv and Ctmtterv.
W•LLS
Ch1rle1 £. Walll. A" ~•. DI 131 Av1nu1
San oi.vo. S1n Cl .... enll. Surv!..ed bv
w!l1. ll1rba!'11 '°"• Alleru rnD!l>er, Mrs.
11 .. nlcti Wtlls. 111 of Sin Cltm..,11; tls-
1!'1', Mra. 0\9rl!ec1 ll:lnlldL of S1nt1
Anl. $erllc11, fodt,, T"ldaJ, 1 PM,
Belt 8f'OldWI' C ..... tl. l!t! ...... nl, El Tora
c .... 11tr1. 11111 llrMdwav Mortu1rv. DI·
-~.
ARBUCKLE & SON
We1tclllf ftfor&uary
U7 E. 17th St, Costa ftfesa -• BALTZ MORTUARIES
Corona del Mar .... OR J..MSI
Costa Mesa ........ mJ 5-Uh • BELL BROADWAY
MORTUARY
111 Brdd~•~ta fttesa
• McCORMICK LAGUNA
BEACH MORTUARY
11t5 Laguna Canyon RcMI.
tH-NlS • PACIFIC VIEW
MEMORIAL PARK
C<aitlery Mortuary
Cbaptl
J5e1 Pacific Vkw Drive
Ne..,.n Seidl, Caltlorola -• PEEK FAMILY
COLONIAL FUNERAL
HOME
1111 BolM .. ..
•·e1tmluter .... *'3$!5 • SMmlS' MORTUARY
l!7 Mala St.
llu•llngton Beac• -
"The only legal way to
choose and cut . a Christmas
tree is from a Christmas tree
grower," they nc;ite.
SA City Hall
Ceremonies
Scheduled
SANTA ANA -lnlonnal
ground breaking rOr Santa
Ana's new $6.2 million, eight·
story city hall will be lteld
Wednesday.
~tayor Lorin Griset will
wield the shovel l"o start con-
struction or the civic structure
by J. 8. Allen apd Co. of
Anaheim.
The site is 500 w. 6th Strtet,
adjoining the present city ball
annex.
City councilmen and
members of the joint dty-
county Civic Canter Com·
m i s s 1 o n are e1pected to
participate in the ceremonies.
T h e 1 o a , ooo-square-foot
building ls sched.uled fer com-
pletion in July 1~ .
Avoid
the
Ch ristmas
Crush
JtDJnlnhl i
W11tcliff Plaza
onN ·t11' r.M.
THI OU•H CHlfSTMAS
GET A · FREE SAFE DEPOSIT BOX
WITH A $500 ACCOUNT
•
AT DOWNEY . S-AVINGS' NEW COSTA MESA OFFICE
·at
' -'' Y.·r?""'-..,...,.~::-.-,i; •••.
Complete
Protection
Vault
..
No Rental Fees
BEST DEAL IN TOWN! •
Eam The Highest Saving s & Loan Interest
Rate In Town With Your Money At Downey Savings
5°/o -$1 or more
51/4 •/o -$500 or more
-90 days
51/4°/o-$1000 or
-1 year
more
6°/o -$5000 or
-2 years
more
AND GET THESE SERVICES FREE, ONLY AS A
DOWNEY SAVINGS CUSTOMER
FREE Check Cashing Service
FREE Use of Photocopy Machine
FREE Notary Public Service
FREE Up to $250 of Travelers and Loan Association
Checks without Service
Charge
FREE Trust Deed Collection
with each $1000 Account
•
\,ll'll''s ~~~,. ~r"IOW.U~lltl\'( rm "Sic•~
• •
INSURED SAFETY OF YOUR
MONE Y TO $20,000
Ave. and E. 17th St.
IMPORTANT
Only 603 safe deposit boxes ore available
inside Downey Savings' new, specially de-
signed, fireproof vault. Many of th ese ore
now token and boxes o re being issu ed
doify! You ore invited to get o ne now,
FREE, while there o re still some left .
A safe deposit box protects you r impor-
tant papers, receipts, and othe r val ua bl e
possessions. Your pol ice and fire deport-
ment strongly recommend a Sa fe De posit
Box. They hove the reports th at prove you
ne~d one.
Of course a few other p la ce s occasiona lly
offer Safe Deposit Bo xes. Most of them re-
quire a rental fe e or wont you to keep a
big account. But we do th in gs differently
at Downey Sovings. We ma ke su re o ur cus-
tomers get the best service in town!
G7t your FREE Safe De posit Bo x TODA YI
Bu t . please hurry. The supply of boxes is
limited and will be issued o n a first come
firs t' serve basis. t
N
Thi Co•I• M111 olfict h l11c1l1d •' 160 E. I 7th Str11t, t i th1 c orntr of R•y"'o"d
A"1"u1, W1 1r1 op1n to '''"'' vou froll'I 9:00 to <4 :00 Mond~y th1ov9h T~11r1d1w,
ind ftoll'I 9 :00 to b:OO o" F1id1y.
Ultimate in drama' is
, this lustrous.,
1 simulated pearl .dog
collar buckled up !·in rhinestones. Theme
is varied in earrings
and ring featuring
; e pearl dust.er.
• ~ •
'
~men
BEA ANDERSON, Editor
TllftA)I, O.C1111• 11. Int '"' 11
9
:G·GO NE G·OOD IDEA
•
!~we.ls .. Coll·ared. for C.hristmas Giving
. . ' ' " ' Women are·belng•lectlo a.do(• lµt llild lovlnt It.
''And frazzled .holiday. •boppen will gain a gem ot an Idea for
Christmas gift-giving If.Ibey. perusa lhe variety of choices on the
jewelry COUjlier -especlally•lhe dog eollar. . ' . .
. 'nle aeasott.!1 elegant canine bQpenina ·wm fu1t1Q a woman's
need fi>r a glilterihg ·trtnht and, 'liliatever ber<lalles, she'll be
able to put on<lhe·dog mo're·artful!y with· j""91s·of fUhion's finest·
pedigree. . • ' . . -
. .Not only will they>w'rap her-up,. b~ her every ~ood·but
!he fantastic .sensat!Ons are·in an affotdable specles1of s!Dlulaled
pearls and· jew8Is. '
Tbe ·ch6ktr.uke·nicklaCes come in aivariety of sizes-some
In leather or· velvet aDd othen in the.coctume lewe\J'Y line design· ·
ed1with simulated stone's:
• • A versaWe·neck-pio<e,, lhe jeweled cellar may be worn alone
or mixed.with ropes 11111.spartlil!g pins. Ma~. nngs for ears,
fingers and wrists are olfered<With ~L ·
She may·feel sleek ·and sensuous. In. a open-weave· collar of
gleaming·pearls or. demure but devUtating in a band of tiny seed
pearls•galhenicl ·by the hundreds and·lhen braided and intarwined
for a bewitching effect.
But wbat .woman '..;,ants 'tempting tokens when she bas 110
place to keep them.when·net"wom?
'J'be .. uJtimate in high fashion· bu come lo· the jewelry case
with the introduction of two 'heirloom masterpieces featuring an-
cient Grellk carvings.
With band-crafted covers of Sanlonyx Incolay stone, the
cases feature classic scenes. The· hand-rubbed antique gold leaf
boxes are lined with finest Tuscan velvet, providing a rich setUng
.for priceless jewels and precious kee'paakes.
Now. have'!"' shortened••n,d brightened 'your Christmas list?
An artful interpretation
is this combination of
simulated pearls1 jade
and rhinestones, which
is repeated in bracelet.
Pearls in grape cluster
form HrTin~s. A perfect
accomP.animent are heirloom
jewelry cases, found at
Bulloch, Fashion Square.
WayOut ·Way ·In for Carol Cha'nning
'
! . •
•
Carol Channing 11 a de1igner'1 dream. Her wardrobe prinMrlly Is
longuette end very soft and 1en1uou1. Thi• outfit i1 by Jean Muir
of London, one of the first deti9ntrJ to 9'1t into the _,oft awing of-
lhlntL
By MARIAN ClllU8TY
That dolly, catol Channing, ls a
bigh-jinkl girl wbo can aet & few
style shrieks ol her own.
When Carol was invited to the
White Houae wedding of Lynda
Bird Johnaon to Charles Robb, she
lelephooed Rodi Gemreich in ·Los
, Angeles and asked him to please
whip up 90mething special -for the
evenl "Fine," said u agreeablt
Rudi, 111'11 do a mtri&o1d chiffon
dress."
The dress anived'tbe morning of
the wedding and leemed barmleS1
enou&h•when carol allpped Into It -
hlglHlecked, lq.,leeved wi1h a
balloon 1kirt.
I Wheft Carol started down the
aisle, hGwever, there wu instant
pandemonium because the lk1rt
with an elasticl%ed bottom crept up
beyond the thighs and there Wll
limply no keeping It .-. without
holding it -..
Setlng 1 rier plight,. a sensitive,
understanding priest from Catholic
Univenity'offered to wait down the
aisle in front of her. Alice
Rooaevelt Longwtrth, that
marvelous 80-pluo lady with •"""'
Mildred Custin, former, president ot
the Bonwit Teller stores, bu been
trying to rectify Carol's faahion im·
age for two year1,
People respond·to Carol, a prac-
ticing Chriltian Scientist who goes
to the doctor when necessary,
because she talks endlessly about
the.theater being her cathedral.
Carol ·bad always ad m·i red
designer Victor .Jori.I of CUddleeoat
and , a mutual friend arranged a
luncheon 1et-toðer at New
York'• snooty Pavilion restaurant.
The waiter, schooled to discipline
reactiorui' to outrageous situatiGns,
didn't' lose hi.I cool when an un-
predldable Carol, a health foods
nut, refilaed the menu and.whipped
out her tbmnol of homemade Iamb
stew and her old-fashioned jar of
baked applts.
1be lady doesn't drink or smoke
became 1he'1 IC8f'ed it might be:
the bepmlng of the road downhill.
Jn fact, 1be drinks gallons of bot--
tled water from a large antique
sterling ailver chalice. She says :
"Part of success 11· the survival of
the. fittest. Talent can be dissipated
if. the phylical isn't humming
i.rfectly'.,
ZEflT FOR LIFE ' ol humor, strutted opirttedly behind
her.
An usher on each aide provided Carol, pphing 50, has a great
Carol with mamnwn coverage. zest for Ufe and will always stay
.X.ter a reporter asked Mr:•· young. She met Rudi ·Gernreicb ac-
. Longworth to deecrlbe "the" *""" cldentally at the dllcotbeque, The
11What dresl?" tbe ~ritily.' :f.act¥1, where both were dancing
Gemreidi'•· ereepy fasl!lon hu the ·buploo madly.
since .,.. to the -· ~ Enn1ually carol faced ~!""· • lmitltUuon per ~ "' Lll lllr-. in hla tpace suit. Great • ~ • . 'CIUtflt," lhl C01DDMmted between
Carpen!er, as.a IJplc:al eumpll ti '·"'-"\I too" be said clo'thes' wora daring~ the ....., w...,.... ou, 1 ,
minllllralioa ot Pnoldat"'"-"10Ulre WU11nC m1ne1• JohDlon. Vidal 81b11U11bu aated many
• 1 cl her wtp; ""!! 'Ille outrageous
Nor I01DUMB 1 ~ Olltl' tliat ban become
In her ,._ cracked nlee. her oiin-.. He <aml to her suite
Carol says: "Al>ba. thal il(ldl at the Watdorf.Astoiia in.New York
·wasn't IO damb, after 4" and tor three daya ltralgbt ht cut
The epllode, plua a h ·W· ba'•flnt wtc CNI a -k. in utttt
other starllen, prompted Lo• allenc<.,Wbel the wiC wss lin~bed
Angele&-bued dnlper, ai r'. be 1ina11J bad llll uy: "Lovely
Blackwell, to put Carol on his an-fortnlcht we tpeht to & et b er ,
DUii Worat-dreslecMllt. ffowrtwt, demit."
Trap .your OWT'I butterfly In this
''wraJMlp''-a dog collar plut
rope .and teasel combinations
that add s an extra falhJo.
flare: Earrings' •r• matchint
.,.orly orbs.
I I
I
'
·Refresb~r ~ .. ~urse in 1 •• Demand
lJEAR ANN LAND~: Pleate give _ , ,..IP • •
me a profe6.'!ional answer. Sometimes i ; '
old-fashio•ed ~orse sense ii not enough.
'Her.e's lhe problem: When my husband
and J visit the homes of fr)ends, the
hoatess lm!_ally ~ays (•~tfr:.abbut ~•If an
boor) "Do you v.•1nt 1 tup of coftee or a
sort drink?" We lnv1rl1bly reply, ''No
"lhan_k you. Don't bother." Moat hosleWI
tben say, "0.K,1' and they never mention
1t pgain. They feel as U they've perform·
ed their duty. ·
When my husband and I have· guests I
always ask, "What would you prefer cof·
fee, tea, or a aoft drink?" Uau1Uy the
1ue1ts specify a preference. , .
. I have alwily.s fe!t Jt is rude·not. to en·
courage a guest to have aome refresh·
ment. My husband says l am wrong and
that I shouldn 't push It. Do you agree
with him or with me? -FENCE-SITI'Eff:
DEAR F.S.: I'm wllll you. Mosl
· flsiton enjoy refre1bmenll. The 1r1clou1
hostess. make~ the 11111~11.Joa .J~ a wry
t~at encourages 111 affirmative an1wer.
Stay with your old-f11hlontd horse te111t,
hoaey. lt'1 better daaa 1ny profe1ll()DaJ
oplnfoft.
iatt ,~ montlli four teoanll In llill
~~ hlxe had \heir 1partmf;Pt1
broken info. Ple11e tell me (and mllllot11
bf others) w\at 1 woman ahould do lf Ille IUdden(y find! herself face to flee ·w11h ~n 1rliruder. · ~
My next door neighbor opened the door
at l'tQOn for a man Who aaid he waa a
builCtfng lp1pector. She' was bound, 1a&·
1ed and robbed. Another woman'• apait·
ment was entered; at f 1.m. by 1 man
~who had a paukey. She w1s robbed and
r1ped1 What is the annytr-l' Should I buy
• gu9! -JUST ltl CA$£
' tbvt doeble ""9 dd cUl1t11otted pro.
~ •' frolt. ,_.. back 4oorl. U Y"
"' llv• .. Ute 1rtGAd Oj«, lrt1 wtHlw ban
wttt N:tvt lo dlfCMl'lg'e pr0wltr1. Never
epe11 Ille door for •• ctnexpecte4 caller.
De NOT, rtpeat'dt NOT leave moaty or
jewelry lylq ar~ld. It llln _tempt a
dellyery er m1inten1lce perlOft lt rehlra
lalf'P ... mike a ttlnn1 "T" botb ll~r•lly
Pel flpraUveJy. ~
Make ••rt yoor Valvable1 ire tn1ured,
\'• Wiil tltt11 ·not feel lncllnt41 to rbi
1W Hfe &e'llve them. And don't foraet
eN el die betl dettrrenll ol·aU -die
w1trWoc.
CONF)DEITTAL To GROWING GRAY
WAITlNG : I know of no~ cure for the
foreve r, tardy. It has been said that
punctu.ality is the loneliest of all virtues
-and I believe it. I would. however.
pttfer to be kept w.ailing 10 minutes than
to ha ve others wait five minutes for me.
Christmas Luncheon Honors State Regent
Dl-.:AR ANN LANDERS : What kind of
·world are we livina: in 11nyway7 AJmost
everybody 1 know has been mugged, slug·
ged, burglarized, had a purse snatched or
a wallet lifted. Twenty years .ago we
n~ver eyen locked our doors 111 night. To-
day I wouldn't dare w.alk after dark from
the bus ·stop to my apaftment, even
though It's less than two blocks.
1 "'DEAR JUsif:' Doo't buy t IV'· Toe
muy ~)lave pn1 already -~ll la
part ol tke p(oblem. Fu.rtbermort:, If IM
lntnlder ates. y·oa -bavt a pa be. ml1ht
Dae hll cun, e+"en tbou1h he dldt'I pllt
to. A w11r111 llOllt, II lite Is It btd,
1bould 11-,J tM~ aad lelp_ 1letp utll lite
Intruder Je1vea. nn die U9'lld call the
police. If 1be ll 1p 1ad aroUd sbe Mould
band ovt:r tile monty a.ad jewelry wltbowC
a word. It 11 lmpo11lble to k111w If tlM ii· .
truder 11 Gii dtu(I, 1 l•1lttve from a
mental bolpllal, or n IDU!Jtrlencecl kid
pullln1 h\1 first job. No poue11iot ii
worth 1 bu.Jlel In the hUd or 1 Ulfe la
tie be1rt ..
Give iJI w lose him .•• when 1 ray
fives Y" lllk IJ11e, took out ! For Ups oa
-.Ow lo ll•ltdte tlte niper 1eI nlesmen,
cllrttt ·An Linders. Reid her booklet,
"Nedd., ud Pettine -What Are Ult
Llmlll7': Send your requtat to Ann
Landen; eeclotillg 5' cent1 ill coin ud a
loq, •tamped, 1tlf·1ddre11ed eavelopf:,
lD care of &ht DAILY PlLOT. .
li-1rs. Lowry Gallinger. regent of the Patience WriJi!:ht
Chapter of the Daughters of the Americcin Revolu~
tion pins .a coisage on J\1rs. LeRoy C. Kaump, state
regent, as Mrs. A1bin Wethe looks on. Mrs. Kaurnp
"'as, gu.est of honor al a recent luncheon arranged
by the Laguna Beach Chapter. Representatives of
five Orange County Chapters attended. I am a wldow who ll•es alone. lo tbt Here ue aom.e precenttve mea1wu1
MRS. RASMUSSEN
Costa M••• Home
Yacht Club
Setting
For Rites
Voyagers Yachl CI u b,
Newport Beach was the set-
ting for the single ring nuptial
rites that linked Kathleen ·
Elir.abeth Brame and Kent
Alan RasmusSt?n. Officiant
was the Rev. Edward C.
Smith.
Parents or the bridal couple
are f\.,rs. Dorothy Brame of
Newport Beach and Gerald
Franklin Brame, Balboa and
Mrs. Marguer:te Rasmussen,
Santa Ana.
Maid of honor '4'35 Miss Ter·
ry Lashier and be~t man was
the bridegroom's brother. Guy
Arnold Rasmussen.
The bride is a graduate or
Newport Harbor High School
and Orange Coasl C.Ollege,
while her husban d is a
graduate of Santa Ana High
School and attended OCC.
They will reside in C.Osta
M~s1.
Christmas
Recalled
Reminiscences of an Old
Southern Christmas will be
the program when the United
Daughters of the Confederacy.
Emma Sansome Ch a p I er
meelll at 1 p.m. Thursday,
Dec. 17.
Mrs. L . .\. Arneson will open
her Santa Ana home for the
•nn~tl)loliday affair. Mrs. C.
,A. Nfsson1 dramatics teacher
end program chainnan "'·ill
give her rendition of Joel
t!handler Harris' • ' U n c I e
Remus, H.is Songs a n d
S.ytns:s." ,
A former sioger with the
~1etropoUtan' Opera and a club
member. Mrs. Henry Stein
will sing Christmas carols.
Following the, 1 event, the
grou' will go 19 the 8o'A'ers
A,lJleum and witness lhe plan·
Ung of • t~tdonated by the
ch1pter in ~ honor of Santa
An• '1 Ctntenni.11.
Yule Potluck
A Chrlstma1 get-together Is
beina planned by the Newport
Bt•ch Chapter. 'A mer I ca n
Association of R e t l r e d
Pertona,
Gathering tt 1 12:30 p.m.
Thursday, Ott. 17. members
will feaat on a potluck lun-
cht<ln. A Chriltmas musaae
will ht «1vtn by James f',
Ptm tod Aar on D.
Christensen will lead com·
munity alnging.
I
'
. Tp avoid ~ cUsappointment, prrispective
bndes are reminded to have their wedding
stories with black and white j?lossy photo-
graph s to the DAILY PILOT Women's De-
partment one week· before the wedding.
Pic tures· received after that time will not
be used.
For engagement announcements it ,fs
.impercltive that the s1.ory, also accompanied
by. a bla.ck and white glossy pictur,e, be su~
m.itted six weeks or more before the \vedding
date. If deadline is not met, cinly a story will
be used.
To help fill requirements on both wed·
ding and engagement stories, forms are
available in aU of the DAILY PILOT offices.
Furthe'r questions will be ansl'•ered by
\Vomen's Section staff members at 64.2-432 1
or 494-9466.
Tax Act
Reviewed
Members of the Orange
County Chapter of the
American Society of Women
Accountants will hear a talk
by Frank L. Swan, CPA, tilled
Problem Areas of the Tax
Reform Acl on Thursday, Dec.
17.
The 6:30 p.rn. meeting will
take place in the Jo lly Roger
rc s1auran\, Anaheim.
Sv.·an, ~v.•ho holds a BS
ricgrce in al·counling fron1
UC LA and a JD in law from
the University of Southern
California, is a member of the
California Slate Tax Ac·
counting Conference and the
Orange County Estate Plan-
ning Council.
.
Women1s
Advances
Discussed
Woman's ad v an cc s in
employment . and a n in·
divldual 's ·toward becon1ing a
functoning person "''ill be
discussed when Miss Theo
Wells addresses the Orange
County Chapter of National
Organization for ,\Vomen at 8
p.m. Thudsday, Dec. 17, in the
Republic Federal Sn \•ing~ and
Loan Association, Santa Ana.
Miss \Velis. \\-' r i t e r ,
p syc hologi s t and cnn1·
munic11tions · con~tiltant. will
de liver a spccrh ent illcd
Christ n1as : ThiS Year Give
Yourself a Person -You . A
lecturer in the recent UCLA
Symposium, the J::xtent or the
~lovement. she also is a
counselor for the NO\V Los
Angeles Studies Center.
Workshop
Horoscope Growing Up ')>ainful
Scorpio: Go All Out
That the problems of malur·
lng confront people all their
JJve1 will be expl1lned when
Dr. Elnora Schmade1 · 1pe~ks .
to Parents Without Partners,
Ilia! the Jlloi\thly meetings wtl!
take pl.ace the third Friday of
each nlonth in the new Dana
Point location and a 11
"WEDNESDAY
DECEMBER 16
By SYDNEY OMARR
The Libr~ woman 1eldom
compromlst,1 oa princlple1,
She see"• to be f•lr In as
many ways as possible-but
she refuses lo go against her
own beliefs. This makes it dif-
ficult for her to plea1r too
m11ny persons. Some cl.aim she
ts .overly sensitive. Bui. she
also is 1ensillve to the needs
of other,, She can be gracklus
atid clamorou s. She seldom i•
coarse. Gemini men Iliad' her
.phy1lcally attractivr. S 11 t
often marrks men borh under
Arie!.
ARIES (March 21-April 19):
Not so. good for speculation.
Conserve funds. Co'nsolidate
gains. Fresh point of view pro-
ves helpful. Romance !Svery
much in picture. St rest
&riglnality. Shake off one who
Jeans on you.
·ThrRUS (A pril 20 -May
20): Avoid tendency lo pennlt
impulsive actions to create
dilemma. Think before yo~
Pledges
Revealed
' By Chapter
act. Caution sheu ld be AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 Feb.
keynoted. One who offers to 18): One in position of author·
share knowledge is sincere. tty takes .iction to aid your
Respond aceordingty. cause. Circumstances turn
widowed, divorced or~ single
South Coast Chapter, Friday, parents in the area are.~vited
Dec. 18, in tilt C.Ommunity'l"•to;;;a;;;t;;;te;;;nd;;;.OiiiOiiiOiii;;;;;OiiiOiii ..
House. Dana Point. 11 GEMINI (May 21.June 20): your way: door of opportunity
Hold Off on u n n e c e S ll l f»Y iJ opened. Act in manner A practicing psycholigst and
journeys. Avoid trying to be at which depicts ronfidence. executive director of The
FOR $10,000
IN PRIZES AND
SPORTS FUN TOO
SEE PAGE 17
TODAY'S PAPER
too many places. Rel'aUves PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Learning Center. Santa Ana
may be argumentative. M.ai'n· You rec e iv e encouraging and al Sa n Diego Dr .
, lain sense of humor. Thi1 message from afar . Travel Schmadel's topic ~ill be
could be your g.realest asset aspects are sti mulated. Write Growing Up: It Hurts At Any l';=========~
now-act accordingly. and ·advertise. Make known Age. I"
CA.NCER (June 11-July 22): your views. Help one who has A member of the National DOWN TOWM
Follow tbreug& on pti.ns. been good to you in past. Science FrundaUon , American "'!mDl'ii::ii:llimliiliillllll
Otherwise, you could suffer · IF' TODAY IS YO UR Psychologica l Association and el COSTA MllA
financial reversal. Be aware BIRTHDAY you tend to make a consultant on Mexican ·
of detaJls. Check policie1, ap-life complicated for yourself. American studies, she also
J>O,tnlrpenlJ, s~cial accounts. Now you have chance to teaches at UCLA and UC! Ex-
Care now prevanlll future pro-clarify matters. You will be tension. Working daily with
blerhs. ~ · released from heavy pressure, children, youth and adults, she
LECf (July 23-Aug. 22): Cy-obligation. Yoo gel a rare, se-is widely informed on creative
cle remains high, but Irritant rood chance. Yuu can 11tart anl productive thinking .
from past reappears. Be nex· with clear slate. Do so. Don"! Ca r o I s Ing in g and
ible. State needs Jn forthright aUempt to hang on to past. refreshment! will follow th
manner. You don't have te Look to a brighter futu re. program which opens with cof-
give. untjJ it, hurt11. Kno~ this T• tiftd our mor• •t>out Your .. 11 1nd fee and orientation at 7:30
and conduct yoorself ac· =:~11't ~~:n-·r.~'"'l~ p.m.
d• dt A•lr•looir. Stowl lllrtll<M>1f UMI 50 t .. lt c,or ,1116,y. to o...rr eooi.1e1. 111e o.-.1Lv PILOT Mrs . Marge Mi ller, PWP
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): _l'f!::.;._.,:i»,~~!_'VG:'.:· \~;.,~;;:uo:.'::~::••_::"~':::":::'"':_~•w:__Jl'~e~si~de~n~t,c_~h~a_!s_'a~n~nou~•o:c..t~~!lll""'!~i!!!!!!!~~!lll!lil~
Feverish activHy will notl ·
replact careful p I .11 n n I n g . ...... AJIY...J -
'.f'hrowlng caution aside r~~ults ,. *'1¥cr~ Fullerton Open Saaday IZ·5 pm ;;1'•••,111;' · E:;::i:~::.:~:~~;· ::~~:, . Glli[iS~GEO. pt' ~· It will benefit you. 'I
LI.BRA (Sept. 23-0cl. 22): \ "f--1 . !% I .
Don I get caught In middle of l · II
dispute among friends. What 1----------------------==-..::::::; ;;:.;~·~.~'in ~~:~~f!. ~:'~~ t IN LARGE & HALF s·IZES I "ise should be '"HM:ient. Take ~ , .
no unnecessary chances. ~
SCORPIO !Oct. 23-Nov. 21 ): ..-
Four v.·o men will receive Plenty of action hr fea tured .
pledge pins from the Epsilon You get things done. You
Sig ma Alpha, In ternational receive dividends for past ef·
d11 ring candlelight ceremonies forts, investments. Member of
Thursday. Dec. 17. opposite sex pays meaningful
l\1rs. Robfrt ~1cGlamery c o in p I i men t. Go all
DRESSES
v.·ill open her Fountain Valley out-nothing hallway.
home for the metl ing, 'A'hic h SAGfM'ARIUS tNov . 22-i
\\'ill include a Christmas par-Dec. 21 1: What you thought "f· r
ty. was hidden may be exposed to ·i
Heceiving pins frorn Mrs. harsh light. Be prepared. lf
\Yill iam Hewsto n. president, Undercover acti vity is not
-$10.00
He is director and treasu rer
or the Orange County Hearl
Association and a member of
the budget and finance Ci>m·
mlttee of the California Heart
Association, as _well as being
active In otl'ier service and
social organizalioos.
v.·ill be the Mnies. Glen fa vored. What you · do, do ,.
Broderick, Larry Sm a 11, openl y. F'inish specific area of ' ,
Hobert t:hadwick and Kenneth u!limi:ite goal. ,
Williams. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. .
A Hanukkah v.• or k s ho p Secret sisters will he reveal· 19 !: You ma y be templed to PANT TOPS
featuring crafts. cen terpieces, cd du ring lhe p<irtv and overspend. Key is to t.ike
decon;1lions and je'A·elry 'A'lll Christmas ~1fls \viii -be ex· stock. Know what It is you
highlight the next n1ee ting of rcfreshn1cnls will be the rc111ly seek. Otherwise, your
the Orange County \\'est Mn1cs. Larry E VAM. Al scArch could prove rostly.
Chapter of Won1en's An1trieA n U;1ckmeistcr, Hobert Flipper (.'heck viith mate, businel!ill
ORT ( 0 r g an i z at i on for and {:eorge Keller. partner.
R e h ab i I i I al ion through r-r====================i Tra ining). Surprises
In Store Helrcshments will be scr"ed
fnllo\.l'ing the progrflm at R
! p.m. Thursday. Del'. 17. in the
~is Xear! Put some atmosphere in your gifts!
Select our intern.allonally 'famous oliYes In the
very place where they have been processed and
canned since 1894. You'll find them packed with
olher gourmet del ights In our Casa del Olivo and La
Casila gilt shops. Open Mon. thru Sat 8:30 to 5:30;
Sun. 10 to 5:30. From the San Bemardino Freeway
take the Euclid Avenu, offramp to f ou rth Street,
then east one block.
Lasl·minute instructions tn Mercury Saving:; and Loan
Santa y.·ili be accepted when building, Hunting lon Beach .
he visits children of mem~rslpiOiiiOiii;;;;.-;;;;;;i0••----1
of Beta Alpha Xi ctu1pter.
·Dela Sigma Phi.
Ile is scheduled to arrh'e 11t
7:30 p.m. Friday, Dec. 18, in
·1 he Hunting ton Beach home of
~lr. and ~1rs. ~lhrlan Lawson
\\'here candy and gifts will be
dJstcibuted. .
Candy an d gifu; also '~ill be
distributed lo childftn at tl:e
Ana~im Speech and Devrlop·
ment Center when Santa
maites his visi t there during a
par\y el 2 pm. Thursday., Dec.
17, als.o 1ponso red by the
chapter.
Style Parade
Accents Yule
In f11shion. it's a season for
ml:dng. I
Avoid
the
Christmas
Crush
Westcliff Plaza
OPIN ·nL t P.M. So sludy lht styles, make
your &eltclions and scramble
the m up fot the long and &borl l
or !'· 11..-------"' L'.================~ TH•OUC'iH CHllSTMAI
I I
,
OTHB 5fl'T
SUffmlONS
•PANT sum
• lOllS
• SLIPS
• CArlllS
, • PANTY HOSI
~ swuflls
• mffCH ·er \. PANTS . E 1a ·· ,; Nor's·HALF·SIZE ' . . . ' 1805 NEWPORT BLYO:
COSTA MIU (Vt ... fi.11hfr11t.t
84 HUNTINGTON CENTER
t I
si.. ll-46 ,,_ $9.00
GOWNS
S'-40-IO -$7.00
SHOP
II
BE
•'
LAYAWAY
•
GIJIT IOXU
•
GIJIT
CDTll'ICATIS
..... -------. -----------------------------~-~·--···-·-·-··-·-·-·-···-·-··--···-·-···-·····--------.. --·-·-···-···l",. ..... ~,~·-···-·-·-··------··-T""
UGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICB LEGAL NOl'ICll: ~NOl'ICS
' . ' .,
DAILY PllOf Jt
~len in Service
llfttrl 'llloma1 Eberurt, •
aon of Mr. Warren R,
Eberhart, ltt?e Fa 1 ton,
enlJlted for three yeara and
ho been guaranteed Air
Def<nse AcqublUon Radar
M.&lDtenance' tralnlns.
After he completes eight
• week.a or basic training at Fqrt
Ord, he wUI rective forty.four
weeks specl1Jty 1dvanced In·
d1vidual b'ain•lll at I.he U S.
Army Air Dtfense S(:hool,
Fort BU.., Tex.
NJvy Petty Officer Second
Class Frank P. LI.Franeo, son
of Mr. and Mrs Joe LaFranco
of 5602 FernhHI Circle, Hun·
Ungton Beach, has returned lO
San Diego aboard tht at1ack
11rerafl carrier USS Bon
Homme Richard.
Navy Jo .. H.
ll'ttbet, blJlbf;nd of the forme
Miss S\lsan NeJson of 200
Altura Drive, Ccrona del Mai
was a:raduated (rom the 01
f1ce:r C:.nd1date School a
NewPort, R I.
Staff Sergeant fill.Uam T
Loost, son of Mr. and MN
WUllam G Loose or 209 Gran1
Canal. Balboa 1st.and, ha
araduated with honors e
ChanUte AFB , Ill , from th
technical training cou rse ro
US Air Force weathe
specialists.
Sergeant Loose, now pro
f1c1ent 1n weather analysis an 1
forecasting, is being ass1gne'
to a uni t or the Air Weathe
Service at Holloman AFB
NM.
Airman Dana T. P.hschel
son or Mrs Phyllis G
Mischel of 247Sl Penfi eld. E.
Toro, has completed bas1
tra1n1ng at Lackland AFB
Tex He has been assigned t
Chanute AFB, Ill , for tralnin1 Jn vehicle ma 1n t e 11 a Ree
Airman Mischel 1s a J!lfi
graduate o( Mission V1eJ
lhgh School. His wife ls th(·
former Ed1lh Campbell of E
Toro. His father , D a n 1 e
Mischel, resides at 515 E SI
Andrews, Santa Ana.
U.S. Air Force Ma,;\e
Sergeant Homer A Schu1tt.
son of Mrs, Verda 1 Schu1tt
29S Delmar Ave , eo~ta Mesa
has arrived for duly at oa, ts
Monthan AFB, A1rz.
Sergeant Schultt, a n1uni
lions maintenance Lechn1c1an
1s assigned to a unit oC th1
Tactica l Air Command J-!e
previously served at Bien •loP
AB, Vietnam-and has servec.
in Uie Repubhc or Korea
The sergeant 11 t t e n d e c.
Harbor High School, Newporr
Beach.
Lieutenant Colonel Hugh E.
Dunlap, son of Mrs 1"\orencr
M Dunlap, 411 Goldenrod
Ave, Corona del Mar, has
received lhe US Air Force
Commendation Medal at
McChord AFB, Wash
Colonel Dunlap, chief o( the
na v1gator section al McChord,
was cited for hts f)u lstand1ng
pr9fess1onal skill, leade rstnp
and ded1cat1on to rluty. He is
assigned to a unit or the
Mtlilary Atrlirt Command.
New Drug
P eril Seen
By Scientist
STOCKHOLM
Prof Juhu s
(UPI)
Axe l red
American C<lw1nner of the 1970
Nobel Prize 1n medici ne. says
he can foresee dangers in the
future while new drugs ara
discovered
"But as long as new sc1en·
t1l1c d1scover1es are et
relevance lo the advancement
of mankind, scientists must go
on doing theu· research,'' ·he
told a news conference
Axelrod, S8, of the UN Na·
t1onaJ Jnstltu te or Mental
Health 1n Bethesda, Md •
shared the med1c1ne award
with Br1t1sh Prof. Sir Bernard
Katz, and Swedish Prof. UU
Von Eueler.
He said his work on the
nerve cells has led to the
development of drugs now in
use in the treatment of many
diseases hke heart decays,
mental diseases and drug
abuse
AS-an authority on the use nt
drugs he was enlru1iled by
the government to study the
use of marijuana in the Ui:uted
States but pressed b y
newsmen on his findings he
said
' Gentlemen you have In
wait until nexl week when lhe
reporl will be pu blished."
'H~ Mom'
Dates Set
LOS ANGELES -The
deadline for Orange County
re111de.nts who wlsh t o
participate 1n the "H1 Mom'
free phone call program 11
midnight Dec. 14.
Th e Com muni cations
Workers of America and the
USO Jointly sponsor the proj
eel in whlch they help loca
residents receive free phone
calls lrom military m e n
ovcrMas during Lhe hohda,ys.
Any ramlly wishing to
partlclpale should send a
post<ltd to CWA·USO H
Mom, 3960 Wilshire Blvd •• T.o.~
Angeles. 90005. The postcard
should include name, addtt:ss
zip code and where lht
military man la "tatloned.
Recipient& of the calls Will
be notified prior to the
holiday&
·----------------·----· --· -
~J~l,_D_Al_LV_Pl_Lo_r _______ r_uosday, Dt«mbtt 15, 1970
'
Man From assachu·setts Does • Ill Rams ;
u•r Te11,1tti.
DETROIT'S LEM BARNEY HURDLES INTO THE WAITING ARMS OF RAMS' WILLIE ELLISON (33 ). THE LIONS WON, 28-23.
Burns Tries to Forget Past
Clll Stu.te (LB) Back Spent Four Y ellrs in Prison
LONG BEACH (AP ) -Leon Burns
1tands in the shoes of a two-year Little
All -American today, trying lo forget lhe
years of shoveling manur('. fighting
forest fires and cutting dov.·n trees as a
prison inmate.
The huge tailback for Cal Stale (Long
Beach> stands on the threshold of a dual
career In pro footba ll And law. Those V>'ho
know the soft-spoken giant hardly believe
he was once convicted of armed robbe rv .
The incredible lale begins eight years
ago in Oakland when Leon . now Tl. con-
sented to give two guys a ride in his ca r.
The twa were connected to a pa"'" shop
robbery and v<'hcn th ey v.·ere arrested, .so
was Leon.
"He took no part in the actual rob·
bery,'' says his college coach, Jim
Nervous, Tight
Stangeland. "All I was doing y.·as giv ing
lY.'O guys a ride," says Leon.
But Burns was a marked man. "He had
had a misunderst.anding with Jaw enforct·
ment officials in the past and at his trial,
despite two hung juries, he was convicted
for aiding and abetting a• armed rob-
bery.
Thus began the four years behind
\'arious prison walls.
\Vhen 1970 is over, so will Leon's pro-
bation and an illustrious, almost un--
believable college career.
Jn two years al Leng Beach, Leon. a S.
root-2, 228·pound runner, has gained 2,772
yards in 625 carries, crossed the goal line
47 times and blocked with the fer ocity of
a man trying to break out of a burn ra p
past.
Having Friends There
No Bonus for Ex-Oiler
As television and recording star .Jim
Nabors recentl y told this column, "hav·
ing someone you know in the audlence
makes you try harder to do \\'ell so you
won't disappoint them ."
And so it is for Arizona Stale Univcrsl·
ty basketball ace Mike Contreras, the
former v.·onder boy at Huntington Beach
High School.
Mike came In Southern California as a
college basketball· player for the firsl
-------=-WHITE
WAS H ----
time Saturday night to shO\I" his wares
aga inst talent from the l'niversily of
Southern California .
Seven members of the Conlrcras f!1mi·
lv and an uncountable number of Mike"11
friends had journeyed lo ltw Sports Arena
to watch him perform.
Clearly. he wanted to be especially prcr
ficicnl
Too, he had been snubbed bv USC
roach Bob Boyd in recruilln~. despite
possessing many abili ties ''hi ch h11d
t"arnt:d him recognllion on the All..CJF
tram.
Pertiaps the SC coach's logic wall that
Contreras y.·ouldn 't fit in on Boyd's in·
l:tmOU.!I stall 1act1C1 (used age1ns1 t.:CLA
1n I.he past ).
As Mikt poi nted out laier. he \li'll5
unusually nervous-VC!O' tight. An1! H 11o·a!I
reflected durin~ the 1ame as h.~ macle
four points rhe'd been 1ver111si1nA 12•,1,
had a ftlw turnovers and fouled out y.·Jln
9:4!1 to play.
play he also departed from hostilities via
the foul route.
Contreras is called a first class pro--
spect by Arizona St.ate coach !lied \\'ulk.
"Several pro scouts hllve lllready in·
quired about him," Wulk says or the
promising sophomore guard.
"Mike has made the convcrs!on from
forward ID guard very well . He has the
intangible or being abl e lo make the big
play most of the time.
''And. he shoots better than m<>!t ~
ple think he does.
"Hill one problem Is lhat he's always:
been a gambler on defel\l'ie and con·
sequenlly fouls a hit more than he
should.··
Contrera!! says the one facet of the
i;wi\ch from a front court po!itlon to
ji!'.Uard has been bringing the ball dow n
court under pressure.
Otherwise it's been a llmooth transition.
The ex-Oil City v:hiz is looking forward
lo the rest of this year -plus a pair of
road games next season with Houston
and Hawaii.
And V.'ulk ts already looking ahead to
next campaign's home llJM'ner -ag111lnst
USC, a team hf" was openly h I t t 11 r
about losing to Sa turday.
* * * Brad ft1rfliamara . standout prep 11 Sun-
ny Hiiis High In Fullerton. has qull the
Arizona State ba11kethal\ team ind wlll
ret urn to California at the semester.
He Is due to enroll al Cyprt111 Cnllegt
In tbe Fullf:rton JC District and he 'll be i
"elcome additJon to that scbool·s bollp
for«a.
* * * Of 18 player! carri~ on the University
of Oregon's basketball team, 13 are from
California. one fro m Washington, another
is from Austra!la and three are Orego-
nians.
And, on the freshman team of 12 Are
eight Californiarni and rour from Oregon.
Saturday he will be pla ying in the an-
nual Pasadena Bowl aga1nsl 1..0uisv1lle.
He has maintained a B average in his
politica l science major and heads next
for pro football and a law dee:ree. lie
touches all he meels with humility.
"I can see v.•here a black might gel
convicted in a case like that but where a
Y.'hite boy fron1 Beverly Hills might get
acquitted," says Spurgeon Avakian, a
good friend of Leon and a Superior Court
judge in Alameda County near Leon 's
teenage home.
"J'\•e al\li•ays fel t that if I had money, I
never would haveJ'one," says Burnll.
T~ prison years were tough. Burns
believed he was innocent and Leon took
out his utter frustration at first with
baseball -the spOrt he loved best. But
lack of equipment forced him to lake up
sports req uiring only dedication.
"The two major sports they have are
boxing and weightlifting. I won he
heavyweight championship as a boxe r but
after you whip three or four people, there-
lsn't anybody else who wants to fight
you," he says simply. "So I started lirting
weights.''
He aidn't lose any of his speed -he
was recently clocked at 4.6 seconds for
lhe 40-yard dash.
Meanwhile, despite the manure shovel·
ing and the tree cutting, he filed writs for
fello11• inmates and built the beginnings of
11 Jaw career.
"It 's kind of hard to get legal books bu t
1 spent a lot of time in the library. I must
have read a about a mill ion cases. I filed
writ.~. appeal~. everything else."
He's called Superman in Long Beach
and the nanie has gotten around. He·s
been called "the Oest ru nning bac k
anywhere" by coaches including San
DiegD State's Don Coryell.
Ex-Heisman
.Winner Shines
In Relief Role
LOS ANGELES -"1t was a tragedy to
lose Mel Farr, but Steve Ov.·ens gives us
a very good threat inside."
Detroit quarLe.rback Greg Landry said
It and Owens, the rookie running · back
from Oklahoma who won the Heisman
Trophy in 1969, provided proof on Monday
night in the 28-23 victory over Los
Aiigeles.
Not much had been heard from Owens
who underwent surgery for a shoulder
separation sufrered in the final exhibition
ji!'.ame of the National Foot~! League
campaign.
He still wears a steel pin in his left
shoulder and he had carried the ball only
seve n times in league play until Monday
night.
On the Lions' first touchdown drive,
Farr soffered a dislocated shoulder and
Oy.·ens ca me on in relief. He carried the
ball 17 times for 66 ya rd s and two
touchdowns on runs of six and four yards.
fie also caught three of Landry's passes
for .19 additional yards.
"It was the first time he had a chance
to run thi s year and he proved he deserv·
ed that Heisman Trophy and that we did
right in making him our No. I draft
pick," said Detroit coach Joe Schmidt.
There had been some criticism that
Owens wasn 't fast enough to make good
as a pro.
\V ith Farr probably out at least three
weeks, Owen!! wil l carry a big load in the
waning days of the NFL campaign, one in
\Vhich the Lions remain a posllibility for a
playofr b<'rth.
For his play aga inst the Rams, the 225-
pound Owens was voled the game ball by
his teammates. ·
Landry .GearsLinnAttack
To 28-23 Win Over LA
By GLENN WHITE
Of flte Dally Jlllet ltatf
LOS ANGEL~ -When you think of
ttle National Football League's elite
quarterbacks names like John Brodie,
JohMy Unlta.s, Len Dawson, Roman
Gabriel and Bart Slarr immediately
come to mind.
And well they should.
But there ls a young man coming over
the horizon .and he's apparently destined
to someday have his name mentioned in
the same breath with Brodie, Unit.u,
Dawson, Gabriel and Starr.
He is Greg Landry, the fellow who pro.
pelled the Detn>it Lions to a 23-23 COO·
·quest of the Rams Monday night before
79,441 disheartened Coliseum faithful.
Landry, 6-4, 205 pounds, put on a claslly
demonstration of field leadershlp as he
guided his mates to a touchdown the first
time they got the ball and Detroit ntver
looked back after that.
The Rams, however, fought back
gallantly and trailed only 21-lli midway
through the fourth quarter.
And they seemed to have momentum
as they rtlpeatedly stopped Detroit's of·
fense in that period. However, a IS.yard
tripping penalty charged against the
Rams on a Detroit punt seemed to turn
everything around.
The infraction gave the Lions a first
down al their own 40. Jt also gave them
further charre to grind down the clock
and so when the Rams finally got the ball
only 2:48 was left.
They moved seven yards to the LA 24
en Gabriel's pass to W Joseph.son. But
on the next play -one in which Gabriel
seemed to have all night to throw -Mike
Lucci intercepted.
Each team sco red a touchdown after
that, first the Lions then the Rams.
Now it means the Rams mullt whip the
Giants Sunday at icy Yankee Stadium
and at the same time hope the San Fran-
cjsco 49ers wlll fall to Oakland.
If San Francisco only tiell, it will win
the division and the Rams will be run·
nersup. An LA victory coupled with a
49ers losll wil l give the crown to Los
Angel es.
But getting biEk to Landry, the classy
University of Massachusetts: grad did a
superb job.
He com pleted Iii of 23 passes for 164
yards. And he ran for 49 yards on three
carries -gSi-ining two more yards than
the entire LA running game clicked off
for lhe entire game.
Landry connected on eight or his fint
11 throws and for the year has a
remarkable completion record cf 14.9
percent this season, hiting on ff of U.7
for 943 yards.
He .told th~ DAlLY PlLOT aft.e°rward
that the gre~t pn>tection afforded him by
Uie offensi ve line wall mostly responsible
for his success.
"It 's our good running game that helps
keep them ho,.est on defense and givea
the passing game a better shot," he said.
No Explanation
"Tonight'• game was particularJy
pleulng to me. We've played divlaicn '
leaders five 1tr1ight weekl (Mlnne.,ta,
San Francisco, Otkland, St. Louis and
LA) and we've beaten the la.st four."
The genill Detroit qu1rterback was
asked If he really felt he had a •hot 1t.
making lhe pros when he was performing •
at Masuchuaetts.
''I thought there was some chance," he ·
aa.ld. "When I WU a aophomore I WIS
having 1 pretty 1ood year. And the pro
scouts were down wa1chfn& our end. Milt
Morin.
"The Browns later took him en the first
round cf the draft. By the time I was a
,.ni<>r Bobby Layne (Detroit QB at the
tJme) came over and spent a few days
scouting me.
'1'lben I really thought I'd have a good
chance at being picked.''
Landry did a Jot of running as well as
throwing as 1 collegian and when he has
to call on his halfback, talents he aeems
unusually able to come throu1h.
Jn fact, he'a rushed 32 times for 328
yards this seuon -that's an average of
10.2 yards per tote, ind buddy that's not
bad.
"I never worry about 1etting hurt,
although the coach doesn't care to haveL .
me ruruUng 1 lot. l reel I can get hurt'.
just u easily on the drop back pass aa t;:.
can on 1 run," he states. ,.
Asked if he was inspiration to his •
mates by one interrupting reporter, Lan.
dry simply responded: "You'U have to
ask the olher guys about that -1 ju.st 10
cut there and try to do my job."
And be does game kind of job doing _
that.
l"lrst down1 ll111lllna y1•U,1
"•Hlfll y1nl•"
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'" ·~ " ll•ll.ll'fl Y•rda•• ,. .....
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Fumol" ia.1
Yare11 pt'MllHd
Cott. -T•ylor 2""' fMt nn t ld:I
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LA -l"Glt.ty 11
Dlt. '-McCullOudl H IHlll from L•'lllry (M11111 lilekl LA -Smn~ l1 11-111 from G1brt.1 (11.IY llldd
LA -FG lltY 2t
0.1, -Owen1 C '""' {MtM kitk) L.A -Trvtll J .,... irom G1brlel (!tty kldtl
JUDGE DISMISSES
BLACKOUT SUIT
M1AMI -A suit charging that the
blackout or the Super Bowl football game
to Soulh Florida violatu the Sherman
Anti-Trust Act and the constitutional
ri1ht.s of 2.5 million people was thrown
out of Federal ColD"l Monday.
In upholding 1 motion by the National
Football League and the City of Mi1ml
for dismissal of the case, Jud~e Ted
cabot said the privilege to watch a live
broadcast of a football game did not fill
within the area of con.sUtutl.onal rij;hta.
t
Eagles' Ramse~ Shot,
Cops Hunt Lone Gunman
PHILADELPHIA (AP ) -A man nam·
ed ''Trees" who dr ives a gold--colored
Cadillac is being sought by pollce today
as tht gunman who tried to kill
Philadr.lphia Eagle.!! football player Nate
Ramsey on a Weiit Phil adelphia sidewalk
Monday afternMn.
The 29-year"'°ld defensive back was out
of danger but still in serious condition at
Misericordia Hospital where he is under
treatment for a bullet wound in the chest.
Two other shots fired by the assailant
hit the pavement, and ont caromed off
the cement-and broke the :skin under the
arm of an lt·year-old girl walking home
from 1diool.
The gunman was an 1cqualnlance of
Ramsey's, but no close lriend. So far
there is no explanation of the shooting.
Detective Capt. William McDonou1h'
said Ramsey told investigators he waa
.11tanding in front of Mr. Silk's Third Base,
a restaurant-nightclub, when the man ap-
proached.
"I'm going to kill you ," Ramsey quoted
1'Trees."
"What do you mean?" Ramsey said he
asked in puuled reply.
··1·11 kill you." the man responded. And
then three times pulled the trigger.
Ramsey, whoae entire pro career hat
been wllh the NaU011al Football League'•
Eagles 3ince graduation fn>m Indiana
University eight years ago, cr1wled into
the nightclub.
A friend, Harry Wilson, 26, on lhe
Eagles reserve list. called police who
took Ramsey to the hospital.
Desiree Ramsey, the player's wife, said
"l just couldn 't believe it. It was go
unreal. You read about this type of thing
every day in the newspapers but you
never think it can happen to you.''
She said "Trees," used to be in the e1·
terminating business.
"He wasn't a close friend, but we knew
him," she said. "You know, to say hello
on the street."
Ramsey had gone to the busy shopping ~
area, in the heart of a b I a ck
neighborhood, with Wilson. They had
planned to buy Olristmu 1lfts. Wllson
left Ramsey standin1 alone while he went
Into a delicates.sen.
Ca ge Ratings
T-"" Jib, I. UCLA !JI) .. 111
2. 5. Clto11N C•l u uo J. Ktnl'lll:lty 4"f t.l•
.f, Ml,..,.ltt' UI •O ,,, J. Jl(~1'!1¥Ultfl) M Qt
'· ,_, 11. .., *
'· Holr1 0..... J.I ,.J •. use ..o "' •. Orallt ..0 1J1
TM• II, W. K"'tuckJ 12. KtllMI I). /flllfM "· , __
IJ. UI_,, lltta
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N.Mtd~t.t .... , I
•torlcl1 IL J.I
It wu the first lime in fi ve gamc!li lh1:.
year he fouled out. And last year 11 hen
his family drove to J>hoenl.i lo y.•atch him
Hardly what you 'd tall home grown
talent. RAMS' ROMAN GAB RIEL GETS BLOCK BY LA RRY .SMITH, PASSES TO J ACK SNOW (LEFT). 10. Vllllnh• ... lt2 lt , s1.11on .... •n1ur1 H D •
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lJneontrollah•e lJrfe'
UCI' s C"lark Can'iSt.and
To ViewFootballon TV
By llOWAllD L. RANl>Y
Of ... DlllY "At! Stiff lllchud Clark doellll't watch football an
teJevlslon.
It i1n't that he can't stJnd the 11.ght of
blood or Ulol he b -...! •boot the
welfare of the athletea on t.he field.
Far from it,
"Whenever I witch a 1ame on
televl!k>n. J get an almost uncontrollable
urge to play the game ag1ln.
"f made a decll.ion after 1 graduated
from high achoo! (Rlv<nlde Norlll) to
otick to ... oporl fn ~· ud -C<>l\llderable deb&le, I aiund I w..ld &el
mar. out ot be,•k1tball."
Coach Tim Tift will all'ft u Iha'
lllvtraide City CoU.ae l!'llllfar hu den~
ad the UC lrvlM 111r1inJ ll""')> th!> ....
aon and --,..,.. I• Jiii leadlnf rebounder on the 1quad.
"I am very ~ -hll pl•J to Ulll
point," Tift adds.
"He bu clelll>ed hla role ;,, the leam 1(1
ttc:t;llent manner. He bu Shen m added.
board llr..,U. and the thing that .... iJn.
preuad me -II his bard play.
"He ooma oa the court lo play no hi.
t la • fierce competitor. Certainly he ii tur .
belt rebounder.·
RICHARD CLARK
Jazz Helps
Calm Down
j\fiteater Star
Richard Clark, startinc center on lhe
UC Irvine basketball team 11 a 1pecialty
jazz fan and feels that llatenlnc to this
type of mUBic calms him down before
participation ln the sport.
"I also go to sleep liitening to this type
of music," the M center for the
Anteaters says. •
His favorite recording 1tar11 are Quincy
Jone s and a new alna:er now making
records, Roberta Fleck.
Clark Js one of two members or the
UCJ squad 1port1ng mustachel this
season.
"I fee1 natural with a mustache," he
says. "When 1 cut it o1f I look much
younger and I have noticed the players
on other teams we p1ay. They look much
meaner with a mustache and now I feel
like I'm up there with them.''·
Clark and guard Phil Mathews have
become inseparable on and off the
basketball court. They have played
together since the ninth grade and know
each other's moves well.
The UCI cage star has • youn11er ·
brother attending UCLA on a football
scholarship. "His name ill Eu11tne but we
call him 'genius'/' Clark reveala.
"While he twni shot a Joi, ha will
IC'Oie far ul 'en tboae drivinl lbatl to the
bubt and when be beginl taldng the
open jump abot. Ht can score wen on the
inside."
Clark's· athletic career began in Japu
when he w11 11 yean of age.
His step-father. wa1 in tht Air P'ort9
, and the flJl)lly II~ in Japan when bt.
Wll 11.ationed there.
"I began playing bueball Ind when the
baskelball .U-rolled arotlnd, •few of
the guys talked me int.a cominc ·out for
the team,'' Clark recalls. ·
•·r had long arms but I wun't too tall
at the time.
"fn high school my belt oport waa foot·
ball and I Ulink f Lille II btl1er riaM now,
"But basketball prettnted a challenge
fer me when people said I touldri'l make
it to the pcofesslonaJ level and,l ltt out to
pro\re them wrong. I love a cballqe."
Obviously he ha!!: good bands, both ht
football and in basketball.
As a tophomore in blah IChooI he w11
an end on offense and defcn.e but moved
lo halfback at midaeaaon.
As I jl.miot he WU a ufety and
halfback unW a lin<e Injury atclellnad
him.
In his senior season he was 1 apllt.end
and rover bact on defense and wu hli
team's leading pau receiver.
After gr1d1111il"1 from hJih achoo! he
attended Rivenlde COUeae 'tfhtr• ht
av¢raa;ed 15 rebouDda a 11me and hid a
It PotD\ ICOl'ln& average.
How dld be hlippen lo cJ)OOH UCJ!
"I only ccmklend two tchool1, UC
Rivertide and Irvine," he ny1. "l knew
everybody at Rlven:tde but I felt I had a
bettor chance of &•tling to lbe pro rub
at IrvlDI and here I am."
How doa he fed ,_ Ula! the -
ba1 atorledt
"It is friendly hert. I like a team you
can 1it down and joke with.
"Right now I'M not 1hooting •• much
but I'm still trying to get the 1yatem
down. My contribution ill to ainctoll'lte
on defense and gettin1 tbe rebounda rtaht
now.
"We've got good aOOotert In Phil
(Rhyne) and Bill (Moore). I Ullnl< we'll
IW'prile a Jot of tearna before tbe IUalft
end1. And we hive a Jood pl1n for nut
year."
AU members of tht ,quad. wiD be tU1J.
ble for another ae~IOD with the uceptlon
of injured Steve Parter.
Golden Wet1t 8-1
Sailors Fall
To· Monrovia
Five, 68-56
. .,. JOllN CAii .................
Newport ll&rllor llJc!I'• -n
team ran Into a d fOudi ,lloaday af.
tel'DOOl'I and tbl ren!t w11 a ... )ou to
Monrovia in lhe opqlng loand ol the
~ annUll HunlingfM Beach tounla·
ment .
The aetbaclc dropped c:ooch DO
Hq:ey11 Newport team into lhe con-
fOllUon round a&aJnst Tultin. 'l1lt IWO
luma clash Wadnetday at 3.
The toft touch was displayed by
Monrovia guanl Willie JICbon who llrod
In r1 pojntJ, adtln&.eiihl.fleld aotll and
Jl free throws. Most of the lii:·f0oter'1
two-pol.Dten came on outlide jumpers. At
lhe frM throw Um he milled jult _..
JtckJC\11, IA aJl.Paclfic Lague ftnt
team d.oict as a junior last year and a
ttarter on Monrovia's OIJ' AMA runner -
up club of 1970, keyed the WUdc&ta attack
that saw the winners i;at the ram• away
early.
Tnilfn& 1-7 ea,rly. "' lhe lint period. Jackaon and bu mata ripped oll •lebt
points in a row -and frcm then on never looked baclc fn poatlng victory No. I fn
Mven outinp of tbe J.m.71 campajfn.
Momt1vla jumped to a 21-14 fint
quarter lead, bekl a »-11 advantage at
the ball and then ...,,1 :m polp1a up late in
the third quarter.
Hqey's club, coming off 1 two-11me
weekend trip to Lu Vqu, appeared
tired at 1tages.
In thi final analy1il, the Tari could
just not hit.
Newport eould only connect on JI ol U
aholl in the openinc bait and a cold third
quarter (thne field plo in 15 attempla)
rtally put lbe aame out of reach.
Newport made a ruah at the Wildclta
In the ctoelnc mlnutel, cutting a '°"point
cleftcit to j\111 nlm -~IO to .. 1115-61).
But Jacklon then bit on a abort jumper
and followed &.bat wttb a cUrity toa and
Monrovia w11 home ~-
Guard Larry G<ntoel led I h e
Newporters in the aeorlna deptrtment
wlth 11 while teammatu Bill McKinney
and Tar1s Yoan& Md 12 and 11.
Newport wu hurt conaider1bly with.
f ;47 left In the thin! qulrter when Youn&
fooled out. At that atqe, Moarovla held
only a 41-32 advantap. .......,, ~ ,... *-"' ,.., -· v ... """ Mdll"""' IC&lllllt "'" .....
T1t11•
llftlff.. ..,. .....
4o • S16 Jecll.-Ill 117 Jl$11SltYMt JIJll ,,,,.....,,..,, ....
SI i 12 MlnrM $I •11 l!S41l~M tl!t ••tllMlll19 .,,, lS ltD•n~l1 lt :tll
tt IJ 1'11 J6 T .. •!1 l 21 11 61
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Eugene sports a B average and was
Governor at Boys St.ate aevual year•
ago. He was an ofrenslve guard on the
Bruin freshman football team this pasl
season and in high school won all-county
honors in wrestling as w e 11 as
pa.rUclpating In the California state track
meet finals as a 1h*putter.
"I'm trying to a:et him to coocentral*
on one sporl In college you have to con-
centrate on one sport and put your whole
interest in one thing ."
Defensive Improvement
Key to GWC Success
Clark 13 also proud of his younger
&ister, LaVeme. At 17 she is still a high
school 1tudent but is looking ahead to a
career as a singer.
"She has a real good voice !Ike my
mother," Clark reveals. "But mom didn't
want the life of a professional •Inger."
Clark rtvtals that his ste~father and
sister watched hlm play 1requenlly at
Riverside but that h1s mother stayed
home most of the Ume.
"She has promised me she will com~ to
gomt: or our games thir year," he 11y1.
"But she gt:ts emoUonally upset. If I 1tt
hurt or go down on the noor. I promlsed
her I wouldn't get hurt when 1he 11
there," he adds with a wink.
The likeable Anteater center can take
care of himself in the thick o( battle on
the court and his addition lo the team for
the ne:t t two years will be warmly ap.
plauded by J;:l player• and fans alike.
Coast Rangers
Rout Two Foes
The Coast Rangers dumped a pair of
Pacific Soccer League ttvals Sunday at
Newport Beach's Mariners Park and the
major division team's conquest elevated
ii lo first place in the cireuit.
The Rangers smothered Be\IOower . &-2,
while Ranger reserves were besting their
counterparts, 5-1.
A pair of Leif Wemeid goab -the first
a 30-yarder -put lhe Rangers on top at
haltUme, 2-0. Chris McCarthy then bag·
gtd two perfec:tors while mates Erie
Smith and Johnny Ha ynes added single
fiCOres.
Brian Mc:Caupey ind John Atkinson
each acored twice for the ruervn while
mat• John Barnet abmmad ID -lllly.
This Sundly the R1nam ant al Lo
Puente for 4 2:3G 11me With to\ch
lndeJl"ndenda while 111bo journey to
Jaycox of Anaheim (or I 12:30 enaace-
mcnL
Consider the aituaUon •WTOUnd.in&
Golden West CoUe1t'1 butet.b.n team:
(1) 'lbe Rustlen are the hl&helt ICOf'oo
Ing junior coUege basketball te1m In the
:1tate with a 99.7 avera,e:.
(2) Five times thJa 1ea110n Golden Wut
has hit the magic 100.p:>int fiiure in com·
piling an 3-1 record.
(3) Four players •re averarina in dou.
ble fiauru, including two over the 20-
polnt mark.
Thus the obviout eV1lU1tion Is that tht
GoJden Weat offenae hu far Ind abov9
ovtnbadowed ~ dtfeme.
Nat so, PYI J\uatltr coach Dick
Stricklin.
"We've played a lot better defensively
thin I lbou&bt we would. Tllal'1 the dll·
fennce right now."
And Strldtlin ii qulclc lo point out tn
e1ampSe.
"We 1ot our biga:est challenc• of the
year Satwdly nltht aialnst Fresno. In
the early part or the 1ame •• couldn't
hit, but our deftn• kept us clole. Frtsno
la an opkleift~ fut brelk team, but wt
held them down. Ir the defen1e hadn't
been so good, we would have bf:en
beaten."
But, of cour111 the RustJlr.efrtnll tln't
about to Lake a beet ·ll&to IG' the deflnll,
Thul far Golden Waat 11 hltUOf lboul
57 pen:enl of !la field ,..t alt8npta, and
Stricklin is mon than pltued with that
"We've been runm,. Mid em:uUna
well. So far we bavte't..hlld that much
trouble ""'111(. We'va -~ well
and really haven't hit a )ow ebb yet."
Stricklin filJURI tha\ tutu.re oppo1)tnts
will probably try to slow lbe tempo ol the
game dawn. "li'a never been OW' pl to
score 100 points. It jull happens that
we've been over UIO on a few occuk>ns."
Stricklin polnll ool 1 .. turpriaes Ula!
have belped the -tll •It a fut start -nlltttly. loi•-•r111
"'1ltlNlcbllldJlmAadlo-Amlnlldl, ..... .,... llr dlo llmtlon lwo_...,Jo....,.1Nm, :a.7poitltl,. __ lle'•-tlJ~
-· ~--lllfl~ ., • aplllll'...... --"HI'• much better he w11 two
yean ap. Ht'• mort mature and j1 a
much better offtllllive bill player. And
he'• much •troncer on the boardl," uy1
Stricklin.
The Golden West eo1dJ1 add1 that
Anderton'• pll.y on dtftr11e has been a
bil wrprb<.
... didn't think he would be l! tough
deftntlvely and alto do llO well on the
boards. He has really improved during
thre Jut two lamtl and ii startln& to look
• lot batter."
Offensively Andenon, a former AIJ.CI'
It.Ir from Rancho Aiamr.oe, ir no slouch.
He's currtntly aver11in1 11.1 poildl per ·-· Two other Rutl1en m 1llo blttlnc In
double llguru.
QlriJ ThomplOll. Golden West'• Ill·
tlmt .-er and moll con1l1lent
perfnrmer, II hlttfnf It 1 23.4 clip while
t-10 center Mart Dekker bu a 10.t
averqt.
S~th Captures
Net, Tournament
TOKYO -Stu ~mlth Of Pua-
clinched first place Mondiy in the
JnltirnlUOnat Lawn Tennis Federat.ion'a
... -· -toumlment b.)'. ~ --... Ken·lhoewtll of
Auolralla, M, 6'1.
Smith won the matcb under the speclal
tie-breaker s::ori.nc ayatem by takinc a
aeverrpoint sudden-death pme afteri the
ltCOOd aet reached M . Smitb will rtetlva
fl5,0llO.
If Smilll looet today. be will technically
tie with the wlnntr of a game between -·•ll Ind C«MI dd Mir'• Rod
i.-. -S.l Bal tflt --~ -.. ,,., 4dp .... be bad
-W'""llll'"Ra11Rll IDil Llftr.
Jo -i-. ArtlMtr Aft of JUcb. mt.lftll, VL, ••led J• kodli, W, U,
'W. -i.-llell y..... 7.eijlio
Frimlfovic !,.1, M.
. ~ . . .. ~,.
•
T.....,, ~ 15, 1•70 DAILY l'ILDT. )7
HB Runs Rampant,: 107-41;
It's 65-15 at Halftime
' llJPlllL-............. p&a,.r Ill .. ljl:lt.of hi ,.._, A quartet of Oil City cepro manipd
TM" a.. flier RCIOlld untt playert 1 double fillure scoring efforts with BrooU
~ laol -tilt lluntlDflm -' ou.i" po••••td.· the tint pllC\I team
tnpllJ lo tllefr ..... O.yur-old -
boll-..-1'U bodf Ip -·
<Hmh-.. _.. up'only " playenl, Ill ~ly .,.!!"ad "!r ... ~Yuhha2$1r'the"'conn ~' bl _...._._~ -··~ ~~-~·· -~ umn, · Ria reptacemenl -6-3 Lff Ordwey -
Tbey .... lllra!fhl-tlwoulh dut7 fn c&nned st muken and p!Uckad off II , ..
tbt Id n .... ta ci' Iha -.d btU boundo:
-... _, illPI lilt Oilen " alter tk *llw• bad ...... Iha !nlU&I Raerve Darrell Wolk<r and allrter
loor .i that btll. '111omu chipped IJI wllb 17 and It --Combo-IOllcttflt7"11
Ila hi lhe -·· tiU. rtct thU tlmt &nlUld 1'ial II lfl-41 .......... GI the.
Sierra Splrtuo lo _.., ---hiiid. lJpeaded
Tllo Ill polat 1'flal, whJch ftD jual I
point -"' ""' ""'""1 -"' 1• ael by Comptoa lo 1117, Is btllned fl be
an •IJ.llme ott aty bleh aln<e there an
DO recordl available to nfU1e tbe dabn.
~ f(ell -crack II the
_,. -and the --tee standard at l :Jt p.m. Wedneldly wben
Grigsby Paces. Corona
To 48-4 7J Tourney lf; in
lhe OUen hoat Pldlk: (San llenlardino)
In I quarter final match.
Pacific toot tbe mdlW'e ol Ranchi
Alamltm bj 1 13-11 count lb t game im-
mediately preceding Ibo Oilers' rout.
Ac\Ullfy, llunllnfton sported I mmtve
65-15 1pread at the half and ended the af·
fflr, for all intent and purpose, before the
coocl-ti lhe llnt period.
Combe' ~.crew ahot at~ <• ol •> ,,.,. the field In Iha !Int liall
and W <•GI 12) far the --rif>llfnl oft IS llrtlcJll polllla at tbt -
belare Sim'Ta coald bat an eJt)ah.
Jn llunllnatoo'1 IS.poinl dalll(e fo the
flnl S;OI ti t!le (ame, W junior -
ste.. -aot ..... "' -poiola -a lff•tia toa and -field pit. Broob' Une bm:bll wen tallied on a
jumper ,,.,. ""' lop of the Ry (-UftC'on'• ftnt. two points), a Up., an fl·
rot shot b1 a teumnatt ad a rfte.foot
-jual lo the lefl "' the -Tilt nther Oller buWla In tile •IJ atrtnc were plc:Ud up .., .-y II~
afla< atoll by guarda Garib Wiie Ind
Tam Cnlnlt and • --"""' the left"'""' by e,.1 forwanf w .. '11>llnas.
Combo cleared hla belch wltlt 4;11 atlll
r•m.tlnlnc in the lint half and reserves
11J CllAIG llllBP'P' ......... ""' ... " Ab ..... jump shot by Mark Gripby
witi JI secendl .remalnlnt propelltd ear-._ Mar's bl.stelball ttam to a 41-
47 viclo'tl' over Tustin Monday afternoon
in the o~lng game of the 42nd annual
Hufltinab)n Beach tournarf1'nl.
ftl' win lhot: coach Tandy GUli1' Sea
Dlljfl IDto Uae second round a11lnst
J' ...... a u..51 victor over Newport
Hllllls. 1'ht two turns clash Wednelday
........ 7 .
1'111 SU Kinp appelttd headed for the
c 5 i1oa bnetet with jusl f'our
lo '°' trailing 3Wt. .. Onrooa, piayinc without 11' star n. din. bounced back to narrow the
.... 41.fl -1;11 fl ...
M ... polnl,...., Scott ea ..... n. just.
• INm the Sea Kine junior varsity a... wufouled.
la • oee-and-one tiluation, Cameron
~ his firll ahol. But a TUstin player
-called for stepping into the free
...... lane toe soon. CA!neron then calm-IJ' sank two tree throws to cut the margin
.. .ftl-41. ' .
~ Gripby went lo work. He hit a
~r from the key willl 1;33 left lo
I .
1ive his team a 44-43 lead. It was 1horl·
lived however, when 'I\lsUn'1 P 1 u I
Zyskowski hit from in clote. ~
That set up Grigsby'1 buck.el that &Ive ,
the Sea Kings the lead for good.
Tustin had a chance to take tht lead
back, but the Tillers threw the ball away
with 15 seconds left. Grigsby then added
lo the lead with a pair of free throwa and
Zyskowski hit a bucket for Tustin at the
buner. ,
The game w1s marred by turnovers.
Tustin, now Z..I for the ae.aaon after,
wins over Rancho Alamlto!: and Santa
Anl , give the ball up 29 times. Corona
wa.s guilty of 23 turnovers.
Corona jumped to a 7·1. advantqe
a1ainst die much taller Tillers, b u i
Tustin then ripped off 11 in a 'row I« a
IZ..7 lead. The advantage then swayed
back and forth until Tu.st.in jumped out to
the 3J.3l 1dv1ntage.
Both teams shot poorly.
Corona hit 19 of 49 field goal attempts
for 38.8 percent while Tustin cann«l 11 of
47 for 38.3.
Grigsby, hitting nine of 18 field goal at-
tempts, led 111 scorers with 2.1. Te.am ..
mate John Sumner hit 10. Fot' Tustin
Zyskowski, a 5-6 forward, canned 20 and
Don Swaim hit 17. Arne Crumley, the
Tillers' 6-7 ctnter, wu held to just foul'.
poln!J.
Tntlll UJI
" rt " ,.
1 • '" 7 l l lY ' . ' . 1 1 • ,
' • l l t t I I
• ' • 1 11 1111 •
Prfces •• CJCll .. .,. 1lill r-beat the high cost of fun and recreation, and
1JO to MW .cl •xcltlllt plllUI ••ery week for on• full year, for less than YOll
now 1p1H I• -......
RICH MUNZ, lace lhluar, :rY Producer and Track Ownlt' extends this offer.··
PLUS
OVER $1·0,000 IN PRIZES
GIVEN ·AWAY
100 TIRES 4 DUNE BUGGY TAPE RECORDERS
Yeur Sire 1971 NORGE CLOTHES & REFRIGERATORS OUTBOARD
GOLF CLUBS MOTOR VACATIONS
ind 10 SCHWINN 1971 ACCESSORIES BICYCLES 3· 1971 COLOR
CAR TOP BOAT 3·1971 NORGE WASHERS TELEVISION
NORGE DRYERS HOME RADIOS
1971 FISHING APPLIANCES 5 RACE CARS MUSTANG TACKLE TOYS & GAMES Reedy To G-nd
Drlvera Furnlahecl • 1971 3-1971 HONDA GUNS & FrH
VOLKSWAGEN lllJTORCYCLES SCOPES WATCHES
Y.tu nMcl nor M preHftt te wlrl, .ncl enlf Recr•atien Pas1 Book Members may win. A limited number
ef Mek1 are nalleble, mwe than SI p11n1 rtpreMntfnt hUftdredt of dollars in value to 1port1 avont1,
recrHt..,. and fun 1peh are Included for $7.ts. Or •• , We'll trust you. S.ncl tw• doll•rs and receive
your ....... -tw. -.i1ar~ • mtnth ft< thr .. .....,1h1, NO EXTRAS.
Thia 11 an acfwrtl'!l"I encl prometMn1I pr .. ram only. No contest to enter, no salesman will call, many
•lftfle pllMt Vffue more than the full Melt costs. l1ch Mok 11 r11l1t1rtd, •ncl Y"' receive one extra
Number ft< the d"'wtnrl• H you orlltr within 5 dlya. Tho wpply of peia books 11 llmlltd, and thla offtf
can be wlthdra~ without netlco by return of all mMMys ,.td. Our promise to youl This Is a Sincere
Ofhr, there are"' hW4en w,..,.,. costs, •ncl •money beck Gu1r•ntH. More pa1111 and prizes aclcMcl
threugheut th. yMr. Some Passes you will recolve ll1tecl Mlow.
AWAIOS "CNIC
PA.MILT PA• ...... ,.,..~_.,..._ .... _,,..._~_,_
lly ""
ltPl.mPAISIS
MU•IPllDWAY !tic"""'"'",..... a......,. .... ft ANY aVI ...... ...., IM'
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JULY 4 .. CltDUTION
IM..... ""°' l'lr. WM'111 Olto ,..,, A* ltll.., DfM•, MM!to .._ a ,......,. ' """' " ,_
LAI •1•.t.1 Cht"'''I••• l'•r ........ Dllto .... or.it."" .. .....
IPOITS PAISll ..... 9"" llMM. ClloMIY l •-M ft. MtMftf(M, 0..tntl'llM -· AH HOllY
AMP CU.flt SHOW AflMl.lltll & ... ,. .. ,. .....
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._IDDll a. ADULT llOIS
PIZZA · NII
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'LIASl NOTIN US OF CHAHSE OF AOORlSS JOA
I 'l'lAl, AS MOll PASSlS WILL l l MAIU~ TO YOO.
IANCHO
IA•·l·9UI
SIM " IMI -O""' CNll llAC.tl OANCI, "000, Dll lNI(
AOMIJltON ANO l'AlllCING .. .. .
~ o.tn 19 , ....... ,,.,,.
2 Fiii ,, ..... "'" ··-"•• NlfM Litll,_ CMrH
MINA.TUii GOLf flll
DISCOUNT CA.ID ~ T W.. t.nHlft, ...... tt ..
,._1n -SNclill .... "''-*-
fAM IL't llLLI AIDS •AMO
MAil TO
BOX M
2044
DAILY PILOT
JI DAILY l'ILOT
KeyUne
Lo sses
Fo:c MD
Head football coach Bob
'.Woods or the itater Oei
Monarchs ha: this thlng about
a main deal.
Woods says, "the main deal
for next sea.son is to build our
offensive line up again.
"We lost the whole right
side but regain lhe entire left
side."
Tbe key line losses are
guard Pat Heffernan, center
Mario Mele and tackle Steve
J<emper. The latter was a two-
year starter on offense.
Returnees on the aforemen·
ti oned left half of t h e ,
Monarchs' offensive forward
wall will be end Dave Nanry,
tackle Mike Barth and guard
Larry Dnzba.
Tuesday, Deetmbtr 15, 1970
:Good Nucleus.lJack
• • \ . I
For ·Buc.Grid Team
Oran1e Cout CoUe1e foot. nmning back and a couple ot.
t.11 CNCh Dk2 Tucker readily defensive back!. And we
admltl tbat be 1 will haft 1 really have a need for of·
aood nucleus back in 1171 -fenslve tackles," .says the OCC
&ut 11e i.n·1 11>ou1 to 111 bock cooc11.
and just wait for next Muon °There are some f i n e
to roll around. senktn in 1 our afea. This has
• "~ we'n iot a good been 1 bum.per ye1r for them. t ~ back. but I think we And we recruit at four schools
iletiit. help at f!Vety poitUon. 'that , wtre in the C J F
We're in desper1~ ~ for playoffs -Orange, Est.ancJa,
,. :lnterier-linemen and we could bilson and Newport.
• IDOtber receiver, another "I'd uy our prospects are
brichter for oei:t year than
-· they were 1t this time last
year. You'd have to sa-y that
we have • &hot at the cbam-
pion.Wp next year.
Youn& and.Tom Malone,
· On defense th< Bue• wil~
have litlemen Jlm North, Lee
Walters, Paul Moro and Dan
Moatl back along w i t h
defensive 1 backs C r a J t
ZallOsky· and Bob Blanchard.
Both center GN!g McCants
and guard Harvey Surp.re·
nant h•ve another year f
eligibility in junior colle1e
football, but they are both '
soph9mores and may move en
to four-year schools ..
"This past sea.son was Me
of our most ar1llfylng," •IY•
T\tcker. Jt wu u enjoyable as
we've had in 1 number of
years. When you hive 1 strong
finish like we did, parllc:µlarly
with a slow start, you alw1yi
feel better."
Sunset
Squabble
Continues
"But a lot of things could
happen between now and then.
We have some lop people cam-
ing back, but we still hive to
get some key fr e s h m e n • --------'-'----
'There's no question about
tha " No matter where else f.\aler
Dei surfers g·r adua t io n
casuallics, the biggest moans
emanate from Woods when the
name of Bob Haupert comes
PAYING TR IBUTE -A packed house was al Edi-
.son Hi.e:h School's football awards banquet Monday
night as fans, friends and parents of the team paid
homage to the 1970 CIF d.,s AAA champions. Edi-
son comPleted· a 13--0 season 'by. whipping Lompoc,
27-14 in the title duel.
Topping the list of offensive
The cootinuing saga In returnes will be quarterback
regards to the Sunaet Leaiue Gary Valbuena, ruqning backs
equabble between Santa Ana Bret Mattias aqd Ken Ep-
I Up.
Haupert, a fixture in the
quarterback 1dot the past
1 three seasons, led t h e
Monarchs lo a shiny 18-6 mark
while he was at the controls.
Last season's backu p
quarterback -prospeclive
senior Billy Clough -figures
prominently in the 1971 plans
as Haupert's replacement.
Says Woods, "We·u probably
throw the ball a litUe more
with Clough in there.
''But our fullback , Rick
Sheldon. may be the inside
runner we've been looking for,
60, you never can tell ."
The 205--pound Sheldon, who
doubled in 1970 as I h e
Monarchs' kicking specialist,
may get a chance lo con·
centrate fully on his ball toling
chores with some placekicking
candidates up from t h e
freshman and junior varsitJ
squads.
With Sheldon as an inside
Chargers'
Hinojo sa
Gets MVP
Jerry Hinojosa was named
most valuable player -on
Edison High School's CIF AAA
championship football team
'hreat, speedy Rocky Simpson the game in its entirety begin·
(440 yards on 96 carries in '70) ning at 8 o'clock.
returns to the fold as Mater ~--------Dei's scatback.
Jayvee veteran Dave
Burknart is given a good
• chance of replacing departing
Dennis Wojtkiewlcz at slot-
back ..
Mike Coury and Terry
~fartindale will batUe for the
split or open end Yacancy left
by J im Nanry, Dave's older
bi'olher.
Martindale will join Chris
Mumford and John McE lwain
in replacing the older Nanry.
Jim Johnson and Pat Magner
in the deep secondary.
The younger Nanry will cou·
pie with Mark Stanbra and
Jeff Clark to fill in the
Jinebacking positions.
Chaffey replaces Loyolii (ln
Mater Dei's m a n -ea I ; n g
schedule with the rest of the
ilata remaining intact.
Monday night at the school 's
sports awards banquet.
Craig 111ortensen recch•ed
the Mark Naylon Award (lll(lst
inspi rational), along w I th
being named captain or !he
Chargers' undefeated jug-
gernaut.
Football
Varsity -Captain: Craig
Mortensen; MVP: Jerry }fin()-
jos;i; Most Improved Of·
fensive Lineman: Bob
Graves: f\.1ost Improved Of·
fehsive Back -Mike Balch;
Most 1 mp ro v ed Oef-ensive
Back : Mark Harmon: Most
lniprovcd Defensive Lineman :
Brian Bayless; Mark Naylon
Award ~Mosl Inspiralional):
Craig Mortensen.
Rhyne Top Scorer
For A nteater Cagers
Phil Rhyne is 5COring at a
23.7 ave rage to lead coach
Tim Tift's UC Irvine basket·
ball team to an early 3·1
record including victory in the
recent Kris Kringle tourna·
ment.
Rhyn e. a red shirt last
season after transferring to
UCJ from USC, has taken over
the scoring lead I r o m
graduated Jerf CUnningham.
Bill Moore, runnerup last
season. is retaining the same
spot this year with a 14.2
average foUowcd by guard
Gary 'Fox ~·ith an J 1.S
average.
Rick MMier, a graduate of
Marina High, is the leading
freshman scorer with an 18.0
average as C<1ach .J e r r y
Hulbert's crew has posted a
pair of victories.
Both teams return to acti on
Saturday night in Crav•(ord
Hall. The Frosh v•ill tangle
vdth an intramural all-star
sq uad after Cal St.ate (l.-0n~
Beach) canceled its scheduled
game with the UC! yearlings.
The varsity will entertain
Stanislaus Slate of Modestn
Sa turda y an<t, Humboldt Stale
on Monda y.
U(. lrYln1 Vlfllt'I' !>II
ltl>Ynr
M-o
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l!lu•ll"'"'m Mtl~
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4~?1 •113 1 47)Jl.5J l•7
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Top Swim ·
Aces Back
'.At UCI
Hlgh and former basketball pelheirlier, i nd receivers Dou& coach Neil Reed (now of1~===~:.:=.:=:..=:::::.7-'=--"--------:-
Anabeim) will oootlnue Thurs.
day attemoon 1l Newport
Haft.or High In an e1ecutlve
·council meeting.
1be J p.m. meeling ·Is dOled
to , the public but any ICUon
perllining to further motlonl
will be aired ln an open
meeting al Newport.
Anaheim High WU llked by
Mike Martin will complete the league members t o
his collegiate career this terminate Reed'.s duller as
sea90n as the UC Irvine swim-basketball coach. for the fe.
ming team embark.a on an im· mainder of the cunent buket-
.t pres!lve ' dual meet 1 n d ba1l seu on.
tournament scheduled. The Colmy Informed the
It begins Jan. 2 with com-circuit by letter Monday that
petiUon In the AIJ-OnJversity it would not honor the request.
of California toomey at UCLA. Reed was judged guilty in 1
Martin, wiMer of 11 gold special Sunset meeting Nov. 30
medals in NCAA ( oollege of undue wiuence regarding
divis ion) competition ·over a Anaheim student Ho w ar d
three-year span, bas paced the Canon .whi le at t end Jn g
Anteaters to the team crown Lathrop Junior ~ in Santa
the past two campaigns. Ana. .\ ~
A freestyle d l 1 t a. n c e The undue influence clwge
,;peciallst, he will again be is in regards· to • auueation
favored to win three Individual that Carson move out of the
'< evena, along with two relay S.ddleback High area to the
races, ln the national com· Santa Ana HJ&h area -but ln-
petition. . stead hil residence chanaed to
, Coach Ed Newland. h.., 1 Anahelm later.
• 11trong nucleus of swimming
talent returning from · last
season in addition to Martin.
Rich Eason sat out the
· water polo seaMm but is ez.
• peeled io participate in swirn-
1 m1ng fo r the spring aemester.
He finished second in the 100
frees tyle last year in Spring-
field, Mas.s.
Mike C.11rn1han, a
sophomore, C<1pped second in
the 100 butterfly in the na.
tionals.
Mark Nelson set a schoo~
record while finishing third in
the 400 individual medley.
Tabor Earns
Loop Honors
Laguna Beach High'a Bart
Tabor was the lone Artist to
make the coac~ AU-Orange
League football team.
Tabor was named as 1 first
team defensive back while
junior Skip Winship 1arneted
honorable mention laurels.
RECALLING IT ALL -Edison Higli's head coach·
-the mastermind of the CIF championship team-
takes his turn at the microphone Monday. night as
the team and coaching staff shared plaudits for a
job ~·ell done. The CIF title trophy is at the upper
riJ!hl.
The list goes on with in-
coming freshman athletes in ..
eluding Bruce Black in the
freestyle events.
Following the A 11-U C
tourney. the Anteaters travel
to UCLA for 1 dual meet with
the Bruins Jan. 8.
Brea's Tom Teeple was
named the most valuable
player while the most valuable
back award was sbattd by
Brian Myracle of Saddleback
and Sonora's Brad Hillman.
Sonora's Doug ·Ford, Valeri!
cia'a Ed Gonzales and Pit
Pryne of Saddle.back tied for
most valuable lineman.
Shutdown Threatened
At Caliente Race Tracli
Tl.J UAN A, Mexico (AP) -
A spokesman says Caliente
Race Track is threatened with
a shutdown over dec lining al·
lcndance an d rising costs. The
track opened in 1919.
The 1.200 cmployes were oo-
tified f\1onday of the poMi ble
shutdown by Gonzalo Gonzales
or Mexico City, president of
Hippodromo De Tijuana and
the owners representative. He
said ::i de11dline or Jan 4. was
set Cor " Cinal decision.
A spokesman said Caliente
''never fully recovered from
Operation lnlerei!pl," the U.S.
government's crackdown on
dope smuggling which dis.
coUrRged many tourists at lhe
border.
Attendance dropped 20 per
cent this year. There were
8,000 race fans Jast Sunda y
compa red with 12,000 on a nor-
mal Sunday.
All of the 1,200 union mem-
bers of Syndicato Alba Roja
are Mexican nationalists being
pa id salaries similar to those
paid in the United States, the
spokesman for the track said.
Another 250 self-i!mployed
trainers and 800 horse owners
would lie a!fected by closing.
Although there also is dog
racing at the track five nighU
a week, the spokesman sai.d
only horse racing is involved
in the financial crisis.
Other foes on the dual meet
slate include Cal State (l.ohj
Beach), San Diego State, Cal
State (Fullerton ), UC San
Diego, UC Santa Barb.lira and
San Fernando Valley State,
The season w I I I be
culminated March 18-20 in
Springfield, Mass. in the NCAA
college d I v i a I o n cham·
pionships.
J111. 1-All-C.tllleml• loum1menl 11
UCLI\
Jt " . .._,., UCLA n •.mJ
J111. D-U(. kn Dlf911 II t ..... \
Jin. n-11 Sin F•,.,..,,.. Vt l'-Y
s1111 '" 1.m.1
Jtn. 2'--UC S.11!1 ll1r'1Ntrt CJ:IJ _
P.m.I
Ft'b. .M-Gold Co11I Tourn11Mnl lit UC S1nl1 lltr'INt•t
F10. ll-CI! Slllw (lont .. .ell) 111 ...... )
~Ml. 20-t.il Dl"9 Stilt 111 1.111.I
~tb. 2J-Cll•-t Col-ll:JD ...... )
Ftb. 21-Ctl Sti lt fl'ullfften) (l~:JD ...... )
Mtri:ll ""'"°"~
Mtrcll 11·20-NCM ClltlY!Jlltnl.ltl•• •I
S11rl ... llt11d, MIU.
The 1170 All-Orange League
team:
Pll'lf OfM-E -Clwlrltt l ulltr, Stddltbtck
E -TCN!f ~llH, Sona.rt
T -Pt l "'"'"'' S1ddltiOKk T -01 ... t fnl•U. El Oorlld9
G -Wtrr1t1 Wtbv, Stddl.ii.ttk G -St•.,. Quinn, 5-r• C -H-•fd L1r-., Soner1
t -llrl111 M¥•tclt, SICl(lltbtdc 1!1 -Tom Tee~lt, lll'et
11 -lrtd Hlll,..111, Sorlor1 a -Sob Blum. S-rt ,. ... ,, Dlft-
Dl -Ed Gon11tta, Vtl.nclt
DL -Ed IClnthorn, Sonor1
DL -0oue l'ofd, Sonort
DL -WtY,_ Miiier, fl OorKe DL -Cf1is Hu._.., V1l9n<lt1
l -oon M1h1rw, s.MltbaU. Lii -Sim ltumtoi., 5_,.,
Lb -JM:J< l'ltildl"9, S-t
DS -TOl'lf MICllV. El DerMI Dll -G•fl1t1 lltllllf, Sonor•
DI -81tt T1bor1 L..-8etct1
Vike Banquet
••• "· ''· ••• "· ••• ... ••• ••• ••• "· ... ...
''· "· ''· ••• ...
'" '" '" ...
Marina High School will fete
tht lootball, water polo and
cross COU11tr)t teams Wed-
nesday n.ilht in tbe 1 c h o o I
cafeteria at the annual fall
.sports awards deutrt.
Festivities get under way at
6 o'cklck.
'
GIANT
SKI SALE
Youth Ski Parka's
Auorttd Colors and $i1e1
6-8, 10-12, 14-16
Were $15.99 .....•.......• NQW
Youth Skis ·•::.:::r
bindings, poles included
From 12.99 • 24.95
$8.88
All reduced 33% Siva Now.
Youth Ski Boots
Sove 50% -R09. $7.99 •.•. NOW $3, 99
After Ski ,Boots
FIHcR l ined -M.n & Women's
R09. $5.99 ............... NOW $3,99
Ski Boots lp•xy kehlf•rntl I ll'Kkle ..._.. •IMI •• ,....,
Si1es I through 12
Reg. $76.00 ............ NOW $50.00
COMPLm RENTAL PROGRAM
Includes Adult and Junior Sins
IET AL SllS, BOOTS, POLES •,;:::"' $9
10% DISCOUNT TO SKI CLUB MEMBERS!
Full Renlol moy be eppli~ to Sid
Purchase mNe within 15 d•ysl I
I Sears I
~~.ueco.
SOUTH ·coAST PLAZA
3333 BRISTOL STREET
COSTA MESA ~331
Just Say Ch1r1• It At Sears
stereo103F.M
~ . . • music music music music
• music good
•
t ~· .-
• -
.. •
~ .
• ! . • • .\
!
I
I
I
l ·
' • I
' I t • ~ • ~
i
' '
' ' (
HOUSES FOR SALE
2629 HARBOR
BOULEVARD
546-8640
Open Ev.nlng1
1111 l ::IO
3 Bedroom Plus ·
Romper room
$24,600
See this home today it's
a fantastic value and it
won't lar;t. In a very
nice area of Costa Mesa
with 2 baths built-in
20x20 family room 110
down to vets low down
to any body!
3 Bedroom 2 Baths
$181 mo. Pays All
HOUSES FOR.SALE -. ;.;H::.OU::.S:.:E:.:Sc.;Fc.:O°'R~SA..:;L:.:E;_l'H"'OU=S::.l.;..S .;..,O.;.R.;..;.SA_L_E __ l_H_ou_s_E_s_F_O-::R_SA'.""L-:E=I
t• Huntington Be•ch 1.&00
HOUSES FOR SALi! HOUSES ,OR SALi! HOUSES FOR SALi! HOUSl;S FOR SALi
1000 Genertf 1000 Genera'! 1 llOI Oontrol 10;00 Gener1I 1oeo Newpeot....,.
* * * * * TAYLOR CO. *
CALIFORNIA .HE!lE WE .GO! $73,500
Transferred owner bas just listed luxurious
Jvan Wells home in beautiful Baycrest. 5
Bdnns, formal DR, enclosed pool. Circular
driveway. First class condition thruout.
J RVINE TERRACE--$43,000
The loy of living! Pool w/beautiful lighted
waterfall. 3 Bdrms, 2 baths & lge liv. rm.
''Our 25th Ye•r''
. .
of;~Ja !J:J/e
PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES
' 52 Linda Isle Dr.
,Cust 6 BR., study, 5 bath home w/4 frplcs.,
circular stairway, decorator selected carp.
& drapes. Shown by appt ........... '$210,000
For Complete lnform1tlon on all homes I.
lots, pl••M cell:
BILL·GRUNOY, REALTOR
833 Do .. r Dr., S•tt• 3, N.I. 642~20
WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO .. Realtors Goner•I 1000 Gen1ro1 1000
675-3000
The.Number to Call \Vhether
Buyina. &llltng or Leisin&
HUNTINGTON
. B.EACH"
%1902 Ocean V\ew Lane, drlve
by, call (or app't, Uke rrw
4 BR. 2~ ba, llOme. FamUy
rm. w/trplc., profeSI, lnd-
acpd. ~ ju.tt reduced ov.
er Sl,000. Now S49,4DJ Lo-
cated just 8 bl.ks. from
beach, Owner trans., make
off~! . " m 11 \\ ~ IU: lfll
II[ lU \ l:\f.
VIEW
RIOM
MOUNTAINS TO
THE SEA
Designed to make the most
of the be:•utitul panoramic
view this roomy Lusk 4 bed.
room home ls the Ideal set.
tin; for your family, Hand-
&0me na':':lral ~'OOCI cabi-
neta, red brick patio, tinted
clus and 3 car garage arc
a few of the many addition-
al rea.ture1 that make this
property so sr>tt-ial. $57,500.
Call 673-85&t
* LIDO SANOS * Sparklll\I 3 bdrnt., 2 baths.
1 Blk. to btach. $32.!JIJO.
Newport Bt:11.ch Realty * 6'J5.l6U *
DUPLEX • 4 br up, 2 br dn,
3-car, neat &: clean, nicely
furn. 200' to bch. Sacrifice.
Owner, TI4/ '542-19-16.
Newpor t Heighti 1210
CHARMING ~s~e tiO~ like new. 4
BR, 2 Ba. Beaut decor.
l..a.rge kit, all bl1ns. Italian
marble frtllc. Chandeliers,
large Jiv &: din rm facing
large pool. Partial ocean ' 2111 San Joaquin H ills Road j;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
NEWPORT CENTER 644-4910 CAMEO ·SHORES
2 . IN 1 view troin large balcony,
LIVE IN ONE OPEN 1~~~~~~~=1 ::-:.~· I;> ... ., ...
f~' , o ~''JO'.'~, \0 THE REAL
\....,__ESTATERS
RENT THE OTHER The gate and step into an REPOSSESSIONS 91~~ * * * * * * Magnificent CU$1om home Huge master BR. suHe
' ', •I'
Gener•1 1000 General II===;;;;;
3 BR CONDOMINIUM
Jn choice secOon of MontlceJ.
lo, to be complet'-ly redec.
orated including. new c&r.
pets. Priced below market.
Act last o$2:~ne.
1000 Plus :Z guest Br's & ~·s
Paneled den & bar
Profitable to own ... A plea.. enchanting entr)'Way that Sparkling clean homes, some ""4l#c.,
1ure to live In! T)le home U lee.da to this Jovely Newport newly painted & carpete;<I. 2, Jl£lt: r\'
CUSTOM 2 BEOROOM
I. GUEST COTTAGE
Excellent Eastside location,
com ple tely reclccorat.
ed. Heavy shake roof &
many bltn features. Retrig
& washer included. Perfttt
for the adult family 1nd in·
la.WB. Immed occupancy. ...
OERi=ION
,J~ ...... ,. ..... ~.
Big lanai room with
copper hooded fireplace
a custom, luxurious charm. Beach home. 3 bedrooms, 3, 4 & 5 bdrms. Some with N1a r Newport Po11 Office
er with 3 kt~ si:ze bed· garden baths, richly panel-pools. f1iA.-VA conv. terms, BY O\VNER: 4 Br, 2 ba,
rooms; country kitchen and led family room and cozy from $17,000 to $40,00G. frplc, bJtns. Many xtras, Macnab-Irvine
Re<y Company
ENTERTAIN
ELEGANTLY
Ctlmplete ho.st's kitchen
For poolside entertaining huge family room. fonnal Jireplacc. Safe &nd quiet CU'-· Collins & Walts Inc. \Valk 'to 3 sch!s. \Vould con.
dining, secluded Uvlna: room De-Sa.c street. Good buy at 884l Adams Ave, 962-5523 1 ='=''="=!='="='-=· "1=._=5306=.==
, . ,PLUS a separate one $38,500. * FOUR HOUSES * I
bedroom money-mAker that c I th re•lly """"' tho.. month-0 eswor y •. , Bdrm. .. ...... horn" In this magnrficent Dover on Jge. lot. Room for mon!,
Shores home wlth a "FOR:. 1Y payments! ~s.950 for FORTIN CO. 642-5000
EVER VIEW."· ApproXi-both! $4600 down. See today
mately 5,000 sq: fl. of Call now. Thanks. 546-2313 & Co.
warmth & elegant: S Bed-Realtors or 646-n7t. REALTOR
rooms, 3 1,_in-places ·ext~ 1 '0ur 15th Year Newport Beach Office $1000 PRICE
''·v, .. _ of bn·ck l torrazo • I Th ...... n • Harbor Area'' 1028 .Bayside Drive • R UC 0 1.,.,,. """"°""' • "'"" 6 73•4400 .,,.,,. ED Tl N
carved dooni from a villa ---~~~~--· f ~ most outstanding value
in Spain. S169,000 I"'~~!""~!"'~!"""' ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; BEHIND IN on today1 market In a Jux-
FHA OR YA Great for l"-laws PAYMENTS ""' '"'"'' 1000 ••. ff.I 3 Owner says "SELL" hJ, 3 tr bedroom homr. Con9Wcr M u 1 t sacrifice. ASsum'-642..rilS 675--3210 bedroom, 2 bath home in SlS,600 VA Loan subject to th<>w features: large scpar-
I "~!!!!!"'l'!!!!~~~!!!!'!O I Mesa Del !'.tar. Beautifully Sharp 4 bednn, 3 bath with ale family room witb we! J ' fonnal dinint rootn. 0 n e 6% annual percentage rate b f I di . 21~
Reduced to $175,000
Macnab-Irvine
Costa Mesa 1100
University Par k 1237
NOT A SACRIFICE
Not a bargain , • , it 's 11
STEAL! Forced sale to !Cl-
ue estate. , ,heirs want im-
med. action on this lovely
l BR, 2 Ba. plus huge bonus
family rm. All far $33,000 •
Don't Wa.Jt!
(ired hill
REALTY
Univ. Park Center, Irvine
Call Anytime 833-0820
OCEAN VIEW-3 Brm
$15,500
UNBELIEVABLE!
That's Rtghl! Hard to be-
lieve! But true!: A 3 J3ed.
room home and two giant
lots Jor the price of one.
Pr1ee includes Mt size aJ.
ley, R.J zoning, you can
have many more units, All
with ocean view, % mt
from beach. You name the
tenn11. Fantastic value!
Don't Delay Dial 96Z-5585
FOREST E. OLSON
Inc, Realtors
19131 Brookhunt Ave.
Huntington Beach
COUNTRY ENGLISH
C"ALEl
Unbelievable: Quir.f trr.e lin-
ed st. to load!! ol NE\V ENG-
LAND CHARM! Hug c
rooms. Teardrop chandelier-
ed Ionnal din!ng, Arched
ceilings &. doors. Thick walls
with strength like "SAM·
SON." Step down master
suite. l'ofassive log -burning
fy-eplace, \Valk-in closet!.
Load!! of brick. Covered pa.
tio. Rich wood paneled de-
tachOO garage. Only $27,700.
Best to hurry and cal.J Cn•U
962-5585.
FOREST E. OLSON
Or no money down to 1 71 A I vets for this well kept 642· 7 nyt me
3M•U~ns. ~1t:sEFO. v:"! ~ ~~t~ ~~ii~=:~~ huge room convertible Into wP'ithr trnota10nthpa. yms•'.b"rn'',.,01 yoSl~ ha~~. n~:; new n~:~ car.
in-law accommodations in-" .... t Pl h 40x62 ' !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!• OK, $24,~ • see page 1087 covered patio, corner lot I d. r . bed down' payment on thiB Clean pe . us a uge rear I' S 1o;,phoM yellow pages -~·ith room for boat or trail. cu ing iv1ng room, rm 3 bedroom with 2 luxurious yard with lots of concrete HIGHLAND
I nr. Real tors
19131 Brookhurst Ave,
1-Iun!in~on Beach
home located· in Costa 11;::,;;::,;;;;;;;;:;:;;;;;;;::,;;~ Mesa. It has a,.. fully en· II
closed cover~ patio. HELPfl 0 h h • private bath. Manicurro •nd wo!J kop1 Ja·"•c•-Costa Mesa's F'incst Real er. wner as pure ased a bat'-· c .......... and dra .... s. •N ,_, 2 Bedrms +Pool h ,_ ,_ h J yard, excellent landscapln~. '"' ~..,...,, ,.... ANO Estate Office. See your home ome at l·<e ""ac · ust re. Huge' rooms. Double gor-Assume VA loan. &nyone
Large mstr bed.rm, 1·"%. ba, qualifies. )'ou1· terms, 3
REPOSSESSION
Two cu g•rok•. corn-• , du<;ed to $29,750. Cali for an sprlnkleni front & rear, Only 10% down with a low· on TV· 1000 Free Christmas Inspection. 546-2Jl.1 Adult occupied. VA or rm ag'-wit h fenced yard. GOOD low priee of s:n.soo. pletely fenced front and
rear yards, great for
families, askllut $24,500.
It'• vacant &o ""hurry!!
gilts at office. Owner/Mgr. ~'l::. SHAPE OU! 01 'own O··-r 0--•, , tenns, .,....,900, · FOR DETAIL.~
-•re """ Ofarles Quintard ReaJtor,, w lk & L
family room , separate for. . -Realtot'I
ii'plc, db!e gar. S37,950, Bedrni, 1*. ha, !rplc, bltns,
Ownr/Agt. 673--0139 crpts, drps. VACANT. * PANORAMIC VIEW 847-8507
$129 Mo. total pml
""lck ""'' on thi• h""' 4 • COi.A TS a er ee CALL 613-8550
bednn home with l* baths," ~ui"ntard
mal·dining room. You'll be REALTY WALLACE 2790 Harbor Blvd. at Adams
amazed at the size of the Sin<• 1946 REAL TORS ~5-0465 Open 'til 9 PM
Luxury Ocean Blvd. Duplex. ~ ~· ... ~~~M~r~
Ov'-rlooking Jetty & Harbor. :• t:: j f l;JlJ --~~~==-== By O\\•ner; 67~ * _:_;A~··=-~·
10THEREAL
\'.'.. ESTATERS
''" l •• ', ...
rooms, 2650 sq. ft . of living J;>owntown C:01t• M••• Open Daily 1-5 Open E venings CAMPER Carone dol Mar 1250 BUILDERS
Buy subjttt to this
beautiful 51* % annual
'..ti rate VA loan and you
get 3 Bedrooms 2 baths.
great neighborhood near
school and 1hoppirli', owner uking $23,950.
See itl •-•
$150 Down
4 Bedrooms ·
Fixer upper
Thi! one needs pa.int and
clean up but at a price ot $24,000. It'a a stea.1
toW down only Sl50
plus closing coats in
Costa Mesa. Call nowl
Look!
3 Bedrooms 2 Baths
$148.00 mo. inti.
I taxes
T&ke ovE"r aubjec.t to ex-
isting FHA loan· annual
% rate of 5"-% and
you'll it'l 3 lar1;e ~rooms. 2 baths, rock
fireplace, built-in kitch·
en. forced air heat, dou·
ble garage, cul de sac
street, block wall fence
and an excellent Costa
Mesa address. Call now
-Open Eves.
$100 Down
3 Bedroom 2 Bath
$19,950
'"°'· Largo countTy •lyl• 1171 642-2991 2001 Aliso Avo I. 20th e:=96=::i2-44:=54~·== ·'TAX DODGE kitchen with el"ec bltns, pric. HAAIOlt F I o· . R ""i"" """""""'°to only I 0iiiiiii1iiiiiiliiiiiiliiiiiilii.iiiiliiiiiilii. •I Orma mmg OOm ·
PJ,SOO, Be in by • • • • • custom hu111. 3.bcdrm. 2 ba, outstand~n~A:E!mn with
COATS &ep living rm., fireplace, family k dinin& rooms. Re.
& Christmas! fam ily rm., elec bltnis FA public Homes for lease-or
' WALLACE heat, patio w/gas fired ·BBQ lease with option to buy.
• i. ~REALTORS 3 ·Bedroom + den home. pit, dble gar., space for boat Call Ior deta.W.
l 546 4141-...:.,. Family/dining room, fire· &. trailer.
(Open Evenings) place, bltns. di11hwash~r, Ladlenmyer Rlty
crpls, drpl!. cover!d paUO, Call 646-3928. Eves: 548-6769
Also Back Bay 4 • family
with pool, Now avs.llable,
also with option.
Dolla rs at Discount
You will agree wbt.n )'OU see
this c h e e r y redecorated
1'--0UR BDRM. Din, ,Rm.;
Fam. Rm. tv.'O bath home,
sparkling Bil gas kit. with
ceramic tile counters and
load11 of cabinets. Double
garage, large 22'x26' cover-
ed & encl~. well lit for
evening entertainment, cus.
tom patio, Located on quiet
cul-Oe-.sac street near down-
town Costa Mesa.. {0 U R
YEAR END SPECIAL AT
ONL '{ $34.950 . WITH FltA
bND VA TERMSJ,
M. M, LaBorde, Rttr.
64&0555 Eves: 548-3265
EASTBLUFf
4 BR. 2 Ba, home located on
a large, tree lined, secluded
fenced Jot. Ideal for young
children.& large dop:, Own.
er wanta: offer. $4:1,750.
133-0700 644-2430
dble garage, All in pcrfectl"'""""!"!'~~'!!"'!!!!!!!!!!!
condition! Immediate pos-OWNER
&enion! S28.T50.
Wells-McCordle, ·Rllrs. DESPERATE
l'ofodel home • $6000 under
S<MHO ,,.....,.....,,.
LLEG£1!EALTY
15mMlllll II~ 1810 Newport Blvd., C.M,
548-7729 market value. Gorgeous 4 !!'l~!!!!!'l"!!!!~!!!!I!!!!~
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!/ bedroom 2 story home • 3 Educational Center
BALBOA
ISLAND
VACANT
LOT
$37,500
sparkling baths; fully car. ElemenlAry, Intermediate,
·peted, huge family room, High School &nd Orange
fonnal dining & · \VOuld you Coast College are 11.ll wtlhln
believ~ air conditioning? walking distance. Three bd·
Immediate possession. Will nns. l ~ bath home wt th
sell In the next 48 boars for B/N'1 and separate dini11g
S39.950. All terms • FHA/ rm. A bargain al only $26,500
VA . NO DOWN. Ca 11 with FHA/VA ternui:. Lar;e
545-8424 South Coast Realtora ghoppin.c: center a n d San
Step Right In! Diego Freeway nearby foJ
your convenience.
•. , To lhis Freedom home
WILLIAM WINTON ,vith 11 n e.xisting high FHA
Realtor loan & a low llS.'!IUmable in·
M. M. LA BORDE, Rltr.
644>0555 Eves: 548-3265
BAYFRONT DUPLEX
2 BR., 1 bath & 2 BR. l~
ba.: on Big Bay, Very 1iv-
1ble. Room for 40 ft. boaL
Owner wants quick gale,
229 Marine, Balboa Island terest rate. 3 bdrms, big
___ 6_7_5-_3_3_3_1 ---·I yards in 11. tine location.
Pleasant St. . Almost new
shag carpets, kitchen floors
& window coverings , , • Busy! Busy! Busy!
$23,950 6~~::1· 968-7015 Eves. Business Is g'rea1 , •. We are
expandln1t. Need Mlesman. Ttle Real E11taters learn A'gent 675-4930 associated more, ee.rn more &: serve CONTRACTO~
better. ProfessU>nal, person-REPOSSESSION
aliud training. Earn over
80%, Call 546--2316 for ln!er. 3 Bedroom n('11r Dana Pnint
view, Marina. S1500 down. F'ull
. price $26,500. tmmed. pos.
session, SEE nns ONE:
BROKERS -REAL TORS
102~ W Bolboo 1>7J-Jl>6:
Cati ~95-5560 ·Brok1>r 11~=~===~~~==1 -~~!!!!!!!!!!~1 4 Bdrm,+ Family rm.
FIX IT UP POOL HOME """"" oxi'1;ng apr. loon of
O THE REAL
'......,__ ESTATERS . .
LIOO WATERFRONT
APTS.-320 LIOO NORD
Sl50,000 Price with 7% 1st
T.D. 6 Beaut turn. units:
6 car garage&'&: util, room.
80 Ft on swimming Mach.
\Viii consider trll.de for boat
or maximwn ~,000 lie. 4
BR. house.
Outside of ~Ing paint, a $26 SOO 6~%. Elegant entry tui.n •. 4
lltUe repair & some yard . ' . Bedrooin.'!I, h u i:: c family
Biii Gr•ndy, Rltr.
32 Deluxe units in the city of
Orange. Gold Medallion. all
elec .•. S Fourplexes and 4
Triplexes with ·community
poaJ, 'PIUs greer'I. belt area.
Te!rific tax deferment on
hl1h Income. Calf for detalls.
N•wport
•I
Fairview
646-1811
(inytim•)
$1,460 TOTAL
DOWN PAYMENT
for lhl11 gi:eat 3 bedroom, 2
bath home nestled on a huge
country style lo!. Glistening
HARDWOOD FLOORS, Also,
carpeta: and drapes, Subject
io VA Loan of $23,45(1 with
tolal payments of S219 per
month. Seller will carry
balance Call •
Walker & Lee
Realtors
2790 Harbor Blvd. at Adams
545-9491 Open 'lil 9 PM
COTTAGE &
INCOME
CORONA
DEL MAR
A Charming llltle cottage
plus renlal on a ~·ell located
R-2 lot in desirable Corona
del Mar. Only $3:1,950. With
excellent ~rms. To see call
673&50. Quick!
'O THE REAL
.....,__ ESTATERS work lhis "Mesa Verde 4 bedroom, 2 ~lh sparkler l'OOm, natural ·brick flre·
Cam}1ridge'' Qome wit h 3 & with beamed cellini;:-family place, swim p~I, park like
family &: formaJ dining rm room and FRANKLIN FIRE. yard 540-1720
1, In .,.at '"'"· Vacant. PLACE. 16 x · 32 hoatod 1955 ·Htrbor TARBELL BAYCREST AREA
Make yo»r oUor. POOL. Wlntor bargain with . * BALBOA * -SALESMEN 4 BR+FR+POOL
8.l3 Dover Dr., N.B. 642-4620
VA or 1-"HA renns at new · . 141·Sllt WW RATE• 4 BR. home. View, plus 1tar. 21 Year old c.orona del 1.far ---w lk · & L age apt.. and . on :z R-21ol!! firm has openlnp for 2 ex-Newport Beach lovers took
plus tloslng coats and OLl.EGE R~TV a er ee $69 ~ perienced real estate 1ale1-at this. 4 big-bdrms. lam·
yoU can move Into th~ •bOOlicllnllll ,,ca Ne~port Beach Realty men Pleak call: Leonard ily room • sparkling pool •
unbtllevable value be· 11ii=::=::=::=::=::=::=::=::=~ \ Smiih or w -•tor Haue tor plus Harbor High School •
2629 HARBOR
-,. xmaJ1. I t's 0 .. 1 .. ~ ReaJtort * 67:l-16-i2 + .. '" ·~ -·3 w fclll! Ori 't ' Westcllff Shopping . All this yrs. old, has a flrepl&ct, LEMON HEIGHTS .~ es / ve SPECIA'L FEATUfl.ES app ' and only minutes to t b e
built -In kitchen, forctd 64&-ml Opcn ti! 9:00 PM Pool, rwllo & ,ptc»<lid Dover 675•3000 air heat. all newly tt· HOJ1iculturiat'• delight, Jove-.. ~ ~~-~~~--=-beach. Priced under market
decoraited. • HUIUl:'l on ly country estate, 2 acrea, Harbor View Silo"'" VI~. Iv•,r.. Wells.-e Steps To Oceen e for quiCk sale, Bet\er bilrey.
this ontl 3 bedroom, den. 3 bath, In Coron• del Mar BuUt 4 bedrm, 3 bath, pwdr Emplf & like re WI Only DIAL 645-0303
room hOme, Lg din rm, fam ,.,., 500 BR f 2 FOREST E OLSON "°""' OK. 198.000. 4 Bodroomo, !amlly room -,m w/!rpfc. Avail now. Rey -· • 3 , •m. rm., ,
PETE BARRITT RLTY. ganlon kltc"'n o• ""' J W 033 M · "'" 2 "' gar., bl!M. REALTORS large lot. Luxury bath with ' ard, Rltr. l anners CAYWOOD REAL TY 2299 HARBOR.!. CM ~unk~n tub + many axtru. Dr., 646-l&iO Open Dally. 6306 W, COA!i't Hwy., NB
1'3.000. voo·own th< 1""1. $2B.,000 • 541-12'0 e LARGE. !mrnac. 3 BR&+ Pho 646-nn fam nn., near Back y '-4 BR + F1m lly rm. S.11, leen/opt or rent area, 2 brick ttplcs, hrd~"CI
BEACH DUPLEX Beaut1ful home, Prime ~a. 4-BR., 2~ ba., trple, 2 Car Ooors. bltm, wafled
2 Furnished Units Enctoscd A covt<ttd petlo, gar. 3 Yn, old,~ Sq, Ft. park-like yard, covered
Xlnt loc1tion 4 Bednn, huge !amily rm. A·l Ont. V•cant ·quick poa. patio, trees. Qullllty house
$21 000 "";:;~7=m;;;:~~~I 540-1720. seu. Call today! on a beautiful 1tniet. 10'*
642·5200
SPECIAL DREAM HOME CLOSEOUT
Great concrete storage for
boat. trailer, and campers,
Sharp 4 bedrooms, 2 bath
home with FORMAL DIN-
' ING ROOl\f. Take subject
tn 5% annual percentage
rate FHA Loan payable
$193/mo. Quiet EASTSlDE
Costa Mesa neighborhood
and you can be in for
01rl11tmas! Excellent vaJue
a1 $29,950!
Walker & Lee
Realtors
2G43 WeatcliU Drive
64&-7711 Open 'Ill 9 PM
REDUCED
By owner for fa.~t sale be-
fore Chri5tm.a8. \Vas $38,500,
now only $.15, 750, 4 Bcdrm,
family, and formal dining.
Shag crpta, bltns, large fire.
place, Vacant for fast pos.
session! Beautifully Jocated
near schools. for details
call 540-1151.
"The Only \Vay to Buy"
GOOD 5 BR hse on Lon·
rlonbcrry In No. C . l'o1 .
Assume eKi5!i ng FHA loan
ol approx $25,750 w/interest
at only 6~ %. f2500 rlown
paymnt. ChRs. C. Martin
Rltr. 543-1J9j
WVELY, quiet, seclud~.
ocean view home. 2 br, den,
2 ba. Sl9,500. Consider
l~&e/option. Owner 518-8007
,,COU.EGt: PRK -$24,900 ••
3 BR-F1-IA 71,;~-LO ON
+ BY OWNER: 645--0971 *
Mesa Verde 1110
J BDRM, 2 Bath. Over 2(0)
sq, ft. Game rm, frplc,
fenced yard. l'h blks from
goll course. $5800 d n .
Pymnts $19b/mo, (OWNER)
54.>3182.
Newport Beach 1200
MOST UNUSUAL
POOL HOME
Interesting floor plant \Yllh
rooms galorv In lhc heart of
Newport Hrlghts with de-
!U)(C pool 5 bcdloom11, fam-
ily room with fireplate and
barbecue. Deluxe kitchen
with built-l n frettc:r, re_frtg:.
erator and blender. Let us
-how this mOtJt lnrereJ1Hng
home, you'll ~ glad you
did. Phone 646-n11 and
only SJ9,500.
Jn a dream ol a location! Credit re)e<:tions place 7 horn.
l\1ost Rltrarlively decorated es on choice Iota on the mar·
3 bdnn., 2 bath. HWTy, this lret again!! 3-7 Bedrms, 3 &
~'On't last! $54.~ 4 baths, hltnll, c:rptg, I.bake
Delancy Real Estat• root elc. from $33.940.
2828 E. en... Hwy .• CdM RANCHO LA CUESTA
644-7270 Brookhurst &: AUanta, .lLB.
~IM=M~E~D~.-p=o=ss~E=S~S~.-968-ll.1S Open JO am-3 pm
Nice 3 Br. home, So. of Hwy.
Move in for Christmas!
Wood 'Jurning frpl., F.A.
heat. Dbl. garage, Good
tcnn11 Rv11.ll.
MORGAN REAL TY
673-6642 675·6459
GREAT VIEWI
FountJ in Valley 1410
REPOSSESSION I
Large 4 Bedrooml
G iant Famlly Rooml + Dining area, crpts, new
paint! Only $31 ,500!
HAFFOAL REALTY
842-4405 Of harbor&: ocean. AtlT. split
levei home on R-3 5100 sq. I==========/
fl lot. Ideal for 4 apt_ unils .
$200.000. 2501 Ocean B/\'d.,
Cd!'.1. By app't. only.
Bill G rundy, Re a I tor
Call: 612--4620
Lido Isle 1351
ON STRATA CENTRO
• 4 Bedrooms, 3% Baths
l5 Ft. + Lot
Stre<>t to Strata
$72,500
LIDO REALTY INC.
3377 Via Lido 673-7300
H~ntington Beach 1400
MOYE IN BY
CHRISTMAS
$123/MONTH
Outstanding home \Vith hugr
1~ x 17 SEPARATE Family
Room complete with POOL
TABLE. Smog frre and
close 10 Blue Pacific. Pur.
chase subject to 514 annual
percentage rate Joan, VA or
1'1iA Terms available, Call
Collect,
MOYE IN BY
CHRISTMAS
and aMume subject to 6'~ %
VA loan with as llltle a.~
$l)OO down! Three queen.
1lUd bet11"10m!I, carpeted
. and rlraped, FrREPLACE
for Santa and MORE. $26,500
and only J years old .
Walker & Lee
R.('aUors
7682 Edinger
(TI4) 842-4455 or 540-5140
60/. VA
Sa nta Ana Hgts . 1630
2-STORY Southern Colonial.
5 br/3 ba, d in 'g/rm,
lam/nn. Located in Beaut
section of ~.A. lights. Ex·
isting" GI A1prtgage, can be
.assumed YI/Lo On . pymt.
$37 .500. ~;>.2992.
170S La guna Bea ch ------~-
WOODS COVE
AREA
Over 3300 sq. fl. in all wood,
C"Ustom hon1e. 4 Bedrooms,
4 halhi; & &aUna bath; den
AND family room, Modem
eRsy care built-in kitchen
"'ilh dishwasher. View din.
ing room, 2 l!replace1: large
double gar.!lge & workshop,
$65,000. Call •
._,,/Otan
REAL ESTATE
1100 Glenneyre SI .
4!H-9473 S4.q-0Jt6
EMERALO BAY
Just listed! Allr. traditional
3 BR. 3 .Ba., sep. Uv,. nn.,
din. rm. I.: fam. nn.
n6 Emerald Bay $75,000
Sho'wn by app't,
Bill Grundy, Re altor
833 Dover Dr., NB 642-48:ll
• $73,500 •
2-STORY, 3.000 &!.·Ft.
3 Br/2 Ba, living/rm k
famll)/rm, 2/fp'1. * GOOO TERMSl1 ·* 404 Emerald Ba.Y,
4!W-2609
D•na Point 1730
$30,950 New 3 BR rtsldence.
34041 CaUlla Drive
BUllJ>ER + 642-4005
4 Bedroom, usume S25,500
Gr loan, S209 •a month in-
cluding taxc11, wry sharp
clean hOme, excellent J'IC!igh.
borhod, c11rpe1A, drapes, I -----·-----1
large bedrooms, 11pacioua Condominium 1950 •
modern kitchen \\'ith bltns,
cozy living room with Palos
Verde alone fireplace, fet)C.
td And l!uld!caped, call .••
BOUUYARD
546-8640 -
Geor•• Wllll•mlOl'I CORONA HIOHLANOS TARBELL 2955 Htrbot-ean P•nick Wood 5'5-:z:Jllll Down, 133,000. Klngunl
•RealtOr ~= •ti"'c:.!:~1°:r~'~e~w=E~STCL!FF==~co=N=oo~~.1 ,~.~B~i~ll~H~••~,.,~n~,;R~lt~r.~l ~R.~Ej.~MJ~2-~2222~·5'.j;~:I :~~~~~~~~~ I' '7~ 645-1 • .164 E .. 1. Bdnn1, 2 · baths. o o ·1 y 2 BR. 21! ho. CJ"b~ 2lll E. C...i, C<IM &7=1 MUST SELL BY OWN
ON THE CHANNEL 169.500. Pool, s., ... Ownor/uny. $1B1 a month • Eastside 5-Plex. Bnnd oew, '" •lrnPlo. 1 blk HZA41I 1·::::)'4MlOJ
\0 THI:: REAL
'"-l:STATF;RS ·.
TIBURON TO\VNHOUSE R.e-
511.le, 2 Bedrm, 2 bath, one
story, carpets, d,rape1, Jow.
ty private patio, dble pr.,
a ir •coro1t1oncd. Tak• ovtt
Ct loan with only 12450 cub + low dosin& COits.
Larw ln RN lty, Inc.
()poll E"""lot•
1111 l ::IO
5 s~!;, +~~an~· 53 8:e1: CORBIN-Eut C.M. 3 an.. 2 81• VA no Loan.A!!:.":'~~. hUJe $88,000 ::~·C:u~~· .;f;a~t. r::c~ 8~t~w:~~~l 8~":
)'OUng. 149,950, MARTIN ~j~~l6SO ~5000 femlly nn, beamed ceUlnp, 356 E. 20th StrHt dbl gu. 642-M. come. 12:19 Delaware St,
CAVWOOD REAL TY , tittpit + BBQ. elepnt alale Cott i Mesi DUPLEX et ocean • 4 br, 2 NO matter "11.at it J:s, YoU
~ W, Q>uil H\¥Y., .NB • , for an '&d ·~ liA!!ll around e:ntry h•ll. StQ.1720 642-4905 ba up,! br, 2 ba dn. View. can aell It wttb a DAll.Y l!...-!!!1 .. l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l ___ .!S:41::1:!2'0!!. ___ 1 ~R~E~A::L~T:.:O~R~S~_:64:4::7.::66~2 ""clock, dtal GU-561'. TARBELL 2'55 Htrbor Prep lnl. & film. 675-0922 P ILOT WANT AO! Ml-WS
'
962-6911 Anytlm•
' 'V.1 HITE ELEPHANTS"
ovemuvilng your houM!
"Cash" .. sell 1htm thru
Daily P ilot Cl&.55Uicd
""..,,... .... .,..., ... 'T...,,,.,r""f,....,...,...,..,,.,....,....,...,...,......,,........,.,..,,.,....,,,..,.,,......,,-.,-.,,-r.--,,-,,.,,,,..,,,.,. . ..,,~,,,.. -,,-...,,,,,...~,,,r.'1•~•rr nnc-·-.·1 r:-; •• ~ t :; t' r. ft!!•~ .. 'It .1 , 1. • 1 ~;:: • ;:-;r rl r •• • i 1 ·; -,,. i< .. ij ••••
~L;SP"f,T • Tuesdu, Orcembtr 1.5, 1970
ilJAT,.. RENTALS REMTALS RENTALS RENTALS RENTALS RENTAL' RENTALS RENTALS 'HouMJ l'umlohod Houw Unfumlshod Aptt. Furnished Aptt. Fumlohod Ap!t. Unfumlshed ~ Unlvmlllhod Ap!t. Unfumlohod ~· Unfurnlshod Apls. Unfurnlshod f~§·~1;;;~2G~40~1~U~n~lve~n~ltygjP~•~rlt~~m7~,l~H~un~l~IR1~~1on;is.~och~t-~H~un~tl~ntf~~on~Bo~odi~~-~-~·l~O...~~r~•kl ;;;~-~ N!'!E"'! ... ch , 5200....,flO!! Booch 5!00 Bolboo 5300 Huntington Booch 5400
"80 W/Utflltf-· OCEANFRONT 1 br • ll.50 + BEACHBLUFF Apt• ~llBR'-P~·i:.o1 c~.z.:m....r:R!.~~ 1 /l Q // VENDOME PRESTIGE LOCATION utUt!ltolt~i:;rlY. NEw2BR .. 2Ba,dbbw"h.
... olnatu or COllples, Move S BR, D.R., 2 !>< ....... $321 o/..a ainla ....l<f61'1n0~Q IMMACULATE APTSJ ""'· pool. patio. 8231 Ellh.
la ....... l BR, Fam Rm, 2\l bl ••• $300 -ADULT and '""'NER SQUARE 642-3<11 or 647-3967, BLUE BEACON c BR, taznn,, rm., 211 bl. Casull estate living. Enter Lo Quinto Her-f'AMILY S.ctloo IV1""' APARTMENTS Lido Isle S35I 'LR:;cG,,:.:_Allr,...;.;ac-2~e='r-'fllOc'-m~l=l39.
645-0W 2500 Sq, Ft, ........... $375 111osa's lush green atmosphere & stroll tr... CloM to shopping, Pork • d ' 1 1 d' ,., I ff h 1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;; All "''"'· Pool. Kl6• & WE HAVE OTHERS! lined walk ways to your apt * Spa\.!Joua 3 BR's, 2 b& Imme 10 e Yi o iecent ,vvestc i $ op· LUXURIOUS b'ont apart. pets nk. )'urn. avl. 847-333Si
ALL UTILITllS INCLUDED * Swlm pool, puVarecn ping canfar-has a Jownhousa avail· mcnt, 3 bedroom, 2 ti.th, 968-7510· 2005
~CH PAd, Ll;una. to
Hatt w/blp person. Pvt bc:h,. ~ ""'· John 533M56, Ex
1 IR. Unf. $150 -Furn. $180 * Frpl, JndJv/lndry fac'la bltns, carpets, drapes, t!Wl· '1~B~R'". -unf~urn-.,-,'"."'Ad"'d"J'"ts-.,..-
2 BR. Unf. $175 -Furn. $210 1145 An•helm Ave. obis featuring private resiOential of· dtclc, fireplace and patio. ly. No pets. Encl gar. • S fir I d f • hln 11 COSTA MESA 00-2824 $395 Lease. To 6Ce call .• • $110/mo. 842-4549 • J>.•c. • Pans, ecor. urrus gs: ve · mosphere. 2 Bedroom. '." eter, gos & JEAN SMITH RL TR witlifn romantic setting w/fun or /crlvacy. --·" ' • 1 lilt. Adult., no ""· mu
nk B Q• I , ....... l!J!Dlll bl TH • I d d . K' h &46-~ <100 E. 17th St., CM I"""· N"'R OCEAN. I·•a·t •1 19t$" Terraced pool, pri. su en ga.s 1 w 1_. • ca e 11 v. inc u e in rent, 1tc en ..... c.11. " ..
8.-\0iELOR will share home hi We1tem Bank Bldf:. seculded seating compl. w/Ramada & Faun· E S built-ins include i:Jishwesher & d'isposel, ol<. $LIO/mo. ~3200 ev!s,
vJilh anothu Ceollere $tU· Univertlty Park taiD. RENTAL FIND R. 2 k 3 BR, downstri, bltns,
dfnt. etc.l 646-6245 Days IU-0101 Nlghta 1i: Color 'co.ord, ldt wi1 indirtct ti 9hting. !:: Frff To landlords wall to wall carpets, full length linen S.lboa Island 5355 pat., nr Bch & F..dinger.
Gi)iL to share ocean view, 'li::::::l:::::::l:I: =::=:::=:mi * Dtluxt r•ng• & ovens * Plush shag ~rP.tg. t=_ 64.S.Olll Orapes. Also available 11 ·2 & 3 Bed. LEASE 2 BR. 2 BA unfurn.1~64;.;2-c.;2;.:387='""~84::2-.:7062:;=-~~-·
b amed ceiling hour;e, Vic-• DON'T DELAYI -/!(Bonus storeg• SP.IC•+ Cov •. c t rport • t-4JJW.IM.C_,. ,.... Stove, ttfr\a, cp~ldrps. DELUXE 2 Br. Newly dee.,
tdrl• Beach. 494-1764 CALL US TOOAYI * Sculpturtd mir~I• pullfn1n le tilt b1ths room, $185 to $255. Call Bob Buckley Adults only, No pe ts , pool, FM, adults. 219 15th
1-'--------12 BR 2 baths $275 * El•_9•nt rtcrt1t1on room. $175 NEW 2 BR apt. Best at '645-0252 or come by MARINER 675-tl486. St., HB. 536-:mo
Cosio MoH 2100 4 BR· 2 ba. Eli.;;;·:::. $275 FURNISHED MODELS OPEN DAILY Co!oca•talloMo . .,.356_ E. 20641h._.iJ; SQUARE /\perlments. .Ii" lrv'ine * BALBOA ISLAND • 2 br. I BR ap1. N•ar b•ach. $135.
: E1e'8nt 3 Br 2}1; ba ,, $C25 Blk from Huntington Center, San Diego .,..,. frplc. Ca 11 after 4, 213/ AduJtg.
AVAIL Jan. ~. Halecrest. 3 4 BR. 2% baths •••••••• $350 Frwy .. Goldenwest College. Costa Mtsa 5100 Ave., N .B. 377-2140 8474461 or 536-1710 ~room home. Nr Baku &
3
BR. mo. ta ma ••..•• $l50 San Diego Frwy. to Beach Blvd., So. on ~~~~~~~=~;m~~~~~~~~~,j~g~~~~~~~ STOVE & retrig, 2 hr. pvt Fairview. Adult family, no 3 BR.02~ baths .: •• $300-$325 Beach S blks. to Holt; W. on Holt to • • • Huntington B•ach 5400 trrrace. Secluded, si ;,.; mo. ~ ~~t mo. Box P2200·2043, 3 i Ba.r lnboedu .. h ... ~.l340,, Cotllo•OMouin·t·· H ormoso 714: 147.5441: BRAND NEW 2 BR. Cotto Mo.. 5100 Newport Boech 5200 '"" & Acaci•. H.B. •1&-9111
REALLY DIFFERENT! * VALUE " Quiet 2 Br,, CHANNEL front 2 BR. ON BEACH! Fountain Vallty 54111!
N•wport Beach 4100 N•wport Be•ch 4200 All deluxe features, Priv. pa.. crpta, drpa, dshwhr, pool. upstalr.i apt, New cpl, drps.
tias beam ceilings, panel. Adult1. Na pets. $130. 2295 Boat dock, Cpl only, S200 • 2 BR unt. From $225 AU. NEW
TOWNHOUSE • b<auti!ul, REALTY CASA de ORO STEPS t~ &b, lrg 2 Br. Ing; lq>Jcs avail. Big '" Pacifio Avo., C.M. 548-<018. mo. 673,.9556 au 6 • 2 BR Furn. From $285 VALLEY PARK
trh:iern, 3 br, 214 ba, frplc, Un iv. Park Center, Irvine CASUAL beam ceilings, frple, radio bldg, putting green, sand or 642-4429 DUPLEX ~ 2 Br. garage, Ql.rpets-drapes-dishwasher Far FAMILIES with pre-
p4tip, pool. 2-car garage, all Call Anytime 833-0820 CALIF. LIVING! ·gar dr. $220/yrly. 642-3490 volleyball. (You Name It!). LGE, clean, quiet 1 & 2 hr drps, stove, shag cpts, large beated pool-saune..;.tennis school children only,
b!Jm,' crpts, drps, Lease ~~~~~~~~~ in a warm Medit. atmos· * OCEANFRONT 1 BR. Adulfs, M pe11. Close .to apts. l hr $110, water paid. patio. Back Bay $155 , rec room-ocean views 2 & 3 BR and 2 BR Studio
SJlS/mo, 523-4710 or pbere, Spacious color co. Yearly $175/mo. Also $140. everything, $165. 2 hr $160, util paid. Na Adults, no pell. 642-2261 patios-ample parking, SlliO ta $21.S
84'-5991 eves or wknds. 1----------~· ted d . d & 673-2259 or 644-597'l children. 33l·A Avoca.ck>, 2 Security gum:ls.
Co-• dol Mor -~· ...-..1ru1. apta • e&Jglle ,,_ CM BR, 2 BA, bltllll. erpt.s, HUNTINGTON 17256 Sauth Euclid, FV 3 BR 2 BA with view & •vu ~~ turni.sbed for style & com-JOI w. Bay St. (btwn Harbor drps $170 N H U (Just Sauth ot WarnerX
'htdlfiltrd pool, avail now at 2 Br. view Furnished 'Til tort. a Priv htd pool • Ntwport Hgts. 4210 & Newpon Blvd, ~ mi N. Inq.' 4150 ~atr~1 :J': PACIFIC (714) 540-4715
$473 mo. Call Mr. Hoegee June' lit. $3oo Mo. • Kitchen w/ indirect lighting CLEAN 1 or 2 Br. Adults, no ot l9th~ • NOW RENTING • 642-4387 642-lm.
*8424, Ag!. UNF. 3 Br. 2 Ba. Weslcliff. e Deluxe RIO, UTlL, JN· pets. Lg kit. $~$150. 2421 64&-0073 Mesa Verde Atta. NEW Du. 1U OCEAN AVE., H.a Santa Ana 5620
4 iR & den, ~ blk to heh. Exceptional at $350, CLUDU>, Adl.llts only .. no E. 16th St, NB. ~l80L e !Jao ask abaut our e plexes, 2 Ir 3BR, bltns, encl BAYFRONT YEARLY (714) 536-1481 -:;;;;;;;::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;";;;;~1 w tr ""ls. BRAND NEW SUPER apt. -pr, patios. wshr / dryer 2 br, 2 ba. untum (Will furn). Ofc, open 10 am-6 pW Daily •
Y rd. Vu of ocean. n University Realty 673-6510 r-BACHELOR •1,5 all features above + 2 Br hookup, Alaa lrg 2 & 3 BR Pvt beach &: patio. No pels, Managed by CAN'T BE BEAT 71lll Seashore Dr. 642-7671 3 B• e ... A,, brick tpl. • • " Corona dtl Mar 4250 ·• ~'UV> ""r mo. Call 67J.0774. WILLIAM WALTERS co. .... ucu 1 BR. i175 , 2 Ba., 2 trplcs. Ir. 4-plexea, 5f6.1.034 ............ ""
-r-L • 1' I •351 bltns e 2 car gar e Sa. of 365 W. WUson. 642-1971 NEWLY deooratetf 1 BR. -IMMAC., Newly decoratec1;I.!!!!!!!!..,!!!!!!!!!!!!..., 1,0 s • -Hwy • $250 Mo •• or wtll -NEW TOWNHOUSE 3 Bdrm bay S blea 0 B h SINGLE STORY sell. Realtor 675-5726 ./ Beautiful 1 & 2 BR turn Ideal lacation, i l60/mo. util DELUXE s. view, best ll SB n 8aC South Sea Atmosphere
LIDO I Isle 3d BR, 2ABail or unlurn apts. O~RING: incl. Adulta only. 514 TOWNHOUSES 2.tB!, 11~1:18<1· ~BR, Crptg, Dbea.~hea. ~~tYearly673-9060 2 BR .• 2 BATH
comp, tum' hse. va ---------·I sell clean. oven D y (in Fernleaf, 642-6766 or ... .,.s, tt: e ng gas ov. avi son Y J,rg 1 BR. Only $200 Carpets&. dlyl!
Utll's pd. 6'f3..G281. Lido ltlt 3351 2 Br), dispb, sh""' crpts, 494-4117 ON NEWPORT ~ACK BAY en, encl gar. Patios. 548-3605 2 BR, .den, 2 ba, cpt, drp&. 2 Br, 2 Ba. Only S22S Air Condiliotll'd _ -. 377 W. Wilson. 1 -I • 1 drps, Jac:uzzi &. Sauna th. 2 -BR, fully crptd, pool. So. 3 &: 4 BIW Ba Frpl tam .u<g IV rm, •torai:e, pa.. 2 Br w/ocean view & Private Patios
L.,una Beach 2705 3 Br, crpts, drp.s, bltns, Huge Pool, FOR ADULTS of Hwy. Clase to ahopa. • c, pooJ, jaccud, IHHI, am W sq• priv deck Only $300 HEATED POOL
frplc. Adulta. $300. 673-1768, nl Adults $185. lse.1673-8213. room, doub~ garage, Beaut. VACANT, Redecorated pell ok. $25.S. 6f2..5765. FUrniture av~ilable Plenty of lawn
I * RENTALS * 142 Vt. Uoclloe. OMYE.RRIMAC WOODS Joun.,. Pool. Billlanl•. througf>out 2 BR, Iba, cpl•. ff t• gt p .1. C LAGUNA BEACH 2 BR l·Blk to OcHn Adult" Childttns ..... drps, ,..,,,.;.. bltnJ, S9(] 3 Br, 2 Ba. unfllrn. Bl""· un ID on ac1 IC •rport & Slorago
·(A.) 2 bdrm, turn. unit. lge. Balboa Island 3355 425 Merrimac Way Call Aft 4: 544-4558 $250/mo. 642-0300, 540-5147 Joann St No D 2 yng Cfl)ll, drpa. $2'JS/mo. C&ll HIDDEN VILLAGE
tI'l!e shaded patia, 150 yds.1---------Costa Mesa. l ·BR., patla; walk to atotta childttn Ok, nc)peu°, $140. 540-7573 or aft 5 968-8658. APARTMENTS GARDEN APTS. · 1 2500 South Salta
'to beach. Leaae@$165 Mo. SUBLEASE 2--story 3-br. ]liJ 4 :'te ~P• • ,n~so•w:'up & beach. l Adult over 40. • MARTINIC'f)UE e * * NEW 2 & 3 BR. Shag ---------1 711 Qcean Ave .. H.C. Santa Ana e 5§6.1525
{B.) 2 bdrm., 2 balh, view, ba, crpts & drps, Thru $125 Mo. qt. 673-2222 crpts, dwhhr, a:ar. Only 3 Newport H•l9hts 5210 536-1487
cldse to beach & evez:ything. Sept. lat. $325. Alt 6, STUDIO &: 1 BR Apts Pvt bach rm & ba. Park .. Llkt Surroundings neighbors in your Bldg. I .;.;.;:.c.!C0.;.;..;..;.;==-:;;;;~1 Managed by
Fiftfplaoe, charm. Older 675-8721. • ColoLl r TV, P!10ne serv. J?G, I ' Nicely furn·d. No DELUXE 1-2 &-3 BR API'S. Child ok, Nr. S. Coast NICE 2 Br, pool, bltns, cptl!,, ~-w_1,,11.;.1,_m~w_a1_"~".:..cCo-'-. ~I ~VILLA MARSEILLES place w/ wood paneWna:. • nens, m1ud aerv Ava1, cooking. 673-6904 Alsa FURN. BACHELOR Plaza. 540-1973 or 54~'2.111 drps, patio. Adil~. no pets.1· (~t3 ~~~tier home, Huntington BNch 3400 Soc{~~ecl~~':em;:u~~~~S!etc l BEDROOM furn ap t :v,::;;s •* ~::u r:,: SPAC 2 hr, l~ ha studio. S145. 642-8001, 642-8006, Huntington Granada 'BRAND NEW
cl in Iocatian, Fireplace. BEAUT 4 bedrm, 2 ba. hame. 2376 NeWJ>Ort Blvd, 548-9755 w/iarage $l'75. 1m Sa.ala Ana Ave CM (:rpt&. drpi, bltns. N r 1 BR. From $13.'i SPACIOUS
Ki ben w/range & refrlg. Crpb, drps, all bltns, htd & • • • • • • • • • 1 * 675-5.55.1 * Mgr. Apt U3 • 646-5542 ~~~ & shaps. ;165 Irvine 5238 ::i BR. 2 bA. From $155 l & 2 Bdrm. Apts.
Dithwabr. Lease@ $3()0 Mo. filtered pool wltb auto FOR You &: room-mate on 2 BR apt, tur_niahed. 5 blkl BRAND NEW Ea.str;ide 1 k 2 ~~~'i;;;;;;;;-;--;:~a;~ I :;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1Sep FAMILY SECTION for Adult Living
MISSION REALTY sweep, 3 ca.r gar. Avail now. guaranteed 'j>ayment plan, from beach I.JI Corona del NEW LUXURY 1 & 2 Br. children ur.der S. Furn. & Unfurn.
985 S. Coast Hwy. Call Mr. Hoef!e 545-8424 Unusual NEW unit Jives ea. Mar $175 mo. 548-7983 BR. 1 &:: 2 baths. $lS5 to Dshwhr, ahag cpt. garages. NOW LEASING! Just Sauth ot Warner Di~hwasher. color coordinat-~ Phane 49'-0731 South Coast Realtars. tully private are.u &:: entry, $l9S. Crpts, drps, dshwhr, Pool & Rec. Quiet adult liv· New, family and adults units ed appliances • plush shag I-~-------°'""=~~~~~~-· 1 CA w/t-place. bath, beamed 1 BR. FURN-Nr. Shp'g $150. so!ll clean Pl• oven, all wtr tn8-! 642-44 70 with total recreation club on Golden West, H.B. 2 BR, 2 BA mobile home. ceilings, patio, refrig. All 602 Heliotrope, 646-6.300, & a:as pd. Hid paol. 324 E. c1a and hoo 2 11 __ _._(7._1:_:4c:>.c84:.::.7·.c1~0::55:.__ carpet • choice ot 2 color
RENTALS Driftwood Park at the rec. facilities. Available 644-8397. 2'.ltb St. 646--9148. IMMAC. 1 Br. Lrg sets. pre-ac I. 1, ' & 3 CASA del SOL schemes ~ 2 balhg • stall
Houses Unfumlthed beach. Adults only. mid-Dec. 646-0073 BolL--WILSON GARDENS APTS ~1.'.'u·tl!Ppdool .. .,~oA,,~~bl. no bdnn1 from $150. Nr. ihop. showers . 1"1.irro:'ed ward· ·-rr~,d~•:"w!"'ocl~s~Rl~Jy~84~1~-<5~11',,... I -SiH!CRP.Ci:EA'N2iBR-"'"' 4300 2 BR. Unf N 1 d ..--.,...,....,.,,, ping, golf, schools, Jusl robe doors . indirect llaht· Gtfteral 3000 ::-SHARP~LEAN 2 BR. urn. ew Y. ec. 2 BR studio 1% BA, util nn, &auth of San Diea:a Fwy. on Channing casuaJ new apt.I Ing in ldtcben • breakfa.st
2 BR, crpt, la:rg-e yard, patio. Pool, $155, Adlts, na pets • $25 WK-OCEANFRONT New cptl k drps. Spac ckise to scltls, Avail 12-15 Culver Dr., Irvine. 8J3.3733. at th i:,i;ach • bar • huge private fenced .._: 3 BR "' BA * garage. Privacy. 2 kids OK. Teens ok 642-9520 Lovely Bachelors, 1-Bdnn. grounds. Adult&, n<> pets. •1ss ""'1153. PARK WEST 1' BR. F-m •145 patio • plush landsca:pin ....
II{' • A • 1229 Delaware SL BONUS ARRANGEMENT Maki ser, Pool, utll. SltO mo. 2283 Fountain Wayr.:·=~~=-=='------1 '" • ·~ 190. Carpets, drapes, dbl E (Harbor turn w on LRG 2 BR apt, P'"°· d.._, APARTMENTS 2 BR. From $215 brick Bar-B-Q's -large heat.. -• F NI 1n-11 •• $235, Optlan ta buy, 4 Br &. This week ........ ·.Save US a 675-87~ • ·. • • ·.-Owned and Managod by 21~ B-kh"-t St HB erl pools &: lanai. gu . ncd yard, ce ....,"""" den, dishwasher. Nr Adams Wilson). cpta, util rm tor waRher & '''" ,....., """ home. Won't last! & Magnolia. 962-DOOl AcApuloo Apt& attractive, BAYFRONT-watch the baat GOLD MEDALLION dryer, aar. $l55 up. 546-41688 The IIVim Company (714) 962-6653 ' 3101 So. Bristol St.
l&LUE BEACON Pool, Util paid, Garden parade! a Br. furn, apt.~ 2 Bd 2 B th (1,2 Mi. N. of Sa. Coas: Pla.ia)
*'i 645·0111 * livinr. Adults. no pets. 18th to Dec 26th. 101, E . Modern 2 Br. 1~ Ba., pa.do, NEWLY decorated lge 1 BR. nns. .. a Santi Ana _L-'og~u_n_o_B_o_o_c_h __ 3_7_DS 2 BR. $115 • I BR. 1145 Balboa Blvd. 613-2760 orpu, -· GE kit. Encl. blln•, $137.50. Eost Bluff 5242 PHONE: 557.8200
*'WON'T LAST* 2 BR 2 ba, pllt I Ibo !800 Walla,,. Avo, C.M. gar, Many luxury ""'"' * 847·3458 * __ ;_ __ ...;;;:.;;:1 $150 MONTH • POOL i t200'mo. 5 eve use. $25 Per Wtek & Up Lido Isle 4351 ~ .• bus. $155. Adl.llt.s.120 E. * l•&: 2 BR. Newly carpeted, 1WNHOUSE 2 Br/2~ ba; 1ncl ept/d~. kids OK CLEAN garden apt 2 br. 1~
$165. O)zy 3 BR cottage 49'-8413 BACHELOR & 1 BR. wt · flrapes, elec.1 k i tc hen. bl tins & Frplc. encl dbl pr. DELAWARE STUDIO apts ba. din area. dshwshr, dl.sp, ~. ~~ ~~~t~~~.t.s, $26S. Beaut 3 BR 2 BA cust· TV & ,naid serv avail. L~~ ~~ni~nc18:cC:· i~ VILLA. MESA APT5. Children ok. Ph. 646-8153 752 Aniigos Wy; 675-5033. 2ti20 Delaware, H.B. stovt', crp!s, drp.s, patio
:BLUE BEACON bit. Beams thru, frpl, view, 450 Victoria, C.M. Mo. Including utUitles. 2 BR, Priv 'Qatio.11td pool. 2 BR studio apl $145. Inquire 64~2271: after 3 p.m. 536-1.Slli 1 :•;'~r.='1~1;;70~. ~546-6=~'"===o:I
1 * 645-0lll * Immac. 8.12-7449 eves. DELUXE 2 BR. furn & un-Bay & Beach Rlty. 675-3000 2 car encl d gar. Children 1343 Baker St, Apt A or B, Corona dtl Mar 5250 * FRESH AIR --5705 ~'=~~-.,.-'-~'-c,""cl wtlcome no pets please! or nll 531-2399 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil Laguna Beach i\tEiy CLEAN and spacious furn $145 ta $16.'i, Pool. 2 1 BR.. Lrg claseta. Poat $165 rnO 719 w WillSGn. •----------Wall< 3 blks to Beach!
3 tiedrm home with 11 fenc-Laguna Nlgutl 3707 children ok, 177 E, Zlnd St. Shut f 1 e board • Ne• r G46-l251 • • *2 BR, 1 ha, MES A Beaut. big 3 BR apt. w/w OCEAN VIEW • Lrg 2 BR. ~d yard, bltns and lots of ;G:;;Oo.:LF=coc:-uno""'•"v";,"w_ho_m..;•'°."4 642-3645 cpt/drps, Util pd. 1884 Q • Ad I L' VERDE. Nu ept, drps; gar, ,..._~ crpls, drps, bltns except apl<;. Unturn. Crpts, drps,
room. Mo/mo OK at $250. * 1 BR. Furn, upper. ~·onrovta Ave,CM u21•t ut rvin9 nopets.$150.5.57·8400. .,.~·1 ..,..,,1 refrig,S22a.Nope!g,536-J?U blt-inll, patios, walking caµ Aaent 546-4l41. br, 2 ba or 3 plus den. Carport. Pool. $l3S I mo. 1 &: BR. Shag cpl&, bltns. CLEAN 2 BR. Adulta over ...,. et"C' distance ta town. ·100 Clift
3 BnRM •·-"" 1 u Frplc, drps, n!w s.ha&' ~~· 560 Hamilton or call Balboe Island 4355 beAut lndscpd. $150 & $170 35. $140/mo. Ga& & water • WANT Older couple . to Dr., Laguna Belich. 494--.'>493
4"' • + .....,,...., rm., u bltns, outdoor patios, 5 , ... , 545-0760 incl all util, AduJts only 00 paid. 548-2407 ON TEN ACRES manage 6 units. (2 bdrl. $50
S95D I dinin& rm .. built~lns., brk. breezeway, trees. $295/mo. I -~-------COLLEGE Or wrkg girl, Jive ,,..ts. ,!::::,:;~;..:.::;__~-~ allowance un i130 ttntal. C d • I
$390 th No FEE •= ·~· ,-LRG 2 BR t d bit I • 2 •ft ~--• u·•·-w-,·te Da•·ly Pilot Box M-12 on omin um a man · • .,.,,.._,,, CLEAN & QUIET at the Balboa lslAnd Inn, 241 Avocada St. 646-0979 • crp s, rpa, ns, • ~ 1; ""'" • •uui" •
Newpart, 540.-1720. Furn. Bachelor $115. 1 Br. 'IV & te!e ph In m= rm. l $162.50 2 BR unit witb patio, na pets. S135. Wk:dys Fireplao!t '/ priv. patioll I :!JO W. Bay St, Costa Mesa.' BEAUTIFlJL Country Club
)3 BDRM .• Family rm., park Dana Point 3740 $125. Adults onlx. no pet.s. Br. $65/ma & up. 121 AgAte fireplace, crpts, drps, beam =·-'=t=S'°""'o'·-".;.'-'-'186-'1~-~-~;~:=r~:; WALK TO OCEAN Villa, C.r.L 2 hr. l '~ ba, pvt
I like yan;I. Costa Mega. Kids 2 BR, 2 ba, trplc. / ·crpts / See Mgr. #6 2135 Elden, CM Ave. ceiling, patio entry. Adults 5 ROOM apt, 2 Br, bltns, (MacArthur nr. CoNt Hwy) Lovely New 1 & 2 BR. Crpts, 'ba1io, crpts, drps, hltns, etc.
OK. brk., $200 a month, NO all $30 wk-l per, w/kit $35. only, _no pets, references. range & stovf', !iv, rm, din ~~~~~;~~~·l~d:"':'~·~d:w:h~r.i7~09~P~al~m~.--S260 mo, Call Jeanne
1-'EE. 540-1720. ~~s£:i,~5Ad~~. 4:_i:oozare Maid ser, linen11, TV & tele. Huntington Beech 4400 23;,.t Santa Ana Ave. rm & den. $190. 646-833.1 -CORONA DEL MAR 847-3957 =E=d'=w='•="'='=· ,;968-<32o==:3===
' RENTAL" :.~~~7~~~ 230l Npt BEAUTIFUL FURN. API'S .. ,_6_73"-0_3!J5 _______ 1 BR. Duplex. Stove/refr. Deluxe 2 BR. 2 ba., upstairs MO~A KAI 2 BR. Patio, Pool . Rentals Wanted 5990
lcosta Mesa 3100 Apts. Furnished I ~:.;;,:;,..:.,;,,:.;;,c._ __ ~~ $140.$165. Quiet, priv, patio, 2 * $170 ·* ~r:::~i..~ard. 2 4 2 apt. w/priv, sundeck, all bit· Children OK. $155 up. Inquire I;.::=:;;:.:::_:.:.::;:.:;.::::.._:::.;:; =;";;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; I ~:!:!!=;.!:.:~!!!::=!-;::: • BEAUT. Bach, &-1 Br. wardrobes, trplc, drtSfiing 3 BR. 1111 BA, patio, bit-Ins. l ,.:.;.;:=:..:.::....:=----1 in.s, cptd. draped, Jmmed. rent~! bonus plan, 8181 WANTED: By non-<irinker·
!LARGE 3 Bedroom, 2 bath, Gtner.al 4000 apta~ $35.00 wkly & up, rm, lacked sep, gar. Pool. crpts, drps, Ask about our LRG 3 Br, crpl.8, dl'J)5, new occupancY. $225 Per Mo., Garfield, "1 blk E. ol smoker. prof. \\'01nan: 4 Br.
\Vestside hame on a full 1-;;;;;;::;:-;,;:;;:;;;;;;;;-l~Furn':";!:;·::.· ~ln~cl~u~tll~. ;54~S-04~~51'-. ~ Sauna. Rec rm. discount plan. 880 Center St. paint. Kids ok. 1998 No. 1 :;..year lease. Beach. 962-8994. hse nr apt, nn Pcnin . \VIII a~. OUtilde BBQ and fire. RENTING FURNITURE 1 BR. furn. a.pt. Heated Pool. 17301 Keelson Ln. <1 blk w.1,.:".::~c.:834Q::..;:::_ _____ I ..;M.::•c:P.;:le:,.A;:_v::'::.· ::"::~_::::_::':..· ~-, WALK TO OCEAN I pay frrin1 S200 • $250/mo.
place, newly palnted & new CQSJS LESS JN26o ""Mo''n·t,ChVi•l•dltta.nco•k1 .. See at ~ ~~~8~lvd, on Slattr). HARBOR GREENS 2 BR. Crpt'd & drp'd. Adults, '' '75-&050 0 1 & 2 BR NEW apts. Frplc's, 540-3404, ;,.i~n•8.
carpets/drapes. $250 month. " m pets. S145/mo. 820 ._ llU'f"'I Cl... Patio, Adults. Lindborg Co. LEA.SE on lo1 & house
PERRON 642·1771 IMMAC, 1.2 BR. Lrg closets. 1 BR. FROM $125 l\fO. GARDEN & sryo;.o AP'I'S Center SL, CM. 642-5848 ' 536-2579 suitable for huitding -45' ;~~:~e~s l~RPe:U~~: Reclec. Pool . Adults, na pets. Overlooking beaut gard'n Ba.ch. I. 2, 3 BR I . tl'om suo. I============= 1 --.N"E;;w"'"o"u"P"L'E""'x,---l-*~S~m-.;ll::C::oh:::i;ld:.-r-.-n~O~K~ I boat. Reasonable. 213:
J\1ESA VERDE 3 BR, 2 Bath, I 00 "•' PURCHASE Util'a pd 548-0336 pa!io .~ htd pool, adlts. J035 2700 Peterson Way, C.M. Newport Beach 5200 Prlv. patla. Enclosed garage, NEW! 2 Br 2 ha. pstia 1,,",;;'::·~T"8:Cl;_,=,..-,c-c--c~=-I bl & 1' • • J2tb ST. across from Lake 546-0370 ISR I family room, tn range OPTION 1 BR. Adults. Pool. Ideal for Park. 53fr4900 .:.;;.:+::;:TH:_E_G_A_B_LE_S_* __ PARK NEWPORT -care Carpeted & drape1t. Comp. -or haJcnny 1ype Agl: AELI Engr. bachelor 77,
oven. frplc. crpts, drpa, Ind .t 1 ti bachelors. Spacious. $125. ·~ 1_, llvg 0 ••lkg lh wal•'" built-ins. ImmAc, land!cap.. * 64>-1!'1:0 nr 637-0514 * wants to rent ,;m! h!le in
12651 1"" Lab-do~ · 1 em se ec on 1993 Ch .. -h • .,. ~,, LUX. J BR. •l.50, 2 Br, 2 Ba. 2 Br. w/gar ll". Adu!'" ... v ' e •· I 3 BR b Pri N" I "-h CM Pl
I mo. """ '"'-'' "' hr d•I M nth to Mo ...... .roo-""'1-J ~ -"' 7 pool• 7 J'•n•·• c'" 11= 000 ng! • · 3 a. 'ce re-2 Br, dbl h•lh. pvt ~"o, n'P oc or · el\.se ( a W Baker) O~· Sat & "' • y, 0 • l-------~~-1 '185· . .,,· lovely Sp•••"•b bldg. 'P" I drp• I bltns, fncd yd ·' e.. "' ""' d •-" call (2131 "51 19~ ( 7 0 ' ' .--" • CUSTOM ONE t lb ih • -· Sp• From •175 lo 14~" uced ta $300 per month, dshwhr. -1. Adult•. Quo'•-· " -. £<} a 1 pm. S 1 room ap w a · · Quiet, serine 11.1mo1phcre. w/pa.Uo. 1AJS..B Orange · ->• ""· ,,.,.,, iei
un. Fumlhlr• Rental Older tenants on!~. $55 mo. Walk to bcb, 219 lS!h St, Ave. 6.16-4120. Bach. 1 or 2 Br. Also 2 sty •, '75·&050 0 _&J161bo6au1Cirual.ml•l•r;oinnc.'• "H'Bil.. Rooms for R•nt 5995 2 Br, drpl, atove, refria', 517 \V. l9th, C?tf. S48-348l Utilities included.~ Townhouses. Elec, kt. pri. • • . ;.;c:::;:::,:..:;_:::::.::..__:.::.:::1
~·a.rd. No pet&, 174 Monk Anaheim ••••j•·••••• 7?4-2800 NOW Renting · 2 Br furn, gd Bachelor $95/mo. UHi incl. Garden Apls. Bit· ins, priv. maid ~r cpl.s, drps Just N. /:.=:::..:=====~'.'../;;;:'i~';;'-21iii'--;;-;;";-;-* $l5 PER week· u P I
crpts, pµge & fenced e DEL LAKE MANOR e * DELUXE l & 2 BR pat. or bal Subtrn prkg, opt IW PM'"'I Cl.,llC.. 842-6121 .
Vi&la. IA.Habra ........... 694-3708 Joe. rec rm, htd pool. No Pool. Patio. 1 adult. patio, heated pool, /rplc. of f'asbion Isl at Jamboree * COROLIDO APTS * • NE\V 2 BR a P t s' w/kitchens. $27.50 per
children. $140/mo. 64&-5824 .,~,, .,,717 Adults. $145 mo. 546-SlSJ •. San Joaqu•·· Hills Rd. 2 BR S d Unf from $135, Cpt1, drps, bltns, wcek·UP Apt!, l\10TEL. 548-
!>rESA d•l Mar 3 Br. Blto•. PALM MESA APTS. ~ ~ .. . tu Jo, urn. All >'amily ...,lion. ,...7271, 9755 I New pa.Int & erpta, 1 BR. lUrniahed. Adults, no $125-LRG modern 1 BR. nr 2 BR, 2 Ba. Sunl<e-n Hv, rm., 644-1900 tor leasing info. elec. dshwh.r dbl carport &.1..:.c=:.::..:.CC"-"'-:.;.:...c.__ =-~=~---~-I
S250/mo. Oyl !146-9222, eves pet. C&ll After 5 pm. beach, crpts, drps, cbildtt!'n frpl ., balcony. Adults $l60. SEACLIFF Manor A p ta. lrg pool. tls0 &. up. 673.3378 2 BR, crpts, drp~. bltns. SLEEPING room. Ocean-I 545-4354 l BR FURN. $149.50 548-2080 ok. 409 Call!, 536-4261, 540-0896: 540-2j70 1255 Baker Spec. holiday discount + CHEERFUL 8c Out . 1 Close to beach. Baby ok. fro n1. ('lderly A:e-ntleman, all
IA TTRACT IVE 3 Br, BachelOrs Furnished. 1 BR. Adults only, No pets. 847-5169 AvAil. Jan. \gt manthly disc. $14~$19'.I. 1 &-br newly der,. Su:;~~gTod,;,$1'='·:::53&-:=;11:66:,======="='i=l·:1:70=';::"':,0·:6~7;>-,,;7566;:;,==-
'[Townhouse, nr CM city ha.II, from $140. Near sbop'g, $!:25 inel. utU. LRG attrac .2 Br. Avail now, DELUX, clean 2 Br. I" bo, 2 BR, l% BA, crpts. drps, ma.ture empt perso n l'
2 BR -· •11• 532 Cenler SI 540-0623 • ' Founlat'n Vallty 5410Founta'1n Volloy u10 2 baths, forced a.Ir htg, paol, ay.., • ;; mo. · Poat Kida k pets ok, $159. studio, Cpts, drps. pool, patio, pool, children we!. •6~7;,_..~9~7----~-·l~.:.::.:;.;:.::.;:.;.:..::.:::.c._.:.::.;.;.:.;:;:.::.::::..;.::.:::!. _ _:~:::;::.
12 car-... $225/mo 545--7474. " mo.Imo. OK EASfSlDE 2 BR unf. bousef 847...8335, 968-'1510. cleancul ad!ts. 1 chld ok. come. 1!>25 P 1 a ce n Ila, ::2 • . •-e POOL , Br, clean, upper, Stv/ref, * 2 BR DtJPLEX, un· e SAUNA f55"r7n9 .. ~7pts ~~!5 A~23up. Pete * 1 Ir 2 BR. Crpls, drpa, 646--0496. 548-26S2. gar, CID. S, of hwy. $190.
I furolshed. Crpt. "' drp.: •JACUZZI -~ or~~ bl'°'. 733 Lili. 536--lTOO, 2\1 BR. II> s., eocl palio, * BAYFRONT * oo P'~-Cpl pre!. 67S.7118,
Nice & clean. ~ 1561 ~tesa Dr. Costa Mesa. 1 BR. tum. $1:SO incl util. SJ&.-0275. pool, \vsh/dry, 1 tv /ref, Furnished & Unfur· .'-'c.3:_43'-;--11--'-95_&1'--t _•.;.co_1_1. __ ,
2 BR hou1e. Crpts " c.trp9. 1 Ph on• ,546..916Q Pool, garagf', d i s Posa 1. cpts/drps, Peta ok. J180. EXECUTIVE 4 Br • .2% J3a.
'h'.1d. $1<S -. No -ts. 20TI .,,..,,~!!!!'!!!!!~!!!'!!=' Adults, no peu. 642-2383 4705 830-8886. nlshed from $295. 2300 1 Frpl hi'· ,,_ .-~ l In Laguna Beach 642-2202 sq. t. , .us, gar.
\Yallace. Apt. 6. Just for Single Adult& 2 BR p11rtly furn'd, b t-s, -DELUX 2 BR, cpt. drps, FA ~~~-""::..:==---$ 34 5 /mo. I •e. 714
NEW orpl>. d.,,.. lgo 1.,,.,. SOUTH BAY CLUB """°· lt60. $30 WK LUXURY h•at. 0 • R. encl gar, '• 2 BR'•. nm. up. N•A< Hoag r,,::Go=''=':::nrod=·.::-==·'----
ed yan;I. 251S f;lden Ave. • APARTMENTS * 548-1425 * back yard, 1 child ok, no hospital. Ctpts, drps, bltns, CHOICE 2 Br. 2 Ba. Sa. <If
1185. "'~" ~_... • MESA VlLLA-147 Flower & up. Bachelon;, stnglea, l pets. 1160. 646-7411, Ref. wAsher/dl')'er s!)8ce, gar, J.I El bll I d ~-""'· N•wport Beech edrm, steps to bcb, all utiJ,1"'--'-'-""'"-'--'-_..c patla. 4217 Dana Road. wy. cc. ns, cps, rpc.
2 BR. New c:rptt, drw-, Cou· 880 Irvine A~. C.l\I. 1 BR Apt · $140 . htd pool, linens, rec rm, N£'\VLY DECORATED 646-8325 1250 mo. R.ltr, 673'-2222. p~ onQr, no pe11. $155/mo. (Irvine and 1600 * Alt 3 fi46-0920 * restaurant, cocktalla, dane-2 BR. cpl1. drps, blt·lns ,;2c.:,.:;R,c.:.---.. --.~~, ™MED. Occupancy 2 Br.,
!!•13""1405•or 1)46.-6762 (714) 645-455' inJ:'. Pool, AdltA, na pets, $14() B carpet • rape · '1tar, !rplc. Util ex Ira . l =...:.:=c"-Cc.:..'-'---/--,,;;~<,..;;;:;;;;=:;;,--Villag l "t A 149 E. Bay 642-9;i20 Oee&n view. •unde:c k, $nO/mo. Lease. 673-0216. HOLIDAY PLAZA N•wrrt Bt•ch 4200 e nn •Ocl Plt garage, w11.shlng tactl .
B ch 3200 DELUXE Spaclaus l BR ..;.;;;:;::~;;:~::;;";:::°''I -~=-~<94~·:!94.16~---I EASTStDE 1 br, w/trplc. $225/nio yrly. 642-3978 e~s 2 BR, trplc, Garden scttin&:.
Ntwpelt ·-"-----itumapt$US.He-atedpool. ANewWayTolive LARGE STU OIO·$l l 2• :134mf,utilpd.l adulton· &wlmds. lchlld.
2 BR fireplaee $2riCI Ample puking, No ~hUd· In Ntwport B•ach Beautiful vil"w on O IU y, Cal &42-8520 · '·2-'B'-R.-u_p_per_, -,.-mod--,-1-<d_;_no_w 11,:1:;;15;:.l;:m::':..· ___ __:644c.;.;·256l=I
1f bloclf to beach 118 39th NB ren. na ptts. 11165 Pomona, OAKWOOD GARDEN Drivt. Call co!ltet 213: 2 BR. unrurn, crpts, drp!!, d R f BRAND new. Ige .. unique 3
675-3699 or 642--0310 CM APARTMENTS 437~204 bltns. $130/mo. 568 w. :!t ~: $~·;:;"• a:ar. BR, 2~ BA. Best area. ~ lil~B~O~RMS~i.~.~2-l!~'iblolhiiis:s::-O,,.o;w;J:::=:·======= ~~16th Stret.t btwa Wilson or call MS.-0760 l·BR. furn. Utll ~!If. Baal _mc;oc.;,_•_13--6904;..c..;... _____ 1
carpeU..or. Faces pool. $275 Costa Mn• 4100 .u-v•ne snd Dover Dr. D p $135, 2 BF( carp. drapes, dack. $150 Yrly. 67:J..7340 2 BR. f'rp1c. Stv/Rt:t. nu
(714) "2 °170 •n• olnt 4740 bl-·. 1•r. 1 Child ov No r ...::::::..:::::...:~;,;:;::....:;:;;.._1 month. Rultor 548-6966. -""' "'-3 '"' 3 BR, 3 Ba. deluxe apt w/ sh& cpl, encl aar, $195/mo. * 2 BR. Fu:m. $15J. SAIL-Inn Motel. Deluxe rms SINGLE. TV, pool, pets ok. Ptls. Nr. stores. S48-6357 f:rplc, 1ge: balconlfJll, view of Nj' pets. li73--t109.
BUSIEST markeU!lace ln POOL B!IJll, ~ dl"P3, na betwn Bay & Be8Ch. month $~ & up wkl y. DANA ~ta• NOW TAkll'll appllcaUons for btY A octan. Ava.U Dec 17. 2 BR.. Apl. w/ pngt'.
town. 1be DAILY Pit.01' child~n, m pets. 32$.J E. inn Sll.S, Wkly Inn $37.~. r ina Inn, 34lll Coast Hwy, Jan 1 on IPftCioul 2 bt. 1~ Apt 1. 745 Domll'll'O Dt, N.B. Private enlttnet. SXICl/b:la.
Ou1lfted aectkm. Save 17th Pl, CM. 548-2'D8 ST;,-1841. UKE Tu tJ'llde? Our h• studios. 755 W. l8th St. Call &4$-1260 700 Narcissus. 675-1!74
money, ti.me A efiort h1 FURN hchel« & I Br.1'1"'a"R.="'~"°u"m-ap-1-. ~U~tll~.~YEA==R· Trader'• PAradlst column Is t BR Apt, new c:rpta, raw 2nd FIN Bll 2 Ba. 2 pallol;, NE'\V 2 br. 1 ba. ttplc, shag
•hopptnr from )'OUI' E·--'lonol·l,nl-·I LY G N hlld • ., -~ b<··"• ~" d · l ·'-· h&1r .. -... -a.race. o c ttn or r you!~ Lfnes. S Da,ya fl.)r drp!I, blt inl. $14S mo. u.,,c. lt&r, near ... :11. \.AJ,J. crpt, rp1, patiO, au ..... ,,
umc · :2._ll~D.cN.:;•:.;w'-'po:.;;;.r.;.t ..:.;.lvd--',_C_M_ •.c""c.'.;.'·-Cal:...;.l.;.6_?s._""1 __ •_fl_:s._ is. Call today .•. 642.-.'m711. Ms..o.151. 548-3148. l~cu. $200/mo. 67$-.5724.
:Joun lain~·
1 & Z B<drooiru -% Balbi
Adult LIVlnR
Fllrlllahed & un1umi.hec1 . , ...
e Db'--•'-' e St.•1 C-.e1•
• '"..,. r..w • Cl....t c-., ..
• ._"""' c.iu..,.
91185 Slator Avenue
' ""'. . ; ~! 1 ~ ... .!
I ~ ·--
-··---·-·-----·----------·· -------------------------------------
----.--.. ~-... -·--~--..---~-··--·----~--~~-
....,
Wheddyo Wont? Wh1ddy1 Gott
SPECIAL CLASSIFICATION FDR
NATURAL BORN SWAPPERS
Special Reta
ANNDUNCIMINTS
end NOTICIS
SlllVICI Dl•ICTORY ,SDV1CI g!Rl~llY i:.....~.;.;.... _____
1
=::..:.
carrmer t"' "" Houloclelftfnl 67J5 Jobo Mon, Wom. 1100 ~""!!!"'!!::~Nl~IOl~n.:,;W!!!!om.!!!' :...!.~ ~w ..... 1100 •
Announc-h 6410An-monh 6411 ~·11-NTllY HOUSE o~ CLIAN AUTO SALI SMAN KITCHEN ...... °"" :n. Stu· SERVICE Sittloh Ati.odam,
l-==================IMINoR-e,!;,•AIRS. No Job Ccmpktt Houtt Oun1nc Wanted pvt t.lme. Studet>t dent l'ftf. »JO'hr wk. Mu.st exp'd. tor c-aw Yatd ahUt. 1-........-rit be hard worker. Golden Emk'• Un50n Sftvlce, 2913
WANTED
OVERWEIGHT
LADIES
Too SmoJJ. Cabl"'I In ..... 642-6124 perlt rnd, No a pe "°' BHr ,,._.102. Harbor, C.M. ~ 6:
0
th e" cablneta. a ,.,..,. Servlc• nete'IAI')'. • • • • • • •• ~SER=Vl=CE""si..;:::--.-.Pwn""""•-.111;:;-ot-:o. 561175 U no ahlwtr ltavt Meu ea .... ,. ....... .,. 41111........._A mac t 66.2312.. H. o Carpet.I, willdoWI. !loon etc. ,,.,...._... ~ ttndant. Lub4 room ap.
•-•·-".n ' Rt• 6 Cornme'L 54M.U1 prtl'd. Ovtr 20. CdM, .,,......,, "" 2100 Harf:lor Blvd. fC$..<*6 * 67S-4ll2 * R~"'ODEUNG ,._ n~lo. EXP. a eantnc woman would L•DllS-~IVES
=u • ·-.-.... llke bouaework by hr or job. Aul1tant M•n•1•r "' '" STUt>ENT~ >.p ts or ovu.
Speclalbl Comm'!, reaidtn-Own trans. 540-18%;. Strof\f re ta 11 upttle.nce, WOMEN Wantfli part-tilnfl 1or new
tial. P~llnr, c • b In• t 1 • I,;;:;;=:=:=::=::==== I 1adits wear. Faahlon Ia. !"Award• Harbrir Center
m&tlHe, lonnlca. ~1598. L•ncfac•plftl MID land 646-4411 TIMES ARE TOUGH! HER!: Theatn. Apply at Cin1ma LET ••-Sw·•e c1o JL n--1• • IS ·YOUR OPPORTUNITY -.,a•-H .......... ~ ...... _ .. re~ A ;UM. AO>~, LAWN and p.J'Mn work, tree BABYSITrER 1or 5 yr, old TO HELP YOUR FAMILY ™ u1'ie1 .. '?°4W,nuW~'.
6'1'3-StlT. 49C-7853 e1tlmate•. Jteaaona b l e boy_ Live In, Lla:ht blMJK. HAVEWHATTHEYNEEDl ' ~M.
-ratet. 536-4385 alter 4 PM work, 8Jl>.399l Aft g PM SET YOUR OWN nME 'fO =====--:o--:-=;I
C•m•nt, Conc,..te '600 --BABYSJTl'ER: For 2 yr old WORK FULL OR PART SPECIALisrt S JN ANY
VICE •••• ~. Ll I 11•-... _ -·E ..... "' *"'RN FROM nELO. I )OU are out or
I
1 '
.S Lines -5 times· -5 bucks
I I.II.I I -AD MlllT INCLUO• ,_Wiie! Y.., JM"' M QMll. ~ YM; •Ill Ill ll'Me.
CEMENT WORK.~~ MAID SER ~ ;:'~:. ;..":" ... ~~ ..... ;_ ,,,., ' ........ , "'" work. channel your efforb
pv VVUll _,, <Pl'l""<WI $lQ 10 $1000 PER MO. WE-into &a.lea. This product , •1 d • t small, niuonable. Free ANXIOUS-to--pleue, hard BOAT S&leJ, Ambitious yna: TRAIN·YOU. NO EXPER. lf:'lll ltsell. Be a whoile. For weight re uc1n9 program o e >-Eatlm. H. stuOlck. 548-8615 working loc&l sir~ Medi man wanted for perm full NEEDED. NO GUB_fICKS. teolltt or "NOJ'k on oom-i-YOUR """ 411111/H ... ,....,. '-' ti ... ti H ftr*lflt.
l-lllOTHllllO "0• SALi -T•AOll ONLY! tablish 1tatistics: fo r rapid permanent CEMENT Work_ Reu. City holiday jobs. Good ret.. time pos\Uon w/an est Co. You mutt have• stnous de.. miuton bl.ala. Your ll'I00"1e
To Place Your Tr•der'1 P •radlM Ad
PHONE 642-5671 d I ~ d A: 1tate llc'd. Side walks, 645-31U. Salary + commlulon. A~ '1re to make money .. havt limited only to """"'" in-w.l.9hl loss, conducle b y qua h ie d" tJo 64" •n 4 pl ·~ nJ ~,, •-bJ ,. ··•• to o·•·r ,_ .. vea, pa s. .,._,_._ · y lGam-.... .,m o y, ~ car --a e '""" u ,.,-it.lath ... 67~7877 alter 5.
Physical culturists. Must b e • mini-MORE Concrete patio for Malnt.nenc• "21 w. Cout Hwy, NB. women, This b )'OW' c~ 1 ---.-~==;o--.--' ,
3 Units Nwpt g. or 3 units
C. f\-le1& for ll-12 unlt1 rt'l'l1 o: C.Mesa, Garden Gr, or
Anaheim. Ask for Al King
Jones Rlty Inc, NB. 673-6210
Trade 1955 l''ord Pick Up,
Short bed. 6 cylinder. Very
good cond, for VW or slm.
ilar car.
B comme:rclal units C-2 Jot,
98x:300. Income SOOD mo.
$45,IXX> eq. Trade for home
here or Oregon. Li!!f>n Vibert
RJrr. 5'18-(1)88. eve 6~.
22 Unlta, older: Lon.I!;
Beach, Eq. SSS.cm. Want
vacant R-2, R-' local land.
PYRAMID EXCHANGORS
67'>-8800
Builder will trarlc new
houJe equity ln Dana Poin t
lor improved lot, ~ach
citil!!S.
Mr. Webb * &t2.4905
12 Units, prime loc. Santa
Ana. 7X Gross, $50,000 E<t.
Trade for $50,000 to $60,000
home, duplex or triplex.
Owne r!Broktr 673-J430
~y Organ _ Top con·
ditlon, Chinese Oriental rug
and several small diamond
rings. Trade for auto or T
;;42-()821
Profitable 26 A ortU'lge .grove
xlnt tax ~hel,, F&C, for
yach!, inr. prop., bus. A
sreal at S3500/acre. McCN!a,
1200 Riverside Dr., Burbank
* * * --
I ,_., "' ttt to p-•e ~• can dO tt. e WANTED • HIGH DE.SERT fur Health. mum of 20 pound s o verweight, have Uesi,; ~~\ YM· ~ "1'~~ .. ~-nc. HOME Rtpa.ln:: Pain~. BOOKKEEPER--Part t l m e c•• ;v~fr "'<ius1n1 fQr ap. ~le Tile ~r WANT Calil-Nev. 2-3 M elev c .. ~ ax • .,_.,,,.,.,, carpentry, ctment work. Sm thru trial balance, ~ • A.nd
HAVE Cl cnr. 90xll7 2 bldgs transportatio n and not c urrently un-FREE Ear. Sawina, break· jobs OK. M6-644e 54Qi..4511 pointment 511·:5192. Unoliwn La.Yer
168,000 eq-$42,000 '"'· $445 d or doct o r's care. All inquiries com -""" hewing k oldploodtna. CARRIER PURE·RIJ[ for malt Job '" FWJ.-, mo. Owner, CM 646-1558. Servict il quallty. 548-8668. Matonry, lrlck 6130 8'7S-S1SI
Mott onlor b"''"'"· marine p let ely confid e nliol. 6620 COMPU:TE C.m•nt • BOYS • • • • • • • • THE DAILY PILOT I 1upplies & equipment_ Net Contr•ctor1 __ _ _ _ _ _
S150Qmo. er_,,.,,,_,inven-,.fY Way, quality home est. Anytime, 146-4 917, W · · .... an 1-Ul"UI ~~ .. Ov
u......... · Muoruy. n :yn exper. "l""I' ANTED MACHINE OPERS Sinale "·--~ ~
IO'Y. Trade for car, boat or ASK FOR MISS POWELL ropair. Wallobcew,,., lloon M>-)183 ""'"'tor •por tlwear. ~ joumo!Ut In It. wo.j
'! 96&-8873. etc. No jo too amall. ' for the Exp'd only. Gd. PIY. men'1°deputment. Applican
DAILY PILOT * 642--3471 * must be able to J'tlPOlrf:. HIGH DESERT for H•alth. -537. 5414 -54.l-l<M, 24 hr a""'"'" Pelntlnt,
WANT CalJf-Nev. 2-3·M elev LIC'D Contr. Remodelfne, Pa-rhantlnt 6&50 Dana Point, San Juan MA INT EN A N CE Man, write clear!¥. undentand
J-(AIE Ct 90xl17 2 bldgt ...:~~<.::.:::::""';:;,'--'= p/time, j&nlk>rial &:. apt 1.uentlall ol pbotoiraphy A . cor. add-ons, roorlnr, patntlnc Ir clo tri CaPlstram and repain . 536-2579 betwn 4:30 , ........ ,. Top com ....... be,.. S68.000 eq-$42,000 inc. S4t5 ftpairs. 540-7858 or DO It younelf. You m. Caplltrano Beach. .....,.,.. r-v
mn. Owner, CM 646-85.58. M0-'?66t. Ava. 3 Br. house. Exter Contact Mr. Seay 11.t A: 5:30. fitl, lood aalary, attractive
. 'l BUSINESS and 6401 stucco $150. Incl mat'l It ILY PILOT MECHANIC Ne e d ed im· new QU&rten:. Apply in wrlt-'rrade S3800 eq. UI 2 BR. -FINANCIAL Lott Addi tions * Remodelinc labor. AU work 1 u ar. DA mediately. F/time. llOl ing only, cltln&" experience.
B•. mob II home in loVf!ly , ---------Gerwick &: Son, Lie 547 1"1 San CJ •-o!ll •··· Id Dr N B b k-·-' "'-........... don to ,. LOsr In Broadway Parki ng 6'T3-604l * S19-2'170 i..::::..c·::ftc::;,·,...,==---emen,.. ct1 ·.......,a e • , . ac .,, ..... ,.. • ""'-Bayside Vill8.g1'. for late Bu1ine11 Lot, Ftishion IBI, t Jrg blue No Wutinc SOS N. El Camino Jteal M-.. lcal "--, Mq&ftt Greenman, Ptt-
model camper/van or car. Opportunities 6300 pkg. Blue B eds p re ad . Remodellna: * Addi!Jons *WALLPAPER* 492-4.fa> .U ~ BOnoel Manager, Box 1560,
O\VNER 615-1642 Please call collect eves. KARL E. KENDALL When you call "Mac" COASTAL AGENCY Front ottice . exp. required, Co1t1'. Mna, Calli, DM&.
Ca.n build 4 units on R-4 APPLY NOW! 492-8569, d11ys 673--tsll Llcensed-Bondt'd 548-15.11' 5"-1'44 &f&.lTU A memhfr of Call AM, &G-2770, 2043 IW..::.:ANT~.;E;.D-, °"ot""d~,-, -'.,..-,-~=.-!
lot, Costa Mesa. Exchange Candy Jobbers NMded ~ST: 9 mo old Dach!hu~. C•rP9t Cleanl"I 6625 PAPERHANGING-Fre e Snellln&: & Snellin&: tne. ,:W:;•:;:••:::•::llU~Dr;:.:.:.,.:.N::·8::·"""',...,,= I Church cUJtodial, I l te
$7500 eq + TD's: For units, Enjoy operating your own liver-red color, m~. Vie. ea t, n tisfaction paran-The World's Largeit MEN or Women. Full par:-gardening. 35 hrs wkly. h.'l'.caror~Agt:fi45.1070, business. Li['hl, pleuant DelMar&SanlaAna Ave., Diamond Carpet Cleaninz teed. Dan Sc hwar t z , Profeislon•I lime. $2 hr + generoua r e a1o na bly l lex ible
637-llo14. work. Days or evenings. o.t Ans. ro Joe, Reward Pre-holkiay llP!da.I 547.5846• Employment Service bonu1e1. Call or come in, schedul e, Saturday• ttq'd,
CAPISTRANO C WNED, Full or part time. 548-6801 Free Minor Repain W/Clnc. l ·CH,:.,ORl~ST=MA="'s-°"Spec-ltl"'°-11""' 2790 Harbor Bl, CM 5fn.60S5 1869 Newport Blvd, F, Costa ~ !1~n +~rou~t!r~
4+ acres. Free & Clear. Men and women, agea
71
MALE grey 1 ho rt hai r ed 300' $15. We alM> install. Price! Fut' Ria:hl! ExL & ;Hor~~bor~B~l~Yd~.~a~1,;Ad~•~m~s;-;; I iMffi'"f-· lo"rn0d.10uii<& &:. Family Health, Make $130 000 TRADE tor income yea~ and over may ha_ndle tiger·slrlped cal lost vie Free ~L 6'5-lJl'?. Jnt. f'rtt Est. Bob ct CoSM:t-rIC SALES: NEW MEN to model suits &: appl 675--0210 9-~m, Moo-, · a given number ol locat10ns. Clilf 0 • 1 · N 8 sportswear. put time eves. "V
or? hou~·-' r rvtne, · · Clean a eaner Cleanest! Caveman 646-8707. l a n t astlc p r odu ct. "'G Inc. -'"~L Fri. RE ":roR •••m1 Refilling nur ware ='--' wlll'd for return 548-4260 II I ~ ~ 1~~-~=~~_,,~...,, ---~---~--:--:-! Top Brand c 11. n d y and · Kurt Wa,iner C.,,,et " INTER A: Exter. Accoua. Guaranteed c ente e .1.:=.c;;;"'-::....-----WARD SECY.~ Receptlonilt
20 To 40 acres producing snacks. Collecting money BLK It whl coc:k-a-poo/ter-Upholstery Cleanen. $9 ceillna:• aprayed, low prices ",..._""':;;=~~----I Nursifl&: in nurstnc ar.a. ~.
Citrus grove, Riverside. while attendini;c to locations. r !t'r, approx 3 mo old, lost average rm. 534 -5 30 5, gd work. 557-7455, 543-2Th9 COCKTAIL Waitreu )'OUftl, SUPERVISOR-~VN, 3--11:30 PM'1. Penonnel Dept. Hoq · l \\· .. Sat, Vic : Bake r & 63.l-5642. ti A \ NB $1500 Per acre equity, or Equipment shall be IUPP cu G M s.16-28.18 PAINTING • Ext-Int. lB yrs. attra'" ve. pp. n penon.. p.m. Hospital , .
local units or commerclal. as pPr invl!11tmen1. $975.00 rant, C. · 51EAM Jet carpet cleaning. «Ptr. Ina. Lie. F'r\'e eat. 719 W.19th St. C.M. LVN SUPERVISOR REUEF l,,Ow"AITRE'=~ss~. 0vo~-r°'2""1.-:s"MJe<>=::,1
Will trade up. 548-3263 TO $8125.00 CASH REQUIR-BLACK w/\.\-'hilr male poo-By ClarKatt, nation-wide Accoust. Ceilings, gsg..9t.:s COUNTER GIRL, part time 3-11;30 pm. pref, 2()...30' hr wk. $1.85 hr
ED. Wrile or phone Multi-rile, hlack collar, ltlst vie service. }>"fee e11. ~ PAINTING: Honest, guar-an-wk. ends, over 18. Chow LVN SUPERVISOR RELIEF + tipa Golden Bea r
What do you have to trade! StatE' Distr ibuting, Inc .. 1681 Brookhurst & Adams, H.B. teed work. Llc'd. Local ftf'a, Bell Restaurant, 2576 -Medicines 3-ll:JO pm 536-9102.
List it here -in Orange W. Broadway, Anaheim, Ca. Rev.•arrl , 96&-9471 C•rpat Laying & Call 615-5740 Aft S. Newport Blvd., C.M. LVN SUPERVISOR ll-'?:30 ---------·t
County's largest read trad-92802. 714 -778-5060. LOST, toy French poodle, RaJNlr 6626 ~~~;;;.:.;:.~;.,==· l ;DiiEN~T~ALi"'RECEPriii'~i>i'itiio>NNiiiIST.,-:.1 am .. " ~1s l=,:,C:C~~.,.-,,-,..c,.,..,,,,-· -• • ti INTERlOR Ir EXTERIOR L V N REL IE F ing post. v .i11 SM.ALL exp'd electronic con-white w/ ... v .. ca co ar. CARPET Lay H Carpet Jerry's Painting Service Desk onl.Y. Exp'd, Proficient SUPERVISOR ll-
7
:
30
am. * tractor w/ lrg potential It l-;';'Ri''wc;&N!;o..::.7o;"2-::-7'COl0:7-,o,:c=:=IPoJYe•ten, ~l'•~ Hi·lo's: e <196-1864 e with insurance. Alternoon to Park Lido Convalescent
Schoo:1-lnstructl0ft 7600 * * good name in Industry, MALE &alpoint Siamese shags. Sell ftlr labor . ==,,,=c..::~,:;;=-;;::::I eve hrl. (1-8or9pm),90me Center 642--8044 needs backer for short term ctil, 9 yrs old, lost \tic Cosla 5.39-3223. INT/Ex~r P&intifti. Free Sat's. Salaty open, binge RENTALS REAL ES rAl E b11nk financing It bonding. MeStl SI &. lnine. 646-8135 est. Ref's. lmmed. Service. benefits, Ph: any time fH .3 . NURSE AIDES-l-11, fl. time.
G ... r.I 0
--d b good -"tra<ls 646--0210, 642-3014. 9 .. A .. •"--"" PersoMel Dept. Ho .. "°'P·
Apts. Unfurnllhec:I =cu." Y '-U" • Lnst; arey & white cat. fluffy, ~~~~~::i~:~JI i""'~a)~8~am~·~pm~. ~-r;~·-1~:::~~~.: ... ~
IT'S YOUR MOYE
INDUSTRY CAREERS
1-;;z:;;:....:;=;.;.;;=---'-""'--------1 GoOO 7n ot .e:rof;s profit to femaJe, Vic Huntington Har . .,;;;.;.Dr;;;•P",:,.c'_lo'-a'-----"-30-FIRST Oau Paintin& &. * DISHWASHERS * N.B. Rooms for Rent SH5 Office Rental 6070 backer on mntraei by con. 1 Paper-h&niini:". Free Est
1.:.::::;c:.::..:.:;....:=;,;_--tract basis. No gimmicks or bour_ Rew. 846-5054 DRAPERY Call 5'15-3459. Day shift only, Full time. Payroll Superviaor * UPSfA.IRS priv. living 1670 SANTA ANA AVE. Ot dishonest practice1. Good BLACK Afghan. Female. MANUFACTURER 1========= I Apply ln person • S5i50 +. Exper, necess an tr&:
room, Bdrm & bath. up en. l Sc sq, Jt. nppty for person v.·/ in-Vic. Victoria and Placentia 22 Yrs in Area! 5of9--0236 Ancient Mariner volume Know computerlud f) OPERATIONS AGENT
tr, no cooking. $85/tnD. 675-2464 or 541-5032 tegrity. Can be proll'ctl'd by on 1219. PLEASE 833-6009 JNTERJOR TEXTILES Plastering, P•tch, p&yr0ll , (multi • branch or • TICKET SALES
839-218.'i. * XLNT OFFICE Space key man inaurance. 17!4) .c;;;_.:;=..c..==-''-"""lwe·ve Done: All The Models Re,.lr 6llO Restaurant multi state). Supef'Vi!e -4 •RESERVATIONS
Now Avail. LIDO BLDG, 65-256.'> 8am·5pm t""EM. longha.ired gray cat Let Us Design For You! 260'r W. Cobt HW)'. clerks. Process mamt pay. e Am FREIGHT-CARGO WORKING (Ir college girl1. 33i5 Via Lido, NB. 6?3--450l 1.:0:;;..:=.::;:_.c..-----4 while feet. gretn eyes, SpeciaJ Pre·Holida,y Sate. * PATCH PLASTERING Newport Beach ~. Exciting co_ e COMMUNICATIONS
AIRLINE & TRAVll
.•
iinglr, room lor r r n t Laguna Niguel. 495-S227 Call 5'19-0236, :U Hrs. All types. F rtt estimate& Nowrirt •·/kitchen privi!. 546--5793 ~"" =-1~ ft M t L 6320 Call M().6815 EXPERIENCED, slncli!! nee-e TRAVEL AGENT ~ """' sq. · oney D
0 •n die ... rators. Apply 82S w. Personne Agenc~ b h 01-~F'ICES. S60-100-Sl80. Al II School P lflc STUDIO, pvt enr & al • C-0sta 1'feu. 646-21~ 1st TD Loan Person.ts 6405 Fumitur• Re1torl"t Plumblnt -.18~1::;•;;s::;1.,cc::..M'=. =-;;== '"Do64··,· •• ~1·0·· N. • r nt • •c ·~ kitchi!!n; Pool. Back Bay, _____ & R·'i I hi '675 ·..:::::::::·.'!.. ___ ..;.:,;..;; : c EXTRAS -,10 E. 17th, S•nt• Ana " S7tl "'A" ...,,.7 ""''LLY LICENSED • 'fin 1 "I .. FILM o, nl!!eds
Student/gt.,, • ......... ....., Ind . I R t I 6090 r u PLUMBING REPAIR ror non-union work f.A.G. ~~"'"""'""'"'""!!!~~ -~="54='U~65.,~96=.,...--I ' LARGE FRONT ROOM ustr1• en a '?%'1o INTE~ Renowned Hindu Spiritualist t'URNITURE STRIPPING No job too small t11C 835-3501. Pex, exper. pref'd. will -COSTA MESA
Kitchen privileges, etc. SMALL UNITS 2 d TD L Advice on all matters. GRAND OPENING SPEC • 642-31-28 • ..................... .,..,.ii j train rlaht }>@non. Ph: PRE-SCHOOL
S75 mo. 548-0516 MESA n oan Lov~. M11rriagt",78 uslness IAL! Any average: chair or ~D-RAIN~~S,;:..,,P~l"U-od~?'"""Dr°'""'"·"t-ng Gan'I Ofc Escrow 1~"36-UB:::,,c;::c;I.~~~--~ ••t•. •-Mo"-v'·. II .:au ·+ COSTA Rr111dings given days a rocker sUipped SS &12-3445 ___ .. •n. __ .. ui" '"' ... ., .,. _,,, NICE Room. prlv, home, $95 & $l l5 mn. l mmed OCCU· Term~ ba!ied on equity. Wf'l'k, 10am _JO pm · -11low? Expertly cleiui= ..,. Familiar w I Escrow P• .... ~-PRIVATE Chrlltian achoo! Full day seuions. Plan.
kilch. privi.l .+Near iihop'g pancy. 66Q.77S sq ft. 642·2171 545-0611 312 N. El Camino Ri!!al, G•rd•nlng 66IO 1.;;2.l:;:"':":;:rv:=.i5.1f>..3854:==:===::=-Uttll. Typing. WSIJI ~!~· needs bus drlv;_r:_ .. lihort ned program, tiot lunches.
&: traruip. C.M. 54~1061 * NEW BUILDING *Serving Harbor are:a 21 yrs. San Cleml'nle I· Frnt. ofc apear. anta tu.... houn. Will train. VVUll drfy. Ages 2-6, lu'1! 6:30 am-6 pm,
i.::.::.:='-'------I S I M rt c '9"91"" ·~ ~1s Roofing 6950 MISS EXEC AGENCY ing recard requ.lttd. J6835 .,., k "· t ••• ·~ ]~" ,q fl units: orfice, res!-att •r o gag• o. ...v. ""'• ""rv.> AL'S GARDENING ~ w ....... mpare: ~ ~ 7 s 410 W, Cout Hwy, NB Broo kh ur1t, Fountai.D .. ~ .. 5237 M isc . Rent•I• room, l I0-22il power, plenty 336 Z, l th . trrc:t Oriental, Swedi11h & French (or Gardening Ii< small land-WENEDA Roofing Co. 646.39J9 'V~ol~l':•Y~·~962-~~l!~12:; . ....,,... __
1
PioArN~oL;;;· ;;;&><;;r-bim;;I
1:.::.:;.:::.;.;;,;.;.,..c _____ I of parking. 1B1h &: Whittier MASSAGE 11Capi11g M!rvice1 ca1J 5f0.51!18 Repairs, Recover or Nf'w 1 !!OI!~~!!"!~~~"'!'._ -:: PIANO Li!!&IO.rl& )OW' home
SINGLE Car garage for rent, Ave Cosla MeAA. ANNOUMCEMENTS Serving Newport, CdM, Cos. Roofs. 1100 Superior Ave, I: * GENERAL HELP * Purchasing Agent Certified teachers. MUAlc
Huntington Beach area• c. ~n NaUress, Real1or 1nd NOTICES la Mesa, Dover Shores, CM. 645-1691 24 HRS. H Good t y p I n
1
_ Purchaalna: systems. Mr. Ha t bc o e le .
5999
$20/mo. Call 646-26117. C.Oi1!a Mesa. 642-14113 10 A.M. to 12 P.M. 1-W...:"::t'°'c"litt;;;·"""'==:--ll B,CEFO;;,;:;i,Ri;iE~Y;;:o:::,:-.::buy:::C-, -:,::aJ!tt'T•. $3.75 R. ""---', Ca 11 Lorraine, 646-1368 nd (F Ad ) uoo 1813 Newpt:)M Blvd, O t t -•"-l~===~~.,-~--t NE\~ Bldg. 1'121! to 2300 6Q. Fou ree I -STORM REPAlR Guy Roollng Co. Recovtt Full nr part t me 645-27'10, 20(3 Wmclitt Dr., TAHITIAN ~ Hula o ....
REAL ESTATE t1 , Nr. Baker and :i-~airv1ew, 642•0450 'J'rl!f: work, surgecy, bracing, 11 p e<".I a1 11 t. 6 4 S-2180, Oependable, live in area. N.8 . By Maihiokalana. P hone
Gener ii 1 yr lease, s u 111 van , FOUN D: Yng, Sh 11 g g Y Licen.~ prune, Landscp ma In t, 548-9590. Mr. Powen 546-9862 =RM:;:;=/::Bo.nf-~-+,.--nl..,-ary,,--f,,.or 646-2112 alter 3 PM,
I ll!!n~c~o!!m~•~P:!:ro!'J-~rty:!!.~6000~~ !~,,......=="'=· =====;;:;:;! ~u~1:t ;'fi:;' ~17~~: I --*,..,MA="s"S"A"G"E,-*.,...-I cleanup Gjoba. Time ... ~n. ILE,:;:;E;::;ROO:;;"F"IN"G"""'c"o~:""""°"""=;;:. = * GENERAL HELP * rellable SITI'ER-HSKPR. 5 -*~P~O"P"U~L~A=R~P=1A"N=°*,.,..-I
I-...--SAUNA • \VHIRLPOOL Profen ardener. ~tie of all types. rl!! cover • $3 75 HR days wk, "Linda" 646-2066, Li!!uoos In home. $25 mo. PRICE REDUCED Lot. 6100 Vic: 15th & ?-1argut>rire . . J p ,_ il" . 646-589.1. ....p·•-, _1 -·"··•· Lie .._ • • 1 ~---------i Cd~f. 673-~, aJ6-8340, Ui\·e\y Gir s. lush ... c 1hes .. 1--"-::....~===,.---1 ... .._..,. • .,., ........ ~.. • :run or part time • • • • • • • • e 54&2759 e EaJ>tbluff Cus 6 unil s, Ownrs NEED Christmas money. 832-!ITIS Open 6 daya, noon-midnight. GARDENING bonded aince 1947. MZ-1222. Dependable, live In area.
4 Br, 3 Ba hm + 5 111udios. J\iust sacrifice my beautifu.i,1-H=U=Gc=F.~. "-m-,~1,--.,-,-. -,-,-,-YI 29.l() w. Coast """'Y, Newport By Experienced Japanese Mr. Powers
54
g.
9867 $196.500. Owner 6~:,oJ.l 1 d Beach 54&.3608 * 548-0228 * S.wlnt ff60 1--:=:==:======' j levPl. view. k>t~. oca.re_ . in 1ops1de, whi1e hottomside. j .,;;";~· ;· :;:::::..,,==-:-l:;-;""O>:;:;;;~;;;;;;;;"-"'T-;:;; I ~=='-------* HEY GALS * MERCHANDISE fOR
SALE AND TRADI I;; presrigP Arizona subd1v1s1on Very frit'ndly, bur misi;e5 ALCOHOLICS Anonymous. AL'S Landacaptna:. Tre e •~i•rnakin& -Alterations
:B;;u;;•l;•;•;;";;;;R;•:n;l•:l;;:;;;;6060;;; I fnr S495 each. 1\1. Morg~n, hi~ owner. Pleasl' call Phone ~2-7217 or write to removal. Yant ftmodellng. DeJlgned to suit )'(IU, t..arp expanding Company
• 121~ So, 7th St .• Ph0t"n1x, 646-524'1 P.O Box: 1223 Cosla Mesa. Trash hauling lot cleanup. Call Jo * 64&-6446 nffds 12 ral•. Full or part UNUSUAL
IMMEDIATE Ar izn n_a &5034-Tclept¥Jne r·ouNO, mrd. i izc, shag;gy · Repair 9J1mklen . 673-llli6. All•r•tlons -642•5145 time. Live In areL OPPORTUNITY MOVING! Like New: ti'
furniture IOOO
OCCUPANCY 6Q2-.!146-7>l.14. hlack feniale d011:; \tic. Announc•m•nts 6410 Exper. Japani!!st Gardener. $.1.25 HR. PART TIME e FULL TIME VECTRA 10fa. $100. Gt.mt 1,060 Sn. II. in convrn1f'nl .11 Horbor k N"~'port Blvd '-" · "uu-· 1 Compl•t• yd ,,,.,,\-. Neat Neat, accurate, 20 years exp. Mr ,., __ k 546.9863 Earn $200 to SlOOO per mo. table 1150, desk $145, "'w
" A 6200 · ' CHRISTMAS CARD • R JI F 1 °•2 '389 Introduce cte1&11, purified wa. ,.,t t ch ··••h sofa -m-locatefl shopping cen1er. S:t'iO cr••ae Nr. 19th, Costa Mes a . "" e a. re' es·,,...., I 6974 HE LP Wanted, Reif. pref. 18 • ou .... · ... .,
Per mo. 5 yrar lease, r~or 10 ACRES south of Palm.,_ .. _'-~'~'~"-~~~.,..---RETURN ADDRESS Complete Y•rd Cerel Tiie, Cer•m C or over. nl le• &. graveyard. 1er Into every home lor le modes $35 ea., matchlnl
\nformarion f·11ll _ • • 0 eod h " OUNO 1 Sh tr STICKERS JIM 540-4837 *Verne. The Tile Man .* Mu•t be courteous, neat, pe r gallon. Positivf' think-chr1. btaut cstm mta. dark 54,5440. Springs. v.'ner n 5 cas. · I-' : ma e e .If', Ap-$I FOR IOOO bo-ot & ttllabl•. Apply Jfll'·ro-retten only. can build pecan cocktail &:-commodes. ~ Vol•• 1750--SlOOO/acrr . Will prox 1 ". r olcl. Vf'ry well MONTHLY •Awn m a l n t , Cust. work. In111:all le re1>1.1n. "" hi h · -• M di Kl ~. ••-
STORE -1126 W. 19th St., CM.
Av11ll. 12/9.
Sl L'ifmo.
Office Rental
* 548-1768
6070
SUPER-DELUXE QUALITY
1-2-3 room. up to 3,000 11q.
ft. oUice sul~•-Immed. «-
c•Jpancy. Oran&e C n I Y.
Alrport lrvine Commerl'.
complei.: adj. Alrporter
Hotel &. 1Re1taun.nt, banks,
San Dir!go A: N'pt Fwys.
UNCROWDED PARKING
LOWEST RATES
Owntr/mgr, ::nn DuPont Dr.,
Rm 8 Nrwport Beach ~'\2'23 Cour1e1y to Broken
·' •-·d """' doll•' •·• ~ N '·" I I Pl I Jock-•'~th~Box. ,,. E. i earn1nzs a11u 11et.ure e l ft& or "Cueen uw·m sell fnr S3.iO/acrP. Ov.·nt'r ti-ail'll!!d, Vic Lucky Shopping .:><!" JU 'K' Lawn & 11pr inkler1 ln111alled. 0 JVU 00 sm · as er •r-C .,~ .>o.1 tulurl!!. Only serious, depend. Rf, lamps. 978-9051.
will carry on ea5y lermit: Center at AUanla, 1-1.B. your copy to: Rotcrtilling. Trees, shrubs patchin(. Leaking shower 17ttt St, .M. Re manirer. able, hard working peopli!! l===~-7"==-=~I
S.100 do,vn, S 3 5 /mo . 5?.6--4l27 Pilot Printing, Label Div, removed, &IS.34l3. repair, 847-1957/846-0206. HOUS EKEEPER • C 0 0 K, with mrmt. potential need srEREO &: cab S500 valu. 0~" 0 •12 l====C""O-=--c7''.:'7C Box 11175 CE"'""IC Tile work. Free EneraeUc, t1ependAble, tAke •-S!OO. $225 dlOl!!tte H:l, new ""'"""" · SHEPHERD I Spanlt>I m I)! Nev.'J)Ort Beach Ca._ '266.' EUROPEAN LANDSCAPER ~~ job too all cilargl!! of house. l teenq-e apply. CALL Mr. Cousu1s $100, &fabed ~JOO. Muat
SAC! $16,000, l plus levrl 15".2()" high, Gold w/blark. Your labels wui'be senl by Clean up . T~ Surgery ;!,-2426° am · girl,
2
dop:, mn-amoking for appointment. S37-6'19'l. &ell, 458 Costa. Meaa St..
Acn. Lake Ma the w s Good w/chllrlren. Founct \'lr return mail. Reason11blr. Eve11. 496-3383 c·-========== 100 CM
!Estate!!, J4 mi/Riverside. Hunlingron SeacliU lrAcl off ;;; family. 61~75 or 5'11)-.4 PURE RIJE =·=·==-~~-~I Ungmd/ull'1. Gorg view Goldtn Wes!. 536-9533 SERVICE DIRECTORY EXPER. Hawa.ilan Gardener Topsoil 69n HOUSEKEEPER, I l v e -1 n . • MOVING-Piano. S pa11 1 ah • lak S4S--M19 aft ---------! Com r I e I e G ar den Ing :..;_,;.;,.c...______ Rel'•, 10 c:are: for elderly eouch, Hl-F'1, leather chair,
mount es. ~1AN or hoy's prescription Babysitting 6.550 Service. KamaJanl. 646-4676. Top Soil, Sandy Loam woman. MT-4441 • • • • • • • • Wuht r, Re:trlg le mlac. Ste
5. glUM"a. Brov.·n horn rim LYMAN LANDSCAPING SALESMXN -Otrr OF Sat •t 218 Jumlni!!. CdM..
208 frame and brown leather MOTHER Will babysit. My Gener•I Services "82 6.13-7636 HSKPRS Emplyr pa,ys fee. WORK" S@ll a product that LIKE-NEW furniture, mlot
Out of St1ta Prop. 6 c11se. Vic nf Ne11o>port Blvd home. Fenced yard. 9 mos George Allen B)!land Aa:f'n-sell& il.ett. Work on eom-TV ron10le.
50
to &1'70 on.
$395 FULL PRICE !Ind 32nd . 6T...-1703 tn :t yn; preferre<I . West (If CARPENTRY, Cabs., Pal~ Upholstery 6990 cy547 "!,.~. B E. 16th, S.A. mlulon or wholesale: baais. C&JI 673-1409 btwn 3-7 pm, b. NOTICE Surf ' Seashore Harhor Crnter. S4 day,~ ting, Formica, Plbg ftpair, ;;.,;==~-----1~~~~~=~-==.:I No gi mm ic k•. no 31" •~-ht\ Pl CdM P INE Tree covered rain er. -hrly. Full rime nr nc· c<>ncrtle, a ppllances & Cz.ykoik l 'a (Csy-kos-key) HOUSEWIVES _ N EED .. ,1,,...., .. prom'-•· Your 11'"1"-~ a at'f', 'I.ht w/roatl CIO!ie tn 2. Dr are11. Your 2 dog11: Sm . I D Ex . ed •· I •-•-I -MOVING M'--I .. l.k •• ' ou..,..,,·~ed by Nat'I hlk/ "'-'hi & Sh11pherrl. Call easion11. · ays. penenc v.·ater '"'fl er rep ... ceme7n~. Custom Upholstery, 183 XTRA MONEY IN YOUR Income limited on!y to your ·b •~>.
1
a.m •
,-,, ... ~1 &;;;hern Oregnn Npt. Pound, lmmed! 5'18-lJ95. 646-1 l:ill Mon thru Sat. to Newport Bl\ld, CM 642-145C. SPARE TIME7 T!\11 pro-Initiative. You will deal c~ta, d~_dh 1• pa~!~~· 2JJ/~~U86 or-TI(/644-4185 FOUND: $300 +, B/31/70, UC'D day care. toddler: '? . JOBS&. EMftLOYMENT duct sells ltatlt Everyone wUPi a reputable firm. ~~',;2;.. .. ea, aruoac ....
am-5:30 pm wkly. Hot RAIN G u t.e r • Iruitalled. ::.:::.:;..::.;;;;.;;;...;;.;; ___ .I ha11 need for H. Work <m 61>-1877 alter s. ,,.._,;,ou_ :';:":;"O:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::=::I Newl)(lrt Bay. Ownc!r ld,n· bo B k . "· b. bl ob W ,_, M 7000 hot I ~co==y,;-.,s.=-:=c:-'.'.".=.,I DESK SPACE iify! \V, Slt'CPI nn 770 San me a I'. liar r/ a er, Qualtly wo.... n.cuona e. J an .u, en commission ()I' w tt• e ,t Sll:RE1'ARY • Part !1me VEL fa. nevtr u~.
_, 62_. .. Vl 1 A 90069 5'16-15.1~. Free C!I. 96A-2208. b11sis. No rlmmlck11 no Tues &. Friday'•, 9 to S. Call qulllfld (Jora, smlchgu&J'rled 222 Forest Avenu~ AR!_:..JE~·:,!W~•!!n~t!-~-~~-~I~"~"'!:':.,· ~-~· ~·~·~·~--l ~ii~ifr'ER:O"';;g.;:-ulmfiT~~Or!lcc.;:;m;1k!tiii•O: MATURE Man desire• work "bloe . ,icy" prom lllf:1. YtM1 SW. Matchlnr love11ea.t i1li. ;. BRACELET BABYSITTER, 1111 age!I, 24 ALL ype1 o eram c e, of any kind, Har experience will deaJ wtth • repUtable 545-!D. ~1. loguno Beach Private buyer wants apt units f'ound on Pacifi c: AvPJ. hour11. Warn1 meal~. blg pla11tering & masonry work. in janitorial and bui lding firm. 67>'1877 after S. SERV •. ettab. Fuller Bnllh I -'.;.;..u.°'1ieg"'-,-.-y~C~r--~,-.-.-.-I
,.94_9466 good locatlOn, any conditiofi. 642-0176 cb:;'i;'k~Y•~nl;;,·;,";;'-;...;:15i''i.:':'C'i.M:;;.;;;;·i='='~=d="';;w='="·='=<&-=l59='·==:=i maintenance. AlllO house ..c,:..c,,;,,:,,,:.;.;...,-=== rte. ~$175 wk. to 1t., allO fTI4I --·6~7~>3S~l~l----c-;-;=:lvNci7.T,-;;;n<;;;;j~;y"io;0: 8ABYSITTJNG, My home, 67_ and apt. window &: wall HOUSEWIVES &. T!:EN AG-pt dme. Sof6-5145 Too lute for trailer. S7S or
OFFICE spare w /Pho n" 4 BR Mme wanted lrom Yh~~at, ,:~keyc!re~~~~~~ by wt't'k or month. 601 19th H•ulln9 -c I 1 • n In I', AlllO floor ERS fl nr pt time. SeU phot. I .!=:.;;SER:=;;Vl;;CE;;::.;ST:=,A"TI'°'O'°N:;---1 trade krt small dinette R I. ~nrl« &. Brnllll t1mount of owner In N.B,. area. Up to A·-. '-2--0li6 St ., H.B. 536-9771. y ARD I Gar. CI eanup. malntenanct. 6 4 2-8 581 phate free -nonpol:luu.nt S A LE S MAN-MECHANIC.· ~
secrrt11rial V.'Ork WANTED 5--0 46 ... '" -Remove Uff1 IV)', truh. anytime. J a u n d r Y comf)lund,. Ph : I ~,.-,cu=sro="'M,-,ru=RN=ITU='-'R"'E'I
;:11 ':;;'.'.\'.',;": ""'· "'"" ~;'N:SS end s!~'~::;,. Brick, Mesonry, .... Grade, bockhoO, ~"" SANTA Cl.AUS for hire. 64~1522 "1tr 5 pm, Fltlt or part time. iu:m;,~ s.. ad cl&A
FINANCIAL ate --JUNK Want~. ~ me•·• E•p, for chlldren'a and/or Ex)>ertenct P"t'd. --~·~~~'~~~---~~! DESK SPACE fi75.IS17. Corona deJ ri1ar. """ .. '"" ..,
BUILD, Rtmodel, repair. pick ti p A caraa:e cleanups. adult partie1. 536-8296. • Advanctment opp!)'. LAJtGE otntna room table ]OS No. El C i mino Real Business ~ILKY TJ.;RRJER. Briek, b\Gck, c o n ere te Hauling_ F.d Stone:, 543-8913. e Training Prorr&m with 6 chairs, I 0 •1• _,{-Vlr. P11.rk l Center J b w nted • PaJd vacation ..,.. 543-34n Son Cl•m•n • pportun1 1•• "'""' • s.&8-0508 e earpt.ntry, no job !?O •mall TRASH &. Gan.1-e de1n·UP, 1 ° a ' 7020 • Prortt •"-rlnr 1 -;;;,·=-~~..,--,-~""°"1
<192-4420 "--'~ ... _,,1 • Lie. Cont!'. 96U94S d•us. SIO a loa.d. Free ett Women • WtU -•'d. •t•tlon SOLID maple dinlna: table, f MAii, vnicr, maaine ~ .. ¥ P FOUND -Id Dt ..... • bic"'"'• --v -.... • .... ~J •·t •· I. .~ CORONA DEL MAR wpplle1. Net Sl.500 Pf'r mo w/combCi~uo'h kd_ ,, ..... BRICK. Block, 1tono. Pat:iol'I, AQytime, 50-5031. MATUJtE Woman wi•he• e Xln t. Jocatton l w!YC' c-"· a a... --
5 Rm suite. stor, &.-prkg, now p/tlme. Req's $2000 8.'D-5°'2 entrance ways. No Job too JUNK Wanted. Free met&l JfOUSEKEEPING by dt,y, e HI sa.llonaie unit lnr SlOO. M7-U76
2 Ba, 1100 "'f. ft. grnd Or. c11.1h 1e<:ured by over S&Oli========== I 1.m1.ll. 646-7825, Ref furn. pick up &: prap cleanup1, er Babyslttlnc. ~~. For tntervlew conl11.ct Bob Did~ fVtt' th!nJc Ol fW&P' l ~=,;*:,:,";;J.6i-7ii;c;;7,,;;•,,.,:;::;: I i n ve n I or Y. 96 l-8 S 7 3 Los t uol Hauling. Ed Stone:. 543-8913 AIDES _ For convalescence, ~ l'ER.50'ffl. SCUddeT", M PM, 211X1 W.
1
_ .... t Whitt -,~ ••
1
,_ • NEWPO"T BEACH Clvlo l~~~·-~·:...,,===:-;:11;:;;-:;:::-:-;;;;:::-;-;-Coblnotmokl-65IO --·· H N 8 .... .... -........ ... n. C\'tt1/v.>imul "• HAULING • Cleanup. Tree• elderly care or l1mlly care. • ...-..t wy. · · IM 1ttle Jor IOl'fltthlftl" )'OU Center 300 ft 10 1000 rt. PART or full time wholeMle TWO dog& • Black • v.·hl CUS'l'0?.1 WOODWORK &: ahrubJ rtmaved. Fttt. Homemakers, 547""681. SERYJCES •~ SEll\fJCE STATION AT-can UM7 Try Ult Tnden
Answ I: &tenllarlal 6T~1fi0l. B1111, Oppty, for th<llt' who malt Pttk·a·poo. saJ! k l-'urnlture & Cabinets t5tlm•te. 64$-3433. THE futest draw in the n:NDANT all abltis optn. Pandile mlumt1 In Uie D&i-
3700 NEWPORT Al.VD. f'l.B. Wtl.111 Financial Sec. f'or M pep~r fr.male Schnau1.t'r 548-4235 nr 645-004• TllE SUN NEVER SETS M West • . • Deily PUol 488 E.17th (ll trvtne) C.M. Apply ln J;lff"IOn. 4878 Clln-17 Pilot Want~
Ori Tl-IE 8.AY .,bl!s:allon In Iv : Call 106t t>lr~ v .. rd, area. TIRED of that old tumltureT Pilot Clutl.09d Oual/Jtd Ad. &U-5678 '42-147D 2'":::.'.:°'::.·::.·.::N::...,::!:lc:Bel>.=::.... __ m.2461. 51).s!.U "8-00'!4 Reward. 54~1554 I:.:.::.=:::..:::..::.::.::::..:;::;:::::.::;.•.:.=:...:::==---·• • .;..;..::.....-"-------., _______ _
'.
i
i •
'
,ICHANDISI ,Olt MIRCHANDISI FOR MIRCHAHDISll FOil MlllCHANDtSI FOii ,P...;IT"-'-S-•_nd_L_IY_l"-STOC.c.;..;;.,K,1_TR_A_N_S_P_O_R_TA_T_l_ON __ 1_T_RAN_S_~.RTATION
D OMLY PILOT Tuesdl,1, Dtoonbtr 15, 1970 • Tll.ANSl'ORTATION
I ·-. AND Tll.ADI SALE AND nADI "SA;:.:;::LE;._AN;.:;.;;D~Tll.A=D-"'1-ll""SA"'L""l-'A-"N.;;:D;...T.;.;R,->.:;;'°':::.'_ FREE TO YOU • ......_ 1111
....,. ,-1-;;:;:;;;;-;:-:::-:;::-::::::1 ~-~L----~~J .Bo~•~ta~&'....Y~OCl;!h!!;h~_:-~!J~SP"'~~d:;!Sk~l'.;Bo!!!_!•!,!;1•~90~30 MOii• HomH
I OfRce ,urnltvre •10 Plenn l Org°'"' llM l !M~lta~l~l•!!n~•!•-~.n~-_!l!!:ill!!!JM~laal~!!l!""!?'!!"!?""!--!!!1'!!!00 1 LOVABLE, rrtY tl&tt 1trtpe D•ne Pupplts
'200
ll1:t?111l?f!l•1•11 Jf.i
Southern Caifamia's
, 1 ...... ;;.;.;.;.;; .. "'",_""'=-"":....-.. -... -. !!! NonCE I!! OtlNESE Hooked rue, a.II* MlNKSI'OL&UakinfUlly :·~~~':t AKC. Fawn, FunllJ.e. ApplL
1 Jll.50 e Rdill'd wood -.rm we have put every Plano Ir wool, 10 x 14 with rubber let ou t Emba Tourmaline. 1 pm. 12/lT canon. now be.Ina: accepted I chalrw., $29.50 • w 0rpn on Chriftmat: ,s.J,. fOl' padd~. Beige with Ooral Xlnt quallt)', Xlnt cond. for pannthood Sa.J ~
rotary ,_ ..... t...~ a clean l'W'teP tellot:IU New, pa!km $25, matchin& S x 5 $400, MS-m2. FREE call, to a rood home, aft 6 PM '
ha¥e the larre-l &e!WIOlJYl.I boo NI with pad ~· French I' h cl\armlf'll • Io v e I y • I,.===· ,-;:-,--= I Clll! \llod omo. tum in thil ~~ ~ ~ d at :;. Pn:Mnclal collet labte with ~ t ~ ~tuttt!:ie an: fttY/wht male, 2 yn old. CllRJSTMAS ~ • AKC
' .,.,Mc Mahan Ottk near de~r·s cost. 9"ne at lowtr shelf and drawer i20 bai. ' & bl l67s Please ca.ll 540-1943 12-15 rec, Champ 1NiiJd, Toy
I ...,.,.p111• For a montY 1av. Ktnmore. vacuum with at: ~U:·Ave.,._C.M. e. LOVABLE B mo male looks aprlcoi, 7 wQ, Shots. Very UOO Newport Blvd. ...., ta hrn I SU 646-4032 llkt Sher dor btn ' blk A precious, W l l I !:told til
Fri A G~ Schwinn Bike In gd memben:hlp. $315 PI us alt. 962.&&81 or 968.2.17912117 EXPERT ~ $7.50.
us. Open Thlll' &: eve1 cond $35, nttt ioftener $SOI tran.fer. Call 548--5306. Poodle puppies. mOllt colon, Sun alt. blende.r $7, touter $5, db PUPPY-pa.rt poo<lie/Pfl,rt
• VOLVO
Al 71's Are Here
Savinp Up To
$466
on remaining 70'1 t •8'782>
Over Se .. Del. Spec.
1970 California Nl'lwport, 121
·hp OMC: big whf!CI
Walllb'orll trallC'r ' x I n I
famUy 1kt ~t lot $2250.
Call 5<1-08T] -· * Micro SpMd Boot 1"'· .. m * 673-t53't
"
L , Bo.I Trall•ra 9032 eaa fADi& • 18' HULL-7' B •am fH PORTS w/tri.lJer. Acoe1sorie1. Best
1966 IJa.rbor, C.M. 646-9303 Otter. 646--7560, I Off' .. Eq
6'U4'0ulprn•nl IOll ~rci!tite.~~ uo~ I ~!Ji e ens , . N.B. Tennis Club tamiJy 'whr, k>v! children' hbrkn Chtiltrnu. 540-0354
WARD'S BALDWIN STUDIO bed w/bxspmp .l matt, NEW Black leather couch II Scotch Ten'ler, 10 wkJ. Will S50 up. Monkeys $35. Special
! UN D £ R W 0 0 D EI e c. 1819 Newport, C.M. &U-8484 hdbrd &: Ubrd $30, IOfa $30, Spani:"* llJ..,! ~ * * hold till Chrlltmu. Aft 5. ~T~~l. bird.I. S47-3851 or Fisherman's D@lighl, l 3' M11rlnt Equip 9035 ' typewriter, heavy duty of· NO\\. IN ONE LOCATION cocktail&: 2 match end Ibis, v•.-a•o 2131598-6274 ~1211'1 -,,,,..---------Thunderbird run-about, 150 '
: f1¢t model, 7 Million aerle1, Conn * Yamahll $11, kitchen tbl oak w/no SUM-GYM: SlJ&btJ,y Ulfd. CHILD'S Alleru forcta to TWO yr otd male Golden hp OMC item drive eng. 60 e WANTED • ! with t11ble: S150. MS.2308. * Thomas Orga ns chrl, $15. l~2 l..ol\.ll Ln, MUST SP;lL. give up 2~ yr old Blk Relflever "Champ," gold gal gas cap., other extras.
l L. C. Smith desk model. Also complete selection H.B. 968-9142. * 546-3093 alt 4:30 * Poodle--Tenier, Cat & 7 kit~ color, Choke chain & fl.ea Boat&. trlr. $ZD:l, 54.J...ll148. MARINE PRODUCT
16 tnc:h carriait type--of pianos & organs * AUCTION * tens, 8JG...4n3 12/17 coJ. Family lrieving -14' Pleasure Sid, elec 1t.&.rt 35 PUMP
: writer $25. 548-7983 Opon Daily 10 til 9 Misc. W11ntecl 1610 FREE T al ho _.. ij.EWARO, 549--3957 H.P. Suntop. Trailer. S495 or 21'." intake, 2" output. • (----~----Fine Furnltlll'e o qu me, ·~ best ~U! .,~..... 646-5361 ' Sat lo.fl * Sun 12.5 & Appll.anr.ea • WANTED • Doxle mix, sweet&: lovable, • GERMAN-Short hair ~· 11---------COAST MUSIC lncd yd , S4IJ..-0813 U/lT Pointer, 6 mo, ready lot 2 HP SEAGULL outboard.
Gari19e S11le I021 NEWPORT 11 HARBOR Auetio11.1 Friday, 7:30 p.m. MARINE PRODUCT training, AKC reg. Line ot -------~-< Xlnt llhape. $75.
l BOUGHT Mobile Hom e .
I Eveeythlna goes. Elec. appl,
1 clock.a, lamp1, silverware,
I' dinelle dishes bdrm set.
You ~ ill ~19. 2214
; B. Rut1e..rs Dr. C.M.
C()(lita Mesa * 642-28St Windy's Auction Barn PUMP NUTl'Y Coek-a-poo 1 yr old field champions, 644-.5194 S•llbOlts 9010 67>2400 ~ Nt-wport, CP4 646-8686 214" intake, 2" output Stm~trained, MZ-41>89, ~ AFGHAN AKC Fem. White J------------·J====~-S. =3·:::Eaa=:
SpiMt Piano $?95 Behind Tony's Bl~. Mat'l. ...._53'1 Commodore, N.B. U/lT w/blk mask. Champ blood· RENEGADE
Thom•• O r9•n $195 ;,39;;o .. -uH;;o'<'rro<>'iilN"'"T"•"'"•:-;,:;1-:,:;1-;:,f---:;.,-;W"AN7"TEiOiD.-"•,--l2 Yng fem . cats, 1 wht/blk line, Jhebrkn. Show or pe!. of
100 New & Used ra-"', Wm. •-•n • ~--i ..... _ .. ___ rhort hair, l calico Ion&" Will hold tor Chrilltmu. NEWPORT ...,. Pianos on Sa.le ·~--•>oU& .... ..,,..,.,. ...,..,,.u......... ha.it 5+6-7308 12/17 15'"""'' altps avail for power
Be•ch Music Center silverware a.nd e h est . CAU, 96MB6T · 84&.7653. Famoll.9 25' Tops'J cutter, hoe.Ill. Bayside Village, :.xi
J{untington Sch. 847-8536 Flair pattern. COit $125, UI·/========== 12 Parakeets w I ca ce . DALMA'MANS Ch'l.Il1p. bred. die!lel, A.P., 7 bags of sails, E. Coul Hwy. N.B.
ed approx. 6 tim~s, $50. ~ Machinery Etc. 8700 5.57-8790 12/17 Take borne Christmall or wk ~ery possible equipment to SUP Re ta.I 1 to 40 ft ~·~•AS ... -,,uo· .... stenotype machine, oever ' 4 Uvely kittens % RIW!llan before. Top cond. Pvt Pty; go anywhe1e 1'1 the v."Orld. boat Ln•nd 0
1'1"P N 1· ~.:>•= ..,._ ·~ -sed llT5 MT-9977 64>-1937. Asking-.... 646-1914 Ev ' 1 s e, ewpor
Bo.t Slip Mooring 9036
FINEST
ADULT PARK
SURROUNDED BY
ORANGE GROVE."i ANO
AGRJCUL'I\IRE
$300,000
RECREATION CENTER
Duc11 n .OO/Mo, Per Couplr
NO ENTREE 1''EE-PET OJ<.
14 MODELS
ON DISPLAY
WANT 1'0 MOVE IN NOWT
Doub!• Wldaa Set Up
Complete With
Awnings, Skirting, T•x
& Lie.
From $9999 I Ser, 7169)
1''1NANCING AVAILABLE
DLR. TR 193
• HANO-Made items. Barbie ! dolls, clothes. Stop-Smoking
: MD kit A" work, wall I plaque11. 2792 Mendoza, O f. Hammond, S 1 e in way, u , • LATHE H. duty 27" swing, 6' Blue. 642-3354 12/17 -"""· e. Beach. &l>-l260.
Yamaha, New & uaed pianos COMPLETE Elec. train set, fj!~tldt~p!~O'tw, ~~r::y· 2 Parakeets & cage l blue, 1 AIREDALE Puppies: AKC BA~SHEE ".'brglg sailboat -BOAT Slips available 26 to 40 14851 JEFFREY RD. o! most makes. Best buys in grttn. Muat be kepi Bom 9/lll70, $125 ea. reg 13 of hJ perlormance. ft Newpon Be ch
'l1 Appliances So. Calif. at Schmidt ]t1usic 3 engines w/can, 2 levels, relit. SJ250. 673-5274. • togethc.>r. 548-5163 12117 litter/champ pedigree , Complete, ready to uil. ' 6n~ ' 1100
on stand, Orig. cost $750. 1 """' """" ,.._ .. cond ., •• 6n -t ·~ LARGE .election of reoondi. Co., 1907 N. Main. Santa Yr old, sell as is $250 a.I I in-1----------A Home for Chrlalmu'!' Kil· .....,....,......, '-"""" '...,..,. ... ,.......,.,.,.,a 11=:::======== S MI. SOUTII 01'' TIJSTIN,
1.4 MI. SOUTH OF
SANTA ANA FRWY.
(11,4 Ml NO. 01"
tioned appliances, repos, ap. /~A;"~'~· cc;-;:c;-7.-;'7n.n"O eluded. Other toys avail at FREE TO YOU ty spayed fem, -needs kind CHRISTMAS pupples .(AKC). 6· Bo.it Ch rt
plianl:'f:sh'ommodel homes. STEINWAY PARLOR lD% o( cost. 675-3003 or adult 536-4037 12/17 Small min poodles. Will 16%' ~. Extremely fast, a er 9039
W dell · & llJ.at GRANO 673-5023. 1---------CU E 292 t'old WI Christmas. Shots & good eond, Full raee. J ib & e ver, aervice -Re linis hed, Overhauled & -------c-WE Are ~ady to help you T Mixed puppies. puppy clipped. 962-2195. splnnakl!r & trlr. $1250. Call Christmas Week Charter
antee. DUNLAP iuarant«d. See & heat' to MOVING I-Must 11eU b Y give someone a Merry ~~~7 N ° v a• C12~7 ''s=E~A7G=L~E~=p=UP=P=r=E=s.-A-K=c~. eves, 213196G-8033. 32' Twin-screw Chris 17141 132 ... 5
SAN DIEGO FWY.}'
appreciate. WARD'S 12/17! Tent tr!~ $159, ct"Uch Christmas. Cock-a-poo and born 11116170. Reserve SABOT, Stmi racing equipt. avail.** 548-2434 -APPLIANCE BALDWIN s Tu o J O, 1819 $15, mod. refnc. SIS, elec ? puppies, Siamese kittens, P LAYFUL blond kittens, 1815 Newport Blvd., C.M. Bl d 64" oAoA Remm, typewriter $40, dbl & mix·' pupp•'••· Will hold housebroken. l>Ttt to good yours now. Will hold til Xlnt sailing cond. Eves Bo t Stor 9 -·· 8X3t PARAMOUNT
• u•7711 e Newport v ·• ~. "" Christmu. 830-9118. a.lter 6, anytime wkends, • " e ~ In C.M. Adult Park ~ b@d compl. $IS, 133 E, 16th until Christmas. ca 11 'h'.':'.om~e.:,'63':'.l'.:.-7"'63~l~•~tt~5~p~m~l2'.'.!1~5'. I >iTi<Ti.TUiiES<'hru;;;;;;;-EBONY Ftsher Baby Gratld. S S CM. 646.m ~ . M JN J AT URE Schnauzer 644--4177. Space rent S52 mo,
FRIGIDAIRE Auto washe:r, What a beaut Christmas 1• p. l, 4. 642-4319 12117 LARGE gentle affectionate AKC ~g. 6 wkl. Ready t0 CORONADO 25 No. 596. By BOAT Sl'ORAGE.8Sc pe r ft., TotaJ price $2495 (BZ 22251
1 ~'. K=re x~nutto ;:~~: present! Sll95 0 w ne r . 2 -COUCHE s. match/ BEA UT I F UL L a r &e a.ltered male cat cheeked by go home for Christmas. owner. Like new, many ex· per month. Electricity & American l'\fobilhome Sale1
...., 673-2259, 644-5912 loveseat, dinette set, cmplt purebred Black!Tan G . vet. 675-4819. 12/15 642-~ tra.s. S6500. 71414~5261 water supplled. 54s.8148 • 56-8241 *
' ~~~T-ati5. de Ii v. ORGAN By Owner; O:mn 2 KJng.u bed, colfee tbl, & sht'pherd. F'l'ee !o qua! VERY Pretty .full grown POODLES -Standard AKC eves. -1~ 1.::;..:;..~:;..-=---=,..,._, manual, 25 note pedal, refr~. Lldo Isle. 673-0487 home Older Children Gd fema.le cat needs home Im-Own ired ho • all al' JR. Folkboat. sea-worthy·,/~
' KENMORE Or Whirlpool percussion, like new. $120D., =·-'=' ='~~--~---! s,a~chdog 817-9936 12'11's' mediately. 494-f.682 12/15 bl1ck,p.; rd,o,i Oufs'tm~'. '2'_a,hogl · • .,k_..i <~o '1280. $1000day•,', DON'T p IN c H 1 elec dryer, Old but in good 642-2393. • JAKE'S Used Everything ' 6 PRECIOUS small mixed 4.92--8364 ...., ..,.,,....,
• cond SaJ ea. Also Kenmore PERFECT ..... , Ti ddl •,,-=,,--,-7."--,--,,--1
h ~ LOWRY Sp•·-1 organ, xJnt Buy-5ell-Trade. Elec. golf ... t • ny cu Y b~ pups. Ready for 1 ., Mal ~t l il 54(}...1389 eves. wringer type was er .,..... ,.._ al , 1 al · Will e ......,... e pupp es, 8 ver 1 ====-=~---·< •, 54&-'672, 84.T-8115. cond. Orig cost $&50, will cart S2S. Front Throw me .. em epuppies. Christmu, 645--0487 U/lS miniature, 8 wk1 old, Used COLUMBIA 22, Im mac:
sell !or S430. 846-63n. mov.-er S6S. Color 1V $125. be 7 wks old on Christmas WEDGEWOOD &a.I 1love, to children, no papers, $40 Motor, Man1 other xtras, _
: GllEO °""'11 "coo""o "'coN"""o Tooon BALDWIN Organ It. speaker. 117 E. 18th, CM. dChriftY .. ,Wtmill kttEvp f~~1""'m2untl,,1 FREE. 646-2206 12/15 ea. 545-4270 before 4.:30. Slip. Sacriflce s 2 7 50 . ' i lge ~:r .our mobile home. Uke -new, full pedal li!!a~B~~-~;;~ayi!.~t 6 pm, u e. ,,,,_ 12ffi '·l"'l'-.... -.95-,,-~-.-S-hc_pe_nt_m_lx_.-Cal~J AKC REG TOY POODLE, 4~12&'; YOURSELF
• Bargain SM. 557-8905 keyboard.SIG00.644--4277. SlOO, a;ntact Mr. Laney or FREE To qual. homes. ~~-CALL AFT 4PM : Lido*t464~~~r !895
SUPER. 1970 dlx, 30'' 1'"rlga. LOWREY Spinet organ, dbl Mrs Greenman at the Beaut purebred, female, G. BRO\VN Baby Guinea Plgll. .....,
daire ell'c. range; yellow: keyboard, blonde, xlnt cond.. DAILY Pnm 330 w Bay Shepherd 1"' yrs, + beaut ~9!1&C 12/15 • sr. BERNARD pups, LIDO-Clean & comple!ely
used 2 mo. Sacrifice $125. Moving-sac S350. 548-3846. Costa Mesa. ' · ' ma.le G. Shepherd pups, -4. AKC, reg. Show quaJ. fitted. North sails, trlr. No.
496-2686 or 493-4196. • Farlin combo organ. Xlnt rnO!., nd homes w/fencell. PETS end LIVESTOCK * 962-7537 * 1865'. $975. 673--0676 all 6.
• REFRIGERATORS e sound. Cost new $700, sac FOR sale: Used 4' fluores· 649-2637 12/17 ---------AKC Blk miniature Poodles, •270 2131~5876 cent fixtures, $5 each, u is. Pets, Gen.r11I UGO FROM MODEL HOMES ., · .,.,_ · Contact Mr. Laney or Mra, BEAUT Pure wht yng adlt. '"-'=c..:c:.:.;;;.:;.;. __ _:.:.;.: I 3 mo old, $75. * 531·8105 * l20S Greerunan. Daily Pilot, 330 spayed cat blue. eyes-shots -TROPICAL Fish .1: ~u.iP-l --==~*'°"'61=3--0=J.1l=9~*==-
MAYTAG Wallher ln perfect I T_e_l•_v_i_ii_on______ West Bay Oollta Me!!& al.!IO 2 beaut tiger , altered ment sa.:le. Closing our 11~ ffilSH SETI'ER PUPS
condition $4.5. 968.86ll after 21" Zenith Color TV ' maJell -shots. 548--0813, everything muat Co· 20% lo REGISTERE0-6 wlu UPR~GHT Piano, $225. 836-4493. 12117 50% off. ~B E, Coast e 546-2969 e
6 pm. lremotel, new tube. Guitar w/casf'. $20 .t~=~-. -------l ====_,~-=~-o I_,-'=========' IS175. 548-6529 Ste!"'4rpliono AM/FM con-PA.RT Siamese, beautiful, ln-Hwy, CdM. 6~55. SCHNAUZER Pups, Male at
Antiques 8110 sole $25. Port. TV &: Stand tell, well trained litUe blk CHINCHILLAS: Em~ncy stud, Grooming, Hold 'til Hi~Fi &. Stereo 1210 SlS. 536-31139 after 5 pm. kbaldll" "Hane e d 1 ""~~ .!!! illness ~ sacrifice of Christmas.. 846--0839. ROUrTop desk. oak. Xlnt I '-'~.;..;'-'""--"'----y d shots ......,.."°""' -· rim ·-'--'· • -·• t BICYCLE& 20" 24" &: 26" • . _. P e a.iu.m.>a • '"" ... p ' GERMAN Shepherd AKC cond. S325. 842.-3235 or AKAi Model 150-D, reel to • alt 7. 12/17 Call 536-2241
2131425--4605 aft tOam. reel custom tape deck. 3 girls &: boys. 1 & 3 Spds. . ====~~~~--, large PUJ>!I. 2 liners. Tmn.s.
1=====7·===== / heads, microphones, wood Nicely painted. Good cond., KITIENS Some. long hair CHINCHILLAS: Be i i e & Call T14/637-Wi6.
•·wing u.chlnos 1120 bl t reuonable. Mini Bike 4 HP, 90rtle short hair Mun'; pt. standard w/cages. e SPR{)/GER .... ,.,, -nw ca net, many eatures. xlnt S9S &4Z.l272 Siamese some domestic. 7 642-2814 ..,.,.,, l'-;;....-''--------1 Uaed 3 mo. Make otter. 212 · . wks 4 mo all colorll. I----------Dogs, pick of litter.
Gon
SACRIFICE No. Coast Hwy, Apt 5, L.B. LADlf:S 106 carat diamond 836-4493 12115 Call 538-1173
1970 Sihger auto zic-zq, 11.uto RCA STEREO ioUtai.re. VVS, blue white, BEAUTIFUL T bb f al C•ts 8820 buttonhol~, blind hems, ov. Walnut Contemporar'!f appra111ed $1250 Sell SllSO · a Y em el----------
ercut, :ug.zags, etc, w/out cabinet. Excellent condition Pri party 212· No Coui kitten, 3% mo's, blk &: gray, SEAL.PT Slameae male, not
attadunentl. W/walm.Jt con-$!75 H · Apt 5 L.B ' deserted. Needs gd hm & regil. to breed w/lik:e fem
1r * LOVE FOR SALE. AKC
fawn. Great Danes, 7 wks.
968-5348.
' • wy, • · people or her own. 540-5487
sole. $42.22 full pttce, or -~-•c;.,,892--8539c,:,=:,.,.:•---1$350 TUITION to L. A, aft 1 PM, 12/17 for pick of litter. 646--0169 Horses 030 ~~alrnts, MS-8238, AKAI-X360D, 16 tapes ~~~t~~:h~~edro~ s~nt:: 3 Part PMdle, female P~P-Siami:,s_:e k~:i~~~~ & F CARVED Western Saddle,
SPECIAL 54~62 $275. Pvt Pty; Classes soon. pies, 6 wks, Ideal for ~1st. * 646-lSlO * lladdle bags, breast collar, Rt~ .. 1-any make, any model ~::~~=;;::::=~~~ 1~6~73-<~853~-~;;;;kvtt"":;;J;IJm~u~~-;l~~T:lll:•:•~C~~=cl:•· I----------tapidero1 &: bridle. Beaut. _... Hunt Beach Christmas gill! 54l)..-Ot28 in yodr own home. Clean, Sporting Goods 8500 SOFI Drink v e n d I n g · . . . D U2 eves.
oU &: adju11t. on I y ~3.95, machine, chest type . Walnut 3 Lovable tt.ger striped kitt· _09~•--------5-t ~=,..--....,,---,,.-,~~~
MS-8238 SURFBOARD finigh, Pa.id $350, take $100. ens, 4 mo a. Need perm, JUST IN TIME FOR BACK Bay Saddle Club
Like new 536-9Tn homes-shots, 548 -0813, Christmas boarding S45 mo, Steel cor· 6'1D"L x 19Y.i"W x 3~"T. Music al
1 __ 1_n_at_ru_m_•_n_1a ___ 1_1_25_1 ~~~·~ ~~
Present. 4 Pc. DRUM SET, red pearl, + hl-hat, 22" eyrnba.I,
throne, all access. Xlnt
cood. S400 invesl. -SaeriliC1!
$200. 548-5148 after <I pm or
weekend
SKIS • 215 Head competition
w/blndina:s $50. Boots, sz
~2~2. plastic $50, lthr $25.
67>1238
· ' 836-4493 12/17 rals for sale $50, English,
CARPET layers, have shag . * l'\Iale MaJtese, white, 1% Western lessons. 54(}...1871.
crpts deal direct, exp ;n. RUSSIAN Blue ~ Siamese yrll, Reg. * Silver teacup
1 11 fin. 5:!9"83Z7 cat looks. Russian Blue female Poodle * Black toy 8 MO old Chestnut coll, ~-8T..c can ' likes to hunt Am allerx:ic female Poodle. No paperi _ Parentage. ~ Qtr &: ~ Ap-,-,;;;;.,-.,;:;;-;;;--:;;o:i"";i;l~";;::5--0;;:137~=-~--''~"~l'S cheap! * 64&-0l42 • 333 E. paloosa. Well tempered. LAD
11
IES rukll Jett out do~ble BEAUTIFUL salmon .and lT!h St., C.M. •Art 5: 64~1794•
CO ar min 1to e. Appraised white male cat. 8 mo old. IF Yau v.oold like to buy a
value $1400, will sell for Very affect i onate. SHERRY'S POODLES nice. lively pony for
VICTORY 21', 3 11alls, out-
board motor $1950. 842-1847
or ~S23T.
OIRISTMAS Fltppcr No. 794
Yard dolly & cover $350.
Call 64&-216)
The
DAILY
PILOT
ORANGE
COAST'S
leading
Ront Coronet ST5, Roth ,M ._i1_c_e_l_l•~n~ao_u_• ___ l600 __
trombone $75, Nob I et 1 -
clarinet Sl20. Artley Flute •.. FACTORY C'LEARANCE
$125. 54.5-184t OUTSTANDING VALUES,
S400. ~2649. 548-0179 12/15 9 yn e.'q)erience Christmu, call 54D-«I02 aft
V3 CARAT • 35 pts, total BEAUT St. Bernard & All breed grooming, Free 1-'~' 30""'P=M"·=~~~--I M k I I
v.'edding .et. Never been UL Shephe~ mix, fem, l yr, pmaa;cl< .·~ •• ·,·nd',"l"""t col·~ .. t· * BUCXSKIN gelding pony, ar e p ace ed. Co.!lt $375, Best oUer. hsbrkn all shols loves .. .,... 9 yn old. Good disposition.
'"°"""""-===o:=~I ALL LIKE NEW, BIG DIS. BAN D Dissolved-Fender COUNTS. CH Rt ST t\f AS
Mustang guitar, G lb llon LAY-AWAY, 3 channel l.ight
Invader amp. & others. 1hows, Color organs, Auto
'-'m-31""'-79~·;;;;;;;;;cr;o-;:::;--:;c I color bars, Do-it.yourself 1..vNN CO,RONET, very gd. (.on1rols, Stereos, FM stereo
«>nd. Appral&ed $75. Bllt ob' radios, tape players &
tWs MS-247S. !apes. XREXSAR CORP.1 I ===_,=,-.,==~ I 87:'> "B" W. lSth St, N.B. SNARE dntm. LUD\VIG,
chrome. S60. Call 546--0573 * HO TRAIN LAYOUT. 6
after 5 Pl'\t clec switches , elec
.,, t'ONN director
case. Approx 2 m. 64tr2165.
trombone
yn old.
Pianos a Organs t130
Spacl•I Holidoy S•I•
FREE GIFTS
WITH PURCHASE
HAP.1.MOND
ORGAN srtJDIOS
tn CORONA DEL 1'1AR
2BSii E. C0ast Hwy. 673-8930
h1mtable, new dual loco
controls, mountain, tunnel,
bridge. Wired for 2 tra.in
operatlom. Mounted on 4x8
board for fold up .l cabinet
w/bul\etin boanl on reverse
11ide. SlOO. 64&-2165.
STEREO Phonograph
Al\ffFi\1 radio including 2
sepa ratt s peakers
wl record!. New $150, Smith
Coron11 adding machine like
new $100, 646-6296.
544-0617 diildre~. 968-2379 I ~.i111 546-2848 5.57-6207
NEW 10 spd boy's bike $50.
Custom built gun cablnel
$150. Man's walnut bachelor
chest &: mirror $75. 548-0012.
CARPET layer has hi.Io's,
sha11:s 11.t fant11stie uvings.
Free est. will please.
371-9958
5 SHORT WORDS MAKE ONE LINE-NO AD LESS THAN 3 LINES
2
TIMES • TIMES
7
TIMD
12
TIMES
$4.50 $6.80 $10.65 $15.90
$5.10 $8.21 $13.10 $20.10
POOL Tables, Brunswick
$259,$ & up. Chuck's Bowl.
ing & Billiards. 27SO Harbor
Blvd .• C.1\1. ~7340.
e SKI families reserve now!
Cabin at Mammoth Mn!.
Sips 7. Firepl, etc S18-$20
---·l----1----1----1---11---1---1---l·---
$6.00 $9.76 $15.55 $24.30
per day. Sll-3374 days. j
WE Loan.Buy-Sell 11.nythlng
Coast Pawn Ir Auction. 2426
Newport Blvd. 642-8400
MICRO Wave oven, like new.
Lear-Jet tape stereo Jor
home, new. Sac 846-2157.
PAYMENT ENCLOSED 0 SEND BILL 0
Publhil for ••••• •••• ,Jt'f', S..1!11111111 ., •• , •• , , , ••• ., •••• •••• , •••• ,, ••
Cltuilicttioft ••••• •• •• •• •• •• • • •• • • •• • • • • •• • • • • • • •• • • • • •• •• • • • • • ••
-N11111 • •• •• ••. • • • • • • • •• • • ·• • • • • • • • • •• •' •• '•' • •' •• '' '' '' ••' • • • •• •
Addl'tu • •• •• • ••• •• •• •• •• •• • • ·• • • •• •' • • •• '' • • • • •. •• •• •• • • •• •' •••
City , • , , •• , • , , , , • , , •• , •• , • , , , , • • 'h•11• •• , , , , , ,, , •• , ••••••••••• .
TO Fl&UU COST
P11t •ftly •111 woul I• ••ell
tp1c1 ab•••· l11dvda yovl'
add,au ., pho11a •urnb•r.
Thi 101f •f yoMr 1d 11 ti th•
•nd ef th• line en which lh•
l•d word •f your 1d i1 wrlt-
t.11. Add Sl.00 t rlr• If you
d11 ir1 v11 1f DAILY PILOT
lo• 11rvic1 with ... 1il1d t••
pli11.
-----------CUT Hiii -PASTI ON TOUl INn\.ON ----------•
IUSINESS REPLY MAIL
Oran91 Coast DAILY Pl LOT
I'. O. lox 1560
Con M-, Calif. 92626
~· r.tqcSl .. f ..... ,.,
TtMllW 11 t••
l.la!ttl Stat.ta
=
= =
(You're Not Dreaming)
But You ,Can
PINCH YOUR
PENNIES
• '
with a
PILOT l
PENNY PINCHER .
Classified Ad
3 LINES
2 TIMES
' $2.00 '
Any Item Priced
$50. or less
(If mor• th•n on• item,
c•nnot exceed $50.)
the combined totel
642-5678
=-~-·-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~1.~~
- . -- ----- -------· ------~--------------~-------· -----------;r----.-------..
Truck•
. c.
TRUCK. CENTER·
OfEV. '10 MONTE eAR.LO JM F<ird Squire w~. Atr.
$.S, f54 FuJI l?l?Wtr, MW .i'adiaJJ.
ONLY 11.600 MU.ES -4(.000 mi. X I n t. $1.fM. ~ ~fydramatlc,)IOwi:-r 1tte;rtng-54~280(.
·ss TR r.x> Trium fh, di&ebtaktt-"1ndi>Mi;AM/ --;,,,.,c-=ro=•=n-=sr"'A"'T"1'=o"N-I
5 Speed trans., tire. 1pe<: 1 ---~------1 overdrive. Musi JJell. T.0 .P. )'M multiplex, 11fa10 bucket WAGON V-f,
ehrome wtltt'I~. red eXter~ '66 POR$CHE MS-5358 aft 3 pin, Sf'l\lt, lull gaugf'a. llit whrtl,, S300 · •t S0.-21~ 1ar,, plush qio.ck inlerlor. b1ctory air cond .. chrome l==========I ~L:~, ~11. rifji. Coo1H1 912. S sp('Cd, brown>l--------._,,.u -,. 11port whel!la, wide track
't:M!ti ... ~... tf11 u l~•lack,f~n'flllWr\ • .'l ~ VOLKSWAGc,,• belted tirf'i, auto load levf"J. •'a.Ml: ~'::rtY. · 1 I , :f~, mOe,.tUMtl'""' er, etc., el{'. Bala nce ol fac.1----------1
CALL 546·6 750
24 hr. Phone
S·A LES ". liNtfili~·
2150 H1rbor Blvd., Coste MMa
. ..
TR 3 '!19. Very cood eon-
27,200 n1i. l''i.na corid. dUlon. }lardtop • con-
$1675 • • 533--0449 vf'rtlble. $5'!5 or bt1t oiler,
-~.
PORSCHE '69 2000 ROADSTER
CHEVROLET '~ .
POR.D
LINCOLN
Afl 10 A!i-1 call Maury $329' i '"l----.,-,VW ___ .;.._1 lory, ~·arranty, This Is an '65 Continental, 4-dr, hnHp
CHICK IVERSON uv abllOJulely gorgtoua automo. Full pwr, air. CleM! S1256. !=========;========· c "'°'=':...100=-:0:...'-':..."c.·7.;,506.;,·=~-I Gmn wtth'Cqqtraatlna: lntu. Jted, 'With mag whffls, wide blle. You'll l'lavl! 11) •f"t to 64f>.-21A2, Wlmril: ~
Mobile Hom•• '200 Trucks 9500 DOT DATSUN YW lot, tuned 1:4illl$t1 runs like oval tires, new engine gu11.r. apgreclate. (944BE~J I~----------OPEN DAILY 549-:ml Ext.,fi& (II' 6': new.,snr1$~ anteed tor 90 days, IFTI7t $3999
\Vant To Live Jn AND 1970 lfARBOR BLVD. rrl $799 e NABERS e
COSTA MESA '66 FORD Yi-TON SUNDAYS COSTA Mr-SA CHICK •IVERSON CHICK IVERSON CAOl~LAC
MUSTANG
Local 6pacei avaU11.ble now! 18835 Beach Blvd. 1963 PorsC'he super 90 new VW VW "1e carry rontra.'cts fact. Autnruized C&dill11.c Dir 11 you are se.rioua about buy. CUstom cah, bucket stats, HunttJWton Btach point & interior. Xlnt' ru~ -HARBOR LVD 6 I · I ti ..... he • Inv a mo'>ile hOme. • .Now's ranger packa&t-. dlr. Canip. lf2..7?8l or Y.0-040 . ..-549-3031 Ext, 66 or 67 54g'.3031 Ext. 66 or tiT on ears.$9$ l up, .ovw B ., cy" ~u nma c, rlUllO, a1oo
· '65 MUSTANG
the tlnte to 11ee ning cond. $2400 or be1t or. 1970 HARBOR BLVD. 1910 HARBOR BLVD. 214.'i Harbor Bl., 540-4392 COSTA Ml:.'iJA f'r, dlr. Exira cle11.11. (YEU,
BAY HARBOR ~;ke~~U:'::tra~1:~~ijna~;~ '71 'DATSllll PICfllBI l.!fl()er.,,.".,wc:"~k~'33-~l-23<~-"-'_""_'1 __ _:COS=.T:.:A;.LM:.:E:::S:.:A __ ,_ 1 _ _:.~co~ST~<=ME~~AA~:__i:==~~;;;~=== ~9100 OJK'n Sund11.y 9.15) Will take tnde -tll' ft• ue un VI" home, ~l I ' B K * 1968 Chev Caprice 3!16. Anc. prlvat. party. 546-l13S MOBILE HOMES privale parly, 5'1&-8736 or "BEAUTIFUL" 6.7 912 .T•-. ,.65 VW S.u•!..h•"k. AM/SW '69 V\Y, Radial tire11, f"M. UIC H or 494-6811. 142~ Baker St, (at Harbor) 494-61111 , Used • Radio, be•t~. 11~ N '" .. , ... 111ereo. Musi Sell~ $1500. -·--------1 ydromatio, air, F'f\-1 , till 1 ~~~~--~~....,,-~,
Costa Mesa M0-9470 "''"""=""'"""',.--~-~I bumper, dlr. Pin 1\ripplnr. ew mo1or, paint. ptl'f'll~,, radio, luggage rack' 645--1650 all 3:30 PM. BUICK 1968 RIVIERA wht-rl, deluxe In I er Io r. '65 Mu!tlU\J 289 HI 1h
195() f'ORIJ % r panel truck . \Viii take car in tl"Ad.t or; wiU Mita;& 5 11pd. K.o n 11 itlnroof. Lo ' ml. ; 99 8 ·I=;===='=='·==== 1'~3ctory air ronditklnlng, $1980. 846-:l1113. performanct enc. headers, f
Trip_I• Wlde Cornell ~~8r). ~~i~~· b::;~u~;:k;i~: finanee pr Iv 11. t e pany, ~tJ!.ISW Blk leath int. 644-1370. • VOLVO , vln}·I 1op. Tilt & telycopic 1 ~1965,,o.::..W,,.:,.b;'-,."--Che,:.,...v-y_l,..m-po-la1 •P"t'd, nffda little body
Continental • Pal'amount Make orter. 212 No, Coast M&-8736 or 49'4~1 . ~~~------J.,;i,f\v~wf'i"":e;;:,BBuU.,:Ontt -o.,;;,;;n;,.;:, I 111~ting, stereo, fuJJ. power. Coupe. Lz't eng, Rec:ent l-=cw-'.,''=-".,MMl.,_,,..1·--.,,-.,,-,:-1
&ITing!on e Universal !{ivy, Ai1t 5 L.B. .71 DATSUN l:lXI Coupe, 2400 ~69 9ll1 ii Euroran style. V"ry clean. Xtras, r ims, .. {XOL58t). · tltta. $500. Call 644-ll}S. • '116 Muatana: Futbaek.
Flamingo e General .~69,--cc""'c=--.,,--,--~--I nii"s, atn nulio, vln, top.. ang, u com ort group, !ires, exhaust ·f'I<:. Make t1f· ~ S?.099 * '5.i Chevy 2 dr. Clean. S22S stick, mod. for tall, $950. &roadmoor • Star ' M ~ ton pi ck-up, 000 nutg!'I, AM l f>'M, 23,000 ml. feor. 642--0368.'. e NABERS e · If Pvt ply, 673-0.183.
Hillcrest e Cambridge warranty. 11895, 673-t607 aft nintat'.', · '64 VW Van 1500 ccm ·tx.· y· Ol or , CADILLAC * 5118-3081 *, '6.\ Mua!an& cnnvt. Aute .. Vl, 4-spd, ruslon1 cab: 1-leoavy l'USlom ur\(lrrco11l , 10, m1 T 673-616.'i ~ TNIHI Ol' o er,
duly equipn1l'nt for can1!)Cr. 1'01'~•· 9 M V 1--....;._;.;:..;:;;;;;_-"'--I CHAPMAN s249J, S2G-3000 or 67f>..tl169 6PM . ~·"' 14. etallie 1.ffi. chnnge r.ngine. New pain!, m I FaC1 . Authorlil'd Cadillat'.' Dir Good cond, Movinr. $700 tJI
MOBILE HOMES app, grp, Chrm whls , $117~)/offrr, K. Block, 2600 JI ARBOR BLVD., CQNTINENTAL offr.r, 642-49!13,
lal6 N. Harbor, S.A. 64 Ford % ton P.U. FERRARI ratk, 8,000 mi. Warr. $3600. 53&-171~. COSI'A Mi;.:SA' * 114/531-8105 * •6 ~~~k.. !E~-'""''~'~''~112-'~"";"~· =-=-1...::.:...=~.'6ii5niB!l:Uils:--''Fll1£bl.AMDEli'; 5-lij.9100 Op!:'n Sunday 1965 Continent•I
Triple Wld• Cor.l'•ll -FER--RA-R-1---1 '64 PORSCHE.CD. COND R~ilt 1500 nU' ch1tch tlre11 lint ••~tt CMWY, •• '64 Riviera, Mirhelln t·adial 1="""'°'·""""=d_,"'.,·=$"1"300=. "6-==""'=' I ::-::O:-:L::D:~':M-::O-::l_l_LE:::--1
Jiillcrest • 1'1a.mingo 195~rd ~·~dTi~:n ~~~up. Newpo(t lrnports Ltd, Or· * ~ B'r':ST OFFER * * gtn., \'Vlt' rtl[. 1'.lusi Seq! 89,3·'1566 • 537..6824 H~e~, alr rond, full equ ip, • '62 OLDS St11,tion Wap
Paramount e Universal e 642_g~93 • anj!e County'• only author· I :;;;-;;C;;'-1
7
1 _A-:"::':;' -';;;""'c;:""':::::--::::1..'.il'.'.1".'00':.. :'.54::;8-<::::0SO~•:::ll::~-'---NEW~USED-SERV. Xlnt rond. Bluelik whlsle CORVEnE Gri. Trans. Pvt. Pty, ~.
BaITington e Bro&.dmoor ·~~Ch 1 1 . 1 !zed dealer. '6? 9ll, ;, • spd, Weber11• ·nu Large Select'ron ~ $9-10, Make ofr. J. Ber1ha, 1---------549-:38117 Alt 3;30
Conti11ental If Star ,.., ev, per cm' nu .pain, SALES.SER~CE-PARTS 111-es, 48.000 mi's, $3.q50, ________..._ oil: 615-4930, home 67~5734. '67 vmE ----~---=·I
Gen.'.l • 11illore•t til'eS, eng, ~cal ~. hatt, Mu~t 3100 w r--H 543-8105 days, ask for Gl't'g. Of vw c· ampe..S, .,, . • B I k Al . I 0 "-k -., '62 r • as Convl!n, $150. sell th is "'k. ~..tR-9'.l02. . ....,..,t _wy. ---------1 ...... r u c · l'-<.'Orw., rast. .... e ·-"4••', 4-11pet.>d , Private ))9.rt)', c..11: CHAPMAN Newport Beach • '67 912,• Hpd, air c-ond. v ns Kombis Spot1 C1r1 '610 e4t>e windows. Xlnt cond, AM /FM radkl.,New poly-• 963-8975 *
MOBILE HOMES J 642.9405 5'10-1764 F'MIAM . New lire~.·& n<.'W a ' I --:;;-.;riiS<U:N"-;;;l~""'~·~'~'~~~"~,7~1.==== glaM u~ •.• EXcellent eon. ----"'-''----··
12331 Beach Blvd., G.G. -•~•P~•-_____ 95_1_0 _;;A~"':;;"";;;i1.e<t:;;,,;:F;•""'~;;°';;;.i;"~ l;b.-"-,';c"'m'·csxa'il'"Ei"'a""ii·<64;;:5--0i;'°;tt3.I Buses, NeVt & Used ·oo wrus ELAN coupe. dition Drlvf!n easy.
' ___ ._,_H_.'_530-_29_30_•__ '67 JEEP, CJ5, V-6, '58 PORSCHE 1600 cpt'. Xln! lmmffi1t• .Oellv•ry ss;;'°3000'!>1" tr67111~169for van. CADILLAC . $2150 PLYMOUTH
•· COSTA MESA 32m 1nHes $1750. FIAT {'Ond, Stud~en! sacrllk'<!. CHICK IYERSON ,,,.... or ~ · A11k for Mr, Grannis SolG-3640 1--.,.-------1
'M bl) "· LI ' * * 642-2143 * * 1'001_ 54"138, Evo1. I· •--" CADll-LAC 1970 '69' ROADRUNNER Casual o e r...'ltate v g =========I ~ '10 911 !E , Hpd, tan-rine, . VY/ . " ,,u-rot' W•nfM 9700 COUGAR Nu 12, 20 &. 24 \\1lde Models go' 0. • 11 &' , FLE£1'WOOD Now on display in 5 Star Campers 9520 • Ar.1/~"M, m111 w hJ a. 549-30ll. Ex( 611 or 67 WE
1
.PA.V, ·CASH LUA'URIOUS BROUGHAM 38.1 VII, automatic, power GREENLEAF PARK radi;lls, lo ml. 325-~ R.1''. 197tl JIARBOR BLVD.. 1 Condor blue f'xtrrior with '68 Cougar A-1 ci>ndition, t!~ring, dlr. Excellent CM-
1750 \Vhittier Avenue 642-13.'lO FALL CAMPER 1..c.A.::d::':.:"'::.'·'---=--'-I COSTA MESA • ' • blue 1>1.dded landau top .and A/C, A1\1/fM !iitereo, P/S dltion. Low mlltl, (UED14J)
Bicycles 9225 CLEARANCE ti ' • '21 PORSCHE • '"" vw Bur. JUd;o, tt'u FDR YOUR CAR maloh;ng d•nl•~ll. ;,,,,_ -"='"=·=1=1"'=· "='=-2999==== l\llll "'' '" ;n tnde or h e SPEEDSTER seat 1peaker1, $1375. pri. pty. ior. Full J:Mnver, factory air, -nnance private . party,
71 ..C. • * 644-~7 * * 644-4687 alter, 8 pm, CONNELL tilt-trlescopi c wheel, JlO"'er DODGE S4S.R136 or 494-6811,
Girls bike & 2 trikes, slight
l't'pair, Cheap! 644-4005
Mini Bike s
'70 Zebra mini bike,
cond, $100 or offer,
67~J7j3
9275
Xlnl
Over a dozen br<lnd new 8
ft to 11 ft. campers now
1la.shed to
54-9 .~~~~, FACTORY'
INVOICE
POllilively no added dealer
charges! Every unit ready
for immedia,te Installation on
Motorcycl•s 9300 YOlll' truck or 11. new 19TI! 1---'-~~~--T~EODORE n.l'UY'U'I ROBINS FORD
THINI 2060 HARBOR Bl.VD.
. COSTA MESA 642-0010 HO~DA '64 Ford Camper Yan
''FRIEDLANDER.,
11'• II.lat fMWY, Ir) I
537-6824 • 89.'\.-7566
NEW-USED·SERV.
Completely equipped with
pop top, ice hox, l!tove, d!r.
HadiaJ lit'r!l. 1 OWOE'r. (UED-
J04) \Viii 1ake car in trarle
or fina.nee. 546-8736 or
494-6811,
J ---------VW, ,65 . Sqbck, Very good door Jock~. twilight .enHnel, ---------"·ss"""'B~A~RR=•"cu=n~A-c,"',-,.~m:"'"' CHEVROLET dual con1fo11 fl'ont 'seats '69 DODGE NOW ON DISPLAY car, Very lo price, $150. . h lral" .d 1 perrorm1vlee. Extras, eood 968-420C1. 2828 Harbl:r Blvd, w111 1v1 uaM/"'.'M1>1'!'r con. ¥. TON , cond. 001.nc in .erviot.
I ..» Costa MN 546-UXI lro s, stert'O A f , power S4$-8234 OUto Sport ta Authorl2ed 'Dealer '*'68 VW' SEDAN• _ _:.:.:.;:.c,:c:;;.,._;,;;,::=o-l 1runk IQ('k, Thi.~ one ewnrr Camper Special. Automatic, ~---·-----,1
Authorizrd Sales e Service e Partl Good cond. SU75 or make of. WE PAY TOP automobile is ~o Immaculate power 1l~rin1, 17,000 •cluAl '70 Plymouth Baracuda 440-6
SALES • SERVICE Sonet Coupes in Stock feor, 897-7524. CASH that we l\avf' it on our main m\lf'll • 11t11J und"r f11clory First Take Over P ayme,,U
• PARTS Orange County'11 Newttt Dlr, WANTED !lhowronm. Thi11 one's for the warranty! Immacula~ thru· 673-7487.
9625 Garden Grove Blvd, COAST IMPORTS rn pay top doUaw for :your, mor-1 discfiminating buyer, out! {388·38EI I~=========!
'1Hm C•U Coiled VOLKSWAGEN lod•Y. Call 1., ,,... .,.,. ., truokl jU1t (7164) $2799 PONTIAC
- - -..... or Orange County In" and ask '" Ron p;nohot. ,al) "' "" -.. tim•lo. • NABERS • c HICK IVERSON I ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;I
.--- ---• 1100 w. p.,;n, Coast Hwy. M~3031 Ext. ~I. '7>0900. GROTH CHEVROLET CAO ILI.AC V '70 GTO "THINK'' 642.o406 • Si&-4."i:l9 '61 VW "BUG Fact. Aulhori:r.rd Cadill11.c Dir W 455 cu. in. Ram Air, 2600 lfARBQR BLV., 1970 l lARBOR BLVD, close ratio 4-11peed.
U
(#lfl SUNBEAM Xh11. <..'Ond: Good transporta. Aak tor S&1ea Mana1er COSTA MF-'\A l,.,,~,...:CO:::::ST.cA~M:::ES;::'::A:._ __ 1 honrt t ... ch, Rifle It Handl'i
• I -~_.--,------I tion, l8lll Beach Blvd. !'"i40-9100 0pP.n Sunri:ty 'GO Dodge Stn ~'(n, runs pki;::, PIS, P/DIB, Radio
*'63 SUNBEAM Alpine New $499 847~unt1haton Bt~h 9-333l CAD, J965 Sf~D. DE 'VJJ.LE RQO<I, needs tra1111 work, & heater, New Firestone
NEW 124.CPE. DEMO top, \\'ire "'hl'f'ls. Xtra CHICK IVERSON Fil.Ct°')' air condi tioning, JCoori lire1, lugage rack, Wide oval11. "AU. BLACK"
$2795 Clt•a n. SG:lO. M~,..7975_ vw IMPORTS WANTED vinyl IOfJ full if'ather intf'r. $150. !>.'\&-81~. Make offer or trade for s.. Orange Counties }or, EverY dlx. option, (NEX •• 66 DODGE Polara Conv. late modf'I Ford truck. ''fftlCN UJl\al'l. TOYOTA 54'3011 >::xl 66 "67 TOP I 'BUYER 063). "''· 1575 T,O.P. Will Ind" 646-4665 IJn.AIWU\ 1970 HARBOR BLVD. BILI~ MAXEY TOYOTA $1 799 557-9359.
SAAB
u1so1H1wy••_c,•,,1up. ,71 TOYOTA'S cosrA MESA 111881 "'"" Bl•d. e NABERS e Looking for • c•rt
'66 VW S nroaf "·-"'""· Ph. 847-1555 FALCON '' EASY New '71 Datsun 893-7566 • 537~ ln stock. ln1mediate delivery. . U WE PAY TOP DOLLAR CA~l LLAC . . Call Auto Re:fe!T&l tree af NEW-USEO..SERV. Jmmacul11te condition. Yellow FOR TOP USED CARS Fact. Authori1.Pd Cadillac Dir I --~-------charge. We ha\111 .elleri, l~ ~~7~ Ppi~~ \v1~a~1~ .-------_.... ~ lll"°ltS with p~n stripping, new t~eli U your eu 11 extra dean, 2600COfS'flAARJlOM~"ABL., '64 Futura c1 onv~rt. hndlue, w11.iting. AU types k pricee.
- - - - -I• ., & engine guaranteeil tor !!() 1. 1 Co.') new tnn11., n mint eo ., ... 0,,. alJ10 wrlc--.... (• 45~~14) \\1\!I lako ''' fn met ·iee us ll'li · ".>4"9100 O-n sundoy Auln PS 67"1"'9 It ~ --'68 FIAT 850 ·-d•Y•. Lk.$YI099PT905. BAUER BUICK ~ ~ .. . .~ ~ • 64•-4431 trnde. \Viii finance private 1• 234 E. J?th St. A R••I Cr••m Puff I i::'::PM::' ::'D;;•:;Y::•::"°":=:;l34;:5:;·=== '=-~A~ul~o2-R~•~l""1~~s.m~·~.,.:!,.,,,I ~·~ll,Call 546-8736 or SPYDER Laguna 'Beach CHICK IVERSON Coifa Me11a 548-7765 '61 Sedan rieVl(Je, Lo mi. Air. FORD .· '69 PONTIAC 9 pa;Mer\ltt -=========:I bl 1 9(>0 So. Cst. Highway VW S!ereo. Auto. f'"ull power. wa<on. Special order Int Camper Rentals 9522 RD~.L~:d with YQ~~4 n. 494-7503 * 540..3100 Auto L•11lflg· 9810 Leather uphol11try, $2995 or -------'---Goldfbrown vinyl !Qp. FUU
tenor. 1 e nl'.'W. 549<!031 Ext, 66 nr 67 Relit orfrr! ~)40-00~ JOP DOLLAR po1>1'er. Tinted windows, Air~
FOR Rl'nt: 22· Pace An·ow CHICK$9rVERSON '71 COROLLA 1970 ~~~~:o~E:;vD. A LJ~S~971 SHARP '67 CAD, lo'mJ'•, ruu \. Nu tire•. $2995. Private pu.
slps 6 lo 8. $150 "'k ·i· 5c PINTO JlOl'"er. $2900. tor ty. 642-5.586 or 646-fl682 mil~ a4~?.S!"i4. VW Radio, hC'Rlrr, disc brakrs. AuthorU:ecl Dir. 847-1865 all tt AM CLEAN USED CARS e '66 1.,.'TO-mCK
S.\9_3031 F..'l:t. 6li or 67 Iac1ory· air, low, low mile~! Sales e Service e Paris $50.00 mo. '63 Cadillae ronvertlblt , Full See Andy Brown BEST OFFER.
Porche n1ag~. New tires
$140 TY.'O Bell hl'ln1rts $15
each. All $6::(1 call 548·6113
1970 Bridgestone 100
Only 218 111i. $325
833-0536
'69 Ya1nah11. 17;> Enduro, lo
mi 's & Clean, $495 * n1•1.1.-.:~o *
1970 Honda Tra ii 70, like
nrw, lo 111ileagl", $280.
548-0.').';J, * '70 HONDA 750 *
Xlnt Cond. CaU: 646--7244 or
~).11}.liOOO,
HONDA J970 CB 450, llke
new. $69.~
831-2117 or 499-2.'iGG
HONDA 90 Mo1 0--Cros!1, $200.
Vf'ry spec:ial. Dirt ready,
1968. Perfect. 494-7280,
YAMAHA Trail 100, dirt bikr.
'68. Takf' hon1e for $17:-.. Just
Dun• Buggies 9515 * BODIES $75 * 2084 So, Anaheim Blvd.
Anaheinl
6.~!l-1151
'69 l)une Bu g g y • pro-
ressiona!ly built. Clr;in.
$975. 6'16-:t.m3
*RAIL buggy*
ineon1plt'tr, $150
*962-:£18 •
Imported Autos 9600
AUSTIN AMERICA
AUSTIN AMERIC A
Sales, Service, Parts
Immediate Delivtty
All Models
J1rtuport
!l1nports
3100 W. Col.It Hwy., N.8 .
6-12·~ 54()..17'4
BMW
h11.d major 1urwo.up, 494-170!! 1---"-------* * 1966 1-tONDA 160 '69 BMW 1600, J-JelW!er. f~
Scrambler, Xlnt cond. lm1ts, &lrrro, Sac. Pvt pty.
1970 HARBOR RLVD, Take older car or 1n1all All Models to Choose From (36 mo.) power, xlnt c.'Ond, $600. THEODORE ** 962-9572 **.
COSTA MESA. do-w·n. Under fac t. warra.nty. Service Monday 'tlll 1:00 PM open end 646--1214 aH 4 pn1 . ROBINS FORD
JAGUAR
JAGUAR
HEAD9UARTERS
Thi:' only authorized JAGUAR
dealer In the entire Harbor
Area.
Compleb;
SALES
SERVICE
PARTS
BAUER
BUICK
JN
COSTA MESA
23t E. 11th Street
548-7765
Call Maury dlr. 11.ft lO an1 Sat 'till Noon RENT
540-3100 or 494-7506. 037327. COAST IMPOR:rS • '59 CAD Ll1nousint , New 2060 Harbor Blvd. T-llRD
A NEW 1971 enr. ~w 1rans, new
PUT A Of Orange County lne. PINTO upholstery. SROO. R:!!'"i-4497 Costa Mesa 1968 T·BIRD, Full power, Air
Toy 1200 ~~:IM~c~c ~~~~ H? $4 !oAY CAMARO , i70 C6UN~~lOSquire-429. c;,';,:;;;;~:'':':~M=:"':troo:M"6=7',,."'•=;;=·=· =Lo:rl
. OTA '69 YW BUG . . 4" MILE Load,., '"" .i1 Xlm. 15865 -,. SHOO, '67 Camaro J:iOSS, air, Ncw-$4?.00 Now, 5.12-25.48, VALIANT
In Your Stocking for Xmas t PlIT 'A UTrLE wirt whl rin1~. 1 onr, vinyl c"',.,-;,"-,..":.:'.:.'·-==~-----------·!
From Dean Le\\o·is Radio, heater, (TUR124) dlJI. KIC.K IN YOUR lop. Alt 6 pin: 675-2787. '66 Jo~airlane ~XL, Full pwr '65 Velianl 2 door. ~"PPY A
!\lust l!ac! Will take old.er LIFE! /. + air. But·ki't 8f'ats, blk in· f'COnomical little car. GMl.t
"
n,.11 L ni..:.1 car or finance, 546--8736 or THEODORE CHEVELLE 1f'r. Make offer. 557-4405 aft rondilion th roughou t .
Wll. UllMJ 4~-61111. ROBINS FORD 1---7 pm. 673-8103.
IM PORTS ·&1 V\V, Rehl! eni;:: $411:,, Con· 2060 tlARBOR BLVD., J964 Cl!Jo:VF:Ll.E XI.NT 2od Car. '64 Wagun. 1960 Valianl-Slnlight gtiek,
tacl Ralph Evan~ G<lfr.7753 COSTA MESA STATION w)..GON. Bf>ige New 11·1111.~. tirr!l, kuto & ~ o o d transporlalinn car,
l!l66 Harbor, C.M. 6-16-9303 or 54Ji-9!!17 aft 5 PM. 642-0010 $6:il * 962-211:1 air. Only $650. M6-6.l06. $200 or bf'81 offer. 968-5230
'69 TOYOTA
Corolla Sta tion Wagon 1U:~""~i;C~•;'~'iiiiiiiiiiii~'900U~:iiiii~odiiiiiC~1rii'iiiiiii·ii,iiiiiiii99QOiiiiii 9900 Used Cari 9900 U1ed C1rs 9tOO
\Vhite w/bla<.'k interior, Likell ·~;;;;ii;i;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;iii;;;;;;i;;;i;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~;ii;i;iiii;;iiii;i;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~ new, Lie, X\VZ928
$1299
CHICK IVERSON vw
!'")'!9-30.11 Ext, 66 or 67
1970 J-IARBOR BLVD.
COSTA MESA
BIU. MAXEY
!T!OfYIQIT!A!
UNDER INVOICE ONE DOLLAR OVER!
! BRA'ND NEW 1910'5
We
$250. 548-9697 67f,.3930 artr 3 pn1.
""HONDA 00 I========== MG
SCRAMBLEll. Exo ro•'!I· 1260 --~D~A~TS~U~N'.._ __ I ·---7-;::~-;:---
llRI IEACH ILVD.
Hunt. ..... 147.asfl
I ml K. at a..t Jhrrp, te ~
new
teg~s
~avt
1970
&
s,veral
Cougars,
Marquis.
near
Mon·
Mer·
c:ury House Cars at c:on• • 673-1342 e -' MG ' "' '"' TRIUMPH '<IJ '6) DATSUN. WAGON Sol.,, So"';.,., Pan, '69 CORONA .
MECH PERf>'. $!Kll> lmn1rdin1c Df'lh·ery.
543-7!t90 EVES Automatic. dlr, Radio, iiea:.. All 11odcb
Jtard1op. Vin}-1 roof, J spe.etl,
immaculate, ~lfy Bluf', Sac.
rlrlre. \Viii take trRrle or
Jlnaoce pvt. p1y, 0111 Sid,
dlr. MQ.3100 or f94·7!"i00 all.
10 a.M. XTS 34.l.
1967 Triu mph ;,oo, S700 or er. sJl('ci~l wheels, (VOt;..
best ofle~. 10,000 mi. Xlnt 9.'ll) \Vlll trade or finance
C'Qnrl. !)62.'.ffi34. prival e party, 5-16-8736 Ol'
Auto Service
& P1rt1
4!l4-68J1,
'68 1600 ROADSTER
J~rlup o 11
~l111p o1 1 ,, '69 TOYOTA CO ROLLA
New pnlnt, con1pli"te englrw!
3100 W. <:oast ltwy., N.B. ovt•rhaul, Clean. Wiii con~Jd.
'66 VW Eng. Cornpl rrbh to Rt!ady lo go! rflr. (WF.Z 710) &:12-9405" ~0.1764 er mo1orcycle for equily,
1600ec. SI~ Erw n can1, Will tAke trade ur finance ----------_•:.:•.:.243:1.;;:c~' .:.".:."';;,·..:2SO=. __ _
Holley 2 h11rrel . p10o'r crank prlvflll! party, 5'46-8736 or ____________.. * '69 TO'/OTA Corona 2.dr,
pulley. $•150. 536·8335, -':.:".:."'"=-ll~·==~==~I • THINK vinYt 1op, lo ni l. Xlnt rond.
N':,";",..,od C<>mp~ p & G '68 DATSUN PICKUP "M,.G" 117"· 54
&-23."'
!lhiffer wl reverse lockout TRIUMPH
I ·~"-Radio. h('11f'1', ti1r., '4 s--.1,
."'
1" 7: .. •un« ~ans. -· ~.. ''FRIEDLANDER''1 ....,... ., (WPP 762) W!U h'1ke car in
TYl'O Ponche Spte<lsfer tradr or financeo private par. 'fR 69 GT 6 + xlnt col'ld. nu
Hantlop5. Jksf Offer lY. ~736 or 494-6811 ,
• 642.4689 • '70 2000 ROADSTER
Triller. Tr•v•I M1S
1970 FULLY cttnt\1 20'
tandem axl. Pvl pty. Ph:
'114: !31-1800
Llk11 new, M'u1t R:ll (WPJ.
JO.I) dlr. \\lilt tak11' ('AT in
trllde: or finance priv1.tte pat·
t;y, 546-8736 or 49f.68U.
t»tt1r-.cH !HWY. n1 clutch A lil'fct. Mu.tt tell
893-7566 • 5.17..s824 <21!!) 69l-M81.
NEW-USED-SE,R\(. TIUUMPH Sp;ir;,.. '67 Mi;,
• --. ..mi_.-.. ll Convt, Xlnt com, or\1 ~ -•;.•:.:"':.:':.:·.;$::.I 1:.;50;;;.-'6"-73-3:..::284:::.::·--
IT'S Stach houM t1mt. Bta·
fe&l .-eltctloll ever! SM the
•lion nowt
' I siderable less than invoice.
Come ' '
over .
buys.
In today & look
these tremendous
You'll want one!
Johnson & son
(1 Ml~• hvth ef ~·" 61 ... ,, .... ,)
LINCOLN CONTININTAL e MARK Ill e
MHCU•Y e COUGAR
WE HAVE SEVERAL BRAND NEW 1970
COUGARS & MONTEGOS LEFT
AT $1 OVER INVOICE!
COME .IN AND LOOK OVER THESE
OUTSTANDING BARGAINS TODAY AND
l TA~E ON.E HOME
'
Johnso ' I
I son
I LINCOLN' CONTINENTAL • MARK Ill e MERCURY e COUGAR
.s.40_._s'.3·0·· .. ·~~ •• ~.:"' ..... :i,. .... ·.•.42·.o91-·1 .. l1 .. s.4.o_.s_6_3_o __ 26_~~-~ .. tr."'.1r-.A_ .. _,_4_2_ •• o.'-'.'-
•
----~ ---~-· -------~ ~--.-----------~~
H DAILY PILOT Tuosdq, Dtce-15. If/II
•
•
·-A ;_-ff .:::~ ••.••.•
·-~ I
WHILE THEY LAST ! ' Brend Now 1970 CHEVY TRUCKS
50,000 MILE ·GUARANTEI ..
~:TON FLEET SIDE ll CAMINO
8 foot box, heavy duty 'Au'tomatJc tranaminion,
rear springs, puges, 7.50 · uDted' glaa. (196818)
x16x8 ply tires. (12961)
$2579 $2695
...
ALSO HUGE DISCOUNTs ON .ALL
1971 MODEU
, CONNELL
CHEVROLET •
2828 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MBA
~=: 546-1203 ~: 546-1200 -...
NEW
1971 BUG·S
ON DISPLAY & READY TO GO
CHICK IVERSON
B..-of tlte ,_ Bq ,,
Harbor Area.Only Authorized VW .. Dealer . ·~· . ' . 1WO L!><ATIONS TO na~. YOU .
441 ... c.-""'·et..,...~·~·" ....
& 1970 Harlter lfv4 ... C•t• M-. '17i-otol .......
FREE GAS
With The Purchase Of
A NEW 1971 PINTO , ••
IMAGINE I
WHEN YOU IUY A NEW 1971 PINTO
WE WILL PAY ,01
ALL -THE GAS IT USES F.01 TWO FULL MONTHI
THIS OFFER· GOOD ONL.Y AT SUNlllT, FOID
HURRY!
THIS OFFER EXPIRES SOONI ALL OAl0LINI
MUST II Dl~IUltSED AT IUNI~ FORD
SUNSET FORD
5440 G.rd• Gron llvd .. Wntndnttw (211) ltl 1111
Tak• V•ll•Y View Off R•mp (n4) .... ,. '
BILL JONES' .
B.J. SPORTSCAR ·CENTER
· IS
AnJiori:n Sales & S~ee
28JJ Harbor Blvd., Costiia Mesa
540-4491
• ;'". "';°•
•
' . . . r.;;c11;;;1:::::1n:::• ....... A-·s.-,, . . ,
llGIN··YOUR HOUl>AY IY SHOPPING 1.fllS
' lt' • ' ' . • GUI~ iOF NEW & ~ED AUTOS· & ACCESSO!ll~ · .,""··~-i -
I I t. i . ' . -· -.. t ' . ~ : • • • l ! ' ' .. ' .....
' . IAlll'A.'HAI ...... PRIAi 1HWN1·
I. • ,·,· ••I ·~·4, --~--............................................... i't,... ......... ·-· ..... ·-..··'-· .......................... . ..... .
·utCK.~~·· ' ..
' ..
·.COSTA
.MRSA.·· . . .
"Specializing . in"-' Qwtlit.y~
DRASTIC IEDUCllONS . . . .
ON AU. REMAINING -· ..
1970 BUICK . DEM~$. . .
234 E. 17th .•ST~ . .
COSTA MUA ..
.. 541;.1165
' . . . . . ' ' .
.
HO.
• . ,
' . .
" ' . .
'' '. THE .RUGGED . .
HONDA "CT·90"
"TRAIL BIKE"
At A Price, Y• W-'t -·
t••*****************i
J.le,./, :JrieJfanJer
11750' llACH ILYD. !HWY, HI
893-7566 * J 1&.11. SO. OF .......... ,., .. 537-6824
NOW IN COSTA MESI
'71 H.ONDA s::"
e.All COOLl.,PlOHT ........ e ll!lONT WMllL OllVS
• =:~~~x:: .. ·~i:c s 13 9 5 e ~~tM tPllD n Ml'M eUl'TO•MILllLllll ,. •
8ALLotf e 11'0Ul.f'UllM81 .. I Dlt. -HDM , ·
,._ 11• ..... c. """'''""'I.KM Tl'llllo Ta a Uc.-
UNIVERSITY .
OLDSMOBILE
.. HAl:IOI aLVD.
70 MOOE l'.ARLO
U.4$4
Oftly ''·'" Mia.
tt\'llr.mstk, p o w • r '""""' -lft.c llrlk• -wlfllloW.,. ,-M.,.M
..,.,........ • .,. ... ---fl;. fl.Ill
"""'' tllf --'• fllct9ry • l r alllf,. dlrsmt tP011 ... Is, wide
trlldl belfM flr-s, .W IMf lrff4..
.... .-c: • .re. ···-ef fldOry -rnnty. Tltlt .. .., -.Ollltlly_ ..,._. """*"'''-· Yw'FI llllYe
,_ -f9 .,.._i.tt. ""81MI
-$3999
COSTA MllA 14MMI
.
'66 THllNDEIBIRD
2 DOOll LANDAU
S..w CT91! whit. Wiit! Midc IM>
dtll "'°' .,,,.. ~,.. cuttMI
Mll9'fl)'W lnNrlol'. """ "°""' ftctory'a!r, tut, W!tee1. AM ......
phis fKltry tttrw ..,., ,._
v..t wlriclo'Q & an~, 1 own-
., ltm wflll, ....,.,, IM '"Ii.ate. °"' "".'' Cltll! .... ''"'*' '""""' tlble ft ' 1 n f . "'* lm"*llllte.
!SIM*),
·$1799
'
' . -
______ ,
l ' : : '
NABERS
2600 ~~~,,~J!VI)~ ;'1 540~9100
COSTA MESA
.. ' ;
CondOt" blue extei;or wltlt blue·pa.dded landau:< top· and·
matchinl" dirdaneUe interior. Full power i.ctory air,
tilt.tdelcoplc wbeel,power door locks, twilight sen:ttneI.
. dual comfort front aeati.Wl.tb11ncllvidual power.,c:OritrOJa. ·•~reo AM-FM. J>OWer. trunk·~ Ths ·one ·~\~totnoblle Js llO immaculatertbat ~ haw it on our main
lhowroom. 1bJs one'1·for'the mott cllacrlmlnatlng buyer. (71&0 ~
1967 CAOILI.AC SEIWI DE VILLE : . . ' . ' . . .
GrHn milt with black padded landau root and. match-
ing full genuine leather lnt~rlor. Full power, tahtory.
ali', •Wt-telescopic wheel, AM-FMrra\lioonew. white .. wall tltts, · local one owiwr car. TftJs one looks br&Qd; new with only 39,330 carefully· driven miles. (YPX270)
$35~
2600 HARBOR BLVD. 540-9100
. COSTA MESA
:J-ree
"Christmas
Tree"
Wfflll ~ 1t11rchue ef any ef
, eur flM MW ... ~ •vt ... -.... '
llPIAT PlaFOllMANCI
M% ti aMW ....,. ,.,... the pvrc.._ MayM yw
...... flnil Mt whJ .... -........ ,,.. ....,.., "'21 ....
-Wll• IMW·lo -··Or ..tc fw ... by,... .... ....... , ....
IDll GARDEN GROVE BLVD.
. IALU' OPSN SUNDAY '
hrt&. s.r.tce T--. ~ tUI l::M
5*2214 (% Ilk. I. .t IMch) "2-1551
. .
···a1LL ·y(ITEs ·
-AUTHORIZED
SAUS . & SERVICE
BILL YATES
VOLKSWAGEN
32152 VALLI ROAD
SAN JUAN 'CAPISTRANO
137-4800/493-4511/499·2261
' '
IS BAC'K
/ AT ...
'--CONNELL---M~~rl ':·-1. ~·;;;;Lnn r n0LI!.J 1 .-,..
2828 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA
~: 546-1203 ~.:: 146-1200
. "·~~· ~.-~ . -.· -. ·-.. . -~ ~-.. -.,.. __ ,..,~-.... ¥-·~ ,..,---~. --· -· I . . ' f' ., • -'f.. --\(''''•"' ~ ~ .. ·-· I ~ ~ ,• • , .... ' I j <
). t ~ -'$' ,• o I \ , , ,.._ t' ~ £ . ' ~~ \"\) . '
Do·t Sing Says ..
I' • *'. "W9 · ,mQke ' better
d•al on new car.
* "We poy.ve,Y high
pr!ce for trade.
*'"How we stay in
'bvs'ineSs? "Boy
we lucky!"
' .
1883fi Beach Boulevard
HUNTINGTON BEACH
It 's Ea•y to Buy The >,:11 New
B r""'1 N tuJ
1911
FORD -.
~2034
hst h th• totll CIOWll INIVIMll~ Ind UJ b Ill• lol1I 'IMllthly JllYIMllt
lncllldlflt I••· '70 lk-•nd •II f1n1nc1 clllU'I• t11 •ppr9¥M c,....
.. , " l'llSllHIS. o.ftrrM INIVl'lltnf price b 11511.M '9clllllllllt •M lllllnce
c~ • ....., t11n, '70 lie-et' If you preter lo p1y c•M. tfle hlll ""'
l'fk• II "'Ir l21SJ.7t lncludlnt win t•x, '7t llcenM. "'"'-' l'wc•I-
.,. l•lo 11.Jr'li. (IRIOWlDOl"l·
$2. s·o TOTAL .. . DOWN ·
PYMT. $63 TOTAL
' . .litON1'1L 'I'.
. P'l'MT.
' .
DUNTON FORD
2240 50. MAIN-SANTA 'ANA
Whwe·lroadWaJ Mnb M1ln St. •t w.m.,
NIW CAR DE,T. 5'6-7t7t • U!EO CAR Dll'T, JW.-717'
·s E ,I~-
PINTO
MUSTANG
.'MJIVERICK
PLUS THE ENTIRE BRAND NEW
FORD LINE FOR '71
AT
SOUTH COAST
FORD -MERCURY ·
W lrudw•y, Laguna 1 .. ch 4ff-1515/5494151
Suzuki MT-SOR Trailhopper
A•kid"s mini-bike thot even
dad can ride. 3 horse-
..-~ power, .SOcG engine, 3
speed a utamatie clutch.
Front and rear full suspen•
sio n and brakes. Swing-in
Ji andlebors and easily
removeable front wheel
makes it eosv to cony in
o ny size car,
14 .. NEW MODELS FOR '71
50CC .TO 500CC . · ·
.EVERYTHING
•. ')' ,j ';],,,. \; ,: •
MOTOR SPORTS .
Onl,r l ltdpptng f>lace fnr'
tnotorcycles A tjdcrs; sports
c&l'I A dliVcra.
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