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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1970-01-15 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa.. . ••
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Dot · ol Beservoi~~s M11rky Depths!}
·oran~e County Loeh Ness 1Mons.ter?, . . '
DAILY PILOT
* * * 1oc * * *
l'HURSDAY AFTERNOON. :JANUARY ~15, :1970
VOL. 63, NO. 11. l JllCTICHS. lll PAOI S
Pill's Blame
For Cancer
In Dispute
WASHINGTON (UPI) ~ A prominent
cancer specialist warned today thm
thousarxls of women may be feeding the
growth of undetected breast cancer with
bh1h coo.trot pills.
· "Synthetic estrogens are to b re a s t
c9ncer what fertilizer is to a weed crop," Dr. Roy Hertz testified at a Senate hear·
ing. Estrogens are a prim~ com~ent of
oral contraceptives. PrevJOUS WJt.nesses
said man made estrogens could also
cause blood clotting in some users of
•'The Pill."
Another witness, Dr. Edmond Kassou[
of Cranford, N. J .. suggested in prepared
testimony that the American Medical
~iation (AMA) might have helped
drug companies promote birth control
pills and conceal their alleged dangers.
But Dr. Robert w. Kistner of Harvard
Medical Schoo! scoffed at studies linking
oraJ contraceptives with cancer.
"The pill is safe," Kislner declared.
Hertz formerly headed the reproduction
research branch of the government's Na·
~al Cancer Institute. He is now with
.l\Oekfeller University in New York .
• Said Hertz : "We know from X·
-ray studies that breast cancer exists in fame cases for years before it can be
Clinically detected. However, since one
1Woman in 20 will at some time in her 1ife
rdevelop breast cancer. it is obvious that .in using the pill we are exposing at least
this portion of women to a substance
known to stimulate pre-existing breast
Cancer in women."
The doctors testified in the second day
of hear.ings before Sen. Gaylord Nelson 's
Jmall business monopoly· subcommittee.
The group has heard sharply divided
testimony abou( the safety of .. The Pill."
Kistner, taklng issue wilh those warn·
tng about dangers of the pill , said: "It is
safer than pregnancy ~t not as. sa.fe as
continence • . . one C1garette 1s three
Pines as dangerous to life as ooe pill.''
Ne wport Appeal
For Freeway
Change Delayed
The final bid in Sacramento by the city
of Newport Beach for realignment of the
Pacific Coast Freeway has been moved
ahead from this Friday to next Wed·
nesday.
City staff members and Mayor Doreen
Marshall are expected to ny lo the state
capital next week to relay the official city
appea l for a new study on the adopted
11lignmcnt or the freeway west of Upper
Newport Bay.
U the appeal before the State Highway
Commission gels nowhere, the city wtll
abandon il s seven-year struggle to acctpt
!he route which, as adopted, woukl hug
tht coastline.
Those expected to alt'"'1 besides
f\.1ayor Marshall are Planning Director
Laurence Wiim 3nd Public Works
DirecL<W Joseph f . Devlin.
HONORED IN DEATH
'M•rtin Luther King
Man y Ceremonies
'.A cross U.S. Pay
Tribute to King
By· 1Jaited ·Prest lnleruttODIJ
Thousands acrost the nation honored
Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. loday-tbe
4lsl anniversary of his birth .
Several governors, including Nelson A.
Rockefeller of New York, Kenneth CUrUs
of Maine and Frank Licht of. R h oil e
Jslandr declared today "MarUn Luther
Xing Day," in honclr--of the ass&11inated
civil rights leader,
Schools were Closed in several cities,
including New York. Ba It i more,
Ph'iladelphia, Kansas City, Poug6keepsie~
N.Y., and Harrisburg,' Pa.··
New York Mayor John V.,Lindsay·al.id
cityworkers could take tbe·day off.
The official inauguration·of the Martin
Luther King Memorial Center,, a .pro-
jected C11liural and spirltu.al 4athering
place for American Negroes, was &et for
today in ~Uanta. '11'1e center will be bUiJt
near K1ng's new crypt and the Ebenezer
Baptist Church where he .served as
copastor.
Unofficial aremonies, m;iny With an·
tiwar overtones, wer, scheduled in ritany
areas taking no official note ot the' dif.
No federal oberavance was ~ and
the White House Slid PreSkfent' Nixon
planned In spend the day at Camp David.
Assemblyman Willie• L. Brown Jt. ,([).
San Francisco), today again pro"°5ec1
Jegislalion declaring Jan. 15, blrihday ol
the late Martin Lui.her Jr., aa "Black
American DaY." in California.
The Negro leglsl1tor Introduced the
same bill Jast year, but it failed to pass.
His legjslaUon would require that public·
school& set the day aside etch year for
programs "dealing with the black ex-
perience in America."
Black residents of Port.land, Ol'e., plan-
ned a citywide bo)'coU of public schooia,
a march a!XI a demonatraUon, The Rev.
Ralph David Abernathy, Klntl'• ,_r
.. head "' the -Chrlsllan t.adership Conftrenet, wu to speak at a
New York rally.
ew or e
n ea on
Olcllncident Boy Plunges Four Arrested in Dr~g .
. '-'.! · . Revived 9' 'attnies, tl:(tla' on' Miisa A': rtriie4t , , . ' '. · · · . . · ___,..,.___ · · ~~ --·-· -: ftrNew-Grse
• • • Survives
lly BARIW KllEIBICll or•·..., rw tttfl'
A 15-year~ld-Colta Mesa boy cheated
death Wednesady nllbt when be hurled
himself flVm the top floor• of the tallest
building in LagunaJluch, tbeJline-lt«y
Surf and Sand Towm-at-1!15$ S. Coast
Highway.
David Temple, t29 Flower St., survived
the specta_cular leap with relaUvely
minor injuries, a scalp ,Jaceratlon and
brokm right wrist, and ts in saUsfaetory
condlUon at South Coost Community
Hoopltal In South Laguna.
Witness Angelo D'Erco1e, maib'e de at
the Towers Restaurant atop the new
hulldlng, told police be saw the boy dim·
bing the outside stairway between the
eighth and ninth floors at 5:30 p.m. and
called out, "What are you dolng here?"
The boy said, "I'm going over!" He
then leaped head first over the 42-inch
railing of the balcony aurrounding the
ninth floor.
He landed In a planted area ap-
prolimately 80 feet below the balcony, at
the second-floor level of the building,
bounced oU and rolled to the first .floor
level.
Police-and hotel employes found him,
bleeding copiously from the head wound,
but sUJI semi-conscious and summoned
an ambulance to take him to the hospital.
His pa.rents, Mr. and Mrs. Robert F.
Temt>le, were notified and hurried to his
bedside.
",I couldn't believe he was still alive,"
Merrill Johnson, owner of the Towen,
said today. The pcllee and ambUJanee
already were at the aeene when he and
hiJ .wife arrived, minutes after D'Ercole
(See FALL, Pa&e ZJ
A team of MttOtics detectlvtt con-The detective ordered everyone to stay
fiscated half·tllo of marijuana and &r· where they were, but claimed that
rested four persons at a Costa Mesa Pezman succeeded in tearing loose a
apartment they had visited for another sheet of tin nailed over a window and
reason Wednesday. tossed out lhe alleged marijuana.
Besides the pound of marijuana, Sgt. Detective Kutch, meanwhile, was in
John Regan and Narcotics Investigator Santa Ana today seeking complaints
Norm Kutch alleged they took three against seven persons arrested Tuesday
smoldng pipes and a small brass pot co~ in a series of raids which netted 11 kJlos
tainlng apparent marijuana debris as of marijuana, assorted drug pills and a
evidence. bit of heroin.
The occupants otthe apartment it 17'{1 ~x ~en and one w~~n _ involv~-~
Whittier Ave., were booked on ebarges of thO~ Ulree incldenls are he.ta In custod~
possesalon of rna(ijuana, with complaints pendl"i; issuance of complaints based .on
being sought today from the Orange evaluauon of t.he felony charges on which
County Dlotrlct Attorney. they were· booked.
The suspects we.re identified as :
-Stepben M. Peunan, 28, of 121 Main
St., Hunth1gton Beach, who owns a cafe.
-Robert J. Beadle, 29, of Long Beach,
sales representative for a major soap
company.
-Mlcbatl D. Reed, 21 , a student at
Leeward College, Oahu, Hawaii.
-Darla J. Ltzon, 21, of the Whittier
Avenue address, whose occupation was
not listed.
Sgt. Regan said be knocked at the rear
door of the apartment and Identified
himself, while Kutch stood by in front,
then opened the door when the occupants
balked.
SPIN ON ICE
ENDS IN FLAMES
NEWARK, N.J. (UPI} -When his ear
b e c am e stuck in the ice, 58-year.old
Anthony Attanasio started spinning the
wheels in an effort to get out.
WitneWs said he spun for about half
and hour. Then an overheated tire ex·
ploded and set fire to the auto's gaa tank.
Attanasio died in the Dames.
Speaker's Aide
Denies Fraud
NEW YORK IUPI) -Dr. Martin
Sweig, suspended aide to U.S. House
Speaker John W. McConnack, and
Nathan Voloshen, a Manhattan attorney,
pleaded innocent in federal court today to
a IS-count indictment charging them with
defrauding agencies of the federal
government.
After pleading to the charge5, bail was
fixed at $50,000 each by Federal Judge
Edward C. McU!an. Sweig, 46, of
Washington, and Voloshen, 72, of Manhat.
· tan, both posted personal bonds and were
ordered lo appear for further hearings
Feb. 17.
The indictments, aMounced in New
York Tuesday by U.S. Attorney R.obert
M. Morgenthau, accused the men of using
the preslige of McConnack 's office to
win concess ions for businesses and favors
for convicts, and trying to help soldiers
win discharges from the Anny. They also
were charged with conspiracy and per·
jury.
L~h Ness · Bevi·sited . -
Peters Canyon's ·-Big Al Swimlning ·Inw Hiswr y
Editor's Note: . Former BrilUh.
;ournaltat Tom Barley who uae4 to
spend hta time vigoro1&1ly cha&ing the
Loch Ness momttr in 'Scotland, is
now doing his thing at an Orange
Countv restrvoir, OI indico.ttd in the
following dilpat<h.
Bv TOM •BARLEV if ftll' DlllY Plllt Steff
ON SAFARI AT PETERS CANYON
REsERVOJR -Our on\y CO!llJ)&nlona at
thi3 remote wit.tr 'bole on UU. gray
moody momfn1 were a mildly interested
houNWlft, 1..-"'"1phil J.yW<>id IOO
and a large black Labrador clog.
The only -on lbe limpid
watenof tlle.Ja•-wu lbe occaalonalrlp-
ple created by lltlul •ond rolnliffed wind.
'JM ..,._ -. ond -at the
water'a edp, bll moth«' abMrttly Ugtrta
I
and puffs oo a cigarette and the OOg does
what all dogs do among the shrubs at \be
edge of. the reservoir.
Ah yes, Labradors are big dogs Indeed.
All, the uninitiated might say, is tran·
qulllly.
n,1s veteran observer ls not, however,
deceived. We have under our belt the
fruit. <JI a long ago assignment In Loch
Nm .and the vast technical knowledge
g\mered white sipping hot sweet lea fOt
Jong hours at the aide <JI that fabled Scot-
tls,h Jab.
Below LJ!e waters of Peters Canyon
mervoir is a erealure that closely
resembles the 8Caly amphlblan that
3porta In the mtn;ky depths and OC•
caolonally on the .aurfaca of the gloelny Scot&h waters. If hlo betn glvtn the name of Big Al by
taaUy · mialed co u n ty officials ahd
onloof(:ers who pathetically believe that
an aUiptor is responsible for ravages Jn
thi s Orange lake. Bird and fish are sAid
to have been devoured in copious qu-in·
tities by the wily creature.
Llke "Neale", the darling of Brlti.!lh
Journalists, Orange County's o w n
monster has skillfully evaded capture :
Tu-o curators from .tbe ·Buena Park
Alligator Farm fished for hours here
Wednesday and sllpped away admitting
defeat. And sevtral local residents have
bravely ventured forth upon the murky
waters to try their hand at gcUlng a little
notoriety out <JI Big Al.
Many onloc>ken pathellcally testily to
ha\>fng -!tVeral alllgaton. And one
depuly llberHr wbo braved hip deep mud
actually returned to llhore to claim that
he had watched two alligators •t 1eist
(See MONSTER, Pa1e Z)
'f
By JOHN VALTERZA
Of lfll Oaltf' ll'li.t Stiff
,A fonner Newport Beach man Is being
field in jail In San Bernardino today in
the alleged beating death of his Z.y.ear~ld
stepson last May in Newport. ,
Michael Shear, '22, who moved from the
Harbor Area a few months ago, is being t
held op charges.. ot mansl'aughter and
felony child be.iltihg.
The charges stem from a death last
May 31 of Patrick Tudor, 2, an incident
which was officially ruled an accidental
death at the lime.
The case remained closed until late last
week.when Shear and his wife, Pat, toot
another son, Eric, 21h. months, into a
Fontana hospital.
Police said the couple told doctors th•
Infant was having trouble breathing.
Doctors at Kaiser Foundation Hospital
. perfonned X-rays on the baby and found
partially healed fractures, police said.
The physicians then called police into
the case.
Shear was arrested earlier this week,
and sUbsequent investigation added to
suspicion that the Z.year-old toddler's
death in Newport was not accidental.
A lie detector teM Was part of the
investigation, police said. , I
The Orange County District AttomeY s
office today returned a complaint cbara:-.
jng manslaughter.
Newport Detective Capt. Lou Heeres
this morning reviewed the boy's death
last May 31 at a house at 2327 Margaret
Street. ,
Police arrived at the home, Heeres
said, after PatriCk was found ~ubmerged
underwater in a bathtub, Sbeal"' told
them.
Heeres said thS:t Shea r told in·
vestigators he heard the boy splashing in
1s .. BEATING, Page 2)
Orange!" Coast
Weadaer
There's no silver lining behind
those clouds, juat a wet one which
will be wringing. out tonlght and
Friday morning tlS coastal temp-
eratures dip into the upper 50's.
INSIDE. TODA. Y
Biafran rt.fugte children will
sing their national anthem for
~roptan ·001>1mnfent aides, but
a f~tur« orticlt O'll Page 13 to·
day show• Lhtll have UtUt to
sing obout.
Ctll"'11~ ' ..... " Cl!.Plllf Up ' Mftllll Pllll'Mlt " c .. nllltt v-u Htlltfltl .... .. ,_., • Ofll!tt C-11 ..
CroN-..N " SylYMI ~•r 14 °"'"' Hfllc• " •=: »-» •'1"'1111 ,.,. • J Mtrttll• ... ,.
•11Mf'U1t11Mllt " T ...... M ·-1 .. IJ -u -" ... ~~ • ..... ,,._ " w.,.,..,.. ...... ,,.,,
Mtu ... ' ........ "'"'* ...
••
---____________________________________ ,_ _______ ....;
-=z'--o~~t•~•1_Lo_r~~~-s~~~'-""'1ar~..::..'_Jon....,~1s_._19~
li'er111al Surrender
Biaf ra Leader
Pledges Unity
F""" Win 8erYkft
LAGOS, Nigeria -Ml), Gen. Philip
Elflon& surrendered Blafra fonnally and
unconditionally lo the N!gerlan.s Thurs-
day with a pledge to .support the nation
u ooe undivided..
~ as if to symbolii.e the pledge, be
hugged Blafra's chlef adversary, A1aj.
Gen. Yakubu Gowon, Nigeria 's national
leader.
"'The Republic of Blafra hereby ceases
to exi!t," Effiong said in his SU1Tender
1t.attmenl to Gowon at a military bar·
racks in Lagos. And Gowon resp()nded:
"Let us join hands to build a truly united
anG great nation where no one will be op-
pressed. May God help us."
Thus came the fonnal end lo the
&ea!Ssion proclaimed by Gen. C.
Odumegu Ojukwu on May 30, 1987 with
the charge that the federal mllllary
gov ernment sought to dominate and
oblit~rate Ibo tribesmen, principal in-
habitants of Biafra.
Almost at the same lime that Effiong
officially capitulated, Ojukwu charged
from a hiding place somewhere abroad
that the Nigerians still were bent on wip-
ing out the Ibos and he appealed for a
neutral force to prevent it. His statement
was released in Geneva.
Ojukwu claimed that the Nigerians
seek to ring Blafra with an iron curtain
''to make sure that the atrocities they
will certainly carry out In Biafra are
unseen and unreported in the world
press."
The former leader, who fled Biafra last
wee•enct leaving Effiong in charge, also
appealeci to the world to help Btarrana
who, he said, were le(t starving and et•
bausted by 30 months of war.
Ojukwu'1 2,000.word atatemenl was
dimibuted in Geneva by an American
p.lblic relations agency, Markpreu, th<lt
had acted as a Biafran information office.
Ojukwu's whereabouts remained un-
known, but an agency spokesman did not
deny it bad received the statement by tel·
ei message from Lisbon, Portugal.
''From all indications, it is clear that
Nigeria will not feed our people," said
Ojukwu. "There is no food whaU:oever in
Biafra and unless food can get into
Biafran mouths in the next n hours, it
will be too late.
"Nigeria's insistence to control the
di stribution of relief is both to ensure
that Biafrans get oo such relief and also
to shut out outsiders who might \vitness
and expose the enonnous crimes she
plans to commit against our people."
Although he named no n a t i o n !I
specifically, hls reference to t he
responsibility or nations that supported
tbe fedual government of Gen. Yakubu
Gowon was an obvious reference to Sri·
tain and the Soviet Union.
Gowon's government has accepted
relief offers from Brita.in, which is
preparing a planeload of medical sup-
plies, and from the league of Red Cross
socieites but specifically ruled out any
assistance rrom nations or charitable
ageocies that directly supported Biafra in
the civil war. The Soviet Union has made
no public offers of relief.
* * * * * * Diil U.S. Arrange Flight
Of Ojukwu From Binfra?
GENEVA (UPl)-Biafran leader Gen.
Odumegwu Ojukw\l was nown -out ol
"Biafra Jut Saturday in a U.S. aireraft -
together with aides, their families and his:
white Mercedes automobile, American
60UTCes said today.
The flight was arranged by U.S. In-
telligence. they said.
The American cOIUUlate in Geneva
denied the reports or any knowledge of
U.S. cooperation in Ojutwu's fiJght.
There was aome cmfusioo 1 n
Washinglon wh<n it beume known lhit
bjukwu also wanted ~ take ~ls
automobile, but after hu1T1edly looktng
around, intelligence came up with a gray-
painted super-constellation cargoliner -
called a "gray jbo91.."
Reports from intelligence 110UTce:i in
Fron1 Page I
MONSTER ••.
five to six feet long swimming away from
bis outstretched nel
Poor brave chap. Many like him suc-
cwnbed in exactly the same manner at
Loch Ness.
1be theory behind all trus speculation is
that local residen~ deposited unwanted
baby alligators into the Jake some years
ago and that a school ol the fully grown
creatures is now happily at home in the
reservoir.
We, of course, know better.
The Labrador looks out across the
water. the calls of nature apparently
quieted. His attractive mistress stubs her
cigarette and keeps a careful eye on her
happily playing little boy.
Below the waters a creature daling
back lo the beginnlng of Ume cast a red
scaly eye on the gull dabbling his beak at
the water's edge.
History is in the making at this decep-
tively peaceful Orange reservoir ...
DAILY PILOT
""""" ...... " ....... ._ .. .......... ,.. .... ,...,
C"t• M-
OllAHGt COAIJ PUILllHIHG COMPAIOIY
l olu rt N. W••d
Pm-I .,,_ """"khlr
• J 1t• It Cu1ler v~ Prnlott>I .... t.-11 M-..r
both Nigeria and what formerly was
Biafran territory include the follO\\'ing
items:
-About l~ men at the head of the
Biafran government stood the danger of
facing trial. All of them except one are
known to be out of Biafra and it v.·as
"hoped" the last man got out as well.
-U. Gen. Phllip Effiong, commanding
Btatran forces after Ojukwu left, will not.
be tried by Nigeria .
-All Biafran career civil servants are
cooperating wilh Nigeria,
-Effiong'a surrender broadcast was
made from a mobile radto truck. and not
from the main transmitting statioo at
Uga near UU Airport. This is why ii wa!;
not picked up by European monitoring
ataUons and only in Lagos and Libreville.
-Ojukwu is a wealthy man and is
ltnown lo have haU h.is fluid assets in
London and the other half In Geneva.
-Nigeria paid cash on the nose for an
Soviet weapons. The last shipment v.·as of
48 12G-miillmeter cannon. all mobile, in
mkl-December. American intelligence
has photographs d them being unloaded
h'om cargG aircraft at Lagm airport.
These guns were im mediately put into
use and shelled Uli airport prior to its
capture last Tuesday.
-There have been no confirmed
reports of any massacres.
-The Uniled States believes there will
be conskferable political difflcult ies in
Lagos, v.·ith the military establishment
reluctant to relinquish authority and state
governors equally reluctant to submit lo
central control.
-Nigeria could have finished the war a
long time ap by an aU-OUt military ef·
fort. But this may well have cost more
civilian lives in Blafra -as well as
military casualties among Nigerian
forct!S -than the number of civilians
who died from starvation.
Water Boy 'Escapes'
Fron1 Lagw1an's Lawn
A thief undaunted by damp weather
removed a watery garden d~oraliorr
from a Laguna Beach home Wednesday.
Andrew F.dward Crowell, 430 ~1vrt!e
St., told police a root-high ceincnt
statue of a boy pouring water had been
removed from the fountain in his front
yard.
The decoration was valued at $6.
UPI TtltPlwlt
JJloma's Eroding Too
Washington University of SL Louis studies of Apollo
II n1oon samples have provided evidence that
erosion on the lunar surface is taking place. but
at a 1nuch slower rate than on earth. This photo,
from un iversity scienti!lts, sho\v s a '1zap pit," also
kno\vn as 1n icroscopic craters caused \vhen micro-
meteorites strike 1he moon.
From Page 1
BEATING ...
the tub, then heard gurgling. After a
minute's siler::<" t:-::: investigated.
Shear then allegedly told investigators
he pulled the boy fron1 the v.·ater and ran
to neighbors !or help.
Firemen we re summoned to the house
and they applied external heart massage
and other emergency measures.
Coroner's investiga tor~ said loday lhe
cause of death \vas listed .J.s suffocation
brought on by inhaling sto1nach contents.
Bul the boy also had a lacerated liver
and pancreas, coroner"s aides related to-
day.
Those injuries, they said . could have
been caused by emergency measure:s ap-
plied either by the parents or by fire1nen
on the unconscious boy.
Thus, the death was ruled accidental.
The case remained closed until the
baby was brought into the hospital in
Fontana.
Shear was arrested at the couple·s
home and Initially booked on charges of
murder and felony child beating.
The infant, Heeres related, is recover-
ing from the injuries and is ready to be
released.
· Investigators were attempting to have
the child released to protective custody in
a home for dependent children.
Mrs. Shear, whose age was not im·
mediatet:.o available. was pregnant with
Eric al the time of Patrick's death.
She is not being held, police said.
Attor11ey Bell to Oppose
Hi1·steii1 f 01· County Seat
Tustin attorney Paul i\f. Bell \\'ed·
nc.sda.y announced his candidac}' lot.. the
Fourlh Distri cl supervisorial seat now
held by \Villi<1n1 Hirstein. Bell is the
Boy, 5, Saved
After Accident
LOS ANGELES (AP) -A 5-year-old
lad \\'as recovering lod11y from injuries in
a freeway accident v.·hich officials say
1ni~hl have co.~t his life if a fire inspector
hadn·t blocked traffic \1ith his car.
Paul Luc ke fell into a busy lraffic lane
\\'cdnesday afler his mother lost control
of hl.'"r car on raln·slicked S;inta htonica
f'rec1vay.
Inspector Rich Klatt. following behind,
wh ipped his car to a halt, bl ocking pass-
in g 1raffi c in lhe boy's lane. He guided
!\lrs. Stan1nlia Lue ke. the 111othrr. to
safely as she wandered dangerousl y nr:ir
cars speeding past. He then radioed fol'
help.
Tv.·o rlnugh!ers. Kathy, 3, and 14-monlh-
old Vicki. \\·ere hurled to11·ard the saretv
of the center divider bul had only slight
Injuries.
fou rth man to announce for the cam-
paign.
A resident of Orange County for eight
't'Cars. Bell. 32, said he decided to n1n for
the scat because he \\'anted lo participate
in county government.
··rm probably the only candidate in
this ca1npaign "'·ho hasn't been ap-
proached by 'an uMamed group of In-
terested cilizens' who begged me to run,"
he said.
The attorney said he feels the biggest
issue of the campaign will be pollution.
''The paramount issue racing Orange
County is pollulion arid overpopulation
\\'ilh the resull.ant destruction of our rural
abnosphere. I lhink we ought lo do
everything possible to avoid being choked
out of our homes," he said.
"I think government at the county level
should be brougbL closer to the voters
nnd lhe voters should take a more active
interest in their county's government,"
Bell commented.
Olher candidate.!! running for the seat
include Anaheim busintssman Burr
\Villiams, Villa Park Mayor James T.
\Vorkman, and Calvin Pebley, Anaheim
councilman and ex-mayor. The in-
cumbent, J{irstein. has not made a
formal statement on his intenti on lo seek
reeled.ion . He has, however, given strong
hi nts tha~ he will step down at the end of
this term.
India Asks
POW Wives
Visit Hanoi
From Wire Servftt1
NEW DELHI -lndla·s foreign affairs
chief lod!IY urged the wives of four
American fiiers missing ln Viet narn com·
bat to try to vi!it directly to Hanoi, pm-
m.lsing his own Wluential help in theic
mission.
l\trs. Carole Hanson of 24112 Birdrock
Drive, El Toro, and the three Los
Angeles County \\"omen beliel'e their
husbands are prisoners of war, held by
the North.
A meeting was held secretly today with
Foreign Secretary T.N. Kaul, former In·
dian Ambassador lo J\toscow. who still
maintains close ties to the Communist
v.·orld.
Kaul. who ha s been urging increased
diploma tic conlacts between India and
the Com1nunist bloc, said he would in·
tervene with officials in Hanoi and sug·
gested the service wives apply for visas.
Other sources said Kaul has already
asked the North Vietnamese regime to
release nan1es of 1,400 American
servicemen who arc eilher POWs or
dead .
New Delhi morning newspapers greeted
the visit by the four Southland "war
\vidows" v.·ith sympathelic stories about
their globe-girdling trip in search of word
that their men are dead or alive.
They \\'ill meet Friday morning with
Indian Prime J\Unislcr Mrs. Indira
Gandhi . afterward flying on to Vientiane,
Laos, for a meeting with North Viel·
namese di plomatic officers the re.
Secretary Kaul has suggested that the
women -ordered to leave Russia earlier
this week after arriving illegally without
visas -apply for papers to visit the
North Vietnamese capital. 1 •• •
From Page I
FALL ...
call ed them, he said.
"Our one great fear during con-
struction of the Towers," Johnson said,
"was thal one of the \\"Orkmen might fall.
We v.·ere really relieved when the job was
completed without a single injury."
Ho~·ever. he added "the fear that
something like this will happen is always
there."
Only recently, Johnson said. he had ii.-
creased the height of the railing on the
balcony around the restaurant whe re
visitors like to stand to admire the beach
and ocean view.
Johnson said the way young Temple
landed after his leap. was "a miracle."
The area around the tall Towers
building is all rock , he explained, but this
particular section had " been filled with
sloping dirt to create a planted area with ·
ferns and other greenery. The hotel com-:
p!ex is headquarters for the Presidental
press corps when Presidcn~ Nixon is in
the area.
Laguna Beach detectives are con-
tinuing their investigation of the case to
try and determine why the youth leaped. Lutl1er D. Marr
Dies in Ne,vport
Longtime Newport Beach yachtsman
and sports fisherman Dr. Lulher 0. !\1arr
died at his Harbor Area home \Vcdnesday
after a long illness. He 1Yas 70.
-1J. J. (Jarrell~ 15th semi-annual SALE
A funeral ser\·ice for the rellred physi·
l'it!n, hotehnan and rancher is scheduled
Saturday al 2 p.m. in Kiefer and Eiri ck4
J\1ortuary, Glendale. with burial in
nearby Grand vie1v Cemetery.
Dr . Marr, who 011•ncd sc1cral yachts in-
cluding the Sundown and the famed K-
Thanga -nam::-sake of K·Th anga Drive
in Ne wport Beach -came to the Harbor
Area 21 years cigo.
He and !us v.·ife Julia Lee li\·ed al 20$4
\l·ista Cajon. dividin g lhei r lime bel\\'Cen
Ne"·port Beach and a home at Kai lua.
K11na. Ha\\'ali, purchased 1norc than a
decade ago.
Born in J\lansfil'ld. :'llo., Dr. '.\larr
retired frorn th e medica l profession 1n
1933 to take over the old llotcl Glendale.
then \\'ent inlo ranching al Corona in 1937
before moving to Ne1vport Beach.
A men1ber of the J\tasonic Lodge and
lh e Shrine, Dr . ~1Arr leaves in add ition to
hi~ v.•ife, a son Luther !\tarr Jr .. and 1\\"0
gr.endchildrcn, i\lichelle and Ste\·en ~l\lrr.
M/IDRIG.//L CHEST ON CH!Jf
llG. ltt. NOW 339.
S,ACIOUS ,.DUWl:l
lho,.,•1 k11•tl IEtlltr •
lk01•u1 A. M11r11>l!i110
MtMtlnf IE•ltw
Jn1nho Cl1riste11ed FROM HERITAGE. DlllSSll llEG 419.
IUINISHlD
GOLD 1111111101 JIE~. tt.
NOW 359.
NOW 79. -" c .. 11 M~: J• wnt ••r 11rttl ~ 8MC"ll: 7'11 WHI 11 ..... l11111t11o•
1.. .. uM IH<ll: 711 J'.,.111 A-t
fotwlll ..... llNdl: IJ•ll ''""'" .,,., .........
DAILY Pll..Of, w11!1 -or" it~ .... "--~... " ""*'""'• •• u. ~ ho!!· . d•~ ... _....k ... , ..... ..,. ~ ~
"--' .. IOI. C.i. M"", "-'"""""' 9Ncfl ..i ,_,..., v 11r.r •• ....,. • ..., -,.._..... d i!..... O<t,,.. CMll l'!liN!afo"'f
~ "'"''IN ,..fl .. -01 nu Mtt ··-· ''""'·· )I_, kl(fl,. ... ~ w.J ..., itr..t, C...11 Me1.
, ... , •••• ,,,., 641 ... JJf
c~., ..... ..., '41·1'"' etrtr...... ..... Ort"" C.-0 PllM!tlllo!f
CfHt11f. ... • -tlwJM. Uhntrt!"'-• tt1,.,1t1 IMfll'" er H"9f'l~lt lltf"el~ _, M r.....-.C.. ,.fllllw! ..... , ,..,.
........ "' CtlWflelll -· lit ...... C.14iu ......... "'If .t H......., fffefl .,.,. C.1t ~ C.HfWlllM. "*"" ...... ..,
1;9,,1r, u.o. -"'If• .,. .... u u.• lflOIMll!r1
lllillft'l •11Nt ... UJlt "*"'""'·
l~ _____ ,_
But FAA Says 747 Neecls Changes
WASHINGTON {UPI) -First Lady
Pat Nixon splashed red, \\'hile and blue
water onto the nation's biggest jetlin~r
today. But there was some question
whether the ntwly christened jumbo jct
woold be permltl.ed lo make its first com-
mercial night on time next week.
The Federal AvlatJon Adminislr•tlon
said the 700,000-pound, 490-passense.r
Boeing 747 -the Pan Am4!rlnan Clipper
.. Young America" -had not yet sue·
ceufulty passed tests of Its emergency
ev:icuation system.
E''en as !he christenin g \\'as taking
place at cold D 1111e1 lntl'rn1u.ion11il
Airport, the f AA said modUicatlon~
would havt to bt m11de In two of the II
tscape chutes 11.~ed to e v .11 c u 11 t e
pnssengers quickly Ir case of an ~ccldenl.
In three separate tests at Ros \.\-rll. N.:'11.,
earlier this \.\'C'ek. lhe chutes 1nalfunc-
lioned. the fi\A said.
BQth Pan Am and Boeins sJirl 111"\'
\\'ere confident modificat ions <'":•!d br
n1aclc 1n lin1e for the sched uled \\"c:t-
ncsday innugural night fron1 New \'ork
to London.
Because of it5 CQncem about the escitpe
S}stem. the FAA limited four drmonstra-
tioo nights today for dignitaries at Dulles
\o 225 persons.
The fA1\ lnsi~t.s that a planeload of
J'O•~Cn"rrS Ile ::ible IO Cl"1IC11ate 1he plane
fron1 only five doors within 00 .~('C{)nds. A
total of 331 p:rsons -a planeload -
t'\'acualed \\·ith S7 seconds in onE' of the
Ros"1ell tests. bot the test \\'3!1 not con·
i;ldered successful because one of the
chu\cs failed.
•
---------
WITH ALL THE EXCITEM ENT AND ROM ANCE OF SPAIN , . ,
A BOLDLY ROBUST ELEG ANCE THAT COULD ONLY BE
MADRIGAL ••• AND NOW FOR THE VERY FIRST TIME
WE HAVE THIS MAGNIFICENT BEDROOM COLLECTION All
ON SALE AT SPECIAL REDUCED PRICES!
KINCl·Slll
HIADIOAIO ltlCI. J4t. NOW
COMMOOl 2·DU.Wll
Hl•HT STAND AlG. lit. HDW
Try our convenient
revolving charge. ·
Y""' /11ror1tf' 1u1cr10 , dt.s1g11cr u..ill be f!app11 to cu.sf.ti Uoll •• ,
•
H.J.GARI\ETf fURNllURE
PROFESSIONAL
INT ERI OR OE.StGNER.S
12 !! Hi'RBOR ll\10,
COSTA MESA, CALJF.
646-021S
209.
135.
' '
I
' '
I
l r
•
..... ~-
Duniington Beaeh
VO~. 63, NO. 13, 2 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA ' ' , THURSDAY, JANUARY ·rs, '1970 ·:reN CENTS
~~~~--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--~~~~~~~~"~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
~chool Action Illegal
Magazine D~tribution Drive Ru"led Unlawful
OA1!,.Y P ILOT Slttl Phti.
lfJ0111 Beco111es Citi%en
Presiding Superior Judge \Villiam Speirs o.f Newport ~ea ch and ,Jerry
Smith Jr., 1, congratulate Mr~. Anne S1n1lh ot l-l unt1ngton Beach on
becominG a U.S. citizen. Since da~ is a. n.ative, you ng Jerry reach_ed
citizenship before mom. \Vho hails or1g1nally from Ireland. Smith
family resides at 6071 Cortez Drive, Hunlington Beach. For more on
ne'v cttizcns, see Page 10.
Huntington's Retail Sales
Show Ri se of $21 Million
HunLington Beach retail saJes during
the third quarter of 1969 shoY.'ed an in·
crease of $2.1.3.56,000 ove[ the same perl.Pd
in 1968, according to William J. Back.
E c o n o m I c Development Department
Manager for the Huntington Beach
Chamber or Commerce.
Contributing lo the cily"s increase in in·
come from sa les taxes were eighl out of
JI classifications of retail business which
showed substantiai gains for the period
January througlt September 1969. . .
Automotive sales were up $10 nullion.
Beach Cliamber
Elects Hor ton
As President
Peter Horton, 1i1cDonne11 Douglas ex·
ec\Jlive has been elected president of the
Hunting1on Beach Chan1bcr or C'o1n·
merce . ~le succeeds C. E. "Bill"' \Voods.
Other officers nan1eri by directors Wed·
nesday night are William Peterson, Bank
of America, fir st vice prcsidcnl; Stanley
Botelho, manager of General Telephone,
second vice president, and James
DeGuellc, glass company ow n e r ,
treasurer.
Sil: one-year directors were appointed by
the board bringing t.he total membership
to 25. They are Jerry Bame, attorney:
Wl\liam Bramey, sporting goods store
owner; Louis Evans, Sheraton-Beach lnn
manager: Wiiliam Foster, Huntington
Beach Company vice pre~idenl and
general manager: Richard Wairfiunas,
Southt>rn California National Bank vice
president. and AllC'n HannC'r, Broa dway
Oeparlmenl Store manager.
foods. $1 million·~ pntral merchandiSt,
$2 million; restaurants. $1 .45 million :
furniLure and applilnce:'!, $790,000; ap-
parel stores, $745,000; other retail outlets,
1671.000.
Back said the addition of a new
building supply ou tlet in the eastern part
of the cily during the third quarter of
1969 contributed $300.000 in sales to that
category. He also pointed to the opening
of a large furniture outlet in the last
quarter which will probably double the
entire r~ail sales figure for 1968 for Uils
category, even though the store was only
open two months in 1969.
Sales othe r than relail accounted for a
$2.1 million gain in the first nine months
of 1969.
Back admitted that innationary action
accounted for lhree.fifths of the dollar
g~in in la:icable sales in 1969 but the city
ihll showed a n<!t gain of $8.5 million.
He predicted $138 miiUon in sales for
1969. The total for nine months was
$100,902,000.
Demolish Order
Set for Appeal
The· first appeal or an order by the
HunUngton Beach Building and Safety
Department to demolish an old building
goes before the city's Board of Appeals
Jan. 28.
The appeal dealing with an order to
te'ar down a house at 7~1 Warner Ave.
\\'BS filed by Edward Varela on behalf of
John Varela, the property owner, city
aides said.
The hcanng is scheduled for 7:30 p.m.
In the Admisistrative Annex to the Civic
Center. 523 ~1ain St.
The Varela house "'as one of 15 ordered
to be lorn dov"n by the building depart·
ment last November.
Superior Court Judge Robert Corfman
will rule today that the Huntington Beach
Cltf School District acted unlawfully in
allowing its personnel to become involved
in a magazine distribution drjve.
In preparation at presstime today was
a court ord~. which uJ)hoki! t~ argµ-
ment of Huntington Beach attorney Jim
Bentson that the district violated educa·
lion codes when il allowed elementa ry
level students to peddle litera ture in the
fund -raising effort.
Bentson, 16642 Melville Cir c I e ,
challenged the' school district when his JJ..
year-old daughter. Lisa Ann y.•as refused
permissi on to join 95 students from
Dwyer and Gisler intennediate schools
on a trip to Disneyland.
Lisa Ann was allegedly told that the
trip, in which the students were ac-
companied by school personnel. was a
reward for those studeot.s ·wbo bad sold
Pill's Blame
For Cancer
111 Dispute
WASHINGTON (UPI) -A prominent
cancer specialist warned today that
thousands of women may be feeding the
growth of undetected .breast cancer with
birth control pills.
"Syntheijc estrogem are to b r e a s t
cancer what fertilizer Is to a weed crop.''
Dr. Roy Hertz testified at a Senate hear-
ing. Estf0£ens :re a prime eompoot0t o<,
oral contraceptives. Previous whoessu
&aid man made estrogtns could also
cause bklod ·clotting-m-some -users ot
"The Pill."
Another witness, Dr. Edmond Kassouf
of CNlnford. N. J .. suggested in prtp1red
testimony that the American Medical
Association <AMA ) might ha\•e helped
drug companies promote bir1h cootrol
pills and conceal their alleged dangers.
But Dr. Robert W. Kistner of Harvard
Medical School scoffed at studies linking
oral contraceptives v;ith cancer.
"The pill is sare," Kistner declared.
Hertz formerly headed the reproduction
research branch Of the government's Na-
tional Cancer Institute. He is now with
Rockfeller University in New York.
Said lfert z: ''We know from X-
ray studies that breast cancer exists in
some cases for years before it can be
clinically detected . Howe\'er. since one
woman in 20 will at some thne in her life
develop breast cancer. it is obvious that
in using the pill we are exposing at least
this portion of v.·omen to a substance
known to stimulate pre.existing breast
cancer in women:•
The doctors testified in the second day
of hearing11 before Sen. Gaylord Nelson's
small business monopoly subcommittee.
The group has heard sharply divided
testimony about the safety of "The Pill."
Kistner taking issue with thooe warn-
ing about' dangers of the pill, said: "It is
safer than pregnancy but not as safe as
continence , , • one cigarette is three
times as dangerous lo life as one pill.''
Stork Harket
NEW YORK (AP) -Stock market
prices remained lower _in restrained trAd·
ing today. (Set quolatlons. Pages 14-IS).
As in previous sessions, investors
y.·erc hesitanl and waiting in the wings
for tompelling ne ws developmcn~.
analysUi noted.
'35 or more· in magazine subscriptiom.
Bentson °protested that he b ad
perso:ially ·offered to pay the coats of the
trip and t.hus include bis daughter in the
school plilrty. He said tl\at the offer was relu~ by .sc.:1001 dis trict officials.
Bentson argued in court that t.he
organizing activities or lhe school and Uie
involvfment or its officials in fund·
gathering and the calling of school
~seinblies to plan and organize the drive
were unlawful.
, The school district's attorney countered
that t.he magazine drive organized by
Quality School 'Plan Inc., of New York,
was e1>nducted through student body
facilities: It did DOC, he said, infringe on
state education codes which bar selling
activities affecting 1district and teacher
time.
The 1trip itself, Bel'lt.son told Judge
tiONORED IN DEATti
M•rtin Luther Kint
Many Ceremonies
Across U.S. Pay
Tribute to King
By United Prt11 lntemation1I
Thousands acr0&s the nation hooortd
Or. Marlin Luther King Jr. today-the
4 I st anoivf>f.sary of his birth.
Sevrral governors, including Nelson A.
Rockefeller or New York, Kenneth Curtis
of r.taine and Frank Licht of R h o d e
Island, declared today ''Martin Luther
King Day," in honor of the assassinated
civil rights leader.
Schools were closed In several cities,
Including New York, Ba It i more,
Pltiladelphia, Kansas City, Poughkeepsie,
N.Y., and Harrisburg, Pa.
New York Mayor John V. Lindsay 1ald
city workers could take. the day off.
The official inauguration of the Martin
Luther King Memorial Center, a pr~
jected cultural and spiritual gathering
pjace for American Negroes, was stt for
today, in A1laitta. 'the cen~r will.be built
ni!ar King's new crypt and the Ebenezer
Baptist Church where h'e served as
copastor.
Unoffi cial ceremonies. many with an-
tiwar overtones, were scheduled in many
areas taking no orficial note of the day. The monlhly meeting or 1he directors
has been dlangcd from the current >
p.m. to a noon luncheon. Beginning in
February, mcclings will l:onvene at 11 :45
a.m. and be rotated between member
restaurants. Lo~h Ness Revisited
Student Facing
Extortion Rap.
A 13-year-old Golden West College stu-
rient has been ordered to appear for tried
Jan1 23 In Orange County Superior Court,
Santa Ana. on charges that he tried lo c:t·
tor1. $5,000 from Or. Ralph Bauer a{ Hun-
tington Beach.
1lictor Yee Tsao. Z2fl lZlh St.. Hun·
ling1oo Beach, was bound over Wed·
nesdaj from West Orange .C.Unty
Munici pal Court, WeMmlns~r. to
Superlor Court et the conclust0n nT a
prelim inary hearing into the extorUon
charges.
Tsao was arrested Nov. 21 , by Hun·
ting&on Beach detectives after allegedly
sending a note to Dr. Bauer, a lrus.tee on
both llj< Ocean View and the Hu.U~oo
Beach Union High School district.,
threatening pl1yslcal bum If 16,000
W1s n'l dellvercd to him.
Peters Can.yon's Big Al -Swimming !nto Hi-story
Editor'~ Nott! Forme.r B1itl1h
joun14fi&t Tom Barley '"~" · 'IL.ted· to
spend hi& ti.me 1'tgoroU&:Jri.i:hOlsih0 tlle
Loch Ness monster in ScoUand., ii
now do ing ft.it thing ot nn Orcinge
Count11 reservoir. ai indicated in tl~t!
followhio di!patch.
By TOM "9A RLEY
OI 1919 Otllf Plltt l it "
ON SAFARI AT PETERS C~NYON
REStRVOIR-Our only Companions at
th!s rtmOle "·ater hole on this iray
moody mcning were a rnlldly Interested
housewife, her romping 3-year-old 1<1n
and a large black Labradot dog.
The only movement on the, limpid
\\'aters.otthe lake was Oie ooceskmal rip-
ple created by flllul and ratnfillod 'll'lnd.
'!be 3-year-old toddi.t ond -al Ult
wa ter's ediC. his mother absenUy Jiahts
..
and·puffs on a cig~~ and the cJoi does onlookers who Jll!thetically believe tJ\al
wliat all dogs do ~mong the shrUbs at the an aJlltator Is responsible· for ra'iages in
edge o( the reservoir. too Orange Jake. Bird and fish afe 1s&id
Ah yes, Labradors are big dogs indeed . to have been devoured in cOpklui qtlin·
All. the uninitiated might say, is tran· tlties by the wily cteature.
quility. Like "Nessie", the da,rling of Brilish
This veteran observer is not, however, joun11'1ists. Orange County's own
deceived. We have under our belt the monstir hu skill!t.dly1e.vaded c:aptuz:t;.
fruits or a long ago assignment to Loch 1\r.·o curators from the. Buena. 'Park
Ness.,.. and tbe. vut t.echnl~al kn:>wledge Alligi1't0r E'ahn fi,st!e<f Jor Muri" .''*'8
garnered while sipping hot swcfl te\J for WtfineidaY and 1hpped away ldh\inlng
long houri al the Side ol that fabled Scot· de!eat. And several local ~aktenti: ·hive
Ush lake. bravtly ventured fonh upon the murky •
Below the waters of Peters Canyon witel"I to try their band 11. 'ptUJ;a l'!lJUlt
reservoir is a creeture thst closely not.or1ely M of Big Al. · • • ~
membles the scaly amphibian that Mariy onlookers pathetk:alty; ~·to
sport.ii in the murky depths and cc--having teen aevera l a1UPtora1' ~one
c8'ionally on the .surface ol the gloomy ~eidY ohtf!U who bravtd lltp d'4l!p mud
Scottish water•. 1 • "-·, aol\lally retW'llod lo;...,.'l<>•cjolni'llllt
II bas·beengiven ~of Bit 111.., ~"~ ~'*"'t':llll!lolt
easily mial~ -c.<>M...tf··<>fli<oaT•r ii:-r • • IS..MO 1PIJ "
,, •
Corfman, consututea a breach of state
law with it.a: breaking: into aChool time: and
by the 'fact that four di!ttict eme~}
two or them teachers, accompanlf:d the
atudents.
Judge Corfman's order is seen as• rul-
ing that may end the activities of school
dist ricts in· magazine, su~lptlon driv'es
and remove all administration influene11
from such projects.
And t.he order is seen as a statement
that all such drives must be on a purely
voluntary basis in which students must
accomplish their own 1ccountin1 and
conduct their own organization.
School district officials have defended.
the program as "something that we've
had for a long. long Ume and an actiVity
that simply benefits student prOJfams,"
But Bentson ·argued : "Qur education
codt clearly slates that a. public entity
may not acUvely partici pate in any pro-
gram which C>lls· fer the ~ o( tax nlonies." ·
S.A. "Al" Moffett. "'~ tJI
the 11\lntinglQO.-Beach City School Di•
trict, said when asked to commenhln the
coort's decision that be had no stattment.
"I'll have to think on it," he slid.
"lf we can't sell ma1azln~. We•ti·have
lo find another projec;t to find mmey.'•
Bentson, when infonned of the Jtate-
ment, shouted:
"Hooray, Justice. has been done tpi!llh
. •·rm tickled pink," be added ...
Jn explaining the poulble m...., tJI
the declaiilo, he said ·it would·~ ap,ily Jo •Ill' fund.r~~iig,eve!jt, .
class tjme or spending tu·monl)' 1 • vale enterprise. ' · .
School district offidobl w'a:; ~:;:"anaware with news of Judie '1 ~
ciai<ln ;md .......S 1 bllmm,,.i.at.lbe
ruling liai'!'i-lhem· .
Formal Surrender
Biaf ra Leader
Pledges Unity
From Wire Servle11
LAGOS, Nigeria -Maj. Gen, Philip
Effionc surrendered Biafra formally and
uncondillonally to tile Ni&erian1 ThufJ-
da~ with·1.Jlledge lo "'fl""\ the uU!"
I S «me undi Vfded. "
Then 11 if to SYIJlboliza ~ pled1e. ht
...huu;~BJafr1 '1 chir! ,:.ad_.t•rJ!ry..k-MaJ.
Gen. Yakubu Gowon, Nlierll 's national
leader: ·
"The. Republic ol Biatra hereby celses
to exist," EfUong said in his !tln'ender
statement to Gowon at a military bal'o
racks in Lagos. And Gowon responded:
''Let us join hand1 to build a truly united
ancl great nation where no one will be op-
pressed. May God help us."
Thus came the formal end to the
1eeession proclaimed-by Gen. C.
Odumegu OJukwu on May 30, 1917 with
the char1e that the federal mililary
government sougllt lo dominate and
obliterate Ibo tribesmen. principal in-
habitants of Biafra.
Almost at the same time that Effiong
officially capitulated, Ojukwu charged
from a hfding 11l11ce somewhere abroad
that the Nigerians rtill were bent on wip-
ing out the Ybos and he appealed for a
neUtral force to prevent it. His statement
was released in Geneva.
OjukWu claimed that the Njgerians
seek to ring Biafra with an iron curtain
"to make sure that the atrocities they
will certainly carry out in Blafra are
unseen and unreported in the world
press ...
The former leader, who Oed Biafra last
weekend leavln& Efftong in charge, also
appealed to the world to help Bialran1
who, he said, were left starving and n•
hausted by 30 months of war.
Ojukwu's 2,000.Word 'statement WU
distributed tn Geneva by an American
public rel1tioo1 agency, MartpreSll, that
had acted u a Biafran information office.
Ojtlkwu's whereabouts remained . un-
known, but an agency spokesman did not
deny il had rectlved the statement by tel·
ex message from Li sbon. Portugal.
"From all indications, it Is clear that
J\igeria will not feed our people,'' said
Ojukwu. "There is no food whatsoever in
Biafra and unless food"" ca n get into
Biafran mouths in the nut n hours, It
will be too late. .
"Nlgtria's insistence to control the
distribution of relief is both to ensure
U>at Blalrans get no 111ch rtllef ond also
to abut out outsiders who ml.ght witness
and ezpose UM enormous ~ she
plan·s tO commit.against our~·" .
'Although b'e nmned no nat1o·ns
specifically, his reference to the
respor&Jt)ility' of· natk>M that auJlll(l!'tid
tl\e federal goven)l1l~I of Gen.. YlkJ!bu
Gowon was an obvlous rdereJIGt to Bri-
~n and the Soviet Union.
and 'to 'li\l't you penon1l · umira.ncts 'and
the assurance of everyone here at¥1 the
u.wrance of the full liatlan,. the sU.preme
Milltacy CounCU alid of tbe l"ederal Ex-
eCut! .. Council ·and 1b Ay-lh&t all th•
~!bat wt~. tl!~.•IU be
"W•. have cran\ed a ~al. l;IMflftr
•• , Pmooally l -lhet probobly . .if •
not-because-or Ojutwal•~. ltich a
lhlnr would JtOt 1; .. , hi-· t4 lhia
c\)llnV!'. J!ut when1 Ii ojukWU tliday! '.'A~~r leodlp( YOU, Into we~ lmlblt
privation, hun,er, deprivation add kDl-
ings where Is Ojukwu today? He til.s
••caped •. probably lo go and enjoy the
money that he bas inlde at your npenae, ·
.at the expense of lDDocent N11ert1m."'
Gty CoJ!tiJlµ~
.Changes Format
Of Annual Meet
C<mmuntty Congress, a one-day_
brain.storming event for city bettel;rnent,
will be continued this year. pnibr.bly In
mid-April and in a new format, ffun..
Unglon Beach Chambet-ol 0on.,...
dlrecttin·decidcd Wednfllday.
The -this -will be poUemod alter "OperaUon Dialogue" .. <natod bJ.
the U.S. O>amber ol Oomm...,.,
Dr. Clltence· Hall, auperlntendstt. ol
tho Oc<an Vtew School Diatricl, w!Jo hll
parlldpalod.ln such eventa, ll worldnfl m
plans. ' Al eiplalned. 30 lo 3S people Ill at a
round table. wilh ,... epecJflc dloc-
subject. Conversatloo wanna up 11111
alter six hours ol bnuJillonr4llll lhe
participants .arrive Jt key corm"umdty,
iaues.
A general meeting ccncludeo lheday.
Compositioo of lbe grwp """""' eadi table is selected to .,ary professions and
occupations. Pre•Jously. acconllng lo
rellring Chambet-Presldmt Bill Woodl,
those aUending complained ol loo much
lecturing and not enw.gh 1ihie · for
dialogue.
,,,.,.... no. llMlr llnlla -·th"' cloudJ, jUll I ft! _, Wblch. wm be wrtngfnc, «it 1bnlJl{!I and'
Friday morning.., coutal !<mp.
erature1 dip tnto the upper 5011. • INSWE '{ODA l'
Gowon's aovernmenl bas ·accepted
relief ' offen from Britain, which t1 . Bf.afro~ re/ugei chfldr111' will'
J)!'tparing a 'fllaneload o( medical IU~ sing thetr 110.Uonal a11thm for
pile! and from the league of Rtd Croll Euro)')fon government cJdt1. bwt
pieltes buL 1pcciflcally nJled OIJl ~IDY • ,• 1 .. t~rc •l'li~l< ""P~ !'.I.oz .
assistance rrom nations ~ chlrtlltHt • : ~ .S'10Wt 'Utcu ~~.,Ufe· 1 ·'
agencle1 thllt dlredly lllJ>porled Blilrt lo' "119 oboia. -· , •
the ctvtl w1r. Tht Sovlet'Unloo bu~ ' c.......w. ? ...,._ ·"
oo public offers.or relief. 1..:.· , 1 =.,':':. _., ,,_,: :.~ ~
Gowon on the othtr band.,ptomnr-.at t...wa 11 .,..,... """" ,.
tbt sufi.endu-Ctrtrnony a ,...1 =-.::... : !Y"!'I ,.... ..,:
Jtfmeatv ancf'J;tectlon for lht· '\D-• 'T • ..._.I ,.... t = ...... U.• ·' •JB I • ' • ...,.Ill'""" tt ".....,.,.. • hlllblta:ntf VI ·•• •' • • ' • ,..... t+lt 1'-"" • ~·we;.taow ... ritoll.1of·101,t wm·.._. , ~:... ~ :; .. .._ .,.~ ·
n10t~~be'..W.• 1 f 1 r ·:· t ,. • MttlllM r """'"""' · ... ~-L~'bitl91t>'~" L...:;··=-""----------'
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L
. % DAILY PILOT H ThundoJ, J.n.,.y 15, 1970
Square About Gisler · s~~ool
Open Classrooms Aid Tea"'1 Teqching
'lly''l'Zllft1' CO'l'ILl>E
ot .. DllW PltM .....
There Is nothing "$Quare" about Gisler
Intermediate School in Huntington Beach.
ln fact, it was deliberately designed by
the Huntington Beach City School District
as a step away from ".squareness" -in
more ways than one.
First impre53ion ot the school is that
a giaut bee flew ovC'I' the southwestern
part or the city and.. genlly dropped her
honeycomb on a IO-acre plot.
The sides are hexagonal -not square.
ll st.ands with short walls juttin& in sev·
eral directions to form a series af con·
rieded hexagons.
And inside, where the classrooms are,
there aren't any walls. The open clat5e5
are part of the schoo1 '1 Olhe:r "u.nsquare"
aspect -team teaching.
· Gisler was designed in 1967 and opened
this school year with the idea of combin-
ing a iwique building structure with a new
and evolving teaching philosophy.
. Open classrooms will ano.w~the school to
·rat)J initiate a team t.eaclung program
•!thin the nett few weeks, according to
principal Jolm Wyatt.
TO understand the team teaching phi!·
osophy and structure, follow a !ixth grade,
boy, Joey. through a oormal eigh~period
day as it shouJd operate under team
teachlng.
Joey attends c~ss at Gisler from 8:30
a.m. to 3: 10 p.m.
His first activity of the day is reading
snd language, a 00.mlnute session which
combines two . normal periods. For the
first 3) minutes Joey is with nine other
ClmmateS and one teacher discussing
the. .course matuial, answering and ask-
ing questiol'l5. Then Joey .le.aves the small class area
and he and hiJ mates join 40 othtr young-
Ms· in a large: study session with two
teachers supervising. For 30 m.imrtt:s
these students can do homework, read or
Work on clasS projects.
' Next Joey shifts to a "lab session," also
30 minutes Jong, with the. 50 yoongsters
from the study session. Here the students
may again be divided in groups of 10 !or
Edison Student
Charles Price
Oratory Winner
Owles S. Price, aophomore student -at
Edison High School, WU the winner in
tile nxent 33rd Oratnrkal c:onie..t ol tlie
Hunlingtm Beach Poot ol the Am<rican
Legion.
Taking secMd place was David T.
Bracken, and tied for third ftre Mark
Randol amj~l<I Naraojo. f!'' ·
Price i11.an honor student at Edison and
bas ietfered in tennis and. iJ a 4P!tech
team 'member. He will coi;npete, "'th
students from nine other schools at
l ;30 p.m. Jan. 25 at the ?t1idway City Post
of the Legion.
Judges for the cont.est included
Municipal Judge Cella Baker; Ted
Bartlett, Huntington Beach city ·coun-
cilman; Ernest Pascoe, pr Inc Ip a 1.
Edison; Gail Langenbeck, past president
of 1he J:luntingt.on Beach Women'• Club
and ~anl !lodgers, •Ice principal Of
Eader elementary school.
Mrs. Casey Quits
Post in Chamber
·'Mrs, Cissie · Casey has resigned as
pfesidertt pf the .Women'~ Dlvlslon or the
Huntington l;leacb Chamber of Com-.
merce~ Succeeding hu is .Mn;. Vera
Podsade, first vice preSident.
Mrs. Casey's hu sband, commander of
tOe destroyer USS DeHaven has been
ttansferred to Norfolk, Vi. where he will
be under the NATO command.
Mrs. Case,Y said the Women 's Division .
woufd ·preser.t seven awirds at the
Chamber'• annual blrxpiet, Jan. 30 at the
Sheraton-Beach Inn.
DAILY PILOT
OllAM~E a>4'T PU•LIW.lNG COMl'ANY
l obtrl N. w,,d
P1t1•t"I -l'llbli.ri.r
J1c• It. Curl1y
Viet "'"ieart 1...i C.-•l lfo1,..gtr
Tho.,.•• Ke1•il
.Lc1i.r
1homtl A.. Murphinc
M t""'lnll Editor
Albert W. 11111
AHOC.lflt Cdlllor
H1ittf11pn .._. Offk.e
1717S l11c;" loul1 .. 1rd
M•iflng Add,..,, P.O. a.1 790, '2641
OtMr. Offic,as Laoll,_. .. ldl~ m 1"«9t AYllMI
• CAii M-1 llO WW .. , ftreief H...,_I &lldl; nu wine ... llOullNltd
~ li1ml, alld-. or llatenh>a to'""-The 115 can be lllld for .,,, opielil iit<iil
ol tile otuda>L .
Willie Joey If In blo lab, oilier yw.,..
sters In the same readJ~ ind languaae
section f!nay, be In · .mQdy or dlsc1-1ulon
group. The order is flexible and the total
project handles about 150 youngsters all
learning reading and lan1ui1ge, but in
divided orders.
''The flexibility or this typr' or teaching
Js where its value Hts, .. explal111 Wyatt.
Tbe normal discuuion4tudy·lab routlne
can be altered in any way the "team" of
teachers reels nechsary to best accom·
plish a day's work.
At the end of the 90-minute reading and
1anguaae section, Joey then aoes to physi-
cal education, oonduded in a 1tandard
method, as a 6-mln1.1te period.
Following phys-ed Joey goes back t<> tile
main ~ whe~ he joins is or so other ~at~ W a lhop, science, music « art course in me of the bulldlna:'s rew
fb:lly-enclosed classrooms. AJ•in taught
in a standard ~minute period.
Then comes lune.h. Alter 45 more min-
utes Joey goes back to class and to an--
other 9(1.mtnlJf.e section, this time on math
and social studies.
The m•th·soclal study :section has tilt
same. format as reading-language, 1Jmply
different subjects.
After the 90 m.inulel stops Joey walks
to bi& last cla51., home room. where he
identifies with one teacher and school
problems are taken care or.
The key to team teaching is the 9G-min·
ute session. Modern educatori: feel it dis·
play$ the best utilization ol time and tal·
ent
For 30-minutes Joey is in a clw with
onJy nine other students, he can learn
more directly from that teacher, com-
pared to a normal llChoo1 with one teacher
for every 30 students.
Joey wiD aho earn a chance to learn
his subject from more than one teacher-
thus widening hi8 edu cational ei:perience.
"Another benefit is that bad teachers
are more easily weeded out by the team
of teachers," adds Wyatt.
..,'frllio"l'fW;~~~~
lrom dlacflulon4<>1tudy~ .. 1abor combine
ln ... larp meetlll( u tbe -de-11lre,
",We hive no problems with one clus
dlsturblna: another," said Wyat~. He ex·
plained that the full team teaching system
has not yet been initiated at Gisler,
but 111 pl'-nned this year.
A few problems still have to be iront>d
out. One' Is report cards. Some adjust·
ment wUl have to be made to aecolmt for
the fact that JotX wi.U have more than
one teacher far certain subjects.
A change must also be made in audio-
visual mat«ial to adapt it for more per-
sonal Ult, rather than the standard con-
cept ot »SO 11tudenlll viewing a movie on
a large acreen. Glliter teachers already
use a movie projeetor that projects into
a teltvision.lilce bo:I for use with smalJ
~·of the new concept in schooling is
the iame as a normal school. Glslrr ln-
tmnedlate cost the district abrot S2 mil·
lion far tile lan<I Ind building ol the
acbool.
A mall area is built between the two
msjor buildings which currently separate
11l1th graders rrom the 15eventh and eighth
grades. The mall has been used for lunch,
phy1lcal education when it rains, civic
meetings and a few dances.
"The primary objective of team teach·
ing is to provide some part of the day
when the teacher can get on a very close
level with just a few of his students," ex·
plained Wyatt. "The compatibility of the
teachers in the team is also necessary
and teachers are being hired with lltiJ
idea in mind."
Public responte to the program has
been good, aceording to Wyatt. who fore-
sees more team teaching in the district
in the future.
The team teaching method doesn't
change the basic curriculum of the school.
"Our studenta are learning the same
things as those at the older Dwyer
School," Wyatt said. "The difference is
jn how they learn iL"
Valley Medians Go Green
Greener strtet medians wilt be the
mark of Fountain Valley.
That point was agreed on Tuesday
night at a joint study session ol the. city
council and the parks and recreation
commission.
Cross C,ountry
Winners Listed
Thirty-five Fountain Valley youngsters
plodded through the rain in the city's
fifµl annual novice cro.ss country cham·
pionsh.ips at Fountain Valley High
School Saturday.
Boys and girls from the third through
eighth grades ccmpeted in the parks and
recreation sponsored meet in preparation
f(lr the Orange County finals Saturday at
Weslminster High School .
Winners tA. the flve different boys'
brackets were Phillip St.afford, Joe y
Vrab, Sc<itt Mueller, Jl.1ike Garcia and
Tooy Vrab.
Girls' winners were Nora Labrousse.
Rita Kysella, Tina Kysella. Sylvia
Garcia, Dawn .Labrousse and Debbie
Labroosse.
From P.,e l
MONSTER •..
five tom feet long swimming away from
his ootstretched net.
Poor brave chap. Many like him SUC·
cumbed in exactly the same manner at
Lbch Ness..
The theory behind an this speculaUon is
that loci.I reiidmt.s deposited unwanted
baby alligators into the lake ~e years
ago and that a school or the fully grown
creatures ia now happily at home in llMl
reservoir.
We, of coarse. know better.
The Labrador looks oot 10"05S the
l•:ater, the calls cf nature appartnUy
quieted. His attractive mistress stubs her
cigarette and keeps a careful eye on her
happily playing liWe boy.
Below the waters a creature dating
back to the beginning Of lime cast I rf'd
scaly eye on the gull dabbling his beak at
the water's edge.
History is in the making at this dece~
lively peaceful Oraflie reservoir .••
Nell Tuesday the council will bavt a
chance to adopt a commission report
recommending landscaping for all major
streets ln Fountain Valley. Last week the
council refused a aimilar report and call·
ed for the study session.
'Ibe point of contention was whether
mne major ttreets such as Maanolia
Slnet should hive temporary paving for
street medians. Tbe council said "no''
and 'n>eaday the commission agreed.
Work oo some street medians will start
an.er the coundt gives its 1pproval Tue&-
d1y.
Talk Set Tonigl1t
On Handicapped
How educationally h a n d i c a p p e d
children can be integrated into a normal
school progTam becomes the topic of a
presentation by Fountain VaUey's Fulton
School stalf this evening.
lt will bea:in at 7:30 p.m. before the
Fountain Valley School district board of
f.rusttes at the Curricuhun Materials
Cent.er, One Light.house Lane.
Fulton School has been awarded a
$fi6.800 federal grant to develop a pro-
gram for the educationally handicapped
which il!i closely aligned to normal
classes.
Traditionally education a 11 y han·
dicapped pupils have been j.c;olated into
special classes and have received special
iru;truetions.
Religious Leaders
Plan Broadcast
More than 60 city officials and religious
leaders have been invited to join the
Fountain Valley Jaycees for breakfast at
8:30 a.m. Sa.lurday in Topper"s Steak
llouse.
The occasion is the f i r s t annual
t.fayor's Prayer Breakfast initiated by
the Jaycees to honor ciric leaders,
especially Mayor Ed~·ard Just.
Guest speaker will be Don Hall .
rounder of Teen Challenlil'.e in Southern
California and current di rector of that
groop·s narcotics and drug r rl'vention
program.
Jn111bo Christened
But FAA Says 747 Needs Changes
WASHINGTON (UPJJ -First Lady
Pit Nixon 11pluhed red, white and blue
water onto I.ht nallon's biggest jetliner
today. BuL there. ~·as &Orne question
"·hether the ne'il>·ly christened jumbo jet
~·ould be permitted UI make its first com·
m•rcial fllghl on lime next week.
The fede:ral Aviation Administration
said the 700.000.pound. 490-passengfr
Boeing 747 -the Pan Amerinan Clipper
"'r'oung America " -had not yet suc-
cessfully pas.~ telits of Its em•raency
C\'acuation sy!ltem.
Even as lhe chri!ltening wa11 taking
place at cold Du 11e1 lntem&tlon1l
Airport, the FAA said modlllc1Uons
would have &o be made In two ot the It
escape chutes u~ to t v a c u at •
paaiengera quickly ir. cue of an acddenL
In three aepa.rate. test& at Roawelt, N.M.,
earlier: \his week. the chutes malfunc-
Uoned, the t AA nid.
Both Pan Am and Boeing said t~y
v.·ere confident modificaUons could he
made in time for the ~eduled Yted-
ntM!ay inauiur1l flight from New York
to Loodon.
Beca1.1se of its concern about the eM:apt
s~ siem. the f AA limited four df'monstra·
liot'I nights today for dignitarits at Dulles
lo 225 Pfrsons.
The FAA insists that a planeload of
pn~sengers be 1b\e to evacuitte the plane
from ooly fh•e doors wllhin 90 seconds. A
total of 381 persons - a plane.load -
evacuated with 17 1ec:ond1 in one of the
Roswell tula, but the test W II no\ COft.
sldenid suctesatul becluae OM of the
chutts failed.
DAILY .. ILOT i11H I'll*
G!SLER SCHOOL: THE SHAPE OF THINGS TO COME IN HB ED!)CATION
Trustees Junk
Too-ltlgh Bids
For GWC Work
Bids by conLractDI'i to do construction
at Golden West College were thrown out
Wednesday night by Orange Coast Junior
College District trustees because they
were all too far over the architect's
estlmate ol the proj<ct cost.
Low bidder of six bidders was Bumnan
C.OOstruction Company. or Chula Vista ,
which offered to eon.struct the buildings
at a price or $2,468,880.
The estimate by the \Villiam L. Pereira
and Associates architectural finn, of
Corona de! Mar. had been $2 million to
build the fa cilities according to their
plans.
No one from Pereira's offi ce was
present lo offer an explanation f:'lr lhc
bids so widely missing the estimate.
Junior C(l\]ege trustees deeided to
read\'ertise. for bids beginning Jan. 29
with a new opening date March 12.
Work on the Huntington Beach campus
covered by the bids was to include a 350-
seat community theater, a police scfence
addition, a cafeteria, a student activities
area and 600 parking stalls.
Rehab Organization
Plans Stock l\reeting
Stoen, boods and you is the theme of a
husband and wife meeting or the Orange
County West Chapter of Women's
American Organiiation for Rehabilitation
Through Training.
The meeting, at which Herbert Segaloff
will be the guest speaker will be held al 8
p.m .• Jan. 22 in the Los Alamitos home of
Segaloff . For further information call 430·
<124-0 or 596-7683.
Did U.S. Arrange Flight ..
Of Ojukwu F1·om Bi.afra?~
GENEVA (UPI} -Biafran leader Gen.
Cklumegwu Ojukwu was flown out of
Biafra last Saturday in a U.S. aircraft -
together with a.ides, their families and his
white Mercedes automobile, American
50UtCes sakl today.
The flight was arranged by U.S. in-
telligence, they said.
1iK! American consulate in Gene\'a
denied the reports or an y knowledge of
U.S. cooperation in Ojukwu's night.
There was some confusion In
Washington when it becamt known that
Ojukwu also w;:inted lo tak e his
aut omobile, but after hurriedly looking
around. intelligence came up ·with a gray-
paint.ed su per-constellation cargoliner -
called a ;'gray ghost. ..
Reports from intrtligcnce sources in
OOth Nigeria and y,·hat formerly \va.s
Biafran territory include the following
items:
-About IS men at the head of the
Biafran government stood the danger of
facing trial. All of them except one are
known to be out of Biafra and it was
"hoped" the last man got out as well.
-U. Gen. Philip Effiong. commsnding
Biafran forces arter Ojuk'A'U left , will not
be tried by Nigeria.
-All Biafran ·career civil servaMs are
cooperating with Nigeria.
-Effiong's sw:render broadcast was
ma'de froin a mobile radio truck .,and not ·
from the main transmitting station .at
Uga near Uli Airport. This· is v.·hy it \Va!:
not picked up by European ·monltoring
stations and only in Lagos and Libreville.
-Ojukwu is a wealthy man and is
known to have half his fluid assets in
L<>ndon and the. other ha!J in Geneva .
-Nigeria paid cash on I.he nose for all
Soviet weapons. The last shiprnent was of
48 120-mitlimeter cannon, all mobile, in
mid-December. American intelligence
,
ffas photographs of them being un!Olilded
from cargo aircraft at Lagos airport.
These guns werei~echate1y put into
use and shelled Uli airport prior tD its ·
capture last TueMay.
-There have been no COllfirmed
reports of any massacres. •
-The United States believes there will •
be considerable political difficultles in,.
Lagos, with the. military establi shment ,
reluctant to rehnquish authority and state •
governors equally reluctant to submit Lo
central CQntroL
-Nigeria could have fini shed lhe war a
ln ng time ago by an eil-oul rnilitary er-
fort. But this may .,.,·ell have cost more ·
ci\"ilian Jives in Biafra -as .,.,·ell as
military casualt ies n1nong Nigerian .•
f;irccs -than the number of ci v11iaos
\\•ho died fro1n starvation.
Beacli Chamber
Seeks Members
A concentrated one-day membership •
drive has been planned by the Huntington ·'
Beach Chamber of Commerce for Mon-'·
day, ·Jan. Ii. .
Chamber Executive Manager Ralph·.
Ktsef said 400 letterS'· sollcltlcg ~··
sp&Uve memberi hid been sent. out in ·'
laying grpundwork for the whirlwind'···
can1paign .
Eaeh merfibcr of the membership com -:·
mittee will be assigned 10 prospects, :
Kiser said. located in the same ·
geographical area of the city. Ki!er '
reporled that the chamber had signed 2S '.
new members in the last ~uarter of 1969. .:
The membership campaign will start · ~ith coffee and donuts at the chamber of· .:
'fices . ·•
fi. J. (}arrell ~ 15th semi-an.,ual SALE
•' ·. .·
.•
MllDRIGJIL
HERITAGE
WITH All THE EXCITEMENT AND ROMANCE OF SPAIN.,,
A BOLDLY ROBUST ELEGANCE THAT COULD ONLY BE
MADR15AL , , , AND NOW FOR THE V'HY FIRST TIM!
WE HAVE THIS MAGNIFICENT BEDROOM COLLECTION All
ON SALi AT SPIC!AL IEDUC!D PRICISI
S,ACIOUS f·DlAWllt
DltlSSll lllG 41,.
IUINllHIO
GOLD MlltlOI llG. ''·
NOW
NOW
NOW
111i1·•s111
HIADIOAID •••· 2i1t. "ow
COMMOOI 2·DUWD
MllKt STAND llG. lit. HOW
Try our convenient
revol ving chorge,
l·our favor ite interio r designer 1rlll be 1'1.app~ io ll!-!iit 11ou •••
H.J.GARREIT fURNITLIRE
PROFISS!ONAL
INTElllOI DESUiNEIS ??IS HA~IOlt ll VO.
COSfA. MESA, CAl!F.
····0215
339.
359.
19.
209.
135.
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r~;,,~. Januiiy !5· 1'110 If OAILV PllGT :J
County Approves Coast Development Study
•• .
~Political Declrion'
Aldrich Bac.ked
.,
. .
:~.On .·s~~ Ruling
' ::Uc :Jrvint Chancellor Daniel Aldri<h
ti>l d faculty membel'l!'fiat out ·WedM!doy
t~at his decl.oion not to allow SOS to hold
a. national conference on campus was a
~tical decision. .
i;lle acknowledged before the Academic stoate that be waa deo)'lni ·Studenta for
POWs' Wives
l\Ieet India
F oreigl\ Aide
From Wire Services
NEW DELHI -India's foreign affairs
chief today urged the wives of four
American fliers missing in Vietnam com-
bat to try to vislt Hanoi dittctly, pro.
mi.sing his own lnfluentlal help in their
mission.
Mrs. Carole llan!on o! 21112 Birdrnck
Drive, El Toro, and the three Los
Angeles County women believe their
husbands are prisoners of war. "held by
the North.
A meeting was held secretly today with
Foreign Secretary T.N. Kaul, fonner In-
dian· Ambassador to Moscow, who still
maintains close ties to the Communist
world.
Kaul, who has been urging increased
diplomatic contacts between India and
the Communist bloc, said he would in·
tervene with officials in Hanoi and sug·
gested the service wives apply for visas.
Other soµrces said Kaul ~as already
asked tPe North Vietnamese regime to
release names of J,400 American
servicemen· who are either POWs or
dead.
New J:>dhj morning new'1l'-pers:ireeted
the visit by the ·four Southland "war
widows" willt sympa~tic 8tori(s about
their,. globftgir4ijng· trip.in search of, word ·
that'&heit men .are dead or alive:
They will · meei Friday m~ wJth
lodian Prime Minister M"rs. Indira
Gand:hi,.after:werd·~ on 1o Vientf~;
Laos, f~ :a meeting with Notth· Viet-
namese dip)omaUc officers there.
Pilot
LOgbook
a Democratic Society civil liberties for
what be fell .to be an overriding political
. reason.
A majority of the 60 prof~rs present
agreed wilh hia'decision ·abd only about
1$ bjnila sbo)¥ed fu favor t.of Associate
PhilOIOphy Profess<r Stanley Munsat's
resoluUon to deplore the cbancellor'1 act
of denying "free and open inqulrf."
Campus sos students bad asked to h°'t
a national SDS confererice at UCJ Jhe end
of Ulla month.
Aldrich said he: bas put no pressure on
the Irvine sos Students. nor will he: bill
he won't allow the ,nlitlonal conference
because of the adverse effect it would
bave,on public support for the university.
"If this institution exJBted~a vacuum
l would have no ,question 1'p t allowing
the conference," he said. "B t this is a
public institution which depends upon the
support and understanding of the people
of the community for its exist.ence."
Graduate Division Dean Ralph Gerard
spoke in favor of Aldrich's decision.
"Some believe our culture and the
university should be destroyed and
replaced," he said. "But others of us
believe we should fight the important
i.ssues and live and let live when possible.
"Dan has gone more than the pro-
verbial mile to be fair. Let's not ask him
now to tear away the delicately-prepared
tissue .slowly growing over the wound
between the university and the com-
munity."
Stephen Shapiro, clSsistant professor of
English, asked the chancellor if he was
aware that the normal prologue to
destroying a group of people is to deprive
them of their civil liberties?
Aldrich said he is aware of tha t
possibility, that he doesn't want to create
a climate harmful to SOS but it is a mat·
ter of time and place.
He said he found his meeting with
students the day before on the same mat-
ter "an e:w:hilera1:iqg 'One and I don't say
that f;icetiously.""
But·dlssatisfied graduate student from
Balboa' J:;laDd ' John Payne told the
chancellor:
·"You have been saying to us when
there is trouble on campus come and ap-
peal oh·reasonable ~ds. N<M: you are
rayin& •09• .~aµae ;YOU art being _
pressured.'You leave' the Only alternative
to students toge~ •·bigger stick." ' .
Music Hath Little Charm
. When Group Needs It
By TOM BAltLEY ·
Ot .,.. ~.., .... '"" ' ' 1\IUSJC HATH CRAllMS, the poet 53¥1, ·oot 'it's surprising' how quickly
they palled for many Orange County concertgoers. when they were ' asked to
get out their check books and ensure the survival of a struggling orchestra's
1969-70 season. ·
Surprising? Make that "predictable." F.Qr there was never any doubt in
this writer's mind that this county, affluent as it ts, would fail to come Uirough
with the paltry $40.®o that was needed ,to put on the
balaMe of a sea50n that was, on paper at least, something
to look forward to.
lt speaks volwnes: for the dedication and courage of
the Orange County Symphony As.wciation that lts direc·
tors haYf: re.solved to come back in the fall and attempt
to pJan and put on a 197Q.71 season. But this does not ex-
cuse tbe tightwads -many of whom are members of the
assoclaUon -who have failed to allow conductor Daniel
~.to take the podjum•for the remainder of the season.
WE HAPPEN TO know that appeal after appeal
went unheeded by people who could have solved the or-
chesb'a's worries with the ~ke of a pen and .thought no more about it A
concerted move by just a few members and non-members of the association
woold ~ave put that $40,000 and mare ·in the bank· in a few days and salvaged
the situation. '
We have to rub shoulders during our attendance In the county's concert
halls with far too many people to whom the occasion is nothing more than a
chance to display the mink and· pearls, talk airily if somewhat vaguely about
the respecti ve qualities of 8ach and Brahms and applaud polite1y once it is
realized, of course, .that It is·the time to applaud.
AND IF WE SEEM to be missing someone out substitute dinner suit for
mink and pearls since the si ns of the concert hall are by no means confined
to the fair sex.
From that point of view the abandonment of the season is no great loss
to any music critic inclined to be irritated by the presence of so JJ18ny mem-
bers of the "be there and be seen" brigade. But we're more concerned today
with the deprivation of tboite genuine lovers of music, those hardy souls who
make the pilgrimage to any and every point of the county where good music
is being offered in, we ~t add, ever improving quality.
Theirs is the Joss. And many of· them have fought bard to make up the
~a·s d~ficiency with $1, $5 and $10 ddnations, :!Ill very welcome and
raived with heartfelt thankl but all quite insufficient for the purpose at'hand. . .
. IT'S VERY EASY at tbiJ point to ret Into a discussion about what this
column feels to be tht disgraceful failure bJ the feder1l governmtnt to make
avail.able grants whJch would allow music and the arts to flourish in this
nation in a manner comparable to that enjoyed by Europeans.
Looking at the Ttmes of London the other day, this writer noticed an
account .of substantlaJ granls given to mu1ic, ballet and theatre companies in
Britain. granta which are strictly controlled and carefully dispensed but which
nevertheless enab le British culture to maintain Its: distinguished and prominent
p~ace In tht. an world today.
THAT DOES'T JUST go for Britain. Many othtr European naUons c.-n
boast government aid and backing on at least a comparable scale and the
caliber of their producUons proves lt.
Jn the abseoce of such support, however, it 11 the duty or the commun-
ity to k~ its·cultura.l crganliatlon1 above water and it ls unforgivable that
Orange County ahould have allowed this to happen to what bas long been
balled as 11Jts very own orcbtstr1."
A pretty 90UJ' note on wblclt to prematurd1 end a season that opened
with sud! brtpt ..........
Members
For Study
Unit Sought
The Board of Supervisors Wedntsd~
unanimously approved. county PlanniQ,
Director Forest D i ck a son ' 1 rtoom·
mendation for a citizens committee to
help coordinate studies on the develop-
ment of Orange CUnty's 42-mlle coastline.
Dickason said be would immediately
atart drawing up a list of potential com·
mittee members and outlining tile
group's duUes. He said he will work
through the administrative assistants for
each of the five county wpervl&OfS in
selecting citizens for possible •r
pointment to the committee.
The county planning director :iaid the
study group is needed to end the
fragmentation of planning efforts alon,g
the coastline.
It will be made up or peNOTlll
knowledgeable in oceanography, reerea-
tlon, ecology and biology in addition tO
represeniaitves of vsrloull 1 o c a 1
governments and tbe public at large.
Proud Netv Citi%ens DAll.Y r11.0T Sltff l'llfte
During his presentaUOn to counl1
sUpervisors, Dickason unveiled •·chart
showing thit 24 studies of ,various aspects
of the county's coastline have 'already
been made in recent years or are
currenUy in pro;ress.
Orange County's and the nation's newest citizens
-122 strong -pose for their picture with Presid-
ing Superior J udge William Speirs (center, fore-
groand) after taking the oath of a!J egiance to U.S.
during naturalization ceremonies Wednesday at
Or.ange County Courthouse. Among ·new citizens
are 54 . Orange Coast residents. Most of the. new
U.S. citizens come from England. (See story,
Page 10.) · Tbe Orange County shoreline. he sug ..
gested. tias bee.n -studied to death, but
that no agency bas ever pulled the
studies together for purposes of an
overall planning effort. Healtli P lanners
Told to W ait
For More Funds
Orange County supervisors Wed nesday
held up a request for $10,000 which would
be used tor a health care needs study in
the so-called "New port hospital service
area."
The request·for the funOs carne·befort1
the board from rel?resentatives of \he
Co pr«ilmsiV"1!re8llhf'lilliiing :u.otfa
tion of Orange County. They asked for
l• I · ' ' ~ the moriey during pr~ntation of a 'yea r
end report to supervisors.
County board members indicated they
"'ant to await findings of a state Senate
hearing on health planning befoie
allocating any funds for a local study;
John H. Trabaod, executive director of
the associaUon, told supervisors that the
$10,000 study would be the ftrst.ofj ts kind
in the country.
He explained, ~'Right now, health care
needs are based on a ratio of population
to hospital beds. ' '
"There are 6,300 hospital beds in
Orafl&e\ County. And 3,000 more have
been •applied for. The association wilt
ha ve tO .,give its approval to these ap-
pliciitl.ons ·before a license can be
granted. We would prefer to make our
endorsements on informed data."
Opposition to allocating the funds was
voiced by S~rvisors David Baker and
Robert Ba tt.in, both of whom recom·
mended the board withhold their vote un·
Iii the Senate hearings could be ix'ld or a
county-supported hearing could be held.
Battin said the association's power to
endorse . hospitals for licenses "was not
contemplated two . yea rs ago v.·hen the
board cautiously approved tlie as.socia-
tioo in principle. Obvious ly there is some
problem in the minds of the citizens of
Oran~e County or the state wouldn't be
holding hearings. 1'
TrabaQd said the health planning grou p
"invites this kind of scrutiny. Our con-
cern is the escalating costs of medical
care. 1f all those 3000 beds arc licensed,
thry will be ready ia 1974 and I don 't
think our population will support them or
we will have the staffs to man them. This
'"'ill only force the cost of health care
hi ,:her."
While holding their approval on the re-
quest for funds, board members dld ap-
prove conti nued use of the association of
a health educator from the office of Dr.
John Philp, county health officer.
Child Care Fund
Tan gle Rapped
SA C RAM E NTO (UPI ) - A
bureaucratic tangle is costing the state
millions ~ or federal w e I f a r e reim·
bursement dollars for child care centers,
the legislature was told today.
In a reJ)Ort, Auditor General William H.
Merrifield also disclosed It Is impossible
to pinpoint \\'ho actually pays how much
to finance <hay care and preschool pro-
grams ror the ne«ly.
He b l amed ''ove rl ap ping
respon&lbillties and confused lines or
authority" as U!e chief reasons for the
'loss of funds and called for placing the
prog rams under a single state agency for
admlnistraUon arid financing.
The state departments of social welfare
and education cu~U,y administer the
child C1Ie centers and preschool pro-
arams.
Students at Saddleback Supervisor David Baker of Huntingt<fl
Beach, who currently serves aa chairman
of the state's Environmental Quality
Study Council, rioted that, although
California has almost t,200 miles Cf
coastline, less than 100 mil~s of it is
publicly owned. ' Bristling Over Controls
t • . '
By THOMAS FORTUNE
Ot IM !Molly Plllll 5!1ff
Saddleback cOllege student government l~ at odds witp the coll~ge .a~ministr'ation
and t~E: length of m'1e stu~en~· ha,ir Ian'~
the only point ot CO'QtenHon.
Student body officers feel ·.\Ile)' deserve
credit aod resped-for·preventlrlg 1tudm-
disruption and say It hasn't been fear of a
repressive administration that has kept
ihe Mission Viejo area campus relatively
quiet. •
They complain that in just about
everything they try to do they are
restritted and , treated like children· in·
:stead of adults .
''There have been many mid night
meetings. We've had to st.op other
students from destructive acts on
buildings," said JefL Dubowe, 20-year.(l]d
stiident acliVIUes commissioiier, from
Tustin. ~1rs. Debi Perrine. 20, of
l rvine, said there are some students on
campus who would·like to burn down the
administration bu1lding jmt to see
something happen, .
"Student government has kept sos off :
this ca mpus for two years," she said.
''We haven't riofed."
She suggested the type · of gratitude
student! get iB not having one activity ap-
proved this yCJ!r exi::epi.homecom.ing.
Student. BoCJy Prilittan~Jom <liothwell;
37. Dana Point, says the administration
reflects the sctv:iPt board, w.lj.ich to him
seem,...'more • conc6rn8'f-wJU..: yotu than
students. :
1'1 response lG• the studenl.5; oomplatnl.
College President Fred. Bremer saJ~ lie
hadn't heard that studenl11 were dlsa~
)X)i nted at not being recognized ..
"Certainly I'm always appreciatlVe of ,
anything the student governmef'lt ~oes do
in a positive ma nner ror t~ benefit of the
college, and I've told student officers ao,"
he said .
·Mrs. Perrine. said the admirUstration
ju.st doesn't undel'!tand the atudents.
.,,1 know of a number-of ... ~le who,
have taken their Saddleback bumper
stickers off because they don't want to
admit they go here."
A good number of students. are em-
bnrrassed by the college1s reiNtatioh fbt
toe-the-line conformity resultin& from the
dress code, student ~fflcen claim.
Newport Appeal
For Freeway
~ang~~~ye«! .
·! IJ t Tht·final b'ld in Sal:ramliito by the dt1 ·
of Newpor:t l!eaj:h ioM'tallgrunent (Jf the
Pacmc Coos! Free.way baa been moved
ahead from this Friday to next Wed·
nesday.
City staff membel'l! and Mayor Doreen
Marshall are expected to fly to the state 1 capital ~xt week to relay the official citYt.
appeal for a new study on the' ad~ r
allgtinient Of the freeway WeR ·d UpPer.
Newport Bay: .
.II the appeal bdor•.11>• State ~ar·
Commiuiou g:et.s nowhere, the city_ wi!L...
abandon ils teven-year struggle to accept·
the r-which, aa adopted, would lwl •
the coastline. · ·
.'Jlloae · ..p.ded to attend lielld01'
Mayor Marshall are Planning Director1 Laurence W11'oh and Public Workl.i.
Djtector. Jooepb -r; Devlin.
'
Skate Boards • ' • 5:95 & 7.95 WILSON-Dunlop-Davis-Bancroft ,
• .
Wheels & Trucks
Frisbees •
Boomerangs
Whiffle Balls
•
•
•
Whamo Sling Shot
Back Packs & Frames
Sleeping Bags
Space Blankets •
•
•
•
•
•
•
• per pair 250 Tennis Ratkets • • • • 4:95 to 46.00
95c-l 8a-2 95 Dunl~p Fort Racket Strung Nylon • • 18.95
· · · " · Kramer Autograph Racket Strung Nylon 18.95
95c-1.25-2.50 Pennsylvania Tennis Balls • • Doz. 7.50
85c & 50c Wilson Extra.Duty T~nnis Balls • Doz. 8.35
• • 2.95 Ladies Tennis Dresses • • 9.00 to 21.95
7.95 to 39,95 Ladies Ten~is Shorts • • • • 7.95
Mens Tennis Shorts • • 4.95-5.95-7.95-9.95
12.95 to 77.50 Mens Tennis Shirts • • 5;00·6.00-7.00
• • 195 Mens Tennis Shoes • • Converse 7.75
• Jack Pqrcells 8.95
• • • 12.95 Mens leather Temls Shoes . ' Stuff Bags-Canteens-Mess Kits
"
' "
Tube Tents-Hand Axes Puma Workout Shoes • • •• 12.95 : ..
Whi te Stag Wann Up Suits
Navy Blue or White • 12.95 & 19.95
Cotton Sweat Suits (navy or green) • • 6.45
Sweat Sox • • 59C· 75c·95c· 1.25-1.50
Gym Pants-T·Shlrts:-Supporters
. .. • •
Champion HandbaU Gloves
Outdoor Handballs 95c Indoor
• 3:95 tu 650 :·
• • • 1.10' :::
•
lettennan Sweaters & Jackets
RaWlings Baseballs & Mitts
Adirondak Bats
Basellalt Shoes-Track, Shoes
Bike Ths-Tubes-Parts
'
•
' • • ~ • ;1
'I l • .
t DAll Y PllOT lllul'Sd11. January 15, 1970
•
,11;· TODAY.'S NE
(C-•U• '' ttie ~nr ,.11tt 111111
Pablo C•sals, the master cellist,
turned 93 years old this week. He
attended a concert and reception
in his ·honor at the mansion of Gov.
Luis A. Ferr• in San Juan, Puerto
Rico. Casals, sell-exiled from his
native Spain, is married to a Puer-
to Rican cellist, the fonner M•rt•
Mont Anez.. • J , Robert Jonos, Ku Klux !Oan
Border Fight Told
Reds' Cambodia
Infiltration Up
SAIGON (UPI) -Informed allied
sources aald today nearly 85 percent <>f
the war supplies equipping Communist
troops ln the Mekong Delta and in the
provinces around Saigon were funneled
through the port of Ream a n d
Sihanoukvllle in neutralist Cambodia.
The two ports on the Gulf of Slam are
barely SO miles from the South Viet·
nameae border and about 200 miles west
of Salgon itself.
Communilt infiltration lnto the Mekong
Della and into the Cambodian border
regions has been on the increase, and
U.S. 1pokemnan reported 100 Communist
troops firing machine guns and hurling
bags of. explo&ves stormed a U.S.
artillery base near the border today. The
allied defenden killed 29 of the attackers.
Allied .sources said some of the wpplies
unloaded at Sihanoukvllle and Ream were
disguised u shJpment.s to the Cambodiatt
anny but were diverted along the coaatal
areas to South Vietnam once they passed
customs inspection.
Vice President Spiro T. Agnew told
newsmen after his visit to Vietnam Jan. t
that there was "a great amount of CQn·
ctrn about material comln& through
Sihanoukville."
The allied source said Agnew ap-
parently based hls remark on briefmgs
that I.be Cambodian ports are now as
vital to the Communists as the SG-Called
Ho Chi Minh Trail through Laos. 'Mle
sources said some of these supplies have
been reached the highland 100 miles
north of Saigon.
They said mos t are moved into South
Vietnam by truck and porter and some
are transparted by Cambodian military
vehicles, but that it was not known if this
was done through local payoffs or with
the concurrence of the governmtnt.
u,1 Tt!1photo
l eader from North Carolina, em-
erged from federal prison in Dan-
bury, Conn. and vowed to head
"back souUl of the Mason-Dixon
Line .where there's no damn Yan-
kee dandrufi." Jones had b e en
sent to prison for one year for con-
tempt of Congress, along with sev·
eral other KKK leaders who had
refused to ~swer questions of the
House Committee on Un·American
Activities. Asked whether he would
take over his old post as bead of
Ute largest KKK organization in
North Carolina, Jones told news-
men: "1 already have -about 30
seconds ago."
More Hecklers
Greet Agneiu
In Auckland
Other liOUfces said Prince Norodom
Sihanouk. the Cambodian chief of state,
partially has responded to U.S. appeal to
tighten his policy permitting the goods in-
to the ports. They did not elaborate.
PLOUGH DRIVES THROUGH SNOW MADE HEAVY BY RA IN AT SOUTH LAKE TAHOE
.But Prtdii;ttd Tempe ratur• Drop Should Mak• It Pure Snow Agai n Tonight
• A prisoner escaped from the \Vilt
County Jail in Joliet, Ill., by the
same route used by four other
prisoners Nov. 9. Authorities said
they did not know why Howard
Zillenkie was put into the cell
\vith a hole cut through a layer of
glass blocks. The last of the Ori·
g:inal four escapers was captured
in Phoenix, Ariz •• a short time be.
fore Zillenkie's escape. • Edgar N. Eisenhower, brother of
the late P r•sident Dwight D. Eis•n-
hower, was said to be making a
good recovery after a hernia Oe"'
eration. The patient, who is 81, is
a Tacoma lawyer. •
l Pat Nixon 110.s dispelled a
secret: her C~ristmas present
from the ·President. Ti wo.r-a
gold watch. The Fir•t Lady
made the disclosure in respome
to questions by reporters. She
said the watch has "a fe10 l ittle
dillmands sprinkled around"
and th at it was a gift "I need·
ed."
AUCKLAND, New Zealand CUP!) -
Anti-Vietnam war demonstrators battled
JXlUce outside Vice Pres.ident Spiro T.
Agnew's hot.el today when he arrived for
a tt\ree-day visit. Tonight th e
demonstrators returned and shouted
"Peace! Peace! ·Peace!" every 15
minutes to try to keep bim awake.
Ten demonstrators were arrested in the
f11'St. fracas but none outside the hotel
tonight when 80 police dispersed the
crowd o1 150 who left with taun ts at the
police.
It was doubtful tonight's demonstration
bothered Agnew -he was in a suite high.
up on the opposite side of the building.
The crowd began gathering early and
when the bars closed at 10 p.m. the
cro¥.'d increased to 150 persons. A small
mobile van. supplied the demonstraton
with relreshments.
Agnew was greeted on arrival by
Prime Minister Keith J. llolyoake and
cabinet members. It was the last official
stop on Agnew's three-week, 11-nation
Asian and Pacilic goodwill tours.
Shortly before the vice president ar-
rived at the Intercontinental Hotel, an-
tiwar demonstrators, including 1 S O
members of _a_ ·SJ:'OUP called the
Progressive YoutJt;1rietl to block a police
van. Police charged the crowd and ar·
rested 10 of them .
"Fascist Pigs!" the dt.monstrators
shouted.
Communist forces shot down three
American helicopters Wednesday. .
Fighting in South Vietnam Wednesday
and early today killed at leut ttve
Americans and wounded at leut 27
others, communiques said. 'I11e helicopter
crashes killed three men and accounted
for eight of the wounded.
The U.S. Command said UJi. battle
deaths in Vietnam last week climbed to
their highest point in a month. A total <lf
98 Americans were killed, 33 more than
the previous week.
* * * Jlanoi Standing
Still-So Does
Peace Conference
PARIS (UPI} -Charging that NClrth
Vietnam and the Viet Cong have
''abused" the Vietnam peace conference
for propaganda reasons, the United
States today called on them again to
begin serious bargaining in semisecret
negotiations.
U.S. Negotiator Philip Habi b reported
to ne-wmen..aft.er the five-hour, 4S.minu1e
50tb eessfoo of the talks, "we didD't iue-
ceed."
"They continued to put f o rt h
misconceptions and distort.ions of the
situation in Vietnam and the United
States," he said. "They continued to d&-
mand unilateral action on our part.
Synthetic Snow
Set for Skiers
By United Preas lnteruadout
Ski conditions were reported good in
mo.st Southern California mounta in re·
sorts today, although most areas were
relying entirely on artificial snow.
June mountain, in the high Sierra, has
tbe best conditions, including eight to 14
inches which fell Wednesday night on a
two to four-foot natural snow base. Open
daily.
Blue Rjdge, Holiday Hill, Rebel Ridge
and Snow Summit are all making artifi·
cial snow and are open da ily.
Snow Valley will be open Saturday if
It has enough good snow-making nights.
Mt. Pinos reports a good natural snow
base for tobagganing and family snow
play.
'I May Surprise Y ou'
Manson, Judge Trade
Courtroom Pleasantries
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -"You know,
Judge, like sometimes I wonder if you
know wha t• is going on," said Charles
J\tanson.
"Sometimes I wonder, too." said
Superior Court Judge George ?\-1. Dell.
It was a storybook settin g in the Hall of
Justice Wednesday as the bearded, shag·
gy-hai red Manson chatted for 50 minutes
with the judge about acting as his own at·
tomey in the Sharon Tate murder case.
"You don't just become a lawyer
overnight, you know," said Manson.
"Well, there is an old proverb that you
probably have heard a thousand times,"
Dell replied. j•Jt is that a lawyer who
represents hlmsel! has a fool for a client.
l think that also applies to laymen who
choose to represent themselves."
Manson, 35, clad .in red velour blouse
end tapestried vest, grinned as spectators
chuckled at his sallies.
?\-!anson complained about the in·
convenience <lf preparing hi s defense
from jail and there were these ex·
changes:
1.1a.nson: "We are living. you know, like
in an age of computers but you give me
some paper and pencils and a stack of
books and tell me -you've got it made."
Dell : "The clistricl attorney is being le-
nient in approving a tape recorder being
brought in by your investigator."
Manson: "Yes, I was going lo ask him
to call the whole thing off."
Dell: "You speak at a high level of
understanding but some of your concepts
are a little esoteric."
Manson: "I may surprise you."
Dell : "I don't think you will surprise
me. We in our black robes do our own
thing too, Mr. Manson."
Manson : "These odd-looking peopht
'(who visit him in jail as prospective
witnesses) are my brothers. They don't
drive a car. They're living in sleeping
bags.-They don't have. an address like
you. 1 suppose at times I appear odd
myself."
Dell : "Hmmm."
Dell granted Manson a continuance un-
til Jan. 28 to enter a plea to charges be
masterminded seven n1urders.
• Georg• Sh•aring, the blind pi·
anis't, opened a collection of 30
pieces of sculpture, borrowed
from major galleries by the Cali·
fornia Arts Com.mission at th e
M. H. de Young Museum in S a "
Francisco. Contrary to the usual
museum procedures, all sculfr
tures are to be touched and all are
identified in Braille. After explor ..
ing a Salome carved out o! a red·
wood burl, he said: "Somebody
could describe for me forever the
smoothness of this redwood, b u t
not until I could feel it myself
would I get my O\\'n degree of per·
The protesters held up signs that sald
"Beware of the Greek Bearing Gifts",
"Victory for the Viet Cong" and
1'Holyoake the Traitor."
Agnew ignored the crowd and walked
into the heaviJy.gUarded hotel lobby smll·
ing. Similar demomtraUons In Canberra,
Australia, his last stop, resulted in IS ar·
rests.
'Peace Diamond'
Se t for Exhibit
"They refused again our offer of
restricted sessions, and they refused
again to discuss the treatment of
prisoners of war."
Deputy Chief Saigon negotiator Nguyen
Xuan Phuong told newsmen in his twn:
"Nothing. There is nothing. 'Mley u!used
to budge."
Earlier, Jnside the conference room,
llabib told the o t h er side, "The con-
tinuation of sterile plenary sessions does
uot sreve the cause of a negotiated set-
tlement" in Vietnam.
~~ Big City School s' Mood
Called 'U11easy, Viole11t'
ceptivity." '
9
NEW YORK (UP!) -A 43.1-carat d;a.
mond, the size of a child's fist. wit! be
ground and exhibited to promote world
peace, its owners have announced.
4,000 More Stud ents
Okayed for Colleges
C i t y official s at Biddeford,
Maine. are not expected to pa y
off the $100 reward they offered
Friday for information on lost rec--
ords of the streets and sanitation
department. The missing records
were found Saturday in the city
treasurer's office.
The two-inch by two-inch uncut gem,
dubbed the "Light of Peace," lvill be hon·
ed to a pear·shaped 150 carats and ex·
hibited around the country with proceeds
going to a special peace foundation, Zale
Corp. said Wednesday
It was discovered in an undisclosed
West African country last year.
At a news conference Zale officials said
t:he cut stone would be worth $3 million to
$5 million.
LOS ANG ELES (AP) -As a result of
increased fees and some juggling or
budget surpluses. the st.ate collegf'S will
accept about 4.000 more students next
month than originally planned.
First prlorlty on the 19 campuses, said
a spokesman for Chancellor Glenn s.
Dumke, will lo to transferring junior col-
lege students who would otherwise "have
nowhere to go after completing their two-
)lear program."
MR S. HART GOES TO COURT
Made Nolsl at Pentagon
Senator's Wi fe
'Janie' to Ju dge
In Court Hearing Arctic Air Sweeps Plains
\\'ASHI NGTON (UPI) -Twice !he
judge called her "Janie," as she is known
to her friends. It could liave been because
he was not used to having the "·ire of a
U.S. sena tor as a defendant in his court. Nor tlie rn California~ Nortliivest Brac ing for Stor1n
California
SOUTMe•N CALt,OIMIA -Mo»!IY
clovclY Tltur"td•'I' •"" "•ld•v wlff! Ptr-
tl•I cle1rlnt1 11 tJftlfl. Orlnltt or
II"" ••ln co-1111 •nd m«in••ln ••••I
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l'tln Mt'ttl-t -llen Hti~ Frkl1v.
l!ttle ttm-•l11r1 cll1,.,...
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er lltll!I r•ln T~11•Kll'I' ""''n!n9. Chill<• f!A 111111 rilln •01!n -llm1 Ft11$1Y.
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~"T CONCl!"ION 'tO MElOt;AH IQ!lOl:lt -Llthl Yt•l1bl' wlrldl n!1llt
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Hit~ L1w 'rK.
She is Mrs. Philip A. Hart. 'vife or
Mi chiglltl's Democratic senator and
heiress of the Briggs fc.rlune. She was
christened Jane, but the diminuti ve form $1 ,, ' . SJ 31 •1 47 " . . " " . u •
" " . " " " " " ,, ,
·10 -33 .. " " " ff " " " . ~
" " " " n u
' " • • ,, "
$t lS
" " . " 11 ,. ,, ,,
\Vas used Wednesday on the roll call and
,0, listing <lf defendants when federal
. .a magistrate Stanley Kin2 opened court in
suburban Alexandria, Va. '°' Mrs. Hart, two Epl5COpal bishops. and
five other clergy and lay leaders had
been charged by the federal government
with impeding movement and cresting
"loud and unusual noise·• while at-
tempting to celebrate a eucharlstic mass
·~1 tn the Pentagon concourse Nov. ts.
The group represents 179 persons ar-
·12 rested when they attempted to hold a
.01 "maJS for peace" in the Penta gon's huge.
bustling public concourse In connection
'"' with the Vietnam moratorium. It w11& the
third such aUe1npt in recent montht.
!I ,, ,If F onne1· Parks Chief
Due for Sentencing
" ~ .. ' j l ~• .n
JJ "
Jf ,, ·'' 11 " ,)( ,. • .IJO " " ,,, tJ IS .Ot
11 SJ .A1 ,, J1
'3 JO .01 " ~ 41 JI
LOS ANGELES CAP) -Mei Pie"°"·
onetime city recrealion and parks coin·
mlsslooer. is due for sentencing Ftb. l 1
on convlctJon o( bribery in connection
with municipal arrairs.
By United Press latertlatiooa1
Un-easy. Adj . Worried, apprehensive
• • • restless, unquiet .•• unstable.
Uneasy describes the situation in most
of the nation's big~ity schools. •
A Senate subcommittee study released
Tuesday says primary and secondary
schools in the nation·s big cities are Ml
troubled by violence that )earning has
slowed to a trickle.
The study said much of the violence
has racial overtones, blamed dropouts for
much of the trouble. and said three·
quarters of the teachers in East St.
Louis. Ill., carried guns because they
feared attacks.
East St. Louis officials denied this, but
there were many who didn't blink at the
figuri!. A United Press International
survey of the situations in some of the
nation's major ci ties seems to indicate
that things could be better, but they could
be worse.
In some places. of course, the situation
Is more than uneasy. Outright f ea r
prevails. Teachers resign their positions,
or carry weapons like the students.
East St. Louis is one such place. Les
Angeles ha s its !rouble spots, as do New
York City Chic ago, Pitts b 11 r g h,
llochester, N.Y.; Springfield, Mass.; and
others.
But in other places, the tension has
Susa n Atki11.s
Gets Trial Dela y
SANTA MONICA (AP) -SU58ll Denise
Atki~. among those charged in the
Sharon Tate murders, bas been granted a
postponement until March 11 of her ti1'al
in the murder of Gary Hinman, Malibu
1nusician slain Jn his Topanga Canyon
home last July 25, ~1lss Alkins. 21. will be tried SC'Parately
rrom anol.her defendant In the •Hn·
man murder case. Robert K. Btausolltl.
who~e trial ended lale last ytar in a
deadlocked jury.
~tiss Atkins has been lndic1ed with five
others of a hippie-type band in the
~Jayings <lf actress Sharon Tate and four
others last Aug. 9 and the kUUng of
market owner Leno L&Bianca and his
\\'lfe the fol\owl og nigbl.
After her appearance In ,p>Urt Wed·
nesday, ~nss At.kins challcd briefly with
l1tll\'smen.
lessened recently. The most notable e~·
ample is Detroit, a racial tinde rbox after
the 1967 riot. Others are Buffalo. N.V .•
Providence, RJ., Philadelphia, and Cin·
cinnali and Columbus, Ohio.
While the South and Southwest do not
have problems of the magnitude that af·
feet big city schools in the North. there
have been Incidents. A v:h ite fathtr co111·
plained to the \llichita Falls, Tex., school
board Monda y that his hieh school
daughter was attacked by five Negro
girls while a male teacher "just stood
there and watched ." The five girls were
suspended and security was increased.
The nati on's largest city, New York.
had to tJre 170 special school guards at a
cost of $500,000 after recent incidents.
One example is Franklin K. Lane High
School, were black youths insisted that
the black freedom flag replace the stars
and stripes. The principal refused and
.students disrupted classes, destroyed
ca!eteria furniture and set one teacher's
clothes on fire.
"There ls no doubt thal a significant
number of women teachers have resigned
from their posts because of disciplinary
problems they felt incapable of sur·
mounting," a New York board of educa·
tion spokesman said.
Lebanese Order
Guenillas Quit
Inhabited Areas
BEIRUT (AP) -The Lebonese
government told PaleJ11tinian guerrillas
today to evacuate their quarter11 In In·
habited areas of South Lebanon within 48
hours OT face retaliatory measures.
Ttie warning fo\lowtd a protest
demonstration againGt the guerrilla~ to-
day by the inhabitants of the tO\l.'n of
Hasbaya. Beirut radio reported .
Guerrillas had sel up ofricts in thf: two
towns next lo f!Chool buildirtlt~. the radio
~Id. thereby end11ngering 1he l11·es oi
hundreds of school child:-=..
Jnterior ;\Iinistcr Kamal .Jumblatt -
the gvvernmenrs chief liaison man wilh
the guerrillas -said in a statement ht
had ordered the office., clMed.
Some informant.& £Aid this decree wBs
likely to create new tension between the
government and the guerrillas, who carry
out at.tacks agaln5t Israel.
•
•
Fountain • Valley Teday'•Flml
VOL. 43 , NO. 13 , 2 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES ORl-NGE· cOuNTY, CJ,llFORNIA THURSDAY, JAN\J'ARY. ·1~, '1971)
School Action Illegal
Magazine Distribution Drive Ruled Vnlnwful
l),ldLY f'ILOT Sl1fl "llttf
1'10111 B e co11aes Ci ti.:e1i
Presiding Superior Judge \Vill iam Speirs of Ne\\•port Beach and Jerry
Smith Jr .• 1. con gratulate ~1rs. Anne Smith of Huntington Beach on
becoming a U.S. citizen . Since da~ is a. n_ative, young Je~ry reach.ed
citizenship before mom, '''ho hails or1g1nally from Ireland. Snuth
family resides at 6071 Cortez Drive, Huntington .Beach. For more on
new citizens. see Page 10.
HuntiI1gto11's Retail Sales
Sl1o w Rise of $21 Million
l:luntington Beach retail sales during
the third guarter of 1969 show~ au .in·
crease: of $2:1 ,356,000 over the !'i3me period
In 1968. according fO Wilb.llJ1\ J , Back.
E c o n o m i c Developmcnl Department
Manager for the Huntington Beach
Chamber of Commerce. . .
Contributing to the city's increase in 10·
come from sales taxes were ei ght out_ of
JI classifications of retail business wh~ch
showed substantia; gains for the period
January through September 1969. . .
Automotive sales were up $10 m1Jhon,
Beach Chamber
Elects Horton
As President
Peter liorton. McDonnell Doup.las eli·
r:cuti\'e has been elected president nf the
Huntington Beach Chamber of Com·
merce. He succeeds C. E. •·Bill" \Voods.
Other officers named by directors \Ved·
nesday night arc William Peterson, Bank
of America, first vice president : Stanley
Botelho, manager of General Telephone,
second vice president. and James
DeCuel\c. glass co1npany ow n c r,
treasurer.
Six one-year directors were appointed by
the board bringing the total membership
to 25. They are Jerry Bame. attorney:
William Brazney. sporting goods store
nwner : Louis Evans, Shcraton-Bea~h lnn
manager: William .Foster. ~unt1ngton
Beach Company vice prcstdenl and
general manager: Richard \Vaidzun~s.
Southern California National Bank vice
presiden t. And Allen Hanner, Broad\'1ay
Department Store manager.
foods. $2 million : general merchandise,
$2 million; r.,_uraotl~ $.1.1' millitib;
furniture and applianc:u. f191,000 ; ap-
parel stores. $745,000: other retail ootle~
$671.000.
Back said the addition of a new
building supply outlet in the eastern part
of the city during the third quarter of
1969 contributed $300,000 in sales to that
category. He also pointed to the opening
of a large furniture outlet in the last
quarter which will probably double the
enlire retail sales figure for 1968 for this
category, even though the stqre was only
open two months in 1969.
Sales other than retail acoounted for a
$Z. I million gain in the rirst nine months
nf 196~.
Back admitted that inflationary action
accounted for three-fifths of the dollar
gain in taxable sales in 1969 but the city
still showed a nel gain of $8.5 million.
He predictud $138 mlllion in sales for
1969. The total for nine montM was
SI00.902.000.
Demolish Order
Set for Appeal
'!'h e fir st appeal of an order by the
Hun tington Beach Building and Sa fety
Department to demolish an old building
goes before the city's Board of Appeals
Jan . 28.
The appeal deali ng with an order to
!ear down a house at 7581 Warntt Ave.
.... ·as filed by Edward Varela on behalf of
. John Varela, the property owner, city
aides said.
The hearing Is ~heduled for 7:30 p.m.
in the Admisistrative Annex to the Civic
Center. 523 Main St.
The Varela house was one of 15 ordered
lo be torn down by the building depart-
ment last Nove'mber.
Superior Court Judge Robert Corfman
will rule today that the Huntington Beach
City School District act.ed unlawfully in
allowing it.s personnel to become involved
in a magazine distribution drive.
In preparation at presstime today was
a court order which upholds the argu·
menl of Huntington Beach attorney Jim
Bent.son that the district violated educa·
lion codes when it allowed elemeotary
level students to peddle literature in the
fund-ral sing effort .•
Bentaon, 16642 Melville CI r c 1 e ,
challenged the school district when hls 13-
year-old daughter Lisa Ann v.·as rtfused
permission to join 95 students from
Dwyer and Gisler intermediate schools
on a trip to Disneyland.
Lisa Ann was allegedly told that the
trip, in which the st..udents w~ ac·
companied by school personnel, was a
reward for those students who had sold
Pill's Blame
For Cancer
ln Dispute
WASHlNGTON (UPI) -A prominent
cancer specialist warned today that
thousands of women may be reeding the
growth of undetecte.d breast cancer with
birth control pills.
"Synthetic a:trogens are to b r e a s &
cancer what fertilizer is to a weed crop,"
Dr. Roy Hertz testified at a Senate hear-
ing. Estrogens ~re a prime component or
oral contraceptives. Previous wlblesse.<>
said man made tstktens could also
cause blood clotting In some usen or
''The Pill."
Another witness, Dr. Edmond Ka!!OUJ'
of Cranford, N. J .. suggested in prtpared
testimony that the American Medicitl
Association f AMA ) might have helped
drug companjes promote birth control
pills and conceal their alleged dangers.
But Dr. Robert W. Kistner ol Harvard
Med ical Schoo{ scoffed at studies linking
oral con traceptives with cancer.
"The pill is safe ," Kistner declared.
Hertz formerly beaded the reproduction
research branch of the government's Na-
tional Cancer Institute. He is OOW" with
Rock-feller Uni versity in New York.
Said Hertz: "We know from X·
ray studies that breast ca ncer exists in
80JTle cases for years before it can be
clinically detected. However. since one
woman in ZO will at some time in her life
develop breast cancer. it is obvious that
in using, the pill we are exposing at least
this portion of women to a substance.
known to sUmulate pre-ex isting breast
cancer in women.1'
The doctors testified in the second da y
of heirings before Sen. Gaylord Nelson's
small busineM monopoly subcommittee.
The group ha s heard sharply divided
testimony about the safety of "The Piil."
Kistner, taking issue with those warn-
ing about dangers of the pill, said : "It is
safer thati pregnancy but not as safe as
continence ..• one cigarette is three
timel!I as dangerous to life as one pill ."
Stock Jtlorkf!t
NEW YORK (AP) -Stock market
prices remained lower in restrained trad-
ing today. tSee quotations, Pages 14-15).
As in previous session.'!, inves tors
were hesitant and waiting in the wings
for compell ing new s developments,
analysts noted .
$35 or more in magazine subsa:iptions.
Bentson protested lhat be h a d
per500ally o[fered to pay the costs of the
trip and thus include his daughter in the
school party. He said that the offer was
rtfu!'ied by achoo! district officials.
Bentson argued in court that the
organiting acUvities or the school and the
involvement of its officials in fund ·
gathering and the calling of school
assemblles to plan and organize the driVe
were' unlawful.
The school district's attorney counll!red
that the magazine drive organized by
Quali ty School Plan Inc., of New York,
wos' cooductcd. ihrough student body
facilities: It did not. he said, infringe-on
state education codes which bar selling
activities affect191 district and teacher
lime.
The trip itself, Bentson told Judge
HONORED IN DEATH
Martin Luther Kint
Man y Ceremonies
Across U.S. Pay
Tribute to King
By• United Pre11 International
Thou s.ands across the nation honored
Or. Martin 'Luther •King Jr. 1today-t'he
41 st anniversary of his birth.
SevP.ral governors, includln& Nelson A.
Rockefelle r of New York, ·Kenneth Curtis
of Maine and Frank Licht of R h o d e
Island, declared today ''Martin Luther
King Day," in honor of the assa58inated
civil rights leader. ·
Sthools were closed In seve ral cities,
including New York . Ba It i mo r.e ,
Philadelphia, Kansas City, Poughkeepsie,
N.Y., and Harrisburg, Pa.
New York Mayor John V. Lindsay said
city workers coukt take the day off.
The official inauguration of the Martin
Luther King Memorial Center, a pro-
jected cultural and spiritual gathering
place for American Negroes, was set, for
today in Atlanta. The center will be built
near King's new crypt ahd the Ebenezer
Baptist Chu rch where he "1enied as
copastor.
Unofficial ceremonies, many with an-
tiwar overtones, were scheduled in many
areas t.akin& no official note of lhe day. Ttie monthly meeting of the directors
has been ctianged from the current 5
p.m. to A· noon luncheon. Beginning 1n
February, meetings will coovene al 11 :4!i
a.m. and be rotated between member
rel!ltauranll!. Lo~h Ness Revisited
Student. Facing
Exto1:tion Rap
A 23-year.'.old •Golden \Vest College stu-
dent has been ordered to appear for 1Mal
.Jan . 23 in €>range County Superior Court,
Santa Ana. on charges lhal he tried to ex·
tort $5,000 from Or. Ralph Bauer of Hun-
llngton Beach.
Victor Yee Tsao. 22Jl 121h SL. Hun-
Ungton Beach. was bound over \Ve<I·
nesday from \Vest Orange Coun1y
r.funlcipal Court, Westminster, Io
Superlor Court at the conclusion of. a
prellininary bearing into-lbe .. extort.ion··
charaes.
T5IO was arrested Nov. 21 by llun-tm,ton Stach detectives after allegedly
llmdlng 1 note to Or. B:tuer, a trustee nn
both the Ocean View snd thf: }luntington
Beach Union High School district..
lhrtateninJ physical harm U '5,(XXI
1,1•11sn·t delivered to him .
\
Peters Canyon's Big Al Swimming Into Histor y
Editor'~ Note... F'ormcr Briti.t1t.
jour11ali!t Tom Borleu who 'uteCI ·to
"pend hi" t1mt"l!.ivorously chasing tht"
Loch Nt"ss mo11.~tcr in S.cotland, ii
now doing l1is thina at an ()rdtf~
County rt1crvo1r. as rndtcoted in the
jol1owi11a d!spotcli.
By TOM BAllLEY
Ot l~• O•Hr PW! Sllll
'ON"'SATARI A-r-PETERS ·CANYON
Rf,sERVOIR.-Our;~JOlio•at .
this ren:l()f.e Water holt-on •• thls,...,fa,~
moody m<rnlng-Wtre 1 mlleily ifi'teruted
housewife , her romping 3-ytar<*:I .IOrl
and a large black Labrador dog.
The only movement on the • limpid
waters of the lake was the. OCCNional rlJ>-
ple created by fltful 11nd ra lnflDed wind.
The 3-year-old toddles and coos at the
we1Ler '11 e<fge, his mpjher absently U&llb
'
and puffs on 1 cigarette: and the deig does
what 111 dogs do among the ahrub& at the
edge of the reservoir.
Ah yu, Labradors are big dogs indeed.
All, the uninitiated mi&hl say, la ttan·
quility.
This veteran observer is not, however,
deceived. Wt. have under our belt the
fruits ·of a long ago a'slgnment to Loch
Nep and the vast technical knowledge
gllf'Tlered .¥'blle._slppJng hQt iwee.t tea for
irons hoVfl at. the.a'ldc or ·lAat fabled Scol,..
UOll l•MI.
Below the waters o( Petcn Canyon
reservoir 13 a creature !bat clolely
rUembles the 8Clly IJl'lphlbl1n that
oportg In tilt murky deptha ind oc-
casionally on the awiece of lhe 1klomy
Scottl3'h waters.
It ha s been given the name 7J!f.Atby 1
ca11lly milled c O·U n tr-of -en:d...i
onlooker~ who pathetica lly believe that
an alligator is respomtble for n.vages ln
this Oranae lake. Btrd and fish are said
to have been devoured in copious quan·
lities by the wily creature.
Like "Nessie", lhe darling ol Brillkh
journalists, Orange County's o w.n
monster llas .akilUUJty evaded itiiptwe.
1Wo curators from the Buetta Park
AIHg•l<>r' F'<irm ll~ed fi!r :t.OurJ• ,here
Wednttday an11 c11JPl!Od awa~ addikll•g
defeat.• And aever1J \loc11-realderftl have
bravely ventured forth Ul)C!n· the murky
walui to try !hell-llfn<l 11 idllWa'UU!e
l!Oloflety•out ol Big Al,
Mony onlooker• po!Mtlcllly.'t.sury-to
having ~ HVil'li111nJgltors. A,.s one
deputy oherlff-brow.!lll)p dMli mud
actu1Uy rttllmed Iii "'1ori to clalm th1t
be ,iJld' watolled lwo allfgatoro al lelll
1 (lln MONSTER, Pap·l l '
Corfman, conslituted a bretch ot atate
law with lt& breaking into school ti.me and
by the fact that four ·district employes,
lwo of them teachers, accompanied ~
students.
Judie Corfman's order ls seen u a rul·
ing tha~ may end the activJUu: of school
dlstrlcta Jn magazine sublcription drivu
and remove 111 adminlstratJbn inOuence
from such projects.
And the oi-der is seen as a l!ltatement
that all such drives must be Qn 4 purely
voluntary basis in which stadents must
accomplish their oWn accounUni and
conduct their own organization.
School district ofnciaJs hive defended
the program as "somethSng lhit 'we've.
had for a loog, ·long time and ·an idlvlty
ll!at simply benefits student Pf'Olrama."
. But Bentson argued : "OUr edu.caUon
code clearly states that ~ wbllc enUly
may not actively particJJ)4te in 'any~pio.
gram which calls for the~ ol
tax monies." •·• ·-
S.A. "Al" Mofteu, IUP!rintendent of
the Huntingtqn Beacb City Scboor Di•·
trict, said when asked't1£0lnrnl'M'°" the
court's decision that he Kid no-llUMment.
"l'll have to think on it,• he:·aaict.
"If we can't sell magazlnel, We'll have to find another project to find""moMy."
Bent.IOn, when. lnlonTied .of the ttate-
ment; shouted : · · •
"Hooi:ay, Justice )la& been done apinl"
•·J'm Uckled pinlr," he added. . ~
In explaining the poqible ~ ol
the docWon, he said JI. would -probably
apply to any fund-raising evtnt. uQHnna
cl@SI Um<°' spendlni tu,mciaOJ f«·pri·
v1;te enterprise. •
School diatrk:t officials were-caUght un-
a:ivare with news ot Judge Ccrfman'1 de~
c11Jon and seemed a bit ltun:ned ·at Che
ruling against them.
Fortnal Surrender
Biafra . Leader
Pledges Unity
From Win Services
LAGOS, Nigeria -Maj. Gen. Philip
Erfiong surrendered Biafra formally and
unconditionally to the Jiiaerians Thurs-
day with a pledge t!) 1upport .the nat_ion
as one undi•i~ed.
n..1-. JI-Ill ~Ua·tlfl';pJidft.1'0•
huged -Bialno"• clllol ~. MOJ.
i;.,,_ ¥alrubu Gowoo. J:liftril ''°'~ll<ofl
leader.
,.......,, ... The Republic of Biafra hereby cta66!
to e.xlst, '' EfOong said in hil sun.Wider
statement to G<iwon at a military bar·
racks In Lagos. And Gowon rtsponded:
''Let us joitt hands lo build a truly united
anC: great nation where no one will ~ op-
pressed. Ma y God help u1."
Thus came the fonna1 end to the
sectssion proclaimed by Gen. C.
Odumegu Ojukwu on May 30, 1987 with
the charge that tht federal military
government sought to dominate and
obliterate Ibo tribesmen, principal in·
habitants of Blafra .
Almost at the l!lame time that Effiong
officially capitulated, Ojukwu charaed
from a hiding place somewhere abroad
thal the Nigerians still were bent on wip-
ing out the Jbos' and he appealed for .a
neut ral forct to prevent it. His statement
was released in Geneva.
Ojukwu claimed lhat the Nigerians
seek to ring Biafra with an iron curtain
"to make sure that the atrocities they
will certainly carry out in Biafra are
unseen and unreported in . the world
press."
The former leader, who fledlUafra last
weekend leaving Effiong in charge, all!IO
appealed to the world to help Blafrans
who, he said, were left 1tarvi111 and ex·
hausted by 30 months of war.
Ojukwu's 2,000-word 1tattment was
distributed tn Geneva by an American
public rt.laUon1 agency, Markpren, that
had acted .ta a Biafran inlormaUon office.
Ojukwu'1 Whereabouts remained . un·
know)l, but an agency !pokesman .djd not
deny it had received the ll4tement by tel\
ex message rrom Lisbon, Portupl.
"From all indications, it Is clear that
Nigeria will not feed our people," sl}d
Ojukwu. "There is no food what!Ot!ver in
Blafra and unless food can gel into
Bla fran mouths in the next n houn:, it
will be, too late.
"Nigeria's insistence to cootrol the
dlalrlbution of relief ii bot.h to ensure
that Blafrans gel no such relief and alao
:.o abut out outsiders who might witness
and c1pose ~ enarmous crimes .• ~be
pl&M to commlt against our people.
Although he named no n a t I o n 1
1peclfically. his reference to the.
responilblllty of n1tlon1 that supported
the federal government of Gen. Yaktibu
Gowon was an obvious relere~ to Bri·
Ill~ and tile Soviet Union.
Gowon's government h11 act~pltd
retief 1 off era from Britain. wtach . Ii
· preparlnf a 1 planeload ol medical' ,Yi>-'
: piles, and ·lrom-the 1••1111' of ·Red. 9'"'•'. '
sodleitMi but· specifically · ruled out an~
, as~lstanct from ·nations Or· eharill.b\411
• agendea th•t directly supported Blalra tn
lhe'clVI\ war. The Soviet Onion has made
no ~bile oll•rt ol ,.ue1: •
Gowon on the "Other hand, promlttd at
the w~thder · certrilonJ a ~ii
1rnn<0lY Ind protect.Ion for ' tho ln-
h11bltants Of Bl•fri. '
• •<\Ve k\io1r'1Mft' 01' ~'were •drolied
and to give you personal assurances ·and
the assurance of evecyone bere and the
assurance of the full nation, the SupteJM
1'111itary Cou(!Cil and of the Federal Ex·
ec.ulive COuncll and to say that all the
guarantees that we have offered will be
hohOr«I. • ' · ~
·"~· '1ave ll'intltl a i...tll;..,.,..ty
••• Personally I km• that· probably il
not .~1:~ ~ Ojukwu'a madne.as.·aucb a
lli111rftllcf Ml l!C"ve-~11\is
couotry. But wbere 1' Ojtilriru todly!
"Aftet leading you into 5ucb terrible
privation. hunger, deprivation .and ,~}..
ing! where is Ojukwu today? He bas
e&eaped, probably to go and eajo_j the
money that he has made 1t your a~,
al the expense of innocent NJg~."
City Continues,
Changes Fonnat
Of Annual Meet
Community Congr~. a .o.n e-.id:a y
brainstorming event for city betterment,
will be contllltled thl• year. pniblbl,y In
mid·April and in a new' format, Jlun..
tington Beacb Chamber of eoa,r. ..
directors declded Wednellday.
~ seillon thi! year wltl'be patterned
after .. Operation DiaJoeue" as ctt.ated bY,
the U.S. Oiamber of Commerce.
Or. Clarence Hall, superintendent of
the Oc<en View &:bool 'l>lstrict; wllo bH
participated in such evenlll, ia wotiingon
pl8M.·
As explained, 30, to-35 people sit at a
round table with m specific di!cilliion
subject. Conversation Wamta up• -.nd
after six hours ol bC'~-· tbe
partk:ipants arrive at key community
issues .
A gene ral meeti.1'11 cancludes:the day •
Compoolllon al tilt &nlUJ> ammd NC!\
table is selected to ·vary professtons and
occupations. Pre.vioUsly, accordinC to
retiring Chamber President Bill Woods .
those aUending c<mplalned of. too 11)\tCh
le<:turing and · not enoujl time for
diaJogue.
There's no sUvt'I" llo!ns behind
~ ckiuda, ju!t a·wrt .one.whlch ·
wlll be wringing out tonight Ind
Friday mornlna u coutll temp.
eratures dip into \be upper 50'1.
INSIDE 'l'OD.t:lf
SfiiJran .,eJUbef'<:Aiidren#tD.m '
.ting tMtr no:Uoncl attthem .for·
Eu~oQfan.govc~t o~bKt
o ftature .articW' on•P'OfC"~8-tO<'
dtiJi '"aliotv.r 'ther have little to
1ing about.
• • ..... • .. .. • .. , .. ,, ..
_.. . .............. , . " ............. --.. l'tf*,.... M ...... -""' ............ ·-. ,_ n
• .. ,... t
l \nt~ lt;1•'hf 1111:(. 1 I ' ' ' > · "M•r·• wttlqm• y'clu titclt to thl fold " • .... ..., ..... "''' WW.""'" w
~ Z DAILY PILOT H
Nothing~s· SqQ.are About Gisler Sehool, • • • '
Ope1i Classroont:S Aid .Team T~(;Jchi'!:g
. . -
I)' TERRY 00m.L'£
or ""' D111r ,,., '""'
Thtre ts nothing "5<1uare·• about Gisler
Intermediate School In Huntington Be.ach.
ln fact. it was deliberately designed by
the Hunl.lngt.on Beach CHy School Distri~t
as a step aw1y from "squareness" -in
1nore l'•Y5 than one.
First impression of the school is that
a giant bee Oew over the southwestern
part or t~ clly and gently dropped her
honeye<>mb on s 10-acre plot.
The sides are hcxtgonal -not square.
lt r;tands .. ,,.ilh 1hort. walls jutting in 5eV-
eral dlrectioiu ta form a 11erie1 of con-
nected hl'xagons.
And inside, where the classrooms are.
·\here aren't any walls. The open classei;
are part of the school's other "unsquq"
aspect -team teaching. ·
Gisler was designed in 1987 and opened
this school year "'ilh the idea of combin-
jng a unique building structure with a new
and evolving teaching philosophy.
. Open classrooms will allow. the school to
fully initiate a team teaching program
within the next few weeks, according to
principal John Wyatt.
To undtrstand the team teaching phi~
0.sophy and .!llructure. follow a &ixth grade
.boy, Joey, through a normal el1:ht·perlod
day as tl should operate under team
1eaehing.
. Joey attends class at Gisler from 8:30
ii.m. to 3:10 p.m.
Hl11 first actjvily of the day is reading
and language. a 00-minute session which
combines two normal periods. For the
fJrst 30 minutes Joey is with nine other
classmates and one teacher discussing
the course material, answering and ask-
ing questions.
Than Joey leaves the small elaas area
and he and h.l& mates join fO other you ng-
.sters . in a large rludy session with two
·teachers supervising. Foi-30 minutes
these students can do homework, read or
.work on class projects.
Next Joey shifts to a "lab session," also
:JO minutes )9ng, with the SO youngsters
from the study session. Here the students
may again be divided in groups or 10 for
Edison Student
Charles Price
Oratory Winner
Charle$ S. Priet. sophomore atudent at
F.di.!lon High School. was the winner in
the recent 33rd Oratorical Contest of the
Huntington Beach Post of the ~erican
Legion.
Talqnn ~ place was David T.
Bracletti' and.~ tor third were Mart
Randol and Donald Naranjo.
P.rjce. ii an honor. .stw:lent41t Edl&0n and
Jias lettered fn tenniS and Is a speech"
team member. He will eornpetc with
students from nine other schools at
1 :30 p.m. Jan. Z5 at the M"tdw1y City Post
or the Legion .
Judges for the conteftt included
Municipal Judge Celia Baker; Ted
Bartlett, Huntington Beach city cou n--
cilman; Erne& Pascoe. pr inc i pa I.
Edison: Gail Langenbeck, past president
of the Huntington Beach Women'• Club
and Bernard Rodgers, vice principal of
Eadec elementary school.
Mrs. Casey Quits
Post in Chamber
Mrs. CWle Casey has resigned 11
president of the Women's Division of the ' ' . Huntington Beach Chamber of Com-
merce. Sucteedini: her 'is 1'1n;. Vera
Podsade, first vice pre1ldent.
l\lrs. Casey's husband, commander of
the destroyer USS OeHaven has been
l.rarud'erred to Norfolkt Va. where be will
be under the NATO command.
Mrs. Casey said the Women's Division
would present seven ay.·ard.s at the
Chamber'• annual banquet, Jan. 30 at the
Sher•ton-Beach Inn.
,
DAILY PILOT
O•ANGE (QA.IT PUal.-l~hlJ\IG <OMPAN't
~tbert N. Weed Prei:Genl ena Pullh~•
Jet.~ JI. Curltv
Vitt l'1'•Mll•nt •M Ci-flt M1,..irr
il>o"''' l(,,.,;1
EdolOr
lloo"''' A. Mu •phin1
Ml""81119 EGl!or
Albt rf W, l1le'
Jl••Odllf. IEG111!"
sl!owliig lllm1, sD4eo,.or llat.nilli to II~
Tbe llb CID be UHd far uy oploial iittil
o/ the atudoot \Ylllle Joiy 11 In bis lab, otller Y""!'l-11ters In the same reading and language
section ,..,. be' ln ·llU<ly or .U.:U11Jlon
groop. '11le order is Oex.lble and the' total
project handles about 150 youn'g!ters all
learning reading and laniuage, hi.it in
divided orders.
Tb/._ \1i>tli c1"amJOm• lllow ltudenll
'!lllh 1!1f 'le'lllliiali .. Ioli to l,..\r Oow ' I ri:oni dlicuaolon-to-atuey-1 .. lab er combine
In one 1111•· mtclilll 11 tllO IOlcberl de-
''The fleslbiUty of this type of teaching
Is where Its value lies," explain1 \\'y(lt.
The normal discuuion-11.udy·lab routlne
Cllf1 be altered in any way tht "team" ot
teaehws feels neeeS!ary to bat accom-
plish a day's work.
At the end of the 90-minute read ing and
Janguaae section, Joey then goes to ph)'sl·
c•l ec:lt.ic•Uon. conducted. in a standard
niethod, n a U-minute period.
Following phys-ed Joey goes back to the
main building where he joins ~ or so
othv Qawnate$ in~ shop, science. music
dr art Course ln one of the buDding'a few
lully.enclo&ed claarooms. Again tau&ht
in a standard 4>n'linute period.
Then comes lunch. After 45 more min•
utes Joey goes back to class and to an-
other 90-minUte section, this time on math
and lqdal studies. The math-M>Cial study aection has the
same ronnat a.s readiJl&-Jancuq:e, limply
different subjects.
After the 90 minuln stops Joey walks to his last elas!, home room, where he
identifies with one teacher and ICbool
problems are taken care of.
The key to team teaching is the 90-min·
ut.e session. Modern educators feel it dis-
plays the best utlllza.Uo11 of tfme and lal-
ent.
For 30-minutea Joey is in a elasa; with
only nine other 11tudents, he can learn
more directly from that teacher, ei;im·
pared to a nonnal school with one teacher
for evary 30 students.
Joey will also earn a chance to learn
his subject from more than one leacher-
thus widening hi5 educational expuienee.
"Another benefit is that bad teachers
are more easily weeded out by the team
of teachers," adds Wyatt.
lire.
"\\'' have no problems with one ctau
disturbing another,., said Wr.1tt. He ex-
platntd thet the full team teaching system
has not yet befn Jnltlated al Gisler,
bul is planned this )'t:ar.
A few problems still have to be ironed
oul One Is report cards. Some adjust·
ment will hive to be made to account for
the fact that Joey \\;n have more thin ·
one teacher 1or certain sul:ijeels.
A chaDge must also be made in audio..
visual material to adapt It for more per-
l!IOMI u.ae, rathtr thill the standard eon··
~pt-of )0.$1) 1tudents viewing a movie on
a large IC'feen. Gisler teachers already
ua;.e a movie projector that projecl3 into
a television-like box for use with small
groups.
Cost of the new concept In schooling is
the same as a normal 1ehool. Gisler ln·
tennedlate cost the dl!triet about U mil-
lion for the land and bu1Jdlng of the
school. A mall area ls built between the two
major buildlngs which currently 11epar1te
tilth ,...den mm the 1eventh and eighth
crades. The mall haa been u.sed for lunch,
physical educatlon when it rains, civic
meetings and a few d1nce1 .
"The prima17 objective of team teach-
ing is to provide .some part or the day
when the teacher can get on a very close
level wilh just a few ol hls studentl," ex-
plained YlyatL "The compatibility of the
te aeher1 In Ule team is a.lao neee.!lsary
and teachers are bein1 hired with thl1
idea in mind."
Public reapome to the program ba1
been good, according to Wyatt. who fore-
sees more team teachinJ in tbe district
in the future .
The team teaching method doe!ln't
change the basic curriculum of the school.
"Our student1 are learning the same
things as those .et t"e older Dwyer
School," Wyatt said. ''The difference is
jn how they learn it.••
Valley Medians Go Green
Greener it.reel med.11111 will be the
mark of Fountain Valley.
That point was agreed on Tuesday
night at a joint study session of the city
council and the parks and rtcreation
commission.
Cross Country
Winners Listed
'nlirty-tive FOuntain Valley youngsteri
pl:Qdded through the rain in the clty'i
fifth annual novice cross country cham-
pionships at Fountain Valley High
School Saturday.
Boys and girls fn>m the third throogh
eighth grades competed in the parks and
recreation sponsored meet in preparation
for 'lhe Orange County finals Saturday at
Westminster High School.
Winners of the five different boys'
brackets were Phillip Stalford, Joey
Vrab, Scd.t Mueller, Mike Garcia and
Tony Vrab.
Glrls' winners were Nora Labrousse.
rut.a Kysella, 'I'lna Kysella. Syl via
Garcia. Dawn Labroosse and Dtbble
Labrousse.
From Pqe 1
MONSTER ••.
five to six feet kmg &Wilnmi.na away from
his outstretched net.
Poor brave chap. f\.1any like him suc-
cum&od in exactly Ule same manner at
Loch Ness.
The theory behind all this speculat1on ia
that local residenta depo&ite-d WlWlnted
baby alligators into the lake some years
ago and Ulat a school of the fully grown
creatures is now happily at home in the
reservoir.
We, of course, know beUer.
The Labrador looks out acrou the
\\•ater, the calls of nature apparently
quieted. His attrad.ive mlstre$ stubs her
cigarette and keeps a careful eye on her
happily playing little boy.
Below the waters a creature dating
back to the beginning of time east a red
~aly eye on the cull dabbling his beak at
the water's edge.
History is in the making at thi1 dccep.
tively peaceful Oran&e reservoir •.•
Next Tuesday the council will have 1
chance to adopt a commJssion report
recommending landscaping for all major
streets ln Fountain Valley. Last week th e
council refused a Bim.Jlar report and call·
ed for the study 11uslon.
Tbe point of contention was whether
some major It.nets such as f\.fagnolla
Street should have temporary pavl n& for
street medians. 1be council sald "no''
and Tuesday the commls.!lion agretd.
Work on 80me street medians will start
after the. c:oundl itves lta approval Tua.-
dlj'.
'
Talk Set Tonight
On Handicapped
How eduealiona\ly h a n d I e a p p e d
children can be integrated into a normal
school program becomes the tople of a
presentation by Fountain Valley's FulWn
School staff lhl.s evenlnr.
It "·ill begin at 7:30 p.m. before the
Foun~ln Valley School district board of
trustees al the Currleulwn Materials
Center, One Ughthouse Lane.
Fulton School has been awarded a
$66,800 federal arant to develop • pro-
gram for the educationally handicapped
v.·hieh is closely ali111ed to norma l
classes.
Traditionally e due at Ion a 11 y han-
dicapptd puplls have been j50Jated Into
special clasae1 and have rtteived special
ina:truetlons.
Religious Leaders
Plan Broadcast
More than 60 city oUielals and religious
leaden; have been invited to join the:
Foun~ln Valley Jaycees for breakfast at
8:30 a.m. Saturday in Topper'5 Steak
House.
The occasion Is the t Ir st annual
f\.fayor's Prayer Breakfast Initiated by
the Jaycees to honor Cl\'le leaders,
especially fl.fayor Edward Just
Guest speaker will be Don Hall,
founder of Teen Challenge in Southern
California and current director of that
greup's narcot1es and drug prevention
program.
Jumbo Christe11ed
But FAA Says 747 Neecb Changes
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Firol Lady
Pat Nm>n spl15bed red. white and blue
water onto the nntion 's biggest jelllm!r
today. But there was some question
whether the ne~·ly christened jumbo jet
would be pcrmltt~ to make it.s first com·
merclal flight on time neit week .
The Federal AvlaLlon Administration
said the 700,000·pound. 490-pas5tn1er
Boeing 147 -the Pan Amerlnan ClipJ>tr
"'t·oun1 America'' -had not yet IUC·
ressfl.11ly passed tests of ita emergency
e1 aeuat..ion system.
Even as the christenlnG wu taking
place at cold Dul J e 1 lntunationa l
Airf)Ort. th' FAA said modtflc11tlons
v.·ould have to be made in two of tho 11
,.~ape chuttj used to t v 1 cu at •
passtnge.r1 quickly It case of an aecldenl
ln three separate t.tst1 at Ro3'-'tll. r.:.~f ..
flarlltr this week. the chutu malfunc-
tioned, the FAA said.
Both Pan Am and Boein& jaJd tl~y
~·ere confident modifiealiona could be
n1ade in time for the scheduled \\'t(t.
ncsday in1ugural fU1ht from New York
to London.
Because of its conC'UTI about the escape
system, the FAA limited four demonstra-
tion nights today fot dlgn1Wies at Dullea
l.O 225 persons.
TI1e FAA insist.I that a planelOld of
p3~sengers be able to evacuate the plane
from only five door& within 90 ttconds. A
tolal of 381 per10ns -a planeload -
evacuated wil.h 17 teconda in ont of the
Roswell ttsta. but the tat w11 not con-
!idered tuecasfuJ bec•un one of the
chutes falled.
DAii. Y PILOT fltff , .....
GISLER SCHOOL : THE SHAPE OF THINGS TO COME IN HB EOUCATION . •
Trustees Junk
Too·lrigh Bids
For GWC Work
Bids by contractors to do conslruclion
at Golden West College. were thrown oct
Wednesday night by Orange Cmu1t Junior
College District trustees because they
were all too far over the architect's
estlmate of the project cost.
Low bidder or six bidders was Burrman
Construction Company. of Chula Vista,
\.\'hieh offered to construct the buildings
at a price of $2,468.880,
The estimate by the \\'lllia1n L. Pereira
and Associates architectural firm, of
Corona del fl.1ar, had been $2 million to
buifd the facilities according to their
plans.
No ooe from Pereira's ofllee was
present to offer an eicplanation for the
bids 50 widely missing lhe estimate.
Junior college trustees decided to
readverUse for bids beginning Jan. 29
with a new opening date March 12.
Work on the Huntington Beach campus
covered hy the bids "'as to include a 350·
seat community theater, a police science
addition. a cafeteria, a student activities
area and 600 parking st.alls.
Rehab Organization
Plans Stock Meeting
Stocks, bonds and you 11 the theme of a
husband and wife meeting of the Orange
County West Chapter of Women·s
American Organization for Rehabilitation
Through Training.
The meeting, at v.·hich Herbert Segaloff
will be the guest speaker will be held al 8
p.m .. Jan. 22 in the Los Alamitos home of
Segaloff. For further information call 430-
4240 or 596-7683.
Dm U.S. Arrange Flight
•
Of Ojukwu From Binfra?
GENEVA (UPt) -Biafran leader Gen.
Cklumegwu Ojukwu was OO'WJ'I otit of
Biafra last Saturday in a U.S. aircraft -
together with a.Ides, their families and his
white Mercedes automobile, American
sources said today .
The flight was arranged by U.S. in-
telligence, they said.
The Am1riean con sulate in 1..eneva
ricnied the reports or any knowledge of
lJ.S. cooperation in Ojukwu's night.
There · "'as some confusion i n
'Vashington v.'hen it became koo~·n that
Ojukwu also wante<l to take his
automobile. but after hurTledly looking
around, intelligence came up with a gray·
painted su~r-constt:llallon cargollner -
called a "gray ghost."
Reports from intelligenti? sources in
both Nigeria and y,•hat formerly was
Biafran territory include the fol!O'Ning
items:
-About 15 men at the head (Jf the
Biafran governn1ent stood the danger of
racing trial . All of them except one are
known lo be out of Biafra and it was
"hoped" the last man got out as well.
hair; photographs of them be.Ing unloaded
from cargo aircraft a,l Lagos ·airport . ·
These guns were immediately put into
use and shelled Uli airport prior to Us '
capture last Tuelday. ·
-There have been no confirmed :•
reports of any massacres.
-The United States believes there will
he cGnsiderable political difficulties in ':
L.1gos. ·with I.he n1Hitary establistunenl',
reluctant to relinquish authority and state'
gove rnors equally reluctant lo submll to .
central conlrol.
-Nigeria could have finished the war a
long time ago by an <111-0Ul inilit.ary ef. '
fort. But this may "'ell have cost more
ci\'llian lives in Biafra -as well as
miTilary casualties among Nigerian _
forces -than the number of civilians .
y,·ho died from starvation.
Bench Cluiniber
See k s Me nibers
-Lt. Gen. Philip Effiong. oommanding A concentrated one-day membership
Biafran forces after Ojukwu left, "'ill not rlrivC' has been planned by the lluntington
be tried by Nigeria . Beach Chamber (Jf Commerce for ~1on-
-All Biafran career civil servanls ate d11y, Jan . 19.
cooperating with Nigeria. Chamber Ex.ecutive Manager Ralph .•
-Effiong's surrender broadcast wa! Kiser said 400 letters soliciting pr~ ·
made from a mobile radkl truck. and not speclh··e ~pn~.rs harl bttn senl out in ·.
from the m11tn lransmltting stat10h ·at laying groundWork for the v.•hirlwind
Uga near Uli Airport. This is 'l'(h~ it was .. iCampaign. ··:
not picked up by European monitoring Each men1ber of the membership com-:
stations and only in Lagos and Libreville. miuee will be assigned 10 prospecto;, :
-Ojukwu is a wealthy man and is Kise r said, located in 1he same ~
koo"'n to have half his fluid assets in gf'.ographical area of the city. Kiser:
London and the other half in Geneva. reported that the chamber had signed 2S :
-Nigeria paid cash on the nose for ;ill new 1ncmbers in the la:i;t quarter of 1969. :
Soviet weapons. The last shipment .. -.i s of The membershi p campaign will sta11 ·
48 120..millimeter cannon, all mobile, In vdlh roffee and donuts <1t the chamber of· ;
mid-December. American intelligenc;e fices.
JI. J. Qarrelf ~ .· · .
15th semi-annual SALE . · ·.
~··· ;.
M.!IDRIG/ll
HERITAGE
WITH ALL THE EXCITEMENT ANO ROMANC E OF SPAIN ,,,
A BOLDLY ROBUST ELEGANCE THAT COULD ONLY BE
MADRl•A~ ••• ANO NOW FOR THE VERY FIRST TIME
WE HAVE THIS MAGNIFICENT IEOROOM COLLECTION ,ALL
ON SAU AT S"CIAL REDUCED PR ICIS I
• '
CHfST ON CMl'T •rt . Jtt. NOW
SPACIOUS ,.OU.Wiii
DllSSll lllG 4lt, NOW
IUINISHID
GOLD MllAOI l lG . ... NOW
IUNG-SIZI
HIADIOAIO llG. 24f. NOW
COMMODI 2.ou.w111
NllHT STANO llfG. 15t. NOW
Try our convenient
revolving chargo.
Your fa uo11tr. 1nttr1or dtslg1ttr "WiU bt happ11 to 4.f.ttSL you •••
'~0JE$!10N4l
INTtlUOA 0,$1GNEl1 11 15 H.A-.eo~ l tVC.
tO~TA W.!S A, CALIF.
•••·0115
339.
359.
79.
209.
135.
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Saddl·ehaek . Today's Fl••I
·N.Y. Steelu-·
0 '
Pill's Blame '
For Cancer
In Dispute
:WASlilNGTON (UPll - A pro~ent
cancer specialist warrMXI t.oday that
thousands of women may be feeding the
growth of undetected breast cancer with
birth control pills.
"Synthetic estrogens are to b re a s t
cancer what fertilizer is to a weed crop,"
Dr. Roy Hertz testified at a Senate hear·
ing. Estrogens are a prime component of
oral contraceptives. Previous witnesseM
said man made ~trogens could also
cau.$t blood clotting in some users of 7 "The Pill."
'Another witness, Dr. Edmond Kassouf
of Cranford. N. J .. suggested in prepared
testimony that the American Medical
Association (AMA) might have helped
drug companies promote birth control
pills and conceal their alleged dangers.
But Dr. Robert W. Kistner oC Harvard
f edical School scoffed at studies linking
al contraceptives with capcer.
'-Jbe pill ii safe," Kistner declared.
liertz fmner1y beaded the reproduction
~re8e3rch branch of the govermnent's Na·
I tional Cancer Institute. He is now with
kfeller University in New York.
Said Hertz : "We know from X-
3y studies that breast cancer exists in
e cages for years before it can be
ically detect.ed. However, since one
wOman in 20 will at some time in tier life
dtivelop breast cancer, it is obvious that
in using the pill we are exposing al least
this p>rtioo of women to . a . substance ~ known to stimulate pre-ex1st1ng breast
cancer in women."
The doctors testified in the second day
of hearings before Sen . Gaylord Nel~n's
Jl(lall business monopoly subcomm1ttee .
11\e group has heard sharply divided
le6t:imony about the safety of "The Pill."
Lagunans Plan
·To Attend Meet
On Envil'onment
Lagunall'S may band together for a bu~
I ride to a big·name Santa Barbara env~
ronmental conference Jan. 28, the ~
' v&-sary of the disastrous offshore Oii
, blowout. .
Conservation minded Councilman Roy
Holm is organizing the bus project lo-
cally. Sche1tuled to begin at 9 a.m. at Santa
Barbara City College the session will ~osl
such participants as Dr. Paul Ehrlich,
noted author and professor of biological
sciences at Stanford University: Alf~ed
H~er, president of the conservation
group California Tomorrow; Ellen Stern
Harris, member of the Los Angeles R~
glonal Water Quality Con~ol Board ; Phil
Berry president of the Sierra Club; Sen.
¥an Cranston · Rep. Charles M. Teague,
Dignitaries ~o have been invited in·
clude Gov. Reagan ; his potential guber-
natorial opponent., Assemblyman Jess Un·
ruh; Sen. George Murphy; and Reps.
Jciut V. Tunney and George E. Brown.
llolm said the conference of speaker!'!
.And paoel discussions will be topped orf
by the Santa Barbara Declaration of En·
vtfonmental Rights. . Jt holds thal all men have the. ~ight . lo au environment cap~ble of sustaining hfe
anlf promoting happiness. ' "ll accummulated actions of the past
l)ecome destructive of this right, men now
livlng have the further right to repudiate
the .past for the benefit of the future," it
itites. ' The document declares thal centuries or
care.less neglect of environment have got
roanklnd lo a final CJ'Olsroads at which
exiStence is threatened.
The declaration states, "we propoae a
revolution in conduct toward environment
which is rising in revolt against us.
(;ranted that ideas and institutions long
established are not easily changed, yet
Coday is~the first day of the rest of our
ll(e on this planet. We will begin ~iflnew.'1
·Those interested in busing to tfie con·
ference may cont.act Jtolm~at .'4!M-2826.
• \
ORANGE · COUNTY;~ CA~IFORNIA ~ THURSDAY, JAl)ll:IARY :is,.rf97(l
,.
• .._'urv1ves
ow er
. (·' ,, ' • ~Y
DAILY"t!IL'Of'.""'9 ..,~".wJ hrt""
Youth OK
Afte1~ Leap
Of 9 Floors
By BARBARA KREIBICH
Of ti!-. O.lfr Plllt Stiff
A IS.year-old Costa Mesa boy cheated
death Wednesady night when he hurled
himself from the top floor of the tallest
building in Laguna Beach, the nine-story
Surf and Sand Towers at lSSS S. Coast
Highway.
David Temple, 429 Flower St., survived
the spectacular leap with relatively
minor injuries, a scalp laceration ai;id
broken right wrist, and is in satisfactory
condition at South Coast Community
Hospital in South Laguna.
Witn eu Angelo D'Ercole, maitre de at
. the Towers Restaurant atop the new
building, told police he saw the boy clim-
bing the outside stairway between the
eighth ·and ninth floors at 5:30 p.m,•and
called ~t, '.'~h.~t are you dojl'S ~?"·
0 ---4----r-~-~--
1SLiiN WATKINS, WITH HIAD INJUl!Y, GOES 1V'l10SPITAL
L1gun1n V.ictim ol Traffic C~lll1ion at Slick lntornctlon
'lii..lloy 1'Hiif11')1'11\,11oi•il'~ 1a.
then.~ hea<Lfim om_thec'2;locb
railing of the l>alcony surrowwling tht
ninth floor.
Man Thrown From Auto
He landed in a Planted area ap.
pnWmately BO feet below the balcony, at
the 1econd-floor level or the building,
bounced off and rolled to the first floor
level. '
In Lagu11a Beach Crash
Police and hotel employes found him,
blef!ding copiously from the head wound,
but 1t1ll semi-conscious and summoned
an ambulance to take him to the hospital.
His parents, Mr. and Mrs. Robert F.
Temple, were notified and hurried to his
bedside. , ' . . . wet. pavement~apparently-precipitated
an accident that sent a Laguna Beach
man to the hospital Wednesday night, JC-
cording to police.
Glen A. Watkins, 44, 1711• Santa Crui:·
St., was thrown from his car and suffertd
a head injury, but is reported in, satidac--
tory condition at South Coast•Qirnmunity
Hospital today.
Driver David John·MacPhee, 29, .. $23 .
Graceland Ave. was westbound on
Bluebird Ce:nyon Drive at &:30 p.m. when
his vehicle struck Watkins' car -wfucli
was southbound.on Glenneyre St.
Watkins was thrown to the pavement
as the vehicle spun out of control and roU-
ed into a third car, parked on Bluebird'
Stock Jlf11rlcet
NEW YORK (AP ) -Stock market
prices remained lower in restrained trad-
lng today. (See quotalions, Pages 14-15).
As in previous sessi~, investors
were hesitant and waiting in the wings
for compellirig n e w s cdevelopmenta,.
analysts noted.
_Canyon Qrive.
MacPhee, 'who police-said ran through
the boulevard stop sjgn at tbe in.
tersection, told officers he had attempted
to make the slop but was unable to do so
because ci the wet, slippery pavement
and slid into Watkins' oncoming vehicle
as it entered the crossing.
Thieves Ransack
Unlocked Home
"I couldn't believe he was still alive,••
Merrill Johnson, ·owner of the TowerS,
sAid today. The JlOllce and amputance
,.. already were at the scene when he and
his wife arrived, minutes after D'Ercole
called them, he said.
"Our one great fear during. con·
struction of the Towers," Johnson said,
"was that one of the workmen mJght fall.
We were really relieved when the job was
completed without a single injury."
However, he added "the fear that
something like this will happen is always
there."
Only recently, Johnson said, he had in-
creased the height of the railing on the
balcony around the restaurant where
visitors like to stand to admire the beach Burglars•wfio entered by an unlocked and ocean view.
rear door ransacked a Laguna Beach Johnson said the way young Te mple
home. Wednesdar ·and departed with a landed after his leap , was "a miracle/'
~ portable color television set, police Tbe area around the tall Towers
reported tbday.. building is all rock, he explained, but this
particular section had been filled with
Coney Kunze, 569 Oak St., told police sloping dirt to create a planted area with
Ii.is daughter TeturOOd to the home about fems anct: other greenery. The hotel com-
3 p.m. to fifid closet doors and drawers plex is headquarters for the Presidental
pulled open and the TV set missing. t press corps when President Nixon is in the area. 1be burglary apparently was Laguna Beach detectives are con-
complltbed between .12:30 p.m. and 3 / linuing their investigation of the case to
p.m., police said. . try and determine why the youth leaped.
Lo~h Ness Revisited
Peters Canyon's Big· Al Swimmi1ig 'Into History
Editor's Note: F'orme1' British·
journalist Tom Barley who used to
spend liis time vigorou.sl11 chMino the
Loclt NeS3 monster in Scotland , ia
now doing his thing at on Orange
County rt"se-rvoir, as indicated in the
jollowi11Q dispatch,
By TOM BARLEY
Of tlit DtllY Plllt tl•tf
ON SAFARI AT PETERS CANYON
RESERVOIR -Our only companions at
this remote water hole on this gniy
moody morning were a mildly interelted
houSfMlife, her romping ~year~d llOl'I
and a large black Labrador dog.
The only movement on the limpid
waters o( the lake was the occasional: rip-
ple created by Jitful and rainfllled· Wind.
The 3-year-old toddles and coos at t1lft
watet!a-«lge..bla.~·-111!\S
• I. ., ... ' .
and ·puffs oo a cigarette -and tbe dog does
what all dogs do aiTIOng the shrubs at the
edge o( the i-eservolr. .._
Ah yes, Labr~dor• are big dogs indeed.
Air; the uninltilit«I might say, is tcan-
quiltty.
This veteran observer is not, however,
deceived. We have uoder our belt the
fruits of a Jong ago assignment to Loch
Ness and the vast tecbDical knowledge
garnered while sipping hbt sweet tea for
long hour• at the side ol that fablt.'d Scot-.
tish lake.
Below the waters of Peters Canyon
reservoir is a creature that closely
resemble• the scaly amphibian that
sports in the murky depths a~, ~
caslooally ~· >Urlace ol the ~I Scottish wa • • 1
It hal ~ 8ll the "'""' 61 jllg•Al'by 1
' . ~-•ll\il l\'~""1ind '.Z':,; '\.. . ------~
' I
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onlookers who pathetically believe that
an alligator i1 responsible for ravages in
this Orange lake. Bird and fish are said
to have been devoured in copious quan.
tlties by \he wtly creature.
Like "Nessie", the darling ol British
journalists, Orange County's ow n
monster has aklllfully evaded capture.
f.wo curators from the Buena Park
Alligator Fann fished for hours here
Weifftesday .and slipped away admitting
defeat. And several local residents have
bravely ventured forth upon the murky
waters to try their band at 1etUng a little
notoriety out of Big AL
Many onlookeri pathetically testify to
lving·f!etn ~tr-al. alllgetors.· And ont , ~IY oheJ:lll'""' brav.it •hlll.deep·mua·
ctuahi' returned' Jo ,8iim ·to tblm that -~w~. tl\'(l~alllg~iorl at IUil
. •(S..·MON8TER,.P.,~lr ·
DAIL Y•PILOT Staff ,....
TOWERS' TIM FOLEY SURVEYS SCENE OF YOUTH'S FALL
Coste M••• TMnager Survives Nin•Story Drop to Flowerbed
Students at Saddleback
. Br.~.tli'Jg~,Q1!~r .~o'}tr'!~
\ • "·" .. ~· ,,,.i) ~ ~ "·"~~(...~ lr,,.'°t .~r/.;, ' •\...,i I
'By 'THO)tAS FOR'tUNE .;M!rnJnisg ation building just to· see
• ~~~JillofW" sonn!thlng happen. · · .
Saddle back College student ·government · "Student government •bas kept 'SOS off
f.!I at odd.a with the collfge a~mllilstraiion this campus for two years," .she :1ajd.
"We haven't rioted:" aod the length of male students' hair isn't
the only point of contention. She suggested the type or gratitude
students get is not having one acUVity ap-Student body officers feel Uley deserve proved this year except homecoming,
credit and N!spect for preventing student Student Body-President·John•Bothwell,
dii;ruption and say it hasn't been f~r of a . 37, Dana Point, says the administration
repressive administration that has kept renects ·the school· board, which to•him
the Mission Viejo area campus relatively seems more ·concerned with votea than
students. quiet.
They comp!ain that ' in just · about
everything they try to do they are
restricted and treated like children, in·
stead of adults.
"There· have-been many · midnight
meetings. We've had to .stop other
students from destructive acts on
buildings," said Jeff Dubowe, 20-year-0ld
student activities commissioner, .from
Tustin. Mrs. Debi Perrine, 20, of
Irvine , said there are some students on
campus who would like to burn down.Ule
Wives of POWs,
Foreign Mini.ster
Of India Meet
From Wire Sen'ices. · ·
NEW DELHI -India's ·foreign affairs
chief today urged the wives of four
American fliers missing in Vietnam com-
bat to try to visit Qlr~IY1to-Hanof, P!~·
mising his own influential help in their
mission. · -.r
Mrs. Carole Hanson·Of '24112 Birdrock,
Drive El Toro,· and the 'three Los Angel~s County , women believe . their .
husbands are prisoners of war r held by .
the North.
A meeting was 11e:ld secretly toda:Y with
Foreign Secretary T,N. Kaul, former In-
dian Ambassador to Moscow, who still .
maintaim close ties to the Communist
world. .
Kaul, wllo has been urging-ln<:f1laSed-
dlplomaUc contacts between India ahd
the Communist bloc, Aid he Would in-
tervene w1Ul officials in Hanoi 3.nd sug..-
gested the service wives apply·fot visa!. -
Other sources said Kaul has already
asked itte North Vietnamese rei:ime to
release names oC 1,'400 American
servicemen who are either P6Ws or
dead. ·
New DelhJ morning newspapers,~ted
the visit by the four Southland :','wvar
widows" with sympa~etlc storlis about
their globe-girdling trip in seai'ch of'word
that their men are dead or altve.
In response· to the students' complaint,
College President Fred, Bremer 11ld he
hadn 't heard ,thl!.t students were dlsap.
pcinted at not being recognized.
"Certainly J'm always appreciative.of
anything the student government di>ea do
in a positive manner for the benefit of.the
college, and I've told student officers ao;l
he said.
Mrs. Perrine said1 the admini.ltraUon
just doesn't understand the students.
"I know of a number Of people who
have taken their Saddleback bumper
stickers off because they don't want· to
admit they go here.''
A' good number of stlJdents are em·
, barrassed by ille college's reputation for
toe·the·lfne ·conf orritity resultlng·from ·ffie
dress code, student ofCicers claim.
ComtiiissiOner Dubowe said a .suryey
taken du,ring. winter quarter registraJ)on
last-week sh<iwed mOst sophomore
students don't want any student actlviUes
because they believe adinlh!Stratlon ruleS
· are 1 too restrictive •for t.hem to enjoy
. theipselves. ·
Ttie freshmen students. asked for
· Clances;.be. said,.butiwhen tl!ey~found,out
. dances at the college ~.not open to non4
stu4ents they changed•the.tr minds.
"The sky isn't Ule.lim~''·at·other junior
colleges either r• remarked C:Ollege· Pres--
idel!t Bremer. ~:
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1 There'~ no 'ijlvef. lintn'g.,behind
those clouds, just~a wet one whlch .
'1111 be • wrtniful . out . tonlght and·
Friday morning u coastal temP"
tratures dip into,~ \{Pper 50's.
INSIDE .TODAY ' . .
8iafra11>0rett:ge,;..chUdren tOUl
sing thtir notional a11themi for
Eul"Qpean government aider, Out ci feature articl~ on ·Page 131 to-
day, shows , they 1&avc little to
1tng about. ·
C1llt""'-' 1 Me.J.i.. 11 Cll.Ulllt U' , MW!INll ,.... 14
CllHltlH 11·12 NI*"" N... .., \ c-ru u or..,. c-r, M
Ct"f""' 11 $)'1Wto httw ,'M
They wlll meet Friday morning• with
Jnd lan ,Prime .M,lnister M'rs. Indira
Gandhi, afterward nying on to Vientiane,
Laos, for a meeting with North Vie\.-
namese dlp\omatlc o(Ucers,lherc. Ditllfl Ntt!Cf!t 11 s~ , n.u
••f'91'i-I ''*' ' thdr ~ ..... I Cll~ll11"'"1 11 Ttlrlllllil, W
flll"'l't• 1 .. 11, "ii . . 11' •• ~ 1f '·1.Tr,_~;f • ~-~ ..... ..., •.-ellolt-1 Mlllllu' 6 ........ ff
secri:t'a!Y,· Kaul has•suggested th•t. V>o women~~t:i:t<I. to tf:a)e 'Rus:ila1 earl~~ ' th!S .,,,,.k-oil•~ 8r/ivJngJl(W.11y wttl!OUt' ·
vlsu -~t>Pll.'· !Of:;p8wi·,tocvilll.'the; •
· NOl'tll. Vlctnamtte caJitfal. · ·.__._-c..·._-...;•;__...;.;...;.;;.;-;_ __ _,
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Ji'onnal Surrender
Biaf ra Leader
Pledges Unity
Prom. Wire Service•
LAGO&, Nigeria -M•i· Get!. Ph!Hp
Eftionc surrendered Blafra formally and
unc<>.,ilUoofllJ I<> tho Nl,erlanl Thur,.
day wMll a pledp I<> 1upport lht nalloa
as ooe Wld.lvlded.
Tlw Iii 111<> oymbol!Je tho pJedle, he
hugtd Blafn'• dUet adver11ry, Maj.
Gen. Y..., Gowon, Nlj:«ia'1 naUOIJ.IJ
lead tr.
"'lbe llopubll< ol lllalra ha-tb)I <e-
l<> ePll,• Elflooc lllid ID hi• •urr-r
&tat-to Go!"M at a mJlltary bar>
racb lD Li101. And Gowoo responded:
"Let .. join·-lo build. llilly '""""
and ..,S Ulloa wbert no ... will he op. ""''*" May God help ... ..
"'!i.,. come lht formal end I<> lht
<ece~ proc:l>!m«l by Gell. c.
Od\llll<lll Ojukwu oo M1y IO, 1167 wllh
lhe charp that lht fecleol mWtary
govqrnont aoucht I<> dom)nate and
obli!Mate Ibo tribelmen, prlncl.pal io·
nab;i.m, ol Biflra. A-•t lht ume time lhtt l!fllona offlc:ially eapltul.IJ.e4, OjW,wu cliarpd
from a hidJni place aomewhere abroad
that Uw: Nigerians 1Ull were bent on wip-
ing out lht Ibo& ud !JO •PJ>O&led f<J< I
neutca.I force Lo [ll'tvent tt. 1111 statt,meot
was re)eued in Ge,aeva.
Oilokwu clalme( lhat lht Nl1eri1n1
seek to rtng Biafra with an iron curtaJn
"to make IUle that tbe atrocities they
will catainl)' arry out in Blafr1 are
un-and Ulll'epoitad ID lhe ~
pres.."
The former leader, who fl<d Blolr1 laat
weeblod luriq Elfionr In char1e, oho
appealed I<> the world I<> help Bialrllll
v.·ho, be NW, were left ltarvinc and ex.-
haul!A!d by IO moolht of wu.
OjPwu.'1 -1,008-word ~ WU
distribuled In -~•• by an Amerleao
public rt1ations agency, Markpress, that
had acted a1 a Biafran inf.ormation office.
Ojukwu 's w.heretlboutl remained un-
known, but ~ q.ency spokemtan dUI not
deny U bod realved the slalement by tel.
a m~ge from Lisbon, Portugal.
''From all lndlcatlons, it Is clesr that
Nigeria wilt not feed our people," !aid
Ojukwu. ''There is no food whatsoever in
llafra and unlen food c.an 1et into
Bia/ran mouthl in the neit 71 hours, it
Wiii he too Ill._
"NJ1eria'1 insistence to control the
diJtrlbuQon ol relier ii both to tnaure
that Blafrtn1 &et no such re.lief and 11.ao
lo 11wt out outlldtn who mlcht wit...,
and ••Poll the tnomtOUI crimes 1he
ptano I<> commit aglinat our people.•
Al~ be named no n1t.lon1
~Uic&Uy, h1I reference to the
responslbiU!f of nUono lhot 111pporWI
the fedual I0\'"'11Mnt of Gen. Y1kubu
Gowon wu an obvious reference to JJrl·
tatn end the Soviet Un ....
Gowon'1 s<>vernmeht bu accepted
reltel offen tn>m Bnlaln, which 11
p<ep..-lur a plandoad of medical sup. Plitt, and from lhe league of Red Cross
sodeit.11 but 1peciflcally ruled out 1ny
aulstance Irons-nations or chultable
aseoe6t.I &Ml dJrectly aupported Biafra in
the civil war. The Soviet Onion bu made
PO public often of relief.
~on,,.J>P the other hand, promised at
the surrtnder ceremony a general
llJlJlllly apd -ctlon for the In· bal>JWN. of Bl>lrL
''We Row" mall of you were dr1gced
Joto it," be.·u.kl.. '
"May I welcome you back to the fold
and to givt you penon.al auurance1 and
the .,...IDCt ot everyone here and the
' UfUfMCe of the full nat.Ion. the Supreme
llllitaey Couocil end of lht Federal Ex-
eculiw Coondl and to 11y that all the
ruatlOieet th.at Wt. have offered will be
honond.
0 We Jaav• sranted a general amnesly
••• Penonally I know that probably if
not becauu ol Ojutwu'a madneM, such a ttlfnc wouJd not have happened to thi!!!
4»UJ1tr)'. ~where ia Ojukwu today!
"After leading you into such terrible
privation. hunger, deprivatlon and kill·
inp where is Ojukwu tooey! He tips
escaped, probably t.o go and enjoy 1he
maaey that he has: made at your el'pense,
at tbe expense of iMocent Nigerians."
Festival Directors Nix
All-Laguna Youth Show
Fa'!lival directors have twmd a
nat -Gown Oii • I0"--1 lo llmit yoo1b art ahibitJne .. lht grounds I<>
young people Jiving within the FativaJ
area instead of iocluding au .school
districts ID the county.
MONSTER ...
five to six feet long swimming away from
his oolltretched net.
Poor brave chip. Many Uke him sue.
cwnbed in euctly the same manner at
Loch Nesa:.
'Ibe theory behind all this speculation ia
that local nsideni8 deposited unwanted
babY.. alliptars. DD tbs lake 80Cne yean
ago and that. a school of the fully growl\ ere.-. i. now happiljl at im>I Ill lhl
reservoir.
We, of COUJV, know better.
'Ibe Labrador looil ouL aCl"Od the
water, die cali. of nature apparently
quieted. HJs attractive rru.tress atuti. her
cigareUe and ketJM a careful eye on ~r
happily playing litUe boy.
&low the water• a ereaturt dat.int
back io the beginning of time cast a red
scaly eye Oil the gull dabbling ilia beak at
the wit.er'& edge.
Hi5&ory ii in the making at thi!!! decet>
tively peaceful Orange rtiervoir .•.
DAILY PILOT
OWAKGI. cw.IT "°'IL.llHWG COM,.urt'
lor..•rt N. W,M
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CU1 l<tllw
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f
The sugge.W~ came from Hal Aklns,
htp -art -and F..Uval ex· hlbil« who said an all.IAguna 11how
coo1d be better tban the customary all·
county show because of the ou1!t.andlng
art talent among Laguna youth and the
facrt that such a show could be better ar·
ranged, with all works framed and 1nore attractively presented.
Director Verner Beck said the ground~
committee had considered the suggr.~tion
and decided "It woukl. be a great mi stiike
to give up our beautiful twntywide
sy"""1 of juryiof."
UndeT" the present system, thousands or
entries from students are jud1ed firs! in
their di!lrict!!! and then by a special
Festival jury.
"I think it'! one of the hi(h poinl!!! of
the Festival,'' director Paul Griem
agreed, "And having it countywide la a
big draw for admissions."
Mayor Glenn Vedder, ex-officio board
member, noted thti t "local school
students will have .se\'eral opportunities
t.o exhibit during the year."
One such opportunity was conrinned a~
directors approved Akin:.:' second reqt~t.
Laguoa students will be perm itted to take
over the art exhibit area under the pup-
pet theater at the Festival Forum for a
two-d1y show during the Winter Festiva l.
Directors agreed that panels now stored
in the area could be moved to the patio lo
make way tor I.he exflibi1.
Festival Laud
Prirclr.ase PU.n
Ritns Into Snng
Initial in"estigaUons or the possibility
o( purchasing Yloodland Drive land ad·
jacent to the new Boys' Club ha\'e not
been encouraging, Festi1•al Director
David Young said Tuesday.
Young had been asked by U1e festh·at
boarrl to look into a suggestion made by
builder Bernard Syfan lhat the 1''estival
con1ider purchasing 1teveral parcels on
WoOOland Drive tor development u a
park 11rea and po8Sible future home for
lhe &:Mo! of Art and Desi&n.
Syfan stijJgcsted tat suc:h a move '<''OU\d
remove the existing "bUght" nel'l to the
youth facility, provide needed park spact.1,
pennjt removal of the lennis courts from
the festival ground-; and perhaps 90\ve
the matter ol relocating the art 1ebool.
"I'm not loo encouraged b)' the in·
vestgationl "·e·\'e made to date," Young
told felJow director,;. ;,It looQ 11 II the
land ma)' be more expt."Mlve than we had
antJcipak!d, but I'd like to cootinue the
JnvealgaUon."
Some proc>erty O\l"fl('TI tnc,·itahl)' will
hold out for hii;:hcr prlc6. Young said,
and condemnation br the cit)' ca.nnot bo
llcal'T'pliaicd unleii it i1 pos11ible to pri;
vide "equal IJ\·lni;: qu1u1.('rs'' elli'CWhere,
which couki bt dlfflcull in vil!w of rlaing
r'skiootial costs throughout the 1..oiaun.a
area.
HONORED IN DIATH
M•rlin Luther kine
Many Ceremonies
Across U.S. Pay
Tribute to King
By United Press lntematlonal
Thousands across the nation honored
Dr. f\.tartin Luther King Jr. toda)'....tht
41st anniversary of his birtlJ.
Several governors, including Nelson A.
Rockefeller of Ne1v York, Kenneth Curti!!I
of f\.1aine and Frank Licht d. R h " d •
Island, declared today "ftfartia Luther
King Dey," in honor ol the aSNSSinat.ed
civil rights leader.
Schools were closed in 1everal cUies,
including New York, Ba ·1 t l m Gr e ,
Philadelphia, Kansas City, Poughkee~ie,
N.Y., and Harrisbuf\, Pa.
New York Mayor John v. Lirldsay !aid
city workers coold take the day off.
The official i111uguraUon ol the Martin
Luther King Memoriil Center, a pr~
jected cultural and spiritual gatheJiiii
place for American Negroes, was 6et for
today in Atlanta. 'Mle center wtll be buitt
near King'• new crypt and the Ebener.er
Baptist Church where he aerved u
copastor,
Unofficial ceremonies, many 1"iUI an-
tiwar overtones, were scheduled in many
areas laking no official note or the day.
No feder al obersvance was planned and
lhe White HOU5e said Pretldent .Nixon
planned to spend the day •t C.mp Davtd.
Assemblyman Willie L. Brown Jr. (0-
San Francisco). today again proposed
legl11\i1ti0rt declaring Jan. 1.5, birthday o(
the late Martin Luther Jr., as .. Blact
Aml!rtcan Day" in Callfornla.
The Negro legi.&lalor inlrodueed the
same bill 1161. year, b¢ il failed to pau.
His legislation would require tha.t public
schools set the day asidf: each year for
pro&ra ms "dealing with the black ex.
perience in Amerlca ."
Black residents of Portland, Ore., plan-
ned a citywide boycott of public 11chool1,
a march and .a demonstrat.ion. The Rev .
Ralph David Abernathy, Kin&'1 succe.uor
as head of the Southern Chri.1tian
Leadership Conference, wa.s to speak at a
New York rally.
Saddlchack Gets
Music Lihrru·y
From Festival
I-laving appar~tly been spurned by
l 11guna Beach High School, FtsUval of
Arta directors decided this week t.o give
lhe Pageanfa old mu11ic llbrary to Sad-
dleback College.
Director Stuart Durktt told the
Festival board Tuei;dav th1t the: col·
lcc.:tion or orchestratioris. purchMed in
some bygone time for the Pageant., wu
offered to the high school two year• aro.
but no one came to collect it.
"Si nce then." salri Durkee. "I h1\•e had
thrtt contacts by phone with the school.
Ea eh I ime they say someooe will come
and look at th e music. but no one ahowa
up. Saddl!back, t understand. "·ould !Ike
very much to have the muiic, so I move
'o'e givt It to them."
The muslcat an-angementl. Purkff
said, are no longer suitable for the alze of
orche1>tra nnw u!ed for the Pageant and
have been gatheri ng dU&t in the archlve1.
• Adn1iral Slates
Talk on 'Vietna1n
Relired Vice Adm. L:'S. Sabin Jr. will
speak on "Our lnvoJvemcnl in Vietnam"
.h1n . 21 to the Constructive Action Council or Laguna 11ills.
1'he group will hold lta: regular monthly
meeting at 7:30 p.m. at. the Royal S1v-
ings & Loan Auoclation. El Toro.
Adm . Sabin was incommand of the
A1nerican amphibious t.ask force &ll'iigned
the job of trana;porting Vietnamese
civ ilians who wanted to flet from the
Communjst north when the country wu
p:1rtiUoned followiq Fttneh surttadtr in
1954.
J~t also "'as In charge nf the tnitill
asS1ult units takin1 Omaha Be:ach bi tM
Normandy ln\'asion of World War JI aM
later wa1 in charge of Naval btacll ae-
t.i\•l!le!'.
Graduated frorn the N1val Acadan)i ia
1921, he is a post 1radu1te In ordaanoe
rn!Jineering and a craduate ol the
Jnduslrlal Colleae of Lhe: Armed Forcta.
Jnfwmrllon on lhe meettna: may be ob-
tained by callinj '37-412$.
\
Aldrich Stand Bac.ked ~:
DeciliDn W lJ.$ P olitirol, Chanc~Uor, Say~
ui; "-~"" oaru.1 Aldrich be ..,., allow U,. n~Uorun conlettnce • .Stephen sbapti{ ~1an1 prorc...,. or loW ,_ _....,. !141 out Wednesday .._UJe ol lht ad-elfecl tt would QlllW>, asked 1he ~ If he was
~!. ,....,.-.have on publlc 1up~ (tr the university. •'lff"t that the no~ prologue to
M lllil d1Rlf•r Mt &e allow SOS to hold '·u t.his iruiUtutJon !xided 1n a Y~ , de:S1r,o)iQ& &JNfiD.ol s.oAleJs to.deprive
' ~W ~wtact Oil eaoWIJI 'W~ • J would have no question about. allow1n& them. Of ihtW eWH libetUeaf · ·
119Ullul fjMJ)9Q, Iba NNJferepre,'' lie ..W. "11111 11111 la • .lldricll &aid lie la .,..,. .i Illa!
He acknowledged before lhe Academic public imtituUon wh.ich depends upon the possibility, that he doesn 't want to create ·.
Senate that he was denying Studen':' for !!!Upport and understanding of the r,ople a cllm~te hannful t.o SOS but it Is a mat· ;
a Democratic Society civil llbel1ies fw of the comm~ fw ._. exlsfiept::e. ter of tu!le and place. . '\
what he Celt to be an overriding. politici.l Graduate OivlSJon Dfan RaJJt Gerard He said he found hls met:Uoc wMb .
r.euo.o. . . spoke in favor , pf AJdrlch't decision. stud,~nti tbe .RA:/ bet~~ the ~ mat~•'.
A "!lloril>' el lhe IO pro1aosor1 pr ... ot "Some belie••'. F"' cuuur, ond the .,,. an .rui.atq ono Md l dOft I uy -. ~ wtth ~· decJJlon Jlld oDiy about.. university ~ ht! des\royed and that facetlpl,11.Jy." :
11 ~· shotrid ta f•vor of Associate replaced," lie oald. "Jlut ofJl<r• of us 11!11 dissaUtfled rraduaie .tlllfleal lf"Ol'l •.
Philooopby -lltalley M.oaafa believe we sboulol !Jrhl tM illlportant Balboa lsllllld Joi>I Payne tet4 tM
ruolutJon to deplore the chancellor'!!! act issues and ~ve ~ let live when possible. chaactllor:
of denying "free and open inquiry." "Dan bu gone more than the pro-"Y'~ have bten 1aying to us when
Campu1SOS1tudent.s had asked to host verbial mile t.o be (air. Let'1 not ask him there IS trouble on campus come and ap-
a nal.ional sos'conterenCe at UCI the end now t.o tear away the delicately-prepared peal on reasonable grounds. Now you are .
of thl1 mooth. f$aMie 819wty growing over the wound saying 'no' because you are ~ •
Akfrk:h said he has put nn pressure on betwetn the universi ty and the com-pressuttd. You leave .the on1y al~ernatiYe ·.
I.be lrvloe ~ st\lllwt. nor will he, liul tnuniif." t~.s~ lo &el a b•l!JU jjick.'
Attorney Bell to Oppose
Hirstein for Co1ll1ty Seat
Policemen Serve
As Pallbearers .
For Mr. Campbell :
Twllll ~ Piii! M. lfll Wedo
neld<)< -hll eandidlCJ for the
Fourtll--JIUfll"llortaJ --held by William Jflnt<.in. lltll ii ihe
lourtl Jllan lo •-for Got ,_
paip. .
A reoldtnl tf 0nnp Cowlly for ~
years, Btll, 12, 1114 he decided lo ""' !CJ<
the sell boeaule he wlllled to portjdplle
in ctUlty pvenwent.
"1'81 probobl)' the Mly eudldaio In
this .._Ip who !Jlla't bettl ap.
proad>td by'IJ!I-IP""'Pof ln-
t<omtod cll!Mnl' Wbo btJ4"f me I<> n111."
he~. "·
Tilt lllomly llld . ""· """ the biUtlt t.sue of Ult cempolp will llt.•pollutlon.
"The peramount ~ faclnc Orenp eou.,jy la poUutlon end overpopulation
with the ruuJtant destiuctioft ol our rural
aimofptlere. I 1hJnk wt oull!Jt 10 do
everytlJlni polSlble to avoid heinl dJoked
oot m our hams," he uid.
"I think 1ovesnulfl'Jt It the county level
should bt ~ cloltr to the. voter15
and the vat.en Mauk! tai:e 1 more active
interMt in tbdr county'• pt.rnrneot/'
Bell ..._,ted. '
Othef candldllet nmninl ror lhe ...t
Include A-.i bulinealman Burr
Water Boy 'Escapes'
From Lagwiau'11 Lawn
A thief undaunted by damp weather
removed a watery garden decoration
from a Laguna Beach home Wednesday.
Andrew Edward Crowell, 430 f\.1p1le
St., told police a foot-hi&h cement
statue of a boy pooring water had been
removed from the founta in in his .front
yard.
The decoration wa1 valued at $6.
Williama, VIiia Par~ Mayor James _T.
womnu, end Calvin Pebley, Anlhe•m
counciJmm Ind 11.fJ\IYGr. '"'-ln·
cumheol, -ill. hie ...t made a lmnat lllWnJont on his Intention lo seek
nele<tiron. He hu, bow ever, give:n atrong
hlnU lhot he wW '*'P down at Ibo end ct
tbloi.m.
Los Angeles DA
Seeks State Post
~ irl Newport Beach lod1y on a
hop-Alj>tn4·Jump air trip up the coa.t,
Loi Anplta DlltriCt Attorney E•elle
Y--hia eandldocy for C-Attorney Genenl.
Tho popular DA made hlB Initial
dj.ackilufe It a preu conlerfl)Ce in San.
Diego, theft arrived Jn the Harbor Area,
wilh llopt ochedUled In Loi Ansela, San
Franeiloo and Otklud.
Ht ll""led the prtM at the Newporttt
Inn here, prior lo headillg north and pro·
-the_..,, _al -11>1 the poweriul pooltion to biltle envlroolnental
pollution. Y""""' uld in I prepued statement
that the ~y ·-al -..... tively wen l"vfouliY .......i powers of
the attorney 1eneral's ornce to help
reclaim man'a environment."
YQlW&er, Sl, is a former FBI tt&ent a.nd
supertM ceurt-jud1e and hi!!! been dlltrtt't.
attomey In Loi Angela Jlinct IJIO.
Other declared Republlcan candidates
are State Sens. George Deukmejian of
Long Beach and JobR Harmer of Glen-
dale and Spencer WJlliams, former health
and welfare chi.el fw Gov . Reapn.
•Atty .. Gen. Thomas Lynch, the only
Democrat holding one of the top state of·
ficH, has said he will seek re-election.
Members of the Lagnua Beach PolJce ~
Department witt serve as paH bearen al :
funeral services Friday for George Fran-'
cis Campbell. fonner mta1ber ol the ~
department who Wtd Tuesday in Be\lt.rl)' ·
ftfanor C.00vak!6cent Hospital, Laguna ~;·
Hills. He was SS. '•
A former New York City police officer,
Campbell served u a park.in&' coatrol ol·
fictr in Laguna Be.ach !or three year•
prior to his recent reUrement because of
illness.
&sary will be receited at I p.m.
tonight in St. Nicholas Catholic Church, •"
Lagullfl; ijllls and m&IS will be celebrated ::' -
at 10 a.m. Friday at SL,N_icholaJ, follow·
ed by interment in A&eencion Cemetery
at El Toro.
He is survived by his widow, Evelyn, of ••
the home. 25151 De Salle, Laguna HUJ1 ; .. •
two daughters, Joyct: and Lynn ; mother, ·
Mrs. Margaret Campbell and two grand·
daughterc, Ellen Marie and Lee Ann .. ·
Fitzgerald .
Campbell wu a member of the Potiol ·
Benevolent Asaociation ol New York City,
the Laguna Beach Police Associatioo and ..•
St. Nicholu Catholie Church. Sheller ·.
Laguna Beach Mortuary are diredocJ,
USS Hornet Ordered ·
Into 'Mothball Fleet'
WASHINGTON (APJ -The Navy an-
nounced today tt will lay up the USS
J1ornet , the fourth anti!lllbmarine warfare
carrier to be ordered into mothballs ill
the l.asl. five mont.hs.
Spokesmen said the Hornet is beir\g in-
activated mainly because of her age. The
ship marked WI 26th year of 11ervice lut
Nov. 29. .. ·.
.JJ. J. (Jarrell~ 15th semi.annum SALE
M.llDRIGJJL
U.. J". MOW
.· . .· ..
•. . -' •
' .
NOM HERITAGE
l'ACIOUS t·llAWU
DllSSll 116 •If, NOW
IUINl,HID
•OLD MlllOI
339.
359.
79. .•
WITH ALL THl EXCITEMENT AND ROMANCE OF S'AIN •• ,
A BOLDLY R08UST ELEGANCE THAT COULD ONLf BE
MAH .. AL • , . ANO NOW FOR THE YlllY flMST TIMf
WE HAVE THIS MAGNIFICENT IEDROOM COLUCTION ALL
ON $AU AT SPIC:l4l llDUCID PRJCl$1
II,. v. NOW
11N•-s1n
MIADIOAID U•. J4t. NOW 209,
COMMODI l·DU.WD
Ntetn STAND II•. )~1. •ow
Try our conven ient
revolving cherge.
135.
H.J.GARRETT fURNl1lJRE
'10flSllONAl
INTlllOI OUllNllS
1115 HAI.IOI M.VO.
COSTA MESA, C-AL/f.
t4•·0JJI
·.
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·.
" !· ..
• • .. ·:
• • • . .
•
• •
" ·.
..
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:Laguna Beaeh
EDITION
Today's Final
N.Y. St.eeks -
•
VOL 63, NO. '13, 2 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES • ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, JAtojUARY 'JS, :1970 TEN .CENTS
0 '
Pill's Blame
For Cancer
In Dispute
WASm.NG1"N (UPI) - A prominent
cancer specialist warned today that
thousands or women may be feeding the
growth or undetected breast cancer with
birth control pills.
"Synthetic estrogens are to b r e a s i
cancer what fertilizer is to a weed crop ,"
Or. Roy Hertz testified at a Senate hear-
ing. Estrogens are a prime component of
oral contraceptives. Previous witnesses
said man made estrogens could also
cause blood clotting in some users of
4'The Pill."
Another witness, Dr. Edn1ond Kassouf
of Cranford. N. J .. suggested in prepared
testimony that the American Medical
Association (AMA) might have helped
drug companies promote birth. control
pills •ncl conceal their alleged dangers.
But" Dr. Robert w. Kistner of Harvard
Medieal School scoffed at studies liiiking
oral contraceptives with cancer.
0 Tlle pill is safe," Kistner declared.
Hertz formerly headed the reproduction
research brandl of the government's Na-
tional Cancer Institute. He is now with
Rockfeller University in New York .
Said Hertz: "We know from X·
ray studies that breast cancer exists in
IOTTle cases for years before it can be
clinically det.ected. However. since one
woman in ZO will at some time in her life
develop breast cancer, it is obvious lhat
in using ·Uli pill we are exposlng at least
this portion of women to a substance
known to stimulate pre-existing breast
cancer in women."
The doctors testified in the second day
of hearings before Sen. Gaylord Nelson 's
small business monopoly subcommittee .
The group has beard sharply divided
testimony about the safety of "The Pill."
Lagunans Plan
To Attend Meet
On Environment
Lagunans may band together for a bu.s
ride to a big.name Santa Barbara envi·
ronrnental conference Jan. U, the anni·
versary of the disastrous offshore oil
blowout.
Conservation minded Councilman Roy
Holm is organizing the bus project It>
cally.
Scheduled to begin at 9 a.m. at Santa
Barbara City College the session will ~o;:;t
11uch participants as Dr. Paul Ehrllch,
noted author and professor of biological
sciences at Stanfoo:.d Uni versity : Alfred
!:teller, president of the conservation
gf'oup California Tomorrow: Ellen Stern
Harris. member of the Los Angeles Re·
gional Water Quality Control Board : Phil
Berry. president of the Sierra Club : Sen.
Alan Cranston; Rep. Charles M. Teague.
Dignitaries who have been invited in·
Clude Gov. Reagan; his potential guber·
natorial opponent. Assemblyman Jess Un·
ruh: Sen. George Murphy ; and Reps.
JohJ'I V. Tunney and George E. Brown.
Holm ;aid the ·conference of speakers
and panel discussions will be topped off
by the Santa Barbara Declaration of En·
vironmenlal Right.s.
It holds that all men have the right to
an environment capable of sustaining life
and promoting happiness.
"If accummulated actions of the past
become destructive of this right, men now
living have the further right to repudiate
the past for the benefit of the future,'' it
atates. The document declares that centuries of
careless neglect of environment have got
mankind to a final crMsroads at which
'-Xlstence is threatened.
The declaration states, "we propose a
revolution in conduct toward environment
which is rising in revolt against us.
tranted that ideas and Institutions long
~atabllshed are not easily changed, yet
llKlay is the first day of the rest of our
life on thls planet. We will begin anew.''
Those interested In busing W the CODo
tcrence may contact Holm at 4H·2826.
!
. . • ,.
' urv1ves
ow er a
DAILY ,II.OT ..... W ,_, a.,tlltt
GLEN WATKINS, WITH HEAD INJURY, GOES TO HOSPITAL
L•11un•n Vjctlm WTr-1fffc C~lltion at Slick Intersection
Man Thrown From Auto
In. Laguna Beach Crash
Wet pavement apparently precipitated
an accident that sent a Laguna Beach
man to the hospital Wednesday night, ac-
cording to police.
Glen A. Watkins, 44, 1711 8anta ~
St., was thrown from his car and suffered
a head injury, but ls reported in satisfac:
tory condilion al South Coast Community
Hospital today.
Driver David John MacPhee, 29, 523
Graceland Ave. was westbound on
Bluebird Canyon Drive at 6:30 p.m. when
his vebic le st.ruck Watkins' car whicll
was soutnboond on Glenneyre St.
Watktns was thrown to the pavement
as the vehicle spun out of control and roll--
ed into a thlrd car, parked "'1 Blueblnt
Stock Market
NE\'i YORK (AP) -Stock marktt.
pricei:: remained lower in restrained trad-
ing today. (See quotations, Pages 14-15),
As in previous sessions, investors
v.'ere hesitant and waiting in the wings
for compelling news developments,
analysts noted .
Canyon Drive.
MacPhee, who 'PClice said ran through
the boulevard stop sign aL the in-
tersection, told officers he had attempted
to make the stop but was unable to do so
beeause of the wet , slippery pavement
and sUd into Watkins' oncoming vehicle
as it entered the crossing.
Thieves Ransack
Unlocked Home
Burglars who entered by an unlocked
rear door ransacked a Laguna Beach
home Wednesday and d<parnd with a
$500 portable color television set, police
reported today.
Cooey KU11Ze, 569 Oak St .. told police
his daughter retumed'to the home about
3 p.m. to find closet doors and drawms
pulled open and the TV set missing.
The burglary apparently • was ac-
compllshed between 12:30 p.m. and 3
p.m., police said.
Youth 01{
After Leap
Of 9 FlQors
By BARBARA KREIBICH
Of ,._ Dlltt' Plllt l19ff
A 15-year~ld Costa Mesa boy cheated
death Wednesady night when be hurled
himself from the top Door cf the tallest
building in Laguna Beach, the nine-story
Surf and Sand Towers at 1555 S. Coast
Highway.
David Temple, 429 Flower St., survived
the spectacular leap with relatively
minor injuries. a scalp laceration and
broken right wrist, and is in sa.Usfactory
condition at Sooth Coast Community
Hospital in South Laguna.
Witness Angelo D'Ercole,. maitre de at
the Towers Restaurant at.op the new
building, told police he saw t.be·boy clim·
bing ·the outsid< slairw~y bet~ tho
eighth ond ninth floors al $:#,;.\ii. and
called out. ~What llfe yoo doing ifrt?"
1be boy llld, ..!!-J'm 1oinr-0V8'l"...Jfe
then leaped htad ftnl over the 42-lncb
railing of the baJcony surroundiiig lhe
ninth floor .
He landed Jn a planted area a~
proxtmately ao feet below the balcony. at
the second-Door level of the building,
bounced off and rolled to the first floor
level.
Police and hotel employes found him,
bleedi ng copiously from the head wound,
but still semi-conscious and summoned
an ambulanct to take him to the-.h0&pltal.
His parents, Mr. and Mrs. Robert F.
Temple, were notified and hurried to his
bedsld<.
"l cou ldn't believe he was still 'alive,"
Merrill Johnson, owner of the Towers ,
said today. The police and ambulance
already were at the scene when he and
his wife arrived, minutes after O'Ercole
called them, he said. ·
"Our one great fear during con·
strucUon or the Towers," Johnson said,
"was that one of the workmen might fall.
We were really relieved when the job was
completed wit bout a single injury."
However, he added "the fear that
something like this will happen is always
there."
Only recently. Johnson said, he had in.
creased the height of the railing an the
balcony around the restaurant where
vi&itors llke to stand to admire the beach
and ocean view.
Johnson said the way young Temple
landed after his kap, was ''a miracle."
The area around the tall Towers
building Is all rock, he explained, but this
pa rticular sectton had been filled with
sloping dirt to create a planted area with
rerns and other greenery. The hotel com·
plex is headquarters for the Presldental
press corps when President Nixon la Jn
the area.
Laguna Beach detectivea are con-
tinuing their investigation of the case to
try and determine why the youth leaped.
Lo~h Ness Revisited
Peters Canyon's Big Al Swimming Into History
Editor's Note : Fontter British
journalUt Tom Barley who . ustd to
spend his time vigorouily cha.ring tM
l och Nesa monstet in· Scotland, U
now doing his thing at an Orange
County reservoir, as indicated in thtt
foflo 1ving dispatch.
By TOM BARLEY
OI IM Dfll, Pllft llfff
ON SAFARI AT PETERS CANYON
RESERVOIR -Our ooly companions al
lhis remote water hole on this gray
moody momine were a mildly interested
housewife, her romping 3-ytar-old aon
and a large black Labrad« dog.
The only movtmenl on the · Jimpkl
waters d tht lake wu the occasional rl~
ple created by fitful and rainflllcd wind.
The 3-year-old toddles and coos at Ult
water't qe, hi1 mother abllent.ly lights
and puffs oo a .cigat<IU ond the dog dots
what all dogs do among the shrubs at the
edge of the reservoir.
Ah yes, Labradors are big dogs indeed.
AU , the uninitiated might say, is tran..
quility.
This veteran observer i8 not, however,
deceived. We have under our belt the
fruits of a Jong ago a.salgnment to Loch
Ness and the vast technical knowledge
a:amered while sipping hot sweet tea for
Jong hours at the skle « that fabled Scat.
ti.sh lake.
Below Ule waters of Petera Canyon
reaervoir ii a creature that cloeefy
resemble.. the scaly amph1blan that
ApO<ts In the murky depthJ and OC·
c1sion1lly on the .surface ol the 1Joomy
ScotUsh watera:.
II has been given the name ol 911 Al by
eaally mlsled co u a Ly olflclall and
•
onlookers who pathetically believe that
an alligator b responsible f<r ravages Jn
this Orange lake. Bird and fish are said
to ba've been devoured in copi<iua quan.
title! by the wily creature.
• Like "NtHle", the darllnf of British
journalist!, Orange Cou~y"'t o w n
monster har !!killfully evaded capture.
· Two curators from the Buena 1Park
Alligator Fann fished for hours here
Wednesday and slipped away ldm1ttlnc
defeat. And several local res;dent,, have
bravely vehtured forth upon the murky
waters to try their hand It gttttna a little
notoriety oot ol Big Al.
Many onlool<ers pathellcally lestl!y to
havfnl seen eeveral aTiigaton. And one
depuly l!htrll! who bra9td hip deep mud
actually returned to "1ore to claim that
he had watched two alllpton al least
(Sec MONrrER, h(e Z)
OAIL Y PILOT lttff ~
TOWERS' TIM FOLEY SURVEYS SCENE OF YOUTH'S !'ALL
Costa Mesa Teenager Survives Nin•Story Drop to Flowerbed
Students at Saddl,eback
"
Bristl-ing, Over Controls
By THOMAS FOimJNE
01 .,,_ O.llf' Plltl If•"
Saddleback College student government
f!I at odds with the rollege administration
and the length of male students' hair Isn't
the only point of contention.
Student body officers feel they deserve
admlnlltraUon building just to 1ee
10111elhlng happen.
"Studenl ~men! has kept_SDS oll
this campus two. years," she said •
j•we haven't rlo I''
She suggested the typ. f gratitude
students get is not having one at;tivity ap-
proved this year except homeColbing.
credit and respect for preventing student Student Body President John Bothwen
disruption and say it hasn't been fear of a 37. Dana Point, says the a~Uo~
repressive administration that has . kept . ">fleets the school board,. which 1o )Um
lhe Pt11sslon Viejo area campus relatively seems mor~ coocerned. wtth. vo&a than
· 1 students.
quie · . . . In response to the students' complaint.
They complain that in JUSt about College President Fred Bremer said be
everything they try to do they are ho.dn't heard that 1ludent3 were.dtaapo
restricted and treated like children in· pointed at not being recognized.
stead of adults. "Certainly I'm always appreciative of
"There have been many midnight anything the student government does do
meetings. We've had to stop other in a positive manper fo r the· benefit of th8
students from destructive acts on college, and I've told student officers so,''
bulldin111s," said Jeff D.ibow~. 21).year-old he said.
student activities commissioner, (rom Mrs. Perrine said the administraUon
Tustin. Mrs. Debi Perrine, 20, of just doesn 't understand the students.
trvine, said there are some students on "I know of a number of ptopJe who
campus who would like to bum down the have taken their Saddleback bumper
stickers off because they don't want to
Wives of POWs ,
Foreign M ini.ster
Of India Meet
From Wire Services
NEW DELHI -India's f0retgn affairs
chief today urged the wives or four
American filers missing in Vietnam com·
bat to try to visl! directly to Hanoi, Pr:<>"
mislng h.is own influential help In lhelt
mission. Mrs. Cp.role Hanson• of 24112· Blrdrock
Drive El Toro and the three ·LOs Angel~s County ' women believe their
husbands are prisoners of war, held by
!ht North. A meeting was held secretly today with
Foreign Seeretary T.N. Kaul, former In·
dlan Ambassador to Moscow, who still
maintains. cklSe ties to the Communist
world. ,
Kaul, who ·has been urging increued
diplomatic contacts between India and
the Comm,unlst bloc, said he would in~
tervene With officials in Hanpl and sug-
a:esled the service wives apply for visas.·
Other 90urces said Kaul has alreadr.
asked the North Vietnamese regime t~
releast! names of 1,400 American
servicemen who art either POW1> or
dead. . '
New °'lhfmorning newspaper• gr~~ed
the visit by the four Southland "war
wldowa:" with sympathetic storles1abou,l
their globe-glrdJing trip in search o word
that thtlr men are dead or alive.
They win meet Friday , mom!ng with
Indian Prime tifiniste.r Mrs. Indira
Candhl, afterwa·rd Oying on to Vlentiene,
Laos, for ' meeting with North Vitt·
namese diplomatic officers the~.
Secretary, Kaut has suggest«Mi that the
women -ordered to leave Russia earlier
this week after arriving Illegally wllhoul
vi"" -•pply' for papert ·to vbll the '
NorLh Vietnamese capital.
j
admit they go here."
A good number of students are em·
barrassed by the college's reputation for
toe-the-line ronformity resulting from the
dress code, student officers claim .
Commissioner Dubowe said a survey
taken during winter quarter registration
last week showed most sophomore
students .don't want any student activities
because they believe administration rules
a1·e too restrictive for them to enjoy
themselves.
The freshmen students asked for ~anee&, he said, but when they fouPd oUt
dances at the rollege are not open to.non·
students they chan'ged 'lheir·minds •
"The sky isn't the limit" at other junior
colleges either, remarked College fies.
klent Bremer.
Oraa11e
. .....
There'• no o11wr 11t!Jac llllllad '
th ... cloudJ, jasl ·-· .... Wld!tl will be wrlngint out ,~ IDd
Friday morning ., coulal 1eiQ
eratures dill' Imo the -IO'lo ·
INSmll DDA!Y
• '8i4fron re/VO<• "'hililreft ciU
sing thtir flO·tional..tin:tMm· jar
f;uropt(ln oouermrwiti.t olde1, but
t'I feature article on Page.13 to-
day lhQWS •thel/• have litill ft!
slng about,
'9tlltn!MI 1 Mt¥• ti: Ctt.Ulllt U11 1 M.-.t ,_ 'M =IM u-: ~-== ~ a.Mw.nl 12 , •rM-,...,., 14 0..fll~H .. lcw te .,.,.. .... t•ltelilll ,... ' li.ctl M..-. 1 .. 11
111,.,.aill!Mflf 11 l*"fl• • fll!MflU t•1' TIIM"'" 17 ~ tt WNIMf . 4
""" .. .....,. " .. WMMit:• '"""' ,.,.,. Mfl!MJI I ........ M
•
"
,,
'·' ,.
. ------;;-.,,.----=====,..,----,---------,----.-~-
J DAllY P1lOT L Thundor, JIM>•" 15, 1970
Forneal Surre11der
Biaf ra Leader
Pledges Unity
From Wire Strv'cn
LAGos, Nigeria -Maj. Gen. P:hilip
EHJonc 51!rr<ndered Bialra formally and
uncoodiUooaUy to the Nlgerlans Thu1'1•
day with a pledge to aupp>tt the nation
as one undlvldtd.
Tbm u U to aymbollro tho pledge, he
hua!d l!Wri'• chief adwnacy, Maj.
Gen. Yakl!bu Gowon, Nl1erla'1 naUooal
leader.
"Tbt Republic of Bi3fr• hereby ceues
to uiit... Efflong said in his surrender
statement to Gowan· at a military bar·
racb In· Lagos. And Gowan responded:
"Lei us Join hands lo buUd a ttuly unlied
aDd sref.l nitlon where no one will be op-
pnaed. May God help us."
, "'lltus came the fonnal end to the
secwion' proclaimed by Gen. c.
Odumegu Ojukwu on May 30, 11167 with
the charge that tbe federal military
governrpent Souaht to dominate •nd
obliterate lbo tribesmen, principal in·
babltanta of Blaire.
Almost at the same time that Effiong
officially capitulated, Ojukwu charged
from a biding place somewhere abroad
that the Nigerians still were bent on wip-
iag out the Ibos and he appealed for a
neutral foret to prevent it. His statement
was rt1e.ased in Geneva.
Ojukwu claiined that the Nigeria~s
seek to ring Biafra with an Iron curtain
.. to make sure that the atrocities they
will certainly carry out in Biafra are
unseen and uttrePorted in the world
press."
The former leader, who fled Biafra Jut
weekend leaving Efllnng In charge, also
appealed lo the world to help Blafrans
who. he said, were left starving and er·
bausted by 30 months of war.
, Ojukwu's 2,000.word statement was
4istribut.ed in Geneva by an American
pu~JiC';-J'tlations agency, Markpress, thal
had aded. as a Bialran information office.
Ojukwu's whereabouts remained un-
known, bui"M agency tpokesman did not
deny jt had i-eceived the statement by tel·
ex message from Lisbon, Portugal.
"From all indications, It ls clear that
Nigeria will not feed our p~plc," said
Ojukwu. "There is no food whatsoever in
Blafra and unless food can get into
Blafran mouths in the next 72 hours, it
will be too late.
"Nigeria's insistence to control the
distribution of relief is both to ensure
that Biafrans get no such relief and also
to shut out ou,t&iders who might witness
and expose the enonnous crimes she
plans ip commit agaJnst our people."
Although be named no n a t J o n s
spectfically, his reference to the
res~Jbllity of nations that supporled
the federal a:ovemment or <it;n. Yakubu ~Gowan was 'an obvious reference to Bri·
ta!n and the Soviet Union. ,
Gowon's government has accepted
relief offers from Britain, which is
preparing a planeload of medical sup-
plies, and from the league of Red Cross
socleit.es but specifically ruled out any
assistance from nations or charitable
agencies thit directly supported Blafra in
the ch-ii war. The Soviet Union bas made
no public offers of relief.
Gowon, on the other hand, promised at
the surrender ctremOny a general
amnesty and protection for the. in-
habitants of Blafra.
"We know most of you were dragged
Into It," be .aid.
"May I wmcome you back to the fold
and to give you personal assurances and
the assurance ot everyone here and the
as!Uranct of the full naUon, the Supreme
Military Council and of the Federal Ex.
ecutive Council and to say that all the
guarantees that we have offered will be
honored.
"We have grarittd a general amnesty
••• Personally I know that probably if
not because of Ojukwu's madness, such a
thing would not have happened to this
country. But where. is-Ojukwu today?
"After leading you into such terrible
privalion, hunger, deprivation and kill·
ings where is Ojukwu today? He has
escaped, probably to go and enjoy the
money that he his made at your expense,
at the expense of innocent Nigerians."
Festival Directors Nix
I
All-Laguna Youth Show
Festival directors~ turned a 'nat tfiwnbo down on a ll<1>Pil&al to limit
'youth art eidlibiUng ofi, !be ~ to
young people livinij_~!Jlin the Festival
uea instead ol ..,.uding all school
-in tpe coonty.
From Page I
MONSTER. • •
five lo sit feet long swimming away from
his ootstretched net.
Poor brave chap. Many like him !UC·
cumbed. in exactly the. same manner at
Loch Ness.
The theory behind all this speeulation is
that local residents deposited unwanted
baby alligators into th!' lak.e some years
ago and Uurt a school Of the fully ~
Creatures is noW happil)r itt home ·in the
reservoir.
' We, o( course, know better.
The Labrador lookS out across the
'water. the cans of nature apparently
quieted. His attractive mistress stubs her
cigarette and keeps a careful eye on her
happily playing little boy.
Below the waters a creature dating
back to the beginning or time cast a red
·seaty eye on the gull dabbling his beak at
the water'• edge.
History is in the making at th is decep.
lively peaceful Orange reservoir •••
•
DAILY PILOT
OIU.HGE t.OAit' .. Ull.ISHLNG COM,ANV
tobtrf N, w,~, "'"'""' .... "'*t'"'"'
Jee.I: R. C11•l1v
Vlc:t '°""*W"'I H.4 Otl>tttl M•..-ov
l ho111•1 K•twil
•• 1 ....
Tlloll'ltl A. M~rphi,.,,
MtMt!tl; Edllor
11;;,~,t4 P. Nill
......,,,. lt•<h
CJly Saltor ---12 1 f.o111t Awtnu•
M•itl111 "''''"''' P.O. a..'''· 92652 --C:.'---! Ot W.1 •• , '""' ,...,...,., ltMll: 2111 -I ••lllN ....,,_,,.
"""'_... •eut1: lJllS kK11 1:111...,.iNd
•
The suggestkln eame f'rom Hal Ak ins,
high school art tead!er and Festival ex·
hibitcr who said an all-Laguna show
could be better than the customary all·
crunty show because of the outstand ing
art talent among Laguna youth and the
fact that such a show coold be helter ar-
ranged, with all works framed and more
attractively presented.
Director Verner Beck said the grounds
committee had considered the suggtstion
and decided "it would be a great mista!\'e
to give up our beautiful countywide
system of jurying."
Under the present. system. thousands of
entries from students are judged first in
their districts and then by a special
Festival jury.
"l think it 's one. of the high points of
the Festiv~J," director Paul Griem
agreed. "And having it cwntywide is a
big draw for admissions.••
MayOr Glenn Vedder, ex-officio board
member, noted that "local school
students will have several opportunllles
to exhibit durlng the year,"
One such opportunity was confirnu~d as
directors apprGved Akins' second request.
Lagqna students will be pcrmitled to take
over the art exhibil area under the pup-
pet theater al. the. Festival Forum for a
tW<Klay show during the Winter ~-estival.
Direct.ors agreed that panels now stored
in the area could be moved to the patio lo
make way foc the exhibit.
Festival Land
Purchase Plan
Runs Into Snag
Initial in\•estiJ?ations or the possibility
of purchasing Woodland Drive land ad·
jacenl to the new Boys' Club ha\'e nit
been encouraging. Festival DirectJr
David Young said Tuesday.
Young .had been asked by the festh·a\
board to look into a suggem.ion made. by
builder Bernard Syfan that the Festival
consider purchasing several parcels on
Woodland Drive for development as a
park area and ~hie fututt hOmc for
!Jle School of Art and De>lgn.
Syfain suggested tat such a move would
remove the existJng "blight" next to the
youth facility, provide needed park space,
permit removal of the tenrUs courts from
the festival grounds and perha~ solve
the matter ot rrloc:ating the art school.
"I'm not too encouraged by the ln-
vest.gations we've made to date," Yoong
told fellow directors. "ll looks as if the
lllnd may be more expt':nsivt than Wtl had
anti.cipated, bu t I'd like to continue the
investigation.''
Some. property ownen; inevitably "'Ill
bold oot for higher prices. Young said,
and condemnation by Utt city cannot be
accomplished unless it ls possible to pro-.
vide ''.equal livins quarters" elSC!.wherc,
which could be difllcult ln view of rl~ng
realdeotW coots thrtmgboot th• Laguna ......
HONOREO JN DEATH
Martin Luther King
Many Ceremoni.es
Across U.S. Pay
Tribute to King
By Unll.td Press lnte.raational
Thousands across the nation honored
Dr. r-.tartin Luther King Jr. today-the
41st 3.bniversary of his birth.
SevPr al governors, including Nelson A.
Rockefeller of New York. Kenneth Curtis
o[ Maine and Frank Licht d Rhode
Island, declared today "Martin Luther
King Day," in honor of the assassinated
civil rights leader.
Schools were closed in several cities,
including New York. Ba It Imo re,
Philadelphia, Kansas Cily, PoughkeeJ>6ie,
N. Y., and Harrisburg, Pa.
New York Mayor John V. Lindsay said
city workers could take the day off.
The official inauguration or the Martin
Luther King Memorial Center, a pro-
jected cultural and spiritual gathering
place for American Negroes, was sel for
today in Atlanta. The center will be built
near King's new crypt and the Ebenezer
Baptist Church where he served as
copastor.
Unofficial ceremonies, many with an·
fiwar overtones, were scheduled in many
areas taking no official note o! the day.
No federal obersvance was planned and
the White House said President Nixon
planned to spend the day at Camp David.
Assemblyman Willie. L. Brown Jr. ([).
San Francisco), today again proposed
legislation declil:ring Jan. 15, birthday of
the J.a~~ Martin Luther Jr:, as "Bl~tk
Ame rican .Qay" in c.lifor11J1.
The Negro legislator introduced the
aame bill last year, but it failed to pass.
His legislation would require that public
schools set the day aside each year for
programs "dealing with the black ex.·
perience in America."
Black residents or Portland, Ore., plan-
ned a citywide boycott of public schools,
a march and a demonstration. The Rev.
Ralph David Abernathy, Klng'5 successor
as head of the Southern Christian
Leadershi p Conference, was to speak at a
New York rally.
Saddlehack Gets
Music Library
From Festival
Having, apparenUy been spurned by
Laguna Beach High School. Festival of
Arts directors decided this week to give
the Pageant's old music library to Sad·
dleba ck College.
Director Stuart Durke~ told the
Festival board Tut!lday that the col·
lection of orchestrations, purchased in
some bygone time for tht Pageant, was
offered to lhe high school two years ago,
but no one cam e to collect it.
"Since then." said Durkee, "l have had
three contacts by phone with the school.
Each time they say someone will come.
and look at the music, but no one shows
up. Saddleback, 1 understand , would like
very much to have the music, so 1 move
we give It to them."
The musical aTTangements. Durkee
said. are no longer suitable for the size of
orche stra now used for the Pageant and
have been gatherini dust .m the archives.
Admiral Slates
Talk 011 Viet11am
Retired Vice Adm. L.S. Sabin .Tr. will
speak on "Our Involvement tn Vietnam"
Jan. 21 to the Constructive Action Council
of Laguna Hills.
The group will hold tts regular monthly
meeUng at 7:30 p.m. al the Royal Sav~
ings &: Loan Association, El Toro.
Adm. &a.bin wu incommand o( the
American amphibious task force assigned
the job of t.ransportinJ Vle'tna.mese
civilians who wanted to flee from the
Communist north when the eountry was
partitioned followh1' Frt.nch surrender in
1954.
He also was ln charge of the inltial
assault units taking Omaha Beach in the
Normandy Invasion of World War 11 and
later was in charge of Naval beach IC·
tivitl~. G r~duattd from the Naval Academy In
1921 , be Is a poM graduate in ordnance
engineerina and a craduat.e of Ute
Industrial College of the Armed Forces.
lnformetioo on the meeuna may b& ob-
tained by calling 831-412.1 •
Decision Was Political,.Chanfel19J: Sµys
VC lrvlne Cblllcellor Daniel Aldrich
told faou!IY memben Oat out Wednesday
thil'IU,a dOe!ston not lo allow sos lo hold
a naUOnal ·~nference oi'I campus wu a
poUUcal decision.
He acknowledged before the Academic
Senate that he was denyinf Students for
a Democratic Society civi liberties for
what he felt to be an overriding pollUcal
reasoo.
A maj<rlty of the 60 professor& present
agreed with his decision and only about
1$ bands showed in favor of Associate
Philosophy Professor Stanley Munsot's
resolution to deplore the chancellor 's act
of denying "free and open inquiry."
Campus SDS students had asked to host
a national SOS ainference at UCI the end
of this month.
Aldrich said he has put no pressure on
the Irvine SDS 1tudeni. nor will he, but
he won't allow the national conference
because of the adv,erae effect Jt would
have on pubUc support for the uruverslty.
"JC thl~ 'instiWtlon existed in a vaC'llum
T would ha ve no question about allowing
the confereoce." he said. "But thl$ i& a
public institution which depends upgn the
suppgrt and understanding of the people
of the comm Unity for its existence."
Graduate Division Dean Ralph Gt-rard
spoke in favor of Aldrich's decision.
"Some believe our culture and the
university should be destroyed and
replaced," be said. "But others of us
belie ve we should fight the important
issues and live and let live when possiblt.
"Dan has gone more than the pro.
verbial mile to be fair. Let's not ask him
now to tear away the delicately·prepared
tissue slowly growing over the wound
between the university and the com-
munity."
Attorney Bell to Oppose
Hirstein for County Seat
Tuatln attorney Paul M. Bell Wed·
nelday announced his candidacy for the
Fourth Distrld superviaorial seat now
held by William Hirstein. Bell is the
fourth man &o announce for the cam·
palgn •
A reaideol ol Orange County for eight
yean, Bell, !I, tald be decided lo run for
the seat because he wanted to pvtlclpate
in county government.
"I'm probebly the only candidalt In
this cam~ who hasn't been •P'
pro8ched by 'an unnamed group of Jn.
terested citizen&' who begged me to nm,"
he said.
The attorney said he feels the biggest
Issue (!( the campaign will be pollution .
""n>e paramount Issue facing Ora~ge
County is pollution and overpopulation
with the resultant destruction of our rural
atmosphere. I think we ought to do
everything po6Sible to avoid bein& choked
out of our homes," he. said.
"J think government at the county level
should be brought closer to the voter&
and the voters should take a more active
interest in their cwnty's government,'•
Bell commented.
Other candidates running for the seat
Include Anaheim businesSman Burr
Wllllam1, Villa Park Mayor James T.
Workman, and Calvin Pebley, Anahe!m
councilman and ex·mayor. The 1n·
cumbent, Hirstein, has not made a
fonnal statement on his intention to seek
reelection. He hai. bOVt'ever, given strong
hints that he will step down at the end o(
thl4 tum.
Im Angeles DA
5eeks State Post
·Speaking in Newport Beach today on a
hop-sldp-and-jump air trip up the. coast.
Los Angeles District Attorney Evelle
Younger aMOunced his candidacy for
Ca!Hornia Attorney General.
The popular DA made his initial
disclosure. at a press conference in San
Diego, thtn arrived in the Harbor Area,
with stops scheduled in Los Angeles, San
Francisco and Oakland.
He greeted the press at the Newporter
lnn here, prior to heading north and pro·
mised the attorney general should use the
powerful position to battle. environmental
pollution.
Younger said in a prepared statement
that the attorney genera) should "ac·
W B 'E ' tJvely aasert previOUJly unused powers of ater OY, ,s,capes the attorney general's om« lo .help
reclaim man's environment.''
From Lagunau's Lawn Younger, 51, is a fonner FBI agent and
superior court judge and has been district
A thlef undaunted by damp weather attorney in Los Angeles since 1965.
removed a watery garden decoration Other declared Republican Candidates
from a Laguna Beach home Wednesday. are State Sens. George Deukmejian at
Andrew Edward Crowell, 430 Myrtle Long Beach and John Harmer of Glen.
SL, told pclice a foot·hlgh cement dale and Spencer Williams, former health
statue of a boy pouring water had been and welfare chief for Gov. Reagan.
removed from the fountain in his fron t Atty. Gen. Thomas Lynch, the only
yard. Democrat holding one o{ the top state of-
,
Stephen Shapiro. aiais.tapt professor of
English, Jsked th6~ chlncellor if he was
a~are that the normal prologue to
. d~ylng a IJ'O!!P o(,pe<>pl~is Jq depri ve
theln or their ciVll libetilies~ .
Aldrich said be is aware of .thaL
possibility, lhat be doem'1 want to crtate.
a climate harmful to SDS but it is a mat~
ter of time and place. •
He said, he found bis 1neeUng wltl},
students t}Je da,y before on the same mat:
ter "an exhllerating ooe and l don 't say
that fa cetiously." '
But dissatisfied graduatt student from
Balboa (sland Johll Payne told ~
chancellor:
"You have been say ing to us when
there is trouble on campus come and ap·
peal on reasonable grounds. Now you ar~
saying 'no' because you are •being
pressured. You leave the only alternative
~ students to get a blgger stick.''
•
•.
Policemen Serve
As Pallbearers
For Mr. Campbell
Members of the Lagnua Beach Police
Department will serve. as pall bearers •f
funeral services Friday for George Fran·
cis Campbell , fonner member or the
department who died Tuesday in Beverlf
~fanor Convalescent Hospital, Lagun,.
Hills. He was 55. ·:
A former New York City police officer,
Campbell served as a parking control of.
ficer in Laguna Beach for three years
prior to his recent retirement because of
illness.
Rosary will be receited at 8 p.m.
tonight in St. Nicholas Catholic Church, •
Laguna Hills and mass will be celebratei·
at JO a.m. Friday at St. Nicholas. follow':
ed by intennent in Ascencion Cemetery
at El Toro.
He is survived by his widow, Evelyn, ot.
the home, ~151 De Salle, Laguna Hills: .•
two daughters, Joyce and Lynn; mother.,·
Mrs. r.fargaret Campbell and two grand-'
daughters. Ellen f\.farie and Lee Ann :.
Fitzgerald.
Campbell was a member of the Police .·
Benevolent Association of New York City,
the Laguna Beach Police Association and ,
St. Nichol as Catholic Church. Sheffer ,
Laguna Beach Mortuary are directors.
USS Hornet Ordered ' . ..
Into 'Mothhall Fleet'
WASHINGTON (AP) -The Navy an·;
nounced today It will lay up the USS :
Hemet, the fourth antisubmarine warfare:.
carrier tG be ordered into mothballs in .·
the last five months. :
Spokesmen said the Hornet is being in-.:
activated mainly because of her age. The"
ship marked its 26th year of service last_;·
Nov. 29. The decoration was valued at $6. fices, has said he will seek re-election. .....:::::======================t." .-..
_jJ. J. (}arreff ~ 15th semi-annual SALE
' -....... -~I-
M.!IDRIGJIL
PIOM HERITAGE
WITH ALL THE EXCITEMENT AND ROMANCE OF SPAIN • , ,
A BOLDLY ROBUST ELEGANCE THAT COULD ONLY BE
llADllGAL • , , AND NOW FOR THE YIRY PIH'I TIMI
WE HAVE THIS MAGNIFICENT BEDROOM COLLECTION ALL
ON SAU AT Sl'lCIAI. REDUCED PllCISl
CHiil ON CHl'T an.'''· NOW
SPACIOUS 'l•DUWll
DllSSll ll6 4lt.
IUINISHI~
aOLD MlllOl
llN&·SJD
HIADIOAlD •••• J4t.
COMMODl 2·DUWll
M .. Hl STAND lt:G. I ~~.
HOW
HOW
NOW
NOW
Try our convenient
revolving chorgo.
H.J.GAl\l\ETT fURNlTURE
'ltOFES!IONAl
INTERIOR DESl&N£R.$
1115 HARIOll. ILVD.
COSTA MESA, CALIF.
····0175
339.
359.
79.
209.
135.
..
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'
Neav Assault Ship
The Nashville, an amphibious assault ship, has been
delivered to the U.S. Navy by Lockheed Shipbuild·
ing and Construction Co. Built at Seattle. the ship
-·
can tran sport 1.000 troops and all their equipment ,
including tanks and vehicles.
Not Much to Sing About
LIBREVILLE, Gabon (AP)
-Biafran children sang the
anthem of their lost country
Wednesday, shuffling their
feet in the dust and mumbling
the part which went, "Then let
us die ·without shedding a
tear."
The children, from 2 to 12
years, included some of the
last pitifully undernourished
ones evacuated as Biafra
crumbled last week. They rac-
ed through the song ''ithout
false reverence of conce rn for
the right key.
Adults had told them to sing
IL Adults also had lined up the
thin and watery-eyed and the
unsteady and had given them
placards to hold that read
··shame on Great Britain."
"Our heads are bloodied but
unbowed and "Long Jive our
hero Ojukwu" a reference to
Gen. C. Odun1egwu Ojukwu.
t h e Blafran leader who fled
the country,
The scene was at a hospital
run by Caritas, the Roman
Catholic relief organization.
near Libreville. Gennan and
French doctors there have
treated children airlifted out
of IUafra for more than two
years.
Some of the 1,800 children al came
the center were moved out in-.1,-_-_::::_....:•:•:""rt''•'-""'""~' -----, to a dusty clearing so they
could be seen by Jacques Foc-
cart, French African af(airs
aide to president Georges
Pompidou.
Foccart c a m e in a
helicopter than landed in. a
clt:aring, tossing up a thick
coat of dust over the young
Biafrans. They responded ·with
the national anthem.
ARE YOU
THE MAN
FOR US?
Our com!M"I' 11 reoiOTy ••11o1nclln9
1nd we ••• lool!"9 tor • loc1l ....,n
-!• !Ired o! lon9 lloJ~ lflCI •""r! m<lnl Y. II you fl•ve I nominal 1mooot ol cllfl to lnves! (1ec11•edl •rod I
0000 reJ>Ul•tlo<I. le! 111 dllCllJI I
bQunllh1! lt70 !or you and your 11,... "r,· t1H celltc:T, tar """"'' 1nur-"ew, Mr. Jtellert, U IO n1.-n1, ••
write ••• M·J71.
But inside one of the low.
open bu!ldlngs where the
children sleep there \Vas no
singing. A 9-year-old boy nam-1~======::==::~~1 ed Emmanuel Angoma, hisli
body yellowed from a I a c k
protein and his eyes dark
marbles drained of blood, sat
with the sUllness of an o I d
man.
When Edith Nwume, a
Biafran nurse, asked him
questions in the Ibo langauge,
Emmanuel replied in a slow,
unhappy whisper.
"Where ls your mother?"
"She's at home."
''And your father '.'"
''He had to go away ''
A THOUGHT
FOR TODAY
Jolt llf1 h .. 11•'4 lflll yw C:tt1'I
m•k• II NII« Dy ,,.., WIJ nu "'' ••
PllESE,.Tt:O AS A puaLIC SERVICE EVERY DAY I Y!
Lff Roofing Co.
u YNr1 '" t 111lnu1 16J.I h,.. .. , .....
BIBLE THOVGflTS
THE lllLE IS TRULY GOD'S WOlDI
Ill 611 book1 were wriHtn ("''' t 11100
y11r pt•iod. 11500 8.C. •o !00 A.0 .l .
Forty dllf11enl wrilt rl 111lhor•d il, Yet,
ij form• 1 coordin1t1d 1tory of God't
de11in91 with min ind Hi1 pl1n1 for min:
it HAO to ll1w1 I timel111, 111 -w;,, •o·
ordin1lor. H11nd11d1 of ih pro"htci11
wt•t fulfill ed in d1t1il. 1!1. !il de1crib1• J11111 inti..,1tely, 600
y11r1 b1f1r1 hit l:llrth, f'1 m. 12 pict11r11 hi1 d11th on th1 ''.""'
1000 v••• b1for1 it occurred. 81c11111 of proph1cl.11, 111ci1nt
wit• 11'1111 1•p1ct1nll'f' loo~1d fot the "'1t1!1h 11 the '"''' h1 w11
l:lon1. The '"01tl11 KNEW, firtl h111d, of hl1 lif•, de1th •nd r11·
,11,,,c:lion, t+i•v w1r1 EYE-WITNESS, Ach 1:·21 , 232. Th1v w1r1
willl119 to 111ff1r P•t11cullo11 1M d1•t+i btc•u•• flf "'"'.' wrili'lfl
Jn the l ibl• 11:11111 J11111, I Cor, '4:f ·IJ. Miry, h11 "'"ther
KNEW wh•lh•t h1 w11 vlrt !n-l:lo r11 or not. Would 1h1 hew• lit
hllfl d11 f•r 1 FALS•HOOO (if ht hid b1111 co11c•iv1d norrftll•
ly) 1 Tht 81blo r1l1t11 th1t 1ht 1lood 11 tht crott 111d 11w Ht'"
dl1l •
Tht l il:llt co11l•l111 KNOWLEDGE, un~nown lo ""'" whtfl 1f w11
""flllenl Iii, "10;22 r1f1r1 ICI th1 "circle of tht 11rlh"'. J11111
•11•w nl9ht 1114 div t cc11rr1d 1lrnuh 1nto111ty •re1111d the 9lobr,
l •. 17rJ4-l6. H1b. l l:J 1•1•. "thi1191 which 111 '''" w1r1 1111
f!'l1d1 of th111t1 whl&h do 1pp111": thl1 •1f1ri •• tr1n1M11!1tlC111
of rn11!1r 1nd 1n1rfy, known enly 1• the ATOM IC •t•• Pi m.
1:1 r1l111 to ''p1th1 of tht 11•1", 111d b1c1111 1 lt dld, the l:n9•
1•1h oct1not••ph1r. M1~ry ch11!1d th11• "elht i ncl we h1~1 our
rned11n 1hi"pillf I•~••· Jib 16:1 r1f1ri lo the etrlh flo1l•nq 111
'""'' i nd to th1 fMITT '"''' in !ht north which modern 11· tro11omi t1 h1~• v1rifl•d. Thi 1i• "d111" I 1poch1 I of (tt•llon
1r1 1ci111tifi( In their ord11, w1t1r lift , lowl1, b111+1, "''"·
Gin. I. I-low dld !he wr!teri lnow, ••<tpl by ifl1"irelio11 1f 111
111.wltt ~od ? Your c:oll'lll'l1llh r1q1111l1d. Ch~rch of Ch1l1!, 211
W. Wll1011 St., Coile M111. C1Ufor11i• 92627. Ph. 541 ·171 I
2. SPRAY
Fir ,_cit Ltoel Curl; Sh11-1>oi.
!t;1um dh"o~e) on P~oc"''·
A p<tCDh ond other ~lone lru•t~:
for Powdery M•ldc:w c..d 'onous
bh11ht. on RO!.A'•, dormcnl
'"''" and :)!rubs,
USE BORDOIL
fOR SCALE ANO OVlllWIHTllllNG INSErn
on dormant fn1i1 uen, CITRUS, Cornellios, Gardr.io1·
.,,,d other hardy ever11retf'I 11-n..bs,
USE SCALE·O·KIL X
3. STIMULATE ROOT
DEVELOPMENT NOW
of tre.1 111nd
shrubs
partit11lorl1
l .Jro ltoot
tr••• and
ltoM11 whe11
t ran1plantod.
v
JUST SPRAY ON
TERR·O-VITE
the compl•I• f1rtlll1er, plant 1rowth actlvot.,, "ii
conditioner. n1t1t.O.VITE ,.dvcet tran1plairtl,. ah.di,
hreali1 down hardpon eMI cl•1 Mii, n•utrollt•• olk•li .
4. PROTEa
FkNrH ond ...,.1oblo ~
dlchorldro llfld othtf i-whh
LIQUID SNAIL-KIL
l S'RlY--llOT l lllT-SlF£R TD UI£
n.. Ollly WJtoy tho! kllls Snoilc. SlllOI, CutWDn'M ond
Eorwlgt; or H ,.., ,......, r.tk,., -0.4.C..-C.
SNAIL-KIL PELLETS
LONQIR LAITINI •CONTAIN NO lRSUIO
HILP YOUR GARDIN NOWI
k ""' you 11M "Ooc~ Cllf.ktm-to"1 Horl!wlt~r1I Qijlde.
SllPP!lff •111 b)' JM 111.ifMfY ., wrht
\
thll""lll J1nuwy •. 1970
Oldest Yet
LIVERPOOL, Enaland
Art Displayed
DAILY I'll.OT J!J
LF~AL NOTICE
'·Miff
HO,ICI ,_,, (ltlDl,OltS
LEGAL NOTICE
f"U7tJ
(lltTl"IC•TI O" IU•lfllll
PICTITltlUS Pl•M HAMI
~ • 0 ' .
14 DAI LY PILOT l T1111rsdu1 January 1.5 1970
Your ~loney's \Vorth Route Hm·ts Yorlc Stock List
Hunt Summer Jobs Now
Complete-New
Air Cal Line NI W VOlllC IA~l 'Thur..:l•Y t «>mPl"t N•w York .Srock C•Chtntl• IH'lttl
Silt& 1'11! CIT.,'ln I t!I
By SVL VIA PORTER
Q. My 10n 1s a hippie 11e s
also a wonderful boy v.:ho any
corporation should bf! proud lo
hlrt Will his 'Ppearance
hinder him 1n gelling a job
tbb SUtnmt'r., He must earn
h1s tuition money
A Yes 1t will seriously
hinder him at mO:it cOnl~
parues, according to the Na
t1onat Directory Service 1n
Cincmn&U pubhsher of tht' an
nuat •Summer Employment
Directory Appearance of
t':xtremcly long hair, beard
and shabby dress ts a
stigma says ~1ynena A
Leith editor of the 1970 dlrec
tory, v.htch IJsts 80 000 sum·
mer Jobs W1lh this goes the
assumed person;)lity of
181stance tG conformltv and
resporunb1lity 11le anll n1pp1e
attitude 1s underlined by the
1970 summer employers who
want to request photographs
with applications This of
t.'OUrse 1s forbidden
Q OUR DAUGHTER wants
t o get a Job working overseas
t h J s summer What are her
prospects'
A The best
year s Directory
Summer Jobs
ever This
or Overseas
hsts 50 000
EARN
i....t by lioo 21)11, • .o
..,.11 from tfte I lt on
24--"'" ,,.od ,
1,..,..,t....t °"'rift ~~
c.rtW.c•i Or SV1 7., on
Pettboolr: Acc<Hfflfi on
•11y ~nts Y OtlT'
w.thdr•w.k honored
1mMedNt.ly Ofl d..,...nd
170 l 17th St
COST4 MESA
W£ .. IE~ At111£R!<:""
IWOUI TRIAL IANKf:RI
AllOCIATION, CAL.IFORNIA
Al90CIATION OF INOUST!ttAL
LOAN CDMl'ANIES
vacancies against 2{) 000 1n the
1969 edition
Enlployers arc ready to
Ct111S1der U1cse applicahous as
t'arly as December, ' ~1rs
Leith t olunteers ' T Ji e
preferred months lo apply
ha\c opened wlll con11nuc into
/\larch April or ?-.fay '
IN SHORT the time to st1:1rt
looking for your summer Job
JS here Milltons of you will be
net:.'dlng jobs this sum1ner
1nilhort~ of Jobs will be needing
you
An1ong the key develop-
1nents are summer ca1t'!p
openings are up about 15 per~
i:crit with e1nploycrs more
\11lhng to cn1ploy high school
sernors than 111 the pasL
Salaries at the lower levels
especially 1n camps are up
$50 to $100 Highest paying
Jobs will he 1n the ser vice
fields with cooks at the top of
the list Now here are 10 key
rules put together by the Na
t1onal Directory Service to
help you gtt your Job
(I) Apply early 1 The reason
1 n1 writing this column now 1s
so you can have the rules 1n
time
!2) rttAKE A UST of Jobs
which vou would llke tile n1os l
-say a half-dozen at the
outside -and ~hrch fit your
interests your abtl1t1es your
quahf1calions and S p c C I ( I C
needs
13) \\ rtle a letter of ap-
phca11on to each c1nploye1 On
a .single typewritten page
state your wish to apply the
period in which you will be
able to work your reasons fol'
wanting this Job the reasons
you think you are quahhed for
the JOb
( 4) Apply for a spec1hc Job
-not Just for anyth1ng that
is available Keep copies of
your appllcat1on leUers for
reference when you receive an
answer
(5) SPECIFY \\hat you ha1 e.
t o offer the en1ployer -1n
terms of your talents .skills,
background Interests ,
previous experience -and no~
Just what you want from lhe-
employer
(6) Attach a concise onl'
page data sheet g1v1ng }our
ha me vour address t school
and ho1nel and telephone
number personal information
such as your birth date
n1ar1taJ s tatus fathers and or
mother s occupation a brief
educational outline 1nclud1ng
name of your school your
clas:. maJor academic
degree s honors ex
tracurr1cular act 1v1 t le s
WHAT CAN THE
INVESTOR EXPECT
IN 1970?
For realistic answers attend this special
lecture being presented by Dean \V1tter &
Co on January 22, in San Clemente
Charles V Neal Account Executive \\1th
our Laguna Beach office \\ill discuss the
conclus1ons dra\vn by Dean Witter s Eco
nom1c Pollcv Conuntt lee at its latest meet
mg held earlier this n1011th
Special emphasis ''ill be given to the ef-
fect s of cur1ent rnoneta1y policy upon th<.>
investment cltn1ate and the business and
!1nanc1al outlook An1ong tile topics to be
discussed
e \Vh1ch securities look be st fo1
purchase now" e Can present fiscal and 1nonetary
pol1c1es bait 1nflat1on'
• \Vdl 1nflat1onarv psychology permit
a rapid ea sing of monetary controls "
• How soon can interest rates be
expected to decline? e How important 1s a balanced Federal
budget to the stock n1arket? e Does the outlook for corporate
profits thi s year \va1 rant ser1ou ..
concern?
DATE
TIME
~LACE
Th ursd•y J•nu•ry 22
St•rt1n9 •t 7 JO p rn
S•n Clemente Inn
S•n Clemente
SU $3 50 per person-$5 00 per c;oupl•
l!SUVATIONS Phone 4q4 0711 or w11te
to the l1ddre11 below
DEAN WITTER lie: Co.
JNCDllJl'DRATED
2H Broodway • 04-0711
LAGUNA BEACH, CA 9l6ll
Marltttl /tr'ni11: He8r 8 oonot!llttu:mmary ol the merket OPI."'
ina and the lat.Nt buSLOe11& and financi.al l)P'Ai a highlilbll. on
DEAN WrrrER MARKET REPORT
KFAC, Diol l'osiuon 13.10
11:03 11 m .. Mondny throu1b Pl"id1ty
lltft l 111111 Ltw (loM Cht c 11i•1 lv:,ir, Air California Monday asked iltr Inv ~ l!Ylnv l the State Public UUlitlea; Com· A I .m -t•V· ~~'£on,~ previous-\Vork experience ~~~ti , 10 1917161!1'1st! !~h -~~ c1.11k ~" o10
other lnfor1nadon such as your mission hi San f'ranclsco for i!~~· v fj l nv. ~t. » -\~ ~'~"!Wf1 ~~
special s k1\h; hobbies lravel permission lo suspend Its ~~'r~ • r ,!: 20 i'•t! l4~: ~~r: = \! 1:0:1\,1 so
the name aod addresSC!s o! at service bdwetn Hollywood Ao Ml 11t 20 ,•, l~ !!"-nto 1u111P~• '° "="'' I.Al U q1~! i"Jl~ fj:~ I 'IJ'.t':f:O\lpl ~ least three references Burbank and San Jose and : .. ~~11 1 .o 1co , ~t. ..o•~ -,, ~"'" o1 ...,, 1o (7) Include W'th vour lotter ""'1''' 'm 20 iffi u~. '"" -'i\ c,u51 sr a., ' Oakland Alt Prod 17• !ii• lt:i. lf" -'' C•1SG• ~11 '' of appl1callon a recent Alr Po i>'' 1 , iu"' 111 1oe -11~ ~oe1c111 1
1
l1
photograph and 3 stamped Tbe line, whlch Is expected ~r.~=u~d~ 4•! 1&:: 1l.i: I~~_" ~::a~~, 1 ~
return envelope (or your pro-to merge with pa c 1 t"l c =t~ it il !illu v. n~ liu + ~ l~u:~.~? ~
.specllve employer to use in Southwest Airline said lt bas :1,:S~X.s 26 Jt '3 l"' + ~, c~o1n111 1 6D
rep y1ng o you 1 app 1es o been ]O.'i1ng more tn .. 1 $50 A e1 11 ~. "' 111. 111.\ 11-. -~ eo.1 1,, 1114 2s I t If l I l ••• ooo·~ r1 lOr 26 2 1.1s l -•coltll'ld a
t •• tl1at you ap h he t hi h A '"'r..u<1 ''"° 1 ,. • ~~ 1',.• -)) !011 1n 1111 60 vou s re,,,~ r per mont on t rou e, w c Ali.i1.uc1 ,., ! , 41.o 43\iii 4"" -11< as 1 'Ob
pearance 1s •neat short 2 Pacts Won it files twlce dally :)lFiS' 11?o 11: Il.. ~1; ~ 2:?: ~~ t!,1 1"
haired or "clean cut ' Air Call!orn1a said It has : /1=fu «;1 1~ ~ ~"4 40 fl~ ~:]~:!,~ 11ft
(8) IF THE EMPLOYER S AN DIEGO (UPI) -Ryan be.en .spending $C5 000 a month ~111=sf.d 1 ~ 1l, 21~ n~ n~:-1~ l~~r ... t.~
senUs you an appbcat10i1 form Aeronaulical Co has obtamed to maintain the sUltlon at :11r~~im'° 1; fftt" Jll~ !~;; + ~ l~EE~r?...it
fill 1t out neatly and com two Navy and Air Force con Hollywood Burbank and had :~O:Pf~ ~ J~ ·'~· lJ1~:; ~ !:u?1~160
pletely -and follow all d1rec 705 passengers dunng the ;W~1l~" iJ'° 1, 1#..! ::~ f~1: -·~ g:••M
111
, t
lions on extra documents re tracts totahng $4 6 m1Jhon for month of November on &he AmerE• 1 to 2 22 211. 22 1111t•c(D .o
d li AmrEs llf2 60 2 41 ''°"' .U COl'I Edit I 60 quested re.terences ead nes, aerial targets roule Am Hn• uo l10 '''" 11 11 -'ii conEdl• 111,
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might help you qualify for Uns Am e1rn<1s 2 •I 341~ 3:m u \, on LNtl1111
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particular JOb OVER THE COUNTER ~~a~~,i~ 1~ ~· ~~-~ ~ ::~·~~.1f
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h hid f I h Am Dltl!ll 1 I 70 l'O 7\1 -,1c11 o1A2$0 '"'t c 1 rcn or orgc sue NASO Llshng5 for Wedn•tday, January 14, 1970 AO stT11 ..,. u 2&i• 1e 2611 -\'t con• M•o 1 •• reveahng ach1even1ents as Agu11V1 ng 1 '• 91• '"" coni Ml9 w1
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Missio11
Bank Opens
At El Toro •
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""" E<'lt IV, ' ll!llle• L 1sv. 2&\lo ln!r&IO •• s,, POuo Co ' 1>11 A Suoar l '° 16 "~ i• I 2• -" CrwnZell 6n dependenl bank M I S S I 0 n AA I Coro SV> •" '"or11 S lfll/ ll\la In! Cont 1ru le , Qu~I CM 11 • 22 ASu<! lltA2 &S • 41 • 411 • «1 1.o -l • CTS Coro 411 "FAPr S ''"" 26 _., o•m Yr ~h. n~ I~::., Sy~ 10\~ 1111, Rad O\<M 1211'> i3YI "msn DI 41 il~ .: l 4i.: ~ -,• Cud My ,,, Bank El Toro has opened its !~~ trw: 1r" 1;~ ~t d Mn 10-. 11 ,,. l~t awsn 1~~ 1~ '°' ~=~11T•£: 3J" 1; :~~. 2 ~ 1 1a : 10 , 101 .. -• c~ohv Pl11s
doors to business Acme fr 1\, 9 re.I Fo 1 IVI 11!1 Miii 29\'t lC'tl Riven co 261 261 AW<NSo• 1 u 60 11, 17 , 11, + .14 Cv11 e~n i i Acme vi:r <.I '' "'" (11 41 4i ) Int Nclr ti• 9 l R1v m Co '1 U AW 11•el 1 2S &O 16 I& I& Cummln 901>
All Hi»11 21 ;1 ruli:~ R 11\1 1no Sw E1svc is,,""•~ ,R~OG•'•' 'o'• 'o'• 1 ~~~o,"',o·,""oo 1•1 l,;..I'.! 2,0,' l,t.~ -1" ~~~l 'W°:'r! ; A ded1cat1on ceremony a t ", •Mus ••• ''• •Pr•• c 1, 11 K 1'111• E1 .. ,, ~ ,..,., .. ,,, ,l~ ... "lrlH'n F ll'4 l•; "I• M IO'h 11 IC rk Co IS 16 "" Cred •1V. G \lo AM!C Co ~ lOS ltt1 ii~ ni. -to Cutler H 110 th f It t 23732 El T Al~ H t l '"' Olll 0$Q 11 17'111( .... 11 Vot 2J 2• Rllt'V Sto ,, J5 AMP Inc ~· JJ Sl Vt SOH. SI ~ CYt!m>s 1 to e aCJ I Y a OrO Al~'" w~ 10 O.t11ln p 1t4 tUi l(rtl1tr a 11\11 Road EJ< ,nl. 2'\'J AmpeJ< Corp S1 '511> 44>• 45 o + o C~Qr~sM 1 .0
Road Was attended by Thomas ~o",," ,','", ",,~ 115,; o.,.'","•'o~ 10 l~ C Ou lit ~ Robin M 11 31 Amlted 1 «I tl l6 't lS\, Jt! + ;. .. .,.. .. , 19 4 10 • r..1nc1 In 16 <t '17'4 Rost Ion 9l t 101~ Amr el 22 n .S\o IS 1.S'4 "'lo Pt11 54 6 O.Cor In t\• 11>\o ~and Res 11111 111'0 Rov C.11 ""' ~i.:; AMCOl\d I 9(1 US 29'0 21~• 19 'o -\4 OanRlvr He J Winget president Rudy M "lid Ar•o l JVr °"lhl AP •~ av. L•ncla In ,_,,, J'it Ru. .Sto• !IO'h ll'!t Anc~Hort to u '1 ' , •1~ -1 o,n• CP 1 'J Atlled EQ IN 111'1 ~UK Clo •1'4 ..+t4 Une Wd 13 Il l! R••!I Ho Jll, 3' AncorpNSv I T 10 191, 20 Dari 11\d JCD Pll t d l ad AlonGeo 9 J 10 l'..anTlS l~f..lrMn Slh 6f.S•dller 6\01',.,Al'ldC!1Y l 7\I 7391'1 31117 38 , 01tl.,.,D!J e e.r1 I Vtce presi en n A~c 11o 1~ ler ~o~ n:i,o. r..arwn M u ~ 1'"" Suintn I!: Sil 6 AoecfleCp 1.s s1 JS-• '"'" 1s, + .. 01vcoen 1 '' G S Ra h Am eu1n U 17'\li 0.Y Am IJ\~ 1',., LN Ron '.S\, 16 /, Schott In ,.,.,, ''-1 Apco011 1 lit 11 3''• ~ ~ -~ DavlnHvd ~ COi ge msay, Cas !Cr ... m Ex pr 66 \I 61 Dewey E t • t f..eacly l.d 11 21~i. Sci CDtr l\'J l~1 ... oua C~em SO <tto 51 1 57 'I -•• Oa11tnPr.. 1 10 Am Futn l l o f'o Olam (r '1V. 23'Ao r..~h C061 ''~ S • Sci 11\d S • ~ ARA Svc % 35 11• HJ JU~ -, DPL """ 3 IS along with directors Louis R -" Grttt ,, 4' 01•c Inc s .st• r..el1u• G 31' • 11 ~scot Somt JI ll A c~D•n 1 60 11 ss•. ss, s '• _ ~. OPL p/C :l 'JO Am ln,d n .. )• Dlv1r fM .s .5\\ r..1v n Tn 1 IV. scr111~5 tt 21 /J; 2JVI Ar l l'SYt l OI •• 1e\.O 1(,. 70~• OM•• Co 2 Bcn"Y T L Duque E T A' •.•!.0,•0 ,.''•' ..!}~ ~0•,"., 26V. 21 f..obl•w '" '"Ser 11111 A 6''l 1V• A Ian• OS l~ ~ 16, 1~•· 16 • + , O•lma•P 1 1 "" ...... ....,. t .,,.. Lon Cd~ 5\, ' Searlt ~• lSll 16 Arm~osi l eo ~l 26°" ;.s~1 ?51• -; oe Mn!t 110 J Do Id P Am PIPec 22 h 2) •Dow Jon 62 6?V. Mid GEi 12'-l)Vo ~•II Cmp 14 1•'• ..._rmccS rlwl 103 21 76'• 76>, -I 0• ti"Jr 4(l j\1cFndden r na " st Gob ·~ • , D!!v!t 06 21v. 2lV. ""'L c c~ 1~ 16'• s.en1ltt• u 11,-, Armour i.o l •Sl't o.s , '5111 g~uec 1n1 .. SI G 11t 1 'I IV. Ortw NL 6 1 ..... Rll• I • I\< Stven Uo 4 " Arm•ICk 10 ll J.I ll 1 U + , tnn Mtg 60 Kenn~c1y and Hugh T \Valker "m lely 22'4 1l ounllln o 'l 2• ~• lk•I l l 'I> 6S 1~e11 N 1 JS 3t Arrnlk o!l 15 1too ss si ss •~ D•nnM10 pf 1
I, •htu• B 1l 1 71 O..tlron II • 11 -a Mgm! A• l • 4 qn•1 Co I 1>, Arm Vb 1 60 J l! Jn ll -, Oenn~Rst O• Ja'""• 'l ('all Stat c •,,,','o'o t " 'c' ,'"•"•'••O"l1rr 15'• 26' Manin M 4;, •I sc~+ W•I 13\o 14 • Aro cor .. l'ct 1 1•\ 11\1 111, + ,,., on11.,1v 1 208 "~ !I l , ,, ,, I~ l''o M&nor C 10" 10~. SoNE T•I J9 ) Oil ArY" Ind 1 74 1J • 23 ~ ?J\, + , OenRGr I !O ~res I"" 9 91" Econ l&D 3(1 11 ~·r Mtg Ii• le SoUn G< 11 ~15 As~l<l' Cl I 20 1 I l< 1 , 14'o Dertco pf 8 Superintendent or Banks l,rll•n M 12,:, U.\oo Educ Sv• 6. 6' \111rm Gr 10 . 17 Sw G>(O ''" u·~ AsSll 8 '"' ,, 1l. 11. 11. -"" O!Sotolnc oO
tra•clcrl froon hos San Fran •,•,~en••'•' "o• ~,, .• ,"00,'r"o',1 ll ll'•~ arcw• Jl1li ~sw E!Svc u is~. AudOG 110 JOI u , "• ••~-\• Oe!Edh l'ft • • " ,•,. o,' •• ~Y•,•, 0 21 21 .. s ... c~rv 10'4 nv. Al!.11 SP<! I 10 s 30. 30 ) JO ~ -'l °''Ed 11U JoO I I t t k "rrow tt " '9'J, El H !t .• ,._o l • lS Sid Rll<I I 11\o '°' AsW!Tran oo 11 10 , lQ • 10 t -~ Oel S!etl t1$CO lf'<.lt quar ers 0 ina e an ,,,,Id. IS l'!I> fH N~c 11 11 WCI t H 1J ~ 19 !"' Se<w JI 31~ AllC!vEI 1 .u ll 21'• :t:l1-12\1 + \\ De~I•• 1• fr I t t of lhe UCC 801 11 :U Elt1'PY 5 a ~tell n 42 •lll ''" HPd 7• 2.S AllCEt 111517 1 •1 ~] t3 OlllF!nan ~ o IC presen a ion ~uto Sd n 11 e ''""' s • ~e11>.1r e ' 5 e•lo sir n 1'\1 All Rklll 0 , Jll 114,, !J , 14 ~ 't ,, o am nu Ml
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8 6 6 F N Mt Ill ll'I NatC•r R 12'1.o ll r co Pd ))\~ ll ' Babe~ W 1 'Id 1\5 15'« 1~ 1511< -1:, uOn11tlltY '' dent San Juan Capistrano B!~~~~· HI 30'• 31 1; FT~1~v 11 ,,,, NC:mp co >l<o Iv. tr 11a1r nll. lJ.,,, 8•krO 1T is 13 22•. n'h n '> -~ Doric Co 32 8 El 31 ~ F B t '6 '1'> Ntl Eout 44 4 rr~u JS 36 8&1tGE l 70 l2 JO"" JO 30 ~ -~ &gr• Olivet Chamber or Commerce and B~tu~B.r l~i.-~ ,1 •• F~:G We 1i ~ ,, ... N•I GoO 1S'4 1m rv111" Fd 17 17v. BltllOPunt 60 16 1St\ 1'~. lS . + ~\ ver (o TO
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and Dona ang pres1 en r hes u1 • , , is ~ t&1n w j!v. 5~1~ ~:~1A:io ·~.,: 4f• ~~'~" N: 1~ • 1r• ::i,:11$ n 1111, ~ 1~~ ~. ~~\ .. ~~1· !.ill ~~~~"tiMJ ~2
or Spectra Slr1p G a rd en E~i .~·\• # tt ~~ ~~~ 2"J ,1 Pie FaE J~ 31 N"n M1Q 6 ~ I ~ ... F p .. JO • 71'~ 11 11', + ... Ed •on8r(n I
( r 0 V e 1 announced t h a I ~P.~1J~1 ol '~ "'' ~ LSC 1i'• ir~ ~:~~1 Co f ~ ~ X'~ PW~ l~ ' 1~1~ g::i;uei012 JoO 2rr ~~ ' ~l l: 11.: :_ ~~ ~'fJ:~1c 1~1rJ S S t '"II 101 acquooeto1 UA 1'~o2So r•PhCn 17 11>,P-w•D• ll1>1',Nnboo '1 z7 ,9~~0~• '" ti 11, 11)1" tO'~ EtMu•lnl89 ell I TOil ~I I CI Uu 8 2•"" 2S 1 ''"0~ S< •1 , 41 Par~w H 1.Sl, H ~ 'V "' w T 1, l BerkPllo Ill )l ls o l.S\.., U o Elect Ais<x Spcct1 ra Slr1p accordina to the c11 ~ Mt 1s i6 t een /\\t 11 .,,,,, P1u tv i-•, •t< Nist Pt 1 i-.; '• eermec Co•11 ts s • >'• si, Et Mern M~• o Cl•!o" ll. J 1 Jtrnl RE 10 10 PlvP le l S !6 Nrd lw E l'lo l 1 Bel~ SH l 80 2J> '6 7.S • U>;t + "I E!MM•g of I tern1s pre~ iously announced c1 "' M~r 11 11 >!ro"e P• 17 13•\ P!!e•lt• T '' 2s,, wr otil w :n • 13 &111 Th•~ 60 ~ .. ,,'• ',', •,•, >++"• •,1e1,n,',!!•"o' Cl nton O ''• 9>. rw!h lo IJ • 1' , Pen Ol~r.. ,,.. J;,. Yrd ny E I • 9 • BltCkOk 1 iO Al P "' It 1s expected tJ1at negoha a11 1rJtw'ln a 1 ?2. 11 '' +·~ Enr11co 110
lions lor acqUJ'<'.1110n under <;o. ~,c.....;\lo.:><Jll~?::e..~~~~-~:z::r.:i:....:J :1~~ ~~UQ 1! ;~ n O ~ • n I :;)1 ~%e~ fie1c'0)
bl I b I 81...e 9tll 1 80 9 ,1 , l() > 51 '> ~ ! EmEI DI B ~ te r1TI<: nl()fP a ccrpl;i e U ot 1 Bobbe B ~i lo u ~ 16 , t6 -"' EmeryAI• '°
II I ti M I F d Blll!lng 110 •IJ 18 • 11 , 21•0 -~. Emha r l 100 par(l('S 1\1 ICSUmC S IOr Y utua fill s 80>(~1 iSb AB9 11 TO M +ll'O EmPOO"C 9(1 I d BondSl•Sl ;;e ,Xl o7\lo -\"11 EtlllJohntn l l('\ s l:l\e Boo1<M111 111 2•1'3 1• 1• -1, E!ldJoh" p1 1
rvte1unvh1 lr Scn<:1t1 on l'ln ,&!~,"w" •• o ~o '' H1 26 75 • i5 . + E~OlhM n •o
,,.. J! 25 '' is + {1 E~" sBusF noun~cd th it <1 $1:. 1nithon .... e,,~,,•,M0, 11J!. 1 IJ"'< u•• nv,, +,,. E...,tG~' 1 J~
... "" VJ 3l • )?, JJ ESe Inc 120 sales order has h<'cn placed aourn1 inc s ?J . 11 1i , EsQu , :lO Jiln 11 G ~ n•t• 11 s G OUD N E • 'II 9 76 Branl!Alr lO 11~ ID 1 10 ~ 10 • -"' Es~~lnt I iO \\1th Spcctr:l..SI! Ip (n1 the Prll 10s ndl > o.. s o11 N HQr 1' 21 <'' 21 Br111ps 7 .o.. 6 s..11 5•" s.. ~ + ,, E•~y1 c11 I• INVESTIN O Mu, 9 /0IO~Pro Fun dlO,d'IO"' Bllt MY 170 111 10• n. 7•'o*l6-I EthYI 0!240 du1.:t1011 of 100 1nill1on NEW YORll. Proa •tl5l6P1ovd~• •'1insr s1M•1>r 1 11 •1. ••· "•-'•Eu 11t.,.,11~
disposable prob<' le:id s ll b -T~t tc11ow1na 011D-~C .. ~~1.,~3 't:3' i~~' 1: ~f ~ :~ ;~:~':~ Fu~3~ 1e '9 ~~~~1111 A\ 1t ~ ~ !~~~ i~•; + .,,'€~:"::.A,;Ob .. ,•emblir.s for the Scns itron 1•tlo • i uePled D•0tc11 1nt 11091~1~ •• Pv 1•J 16? fou11 tn1011 f.l~t1nuG in J ~& 15,, 26 E•CellO 175 .. " ~· Netlonal Auocl Ot1•wt• n l) ~.ol I R11h .S ?.S .s 11 Gtcra 10 11 // 43 Brown co 12 10 •t. 10 + \~ Faflt! 9e 10 Clcctncfevertheimoinclet 111ori ct securll•1De1t1 Tr 1111 !ti 11 •1Ull G1t11 1001 •n ar°""" co pf 11 u 14,,_ 1s .._1, Fauor A SI o.:11.,~ In< •r1 Olvld Sflr l SI lvv U"tV•ll lntllm 1 ll I 32 Bw"$-I 10 11 JS,. J$V. lS\1 -\, Fa •c~C SO 1~ arltt! At wMch Down! F N 4• 4 I oe J HllCOC:k I •S 1 11 l~•tll 1~ ~~ 1t fl, Brun•~ C2t ,u lr>t 17 11 -114 Fe r 1-1111 !Sq no•e secur lt "' •df'1!~el IS 71 Un Joftn•tn 2111 2 11 V 111 611C'.'Er ! 1D 1 70 o 1 101, + 4 F,. •mo<1I 1 (OUld hlVf been Of"1vl Fd 127.5 J 91 l<eYS10M Funds VtW1a I fO t 11 lluc!d Co 110 1~ IS 0 5 > B~ Felrmnl DI l
ICIO bldl or Doi/OM! Otl'l'f r..v n M 1J IS Cus 81 11 )(I 19 11 '1e11 Ttch s 01 s 49 Bude F "'60 ,', '• •• 1'•" 1'.~ -. -•• ',',!1~,!IA 000 .. r•$liedJ Wtdn""° Etton&.How•ra Cus B2 n:nnt11Rev1rt li1'U9SBVClveltn" , ,,. .. _
lld AP 8• •n 9 IJ 10 11 C:us 64 '!i i ~ j".~~thFd ! M ! Ji 8urtForo 1 10 l'ct Sl>o -111.!o Sl .., -1 v. F&nilttt In<: ADerdn ~11 21! Gtwth IJJ01'S~ !U' ~I Sl! SfJ thU<1' l$1Sll.JI Bulov1W 60 JI 38 ~ )a~ la!~+~ F4rWtll Fl., Advls<S 7 01 1 6' lncom i 8t 6 lt us $ 2 II ll lt IC kucldl'r Funds &unlc Rome 110 l l JJ ' ll -to. Fe ehMI IOD "" lltld 1 lj 110 Eberst IJ it 14 1' u• S; '11 10 60 Int Inv 1613 11 41 llunkR oil SO l •O :l'\.l :t9 > -• FAS Intl •71 Atu1re 101 10 12 Ear et univ• us 0 ,, 0 o; ... 0 •• '' •• '' lurt 1....i 1 '° l l l•,. 3,,. ~" _ 'loo Fe<ide 1 Ml A.!IAmF ll 91EmrQSC 7191166 usSl ~~ .w"" O d ,. l ' < .. '11DfttFlll200 1l l1Ener•Y 1'18 711 Cu•S• 51 .S~I 1111 UOllSO'l urn v •v S l o n n -\• e<IMogl,.. Arnc11<1 S\MJ 1s.sEnto•s• •10 115 Po• ••••SI C:om St 10111onBurr9~~ 60 116 110~106>o lro -'"• FtdP•c Etc Am Sus J013l2 Ellul ~ ttt96l KnlcwD tU1S.icc Eau1 l!l •OIBusnunv lll .J & 17'1< 1>•-V.FP1c llfll' A.m OYIJI lO()) EQUIG1h1J11tl, .. Knlc~ (;t J0.5111150 tt I~~ 711 115 -C-~ F,",',',''r''ol· 0 IA!'\ AE • 199&6 Iha• 11~ r..1~ Gr!h 10241!1' flK "m •$l1G64 , SAN FRANC I SC -!im~ ~rth 5 71 t Everi, In 13 6' • •i L•• !~V•! •" 10 J9 ~e! 5,,..,5 u ilt 17 51 Cabo1 Ca 11.D •• l :!O + ~. Fl'd$ on 6<I
The Cahrornia Public lilll1hes ~~ ).:J, • .'~1 7!~l ~:.:.ii' Ju ::~ii~ ~·:e,~ich l~ ~f 1iJ~ ~~d• Oe•n 1~ ~ n H ~:11~~a"~Jf 1b6, '~. '~. 1~! + ~. ~~0_w~st~ .. ~
Con1miss1on Tue s dciy ap :~NP•?'h,,~':i:~r:c•.o;1"11 11,,",;i",~Jl: i~~ ~!! ~t:~1:m11,..., l~~lH~~:::::~PL 1'i: ~ ]:\, ~~"' 1~'· ~Tti::tiS~ /~
llrovcd Cll1S '" nas bills Attcl>or G•WP F,", fund, IS 11 H St LJrw; Nat in B> 10" Slo"'• Tr t ,. 10 Ii CAn~u R:v l 110 50 50 so Frt dclM 1 •0 " C'P I 1ss•11 otn2lt226 1•r..lll<' S17560Smlt~8t10 t 10~(!6rtw •6.o ll l 1 11,7>~ Flltrol '
mnf 0Ullltng \O SIJ 680 500 a yehar f,,',7.,~ I~ i8 1: ~ Floe~..!ial "•'f) 1 II l.'('~~d S1~,'~1 •? II ~:7,,..,1n(;1 : n : ll c~i.~·~nlioO lli !t , il 1 6,'i,,; ' ','1,'~o"tlo~o'o ,1•;. r c lecting IC< UCllOtl In I e F<I I"" 'Ol • .. lfl(!u)I • 01 • •6 C&lll! 11 ,, ll l1 So•t• 1~v ,. ?I 14 41 C1na ll!(I 1 ID -~ " • ,.,
A Fd 11 lncom •I• • 11 Mvt 1' ••I• 6• 'l)l'(!r• o ~1 9)17 (ao C llOC\t 1 ~ .k JJ ll , -\, F• NC IV 1 00 fede ral u1co111e tax s11rclu1rgc 1 ,.~!:,~. 1 ~r1'36 v('fl1 1 s1 , "~·"~1~ 1 .s1 ~ ?1 ~!Frm r;1 s •s ',1 C8•~·~~ 1 10 1 ~1 .s1 . 11 , F,,N,,51 ?Se
r h(' rcdU(tl011S applv iO lhe ~~~11'; o.,ont~:' 'SS ~:1'7n21~ l~ ~i l? ~ ~:~~ E.i \~~~Ii :! ~::.~d .... s~~ r ~511!100 ~~;o 'l&J~ s l1~ i:·· !ti~ 1't ~ + lo ~j;~~1'f~ :t r f ( d "I \ 0 'd ~ loll &65F•! 111s1r 19' •11~··· Tr 1•1'16,1 ~m 1"0 n r-o n t1.1 c1 0PL! 116 ~1 l Jh lh_i, F 1h•St 6 l(llC .n~ an a:..t'1:rc F~~<:l ll l6t1 36 F&I MU!!I '.\e")l~llt• l)S•S Fl'1u( '''7~C.,.,,Ttll1 6(1 12C 16 l6 1r TV.F~ Sii 'I ClfroaGn!tCO si t •1l611F11N~1 1i..-•s\lt11~~ n•J11.-!.<ten ''1•96 C1rr,rC oM1 ll011l:J1 ; ?lo +'•FJ1111~~t .~outie.1 11 110 n JX""c, •91 .SA(IF!I Slt r• •l J•'111 Mc Oon I M f 1J$~11 RM Fob CarGn 11•11 Int. lH, n~ tll< F8 E COl•I
and Southern Counll~S: Gda.1C97o0 ~=:~~ 1~ j~ 1~ n ~':i "':.J 11: ;:l,~.., "1;~ 1! ~ 1~ ;~ ~=~ 0o l'! ~~ ltfi ~:~~·r~ '°" 5~ ~i! ~ fl • + \! ~1! ~:! 15<iMI Bast'd on esumate &era"''" t 6tF1• 01~ )1619 MOOt1 ~1 1i n1474 s1ock 1 •suo1c1)t1c<k• i.o
1
n )Jl'lo 10 J011 -.. F•~PowL1 ;
181 FO' 17UIJ71Fnd Giil Sl2 6JdM~rton F~nll1 ~uo tnGI ttl l/\5C1 t1rlr 1 10 ,111 Jt ''r l>•, :If -l•FI• $~ti l sales lhe decrease s 1\1 annua 6~~.t~ •SI 1 1t Founa ~ 1" 1 7J G•wll! • it 1c 09 ~u111"s1 ~ •~ 1a 14 cc 1 corp 11 ,, 1 1i. -\' Fluor'C" 2 0l, PG&E li»!on SI •ll l19Fouri& lfJ1G1A lnco.., 1 11 •11~v.w:r Gt 1 '111tJ C:l1> Ofl2S ,s 11 , 11 !"' _..._ \' Fl•Tl"r JO re v enu es arc • 0~, Fon 10 1•111sFr~"~l "Grouo 1"~11· 7 131<tTMR "" n.s.11'1o'.c-coco•11 to 21>0 21 •, 1 . FMC C:o u ·=ooo •·uthern Caloforn1a e,~,.'.',' $0 I IC tlS ()NT( 100•11 M Mll" "~ ' l 17'lfftthir 911\lftM CtllntffC1>) •• 59 ~ SI l 53"-1 FMC "I"' <J"'<N ,.,,,,, ""' 1) 7~ Jo Jl GrW!fi • 1' I"' M!F Gt~ 5 It> 6 H TKMnc I t 1t 6 11 Ctnca ln l JO J' •~ • •JI> •1 l -V • FoodFe r 90 ( $18"~ Southern Bu-• HOU.O vtu •u'!J"'lu t'l,,.r: St1'!5,.TKh'10! 7:1t1:'t,!en1F11v o• 'ij"• 11'•1J~+'i'F-••<•• •85 vi vor• tG' -,, h tt • 1'I IPW;om t 12 1 1 Mu O..,!n t 40 10"" Ttmo t:• '' " 21 n, en Hiid 1 d 11 21•1 )J "" Counto's 1926 •~ Changes C•n•d" 172 :ioJS ~r"d"" I in 1 1 v.ui '~" ,~ n~ ""' 'owr 1-1R "~~ 1 n1 "' \llLI 1 ~1 11 •1 XI 1 ro•~ -. ~ f oait Min illlV (11<1•111!" I 12 N to Fd ltMlll I It J! lf t Tri! 1 '' '4.1 Tr1n (to 1 JI t V Ct" I IPS I It :JS 11 11•, 17>l ,\ Foote llf2 XI
were eff e<:llvc Jan I (1g t n~v , 41 • u ruric:1 Am • 11 si 'ttA Mut 1~ ,,, 1n" ,.,,~ Ea '~ '' 11 '' CMI t.• E1 1 ''• '•• •, 10,,,• 'oor,'• =, l! ~:~='• t: C1111! lh• '09 17 69 n ~ l~ q 10 ,, ~., WS..c t >T n SJ Tulk)• "" ,, ... "M l...,MPw I I' ... F 60
Ctn! Sh• 11 °' 1~ 01 Glllr•ll• u ll ll IJ •' Ill(! '" ,, 1n ., Twnf" GI • ,4 • •• ..,. SW 1 90 •s ',1,• 'n'"·• 'n" -t1 ?,",, ~·o" -. (fla"nlna l'Und1 rnw $lie ~•' tft~'' ~ 11 1 H tw"C l"c • ~, • t• •nl Sov• ,flO J9 ""
Blle!'I 1on lto At•c Sc fU t ~1 N•t St<tur $•• ..i• Mui lft"lllll•• enlelU •b ,"o 1>1<',•, ll" Ji'-'•' ',,",o~w~ Pl 1 f,-» }"'II Cem 51 I O!l~'' !\Alan l~"ll"Unlffl t.3410'1 CeM'tl 1'<11'.1 . .0 ~• I' , 4 Ful Ad ._., •"' """" J ,., s ., u~11('(1 Ful>Ck Cfr!·leec! _ ,ac 10 1 ' l'", t '' ,,,..,.. " '° ~om I l 1 e.r1h I rid ,.. ,.-, " 'II) l"llvl<I • " .; • Ace"' 1'111 1'" Cllfl-ltd 111 M •'o >/I~ " ,,,,., -111 flr""ldul l '° •-1 2 '5301 1'.....,n ISlllU f.-w~ ,,,,~,..,nm l•Ml.l"C"un•Ai"" I ~v.1<1 ,-! flru-'lta110 :llfHGrtun l'.lu~t!n 16'11•4? PIS~ A••'>••$~!•" '"~"'tFIJll On ti "~'''19'•~"F~u611141f C• n t 01 t U 1-11mll!OI! 1.,...~.., ~ '>\ • • ' ""~ • ·~ • '" ih•dbrn •~c 114 11 ~ 10 . n -"' fu11 d 11 ,,12 11 .... , u~•~11 SIO<\ • "' • l" Fd C•'I • 0 • JI ~·"'rt''•vo ~. I 1 , ;>It ,. • -\~
' 1 '1 "101 77 G!" "''""I ~O>! "•111 • <t '" 1 Vt • 1...: '"-" nl er ~I ~61,, '61 to •6•• G•C Cc l..SC 1• $5 5t•~ s~~" lo ~· u ~ "'•f'DV~ , .,. , 11 ~. 'W " • "~ •• 1 ~t 1 In l t" •.. ~~~•Mn ! 1~ t I" 1' 1n.._ .+-,.,, GAF Co••.~4t " 1>"< 1Sl<o ~I t •Jl6.il "••<ln" ~·10;;< ·~ '<f •H •f l•Gf" ~"(tCCC'fle<:-er r.i'll l ., lll ·\o-V.(i.1,~ IH1111 l lJ' U U n 1 t \I Capital Corp or ritmc.I ,. 11~17 11'"" I 1 "" IA •• ~v """' '~ • 1 I ~n $I 1 'II • ,.,, Cll!\[•mt' 'n "' '•o ,, • !',.,• ,, , -\ti G•m ~kll I :'IO 1' ,,, r• • ~ ~ ll "t'l.Yl"M 11 t•a.~•ft• 1•11 1 .. •n(rS ~nt l O"IU NY1NI Al'-o. A!•1 +\~G1m,p11 1) 7''•lf' America a f1nanc1a l sen:1cts r>~:i~. •st s o1 "•"~ c;o.. ••\ ••1 ~~ ... "1 1 • 11• ·"""~' ,., ·~· 11""'t" 1'°b ,, ,, 11 1j ~-" .. ,1 211.o 1 1,
company, announced the elec G~11 10l;_ , ,, !!..~r".,. 1~ ~Z '~ ~ ~:." ; ;: : ". v!~~~~d,. ! !: t !: i;, ..E.~ o tf ?0°1~ it'~ .i1 • i ' -" :~~1 30 1~ ,A,..
11
\, II r v~ .. 1 •Stl 1• .. M•"n1 v•1•''"~~ l ••c ··~~~ •••1 ''""'"'"~°""1 '"'•F.:•Ja~ 4,111e''° l .. lion of Donald f.1 Berner o [°"'m( ,,,,0 11 .. Di"'"' ,,,, ,, 1'11 "~ , ..... " • c., '" .... ,."c c111<E•oi 111 M 1:• li '""Ir 1nc1 ,, .,., 1•
JIU n I 0 ngt 0 n "·ach •s oms ~~ Ji» SSG \I 1'!111 $"' ~_. ...... vms 11 •• .,,..., 1• 11••1).o.I 'r~~,\(e." c•, "• 11 • :'• .. '-1\~ _,n c., 11 11 , u11 r.11.: " D"lmo.,w1111 F.i,. 15 1 ''"' •n '''"N~ 11 .. 1t ~ W• ""'" r. ., ,. 111 4•' • " L -1n111 Jo!• ~ , ... 1fl.lo h f ti Bo rd and t:10 ~" '"ln •,1m<11r " r•• •1t-,,,~•r" ,,,. .,. """'' •• ,...,,,. M&P 111ci 1 lt 1w1 o Jl: n ·"• "Alnv '"• 171> )11, crurmano 1e a r""""' '"'u"'°""""' •~11~,,·~r.·dl~"''"' 1 ... 1 11"1( .. :irrr' ~ Utii;f ·~g"mon eo11 •'•:U J"'scpl• Cherry a s vice '""'1' '/i'' .1s 1m1> "~ 1 • ~-''"'""" ~o ••• •• '~o•~ io ,.11_,. ,,00,•10:13" ,iJ ~. "r.• -•-"-.. Tr•" 160 ~· )4 ~ •• C•J'' i' O 0 J1 fl<: Fd8 '1" ''' "~ "l ut •"' • ~ l ttl>'t , "'f!V.I' :-'! • "' '" 11 l' 1) ti!-\ u , ht r::w111 1 11 11...,H>ovt '""~'1 ""• 1 ••1 1~" .,.;.;,, , • .,,,~~ Ful 1 1 '"11 _t4 G~_.,\nt .20e 1,11 "O
C arm<IO !!!ft\e 1 U ~l•~llnd Trnol 1"'1 1,ol"t"•lm tn t•• V•ll" 1 11 1" .. !"'!'Clt 1 jf• p lf.i~=::§"' {It llir 11 10 lt;: Berliner "Ill ren1~1n a s e x 1mr>e1 ~ 1• • ,. 1<1(1<••t ~ ·~ • •• "'"'' M • • " "" • '" 1~ •• ~11 c:n t' ~ • !I:! • ,,.. ,., 4 ,. no..,,1 ,,, ?Ot JI! ,.. • d d l>l'NI lbd 1 •& t 1'I "'~• Sit( T '' l t• +flt ~' 1~ If I"~' o,1.,., t"d ' ~' ~ ,. tw' I t~r f" » i' lf.' _ ,, ~0.n~m ! Iii ~t lJ • ecutlve VJce prt!;1 ent an -~ f:d I""' o' 1NfG"I .. ...,~1 .. ....., "'~' '-'"' • .., "'1•t111 11All1• '' .... °""!!. , , , ,, 1 1, _ " '" Ei~ , ., P, 71 , 1• 1 ~"""lk ~I S. nv C"oA """ • '"~" lll'rod 1'"" ••~ '~·., "f ""''"'"' '""'""' • G •o •· .. > Chf'rry a s seolor vice Ofl((lrd Ji•i 11•1~v 0 .. "'''"'""'•• ,.., n1•1'-T'"l"11~" I ... '::~n"1;;gl 15~ ~ jl'• m,+,.. "' .. e n .... ' ~•c!·I,. 11'11'".,., 1.-~, 1~"' -.,.-• .-1111,._ ""•• ,, .., • ·~.foll! 1'11 I 1"1 1 )t!oi-•i Ot"Fdt f 6~ f1 9'11,, prCSldCnl Cont~ tfl l JI 4 1' l"vn ''"' w"tY-1 ! Gr-111 U d JS.O 'fOl!ll 2.IO i.Oi 11!S4il1 2 4t 1 li~ \lo ~V. -Ui G6ll HOii l "' 1Jl'i
PUC Oka ys
Gas Cuts
llcrliue1· New
Unity Chah·111 an
r
• Thursday's Closing
t
I
"
Prices-Complete New York Stocli Exchange Li st
hln Ntl'tl .. Ol .. OCOl .. "'"'"'"""'"'"-'"'"'""!BO!!IO,., ............... , lh• J Hl1ft \.• C._ C-t ','
"° ,, ?~.~ l!'l .!; ~
rt affn qv. F: • ~ on •l ~•;i,..,, 10 I 1 lf tt,~
l ~:' "~ g~=~ H 42~ _.,...,. 4~-~
l! u:1• ~ ll~ • , '' Y Utl -\1! I Oh <0 \t 41 ~-~
Ma11 Ends Lower
5th Straight Day
. ,"',, "''!" 1114 2>•:1~\o i 1il\ 1e1' 'JZ" _ n NEW YORK (UPI) -Stocks closed lower t~ .~ .~ ••· ~~ day on the New York Stock Exchange For Ute fifth
,ij ~1-t ytt ~f1, t 1\• consecutive day Trading was mode.rate ;} r1• fi~ a~=•" 1•he UPI marketw1de 1ndicator was down 0 36
» Hw ~ :u~ ! ~ percent on 1570 issues traded Declines Jed advan
T ces, 756 to 531 u•L. •tie 1 --!"'• '" : n~ fl'• ii" +1 The Dow Jones average of 30 blue chip indUS· 2,~CfPICll ~ 1~ n1 ~ '' -1\i trials \Vas off 2 11 to 785 05 Volume of more than ~ri;.::~ 1~11 fj m? U~ l;'' !:. \! 11 million shares was ahead of Wednesday s pace ~ c~~~. ,
11 11o 11, ,J Analysts beheved investors "ere wary of com-u"'°" c.,.11
.'
UnEec110 ,., ~~ g~ ~~.,tit' m1Ung themselves until after President Nixon deli L 11 ~. ::~ !° ~ 1n 1ff , 1nv. ='~ vers hi s State of the Union and bud get messages v" E on lo ~ 111..:0 111 ~ 110\\ +1 UnO Ctl 1 1111 " ~. '° '° Ialer this month uocn on so ,, 2l\• ?~ 23\t Un P•t Co 1 1 "" a1 -.... In stitutions appeared to be selling some ol Ute1r un ... Pec' ! "'!! ",.'· "•• ~ "! • th ~·.,~:.·.~ holdings since ere were se veral btg block trans-.., --..,
'
~>o ~ !\ •'' U11lr'1W•I 10 _ actions uni .,,,,1 o' 1
2f..! m1 1'"' ~ ~ A 349,500 share block of Transcontinental Jn-un,hot>S :io ~ l~i\ 13tv. ih' ='~ dustries, the biggest of the day, traded at 21 off e~rl ... ~rll ~~~
lf ~ n!mlj, ~ +"' 0 19 0th d Un Furl! 1 •0 1411 .u ' it~ .,, er issues own on big block trades included u111 net 10 'i W-~ ~ =:, i,a 39 200 shares of General Signal 65 900 shares of 8~1:•z.~0: ~ J f~~ i•1t: U~: -"' Exas Industnes 74 600 shares of Union Camp, and 8~ ~u~k· J~
1f :l \ #a~ 4J~ =1""' 22 900 shares of Chrysler which closed off 3/4 at ~~FF0,:ci,2,~ 16 SS\/o 3J 3! ,_. Oj 3/~ USGVOJM 3' .~ ~~ n~ Im =:: ., • ~~ p~~~ :! ~ J;~ =~ ~~ -«lamm9.,llll!l!!l!!!ll"":!l!l"""'"""'.,~""""'"'"""""",.""'l~~p~o:'n1120
L DAIL V PILOT Ji
Con1plete Closing Prices -American Stock Exchange Li~t
'Briefs " ' ' ~·.
WASHl~GTO!l'(UPI) -The
Defense Department awarded
the rollowmg contrtcls Wed
nesday for aircraft1 procu re
ment and maintenance Lock
heer Aircraft Corp $10 8 mil
lion for Navy P3C planes
Untted Aircraft Corp $7 2
m1lhon for Navy Jet englnes '
McDonnell Douglas Corp $5 2
m1lhon for Navy TA 4J and
A-4M ai rcraft
DEARBORN Moch (UPll
-Fo .. d Motor Co announced
1t will build a '7 S m1U1on
plant 1n Dearborn devoted to
carburellon eng1neer1rug par
ticularly testing and design
research
NEW YORK (UPll -Savin
Business Machines Corp has
obtained a li cense for a high
speed photoelectric pr1nt1ng
process f r o m Eleelropr1nt
Inc or Palo Alto Cahf The
process makes photocopies on
plain paper
Savin will be 101ned tn fu r
ther deve lopment of the pro-
cess by Stanford Research In
a:titute Minot Co of West Gtr-
many and Ricoh Co or Japan.
~t Is hoped to put the process
Ld commercial production of
equ1p1JJ.ent m two yeara 1
ONLY TIE
NEWSPAPER
• . :
0'1 \ 'fllE :'ll:EY:SPAP'£R I"•
'"n !'Udt annd hunhnJi You '
u n 111 .. a)• b11.1 th~ IUU r-• l
.. m t wht:a 101.1 rc•d ~ nc-.. t
p11pU
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DAILY PILOT Thu~, January 1970
Medal of Honor
Hero Re-enlists
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -
Medal of Honor ·winner Sgt.
Richard A. Pittman re~nlisted
in lhe Marines after 20
frustrating months as a
civilian in his hometown of
Stockton.
his Severa] pleu for waivers.
He reeeived the Medal ot
ltonor arter using two
machine a:uns .anci a 'J>l.sWl to
stop an advance of about 40
Communists iii Vietnam on
July 24., 1966.
. .
't St t * ~ * * *· * * * * ! * ~' * *· * *
MERCURY SAVINGS · -and loan assoiiatioo ' ·
NOW OPEN
EVERY SATURDAY
10 A. M.-4 P. ~v'l .
Open·Mon.·ihUJS. 91.m . ..t p.m.; Fri. 9 a.m.-6 p.m.
IUENA PARK ,~;\ H,UNTINGTON lllACH
Mercury Savinp Bid(. • :-<,; Mercury Savlnp Bldg.
Vallay View at Lincoln ~ Edinger at Beach
********* *******
AMt:fttC A '9 LAftGE ST flAMIL. ... CLOTH ING CMAl Hi
G11itar Chugs Alotag
''People kind of expect .too
much o( a Medal or Honor
winner ..• it gets to you •••
you shouldn't have to go on
prov.ing yourself," Pittman
said.
After a series of speeches,
parades and banquets, the
returning ·24-year-old hero and
rather of two infant girls
learned that a childhood defect
in his eye prevented him from
being a pol iceman.
"Everything was fine until
they found out about the eye,••
he said.
While PltUnan tried lo join
state and local poilct • agen-
cies, he worked as a bULCher's
apprentice, a tele'phone com·
pany supply man, an assistant
to a county su~rv,lsor and
with the Veterans Admtri.stra-
tion.
Barbara Perkins strums a regular size guitar as
Benguerel takes her for a ride· in the world's larg-
est floating guitar, the 17-foot $.S. Boatnik. The mod
rock boat, which is powered by a 9.5 hp outboard
and has strings that can be strummed, is being fea-
tured at the San Francisco National Sports and Rec-
reati"on Show which will run thro~gh Jan. 18.
FAIR
llis wire and fami ly lhink he
should have stayed in lhe
11-tarine Corps in the first
place, but ''f've always had lo
learn the hard way:• he said. now
Buss Get Fan~y Eate1·y
Not Europe's Best But Worth Visit
Feit, f1ir, f1clu1I~ Tho11
thr11 word1 1um up f1cforc in
op1r1tion 1111 th1 DAILY PILOT
1cl ilori1I )1191 IYlry ci ty.
The eye dcrect gave him •a
draft status of 4F, but OJe
Marines accepted him after
Corps officials in San Fran-
cisco said Pittman is qualified ,
for any duty. but will be
assigned to Parris Island,
S.C.. for recruiting duty in-ata ~
MOSCOW (AP ) -Until a
few weeks ago , a complete
gounnet tour of MosC-Ow took
about Hve minutes. Now, with
the addition of a sparkling new
skyscraper restaurant, i t
takes slightly longer.
Some foreigner s con sider
that the Rossiya Hotel's 2Ist-
floor eatery is the first
restaurant in Moscow worth
visiling.
Jt's not only the Swedish and
Finnish furniture that does it.
Even the food and service are
good by Soviet standards
t,hougb not equal to the best in
Europe.
Manager Akluned Salarov,
the natty, Tata r -born
manager, revealed part o{ his
secret.
1 "I forbid women to do any
~ ~g here," he said, belray-
1nf! his Oriental view of
wom~. "They belong at
home ~the children."
Sata -crewcut "''ailers
move sw fUy and most or
them speak basic English, ap-
parently to culfiyate a foreign
clientele. -~ When two f o ' n cor-
respondents show , , for
dinner without rese ns,
Sa.tarov offered to eject wo
.Russians to make room. llut a
quick compromise was al';i
ranged and the · foreiJn
shared a table with
Russians.
The testaurant in
comfortable bar. rest
to compare wi t is in
Helsinki, Finl~ milel!I to
the northw~ \ CIJSl<>olel's' who find tbeir
·way to rcstaur"arit in the
laby · , -4,0oo..room .hotel , ' eeze through a crowd
·to get in. •
at the pl.!ite-glaSs door,
must then try to get the
attention of the bouncer who
guards it. shouting their
names through the glass and
explaining that reservations
v.•ere made .
If the bouncer notices. or
cares, he may decide to unlock
the door.
Greeting the visitor inside is
an enormous semiabstract
stained-glass panel illuminated
from behind. At least one
sickle is recognizable, and a
hammer is likely in three
somewhere if one cares to
hunt for it.
When a waiter recognizes
the foreign nationality of
visitors. he is likely to beam
and say, "I am speaking
English," then lead them to a
table decorated with a smal!
flag of the customers' country.
by Leary
247 llroodway a....•• .... _., •. ,,74
Hours: 11 a.m. to 10 p.m.
The view of the Kremlin Ru ssian. Silverv.·are a n d
yard and the twisting Moscow
River just below is breathtak.
ing.
Moscow-style borsch. beef
stroganoff. meat pie s called
pirozhki. and creamy Russian
ice cream -alf to be washed
down with plenty of straight
vodka -are among the
specialties.
The cuisine ls . exclusively
di shes arc of an atlrac tive
inodern Hussian design. The
linfn is not changed every
time new cus tomers arrive,
but it is not allowed to become
dirty as in some Soviet
restaurants.
A typi cal meal costs six
rubles, officially $6.66. That is
an average price for Moscow's
better restaurants.
struction.
PUBLIC NOTICE
furniture
. We are not going out of business, but we are preparing for a total remo•
deling and must clear the floor for workmen to begin. We exped to create
one of the most unique furniture stores in California when our remodel·
Ing is completed. You can. help us and save yourself big money buying now.
• CHECK THESE . EXAMPLES •
BEDROOM
5 Pc. Burnished 01tr. Sil bv ">om1ric1n"
WAS S 749.80 NOW $ 436.00
' Pc. Sit M19nific1rtl P1rd11T11nl finiih-bv St1nl1v
WAS 1095.00 NOW 599.00
5 Pc. W1>!n ul S1!-Tr1n1ition1I Style
WAS 639.00 NOW 368.00
S l'c., M1dil1rr1n1;n Styli 111. Fruitwood
WAS 689.75 NOW 43 8.00
SAVE $313.80
SAVE 496.00
SAVE 271.00
SAVE 251.75
6•Pe.. lt1li111 Pro~inci al S•t-txtr1 l1rg1 clr•n1r, Fruilwood •ilh
'lrirn, • b•111tv,
WAS 799.80 NOW 456.00 SAVE 343.BO
M•'lchi111J Armoira
WAS 299.80 NOW 178.00
.f-.Pc. Group, ltal1111 Prowin,!11
WAS 430.00 NOW 195 .00
6•Pc. t"el by C1ldwall. P1c111 Wooil, Nict d1 t1il
WAS 759 .00 NOW 429 .00
'S Pc.-Spa11i1h Styli
WAS 668.00 NOW 378.00
GA ME SETS
i Pc. Sil w1upho!it1rtd btrtll c:htl!I
WAS 559 .80 NOW '419.80
S Pc. Sit •/c1111 b1c~ ch1it1
WAS HS.00 NOW 248.00
S Pc. Sei. luft•d b1c~ uphol1!1r1d chair1
WAS 479.88 NOW 399.80
I Pc . Sp111i1h Sit, 4'1", c111r trim 011 ch1 i11
WAS 5)9.95 NOW 399.80
SAVE 121.BO
SAVE 235.00
SAVE 330,00
SAVE 290,00
SAVE 140.00
SAVE 100.00
SAVE BO.JS
SAVE 140.JS
CoffN Tables, Commodes, Lamp Tables, Occasional Tables
A LARGE SELECTION
AT SAVINGS UP TO 11z OFF!
We h1v1 1 great select ion of ha n9in9 lamps and t1ble lamps.
ALL ARE REDUCED
SOME MORE THAN 11z OFF !
\
DINING ROOM
I Pc. P1c111 Sit with 0¥11 l1ble, 6 ch1ir1 l b11ulif11I br11klronl
WAS 1295.00 NOW 7)9.00 SAVE 556.00
M1gnific111t C1rved 01k, ' pc. 111 .,.jth b1111til11I b•11kfronl, uphol d1r1d ch1i11
WAS 1795.00 NOW 1080.00 SAVE 7lS.OO
L1 r91 tr1st!1 t1ble, b 11phol1t1r1d ch1ir1 & 1i9ht1d chi111 c1bi111t. Ok p1c111
WAS 1259.80 NOW 836.00 SAVE 423.BO
l1111tif11 l lt1li111 prov inci1l I pc ,11! C1111 hiOJh back chairi
WAS 940.00 NOW 688.00 SAVE 252.00
CHAIRS
2 only,. bl1clr n1u9.
WAS 149.00 NOW 99.00 SAVE 50.00
F•111th pro•inci1I hi9k b1clr
WAS 139.80 NOW 78.00 SAVE 61.BO
High b"1ck club ch1ir, 1nl. 9old
WAS I '48 .80 NOW 74.SO SAVE 74.30
M11t1 Club Ch1ir, Gr1111 t1p11lrv
WAS 144.00 NOW 89.00 SAVE 55.00
l11utiful 1.,,,,1 Ch,;,
WAS I 59.80 NOW 99 .80 SAVE 60.00
I li c\ N1u91hyclt •ec.lin1r
WAS t;'9.80 NOW 59.80 SAVE 40.00
S•nd1lwood Ht.:ih 810t k R1clin1r
WAS 119.80 NOW 78.00 SAVE 41.80
Rull lwetd Pillow-bee\ club Ch1ir
WAS t ~9 .80 NOW 99.80 SAVE so.oo
SOFAS
M19nific1nl moch1 ,.,,1 .. ,1 I'
WAS 4i9.00 NOW 279.90 SAVE 159.00
Spri n9 Down, I h1xu•iou1 m1!1l1111 1011. Tu•1do 1lyl1
WAS 648 .00 NOW 420.00 SAVE 228.00
L11xurious 9' Cr11c.111I 1111!1•111 ¥11¥11 •/c:ontr11t w1lh
WAS 499.80 NOW 346.00 SAVE 153.10
Mtny mor1tf11wing1of1111111$100011 I tch.
S1¥1r1l lo¥1 111h loo, 11 9rr1t cli1.cou11h.
Miscellaneous desks, paintings. wall decor, bric -a·brac, all •• once in a lifetime prices.
REALLY IMPORTANT SAV INGS.
Entry consoles, folding screens, planters, all drastically slashed.
BOOKCASES 6' w;de, 7' high -waro $109.9S Now $74
MANY OTHERS GREATLY REDUCED.
AH Merchandise Subject To Prior Sale • All Sales Final-No Refunds, No Exchan9es
Convenient Terms Available
alpert's interiors e 1925 harbor e costa mesa e 646·0541
\
i •
"
saving I
CREPE
BLOUSES
4.99
Regularly 6.99
Iha luxurlous fabric is the thing!
silky rich-bodied, washable Chiara crepe of
acetate-and-ny lon in clear soft-tone colors
the long-tall style is the thing!
expensively made placket-front blames.,
with regular-style or hidden button-closing
the long-point collar is the thing!
narrow, wide, and wide-spread collars, widJ-
twin-buttoned cuffs adding to the fashiao
MISSES' SIZES 3Z TO 31
SUNDAY · ,...;i,iiq. OPEN ffi
11 TO 5 ,
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COSTA MESA, 1601 Newport Blvd. at 16tll
GARDEN GROVE-12 372 GARD EN GROVE BLVD
Fastest in West
8'11 ll. s.11 iL l f'J It.I fasttsl rflpOllSf In the Wtsl "9-1111Sl ~
own clock. Ttsl Dime-a-llnt Ads, Whtrt lht acUon 11, In Siturd11'1
DAILY PILOT.
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Newport ·Darhor
ED •ITION N.Y •. Stocu
VOL. 63, NO. 13, 2 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES .. ORANGE COUNTY; CAtlFORNIA ,. -. t' THURSDAY, JANUARY 15, '1970 TEN ¢ENTS
Boy, 2, Victim
Ex-Newport Man
DAILY rlt.OT SI~ "~Oii
FILM STAR DEVINE, CHAMBER'S CURREY (R IGHTl CONGRATULATE 'MAN OF THE YEAR'
Newport's Jorgensen, Surpri1ed by Honor Bestowed at Annual Chamber Banquet
Jorgensen Man of Year
Cliamber Honors Marine Hardware Dealer
Newport • Beach marine hardware
dealer and long·lime Hoag Memorial
Hospital board member Vin Jorgensen is
the Man of the Year for 1969.
The tall. sn1iling Jorgensen won the
flonor from the Newport Harbor Chamber
of Commerce at its 63rd annual in-
stallation banquet wednesday night at
the Balboa Bay Club.
Jorgensen, in a brief acceptance
s~ech, said he was "speechless and very
hOOored."
Mesa Boy Jumps
9 Floors, Escapes
Deatl1 at Motel
By 81\RBARA KREIBJCH
01 ""' O•lfr r1101 s11ff
A !~-year-old Costa Mesa boy cheated·
death Wednesady night when he hurled
himself from the top floor of the tallest
building in Laguna Beach , the nine-story
Surf and Sand Towers at 1500 S. Coast
Highway.
David Templ e, 429 Flower St., survived
the spectacular leap with relatively
minor injuries, a scalp laceration and
brol!.en right wrist, and is in satisfactory
condition at South Coast Community
Hospital in South Laguna .
Witness Angelo D'Ercole. maitre de at
the Towers Restaurant ·atop the new
building, told police he saw the boy clim-
bing the outside stairway between the
eighlh and ninth fl oors al 5:30 p.m. and
called ouL "What are you doing here ~"
The boy said, "'I'm goi ng over!'' He
then leaped head first over the 42·inch
raili ng or lhe balcony su rrounding the
ninth Iloor .
. Receotly appqioted • Ap"'ll'if Court .JuS{ict RofiJ'rt Gat<tner, 19611'11 Man Or
the Year, participated in the presentation
to Jorgensen.
Anottrer fOTmer"'Min rif the Year, Le~
Steffensen, also participated in the tradi·
tional ''suspense-but-no-surprise" lead-in
description of the new recipient.
Jorgensen. who has served on th e
board of directors of Hoag Memori al
Hospital for the past 15 years, has
been board chairman for the past two
years.
Justi~ Gar.dner detcritied Jora~ni
as a ' man 'de'dicatea· to humanltjrfai!.
acts of service·"lo the community for
ma~~y~rs." _ ____ _
Jorgenser.. the son Ol a masler miner
from Denma rk, moved with his parents
lo San Pedro. attended schools there,
then entered Occidental College, where
he was graduated.
Jorgensen. who retired from the
Marine Corps as a colonel after World
War 11, came to Newport Beach soon
(See JORGENSEN, Page 21
Los Angeles DA Younger
In Attorney General Race
Spea king in Newport Beach today on a
hop-skiP-and-jump air trip up the coast,
Los Angeles District Attorney Evelle
Younger announctd his candidacy for
California Attorney General.
The popular DA ·made liis initial
disclosure at a press conference in San
Diego, then arrived in the Harbor Area,
with stops scheduled in Lo8 Angeles, San
Francisco and Oakland.
He. greeted the press at the Newporter
Inn here, prior ID·heading·norih and pro·
mised the attorney general shoukl use the
powerful position to battle enviromnental
pollution.
Younger said in.a prepared·statement
that the attorney' general ·shJuld "ac-
tively assert previously unUSed powers·of
the attorney general'! offtCe to help
reclaim man's environment.·•
Younger. 51, is a former FBI agent and
superior court judge and has been district
att orney in Los Angeles since 1965.
Other declared Republican candidates
are State Sens. George Deukmejian of
Long Beach and John Harmer of Glen·
dale and Spencer Williams. f()rmer heallh
and welfare chief for GQv. Reagan.
Atty. Crl!n. Thomas Lync h, the only
Democrat holding one of the top state of-
liei!s, has said he will seek re-election.
Younger's announcement centered on
pollution control, curbing c a m p u s
violence, fighting drug abuse, and more
vigorous law enforcement procedures at
the state level in aid of cities and coun·
ties.
Younger said he would use every tool of
the law "In fighting pollution." He said he
would create an environmental task
force.
He said he would prov ide •;more ef-
fective use of space age technology to im·
prove the m·ethods of criminal in·
vestigation and prosecu tion."
And he proposed thal local law en-
forcement offi cers be granted authority
lo use electronic survei llance.
I Younger said there is every indica tion
that organized crime ''is m a k i n g
strenuous efforts to gain a foothold" in
Callrorni a al the first opportunity.
Held
By JOHN VALTERZA
ot tl11 OlllY l'llot Stiff
A former Newport Beach man is being
held in jail in San Bernardino today in
the alleged beating death of his ?-year-old
&tepson.Jast May in Newport.
Michael Shear, 22, who moved from the
Harbor Area a few months ago , is being
held on charges or manslaughter and
felony child beating.
The charges stem from a death last
Pill's B lanie
For Cancer
In Dispute
WASHINGTON (UPI) -A prominent
cancer specialist warned today that
thousands of women may be feeding the
growth of undetected breast cancer with
birth control pills.
"SyntheUc estrogens are to b re• s t
cancer what fertilizer ls to a weed crop,"
Dr. Roy Hertz te.stified at a Senate hear-
ing. Estrogens are a prime component of
oral 1'0lllj'~~i>lii'* Previous wilnme•
said man made utrogens could also
cause ... blood clottini in some users of
·~ni~Plll?! -
Another witness, Or. Edmond Kassouf
of Cranford. N. J .. suggested in'j>rePared
testimony that the American ·Medical
Association (AMA) might have helped
drug companies promote birth control
pills and conceal their alleged dangers.
But Or. Robert W. Kistner of Harvard
Medical School scoffed at studies linking
oral contraceptives with cancer.
"The pill is safe," Kistner declared.
Heriz fonnerly headed the rtproducUon
research branch of the govermnent's Na-
tional Cancer tnstilute. He is now with
Rockleller University in New York.
Said Hert z: "We know from X-
ray :studies that breast cancer exists in
llOllle cases for years before it can be
clinically detected. However. since one
"'oma n in 20 will at some time in her life
develop breast cancer, it is obvious that
In using the pill we are exposing at least
th is portion of women to a substance
known to stimul ate pre-existing breast
cance r in women."
The doctors testified in the second day
of hearings before Sen. Ga,ylord Nelson's
small business mooopoly subcommittee.
The group has heard sharply divided
lestim<my about the safety of "The Pill."
Kistner, taking i~e with those warn-
ing about dangers of the pill, said: "It is
safer than pregnancy but not as safe as
continence • • • one cigarette is three
limes as dangerous to life as one pill."
Stock Market
NEW YORK (AP) -Stock market
pr ices remained lower in restrained·trad·
ing today. /See quotations, Pages 14-15).
As in previous sessions, investors
were hesitant and waiting in the wings
for compelling news devel opn1ents,
analysis noted. Jle landed in a planted arci. ap-
proxima tely 80 feet below the balcony. at.
the , second-Door level of the building,
OOunced of( and rolled to the first floor
level .
Pplice and hotel employes found him,
bleeding copiously from lhe, head wound,
but1 still stmi~sclous and summoned
an flmbulan,ce to,take him to. the ho.spital.
Lo~h Ness Revisited
tis parepts, ~. and Mrs, Robert F.
Terliple, were notified and hurried to his
be<&J<le. •"i couldu'l ~Jieve he was still alive."
Merrill Johnson. owner or the Towers,
said today . The police and ambula nce
alriady were at the scene when he and
his wife arrived, minutes after D'Ercol~
called them. he said.
•;our one great fea r duri ng con·
!!lruction of the Towers," Johnson said,
"vras that one of the workmen might fall .
We were really relieved when the job was
t'Ompleted without a single injury."
Ho"'ever. he ~dded "I.he fear thaf
something like this will happen is always
there."
Only recently, Johnson said;he had in-
creased the height o! the railing on the
balcony around the restaurant where
visitors like to stand to admire·the1beach
1nd1ocean view. ·
JOhnson said lbc way _young T_emplt
landed after his leap, wa5 <+a miracle."
'Peters Canyon's Big .Al :Swim·ming Into History
' ' Edilor's Note :. Forme.r . British.
joui-Mli.tt Tom Bartty· who' U$ed-to
3pend h.is ·time .vfO!r,oualg 'ChClSin.g lthe
Loch Neu monster i11 ~cotland. i.i
now doiltg his tl~ing at an. Orange
County r(.servoir, os indicate d in tlte
follo1ot11.g ditp0tch.
By TOM BARL.EY
Of !lit OtllY 'lltf Iliff
ON SAFA'Rl AT PETERS CANYON
RESERVOlR-~Our·'OOly.comp8nJOr111 a\
this remote-water hole on this gray
moody•moniing were a. mildly interested
housewife, her romping 3-year-old son
and a large bl11ck Labrador dog.
11\e only movement on .the limpKf
waters of' the lalte" waa.the oCcaSion~
pie cr<ated by fitf\11 •nd rainfllled •
1be 3-year-old . toddles. .and .coos at the
water's edge, his mother ab8ent.ly li&llb
)
and.puffs<-on ·a cigaretteiand'the dog dOes
wPlat all dogs 'do am6rig·U>e shrubs at the
edge: of the reservoir~ : · . ·
Ah yes, Labradors are big dogs indeed.
All. the uninitiated might ~y, is tran·
qui lity.
This veteran observer Is not, however.
deceived . We have under our belt the
fruits of a Jong ago assignment to Loch
Ness and the vast technical knowledge
garnefei:I wfille sJpping hot sweet tea,,,for
long hoorS at the !id e of that.fabted•Scot·
lish lake.
Below the waters of Plter1 Canyon
reservoir is a creature that , closel.Y
resembles the scaly arrlphibian that
sports in . the murky · deptha and 00>
casipnaQy on 1Q\e sw:(~ of the &'loomy
Scottish waters.
It baa-been given tht name of ~Afby
easll7 misled co u n.(J. al1J'L ,Qd .
onlookers who pathetically beUeve that
an alllgatbr iJ•reSponsible for ravages in
this Orange take. Bini and fish are'said
to have been devoured in -copious·qua.n·
tilies bj the wily creature.
Like "Nessie", the darling of British
journalists, Orange Coonty'1 own
monster has skillfully evaded capture.
Tui:> curators from the Buena Park
Alligator Farm fi!ihed for hours he,.re
Wednesday and sllpped 11w1y-1dmifting
defeat. And several local rtSktents hi've
bravely ventured forth upon the murky
waters to try their hand at ge{.t.ilig ia iittle
notoriety out of Big·AI.
Many onlookers pathetically tctlily ID
having sten_ Aeveral alligators. Anet ·one
dt)!Uly sheriff who braved hip d0ep. mud
aotuall)' returnedclD, lll>Ore to elailn thal
11<.Jiad.watchect two alllpiOr1 al loall
(Seo MONSTIR, Pase I)
r
• Ill Slaying
-A1ay 31 of Petrick Tudor, '2, a.n incident
which was ofriclally ruled an accidental
death at the time.
The case remained closed until late last
week when Shear and his wife, Pat'; took
another son. Eric, 21,'1 month s, into a
Fontana hospital.
Police said the couple told doctors the
infant was having trouble breathing.
Doctors at Kaiser Foundation Hospital
performed X-rays on the baby and 'found
partially healed fractures, police saitl.
HONORED IN DEATH
Martin Luther King
Many Cere1nonies
Across U.S. Pay
Tribute to King
By United Pregs International
Thousands across the nalion honored
Dr. t\tartin Luther King Jr. today-the
41sl annive rsary of his birth.
Sevf'ral governors, including Nelson A.
Rockefeller of New York. Kenne~h Curtis
of Maine and Frank Licht of Rh o d e
Island, declared today "Marlin Luther
King Day," in honor of the assassinated
civil rights leader.
Schools were closed ' in several cities,
Including New York, Ba It i more,
Philadelphia, Kansas·City, PoughkeepSie,
N.Y., and \{arrisburg, Pa.
New York Mayor John V. Lindsay gaid
city workers could take the day off.
The -official inauguration of the-Martin
Luther King ·Memorfal Center, a ·pro-
j~ted cultural and spiritual gathering
place for American Negroes, was set for
today in Atlanta . The center will be built
near King'fi new crypt and the Ebenezer
Baptist Church where he se rved a~
copastor.
Unoffi cial ceremonies, many with an·
li\\'&r overtones, were scheduled in many
areas taking no official note of the day.
ST HTK KING w'°1 art ,
No federal obersvance was planned and
the White House said President Nixon
planned to spend the: day at Camp David.
Assemblyman Wlllie L. Brown Jr. (I).
San . Francisco), today again proposed
legi.slatton 'declaring Jan. 15, birthday of
the 'late Martin Luther Jr., ·as "Black
American Day" in California.
The· NegrO legislator introduced the
sam!! bill last year, but It failed •to pass.
His legislaUon would require that public
school_s set the day aside each year for
programs hdealing with the black · c:r-
perlence in America."
IT'S fJOG'S LIFE
IN HARBOR A.REA.
See all the World War J fighter pilots
get Ung their • overst'aa shots. Would
Snoopy bre so brave 1 . ,
For .DAILY PILOT Pholograph<r
Rll>hltd Koehleo'a plctorlal accounl or a •
dog'111lft, tee page 21 . i ·
The physicians then called police into
the case .
Shear was arre.!ted earlier this week,'
and subsequent investigation added to
suspicion that the 2-ye8r-old toddJer'g
death in Newport was not accidental.
A lie detector fest was part of tlie
investigation, police said.
The Orange County District Attorney's
office today returned ~ compJaint cbara:·
(See BEAT)NG,·P•J)'".
Biafra Formally
S11rrendered;
Unity Pledged
From .Wire Services
LAGOS, Nigeria -Maj. Gen. Philip
Effiong surrendered Bia£ra formally and
uncondiUonally to the Nigerians Thurs·
day with a pledge to support the nation
as one undivided.
Then as if to symbolize the pledge, he
hugged Biafra's chief adversary. Maj.
Gen: Yakubu Gowon, Nigeria'& national
leader.
.. :. "The Republic of Bjafra hereby ctases
to exls{," EUiong said in his surrinder
statement to Gowon at a military bar--
r~ck•· in Lagm. And Gowon responded :
'1td ds join tiafiai to lffiila-i tfuJYUfiited
ancl great nation where no one will be o~
pressed. May God help us."
Thus came the formal end to the
secession proclaimed by Gen. C.
Odumegu Ojukwu on May 30, 1987 with
the charge that the federal mllilary
government sought to dominate and
obliterate Ibo tribesmen, principal in·
habitant& of Blafra. .
Almost at the same time that Effiong
officially capitulated, Ojukwu charMCf
from . a hiding. place aomewhere abrold
that the Nigerians still were bl!Jit on wip-
ing out the lbos and be appealed for a
neutral force to prevent il His statement
was released in' Geneva.
Ojukwu claimed that the Nigerians
seek ·to ring Biafra with an iron curtain
"to make sure that the atroClties they
\\'iii certainly carry out in Biafra are
unseen and unreported in the world
press."
The former leader, who Oed Biafra last
weekend leaving Efflong in charge, also
appealed to the world to help Biafrans
\\•ho, he said, were left starving and ex·
hausted by 30 months of war..
Ojukwu's 2,000.word statement wu
distributed In Geneva by an American
public relations agency, Markpreq, that
had acted as a Biafran lnformatlDn olfJee.
Ojukwu's whereabouts remained un-
known, but an agency 1potesman·did not
deny it had received the Matement by tel·
ex message from Lisbon, Portugal.
"From all indications, it is clear that
Nigeria will not feed Our people;" said
Ojukwu. "There Is no f0!4 w~atsoever in
Biafra and unless food can-get into
Biafran mouths in the nett 72' )Joun, it
will be too late. ·
"Nigeri a's ins.ist~nce to control the
distribution of relief is both to ensure
th at Biafrans ge t no such relief and also
to shut out outsiders who might witness
I See BIAFRA, Page I I
Orange Cout
. , w-dler
There'& na sUvtr" lining behind
tha&e clouds, just a wet one which
will ' be Wrlflging o'ut tonight and
Friday mornlng as coastal temp-
eratures dip into re upper 50'1.
INSIDE TODA\'
Biafrtin refugee children toUI
Bing tltt ir national anthem for
E11 ropt a11 government aides, but
a feature arttclt on r~e 13 to-
day shotc.r tlieu haH littlti to
sing about. • · ·
<•H"-111i. ' M•¥i.t u CMc-lolt Ull ' M..,,.., , .... .. ci.u111M '"" ........... .. <•nnc• " Or•llM c...., .. c,... •• ,,. " ,,.... """ ,.
DMtll N9tktt " 'r::." n.n ••ltffUll ..... • S "'""*" 14-IJ 1111.n•i.)Mllt " T•lt'W,.. ..
"lllfll(• 1+1f TllM"'" .. "9rtKOH .. WtMflllr • Allfi ltt!ttn " .. ... ,. "!!"'! 11~ M.11 .... • .,..,,.. " ... '
1 ' • '
' I '
11
I
' I
Z DAILY PILOT N Th11rsd;q, J1nu1ry l!S, 1970 t.:: .
Mal"ijua1aa F o1111d ..
Four Arrested
On Drug Rap
A team of narcotics detectives cf>n·
fJ$Cited half-kilo of marijuana and ar·
rested four persons al a Cost.a ri.tesa
apartment they had visite<i for another
rta.son Wednesday.
Besides the pound of marijuana. Sgt.
, -Tohn Regan and Narcotics Investigator
Norm Kutch alleged they took three
~smoking pipes and a small brass pot con·
. talnin&: af>parent marijuana debris as
evidence.
The oe<;Upants of the apartment al 1771
Whittier Ave., were booked on charges or
possession of marijuana. with complaints
being sought today from the Orange
_-Q>unty District Attorney.
, The suspecl<i were identified as:
-Siepbea M. Pei.mu. 28, of 121 Main
St, Huntington Beach, who owns a cafe.
--RObert J. Beadle, 29, of Long Beach,
sales representative for a major soap
company.
• -J\tlchal'I D. Reed, 21. a student at
~wilr.d College, Oahu, Hawaii.
-Daria J. Won, 21, of the Whittier
.A.\·enue address, whosa octupation was
DOt lisled.
.. Sgt. Regan said he knocked at the rear
~oor of the apartment .and identified
Mesa:· Council
,Meeting · Site
For Fair Board
Conducting I.he second in a community-
\risit series around the county. the 32nd
pistricL· A&ricultural Association will
meet tonight in Costa Mesa City Council
chambers for monthly business.
The Fair Board will convene at 8 p.m.,
welcomed by Mayor Alvin L. Pinkley and
City Manger Arthur R, McKl'nzie, with
mostly rouUne matters shown on the
agenda.
Secretary-Manager Alfred Lutjeans
said today he will have several items to
discun in the manager's report period,
but did not explain them further.
One matter to be talked over is the
Coita Mesa Police Department's anti·
drug abuse program which is scheduled
for late' next month on fairgrounds pro-
perty.
Lutjeans said there will be no
discu..ulon of the 1970 budget. becau.5e: it
has noL been returned yet from reivew by
finance officials in Sacramento.
Fair Board directors recently initiated
a series of meetiop out!lde their head·
quarters .at the fairgrounds, designed to
give Orange County citizens a better kt.ea
of OOw they work.
The public is invited lo these meetings
and is encouraged to contribute thoughts
and ideas for the 1970 Orange County
Fair and Exposition to be held next 11um-
n>er.
Fair Board members met tn the
Fullerton Civic Center last October for
the first 11uch conunwllty-visit seS.!i.on
and others will be •!aged througboot the
county in the coming year.
State T ax Chairman
Raps Law's Loopholes
·LOS ANGELES (UPI)
Assemblyman \\'illiam T. Bag I e y,
~hainnan of·the Revenue and Taxation
Emmlttee, said today the ' • r i r s t
ority" in tu refonn must· be the c.Jos.
ot loopholes.
' The San Rafael Republican said the
$J.prioritles included curbing unlimited oil
pletion allowances, removing special
treatment for capitaJ gains, taxlng
igh income recipients who now pay no
llous. llmitlnr .. cessive ct.predation
lllledudlons and going after tbe t.az:
4ropouts that owe taxea but do oot pay
them."
1
DAILY PILOT
OltANGE COAST PUeLl!>HtNG COM'ANY
!'f\r.,t N. W11I
, ... ldtnt t noll ,lllllllftW
J1c\-It. Cu1l1y
Vitt ltr•iWlll tl!f ~ti Mtn.t~r
l~•Pll•• 1(,,,.;1
£0110r
lkomtl A. M11rpl.ift 1
M•"'91"9 Ed~tor
himself, while Kutth stood by In front,
then opened the door when the occupants
balked.
The detective ordered everyone to stay
where they were, but claimed that
Pe1man succeeded in learing loose a
sheet of tin nailed over a v.'indow and
tossed out the alleged marijuana.
Detective Kutch, meanwhile, was io
San.ta Ana today seeking complaint.a
~ainst aeven persons arrested Tuesday
in a series of raids which netted 11 kilos
ol marijuana, assorted drug pills and 1
bit of heroin.
Six men and one woman involved in
those thr.ee incidents are held in custody
pending issuance of complaints based on
evalus.Uon of"the felony charges on wh.ich
they were booked.
Fro11a Page J
JORGE NSEN ••
after and opened Balboa Marin e
Hardware and another store in San
Pedro, both of which are flourishing t~ day. ' .,,..
S~ce then, Jorgensen has been highly
aet.ive Jn work on the Rotary Club a
dgroup w hi ch be has &erved as pr~i· ent.
He has served three terms as an elder
of.St. An.drew's Presbyterian Church and
this coming year will be the president of
the chamber's Commodore's Club.
Other current projects for the new Man
of the Year Will include direction of Hoag
Hospital's_ huge "Reach Years" fund
dr!ve destined to raise millions for a new
hospjUJ tower complex.
Jorgensen and his wife. Nora, have
three daughters, Ann Christine, Kathleen
and. Mary 9race, and a son, David Paul.
. His favorite sport is sailing. His hobbies
include ph~ography and "'oodwork.
Veteran f1.lm and television star and
Newport resident Andy Devine served as mas~ of ceremonies for the eveninR.
Besides the naming of the Man of the
Year, the Chamber general membership ~ttended the Wtallation of Corona de!
ar. lawyer CharJe.s Currey as their new president.
Currey, accepting the Chamber gavel
from retJrlng president RJchard Stevens
promised an energetic year of in:
volvement by ~ chamber with strong
emphasb: on environmental issues. A new
committee would be formed to examine tht!-Jssue, he vowel.·
Newport Beach Mayor J') 0 r e e n ~arshall installed the new officers and d!~rs of the Chamber and its several d1VJsions.
She praised the Chamber tor its in.
volvement in the city's issues of the past year.
"Eve~ if the Chamber disagreed "'ilh
s.ome ~1ty policies, its strong particip<1-
tion with city matters shows how slron~
and via~Je it is as a great part of this community," she said. Wi~ers or . the Chamber·~ annu;il
Floating Chnstmas Tree and Boat
Parade this past Christmas season were
awarded their large gold brandy·snifter
tropbies at the dinner.
About 400 persons attended lhe annual event
From_ Page J
MONSTER •..
fi~e to siz: feet. long swimmi ng away from
his outstretched net.
Poor brave chap. ~tany like hlm sue·
cumbed in exact.ly the safne manner at
Loch Ness.
The theory behind all thls speculation i~
that local residents deposited unwanted
baby alligators into the lake some years
ago and that a school of the fully grown
creatures is now happily at home in the
reservoir.
\Ve, of course. know better.
The Labrador looks out acros!l lhe
vral.er, the calls of nature apparently
q~ieled. His attra9ive mistress slubs her
cigarette and keeps a careful eye on her
happily playing little boy.
Be.low the '"'aters a creature dating
back to the beginning of time cast a rt:'d
scaly eye on the gull dabbling his beak at
the y,•ater'!I ed~e.
. History is in the making at this dece p-
tively peaceful Orange reservoir ...
. -
Fi1·e Chars House
Ne\vport Beach firemen survey. damage at vacant
house at 214 Goldenrod Ave., Corona del Mar afler
blaze Wednesday night. Damage was estirna'ted at
$5,000. The cause is still being investigated. Fire--
men said blaze broke out abollt 9: 15 p.m., damag· .
ing upstairs portion of a wini of the house. Neigh·
bors noticed flames and called for help. No one was
injured. -
F rom Page 1
BEATING ...
ing manslaughter.
Kcwport Delective Cspt. Lou Heeres
th is morning revlewed the bay's death
last J\1ay 31 at a house at 2327 J\1argarel
St reel.
Police arrived at the home, Hee.res
said, after Patrick v.1as found submerged
underwater in a bathtub, Shear told
them.
Heeres said that Shear told in·
vestigators he heard the boy splashing in
the tub, then heard gurgling. After a
minute's silence he investigated.
Shear then allegedly told investigators:
he pulled the boy from the water and ran
to neighbors for help.
Firemen were summoned to the house
and they applied eittemal heart massage
and other emergency measures.
Coroner's investigators said today the
cause or death was listed as suffocation
brought on by inhaling stomach cootents.
But .the boy also had a laettated liver
and pancreas, coroner's aides related te>-
day.
Those injuries, they said, could hav e
been caused by emergency measures ap.
plied either by the parents or by firemen
on the unconscious boy.
Thus, the death was ruled accidental.
The case remained closed until the
baby was brought into the hospital in
Fontana.
Shear was arrested at the couple's
home and initiaUy booked on charges of
murder and felony child beating.
Attorney Bell to Oppose
Hirstein £01~ County Seat
Tustin attorney Paul M. Bell \Ver!·
nesday announced his candidacy for the
Fourth District supcrvisorial seat no1v
held by \Villiam Hirstein. Bell is the
fourth man to announce for the cant·
paign.
A resident of Orange County for eight
years, Bell, 32, said he decided to run for
the seat because he wanted to participate
in county government.
"I'm probably the only candidate in
Li do Isle Ma n Heads
Ma rch of .Diu1es Drive
Dr. Jerrel Richards of Lido Isle is
heading the January fund drive in
Newport Beach for the National Foun-
dation-March of Dimes.
Since 1958, the March of Dimes, once
the nalion 's chief volunteer organization
in the fight against polio, has turned its
energies and resources toward the
prevention of birth defects.
this campaign who hasn·t been ap-
proached by 'an unnamed group of in-
terested citi zens' who begged me lo run ."
he sa id.
The attorney said he feels the .biggest
Issue of the campaign will be pollution.
"The paramount issue facing Orange
County is pollution and overpopulation
with the resultant destruct.ion of our rural
atmosphere. I think we ought to do
everything possibte to avoid being choked
out of our homl's," he said.
"r think government at the county le.vel
should be brooght closer to the. voters
and the voter~ should.Jake a more acti\',e
interest in their 00111n1y's government.''
Bell commented.
Otller candidates running for the seat
Include Anaheim businessman Burr,..
\Villia1ns, Villa Park J\1ayor James T.
Workman , and Cslvin Pebley, Anaheim
councilman and ex-mayor. The in·
cumbent, Hirstein, has not made a
formal statement on his intention to seek
reelection. He has. however, gi\·en strong
hints that he will step down at the end of
this term.
CIA Helped~
Biafra Chief
Flee Nation?
GENEVA (UPf) -Biafran.Jeader Gen.
Odume.gwu Ojukwu was flown out of
Biafra last Saturday in a U.S. aircraft -
together with aides, the.Ir fam ilies and his
white Mercedes automobile,' American
IOl.n;cn aaid today .
The fil1ht , was arranged by U.S. In·
~lligeoce, they said.
The American consulate In Geneva
denied the repor't3 or any knowledge Gr
V.S. ,cooperation in Ojukwu's flight.
,'there was soine confusion t n
Washington when it became known thlt
Ojukwu also wanted to take hlJ
automobile, but after hurriedly lookin g
around, intelligence came up with a gray·
painted super-constellation cargolinef 7
called a "gray ghost." !.
Report.. from intelligence sources in
both Nigeria and what formerly wri:
Biafran territllry include the followi"'
items:
-About 15 n;ien at the head ol u,·
Biafran government stood the danger (t
facing trial. All of them except one a,;.e·
known to be out q£ Biafra and it was
"hoped" the last man got out as well,
-U .. Gen. PhUip;Elllong, commandi11&,
Ria.fran forces aftu Ojukwu left, will no·l
be trled by Nlgerji. . :,
-.All Bilfran cileer civil servants .re
coopers.tin( with 'Nigeria. .
-Efflong's surrender broadcut wa:;
made.from a mobile radio truck, and noti:
fmn the main tran..mtiWng station at
U1a rtear Ull Airport. This is why it wn
not picked up by European monitoring'
litations and oo.ly in Lagos and Libreville.
-Ojukwu is a wealtby man aM JS'
known to have half his fluid as.5& in
London and the other haU in Geneva.
ft i:r -tr
Fro11a l'age I
BIAFRA .•.
and eitpose the enormous crimes she·
plans to commit against our people." .
Although he named no natio1tt
specifically. his reference to t h e
responsibilit}r of nations that supported ·
the federal government of Gen. Yakubu·
Gowon was an obvious reference to Bri•·
tain and the Soviet Union. '·
Gowon's government bas a~pted
relief oTfer.s from Britain, whtch ·ta
preparin1 a pla{leload of medical .su,:•
plies. and fro'm the league oI Red CroSs·
soCieites but specifically ruled out arrf·
assistance from nations or charitable
ag!Rcies tllat dirleclly supported Biafra ii(
the civil war. The Soviet iJnion has mad&
no public offers of relief. •
Gowon, on the other hand. promised at
the surrender cerempny a genera[
amnesty and protection for the in-:
h<tbitants of Biafra. .
"We know most of you were dragged;
in~ it,'' ~said. '·
..
•.
The infant, Heeres related, is recover·
ing from the injuries and ls ready to be
released.
Investigators v•ere attempting to have
the child released to protective custody in
a home for dependent children.
15th semi-Qllnual SALE . • ·.
?o1rs. Shear, "'hose age was not im·
mediately available, v.•a! pregnant with
Eric at the time of Pa!Mck's death.
She is not being held, police said.
Business Star ts
With Stock Lost
A Costa J\1csa man just entering the
r'etail tire sale business was relieved of
his inventory Wednesday night in a $433
residential garage burglary as the family
ate dinner inside.
Richard H. DeMotte, of 256 Broadway,
:;;aid his young son had di splayed eight
!ires on the front lawn shorfly before to
three potential customers, v.1ho left
·without buying.
The victim told police the tires were
returned to the garage, then discovered
n1issing along "'ilh nine o!hers when he
checked them after the meal.
Officer Frank Uphan1 :-aid Dei\totte
learned the trio -or foreign extraction,
114·0 barefoot and nne 1.1·caring sandals -
had been seen in the ;il!ry behind the
home.
MJIDRIGJIL Cl>'t1T ON C'if~1'
l tG. l•t. NOW
SPACIOUS f.tltAWl lt
339.
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Jt•oll'te F. C0Uh11 N..,....,, kKl'I
City l•llW
................ °"'-'
359. Dil:ISSf lt IU~ (: 1. ,,.,
I UINlSNIO 79 • GOLD MlllOI lC:IJ • ... NOW Jumbo Christened "
0
" H ER IT AGE
·.
\
1211 Weit l elbe• le11fe,...1rl
MeiPiatt Acf41Wil P.O .... 117S. t2&1l --Olllil w..., Jill W.1...,...,..
"""""''-di: la ~I A-
HllflttfW• '*11; 17!'.J l-cfl ·~-.......
But FAA Says 747 Needs Changes
WASHINGTON (UPI) -First Lady
Pat Nixon splasbed red, white and blue
water onto the nation's biggest jetliner
today. But there was some que.slion
whether the newly christened jwnbo jet
would be permitted to make its first coin·
n1crclal flight on time next '>''P<"k.
The Fed@ral A\•ia tion Admi ni~tr111inn
sa id the 700.QOO.pound. •OO-pa!':i;:cngcr
Boeing 747 -the Pan Amerinen Clipper
'"t"oung Amerlra" -had not y~t sue·
ctssfully pa5sed lests or its emerg<'n cy
evacuation gystem.
Even as the christening was taking
place at cold Du I 1 es lnte.m•Uonal
Airport, the FAA said modlficallon1
would bave to bt ms.de In two of the t 1
escape chutt?s used to e., a c u a t •
passengers quickly Ir: case of an accident.
I
In three separate tests at Roswell, N.M.,
earller this week. the chutes malfunc-
lioned, the FAA said.
Bolh P:>n Am and Boeing said lh!y
"'ere conrident morUfi c<1tlons could be
n1ade in tlnle for the scheduled \\led·
ne~rlny inaugural flight from Ne'v York
In London.
Because or 11~ concern about the escape
!i~ srem. lhe f.AA limited fnur dcmonstra-
tiOfl flight! today for dignitaries al Oulle:i;
to 22S person~.
The F"AA insist!' that a plantload of
pa!-scngcr~ be able to c\·acuate the plane
from only fi ve doon wit hin 90 seconds. A
total of 381 ~rsons -a planeload -
evacuated "''ilh 87 Sff'OndS In one of the:
Roswell te1U, but the test was not con·
1idere4 succeuful be.cause one of the
chutes failed.
'
WITH ALL THE EXCITEMENT AN D ROMANCE OF SPAIN , , ,
A BOLDLY ROBUST ELEGANCE THAT COULD ONLY BE
MADRIGAL • , , AND NOW FOR THE VHY flRST TIMI
llN .. Sm
HUOI 0.1.ID •••• 14t.
COMMODI 2·DlAWll
IUIHT STAND .... lit.
•OW
NOW
WE HAVE THIS MAGN IFICENT BEDROOM COLLECTION ALL
ON SALi AT SPECIAL UDUCED ~RICISI Try cur convenie nt
revolving cherge.
)'our favorite 111tcnor designer will bt hopp11 to nssisr 11r·!I,,,
H.J.G ARRETf fURNITURE
PR.O~ESS IONAL
INTElttOk DlSISHIAS
111$ MAll:IOlt ILVD.
COSTA MISA, CALIJ.
•••·0271
r,
209.
135.
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'· '
Horoscope
Professional Care ,for
CHILDREN, ELDERLY, CONVALESCEf\!T
· In Home -Hospital '· "
24 HOUR SERVICE
HOUR-D.t,"1-WHK
AWARDED PARENTS MAGAZINE
GUARANTEED SEAL
Sagittarius: Watch
Physic~/· Condition
WE SIT BETTER, Inc •
South Co•• AIMCf
6 4J.J 274
Suki111 1 lltW, tltltln1 c1rt1r?
Thtre i1 1 'rttlc•I thort111 of tr1i11tl1
MEDICAL
AND·
DENTAL'
ASSISTANTS
.S~orl, inteo1i~• counot fully '<iuolify ~·
In <in Aulot11nl in the oflice of o ~ki"n
or Oenli11. ' 111on1h pratram '"' O•nkll A1·
ai1lont or Modicol Olli(• lttctpti011i1t. 1
month prog111m lor Meclicol J.11j1lont. Doy
or evening cloue1, lifetime plo<e011nt
oui1tonce ol no odclillonol co1t,
Southern California College
of
Medical and Denlal Assistanls
(formerly l os An91le5 Colltttl
;,
ii\@@[jl~[DffirOO)
by lht Accrediling Commission of !ht
N,,,·s. Assn.. of Trd. ind Technlul Sthls. •
Writ• or Phortt for frH lrochvre .~
1717 South Brookhurst
Anaheim
Phone · 635-3450
FRIDAY
JANUARY 16
By SYDNEY OMARR
People do lhlng1 in Juaty
manoer" today, l n c l u d I ag
eating, playing, loving. No_\b-
ing seems to happen halfway;
all the way or nolhlng.
ARIES \March 21-April 19):
Accent on possessions, inoney.
opportunity to obtain' genuioo
bargain. Especially good if
you collect art objects, ·stamps
or coins. Be alert. Income
potential gets boost.
TAURl)S (April 20-May 20):
Take initiative. Superiors ap-
preciate your worth. Build
your own self-esteem. Don 't be
satisfied with second best; you
can be nu1nber one. Realize
this and act accordingly.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20):
You discover secret. Could be
key which ends feeling of
being alone. Bring to surface
natural sense of humor. Give
fun play to intellectual curio-
sity.
CANCER (June 21-Ju1y 22):
Trust hunches. Your intuiti<lli.
won't let you down today. Ac-
cent on friends, hopes, desire.s.
You could be surprised by
lovely gift. Member of op·
posite sex pays meaningful
compliment.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22 )°:
Stress on obligations .•
responsibilities. Career is in
. spotlight but takes some
twist s. turn s. Your
showmanship is appr~iat~.
But be sure your are familiar
I
~WJIFt~~
ON AU: FALL
& HOLIDAY
MERCHANDISE !
"" ~0% to 70% OFF REGULAR ' PRICE •
• • • to make way for our 1970 Swim Suits
jsALE STARTS TODAY!-SHOP EARLY!j
• ALL COATS •
REGARDLESS
OF LENGTH
Trtmendou1 Selection
1/3 OFF REGULAR
PRICE!
Wool and Crocheted
BETIER DRESSES VESTS
$8 to $35
R09ulor to $75
Wool ond Orlon
SWEATERS
$6 i o $16
R19ular to $30
MlsceUaneou1 lttml
GOWNS, ROBES,
PANT SUITS, ETC.
30°/o to 50°/o
RtcJular Price
OFF
$9 to $13
R09ulor to $26
Wool and Polynter
PANTS
$6 to $12
R09ulor to $28
Orlon • J trsey
TOPS
$4 to $9
R09ulor lo $11
WOOL· POLYESTER & KNIT FAMOUS BRAND
COORDINATES
MANY GROUPS
TO C:HOOSE FROM
Balboo l•lond
204 Matin• Ave.
Huntln9fon Center
7777 Edlntlf
1 /3 t• 1 /2 OFF REGULAR
PRIC:E
Use Your W•t Se•I Charge
Master Ch1rge-8ankAm•rie•rd
AT OUR SIX
SOUTHLAND LOCATIONS
South c ... 1 Piao
UJl ltlstol
£1 S09uoclo .
321 Moln Strfff
Costa Mtsa
270 E. 17111 St.
.......... h
240 lroadwoy
with basic requirements.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22 ):
Journey could be 'Xl agenda.
Much gain indicated through
written word. Solution to pro-
blem cou1d be found by
reading your paper. Unex-
pected c a 11 , long-disic:pce,
could be a highlight.
UBRA (Sept. 23-llct. 22):
Delve deep into wh'at appears
to be myst~ious area. And
maintain air of mystery,
younilr -others will be in-
trigued. Money r e g a rd i n g
estate or property' could be _
coming your Way.
SCORPIO (Oct. 2}.Nov. 21):
Lie low -play waiting gapie,
Permit mate,. partner to take
initiative. Spotlight on how you
develop public relations. Don't
get involved in foolish dispute
-especially one with legal
overtones.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov . 22·
Dec. 21): Your diet, health,
general p b y s i c a I condition
deserve attention. Be percep-
tive. Obtain hint from Scorpio
message. Don't be in too much
or a hurry.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 2%-Jan.
19): Emotions fiy h ig.h:
romance e-0uld be featured.
But also make some room :or
logic. Don't rely completely on
im pulse. You will ultimately
have to face yourself.
AQUARIUS (Jan 21>-Feb.
18): Property matters con-
tinue to demand your time.
Spread influence; broaden
contacl.S. Get more than one
opinion . You may be slightly
angered by individual who is
pompous. Maintain sell~on
trol.
PISCES (Feb. 19·Mareh 20 ):
Now you can set up a better
program of communlcaUons.
Relatlons improve w i t b
neighbors, family members.
You are versatile, but your
forces are less scattered.
IF TODAY lS YOUR
BIRTHDAY you are a
spiritual person. You look
deep for meanings nOt cvidtnf
on surface of situa tions ,
persons. This is a time when
you prepare and plant seeds
for future development. Don't
rush into permanent tie.
To Und ou! more 1balil l'OUrstlf •~d •~lrolollv, order Srdney Ofl"l1rr'J 50· 111~1 booi<lll, Tht Trvth Aboul A1troloev. Se-nd blrllldtlt 1od SO Cf~!$ to Omtrr 8ookl'lt, lht DAILY PILOT,
8cl! :'2.0, Grind Ct~lrll S11tkm, N-York, N.Y, 10Cll.
Dieters
Invited
Drop-outs can still be drop--
offs if they join women of the
Harbor Area who are in·
terested in Taking Off Pounds
Sensibly (TOPS) .
Newcomers as well as
former members are invited
lo attend weekly sessions of
TOPS Merging Menfiaids on
Thursday evenings at 7:30
p,m, in Woodland Elementary
School, Costa Mes·a.
Tonight has been designated
Back to TOPS Night with a
special program. Mrs. Leon
Townsend will review the
club·s history and ac-
complishments and a s s i s t
participants in a personal in·
ventory .
The program includes week·
ly weigh.ins , g1'.9Up
discussions,, lectu res on menus
and food preparation, anct
group involvement.
Meetings are free and open
to the public. Those interested
may phone Mrs . Townsend at
6'12·1804.
' ·Selection
Scheduled
Judging for the first level of
competi tion in the a n n u a I
Hallmark Art Contest f'>r high
school seniors· wU1 take place
Saturday, Jan. 17.
Announcement wu made by
'Mrs. Keith Keppler, fine arts
chairman of the J\MJor ~It
Club of Newport Beach, &tea
spomor. •
Winners · will be selected '
from each high school in the
Newport·P.fesa Unilied School
district and their work will be
sent to district competition .
Further judging takes place
at the state level and the
Hallmark Co. awards four
cash '"'ards including a $1,000
lirst prize .
Winners from lhe area
schools will be honored at a
club luncheon and presented a
cash prize.
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Tl'lursdaJ, J11111111 .'' 1970 DAILY PILOT JI[
•
'
FUR SALE
·EXTRAVAGANZA
3 DAYS ONLY
FRI. JAN. 16, SAT. JAN.,17, MON. JAN. 19 ,
'
HUNTING FOR A SPECIAL FUlt, ,1 AT THE PERFECT PRICE? JOIN ftOllNSON1S POSH
SAP'Aftl AND GO WHERE THE GREAT ONES ARf'.! V0U SEE', WE1Y£ GA.THE.RED HUNDREDS• .
OF SUMPTUOUS, P'JNE QUALITY FURS"!'ftOM Ou1t'ENTIRE 10 STORE STOCK AHD WE~RE
MOVING THEM FRON STORE TO STOftE FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE, SO FRIDAY, SATUftDAY
AHO· MONDAY. YOU.CAN SEE A WEALTH OF P'UR IH ftOBIH~ON's HE.WPORT BEAof ~uft~
SALON, EACH ON£ 15 A TROPHY, TAGGED ~,. A SAVINGS vou1LL NEVER Sllt°QH·
ANY OTHER SAFARI, WE'LL EVEN HAVE EXTAA SALES PEOPLE OH HAND Tb ASSIST
YOU. ALL MAY BE PURCHASED ON OUR LAY AWAY PLAN. CREDIT TERMS ARE AVAIL.ABLE,
•
NATURAL MINK CAPES
366.00-566.00
NATURAL MINK STOLES
466.00-526.00-666.00
NATURAL OR DYED MINK JACKETS
466.00-666.00-766.00-1066.00
DYED BROADTAIL-PROCESSED
.
JACKETS AND STROLLERS
246.00-366.00
NATURAL MINK ST.ROLLERS
966.00-1166.00
NATURAL MINK COATS
1366.00~l 666.00-1966.00
. ' ,Uft PftODUCTS 1..ABELED TO IHOW ColJNTRV Of!' ORIGIN OF IMPORTED FURS •
I ,, . " " " SHO~ FRIDAY ANO-MONDAY UNTIL 9:30
"
ROBINSON'S NEWFDRT ·FASH ION !SL AND • 644·2800
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OAILY PILOT (N)
It's . Sunday
·.1
But Cash ,Registers. Ring Everywher~
"' N-'W YORK (AP) -lt's their stores open .•. " sald a nights and continue through ~~i.-:y and the cash registers J .C. Penney spokesman the weekend ,'' when the car is
.are ringing in Larey Voet 's Penney, Montgomery Ward available, he said.
litl'P'<inarklt. bwt to him they and Sean R o e b u c k ex.
don'l haw the same musical perimented with Sunday sales But opening either large or ~lme as on wee.kdays. In some stores for tbe first small stores on Sunday is nol ,.... as simple ·as It might seem. t'J,~'t think anybody likes time late last year and say The extra .work <lay is ex· •'Orklng on Sui1days," Voet they Intend lo conUnue the -8id watbh.ing a w 0 m a n prlcUee. pensive and can cut into the
1queeze a head of lettuce'then Sunday has a marked ad· profits from increased sa les -
to&s•it back on the pile. vantage to some shoppers. if they do , in fact , Increase.
~ Like it or not, Voe t , Husbands whO c 0 mm u 1 e And many states have "blue
l"m&nager of an A I be r s between suburb and city can la"·s." These are so called
'.llJPtrmarket in Cincinnati, accompany their Y.'ives to help because the severe moral dic-
i al)d other retailers ilcross the make decisions on major tales of 18th Century Con· ~nation are faced with a' grO\\·· purchases, 1. n d excursions necticut Puritans were bound
In& ,trend lo remain opeo 0 ,1 lQl'Ough rarribllng department in a blue book. The blue laws
,. Sundays. ~ stores take the 'form of Sunday restrict sales of many items
• "Our store stays open,only outings for the whole family . on the Sabbath.
because others lire Blue laws have been "All our adverP,sing Is • oeen ... it's a chain ·reac. geared for the weekends," modified over the years 8\1d'"
•,tion,•• he said. frequently have been the said the sales manager for Even old-line department Ralph Williams Ford in Los center of legislative con·
stores -pressed by com. Angeles. "More bu!lneas is troversy.
petition and an apparent de· done during the weekende than In Kentucky, for e:rample, It
• mand by shoppers rcrr a place during the weekdays." Is legal to buy a glass of milk
.. to buy on weekends -are One-car families and work· on Sunday, but not. a full bot-
• 8laying open on the traditional Ing wives like Sunday shop. tie. You can buy a cooked
day or rest. ping. reports a Food Fair hamburger: but not a frozen
~ ••()Jr stores will remain market manager in Los one.
~open only in areas where our Angeles. Busi n e s~ is Tn 1'1assachuselts food may
'"ma jor competitors. , . keep ''especially heavy F r i d a y be sold only by farmers or
~-'~--'-~--'-~~--'-~~~-'-'~~~-
stores which during the week
employ not more than three
persons. including the owner .
ln spite of blue laws, aome
m'rchaots· have been
determjne<i to open on 'Sun-
days, with varying results.
In Hopkinsville, :Ky., for ex.
a.mple, the S. H. Kress Co.
was recently fined S50 for
violating the state's Sunday
closing law. A similar charge
against Big K, a discount store
was dropped.
Sunday s a I e s of general
merchandise in Ohio are pro-
hibited, but they continue.
"Nobody enforces the law, 1
guess because it's an un·
popular one," said John C.
Young, city attomey for
Columbus. "They tried to en--
force it , •• about five or six
year ago ••• went through 200
to ~ cases ••• but there was
so much pressure from the
business commun ity, they
finally stopped enforcing it .''
Al Jl.tateri, of Bismark. N.O.,
challenged the city's Sunday
closln& ordinance and his
grocery store-which baa six
employes -was c losed
down .
"I did 25 percent of my
weekly volume on Sunday,"
Materi said.
However, theord in a nee
modeled after North Dakota
state law allows groceries
operated by not Tnore than
three employes to remain
opm on Sunday11.
Retailing officials worry,
loo, about the effect of Sunday
work on the attitude of
employ es.
"Being open on Sundays
makes the 1 retail business
unattractive to current and
prospective employes," said a
Harrisburg store manager
privately.
Some shoppers, however.
are almost vehement about
doing away with laws that
prohlbit the sales.
''It's ridiculous when you
aren't allowed tO make an
honest living on Sunday or any
day. Our nag Is on the moon
but we still have law1 which
keep mothers from buying
milk on Sunday," said ).trs,
Mildred Peck of Louisville.
Strong sennoos w e r e
preached against S u n d a y
openings recently in Alabama
when it appeared Sears Stores
might test the constitutlonality
or the state law pennltth1g
sale only of only "essenUal"
items.
Sears did not open there,
and P. L. Balden, Sears
manager in Birmingham. says
the company has no plans to
open now.
'The Southern B a p ti s t
Orthodo:r Jewlah groups In
particular have i:ressed for
change in the blue laws. The:
Jewish Sabbath ii Saturday.
Blue laws in some stales,
like Penmylvania and Texas,
provide that members or fa iths
which observe the Sabbath on
a day other than SWlday can
open as Jong as they close one
olllu day tn the week.
Consumen and churches
have reacted in varying ways
to Sunday sales.
• . • "It takes meanin: aw4y
from the seventh day or the
week, the day of rest. I only
shop then in an ell}ergency,"
said Eva Brose, 4t;" a library
"-'Orker in the same city. •
Discouot houses in some
areas have long been sellhlg
on Sundays.
"Sunday Is Ollf besl day of
the week.' •. we aell
everything -c 1 o th Inf.•
jewelry, appliances, hardwal'fl,
toys," said Anthony Nucei11
assistant manager of Atlantic
Thrift Center, a Sou t b
Philadelphia discount house •.
"We haven 't run into any
church reaction . . . • it
becomes a way of life," he ad-
"As far as I'm concerned,
it's fine for anyone to be open
on Sunday ••. It's like any
other day of the week. Some
people can't shop on other
days," said Denny Hirsch, 24,
a ClnclnnaU school teacher. ded. ConvenUon in that state pass-,...
ed a, resolution that called\p;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;ii;!I
upon its members to patronize
stores that "Observe the
Lord's Day " Rev. Oley C.
Kidd of the 103,000 member
Birmingham Baptist Assn.
said the resolution "by in·
ference" called upon Baptists
not to trade with stores that
might attempt Sunday open-
ings.
GOP E;fes Senate FABRICS '70 Election Races Start 1VOW OPEI\'!
. • ~Thing of Beauty
Ul"I C...,.,,_ ..
: Scenting the photographer, a T?fal stag proudly displays i1s majestic antlers
. as it pauses bet\veen trees in th1 s wintery \Vildlife scene at 1 he Opel Zoo's
deer reservation in Kronberg. Germany.
. I I .
WASHINGTON (UPI) -
The election year tempo, more
or less muted until now, has
started picking up with two
b I g • s tat e Republi cans an·
nouncing their bids f o r
Democratic--OCCtJpiecl Senate
iieats.
Josiah A. Spaulding. 41. a
liberal Republican and ronner
state party chairman. an·
nounced hls candidacy for the
Republican senatorial nomina·
lion in Massachuse tts.
rr he gets the nomination.
Spaulding, whose family ties ·
go back to A I e x and e r
Hamilton, would face
De1nocralic Sen. Edward M.
Kennedy, heir lo the legacy of
one of lhe nation 's most
famous families. in I he
November electiafl. Jacqueline
Kennedy Onassis was a
bridesmaid at Spaulding 's
wedding in 1949, and Mrs.
Spaulding later was an at·
tendant at John F. Kennedy's
wedding.
Rep. George Bush (R.Tex.).
said Tuesday he would seek
the Senate seat now tield by
Sen. Ralph Yarborough, a
liberal Democrat. Bu 1 h • s
father Prescott Bush was a
senator from Corr,1ecticu1.
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FINAL:: STOC:KS!
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At the same time, the deal directly with the In-
Senate race in California d.ividual _with you and me." started ta king on some fonn. Rep. Jahn v. TUMey, 35, son Through his office Kennedy
of !onner heavyweight champ said: "l expect to have a
Gene Twmey, has announced vigorous Rep u b 1 i can o~
he would seek the Democratic ponent."
nomination in CaWornia. Bush, 4~year old Texas Other Dtmocrat.s mentioned as possiblf: candidates appear transplant who made a fortune
lo have backed off. in oil, announced his can·
IMPORTS
UNIQUE FABRICS • UNUSUA[ TRIMS
NEEDLE WORK e RUG KITS
494-2330
472 SO. COAST HWY.
1084 Irvine
Tustin
LAGUNA BEACH
OTHER LOCATIONS:
• 26161-C La Pai Road
Mi ssion Viejo
On the Republican side. Sen. didacy after conferring with
George Murphy received a President Nixon. He said
medical clearance from his Nixon has not committed him-I
doctors for a second six.year iielf to campaign for Bush but
lerm, apparently squelching the two are close political al·j
rumors he would step aside .;;l~ie~s.i..iiii-.;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.,!~::::::i~::ii:::iii:::iii:::iii:::iii:::iii~:::iii:::iiiii: fo r HE\V Secretary Robert H.11
Finch. Finch said Tuesday if
Murphy should not seek re.
election, ··1 would certainly
think about it." .
Spaulding, a Yale and
Columbia Jaw school graduate
who has never held elective
office. became the f t r s t
Republican to announce for
the Massachusetl.'I S e n a l e
seat.
He offered to debate Ken-
neqy and charged the senator
deals 1'through big unions, big
city machines, big business
and big . concentrations of
po\\·er. '' Spaulding said he
\\'ants the government
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for the
BEST MOVE
of
YOUR Lll'E
Call:
494-1025
580 Broadway
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' • . ; The DAILY PILOT~ t ·he ''Today'' Newspaper ~·
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DAILY PILDT
• ~ • HAPPY EXPRESSIONS ON OWNER'S FACES DON'T BETRAY WHAT IS AT THE END OF THE LINE OUTSIDE NEWPORT FIRE HQ FOR UNSUSPECTING PETS
.
l • •• . , • ' ~
Would Snoopy Be So Brave? PHOTOS BY RICHARD KOEHLER
'
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MOM HELPS VET, BUT RICHARD PHARO CAN'T LOOK AS 'Fl Fl' GETS RABIES SHOT FROM DR . KENDAL SVEDEEN
'POOKIE' DISCOVERS WHAT THE WAIT WAS FOR
BARBARA McCUTCHEON'S 'GI GI ' LOOKS FOR SYMPATHY BASK ET OF TOYS KEEPS TAMMY COHAN'S PETS COMPANY ,'CflARLIE,' NANCY BOATMAN SMILE RELIEF -IT'S OVER
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DAILY PILOT
BILI: RUSSELL
. " ...
~nghorns
~ay Play
. -,
Penn State
" : WASHING TON -Texas and Penn
St.a~. which failed to settle their dif-
fennces·this past season over which was
the nation's best college football team,
have boon di>cussing the poosibility fll
~ next fall, The Associated Preoo
learned Wednesday night.
"'Coaches Darrell Royal of Te1as and
toe Paterno of Penn State met for Oliminary talks Wednesday shortly
ter the National Collegiate Athletic
~ti.on convention passed a rule
~nnitting teams to scheduJe 11 regular
~son football games rather than 10.
'" • ...
" RIVERSIDE -Dan Gurney's hopes ol
t'jaalifying in the pole position today for
Sunday's Riverside-Motor Trend 500
N1'SCAR Grand National stock car rac•
ride with the weatherman.
'•Gurney, of Costa Mesa, C1>favorit•
Jftmelli Jones of TOrTance, Calif.,
lf;\SCAR champion David Peanon of
Spertanburg, S.C., and sup« speedway
king Lee Roy Yarbrough o( Columbia.
S..C .• drew qualifying• assignments well
down the list, virtually precluding them mm qualifying until Friday should
?/tdnesday's inclement weather eonl.inue.
The first 15 po&itions -along with
ciualifying prize money -are up for
p1bs toda y.
< .. • , NEW YORK -Johnny Murphy, whn
lrst gained fame as one of baseball's
}Qmier relief pitchers and tben as
.::meral manager of the world champion
N8 York Mets, died Wednesday night cl
a heart attack. He was 61.
The Mets' rise from baseball's depths
fo its heights coincided with Murphy's ap-
pointrnmts as general manager in
December, 1967, end the naming ol Gil
Hodges u manager two moolhs carli~.
Murphy was instrumental in luring
HodgeJ from the Washington Senators
end in acquiring some of the young stars
who helped the Mets to the championship
last season.
Murphy was signed as a player by the
New York Yankees olf the campus or
F ordham University in 1928 and joined
the parent team first In 1932 for two
games and then for a stretch of 10
straight seasons beginning in 1934.
He compiled a 93·53 won.Jost record . all
fn relier, and it was his numerous and
MM:Cessful trips out of the bullpen that
earned him \he rUckname "The Fordham
Fireman." • SAN FRANCISCO -University ol San
~ outshot Santa Clara 30-8 at
the free throw line to gain a 7o.M West
Coast Athletic Conference basketball
upset Wednesday nighL
'lbe Dons trailed only once, 3-2 at the
outset. and remained undefeated in
WCAC play with • 3-0 mark. The Dons
"If 9-S overall compared with Santa
CJJra·s lo-3. • Soot.h Carolina's towering Gamecocks
nvercame the Selvy mystique at Furman.
but Philadelphia's imposing Palestra cas~
IU spell on Calvin l\.furpby and Niagara.
South Carolina. the nation's tbird-
ranked college basketball power, came
from behind Wedne!day night for a 59-56
vktor)' over scrappy Furman, coached
by -&COring -Frank Selvy IUld triafred by his y...,..S brnlher,
<Jiorles, -poured in 22 points.
t
Best Team Always Wins.••Bnssell
By TOM FORTUNE
0t tlll DeilY Pllllt SltU
Not many people, if they had the op-
partunity, would laugh at themselves
and walk out on a $200,000 per year
job. But that is what big Bill Russell
sald he did ln a talk at Orange Coast
College this week.
A year ago the 6-foot-9 Russell was
player~ch for the Boston Celtics.
Today he Js, among other things, an
itinerant college campus lecturer on
racial issuea that transcend sport.
The living he makes for his family
Isn't as lucrative but he says he has no
desire to go back to lighting for re-
boundll.
Allowing that he made a smidge n
over $200,000 a season, he told the
OCC studenta:, "People tlllnk that'1 a
lot of money and they're righL But do
you know J WU underpaid?"
He said the chairman of the board
at ~eral Motors makes $600,000 or
$700,000 a year. •;Do you think he con·
triblltes more t.o General Motors than
I did to the Celtics?"
It would be tough to debate his
point. With Russell in lhe post the
ceiucs won 11 of the last 13 NBA
championships, a record of dominance
probably un.sw-passed in 1 po r t s •
Rwsell was the Celtics,· now just
another basketball club ·without him.
And why did he quit ? He told this
story at OCC:
"Last sea.son the Baltimore Bullets
had beaten us fiwe times in a row and
so we were really going to show them.
Well , with 25 secondll to go it was a Ue
game. \Ve got the ball. "Time out.
Time out, rel! So we're going to talk it
over and decide who gets the last shot
to execute these suckers. I started to
laugh.
"The other players said, 'Here we
are a tie game, why are you
laughing?' I told them, 'I feel silly.
Hete I am 35 years old. semi·nude,
standing here ready to kill somebody
for a damn basketball game.' So we
We!ll out and lost that one."
One ol the college students Wed
Russell if he f!Vfl considered himself
an ,Uncle Tom. ""Ibe only thing I've
ever considered myaelf ii a man," the
big bearded .... Aid.
No one is arguing that point either.
He is a man who could rile to the oc-
casion, time and.apjn. Even into mid··
dle age. Hia record says he was the
best and he•knowS it.
Russell gave bis all.tllne. all star
team as Elgin Baylor and Bob Pettit
at forwards, Jerry West and OSCar
Raber1s<>n at guards. "Need I go any
lurther!" be remarted.
The two Lakers, Baylor and west.
he rated 1he all·time best at their posi·
lions. Chamberlain he said was tough,
"the iecood·besl basketball player
~the last 10 years."
'J'ben he WU uked, ''Do you ~ally
think you abould have beaten the
La.ken last year?''
"Let me tell you something -lhe
bes& team always wins," RusseU
respooded.
And he was asked about form.er OCC
star Jolin Vallely. Did he know of him
now he's at UCLA?
"Yeah. UWe old cat 5hoots all Ole
time," said Russell. He begged off on
a qu.-i whether he thought Vallely
could mate the pros because he hadn't
aeon -enough tlm ... 'Ibat was Russell at OCC.
Seaver • Ill Newly Won Glory
•
It's a Long Way Down for 7·2 Lew
Big Lew Alcindor. the Milwaukee Bucks center, has a long way to
reach for a loose ball on the fl oor but makes the pickup without diffi·
culty. The fonner UCLA star went up to sluff in the winn1ng basket
with 12 seconds remaining to hand the Lo s Angeles Lakers a 115-113
defeat Wednesday night. His 46 points was a career high and a new
Milwaukee Arena record. John Egan of the Lakers has m issed in his
atte1npt lo gain possession.
Realignment Bogs Down Retiren1ent
Am1ounced
By B~ughan Rozelle May Intervene With Methods
NEW YORK (AP) -The I 3
clubowners of the new National Con·
ference ci the Nat.imal Football League
huddled again today to try to realign
themselves into three divi!>i~ that
please ~erybody.
After five more fruitless hours of
meetings Wednesday, Commissioner Pete
Rozelle said, "I can't report any progress
except I found oot some of the owners
are dissatisfied with their hotel ac·
commodations."
"I'd say that might be a plus because
maybe they'll want to go home."
Rozelle promised that the owners won't
leave New York ''until we have a resolu·
tlon on this. one way or another."
He said if the owners don 't unanimous-
ly agree to a M-4. divisional setup among
themselves this week, he will call the
1ignals f« them.
"Someone wtll have lo change his view
or I Will bav._ to become involved in
this," Rozelle said. "I do not have the
authority to move in, but I have the
responsibility to see that it's done."
Rozelle's methods coo Id i n v o 1 v e
unilateral action on his part or settlement
by lottery, through a series of blind
draws.
The commissioner has a few other
methods at his disposa l, which include
"locking them up" as he did during the
('ight.month hassle over the grouping of
the new American Conference.
One of those meetings lasted 36 hours.
llowever. tho.5e meetings were more
complicated than the current ones
because they involved the transfer of
three old NFL clubs lo give Lhe con·
ference 13 teams. After it was decided
which teams would switch. the realign·
ment was settled in a matter of hours.
Rozelle is anxious to settle the National
Conference and (£el on to other things.
like the 1970, BChedule and a new
television contract for all 26 teams.
Today's meeting was the fifth the NFL
owners have had on reallgrunent since
last ~fay whe.l Cl~eland. Baltimore and
Pittsburgh or the old NFL agreed lo
s\\•itch to the new American Cooference.
Cleveland will compete w i t h
Pittsburgh, Houston and Cincinnati in one
dh,ision. Kansas City, Oakland. San
Diego and Denver will comprise another.
Baltimore joins Buffalo, Boston. ~fiami
and the New York Jets in a five·leam
division.
Attempts to shift the 13 NFL holdovers
have run into all sorts of problems, in·
eluding geography, weather, stadium
size. gale potential, and compeUve abili·
ty. Owners are reluctant to be put into a
division which figures to be dominated by
a powerful club for any leoath ol Ume.
LOS ANGELES (AP) -A year ago,
'-"" Angeles Ram.! coach CJeorie Allen
talked All·Pro linebacker r.tuie Baughan
out of retlremenl 'Ibe chance! ot a
repeat performance by Allen this year
appear slim.
Baughan, who spent the last four of hi.s
10 National Football League years with
the Rams , announced bis retirement
\Vednesday after talking at length with
the coach.
Alien. who joined other Rams ofricial~
ln praising Baughan as a model man on
and off the football field, again said be
hoped Baughan might once more
reconsider.
Laver Fourth
In Balloting
For Top Athlete
NEW YORK (AP) -Tom' Seav.,.,
selected '!be Associated· """"' Male
Athlete cf the )'ear Wednesday, ls W«"·
rying less and enjoying life more now
that he is the toast fll the sporis world.
"I've been turning down many mc.:e in·
vi tattoos ~ I've accepted," Seaver said
o( the ban!luet circuit that awaits
baseball's brightest star every year.
"I've just been enjoying myself, spending
time with my family . I won't Jet all trus
interrupt my private life .
"But (he time to st.art worrying is when
they stop recognizing you ."
Seaver received 95 votes in the
balloting of sports writers a n d
1porucaste<s throoghout the country.
Namath got SL Steve Owemi, the
Heiaman Trophy winner from Oklahoma.
was third with 41 and Corona de! Mar
tennis JrO R9d Laver fourth with 40.
Then came Joe Kapp, Minne1ot c.
quarterback, with 35.
Seaver, the New York l\fets' AU-
American boy who led them to their
believ&it-or-n<t National League pennant
and World Series victory last year, is: en-
joying his latest aceolade now.
"It's quite an honor," he said of the
Associated Press award. "I'm very flat-
tered."
At 25 years of age, Seaver, who won 25
reguJar seuon games, one playoff game
and one World Series game last sea.son,
appears to b,ave a nwnber of worryless
years ahead ol him .
In fact, with his drive to aeromptish
the lmpoo..ible ._, the leader of the Meis,
it ian't unbelievable that he might match
Sandy Koufax's feat of winning the AP
award twice.
The only other double winners are ten-
nis player Don Budge and golfer Byr;o
Nelson.
By winning the honor, Seaver continued
baseball's dominat.ioo of the award. He is
the fifth straight baseball pl.ayer to win
the honor, following on the heels or
Detroit's DeMy McLain, and be i1 the
eighth in the last nine years.
To win it, Seaver had to beat out Joe
Namath, his football rival in Shea
Stadium. Namath, of course, led the New
York Jets to another impossible goal, the
American Football League's first Super
Bowl triumph.
CLIFF HAGAN
ffrevino's Success Breeds Problems
~ .
ait sources ck>se to the J2..year-old -ltar
defensive signal caller said chanCes or
Baughan returning to action ne:n season
are remote, l
Baughan, the Philadelphia Eagles'
oecond·round draft choice from Georgia
Tech, and named by the Associated Press
as an All·Pro in 1968, has undergone
surgery twi ce on his right kMe.
Hagan Resigns
As Dallas C'..oacli
DAU.AS (AP) -CUii Hafan noigned
.. coach cl· the Dallas OiaparTS!s fll the
American Basketball A s s o c i at I o n
WedneflCtay, 'saying the owneri .. thought
we should be in fint place and that I was
too demanding of the players."
t 1'ffOENIX (AP) -Le< Tre.tno is an
.y..ncan phenomenon -although ~'d
Jtgblbly change the tac to "Melican·
Alnerican" -inltant hero, a rags-to-
~ free,.wheeler, irrepressible.
;:But witb his meteoric rise from a $35
.!.week driving r l:lnge assistant to a
f6llllon dollar concern have come some J.foblemJ. Words such as "interest
(ate1.•• ''tight money,''
"aillmanagement" and "retaU outlets" ta,. been added IO hll vocabulary.
"';H•'a the aame py. though -1tlll
' talkative, oo&1ng confidence. But
-IDd problen1ll .,.. • IAtl•
... n1.
01Man, three yeara: 110 t never thought
l 'd have problems like this,'' said
Trevino.
Two and one-half years ago Trevioo
walked about two miles a day from bis
motel to the course that was the site of
the U.S. Open aolt championship becau!JC
he couldn't afford a cab.
Two weeks ago he instituted a suit -
"t think it was for $514,<nl" -in El Paso
Federal District Court against his
manaaen. Coosulllng Services. tnc., or
Akron. Ohlo, which al50 represents
aolfera Jullu1 Boro1, Orville Moody, I.ff
Elder aM others.
Among oCMr thlngs. Trevino claimed
mi11managemcnt .
"1tfy lawyer doesn't v.11nt me tn talk
much about It." he explained. "But t
claimed mismanagement. We didn't think
v.·e were gelling as much out of It a~ v.·e
should.
"Some of my major sponsors were
unhappy with their contracts, the way
they were being treated. I don't know
... :hat's going to happen next. That's all up
to the lawyer."
Trevino's life is well known.
He didn't know hi& father, was raised
by his grandfather, a Dallas gravt-
rlip:er. He perfected his golf game while
in the Marines, qualified for lhe 1967 U .s.
Open and went to Baltusrol on • string.
"I had a return ticket to El Paso and
$00, '' he recalled. He finished fifth In the
Open, 1nade some $6,000 "and wondered
how Jong this has been goina on."
He hll the tour -at &.he urgjng of his
wife -made more than $26,000 and, in
111&8. leaped to the front rank of golfs
super stars by capturing the most
prestigious Lille lhe game can offer. the
United States Open championship.
"He made just about as much out of
the U.S. Open as a player possibly
could," a fellow pro said. "He hadn't won
before, wasn't tied up with any contracts,
then won the big one. And be has that
penonallly a:oina: for rum ...
"You win the U.S. Open and people
think you made a million dollars,"
TrtYino said. "But it's not that easy, not
that fast. f\.foncy's tight now. and wtth the
interest rates what they are ..... :·
He would have played in Sunday's NFL
J>ro Bowl -the ninth au.star game to
which he was named -but reinjured the
knee late in the 1969 season.
Baughan disregarded mecUcal ad\ict
and returned to action in the Rams' 23-20
\Vestcrn Confeence playoff los.s to Min·
nesota last Dec. 27. He lasted one play
before the knee gave out.
lfe said anothtr veteran. Jack Pardee,
would be equally valuable as the
defensive play caller and that his
replaternent. 1ii-year NJl'L pro Jim
Pumcll, would "do a good job.·•
The Chaparrals Wued a atatemenl
saying Hagan made the d e c i s i o n
"because of a difference in coaching
phUoeophy with the team 's owners."
The 38--year-old Hagan, a h 1 r d
laskmaster, was prone to shout at his
players from the bench wtien they madt
a mistake and yank them off the court .
Hagan, who was an All-American und~r
Adolph Rupp 1t Kentucky, came tn
Dallas in 1967. ll was his fll"Sl coachlnt
job.
He was rtplaced immediately by 1't11
Williams, the 1eneral manager of the
ChJparrals and a fonner star at Southern
Methodi.t Unlvmlty.
I
--..-...... -...... .,. .... ..... _ ------.. ~ .... _.
. * * voe. 63, NO. '13, 2 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES ORANGE ·CQl.!NTY, CAUFORNIA THURSDAY, JANUARY J 5, 'J 97.0
• • esan ur-v-1ve.s
Biafran Pledges Unity
Formal Surrender (p Nigeria Signed
1'"rom Witt Services
LAGOS, Nigeria -Maj. Gen. Pfulip
Ef!iong surrendered Biafra formally and
unconditionally to the Nigerians Thurs·
day with a pledge to support the nation
as one undivided.
Then as if to symboliie the pledge, he
hugged Biafra's chief adversary, Maj.
Gen. Yakubu Gowon, Nigeria's national
leader.
"The Republic of Biafra hereby ceases to exist," Effiong said in his surrender
slatement to Gowon at a military bar·
racks in Lagos. And Gowon respooded :
''Let us join bands to build.a truly united
and great nation where no one will be op· pre~. May God help UI. '1 ,
Thus came the formal end 'to the
secession proclaimed by Gen. C.
Odumegu Ojukwu on May 30, 1967 with
the charge that the federal military
government sought to dominate and
obliterate Ibo tribesmen. principal in·
habitants of Biafra.
Almost at the same time that Effiong
officially capitulated, Ojukwu charged
from a hiding place somewhere abroad
that the Nigerians still were bent on wip-
ing cut the lbos and ··he appealed for a
neutral force to prevent it. His statement
was released in Geneva.
Ojukwu claimed that the Nigerians
seek to ring Biafra with an iron curtain
"to make sure that the atrocities they
will ctrtain1y carry out in ·Blafra art
(See BlAFRA, Page Z}
Four Arrested in Drug
RaUl on Mesa Apartment
A team of narcct.ics detectives Ciln·
fiscated balf·kilo of marijuana and ar·
rested four per50nS at a Costa Mesa
apartment they had visited for another
reason Wednesday.
Besides the pound of miU'ijuana, Sgt.
.John Regan and N~cs Investigator
Norm Kutch allegt.d they tock three
smoking pipes and a small brass pct con·
tainiog· ~apartni mariJullJ,3, d!brj( F
evidence. · ' ·
-Daria J. Lezon, 21, o( the Whittier
Avenue address, whose occupation was
not listed.
Sgl Regan said he knocked at the rear
door of the apartment and identified
himsetl, while Kutch stood by in front.
tben opened the door when the occupanta ·
balked.
/ -oor
OAIL Y I'll.OT Sllff .. ...._
The occupants of the apartment at 1771
Wbittier_.Aye.1 were booked 911charge•J1f
posaession ot mattjuana, with eomplainta
being 1011sht today from tbe Orange
County Dtatrkt Attorney.
The sus~ were identified as:
-Stepbea M. Per.min, 28. of 121 Main
St., Huntington Beach, who owns a cafe.
-Robert J. Beadle, 29, of Long Beach,
sales representative for a major soap
company.
The detective ordered everyone to stay
~her~ they wer~. .bu~ claimed ¢at
Pmnan ~ 11' tearint 1oMt ~i
sheet of tin nailed over a window and
to•sed out the alleged marijuana.
-vetealve Kutch, meinwhili. Wu in
Santa Ana today seeking complaJnts
against seven persons arrested Tuesday
in a series of raids which netted 11 kilos
or marijuana, assorted drug pifls and~ &
bit of heroin.
Jordan, Tucker to Run
HONORED IN DEATH
Martin Luther King
Many Ceremonies
Across U.S. Pery
Tribut e to King
By United Pres5 International
Thousands across the nation honored
Dr. 1\lartin Luther King Jr. today-the
41~1 anniversary of ·his birth.
Several governors, including Nelson' A.
Rockefeller of New York, Kenneth Curtis
of Maine and Frank Licht of R h o d e
Jsland, declared today "Martin Luther
King Day," in honor o( the assassinated
civil rights leader. -
Schools were closed in several cities,
Including Ne~v York, Baltimore,
Philadelphia, Kansas City, Poughkeepsie,
N.Y., and Harrisburg, Pa.
New York Mayor John V. tindsay said
city workers could take the day off.
The official inauguration of the ~fartin
Luther King Memorial Center. a pro-
jected cultural and spiritual gathering
place for American Negroes, was set for
loday in Atlanta . The center will be built
near King's new crypt and the Ebenezer
Baptist Church where he served as
copastor.
Unofficial ceremonies. many with an·
Hwar overtones, \Vere sc heduled in many
areas taking nG official note of the day.
ST HTK KJNG with art
No federal obersvance was planned and
the White House said President Nixon
planned to spend the day at Camp David.
Assemblyman Willie L. Brown Jr. (0.
San Francisco), today again proposed
legislation,detlaring Jan. l5, birthday of
the late Martin Luther Jr., as .. Black
American Day" in California,
The Negro legislator introduced the
same bill last year. but it fail ed to pass.
His legislation would require that public
!Schools set the da y aside each year for
programs "dealing with the black ex·
perience in America."
Black residents of Porlland, Ore .. nfan·
ned a citywide boycolt of public schools,
.a.'ttlarch and a demonstration. The Rev.
"Ralph David Abernathy , King's successor
as head of the Southern Christian
Leadership Conference, was to speak at a
N"ew York rally.
In Memphis, Tenn ., where King was
killed by a sniper April 4. 1968, no official
observance was scheduled. Local 1733 of
the1American Federation o! State. county
=i.nd municipal employes ,planned a
non(W.nominatiooal setvicc. Ring was
gupportlng the Joeal in-a eanitation strike
.at the time-or his death .
>
-Michael D. Reed, 21. a student at
Leeward College, Oahu, Hawaii.
·Six men and one woman involved in
those three incidents are held in custody
pending issuance cf complaints based on
evaluation of_ the felony charges on which
they were booked.
Again; Hammett in Race
Birth Control Pill's .Link
To Cancer Under Dispute
WASIUNGTON (UPI) -A prominent
cancer specialist warned today that
thousands of women may be feeding the
growth of undetected breast cancer with
birth control pills.
"Synthetic estrogens are to b re a st
cancer what fertiliur is to a weed crop,"
Dr. Roy Hertz testlliecl at a Senate hear·
ing. Estrogens are a prime ccmpooent of
oral contraceptives. ~· witneues
said man made est:oge.i& could also
cause blood clotting in some user1 'Ci
.. The Pill."
Another witness, Dr. FAmcnd Kassoof
of Cranford, N. J., suggested in prepar~
testimony that the American Medical
Association (AMA) might have helped
drug companies promote birth ccntrol
pills and conceal their alleged dangers.
But Dr. Robert W. Kistner of Harvard
l\ledical School scoffed at studies linking
oral contraceptives with cancer.
"The pill is safe." Kistner declared .
Hertz: f1r1nerly headed the reproduction
research branch of the goverM1ent's Na·
tional Cancer Institute. He is now with
Rockfeller University in New York.
Said Hert z: "We know from x.
ray studies that breast cancer exists in
some cases for years before it can be
clinically detecied. However, since one
woman in 20 will at some time in Iler life
d1Velop breast cancer, it is obv:iouli tllat
jn using the pill we are exposlng at least
this pcrtkln of women to a substance
known to stimulate pre-existing breast
cancer in women."
The doctors testified in the second day
of hearings before Sen. Gaylord NelSOl'l 's
small business monopoly subcommittee,
The groop has heard sharply divided
testimony about the safety of "The Pill ."
Kistner. taking issue with those warn·
ing about dangers of the pill, said : "It ls
sarer than pregnancy but not as safe as
continence . , • one cigarette is three
Urnes as dangerous to life as one pill."
By ARTHUR'R. VtNSEL
, Of 111• Oall'Y l'llol Slflf
The 1970 Costa Mesa City council cam-
paign opens formally in two weeks, but
all challengers will face two incwnbent
councilmen who plan lo' run· fOr cffice
•gain.
Papers to file notice of candidacy may
be obtained beginning Jan. 29 from City
Clerk C.K. ''Charlie " Priest, with noon on
Feb. 19 set as the deadline for their
return.
Questioned about their plans, both men
winding.up·four year terms as of April 14
said this week that barring any un·
foreseen events. they will 'hit the cam·
paign trail again.
"'I ·can say this at the present time: t
anticipate running.'' coofirmed Cciun·
cilman Willard T. Jordan, a veteran of
more-1han six years in «1ffice. including a
tenn as mayor.
"At· this moment.• I also anticipate run·
ning,'' said Councilman George A.
Tucker, who won his first election in 1966.
Privately mentioned as a probable call"
Stork ltlarket
.NEW YORK (AP) -Stock market
prices remained lower in restrained trod·
ing today .. (See quotations. Pages 14·1~).
As in previous sessions. investors
were hesitant and waiting in the wings
for compelling n e w s developments,
analysts noted.
Loeh Ness Revisited
Pet;er.s Canyon's Big Al Swimming Into Hi-story
Editor's Not4!: Former Briti&h
journalist Tom Bortty who med to
spend hi& time t}igorou.sl~ chasing the
Loch Net! monster in ~cotland, is
now doing his thing at'·an Oranac
Cottnty rtserooir;. 0$ indicated In the
Jollowtng di1patch.
By WM BARLEY
Of tllil Otll)' ,. • .., .,..,
ON SAFA!\!~ AT PETERS CANYON
RESERVOIR .JI OUr oll'1 companion! at
this remote water hole on UU. gray
moody morning were a mUdly interested
housewife, het" rompiog 3-ytar-old ,..
and a large black 'Labrador dog.
'!be only movement .on · lhe limpid
waters o( the lake was the occasional rtp.
pie created by fitful and ratnruied wind.
The 3-year..id tocld!M and cooo at the
water's edge, his lfiOllter a""'1itly IJghti
aJ)d·puffs on a cigF1.Tette and the dog does
what all dogs<to among the shrubs at the
edge of the reservoir.
Ah yes, La~r;a~or~ are big dogs indeed. An. the uninitiated might say, is tran-
quility.
This veteran OOserver is oot. however,
deceived. We have under our belt the
fruits of a long ago assignment to Loch
Ness and Ule vast technical knowledge
garnered while sipping hot sweet tea for
Jong hours al the 'side of that fabled Scot-
tish lake.
Btlow the · waters cl Pettrs Canyon
rwrvoir is • creature that ckx!ely
reaemble.• the scaly amphibian that
oporta In the murky depllu ancf,ioc-
calrionally on Ill< our!ace o! the gloomy
Scottlsh waters.
It hlS been given lhe name o! Big Al by
easily mtslld c ir on ty offittalS and
•• '
-----·-·-----..-~-------~----
onlOOkf!fS, who patPetically believe that
an-alligator is respon~ble for. ravages in
this Orange lake. Bird and fish are said
to have been devoored in copious quan.
titles by the wily-creature.
Like "Nessie", the darling of British
journalists, Orange County's own
monster has skillfully evaded capture.
Two curators from the Buena Park
Alllgltor Farm fished for hours here
Wednesday and sllpped away adrhitting
defeat. And several local resJdenta have
br~vely ventured forth upon the murky
waters to 1ry·thelr hancl al gettinl • UtUe
no(<riely oot ol Big Al.
Many onlookers pathetically testify to
havtng seen several alUgators. And ooe
dej>rty sheriff ,who br•vecl hlp deep mud
actuany returned to shore to' clattn that
he had watched two alligators at least
CSet'MONSTER, P .. e I)
dklate In recent month&, Ccl6ta Mesa
Planning Commissioner Jack Hammett
confirmed that he will al.!111 enter the up.
coming election campaign.
"t·m oot a .politician." said Ha.mmett,
active in many areas o( community life,
when first asked directly about his plans
for the 1970 race.
"Others have suggested it and T have
been giving it very serious consideration
and deep thought ... " he continued.
·:Yes, I plan to r.un at this .time."
Hammett, of 809 Presidio Drive, is ad·
minis1.rator of the Bristol Park Medical
Center, former president of ' the Costa
Mesa Chamber of Commerce. former
Planning Commission chainnan and
senior reserve officer on the Ccsta Mesa
Police fofce.
Jordan, 2269 Santa Ana Ave., is an
architect. former planning commissioner,
and has been involved in special
Ohamber or Commerce activities, as well
as handling spe(:ial committee work as a
councilman .
Tucker, of 1715 Palau·Place, a United
Callfurnia Bank officer. is fonner presi·
dent cf U1e Harbor .Area CoordinaUng
Cooncil and haS taken a wiiie.inter~l in
other community aftairs. ,' ·.
One other man has informally an-
nounced hls candidacy for the city coun·
cil, although .he c'ampaignfd unsuc·
cessfully in 1966 and again two years ago.
Theodore C: "Ted" Bologh. of 286 Del
Mar Ave., a (ormer resteur_ant owner
now employed by industry, said recently
he admires Vice President Spiro T.
Agnew's style and may adopt. it.
. Less than two weeks ago, Mrs. Lucille
Waughtal, a housewife, .of 2433 .College
DJ:ive, addre~ ,the council Jnd made
painted· remarks' about the · upcoming
election, but said she won't run.
... _."No, I've vety teasingly said,we ahould
nave a woman 1 en the counci~ ·but I
defthitely won't '· run,~·· the · attracttv,
blonde• grandmother said when.contacted
WednoMay. • 1 ,
"BulJ've been ,urge(flo," she',31kted.
Jim WOOd. a real tor who 1 hf:ads the
Costa Mesa·based Clt!zens Harbor 1 Area
Research· Team (CHART) apparently cs .. COUNCll., Page 2)
l\iesa Councihnan
George Tucker Weds
Costa Mesa City Cooncilman Georae A.
Tacker was married last weekend to the
former Mrs. William J. Shaw Jn rltt1 at
the Communl!y CongregaUonal Church o!
Corona del Mar. ,
The couple will make lheir honlt: at
1715 Palau Place In Coata M~'&. Mesa
"Verde area. -
-~-------=-===1
Today's~
N .. :Y. s-'teeks
TEN CENTS
Teen Listed
Satisf acto~
At Hospital
By BARBARA KREIBICIJ
Of IM Oallt l'llot Stiff
A JS.year-old Costa Mesa boy cheated
death Wednesady night when he hurled
himself from the top floor of the tallest
building in Laguna Beach, the ninwt.ory
Surf and Sand Towers at 1556 S. Com
Highway.
David Temple, 429 Flower st., 111rvived
the spectacular leap with relatively
minor injuries, a scalp laceration and
broken right wrist, and is in satisfactory
condition at South Coast Ccrnmunity
Hospital in South Laguna.
Witness Angelo D'Ercole, maitre de at
the Towers Restaurant atop the new
building, told police he saw the boy clim·
bing the outside stairway between the
eighth and ninth floors at 5:30 p.m. and
called out, "What are you doing here'?"
The boy said. "I'm going over!" He
then leaped head first over the 42-inch
railing of the balcony surrounding the
ninth floor.
He landed in a planted area ap-
proximately 80 feet below the balccny, at
the ~cond·floor level of Ille building,
bounced off and rolled to the first floor
level.
Police and hotel employes found tiim,
bl•'llln& copiou.\y from lhe head wound.
bUt !tin semi.con1ci04J and suQUMned
an ambulance lo take film to the hospital.
His earenU:,, Mr. and Mrs. Robert F. · Tempie, were nofille<I and hiifilidlO~his
bedside.
"I couldn't believe he was still alive,"
Merrill Johnson, owner of the Towers,
said today. The police and ambulance
a lready were at the scene when he and
his wife arrived, minutes after D'Ereole
called them. he said.
"'Our one great fear during con·
struction of the Towers," Johnson said,
"was that one or the workmen might fall.
We were Teally relieved when the job was
ccmpleted without a single injury."
However, he added "the fear biat
something like thls will happen is: always
there."
Only recently, Johnson said. he bacl in-
creased the height of the railing on the
balcony around the restaurant where
visitors like to stand to admire the beach
and ocean view.
Johnson said the way young Temple
landed after his leap, was "a miracle.'"
The area around the tall Towers
building is all rock, he explained, but this
particular section had been filled with
sloping dirt to creat:e a planted area with
ferns and other greenery. The hotel com-
plex is headquarters for the Presidental
press corps when President Nixon is in
the area.
Laguna Beach detectives are COD•
tinuing their investigation of the case to
tFy and determine why the youth leaped.
ft.'sv. DOG'S LIFE .
IN H A-RBOR AREA
See all the World War I fighter Pilots
getting their overseas shots. Would
Snoopy be so brave~
For DAILY PILOT Photographer
Richard Koehler's pictorial acoount of a
dog 's life, see page 21.
Orange Ceut
Weatller
There's oo sliver liolng bebind
those clouds, just a wet one which
wUI be wringing out torught and
Friday morning as coast.al temp.
eratures dip into the upper 50's.
INSIDE TODAY
Biajron refugee children will
sing their nation.al anthem for
European governmtni aidt.s, but
a. feature article on Page 13 to·
day shows theu have little to
.stng about
'
' ' '"" " " .. • ,.
t+11 .. " •
0 2 DAILY PILOT C Th,nd•>'. J1nUA1Y 15, 1970
Dad Held in Tot Death -. -
New Evidence Prompts ·Ne1vJ}f)rt Action
" ~ < I • "
By JORN VALTERZA the case. U. nei~1 f9r help.
ot tt1t o.11Y """'' s11tt Shear wu arrested e.-uer th1t '\fttk~ F11*Men'wtre'summoned to tbe ~--
A former Newporl Beach man is being and subsequent investlgatiol'I added to and they apphed 'ettemat htttt hlauaae
held In j~D in San Bernardino today tn suspicion that .the t-year-0ld toddler's and other emergency measures.
the alleged beating death of his 2-)'ear-old death ln Newport wa1 not accldentaJ. Coroner's investigators said today the
stepson last 1t1ay in Newport. A lie detector tl!:st was part of the cause of death was listed as suffocaUon
Michael Shear, 22, who moved from the JnvesUgation. police said. brought on by inhaling stomach contents.
Harbor Area a few months ago , is being The Orange County District Attorney's But the boy also had a lacerated liver
h~d on chairges of manslaughter aild office today returned a complaint charc· and pancreas, coroner's aides related to-
Mony child beating. ing manslaughter. day.
The charges stem from a death last Newport Detective C{lpt. Lou Heeres Those injuries, they said , could have
May 31 of Patrick Tudor, 2, an incident this morning reviewed the boy's death been caused by emergency measures·~
\fblch was orficially ruled an accidental last May 31 at a house at 2327 Margaret plied either by the parents or by firemen
dfaPt at the time. Street. on the unconscious boy.
· ''1le cue remained closed until la1t last Police arrived at the home, Heere! Thus, the death was ruled accidental.
week when Shear and his wife, Pat, took said, after Patrick was foWl.d submerged The case remained closed until the
another son, Eric, 21h months, into a underwater in a bathtub, Shear told baby was brought into the hospital in
-Fontana hospital. them. Fontana.
, Police said the couple told doctors the Heeres said that Shear told in· Shear was arrested at It: couple'!
-Want w~ having trouble breathing. vestlgators he heard. the ~ splashing in home and inlttaJly ~ktd o~ charces of
Ooetol'$ at Kaiser Foundation Hospital the tub, thtn beard gurgling. After a murder and felony clnld beat1nc.
performed X-rays on the baby and found minute's &Uence he investigated. The infant. Heerts related, is recover-
Pertially healed fractures, police said. Sheer then allegedly told tnvesUgators lng from the injuries and is ready IO be
. The physicians then called police into he pulled the boy from the \vat.er and ran released.
UPI Ttlflt~tlt
n ·ifl U.S. Ai:range Flight Younger Reveals
Candidacy for
Attorney General
Moo11's Eroditag Too
Of Ojukwu From Biafra?
GENEVA {UPl)-Blalran leader Gen.
Odumegwu Ojukwu was flown out or
Biafra la.st Saturday in a U.S. aircraft -
together with aides, their families and his
white Men:edeS automobile, American
!iOUl'ce5 said today.
The flight was arranged by U.S. in-
telligence, they said.
'rtie American consulate in Geneva
denied the reports or any knowledge of
U.S. cooperatioo in Ojukwu's flight.
-: There was some confusion In
Washington when it be.came known that
Ojukwu also wanted to take his
automobile, but after hurriedly looking
3round intelligence came up with a gray-
painted super-constellaUon cargoUner -
called a ·"gray ghost." .
Reports from intellig~nce sources 1n.
both Nigeria and what formerly was
Biafran territory tnclude the following
items:
-About 15 men at the head of the
Biafran iovemment stood the danger oC
facing trial. All of them except one are
known to be out of Biafra and it was
''hoped" the last man got out as "''~II ..
-Lt. Gen. Philip Effiong, comm8ndmg
Biafran fortes after Ojukwu left, will not
be tried by Nlger\a. -Alr Biafran career cMLaer.vants an
cooperating with Nigeria.
-Efflong's s\DTendtt broadcast was
made from a mobile radio truck. and not
from the main tranmiitting-station at
Uga near Ull Airport. This is why .it "f3S
not picked up by European m~t~
stations and only in Lagos and·Llbrevill~.
-Ojukwu is a wealthy man and is
Beer Drinking
Thief Take-s Art
A burglar with a taste for artwork and
beer lild in a men's room at a Costa Mesa
tavern Wednesday until it clc>sed, then
chose his loot while sipping several glasli·
es of brew.
Mrs. Dorothy Gardner, owner of King 's ~n. 720 Randolph Ave., e.slimated the
Jb,<;s at $100 when she reported the inci·
dent to poUce after it ·was discovered lat·
"'" in .the dliy, l 10ne Of her own oll paintings, lhr~ old
ses surrounded by a while pic'ktt:
e, plus an electric, animated beer
ertisement depicting a scenic water-
wert cut from their hanging places.
The victim said no other paintings or
,/a.Juables were ta'ken, although the auto-
rfiatic CO\lllter on the tap show~ $1 .45
~ of beer had been consumed after
~aid Patricia Lintown closed up and
1111.
DAILY PILOT
knoWn to have half hia fluid uset> in
London and tbe c:tb<r haU in Geneva.
-Nlittla paid cash on the -. for all
Soviet weapons. The Jut shipment was of
48 .UO-milllmeter cannon, alt mobile, in
mid·December. American intelligence
has pholograplls ct them being unloaded
'"'" carao aln:raft at Lagos airport. These guns were immediately put into
use and shelled UU airport prior to its
capture last Tuesday.
-There have been no confirmed
reports of any maasacm:.
-Tht United States believes there will
be considerable political difficuhies in
Lagos, with the military e3tablishment
reluctant to relinquish authority and state
governors equally reluctant to submit to
central control
-Nigeria could have finished the war a
long time aao by an all-out military ef-
fort. But this may well have coat more
civilian lives in "Biafta -as well as
milltary casuatties among Nigerian
forces -than the number of civilians
who died from otarvaUoo.
From Page 1
BIAFRA. •..
unseen and unreported in the world
press."
'l'he former leader, who fled Biafra last
v;eekend leaving .Efflong in charge. also
appealed to the world to help Biafr ans
who, he said, wett left starving and ex-
hausted by 30 months of war.
Ojukwu's 2,000..word statement was
distributed In Geneva by an American
public relations agency, Markpress. that
had acted as a Biafran information office.
Ojukwu's whereabouts remained un-
known, but an agency 'pokesman did not
deTiy it had received the statement by tel-
e~ message from Lisbon, Portugal.
"From all indications, it is clear that
Nlgeria will not feed our ~ple," said
Ojukwu. "There is no food whatsoever in
Bialra and unless food can get into
Biafran mouths in the next 72 hours, it
will be too late.
"Nigeria's insistence to control the
distribution of relief is bolh to ensure
that Biafrans get no such relief and slso
to shut out outsiders \\'ho might "'ilness
aud expose the enormous crimes she
pl.ans to commit against our people:·
Although he named no nation s
specifically, his reference to the
respon1ibility of nations that supported
the federal government of Gen. Yakubu
GOwon was an obvious reference to Bri·
lain and the Soviet Union.
\.Va shinglon University of &t. Louis studies of Apollo
11 moon samples have provided evidence that
erosion. on the lunar surface is taking place , but
at a much slower rate than on earth. This photo,
from university scientJsts. ::;ho\\·s a '1zap pit ," also
known a s Jn icroscopic craters caused \Vhcn tnicro--:· ••
meteorites strike ·the moon .
.,
' · Speal<lllg Ill Newport Beach lllday on a
hop-aldp.and·Jump air trip up tbe cout,
Los Allgeles Diltrlct Attornoy Evelle
Younrer announced bis cm:Udaey for
California Attorney General.
The , popular DA made his hilllal
dilcloiure at a preu conference In San
Diego, theo arrived Ill !be Harbor Atta,
with et.ops acheduled in Loe: Angele&, San
Attorney Bell to Oppose
Hirstein for Countjr ~eat
Fro1n Pa~e 1
COUNCIL~ ••
considered running in 1968, but did not •
al'ld said then he would probably enter
the 1970 campaign:
He has since moved to Corona det Mar.
although he remains active in Costa Mesa ·
civic affairs. Francisco and Oakland. Tustin attorney Paul t.1. Bell Wed·
He greeted the preas at the New-porter nesday announced his candidacy for the lnn here, prior to heading north _and pro-mised the attorney general should use the Fourth District supervirorial seat now
. powerful poaiUon to battle environmental held by William Hirstein. Bell is the
pollution. fourth man to announce for the cam·
Younger said in a prepared statement paign.
that lhe attorney general should "ac· A resident of Orange County for eight
Uvely assert previously unused powers of years. Bell , 321 said he decided to run for
the attorney general's office to help the seat because he wanted to participate
reclaim man's ~nVironment." in county government.
Younaer I 51, .1s I former FBJ ace~t and "I'm probably the only candidate in
superior ~urt Judge and hu been diJtrlct this campaign who ham't been ap-
attomey m Los Angelea: alnce 1985. . ~ched by 'sn unnamai group of in-
other declared Republican candidates terested citizens' who begged me to run " are State Sens. George Deukmejlan of he said '
Long Beach and J~bn Humer of GJen.. 'The ~ttomey said he feels the biggest
dale and Spencer Wdllam11, fonner health Issue of the campalgn will be pollution.
Md wellare chief for Gov. Reagan. "The paramount issue facing Orange
Atty. Gen . '!'homas Lynch, the only County is pollution and overpopulation ~rat ~ld1ng o.ne ol the top st~te of-with the resultant destruction of oor rural
fices, ha.s said he wlil seek re-election. atmosphere. I think we ought to do
Yoo_nger'' announcem~nt centered on everything pGM!ble to avoid being choked
pollution conUol, curbing cam p u Ii out of our homes" he said.
violence, fighUng drug abuse,. Md more "I think gov~ent at the county level
yigorous law enforcement procedures at
the state level in aid of cities and coun·
ties.
Younger said he would use e\'ery tool of
the law "in fighting pollution." He said he
would create an environmental task
force .
He said he would provide ''more ef.
fective use of space age technology to im-
prove th e methods of criminal in·
vestigation and prosecution."
LBJ Gets Space Talk
STONEWALL, Tei:. (AP) -Former
President Lyndon B. Johnson was briefed
nn the Apollo 12 moon landing mission by
astronauls Charles Conrad, Richard
Gordon and Alan Bean Wednesday at his
nearby LBJ ranch.
should be brought closer to th e voters
and the voters should take a more active
interest in thei r county's government,"
Bell commented .
Other candidates running for the seat
Incl ude Anaheim businessman Burr-
Will fams, Villa Park Mayor James T.
Workman, and Calvin Pebley, Anahe im
counci lman and ex·mayor. The in·
cumbent, Hirstein, has not made a
forma l statement on his intention to seek
reelection. He has, howev.er, given .strong
hints that he will step down at the end of
this term.
Store Robbery
Alarm in Error
Police r.aced to a <Mita Mesa liquor
store Wedhesday night ' When tf silent
A fie ld of seven candidates was offered
to Costa Mesa voters in the election two
years ago, with Mayor Alvin L. Pinkley
and Vice '11ay'or Robert M. Wilson easily
\\·inning new terms.
Counciln1an \Vll liam L. St. Clair, now
entering the mid-point of his term ,,
defeatOO th en-Vice Mayor Calvin Barck.,
one of the few incumbent council
members to lose to a challenger.
The election on Tuesday, April 14 may
seenl farther of.f than 12 weeks, but City
Clerk Priest today was already reserving
locations for the city's 49 voling
precincts. ·
Priest said today that he has been ooo--
tai:ted by a young Orange Coast College
student of legal age. who is interested in
tht idea of running for council, but Wanta.· .
to think and talk it over more.
U,CI.:A Student LOst "
alatm _indicatinga"robbecyln :progress In An«eles Forest " was triggered at headquarters.. , ... ~ .. . . '• £.l.:. ·b !
Jamie T. Postum. 20, ""employea at·E·tr •• Tnn Liquors, 2267 Harbor Blvd., told in-f\·IONTROSE (AP~ - A search was :
vestigalors he had only tripped while begun Wednesday ~ug_ht for .a UCI.A stu·· ..
stocking the beer cooler and hit the but.-dent repor ted missing since Stmday :
ton as he grabbed for balance. morning .in .the Angele_s National Forest. .
He apparently didn'l know what to do The m1ss1ng youth 1~ Robert '.fheders, ;
but wait and explain so officer David 19, who had gone to S w 1 t z er~ ...
Brooks suggested he '_call headquarters Camgprounds with hi s roommate Jim :
after his next trip and cancel theirs. Pe~rs, also 19. to hike. -. -.' ' ' . And he proposed lhat local law en-
forcement officers be granted authority
lo use ~ectronic surveillance.
Youngtr sa)d there is every indication
that organized crime "ls making
strenuous efforts t> gain a foothold" in
California at the first opportunity.
JJ. J. (Jarrell~ 15th semi-annu111I SALE
From Page I
MONSTER. ••
five to six feet long swimming away from
his outstretched net.
Poor brave chap. t.fany like him SUC·
cumbed in exacUy the same manner at
Loch Ness.
The theory behind all this speculation is
tha t local residents deposited unwanted
baby alligators into the lake some year!
ago and that a school of the fully grewn
creatures is now happily at home in the
reservoir.
V.'e, of course, know better.
•
\
OltA~GE. co~~r PUllLl~~IHG COMP--.NY
Goy,•on's government has accepted
relief offers from Britain, which is
preparing a planeload or medical sup-
pl!es, and from the league of Red Cross
socieites but specifically ruled out any
assist.a.nee from nations or charitable
agi;ncies that directly supported Biafra in
the civil war. The Soviet Union has made
no public offers of relief.
The Lab rador looks out across the
"·ater. the calls of nature apparently
quieted. His attractive mist ress stubs her
cigarette and keeps a careful eye on her
haopily play ing little boy.
. ' '
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J•cl: -· C11•l•v v1,e Pres.den• ,,,., O•ne"' M•~•gv
lh1..,•I l(,1wi1
Edl!tlr
Tho'"'' A. M111ph i~1
M.,,•llnt Edit«
Cost• M ... Offlco
l lO W•ll l•v Street
M•ili~g Adrlr1n: ,,O, loir 1$60, •2&26
' Otfl.t Offf&ff
Newtarl ... Cl'I! 1111 Wnl lhlllOI ll11111ev••d
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• f1ilt.,ltl n11lflr or cdvttll"""''" .. t rtlfl ....... , bl .......,,,WUI WilM\ll ..,.c\tl W•
""'" .... OJ COP'fl'lfl'tl .... ~.,. • !llcO,,. tla>n ...... ,..r. II Nt W,:1t9rl hid•
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• U rto11. i; D6 IJOOtlllllYI .,., 111111 $1,)0 fNnt~IWJ
1nm1erw "'"'~lfta!IMI,. 11.0t """!:,-.iw. •
GO\\'on . on the other hand , promi!ied at
the surrendtr ceremony a genera l
amnesty and ~rotection for the in·
h1:1.bitants of Biafra.
"We know most of you were dragged
into it," he said.
Below the waters a creature dating
back to tht beginning of time cast a red
scaly eye on the gull dabbling his beak at
the ,,·ater's ed,l{c..
•Ii.story is in the making at this decep..
tively peaceful Orange reservoir .••
Jumbo Cl1ristened
But FAA Says 747 Needs Changes
,WASHINGTON {UPI) -Fl"l Lady
Pat Nixon splashed red, white and blue
water onto the naUon's biggest jetliner
today. But there W8S some question
whether the newly christened jumbo jet
would be permilted lo mak e ii~ fi rNt com·
1nerrial flight on tlJne next \\'eek.
The Federal Aviation Administration
!aid the 700,000·pound , 490.passc.ngcr
Boeing 747 -the Pan Amerlnan Clipper
"Young Amerlca" -had not yet suc·
ccssfully passed tests of it.I emergency
e\'l\Cuatlon system .
Even 1s lhe christtnlng "'IS taking
place al cold Du 11 es International
Airport. the FAA s11ild modtlleaUons
"·ouJd have to be made in two of lhe: 11
escape chutes u~ed to e v a c n a t 1
pauengers quickly tr case of an accident.
Jn thrt!e separate tests at Roswell. N.~r..
earlier thts ,week. the chutes malfunc-
tioned, the FAA said.
Both Pan Am and BQ:Cing said th~y
"·ere confident modifications could be
nia"c in thne for the scheduled \\"ed·
nt>,~day ina ugural flight fro1n New York
to Londori.
eec11use of its concern about the escape
s1 srem, lhe f AA limited four demonatta-
1ion fllghls today for dignitaries at Ou.lits
to 225 persons.
The FAA insists th al a planelOAd of
pa• stnrers be able to evacuate the plane
from only five doors within 90 second.a. A
total of 381 p~rsons -a planeload -
evacuated "'Ith 17 seconds in one d the
Roswell tests, but the test wu net con·
l!'idered sucCe&Sful because Ont of tbe
ch utes failed .
•
M/IDRIGJJL
"
0
" HERITAGE
WITH All THE EXCITEMENT AND ROMANCE OF SPAIN , , ,
A BOlOLY ROBUST ELEGANCE THAT COULD ONLY BE
MADRl•,U • , , AND NOW FOR THE VIRY FIRST TIME
WE HAVE THIS MAGNIFICENT BEDROOM COllECTl9N ALL
ON SAU AT Sl'lCIAL HOUCEo PRICISI
\'our forotite interior dtsigntt will bf! hopp11 to" 1 ~f.11 ,,.
H.J.GARRETT .FURNITURE
,RO~ESSIONAl
INT(RIOJ. DESIGNll$
' .
111.S l-IAR80R I LVO.
COSTA MUA, CAI.I~ •
646·02 75
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, J
Thursd.ly, January 15, 1970 S D41l Y PILOT :J
County Approves Co ast Development Study
DAILY PILOT 51-0ll P~~!O
Pro1ul Netv Citi%etas
Meinhe rs
Fo1· Study
U11it Sougl1t
The noa rd of .Su!)('rvisors \\1"'c!nesday
unnnilnou~ly npprovcd c.ounty Planning
Director Foresl D i c k a s o n ' s rccom·
n1Pndatlon for a citizens committee to
help coordinate lilud1es on t~ de1·e!op-
n1t'ril of Orange Ci.1nty's 42·mile coastline.
Dic!l:ason said he would immediately
start drawins up ~ list of potential com·
1nitlee mcn1bers and outlining the
group's duties. He. said he will work
through the udministrative assistants for
~<ich or the fi\'e county supervisors in
sC'!ecting citilt'ns for possible. ap-
P'-in tmcnt to thC' committee.
The cou nty p!:tnning director s:iid the
study group is needed to end the
frag1nl>nl:ilion of pl.lnn1ns: efforts along
11 1• coastllr:t'.
ll wilt be m;.ide up nr persons
krnw!ed!'c;iblr in ON:'anograph,v. rc::rea-
f·;'l'l, ecnlo~y tind biology in addit'.on to
re~rescnlal1vcs of various lo ca I
1;r1>'crnmcnts and the public at largl'
!Jurir.~ his present:ttion to county
~11pcr\·isor~. f'li cl<acnn unvc1l~d a cilart
~!·1111·1ng that 24 studies or various aspects
of the county's coast line have already
l}('{'n MPdc in rece nt years or are
< urrer;lly in pro.cress.
Lng1111ngrlns By Phil lnltrl1ndl
; ,
"We love our little street -ju1T enough ocean t o you know you'r•
In Ca lifornia, and just enough kooks so y.ou know you're in Laguna."
Senate Probe Due
Health Planners Told
Orange County's and the nation's ne\vest citizens
-122 strong: -pose for their picture \vith Presid·
ing Superior Judge \Villiam ·Speirs (center, fore-
ground) after taking the oath of aUegiance to U.S.
during naturaliialion ceremonies \Vednesday at
Orange County Courthousr. Among OC\\' cili~cns
are 54 Orange Coast residents. J\.Ios t of the nc1v
U.S. citizens coine from England. ~See story,
Page JO,)
'rht• Or;in;r County shoreline, he SUK·
_1:C':--tcd. h:'!~ !wen ~tudied to rleAth. hut
1;1d\ nn age1n:y h:is e\'cr pulled the
~111Uirs togethe r for purroses of an
111 f'r:i tl pl,1nning lffort.
Suncr\'isor D:ivid Bakrr of J.luntingto n
R"~"li. ll'ho eurrentlv ~rrvcs as chairman
r, 1'.··· ~1.,tc'..; t:n\'ironmenlal Qualitv
:-:.1 •ril' ('iiUn(•il, nnted tt1(1t , l'lllhnugh
(':1!;lorn1a h:is 11!n1n!lt l ,~f\O 1niles or
l'<'l;1,\lint•, less th:i n lUO nulc:; or it is
)•lilJl.cly U\VllCd.
Must Wait for Funds
Venu s W 011't Be Replace{l
Festival of Arts directors have tight·
ened lheir purse sLrings and decided
that the high cosl or good sculpture will
1nake it necessary to leave lhe tall pylon
Rt the Laguna Festival entry un·
decoraLed, al least for lhis year.
The pylon form erly supported the
Festival symbol, Botticelli's V c nu s
(locally known as VenuS-On·the-half·shell)
but Venus became i n a rt i s t i ca 11 y
\\•eatherbeaten and was hauled off to the
junk pile.
Grounds manager Mogens Abel advised
rlirectors of Ii.ls errorts to find a new
decoration, but when he gol down to
ligures, they agreed with lreasurer Paul
Grie1n who said , "We don't have that
Pilot
Logboak
kind of money . \\7c shouldn't do anylhini;
more this year that doesn't have to be
done and I think this could u•ait."
Abel said that pulling on a contest lo
find "a nice piece of sculpture" \\'OUld in·
volve spending $200 to S500 for a brochure
and $1 ,000 for a prize, and lopping this off
with an investment that could run
anywhere from $5.000 to $20,000 for a
good bronze, depending on the details.
Hor;·cver, if direc tors \\'ere willing lo
drop the contest idea and simply have a
local sculptor submit designs and produce
the decoration, the whole coot might be
reduced to as little as $2,000 Abel said.
Even this was too much for tbe board.
Mt1 sic Hatl1 Little Cl1arn1
When G1·oup Needs It
By TOJ\1 BARLEY
Qt tl'le Olll'f Piiot Still
J\IUS IC JIATH CJIAR1\IS, the poet said, but il"s su rprising how quickly
thry palled for many Orange County concertgoers when they ."·ere asked ~o
get out their check books and ensure the survival of a struggling orchestras
1969-70 sea!'on. Surprising? Make that '"predictable." For there \\'as never any dnubt In
th is wriler'li mind that this countv, affluent as it is, would fail to con1c through
with the pa itry $40,000 thal was needed to put on the
b;ilance of a sC'ason that was, on paper at least, something
to look forward to.
It speaks volumes for the dedication and courage of
the Orange County Symphony Associalion that its direc-
t lors have resolved l.o come back in Lhe fall and attempt
to plan and put on a 197G-71 season. But this does not ex-
cuse the tigh twads -many of whom arc inen1bers of t~e
association -who have failed to allow cond uctor Daniel
Lewis to take the podium for lhe remainder of the season.
\VE IIAPPEN TO know that appeal after appeal
\\'Cnt unheeded by people who could have solved !he or-
cheslra"s v.·orries \\'ith the stroke of a pen and thought no more about il. A
concerted move by just a few members and non-members of the association
\\·ould have put that $.W,000 and more in the bank in a few days and salvaged
the situation. Yle have to rub shoulders during our attendance in the county's coocert
halls \\'ith far too many people to whom the occasion is nothing more than a
chance to display the mink and pearls, talk airily if i;omev.•hat. vaguely a~~t
the respective qualities of Bach and Br.ahms and applaud politely once 11 1s
reallzed, of course, that it is the tlme to applaud.
AND lF \\'E SEE;\I to be missing sOmeone out substilutC' dinner suit for
mink and pearls since the sins or the concert hall arc by no means confinc:d
to th e fair sex.
From that point of view the abandonment or the season is no greal los~
to anv music critic incl ined to be irritated by the presence of so 1nany men1·
bt>rs Or the "be there and be seen'' brigade. But we're more concerned today
v1ith the deprivation of those genuine lover.s of music, those ha·rdy souls w~o
1nake the pilgrimage 10 anv and every point of the county where good mustc
is beinl!: offered in, we might add. ever improving quality.
Theirs is the loss. And many or them have fought hard to make up the
orchestra's deficiency Ydlh SI. $5 and $10 donations. all very welcome and
received wilh heartfelt thanks bul all quite insufficient for the purpose at hand.
11·5 VERY EASY at thi s point to get into :t discussion about what this
column feels lo be the disgraceful failure by the federal government to m11ke
available grants which would allow mu~c and the arts to flourish in this
nation in a manner comparable to that enJOYOO by Europeans.
Looking at the Times of . London the. other day, this writer notic~ ~n
;in:ount of :;:ubstantial grants Riven to music. ballet and th eatre companies 1n
Britain. R:rants which fire strictly controlled and carefully dispensed but ~hich
nevertheless tnablr. British culture to maintaln Its dlsUnguished and prominent
place in the art world today.
TIJAT OOES'T JUST .11:0 for Britain. ~1any other Eurnnean nation!! C:Rn
boa~! government aid and backing on at least a comparable scale and the
calibt'r of their productions proves It.
In the obscnce or such .support, however. It Is the duty or the enmm11n-
ltv to kN'p It, cullural organlzaumis "Above w·ater and It l.!i unforglvt1ble lhnt
Oft1n.11:c County !ihould have allowed this to happen lo what hos long been
hailed as "its very own orchrslra."
A prrtty ·sour note on "·hich to prematurely end a season Lh at OJM!ncd
,1w1th such bright promise •••
Do1v11 tfie
~lis~iomi
Traill
Registratio11
Deadline Today
SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO -Today ls
the final registr:ition date for resident'!
\1·i5hing to vote in the J\1arch 10 school
bond and lax overridr election ror the
C:ipislrano Unified School District.
Deputy voter registrars will be on r!111y
al S~n J uan and San Clemcnle cily halt's
~.'ld the school district offices in Cro1vn
\',11lry Elcn1cntary School at Lat,'Una
Nrgucl tn assist persons v.·ho \\'i~h to
reRistcr or re-regi~ter.
Trustees arc seeking a 50-ccnt t<ix
O\'Crrirlc and perntission to sell school
hoods at an interest rate of seven percent
ii.stead of the present fj\·e percent.
0 Foreign .'itudy Set
LAGCNA !!ILLS-College sfudenls in-
terested in foreign study and travel are
invited lo apply for graduate fellawsbipci
beinR offered by Rotary International and
ll;(' Rotary Club vr Laguna lli!lli.
The. fellow ships, covering travel. livinJ?
and educational e:-:pcn-:es \.\'ill he ::t\.\'arded
tu qualified grad11nte students, .i ncd 20 to
Gladys S. Coo le
Rites on Fri.day
Funrral services \\'ill be held Frid;iy at
2:30 pm. in t:ic Church of the
Hccessional, Foresl Lawn ~1emorial
l'nrk. for c;!nr!ys S. Cook of La~uno Hills,
,1·ho clled TucsdJy at South Ccasl Cont·
nu1ni~v llosp1l<1!. She \Vas 'ii.
1\ rOur-year resident. aI Laguna JWls.
;\\rs. Coo~ is survhed by her husband,
l\1urJ R. Cook of the homr, 162A Avenida
l\1aiorca and by n niece. rilrs. Joycr Lyn n
Srnggie of J,,a Jolla. Burial \Viii be at
Fort·~! L11\\'n, Glendale. Sheffer Lagun a
Beach ~l ortu(lry are directors.
Rock 1-ludson Sucrl
1.ns· AKGEI,J~S IUP I) -A neighbor
rf n .. 1ch lltrJson has sued the actor for
~~4 500. corotrndini:: a 1>0rlion or l-Iudson·s
~rrrty flid onto his li.Jod during last
w1r1rr·s hra vv n:nns.
\\\ !r'cr It ~-lodinr, 48, said in his 5U1t
ftl j \Vcrlne-.dav Hudson remo\ed shrub·
I rry nnd lrc't..'S from his properly. causing
11~<:> l;ind tn rrode during rains and slide 10
]111: Beverly llil!s properly below the ac#
,, r' .
Orilnge County sHperv lsors \\'ednesday
l1elrl up a request for $10,000 which would
be used for a health care needs study in
the so-called "Newport hospital service
area."
The request (or the fund s came before
tile board from representatives of the
Comprehensive Health Planning Associa-
tion of Or(lnce County. They asked for
the money during presentation of a year
end report to supervisors.
('n11nty board mt?111bers lndical!'d they
w:inl to a\vait findings of a slate Senate
h?arinR; on health planning before
allocating any fund s for a local study.
John 1-t. Traband, executive director of
the association, told supervisors that the
$10 000 study \\'Ouk! be the first of it.s kind
in the country.
He explained. "Rlght now, heafth' care
needs are-basad on a raLio of population
lo hospital beds.
"There are 6,300 hospita l beds in
Orange County. And 3,000 more have
been app!led for. The association wi ll
have to give its approvul to these ap-
plications before a llcensc can be
i::rantcd. \Ve \v ould prefer to make our
endorsements on inlormed data ."
Oppo~i1ion to allocating the funds was
\'Oired b.v S11pcrvisors David Baker and
RoOOrt llallin, bolh o( whon1 recom-
mended the board withhold their vote un-
til the Senate hearings could be held or a
county-supported bearing could be held.
Ballin said the ;issociation's po"·rr to
endorse hospita ls for liccnsrs "was not
<:ontemp!atcd two years ago when the
hoarrl cautiously appro\'ed the associa-
lion in principle. Obviously there is some
prt.blem in the minds ol the citizens of
Or:inge County or the state \\'OUldn't be
holding hearings."
Traband said the health planning group
"JnvitC's this kind nf scrutiny. Our con#
cern is the escalating costs of medical
care. If all those 3000 beds are licensed,
lhey will be ready in 197~ and I don't
think our population will support them or
we will have the staffs to man them. Th is
will only force the cost of health care
h.lrher."
While holding lheir approval ori the re-
quest for fund s. board members did ap·
prove continued use of the association o[
a health educator from the office of Dr.
John Philp, county health officer.
Child Care Fund
Tangle Rapp.eel
SACRAMENTO !UPI) -A
bureaucratic tangle is costing the slate
millions of federa l w e 1 fare rcim·
burscment dollars for child care centers,
the legi~laturc was told today.
l n~a report, Audit.or General William Jt.
Merrifield also di sclosed it is impossible
to pinpoint who actually pays how much
to finance clay care and preschool pro-
grams for the needy.
He blamed ''overlapping
responslblllUes ~nd contused lines of
authority" as the chief reasons for the
loss of fund.!! and called for placing the
programs under a single state agency for
administration and rinancing.
The state departments of social welfare
and education currently administer the
child care centers and preschool pro-
grams.
ZS. Students ~·ho will be qualified for
graduate study hr A1J!;'.L1~1 nf l:Ji \ ;n·c
£'1igiblr lo apply in \1 rt ting to the ltotary
Club of Laguna llills, Box 2156, Lagun<i ~
I !ills. !!2553.
Dead!ine·for enmfllr1ion or applications l~i'""'"'"":;...°'"i-msa
r.nd interviews is r-.1<1rch J.
O l~111·olf11re1ii Oro11s
~i!SS!ON VIF.JO -The final t·illv of
\\'inter quarter enrollmrnt at S;iddleback
College revealed a dron of :.ibouf 17 prr-1
crnt from 1he fall quar!rr. a r1!e nf :•I·
tnlion described by nr,..sidenl 11r. Fr'!'d
Brl'mer as "\·cry gonrl" c11n1p:irrri 1\·i'h
n1ost colleges far lhC' { a 11 • w 1 n t c r
changeover.
\Vinler Gllflrler er,rnllmrnt Is 2,Qllit.
1\•hich includes 1.130 full \lfllC 11nd !J5!i
11.irt time students F,ill cnrollmcnl •ff ij
2,500 included 1.300 full time c1nd 1,2.00
part time studen1 s. I
Last vear, \\'hen lhe collrr.e offrred on·
lv frrsh1n~n rlasst..'s, tota l iriiti:il rc.;islrll·
lion Y.'aS 1,500.
O S111de11t< Giue l'la11
r-.11SSION VIE.JO -''U ndrr ~1ittrn•ood"
is bclng presentrd by the Experimf'nl:i l
Communication Group at r-.11ss1on \'iejo
I li~h School.
The play bv DyJ.1n 'Thomas \\•Ill be
pnrforme1 Friday at 3:1$ p.m. and ~atur-1
day al 7:30 p 111. :it the !:chool. The plily is
directed by Bob ~Terrhnnn.
Ti ckets 8Vail;iblc al lhe rtoar ran be
reset\ ed by call1og R37-!l2ri2 ThC'y arr
Sl 25 for adu:to; and 7~ cents ro r students
\1·!th ASB cards
O Building ,11111ro1·ed
LAGL'NA JrJl~LS -Ros~moor Corpora-
lio., representatives \Vcdnro;rl:iy won llP-
proval from the Oran~e County Plannln~
Crn1ml~~lon to build tt.r1r corporntl
headquarter5 jn Laguna l l!lls.
Pl.mninq commi~ion ~pl'tt:t'!man L8rry
?i-loorc said thl' off!cC' \Viii !:lb a single
story bulldlng holding nb11ut 4S people
during the \\'Orking day. It will b(> locO:tc:!
nn f\.Joullon Park'\'3.Y south of El Toro
Road in Leisure \Vorld. '
Sltate Boards • 5.95 & 7.95 WILSON-Dunlop-Davis-Bancroft
11/heJ!s & Trucl1s per pair 250 Tennis Rackets . • • . 4.95 to 46.00
Frisbaes 95 c_180_2 95 Dunlop Fort Racket Strung Nylon 18.95
· · Kramer Autograph Racket Strung Nylon 18.95
flJomerarigs 95c-1.25-2.50 Pennsylvania Tennis Balls • • Doz. 7.50
VJhiH!c Gz!ls 65c & 50~ Wilson Extra Duty Tennis Balls Doz. 8.35
Wllam o S!lng Shot 2.95 Lzd'es Tennis Dresses • 9.00 to 21.95
B •· p •· & f 7 95 to 39 nr, Ladies Tennis Shorts • • 7.95 _ac_._a_cr_ •• s _r_am_es ___ . __ .~_. Mens Tennis Shorts 4.95-5.95-7.95-9.95
S ~oping Cr gs 12.95 to 77.50 Mens Tennis Shirts 5.00-6.00-7.00
s,ace r12nliets 7 or. Mens Tennis Shoes .• a Converse 7.75
Jack Putcells 8.95
12.95
12.95
• 3.95 to 650
s:u:f £2gs-C~ntsens-Mess !\its
Tube Tents-Hand Axes
White St•g \'/arm Up Suits
tlavy Blue or White 12.95 & 19.95
C2tton Swcz t Suits (navy or green) . 6.45
s~ cat s~x 50c-75c-95c-1.25· 1.50
Gym rants-T-Shirts-Supporters
Mens Leather Tennis Shoes •
Puma Workou t Shoes •
Champion Handball Gloves
Outdoor Handballs 95c Indoor •
Letterman Sweaters & Jackets
Ra wlings Baseballs & Mitts
Adirondak Bats
Baseball SHoeS-Track Shoes
Bike Tires-Tubes-Parts
• 1.10
• ·4 DAILY PILOT Thursd11, January 15, 1970
•
IC.m,n.c ., tllt o,llJ Pllll Sttll)
Pablo Caaals, the master cellist,
turned 93 years old this week. He
attended a concert and re<:eption
in his honor at the mansion of Gov.
Luis 'A. Ferre in ·san Juan, Puerto
Rico.· Casals, self-exiled from his
native Spain, is nlarried to a Puer·
to Rican cellist, the former Ma rta
Montantr. •
Border Fight Told
Reds' Cambodia
Infiltration Up
SAIGON (UPI) -Informed allied
sources said today nearly 85 percent o(
the war supplies equipping Communist
troops in the Mekong Delta and in the
provinces around Saigon were funneled
through the port of Ream a n d
Slhanoukville in neutralist Cambodia.
The two ports on the Gulf of Siam are
barely 50 miles from the South Viet-
namese borMr and about 200 miles west
of Saigon itseU.
Communist Infiltration into the Mekona:
Delta and into the Cambodian border
regions has been on the increase, and
U.S. spokesman reported 100 Communist
troops firing machine guns and hurling
bags of explosives stormed a -u.s.
artillery base near the border today. The
allied defenders killed 29 of the attackers.
Allled sources said some of the supplies
unloaded at Slhanoukvllle and Ream were
disguised aa shipmenb to the Cambodia11
anny but were diverted along the coastal
areas to South Vietnam once they passed
customs Inspection.
Vice President Spiro T. Agnew told
new1men after his visit to Vietnam Jan. 1
that there was "a great amount of con-
cern about material coming through
Sihanoukville."
The allied source said Agnew ap-
parently based hls remark on briefings
that lhe Cambodian ports are now as
vital to the Communists as the so-<:alled
Ho Chi Minh Trail through Laos. The
sources said some of these supplies have
been reached the highland 100 miles
north of Saigon.
They said most are moved into South
Vietnam by truck and porter and some
are transported by Cambodian military
vehicles, bul that it was not known if this
was done through local payoffs or with
the concurrence of the government.
J . ··Robert Jones, Ku Klux Klan
leader from North Carolina, em-
erged from federal prison in Dan-
bury, Conn. and vo\ved to hea d
•·back south of the Mason-Dixon
Line where there's no damn Yan·
kee dandruff." Jones had b e en
sent to prison for one year for con-
tempt of Congress, along \vith sev-
eral other KKK leaders who had
refused to ans\ver questions of the
House Committee on Un-American
Activities. Asked whether he would
+ake over his old post as head of
the largest KKK organization in
North Carolina, Jones told news-
men: !'I already have -about 30
More Hecklers
Greet Agnew
In Auckland
Other sources sald Prince Norodom
Sihanouk, the Cambodian chief of state,
partially has responded to U.S. appeal to
tighten his policy permitting the goods in-
to the parts. They did not elaborate.
PLOUG
· UPI T11tJl!t10 H DRIVES THROUGH SNOW MADE HEAVY BY RAIN AT SOUTH LAKE TAHOE
But Prechcted Temperature Drop Should Meke It Pure Snow Aga in Tonight
seconds ago." • A prisoner escaped from the Will
County Jail in Joliet, Ill., by the
same route used by four other
prisoners Nov. 9. Authorities said
they did not know why Howard
Zillenkie was put into the cell
with a hole cut through a layer of
glass blocks. The last of the ori·
ginal four escapers was captured
in Phoenix, Ariz., a short tiine be.
fore Zillenkie's escape.
' .
Edger N. Ei1enhower, b rother of
the late President Dwight 0. Eisen-
hower, was said to be making a
good recovery after a hernia OP'"
eration. The patient, who is 811 is
a Tacoma lawyer. •
.. Pat __ fiixon has dispe__lle_s# g
secret: her Christmas present
from the President. It WO.! a J gold watch. The First Lady
·1 made the disclosure in response
I to questions by reporters. She
said the watch /las "a few Little
diamand.s spri11kled around" i
and that it was a gift "I 1ieed·
ed."
' • George Shearing, the blind pi·
anist, opened a collection of 30
pieces of sculpture, borrowed
from major galleries by the Ca1i·
fornia Arts Commission at th e
~1. H. de Young Museum in Sa 1'
Francisco. Contrary to the usual
museum procedures, all sculp-
tures are to be touched and all a.re
iderrtified in Braille. After explor·
ing a Sa1ome carved out of a red-
wood burl, he said: "Somebody
could describe for me forever the
smoothness of this redwood, b u t
not until I could feel rt myself
would I get my own degree of per·
ceptivity,'' • C i t y officials at Biddeford,
Maine, are not expected to p a y
oU the $100 re,vard they offered
Friday for infonnation on lost rec-
ords of the streets and sanitation
department. The missing records
were found Saturday in the city
treasurer's office.
AUCKLAND, New Zealand (UPI) -
AnU·Vietnam war demonstrators battled
police outside Vice President Spiro T.
Agnew's hotel today when he arrived for
a three.day visit Tonight t h e
demonstrators returned and shouted
"Peace! Peace! Peace!" every 15
minutes to try to keep him awake.
Ten demonstrators were arrested in the
first fracas but none outside the hotel
tonight when 80 police dispersed the
crowd of 150 who left with taunts at the
police.
It was doubtful tonight's demonstration
bothered Agnew -he was lit a suite high
up on the opposite side of the building.
The crowd began gathering early and
when the bars closed at 10 p.m. the
crowd increased to 150 persons. A small
mobile van supplied the demonstrators
with refreshments.
Agnew was greeted on arrival by
Prime Minister Keith J. Holyoake and
cabinet members. It was the last ofricial
stop on Agnew 's three-week, 11-natlon
Asian and Pacific goodwUI tours.
Shortly before the vice president ar-
rived at the InterconUnent.al Hotel, an-
tiwir-demcinstr810rs; -mciuarng ls o
members of a group called the
Progressive Youth, tried to block a police
van. P.olice charged tbe crowd and ar·
rested 10 of them.
''Fascist Pigs!" the demonstrators
~houted.
The protesters held up signs that said
118ewa.re of the Greek Bearing Gilts",
"Victory for the Viet Cong" and
1'H0Jyoake the Traitor."
Agnew Ignored the crowd and walked
into the heavily•guarded hotel lobby smil-
ing. Similar demonstrations in Canberra,
Australia, his last stop, resulted in 15 ar·
rests.
'Peace Diamond'
•
Set for Exhibit
NEW YORK (UPI) -A 435-<arat di•·
mond, the size of a child's fist. will be
ground and exhibited to promote world
peace, its owners have announced.
The two-inch by two.inch uncut gem,
dubbed the "Light of Peace," will be hon-
ed to a pear-shaped 150 carats and ex-
hibited around the country with proceeds
going to a special peace foundation, Zale
Corp. said Wednesday
It was discovered in an undisclosed
West African country last year.
At a news conference Zale officials said
the cut stone would be worth $3 million to
$5 million.
Communist forces shot down three
American helicopter.a Wednesday.
Fighting in South Vietnam Wednesday
and early today killed at least five
Americans and wounded at least 21
others, communiques said. The helicopter
crashes killed three men and acC<>unted
fur eight of the wounded.
The U.S. Command said U.S. battle
dealhs in Vietnam last week climbed to
their highest point in a month. A total of
98 Americans were killed, 33 more than
the previous week.
* * * Hanoi Standing
Still-So Does ..
Peace Conference
PARIS (UPI) -Charging that North
Vietnam and the Viet Cong have
"abused" tbe Vietnam peace conference
for propaganda rtasons, the United
States today called on them again to
begin serious bargaining in · semisecret
negoUatJons. u:s. NegolJit0r·-P6iIIPftibiD-reported·
to newsmen after the five-hour, 4>minute
soth session of the talks, "we didn't sue·
ceed."
''They continued to put fo r t h
misconceptions and distortions of the
situation in Vietnam and the United
Stales," he said. "They continued to de-
mand unilateral action on our part.
"They refused again our offer of
restricted sessions, and they refused
again to discuss the treatment of
prisoneri of war~
Deputy Chief Saigon negotiator Nguyen
Xupn Phuong told newsmen in his turn:
"Nothing. There ill nothing. They refused
to budge."
Earlier, inside the conference room,
Habib told the o t h e r side, "The con-
tinuation of sterile plenary sessions does
not sreve the cause of a negotiated set.
tlement" in Vietnam.
4,000 More Students
Okayed for Colleges
LOS ANGELES (AP) -,,. • result or
increased fees and some juggling of
budget surpluses, Ute slate colleges will
ae<:ept about 4,000 more students next
month than originally planned.
Flrst priority on the 19 campuses, said
a spokesman for Chancellor Glenn S.
Dumke, v.·ill go to transferring junlor col-
lege students who would othenvise "have
nowhere to go after completing their tv.·o-
)'ear program."
Synthetic Sno'\v
Set for Skiers
By United Press International
Ski conditions were reported good in
most Southern California mountain re-
sorts today, although most areas \\'ere
relying entirely on artificial sno\V,
June mountain, in the high Sierra, has
the best conditions, including eight lo 14
inches v.·hich fell Wednesday night on a
two to lour-fool natural snow base. Open
daily.
Blue Rjdge, Holiday Hill, Rebel Ridge
and Snow Summit are all making artifi·
cial snow and are open daily.
Snow Valley will be open Saturday if
it has enough good snow·making nights.
Mt. Pines reports a good natural sno\v
base for tobagganing and family snow
play.
MRS. HART GOES TO COURT
Mad e Noi1e at Pentagon
Se nator's Wife
Arctic Air Sweeps Plains
'Janie' to Jiidge
In Court Hearing
\VASHINGTON (UPI) -1',·ice the
No rthern California~ N ortliwest Bracing for Storm
judge called her "Janie."' as she is kno~'n
to her friends. It could havl' been because
he was not used to having the \vi fe of a
U.S. senator as a defendant in his court.
Ca lifornia
$0UTHEftN CALll'OflN!A -MGtll't
(loud'f Tl>u•M•V •1111 F•ld•v w!!h P••·
Tl1I cl••""" 11 tlmu. Orlule1 °"
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'''" "°'1hwlHI t>0r111111 11111n l'rldt r.
llltlt ltmlle'Fll!Urt ch1ntt.
LOS ANGELES AN O Vl(INITV -
Mo1Ur cloudV Tl>~•idlV &"d l'•ld&l'
with Hrlll! cle<orlno .i time•. OrlUltt
.,. ll1hl '''" Tl'lllrMlll' morning. Cl11nc1
of tltlll r&I" 1111ln 1oOm1!1-F•id•••
Ll!lll f-r1lu•1 Clun11t. low l~ll"·
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She is Mrs. Philip A. 1-lart. v.·ife of
f\otichlgan's Dtmocratic senator and
""" \.eW "'-<· heiress or the Briggs fortune. She was '! ': christened Jane, but the diminutive Iomt
s5 11 \\'as used Wednesday on the roll cnll and
~ ·~ .OT listing 0£ defendants when federal
~ 3, .«i magistrate Stanley Kin~ opened court in
~! .: suburban Alexandria, Va. .;: ~! ,o, J\1rs. Hart. tv.·o Episcopal bishops, and
ss '' five other clergy and lay leaders had
;; ': bef"fl charged by the federal government
.10 .n v.·lth impeding movement and creating
~~ ~ "loud and unusual noise" while al·
'' 15 tempting to celebrate a eucharistlc mass
~: ;; • ,J in the Pentagon concourse Nov. 13.
,, 19 The group represents 179 persons ar· St ST .ll n " rested v.·hen they attempted to hold n
' " " .. ;: .01 "mnss for p<'ace" in lhe Penlagon's huge.
11 bu~tling public concourse in connrction !! •·•' v.•it.h the Vietnam moratorium. It was the " H ,. third such altcmpt. in recent months.
" " ., , .
" " .. ~ " . " " '' 1T
" n " " .. .. . " ., ..
tl 11
J1 lf
" » ., '.l ,._ '*
" Fonner Parks Chief
•• ,. Due fo r Sentencing
"' ... ·" ... ,, LOS ANGELES (AP) -Mtl Pierson.
onetime city rccrtnllon and parks corn.
mlMioner, Is due for sentencing Feb. 11
.01 on convictitm of bribery in connection
with municipal affairs.
'I May Surprise You'
Manson, Judge Trade
Courtroom Pleasantries
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -"You knO\\',
Judge, like sometimes I wonder if you
know what is going on," said Charles
J\Ianson.
"Sometimes T wonder. too." said
Superior Court Judge George M. Dell.
It was a storybook setting in the Hall or
Justice \Vednesday as the bearded, shag·
gy·haired Manson chatted for 50 minutes
with the judge about acting as his own al·
torney in the Sharon Tale murder case.
"You don't just become a IB\\')'er
overnight, you know," said Manson.
"Well, there is an old proverb that you
probably have heard a thousand times."
De.II replied. "It is that a lawyer whQ
represents himseU has a fool for a client.
I th.ink that also applies to laymen who
choose to represertt"themselves,''-
Manson, 35, clad in red velour blouse
and tapestried vest, grinned as sf>eclators
chuckled at his sallies.
Manson complained about the in·
convenience of preparing h i s defense
froin jail and there were these ex-
changes:
r.1anson: "\Ve are living. you know, like
tn an age of computers but you give me
some paper and pencils and a stack of
books and tell me -you've got it made."
Dell: ''The district attorney is being le-
nient in approving a tape recorder being
brought in by your investigator."
,. Manson : "Yes, I was going to ask him
to call the whole thing off."
Dell : ''You speak at a high level of
understanding but some of your concepts
are a little esoteric."
Manson: "I may surprise you."
Dell: "I don't think you will surprise
me. \Ve in our black robes do our own
thing too, Mr. Manson."
lifanson: "These odd·looking people
(who visit him in jail as prospective
witnesses) are my brothers. They don't
drive a -car. ~They're -nving-;n ·sleeping·
bags. They don "t ha_ve an address like
you. I suppose at times l appear odd
myself."
Dell : "Hmmm ...
Dell granted Manson a continuance un-
til Jan. 28 to enter a plea to charges be
n1asterminded seven n1urders.
Big City Schools' Mood
Called 'Uneasy, Violent'
By UnHed Press laternatlonal
Un~asy. Adj. \Vorried, apprehensive
•.. restless, unquiet ... unstable.
Uneasy describes the situation in most
of the nation's big-city schools.
A Senate subcom1nittee study released
Tuesday says primary and secondary
schools in the nation's big cities are so
troubled by violence that learning has
slowed to a trickle.
The study said much of the violence
has racial overtones. blamed dropouts for
much of the trouble, and said three·
quarters of the teachers in East St.
Louis, Ill., carried guns because they
feared attacks.
East St. Louis ofricials denied this. but
there were many who didn't blink at the
figure. A United Press International
survey of the situations in some of the
nation"s major cities seems to indicate
thal things could be better, but they could
be \•lorse.
In some places. or course. the situation
Is m o re than uneasy. Outright f e a r
prevails. Teachers resign their positions,
or carry weapons like the students.
East St. Louis is one such place. Los
Angeles has its trouble spots, as do New
York City Chicago, P it ts burgh,
Rochester, N.Y.; Springiield, Mass.; and
others.
But in other places, the tension has
Susan A tkins
Gets Trial Delay
SANTA MONICA (AP) -Susan Denise
Alkins. among those charged In the
Sharon Tate murders. has been granted a
postponement until March 11 of her trial
ln the murder of Gary Hinman, Malibu
1nusician sla in In his Topanga Canyon
home last July 25.
J\fiss Atkins, 21, will be tried separately
rrom another defendant in the Hin·
mnn murder case. Robert K. Beauso!iel,
\\•hose trial ended late last year in a
deadlocked jury.
J\ll" Atkins has been lndlcted with five
others of a hipplt'.typc band in the
slayings of actreu Sharon Tate and four
(lthers last Aug. 9 and the kllllns of
m!lrket ownt'r -Lcno LaBianca and his
wife the follo win g night.
After her 3prcnrance In court Wed·
nesdn~·.\.~fiss Atkins chatted briefly with
11ewsmen.
.lessened recently. The most notable e~·
ample is Detroit, a racial tinderbox after
the 1967 riot. Others are Buffalo, N.Y.,
Providence, R.L. Philadelphia, and Cin·
cinnat1 and Columbus. Ohio.
\\'hi!e the South and South\vest do not
have problems of the magnitude that af-
fect big city schools in the North. there
have been incidenl.S. A v.·hite father com·
plained to the Wichita Falls, Tex., school
board Monday lhat his high school
daughter was attacked by five Negro
girls while a male teacher "just stood
there and watched." The five girls were
suspended and security was increased.
The nation's h1rgest city. Ne\v York,
had to hire 170 special school guards at a
cost of $500,000 afler recent incidents.
One example is Franklin K. Lane High
School, were black youths insisted that
the black freedom nag replace the stars
and Stripes. The principal refusl!d and
students disrupted classes, destroyed
cafeteria furniture and set one teacher's
clothes on fire.
"There is no doubt that a significa nt
number of won1en teachers have resigned
from their posts because of disci12!inary
problems they felt incapable of sur·
mounting," a New York board of educa·
tion spokesman said.
Lebanese Order
Guerrillas Quit
Inhabited Areas
BEIRUT (AP) -The Lebanese
government told Palestinian guerrJlla~
today to evacuate their quarters in in·
habited areas of South Lebanon within 43
hours or face retaliatory measure.s.
The warning follo\\1ed a protest
demonstration again.qt the guerrillas to·
day by the inhabitants ot lhe town o(
11asbaya. Beirut radio reported.
Guerrillas had set up ofrices in the tv,.o
towns next to school bulldlngs, the radio
said, thereby endangering the lives o.{
hundreds of school childr:::.
lnterior ~tinister K11mal Jumblstl -
the l{Qvcrnment's ch ief liaison man with
the iuerrlllas -said in a statement he
hart ordered the offices cl~ecl.
Some lnforma.nts said this decree was
likely to create new tension between the
~ven1n1ent and the guerrillas, v.·ho car"'
o\W at.tacks against Israel. ·
., Thursday, Jaltult'J' 15, 1971) IWl.Y l'l\OT !S
~mith Angry QUEENIE By Phn lnterlandi Equipment Damaged
Court Segregation •--~:::~~2+:~;-t'5;,,~. ~· :.
\~t· . .. ~-. Sabotage Hits AEC Plant
1st Insured
Craft 1-0f ted
CAPE K&NNEDY (UPI) -
Engineers tracked the fin&
Ruling Lambasted ..
: .. ~· ;.
...... ,
.~:. ·~
~· , . . ....
Hanoi OKs
Notes, Gifts
ATLANTA (UPI) -'"Jus.
tice' ain't bliPd any niore
She's just facing south."
That abservation by the
Atlanta· Journal's homespun
philosopher Piney Woods Pete
seemed to s ummarize
Southern reaction today to the
Supreme Court's latesl school
desegregation ruling.
The court \Vednc s day
decreed 14 school districts in-
volving 300,000 students in
Georgia, Florida, l\1ississippi,
Alabama and Louisiana must
totally integrate by Feb. I.
.. : .
-
.. ...
fo.1ost school officials ex-pressed dismay at the short ''Even i! I had time for an opinon, I wouldn't know
time allowed -a little over ________ w_h_a_t_to_do __ wi_·l.h __ it._'_' -------
two weeks -to reshuffle the
pupils.
''When you go tearing up the
school system in the middle o(
the year. 1 don't know that the
result will be," said William
P. Clark, superintendent of
Bessemer, Ala., schools.
Soutli Korea Denies
Viet Civilians Slain
\V ASHJNGTON (AP) fully , saying only that they OC· There ls that pa11lblllty .•• satellite INUred •aalNt the
DtstructJon of .,,uipment at a curred in such a way as to in~ The AEC s po k e 1 m 1 ft', ~ of rock~ nJght today and ., pr<pettd In kick It Into IU
major Atomic _Energy Cont· dicale sabotage was involved. however, said "we have .•• no f1nal orbU above the AUanUc
mission plant in Colorado has "Even with intensive in-reason to believe there was Frlday. ,
raised suspicioM of sabotage vestigation we are still not anyconnedlontGthefire."He The c ommercial com.
and prompted an intensive, 11ble to identify the body or said "It involvei a few municatkn tat.elllt.e wUJ re-
round-the~lock investigation bodies involv!d," he said. thousand dollars damage•• to main covered by ft.I $4.5
by federal agents. aceording "We're still at it. Once we flnd equipment "but we can't tell million Jnaurance poUey until
to government informants. a body there might be a link to you whether it was a whoslts, the ultimate 22,300-mlle high
The AEC confirmed there what happened last May. or a whatslt , or a whatever." stationary orbit la achieved. recently had been '"a rew in-___ _:.:_ ____ __;:._ ____ ...:... _________ ;;_ _____ _
stanc~s of damage to govern-
ment property" and equip-
me~t at the Rocky Flats,
Colo., racility, but refused to
characterize the incidents as
sabotage "because we are still
investigating.''
The plant, the ()nly one Jn
the country which processes
plut()nium for nuclear
warheads, was crippled by a
$4S million fire last May 11 .
A special AEC committee
investigated the lire and ron-
cluded it was caused by spon-
taneous combustion. 0 n e
source said the new probe has
yet to establish that the fire
was not sparked by natural
causes.
LADIES & QENTLEMEN.
Mr. ltot•r Ch•ln of H1mc.o'• of HON• ION• will It• l1t. N•w,.rt l•1th
for l J1y1 only, J•n. 11th thr11 11th, Thu r•., Fri. a Sit.
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IEFIRE IJSlttOI
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.. lllllJI ..... .... 11.n ., .
Abt tn jllpl11: """·-... iw, 1111 .... "1t• .... ., ...... lltm.
'w .,,.111t1MM 14111 Mr. htw CW.
Attk Now,.,._, 1•, 1107 Jo•ll•1" 1111., ~ 671-1711
.11!1:,JollCO'• J. TD.
STOCKHOLM, Sweden (AP)
-The Norlh Vietnamese
goverMlent has agreed to ac·
cept letters and small parcels
sent to American prisoners of
v.'ar via U.S. branches of the
\Vorld Peace Movement, ac-
"Everybody is still in shock
trying to figure out the situa-
tion," said John Mathews,
president of the F Io rid a
Senate. "It's a Imo st un·
believable that the court has
said it's got to be done in two
weeks."
"But two months after the
lire," he added, "a series of
things began to break out. not
serio:.is but t r o u b I e s () m e
things, very troublesome. And
SEOUL ( AP) A harmed, even if it might mean somebody's got to be doing
Spok•sman for the South it."
AOYAJ. Jlon9 .Kong TAU.-
IL P. 0. 90X. eec>•• RO?'«J KOMO
cording to a
the Swedish
mJUee.
spokesman for
Vietnam Com-
many Viel Cong have to be Tc ' Id t Korean Defense Ministry tt> 1us source wou no
day denied allegalions that ,~m=i':"::d:..'_' _______ _:d.:.":.:'.:.'i.:.be.:.....t:..h:..e_1:..·n_ci_d_en_ts_m_or_•..:_ _______________________________ _
Berti\ Svahnstroem of the
Sy,·edish committee said Louis
Schneider of the American
Friends Service Committee of
Philadelphia and Jim Forest
of San Francisco, a represen-
tative of the \Vorld Peace
Council , got the plan approved
in principle during a visit to
Hanoi this month.
Svahnstroem said the plan
calls for delivery of letters
and packages weighing less
than seven pounds t D
American branches of the
World Peace Movement .
These would send the mail to
11oscow for forwarding to
rianoi.
Svahnslroem said s o m e
details of the arrangement
have yet to be worked out,
"but in principle it has
already gone into effect."
t-.1any officials felt the
federal courts w c re a~
gressively pressing desegrega.
tion in the South while ig·
noring northern schools.
"It Is certainly regrettable
that in America we have to
have different standards_ of
justice for one part. o[ the
county as against another part
or lhe country," s a id
Louisiana Attorney General
Jack P. F. Gremillion. "School
districts in the Midwest and
the East have the privilege of
i:unning their schools. but In
the South the courts run
them ."
"This whole thing," ac-
cording to Georgia G o v •
Lester fl'Iaddox, "is an ex.
ample or the dcclaralion or
\\'ar being \\'aged upon the
South and her people."
i::outh Korean marines
murdered nearly 200 Viet-
namese civilians iri 1966 in
central South Vietnam.
Brig. Gen. Roh Young Sou
said the aliegation is "based
on casual statements by Viet·
namese refug~s and hearsays
and is not substantiated by
concrete evidence ."
He said "such unfounded
allegations are only detrimen-
tal to our commoo efforts for
peace by me allied nations in
Vietnam. and serve the in-
tertst of the common enemy."
A U.S. anthropologist, A.
Terry Rambo. now a graduate
student at the University of
Hawaii, said last Saturday he
had round evidence of South
Korean atrocities w hi I e
leading a U.S. government·
sponsored research team in
South Vietnam. He said he
took his information tO the
Defense Department but the
department did nothing about
---
Impala.
Idealists Die ___.._ it. -----1·----ltS more re.~sale
3 Peace Corps Girls Kifled
By ASSOCIATED PRESS
Marilyn McKay wanted "to
give of herself before she set-
tled down to her own life."
Martha Merrill ''C'{}flstantly
felt she wasn'L doing enough/'
Susan Davey was ' ' v e r y
altruistic" and "wanted to be
of service to people."
So it happened that in the
23rd year of their lives the
three girls -Marilyn from
Forest Hills, Queens; Martha
from Tucson, Ariz., and Susan
from Chicago -were assign-
ed as Peace Corps volunteers
in Liberia on the African West
Coast.
Tuesday, while vacationing
in Kenya, the car in "·hich
they were riding collided with
a freight train at a crossing
near Eldorel. 160 mi 1 e s
northwest of Nairobi. All three
were kille<j, together with a
student riding with them.
Joseph H. Blatchford, direc-
tor of the Peace Corps, said
the accident was ''the worst
single accident·· ever to strike
the corps.
For Mr. and Mrs. Robert F.
McKay in their Forest Hills
home in Queens the news was
doubly tragic since t h e y
already had lost their only son
in an auto accident. A second
daughter, a nun. su rvives.
The Kenya accident was the
first triple volunteer fatality
since the Peace Corps was
established nine years ago.
Twenty-nine other volunteers
have died in service.
Rambo was sent to Vietnam
in 1966 under a $130,000
Defense Department grant to
study refugee problems. Two
members of his team said
Wednesday their field work
had Wlcovered reports that
South Korean marines shot
Vietnamese ci\'ilians.
'The South Korean general
said the report on alleged
Korean atrocities was
"deplorable, for it ma y
damage the national prestige
of the Republic of Korea and
the good reputation of the
Republic of Korea forces in
Vietnam.''
He added that "it has been
the firm policy of Korean
forcei; in Vietn am that not a
single innocent civilian may be
Andy's Fun
Ask: CJny kid. "Ask: Andy" b fun.
Stt lt Saturdays In tht DAILY
PILOT.
I Se ··-I Enjoy the Luxury of Soft Water with an
_ aTS _Automatic Water Softener
Sears Aut.omatic Takes the Work Out of Softening Water
WITH SOFT WATER
Yoo Save Money soap and cloth-Yoo Work l.t.!S er wil.hout effort,
on detergents, I I Keeps things clean·
ing !MUI longer e!iminates bath tub
'---~~-~---' ~~~~-~~~· nngs
FREE Estimates!
Phone Sears
Today?
~[Sears )
MJ.A,~4*-
SAVE '41
This Week
So. <:;oast Plaza, 3333 Bristol St.
" Phone 540-3333
it' s~
value because . . more to re-sell.
Body by Fisher
Fisher Body builds bodie~ one way. To 11.st. That's 1he way 1f
is when che beu materials and
rhe best craft~men team up.
Side-guard
beam stnic:ture
Jmpala. is plenty 1lfon1. But
to make it even stronaer,
we welded a 20-pound steel
auArd rail in to each door. J u~t that much more
protection bclwu.n you t.nd
lhe outsjde.
Computer-
seleCted springs
However you equip your lmpal1., :...c-----our compu ter m1tche11he corrcc:tr
~c11 of Full Coil sprinas 'o its weiaht-front ind rear. Which
means no ovcr·sprin1in1 or under-
~prinaina. And a Jot more comfort.
Hidden
radio antenna
Fine-wire antennas buried
in the windshield are available,
No broken antennali tor you,
Maglc-
MlnorflniSh
Which means tpeci1l primer coat,,
scalers, 111.ndin;. three coau o( lacquer finish, b1tinz, UDdiDg,
bakin1 a11il\, and wuin1 or hori·
zontal surfaces. BeauutuLAod tou1h.
longer life
exhaust syslen(
The cxhau3t system'• critic•!
par11 ire 1lum1niud. So il itn.)J
11 quick to cxh1u11 iuclf,,
Or your pocketbook.
AotectMt·
lnnerfande~
Under each fend« ii
another fender. !ti t01e
purpose ii to fcod off .
zoad Wt. slDSb, and 111y.
thin1ehc tbowealblrcu
whip llP-
Wldestfiout b lld In Its fleld .
Power disc brakes More resale value,
more populartty, mo.
When a car wci1h1 •round 4,0001 lbs., extend• 11 feet. and c:arric1
_ a stand1rd 2SO.hp 150.Cublc·lndli
\
vs. it deu:rv11 lh111abilily of a ~
wider 11anc1. And th1l'1 just what
we've: aiven lmpall./'-' With our custom coupe you 1tt
powtr disc brak:s $landard \JP
front. And you can order them
on all other Impalas. \Vh11.1•s
more. our bntke lines arc built
lo rts.ist conOOon Jocacr.
•
•
lmpala's.hif}ler rcs1le value.
Jt'a quite a tradition with
America'• mo1t popular car.
And as you can ice rrorn the fcaturu hett, it'3 not a
1r1dition we're about to 1ive
up. Jmpala. Mor. to drive. Ji.fore to re-liell, ., your
Chevrolet du1cr will aladly
"10WJOU.
"
I
. I
·'
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<.
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DAD.V PROT EDITORJAL PAGE
'
.
Oil'·s Toll
The oil leak in the Santa Barbara._ ChanneJ· contin-
ues \Yhile oil interests argue for more drilling "to re-
lieve the pressure" and politicians dilly dally, as lhey
have for a year since the disaster.
Apart trom oil damage to the c<;>astline, the toll in
wildlife is shock enough in itself. The state Depart1ncnt
of Fish and Game reported last week that 3,600 bird~
died from the oil, plus three sea lions and four por·
poi ses. Treatment did little good. Of 1,575 birds treated,
only 168 survived.
The department's annual reJ?Ort also said ''alarm-
ing evidence" 'vas obtained dunng 1969 that breeding
colonies of bro\vn pelicans had an "almost complete
reproductive failure."
Jlo\Y much· value will be placed on offshore \Vild·
life once it is gone -killed by pil? Could any amount
of revenue from the oil justify the environmental dam·
age already done and con tinuing?
To ~he first question, the clean coastline and
healthy \Vildlife are priceless. To the second, a resound·
ing NO.
A Promising Idea
Fancilul ideas have been advanced !or bringing
waler to the parched Southwest from the \Yater-rich
North,vcst. One, for example. was 1o tow icebergs from
the Arctic, anchor _ them offshore, and pipe the water
ashore ·as the ice 1nelts.
Now comes an. idea \viih hnaginaUve ingenuity
"but genuine promise from Rep. Craig Hosmer. R-Calif.
First€roposed, in 1968 by llosmer and former Congress· -man d·'ReineCke. now Lieutenant Governor, the plan_
calls Qr water flowing into the ocean from the Eel·
Klamath River area to be piped to an appropriate
terminal point in Southern California.
• Ill Wildlife
Development Of plastic pipe some 15 years ago op.
parently solves the problem of salt water com>O!on. A_
buoyant, reinforced plastic pipeline up to 32 feet In. dla·
meter would carry up to 3 million acre--feet per year of -
\Valer which would olberwise simply be dumped irom
the rivers into the ocean.
Hosmer reports a detailed engineerillg study-of't!)e
unique idea indicates the pipeline would take &:5 yean
to put into operation and would cost about $2,188,009-
a small fraction of the cost of on-land aqueductl1 a ·nrd
pipelines.
-Estimates o! delivered cost of. the water put it at
about $77 per acre-foot, a figure competitive with alter-
native water sources for Southern California.
Hosmer believes the plan is feasible. If so. It should
put an end to the alann building up among residents of
Oregon, \Vashington and Northern California over the
prospect o! diverting water from ._their rivers before
they reach the ocean.
It would eliminate further on-land environmental
damage by water-carrying and pumping installations.
And if it is operating by 1990, as Hosmer suggests,
it could solve the water problems of Central and South-
ern California until about 2020.
· "After that," Hosmer said, ''I believe desalting
technology will have pro~ressed to a point where bO'th
areas could have unlimited water supplies from the
ocean. And this, of course, means that the Southwest
might never have to touch the precious waters of the
Colwilbia and the other Pacific Northwest rivers."
Fanciful as it may sound, the idea merits thorough
tnvestigation. It's all too easy to forget that most of
Southern California is a desert, existing only with the
benefit of imported water. ''PEACE, BROTHER." 1.:.-~~~~~--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~·:...-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-
i. • Enviro1i111ent N01v l1t•tltitt9 Politically I The Anti-pollution Effort
WASHlNCT(i'N' -The en\1ironment
roblem.is as big as all outdoors, lending
·1.self to lyrical passages and rhetorical
emedies.
.President Nixon's problem is to become
sQlficiently lyrical about the problem to
b¥ inspiring v"ithin the confines of a a>Vlanced federal budget. If accomplished,
!U'is wt!Uld be the neatest trick ot his ad·
{niinistration because there is no doubt
~at we could spend our entire national tcome on creating an ideal environment
lthout succeeding.
Environment is now the in-thing
tpolitica/ly, Governor R e a g a n of
1(;alifo:rnia IS" keynottng hls <administration
~ environmental improvement. Once
orld heavyweight champion Gene Tun·
ey's son. Rep. J ohn V, Tunney, Is run• .nIDg for the Senate in California with the
~ar-cry of cle8ning up the env ironment
rnd savpig us all fro1n rnass suic ide.
1 PRESIDENT NIXON is aboul to add
3\is bit in addressing Con11:ress on the
~11slate of the union and changing the name
f the Interior Dep artment to the Na-
ional Resou rces Department. It's now or
ver, the President satd, to begin to dG
something about air and water pollution,
pulation congestion and transportation
trangulation, A Council on Environ-
ent.al Quality has been created by act
f the last Congress in the executive of-
t!ice of the President and the President
1\vill soon name its men1bers and define
fits goals.
~ President Nixon's gro\ving enthusiasm
~!or en"ironmental impro\'ement reveals.
~ emphasizes. one of his more in·
cresting characteristics. His mind soars
ith reform. The Jarger the problem the
m'!Ore imaginative his approach.
i
•
Richa1·d Wilson
'•
He would. for e:-:ample. create a \Vhol\y
Volunteer United S t a t e s armed force,
notwilhstandinc a probably added cost of
numerous billions of dollars.
I-IE WOULD, AT one stroke, rerorm the
nalion's welfare system. at an added in-
ilial co_!it of ~ billl~ns-"'.hi~ y~ably
could not be contained within $10 billlons
Jn ·a few years.
. When environmeotal Improvement is
talked about, cost calculations must
escalale into scores of billions along with
drast ic aUerations in the operations of
the industrial system. Some claim that
merely to undo the havoc wrought by the
United States Corp of Engineers would
cost nearly as much as the $10 billion
spent by the corps in the past hundred
years or so on improvement of navigable
waters.
President Nixon is faced therefore by
the reality that any beginning he ma'ltes
on improving or preserving the quality
of the American environment will have lo
rely niore on rhetoric than ready cash.
Coni:;ress is spending the government's
ready caSh as fast <is it becomes
avai13blc as \vas illustrated lately in the
delightful discovery th at there v.•as
enough reserve in Social Security funds
to permit a 15 perceflt pension boost
\\•ilhout increasing Social Security taxes.
NIXON IS COMMITTED to balancing
the budget, and if he is to do so he will
have to find more tax revenue in an elec-
tion year. This will inevitably take
precedence over cleaning up the en-
vironment and merely illustrates the
nature of the problem the President
faces.
In one hour the President's mind soars
with the challenge of the 70s, how to
clean up the environment and prevent
our planet from becoming "a poisonous
world in which to live;" in the next Qoor
Mr. Nixon must consider whether or not
he really dares propqsln( excise tax in-
creases jn an election year so that the
budget can-be balantaf--as·-an anti•in•
nation measure.
The contradl'ction of wliDting to do too ·
much with too little fUnds '1flill have to
lead eventually to measures not requiring
heavy gOve'rnment outlays but shifting
responsibility for the anti-pollution effort
to the private sectoc of the economy
THAT ~IMPLY MEANS more slringent
laY.'S preventing American industry and
its products from polluting the air and
water and land and then instituting a
long-term.---program to·repair the damage
of the past. To say this is easy. To ac-
complish it may mean revolutionary
changes in the automobile, 20-year proj·
ects to rid rivers, bays and Jakes of their
poisonous silts. changes in the function of
jet airplane engines, alterations in basic
industrial processes, changes in the
manufacture of consumers goods, new
methods of waste control and disposal.
We would even then not havfl! begun to
remedy population and transportation
congestion nor have gotten into the more
subtle esthet.lcs of tte quality of the en--
vironmenL
; 'Unrealistic, Irresponsible'·
I .
• ~o the Editor f ' ( As a commander of the Military Order r_f the World Wars, I deplore the action of
.anti-Vietnam protesters. i::ince I.hey serve
tonly to encourage Hanoi to continue
~ostilities in a war the VC cannot win, ~d "~ho do nOt occupy -a -sfi1gl{! center of
~pulation and less than 10 percent of the
(area of the South. t These misguided pacifist! reluse to
ognize that there would be T\1l \var
re if Hanoi was not violating both the
54 Geneva Agreement and the 1962
4Lao:s Accord, in both of which she pledg·
led to respect the frecdo1n o£ her
laieighbors. llanoi recklessly h<)S suffered
eaths o{ over 580,000 of her nwn lorccs..
nd deliberately hai:; killed nearly 500,000
vilians jo atrocious attacks on centers
popu]atioo.
IF WE WITtlORE\V, ll~ they demand.
s Gen. Eisenhower declared, it would re a COmmunist victory, threaten the
---W-
Thutsday, January 15, mo
The editorial poae of t1ic Dotty
PUot seeks to inform (Htd s!im·
u!Ote reodff1 b11 pro11nti11g thu
newspaper's opinlotu and com--
mentart1 on topiCJ of inl~rest
and significanu. bu prov~d111g o
forum for the uprtssum of
our rnidJ:r1' opbtimlJ', o"d. bv
J)'Tlsenting tht dfvert_e. vit1.o-
potnu of inform.Id ol:iserver1 find rpolc<?M'< on ~picl o/ th<
dog.
Rob<rt N. Weed, PubUsher
•
•
Mailbox
lt'!teff !•om re••s '"' w•l<:0m~. tlorm•l11 w•l!••I &l\O!.lld c.onve~ !Mir m•»al!J\ in lOO wofd\ Of !flu,
T~' rlo-nt to coridenM: liltl•" lo lU s~c1 O• cllmi-n~!• liDel 11 !'fttNl!d. All l•llers mvs1 ln(lude 1\~ n•1vre and m•ll!nt «kl•eu, 001 n1one5 mav i..
W!l"llflld oti reoues! II ~ulliclen1 re.iison 11 IPPt•enl. f'otrrr w111 na1 ii. 1111bllihed,
freedom of alt Southeast Asian nations.
and would encourage Instigation of
hypocriricrilly called "wars of national
li beration" throughout the free world.
Resp0nslblc, patriotic A m e r i c a n s
regard lhe peace rpai'chcrs as an
unrc<ilistic. unpatriotic, undisciplined, ir·
responsible. u n .,.,. a s h e d horde of
••screwballs." utterly lacking any sense
vf righteous11es..<1 or concern for law and
order. The Prts.ldent should be sup-
ported.
JOSEPJ-1 \V. BOLLENBECI\
Capt., U.S.A. (Rel.)
Car• i\1ot 1•1n11t11i11gs
To U1e Edit.or :
I have just returned from viewing the ,
remains or one of my high school
classmoics. This terrible thing happened
because two fellow s wantert to have ll
drag race. Jf drivers Jle\1er learn that
cars are not pl3yt.hlngs many more young
Jives will be isnucred out m'edlessly,
SANDI LEASE
Chrl5'111n1 Gitt
To the EdJlor:
OVl'!r the Christmas holidays 1 did some
~urnng alortg the Orange Coa$l and one
da)' drcided to go surflngr pl Huntington
Beach. Along Coast Highway and the sur·
rounding streets in the city there were
parking meters, similar to those of
Newport Beach. Huntington's meters
looked dUerenl. though. Over each one
\\'as hung a green. plastic bag that had
prfnteil on ft: '1taPPY-HO!ida;Y&-Two
}Jou rs Free Parkifli."
It made me wonder, why can't more
cities do something like that?
IT SEEMS TO ME that Newport
Beach, the city that has gathered a mint
off of innovations such as the annual
surfboard license aod the $10-plus park·
ing ticket, could afford to give its
r esidents and visitors a small and useful
girt similar to this once a year.
I would just like to thank the city of
Huntington Beach for that unique
Christmas gift and ask the city of
Newport Beach to consider something
along these lines for next year.
GREG ASTLE
Dear
Gloomy
Gus:
\Vhat :i state our polllfcs Is In.
\Vith Tunnty running igainst Sen-
Ator ~1urphy, the son of a former
boxing champion is trytng to capi-
talize on the family name to ouft a
famous song and dance man.
-T. F.
'f~lt , .. ,.,. ""'"-"' ,...,.. .,._ ... __ , .. ., ,.,.,. " -...,.,_.. ,....
,...,, , .. ,.... ......... , o ... 0.11)' '""·
Senators
Investigate
'The Pill'
•"I-. •r ~\Ji> 1,,,." ., • ·'IY
.. l ..
! ' ~ -. { ,.,f
The Chinese Book of Changes, dating
troin the third millenlum B.C., prescrib-
ed quicksilver fried all day in oil as an
oral cootraceptive. Today•a tirth<onV'ol
lJUls-·compooed ol synlheUe hormones
wookl aeem considerably J&fer. But
British medical authorities ba\'..t , con-
cluded that ......,. ingesting pin.. -
tainln( ~ omounts d synthellc
estrogen run the risk of aerious,
sometimes falal, blood clotting.
A Senate aubcommi... headed by
Gaylord Nelson (0 ·Wis.) has just
begun hearings on the possible health
hazards d blrth<ontrol pills. Nelson
pointed. out on Dec. 22 that drug com·
jNlnl«I aro required by la\v' ~ supply
printed warnings of possible adverse
react.ions to their p-oducU, OOt that ~e
warnings aometimea: art not paseed on to
physicians.
USE OF THE PILL may be ,taken as
one index of the extent of the !IO"C8lled
sexual revolution. Only ar<Uxt nJne
million oral contraceptivu wen sold in
the United States in 1960, as Compared
with u billion in 1969. An estimat.ed a.10
million American women take The Pill on
a regular basis. Meanwhile, the country's
birth rate has declin«I to its lowest level
11ince the Depression.
The population of the United states and
of the entire world nevertheless is grow.
ing too rapidly. If current birth and death
rates remained at the same level for
1.565 years, it is estimated, the weight of
human beings would equal the weight of
the earth. Around 11 bilUon babies have
been bom since the Stone Age, which
means that one out of every 22 babies
ever born js alive today.
OOUBTS ABOUT the safety of oral con-
traceptives wue votced soon alter Ule
pills became generally available in 1960.
Unpleasant but usually minor s~feda
such as edema (accumulaUon of fluid in
cormective tmue) were reported by
users. A smaller numb« of rirnen ex-
perlenc.d lhrombophlebllls, a painful and
sometimes dangerous blood clotting in a
vein.
A Food and Drug AdrninlstratiOn panel,
appointed early in 1963 to look' into 1.he
Nood~~IJngrtpclrls, concluded afltr
five monUls of study that Jvailal>le
evidence offered no proo( that oral con-
tracepUvu. wen to blame 'for the
disorders. But suspicion or The Pill did
not abate, and the Nelson subcommittee's
finding may intensify it.
MEDICAL RESEARCH haa shown that
experimttrt.tl animals giW11 estrogen
developed a high incidence of breast
cancer OVt:r a IO-year period. Ttlus, I.here
is some fear that brtast tumors may oc·
cur Jncre.astngly among American pill
users by 1971. Or. Roy Htrtz, chtef ol the
reproductive research branch ol the Na-
l.Iona! lnstltul< d Oiild Heallh and
Human Devtlopm<nl. Is surveying 50,000
women to determh1e any caa.ial rela-
llonshlp between The Pill and breast
cance. .
Despite tarlitr predictions, n e
suliolllule for n.. Pill has yel been
dtvisod. Research has centered on in-
jections that would create a hostile
ut«ine environment for sperm1 on •
once-a-ytar fnjection which the mate
would consid<T to be the m<>ll nearly
ideal contractpUve of •U. the post.coital
pill. Nooe d these methocla ls beyond lhe
1 .. 1Jn1 atap.
I
Television Flunks
In Public Service
In his recent book. "With All Its
Faults," which he subtitles, "a candid ac-
count of 40 years in advertising," f ajrfax
Cone, head of one of the largest ad agen·
cies in the world, devotes a rousing final
chapter to the sins or broadcasting -
especially television.
"The air," he reminds us, "belongs
neither to the broadcasters nor to the
adyertisers, It belongs to the people, and
it belongs to aU the people,"
STATIONS AND channels are licensed ••m the public interest, convenience 8nd
necessity.'1 But they are run almost
wholly for private gatn, competitive ad-
vantage, and popularity ratings. The
huge TV networks themselves, in my
opinion, ar~ a criminal betrayal of the
public intaest and the whole concept of
.. responsibility" ill communication.
Last month, the first Alfred I.
dePont-Columbia University survey of
American broadcast j o u r n a 1 i s m
castigated "cynical proprietorship" or
teleVi:sim and radio stations that "do as
little for-their audtence as they can
legally get away with." You can't say it
much plainer than thaL
THIS Sn.JOY, echoing Mr. Cone's book,
pointed out that of the 30 television spend-
eni. representing advertising budgets of
$1 .3 billion, none chose to sponsor a net-
work news docullW!ntary in the past sea-
son. An assassination or a space-launch.
' . . ~ " '. :'i'';R;J
r, !Y~_ney :J~H~-
tng will spur hours of news time, but reg.
ular programming is "dulled by broad"
casting's ~sistenl pursuit of profit."
As Cone makes, clear, "there has never
been another medium even remotely like
television, and it requires a new set of
rules for all of the participants.~' The
privileges of sponoors-, of ad. agencies, of
the networks and the channels, must b8
StJbordinated to lhe rights of the ~le to
be fully, accurately, bonesUy informed.
IT JS NEITHER necessary nor
desirable lo lake the profit motive rot' ot
broadcasting; but it is essential to for ce
the profit.fa't networks and cfiarinek to
plough a larger share of their earnings
back into operations that perform a
public service. This could easily be done
on a rotating basis, Where each network
would give up one or two nights of prime.
time a week iI it wanted to keep its
license.
The .Jarge advertisers will not volun-
tarily penalize themselves by sponsoring
programs that attract a smaller au-
dience, but the broadcasting industry
itself ·should rotate the advertisers•
message ·through a full spectrum of pro-
grams, or give up the air it is polluting.
Eggs a Penny a Dozen
Things a columnist might ne'm' know if
he didn't open his mail :
'l1lose good old days: In 1530, in
England, if you had $50 in cash and
wanted to live on a farm, you could stock
it with three horses, six oxen. 20 cows,
200 sheep -and still have $2 to apply on
the rent, which was about S5 a year.
Chickens sold for a cent a piece, eggs a
penny a dozen, a big fat goose five cents,
wheat five cents a bushel, and the price
of beer was legally set at two cents for
three galloos.
A survey found that 78 percent of
Amer;can girls and women wear pantie,11
during the winter months, 23 percent
more than do in summer. What will
.science discover neict.?
At about the age of 35 prac-
tically everyone start,s suffering a loss of
hearing in certain ranges ol sound.
mERE ARE FEW divcrces among
people who remarry after 65. Almost all
Such marriages are successful, a
University of Connecticut study found,
and listed 75 percent as 4'hlgnly sue·
cessful." One reason : most of the
widowers and widows who took second
mate.s had had successful firSt. mar·
riages. •
Quotable notables: "We live in a
('()Ckta!I culture whose unlovely symbol is
the ring oa the best mahogany." -Elsa
Maxwell.
The champagne life, alas, has its perils
-including opening the botlle. "The
dir'ect impact fct"te ()( a flying cork.
which may strike the eye at a speed of
about 45 feet per second, compares with
the impRct ol 8 mine blast," says Or.
Wilfred D. David, exeartlvt director of
the SOc:itty for the Prevention o(
Blindness.
'EXECUTfVE SIGNS: This one's on the
Wk or Jules Podell, cwncr of fhe
Copacabana in New York: "It takes more
than a shoeshine to give 1 man a polish."
'Mgbt-packed: PulS'llrs. Of nartran
Sl8rs, can. give of( 100 times as much
energy as our sun. ~e mystery stars
IN! !la 1fJ1st that ln an area of a few hun-
i
llal Boyle ... , • j'
~= ' ·~· .. ..,,,.,.., "'~_....,...;.,,
dred miles or less they can contain the
material foul'ld in a million earths.
Early Decline· i\{ost people think of
middle age as beginning on their 4oth
birthday. As a matter of fact. however,
their physical prowess reacl1es its peak
at about 26, after which lt begins to go
slowly downhill.
FRIGJO BOON : Molorlst1 tn
Fairbanks. Alaska, get a cold weather
bonus. notes the National Geographic
Society. \Vhen the ten1pcrature falls to JS
degrees belo1v zero, the parking meters
conk out.
Wortll remembering: "Psychiatri~l!
say Lalking helps solve problems -
causes 'en\, too:· -Arnold Glasow.
Better !ale than never: Tickets lO
years old \~ill be accepted at Expo 70, the
gigantic international exposition on which
J apan is spending $2 bH\ion. They are the
12 million tickets sold for the planned
l!'MO World Fair in Tokyo which was
canec\ed by the outbreak of war.
tt was Winston Churchill who observed.
''A fanatic is a man who can't change hit
nllnd and W1>n 't change the 11ubject." !
' Bu George __ _,•,
•
I,
Dear George~
Please send me your pamphlet.
~·1,001 Things lo Tell Your Wife ,.
When You Stay Out UnUI Four in fi
'the lttorning." ~
G. WILLIAMSO!f '
Dellr G. \\l illiamson:
Please send me proof that "G''
~lands for something like "Greg'' :
Instead of something like "Grace.·•
One wife broke our security last
year and we h41d to write n whole
'l('W pamphlet.
. -~--------------:; .. -~-
DAILY PILOT 7
•
CHECKING • QP •
Jody'-sMom,S.aysDead Son ·'Wanted to Die'
' -
,,_ Wlr.Semceo !try Lallldown, Mn.,r .. ,, Fouquet.all·Y••r-old ponntly wu.julous of Jef. told Fouquet: U,_o .. raperlodoltwoto
LOS ANGELES-Sheljff'1 quot's child ,by a privlour ,..ldar,lsaecUoedolbau.tnc f<lyaodhad-bealln(hlm "Dlddy,ldon'twanltollve lhree wem.
olOcen say Betty FouqUat, marriage. ' • • ., tbe J>oy todealli Sept.,lf, 1118, ·be<ause be wu another man's any more." The FouqU<lJ, meantime,
whooe huaband ls under· Ill-The sta-given last and ltavtng his body by the aiJn. Fouquet auartedly ulted, , dktment l<>r murde< In lils Dectmber by Mrs. Fouqoet , aldo ol a road -In the•~ lille rtlatod, lnvesUaators "WbydOn'tyouJulldle," ara awaiting trial Feb. i In Grass Cl • Ad Ke ~·· dloth, told t h em _wu made public by -~~-~Sa"'"' d!J)rlcl of ~ 11111.Jh•t the boy persisted 1n "All rlcb~ l will," hll Bakenlleld on felony charges · aim~ · -' y-the li>y·llld be waoted to die !nvesllptors lfler-1\·on·atd"-Lot;\Dples Coupty. , •• nlllq Fouquet "Daddy" even mother said the boy replied. of11bandonlng another of the
only a day before he auc-Fouquet was lndletod IY!ll,li Mn. ·Fo~ 2'! . w 11 tl!qqb tbe stepfather ob-Accordln( to the stalsmenl, woman'• cblldren, Jody
cumbed to beatinp. neaday by the Lao,i~. quotod I!! tlii •Qoo. ~;-le<lsd. Julll pr1or to hla death, the.next day Jeffery did die Lansdown, ~.
To Man's Survi· val . 1be boy WU :;.year-old Jel· Counly Grand Jury. . m:nt u 1111!:" Fouq11et •P-Mr~ Fouquel Aid, JeHery ofter be•tlnc• lhat had -cl:t.r~ w; f-:~ .. ?;;~ ~
r, • · ' '' .. "f ' freeway fence 25 miles south
Y t S lft'~.J--_OfS of Bakersfield. or y ure ·. "· ~ ...... ' The Balterafleld case led to
,,_ t. M BOYD WHY,,.,, S"'"'DE llATE " Inquiries by Jody's natural · w' . ·:--:r • .,.. ff C uld T !._. B · ' h s • • A d lather, Blliy Joe Lansdown of
u:irJ:."!h;; ::i:~ ~f'"" rn!utr ::h: ~ e 0 .LUn 0\ . eac It-ms rreste lii~iii!=-~;;·~;::·Y:;oi:;Tett_·--~~iii".°"itilhi• -L1-w ~--I ha In unknown • ' • POSTMEN In -,, -.~._.,......peope ve NewYorkCltyfindaboutto B t U h, -...nr-Tlllt's w h' • t the ' wallet. a day tn the mallbo1es ea nru • Get !he moil on
medical ltllowl want to know. • •• DID YOU JUWJZE there LONG BEACH (UPI) -School. ofOclals warned the sbowlng llbns deplcUng ... INSURED s•v1NGSI
N.,. __ IUCh thlnD he has were no aemtrab In the U.S. LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Four l.4111 Beach Slate itudenta that their presence acls, violence and'"' educa· 11 •
IOWld out. They're angry; UU. Navy µntll 81 years ago? · . • Saylnf he wu aatlslled lie Colle1<. studenb were arrested lnalde the bulldlng would be an tlon. Both prof....,.. have KEYSTONE
"'1""'1atrtat conlendl, l"'Y NO COu.EGE LAD studying SAVINGS lnl"Y· I f exttwdlnarily Plato should forget the word cou1d defeat Jene Unruh in Wednesday In a <·ln ~ unlawful auembly when Jt been notlfled they will not be AND LOAN u~iATIDN
heavy people were able to •symposium" actually mean1 the June primary. Mayor Sam testing the suspensions of two cloaed _at $ p.m. All but the rehlred for the 197 0-71 t-ld'W eo.-.,tr.1Jon1 move around better. ~e "drink together'' ..• IT 18 Yorty baa revealed there ia a professors wM u.ted nude fouramsteddrlttedoutoftbt academic year. u::U.':l'Ja.5.38~:::
claims, they would make· Uie CLAIMBD the four thinis "distinct possibility'' -he may models and movies deplcUn& buUdlng before it cloeed. "We were tryinl to show the 1..u..~ f:"'lrnl.,.Jw..I• 1"11'14'• fiercest soldiers. most essential to the survival run f<r Governor. · , sexual ads in a IOdology 1bere wu no vlollOCI wt')eft ~ Mt. flf..w..t,..""""
OPli(N QUESTION -Can ol man are air, Ugh~ walsr '"You, can ... It 11 a, dli-cl-cit)> pollce and campus secur!· absurdity of COM!derlng ,.., flll.ASlllLlllCatlOllWI a17,~explaln the nat\ft of and grass. · t:inct W-., chaJ.. 11ie four Were part of a ty cuardl moved to a btU ua1 behavior or parts of the fOIYOUttMNI
baJl.Jlu!nlng? CUSTOMER SERVICE-Q. lenge 'U".! %r I ;.:u Demo-pollllca Is needed and I am group QI about lOO aludenb bour-lalsr. ' human body u ob-e," -
-With about 30,000 "How far coold a ful1..grown craUc gubernatortal nOm.Lna. there who blocked a hallway of the The two men~ upend· Steele aaJd.
hairs on his face. the average elephant throw a . full.grown lion," Yorty said. ~, · are marir · Demo-administration building to pro-ed Monday after Uley put on •,:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
man has •pproxi;mately 10 'man?" A. Believe!: 76 feet ts crats wbo reject the type of test the :JO.day 8\JSpensl.ons cl. clauroom demoutratlon with
time.a as many whiskers as a the record ... Q. "BOW FAST "I will announce rtr'I final leaderihtp being handed out Don Robertson and Marlon two nude glrll and two nude
robin has feathen, and I does a woodpecbr'1 beak decision in about 60 days at-to Ulem.'• Steele, men w h 11 • 1Bnultaneoua1J ':hou&ht ~ Q:llght be _able to move?" A. Maybe 100 miles I.er aurw:y1 have been qllde.'" ...:.;...==------....:.,=.;.... ______ ..:;;,.;...._....:.,_;;.;.,;;_;,;;_....:.,:11
use thJJ .infonnatlon in your per hour •.•• Q. "IN A FIGHT The filing date ls March 30.
wort lncidenlalJy, zpeaklng of betwien a llori&nd a ltop.td, "l am satisfied I would de-
whiaken, am adviaed ne~er to which wiM?" A. Usually the feat Unruh Jn the Jtme ..prt.• ~
l\tn a Nfety razor m a leopard mary although It would not be .
medicine cabinet w!lh loosely DooNG OUT-Children do easy. He bu solid left wing
ttoppertd Iodine botUea. Such not sit down to dinner with activist 1upport. And I am
iodlrit fumes, it's said, corrode their parents in th 0 s e sure I would give lncurnben~
the blades. restaurants By • • th 0 s e Reagan a tougher fight than
restaurants"' I i'efer to a Unruh tn the general election;"
chain or duitnr establishments . the mayor added.
In Sweden wheriln the Off. Unruh, Aasembly minority
spring cl cuStonien are herd-leader, has announced hls can·
ed into special 1ect:tOn.;. There, dldacy for the DemocraU~
thty eat at smaU tables, nomination.
oversttn by delterous ladies, Yorty s a Id his objective,
who reportedly get used to it. should he e n t er the race,
eventually. would be to "save the Demo-
LOVE AND WAR-Dkt you crauc party, give Jt a more
1 read that Georala gentleman's moderate tone and give it a
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -ha c kney e cl claim that chance to serve the people
'Wild Spree'
Suspect
Surrenders
An ex-<0nvtct suspected of a Southern girls are prettier of this state."
wild sbooUng spree which left than Northern «irb? Que!Uon Yorty also said, "An alter·
two persons dead and three arises ·why UUs be so, if indeed native to the Unruh type or
wounded surrmdered quietly so it be. Our Love and War
Wednesday in the garage of a man has thought it over and
suburban home, which an decided the contention has
unemployed &OClal worker had some merit. "Southern girls
offered as a shelter from a learn to play at an early ag~
Sorrn. while Northern glrls
1
learn, howh
* * * Brown Hints
NOWI • • ac11c
Savings
PAYS
Outdoor lighting you
; never thought you
could afford!
HeMayRun 1bt suspect, Ra ·ymond toworkatanearyage,' e
Scott, M, an animal handler says, "and it is widely known
for a veterinary ICbool at the that girls who play well are
Davil campus of the Unlverai-prettier than girls who work SAN JOSE (UPI) -Fonner
ty of. California, had a .33 well." We may discuss this Gov. Edmund G. Brown sayJ
caJlber_ ptatol .rolled up.Jn a IJ)at~ ag~._bjJt I doubt it. he is · ~;~I~ _at.:_lll_e
jacket he wu ualng as a RAPID l\EPLY -Yes, sir, poulblllty o! rwa>lng Cor ~
pillow. the chipmunk always divides Democratic gubernatorial
Scott hu been sought since its burrow UM a three-room nominaUon against Msembly~
Tuesday afternoon. when a abode : bedroom, living room man Jea Unruh.
wild tlllJllll&ll shot down people and pantry. "rm dotng nolhlng to
at .random in a rampage Your questioni and com-generate any steam on my
throulh the Ingleside residen· mt'nU art welcomed and own," Brown S&id in an in-
tlal district. wilt be med wherever pos-teivlew rep:>rted ln the San
WhUe police were con· zible in "Checking Up." Jose Mercury.
A quality system }'.OU install yourself
, •• ln minutes, with complete safety •.
No---·-utlordlafl!l-IY•••fuollllUllnl •UL
--1Z '°It sysllm abaolUlll)I 1hodq>toof, child safe! •
ThM low voltql tltl n complate with latp Mtled beam
1wa. color ltn111 (Imber, .,._, cw, pfnk Md blU1), weather· -
Slf'OOI, lhockproof cable, nrmomw with Gl'Hlff switch or
IUtomltlc tJrrw. around ltlkea and Wiii brackets • Use this
a:IUna ""' lllht from Uttla Giant In -. of -thrauah-
out Iha -frw security and outdoor bnuty. FOii' sepnta ducUng an extensive search Please address 11our mail to Br.own said a delegaUon
fO(' Scott early Wednesday, L. M. Boyd, in care of spob wkh him 1'lelday of~
they·received a call from Dan DAILY PILOT, Box 1875, fering financial support if be
Wlodom, Of Lalayetls, a N~wporl B<<1$.h. Calif. decided 19 c\l!l!Lenie Unruh !or
IUbwl> ~ miles easl of San· 92663, the nomlnalloil. "=: a 2 5. ye • r . 0 I dljiiiiiiiiiiiiiCoiFP'iEi;;Ni'TTiONONi1iiiGtt:HilT'iiiiiiiiiiiiiil
unemployff social worker,
Aid he befrierided a man in a
San Frlneisco bus station
'I'Ueldly nitht. gave him a
ride 'to Lafayette and then let
him sleep in the garage
because i1 was cold and wet
outside.
Don't
FIDDLE
AROUND
figuring
your own
w-. who la married and
has two small children, said
he bedded his guest down in a
aleeplng bag and turned on the
Jate television newa. The man
he had taken pity on malched
\he description of the wanted
~social worker notified
the Contra Colla oherilf'1 o!-
llce and deputie5 burst Into INCOME TAX
. Ille 1arage. They Aid Scott
did not ,..1s1, but marled
••FuclltJ" at the arresting of. ~, flcen.
• Scott la also wanted In Davis
for attempted murder, assaul.t
wtth a deadly weapon, twO
cauntl of rape and three
count.a ct Jddnaplng in ~
-w!lh ..... kend crime ~ ln that unlvenity com-
munity 'Ill mUes eUt of San
FnncJsco.
Burglar Tries
SAii BEllNAllDlNO (UPI)
-bemia D. Gibeau, 2Z,
-WrlaJrtwood, a convicted · buiclat. alt.empted to stab
htmlell -• lll>arpened
, ... -...... ,.,, .. , .. --"" ....... ..,.,. .. ................ ~,_
llftitl.91 ,. ... -,.... liiw.
_,,. "-~ ....... N&l
lleck. W.'W ..... -"" --""' ..,.,., ..... ........ "-_,, .. , ..... , .. , .,_
""""' f., IMllllU1cy. Wfrr~•.. .-ft lilt lleck ... ,._ ... ,
aorll I flDllAl ·
AND ;
STATI
l!m
' ' C..ta Mel.-C•t1 Mele . CONM tlel Mar' ~
1175 HI,.., 11¥4. 2750 H1rW llWI -LC.W-Hwy.
(ftMH.t,,.., aytJ '
· toolhbruoh In aupertor court , . w-y after he wu WllKDAYI t.f IAT· & IUN. f.J
li!ntenced to I prison term. fllO "'"°INTMIM1' -•t•HA•Y r-liiiill ----COUPON·-- - -_.
SIZZLER SANTA ANA FIGHTS I L INFLATION WITH A GIANT WEEK-END I
I [ 2~ Ovr f~~~l .4~~~!n ~~~l~ner ~1 ~t I· 1 I Another for Just "ONE CENT" lwlth coupon).-Yeu luy
, 2 Saled1 lo 2 Drlnka. Sale Runs 3 Bit Daya -Fri., Sat., Sun., I January 16th, 17th ancl 11th I GOOD ALL DAY -LUNCH .. DINNER 11 AM. .. ' P.M. I
GOOD AT SANTA ANA 517710 ONLY
I 2821 S. lrimll St, (Naxt 0-to Dept, of l"'pl°"'*'tl
546·8270 Sorry, No Tab Out
·-----COUPON___ -.;
. "
PER AllNUM
COMPOUNDED DAILY . ' .
on six-month ' .
Bonus Ac.cou.nts
S,,000 OR MORE
If withdrawn before alx months It la treated
••a regular account. "egular aa,vlnga
accounts tam 5.13% when -our &.00% .current
annual rat• la ~mpounded d11lly .and main-
tained for a year -earning• paid from date of
receipt to date of withdrawal even for one day.
Ask how you can receive, service charge
FREE
1. Jafe Dei)ollt Box 4. Tickets to aporta
~ · Tteveler'• Check• and theatre attrac·
· 3. Collectlon of notea Ilona (Tlcketron)
1$• Many other FREE Hrvlces.
OPEN SATURDAY
• Twe~0~~~;~'S:vou • --OIClllrlll lllWICl\WtU.•--
D_•_ IAIT•Mlllli alllllllll lll!ICOMtlUM _ .. ]..... .............. ... ;· 1M. C.. .. Cllti
~ ttMIUPIAZA JJtz\•tHM IMll&-
Ufll.-11& ---... _ ... -·· 'I,, II& ' ·IA& atA AllCW ._,,_ ,. mu.1t21•
mt-II& 41LU.Ma 4111.-a .... _,.
.,.
,.
1111 lo -'"""'
Anothat Uttlt Giant Product
FOR 'ALL YOUR
PLUMBING NEEDS
WATER HEATERS
• REPUBLIC "GEMINI"
20 Gal •••• $42.88
30 Gal •••• $44.88
40 Gal ••••.• $49.88
50 Gal •••• $64.88
Thi• qu•llty 9u•r•11t•ed 91•11 lln•d w1t•r h1•t•t
It equipp•d with 1•f•ty ••mp. 11 r•quired bv
l1w. w. h•v• 11m• d1y inli1!1 •tio11 •v•il1bl.,
if yo11 with. All norm•I h11t1ll•tlo11 p1rh inc lud·
ed. C•ll by 11oon-in1t1ll th1t d•y. Al10 •m•r•
t•llCy lfltt1ll•tl111 ev11l1bl•. All work done by;
mc1t1r pl11mb•r1,
INSTALLATION AVAILABLE
GARBAGE DISPOSALS
IN·SINK·ERATOR
MOOEL NO. 333 $3195 REG. $59.95
OUR PRICE ........ ..
• Mod1I lJJ-1 Yr. G111r•ntee • ~
MOOEL NO. 555 s4511 RIG. $69.95
OUR PRICE ......... .
Mod•I 111--1 Yr. •u•r•n .. 1 '
MODEL NO. n s541s REG. $79.95
OUR PltlCI ..........
Mod1I 77-1 Yr. G11•r•nt1• •
INSTALLATION AVAILABLE
5 PIECE MEASURING SET
.I
'4 STAIN~ISS
STEIL SPOONS
WITH HOLDIR
R09. $2.91 Value
' ' '
I
I I
I
f DAILY ,PJ~OT Thunday, Ji111uary 15, 1'170
! I '
SINCE 1929
W.HITE~
FRONT ·
DUAi.iTV • SEAIJJCf • DISCOUNT • INTEGRITY
A bandy tool; with ~1pe
jaws and clamp. #667 ova IEI. lnw ,.IC[ i.!J
S.S. DUAL
GAUGE FOR CAR 1 Oil pressure and ammeter g~uges. Swivel I
ioou"!s. illum1mtl100; with m0\ln11ng ha1d-
ware. Haw~ 1352. OUR REG. PRICE l.ll I
LAii Dar:s · . . OF OUR A'NNOl·-·' .. . . l JAIUAIY" .... ._
4 •• '1 ·.11 ~.. ,;.#
:0_~· ... SEIYIQ . '
SHOP ll~f':{,.-41!..
NOMI FOi ;;t;~
C/llPmNG,_
.. CW..21 3.11& MM&
• 12.1 cu. ft. I , Huge ~ven ..
ref,rigerator 1
1
and glide-out
with56~:cap· smoke les s
acity freezer I broiler. 4 sur-chest • Glide-f b & out. s'elves•, . I ace urners . '' 1 wide WQft.Jlfea "deep profile" 1 • lnlinite heat
door storage .1 heat selection
shell • full-1 thru -out.
w1_dth porcelain. 1 1Eu•ur. ,,...11. crisper • Twin 1 1MSTM.1JTlll
egg. shelves. I '"""'
NORGE H'EAVY-DUTY
AUTOMATIC DRYER
• "Fan· Jet" eff~iency .•. clothes dry faste1. ll'll)re evenly • [nd-of-
cycle signal lets )'Cll know w~en ~ryirig cyi:!e 1S elliling • Spetial
cycles for all types of ~abf'1cs including pemia-press.
· '1iLEN ·
ClMPBELL,
,;•"SATISFIED
. •· MIND"
JOHNNY
SAVEi CHOICE OF LAMPS
BOUDOUR LAMPS IHl·lllTINSITY" -,
VARIOUS STYLES I DISK LAM I
I
I
J
Trigger action; glue & caul\·
ing sticis included. #968
OUI I EG. lOW Pl lCI 5.97
14" STEERING
WHEEL
A ·tli\)-selling hit' New
-from Pickwick Rec-
ords' _________ i1m, ____ ""'
' 45 RPM RECORD
CARRYING CASE·
Holds 50 records.
Comp lete with in-
dex for easy filing.
r-...r Choice ol colors .
CASH
HIS TOP SELLING
ALBUM FJ!OM CO-
LUMBIA HARMONY
. GREATSAYINGS! ·---Ji.---------
SRASS FINISH
' RECORD RACK
!~ot0s 1-
1 COOOROS :lds up 10 60 recMds -either tri l I RE or 45 RPM singles. Re<Didfalways at I YtJUr fingertips!
......,,
.. • • -· ·..,. ..
>l:lu.led ballerina shades; choice
of ·118!:es in mill! glass, marble
or fio~nai t -glass. o.llR REC.
• PRICE 3.41 • •
\Dl~~\\ tot ~\\
MOMl \\
Off\(l \\
-& SMQP 1~
rocuses a bright, wl!~e :;
light in a conce11trated l ·
. area. Gives g!are free li~bt· fJ ~ I rng for readrng, sew ing. ;
I Gooseneck-.
style in I beige. I black , I , v o r y •
• Model 390.
FANTASTIC BUYS ON RADIOS, PHONOS, RECORDERS
I
"SUN COUNTRY'! : t
AIR FRE.SHENER
Powerlul solid state •mi>-
lifi!f and 4 speed auto-
matic l!COfd changer in
one compxt unit. Matched
6" Oynapowei speakers in
WilRUI arain li•is tied en-
closures. Dusi-cover incl.
QITI FIOllT
'
----------
1
..
. CIEDIJ ~IER
.. j, " ' ·~·-~ I
I PHILCO 1•-
INCLUDED AT MO EITIA
COST WHITE flONT'S
3 JEAR
PIOURf TUBE
REPLAffMENT
WARRANTY
(llClUDING lAIOI)
G ~E .· l 8'' P 0 RT AB L E , ' .
• All channel, VHF/UHF black and white reception •
lightweight for easy portability • Durable, slim cabi-
net·with front controls. M4 20
PHILCO~=~ 1ELEVISION ' '
• Big viewing area in slim-line cabinet • Reproduces black
and white pictures of contrast and definition anywhere •
All channel UHF/VHF reception • Built in VHF antenna, de-•
tachable UHF loop antenna for good reception.
HURRY LIMITED QUANTITY! "
••111 fto11rs
H-IU 111115·
Ill Sll'llCl IT
ltQU!tl
tOST
I
• \
ZENITH 18''. PORTABLE : -* • sum-line ~abinel with· bi g viewing area • 'Excl~-
si ve handcratted 20,000 volt 'chassis • Built-in-tele-
. scoping. antefl(la and carrying handle • All channel • •
VHF/UHF .tl!ning. .
3 QUARTS
.,ENNZOIL
4 QUARTS
TRANSMISSION
FLUID ,
General ltitors ~ed! Sa~e dol-$ I ~ on t•a1e S«Yice bills. OUatl .-
11te. •
COMPARE 59' 4 ::~
f ;ivmou~ dtf)endable trrancl
in ;i choice of 20 DI JO
~I~~ Stock UP ruli, illld sm1
STOCK UP THESE SUNDRIES AT SPECIAL LOW PRICES!
AQUA NET
HAIRSPRAY
HU&E 16 OUNCE
IMPlllAL SIU
3 -~s-regurar. llard-to·
kllll or ansceftled. Save now!
r
6 ::.OA1 54c
l'Jl(ll •
Thuriday, January 15, 1970 : DAil Y. PILOT ft •
HURRY •••
THIS EVENT'
E.NDS SUN.
JAN. ·18
;,
., ~-~l ®o:...===
• WE BC OR 18" :,~i; TV
• 13.000 volts of picture tube pow-
er • 3 stage If vi deo ampli fier •
Memory !me tuning system • All
channel VHF UHF tuni ng system •
Handsome cart included.
ELEClRIC
PERCOLATOR
Aominum c.oJ!ee 'l!.J~';r
r· ~~~s 2 Ill 9 Cu~~ ot
~ .. ~1e1ous col!ee. Sa rr1y
1 ~.ermostat lo ~re~ent
'ourn.oul". 81 Chilton.
Har~est gold or avoc ado.
#1198·41·~4.
OUR REG.
LOW PRICE 4.47
·. . ' . ' . . ....
JUMBO-SIZE PICTUR£~!'
lAllOSCM'ES
"SUSCAPES
MOOERllS
A wide selection of sub-
iects whether yoo like an
"Old Mast~" "' ')jorre-
~mg roodern." Beautrlully
lr<WOOd rn M!drterraooan
.waloot or antique go~. '
ll"x55"
. tMC(MDEO AJ IHI m11
COST WMITE flONM
,3 YEAR
PIOURE TUBE
' REPLAUMINT
WARRANTY
!IXClUDUIG U.101)
,· ~11"1!.
.·1 •
. ZENITH 141 f:· TY
• Transistorized circuitry for tnrest
color tones possible • All channel
VHF/UHF tuning system • Exclusive
hand wired chassi s •Anten na :
handsome portable cabinet.
"
MAJESTIC CABINET WITH
FM/ AM/STEREO · FM RADIO
• Zenith's new solid slate audio ampl1-
lication system • Automatic frequency
control assures "dritt -free" FM radio•
Stereo precis ion 4 speed au tomati c
record changer • Micro-Touch" 26 tone
arm '. Meditertanean style cabinet.
·STRETCH WI.GS!
MADE OF THE NEW WONDER FliEI THAT
LOOKS AND FEELS u11r HUMAN HAIR,
BUT IT'S SO MUCH EASIER TO CARE fORI· '
We've S<1!d tllousands at 16.97! Wigs
arP completely carehee ..• needs very
htlle styling eve1 1 3 popular styles:
"Pixie." ~s1ra1glll'' er "Cu1ly Top."
One size lits any head.
SIMILAI WIGS NOW IEING SOLID
AT1 t.•7 AND MOREi
~
I
•
• • UOI
* C11Aao1 IT*
• IANl\AMUICAID
• WNIJi FIONT CAiD
• l'tll I CHUGt
CIEl!IT CAIDS
LOS AllGEUS J".'l!i'r llYI ... IAUSll I II lA, •IA Of -4
u Clf#l&l ''"· ' 'lNAHEIM
IAllOl I tmlll WAT ••u-sorr• °' tfSlllTUlfO
WT LOS ANGEUS
SJ7J l&lf OLTWIC It.YD.
1 lll<tS fASr OI AtlMrk
mT ft tol'IUKI ·
SAN BEINARDINO
4ft OINlll SltOW IOU 1m01rSM11 ... .,..
flllW&r lf OIMlf SJfOW ft,
VAWY WEST
<-nLlof lfff. ,.,....·=· ,,.....,,,,.,, .....
COVINA
11S1 JIOlrM a~',v1. •nwt•• ..... ,...,., .. ....... • *OW .... ,,
VAllEY EAST
'ACOIMA
U.•llL CMJON It OSIOlll't
JlfJ Off COi.DiN JrArl t'Kr.
• OHTA~·
1 »l M0.1 MOli"tAIN lYl.
Af'JflJlfJT Off flllWAf
\'Olll , ... II, AT. YfllNl~ '"'· Mst n1ru rJrr ofr rtUWAf.
COSTA MESA
1 .. IRISTOL &YI.
JllJf Off llHW,Olf A'll.
lnwl .. S.I '. FWT & IAll• ITS •
T RRANCE.
TOQAllU llVD, AT
HAWTHOllNE ILY.D.,
· 'MWllEY ' · . wo'o.iwlrAl"rW111at .. • .-·''''•'IT°'"" ' JM GMINfl ,tflWA;•
AAAl•<D¥11• MOtl. T•UMT.1•AMMtPM1
su•aYltAMte7fM1. , J OTllllSIDllG .
.... T1111m.12 ..... ,,.
SATillOAT1tAM-tetfM
$1N..11AMt•7PM
I 1
'
I
~
,
r.c;:;:::;;;;::=:;~--------------- -- -- -,.... ---
U OAILY l'ILOT
fCou~ty Gains 122 New Citiz~.~s
I
•, •
,-BJ TOM IARL6Y five lonl!'lf aliens comblnlntl or"" o.1tr p1111 .,,,., their naturalluUon with a
• SANTA ANA -Plft!'-lour coodl•._.i cab.
: Orqe Coast r e s I d e n t 1 Mn. llllrid Gold ol 2'IOI Se~
'dumped llletr llien "flall'I-tin( Sim Drive, Corona del
.Uoo cards Wedn.,doy In on Mir, celebrotcd her 351h
;act of defiance that WU' birthday wblle ihe cut her
'Witnessed by three Superior Brtlllh Uu IDCI llobert John
, Court Jwl(e.s. ltolpe, 1111 Comllle Drive,
Bul there'll be no court ac-a1ao a Brttiah cltlun, marked
,lion against the happy im· the 40t.b anniversary of h1s
•migrants. For they now hold a birth.
l!tatus that precludes tllem BrlWil lopped the Usi ol 11 ,
;from lhe an11111l r<glstration contribudq naUons with 12
chore, that ol cltiuns of the 1...-IUbjecb ol Queen
,lJntted States of An>trtea. Ellubelh U opting for United
They were amrmc a class of Sta tea cltizeosblp • .ean._acta waa
· 122 former 'aliens -the first clo• beh1nd with 12 and West
such clu! ol ll'IO -who Gennoey toot,thlrd spot In the
pledged their llnl oolll. of llaDdlD( with eJcbt former
allegiance before Su Per Io r Rb1nelanders lining up for the
Coort Judges Wllll1111 Speir•, unfamiliar pled(e. ·
K<nn<th Williams IDCI Robert . Hunlfll&lon Beach topped the
Bany1rd in the DOW traditloaal tally of 14 cOntrlbuUng ,Or.nee
naturalization .,..._,. Coul cities .witll, If,_ ,.. .... ., Among them were three r:r. triple" from South Kor .. who of the Oii City cutting ti•• with
were ho)Ai .... a dual ceJebra-theJr homelands. Costa Mesa -.. .... 13 to Ille -... and l1on. Joan Mlrlo, James David , tali crowtnc Foantali> Valley
:: p~=!ra,:: an..: I tool<· third plllCe With six
adoptive ~l!I, Mr. and resfdenU:.
Mrs. William Stratton of 13311 Sworn 1n as United Slates
Barney St., Westm.lnster, to dUzer;ls in order .or the con-
re!Ume the 12th birthday, tributing c<mmuruty were :
celebrations interrupted by the . CQ1\9NA DEL.MAR -Elko court rormaUUes. Kurodl Nutt, 507.Jumine, (Ja-
Blrthdaya were the order of pan) and Inirtd Goel!, 2709
the d1y for the Orange COut Setting Stm Drlve (Britain).
r-contingent With no fewer Ulan COSTA MEM-Rollnd Leon
Herold, 2 4 1 2 Westminster
Place, (France); Mu r le 1
Evilyn and Ernest Southall,
1688 Iowa St. (Canada); Mavls
June (Canada) and John
Joseph Dooley (Britain), both
of 963 Springfield St.; Elfrieda
Hughes, 1845 Anaheim Ave.,
Apt. 18-C, (West Germany);
Adriana Petronella a n d
Cornelus Adrianus Adriaans,
2059 Monrovia Ave. (The
Netherlands).
Also from Costa f\.1esa,
Elfriede Ida Maria and Hanns-
joerg Albert Ge rhard Eckert.
335 University Drive, Apt. C
(W~t Germany); Henriette
For The
3 Coast Residents
Ge~ Key Jury Posts
'Record
MEETINGS
Deatla Noelu•
e1LllltT
Alw\1 NI. Cllti.rt, 110·A ml! SI., N_,or1
... di. 0..11 of OMttl, Jtll. 1L Slll'YIYH
.,,_ -.rth'-r •• e..,,in ~-H~
l•di: ,r1rock11ue11tw •. Gtlf -Colli.rd,
Wl'llt!IM'I 1l1Nt", Gr1c1 llllkl, Chlu .. 1
.._ •r .. 11r~chUdrefl, 11-ry, ,.,~.,.,
,:. 1'M, 1'Klllc: VlfW ( ... HI. ltMll'-"t
M_, $1turdtY, ' AM, Our L.-4'f el Mt.
c.nnel Ctlhollc Churd'I, 111*-it, tf9oly
(NA C-1.,.Y, Lo-"""t"' 1'tclfle
Vl9w Mortutl'Y. Dlr.cfort. McHAltY
a..ri.. S. Mclt11'Y. 2 N_d, Lide ,.,111;,
NewHrf ludl. 0.lt ol clMl'tt,, Jl-rY II, lllNfYMI br ,_ 1on1, ltobfl'I It., fJI
~. tod lttllcllitl C. ~HtlY. H-·
"f't IMcflt two 1rtlldchllc1...,.. '"" two 1 .... t .. randcl\!1d"". Gr1vnlde _.,left, Mt!Wltr, J1nu1rv 1•. 2 ,.,,,., Jltclfk vi-
,,._ .. , Ptr1l, wlfll Dr. lttYl'lond I,
llrahM!t offle:ltllnt". l"tclflC"O ,Vll'W .Jllo-r·
"""· DlrKtors. MOOO
L..wrtnet ll•Y"'" Moot-.· 11'11 °"'"" Aw,, (0511 M-. A .. llOI llllJl Of .. ,.,,,
.1-l'Y n . 1urvtv.11 b't' wife, Mrw. KtlM
~I d..,.11..,._ Mr1. S.My GUI, fr•
mo11t. Ctllf; Mr1. Lturt 1'1""'-11• Costt
~r M,.., Cllel'YI eomtllck. 1ffU"t"""'". a.di/ Ml'1. Slllltfl Uri1wwltl, Mrs. Mar-ulfe Cr1rw, M... Htlet Colt, 1tl tf
Olltl Mft1; 1111,.., M ... l••lrlet Du11r1, ...._ <:ruu '' 1nifld(l'l!1<1rt!'I •fllf on•
tl'Mf .. ni!Mkllll<I, .._kft, l•hlrHY. II
ltM, If ftll 'M-k: 1°Mplt 111 N....,...
IMcfl,. lnf-t, Fl. 111.0ffU•M Ht110fl•I ~. s... oin.. 1e11 1rM11w1r _..._,...,., OlrlCton.
ARllVCKLll • ION
_ W-lllf M.....,.
07 E. 17111' St., Cool& Meu -MMm • BALTZ MORnJAllllll
-delMor ORfftM
(loot& M,.. Ml ~ • BELL BROADWAY
MORTUARY
Ut -•r, Cool& ai.a
LI ~131 • DILDAY BROTHERS
Halln&too Vlllq M-lttll Bae) Blvd.
llulillCIGa Beoc~
111-7771 • PACIFIC VIEW
MEMORIAL PAJlll
Cemetery e MMlliolJ ..... ~Nt..,.n lied, ClllJ'nLI
lff.r.ll' • PEEK FAMILY
COLONIAL r1l!iBIW. HOlllB .
'1111 ..... An.
Watm._... ·-e
lHEFF'Ell llOlmlAllY i..p..-~
IMQcm 1t •• • SMITlll' -1VA&Y
In-IL -.c.-~
SANTA ANA -Three
Orange Coast midents have
been 1pp0inted to k~y post! on
Ille 1170 Orqe County Grand
Jury.
Serving as secretary under
Grand Jury foremaft George
Honold will be Min Marian Ltluile Park11 of 233 Morning
Caa,on Road, Corona del Mar.
Mn .. Audrey B. ,Cotton of 1509
E. Bay, BalbOa, was the
choice of the pa11el for assUi·
!ant' leel'elary.
The l t 7 0 in"vestlgative
group's sergeant at arms will
be Charles Mashburn of 503
13th $t., Huptlngto1;1 Beach.
And Courtney IL Chandler of
Santa Ana, the recently
nUJ'ed • Orange C OU n t y
p(J.rchaalnk •rent, was tabbed
by the jury for the job of
foreman· pro tem.
'lbe nert tuk forcing the
newly cr.llled p&ael will be
Saddleback
Has Bureau
Of-Speakers
MISSION VIEJO -Sad·
dleback College has oraanized
a speakers burtatr of In-
structors available to talk to
ammunity groops on a va-
riety ol topic ..
Subjects of ·instructors' eI·
pertise or. interest include
•'Water Pollution," "Ex·
the seleetion o{ chai rm en of
its committees. It is expected
that the selection proces s will
be completed later this week.
Six Orange Coast residents,
three of whom are women, are
members or the 1970 Grand
Jury.
Food Supply
Talk Slated
By .Aldrich
, IRVINE -"The World
Food Supply' Problem'' will be
lhe topic of an address by UCI
Chancellor Daniel G. Aldrich,
J r. Monday at IO a.m. al a
general membe l'ship meeti ng
of UCI Town and Gown. The
meeting, open to the public, ·
wi!J be held in Mesa Court
Commons on the UCI campus.
Dr. Aldrich's address is the
second to be presented by
Town and Gown under its
theme for the year: "Human
Ecology -Environmental
Pol.lution and World Popula·
tion.'' Professor G T 0 v e r
Stephens of the School of
Biological Sciences initiated
the series with a report on
"world population.''
A 1 d r I c h , Universitywide
dean of agriculture before his
appointment al UCI, will
discuss the new "agricultural
revol ution."
tra s ensory Perception," Co A ks
"California Indians," "Art unty S
History," "Waves and Surf·
tng," "The Hippie Movement
ol the 19th Century,'' "Syn-Ne n· I theuc Lile ," "Juventle Delin· W ISP .a Y
queney" aJ1d "How to Write Computer" Programs." SAN'T~ AN A -Noting that
Thirty-nine instrUctors are Orange County's display in the
available to speak on 58 dif· state capitol' building is "nd
ferent subjects. The apeake n1 up to the standa rd'! of the
bureau la a community service other county exhibits," the
of the junior collese and there county Board of Supervisors
Ls no charge. has apened a contest to design
Allo available by special ar-a new display.
rangement are guided tours of The conlest wlll be open to
the campus at Mission Viejo, all county high school, junior
talks by College Supt, Fred college and college students.
B f th board of According to contest rules,
remer or *"Y 0 e the students must submit trustea, vocal or band con· cert.I, ~. pcte1ty or drama mock-ups of a display which readtnls. and talks 00 athlet· will not cost more .Ulan $1,000 to implement. CP. -,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;==;I Chit. ....tee, educaUonal, ,•
professional, bsulness, youth
and church croups are urged
to make use of the speakers
Wre&u. Two weeks advance
notice must be given.
Penny Pincher
Ads Turn Sense
Into Dollars
PEPPERDINE COLLEGI;
T
I
•nnouncts that
THE PEPPERDINE SCHOOL OF LAW
(formerly Or1n9t University)
Is now receiving applications
for the Spring Term beginning
' January 26
~r information contact
THE OFFICE OF THE DEAN
THE PEPPERDINE SCHOOL OF LAW
12345 Westminster
Santa Ana. California 92703
(714) 531-8581
•
Underwood, 863 Towne St., Stanley Doqiaa JIDlch~ tl2I
(France); Nils Erik llelmer Gt'eeJlwlch Drive '(Britain).
Wallin, l'IO Mission Drive IRVINE -Annande Hardy
(Sweden) and Ca r me I a Ca$oguay, «st Lancewood
Artiglio, 1933 Wallace Ave. Way (Canada),
(Italy). LAGUNA BEACH
DANA POINT -Nichol~ Marianne Kramer, 533 .[.om..
Lindsay an d Michaela Ashley bardy Lane (Belgiwn).
Smeiman, both . of 3 31 72 LAGUNA NIGUEL -Jellje Lynn, 25161 Adelanto Bremerton St. (South Africa). (Canada).
FOUNTAIN VALLEY -MIDWAY CITY -Masako
Regina Eleonora Toussaint-Jennings, 15181 Jackson Ave.
Zannet, 18544 San Felipe, (The (Japan ).
Netherlands); Susannah. Vera NEWPORT BEACH_ Lyn.
and Rodolphe Joseph Bernard, da Beatrice Holmes, 2304 16330 Sandalwood (Canada); Gordon Wimpenny, 1 8 6 4 7 Red.lands Drive (Canada).
Spruce Circle ( B r i t a i n ) ; SAN CLEMENTE -Wln-
Susana Carmen and Gerardo nlfred Ella and Eugene Martin
Ruben Demarsico, 15816 Yue-Madden, 263 La Cuesta (Bri-
ca Circle (Argentina'). tain).
HUNTINGTON 8EAcH -·SEAL BEACH-~ Maumo
Robert Joseph • Uwis , and EcJ:'t, B~~lca•' )4118. · 1' El'de'r. Av.e.
Morag Joyce Michaud , 1:;q u
Belfast Lane (Canada); Rel-SOUTH LAGUNA -
n1ut Hans Schmied, I838S Maurice Wolfe, 21711 . Wesley
D e 1 a w a r•e S t _ ( W e s t Drive, Apt. B (Britain), and
Germany); Anne Mary Smith, Susan Rosemary 'Edson, 24312
6071 Cortez Drive, (Ireland ); Los Serranos (Britain).
Anna Katherina, Otto, Man-WESTMINSTER -Joan
fred August and Mo nic a Marie, Peter Lee and James
Sklrde, 10101 Merrimac Drive DaVid Stratton, 13311 Barney
(West Gennany). St.· (South Korea); Johanna
Also from Hun ti n g t o n Theodora and Mar i nu s
Beach, Sharon Lorraine Bop· Theodore Mlchielsen, 9 3 8 O
ner, 16532 Kettler L a ne L·a r .k s put Drive (The
(Canada); Charlotte Spence _·tfetb"1a.nd!).
and Robert Kni pe, 6 3 9l1p;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;o;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;ll
Camill e Drive (Brita in );
Giovanna A m at o , 8252
Deauville Drive (Italy); Elise
May !Canad.S:) and Frank
Austin Ke r s haw (Britain),
both of 16281 Hollywood Lane;
and Hilda Florence a n d
1111.., .. &tr.
Profit Aftet'·H••n
TELEl'HON!
ANSWERIN~ IUREAU
935.7777
' •
r
' !
J
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for
. min. •nd boys
sallin9 i1cli:1t1
hidd•n·hood, nylon 1ipp1r, waterproof,
windproof
111 s1iling colors
l
1 f11hio,, id111cl, newport b11ch * •44·1070
b•~~•m•ric1rtl * fl'!llt.r chtrt•
Near hali a century of Hmce /Near half a bllllon doll11'8 111'.0ng
"
o more .interest th·an banksl.
25% MORE INTEREST THAN BANKS on regular passbook savings! Interest compounded dally,
credited quarterly. Interest paid from day-In to day-out. No notice required for wtthdrawals.
Transfer your savings to THE BIG M today.
Now! 5~% on 6 Month Bo.nus AcC<OUnts
THE BIG M also offers 5~ % on Bonus Accounts of $1,000 or more held for 6 .months. 'this
means you earn 5% current annual rate plus .25% Bonus Interest,· per annum1 Come In or call
for information. . ,' ·
W. R. Sammons
SmiM' VU.. Pruidmt.
R~gioftal LooAMa""*tr
Robert D. All.on
ViuP~
BnnK7'MllflOIW
MU1UAL
SAVINGS
' .U laan uadalin
CORONA DEL MAR
2M7 Eatt.CO..I HlghWIJ
TaftpttoM17WOtO
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WllTAftOADIA
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T1/tl)hon1446-o1Mi
COVINA
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GLINDA LI
331 North I rand louieYard
TMlpttoM24M141
PAIADINA
(HNdOfflca)
a15 ~t Colorado eoull\llrd
T•l•pt\OM 441-2345
1
---..
MR.MUM
'
Yule :Cards Await
Delivery to N. Viets
WASHINGTON (AP) president ol the Jaycees, said
:P.fore than 125,000 Christmas his organization is seeking
cards coupling s e as o n ' s now to arrange for air
greetings and a plea for the transportation to Pari.s.
release of American prisoners LeTendre, at his Tulsa,
Of war, are piled in the Post Okla., headquarters, said he
Office, awaiting delivery to hopes the cards will be
North Vietnam's chief delivered within the next two
negotiator-at the Paris peace weeks.
talks. He said there are diplomatic
1'ie m&:i.J, addressed to Xuan eposiderations, too.
'Thuy and produced by the ap· One essential item: Clearan-
peal of the U.S. Jaycees and ce from the French to take the
Sert Robert P. Griffin (R· shipment of cards into the
Mich.), is a gesture of public coontry.
sum>art for efforts to get the LeTendre said he or another
names of priSO'llers, seeure Jaycee official will make the
hun:ume treatment, and win flight to Paris to deliver the
release soon. cards. He said the organiza-
Plled in-mail bags, the cards tion is seeking to make ad·
are at Ult central Post Office vance arrangemenis with the
in 'Washington while the North Vietnamese delegation
Jaycees-work out ar-there for the final delivery,
rangements for delivery to although the shipment .. will go
Xuan Thuy. ahead in any event.
Griffm said he has no There was OQ. word u to
evidence the appeal w i 11 what happens 1£ the North
change North Vietnamese at-Vietnamese deeline to accept
titudes, but added Hanoi is not th.e bundle of holiday mail.
insensitive ~ Amer-ican and1p;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;,J
world public epinion. .
"It's just difficult to at-~te what they'41> to any
:J:._c~ &rung we do_:'.' ~
fi-riH~ launched the, appeal,
clOar<d by the State ;Depart.
menti with a Senate speech Qec. 10. The Jaycees·handled
pre,notion and arrangements.
1be cards were sent to-a
~office bo:a: in Wd:iington,
where they have been ac-
cumulating ever since.
Andre LeTeDdre, national
Passing Grades
By Humphrey
r.lJNtji;;APOLIS, Minn. (AP)
-Fohner Vjce President
Hubert H. Humphrey says
everybody got a passing grade
for the oourses he tailght this
fall at Macalester College and
the University of Minnesota.
He had a course on federal
dom<stic policy at Macalester
and one on government-and
society at the university,
A Delight
FOR DINGHIES,
-SAILBOATS and.
, ...
ONLY U. LI$.
FISHERMEN
AMl•ICAir£.MADI "'-'"
COMMANDO MOTORS
#501-5 H.P.-$1f4.SO
'#750-71/i H.P.-$241.$0
SMrt I L... Slmt Medel•
Boat Island, Inc.
7ot W. c .. t Hwy .. Npt. kit.
(714) 642-6630 .
• ~~C?~o~r~~?!=
INGLEWOOD • IG'IM LA CIENEGA BLVD. • 671·7577
SUNSET DIST. • M&S SUNSET BLVD. • '!>6·2997'
DOWNTOWN e 623 $. OUYE ST. • (OPENINC SOON)
WILSHIRE OIST. • ,70 S. VERMONT • 313-1391
SHERMAN OAKS • 15113 VENTURA BLVD. • 713-SJn
AKAHCIM • 1640 W, LINCOlN AVE. • 176·3210
NEWPORT ltACM • 38'1 CAMPUS DR. • 540·9691
•
l ••
·----------------------~---------------·------ ---
Re.d Offensives Possible K-Mac .Drug & Diseount Store
WASHINGTON (UPl) He said that the comparable
Communist infiltration into figure ·for 1969 was about
South Vietnam d e c I i n e d JOO,OQO to 110,000.
dramatically in 1969, but U.S. On the -basia of these
officials said today the poten· -figures, McCloskey a a i d ,
tial exists for Communist of· Secretary of State William P.
fensives this year In the Rogers told his last news con·
Mekong Delta and the Central f-erence De<:. 23 that in-
Highlands. . filtration in 1969 bad dropped
The outlook was an elabora· by 60 percent.
tion on figures made available U.S. Officials said the lower
by the State Department on rate or infiltration means the
infiltration of troops from Viet Cong and Nor1h Viet·
North Vietnam during. 1968 namese · regulars would be
and 1969. unable to mount a massive of.
Departments poke s man
Robert J. McCloskey said he
best estimate or U . s •
Intelligence agencies was that
2.50,<KX> troops infiltrated South
Vietnam during 1968.
rensive such as occurred dur-
ing the ·'Tet" lunar new year
holiday in 1968.
But they cautioned that
about 7,000 Nor~b Vletl)amese
regular troops bave been seen
2666 HARBOR BLVD.
546·7080 COSTA MESA
WEEKDAYS 9 to 9
SATURDAY 9 to 5:30
SUNDAY 10 to 5:00
. .
Auroft'.lATIC. SCISSORS
~j o R.•m•m b•r th• toy
•l1cfri• Ol'lll '/011 h1d
wh•l'I you w1rt liffl•1
Th•1• 1i,,'t it, bvt th•v'r•
lik• 1 bi9 brother.·
l'ort1bl1, 111111 011 "C"
fl11hli'iht b11f1ri•1. 211
ELECTRIC HEATER
D St1v w1rm 111 wi11l•r
/90 to Florid1.I
0 El1ct1ic ht•l1r f11lvr11
1•ftty tip.over 1witch.
i D 6r1dv1t1d controls 9iv•
1411
DRIVEWAY COATING
D Giv• th• driv1w1y •
"'w co1t.
0 Thin witch tfl• wif•
tly, "Wher1'1 my n1w
co1t7"
0 luy h•r 0111 111d thitn
quit r•1din9 th111 •d1.
89C GAL.
GLUE GUN KIT
N1w d1•I, lnc1vd11 th•
glv• gvn.
0 Got 1bovt fiv• "vc••
worth of 9lu1, 11t1l1tr,
111d llltW typl 9IV1t
sti,lu.
With b•nch r11t for
· •wfom1tic 9lvin9.
911
BLACK: & DECKER
No 7o00 Y4 INCH DRILL
0 Eco11omic1I 9111•r1f 11wr,01•
dr111 from ll1ck & D•c•••
h1nJl11 111 m•t•rf1l1 f11t
,,,J 1c.c11r1+1lv.
0 Comfort•ltl• 9d p, ind i1'1 w.u b1l111c-4f re, •• ift
1n1IVtit for J Y••r•.J
•••
In lbe Mekong Delta and It Is
believed offensive prepara·
lions are in progress by the
Communists in the C'entral
Highlands north of Saigon.
The ofiicials uid it is lm·
possible to forecast Com·
munist intentklns. But they
were inclined to cow:lude the
Communists could launch oJ·
fensives in the delta and in the
highlands.
u .S. analysts are s._tudying
captured documents and in·
terviews with. defectors to
deterinlne the Communist in-
tentions.
President Nixon O'l Nov. 3
directly warned Hanoi against
trying to take· military ad·
vantage of the continuing
withdrawals of U.S. troops
from South Vietnam.
Massachusetts
Not Smoking
BOSTON (UP!) -"No
Smoking Week" opened Sun-
day in Massachusetfs.
Gov. Francis W. Sargent
said he proclaimed the week
in conjunction with the sixth
anniversary of the U.S. sur.
geon General's report strong-
ly indicating smokin.g was a
serious health hazard.
Our. everyday prices c;ire
competitive with all discount
stores. Try us for your health .
and beauty aids at discount
• pnces.
3323 N9wpert llvd., New,.rt IHch
Across from Ntwport Bt•ch City H•ll
Phone: 675-6611
HOW'S THIS FOR
A TURN o·N.?
'A.d,,.r!l1td •PKl•!1 OOOd lhrv J1nvarv 11. Tt7o C•nd on1 bleur,,.
lbolrt lnfltllotl 11 TM! 11\1 Cindy bi'rt I buy MW&dl'/1" lrml't 1111
..-.ovQl'I '°be lltle!'l!nt.) ......
FIVE LIGHT CHANDELIER
0 W1ov9ht i1011 b.11!.fy
with c.1ndl• tip bulb1.
0 Jvit 01• ff.;,., for f1rm1I
Ji11i119 room cir 111 •rt+rr
1r11 th1t n11d1 help.
0 No 9l1r• •r h1r1h li'tht,
iv1t I w1rm 9low.
174~
SHELL PARTY DISH
0 P•rly di1h it iJ11/ for J ip
1nJ chip1.
Not b1J for nvtJ or c1n.li11
if yov for1Jot to m••• th•
d ip,
W•'r1 clo1in9 th1m evt.
thl1 'pric1 i1 11 clo11 to
fr•• II WI Clll 91t,
20' EA.
TYLO LOCK BY KWIKSET
'
D N11t for •••ping th•
•td1 in 111d th• Oill
c.oll1ctor1 ovt.
D Or th• oth•r w1y 11ouncf
i~ they tot w1lrJ ,,,,,.,,,
O Tylo J11i911 model wi01
mou11li119 h1rdw1r• i nd
l k1y1. 311
G.ood tolid 91lv111 it1d
r1i11 1vtt1r it tllpioirtt,
1old1trl•11.
Goed 11rof1ction 191in1t
1oil ••01le11 inti pl1l'lt
wa1h1w1y, 0 (Thou9ht th1t w11 1
r•c• hMt• th1t r•tir1ti.>
85~0fT.
UNG TH
SKILSAW 71/4"
CIRCULAR SAW
0 Wlth pew1rfvl I Vt HP
Supt r l ur11011t Prof1cl1il
Motor. a 'Vi .. cwtth1! Cltf'IClty Will
'40 wood, p 11ti,,
..c•mpe1ltl•n will Oo1rd. 0 ll.1199.cl h1lic1I 91ttr1 iA11111t
fOWI<' to tptr••
31 81
IPRE'TTY CORNY)
DELTA FAUCETS
KITCHEN or BATH
' 0 . Med•r11 1hiny 01lt1 f111c•h for kitchen 11 lt•th fr1 +11, h1i9ht·
of lv•11ry 1tyli119 111d 111y op•r1tio11. (Th1t'1 oJd, I th1119ht
they mtd• 1t11mbo1h.I
0 U1• for r•1"l1c1m•11t, room 1dJitio111 •• bvy 011• 11 thi1
1p1ci1I pric.• to h1v• 011 h1nJ wh111 ll••llltd.
D A•m1mb1r, •1111 f111c1h 111v1r di•, th1y j._t lllrip, 4rip, dri,.
2•• El{.
Ne. 100.ws.11th
No. 100.wS.Kitch.11
3 LITE FLOWER SWAG
D U1111•111I • .,.u,,, Mlk••
fhi1 1w19 I l•rtV•t11fiO•
piK"i,
0 Fv11rty, It il•••rt't 11y
1nythl114J +. rn•.
D With• 1w19 ch1i11, ho•lt._,
•rtlll ltt-llrt• 1witch.
21 95
QUIET SWITCH
0 It'• 1 '"'" to instill thi1 tiuiet
twitch,
0 Th•n no mor• clic• click t•
w1k• th1 b1by fr•m hi1 ••P•
Q ITh1t'• ;f yoll Clll flt tht llttf•
J1rlin9 t• 1l11p.J
39'
FLUIDMASTER
BALLCOCK
Good"v• l'lei11, 1qv1t1I,
drip, 111111 llith w1t•r •ilh.
Goodltv• wl991ll'lt th• l•v•t
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•
60's Lively Decade·
Liz, Si1iatra Top Fil11i Neivsmakers
By BOB THO~IAS ~
FlOLLYWOOD (AP) -Thty ~
started with the dea1h of the
"King" and ended \\'ll h a n1as~
murder.
These were the 1960s, a
decade or stress and change in
.
r
the movie world. But the
l·lollywood ne\vs during the
past 10 years \vas not entirely
som ber. It also included Ilic
liveliest marital mixup in fihn
history and the election of ac-
tors to high politicul office.
The top Hol ly,v o od
newsmakers of the decade
were f;liiabeth Taylor and
Frank Sinatra.
· . .,,,~E~fAINMENT
. ,..... .. _
l9M he v.·as going to run for ,
r tht> U.S. Sena te. He ran and
"'on against former White
House pres:> aide Pierre Sal-.
inger.
Then in 1966 Ronald Reagan,
a Republican like Murphy,
chanllenged the incumbent
.Edmund C. Brown. for the
~ governorshi p af Calilornia -
and won. Not so successful
v.'ere two other RepubUcans,
Shirley Temple and Wendell
Corey. \1·ho 1vere defeated in
ra ces for Congress. In 1969 the
1 former child star was ap-
"1 pointed by President Nixon to
be a delegate to the UnUed
Na tions .
The death of Clark Gable Jn
Disneyland Exhibit
Walt Disney Immortalized
By VERNON SC01T v.·Jth the California lnstitute of t•ompletel,y new <i pproach lo
HOU.YWOOD (UPI) the Arts -a kind of artistic training in the oi·ts is needed
Cal 1'ech -noW being com· I h I \Vhat better place for a ... that's the printipa t ing
memorial to the late \Valt pleted at Valencia, Calif. It \iope to re::ivc v.•hrn I move on
Di s ney•:; genius than ope11s next fall to 700 students to greener pasturt!S. If I can
Disneyland, where a special studyi ng art, music, dram<J. help provide a p!aec to
building displays his awards dance, film, theater, desig n develop lhl' talent of the
and de m 0 n s t"r a t es his and general studies. ful url', I th111k I will have ac·
philosophy of the arts? ln the film Disney says: "A t·on1plished so1ncthh1g."
On exhibit at "Walt Disney: 1=:::;;;;~~~~~~~~1 -__ A Legacy for the Future" in If ----------
the Magic Kingdom are scores ~Wll!@)l I D Q }!'"' •. BALBOA of awards. plaques. Emmeys,
Oscars and commemorati" 673-4048
medals, one of wh ich was NCWPORI BEACH • oR.l·8l50' OPEN
presented to Mrs. Disoey by 6:45
President Nixon last March. "ONE OF THIS YEAR'S BETIER 10t •. ••''-
Perhaps the most touching uov1cs1. Funny, Romantic, lalb•• ,.n1n1ul• memento i1 Dilney's old de•k '"
from Park School, Marceline. Touch1'n«I" · Mo., where Walt sat as a first •. -i:.Miliul.upi11M11i11CC NOW SHOW ING Miss Taylor dominated the
headlines during the first half
or the decade. She had created
plenty of thc1n in 1959, "'hen
she married singer Eddie
'Fisher after he had left his
wife, Debbie Reynolds.
du ctors were captured , tried
ap d sentenced. ln the same
year Sinatra Sr. wa s required
to divest hi1nself of his
Nevada gam bling holdings
because he had entertained a
Mafia mobste r.
1960 removed the star who had .. ,, Bl LJf h b<>ena<k n ow l e·d ge dthe ., etna••• 9•• 9 t grader In 1908.
The initi3Js "W .0. 1• are
carved -not too arti•llcally
RodStelger .,...
Claire Bloom .
In 1961, Miss Taylor nearly
died in a London hospital. She
recovered enough lo leeter
across the stage al the
Academy Awards and collect
an Oscar for ··Butterfield 8,"
one of her lesser filn1s. She
was making "Cleopat ra'' the
foll owing year when s h c
becan1c enamored of her cos-
tar, Richard Burton. It took a
year for them lo shed thelr
respective mates and marry.
Sinatra was making news in
1962 \\'ilh hls engagement to
dancer Juliel Prowse. The
engagement was called oft
because she declined to give
up her career to become Mrs.
Frank Sinatra.
In 1963, .f'rank Sinatra .Ir.
was kidnapped and released
unharmed. His three :ib-
Sinatra took a mo c h -
publicized yacht trip in 196:'!
v.•it h his movie friends, in·
eluding the young star of
'·Peyton Place," Mia t~arrow.
Sinatra ma rri ed the actress,
30 years his junior, in Las
Vegas the following year. lo
1968 she divorced ·hi1n.
The "probabl y suic ide" by a
sudden overdose of pills of
Maril yn Monroe in 1962 shock-
ed the world and brough1 forth
:1 flood of \Vritings about the
fu tility or fame. Hollyv.·ood
s!yle. In 1969. the lit e of .Jud y
Garland ended. also fron1 <in
overdose of pills.
Acto rs in politics pr ovi ded
much controversy in the J960s.
Many politi cal o b s e r ve r s
snickered when tap dancer
George Murphy announced in
'l111possihle Years' Next
At Beach Playhouse
The Huntington Be a ch
Playhouse is currently in
rehearsal [or the new genera·
tion gap comedy · · T h e
Impossible Years," wh ic h
opens a five-weekend run Jan.
30.
'rl1e play. dealing with a
highly respected scienti st "'ho
has no control over his lw()
teen-age daughlers, is be ing
directed by Randy Keene. \V ho
staged the play hoo.se's las~
lwo chil dren's productions.
Nancy Wells is assislant diree·
tor for the show .
Stan Be ll, a n1embcr n[ the
14ldo lsle Players, takes !he
leading role of Dr. Kinglcy,
with sisters Valerie an d Bon·
nie Harries playin g the young
daughters.
Otbers in the Huntington
Beach cast in<:lude P a t
Mullins, h1arlin r~ u c h s ,
l\1iriam Kaiser. Stere Uj"ller,
.!ohn Phillips, Don Naranjo,
Doug Gracey. Kathy Sheldon.
Dan Kaiser and Mike and
Steve Crowley.
Bill Susman is producer for
the com•Jy. assisted by Grace
Shaw as stage manager anit
lechnicians Ron Langseth and
Bill Moreland.
Performances will be gi vcu
Fridays and S at u rd a y s
through Feb. 28 al the
playhouse. 2110 Main St., Hun-
tingto n Beach. Adv a n c e
reservations are being taken
al 536-8861.
Fay a Model
1-IOLLY\\IOO D lt.:PlK l -
Faye Dunaway will star as a
fas hion n1odel in Universal's
"Puzzle of a Dow nfall Ch ild,''
Cross,vord Puzzle
A C ~ OSS
l Platt of
lost soul s
" Part of lhe htad
10 Panfish
14 Zents
15 Thin
111 Can onical
hour 17 lilounlaiu s
of B.C ..
Washing ton ,
t ic.· 2 word~
19 Ransom
E. ····'. Plonter
auto m.1 11u·
Jactllrr•
20 Co mpl t le
21 Flitter
23 Cakr
featurt
25 State · Abbi.
2111 "The Btid9e
of ,~an Luis
27 Proh ibition
29 Fur l
31 511 ya1ds 33 Era 34 Requ est
.1 loan· 2 word s
)'Kind of
b.1srb~ll
game·
2 words
40 HUH)'
4Z Items or
attire
47 Do 1001
1epair ioh
4'} Negative
prt!1\
50 Friend
Sl Va11t y
51 Kind of
leather
54 Unclos t :
Poet.
57 Rr putalion :
Abbi .
5q Tr ade mMk~
t.l RPd Cross
~ubjec 1
2 words
t.4 Counst lor
t.7 Food
bS A. sh~rr
of thP
winning~
70 8t lort Jon9
71 Fancy case
72 Furniture
1trni
73 Bra~e1broo~
or S11owdo11
74 Branches
75 Highway
patro1m.ln's
conc ern
DOWN
l Fabrit
2 Me!~I
3 R 1chnrs~
In mat1er
4 Fund amental
5 Bord
b Garmen!
Informal
7 Sounded 44 C.1rbona1ed
btvt ra9e
45 AUick
8 t:leclron1c
111strument ,..,.,,.,.,,-,,,-,,,, •
" hr-t--t--t-J-)8
t t t n 1 • L r
.~ .. (lit. •
l 15. 70
9 Gardenl11~ 4J B1blit.al
dtvitt dancer
10 St lf· 46 Sot1r
1mport!nl 4B Un1vtr s11y
person officials
11 Dye 51 !i igll jum(}
12 lmproptr contr~lJ111
13 Troublesome 54 ~~anufactur1ng
18 Fr. Im-hy·piOcluc!
pr t ss lonist 55 Gorge's l2 English 1nstrumt11t
ri ver 56 BastbAll
24 -····Bowl miscue
27 A.trow par t 58 1.11cl1el·
16 S1cknrss arigelo
JO Did a work
l rrasr Job: frO Rrady 10
nforma be dr1wn
32 ·-·Mid do11'1s 2 word~
35 Rose lea\1,r &2 Oispattl1
37 Lincoln: &3 Rhyth m 2 words 111s1ru111e nt
38 Ont wllo bS G,\lt
is adOl"rd amouro11sl y
39 Military bit Woo~~ gr;;s~
machine &9 Early in
~l In tl1e the ~rco<i:l
~11o w : Slang century . ' ~, ~"~~.~. ~,,~~,,~ ..
"
• • .,, •• ~:·;_,l"-1+': -.. ~: .. ;~"~r.:~~:;'_'--l+f-1;i:,~'i.~t'.''.i~t:j1: .. ~t=j~~,,1"==t;~,'[~~~-~
., .·" ''
pg 71 ~.' h,~~,-+-~-t-••-,,...J.-1--.b-i--~r.-t---+-~-l-i
"King'' o( Hollywood films, a 1
title he did not enjoy. After bis Connie Stevens was one of lbe lovelies \Vho accom·
de<ith, his wido1v Kay Gable panied Bob Hop~ on his;Vietnam Christmas trip -
gove birth to the actor's onl y 1'.luch to the ~ehgl.1l of the servicemen. The high-
child, William Clark. hghts of the tnp 'v11l be telecast tonight on "Christ·
Cary Grant became a rather mas Special" at 8:30 on •Channel 4. for the first ti me at the age of ----'--------'-'-"'-'-'.:..C _________ _
62. His fourth wife, actress
Dyan Cannon . divorced him in
1968, charging him wilh er-
ralic behavior while on LSD
trips.
Pleases Himself
Kramer Bucks Film Trend
-in the wood.
Disney died of cancer more
than thre e years ago. But he
comes to life in an im·
aginative 10-minute fi lm, part
of the exhibition which Is open
free to the public.
The movie depicts t h e
youthful DiS>ney, a montage of
his work and hls dream• of the
future.
Most. inspjring ,, the ALSO
represe ntation of foreign coun-Jamel Garner
tries which paid him homage ! Gayle Hunnicutt
revolt, Is not aimed during his career : The Soviet IN By GENE HANDSAKER
-ALSO-
Potfy Dvkt ,,
"ME, NAT ALIE"
The death of \Vall Disney in
1966 was a blow to the milJions
who had known his genius 1vith
fan tasy for a generation. Sonle
fl'ared for t.he future of his
entertainment empire, but he
had planned careruHy. By the
decade's end the Di s n ey
enterprises were flourishing as
ne ver before.
1-IOLLYWOOD (AP J
You th audience? Adu lt au·
die,1ce? \\'hen Stanley Kram$'
n1akes a movie, he tries to
please only one p e r s o n :
U I J a Y I . "MARLOWE" specifically, he says, at youth. non, a p n , ugos av1a,
"It's a story of the student Thailand and virtuall y all the \~:::::c::=::=::=::~====::::::::!~~~~~~~~~~~~ rebell ion from .i our point of countries of Europe and Southlr-----
Oscar provided his annual
spate of headlines.
In 1961. Jimmy Stewart
delive red an emotional tribute
lo Gary Cooper, and television
''ic1vers realized for the first
lime the seriousness or
Cooper·s illness. He died of
cancer a rew month s later.
Sidney Poitier won the
Oscar for best actor of 1963,
and his victory seemed to
sy mbolize the emergence of
1he Negro in A1neri can life. In
1964, Patricia Nea l. \vhose
personal life had been marked
by tragedy. 1vas a popular
winner as best actreas. The
following year she suffered a
n1assive stro ke whil e preg·
na nl , yet managed to recover.
give birth l.o her child and
resume her ca reer.
Katharine Hepburn twice
.sl<irred in the Ac a d e n1y
<iwa rds. In 1968 she won her
~ccond Oscar after a 35-year
lapse. Then in 1969 she tied
with newcomer B a r b r. a
Streisand for the besl actress
award.
Clrina Music
At Fullerton
Stanley Kramer.
"'And I haven't always suc-
ceeded too well," the veteran
but still boyish producer-direc-
tor remarked. "But you mutt
do what pleases you -not an
audience you're supposedly
cN!ating for."
Latest proclucer-associatiOP
surveys ind i cate mott
moviegoers are between 12
and 24 years old . Man y pro-
ducers are tailoring theme11
a nd s lo r i es accordin gly.
Kran1er, whose outsland~
films ra nge from ''Champion'
and "High Noon'' to "Jud1-
menl at Nuremberg" and
the current "Secret of Santa
Vittoria.'' says th is trend may
be a mistake.
'·The youth-oriented film of
1968, '69 and '70 may be a drag
by 1971" he argued in an in·
terview. "We'd better make
rilms thllt are good, up to
date, aware, even revolu·
tionary. That do es n' I
necessarily imply that they're
youth-oriented.''
Even his currenl proje<:t,
"R.P.M.'' starring Anthony
Quinn in a story of campus
-~-----= PAUL NEWMAN
"BUTCH CASSIDY
AND THE
SUNDANCE KID"
"ME, NATALIE "
C111f. 51111. l :JO P.M.
(lrienta\ music and pilgentry
will fill th~ Ca l. State,
Fullerton Little Theater Feb.
14 whe11 the So uth e r n
California Chinese 0 pe r a
Society pcrfor1ns publicly for
the lirst ti1ne in Orange Coun·\~~~~~~~~~~~~I
ly.
Sponsored by the CSCF
Pat rons of the Library in
association with the theater
and musie departments, lhe
prog r:nn will feature "Chuen
Chiu Pei" \Romance of Chuen
;ind Chiu) and .. Mei Lung
Chen" (The F'r·o l i cs ome
Dra gon and the Beautiful
J~hornix.)
Cu rtain ti1TI(' is 8 p.n1. and
the perfor1nan ce \1°ill be
lollowcd by a panel discussion
:.i nd reception. ·
SlANlEY KUBR ICK
PRODUCTION
2001
a•aceodyu.y
ON GIANT
CINERAM;\ SCREEN
METROCOLOR
@O•Olllt• ~•n Clally noon. :!.~ilff.f -~'d~ibl1io E
e.nttfl aff mu1ual •r.=~!' .. •II L fbtirty tic IC et !Jel'C • • 21
America. view, Quinn's and mine, as
members of the establish-His concepts of art and
1ne nt. And I don't know what enterlainment transcended in·
th al is. ternational boundarie1 and
"I'm what might be termed politics.
~&J Jbuth Coast Repertory
"'l'eter Church is Outs1a11di11 g"-L. 1\. 1'ime s
"JOE EGG" w;th P•tor Chu«h
"Unbridled Brillia1<ce''-Pilol
Thurld1y through Sunday -1:30 P.M. County Premiere
1127 N1wport, Co1ta Mesa -646-1363
in a loose sense a discarded An eye-catching display case
liberal."' Kramer reflected. Includes a regulation size
"For years J was dealillg with Oscar trailed by seven 11maller
films made in spite or the Academy Awards for hl1 first
establ ishmenl, so-called, until -and perhaps greatest -
someone told me it was me~" feature length cartoon, "Snow I'===
He symphathized with a \Vhite and the Seven Dwarfs."
black man 's problems in a Most of the cases are filed
v.•hite army in "Home of the with memorabilia which oc-
Brave," c h alt en g e d fun-cupled and overflowed his of-
damentalists in "Inherit the fice during Disney's lifetime .
Wind'' and warned that the Even so, only the most in·
bomb could destroy the world teresting and unusual honors
in "On the Beach." are displayed. such as lhe 1968
The "discarded liberal" im-commemorative stamp bear·
age emerged with "Guess ing Disney's likeness.
Who's Coining tn Dinner," Best of all. however, is the
starring Sidney Poilier as a great showman's projection
black man engaged to marry a into the future.
white girl. 1 The brief film deals parUy l~====.11
Extlusiv1 Eng1g1m1ntl
TONIGHT AT I l 10
THE REIVER~ 11 1 SCOUNDREL. •n OPERATOR
and 1 BRAWLER ,,,•
N$C THIATll COllP.
ACllES OF flll PAIKING
WllXDAYS Ol'IN 6:41
SHOWTIME 7:00
S•f, & 11111, -0,.. 11 ff•lll
5"10WTIME 1l:JO
' ' WAI:r DI SNEY'S • •~r.:111., ~•rr<1on ''"'~'•
' '
IOI
DALMATIANS
211d ..... RATED FUN SHOW
W•lt Dl1Hy'1
"HANG YOUR HAT
ON THE WIND"
Shows Start at 6:30. •Chlldrtn Under12 Fr11!
LATE SHOW TOHtOHT -All. TMIATftl5 ~l!!I!! aOTH ,.E.lTUllliS AS U.ll Al 111)1 ,..M.
'""ll!oro'..,· •·......!'..1s..1
~-2411 __
... ..,_
Sll·ll71
An Coler S~ow
''THI aAnLE 01' llUTAIH" (0) "M "THI DIVJLI IJllGADI!!''
l •tlu11¥• Or111tt C•. Dr1Yt ·I• UMwlnt
Wener Mtm.a-...11 C•lfr "CACTUS l'LOWEll .. !M)
PIUI ltmt1 Oarntr It "MAlllLOWI,.
Dvtlifl HMlfl'l.tll M!a "''"'"'
"'JOHN & MAii'!'" 111:1
l'rlflll Slnllre •~111e1 Wtk~
"LADY IM CEMINT,. (Ill
PIVI MtWINft-.t.11 Ctltf
''IUTCH CAISIOY a THI
IUNOA .. CE klllY' !Ml
"CHt•• IMl
All C.lol'Cy(lirmMll-
atcell'll'l'leNlltd 'or .,,.itf
''WILD A"Cll.l"
"'TMl OLO•Y STOM,.lkl"
'"MILLS A.HOii.i Oft W ILJI'
2nd Popular Hit
Burt Lancaster
Deborah"""
";rhe Gypsy Moths"
20oi CfNTURY.fO.X PRESlNTS
Dustin Mia
Hoffman Farrow
JOHN AND MARY ,,.,,,'.
Oi!J Panavision~ Color by Deluxe '·' -' '. ,, .
1:See it with someone you love--or would like ton
...
• ,. ._,.""""' l¥MX. N~
ROerR'I' Rf'.llfORD ' MnlMINf RQS&
BUTCH CASSIDY AND
TIIE SUNDANCE KID .::._)
New Assaailt Ship
The Na shville, an amphibious assault s hip, has been
delivered to lhe U.S. Navy by Lockileed Shipbuild-
ing and Construction Co. Built at Seattle, the ship
can trans port 1,000 troops and all their equipment,
including tanks and vehicles.
N-ot Much to Sing About
Biafra Refugee Chi'ldren May Never See Parents Again.
Th<l•4lf, JIJ!llary .... 1170 DAil V PILOT • J 3
B-.l! s •d LEGAL NOTtCI!: LEGAL NOTICE CJlllCS 81 l-~~L_ltG~A_L_N_'OTl~~c_E~~1l-~··~·f,1.~ .. ij·~·f<·mu~1ti:i;u~.·~·r--I -~~~~~~~".__~-
..
'
... -CllDl'lllt tTATI OP CALll'O•NIA Hit T.aHI
•• TNI COUNTY Of~·---tU,lllOA C.UaT I• TMI .... 'a.MIM tU,llllOlt COUit 0, THI
ITATI ., CALllll'Ol.IUA NI 1TICI· 0111' MIA.IHO Olli' PSTITtON STATI OIJ CALll"OllNIA "01
TMI COUNTY N .. i.Nea :icir•Ao::~~. t:n:~~lo•"l'l THI COUNTV O• O•AHOI Oldest Yet
111 .. A...itt Mlllli•fUTIOlll WITM-TMl·WILl..,.,._ Ill" A '4JIJ
lJVERPOOL E J 11 n d 1111x10 111otte•' •• "'"' o• lllAL •1to. , n 111119 tf MAltGAltlf 4 OILLITTI, ltt1i. .r WILLIAM WALL.ACE MUI· •lllTY AT •ttWATI SAi.i
(UPl) -An Am. r le . n o::,~. II Hl•ll 't OIVIN .. tflt SIN'oT~·:ri· Hl!•E•V 4 1YEN Th1t &tile .. L'l'OA lAltlAll:A KOHL TVH,
_ ..... M uU • Mmlnlr that erM"-" .. fll• .i.iw. fllltltll ••lllHrlt Mlvl1 M\lllflr "-• II'" htf•I" • IH'tllkl" OtcetHCI . • ,.. ........... -llMot •II Hfttftt NY1111 ll•I,,. ••••!\ti "" .... trllNllt' .. will .... CocUcll •Ml i... Nolle:• II hll'tOV tlv1n !Ml .., Ot ellf• •• ·' pod bodl ted "" • ·-• •-,,,._Ht-J111u1,., 1<1. Im. ,... 1H1111"1111«1 •t1tr c. . ..t"R"eUI el IYlt'UI 111lill ill.clCltflt IN '"ulrH hi "°""' L~ ti .......,."11tr1i..,.. W '"' Murriy tAd!tlllllllrttor ot 1t11 lotei. 01 ..... 'lrllh tht __ ,., llOlldl<lr-. Ill ""'efl'ie. ~ • .....,_, .. wll!cll 11 mMI• IO• •
I..,_ -.....l..I in f.' f It ff ft flf lhl Clitl1l o1 ........... Wllttlliil UiUl1 ... fUrlfltr Nl11CUl1"-I nd 11111 lllt !lme Ind L.-01 llr r1 l(oflllv-PI. ... , ... will •~ll •vou '"""" ' .. .,_flt tl'IW!I, wtfl\ Wit ~IY eltCIJ ot hHrl111 ft11 "'""t N I iMt11 H I 11 1'1Vl'9 .... II) !IW hltlr..11 blckler, WI-•
AUltraJia rece..11 .. could be -~ .... 1re""' \lflilllnlt,... ,, ,.... tffl"' "' •ttiru•rv " ""· ei t :H '·"'·• 1 .. '"" IK1 ,. to1111r,,.111en b• 111e •bciv .... 111111rct '""'l "' Mt Attor111n. ,,..l\knh •111111 ,,111111111, -r#oetn " OW.r.,,,..,I Nt. s ol .. 10 Sl.oHtlot Court, '" "" rlthl, tlllr, .... _,.... than 2,J b1J.lon -an OJd lfl' I , ltlfl 11., C•ll M1111, Ctl11W11l1 ctllft, 11 HO Civic: Ctrii. Ori~ WMI, 111 llfMI. I/Id lhllhl ol IM ft'<:tc:ltlll If 111•
... ,,.,., I'"' ' 1'H27, wl'llO. II IN llOICI .i M ln111 of t11f Cll'f "ltr1!1 A111, C1llfor11l1, llmt ol her O.t lil Incl ell Iii. rl1hl, Jll.lo,
oldtr than •ftV other known !hi U"Ci• .. lenlll Ill ... l'fllltt" 1'11111fllllt OltM J11WI"' u. lOt. •M l11!t•'.!'' "" .. ,.,, ..... -by 01tr1t.o .. -v tt IPll •1119 d .. 111 d'"*"' wtfllll'I f&Ur W I IT JOHN Ctullh' (lerto;. ot llW Of' Olhetw1U, IC'IUlr~ ~ lhlfl
animal ute on earth. _,..,. 1nw """ t1 .. 1 1u.i1,~11t11 tf t1111 .. .,. ... Ii..._ _. 0111......,, ~ ~i!:"~':,'~'!':;. ~ !': :c:i:,nt,,~'. • "'"r'I· ue '"' 11111 ,....... t1111 r .. 1 ,_"' IK .. H Ill "" Counh' ol Kenneth Caster ot Univt rsl-011., Jt11u•'"' '· ,.,,, ~= ~ ~!~t..11 .,.,, o.,,,.,, ~'" o1 c1~1o<1111. o.urtlltd ,.,_
of ~-·---u d the GU.Cl •uHF , .. C111} t41.7111 IOllow1· ty """"'UIJ~ ml e E!11tc11lrh1 "' Wiii A~ Mr •9'1t11Mr 1..oi n, TrlCI tt07, 111 t11i clh'' ot Slnt~
statement durtn1 an addrtss ,.4,.11t'1iM, •,'n\~'i:" flcHIPlf 'Lltlll•llld °''"'' eo.11 o.uv '1"'. ::riior~:;n~, '~.,o;!c':d,11 sr;111100~ to geoloatsta from 11 coun-A.......,. et \AW J11>11.,,, 1s. 1'-n, 1'10 Jj.7(1 ,,, •"" ,, •M ,, of Ml1t••'--•
i..las """& se-lntr which Is ,., I. lMll SI. LEGAL NOTICE M•••· 111 ,,,. offl~ of lht Count, u.u: • 1ui:;: '"'-• c ... ,._., c.1""1!1t fM.11 ll:ocordtr of 11ld Ce11m1V.
studying animal tracks, traits TM. 1'141 ...,.,, $ubltct 10: curr1111 ''"'" cov1,..n11,
and •·-~ In A"'""'• ""' flfft!nl •41• co n If 11l o11 1 , re1lr)etlon, rnervtllOf>', uw10WS preserv..... •ultll1hld Ort11111 (Nit C1lly 'lltf, c1at11111CA11 Giii' aUt\111111 ri.Ms, rlthli OI w1y, Ind 1-.tmtflts of
rock is the first of Its tlnd. Ji nultY l'-U. 21 •nC l'llN'\llfY J, 'ICTlflOt.rl NAM• rearill,
' ~~-Int •10 Tiit uNlltl'lltlltd clots c1rtl!Y hi !1 COi>-81d1 or offeu ••• lnvttw tot' 1111 11'0-Caster said the bodies IJ.llVW' i11ud1,.. 1 lluilnH• 11 w ·w. 11th $t .. "'"' •lld mull tie 1,. wrlllfll incl 1t11v-bl ed a "consistent structure." LEGAL N011Clt c"'' Mtlt, Ctlllorn11, under "" fie-ci.n"''"° to 1,,. M11t1lnl1l•1t~ or 1o tne ,!·-------------11111-llrm ........ of HAll:8 0 Jl ~ of hit ll'lll'lllVS. FtlMfl'l'ltn,
which sugested they were ClltlU'>CATI Of' lUSlllllll T•INCHING CO. 1nd lhtl Mid fir,,., it l"urrn1n, llltom & l(lelfl• tr ,,.,,V bt Iliff
k I t I I f 1;9m-MI of 1111 folklwl nt _.IOM, w"-In ""' oHlce of 1111 cler• of t!\t SUPt•kl• s e e a rema ns O P r e -,1CT1T1ou1 111AMI "'"'" 111 tul1 1n11 Pltc• 0, rnllf.,,tt i re Court 11 ''" """ 111tr t!\t 1rrs1 PUbMc•· historic anima ls. Tl'lt uMtr11•11N d• ,.,,"" '""" 1,1 11 to!IOW'I : lion 01 11'111 n1tlc1 •nd betore """ ,,.,1kltt11 Ir Ca t • find! Clft4iucllnt 1 butlMS& 11 3)3 Mlrlflt A~t.. o-lill H, 1nd Lll\ltn E. S.naon. tM OI 1111 11le. Ser I nl! are SUli. 4. •1roo. 111 ... ~ Ult • t21'2 ) Olk It .. (;0111 MMI, C11Jtor11!1, Terms •~If «111C1Ulon1 of '''-' Ctsh I~
prov!!! ~-correclh ol~'a...th~-~tlol ~··~~~1~" ,1::;~~~11-::.11~":t ":Z:: t:,::,.J~.' ~~,.!!~· ~~w:;:~r~c~~~.~;1: ~:~".~•;:
w ue e ug~ ~VlU tltl'fl It _.,.,. of 1111 IOllO'Wllll • .,,,DI\,, 1..1111111 E. Sll\IOll ' l>llflnc1 to bl ••Id ~ (.Onf!,f!\ltlofl of animal llf.e on e.arth Whosl lllmt1 Ill full I~ •lllctt of Stitt (If C·1lltomle, Orlflli C!Mlflh': 11i. 1w Ille SUPerlor Court. T1•n , ..,,1,,
• r.tldMl(t '"' •• t.llOWI' On J111U••Y 1" 1'10. btfort ,..., • -·•!Irle •NI "''r"ttr .. l'ICt """'""'' Ind Noh'Y •ub11C i.. 1rid IOr .. Id SllM, ••tmlum1 011 l111ur1nct 1ee@ft1tbi. 10 i nt -1on1lly 1p,..1rK OM11!d H. Se"'°" a, PIJ•dtllel' 1h1ll 119 Pl'OrtlM! It If Ille dllf t11n111 f . $1f1SOl'I known lo "'' to bl lht of rttordln• of tonv1y1nct. Tiit !Ill• In· ,..r.ont Wholt nemet. 1rt 1ubl<:rlbtcl lo t~t•MI H lkv 1Mll be 11 Ille ewHnH of 1t11 w11111,, rn1l,....,....fll 1nill tck110Wltd1111<1 Thi ~•lier. Art Displayed
Oil palntlnp by Mrs. Joy c.
Everitt, a local artilt, are m
IUcMNI T. C1rrll\llon Jr,, 20f ll~
AYI., l1lbot l1l1ncf, (lllf, ~
J.......i t . C•rtlllf!Dn. '°' •urw Avt., Atlbff 1tt1M, C11ll, t24U
Dttld J1t1u1rv-U, 1110
ll:lcht•d T. C1rr!"''"' Jr. J,....I 1.. CtrrlMlo!I STA'fe OF CALl,Oll:HIA, OltANGI! COUNTY:
ll'llV tllKVtld '"" """'· Thi ''OH•h' herein dt1erlbtd 11 com• (Ofl'l'lCl•I.. $1All P'r\OlllV rlftrred 10 11 1111 Wt1f $1,
Mlirt K. Hlh,., Gtrffudt •11ct, Sanll Ant, C1llfOrRl1.
Nof•rt •ubll c-C1lltornl1 Tlla unclerslt ne4 ''''"'" Ille right lo ,., fl'rtnc111J °"'"' In led 1nv 1rid 111 bllf1. d!Splay through January At tht On Jl nui rt 1'-lt1', -.t-l'f\I, 1 01'111111 C-tt Olllld: J1nu1rt '· 1t70. '"~" n •• • llbr l.'M: Notetv •ubllc 111 ,,.,. for uld s1111, Mv c-mlttlon Ex•l•e• Pel'lr o Murr•v-Hunt""6..,n ~cu ary, -,.,.._itr ..... , ... Jtwtl L, C1rr11111.,. NOY.,,, 1tn •• Admi,.r11r1to, of m. Mub'r~~ Shot • .,, •·during rtiular ~ !~1:''#i.T.:;~1:':' .. ;"11:=n,:! ,.~~~s. <>;;,,,.;, c;: ,?~~,~11&;: :~:.i'!ni:. 111e .~mett -~ """"'''*' lo tll1 wllllln lfl1trU!fltinl •!If im 10·10 tin 6ffilll,,.l'fl Ori~ ttk119WINl141 t11•y tlllCUIM 1111 """· HUflll .... lon •tath, C:tllt<lrnlt f16Af LEGAL NOTICE (OltlClll Still LEGAL NOTICE ••tN lltMAlll, ,UIMAtt. Chftftr '· S1!tJb11rv lLOOM I l(LllN
Clll:TIPICAT• o• •Ut!Nl'I mt1rv l ulll!t . Ctllfotftll t -•S'f ly: ., .. ,..,A.~-··
l'ICTITIOUI lllAMI! :;;~::-t~~· In su11••to11: COUllT 01' llJ $tvlfll ........ 1¥" 011 ... Tiie UfldenltMlll .... ltlftlfv ... 11 ~ e TMI tTATI.,, CAllfl'OllNIA ...... .., Miiis. etnf, tl!lt CluCT!ne 1 bwll'llt 11 -fMt 11th $1 'f'!. .. , !;T•,~M lll•lrts l'Oll THI COUNTY Tel : IJUI 11 .... lllW ... II
C 'I ., "'"'' ~·· "~ OP OIANOI A"°""1's fW A ... 111111,tler C011!1 Mt''' • '""11, \lnffr the fie-l'ull111'*' Orth" C11tT 01tfv '11•1, 'ubllshtd or11111 C111tt 0111v 'lier, !ltklut firm fllf!\I of AVOM Cll:A'I J1-ry 11, ::it, 1f 1nll 1'"'1.il rt 1. NO A -"11' J • I '"' ". ClfAHfllS lrt41 lh1t llliil llffll 11 com-• HOTICI 0.. HIAlllM• OI' 'ITITIOH l llUI,., '"' t, I • .
1-.1 of 11'11 fellowt111 ..,...,, Mtt.1 lf7I 7I 7t l'OI: llll:OlATI ff WILi.. AlllO l'Oa
"'"" 1" flrll •nll 11tc1 of m lclli!IU It•• LEGAL NOTICE Lln111 o' AOMllllllTltATIO,. LEGAL NOTICE loti.w.: WITM THI 'lllf'llL AHllllXIO 1--------------Cl'ltrlff F. , ....... 1iwr e l\llN, .... ,."' CAll:l G. FALK. Otc11tld. •·UJO G1"'t11 G,._¥1, C1"fonl!I NOTICE 11 Hlltll'I' GIVIN Thi! 01llill J111U1rt l'-lf1' lllOTKI ., tAll C:All;L DONALD 'ALK hH fl!ld 111ttl11 t ClaTl•ltATI! OP IUllMllS
Cheri" I'. Perttr Nltl(I lt hertM' l l\llfl 1unu1t1I 1' MC-11«1110!\ lot 1roblt1 of win enlf for l'ICTITIOUt NAMI!
LIBREVILLE, Gabon (AP) "What do you want to be ta ped \Yith adhesive bands on A European in the crowd STAT! OF CAL ll'01N1A 11.,,, sn •nll son If~ c 1-1n c ... o1"" 1nu1nct., Litlhl'I"' Adl'l'll111"r111on w!1h Tht u11e1ersl•nt11 e1o certlfv 111,,, ••~
h ,,, k-• that th ch1'id-.. Oii.ANGE COUNT'!', St1i. ., C11lftml• .... undlrtlt!llllll, 111(1 1111 Wiii •Mt•"" I• Ille Mlll\oNr, COlllfudl!ll • blttlnns II uoo-Ad1ms - Biafran child,ren sang the \V en you grow up . their foreheads cannot r emar ..., e '""' On J1~ .... ,., 1'-,,"°' lle'ltr• ""· 1 Jtl!M.., Thl(l l.,..,lc1, wtn 1111 •t "1bltr r11.,.,..~ '' w11k:11 11 m•ct• tor 1ur1t1fr C•••• MM•, cintornl i, urMr th~ iic'.
"A teacher." remember where they came were lucky. N1111,.,. •ub11c 1" and ,,,,. 111i11 St111, "'c11or1, 111• •1c111, ce.11 Hwv .. s .. 1 11rt1cut1n. •ltd tr..1 th, 11,,.,. '"" •t•c• tUlouJ 11,,,., nimt e1 THE EXECOTIVf!I' anthem of their lost country . . ..,.o,..llY 111p11rM Ct1•r11S I', •erttr IMdl, C1Hl«'!ll• 11 10 '·"'· '" 11tut111v. flf 11e1rlfll 111t NrM r...1 """ 111 fft, lAlllER $HOP lfMf thit sekl 11,.., It
"Are you sad that Biarra from. Records shtnv only the Miss Nwwne didn't hke the k110Wn ·11 m• ~ ...-1111 "'"" W111ta th•'"' ••v If J111U1rY. im. thl 1'11-· l'ftru11Y " n10, 1t ~ •·'"·• in Ille comrsowf of lht toiklw!ntr HrtGl'IS, ....,,,,.,
Wedne sday, shuffling their lost the war'.,, name of the hospi'tal that a k """'' 1, 1ui:..n1blill i. 111e w11~111 1, .. 1111 ~rlbltl .,""""', ,..wit: C111rtr..,. o1 o.-11"lmtnt No. 3 et selct .,1,,.," 1,. iuu •ml 1111c" of •••ldtMe ••• rem r · 1trvmM1t 11111 1ckflCWlldslill ht uecutM '"' C!MV'!'. 'l•t lM. """"" Ne. cwrt. " l'OI Ctvlc Ctnttr D•lvt wnt, In 11 fellows· feet in the dust and mumbling Miss Nwume did not dispatched them. And Nigeria "How can you tell a child ""-H,,.,.. oeoni&21SU. l l_,.. He. I! 7'15' IN Clh'" s1n11 "'"•· c11r.ern1•. HS'tO!d Nutt!~•· not 1ow1. Coll•
, T h I !Otllc:ltl SHU C1 Htoml1. Dtlld JlflUlrv IJ, 1'10, Mt1I Ci l!lorllli the pa rt which went, ' en el tra nslate the question. considers Carilas an illegal he's lucky to be alive?" she Merr k . HIMlrY " s.t• .. i.11 i.."" ~-"' .. 1111Ytne w. !. IT JOHN, t i.Wd w1JDc1sO!I, ,,11 oikott Avt .•
Us dl·c w1'thout sheddm' g a "Well, what good is it to tell ai'd group. demanded. N1t1rt '"'bile • c1111or1111 ti•" "' Ill• 111\119"!tnM "°'" .,,,,..,, '"' c-h' ci...• • co.11 M"' C•l!lorn11 •rt~illll Ot!ICll 111 IMCl'lllllffl ....... In Ille lrNUftf flf 111',GI PAL.Mii, IAlllTTA. 'TMOllDAllSON Oil..::I OK~b9r :IO iHt
tear ." some of them," she said. ~1.iss Nwume watched the "Children don't thiak like o''"" '°"""' 1 .. 11,,., ""'""' eti11s " 11Ywtt11,,. '"""' TOOM•• Ftev• w~ · My C_,,.,IHlll\ E•PlfH ....,_ II •Ill. -:.:.::.~ ........ •tu11¥lf'lll Ht""ld Nlltl l,,.
T he Children, from 2 to I? "Tbe children always played children as they s tood in the ,that. They espect to be alive. Nev. ''· 1n2 D•ftf tlll• ttti •••et J1rw1,..., 1m. ,. C1llfff'li. "''' Stl!e ot C•Hfoml•. ori11te Cotmt¥: · t part Th r · th cll · t · It's one of thelr rights. How ll'ubl!lhM Or•111• '"'' 0•ttv •11et. l llf Jiii-111• m•1 ~· ..,.,.,. on CKembtr •· Ifft, bffore ..... • , 1 ded some of the an unportan . ey car-sun 8CJng e airs se up ln J•NJ•N u, n. tt 1ni11 ,.~,., s. •YMlihM '°''"" CM.t o111v-P11ot, """"""' ,_, f'Mni.ii... 011• roiiet Nollrv Pubnc rn ind 10, 1114 St•I•,
years, inc u ried water and got firewood the shade for the distinguished dare you tell a child he's lucky u10 n.11 J1n1111Y 1s. 1m .,..1'0 f'u~ll•llN °'~""~ C1111 u.70 ,....,.,,11, •P•••'• H•rtld Nutllnt end
last Pitifully undernourished d t be Id! Th · · ,, be al1"•e'." Jiftwery u. u, · '"' 1.ie.d WOO<ll<ln knew,. 1e me to be lh•
and wantc o so ers. eJjjiv010s01t000rs~.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;w;;;;;;;';;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,-\---~LE~G~AL~~N;O~TI;i;;C~Ei.,luTiCC"i<;<L:V.;iLE~G:iiALi.~N~OTI~~Cl!:::_ ___ 11_~;;;;~~~~~~~~~~-;---\~··•""' ..,,,05,, n•mn ••• '""•crlbeoll te ones e va cuated a s Biafra older ones know, of course, "'' wllhtn 1n1trum1n1 ,.., 1ckAowledtld
I t k Th h JtA1•v11w TMIUPlt.rTIC •OOL YOLt.rllltlUI, 1•c. th ... allto;ult(I Ille ••mt. crumbled a s wee . ey rac-but the younger ones, ow AND tuP11io• cou1111 o• TM• 10 F,lCIAL SEAL)
e d through the song without could they understand?" ''Doc'' ChaaKem-Co says ... · ,A111:v11w ''"'• NOtP*rAL ·~rc: .. e.,A.;1;:'.~:~0111.
false reverence of concern for While the war went on, .. e11c1 TO ct111t•ACT••1 Ml. A"'4M
the right k ey. chii'dren who recovered in SIALS:O 'll:Of'OSALS •lit" t11:1l'llill ,, ""' l'AtlVllW STAT! HDS•tTAl, 1501 -,,~·,::.A~\"'::,HO.:t~ ::~·~.i:=
ll1P1Clll G. Homt11
Not1rY 'ubllt
H1rllor Blvol~ c .. 111 Mill, C1llfon!l1 ""'IU 101• I.I'll., Fr;,it1y, fl'tl'lr\ll>'Y ,, 1'70, ti
Adults h ad t old them to sing Gabon or the Portuguese wtikn 11m1 •"II PIK• 1111., wm M "''11c..-,,.,, ... 1ne ,..,. "' 1111 11111tu1111n ,, ~:1!:'.1~ ~~\Tf~1"'J~t~~11 Ktl!•N
it. Adults also had lined up the Island of Sao Tome were often ""'twlrmni,,. "'1of 1111 "'1""'-w T~'"""'Jc ••1 V•hifllwl'a.-IM. •k• ALllll:T M, Kl..l!IN •k• AlllEJtt
Sltll ol C1!Hor11l1
Prlncl11&I Olflct lfl
O .. lltf COUfllY
d t d nd th th . ls In In lilllllrtl, 11111 ,..tlkl r'l~tlttl er: l(LllH •k• .... M. KLEIN, OICNHocl. thin a n wa ery~ye a e sent back to ell' paren TI'I• con1tn1c11111 of • »' • w 1wtl'lll'llf"I' ... ,, e1r1c""" illldr •~d HOT!CI 1s Ht:lttlY GIVEN Tll•t M•v it. un Mv c-mluJ$/'I E,.lru
unsteady and had given them B1'afra. A newsman w ho wiJkJJ '" x '" ttnuet• ~t ""111~1 llullflnl ""'1"' ....,.,,. 111"'· OtrottoY" '1'11111N ft•• r11111 fltl't11'11' llllfl°" "'""lllllld or1nie Cotti o1uy ,not,
h Id h t d . ,. .. ,..., 1ni11 qtt11t1 '"'" "ul.,.,.nt1 "'1ttr1e11 •tnlc1 '""' tll'ltr tw Ille ireblte 91 tti. wru of 1tie •bovt· Jenut'Y 1, a. 1s. n. ttl't Jm,.• tVlacards to o t a rea traveled with an Irish priest un1111111 '"" ......... •ll'l•r ..,,,..,lftC.. "'"'"' i111C11i111nt .ncr '"' "" ll•u•tK• " -.. B · " I i.ts rnuel 119 lllM!lrttill tor 1111 Mlllr• ~ ill1Kt111M 11111'1111, Dtvlltlon1 t,..111 111111 ltl""'5 1 111 llt!o 'Shame on Grea t ritam. delivering the children to their •Ml 11'f<'lllc1tten1 wilt 1111"' w.lcl.,....,.,. wltt " c11111 tw r1tec11111et111t11 • .....,..,c!":.'":'icot,.,11 '4;.,,a.' _:: "',;.•;; LEGAL NOTICE
"Our heads a re bloodied but parents in tiny huts on TM o-.r ,...,.." ""r1t11t,. rtloet lftY •• 1n bi.•. 1111rtu11,., •lllf tto•I "" ,,,,.,. ""' •lKe>i-------------111 •«Wiii-wllll Tiit ,...•ltltftt et Sk!ltft 117J ti' tl'lt LIW CMe, the OW111r f1f ""'r111t Ille .. me II•• """ tet tor •-»1n
u nbowed and "Long live our Biafra's red dirt ro ad s M• ••ctmt'*' 11111 1111 .....,..u, .,t¥1rn111 1111 If' w•,. 1111ptic-M1 ,. 1111 IW•t J11W1ry lf, 1m, 1t 1::io •·"'· '" the ClllTlfl'/CAT• 0 , tUl!llltll
he ro 01.ukwu'' a reference to remembered the fine reu-11 bl""' II •• 1o111n: cwrtroom e1 O•NtlrMflt No. ' .. 111d •M•LITI• PAYMIJfTS •O• ftllr!, it JOO Clvlc CMlll• Or Wtil. In lhe l'ICTITIOUS NAM•
Gen. C. Odumegwu Ojukwu, nions: Sometimes tears and in tM•1..oYll 11,.lllllTI Cttv"' s1nt1 A111, c1t1t1•"''· The und•••l•n•ct do c••llty '"'-" irt I d ho rl d pu ch Owed and C:,..11 w T1" Ihle: •11t """"' & 011111 J1nu1" U, 1'10 -~ •. ,, ... , "•<-· ,, ·-• ''''" •··• th e B l·arran ea er w c one case, a n , • • .,..., •• -· w , _ ,..... , •• ~ "''"'~ .... ·--.... , -... ........... -., ' ''" .., •• W, I!. ST JOHN, (111nty C!I!'., N-r1 ll•Kh, C•ltf0tftl1, undtr l~f llc-the country. probably remembered for four ........ .,.... 1.41 '·" t.U OALv111 •· K111111 11111ius 11rm "11'1'1' of 111e1uiir111 p1,.
th th t l'ttl ?.,........... '""' •II llf. NIW...-T '""'~ Mtdlc1r Center '"" '~" ltkl "'"' 11 COM-The scene w as a t a hospital mon s, rown a a 1 e _, 1.11 """"" , .. ,~. c1wt. nut -"' el 1111 ioi111w1,,. ""°"'' w'-41
h Ro brother T•ltlt ·-SIW o ..... 11tr 1.11 !Tlh UH) 6N-1tt1 ,.. ...... In tuU Incl ••••• ,, r11fdtll(I ••• run by Caritas, t e man · ,,_, MlllM• .» .u .u """"" 1er P~ ,
1
... , 11 follo'-MI: -
Catholic relief o rganization. Now there is a dwindling c-1 M•..., """'"""''n •·• ~u~tllh..i or-ce.11 0111,, .,.·,,· ,.,.. Killl'I, M.o .. 11N E. ,., s1r111,
h h'id C-t M•.on l'l•Jlntt & lrlWfU"' Jt-f'Y lf. lt. 22, ltl'O Tut!ln, Ctlll,; Frink E. Ottulaen. M.O,. near Libreville. German and chance t a t some c 1 rtn can ' Mto;111111 ow11tr '·'' ,,,,,., v1u1y oriw. v111, ,,.1111;, c1o1.1 F rench d octors ther e have ever find their parents again. 1.' PRUNE ,,.. w.ni ... c ,n .~ .ts .3,S LEGAL NOTlCE Malthtw w. suwlow•kl. M.o .. nu I ._ ll:tllllO<cl .... I"" wot•tr 1.37 Vltll C1Ullil, New.or! llttCtl. C1lll. treated children a irlift ed out A boy like Emmanue knows s1rve1ur11 ,...,, _,.,,, ,... aA11: 2221 011e111 Ott. ,J, 1m .
Of B l'afra for more than two the name of his village, but L•M""' .u -" .u NOT1c1 To c11.•01To111 ''"" Kahn Dteidu:lus fNittrffs, CCM benies l..11Mrtr -Glllltlt M' CtntlfltClllll 4.US lllPllllOlt COU•T 01' THI Frink E. Obulotn Years. other smaller children who Gropez, Rose1. eu1 bcfofe: you $10ot1, Oltr•to• of """""''"c • 1ittu1c ITATI OF CAL••o•H•A •o• M11111 ..... w. s11wrow,•1
h "th th ' ames toel1, vlbr'lllrll mtchl,,.. L 1lmU1r THI COUMTY O' Oii.ANG-a Stile of (81ltor11i.. Or111 .. Counl•:
Some Of the 1,800 children at ,;::C:a:m:e:::ier~e~Wl!;!m;;!::e:lf=n==~l l 11e1 "Doe" Cho-Kem-Co's Pruning and -"'-J,..~~-, tntelltntUt 1"lt not 11p111t1ly NO, A"'4Ut Oii Dt<:tmbtr rt, lNI, be!or~ "''' 1 d t · ..:. Sproylr'lg Monuctl frcm your Gardeft Cl111llled h1r1l11 ,,!5$ l!tllll If DOit.it OAPHNE GITTIHGS, NO'lt,., 'ublkt I" i nt tor tlllf Sit!•, t he center were m ove ou In· Alf••rll••""'"' • c1ncre11 ,,.,. ""'"' .,111111n1 Ott••'"· 01rt01111ll'o' ,., .. ,,.,. F•lld Kihn, M1111'1ew
to a dusty clear ing so they 5upply 0.01iror•rllei.for tree,., typt 4.W NOTICE 11 Hl!lll!CV GIVIN i. Ill• w. suwlowtkl '"" fl'l'lnk E. Obui..11
b J F FREE cq:iy. l•Ylnl If l it "'n-rntlll!11c t i,._ IMl\1111.... ctlillttllrJ of 11\t 1llo¥1 hllm..::I dtcedMll k!ICIWfl to rM te lie ttll Pll'IOftl who,. could be seen Y a cques OC· ABE YOU -r 1111, drtln 1111 .. t. 11111 •II,.,_ ft•Y lnt c111,,.,, •••!ntl 1111 n•,,.,•• ,,, 111ti.cr111ec1 to "'' whhl11 1 ....
Cart, French African affairs "'"''°""" 111. 4.w 1111 dKttJent .,.. ....,1,.. ,. tilt ll'ltm, Jl•umtt1t 1nct 1t kfl0wttd1ec1 they uec111t1
2 SPRAY M•klfll " au1tlr11 111 _.l'Mlflltlc with 1111 111t1111rv """"'"' 111 lht efllc1 tr.. ....... a ide to president Georges THE ,.,. AlN pipe re1111t 4.Sil "nit ,11r11"'111, •bov• lflflOt4 «>11r1. 1r (OFl"ICIAL sEA Ll p •d l lI.l1l Wltc..,,.,n ),4 $ It lrtllflf 11\tm, Wlll'I 11\t ~KNlllY Mt\lretn A. fl'K"-IWI oFmopc~a~~· c ame in a f•• P•di a...t c.,r1; Stitl'-W. '!'' o~,::,.i : 11111--.1 s.u .~ ·'° ... :f':i,~';~:W,~ :=:ii;-::~.'~ •• ~'~ ~~!~ ~i:~~c1111orn11 FOR Us.. • loum di!oCOHl on PllOdies, Al~ com11r"11t, t um• ., lld., c.,.,,ne, C.111. '°"°' which 11 tht Mv CeiT1m!11lon E~plru helicopter than la nded in a • ''"""" ,,.,,I'll, •lK• .. butlllf'l• If""' 11ndet11,,,.. 1" 111 NllY. '· 1t1J
I • t • a thick ... pri(CIS ond otf>dr "°"e lruH'S; GTl«P 2: 1.11 m111tr1 11tttf11lnf 10 IM lhlll'fl 01 1116 Jlublli.htd Or1""1 C1'1"1f 01llr ll'lll'lt; C earing, OSSlng Up fcir Powde"' Mildnr cind YDtiout ~kl•lttdlf-Whffl ...,Pl-Ptrd, llc..itnl. wlll\11' l!IU• montli1 lllt r I,,. JtnUI,., I. I, U, 22, 1910 '4"·ff th g O\lr cempeny Is r••idlY t•PllllllllG ., '' coat of d ust over e youn 1...:i .... 1,, IDOIC lllG ter , 1aca1 ""11 blighn on Roses,°"""'°"' F.,g1,111n, JH• or 11m1111 ty~t 114 rtrs0• ,..'"',nt1t1on.,• ~,",M• lie•.
Bl'afr ans. They responded with ...,.., ;, 11....:1 of '°"' "'°"" 11111 1~or1 Y•rd •• 1ua 1w1111out or•• ,.,.,,. 1 tt•m r 1 , ''· .._.,. 11 VOii """' 1 nornt111! 11'1'111\111! trffs ond P.rubs, 1tlldl,....nh> c111r1 .. M. AH•r LBGAL NOTICE
the national anthe m. of Ctl~ lo invn t hKur..il ll'ICI • 0 0 I Grewp l: ..... A4mlRl1trelor of 1111 """ T .....
goeci •«1Utt!I011, It! us dl1cu11 1 B RD L F•rlf l'trtuson •• 11mi11r 1Yr>1 Cwllfl 11 ""' •lllYt n1m1 •0telillt11t • But ins ide one of the low. boullflfui 1910 ter 'f{lu •nd 'I""'' um-IJ.'$i'£ dr~• "''"' 1t1ec11l!ltrll'l1 101111:1 "· It.ICM lilOTltl TO c11.•otro11:1 Id. h the Uy. (Ill Clllfel, ,., ......... , "''.,. '•wtr <111C••I• ""' '"""'' ,,. •111 ••• su••••O• COUIT 01' TNI' open bui 1ngs w ere v1n, Mr. ll1Hr1, nu1 n1-nn. ., 11;o0,...,. 1n11 Cll•lll""n Vt'""' C1N1. ,.,. lfATa oir CAti•ollHIA FOlt
children sleep there was no wr111 ''" M.Jn. o':",...:,;._,"'1" •.11 A~,~·~=11111,.w TNI couMTV OI' Oll:AHO•
singing. A 9.year-old boy nan:i-1~=============.1 FOi SCALI A"D OVlllWIMTlll"Q INllCTS Trtnd!lnt ml(lrlni •r>1te"4' iu111 II PublltMll Ori n" Co1tl Otllf Jlllol. Ne, A1414t
ed Emmanuel Angoma, h1sli en dorrnoM fruit tree$, CITRUS, c-111o1, Go,..._· t-toDt dtiolfl ''"'''IY· m11r'•· J.,.,..,..... 1, •· 11, n , u ia ,_!'-'' E11111 "' LOLA J &wl!ll. Cl..All:K.
fT I k --~ _,__ .__,_, _,__... r•llfll) o,c•11ed. body yellowed om a a c A THOUGHT .,.... "'""'' '"'"'' ""''11'"" "'"""'• Grouo s: •.31 LEGAL NOTICE
d h-dark SCALE o KIL x H"vy ctuf'f '*llll•r111" NOTICE ts H&:ll:Eflv GtVl!N 1o 1111 protein a n ts eyes IJ.'$i'£ T•KWlr 0,..,1~_.,11 """ ~"'"'" 1•11: 112» crec111or1 of '"-•bllv• "''"""' lfKHtnl m arbles dr ained of blood, sat • • llulldot•r. ,.,,.,,..,, "''"' .... lllOTIC• TO ClllDITOll:S '""Ill H•Jonl ht¥1nt Cll ll'fll ""ln•I IN I d FOR TODAY Plllh trKll<' IUfl'l!ll:IOl COU•T OF THI tlld llttl'Clenl 1•1 rl~ulrtd lo file 1r..m, with the stillness of a n O 0,.,1 ,, • ITAl'I 0' CALll'OltHIA ,oil with tht nt ce111,., YC1Uch1n, 111 '"-efflct Co1fl~lne!IWI hff•Y illuty rt,..lr!Nll .'I THI COUNTY OF OaANGI O'I Ille tier• ef lht t bovt 1nt1Uttl tour!, oP
man . "' '"' k "' '"'" 11111 y111 c•~'I 3 STIMULATE ROOT '"" wtliller NII. A UIH to ••t1111t them, wllh 11\f ""'"",.. When Edi.th N wume, a •••• ,.., -• -•,. -·•• l st1:1 " MlltlAM I. CON.LEY, YC1Uc1t1ra. to Ille uno1n1,1114 11 .,,, 11111e1 l'flfkl ff lltl,_.. If Tiit Wlf )'Ml Nh .....,,., "" Cle<IH... ot IOONE & SAfCHl!iLl, AllorfltVI II
Biafran nurse, asked him "· DEVELOPMENT NOW •,~1~dtr-wt1••1 ,.,... "'" 11• Y•rf• NOTICE IS Htltl!IY G!VEN 11 ,.... t•w, :woJ ~ ••K" 110t111v1rct, t ..,,. -Ell.., Gl••fll'# ••~· .. r e,..r11tr w\111 klm crldlWlr"I If 11\t 1bo¥~ n1mttl dtctilltnt INch, C1!tf1tfll• 9'1*1, wMtll t• ""111c1 questions in the Ibo la ngauge, • 1119<11"'*"-111 1 11 h vi 111 !Mt tht of bull of tt... d 1 " 1 u ..
E mm a nuel replied in a slow, PAESl!HTEO As A Trw11C111n1 l'flltlllnt '"""'' 11vtr.. ..~ ~.:r•.,.• ,:: ... ~r .. ""~·~~ !Mm, '-" "~::r,,1"' 1, ;:::', ~.·,: et~.~ ;",:., PUllLIC SERVICE EVl!lt'I' OAY lY: of frMll anti: f•t 11iHll ClllCll)', mltr'1. r1tln•I w!lh the 1111:tsurv vtvelllrs. 11 lilt of'llar d111I, within fo\lr mOl'lltll ifltt tr.. lint
unhappy whisper. Unlvlnl•I •rwi....,.,,, ..... tot lllll'ltl, ... tM tltrk et !he 1b6¥• rn1111111 to11rt. er 1Ubl1c111ori oi "''' Nillc1. "Whe-o's your mother?" LH Roofing Co. shrubs "ck "°'· i11rt111n1, cltm111t11, I'll ••M•nt 1111,,.,, wttti 1111 111C•1t•rv ott.i J•nu•rv " 1910.
'"' dtrrtck, dtn'k:k ""'' cran1, llllkl ve uthtn, lo !ht \llllllrsltllld 1t c/o Chtr1t1 I , Cllrk .. She's a t home .• , ,. Ylfrt "'•·1-porti,i.rlarly illr1vtr •"II ltlWklne l!'llClll~•I 'l'OUNG, ••eN"Elt & Hl!WI. 311 w •• , Act,,.,r~11tr110t OI 1r.. fflll•
"And your fa ther •." '"1 111""klf AY•. .C·nD &ore Rfft 1'!.1111
1"'"' .SS .o ·• 1111ri11 Strttt. s1n11 ""'· C1t110,~11 t2101, ot ll'lt 1bov1114l'flld dtceatont .
... vtr of 11y,,.,, l•uc•1 Wf\lcll lo "11 11sce •f b~1ln1H of "" lOONf ' l!!.~HILL "He had to go away.'' ttff• oncf Lfl• """ • r,•ntt •lltr llY•I '·"' 11n111r11111..:1 111 ,,. '"'"'" Hr11rn1n1 10 1r 1 o. A. • ~1'111 M "' lllln I \"frdt. Ill• 1tt111 If u ld •&ceillent, wtlhln lour UOf Ltnt ltl(ll l MI. lOMt whtn ""'''' ltWol 4.tl 1'116"1111 Iller ,,,. flrit "1blluitlotl of tt.11 "'"' lHcll. e1111. ,..., la •-~ I Ylnll kl llS• llllfl 11 y1rfS flOttCt. Tlh (111) 4)4.Mtl tranap n..... Wlllr llvtt •.ti OllK O~r 1f, 196f. A"'"""• ..,. A*'itn111,.,,.,
JUST SPRAY ON
TERR·O·VITE
th• cOl'llplM• f•rrill•r, plant tlf'DWlh Mii....,, ... 1
cortdltlONr, THR..()..VITI re4ua1 fN"'Plantl111 lheck,
brooks down hardpan anll' cl91 Mil, nnt,.n ..... u.
4. PROTEa ''°"" Ol'ld "'Dl!oble gordlnt.
dl(hondro ond othtr '°"'"" ,,.;...,
LIQUID SNAIL·KIL
A SPllAT-IDT A lllT-UFlll TO UK
ni. °"ly ~ tMt klUs Sno1r., SllOI. ~ _.
Cci..-lol or If 1"'""' , .. ...._ _. CIMr Wat Co
SNAIL·KIL PELLETS
LOUER UITIH • OUTAll 10 ARIEllC
HELP YOUR GARDIN NOW!
It*"" ,_ i.rt ~0oo· CM-'-'t'• Mortitlllllll'al .....
Siolpp!IM rlU lrf Jf/111 _.., It """
Drlwr ., lf'll(k ... ti lllll'l'lliill U.-Clty; Jell:OME COVGLAS Ll!HN li!ltT ,ueil1 ...... Or•ne• (fftl 0•11Y •111!1.
l"• "''"' ' llllls •. u E~•tulor ol .,,. Wiii J1nUtl"t' •• lS. "· "· "" 13-70 ' llrl• te 11 •• 4.M et th• tbeUt n11M<t tec:ldenl OrlYlf' If trlml).fll.111 ll'lldll TOUHG. f'll:ElllNI• • NCWI
u..-1r 1 Ytriill '·" 111 Wftl 11111'!11 11 ..... 1 rtl'll1 er more ,,SJ 111111 A111, C11H11'"41 tU'ft Wtttr M' 111111....,.ff trlldl illt lvtr: ,,.....,.., 1"41 '41 ... HI """tt '500 '"""' 4.tl ""'""" "" l~tcvl'W 'SOii .. 11 ... , to -fllklm IM •ubll•h"" Or•fllt C111t OtllY Pltot. llerto; Liii oriv.r s.As Otttmbtr 1$. INt '"' JlflU•t~ J, •• u.
LEGAL NO'l'ICE
P4J11S
cr•Tl,ICATr 0, tUSIN•St
•ICTITIOUI llllltM NAM~
1-.Tr .... 1 ,lfJt "'°"' T,,. Uflllflltlleel deft l'llflb, "rl\fY •rldlllyer & l llfltrnlll!li 1.il.S J7 ·'' Ill.ti ht If ~lne • bu•lnw t s 1n 1 ... l,lckl'tlldtr1 O•M•trtl 4.• .• ,4J .ts .» LEGAL NonCE lflvldutl at ,.., C!ul!MIJU Roed, c°'11
l ltfll'lc:l•11 Wlrtm111. J1umt,l'lll• 1.tJ ,ZS Melt, G1nFetrnll, wne1< !hr l!t1lllOU1 fir"' ·= '·'' ! ,JI .st ,. •• ,,, =~·lh'!t T~M ,~,,,sH~Rcr;,:.::E~T·:.:
lrutll 1,6' .lt .2S Cl•T•"oc'TCAITTIOIUOl•N~~~.INlll followilll ..,_, •PIMI -· In lull t •f ...,......, I .t ,.,., lllU flf '"ldlnct 11 11 fol!Clwl, to-wll, • ....,,,..,mefl 511'lf ' Tiit 11ftdtr1ltflll llO «111\o NY er• ll:ICkAllO A. Nl!Wl!l L. '''' ''ri1,,:::u '·" 1e"i. lS"t. u14 :C"r,71 • ~h"""~ ·~ ,tt ~"'w!,5!" Clllt>l\oull II.OH; Cotti Meis. c1n1or1111 fillllllfltltr I.It I .. \ 11•• U'!\ ' twHr IC ' I ol'll 'DwAll~ """ llWutll"lll ''"'l!llf J1Ul'Mvm111 s.tt , • ..,~. t"9 u ... 11\.t tlclll!Olll firm n•Mt If "411: 0.lld Dtt:1mbtr lt, 1"9, ' ,t4 d AISOCIATEt IJliil llllt ltTill fll'l'l'I II CM-ll:tthttill A. NtWlll
',"' •• ::,"' telll... s. 4.'l .u .as . .. .. tit .,,, tolklwlnt llfrll)M, .......... l TAT!' OF CAl ll'CllNtA. I l,'7J .~, ·1st M Mlnft In 11111 .... lllttl II rttldlfta lrt COUHTY OF OllAHGll I u
"""' !Miii 1Wrll1r 1.u ·" 0\6 .n " 11111ews: o" Ol!«l'fllMr lt, 1Nf, tieter• me. 1 Tiit "1'tlr '-11 ,U Tttrv A. Slln'1rd, lOllft lllftll Clrcl1, Not•l'Y 'utlNc lfl ftNI for 11ld COU!lfv ....; flit 111T1r M l-•.U .l<'I ,ft ,,.. Hr.o"lll'l9lofl IMO!, Ctllltl'llll . $111'1, ttrlOflllt'I' -•.,fd ll:ld11td A. .. "' cllttlflcetlO!I tmltfM flll"llll -!llt lttl tlltn ,., ...•.. , ... ,.,, ..•.... U... MY'-i A. Sh1Wt'11, 25U (lrcll Orfve, Ntwtll kllOWll " 1111 le lie flllt M'IOll O'rWll""' -"" .... tfltfl .,. • .,,. -l'lelf (11-\I tlm• lilt '""" ,.,.. N"'""I lMc:h, (1llrorll••· .....,. -.. U•lbM•lbtit ,. ,,,. whftt,,
.....,. lllf "'llllYI -1111 Mb ll\ll'f ""ti flll tlllY• l"llUIM' llfM r1f91, Tiii 011..::1 Ottffllber tt, lNt !nsl"""""t, fnd 1tt1nowled!led i. m1 lfl1I
Jiltlkl•Vl ....... wlllc:fl tllCll ,,,... tlltft Ill ~lill IJlllll Ill •II "''"'"' 'tot61nlnill' "' Tll'fY A, 111-.,,. lit ••8;1/t" llM ttmt. I 1911 colllctl .... tll't11flil>t """"""' 1pC1tlc1•l1 tll lllt .. rtltu11r '''"' CllNlllCI-Mvttlll A. Shfwtr• Wllftr .. fl'IY 1111111 111C1 lffl,
lltft Ir tne of Wll'lfrllfl M!llOYtill 11'1 fM fl'llld. tltlt et C•t11t111l1, Of'll\tt CO!HltY' 011,.ltl l lt:ALI He •Id Wiit bl '°"'~ ltl'lllU II II ft<Ht ... I •llhk fortfl f\lt!l t1ll• "" NII Oft Dtc:Oll'IW n, Ifft, &tff•f mt, I I A OWllill<' lllf 11 """' ~ !l(CM'llll'" Wlfll fPll lf'IVltltlfll of tllt lrtlllll l 'lllUlr• Htfl'V llllltlk In ellill 1'tf M141 111,_ Mtrtltl J-H-
IMRl'I 1fld ct1111ltlaoll1 '" ,.,ti! IMl•t Ill• t .MCtftcttltnt .... " allNtf' lt!WI M ffiMlwllr ,.,..rte,.,.,... A. Sntw•"' ,;;; Nott rv 'llllltc-Ctl'lfll''"
llc•l'dfif llld t lM ......,.1111W ., • ..,1,..,. "" lew. MVl'ell A • .,,....,. lrl!lwjl " 11'11 " fll tl!t ll'rlftc lNI Olit "' co.IH II ft\4' ltutt>rllltt, ••ltlttlltllt W •If IM'tfl'ltl ''"'" ''' t vtl!••ll 1t ..,_ wMo11 fllmM ,,.. 1uWtrlbt• lo Cl
IN ~··"' o.er111oM Otjln , lltJNllW f:~i;'"''' ,., H•t... •tvtw•rf· iM Wlllll" If\~ ..... •cklltWltlltld °'"'" CoullfW CO.tit Miii. CtllflMll,-tH»i """"""°-•-111'1 4St. "'"" fll:M:IMI fM WM. MY c-INlolt b 'ITrtl ,AllVllW THI l'l\itlC "°<ll VOLUHTRltl. (01',ICll\L tl!Al) IHC, •M J\llftll• M. &lltttlll.il Nw . 11. 1tn
•AIAVllW •TATI HOlllll.tJ. Nott,., ,ull!lt>Ct~• lllCNAllO A. flllWIL\. ATTY,
tMl Ht,.., .._,...,.,.. 0!'911 .. Ctufllp 'It ltlll Oil StrW r,tt11 MtM. (tlllwftll My Cofl'ornlHIOll h•ll• Cttt• Mew. c.,,.,. .. nm
F'AHICLllll 0. ~I.. l •utll•=~,,.!° \~~ 01llr (.lttt, l"UOllt1'1141 Of'l!!ll C: ... I O.!lr Plllll' ..&Ctvtl llltlfllll' fl o.ffm• IS. !Hf 1111 JMll•,., I, , 1J, DKM\blt , .. Ifft -J_,, 11 "1 IJ,
1"1111111..., Clr9ftOI ett11 DilJ 'l"'r J•n111rv L n. 1m 1' 1t,. t1".., *' nlMt
I
1'
)f IWlY PILOT s lhundU, January ~ , 19?0
Year Money's Worth
Hunt Summer Jobs Nmv
11J SYLVIA PORTER
Q. My JOll u a hlpple He·s
also a 'lf'Ondertul boy who any
corpontlon should be proud to
hire Wlll his •ppearance
hinder hnn 10 getting a job
this awnmer' He must earn
his tuition money
A Yet, tt will 1er1oosly
hinder him at most com-
panies, according to the Na-
tional Directory Service in
ClnclnnaU. publisher of the an-
11ual "Summer Employment
l)trectory " "Appearance of
tltremtly long hair, beard
and shabby dress is a
stigma," says t.lynena A
Leith, editor of the 1970 direc·
tory, wtnch hsts 86.000 ~um
mer Jobs ''With th1S gots the
a.ssumed personality of
rwstance to confornuty and
rts~~ubllity The anti h.ipp1e
attitude is underlined by the
1970 summer employers who
want to request photographs
with applications ~ This of
course is forbidden "
Q OUR DAUGHTER wants
to get a job working overseas
th 1 s summer. What are her
prospects'
A The best ever This
year's Directory of Overseas
Summer Jobs lists 50,000
EARN
~ • _.., .... 20th • ..i
••rl'I fr.,. the I at on
2 ........... " p•1d
,,....tM•t 1\rift
C.mfic ..... Or 5 ~1 Y.' •
'"*"~ Acc04Hris o.
Mt'( MMMIRh Your
.......... hot.°'"·cl
j -.....i;elely .. d ..... d.
171 I. ,, .. St.
COSTA MIU
........ lllMltJtH:Mf
MIDUSTWI~ MNKEM
lllllOClA1lCl9f, CALll"OftlUA
AlllCIAnoJI CW IND~
I.OM COMPA .. U
vacanc1ts against 20,000 lll the
1969 edition
"Employers are ready to
consider these •pphcaUom u
-early as Dtcember," Mrs
Leith volunteers. • 1 Tb e
preferred months to apply
have opened, will continue into
J,1arch April or May "
IN SHORT. the time to start
looking for yoor 11ummer Job
is here Millions of you will be
needing Jobs this summer,
mlllloas of Jobs will be needmg
you
Among the key develop-
ments art summer camp
open111gs are up about 15 per·
cent with employers more
"1lltng to employ high school
seiuors than m the pasl
Salaries at the lower levels,
especially 1n camps, are up
$50 to $100 H1gbes• paying
Jobs will be 1n the service
fields with cooks at the top or
the hst Now, here are 10 key
rules put together by the Na
t1onal Directory Service to
htlp you get your Job
(l) Apply early• The reason
J m wnt1ng this column now is
so you can have the rules m
Ume
(2) MAKE A UST of JObs
which you \VOUld bke the most
-say a hall-dozen at the
outside -and which fit your
interests your ab1hbes, your
quahflcahons and s p e c 1 f 1 c
needs
(3) Write a Jetter or ap.
phcalton lo each employer On
a Slngle typewrdte.1 page,
state your wish to apply the
period 1n which you will be
able to work, your reasons for
y,anbng this Job, the reasons
you think you are qualified for
I.he JOb
(4 ) Apply for a spec1£1c JOb
-not Just for "an.ythtng that
1s avatlable" Keep copl~s of
your application letters for
re'ference when you receive an
answer
(5J SPECIFY what you have
to offer the employer -1n
terms of your talents skills,
background, interests,
previous exper1e11ce -and not
JUst wbat you want from the
employer
(6) Attach a concise, one
page "data sheet" g1v1ng your
name, your address lSChool
and home) and telephone
number, personal information
such as your birth date,
marital status, father's and/pr
mother's occupation a brier
educational outJjoe, 1ncludlng
name of your school, your
class, ma1or a c ademic
degree s, hai10rs, e1-
tracurnculara ct1v 1t les:
WHAT CAN THE
INVESTOR EXPECT
IN 1970?
For rea11st1c ans\vers, attend thu spe<:1al
lecture being presented by Dean \Y1tter &
Co on January 22, m San Clemente
Charles V. Neal , Account Executive w1th
our La'una Beach office, will discuss the
conclusions drawn by Dean \V1tter s Eco-
nomic Policy Committee at tls latest meet-
lng, held earlier this month
Special emphasis w1ll be given to the ef-
fects or c:urrent monetary policy upon the
mvestment climate and the busmess and
financial ouUook. Among the topics to be
discus.sec!.
• \Vh1ch secur1t1es look best for
purchase now'
• Can present fiscal and monetary
policies halt 1nflat1on'
• \Ydl inflationary psychology permit
a rapid easu1g of monetary con trols'
• How soon can interest rates be
e:\.'J>ected. to decline' e Ho~· important 1s a balanced Federal
budget to the stock market' e Does the outlook for corporate
profits this year lvarrant ser1ou.:;
concern'
DATE: Thursday, J•nuary 22
TIME: Starting at 7 lO p rn
PLACE: S•n Clemente Inn
S•n Cl.manta
Slf. ') 50 per p•rson-$5 00 per couple
lllSHVATIONS: Phone 494 07 11 or write
to th e address below.
DEAN WITTER llC Co.
JNCDllPQJV.rSD
' MtmN• ,,,_Yortc Moel C.¢1'1•111•
2!1 lroHw1y e 494-Glll
LAGUNA BEACH, CA. '26Sl
' "JI arlMl N ttw. ffell' • condae wmmary ol the mutet opd"l-
.,1 md the la181badl_...., 8nonciAI ..... ~..,
~ WITTER MARKET REFORT
ICPAC. Dial l'ooi"'"' 13.10
8:06 ..... Mondo7 lhroafl> Fridq ,,
Mission
Merger
Delayed
PUC Okays
Gas Cuts
SAN FRANCISCO (APl -
The Cahfonua Public UUhttes
New
lJ uity Chair111 an
Route Hurts
Air Cal Line
Complete-Ne\v Yori\: Stoel\: List
UM• l'ltt (~ch I Hltll LtW Clott Cht
II~ -'· ~ ... _, ..
"" , ... _ ..
!? • + '• 'I • -t 11 ., -'1 t;l: = ·:
:iti. r 1,
" " ' " If'_, ' . ' ··~-1 . ., ~ -t • ''•-. SS.,-! , 11\.) -•• 11 + •• Jll 1 -•
,. .j. '.
"" -t l M'a-1
21\.\ -I ll'lt -• 7•h + •
" " . ,,, ... \!
1~"1o -i ,,.
n 11 -, ~7 -1 '
H ' -•• •1 + • 11>.:i -I ~lt• _, • ,,
1•'1 -•o 11 I _,. l o lt • -t •
17'• -lo
ll • -'· ,, .. -'• :a~ I> 'l.
11•. -t 1 nv;, -• 10 .I-•
"" + • ,1 .. -1
9. -'• 71 -1' •• 0 -i•
JH111•J,et
Sy1nbols
... ---~-
Wednesday's Oosing
• 1970 DAILY r!UlT
Prices-Complete New York Stock Exchange List
S.11• ,..,, ... ::u,,.,....,.,. ........ """' ................. , .... ...,-------------,
th• I Hlt~ Ltw C ... Cht I' 11*.I Ml.ii LR C._ Cllt
20 ,.,,. ~,, "'"' -"' ;i•,N<M, 1,•, •H !.!.... It n + "' DOW JONES A.\'EftAGES w~1 ~ ~,1 ~~ tm ,f1h t_ ~ Investors AwaI•t ,r.::ttt9'1 ·v ·i;; 2i: ,~ +: H ... von.t•"l'INI l)owJ-,_,, .. :::.r.!ii'"I
UO 13' 1,, -1 l't~lt•t,i!f OU 4~ .w Wt!llll Ill J
til't " .... ··~•IH• IO ,,, ~ ,. S.l't -~ STOCKI w,r, -I ...
U ,1 1•l.14l.l -l'I 1,r1"11I~ t S lioi 1 \Iii lOll'Q 111fS1't13JIOM7UH-t MWPll'plC410 ~i'! 1?~ 2:~ 7i tt : ~~· ~r.'. •, -~ f ~~l't• _ ~ °"" t11o11 t.o• c1oM Nt1 ~ii";,, 'tU >• l! ~ ,,.,. :.j\.O +l RW 11'1( 12' µ, ~ -• Wlll"lll' ~
., (, :ti\' 2'\ol --~ lli!W '"''° • I I i l JO Tr" 172.J.I 1u• "''' U,:7S Wtt" Air llf'I
u • • .o\~ '°111 -~ N• B d Talk l"w ~~· 11 f1\\ -11 UH 11••• 111.» IOtti l1t.J1-1.nw111Wi I·• ,; c~ ;:t? ;~~::; IXOil u get r=.11
c.r.1
12 1t 1~t 1ut +:t Sit UtU m,.)1 W'3' Utu -•a:!.~'7 l"KM -T--.'V-'"•"*1i-111 ti.w"""1n ._.._. =~ .. •1,Jl'.'f.
1l f:"i l' f~U t \; 8~~cb'lt1 lt 191 ffi'o 2•~ l.~ -;:: ~fld\16 !}Ji Wn II .,, JO
p,' Ht: ~f~ 32~ = !~ UGI Ct> ~ nt ft1i1o !ft fJlli :!: "'u~t" ~ ::S"~i' .:,\
" !1"" s.'h 1~ .. NE\.V YORK (UPI) -Stock prices lost ground ~u~~l~=~ ~ ~~ ~!" ~ne + ~ '5 Sit 1~ $!~!i,J:°# n ~~ ~t. ~ -t ~ In !aCk:lUSler trading today 3S investOrS Seemed tO n, c',',b•I! 1~ 1!!', :Fl "+ •"'-------------jWt¥1tll1t AO lJ 7J' n 1Jl'I 11, 111oii c':r' ~ 11 • " -..., I ,.... Ntl WIYflr ••• 1S llM u" :n1t Jll!. -1 , be awaiting President Nixon s budget and State of un e1ec r.10 '° i 1 l 1 -,11,. 1 KIM L"" c•cH Whtt: .. lr st~ ,J ;: ~5 .. :ar: ~,: the Un1on messages before comrruttrng themselves ~~1~i.l"t: r~ llv. ~!"' Jl .. + ~ u~,,E • ., Jl!? ,., ~ .. -+l'o SFilr~: ~
,, M ,, , -Admm1strat1on spokesmen s a 1 d President uoc.i 1111 '° 116 '' ~1~ ~ -~ u co , .. '' ~ »~ (' W1' rcn "'" s !l "' VnP1cC1>1 '9 '3:U \\ (J\lo -\\IJ OU)O UO 20"' ""l"'W~IC IC' 10l j,v. u ua :: ~ Nixon has ordered further substantial cuts lll th e ~:~:-·~11"°2 7T ';!; ,:: 3;t ... r.: UI• (Ml tt Ii ~ ~f\i '"' v. ..... ,~ •• ~ " •~s ~.,,,. 20"'-"" fiscal 1971 budget Earlier other spokesmen had un1on.m 1 40 1s ••• •~ •1>o =i?~!'h Pt; 'a 1 l!~ ~""-' wtiJ~·.ii~ 1 ~ llt~ Ji~ Ill< =1:' I u" rGvt1 10 7l 1ti.:. 1t lf -"'V•r'f:n i,14 ll lt 1t 1 ;;...., _ t?; i"iJ'0,, 1 .. said that the ne\v budget would show a surp us u111•ov11 DI • 11tt 1~-.. 1o:i" 1GJ1.1 -.., v1111tr r..o s • ~ "" + ,,. w , ... lOb 11~ Bt: ll111 R~ ='"' but investors ren1a1ned cautious a ~arently wait H: l:~ 1fo :m J&t~ "\. fi~ _,~~~or':,.-~ ~r~ :ir ~t -\4, w 1 00 16 l~lr,:.:1~1>11 1~L +1t; l f th I st h b d t x•.•, ',1.~, •• u 11 , ff .. 11~1 -+ l\vfcieo..np .SCI • 2t'lo Y1. :1,,-1.1i ~11~~~11 J.: 13 ..,~ ,.. ,, _ ,, 1ng o see or emse ves JU w at e new u ge " u 1111 io1 .. 101, -~ vmilll' 11 1 , •• ... + 111 w111!n~o~~ '"' n uv. "~ 11111 +,,. co~ains unF ~''"° 11 ~ ''• .if1.-ll.v1 !ttw112 t0 ft,. 2Mt, -lAwMOf)(ltB "' ~·· s• Sol ~ + Ill u-~ Unit Incl 1Q 11 91>)-~' 91'1 -\\ VI p pf:!:_,n Jl'° I """ 100 -14 w tl!11"w 1 • 141 1'11 '>"" 1"--'-Shortly before the close the UPr market wide 1n ~~::1~ ~: ~ ~ ~ 1' ,: ~: ~Pl>•~'ao1 ;1: lo'. ••11 t~ + Vi w1.1>s·~ 110
2! r.1• ~ 1 ~ -l \4 Un r.iuclr .91t 16 1110 11 '> 11u Vor"'4o 12/ s ~ ft~ l•i. -til Ww',',~ Ch"'~ -,, ,,,, ,...._ ,. dicator was off 0 45 percent O! lhe 1554 issues unit P• M111 ,, ..i, • .,.. "• +,,. vskcoro ... 2 ut. 33 m. + •• ..... ... Ii Ul~ 0 .0'-=,;· USForS '"" 16 nw 311'1 111 .. +v.11 .. ln/llo.ll 1 • I~'"'• ·~-1.Wf>/VWW .50 l1 ifll ~. ~ 'i = \'? traded, 767 dcchned and 500 advanced The Dow t\~l:~ 1: lU ~ , ii"" U ~ll! vw"' unit n W 'x y .. 1•1>1 '•"' -"':.=.~•,'/., " ,..., ,. , ,.,,.. + ... Jones average of 30 blue chip 1ndustnals was off uscwp p1119 1 :u, 33 n _ t. -• ..,._ oo,... -4
JD :'.Ith ltVI Jt.., -\• 0 85 t 787 16 Volume to d 10 Ill sh f us 11111"'1 ·~ ti 111. 16 . !1 W•w" .. I.JO ~ '°'4 '°"' ~-.. ... orlll Alt'lfV 20 ., • ,..,; "'" + .,,, o ppc rn1 on ares or u~ P1ycn M Hci JJ . 11 .. 311, _ ,. w. •Mn 1 l 7, ... ,,.,, 11.,. _ 1<o :•11,',',' ~-
'l JI xw. ~ -1. the first time 1n three days usPcn g!S'° i:io 11 ,, n +1 w1 •fl 1t:i. 1 .. ~ .. ~1.,. U JC,"[ 1~ ... ~ il.~ f:u 7::! !' Among the most act.lve is sues \Y e re Union 8ip!l!.:11l 1 ~ ... Y~ ~~;; = '~: ~~n...,\1>1 ,~ 11::: 21 . 1,,.. = ~ xt"::,0rK, ~ 10 ;JOii. lO 3IO ~ US Sfllf' t b 21 l 7) l6~~ 3'l:o -.. Wlnlf"l:I ) lllf 1• ?S jl 13 -1141 !lltll 10 10 ,. ,.,, ,.,. -1. Camp, Transcon Belco Petroleu1n Schlitz Lum s us s "1 l .o ~6 1••· :u. :u•. -,, w•111tco "' 1 111 !" 11 . -+ ,. •It cor• '' J 'll\/t Jl'llo 21\ls-, USTobac l ID 11 ll"o It ..... ll'Ho + ~, Wirt.1,rn '1! 11S 11 'o I '-721,t; +-'lo Zllol 1111' A to ' ,,1-o .,,,. ,, • -.., Consohdated Foods, Litton Industnes Xerox Eas unu u111 11 n 131< '11.., tJ -t, w11 .. ,,. 1 • mo n »1~ -L !'"'' l'll«n ., :14 • ""' lo!\ U11Ut I 11(1 JS ' l1-'ll 111\21 ~ -,, w11<H1 I u ,.\, )I ,.,_, + '4 •••Nor P( 1
171 :n ... l l"llo 21'1> -• tern Afrhnes and Occid ental Petroleum llnwLc1f I '° u M"'J 2n, 7'1) +I I W•:;tll l't t ~4 u' 1l. n rt Cor• l JS~ ls:IO ~ + ~ U~lv() Pd IO 16t 11\• 11.. 1124 -\, Wli II 1 H » \'r 2'1 2'1'~ + ~ 1~1111111 1 olll 'M li)lol, 10 1G -l UnlvtlV (<'ft!> JIJ tj t 91 \/o flh -H• WI!_ II Jqllnt 21 1 1\-t 16~ "·'-+I\ Z~rn Incl JI
119 24\l 13•~ ?l<t-''•DC: .. ;i!o.;<1'l""'""''"'"'.,;"'•'-'"''"'"'""""'•t..Z'.'rl"'l;r. "'/OM 160 114 Hit l<l ... S$ + 'll WIVftGo> 7• 4 !'"" Ult l~AI +" I 172~ 1n\!o 112".1.-111».. iT. u ~ Biiis! .jQ 13 ,,~ 111.< , ••• -.,., W•v G !>fl"' l I ,. 11 c-.wrl•Mtd 11¥
Complete Closing Prices -American Stock Exchange List
Pacific Gas,
Electric
Hikes Rates
•
SAN FAANCJSCO (AJ') -
Pacific Gas and Electric Co
was given authority by thl
California Public U t 111 t I e 1 "r
Commlsaton today to Increase
natural gas revenues by
$16 1$5 000 or 3 48 percent an-nually
r
PG&E had requested In--
creases totaling 1:21.178 000 but
amended thii to $21,32:7,000
The decision, effective Jan 19,
authorizes a 7 3 percent rate
of retl!rn for the utlllty's eas
department
'Ibe company had sought 7 I percent
The increase for the average
domestic user wil l be about 7 4
percent For the use of 100
therrru; per month 1n the
lowest zone rate the cost
would increase from $716 to
$7 79
SS Increase
Automatic
Social Security benef1c1ar1es
need not apply ror the 15' per
cenl benefit Increase Just sign-
ed into law by President Nix·
on
O~Lr '(116 ~g..,51•.U-£~-.
10'* •1w:h ~ h11"""l \ Crll
u n .1 ... ,... ha1 lite r"'" ,.."
.-•nl whtll .,.. ~114. llle "Mt"
J -
L.
-
Thu1"5day, January 1970
Guitar Chtigs Alo1ig
Barbara Perkins slru1ns a regular size guitar a:i
Benguerel takes her for a ride in the \vorld 's larg-
est floating guitar, the 17-f09t S.S. Boatnik. The 1nod
rock boa·t, '"hiC'h is powered by a 9.5 hp outboard
and has strings thal can be strummed, is being fea-
tured at the San l·"ranc1sco National Sports and Rec-
reation Sho\v which will run through Jan. 18,
Russ Get Fa1i.~y Eate•·y FAIR ~ f~1t, . f1 ir, f1clu1I. Tho,.
three word t 1um, up f•,lor\ j,.
optro!1on on th1 DAILY PtLOT
tditorio l p•91 1v1ry d ty. ,
• Medal of Honor *****~*****~~•*****
MERCURY SAVINGS
Hero Re-enlists
SAN FHANCISCO (AP) -
Medal of Honor winner Sgt.
Richard A. Pittman re.enlisted
tn the r.tarines after 20
frustrating n1onlhs as a
civilian iu his hometown of
Stockton.
his several pleas for waiven.
He received the Medal of
Honor ufter using
1nachinc guns and a pisto l to
stop an advance of abou t 40
Co1n1nunists in Vietnam on
July 24. 1\166.
and loan association ,
BUENA PARK
Mercury Savings Bldg. •
Valley View at Lincoln 1i "11~'
HUNTINGTON llACH
Mercury:Savlnp Bklr.
Edi.nae( at Beach
"People k111d of expect too
1nuch or a Medal of Honor
winner .•. it geLS lo you .. ,
you shouldn't ha\·e to go on
proving yourself," Piltman
SCI id.
V.'hile Pilt1n<1n trird to join
sl<lte and toc~d IX>ik'C agen -
cies. he worked as a butcher's
.apprentice. a telephone com-
pany supply man, an assistant
to a county supervisor and
with the Veterans Administra-
tion.
******-***~"~, * *·* * * * *
After a series of speeches,
parades and banquets, the
returning 24-year-old hero and
father or two inlant girls
learned that a childhood defect
in his eye prevented him from
being a policeman.
"Evcrythinl: was fine until
they round out uboul the eye.''
he said.
The eye defect guve hin1 a
drafl lil<lllls of 1f. bul the
J\1arines accepted him after
His wife and fa1nily think he
shou ld have stayed in the
11arihc Corps in the first
place, but "I've always had to •
Jearn the hard way," he said.
Corps officials in San Fran-
cisco said Pittman is qu alified
for any duly, but will be
<issigncd to Parris ls\and ,
S.C.. for recruiting duty in-
, slruction.
'
LAftGEST PAMILY CL01'Ht~G !C.\fAIN
now
ata
saving! ' Not Europe's Best But Worth Visi/, ..
MOSCOW (AP) -Until a The view (lf the Krendin Russian. Silver1varc a n d
few weeks ago, a complclc yard and lhc !wisting /\1oscow dishes arc of :.in al\ractive gounnet tour of ?\1oscow took n · . about five minutes. Now. with 1ver }USt below is hreathtak-nwdcrn Jlussian design. The
the addition of a sparkling new ing. linen is nut. changcci every
~kyscraper restaurant, i t Mosco"'·Slyle borsch. beef tul)c new cus.to1ncrs :irrive.
takes ~lightly longer. stroganoff. 1neat pies C<lJled but it is not allo"·cd In !wcomc
Some foreigners consider pirozhk1. and cream\' Russian dirly as in some Soviet
that the Rossiya Hotel's 21st-ice cream -all to be v.•ashCil restaur:Jnts.
noor eatery is the first down v.'ilh plenty of strai!ht A typical 1neal costs six
restaurant jn Moscow worth vodka -are among he rubles, officially $6.66. Thal is
visiting. specialties. an average price for Moscow's
JANUARY
CLEARANCES
MOST STORES ...-~ FASHIONJ ISLAND ~~
MCWJ'ORT CCNTC&
P1c1fic;: C1115t Hi1hw1y betwe1n Jtmbo,.,e 'Ind M1tA<1hut. Fr1ew1y minutes aw1y.
It 's not only the Sv.·edish and The cuisine is exclusively better restaurants.
Finnish furniture thaL does it. i;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Even tile food and .servioo are
&:ood by Soviet standai'ds
thoUgh not equal to the be'sl in
~~pe.
· ~a nag er .J\khm'td Salarov.
lhe· natty. TalarMborn
manager, revea led parl of 'his
Secret.
"1 forbid \vomcn. to do nny
se['\ling here," he S;Sid, betray-
ing his Oriental view of
womanhood. "They belong at
home with the children."
Satarov's crewcut wailers
move swiftly and ~ost of
them speak basic ·English, ap-
parently to cuJUvate aJoreign
cliente.le.
\Vhen two for !:!,,I K Ii cor-
respondents showed up for
dinner v.•ithoui reserva.tions,
Satarov offered to ~jec.t two
Russians 19·~ room, -"'ta
quiek""'mtnpromise--wilY""ar"'
ranged and the foreigners
shared a table with the
Russians.
The r~slau ranL Includes a
comfort able bar. The nearest
tb compare i,vlth · 'lt---h in
Helsl nki , FinlanQ.~550miles to
the ;northwest. ·
Custome rs who Jind · their
way to the reSlaurant in the
Jabyrinthine, 4,000-room hotel
must squeeze through a crowd
waiting to ge' in. ·
·Once at the Plate-gla$S door,
they must then try to gel the
~uention ol the bouncer who
guards it. shouting their
names through the glass and
explaining that TC'servalions
1vere made.
If the bow1cer nolices. or
cares. he may decide to unlock
the door.
Greeting thr visitor inside is
~n enormous semiabstract
stained-glass panel illuminaled
from behind. Al least one
sickle. is recognizable, ;:tnd a
ham 1ner is likely in three
somewhere jf one cares to I
hunt for it.
When a waiter rccogniies
the foreign hationality of
visitors. he is likely to bca111 •
and say. ''I am spea king '
English," then lead them lo a
table decorated \Vith a small
flag of the customers· country.
GRAFFITI by Leary
PUBLIC NOTICE
furniture
Wc"'-'e not going out of b usiness, but we are preparing for a total remo-
• • • cl'Jing _.nd must clear the floor for workmen to begin. We expect to create
1ohe of the most unique furniture stores in California when our remodel•
:ing. ls completed. You ca n help us and save yourself big money buying now.
CHECK THESE EXAMPLES •
BEDROOM
Ei Pc. Burn;,h,,d Q.,~ Sr.t bv "Am~1ican"
WAS $ 749.80 NOW $ 436.00
5 Pc, $1! M .,g·~;fieen l Po•c~"'""' fini1h-bv S1.,nl11v
WAS 1095.00 NOW 599.00
5 Pc. W.!"ut Sel-lr~n1itional Stv!e
WAS 639.00 NOW 36e.oo
S·'Pi:". Medi ~rrene"n Sivie 1ei, Frui+w.,od
WAS 689.75 NOW 438 .00
SAVE $3 13.80
SAVE 496.00
SAVE 271.00
SAVE 2Sl.7S
_6Jftc. H•li1n Pra~inci 1I S .. 1-.E1tr• l1rq1 d1111er, F•u1!wood with
trim, " b1•ufy ~-WAS 799.80 NOW 456.00 SAVE 343.80
_Mo11tchinq Arfl'l o i,,
WAS 299.80 NOW 17 8.00
4 jfi, Grou p, lt•l1•n Pro•·~ci i!
WAS 430.00 NOW • I 9S .00
... Pc , itl bv CeldweH, Pf!r,.n Wood N,c., d1l11 il
WAS 759.00 NOW <129 .00
·5, Pc:. Spani1 h Sly It
WAS 668.00 NOW 378.00
GAME SETS
S Pc. Sat "" upl>ohlated bt1r11! ch""'
WAS 559.80 NOW '1l q,90
5 Pc. 5el w c•nr-b .. ck (.h•i'l
WAS J48.00 NOW
5 Pc . Sot, tufted bt1ck uphol11e•1d cl• .. in
WAS 479.88 NOW
5 P(.. S"'1n•th SP+, oll", conr !rim 11~ ch•"I
248 .00
399.80
WAS 539.9S NOW 399.80
SAVE 121.80
SAVE 23S.00
SA VE 330.00
SAVE 290.00
SAVE 140.00
SAVE 100.00
SAVE 80.lS
SAVE 140.lS
Coffee Tables, Commodes, Lamp Tables, Occasional Table'
A LARGE SELECTION
A.T SAVINGS UP TO 1h OFF !
We hav• • great selection of hanging lampi o11nd t11blo lamps.
DINING ROOM
I Pc Pf!tfl n Sel with o~t1I fobl11. b ch•i" & b1•ulilu1 brcoklro"I
WAS 129S .OO NOW 739.00 SAVE SS6.00
MA gniliconl CAfwf'd o .. k. '1 pc ,.1 "Mi +h b111u!iful bre•kf,l'.'n!, uphol.t1rcd ch1i•1
WAS 1795.00 NOW 1080.00 SAVE 715.00
l•r<,ie lre•t!e 1t1blo, b uphol.le•ed chait\ & li9hl1d cltona cdbinet, Ok petfln
WAS 12S9.80 NOW 836.00 SAVE 423.BO e, .. ,,1;lul Italian provincial 8 pc •el C1nP t.:9h b1ck C~ll•ll
WAS 940.00 NOW 688.00 SAVE 2S2.00
CHAIRS
1 onlv. bl.(.~ 01119.
WAS 149.00 NOW 99.00
F·e~th p•o~incifll l.i9h b1c~
WAS I 39 .80 NOW 78 .00
H"Jh bac;:I. club ch •or, •nt 9old
WAS 148.80 NOW 74 .50
Mon'1 Club Ckt1ir, G111n l11p1•'1y
WAS 144.0 0 NOW 89.00
Bet1 ul1lul e.,..,1 Ch,,,
WAS I 59.80 NOW 99.80
Bl ~ck N•ugehydl! •ecl'~11r
WAS 99.80 NOW 59 .80
~•nd~lw nod Hiqh 8t1tk 11.e~lintr
WAS 119.SO NOW 78 .00
r\u 1I tweed Pillo w·bnck cluh Ch,.;,
WAS 149.00 NOW 99 .80
SOFAS
M119n1 lit1n! mo che v1l••I 8'
WAS <39 .00 NOW 279.90
Spron9 Dow".• l~x'"'('U• ""11!el11111 1of1 Tu~edo >ly1e
WAS 648.00 NOW 420.00
l uxuoou1 9' C<Rtttn! 1•u l~rn1 "~Ivel .., c:i~trait ...,.el/1
WAS 499.80 NOW 346.00
M,ny ll'IO•t 1t 11••ng1 of et 1111! $100 011 11ch.
S1•1r1I 10~1 •••h loo. 1t qrt1I di1tounh ,
SAVE SO.OD
SAVE 61.80
SAVE 74.30
SAVE ss.oo
SAVE 60.00
SA VE 40.00
SAVE 41.BO
SAVE so.oo
SAVE 1 S9.00
SAVE 228.00
SAVE 1S3.80
Miscellaneous desks, paintings, wall decor, bric-a-br•C, all at
once in a lifetime prices.
RE ALLY IMPORTANT SAVINGS.
-j .f/~
CREPE
BLOUSES
4.99
Regularly 6.99
the luxurious fabric is the thing!
sil ky rich-bodied, was hable Chiara crepe 0£
acctatc-and·nyloo in clear soft-tone colors
the long-tail style is the thing!
c~:pensively made placket-front blouses,
with regular-style or hidden button-closing:
the long-point collar Is the thing!
narro\v, \vide, and wide-spread collars, with
"''in-bunoncd cuffs adding to the £ashion
MISSES' SIZES 32 TO 38
OPEN
SUNDAY
11 TO S
•
,
\
j
!
•I
•
! l
ALL ARE RED UCE D
SOME MORE THAN 112 OFF !
Entry consoles, folding screens, planters, all drastically slashed.
BOOKCASES 6' wide, 7' high -were 5109.95 Now $74
MANY OTHERS GREATLY REDUCED.
COSTA MESA, 1601 Newport Blvd. at 16111
GARDEN GROVE-12372 GARDEN GROVE BLVD
All Merchandise Subject To Prior Sale • All Sales Final -No Refunds, No Exchan9es
Convenient Terms Available Fastest in West
247 Broadway 1 Buy 1t. Sell It. Try U1e faitesl responst in the West agalnit '10\r
...... _,_., •. .,,. ' alpert's interiors e 1925 harbor e costa mesa e 646-0541 ,., """ r .. , 01m .... u,. "" ""'" '"' '"'"" ''· ,, s'"'"''' Houri: l I a.m. fD 10 p.m. .1 DAILY PILOT. • ~-~ ,_,._ ________ ~------------------------.................. ..._ ........... '--~~--1P---~~~~~~·
f
------------------------------------------------------
The · Good .Life : 'Spoiler of Health'
\ "·"' r-,•401
PROTECTION -Aides apply vaseline to lanied
awimmer Greta Andersen prior to one of her Eng·
lish Channel crossings.
Tav,...r. JlllNIT 11. un '"' 11
DIET AND EXERCISE -
Betsey Knauf, 17. Huntington
Beach High School, agrees
with Miss Andersen that daily
exercise is essential to health.
FEEOlNG T 1 M E -.
Even when she was
breaking records as a
m a rat h o n swin1-
mer. Miss Andersen
favored high protei n
contentrate mixed with
ju~~ ·.
DANCE FOR HEAL TH -Creative dan-
cing, which she terms rhythmic calis-
thenics -begins with the very young in
Jnost of Europe \Vhere physical fitness
is stressed.
By JODEAN JIASTINGS
01 1tM o.llr Plitt 11•"
"In America "''e have too good a life :
we're too spoiled -and I can say that
because I loo am a ciUzen ol tbia coun·
try," smiles blonde, Danish-born Greta
Andersen.
The world's greatest woman's distance
swimmer and largest money winner in
women's professional swimming history
has just returned from Ft. Lauderdale
where she and othei outstandll:I« athletes,
including Johnny We1!1$muller, attended
enshrinement ceremonles for the Intema·
tlonal Swimming Hall o! Fame on Dec.
28.
Now ~1rs. Andre Veress or Huntington
Harbour, she also has been named to the
Hall's all-time swim team for the longest
career as an active world champion -14
years.
It's too bad we have too much good
rood, she continued with her still-distinct
ando melodious accent "There is a
sayJng: The cow gets mad al us because
we kill the cow, so the cow kills us."
WATCHES WEIGHT
The tall (5-foot, 8\.it-inches) large-boned
athlete complains, "I have to watch my
weight. I could go up to 250 pounds ln
three months if I didn't. I used to swhn
10 miles a day and I still have a big ap.
petite; the fat would pile up."
Miss Andersen has her own definite
views on diet, even though her husband is
a physician. She feels the public has had
"bad information" on the subject. She
herself favors a high-protein ~iet balanc-
ed with frtsh vegetables and fruits and
supplemented with vitamins. Iron, ':\'heat
germ and a protein concentrate . She is
llio opposed to al l fried foods and believes
adult Americans eat too many eggs
("two a week are enough") and drink too
much milk. "And I don't believe in diet
pills," she declares.
Poinllng out that even our children are
too heavy, the dimpled. green-4!yed
woman C<>nlrasts our physical fitnes~
program with those in Europe, where
youngsters already are concious of
physical filness by the Hrst day they go
to school.
"Even at 5 they spend an hour a day
doing calisthenics and rhythms , like na-
tional square dances , •• what I call
creative gymnastics.
NOT EXERCISE
"Women will sa~ to me , 'but I get lot.•
cf exercise clearung up the house'; or
'there's too 1nuch going on: l have to take
the children so many places, I don't ha ve
__ tj_m~. ~.1.h.8(!.. f!9.L exercise, and the klds
get a mother who's a nervous wrecK."
Miss Andersen invested her winnings in
her own swim school and health spa, but
1he adamantly recommends any form of
'TA KE ONE HOUR' -
Although Miss Ander-
sen's forte is swim-
ming, she spends an
hour a day on calis--
thenics because she,
too , has to wat.ch her
weight.
exercise, 1nd she and her husband ollen
will spend as much as five hours over a
wetkend, bike-riding. In addiilon she ex.
erclses an hour each day and although
her school fealUres a heated pool, she
swims -three tbnes a weelt ln the chilly
channels fronting their waterfront home.
Why the 'bay when she has the pool at
her dl,posal?
"Cold water Ughtens up the muscles.''
says ·the youthful looking 40-year-old.
"You lose two or three pounds in the
calories you bum just keeping wllnn. I
have a·'lriend over 70 who swims 'every
day in the ocean and doe!n't Jook a day
over 50, -no flab, no wrinkles."
DON'T STICK
"Too many women want to start an er-
ercise program but don't stick ·w It. l
think most health spas would agree that
only 20 to 25 percent of the women who
start an exercise program stay with it."
Each of us owes him.self at least an hour
a day."
In addition to holdillg the English Chan-
nel world recol'd for "'omen Miss
Andersen broke all records from Catalina
Jsland to the nlainland and the women's
record rrom the mainland to lhe island,
and is th.t_flrsl person in history to swim
a t"'(>·way crossing of a major channel.
She has been named Woman-of-the-year
by the Los Angeles ,Times, Southern
California Athlete-of-the-year by the
Hehns Foundation and I.;oog Beach
Athlete.of-the-year.
She met her present husband, formerly
from Budapest, at the beach, naturally
enough .
"He's 1a terrific swimmer," she Hys
proudly,
SWIM EARLY -l\llss
Andersen was one of
the first to advocate
teaching swimmin& to
inlanl.5.
Woman Trapped in Ho me When Neighbor Unstraps Mouth
, DEAR ANN LANDERS : lf you can get
me out of UU1, f1>U are a magician. l
know it's my own fault. so please don't
sive me Hail Columbia. Just help me.
l'm a quiet person who minds her own
business and stays to herself, but I let the:
woman next door get too friendly. I am
ao sick of her big mouth I could scream.
I used to wonder how women could visit
dur\ng the day and still get their
hoUsework done. Now I know the answer.
"l'hese slobs don't do any hou sework..
which is why they have 80 much time to
"pester thole of us who do.
What really makes me furious Is the
way she bring& 111 her cooking and bak·
lng mistakes over here for us to eat. I'm
fed up with her burned stews and
overaeasoned spes~Ui. Yeiterday U waa
,. pJddin& th1l dldn'l jell. She '¥"•
ANN LANDERS
"flere's your dessert for tonight. J must
hRV(' lefl something out but It tastes fine.
Drink it."
Please. AM, tell me how to cool o(f the
friendship without slamming lhe door in
her face . She has made me so nervous I
yell at my children and am nasty to my
husband. Help! -TRAPPED IN MY
OWN HOME
DEAR TRAl'PED. Go to your rloctor
•ad Jc1 blm lell you you nttd mort rt't.
laform your friend of the docLor' order&.
Tell her you must lie down at rrequent in·
lt.rvah1 and that she can't come over
unlovtted anymore. Say. "I'll call you
whtn J:m fttllng bell.er." And wben you
11'1! fffllng better amt think ptrhaps you
ought IO give ber a call, "just Lo be nice/'
take out this column and re~ It again.
DEAR ANN LAND ERS: t was in·
tcrestcd Jn lhe study you cited recently
which showed an unusually high achicvc-
menl level or chlklren l!sm to )'Otlng
,
mothers and old fathers. (Especially
male children.)
I am currenlly involved In another
l!tudy which explains this fascinat.lng
•·phenomenon.'' The reason the child is
precocious and tends to be an achiever is
because the mother fee.ls closer to the
child than to her husband . Consequently,
11he..spends an inordinate amount of tilne
with him.
The child, as a result Of thi.s close rela·
tionshlp, may be an achiever, but he pays
ror hh1 achievement In other ways. He is
usually emotionally Immature and hung•
up on his mother. This makes him a poor
candidate ror marriage. Better lwtom
11/iould have m~rried someone In her own
group and oot hav' the kid turn out to be
a superstar. Pk?a~kee.p plugging for
everything In Ila own season. -TURN
TURN TURN
DEAR nJRN: Voar atsumptloll Ui1I
Ute )'OUDI molbtt 1pelldl u btordllale
amount of Ume wlUI btr IOI. btcsnut M
Is closer i.o her •It lbu tbt: old 11lftr
sht marrif!d may or may not be ne.
Some of tbeae you1& moms 1peDd 11 I•·
ordinate amount ol thne wl~ yo"•«
Jover1. Elcll cate mu1t bt Jud1ed
separaMly.
DEAR ANJll LANDERS : Our ieom<lrY
teacher is groovy, great look1ng and not
1nArricd. He used to live In an apartment
but he couldn1t afrord it any more and
ntovtd lnto the beautiful, lar&e home or
1n older womifjrwho I.I veey rich. She la a
widow. Some people aay he Is renUng i
room but nobody ever u.w ren• recelpta.
We nail.le high IChool tuchen In
Virginia lll'e underpaid but Whal do you
think 1bout lhb? -HEAD OF WHAT'S
WHAT
DEAR HEAD: Nol ,!Mt k'o real!)' y-
balhte,s, but m.,.,_ )'90r pomelry
&eaelter b1 dllCOvertd • 8e1I' up.
Ts atcohollam a dlieaae! 11ow caa fPll
alcoholic be tre1ted? ls thert: a cure?
Reid the liooklet "Alcollollam -Hope
and 'Help." by Ann Landen. En<lole Si
centa in coin with your request and a
1o111, $&mped, .. u«druaed •nYeiopo.
Ann Llndero wlll be fiad lO help )'OOI
wllh your problems. Stnd them to hlr Jft
care ol lhe DAILY PILOT, enc:lolillc I
1<Ir .. ddr~, 1lamped envelope •.
r-------..,.---------------------------------~-----~ -..........---~---------------~----------. ----.
L
•1 D~~V-·Pl_L~T. -•. -_::~ay, J~u'..'' ·,. 1'71
L~gs-Blosso.m .in -: Loy_e, .. Aff ~i_r e· -~
By PlrRIClA A1cCORl\tACK covered the whole leg, obscur-..
NEW YORK (UPI) _ The ing the beautiful contours."
His pantyhose for spring in· newt~ leg covering ror chic elude:
gat.t dlis spring resemble a -Complex Max. This is
psychedelic -art, sm,w, a desQribed .· a!I ~·'a phan-
pail\t.ed flower gii"den or a 1j!fai'nag({ria of int r I ca t e',
1 . l ast.rfflog1cally inspire,4 color blindness tc:u wa king. t goorietrics in brilli~t coloiS
depends on ~r imagination. posiUoned from thigh to
For muc~ of this credit. kne~" It aims to give a bewit-
Pel.er 1 ~tax: ·idol' of young chinR look to the contour«>(. the
Amer(ca whose avant garde upper leg. Max believes this
area has been neglected. postier&, numberless clocks -Thigh band. This design
amt; e x u b e r a n I home intermingles brilliant florals
furnis~1ngs innovations have positioned on the side or the
entblled Ute U-25s (llii..,.l'>_<. Je~above ~-· · ;.,
ds) -"".?--rt nouveau sock. nu,v
year, ; · . 1 ;'> ta' "sia of abstract f.l~~f.'1
"I n:i in love ~1~ 1eP, ~s e • ces the t,eg from !f"S to
Max, rn explauung ho~e just below the ~·. i ,
happened to move irta~ks • !itCeo *nee band. ·This com~
of art fur leg coverings -pan· bination of cosmic geometrics
tyhosd:and body stockin1s. is desigl')ed to flatter the con-
" Adyenturous leg aJ.l'j}.s a·: tou:d.o~ q\e knff is a.iwild. new
logical proJection of lllL,<Jt·in-i"'a}'., -atjSjned'_ ~ the · ~lit.
Inotioit concepts for the-·Wie£ bea\ ancflf.he Age or A.quatii.J s. '
of busCs." The Pete Max body stocking
~ The ' Max designs for pan-designs are something else.
lyhose use silk screened fan-Consider flowermetrics -a
tas•Jl,s of f Io we r s , ~-floweryol art jieco ~pn in the ,
st.ellations and clouds in sp(llf form QI" Jll e1bt1c pendant •
of vibrant color, placed une(-posttioried· .b e.l \Ve ~ n the
pectedly on an opaque base t'O J>reasts. ' •
enhance the thigh, knee or This is complemented by a
calf. harmonizing tw<rinch band of
"For years." says _Max. "~ ,fJQral fanta~.;at the hip line.
was d~pressed by textures and executed on an opaque back-
pri~te(I hosiery designs t.hat ground.
Inspection .Costs
Federal inspe7ctfoh ' a tax-
suppotted activity· ..,.., costs
each man, woman, and child
in the' United '~teles about''.50
cents~ year. . .
inspection of meat and
poUltry assures that these pro-·
duots have been prepare~ ~
sanitary surroundings; are
wholesome a n ti truthfully
Jabe:ltjl.
•
Artolher body stocking art
happening by Max is called
faster than light. Th is is
adorne·d With -a constenat.ion of
multishaped cosmic , stars in
white, positioned al the bust
Tiile 'with -superlative ·effect
agairuit an opaque ~.e i g e
backgroUnd.
"J destgnEid my pantyhose
and b.(>dy stockings to be ex-
ponents of joy wherever they
cl'r'CUlate,'' Max said.
Hear tha t, all vou members
of the Girl' Watchers o(
America:
. '
-BACK
."STREET
kimni»e otti.re
IS BAYING A
SALE
S1MJIE //if 10:00 AM
'AillRSOAl IMllMllT TS ...
IV ·'-C"""-... r,_ 0--.......... .,,_.
-····· .,__~a--~
FUR COATS
DA1'1'1Mf DRE5SIS $7-$12-$20
'M> & '15 GBST & Gi6T ... JS:ffW
SICIRlS $15 PMllS $l5 •
" Following a hcineymoon at
Lake ~~owhead, Peter Binder
Freed and his bride, the
former t-.1elody Kay Davidson
will establish their first home
in Huntington Beach.
The daughter of Mr. and
fl.trs. Donald Davidson of Hun·
tingtori· Beach and the son of
Mr. and !\.1rs. Richard 1-"'recd
of Dayton ex changed vows and
' Dad's Honored
'Tuesday, J an. 20. 'will be
Father's Night al the Sunshine
Community Nursery School,
located in the Presbyterian
Church ol ~he Covenant, Costa
-Mesa:-
Guest speaker \viii be Mrs.
Jon Shirley, past president of
· Garden Grove PT A Council
and instructor for parent
nw;sery. education cour~s.
Membership chairman 'is
Mrs. Terry Dazey. Those with
childreti from two years. nine
Tnontbs of a8-e to )(tndergarten
age may call her for in-
formatioo at 546-0994.
rings before the Rev. Micbael
Duffy in St. Bonaventure
Ca tholic Church.
Miss Maria Federico was
the inaid of honor and serying
as the bridesmaid was Miss
J\1ary Cross,
'fhe bridegroom, who is sta-
tioned at El Toro, asked
!\1arine Sgt. Dennis Dethl~s to
be his best man. and usher
1vas Michael Davidson ,
brother or the bride.
The bride, a graduate of
Huntiugton Beach High School,
is a nursing student at Orange
Coast College, and her hus-
band is a graduate o f
Millersburg Military Institute,
Kentucky.
Writer Booked
t-.lrs. Dorothy Gilden, writer
and autliority on women's
liberation, "'il l speak (or the
Rapport women's group of the
Llnitarian·Universalist Church,
Costa Mesa tomorrow evening
at 8 in the church.
ii>Mns,-.rs I , , $6-$8-$10 You Know Reinert's
St;;MU\mtS $6·$8·$l0
aEAHRS & SUEDES
~-wm -....cuti -r...,.
I rn -1 ~ ' I -~s I
! 1---0-Tlll_R_Tll_IN_G_s_ ... _rc_ro_•_c_c_Olt_D_tN_Gl_Y_ ....
AU SALES FINAL NO HOLDS NO.J:AYAWAl'S
NO CHAIGES All ITEMS SU&JECT TO PlllOlt SALE
r SMf NOi' "'cut utllVltMl arr S'fOtt
rWRTON )01 N. HA•IOI llVD.
Ol.AHGI #"1 TOWN a COUMTaY
NIW'°IQ" HAGH 0:2J ,AIHION 1$UJtlD
I.ANT A UalA.l:A .._2 t.A CUMllt "'-AJA
\A MAPA #16 fUNtoN SQUAii
UHt'lll .. Al CfIT. MMl.l.TOM HOTU
Md mt>re to come
-
•
+
. Reputation, here's the
Sale that really is . • .
Don't Miss This One !
• •
The Te~
Tattler
!Editor's Nole: A col11mt1 ol' womtfl't
kill toll' M;Orn will ·~•r ••ell Wftk
Ill tr.. DAI LY PILOT. To l'fllOrt 11(111' ..
tor the -k, Plllln in.II hm lo P , O.
lloK 15611. The~ m1nt ii. r.ulvld bl'
MOM11'.)
LAGUNA •l!ACH
•ITTI• NINI -A Fllelll, 11\e MMU, Li!Ol'llrd Oru1IW., 301 Jol\fl, p_., 31\'11 R!lll'I WllUa, 351 II fllgllt,
-Mrlle$. COutlnev Y111r, U \':11 Clllrles Mol'rllOll, lll'J1 Ell llll l'Mrto, ~-THlll!I! MONTH •tNOl!ll -A
Flltlll, tM Mmes. p_., •71 ldl Mii'
Sthorn1k1r. 501 II flitllt. 1119 Mmes.
WtUr1m c1..,1•l.J.-~1 Morlo, .loO, Ml!SA VlltDE
LOW NIT -A l"Ufhl, 11\t Mmtt..
Ktlll!I' l.tlnh. 731 Wllll1111 01wson. 15;
Merle c111mb&rll11, ••rt ~fl'Hl'll, 7'; 8
F119111, the Mmes. Frlnlt Fol', 70;
R1iPh Tlppf1111, 71; Wllillm CoMn, 1•1
James ll'°'k' 1'; e FUe111, the Mmn. Don Gow, 6t; Al JOfll't. Lowell Sl1rk. ~ KttJl!ef", 74.
lll'llN! COAIT
aLINO NINI! -Cllo11 A, tllfl Mmn,
lloblrt Arnold. .(11 lloblrt U.rdn.,.,
«ll'J; Clau 8, TM Mrr .. 1. ROI' Htllberv,
3'1 DOii L•nk. .io; Cl11s c, Ille Mr<>n.
9.,,1 E111itl.1. '31 G. L. P1!ttm111, '3\\i. TIN WHISTI.I -Cl1t11 A, Mist OH Del Wllllt, 151 tfle Mmn. Robert
Smllt!, U 1 1\09 Gr1v. 32; CllH a. MIH Mlr~ll• Ketler, M,.._ ..... , MCH\11111,
ll; Jamn T1v1or, l11 ClllH c, "'-Mm11. MV•Ol'I Shtwtrd, J1; GloOrtt Woodford, 3J1 Freer Petterson, 7'; Cl111
D, thl Mmel. Evt!Vn E1m11\1w, Bfn
H1t11wl"ktl, 34; llobtrt Y1rd!ly, Rolltrt 11u111r. a3.
League P~inters
Display Works
F~ur members of the Costa
Mesa Art League wilt bave
their WO{ks on display during
February.
Mrs. Arthw: Williams, who
rtcently coriipJeted f o u r
seascapes for the ~w Cultural
Arts Building in Canada, will
have a showing Jn OQ. and
acrylic in tke Costa Mesa
Country Club.
Mrs. Williams, formerly a
sketch artist for fas b i o n
designers Edith Head and the
late Adrian, is a past presi·
dent of the Huntington Beach
Woman's Club and a member
of Costa Mesa Woman's Club,
and ahe also serves as fine
arts chalnnan for Oran~
District, California Federation
of Women's Clubs.
Featured in the Cosla Mesa
Library will be Mrs. William
Ludlam, whose oils may be
viewed during regular library
vate. collections throughout
this couutry and Europe.
Mrs. Donald Williamson of
Huntington Beach now Is
displaying oil paintings in
Crocker Citizen's Bank, Costa
Mesa. Mt.et receiving basic
training at Otis Art Institute
she continued with private in-
struction under Laguna Beach
artists James Clutter. Bennett
Bradbury, Vernon Kerr and
Phillip Gilkerson.
She has exhibited In Los
Angeles and Orange counties
and also is affiliated with
Fountain Valley and Hun·
Ungton Beach Art associa-
tions.
Stitchery and tapestry by
Mrs. Donald Biel will be
shown' the remainder of this
month in the Cost:a ~fesa Art
Gallery. Exhibits are open to
the public between 1:3Q__ and 5
p.m. Saturdays.and Sundays.
fora
sewing
machine
11JNE-UP! • W T . hours. Omen rl m She has had one-man shows
Mrs. Biel has held one-man
shows in Las Vegas, San
Fernando Valley and
throughout Orange County.
She is a permanent exhlbiting
artist for Quorum Galleries,
Laguna Beach, and a regular
contrlbutQr 'to the_ Laguna
Festival of Arts. Additional in·
formation may be obtained by
calling Mrs. Richard Ingram,
549-1667.
................ :
throughout Orange County as Off Pounds well as in Pahn Spdng•, Palm
Desert and Arcat;lia. ?tfrs.
B D Ludlam, who began h e r Y ancing studies al Ute Otis Art
Institute, has continued in-
Daytime and e v e n l n g structlon at Orange Coast
classes i n dance-exercise College.
A 7-point program done
i_n your own home, on
any make or model
sewing machine. Why
not 18t the experts do It
for only
techniques taught by dancer Her paintings hang in pri-
Mrs. Peter Church will be~ln,ro;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;w,/
next week in Community
Youth Center, Corona de! Mar.
$675
Monday night sessions will
open at 7 p.m. on Jan. 19 with
daytime classes at 1 p.m. on
Wednesdays beginning Jan, 21 .
Cost of the eight..week
session for Newport Com-
munity Theater wit lbe $1.50.
registration available by phon·
ing 673·1071 or 675-6302.
LA MODE FABRICS
11512 .... ''''· Tew• & Co111ny CMter
Next te MoriH S...htt1
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with convenient
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ONLY
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Cl:J rns, mends, mono;iroms.
Sews buttons and bullonholes.
Ifs quiet and vibrolion-free
1. Adjul~ ·-tnliolL
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~urbudget. ••
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SINGER ··
For hllephone number of :;
store ne1rrst you, sre white ::
paa:ts under SINGER COMPANY ~ •• \
··---1'!0GI•-
Today's Final
Stocks Today
·:
. •
Singer Vacuum Cleaner 1-. :-. .
' Get the Set!
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The Tripl&-Actlon upright vocuum
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Three·posili<xi handle .
•
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Porch ' n Potld vocwm
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cleaning of goroge, ca r;
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w11h brush and 2 extension
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make 11 eosy lo move.
J•or n.ddr11•• of •for~ neare•r you ~ 1J1e 1"hite pa«e• of your telephonl! book under ~inger Compo.,..
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Shor!, in1e111i•c <Oune• h•llY ~1111li!y 'fOd
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"' Denli1r. 4 .. onrli pu;>ll'""' for Dental A...
1i•tan1 o• Med•col OH;c• l•<eplioni1t. 7
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oui1tan<• ot no Gddilional toil.
Southern California College
of
Medical and Dental Assistants
!formerly Lol An9eles Collt!lt)
;,
ffi©]ill~OO)
by the Accrediling (.om"1ission of !he
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Writ• 1r l'hone ftr ffM lr'IChuro
1717 South Brookhurst
Anaheim
Phone 635-3450
.dffo.
*-iJ#lR -
FRI DAY
JANUARY lb
Dy SYDNEY OMARR
. People do things in lusty
manner today, In clu ding
eating, playing, loving. Not.b-
ing seems to happen halfway;
all the way or nothing,
ARIF.S (~tarch 21-April 19'):
Accent on possessions, mooey,
opportunity to obtain genuine
bargain. Especially good if
you collect art objecls. stamps
or coins. Be alert. Income
potential gets boost
TAURUS (April 2Q..May 2Gl:
Take initiative. Superiors ap-
preciate your worth. Build
your own self-es teem. Don 't be
satisfi ed with second best; you
can be number one. Realize
this and act accordingly.
GE!'t1INI (May 21.June 20):
You discover secret. Could P.:e
key which ends feeling of
being alone. Bring to surface
natural sense of humor. Give
full play to intellectual curio-
sity.
CA~CER (June 21-July 22):
Trust hunches. Your intuition
v.•onl Jet you down today. Ac-
cent on rrieods, hopes, desires.
You could be surprised by
lovely gift. ~tember of OP-
posite sex pays meaningful
compliment.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22):
Stress on ob li ga t ions,
responsibilities. Career is in
spotlight but takes some
twi sts, turn s. Y o ur
showmanshi p is apprecia ted.
But be sure your arc familiar
ON ALL FALL
& HOLIDAY
MERCHANDISE !
40% to 703 OFF REGULAR ' PRICE •
to make way for our 1970 Swim Suits
jsALE STARTS TODAY!-SHOP EARLY!l
• ALL COATS •
REGARDLESS
OF LENGTH
Tremendous SelKtlon
1/3 OFF REGULAR
PRICE!
Wool and Crocheted
BETTER DRESSES VESTS
$8 to $35
ReiJular to $75
Wool and Orlon
SWEATERS
$6 lo $16
Reqular to $30
Miscellaneous Items
GOWNS, ROBES,
PANT SUITS, ETC.
30°/o to 50°/o
Rtl)Ular Price
OFF
$9 to $13
Re,ular to $26
Wool ancl Polyester
PANTS
$6 to $12
R19ular to $28
Orio" • Jeney
TOPS
$4 to $9
R09ular to $11
WOOL· POLYESTER & KNIT FAMOUS BRAND
COORDINATES
MANY GROU,S
TO CHOOSE FROM 1/3 ,o 1/2 OFF REGULAR
'RICE
~ **/~-~t ..,
Use Your Wet S1•l Ch•rqe
Ma1ter Ch•rq-BenkAm1ric•rd
AT OUR SIX
SOUTHLAND LOCATIONS
.... ldctod
204 Morin• A••·
Huntl""°" ,Center
7777 Idiot•
s.-1• e .... , ,_
3131 lrl1tol
II S..,uodo
J21 Mol• StrHI
CNN MM
270 E. 17t• St.
with basic requirementll.
VIRGO (Aug. 23.S.pt. 22): "'
Journey could be on agenda.
"-1uch gain indicated througb
written word. Solution to pro-
blem could be found by
readiog your paper. Unu-
pected c a l I , long-d!tance,
could be a highlight.
LIBRA (Sept. 23.-0ct. ZZ):
Delve dttp into what •ppean
to be myst¥ious pea. And
maintain air or mystery,
yourself -others will be l~
trigued. Money re g·a rd I n.1
estate or property could be
coming your way.
SCORPIO (Oct. ZS.Nov. 21):
Lie low -play waiting 1ame.
Permit mate, partner to take
initiative. Spotlight on how you
develop public relations. Don't ·
get involved in foolish dispute
-especially one with legl)
overtones.
SAGmARJUS (Nov. IZ-
Dec. 21 ): Your diet, health,
general p h y s i c a I condition
deserve atteiition. Be percep-
tive. Obtain hint from ScorpM
message. Don't be in too much
of a hurry.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.Jan.
19): Emotion; fly hlJh;
romanct could be featured.
But also make some room for
logic. Don't rely completely on
impulse. You will ultimately
have to face yourself.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
18): Property matt!rs con-
tinue to demand your time.
Spread influence: broaden
contacts. Get more than one
opinion. You may be slightly
angered by Individual who Js
pompous. Maintain seU<0n-
trol.
PISC§ (Feb. 19·"-farch 20):
Now you can set up a better
program of communications.
Relations improve w i t h
neighbors, family memben .
You are versatile.. but· your
forces are less scattered.
-W--TODAY 18 YO\Jk
BIRmDAY you are a
spiritual person. You look
deep for meanings not evident
on surface of s i tu a t i o n s ,
persons. This is a time when
you prepare and plant seeds
for future development. Don't
rush into permanent Ue.
Dieters
Invited
Drop-out! can still be drop-
offs if they join women of the
Harbor Area who are in-
terested in TakJng Off Pounds
Sensibly (TOPS).
Newcomers as well as
former members are invited
to attend we ekly sessions of
TOPS Merging Mennalds on
Thursda y evenings at 7:30
p.m. in Woodland Elementary
School, Costa Mesa.
Tonight has been designated
Back to TOPS Night with a
special program. Mrs. Leon
Townsend will review the
club's history • n d IC·
complishments and a s s I s t
participants in a per10nal In-
ventory.
The prog ram includes week-
ly we igh -in s , group
discussions, lectures on menus
and food preparation, and
group involvement.
Meetings are frtt and open
to the public. Those interested
may phone Mrs. Townsend 1t
642-1804.
Selection
Scheduled
Judging for the first level of
competllion in the a n n u a I
Hallmark Art Contest for hJah
school senion will take place
Saturday, Jan. 17.
Announcement was made by
Mrs. Keith Keppler, fine arta
chainnan of the J11;tlor EbeD
Club or Newport Beach, area
sponsor.
\Vinners will bt selected
from eadt hlgb ICbool in tlie
Newport-Mesa Unified SclW>OJ
district and their work will be
sent to district compet!Uon.
Further judglna tak~ place
at the state level and the
Hallmark Co. aw1rds tow:
cash &wardl tncludlng a ,1,000
first prize. .
Winnett frtim the art1
achoola will be honored •t 1
club luncheon aod prtsented 1
cash prize. •
Thu,,,.,, Jl:ftltary ·' lt70 DAILY ,!LDT Ji!
' .
' '
-
) . · .
I~~
) • -
f :UR SALE
EXTR.AV A GANZ .A
3 ·D·AYS -ONLY ·
FRI. JAN. ·16; SAT~· JAN. 17,· MON. JAN. 19
HUNTING FOft A Sl'EC:IAt.. P'Uft ••• AT THE fl'i!:ftl"t:CT l'ftlCE? JOIH ftO~INSON(a ·POS.H
SAP'Aftl AND GO WHERE THE Gft£AT ON U AftEt YOU SEE, wr:tvr; GA'tilDKD ttUNDftllEDS
OF SUMl'TUous. P'INE OUM.ITV l'URS P'ftOM OUR IENTIRE 10 STORIE STOCK AND W.ll1Rr:
MOVING YHIM F"ON STOl'E 'TO STORE POI\ VOUft CONVENIENCE_. SO l"RIDA~, SATUM>AY
AHD ·MONDAY. YOU.CAN SKI: A Wlr.At..TH 01" P'Uft IN ftO•IHSOH1S H&Wl'DftT •KAOI f\Jft
SALON. EACH ONE 11 A TftOl'HY1 TAGGED AT A SAVINGS YOU'L:!-NlfVIDt ~!IE QM
ANY OTH!ft SAFARle WE:1U.. EVEN HAVE EX'TM. SALU PEOPLE ON f1 AND TO AS9JST
YOU. ALL MAY SE l'UftCHASED Ott OUft LAY AWAY PLAN. CftEDIT Ti:ft.MS .Aftl!:._t'V~ILA8L'!',
NATURAL MINK CAPES
366.00~566.00 .
NATURAL MINK STOLE'S
466.00-526.00-666.00 '
.
NATURAL OR DYED MINK JACK,ETS
466.00-666.00-766.00-1066:00
' '
DYED BROADTAIL-PROCESSED
JACKETS AND STROLLERS
246.00-366.00
NATURAL MINK ST.ROLLERS
966.00-1166.00
••
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NATURAL MINK COATS
1366.00-16.66.00-1966.00
. '
FU" PftODUCTS LAIEL!D TO SHOW COUNTRY 0 ,. ORIGIN OF IMPbftTC l'\lftl.
'
. . SHOP ·FRIDAY AND MONDAY UNTIL 9:3().
ROBINSON'S NEWFQRT ·FASHION ISLAND •kl44"2800
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• . . . ' ' ; ..
I • '
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I
t
0 Oltl V PllOf s Thunday, Janual'). .. 1'70
It's Sunday ·But Cash /;R_egisters Ring Everywhere
NE\V YORK (AP) -It's
SUnday and lhe cash rrgisters
are ringing 1n Larry Voet's
supermarkel, but to him they
don't havt the s1m~ 1nusic~I
chime as on v.·eekdays.
"I don't think anybody likes
working on Sundays,'; Vr;iet
said watching a w om an
squeeze a head of lettuce then
toss it back on the pile.
Like 1t or not, Voet,
manager of an Alb ers
supermarket in Cincinnati.
and other retailers across the
nat ibn are faced with •grow·
ing trend to remain open 0,1
Sundays.
"Ou r store stays ' open, only
btca use others a re
open ... irs a chain· reae-:
tion," he said.
Even old-line department
stores -pressed by com·
petition .and an apparent ,_de-
mtnd by shoppers, for a place
to buy on weekends -are
sta ying open on the traditional
day of rest.
"OUr stores will remain
open only in areas where our '
m a j o r competitors . , . keep
their stores open •. , " said a
J, C. Penney spokesman
Penney, ~1ontgomery \Vard
and Sears R oebuck ex-
perilnented With Sunday utes
iit some stores for the first
time late ' last year and say
they intend to continue the
prJctice. · .
Sunday. has a marked ad-
•
vantage to some shoppers. "especial\)'. hea vy Frid a y rrtquently have be~n the violating the state's Sunday grocery stor&-which has six
•lusbands \\'hO c 0 m n1 u t e nights ilfld continue through center of legislative con-closing law. A similar charge en1ployes -WIS c Io s e d
bel\\'een su burb and city can the weekend," when lhe car is trover1y. against Big K, a discount store do"'"·
accompany their wives to help avajJable, he sai d. In Kentucky, for exa1nple. it was dropped. "I did 25 perce nt ot my
make decisions on major .But openlng dther large or is legal to buy a glass of milk Sunday s a 1 es of general weekly volume on Sunday,"
purchases, 1 n d excursions )Unall 'stqres on Sunday is not on Sunday, but not a full bot-merchandise in Ohio are pro-!\fateri said.
through rambling department as simple as it might seem. Ile. You can buy a cooked hibited, but they continue. However, the ordinance
stores ta ke t!¥ form or SUJJday 1'he extra .,...0~k day is ex. hamburger but not a frozen '"Nobody enforces the lav•, T modeled arter North Dakota
outings fo( the whole fatnily. pensive and can cut into the one. guess because it's an un. state law allows groceries
"All O\lr ; a<f.vertising' ·is profits from increased sales-ln Massachusetts food may popular one," sa id John C. operated by not more than
geared for the ·weekend.!!," if tli ey do, in fa ct, increase. be sold only by farmers or Young. city attorney for three employes to remain
said the sales manager for And many states have "blue stores which during the week Columbus ... They tried to en-open Oil Sunday1.
Ralph \Villiams rprd in Los laws." These are so called en1ploy not more than three force it ••• about five or six Retailing official.I won-y,
Angeles. "More business is because the severe moral die-persons, includhlg the owner_ year ago ... went througb 200 too, about the eftect of Sund,ay
do.ie during the y,·cekends than tales of 18th Century Con-In spite of blue laws, some to 300 cases ... but there was v.·ork on the altitude of
during the w"'ltdlys." necU.cut Puritans were bound merchants have been so 1nuch pressure from the employes.
One-car '!•milles and work· in a blue book. The blue laws determined to open on Sun· business community. th ey "Being open on Swidays
ing wiveY"like Sunday 5~ reSU'ict sales of many items days, with varying results. finally stopped enforcing it.'' makes the retail business
ping. report.I ~Food Fair on the SabbaU1. In flopkinsville, Ky .. for ex. Al Materi. of Bismark. N.D., unattractive to current aOO
privately.
Some shoppers, however,
are almost vehement about
doing away with la"'' that
prohibtt. the !ales.
"It's rldiculous when you
aren't allOY.·ed to make an
honest living on Sunday or any
day. OUr nag Js on the moon
but we still have laws which
keep mothers from buyln1
milk on Sunday," said Mn.
Miidred Peck of. Loul1vllle.
Strong sermon.s w e r •
preached against S u n d a y
openings recently in Alabama
v.·hen it appeared Sears Storts
might test the consUfuUonallty
ol the st.ate law pennittlng
sale only of only "essenUal"
items.
m..-k1et maBna1 . in Lo1~ Blue lav.·s have been ample, the S. H. Kress Co. challenged .the city's Sunday prospecUve employes," said a An~i! es. • u s 1 n e 5 5 11 modified over the years and was recently fined $50 for closing ordinance and his Harrisburg store manager
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than any other remote unit today-NOW $641.50
Scenting the pholog rapher. a royal stag proudly displ ays ils 1najestic antlers
as it pauses bet\\1een trees in this wintery wildlife scene at l h e Opel Zoo's
deer reservation in Kronberg, Gern1any.
Bo y Finds
Stolen Good s
PAL!\tDALE (UPI) - A 12-
year-old Palmdale y ou th .
riding his minibike in the
desert. passed some objects!
spark.ling in the su n and stop-I
peel to investigate.
The boy, JOl'y -lleadley.
round six w·ristwatches taken
lro1n the Ye Old \Vatch Shoppe
here during a Nrw Year's Eve
burglary. li e returned the
v:atcbes to local she riff's
deputies who notified the
shop's o\\'ner. Cli nton J. \Velis.
\Veils thanked J oey for
returning the "'atche s
\\'Orth a tot.al or $220.85 -and
commended him for his hones·
ly. He also orrered the boy a
reward -a soda from the
local snac k shop.
Jn Jlospita l
HOLtY\\'OOD fUP I)
Television personality 11 a I
!'<larch has reentered UCLA
t.1edical Center for treatment
following lung :surgery last
November. according to a
hospital spokes1nan.
The spokesn1an and family
refused to comment o n
l\.farch's condition, admitting
only that he Y:as undergoing
treatment.
" STEVE, DAN & IY RON FENLEY
n •••• , •• :n9 u1 •rlv wild tnd
t •c:t:nq d~y• we ••• liYin9
lh•<>u9h. Th••• ••• d1v1 of cri·
1:l. oi ind•ci oion, of btttk•
!hro"gh he1ptd upon br11k·
lhrou9h. New hoti1on• flou•i•h
d1ilv in th, Y••V 1htdow of
worldly wot\ wh ich tpp1tr 1o
9 i•t th1 fulu rt • moo! lenuo111
hold 011 lilt.
In the mid1t of 1!1 lht ttrlh·
1h1kin9 •••nh which 1tt duly
co'-.•rtd, iilttd tnd •n1ly11d by
1-.1•v know medium of communi·
c tlion, we 1om1lim11 1011 1;qht
of lh1 ftcl th1t bt•ml1n, but
in l1rt 1lin9 bih of hum1n t.i-.i t
t ft 1till ptrl ol !ht p1uin9
'''"'· In ti.ii column we hopt
lo louch on ihtm f•om !<mt lo 1: .....
We hop•, 1l•o, th1t 'tfou ... a1
m•~• it • htbit to f.otn t to out
olfic•• lo• ell v••u "ttdl' ;,. in·
1ur•nc1. We pride our1elve1 in
1upplyi1\9 jcnl th1 co-.er19•1
n11d1.4 for the i ncfi•iduel 1ftu •-
t ion - without omiu ioni o•
overl•p•. Com• ;,. •nd !ilk ;+
o-.er •I IT I ON FENLEY INSUIANCI, 902 M1i1t She•I
In Huntin9lo" Be.ch. Phon•
5Jfl.752S.
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•
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Dimes
Drive
Pushed
TllursdQ, J1n11ary , 1970 S DAil Y PILOT V
Smoking Carbon Monoxide Clue to Other Ails
. .
N E \V )'ORK (APl -Swe.. such as automobile uhausl. arteries, preventing norn1aJ Academy of Sciences. A#lrup 11a1d, had unuJu•lly series of experiments, two bit1 who were not aiven any
dish scientists said today The carbon nionoxide from flow or blood and exygen. Dr. Astrup said his depart· high levels or a compaund groups or rabbit! wert fed cholesterol, lbe carbon monox-
1 h at c a r b on monoxide cigarette smoke gets into the The new report came from ment noticed h I g h con· formed by the carbon monox-cholesterol, but only one group Ide produced damaae In the
from cigarette smoke is "very bloodstream, the scientists Ors. Poul Astrup, Kn u d centratlons of carbon mono:r-ide and hemoglobin - a com-1 d to bo walls of the arterlea.
likely" part or the reason said, where It appears to Kjeldsen and John Wanstn1p ide In the blood of young men pound ca 11 e d carbox-wa.s 8 so expose car n
A cllywide fund ralsing smoker5 develop more cor-pave the way Io r the ac· of the department of clinical with coronary artery diseases. ylhemogtobin. The I eve I 1 monoxide. In an early !iludy of 1,000
'campaign for the fo..1arch or onary heart disase. cumulation of cholesterol in chemistry at the Roy a I Carbon mono x Ide, a reached 10 to 20 percent. The a cc um u I at Ion or factory worker& Chosen at ran·
Dimes Ls under way in Seal If lhls is so, they said, It the arteries. Hoepital in Copenhagen. Dr. poisonous gas released by The high levels were linked cholesterol in the arterial dom In Copenhagen, Dr.
Beach with Chief or Police Lee means that scientists con-An excess cf cholesterol is Astrup described work on rab-combustion, combines with to individual smoking habits, walls of rabbits exposed t.o Astrup said "a clear rela·
Case acting as chairman. cerned about preventive ooe fa ctor that has been im· bits and studies cf humans at hemoglobin in the blood, such as depth and durallcn of carbon monoxide wu three to tlonshJp" between high carbon
Chief Case Is 3 member of 1nedicine will have to take a p\Jcated in Ule Incidence cf a conference on biological ef-displacing vital oxygen. inhalation. five times as much aa in those monozlde bk>od levels and cor-
the executive committee of look at all forms of exposure heart disease. Deposits of the fects cf carbon monoxide About 10 pereent of the To check their observations, give.1 only chclesterol, Dr. ooary artery disease wu
the Orange County Chapterl_o:l:peo::p~le~t~o~c~a.-:bo:n:m:"':':':id:•:· =l•:ll:Y::':""':ta~ncer.:c:l:og::t:h:•::'"°:":'°:":d:by:t:h<:N:":':Y:o:r:k:•:m:ok:e:rs:t:h:•Y:':'":di:'ed=, :D:':·:D:':· :"'::lru:p:":':d:th:•:t:i:n:o:n:•:"':'ru;p:sa:ld:.:l~n:t~es=l!=o:n:r:•b-::de:mo:111:t•:•:ted:.::::-The N a t i o n a I Foundation-
March of Dimes and has serv-" .t;M •• · II ~:¥!:~:;;r~~:~:: STILL... LEADER IN LOW DISCOUNT PRJCJN6/
the local chapter has made me
even more aware of the
tragedy of birth defecl.!,"
Chief Case said. · · T h c
statistics are shocking -one
of every 16 babies born wilh a
significant birth defect."
He pointed to two scientific
breakthroughs through the ef-
forts of the March of Dimes -
the Rh scrum a11d the rubella
lGerman measles) vaccine.
GWC Urues " Students
Em·oll Early
To Insure a good selection cf
classes, the Golden West
Ccllege Admissions office to-
day urged students interested
in enrolling for the spring
semester. beginning Feb. 2, to
make their registration ap-
pointments now.
Registration for the
semester will begin Jan. 26,
and will be compressed .into a
cne week period for both day
and evening students. ac-
cording lo John L. Buller.
associate dean of admissions
and records.
Currently enrolled d a y
ztudents who expect to con-
tinue next semester w i 11
register from 8:30 a.m. to 2:30
p.m. Jan. 26 and 27, except for
those with more than 30 units
who will register from 10 a.m.
to 3 p.m. Jan. 13.
Registration times for day
studenlS returning after a
period cf absence are from
8:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m., Jan. 28.
New students and all other
ritiirnliig dayS ruaents wm·
register from 8 a.m. to 3 p.m.,
Jan. 29 and 30. and from I
p.m. to 4 p.m., Feb. 5.
Evening students registered
during the fall and continuing
wiU register Saturday, Jan. 24,
from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. by ap-
pointment.
New evening col l ege
students will r e g i s t e r
alphabetically by last name
from 6 p.m. to 9 p.m. 1n the
College Center as follows: A-
C, Jan. 26 : D-J, Jan. 27; K-Q.
Jan. 28, R-Z, Jan. 29. Open
registration, as space permits,
will be Jan. 30 and Feb. 2~.
from 6 p.m. to 9 p.m.
Youths Learn
Of Engines
In Schools
Setting the timing and ad-
justing the carburetcr oo a VB
engine is oo big deal.
Unless, of course. the
mechanic who is turning the
wrenches is a kid from
elementary school.
About 30 k i d s at Harbour
View Elementary School in
Huntington Beach are cur-
rently getting their experience
as automobile technicians on a
1957 Va training e n g i n e .
donated by Ole technology
division of Golden W e s t
College.
Harbour View teacher Paul
~1ercier said the students,
mostly 13 year olds, began
their studies w1th small power
plants, looking at exhaust and
combustion systems, piston
strokes and how the parts
rel ale.
But it wasn't long before
Mercier had c'lhausted the
possibilities in lawnmo~er
engines and began casting
around for bigger field! for his
pupils to conquer.
Golden West's technology
division heard about It and
donated a training engine. no
longer usable ,In its own pro-
gram. Wes Mole, Golden West
instructor, p.Jt hi.I people to
work overhauling the engine
and An thony Sully. hf;ad of the
college's manufacturing proc-
essM pro&gram. bu i It an
engine stand.
When they delivered the
engine. hair the school turned
out to "wow" and "~ whiz"
over their new prize .
Mercier ~•Id the enatne will
allow student. to go Wo ffrn·
Ing, carbureUon and talk tome
about tune.up.
• •• 1he "Kty lvJ"' lllGl'let•
c111 our 1hel¥1t point to
ollfltonding saYin91 made
possibl. by 011 ••ceplioll.
al putcho .. w • monu-
foct-'s tMipOICWp pt0o
~loltowoll<"•-
RIB STEAK LINK SAUSAGE ~~:~~~~--..... 89'
Prices ore Dixounted b:cept an
fair.Traded ond GO'l'ernftlent
Controlled Items. 1.1s.70
lDClY IOIOIO
lllf, TlNDll..-: ll&N
ANDJUILY
RUMP ROAST ~~~r-~~~.~'.~--·· 85f •.
CHUCK ROAST ~t~':::~,r .. __ 49f ..
SIRLOIN STEAK ~~~r.~'.".'.~'.~ .. 99f •.
98~ .. ...
BlADE CUT
LINK SAUS~GE :::::,':.:~ ......... 33'
ROUND STEAK~~:~:. ..... ~ .. --95~.
LEAN
RESS
ECK STANDS
••• with 6 items
or ltu
STRICTLY
TOP
QUALITY
• , • feolurlng the lomCK.11
bJancb )'OU WOl'lt • •. tf'I•
leGMll'l'I 'n•ll fr .. h pro-
dUU ••• and top q11C1lity
flleotl 'Wilh OUf .,loncl"
of .atbloc.t""'· • ., .. ............
. .
BONELESS CROSS RIB ROAST LuunoH•11nr_79,~
T-BONE STEAK ""'"'"""''"''"°"°'"'tt .... _ ..... -11~121
TURKEYS ... i·.u: ••• HENS u.45~ .... TOMS ll,39c
.FRUM
'I
RIB ROAST STANDING -SMlll IND 98< lUCIY IONDID l(lf...... ll,
PORTERHOUSE STUI -TAllS OFF $)31
LUCKY IONDfO llff ll, CHUCK
•OAST
GROUND ROUND RIB S1'UDING FRYING UHt l•D CHICKENS CUBE STEAKlu'c~~'••••••uu ... 98f •. s~{~Y0 43l~ STEAK CNICKINFllED -12-0Z. 79c Plf·COOIED, SNUITINOA.--IA.
GAME HENS~~~~~ ............ u.79c
->
HILLS BROS.~!';ru.78'
HILLS BROS.~~~u.•'111
HILLS BROS::'o'rwo.12"
JNSTANT::t'1~t-sJ 19
TEA BAGS=.39'
BEANS f:~~~·.v,~~~.'c•• ... -.. 25<
NIBLnS CORN~::~ ...... ----23'
LIMA BEANS :l~~~:r.~ ..... -.32'
... kl(&tjf.·-.....
VEGETABLE JUICE
HARVESTOAY 29C 46-0Z.CAN
FRENCH I ES !',~~~~.~~~~.~.--2ic
BIT 0 HONEY PEAS "'•u• .. -..... 18'
PICKLED BEETS ~a:r~':°u~~.~~.'.~ .... -25'
PORK AND BEANS ::':'~~: ........ 16'
SLICED CARROTS :':':~J:_ ..... 26'
DOLE PINEAPPLE ~":~ ....... _39'
SUP REMA CHERRIES ~!',u ...... 29'
HARVEST DAY PEARS .. ,u ... 25' v.a APPLESAUCE ~C:~~.0:.~~.~~~~'1 8'
... 1:4tfktl'--....
MACARONI DINNER
KRAIT 7'/,.oz. BOX 19c
GRAPEFRUIT ~~~!;.~~-~~~--31 (
LIBBY'S PLUMS ~'::.'c ................. 30'
ORANGE JUICE ~~~r~:~ .............. 39'
APPLE JUICE !:'J,~~• .. ·-·-··-····-.. 44r
FRUIT COCKTAIL :•::I'm .......... 25 '
ARMOUR TREET ~;'::1!:.".:'.~~ ....... SB'
ROAST BEEF HASH ~t::.~1!~~~~--53'
STARKIST TUNA ~~·:~ .............. 32'
SYRUP :~~'n_~~~~~ ....................... 51 '
~~--~-
KERN'S PRESERVES :::'l'J ......... 36'
. ii'<-Dill PlffiES"~~ ..... 38'
CUCUMBER CHIPS :r.~.~-~.'.'..47'
RIPE OLIVES·~~~.~~~.·.~ ....... 47•
PITIED OLIVES ~:::_·:..~~~ .... 38'
""' PLASTIC WRAPl;~i?nu ... 20'
CREAM OF WHEAT,,ou•• ........ 48'
TEXIZE !':t',t,.~~~~-.. ----... ~ ............... 19'
0--PLEDGE WAX::':r~<a11 ......... 'J"
BABY FOOD !~1~\~,'l~.~~~.1.~ ............ CJ<
.,... KRAFT DRESSING ::-;,'.~;::'.SS'
JUNIOR BABY FOoo::::·t~ ...... 12'
...kl(fktt.·--
BISQUICK
BITTY CROCKIR-44 BISCUIT MIX C
40-0Z. BOX
.,... KLEENlX FACIAL l:.':l ...... 25'
MO DESS NAPKINS ~!~~~::1 ........ 77 t
WAX REMOVER:~\~ ~·::.~.1.~~.'.1
.... ~89 1
o-< BEL AIR CROUTDNS::",'.~.35'
SPAG HETII :~~,~~!:~.~ .~~.~'.~ ............. 23"
CHINESE FOOD(MUft llllf. llOIU SJ fl
~.l.tlUIU) 4) Ot. CUf •••
... MANWICH SAUCE ~:~'i .... 31 '
RAISINS :~~~;~ ,~~~,.~~~~~ ............. ·-·-29'
DOG FOOD .1.1ro 4l1Yll 01 llOllUUAT 3"'
(llllMlll ll>fo Ot. <.I.II .......... U
Our LOW Evcr)day Price!
SKIPPY
PEANUT BUTTER
21.0Z. JU 87c
TAIBY CAT FOOD :~1"11!1~f.1::.~ 16'
PURINA DOG CHOW ::l'.':: ....... 77 '
JONNY CAT ~:~i".'!! .................... 57'
DISCOUNT llllCES IVllT DAT Of THE Wffl Olf •lfSH PROllUCf!
F•OM (fHTIAl AMllKA, 5DlOU llPI & IWllT 10~. BANANAS ~e."·
U.S. MO. 1
RUSSn POTATOES 10 ••••• 48• ClllO IAG
UCIT fUTUllS su•11ST GIAPIFIUIT AT LOW IYllTDAY PIUClS!
•
RINSO DRIVf. _, ALL
POWOEI DfTEJl:GENT POWI Dm•GEHT
'9.0Z. aox 82 < $136
'
jl.OZ. IOX . ' •
BEEF STEAK ROAST
CEW85
USDA GlADE A • • FIISN.4,c l:, c ucuaac w4i1133c lUClY IONDED
BONDED ll. IONDH ll. lllf lB. l8.
; ... ·-f91~· ~
BANQUn MEAT PIES ........... 19'
ONION RINGS ::~·r: ......... :::: .. : ... 45
OH BOY SANDWICHES ll~~ .... 79•
MACARONI ::~.'::.;.1.~.~~:.~~.~: .... _35'
ORE-IDA POTATOES :~::r.'. ... 45'
CHEESE CAKE ............ _ ........... 19'
SAIA W -•TUWUllY • Ullltr
VEGnABUS :.":'<":~ ............. _ .... 38' ,, ... "' c-. •w & unon CREAM PIES :f,Tt ..................... 27'
(ltt(tUJC, (K ... T, &--, SUA•&. S11Awtlnf
BEEF TACOS :rt,~;~·.~~·.1 .............. 49'
CREAMED CHICKEN ~:... .... 43'
...kl(fkt!·--
HUNT'S TOMATO£S
ll·OL CAN 2 7 C
MEXICAN FOOD~e.'~~':., ...... -.... 49'
1110 M 11111 Clllll llllltlOll
CHUN KING~'l;.~~.~~~ ........... 94"
FISHSTICKS ::'~!.'::~ ..................... 65'
EGG FOO YOUNG :~~·~.. .. ... 66'
EGG Roll (llUlll·llNG -Ml Al I. 56' O>'°'I lllt!MP6Sl.PI•···"'"'
WAFFLES !~~~ :::.1.~~·~·~·'·~·.~~~~: ........... 44"
ORANGE JUICE i~'~~~:!~ ............... 53•
BEEF STEAKS•ot•·•ltlllltlll" 69' It fl.Ht, ............. ,,, ••
BREADED SHRIMP~1::~·::~ ••• -... 751
ORANGE JUICE~:,~~.~~~ ........... 21'
... kl(fktl'--....
CLING PEACHES
HUNT'S
29-0Z. CAN 25c
.•. the few ite11s listed on this pare
constitute just a small samplinJ 11
the thousan•s 11 law, •lscual prices
in store for you at lucky.
FARMER JOHN BACON :'.~ ... 77• LUCKY BACON \eo \
IAI•, 1Wlf1 M IOllM. •
SLICED BACON :.::: ........ -.... -.. 79' \ • 73c OSCAR MAYIR BACON ~~ ... as•
THIN SLICED BACON~:.'.~.'<'." as·
.,... HYDROX COOKIES lr.'~':!,59'
PREMIUM CRACKERS :l~l':., ... 61'
BREAD ~:~l"~:t~~~.~.~.~~~~! ....... 25'
RAISIN BREAD ~:~~~11~:~~ ............. JJ•
SCOOTER PIES
BUR RY'S
14-0Z. BOX 39c
... kl(lkjf.'-.....
TOMATO SAUCE
HUNT'S
I-OZ. CAN 9c
~Van de Komp's•
AN OUTSTANDING VARIETY
OF FRESH BAKERY GOODS
(AT MOST LUCKY STORE S)
\llllllll.,.lll'llllll .,.
? o:..:dr·'' lOW UISCOUNT PAIClS ON HOUSEWAR[S f: BlAUTV AILIS
T£Fl011* COATED
BAKEWARE
E•i•r t•• •••·Stick, tlSJ
cl111 11111liti1s tf l(f.
LON • h1 11•r cll1ic11f:
• l•MJ Mht ...... <• .. • ...
• 1 O·hM• PS. PM
• l••iy Mix S...rt <•k• ... .......... lHf,••
• 11-cw' Mfffl• '•• • J•n•l•r lh1tl .. ••• • 1 f.IHla Pl111 t11t
YOUl CHOICE
99c
~·~i~~-~~~! ........... ~112
. ~~:.~;~~ ................. -39'
LISTERINE
ORAL ANTISEPTIC
Tie PDWEIFUL ... unml ...
1ar11e for a meter, fras~1r
•11tll .tU c1I• If Sift 01r11t
prttt1ti11. 8 8 C
14-0UNa 1111 aonu "'-~ OUI IVllDi\T I.OW PIKl
BROMO snnER
Fast relief frt• '"It st1•1cll
•lsc1•f1rt. oa1'i:'tvlft~Di\T SSC DISCOUNT PllCl
BAYER ASPIRIN
F••Nsltl' .-k• 11litttrt•lliMr,a11
el c•I• 1r •eMac•t. Um( IF IN
'lllM llTIA LAltf Siii
TOOTllASTI
"' IMilf ....,. -.,. ... ..., "" ... 1111.-•1
69c
69C
COLO WATER. LUX
All TOllU SOAP . 33•
•
Shop Any Day ••• Save Every Day ••• with Lucky's Store-Wide Discount Prlclngl
• t
• I
i ~
• ;·
"We are really 1etUng quite
tcchnlC11 for this a.ge crour,·
hi.it lt'a i\Urprlsing how rapid y
' they pick up." he said.
•
I 1·
ii DAJLY PILOT Tl'lul'Sday, J1ru11" , 1970
Best. Tea1n Always Wins·· Bussell
Bill RUSSELL
By TO~f FORTUNE
Of Mii O.llr "II•! Sllff
Not many people. if they had the op.
portun!ty, would laugh at lhemseJves
and walk out on a $200,000 per year
job. But that is what big Bill Russell
said he did in a talk at Orange Coast
College this week.
A year ago the 6-foot·9 Russell was
player-coach for the Boston Celtics.
Today he is. among other things, an
Itinerant college campus lecturer on
racial issues that transcend sport.
The Uving he makes for his family
Isn't as lucrative but be says he bas no
desire to go back to fighting for rt·
bounds.
Allowing that he made a smidgen
over $200,000 • season, .he told the
OC'C students, "People think that's a
lot of money and they're right. But da
you know I was unden>aid?"
He said the chafrman of the board
at General Motors makes $600,000 or
$700,000 a year. "Do you think be con·
tributes more to Generitl Motors than
J did to the Celtics?"
Jt would be tough to debate his
point. With Russell in the post the
Celtics W9fl 11 of the Jast L3 NBA
championships, a record of dominance
Rt'Obably unsurpassed in s p o r t s •
Russell was ttie Celtics, now just
aQOther basketball club without him.
And why did he quit? He told this
story at OCC;
"Lasl season Ute Baltimore Bullets
had beaten us five times in a row and
so we were really going to show them.
\Veil, wi!h 25 seconds to go it was a tie
game. We got the ball. 'Time QUl.
Time out, ref! So we're going to talk it
over and decide who gets the last shot
to execute these suckers. 1 started to
laugh.
··The other players said, 'Here ""'e
are a tie game, why are }'(lu
laughing~' I told them, 'I feel silly.
Here I am 35 years old, semi-nude,
standing here ready to kill somebody
for a damn basketball game.' So we
Y.'enl out and lost that one."
One of the college students asked
Russell ir he ever considered himself
...,._.~~._,,.~,,.....,,_.,_._ ...... _~"""----IW2--............... ..,.,...,.,~,,_,.,. . . .
'
an Uncle Tom. ''The ·only thing I've
ever considered myself is a man," the
big bearded one said.
No one is arguing that point either.
He Je a man whO could rise to lhe oc·
casion, time and again. Even into mid·
die age. His record says he was the
best and he knows it.
Russell gave his all-time, all star
team as Elgin Baylor aod Bob Pettit
at fQf'Wards, Jerry \Vest and Oscar
Robertson at guards. "Need I go any
further?" he remarked,
The two Lakers, Baylor and West,
he rated the all-time best at their posi·
tion.s. Chamberlain he said was tough,
''the second-best· basketball player
around the last 10 years.''
Then he was asked, "Do you re.aUy
th.Ink you should have beaten the
Lakers last year?"
"Let me tell you something -the
best team always wins,'' Russell
respond<d.
And he was asked about former OCC
star John Vallely. Did he know of him
now he's at UCLA?
"Yeah. little old cat shoots all the
ti.me," said Russell. He begged off on
a qu estion whether he thought Vallely
could make the pros because he hadn't
seen him enough times.
That was Russell at OCC.
~onghor11s
~ay Play
·Seaver • Ill Newly Won Glory
....
£Penn State
t' •
i: ~ ASHINGTON -Texas and Penn ,«ate. which failed to settle their dif-
!ferences this past season over which was
ti\e nation's best college football team,
have been discussing the possibility oC
4neeting next fall, Tne AMociated Press
~11:,arned Wednesday rugllt.
~ Coaches Darrell Royal of Texas and .JOe Paterno of Penn State met for
~liminary talks Wednesday shortly
~~ the National Collegiate Athletic
~_iation convention passed a rule
~Uing teams to scbt.dule 11 regular 1".'8&00 football gam~ rather than 10.
•' • ;'";£,!VERSIDE -Dan Gumey's hopes or -ifying in the pole posiUon today for
Sunday's Riverside-Motor Trend SOO
*5tAR Grand National stock car race ~ with the weatherman.
rt!itumey, -0r Costa Mesa, C"O-favoritt Pimelli Jones of Torrance, Calif.,
NA.SCAR champion David Pearson of
§f1prtanburg, S.C., and super speedway
~ Lee Roy Yarbrough -Of Columbia, ":c .. drew qualitying assignments well
):ldwn lht list, virtually precluding them
J~ qualifying until Friday ~Id
·~nesday's incfement weather continue.
'. The first 15 positions -along with
~ualifying prize money -are up for ~bs today .
f ' • \ .
jl'.EW YORK -Jot.my ltturphy, "A'ho
~ gained fame as one of baseball's
premier relief pitchers and then as
gettral manager or the \\uld champion
New York Mets, died Wednesday night of
11 heart. attack. He was 61.
The 1-fets' rise from baseball's depths
to its heighl-' coincided with Murphy 's ap-
poinbnents as general manager in
December, 1967. and the naming of Gil
HOOges as manager two mooths earlier.
~turphy wu instrumental in luring
H<Xlges from the Washington Senators
iind1n acquiring some of the young stars
who helped the Mets to the championship
last season.
Murphy was signed as a player by the
New York Yankees off the campus or
Focdham University in 1928 and joined
the parent team first in 193! for two
games and then for a stretch of JO
straigbt seasons beginning in 1934.
He C'Orllpiled a 93-~ won-lost record, all
tn relief, and it wu his numerous and
succes.slul trips out of the bullpen that
ea med him the ,Uckna.me "The Fordham
Fireman .'' • SAN FRANCISCO -University oC San
, f'randcisco out.shot Santa Clara 3()..8 at
the free throw line to gain a 70-64 West
Coast Athletic Conference basketball
\lpset Wednesday night.
The Dons trailed only once, 3-2 at the
Of!Lset. and remained undefeatOO in
~c play with a 3.0 mark. The Dons
:a~ 9-5 overall compared with Santa
Clara's 10-3.
• Sou\h Carolina's towering Gamecocks
overcame the Selvy mystique at Furman,
but Philadelphia's impoeing Palestra cast
its spell on CaJvin Murphy and Niagara.
South Carolina. the nation's third-
ranked college basketball poy.'er. came
from behind 'Vednesday night fOr a 59--56
victory over scrappy Furman. coached
by former &:oring wizard Frank Selvy r triggered by his youngest brother,
T1~rles, who poured in 22 point.s.
It's a Long Way Dow1i for 7-2 Lew
Big Le\v Alcindor. the Mil\vaukee Bucks center, has a Jong way to
reach for a loose ball on the floor but makes the pickup without diffi-
culty. The former UCLA star \vent up to stuff in the winning basket
'vith 12 seconds remaining to hand the Los Angeles Lakers a 115-113
defeat \Vectne sday ni ght. His 46 points was a career high and a ne\v
l\1il\vaukee Arena record. John Egan of the Lakers has missed in his
attempt to gain possession.
Realignment Bogs Down Retiren1ent
Aru1ounced
By Baugha11 Rozelle May Intervene Witli Metltods
NE\V YORK (AP ) -The 1 3
c\ubowners of the new National Con·
ference of the National Football League
huddled again today to try to realign
themselves into three divisions th8t
please everybody.
After five more fruitless hours of
meetings Wednesday, Commissioner Pete
Rozelle said , "l can't report any progress
except I found out some or the owners
art dissatisfied with their hotel ac-
commodations."
"I'd say that might be a plus because
maybe they'll want to go home."
Rozelle. promised that the owners won't
leave New York "until we have a resclu·
lion on this, one way or another."
He said if the owners don 'l unanimous·
ly agree to a>« divisional setup among
themse\\'es this week, he wiU call the
8ignals for them. -
"Someooe will ha\'e to change his view
or J will have to become involved in
this," Rozelle said. "l do not have the
authority to move in. but I have the
responsibilit)' to see that it's done."
Rozelle's methods could in v o I v e
unilateral action on his part or setUement
by lottery, through a series of blind
draws.
The C"Ommissioner has a fe\V ()\her
methods at his disposal, ""'hich include
"locking them up" as he did during the
t'ight-month hassle over the grooping of
the new American Conference.
One of those meetings lasted 36 hours.
It ow ever, those meetings were more
complicated than the current ones
because they involved the transfer of
three old NFL clubs to give the c<ln-
fcrence 13 teams . After it was decided
\Vhirh teams would switch. the realign·
ment "'as settled in a matter of hours.
Rozelle is anxious to settle the National
Conference and get on to other things.
like the 1970 schedule and a new
television contract for all 26 teams.
Today's meeting was the fifth the NFL
()1vners have had on realignment since
last l\1ay when Cleveland, Baltimore and
Pittsburgh o( the old NFL agreed to
S\1'ilch to the ne1v American Conference.
Cleveland \l'ill compete 1v i I h
Pi ttsburgh, tioUston and Cincinnati in one
division. Kansa!'l City. Oakland, San
Dieg() and Denver will comprise an()ther.
Baltimo re joins Buffalo, Boston, ?>.tlami
and the New York Jets in a five-team
division.
Attempts to shift tile 13 NFL hold()vers
have run into all sorts of problems. in-
cluding geography . \Veather. stadiu1n
size. gate potential, and compclive abili·
ty. Owners are reluctant to be put into a
division v.·hich figures to be dom inated by
a po\verful club for any length of time.
LOS Ai~GELES (AP) -A year ago,
Los Angeles Rams coach George Allen
talked All-Pro linebacker Maxie Baughan
out of retirement. The chances of a
repeal performance by Allen this year
appear slim.
Baughan. ll'ho spent the last four or his
10 National Football League years ""ith
the Rams. announced his retirement
Wednesday after talking at length with
the coach.
Allen. "'ho joined other Rams officials
In praising Baughan as a model man on
and off the football field, again said he
hoped Baughan might ()nee more
reconsider.
f.rrevino's Success Breeds Problems 1
But sources close to the 32-year~ld star
defenttive signal caller said chances ot
Baughan returning to actian next season
are remote.
Baughan. the Philadelphia Eagles'
second-round draft choice from Georgia
Tech. and named by the Associated Press
.11.s an All -Pro in 1968, has undergone
surgery twice on his righl knee.
~ ;
:!PHOENIX (AP) -W. Tm>ino b an ean pllenomenoo -although be"d
Jy change the tag to "Mexican·
can" -instant hero, a rags-t~
&htl, free-wheeler, irrepressible.
1 sut wtUi·his meteoric rise fro1n 1 $35 f.~t driving range assistant to a
4iiftioo dollar concern have come some pJems. Wordl such as "Interest
~tes ,•• ''tight money."
Jsmanaa,,cme:nt" and .,retail ouUeta"
vt been .ldded to hit vocabulary.
'Ht"a the Mme guy, !bough -•1111
..-ash, talkatJvt, oozing confidence. But
lh8 prusuru and problems are a litUe
llUf-1. ··"A""' throe years aco J never \bOU&hl
J'd have problems like this ," said
Trevino.
1ivo and one-half years ago Trevino
walked about two miles a day from hi~
motel to the course that was the site or
the U.S. Open golf championship because
he couldn't affonl a cab.
Two weeks ago he instituted a suit -
"I think It was for $514,000'' -in El Paso
Federal District Court against his
ro_anqer1,._ Consulting Services, I~ .• or
Akron, -Ohio, which also represents
1olfers Jullus Boros, Orville Moody, Lee
Elder and others.
Among other things, Trevino cl0imed
mismanagement.
"My lawyer doesn't wanr, me lo talk
much about lt." he explained. "But 1
claimed mismanagement. '\'e didn't think
"'e were getting as much out of it as \\'e
should.
"Some nf my major sponsors were
unhappy with their contracts, the way
they were being treated. I don't lmow
"'hat's going to happen next. That's all up
to the lawyer ."
Trevino's life is v.·ell knov.•n.
HI? didn't know hia father. was rai!ied
l)y hls ggtndCathgr~ a Dallas grave-
digger, Ile perfeettd his golf game while
in Ille Mllines. quall!lcd for the 1967 U.S.
Open and u.-ent to Baltusrol on a string .
"I had a return ticket to El Paso and
$50." he recalled. He finished firth in the
Open. madt some $6'°° "and wondered
ho1v long this has been going on."
He hlt the tour -al the urging of his
\1•1fe -made more than $26,000 and, in
1968. leaped to the front rank or golf's
su per slars by capturing the most
prestigious title the game can offer, the
Unilt'<I States Open champioMhlp.
•·He made just abou t as much out of
the U.S. Open as a player possibly
could," a fellow pro said. "He hadn't won
before, ~·asn't lied up with any contracts.
then won the big one. And be has tMt
personality going for him."
"You wJn the U.S. Ope_n and people
think you made a million dollars,"
Trevino said. "But it's not that easy, not
that fast.. 1.tonc.y's light now, and with the
inttrtSl ratc.s \fflat Ulty m ... ··
He would have pla yed in Sunday's NFL
Pro Bowl -the ninth aJJ.star game to
which he was named -but reinjured the
knee late in the 1969 season.
Baughan disregarded medical ad \·ice
and returned to action in the Ram s' 23-20
'Ve.!l.crn Conference playoff loss to l\lin·
nesota last Dec. 27. He lasted one play
before the knee cave QUt.
He sakl another veteran, Jack Pardtt,
would be equally valuable as the:
defen.Uve play caller and th.at hls
replacement, &ix·year NFL pro Jim
Purnell, '°"Id "do a good job."
Laver Fourth
In Balloting
For Top . .\thlete
NEW YORK (AP) -Tom Seaver.
selected The Associated Press' Male
Athlete of the Year Wednesday, is wor·
rying Jess and enjoying life more now
that he is the toast of the sports world .
"I've been turning down many more In-
vitations than I've accepted," Seaver said
of the banquet circuit that awail.!'l
baseball's brightest star every year.
"I've just been enjoying myself, spending
time wjtil my family. I won't let all this
interrupt my privale life •
"But the time to start worrying I! when
they stop recognizing you."
Seaver received 96 votes in h
balloting of sp:irts writers a n d
sportscasters throughout the country.
Namath iot SL Steve Owens, the
Heisman Trophy winner from Oklahoma,
was third with 41 and Corona del Mar
tennis pro Rod Laver fourth with 40.
Then came Joe Kapp, Minnesota
quarterback, with 35.
Seaver, the New Y()rk Mets' Ali·
American boy who led them to their
believ~it-or-not National League perunant
and World Serie3 victory last year, is en-
.. joying bis latest accolade now.
"It'!! quite an honor," he said of the
A~lated Press award. "I'm very flAt·
tered."
At 25 years of age, Seaver, who won 25
regular season gjltnes, one playoff game
and one World Series game last season,
appears to have a number of worryles.!
years ahead of him.
In fact, with his drive to accomplish
the impossible as the leader of the Mets,
it isn't unbelievable that he might match
Sandy Koufax·s feat of v.inning the AP
award twice.
The only other double winners are ten·
nis player Don Budge and golier Byron
Nelson.
By winning the honor, Seaver continued
baseball's dominaUon of the award. He is
the fifth straight baseball player to win
the honor. following on the heel! of
Detroit's Denny 1.fcl..ain, and he is the
eighth in the last nine years.
To win it, Seaver had to beat out J0rt
Namath, his football rival in Shea
Stadium. Namath, of course, led the New
York Jets to another impossible goal, the
American Football League's first SUper
Bowl triumph.
CLIFF HAGAN
Hagan Resigns
As Dallas Coach
DALLAS tAP) -Clilr Hagan reriiJW'd
as coach of the D.11.llas Oiaparrall of the
American Basketball Assoc I at lo n
\\'ednesday, saying Ult owners ''t.hougtlt
we should be in first plaee and that I was
too demanding of the play en."
The Chaparrals issued a statement
saying Hagan made the d e c i s i on
"because of a difference in coaching
philosophy with the team's owners."
The 38--year.old Hagan, a h a r d
taskmaster, was prone to 5hout at his
players from the bench when they made
a ml!'ltake and yank them off the «iun.
Hagan, vt'ho was an All·Amerkan under
Adolph Ruw at KmluckY, came to
Dalin In 1187. JI WU hll flnl t<>odlinc
job.
He was ttt>lactd tmmediately by Ma~
Williama, the 1eoeral manager ol the
ChapatTail and a former llar at Southern
M~ Unlvenlly.
·• -----=--=..-..,. -~--~~=,.,.-,,-T --i;--,...--~-.-
43rd Straight
Free Throws Do It
·: . For Oilers, 62-55
By CRAIG SHEFF
Of ""' o.tlY rn11t l tt.ft
Huntington Beach High has
a tradition of winning basket-
ball games.
In aetting that tradition,
, Oiler basketball players have
• learned to play well in the
' clutch -and that is exactly
what happened Wednesday
· night at Western High.
Trailing throughout t h e
game, coach Elmer Combs'
club rallied in the final quar·
teT to pull out a 62-55 victory
over the Pioneers.
The victory was the Oilers'
"3rd straight tn Sunset League
play and their second this
season.
Down 50-43 at the start of
tht final quarter, the Oilers
did not get rattled, fighting
back to tie tbe score at 55-55
with three minutes left in the
game.
At this point you could sense
an Oiler victory. Huntington
then proceeded to score the
final seven points or the game.
~·· It was some clutch free
throw shooting in the final
Quarter by the Oilers parlayed
with the fact that Western
·became rattled when it en-
visioned victory.
In the final eight minutes,
Huntington converted its first
11 free throws, then missed a
, charity toss with seconds to
· play and the game safely
tucked away.
Individually, forward Lee
. Walters and guard Curt
Carlson led the way for the
. Oilers. Each bad 25-points.
Walter.i:, hltUng irom in
close, had nine field goals, in·
: eluding the one that tied the
g a m e . He was a perfect
·-seven for seven from the free
·throw line. Carlson carried the
·toad from outside, also hitting
nine two-pointers. He was
, seven for eight from the free
throw line.
The Oilers got off to a cold
llart, missing their first eight
shots and Western jumped to
an 18-8 advantage. '
But Huntington wanned up
· considerably during the rest of
the came, ca~_g 21 of 56
HUNTINGTON al!A(H l't) ""''"' Wtl!WJ f 7 ' 2S (.ale 2l•7 Wli• ODlD CtrlSOl'I ' 1 3 tJ '"'•rrell 0000 MorD 1123 Oe!rlttofl D 2 1 1 TC111ll 21 lD 15 62
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W11tern 11 17 15 l-55
OCCDrops
80-66 Tilt
To Cerritos
Plagued by foul problems In
the second half, Orange Coast
College's basketball· team fell
to Cerritos, 80-65 in South
Coast Confere·nce p!S.y
Wednesday night on t h e
Falcons' court.
The-Pirates had three
players foul out. Leading re-
bounder Phil Jordan was the
first to .go midway through the
second hall. Center Rick
Stickelmaier and f o r w a r d
:vuatie.Diffle followed him.
With Orange Coast missing
)ts bootd llrength, Cerritos'
-~ik rm line took over on the
•ards Md the Falcons "'SPurted to a comfortable lead.
In the opening ball, the lead
see-!lawed back .and forth with
the two team! tied 31-31 at the
'halftime intenniSsion.
Stickelmaier took tcoring
honors for the Plratea with 19
points. Jim Kindelon had 14
and Troy Rolph hit 12. Jordan,
with seven points, had his
lowest output of the season .
For Cerritos, 6-7 forward
Ron Ballou led all scorers with
24 while 6-9 center Ev Fopma
had 21 . The Falcons shot 49
• ·percent from the field, hilUng
.25 of SL
, " Orange Coast, now 1-2 in
."'conference play. will meet Mt.
·'San Antonio Saturday in tbt .occ gym.
OltANOI COA~~"iT "" 1?
•Jord•"' '''1
Holrnn I O • 7
.Sllt;ktlmt!fl' ' 1 ! 1• telncltlon J • • 14
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""''-' 1 • • t Tet1ft n '6 11 ti
tltltllmt MSIC OCC SI, (erTllOI II
field goal attempts for 31.3
percent. From the free throw
line, the Oilers hit 20 of 26 for
76.9 percent.
Western connected on %2 of
58 shots (37.9 percent) from
the field and J l -0( 19 free
throws.
Huntington will look for lb
third straight league win Ws
seasm Friday nigbt against
Santa Ana. in the Oiler gym.
Vik.es Cool
SA, 70-54,
In Sunset
By HOWARD L. HANDY
Of !ht Diii.-.. Ii.I S"ff
A tenacious defense forced
numerous turnovers while the
hot shooting ··hands of Kipp
Baird and Rick Mosier scored
40 points between therq as the
Marina Vikings kept their
Sunset League re c: o r d
unblemished Wednesday night
with a 70.M victory over the
host Santa Ana Saints. '
Marina moved in front from
the outset on a pair of quick
baskets by Mosier and the bat.
tling Saints never recovered.
Coach Jim Stephens• crew
utilized the bulldog defense
from the start. forcing the
host quintet into f • u r
turnovers fn the opening
stanza. The number was cut to
three tn the second period with
the Vikings holding a 37-27 ad·
vantage at intermission.
In the third, period Marina
forced the Saints to give up
the ball an unbelievable 11
times without a shot, limiting
them to seven attempts from
the field f<r the entire eight
rnirrutes. They made good on
three.
For the game, tt was a total
cf 24 turnovers forced by the
hustling Viking defense.
Marina put the decision well
out of reach with a 10.point
splurge early in tbe fourtn
period after leading by 10
nmt of the nigh~ In--
creased the margin to 20 with
2,15 left.
Three teams art undefeated
In Sunset League play with
Westminster leading .the way
with three wins. Ma'rina and
Huntington Beach each have
two. The Vikings play host to
Newport Harbor Friday night.
In addition to the large num·
ber of turnovers, the Saints·
found star BJlly Williams in
early foul trouble. 'Three in--
fractions were called against
the Saints in the first period,
all against Williams. H e
garnered his fourth in the sec·
ood quarter and played in--
termittently in the second
half.
Marina hit 'ti of S9 attempts
from the floor for a good 45.7
percent average but the free
throw figure · was only 51.6
percent.
Sant.a Ana, with 10 fewer
shots, scored 17 of 49 for a
creditable 34.7 average and hit
11 of 24 at the charity toss line
for an 87 .5 mark.
Mosier was high man for the
game with 24 while Baird hit
for 18. Chris May led the
SaJnts with 18 while Williams
was held to 11.
llllnl Motl ti'
Str•llord '"' (rDnltrlte McGulr• E1'1t """~ Com•r
RQ1Mr
Tol•ll
MAltlMA 11tl " • • ' ' ,
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S1nl1 Ana II U 10 11-.w
SADDLEBACK
HOSTS FOE
Saddleback College's basket~
ball team, with a chance to
move up a notch in the Desert
Conference race, f a c e s
Barstow tonlghl (8) al Mission
Viejo High.
Coach Roy St.evens' club
split a pair of games last
weekend. Barstow and
Imperial Valley c urrent J y
share the conference lead with
2..0 records.
Following tonight's game,
Saddleback travels to Victor
Valley Saturday night.
Three Desert. Conferen~
game!! are scheduled Frklay
night with College of I.he
Desert at Collegt of the C.n-
Ylllll· lmperlal Vallty at Mt
San Jacinto RDd Mira Costa at
Victor Valley.
, ________ -------------~-----· --~·--· . -~. . ..... _
Thllf'SdtJ, Jamrll'Y , 1~7Q DAILV PILOT ta
DEFENSIVE LIONS -Westminster High's Dan
Broderick (30), who shelled Newport Harbor .with
39 points Wednesday night, presents a stiff defense
against Newport's Dave E ccles (31) as he tries to
DAILY ,.ILOT rPlftM ., llkhrt 1t•11t
pass out to mate Lee Haven (55). Lions' Richard
Mann is in foreground. Mann hit .!l 20-footer with
two seconds left to give Westminster a S0.59 victory.
Estancia , Top Wrestling Tourneys
Holds Off C. . V . C A Foe, 5946 oming pin oast rea
By JOHN CASS
Of ""' D111.-rn111 '""
Estancia High's Ea g I e 1
withheld a strong second half
rush by the Falcons of Santa
Ana Valley to earn a 59-46 vic-
tory In the Falcon gym
Wednesday night.
Bill Wetz.el's Eagles built up
what proved to be an in-
sunnountable a d v a n t a g e
through the first half of pla y
as they owned a 27·9 bulge
prior to the popcorn break.
The Falcons, who converted
only 50 percent of their charity
tosses all night, could manage
only five of 11 through the
first two periods.
They were just as cold from
the floor. The Falcons did not
get their first field goal until
Jim Keyes connected from un-
der the basket with 32 seconds
remaining in the first period.
Joe Lopez got the second
with five minutes left in the
half. That was all the Falcon
scoring from the field in the
first 16 minutes.
In the meantime. Skip
Williams and Mike Hays led
the Eagles with eight points
each while Gary OrgUI con-
tributed six and Steve Butler
added rive.
Keyes and Steve Kuril chyk
led a strong defensive effort
that chctked off most of the
Eagle offensive e f f o r t
throughout the third period as
the Falcons narrowed the ga p
to eight points, 39-31.
Estancia's forces appe ared
to be in trouble as Butler foul-
ed out of the game wi th one
minute gone in the final stanza
and Williams followed 60
seconds later.
But Keyes drew his fifth foul
with 4:57 remaining in the
game, taking Valley's re-
boonding strength to the bench
with him.
The two major prep wrestling events of the Ttm Flynn, senior, 131 -5-1 with two fills
year for Orange Coast area grapplers are oo and second In the Mira Costa ioumey.
tap this Saturday and next with the Orange Mike Hollinden, senior, 141 -M wtth four
Coast College Invitational first -then the plos and first In the Mlr1 Costa toarney.
Fountain Valley Five Counties tourney. Dan Lewis, junior 157 -f.O with elgb& falls.
For persons inexperienced with high school Voted the outslandlng wrestler of the Mira
wrestling, both events offer an excellent Costa Tourney and baa bad only four polntl
means to find out what the term "athlete" acored on him In his nine wills.
means. Bob Walker, junior, IN -I-! overall and
The sport Is rapidly gaining ground as a fourth in the Mira Costa ToU111ament.
major item in prep acUvJUes, but unfortu-
nately it still takes a backseat In the publici·
ty department.
Perhaps one of the chief reasons for that is
'
. -------ROGER
CARlSON
~---
that people tend to prejudge an event before
actually taking a first hand look.
Both tourneys are all-day affairs, beginning
in the morning with semifinals and finals bill-
ed for 7 and 8:30 p.m.
* * * Fountain Valley Hlgll't wreatlla1 team toa-
tlnuea to pile ap tbe wln.1, tlte Barona DOW
po5sets 28 1traJght dual meet vtctorte1,
Overall, they're 35-t tlnce bechmln& the pTOo
gram In 1966.
Hert'a an example or why co1ch Vern
Wagner's ouUlt Is so highly re1pected :
Patil LaBlanc, junior, IOI -M with three
falls and first In the Mira Co•la TOltl'llameaL
* * * Watch out for El Mcxlena and Jt'1 basket-
ball team -now and Jn the future.
The Vanguards do a pretty fair job cf it and
what's more. they 're using two juniors, •
sophomore and a freshman in the starting
lineup.
* * * It seems Ironic that here ln Oran1e County,
where the weather la probably anma1cbed
anywhere, overall, that N e w p o rt.M e 1 a
District high schools should have &Jae coldest
eyma In existence.
Corona def Mar 1nd Estancia top the list
and Newport's Ice box Isn't mucll to brag
about either .
Even full bouse1, wttb body tempentares
and high emotions, do little to offaet the
po11lbilltle1 of froatblte.
* * * Lonnie Wormley of La Jolla holds a TtCOtd
that could stand for some time in the
Newport. Optimist basketball series.
WomtJey managed to foul out before the
half against Newport Harbor in the Vikings'
74-59 loss to Newport recently .
What's more, he failed to score and ,didn't
come into the 1ame until the aecood period I
Dis~us Given OK
JJp untll lhis week the discus
had been just another hot
potato to throw around by the
Huntington Beach Union High
School District board of
trustees.
But It has now been
relegated to its proper plact,
In the hands of high school
athletes, where track coaches
have insisted lt belonged in the
lirSL place .
A three to ont decision by
th e board Tuesday night has
placed the decision of Its i.tt
as a field event Into the band!!
of the schoohi' athletic direc-
tors and 9'1nclpal1.
plonship to Loara High School
Jut year by one half polnt,
because they bad no discus.
They implored the board of
trustees to include the discus
throw into their athletic pro-
gram, contending that they
could have picked up 18 extra
points by compeUng in this
category.
But neither the board of
trustees nor the ad-
mlnlstr•Uon was q u i c k to
allow It, since U'le discus Is
considered 1 dangef'OUI and
haiardous event by some high
schools and hu b e e n
eliminated from their athletic
competlUon.
dangerous," said .Dr. Joseph
Rlbal, the only truatee to ~
poae the measure.
Fountain Valley track coach
Matthew Leonard, who w11
present to defend the discus,
said "Our boys have been at
quite a disadvantage. 11'1ls ls
diaheartenlng not only to the
boys but to neyaelr.
Dr. Paul Berger, principal
of Fountain Volley HI g h
School, hu promiled thtm
th•t the discus would be In-
cluded u 1 compeUUve track
catecory as JOOn as practice
opens in about two weeks.
60-59 l' erdlct
Lion Ace Pots 31 ,
AsTarsFallAga~
By ROGER CARLSON
Of tile DtllY r1141t 11'1f
Another routine verdict w,ent
into the books Wednesday
night at Newport Harbor High
School.
Routine, that Is, w h e n
Westmlnlter and N e w p o r t
Harbor collide In S u n s e. t
League basketball wars.
Richard Mann of
Westminster's Lions let loose
with a 20.footer and the
resulUng swish with two
seconds to go beat the host
Sailors, 60-59, in what must be
one of the most frustrating
series ol defeats in Newport
Harbor history.
Friday it was Anaheim deal-
ing the Bluejackets a 57-flS loss
with two free throws in the
last two secOnds.
Westminster 's clutch win
Rio Hondo
Tums Back
Rustlers
Hampered~ by the loss of
high-scoring forward Chris
Thoplpson early in the second
half, Golden West College's
bask~ball team was defeated
by Rio Hondo, 93-71 , in
Southern C al if orn i a Con-
ference acuon in the winners'
gym Wednesday night.
Thompson, who scored only
three points in the game, com-
mitted his fUth personal foul
just foot minutes into the se-
cond bill. He did not play the
last sll: minutes of the initial
hall ...
MLOIN W!IT (11)
w ....
'""' ~=~-Ptif!~ Grr~H
,~ ..
Hli~tl
81rll Tol1lt
PO 1-T rP' TP J • 1 10 1 0 ' ,.
1 1 5 l 5 1 1 H , , 3 u
l • 1 ' , e • ' 0 1 0 1
l 0 • ' " s n 11 11:10 MONDO cn1
P'G l'T "" Tr BllY I I 2 J T~tM!1 412•
FtfWl'k• 11 I 2 21 Mllllr 5 4 4 14
Wtlltrl J 1 ' 17
Ge'11tr 0101
o r1 ... ..-2 115
Gul!e ... N 2 I 0 J JtMln 4021
MllOll ? 0 o 4 To!tls 31 lf lt fl
H•lftlrN -.t! Rio HOlldO 41, GWC
~
c:Omts alter !Ml year'a "" 'dramatic Lkm lictortes. •1 First it was 1 8M7 sque~
when Sailor Paul Holmes' l-
foot .IW14her was a tecond i late -then the claulc ft
overtlJ!l' 1'1·111 declalon
Newport.1 The"""' -·Dave WP.MM'• Slllors fof nlne-cooi>i lq their bid for '
. SW>o<\ Utle. Niwport · trilb WestiiiinJter by t,.. I
a:ames.
For Westmltlater, it me• the third loop victory In , p
many starts ..,d the spt,iii.
tingling win could be' 1"'
decision necessary to Jain f
momentum requlrtcJ in
champi<inshlp. eh..-.. ·
Center Dan Broderick had a
tremendous ni&ht tn t h f
shooting department, hi~
39 points on 14 field pals*
11 free throws. All that ....,_
ed to be requJred f o r
W estmlnster to acore waa to
get the ball to Brodtrtck. ~ .. ,
Bolh !e8111l1 suffered ·
the offtclat!ng, which Irept ·
crowd of 700 ln what 1eeined
to be a constant uproar.
Newport never lrll1ed lhe
first half, but the .....,4 hoJf
fireworks aaw the score UiM
"' the l•od chant< iwidl'D
times. ~.1
The hoN appeared to hkt;
It locked up )Vlth io ..-)1>
go.In the game m Lee H•Vf!ll.,
sttal of 1 Uon pua Inside "!fb
I 59-58 lead. ~ '
But Neb TahU -lie41ii
by'BroderJcl; Jn I-· at midcourt 1114 tllO latter tJP.
ped the ball to a mate to il'/l
Westm.ln.ner possession Wiii
11 seconds remalnlng".
That set It up for MIM to
come throogh with his perfec.
to for coach Don Lea~
league-leadiJlC outfit. ·-'f~,
The Tan had one ~
chance with two second& if
maining -as In the Anahelm
loss -but couldn't 1•t o1J 'f
~bot in time. ·. ,
WISTMINITllt (Ml .• ~~l-~m... 'ii~ llr011;;'1'Ck ,, 11 '(;f
r.:c:,.., I ! ·t·~ B1ne • \ N-hoo.IH I ; ·\ "'To~:1. l 1\ ;z. NIWftOltT MAltaotl lit) !· · ,. ,. ...
·~~. ! I ,,.
R(Cl•s J f r· ~I 1 ·'~ ~
't;1!1 ,. ' ,,
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;-~
" Youbetlina
Green Stripe backer
:·
\.:. ., ~
'.
. , . •r. •1!.-' ... ~
'< ~·:1 ·~·:
;-:"\ . •
;,,._
<
··t! ;.;
! ·-•',i .. ~ .. ' ,, .. ..
._,
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'
Previously, It had simply
been fo.i:bldden. This aroused
the an;cer of Fountain Valley
High llchool stucltnts who lost
the !nine IA-track cham· ,
"Simply by •Iiuttnr the heat
from the board of trustees to
th< principal'• d•sk Isn't s<>l•I
to make It any I e a 1
~·
Edison Hlch School, abo a
member of the ln1.ne League,
which uUllzed the dlacus In
league meets, will Include the
dL!cul In Its track pro~am. 1---------~--------~-'Lt.
l""'I ____ .,..,....., __ ....,....,........,. ____ ,...,...,,.........,..,...,,..,..-,-----------,... ... ~--~-.~--. ------. . ·--, -·, .......
I
I I
f '
I
I
T~qrsday, Ja.num-1970
Irvine Battle
Sea Kings Blitz
Magnolia, 67-42.
By STEVE ANDREWS
°' .. DallY "*' '"" Corona del Mar used a big
second quarter to blitz the
..host Magnolia Sentinels. ~&.
in Irvine League basketball
action Wednesday evening.
The Sea Kings now are lied
ofor the top spot in the stan·
v dings with the Loara Saxons,
who durilped Edison last night.
Corona's record stands at 3--0.
Tandy Gillis' quartet used
some fine defense and ex-
cellent offensive boardwork to
take a handy halftime ad-
vantage, 4{).24.
Le.ading only 21·17 entering
the second frame, the Sea
Kings came out and outscored
!he Sentinels, 14.J. at one
stage of the period. During
this stretch, Corona hit IO free
throws. Don Killian had the
most charity losses in lhe
period, five.
A tough defense limited
?..1agootia to j1,1st eight shots in
the second quarter, of which
lhe Sentinels made three.
From there on it was a mat-
ter of by how much the Sea
Kings would win as tht!y
pourea it on the second half.
The def~ held Magnolia to
only four of 20 from the field
and the offense built up . its
biggest lead at the buzzer as
Mark Grigsby connected for
two coosecutive buckets.
Corona got balanced scoring
from four of its five star'ters.
Killian was the high man with
18 points .. He was aided by
teammates. Tim Conroy, 15,
.Jeff Goeliti, 13, and Mi ke
Sevier, 11.
Of Killian 's 18 points, 14
came via the free throw line.
The senior bad a big firsl
quarter at the charity stripe
as he COOVi!ried eight of nine
to set a pattern his teammates
carried on all night.
The Sea Kings cashed in on
MAGNOLIA 142]. ft ~t t.
~ b 1 16
D l 4 l 0 0 I 0 : ,,, ~ : ' . ' 1 6 l 10
' D l 2 D 0 l 0 11 20 ,, •1
DI\. MAit 161) It It ,J I• 1 U 5 II 1 ~ I 4 li l ! 4 ti l 1 • 1l 0 0 1 0
I 2 ,I. • 0 0 'l 0 ] 0 1 I D 0 l 0 lt 2'27U
SC9l"ll " o.,.""' M .. no!la 0 1 t t--t1 . C,,,_ dfl Ma~ 11 1' ll lf--41
29 of 38 attempts as the of·
ficials called 56 rouls on the
two schools.
Magnolia didn't do too bad
at the line either. If it wasn't
ror their 20 of 31 they might
have been in deeper trouble in
the late stages.
John Boren led the Magnolia·
attack with 16 points while
Bob Stewart contributed 10 ror
the Sentinels. The resl of the
hosts' squad was shut off ex-
tremely well by the Sea Kings
man-to-man defense. '
Basketball
Standi11gs
\OVTH COAST CONFERENC!
W \. PF PA
Fulltrton 3 O 237 1%
c~rritm. 1 1 IL.I 169
Ml, s.in ~lonio I 1 9• 99
!otn DI-1 1 151 1S9
Or•nte Cont 1 7 171 74.l
!oan1a AM 1 'l 217 2;J
San DI-W sa 0 7 13' 1'7
W•Jneid•V'i Raullh
C:frr"(!I .... OrAnga -""'•t .66
Fuller'91'1 n, Mt .. St.ii Antonio lt
SAn Dli11C1 11, !11\ta 11t1• n ·
Se~ Ditto MeU, b'la
Sahirclllv;1. G-.
M1. San Anlonto 111 Orll'IOf COl=-f,
Ctrrilos at Senta AN I · ~
San Ditill> fl.QI 11 S.nJPjtw .
Fullerton, bve
SO. CAL. COHFERENCE Ii. ~ \. PJ' PA
Cvore•• ) O 77S 7•6
LA j-lar!IOI" 1 O 1111 1"6
LAC( 1 1 76!1 23:1
1110 Hor'da 1 I 1m 16S
LA So<l!-.,1 l 1 1~ HO
Go!""' Wes• 11 3 717 111
E1sr LA 0 l 223 l~l
. W1Gnttd•r'• lltl'lh
Rio HOll09 fl, Golden w.n 71
CVP<e:-!1 12. LACC -71
LA SOu!llW9Sl 81, EIS! LA 73
l,-, H1rbor. lwe
FrldfV't G•!ftff
L.O. i.....111we~r a! Goldlm Wt!!
LA Hartior 11 CYf'" .. '
Rio HO!'Hlll •! Elf! LA~
LAC(. tw'
IRVl"E L•AGUI! WC. PF PA
Corono del Mi r J> ·1 1'1 1\1 Lo.11'1 136 186 Co•ll Mf'><I 1 1 1,ll ~10 Es11ncil 2 1 89 178 e;i;,Cll't 1 7 U& 116
Fcunllln V~llev o J m 713 S~n1a AM V~llfV 0 3 1S1 115
WednttdlY't Sc"'' Cosll Mtta 7S, Fcun!aln v1tlaY 10 ~~=1:)19.Ms'.'n~' A1*:\.":11:, 4,4 Loara 15, EdlsOI' S3 FrJG1y't G1mas · CO>ll Mtta a! Corl>fll Gel Mar !'~ltN:it ti Loara
S•nll An~1~::.:f:y'~! ~:'~~~in V>1!1~~
M~nolla vs Edl1cn a! Munllnato"
Btl SU"SeT LE•GUE
WesTmln"•r liunririglon Btt(h Mtrlna
"'""helm NewPOrl HarD<t• Santa An~ Wt.,ern
W L PF I'~
l020t l;I 2 0 1., l ~l~:~J I 7 li6 i69
0 l !6• '" n J 16J 111
WtO>'ff<l•v·, Score• thmllnoton 6eo<n 61, w~••orn ~5 M~•i"" 10. SenM Ana 5• weumins"r M. NewDOrl Hartlc!r ~' Frt<11y•• G11mn
Newparl Harbor ft Mar'n~
San•a """ 11 Hun11no1on 6e~cll Wutmlnl!tr H A""lit•ni
Prep Wrestling
lfl-CUI Of) Slllfl Alll \'lll•Y
~urvt. (iiAV> plnMCI MCGiii
IE); S:l• l~omrtMt lfl dee. ,A.91.1lttt•
(SA\'); t'4
11~__., (fl die. O.L-
tSA.VI; 7·2 u~o;i;m !El oec. ,.,.....,,.
CU.Vil ·•I
IJD-«odlenbKlt ISAVl pinned Wle-wafl#t lf.J; 3:st
13'-P-IE) ctr... 8endt.1 tSAV)1 .. 141-BentOll (SAVI ffe:, OeGto11 IEl1
H 1*-J-lntt CE) ... ll:hoera BAVll .. ·-1S7-MU~ ouf ,.1""" ~11
ISA\'JJ 1!11
1..-C:luff (I') dlt. ... rm.n ISAVl1 .. . ' 111---0,..lle (~VI W . C!llr (f)1 7.(1
IM-GalcJWt'N· Cl! IMC. Clltlrel•r
ll.4V)I l~f MV~ lli,A.V) itll'IMll LM IEJ;
3:56
, Jllliltr Vat\l'f
..... lft) (fl Sefllt Altl VIII..,
tt-GtnMH' (IE) Pinned Arnokl
1¥-Yh '°' ·----' 11~ 11} eK. A1t11li.r1 IMVI• ... TU-,..,_ Ill ~ &1flelt;e
tSAVll J:U
•
Chargers
In 85-53
Sethacl{
By DAVE CEARLEY
01 lbt l>•lh' f'lfllt 51t !I
Prep Swim Results
V1rsltv 1«t Fru~-1. ll:otllnt (M) 1. llobl-
1!1 DGrallO (SS) U•l LlfilM INC~ (M) l. 6tflnlnoton !M). Tlmft: 1:10.l.
<00 Frlll -1. A. Wt~• !LIU 2, 61!'110 J,CI l'ff'l!-1, &oo!ll IMI t. JllhlliOn
IEDl 3 Brown !LIU. Tli · 210l.J (Ml J, D~t1lal'I (Ml. Time: 26.t. !l FrPt -1. C. Ware LB} 2. RM<! 1. 4E0l J J Slow9Jcy IL!ll. '""': ?•0 100 1nt11vlt111il Medl .... -1. NtU$on (Ml
llJll lnd•V·~~•I Medlev -l MO<><• Miri"i c•tt (11) Edl!IOfl c ..
iEDI 2. l(~"rev (E01 J. Smllh iED1. 20CI Medi.~ ll'-"•V-1. Milrint CTitlt, r1m1. i::w.o
Oov1oa -1 P~ltO (EOl 2, We~eo· llolr11WI, Gugl•r. $0rtn....,J, Timi':
!EDl. No lhlt(t 50 Fr--1. Fl-(Ml l. Md:ct¥11n
!DO Ffv -1. 0 Wart IL6l 1 Moen !El J. Harattk~ !Ml. Tims: tt.O. -1 £.01--l. Brlcllle1 IEO! Tim• \'05.9 Tl 2 35 100 Free -i c w~re IL8 ~ 6~•-(Ml '.i. We•t (Ml. me: : .4. rel! (ED! J. Pedll (!::DI Time. Sl • 7CC F•~f-!. Sorensen IM) f. Gu!l(er
100 Back -1. l(enrey (EDI 2. 2 ll 7 ri~~~"f:'l~n1 CLDJ 3, flrldoei 1E01. 100 lndf~lllu1I Mllllln-1. Oavlei IM\
The Irvine League leading •OO F ret -1. A , Wtre !L6 f 1 e~nd ' F~,g~ !MJ :i. F1vnn iMl. Tl-:
Lo !ED! J. i-.~~•tv (EO/, lln•~: 4:29.0 1 ;11.~. ara b&Sk~tba1J team 'js JCC Br~a•I -1 flU((tn ((DI 7. SO f lv-1. Gugler IM) 1. H1l1sllci; known as the Saxons. l>n>il ~ (EOl l. Gulleo.~ IL.Bl. lime; jMI J, M1t11neutt• (EL Time: .33.7. 1·JJo' F•~~ llel~v .... I. L.tCU'111 !leat~ 100 Free-I Flvnn (Ml 2. THll (Ml But Wednesday nighl they !J, si~ .... k,, brown, .... "t'/drw. [. 3 Sar•n'-Cn (Ml. Tlmt!: l :Ol.t •
I W•reJ. ScncoL reto•ll 1:...., l<'l l 50 fl alk-1. Ftr9Ul0n {M) t, lklolll ooked like the Huns, wit.h Al· c.,, IM• l we11 11.'l. Time: l 5,l. tila himself in the slarting d uti 1111 L e h i.o ere1~1-1 McCow•n !El 1. Gro14' ~rl:.~0/t~~ 1. Wlcoanu.t1~"~i ,et;~,d t.~n1 (M) l. 11.olranel (M). Tlma : 31.l. forward Spot. ll'Ol l D. Slc"':~y l~i"l l llm~ ?·li .o 100 Frtt 11.«dV-I. Meril'lll (F1vnn.
Lo ped , !O Fret' -l lcDl•n~•• (EOl 2. c,,0,,11<1m, Htlallldl, OltYles), Tlmei ara up its loop mark ,.m»ltn !LBl l. Bl•~k ILDJ. Tlrrno: n.~ 1.,,.1 Hiil lndivldu"I Medley -l. Anr1~, to 3-(1, 12·3 OVetSll, 8S it born· (E'Ol 2. MMUt r CEO! 3 61llev (L!ll. 2. Prime !M) J. O'(Cnne-t! IM), lime:
barded Edison, 8f>..53, in the T!;GtF1~ ~·~ T"'1•~n~ki iED! 2. l erk!t 1·0,!.;.9·,,, _ , •• ,.,.,, IMI I, .,_,
S . !EDI J. Kre •• (LSI. Time: 32.J "" ~" "" axon gym. 100 Fro:e -i. w1('Q<!nd !E:Dl ?. (Ml l. Booth <Ml. n"'': 1:12..!.
It took the Saxons i'ust over f9";'""" iLe> J. lfeaw'" cLBl. Tim e: iUl Free-l. Dunn IMI 2. Roti;nlGll
s~ a~r~ -1. T~~·~n.~I IEO I 1. (Ml tl~ 1hltd, Tl-: l ·OLJ. four minutes to break the con· z~r~ic (Eto1 3 o. s1a.»~v 1LE11 11=: 1e-:: a~ck-1. Hc•lck tMl t . Cardin••
test 'wide open. Lo a r a 3'\b 6,~••t .... 1 io:'""' iLlll 1 Mii11er 1M1 J. we1tqc1e t El. Time: 1:11.9. (ECI J. A~hhna ILBJ. T1rue. J.1 a .IOI) ~•eto-1. Rollins. (Ml ?. Cardln.1 f outscored the.Chargers 14-1 in a.eJ 1M1 J Few1ey tE >. Tome: ~:ss.2. the last 3:5 1 of the first Mar ina !H l p a1 l"dl••n 100 Bon sr-1. s11kt..a~• <M> 2. Joh,..
?(!(> M~Uicv Relav-1 E~.;~,1 ll~•(k-~on 1M) :;. Mitxel•On IE). Time: 1:1t.1, period. el•(·.n, Mcln1vre, "'°°'nDI'·"" Holin~;i. •tJ Free RelaY-1. Marina <O'ConMll,
Th b r, S rlr:'e· ?·ll.I. K•n~, Jolln,I!<', Ca•dlna•). Time: 4:11.0.
e compact, ut ast, ax-1 ,.---------------------ons took just 15 shots in the .._
first frame but canned 12 of
them for their long lead. I
Attila, in the Person of John
Bogdanowicz, aecounted for
most of the damage as he hil
four straight field goals in the
initial scoring splurge. I
The count could have been
1
worse but Loara coach Virgil
·Webb began using substitutes
midway through the second 1
with his club leading 40-16.
Edisoii's tall center John
·Fisher was rarely able to
break free under l!'t'? boards
and picked up only seven
points before fouling out just
before the end of the third
quarter.
Both squads opened \V. it h
zone defenses but the outside
shooting of Denny Nicholas
literally destroyed the
Chargers.
The small Saxons matche<t
the Chargers' superior height 1
with tremendous speed and i
great reflexes Ji.nd a great
1
amount of hustle.
one
IRES
TIRES
TI RES!
60 0
l>AIL Y PILOT Pholo by Pill O'DllllMll
The only Charger to show
any effectiveness for the night I
was substitute ,forward Mark ·ON~ THE DRIV E ~· Fo~1ntaln Valle y's Da ve Lynch (44) atta cks the ba sket
..as Cost~ Mepa dcfend~r Bob /\usli n 133) stands by. Behind Austin is Scott
Neville. Costa 111 esa out!a ::.ted the Baron::-. 75-70. for its second Irvine League
Harmon. I ~ .~· ~~
J.Jarmon1 a sophomore. ler! r/;"ti:W: ~
Edison scoring with 11 points • _ )-~~
and \vas the only Charger \vho "" • · .. ,.~ · \tiin .
sccn1cd able to nutn1uscJcl ._....., ~· ~
Loura under the boards. ~~ if
Mesa i11 Tl1icli of Title Race e,,..
< v •I e
F -~~' Wrlqnl .>..rv. "''n10., w.1-0·· ~,,.,.,.,,,d ,00,
l Ol•I'
60150N !!Jl /flt~f !D ,
I ' ' l ' .,-" . J 5 I i ~ ~ I~
5oonl• 6nnoanow•u Wn· el•r "l•cf\GT~• l'J•bb
' l 11 0 1 i 1 0 • • ~ l!..ll 1~ ,J LOl\R,6. US\
Hy (;Lt-.:\\' \VHITE I II s·~r(t!ev 11nr rrn<"fJ i. Bob Aus tin was 1hc big noi-.,e r .. ,
' ' ' ' ' ~
O! !hf D•oly Pill! Stitt lt 1v;1s rcsrrvc Ti111 Sa!ios for the winners the firsl half, ~'n'~ 0 0 J 0
fn s \a ~1f'~a H i g h '.~
~~US\angs, ri('!..t•ri fo!· ;1 ) II l I'
division fin ish in 1!11• lr11111·
League and rn~~essors ,,f :111
uni1npiJ~ing :i -tl pr1 '·!l';t~tl''
record. are in !hi> \lurk of !hi·
loop championslull rnco 1ud.av
aflcr' outlasung r· 0 l! 11 ! :i ) !l
Valley's B:1rons, 7 5 · ;-O,
Wednesday night.
\1·hn put !'\cernr>'s lnrecs in tallying 17 points. lie Y.'aS hi gh ~~;.::g150n ~ j ~ ~
I
'
r d I I poinl produce r for the nigh t 101•1• score by Gu•rt•~n 11 19 81 1 r11n .;r goo <.1s ir 111 a pair ivith 23. 9 ·~ H u ... n
t.:f free lhro11·s 11·ilh 4 27 le ft to ljjijiiiijijjiij~ijiijjijj,,jij"'iji'l'il"ii'i' !'l'-~'P'i
The 1\1ust;111g~ 1r,1il r·,,
learlcrs Luarn <1ntl l'or11n:1 tl\·I
~lar b.v a garnt.> .<tnd !<.1i:hl1• 1l1e
J:i!tt'r Frid:i~· nit;ht.
(.'oath F.mil Nt'Cti1r's h11· !i-
had to pull Jl u11l 111 1!11· l,1.,\
Quarter after !hr I· ,,J !1;"l
changed hands nr 1h1• .1
wh~ t ied 26 !1n1£·s 1hiri11;; ti:•'
hiller batth·
Cosla 1\l\'S:J fuund :1
\l'f'Jk11l'~<; Ill !br l;J• ! ' \
lllJJllllt'::, ;:,; 111e B;11ons J-t"'l'l d
tn lire. Tl11·y v.1·r1· un:>1.:1· 1~1
get b:1ck on clrrrns•' :t111I \11r•
r-.·!u,sta r.g-s ridd lE'-l 111<•1 1! 11<th
sl101s lroin u11ur11ll'<i!h 1l1c
buckt•t.
13
JOBS
IN ONE
111:ike it 53-57. 1'hcn several I
:->ctontls lott r lie connected on
<i lav up ;ind ii 1v:.is 60-57.
'I llt• B<1ro11s st:1ved 11•ithio
tl11"('(' Ull\J I th e lnsl c 57 SCCOl~ds
11h e11 <i~aln Sulios ca 1n c
011 oe~;h. This ti1nc llc popped
111 anolher rharil,Y throw to
11 )<!!..l' I ~ i2-fi8.
' '
"
-'-" COSTA ME!tA (Ill
•9 fl "' lt ~ ~
' ' ' ' , . " ' ' " ' . ' ."I ll U f ll\JNTJ\IN VllLLEV (1 1)
19 n pf
' '
\; ''"" 1
' '
n ol
r· _..,.
'' ... , .• on
• ' ~ ~ ~ ,, 10 ~o
i ~,,. i.,;.,1•er:,,~: o,~M;;'s11 ,, ~ tnl
(<>·.,Id M~•a lo 13 15 11 -1.\:
l~OST
C.6.RS
'
RAYCO E.XPL$:TS WILL:
'1·.•..ect•H~••.,.•~d ""-,~-·~ ,o,11 1d1u1•, "\ •M
~"nl t loJn tM•r<I br•~•
'"em111y
)I (l&li •f141 !Ui:o-IWl<k
~1 ..... l\t!)'.~t !rOl!I W!\t:-el
··~· I) 11,~d j('>1 ·"-M:l>fOYf '"
.-.. --.. ~
INSTALLED
CHAIN-LINK
FENCING
EASY CRfOlf lfltMS -ll•yco It Now o fact<>ry Aw!ho•irttl
Co• Ste••• ond Rad;o R~poi• S..-..ice S1.,tlo"
WHITEWALL
!:~,~~~ s191 0
77S•ll "
1251114''
f ;lt fo,
Fi'"' Fo•
+ F .E.T. l .JO lo !.:M
f·71 {1969 Sl lE)
G-71 {1 969 SIZEl
f-71 {1 969 SIZEI
100". NYtON CORO & FULL 4 PLY
OTHER SIZES BUDGET PRICED.
SPECIJ\l TREAD GIVES MORE GRIPPING EDGES
l"AEAD ON SHOUlOEIS GIVES MORE WEAi! IN TURNS.
NO TRAD£ IN! INSTALLED FREE!
SHOCK ABSORBERS
HEAVY DUTY -••<f.,c• 1J.., w •cor. In•
'"'' ••<• "•blo "'P'· s 1910 GI~•• ••••a comfort
rich. fill ""''' cau, palt
INSTAli.ATION INClUOEO .
t,t~ TIR ES
UST
E
OL D
SAT.
3 AM to 5 PM
To ~11ak e
Room F·or
lncomin9
Factory
Shipments
AL L TIRES
ON FIRST
COM E-
FIR ST
SER VED
BASIS •••••
Overstocks Too
Numerous
To List-
In All Price
Rgnges
\'/hile Stocks Last!
Calendar
WHEEL ALIGNM ENT &
FRONT WHEEL BAL. p1•h •.• widt Mlefflafl, Cl>ooll ,,_ •
"'"'...ciffl •nortn11•I 1f cokn, •tyl.t, pal·
te1111 & fai..k• 1r..:hllll111 vi"yf1,
DETROITER MUFFLE RS
OU!ET! SAfll INSTAlLA-llON f,EE . , ,
'10 MINUTE SEIV1Cf, s910
PIPE & IR.1.CKETS IN STOCI(,
3 Ways
to Charge
COSTA -ll.111tm..n -•etmrw JC '" Sff. .. IMl<;ll; ., Mllllefl Vle/O Hiii\ UI. ""!''~ -Htwliclrt 14.,i;,o, I' ""'"' ~ f), 1111 C:l&!Tie2: et VII I ',,~• .. 11; { :I )L C'Jll'tU II ;oldtn Wtf'
I " rpot ., Drll!lf llt ();JO '
~~POINTMENT $400
NEEDED. MOST CARS ~O A'INUTE SERVICE NO APPOINTM.ENT NEEDED '•EE SYSTEMS INSP!CTlON.
LOW AS
'1ESA,
c:; Cli
HUNTIN GTON
BEACH
4115" l .17t'I ~.ti! 64.6·24<11<11 16111C.acft11.,d, • 147·'011
Opo11 Man .• fd, 6 to 7.~01. 1!1 S Opttt Mon.-frl. I hi 1·$ot. 'tll I
• • ..
• t
l,
' '· l• •'
1 s ·~
I,
~t '• " '
. ,
WHAT'S IN-
OUTDOORS?
by Jock A-,
Stocked with more than 7,000 pounds of rainbow trout, lrvlne
Lake will open its gates to the general public for the 1970 fishing
season at S a.m., Friday. Russ Cleary, Owber and operator of the
Orange County Lake expects a large turnout for the opener and
predicts fishing shotild be excellent.
In a pre-season sampling of the Jake last week, sports writers
from all over Southern California tested their angling skills at the
lake and came up with nice catches of trout to 3\2 pounds and
bass exceeding seven pounds.
The 7-polind trout stocked last week eluded the hooks and are
still in the lake, and the chances are ·pretty good that a lucky
angler will hang into one of these brutes~QPelling weekend.
For more infonnation on the lake and weekend reservations
phone (7!4) 633·1520.
Vail Lake management reports that the rain over the weekend·
kept angling pressure down, but that Lee BenUn of Anaheim nail·
ed a five-fish limit, weighing in at U pounds, in the largemoUth ·
bass catagory. He also picked up six nice crappie hitµ.ng the
scales at 'Ph pounds.
Bentin was fishing with water-dog type deep running plugs in
about 25 feet of water.
Fish deep for all species of fish with bottom bouncing plugs
good for bass, weighted feather jigs fort crapPie and wonn:i _and
live nightcrawlers being best for the big bluegill.
Local landings are finding fair action for their passengers on
both bottom fish and surface action. Davey's Locker, Art's Lan·
ding and San Clemente Sportfishlng are all running fuU winter
scheduJes and the operators look towards increased surface action
as the off-shore water temperatures are rising daily.
A god bite of calico bass"off the Horseshoe kelp was recorded
early this week, and from the looks of the water &Ild water
te mperature a good run early white sea bass and yellowtail could
be just around the comer.
The whale watching trips are still being run out of Balboa
Pavilion,
Deep sea fishermen and sportfishing operators were dealt a
low blow this past weekend when the commercial anchovy
fishennen were allowed to increase their harvest a! these forage
fish by more than 100 percent.
It has been proved that this harvest has and will in the future
eontinue to ruin anglers' chances of catching the game fish which
used to .i~vade our coasUine prior to the uncontrolled reaping of
our Pac1f1c Mackerel and Sardine by commercial fishennen.
_ A letter to your congressman or to the Department of Fish
and Game in Sacramento could help in this political fight against
the commercial fishing interests.
HUNTING SEASON ENDS ON WET NOTE
The 1989 hunting season came to a damp end'Sunday, but the
hunters and scatter--guners of Southern California can Took.back
on an above average hunting year.
Even though the deer harvest was down and the · quail and
chukar hunting was not what it was expected to bt, dove bunters
and waterfowlers found good shooting fOr the entirt season In
most areas. AU of the duck clubs in the Southland boasl.ed a better
than four bird ave rage per gun, per day, over the entire season,
while the public and. state controlled shooting areas aV,etaied just
under three birds per gun.
The dove population was high and it is expected that both the
propegation of waterfowl and other migrating birds will be even
higher next year, providing ample rain falls during 1970.
Even thou~h hunting season has ended, hunters can still take
Hdva ntaee or the pheasant, chukar and ffighted mallard shooting
being offered to members or the private club locally.
Robbie's Gun Club in Fontana and Mill's Shooting Preserve in
Bakersfield will continue to shoot upland game through March,
and both these clubs offer shooting to the unattached hunter on a
daily basis.
This writer closed out the 1969-70 waterrowl season, with a
morning's shoot at the Roper-Ranger's Hunt Club in San Jacinto.
llunting \Vas fair as the birds wo rked the ponds all morning. Lou
Csenar, owner and operator of the club is taking reservations now
for next seasons shooting of ducks and pheasant and anyone in·
terested should call 673-2378.
Larry Coffing, owner or .the Laguna Hills Gun Club reminds
hunters and scatter-gunners that they could keep their eyes sharp
by shooting a round or two a week at his club.
Colling has scheduled a number of exciting shoots during the off
season, the first being a Escapades trap and skeet shoot this
v•eekend.
The shoot is for members of the club only, (memberships
can be obtained on the day of the shoot). and will consist of a 100
rounds of skeet, 50 rounds or 16-yard trap ·and SO rounds of trap at
the shooters handicap. For more information phone (714 ) ~1003.
The only open season left for hunters is that of vannit hun-
ting. Nimrods can find hours ot' good hunting in the back hills of
Rivers ide and San Bernardino coiinties. The only thing necessa ry
is a valid hunting license and also make sure that you are
shooting well off the highways and not shooting on private posted
property.
For more infonnation on vannit hunting contaet your local
spof'!-ing goods store or gun shop for hot sports and the proper
hunting gear.
Javvee Basketball " Ml-Ill Ult '>lurrfY (61 G
144) C~M
!16) Sumner .... ~ ( lfl ContOY
IH Klllefl'r
L•flertY C6l G w •• ,,, (2) c
Wallllng (10) F
Pttf Cll F "'~ Sett'9 ~' Cl•rtera
Ma;nalll ' 15 I} 1G -'' C"l'Ol'll d1! Mt r I 10 10 12 -31
M1tn0tl1 Sutl$: Adi:H'Mn Ul.
CerOl'll HI 1A.r IUDl!I : L.aoerloff UJ,
C~mtr<:1n ('1. C~l!OI (ll ll'ld OftU !6).
M.llr! ... CUI
B011<1e11 nll
Sande'l'I (lJf Bun (61
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F (01 Oonures c tJl av~~
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ScorJn1 1u~: MrrlM-.'llotrtf:llodl 10.
Sanl1 Ane-Arl11 t. Ne-4 Pitndi..
tori 1, Nall A, Praetor 2. ·
'"'' IW CINtttn Mll'IM U 17 1• 11 -J7
Sa"'llAll& If l 111 -.tO
-n• '· JO~' 4. WntmlA1ttr-01,. t llk 4, Mendo11 I.
H.tlttlmp ICOrt: NMllO!'T H1rbor 30, WH!mlnster 11.
ft-11111 V11111 l•ll Ull Cftlt Mn1 P~ ( 101 F (f) All~n
Miiier (•l F (?) Youn11 Slolball UJ C (•) RHO
Gerber HJ G (6) $1"""°"
FODlt 1101 G (1l Mfrdlloltltl
Scorlnt Wbll: (OJll Mtu -Ends·
lf-Y (ti, M•d.Nn ni.
Foi.on!11n VtlltY -C..-rl1te H ).
Htffllme: COlll Meu "· FOUlll•ln VtfltY II,
End al "''ulltlon: 3'-U.
tdl-!U) '' 011 i.: .. ni BYrc~am Ul F (Ul,C•ton Bfldl Ill F 1111 MKltod
C•rlMn 111 C (S) Hurford McNrv (lt) G (JI 111:~1
Thon\p1on f'l G (f) W.11:
Sc:or111t •ubt: lEI wm11m1 1.
Htlfflmt: EdllOll If, Lotr1 U.
trtrlldl flSI OJI SA V111W
• -. t. -
LIMIT TO' CLOSE TH ~EASON -Toni •Niemiee
of Newpoit Beach and Tustin. bagged her limit of
ducks· at one of Orange County's private clubs a s
.the ·season came to a close Sunday. Mrs. Niemiec
said shooting was great and is already looking for-
ward to next season.
Special Coot Slwot
Slated 2 Weekends
A special cool shoot "'ill be
held on the two weekends 0£
Jan. 17·18 and 24-25 on the
Imperial Wildlife Area at the
southeast end of Salton Sea,
the Department of Fish and
Game announced.
The special season, authoriz-
ed by the U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service, will apply on·
ly on the DFG Imperial
Wildlife Area, including both
the Wister and Finney-Ramer
units.
The special season is being
held to reduce coot depreda·
tion on the area's green crops.
Large numbers or coots arc
devouring the green barley
and other feed grow n
specifically for U1ousands of
wintering ·geese.
DFG Regioilal Manager
Robert D. Montgomery said
the following rules will apply
to the special .season:
Only coots may be taken.
FLYING FUN!
by WAYNE CHASE
Whit do lh1 win91 of 111
1irct1ft do7
They produc• the lift fo•ct
of '"' 1ircr1fl. Thr for.;:1
thould be 1lron9 111ough to
lift lh1 weight of the air·
plent. Wh1n the lift it m1in·
l1in1d !ht d11ir1d •lliludt
will 1110 b1 m1inl1intd.
Hunt permits wilt be ·free,
with no limit on hunter
numbers.
A hunting license is required
but a Federal duck stamp is
not.
Shooting hours will be !rom
7 a.m. to 6unset.
Each hunter must pick up a
self-service pennit at the
Wister unit checking station
on Davis Road about half a
mile south of HlgbWay 111 ap-
proximately five miles north
of Niland.
There will be no limit on the
number of coots a hunter may
take, but e<Jcb hunter must
pick up every coot he shoots,
ri II ou l the report section of
his permit and return it to the
checking station ~fore leav.
ing the area.
The DFG said it will find
users for any coots not wanted
by participating hunters.
tlir oul1rmod tip o" th1 l1it,
one on th1 right. N1•rlv .• u
p lane1 lod1v ••• monopl'"''
or 0111 win9 pl ants. Th• old
hipl•n• models are n11rly
110"·••<11•,..t 11c1pl for 1om1
•griculfur•I work and 1ky·
wrili"'9·
CllTHI i11 1"11 te• UI II HAlllOR AVIATION inti _, llllP you ..
•Sr yQ•r VA be11tllls It ltf Yl\lf r1lillgt. Wt w.iktm• yvv .. lly 11
ffll l>nl cl¥' rl!H 111 Or1n,t Cou111y. A prlwt11 IHI" court• ll """' un.ot. HAlll:IOR AVIATION.
IUl W1rn1r ""'·• 1.a-11111, Open fl"Olll QllflM fo Mlitfft ltlly.
"lrlnt II! IUf Cl>h!ll'I"' tl!4 f4' ytVr 111 flfll!t Irr en ry S5.ot." WHl'llllflrtwf' In) Oil Nl'f. H•r-
S<!uthwldt O•J ,_ llll Swltk FrllchrldOtl 001 F (3f Ed'lw1rd1 •
lfie •rr1n9tm1nt of the
wi1191 produc11 • fare• 11 •
••)'ttio"' to • flow of ,;,,
H1r•i11 !1 ft, •1ri1blt d••'<J"
ft•f3°r11 . Tht wing 1rr1n91·
mint c111 cltl1rmi111 mtn111-
.,,,,bility end ptrform111ce.
It ctn i11crt111 spt1d •l'ld
1t•bility. It 1110 cl1termin11
typ1 of tl<Ylc• 111cl t COllO""Y
of contlrucfio11.
Sie,..."' ll l F (111 K11mer Mor,_ {II C Ill Helvlt
Helt Ul G (") Clint
Brrw 171 G (1) khnlldrr
kotlr>t 111t11: ~ Hlrbar-lir-
Wrestling
Otlfffl Wtsl J6, V.CC I
11 1 -MorltY {GWI dlC. Zorldr;
(LA(C), ·u.~.
nt -Itek (GWI "9c. it'rlw•H
ILACC ). 11·1.
lU--McDllltlO(cl fGWJ won b1 10tre11. 1-2-!Curll 1•wl-W lorfth, 15' -Alltl11 GW -by .forftll. '1' -Vl ....... 111 ( Wl rlr\nltd l(lmblH !Ll~Cl,:_J:I*, M IGWI ll"'Md
F'r.o-! !~~CCI dee'. ,rle11
1~"a' !_-'·11:1vmond lOWI •liwf Allen ~ L.A'6)~$1t..1 ........... ,. 'J11--lki ~ -bf IWl!J!• l~ = 111~'° rn:Toc"tr t"..,.. *J'.i:· 1e,._ lord fltH , l.t.
10 -lo ~---w "'"'!, ISO -°M~'."1;'J COCCI pil'lllld cr:·~~W· c~c, Dllll'lld ic:r-
conltr en " !I B911dtr Sttw.rd ltl C ff) it'ltldl K••-nn c o•l Thom•• t.tlMIOrl 0,,. G (I) CtiM1n•"'-m korlnt 9'lbl -E1t1rcllo: Ll'ord s. w,coff 2, Hr,1 11 S111!1 Anr v.i11,r
Allmt"' 2, lll:odt''-1 2, Vaunt 1.
"'lft!mt: Ell111tl1 •• Vtlll' ti,
A wing it m1dt up of fw1
p111tlt, 0111 111t1ndinq fro111
lht crnler of .th1 eirpl1n1 lo
ONCE A YEAR
CLEARANCE ·SALE
Starting Jan. 15·31
SAVINGS IN ALL DEPARTMENTS
WATCH NEXT
WEEK FOR
"THE HUMAN
BODY IN FLIGHT"
""~~ . 'f§"' , ~
=~-.. -~ @£ .:;; w ~
SPECIAL .
.HAND :TAILORED
2 PAN\ SUITS 599so
,·, ~ ·, ... ~-. ~ -.
Thursday, January _. 1971) DAILV PILO.T 15
Southland Sport Outdon·e·
'
How Surfiiig Stacks . Up in New Zeal,and
By LOGAN Locl\.\BEY ot rlle Dlllr r11tt Stltf
of practice don't appeal to the fesslonalism in New Zealand
younger men. becomes more a p p a rent ,
Calltomia.,
All the faclUUes ll!d equip-ment the New Zealand clubs
hav~ are financed by dona..
Lions from fund ralaing cam·
palgn.s.
••• -
After yean of dedicated
v·olunteer. work. New
Zealand's volunteer-lifesavers
are· realizing that they must
have a professional organiza-
tion.
This has been brought about
by lack of incenUve for the
younger men. These men
would ·rather search for surf
than be on a non-paid patrol.
The growth of surfboarding several clubs are beginning to
1n New Zealand is one of the employ modern rescue gear
major causes for lack 0£ in~ and the use of paid men. This
terest in the surf clubs. Ac--advancement Is largely due to
cording to per-capita figures, the visit of five New Zealand
there are twlce as many lifesavers to California last
surfboarders in New Zealand summer to study U • S •
than there are in Southern methods.
Csllfomia. In Christchurch there are
This surfing population In nine clubs and each has one
tum causes more problems for paid patrol m~mber during the
the lifesavers because o( . slJ: week holiday period at
the mingling with the swim· Christmas time.
In some cases, the Jack of
members forces the complete
closure of a club and-thus
there are no llfesavera on ·~
patrol along stretches of beach
six ·· miles loog and with a
population of 5.000.
The administrators or these
younger patrol men are con-
cerned because they can't
command discipline. tr a
young man is told to patrol an
arell and he doesn't like it, he
just walks off.
mers. All clubs have at least one
As a result, most New modem rescue tube and some
Zeal'and beaches baVe flagged are coosldering the use of
surfing boundaries , v e r y rescue vehicles and rescue
similar to , those in Southern boats.
The only real incentive to ~in the clubs is competition in
cimivals with other clubs in
New Zealand and Australia.
Thls, however, is losing its ap.
peal loo, since the long hours
California. These are.as are A jet boat firm i n
policed by beach wardens who C h r i s t c h u r c h is now
have the power to turn of-demonstrating a new craft for
fenders over to I o c a I surf rescue work which has all
authorities. of the capabilities of the twin
As the need for pro-screw rescue boats i n
Introduction or modern
rescue technlqu~· used in
California is being ~ducted
by three Orange· County
lifeguards: Logan · Lockabey,
Newport 'Beach; PhU Stubbs,
San Clemente; and Max
Bowman, Huntin.gton.~ach.
The three men aTe leduring ...
at 60 clubs. in New Zealand
and are doing extenaive work
for radio, television an d
newspapers.
..
SAVE *11°0 TO •194o
REGULAR 7420
.ASEJ
"Mnt1um·r ..
4 Ply N)1on Cord
Contour Trad ·-... ~. 111.:• -'1.1:'."' . ... -l ,!iO I ll .... , ... .........
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NOW ONLY~.
FOR$·
NowonSale Save up·to$77&
GOODYEAR TRACTION
"Hl-MILER"TIRES
Nylon cord Tira IOI'
Panela. Pick11pe.
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w .. •33• -•39'"
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7.35114 ....
1.151 t• • ..... . ... u .lr
1.2$114 ... • u,,,
•.~5 I 14 • ,,., ... ... =~ " "' • ... • 11.n •
l.f:ll15 ... ... $!.lt
1.25 • 15 ..... M. ·~ .... "" 1.5 J 1 .. • ' • ...... w><
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• Tough To&yrt ?llbber Jot strengtb ud
long mileaae
...... Ihm ..... '"-od ....... pd trllCllon to Start-Stop -rain. OI' thine
YOUR CAR BATTERY 30 MONTHS 010?
TRADE NOW! AVOID HARD STARTll& PROBLEMS
a
$888 .., •.•.• "'· .... ,.,...,...tm.•.J. Olle~fdcel : =--~'=· . --~.;;.
Air"dda , ...
lmpect plVp: checlc and.reHt .timing I:: point•: edju.tt
c.rburetor A choke: c:le1n fJJel bowl. •ir filte\' I: bitterr;
check 1an.ltloD wlftt. conde:p11r. diatributor ca9, ll•rt•.
rquletor, tnen:tot. f11l btlt, cylinder comp .. ·.•.1tery..,
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............................. ••••,•• ••'.•• ...................... .
I '' • •. •'•'····-' ~ ••
SERVING 4LL SOUTHE~N CALIFORNIA
YOUNG & LANE °TIRE CO.
. ' ..
U96 NEWPoRT
Ph, 549.9)13 COSTA MESA
"'II"" VE U
iiw· ~'°i.,nt COCCI OK. l'l¥0M HAllOR CINT!I • 2JGO HARiOlt • COSfA MISA •
' -......... ,.,, "'· ''""" MONDAY; THURSDAY. •RtDAY TILL • •.M. YOUNG & . LANE TIRE co. 492 OCEAN A N E !~Cl, _!-l'O'•h•~llOfl HllHI -.... Ph. 49~ LAGUNA •
~~t~r~l:J..i°'1\xcJ ~nnH ll • ..::::::::...;,P~h~.~6~144;f>..4.;.:,241;;;.~~-·..;;°"";:;;~n~e;_;K~l~n=9;•~C;h~o~r=9;•.T~od;;;•~Y~,;;;;::;:;::;;..,J·!l..ir.:::.....: .. ._~;ltii.,. ..... .,..llCJll .... S!!,,,,,:.1!11olll ... .,.,,,.::S ....... · .. 1111 .. .., ................ !lll~llllJ OD•nlll1n Ul:H l. t:10. ••
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•9 DAllY Pll 01" Tllur1day, January 1 1971) :~"'--.,_..:.::.---'-'---'-'~~~~~ ~-
TUMBLEWEEDS By Tom K. Ryan
MAN! 11'.S Ei~T1'HAVE Mf HORSE ~DER M5 A(1AIN!..:10 FEEL 1Hl\'I
t--"""':-iSTRNNIN' MASS OF ANllML fN!:RGY
EAGER10SURGE
FORWARO ATM'(
COM/MW!
PEANUTS
. ___ _
J...E'S 60,EPIC.90VJ L.E.'S .
RIPE:! !.E:S IJURN'THE PUST!
a..WE1HE WINDJAVIAV,
!JIG' FE:J...l..A !
AWAV!l
---~ PLAIN JANE
... ____ _
!HAT'S
R.JGHT ••
THEOl06lCALL~. WE'RE
OFF THE HOO< ! PERKINS
TELEVISION VIEWS
Fun·packed
NBC Evening
,_~
JUDGE PARKER
PLEASE, EXCltSE • FOR Cb'IMG, 'feS,
Jl"6E PAJ:l(EJ: •• arr nus WT 11\Rs.
1.-.'r..t-...-. ---->-IS .). ts};._
WOULD JT' BE All rl6HT
F I S1tJIPPEC' Ill II nfE
MORNlll6 1EFORE I
MEK HAS 8fEtl A lltGtnMAIE! MlllUS~
THE c.Hi\N6E IN art Hi\S IEEJf
60 10 ""11' <:
By CYNTHIA LOWRY
NEW YORK (AP) -It was one of those NBC
"Multi-Special .Nights" Wednesday -three pro-
grams in rapid succession, each designed to create
fun, laughter and a sense of well-being.
The 21h hours bad marked ups and downs, but
there was considerable diversity, some pleasant
singing and dancing, Jots of 1stars and, once in a
while, a chuckle.
THE EVENING started with a pilot show for
a series, "The Shainefu.l Secrets of Hastings Cor-
ners," a half-hour comedy that was a parody of
"Peyton Place," every soap opera on the air and
-in the courtroom sequence -"Perry Mason."
"Hastings Corners" had its moments, but it has
arrived a couple or seasons too late: "Peyton
Place" and "Perry Mason" have departed into re-
runs and the dayt ime soap operas are rarely seen
by the male half or ·Lhe nighttime audience, so the
satire wa s lost.
Next n1as a pleasant hour of song. daoce aild
wry sketches built around the unpredictability of
womankind.
GENE KELLY starred in "The Wonderful
World of Girls," strolling easily through his mu si-
cal numbers and handling the sketches nimbly. He
had some very expert help from Barbara Feldon
and Ruth Buzzi but the show dropped occasionally
because th ere was little or no unpredictability
about the sketch material.
Rowa n and Martin followed with a special
dedicated to one of television's favorite games,
making fun of television. The show kidded , in
slcetches and blackouts, everything from TV news
departments to the commercials.
They, too. had some expert help -Carol Bur-
nett, the Smothers Brothers, Sammy Davis Jr.
and cameo appearances by other stars.
ONE SER IES of blackouts was pegged on the
premise that television had changed 'lhe course of
hi story: \Va shington crossed the Delaware in search
of a TV repairman, the 'Ntanic changed course in
mid-Atlanti c to pi ck up a better TV signal.
The sta rs, \v hile involved in a lot of cos tume
changing and parts in the sketches, stuck pretty
close to tlJei r fu nctions in "Laugh-In" and were
rarely the cause of much hilarity.
TUESOAY NIGHT'S "Movie of the Week" on
ABC ran about 12 minutes short becau se so mebody
started the projector for part two of "Foreign Ex·
change" \vhile several minutes of film were left on
the projector unreeling part one.
This resulted in the omission of a big chunk of
action in 1nidprograrn and panic at the studio when
the program unex pectedly ended early. They gralr
bed a handy reel of film and slammed it on the air.
This viewer th ought the sudden movement of
plot, \vhile confu sing, was just sloppy film-cutting
and bad editing . Almost 350 viewers called ABC tO
ask what was wrong. And two called to congrat·
ulate the network on the fille r program, a mini-
documentary on the Revol utionary War that wa s
never fini shed.
Detanis the Menace
'1 TOll>llEV YOO ~1UE eEST 'WELi., i.£~ Tl1:f IT
~CAl<e~IN 1llE WI/Ole #f'l':llW ! • °" \l%IZ NOlllEJZ .•
• ,,
I
I
5HOCJ<ING! M:ll\.P 'IOI
COME 10 '5EE llM?'
MOON MULLINS
TM15 YIAS A HAL 5MMT ..,.,;,
KID!-·)r«'.JT MUOf TRAfFk: ON 11#$
BACK fll)Al>f -NI TIE PJWE~
NEAR<.Y"5 6-
AS Cll 1!£ PU<!!
>STUPID,
DON'T JUST 'O"TAND ,...._ _
"TI-\ERE.' DO
SOMETHING!
GORDO
• .MARCl~1 S .
.KfL.l. '( .s'cHOOl.
EMPORIUM
~ ..
• Usec:t Boo\< r . S'Ai,e:
J ~<)I ~011.l(f r
I . 1. o~.
r
•
PO 90METHINGI ·•
I'M 'FREEZING!
T+-llS WATE'R:S
1CE coi.ol ·
MARCIA, TM!$ 9'l:ll<. IS 'TOli:N P~S AICE MISS~ANO 9£SIDES, :r ~ A1.f/1£1<,rJI/·
REAP rr:
•
~ -
--; r·---,--,--
b
J
• • • • •
•
ly Frank la9llllld
By Jahn Miies
. By Harold Le Dou
YOU'RE 50 t:'INP 1t> TA.t:'E 11-115 TIME
WITH ME! I PIC>N'r KNOW WHERE TO
TURN! evr UJn. MAS MENTIOlilEP
l'OI SO OFYCN! PERHAPS SEl!:IM6 a Will PO SOM!T'Hllf6 FOR HllA!
By Ferd Johnson
·-El~c,AIJSI!' l «lT Mil> TOl>).Y ~ WJ coo PA-ST .AU. Tl!Ost= l>~SS
51fOP WINDOWS ON 11lE! WAY HOME•
l·lf';
By Gus ~rrlola
l'LL.
CCNSIO!>RINCi THAT YOU
.-Re A UUl..L<8t.e R:>Ol.
BLJY rt; wrrM0tJT AN OUNCE OF
9Llf SOI-~LES. RESIST ... NC~ :r
ISMOCM ~INI< SOI 15 PR TY
TOO CHEAP ...
Hf<itl-
•
-,-,--r .• -.
T 1 l u ::' " r :. r
JANUARY 15
• • v
By Charles Barsotti
~IO
91mtN!1'1 ...... ltlrl
(C) Dnimctlc *'1 of -tf Alner·
kl'• ir•tut ,.,,tf'L Ill""' _,,,_ (!OI
mw--•-tcl Im Prl•llrtl (2 hi) '\ol Apuroa d•
los G1llos."
""' 8 llc -(CJ (60) ""' ""'''" D-ICl (IO)
D Chrysler Presents Bob * Hope Christmas Spoclol
with U.S. Servicemen
All Around the World 8StM .... cq (90) Gullb IN
Kalt KIWlll', om4 W1bOll, London
ln Ind All Bibi.
U L.A. TV DEBUT·Georp * sanders In "CAIRO"!
D 9@ ID lllllllD"' ""9 Cltrlst11111 SHw {Cf(90) Rlmtti
hifhlllfltl ol Hope's ChrlltllMll tour
ta enteittln Arntrlean Slrvlctrnll
st1tlontd In Gtnn•J:IY, ltlly, TurHy,
Th1il1nd, Vlttn1in, T1hr111 111C
Gu1m lrt 1howft. Ho,t's ~ in-
cluded Romy Schn1lder, T1rau
Graves. Connlt Strwtns. Sw-1nn1
ChtmJ, En Rtubeir-Staltr (Miu
World of 1970), tll• ll ctrls of
Th• GoldcllUtrs of 1970 11M1 Ln
Brown and hb Sand of Rt!IOWL
9 lnln& (C) (90) Eddlt G1rd1
vs. Cherokte Piller In • 10-rolll'Mf
ll&frt'll'elcht boL1. (Ttnhtlw)
fJ Sia O'Cledl IHvie: .. C.111" (Mn·
P1nM~r11111) 'U--G.torp S1ndln,
Rlcll•rd Johnson, f1t1n H1m11M,
Willer RUii. Tiit C11rt Mu1e1111 ii
UM settint lot • d1rrn1 robbel)' o1
Its v1lu1b!• 1ncltnt 1ema.
0 Did: ¥111 D7'e (30) m • fUftbloHI 1C> <30> m ... '"' (CJ (60> llll IIl ... -(<) (30) ID W'Nt"• JtnT (30) "Roamln1 the
Srnlthlonlln." Skulls, lbletons. ind
tools from "'1n'1 past. a CIJ ca -!<> (30) II>""" ..... (30) m ,..... <t> <&0> J1c11 White.
u llll mm -tcl !!OI "Th• l"llra• b F1mll1r.• S.m••
t111'1 mother pub 1 1111d Olll D•rril
Whlll I'll obi.ct-lo 111¥1111 I Wlr•
lock u his dlu&h"'1' teed'ltr. Jfl!I
Rnblnto11 ruests.
mn. "' -(CJ (60> m--(60>
l:lO D -•-IC> (60) IJ T1ll ...... (C) (30)
ED NET ,..,.._ (C) (2 hr) "'Mt·
mile." A t111Ybion 1dlpbitl011 ., tttl
N1tion1I Th11!1r of 6h1n1'1 pmlue.
t!on of H•mld tllold In G11t111t"
dr••·
m., •--(CJ (30)
llll m""' •-(<O)
·-..... -(30) 18@-lo-(CJ (30) ~DOfJQt (l)ta --fl T• a. T...,,. (30) "To I.Ni (fj "£ielpl ,,_ Flrt tmt•
,,.. llM lcoordtftl to y0111 Nilure (wut1rn-dr1m1) 'Sl-Wlllllm Koll-
11 C.1111111 LovL" Curlna IOClll prob· en, John fonyth1, .fil•l'IOf P1rk1t.
lems ltill Clll colltrlbutl to 111ental A 1roup of Conftdertl• pritone11,.
Htnm is the dlilf 11111 of Phil•· with tM aid of • bnutfful South·
dilphil'• Jiff.,._ Community y111. tin 1)1Jlllllhi11r, pl111 11 ucapt
t•I Hltltll Ctnttr, tp0tll&htt4 to· from • Union strvnll'lofcf.
n11ht 1 O @(J)&')T• Je• fC) (liO)
-CIJ--·-(30) ) Guests: Ga11 Gobel. R1pb1tl, "°'" •-Shthi W1lll1 ind Tiii Rntals.
.,_,. (C) (10) m-,,... !<> (lO)
mn.t '" (!O)
t;JOIJ•--(C) (30) Im• Ward.
II>"' - -(Q (30) ·fll-..... (!O)
1:111 u a CIJ ·-"''" tt> ~> Mr. Fnnch, luffy 111d Jody '" ll:JO fD De ~ (Q (60) (II') ••rootMd 111 1 bllntrd wtine 6riwl11J
'
to Vermont te Miit Unclt l llL II Cydtil (30)
lllllJ(j)ID--tcl ll:OOfJDU•.., (CJ (60) ''hf!IM ......... " 8ooM.
''" Coopet .. I hl1oW ,..._ D"' ..... .
•r1 11dff .,. Patriot '""" IR ttllir liJ ~ ...... ,__. (...,...
d•rinc tlCIPI lrom till Brltilll. John mrt'err> '47 -""""""" loprt. Dwktloll fWlls. Lauren ltcaA, 1c1m MoonhtlL
u,,..,.,._(CJ~> m..,... ....
r r· i r t, ,
DAmME MOVIES
t:OI D • .._, T'*6t"' (dr.,•) '57
-sttrll't Wlllt111t111, °"" '"""*"
uoo-......... (od·
ftlltltrt) ·•~Victor Md.trlen. bl
Hitt
Cl 1Jlt 11 Ult l1!11et• (d1tm1)
'SS-Alcmo Monttlbt1,-Aftnt l1n· ....
m "' s.w. • 1t111 ce>
llllCIJQ)@Qt(I)-ttl aa m m .... (C)
1:00 R lhW~ "fral S_,. ftl'Wm)
·D-Robtrt Ry1n , lt•ftdolpti Scott.
M111 Jlflreys,
DU•,.. (CJ
II_..., ••--Ill llJ w.. 'l1ltatn: '1ltt .........
m .,.,," o.. ~-,,.,,..
bi'y·dr1m1) '47-lur,.. lllllrldllll.
Dulcie GrtJ.
11!«1 8 -ru{IM la Om" ("°"*'r) '3J
--fredrlc M1rdt, C11udttt• Colbert.
i,io m .. ..., "' ,... (~..., .,.
-Jolin G•rfleld, lllldtllfne Prllll,
"""""" ........ (.,,..,, .. , -811111 Oortt..,,.,
m '\ttt ., .. ...,..,.. (••·
1111) '$5-J1m1s tr.It. Jll!I DlriL
4:l0 IJ (t) •5o1 If PtltfW' (COii-
«11) '52-8~ Hopf, Jf111 Rll*fl.
.'
----------------------------'---------------------...11
--------.. •
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'1~70
0
HOUSES FOR SA.LE HOUSES F.0.R SALE i'tOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES.FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE RENTALS
1000 Me11 Verde 1110 Huntington 8"ch 1400Huntin9ton Stach 1400 Laguna Baich 1705 CUSTO~l 3 Br, 2~i Ba, 2 1,;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,l'::::!~;:;;DIR;T;Y::;F;A;;'.C;::E~:.::; Gener11 1000 General 1000 General 1000 General
Hau .. 1 Unfurnished
Gener1I 3000
FOREST E.
OLSON
Tnc. Realtors
WHAT'! $1(950
MESA VERDE
Ne~ ~~:,~o~~C ,
neighborhood. CIOt>e~ lo
,ve1·yll1ing. Lot of room
here. Walk ·to the Coun·
ll'Y Club Fah'lvays. 2
tirf'placcs & !ll!rvice
port.ti for the "-'ife. 1800
sq ft ol livirr;; area.
llun•y on i his one~!
S29,9j() • 10'!1' do11·n pay.
ment.
Large 4 Br.,
2 .. Baltr
Everything Tip Top
lnc:ludlng ca.1:pcts. drapes
ntl paint. Sc11arate tnaster
s ite, ultra n1ock'rn kitchen
\\'ith built·ins. \Valk lo
schools and shopping. Spac-
ious family room, 'v a rm
1v o o d burning fireplace,
shake roof. Ai;king $-?9,450,
OPEN ~OUSE
FRI., I pm to 5 pm
Drop on by 2C61 Swan, Costa
i\tesa. & see how lovely a .t
bedroon1 Republic hrunc can ...
BAYFRONT
HOME
\Vith pier & slip
and room for a
large yacht
Exclusive Harbor laland Rd.
2 Bedrooms plus apt.
Large bayside terrace
with BBQ & l'-'et bar
$145,(00
Listed exdusively with
}~rplt.-, Cp.ts, Drps, m1ru1, GREAT BUY 4 lJ.nit apl. 120 yds, ft'Om
Pror. Land&eaped on Ji lot beach. Should gross $9,000.
w/sprinklers. 3 & 4 bedrooms, 2 b1th homes In $10,000 annual. Needs paint
5.5% LOAN L-Ill I H 1 8 & clean-up. Price, as is, Save annmv $26,0CXl on In!. 51SlU U unt ngton each. .. ~-$ $69,500. \Vi ii l.(ad!!.
payments. 549-1427 23 990 ilfISSION REALTY .J~l
LEAVING. Mus i sell lmmac. I
3 Br, 2 BA, fan1 rm. bit-Ins, L19una Niguel 17a/
cpts. drps, cov'd patio. Xtra Call (714) 962·1353
$17.5 ... Ir; up. Lge selection of
3-4-5 Br homes. AU areas.
Blue Beacon, &f5.{JW, C.M,
$140. 3 Br. Lge fenced yd.
Childi'l'.n & pflts welcome.
Avail oow. Bkr. 5344i980
S170. 2 Br, nr ocean. Children
& pet we~com~ Bier ~980
•hup. A .. lng 127,500. Mak• 10 AM 'Ill 1 PM , ••••••••
oiler. Owner. 549-1096 SPECIAL 3 Br, aJmost new. Costa M111 3100
GOLFERS Coun<ry cl"b SANDPIPER HOME$ No down, 7'h7o loao.1--------1
Villa. 2 Br, 1% Ba. Liv, din On Brookhurst at Atlanta Prestige atta. $29,900 'vith DESIRABLE
& fam. rm, pa lio, 2 car aar, !!!'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~'!!!'!!!';'!~!!!'!!!~'!!!~~~~ I just $450 closing c o s t , HO?.IE pool. $32.500. . 549-3760 payments ~ rent S250 ., Br ., L~ cpld •-· to~
E.ltbluff 1242 Lido Isle 1351 -"~ ""· ' .... ~. , ... .,,,, ~:i· Theater or Homes. air heat, Garb-dlsp, blt·lns,
Newport Beach 1200 BLUFFS _ "'L!ncltl" plan. LEASE/OPTION Jrpl<', patio, garage, wa!er
Mod D R1 Choicest greenbelt loc. in 4 BDMI, 3~3 BATH ••••••••• furn. Adults only no pets. em Ur1"1eX&S adult area. 1-Slory 3 bdrm .. 40(Xl sq. tt. JOT Via Eboli. RATE REASONABLE
It's no mistake? A beaulilul
to1vn. home all ret1dy 10
move right in 11'ith \'ery lit·
tie furnit!U't'. Prit•e includes
up to date built in rang!!,
ovl!n. disposal. 11•ashrr, dry.
er. drapes, carpeting, pri·
vate patio, club houSC', and
super pool. No 11ualifying?
Take ov~r low . lo1v intere~I
FHA loan. Fanla.-;ti1: bar-
gain!! Bl'llC'r hun·y dial
6'5-0100.
/fDIJli,.. COAT$ ~WAL~C!
REALTORS
---546-4141-
On The Peninsula 2 baths; lanai. Lge_,,v11.lled 3 car garage. Crpls, drps. Dana Point 1730 [ Across from Country Club
I """~"""""""""""""1 2 BR, fireplatt, enclosed gar. pallo. 0\VNER -644-45M 2 yrs young, f.IAKE OFF. ---------2TJ Mt'sa Dr. * P h. 548-6706 NEED MONEY? ag\! ·each unit. ~ear beach. ER! Ownc>r, C:2131 244-3101, 4 BR RANCH STYLE LOVELY To1.vnhse~ 3 Br. 2
Only $54,960. El Toro 1244 eves 1:213) 246-0700. Plus family room. 3 Baths. Ba, Nu w 1v shag. 7x19 cov
To buy a new home! lnvesti. On Balboa Island I=========' I Nice l'Csidential &·ea. Com· balcony. 2 car gar, priv
gate our l[Ua..rantffd trade 3 BR Jo"'·er + 4 BR upper, LAKD'RONT -Lake Forest Huntington Bea ch 1400 pletely refurbished y 0 u r patio, Wh\ Yd maint. N1· ASSU ME f HA LOAN '"l::::::l(Open~~E:::lven;:i;:nasl~:J
But here·s your chance tol•
58\'e u. Just take ovl'r tan· Formal Din1'ng Room in plM, Let "~ an-·-, -u, I bit f;~ $8S Ne\v 2 BR, 2 Ba home. Lu.'<· h · · pool clbh•· $235 L ...., ,, .. ., ~~ e ec na, ..... ..,.ace, ,000 c o 1 c e of carpet color. · "'"• sc. q~stions \\'ilh no obligation. Riddle & Ross Rltrt. ur!ous ·shag crpts, drapes. SAVE $3,000 $29.500. l.o11', to1v doii•n. 540-3069 or 63!)...4248.
t>stic low ;"'""' FHA looo.
No qualllying! 3 bedroom. 2 Executive .J bd1m 21,i bath
bath Collegc> Park estate Tur!le Ro c k B1"0adnKlOr
horiii. · Sepnra!t' paneled home. Large fiimily room,
Fair enough! li1a E. Coast HWY,. 6T.>-7225 Boating & fishing in front (Bl'okers reel POINT REALTY COl\t PLETELY ri!dec. l BR ya r d. Poo l, ten n l~. ~"~""---fl n. •p N d NEWPORT HEIGHTS Large clubhouse pri\'I. Belo\v for Sale by Owner ~"""'st WY ....... naPolnl r. • ew cpts, ra-pes. Colesworthy & Co. 4 bdrm 2 bath home . dining market price. 494-846.'J 17141 49f=5323 t'nced yd. Xlnt Joe. No pets.
room & run1pus room g 2 only $49, 900 Ma'< 2 child. 548-9737
family roo1n. Underp~'iced Jormal living 1uom, mini. "Agcnl" "For A \\'ise Buy ..
for area al $26,9.JO. Be 1>nurt mun1 yal'd , atrluo1. 3 con1· 642-7TIT ORANGE COUNTY'S
LARGEST
Ii.replaces. 2100 sq ft of llv-Corona del Mi r 1250 2 yrs old So. l lunlington Apts, For Sale 1980 LOVELY New j Br, 2 Ba,
ing area · needs some!: paint Crest 4 Br with lgc master crpts. drp~. b 1 I· in!\, see today. Call 64.>-0303. inunH y pools. Fee simple. li;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii...,
tNe.'i:t to UCIJ RARE TURTLE ROCK 2629 HARBOR BLVD.
546-8640
·priced for !minediate sale LIBRA suite, 2~2 Ba, lge family rn1, 17 UNITS By 0-.vner _ 1.4 clsh,\•shr, $230. 642 -5349,
al $32,500. FHA/VA • NO You need beau1y around 2 fire placei;, sunken dining acres. Attractive Financing. 548-8;,78 5 BEDROOM
SPANISH + VIEW
$42 ,500
RESALE OPEN EVES TILL 8:30 DOWN AV AI L. Call you! A'Petite Tt•ianon' is rm, deck with beaut. vie\v Xl11't Depreciation. Gardl'n -1=0=R-0-,73-+~d,-,-Co~""-o-l'll5-0•1
s.iS-8424 (open eves) South yours in this serene 2 & d!"n or mt11s, city & coast. Pror. Atmosphere. No Vac. Rents 2 Ba, 2 sty + maintenance.
Coruit Real Estate. with musi-cal fountains & decorated & landsc:a 1>ed with due for increast>. Roon1 to Clubhouse, pools, near OCC.
Just Listed/Baycrest FRENCH DECOR delicate' French airs. L..ocat. sprinkler system. fully car-bld addt'l units. Current yr-S.114561 eves, 54&4761 d""S
SpacioUs uncro1vded 4 bdrms, t·' & d d I ; I 2 ~ Condomiruum. 3 Bedl'ooms, ed in secluded Irvine Ter· pc L" rape , centra a c, Y gross S 1,200. Total 3 R d famlly room & dining room. 2 bl 1150 000 o.11 B & en, College Park. ~-. bl 2 baths. Pool. Beau•:f..n .. i·ace at only S42.500. car garage. I-in,, inc. . . "" or T r d. Pool w/m••'•I. No ~ts-. .....,sira e street away from ...,......, d' h 1 I ·• 67~ ~.•c..., " ..--"'"'" ma.intaJned. Hal Pin .. h in & Asaoc. is was lei', au,,.,ry rrn. .,.....,~;..,,. "'" "0~= all 5 p.m. 'traffic. Attractive decor is-.. 8132 \V nJ .. ~~=-----~~ land kitchen. shake roof, $32.500 3900 E. Coast Hwy, 6T.i-4.'Ul2 962 e ock Circle. n4: RENTALS I CHE=~E~R~FUL=~2"-=B=R-. -.-.--...
LIDO REALTY INC. -6l2S ot· 968•7672· Houses Furnished ~ ..... evcrsizoo double garage. 3377 Vii Lido 67J..7300 TOGETHERNESS BETTER THAN NEW! no pets. I child. $145 mo. 773
10°/o DOWN Newport
Call w sr>e this. $69,T:il. e DUPLEX e Two 2-BR. homes joined by LARGE 5 BDRM! Rentals to Share 2005 \V. \\'ilson. 54&2802
J Uit aJfOPfrom theOCEAN. acy for the \vl'IClle family! •.~.r>'ey iomc w/al improve. -1st-last mo rent. 200 1 Pete Barrett ~ kitchen & dining a.real!. Priv-'~· I I I ---------1 Si\f 3 BR, no gar. child, pets,
645·0303 Newport Heights
at REAL TY 3 Bdrm. & 2 Bcl nn. plus 2 Lge. liv. rooms iv/high ments. Huge rock frplc. GIRL \\'anted to share 4 BR Charle. 548-5044 guest roon1. bcan1ed ceilings. 50 Ft. view l\1ust sec to apprec. Only npt \I'/ 3 girls in Newport
al Harbor Cc>ntei· O\\·ner 11•il! ca1Ty 1st Trust Victoria 16()j \Vestclill Dr., NB Reduced to $5l.500 let & only $49,500. $35.950. Beach. S62.50 mo. 615-6374 11\f!\fAC 3 BR. 1~ Ba, frplc.
642·5200 ~ Graham Rlty 646-2414 OUR EXCLUSIVE HAFFDAL REALTY or 494-8898 aft6 pm. Nr schls & shop'g. 54:>-4529 -I! ho B c' Deed. 4 bdrms 2 balhs. huge •..v;> ar r lvd.. .,,f.
1,..,,.,,.,,.,,.,,.,,.,,.,,,1 living 1oon1, lir<!place +
MESA DEL MAR large farnily, Heated pool,
dbl garage, shake roof.
646-1811 I lii========= I Nc>ar Newport Post Office Universfty Realty 673-6510 842.4416 3 \Vorking girls would like or 673-l4J4
(anytime) BY O\vne.r _ Eastblutt. 3001 E. Coast Hwy .. Cdill 51;4 0;0 LOAN same to share 3 Br apt on 2 BR house, garage, fenced, $22,950 BUILD INCOME Balboa Island. Call alt S:30 no hildren. $135 mo. 182 E.
F 0 U R_ BEDROOMS, large beauti ful view, 200J sq ft. 4 lo a~ume. Pymnta $167/mo. \Vilson. 642-0530
Cute 2 bdrm & den, near bdrms, 2 baths. family Ocean side of Hl·Way 3 BR, lg fam rm, lg. lot. ~p';m;::·,,6;;:"-;;..;:76;,15""'"'°"""°~~
doii·ntoivn C.fiol. & City Park, room, panel ling. 750• deck. Little old houSc on rear of Prictd beloiv market. Sub-R ESP 0 NS IBL E Empl.
i"fas rl'<I brick Heatilator I ·• 14 6 5 0-0 R ' I I Ke al P ho Id
living room, family room
and built-in kitchen. M:is!er ,Vlf1+9'1·· • Lachenmyer Mesa Verde 3110
bedroom oU lo ilself 11·ith its ,~---•1111 mmac. co'""· . . 'w o . Y -mi! down -2nd TD avail. l'l'SOn ~· \\"OU apprec
fireplace, fruit trees & 644-1762 F itxmorris Rea lty Co. * BRASHEAR RLTY • sharini:: niy beau \'W h1n. el'-'n p1iva!c bath. Recently Realtor
proiessionaUy rtpa!nted in-1860 Ne11•port Blvd., C:v! Jargl! lencrd lot. For ap. y=o 3135 F:. Coast J!i.\\'Ay 160Cl2 B d S200 f.Jo. 644-2979 pointinent lo see, call BA ,. n. NT Apt suites. Fan· · each Blv ., HB , ;;;=c;';;'-;""'";-'=--,.-tastic view! Dix 2 BR. 2 Corona de! ~1ar 673·9010 8~7-8507 Eves. !)68.1118 1 \V0~1AN to share house.
LG. 3 Br, 2!.1 Ba, DR, All
nppl, Cpls, Drps, 2 Frpl!!,
Cvd. patio, Lg fe nced
landscaped yd 1v/ sprink·
Jers. Gardener, Garage. All
for $300. 1765 Bahama PL
549--1427
BA. Dock11. S•W,300 up. HOU)cS FOR SALE Chlldren ok. $140 month.
Helen l\lcKenzie, R I tr . Home Needs Family 613-731.'i
side and out. Fully carprt-CALL 646-3928 Eves. &16-229\l CHANCE
ed and draped. 0:rvered pauo1~=::==::::====:l r·amily honw. estate siz·
646-0732 Corona del Mar 1250 to appreciate 5 bdrms de· LADY share Hunt. ~h .
BLUFFS • 3 BR, 2 BA, split· I---------sired built -ins, bca~Uflil house \vith same. Some furn
and fenced yard. ASSUM.E li-----, ed lot! Seautirul:? sklt"Y
1..ARGE LOW INTEREST DOVER SHORES with ' bdnns.-dining
V.A. 51.4 % LOAN. Priced to . . roon1, den, living room
Sell fast at only $28.500. Spacious view .home; 3 b...>d-1vith massive, used b1·ick ~l!"!lll!l!l~ilf!!!'!'!!'!!l!!/I!~ I rooms, den \\olth wet bar &
level condo. $29,500 or DON'T yard & minutes to the beach. ok. Prkg, .!!lrg. 714: 968-8178
I I •-o.............. All !or $34.500. ease op • ..,n. .,.. ...,,,., ROO~ff.1ATE Service -male
3 BR, 2 bath. Crpted thru·
out. Lrg fenced ya rd .
Gardener Included. Ca 11
67>7514
fireplace, 3 bathfi. All in lireplaet', Floating staircase perfect condition. 0-.vned 1\•ilh fireplace. High C!!ilings IP'-'1 give spaciousness to this by Corpot•ation. Anxious $25 5001 Newport Heights 1210
ltLxuriously carix:ted & drap. to dispose of propel'ty, , •
C'd hon1c. Owner must sell. Chance for a real bar· 4 Bedr m + Family Rm I---------
$82,5C1(!. gain. ASking $39,!};jQ. Loua house for tilUe money. LOTS OF LIVING
Evenings cau 531-j,570
0 h b l.."ll'ge open OOemed Jiving In this 3 Br. home built 10 n macna room, separate dining room, around a pool. + a 3 car
(714 ) 642-8235 18 f1 . recreation room. garage, $33.500. EZ terms.
Missing The
Back 40?
•-••t720 VOGEL ro. -Realtors 9C1 Dover ·orive. Suite 120 \iiiiiiiii .... i-i-i-=::1-iii=iii• J ~ · · Nowport !leach A . PLE'.ASURE TARS.ELL 2955 Harbor 2667 E. °"""Hwy. 673-2"l<)
ROOM TO SHOW Dover Shores 1227
Costa Mes• 1100 --------FOR BOAT This 3 Bedl'oom charmer.
Here's 1/3 acre PLUS in ., . Courtyan:I entry. 2 Baths. I---------
Back Bay 11·i th 3 lxlrms 2 4 Bedroom.' w bath ho:iie. 111 Delightful garden view from SPREAD ba~ & l5x30. !Xl<ll with div-n11nt cor:w:litlon. Lai~e h\'.tng family room. 2 Fireplact•s.
ing board. Try FHA or VA room with used brick fire· custom thruout '$46 500 OUT
or 10% dO\\•n. place. -Extra large covered l\1ary Lou Mario~ ' In this lovely 3 bedrooin 3 $27 ,500 patio. Kirchen with all built· bath t1\'o story featuring
ins. S2.J.950 • JO'i~ d 0 w n. • ..... _. _ •-large separate family 1'00n1,
Newport
at
Ready to move in. · .__, formal dlning area, oven;i;te
646-7171 -546-2313 double garage. Gigantic yard
Victoria
646-8811
Coldwell, Banker & Co. located on a q u i e t skit
550 NeWport Center Dr. street. S31.9!G.
Newport Beach, Calif. 54~2313
(anytime) l-~~~i"'~~i'i'~1 ;8~3~~0~7~00~~~~644-~2;430;, NEEDS .PAINT .
!:;:i:iiiiiiii====il\Vell built 2 bdrm hofnc ex-Unbelievable Value
tr.a. large double garage'. ac· Only $2t950 in the hea11 or
AN EYE OPENER ccss 10 rcttr yard, n.2 zone Costa M~sa. l~n1acula~ .all
The Grand Jury 11u uld 1'1'.0· . room to build, $19,750. nc\\·J.y painted in & out. High
der a unanimous verdict that DUPLEX C ZONE qual1!y 1v/w carpels t11ru·
this 4 bdrm/den_cali.fornia out. 3 bdrn1s 2 balhs, fam-
contemporary is a v.'halc of 2 bdrms each side, 2 garages ily room, all built-ins. Beau.
a buy, Assunt(' this 611.% $29,750 with tcrn1s. lilul lava rock fiNpluce in
FHA loan of appro.xinialcly Wells~McCardle, Rltrs. L/R. \Valk to schools.
$25.800. 1810 Ne\\·port Blvd., C.M •.
\-O"THE REAL
\"-ESTATERS .. f •, ,,., II'-f•'.'
King Sized
.f bdrm for growing families.
Oversized family room &
custo1n buiH • in kitchen.
Special landscaping & out.
floor lighting. E.xcellcnt lo-
548-1729 64~-0684 eves. ~·-·· PAUL•WHITE caLion near all sehooJs, ocx;
PAUL•WIUTE CARNAHAN & SllOpping C..nter. Full
CARNAHAN Pool + Formal Dining •aALTT co. price only $33,900 Now va-
0 cant for lns""ct!On C' 11 -a.1.1.LTT C • :l lovely lal'ge bdrms -big 1093 Bak c•~ "·'6"'40 ~ .
Dover Shores
New Deluxe
• 4 Bedroom-3 Bath
• 2 marl>le, l Roman tub e 2 mal'ble fireplaces
• \Vet stepdown bar e J:.e.rge IamUy rooin
$89.500. $20,000 dwn
8o/~ 2a yr. loan
OPEN DAILY 1-4 PM
1528 Anlirua \Vay
H. C. VALENTINE
646-5426
Impressive & Sp•eious
4 Br. 41·~ Ba home overlook-
ing Bay w/ scenic Mntn
view. Hlgh ceilings. 5000
sq. ft. built around court. -I
car gar. Maid9 qtrs. E·z
maint, Immed occp. All!urne
6~% loan. Owner. 548-7249
We1tcllff 1230
NEWPORT SPECIAL
A home of distinction \v/e.x-
tras such as marble fp\.,
brkfst room, cl.rcular drive.
elee. gar. 4 Br. 3 ba. $69.500
CALL ME Pacific Shoi-es Really or female $75 to $100. Bl"c 847 ·8586 01' 536-8894 .. A DUPLEX I '!'!!~~~~~~~~: 1 ,&:;;';:"';;"~· ,;":;:;.-0~1~11::,, ~c,:;·';;t~. =
Two bedroom and den. 1·1f H . Costa Meao 2100 Newport Beach baths. Quality custom built unt1ngton
3200
home . on Marigold plus a Harbour
spacious 1 bN:troom garage
apartment. Close In beach
and shops .•• Q\vner will
can-y financing. , .No loan
cost!I to you .. .'Save $$$ al
only $47,500.
673·8550
90 Lind• Isle Or.
Exquisilely decor 4 BR, 4
BA home. Crprd & draped.
lnd scpd. Boat !;lip. $.135,000.
Linda Isle Developm•nt
8111 Grundy 675-3210
Fountain V1Hey
140S
1410
ADULTS ONLY
3 Bdl'rns 2 baths, split level,
2 <'a r garagc>. Avail. Jan, 15
or f'eb. l . $275/mo.
Bay & Beach Realty, Tnt.
901 Dover Dr1ve, Suile 126 NB
6~5-2000 Eves. 548-6966
TOWNHOUSE: 3 BR. 2'h
BA, lrplc. patio, pool, 2 car
gar, all bltni::, crpts. drps.
L8c S275 mo. 1171-aBU or
&12-2497 eves or wkends.
Country Club Living
Putting green -pools, 3 Br,
2 BA. 25M University Dr.
67'5-6041 or 642~5
EXECUTIVE home, -I BR.
can furn partly. Adults.
Corona del Mer 2250 Refs. 2212 Margaret Or. ...;....;.,;._""-.._'-.....:=:I 540-6761.
~ . fan1ily rn1 in the C{lmbrldgel;==:=="=·=·"='·==~=~=: 540-11$1 Heritage ReaJ Es-
546-54'10 Series. A great family home.i• ,',.",,,',,.',.0"'~",.'!!!v!!"!!I."""""""' 1=========1 ~ 5'658!0 OPEN DAILY EMERGENCY"
1093 Bake1 , C.~f. R, C. GREER RHlty Lido Isle 1351 3355 Via LidO 673-9300 .;;;.:.;;.;...=;:_ ___ _ OCEAN View. 4 BR, 4 BA.
rumpus room, bar. very
large! New crpts, drps,
paint $365 Lse. 548-5766 or
548-5371
YES YOU CAN {noarci,,;,,,.th_) 2043 P•lom• Driv• '"
Own "' 4 bdmi home in de-L,LEGE REALTY Choice aren just of! Irvine -CIRCUMSTANCES 1500Adlmsa!Harbor,thl Ave. & 20th. (},vner simply FORCE THIS SALE -
sireable Coll egt" Park for MUST SELL TN JANUARY . '.-: bedroom home pill$ gUest
less than $225 per month. LIDO SANDS All oHcrs invi ted! All large house • large garage on
$5000 down. M polnb or rooms, close lo schools, alley· top eastslde location.
loan lees. Ottupancy In 10 5 BEDROOMS ho don't miss thi~ _ $2-1,000.
days er less. 2 Baths. Large yanl. s ps. "xcellcnt terms • what a
$29,950 ~' !46·5880 b>zy,
George Williamson f c~~nt1rclrltrn1t/lf1trt) +m;lf®£fJ 673-4350R~~~~~ Eves. 1s\i~=Na~:rI R~Y~ 1-o·THEREAL '0. E:>TATERS * 642·1771 Anytime * $24,950 $28,950
ll:il=======;:1,, 5 BEDROOM~ . 3 Bath&, Family Room COZY & CO~fFORTABLE. -b.."tthll. Dream built-in klt· Designed for Jiving &: enter-Quiet. traffic free location. 3
University Perk
'
chl'n. Covtred .patio. Owner faining! L ll tit e scmarate Lge. bdrms.. 2 iparklln; REALTY ~~ with f 1n1 n ct n g, family f'OOm with wet bar It bP.ths: family size family Univ. Park Center, Irvine
541).l720. seporate hnth. King bed· rm. &. 2 massive raised Call Anytime 83~20 Golfer's Paradise
Beaut home localed on 101.h TARBELL 295S Harbor rooms built·ios tireplatt hearth (rpl~. Seeing is l~~~~!'!'!!~~~~
grpen o<. 27 hole Bermud• DOVER SHORES S4o.in0. ' . believing & only $28,500
Dunes. fulest desert coul'!M!! B d N /V' TARB L 2 5 H bo Call 54' "'"' ( )
Roomy :l BR, 3 BA furnlith· 3 ran ew w ll W l'iiiiiiiiEiiL ... i;9;;;5 ... iiii•;;;riiiir;j ,~Sou~t:h~COM~~'!l~R~•~a~1°!~~';.~l~'_ve_• Pd ho1nr Inds 2 g(,H earls COURTYARD POOL 1· BEST BUY
Club m~ben:hlp avatl. Ae.k'. ~ bdrm11, 3 baths + powdrr $12,500 HD NEYMOON COTTAGE EXCLUSIVE UNlVERSITY
ing S95.000 . xlnt lt'rm~. room. panelled .ram rm w! and income on corner lot. PARK. Immaculate oond.
Lind• Isle Development frplc. FoniJal din rm. Frum C\lta Easts!d(! 1 Br, cottqe ~ :;:~:s 7~~ ur::t Tile roof, hua:t llv nn w/
Bill G d 67.S.3210 Sl OO,OOO, Roy J. \l/ard Co. on R·l lot. Only S3000 On. beamed celll,.-. 3 B<tnn, run Y 1430 Galuy or. 646-1550 ll det"d. Owner after 6 pm. 2 '·th, w-w crp•·, drp•, A. C. PETIITE !"'8.llor 548--2394 ..,. ..,
I Exttnili\lc ~ndsc11pl11j1; LUSK-EASTBLUFF 2100 llarbor. C.M. f>48.0S22 Ntns. CUJtOm l•ndsc11.plflll'.
2 Sty, 3 BR, 2 &\, xu·a l.rg Owner trans. 4 BR. 2~ii ba. 4 BR + Xtr11. Rm For Bu!. Takf! over 6~% IOM. You
tam nn. crpts. d r pa F'1m. rm. w/2nd frr\l . Lee-SAt'RIFICE! 4 BR. z BA. 934 \V · 19th St. Owner -1213) tOst tef, 333-2639
thru.-oot. All bltn!I. Patio. corner lot. Only $-19,500, sep ram rm, 2 sly. tl!'d pool Ta!).-t6'1T. &73--3448. 1 1~s~.;,Y;;;;O,.;U::;;R_::::A.:D:::._l N
111.950. $1100 dn. Bkr, CORBIN·MARTIN w!•llde & div brd. Nr e BY OWNER e CLASSirJEO'!' Som~M will
519-2'288 wkda)'s, Mo.58'1~ REALTORS 675-1662 tchools. $5000 dn. $f5,!'IOO. 2 BR. houMt on I~. R·2 lot, be tooklnJt for it. Dial &42·
l"Vt'a/wlmcb. 3006 E. C0i1st 1hvy .• Cd~t ;~::"::"::":::.. ___ _.;;.__ East.side/ Own/Bkr. 675-3031 ..5878
lrvlne 1238
UDO LOT
Cho~ 35 ft. street-to-street
corl'ICr Via lfavre. & Soud.
3250 l $3
7
'
500 I f1§•_@Elt.M G eneral 3000 Corona del Mer
OWSOO '\ rT!!'!mtll'" L•odlo•d• & 8•okon
3416 Vla Udo, NB GT.:>-4562 ** FJXER·UPPER ** Help stamp out broken-up 2tr:i~ .. ;:.~1e~1:2t0~~
Older 3 BR cottage, lots of hOuscs. •Piii & "-"tlrd ten-Acacia. il l 772-0367, S30459'J
3 BR· 2 BATHS ctinnn, plus guest apt, both •nt.s. \Ve tend qualifitd ten-or S3T-4ln.
Charming hOme on la!iC COT· wlth tantude oceo.n vtews. ants. """"-,,..=~=~~,,-1
nrr Jot. Prlvatt patio. AAktng $32,500. *SPEE-DEE NEWS* v~c.1.= y~r._~~~ 8::
$59,500 Rlvit"' Realty A~lul~ly Free .. ,., v
Call for App't. 3c.Q Coast Hwy 645-2464 646--3928, AGT.
W•l~ar Riiy. 675-5200 South t.aguoa, '99·1!00 * HELPI MUST RENT* Huntin""'n Beach 3400
3.lti6 Vil\ Udo, N'B Open Sun. 120 Yd1, to crashing surf. 2 76 lioustte a: ~pl!. MMt ---'"''-"-'..;..,.,_ __ I
$55,000-3 BR. 2 BA Sty, charmt>r. 3 Br. 1% ba. at'l':e.1. 1 Bdrm to 1 Bdnn. NE\V 4. Bd1., 11,) bl.., cpU,
119 VIA VELLA A steal ror cnly $39,SOO. $75 to uoo. }.v31J Imm, drps, bit-ins $223 mo. 1st ai
O\VNE~4 •714l 45'f-6i48 PLACE REAL-TY t ~ * ~I SUAn &tS-2464 * 1 last, Mr. Buker, 968-6834
·-------------.... --------..... ---------------~-------
DAILY PlLOT Thlll1de1, Jan111ry _ 1970
ITALS
HouH• Unfurnished
RENTALS
Apt•. Fuml1hod
., 11AL~ RENTALS RENTALS RENTALS
Ap11. Fuml&ht<I A~I>. Unlurnl•hod ~1., Unfurnished Aots. Unfurnl&hod ----------·* ... -1111!•1 BUSINESS and * * * * * FINANCIAL
Hun.t1npon &uch 3400C :::°'~'~•.;M:.;n~•;;;;;--:~41;.;00:;:_IC~oi;';'•~M~o~•o;•;;;;;;;:-4~1;100;l;°":;;n•;•;•;1;;;;;;;;;;;;;S;OOO;;;,jC;:.;•~•f~o~M~,·~·;-;:;;;:~;S:;:_IOO;;:I Huntington 8•1ch 5400
ioo • , BR. 111 a.. 2 •IY * SUNNY * 1 BR turn apanm••I. ms VEN DOME HARBOR GRElN_ S BEACH Apt •or Rent' ' BlkJ Condo. cptJ, dp11, stove. yrly, Shot'C! Prop·ert ie11 , , •oft Bch. Crpt & Drpa,
-I"•, wahrld-". pr i 673-9060 or 675--025.l Mature Cpla Only. No child • ... ~ ,,_ * ACRES * APARTMENT$ pal1o, pr\<&, pool, tlubhte, J BR, 2 BA. crplt, drpg, IMMACULATE APTSI SPACIOUS Call 962-4152 aft U noon,
t•nnt s c t 11 . Collf'ct frplc, dlahwhr. Year rowld. ADULT & FAMILY TOWNHOUSE LMNO OIEZ ORO AP'l'S. 3234
213/"""31 * Motel-Apts * 1175 per mo. 64>--0117 SECTIONS AVAILAllLE s. ....... adult. ramUy com-Atlanln, H.B. N•. I, 2, 3
4 BORMS 1-% baths. colTlt'r BLOCK To Ocean & Bay. 3 Clo1• to thopplng, P1rk munltles. Bachelor 1·2-& 3 br'11. Priv. gar, pool. Utll
lot. Vacant. 6 month or 18 1 signal~So. of o .C. Br, 2 Ba, w/W' crpls, drps. : ~=!:r'I, i Ba Bdrrru, turn & unturn aptl, _rm_. -~---•-r_s.1&-__ ,.,_,., __
month lease. $.U(l/mo. Bkr. Fairgrounds Sl95. 548--0797, 642-8400 *Swim Pool. PuVarten $110, per mo. 2 BR, frplC', patio, cpts, drps.
M&--4141 St .... lo & 1 l.cfroom1 1 BR, carpets. On octan. * FrpJ lndlv/lndty lac'lt , Avail llO\V, Avail 2/1, 1 & 2
•
.... _
"""' 3.Bdrms 2 bath.•, fireplac:r. $30 WK. &. UP S125. Utilitiee paid. '417 E . 1145 Anaheim Ave • L!lrge il'arden pauos ~~~;; apts. Lindborg Co.
Nrar elementary school &: Doy, WHlc, MHtll Balboa Blvd. 6'1:.-5810 (X)STA MESA ~ • Open beamed teillnis ,..._.
new Edison Hlil'11. $225/mo. • Kitchens t.. TV's incl. l::'.::'.::':~:;=~~=~~11;;~;.,;;;;;~~,,:;;;;1 • Flreplat:es • Ree. Rooms J-IUGE 3 BR. 2 BA. Crpti;,
Whodllyo Went? Whocldyo Got?
Bier. 54EHl41 e Phont i;trv., htd pool Coron• dll Mir 4250 e RENT e • 2 pools, saunas, nurser,y drps, bllns. Pool. Kld.s OK. SPECIAL CLASSIFICATION FOR
S32S :EXECUTJVE 2 11tory 4 e Maid service avail. school. $169. 968-7510 or 847-1594
al d
' NE ,ORT .LVD 2 BR, 1 BA, blk/occan & 3 Room• Furno•ture JMt-.fED. OCCUPANC'i BR, 2~ Ba, form 1n. 2376 W , b v· ..._ 2 BDRl\18, 2 BA. pvt, patio,
NATURAL BORN SWAPPERS
Spocial lloto
all bl ay, IC'\\', r n patio , $1 9.95 & UP 2'100 Peterson Way fr'plcs., huge lam. Ills. 541-9755 Adults, 110 pets. $l90 YtiY. Costa Mesa 546-0370 heated po o I, washer &
All 4 pm. 847-3627 --~l~G-1-B~O~R=M---673-76'29 1 :onth·TO.M1"1th Rentals Nr. Harbor & Adams dryer hook up. 962-8994
S Llnq - 5 tlmq -5 bucks
ltULES -AD MUtT INCLUDE
J-W ... I \lllf M W .. ft'HI, ~ft Y'4.f .. flt In tr.-.
1-YOOlt .._.. ''"''°' ....... fo...S hflft fl ed\'trll1l111<
3 BR. II< Both. lrg 2 "°'"" * * IVIOE SELECf!ON children ok. $255 rn o. 2 BR, Crpts & Orp~. Pool. DELUXE 2 BR. Adults: only. ~1nta Ana 5620 ~OTHINO FOil IALI! -T, .... OES ONLYI
ul\-A263 \V/W carpel.I, drapes, patio, So. of H\vy. Adil!!. $165, NO DE~SIT 0 .A.C. No pets. 998 El Camino Dr., I "~o;;c.;__;c;;_ ___ _:= PHONE 642-5671
~ t..e11S(', Call 673-8213 HFRC Furniture Rentals CM 546-045l FOR TENANTS WHO garagt. ~e to apprec1Ate.1 ~~~-------, -1517 W. 19th. CM 548-34!11 · · To Place Your Tr1dtr'1 P1r1dlH Ad
fount1in V1ll1y 3410 No pcl3, rouplt pre!. 2047 fil'.1A LL Furn bachelor. L11e NICE 2 Br & den apt. i14 ba \VANT TtlE BEST!· '59 Ford g convt. Good top,
Cha.rko SI, Apt B. 548-6030 cooking. ~lature adult only. $13S. 2 B.r 4-pl~)(, BHns, fqilc. Avail Feb l $175 mo: COCO PALMS-new titts, value $150. Trade
.t BDRM. 2 Baih, >1•/w, or !)48.9001 Closr to bch. 675-5359 w/w, c:hlld OK. BI u e 642-7508 SANDALWOOD ror color TV or good auto-
crpts, $235 mo. 6~2.f.!10 ~=~~~=k~~~-=~~~=.;,,;;:~~~\,s.~a~oo~n~,~645-0lll~~~· ~C~,M~==I ''=-"'--~----matic water !SO!tener. Call '"'" 545-2583 .,,~, $25. Per W . & Up B•lbo• 4300 · NEW •1'' 2 BR, 2 BA. Sh•• t STY GARDEN APTS .,.,..147,
B •·1 & 1 BR h d pool Co1ta Meso 5100 crpts, drps, lmmed octupy. L -k "" ··-···' J----------3 BR. 2 Ba. Liv . .fan1 Rm. ac .. .,or • t • 1;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1 1s~17'-~S~l8~0~,~540-~~l~9T.!~====I uxunouapar . .,..esUflVUI"" '62 Ford Galaxie S2'25, '59 ~k. -L drps. Elcc bJt. mald service. Kitchens & C'LEAN Ba h 1 A inas. Pri patios, pool&, crpts,
i 't' ~·..-TV avail. 4.50 Victoria (Nr • c e or pis. drps, frplcs. All elec bltn11. Cad. Sedan de VU!c $350
Ins. $225. 892-2498 Harbor). All util incl $8~ up MERRIMAC WOODS Newport Beech 5200 Nr 171h & Tustin a:hop'g, value: \Vant P .U. truck
We1tmin1ter 3612 31:1 E. Balboa Blvd. Just completed, 1 or 2 BR, 2'1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~! 1 ca1npt•r, trailer, or ~ ?? * NASSAU PALl\-fS * BALBOA ti73·9!14j BA furn or unlurn \Vith air1 , Adults on y. 646-5486
J & 2 BR. Pool corid, comp! soundrproofed, 1·2·3 BDRMS, 2101 Ponderosa I--'--"-------
3 BR, 2 BA. <'Pis, drps. bl!·
ins, hid pool. Pets OK. \Valk
fo 1Chl, S'L5. 5.16-9533 att 4.
~· S FURN, 3 Br. 0<.1'anlront Ap1 · Santa. Ana 542·6600 3 BR JIOUSE 177 E. '""'"' t. i;u.364j Balboa. Avail. Jan. 22nd. self. cleaning owns, wood SPACIOUS new 2 bdrm . 'sep 2 car gar.
VILLA POMONA Ideal for Students. CaU ceilings, ~swhrs, lush land. '2 bath. Nr. shopping. Laguna Beach 5705 S9th Wa. Long Bch. $22,5o'IO.
New 1 & 2 BR apts. Adults 494-1534 or 646-7744 5Ca.Plng Wllh streams & wa· M • S -A t $8000 equity. Will tntde lor
3705 "'
N •• E 1 ~ -~=~-~-~~-~1 terfalls, elevators, BBQs, arin•r. qu•re P 1• Stud·oo $75 same in Costa Mesa, o Y. ope .... ncos,,., gar-1 BR furn. Porch & palio clubhouse, sauruu:, jacutti & 1244 lrvnM Ave., N.B. Call: 646-Tn4
ages & laundry rm. 1760 area. $1.15 mow June. Util swim pools, p-iv gar. w/ 645-0252 Util , inc., 2 mos .. in advance 1---'=.:..:c::.,:c::... __
BY Owner: Le~ or buy Pomona. Also unlun'l apts. pd. 67:,..1573 )olorage. Everything 11 e w,.,'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!• I . S25 cl. dep, Close in. Single Lak<' Fo~st : Lakefl'Ont
beaut 4 BR. 3 ha home. SUS CASITAS OLDER 4 BR oceanfront. Starting at Sl<IO. Adultsl' penion only. Boating & l''ishing, Nu 2 Br.
Formal din rm, fam rm. Furn. I BR & Bach. apt!I. $300/IM'. Frank i'rlarshall plea~. Just East of 2600 FOR Rent Or Lse: Peninsula NEWELL ASSOCIATES 2 Ba. Home for duplex or
Canyon view, cul-de·sac, ZllO Newpon Blvd, Medal-Realty. 615-4600 Jlarbor Blvd, next to Naber• P l, 3 Br, 2 Ba on Balboa -494-6594 . no. S.D, C.Ounty land part
bit ' kit •-d il. I by ' •~="'-=======I Bl d t h n.. Crp Int. $11 ,350 equity, 494-846.1 ·In • ....,.ame ce ing, ion Hotpo1nt. 1 · Cadillac al 42S Merrimac: v · a t e ....,._..,an. Is, Sl85 · 2 BR, 2 Ba duplex.
dbl gar, prac!ic1.lly no yard BEAUTI1''0LLV }~URN. Huntington 8each 4400 \Vay 54J.6300 Orps & Blt·ins. $285 1no. C1·pt.'!, drps, stove, retrig. Trade S.F. Valley 5 br, 3 ha
maint. IdeaJ for children & 2 BR apt. Adults, no pet.'!. • Call 548-7889. Good Joe. & View. 673-4017 home w/everything + 5% o/o
entertaining 5300 mo or s145. + util. 7272 r.taple St. New Huntington Capri BRAND NEW OCEAN (ronl, Upper, 2 Br. REAL ESTATE assumbl lORn for 4-5 br hm
140,000. 4!M-8827 5t8--0l57 FOR SINGLE ADULTS & Oen. S225 yearly inc. uU. General coast area. 714: 527·9674,
CHARM 2 Br, 2 Ba.. Atrium, Where Living i$ Fun! Avail 2/1. 644-2627 _.:.;.;..:---"'------213; 430.Htll, eves 348-1788
cpts. drps. \Vhile \Valer MERRIMAC WOODS Custom 1. 2 & J Bdrm. Apts.
V1ew. Priv Bcb. L3e ~ Furn units avail, see Ad un. from $140, .f'urn. & Unfum.
owner 499-3638 der clas,, 5100. 12.5 Merri· (Just $85. F'urn.-Sh1u-cd) mac \Vay. 545-6300 LARGE, Newly redec. l-Br.1 ~==7=-,-,-~-Tennis, Volleyball,
duplex. Ocean view. Adults, QUIET 2 BR duplex. Bltns, Gyms, Billiards, Pools,
no pets. $150 month garage, patio. E-side. Saunas.
PLACE REALTY 1194-9704 Adults, no pets. 361 B. Ogle. ~i~l Director Arrartgrs
642-1298 1'~UN, GAMES&. TRIPS
Mi11ion Viejo 3708
2 BR. 11,:i Ba. Eldorado
Home. $210 a l\lonth. Call
837-1747 Ol' 546-4399
!\ENl.AL~
Apt•. Fuml1hod
General
Single
Adults
4000
Luxury slngll", 1 & 2 bed·
room apert.menUL. fumiilho
ed and unfurnished, with
complete privacy ancl IAnd·
scaped country club atmos-
phere including-S7SO,OOO
worth of rttreationaJ factl-
ities designed and operated
just tor .si~e people.
RENTS FROtit
ms to l3tttl
NEWPORT BEACH
880 IRVINE A VE.
IRVINE AND 16th
(TI4J 645-0550
GARDEN GROVE
13100 Chapman Aw.
(4 blks W. Santa Ana F'w)o.)
(714l 636-3030
ANAHEIM
NOW LEASING FOR
MARCH OCCUPANCY zn So. Brookhunl
(1 blk. So. of Lincoln)
1n4) 772-4500
' South Boy Club
Apartments
The GORGEOUS New
VAL D'ISERE
&ngle-I br--2 br. Furn.-unt.
Sauna., Aery Rm, Billiards
Therapy & 45' pool, BBQs
$145 & up • ATTRACTIVE, 1
bdr., pool, util paid, garden
Jiving, adult!I. no pets. 1800
\VaJlace Ave .. C.M.
BACHELOR, util paid, w to
w, drapes, private, no pets.
Sl20. &12-ts74 m 642-821.3
l Berlroom Furnished apart·
ment For Rent. Ca 11
~
LGE, l Br, no children, no
pets. $125. 641 Shalimar Dr.
''A", C.tit
1 BR furn, $150. incl util &
pool. Adults, no p els,
549-2627 or 968-1740
Newport Beach
Newport S.ach
GRAND
OPENING
IMMEDIATE
OCCUPANCY
4200
Lu:\111'Y garden apartments
offering complete privacy,
beautiful landscaping &
unparalleled recreational
facilities In a country
club atmosphere. Nov.·
leasing Jn Newport Beach.
Models open 10 am to 8 pm
Furnished or unfurnished
Rents from $155 to $310
Oakwood
Garden
Apartments
1700 16th Street
Z<XXi p.,..,n, Rd. 642-8670 714: 642·8170
$12S. 2 Br nr beach. Garage, 1 --.,.-,=~~==--
child & ,., OK Bl"' MESA MOTEL
Beacon, 645--0111, C.M.
Cotta Mesa 4100
S©\\~}A-Ll£~s·
The Pun/• with the Bui/f.fn Chuckle
O teortano1 len1rs ct the
four KtOmbled words ~ .--
low 1o fomi four si111p!1 woto'1. .,,... ( ~ ~ lr 11Gi 0 f 1 1 I>~~~ ~. ~
'
$150 & $170 3 BR. 2 ba. Fpl., cpts .. drps,
hltns. di~h\vshr. Walk to
beach. 642-3850 Agt. "UTILITIES PAID
l & 2 Bdrm, 2 $Y.im pools l Bdnn apt, Cose to bay &
Adults only, no pets. 642-3535 beach. Newly carpeted. $150
Days, 645-0'283 Eves. 6'T:r7876 or 494-2250
307 Avocado St., C.J\f.
See f.1gr on premises Newport Shorts 5220
Rentals Wanted 5990
!lilll' llllllml!JD ~ RENTAL FINDERS
10'1.i Int, 2{)% Disc 1st Se·
cured by land & res'p s.igner
& final Apr 71. S2000 multi-
ples $34,000 total Trd all/prt
,vac. land • house ? 675-1047
~ fTM T• l_..,. ~ 411 w. 1,.,,, wft 111-Fine citrus ranch. 31.4 ac.
~I-~ 641·0111 3 hr home & out bldgs, $125-C:= .::=.._ u11u11011 .11111"1111t ' M. \Yant Orange Co. prop.
t -.._._ ••~Oldl"~ JllflCI' or submit. Equity $801\l .
Sandcastle R.E. 494-8crl5
Have 20 UNIT apt. bldg r..rs
Trade for Spanish style
howe on beach w/view +
sn1aller inc, unlts or ? Prin.
only, 642-8006 or 642-8001 .
OCEAN VIEW LOT -CAP-
ISTRANO PALISADES:
TRADE AS DOWN ON UN-
ITS OR ? ? '?? PLEASE,
CALL 540-4083 ANYTl?t!E.
1963 Cad Conv., good cond.
Po \Ver brakes, steering,
~ats, windows. FOR pa.rt
eq in small home or what
have you? Meyer 546-5880.
12 uni~ +. Close to Harbor
& Newport, 01. Valur $97.-
500. \Vant home. Owner will
carry fi nance chgs. Leon
Viben, Rltr. 548-0588 anytm.
* • • •
CHINCl-IILLAS & equip.
ment. Trade for furniture
Ot' ~???Phone 548-5727. • • * •
Bua. OpportunlllH 6300 _ ..
J\tANUF AC1URER
$17,500 Investment into the
no. l Business of the day. 25
yr. hi!tory of i;ucceu, now
expandlf1' opuations to So,
Calif. Conlplete factory in-
stalled & ready lo go. \Vill
train Principa.I of Mgmt.
abilities. Contact lrnnled .
Once in a lifetime oppor. to
make that high income tn09l
Jlf'(>ple drtam ot. Starting
llalary $12.000 + substantial
profils. Call Nrn CliHord
(714 ) 774-7050
COIN laundries-Frigidaif'@.
From $6,500 to $42,500.
Ane.heim, Costa f\1 es a,
Buena Park, 1-~ull erton ,
Garden Grovf',
\Ves tminster, Huntington
Beach, Santa Ana, Tustin,
La Mirada, \Vhittirr.
Call Charlle 525-7833
SUCCESSFUL
Dry cleaning businel>S, pm.
fessionaily equipped + laun.
dromat. Excel loc. on Heu··
bor Blvd .. Costa Mesa.
CAUDELL REAL TY
546-f>l60 Eves. 545-3310
LIQUOR lic't. On Sale
Inter • County Transfei~
Lie's As Low As $6600
\VE \VON'T BE
UNDERSOLD
Winston collect (2131 272-4249
e BEAUTY SALON. Unique
4 stal:ions, view, good
business. Reasonable temu.
Box 681, Laguna. 4!M-8306.
e BEAUTY SALON. Uniquf'
4 stations, view, good
business. Reasonable terms.
Box 681, Laguna.. 494-8306.
Investment Oppor. 6310
6320
2nd TD Loan
BLACI< Lab. male,
Cypreu & l\1esa Dr ..
lit!!. Call ~!'r1108
Nr
S.A • ICETAX I .! ~ -
. ' I I I I' _ ' ' ~ i ' " I
~A;c<::.•.:••~D:;•:_ ____ 6:;2;:00:::: "y~Q~UN=G-Sl_AM_ES_E_k_lt_te_n.
-ISOURE I :
_ J J 1
1
I . A_ smart guy: He pfclts up
I
FOLWAL 1 • V"} on your·-·. 1 1<
l'--'i-1 ;;...~,..;.;~,i-1 -rl-~11.--I O C01T1ol11e the chll(lde q:C1eo
by fiUi"i In th1 mlnino wotd '°" dlVlllop lrorn >lep No. 3 below.
• ~~'mt~~~~t~EJJ[IS 1· r 1s r 1· 1· ,, 1
e g\'t'.'=~ •m•os '0 I I I I I I I I
JCRAM·LETS ANS.WERS IN CLASSIFICATlpN 9000
CA?lf PF.:RS, trailcni. 10 11ctts
ne11.r I~ lake., no crowds $25
mo. 897""84i8 -
vie. "The Blufft" 64M387
betwttn 4 & i pm.
FOUND • small black cal
very friendly. Santa Ana
6210 Heights. 549-04"9 ~~-~~-----ARROWHEAD lux 3 Br, 2
BA bomf', 1400 "'1· ft., golt
Cl st Vic\.\'. 0\\'n, Sac:r.
64&-7ll9<
BLUE & Chrome Girls B!kr.
Vic Carnatlon & Bayside
Dr. Cdl\t 613-40.--.,,)
S AC. nr Hf'met: s~nlo
hidcaY»ay, 2700' cl,, mr.. Lost game, $5000: $50 dn 633-7710 _______ _;'40.;.;:1
l\TAl,,E ltl'ay tabby atf.
College Parle area. S45-2703
S..10 A~t ti.fl!, -LOST r.tcsa dt'I l\t ar tnct.
Costa P.le1a. frmide e11t •
d1.rk ~·c.llQ1v w Id a r k, r
)'tillttw stri!)f'~. 1 yn ant kl
"Peanuts" 54S-j.J92 t
OAILV PTLOT Dtt.IE·A ·
LL~ES. \•ou ran U.9f! them
tor j1:$f pennies a dAy. Dtal
ft.12-5678 1
'
·-·---·------~·-·-·-. -·-------'--4-.•----~_.__.___-~---~------~---------~---------------------~
-.....-----
rhursday, Janu117 , 1970 DATL Y PILOT 21)
JOSS & IMPLOYMliNT JOIS & EMPLOYM&NT JOIS & EMPLOYMEN 1 JOBS i EMP l OVMUIT JOBS & EMPLOVM!Nf ANNOUNCEMENTS
1od NOTICES Jobs-Men, Wom. 7100 J._,.n. Wom. 7100 Jobs-Men. Wom. 7100 Jobt-Men, Wom. 7100 Jobt-Men, Wom. 7100
SEltVICE OIRECTORY
Accounting 6500
BKKPG in 1ny hotne !or
1>n1all businesses. Ac<;ts ttc,
acct11 pay., payroll, thn1
trial balance. qrtly reports.
Ca.II eves aft 5 or \l'knds.
~9480
Electrical
When You
Wont it done
right •••
Coll one of
the experts
listed below!!
Personels 6405 ----------·-k-_--_-f_/_C __ DfSHWAS1tER -Dl\ys M .
$2 hour. Apply, ChtL * F'ULL\' LICENSED* Ad\'el'll!llni; /\gtncy J...ictl.1 l.tff.; exell:tnc, varied Dll.IJ.1i\N·s
Reknowrlfld Hindu Spiritualist Sharp setretary ior tail· position. Lot. of public coo. 801 E. &Ibo-. Blvd,
Ad\'lM!s on nil nu1ltt!cn: paced Ne\vport ~ach Agen. tact $500 to start. B1tlboa
1..ow. ~t11.rrlage, Btl¥ine11ii. cy. Typn 85.'70. Shorthal\d Independent DRAFTSMAN·A rch. Sr.
Cou11Af!lp. He a Ith . !lap-100, organizc & follow thro. Personnel Agency plrw.s.~ & SuN..-tss. No pro-Under 35. Plw>nt': M2.J910. 1716 Orange Ave, Suite c Ncwpart Beach. G'r'.1-6110 '
blllnll loo large or loo 42;1 N. Newporl Blvd., N.8. C.Ut. 642-0<126, 545-0979 * DRIVERS *
small. I CAN HELP YOO. -Arfiuu tl· BKh'PR F/C to ssoo No Experience H.e11.dings given 1 day:t a BE YOU RO\\'N BOSS~!! Ftt Ne20tiable
"e(k. 9AM·9P:-OI 312 N. El Rt'l ialile Pt"'r~n \Van!ed To PART OR. t~uu.. natE Necessary! Ca ml no Real, Sa n ... , .., Clemente. ol92-SlJ6, 492-0016 Independently Own & Oper· SMru~THA BAR~ ~tuit have dean (Aljfornfa
ate PeNIOnnel Agency driving record, AQply
SERVICE DIRECTORY EYELASJ-ll•:S; ('ach lruih ap-U.S. POSTAGE mg S. l\laln, SA s.t!J.2265 YELLOW CAB CO.
pllffi separa1<'1y, very STAMP MACHINES BOOKKEEPER. TI!cep-186 E. 16th St.
6640 p h I natu1'111 lookini;r $15. Jan. ill· Fron1 Your Home On FUll uonl!t, medical o ff ice, Costa Mesa -------aper ing ng tt'Oductory (lifer,, l~I appt. 0 , lm •-•-. & I-=== Palntln,. 6850 U LI 1· ~pare T e onsis:, .,,..rv1c. Laguna atta. Stale age EL"-ONICS TECHS ELECTRICAL Se · & • half price. llousc ca s. n. · I T I al Pllo ~rn "'"'" 1 ---~------da S46-l690 1ng 'our Own rad ng qua!. Brue ~f TI4 0 ly t \Vork ove~as. Contact
l't'pair. 24 hl's. 7 days. No RF.AS. rates on Int. & Ex1.1.::;;;;;~::;,.~~-,--;=.,,. Al'ea. No Expcr Nee. High BOYS 10 . 14 Vernon Pierce 71.f: 714-2610
job too s1nall. Re--nuxlcl & Chuck's J'nlg. Lie & Ins. SECURITY AVAU ... ABLE P1'1)/il Starts lmmt>Q , LUe-carrter Routes Opeo y
additions. If ir·s electrical, Yrs. of exper. Loe rc.f.i;. lluchclor. COJll"gc Dcgi'CC' time lnconll.' Rout('S Req. EXECUTIVE SECRET AR
11'e fix it! 646-4712 643-0809 J.:Xpert work. will livf' In your hon1e, 1f Ca.sh Invm Of $49~: Sl'\175; tor FOR PUBLISHING
TILL & Assoc.. Public Ac· _F_loo_,.. ______ 666 __ 5
countants, Audits, book·
keepln&;. taxes. ( 714 )
.,/ p AT NT I NG-lNTtExt. uno~~cupied, !or your pro-S.3450 & UP • Securerl By Lal\lM Beach, So. L8'una COMPANY PRESIDENT
Jack can do thl\t painting tection. Ref~renc_<"1',· Reply Inventory. Jo'Ol' Pl'ompt Per-DAILY PlLOT Exper, &: adaptable to a \\ide
job-fast, clean &. vet)' reas! Dox 5l.1\f. Daily Pt O · sonlll Intervw, Write About 642-C32l variety of projects. Heavy
84&-4503
B1by1lttlng 65SO
CARPET VINYL TILB
Frec estimate Llc. Contr,
J40.7'262 5-1&4178
G1rdening
Est. 894-3895, l!47-13SS A~'TROLOGY l:1auc11 Now Yourself lncl Phone no in * BUSBOY 1t Graveyard stcnorette dictation, light · · F' 1 1 ,-n '"'''' ,:.: ,..·pit•! ~,,·.,,, shirt. $1.65 per hr .. 3-1 hr wk. bookkeeping, S.11. belptut • I I • E-,-,-. ,.Ol'llllt1&· or n orma 10 v ~ v ru
n erio~ .• x erio,r Call The Sun Sign, 61~1. J\fnchine11. 1831 No. Gramer-Apply in person, 562 W. 19th JI.lust be \1•ell groomed, artlc.
At'Ous\Jc cei!Jn~s pt~. 12 yrs Attrr 6, Burton J\1orsc -cy Pl.. Hollyv.'00<!. Cal. 90028. St. C.M. ulate & attJ'l:lctive. Xln't
6680 cxper. Stale lie. Pnlsburgh li7J ?l<IQ Or call Collect (213) 464-453,j CASHIER WANTED \VOl'kina: Cone\, & Co, Fringe •---------""''· 5'3·1787 :,;~~~-:.::~· ,_,.-,,.-,;:::::-°"'= "·neflu Call 0 13-CHILD '--.... ~ :;. AnV1in1e. .e<: • -"' •£""'· care, my uume, '""n· -=~~=~---~·BE An1a1ed at New Beaury ......... ..,..,..,..,..,..,.. I f
la Ana St, C.l\I. Any age, Afl~~~nte~~~ine~n. ~X·f AIN~1~R,. ~1v sc~I Pos. Now. 968-3119 for Architect"-·' App y Eves A ter 6 ENGINEER, mechanical.
have playmale $2j \\'k. eac1er \\'J pain eves De111onstr your ho1ne no\V, "'"'" Port Theater, CdM Exp. in piping deslgn, Resp. loving home, please industriaJ & residential.. v.•knds. Xlnt v.'Orkn1anship, Lu . Cuslo Cosmetics. heliting & ate. Prefer some
call 642-1271 * &lS-3629 * Free es1, 646-1519, ~ zicr m PROJECT CHILD CARE: Loving lady exp. apt. cons Ir u c Ii on. . . . &·nU Retired gent. 15 yr. ARCH TS d 1 1 1 I 7 DEPENDABLE exp'd child GEN'L yd. Clean-up, tree C. R. Kelly ~a1nt1ng. res t.JC(Jt marriage niirided ITEC lo care !or 2 mo. oJ gr Kr Bnlancc-Fo nc. 14:
care in my lovely hm. serv. roto-lill. Sprl'.:l r Complete 1nter1ors & CX· l·d· 1 42 hild Send 4 yr. old boy, It house-work, 642-5700
. !' I R 1 · "' ·k 1--.. :t y 0 · r11l c ' SR DESIGNERS 9.7 l\Ion th'"'· F,I, g.5 Sat. Chtery play rin-nun;cry, Lg l~pa1rs. 'au • ea son. cnors. .-.01 ?~aran '""""· photo Box M915 Daily Pilot. • ... Englneer·Exp. Struct.
fncd yd. 646-5:i:J7 646-5818 Free ests. 53S-0Ja.:i • • NE"edS O\\'n transp. to Arch Nl'wpol't Beach. 675-6110 =='-~---o:-~.-,-. -I ALCOHOLICS Anonymou1 SR PLANNERS Beach Hts area, Laguna CHILD care by exp'd 1uother JIM'S Gardf'ning &. lawn FOR Better Pa 1nt1 n ~ • Phone 50-7217 a.· write to ' Bch. MUST ht! dependable Field Representative
75c hr or $20 wk. J-las refs. mainlena.ncc. Res. & com· In\~rlor & exterior, <icoust1c P.O. Box 1223 Costa ~fesa. & permanl'nl. Sla_rt Feb.. 2. J\farrtcd, prcf some i;-oUeg\'.
Beaut. playnn w/ 100 -toys. mercial * 540-4837 I ;co~o~h~n~go~,~.,._.,~:!l".7~7,;l~M~U~n>~d~,'-li,;:;:=:;::::;:::;=:;::;:=~~ SR. D.RAFT-5MEN $250 mo. 4g.J..gSgJ $600 to slarl +car al!Ow.
8'17-084,l CLfo:AN-UP SPECIALIST PAINTING-Ext-Int. 18 yrs. Announceme nts 6410 Independent •1 · d · -"d · b F Leading international archl· CLEANING Lady for model BABYSITTING \Vented by "011•1ng. e g1ng, uu JO s. cx1lCr. Ins. Llc. rec-est. Personnel Agency
d•Y· Mature \\'Oman. Your ltf'asonablc. 54&--695'1 Aet'Uusl. Ceilings !")18-5325 SENSITIVITY TRAINING recturaJ and planning firm hornes, South Laguna Area. 1716 ~-. Av•., Sull• C
\VORK Sliop needs Project Architects * * 496-1286 * * vn1 .. ,. ~ hm, my hm. l roning $1/hr. :ft PAINTING • Jnt/Ext. _ C.M. 6.U-OO'l6, M>0079 548-4503 General Servicff 6682 Local rcfcttnces linmed A program of interpersonal with substanr ial experience
CHILD ""-1.0 "'Y \V, 18,,. M""rvicc. 64~;i242. ·646-3657 excrt•iscs ror s1nall ~e!f-di· in major projecls such as Control Clerk Finish Carpenters,
.,,..... w RAIN Gutters I nstalled ~~~~~-~-~~i rected groups. ].11n1mal Shopping O-nte1·s, Office Gd w/tlgures, 10-key adder, Cabinet l\1akert;,
St. home. 3 opcnin1:s. Rainy season aln1ost hrre! YOU Supply Thf' Paint. 3 Br, charge call 6-12·8730. 10 A."J. Buildint;:s. Hotels, Urban De-keypunch helpful, Co. 1vill Spray Painter,
642-2031 Free est. Reasn! 968-!lOS Liv R:\I & l~ltcht:'n Painted, 5 P!'.l sign and Planning p~ train. S37!).$~00. HARBOUR YACHTS
\VILL Babysit !n my home S50. Call 5,';7-863.'t I========== gl'an1s: also Senior Design· Independent 15192 Goldenwest Cir.
days, under 5 yrs old, H.B. H1uling 6730 PAJNTING, Papering 17 ~-rs. Auto Transport 6445 f'i'S, Senior P lannei·s. and PerlOnnel Agency 894--4747 \Vestminster
area. ~9 in Harbor area, Lie. & Senior Draftsmen tor lntcr. 1716 Orange Ave Suite C Top v.·ages, fringe benefitl'i.
ADULT m~t . \\'ill, babysit MOVING And hauling, <'X· bonded. Rels. furn. &12-23:16. RIDE from NB to S. Coa!il esting and creative work at C.l\1. 642-0026, ' ;)45-0979
cess fu1·nitu~ and ap· --==~------Plaza.. leaving 11 :30 -12, llsorti~ in ..._.h in hl"r C hon1e ,v/3-5 yr * PAPERHANGING c ""' C0Si.'1ETICIAN experienced .., " plianccs or n1in, $. 536-1091 ~ re\ul'nfng 9-9:30. 642-62'17. ws ANGELES and ' olds. Day or V.'t>ek. 64...-u:iGO tlvt!. & PAL~TING * 96.3-2423 6'l6-:i3ss CURONA DEL MAR !Or dl'ugi;tore.
Brick, M1sonry1 etc.
6560
BUILD, Remodel, repair
Brick, bloc!-:, conctetc,
carpentry, no job too small.
Lie. Contr. 962-6945
C1blnetm1king 6S80
RESIDENTIAL & Comm.
Custom Cabinet & F'urn.
Furn Rt'-F'inishlng. 64.>-0991
Ugh! h<Ouling & t-lf'anup. oJ ;o""'a;S;:::;&-=E7M~P=L~O=Y~M=E~.~.T Tntermedialc personnl"I With 536-3081) P lasterino. Re oair 688 '" COASTAL AGENCY No job loo srnaJJ exceptional quallfic:attons
642-7095 e PATCH PLASfl::RING Job Wanted, Men 7000 and POtential for growth will P rofessional
C · also be considered. Employment '\' /\ R D / G a r. ·I canup. All types. Fre°""e est_imalcs ···ouPLE ,,.1,h ,_R 1 10 l\-o-'·
R · 1 1 "·II •1 '-"'"' '" For an app1, Assistance ernove lrCE"s. ivy, 1·:1s l. .._.. ~ a on or deliver. Expcr. skip-Grade, backhoe, 962--814a --; "-"•~ Contact i\lr. R. l l'\1itcham A mernber of
Pl b, 6890 rt'r, eng:, l.'ook. 6i,,..,.'LJ or rTI4) 6.J.1.()620 Snelling & Snelling Ill(". •Hauling. Have ::4 ton um ing fiiJ-4752 -===~~~-,-7" bl11•n 8:30 & 5:30 2790 llatbor Bl, CM 540-6055 piekup. licensed & insured. PLUJVIBJNG REPAIR RETIRElJ Chief Boatsv.•ain's Harbor Blvd. at Adams
.494-1003 No job too .small matr. F'n1 U.S. Navy SC'C'king
Clean Up and Haul e 642-3128 • cn1ploymrnt in n1arine type
SIO a load. 64&-2528 or \\"Ork. Box 344 . C.1\1.
\Vm. L. Pereira &. Assoc.
J\tacArthur Blvd. at Ford Rd.
Co1'1)rta de! Mar * COOK
FRY COOK
{Evening shift)
Apply in person
2toSpnt
The Five Crowns
Restaurant
381ll E. Paci!!c Coast Hwy.
Co1-ona de! Mar No ph. calls
Foreign Car Mechanics
Good co. benetlt&, 1ncl paid
vacation, group in!, uni.
forms furnished tree. Good
Housecleaning 6735 Remodel, Repair, 6940
----'--"----!Job Wanted1
Equal Opportunity Emplo~r Full time position comm. schedule. A&k for
Cerpenterlng 6590 1---------1..;..:....:;.o;,___:.._::____ * APT CLEANING + Add-A-Room Women 7020 AUTO SALES-Joe Moore Ph. 54!>-17&1.
APPLY IN PERSON GARDENER '· · N
CARPENTRY :F'ast & thtlrougll &12-~!t&I Remodeli ng
Custom Deli9n Service
Free Estimate. 494-0751
CO:O.lPANION for elderly
lady ll;irhor area· Car. v.•\ll
drive. No hsewk XlL1''rencb
Pt-ofessional training pro. ua1nec. o exp
gram nee. Xlnt opprty. (n4J ~flNOR REPAIRS. No Job \\'illinms Clennil1g &rv,
T°" Small. Cabinet in Pl'" J ACK'S HOUSEKEEPING
ages & o t her cabinets. Complete 1-lou5ecleaning
l'~or t-ecorded information COCO'S 546-91'68/49'1·5427 anytime
• 11'' you need remOdeiing. Cook'i;. Europc~n, n1arricd.
palnUng, or repairs. Call llrs 9:30-4:00 :,.1.sat.
phone # 'l8 ~t'ashton tslan<f "" GENERAL OFFICE
~15. U M answer leave ~8-7243 642-8931 SJ.'>.1315 NE"1vport Beach, Calif. Elect typewriter, 10 key ad-
msg at £46.2372. IL O. Andenon BAY & Beach JanltoriaJ
Dick 642-1797 833-2045 p.m. B AB Y SJ 1 TE R -. lit~ * * * COOK der. Age 25-35. Sa.I open.
housev:ork, n1ature. Live in. Ca!eteria work Hours 7 AJ\f 1741 Placentia, C.M.
Carpets, windows, noors, etc. Roofing 6950 CON'fALESCENT, f!ldr.rly or GEN. Repair. Add, Cab. Res & Conlmc'I. 646-1401 l---~-------1 family care. Days or
Formica Paneling. ~tarlite. ALL types rock, v.'OOd & overnigh!. short or long
3 boys, 7, 8, IO. Oct?an lront to 3:30 P M. Cai1 Mrs. Pen.1 G0~E~NE=RA_L_O~l!~;"'----P~/~H~m-e,
Balboa. 675--100 1 nlngton between 1-5 PJl.1. S. H. Nf'CCssa.ry, Good W/
AJ!ything! Call Dic k . e \VINOO\VS DIRTY? asphalt shingles. LEAKS lrnn. Bonded &. insured BABYSITTER, pt. lime, my 83J.-0600 Ext. 2C36. figures. Call 6T;r5333
673-4459 F'rcc est. 15 years exper. REPAIRED. \Vork guar. em Tl loycs. ltomemakers, lfiF.j;jJ;i:-;;a;=tii;o;;;:--s;;;;;ttl:Jo~h~n~n~y~D~u~n~"'=~-64~~~2364~ :H7-G68! REPAlR. Partitions, Sn1a\I 841-1136 ==~~-~,,.---,-
home, afternoons only, Mon-* COOK * Experienced GENERAL officc·P/tlme.
Fri. NB. Own t rans. Apply: SURF & SIRLOrN, Hn. flex. $2.50 hr. 10 key
675-3856 a(I 6 5930 Pac. Cst. Hwy .. N.B. add'g mach. 54>1176 remodel. etc. Nilr! or day EXPERIENCED NURSE (practica11 ca1'E' for
Rell!! Call KEN 540-4679 1-lollseclean!ng, havl? own Sewing 6960 ambula1ory or bed paficn!,
lransp .. day v.-ork. 511 -9357 your hon1c days. 5JG-7826 REPAIRS * ALTERATIONS 1• e Di't'ssmak1ng. Alterations *CABINETS. Any size JO. b COr.tPLETE qua 11Y Di\Y\VORKER
BABYSl'ITER-, 2 to ll PJ\.f, COOK • l~OUSEKEEPER, 1-IEAVY EQUIP. ~TECHS.
my home, East side Costa Lido Tsle Jive out local Work overseas. Contacl
i\lesa. 645-0S63 ttfii:. 673-.isoa ' Vernon Pierce 714-714·26.1.0
I I · E,,. .. ·, •• ,d S""cial on coat hems 25 yrs expcr. 548-6713 iOUset ('aning.
30
_ '1 '"' • ,~ 1-lonesl, dependable
R<'nsonablc, 839-•. )3 * 64&&14G * Call anytirne 541·2772
BARMAID 6:30-2:30 night
shift, Tut:'s. thru Sat. $2.2.i
lo start. Apply in per!IOn lJ
to 2, Little John's Jnn 20072
N. Santa Ana, Santa Anll
I tts., rorner Red HUI &
Palisades.
e e CXJUNSELJNG e 0
liow interested are you 'l' Cement, Concrete 6600
CONCRETE \1-'0rk all types.
Sawing, breaking, hauling,
Skiploading: Lie. Service &
Quality. 842-1010
C RPE'Ts \'" I a LEATHE!t Garn1f'rlll< llC'n1·•-==:~~::;,.::;~~="'= A , vinrows, rs. 1·
etc. Res or Cmc'J. Xlnt med. Special Thru J.nn. ~/-! Jobs--Men. Wom. 7100
,1·ork. Reas! Refs. :1i8-1111 Off. Fas1 51.'rvice. 67:>-173J. lc:.;_;:.:_;,__;~_;,,-----
Income Tix 6740 Accounting Clerk
\Ve oUer a professJonal
ClU"eer.
You are jusUy compen.sat.
ed for your eUorls.
D R ESSMAKING, satisfac-
tion guarantl"'C'd. Reasonable
rates. Call 962-1060
*CONCRETE floors, patios, Smiley Tax Service 970 Position available immcdiat('·
etc. Reas. Hurry before Tailoring 6 Jy. 011(> or inore >'ears c.'<-
BARMAID, experienced. Ap-
ply in pc-rson !\-ton thru
ThuNJ. High Tide, 7Z7 W.
19th. CM
SELF MOTIVATJON
defcrm!nts your income
\VE TRAIN YOU ra.iny season. Don, 642·8$14 OUR 121h YEAR LOCALLY ---~------I ""riencr. Ab!e to op<?ra!e i\lr. Al's Fashion Tailor , .. C!:MENT \Vork: Orivev.·ays, -Special Ra1cs to 1/18/'70-A!trrations & reniodcling for adding machine, lyplng &
Patios, Slabs. Small jobs No \V·2 Nrl'dcrl -Call men & \VOincn. Clothes out heavy filing. 3 \veeks vaC'a-
* BEAUTICIAN. for busy.
popular pril"ed C.l\1. 5alon.
Pd. vac. No clientcle req'd.
New grail welcome. Call
for a position 1vith
too. Licensed. 84J..8157 \V. A, S~1l LEY C.P.A. 01 sly!('. losl or gained lion afri>r :: years. gl'oup in.
642-2221 anytinll' 646·9666 1 1 suranct:', credit 1.1nio11 & CJther -PACIF1C VIE\V -
?.1EMORJAL PARK CUSTOl\1 CONCRETE \\'Ork \\·eight'.' Don't I ll'0\11 I ien1
patios a specialty a1vay, bring in !or refilling. benefits, OT 548-9919
Free Eslimales * 646-1234 I,_o_n_i_n~p ______ 6_7_S5 Rrasonablc pri('('s. Parking Apply :ti DAILY PIL BBAUTJCIANS -IJooth R~n· Phone-
-a,·ai\able. Cnpri L1gunu :GO Wes! Bay St. cal N.,..•pt Bch. Call a!ler 5 644-0212
CEJl.lENT \VORK, .no job loo IRONING In /l.ly l-lon1c. $1.00 Arcade, 142~1 S. Coast Hi~')'. Cosia f\lesa, or call Pi\!, 543-2801. J( no ausv.·er call
small, reasonable. Frt>e J1r. Alterations. A Is o. J\.frs. Gt'C'f'nman, 642-1321 &" 2700 Laguna Beach BOAT CARPENTERS ... estlm. H. Stuflick 548-8615 babysitting. any age, A p bl
anylirnc. Call ~:>-76~1. cents aya e Experienced. Apply 1 9 7 4 cusr. Order Supvr. $800
Contr1ctor1 6620
Additions * Rl'modeling
Fred H. Gcrwick, Lie.
673-rotl * 549-2170
TILE, Ceramic 6974 GOOd work b:ickground with PlacenHa, C.l\f. F'ee paid by Co.
lRONING, no sheets, 2j lo :1.0 --"'---------! accnts payable ('.xp. salary * BCXJKKEEPER .., SAfltANTHA BARY
pieces !or s:.. You pick Ufl & + Vr.rne, The Ti[r J\.1nn * to $4ll.67. 1•n!I Loraine, For Huntington Valley Con-2229 S. Main. SA 549-~
deliver. CJ\ol. 646-:j&ll Cusl. work. Install & rcpi:urs. We.~ic!Hr Pcrsonncl Agency, va!C'~nt Hospira! in Hunt. Also Fee jobs
IRONING dollt.' in n1y home. No JUb too sn1all. Plaster 20t1 \VrstcliU Drive, N.B. ingt,on Beach. Experlen<:e in DESK CLERK. Must be
$2 pcrcroren. Bring hangers. palch. Lcakinl!: KhO\VC Tl-;c64;;~.-m,o""=-o=-,;-;;-= Medicare . afcrl ical pref'd. exp'd. NCR 4200, PBX. all
C1rpet Cleening 6625 i~"'~'=·="'~'1='=======-8.;?-l~~~~~ APT. t.IGRS. for 1.5-'.! BR Apply !o Mr. Sigler, Park· front desk procedures. Ben ==========! uni!.~. J\ilarr1ccl cpl. J\finor hurst Rctlren1('nf Ho1el, 9925 Browns, 31106 So, Coast
A-OK Shampoo Special $7.50 J1nitorlal 6790 6990 rcpair11. lawn & pool care. Al~nicda, 1''ountain Valley. }fwy, So. Laguna
rm/leas for halls, E"lc. Also Upholstery ~1691 962·;,.'J.ll. DENTAL Assistant, chair comp. housecln'g 827-3182 DUTCH i\1aint Scrv, crpt
clng. flr 1vaxing. \\'indow CZYKOSKl'S Cust1n. Urihol. 1 OO · aide, SChMI or cxp'd re·
CARPET STEAM CLEAN· \vashing. Ji11rry van Bcynt'n Eumf)l'an Craftsmanship J_~Ls-Men'. Wom. 1 Jobs-Men. -~om. 7100 qUlred. Uncler ~. Send
ED No soap, no brushes. 5.17-1508 if no anii call aft 3 100'1C fin! 642-1454 resume lo Daily Pilot Box
For esL IWS-5971 1831 Newport Blv, C~t P-19.
L d 6810 :==:=::::===== Att•mbl1r1 II ·~-------~
Carpot Loylng &
Rep1ir 611-26
FOR CARPETING
OR CARPET LAYING
C. A. Page &12-2070
BUSIEST m11.J"ketplace In
t011on. The DAILY PILOT
Classified section. S a v e
money, time & eUorf. Look
now!! I
_•_n_s_ca~p~;-n~q'-----DENTAL As11lslant -Chair
w elding 6995 Burroughs Corp. ;~':'.ii.""''· N'""""'· c.u TAKATA NURSERY'
8eAt Design
Sprinklers Jnstailefl
Drain P ipe Jnstallrd
Tree l.tim & Clean·up
54&-0724
GENERAL LANDSCAPE
GARDENl::R aean U!Jli,
Renovating tree lt'1n1mlng,
pruning.
642-8214
ORNA~1ENTAL IRON gates,
railings, rolumns, dlv!dcn.
nrchc8, grille&". fum!t11tt.
Frt·r •·s!. BradCleld Uitg.
5.tlS-2511 . &IS-~7!17
IT'S Beach ho\l~e lune. BIJ,:·
gesl ~ecllon cvCr! Sec. lhe
DA ILY PILOT Ow;Wed
section NOW!
New Commtrcl1I Computer Pl1nt
MISSION VIEJO
Now taking appllc1tlons for
ASSEMBLERS
-------
ANNOUNCEMENTS
ood NOTICES
Lost 6401
LOsr: Ow.rronl Toy poodle
1~·earina black rhillCllto""'
collar. vie ConKrvss &
Ph1Cf'ntia, Ci\f. Rcwan:I.
646-906&
$M REWARD f.or black &
be~ female Shepherd 103'1
111 CM. Possibly '¥// male
blk It beiae Shcophcrd,
642-0066
ANNOUNC~MENTS
ind NOTICES
ANNOUNCEMENTS
i nd NOTICES
Lost 6401 Lost 6401
LO:-i-r: 1 Sc·recn G r a 11 s
Catchrr. Vic. Gisler.
J~IJybrook<' & Baker.
Reward! Call :.4~2!).I.~
LOST Uicycl!! d'n\·n1o•·n C.~f.
26" OO)'s 1:tand. mid·
dlewcirtht. Blut' '"'"mall
ba8ket, r,_18--0279 M 536-7028
I.OST: Blue Parakttt, Vi c,
:mt h & AH~ N11mrd
l\lanucl. n.cwo.rd: MS.2·123
612-0200
RE\\.ARD • Toy \\'hi!P. (l()l>-
dlr, !I YM! old. Ans "Bri!:t't·
le" vic i.~ullr11on & Cablillo,
C'.\f. Call evl's. 6-16-7262
LOST: P(>! Rtlroon. Vie.
Sand Cll.sll<' & Mal'R'Uerl1c,
Cdl\.f, Re\vard! 644-1370
~,.r•')nl!llt
al our new plant in Mission Viejo, Calif.
Some experience preferred. Jobs open
in January 'vill be at our lo~tion in Irvine.
Apply 8 am • 4:30 pm
Monday th~ough Friday
EMPLOYMENT OFFICE
25725 Jeronimo RNd
Mission Vl1 (0, c.11lf.
830-3232
Wherever There'6
Buainea1 Them'a
'HELP Wanted: Energetic
man, ,varrhou&e. packfng &
maintenance. Yl'ar-,.round.
Gd. benefits. Happy crew.
Ph for appt: 494-4515_
HOSPITALITY HOSTESS Is
looking for malure women
to welcome ne\vcomers to
the community. !\lust have
typewriter, car, and be bon-
dablc. Apply 235 E. Main,
SUHe 7, Tustin, Ca 11 t.
54~925
HOUSEKEEPER for busy
family, full time.
Permanent. Live-in pref.
11.8. 5.~1248
HOUSEKEEPER • Live ln
for eld!!rly couplr. Mature
womon pref. Call 642-6661
lntermed. Draftsmin
2 yrs college, 1-2 yn exp.?r.
to $600 to start. Co. wUI pay
fee. Fee jobs al.'iO avall.
Independe nt
P e rsonnel Agency
1716 Orange Ave., Suite C
C.M. &12·0026, Si5-0979 * KEYPUNCH *
OPERATOR
Swing Mift. Prefer one year
industrial Keypunch expert·
ence. Apply
COLLINS
RAOIO CO.
19700 Jamboree Rd.
Newport Beach
Equal opportunity employer
!\lAIO ~ lic'd pttl. allo ANil-
tant • He'd • wW train. Full
lime. JON PETERS Beauty
Sftlon. 1610 W. Cout Hwy,
NB
l\IAIDS, Exptrieneed. Also
male for housekeeping
\\'Ork. Ben Browns 31106 So.
Coa5t Hwy, So La.gun..'\
MANAGEMENT
PERSONNEL
Responsible ar.d agrreasive,
ab~ to work long hOUrs.
APPLY lN PERSON
Holiday Health Spa
1~ Main, at Beacb Blvd.
RECEPTIONIST: Front
Ptak. Girl v.•/exper a11
~C'E!pt. In dental office. H.B.
Area. Call 846-354(1, 8 Ar.t •
2 PM.
REAL F.Sr ATE
3 saleirpeopk needed nowt
lmmtdlAte noor time tor
qualified li~M«S. FuU
Pro&ram includes eqult)'
loans, goaramted sale11,
trade·ln1 & progreMlve
tralning program.
Rex L Hodges, Riiy.
8'\17-2525
Five Polntl Shopping Center, Restaurant
Huntinaton Beach J SADORES, New p o r t
OR Beach's hf!west restaurant
2300 Harbor )llvd. now hiring cook a ,
Harbor ShOpping Center waitresses etc. PleaSt' apply
Costa Meaa in penon .. 333 Bayside
l\IANAGEl\tENT trainee. Ai· =D~rl==~·=N=·~·-· ---~-~
gres11ive yming l'Mn ln-RETIRED man over 50 M.'.lrk
terested In job with future in parking lot part time. No
In furniture rental co. 517 drivinr. See Mr. Allen,
\V. 19th. C.M. 548-3481 Bank of An1erica parklnr
MATURE v.-01nan wlth lime
on her hands for ironing.
C.l\1. 545-{)611 alter 6 Pl\f
Medical Front Office
to $433. Exp. mrdical and
medical'(', typing, call Ann,
\Ve.ttcl lff Personnel Agency,
:?<Ml \VestclW Dr., N.B.
66-7770
MILL WORKERS
\Vood fun1llW'e manufactur-
ing. Openings k>r WOOd wtil'k-
ing machine operaiors •
Exp'd & trainees. Steady -
full time employment.
1-larbor Mtg. Co.
400 29th St.
Newport Beach
l\t1':TAL WORK
TRAINEES. Young,
Autocoast. 1974 Placentia,
c.r-1. 548-55.st
newpolt .
personnel
.. agency
Profea1fonal Service
for the employer
and the appllc1nt
833 Dover Dr., N.B.
642°3170 549-2743
Nursing
RN or LVN
California License
4-12 PM shift avail.
12·8 AM shift avail.
APPLY IN PERSON
Huntington Beach
O:mvalescent Hospital
18792 Delaware,H.B.
NURSES Registered • even-
ing & night shifts. Ex.
benefit!'!'. Apply Personnel
Dif"l"<'tor; Sn. CoMt Com·
munlty llosp.. 31872 Coast
Hwy .. So. J..aiuna. 499-1311,
ext. 356
PAINTERS HELPER:
Occasional/Day11. Will train.
Call 540-3924
PART TIME
COLLEGE sruoENTS
HOUSEWIVES
$2.00 per hour plus bonuses.
JI.fen or women, over age 18.
four hours a day, C'.all Mr.
King, &1~•1
P/TIME Help For Sandwich
Shop. No Saturdays or Sun-
day1, call 645--0392.
PLASTICS
Materiel Handler
Graveyard shift. Mair. Must
be neat and dependable, Ap.
ply 8 am to noon.
Orange Coast Plastics
85() \Y, 18th St., C.J\-1.
POWER PLA~"T MECHS.
"rork overseas. Contact
Vernon Pierre 714: 774-2610
PROFESSIONAL Sale
Career • searching for man
to leatn our bu5lne11s and
handle sales execut!vl" posi·
tion. Training Income pro-
vided. College, sales or
business exp. Married
542-5623 Ext. 321
PRESS OPERATORS
Women • V.'ork for plastics
molding plant. Eve shUt
546-3370
RECEPTIUNI&"f' COUNSEL-
OR: prefer mature, atta, &
active woman. Work 3 to 9
or 5 to 9. Many cu. benefits.
Gloria Marshall Figure Oln·
trol Sa.Ion NB Call 642-3630 * * RECEPTIONIST
Full time, a; to 30, Attrac·
live. sharp, min. l )T exp,
.type 60 acc., Sli not nee.
Beaut. &;front oft I ce.
642·5735
lot Lido Isle
REUBEN'S
Costa Mesa
Naw lnterviewinc
e BUSBOYS
Full Time
e CLEANUP/
BUSSING
Girls • D~1
APPLY-
1555 \V, ADAMS
COSTA MESA
See Betty Bruee at
mi.6,, E:xec
AgenC} for Career Glrlt
'\110 W Coast Hwy., N.B.
By appoint. 646-3939
SARAH COVENTRY has
openings for full or part
time sale11. No lnvl!Stment .
no dellverles. For Interview,
540-0614
-SALES-
ORDER DESK
Progressive a n d rapidly
growing Orange County Ptt-
clskln Aerospace parts mf&;T.,
nCC'ds y0ung man, prefer-
ably with college ~ or
equiv., for imlde sales or· j
der desk pos1tion, later to
go Into out5ide sales. Engl·
neertng or mechanical apU-
tude very helpful.
Salary open. Xlnt co. bene.
fits Including insurance, pen-
sion plan; 51Ck leave etc.
Please send complete resume
to Box M .573 The Daily Pilot.
SALES PERSONNEL
needed pan rime for adult
luxury apartment complex.
Previous sales or leuina'
exp. required Call
OAKWOOD GARDEN API'S
642-8170
SALESLADY
Positions Open For \VomM& ,
Wear Sales & Mgr·Tralnees
in Livtly Young Shop, Mail
Resume to THE WET SEAL.
1852 Kaisl"r, S.A.
Sales
SALESMAN WANTED
lo supervise boys, age 12-16,
' ,I
in newspaper field. You will
not deliver newspaper or
culleet. Must live in Colts.
Mesa area. $100 guarantee
fi rst two 'veek!I II you 1
qualify, Must have 1tation
wagon or van. Call Mr.
Valdez anytime at 213:
116.>-2096
SALES MANAGER
$700 mo + expenses, Fee ne-
gotiable, Expcr selling to
jobbers, Nat'! Co. Ca 11
54&5410.
JASON BEST
Employment Agency
2207 So. Main, Santa AM. , ••••••••
' ' .,
NOW'S THE j\
TIME FOR
1: QUICK CASH ::
THROUGH A
DAILY PILOT
WANT AD
642-5678
' •
FEM.ALE amall grey poodl<'.
Ana "Josie". Vi<' Wilson A
{tulgen or 17lh & Monrovia.
f.M . ~ ()!" 3i6-2T.'9
LOST e11.mel eolonld leather
flU~ at Al~rmn's, CdM .
V11.luablc personal tden-
llricallon. }\('ward 67J-3216
LOST Fluffy whil(" c;it u·ilh
<lam"" Nk••· bhoo '>'<'· >'ClR SEWING Ploue Call "'--·•"'"'" , ••••••••• ne"'·"m :j~?m . ____ ,_1s._i1_1_e_• __ 1 ... ________________ _,, ---------------------------'-'"':..::..:0..::0..:::..:::..::=::..;:
I
JOBS a IMPLOYMENT JOBS & EMPLOYMENT J... Mon. Wom. 7100 Jobi-Mon, Wom. 7100
tmLlTY man. hcalihg Ir
S.let Trainee ale maln1enance. i\t u 5 t JV ~ )IC't.r. Nalional Co. havt: car. Ba.l&nce-Flo lnc:.
1':1uat have degfff.. (Other TI4: &4~ t~ anc1 pakl Jobi} can Ann. l--.~.~w~A"'""1T"R"'E"s"'s.~restc1111 Pe.nonnel, 2>t1 Gniwyud &hlll, £).'.pcrienc-
Weat,clW Dr., N.B. 6~2i70 ed. <Mr 21. NO PHONE
SALES
ProlnRoraJ tra.lni"I' ~
1ram. For recorded illfot·
matkln phone 835-137:1.
SA LES1\1EN. SaltliWOmcn
enjoy SC!lllng: prestige -pro-
duct. By appt, Xlnt earn·
ina;s, no competition. lnter·
views, 71-4 : 778-2.JOO, 1G.1.
SALES Woman • Exper for
wru1c ln Sports-...·ear Shop.
F /ttme. 1lW! Sport Nook.
488 E . 171h St., C.~t.
SEAMSTRESS. asst designer
& ample maker, exp. Reis.
499-~ bet 11. aft 6
SALES PERSONNEL
M•le & Female
A yoUng, aggresiolve, expand·
ire property management
company has openings for
lea.sing agents. Previous
Jeuing or rrnta.l experience
helpful. Contact
l\llSS LOU BUNTING
f 714 J 6.fS.-0550
Salesmen
Harbor Volks\\·agen need!.
one man for e.'<pa nsion.
Auto expeT"ience not nee.
es.sacy. Sales training
and usistal\Ct' will be
provided • .Appl)' in per-
500 to J\.lr. Tanner. J8nt
Beaeh Blvd., Huntington
Beach.
SC:Rl\V MACHlNE * TRAINEES '*
$137.25
per \\'ttk 10 star!
Sljl.5(1
after 30 da)-z
Apply, Z. 0. PRODUCTS
3190 Pullman
Costa f.1e$&
"""'" SECRETARY
Public Rel•tion'
Terrl!ic opty tu $500,
Independent
Personnel Agency
1716 Orange Ave., Su!l<' C
c.~1. 642-0026. &15-0079
SECRETARY
CALLS~
KONA LANES
aiOO Harbor, C.l\f.
\VE need 2 yollflf, n<'lll a11·
pea.ri111 people interested ln
con1bi11atlon Graphic Ari.$
sales JM)litlon. 675-06l:G
\\'Al TRESS v.-.nfl'd for t!Of·
let' shop. Hotel Laguna. Call
CoUf'e Shop hostess to ap-
pl)'. 49'4-1151
\VAITRES.S • Exp'd. Apply
S\VISS CHALET
414 N. Nt'll'J)Ort Blvd, NB
\\'AITRESS WANTED: All
shtlts. Apply in Person at
1400 \Y. c.oast Hwy, N.B.
\Vomen
LOAN PROCESSOR TO $500
Nc"'port &ach Area
Escrow &: Bene·Demand
Knowledge. 100~:, FREE
Oxlord Emplo)menl Agency
3932 \Vilshire Bl\•d. L.A.
{213) 386-8290
Schools-lnstTuction 7600
MEN & WOMEN!
C0~1PUTER PROGRMT·
11.ITNG IS THE KEY TO
YOUR PROFITABLE
FUTURE!
Ouaes 5\a.rt soon.
Pllot program offering the
finest equipment and facil·
ilies available! Real-time
con1puter programming.
Ml!lltCHANDISI fOllt MERCHANOISE FOil
SALE ANO TRAD! SALE AND TRAOE
Fumltu,.. IOOOFurnlture IOOO
PUBLIC NOT·ICE
DfCORATOR GETS CA1 ·~ELLATION
Of 18 lUXUR\' APARTMJJfTS
Sponish & Mtditerr11111n Fumiluro
All BRAND NEW
9-pc. Medlterrane an Bedroom Suite in Pec'ln
IRog. $349.00 I .•.....•......... -..... NOW $168.00
Gor9eou1 Sp•nish Custom Built Sofe with
ma tching Love Seat-Choice of beeutiful
fob.I". !Rog . $4 19.951 ···-··-·NOW $225.00
~~~di '~.~in~~~ ~:~i.;·~~d··c;1f;~··r~bi;;::ir;:~:
Ta ll Decora tor Table l•mps
!Reg. $49.9i l --··-·-·····-·-···NOW $11.00
Sparii1h Hanging Swag :.a mps
!Rog. $49.95/ ···-·······················NOW $22.50 A decorator dream house on display - 3
rooms of gorgeous Spanish furniture (\vas
reg. $1295.
SACRIFICE •••••• S425
CREDIT AVAIL. NO MONEY OOWN mm FURNITURE
1844 Newport Blvd.H .. ~;'B1vd.>
Costa Mesa Only
Every Night 'Tll 9 -Wad., S•t .. & Sun. 'Tll 6
ThuMay, J1at1arr , 1970 CAIL 'I PILO T
MERCHANDISE fOllt MElltCHANDISI FOllt t lCANSPORTATION fRANSPOR.rAT ON
SALi AND TRADE SALE AND TRADE FREE TO YOU lloati a Yochh 9000 Motor Homes 9211
Pianos. Organ• 1130 Mlacell•neous l600 CmERAL boa! aean nre TilE \VOru..o·i; LARGEST '67 DODGE SPORTS VAN, ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;;;;;;;;;;;;,J ·--:--;:;;;;;;;;:;-:---J ntlneulshel'¥. iob&ttr \nPf, 11£" CR UIS JN C CAT· full gallt-y. pr~p-up top, * AUCTION * "°""· ... ,.. """'· Ill• AMARAN. N. w SS' x ~ .... " l2300. ,.....,.,
If" you •~ buylng a Piano
or Organ this YEAR A:
are Interested In some rt&l·
ly great deal1, .ilease shop
\VARO'S BALDWIN STUDIO
I.SU Newport, C.M'. 64U484
Open Every Niie
Ii Sunday Aft@rnoon
PIANOS & ORGAN.S
NE\V &: USED
• Yamaha PIMOa 01"gans
• TIX>mas Organs e KlmbQIJ Pletnoii • e Kohler & Campbt'll
COAST MUSIC
NEWPORT & HARBOR
Costa ~tt-sa + 632-2.\51
Open 10-6 Fri 10.9 Sun 12-5
HAMMOND Steinway. Yam·
aha. New & used pianos of
most makes. Best buy1 In
So. Ca.Hf. at Schmidt Music
Co. 1907 N. ?ifpin, Santa Ana
prtW:rvers lUf' chl~dren il 20• Sl@eps 10, Lux SI.Jon. 21 ~=i=======' I
FRIDAY -JAN. 16th •dulll, 2 p·r 18 oon. M Cablnl, 2 Hds, 2 Queen Motorcycln 9300
7:JO P .M. 968-795T 1/l6 bed•, Teak dcckl. Teak 1969 y H ·•~ End
NEW I lJS£0 FURNITURE f'REE lO ad hOme 1v/fencd cabinCll. Powu 7 knls, Sall AMA A ir.Ju -uro.
YR 0 M REPOSSESSIONS yrd, Chihuallua/doxie mix, 30 knts. Price $110,llOO. OT l.S. -Xlnt eond. Lo11·
AND BANKRUPTCIES: ha:brlrn, shots, a:ood 1\'11.lc:h· Terr:ns • \VIII trade, part mileage. $575 or best oUcr.
Nice Bedroom 10ls,, Dini.lie do&'. adulta or older child-cul\, part clear real estate. 549--2l:i7
room ACts. Olneties, OlestJ ren. 633·3.'341 1115 ?-.lake oUcr. 531).8)83. P.0.1'BR.:,;;O~N~C0=750o~,~,-,.~,717bi~k-•. -r~.c,.
ol Dra"'t!l'I, Dt-W, Collet FREE To qualified honie: Bo" 1913, N.B. street or trail. Low mileage.
tables, Scwinl': lllJIChine•, 01. 11•/lenc.'Cd y1-d, I 0 v ab I e "SCRAM LETS Sacrifice $175. 646-1587 eve!\.
v&1U1. lbairs, Matlrenes, friendly female alrdal e, • only.
Book cue11. nf ll'J'Ors, Re· good wllh ~h t Id r c n , 1,68-',-~BSA=~s7p7it=n.,,-~,7,,-rl<~71v".
cliners, Lampis, Picturrs, 4 "'ell-tn.ined. 633-?.049 1/17 ANSWERS 650CC. Stored 1 yr. 1500 act
Color TV's, Stt-1'00g It Por. TOY collie • Lab &: ??? J .. nil's. llnn\ac, $975. 673·7334
la blrs, Hom~ bar, Dressers, female!, l male, !i \veeM Homing -Exact -RoUSe -or 673-9206.
Po\\-er moweri, Hospital bed, old aDd v.·eaned. SJ0..364j aft Fallow -\VHISTLE 1 .=69'--'KAc"l~VA~S~AKl=~"'~G-3~-~=T=R'I
Patio furniture, Baby beds, .C Pt.t ,veekdays. Anytime A st'tl:a.rt gu)': He picks up Immaculate. l ~IOll old.
Refrlgt-rators, Stoves. \Vash. weekends Ul6 a girl on )'Ot1r \VHISTLE. $77:.i. Call 675-ji!ijS
el"!I, Dr)'ers A: MUCH AtOREl l ! FREE lo you • Liv, Room 19G9 14' CHRYS. Runabout. "66 HONDA
WINDY'S AUCTION 'hat<. """'' ree<W•ri .... ' " hp John•m • "''· u...i 100 &~mbl" !'90 good twin beds, no head-IS hrs on vacation. ?.lust sell 547.3182
boards. Call ~7297 1/15 $995. 842-3159 ·~ BSA 4'1ICC Vi r 10 r
CO?.tE BROWSE AROUND COUJE, 14 mo. o Id , 24' CABIN cruiser, new eng Special. 1600 mllrs Never
20751A Ne\vport Blvd. blk/whl, male. To good & trans. Nttds cabin 1Y0rk in di.11.. $57j Fb111. 673-7619
Behind Tony's Bldg Mat1s home only. 842-5846 alter 5 only. BARGAIN! $12 50 .1~~=~~-~-=---=-o. Costa Mesa * 646-8636 pm. 645-0293 eves. '51 AJS, 500 cc, .single, $·199.
OPEN OAlLY 9 to 4 '58 AJS 650 cc Ivrin. S250.
ADORABLE Brindle female \\'/extra parts. 5-18-811~
POOL TABLES part Boxr r:, 2\3 nws. Needs S1llboilt1 9010
Secard Pool loving care in new llonie. ·ss Honda 450 Scram. FREE BRUNSWlt:K-Afi.tf' 962--0180 1116 Gd cond. $67j, Only
ORG Custom Slate Table KENDALL 32 2.000 mi.. Call 673-.iSSS AN CLASSES From S2S9 CALICO Fentale cat needs 32"llx5, extremely roomYl-c=-===='""°"'"'=-
MONDAY 7:30 Pf!I 100% Financl"" good home. Sweet loving Atkin oft shore cruising cut· '69 YA?.1AHA 175 Enduro
NO OBWGATION .... nature, sho11 tw-. 673-3314 ter or ketch. H e av" 900 miles. EXTRAS!
GOULD MUSIC * SECA:E1~L.S * aft 6 pm 1/16 Jlbt'rglass. Any :srage 01 $5;'JO * 673--0993
2045 N. f.1aln, SA 547-0681 323 s. 1-Iain st. Orange LABRADOR feinalt-, 7 mos. compl t'tion. 642-8961 i
BEAUTIFUL Thom.' 3 old Nd!! large yanl, frit-ndly, anylime. Auto S•rv cas USED Clothing -Ladies & P1rt1 manual Organ, Palace Sl%f's 3 & JO. Good Col\-u se d lo children . CAL 28-By 0 1vner. Clean, 9400
20 PC. "MADRID"
3 Room Group
FROM MODEL HOi\lES
Indudes: Quilted sofa and
chair -2 end tables &. cot·
fee table -2 .Latrips -dre&S-
er -mirTor -headboard -
qUilted box spring I: matt·
ress -5 pc. dining room;
table &: 4 hi-back chairs.
model; full pedal range, dHlon. Reuonable. 673-443t. 549-2080 1/15 fully equipped, tull sail, ----------1
1000 Built ln r hythrn. etc. J\Uss lo.1ikr's, 3432 Via PETS end LIVESTOCK au:<. eng included. $9000 ~r ATl'ENTION; Serv. ~tations ------~~==! Rca.mable. 846-l45.3 , Oporto, Lldo Island. 9Mf·l----------1 besl oiler. Call bhvn 8-;l, & garages!! _Electronic lutlf'
8' SOFA, never used. quilted NE\V & USED, Pianos, 5PM. Pets, General 8800 833-1234 f'X.t 31'1. u~ sco~. d~·ivt-on Jrunt f'nri LIOO 14, No. 2775. Full l'a.C· ahgnmt-nt, ~deg. auto tire
COMPARE AT $7•9.95
$399
WELK'S WAREHOUSE
No dow~I~mt& onlt Sl6 mo.
600 \V. 4th SI .• Santa Ana
Open Dally 9-9
Sat. 9-.6 Sun 11-6
3 ROOMS of SPANISH
• 8' DlVBil + Love RBI
• 5 Piece dining room set
floral, scolchguardl"d Sl35, Organs, Rebuilt Grands, ?.fOVING -JI.lust sell immed. ----------.· Good condition changer, c1garelle nl&ch.
nlatching klveseat SSS. Call Wallich's C.!1.1. 34()..2830 2 Aquariums, 2& & 15 gal, YOUNG male c.-anary, im· ing ~ar. · 494-30S2 77!>-0592 ==========-! I I 1· h 1 pm1ed f"""m G••many. Yard dolley, cover. Best orf·t-========== comp e e, ts , pumps, e c. .,.. • 73-f.i160 h ~m61~ T•l•vislon 8205 Sell all or aep. Baby car bed Master Singer. \\'/food & er. ore. 6 • rn. Truck• Office Furnltur• 9SDD 8010 $5. 646-5709 Ca&t Sl5. 96&--21.."6 LIDO 14 Sailboat, No. 2389,
Lease Color 'IV or Blaek &.1 =='""',__=,..,,---=...-, ==========! \\'Ith trailer. Call 837-70391----------
\Vhite. Option lo buy. Free FULL Sz Dbl Garage Door. C•h 8820 alt 6 p~f 1953 F1ord custom open
service. No deposit A·Actlve Compl w/hardv.-al't!. Si5. --------"'-::;; """'-'""'-~---.-·I furnilure truck. Good shape. TV Rental Co. 2742 Portolo, (Mesa del fl.tar PAPERED SlAi\lESE KlT· LIDO 14 Complete \\'/tra1l~r. Priced for quick sale!
OFFICE FURNITURE
Nl:.\V & USED e desks e eha.J.Mi: e files
McMAHAN BROS.
OESK INC.
!Serl Newport Blvd.
Costa Meaa * 642-8450
~-='-'-' ~'22-,...1_1_53~--' 1 Area) aft 6 or call 531--0651 TENS. S8006"Jt ~A.,'!ichardson. 842-4455, 613--0l,ll, eves 675-51178 ,
=-o wkdays , .... ........, eves 21'" RCA Con. $25. 21" SEALPOINT 1966 Ford F-100, 8" Bed, IA
Cr'OK!ey $30. Bolh TV's in =='======.=.1=0 Call 536-8915. 20' WOOD HULL Alum. masl P.1i Clean. Call aite1· 6 PM
good cond. 548-139:'; Misc:. W•ntH -========= 5 HP Outboard $500. ~
Office Equipment 8011 HI-Fi & Stereo 1210 SWE BUYS Dogs 1825 ~~147 1 ,,,~,~oo"'oo=E"""'v""a-,"""1os=-, '"'y"'s.
20 \VOOD HULL Alum. masl auto, air. M'mi-campcr, :dnt
MARTI NCREST KENNELS 5 · HP Outboard $50 0 . eorv:f. 673-4006 TYPEWRITER, Ad d I n g
mac:hine, calculator, \'er)'
reas., xlnt <.'Ond. 892·2423.
EDISON Voice writer Model
EV-E $125. Pll. 642-i!Ml:i
MUNTZ stereo Jape conver·
ter w/speaker. 23 tapes_ ;115
Susie • 6TJ-5532
Sportin9 Gooda ISOO
$ FURNITURE $
APPLIANCES
PUREBRED PUPPIES ~;t~!).4~14~7=====""°"·1 '.:=======":;:_:
-546--0989 -2'il' CASC::ADE SLOOP C•mper1 9520
• Great Danes e ltialtese 90 % Complete
• ?.liniature Schnauzers 642-8961 anylime 1• __ 6t_F_O_R_D_E<O __ oo_t_1,..--v-.-,
* Dog Training Oasses $450. Days 5'10--324!, Eves l ~~~!!!!!!!!!!""'""'""'""'"'I Power Cruiurs 9020 5-IS..9697
Gen. Ins:urance A&ency
Mature woman e~nced
in l.11 lines or insurance.
Salary open. Nl!W o!flce.
Great opport. 614-4738
Union lank Square • 5 Piece !kdroom set Gar•qe S11le
SUPER GARAGE
8022 SKIS • l\lcns: Poles, Shoes.
Bindings. Used 1 Season,
$95. Burke Golf Clubs, bag,
cart, bell ret11ever, etc. $125
Call 540-4165.
Color TVt-Pi•llOt-St•t•O•
1 PlK•., H• ... hn
CASH IN JO MINUT(S
• 541-4531 • PUPPIES S:.i each to good
homes. 2 females. 1 male. I----------. '66 V\V Camper. l\f u 1 I
They are a t."f'OSS bel\\'ttn ? 1968 . 2:-.· Hardtop Cabin sell. Xlnt cond. Ne\V tires,
& ?. Look• like a coc:ker & Cnuser, 2~ OMC .. SS, ~F", ref. stove. $1975. 49,._7406
poodlt's u•ith lairJy long all t-:ot:l~ incl trailer. Like
SECRETARY
$500 mo. ff'e negotiable, Al·
tractive gal !or ll lront off.
ice. &ach area. Ca.II ~O
JASON BEST
"Employment Agency
'2201 So. r.1ain. Santa Ana
Secretary
Good S/H and ryping skills
\\'ith purchasing and engr,
backlround. beach area, caU
Lorah'ft', \Ve5'lcJlff PP1'90fl•
ne\ Agency, 20t3 \\'cstcliU
Drive, N.8 . 645-mo.
SECR.ETARY • attractive
young lady !or \YOrk in law
office, good typi!lt v.'ith
plt'a.s&nl pE'rsonallty to met\
public and ans\\· er phone,
Laguna Niguel are a. ,.......,,
SECRETARY PT/ime
!Penni. Olfice Dfot11.il tor
l\1fr"s P..ep., Type, S.H. EX·
per Nee. 4-16 hrs wk. Full
df'lllils to Box 53~1. Dally
Pilot, N.B.
Sec.-Recpl.
G«lr) !)'ping skills, good \\'Ork
rcrord, musl like detail
woril:. Call Loraine, \Vest.
cliU pe-r90nnel A~ency, :!(}I'.\
\Vrstdiff Drive, N.B. s.i;,.2no
Service Statton. Service Dept
01 NN'dl"dl * $135 PER WEEK + for New t.1ark C. Bloon1e
C.l11r. Store. C.'hange Ores &
!'hOcks. Refer \\l tll train.
f.1ed, benefits & ins11r. P"n.
sion. I: Prof Shar Plan, Ap·
ply Mark C. Bloon1e Co.,
14Q.IO Brookhurst, G.G.
SER'VJ CE STATI ON
Daytime Man. Ex per. ~lust
be ntel & have a haircut.
490 E. 17th St. C.M.
SERVICE station attend. -
exp'd, iull time. Hrly y,·ar:~ + eunm. Penn~nt. ("rO(J(t
South Tewer FULL PR.ICE S3S8
Sulta 40 SUPER SPECIALS!
")ran1•° C•llf .• '2666 Span sola & love Rat $179.0CI
!!!!"!"'C!!!o!!!l!!!I !!!54!!!7!!!.94!!!!71"!"'!!!!!!!• I Kg u mattr & hx. sprg S 99.95
LOOKING FOR A SOLID ;. Pc Span Dinette S &l.!ll
FUTURE r·rr GETTING j Pc Span Bedrn1 suite $129.Xi
NOWHERE?. u., •">" "•" '""'' pl'"'
DO YOU-WANT TO GO
SOMEWHERE??
Tl·lEN UXlK INTO A
CAREER
AS A
RAOIO ANNOUNCER
CL.ASSES FORMING NOW
LEARN:
In a radio station on profes-
sional equipment from work-
ing D.J's.
CALL m -3800
lns1\rUlc or BroadcUt Art.•
1601 N. Britto!, S.A,
Student Loans
Ff"t'C' Placement St'rvlce
ITS YOUR MOVE
Discover a Great New
Career With The
AIRLINES
e OPERATIONS AGENT e TICKET SALES e H.ESERVATIONS e AfR f"REIGHT.CARGO e COi\t!\IUNICATJONS e TRAVEL AGENT
Airlin. Schools Pacific
610 E. 17th, Senta Ana
54J.6S96
The Newport
School of Bu1ine1s
Features \\'cekly refresher
courses in the dtills you
need 10 ~et tile job )'O\J
\1•ant!
Approved Furniture
2159 Hai·bor, C1'1 a.is.9660
ASSORTED pictures 50c lo
$3.50. Used 7 dra"·er walnut
lingerie chest $39.95. 2 used
squal'f'. corner tables. I
\\•11.\nut, 1 y,•h!te $9.95 each.
The 1-~actOry, 18&i llarbor,
540-6842.
DINING H.oon1 Set, 6 Chra
\\'oocl 1-~1111.sh. $li. 2 marble
Ip end Ibis, Danish, SIO ea.
C.OftC<' lbl, $1 2, or all for
$30. Call 536-2426.
a· l\1EDIT Sola. rn, H.idcab-
ro. $.'JO. Zenith Color TV,
$27:.i. ,,1isc items. ],·Joving
'5-l:>-7700.
USED portable blk & \Vhl
TV's $59. Assorted oc-
casional chrs $10. Gold 54"
credenza S29. The raclory,
1885 llarbor. ~42.
USED t\\·ln beds -Cornposed
1 headboard, I !ra1ne, b~
springs & mallI'f'1s $32.
Assorted. \\0alnut nHe 11!antls
S7.9:>. Assorted headboards
S4 . Tilt' ractory, 1885
Harbor. 541)..6842
DEPENDABLE couch, only
12,000 miles. l"ollts into heel.
$20. 1914 Fullc-rton, C.t'lt.
after 5 PM
USED sofa & chairs $69.9:-1.
Used Philco eonsole c;ihinet
blk & ·will. TV $j9. Desks
for tC<'n11.gt'r1 $9.9.i t'ach.
The Factory, 188.J Harbor,
5~0-6S42
QUALITY Dining Se I.
Cui'!tom Sola (pu rp le\
Danish. Like Ne\\-. CaU
tm-2234
SALE:
1-~ri, Sat & Sun. Bcdrm set.
dinette set, corner couches,
pole lamp. coffee tables, 140
rt'rord albums, TV, kitehen
appliance11, loys, kn i c •
knacks, decor-.i.tor ilems -
loo numerous to n1ention.
33212 Mesa Vill'ta Dr .. Dana
Point
GARAGE SALE Sat & Su~
Jan 17th & 18th. 919 Darrell
St. CJ\1. 10-4 Dail y .
PrOl'eeds for youth group.
GARAGE SALE: Sat, Jan.
17, 10 a.m .. 267 Emerald
Bay, Laguna Beach
Appliancn 1100
8'xl0' FOLD-OUT lt'nl. self
stoting poles, uaed tv.ice,
~I S225. Sl25. 494-4382
Mi1cellaneous 1600
TENNIS· ctub membership •
Newp:irt -Beach club. "Best
in 1he \Vest." Orrered at a
s.i.vings of $450. Ca 11
642-3067 l'l'CS.
BEAUTIFUL hflild painted
oil portrait of you or your
\VE Desperately Need A
\Vhlrlpool 01· Kenmore
Comb. \\'asher-Dryer, Little
Fixing OK. $Xi. 646-S749
Eves.
MOWER, front-throw, &
powe r rdger.
842.Jljg
8utld1ng M•t•rlak 1760
hair. 2 monlhs old & really new. \\ill trade f'<I. for Imported AutPS 9600
cule! 847-1868, HB smaller outboard. 592-1660
Jan""" Cloara""'! ''"' I 3'' CH.RIS ROAMER Lot. AUSTIN AMERICA· of Extras! l\lust see! \Vill 3 females, 1 male. Toy collie.
Lab &: ??? Five wee.ks old trade. 67:..3242, 49!H206
and v.·eaned, '536-3645 aft 4 AUSTI N AMERICA PM wkdye. Any t Im c Speed Ski Bo•ts 9030 ______ .;c... __ ~ I u·eekends. e Sa.lei, Service, Part.a
Immediate Delivery
All Models \VOOD\VORKING P 0 WE R
TOOLS.
AU. TYPES.
CALL • 646-31 l8 or 6-J6..8667
==--=--=-GU A RD Dogs. AKC reg.
German Shep. 5 wk s ,
Champ stock, 4 !em, ! male-.
837-6918
1968 SEA Ray 17'. Black
\\'/red inter. Jnbrd-outbrd
l\ff'rc cruiser, 120 HP; 110
hrs. $3000 inclds convt top,
<.'OV<!r & trailer. 644-~68 children from a photograph. FREE TO YOU SC::01"I'IE Pups. AKC RC'~. g
A wondc-rful idea !or Iha! \\'eeks old. $75. C 81 1 9036
J2rwµor1
31111 orrs
sperial gill. &lfi.3629 4 92-l 8 4 2. 315 Calle Bo•t .t;llp Mooring 3100 \V, Cout Hwy., N.B.
TOP Col)(!; fl latclling Couch \VANT good homt-for 1% yr. Pescador. Sa n Clementr SLIP for rent. accom. to 43' 642-9~00 . MG-1764
MAYTAG & \\'hirlpool auto & Chair. Packard Bell old Calico female cat "·ith BEDLINGTON Tt'lTier pups, boat, now d1ru Jltlay. AmerJ. Authonzed b!G Dealer
washer, late model.· xlnt St~reo. 1YJ>f"''riter, TV, & old~r person. Also short champion sired. look like can Legion Anchorage, N.B. TEACHER n1ust sac! '69
cond. SGS each. &46-8612 or Misc. 646-~2:i2. haired calfro kitten and long Jambs. Xlnt house pels. 213: 62G-0481 v.·kdays. Austin Ameri{'&, auto trans,
847-8115 1963 Encyclop.di• Brl-haired bl k}.l\"ht kittens 5 675--3887 lXJCK space nr Pavilion, ac-R/H. $1350. 67:>-.6912 aft 7.
REFRJGERATOR Hot-tannlc• (white set) in· mo. old. All had shots. 2027 CHIHUAHUA. fem, 4 mm;, con1. boat up to IS". $3(1 mo.
point. U!!ed 9 mos. \\'hite. eludes yr books. new Orange, Cf\! 1116 AKC. lrom chan1pion stock, Lol'lg term pttf. 673-4300
like nc\v! Savel 545-1427 GO CO'lP I dull cond. $225. ~n1 · " · or a s or ~~broken. Sac. S50. * 27' SLIP, Ne1vport
BMW
8' CUBIC f oot Kelvinatol' older r.hildren. Lo\•able ler· 49:1-5341 Harbor. 3446 Via Oporto
RefriR Aln10sl New QUA LIT Y kl~ bed · quiltf'd r ier/mi.'\: Uoi;. ~tale. Hse • BMW • · • 1nal!re.'ls, Conirle!e. umised ""L ,.. .. , \V•!chdog, all sllots. POODLE Puppie1;, 6 1\'eeks, Pacilic Yacht Sales 6i3-1570 All ,,1odels in Stock
Sll.c:rifice. $&!. 846-502--1. $ • •· ~ •ih'"" "$~ I '" IO.\ 11·or!h $2j(), 842~ Nt'eds gd hm: fncd yard. '"' · ,,,_ ....,, -_.. for Immediate Delivery
USED AppliaflCC & TV 's, all C'Vl:':s. 64~28 1116 * &,17-3471 * Mobile Homes 9200 SALES-SERVICE. PARTS
guaran1eed, Dunlap's, 18151-~--~-----·I BLACK• -T&M MOTORS INC Newport. C.l\I. 5"8-TISS Cat'J')('t la)'rr ha!! Hi Lo f'E~tALE 5 lT ord spayt-d ..... brndor, female, 7 * '67 ?.tUSTANG , •
nr lons Sl.99 yd. Shag11 cal, blaek "'/ l\"hile mark-1nos, AKC rt'gistered. V-8 .. 4 .. SPEED 808l Garden Grove Blvd.
Antiqv.s 8110 from SJ.:iO 11p + my labor, ings, all shots. OJ de r •34~7ii3 • Sparkling' orig lime frost :.i34·22!4 Open Sunday 892-S..'151
OOc per yard. 847-1.}19 children onl~·. &l&-5709 1/16 AIREDALE-ARC champion green vinyl int. Brand lle\\'
LOUI S XIV q11ren si?c hed
S300; coffee tbl, oval toP,
Frt'neh legs SlGC: ladies
1h'C'11scr, inlaid n1ahogany
$.150: ehair. Vic!orian s\ylt',
CARPET Installer has one
roll, avocado nylon rarpet,
Double jute-backed. \\'ill sell
all or pa11 $3/)'nrd. 5'1~724J
WADE REYNOLDS 0 i I l'lusl"y rose velvet uphols1c-r. Painting, pol'trail of young
lni.: S95; chall'. Victori11.n gii·I, l8'"x20'". pr 1va1 e
11tyl<>, lull hack &·~eat, olive O\\'tK'l'. Best olfl'r. 830-4134
velvet $6.i: \Vash stand, I =~=~~-=~-
Ani ei;can, 3 dra\\'Cl'S, 1 door GRAND Pi11no, Flscht"r con-
$16.;; coffee tnhlr. ~inall trnip. $1200. RCA color TV
round marblr top $325: $150. Botti rbony. 613-2'l59
ALEUTIAN Blue ro>., Full 2
skin C'Ollar. Sacrilict. Call •
646-JOlJ
i\IALTESE POODLE, femalf' stock. l ye111·. Shots, pren\iun1 "Tiger . pa \V ·' DATSUN * 846-143:> * \V I v;all s. "Clloice" 1011' 6 mo. old, To good home 1----------
w /fen ct-d yard anri COCI~ER Female AKC mileage-fromafinchon1e, *"RISING SUN''
children. 54~37;, 1/lS BUFF, Champion Sil·rd, 10 and only $1799. i\IARQUIS . . .. .. .
v.•eeks. Call. 67~7144 eves MOTORS. 900 So. Cst Hwy, 67 DATSUN 1600 RDSTR
1'10VJNG -must find homt-. ' · Laguna B e a c h 49+-T:.:iOJ, Put your top do11·n & your
Approx. 6 yr. old female 2 MOS old Samoyed puppy, ~3100 5pfrits up • join the jct sci
spayed Peke·A·Poo. Older male, .shots, papcr!I. & 11•het'l al'ounrt in this
cpl. pref. 646-570'1 1/17. • 67~330S * YEAR END spa1·kllng, oriC'ntal, c;rt>a1n
4 RATS, 3 males, 1 female GREAT Dane ! n1os. AKC CLEARANCE SALE beauty "·/plush black vinyl
11 I ,_ · m•I•. •~ •· oil••·. ALL SIZES int. & ncy,• 1vtii1c vinyl lop ema e may OK f'xpecting) " ~ ' ~ NOIV ON DISPLAY . 642·5~53 Ab6olu!c llllo1v1"00n1 conch. a littrr. Call nn '1·eekdays BAY HARBOR 1ion th1-u-out! Only Sl 69:.i.
all 4 pm 546-363'1 ./ POODLES.AKC I Mobile Hom• Sal•• l\lARQUIS MTRS: 900 ~.
t1tEE PIY\\"OOd & n1ahogany Apricot, Sasft•as line. * (714> TI"JI'-' * 142:.i Bakor St., Costa P.Iesa Cst 1-f"<A-y, Lai;i:una B each. scraps. Short blockll & long ,,. 1.; block East ol Ha!'bor Bl\'d. 4!»-75Cr.. :,.l()..JlOO.
\vmicing cond. 990 E. Coast QUALITY king bed • quiltro
Rureau. t'hC'.ITY, American
$275; Judgrs day rouch, ook
cl11.w foot rust upholstering
S300: a.'i$0rtt'd lamp!\ & pie·
lures. Lo'~ M'<ll, White d.'\·
mask upholstering S.16:>. &t·
tre. oval rlbhed, rio\\·n pil.
1(}\1~ sm: ri11~. 5-18-~
SHIPS Anchor Bell, 2 ln1ari
• ,.~A~ll~L7V~M~,-m~oc-.,7h=i•_,.lo-,
Ne1\'po11 Rrarh Tl"nnis Club.
Cnll 549-22SG
strips. 646-2377. 1/17 AKC Collir Pup11. Champion Costa Mesa ITI4) 5--IO-!l47C NEW '70
j DARLING pups. Parr'.'/ sho\v 1>tocl<. Shllllmar.Raven RARE OPPORTUNrrY
Aust. Shepherd, 6 ,,·ks. old. Kennels. &12-4424 i\IOBILE LIVING on !he DATSUN PICKUP Hwy, NB 533 Do\'er Dr., N.B. mattress. Complelr unu~
SERVICE Station Attn'dnt.1 ii0ii0iii0ii&l.1i0ii'.J810...,...,...,...,.
1
$100, \VOrth S~. M2--0536
Exp'd. Dll)' k l"V1!, sh\111 I' ('Vt"S
avail Union o 11. l&i~ AUCTIONEERING REGULAR 2 \V EEK TER?-.1 Adams, C.f.f. 540--1206 .,_ . .. ...
U"' in uullnt'SS for )'0Ur.'ile11! SERV Sta AUendant, ex.p. Leam to be: an auelioneer.
nee. 4678 Campu1 Dr .. N.B. \VEST·BEST sa-tOOL OF
Alrpor! Te"aco -see Mike AUCTIONEERING, 206 \V.
SERVICE Slation Attt'nd. 4th, Sll.nta Ana. 638-5000.
Expel' 1-'Dll time. Prefer I """'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'~ older man. ~pply 560 W. *•LEARN ABC Shorthand
19th SI .• C.1'1. for easy note taking. l Life
SJ'M'ER. :l yr old boy need$ 'l'im~ Sa l SC!lf;i01!5 only SlO.
Jovlrc ca:rr. S.5. r.ton-F'ri. V.'rite for l'('Jdstration cnrd
NB area. Call 61".r1824 11{1 6 OO\\'! "Sat Sessions", 273
Pm Cecil Pl.. C.M. or call
616-J.·.:17 S1Tl'ER • Li\le In 11.B. 1trt'a. $1S Mo. 4 chUdt'l:n, J in CONCERT Pianist • Leigh
scbooJ.. Reftr. AUddlP Age. J JR.mM Unger alX'l?ptlng i;IU·
96i-3141. <21SJ 830-7704 rt~nu: all levcl1 pL'\no; l ~ar
SHAMPOO Girl • mu.sl
lice--
be mo11y, Solfegc, Comfl0$\0on.
MS-8106.
CONTI:S.$A llADt
F AliJllQNS. • 615-33115 •
SYSTEMS ANALYSTS
PIANO LESSONS
All &Res, lk&.. lnlermcdl·
atn, THEORY . JMPR0\71Z.
ATION. Rcuooablc. Call
<t'r ~ p.m. 5~1548 won OV'ftll!U. eomact
VttnOl"I ~ n4-n4.Z10 11.JTORJNG-HhJr Hi, Elem
TA!k Yauns Man. Steady K"hl!. 5 Calif. crf'ds.
Joh 5'i aay ~IL lncluctlnc r-.111.1ten dtgr. 12 yn r:xp.
S.t ,,,_ sun.' 8ay•l4e F"A $12 hr. ~96-2256 M~ mi !«•port Blvd., MERCt!ANDISE FOR "'""'°" Beod>. 673-7380 SALE AND TRADE
Tt!IC!PhCJnt A..wttlna Scntloe fwnftura IOOO Operatqr, qpe:ritnctd In
,....,.. and 'Iolk!_n4 1• 1--------
buainelll pe0Plc01 fl:vr.nlf\IC BEAUT. T"'\11 b ed r oom
ahl(I loll. Call .f!M..J(Xl.1. wile, J )'fold. $32$. i4+-1lU a.wn or 545--0481 '_o1_1 ... _s _____ _
S PC bedl'OOln 1troup - 6 b1Jy,•J11, ROSC'u'ood fish. 6 Old
drn1wr dresser u•/mim>r -•Fashioned Books, 1~1872
1 her1dboard -2 nlle stand~ w/stecl engraviJIRS, Old
$~9.9:1. As~rtM 1t l nr1te purple glaSll collt'ctors
chairs Si.9:1 each. 2 hanging ltrnis. \q:; lacqU('rtd tray
li'mps S9.9J e111·h. 111C Fae· w/mothcr of pearl ~wtt'r
lory, 188.i llorhor, 541)-6842 &. copper, \\'/folding stand.
I-IATCl-1 CO\'t'l' table $50. Steins, Toby mugs, 6 pc·s
Ollvt' llOfa $30. Ft"l'nch vr.r:v rare earamrJ glp,g.
ProvlnclaJ d_ressin{: table Cloisonne 11en1~. Tit i ~ s
;i:;. '1~--0366 i\llke's, 3132 Via Oporto,
t~ORCED lo i;ell 8' r.it'dit. Lido l.~l11nd. Call Si:l-143.J.
9Ai\J.:)P~l. 80la, 1 pc 88&.'ICI din rn1 st't.
5 pc Basset Bl't set. roHec &
l'ntl Ible. ( l l 82G--O'.l8)
1-UDE·A·Bi;:D, (.'QU{'h, f"O('kj>r,
maple collC'C & ,,nrf thl~.
hutcli, dinene. 12xl5 b11'lded
tu't. 111r.reo. bkcnst', lnmpa.
M~rl
--ST'°H...,A'"N'"T"'IO-;:;U=E-
SHOW & SALE
JAN, lJ, 16. 17, 18
Thurs, Fn. Sat 1·10 P~I
SUnday 12 to 6 PM
Lon.1: lle11ch l\lunlclpal Aud.
Long Bcat'h BJ\·d, &
LOUIS XV dl11 "'°' 6 ran·rtl Ocean ,\\'C.
chatrs tablt' :;·x~'t' 1111 ANTIQUE SHOP
w/Cabriolc le11:s S4 :io. CLOSING DOORS 11
642-«l39 !! F.Vf.lt,,,ilNG GOES t! ,~=2~P~l~EC1=;~..,-,~,ffi-n-a=1 =;o', I TUES. TllRU SUN. 101
Turquoise naugahyde. chair 18423 Besch Blvd.
$20. 548-2900 Huntington BfArh
5 PC t.1aplc Be<lron1n Rt: 5
drtH\'tr desk \\'/(l:lass !np,
'l'v.'ln hrndhoards. S.l,~2!).19
BLUf.: Sof•. lop rolll1 s;,o. \\'II
.t: a:ld bunk bcdt $50. Blue
BR cpt1 .\ ace St~. 833-2660
AR.\I Ctudt. Contcmpornr)':
Aqua·brown s.in. .m Cosl•
flfrsa St. rs-ml
Le111ded Hengln9 Shade•
.. 54l·2'.ii8 •
S•wlng ~t.1 8120
196!1 :i;JNGER ZIG·ZAC ,
wnJnul ron'°le, bo t ton
ho l e11, deslgn1 elc.
Gulln\nlttd. $36.00 Cash .st
tasy lf'rnll!! 52&-C16
CHARTER Ne\\'fl011 Bt>ach :: n1ale. 2 fem. SIG-27391/15 POODLE, TOYS. shots & BEACH. Limiled spaces ln \V/cam""". !lG hp ovrrhead
tennis club n1Prnber:shlp for tr\ £! 11 t d' •-· salt! or lrndr. C!lll &14--0634 ?llIXED English Setter & • m. ;'\:ce C'n Pt' Lgree. ne1v addi1ion lo Dt"ift1\'00d ca111, 4 spd, dlr. 6 ply tires.
Poodle. 1 yr old male. $50. 5-IG-S319 Beach Oub. ~1odels Oil dis-hack up lights. You nan1r
F irewood P!'l'fer adults. 642-91TI 1117 * DOBERi\1AN pup.<:, males, pla.y! Gl"t't'nleal ~to bi I e it! Sc1ial # PL52litmT.l.
637-61lil1 2 \"NG Y.'hite female rats AKC, shots, li \l"et-ks. Call Honie Sale!!, 21462 Paciflc t"'llll pri~ S2009. Take small
SH,\RP! !'!.rd \Vig -1oor~ \O.'/Ca£t'. Call 549-1327 642·!!961 anylhtK' Dot lligh\\'9.)', 11.B. 536-Wl3 dn or tr&de. Call Phil.
Human Hair SE. Phone -f'VE's 1/lS CHIHUAHUAS For &Ir. Pc! '68 2t.\--50, l \I BA, carpe1ed. 49-1-9773 or 5'15-00.14.
892-9170 after 4 u·ttkdn)'!. GERi\1.AN Shepherd, 10 mcJlll, or Show, AKC. Call drapes. partly tum. !\lust
/POOL Tahir, 8", gold top, good y,•ith child r en . 546-3746or547-3874 M!ll $87jQ, terms. Hun· $
like new, Sl15. !Wl-3860 l/lS ritaltese puppie11 ~i;g101i By the Sea, Space &u.a DATSUN JUVJCa I
Olli 546-3867 LOVlNG Family cAI -needs AKC,
2 HOl\IEl\IADE Snt\n Crib homt'. \VIII pay all upkttp. &11-05118 or 5'13--I07J "68 KJT F11irVic\\', 12.~40'. "Lcad('r in Ttw: Bl!u<'h l'lt\es''
Comfo11s, $20 Eal'h. Call 61~1979 l/16 BASENJr Barklf's1 puppie1 C !t:ll n . Nice Par k . ZIMMERMAN
842-7137. HA~1PSJ'ER v.'/cagt' h'f'(' t() fron\ Africa. ClUtmp. slot'k, Rt'Ason11.ble Rt'nl. $\\•ln1·
RE1'1{1GERATOR, boby -...i honie. 67j-451 7 xlnt mk'gs lenns Gta--0:>33 nilng Pool. Clbh~. N"'Pt 2845 HARBOR BLVD. •-· ui·, " . . Bch. Call ~1611 540-6410 crib, hoy's 10 llpci bike. all ll\'l'S.
)t int <'Ond. 847--6560 aft er 5 x"·m"""'=EN=s.~7~mo-n~,,~,-.~ld . ...,._ 1130 * NE\\' 24x60 DELUXE, 2 ORANGE COUNTY'S -BR. 2 BA, <kn, crpts thru· NO l PORTABLE s· Bar. sullable F'l'ff to good ho m1n~ ~ REG. Thorobl'!'d f'llly sn.o. 4 out, J>&Uo ._ c.1rport awnp, •
lanai room. dt'rol'Bthi! r11it· 836-4.t!tl .. yrs gentlt-. No bad IVtblts. 28' ralled porch. Man,y e:c· DATSUN DEALER
tan & lauhala. ~-671-3'730 ADORABLE. fluffy, 6 \\'k old English or \Vestern. 518-71 73 tras. SIS.~: 642-ll!i(I DOT DATSUN
SKIS "ith bindings. Head kiltens, trained to sand box. or ?U-723.l CUSI'Oi\f coach iv / cal>Aria . t~ Stach Blvd,
Standards. Look Nc-vt1.d4 646-S473 l /l6 S YEAR old, chot'ola!c, man All \\'ood, many f'Xtnis. Huntington Beach
blnclingi;;, S-10_ 615-1477 5 MICE & large cage + MIU'e, Good 1how pro-Sl5,9."i0. Trade? Udo Penn, 842·1.81 or 540-1442
ZT!l.1~1ER.\1AN SKI BOOTS. miall cage. j.18-35.)2 1/16 S()ttt.s:: 1-lunt II jurnp • l)T'.>"3524 •69 D S
\\'orn 011Ce. 1'tans alze 9 $20. CO CH hair needs Sacrlflt"t' $T!JO. !>I~ •tsun te. Wa g.
U & c . llORSES Boarded· Box Stall CUST. mobile d\\"11t11•n PAim flam1ngn r('(f, blac·k l>11rkrt :;:;~~mt'nlld rlngs. S3W50 recoverl~g.i7.7712 Corral. F'l'l.'d, }ao, CAii ~ ~tT d~ J~m·~ fnd. ~11ts. ttlr, 10.0W •rcuW nll.
and lllCll'lf'~. S2l~. dlteOUnt a.l9-3Mt &42--4370 • m urn. Ulldrr fae111.:uT; rltdio. 11o111. if. ~ !Wl E:\1PTY l\tOV?NG CARTONS ,, Tak(' 111nnlt dn, "'Iii fuic Ill'\
to ~r • 4 1 &13..368~ 1 16 * llr l\tl)ST SELL.• Lovtly ROD A Rt'cl 1 BR 1():1(50 lum. piiy ·70 UCf'n~· XCZr.tS
APT Sz Range, i10. ~ K J TT EN s 10 \\-ks old, &y i\lal't $223 or btsl oflcr. Perfttl C'Onoi. lllneu fort"Cs Call °Ken 494--9773 ~r ~~I·
12x15' Cold 11hff.R. $.j(). Grey ~6-2656 evenings 1117 96'2·'i193 aale. 847-4.aJ( 1969 DATSliN:;-;Coct=-,. ~~
1"''ced, S3S. 6'Jl..04.t5. PUPPIES. 7 "'ks. old 10 good TRANSPORTATION 20x58 lllobll<> limn~. 1 mo m 0 de 1 2 o o o, ~1~ ~';::~
WJtlTE COllhOle aewlnc home. 54S-UI05 1/16 Bo.ti & Y•chh 9COO old. Equltyl-t11keo1neon-Yf'IJ01''/blk top. S2JOO .
n1achlne, not tlg·rAJ: $"..3. · lract. ~lov'tnv E&rt. MS-95n Rl.1--1092 afl 6::-.0 pm.
Tank vacuum $2.l. MH!C>H l! Sm1d l 1urtle:1 ~709 1/16 ..... Ol"ENS --~ --~---==='"'""""'""-=-J'REE Rabbits 847-6892 l/J6 ..., ,, "b1 w/n1uur1nr P.IUST' f\IOVE IT! ~10, 11s '67 Oat,11n Rc1!1Ti·-,_~,-,1'<~(
nlAtLER bltdl for VW bl.II. _ In Nf'\\.llOrl Ba.y, $.1950 lncl'1 is. Awn!nr~ I: etc, $2MO. t&h. hrd!p. :\1n'I Cond
Like nrw SU. &1&-9US PUPPIES &18-4069 1/16 moot1ng. Call ~ 531..(L":OO. :l31.soi6 $1400, EVt'~ ~ :..i:.-.l'!l73 .
-----~--------.-------· ,
. -:-;D-;;A,,ll;;Yr.P"l"'LO"T""'=--~===Th~u~rsd;;":;;•;:;J;;:"';:;";:;'"'---'1.::.:970 ..
l '!-'!ISPORTATION TRANSPORTATION Tl<ANSPl)RTATI Q_N TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION ·TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION
-.. "".., Autos 9600 _1..,_oo_r::ted--A._ut=°':...;:;9600;;:.::; I ;l:::m;i:l'Orioel:::.::::...:"';;:".::"":::__:9600= r:A:•:.:loo=-W::.:•:::•l=ed::.__:_97:,:00::J-U:.sod::.:;:;C:;•::•;:;• __ _;9900:.:.::: J Usod Cart 9900 Uaed Cort 9900 Ustld C1r1 9900 Ustld Cort ,,..
ENGLISH FORD PORSCHE VOLKSWAGEN wt PAY WH CHRYSLER FORQ ·OLDSMOBILE PONTIAC
G * Ooormon Saluljl i, ;. •. A~PJ:I • I . ' • ~ '118 PONTIAC l!oMlvllJo. 4 ORAN E COUNTY'S '66 -911. red, block 1n1., s UW BUGS fOR YOUR CAR 1969 CHRYSLER IMl'EIUAL , '81 G~ ~·· 300 Eng. '6T OLDs CUUAu supreme, 2 cir Hd · VOLUME ENGLISH sp.i, chrn1 whbi, nu ti-•. In • on lloor New ~in" --dr 11-~top m•roon top, •tr COIMI., PB. PS, '" Luxurious, sparkling, •i..,,."" * '62 FALCON ''SQUIRE'" '.' · • -.. ,,... ' "" ' -wl.ndo 6-' FORD DE ALE R ~~nd. WOOd strr wbl. FROM CONNELL black, 4 door sedan w~ STATION WAGON tread wd ovalll. m&JS, w/blck Vinyl tnt, air cond., i'tit' ltrg wh7.''10 :Z1. a;;.m
SAL ES. SERVICE $399 dau top, plusb black, eenu-A/T, .RJH. cbropHt q>of V>p . clutch 3 n'IO old, 2 nu muf· PS, PB, Michelin tires, xlnt Rea. paid. AvaU &bout Feb
•
'
O&VE< DrR .'°Mod!N•STI• OCK ·~ PORSCHE • 911L, 1 CHEVROLEl I~ calfskin inlerio1·. All Jugo.gt ra~ etc. sparlfling ~ .. 'N~_T11•~-CdWklnter. fnd;.~e f~ ~~o~~~ lat, $2490. 644-2284 owner. Lo mi. Silver Gray. 2828 Harbor mvd. space age PoWer llSllist& + orif:onyx fllack w I bieaut •, .... ~to""" ... lll • Beiit or .,..,,,... inn. _.v -=~==~==--
• 2 & 4 Dr. Ikluxe5 Xln't Cond. Ca11 675-4030 GOOD SELECTION Costa Mesa 5f6.l200 "DUAL" AIR CONDITION· red/White Vinyl int. None Ofr Ovr $350. Must sec to 494--0113, Emen.ld Bay, 1~':'~tii~T~~N: e 2 & 4 Dr."GT Model5 '68 Porsche Targa, ail', tape IMPORTS wANi-Eo ING~ Under transfeJTable, bett~ for OftlY $4951 MAR-Apprec. Call ~2638 ,t.oauno°""=::,::Be:;•::'::h ___ ~ Power sfttrtng It b~i.
• Station V/agons dk, 11,000 mi. Tanger. Oranae o:iunttes new car ~ctory warranty. QtUS 1'1TRS; 900 So .. est '00 STARLINER. 352 V.S. OLDS '69 2 Or. Custom 88. $l7S phooe 644-4681 after
At.any with fully automatic Orange. $5395. 524-65'19 c TOP $ BUYER True pre!tige motor car _ Hwy, Laguna B e li ch, Comp) Overhaul 1968, Nu Gold. P-dlsc 'brk5, P/1, 6 trans .. air, radial tires, ra. ,68 Porsche 912, clean, call BD.L MAXEY TOYOTA $5000 4~7503. !i40--3lOO w/w tires, auto. trans., wildws, seats, air, ntw tlref;.1 ~='"'~•~·m=. =~~--
dlo, vinyl roof, wsw tirel'i. fol" appt. pis, p/b. radio, Body It in-.~•::9&-c.2256:::;'==~----l1961 PONTIAC Catalina
B8fi: ~L~l~"~ Eyes &42-124' ' R. Beach. Ph. 841.f555 900 So. Cst Hwy, Laguna &:h Fully factory equipped, Dlr. ter need V.'Ork. BEsr OF· 63 STAJ'tFJRE. Immaculate! Safari Sta Wag. Good cond.
ORDER NOW '.68. PORSCHE, Sl&te, ......... 5'., ./ \lrj;' PAY CASH FOR 49-i-Th<n 540-.3100 $89S. . :.ERt·r·2PPrlMv .• Pty, 548-8997. 1 oy,<ner. Full power, Air. ~~ 6:30 °" 10:30 pm,
.... ., . ' ., -'64 IMPERIAL 4 D Pho .. A .. ,,.,,,.. ... ... New tires. Must Seil! Pvt. l ==c=~=~-~~ Theodor• spcl. Exec-• .co~ ~ C.U1 • ~ USED VW's, AllJ far John, r. hdtop. ' ' ' ne .........,.,.., o. ••. 548--3106 '68 PONTIAC GTO conv. P/S.
ROBINS FORD 675-0014 call IWG-0067. Xint cot~. Full equip., lthr. '64 FALCON Futura V-3, 2 UNCOL c•::; ~======== -=:::-======:;;; M9-3031 Ext. 66 or 67 1iphol. 67'.>-3031 door, hd top, 4 opd, R/H, N -P/8. Air, 15,000 ml. New
2000 ""'"°' Blvd. ' ~HARBOR BLVD. PLYMOUTH paint. Cuh & toke over
Cost• Mo" 642.00IO ROL_ LS. ROYCE OOSTA ME>;A Auto, LH1ln9 9110 COMET good rood. S100. >t&-4580 1008 LINCOLN. 4 °'" All pm'-'· 838-9429 alt S PM
FERRARI
FERRAR I
Newport Jmporu J.,fd,. .Qr.
ange County'• only author-
ized dealer.
SALES-SERVlC'E--PARTS
3100 W. Coast Hwy,
Newport Beach
642-9405 ~1764
Authorized Ferrari Dealer
JAGUAR
1960 3.4 SEDAN. Black
-;r 1--:1~~~'--·1==~~~~~~;;;11 __ _:::~'.___ '6.5 Ranchero, blue printed, pwr, radio, air. Nylon tricot ,68 VALIANT LEMANS '6S, air, bids. p/b, ROLLS Royce Show car, LARGE 289 auto. 380 gear, headers, uphol. Priv owner. 642-2806 p/i, r/h, vinyl top, xlnt
Silver Dawn -Sunroor. This SELECTION LEAS.E -RENT $300 TAKES IT etc. Sl200. 546-4.!»18 aft 6 pm. * 5E~N~~Ji * cond. Priv prey. ~23'll
classic 1954 model is im· of VW fmm9dtate dellv•ry "62 'I ,_ 1 Del \V Sa •• PONT ...__.,..st 5•-Wog on all .. ere ~mo "'" '" MUSTANG Sole! $1199 le!~ ''~"~ ~. · p_ecclible. Even has the CAMPERS 1970 FORDS & 4 dr, r&h, xlnt motor, new FORD V8-P/S, lt.(adlo, Good coM. auto ma t'i c transmission. b 1 10 ... M"1ster "T'' $1095. Pliv/Plt., 96S-08'14
Pur;chased in London by the Harb V W FORD TRUCKS r -.o"='="=Y=· =..,.==·===~'°'""== 1-::--::-:--::--:::--:-~ Our ,-'66 MUSTANG 645·1441 111161 PONTIAC; reblt owqer oI Guarranty . • •All PCJ,Pular ma~. Fo1d CONTINENTAL '64 1'~ord Conv. XL, R/l-1, engine. $150.
Chevrolet in Santa Ana • Alfl'HORIZED autho(U'.ed leasinr. 5ystem. (PY.·r steering, brks, win-VS, automatic trans, CLEAN, %1.0o Harbor Blvd., C.M. •Call 968--5230 *
will sacrifice for quick sale. SALES & SERVICE Get Our CompetltJve Rates1---------dowsl Clean, good cond. a perfect 1st or 2~ car. ,67 PLYMOUTH I::
FOR APPOINTMENT TO um BEACH BL 842-4435 Theodore 63 • BEAUTIFUL condi!ion. $1'50. 523 &!award Rd, CdM. l{UIT}'! BARRACUDA RAMBLER ~1~"" Oavo Loe""r HUNTINGT\)N BEACH ROBINS FORD All 1,.thoc • powoc · tow 61~ °' 54"-2241 Sale! $1299 Sale! '66 YW 2060 Harbor Blvd: mileage. 642-1522 aft 5 Pt.I 1964 Ford Ranchero, 3 ipd, M l1t•r ''·T'' 645-1441
2 Doo . nd ' . Costa Me.sa 642.0010·1,,,•,,w,.,'.,"-'-c'·~~-~--custom frbgls rear cover, 2100 Harbof Blvd., C.M. r, air co 1ho11ing, dlr, '66 Lincoln Conlin. 4 dr, Lan-priv party. $815. EifS-1420 TOYOTA
Auto .• PWl' strg., dlr .. bl~
on blue. Full price $Ui:?!J. Sm. SACRU'ICE
down, low pymnts. WW fine 1960 RAMBLER
pl'llt prty. UJH345. Ca 11 4«ior sedan, good tires &: ~ Ml oondt•'-Im '69 MUSTANG 5""" ru na ..... n. • )Ill' LEASE """ da.u Ip, air, tape, Xln't '65 COUNTRY Sedan. White. maculate! n!l30~ Would l!ke Canel. $2200. 5:1~7918 'eves .,.2 V 0 p p b Grande-~1. power steering,
Pickup RRB813 Call Phil '69 Cad Eldorado, full pwr., · .;;:, ..,, /s, / ' air. disc brake5, radio, heater &
beauty! \Vood paneling, lthr 1---------"Roy'' 494.9113 or 545--0634. brake(. not a dent In body &
'61 Pl YMOUTH uptialstery in good 1hape; uphol .. auto tram .. $995. Ph.
f.'lr. Gennett days ~42-4910 x
373, eves/wknds 675-6039
'51 KARMAN-Ghia..· needs
work, good matetial for
Dune-Buggy~ $125/oUer.
5'18-4506
JAGUAR '62 XKE Roadster.
i\fust sell! Draf1ed! $1350 or
best oUer. J\1r. Smith,
. 5'18-T:J96
TOYOTA
SEE & DRIVE THE 1910
ALL REMAINING 69'$
MUS! BE SOLD NOW!
PRICED FROM n780:60·
Ser. # 1450
Your B<'st Deals Are Still At
DEAN LEWIS
1966 Harbor, C.J\r. 545.~300
4!M-Sn:i or ~. air. viqyl top, 10,0CO n1i., $l200. * 6?3-581.l lratter hitch. $2850, 536-2442
'68 VVv [ II n19 per mo. CORVAIR '63 FORD 1 Ton, Cab & '66 MUSTANG. Blue sunroo ' an1 m, '68 Cadillac Eldorado Cha!lsis, duai whll. Gd coco mats. Jmmacu"late. di . vi 1 ~ d C 11 64 •• 930 w/white Vinyl tp. Many eic· Best oUer. 494-6893 or ra o, all', ny _top. ./ '62 CORVAIR. ne\V lires, r -~-"-·-• __ ~ __ .__ tl'a5. 46,000 ml. 54SpX13,
675-2'l04 ·$159. (Xlr-mo. neecls-sl-igbt work. $100 or 1970 MAVERICK, l ow 'G9MACH ff"spd. $2595. can
::.:.::..:.:::..:.. ______ '67 T·Bird Landau, fuU pwr., best otter. 644-1369 mileage, auto, radio, heater.
'68 .vw Seelan, light blue. air, stereo tape: $'79.permo .. 1 ~=========1$2100.534-5200 .61s..4373
Orig. O"·ner. Jo ~i's. Xlnt '67 Galaxie soo, 2 dr IIT. CORVmE 4-T Pbf
Cond. M l /FM rndto, many air, vinyl top; $59. per mo. '63 FALCON Sprinl, 4 spd,
xtra5. S149a. 54fr7909 SO. COAST LEASING R/Ji, 5tereo tape, xlnt oond. $500. 842-1943 aft 6 pm.
'GS Must., 2 + 2 FB, new
tires & shocks, good cond.,
$1225, 536--6000 alter 6
ROADRUNNER Motor in XLNT cond, auto ,., < ba-1 u"-ati" trans & heater -toW price """· .... ~ a ...... ... ra· dlo, heater, dlr, blue on blue. $100. Call BW Gartner.
$1699. SmaJI down, lo w I ~5.16-84==11=H=.B=.==== pym~. WP_S242. C!,11 Phil:
494-9113 or 54a-06M,
·ss PLY. Banacuda. :l DR".
R/H,, w/slw. Xlnt cond.
Transl. must selll T.0 .P. 545-3809
STUDEBAKER
'59 Studebaker Lark, g cyl, 4
dr. varlou11 part....n aood.
64G-4695 aft 5 pm.
BTT T MAXEY '67 V\V Bua: 1500 epg, white 300 W. Cst Hwy. NB &IS-2182 '64 Corveue 365 hp. 4 spd, !-----~~---
MERCED.ES B.ENZ •LL wlied im. Uodoc J0,000 ml. ' "'w po•i-t. AMIFM. • •• '59 FORD v~ Gotoxlr. 2 dr.
Like new. $1350, 962-3029 UMd C1n 9900 brakes, 12" Indy tire111 & Pos!traclion. $225 or ofr. lTlnlVfOITIAI 1-===:;~~~==-i.=::..::::.:.: __ _:_=1 m..,. Nu '"'I poi"!. ''"" ,::61:::.3-80..::,c71:..,,_ __ ~_
PONTIAC OLDSMOBILE
. • ~ I VOLVO ~ lo apprec! $1900 film '62 J\IBRC. Mctea1'. Xlnt int ---------* FLEET SALE * 40• 3082 '66 OLDS Cu"---Full• 11881 BEACH BLVD. 1----------1 .,... & body. Needs mech'L .,...... ,, Ordn9e . 'fi6 Leillal\I Convt. P/1, 3
speed V..S, radio, Poly&las
til't's. Xlnt oond. 543-5947
T-BIRD '65 Convt. Air, full
pwr. Finest Ooad. Below
Wh!!le Bk. Must Sell. SU 75.
aft 7 573-8203 L.irgest Sele(l1on
New & Used
Mer(edes Bl'n?
(5) 1008 Chevy Impalas equipped. Be!t otter.
Hunt. Beach 847.a555 VOLVO 2 Door .............. $1700 '6.">. CORVETTE f'tbk. Nu \\'Ork .. $100 or bst. 494-3939 T. Kilgore 644-5796
I ml N. of Coast Hwy, on Bch (5) 1968 Chevy Impalas pawl. eng. P.cd w/ blk int. 1967 F"ord LTD, Air, pwr "61 PONTIAC Station wagon, '65 Landau, full pwr, air.
'67 Toyota Corona SEE & DRIVE THE 191fl 4 Door .............. $1650 3?7-36.) -I spd. Sac at $1995. brks, & strng. Gd. tires. '54 OLDS. $150 rebll trans. $300. Call au 7 $1550. Call 50-1723 days. Jim Slemons Imps.
Warn!'.!r & M<ii n St. A · di 4 ALL R~'!AINING '9'S (3) 1968 Ford Country 642-6006 Make otfer. 546-2986 G90d trall!portation pm, $36--388l M~l.30 eves. uromauc, r, dr. sedan. ~c,,. ,7,;'-,==--=-----""-==~~=~--1 536-!1<42 While wi th b!Ue interior. '-Wm' BE SOLD NOW! sedan station wag .... $1900 '68 Co1vettc 327, 4 spd, •'64 FORD Gal 500, 4 door .~-~,,_;,~~==~·1 '67 PONTIAC GTO. Ex· '57 T·BIRD. Xlnt Cond.
S.:inta Ana 546-4114 Smalldown&lowpayments. PRICED FROM iz.;98. tll 1968 Ford Galaxie AM/Fi'.1-1, Both tops. S3895. sed., v.g, auto. Good order. "1'3 OLDS STARFIRE ce.llent condition. 4 speed. $1695. Ctll 6'1S-4373
'64 Benz 190. UJC197. Call Roy 494.9773 Ser. # 7860 4 Door ................ $16001...;.oa=l=I '='::''='='=P=M;;·=63=0.~11,:;48~0.:..~S650~·;·~54~0.~t0~52=====.!,_,=~$350=.==Qill=="='=·1U5===.:.,1=1=600=·=C=ol=I =(213)===43=1="669==..:...===="='=P=M==:::::::=J
Au!o trans. Leather inter. or ~0034. ' Your Best Deals Are Still All====-=='==== I 9IG0
$1650. 54;)..2547 or 543-4801 • '69 TOYOTA Corolla DEAN LEWIS New Cari
f.1ERCEDES Benz '62 190 Sprinter, 4 spd. 'Beige. $1450 l966 Harbor, C.M. 646-9303 BUICK
SL. Xlnt cond. $1800. ~O='="='="=O=f=k='=· 8=41=-='481=·== J l96S VOLVO S T AT I O Ni---------~~~1~71~4~) ~"='"'~''--·I \VAGON. 122·S model AM· '68 BUICK 4 dr \Vgn. Little
1960 i\o1ERCEDES BENZ VOLKSWAGEN F~t. 4 speed, air' con-cash down, take ove r
190 SL. Both lops. ditioning. 4 ne\\I radials. paymnts. Nd! some body
XLNT COND. 673-8208 32,000 miles. Excell ent con-work, runs gd. 8.000 J=========' 11966 VW, Re-Bit Motor. X1n't dition. Sl !lOO. 830-459& ~"::'=-31=I'======
MG Condition. $1095. Ca I I -
MG
Sa1es, Servic.:, Parts
Immediate Delivery,
Al!Modcls
J1rluporr
JIJnports
3100 W. Coast Hwy. N.8.
642-9400--5-10.1164
Al!fhorized MG Dealer
'61 MGA, good mech. cond.
Priced Ior immed sale $450.
644-5188
~1GA 196(1. Good Condition,
$600. Or Best Offer. Call -
966-58811
'69 MGB GT, 5 mos old, all
('Xtras~ Paid $4000, asking
$3495. 675-7004
MORGAN
'57 MORGAN
+4
Sl500. &12·1714
PORSCHE
'63 PORSCHE ronv; new re·
bit eng, paint !op, am/rm.
Best offer. '194-6893, 61~2704
642-1314, 615-0144 '69 Volvo, 2 dr, Autom. CADILLAC
'56 VOLKSWAGEN. good trans., Lo1v mileage, ] ______ _::; __
condition $350. Ol11ner. $2500. 4~036
6T:i-Ta32 AntfquM, Cla11fcs 9615 1965 CAD Coupe de Ville.
'62, 1/V:I. New reblt enrii:ieo Beaut. colld .Low .4lli.1e1.
xlnt c:on<l-ri-1ust sell! $575 or Lots ol extras. MW!t see to
oiler. 548-9823 '57 MORGAN appttciate! Priv owned. See
'88 VW Fast back, A~I/FM + 4 at 393 E. 17th St, CM.
new brakes S1600. Private 548-1696 or 673-1783
party, Eves: 54~14 $1500_ 642·1724 eves/SUn
1953 HENRY J '63 V\V Camper, reblt cng., Good Condition. ~take ()ffl?l'. '65 CADILLAC ~&~1~4~tC:rs best oiler. 494-2405 COUPE DE VILLE ·=""''C°-~-'-'~-~-l=========lru1 power, air, fuUy equip. '67 VW Bus. Orig. O\\•ner. Autos W•nted 9700 ped, leather interior, landau
$1100 Cash. Call -Days top, Excellent col'klillon! _,"=",..,21=91~·~E~v="~·-613--233-"-2-~ I WE PJ.Y · Must sacrifice, 'Best offer
1966 V\V l300 sedan, good CASH over \\'holesale, Call 537-Ml.O
condition, low mi I ea g e CADILLAC 1967 seda n
$1 .@ . 968-7838 DeVille. Silver w/Blk pad·
'f,6 VW Fast back. Sunroof. for used ea.rs Hr trucks just ded tp, air, 6 "'ay 51. stereo
$1].95. Ask !or Ru s I Y, call us for tree estimate. Fri-I rad, py,l' door! & wind,
642-8774 or 54;)..-0225 Aft 5. (HEU l£T $3000. Cail 673-n4I.
'66 V\V Xlnt running rond. GROTH &;1R·O FOR sale or lease at a
nc\v clutch & tires. 642-919j sacri!Jce, '68 cad. Eldorado.
or 673-7884 Ask for Saleis Manqer Fl pwr, air, AM/Fllrf stereo.
1!t2ll Bear>b Blvd. Be "ul ~ "103 '66 V\V. Less than 20,(0') mi. .. Huntlnaton Beach autu • 0 1.rv
"'hi te/red int. Xlnt cond. ,,, !1-33! .. l=~-·l l958 CAO. All power. FAM(·
646-1715 aft 6:30. -WE PAY,_TOP LY CAR. REAL CLEAN! /'67 V\V Bug. Low n1ile5. DOLLAR $.195. Call 673-4253
Excellent condition. $1350. for good, clean used can. '64 CAD. $1395
Call 673-6539 all makes. See George Ray 2066 Pl.ACENTJA
'68 V\V Excellent condition Theodore Robins Ford COSTA MESA
$1350. Call 644-1~ or 2839 2060 Harbor Blvd.
Catalpa, EastbluH C.~t 642-0010 CA MARO
Imported Autoa 9600tmport9d Aut~• 9600 Im por t.cf Autos 9600 * FUN·N·SUN I I;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;==;;;====;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;, I '6' CAM ARO "307''. v ·8,
Get ht t• the swl11t •f th9 '70'sl THM .,. Jnf tlrle ur1 hi d• ft 111,
Com• He the11t today,
'68 vw BUG llNio, 11 ....... Wiii!• Wlllf, •11tt11'1lllC llkk $11111, (.ll OlOtt)
'64 KARMANN GHIA ~:,~;,.;N"'·
'60 VW CAMPER '"'"'"'
'66 TOYOTA WAGON :.::~:.::,""
'66 DATSUN WAGON ~.::;.~""
'67 DATSUN
'65 VW BUG
4 ttor ftll-.., AIJttrfllllC.
Wllllf wtll llrta. IVWJIUJ
tlMlt, _, .. ,
wflli. w11 ... ll't:l'HJI
-1
$1795
$895
$1095
$995
$895
$1295
$995
$2495
CONVERT, outstanding bug.
gar orange w/black top &
plush black vinyl int., A/T,
PIS, R/H etc. "Note ; this
car has only 17,631 miles &
i5 acid with a tranlferrable,
new car factory warranty! ..
Only $2695. MARQUIS
MTRS: 900 So. C's! Hwy,
Laguna B e a c h. 494· 7503, S40-3ioo. ·
'69 CA~ -RS, orange.
250 HP, 'Pis, P/b, air.
$3100. * 613-5811
CHMOLET * SMART CHOICE!
'66 CHEVY ll, V.S, "NOVA"
HDTOP, A/T, PIS, R/H,
new W·waUs, 5pal"kling orir·
inal Glenn Green w/lmmac
green int. "Mint" condition.
Only $1565. MAR Q U J S
J\ITRS: 900 So. Cst II1vy,
Laguna Bea..;h, 494-7503.
540-3100
58 CHEV Wagon. Just had
valve job. New tires. trans,
gen, brake1, carburetor,
volt regulator, clean ln and
out. $325. 341-3411
'64 CHEVELLE Malibu 2 Dr.
HT. 6 eyl, standmf llhifl,
Good cond. New brkt. 1 own-
er. $700. 548-045.1 aft 5 p.m,
'62 CHEVY II wagon, P/S,
$150. 2646 Buswood St ..
Newport Beach. 6#-0t96
'68 SS396 • Chevelle Like
new, lo miltllie. $1100, Must
sell! 6f6..9109
'63 GREEN Briar Van,
Custom Inter. Xlnt Cond.
$57$, Call 841-5136.
'Gt IMPALA SS
Air. RE81JILT ENC.
GOOD COND. 673-5191
JOHN CONNEil
"NO GIVEAWAYS
NO G IMMICKS"
.•• J 111I 11 Yeer1 of Hon11t
Oe1 linq, Setlin9 C~ev•oleh.
Co111e In And Test Drive The All New '70 Monte Carlo.
'fhe Largest Se lection In Orange County!
WHERE?
AT CONNELL CHEVROLET
BRAND NEW 1970 CHEVROLET
IMPALA ~ 52.61 SOlDllYOUU
TODAY
BRAND. NEW 1970 ·CHEVROLET
Chevelle 5 24 5 9°·~:D~~u ,
BRAND NEW 1970 · CHEVROLET
NOVA
FINAL
CLOS£0 0UT '69 CAMAROS· ~.1UST
GO!
LARGE SELECTION OF USED CARS
'67 CHEVROLET
% ton pickup. (U29790)) $1295 I '65 CHEVROLET Impala 4 Dr VS, auto., P.S.,
rad.lo, heater. (NGW313J
$6951 '68 Y.W. IU• Radio, heater. 4 speed.
(XOA717)
'68 CADILLAC $4395 Convertible. Air, P.S., J"!\dlo.
(\VSH 895)
'64 MIRCURY
Convert. VS, auto., P.S., rad.lo,
heater, CRBY899)
'67 CHEVROLET
Impala Sta. Wagon. Auto.,
radio, hrater, 9 passenger.
(ll5612)
'67 PONTIAC $1 095 Ul\.tans 2 Dr. R&H. beautiful
gold finish. ('I'WN484)
17' FIBERGLASS CRUISIR $895
C'.abin cruiser w/50 h.p. Johnson
c.lec. motor & trailer. Complete.
'63 PLYMOUTH
4 Or Belvedere. Automatic,
RAH. (0TW118)
'67 CHIYROLn
4 door. Automatic, power
steering. (11~)
'U FGRD •Al.AXIi
~00 4 Dr.-Autom&tlc, Rtit
(NTE606)
'995
'65 MUSTANG ' '995
VB, converUbl~. autom&Uc, r~o.
heater. (1VU158)
''
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ft ~RY I'll.OT -..
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I.DAILY PILOT
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:J, :Jhe Crew o/ ApJ/o .12:
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:J.rom 011ange Counf'J, · 'Cafi/;,.mia, we ·~
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./iapp'J · fanJ;,;, a6 ·iou preF-e lo ve~fure info
. .
~ vaJlne66 of 6pace -lo p/ace~m_u,f/u,. 661 o/
.American /~fprinb ·-ori f~e hio;,n.
... '
_ :J!e courtuje1 6Lif/ ad Je,/icaliiin u~p/;µ
t'I 'JOU anJ Ike a6lronaub u/io wenl lefo~· .~
are a 6ource of p,.;Je anJ. in6piralion. lo U6 a{!.
qooJ fucL anJ (JoclpuJ. .
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CHARLES CONRAD, JR. ALAN L IEAN ·
...: •.
RICHARD F. GORDON, JR.
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Lou• and Clea~ ..
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y C?U~: pfobi!ibly · remember the AST RO ·SCROLL -. . . .
m6ssage. reproduc~d , here (left). Maybe, you
weie ce~en. among the 6,000 Orange Coast ~rea
residenfs 'who took the trouble to sigh it while
it was on. display at South .Coast Plaza sev!tral
. weel<s .ago. If so; the DAILY PILOT and South
: -·.. . ·' . ~ '-. -.
COQ!t Plaza M~rchants ·join 1n thanking you f0r
.. ~Yo.!1~-thooghtfulness. And you might be pleased to
· · . -5ee 4below) that the Apollo 12 astronauts made
·, it one of their first ~cts after ending their. .post·
. hinar flight quarantine to say "thank you" in
· their own words, too. (By the way, kids, thaYs
· ·. : ·' i:ri'i authentic "Pete" Conrad autograph, in «Jse .... ·' '
you want to clip it out-and save it among your
Apollo mission souvenirs.)
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