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1970-01-19 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa
' 7 i '1 ' ~~~~~~"'-~·-·-~-.. ~·-~-"'~t•ICT~ .... :•:;,·::·:··:·;· ...... ~·.-~·· ...... , Five Crash • . Victims Die In Coun~y Foor Orange Coontlllllll, lncludini a San Clemente sports car driver, ~ere killed in traffic cra!het over the weekend, the Callf«nia Jllghway Patrol r-"<! to- day • . A llfth motorist diid ol Injuries oul· rered tne week earlier, bringjng_tbt tCJWo. ty's 1970 traffic death toll to 13. Killed instantly Salurday night when bis sports car struck a tree beside Ganado Drive near Ortega Highway in s3n Juan Capistrano was John Laurence Stauff. 42, of 120 E. Escalones, San Clemente. Police said Stauff, who recently rel~ ed from paratroop duty in Vietnam, was 1170 Coonty Tralflc lKt 1t Death T•ll 11 returning from a bachelor party in honor of his brother, Harold, when the acc~t occurred. He was to have been best man in his bfother•1 wedding Jan. 24.. TREATED FOR CUTS Stauff's passenger, James Lewis, 23, of the aame address, was treated for cuts and bruises at South Coast Community Hospital in Sooth Laguna and ttleased, police said. An elderly Garden Grove resident, Virgil C. Robinson, 84, ol 10031 Melody Park Drive, died Saturday at 9:45 p.m. at Palm General Hospital of injuries suf· fered when be was struck by an auto Jan. 10 on Brookhurst Street in Garden Grove. Police said they are still inves- tigating the accident. Another Garden Grove residenl, Mrs. t.ucllle Hittle, St, (lf 9691 ~estmimter Ave., succumbed to her inj Sonday "iDOt niug. Police Niil llhe a-ccm- panion.. Mrs. Loia Haws, ol Kemville, were croesiiig Wutminster Avenue near Kerry Street Saturday evening when they were struck by an auto driven by Mrs. Cecilia Green, 21, ol 10461 Haqrd Ave., Garden Grove. Mrs. Green was ~ held. SERIOUS CONDITION itrs. Haws, who Is jn serious condition at Westminster Cotnmunity Hospltal , and her husband were vjsit.ing the Hittle family, police said. The two wom"1 were appareoUy on their way hornet-from marketing when the accident OCCWJed. La Habra police said today they are still searching for the driver o{ a v!hicle which reportedly struck and killed\Mrs. Jacqueline May Stubbs, 40, of 17~0 ~ La Habra Blvd., early Sunday mornmg.1 According to witnesses Mrs. Stubbs'was struck by a late model light colored car while crossing the street in front o{ her home. ~ena Park police today stated they are continuing to investigate the Satur- day morning accident which took tbe life (See DEATHS, Page %) Hide and Seek Game Ends; Dru g Suspect Jailed An Arcadia man who popped up and startled two passing detectives spent the weekend in Costa Mesa City Hail, after the lawmen claimed they stumbled onto a haul of hashish and marijuana worth '2.500 in his parked van. The accidental discovery led to the booking or Robert E. Dietze, 26, on charges of possession of hashish and marijuana for sale. Arresting officers were walking along In an area known for frequent drug ar- rests about 8:30 p.m. Friday, when they neared a parked van which appeared to be empty, said Detective Norm Kutch. Suddenly, he said, someone arose from I.he dashboard area, leading Detective Sgt. John Regan to snap his flashlight beam into the vehicle. Regan and Kutch said they saw what appeared to be several lids, or two-ounCe plastic bags of marijuana on the floor and asked Dietze lo step out of the van. The narcoUcs detectives said they foond an additional kilo. or 2.% pounds of marijuana hidden under a jacket on the seal, plus about one-half pound of hashish, the relined sap or the marijuana plant. Kutch said today that bash is sold oo the average of •10 per gra'tn, so the amount confiscated w o u I d run about $2.240 in value, wlth $200 more for the marijuana. Several other drug arrests we:re logged Q\·er the weekend, but most Involved ei:· tremely srnall amount& d. contraband" discovered durlng rouUne trafHc vlolaUon ltOps. Two cates Jnvolved di.KOvcry of. rnaf.- Juana In apartmcnta police visited for olh~ reaaons, only to amell the burnin1 '''ted and pursue tbe lnve1t1satlon. ' , ..~ .. While Orange Coast cuties don't go near ·the water ~ cause of the ·clammy weather, 20-year.old Jennifer Drum· mond of Australia finds the beaches at Bondi quite to her liking. Rich 'Hippie' Says He'll Fix -~_..·, .......... ·.~.,~. War~-reace NEW YORK (UPl) -MichAel James Brody, who. now says be will d1ltlibutt rroo billlon, or maybe an. even · trillion, also promises a plan for peace-fn'Vjetnam to President Nixon plus cures for cancer and all other diseases. Brody, whose Jong red hair and hip clothing belle his claimed wealth. lnsi.111 be will give away money to anyone who needs it. - Before a national television audience on the Ed Sullivan Show Sunday night, Brody, 21, played a 12-string guitar and sang a ballad written by Bob Dylan, ••you Ain't Goin' Nowhere." Then he.pr~ claimed again : "I'm worth 100 billion dollan. Dots that stagger your mind? In fact, that was yesterday. 1 mJgbt be worth a trillion to- day." Crowds or people, many of whom !laid they hoped for a gift from Brody, mobbed the college dropout philanthropist u he entered and left the theater. "You're kill· ing me," he shouted before police hustled him into a car arxi he drove away. Jnside the theater earlier, Brody, who appeared flushed and excited, told reporters he would oonUnue th e giveaways ir hls public, fnclui:Ung those who have picked.his pocket and pulled his wedding ring from his hand in the past (See BRODY, Pqe t ) Dog Tests Told I ,. • Ca·lilornia Fir111 Halts IJse ol Birth Mini-pill High Court Bans uick Draft as 'Punishment' . . ,, . ~ ~· l t~"-"'"' • ·-eoc x e L£ c plz - .... £ .. • State Buys County Be·aeh Mott Says 3 Miles Acquired After Irvine Talks By RlCJIARD.P .. NALL Of "t: ... J'tllll .._ William Pem MOU, Jr., director of the State Department of Bacbes and Parks, said Saturday that California has just ac-- qulttd three ..,.. mllea of publie beach in Orange. County. Mott declined to pinpoint Ille locailon but had just completed talks with the Irvine Company which be said pleased him. . Mott was one of a panel or speakers at Ille San Clemcnle Inn taking part In a conference on the future of Orange Coun· ty beaches. The Irvine C.ompany has announced plans for cooperative development of its coastal holdings between Laguna Beach and Corona del Mar so that the public will have access to beaches. Commenting on .his talks with Trvine Comp&n)I olflcials, Mott •Id he thought the pending development would bring "a totally new concept on how' beach are•s can be available to the public as well as have private development." He called the concept "something quite unique which may .et a precedent for Ult mt af Call!omla." Mott also forecast a new trend in state beach pl&Mlng which will push the auto inland. "In the past we have planned for the mito. We now are going to plan the atale park system fer people and not Ille auto." Commenting on npanded parking .recenUy provided at Doheny State Beach, Mou said, "the parking lot can be ripped out tomorrow. We're making studies to determine how to move the autos as much as five mJle!I inland and,provide a ayatem of. mini-bus transportation. "Doheny Park is merely a transition on what we're ulUmately going to have." lwfoU also spoke of the need to convert mUilary lands such a:i Camp Pendleton to public use. "Pendleton and aeveral others are closed to public use. We're working on this situation." wurts Must Take Action WASHINGTON (UPI) -The SupreIOe Court today barred SelecUve ServJce boards from speeding up inductions to punish registrants for violating draft law regulations. The court, In a 6-2 ruling, he.Id that any action taken against "delinQuent'" registrants mu.st. be p.ttsued through the courts. The justices struck down the prac.i tice of reclassifying them 1A subject to immediate call up. The decision came in a criminal• cue Involving David Earl Gutknecht of Gay;. lord, Minn., who contended be wu re- classified by his local board and ordered inducted beCau.se he deposlted his draft card at the feet of a U.S. marshal during a war protest in Minneapolis. The coutt reversed a subaequent con- viction of Gutknecht for refuslog to re-o · port for induction. The majority opinion written by Jutb William O. Doog(as said there will noth- ing in the 1967 draft law givin_g SelecUvt Service authorities "free-wheel.ing auttm~ Jtf to ride herd on the registrant&, uling immediate induction as a disciplbwy tit vindictive measure." Company Suspends Use The state had planned 'its first surfing park -a mile of beach frontage backed by 180 acres -adjacent to the Loran Coast Guard Station which abuts Presi- dent Nllon'1 Western White HouSe. Securtty 1helved the plans for the "Trestles" 1 l"-t • when the Preaident bou&hl his home,lut year. Queatloned after his lalk, Motl said the '1Trestfes'' iJ a superior surfing area. .Nllon akies bad indicated some other Camp Pendletoa land not clooe I<> the Western While H-might be uaed. Mtltt wants all of the area for the public. DAILY rlLOT ,_,,_,.- 'PARKS ARE' FOR PEOPLE' S.ad111 •nd P•rks' Mott The court asserted: .. The power under the regulations to declare a registrant delinquent has no statutory standard Cit' eyen guidelines. 'lbe-"power· ia ~ enUrely by !be cllsmlion ol !he local board. "It is a broad, roving authority, a type of administrative absolutism not coogm.. lal to our lawmaking traditions." Of Its Birth ~Mini-pill' PALO ALTO (UPI) -" Sy n·t e • 'r.aboratories Inc. today atlapended use ol its "mini·pill'' oral tontracepUve on a ~t basis in the United' States. . The finn said it would immediately confer with author i ties in England, France and Mexico, where the "mini-pill" has been marketed Com- mercially for almost a year. It has not been sold commercially in the United States. , The suspension of clinical studies in the U.S. came after doss tested on the·proo gestin-ooly pills s1'1ow'ta "'ad~ if. feels," including lesions and po1Sible metabolic changes. I Syntex spol<aman iaid . doll · lludlb wlih Ille IOQU<OIW· birih <Onlrol pills, )n wlf:h estrogens and fl>rol'atlill ~ dlf. 1-t lypes ol female. honnooa _.,.. taktn on diffemit• d*Js: did not. de'rnonstrate the 'lame ,e(fecta: i Lut .... ~.lop mellloal aulhoriU11,11~ !elliil •In ~ be1tln1s In W~covec elfecl of !he esln>gl!ll-: or ,l!<J(len!Jal ~ blrih cantol pills, which ht~ been on the merket'in-U...u.s. for· ...,. time. Some doc~•1ald ihey had htnnlul side effects 1lllt others dll!plli..I this. The "mini-pill," whicb ·bu been hailed by torM u a "second generaUon" birth control devlce wbich would be free of IOllle of the compllca~ !'( estrogen- bued pills, has been aold In France and M:Wco for a year and in the United Kingdom •Ince 1111 May. It Is marketed in England under the b:-and ame "Normenon," in Franct u "Naceny1" and in Mexico as "Rete1." The company spokesman said the "minl-P'U" w11 tested on 4,700 women In the United Slalel and 1brood before II went on the· mar:ktL It wu still beln( lested at IO c<nlen In the Uolted Stai.I, where the FDA bad wllbheld marketing approval. · 'nit IJ)ol<tsman said !he effecil noted in do1 testa were "basically leslona," but that posalble metaboUc changes were alllC) noted. ·~'Mlere art a variety of effects, but t.he pathology ls not clear," he said. "We are gol111 to nuke f\n1ber tests wlih dop to dettnnine Ille .nalllrt ol the elfectl and whether certalnTspeeles of-dop m-unl-- quely ltl\llUve to such cott\pounds." lte 1ald te&b with monkeys Ott the ''mlnJ·pill" allowed DO adverse effects. Molt predicted confldenlly t h a I "ab!olutely the Treaties will be In public usage eventually. Wt had everything set to go when the Pmldent bought that Jand.'' He indicated that ••eventually" pro- bably meant when Mr. ?jlxon Js no longer Presideii.t. "There Is not nearly the security problem for fonner Presidents;'' he said. · Molt died a sille park developed across the river from fonner President Johnson's Tt1u ranch aft.er he left the Pr<sldency. During his talk, Molt also al~ plam for new tmphasl& on underwater parks and preaerves along the California c:oastllne. "'nit department it now lflen. tJfyinc crltk!al areas to create un- derwater parka and preservea," he said. He called !hem aa udllng reaullooal l'tlOUrte and uld, "underwater deetfue. tion 11 moro intensive than oo land, there ts liUle or no t1me to accomplish tills." ~Iott said there are 1,051 mUes of Callfornl:a coaatllne with 437 miles ln pllblic ownership 1111d only part of iheaa mUe1 the type tultable for swimming. He said the state must tlltnk in termt of· lOlll public owner1hip of ih~ type besch from Point Concepllon south I<> !he Mexican border. "California must recoplie !hat It ls ihe trustee of ihl1 (Seo MOTr, Pll' I) $1 Billion Slash In 1971 Budget Slated by Nixon WASHINGTON !AP! -Presldcnl Nix· · on has his fiscal llrll budget , "wrapped up" and It contains subsll\llU&I cuts he ordered in the area of a blllian ·dollars or more, the White Hou!le said today. No formaJ figure was given. But presidential press secrctar:y Ronald L. Ziegler said that before Nixon met with· his Cabinet Tuesday and ordered the cuts, the budget wu at "a level abo'4 $203 billion." . Ziegler added, however, that the further cub the President ordered doea · not necessarily mean a w)denln1 of the surplua that Nixon wanta. Tu rev~oue11 and other CONldcraUont may have lK'en Involved. . It is "a tolld bud'-et" Ziegler said and he described It as ' responsive to the na· tional needs" but which he said the Presi· dent also "tw kept in mind that one of the presalng naUonal prlorlllet le the health of !he economy." In response to questions ~ N1port.er1, Ziegler described a aoUd budset 8$ ope "soundly hAlonced and thal does have aome surplus." Chier Justice Warren E. Burger and Justice Potter Stewart dissented m. the scope ol the Dooglaa finding. Jlllllce (See ·ORAFI', Pop I) Oraage Weather " Cloudy skies with an occuloouJ pll!er pallet of rain on the roOI ia the outlook for TUesday along . !he Orange Coast wlih li!Ue change in temperature. INSWIJ TODAY One cottttndtr /01 tht Con- grts.t lonol Cup rac11 ha.a been · ' selected to htphliqhl a lleallll wtrlc.!!d of bocU•a octillilJI. Pages 13·14. t 1 2 DAILY PILOT s MOVING UP? Ch1rter Writer Burke Burke Next California Chief Judge? CaJifornia Supreme Court Associale Justice Louis H. Burke, a longtime Newport Beach resident and a draftsman of the city's charter, has been mentioned as a strong contender for the state court's chief justice position. Justice Burke, whose N e w p or t residence is 46 Beacon Bay, was men· Uoned by state government sources as a likely candidate to replace retiring Cliiel Justice Roger J. Traynor. Justice Traynor will leave the highest state coort at the end of this month. Justice Burke, an avid sailor in the PC class, has Jlved in Newport for many years and spe nds hls weekendl and spare weekdays at hls Beacon Bay Home. The court is in San Francisco. The judge is the author of lhe book ••with This Ring", a book aimed at more equitable divorce law1. He is a Republk:an, an acUve layman In the Catholic Church and an amateur painter. Juslice Burke was Ole flrst legal designer of Newport's city charter in the early 1950s. He won appoinlment to thP i.; .. h ,., ··t by former Democratic Gov, Edmund G. ••pat" Brown." . Another Newport Beach jurist, Justice Robert Gardner, has also been mentioned bY. authorlta.Uve sources 11 a poasible candidate for the atate supreme court. Justice Gardner is reportedly in con- tention despite the fact he was only recently elevated from Orange County Superior Court to the seat on the Fourth District Court 0£ Appeals in San Bernardino. Surf Eases Off At Huntington Heavy surf which battered HunUngl Beach over the weekend with waves up t 12 feet hu dropped down to seven· an<l eight foot wave11 today, according to Weguard Capt. Douglas D'Arnall. The weekend surf was 11purred by storms at sea, said D' Arnall. Northwest swells can be expected until Easter, he added, but high waves will only pop up when churned by stonns. Inexperienced swimmers have been warned by lifeguards to 11tay out of the water whtn the surf is high. Boats are in danger too, if they com! ne11r the rurf line in stormy weather, said D'Arnall. One youth, who lost his belly board, was pulled up the municipal pier ramp Sunday by lifeguard David Buckley. DAILY PILOT NewpM ..... H••tf .. t ..... 11 &.it"'• .... '-•llt9&• ,....., CNN Mite 0""1'1Gt C041T PUtl.1$1llNG COMPANY Ro!.111 N. w •• .i Prt\001n1 •nd P""'llofltr · J.c~ R. Cwrler Vitt Prt•;citnt -Co-fltt<"•I M.,._.tf' Tlto1t1•1 11:,,,;1 f-ll<fr . T~o1t1•1 A. M.r,hint ~Mtlflt '""" -. .. CM•• Miu: J• Wnl ... $1ftt4 ,,...._., l ttcn; nu Wnl ••-&Dlllcv•,.. 1.-l•t<11: JU l"l"'tl 4Wff!W Hllflth"t"' IN<Jt: \1111 ltt(ll • ...., .. wt ... ""11."I PtlOT, wl!lt -1(1! k t .... '4nt<I ,._., H .... J.Prn., It N 'i•llff ••U1 t•<tpl l"fl· • tlt1 lo! """fllt .. itlfnt !..-.... "". INC"' H..,_1 .. Kl\. CM!f #f .. ,, 14\lflllnt'M fNCl'I INI l"-Mlio V•flt'f, l*'t wltfl - ........ t•M ....... °'""' Cttl! PW!lt""" ~ ~lllW ,..,.._ '" H n11 Whl ..... .,.,.,,.. ii.._.. ltK.11, .... Jll w.,, •• , '""'· (ltll Mal, ,,,., ..... t1141 •41-4111 Cl .................. ,.,.,,,, ("""...... UM, Or•.... C...11 P..Oll•fl""' ~f. H1 • -JlwOM. lll\1't•tl""lo ........ "Wtltr • .,_.,,.......... ......111 _, IN ,..,..,.._... wl""""I Nlf(W .... MIWIM It _,,,.llfll -· lfot .... <lnl -~ .. If 11 Ht-9 ltJdl .... C..MI ....... (tUIWftil. luOMt•I"" ay .......... u.• "*'"'"'' .,. l'llllt 11.• -111r1 ll'llllllrr ""'""''-. u.• ,_,.,.If, . , • Mondry, January 19, 1970 Nixon Picl{s Floridian Carswell Tappe<l for Suprenie Court Seat WASHINGTON (UPI) -The White House has Wormed Federal Circuit Judge G. Harold Carswell of Tallahassee , Fla., be will be appointed to the Supreme Court, UPJ WU told today. Carswell baa been prominently men· tioned for thll vacancy, created when Abe Fortu rts!JMCI la.st May under fire for h.la financial aaoclaUon with flnaocler Lou.la: Wolfson, who was.convicted of sell· ing unreglitered aecuriUes. A White House aJde telephoned Carawtll, 50, aeveraJ daya 110 to inform him he had been picked. "lie was told jusi to sit tight and make no slattment about the nomination, 11 a source said. Carswell did just that, telling reporters In Tallahassee th.at "It would be highly inappropriate for me to make any com· ment of any nature" on reports of the ap- pointment. Nixon named Carswell, a former federal district judge, to the 5th Circuit Court of Appeals seven months ago. The coutt handles case.s in Florida, Georgia, Alabama, h1ississippi and Texas. Florida lawmakers said tbe Carswell selection was a good one. Rep. Don Fu· qua (0.Fla.), describing himself as a personal friend of Carswell, 11ald: •·He has no stock problems. He 11 a good man. J consider him a moderate conservative." The Senate last year rejected Nixon's first choice for the Fortas seat, Chief Judge Clement F. Haynsworth of the 4th Circuit. Opponents a t t a c k e d llaynsworth's bencij record on civil rights and his finan- cial holdings in companies involved in litigation before his court. Sen. Edward J. Gurney (R·Fla.), first suggested Carswell for the hich court. A Gurney aide said the senator was "very pleased '' by Ule report of the judge's 11election. Sen. Spessard L. Holland (D-Fla.), was qooted by an aide as saying he had not heard lrom either the White House or the Justice Department about the nomina• lion, "but he will be &lad to support Carswell becaUle be is a good human beina and a good lawyer," the aide aaid. "There bu never been a Floridian on the Suprtme Court. Tbls would be aood for the atate." The aide added that Holland had sug4 atlt.ed tv..·o others for the nontlnaUon, Justice B. K. Roberts of lhe Florida Supreme Court and Dr. Stephen C. O'Connell, president ol the University of Florida and a former Florida Supreme Court justice. A Carswell appointment would bear out earlier predictions that Nixon would tum to Dixie for a Supreme Court ap- pointment following hJa rebuff on Haynsworth, who Uve11 in Greenville, S.C. Leary in Laredo Court; County Trial Post11oned Fro1n Pagfl l MOTI' ... frontace !or the entire country," said the speaker. lie said cities, counties and the state must make this acqullition a priority item for their dollar even though some of the· front.age la $2,500 and more a lineal foot. He said also there must be coopera- tion bet\\·een the public and private sec· tor s. From Wirt Servtce1 LAREDO, Tex. -The streets of Laredo led to a \Vest Texas courthouse today, where Or. Timothy Leary went on trial again for marijuana charges thrown out once already by the U.S. Supreme Court. A two-day continuance wa11 granted un· til Wednesday by Orange County Superior Court authorities, meanwhile, since Dr. Leary, hias wife and son were due to go on trial tOOay in Santa Ana for an LSD and marijuana case dating back 13 months. Dr. Leary -declared candidate for the California governorship in November - criticized the re.trial by Texas and federal authorities, charging it amounts to poliLical hara15sment. "The Nixon Admlni11tration doe• not have anv failtt in the democratic process and they want to use the pov.·er of government to harass us." he alleged . •·Anyone who hears that the govern· From Pagfl J DEATHS ... of a Buena Park housewife. 1\frs. Ellsie Rita Ram<>s, 37, or 7332 Chippewa Circle. was stopped for a traf· fie light at KnoU and Orange avenues when she waa struck headon by the vehi- cle driven by Jack ,.1cKinnoo, 26, of 122 Bella Vista St., Anaheim. police said. McKinnon"s "ehicle apparently crossed the center divider line, ramming i'.1rs. Harnos' stopped vehicle, investigator~ stated. McKinnon v.•as treated at \Ve~t Anaheim Community Hospital a n d released. CdM MAN BE'l'fER A Corona de! Mar resident, John Stein· broner, 20, of 3036 Breakers Drive, wos reported recovering from injuries suf- fced Sunday morning in a single car crash on Newport Avenue ~t Barrett Lane near Orange. California Highway Patrol officers said Steinbronu was a paasenger In the vehi· c\e driven by Kerry Bruce Moore, 20, of 1214 W. Santa Clara Ave., Santa Ana. who is recovering from injuries In lhe. same lro>pital. Patrolmen said Ule two were north· bound on Newport "at a high rate o[ speed" when :P.toore lost control of the car on a curve and hit a guardrail. Both youths were ejected from l~ auto on im- pact, officers said. A Santa Ana husband and wife are listed In critical condition In Sanla Ana Community Hospital today following a tw<H:ar collision at La Colina Drive and Redhill Avenue near TusUn Sunday morning. Highway patrolmen said either the auto of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Holmberg, JIZl Ravencrest, Santa Ana, or that driven by Marvin Hollenberg 25, from the Marine Helicopter Station, Santa Ana, ran a stop sign at La Colina caus· ing the accident Hollenberg was treat· ed and released from the some hospital. ESCAPE INJURY Two Navf men fro mSDn Diego escap. cd injury 1n a four<ar mishap on the San Diego Freeway near San Cleinente that sent two couples io South Col:Ult Community Hospital v.·lth major injur· ies, officers said. The accident took place neKr Avenue San Luis Rey overtrossing when the soulhbonud car driven by t.lichael .J. Aguilar of Miramar " Naval Air StaHon, San Dlego, lost the left rear wheel, patr<Mmen said. Michael L. Smith ot the San Diego Naval Recruit Depot struck the rolling wheel but wu not Injured, of. !leers said. The wheel then stuck the auto drl\'rn by Jlarold R. Cardin, 60, of San Die~o, causing the vehicle to go out or control, cross the center divide.r and strike tha car driven by Orin Weir of Bellflower. Cardin, his wife Francis, Weir and his wife:, Bertha, were taken to South Coast Community Hospital with multiple frac-- tures, patrolmen noted • Quake Jars Russ ia Pi10SCOW (AP) -A mild earthquake shook Uzbek.Jstan hi Soviet centrlll A!i\a today, T~s said, addlns that there were no reports of injuries at damage. The eMt.hquake was centered ne11r Ta!hkenl, the Uz:bek capital Viat w;is badly dom-- "g:-:f by a trrmor In 11166 . " _f ment ls trying me after a unanimous Supreme Court decision knows that there is something fishy here -or it is unfair," he continued. · He was convicted in 1966 of failure to declare marijuana and pay federal tax on three ounces of tile weed, brought across from Mexico at Laredo, with a $40,000 fine and 30-year prison sentence imposed. The U.S. Supreme Court ruled that <lcclaring th-:! marijuana would have fore· eel the forn1er Harvard Co 11 e g e psychology professor lo reveal in· criminating evidence against himself and O\'erturned the conviclion. Susan Leary carried the pot in a dainty silve r snuff box cradled bet1o,•cen her legs and \Yas conYic led of illegal transporta· tinn and concealment of marijuana, but given a probate sentence. The proceedings Jn U.S. District Court will be presided over again by Judge Ben Connally, who sat in Leary's first trial. The new trial involves smuggling of marijuana and carries a maxilnun1 sentence of 20 years in prison and $20,000 fine, but Dr. Leary is confident he will win again. He, his wife Rosemary, 33, and son J ohn, 20, are scheduled for trial on charges of possession of dangerous drugs and marijuana as a result of their arrest Dec. 26, 1968. in Laguna Bencl1. The trial is no\Y scheduled \Vednesda y In Orange County Superior Courl. depen- ding on oulco1nc of the Texas pro- ceedings. Besides the Texas and Orange County proceedings, Dr. Leary recently appeared in a New York courtroom and face! Riverside County cou1t nclion sten1ming from an LSD drowning death al a com· munal ranch. He was charged \.\'ith contributing to the delinquency or a minor last year after Ch11rlene R. Almeida, 17, of Laguna Beach. drv1vned in a deep creek pond on the ranch near llcmet. "I'm running !or governor of CeJifornia," Dr. Leary declared today in 1'exas. ''I should be back in my own state, turning on my voters instea d of ha\•iny t<' spend the time and energy here going through a case that we know we 'll \Vin." Police Pig Perky Moss spoke of the need to protect the estuaries v.·ilich he called an important resource to the fisheries and one not completely understood. Californians, he said, must concern themselves also with proteclion of their tidal pool.! which have suffered very serious damage. It oould take more th.an 100 years lo re.store some of them, said Mott. Mott saidtl1e problem of conservation doe s not stop at the beaches; it ranges back the coastal plain to the mountains and streams which carry sarxl to replenish the beaches. "\Ve can'l talk beaches without looking to the mountains. \Ve can destroy the beaches with.out entire envirorunental planning," said the speaker. Acquisition of beach area from Point Conctptlon south Is the state's priority item. said the official. He said currently the state cannot (because of the high in- terest rates) sell bonds for acquisition but is discussing with private owners the possibility of accepting bonds in mum for their lands. Runa,vay Auto Does No Damage A runaway car rolled across all traffic Janes on South Coast Highway Saturday morning, missed oncoming cars from both directions and came lo rest against a utility pole, Laguna Beach police report. Officers said Uie car. owned by George \V. Turner, 2609 Vicloria St., was parked on Victoria before it took off on il.s solo journey shortly after 7:30 p.m. The handbrake apparenlly had not been set, police said. ''Fuzzy," lhe pig mascot of the National Police Patrolmen's Asso- ciation sips champagne offerC!d by association president Richard f\llacEachern at Boston animal hospital as asJoclollon .9ccretary Robert FJaven looks on. The porker got sick last week and wos rush· ed lo the hospital -with a police escort. I UPI T1Jel>lllellt MICHAEL BRODY HAS LITTLE TROUBLE ,GIVING MONEY AWAY Now Ht'a 'Trllllonairt' With Peace Plen, Cure for Cancer Fron• Page l BRODY HAS ALL CURES ••• few days, will stop crowding him and pulling his hair. "'Don't be so greedy," he said. '"Give me a chance. Give me some time." He made promises to bestow massive sums upon North Vietnam in order to end !he war and called on Nixon to meet him this afternoon at Kennedy International Airport here to discuss poverty and v.·orld peace. The President will be busy in 'Vashington, however, preparing his State of the Union message. ''I have cures for all diseases,'' Brody said. "I have a cure for cancer." .. He promised to disclose It at the airport during a ne\\'S conference. Bnxly's bride of two weeks, Renee, a slim woman with long brown hair, stayed near him on stage and through the crowds. They exchanged loving glances frequently. A reporter for the New York Time11, who traveled to Puerto Rico with the Brodys over the: weekend, reported today the young heir conceived his plan to give away his money while he was "tripped out on drugs." ''What a joke I've pulled on the world!'' the new spaper reported Brody &aid. "They think I'm Jesus Christ." The report added Brody met Renee '1·hen she came to Scarsdale, N.Y., where he lived in a rented $80,000 house, "to sell J\1ichacl and some of his friends iOme hashish." As Brody escalated estimations of his \vealth Sunday. circumspect 11tatements from his bankers we(e less dazzling. Officials of lhc Continental Bank of Chicago, who would not discuss Brody's actual net worth, said the initial reports he had inherited $25 million were a •·gross exaggeration." The money came from Brody's maternal grandfather, John F. Jelke, the oleoma·rgarine manufaC4 lurer, who died in 1966. The est.ate, filed for probate. was said to be worth $6,881.000, divided among & ever a I beneficiaries. Moscow Releases Names Of 13 Vietnam Prisoners t\10SCOW (UPI) -l\foscow Radio to- day released the names of 13 U.S. serv- icemen imprisoned by North Vietnam and said it would broadcast taped me.ssages from the men tonight. , Names of all 13 men have been re· leased previously and so have their state- ments by Radio Hanoi and Havana Radio. Some apparently were broadc11st by Mos· cow Radio and Havana Radio on Sunday night. In Washington, the State Department said il had made a protest to the_ Soviet Union about the broadcast. (A department spokes1nan, Robert J. 1.1cCloskey. said the Uniled States in- formed Atoscow it "welcomes news about our prisoners of v.•ar in Vietnam but we are puzzled and disturbed by the manner in which information on American prls· oners is being conveyed to the American public and we can only assume that prop- Fl'Otf& Pnge , DRAFT • • • John i\I. Harlan agreed with the majority but said he felt regulations on delinquents could be ts:sued legally If intended to re- quire a youth lo comply with reglstra4 lion regulations rather than as a punish· mrnl. Among other actions, the court: -Held that Alabama and Georgia had been practicing racial dlsc,riminatlon. in ~election of juries but declined to strike down the state laws generaJly. -In an apparent deadlock, ordered re- arguments at a lower court level on the issue of whether federal agent! must ob- tain search warranti to use electronic devices to monitor their conversations with criminal 1u1pectJ. The case lnvoJv. ed James A. \Vhlte who was arnsted in Chicago ln 1966 on charges of poa;ses,,ion and aale of heroin. Locker Burglars St1ike 3 Times Ga11ey and equipment thieves hit three sepante times over the weekend al the Oavev's Locker docks al the Balboa Pov!Uon. The galley of the large Catalina I.our boat Island Holiday was robbed twice over the two-day perkld, police aak1. Each time the thieves stole candy, food 11rd beer valued 11t 1111bout ieo. The thieves 1110 atole a fJ)) net from the .!tern or the Fury JI, the floatlnc merino laboratory 11Aed by Oran.gl! Coun- " ly r.chools. aganda purposes are irfV'ti'!ved. ") A Moscow radio spok~man said the messages will be broadca"St in two half hour progran1s at 4 p.m. and 6:30 p.m. PST on the 25, 31 and 41 meter bands. Thi! names listed by the spokesman \Vere: 1. Michael S. Kerr, whose wife Is Jerry Kerr of Port Angeles, Wash. 2. Norman McDaniel, wife Jean Carol ~tcDaniel. Greensboro. N.C. 3. James Quincy Collies, Atherton, Cal· ifornia. 4. Paul Brown, wife Carol Brown, Cran· stein, N.J. 5. Roger ln,l!velson. Sanford. Maine. 6. Joseph Scott r.-lobley, A-1anhattan Beach. Calif. 7. Giles Roderick Newton, wife Bar· hara. Albany, Ga . 8. Wil!iam John A-1ayhew. father Stew. er~ ti·layhew, New A-1anchester, W. Va. (U.S. postal ~lde does not lilt a New :P.1anchester, Vi'. Va.) 9. i\1alcolm Garley, Greenville, !\taine, 10. Gordon Albert Larson, San Antonio, Texas. ll. llugh Allen Stafford, Cambridge, to.Id. 12. Harold Ed Johnson, Hutchinson (or possibl y Shav.·nee J\1ission). Kan. 13. John David Lunar, Roy, Utah. Woman Puts Up Fight on Traffic Offense, Jailed A Malii;>u woman who rerused to sign a traffic citation and allegedly scratched and kicked an offlcer trylng lo serve it, waa booked in Lacuna Beach on a charge of resisting arrest Sunday night. Officer Robert Remillard said driver Anne Carthew A-1arcus, 29, at first i&· nored his flashing red lights as she drove south on S. Coast Highway at speeds of 50 lo 55 miles an hour in a 3$-mile zone at 10:30 Sunday night. When she finally pulled over al the en4 trance to Treasure Island, the officer said, he wrote out a citation for speeding and drivinc without a t.afl Ji1ht. She !'!.fused to sign It, despite his \Yarning that ahe. would be 1ubject to arrut., llem1 1\ar<l sald. When he 11ttempt.ed lo lead her to 1111 squad car, she tried to break loose, kick· ed and 1cratched him, he added . Th• lr11te driver, handcuffed, wu taken to the police station for booking and agreed to 11lgn the citation. Sht now will be charged with ruhcll"ng .11rre1t In a<fdlllon to tht alleged traffic violations , police 1ald. ,. 11 I I I '~ I ' ' I • • :11n.tingtoD· Beae Teday's Fl•al N.Y. Stoeb " l~ .. ~· . ·y~~~ NO: Q·,, 1,SECJlONS, 32'P'A'GtS .... ~~~~~~~~~~~~~.,-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-'--~~-"-~~--~~~~~..---~~~~~~~~~oP, .... 1 ~~~~~·~~~~~ .... 6--~~~~~~~~~~ ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, JANUARY 19, '1970 TEN CENTS lili&CHERIVICICY,CAUDL:E ENCOURAGES HANDICAPPE,D STUQENT · 1For-1Motor·CoordiMtiOl'\J. Walldnt··Be•ms ind S.l1nc1~8Nrds;. ~ . .. • ' ••• It ' v~~ley Tries New Wa y , . r'~EducateHandicapped .. · J!y RUDI NIEDZIELSKI · ot·lllt o.llr f>lltl Sl•ff "'Wftatt.doiyou do withrtbe educationally wcapped cbild? 1lt¥. him.out of -the classroom, place Jiin11n,,.. special .class, ·with special ~.and a special ucrriodum'? ThaO-has been·the ·common practice at bµniirem-<>r :;cbool districts arOWJd Ute nl.tion. ·But 1at the Fountain Valley School Disttict Ws year something new· is being ttjed. Jt Js a pilot program aimed at teaching the handicapped child in the re"\Ulat-classroom. Federal funds under the Elementary alid Seooodary Education Act, Til1e Ilr, h~ve·provlded $66,800 for the program's rust., .year o( operation. p r 0 j e c t qK1rdir)1tor, Larry Belkin, anticipates ad· dttional funds of ~.300 for the second year and $45,000 for the third year. a.so many great things are happening in~ this program," maintained Belkin. ''One ·youngsLer who was eompletely ex· cludtd from public schools last year ~or his disruptive behavior is back add functioning so· well in the regular claseteom even we can't believe it. "Anether child who was constantly under heavy medication is previous years · is completely o(f medication and is a dif· ferent human being in the regular tjaa(l'oomithisytar,0 he added. "[tthJnk the reason for this is that these 'k¥ls feel more ·llke they're the same~ eftryOne else. They feel better about ~Ives. They have more incentive and they have higher goals." Ed\icationally handica pped children ar~ those ·who have sOme kind of serious melliCal, ph)l3ical, . e m·o lion a I or ueUroabcical problem, that keeps them ·~.~ls to Weigh sa'k of Bonds :rho Ale .r '650;000 in sc11ool bonds 'Will be·COl!llderod lllniCfll by Ute Ocean View Sd>o6l Dlstrtct"boaTd .r trustees at tlieir 7:•·'P= meetlna at t11o<lillrtct'1\lleed• ~.·Tm'Warnert. ... H~n ~. Or.1oC!arenceiHaJ~ superlnlendent, said the bonds would q11a1Jfy the district. for •tale aid ollocatlono and fa< Ute dtslgn ol nf!W flidllUe!l. DuriN 'the same meetJng, the 1trostees wlll al1t consider auth«fZlng the doubl· lnt·elll!Je dl!Uldt's >12-man lellCher aide fol'te"at ~ annual expense of ,52,000. ' ftom tearnin~at~same rate, or:in the same mamer as other-children. The-term applies, to-ithe•educable 11len• t3lly retarded•as well as tG children with nonnal intelligence who have other disabilities which prevent them from learning in the normal fashion. ·Belkin said over the years that ioolalion of these children into special groups, as is common practice, has ()nly created new problems for them. They have been made to feel different and have had to·bear the stigma of labels and'names, he asserts. The Fountain Valley project works like this: A psychologist first administers testl> to discover the strengths and \veaknesses ()f each child. The child then is turned·()ver'to a ''prescripti ve teacher" who works with him to remedy specific pr()b!ems, with specific exercises. Also on the team is a "resource teacher" who helps the classroom teacher tldapt curriculum for han- dii:apped children and works with thim. Olher specialists, such as health and development and speech and JangUage dev'elopment experts1 contribqfe their knCM"ledge as well. But according to Belkin, the most im· portant member or the team is still the classroom teacher, who has become more aware of what she can do to help the children function in · the re g u I a r classroom. -Thanks•to 'lhe federal 1grant, the Foun- tain Valley School Diztrict has,been able to purchase certain equipment to work on learning problems. These jnclude the ••nof!man Program- med Reader," an audio-visual m1chine which allows the childreQ lo work at.their own pace, and devices designed to .help the children with concept formatl011 0 p~nics and arithmetic. A tape library with follow-up worksheets p r o v I d e 1 auditory help at a self-pacing rale .. Belkin claims that. partnt reaction lo the program has been highly favorable. •·0ne mother-who is not :SCl' wen· to-do called me arw:l wanted \o• donate something to tbis program," 'he said. •'She said she wanted t<> do something in return for the miracle that happened •to ber boy lhls year;., · ~·An intereaUng •aldellghl-thal We<dklri'( etpect, to .l>•PJ>tn'•has' btF,thabrolher students.. haYe betn. •so:-he1pfuf·~nd un• dentanding," he conUnued, addin1 that the childrcen are·senzJUve t<> the problems or the handicapped child, "One traiifible mentally relarded"'stu- dent who came in from another district had no academic skills whatM>ever. The: kids have sort or adopted him. it•• llk~ he's been held back ell Utea years and he's trying to loam ·something:" -. ' Draft No 'Punishment' • J Supreme Court Bars Any Quick lnductwns · WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Supreme Court today barred Selective Service boards from speeding up inductions to punish registrants for violating draft law regulations. The court, in a 6-2 ruling, held that any action taken against "delinquent'' registrants must be pursued through the courts. The justices struck down the prac· tice <>f reclassifying them lA subject to immediate call up. The decision came in a criminal case Involving David Earl Gutknecht of Gay· lord, Minn., who contended he was re· classified by his local board and Qrdered inducted because he deposited his draft card at the feet. of a U.S. marshal during a war protest in Minneapolis. The court. revened, a subsequent coo- vicUon ol Gutknecht for refuaing to re· port for Induction. , The majorlty opjnlon written by Justice William O: Douglas said there was noth- ing In the 1967 tlraft law giving Selective Service author!tles "free-wheeling author- ity to ride herd on the registrants, U!ing immediate induction as a dlsclplinary or vindictive measure." The court aaaerted : "The power under the regulations to declare a registrant ' delinqu...t bu no atatutory atandard or even IUldeUnes. The power ii exercised entlnfy by Ute dlacretion of Ute local board. • "It Ii a })road, rovinl authority. i type of admlnl!traUve absolutism not cor11en-o ial to our lawmaking tradiUom." Chief JUsuce ·WmM EJ~Burger' and Jusllce Potter Stewart.dissented on the scope Of Ute ' llo\11111 finding, JUJllce John M, Harlan •&reed w!Ut Ute majority bot'Slld be !ell r<(!UlatiDnl on dtllnquents could be t.,...i ltiolly u intended to ,... quire a. j'Ollth to comply wlUt r<gislra. tloiJ rqulailoM tatbtr than II I punish- ment. ' Rich 'Hippie' Says He'll Fix War,·Peace 'i'alked Wit'! lrvi11e State Acqu~res NEW YORK (UPI) -Michael James Brody, who now says he will distribute $100 billion, or maybe an even trillion, al so promises a plan for peace in Vietnam tG Presidenl Nixon plus cures for cancer and 211 olher diseases. Stretch of Beach Brody, whose Jong red hair and hip clothi ng belie his claimed wealth, insists he wlfl give away money to anyone who needs il. By RICHARD P, NALL Of Ille D•ltr l"U•t Sl•ff William PeM ~1ott, Jr., director of the State Department of Beaches and Parks. said Saturday that California has just ac- quired three more miles of public beach in Orange County. Before a national tele vision audience on t.tott declined to pinpoint the· location the Ed Sullivan Show Sunday night, but had just completed talks with the Brody, 21, played a l2·slring guitar and Irvine Company which he said pleased sang a ballad written by Bob Dylan, h' · · "You Ain't Goin' Nowhere." Then he pro-im. Mott was one of a panel ()f speaken at claimed again : u •• San Cl le In ta'" .. w .., .... • "I'm worth 100 billion dollars . Does i.o..:" emen n ,.... t-1• m " Utat.stagger your tnlnd! In lac~ Utat wu :;=.qn lljc llllU" II! 9".~few!. yesterday. J mi&ht be worth a trtlllon to-The 1rv;,.. ,.,_ .. n ... 1 bu amaounoM day." .. "'I~ ""'!",._.. Q'owds o! peop'le, mar~» or Whom said =o~•==t~ tlley hoped !or a girt lrom Brody, mobbed and Corona ·de! Mar ,. Utat Ute public the college dropout philanthropist as he wlll have aoce11 to beaches ~ntered .~nd left lhe theater. "~ou're kill· Commenting on bis ~ with Irvine 1~g ~e, he shouted before pohce hustler Company olliclali, MoU aaid he thought him 1.nto a car and he d~ve away. t.lje pending fleyelopment would bring "a Inside the theater earlier, Brody, who totally new concept on how beach areas appeared flushed . and ex~ted, told can be available to the public .as well r~portera _hd • woul~ continue t b e as have· private development!' . giveaways .1f his public, including th~ He called tbe concept "80mefhin& quit.I who have picked his pocket and pulled his unlque which may set a precedent for the rest of California ." Mott also forecast a new trend in state beach planning which will push the auto inland. "In the past we have planned for the auto. We now are going to plan the state park syztem for peuple and not the auto." Commenting on expanded parking recfflUy provided at Doheny State Beach, Mott said, "Ute parking lot ean be ripped out tomorrow. We're making zludiez to determine how to move the auto! as much as five miles lnl~ and provide a ~=~~ what we're utumatily g to have:" ]\Iott ~ JpcSc "' Ille -ta -"'fl mWtarJ lands such • C., ,_ ta public .,... "P~ iiicl .1<vtral othen are closed tt public UM, We'te working on this sit\faUon." The state had Planned JU first surfing park - a mile of beach frontage backed by 160 acres -adjacent to the Loran Coast Guard StaUon whlcb abuta Pre!I· dent Nixon's Welle!ll , Wblte • Jlouse. !See MOTr, P• 2) wedd ing ring from his hand in the past few days, will stop crowcling him and pulling his hair. ••0on•t be so greedy," he said. "Give me a chance. Give me some time." Lynch Won't Seek Return He made promises to bestow massive sums\ipon North Vietnam in order to end the war and called on Nixon µ> meet him this afternoon at Kennedy IntemaUonsl Airport here to discusa; poverty and world peace. To Attorney General Post The President will be busy in Washington, however, preparing his State [Se< BRODY, Pagt Z) Planners' Posts Filled Tuesda y Three planning com m i s s I on ap- pointments will be made by the Fountain Valley Ctty Cooncll at its regular meeting at 8 p.m., Tuesday in city hall. Commission chainnan James Dick and Commissioner! Tom Morrison and Elck>n Bainbridge will be interviewed by the council along with new candidates for the Utree posts. The incumbents, whose tertns expire Feb. I, may be reappointed by the cOUn- cil or new men may be selected to tilt out the commission. No public hearings are scheduled for Tuesday'! meeting. SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -Calllornia Attorney General '11:iomas C. Lynch, the only Democrat elected to statewide office in the Republican sweep of 1966, an· nounced today he will not seek re-elec- tion. Lynch, 65, said he only made up his mind "over the holidays" in discussions with his wife and two son!. The attorney general said he had been In public office since 1933 and would like to "spend some Ume in a quiet at- mosphere. •• Lynch stressed that be ztill had a year lo go in office and said that after that he wanted to pracUce his profeszlon as a lawyer, "preferably in San Francisco." He told a news conference he had something in mirtd but could not di!close detalla except that ft waa in San Fam- clseor 1 Lynch , who became attorney general by appointment of Gov. Edmund G. Brown Aug. 31, 1964, waz elected to a full term In November of 1966. He sald be could not do this job pro- Bad Effects on Dogs perly and campaJgn for office at the same time. Lynch 1ald the }ob of attorney general was becoming successively more dif~ ficult. "I talked to Gov. Warren (former Supreme Court chief jusUce) recently and he mentioned that the attorney geberalship was a lovely job," be said. "I asked him how many deput1ts he had wlien be \V8' a!Wney i""F•I Md h:e said 74. l have over 260, plus1 offices in Los Angeles, San Franci!CO, Sfcramento and San Diego. "Problems are growing all the Ume. We have Jr<>blems that were unheard of 20 years ago -oil pollution, en· viromnental control, anUtrust. And law enforcement is getting to be a greater problem." · Lynch was asked if he wouJd endorse his chief deputy, Charle! O'Brien, who had'nol declared but bu been menuonec1 as' a possible candidate. '"That problem ;has not come up," Lynch said. "Charlie O'Brien has been a loYal and efficient chief deputy." 'Mini .. Pill' Use Halted PALO ALTO (UPt) -Syn t ex taken on dffferent days, dJd not The company apokesm1n said the LaOOratories Inc. today suspended use of demonstrate the same eUecu. 0 mini.plll" ..was teated on 4,700 women lrt its "mini-pill " oral contraceptive on ~ Last weet, top medical authoriUea di!· the United St:atea. and •bro.ad before it tezt basis in the United States. fered In conjrealonal heiring! in · · ~ • . The rltrrl sakl It would Immediately Washington.over elfecl or Ute estrogen--went on the .market, It was •ti ll bemc co n f e r w I th au tlh o r ii I e1 · in or1 1eq~llal -blrth contol pjlls, which ta;ted at 30 ~ters irl the, U!Dt~ Stites, ~land, France and Meltjco, w1im tho · have llOeit on lhe•!Mrket In <!lie· U.S. !or · wher9"the FbA· bad ·wltbheld•morkeUnJ "miµi·pill ", has' ~ <Jl'lll'ttitd ioom-• ~lUme. Some'doCtoQ1 H1d Qley" had •pPl'O'VIL · • ml'fCWJ1 !or ahi!ool a~. l~nol hannl\11,lde •e!fecll,•bol<olben~ The opotam1n.uif tlie effects noted ·betn-90kf <:OJDmercially"in ' the'.·\JOJl'.<I Utla. . · · ' • ln'Cfog teob were "bNlcally ltllons," but Stites. ' _. n.,•mJ\d.ptll;"·whlch bu been hailed -that peeatble metabollc chatlg01 we .. The &USpenSion.or cllnlcal llludl" In Ute • bl'\-u a "leCOlld gentratfon" birth alai> noted., U.S. came after dogs ~sted on the PJ'0-1 control device whJch woo1d be free of "There are a variety of effectJ~ but the gestin-only pill! s~ed ''~verse d-. so~ of the compUcaUons of estrogen-pethofoO 11 nOt clear," he 111d . 11We are fed•," lncludina leaiona arid pouib!• bajed.pllb, haa been aold In France and s<>tni to mate further luls wtth dop to metabolic chanJu, Mfilce !or a. year aod In the 'United •delermi"' the nature 'ol Ute efltcts and A Synter ~Uman 1afd•cfoe:11tudies · J{l gdom all)Ce Jazt May. Whether cvtlbt·1pec:lea ol dop we uni- wllh Ute •oeqirenll>l bir\b eqnjro~rlflff. Jn 1 b marketed fn England under Ute qutly 1en1ltive to such compounds." which eslroftflS_ -W ~t11tS1-·od)r., #brand ame "Nonnenon /' In France as He tald tesb with mon~eys on the lmnt typt• or•fi!nille 'llorinonu-art "Niltfii)>)'' and~n Mu!co u "Retex." ••mi•l-pllf" llhowtd no -effects, ( J Among other acllool, the <Olltl~ -Held Utat Alabama and G«qla bad beeq practJcing racial dlacrlmjnatkm in oelcctioo or juries but dedined to strike down the state laws generally. -In an apparent deadlock, ordered r&- arguments at a lower court level on the is.sue of whether federal agents nualt ob- tain search warrants to· UH eJec:ti'onic devices 11> monitor !hell' ........-.. wlUt criminal 8Ulpecb. The Clli lnvolv- ed James A. WIUte who wu arrelled 1n Chicago in 1968 on charges of poeHllion and sale of heroin. Beach Eyes First City Fun Fair Hllrltington Beach city COW1C1Jmen t... night will hear a recommeodatim·to eet May 2.1 as the date for the city'• firlt comrnunitywide festival. The proposal comes from the HunUng· ton Beach Coordinating Council, whJch has been studying prospects for a com- munity fair and exposition. Other business before the city council which meets at 4:30 p.m. and 7:30 p.m. in the council chambers, inch.1$1es: -A request of the HunUngton Beach Humane Society for an increase in im· pound, license and placement fees. It is recommended for approval with certain conditioos. -A letter from the junior chamber of commerce <>ffering to stage the Fourth of .July Parade for the same amount ~~~ldecjfy C!ert Paul Jmes that statements Of qulllfica- tieos !I)' city -<OUJ1Cil and city atorney caiidldiiea be mlllled wlih ump!e bal- lota at • cost or $150 each. -An agreement wiUt Ute State De- partment of Finance to determine the April 1970 population or Ute city. Cool would be $550. -A resolutJon lo acquire 18.M' acrei of land for $375,000 from the State of California for the central city parkslt.e. -A resolution requesting leidalatfon to return 60 percent of gas tax funds to southern counties rather than the pres· ent 55 percent. Surf Eases Off At Huntington Heavy !UJ'f whlch battered Huntington Beach over the weekend with wav~ up to 12 feet has dropped down to seven and eight IOot waves today, according to lifeguard Capt. Douglas D' Arnall. 'Mle weekend surf was spurred by storms at sea, said D' Arnall Northwest swells can be expected until Easter, he added, but hJgh waves will only pop up when churned by storma. IneOOenced swimmers have been wameOy llfeguards to stay out of the water when the surf Is high. Boats are In danger too, if they come near lhe sure line in stormy weather, said D' Arnall. One youth, who Jost his belly board, was pulled up the municipal pier ramp Sunday by lifeguard David Buckley. Stock M•rket NEW YORK CAP) -Tho stock markel continued Jts losing ways in moderate late trading today. (See quotatfona, P11gt1 :Z0.21 ). Qrange Weatlier Cloudy skies with ID occasionaal pitier patter or rain on the rool i1 the oullook for TUe!day along Ute Orange CoaJt wJUt UIU• change In temperature. ,INS~E . W•-'"' OM' C0711e!ldtr· I"" Ille Con-QrUtWmal Caip racta Ml btm r•ftcted ta highlight a h<®!I 0><el<"1d· ·of boaUno _ cclltlity, Pagea .l3·14,. · • I .J DAILY PILOT K Mond11, J"""'7 19.,ltlO MICHAEL BRODY HAS LITTLE TROUB LE GIV ING MON EY AWAY Now He'a 'Trillionairt' With Peace Plan, Cu re for Cancer From Page l BRODY HAS ALL CURES ••• of the Union meua,ge. "I ha\'e cures for all diseases," Brody said. "J have a cure for caricer.'' .. He promised to disclose it at the airport dW"ing a news ronference. Brody's bride of two weeks, Renee, a sUm woman with Jong brown hair, stayed near him on stage and through the crowds. They exehanzed loving glances frequently. A reporter for the New York Times, who traveled to Puerto Rico with the Brodys over the weekend, reported today the youni: heir conceived his plan to give away his money while he was "tripped out on drugs." "What a joke I've pulled on the world!" the newspaper reported Brody said. "They ihlnk I'm Jesus Christ." The report added Brody met Renee when she came to Scar.le, N.Y., w11erc he Jived in a r.en~ $80.~ house. "to·sell ~1ichael and 50.rne of his friends some hashtsh." ' As Brody escalated e.slimatlons of his wealth Sunday, circun1spect state1nents from his bankers were less daullng. Officials of the Continental Bank of Chicago, who would not dlscUss Brody's actual net worth, said the initial reports he had inherited n5 million were a "gross exaggeration." The money came from Brody'& matemal grandfather, John F. Jelke, the oleomargarine manufac. turer, who died in ljS(i. The estate, filed for probate, was said to be worth $6,881,000, divided among •ever a 1 beneficiaries. Pilot Brings. Miss Christy • Fashions Report Tuesday Tuesda(s ~~er girl'' for tht women's sia:Jon of the DAILY PILOT is Marian Christy, one of the nation's most respected fashion writ ers. Winner of 12 national writing awards and three state awards {~1assachusetts) in the Past three and a half years. Miss Christy is not.ed for her global galloping in t.he coverage of the fashion beat. She lnsists on spending at least three -months out of each year covering the fashion news capital of the world -New York, Paris, Rome, Madrid -even Dub. lin, when Ireland is where it's happening. A native of Boston. Miss Christy wa!l graduated from Boston University's School of Journalism. She became fashion editor of the 8-03· ton Globe in 1965 aller four years as a feature writer for Women 's Wear Daily. Her syndicated column now appears in newspapers throuahout the United States. It will be a weekly feature of the DAILY PILOT, beginning Tuesday. and will be featured each Tuesday on the cover page of the ~·omen's section. DAILY PILOT NEW PILOT 'COVER GIRL' F1shlon Writer Christy ' ----------- - Autos Clogging Coast Conserva tionist T ells What Fu tiire Holds lf 1")!1'1' •looklu fof ail \lllC\~U"'4 lie~";.c.r balbQ ri)lptbO IO..etiUll ln lhe .Marine Corps and hope lo be ala· tJontd .at Camp Pendleton. Thia waa I.hi advict Saturday of. con· servationls.t·author Wuley Ma~. who rpokt ot coastal cities so sv.·amped with summer trafric that they can become undesirable place$ kl live. ttunUngton Beach. Newpc:>rt Buch and Wsuna Beach art in parUcularly precarious poiitlons as far as auto strangu]atJon, 'be said. Ptfan was OM of six speakPrs at a c9n· rerence at U. San C11mente Inn on Ute future of Oran&e Cclunty hfaches. Sponsored by the Capistral'IO ~ay Area and OJ ange County Leagu~s of Women Voters, il played to an enthusiastic au· d.lence of about 175. 'Mle seMlon Included much of Orange County city and county offlcl•ldom. Speakers were KeMet.h E. Carr, San Clemente city manager; Richard P. Ruiz, executive assistant to Supervisor David L.. Baker:'. Knowlton Fernald Jr., arehiteet and planning vice president, Leguna NijueJ Corp.; William Penn Mott Jr., director of the state Department of Parks and Recreation, and Aa.sf.mblyma n Alan Sieroty. Marx said fr~ways lhould mttt the demands they are placing on coastal cities. Mentioning coastal freeway offramps scheduled for Beach Bo\Jiev1;nf of Hun- tincton Beach and M1cArt.hur Boulevard of Newpert Beach, M1r1 said, 0 1 can visualize Huntington Beach and Newport Beach as one big honking auto horn on a coastal weekend." He aaid lho Slate hlpway people should plan turnouts,-viewpoints, and pie· nic areas to accommcxtate the traffic carried by the freeways. Alternate forms of transportation 1hould also be studied, said Mart menUonlna helicopter& and hydnlloll" He predicted that future beach recrea· tion might include all year swimming in rubber suits, "submobilts" for un- 4erwJtef w1ndttln and lighted beaches 'for nllbl we: · But wlthoul sU'O!\i mana&eznent, iald Man, tht shoreline will tum iota ''Mmething that th• Scripps lnstitute or Oceanperaphy can't put back together apin." We must, said the apeaker, find alternatives to shortline development and protecUon that will not bankrupt us. Jn the Surfside, Sunset Beach and Nev.·port Beaeh areas, he said, 30 million cubic yards of sand will be needed in the next 20 years just to maintain the beach and the Army Corps of Engineers -and nobody else -knows where it is going to come from . Erosion control, he said, runs into astronomical costs Ulat force the federal govmunent to step Jn. Erosion he said threatens four north county beaches, In· cluding HunUngt.on Beach, most popular in the state, and $100 million in property development and a four lane highway. REDUCES ABILITY The speaker said development on dry sand reduces the ability of the shore to protect us from wave action. He mentioned a parking lot built on ary sand at Aliso Beach to handle autos as well a& people and said the South Coast area has much more land in private ownership than the north coast which ha,s far greater density. Marx. author of the prize·winning book j(The Frail Ocean," talked of jetties \~1hich "Interrupt the drift Of sand that nourished the beaches" and of flood con· trol dame that stop the supply of .sand from the hills. He talked of dumplns into the ocean and dredging of estuaries w h I c h decrease their ability to handle p0lJu. tion. He saJd the Upper Newport B11y has aspects which make it just as much a scenic wonder as Point Ulbos at Mon. terey :.r Torrey Pine.s in La Jolla. Marx (!ited the example of Laguna's Victor Hugo Inn and adjacent Heisler Park as an example of trying to make the Coast both usable anad s~nic. Beach Going to Students For Ideas on New Park Huntington Beach official! are 1oin.J to the group that will u1e lhem most for suggestions of what a ne"· park should of. fer . Teachers in all grades, pre·school throu&h col\eat, are being asked to have their studenll draw their Ideas of what should go into a two to three·acrt neighbQrhood p@rk, or even a larae 150- acre central city fadlity. 'J1,e idea was sparked by a drawina of a haystack, sketched on a child's ~rayon picture idea by a student of teacher Carole Ann Wall. Mn:. Wall, who is a member of the city Design Review Board. brought the drawln1 and others to city hall. Development Coordinator Tom Severns and Park and Re<:reation Director Norman Worthy hid received many Ideas for parks before but none included the possibility of a. haystack. "We welcome all Ideas &11d ask only that items dra~'n inside the parks be labeled or be easily Jdentlfiable to the desigqers," '\\'orthy said. lp addition to soliciting ideas from the children who will use the half dozen parks aoon to be undtr conrtructlon, Severns announced that park designers Freedom Essay By Beach Youtl1 Sent to Boa rd will hold meetings with residents nearby the proposed park6 to a:ather ideas for tbe ulUmate design. Drawings should be sent t.o the City or Huntington Beach P.O. Box 190. marked attent..ion Bill Reed. they may also be dellyered 19 Reed or Severns at city hall, "° Pecan Ave. Beach Trustees Consider Tax Override Vote . Trustees o£ the Huntington Beach City (elementary) School District meet at 7:30 p.m., Tuesday in the library or Dwyer Schoo] to consider a tax override elechon. The election, requested by district of· ficials, would have to be set for April 14 to help the district this fiscal year. :rw..., issues:wiJl·be considered· by the trustees Tuesday : -A 65-75 cent increase in the tax rate for operating funds. -An increase of $1 to $2 in the tax rate for a pay.as.you.go school construction program. Trustees have not yet indicated hov; much or even if they will ask f:ir the tax override1. The district's tax rate is cur. rently $2.45 per $100 assessed valuation, lowest ol the five elementary school districts that make up Ule Huntington Beach Union Hi1h School Oi~ict. There are also ero1lon problems from Doheny State Beach to San Clemente, said .Marx. He said Oregon is rcgulatinl' development on dry sand and Santa Barbara has arranged a 30·foot setback on geologically unstable coastal bluffs. He cited the Capitlrano Highlands as a good example of a bluff that should never have been built on. Speaker Ruiz pointed to the 1941 plan for Orange County shoreline develop- ment. He called it a food study and p1raphrased it.a essentta thrust 11 "For God'a sake buy the coast." He aald the atudy 11.ld of the U miles or coaslline, "It will never b6 any lonier al)d It will never be any cheaper." Ruiz said that tn 1941 there were 30.2 miles of county b t a c h In private ownershlp and ta.5 tn public. Today the private sector has dwindled to 19.2 miles and the public ownership 1!1 23.4 but much of this was due to acqulsltton of an ad· dltlonal seven miles by the state. The Salt Creek controversy, aald Ruiz, servtd as a catalyst and precipitant that brought the beach need! Into shJrp focus. He cited county mealUl'ea that have come aince. Ruiz said put prior1Ue1 by the county -to serve ll'Owth not duplicated on th.ls earth -were given to aervices lor the population with r~llon and esthetlce: taking a stct1ndary poeltlon. It hu become evident since Salt Creek, the speaker said, l•lhat the public ls more cor'l(!trned with the quality ot life than gro"'1h." ALSO IMPORTANT Baker said, 1peaki"1 for hlm1elf, that he believes beauty, order and bannony are just as important as c:ourta and jails. He aaid bold Jeaderihip in(enulty, and mq11ey will be needed in the years ahead to take care of recreation and con· servation. "Will you be willing to put up the money?" he asked the audience. "Will you permit local offJclals to make the necessary decisions? Will the officials h1:1ve the boldness?" City Manager Carr said of the 4.8 miles of beach within San Clemente city Um!ls, three miles are ln public ownership. 1~ city owns 10,0llf l!r.eal reet of frontage and the state another 8,0U. Carr saJd San Clemente taxpayers had encwnbered themselves for nearly tl.5 million since 1961 to buy beach. "San Clemente, as a city, has taken it upon itself to recognize that beach property to the greatest extent possible should be in public use," said Carr. CITY AGGRESSIVE The city has also been aggressive. he said, in providing restrooms, concession restaurants and adequate parking where p::>ssible to serve the beach goers. He 1aJd a v.·ater reclamation (sewage) plant now under v.•ay will cost $2.5 million but will ensure against pollution of the ocean. The effluent will be used, as it has since 1937, to water the golf course. Despite San Clemente's public beaches, said Carr, on a busy Sunday beach goers sti\1 wait for sonieone else to leave so they may use his sand. Fernald spoke of Laguna Niguel Corporation plans to use 13 square miles fur 80,000 resident.'! and a planned city as free aS' possible of the ills cities are normally heir to. He said the beach frontage. of the cor- poration represents 21h percent of county coastline and that the population planned amounts to 21,;, percent of expec:ted coun· ty population. \\'ithin the next year, he said, another parking lot will be added to ac- commodate '100 car~. or with decking 2,800 autos. Corporation land will have planned recreation, beach cleaning and lifeguard 11er,·ice and ·will pay taxes rat-her than use taxes, he said. Within the decade, he predicted, Niguel \viii grow to 50,000 pt'rsons. Fernald, an architect, said he felt lt more important for public agencies to ac· quire large parcels of property for year around use such as Mission Bay in San Diego rather than just long strips of beach. ?i.frs. Constance C. Blanchard of 1641 Jenrich Ave., Westminster, has presented the Huntingtoo Beach Uni.on High SchOol Dtstrlct board of trustees wlth a mounted diiplay of her son's es11ay on ''Freedom." Betreh Rotarians Told ' DAll.Y PILtT St•ff l"llttt 'PARKS ARE FOR PEOPLE' Beach•• end Parks' Mott Fron~ Page .l MOTT. • • Security shelved the plans for the "Trestles" art a when the President bought his home last year. Questioned after his talk, Mott said the "Trestles" is a superior surfing area. Nixon aides had indicated some other Camp Pendleton land not close to the Western White House might be used. Mott wants all of the 41'ea for the public. Mott predicted confidently th a t ''absolutely the Trestles will be in public usage eventually. We had everything set to g() when the President bought that land." He Indicated that "eventually'' pri> bably meant when Mr. Ni:con is no Jon1er President. "There is not nearly the security problem for fonner Presidents.'' he said. Mott cited a st.ate park developed across the river from former President Johnson's Te1u rMch aft.er he left the Presidency. During his talk, Mott also aired plans for new emphasis on underwater parks and preserves along the California coastline. "The department is now iden· Ufylng critical areas to create un. derwater parks and preserves," he said. He called them an exciting recreaUonal resource and said, "underwater de.stru~ Uon is more intensive than on land, there is Uttle or no time to accomplish thi:i:." Mott said there are 1,051 miles of California coastline with 437 miles in public ownership and only part of these miles the type suitable for swimming. He said the state must Utink in terms of total public ov.11ership of this type beach from Paint Conception south to the Mexican border. "California m u s t recognl~ that It is the ti'us(ee of-thiS frontage for the entire country," said the speaker. He said cities, counties and the state must make this acquisition a priority item for !heir dollar even though SO'l\O of the frontage is '2.500 and more a lineal fool. He said also there must be coopera. tion bet~·een the public and private sec· tors. t-.ft>Ss spoke of the need to protect the estuaries \rhich he called an important resource to the fisheries and <lne not completely understood. Californians. he said, must concem themselves also with protection of their tidal pools which have suffered very seriou s damage. It could take more than 100 years to restore some of them, said Mott. Mott saidthe problem or conservation does not stop at the beaches; it ranges back the coasLal Jllain to the mountains and streams which carry sand to replenish the beaches. "\Ve can 't talk beaches without looking to the mountains. We can destroy the beaches without entire environmental planning," said the speaker. Acquisition. of beach area from Point ~nception south is the state·s priority item . said the official. He said currently I.he state cannot fbecau.se of the high in- terest rates) sell bonds for acquisition but is discussing with private owners the possibility of accepting bonds ln return for their-lands. OPA:iC-E C.OA~t PIJILl~h!NG C.OM,.lNY ll:obuf N. w,,d P1~:oen1 .... P~bllSIH• Jae\: R. C~•l1v "''" "fl:oiclM! •~d C-9ntrol M•"•;., Thol'l•I l(etvil Enlior Suspected Spy's Bid For Bail Again Den ied Jn pre.senting the display, Mr!!. Blanchard said she did it to "help eombat some of the negative statements con- cerning our fine young people and our outstanding high schools." Most Unhappy With Jobs Tiit"''' A.. M~1 •lii ~t M•n.tQ•"9 Editor Alhtrt W. 8 1ttl A\)O(lti. E4•10r Hu•tit•tl•• IMcll Offlct J7t75 l11d1 loul1¥"d M1il;~g _.,dd11u: P.O. lot 7•0, •2641 Othtr OHie" lt;~.,. lt1(~: 2'1 For.,! .t.~t•.,. 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LONDON (APl -Wiiiiam Ja mes O\ven, the 68-year-old m~mber of ParlJa. ment accused of spying, was again denied bail loday anad ordered held for another hearing on Jan. 27. Chief Magistrate Sir Frank ?-.1ilton denied bail at a lf..mlnute hearing in Bow Street Court. Cmdr. Jahn Wllaon of Scotland Ya.rd's Special Branch oppo1td the rt!quest for bail. The essay v.Titten by fl.ferk Blanchard, an l lth grader at Weslminster tugh Scho::>I, has received the commendation of several nationally p r o m l n e n t personalities, including President Nlxon, Red Skelton and Ronald Reagan. Said Reagan, "It is ln~lring to know that most Americans maintain thtlr traditional faith and pride ln our country. Plaase ~vey to your son my 'test wishes for his future suceess." Coast Pa1•ks Asked LOS ANGELES (AP) -Rep. John V. Tunney said today he will propose In Congress that lbe iovernmtnt detlJri&li several coa&tal areas as a California Coastline National Par~ • Tile park would incorporale the coastal portions of lhe U.S. Marine Corps Base al Camp Pendleton. the Channel ltlends. Van- denburg Air Force Base, Los Padres National Forest along lhe Bil Sur coast and the Poinl Reyes National Sta1hou. "The purpose of this park will be to prottct tht public interest In the scenic. biological, recreational and economic values of CaJi .. forni'a'ti ocean front," the Democratic candidate for the U.S. Senate said at a news conference • t, By ALBEl\T W. BATES Of !llt O•llt f'!ltt Sti ff Eighty percent ol working Americans hate their joba and blame 11 on the job. And the failure blames -everyone and everything but himself. So says Jack Barton of Buena Park. a consultant to Sucoe1& M o t 1 v a t I o n Institute. who addressed the Huntingtoo Beach Rotary Club Friday on personal development and moti vation. Barton cited the "Jones Syndrome" as the game of one upmanship -keeping up v.•ith or ahead of the Joneses -played by so many seekers of money and prestige. j'The.se persons finally reach a Hearst castle and have nowhere to go." he said. "Ftw even try to compete with this type, much Jess keep up.'' Parton explained that the great need of everyone ls for self·fulflllment beYond ob- taining food. clothing and ghelter -but ITla,n never come close to satisfying thi5 psfcholoaical need. Otflnlng true success, he said it lies In "tht Journey from one achieveme·1t to another, e11ch empirlccilly more diffi cult than the l:i st." l-fe added thot tach general.ion ha; .• lea:acy of. a~hleven1ent from the previous one, g1vma a new challenge to stJf.fulfillm~nt. ''l\lotivation Is the only baste lngredl(lnt lacking In the unsuccessful person ," Barton asserted. He described basic motivations as: -F(!ar. the oldest known to man, beginning v.·ith the caVe man and his club versus the tiger. Today it often comes from the threat by a boM to fire an employe. -lncrntlve, based on reward and aJ> petite -the carrot in front of the donkey. Eventually the donkey must ha ve the carrot or the Incentive Is destroyed, Barlon assured hla audience. -AUltude. All of us art! a composite o( environmental lnnuence!. \Ile are in· fluenced by our Individual backgrounds. And attlludes are a habit of thought, either positive or negaUve. Barton er· plained thlJJ: "\\'hat we are today is a product of Yf!tcryear, A baby 11 In a positive v.·orld b111 v.1len he Is out ot the. playpen and Into school he enters • world of negatives. "Negative conditioning cont In u es th rough school, often on to pur11uit of 1 docto r of philosophy degree rather than fnce the outside world. But despite the constant negatlvi~m of the environment -crime news, for t>:ample -attitude• cnn be chanaed from neaatl"e to positive. Or it can be lhe opposite.'' B;rton nffortd what he ca·lled a "million dollar success plan," with five points: I. Crystallite thinking. \Vhat are my talents? Who am I? Do I like myself? 2. Set a goal, a realistic one in terms of personal talents. 3. Desire -keep it alivt. .f. Confidence -nothing succeeds like suecess . We must give o u rs e Ive ~ reachable goals which yield more success than !allure. S. Determin ation, iron-willed. This means not quitting no matter what the handicap or obstacle. (Barton mentioned the great mllcr, GleM Cunningham, who overcame a bo)•hood burning to beeome the be~t mile r or his time. and polio vie· tim Pat McConnack, who became a champion diver.) Barton was enthusiastically receiYed by nn audience or Rotarl1ns who. !or the niost part, •re e1nployers of perliOns ta \\'horn Barlon's analy~<'s and counseling on motivation primarily apply. Their response •ppeared to stem mainly from the 3pellker's comme:nll on self-fulfill· n1en1 as a universal humAn need and his delinlUon of true suctess as lying in the ••Journey'' through 1chlovements rather than the mere accumuJttion of material v.·ee-llh . • I 11 ' ~ I ' ---~------------------------------------------- . B-udget Ve ·to Assailed Democrats Map Strategy as Vote Nears WASHINGTON (AP) -Congress began an election-year sessK>n at noon Monday with its Oemocntic majority pnpa.red to challenge President Nixon's threatened veto of a budget-raising ap- propriation fot education and health. Moscow Tells N·ames of 13 Red Prisoners ~10SCOW (UPI) -Moscow Radio to- day released the names of 13 U.S. serv· icemen imprisoned by North Vietnam and said it would broadcast taped messages from the men tonight. Names or all 13 men have been re- leased previously and so have their sl.ate- ments by Radio Hanoi and Havana Radio. Some apparently were broadccut by Mos- cow Radio and Havana Radio on Sunday llighl In Washington, the State Department said it had made a protest to the Soviet Union about the broadcast. (A department spokesman, Robert J. McCloskey, said the United States in- formed Moscow it "welcomes news about our prisoners of war in Vietnam bot we are puzzled and disturbed by the manner in which information on American pris· oners is being conveyed to the American public and we can only assume that prop- aganda purposes are involved.") A Moscow radio spokesman said the messages will be broadcast in two half hour programs at 4 p.m. and 6:30 p.m. PST on the 25, 31 and 41 meter bands. 111.e names listed by the spokesman were: 1. Michael S. Kerr, whose wire Is Jerry Kerr of Port Angeles, Wash. 2. Norman McDaniel, wife Jean Carol McDaniel, Greensboro, N.C. 3. James Quincy Collins, Atherton, Cal· lfomia. 4. Paul Brown, wife Carol Brown, Cran. 1ton, N.J. S. Roger Jngvel.son, Sanford. Maine. 6. Joseph Scott Mobley, Manhattan Be.ach. Calif. 7. Giles Roderick Newton, wife Bar· hara, Albany, Ga. 8. William John h-fayhew, father Stew- art · Mayhew, New Manchester, \V. Va. tU.S. pot1tal guide does not list a New :Pitanchester, W. Va.) 9. Malcolm Garley, Greenville. ~1aine. to. Gordon Albert Larson, San Antonio, Tei:as. 11. Hugh Alim ~Stafford, Cambridge, Md. --IZ. Harold Ed Johnson, Hutchinson {of possibly Shawnee Mi!'lsion), Kan. 13. John David Lunar, Roy, Utah. Robert Cwnmings' Marriage 'Dissolved' LOS ANGELES (AP) -Actor Robert Cummings is the first Hollywood personality to end a marriq:e under California's new divorce law which recognizes "irreconcilable differences'' as the only ground necessary. Superior Court Judge William B. Hogoboom dissolved lhe 15-year marriage ol Ctmunings and Mary Elliott Cum· mings UDder the new law which took effect J&o. J. The Issue topped the Senate agenda. and Sen. Mike Mansfield (0.Mont.), the majority leader, said he hopes {or a quick vote, by Tuesday at the latest, to send lhe $19. 7 billion appropriation bill to the White House. Vl'I T1....,..ie Bondi Beauty \Vhile Orange Coast cuties don't go near the water be- cause of the clammy weather, 20-year·old Jennifer Drum~ mond of Australia finds the beaches at Bondi quite to her liking. Pendleton Ouh Offering Grant To Victims' Kin A unique, $500 scholarship to be award4 ed" to a teenaged son or dallghter Clf a Marine killed in combat has been an- nounced by the Marine Officers' \\1v(:J Club or Camp PendJeton . Freshman-level college 1 tu dent children or both officers and enlisted men are eligible to apply for the one-Ume-only grant, which supplements two permanent scholarships offered by the club. The scholarship is financed by sale or unifonn items donated by the families of slain ~iarines, refurbished by volunteer workers and sold in the Turnabout Shop at Camp Pencllelon. Students must submit ch a r a c l e r references and assorted other data, plus formal applications, available by writing Mrs. J. R. Woodring Jr., care of MOQ 17107~. Camp Pendleton. The bill includes $1.%6 billion for educ .. tion and health spendlng which Nixon has te.nned Inflationary. Democrats spent an hour In closed caucus discussing their s t r a t e g y • 1'.tansfield said afterwards that prospects "'sounded awfully good" for a sub!'lta.ntial vote to override a Nixon veto. But the issue would go to the House first, and Republican Leader Hugh Scott of Pennsylvania 1a1d the GOP believes it can muster the votes there to uphold ~·ix· on. It would take a two-thirds vote in each branch to override a veto. In the House, Speaker John W. ~1cCormack (0-Mass.), predicted one of the flrsl big issues will be anticrime legislation. M.c:Cormack noted to newsmen that the llou_se J~lciary Comn1ittec plans to begui hearings next month on increased funds for the Safe Streets Act of 1968 and the speaker sald he hopes other House cnmmittees wiU be acting on anticrime proposals before them. Asked if he expects the congressional elections next fall to make this a political session ol Con~ss. McCormack replied t~1t Democrats introduced all the major bills last year -Md pulled a typewritten list tA. the bi!Ls out of his pocket to read to newsmen. Sen. Warren G. Magnuson (0-Wash.), In charge ?l' managing Senate action on l~ education and health appropriations bill, s1ld he was ready for a swift roll call \'Ote on the meuure. MC Hal Marcli Of 'Questwn' Dies of Cancer LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Actor and comedian Hal March, whose name became a household word when he was m~ter or ceremonies for the televi~i:>n qwz lhow, "The toi,O'JO Questfon," died today of lung cancer. lie w;;.s 49. March under.vent surg .. ry at the UCLA ritedical Centt-r last No,·embcr 1:ld bad been taking coball tri:3bJ1~nts. H~ had received a tclegr1m ol C:ntc.uragemcnt from actor Jolin \V;yne, who won his own battle with lung canc!!"t: "1arch reentered the hospital early in Jan~.:i.ry. The affable, dark-haired performer Epent I~ ye.ar'3 as an actor, comedian and singer 1n night clubi, burlesque and radio before the quiz program became famocs and ita"contestantl-ei!lebrit~s. 1'.iarch wa.s not diredly· im;>licated m~· the scandal which later n:rrounded the Pftll:l':lm, one of the most popular in the ' mid·IWJS, during which tome contestants admilted fhty bad been coached w:lth the annrer1. March was with the program for 3\~ years, a~ followed it up with acting roles on numerous television speciala and on Broadway. Tricia ~it by Flu 'VASillNGTON (UPI) -President Nixon's daughter Trici8 has the flu, the \\'hlte House reporttd Monday. She is belni treated at the White House by Dr. Walter Tracy, NiJ:on's personal physician, and is staying in bed. El Rancho Introduces the new! MOVING UP? Ch1 rter Wrlt1r Burki Newport's Burke Next Top, Justice For State Court? California Supreme Court Associate Justice Louis H. Burke, a. longtime Newport Beach resident and a draftsman of the city's charUr, has been mentioned as a strong contender for the state court's chief justice position. Justice Burke, whose Newport retiidence Is 46 Beacon Bay, wu me.n· tioned by stale governmenl &eurces as a likely candidate to replace retiring Oller Just.lea Roger J. Traynor. Justice Traynor will leave the highest state court at the end of this month. JusUce Burke, an avid sailor in the PC class, has lived in Newport for many yean and spends his weekends and spare weekdays at his Beacon Bay Home. The court ii in San Francisco. The judge is the author of the book .. With This Ring", a book aimed at more equitable dlvorce laws. He is a Republican, an active layman In the Catholic Church and an amateur painter. Justice Burke was the first legal designer of Newport's city charter in the early 1950s. He won appointment to the hid! cout1 by former Democratic Gov. Edmund 0. "Pat" Brown." ~ Another Newport Reach jurist, 'Jl!slice Robe.rt Gardner, has also been' mentioned by authoritative sources as a possible candidate fer the state supreme court. . Justice Gardner is reportedly in con- tml!<in dei~ite the: fact he was only recently etfli\.iiited ffOm iOrange-COUnty • Superior Coilft to the seat on the Fourth District Court or Appeal!'-in Sn Bernardino. Disabled Vet Official Says 'Care Not Best' ST. LOUIS (UPI) -Raymond Neal, pruident of the Disabled American Veterans, s~ Sunday that a lack of funds prevents Veterans Administration . hospitals from providing woundtd Viet- nam veterans with medical care is good as that or private hospitals. Neal, of San Francisco, sald that wherus private hospitals average three employes per patient, VA hospitals have 11 cmployes per paUent. I) Exclusively for Super Shoppers! Recipe boxes that are designed !or your El Rancho recipes •.• each box come" complete 'vith a zet or 12 catego,ly dividers ••• so convenient! Plus El Rancho's famous Roa.at Chart! Your c~oice of four modern decorator colors •• , one juat right for your kitchen ••. washable, durable polystyrene ••• with a lifetime hinge! The perfect way to keep your El Rancho recipes for handy use! · Tomato Sauce .......... ~.L.~~ ..•...••.• 5' Del Monte •• , the rich red one that you use so often in so many favorite recipes! 8 oz. can Baby Food ...... '!f~~R:s.~1.R~~.e~ .......... 12 FORS1 Your choice of baby's fa\'orite varictiea ••• at a price that invites you to enjoy &a\·ina! Mond'1, ;.,,,,.,, 1', 1970 H DAILY Pl1.0T 3 New Commissi on Solon Promises • Saving of C~ast After tossing darta al a hoet of con- 1 er vat i o o i 1 t targets Saturday, Assemblyman Alan Sieroty CO.Beverly Hilb) said he wll! Introduce legtal>Uon that would prevent any lrrever1lblt damage to CalJfornia coasUine. Sleroty said the proposed le1l1l>Uon would create a Slate Coastal CommWlon similar to San Francisco Bay Con1erva· tlon and Development Commission, established to protect lhe bay from land fill projecll and other detrimental uses . The commission, he said, will be cnm- prised of regional commissions responsi· ble for various sections of coasUlne. It would, b)r a pennlt system, have veto power over projects from a half mile in- land to three miles at sea that seem bannful to the f!COlogy of the CO&St. The lawmaker WA! anchor man In a conference: on the future of Orange Coun- 1.y beaches sponsored by the Capistrano Bay Area League of Women Voters. It was held in the San Clemente Inn. FOUND TARGETS Sieroty found targets that ranged from electric power pl1nts -both fossil and nuclear fueled -to the Upper Newport Bay land swap and Joss of public acces1 at Salt Creek. T~e charged that the lJpper Bay land exchange ~·ould not provide the public with fair value for public lands traded, did nol give adequate consideration to public recreational needs and would eventually result in destruction of one of Ille last remaining estuaries on the entlre \Vest COast. "I have written to Governor Reagan, who recently in his State of the State message expresed concern about our disappearing estuaries, and have asked him to call for a recona;lderalion of the land e11:change by the Stale Lands COm· mission," said Sieroty. Zeroing in on beach acctss, Sieroty said beach areas such as Salt Creek in Orange County and Sea Ranch in Sonoma County (which cuts orr 10 miles of beach from the public) "have become battle cries for lbose who will no ldnger see a rublic resource turned into a private reserve." CASES PENDING Sieroty noted the two cases now pen- ding btfore the state Supreme Court con· c~rning the public's right to acces.s. He sa:d Assemblyman John Dunlap ([). Vallejo) will introdlJ&8. legialatJon to1re· , quire local 1overnment to J n 1 u r e reasonable publlc acceu in any 1ub- dl•1ision-ilong the California coastline. He called on on aroused electorate to Insure passage of the bill. Sieroty commended the Salt Creek ac. cess battle being w a g e d by William Wilcoxen. Laguna Beach at· tomey, and the work of Helen Keeler,, fonner Laguna Beach vice mayor, n bringing the matter to pubUc aUenUon before his subcommittee. During his Iona talk, Sieroty called for better water quality control by ffillOVing rrom control of the Water .Quality Control Boards "those members who repruent industrial. agricultural and domesUc polluters." He said he will co-sponllOI' legislaUon to remove the polluters from the water boards and to provJde a conflict of in- terest clause 1imil1r to one that exist.I DAILY PILOT JMH ....... ZEROING IN ON POLLUTION D•rt Thrower Sitroty for the Public Utilities CClmmtsaion !PUCl- OCEAN NOT DUMP Sieroty said aovermnent as well u in· dustzy must..1top treating the ocean u its dump. QuotlnJ eonterValJonl&I author Wesley Marx (who abo 1pon). the assemblyman aaid, "1be ocean bu ita tolerances and its ltressea. When tbeae are surpaued, the ocean !aHera. "Filh •tock• can be depleted_ Beaclies can erode away. Seawater, the moat common subs~ on thil earth and the mosl life·nourWling, can be hideously corrupted." The speaker said flatly that pawer plants should nol be located along the beaches. "Their structures are not com- patible with the natural est.belies or the shoreline. Instead, we should look to underground sites and to inland aites away from ppoppulaUon centers." He was critical of nuclear plants: both for discharging r'ldioactive wastes and for du~ping warm ~ater into the ~. changing tbe ecology. Sieroty alao ques. tioned the standards for radioacUvity set by The Atomic Energy Commlnlon (AEC) _citing two lcientisfl who alled lor a reduction "to no more than JO per. cent of lhe AEC discharge lbmdard1." INSTALL TOWERS He said power companies should Inst.aD coollng tower& or other cooling syste1111 to greatly reduce the amount of heated effluents. Sieroty a1so predlcted that the fulure of fossil-fuel power planta ii limited, particularly in Sou the r n California, because of the huge quanttUea ol air pollutanta they emil Sieroty was particularly critical or oil exploration offshore and of oil generally and lls smog and byproducts harmful to envlrOM'lent such as DDT; plastic packaging and detergent!. The speaker said he cons.Iden: on deple- tion allowances "a subsidy far pollnt1on", Sirloin Tip Steaks ............................................... LB. S'l .29 You know they11 be deliciously tender, because it's El Rancho btef! Bral!e them and 11ervc with ricaI Pri.ct1 in e//tct Mon., Tut'I., lVtd.., Ja.n,.11, to, it. No Idle• ta tu.a.Zera. ARCADIA: S.nMt 111d HunUniton Dr. (!! 11.tncho Cl!!t1r) PASADENA: Beef Heart ....... _._ ............... 59~ Add adventure to your plt.nned menu! Sweetbreads .... -................... 79~ Be brave ••• anned "'ith El Raneho'a recipe! Rabbit .................................... 89¢ Fresh ••. for fryins int.o a lt.t:tc tcmptlnr treat! Ox Tall ................................. 49~ Serve ox-tail soup ••. r ich and hot and hearty I XLNT Pizza ........ -.. -.. .. .. . . . .. .. .. . 89¢ Spanish Onions ................ 2 ~ 19¢ Cheese or Pepperoni • , • 12" b!i, ready to bake! Add mty flavor to favorite dishes! ' ' '------ " .. 320 Wut Coloralo Blvd. .SOUTH PASADEllA: fromont ind·Hunlln&ton Or. HUNTINGTON BEACH: Wirn• ind Al1onquln (Bo1rdwilk Cenler) NEWPORT BEACH: 2727 NIWPG<I BIY~ inl 2555"!.ulblutt Ill. (Wtbhrll Vu~11 C.lltfr) I • ' • • ' • DAllV PllOT Mormons Moutn ·Mcl(ay· LDS Presi.dent Dies of Heart Co.,,,,g~lion · (~ 11f .. o.n, PU .. StllftJ A Beckley, w. Va. radio station ~ that anybody with a worthy cause and a good size, pick· up truck can lay claim to ~.ooo Chrlstmas cards. W\YNR received. 158 000 Christmas cards during a bOilday campaign to bring some cheer to rneotal patients and oth· et' institutionalized persons. T h e station managed to distribute two-- thirds of the cards, but has a stor· age problem with the remainder. • "Just like taking a pass in Rug· by" was J••n-Pl1rr1 Chopin's coinmf.flt after he caught a five.. year old boy who fell from t h e seventh story of a Paris apartme~t block. Chopin, a :ZS.year-old phySJ· cal education teacher, was in a building across the road Wh,.en he saw Rafik Mtllanl-Marrouki bal· anced on a sevenUt story balcony. Chopin rushed down the stairs, crossed the road and was just in time to catch the child. • Th.is l ittle girt with a big appetite is m.Onth--old sloth bear, a native of India and Ceulon. The bear, the fir.st to be rai!ed from birth at Madi.ton, Wi.s., Villa! Park. Zoo, i.! fed bu zoo- kteptr Sta" Finkt. 0 H•nry •nd K•th•rlne Luz•tt.•r were married af the Findlay, Ohio Police St;ition by a patrolman-. The Luzalters, once before mar· ried and dfvorced, went to the sta· tion complete with license and wit· nesSes to a'sk where they · ~gbt find Ji. minister. Patrolman David Clark, an ordained minister, fetch· ed his Bible ftom ·hcime and read ' the wedding vows as several cur· ious policemen Jooke<I on. • • SALT L1iKE CITY"Utah (UPI) -The world's nearly three million Monnona mourned today the death or their pro- phet, seer and revelator, President David O. McKay. McKay, president of the Church o( .Jesus Ou'ist of Latter-Dey saints· since April 9, 1951, d\ed euly Sunday In h1a Hotel Utah apartment He was 96.. Death wu attributed by his physician, Dr. Allen T. MCFarlane. to acute con-- gesUon ti the heart. He had lllf'fered from· heart and kktney failures for eeveral months and la-peed tnto a coma ·abort ly after midnight He died at e a.m. Sunday. His wife of 69 yean. Emma, 95, was at his bedside as were most of their seven children. A son Robert. said McKay was wlthaut pain d~ng his final hours and died ••peacefully." . Messages of condolencet poured into this city, wodd capital of Monnonlsm, from · tholtsands of friends and ac- quaintance!; from • chutch leaders; ahd fnnn 'President •Nlzon.and fanner ~! dent ~ B. Johnson. * * * Joseph S1nith, 93, Expected As Successor ·SALT LAKE CITY (AP) -J°"'ph Fielding Smith, who I< t>p<ded In •uc- ceed David Oman McKay as prukfent of the Morrilon Church, Is a · 93·year..old father of 11 who fol.lows a vigorous w«k ICbedule. ' He is the church's historian and most emineilt authority on thtology. Smith is president· aod Rnlor member of the Council of the 'IWelve Apostles, the secood highest body in the r u )ll!'i hierarchy. As auch. ht is regarded as first 1n line of succession to McKay, who died Sun· day. Smith is the son ol the church's lilth president, Joseph F. Smith, and • grandson of Hyrum Smith. Hyrum was a brother ol Jooeph Smith, foonder of the church. Besides -g on the Coancil flf the Twelve, Smith bas bttn a ~!or In Prelident Nixon said the "Mormon Church bas been deprived ol a dlningUlmed and great leader and America has loet a foremost citizen and human bedng." J.ohnlon said McKay's "profound com· mU.ment to ·hts fellow man and his faith Inspired 111 In upIJit oor ~nd oor sights toward a better world." ~ The LD6 .cbun:h'• Coancil ol 'l'W<h"" which •••1m1<d le>dershlp ol the dnlrch upon McKl)''s d@th, was to meet today .to ltTange details of his tuneral and to plan ftr the selection of his successor. Tmtative plana caJl for funeral service to be noon Thunday in the Satt Lake Tabernacle wilh burial in the Sah Lake City Cemetery. ,Informed soorees said the council pro- bably Will meet.Jan. 29 to pick a new president aoit the most. likely candidate is Joseph Fielding Smith, president ol the Council of Twelve and its senior member. Hls father, Joseph F. Smith, was sixth ptesident of the church and· his grandfather, Hyram Smith, was the brother. of Jooeph Smi!!J, the prophet, the Firsfl'i'elifdency, the hlgheot body In , . the church hierarchy, since 1965. He was ordained a member m the Council of Tw"eiVe Aprl1 t7, 1910. · Dt~ite his ag~. Smith has enjoyed g«1eiaily good health. He adheres to a vigorous working schedule, ~g ~ of his ~e at a typewrilef OOth at his Ttmple Square 1C1h1)1'ch office and at home. .. founder and rm president of Ule church. Brigham Young, McKay and otbel'I presided over the councl!'at the time they .were elevated to the presidency. McKay wa.s sustained as the ninth pro- phet. seer, and revelator of the church on April 9, 1951, five days alter the death of Praklent <>-ge Albert Smith. He guided the church through Its gr<ateot period ol growth with mem- bership more than doubling from one million tO 2.8 million and the number ol temples built or under comtruction aJM, doubling, from eig'1t to II. But in recent months, he saw the chUrch come under incTeas.ing attack fOr its dOctrine which bars Negrou from al· talnlng priesthood -a rank ri.tonnon youths attain at I.tie age of · 1% and a necessary step for .future leadership in the church. . . But ln a letter to 'various church of. fictn a month ago, the LOS first presidepcy reaffirmed Its doctrine on Negroes, holding it was a matter oC i'e11glon. • ... IJl"I ff..,Mi. The 60-uear·old man. appar· en.tly ·was lY1l avid titwspaper reader. It cost him his life. Malmoe. Sweden police said tMy found the man, whose name Was tt(lt relea.Jed, dtad in bed, buried under packs (lj n~spapers. "The paper! had bten 1tacked next to tlte btd. They apparently fell Otltr him in slttp and he BUffocot.ed," a police spokesman said. sn1itb credlta his g«>d health to worlc: o!!ll.keyini !lie Wqnf 'ol Wis<lom , which, a-mong other admQnitions, d I r e c t s Mormon,, to refrain from smoking or drinking sUmulanU. including akoholk: beverages, coffee and tea. "A man should never reUre." he has said, "and I am a witness of that fact. There an a number al cases where men have retired. and nature took them at their word. When a man reUres from his cmpkrymen~ he "1ould k'eep busy at something." VIET 'PIGGYBACK' -A ·member of ARVN's 7th Division gives wounded buddy a lift across makeshift bridge following clash with Viet Cong force in the .l\'lekong Delta area. The sector was formerly held by the U.S. 9th Division which was taken out under the first withdrawal of U.S. troops. ' He spends evenings relaxing or doing office homework. 4 S. Viet Children Die • For two days, five-year-old Ugo "Sometimes we sing and re a d together," says Mn:. Smith, ''but many M1nc1'1 mother endured the noise as he rol1ed bis newfound metal toy around the house in Messina, Sicily. Then she took it away from him. The mother di scovered th e metal ball was a 1940 hand gre- nade. When armament experts ex- ploded It later, they found it to be in perfect working order. of the evenings he W at his typewriter ·preparing his 'Answers to Gospel Ques- tions.' " As Teen Hurls Grenade As a youUi, Smith herded cattle. And although his glasses and thin, grey hair give him a scholarly appearance, he also looks the part of a sturdy outdoorsman. SmJth is the author of 2J books on history and theology. SAIGON CUP!) -A !&-year-old .boy It> day hurled a grenade into a schoolyard near Da Nang and killed four children who were playing volleyball with a group o£ U.S. Marines. Eleven other chHdren and six ol the 12 Marines present were wounded. Florida llit By Arctic Cold It was the second terrorist attack of the day. Communist troops using a Cleymore<ype mine which hurls '1eel pell& over a wide area ambushed a South Vietnamese officer candidate com- pany at the edge al Saigon, tilling 18 Vietnameoe and wwnding 35. Newsmen reported from Da Nang that the terrorist who threw the grenade into the Tanh QuJ Hamlet School 20 miles south of Da Nang was recogn.iied u a boy from a nearby village. He escaped and policemen were searching for him . Freezing Rain, Drizzle Extends From Texas to East C.lllornl• A •ftlrm fl'ont 1!1lled IOff lllt CMll •\low.., •l'I v1rl1bl• c!_, e-rer looJl"9"' (fllfot11l1 -IY. Tl>lrl w11 lltllt t9191"'111U•I (l\f ... t, lw ""'°"" Wit partly .u1111'1 wltll v1rl1ble c:loud1. TM l!lg~ w11 tS. l~t t.O'°"''-'A -11 lulodtY. Tiie o.,.1r11lehl low 11 $1. TM Air l'o1!11!1or1 Con!•OI 011tr!tl ~ llO -"' "'' b11l11. TN U.L W"'""" l uruu'• l1v~y ~·• call• """ • clllroct of '"'" t tttr m~. Tiit '"'"'' !1 11\tl 1111 .. !ell_,. r1-!tit! bleded "'' C\ll'l'W ••m "'11111 lw-nk .,..,, bY ,...., .,.,. 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S1.1•rfl't ""'""1111H'eti -. _..,.. tfo'll ... _, ol '"' _,.,.,,. ti.If "' '"' l\flloo! t•'' of !lot ltoc.ldft "'"' IGM'I wt"' r91;erdl11tt of )t tltlOW ti 1 .... 1.111 f /ld l1 t>tlow t i ll!IWMI• "-1 ,t ilt. bo!ft 111 Mlf!Mtlltt . Al-~119 .0.11cllo•"M ""'",. e•~•r1f!11d e11,,...rck flol1t lo1t011 1ro .. 111villt C~lc8f~ Cl11d11"1!1 D•w~ Des Mol- Otl"lll t<tll"IMnts f"ort WDrl!I ·-...... Horlol'ulu KtNal CIT'r l••"-· l11t. A•t. Mltl!>i ·-· .... ,,. ... .... y .. Not-I .. '"'-"' ... , .. ::r-Ctl'I ........... l"fto RObla '"'""'• , . .,.,... RwldCllY •td '"'*' ·-""-ft" llk• Cl1Y ... -.... ,.,nc:ttc. Stt!liof , ...... TPitrMt l W111\lntfllfl ' Hi.ti Ltw rf'K. " " •t ·IJ " " u " .J) JJ ... ·" 3' ,. .ot 71 ., 1$ • .01 " " " .. -.I ·17 .~ • • .,. 4' d ,, M " 11 It ,n " " . ' ., ,, ' " .Sf ,. a -IJ ... ... 0 " IJ J .er "' " ,, 11 ·1 ·lJ .et " .. '1 SI .. q .. " • ·11 '" .. " " n ., The report added that 100 children had just left. the six-room stucco school for noontime recess when the terrorist ap- proached the building. He lobbed one grenade into a classroom but it failed to explode. The second hit the roof and roll· eel into the dirt school yard. The Marines playing with the children were memben of a volunteer platoon with a dual military and civic action mission. Some ci the Marines were distri~ candy left over from their USO Chrbtmas packages. BIRTH CONTROL fi'OR PETS URGED LOS ANGELES (UPI) - A city council comm ittee has propo!ed a birth control program for pets at cut-rate prices 1o curb an lncrejse In the city's dog and cat populallon. The Public Jlealth and Welfare Com-" .. .... .. .. "' .. " .. " n " .. mitltt Thur!da.y recommended the pro. .01 gram be admln il¢ered at a pilot clinic at .n an animal ahelter where pets can be ,, ncutertd lnexpenslVtly. JI 20 ,Of CHURCH LEADER DIES David McKay Wat 96 Senator Hints Soviet Role In JFK Death WASHINGTON (UPI) -Sen. ruchard B. Russell (J).Ga.), said today he never believed that Lee Harvey Oswald assassinated President John F. KeMedy without at least 60me encouragement from others. Russell, a member of the Warren Com· mission that investigated the assassina- tion, said however that he did not have ''the slightest doubt'' that it was Oswald v.·ho fired the fatal shots in Dallas on Nov. 22, 1963. •!Jf there was any one thing that was conclusive it wa.s that Oswald fired the &hots ," Russell said, but he added : "I never did believe that he did it without any consultat.ion or any encouragement whatsoever." Russell said the Warren Commission was not able to investigate speeifically the source or such possible consultation or encouragement, and RU5.$eII added he could not pinpoint it. But Russell observed that Oswald spen t some time in ri.tinsk, Russia, prior to the assassination and said this was in an area where the Russians trained and 1chooled large n:µmbers: ol Cubans. ~ The · 72-year-old Russell made the statements ti> newsm~n in response to questions prompted by a story in the \Vashington Post based on a series of taped interviews· he recorded for broad· cast next· n'lonfrt by an Atlanta television station -WSB-TV. The Post said Russell mentioned in the lnterviews that "too many things ••. caus- ed me to doubt that he (Oswald) planned it all by himself." Ip the interview, Russell sai d some of the factors which influenced his doubts were Oswalci's sojourn in Minsk, which he. identified as "the principal center for educating Cuban students" and some of Oswald's trips to Mellieo City. Other factors were "a number of di&crepancies in the evKlence. or as to his means of transportation, the luggage be had and whether or not anyone was with him," the Post reported. Russell, one of seven members or the commission headed by Earl Warren whc> was then chief justice of the Supreme Court. said his doubts led him insist on an insertion in the final rejXn'l before he would sign it. The insertion sai d that "because of the difficulty of proving negatives to a cer· tainty the possibility of others being in· volved with either Oswald or Ruby (Jack Ruby who assassinated Oswald ) cannot be established categorically, but if there i3 any such evidence it has been beyond the reach of all the investigative agencies and resoorees of the United States and has not come to the attention of this commission." Florida Unable To Desegregate At Once···Kirk WASHINGTON ( AP.l -Florida Gov. Claude Kirk told the Supreme Court to- day Florida is "financi ally and physically unabfe" to meet the terms of the court's order for immediate school desegrega. tlon . Kirlc: said he wa s ordering Florida school districU: not to change their school calendars during mid-year. "The stale of Florida atAndS ready trt comply with the order of any tribunal." the motion said, "bot U presentJ.y finan· · cially and physically unable to do so and is faced with a situaU<i1 rJ impossibility ol. performance." Dellvering his motion penonally to the court, Kirk said Florida could not ac· complish the scope of dt$egregation or. dered In the lime allowed . Hangovers 'Costly' LONDON (UPI) -The National Coun· cil on Alcoholl!m said Sunday hangovers eo«t BrltAin $600 million a yc11 r In losl work. The council said more than 2$0,000 worker' fall to show up for their jobs each Monday because of hangovers. A~ew~a{S Asian Tour Beneficial TRAVIS AFB. Cllil. (UPI) -Vice President Spiro T. Agnew returned to \he mainland United States today from a wee-week tour of Asia he said left him reeling "very encouraged" about America's image in the Far East. The vice president's jet touched down al 7:58 a.m. at Travis Air Force ~!e about $0 miles northeast of San Francisco for a two-hour refueling stop en route to Washington, v.·bere arnval was scheduled at 5:10 p.m. F.ST. · Agnew was sleeping when the big jet landed in a cold drizzh! at the California Air Force base. About a dozen newsm_en waited at lbt! airstrip in case the vice president made an appearance. Agnew, accompanied by his wife. Jud¥. :r1.opeared rested after a weekend _in Hawaii during which his only official engagen:ient was a meeting wi~ Adm. John S. Mct::ain Jr., the U.S. Pacific com· mender. ~···"' The vice president returned to the u.~. Friday from his three.week ~ of Asia and Pacific countries. He said he wa.o; "very encouraged by the general attitude toward the United States" and "very much morP. optimistic than when T lfel" about the Nixon administration's policy in Vietnam. Agnew said leaders of the COU!l~rie,s he visited. which i~luded the Ph;ihpp1nes, Taiwan, 1'1alaysia. Nepal, Singapore, Jndonesia, Thailand, Afghan i stan • Australia and New Zealand, "made It very clear to me that they wanted a con· tinuing U.S. presence in the Pacific." He said the highlight of the trip wu hD persona.I impression of Vietnam where he said he fowxl good morale among fighting men and good relations among members of the South Vietnamese government. Tile vice president ran into several an· tiwar demonstrations on the fasl·paced tour but didn't appear to be bo.thered by them. "I have never been intimidated by demoostrators, •• he said in A"uckland. New Zealand, one of the countries where he encountered protesters. Agnew '"spent a quiet two days:· tn· Hawaii. He got in some beach time at his hotel in the fashionable Kabala sectk.in of Honolulu, but cancelled a rourd ot golf because of a "tennis elbow" which he ag· gravated during a game of tennis in Australia. Calley Declines To Defend ·self At Army Probe FT. BENNING, Ga. (UPI) -Lt. William L. Galley Jr. declined fo take tbe stand in his own defense today in an Anny investigatory hearing into his aUegtd IIOth murder of a civilian in South Vietnam. 'The investigating officr.' Ll Col ri.1ack H. Hopper of the Anny Infantry School, took the charge under advisement. Hop· per will recommend y;helhcr Calley be court·martialed for the murder -an in- cident apparently unrelated lD the alleged killing of 109 civilians at f\.1y Lai -and the Ft. Benning commanding general will decide whether a court martial be held on it. 'The charge was heard In the courtroom in whi ch Calley is to be court-martialed sometime this year on charges of murdering the 109 civilians at My Lal in 1968. The new charge alleged that he kill· ed an adult male in Quai;ig Ngai province six weeks before tile My Lai massacre. Calley, a snub-nosed young man with brownish hair balding at the temples. sat slumped in his chair between his civilian defense counsel Latjmer and his military defense counsel, Maj. Kenneth Raby, dur· ing the one·hour hearing. The prosecutor, Capt Arthur ~f. Daniel, introduced in evkl.ence five letters or prosecution witnesses. presumably containing their versions of the inciden t. Latimer said the defense wou1d not offer any evidence "at this time." When Hopper sakl the defendant migllt take the stand for awom testimony in his own defense Latimer &aid: 7,000 Okinawa Workers Strike At U.S. Bases NAHA, Okinawa (AP) -More than 7,000 Okinawan workers began a scbedu\. ed five-day strike against U.S. mllili.ry ' bases today and five Americans and 14 , O~awans were reported injured 1n "' picket line incidents. The strikers, angered by the di!D\is:sa1 of 1,188 O'kina.wan workers because of a cut in U.S. defense tpending, posted pickets at 74 gales to U.S. military bases at 12:01 a.m. They demand higher severance allowances and longer advance notice for workers to be dismissed . U.S. military officials con fumed et least one lnjury, saying an AmC!rlcan wa~ hit by 0)'lng glass from 1 car window smashed by rocks. Two other Americans \\'ere reported Injured In similar bul separate lncidenla with pickets. An OldnawilD newsman said ht saw two Americiln women injured when their car S\\ .. erved out of control and hit a guard 1 house at the gate of an Army brbe neer Naha after they were conCronted by pickets at Ult aate. ( . . .. • ' \ ' ' ~men ·· ' BARBARA DUARTE, 494-9466 MM!lif~, ,_, It. ttrt I , ... II 'N~ fighting or Arguing' , AFS feel Students ' at ·Home .The merits of ·the American Field Service were ,expJ8ined to Mission Viejo residents interested in starting a chapter recently . by Laguna stu- dents~Manfred Heine, Margie le· Roux_ and Fernando Ga]a . ... As introduced by Mrs. Marshall Houts, president. of the 1:-8-guna. chair t.,r, the LagUna Beach High School trio shared som~ ~p~ess1o~s \Vtlh the gathering. "The best part of being an AFS student is hVUlg with another .fmµUy ," observes Heine. . . · . . Pets in the home were a surpnse to GaJa as most people 1n Sp~1n livtin apartments. He was interested, also, to see so many churches \Vh1ch weren't Ca tholic. , ~ , ,1 Mi.Ss le ~oux fmds_ school the biggest d,ifference be~ween_ countries. •;THere ts_ less pressure qere," sbe finds, "and the relationship bet"•een ·student-and teacher-is much closer/' ·,_. --- -The pi-ogram, which is.firmly established in the area, work~ on the basis of community families providing care and affection for foreign stu· dents. Transportation is provided by chapter members to enable the visi- tors to see all facets of community life .•. from picnics to \Veddings. · , The local chapter raises the $850 participation fee for each student Jn their school Contributions from service clubs, churches and individuals -support the program. . AFS students are seniors, participate in student government and ex- tra curricular activities, carry a full academic program and graduate in 'June. . As summ~ µp by the student from Spain. "People alJ over the 'vorld, all races, all religi:ons, unders~d each other because of AFS. N~y f.S}S what you are, they just understand you are people. When we visited W3tt.5, no one judged against me. People can understand each other with- out arguing or fighting." ' '" ' ENJOYING TH~ ART 'COLONY A'l"MOSPHERE -American Field Service Studfnts (left tP right) Fernando Gaja of Spain; ~fargie le Roux of South Africa and Manfred Heine of Germany ' take a break on the high school lawn . The students have been sharing their impressions and experiences in the United State.!! \Vi1.h residents and schools in neighboring districts. Qua'rter<entury . Mack ' ' ' ~-Co·m rnurrit-y Concerts· Play Lasting Role Laguna Beach Community Concert Association is celebrating a quarter-century of community concerts ii;i. Laguna Beach . Firmly establi.shed as the oldest concert association in South· ern California , it has achieved eminence by present.ation of disting .. uished and exciting concerts over the years. Since the aim ol the organization is lo· maintain Carnegie Hall · standards and to bring highly qualilied artists to more than 800 com-: munities itt the United States and Canada, members need not.travel to large metropolitan Centers to hear and see the world's finest artists. With programs lea.luring the Dolmetsch.SChoenfeld Ensemble (violin. cello,· recorder and barpsicord) and the New York Lyric Quartet behind them, merribei's now are anticipating the next con· cert of th& current .. seasOn which. brings brilliant du~pianists Dolores Hodgens and Samuel Howard I!> the stage of the Lagun~ Beach High School Audil!>rium·on the evening of Jan. 29. , . . The season will bow out with a March concert presented by young college student Shigemi Matswnolo, a soloist with the San Francisco Opera. · · With a membership in ·excess ol 550 drawing from the area· be- tween Laguna Beach and San Clemente, the association features young artists as well as 1those es\ablished in their careers • . Launching• a rn,embership drive each spring. the association has c•tabLished a fee"of '81.or adults and $4 for students which entitles , members.to attend :BJI otlfer concerls given by affiliated associations in Southern Cati!orn'.ia. nrere are no tickets available for individual 1 concerts. DUO PIANISTS ANTICIPATE CONCERT -Believing th at good music means much more than mere entertainment, M r s . Donald VBnderbilt and Mrs. George H. Thompson (left to right) have been staunch supporters of Laguna.Beach Cornmiinity Con· certs. As ,they anticipate tllis month's pi'-JlO coacert, 'they can look ba<:k on service .which includes mem\)rerShjp on ·th•· board of directors. Serving as president of t~e association for the· current season fa George M. Cunningham. Other officers include Dr. Lawrence' F. White, Col.. Will~ H. Rol.ey ~nd Mrs. '\\'.hlte, vlce .presidents; Mrs. Arthur S. Wiley, .!l~reta;ry: Mrs . John G. Loncaric, assistant secre- tary, and Mrs. Amy Godshaw, treasurer: · Art Ga·llery Reiect Puts ·H~r ·;in a Bad F of Mind ·: DEAR ANN. LANDERS: A relative has taken up painting as a hobby. Sbe-hal just presented me wlth an eoormou1 portrait of myself. It is an abstract mooJtrQ&ty in tile P.icasso 1tyle--ooe brown eye and one blue eye. a gr~sly ex· aggerated noaie and Nue hair. lt loots men like a cartoon than a pairting. My husband and chiklren couldn't ·stop laug!J.tng_ when they &aw il Tb make mat - ters · wmi'e. th& relative went to con- 31derable expense to have the U:llng fram- 9:1 so, of coorii!, we are erpected kl bang II. • t We've had the picture three wee1ts and five just about run out of excUICI. The arti!t his been be.re several times and keeps astlllg rbout the po(tratt. How can I &« out of han&ini it-gracelully.? -• HARPOONED ' sometimes develop UfeJong complexes DEAR ANN LANDE~ ago I ' because of their names. An outstanding · a cousin of whom...r'a!wa:YS h~ve been -ex-ample v.·aS -a shy;Tnt·roverted young fond, took up .With a woman-who can•t woman whose moniker was Alpha compare with his wife. No one eould , Omega . When asktd •bout her.name she ·understand it. Five months ag'o his lovely. f 1 .. .hesitat.ingly explained, ''Mother didn'"t wHe 1ive bbn a divorce. Everyone ANN LANDERS '1 DEAJl BAJtP: You cn't, '°be a 1port ind Una tbe pldern thing. It ahoald be a p-eat eeaverwdou piece. Arter a couple of m•Ull move Ii to anOlher room and lhe1 It Ute aWc. DEAR ANN LANDERS: A wllilc back you priuted a letter from a reader who said ~it was cmel· Of parents to saddle t.heir cblldrf.fi with peculiar fint names just beau.st they Uiougbt it was "dlf· ferent" or .. amusing." Jn-}'OU?" reply. YoU mcndoned Miu Jina .. Hogg and evCfJ third J)tt90l"I in Texas wtote to sti;y they knew ber or were rt I a led to her. 1. r have just. read an article in a wan~me. She wl.!lbed everyone to know I>-..-...ned he would marry the other magazine that aays 1 -capricious setetifon was her first and hopefully her-last.'' ,,apan at the first legal rhoment. He has o( names can siriously hamper a child's Is .it., any-wonder that more than 50,000 not done ao. They still maintain stpal'"ale chances for happiness. One young fellow people 31 Yetr petition the U.S. courts to apartments but lhty go everywheN! had a difficult time all through school undo t~c damag_c ,dofie to them by their toa:ethet IJ1d .. are invited to &otne highly because no one believed his name '¥85 parents? I h* you print this letler for respectable pl~ Ma couple . T considu Tonsilitis Jooea. When he tried to enlist the .benc!lt qf Momrand Pops who are lhc relationahip lmmcwal and have told ·Jn U1e Navy he en"""'•ttred the same Ptel! r him so He of!er1 no defense -lem to get --ly -·le a' baby·nam· · · doubts. Further lnvetUjalion revealed v..... .... ~ that Ton •ilitfs had three ing llm1. ~ P~IN JANE ANO ·CLAD Pleasi,teJlmethecorrectwaytothini brother~Menin&ijis, Appendicilis and OF l'I' abouL this ol!ensive rel.aUonshlp. My Peritonitis. ~ · -• "°"9in if no longer "chtalirt1ll •ince btJs DBAJl JANE: App1rtntly Shakespe1fe not a married man. I need your objective "'II wrong, Tbtre'1 pleoty In a name. vlewpotnt. -VAN COOVER A psychologist pointed out that children DEAR VAN: Of tours& Ii Ir sad wllen peoPle wt admire dlaappolar as; but wbat your cou~in doe1 is !iii buibst11 • . '. I Pvt 10 klita wbat ~ m1rtla1e was , like. And neither do yoa. Now }hit lie Is unmarried, bl1 relaUoaship . wl• I.lie "other worban" 11 kosber .. U ).11 doti'I like her, don't 1ee her.See him lloee. When romantic gla:ites turn to warm embraces is it love or chernjstry? Send !or the booklet "Love or Sex and ~low to Tell the Difference," by Ann La.ndtf!'I. Enclose a long. stamped, seU-addresst:I envelope and 35 cents in coin \Vilh your request. Ann Landers will b< glad to bolp )'OU with your problemo. Send th•m.to her In care or the DAILY PILOT. <ntloslog a self-addressed. stamped envelop~. : ' .. . • . • . . • • . . • . . . . January Selections Zonta Honors Coeds New Officers Light the Way Guiding members through the new year will be (left lo right) Mrs. Louis R. Raymond, Mrs. Chuck Kleiss and Mrs. Richard A. Brumner. vic_e presidents and president of the Blessed Sacrament Altar Society~ The new officers will preside during the next meeting of the group taking place at 8 p.m. Tuesday, Jan. 20, in the Westminster church. Horoscope Eacll month the Zonta Club ol NeWport -ilco<irt ... Maio< cJrl from uch or 1ll• Ne"""'"Mesa bilh tchoola as lbe ZObta G1r1..r-monlh. 1bt aeJectlon 11 bued upon 1e~p; cillzen•hlp, . schoJanbtp and te.rvloe to lier IChool. At 1Jle · end .of the ld>ool year, the · c.eas ,.lect • the one ·they feel . "Wit quali!ied to be n1med ~ Zon- ia Girl of-the-year !or· 1lleir ·achooJ and th:e recipient of a 4 ao l&vlnfs bond. , ESTANCIA MiU Beth Newman, daughter of Mt;\I. Estf:llt Newman ol Co.sla Meaa, serves as CSF aecretary, Girl 1' Leacue Senior RepreaentaUve, Commiujoner of Comnitl'lity Service and is a member of the Senior Class' Council. 'She wu nan;>ed Freshman Girl-of-the-year and received a jewtled Gold E for her service to the lcllbol in her: junior ·year. . A member ol GM and AFS Miu Newman alio has auved on the drill team and u a JV cheerleader. nurtnc her 1ophomore and junicr years she wu a voluntttr at Fairview State Hoepltal. Miu Newman pl1n1 to .at· Aquarius: Don't Hurry TUESDAY JANUARY 20 thought wssible. Key Is lo GEMINI (May 2J.June 20): • CANCER (Juno 21.July l%): open mind to contact!. Guard v~luables. Some who Cycle cont fn u e 1 hi&h: TAURUS (April 20-May 20): take you ~laces can. be however aomtthlna you took NH HIGH Debor1h Tucker tend UCI and major in the drill team and ASB co. psycholoo. lreasurer and was the red· pient of the Outstandh!g Book· NEWPORT HARBOR keeping Award in her Curra1t Pep Clnb president. sophomore and juniors years. ASB Pep Commislioner and Miss Paplham also is the Executive Council Member, current winner for her school Miss Deborah Tucker was of the DAR Good Citizenship -Award. named Most Spirited Salloret· te in 1988. She has been a CORONA DEL l\tAR member of AFS, Spanish Club, Planning to attend San Drill Team and CSF. Diego State College and major in fine arts and psychology Is The dau&hte.r d._ tderchant Miss SuNiinkley. daughter of l Marine Capt. and Mrs. Cyrus Mr. and Mrs. John Minkley of M. Tucker of Newport Beach corona del Mar . also hu been a . member of h G · 'l'ri·Ki·Y and has worked at s e is iris' League vice president, a member of the Pair\tiew · State Hospital and yearbook staff and Surf Club Hoaa Memorial Ho a Pit a I, Secretary. Preabyterian as a Can· d atJ1 A GJrls' League represen· CM HIGH Sue P•plham CdM HIGH Sue Minkley By SYDNEY OMARR Tie up some loose ends. Op.. careless w 1.t h belongm1s. ' :: ARIES (March 21-April 19): -portwlity abounds. But you Stre!s ability to write, com· fot fl'll'lted may suddenly 3 -=Y=oo~1=•t:::m;:o;:"'~doo~•:::1ll;:•;:"=:Y;:ou:::::::;:m;:us;:t:::be~sol=;;:::ect;:i=v=•·====m:::wu=·c=at=e=.====:::; chanat. Y • per' tatlve in her sophomore and She plans to attend UCJ and junior years, she was named major in biolo~l sclmces to Girl.of-the-quarter in Sprint. ~; LEO (July 2l-Au1 .. l%): .become 1 a tea at the hi&h 1969. school evtl. Mi•s Mi'nkley also does d · ... · 1 ; Realize that minor step ou t or your car an lnto .atricia • " dlJJturbanct is not major COSTA MESA voJunteer work at Fairview jlo _________________ , A CSF Gold Sealbearer and State Hospital. • • ' . ' - calamity . VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): member of the yearbook staff, o.i;i;;;;;..i.;,,,,;..;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;iiiii;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;;iiiii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;"i l\liss Sue Paplham plans to at-1 tend the University o f Southern California and major in account.ins:. Sale Study Lto message. Your am. bitions are rtron1: you lvant results. You 1et them by heedin& what appears to bt unorthodo:r advict . LlllIIA (Sept 23-0cl. 22): No day to follow the crowd. SOm~ will claJm Y«I are being cifletolll~•-of belni di!· •, flttnt. • • I • ~ The daugther o{ Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Paplham of Costa Meaa, she also is Pep Club preaident, GAA treuurer and Spanish C1ub secretary. She has been a member of ~--. -· -IGOl!PJQ-(Odril-l'lov. 21k A , maneuver that occul"I bthfnd the aoenu may havl direct effect on your pl'Ofl'taS. ,.. :. .. Signlfkant savings on selected pieces/groupings from America's great furniture makers ..• 'I ' , ~ . r -.: ..... •' .. .... ... . " \ ' .. ,..-~ ' ' . ' ' ' .., f lienredori ·•·cu!lOrn Folio Three" 44'' DllVl 1,1G TABLE u:ith Tu.:o 20" Leart., Reg . .C09.00 SALE 2.C9.00 . ~. .~ . i : '· ; MATCH/,~G ~//)f; Cl/A/II T!IBU: .f \/)Ff)( r. CHAIR Sl'T R•O· 1 19 .00 SALE 69 ,00 Reg. 885 .00 S.&lE S2S .OO This sale hos a lways signified something special -"the quali ty th at endures," The 87th hos changed in only one respeci -there's more of it .•. so 1hat thi s is the lorgetl semi -annual anniv ersary sol e in our history. All the selected eieces and groupings ore from the regular J. H. Biggar stock, These include full dining room col · lections, bedroom grouping s, cabinets, tables, lamps, occtssori•s, carpet ing and upholstered sofas and chairs in de1ign~, col ors and patterns ••. bearing such honored names os Drexel, Heritage, Henredon, Thomasville, just to name o few. Anniversary Savings at All Three Stores! PASADENA Colorado at El !vlohno 792·6136 POMONA lloll, Easl of Gary 629-3026 SANTA ANA, MAIN at ELEVENTH 547°1621 :~:ner,ndent wi~t beinf SAOmAllIUI !Nov. 22· De<. 21): Friendship and mmeyltndinc do not mix to-- day. Use yaur intuitlori. Follow hunch . CAPRICORN (Do<. 22.Jah. Ill' Position o! Jhote at helm ciiiild be leu Dion 1!eady. Be llnowl•daeable, alert, ready to step in with altemaUvea. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Diplomatic •pproacb , is belt ont today. Avoid trying to . force is.mes. -One who works with you may oome up wltli in· terestin& report. Bt. analytical and not In too much of a hur· ry. PISCE.• (Feb. ii-March 211\: Emotional reactions a r e dtfinlte and direct. You 1et what you want -but self-con· trol ls a rtqul11te. Take~off ' Tuned In A take-off on ,the "man on the atrett" type radio · in- terview will highlight the Wed· nesday. Jan. 21, mttting of the Officers' Wives League of Orana:e~~n!Y.~ the Balb91 Bay CluD.~· A social hour 1t 11 :30 a.m . will precede lunch a't 12: 30 p.m., according to Mrs. J. P. Aynes. coordtn·ator. In charge ol the proiram 1 are Mrs . .Aynes and Mrs. E. L. Zieli'.iski. both of Corona del Mar. Prizes will ~e given to each person interviewed. The league is open to wives I and widows of retired military officers of ah branches SEMl·ANNUAL SALE S.v• ov•r 50% on Am•rlet'1 l•adln1 f11hion 1hot1! H1.1rry now to •niOY th••• tr•m1ndo1.11 v1lu11. Stlfl • 11n1 111.ctlon, 11ttwiu1h not tv•ry 1tyl1 In 111 sires. 5.99 to 7.99 2 99 CASUAL GROUP... • F•J.iet 1111114 N1wJ1trl l11t~ Huntifttlon C•nt•r 'S•wlh Ct•1I ~l.11 Hwn11n91on lt•t~ C 1 1l1 M111 NOW ••• THERE ARE TWO CROWNING .GLORY BEAUTY SALONS TO SERVE YOU IN COST A MESA Cr~~ning.¥1o~y (formerly_Caprice Coiffures) Soutli Coal~ Plaza, Costa Mesa• phan• 546-7116 Crowning Glory 267 East 17th Str"t Costa Mesa • phone 548-9919 /h. PRICE PERM SALE Bouncy. beautilul curls can happen lo you! Hold that glamour oet with oasy-care perms! Look ready to go wilhoul lrelling or setting. AU at jumbo oavings! Complete. 520 MAGIC CURL $ J 0 525 GI.AMOR CURL 'I 25o 535 REGAL CURL $ J J50 Budset perm alwayo SS.95 (normal hair only) ~BEAUTY BARGAINS·----. Pricea skynx:kei everywhere but here. Streich your beauty budget and enjoy a flattering style. EVEN MORE SAVINGS ON MON., TUES .. WED. MOK .. TUES .. WED. LATtl! WtEI SHAMPOO·SET $245 $295 HAIRCUT $J 50 $200 ID STYLE INAMPOO·ln $2tS $395 HAIRCUT $2H aUweek Crownfng Glory BEAUTY SALONS Appoi.l&tme1t.1.s uitlcomd buJ l'IOt al1007s nt!ceJSfJf'' OPEN EVENINGS CROWNING GLOR Cf•rfMfty C•itric:e Celff1retl SOUTH COAST PLAZA L•wer Unil--N..-t '-s .. n. PHONE 546-7186 OPEN EVENINGS I. SUNDAY CROWNING GLORY 267 E. 17th ST., COSTA MESA PHONE S48-9919 --....,, • l l ' • ·-~-~·-·--------. --~ -.--.-.-; • . Valley Today's Fbull N.Y. Stoeka *. * . ORANGE COUNTY, CAOl'ORNIA MONDAY, JANUARY 19, L970 TEN CENl's ~--~,:.NO. 116, 3csECJ~ONS,.32 P·lt.GES , "i!~:::--~___;~~----,~~~-:-~~~~~~~~~~~--~--·~~~~~~~~~~~~~- T<EA¢HER·VICK·Y CAUDLE ENCOURAGES HANDICAPPE.D STUDENT -1~~or!A1ofor ~~~in.tiort, W•lking Be .. •!"A,.?. •~, ~!t~ i:cts . ~· . . ' . -~---" .. f~lley Tries New Way ... f..hEaucuteHandicapped ·-' ' : 11y1lUDT NIEDZIECSIU ~ , Ol IM"Dfll)t•P'llll Sf.Ill ·WY(do.·y&l do ·with :the·ed.ucalioniitly h...ftcai>Ped -chil41 ·.Take I him ·out.10( r'the. classroom. place hiin ·1jpl· a s.....Mal -class, with special " •... ~t?tti's, alid ,a special ucrriculum? "That~bas been the common practice at bunctl'fPi; ·of ·schooL ,districts around the natoO. :Sut iat' -~the FounWin Valley School :Dtst.n~ this Year'something new is being mec1:· :11 ·is ,a · pilot pr~ram aimed at te~dU{lg the bandicqw.ed child in the · ri,Ulir classroom. .F~ral fpnds under the Elementary a,i\d~dary Educaµon Act, Title Ill, hiv~P,rOv:ided $66,800 for the program's raist: 1 'ear of operation. Proje c t c0&-din8tor, 1'arry Belkin, anticipates ad· cti\io'.n8t ·funds of $56,300 for the second ~r arid ~5,000 for·the thir~ year. . '.'So. many great things are happening tn·"thls program." maintained Belkin. ''Oi\t youngster who was completely ex- cl~td from public schools last yea; Mtauae of his disruptive behavior i.s back arld .iunctiOning so well in the regular cllstroom even'we can't believe it. ... Mt;ther .child who was coostantly urxte•r fitaVy medicaUon is previous years Js -cornpletely off medication and is a dif· feren~ human being in the regular clUSrc:iOm·this year,'' he added. "!·think the reason For this is that lhese Jdds tfeel;mOf'e 'like they 're the same as ~ else. They feel better about them8elve.s. They have more jncent.ive aridl~Y haVe higher goals." • Educationally han.dicapped children are thole Who have some kind of serious ~ pliysical, em O•t i o n a I or 1eid0t0Ci"cal~ problem that keeps them ( ~hools to Weigh Silk · of Bonds • f 'f' ~ ''tl>t~o·o! !650'1m'ln•school bonds will ~COMidered tonight by the Ocean View ~}2DistiictJbo'ard of ·trustees . at their 7:tb ·p.m. meeling at the di5trict's'head• qdirt.en. 7972 Warner Ave., lluntingtoo Bach-. ... br. Clartnce Han. superintendent, said the', bonds would qualify the district for .iatt aid alJOcations ancHor the design of W facilities. !Juring the same meeUng, the truslee• will allo_,lider authorizing the doubl· inr-(lf·tfie dt$triet's 4z.m11n tea'eher aldt roH:t, at an annual e1penst or ssi.ooo . • ' • rr·om-leaming:atrthe1samerr.ate, Or' in ·tlie .ume manner .as •other•chilttren.' -Th-;-te~·applies1.o,the eCtucabte1me n. 1ally· retarded as well ,as to .chlldteii,wilh nonnal ·intelligence1 who have of.tier disabi!H.ies which prevent them from learning in the . .nermal fasliion. 'Belkin·said•over the years·that'isolation of these children inW special groups,. as is common practice1 has only created·new problems for·them. They.have been·made to feel different and have had to•bear the stigma of l3be!S aild naines, lie asserts. The Fount~ln Valley project Works like this: A psychologist first administers tests to . discover · the streoglhs and \Veaknesses of each child. The child then is turned over to a "prescriptive t'eacher" who works with him lo remedy specific problems, with specific exercises. Also on the team is a "resource lc<1cher" who helps the classroom teacher adapt curriculum for ·han· dicapped children and work s with lhim. Other specialists. such as health . and development and speech and language development experts, contribute lheir knowledge as well. But accord ing to Belkin, lhe most im· portant member of the· team ·is· still the classroom teacher, who has become, more awafc of what , she can do to help the children function in the re g u J a r classroom. Thanks to the federal grant, the Foun· lain Valley School District has been able to purchase certain equipment to work on learning problems. These include the 0 Hoffman Program. med Reader," an audio-visual machine waich •aUows the children to work at ·their own pac:e, and devices designed to help the children with concePt form ation, phonie& and arithmelic. ·A tape library "'ith Iollow·up worksheets p r o v i'd es auditory help al a self.pacing rate. Belkin claims that 'parent react\on to the progrtmJ .bas been highly favorllble. "One mother 'who is not iso :well to do called me 'and wanted to dooate something to this program ," he said. ''She said she wanted' to 'do sometliin£: in return for the miracle that happened to her · boy this ytar." · "An interesUng sideligbl·tbal wetdijln't expect ·to happen h3s been' that , olb'er students haVe been so · helpful and I un. derstandiag,"· he continued, adding that the children.are sensitive to the problems ' or the handkapped child. "One trainable menlally retarded atu • Oent who ~ame in from another district had no academie skills what.soever. The kids have sort of adopt«t llim. It'1 like he1s been held back ah these yeart ind he'i trying to learn something." . ~· ~ _ .... Draft No 'Pun.ishment' Supreme Court Bars Any .Quick lnductwns , WASHJNGTON (UPI) -The-Supreme Court today barred Selective Service boards from speeding up inductions to punish registrants for violating draft law regulations. The court, in a 6-2 ruling, held that any action taken against "deli.iquent" registrants must be pursued through the courts. The justices struck down the prac· tice of recla5$ifying them IA subject to immediate call up. The decision came in a criminal case Involving David Earl Gutknecht of Gay· lord, Minn., who contended he was re· classified by his local board and ordered Rich 'llippie' Says He'll Fix War, Peace NEW YORK (UP1) -Michael James Brody, who now says he will distribute SIOO billion, or maybe an even trillion, also promises a plan for peace in Vletnam to President Nixon plus cures for cancer and all other diseases. Brody, whose long red ha:lr and hip clothing belie his claimed wealth. insists he will give a"'ay money to anyone who needs it. Before a national television audience on the Ed Sullivan Show Sunday night. Brody. 21, played a IZ.slring guitar and sang a ballad ~·rilten by Bob Dylan, "You Ain'l Goin' Nowhere." Then he pro- claimed again : "I'm 'fOrlh 100 bilU!<! dolhf•• -~ that stagger your mlnd't·ln fact, ttiat was yesterday. I m!iht be. ·worth a trillion too-· day." --· ~ - Crowds of people, many of whom said they hoj,ed for a gift from Brody, mobbed the college dropout philanthropist as he ente red and Jeft the theater. "You're kill· ing me," he shouted befon: police hustled him into a car .and he. drqve away. Inside the theater earlier, Brody, who appeared flushed and excited, told reporters he would continue the giveaways if his public, including those who have picked.his. pocket and pulled his wedding rll;lg from his· band in t~ past £ew 4ays, will stop crowding him and pulling his hair. "'Don't be so greedy,'' he said. "Gi\!e me a chance . Give me some time." He made promises to · bestow massive su.ins upon North Vietnam in order to end the war and called on Nixon to meet him this afternoon at Kennedy International Airport here to discuu poverty and world peace. · The President will be busy in Washington , however, preparing his Stat~ (See BRODY, Pas• %) . Planners' Posts Filled Tuesday Three planning c o m m t s s J o n ap.. pointments will be made by the Fountain Valley City Council at its regular meeting at a p.m .. Tuesday in city hall . Commission chainnan James Dick and Commissioners Tom Morrison and Eldon Bainbridge will be tnterviewed by the council along with new candidates for the three posts. · The incumbent!, whose tenns expire Feb. l, may be reappointed by the coun- cil or new men may be selected to fill out the commission. No public hearings are ICheduled for Tuesday'• meeting. Inducted ~ause he deposited his draft card at the feet of a U.S. marshal during a war protest in Mlnneapolis. The court reversed a subsequent con- victlon .of Gutknecht for refusing to re-• port for inducUon. The majority opinion written by Justice \Villiam 0. Douglas said there was noth· ing in the 1967 draft law giving Selective Service authorities "free-wheeling author· ity to ride herd on the registrants, using immediate induction as a disciplinary or vindictive measure." . _)he CO!Ut. asw:t.ed: "The power under the regulations to declare a registrant . ' delinquent hu no stah.ltorf standard of even afildelli!s •• The powfr is. ex~sed enUrefy -by !be dlscreUoo ,ot the · 1oca1 boafd. . '"'J; \. "ll b a broad, roving authi>fity, ' type of admif\iatraUve. a~hrtfsm.not ~en ial to ,~ 1,wmlldng tra4i,Pons." Ohle~ . .lflstlce Warren ·E. aurger and • Justice Potter S~ewart dissented on the scope: .of the-.. Douglas finding . JUS.t.ice John 'M. Harlan agreed wkh the m1jority but said 'he feit·ngulations ~n delinquents could be issued legally if intended to re- quire a" )'OOth to comply with regjstra· Uon regulations rather than u a punish- ment. Talked With Irvine State Acquires Stretch of · Beach By RICHARD P. NALL Of ltMI DallY Plltt Sid \Villia:m Penn Mott, Jr., director of the State Dtparbnent of Beaches and Parks, . ' . said Saturday that California has just ac. quired three more miles of public beach in Orange County. Mott declined to pinpoint ttie location but h~d just completed talks with the Irv ine ·Company which he said pleased him . Mott was one of a panel of speakers at the_ s.an Clemente Jpn .to.kins ·~ in •• -. ...-lltlure ,<if, iiiraDifCelll' 1.Y beaches. -· _ The ·1'vJl!i -Cdmpany baa· -pl1111Jor -•Uve dev~lopmont oJ it< coastal holcUngs between Laguna .Beach and Corona deJ Mai so that the public will have access to beaches. Commenilrig on his talb with Irvine Company officials, Mott said he thought th;e pending d'evelopment would bring "a totally new .concept on how be8ch areas can be avaUable to the 1public as well as.have priVite development." · He.called tbe concept "something quite ' .. unique which may set a precedent for the rest of California." Mott also forecast a new trend in state beach planning which wtU ~h the auto inland. "In the past·we have planned for the auto. We now are golng to plan the state park .system ·for people and not the auto." Commenting on expanded parking recently provided at Doheny Slate Beach. Mott said, "the· parking 1ot can be ripJ>ed out tomorrow. We're making studies to detetmlne how to move the autos as m'IQI .. fi•t-m!les ~'1l~ll<!.•!)d , ·Mle,_a Qltedl':.ci'<-:.tJ.u(: ' ; .r.(1;, ,fl~ .. \ ..... wbat-W~re ultiinateff · ti ..i." ' Mott,ibo,1poke of lbe·iield .lo ""''ert military lands such u Cltnp Ptndltton to public use. "Pendleton 4n(f aeveral others are Closed to 1public use. We're working on this sltuatlon." · The state had planned Us first surfing park -a mile of·beach front.age backed by 160· acres -adjacent to t!'e Loran Coast Guard Station!whicll. ,abutl~Presi· dent Nixon's W~ White House. IS.. MO'l'tl,,Pap 1~: Lynch Won't Seek Return To Attorney General Post SAN 'FRANCISCO (UPli ·-Calllornla Attorney General Thomas C.·Lynch , the oniy Democrat elected to statewide office in the Republican sweep of 1966, an· rwunced today he will not seek re.elec- tion. Lynch, 65, said he only made up .bis mind "over the holidays" in discussiona , with his wife anQ. two sons. The attorney general said he had been in public office since 19,33 and would like to "spend some tin'ie in a quiet . at. mosphere." Lynch stressed that he still had a year to go in office and said lhat after that he wanted to practice .his profession as ·a lawyer, "preferably in San.Francisco." He told a news confereoce . he had something In mind·but could not dlsclose details except that it was in San Fam- cisco. Lynch, who became aUOrney general by appointment Of Gov. Edmund G. Brown Aug. 31, 1964. was elected to a full term ln November or 1966. He said he could not do thls job pro- perly and campaign for office at the same time. Lynch said the job or attorney general was becoming successively more dif· ficult. "I talked to Gov. Warren (fonner Supreme Court chief justice) recently an,d~ he mentioned that the attorney generalship was a lovely job," he said. "1 asked him how many deputies he had when he was attorney g~al and he said 74. I have over 280, plu, offices in Los.Angeles, San Francisco. Sacramento and San Diego. "Problems are growing all the time. We haye problems that were unheard of 20 years ago -oil pollution, en· vironmental control, anUtrust. And law enforcement ii getting to be a greater problem," Lynch was asked If he would endorse his chie£ deputy, Charles O'Brien, who baCI not declared but has been mentioned as a ·possible candidate. "That problem has not come up,'' Lynch said. "Charlie O'Brien has been a Joyal and efficient chief deputy." Bad Etteets on Dogs 'Mini Pill' Use Halted PALO ALTO (UPi) -syn te x taken on different days, did not The t!Ompany spokesman said the Laboratories Inc. today st15pended use of dernonstrate the same effect.I. ''minl·pllr' •Is tested on 4,~00 woinen in its "mlni·pill" oral contraceptive on a Last week. top medicaL authorltlet air. Ult United States. and abroad Mfore it test basis Jn the United States'. fe~ed In congressional hearings in 11 be The firm said it would immediately Washington over effect of the estrogen-went on the market. tt was stl ing co n f e r w i t h a u t ~ o r it i es in or\sequentJal .i bir~ co~t9l pills .. which tested at 30. centers in the:. Up.it,e~ States, England, France and Mexkot Where. tbe ' ha,ve been··on me market· tn the·U,S. f~r · where-the FDA bad withheld mark~ting "mini-pill" has been ' marke~ .... corn-soine·ttme~.Sorhe ... dt'JCtors aald they, bad approval. , · mercially for a!'most· .a' year. lt his •not ' ~tgJ·.1lde t/f~U, but others dlfputed The ~pbkesman said · the effects notec1 been sold cotflnerciallv in 1th• UnJtejJ th . r ' Jn dqs teat.I wen "basically 18slons,'' bui States. · . . <! 'jmfnJ.PUl;""Whlch h'aa·~en Malted that poulb'le · nietaboliC cbanps were The suspension of clinical studies in tbe bY aome 'as a "second generatiOn" birth .alto-noted. U.S. came after dogs tested qn the ~ control dev~ which would be fret or "There are a variety of effecta, but> the geaUn-only pills showed ''advirse er. Mme or the complte1Uons of eslroaen-pathology it not tlur," he aald, "'We are feet•." including lesions and ' P,OMlbl• based-pllll, has. belt! oold In Fronce •nd acing to make ·further tos11 with dog1 to inetaboUc chang... · Mlxlco for .a yeir and In the United -.. the i>lature, ol th• c!lecll ond A Syntex spokesman ••ld dog' studies Klttadom •Ince la$1 May. whetfler certain species of dofl are uni· with the sequential birth conlrof plija, in II lo morl!ded In Enf,l•nd unijcr the Quely 1enslUve to ••ch compound!." which estrogens ind progatlns -dlr;, "'ib:tnd 'ame ;ir,of'rne\'lo!),' ln"J!'ranee u Ke said teM.s with monkeys M tht ferent types or female hormonetr -m t'Nectny,1''1M ift,-Mai0&·11""Reter.'' ... "mlnl·plll" thowed tto advtr11·effects. ' ' Among other actions, the Court: -Held that Alabama and .Gi<qia liad been pracUcing raclal dls:rlmlnatloo in ,.lection ot jurtes ,oot declined lo strlkt down the state Jaws generally. -In an apparent deacJlock, ~d re- argumenls at a Iower court level on the· issue of whether federal agenta must ob- tain se.arch warrants to use ilectronie devices to monitor their convena1ion1 with-criminal suspects. The cue involv• ed James A. White who was arrested in Chicago in 1966 on cbarge.s of ~ and sale of heroin. Beach Eyes First City Fun Fair Huntington Beach city councUmen ·to- night will hear a recommendation to set May 23 as the date for the city's first communitywide festival. The proposal comes from the Hunting· ton Beach Coordinating Council, which has been studying prospects for a com· munity fair and exposition. Other business before the city council which meets at 4:30 p.m. alld 7:30 p.m. in the council chambers, includes: -A request of the Huntington Beach Humane Sdciety for an increase in im· pound, license and placefuent fees. It is recommended for approval with certain conditions. -A letter from the junior chamber of commerce offering to stage the Fourth or JUiy Parade for the same .amounl ·budgeted for the !!I.II parade. , .. -_ • -I<. rec.rnimindation of CilJ Clerk P,auJ Jenes that.i&tat.emem6 d •uallfica. tloas bf city councll and city atorney candidates be mailed with sample baJ. lo&s at a cost of $150 each. -An .agreement with the State J)e. partment of Finance to determine the April 1970 P?,eUlat.ion of the city. Cost would be $550. -A resolution · to acquire 11.68 acres or land for $375,000 from the State ot CaJlfornia for the central city parksite. -A resolution requesting legislation to return 60 perce,,t of gas tax funds to sduthern counties rather than the-pres.. ent 55 percent. Surf Eases Off At Huntington Heavy surf which battered Huntington Beach over the. weekend with waves u·p to 12 Jeet bas dropped down to seven and eight foot waves today, according to lifeguard Capt. Douglas D' Arnall. The weekend surf was spurred by storms at sea, said D' Arnall. Northwest swells can be expected until Easter, be added, but high waves will only pop up when churned by stonn~. Inexperienced awimmers have. been warned by lifeguards to stay out of the water when the surf is high. Boats are in danger too, if they come near the surf line In stcnny weather, said D' ArnaH. One youlh. who lost ·his belly board, was pulled up the municipal pier ramp Sunday by lifeguard David Buckley. Stock Market NEW YORK (AP) -The stock market continued its Ioslng ways in moderate late trading today. (See quotations, Pages 20-21 ), Orange Weatlaer ' Clpudy skies with an occ1slonaaJ pitter patter of rain on the roof Is the outlook for Tuesday along the Orange C.OOst with little change in temperature. INSmE TODAY Onr contender for the Con· greuional Cup races haa been •elected to highlight a heavu wetkend oJ boatino activitu. Paj/t1 13J4. . • ' • ' '"1111•' C.llftnllt Cfllft•lllt U11 ·ci.111tltf Cffl!lfl ,,.,_,., Dtltll Nlllttl htt.1111 "'" •ftlfl'tlolflflllftl flllltiK• .,._ ........ Mtfi.t• 1•1• • ' .... " • .. • ff .... .. " • I \ I I I. I " Maftd<J, """'""' 19, 1970 •' MICHAEL BROOY HAS LITTLE TROUBLE GIVING MONEY AWAY Now He's 'Trilllonaire' With Peace Plan, Cure for Cancer Fron• Page l BRODY HAS ALL CURES • • • of the Union message. "I have cures for all rliseases," Brody said. ··1 ha\'e a cure for cancer." .. He promised to disclose it at the airport during a news conference. Brody's bride of two weeks, Renee, a slim v.'Oman with long brown hair, stayed ' near Nm on stage and through the crowds. They exchanged loving glances frequently. A reporter for the New York Tlmes, who traveled to Puerto Rico wlth the Brodys over the weekend, reported today the young hetr conceived his plan to giVe • away his money while he was "tripped out on drugs." "What a joke I've pulltd on the world!" the newspaper reported Brody Aid. "They think l 'm Je5US Christ." The report added Brody met Renee \\'hen she came to Scarsdale, N. Y .. where he lived in a rented $80,00o house, "lo &ell Michael and 90me of his friends so1ne hashish." As Brody escalated e.slimalions of his wealth Sunday. circumspect staleLnenls from his bankers were less dazzling. Officials of the Continental Bank of Chicago, who would not discUS& Brody·s 'actual net worth. said the initial reports he had inherited J25 million were a •·gross exaggeration." The n1oney came from Brody's maternal grandfather. John F. Jelke, the oleomargarine manufac- turer, who died in l~. The estate, filed for probate. v.·as said to be v.•orlh $6,881,000, divided among 1 e v e r a I beneficiaries. Pilot Brings Miss Christy Fashions Report Tuesday Tuesday'• new "cover girl" for the women's section of th~ DAILY PILOT ls Marian Christy, one or the natlon's m06l respect.eel fashion writers. Wmner oI 11 national writing awards and three state a"·ards tMa55achusetts) in the past three and a half years. ~1iss Chrisly is noted for her global gallopina: in the coverage of the fashion beat She insists on spending at least three months out of each year covering the fashion ne"·1 capital or the world -New York, Paris, Rome, ~fadrid -even Dub- lin, when Ireland Is where it's haJ>pening. A native of Boston, Miss Christy was graduated from Boston University's School of Journalism. Sht became fashion e<iltor of U1e Bo.5- ton Globe in 1965 after four years as a feature writer for Women 's Wear Daily. Her 11yndicated column now appears in newspapers throughout the United SUites. It will be a weekly feature of the DAILY PILOT, beginning Tuesday, and will be featured each Tue!day on the cover page of the women's section. DAILY PILOT NEW PILOT 'C OVER GIRL' Fashion Writer Christy Auios 'Clogging Coast Conservationist Tells What Futitre Hol<ls II l'Ol!'n ~ fjlt an Ullduu~ •-ach · Oiir beil"oet ml""' bo 1o ..ull 111 ~ ''Y ..... the Marine Corps and hope to bo lli- tloned at Camp Pendleton. Thi• was the advice Saturday of con· aervatlonlst-author Wesley Man:, v.•ho spoka of coastal clUes sq swamped v.·lln au.mmer traffic that they can becon1e 1 undetlrable places io live. Huntin~n Beach, Newport Belch and Laguna Beach are in parllcularly pretarious positions as far 11 auto tstrangulation, he said. Marx was one ol six speakers at a con- femlOI al the San Clemtnte Inn on the future of Orange County beaches. Sponsored by the Capistrano Bay Area and Orange Coonty IAagues of Women Voter1, lt played to an enlhusiaslJc au- dience of about 175. The session tnctuded much of Orange County city and county officialdom. Speakers were Kenneth E. Carr, San Clemente city mana1er; Richard P. Ruiz, executive assistant to Supuvlsor David L. Baker; Knowlton Fernald Jr.• architect and planninl vice president, Lquna Niguel Corp.; William Penn Mctt Jr., director of the at.ate Department cf P1rk1 and Re<:reaUoo., and Auemblyman Alan Sleroty. ?i.farx i;ald freeways 11\0Uld meet the demands they are placing on coastal cities. Mentioning coastal free"·ay offramps ieheduled for Buch Boulevard of Hun- tington Beach and MacArthur Boulevard of Newport Beach, M&r::1 aid, "I can visualize Huntington Beach and Newport Beach 1s Me big honking auto horn on a coast.at "'eek end." He said th• state hlghwoy people should plan turnouts, viewpoints, and pic- nic areas to accommodate the traffic carried by the free"·:;·~. Alternate fonns of transportation &hould also be studied, said Marx mentionin1 helicopters and hydrQfolls. Ile predicted that future beach recrea- tion might include all yea r swimming in rubber suits, "submobiles" far un- a ..... c.r wlndet"'4 •nd lighted beaches , .. nllhl .... ' But without strong man;1gernent, &aid Marx, the .,_ellne will turn into "somrthina: that Lhe Scripps Institute of Ckt11nography can't put back together again." We must, said the 1pcaker, find alternaUvu to 1hortiine development and prot<ctloo that wlll not bankrupt u.. ln the Sutf&lde, Sunset Beacll and Newport Beach areas, he said, SO million cubic yards of sand will be needed in the next 20 years just to maintain the beach aod the Army Corps of Engineers -and nobody else -knows where it is going to come ftom. Erosion cont.ro!, he said, runs into astronomical costs Lhat force the federal govmunent to step tn. Erosion he said t.hl"eatens rour north county beaches. in- cluding Huntington Beach, most popular in the state, and t100 mllllon Jn property development and a four Jane highway. REDUCES ABILlTV The speaker said development on dry sand rtduces the ablUty of the shore lo proter.t ua from wave action. He mentioned a parking lot built on ory sand at Aliso Beach to handle autos as v.·tll as people and sald the South Coast area has much more land in private o"'nerShlp than the north cout which has far greater density. Marx. author of the prize-winning book "The Frail Ocean," talked of jetties which "interrupt the drift. of sand that nourished the beaches" and of flood con- trol dame that stop lhe supply of sand from the hJlls. He talked of dumping into the ocean and dredging of estuaries w h i c h decrea!le their ability to handle p0llu- tion. He said the Upper Ne.,..·port Bay has aspects which make it just as much a scenic wonder as Point Lobos at ~fon terey .:.r Torrey Pines in La Jolla. Marx tlted the exsmple (If Laguna's Victor Hugo Inn and adjacent Heisler Park as an example of trying to make the Coast both usable anad scenic. Beach Going to Students For Ideas on New Park .. Huntlngton Beach officia\1 are 1oin1 to the group thlt wW use them most for i;uggesllona: cf what a new park should of. (u. Teachers In all trades. -pre«:lx:lol through college, art being a!ked to have !heir students draw their ideas of what should go into a t.,.,·o to thrtt-acre neighborhood park, or e\·en a large 150- acre central city facility. The idea was sparked by a drawing of a haystack, sketched on a chHd'a crayon picture idea }ly a student of teacher Carole' Ann Wall. Mn. Wall, who 11 a member of the city Deslan Rtvlew Board, brought the drawing and others to city hall. Development Coordinator Tom Se\·erns and Pa.r k and Recreation Director Norman \Vorthy had received many ideas for parks before but none lncluded the possibility of a haystack. "\\'e .,..·elcome all ideas and ask only that items drav.'Tl inside the parks be labeled ar be easlly idealifiable to !he designers.'' Worthy said. In addition 00 soliciting ideas from the children who will use the half dou:n parks soon to be under construction, Sevtrn.s aMounced that parK designers Freedom Essay By Beach Youth Sent to Board v.ill hold meetinp v.ith re!idents nearby the propo.wd parks to jalher ideas for the ultimate design. Oraw:lna:s should be. sent to the City of HunttnitOn Beach P.O. ~ 190, marked attention Bill Reed. They may also be delivered to Reed or Severns at city hall, 520 Pecan Ave. Beach Trustees Coll8ider Tax Over1-ide Vote Trustees o£ the Huntington Beach City (elementary) School District meet at 7:30 p.m., Tuesday in the library of Ov.'yer School to consider 1 tax override election. The election, requested by disl~ct of- ficial!, would ha\'e to be set for April 14 00 help the district this fiscal year. TY.\l issues will be considered by the trustees Tuesday: -A &S-75 cent increase in the tax rate for operating funds. -An increase of SI lo $2 in !.he tax rate for a pay-as-you-gu 5ehool const ruction program. Trustees have not yet indicated how much or even if lhey v.'ill ask for the tax overrides. The district's tax rate ii; cur· renlly $2.45 per $100 assessed valuation, 10\l.·est of the five eJrmentary school districts that make up the Huntingt-On Beach Unlon High School District. There are also eroslca problems from l>oheny State Beach \0 San Clemente, said Marx. He said Oregon Is rtiulatlna development on dry sand and Santa Barbara has arranged a ~-foot setback on geologically unstable coa.stal bluffs. lie cited the Caplatrano HJ1hland1 11 a good example ot a bluff that ahou1d never llave t>Mn built on. Speaker Ru~ pointed to the lMl plan for Oranre County 1horellne dtvtlo~ ment. He called it a food 1tu(y and paraphr~ lta easenUa thruat as "For God'a sake buy the coast." He aald the atudy aald ol tho c milts of coaalline, "It will never be any lonaer and it will never be any cheaper." Ruiz l8Jd that In 1'41 there were 30.S milts of cwnty b t a C h 1n Jrlvate ownership and 12.$ In public. Today the private sector ha1 dwindled to 11.S miles and the public ownership la 23., but much of lhJs wu due to aequll!IUon of an &d· ditlonal seven mlletl by the stat.t. The Salt Creek controver1y, ••kt Ruiz, served u a catalyst and precipitant that brought the beach needt Into sharp focus. lie cited county melSW'f:I that have come slnct. Ruiz said past prior!Ues by the county -to aerve growth not duplicated an this earth -were given to aervlcts for the population with recreat19n and uthttlca taking a secondary poaltlon. It bas beeome evident since Salt Creek, the 1peaker said, "that the public la more coocerned with · the quality ot life tb4n growth." ALSO lJllPORTANT Baker aald, 1peakln1 i... hlmHH, that lie believes beauty, order and harmony are just as important as courts and jalls. He said bold Jeadtnhlp ingtnulty, and money will be needed in the ye1r1 ahead to take care ol recreation and con- servation. "Will you be willing to JMJt up the money?" he asked the audience. "Will you permit local (lfflcials to make the necessary decisions? Will tlie official! have the boldness?" City Manager Carr said (If the 4.8 milts or beach wlUUn San Clemente city Um!ta, three mile& are in public ownerstilp. 1~ city owns 10,084 lineal fett cf frenta1e and the slate another 8,022. Carr said San Clemente taxpayers had encumbered themselvea for nearly $1.5 million since 1961 to buy beach. "San Clemente, as a city, has taken it upon ilse\f to recognize that beach property 00 the guale!t extent poulble &hould be ia public use," said Carr. CITY AGGRESSIVE The city has alS<I been aagressive, he said, in providing re!lrooms. concession restaurant5 and adequate parking whtre possible to serve llle beach goers. He said a \\'aler reclamation (se'Vl'age) plant now under wav \\'iii cost $2.5 million but will ensure aiainst pollution of the ocean. The effluent \\'ill be u11ed . as it has since 19~7. to v.·ater the golf course. Despite San Clemente's public beaches, said Carr, on a busy Sunday beach goers still wail for son1eone else to leave so they may use his sand. Fernald spoke of Laguna Niguel Corporatjon plans to use 13 square miles ror 80,00(J residents and a planned city as free as possible of the ills cities are normally heir to. He !aid the beach frontage of the cor· poralion l'epresent.5 2\i percent of county coastli~ and that the popi.ilalion planned amounts to 2 ~1 percent of expeeted coun· ty population. \V\lhin the next year, he said, another parking lot v.'111 be added to ac- commodate 700 cars, or with decking 2,800 autos. Co rporation land will have planned .r.ecreation. beach cleanin1 and lifeguard ser\·lct and v.·ill pay taxes riither than use taxes, he said . \\'lthin the decade, he predicted, Niguel will grow to 50,000 persons. Fernald, an architect. said he felt It n1ore important for public agencies 00 ac· quire large parcels of property for year arnund use such as Mission Bay in San Diego ratJ1er than just long strips of beach. Beacla Rotariatas Told j ' DAILY ,ILOT Sttff Plletl 'PARKS ARE FOR PEOPLE' Btachea and Parks' Mott Fron• Page 1 MOTI. •• Security shelved the plana for the "Trestles" are a when the President bought 4!s home last year. Questioned after his talk, Mott said the ''Trestles'' ls a superJOr surfinc area. Nixon aides had indicated tome other Camp Pendleton land oot cll>M! to the \'1estem White House might be used. .Mott wantt all of the area for the public. Mott predicted confidently t h at .. abaolut.ely the Trestles will be in public usage eventually. We had everything set to 10 when the President bought that Janet" He indicated that "eventually" pro- bably meant v.·hen Mr. Nixon Is no lons;er President. "There is not nearly the security problem for fonner Presidents," he said. Mott cited a state park developed across the river from forme'r Preaident Johnson's Texas ranch after he left the Presidency. During his h1lk, Molt also aired plans for new emphasis on underwater park& and preserves along the Ca!Jfomil coastline. "The department is now Iden· tifying . critical areas to create un- derwater parks and preserves," he said. He called them an exciting recreational resourct and said, "underwater destruc· lion is more intensive tl1an on land, there is little or no lime to accompUsh this." ti.fott said there are 1,051 miles of Ca!Uomia coastline v.'ilh 437 mil~ in public o"nership and only part of these miles the type suitable for S\l.'lmming. He said the state must think In terms of total public O\l.llershlp of this type beach from Point Conception south to the Mexican border. "California mu s t recognize that It is the trustee oI this frontageJor the 'ntlre country," said the speaker. He said cities, counties and the state must make this acquisition a priorit y item for their dollar e./eti though some of the frontage is $1.500 and more a lineal foot. He said also there must be ooopera· lion bet"·een the public and private sec· tors. ti.toss spoke of the need to protect U1e estuaries v.·hich he called an importan~ resource to the fisheri6 and ~ not completely understood. Californians, he said, must concem themsel1.1ta also with protection of their tidal pooli; which have suffered very serious damage. It could take more than JOO years to restore some of them, said ~fott. Mott saidthe problem of ronservation does not stop at the beaches; 1t ranges back !he coastal plain to the mountains and streams which carry sand to replenish the beaches. "\\'e can't talk beaches ll'ithout looking to the mountains. We can destroy tht. beaches \\'ithout entire environmental planning," said the speaker. Acquisition of beach area fron1 Point Conception south is the state's prior ity item, said the official. lie ~aid currently the state cannot (because of U1e high in- terest rates) sell bonds for acquisttlon but is discussing "'ith priva te 01vner6 the possibility or accepting bonds in return for !heir lands. o~.UIC.I CO.UT PUaL1~h!NC. COM,.AllY kob••' N. w •• d Pru.oe~I 1r.i1 Pulll"llll.o" J1cli: It. Cu•l•v ViU 'tt1-lden1 •r.d <>-r•I /14,..gt• Suspected Spy's Bid For Bail Again Denied ~1rs. C'.onstance C. Bla nchard of 1&41 .Jenrich Avt., Vi'estminster. has presented the Huntington Be.sch Union ~Ugh School District boa.rd of trustees \lith a mounted display or her soo's usay on "P'reedom.'t tn presenting the display. ~trs. Blanchard said she did it to "help c0robat .some 0( the negative statemenl.5 con. c'min1 oor fine young people and our outstanding high schoolli." Most Unhappy With Jobs l horri•' K ..... a £a11or lh•"''' A. Murpl.in• M•""Plr>V E<li10• )llbt tl w. lthl A.,ot!tlt Ell•!Dr W11•th1tlo• hech OHie• 17175 l11ch l•111ever0 M1lflftg ,M01111: P.O. loll 790, '2641 Otkf Offlcn L ....... ltlc.J\: )22 flfftl A~l!'Ut C•lt M"'I Jlf ....... , I•~ ilrMI N .... ,....1 ... c.rr: nu WHI 8tlbH 811'11!tv11• • LONDON (AP) -\llllllam Jan1cs Ot\'Cn, the 68-year-old member of Parlia· mrnt accused of spying. "·as again denied bail today anad ordered hrld for an<l\hcr hearing on Jan. 2i. Chief t>.1agistrate Sir Frank t\.1ilton denied bail at a 14·m1nute hearing in Bo,,. ~t.n>et Court. Cmdr. John WllllOn or Scotlend Yard's Special Branch oPJ>OSed I.ht r..?quest for bail. TI1e essay Y.Titt.en by ~lark Blanchard. an 11th grsder at Westminster Hlah School. has recei\·ed the commendation or several nationally prom in en t J)Ersonalities. including President Nllon, lted Skelton and ltonald Reagan. Said Reagan . "ll is iMPlring to know that most Americans maintain their traditional faith and pride In our CfJUnlly. ?lease convey to your son my beat wishes for hi& Mure S\JCCt!:S." Coast Pa1·ks Asked LOS ANGELES (AP) -Rep. John V. Tunnty said l<>day he \rill propose In Congress Uiat the Jovenunent deaianatl sevtral coa stal areas as a Califonlla CoasU1ne National Park. The park ~·ou.ld incorporate lhe coastal port.ions of the U.S. ?\larine Corps Base al Camp Pendleton, the Channel Jslands. Van- dcnbur,I!'. Air Force Base. Lo s l'adres National Forest alon1 the Bl& Sur coast and the Point Reyes Natlon~l Se81hort. "The purpose of this park wUI be to,pn>ttct the public Interest in the scenic. biological, recreational and econonUc value! of CaJl· fornia"s ocean front." the Democratic candidate for the U.S. Senate said at a news conference. . ' By ALBERT W. BATES DI l~t D1ilr Plltl ilttl Eight)' percent of \\'Otki ng An1ericans hate their jobs Ind blame it on the job. And the fiiilure blames everyone and C\'Crj1.l1lng but himself. So says Jack Barton of Buena Park, a co&ullant to Success ?i-1 o t I v a l I o n Institute, ~·ho addressed the HunUngtcin Beach Rotary Club Friday oo personal de\•elopment and motivatioo . Barton cited the "Jones Syndrome" as the Kame of one upmanship -keeping up \li'IUt or ahead of Ult Joneses -played by so many setkers of money and prestige. "These persons finally reach a H<.>a.rst casUa and have nowhere to go,'' he said. .. fe"' even try to compet.e with lhis type, much less keep up ... Barton explained that the great need of everyone ls for seJf.fulflllmenl beyond ob- talnlnc food. clothing and shelter -but most never comt clost lo saUsfy!ng !his ~ycholo1ical need. Deflnln1 true success, he said It lies In "Uie Journey Imm one achievemtnt to another, e11ch cmplric11lly more difflcult than the la!lt.'' Ht added th11t each genflalJon has a ltiacy or achle\'cmtnt from the prtvlous one, glvlna a nt w challenge to setf.fuUlllment. "~1ollvatlon Is the only basic tngredient lacking ln the un.succesaful peraon." Barton asserted. He dtscrlbtd basic n101.ivations as: -Fea r, the oldest known lo man. 1>e1inning 'Vl'lth the cave man and his club \'ersus the tiger. TOOay It of ten conlc~ from the threat by a boSJ to Ore an e1nploye. !..lncenlive , based on reward and ap. petite-the cB.rrol In front of the donkey. Eventually the donkey must have the carrot or t.he incentive Is destroyed, Bartoo assured his audience. -Attitude. All of us are a compcsitt Of environmental lnnuences. We are In- fluenced by our lndivldual back«rounds. And atlitude11 are a habit or thought, either positive or nea:atlve. Barton tl· plai~d this: ''\\1hat we are tOOay la a product or )Ctt.eryear. A baby 11 In a posiU"e world but when he is ot1t o( the playpen and inlo ~hool he enter• a world of nea:aUvea. "NegatJve condltJonJna: con\ In u e 1 through school. cften on \o purtult of 1 dnctor of phJlosophy de1ree rather than face lhe outside world. But despite Ule constant nt?gatlvlsm of tht envlroMlenl -crime news, for example -atUt~s can be. chana:ed from nea:iitJ\'e to pofitlve, Or It can be the· opposite.•• , • ' Barton offered whnt he called a • "~iltioa dollar success plan," with fi,,.e pomts: 1. Crystallize thinking. \Yhat are my talents? Who a1n I? Do I like myself? 2. Set a go11I , a realistic one in terms nf personal talents. 3. Desire -keep It alive. 4. Conlidence -nothing auccteds like succtss. We must give o u rs e Ives reachable goal s which yield more success than lailurc. 5. Determination, iron-willed. This means not quitting no matter "'hit the handicap or obstacle. (Barton mentioned the gr"at miler, Glenn Cunningham , who m•ercame a boyhood burning to become the best miler of his time. Rnd polio vie· lim Pat McCormack, who became a champion di ver.) Barton .,..,as enthUliiastica\ly rtctived by an audience or R.otarians who, for the most pan. ire employers of persons la whom Barton·s analyses and counseling Oil motivation primarily apply. Their mponse appeared oo sttm main\( from the speaker's comment&: on !'el .fulrlll· mcnt as a universRl hunlan nctd and his definition of true JUCCess as lying in lht "journey'' through achle:vementl rather than the mere Jccumulatlon of rnalerl.al \\'Cll lth . • '" ' \ • • ' Saddlehaek r ' . Teaay's Flnal N.Y. St.oeb • . . :V.0£, ~3, NO. J6, 3 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, JANUARY 19, 1970 TEN CENTS .. Auto 'Strangulation' Perils Cities on Coast lf ·•you'rt: looking for an uncluU.ered beach, Yaw' best bet might be to enlist in the• Marine Corps and hope to be sta- tioned at Camp Pendletoo. .Tbia·wu the advice Saturday of con- .9S"Vltlooist-author Wesley Marx, who spoke ol coastal cities so swamped with 11.1mmer traffic that they can become ume,irable pJaces to live. ~ Beach, Newport Beach and Lap)I Beach are in particularly -: • . ' pr«arious positions e far as auto stranguJation, he said. Man was one of six speakers at a con- ference at the San Clemente lnn on the future of Orange County beaches. Sponsored by the Capistrano Bay Area and Orange County Leagues of Women Voters, it. played to an enthusiastic au- dience of about 1'15. The session included much of Orange County city and county officialdom. Speakers were Kenneth E. Carr, San MICftAEL. B'ROOY MAS t lTTLE TROIJBCE GIVING.,MONE,Y·AWA>Y 'Now He's 1Trillioriaire' -With Peace .Fllanr cu,e{for-.'.Cenc~r' .:ue~s Trillionaire Hippie· T ycoon Escalates Pledges NEW YORK (UPI) -Michael.James Brody, who now says,he will distribute $100 billion, or maybe an even trillion. also Prornises1~ plan for peace in Vietnam to P.resident~xon plus cures for cancer and all <Kher iseases. · Biooy ~ w e long red hair and hip clOtblOg bell? his claimed weallh, insists he will give away money to anyone who needs it. &:fore a national television audience on the ' ,Ed Sullivan Show Sunday night, !rody, 21,. played a 12-s!rlng guitar and .-ang a ballad written by Bob Dylan, "Y~ Ain't Goin' Nowhere." Then he pro- <!•imed again ' "I'm worth 100 billion dollars. Does that ·stagger your mind? In fact. that was ytst8"1ay. I might be worth a trillion to- d,y.~1 . Crowds of people, many of whom said ~hoped fOr a gift from Brody, mobbed Ille cOllep dropout philanthropist as he entered and left the lhealer. "You're kill· me me." he shouted before police hustled him klto..a car and he drove away. ~~ t;e theater earlier, Brody, who , apPeaiM"' flushed ana excited, told reporters he . woukl continue t h e • giveaways if his public, including those who have picked l'IJs pocket·and pulled his wedding ring from his hand in the past few days, will stop crowding him and pulling his hair. "Don't be so greedy," he said. "Give me a chance. Give me some time." He made promi ses to bestow massjve sums upon North Vietnam in order to end the war and called on Nixon to meet him this afternoon at Kennedy International Airport here to discuss poverty and world peace. The President will be busy in Washington, however, preparing his State of the Union message. "I have cures for .,fill diseases,''-Bro1J said. "I have a cure for cancer." .. He promised to disclose it at II airport during a news conference. Brody's bride of two weeks, Renet, a slim woman with long brown hair, stayed near him on stage atxl through• the crowds. They exchanged loving glal'ICf11 frequently. ,Bad Effects 011 Dogs , Clerntt1te city manager ;J\ichard P. Rulz, executive assistant to Supervisor David L. Baker; K.nowhon Fernald J r . , architect and planning vice president, Laguna Niguel Corp.; William Penn ~foll Jr., director of the state Department of Parka and Recreation, and Assemblyman Alan Sieroty. Marx said freeways should meet the demands they are placing on coastal cities. Mentioning coastal freeway offramps scheduled for Beach Boulevard of Hun- tington Beach and MacArthur Bou1evard or Newport Beach, ltfan: said, "I can visualize Huntington Beach and Newport Beach as one big honking auto hom Oil a cOastal weekend." He said the st.ate highway people should plan turnouts, viewpoints, and pic- nic areas to accommodate the traffic carried by ttie freeways. Alternate forms of transportation lhoold also be studied,' said Man: mention.Ing helicopters and hydrololl1. He predicted lhat future beach r!c:rea- tioo might include all year swlmming in rubber suits, "submoblles" for u°" de.N·aler wandering and lighted beaches ror night use. But without stronj manageffient, said Marx, the shoreline will tum into "something that the Scripps Institute of Qceanogr~y can't put back together again." V\• muat. ·said the -'!«, lllld alt.ernaUves to sborelfne developmmt and protection that wiU not bankrupt us. In the Surfside, Sunset Beach and Newport Beach areas, he sald, 30 million cubic yards ci sand wllLbe needed In the next 20 years just to maintain the beach and the Anny Coi:Ps of Engineers -and nobody else -knows ~ it.ill £oio8 to come trom. Erosion control, he said, runs tnto (See CONGESTION, P ... I) State Gets Tli.ree Miles Of Coullty Public · Beach Draft Punishing Banned by Court delinquent has no statutory standard or even guidelines. The power is exercl.sed entirely by the discretion of the local board. .. , Deal Bared After Talks With Irvine By RICHARD P. NALL • Of t1M DMIJ Plllt Stiff WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Supreme Court today barred Selective Service boards from speeding up indu ctions to punish registrantl for violatine drafl law regulations. ' Tbe Ct!'Url, in a 5-2 ruling, hei<f' any action taken against "de n " 1 registrants most· be 'liimJod1h gh t1ie courts. The justices struck down e prac- tice of reclassltylng thfm lA a ject to immediate call up. "IL is a broad, roving authori~)'. a~ , of' •dn$11tr•Uvt ...... lutiain Mt~ial ta our_ la~ trdtkft." -· - William Pem Mott, Jr., clirec;:tor of the _ .. state Department of Beacl\el and Parka, 11.id Saturday that California has just ac- quired three more mUes of JX]bllc beach • r 1n 0ran1• Couoty. The decision came in a er· inal case involving David 'Earl Gut.kn ht of Gay- lord, . MiM., who contend he was re- classified by his. local boar and ordered Inducted~ because he de led his draft card at the feet of•a.u.s. sbaJ during a .war protest in Minneapo · . The court revened a su equent con- viction of Gutknecht for re using to re- port for induction. - The majority opinion,written by Justice William 0. Douglas said there was noUJ.. ing in the 1967 draft law giving Selective Service authorities "free-wbeeling author- ity to ride herd on the registrants, using immediate induction as a disciplinary or vindictive measure." The court asserted: "The power under the regulations to declare a registraot Cl!lel Juatlce )\'lrmt E. Bu1f"P _,, Justice Potter Stewart dJsse.ntid on, the =pe of the Dloglu finding, Ju.Uce John M.-Harlan agreed with the majority but said he felt regulations on delinquents could be issued legaUy ii. intended to re- quire a youth to comply with registra· tlori r~lations rather than as a pwllsh- nrent. Among' other. acU.ons, the court:. -Held that Ala~a and Georgia had been practicing facial discrimination .in selection ·ol juriea but declined to strike down .. tbe ltaie 1-•• generally. -In an,apparent ·dead~ ordered re- argumentt at. a lower court Jevel .on the issue ,of whether federal agents muat ·ob- tain search · warranU: to U!e' electronic devices to monltor their convenationt with criminal suspects. The -case invoJv. ed James A. Wlrlte who was arrested in Chicago in 1968 on charges of pos.1ession and .sale of. heroin. Lyncl1 Won't Seek Return To Attorney General Post SAN FRANCISCO (UP!) -!d,lilornia Attorney General Thomas C. Lynch, the only Democrat elected to statewide office in the Republican sweep of 1966, an- nounced today he will not seek re-elec- tion. Lynch, 65, said he only made up hi.I 1nind "over the holidays" in diJcussions ~'ith his wife and two sons. The attorney general said he had been in public office. since 193.1 and would Uke to ''spend some time in a quiet at- mosphere." Lynch stressed that he still had a year to go in office and .said that after that he wanted to practice his profession as a lawyer, "pre.ferably in.San Franclaco." He told a news conference he had something in mind but could not disclose details except that it was in San Fam- cisco. . . Lyn ch, who became attorney general by appointment of Gov. Edmund G. Brown Aug. :u, 1964, wu· elected to a fuII term In November ot 1'166. He said he could not do thit job pro- perly and campaign for office at the same time. Lynch 1aid the job of attorney general was becoming successively more dlf4 flcult. "I talked to Gov. Warren (former Supreme Court chief justice) recenUy and he mentioned that the attorney generalship was a lovely job," he said. DAILY PILOT t tlft,PJleit "PARKS ARE FOR PEOPtE' Beaches and ·P•rks' Mott · Slioals Sqrrob1Jle Comes Up Again Before Pfunners The Sboab versus Sandll controversy will surface again at tonight's regular meetin"g, or the Laguna Beach Planning CommlBllion. Shoals owner Richard Burt'• request to add 32 units to the motel at' 1601 S., Coast Jlighway, sparked protests from.owners of the neighboring Lagu na Sands and questions from city officials on the mat. ter of private use of a city-owned beach a'ccess road. When planning commissioners finally apµroved the Shoals request, after tag- ging a long list or condition.! onto the variance, the matter was appealed to the city counC?il by sands owners. · Advised by the city attorney that the planners had not apeclfied all their fin- dings in the approved legal manager, councilmen bounced the case tiack to the planning commlsskm where it has been getting some further study and may be re11olved for a second Ume tonight. Motl declined to pinpoint the location but had just completed talks with the Irvine Company which he said pleased him. Mott was one of a panel of speakers at the San Clemente Inn taking part in a conference on the future of Orange Coun- ty beaches. The Irvine Company has announced plans 1or cooperative development of its coastal holdings between Laguna Beach and Corona del Mar so that the public will have access to beaches. Commenting on his talka with Irvine Company officials, Mott said he thought the pending development would bring "a totally new concept on bow beach areas can be available to the public as well as have private development" He called the conctpt "something quite unique which may set a precedent for the rest of California." Mott also forecast a new trend 1n state beach planning which will push the auto inland. "In the past we have pla.mJed for the auto. We now are going to plan tbt' state park system for people and not the auto." Commenting on expanded parklng recently provided at Doheny State Beach, Mott said, "the parkJng lot can be ripped out tomorrow. We're making !ludies to determine how to move the autos as much as five miles inland and prov!de a system of mini-bus transpoN:tion. "Doheny Park is merely a transition oa what we're ultimately going to have." Mott also spoi:e of the need to convert military land,, such as Camp Pendleton to public use. ''Pendleton and several others are closed to public use. We're working on this situation." The state had planned its fir.st _pflnc park -a mile or be&ch frontage ~eked by 160 acres -adjacent to the Loran C.oast Guard Slat.ion which abuts Presi- (See MOTr, Pap ZI Orange Coast 'M ... ~ .. Int Pill' Use Halted "I asked him how many dtputles he had when he was attomey'general and he said 74. I have o~er ieo. plus offices in Lo.1 Ana:eles, San Francisco, Sacramento and San Diego. Also on tonight..'s agenda is a presen- tation by Vacation Village owner Loren Haneline, who is continuing bis Jong-stan· ding attempt to resolve multiple zoning prOblems at his motel complex on S. Coaat Highway. At a study session last week, the cit)' planning 1tarr disagreed with Haneline as to the ·number of ad- ditional units he may be permitted to build, bUt commissioners ha ve not yet he8.rd his complete presentation. Weather Cloudy skies with an occaslonaal, pUter patter of rain on the rooi is the ouUook for Tuesday aloag the Orango-eoa.t wltb little chanie in temperature. PALO ALTO (UPI) -Syn t e • Laboratbrie&Tne7 tOday suspended UJe Of ita., "mini-pill" oral contraceptive on a test basil ln the Uni~ States. ,Tiie firm said it would immediately CQ.J!;fer with authorities in En&Jand, France and Mexico, where the "mini-pill'' has been rnarketed com- mird11ly for almost a ytar. It has not ldn .. Id · commudally in the United Stlfa. The Mpenaion ol' clinical studies in the U.S. come alter cfoGs tested on tll<I pro- 11:e1ttn.or1'y· plUs shO'ttd ''adverse e.f-1~." lncludlnr l'SloM and possible milil>Olli: chtrlg ... IC'~ 1potesm1n Wd dog studies wtth the ltiqutnUal birth control pills. 1n whloh ...._,. and .f"'OllesUns -dlf- l"l'l't t,ypes of 1emal1-hormonH -:are ' taken on different days, did not demon strate the same effects. Last week, top medical authorities dif- fered in congressional hearing& in Washington over effect ol the estrogen- or sequential -birth contol pills, which have been on the market in the U.S. for some Ume. Some doctors sakl they had hannfu.l 1ide effects, but other& disputed llliJ. The ''rrilni·pill'." which baa been hailed by IOme as a "second generaUon'' birth control devi ce which would be free of some of the complicaUons or estrogen-- based pills, ha.a been sold In France and Medco for a year and In the Uniled Kingdom.since Jaat May. It.,Js marketed" In England und<r t1'o brand ame "Normtnoo," In Fr1nce as ··NactnyJ" and In ~fuko as "Retex." • •• The company apokesman aaJd the umini·pill'' was tested on •.700 women in the United States and abroad be£ore it went on tht market. It was still being tested at 30 centers in the United Statei, where the FDA had withheld ·markeUns approval. ".. The spokesman said the effecta noted in dog tests were "bas:ically lestons, ,, but that possible metabolic changea were alto noted. "There are a variety of eltectt, but the pathology is nol clear." he uJd. "We are going to make further testa: with dogs to detennine the nature1 Of the effectl and whether certain species of dogs arc un}. quely sensitive to such compoundJ." He aaid tests with monkeys on the '"mini-pill'' showed no adver&e effectl.- ,.Problems are trowing an the time. We have problems that were unheard of 20 years ago -oil pOlliitiOn, en- vlronmentAJ control, antitrust. And law enforcement is getting to be a greater problem." 'Lynch was asked if he "ouJd endor11e his chief deputy, OW!u O'Brlat. who had not declared but has beeaDltntlooed as a poulble candidate. "That problem has not ·come up/• Lynch said. '40,arlle O'Britn bu been a loyal and elfident chlel deputy." NE WYORK (AP) -Th oJtoct mortet continued Its loatng ways In ~tnte late trading tod•Y· !See quotaUona, Paa ea »JI) • The Laguna Beach Fine Arts. Associ•· lion ~originally the Splinter Festtval)·WIU submit a dual request for use of its ex- hibition arN at 34' N. Co11st Righway during the Winter Festival in Febn.11ry as well as durlne the 1Ummer Festival of Ar\S run. Planners meet at 7:30 p.m. In city coUncil chambers. Hal March Dies HOLLYWOOD (AP) -Actor Hal MN'Ch, the dappir dark.Jlalred muter of ctrtmorUea of televlllon'& 84,000 Quei- Uon" qu~ ohow o{ tbe lllO!. died today. . He wa• •t. ~•rd]. w~ amiable ad lib otyi• made him a favorite with' TV audiences, ...Cccmbed at4:11 a.in. at th.-Uni..ntty or Clillornla Medlc•I Center. INSWE TODAY One contender for the Con- greuionol Cup races .haa betra · .. iecttd to hrglillght a hidv~ : wt'~nd of · booting actfult11. 1 Pag" l3·14. .... I • ""' .. .. .. • " .... .. ... • 1 l DAll,Y rllOT l MOVING UP? Ch1rter Writer Burke Burke Next California Chief Judge? California Supreme Court Associate Justice Louls H. Burke, a lOngtime Newport Beach resident and a draftsman o! the city's charter, has been menlione:' as a strong contender for the statt' court's chi ef justice position. Justice Burke. whose Newport resideoce 11 4e Beacon Bay. was men· tiooed by slate government sources as a likely candidate to replace retiring Chief Justice Roger J. Traynor. Justice Traynor will leave the highest 61ale court at .the end of this month. JuStice Burke, an avid sailor in the PC class, has lived in Newport for many years and spends his weekends and spare "''eekdays at his Beacon Bay Home. The court is in San Francisco. The judge is the author of the book •·with This Rine", a book aimed at mort equitable divorce laws. He is a Republican, an active layman in the Catholic Church and an amateur painter. JUJttce Burke was the first legal designer of Newport's city charter in the early 1950s. ... ; , Nixoir Picl~s . Floridian . . . CarS,wel.l Tappe~_·lor Supreme Court Seat wAS!iiNGTON M'J) -Tlle ,Wbilt House hu llllamttd Federal OOti!ll • Judae G. Hlirold car.well or 'l'.il~. Fla., he wiU be apl)Ointed to the Supreme Court, UPI WU l<>ld l<>day. Carswell has been prominently men- tioned for the vacancy, created when Abe Fortas resigned last May under lire for his financia l associAllon with financler Lou.is Wolfson, who was convicted of ''I~ 1ng wreststered secur1Ues. A White Hou19e ' aide telephoned Canwell, 50, severa1 days 1go to Inform him he had been picked. "He was told jus1 to sit tight and make no statement about the nomination," a source said. Carswell did just that, telling ttport.era !n Tallahassee that "It would be hlthly Jn&pproprlate for me to make any com- ment of any ri'ature" on reports of the ap. polntment Nixon named Carawell, a formet federal district judge, to the 5th Circuit I I ' •, ~'!\"i~ A..u1' ~, .. IM!llhl ., .. Tllo """" 6ao.Ni-~ bi Floildl, Geor&la, Ala!>ama, Mlullllppl and Te%1L ' Florfda lawmakers said the CarawtU aetecUon was a good <1ne. Rep. Don Ftr qua (D-Fla.), dtscrlblng hinmlf at a personal frtend or CartY•ell, sai d: "He has no stock problems. He is a good man. I consider him a moderate conservallve.'' , Tht Senate lut year ,rijecte<j Nixon '• fi rst choice for the , P'ortas aeat, Chief J"41e Clement F. Haynaworlh of the 4th ClrCuit. Opponents attacked Haynsworth's bench record on civil rights and his finan· cial holdinia in companiea involved iD litigation before his court. Sen. Edward J . Gurney CR·Fla.), flrst suggested Carswell for the high court. A Gurney aide said the senator was "very pleased" by the report of the judge's selection. Leary in Laredo Court; County Trial Postponed ' From wfre Strvtees LAREDO, Tex . -The streets or !..-aredo led to a West Texas courthause today, where Dr. Timothy Leary went on trial again for marijuana charges lhro'.Yll out once already by the U.S. Suprtnle Court. A two-day contlnuanct. was granted un· ti! Wednesday by Orange County Superior Court authorities, meanwhile, since Dr. Leary, bias wife and son were due to go <1n trial today in Santa Ana for an 1.SD and marijuana case daUn& back 13 months. Dr. Leary -declared candidate for the Calllornia governorship in November - criUcized the re-trial by Texat and federal authorities, charging it amounLs to P.Ollilcat harassment. "The Nixon AdmlnlstraUon does not have any faith in the democratic process and they want to use the power of government to harass us." he alleged. "Anyone who bears that the gov em· ment Js trying. me after a unanimous Supreme Cow1 decision !mows: that there Is somethlng fishy here -or It Is unfair.'' he continued. fie was convicted ln 1966 or failure to declare marijuana and pay federal tax on three ounces of the weed, brought across from Mexico at Laredo, with a $40,000 fine and ~year pr'iaon sentence lmpo5ed. The U.S. Supreme Court tultd that declaring the marijuana would have forc- ed ihe former Harvard Co 11 e g e po;;ychology proressor to reveal in· criminating evidence -..;;::'.:;st himself and overturned the conviction. Susan Leary carried the pot In a dalnty silver snuff box cradled between her legs and was convicted of illegal transporta- tion and concealment of marijuana, but given a probate sentence. The proceedings in U.S. District Court will be presided over again by Judge Ben Connally, who sat in Leary's first trial. The new tria l involves smuggling <1l marijuana and carries a maximum sentence of 20 years in prison and $20,000 fine, but Or. Leary ii conUdent he will win again. Sgl. Speowd J.. HOiiand (0-Fla.), ""' quoted by ltl aide 11 uytng he had not '*nt from tither the White Ho use or the JusUce Department about the nomina· Uon, "but he will be glad to s:upport Canwell because he ia a good human being and a good lawyer," the aide said. "There has never been a Floridian on the Supreme Court. This would be fOCXI for the state." The aide added that llOlland had sug- gested two others for the nomination, Justice B. K. Robert.s of the Florida Supreme Court and Dr. Slephen C. O'Connell, preliident of the University of Florida and a former Florida Supreme COurt ju!tlce. A C4rswell appointment would bear out earlier predictions that Nl1on would tum to Dixie for a Supreme Court ap- pointment followlng his rebuff on Haynrworth, who lives In Greenvllle, S,C. f'toom Page J MOTI .•. dent Nixon's \\feste m White House. Security shelved the plans for the ''Trestles" are a when tlle President bought his home last year. Questioned after his talk, Mott said the "Trestles" Is a superior surfing area. Nixon aides had indicated some <1ther Camp Pendleton land not close to lhe \Vestern While House might be used. Mott wants all of the area for the public. Molt predicted confidently t h a t 1'ab8olutely the Trestles will be in public usage eventually. We had everything set to go when Ule President bought th.et land." He indicated that "eventually" pr<r bably meant 'A'hen Mr. Nixon is no longer President. ;,There is not nearly the security problem for former Presidents,'' he said. Mott cited a state park developed across the ri ver from fonner President Johmon's Te1as ranch after he left the Pre:ildency. During hia talk, Mott also aired plans for new emphasis on underwater parks and preserves along the Califbmia coastline. "The department is now iden· tifylng critical areas to create un. derwater parks an d preserves," he said. He called them an e1citlng recreational resource and said. "underwater destruc- tion is more intensive than on land, there is little or no time to accomplish this.·· Drinking Drivers Dent Fenders, Pocketbooks He, his wife Rosemary, 33. and son John, 20, are scheduled for trial <1n charges of possession of dangerous drugs and marijuana as a result of their arrest Dec. 26, 1968, in Laguna Beach. The trial is now liCheduled \Vednesday In Orange C.ounty Superior Court, depen· ding on ouico1ne of the Tua; prt> ceedinp. Besides the Texas and Orange County proceedings, Dr. Leary rectnUy appeared in a New York court room and faces Riverside County court action stemming from an LSD drowning death a~ a com· munal ranch. !'.fott said there are 1,051 miles or California coaslllne with 437 miles in public ownership and only part <1f thesa miles the type suitable for sv.'imming. He said the state must think in tenn.s of total public ownership or this type beach·from Point Conee:plkln .south to the Me1ice n border. "California mu st recoanize that it is the tru~tee of this frontage for the entire country," said the spea ker. It was a bad weekend ror motoring celebran~ passing through L a i u n a Beach. Answering a traffic accident call to the 800 block of Park Avenue at 8:50 p.m. Expectant Moms Oass Planned A special class ror expectant m<1therri will be presented for approval at tonight's meeting of the Board or Trustees of the capistrano Unified School District. The class will be outlined by Ray Oliver, assistant superintendent for in- struction at the 8 p.m. meeting in Serra School, Capistrano Beach. A study of educational opportuniti~ for expect.ant mothers has been coordinated for I.he past two manths by the Pupil Personnel and Instruction Division. nie study has included research Into the district's needs, st.ate support. procedural guidelines and sua::eslful programa in other district&. U adopted the fully reimbursable pro- gram will be implemented at San Clemente High School. DAILY PILOT O~GE. GOUT PUaLtSHlHG COMP'At4'1' Rob.it N. w,,4 P1nlll1<1I W ~i*llll!tt J1ci Ill:. c,,.1 • ., v~1 l"t.,ldf'll 1r.d '"-••I M1n1;1 Tltomt• k,,.,;J 1:61tot Th'"''' A. M~111hl~1 M1nevlnf ffl!o' lt.ic~1r4 P. N1U Lt,_ IH(ll Clly lfflltl' I. .. •••••• Offkf' 21t ,.,,,,. "'"'"'' M1ili119 Aiit1n• P.O. 101 •••. 9J•sz Otfft-Offlct• '(..a.Ii.,,,,_,, D "'"' fl11 Srtttl HrWllOr1 l11cll: '111 W"' ll1lboo ft.oll ltv1'4 • "'fllllr!Oltll llCCllJ 17'/J DtlC~ l:111.1v11• Friday. police found a badly damaged car wrapped around a utility pole, its In· ebrlated driver convinced he had hit another car. The driver was booked on a drunk in public charge and his car towed a\vay. On Saturday evening. responding lo anolher traffic call, officers found an elderly Los Angeles man staggering around in South Coast Hlghway traffic \\'here his car had ~n involved in a minor colision. He wa s charged with driving v.·hile drunk. At 1:30 a.m. Sunday, a Laguna man proceeding d<1wn Broadway v.·as stopped for driving without lights, After .ofl icers investigated further, he was additionally charged with drunken driving. and driv- ing without an operator's li cense. The roundup continued today v.•hen another weekend celebrant was hauled in at 6:30 a.m. after officers spotted his ve.hicle weaving erratically from south· OOund to northbound Janes in tl1e 2600 block of South Coast Highway. All the drivers survived their adventure without injury, except to tht pocketbook. <lented In each case to the tune. of $302, the standard bail for drivin& under the in· flue nee. Pendleton Oub Offering Grant To Victims' Kin A unique, $000 scholarship to be av.·anl· ed to a tetnaged son or daughter or 11 ... Marine killed in cmnbat has been an- nQunced by the Marine Offictrs' Wives Club of Camp Pendleton. Freshman-level college s l u d • n t children of both officer& and enlisted me11 arc eligible to apply for the one-time-only crant, whJch supple1nenla tv.·o permanent scholarships offered by the club. The echolarship ts flnanctd by sale of uniform Items donated by Ult familiei. of slain Marines, rerurblshed by volunteer \\'otker• and sold ln the Turnabout Shop at Camp Pend~l<>n. Students n1mt submit c h a r a c t e r references and as.sorted other data . plus formal applications, available by wrlUng Mrs. J. R. Woodrtng Jr., care of MOQ 17107.C. Camp Pendleton. Only seniors attending Orange or Sa n Diego County high schools and pl:tMlng to titlend an accredited , four.year college will be eligible ~ April JS is the deadline ror submia.slon. Tricia }lit by Flu WASllfNGTON (UPI) -l'ttsldent Nixon 'g daughter Tricia has the Ou1 the \VhHe Jfou.se reported ~fonday. She ls btlng treated al th< White House by Dr .. Walte:r Tracy, Nb:on.'1 per5011Al ph)'1lelan, and is staylna In bed. • He was charged with contributing to the delinquency or a minor last year after Charlene R. Almeida, 17. of Laguna Beach, drowned in a deep creek pond on the ranch near llemel. "I'm running tor governor of C2liforn!a." Dr. Leary declared today in 1'exas, "I shou ld be back in my OY.'n state, luming on my voters Instead of having to spend the time and entrgy here going through a case that we know we'll win.·• * * * Leary Granted Hearing Delay Dr. Timothy Leary and his con· troversial family today "·on a t~·o-<lay delay of their Orange County Superior Court trial on drug mrenses for which they were booked in Laguna Beach more than one year ago. Judge \\>'illiam Speirs granted the delay until Wednesday In the absence of Leary, 50. his wife, Rosemary, 34, and son John Bush Leary, 20. Jt wa1 explained that the ramily's battery of lawyers needed extra time to prepare for what v.ill be their 11th apperance in the Orange County court. The three Leary& were booked Dec. 26. 1968, in the Art Colony and char1ted ~·Ith pogsession or marijuana and LSD. ~f~ tions for dlsmlssal ~ave been rejected and are currently awaiting hearing at the appellate level. Quuke Jars Russia f\tOSCOW <AP) -A mild earthquake ~hook 1,.lzbeklstlln in Soviet central Afila today, tass said, adding that there were no reports of Injuries or dama1e. T1ic earthquake was centere:d near T11hkent, the Utbek capital that was badly dam- aged by a trtmor in 1968. He said cities, counties and the slate must make this acqui sition a priority item for their dollar even though some of the fro ntage is $2,500 and more a lineal foot. He said also there must be coopera· lion betv,.een the public and private sec- tors. M05s spoke of the need to protect the estuaries v;hlch he called an fmtJOrtant resource to the fisheries and one not completely understood. Californians, he said, musl concern themselves also with protection <1f their tidal pools which have suffered very serious damage. lt could take more than 100 years to restore some <1f them, said !'.fott. Mott saldthe problem of conservation doe~ not stop at the beaches; it ranges back the coastal plain to the mountains and streams which carry sand to replenish. the beaches. "We can't talk beaches V.'itJ1out looking to tJ1e mountains. \Ve can destroy the beaches without entire environn1ental planning," said the speaker. Acquisition of beach area from Point Conctptlon south is the state's ptiori.ty ilem. said the official. He said currently the state cannot (because of the high in- terest rates) sell bonds for acquisition but ~ discussing with private owners the posslbillly of accepting bonds In return tor their lands. RWJaway Auto Does No Damage A runa\\'ay car rolled across all traffic lanes <1n South Coast Highway Saturday morning, missed oncoming carli from bolh directions and came to rest against a utility pole, Laguna Beach police report. Officers said tl1e car. 01vned by George \V. Turner. 2609 Victoria St .. wa s parked on Victoria before it took off on its solo journey shortly af ter 7:30 p.m. The handbrake apparently had not been set. police said. Coast Pa1·ks Asked LOS ANGELES (A!') -Rep. John V. Tunney said today ho ,.,.ill propose in Congress Lhat the $Overnment designate several coastal areas as a California Coastline National Park. The pork would Incorporate the coaslal portions of the U.S. Marin• Corps Base at Camp Pendleton, the Channel Islands. Van· denburg AJr Force Ba'se, Los Padres National Forest along the Big Sur C08tl and the Point. Reyes National Seashore. "The purpose of this park will be lo protect the public Interest in the !(enic, biological. recreational and economic vaJue5 of Calt- {ornla's octan front.11 the Democratic candidate for the U.S. Senate said al a newa conference. • • NEW PILOT 'COVER GIRL' Fashion Writer Chriaty Miss Christy \ 'Cover Girl' For Pilot Tuesday's new "cover girl" for the women's section of the DAILY PILOT is Marian Christy, one ol the na tion'• most re1pect.e Jon writers. WiMer of naUonal wr!Ung awards and three ate awards (Massachusetts) in the three and a half years, Miss Christy ls oted for her global calloping in the COV Ce of the fashion beat. She Jnslsts spending at least three months out of e. year coverln1 the fa shion news capital the world -New York. Paris, Rome, M drid -even Dub- lin, when Ireland Is where It's hlppenln1. A native of Boston, Miss Christy waa graduated from Boston UnJverslty'1 School of Journalism. She became fashion editor of the Bos- ton Globe in 1965 after four yeara as a feature writer for Women's Wear Dally. Her syndicated column now appears in newspapers throughout the United States. It will be a weekly feature of the DAILY PILOT, beginning Tuesday, and wUI be featured each Tuesday on the cover pap of the women's section. From Page J CONGESTION •• astronomical costs that force the federal government to step in. Ero6iOn he said threatens four north county beaches. in- cluding HunUngton Beach, most popular in the state, ~ancr •100 mlUlon-ln proptrty developmeilt and a four lane hlahway. REDUCES ABILITY The speaker said development on dry sand reduces the ability of the shore to protect us from wave action. He mentioned a parking lot built on ary sand at Aliso Beach to handle autos as "·ell as people and said the South Cotst area has much more land in private o'wnership than the north coast which has far greater density. Marx. author of the prize·-A'innlng book .. The Frail Ocean,"· talked of jetties v.•hich ''interrupt the drift (If sand that nouri shed the beaches" and of flood con- trol dame that stop the supply of sand from the hills. •le talked of dumping into the ocean and dredging of estuaries w h i c h decrease their ability to handle pollu· tiot1. He sai~ the Upper Newport Bay has aspects which make it just as much a scenic wonder as Point U>bos at !'.fon· lerey :.r Torrey Pines in La Jolla . h-larx cited the exan1ple of Laguna's Victor Hugo Inn and adjacent Heisler Park as an example or trying to make the Coast both usable anad scenic. EROSION PR.OBLDfS There are also erosion problems from Doheny State Beach to San Clemente. said Marx. He 11ald Oregon ia re.guJating development on dry sand and Santa Barbara has arranged a 30·foot setback on geologically unstable coastal bluffs. He cited the Caplstr~ Highlands as a good e:xamplt: of a bluff that should never J1ave been built on. Speaktr Rui z: pointed to the 1941 plan for Orange County shoreline develoir ment. He called jt a good study and paraphrased its essential thrust as "For God's sake buy the coast." He said the study said of the 42 miles of coastline. "It will never be any longer and Jt will never bf. any cheaper." Ruiz said that In 1941 there were 30.Z 1niles (If county b e a ch in prlvatt O\vncrship and 12.5 in public. Today the pril'ate sector has dwindled to 19.2 miles and the public O\\'nership is 23.4 but much of this v.·as due to acquisition of an ad· ditional seven miles by the state. The Sall Creek controvtrsy, said Ruiz, ser'\·ed as a. catalyst and precipitant. that brought the beach needs Into sharp fOCIJ!. · He cited county measures that have come since. J?E.STIJI AL GIVES READERS $2,000 A $2.000 donation from the Festival of Arts to Laguna Beach Hf&h School's Choral Readers will pay the readers' air fare to San Francisco "'here they have been Invited to per(onn Feb. 7, during a conventloo d the Callforn!a Association of Teachers of Eoglistt. The presentaUon on behalf or the Fe!'tlval Board of Directors was rnade by William ?.iartin, Festival president. Ac-- ,,.£eptlng ror the readers wa& Laguna llonch IU&h Scbool l!tudent Tom !lout .. t . ' • Five Crash Victims Die In County Four Oran1e C<lwitians, including a San Clemente sports car driver, v.•ere killed ln traffic crashes over the weekend, the California Highway Patrol reported to- d1y. A fifth motorist died ~ injuries auf· fertd one "·eek earlier, bringing the coun- ty's 1970 traffic death toll to 12. Killed instantly Saturday night when his spof"U car stiuck a tree beside Ganado Drive near Ortega lUghway ln San Juan Capislrano was John Laurencr. Stauff, 42, oC J!O E. Escalones, San Clemente. Police said Stauf(, who rect11Uy mutn· ed from paratroop duty in Vietnam, wa!f 1170 u County Traffic Death Toll IHI II returning from a bachelor perty in honor of his brother, Harold, when the accident occurred. He "''as Ui have been best man In his brother's weddina: Jan. 24. TREATED FOR CUTS . Stauff 's passenger, James Lewis, 23, of the same address, was treated for cut& and bruJses at South Coast c.ommunity Hospital ln South Laguna and reltaaed, police said. An elderly Garden Grove resident, Vir&ll C. Robin..,,, 14, o! 1000: Melody Park Drive, died Saturday at 9:45 p.m. et Palm General Hooplt•I o! lnjurlOI suf. fered when be wu struck by an auto Jan. 10 on Brookhutst Street jn Ganim Grove. Police said they are st!U inve.s· UgaUng the accldent. AnOther Garden Grove residetl, Mrs. Lucille HltUe, 51, of 9691 Weahlnattt Ave., succumbed to her injuries Sunday mom!ng. Police said she and a com· panion, Mrs. Lois Haws, <1f Kernvllle, wert crossJng Wesbnlnster Avenue near Kerry SU'tet Saturday evening when thef Wert struck by an auto driven by Mrs. Cecilla Green, ZI, of 104&1 Hazard Ave., Garden Grewe. Mn. Green was not held. SERIOUS CONDmON ~frs. Ha\\·s. who Is in serious condition et We,,tminster Community Hospital, and her husband were visiting the Hittle family, police said. The two women wm apparenUy on their way home from marketln& when the aceident occurred. La Habra police said today they are still searching for the driver of a vehicle which reportedly •lnlck Ind klll..r Mn. Jacqueline May Stubbs, 40, -of 1710 E. La Habra Blvd., early Sunday morntna. According to wltne3ses Mra. Stubb1 wu struck by a late model llghl colored car while crossln& the street in front of her home. atlena Park police today stated they are continuing to Investigate the Satur· da y morning accident which took the life of a Buena Park housewife. Mrs. Els le Rita Ramos, 37, of '1331 Chippe"'a Circle. was stopped for a traf· fie light at Knott and Orange avenues when she was iitruck headon by the vehi· el f driven by Jack McKinnon, 26, of 122 Bella Vista st .. Anaheim, police said. r-.tcKinnon's vehicle apparently crossed the center <livider line, ramming Mrs. Ramos' stopped vehicle, inve!l.igators stated. ?o.tcKlnnon was treated at Wei.t Anaheim CC(Omunity Hos pital and released. CdM MAN BETTER A Corona del Mar resident, JClhn Stein· broner, 20, of 3036 Breakers Drive, was reported rttovering from injuries wf. feed Sunday mru'ning in a single car era.sh on Newport A venue al Barrett La ne near Orange. Callromla Highway Patrol officers said Steinbroner v.·as a passenger in the vehi· cle driven by Kerry Bruce Moore, 20, of 1214 W. Santa Clara Ave .• Santa Ana, who is recovering from injuries in the same hospital. Patrolmen said the two were north· bouod on Newport "at a h.igh raie or speed" when Moore lost control or the car on a curve and hit a guardrail. Both youths were ejected from the auto on im· pact, <>lficers said. A Santa Ana husband and wife are listed in critical condition in Sant.a Ana Community Hoepital today following a t1vo-car colllslon at La Colina Drive and Redhill Avenue near Tustin Sunday morning. Highway patrolmen said either the auto of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Ho~mberg, 1121 Ravencrest, Santa Ana, or that driven by Marvin Hollenberg 25, from the r-.larlne Helicopter Station, Santa Ana, ran a stop sign at La Collna cauti- ing the accident. Hollenberg was treat· ed and released from the some hospital. Lagunan's Wife Hurt in W reek The wife ol lAguna Beach tlectrical contractor Gordon Strachan wa& slightly hurt in A Laguna Canyon Road trafllc collision Fridas evening. Police report Mrs. Charlotte n. Strachan, 50, was attempting a left turn on Laguna Canyon Road at 5 p.m. from the driveway of Gonion's Electric, 224' Laguna Canyon Road. when htr car c:Ol· lldl'd "·Ith an eastbound vehicle driven by Charles EdY.'ard Kollman, 20, ol tto Be~la Ave., Corona dcl Mar. Kolhnan told police ht swerved right but was unable to avoid 1lrlkin1 the rtat of the Strachan vehicle. Mrs. Strachan suUe.recl a head laceration and was treat· ed hy htr own physlcl•n. ' ' . 17 I /• 17 I ' -.,. . -· •• Y" .:]' -, ...-•. •. j • --. Laguna Beaeh T.UY'• l'lllal N.Y. Steek9 . :voe. i1, NO. r6, 3 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA 1 -MONDAY, JANUARY '19, ·1970 TEN CENTS Auto 'Strangulation' PeriI-s Cities on Coast .· 11 · you're looking for an uncluttered beach, your best bet might be to enlist in the Marine Corps and hope lo be sta· tioned at Camp Pendleton. • TIUs was the advice Saturday or con· servatlonist-author Wesley Marx, who SpQke oC coastal cities so swamped with summer traffic that they can become undesirable places'to live. Hu_ntington Beach, Newport Beach and Laguna Beach .are .in part..icularly precarious PQ!itlons as far as auto .strangulation, he said. Marx was one of six speak.ers at a con· ference at the San Clemente Inn on the future of Orange County beaches. Sponsored by the Capistrano Bay Area and Orange County Leagues of Women Voters, it played to an enthusiastic au- dience of about 175. The session included much or Orange County city and county officialdom. Speakers were Kenneth E. Carr, San MICHAEL BRODY HAS LITTLE TROUBtE •GIVING .MONEY ' AWAY Now· Ht~s 'Trillion1ire' With Peact. Plan, Cura for·Cancer He~s Trillionaire Hippie Tycoon Escalates Pledges NEW YORK (UPI) -Michael James Brody, who now says be will distrjb1.Ue $100 billion, or maybe an even trillion, also promises a plan for peace in Vietnam to President Nixon plus cures for cancer and all other diseases. Brody, whose long red hair and hip cJOthing belie his claimed wealth. insists he will give away money to anyone who needs it. Before a national television audience. 01 the Ed Sullivan Show Sunday night. Brody, 21, played a Ii.string guitar and sang a ballad written by Bob Dylan, .. You Ain 't Goin' Nowhere," Then he pro. claimed again: "I'm worth 100 billion dollars. Does that stagger your mind? In fact, that was yesterday. I might be worth a trillion to- day:• Crowds of people, many or whom said they hoped for a gift from Brody, mobbed the college dropout philanthropist as he entered and left the theater. "You're kill· ing me," he shouted before police husUed him into a car and he drove away. Inside tile theater earlier, Brody, who appeared flushed and excited, told reporters he would continue t h e giVeawaYs if his public,. fncludlhg those who have picked his PoCket and pulled his wedding ring from his hand ·in the past few days, will stop crowding • him and pulling his hair. ,;Don't be so greedy," he .said. "Giv1 me a chance. Give me some time .'' He made promises to bestow·massive. gttfus upon North Vietnam ini>rder·to end th~ war and called on Nixon-to meet' him this afternoon at Kennedy International Airport here to discuss poverty and world peace. The President will be busy in Washington, however, preparing his Stale of th• Union message. "I have cures for all diseases," Brody said. "I have a cure for cancer."., He promised to disclose tt at the airport during a news conference, Brody's bride of two weeks, Renee, a slim woman with long brown hair, stayed near him on stage and through the crowds. They exchanged loving glances fre quently. Bad Effects on Dogs Cl~te city manager ; Richard P. Ruiz, executive assistant to Supervisor David L. Baker; Knowlton Fernald Jr., architect and planning vice president, Laguna Niguel Corp.; William Penn MoU Jr., direct.or of the state Department of Parks and Recreation, and Assemblyman Alan Sieroty. Marx said freeways should meet the demands they are placing on coastal cities. Mentioning coastal fr~way offramps 11eheduled for Beach Boulevard of Hun- tington Beach and MacArthur Boulevard of Newport Beach, Marx said, "I can visualize Huntington Beach and Newport Beach as one big honking auto horn on a coastal weekend." He said the state highway people should plan turnouts,,viewpoints, and pie· nic areas to accommodate the traffic carried by the freeways. Alternate forms of transportation !hould also be studied, said 'Marx m<nllonlng helicopters and hydrololl~ He prediCted that future beach recru· tion might ipelude. all year swfuuning in rubber suits, "submoblles" .for un- derwater wandering·and lighted beaches for night use. •. But without strong management. said Marx, the shoreline will tum into "somethin~ lhal the SO'lpps Institute of 9<-~Y can 't, put back together again." * * We · mual, laid 'tile ~et. IJnd alter!aUves to shoreline development and ~Uon that wiQ. DOI bankrupl us. tri the Surfside, Sunset Beach and Newport Beadl areas,_ he Aid, 30 mlDlon cubic yards of sand will heneedod fn the nezt 20 yesrs jU51 to· maJmln the beach and the Anny Corps of Engineers -and nobody else -knows where ll Ill 3oq to come from. · Erosion cOntrol,~ he said, runs tnto (See CONGUTION, P. ... .J) State Gets Three Miles ' . Of--County .. Public ·Beach Draft Punishing Banned by Court WASHINGTON (UPO -The Supreme Court today barred Selective Service boards rrom speeding up lnductJons to punish registrants for violating draft law regulations. The court1 in a . ~'%; rqling, be kt that any at"l:Jon taktn ~ "dtlinQueht" registl'antJ: must bt pur.Jlled through the "°""'· The jVstlcd'ftnlCt down the prac-tico of rtclaaslly!nf them IA 111bject to immediate call up. The decision came in a criminal case lnvolving David Earl Gutknecht of Gay- lord, Minn., who contended he wa~ re- classified by his local board and ordered inducted. because he deposited his draft card at the feet ol a U.S. marshal duriD&' a. war protest in MiMeapolis. The court reversed a subsequent con- viction oC Gutknecht for refusing to re- port for induction. delinquent has no riatutory standard ar even guidelines. The power is e•erc!.sed entirely by the dlscretJon of the local board. "It is a broad, raving autliOrity,, a type ol Jldm~lrali)',~ '~solullm·Ql!I. ~ Jtaf'\ol our 11wmatlng tridltidht"' · ' Chlel Ju.sli~ Warren £ .......... ,,. Justiie ~Stewart dluented en trte !Copt of the Doolill• fln<llng. ·31t9t1ce John M. Harlan agreed with the majortty but said he felt regulatiOns on delinquents could be issued legally if intended to re- quire a youth to comply wUh registra· tlon regulations rather than .u .a puniJh. ment. · Among other actions, the ·court : -Held that Alabama and Georgia had 'been practicing racial di.scrbninaUon in 6'1ectlon of juries but decllnod to strike doWn the state laws generally. ' . The majority op.inion·written by Justice William 0 . Douglas: said there was nofu.. ing in the 1967 draft law giving Selective Service autboriUes "free-wheeling author· ity·to ride herd on the registrants, using immediate induction as a disciplinary or vindictive measure." -Inan.appmntdeadlock,ord<udr ... S'=·-·-l-arguments at a lower court level on the ff)lif.u;:j issue of whether federal agents must ob-· Squalf6w Comes Up A:gcciin The court asserted: ''The power under the regulations ·to declare a registrant tain search_ w1rrants to use electronic devices to lnopitor their conversations with criminal ·suspects. The case involv· ed James A. White who was atrested in Chicago in 1966 on chargea of possession and sale of. heroin. Lynch Won't Seek Re~urn To Attorney General Post SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -California Attoiiney General Thomas C. Lynch, the only Democrat elect.ed to statewide office in the Republican sweep of 1966, an· nounced today he will not seek re-elec· lion. · Lynch, 65, said he only ma~ up bis mind "over the holidays" in ·discussions with his wife and two sOns. The attorney general said he had been in public office since 1933 and would like to "spend some time in a quiet af... mosphere.'' Lynch stressed that he still had a year· to 10 In office and .. 1d that affer that he wanted to practice his profession as a lawyer, "preferably in San Francisco." He told a news conference he had 30mething in mJnd but could not disclose details e1cept that lt was in San Fam· cisco. , LYn~t .'!~ bee~~ at~g ge~~ by •~polntment of Gov. Edmund G. Brown Aug. 31 .. 1964, was elected to a full ttnn tn November of 1966. He said he could not do this job pro- perly and campajgn for office cit the same time. Lynch said the job of aUomey generaJ was becoming successively more dlf· ficult. "I talked to Gov. Warren (fonner Supreme Court chief JusUce) recently .and he mentioned that the attornet generalshlp was a lovely job," he saJd. . Before Plq.n11er.s The Shoals versus Sands coittrovUsy will surface again at tonight's regular mtetin& of the Laguna Beach Planning Commission. Shoals owner Richard Burt's.reque~t to add 32 units to the motel at l&ql S. Coast Highway, sparked protests from owners or ·the neighboring Laguna Sands 1:nct questions from city officials on the mat. ter of prlv'1te use. of a city-owned beach access road • When planning commissioners finally approved the Shoals requeat, after tag- ging a Jong list' of conditions onto the variance, the matter-was appealed to the city council• by Sands owners. Advised by the city at~ that the planners had not specified all their fill' dings in tbe apprpved legal manager. councllmen bounced the case back to the planning commisllion where it has been getting some further· stU<)y and may be resolved for a secon(l time tonight. Deal .. Bared AherTalks With Irvine By RICllAllll P. NALL ,Of"" o.ltr ,, ... ,,.,. William Ptm Mott,,Jr._ director of the Slate Department of Beaches and !'irks, f4ld Sftunl'1 fl!at ~· ~ i!lll •o- C[111rt<l thtte more miles of public beldl lb'-or;nii~ .... ~ -- -......... ,~!Cit 11.tii11J1ioi but haif Jusl completed talb wltlt the Irvtne Company. whlcb he said pltased him. Mott was one of•a panel' of speakers at the 5an Clemente Inn taking part .In a conference on the future of Orange Coun- ty ·beaches, The Irvine .Company bas announced plans for eooper8Uve develapment of its coutal holdings between Laguna Beach and Corona del Mar so that the piblic will have accen to beaches. · . Commenting on his talks _with. Irvine Compan~ ofllcials, Molt sald be·thliught the pendlllg development would bring "a totally new concept on. how beach areas can be available to· the public u wen as• have private development.,. He called the concept "something quite unique which may set a1precedentfor the rest of California." Mott also forecast a new trend bl state beach phuming which will push the auto inland. "In the past we ·bave piaoned for the auto. We now are going to plan the state park BY•llm> lor people and Doi tbe auto.'' Commenllnf on •!plllded parldng· recently provided 1t Doheny State Beach, . Motl said, "the parking lot can·be rJPped out tomorrow. We're m~ studlef to detennl.ne hw to inoVe toe ·aufoa as much as five miles inland and provide a 1ystem of mini-bus transPqrtallonc "Doheny Park is merely a tr~~ on what we're ultim~Jy going to bav~t· Moll also aJOO)re ol lhe ·need to COl)vtrl military lands sucb ~ Camp Pendleton to public use. "Pendleton and several others are closed to }>UbUc wie. We're working on Chis situation." The state had planned its lint slll'lln& park - a mile ol beach lronlai< bicbil by .160 acres .-adjacent to the I.Oran Coast Gwird Station which abuts l'rtsl· (See MO'IT, Pop!) .'Mini Pill' Use Halted "[ asked him how many ~es . he had when he was attomey,g~al Mel he 11ald 74. I have over 260, P-_)q& offices in Los Angeles, San Francisco, Sacramento and San Diego. Also on tonight's agenda is a· presen- tation by Vacation Village owner Loren H&t)eline, who is continuing his long.fl.an. d'1ng attempt to resolve rnuU1p1e zoning problem1 ~t liis motel complex on S. Coast H1ghway. At a study _ ~km Jast week, the cjty planning stafr dlSa~ with. Hanelft'ie. af taa h,e number of ad· dllional unilll he may be permitted to build, but commissioners ha"!e nOt yet heard his coinplele -entallon. Weadter CIOlldY .~la with an'occulooul . pitier patter 'of rain on the rool ii the outlook lor Tuesday aJona the otange Coall will! llltle chanp in temperature. • PALO ALTO (UPI) -Syntex Laboratories Inc. today suspended use o( its "mini·Piil" oritl contraceptive on a test basis In the United States. The firm said it would immediately confer with authorities in En~land, France and Mexico, where the "mmi~pill" has been marketed com- mercially for almost a year. It has not been aold commercially in the United StalU. The suspension or clinical studies in the U.S. came after dogs tested on ·the pro-pt.i~Ty pills 1ih0Wed "adverse er. <~~." including lesions and possible lhtlabollc changes. A Syntex e:poktsman said dog ·studies lvlth the sequenUsl birth control pills, in which f'.strogens and piogcsUns -dil· ferent types or femnle honnones -are taken on different days, did not demonstrate the same effects. Last week, top medical authorities dif- fered in congressional hearings ~n \Vashington over effect of, the estrogeo:- or sequential -birth contol pill!, which have been oo the market in the U.S. for some time. Some doctors said they had harmful aide effects, but others disputed this. The.. "mini-pill," which has ·been hailtd by some as a 0 aecorid generation" birth control device whlcb would be free ot IOme of the compllcaUons or estrogen-- based pills, has been 10ld in France and Me•lco for 1 year and in the United Kingdom •ince last May. J~ is markec.ed in England under the b:and amc "Nnrmenon," in France 11 "Nneeoyl" and ln Mexico as "Rcter." "Problems are growing all the time. The company apokesman said the We have prablems that were unheard af 20 years ago -oil polluUon, en-•'mini-pill" waa lC6tel;I 00 f,700 women .in v1tohmt:nta1 control. antitrust. And Jlw the United State• and abroad before it enforcement is getting to be a grtater went on Ult market. It was still being problem ." tested at 30 centers in the United States, Lynch was asked ir he woµld endoNe where the FDA bad withheld marketing hls chief deputy, C~artes O'Brien, who approval. had not declared but haa ....., ~oned Th t said the efrecta noted as • poulble candidate.· · e spo esman -· ' • ''that -bltm ~. as .. _. come up,"· In dog tests were "ISasica!Jy lesk>ns,"'tiut .... ., •iu~ that poMibte metabolic changes were . Lynch 11•id. "'Charlie O'Brien ltaa been a also ·noted. layal llllltelfl<ient chief deput,y." '"11\ere are·• vatlety of .Uecll, but the • · patholOl)"ls nol deot:'~he Nld. "We are StOC!k Market· goln1 to moh lurther lesls with dogs In The Laguna Beach Fine Atts AS50Cia· tlon (or(gil)ally tlie Spllpter Festival) will submit a dual ·rtQUnt fo,r u~ or tts ex· hibilion area a1•ill N. Coast ijlghway dur'lng the -Winter Fesuvil In February as well as during the attmmer FesUval of ArtJ run. , P.lanners .meet ·~ 7:30 p.m. ln city c:ouocil cbambei's. + • • • Hal March · Dies ' HOLLYWOOD .(~) -""'CIOr' Hal -.• March, lhO•claPPtr· dark·halr<d m•ater·ol ctttnhxiie1'/af..1televisloo.'s 64,000 Qta. lloq''9]11s -of/llie llllOs, died today. determine, the ....... at the ellects and whether certain speciei af dogs are uni- quely sensitive to $ICh compounds.'' He was 4t. · NE WYORl\.MP) -Th eatoclr market "l•rdl, wl!Ooe li.nl1ble-'ad lib style conUnued Us losing ways tn moderate made btm .ai~avortle with· TV audltnces, He said tests with monkeys on the "mln1-pUJ" showed-M--tdYerse effects. late trading today. (See qn0l,!1I0111. Pases ..CcwnbecJpt l :U 1.m. aLthe.Unl~enUy »ti).-· --or callfoti!WM¢1cal Ccnler. ' INSIDE TOD.tl' On• con~ for the (:.,,.. gr11.sfonal Cup roctl has btn stlec(<d to ·highlight a h..,,, weektnd of b..U119 aclloil!I. l'ag., 18-14: ...,...., f•if \ --~ --• C.'"9fllll • ' ~·--) -a.ctllllt 'Ull-" r ' ...... ·cw...r tr ~· tWf ........ ,,...,.. .... -,._,, -c~ • .._.,.,......,.. """' ........ ,. ,.......... " ......... ''" • "'*""" • •111«t••111t ,. ....... • '"'"" ,..,. ...... .... . ...,....,. If ................ ,1, A1111.....,. ·u ...,...,.... w Mlll"9a ' • u ... , ...... MOVING UP? Charter Writer Burk• Burke Next California Chief Judge? Calirornla Supreme Court Associate Justice Loois H. Burke, a longtime Newport Beach resident and a draftsman of the city's charter. has been mentioned as a strong contender for lhe state court's chief justice position. Justice Burke, whole N e wport residence ti 46 Beacon Bay, was men· tioned by state government sources as a likely candidate to replace retirfJ'lg Cliief Justice Roger J. Traynor. Justice Traynor will leave the highest state court at the end of this month. Justice Burke, an avid sailor in the PC class, has Uved in Newport for many years and spends his wee~ends and tptre weekdays at his Beacon Bay Home. The court is in San Francisco. The judge is the author or the book "With This Ring". a book aimed at more equitable divorce laws. He is a Republican. an active layman in the Catholic Church and an amateur painter. Justice Burke was the first legal designer of Newport's city charter in the early 19505. I •• t• o I . . . . . • NiXon Picks Floridian , Carsivel ! Ta ppe4 ft>r Supreme Court Seat WAS!mtcm>l'I IVPI) ;.:,no W!IMI. ~t{ ~."!V"" lllOJllllt •rl-The sen. SpeN&ld L. Holl•nd 10.r1a.), W8' Houa bu ll!lin\ld "J'odenl •Cl1Qllt fiiliclWI" ~ .Iii FloflQ, "Georsta, quoted by an aide u uylng he had not ~·(I. ~ ~ti~. 1b1ma, MIN!lllppi and TUu. heard from tither the White House or the P'la., he will be apjd'lnted to the SUpreme Florida lawmakers sak! the Carswell J 11 ~ rim 1 ~ .. , u · Court UPI W .. to tod u& ce IA'pa en '~ ie nom1na-. •Y· eelt;e\Jon was a goOd one. Rep. Don FU· .. Carswell has been promlnenUy men· qua ([).Fla.), describing himself as a lion, but he will be glad to support tloned for ~he vacancy, created wtlen i\be tiersonal friend or Carswell, Said: "He Carswell because he Is .~ good. tium~n Fortas res_1gned las,t May under _fire for has no stock problems. He is a good man. being and a good lawyer, th~ .atde said. his _financial assoc.talion with finii.ncler l C<)PSider him a moderate conserv11t1ve." "There has neve·r been a Flor1d1an on th e Louis WoU~on, who was convicted of 11!:11· The Senate last year rejected Nlxon't SUprc1ne .~ourt. 'fhis would be good for lnl WJreatitered ~IUe1. firat choice for the Fortrui seat Chief the state. A White House aide telephoned Juda:e Clement F. Haynsworth or 'UJe fth The aide adQed that Holland h~d sug· C:'raw?ll, SO, _severa! days ago lo Inform Circuit. ge11ted two others for lhe nommatl?n· him he had been picked. "He was told Jur;:ticc B. K. Roberts of the Florida just to sit tight and make no statement Opponents at lacked Haynsworth's Supreme Court and Dr. Stephen C. about the nominaUon," a 500rce aaid. bench reeord on civll rights and his finan· O'Connell, president of the University of Carswtll did Just that, telling rtportera cial boldin1s in companiea involved hi Florida and a fonner Florida Supreme ln Tallahassee that "Jt would be highly litigation before ha court. Court just.Ice. inappropriate for me to make any com· Sen. Ed\ol.'atd J, Gurney CR·:·;a.), first A Carswell appointment would bear out ment o( any nature" on reporta of the ap-suggested Carswell for the ;tigh court. earlier predictions that Nixon would tum polntment. A Gurney aide liaid the ,senator was to Dli:le for a Supreme Court ap- Nixon named Carswell, a former j'very pleased" by the report of the polntment following his rebuff on f~eral district judge, to the Ith Circuit judge's seletUon. Haynsworth, who lives in Greenville, S.C. Leary in Laredo Court; County Trial Postpo11ed rrom ww Seni?• LAREDO, Tex. -The streets of t.aredo Jed to a West Texas courthouse ·today, where Dr. Timolby Leary went on trial again for marijuana chargts thrown out once already by the U.S. Supreme Court. A two-day continuance wu granted un- lit Wednesday by Orang!'County SUJ)etlor Court authorities, meanwhile, since Dr. Leary, hias wife and son were due lo go on trial today in Santa Ana for an LSD and marijuana case daUn& back 13 months. Dr. Leary-declar<d candidate for the Californll governorship in November - critlclaed the re-trla l by Tea:as and federal authorlUes, charaln1 It amounts to pol!Ual harassment. "'Mle Nixon Admlnlslr1Uon does not have any faith ln the democraUc: process and they want to w:e the power of government to harass us.11 he 1\leged. "Anyone who bears that the govern· ment ii trying me alter a un1nlmous Suprenie COUrt decl!Jon knows that there ts something flshy here -or it is unfa ir," he continued. He was convicted in 1966 of failure to declare marijuana and pay federal tax on three ounces or the weed, brought across from Mei:ico at Laredo, v.·ilh a $40,000 One and :JO.year prison sentence Imposed. The U.S. St.:.;!'zme Court ruled that decl&rln1 th~ marijuana would have fore. ed the former llarvard Co I I e g e psychology professor to re\'eal in· criminating evidenct against himself and overturned the conviction. Susan Leary carried the pot ln a dainty silver snuff box cradled between her legs and was convicted of illegal transporta· lion and concealment of marijuana, but given a probate sentence. The proceedings In U.S. District Court will be presided over again by Judge Ben Connally, who sat in Leary 's first trial. The new trial involves smuggling of marijuana and carries a maximum ~cnl.e.nce ol 20 years in prison and $%0,oon fin:?, but Dr. Leary· ls confident he will ~'in again. ' From Page l MOTI ... dent Nixon's Western \Vhile House. Security shelved the plans for the "Trestles'' a re a wh en tJ1e President bought hi.a home last year. Que.stioned after his talk, Mott said the "Trestles" is a superior surfing area. Nixon aides had indicated some other Camp Pendleton land not close to the Western White House might be used. 1'-1ott wants all of the area for the public. !\iott predicted confidently t h a t "abaolutely the Trestles will be in public usage e~ntually. We had everything set to 10 when the President bought that land." He indicated that "eventually" pro- bably meant when Mr. Nixon is no longer President. "There is not nearly the security problem !or former Presictents," he said. Mott cited a state park developed across the river from former President Johnson's Texas ranch after he left the Presidency. During his talk, Molt alto aired plans for new emphasis on underwater parks and preserves along the California coastline. "The department is now iden• llfylng critical areas to create un· derwater parks and preserve5.'' he said. He called ·them sn exciting recreational resource and said, •·underwater destruc- tion is more intensive than on land, there is little or no time to aceomplish this." Drinking Drivers Dent He., his v.·ife Rosemary, 33, and son John, 20, are scheduled for trial on charges of possession of dangerous drugs and marijuana as a result of their arrest Dec. 26, 1968, ln Laguna Beach. The trial is now scheduled Wednesday In Orange County Superior Court, depen· ding on outcome of the Texas pro- ceedings. Mott said there are 1,051 miles of California coast\lne with 437 miles in public ownership and only part of these miles the type suitable for s..,i'imming. - ' Fenders, Pocketbooks JI was a bad weekend for motoring celebrants pusina: through L a & u n a. Beach. An6wering a traffic accident call to the 800 block of Park Avenue at 8:50 p.m. Expectant Moms Class Planned . A speciaJ class for elJ>eClanl mothe:rs 'vill be presented for approval at t.cmlght's meeting of the Board <A Trustees of the Gapistrano Unified School Distrlct. The cla.sa win bt outlined by Ray Oliver, assistant superintendent for in· struction at the a p.m. meetlng in Serra School, Capistrano Beach . A study of educational opportunities for expectant mothers has been coordinated for the f)ast two months by the Pupil Personnel and Instruction Division. The filUdy has included research into the distrld'1 needs, state support, procedural guidelines and successful programs In other districts. If adopted the fully reimbursable pr~ gram will be Implemented at San Clemente High School. DAILY PILOT OIU.M?f-CC.I.It l"UILllltlNO toM'AJfY ll:obt rf N. w.,, l"rtlllltM 11111 M!hMI' Jtc• It Cu•ltv Vkl l"•nlO•"' ••. 4 G-••I M1nts1 Tl!1"''' IC1tvil l•>IOf T1!1"'•• A, ~,,.,hint Ni1ntt"'11 EGllO!'" llic~tr4 '· Ntll 1.tOUM ltU " c11w 11a1"" L .. ••• a.Mii Offk• 21 1 '•111t Av1"ut M1lti nt A''''"' P.O. le>~ 666, tJ6~J Ottt.r Offlct • "''' NiHfi uo Wnt ••v $1•HI N---' lttf~; 1111 -1 ltlMt leultvt ... +.lflOfln!lll.• le&CIH 11111 llK~ IW>t•t•G Frlday, pollce found a badly damaaed car wrapped around a utility pole, Jta In~ ebriated driver convinced he had hit another car. The dri\-er was booked on 1 drunk in public charge and hi,s car towed away. On Saturday evening. re!fponding tG .another traffic call. officers round an elderly Los Angeles man staggering around in South Coast Highway lrflfric \vhere hb car had betn involved in a minor colision. He "''as charged with dri ving while drunk . At 1:30 a.m. Sunday, a Llguna man proceeding down Broadway ~·as stopped for driving ~·ithout lights. After officers investigated further , he was addiUonally charged with drunken driving, and dr\v. ing without an operator's license. The roundup continued today ~·hen . another weekend celebrant was haul!d in at 6:30 a.m. after officers spotted hi1 vehicle weaving erratically from south· bound to norUlbound lanes in the 2600 block of South Coast Highway. All the drivers survived their adventure without Injury, e~cept to tHe pocketbook, d1?nted In each case to the tune or $302, the standard bail fqr drivin& under the In· nuence. Pe11dleto11 Club Offering Grant To Victims' Kll1 A unique. $500 scholarship to be a~·un.J· ctl lo a teenqed son or dau1hter ol a Marine killed In combat has ~en in· nounced by the tl-1arlne Officers' Wives Club of Camp Pendleton. Freshman-level college s I u de n l children of both officers and enlisted n1en arc eligible to apply for the one-lime.only grant, which supplements two permanent scholarships offered by Ule club. The scholarship is financed by sale of uniform Items donated by the flmllles of slbin flfarines, refurbished by volunteer workers and sold In the Turnabout Shop al Camp Pmdleton. Student& musl submll ch a r act er r('fcrcnce5 11nd assorted other riat:1 . plus formal applications. available by wrltln1 fl1r1. J. R. WOO<trlng Jr,, care of l\tOQ 17107.C, Camp Pendleton. Only seniors attending Orange or Sen Diego County high !IChools •nd pl1nnln1 to atltnd an S('Q'edited, four.~ar «1lltge will be eligible and AprU 1$ is the deadline for subatillion. T ricia Hit by Flu WASHINGTON (UP I) -l'r<•ldont Nlxon'll dau.ghtrr Tricia h11 the nu, lht \\'hlle House report~d Monday. She Js being treated at the White •f0\.1111 b)• Or. Walter Tracy, Nixon 's personeJ physldan. and ts 4ta}'il'\& In bed. Besides the Tel"I! ·and Orange County proctedings, Or. Leary recently appeared in a New York courtroom and faei!s Riverside County eourt action st~rnming from an LS D drowning death at a corn· munal ranch. He waa charged wilh contributing to the delinquency of a minor last year after Charlene R. Almeida, 17, of Laguna Beech, drowned In a deep creek pond on the ranch near llemet. "I'm running for govtrnor o f California" Dr. Leary declared today in Texaa, "i should bt back In my own stalt, turning on my voters Instead of h~vlng to Sf>C!nd the tlme and energy here go\r.g through a case that JNe lnow we'll ucin.'' * * * Leary Granted Hearing Delay Dr. Timothy Leary and his cnn· troversial family today u·on a l\\•o-day delay of their Orange Counly Superior Court lrlal on drug offenses for which they ~·ere booked in Laguna Beach more tha n one year ago. Jud11:e \\'Jlliam Speirs granted the delay untn \Vednesday In the absence of Leary, f>O. his wife, Rosenlary, 34. and son John Bush Leary, 20. ll was explained U1at the famil)•'s baltery of Ja1\·yers n?eded extra time to prepare for v.•hat "·111 be their I I Lh apperance ln the Orange County court. The three Learya were booked Dec. 26, 1968, In the Art Colony and charl(ed with possep:lon of marijuana and LSD. Mo- tions for dismissal bave. been rejected and are currenUy awaiting hearing at the appe.Uate level. Qunke J ars Russia !\10SCO\V (AP) - A mild earthquake shook Uzbekistan in Soviet ctntral Asia todAy, Ta1s sa.id, adding t11at there were no reports of injuries or damage. Tht earthquake wa1 centered near Tashkent, the Uzbek caplt.al that was badly dam· aged by a tremor in 1966. lie said the state mu.st think in terms of tctal public ownership of this type beach from Point Conception south to the Mexican border. "California m u s t recognize that it is the trustee of this frontage for the e.ntire country," said the speaker. He said cities, counties and the state must make this acquisition a prlorily item for their dollar even though some or the frontage is $2,500 and more a lineal foot. He said also there must be coopera· lion between the public and private sec· tors. r..tos~ spoke of lhe need to protect tbe estuaries which he called an important resource to the fisheries and one not completely understood. Californians, he said, must concern themselves also with protection of their Iida! pool!! which have suffered ve.ry serious damage. It could take more than 100 years to restore some of them, said flt Ott. Mott saidthe. problem of conservation docs not stop at the beaches: it ranges back lhc coastal plain to the mountains and streams which carry sand to repleni1h the beaches. "We can't talk beaches y,·ithoul looking lo the mountains. \\le can destroy the beaches v.·ithout entire environmental planning," ~aid the speaker. Acquisition of beach area from Point Conception south is the state's priority item, said the official. He said currently 1he stat(' cannot (because of the high in- terest ratesl sell bonds for acquisition but ls discussing with private owners lhe possibility of accepting bond! in return for their lands. Runaway Auto Does No Damage A run3\\';iy car rolled across all traffic lanes on South Coast High"'·ay Saturday morning, missed oncoming cars from both di rections and came to rest againsl a utility pole. Laguna Beach police report. Officers said the car. ov.·ncd by George W. Turner, 260!I Victoria SI .. l\'ilS parked on Vi ctoria before it took oU on ita: solo journey shortly after 7:30 p.m. The handbrake apparenlly had not been set, police said. Coast Pa1·ks Asked LOS ANGELES (AP) -R•p. John V. Tunney said today he will propose in Congress that lhe sovcrnment designate several coastal areas as a Califomla Coastline National Park. The park would incorporate the coastal portion5 of the U.S. J\laMne Corps Base at Camp Pendleton, the Channel Islands, Van- denburg Air Force Base, Los Padres National Forest along the Bi& ~ur coast and lhe Point Reyes National Seashore. "')111 purpose ol lhls park wtll be to prot•ct the public inlerest In the scenic, biological, r.ecreatlonal and economic values of Cali· lornia's ocean front." the Damooratic candidate !or the U.S. Senate said at a news conference. ----------· NEW PILOT 'COVER GIRL' Fashion Writer Ch risty Miss Christy 'Cover Girl' For Pilot Tuesday's new i•cover girl" for the ~·omen's aection of the DAILY PILOT is Marian Christy, one oC the natlon'I most respected fashion writers. \Vinner of 12 national wrlUn1 awards and three state awards (Mauachusetta) in the past three and a half years, Miss Christy is noted for her global gallopln&: in the coverage of the fashion beat. She insists on spending at least three month.I out of each year coverln1 the fa shion news capital of the world -New York, Paris, Rome, Medrid -even Dub- lin, when Ireland Is where It's happening. A native of ~ton, Miss Christy w11 graduated from Boston UnJversJty'1 School of Journalism. 1 She became fashion edltot of the Bol- ton Globe In 1965· atter four years u a feature writer fm: Women's Wear Daily. Her syndicated column now appears In newspapers throughout th e United Stales. It will be a weekly feature of Ule DAILY PfLOT, beglMlng Tuesday, and will be featured each Tuesday on the cover Pl&• of the women'!! section. J'rom Page l CONGESTION • • astronomical costs that force the federal government to step In. Erosion he Aid threatens four north county beache!f, In- cluding ijuntington Beach, most popular in the state, and JIOO million Jn property developinent and a fOW' lane blghwiy. REDUC ES ABILITY The speaker sa!C! development on dry 1 sand red uces the ability of the &bore to protect us from wave action. He mentioned a parking lot built on ary sand at Aliso Beach to handle autOs as well as people and said the South Coast area has much more land in private ownership than the north coast which has far greater density. f\1arx. author of the prize.winning book ''The Frail Ocean," talked of. jellies \\'hich "interrupt the drift of sand that nouri shed the beaches" and of flood con- trol dame thal stop the supply of sand from the hills. He lalked of dumping Into the ocean and dredging or estuaries w h i c h decrease their ability to h1ndle p0llu· tion. He said the Upper Newport Bay has aspects which make It just as much a scenic wonder as Point Lobos at Mon- terey :.r Torrey Pines in La Jolla . ~farx cited the example of Laguna's Victor l{ugo Inn and adjacent Heisler Park as an example: of lrying to make lhe Coast both usable anad sctnlc. EROSION PROBL~fS There are also erosion problems from Doheny State Beach to San Clemente., said Marx. He said Oregon is regulating development on dry sand and Santa Barbara has arranged a 30·foot setback on geologically 11nstable coastal bluffs. He cited lhe Capistrano Highlands as a good example of a bluff that should never have been built on. Speaker Ruiz pointed to the 1941 flian for Orange County shoreline develop- ment. He called it a good study and paraphrased its essential thrust a5 "t"or GOO's sake buy the coast." He said the study said or the 42 miles of coastline, "It will never be: any longer and it 1\•ill never be: any chtaper." Ruiz said that in 1941 there 'A'ere 30.2 miles of countY beach in private o'A·nership Rnd 12.5 in public. Today the prf\·a te sector has d'A·indled to 19.2 miles and the public ownership is %3.4 but much of !his was due lo acq uisition of an ad· ditional seven miles by the stale. The Salt Creek controversy. ~aid Ruiz, served as e catalyst and precipitant that brought the beach needs Into sharp focus. He cited county measures that h1v1 come since. FEST I VA L GIVES RE.4DERS $2,000 A n .ooo donation from the Futlval d At1a to Laiun1 Beach Hill\ School'a C.1lOC'al Rtaders will pay th11 rtlders' air fare to San F'ranci!ICO ..-·htrt they have bc-tn ln\'lled to perform Yeb. 7, during 1 con\·entlon of the Callfoml1 Auoclatlon of ""eache:r~ of En!llrh. The presentation on t>Qhalf of the Fr~11v11l B~ard or r.trcctors ~'•~ m11.de by \\'illlam ~fartln. festival pre:sldent. Ac· C':'.plln!{ for thl' re1;:e.r1 \l'llS t,aguna Bench High School 1tudcnt Tom Hout5. I . ~ Five Cr(lSh Victi~ Die In County four Orange OountilJ\B, lncJudinj I San Clemente sports car driver, were killed In traffic crashes over the weekend. the Catifarnia tlighv.'ay Patrol reported to- day. A fifth motorist died of injuries 1ur. ftrtd one v.·etk earlier, bringinC the coon· ty's 1970 traffic death toll to 1%. Killed i.nstanlly Saturday night when his sports car struck a tree beside Ganado Qrive near Ortega Hlghw1y 1n San Juan Capistrano was John Laurence Stauff, 4%, of 120 E. Escatones, Sin Clemente. Police. 6akl Stauff, who recently r~um ed from paratroop duty in Vietnam, wu "" JI County Trafflt Deatb Toh IHI II returning from a bachelor party in honor of hill brother, Ha rold , when the accident occurred. He \vas to have: betn best man In htr brother's weddln&: Jan. 14. TREATED FOR curs Stauff's passenger, James Lewil, al, of the same address, v.•as treated for cuts and bruises al South Coast Community Hospital in South Laguna and releued, paltoe said. An elderly Garden Grove relidtnt. Vtrsll C. Robinoon, II. ol 10032 Melody Park Drive, died Saturday at 1:45 p.m. at Palm General Hoepital of injurlet tuf- fere:d wbell he was struck by an auto Jan. 10 on Brook.burst street in Garden Grove.. Police slid they are still inv• (!gating the accident. ' Another Garden Grove resident, Mrr. Luctlle Hittle, ~I. ol 969t Westmlnater Ave .. succilmbed to her injuries Sundly mom!nJ. Police aald she and a com- pankm, Mrs. Lois Haws, of Xemvlllf', were croasing Westminster Avenue neat Kerry Street Saturday evening when they were struck by an auto driven by Mrs. Cecilla Green, 21, of 10t8t Haurd Ave., Garden Grove. Mn. Green was not held. SERIOUS CONDmON Mr,. H8y,•a. who is in l!lerlous condition at Westminster Community Hospital, and her husband were visiting the Hlttlt family, police said. The two women were apparenUy on their way borne fn:llll marketing when U. accident occurred. La Habra pollce said today they ,,. 1llll aearchlng for the driver of a vehicle which reportedly struck and killed Mn. J acqueline May Stubbs, to, ot 1710 E. La Habra Blvd., early Sunday mornJnc. Accordinl ti> witnea... Mn. StubN WU struck by a late model light colored Cir while croeslng the street in front ot her home. 9.uena Park police today stated they are continuing to investigate the Satur· day morning accident which took the life of a Buena Park housewife. Mrs. Elsie Rita Ramoa, 37, ol '133% Chi ppewa Circle. was stopped for a traf- fic light at Knott and Orange avenues when she waa &truck headon by the vehi· cle driven by Jack McKinnon,. 26, ol 12Z Bella Vista St., Anaheim, police said. f.-fcKinnon's vehicle apparently crOMed the center divider line, ramming Mrs. Ramos' stopped vehicle., investigators state.d. McKinnon was treated at W~st Anaheim Community Hospital a n d released. CdM MAN BETTER A Corona de) Mar resident, John Stein· brorter. 20, of 3036 Breali;ers Drive, was reported recovering from injuries IUf· feed Sunday morning in a single car crash on Newport Avenue .at Barrett Lane near Orange. CaUfornla Highway Patrol officers said Sleinbroner was a passenger in the ve.hJ. cle drlven by Kerry Bruce. Moore, 20, of 1214 W. Santa Clara Ave .. Santa Ana, who is recovering from injuries In tho same ho~pltal. Patrolmen said the h>i·o v.•ere north· bound on Nev.·porl "at a high rate of speed" 'ft'he:n t.-foore lost controJ of the car on a curve and hit a guardrail. Both youths were ejected from the auto on im· pact, officers said. A Santa Ana hwbancl and wife are listed in critical condition in Santa Ana Community Hospital today followlni a l'A'o-<:ar collision at La Colina Drive and Redhill Avenue near Tustin Swx:lay morning. Highway patroln1en said either the auto of fltr. and i\lrs. Charles Hotm ber1. Jl21 Ravencrest. Santa Ana, or that driven by !'\iarvin Hollenberg 25, from the Afarinc Helicopter Station. Santa Ana, ran a stop sign at La Colina caus. Ing the accident. Holll'!flberg was ltt•t· ed and released from lhe some hospita l. Lagunan's Wife Hurt in W reek The wife or Laguna Beach tleclrleal contractor Gorden Stracban was sl!Jhtly hurt In a Laguna Canyon Road ti:aUlc collislvn FrldRy evtnlng. Pollet! report Mn. Charlotte n. Strachan, :IO, ~·as attempting a ltft tum on Llguna Can)·on .RoJd at 5 p.m. from thl" drlvtw~y Of Gordon's Electrlc, htl Laguna Can)'on Raad, when her car col· Pi"<! .,•Ith an eastbound vehicle driven by Charle~ Edward Kollman, !O, ol 440 B· ····:a Ave., Corona del i\far. Kollma n told pollC'e ht S\\'ervcd riaht b t \VI S .unablC' to avoid striking the rear of the Strachan vehicle. 1'frs. Strachan ii:ufftrecl a head laceration and ~'as treat· ed by bu own phyaJc.lan. .! I I -------· ............. ..---........... .__._ Mond11. JanUll'Y 19. 1970 DAILY l'ILOT :J/! I TUMBLEWEEDS By Tom K. Ryan SAL Y BANANAS ly Charles laf'IOfti Ae!ILLETIN!: Ii IS NOW SCAl.P INV-N'T"ORY 'TIMI! J,. •• MONDAY JANUARY' 19 r vr•~,~~I l;mll!:NIWt (Cl (60) Jtrry Dunpby. H11nt1Q·lrlnkl11 (Cl (30) S AUtn Sllow (C) (90) Guts11 lrt .13}'1'11 M11dows. J1rry Colllns, am H1nde11on. U CHARLTON HESTON-* "THREE VIOLENT PEOPLE"-IN COLOR! 8 ln1ln1 in Adltt (C) (30) Bt!· k1tb1tl hi1htlll!ts. D @ (I) Q) llC Mel!fty Mtvlt: (C) "Hn T• S1••1 I Mllllo11" (com· edy) ·~rer H1pburn. Petar 01oolt, EU Walltch. Hurh Crillilh,il Ch11lu BoJer. An 1le1ent P1r11l1n 11hll1nthroplst. who 11 In ttality tn art torier. '""' to 1llow lh• french 1owrnm1111t to 11llillit one of his finest pitcts, Cellini V1nus- 1 take. His d1u1ht1r, h1rin1 tht for1erv will ba diSCOY1r1d, conspi11! with 111 1rt drtectin ('ll'tlo h11 bat11 hired to aipose 1111 rorttr) to sl11! !he strtue. m David frost Shtw (CJ (70) M1rty Allin 1u1stt. m T11t 111 Y1JllJ (C) lfiO) m S.11bruafl Th11tr1 (&0) f!) PtDI (30) 9:00 ID 9 (() Ml71Mrry R.F.O. (C) (JO) Utllt Mika vol11nttt1s to bkt Clll of How1rd's ltlki"n1 m)'Tlllt bird, then 10111 it. Mike bttys 1 autisli· lute bird 1nd bep Aunt Btt not , PERKINS THI: PRCCEElllN& INFORMATION IS AN EYCUJSl\IE Sl:RVICE CfllllS NEWSPAPER! •• • 0 S~ O'Clock Mowi1: (C) ''111111 Yklltnt Ptopl1'' (western) '57 - Ch1rlton Hulon, Anne B1xl!f, Gil· btrt Roland. Ctrpttb1uers threaten an IX·Conltd1r1!1 otficer's ranch, ind his wife tries to use htr setrtl p1st to U\'I him. Diet Yin DJk1 (30) 1111 fllntston11 (C) (JO) stir Trek (Cl (60) to !tit D 9 (jJ m NIC MoM17 Mtvi1: (r) •1w1 iUtu tM llinr" (com· tdy) '66-0e1n Martin, Alain De· Ion, '°'' Si11\op, RO!lmllY fonyth. JUD~' PARKER (1) Alt flltws (C) (30) fitrt New? (30) CIJ CBS Naws (C) {30) Padon Gltan1 (30) New1 (C) (60) Jae~ Whitt. t :SO llfillC Ntwwrvic1 (C) (60) The Ci11111 C1Mt (C) (30) My 1norlt1 M1rtian (30) l]) f'trry M111111 (60) Offlc9 of till P1tsid1nl (30) (R ITJ Hunt11y-Brinlde1 (C) (JO) Pfiibt (C) (30) Tiit 1!tlry of t~e m111dwnfuret tA a seanisl! nobl•mtn willl roaues. AFTE~ 11scals ind knave1 of fronlitr Amel· TA)(IH'7 ltl. A.!&EY f,PE+j(.E~ 8 Hlfl Co111 tht St1fl (C) (60) TO Pl~~E~, Oon Ad1ms is llonor!d tnd ~ar1s1td SAM t'~IVER: by 81111111 F1ldon. Ed Plitt. lton· 1 tlECIPES TO 'oi: ard Stirn, 0.mila Jo, Woody Wood· STOP 8V -.. bury, Hertic Sty1u, S1ftd1 Btron l .JVPGE "'-fk~ ·-. nd Al111 Ortkt. ~ 11C:*E ! - flll ET Jo11rn•I (CJ (60) '"A 4 (])TM Mun1tt11 {30) iiOtid•r• 34 (C) (60) llM1~ Nm (C) (30) Gli p31 f1f Chin1:' 1 J -)J•_-p-;·';°,._:- 1 J..-"""1mpld11 M•liul1• (30) J I/ ·-? 1:00 IJ CIS El'tlniq N1w1 (C) (JO) CJ Whtt'1 Mr Unt? (C) (30) P111· 1list1 for the wttk art Pe20 Cass, Al1n Alda, Soupy Sales ind "rltne franc ls. 1 11 lov• l lfCJ (30) Int the Clod (Cl fJO) 'Ce111modlty/Mutu1I fund (C) !R) CJ) M0Rd11 Show (C) (2 hr) h11adt." Cary G11"t. Aud11y Htp-1 l111t11. 13 Allor1! (30) IS CIJ Tr11ttt ot tonuquencu (CJ le C.Wt Wotld (Cl (30) · m T1lll e1n 1t1 130> l :lO rJ TONIGHT'S BEST BETI * THE DORIS DAY SHOW! rJIII Cll "'""' (tl (30) "'•-MOON MULLINS does1ft worrt 1bnul lht conuquen· ces wh1n sl!1 '11kes" •ir poodlu from 1 priYllt, locktd 1~mobitt, but slM ultimllel1 linds h•tst!f In court on • robbery thar1e. J1mes Mlllllollin. Jerom• Covrlan, Chulas I Lant a~d ISM Arna! 1u11t. 0 Nm (C) (30) lltrter W11d. Ill 1111 Jefl111 lffl'S (C) (30) fZJ Hone 01111"• (60) IJI hwblt Mnictl (30) 7'JOUSCIJ""""' «> (60) "Thi JIKl11 Gun." Tiit lonftimt ftud 10:00 8 ft(() c.r.t l".""llt (C) (60) ef wldowtr-r1ncfl1rs P11111<t H1im1t fll11 Wilton ind Vikki Clrr IUIJt. 1rtd Cltt1 Boldin is rtkindled by 1 8 m """ (C) (60) tllt rom1nct l!f Htimes' Diii[ ton QI DtJlt! (C) (60) Dibble D11ke, 11\d Boldtn's only d1u1hltt. R1dl1 rd Tht Brooklyn 8rid11 and M1rty X. Sl1ttcl)', S11n McClory, Pe1e1 Allen 1uul. Jta:in tnd Laurie Mock 1uesl. I m,.,.., M-(&Ill ARE YOIJ SURE IT ISN'T AN IMPOSITION •. OU~ WA.LK l~G ,., • •· • il"'A~OllNCEP ~- , . ., , By Jotin Miles By Harold Le Doux - PEANUTS By Charles M. Schulz • Nv\KE VP' "°"' 5Tlll'l0 M!ND! TF.LllVISJON VIElVS Brody Also In Show Biz By CYNTHIA LOWRY -, ·~·----.. " NEW YORK (AP) -Michael James Brody' J r .. the generous margarine millionaire, not only'..· made the fiead.Iines over the 'veekend, he also broke : into sho\v business -at the top. That keen and fl ex ible booker of talent, Ed Sullivan, moved fast and signed up the 21-year..old Brody for his Sunday night sho\v. Brody had ~en handing out money for sev~ral day~ and .Pr':lnusmg to give away more. Knowing public cunostty was running high , Sullivan kept Brody's "singing debut" until close to the end of th e CBS hour. WHEN IT came, it may have been ~he biggest anticlimax in television since the marriage of Tiny Tim. Brody, in casual clothes and clutching a guitar.J came on stage with hi s you ng \Vife and announcea diffidentl y, "This is my first ap,pearance anywhere ever." He strummed the guitar and sang something called "You Ain't Go ing No,vhere." At the con- clusion, Mike kissed his \Vile, confided that "I've got 100 billion dollars to give out next \Veek ." and disappeared. lt .-ts very probable that Brody makes a. better philanthropist th~ perf~rmer and ~t is almo_st cer- tain that Ed Sulhvan \VJIJ have a big fat ra'ting for his show because Brody appeared on it. C!t le Mr !f~r!d 1~d W1lctin1 ti PJ) Fil1q UM (C) {60) "Why Don't It (C) .. (30) · DMf' ig .• f?ut:lllter Conserntlvtl Und1rst1nd~" W1llt1 Wen!. [l!en Mon~oe 1 ins1stentt llortr ~poport 1nd Wts Pllsk1r-1 "_[:::~~ STEVE ROPER By. Saunders and Overgard THE OTHER acts \vere the stand ard Sullivan mix ~ the singing.dancing Kes sler Twins, Cassius Cla y in·~ scene from his no\v-closed Broad\vay play. a comedy magic turn, and June Allyson singing a medley of old songs. Brody, it turned out, bright- ened the Sullivan corner considerably. tt11t 1 eommunlut10ns 111> e:xltb both aharplr ,ritlcal ot Wll lltm F. hetwttn Mr husb1nd ind d1u1hterj Buckley"s ~im-Join Buckley 111d I 1.,~ Is supported by Lydi1's school wh1n t<1natmtive HtrYey Huk1ri to dis· Jolln his to .10 see •~•. ~rlncl!!il.I cu» toniiht's topic. 11 MtKE '~ Altn Oppenh11mer 1nd l1ll1n F11ld _ _. ~ M "" 11"1 CONV€R5ATION 1ueat. fl) c.r.., "' u"'ris-...,. WtTH THE 8 stuntp U11 St.111 (C) (30) . ! Hl~HL y Guisb: Lloyd Hayrits. Deni• Hich· 10:30&1Cfntltli (30) t IMPRESSEO , 0111. ~ren V1lenl!ne. WAfTR!SS JS fl @(JJ'U) It T1kt:J • Tllilf (C) 11:1>0 II CJ 0 Nlws <tl StlDDENLY 16<1) ''Th• Ste1l·Dfi¥\n1 Min." Al g Th• Wedtn11r1 I c,.;{)fD WHEW Mundy tlsh Ills lilt on th• 1u!O· , H , 0• • • bilt r1tetr1ck5 of £uroP1 lit Rtl GMovft: \ovi, •tt 111" .'.. ~OOCOMES :°I &aft ht Cordona where th' l!01111" (dra!"a) '65 -Vlrn1 Lisi, I BACK FROM llirssi1ns h1v1 Cub1·tyPt mbsl!e Feter Btldwin. THE PAl<XJN(j b1s1 pltlll. Mario Andr1ttl plays m l'lfttn l'tttt /.OT.1- hirn•lf 1nd Ferntndo Limas, Ft· • llci1 f1ft. Dick Smotl!911. Edw1rd OJ H1 Said, Sll1 Stid fC) Binns and Grtr Mullrwy 1uest. @(I)~ til ft ((J fllm (C) MIKf/-J WE:t-JT OUT TO CME CK oui;: 111'\ES .. ·Al.ID·~THE T.QUCK .' ... IT'S lll&N STOLEN/ l'J Million $ Mnia: "Tiit E111 Elli M¥tRturt (30) "Jnurney to Pal•·! W.r (cornedJ) '51~•1Y G1an1 illllll.. 'I BellJ' Or1k1, Lurent Tuttlt. The MUTT AND JEFF I J RELAX', JOKER I ~U PROS\.Y FORGOT WHERE WE PARl<EO IT/ w1t1 of 1 city 1n1ln1e1, motlier cf €EJ m CiE Haws ft) 1-.,,-,--. -,-.. -.,--,;,_1i-,,-_-E, th111 children, 1dds 1 homele" ,.,.,.,. •• Yl'nt'\1:t ,..,......, younpt1r to htr brood, then •n· 11 :10@ {]) Cln1m1 Stven\ttfl (t) '1.11t LITTLE NUMBERS other 11!d IM!lher. of tht 81dmtn." I "T1-IAT APP&AA oN m Truth or Cot1uqu111C11 (C) t30) TH& BOTTOM ENO 'THOS\i ARE"lllll RELEASE DATES! I/MATS RELEASE DATES 11-iJirT "!HE DATE "THE AR:TlllT PUTS ON EACH STRIP SOT+lE \iDITOR . ll) Mlior Ad11111 (60) 11:~• IJ Qt (J) M1rY GrHlin (t) Ot="T~ESE STRIPS 01 <R> ' liV&RY DAI' L.>KE fl.IT1chnlml t.Nier (3 tllll)(])lt)J&hnn1 Canon (CJ f .. 'r ,z .. 1o''ETC.? fm ftt11dt Clltf ~]()) Juli1 Child .tJln Kl111 ls substitute host thii f1rwp1r11 I v1ri ety of u r1mel·ll(1d wat•. Jtnt Mor11n ruests. I t demrts. m Ctlvdlt " lloto (30) &.'00 II m Uwtfl·ln (C) (601 (iuu1 Ptter L1wford wort;s up 1 lit~tr tNlf Wvin1 comme1titls, pl17~ C1«11 Wtlllinrton ind lnnnh 1 hit modern musicel. n' '"!lll!Tht le11 Hopn Show (~) (30) he story of 1 1rut roJftt. (R) m Te T1U Ult Trvtlt (C) (30) iallltd: M11ht/f11tu1n (30) · m w.ilf ,,.. •• cc1 <6oJ IE P11tdtn1111 (30) 1;301J@(f)Hert's lvcy (C) (30)1 Ylvl•n .IOntt arrivta in Hollywood ! ind 1~pects l11tJ to mekt 1ood ht1 11tomiia to 11T1nrt 1 dln11e1 dolt with L1wrenct W1!k.. t1wr1nt1 Welk. I Vtvlan Ytnct Ind Mtty Jin• C1111t I 1u«t. • TUESDAY DAYTIME MOVIES liD 9...... Mdri<• ~II' C.,ld'" (comtdJ') ''' -Jimmy Lfdon. "'M•rr AN!kll hlnp II" (eomtdy) 'U-Jlmmy Lydon. D "M'tlftt'11• Co"e!usion (10· m•l!Ctl ''6 -Clar~ G~bl1, Grerr "'"°"· t :!O D "CriiM W1¥1" {dr•m•) '54 - SCttllni HQdln. B ku,•1 ShlW (C) Sc~tdultd ru•sts Include Ale( Kendrick, Sim· uel Houston Johnson, Ted Mick, lshlay Mon!t1u• tnd M1rtltl R1)'1. fJ &) Old CM!t (C) 11Yth• Din· ~ar, Boll EJllott, R•Y Gouldln1 and Jotin Stblatitn 1uest. m Mtwili: "YtHtw DJ" (mltm), 1.,:;:;._~~...lr,£_..:J '48 -Gtttof)' Pttk, Allnt 811ter, 11 lllthtrd Widmart;. OJ Mt'tlt: .._...... Ait hi TOWll" (lrrlsteni) 'SS-Rex Ruton, Robtrt Arthur, KlthJ Nolan. 1:1>0 IJ Mnlt: (C) "Lut tf tllt 114· 111111" (w11tirn) 'S7-titor11 Mont· 111mtl'}'. Jtll'I« !11sl. Dou1111 ICan· 1 nedy. DDN..,(CI 8 C1111111•1tJ l1lltti11 loer~ (C) m Adltl TllNtll: ''TM Awnprt. .. ID "Cept1111 c.•~· 1111v111tur11 '40-Vlctot M1tur1, Leo C.rril!o. 12::00 D "Enter M•d••" (comaity) '3S -EHISI ltftdi. Carr G11nt, LJftnt &.ll'llll!l. 1:30 m "'f)t lllt,..lllc#t A•berteM" (d11m•l ''2-Joltpll Cotllfl, AIM• Moorflltld. I 2:00 Q (C) "'"" Ttu'l'I l11B111 Mt" (111mtctJ) '!3-lrodlrkk Crtw1trd. C.1a1rt Trevor. m "SmR lllllt .. M•• (Wtlf• t rn) '5$ -Loli A!b1l&f\t. C111rlu O~lnllv1n. ';JO 1J "'Jiit lllltet KMtoll ..,,-(bl· DRraplly) '&1 -Don1hf O'Connor, I ~nil 81)111. • GORDO ? WILL.KNOW W>\EN."Tt> PUi \TIN T+IE NEWSPAPER! Most actuality prograins are produced by the ne1,vork s. \vhich use their own news departments. and thus even a \Veil done program by an indepen- dent producer has difficulty finding a net\vork berth. "Thirty Days to Survival" is one of those, but it Impressed a sponsor \Vho lined up a lot of inde- pendent station s to broadcast it The program is the filmed account of 1he experiences of a group of young Americans -average age 17 -in the moun- tain wilderness of \Vyoming. THE EXPEDITION was headed by Paul Pel· zoldt, founder of the National Outdoo r Leadership School, \vho believes that an experience in survivaJ builds character and independence. Petzoldt and his aides taught the young people ho\v to climb and descend the sheer face of moun- tains, to cross rushing streams. to identify edible ) j / roots and nuts, to fish . to read n1aps and follow '->.)[/ 9-10 trails. o·ft.'31·19 THE PARTY packed into wil derness country ''X LOV&TO carrying their own supplies to learn for a month ~ONFOSE under supervision. Then they were left to their own DITQR.S! devices 60 or 70 miles fro1n the nearest ranch to '). make their way back by living of! the land. They ·~ .,X~ . made il. it was hard. and it \Vas the basis of a ~\,..f";'jj <(.. .,,1.11' 11 _..;v..;er..;y:..::in..;t_:_e..;re_:_s..;b_::n,,_g .:.h..:o.::u_r ..:o.:.! -'-t e"l-'-ev-'i-'-si:.:o.::n_. ------- •/'I ,·ti : I --12. 100.2 4 ;10.v.l:t I H9 i;·l'l.,,.'\H9 '-=1""y-G°'"u_s_,,_A,,-rrf-I ""'""'"'1 ALL. Wr. WANT TO KNOW IS, IS IT ANY'l'MING WHICH MAS eve11: 9'FOll:E SEEN £ATEN ~YMUMAN . Dentais the ltle1aace .. ..... .. ' • 1 ' ! I l ! l • I I L _1•111' 1'1oney's \Vorth GNP Up, But Whatlslt? II)' SYLVIA PORTER ~. : \a his St.8te of the Union ,. mesuge later thl.s week, Braident Nixon will mention 6 apedrk llAtlsUc for our na· tfoo'1 Grou NationaJ Product In J970 and he'll almost surely loieca1l that GNP wUl rise lo ' ·the hl!toric annual rate or $1 :·trillion before 1970 ends. This . Pftdjctloo, coming from the :. White House Itself, will m11ke : ' beadlh'lt1 the world over -~and mlllions of you ~·ill pick it :up. repeat it, nlc1nori2c It, foltow lt • : This is the ll'a y It ahva)'l'i · · &°''· for GNP is !he single .. gr~&t mcasurr of the size of •• the--.u.s. ecoriomy. thr most comprehensive cc on om i c staUstlc the "artists" in the l'itotistical world have invented so: far. BUT BACK ur a minute. :. Oi,_you l'!ally know what this c· fiiiore stands for, what 11 in- ; ch.1dts and does not includ~ Do ;: you undersuind what's behind , . .my sim ple statement that · GNP is the market value, ex· • . I EARN •' '""'"t by th• 20th •nd ·••"' f,om th• I st on 24.MOflth full paid inv•1fment Thrift ,•C..+ffic•t. ... Or SVi 1. on '· r.,.boolt Acco1tt1t1 on '"'Y ~ Yot1r wi"1tha sh ~.d ...... ~····~ --.c1~d. ' 170 I. 17tti St. COSTA MIS.A •SMlll": AMERIC.lllM ""OUITltl.111.L l.111.MM:ERS AnOCIATION, CAlll'"ORMIA 1..0CIATION OP" IMOUSTltlAL, LOAN COM,.Alfll:S I pressed In dollar~. of our n1· lion's total output oJ goods and Sf.r\·lcts? You're the exttplion tr yoo do, so here arc some little known facts ;ind some shorp observations abol.1l this tidy ynrdsllck: (I) It'! a vague c~tlm:ite, that's all Jt is. It is fnr, far fron1 11n actual su m of lhe dollar value of its components. 12) IT'S EXCEEDINGL\1 • ln<iccurate and al\\·ays is su!>· ject to C-Onstant revision ex· lending for years alter the event. jJ) It ls ~ \'Cry reeent ln· vention too . The first tirne the Commerce Dept. issued .i liNP estimate wa s a mere 2!1 Air West May Issue Nelv Stock SAN FRANCISCO fAP) .- An Air \Vest spokesman said its director~ w i I l meet in the near ruture lo schedule a stockholders vote on a pro- posed $30 million issue of new preferred stock. The Civic Aeronautics Board last month approved purchase of Air West by Hu ghes Air Corp .. a subsidiary of Hughes Tool Co. Procrcds of th'e lltock :;pie \~·outd be used to meet ncl \1·orth ('(lmmitments in lhe purchase agreement w l t h billlo.1a1re 1101\•ard Hughes. The Air \Vest spokesman said legal representatives of Hughes and the airline were "·orking mean\\·hile to com· plete required moves for the }lughcs acquisition . Air \Vest. operating 9,000 miles or routes from Calgary, Canada. lo f.texico , acknowledged last "'eek tha1Jl had been in arrears on payments to some airporls. Thi.' spokesman said Air \Vest had submitted proposals for complete settlement over a period of time. A number of airport managements have reported acceptance, he said, a,1d others have not yet com· pleted action. Crossword Puzzle ACROSS 1"-6ulb•"~ Gogol now tl ' lntllgue 10 Jnt.trnational allianct: j,bbr. 14 A.ctlvt caust IS T1.lk loud 1.nd lonlj Ht Asian country 17 fltpultd crl11lnal =· roup 18 Jrl!Sl!ll! I• futl 20 A.dVlllCI! f : 'on wa11es Zl Business letter . s1lutatlon 23 Sovtftignt:t 2S Vast art• • 2W Connttlivl! ""' 27 Ptrlo4 2' Trl111 31 Bob bail ·31 Lu1urlant •.'JS.O siris' wilt 37 Avoid 41 Currtnt .• 42 Anci ent Hal lan goddtss 44 Gas • 45 1Ci11d ot busi nt~\ pf JC I! •7 Social climb~r •a Corpor~ls, t .g.: Abbr. 41 Chil d 51 Was indebted 53 Piect of ¥1!1 Se 5C Likt lY 57 State: Abhr, S<i-···dtllS lil Kind of 11e9aliT t '1011! 114 Ho1din11 dtYiCt 111 P1essur!: Comb. rorm li8 Contintnt lift Ptrlum t 70 Num,r1ca! prt'lir: 71 Sl:ati n11 art"n a 7 Z Buzz. 73 Ex ami nation 7C Joint J S Ga ins DOWN l Pound down 2 Japantst isingl11ss ] lnltiativts 4 Htrbattous plant Sa turday's Puzzle Sol'lt d: 5 Motionlt ss Ii Forecast 7 Halt 8 Ra11g r sections II Camptd out 1(1 Pltasant 11 Fr~granc t 12 Captured 13 Con!lnousty; 1 words 2Z Put down 24 G1a!l n11 Z7 Fine···· ZS Patt JO 1nstr umt11t 32 Eurorw an capital 34 En9l 1sh duchy )Ii Prt· c \p1 t~l1r,r. form ' ' 1 '1,.'7 1) 33 Proftssional Jl"fSOll JIJ Sound 'O Noun ending 43 Second son of old 41i Moist 50 Land 5Z f imt p~1iod 54 Kind of super ior 55 Locat+o11 S!i Pastrit'!i sa .6.rra draintd by -a rivf'f fiO E~ctss !vt fi2 Bf1d bl Tti1n m.1rk DS Horatt or Tl1omas··-!i!i Ch1 t f '~eculivt; Abbr. •• -·· .. Scleilce Shrinks Painful Hemorrhoids .: ·»stops Itch-Relieves Pain ., ' Fmcla Way T1lat Bolh Relieve1 Pain ~"··· ...... ' . and Sluinb Pilea In Moat Caset • qe) took lll•ce. 'Mia -.cnt is I Prrpa .. atio" H*. There ;, no other fomula /or hemorrhoid• Ilk• it. Pr•Jl •ration H alao 1ooth11 lrritaW tl11u11 and llelpe pni.,ent furthtr lnfei:tion. In ol ntment or supposi to rr I orm. years ago; quarter1y er;timate5 wtrtn'l 1nade lll'llil 1947. (4) ll bu so frequently been the subject of wrong fore<:asts that a ftw years ago the Na- llonal Bureau of Economic Research made a special study or experts' errors in GNP predictions, found that thty came to a shocking 40 percent o( U1e year-lo-year change. 15) Tiii~ QUt.STlON, In ~hort. Is no t 11hether Prer;:id~nt Jol11s Royflteora Nixon 's projection "'Iii be 11-roni;: the question i!i only \Villiam T. Perkins of how 11 ru,1g lt will Ix>. I' · l Be h h To n1c. the truly lascinat ing iunting on ac as t:-ile is \\'hat GNP lcnl'es out. been appointed indus- Lct me put lh1s ln!O lern1s of trial relations ma nng- yuur· own life. er for Raytheon 's c:on1--If you !'pc1td .--as Sl'l n1any rnillions of u~ RcroSli lhc puter operation, Santa l:i nrl !ipcnd -manh leisure .t\na, lie joined Ra y· hours in do-ltyoursctr pa inting theon from Packard around the house, modernizing building, etc., you produce a Bell Electronics where birhgl house, a 1nodern ki1· he \\laS director 0 £ COITI• chcn. an extra room. etc. Bul pensation and benefit.~. you r C0'11lribut ion lo C:NP is ------------ ZE RO. All that ili counted 1s ll'hat you spend for point, lun1· bcr, nails, metals, t'lc. BUT IF YOU hire su1nennr to paint~ moderni2.c. build , etc.. "'hat you pay these workers ls a major con· tribution to GNP Their pro- duct may be inferior lo yours but their labor counts. -lf you stay home and clean, wash. sew, cook, all lhat you contribute to GNP is what you spend for appliances, materials, u t e n s i I s , in· gredients. etc. Your pro- duction -which JS your home -also is a big ZERO. But if you hire people to clean, wash, sew. cook. \vhat you pay them is a significant addition to GNP. Again, the results may be inferior to yours but their labor counts. A FINAL paradoy: say you stay at home and your best friend earns SISO a week as a secretary. Contribution l o GNP : her $150. Now let's say you take her $1$0 job and pay her $150 to tend your horne. Contribution to GNP is no\v $300. . And this is only a pal'I of lht tale. Since GNP is al"·ay:'i counted in dollars. price in- creases vitally affect tht' tota ls. Much of 1969's GNP rise "'as strictl y inflalion; more or I970's will be . So to make the figure more meaningrul. the Co111merce Drpt. <juotcs it in ';c11.1slan1" as "'ell as current dollars. For instance, wlttn GNP ~·as at f!M2.8 billion in current dollar~ lasl year. it was only $730.6 billion in 19J8 constant dollars !meaning price inc r e a sc s since 19fi8 had been wiped out of the total s). NO\\' SURELY you un- «lcrstand v>'hy I called GNP's r.1vcntors ' . a rt ; s I s . I in stalis!ics. And now you can read and hear Nixon's foreca st "'ith !he skepticism it war- rants. Work Starts On Birtchcl' Irvine Site Sensitron Gets Order Scnsitron Tnc .• Costa tl\esa, announced that it had re~ived an order from Sensorrnatic Electronics Corp., Akro n , Ohio, for 3·mlllicn1 ~cn~itized m a r k er s lnr u~c i11 Sensormalic 's ''Antl-PllJcrage System." The Sensormatic ~yslem ha~ \\•idespread applicat ion as an ;inti-theft device in retail sto res, libraries. art gallerie.c;, motels, and industrial plants. Se1ninar on Coiinty Growth Rescheduled A one-day seminar dealing \Vilh business growth i n Orange County Jnd its at. tcndanl problems which \1·as origina lly set for Friday, Jan. 16 has been rescheduled and wi ll be held Friday, ri1arch Ii. 9 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. al the nc\v Airporler Inn. 18700 ~1acArthur Blvd., Newport Beach. Titled ''Current Problems in f inancial 1\1anagemenl." the se1ninar. pr c se nt ed by University or California Ex· tension, Irvine, is coordinated by Dr . Earl S. Beecher. a~sociale professor of finance a nd insurance, Ca lifornia St11te College. Long Beach. Topics lo be dealt with In- clude financial growth, the turn-around situalion, con- glomerate acquisitions and bank consolidalion. b an k financing. and the role of in- dustri al real estate. Others on the day·s program wlll be Smith B. Davis, fin11n- cinl vice president. Southern Ca lifornia Edi&an Con1pany; Robert \Y. Brown. executive vice presidcnl, Fim Wrst'em Bank: Donald E. McLarnan, Pacific Coast a r e a ad- ministrator, small Business All M•k-All Modalo AllMll!tt>l5--Tr.ck• •·w~,,, St••it • M•~•• th1 Dih11111t 1" Ol'tllf'I C:-ty 4J1t (I'"'" Of, "'""'' .,... 1710 J .... lJ l•t ""'''-' "' s .• .,.,.,,. 11111 1lJ.1Ur Administration: Robert E. Thomas, co unt y ad· ministralive officer; James E. Shelton Jr., rorporate con- lroller. Beckman Instrument.~. Inc.: Or. Ronald S. Johnson, assistant to the vice president, financial ma na gc men I, Douglas Aircraft ; Dr. Charlr~ \V. Huegy. vice presiden t of finance and cronomie plan· ning, Cleary, Hilland Co.: and John Ed . Murphy. president or the Irvine lndustri:il Complex. Registration for the seminar 1nay be made. at the UC lrvlne F:xtension office, Rn1 . 1325 Cra\\'ford llall on the UCI c11mp11s. The fee is $~ and in· eludes lunch. A two-day meet.Ing dr;iwing computer experts from eduCa· lion, industry and government ~ervice will be held at Orange Coast College Jan. 29-30. Entitled califomla Educa· lionnl Con1puting Consortiu1n, lh!!. meeting ls expected lo al· lract more th an 300 COffiP\Ller ('ll'l!CUtiVC!!, occ will be h~t to lhc ..,ymposium. About 40 ~chools, colle~cs and uolverslt tes now belong lo CECC, p I u l'I govem1ne ntal 11.gcncies such as th~ U.S. ttoresl Service. Tlie orgnniz.li· !Ion is designed to provide a ba!!is for exchanAe nf ln- fonnation and lo h ' I p members keep abreast of developmrnti; in !ht> field . First day of the mttUng "'111 f~<itu~ sevcrtr l a d d re 11 l'I ts lro1n cxpertl'l in various lieldi, Pac Tel Bares '70 RESORT PLANNER Walt•r L. Spicer Spicer Joins Sim Valley l\1er"Cr "' ,-,· ................. , ... , .. ~. • Co1nplete-New York Stock List· ) ,.... ,., Cl*.J Nl1t11.Ma..0it. Market . Monday's Closing ~~ " ... • .. -;,' IWLY "LOT b Security's '. Board O& ... Merger Pia~ 1>ecurity Pacific N-11 Bank's directors •PiwO•eif • propoaed m1r1er qretllllnl bttween the bank and t.ht Bank of Sacramento. The mercer propo1al llrill·bt presented to Security •Pacific Bank's 1b1reholden, tOr .ap· proval, at the unual meetln&. MarF11 10. Direct.on of the Bank· flf Sacramento have apptbted the mor1er prOpoNI ~41\d ratillcaUon by tht bank't shareholders will be aousht at the bank't annual m~;on Feb. 24. · ., Tht proposed mer1or +.· ment calla for the e~·of one Illar• ol Secarl\y 'Pllil!ie Bonk stoc~ for etcll lhlf\ll.ol Bank of Sacramento ltoct: Ir •PJ111W•<f by tile ,... •. Uve banb' shareholdon, .lb• ""''" l• 111bJ•cl '°=· al by the approprlat. authoriU11. No tenlaUvf I< !or eompltUon ot tho .,. hu been eltlbllabtd. '\ · ..... ... Keyzers~ .. Center Posi Claude "Skip'' KeyUri -of Sant. Ana has been pnllMtecl to m11111er of N~ c.w developmtnflor llici lrv!no Cii. ni.e announcemlftl w 1 1 mode today by Temnoo A. Wellll, Olllfor ......... ot commettlat ·-I~ for lht eoml"'O)'. In his -potillmr. x.,..,, will supervl11 and - ail Newpart c.nter !!!!" merchl ~"!il· cludillf projocla,llJ tho ~ Co. and by Olllal6i dmlejiri. Ht eatlmateo lhil _ ,_,. "1erdil l"Oltcll lolallnr' .. mllll<n wllf be under .,.. alnlctloo or Ill Iha llnal pl.,,. niOI at.pa for No.wpor l Center durlna 1111>. • • ' ... . ~YPaOf .• . -~-.. :Medical ,_ .. .. . . .. ;Siude11ts ,··~'·. Miss Draft .. -... ~ .. '. Jl',ISHINGTON !AP) -On- bl· tnedical students will be ~ble for college deferment.'I ttndeT the Nixon ad· rftinistration proposals to l.!:~lnate draft inequities . . Mer a specified date. no 'qlOfr. student entering college ~.claim a draft deferment Qb;.tJje basis of education. , l!oWever. a iiophQmore, ,fuDior, 9r senior with an ex- ~. draft deferment \'fhen tJie.~ rules go inio 'elfect Wilt:}!<: pennifted to complete ~ u:r>de,rgraduate schooling. : .. JfbJs is Uie thinking of Pen-lirOri officials who have been aha_Png the Administration's ~hi to do away with d~ .deferments in the stu· c1ent;;«Cupatiooal, and paren- tal c.tegories. j . • l'REATEI> !!QUALL Y :secretary .of Defense Melvin a. Laird said last weekend Preiide.nt Nixon "wants to 'JnOn,. .in the direction so that '.all.J'..oung people are treated •eqtillly and lairly." 1 --Proposed measures to carry oat ' this objective will be revtewed by the 'National 'Securj.ty Council and laid ·~rare the Seqate Armed Services Committee n ex t month with indications the ad- ministration will put them into effect as soon as possible. Just when this will be Is still ,.upcertain. 1;,iluiciais said young m,n . }!a~g occupational a n d parental defennents at the Ume the more stringent rules 'take ,bold will be allowed to re- .tali) jhem. .But, as in the case of stU· de:!J\ deferments, no new ones will be granted. ' Unlike the student defer· m~nt, which officials say will permit uceptions for pre- medical students, there ap- pe~an to be no prospect of my further defermenur1or1ob . or family reasons, except where ~ip might be involved. .Sob .deferments have been heavy in the field or teaching, -poli~ce, and fire department .wairk. Authorilies e x p e cl corn· munlty needs can be filled adequately by former servicemen and no special delennents will be required in these areas. SAME REASONING The same reasoning applies to hard skill jobs In the m.echanical and le c h n i ca 1 ~ld5, It was said. As the United Slates scales d~ its commitment in Viet· nai:n a n d simultaneously reduces the overaJI size or the anned forces, fewer and fewer yoong men will be required for µte drafl The Pentagon ,ex- pe°"5 the draft will take about ~000 young men this yeilr, a drop of 65,000 from 1969, The lev.el should go down even lurther in 1971. _ J;ome Pentagon experts believe the virtual eliminailon ~f, atudent defermenta may in- ~ly help the flagging kpTC program W i th some UUdents pouibly enrolling as a hedge against the draft in· letnlpUng their ochooling . . ,_.Uihorities say provisions iJi11 be made for allowing ~ fi-eshmen who enter col-Jfi'E -before they are 19 to (dillh that first college year. ROiever, they would then h...,: to report for military ii#ric.. . • :~ bas stressed the new I~ Will keep dI aft ~inenlf In •fleet for ,i,Hlcal ad hatdsbip ,..... ... - ------ - ----- ----------. -- - -.. ---. ·;c;,·-"·-..">;;JiPlll""-i'°'">l'1"111~ .... ~ ......... """I'"''°"'~·~··. P.ricei Effective thrn Tue.day, Jan. 20th Seara Engine Block Guaranlee If any part fails due to defect& in mate• rial or workman&hip within 90 da~·5 from date of sale or 4.000 miles, "'·hi ch. ever occur& finl~ we wiO repair or re· place parts free of charge. L Se;irs Has Over 950 Makes and Models ALL ARE GUARANTEED Short Engine Bloeko Priced with Trade·lrl for Chevy ''283'' or Ford ''292"' •All cylinders are rebore"d and honed. $ and the , crankshaft is reground. All New part& in.elude pil!itons, rings, tim· ing Chain, camshaft ·hearing Aok About Seani Convenient credit Plan• ,.. ·- ears • , l'" • •\ •-.. • • I' 4 1 • • , • • . NEW TREADS~ Tuh.eless Blackwall " · 13-inch and 1-j.-inch •izes· Your Choice •.. Any Size Listed For / Plus Fed. Exe. Tax Each And 2 Old Ti.res SIZE f.E.T. SIZE f.E.T. ~"'-"'--~~~~-"'E~A~C~llCl ~-""=:...~~~~~~·~~~C2~ 6.50xl3 32c 7.00x 14 4\e "-""'-'-"'-"~~~~~-'-'= ~~~OO=x~J~3~~~----'3=-=4c ~7=.5~0X~l~4~~~~~44e~ 6.50x\4 40c 8.00xl4 45e Whitewall• Only '2 More Per.Tire! •Retreads on sound tire bodiet . . Having Transmission 'l:rouble? "The Next Best Thing to a New Car" is ~ Sears Remanufactured Automatic Transmission I Installed ~ l" • .lA,· v ,-------------------------------------------------~ I ~ f.ul fA 1-4 .. 00. 521-4530 ft MONTI GI 3-3911 lOHO a!ACH HE 5·0121 PICO WE 8· .. 262 SANTA ANA Kl '1·3371 TO~tANCE .5 .. 2.f 511 CANOGA , ..... 3 .. 0.0661 Gl&IDAu Of 5.1 oo ... a , ... 611 OLYMPIC , so10 AN a.5211 POMONA £0 2.114.s, .NA 9-516', vu 6-6751 SANTA •E sPRrNGs 944.9011 ul'L\No 9as.1m I I (QWTONN! 6-2511. N! 2-5161 HOlll'WOOO HO f •.59 .. 1 Ol.lNG! 637-2100 SANTA MONICA EX 4·6711 VAllEY PO J.8461, 984·2220 I C0YNA 966-0611 INCKEWOOO 01 1·2521 PASiJ>lNA 611-3211. 351 ·4211 SOUTH COAST PLAZA .540.3333 VERMONT Pl 9-lfl 1 ,________________________ _ ___________________ , . Shop NJalita MontloJ lhro119h Satllrday 9::111AJA.to9:30 P.M., Sunday 12 Noon to S P.M. "Satisfaction Guaranteed or Your Money Back" -_,. .. I • ' 7 7 • ----_.._,...__,,-... ., ,., .. ~ ...... 'Ii'".,,. •• 'l w ,.; ~+"Fiif *' . .. arbor T ... y'• l'bud I N. Y. St.eek•~ VQ~. 61, NO. '16, 3,SECTIONS, 32 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, ~lfQRNI~ TEN CENTS -! • .•. .. ,. . -•• ·; ' • I'. •. ,. .. I' •. " --·"' .. -· -·~ Newpor_t Makes Last Bid Qn C ~as,t.~l if reeway ·'By· JOllN'VALTERZA Of Mile IMllY l'Mlit ,..,, 'Ii "'POl'I Beach Mayor Doreen Mar!hall will>lead·•1tBil-member city delegation to Sacrinlento WedrieSday 1n a final attempt lo chailge the palh of the Pacific' Coast Freeway. The figbt·and Ion, list of trips to Sac- rameJlt9 Jn the biUer freeway battle bas entered.its seventh year. and this Ia.~st f;rlp. l!IO"'ol!ll>al! have vowed, will be lhe fi .. 1 .... ' - Besides Mn. Marsball,-otbtra.flying-to the capital will be. V}ce Ma'yor Lindsley Parsons, Councilman Paul Gruber (who in past-1ikirmishes led the flglit as may- or), Planning Director Laurence Wilson and Public Works Director Joseph Dev· lin (anot~ veteran 'ef 'the campai&n). The city stiff has remained rel'atiVely mu·m on the formal pru:ent.atJons expec· led to be made before the Hljhway Com· . . ' IDISSIOll. , ,, Devlin .aid the contenll of lh<'city Pre- .. • • ..... . • • • ' -·l . • \ ' t I ' U'f ~- MICffAEL 't ROOY"l'tAS UT-TLE-'l'ROUB'L E .GIVING MON~Y AWAY · .Now •'•· .1r1.lllion1ir.a' 'With; Puce, P:l1n,..Cur«.for. C1nca.r. . ' ' . (le ~ Trilli·ottai.-e~ Hip p;1 Tycoon Escalates ~ledges N!W YORK. (UP1-1'1ichael James crowds.·They exc.hanged-loving .glances Brod! •. who now says he will distribute frequently. $100 billion, or maybe an even trillion. .A reporter for the New York Times., allO prpmisµ a'Plan ftr peace in Vietnam who traveled to Puerto Rlco with the to President Nixon plus .cures for cancer Brodys over the weekend, reported-today• ahd ill other dbeasesJ the yo1.1ng heir conceived his plarLto.give Brody,· whose long ~ed hair aocl hip away his money while he was "tripped t:lothing belie his clainlcd wealth, insists OOt on drugs." he will give away monQ to anyone who ';What a joke l've pulled on the world!'". n~s it. the newspaper reported Brody said. Before a national televl!ion audience on "They think I'm Jesus Chrjsl" the ld Sullivan Show 1 Sunday night, The report added Brody met Rerl1!e Brody, 121. played a 1k1Jing,guitar and when she.ctme to Scarsdale, N.Y,, where sang a .ballad written tiy Bob Dylan, ht lived in a rented $80,lm.bouae, i.t,0 sell "You·Ain'l Goin' Nowhere ;" Then he pro-Mich·ael and some or his friends · aoffie claimed agaio: · hashish." J "I'm wtirth ·JOO billion ~ ollars. Does As.Brody escalated csUma~s~ his that stagger your mind? lnjact, that was wealth Suoclay, cirtumspect statements ye&WctaJ. I might -be worU. a trillion to--from his bankers were less d itllng. day." Officials of the Continental Bank 0£ Cro'A-111 or people~ many ( whom said Chicago, who wouJd not discuss Brody's they hoped for a gift from Brody, mobbed actual net worth, said qie_initit1 flporls the collegd dropout philanthropist as be he had inherited $25 million were a entered and left the theater. 'fYou're kill-.. gross exaggeration." The money came in( me," he shouted be.fort police hustled from Brody's maternal grandfather~ John him ioto a car and he drove away. P, Jelke, the oleomargarine manufac· Inside the theater earlier, Brody, who turer, who died in 1966. The estate, filed appeared flushed and excited, told for probate, .. was sakl to be worth reporters J>e\t would conlin.ue the $6,881,000, divided amon1 · 1 e v•e.r a I glvtaways· lf Ms ,public,. including those beneficiaries. 1 who have picked his pxket and pulled his ' seni.tion· will be kept aecr.t ''lo no one will misinterpret some parts or ·our com. mentary." The group· is-eipected to make· an ap- peal for a new study on the controveni1I freeway routing, proposals which. would push the path of the roadWay farther i1>" land and away from Newport's Mariner's Mlle and parts of the bhtffs near New· port Heights. But ~ · opposed to inland rOOting, principally the cities of Costa Mesa and Huntingla! Beocb,.Jtill _., aoy route cbangt. HuntJngton Beach's City Council in re- etnt. days has sald it doesn't object to the reopening of route studies, but Ill consent comes onlY, if houses in that city are not allec~. .• Any changes in routes, it is conceded, could take more homes, thus the "en· dorseme.nt" is not a marked change in Hunti11aton Beach's pos,iUon. · Any new in.land route Wo~ cut throUgb n~-Gf·tbo S:.,Ai:.,ftn.. i:~ln~Buct '. • C... Mesa~ •ho hav CGlllll- t~"" l!ilml nute •• rec<mJy reiterated....,. polAiab avln H any, new\, iriland , l'OiMI 'ata7. Wkbln Newport city Iimlb. i" ,. ,,. .:: ~ . -. ' Newport VlclMayorf!1r10N, who last month ·offeraf some new roote augge&o lions for Inland areu <il\Newport Height!, said Wednesday.'• 'meellll& is the. "last ~.'! . - • • ( t •• Otber ....... _ ..,..a, -8ddlnl'tllll ff Ille oommlalO!l ilv'8 a·llal .., to ,.. si\1117 pitas, the• only l!cal-lmLworli wllh stale englneerJ ID reoolve prolilem. alOll( !he adopled route ~ all lli.tt II left. ·- Aloog wilh oUicial city preaeniallOlll Wednelday will come a petition liped by 1,000 Corona def Mor realdmt& ·who oppose current freeway acceu IUDS to (See F(IEEWAV, Pap I) ; Draft -·No ... ~ · .nishmenf' ; S11:preme Court Bars Any -Quick lnductinns · WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Supreme Court today barred Selective Sifvice boards from 1petdihg up inductioru to i>\mish registranta for violating draft law rqulations. The court, in a 6-Z ruling,. held that any act.ion taken against "delinquent" registranb mut ·be pursued. through the courts. The justices struck down the prac- tice of ·reclassifying them IA subject to immediate call up. .The decision came in a criminal case involving David Earl ·Gutknecht of Gay· rard; Minh .• who contended he ·was re- classified by his local board and ordered Four · V ictims . ' . .. ' Of :Traffic Di~· in ,t;'Dunty . -· ... ..---:. ~ ~ "'!"" •l"ot1r OraaP COW.li.w1 lncf"'\1"g a San Clem•ni~ spOrli·dit lrivir, ....... 1me<1 1n traf£ic crashes over the weekend, the C8Jif0rnia Highway Pat{OI reported to- day. · A fifth motorist died of injurie5 1ur. feted one week earlier. bringing the coon- ty's 1970 traffic de&tlf toll1u. 12. Killed il}stantly Saturday night when his sport& car struck a tree beside Ganado Drive . nU.r brtega Highway in San Juan Capistrano was John Laurence si._uff,__, 42, ol 120 E. &.ea!Onel, San Cl~-i'Oiic< sUI Stauff, who rec.nily rttum- ed ftom parafnlop duty>in Vietnam, was It'll lZ County Tnlli• Dutll Toll' Jin II retUrning from a bachelor party in honor d ·his brother, Harold,rwhen the accklent · occurred. He was to have been best man in h1s brother's wedding Jan. 24. Stauff's passenger, James Lewis, 23, of the same address, was treated for cuta and bruises at South Coast Community Hospital in South Laguna and released. police said. An elderly Garden Grove re11jdent, Virgil C. Robinson, 84, of 10032 Melody Park Drive, died Saturday at 9:45 p.m. at P'!h!\ General Hospital of !ojurl,. 1111· fered 'When he was struck by an auto Jan. 10 on Brookhurst Street in Garden Grove. Police said they art still inves- Ugalin( !he accident. Anotar Garden Grove resident. Mrs-. Lucille Hittle, 51, ol 9&91 Westminster Ave .. suceumbed to her injuries Sunday morning. PoUce said she and a com- panion, Mrs. Lois Haws, o£ Kernvllle, wen crouing Wesbninster Avenue near Kerry Street Satunlay evming when they (See DEATHS, Pqe !) Inducted beca1Ue he depoeited his draft Wd at ih< lie! cl a U.S. maribj]GU'tilig A war proteJt in Minneapolis. • The court-reversed a su.bsequent con- viction of Guttnecbt for refusinl: to re- port for induct.Ion. The majority opinion wriUen by Jwtice William o. Douglas said there was noth-inl in the 1967 drart law giving Selective Service authorities "free-wheeling author· ily to ride herd on the registrant!, using immediate inductJon as a disciplinary or vindictive measure." The court asserted : .. The power-under the regulations to declare a registrant ' delinqu<11t bu no statutory· 3\ardml or even.;llJfdelim;. ~-is.· exerdsed entlrefy· by ih< ditlcreUcio· d · the ·local ·-·-' . ~-. "ll'il'• brOad, roving authorily;-a type of adminittraUve absollllfam not congen- ial to CM' lawmaking ltadiUons." __ Chfef J ustlce Warren E. Burger and Justice Potter Stewart . diuented on the scope of the Douilas findlnJ. Justice John M. Harlan agreed with the majority but said he feh regulations on d.ellnqu~nts could be issued legally if intendel to re- quire a youth to comply with registra· tion regulations rather than as a 'punish- ment. Talked With lrvi~ . ' Among other actions., the court: -Held lhat"Alabam.a ud Georglrhd been practicing racial discrimJnatioa ·fn "lediO!l of juries but declined lo<Jllrite down the state 1awa generally. -In an apparenl'cleadlock, mlmd,.. ~ at a lower COIUt level m the issue· of whether ftderal qents IDUlt al). t.ain search warrants to use electronic devices to monitor their conversations With criminal suspects. The case lnvotv. ed James A. White who wu muted in Chicago· in 1966 on chirgei of poueaslon and sale of heroin. Flo ridian Stat~--~~q_J.l~r~·~ ... ,;::,. -Nixon Clwice ·~ · , .. , · , .. , "''' ~ ,. · For Court Stretch ·· 01~··,Be trtJh •• t·r 't _ By RICllARD•P. 'N&LL qt tM DtMI' Pll9t .'ltff William Penn Mott; Jr:, dinlcJot"of•tbe Stale Departrnent ·ol Beacha andiParb, eaid '.satunlayAl\&I €alllonifa,Jw JUat'.aC. quirt<! tliree lll'll" liilles_of publi~ tieach in Orange CJo\mty. • Mott declined to pinpoint ,the•location but hld-just COJJ!pfeted tal)I• wllh the "' , Irvine ())mpany which he said Pleased him. Mott was onie1ol 1· panel o! s~rs at iii San 'rn....me, Inn tai1J!c pit! in a conference on the future of Orange CouJt.. ty beaclits. " The Irvine 1CornP,ADY hai 8llllOllJICOI! plans for cooperative develoj>ment of its coutal holdlngs between Laguna Beocb and Corona del Mil' so .. that .the pUblic . will have access to beaches. ' CommenUng on his' talks' With Irvine Company officl~ls, Mott said he thought the ~dlI!B develoQ111tnl woo.kl ,bring "a totallY new concept on ·how .beach. areas 1 can be ~vallable to the public as well as have private development." ' He called the concept "110mething quite unique which may set a precedent for the ., (See ·MOTT, Page !l Lyneh Won't ,SeekRetum To Attorne • • r •• SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -Cali ni. Attorney General Thomu. C. L ,.~ ooly Democrat elected to statewi . office in !he RA;publicao •-P o! I ff an- Gene ral -Po st . -. -. llOl\nced loday he will not oe<k !Ml..,. ti"{I, --Lyncij,. 65, said he Of!IY made up . his mind •1ovj?r the holidays" In dbqtSSlons with his wire and two sons. ~ ' l!'ASlllNG'l'tW.(llPi~ -. ftt ~ """" b.. informed ' -I ,ateull Judge G. Harold Cwelf of TaDah.-, Fla,, ht will be appointed to Ille Supi'emo Court, UPI WU told todey. Carswell' has been prominenUy men- tioned·for the vacancy, crea.ted when Abe Fortas resigned laSt May under fire for his financial association with financier Louis Wolfson, who was convicted. of aeU. ing unregistered &e<:Urities. _ A While House aide telepboned Carswell, Ml, several days ago to tnromi him he had been picked. "He wu, told juA to· sit tight and make no atitemmt about lbe nomination," a aource aald. .Carswell did Just that, telling ~ · l- ln Tallahwee that "It would he1bljjlfr,-" Jnappropriate for me te> make aqy ~ ment.ot any nature" on report& of·the •P.!' potntmenl Nixon named; Cimv!ll, a former , federal district judge, to the 5lh Ciicult • Court of Appeals seven fnontbs a~ De court handles c .... In Florida, Geiir9la,' Alabama( Miasiss:ippl and Texas. . Florida lawmakers said the. Canwell f!election was a good one. J¥p. Don Fu~ qqa· (D-Fla.), d""1'iblng hlrnsel! as a personal fiiend of Carswell. aatd: 0 He hits no stock probJems. He is a good man. 1 consider him a moderate conserva,Un:.'' Th.e Sen'ate last ytar rejected NW!p'a first choice for the Fortes eeat, Chief Judge Clement F. Haynsworth of the 4tb Cireillt: Oppclnents at t a'c1(ed Haynswodh'a bench record on civil rlgbts and his flnM-- cial holdings in companies "involved :in litikaUon before his court. ' Sen. Edward· J. Gurney (R·Fla.). lint 1uggested Carswell for· the hlgh court. A Gurney aide said the 'senator was "very pleased" by the report of the judge's selection. weddlll( ring from his hand l1I !he pasl- few .clays. will stop crowding him and pulling1hi11 hair. . . Bad Effects on Dogs I The attorney general satd he had been tn.publie office since 19S3 and wol.ild like to · "spen~ ,som~ tiOle , In a ,q!illet ~ "Don't be,rao greedy,'" he .said. "Give me a chance. Give me .some time.'' He made promises to bes~ massive sums u~n North Vietnam in orcfer to end the.war l.nd·called ~n Nixon to meet him lhle afternoon at Kennedy International Airport Here to discuss poverty and world lpe~. Prtlklent will be busy in Washlngton, l'lowever, preparing his State d !he Union...,....,.. 0 1 have eures•tOr all di8ease.t,'• Brody Aid. 111 have a cure for cancer ..... He )llorniad · to dlxlose it at 'the airpo;rt during a newt conf~DCI. arOd.Y,11 brlde;-of two weeks, "Renee, a allm woman with long brown hair, stayed near bim on ·,stage and lhrough the Stoek Jtlorket NEW YORK (AP)-The stock market eontlnued Jta Jogfng ways, Jn moderate late ltadin& todl)'. <See quototlons, Pageo 20-ll). lnospllere.'"' . 1 'Mini Pill' Use Halte Lyncli stressed Iha! Ii< still hid a•yeu' to g'o In Oince ana iald that after' that 'he1 wanted, 'tO ·pr1cUai his ' pfufmlon . ls-.a taWyer, "Pr,fel'ebl)i in San FrancisCo.'", PALO ALTO (UPI). -&ynte1X Laboratorie£. tnc. tod8}' 1u1r.nded~U11:l()( its "mini-pill" oral <coptraCeplive on a test basis in ih< Unlled si.tes. The firm said It would Immedi&loly co·nfer with a.ut'b0Ti1ttea tn England, Franoo and MalCo, wha-e>lho "'mini·plll" bu been marketed lcitm- mm:l>llY'f<ir' almoll' .a ,..,.. It has· not been ''°ld commen:ially1 In the11 Unitlid States. 'Jbe IW!pen:tim ol clinical studies In the U.S. C"Jl' alt.r dogs leJted on the pro- geatin«i]y pills 1howed "adverse ef. recu." including' llSi<N •nd pciaible motahoHc changes. He· told a news ·conference he had 80mething in mind but could not disclose taken on different days, did not The company pakesman said the details except that it waa tn .. San • .Fa!'lh- demonstraft.>the same effects. -mhd.pUl'"-,ns1 -"w-4,700 women in · elst0. Last week, lop medical authorities dlf· IM-Uolled Sta Jiroad be! u Lynch, who became ailpr'!'.f 1encral lertd in congnssional · 'bearings ·In L 1t wu 11110 ':ni by appo~ of , qo.. Edlnµhd • G. Washington over effect d·lhe eatro(en-'" -'.v-•~ Sta' lu, , Bio~ .111(. 3l; li\14, JI;" el~led to • f\lll, or eequ.ntlal -blr1h eootol pllil, whlCll ~ ""' ·-tOfJD fn ffo\\em~t cl I~. • have l>een on lhe'maRel in !he :U.S. for • wlitte if>e• D" bad Witllbeld ~ • I!e,Aid ht c0old not do llils;iob1,p!1> ; . tolne time. Some doct«a -they had , approval , . · . .• . , · , • perly .11)<1 ~lgn. for ·~. at !he., • hafmtuI aide 'llfecta, hot.olh«a ,dllpuled • The. an .aid, !lie ellaCfa nolil• uilie· lime, · . W.. In were ''bu)cally leat<inl," bGt L)'l!Cii lll<r !he job pl aftolJ>ei Jtnerol The "mini-pill," which hu been heiled that le · metabolle chaqel _. wu becomlna "'~"IY m<>re dff· by some u a "second genen.Uon" l>irth allO ·note&: •· lidilt *'I talkld to Gpv. Warren (former control d<vlce which W<JOld be lree of "Tb!"< are a .variety ol ellect.. bul !he Supreme CoOrt chief juitk<) r<eenily 10me or lhe complk:atlonl ~· atrop pe~gy IJ. not clear."' he aakl. "Wt are and lie mentlOn~ th al t1le altomer hased pilb. ha. been sold'tn France •nd ' gol to niake 'fOrfher tests' with dop to 1•11ttal!hlp wu a lov1ly job," h\ Sl!fd, Mexico for a year t nd In· the Unittd de rmtrie 1he na~ure of the1tffedl tnd "r a11tccl him how fnanY. deputies ht Klnadom •Ince last May. . VJ lher c•"'l•ln'. 1pO<l~of '"ft'.a~ urii-hd wi1ef\_llt waro~ 1•n«al .,,a lie r • Weatlier . Cloudy skies with an·oce•!ionaaJ pitter patter of rain on the rool is the outlook for T,uesday alon& lhe Orange Coast wltH Little ehanac tn-ternperature.. INSIDE TOa.t.Y - 0111 conitndn for 1 Ule CO. 1 gr~11ionql CuA' t~e• tM.s btft, i 8'lfcUd lo hlghlighl •• ,....., • w<tklnd of botiUng actlultw. ' PaglS 13·14. ,,,,: • ..., " • " • .. .... " " • A. Syntex spokesman said doa studie11 . with the te<tuenUal birth controf pills, in \ which estrog<ihs end pro1u~•• -dif- ferent .types of femele·hormOMI -ar.e It Is rnarketod· in Eng-·unjler lhe J qutly sei\sltJ .. -to ·illdl ebm~I' saltt 74, I~.••• ov*'llO, 1'lll o1nae1 bf b;'and arne "N'oimenon,": in'. F:r.anc<· as c¥-"ld·,1islS '1!1111, 'lnlMiih "on °* Loi· An'(e!_ti; &ntrmc~. 1111er1ntento ' t•Nacenyl" and tri ·Mexlco.,u •'Jletn.w ,, -''mlnf-pm,.lbowtd-no.W,.,..,~.&cu. ·and Sin Dteio. · ~-----------..J ' '1 •• " ~" - U'I Ttltttllttt Police• Pig Perky r ~ • ' . , ·'·F~:', ihe pig mascot of t,,lle National ro~ice Patr_olmen's. Asso· ciritiorr sips champagne W£e"fed by association president Richard MacEachern at Boston ;mimal hospital as associ8.tion seCretary Robert Flaven looks on. The porker got sick last week and was nl!h· ed to the hospital -with a police escort. Partners for Progress Report Joh Aid Success The dawn of a new decade has begun with unprecedented promise for a Santa Ana finn organlz.ed four years ago to help blacks, Chicanos and other minority group members find badly needed jobs. Wyatt J. Frieson. 37, an accountant who started Partnen; far l'Togr"' (PFPl in 1966 as a method or get~ such workers into the mainstream of Orange County's tconomy said he has hit a new high in success. By the end of-the month closing Jan.~ l5, Ftifson•s or1aniz.ation bad put 36 persons into such jobs as assembly, 11teretarial work, stock clerking ~nd others. "They're not the highest skilled jobs, but they're not all concentrated in the lowest-paying category either," said the PFP chief, who bas fowid work for 480 From Page 1 / FREEWAY ... ' their cmnmunity. The group has W1)l'J support by the Cor· ona del Mar Chamber of Commerce. The Corona del Mar Civic Association is lead- ing the flghL The group opposes the UM!! of Fifth Ave- nue as a four-lane collector stnet -a project which ll.'ould elirNnate scorts of houses in the northern Part. of Corona del Mar. The petitioners offer new plans to use a new road following Buck Gully as an access route to Pacific Coast Highway, instead. Corona deJ ~far Chamber President Dee Cook, a former councilman, and Al Forgit. another ex-councilman who is see.king reelection to fight the freeway, OOth have said they plan to attend the meeting starting at 10:30 a.m. in the basement ol the state Public Works Building. DAILY PILOT OJ!A"IGE c.o.-.s1 PUll.1~HING COMl"AN't kob••f N. w •• d Pr•ld.,.I •ncl 1"ul>ll1h" J,c\: R. C11•!ey V!(t Presldenl ••<I G_,..I Me~•t•• lkom1t K11wil Efllor lhtm•t A. M11rp~in1 Mtnqfflt EdOIOr J1romt F. Co!liftl ,.,,....,. lfftll Gll'I' l!<lltiw "••1,.rt .... Offkt 1111 Wttt 11!1~0• l oul1•••• Mtiliftt Addrtsn P.O. lot 1171, t166J Othr Offic.111 et.I• Mtltl llO Wet! ltr S!'Mt Lit-&t1ch; n; '0<"' AV«!'" tlll'l'l!lftttotl 19A(Jlt Jiii) ltKh llll.CVI .. Dl.11..V ,,.U.OT. wf'lh -Jdll 1' c•<nbiMd tllt ,._......_ 1a "*It"" .i111r ••c..i s""' 41ty .. _,.,_ t<lll ..... fO< Li i""" 1k1(11, .. ,..,., lttfdl. C•l1 Ma.II. Hv•ll"91 ... ·~ .,, l'-111111 Vtllly. t~ "'"" ....,,. ........ , fflll•••· on .... u.,1 '"°"'~"" ~ ,.-1111.,.. ,.... ... ,, 11 2111 w .. 1 ...... at ... ,. N"°"'1 .... 1c~. ff.f J» ... t My t""*'• (.tll• M-. ,,,,,,, .. fn•> .,.,..,,, a.I .... AilfNrtklM .. ,.,,,, ("..,......... ,..,, Of.,.. &Mt P\lbll,~lllt ~. ""' ,,..,.. owin. 1nw1r11 ..,,, .. .-1t1 fllfllfr ., ....... .._..ti llt<tlot ,...., iie '""''!JC'' wl!Mut trt(ltl ,.,. ........... """"-' -· ~dell _, ... M jjj ti~ hKfl M4 C.... ....._ C•~lf. "°'"'lptltol .-, t:tl"W aM ......,.,,, "1 Intl! S:.JI -11rr1 """"'"' ..... llilfll. l1JI ,...,..!)'. > persons since he began. Frieson and his three-member staff have referred an additional 760 persons to employers where they found work on their own during PFP's four.year ex· istence. The operation centered In a rented house ha.s a $24,000,"annual budget and ex· ists solely on contributions from cor. porations and private indJviduals. Honors bttve come quickly to Partners for Pro,Tess, which Frieson says r.-lfy doesn't take much money to operate, although its activities have branched Into training programs and other worker aids. 'lbe job done by PFP, saya f'rleson. will no')>longel-be needed when black and Mexican-American cornmunltlea set up job placement services and minority group members become bua:lneu owners as well aa employes. Partners for Progreu h41 been recognized as a recipient of the 1969 Disrieyland commurilty 'Servtet Award and the Orange County NAA~ chapter, which cited its service and humanitarianism. From PGfle 1 DEATHS ... were struck by an auto driven W ~tn. CeciJla Green. 21. of 10461 Hazard Ave ., Garden Grove. Mrs. Green was not held. SERIOUS CONDmON Mrs. Haws, who is in serious condition at We.stminster Community Hospital. and her husband were visiting the Hi ttle family, police said. The two "'omen were apparently on their way home from marketing when the accident ocCurred. La Habra police said today they are ll:ill se~hing for the driver of a vehicle which r<portedly struck and ·~med Mrs. Jacqueline May Stubbs, 40. of 1710 E. La Habra Blvd ., early Sunday morning. According to witnesses i\.frs. Stubbs "·as stri.ick by a late model light colored car wbl.le CT'06s'ing the street in front ·of her home. Buena Park police today stated they are continuing to investigate the Satur· daY morning accident which took the life of a Buena Park housewife. f.lrs. Elsie Rita Ramos, 37. of 7332 Chlppewa Circle, was stopped for a trar. fie light at Knott and Orange avtnues when she was struck he.adon by the vehi· cle driven by Jack McKinnon. 24. or 122 Bella Vista St., Anaheim, J)Olice said. MoK.innon's vehicle apparently crossed the center divider line. ramming 11-frs. Ramos' 11topped vehicle. investigalors stated. McKinnon was treated at \Vest Anaheim Community flospltal 1 n d released. CdM MAN BE.Tl'ER A Corona de! J\tar resident, JOhn Sttln· broner, 20, of 3036 Breakers Drtvt, was ~Ported recovering from injuries suf. feed Stmd:;,y morning In a single car crash on Newport A\'enue at BtrTett Lane near Orange. caurorni• lf'8flway Palrol orflws said Slclnbrontr ws1 a passenger tn the vthl· clc drfvtn by Kerry Bruce Moor<, 20. or lZl4 W. Santa Clara Ave .. Santa Ana. who Is recovering from injuries io the samt hospital. Patrolmen said U1e tl\'O were north· bound on Newport "at a hlgh rate of speed" whtn A1oore lost. control of the car on a curve and hit • guardrail. Both youtha: were ejected from the auto oa im· pact, officers ~aid. ....... .~, ... .t-•· .... -. -• • ' .......... , •. ._', .... ,I Aiito~ Clogging Coast ". Co~ervati~11ist T~ls What .Future HoWs • btech; ~ . mli!ifti, i;l-.... tln ownenhlp than lbe ~ coasl which has • If ll!'lt!r. Iii\ lil1 •-l•ltl'ed orea hu much nme land In privale IJli Marhlt· . and brillt lo be Ill· far lf'&ler demlty. tlontd it Ctmp Ptndltton. Men. author o( the prize.winning book Ns was tht advh;e Saturday of con-"The Frail Octan," talked o! jetties MrVaUonlsWuthor Wesley Marx. ~'ho wttlch "Interrupt the drift of sand that spoke of coastal clUes 50 swamped wtth noorishtd the beaches" and of flood con- sununer tr.atOc that they can t>tcomr. trol dame that stop the supply of sand undea!r-ble places to live. trom the hills. Huntillgton IJach, Newport Be•ch and He talked ef dumping into the ocean 1 Laguna Beach art in parUculirly and dredging of estuaries w h i c h precarious JJ05iUons u f~ as auto · decrea:se their ability to handle pollu· strangu1a,tlon, ht said. tion. He said the Upper Newport Bay has Man was one of sli rpeakers at a con-aspects which make it just as mu ch a ference at the San Clemente Jnn on the scenic wonder as Point Lobos at ~lon- fuiure ;,, Orange County beaches. tmy .;-r Torrey Pines in La Jolla. , Marx cited the example or Laguna's Sponsored by the Capistrano Bay Area VJctor Hugo Inn and adjacent Heisler and Orange County Learues of Womm Vot<rs, H pl1yed to an enthusiastic au· Park as an example of trying to make the Cout both usable anad scenic. dlence of about 175. 'Mlere are also erosion problems from The sesslewt included much of Orange Doheny State Beach to San Clemente. Couf>ty city a00 coonty officlaldom. said ~arx. He said Oregon is regulating Speakers were Kenneth E. Cvr. San development on dry sand and Santa Clemente city manager; rucbard P · Ruiz, Barbara has arraoged a 30·foot setback executive assistant to Supervisor D•vid on geologically unstable co.istal bluffs. L. Baker; Knowlton Femald Jr·, He cited the Capistrano Highlands as a archlttct and plannJng vice president, good example or a bluff that should never Laguna Niguel Corp.; William Penn Mott have been built on. Jr., director of the litate Department ()f Speaker Ruiz pointed to the 1941 plan Parks and Recreation, and A1semblyman for Orange County shoreline develop· Alan Sieroty. ment. He called it a good study and Marx said freeways 11hould lllttl the paraphrased its essential thrust as "For demands they are placing on coastal God 's sake buy the coast." cities. ~ He uld the study saJd of the 42 miles of Mentioning coastal freeway offramps coastline, "It will never be any longer scheduJed for Beach Boulevard of Wun· and it will never be any cheaper." tington Beach Ind MacArthur Boulevard ·Ruiz said that in l!Hl there "'~~ ;»J ~ N~port Beach, Marx said, "I can rniles of county beach in-f)rivati! visual~ Huntington Beach and Ne11pom ownership and 12.5 in public. Today the Beach as one big honking auto )torn on a private,lCctor has dwindled to 19.2 miles coastal wi:ekend." "'-, and the public ownership is 23.4 but much He said " the Btale • highway people of this '188 due lo acquisition of an ad- shoukf plan turnout.a, viewpolnU, and pie# ditlonal seven cnifes by tl:l.e state. · nJe ar~as to accommodate the traffic The Salt Creek controversy, said Rui z, carried by the frtewl!YS-Alternate forms served as a catalyst and precipitant that of .transportation should alao be studied, brought the beach needs info sharp focus. said Marx mentioning helicopters and He cited county measures that have hydrofoils. come since. He prediC\ect that future beach recrea~ Ruiz said past priorities ~y the county tioo ml(ht include all year swimmin& In -to serve growth not duplicated on this rubber .suits, "aubmobiles" for un-earth -were given to services for .~e derwater wandering and U1hted beaches population with recreation and esthetics for night use . taking a secondary position. But w;tbput strong management, said It has beco"!e e.~ident since S~Jt. Creek, Marx, the shoreline will turn into the speaker said , that the pubhc is more "som~g that the Scripps Institute of cancer~ with the quality of life than Oceanography can't put back together growth. again." We must, said the speaker, find alternatives to sho~line development and protection that will not bankrupt us. ALSO ll\IPORT ANT Baker said, speaking for himself, that he believes beauty, order and harmony are just as important as courts and jails. He said bold leacj'.tr&hlp ingenuity, an~ money will be needed in the_ years ahead . to take care of recreation and con· servatlon. "Will you be \\'illing to put up the money?" he asked the audience. "Will you permit local officials to make the necessary decisions? Will the officials hi;ve the boldness?" City 1.1anage.r Carr said or the 4.6 miles of beach within San Clemente city limits, three miles are in public ownership. Tbe city owns 10,084 lir.eal feet of frontage and the state another 6,022. Carll said San Clemente tax~yers had encumbe(ed themselves for nearly SI.I million since 1961 to buy beach. "S•n Clemente, as a city, has taken it upon itself to recogniie that beach property to the greatest e~tent p«i>!:slble should be in public use," said Carr. CITY AGGRESSIVE The city has also bee11 aggressive, lte said, in providing rei1troam1, concession restaurants and adequate parking where possible to serve the beach gotrs. He said a "'ater reclamation (sewage) plant now under way will cost $2.5 million but will ensure against pollution of the ocean. The ernuent will be used , as it has since 19$7, to water the golf course. Despite San Clemente's public beaches, said Carr, on a busy Sunday beach aoers still wait for sonieone else to leave so they may use his sand. Fernald spoke of _taguna Niguel Corporation pla.ns to bsii3 square miles for 80,000 residents and a planned city as free as possible of the ilia cities are normally heir to. He said the beach frontage of tllf: cor- poration represents 2111: percent of county cfiastline and that the population planned amounts to 2~ percent of expected COUO· ty population. Within. the next year, he said, another parking. lot . will be addtd to ac· commodate 700 cars, er with decldnc 2,800 autos. Corporation land will have planned rec reation, beach cleaning and lifeguard service and will pay taxes rather than use taxes, he said. Within the decade, he pt edicted, Niguel will grow to 50,000 persons. . . Fernald, an architect. said he felt 1t more important for public agencies to ac- quire large parcels of property for year around use such as Mission Bay in San Diego rather than just long strips of beach. ~ 1' ,.. • NEW PILOT 'COVER GIRL' F•shlon Writer Christy • Miss Christy 'Cover Girl~ For , Pilot Tuesday's new "cover &irl" flt!' the women's section of the DAILY PILOT ji Mari•n Christy, one of. the n1Uon's most respected fash ion writm. Winner of 12 national writing awards apd three state awards (Maasacbusetts) in the put three and a half years. Miss Christy ii noted for her global gallopina: in the coveraa:e of the fashion beat. She insists m spt11ding at least thrtt months out of each year coveriJll the fashion news capital of the world ~ New York", Paris, Rome, Madrid~ even Dub- lin, when Irtland Js where it's happening. A native of Boston, Miss Christy was graduated from Boston University's School of Journalism. She became fashion editor of the Bos- ton Globe In 1965 after four years as a feature writer for Women's Wear Daily. Her syndicated column now appears in new!!llpetS throughout the United States. It will be a weekly feature of the DAILY PILOT, belinnlng Tuesday, and will bt featured each Tuesday on the cover page ol. the women's section. Jn the Surfside, Sunset Beach and Newport Beach areas, he said, 30 million cubic yards of sand will be needed in the next 21) years just to maintain the beach and the Army Cor~ of Engineers -and nobody else -knows where it is going to Firemen Save Girl Trapped From Page i . t MOTI' ... come from . Erosion controJ, ~e 5!1id, runs i'nto astronomical costs that force the federal government to step in. EJWion he said threatens four north county beaches, in· eluding Huntington Beach, most popular in the state, and SIOO million in property development and a four Jane highway. REDUCES ABILITY The speaker said development .on dry sand reduces the ability of the shore to protect us from wave action . He mentioned a parking lot built on ary sand at Aliso Beach to handle autos as \Ytfi as Pfople and aaid the South Coast Newport Woman Hurt in W reek A Newport Beach woman is hor>pital- lt:ed today with injuries suffered Satur· day when her car collided '1'ith a milk truck at a Costa Mesa inter.!=~On. ~1ary A. Oberhaus, 31 , of 4216 Patrice Road, ~'as undergoing treatment at Cos- ta ~fesa Memorial Hospital today. for a chin laceration and multiple face and head bruises. Nu rses said she was in fair condition an<! might be able to go home for con- valescence Tuesday. Police said Mrs. Oberhaus "'as east· bound Ol'l Falr Drive at 9 a.m .. v•hen her car collided with the Adohr Fanns truck drlvin south on Fairvie"· Road by Ar· thur 1'~. Loian. 43, of 9390 El Arbol Ave., Fountain Valley. He was not injured. 111 Mini-e:f-Building '·' building forgot to leave a door unlocked. Marca Harrigan, 21 . of Orange decided to work late at the office Saturday, but someonf in the two-story Ne\\'port. Beach Whale Viewers Saved So the petite Miss Harrigan f~und herself locked in after her chores were through. SAN DIEGO <UPI) -Twenty-one pers:>Q.S retumin& from a whale watching expedition were resuced Sunday after being lhrown overboard from their 4&-- foot boat by heavy surf. The boat. a converted SJ'.l()rlfisher, was almost overturned as it broached in a 12- foot wave aOOut 20 yards inside the en- trance to Mission Bay Channel. She called firemen to free her. \Vhen the rescuers arrived they told the trapped miss to walk out onto a second· floor balcony to wait for the ladder. \Vhen she came out, one fireman sai$f today, three firemtn almost fought one another to sCramble up the ladder for the rescue. She was wearing a mini skirt. Coast Parks Asked LOS ANGELES (AP) -Rep. John V. Tunney said loday he w·ill propose jn Congress that the government designate several coastal areas as a California Coastline National Park. The park 'vould incorporate the coastal portions of the U.S. r-i1arine Corps Base at Camp Pendleton. the Channel Islands. Van- denburg Air Force Base, Los Padres Nation.al Forest along the Big Sur coast and the Point Reyes National Seashore. "The purpose of this park will be-·to protect the public interest ln the scenic, biological, r"ecreational and economic values of Cali· fornia's ocean front." the Democratic candidate for the U.S. Senate said at a news conference. Marijua1aa Charge '!' Texas Takes Try at Tim From "\\'ire Se.r't1ce1 LAREDO, Tex. -The streets of Laredo Jed to a \Vut Tuas courthouse today. \\'here Dr. Timothy Leary went on trial again for marijuana cha rges thrown <XJt once already by Utt U.S. Supreme Court. A t'l~1o-day conllnuanct wa3 grantrd un· tll We(!ncSday by Oringe County Suptrior Court authorities, meanwlllle. slnce Dr. Leary, hl'a11 wlfe and son were due to go on trlil today In Santa Ana for an t..SD a.nd marijuana case d1Un1 back 13 montht. Or, Leary -declared candidate for the California govemorshlr in November - criticized the rt·tri• l>Y Teias and ftdtral authorilles. charging it amounts lo political harassment. "The Nixon Admlnlstralion does not have any filth in the democratic process and they want to use the power of • 1overnm'ent to harass 'us." he alleaed . "Anyone who hears that tht go\·em· ment ls trying me ajter a un•nimous S·1rremt Coun dtcls!on knows thal there ts semething fi1hy here-or it is unfair,11 he ~ntinued. He was convicted in 1966 of failure to declare marijuana and pay federal tat on three ounces of the ~·eed, brought across from r..1exico at Laredo, with a $40,000 fine and 30-year prison sentence imposed. The U.S. Supreme Courl ruled that declaring the marijuana would have fore· ed the former Harvard C o 11 e g c psychology professor to reveal in· crimlnatlng evidence against himself and overturned the conviction. Susan Leary carried the pol In a dainty silver snuff box cradled between her legs and "·as convicted of ~llegal l.ransporta· tlon and concealment of marijuana, but given a prob&.tt .sentence. The proceed ings in U.S. Distrit.1 Court will be: presided over again by Judge Btn Connally. "'ho sat in Leary's first lrlal. The nl'w trial involves smuggl111g of marl Juana and carrlcs a maximuln sentence of 2CI years In prison and $20,000 fine) but Or. Leary Is con!ldent he will \!:tn &Jain. He. his wile Rosemary, 33, and aon J ohn, 20, are scheduled for trial on charges of possess.ion of dangerous drug! and marlju.i na as a result of their arrest Dec. 26, 1968, in Laguna BeaCh. The lrial is now scheduled Wedn~ay in Oran ge County Superior Court, dcpen. ding on outcome of the Texas pro- ceedings. Besides the Te1as and Or1nge County ptoceedings, Dr. Lury recently appeared in a New Yori courtroom and facts R·verside County court act.Ion stemming: from an LSD drowning dt.lth at a com- munal ranch . He was charged with contribuUng to lhe delinquency of a minor last year after Cha rlene R. Almeida, 17. of Laguna Be8ch. drowned in a deep creek pond on thf' ranch near lftml!t. "l"m running for gov~rnor of Cr lifornia," Or. Leary declared today Jn Tcx(ls. 1·1 should be back In my O'f\ll state, turning on my vottrs instead of having to !ipt:nd the t.lm~ and energy here golniz throucb t case that 11·e know we'll "·in." rest or Ca1Uorn1a." Mott also forecast a new trend· in state beach planning which will push the auto inland. "In the past Wt have planned for the auto. We new are going to plan the state park system for people and not the auto." Commenting on expanded parking recently provided at Doheny State Beach, Mott said, "the parking lot can be ripped out tomorrow. \Ye're making studies to determine how to move the autos as much as five miles inland and provide a aystem of mini-bus transportation. "Doheny Park is merely a transition on "'hat we 're ultimately going to have." t\fott also spoke of the need to convert military lands such as Camp Pendleton to public use. "Pendleton and several others are closed to public use. We're working on this situation." The state had planned Jts first surfing park -a mile of beach frontage backed by 180 acres -adjacent W the Loran Coast Guard Station which abuts Presi· dent Nixon's Western \Vhite House. Security shelved the plans for the ''Trestles" are a "'he n the President bought his home last year. Questioned after his talk, 1.1otl said the ''Trestles" is a superior surUng area . Nl1ion aides had indicated some other Camp Pendleton land not close to the "'estem White House might be used. Mott wants all of the area for tile public. t>.tott predicted confidently th a t ''absolutely the Trestles will be in public usage eventually. We had everything set to go when the President bought that land." He indicated that "eventually" pro- bably meant when Mr. Nixon is no longer Presidenl "There is not nearly the security problem for former Presidents," he !&ld. ' J\1ott cited a state park developed across the river from former President Johnson's Texas ranch after he left the Presidency. During hi$ talk, Mott also aired plans for new emphasis on underwater parks and presenies along the California coasUine. "The department is now Iden. tifylng critical areas to create un· denvater parks and preserves." he uid. He called them an e1citing recreational re!ource and said, "underwater destruc· tion is more intensive than on land, there is li ttle or no time to accompli$h this.·• Locker Burglars Strike 3 Times GAlley and equl~t thieves hit th:rtt. separate times ovtr the \\"etkend at the Oa\'ev·s Locker. dacks at the Balboa. Pavilion. The ~alley of the T~rge C11talin1 tour boat Jsl1100 H0Ud1y was robbed tWtce O\""r the t\\-'0-day period . Police said. F.ach time the thieves stole candy, food a!'ld beer valued Rt •bot.it $60. The lhievea also stole a '130 net from lh:! stern of the Fury II, the Ooatlnf marine laboratory used· by Orange Coun· I•· ~~i.~~•c . ' . I I .' I I .. , , ' , l • . • .,. •. .. 1 ,. ' [,.St!i~p orfting .. Ca,~t ~e¢e i v.es ~?'. · 1 ~ , ..-t ~ l .. , l • '-.-' ., + r ~ .. • •.. " -' ·;, 'Another year has-come to a -close for tl\e ·Glfl• Clubiol the Har-bor Area,. bringing the time. wben ap!ifeclation Is •".Pre•sliLand 11ew dutieS"ai:etassigned for Ute corning year. , , ,.1 • J' During a luncheon .meeting of the Board orDi•ectors,{R0nal~ Hardy of Costa Mesa accepted the. presid,nt's duUes 'lroln>outgo~g •. bOl(rd president, Mrs. J~es M. Dodds. , . Sf!a.ted· with the new president were Henry Vaughn, vice pres·~ id~t; 1~on• Cq-\enl:an .. recordipg secretary ; Mrs. Carlton ~ears, cor• ~ • respondmg secretary, an~ John Toner, treasurer. ,, ~ ln .reviewing accompli~hments of the past year, 11.frs. Dodds an- nounced tb·et the Californif1 Community Foundation has awarded the cJu~ a grant Jo.r the purchas.e of a SJTl&ll van to carry supplies a tt. d •' . eqwpment to1 fiv:e area elementary schools. . .,. . . The acquisition of the van is a dream come true for the. ctllb,. Mrs. Dodds said. Completely equipped with craft areas and facilities tor teaching homemaking skills. the van will make it possible, for girls unable to attend the regular' club sessions to share the benefits· of club membership. Retiriilg directors. the Mmes. Carol French, Dodds . Alvin Pink .. Jey,· DeMurl Tosh and Dr.~ Steve Asahino"Were presented Girls Clubs of America Inc. National Service A\vards, and certificates were giv· en · to retiring board members, Mrs. Vernon Matthews and Mrs. Ber~ tren Smith. Mrs. Audrey Cooper-and Mrs. Dawn Bowne 'vere presented cer· tificates and Girls Club pins as Outstanding Volunteers.of-the-year. · -Certificates-0Lappreciatio0-were _giv.en-to various community \ s'ervice organizations for theif continuous sUpport of the club . Recipients were the Costa Mesa-Newport Harbor Lions Club, K~pa Alpha Theta, Newport Harbor Business and Professional -\Vome~. C04st Homemakers, Wed.nes~y MoJn!ng Club o! Costa Mesa, . AssiJltan~e League of Newporj Beach, Altrusa Club of Newport Har- bor, ~roptimist ·CJub of'Newport Harbor. Costa Mesa Women's Club and ' the Coota Mesa-Newport Harbor Lionettes. Archie Mann received a special certificate of appreciation for his· continued interest in the activities of the club members. · . An inn?vatlon during the past year, the Shadow Board was dis· cussed.·A sub-boardi it enables teenage members to lea rn effective board procedure while planning the program \vith the re~ar Board of Directors. . The<~~e~board. for .:te~!.rs.i~ tEe first one for al!_ G_!rl~ C}Jubs in the Urutea States .as>weU asDe1ng a fl.l'st for the ff.arbor Area unit. Rei>re.!tm!fng ute__new teep~ };lofil'd were ,Misty Itee .. jiresident; "Ferri FiSHer. vice presid~nt: Liz Beasley, treas1iret; Beckie Kendal\, r:~ording secr~tary,. and Debbie Riopelle, correspondiiJg secretary. TIME 5-T·R·E·T·C-H-E-D -Mrs. Edmond W. Somerhouse (right) seems to have .a special fonnula for stretching time as she chafked up 354 ho9rs. of volunteer, setwiee at CoSta Mesa Memorial Hos· oREAM:Cb,.;E-TRCJ.E'-One Qf. llie d7e~rns oi the ·Girls Club of the Har~or·Area ha~, been fulfilled with the van.it received through a· grant frdm'.the CBfifcrrnia Community Foundation. The van will ' . pital. CongratulaUng her are (left to •right)<Mrs. Alexander Mc· Gillivtay, retirjhg auxlliaty President"atid Mrs. 'Robert Wilson, newly installed lt!ader. • ··~·' , visit five;~i'ern"'"intary..schOOi~ "'ith the.Girls Club program. T~ng tbe wrappings•off the ne~ gift are Ron·a]d Hardy, new ptesident of t~e Girls· Club·ijoard·of.Directors, and Mrs. James Dodds. Demands .Met By Auxiliary ?i-iore than. one moment ol pride was shared' by Costa l1esa Me1norial Hospital Auxiliary members during their first annual meeting in the hospital conference room.- And thex can be justifiably proud , for during a perio.d 0£ 14 months~since its .foundin.e: a total of 8,563 hours have been given by volunteers. or this total , 6,325 hours are attributed to 36 dedicated women who have 1 aonated 100 hours or more . Each was presented a pin by .A.. 0 . Sage, h.osp\tal administrator, and .special honors \vere accorded Mrs. Edmond W.'Somerh'Ouse. who. gave 354 hours, Mrs. Wil· liam Clegern, 343 hours. and. ?ttrs. Alexander MacGilliv-ray, retiring president, 332 hours. Not willing to rest on their laurels, these dedicated women opened a new year by electing and installing new officers , and calijn~ for help from everyone interested in the cause. .. , -Althougb .tlie:'Auxiliary has a membership of 100 at the present time, m.ore are needed to meet the demand5 of additional ·Services. Those interested may call Mrs. George Thomas at 'MIJ.2031. ' Leading the.rgroUp for the comin~ year wilJ. be 1'1rli. Ropert M. WiISori1 assisted by the Mmes. Reginald G. Jones, 'rh~maS. .Ronald Stenge and 0. V. Riley, vice presidents. . Others ·are the Mmes. Roger H. Jones and William C. Kuhn, recording and corresponding secretaries; Wil· liarn C .. Lambert, treasufer, and MacGillivray and ,War- ren R. Atherton, directors. - ' . Art Gallery Reiec;t Puts Her • Bad Frame of Mind~ .. , . -t>EAR ANN LANDERS : A r!!lalive ba~· ~ken up painting as a hobby. She has Jti!t presented me with an enormous portrait of myseU. It is an abstract trJor'l,StrO.tjty in the Picasso style-one btown eyt and one blue eye, a grossly ex· apated noee ·and blue hair. Jt Jook1 More like a cartoon than a painilf'lg. My fublnd and children couldn't stop ~when they !aw it. To make mat# &n. worse, this relative went to con· .tiderable expense to have the thing fram·· p· of course, we are expected to hang -{.we·ve bad ~ picture#three ~ks and lt'Jt just aboUt nm..-®t of excuseJ. The ~ has beeJ) ¥rewsevetal times and ~asking •botlt the portrait. How ca n .: ,et out of hanging it-:gactfully? - JlMu>ooNED DEAR RARPr'foa e .. 'I, 10 be 1 sport and hang M Colden thing. It 1!1oa.ld be a great ct1mnadon ptece. After a etuple of monU..1 move It to 1.otber room ind tben &o the attk • DEAR ANN LANDERS: .A .while back you r.rlnted a lettu from a reader who Mid ;t. waa cruel of parenl5 to s~e their children with peculiar first 11ames just because they thought it was "dif· lerenl" or "amw ing." Jn yOur ~Jy, you mentioned Mis& Ima Hogg and every third -perROn in Texas \mite to uy they knew her or were related to her. I have just reed an article in e magazine that says a caprkkm selection of names can serkmly hamper a child's chances tor happinw. One young fellow had a difficult time all ihrough school because no one believed his name wa1 Tonsililis Jones. When he tried to enlist jn the Navy he encou£ered-the saffie doubts. Further investigation · revealed that Ton s iliti s bad t h·r ee brothers-1-teningitls, Appendicitis and PeritonJtis. +A psychologis_te>inted out that chUdren sometimes develop lifelong com plexes because of their names. An outstanCting example wa~ a shy, introverted young woman whose ~moniker was Alpha Omega. Whttt asktd. libout llet name she ,hesitaUngly ,explained, "Mother .didn't want me. She wished everyone to know I was her first and hopefully herJast." Js it any wonder that more than 50,000 people a year petition the U.S. courts-to undo the damage done to them by their parents? I hope you print this letter for Vie behefit-or~oms tind Pops who are tempted to.&e\ ov_'lly cute at baby·nam· ing time~--PLAIN JANE AND GLAD .Qy lT •. DEAR JANE: Appartntly Shakt1peari waa wr~g. TlNn't ple1ty;ln a name:. DEAR ANN LANDERS: Two years agB DEAR VAN: Of course it Is sad wllen a Cousiri of whom I always have been people we admire disappoint u11 bid: wlllt fond, too~ up with a woman wh~ c~n'.t your cousin does Is bf1 bu1lnt11;: <:ompare wilh his wife. No one cOtild t bave JtO Wea what bil marrt_qe_'.}Ja1_ wiiSerstand it. Five montlls ago lll• ldft!Y till<. And aeltlltt do yoa. Now tlill llo 11. -wife gave him a di~~·. E~s:yone a1manted_, .1111 rtlattoadl1'i W'ttll the ' a.s111med he w:ould marry the , ~r "otller wom1a" 11 kOllter.~ U ,. .. dta't woman at the first legal m9""1ent. He h&I Ute ber, don't'" her. Bet.hbn •\GM· not done 90. 'Ibey still maintain separate apartments .but they go everywhere When ~antic glances tUm to, wann ; together and are Invited to some highly embraces is Jt love or chemistry . SflDll ~ . for the booklet "Love or ~x and How to • respectable places as a couple. r consider Tell the Difference." bf Ann Landera. : the relationship immoral and have. told -Enc106e a long. stamped, self·addreoed · him so. ffe"of(ers no defense. envelope and 35 ·centa in coin wJth your : Please tell me the correct way to think request. ~ 11bout . this offensive relatlonshlp. My Ann Land ers wUI be glad to ht.Ip, YOll ; cousin Is h6 longer "cheating" since he is with y'our problems. Sen~ them to her ln : not~ ~arried man. I need YOW' objective care. of the DATLV Prt .. OT, tnclO!lnt a : vtcw201nt. -VANCOUVER ~ •. ·~ .seli-a\idres.se..:. sla111pe.:I en~clo,i;e. ..: ': . ' -. ., 1 Jf· DAILY PILOT New Officers Light the Way Guiding members through the n_ew year will be (left t.o riaht) Mrs.1 Loui!i R. Raymond, Mrs. Chuck Kleiss and Mn. Richard A. Brumner, vice presidents and president of the Blessed Sacrament Altar Society. The new officers will preSlde during the next meeting of ithe group takinz place at 8 p.m. Tuesday, .fan. 20. in the Westmins ter church. Horoscope January Selections • • ' Zonta Honors Coeds Each month the Zonl.a Club of NeQOrt Harbor booor1 one senior llrl ftwn ucll of the Newport..Mtsa 'hi&h achoob .u the Zonia Girkl·lhe-month. Th.e aelecUon is basec! upon leadenhlp, clti1en1hip, ICholanlllp and """"' lo ber lcllool. At the tnd o1 the ichooa._, year, the coedl nlect the one they feel m01t qualUltd to bt named the Zon- ta Girl ol.tJie.year for< their ICbool and the recipient of a liO aavlnp bond. · !MANCIA M11s , Beth Newman, daughter of Mn. Estelle Newman ct Colta Mtsa, atrves u CSF ~tary. G l r 11 ''.Le a a: u e Senior ReprtJe!Utive, Comn\lSS.ioner cl Conummlty ServlC. and iJ • member of the seruor Cius Council. She WU named Fre.Wnan Girl.of-the-year and received a jeweled Gold E for her xrvice to the tdiool in her junior year. A member cir.GM and AFS .M;..s II•....,.. .r.o bas served oa the drill team and 11 a JV chetrleade.r. Durine her sophomore and junior years she was a voluntffr at Fairview State He1pital. Mi.as Newman pliN to al· ESTANCIA Beth Newm•n NH HIGH Deborah Tucker tend UCI and major in the drill team and ASB co- psycholoa. treasurer and was the reci- . · · · picnt of the Outstanding Book· NEWPORT HARBOR keeping Award Jn her Cu'rre..1t Pep Club presldent. sophomore and jun iors years. ASB Pep Commissioner and Miss Paplham also Is the Executive Council Men:iber, current "'inner for her school Jitiss Deborah 1\Jcker was of the DAR Good Citizenship -. Award. named Most Spirited Sailoret- te, in 19118. She has been a CORONA DEL ?t1AR member ot AFS. Spanish Club, Planning to attend San Drill Team and CSF. Diego State College and major • • ., CM HIGH Sue Paplham . ·-... r. I, .. _' ";;..!.', ... _ ~ in fine arts and -psychology isl The dau1hter of Mer chant ?o.fiss Sue Minkle y, daughter of Marine. Capt. and Mrs. Cyrus 1"1 · ·"1 J·• •1· kl r . }if. Tucker of Newj>Orl Be'aCh r. aJiu 1> rs. '-'"" J• in ey 0 . also has been a member (Jf Corona del Mar. I Aquariu-s:-~Don't HtJrr.y Tfi:Hi-Y and has Wofked . ar She is Girls' League vicc1 president, a member or the ·cANCU tJune 21.July Z:): Fairview $ta~ Hospital aJJd yearbook staff and Surf Club TUESDAY JANUARY 20 By SYDNEY O:'lfARR ARIES (March 21-April 19): thoughl possible. Key Is to open mind to contacts. TAURUS (April 20-¥ay 20 ): You get more dooe than you Tie up some JOose ends .. ~ portunity aboonds. But , :You must be-.seledhe. GEMINI {May 21~une %0): c;uud v~U1bles. Mme who take you places can . be careleas with ~·belonlines. Stress '1.bllity to write, com- mtinicate:- . . ' I .. . !' Significant savings on selected pleces/gtollplngs from America's great furniture makers .•. I 11 ' . .' 'I '• t . ' . ' .. . ·' \ Henreclon "'CUJtom 1-'oiio Three" 44" DI.YING TABLE with Tw• 20" Lence.1 Reg, 409.00 SAlf 249.00 I ,l/ATCHl.\G ~IDT:: GI/AIR TA BLt A\ D FOL R Cfl.41 R SET Rev• 11 9.00 S~LE ~9.00 Reg. 18j .00 SAU 525.00 This sole hos always s'ignifie,d something special -"the quality thot e ndures." The 87th ho·s c;hanged in only one respecl -th ere's mori of it . , . so that this is the largest semi-annual anniversary salt in our history. All the selected piece~ and grouping s o~e from the regular J. H. Biggar stock. These includ9 full dining room col- lfction s, bedroom groupings', cobi~els, tables , lamps, occ1ssories , carpeting and vpholster.d sofas and chairs in desig ns, col ors and patterns ••• bearing such honored names as Drexel, ~erttage, Henreclon, Thomasville, just to name a few .. Anniversary S1vlngs at All Three Stores! PASAO&NA Colorado at El Molino 792-6136 ~OMt!lNA Holt, Eut ot"G ary 629-3026 SANTA ANA, MAIN at ELEVENTH 547· 1621 Cycle c o Di 1 D u. t i \,;.,i.: Hoag Memoriil H () I p l l a I ' Secretary. ....,. Prea~yterlan aS .a · Can-. ·however, l<lmetb.inl you took ·dystriper. A Girls' League rcpresen· de tative In her sophomore and for cranted may ·sud nly _ · ~plans to. ~\l.epd UCI and i·unior i·ears·, she was named '_df•"•t, · . mai· or in bio1A.,:;cal scieioces to -.. "'8' Gir!-of-the-<iuarter In Spring, LEO (July 2.1-Aug. 22): bo<o'j'j a t1eaclter at the high ,969. &eallie. t.h1t minor ic!W>o _eve . J\1i!s ~linkley also docs step out ·or your c&r and into l'atricia's dlsturbance is not major "COSTA MESA · ''olunteer work at Fairview I .. ------------------~ · calamity. A CSF Gold Sealbearer and State Hospital. VIRGO (Aue. u-sept. 22): member of the yearbook staff,,p;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;m; Study Lee ·mess:a,c. Your am-Mias Sue Paplham plans to at- bltions are strong; you want tend the University 0 f r•sults. You gtt them by Southern California end major heeding what appears to be Jn accounting'. uoortho&tx a41Ykt-:· · The dau1ther ol Mr. and .UIRA~1~-1.1-~t. :22): Mc"· MEugeneh Pa1plha.mpol .No day to follow the crowd. Mla es1 , 1 e a 90 ts ep $ome will. claim, yot.I" .11re "being Club president. GAA trel!urer differtnt for aake of beinr dlf-and Spanish Club secretary. She has been a member of ferent. SCORPIO (Oct. 2J.Nov. 11 ): A maneuvrr that oceurs behind tht s«nts may have direct effect on your proenss. Be indepen4~ without beinf arrogant. SAGmARIUS !Nov. 22-- Dec. 21): Friehdship and moneylendina: do not mix to- '31y, UH your intuit.ion. Follow hunch. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jan. 1J): Po'1t.ion al. Uiote at helm . could ~ ·le,,s 'iban 1teady. Be Jcnew1ed(e1blt, alert, ready to 1ltp in ~ •rhattve1. AQUAllUS (Jon . .20-Feb . 11): DiPlomatic approach 1_, ~st mt today. Avoid trying lo force L!:suu. One who works With yw inly e<1mt up with in- t•rutinl np:>rt. Bt an1lyUcal dd not in-too much of• hur· ry. P18CES (ftJ>. II-March 20 ): · Emetional. ' tt:actioos a r e defillite _and direct. Yoo &" whit YQU want -but self-con- . tiol is • requiaitt:. . .. Toke~off Tuned In A take-off on the 11man on the streel" type radio in· terview will hlahlight the Wtd· nesd1y. Jan. 21 , meeting of the Officers' Wives League of Oranae County in the Balboa Bay Club, A social hour at 11:30 a.m. will precede lune}\ at 12:~ p.m., according to Mrs. J .. P . Aynes, coordinator. In char1e ·of the program are Mrs. Aynes and Mn. E. L. Zielinski, both of Corona -de! Mar. Prizes will f>e given to each person intervleWed . The league is open M> wives and widows of retired military officers of all braDC.hes of service. Anyone: wishing in- formation may contact Mrs . Aynes at 675-1564. SEMl'·A'NNUAL SALE St-tt ·cw tr -50I· en Amtric:l'1 lt1dln1 f11hion 1hoffl Hurry nOw to •n)oy th•n tremendous v1lue1. 51111 • flft• Mkctioft, 1lthoujh not tvtry 1tylt In tll 1itt1. 5.99 to 7.99 2 99 CASUAL GROUP... I Fl1hiei 111•~11 Ntwfle'4 iltth Hu~tington Ctnl•' i1ttl h C111t 111~111 l-l unti"tlon 1,.,~ Ce1l1 M111 NOW ••• THERE ARE TWO CROWNING GLORY BEAUTY SALONS TO SER\JE' YOU IN COST A MESA 1. 2. Crownin9 Glory (formerly Caprice Coiffures) South Caast Plaza, Costa Mesa • phone 546· 7186 Crownin9 Glory Costa Mesa • ' 26 7 East 17th Street phone 548·9919 ~ PRICE ·PERM SALE Bouncy. beautilul curls can happen to you! Hold that glamour sot with easy-care perma! Look ready to go without ltetting or setting. ... ll at jumbo scmngw! Complete. 120 MAGIC CURL $1 0 125 GLAMOR CURL ' . 135 REGAL CURL •12so $17so Budgel perm alway• S5.95 (normal hair only) '.EAUTY BARGAINS-<.. slryrockel everywhere but here: Stretch your beauty budget and enjoy a fiatlering style, EVEN MORE SAVINGS ON MON •• TUES •• WED. SHAMPOO· SET HAIRCUT HI STY!£ IH~POO-HT HAIRCUT MON .• TUES., WED. $2•5 $150 12•s 120• all week CrownTng Glory BEAUTY SALONS .4ppoiJttm.enJ..s fCtko~ buJ. no& qlwoyi nec~Jar)' • OP.EN EVENINGS OPEN EVENINGS & SUNDAY CROWNING GLORY CROWNING GLORY C fer!Mfir c.,rt&• Celff11'" I SOUTH COAST PLAZA 267 E. 17th ST., COSTA MESA Le'Hf Leffl:-Hut ~ S..p . PHONE S~ifii -· PHONE S0-9919 IL!:====~====· .... r 17 '' I I 17 -----~~------------~---.---~·~~---.,,,--............. --~~.,. ~----,..---,....--·---~. - .i..ta ~ .• esa .N.Y. StAteb E·ltl·"&IO·N '*'. • YOC. If, NO ~"6, J·S6CTIONS, 32 PAGES MICHAEL BRODY HAS LITTLE TROUBLE GIVING MONEY AWAY N"· He'1 'TrillJo.,alre' With PMce, Pl1n, Cure fo1 Cancer De.~s· Trillionaire? Hippie TyciJon Escalates Pledges ' ' r.' NEW 'YOll!I' (UP!h,. tlicblel..J-s ,,.,,. ti."'·l!it'f'l' -~pulled ~lo trody. who now says he will distribute weddtnf·ring from-1111, hJDd jn, the past flQll billion, or. maybt iii even. b'illimt, •• ~ys, will stop 'Uowclio.f him and ~~·a plan for pbce in Vietnam pulling his }\air. •. to Prisjdent Nixon plllf eures for cancer "Don't be so greedy," he said. "Give and all other diseases.r~ _ me a. chaocc. Give me some time." BJ:odY1 whose long r;i-hair and hip He made promiseS to bestow massive clothing belie his -claimed wealµi, insists sums upon 'North VietnaJlll!.in order to end lte will •give away·moDey·to any.one who the war and called on· Nixon to1meet him ~:it:. · ' this afternoon at Kenoed}1 JnternaUonal Before.a natfonal~eleviabi·audlenoe on Airport,bere-to-discuss poverty .and·world the 'Ed Sullivan Show Sunday lligh4 peace. Brody, ·11, played .a•J2-~.guilar· and The .President will be busy , in '°"" a-ballad · wrttttn· hit Bob Dylan, WashiJiPn, however, preparing-his Stall "You•Ain't Goin' Nowhert.~ Then· he· pro. of the Union .message. ctaim4;ld•again: 1 "I have cures for aJl'diseases,11 Brody "I'm worth JOO billion Gollars. ·Does &aid. 111 have a cure for cancer." .. that stagger your.mind? In tact, that was He -promi!ed to diS:Close Jt at the yesterday. J,migP.t be wortli a trillion to-. J.irport during a news conference. da.J." · '. Brody's. bride :of:t"!o weeks, _Renee, a Crowds of peoPJe, many fl. whom said sJ~ •\\'Oman with,long brown hair. stayed they ~ped for a gift.from Sr¢y, mobbed near him on stage and ~rough the the college 'dropout flhilantbi'opist as he crowds. They exchanged loving glances entered and left the theater ... You're kill· frequenUy. ing me," he sbOuted before P,lice hustled A reporter for the New York Times. bim into a car~ he drove •way. who traveled to Puerto Rico with the Inside the theater earlier, f;Brody, who Brodys over the weekend, reported today appeared flushed and ej:jted, told the young heir conceived his plan to give :ceporters he would continue the away bis money while he 1was ''tripped &iveaNys if his .public, incJ\tding those out on drugs." • · 1 "What a joke I've pulled on the world!'' Schools to W-eigh Sale of Bonds Tbe:sale or '65(1,000 in school bonds will be cqiisidered tonight by the Qcean View School" Diattict board of trustee; at their 7:30 p.m. meeting at the distrit's head· =·rs, '1972 Warner Ave., ~ntington 'Dr. Clmnc&Hall, superinlendtnt, said Qie bonds would 'qualify the ~ for .W.·aid allocations and ·for the ,iesign of new facilities, . DurinJ the·same meeting, tl\e:trustees will allo~ authorizing tbie doubl4 Ing of:the diittict's 42-man teacher aide force,,at.an anil.ualexpcnse of·S~.ooo. the newspaper reported Biody said. 1'They think I'm Jesus Christ." The report added Brody met Renee when she came to Scarsdale, N.Y., where he lived in a rented $80,000 house, "to sell Michael and some of his friends some hashish." As Brody escalated estimations ·of his wealth Sunday. circumspect statements from liis bankers were less dazzllnJ. Offic!als of the <lonllnental '!lank of Chicago, ·who would not' discuss Brody's actual net -worth, said' the initial reports be had inherited 425 million were a "gross exaggeration," The money came from Brody 's maternal .~father. John F. Jelke, ·the oleomargariile« manulac- turer,,wbo died in' 1966. The estate,. filed for PJ:9bate', was aaid to be worth $6,881,000, divided among i e v e r a I beneficiaries. Coast· Free~y qnestion t ORANGE COUl\lTY, CALIFORNIA TEN~ Draft No 'Punis.hnient' Supreme Court Bars Any Quick Inductions. . -~- WASHINGTON (UPI) -Tbe Supreme Court today barred Selective Service boards from speeding up inductions to punish registrants for violating draft Jaw regulations. · The court, in a 6-2 ruling, held that any acUon taken against "delinQuent" registrants must be pursued through the courts. The justices struck down the prac· tice of reclassifying them IA subject to immediate call up. The decision came in a criminal case Involving David Earl Gutknecht of Gay· lord. Minn., who contended be was re· classified by his local board and ordered Four Victims Of Traffic Die in County Four Orange Countians, including a San Clemente sports car driver, were killed in traffic crashes over the weekend, the California Highway Patrol reparted to-- day. A fifth motorist died of Injuries suf· fered one ?.·eek earlier, bringing the coun· ty's 1970 traffic death toll to 12. Killed instantly Saturday night when his sports car struck a tree beside Ganado Drive near Ortega Highway in San Juan Capistrano was John Laurence Stauil, 42, of l~ E. Escalones1 San Clemente. Police said Slauff. who recently return· eq from paratroop duty in Vietnam, was 1rl('' · ' 11Ga~ mtfllc II Deatll Toll returning from a bachelor party in ~onor of hi8 brother, Harold, when the accident occurred. He was to have been best man in his brother's wedding JanL24. Staufrs passenger, J8.met Lewis, 23. of the satne address, was treated for cuts and bnlises · at South Coast Community Hospital in South Laguna and released., police said. An elderly Garden Grove resident, Virgil C. Robinson, 84, of 10032 Melody PatkDrive, died Saturday at 9:45 p.m. at Palm General HOBpital of injuries suf· fered when he was struck by an auto Jan. 10 011 Brook.burst Street in Garden Grove. Police said they are still inves. ligating the accident, Another Garden Grove resident, Mrs. Lucille Hittle, 51, of 9691 Westminster Ave., succumbed to her injuries Sunday morning. Police said she and a com· panion, 11-irs. Lois Haws, or Kernville, were crossing Westminster Avenue nt:ar Kerry Street Saturday evening when they were struck by an auto driven by Mrs. Cecilia Green, 21, of 10461 Hazard Ave., Garden Grave. Mrs. Green was not held. Mrs. Haws, who ls in serious condition at Westminster Community Hospital, and her husband were visiting the Hittle family, police said. The two women were apparently on their way home from marketing when the accident occurred. La Habra police said today they are still searching for the driver of a vehicle which reportedly struck and Rilled Mrs. Jacqueline May Stubbs, 40, of 1710 E. La Habra Blvd., early Sunday morning. According to witnesses Mrs. Stubbs was struck by a late model light colored car \\'hile crossing the street in front of her home. BJlena Park police today stated they are continuing to investigate the Satur .. day morning accident which took the life of a Buena Park housewife. Mrs. Elsie Rita Ramos, 37, of 7332 Chippewa Circle, was stopped for a traf- (See DEATHS, Page Z) • • inducted because he deposited his draft card at the feet of a U.S. marshal dul!hlg a war pro'test in MiMeapolis. · The court reve~ed a subsequent co,,. vict.ion of Gutknecht for refusing to re.- port for induction. The majority opinion written by Justice William O. Doua:Jas sajd there was notb· ing in the 1967 draft law giving Selective Service authorities "free.wheeling author· ity to ride hei·d on the registrants, using immediate induction as a disciplinary or vindictive measure." The court asserted: ''The power under the regulations to declare a registrant delll\quent has no statutory standard or even guidelines. The power is exercised entirely by the discretion of the local board. · "lt is a broad, roving authority, a type of administraUve absolutism not congen· ial to our lawmaking traditions." Chief Justice Warren E. Burger and Justice Potter Stewart dissented on the scope of the Douglas finding, JIJ!tiee John M. Harlan agreed with \he majority but Aid he felt regulatioos on delinquents could be is.sued legally if intended to re- quire a youth to comply with registra· tloµ regulations rather than as a punlaJ>. ment. · Bad Etteets on Dogs Among other actions, tht court: ~Held that Alablona and !leorala llad been practicing racial diaerimiJiaUon. ID selection of juries but declined ~ lltlk• down the state Jaws generally. -In an apparent deadloct, ordeted.'re- a.rguments at a lower court llhtoo the issue of whether federal ._... -ob- tain search warrutl .to Mi ellctrGoic devices to monitcr tllllir c:wuailtioml with crlm!nll -II. Till -laVOIY• ed James A. White wllo --ln Chicago in 11116 on chirps of,..._ and sale of horoli!. • 'Mini Pill'· Use Halted PALO ALTO (UPI) -Syntex Laboratories Inc. today suspended use of its "mlni·pill" oral contraceptive on a test basis in the United State&. The firm said it would immediately confer with authorities in· England, France and Mexico, where the "mioi·pill" has been marketed com· mercially for almost a year. It has not been sold commercially in the United States. The suspension of clinical studies in the U.S. came after dogs tested on the pro- gesUn-only pills showed "adverse ef. feels,"' including lesioM and possible metabolic changes. ·A Syntex sl)Okesman said dog studies with the sequential ,birth control pills1 in which estr:fge,ns and progestins -dif· ferent types of female hormones -are •• taken on Clifferent Gays, did not demonstrate the same errects. Last week, top medical authorities dif· fered in congressional hearings in Washington over effect of the estrogen- or sequential -birth contot pills, which havt! been on the market in the U.S. for some time. Some doctors said they had harmful ~ide effects, but others disputed th~. . ' The "mini·pill," which has been hailed by some as a "second generation" birth control device which would be free o( some of the compllcalionS of estrogen~ based pills, has be~ sold in France and Mexico for a year 'I.and in the United Kingdom since last May, It is marketed in England under the b:-and ame "Normenon," tn France as ''Naceoyl" and in Mexico as "Retex." Lynch Wun't Seek Rikirn To Attorney General Post SA~ FJW;e1sco (UPI) ·-California ' Attorney General Thomas c. Lynch, the only Democrat elected to statewide office in the Republican sweep ·or 1'966, an .. nounctd ·today be' will not seek re~lee tion. Lynch, 6~, said he only made up his mind "over ~ holidays" in discussions with his wife and two sons. The attorney generaJ said he had been in public office l'llnce 1933 and would like to "spend some time in a quiet at. mosphere." Lynch stressed that he still had a year to go in office and said that after that he wanted to practice his profeSsion as a lawyer, "preferably in San Francisco." He told a news conference be had something in mind but could not disclose details except that it was in San Fam· cisco. Lynch, who became attorney general by appointment of Gov. Edmund G. Brown Aug. 31, 1964, was elected to a full term in November of 1966. He said he could not do this job pro- perly and campaign for office at the same time. Lynch said the job of attorney general was becoming successively more dif· flcult "I talked to Gov. Warren (former Supreme Court chief justice) recently and he mentioned that the attorney generalship was a lovely job," he said. "I asked him how many depuUes he had wben he was attorney general and he said 74. I have over 260, plus offices in Los Angeles, San Francisco, Sacramento and San Diego. "Problems are growing an the time. We have problems that were un~eard of 20 years ago -oil pollution, en- vironmental control, antitrust. And Jaw enforcement is getting to be a greater problem ." Lynch was asked if he would endorse his chief deputy. Charlei O'Brien, who had not declared but has been mentioned as a possibl.._ candidate. "That problem has not oome up," Lynch said. "Charlie O'Brien has been a loyal and efficient chJef deputy." Mesa Receives Japan Letter- Needs Linguist Neither rain, nor sleet, nor dark o! night stalled delivery ol an Air Mail Jet- ter to Mayor Alvin L. Pinkley, but it took awhile to find someone to read it. One letter postmarked in Japan has been translated. but another mailed to Costa Mesa City Hall and reeeived earlier is still making the rounds of Harbor Area linguists. Mayor Pinkleyfl said he sought help from several persons of oriental eX'• traction recently, but none co u rd translate the difficult dlalecl, written in Japanese characters. Dated Dec. ZS, In the 44th Year of Showa {1989) lhe note brings the city thanks from Plnkley's counterpart. Mayor Giichi Honda, of Esashi City, Hiyama-Gun, Hokkaido. Tbe company apokesman llld llie ••minJ-plll" was tested on 4,700 women in the United::= and abroad before II went .on market. lt was lllll being tested at center* in the United States, where the FDA had withheld marketing approval. The spokesman said the effects noted in dog tests were "basically lesions,'' but that possible metabolic changes were also noted. "There are a variety of effects, but the pathology is not clear," be said. ••we are going to make further tests With dogs to determine the nature al the effects, and whether certain species of dogs are uni- 'quely sensitive to such compounds." He said tests wUh1 monkeys on-the "'mini·pill" showed no ·advene cffeetl. 'Hide and See'IC Game Ends; lihig :suspeet Los~s An Arcadia man who· PolJPil' up ud slartled two paSS!ng detecli..S ljonl the weekend in Costa Mesa City Jail, after the lawmen claimed they stumbJed onto a haul of hashish and marijuana worth $2,500 in his parked van1 The accidental discovery led to the booking of Robert E. Dietze, ~' on charges of poasession of hashish and marijuana for sale. Arresting officers were wa1Jdn1 .. t1ong In an area known for frequent drug ar· resta about 8:30 p.m.. Friday, when. the)> neared a parked van which appeared ·to be empty, said Detective Norm ·Kutch. Suddenly, he said, someone arose from the dashboard area, leading Detective Sgt. John Regan to snap bil· fiasbllghi beam into the vehicle. Regan and Kutch said they saw what appeared to be several lida, or two:oance plastic bags of marijuana on the ~ and asked Dietze to step out of the·van. The narcoUcs detectives aaid they foul)d an additional kilo, or 2.2 pounds' of marijuana hid~ under a jacket on the seat, plus about one-half pound of hashish, the refined sap of themartjuana plant. Kutch said today Uu!t bash is sold on Qte average of $10 per gram. so the amount confi&eated w o u 1 d nin about $2,%49 In value, with $200 more for the marijuana. . Several other drug arrests were Jogged over the weekend, but most involved ft'.4 tremely small amoWlfs of contraband discovered during routine traffic violation Stops, I · Orange Weather · ~ewp'1rt ·Make~ Another Last Plea A translation orrered a hint of the con~ tents of the other letter , written In Japanese. when Mayor Honda thanked Mayor Pinkley for hospitality tpward Esashi City re!i.dent Dr. Mit!bo Sasaki. Or. Sasli.i j aocl. a group of collugues visited CaJlfomia late last fall, and he and · several researchers ·studied at Fairview>-Slate lloopital, while others obeerved·rqetbods cilsewhere in the men· tal l\)'gl<ne oystem. Cloudy sk1es wlth·an occasionaal pitier pattet or rain cin the r9of ii the outlook for Tuesday alq the Orange Coul with Utue crum,. In temperalur • 'BJ JMNt'VALTERZ>\ " •Of--~·f'flM...,, • Ntwpo!Ueaeh Mayul"lloreen Mt1rshall Wt!l<tUd aw-lriember-city dcle'gallOn to Sicramento·Wfdnesda:rin a final attempt to chan"' the path of the Pacific Coast FreiwJy. ' ~ Tbe light o.nd long list of trips !!> Sac· ramento in the bltter freeway battle hu entered tt.s seventh year, .and Olia latest trip. the officials .have vowed, wUl~be.rtht Gnal' one. Besides Mrs. Mara~, othetSt ~ tn !ht cipltal w!P be Vice Mayor lliailsley Pa.rsons, Councilman Paul Grubel' (who in'past fikirmlshes led the fight u ma:r of), Pl~ ..Llw·enct" WllsOn ' and'..Pu~lic'<W~ J1J1ejlll11lev. lin (anotJleti, veteraDi Of1'the c&mpaign). The city. staff has.remained relatively mum on the:format'pretielt\iltions expec. l.ed to be made befc:n·the Highway Com- mission. Devlin said the contents or the city pre- aentation will be kept &ttrtt "10 no one will misinterpret. some parts of. our corn. mentary." The gl'(IUP Jg expected to make an ap. JleB} for•& new study on the controversial lreeway rouling, p..._1, which -Id push the·p.tth ol the roadwlY lartller in- land arid away froin Newportt• Matlner11 Mlle and parts ol the bluffs .neat'New· Porl Heighls. • • But those opposed to Wand rouunr, principally the cities of Costa M,.. and Huntington Beach, still oppose any roUte change. Huntington Beach·s City Council in re- cent days has said it doesn't objtcl to the reopening of route studies, but its consent comes only if houses in that city are not a·rr~ted. Any changes in routes, It ts conceded; could take more 1 homes , thus the ·•en. dorse1ntrrt" Is not a marktd change In Huntington Beach's pos!Um, Any new Inland route would cul through neilhborhoods w..i of the Santa Ana Riv· er Jn llilntlngl<ln Beach. Colta Mesa officials» who have ~si. lenlly opposed·an lnl•nd roule, rtcenllY rtittrated their posltfon even if any new Inland foutes stay within Newport city llmll&. ' . Newport Vice ~{S.Yf1f Parsons, wJio last .mos11.\1 offered some new r~te. SU8ie&- tions for lnland areas of Newport 'Heights, said' Wcdnesday'a meeting la the "last hqpe."' • · Olher counclllnon agrted, adding that tf the commission givts a rhit no to re- stady pleas, then only local~level work Wlth 1late engineers to resolve problems alona the 14opted route are all !hit Is Jell. Along ·wiUt ,of'ficial city presentations (Sff FREEWAY, Pago Z) Dr. Sasaki and his colleagues . wt.re gretJed by the Costa Me,a City Couocil and made honorary citizens, 1ea~a: to the \l(Brm thank·you note from Mayor Honda. ~ . Stew 'itlarket NEW YORK CAP) -The stock market conUnUtd il!l tosing ways in modttate late lradinJ tocflY, (See quotadons, Pages 20-%1), Analyst& aakl the market was. beinc ,..ighecl down by weaknm in the glomor ls!Ues.1 For· U'le stCGl'ld ltr alght Sf:8Sloll. INSmE TODAY O·rn! contender for tht coft. gre.s1ional Cup races has been i selected to highliQhC a ~ 1oeekend • of boaU1ig octivltr. 1 Pag" 13·14. •• l Police Pig Perk y "Fuzzy," Ule pig masc<1l QLtile 'NatjQp;l! PQlice PalroJmfil' Asso- ciation sips champagne offered by association president Richard MacEachem at Boston animal hospital as association secretary Robert Flaven looks on. The porker got sick last week and was rush- ed to the hospital -with a police escort. State Acquires Beach Land fu Deal With Irvine Firm By RICHARD P. NALL Of JIM o.llr PUii St.ti' Willlam Penn Mott. Jr., director of the State Department of Beaches and Parks, said Saturday that California bas just ao. quired three more miles ~ public beach in Orange County. MoU declined to pinpoint the location but' had just completed talks with the Irvine Company which he said pleased him. . Mott was one af a panel of speakers at the San Clemente Inn taking part in a confer~ on the future of Orange Coun- ty beaches. The Irvine Company has announced plans for cooperative development of its coastal holdings between Laguna Beach and Corona de! Mer so that the public will have access to beaches. Conlmenting on his talks "'ith Irvine Company officials. Mott said he thought the pending developme_nt would bring "a totally new concept on bow beach areas can be available to the public as well as have private development." He called the concept "something quite unlque which may set a precedent for the rest of California ." Mott also forecast a new trend in sLate beach planning which will push the auto inland. "In the past we have planned for the auto. We now are going to plan the state park system for people and not the aulo." Commenting on · expanded parking recently provided at Doheny State Beach. Mott said, "the parking lot can be ripped out tomorrow. \Ve're making studies to detennine how to move the autos as much as five miles inland an d provide a 6)'5tem of mini.bus transportaUon, "Doheny Park Is merely a transition on what we're ultimately going to have." ., Mott also spoke o( the need to convert milltarv lands such as Camp Pendleton to pub1ic use. "Pendleton and several DAILY PILOT io\i11! N. W11C J'tul<ftftl t ftd P11~1;.i,,r others are closed to p.iblic use. We 're working on \his situation." 'Jbe state Jiad planned its first surfing 'park -a mile of beach frontage backed by 460 acres -adjacent to the Loran Coast Guard Station whlch abuts Prt.Si· dent Nixon's Western White llou~e. Security shelved the pJan s for the "Trestles" arc a "'hen the President bought his home last year. Questioned after ·hit' talk , !\Iott said the "Trestles" Is a superior surfing area. Nixon aides had indicated some other Camp Pendleton land not close to the West.ern White House might be used. Mott wants all of the area for the public. Mott predicted confidently t h a t "absolutely the Trestles will be in public usage eventually. We had everything set lo go wben the President bought that land." He indicated that "eventually" pro· bably meant when !\tr. Nixon is no Tonger' President. "There is not nearly the security problem for former Presidents," he said. Mott cited a state park developed across the river from fonner President Johnson's Texas ranch after he le fl the Presidency. During his talk, Mott also aired plans for new emphasis on underwater parks and preserves along the California,, coa stline. "The dcparbnent is now iden· tifying critical areas to create Un· <lerwater parks and preserves." he said . He called then1 an exciting recreational resource and said, "underwater destruc· lion is more int~nsive than on land, there is little or no time to accomplish this." l\1ott said there are 1,051 miles or California coastline with 437 miles Ir public ownership and only part of the~c miles the type suitable for swimming. He said the st.ate must think in term~ of total public 0"'11ership of this type beach from Point Conception south to the Mexican border. ''California must· recognize that it is the trustee. of this frontage for the entire countn'." said the spe{l>ker. Ni xon · Picks Floridian Cur $.well 1' apped for Supreme Court Seat "UH!Nto'rilN (UPI\ -'l1iO Wb11A1 HOuJli '~ 'lafonMd ' Federal ~II Jud1• «, Harold eenw.n o1 TAl••&iuee, Fla;, he will be appointed to the Supr11111 Court, UPI WU told today. • Carswell has been prominently men- tioned for the vacancy, created when Abe Fortas resigned last 1.fay -under fire for hla fh1anclal associaUon with tlnancler Louis WoUson, who waa convictetl of ,ell· Ing unnglstered securities. A White House Aide telephoned Canwell, 50, 3everal days ago to ·tnform him he had been picked. "He was told ju.st to alt tight and make no atatement about the nomlnaUon," a source said. Carswell did just that, telling reporters In Tallahassee thet "It would ~' hlghly inappropriate for me to m:\i.c any com· ment of any nature" on reports of the ap- pointment. Nixon named Carswell, a former Coastal Cities Face Automobile 'Strangulation' . .lf you're looking for an uncluttered beach. yaw-best bet might be to enlist in lhe Marine Corps and hope W be &ta• tioned at Camp Pendleton. This was lhe advice Saturday of con· 'servationist·author Wesley f.farx, who apoke or coastal cities so swamped with summer traffic thal they can become undesirable placea to live. Huntington Beach, Newport Beach and Laguna Beach are in partk:ularly precarious positions as far as auto strangulation, he said. Marx was one or six i])eakera at a con- ference at the San Clemente Inn on the future of Orange Cour.ty beaches. Sponsored by the Capistrano Bay Area and Orange County Leagues of Women Voters, it played to an enthusiastic au- dience of. about 17S. The session included much of Orange County city and county officialdom. Speakers were Kenneth E. Carr, San Clemente city manager; Richard P. Ruit, executive assistant to Supervisor David L. Baker; Knowlton Fernald J r . 1 architeet and planning vice president, Laguna Niguel Corp.; William Penn Mott Jr., director of the state Department of Parks and Re(reation, and Assemblyman Alan Sieroty. Marx said freeways should meet tM demands t.hey are placing on coastal cit.Jes. Mentioning coast.at fteeway -offramps acheduled tor Beach Boulevard or Hun· llng1on Beach and lt1acArthur Boulevard of Ne"'port Btach, i\1arx said. HJ can visualize Huntington Bea.ch and l\'ewport Beach as one blg honking auto horn on a coastal weekend." He said the state hlgh\vay pei>ple should plan turnouts, viewpoints, and pie· rue areas to accommodate the traffic carried by the freeways. Alternate forms of transportaUon should also be studied, said "t&rl mentioning helicopters and federal clil1rict Judfe, to the 5th Circuit Coult 'of ~PPe&ll aven months ago. The court h1ncl1N CUN In Florida, Georgia, Alabama. Mlsswlppi and Texas. Florida lawmakers saJd the Carswell aelecUon was a good one. Rep. Don Fu· qua (0.Fla.), describing himsrlf as a personal friend of Carswell, said: "He hu no stock problems. He is a good man. I consider him a moderate conservative." The Senate last year rejected Nixon'3 lint choice for the Jl'ortu seat, Chief Judge Clement F. Haynsworth of the 4th Circuit. Opponent& attacked Haynsworth's bcn<:h record on civil rlght5 and his finan· cial holdJngs in companies involved in litigation before his court. Sen. Edward J. Gumey (R-Fla.), first suggested Carswell for the high court. A Gurney aide said the senator was "very pleased" by the report of the judge's Mltetion. quoted by an aide as aaying he had not heard from either the White Howe or the JusUce Department about the nomina· tion, "but he will be glad to support Carswell because he is a &ood human being and a good lav,•yer,I' the aide said. •;There has never been a Floridian on the Supreme Court. This would be 1ood for the Slatfl." The aide added that Holland had sµ1· gested two others for the nomlnaUon, Juatice B. K. Ro&erts of the Florida .Supreme Court and Dr. Stephen C. O'Connell, president of the UNverslty of Florida and a former Florida Supreme Courti justice. A Carswell appointment would bear out earlier predictions that NiJ:on would tum , to Dixie for a Supreme Court ap- pointment following his rebuff on Haynsworth, who Uves in Greenville, S.C. €onv e1ies Toliight Me sa Coun cil Halts Tue sday Night Meetings Returning lo a normal schedule, the Costa Mesa City Council will convene tonight for a one-night session, concluding a series of Monday.Tue.sday meetings in- itiated to catch up on back bu.slness. Cily officials reminded people with scheduled items up for consideration, or who wish to address the council, that no metUng will be field Tuesday, Letters of notlficaUon were mailed to people with various matters on the agcn· da, but some are expected to be pootpon· ed as a result of the first and lhird Mon· day schedule resumption. The meeting will begln "'ith a customary business session at 6:30 p.m., follo\\'ed by a 7:30 p.m. legislative session and concluded with oral communications and councilmanic comments period. Several ord{nances adopted at an ad· journed meeting a week agi> will be up for seC-Ond reading and formal adoption, with further discussion of a law govern· ing swap meeta in public heulna. City Attorney Roy June Is scheduled jo su bmit a contract for a downtown area traffic study discussed recently and said last Monday he would have one prepared for hiring of a municipal goU courae manager. Several t.0ne exception Ptll'Dits prt> cessed by the COSta M:eaa Plaanllll Com- mission last Monday will also come before the council, including one required for the new Harbor Area Youth Problem Center. One of the highlights of the earlier busiaess session will be announcement of nine members appointed to the newly fonned Costa Mesa Crime Prevention Committee. Councilmen met in executive personnel session at the close of their adjourned meeting last ftionday to evl.luate and choose the COmmittee, based on-Mayor Alvin L. Pinkley'i recommendations. FiremenSaveG~l Trapped In Mini-e1-Building Marca Harrigan. 21. of Orange decided to work late at the office Saturday, but someone in the two-story Newport Beach building forgot to leave a door unlocked. So the petite ?ttiss Harrigan found herself locked in after her chores were through. ~ She called firemen to free her . When t.he rescuers arrived they told the trapped miss to walk out onto a second· floor balcony to wait for the ladder. When she came out, one fireman said today, three firemen almost fought one another to scramble up ihe ladder for the rescue. She was wearing a mini skirt. F ron• Page 1 hyd rofoils. He predicted that futurt beach recreh--... n EA THS lion might include all year swimn1ing in JU rubber suits, "submoblles" for un· derwater wandering and lighted beaches IN CO UN TY ••• for night use. But without strong management, said ?..fart, the shoreline will tum into "something that the Scripps Institute of Oceanography can't put back together again ." We musl, said the speaker, find alternaUves to lihoreline de\'elopment and protection that will not bankrupt us. In the Surfside, Sunset Beach and Newport Beach areas , he said, 30 million cubic yards of sahd v.·111 be needt<! in the next 20 years just to maintain the. beach and the Army Corps of Engtnee.rs -and nobody else -J.:nov.·s where it is 1oing to come from . Erosion control, he said, runs Into astronomical costs that force the federal government to step in . Erosion he said threatens foor north county beaches, in· eluding HunUngton Beacli, most popular in the. state, and $100 million in property development and a low-Jane highway, fi e light at Knott and Orange a\'enues ·when she wai struck headon by the vehi· cle driven by Jack McKinnon, 26, of 122 Bella Vista st.. Anaheim, police said. McKinnon's vehicle apparently crossed the center divider line, ramming l\1rs. Ramos' ~topped vehicle. investigators stated. l\.1cKinnon was treated at Y.'est Anaheim Community Hospital a n d released. CdM MAN BETIER A Corona del Mar resident, John Stein· broner, 20, of 3036 Break ers Drive, was reported recovering from injuries suf· feed Sunday morning in a single car crash on Newport Avenue at Barrett Lane near Orange. California Highway Patrol officers said Steinbroner was a passenger in the vehi· cle driven by Kerry Bruce Moore, 20, of 1214 \V. Santa Clara Ave., Santa Ana, whn is recovering from injuries in the same hospital. Patrolmen said the two were north~ hound on Newport "at a high rate or speed1' "'hen Moore lost control of the car on a curve and hit a guardrail. Both youths were ejected from the auto on im· pact, of(icers said. A Santa Ana husband and wife are listed in critical e-0ndition in Santa Ana Community Hospital today {ollowing a tv•o-car collision at La Colina Drive and Redhill Avenue near Tustin Sunday morning. Highway patrolmen said either the auto of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Holmberg, 1121 Ravencrest, Santa Ana, or that driven by tllar~·in Hollenberg 25, from the f..1arine Helicopter Station, Santa Ana. ran a st.op sign at La Colina caus· ing the accident. llollenberg was treat- ed and rel eased from the some hospital. ESCAPE INJURY Two Nav¥ men fro mSan Diego escap- ed injury 1n a four-car mishap on the San DiegQ Freeway near San Clemente that sent tv.•o couples to South Coast Con1n1unity Hosp ital \l'ilh major injur· ifi;, officers said. NEW PILOT 'COVER GIRL' F11hlon Writer Christy Miss Christy 'Cover Girl' For Pilot Tuesday'• new "cover gir1•• for the women's section of the DAILY PILOT Js Marian Christy, one of the nation's most respected fashion writers. Winner of · 12 national writing atants al'ld three state awards (Massa~husetts) in the past three and a half years, Miss ~hristy is noltd for her global galloplnc an the coverage of the fashion heal She insists on spending at least three months out of each year covering the faahlon news Capital of the world -New York, Paris, Rome, Madrid -even Dub. lln, when Ireland ls where it's happenm,. A nat.ive of Boston, Miss Christy was graduated from Boston University'• School or Journalism. She became fashion editor of the Boll· ton Globe in 1965 after four years as a. feature writer for Women's Wear Daily. Her syndicated column now appear; in nev.·spapers Lhroughout the United States. It will be a weekly feature of the DAILY PILOT, hr.ginning Tuesday. and will be featured each Tuesday on the cover page of the women's section. Father Stops .Son's Suicide Burdened V.'itlt problems, a young Costa Fifesa man threatening suicid e finally turned over four rifles and a supply of ammunition to police waitb1g outsidtt Sunday, following a long talk wiih hia father. Officers v,·ith drawn guns and neighbors stood around the Baker Street residence during the afternoon incident, v..·hich end· ed peacefully and without any arrest. Investigators sald the 23·year-old man refused at first to allow lawmen to enter the aparlment, but let Sgt. · Thell Glascock and a friend inside after a 30.1 minute conference with his father. Sgt. Glascock. and the friend of the young. husband discussed the problems underlying his feeling of desperation for an additional ~riod, before the situation eased to their satisfaction. From Page 1 FREEWAY . •• Wednesday will come a petition signed by I.000 Corona de! Mar residents who oppose current freeway access plans in their community. The group has won su pport by the Cor- ona de! Mar Chamber of Commerce. The Corona de\ Mar Civic Association is lead· ing the fight. Th~ group opposes the use of Fifth Ave· nue as a four.Jane collector street -a proje(t which would eliminate scores of hquses in the northern part of Corona del l\far. · The petitioners offer new plans to use ;:i. new road follo wing Buck Gully as an access route to Pacific Coast Highway, instead. 1l.1m1t ICffvil IE<flTor Tho.,,•• ;.,, Murph l"• MtMt"'8 ldi10!' Texas Takes Try at Tim The accident took place near A venue San Luis Rey overcrosslng when the southbonud car driven by Michael J. Aguilar of Miramar Naval Air StaUon, San Diego, lost the left rear lfheel, patrolmen said. Michael L. Smith Of the San Die:;o Naval Recruit Depot struck th e: roltin p \vheel but '~·as not Injured, OI· ficers said. Corona de\ fllar Chamber President Dee Cook, a forn1er councilman, and Al Forgit, anolher ex-councilman who is s<C~king reelection to fight the free\\•ay, both ha~·e said they plan to attend the meeting st2'rling al 10:30 a.n1. in' the basement of the 'late Public Work.s Building. Quake J ars Russia • C"N Me1e Offi$1 JJO W1tl l1y Str11t Me ili"!I Add11n: ,.O. lo• IS60, 92626 Otllt' OfflcM )11W-l lff(ll1 l'11 WIJ• l alba.I l•uit111•4 I.It ..... ll1Cft: '2? Ft•t•1 "~f<'lllC MU"~i.i 11•(111 1'11S l11t~ I W~vtr4 From Wirt S.nrlcu LAREDO, Ttx. -The streets of Laredo led to a West Texas counhouse todriy, where Dr. Timothy Leary \vent on lrh1l again for marijuana charce& thro\•:n out once already by the U.S. Supreme Court. A two-day continuanct was granted" un· ti! Wednesday by Orange County Supe.rlor Court authorities, meanwhile, since Dr. Leary, hlas wife and son were dut to go on trial today In Santa Ana for an LSD and marijuana case dating back 13 months. Dr. Leary -declared candidate for the California go,·cmorsl1ip in Novembtr - criticized the ~trial by Texas And federal authorities. charging It amounts to political harassment. "l h11 Nixon Adm inistration dots not ha,'c any (alth in the democratic process and they want to use. tl1e po"l\'er of government to hnras~ us." he alleged. "Anyone v.'hl> llears that lhe govern· menl is lr)ing "'' after a unanimouJ Supreme Court decl&ion kno~rs lhat thue ) ls something fishy here -or it is unfair,·• be continued. He. was convicted In 1966 of failure to declare marijuana and pay federal tax on three ounces of lhe weed, brought across from ltftxlco at Laredo, with a $40,000 line and »year prlaon sentence imposed. The U.S. Supreme Court rultd that declaring tl'ie marij"uana would have fore· td the former Harvard Co 11 e a e psychology professor to reveal in· criminalla, evidence agalnst blnuell and overturned the convict.tOn. ' Susan Leary carried the poL In a dainty silver snuff box cfadled btlwttn btr legs l'lnd was convicted of lllt&al lranaporta· ti~n and citnctalmtnt of marijuana, but ah·en • probate senttnct. The proceedings ln U.$. District Court will ht presided over aaaln by Judgt Ben Connally, Y.'ho sat in Leary'• first trial. Tlle new ,.,rial lnvoJvtt 11nuQ1in1 or marijuana and carries a mulmum sentence of 20 years ln prison and $20,000 fi'le, but Dr. Leary is confident ht will "'In again. He , his \\'lfe Rosemary, 33, and son John, 20, are schedu led fo1· trial on charges of possession or dangerous drugs and marijua na as a result or their arrest Dec. 26, 1968, in La·guna Beach . The trial is now scheduled \Vednesday In Orange County Superior Court, depeir ding on outcome of the Texas pro- ceedings. Besides the Texas and Ortinge County procttdlngs, Dr. Leary recently appeared In a New York courtroom and faces Rtverside County court siction sten1mi ng from an LSD drov,•ning death at a com· munal ranch. He was cha rged with contributing to the delinquency of a minor last year after Charlene R. Aln1elda , 17, of Laguna Beach , drvwned in ~ deep crct1k pond 011 the ranch near llemeL "I'm ru nn ing for go\ 1.lrnor of Ce:lifornia," Dr. Lenr)' declared today in Texa~. ··t should bo bock in my · own tlltc. turning on n1y voters lnstwd of having to spend the time and energy here gcln~ throuf!h a case t.bal \li'e know ¥lC'll ·"111." -·--·--- The wheel then stuck the auto driven by Harold R. Cardin. 60, of San Diego, causing the \'ehicll': to go out of control, rross !he renter divider and strike the car driven by Orin Weir of Bellflo\\·er. l\fOSCO\V <AP ) -A mild earthquake shook Uzbt>kistan in Soviet central A5ia ioday, Tass said, adding I.hat there were no reports of injuries or damage. 'The earthQuake was centered near Tashkent, the Uzbek capital that \vas badly dam· aged by a tremor in 1966. 1 Coast Pa1·ks Asked . LOS AN.GELES (AP) -Rep. John V. Tunney said today he \Vlll propose in Congress that the ~overnn1ent designate several coastal areas as a Cali fornia Coastline National Park. Tho park "'ould incorporal e th e coastal portion~ of the U.S. i\tarl ne Corpi: Base al Camp Pend leton, the Channel Islands. Van- denburg Alr Force Base. Los Padre! National Forest along the Big Sur coa~t flnd the Poin t Reyes National Seashore. "The .pur~se of 1his park \\•ill be to protect the public Interest In the scenic, b1ological. re:creationAI and economic values of Cali· rornla's ocetiin fro11t." the Deniocratic candidate for the U.S. Senate said at a news conference. I ' • Laguna By BARBARA KREIBICR Ot I~• Dtlt1 ,1101 lttlf Stu<lents from Laguna Beach High School and twa members ol the district iehool board engaged in a person-lo. person experiment in communication Thursday as the ;student-initiated Open Forwn serJes gel under way in the djstrict board '"'t· . About a dozen udenta turned uptO fire questiO!lS at ~d president Larry Taylor and trustet Dr. Norman Browne (substituting foc )Vllliam Wlkoxen who was iU) and received in return some thoogllls on the o Rs -Rlgbis and Responsibilities. 'l11ey learned tqat Dr. Browne would like to'get rid of the dress code, tound out a ltttl~ about the1 workings of a school board and rece.iv~ a. dissertat,lon on the virtue' of newsp~ reading. The trustees leapied that at least one. studen( thinks "mo.st of the kids" at the high sohool ;mo P,.etty happy with the way it~ beipg ~ and a lot of tb.m would Uke to know •what the students can -----------------------·---------·-----~----~ do lo htlp cet the forthcoming tu over- ride puaed. ln rtlJ)OMe to an opening qutation, Taylor eiplainod that lite llaft pull lite tntlrt "-lblltty ol operaUng scllool dlatr!ct< ill the bands ol locally elected trustees who are, in effect, Jtate olfictts. "Actuallf w«-111 ban-thing to say about lnythlng Utat ._ on In ~I tlme.'' .,.ict Ta~Jor. "and a bout everythinf that lnvolwt money. Ef. fectlvely we delegate many (I( the duties lo lhe ~ent and his staff, but they are responaiible to U11" •. 'llte aim of Ille boW, Taylo< said. Is to 0 give ~ an-educaUon that will prepa re you for adult life.'' Asked what kind of standards would 11< considered acceptabl' lo< adutt life, Browne replied, "'lbit'I AtOugh question, but one ot the larger goals woold be to prepare responaible cjtizens who will make good decllions and will not be a problem to aoclety. '11lere has been more emphasls on the preparation of responsi- ble citizens in recent years, because we aee so many citizenl who are not Questioned responalble and turn to crime and drug use." Why wasn't something being done to Improve the school library, a siudent asked. I APPLICATIONS Taylor explained that the board and school administrator had made three ap- pUcations in the past three years for $100.000 in federal funds to improve the library •. each time without success. "We are like you," he said. "We have just ~ much mooey to spend, and when we've spent it there isn't any more un· less we can find a way lo raise it." Asked if the community should not be blamed for the library deficieucy. Tay- lor said, "Perhaps in<tftectly. If the last tax override hacf"dO("been defeated \11e . would have had more money.'' - The students expressed great Interest in the forthcoming override and bond elecUcm, urging trustees to tell them how they could help to get the message of the need to the community. "espe-- cialiy the old people who don't have kids and will vote against it.." Taylor &aid the district does not want to "use" students to plead tor the tax and bond issue. ''Jt's up to us, the lrustee1.; and the ad· ministration, to make Ute need clear to the voters," he.said, "but there's nothing lo keep yo~ (rom encouraging your parents to vote-especially fathers-last time most mothers vok->d, but very few fathers." Asked what he thought of the school's dress code, Browne said, "Personally, I'd like to get rid of ii." He qualified the statement by pointing out that, since school trustees are elected officials and supposed to represent the community, they might sometimes have to 18.ke action that does not agree wUh Lbelr personal views if there ls very strong community feeling on the subject, as with lhe dress code. Taylor pointed out, "We didn't vote for or against a dress code. \Ve were asked to approve a dress code you students had worked out, and we did." Asked for his personal \'iew, Taylor Monday, Ja11uary 19, 1970 s DAIL V PlLOr 3 by Students rep!led, "l'".e neyer (ell that r 'owned ' my children or should lay down rules about lhe:lr dress other than telling lhern 'Look in the mirror. I( you're satisfied with the way you look, then it'a up ta you.' I'd say the same to any student. Take a good Jong look ln the mirror and decide whether you're satisfied wllh what you aee." Browne commented that on a reeent visit to a hJgh school campus in Northern California that bas no dress code he had ooUced the students looked "much neater than our students: down here." He said he wasn't .sure what that meant, except that it may have reOected a different attitude toward dress in the commWllty. 1• Several students said they f~lt more comfortable and could "study belier" if they were allowed to wear more informal clothes. CAMPUS DIS8ENT Discussion moved on to campus dl!!lsent and the generation gap. •·Some dissent is valid and some is not.'' saJd Browne. 14There are plenty of problems in aociety and students have valld reuom to complo.ln about some th1ng11. l'm Just not sure some of th~ means they uae to exprtsi; their dissent are valid." 'Taylor agreed. "There is no doubt of the tJgbt to dissent. Jt'I the m11nner of dinent that ls the que.ston. It's right tn quesUon and seek new ways, but you must realize that change ls continuous - every generaUon changes and there is nwch changt within a single lifetime. l believe ,you should have &001e disside11t opinions but J illJo tieJJeve In the two R'.~ -rights, and lhe respoosiblliUe.s th:it &o with them." Regarding the generation gap, a gir l commented, "I don't think therei's such a thlr1g as a genFr!tjon gap -il'.s more of a people gap, It's been publlcl%ed ton much_ ~s !! generation grui. J qim· municate fine with my parents.·• BOY DISAGREES A boy disagreed. "J think there's a big gap. Both the older and younger genera. tions .:ire questioning a lot of each othe r's values." ' ·Dow,& the Coastline Protection Promised "Maybe il's because when you're young the ~·ay you want society is dif!ereill from the ·way you wan t tt when you're older," said another girl. To a comment that students "don't "know what the school board ls doing;• Taylor noted that board meetings are open, but sugges ted that a report on board actions, translated into simple lcrms1 could be provided for the student.!. ll was suggested by a student that such information could be published in the school paper. Mission Trail Si.eroty's Bill to Create Coastal Commission Witli Veto Oceans Pl1ysics Lecture Slated MISSION VIEJO -Dr. Jack C. ~filler of the Pomona College physics depart· ment will speak on "Physics of the Oceans" at 11 am. in room 2 of building Q at Saddleback College on Jan. 23. Dr. Miller, who has his B.A. Degree from Pomona and a PhD Degree from Oxford University in England, continued advanced studies at llarvard University and Scripps Institute of Oceanography. The lecture is free. e Ne"' Prh1cipal Set CAPISTRANO BEACH -Palisades School is getting a ne\V principal. He is Larry Peltier, who ls replacing Dr. John Crain. Crain is the ne\v assistant superintendent for personnel. Peltier, who has three children. formerly was teaching vice principal of Ole Hanson, Crown Valley and Concordia i;chools. He came to the Capistrano Unified School District in 1965. e Student Sho11i Slated CAP ISTRANO VALLEY -lo.!embers ot the American Association of University Women, San Clemente.Capistrano Bay chapter will sponsor a student production Thursday. Members of the junior and senior hum anities club at San Clemente High School will present original views of. the significance of art fonns in a changing society. The students will use mWlic, drama, art and history in their pres· entation. The program acted and directed by the gtudents will begin at 7:30 p.m. 1n San Clemente High School liltle theater. After tossing dart!!I at a host of con- s er vat ion is t targets Saturday, Assemblyman Alan Sleroty (D·Beverly Hills) said he will Introduce legislation that would prevent any irreversible damage to California coastline. Sieroty said the proposed legislation would create a State Coastal Commission similar to San Francisco Bay Conserva- tion and Development Commission, established to protect the bay from land fill projects and other detrimental uses. The commJsslon, he said, will be com- prised of regional commissions responsi- ble for various sections of coastlioe. It would, by a permit system, have veto power over projects from a half mile in· land to three miles at sea that seem harm(ul to the ecology of the coast. 'ftie lawmaker was anchor man in a conference or. the future of Orange Coun· ty beaches sponsored by the Capistrano Bay Area League of Women Voters. It was held In the San Clemente Inn. FOUND TAR GETS Sieroty found targets that ranged from electric power plants -both fossil and nuclear fueled -to the Upper Newport Bay land swap and Joss of public access at Salt Creek. ·tte charged that the Upper Bay Ja nd exchange woold not provide the public: with fair value for publlc lands traded, did not give adequate consideration to public recreational needs and would eventually result in destruction of one or the last remaining estuaries on the entire West Coast. 1•1 have writteil to Governor Reagan, who recently in his State of the State niessage expresed concern about our disappearing estuaries, and have asked him to call for a reconllideration of the land exchange by the State Lands Com· mission," said Sieroty, Zeroing in on beach access, Sieroty said beach areas such as Salt Creek in Orange County and Sea Ranch in Sonoma County (which cub off 10 miles of beach from the public) "have become battle DAILY ,!LOT Still l"llol• ZEROING IN ON POLLUTION Dert Tftrower Sl•roty cries for those who will no Tonger see: 1. public resource turned into a private reserve." former Laguna Beach vice mayor, in bringing the matter to public attention before his subcommittee. During his long talk, Sieroty called for f\etter water, quality control by removing from control of the Water Quality Control Boards "those members who represent industrial. agricultural and domestic polluters.'' He said he will CO·sponsor legislation to remove the polluters from the water boards and to provide a connlct of in- terest clause similar to one that exists for the Public Utilities Commission fPUCJ . OCEAN NOT DUMP Sleroty said government as well as in- dustry must stop treating the ocean as its dump. Quoting conservationist author Wesley Marz: (who also apoke), the assemblyman said, "The ocean has Hs t-Olerances and its stresses. When these are surpassed, the ocean falters. "FIBh stocks can be depleted. Beaches can erode away. Seawater, the most common substance on this earth and the most life.nourishing, can be hideously corrupted.·• . The speaker said flatly that power plants should not be located along the beaches. "Their structures are not Com· patible with the natural nthetics of lhe shoreline. Instead, we ahoukl look to underground sites and to Inland sites away from ppoppulation centers.'' He was critical of nuclear plants both for discharging radioactive w~tes and CASES PENDING for dumping wann water int-0 the ocean, changing the ecology. SletotY also ques-Sieroty noted the two cases now pen-tloned the atandards for radioactivity ding before the slate Supreme Court con· set by the Atomic Energy Commission cerning the public's right to access. He (AEC) citing two scientists who called said Assemblyman John Dunlap (0-for a reduction "to no more than to per-V~Jejo) will introduce kgislatian to re· cent of the AEC discharge standards." .. qul're ""local government to i n s u r • reasonable public access in any sub-INST ALL TOWERS division along the California coastline. He He sa id power companies should install called on an aroused electorate to insure cooling towera or other cooling systems passage of the bill. l.o greally reduce the smount of heated Sicroty commended the Salt Creek ac· effluent.s. Sieroty also predicted that the cess battle being w a g e d by future of fossil-fuel power plants is \Villiam Wilcoxen. Laguna Beach at-limited, particularly in Sou the r n torney, and the \vork of Helen Keeley, California, because or the huge quantities iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii El Rancho Introduces the new! I) Exclusively for Super Shoppe!'.s! Recipe boxes that are designed for your El Rancho recipes ••• each .box co"'!es complete \Vith a set of 12 category dividers •• , so conven ient! Plus El Rancho's fan1ous Roast Chart! "Y our cl_to1cc of four modern decorator color.! ••• one just right for your kitchen , •. washable, durable ·polystyrene ••• v.'1th a lifetime hinge! The perfect 'vay to keep your El Rancho reci pes for handy usel Tom a to Sauce .......... ~~L.~~r~...... .. . . 5' Del :h1onte •• , the rich red one that you use M> often in so many favorite recipes ! 8 oz. cu.n Baby . F 0 0 d ...... ~~~~R:s. ~~~~N.E~ .......... 12 FOR $1 Your choice of baby's favorite varletiea ••• al & price that invites you Lo enjoy gavingl of air pollutants they emit. Sieroty was particularly critical of oil exploration offshore and of oil generally and its smog and byproducts harmful to environment such as DDT, plastic packaging and detergents. The speaker said he considers oil deple- tion allowances "a subsidy for pollution" .• "It Is time to end1these subsidies which allow the oil industry to arrogantly pollute our waters, despoil our en- vironment and deteriorate the quality of life in this state and nation," he said. He called for a halt to off·shore oil drilling dn d gave a history of the Jan . 28, 1969, disastrous' off-shore oil blowout at Santa Barbara. Sieroty called ror a public campaign of letl.ers to legislators and editors and of paid advertisements by conservation groups to end envlronmental ·pollution. SUFFERED ENOUGH Said the speaker, "I ~lieve this kind of public campaign is overdue. We have suf- fered long enough the destrucUon of the coastline environment by oU, sewage and pesticide pollution, industrial wastes. oil tanker discharges, power plants, unslght· Jy structures, un concerned governmental bodies and insensitive land developers." "T do hope as we hear so often, that this ia truly the year ol-crcolOBY •• , the year that man begins to treat with gentler hands the place in which he lives." Robert Cununings' Marriage 'Dissolved' LOS ANGELES <AP) -Act.or Robert Cummings is the first Hollywood per90nality to end a marriage under Califom!a''s new divorce law which recognizes ''irreconcilable differences'' as the only ground necessary. Superior Court Judge Wil liam B. J-fogoboom dissolved the ZS.year marri age of Cummings and Mary El\lott Cum- mlng.s under the new law which took effect Jan. I. Noting that the student& present ap- parently had not been aware of the board 's e!forts for the library, the recent Top of the World land purchases, the dato of the override electiQn and other items discussed, Browns commented, "I get the distinct impression that you people don·t read the newspapers." GIVES COVERAGE The local press, he said, gives coverage lo school board activities, both in pre. meeting stories and in reports of tht meetings themselves. "I'm just not interested In most or the things in newspapera," s81d one girl. ••I don't think they're worth reading." "How can you form an opinion and keep up with community events if you don't read newspapers?" asked Taylor. He said he reads three papers a day. Browne said be reads five. The local papers are "both bad," said a boy. "I've never bren in a to\Yn that gives iuch complete and detailed ·coverage of coOUTiunity affairs," said Browne. "1 tii!nk you n1issing the boat by not follow4 ing the papers. You seem to be interested only in the things that directly concero you -like getting a teen center or fi1ing the library or the fact that there's 'nothlng lo dO Jn ·1..aguna:• Thert's a lot going on in tbe community that you should kno\v about if you're really con· cerned. 1 think you should be ashamed to say you 're not interested .•• " GET REPORTS Taylor added, "Several of the thing s you've asked about today were on the front pages of the local papers. However, ~'C \1·ill see that you get reports of the board meetings." To a final question about marljuan9 use, Tayklr said, "ff you smoke it, tt won't hurl me. But my concern would be tha~ it might hurt you. I think that's the feeling o( mosl adults who oppose it - they 're nol the ones \Vho risk getting hurt, you are. And you might remember that we (the adult!) have to obey a lot of laws that people make for our protection, too." • Sirloin Tip Steaks ............................................... LB. s1.29 You kno\v they11l be deliciously tender, because Il'1 El Rancho beer! B'rAiee them and serve 't•ith rice! Pricu in a/ft.ct Mon., T~t .. ivtd'., Jan.19, to, #1. No 8ale1 to dealer1. ARCADIA: Sunset and Huntiniton Dr. (8 Rincho Center) PASADENA: Beef Heart ........................... 59~ Sweetbreads ... . ................ 79~ Add adventure to your planned menu l Be br&vc ••• armed \\•ith El Rancho's recipe! Ox Tail .................................. 49~ Rabbit .................................... 89~ Serve ox-tail soup ••• rich and hot and hellrty! Frtah ••• for fr>'ing into ll tnste tempting treat! ¥LNT Pina . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 89" Spanish Onions ................. 2 ~ 19~ Cheese or Pepperoni ••• 12" bir. ready to babl Add zcaty flavor to favorite diahe3l r , ,.., 320 Wnt Color1do Blvd. .SOUTH PASADENA: Fremont and ·H11ntington Or. HUNTINGTON BEACH: Wuner and Alaonquin (S.ardw1lk Cent1r) NEWPORT BEACH: 2727 Nowpo~ Blvd. and 2555 ·E111blull Dr. (Eastblull Y.11111 Center) ' ~ DAil Y PllOT Mond1y, January 19, 1970 Mormons Mourn Mcl(ay LDS President Dies of Heart Congestion Ii TODAY'S 1iws • ((-'llM 111 .... D1\1Y r 111o1 Sltffl A Beckley, \V. Va. radio s_tation aMounced that anybody . with. a \\'Ortby cause and a good size pick· up truck can lay claim to ~.000 Christmas cards. \V\VN R re<;e1ved 158 000 Christmas cards during a holiday. campaign to bring some ct;eer to mental patients and oth· er \nstitutionaJlzed persons. Th e station managed to distribute tw()o< thirds of the cards, but has ~ stor· age problem with the remainder. • hJ usl like taking a pass in Ru7· by," \Vas J ean-Pierre Chop!n l comment aft.er he caught a f1ve- year old boy v.·ho fell from th e seventh story of a Paris apartme~t block. Chopin, a 28-year-old phys1~ cal education teacher, was in a building across the road when he saw Rafik Mellanl-Marrouki bal· anced on a seventh story balcony. Chopin rushed do\vn the stairs, crossed the road and was just in time to catch the child. ~ 0 Thi.! little girl with a big appetite ft monU1·old sloth. bear. a native of I ndia and Ceylon. The bear, the first to be raised from birth. at Afadison, \Vis., V illas Park Zoo, is fed by z-oo- keeper Sta1l f'i11ke. • Henry and Katharine luz:attel"' \Vere married at the Findlay, Ohio Police Station by a patrolman. The Luzatters, once before mar· r ied and divorced, went to the sta· tion complete wi th license and wit· nesses to . aiik where they might find a minister. Patrolman David Clark, an ordained minister, fetch· ed his Bible from home and read the wedding vo,vs as several cur· tous policemen looked on. 0 SALT LAKE CITY \Jlah (UPll -Th• world's nearly three million fl.1ormons mourned today the death ol their pro- phet, seer and revelator, President David O. McKay, McKay, president of the Church o( Jesus Christ of Latter.Day saints since April 9, 1951, died early Sunday in his Hotel Utah apartment. He was 96. Death was attributed by his physician, Dr. Allai T. Mcfarlane, to acute COO· gest.ion ci. the heart. He had suffered from heart and kktney failures for several months and lapsed into a coma shortly after mJdnight He died al 6 a.m. Sunday. His-wife-of 69"year1, Emmi, 95, was at h1s bedside as were most of their ~ven children. A son, Robert, said McKay was without pain during his final hours and died ••peacefully." ~ Messages of condol~s poured fnto this city, world capital of Monnonism, from thousands of friends and ac· quaintances; from church leaders: and from President Nixon and former Prcsi· dent Lyndon B. Johnson. * * * Joseph S1nith , 93, Expected As Successor SALT LAKE CITY (AP ) -Joseph . Fielding Smith, who is expected to suc- ceed David Oman McKay as president of the M9f?OOl1 Church, is a 93·year-0ld . father·or 11 who follow s a vigorous work &ehedule. fie is the church"s historian and most eminent authority on theology. Smith is president and senior member of the Council of the Twelve Apostles, the second highest body in the r u 11 n g hierarchy. As such, he is regarded as first ln line of succession to McKay, l':ho died Sun- day. Smith is the son of the church's sixth president, Joseph F. Smith, and a grandson of Hyrum Smith. Hyrum was a brother of JO$eph Smith, founder of the church . Besides serving on the ~ii or the Twelve, Smith h83 been a cd1,1.11selor in the First Presidency, the highest body in the church hlerarehy, since 1965. He was ordained a member of the Council of Twelve April 17, 1910. Despile his age, Smith has enjoyed generally good health. He adheres to a vigorous working schedule, spending much of his Ume at a t}·pewriter both at his Temple Square church office and at home. President Nixon said the "Monnon Church has been deprived of a distinguished and great leader and America has loQ a fore.most citizen and human being.'' Johnson said ?t1cKay's 0 profound com· mltme.nt to his fellow man and his faith inspired us to uplift our hopes and our sigh.ts toward a better world." The LOO church's Council ol Twelve, which assumed leadership of the church Upc:M:l h1cKay's death, wu to meet today to arTange details of his funeral and to plan for the selection of his successor. Tentative plans call for funeral service to be noon Thursday in the Salt Lake Tabernacle with burial in the Salt Lake City Cemetery. i Jnfonned sourees said the council pro- bably will meet Jan. 29 to pick a new president and the most likely candidate is Jooeph Fielding Smith, president of the Council of TweJve and its senior member. His father, Joseph F. Smith, was sixth president of the church and hls grandfather, Hyram Smith, was the brother of Joseph Smith, the prophet, ~· . . ... . r .... founder and first president q( the church. Brigham Young, McKay and otbers presided over the council at the thnt~y were elevated to the JftSldency. · McKay WU sustained 81 the ninth-pro. phet. seer, and revelator ol the chu:rdl on April 9, 1951, ftve days after the· death of President George Albert Smith •. He gilkkd th< church throJSh ltr greatest period ot ,,..wth with ""'11· bershlp mare than doubling from me million to 2.1 million and the number ol temples bunt or under construction abo doubling, from eight to 18. · But in recent months. he aaw the "chUrch cOme under increulng-attack for its doctrine which ban Negroes from at- taining priesthood -a rank Mormon youths attain at the age of 12 and a necessary step !or future Jeadentl.ip in the church. But in a Jetter to v11ious church ol· ficen a month ago, ~ LDS first presidency reaffirmed Ila doctrine on Negroes, holding it wu a matter of religion. r T he 60-year-old man appar· . enc ly 1cas an avid newspaper [. r eader. Jt cos t him his li fe. .-, ~lalmoe. Sweden police said they found !lie man, whose 11ame was not released. dead in bed, buried 11nder packs of I newspapers. "Tlie papers had been stacked nezt to the bed. The11 apparently fell over ~}m \ Smith credits his good health to work and keeping the Wor<I. of Wisdom, which, among other admonitions, direct s Mormons to refraln from smoking or drinking stimulants, including alcoholic beverages, coffee and lea. "A man should neve r retire," he has said, "and 1 am a witness of that facl There are a number of cases where men have reti red. and nature took them at their word. \Vhen a man retires from his employment, he should keep busy at something." VIET 'PIGGYBACK' - A member of ARVN's 7th Division gives \vounded buddy a lift across makeshift bridge following clash with Viet Cong force in the 111ekong Delta area. The sector was formerly held by the U.S. 9th Division which was taken out under the first withdrawal of U.S. troops. in sleep mid he si•ffocated, a l p.o~~~ s:es:on said-. • .... He spends eveningMelaxing or doing office home·work. 4 S. Viet Children Die • For t\VO days, five-year-old Ugo Manca's mother endured the noise as he rolled his newfound metal toy around the house in Messina, Sicily. Then she took it awa y from him. The mother discovered. th e inetal ball 'vas a 1940 ha nd gre- nade. \Vhen armament experts ex- {>!oded it later, they found it to be in perfect \\·orking order. ..Sometimes we sing and read together," says Mrs. Smith, "but many of the evenings he sits at his typewriter preparing his 'Answers to Gospel Ques· lions.' " As Teen Hurls Grenade As a youth, Smith herded cattle. And although hi.! glasses and thin, grey hair give him a scholarly appearance, he also looks the part of a sturdy ootdoorsman. Smith is the author of 23 books on history and theology. SAIGON (UPl l -A 16-year-cld boy to- day hurled a grenade into a schoolyard near Da Nang and killed fmir children who were playing volleyball with a group Florida Hit By Arctic Cold Freezing Rni11? 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Tide• ~~c,,.,., Iii.ti ~~..., tow • #.OH DAY . f~N I.Ill. ).f 2.'4 '·"'· 0.1 lU•IOAY ,,1,,1 "1•11 .... , ..... ,. •• 7 Jll t .m. I t ""'' low ........ ,. •••• 1·11 1,m. t .I ~"-Iii.II .............. t ,J111.m. j ,J St<•"4 1,,... •• J.M•.m. O.I Su~ ll lttt •·511.m. S111 S:1l1 "'· ~ lt1Ht1.M,.m. lthl:91 1 m, lJ.S. S11mmnr11 '"' ('Mltfl .... "'"""'" nil! t'!lltl -rt l'llt Pr ''"'~ ... !'(fl( 11~ '°"'"· Cold Wi ve Wl l"fl""' 1-. In tlitt:I tor lolllfl!I •• flt tovl~ 11 Ntrll'r#ffl "'"'" l'lftt!nt rtln •!'Id drl11 .. wtfll ,_ llwl Ind ll!OW tMlffNltc[ lf'ORI llt!lf'n Tt••• hi tlll Cfnl••I ,.._l1chl1n1. TflVllll"I Wl,,llllft ....... 111 for 11'\0ll ., "''' .,... *-ol k l flll l'ledl- Lltl'll -fell ''°"" thl c1nlrt~ 11l1ln. Mlf 1Cn11• !hi Ml<,lwtfl to ftlt' GrHl Llktt. SIJt>·flt'I ltfl'll'tf"ltv,_, ..... ,. Dl'"IVI• ""t "' "'°"'' ol '"' t!Df1fllf" hill "' tlle 111tlon 11.i ol 1"9 •ocklfl ff•IY lod•Y wllh !Kft•Olnt1 et • "9tow '' 1!1.-ilklll •M )f btlOW 11 !~It,... 1'-1 l'lllL IXltl! In Ml11ritto11. Tem.1terat11res Miii! L"'" l"rte. ,l,lbu<luer<>ut " n Anchor111 .. ·• ... ,l,llent1 " " 81..,et111e1<,1 ~ " Bl1mertk .,, ~· """ ~ .. ·" Boston ~ • -~ llrowns~lllt " " ClllceOO " • .. ClnclnNll ~ " .,,,._ " " Oon MoilMll ·• "' ... Dell911 ~ ., FtlrNMs ... ·~ FOi'"! Wor!ll " " ·~~ " H ... ,_ " " ,,, ~111u ., " K1nN• CllY • ' t.11 Vnll " " lot ""91111 .. " M-" ., Mln.....olk ... ... Nror Or'-~, " .. N ... Y,,,._ • " Nor1tl P1ttt1 " ' "' 0..lll'ld " " Olil•'-"' City " " ....... ., "' "' r11m ,~,.., " " PIM lilobltl " " """" • .. l"llltourtll " " 111111d Ctlv • "' ... 11141 '""' " " ·-" " .. k<'rlll'lf!'llO " " $111 ~· CllY .. " "'" o~ .. " 1.111'1 ,_,lllCfM:O ff " .. ftfftH1 " H :~ 'l>Olt•ne " " T"""''"' " H W11llintl0tl " • .. of U.S. Marines. Eleven other children and six ol the 12 Marines present were wounded. It was lhe second terrorist attaet ot the day. Communist troops using a Claymore-type mine which hurls steel pellets over a wide area ambushed. a South Vietnamese officer candidate com. pany at the edge of Saigon. killing J& Vietnamese and wounding 35, Newsmen reported from Da Nang that the terrorist who threw the grenade into the Tanh Qui Hamlet School 20 mile,, south of Da Nang was recognized as a boy from a nearby village. He escaped and policemen were searching for him. 'The report added that 100 children had just left the six--room stucco school for noontime recess "''hen the terrorist ap- proached the building. He lobbed one grenade Into a classroom but It failed to explode. The second hit the roof and roll4 ed Into the dirt school yard. The Marines playing with the children were members of a volunteer. platoon with a dual . military and civic action mlMion. Some of ~ Marines were distri buting «::andy left over from their USO Christmas packages. BIRTH CONTROL FOR PETS URGED LOS ANGELES (UPI) -A city council tommlttee has proposed a birth control program for pets tit cut-rate prices to curb an Increase Jn the city's doa and cat population. The Public Health and Welfare Corn· mitttc Thursday recommended the pro. gr.rim be administered at a pilot c:Unlc: at 11n anima l shelter where pets can be neutered inexperuively. " I -~ I_ Ti • CHURCH LEADER DIES D1vld McKay Wit 96 Senator Hints Soviet Role In JFK Death WASHINGTON !UPI) -Stn. Rl~d B_. Russell Co.Ga.), said .today. he never believed that Lee Harvey Oswald assasainated President John P'. Kennedy without at least some encouragement from others. Russell, a member of ~-Warren· Com- mission that investigated the assassina- tion, said however that he did not have ••the ali ght.est doubt" that it was O!wald who fired the fata l shots Jn Dallas on Nov. 22, 1963. .. If there was: any one thing that was conclu1lve it was that O!wald fired the shW." Ru~ell said, but he added : "I never did believe that he did it without any consultaUon or any encouragement whatsoever." Russell saJd the Warren Commission was not able to invesUgate specifically the soure or such possjble consultation or encouragement. and Ru.ssell added he could not pinpoint iL But Russell observed that Oswald spent 10me time in Minsk, Russia, prior to the assusinatlon and said this was in an area where the Russians trained and 1chooted large numbers ol CUbans. The 72-year-cld Russell made the statements to newsmen in response to quesUons prompted by a story in the Washington Post based on a aeries of taped interviews he recorded for broad- cast next month by· an Atlanta television station -WSB-TV. The Post said Russell mentioned In the Interviews that "too many things ••. caus- ed me to doubt that he (Oswald) planned It all by himself." In. the interview, Russell aaid some of the !acton which influenced his doubts were Oswald's 11<>journ in Minsk, which he identified as "the principal center for educating Cuban students" and some of Oswald '& trips to Mei:lco City. OtMr factors were "a number of discrepancies in the evidence, or as to his means of transportation, the lugga1e he had and whether or not anyone was with him," th< p.,, reporud. Russell. one of seven members of the commission headed by Earl WarTen who was then chief justice of the Supreme Court, said his: doubts led him Insist on an insertion in the final report before ht would Sign ll The insertion said that "because of the dlfflculty of proving negatives to a cer· talnty the possibility of others belng in- volved wtth either Oswald or Ruby (Jack Ruby who assassinated Oswakl) cannot be established categorically, but if there is any such evklen<:t it has been beyond the reach of all the invesUgatlvt agencies and resources of the United States and has not "'"" to th< at1'ntlon of this commilslon.'' Florida Unable To Desegregate At Once··· Kirk WASHINGTON (AP) -Florida Gov. Claude Kiik told the Supreme Court to- day Florida is "financially and physically unable" to meet the terms of the court's order for immediate school desegrea:a· ilon. Kirk said he was ordering Florida school dJslrlcts not to chin(• th<lr 1ehool calendars during mid-year. "The state of Florid• stands ready to comply -th< onler of any tribunal," 1l1• motion said,· "bl>t Is pmently finan- cially and phyalcally unable to do 80 •nd is faced wilh a situatlwi ol impoafblllty of performance." n.u....mg his mollon penonally to th< court. Klrk said Florida could not ac. eompillh th< scope of deo•1rt1atlon '" d.....i In th< time allowed. Hangovers 'Costly' LONDON (UPI) -The N1tlon1I Coun- cil on Alcobollsrn II.Id Sunday hangowrs cost Britain '800 million a year in lost work. T)'ie: council 8&1.d more than 250,000 workttt f.1111 to show up for their Jobs Heh Monda, b«!auat ol hanpver1. ~gi;iew-Says· ' Asian I.four Beneficial TRAVIS AFB, Call!. (UPI) -Viet Presl<leot Spl.ro T. Agnew r<tum<d to 1l1• mainland Urrlted · Stf,tes today from a three-week tour of A!ia he uld left him feeling ''very encouraged" a b o u t America's image in the Far East. The vice presldentfs jet touched down at 7:SI a.m. at Trafis Air Force ~ about 50 miles northeaSt of San Francisco for a two-hOur refueling stop en route to Washington, whenl arrival was acheduled at 5: 10 p.m. ESr. • Agnew "'·as sleepiilg when the big jet landed in a cold drl:r.tle at the C1\if<rnia Air Force base. About a dozen newsm_en waited at the airstrip in case the vice president made an appearance. Agnew, accompanied by his wife. Jud y. aopeared rested after a weekend . 1n Hawaii during which his only official engagement was a meeting ~?! Adm. John S. McCain Jr., the U.S. P'acil1c com- mandel'. The vice president returned 'lo the u.~. Friday from his thn:?e-week tour of Asia and Pacific countries. He said he was •·very encouraged by the general attitude toward the United States" and "very much more optimistic than when I lfet'' about the Nii:on administration's policy in Vietnam. Agnew said leaders of the ~~e.s he visited, which included the Phihppmes, Taiwan. Malaysia, Nepal, Singapott, Indonesia, Thailand, A f g h a n i s t an • Australla and New ·Zealand, "made It very clear to me ChaL they wanted a con· tinuing U.S. preseace in the Pacific." He said ·the highlight of the trip was his personal impression ol Vietnam where he said he found good morale among fighting · men and good relations among members ol the Sooth Vietnamese government. The vice president ran into severa1 an- tiwar demonstrations on the fast-paced tour but didn't appear to be bXhered by th<m. "I have never been intimidated by demonstrators," he said in Auckland, New ZealaOO, one of the countries where he encountered protesters. Agnew spent a quiet two days tn Hawaii. He got in some beach time at his hotel in the fashiooable Kahala section of Hooolulu, but canceJled a round of goU because of a "tennis elbow " which he ag- gravated during a game of tennis in Australia. Calley Declines To Defend Self At Army Probe FT. BENNING, Ga. <UPI) ~ Lt. William L. Galley Jr. declined to take the stand in . his own defense today in an Army blvestigatory hearing into his allegt:d lIOth murder of a civilian in South Vietnam. The investigating officr, Lt. Col. fl.faclf H. Hopper of the Anny Infantry School, took the charge under advisement. Hop- per will recommend whether Calley be court-martialed for the murder -an in· cident apparently unrelated to the alleged killing of 109 civilians at My Lai -and the Ft. Benning c.ommanding general will decide whether a court martial be held on il The charge was heard in the courtroom In which Calley is to be coort-martialed &0metime this year on charges of m\ll"dering the 109 civilians at My Lal in 1968. The new charge alleged that he kill· ed an adult male in Quang Ngai province six weeks before the My Lai mall68cre. Calley, a snub-nosed young man with brownish hair balding at the temples, sat slumped In his chair bet.ween his clvtlian defense counsel LaUmer and his military defeme counsel. Maj . Kenneth Raby, dur· ing the one-hour hearing. The prosecutor, Gapt. Arthur ?>.f. Daniel introduced in evidence five letters of prosecution witnesses, presumably containing their versions of the incide.nt. LaUmer said the defense would not offer any evidence "at this time." When Hopper said the defendant might take the stand for sworn testimony in his· own defense Latimer said: 7,000 Okinaiva Workers Strike At D.S. Ba.ses ,, .. ~ .. '" "' II .. ,, .. NAHA," Okinawa (AP) -More Ulan ' 7.000 Okinawan workers began a schedul·,.. ed five.day strike against U.S. military fl bases today and five Americans and lt "' Okinawans were reported injured 1n ! picket line incidents. 1 '6 The strikers , angered by tht dismissal • d. 1,188 Okinawan workers because of a" cut in U.S. defense spending. postect • pickets at 74 gates to U.S. mtlitary bases ,, at 1Z:01 a.m. They demaod higher -:i severance allowances and longer advance notlct for workers to be dismissed. 'I U.S. military offtclab confirmed al least one lnjury. saytng an Amerlcan was • htt by flying glass from a car window r;a smashed by rocks. TWo other Americans .,'Gre reported injured In similar but ICIPlr&te incidents with pickets. I 11· An Okinawan newaman said ht .,,w t"°o American women Injured whtn thtlr CJtr • swerved out of control and hit a gu•d .,. hoUse at the gate of an Army bue nm1" • Naha after they were confronted by plckclo •t the aate. ' • ,, ' " ' • ' ' • i • , ' • • ' I • • • J ,, I ~ Twins Separated Proud parents Ml, and Mrs. John Kobierski of Danvers, Mass: pose with their Siamese t"·in girls, born Nov. 23 and separated at Massachusetts Gen- eral Hospital Nov. 26. LitUe Marie Elizabeth looks UPI T1lt11Mtt ',. ' ' up at her dad as Maureen Arute snoozes in mother's arms. The parents took twips,home at weekend. The twins were j oined at the abdominal a nd pelvic ar ea and a restru~tuting of their organs \Vas necessary. Pr otesters Go Eas t, lrli Russ MOSCOW (UPI) -Soviet authorities' today held three young West Europeans who handcuffed themselves In public -one disrupting a performance of "My Fair/ Lady" -in protests against imprisonment o f dissident Russian Intellectuals . Victor Van Brantegen or Ghent. Bclglurn. n1anacled hitnselr to a balcony r<1.ili11g SunrJay night after the first &cl o! "l\ly Fair Lady," sho11trd ''Svobod a Crigorcnko'." !Freedom for Grcg:.irenkol, and showered the :iudience with leaflets. Polic:c sawed off the handcuffs and removed hhn from the theater. Viin Er<Jl\tege11 was ap- • pealing for frecdo1n for Maj. Gen. Pyol r G. Gregorenko, " ___ ,, DAIL v PILO'l IS Last Photo of Badger State cashiered fron1 the Red Army for his liberal viev,,s. The last knO\\'n photogra ph of the SS Badger State, taken by a crewman Dec. Tu'o youllg ltnlians 24 hours 25, about 24 hours before the ship was abandoned in mid-Pacific after an ex· tarlier created an uproar in plosion. The photo shows the ammunition ship at a bout a 35 degree r oll and the Tsum department store. has been placed in the record of a Coast Guard board of inquiry investigating one of M O$COi•:"s biggest, by _1_h_e_d_is_a_st_e_r_._T_w_e_n_ly_-_s_ix_m_e_n_d_i_ed __ in_lh_e_i_n_c1_'d_e_n_t_a_n_d_l_4_s_u_TV1_·v_e_d_. ___ ' ___ _ Gl oomy Gus Is handcuffing thcni:;clv~s. , to a pillar to distribute an open let-Sino-Soviet Border Talk Passenger · Railroufl Corporatiori ·Urged Your Kinda G uy ter to Premier Alexei N. !'==========='--Kosygin. __ _ Dime-A-Lines Mean $$$ - At Deadlock LONDON (UPI) -Jlussia offered Communist C b i n a border concesslom but failed to break the. deadlock Pl talks over their ·contested frottiers, reliable diplomatic reports aa.id today. · Soviet negotiator Vasily V. Kuznetsov is expect.ea to rttdrn to Moscow shortly from the stalled talka fu Peking, the dlplomaUc reports said,. • The Soviets' offer· of frot'lti.er adjustrrients reportedly fa~ed to appease Peking's demlnd f·or wholesale t r o $.p withdrawals from the ~ tes~dei's and f 'o r Kremlin admission that tl\e existing Sino-Soviet frontJ treaties are illegal. WASHINGTON (UPI) - President Nixon is . expec;t.ed soon to ask Congress, wbich returns today, to set up a g o v e r nment·industry cor- poration to save rapidly disap- pearing passenger service on intercity tr~. - The semi-public corporatia.i, to be known ~s "Ra.i lpax," would be fiqanc~~ by a $200 million contribution from the railroads plu~ $iOO ffitlllbn from the government, in- formed sources said today. The corporation would be modeled after Comsat, the publi c-pr i vate Com· municalions Satellite Corpora· tion, they said. · · The three-year proposal, Which is ba c·ked by Transportation secretary .John A. VoJpe, woold make it posll- ble for railroads to roo- centrate on hauling freight, without disru pting intercity paSSenger service, the sources said. "Ra.ilpax" would operate passenger service, without regulation. by the JntersJ.ate Commerce Co m m i ssi on . Railroad companies " h o decided to join the corporation would be required· to supply in cash 50 percent of the 1969 cost or . operating its rail service. Th e other half of the cont.ributiQn could be in equiJ>" mc nt. · The 'gOvernment 's $IO O hiillion contribuiioii would be broKtii dOwn into ~ $40 million fuild' for· new tqUipment and $60 million to guarantee l~s. The Sin<>Sovl<t <011flict r eac h ed new c rlsi ' dimensions. The Peking talks, resumed only a week •Jo. after a short tteess dtad1ock- ed, and are hanging fire, the 50Urces said. The talks may be kept &oin& ' as a mtre formality to avoid an open break. But in effect they are unlikely to lead to any seUlement of tht conflict in the foreseeable future, the reports said. To11 :Negro in Service Hired by Oeveland CLEVELAND (U PI ) -Air orce Lt. Gen. Benjamin G. avls Jr.. highest ' ranking egro in the armed·-forces and n of the nation's first black 1 n-e r a l • will become Am veland safety director Feb. erican I. He admits the job win be " h." T lls M avis wilf rf:tire Jan. 31 e erg e1· aft ·37 years in the service. His\appointment tO the safety NEW YORK (AP) d~'s post was announced American Airlines, the na-Satikday by Negro Mayor Uon'a Jecond largest air car4 • • Car1\B. Stokes. McM a n a m on said Jn November he would resign. Police openly op)>O!led both McManamon and 'the mafor aftt:r white oflicets we re j>ull- ed out of the black ghetto·dur- lng the Glenville sniping'.s in 1968 which left 1-0 persons, in· eluding three policemen, de"ad. Baby Born In Taxicab rier, and Trans.Caribbean "Somebody has to do this· CHICAGO (AP) _ It was Airways annoonced Sunday type of thin'g aiid I'm en· the old story of the baby bom plans to merge. thusi115tic abOut making the in the back of a .taxicab, but The prOposed. $18-million effort," said Davis, wht> ad-with a new twist. merger ls to be voted · On by mltted1 giving the offer a ''fbt Sherry Avila, 26, or Chicago the boards of both airlines of conS:deration because it \\'as on a train from Peoria, Wednesday. It also must be is a tough job." returning from a baby show· approved by the Ci v 11 Stokes said Davis Would er, when the pains began. A A e ronautic 1 Bo a r d , have complete responsibility Rock Js!Qnd Lines trainman stockholders of each company, over the city's poliCe force and t 0 t d the startled husband, and President Nixon, who has "a vet; specl81 as!igrube:pt Frank, :ft, "We told.her to get the final say when in-to 1ee that Cleveland no longer off at La Salle, and al Peru ternatlonal rout.ea are Jn-Is high on the list of crime and at ·Joliet, but she l\'anled \'olved. statisticg and low in law en-to bt with you ." The plari calls ror American forcement and crime preVen-Avil a tW!lht!d his Wife off the to eieha:nge 1711.r shares of its tion." · train and Into Erwin Holl· l!ilock, which closed at $25.75 Davia will succeed JoseJ)ft F-. beck's cab. When the cab poll· Friday on the New York Stock McManamon, who tias faced a ed up in front of Wesley Me- Exchange, for each 100 shares hostile p o 11 c e department morial Hospital, three pru;- of Trans.Caribbean at o c k • .since he took the post two _ 3tin!Jers got out. includinC a Which closed at $5 on the }'i!ars ago at the start of healthy 4 ·pound. 51,1 ·ounce Amerk:an Es.change. S toke s' fi rs t term. boy. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiWiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii I FITTING PROBLEMS?? Learn Styling as Designers do it Pattern-cutting mettiod that Im you - e DIA.PT PAttllNI wlfll eJtlr tweAIM'fh•--•re111 .. n. e MAI.I ANY Siii, ANY STY LI ,.,...,,....._ ~- • PIT PAnDNI IN MINUTl l ,. , ·e COMPU'YI A •AtMINT IN J HOUl5. " . MASTll WITH NO Pl•UllB, .... ,.,... .. .. " e DDl•M AND COPY' PAIHIONS. c 11, ... s... fer ,,_ ...... 90·Mlnute Demonstrations l 19lnnln9 at 10 A.M., 2 P.M: •nd , 7:30 P.M. D1mon1tratlwi FH $1.00 ,. FOUR DAYS ONLY IN COSTA MESA W~flel4.., •1 Wt.~, JHHry 21 , 12, 21 & 14. i a..MwHt ........... 1 ,..., ...,.. C...f ..... , .. ,.., .. c.ftJJ -.--• 8 11 lrhttif ....... C•t N M... . JI IAaLY POI l lST SlATI 'I ''Emergency·situations·aren't·optional.. ThatS why 4 disc brakes are.standard·on every Mercedes-Benz!' ·y ou KNO\v1he fcellna. The hour's late. The road is clear. The slow metro. nome of the wipers keeps you com· puny. Your mind is already home. Then.it happens. Just over a rise you find a trailer lruck sprawled in your path. The~ is only one thing between you and 1 2<J.ton ran.dblo.::k. Your brakes. fn • Merccde5·Beni. rho~c b rakes ·would all be ihe di~t-type-. Not just the rront ones, Alt four. We offer no options. We believe that the braking system i~ one IX#.1>,...tu t tlf• HJUr I"'•· of the mos1 vital mcch· aniJmJ on an au1on10- bile. So it mun be the bt-.sl we tan build. It's a 9tubborn a.i. litude. Arid 1n e.\f>tn· !iive one. But anything les~ is not good enough tor Mercedes·Bcn:i;, \Vl1en you've: got to t lop Disc hrllke s are ~uperior to cornmon drum brakes for three reasons. One, a disc brake is better a ble to dis. siP,at~ hca1-a major cat"e of brake fade. 1\vo, thcn:'s farmotteffcctive bnklna: are11 on a diK brake than on an ordinary drum brakt, (i\•in1 you mon: lilOppin1 power . Thrtt, a disc. brake i' less afrected bv wat.crand you face ltst danger of brake fa il· ure, even in a cloud· burst. In addition, the Mercedes· Bens 1 brakin1 sy11em b deslaned to give a con· 1 rolled st rnlaht·stop-even when you ha ~e to stop short from high speeds. (Which is 1 poli1c way of ~aying"ponic ~top.") You'll feel thi~ extra morain of contrul and braldn1 power the first timeyou 1esl stop a Merccdes-Beni. Because we bclic:ve, v.•hcn you've got 10 stop, you've gol to stop. Butdon'111ophere There's more to a l'o1en:cdcs·&m 1h~n just stoppina. After all, ihe Joy is in rh' dr\\•ina. In fact, 1 l'olercede5.Benz may e,·cn chanae your driving habits. Because if your knuckles now whiten every time you face. ~udden curve in • swarm or flicker· io1 brake Hl;h1$, a Mercedes·Benz could prove° to bi a relllxing experience. Our four·wheel independent ~u~pcn· tlon plants tho~ lira on the road llke no ordinary suspension could. Helps you take curvCs In o~. ·smooth 1win1~venly be- t\veen 1he white line and the guardrail. And the ncxl time you drive your own car, count how many times you hive 10 make tho1e 1iny )leering adjustments lo keep it from wandering. Our recirculating h~ll·type ~teering,cven with power added, helps lo gi\'e you a certain •·reel" ror 1he road and a confidence that the car will traekwhercyou aim it. Wt believe that a 7~milc-an·hour e~· pressway is no place to play with your "l eering \\'heel. Look for 1he little 1hlngs A lot of "ne•rgreat" cars missed beine great becau~e of doppy \vorkmanship, ¥!1pd~~h as~cmbly or lack of auention to dc!ail~. So 1fteryou 1c.1tdrive11.Mercede:J-8eni ind sec th<-big differences in h1ndl!ng1nd ~ontrul, take a few moments to examine tlie little dll'Ferenccs. Run • matchbook around the hood, trunk and door open- in1s. See how the gap ia txa.clly the s1mt t hrouatiout. (Try that onyourpresent car. ) Notice that every 1eam his been 61led 11nd ~moothed,likc 1he fin iah or fin• chin~. Slam a door. It ~unds like a vault's. /lltrt:ld•:Jolltui 210 S!. • J·p.11.u111er, /11d·hticcr~il pe•/Ot'"•t1e• '"'" Jor ~&00tr J1,9(J(J, Reach under the dash. Not a wire toJ here.It. Look al rhe tri~. If it looks li~e wood, ii i~ wood-not plastic. If ii look5 Ilk• <'h romc. it is chrome-not plastic. V.'e could take some shortculs, mak• some 1:ompromifell. Our 1:1rs would 11111 be good ~nou.&h for most people. But they 1 wou!dn '1 be good enous;h for Merccdct-1 Be nz., New brochure• Ju~t mail the coupon for11colorful brtt- churc deKtibina Mcrcedes·Beni: in more detail, And ff you would Uke lhe conven• ieoce or your O\l'n t.1eretdes,8eni: whi1t vaca1tonin1 in Europe., check !he box for our Guide to European Delivery. Better yet, visit our showroom. Our represent it Ive.will bcalad to tell you about any of our sixteen models. The prices ta111e from $5,1)94' lo $28,343'. And be sure to take that 1eat drive., c...,.n..,, 1'11, .. .,_..,.,_flf Ii-~-. 1.., • ......... , ... , ""'' ol .. ,<)', • ...,..,.i .. ol .,.,,_, ....... e"I""'· t11,.00•11<;ol 11, ... !Io ... :-0--.--;;;;s~;;;~~-;;~~1;;----.. 1 , 1 120 W. Warner Avt. I Santa 'A:na, Ca11f. q2707 t I Pleau N11d me your fuJt-cok>r l:rmcllUrc of the Mu • I 11 ctd~...atn1 rnotorair1. I O 'tea-Include the Mel'Cl!de&-Btnt Guii:le to Bu~ 4 I j'>l:~n Dt:llffty. I I I t Homs I I I I M4reu I I I ! ChJ s .. w :tit--I I I I Teltll I O I ~--------------~----------~ Jim Siemens Imports / Inc.· 12ow. Warn•• Av•nu•. Santa Ana, Califo rnia 92101Phono:11 4-546-411C ~-.. \ -- L . . :: .. --·· •-DART"PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE Conflict of "Integrity In government, and the people's conlid· them In their official capacity or by any body or board ince in their government must be maintained at the of which they are members. blgbest possible level." -Eliminate the Joint Legislative Etllics Commit·. With these words Assembly Speaker Bob Monagan tee and esLabUsh separate commissions for the JegisJa-tive and executive branches on ethics and conflict of and Sen. Howard Way, president pro tempore of the interest to assist the governor and the Legislature in state Senate, led oft their joint ennouncement they are carrying out their respoiuibility to usure the J>:OOPle introducing bills In the two bous .. which aim at over· that th~ higbe~t standards of.ethical bebavlor are bemg bauling Califoptia's conflict of interest laws In a major maintained m government. way. ~ The bill has a number of other "teeth" aimed at Conllict of interest bas resulted .In majpr scandal providing a solid underpinning for public confidence in· at the municipal level in Lo$ AngeJeS" and a successful eluding extending the existing code of these provisions recan election in Fountain Valley. So the jssue is close to all state employes. to home. But at the state level; .Monagan and Way had On its face, and in all its details, the joint bill ap- this additional to say: pears to be an approach to enforce integrity at the state- .. California's pcesent laws concerning' conflict of m.-------·.ll~vel which could be a landmark law worthy of adop- terest are inadequate and' scattered throughout the state t1on in all other states. codes. They have caused confU1fon among public of-The next question: Can Speaker Monagan and Sen· ficials, including .attorneys. and tb,ey have not been ator Way put their bill through the Legislature and the equitably applied to an public· officers and employe.s. governor's office in the face of probable opposition 0 1'Je. legisla_tion we wil.l t>J'O.POH Will be the tough-from legislators in both houses who are unduly iaflu- est conflict Qf illtereat law m the nation. lt will hit enced by lobbyists for special interests? dlrecUy at tl>e unscnipulou~ Individual, but it will pro-We hope so, tect public servants from unwarranted and ill-moti· vated. attacks on their character and reputation. There will be no trials by headlines, but for the first time \~1e will have the' machinery to detect and punish the guilty." To accomplish thls laudable objective, the t\YO legislators propose to : 'Squares' vs. 'Mods' . --. ' ' ~ ;: • . -Consolidate all conflict of interest provisions cur- rently scatte~ed throughout the govennent code. -Retain and expand existing law prohibiting slate and Jocal government officers and employes from hav· ing any ~terest in a contract made er negotiated by Temporary restraining orders have issued from the courts in the case of Saddleback College trustees• et~ Iorts to limit t he length of students' hair. Tbe whole time-wasting, demeaning ·and silly business raises a question:. \Vhat will happen after the complying stu· dents register, then let their hair grOw longer than the ''square" trustees think is tolerable .for a "mod"? 'Rac«u w sar-.,. aiat ~ lW!Od but truth will MIJl!1" Public Needs Nuclear Candor ' We Talk; Russians Expand WASHINGTON -Defense Secretary Laird say1 the Soviet Union has gained superiority avr1 the United States in the nwnber and carrying weight of their nuclear milalle force. This is a belated acknowledgment of the warning given more than a year ago by seriously con- cerned military men. Laird rather lamely admits that the Russians were moving at • faster pact than wu realized. So the ABM battle, won by the Nixon Administration by one volt last year, will begin again this year, The Nixon °vic~ tory" was only comparative, for the "Safeguard" system be advocated wu a cutback from the ,.sentinel" 11stem of Che-Johnson Admlnistr.aUm. .and tbe- "Sentlnel" System waa a cutback from what many'military men argued was the onJy prudent defense for the United St.ates agalnat -the Soviet ·union'• ascent 10 missile superiority. TRIS IS AN OLD, o)J:t story. We bask. in our nuclear superiorltf. OpJ>onents ot nuclear expauion complain of the oYer kill mentality of the Joint Chiefs of Slaff. Time passes and we find that in some important aspect the Soviet Union bas overtaken the United States. When the security or the United Slates bangs by one vote in the United States Senate it is clear that sorqething is dangel"OU3Jy amiss In the way this government adjusts itself to the awful mathematic1 of the nuclear age. Nuclear expaMion is so inhibited in the llnited States by the-force o( public opinion that it has become necessary. however undesirable, for the government to go far beyond presenllimits of secrecy if the public Js to be convinced that the danger implied by Secretary Laird ex- ist!. Without the force o( public qplnion behind it on thls issue the Nixon Admin- istration will 'go through rrure hair rais· ing Wists on the natioo'a security, LAIRD SAYS THAT estimates of eitrly J 969 O!l (feployment and construction of three primary Soviet missill! sites turned out -to be· conte?Vattve. A11 right. Jet'.- have the figures on bolh s.ides. Does the new esilmate of Soviet SS.t missile • deployment. threaten our own ability to ztrike back with our Minuteman lCBM's! ls the Jrbnary reliance we have placed on these missiles nullified by the Soviet UniOn's deployment of SS.9 mllsileA which can knock oul our itinuteman bases? It is Tt'ell to remember that all the while the Senate opponents of AB~t "'ere arguing that the d<ployment o! the ABM would deter the Russians fr o m negotiating on nuclear control they were expanding their own missile force faster than we knew. Knowing how fast they were expanding .and th.at they probably would gain missile superiority, they were willing lo agree to missile talks which they also knew would have to be very long drawn. \\'e find the Russians, therefore, in the familiar posi· tl on of pur1uini their own Interests. THE ISSUE TRIS YEAR is likely to rise on an expected request of $1.5 billion by President Nixon to upand the Safeguard m.i&Sile system. lt undoubtedly will be argued that such a proposal will plunge the miss.Ile talks begun in Helsinki into·a deep chill. lt is eYen chillier to know that all the while we talk the Soviet Union eipands its strength and that the time may come faster than we know' when the Rlwian mlS!lle fotet will be capable of knocking out 95 perctnt of the I,000 Minuteman milalle& on which the U.S. ptt!eDtly~ellos.·· . Laird once. ~· !hat timo. mirht come in 1'74. Ncnr, maybe It will be 197J! And, II it does, will the Helsinki agreements even have been formulated and will they lr<eR U1 Into 101n1 c:ciocept of ''parity" or "sufficiency" bued on the increued Soviet missile stnngth! WHAT IS CALLED FOR now Is an era or nuclear frankness rather t b an dependence on se<nt Stssioos of the Senate to try to convince politicl.ant to eo against the public pressure.s they fetl. The public needs conviDcing more than the Senate. It neither understii:1iJ& nor likes to think about the elements or nuclear power. In the end what will ~t is public faith in the veracity of the Nbon Administrati~'s information .and the validity of i judgment. That cannot be won in a ha ~arted or casual "iY but by the marshaling of facts and con· clusions and their convincing prtsen. talion to the public. 'I've Had It Up to Here' Bob Roberts, o Seattle radio com· meniator, deliVf!rei1 the following speech on the air. causing a flood of requestJ for copies. -Editor By BOB ROBERTI! There's something that needs to be said about this country. And since no one seems to have the gumption to say it, I guess it's up to me ••• I have had it up to here with persons l\'ho are trying deliberately to tear my country apart. And it's way past time to throw at me that tired old whee'ze about being a flag·waver. You 're damned right I'm a flag·waYer, and I got the right to be one the hard way ••• I have had it with pubescent punkA, wallowing in self-pity. wbo make a display of deploring their birth into a world which -to use their sissy e1· pression -they didn't make ••• WELL. t DIDN'T make the work! I was born in, either. And neither did the men l knO\f who are worthy of respect. They .... ~~;.~ _,, . ' Moiidw,,,January 19, 1970 The ·~ poa• of th< Doi!u Piiot 1eikl' to ttl/Orm and stim- ulate rtadn1 bu pn1enting Chis nelDIJ)apfr'I opinions and com- trl41ltaru on topia of interest and sfonlfka11oe, bv ~ding a foratm for t.h• tqreu1on of our reodo-1' oplldont, and bu prt1et1tlnO the dfvate view- polntt of fnfort'Md ob1trver1 and "'°"""'.,. °" topics of th• day. Robert N. Weed, Publisher , , •I ' r •/ ! Guest Ediloria] \ _,; just went about and made something out of it ••• The men T grew up with were fetched up in a logging camp. They were the im· migrant sons of every castoff race there is. And they didn't have a hell of a lot of knowledge at home to start them off, either ••• But l can write yoo a song about the son of a Po Valley coal m1ner who became .a nationally renowned physicist; ebout doctors, lawyers, teachers, forestry specialists, conservation experts and men of the cloth -in the Seattle-TaCilma area -who came out ol that loggJng camp. And about the son of a Danish merchant v.•ho is one of the best friends I've got ••• SO DON'T GIVE r.m your whining, whimpering, 1el!1>ilying daptrap about bow this counlry ii letting you dowrr, •. I have had it with hipplea, brainless in- tellectuals, writers who can't write, painters who can't paint. teachers who can't leach1 administrators who can't ad· rninistrale, entertainers who fancy themselves sociologists, and Negroes who castigate as ''Uncle Toms" lbt Yery men who have done the most tO demonstrate to 111 of us the m06t Important quality in America ••• the qut1tlity of individual rnterprise and responsibility ••• Dr, Quotes a.artes Collnd, Slttnnan O a k • , Aseembly Speaker Pro Tem, ee \lote •1• -"Any indh1dual considered old enough lo \•ote should be held completely ac· countable for any crlrne he m•Y com- miL" George Washington Carver. Arch I e ~ioore, Bert Williams, Booker T. Vl'a~hington, Roy '\\'llkins, J us tic e Thurgood rifarshall, Duke Ellin,gflln Count Basie, Nat Cole, the Mills Brothe~ and their father ••• .and many more. I've had it with those cerebral giants ·who think it's smart to invite drug ad· \'ocate1t to lecture in their classrooms. .and with teaching curiosities like that one in the 11iercer Island School D!Jtrlct who invited • Black Power spokesman to dispense a lecture on nag-burning • t • I'VE HAD IT with people who are set. ling aboot deliberately to rip up mankind's noblest experiment Jn dece~ cy. And I'm going to tell you something. Ir you think you're going to tear down my country's nag and destroy the institutions my friends and members of my family have fought and died for, you're going to ll•ve to climb over me first • •• And, buddy, you'd better get up awful early .in lhe morning, •• Dear Gloomy Gus: All we need wllb 1 criUca1 popula· Uon explosion is 1 dru1 like L- dopa (announetd by AP Jan. 14) that turns octogenarians into ldolexent jackrabb!Ls. -J.M. D. fflff '''''"' rtflKh ,..,~, •I.-Ml lllCftMrlly 1llMt ti !flt fl............. ..... 'I"' ,., ,..., 11 01W1111 •n. 0.11, ,11.,. Ted Kennedy's --Friemh A Ukd His Downfall .... l'>t!""!lt#l""' ..... ·""'•"N.•-. ~t ... ·~it--~ •=.a.~..!'.'.L ..... ..1 The moment Sen. 1'4ward Kennedy's automobile nipped from the bridge drownin& his passenger, Mary Jo Kopechne, his chance ol becoming Presi- dent took an abrupt downturn. If a chance r~, it wu l argely dlsslpoled by his mm !w>dllnl o! tho aftennath. The ~thical problem facing the Senator was possibly not determinative of his future. Men under ethical clouds have been elected president. But mea using extraordinarily bad judgment. and suh1e- quenlly iavolved in compounding the bad judgment, have not made it. We need not saddle the Senator with the sole blame for thLs development. Much of Lbe_ blame must rest on his friends .and ad visers or social frlentls who became overnight 6trategists in a com· plex' situation. There is .ample evidence these 1trategists, 90-CaUed, were at work within an hour of the event. If so, they made incredibly wrong decisions, just as a general commanding in battle may make unrealistic decisions leading lo total rout. FEW AMERICANS have had such high polltlcaJ value as Edward Kennedy en- joyed before the tragedy. He v.·as the last hope ol the family name which had been ,;1 but era.sect by assusins. He bad e'x· hibit.ed acwnen by declining a premature nomination of his party the year before. Such families are Uke the old Roman tribal families of the Republic, entangled in emotional loyalties in time of violent crisis. Scores of ambitious figures become passionate disciples of .a name, itself. These Kennedy men, seeing the'ir hope Imperiled, clustered ln a phalanx about the Senator, followed him to his home, spreading out to the MassaChuseUs political centen, and in a "ider circle lO the party seminars. "'e will never know what counsel these people gave ~fr. Kennedy, or what his personal reaction wu. We onJy know that for a few days he was almogt buried by them, .and it is fairly certain thef played a large part in his initial television ex- position of the affair. THE EXPOSmoN was I fiasco.. Only ldolators of the Kennedy name, or those who merely felt sorry for hbn, could .ac- ce pt it. Understandably, he was confused, his memory of the event faulty. But the occaskln called for appa]ling hof!esty and lucidity, and lt was not to be found in his wonls. Thoogh 11lr. Kennedy said repeatedly he v.'anted a merciless investigation bringing the facts to light, he as principal did not compel it. He did not, or could not, stay his friends, who rushed to the Boston Statehouse to · tnsurt t.he facts W1>uk:I never come to llaht. Secret inquests, people whost lips are sealed by intolerable Jre51ure, are not unknown in Amerie1.. But sucb sup- prtssions in our national Ufe have never furthered a sense or fulfi lled justice, however they ma.y be ratlonalittd by thost who maneuver them. The pubUc ef· feet of them is &o foster dlstortlon.s or reality, and to fortlfy cynical convictiotu that justlce ~ i1<iJ11 1Ubvened. Edward Kennedy ls In lhe vortex or this clrcumst&nc~1 and when he cannot say what he lokl tne tor0ner's jury, he Is u helple&S as any nameleM clthen in the land. I -----------~'.I ' ~ '°" ... :niDch 1-,.,,,.,,. yoa.. . • Smoker's Agony At Typewriter It ts really quite easy to write a Cillumn "·ithout smoking a cigaret -even lf, llke me. you haYe been a three-pack·a-day man for more than· 30 years. You just sit in front of the typewriter and think good thoughts, sweet thoughLo;, · healthy thought&. Birds in trees. Bees in cloYer .. Sand and surf in summer. Ski tracke in winter. Life ca.n be beautiful. ·Freedom ts bet.. ter than slavery. A stitch in time saves nine. 'Ti.s far better to baYe loyed and lqol. WHAT WE NEED hero ts. i .lilOt con- centration. .and then ideas will come. Concentrate on the keys. One 1&ys ''Clear'." One says "Set." One 'M-R." There are 25 symbols that are not letltrs. I have never used the plus and minus signs. Did Smith ever know Corona! Corona Is also a cigar. Watch it, boy. Maybe the ribbon needs changing; that would give you something to do. Can't write a bright colwnn with· a faded ribbon, old sport. And howl about ttitlng the "Total Tab Clear" to set if It works. I'Ye never used a "Tot.al Tab Clear" in my whole typing life. · \ (Jesus ne\1er smoked. Socrates nevtr smoked. Nobody at all &moked until the mid-15th Century, .and never missed it.) . . WHEN IN TJIE course of events · U becomes necessary for ·one nation to.',. , Noman Is .an.island ••• Ela.' fe1te llurc lat an.er GGf;t • • • I havt nothing to declare: but my genius ••• The Jyf ao short, the q~t :so long to lerne • • .. O never say thitt I was false of heart .•• One must,ree the conscious mind from Its fetters and then thoughts and associatliok drift .. up from the "un· conscious, nni'ng. their Ov.'n ShapeS and patterns. thing is to relu, don 't force it, keep the pipes loose and tba juices 0<>1fing. THINK :ABOUT the girls ln their sum· mer dreste~, the taste of ripe apple.s just fallen from the tree, the· odor· of wood burnln(i ..• no, not that. No evil can come tQ a good man, and it is far better to suffer an injury than to inflict one. ~fy bc::dy is a tabernacle. My throat is • furnace; l\.1y llHlp are an.incinerator. My breath is tainted. my teeth are stained, my fina:ers are yellow, my pulse is fast, my cough is shallow. Nothing Is stronger than an ~dea ·whoH time has coine. Nothing ill weaker than a resolution wh06t time has not come. But it is not hard to write • column lfithout smoking a clgarel. M you see. I just mad• it •• , made it , •• made it • , • made ·it. A Correction From OCC To the Editor: J would like to CO?Tecl a:n erroneous im· pression .by a reader {~1ailbox, Jan. 13) regarding the sale of sµ,deat body cards at Orange Coast College. No one is being coerced Into buying 1· card, and no one has 'Lo aee the dean of Letten from readeTI art toelcOJM, students if he chooses not to buy a cant Normally toriter.s 1hould conve11 their Each student was mailed a· letter mt1sage1 in 300 words OT less. The ooUining the many advintag:es oi owning right to condense Zttttf"1 to fit .spcce a s.tudent body canl. 1be price b $5 for or·.eliminate libel U re1troed. AU let.- the sprivg semester. teT1 muat include !ignature and mail· At \he second Iegistratim station, ·' ing addrs11, but namu ma11 br \Oith. students are .again intonntd about the ' held on reqHc.tt if tufficient Tea.soft card, and are asked if 1bey wish to buy I i1 apparent. Poetr11 toill not be pub· one. Jf they do not. \bey 8'gn a waiver Jishrd, saying they forfeit Ule privileges ol own • 1 ing a card. -THEY THEN GO ON and fmish1 registration. They do not have to leave the line, do not haYe· to leave tht Fairgrounds, and dO not 'have to see 'Mr. Kroll. led ii, they don't care, It doesn'l ooncom them. IF OUR COUNTRY was on a food and clothing ration and the war's hardshipa weu fel t on the home front, the attitude would be a little dlflerent. If they bought a cad at fall registra- tion, when they were more elpenslve, $he atudent. ls given a refund at StaUon Two. .. The I.I fee entill .. the stud"1t to l50I "'Ol'lh ol inedical bmlronce, eHgibtHty fot student loans. free admission to c1mpu11 evtnls, IUPport for clubs and 1thletlct, and tbe school newspaper and creatl""' artsm~. Jf ~y this were true: "Love, peact:, truth." If all mankind believed theM words, Bob Hope could Jtay ~ for -·, <llrisbna .. ' Not a bad buy !or 1.1- 001' JACO)IS Cmlmunity ServlC:e occ Apnt1t11 ot· B- To the F.ditor: A little tounill on the othtr si<le ol pi. globe c.Uled Vietnam Is haviJl& a dlsaslroo.! effect upon out <auntry. ~lee! if we are aoing to fi&bt a' wllf, ld.'1 ft&tit; I! we an not going to light, let's set aut. We could have wrapped It up two years ago. Part ot this delay b due to the apathy at home. The home front doesn 't srorf'CllRISTENS!IN ~-B11 Georp --. Dear Georce: You answered M.W. that you make up all ·the questions tn· your columo. 'l'hb,'ctnnot be PCllSfl>ly · true aDd J can pi:ove itl I have sent you three questioMt and al- ll100gh you didn't publish 'lwO, you did pubnlh iinel I ~ve the cDp •nd the corbonl ol tlie other lwo questions. :!'fY and cet wt cl th.ls one, George. A.J.S. Dtsr A.J.S.: If you think I'm going lo sit h.,.· "l"lnl wllll a ll1111<nt GI my lmagfnaUon. you're crazy. I i I •• 1 I ~-----------.. - CHECKING · :• UP • Eyes on . . h ' . . November •;.....':Ha' ·wan··. ·'Bra WASHINGTON (AP) W ' Republicans are ·mounttni a • 1 · -wel~flnanced off""'1ve t o ... ' ( reverse historical trends and ·· • · ' ' B pick up strength in the House T'k at. ~eus Is 3~ .. ~~q~. off.year. elections this ..14-~ P Rep. Bob Wilson of · , .' · ' J · ·· · · ! California, chalnnan ot the 11 T M vo· ' h hould be ""'tween' G 0 p Congressional Com· !By u. • women, e s r-· mittee, called a news con-n·~· CLAIMB[\ the three them, right?" A: 'nlat's ·not fe.rtnce today to name a new moat . , y re e ~·g n i zed . the way 1 heard it. ~ man· executive director of the panel tra~ arks in ttte ,,arid -are ners experts say he ought to , arid to di8cusa campajcn ··~e:• "B. v: ;D:" and walk on the outs~de! so he can . strategy. • • S i nger :' ••• .PelVFJlFUL ~alk to ~ither one WJ~t turn-Reliable sources said this l\.IAGNfits .cali throw l'tlg ru., back .on the job will.go to John T. Cllklns, migra~ ·• bir.dJ ' 1 off . th"tir other · · · Q .. "wmCH. RAVE now executive a&Siltant ··to course i that has been pro-the longer hfe expectancy -Rep. Howard W. Rob'8on.' (ft. ved ., ';A MAKER OF , tall men or short men?" A. Up NMY.( It has been baJd by-l. fe minint undergarments says, to the age of 40,~k:11 :en Lee Potter. : "I don't know why, but almost than short men e. r at, The main co~ of the all the bras sold in l:lawali are. ~ough,the tall 'IJ'tt;D seem to GOP is the JQDg..&\anding size ·34 B.", •• IT'S: SIMPLE, live longer. !radition which finda!tbe..partf. in the wild animal world, the NARCOTICS -Man for ro power at the White House vegetarians sip w.ater, the man there were 10 ttmes as losing House ,strength durfu~ meat-eaters lap iL · • • THE" rnanY drug addicts nationwide off-year elections. lt'1 beeri SURVEY·TAKER:S SAY oaly 55 years ago as there are to-reversed only. once, back .tq o~ college girl m three will day. One out of ever,/ 400 1934. · kiu on th~ first date. And I grownups then was making Since the tum. of the cen· am Genghis Kh~ some sort of. scene with hard tury, the averige loss has tovE'AND WAR,._ You 'd narcoUcs. Mail order houses been 37 seats· and the think the feport about a -specifically, Sears Roebuck Republicans, in this case, arei · "'oman who kneels down on & Ca. -sold tablets to help starting from the. short slde of the floor and takes off her . the. poor phmg~rs put aw~y a 24~189 House p o 1itica1 husband's shoes should· be fil· the1r needles. U.Sten, Cyntbi.a, Tineiip. There · ii one vacancy ed under "Love," would you j_1;1st about ap.y retiree )'.OU. i!i a Democratic area of not? That's what J thought me~ can tell .you ~ore abOut Chicago. when a Sacramento subscriber turning on with opt~tes th~n On top of this, th e 50 described his wife's nighUy your ~arded boyfnend will Republicans were able to pick routine. It turns out ho\\'ever ever find out. And the old up only four House seats with she di>eS -nOt ·engage ·in .. thi~-ralfch hands who kn:o~· toco PreSident N~oit "capffuing Ille tender practice when he ar-weed when they see 1t stl~lte· House m 1968. rives home, but only when he outnumber all the pettr • ~· And Democrats have won tries to go back out. Fik it un-paltry. puny pot-smokers in five eut· of seven House con- der "War." I • your. class. Oh eo~e ~n, stop tests held since the 1968 . , bawlmg, honey, I d1dn t mean general election OPEN Ql!ESTION _-ls to hurt your ego, you're a real 8 t the GOP ·Co ssionat there any ~vidence to sup_POrt sophisticated young lady. Co~mittee _ set ~~ ele¢ the old claim that Adalf Hitler d r e I t H 0 u ho .,..,; .. t " Your question! and "com· an e • e c a e once was a ~ t-U .. er. men ts are ·welcomed and will Republicans -has been talk· CONSIDER THIS -Mar· tie used wherever possible in ing in· terms of a record $4.3 ried men make 'more· money "Checking Up." Please ad-million budget to help l>olster than widowers. \Vi d ow e r :s dress your niail to L. M. Boyd, its campaign. - make more money than McNaught Syndicate, tnc .• in The committee'a previou.s divorced men.' Divorced men care of DAILY PILOT, Box hitb spending came in 1968 make more maney than 1875, Newpari Beach, Calif.. when it shelled out.$3.4 million separated m e n • Separated .92663. on House races. men make more mo:aey than, --------------------! single men. In all ages. On the ayerage. So say the statistl· Clans .. CUSTOME'lt SERVICE -Q. "When a sentleman is walking down the street with ''° :Passengers , - Got Break On Holidays , WASIDNGTON (AP) -u.s_ air travelers apparently had a merrier Christmas and hap- pier new year this past holiday season -they didn't have to spend as touch time waiting in terminals and planes as in the past. The Federal Aviation Administration reports lhere were · fewer delays i n December at the five major airports · servt.1g New York, , Chicago and \Vashington than in any other month since flight quotas at those airports went into effect last June J. Thtire "were· 3,074 delays of 30 minutes•or more at the five airports· last month, compared with 10,528 in December of J968, the FAA said. Thert were only 545 such delays throughout the nation during the 10-day holiday period from Dec. 24 to Jan. 2, comparec:l with 2,226 in the' corresponding period of 1968, lt said. S"The December delay figures are further proof that Ute flight quota rule is bE:.nefiting the traveling public by easing congestion and reducing delays at our major airports," said Secretary of Transportation John A. Volpe. "f was particularly gratified to see that those who chose to ny home for the Christmu- New Year's holidays had a muCh easiei time ·of it this )'l!ar than last.'' SThe quotas have been ex· '""tended to next Oct. 25 for the tirports: New York's baG"uardia; Newark. N.J.; Washington's National; New Y-0rk's KeMedy International; and Chicago's O'Hare. A THOUGHT FDR TODAY ,..£$1!HTl!D AS A ruaLIC l&ll'llCE EVE•Y OAY IY: LH Roolint Co. wv .. ,, .......... }'IJ h""" ·-'42·1m I Who C.res? No olhtr newsPJiPtr In tht workf iart~ about your community !Ike ~ur ~community dally ntwSpaper iots. It's tht DAILY PILOT. , THESE PENNEY STORES WILL BE OPEN SUNDAY AFTERNOONS I 12 TO 5 P.M. •BUENA PARK •BURBANK • CANOGA PARK •DOWNEY •FULLERTON •GLENDALE ) • HUNTINGTON BEACH • INGLEWOOD •LAKEWOOD •LONG BEACH •·LOS ALTOS •-MONTCLAIR ' • NEWPORT BEACH • NORTH HOLLYWOOD • SAN FERNANDO • SANTA MONICA ' .. •TORRANCE ' •VENTURA •WESTCHESTER • WEST COVINA ; . • WHITIWOOD I I M011d1Y. January 19, 1970 , ·. , DAILY PILOT.? .. ' .. . • . ·-• -~·-.l-.. SALE! Our sleek-fit ' .. _, , Gaymode" pantyhose REDUCED THROUGH SATURDAY! ,,f •·"T'' ' r • M ..... • ·----~ 0 .. ' REG. l2, NOW • Super savings , , , superb foshlonl 0..,.. mod•" ponty host now rtcluced for • Jhn. ifed time only. Reinlorctd heel or nudt ti.ti styling· In Agllon" 1tretch nylon, ~ tioned for !ht closftl, smoothftt flt a 9lrl could 01k for. Colon, loo -tvtrythlng ''°"' pale through powl Short, Averagt, Loot. and Extro long lengths, Irresistible? Definlttlyl . . ' '. . . . ..._ ... VAILABLE AT YOUR l..OCAL. PENNEY STORE . ' , • ' l :• ~ It OAILY 'l'!UT Mother Held; 3 Kid s Dead LOS ANGELES (UPI) -A woman freed on bail on a mllf'der charge two ·weeks ago was held today on another charge of murder in con- nection with the shooting deaths of her three children. Authorities 11aid the "'oman, ~1rs. Archia ~1ae Anders. 26. also was accused of wounding a male acquaintance before surrendering Saturday to police. QUEENIE By Phil lnterlandi The bodies of Pauletta, 2. and Reginald Anders, I. \l'ere found in a bedroom or lhe woman's home and the body of There sa Ann Tollar, a child by a previous marriage, was found on the back porch. Police said the woman I "Here I am finaJ,ly getting charisma and they pull allegedly \\'ent to the home of ¥1andatory retirement on me!" Vincent Calender. 30, where ----~--------------- police later found him with a Unruli Urges Big Chan.ge In T eaclting SACRAMENTO (UPI) - Assembly Democratic Leader Jess Unruh has called for a "'radical change" in California teaching methods including contracts with private firms to superficial graze wound on his leg. She then returned home, police said, and ca I I e d Calender. saying she had kill· ed her children. IRS Wants Cash help improve learning techni· to finance the initial project. ques, Unruh said, with slate revenue "One of the problems facing iidded later if the plan proved the public education ~ystem -successful. Mrs. Anders had been released on $2,000 bail follow· in& her arraignment on a murder charg~ s t e m m i n g from the J an. 3 stabbing deth of a neighbor, Mrs. ~1adeline Nash. 32. Credit Cards Won't Work which this bill is designed to'.-===-'------''-------------------------------- cure -is that if has no real competitors to spur it to ex· cellenet," Unruh said refer- ring to his proposed new legislation. He said the bill V.'t>Uld establish a limit ed ex· perimcntal project for con - Authorities said Mrs. Nash ~·as stabbed when the two women, both anned ~·ith knives. reportedly argued over a dispute between t h e i r children. SAN FRANCISCO I UPI) - Forget all those reports you've heard about being ·able to pay your 1969 income tax via credit cards. For that matter, forget about pa~·ing the Internal Revenue Service by anv other "credit means." Cash on Uie line -as in the past -will be the only means of making payment. JI did observe, however, tha~ any check "or o t h e r document" will be accepted by the IRS if it is issued by a bank or credit company and cleared by the Federa l Reserve District where issued. Penalties may be imposed on taxpayers who s e in· strumel'lts of paying are not honored by their banks, to the amount of one percent of the dishonored check and an ad- ditional minimum assessment of $5, plus interest and other possible tax penalties. l~acting. with private_ educa· . enneM-1 t1onal fltms for reading and . mathemaUcs teaching pro· . · .. grtme. . · · ·ALWAYS FIRST GUALITY . Six Teens Victimized By 'Toughs' SAN MATEO I UPI) - Charges of attempted murder, kidnaping and criminal con- spiracy have been r i 1 e d against six members of the Death Riders gang. The sis: ~'ere held on $20,000 bail Sunday following a wild auto chase that ended in an at· tack on six teenagers Satur- day. One of the teenagers. Michael Moore,· 17, suffered knife wounds in the temple and right leg and \Vas· beate11 on the heaa With chains. According to San 11-falel'I police, the incident occurred when the teenagers drove by a bar where the six toughs were congregated in a parking lot. A knife was thrown through the car window and it struck Moore in the temple. The gang members then ~ped into a car and pursued thi teenager~ ln a wild chase that reached speeds up to 75 miles an hour. The teenagers finally stop- ped their car and tried to flee on foot, but were overtaken and beaten. Tunnel Opened SAN BERNARDINO (UPI) The four-mile S a n Bernardino tunnel, part of California's vast master plan for water distribution, was completed this weekend when the last section of granite was dynamited. The tunnel ls designer! to bring water from Northern Californla to the San Bernardino Valley by I9n. "Any credit arrangement for the payment of federal Laxes is strictly between the taxpayer and his bank or other credit company," the IRS said Sunday. Oakland Slide Victin1 s Fear Rai11 Predictio11 OAKLAND (UP 1) Residents whooe expensive homes are sitting precariously otl a slowly creeping r ain- soaked hillside were ap· prehensive today over the \•:eathennan's forecast for more rain. "You can just sit and "'alch pieces, big pieces, falling right Manson Cuts Beard out of the hi llside." said homeo\\'ncr Phlllip \Veichcrt after the area slipped another three inches Sunday. Many of 14 threatened homes in the three-acre area, which had lo be cordoned off by police to keep away droves of sightseers, have cracks in the •• .,,alls and ceilings. One home, perch?d on the edge ol a 100-foot cliff above a s\\•iflly flowing creek, has been abandoned. A 50-foot crack along Lon- LOS ANGE LES (UPI) _ don Road is more than two Charles Manson, a cc u s c.d feet wide, Half the street has mastennind of the seven Tate-dropped, leaving three feel of LaBianca murders, shaved off asphalt hangtng in the air. his heavy, dark beard Sunday Residents say the road is under close supervision of dropping six inches a day. sherifra deputies. Trees, utility poles and Unruh, a candidate -tor t'le Democratic gubernatorial nomination, said the contracts would include "performance guarantee'' clauses stating that student.s would reach a certain achieveme11t 1 e v e 1 within a spepcified lime or a penalty would be assessed. The firms \~ould b e "reinibursed" for each student \\'ho exceeds the standard s;;t for his grade," Unruh said. California taxpayers, h I? said, now spend $4 billion a year on public schools, v.·ith more than half of the local Jiroperty tax going for educ2,- tional purposes. "Unless there jo.; a radical change in the way \\'e teach our children, by 1990 we will spend as Tnuch on educ.alion ~s we spend on the national defense budget to· day," said Unruh. He said ilew methods must be developed for p u b I i c schools to teach ''the basic skills cf reading a n d arithmetic." He fiaid private industry should be employed to develop new teaching techniques even though "some will contend that approach to teaching is overly businesslike." "l believe it has the great advantage ~ fi~~ responsibility for results and places a new and badly needed emphasis on the achievement of children in the basic skills," Unruh said. Federal funds would be used r-.1anson requested a razor mailbox posts are tilted. blade and it was provided by Fireplaces, driveways and re· deput ies at !he county jail tai ning \Valls are cracked. where he is being held. He toJdl-~--------------------1 deputies he had always ~en clean-shaven until he was jail· ed in Independence. Manson s aid the Independence jail had no shaving fa cilities. He was held there on stolen car charges prior to hi s transfer here to face trial in the Tate case. ~1enson, whose hair remains at should~r length, will enter a plea to Conspiracy and murder charges In su perior court J an . 28. OPEN TONIGHT •, DON'T LOSE YOUR SHIRT ON YOUR -~ INCOME TAX Preporino yovr ow11 lox r•tvrn 111111 •xoctly "' bon-•I of laughs. lvt, It tOll IM "°'>'· Sl111pfy IH H • I llock, TM l11Corn• Tox '""'•· "Th•n you col'I bf Cleffaill yov"•• NUIY.d ..,.,., polltlbt. dtclvetlon. AM tfMrf'• fti• nok•d truth. IOTH $ flOllAL AND STATE UP M•R[3~~0. Am.,iu'• Urgts.t Tax Strvic• with Ovtr 4000 Offices C•tl M-.. 1175 HarW 11-4. Miii! Office i4WNe Cott• Mt11 2751 Harbor Blvd 1111 rtt• ol C•ll'" c ... 1tr) Coron• del M•r 244t I . (Mtt Hwy, (II MKArtflur ..... ) WllKDAYS f.f SAT. & SUN. f·S HO A~'°IHTMl!HT ~ltlllll 'I' Treat your hair lo luxury,.. Helene Curtis conditioning treatment shampoo, and styling 3.88 Sue Cory festival permanent wove,., 8.95 We speciolize i11 the core of fotltlo n wigi USE YOUR PENN EY CHARGE CARO - NO APPO!NTMENT NECE.55.ARY ~Ul.Ll•fOM 0 .. 1111,•tlT c ... r,.. w •too .. 1111)4 11...,,llflt"" Ct111., ,,.. 11oor. m-m• Nl~•f lit.CM F1t11,_, ''land 2rld tlacw • ......,,,. CARPETING . . 51 ECIAL ~. Manufacturer's Closeout! . l Outstanding carpeting priced for a fast sell-out! Don't wait! 'Salem' classiclaop pile fitumoothly into any decor. l 00% nylon in solids or tweeds . 6 decorator colors to choose fr om . 'Pleasant Valley' a hi-low ran· dom shea r , .. beautiful acrylic/ mod· acrylic blend. Decorator colors lo enhance any room in your home. 'Mirage' a handsome tip shear level pile in a beautiful blend of acrylic/ modacrylic. Decorator colors that ·will drow compliments every day. 'Indian Summer' a magnificent shag carpeting in acrylic/ modacrylic. At a price that le~s you carpet one room or the whole housel Great colors to set off any decor from colonial lo modern! Save! 3.88 SQ. YD .. 6.88 SQ. YD. 6.88 SQ. YD, 7.88 SQ. YD. Padding and expert in1t1l11tion 1vall1blt at Penney'1 r19ultir low prices. Ust our timt p1ymtnt plan! FOR PROFESSIONALIZED CARPET SERVICE:._SHOP IN STORE OR SHOP AT HOME • • • CAll YOUR NEAREST PENNEY$ TODAY LAKEWOOD NEWPORT !EACH CANOGA PARK (883.3660) DOWNEY (869-45'1) FULLERTON (87I-4343) HUNTINGTON IEACll (892.n7I) (63'-7000) (833-0783) MONTClAit VENTUltA (621.3111 •• 91l-7217) . (6'2·7592) • Free estimate. • No obligation. • We bring 10mplti. • frff consultation. I :• •' , - • 'Good' Abortion La iv Now Drawing Attacks I Rare Trees Won't Fall To Dozers LA JOLLA (AP) -The last :stand of unprotected Torrey Pines, rare trees dating back to the Ice Age. won't fall to the bu11dozer if these people have their say: -Two little girls in Pomona who raised $5 by baking cookies and selling them door· to-door. -A woman in Racine, Wis., who sent $100 in memory of a son killed in Vietnam. The sixth grade class at .John A d a m s Elementary School in San Diego. The youngsters solicited $127.78 on a Halloween "trick or treat for Torrey Pines." -The students of S a n Dieguito Higb School in San Diego who "just a bout emptied their treasury" to donate $1,000. But the nationwide cam· paign which began Oct. 15 is still $200,000 short. said a spokesman fur the Torry Pines Association. The state has eannarked $900,000 to help acquire the canyon across the salt marsh north or the Torrey Pines State Re~rve. The state won't release the funds unless they are matched from J o c a I sources. • ·Too ·many hills'? _µse our money! We lll<e to help you pay left-over bms, emergency expenses, home and car repairs, or buy a new appliance. That's what Morris Plan money Is for. You may borrow from $100 to $5,000, or more, and have your money the day you apply. We'll schedule paymehts to fit your income. When you need money for arry good reason, use ours. We like to make loans. orris Newport Beach-3700 Newport Boulevard-673-3700 • Monday, January 19, 1970 DAILY PILOT f team sa e! Through Saturday_ Only! Save 21. 95 on a programmed 14 lb. capacity washer Reg. 209.95 NOW $188 • All .,...,. .potcelain lini•h -•-'I• programmed wash selections • pre-treat setting • bleach fountain• full , medium and low water level setting• • hydro-surge agitator provides vigorous wash action • white, cop· pertone, or avocado .•. color costs no more a t Penneys ... sa choose your color-motched team now! Save 17. 95 on a 4 temperature gas dryer now ... limited time! Reg. 169.95 NOW $152 • Automatic dewr.inkling minimizes ironing • od;ust- able signal sentry sounds off when cycle is completed • interior light • porcelain enamel finish lop and drum • white, coppertone, avocado or harve!t gold• Color costs no more at Penneys ... so choose your favorite. ,. Save 17.95 on a 4 temperature electric dryer In white, coppertone, avocado or harvest gold. ' Reg. 139.95 NOW ............................ -•••• •122 ,, ..... ' ' : i ' ' . fl ... . .. ,,.,.·' ·,._' ~-~ ,,...>· ........ , ...... :.-~~· ~:;., .. ;,..~·· .: .. ;, . Use Penney• Time Payment Plan BURBANK CANOGA PARK COLLEGE GROVE CHULA VISTA DOWNEY FULLERTON l. GRANADA HILLS HUNTINGTON BEACH HUNTINGTON PARK LAKEWOOD LONG BEACH LOS ALTOS MONTCLAIR NEWPORT BEACH NORTH HOLLYWOOD SAN FERNANDO SANTAANA TORR ANCE VAN. NUYS VENTURA ' WESTCHESTER l ·- • -------------------- .. DAILY PIL'oT Despite Cotaflict l1·vine Fnll Up Fo1· The County Won 't Cut Gr ads Told Take Riverside IRV1NE -High school UCI by Jan. 7. Record .. --Smallpox Vaccine senlon who decide they would Admission app)jcations for like lo attend the local UC advanced standing still will be Irvine campus next year are accepted for an indefinite time going to have to seltle for UC until quotas are rilled up. MONDAY a..n1or c11111nl c111b of r.11nlino•o" By T0!\1 BARLE'' ... <h, f>Ork ..... ltK•ttt on &IOQ •• 11111 1nc1 Or•-.r'"'· !1~nllnolon Of ,.... DtllJ l"Utt Suh '"'11 11 t .m. N NA Or tl•w•I M1r11or s,e..,1or c11111n• Club, SA TA A -ange hlllOI' Cltl-(11/l>IHl\IH, 1 "' Slrffl •M 1nrl111 "'-· N1WP011 1111ch. County must remain an ln-u~f,.~·"'l:uiw1 •nc11llV9 •oard, Ctrtl te-ted spectator 1·n' the Jt"I At111ur1,.1. 16-U Htrtlor •tvd.. ''"" C•lt MtM, ,__ ' [he lo • ,. .. ..._, c.,.,., 1<1w1"1' c11,111. J01.r1 debate now ra(lllg: on pie Rftl ... r111t, 1121 E. Cot1! Hkl~Wf'I, d c..-... 11e1 Mtr. ,_., of smallpoi vaccinati~ an be an awful price w pay for a Riverside instead. Present UCI enrollment, In- population which, after a num-AdmJsslon applicalions for eluding the Medical School, Is ber of years, has l~t its im-new frethmen in the fall have about 5,000 students, with a munlty. been closed off and applicants 1,000 student gain to 8,000 "A lot or opposition to the be. d. led l planned for the school year precautions comM from those are 1ng re 1rec o who resent the effect that vac-Riverside, the only UC cam-beginning in September, cinations can ha\•!! on some doelors in the county can talk pus still open for new Brown said. "Whet C:.. le Dooo AIMot A-17" ............ ARTHRITIS FACTS FO. ··-January 21-Wednesday-7:10. Marl~ers ~~VP"' "~Q 2100 M•l•ll'I· ve~~a...lti • Panel Dlac.aulom J,y Doctott p I. , •• • • L..,fl the F.cts About Arttlrltls • 9ufft1ot11 AMw«ed PrM-..te4 ly THE ARTHRITIS FOUNDATION PUBLIC INVITED FREE ,.,...,,.... Ho•c.-,.,r•• "" M•"'' c•ub. the mer1·1s, of the prolecl1·~ YMCA, tlOO UnlvtrlllY 0 r I Y t , N•-1 ••tell. 1 om . meuure In today~s society, i E'f~::,,se~:t r~~~ll<~':"r:~• rr0111a. iso1 H•rw 1111vd.. '"'" chief medical officer his Dt~~·.?:15&:V. coal• cn1p1..-, declared. • t . ' ~,r.ir!; Jr,7:.r•N,1..!.:!:...rs'ie1~~,,s::o "I'm ~ply ir}l'eretlle<I In ~.v. H""llno•on llt•t n cn101.,, the ·contr6tet')', .. sakl. Dr. persons,'' Philp s&id. "They aboul. \t _·Bil w~ like, but .·· rreshmen, UCI jlegistrar1 John i Quotas .!or fall quarter think that we're inflicting pain the.re 11 ~ no act_1o_n }ror~ m_y Brown annoul\Ced today; enro.llme"nt are Marly 2,000 ,._ __ ;.., __________________ _. and piµiistunent needles.sly to off~ce unti.~,an offJ.:1al ruhng is Tobe acce~ed, qualified ap-, new "students with about t,2001• defend a'ainst a danger that. ~d~e:h:ve~r:ed~· _______ _!P~lic~a~n~ts:._m~ust~h~a~v~'e_:'IP~·~pt~ie~d~l~o:_o~f~the~m~'f~,.~shm~~·•'.;·~---====================== no l(lliger·t"eally e.r.ists." \· M1>0nlc Tempt.. 1114 Lff.t "v•. Hun· John PhJlp, "but I don't intend flllOIOl'I llttcll, l :JO o ..... c.,.11 Mt» H••mct1• 1.-oc1<1t No "· 10 choose up sides. But our OOd FtlklWl Ht ll, 156-1 NtwDorl 111w. Cott• M••, • •.m. role here is to uphold the TUISDAY t t• • '"'" ~t EMch~noa Club, cor11 11 .. 1 regu a 1ona co Ve r 1 n g V8C· 1tei1tur•"1· 7641 Htrt>or •1•d '°"'' cination un1ess and until there M111, ._. ct= ... ~·1 Jr~· i=~1w~1, c1~,;m~~~~ is a change m the rules.'' cor""' 011 M••· n -10 o...... Phllp's comments were ln-Hu"'lnoton &Nell Ror1ry Cl\/b, Nortto, . Fout WlnM Rttt1ur1nl. 1M21 11.r11 &plred by reports of C<>nfUCtJng ~.'i!i<.• 1tad. H~nu~ 11•~'"" 11:15 •• comments ,given . by · U.S. H~1':!,;\':on,.~~11~r ~~~,~~ ~11~~ ~ Pu~lie ~alth Service ofHcials :_-,:,i:i ... V9 .. H1111111101on 11e1c11 12:1.1 .• ~"":the vaiue of the sm!tl l pox Ntwoor1 Htrbor 0o11m111 c111t.. Ylll•,..:l"'•-ination in a nation thaL Mtfln1, !0"5 flY1IO• 0.)V•. NtwDOl"f <!•~ .. c~r:c~.:!:1~1:-:.:i. Club. Costf M1S4 has been free or the scoorge.- (ioU Ind CounlrY Club. Co11t ,_,.. -~ One exceptiOll -Jince' n :u o.m. • • ! • Coron• Clel Mt• E•cll•llQ• Clult,. ; 1H7 ' , • • ~ J01tl'1, Jl21 E. CHsl MlohWtY, ; , • ,- Coron1 .,., M1r, "°°"· "Perhaps J personally tend Huntlncuon llHc11 Norlll u .... , crui.. . • Mt1~11rk c...,n1rv c1v1>. ,,,., to be a little conservative G''"'"'· HUftllllQ!on lltKn. """"· about this," Philp said. "l can Dealli Notices MO"DAY o•ITS -Jt n It .... JtTHOLOMaW see the thinking of those who say that there i!i: no plinl in preserving a measure thal does cause distress to 89me of those l'aecinated bot then I have to admit that there could ·,. A· "very few !' of those ""ho receive the vaccination break out in a rash of vaccination marks, Ph.ilp explained. "No one regrets this more than the health orficer or physician," he said, "but we have had to regard the incidence in the on- ly way possible-that we have to take this precaution to pro- vent a disease that at one time "'as one of the wOrld 's major i;courges. ·• "Drop the precaulions a nd we could invite an invasion. of the disease. 11 fhilp said. · • "That's the t.e;arf of wb,._aj.• is being debated Tight now and ,ye do prettJ well have to sit back and see what the U.S. Public Health Service v.IUJ have to say °" the con versy. "Until th.en." he said, "we itick with \.·accinations. *We NI.,. llt<'llll lltr!llOlOmew ..... t II. DI 47' M1rloold, Coron1 <Ml Mtr. 011• Qf c:IN!h, J ....... ,.., II. Su,..,lvtcf lw nlKU.. M•1. C:-11 Gt,..,.,., Arc1dl11 ll1u1'hter· ln·llw, M ... LM,..,..t •1r1t1olDn11W, St" Ardo. s..-.ice. •net I'll~!, 1rlv111. 8tllr Mortutrv, 3po E. Co11t H!1hwtJ, Coront Gel Mt<, OlrKIOro. DONALDSOH ,O.rtllur OD.,.ldJOn. ,.,,e 7'. or t !O Kno•, CO•ll l.\111. 0.tt of llNlll, J .... JI. Sur· Y•Vl<I bJ WJlt. Ctlfltrfnt Oon.ldl ... i -· Don.Id R. Don.tldlOll. N1W1tort I Hdlr d1u111,.r, Jtllltt p. I.I'd..,. Cast1 M ... : ••• 1•1'"1ct'llldr1n 1nd two o•ttt-trtnct- clllldrtn. Row,..,, Tut!d1J, 7 PM. 1t.- 11ult"" Miu, Wtdne1d•Y, f J,M, both ti i.1. Juc111..,1 Cttllollc Churdl. lnltrmont, Good Sheohtrd CemtltrY. 111111 Mort~ 1 .-,., CorOl'lt 011 Mir, 01ttclotL Cd11ipute~ A-c f ounting System for Cou.nty? ~. by superyisors includes: the OUNLDI" Vlvitn H••tl Dunl11P. ,.,,, '5. of 07 Motf\ln<r CtnrOl'I ltotd. Coron1 d&I M1r. Ott• ol cM11~. Jtnutl"Y 16. Svrvlved bv 1111.otnd, lttJmond; ,_ soru, Albtrl flrownl....,. N.-w York1 Geor1t •,_,,ter. flurblnli; t"ll 11.,. 1rt...,dllld...,. E11!- ,.rn S"r lt,...l<n.·""'lllllt, MDIMhr. l :JO PM, lltllz Coront Gel Mtt Cllt~. 'F~ ntrtl ...-vi'"' T•tJdlY. l l"M, 111111 SANTA ANA Orange County Supervisors' ·· h a v e ordered a $40,000 study !l.imed at setting up a computerized, uniform cost accoun t ln.g system for county govern· ment. '°"""' "~ M•r cii.oe1. 1n1trm..,,, "·~·· •. ".Rfghl now · each ~eparl· Ille Vitw M-111 l"tric . 811fl MDr!\1-' ~ .,..,, cor-0t1 Mt r. Dl•Klo(I. ment has its O'o\1l cost GOL-ION ...,_ l Htnrl• 1. .. Go1>0n. ,.,, u . ., 117 1111 CGUOl.ll.Li arrangemen SL N11nlln11ton llHCll. Otlt of GM1tl', Jtnu1,.., 11. Su,...lued lw wilt, l"tlrh 3C· We cost ol, •hiring a oonaultant · from the Santa Ana ac· counting firm of Ernst and Ernst. The major county departmenLc; participaling in the ' development of the · new system are purc~&ing, per- sonnel, administra~. audi· tlll'-COOtroller and data~.._serv· ices. . • . • .. thrtt """' LH 1...i Lt11l, GQ1>0n, To>• •11 Dttrl Gohon, HIJ'\t\1>1tfbl\ llf,d!: tw0 1111191111 .. , Mrs. Romt HOiie. Coat1 Mtlt; Mrl. N-.il RlllHll. HUfttl"tlon llM<ll; 16 1r1ndcllllOrtn. Grt Yt llOt lt"'ICtl. T""4t r. 1 PM, H1rDOr ""' Memorlll "••k. Smit~• Mori\jtl"Y. Olrtdo... - County Aud1tor-Contro\ler V; \ N . " .. J d A. "Vis't Heim iaid the pro-\ ew,.. ."' .ge gram, when established, would lead-to more efficient managc- GllOOM Hedwl<o K. Groom, "11• IO, formerly o! o...w.,, NI-••t r J in 11 In Hu,.11,,._ T 8k~ Bench -;:m:':"':i:":"°"::;:":ty::;:go:':":":m:en:L:;I ... •...'. '°" a .. c11. survlvtd "' soto, G-•• ~ ,.,Od brtchl, SE""'" Gr1r111dt 1trflc · , ' ....., ' T1111.d1r. 111!1. yl1St111ln1i.ll..__....m.r,11 Ptrt". S" ·~~ ~-rl. Friday , 1,-JjtA n .. ... ,.,.._ Roc..rt H'"'"""· ·t1W' lllol }t .. Coau _ . SANTA ANA -• Enrobing M11o1. Dllt of dtt11t~· 'f1)C. ~f1~Stnrlc.1 --moru'es for Judge J.E.T. -lno 1! W11tcl"1 MOrtt.o..-Y. ""'" MAYH •H .• ·"N&d" Rutter of Newport Veld• Lou MtJll\i1h. A11 ~-of til Jo.. B ch h bee te tstivety ""111 s1., cot11 ~t••. 011• 01 d.t1fh. ea ave n . n J..,. 11. Survlvtd t.r 11u11>1rlf, G-'•••• schedilied for Friday .P Y ,,,.,,, 01uon~1ri. c.r111hi1. Ottrv-. t!Pn!'il: Qr11;1ge Count.¥ $,uperior ~t t nd RtnH. motlltr, Mr1. ti"' CooNi', -· ff"-:... ..' '\ J.• . O.ltllam1: lllree broilltl'I. 0,..,11 C-•· ·;() ]!,;MU$. ...~, · ~ ,.,11.: L-oul1 '"d R~ C-. Vlr1f"l11 . :.. p-·idi ,,. . 1-.lne Wj\llA;_ tltltr. Mr!. lrmt Jtt fl ~--. Okt.· ''-• Q& "'~ 1,141n l>ornl. $..-vlc11. Tutodtv. l PM. l'lrol Speirs will take the bench !or t"."''::1:'.c:~~;:1.~~~dl1";:1!..,~~vw:,~· the I .. p.m.. ~re.mony . ln ... 1n1!M M-•l•I Ptrk. Btll ll•OldWIJ •. Department .One in y,•h1ch Mor1111rv. Dlrtc1or1. Judg·e Rutter will . oUicially NICHOl-S Jalln Nlc1>o11. ,,11 we11mln11et" f l1c1. t>ecome a Superior Court c ..... Mn•. Datt or o"rn. J.,. ~•. i·uri.11 'The court's 21Sl'• judge Su,.,\Yl<:I by 01110111tra, M ... Mtl'k,Prlcw, • . cos11 · M111; Mrt. M1r1111 M-htn. "'ill be welcomed b)l fellow ~cr1 n10'l. P1.: tllft. Jt..,.s Tum1ne1i... i·udges member.i ol the C0!11 Mtll; live ,r1ndclllldron 11'<1 lllttt• ' • . ''"'·v••ll<l<lllld•tn. s1 .... 1c1• wm t1t ~1111 Orange County Bar Assoc1a· tn Scr1nton, P1. w .. 1,nu M0<tu1ry, •er-HOR and memben of his fan\i· ""frdlftl d!•Ktor1. "YLI: I). Josh111 0. Pyle. nJI Cro1bJ Av1 .• C.tr. ,Qrg'mizer! were. hopinl!'.'to· do!-n GrDYo. Ollt o( dHl!'o. J1n. U. S11r· ', ... vec1 bJ wilt. Ml<lhlt E. ,.,It : ntPh•""· day that Ney,'port Be,ch .at· 1.-. Glen Pyle, 111, lle1r; "''''· Mr1. tome~ Dennis C•nw1nter, How1rcr k . 5,.,1111, Hunll"l!lon ll11c11. • ol -~· Se,..,i<••· W~n•u6tv. 12:JO, Wtvt•IY chair a ' the Republi~n cnurc11. 1n11r,.,1n1.1 F1lrn1•tn Munorltl State Ce. n tr a 1· Committee, P1rk . Vllht!ion, 1'1tldlV. ' ... M.t l"M, . P1c111c view cn1Pt1. cor0<11 1111 Mir. \Vould be present a~ the of- P1c1t1c v1,,., MD•tu•rv. 01r1c1ort. ficial reception for Judge Rut · lllNODLD ~11n11v L. Rlnoold. ~ o s1v1111, L•.91'· ter. The 90P f,ig\jre is cur· na Hil11. 0111 01 cre11 n, Jon. 1•. s11r-· rently· abroa~. , y!ytcf bY OIU9Mtl'. Mr1. Je1n R .... u. 1ow1: 1wo 1on1. s11n11y, Min""'°''' and 'Judge Rutter Wa$ elevated G•"' Rlrioold, ldtho. se .... lc1s, 10 ... M. from the Harbor Judicial ,.,.,.r, M-•'• w,11t1111 c111"t. tnttr"· . Dt.slri·ct Court 1•0 Costa Mesa ,., ... 1. Mt1ro1t Abbtv. Wttlcll ff en-• Mor•u••'· M64..., DlrKtor1. by Governor Ronald Reagan .==========;:;!. to take tht seat vacated by the ' ' ARBUCKLE & SON Westcllff J\1o rtuary .f%7 E. 17th St., Costa J\!esa ""'!II • BALTZ l't10R1:UABJ.ES Corona del J\1ar OR S-HSI Costa !\1e11 !\11 5-tlli • BELL BROADWAY l't10 RTUARY 110 Broadway, Costa J\1esa LI 1-3133 • DILDAY BROTllERS Hundngton Valley · 1\tortuiry 17111 Beech Bl vd. Huntington Btacb IU:-7771 • r AC IFtC VIEW MEMORIAL PAllJt Ce.met~ry • l't1ortuary Chapel 3500 Pacific View Drive Newport .Btac.11, CallfornJ1 "H'lll • PEEK FAMU..Y t'OL0~1AL FUNERAL HOME 7SOI Bols1 A\'t . \\'ttlmh11ter -.SUS •· .. SllEFP61l~IOR1'1JARY• Llguna Beach • 4M-1SS5 San Clemtnle · 4ft.1100 ....... SMJTttS' MORTUARY 12'1 Mlfn SL lfunlln&lem &tacit - now Justice Robert Gardner of . t~ FO)lrtb District Court of Appeals . want to tie them all tr>gether . Jn. one, comprehensive, com- puterized sy•tem," according to. Mrs. ~1:i~ne l.1anls, dlrec· tor of the county's budget system. The expendftuu approved • • •• ·:Y~y·Notes Dimes Plea .. ·~ I ' .• Janui{y is Mar~· of Dhnes utorith). Fountain Valley. 1 ?ifayor"E<lward Just made It bfflcial with a proclamation praislDg the l'tlarch of Dimes for its battle against birth defects. "U future generations art to benefit from our trope today. each of us must participate fully in thls great health cl· fort;" reid' tht prbclamitlon. ........ ·~~. now open ••. Sears New Inco111 c Tax Prepara ti on Ser vice Now you ·don"t have lo spend long hours over y~ inoome lax:. 1' .. or a rearoqable fee (based on a. posted schedule) a trained tax preparer will carefully rE'view and pre- pare both slJ.{.e and red- eral f.axcs with your as- surance of comp\Jl.tit.ional accuracy. •Th e service .is fa st, confidential • ~o appoin t.men t is n ecessary • The fee, as lo\V as $5, m ay he put. on yot1r Sears Revo1 ving Charge Con\e i n to your nearest Sears &tore li•ted b elow for help with your i ncome. ··~· tUENA 'AIUC CANOGA l'AU. COMl'TOti. COVINA. fl MONTE OlfNDAlf HOllYWOOD tNGlfWOOD lONG &fACH O LYM l"IC & SOTO OlAHGf ,A$AOENA. l'QMONA. l'ICO SANTA AN.A UNfA ff .Sl'lllMGS SJ.NT A. MONICA. SOUTH COASf l'V.U TOl:llANCl VAllfY VEtM09'1f I Sears I ~! lilt"\, HUI HI r,11; ~'-0 (.fl, ~hep N1thl1 Mondcar "''O"tll So1u•d11y O JO A Ill, '• • lO , M., ~~~do1 ,, N oQ ... It J, M '• ., , "• ' . t " ,. .( " 1, Sale! Bes·t selfing Fashion Mci;n.,br dinettes! .... ( • ·~ ,, _ (THROUGH SATURDAY ONLY) } ,, ' • ·,· '," ,.. •. ' ••• ., < • •' .. . ' .. , " ' ....... , ... ......... 5 PC. 'MEDITERR ANEAN' STYLE DINETIE SET ,.'. iEG. '189, NOW .. Har\dsome black frame 1abl9 mea1ure1 A2" wid. ll 42• 1tin6 .and ••Nnd1 lo 54'• or 66" with 2 12" leaves.~ fop ii a I••~ oak woodgrain finish, High-bock chairs are framed Jn blaclr with vphol1tered vinyl seofl in a gold d11ign, $149 . . . . . " l PC. DOUllE PEDESTAL DINETTE SET ••• REG. st 29, NOW 7 tc. OVAL DINETTE SET WITlt 1 l EAF ••• ~EG, 1139, NOW :l6wx48~ ovo l toblt top i1 bloclr with "xlvrtd wolnur inlay fini1h ond ••lend1 kl 60"with 1 12" l•of. Choirs ore block chonn•I •inyl ond woodgrain vinyl on bot~. . -•12s ·: ... T111ured pecan woodorain f1t1ith toble top m1a1U'rft •2• wide x 54• Ion; 011d 1xttnd1 to 66•. Vinyl ieots a re most art•n on gold dt1ign background 1 NOW! TH(S( VALUES AT ANY ONE OF THESE P£NNEY SlORE S! CANOGA PARK LAKEWOOD DOWNEY FULLERTON HUNTINGfON BEACH MONTCLAIR NEWPORT BEACH VENTURA 'SHdl' SUl'lOi\Y, TOO 12to5P.M.! • I~ I , I ' ' • • .. _. J....., 1+, 1m St ' • • • , • . . . . . ~, r ... • ; I • . . ... . . • • . . ' ' . '· . . re5 . . . . : : [ . . . . . . . . -, . . a . ·e·: .. · ·.(; • • • ' t. -~ (THROUGH .SATURDAY .'.ONLY!) ' r-~:------... -:N::"o·i ""··"'W. ·.··. ~·9· ... ,.' "·c .... _·. _____ ,...., . ' '" . ' . . . . -. ·. . . 16 •· 11-..y tluty '""" ,.11. ll!O. I.ff ........... ,,, NOW "' "•·-·-~,..--:·• ..... ,,.,,. tllot. t!O. 1.3' .......... HOW"' U fll· ttelftlets steel rflizll'lt l.ewl. HG. 1.:zt ............. NOW"' Tri..., ••• c•htrs te """"h your 4•or. llO. 1.2t ............. NOW "' r~• _..., ....._ ...JR. ,.. •• 6 "'I' l!M. •to. _1.tt ..... NOW "' 6 t•I. JtJottic tresh con tn r.d or eve-. coie. liG. 1.49 ........ NOW "' 2 •· Telleo• c-.1 olu,.,inum souce 4 pt. lflundry kit ... ~ ,.t1 ati4 -·· ,.. •• llG. 2.49 ........ NOW '·" clethe,pln l>eg, pin• olHI 1terep Mi.· I" .-ii Tok.• -tet1· olu'"I"""' l!G. 2.U ............. NOW IM .,hWlt. llG. 2.49 .•.•.. NOW I.ft I" C811·1ron ·skJllet for intloor., ..,; TrMI: ltG. 2.il9 ...••.. NOW I... .._ ceeklng. ll!G. 2.29, NOW I.ft 3 ~t. stainlea stffl 10ixlng l>owl. HG. 2.2t .................. NOW I.;. . :" ' ' l'i~ltk i.;.... k~ ... ~ pint Tho.-Itel· tie. HG. 3.i9 .... , ..... NOW 2 ... 11 %" T~• cerotO<I alUMln""' 9ritl· dlo. ll!G. 3.il9 ......... NOW 2 ... 16 ~ <•.rry-..·iiln cenlotor sot . ~EG: 3.66 ..... , •...... NOW 2.ff SALi ••• LAUNDRYtACCESSORIESI ' . . ··; :., ... ' ...... , ' .... , P•••-'Adtft' Jttth ,.,., ....... .., wtth elti"f'l"L ,., fr•1her •••1111111, cl••ll•r .._5 •• 4eLML .... 1.$9, NOW .... I.It r-r Silex I-Int MeN ... 119i. lo yew chelOo el , ..... ,., ........ ., ...... ........ ~·-.. ~..... ",MOw •..••. 1.11 . . , ...... ~'" ..• -.r-· _,,...., .. ' ,., ... ,." •J •ll.••lt:e••.,~ ' . ,.....-. .......... . dt. t.79, llOW ..... t .H ' . "' ,,,J.. • ..,. ,~ .. ,., ..... ton '• et..,_ Nlrs with· ... lftl\ot. ...... .. ..... ,., ......... RM.•6.9',NOW ..... l .H I\ ,•., ' Plellic 40 qt. wellebasket ift ..,_do. ll!G. 1.33 ... MOW He Se•l6rlrff9 24". 36" -le""4ry lle1. HG. 1.19 ......... NOW..,. 1 •· Tefttft• Netotl alUftlln""' _ ... •evc.,..... l!o. 3.-.... NOW 2 ... T~• ceetetl elUMlnvM tullM llek· int pan. HO .. 3.3' ...•. NOW 2 ... 12" x 17" Teflero9 cH!etl eluMI"""' beh/r-1 poft. 1!0. 3.39 ........•.... NOW 2 ... Utlllty -·· """· .. l!G. 3.99 ............. NOW 2 ... , ' NOW! fHtsE VAl UtS AT ~y ONE Of tHtst ~ENNEY STO~ES! CANOGA PARK LAKEWOOD DOWNEY MONTCLAI~ ·FULLE!i!;tON', HUNTINGTON BEACH NEWPORT-BEACH VENTURA sl40; SUNDAY, TOO '12 to 5 ;,M.t . . I . ··-. ' • • I .. • • l ·- 1 OAJI.\' PILOJ Mond11. J.n,,.,,. 19. 1970 No One Really Won Nigeria-Bi afra War • a Niceril.n mw10n was ln magW~ 1n Lagos, supplied Ptioscow. It den.led it wu seek· materials f o r newspapers, \\'ho \\'On in Nigeria? Who ing amu, but in August prepared to open a direct air lost!' Unk with Moscow. They pr<r By \\'ll.J..IAl\t L. RYAN AP 5-1~ CetT-"*'" St.alesmen are toting up .. the Nigeria took delivery on about i>ably helped along a small, score. and the tally has litt1e 20 outdated Soviet AUGIS jtl well-organized Nigerian Com- to do with whether the Niger-fia:hters and on two fighter murust organization called the · 1 •k bomber• made in "--iaJJst Worker1 and 1an ederal government or .... e .-JV\; Biafran.s lost. Cuchoslovakia, all this to sup-Farnlers party. Again, as in similar crisea in plement t"'o old American- Africa and elsewhere in Ult made, propellor•lven B26 AMEJtlCAN WORRY • past, the y,·orld has wiblessed bombers 'l\illch had been The Americans w or r-1 e d an example f1f the failure of Nigeria's total alr force. Soon about the rl.sk d ireat power great nationa to break out ot Egypt woukl be in the act. too, involvement in the crisis. the aet-encl'U!~d prison of JUpplying plloU for its fellow Loc1lly Washlngton worried -"U Moslem •ovmunent. , -about a new Soviet attem~ ,.power y,vu cs. . ~ / Proba~y t.bf''Russians were Tbt smet deal waS cash M penet1Jte other~ key Af '"-Hne'ln •dv•-. ~-1 '"'·""' regions. · ~ , the real bis wi.nner5, but in ~ po ........ anv. 1o11,;.r- olhtr capltah, leader5 may be we~ fringe benefit&. The Private lnteftsts.-4.bo. were ~ gulell.Y co ft a rat u I a t in g Rus$ans were tnakinc'poinb· profiling fn:im the War. "ll themselves, that. au things with other Africans w h 0 .... inks to high heaven," cried a considered , they did not do too feared JI m 11 a r tr l b a I Swin newspaper upon the of. badly. secessioni!m. They w p n , fidal dlsclpsure thRit a Si,\1is$ policy was defended as In line with Britain's "residual col· onial responsibilities." If Bri· lain didn't do so, Nigeria would look elsev.•here, it was pointed cul. Now the war Is over. formally. The suffering and problems remain, alcng with the big-power politics. There is a rush of Offers to help Nigeria repair the v ast damage done by weipons sup- plied by both East and \Yest. Gowon, in a fairly comfortable Po1itical dttver'S teat, will pick and choose where the be.Ip· comes -from, "'horn he will hcilor by acce~ng it and "'horn he "'1:1 punish fo r not E1•eryone elsl!' Sej'IDS io l]av• having supported h1n1 1n the Jori f.Omelhing. lnchldinf' lhl pasl. If he list.ens lo the Nigerian:1. · n.ussiaas, he ~JI k c c p ~_.~,..,.~~~-"-~- \\'c stern naUOtU1 at a.rq1's length, Thr Sovlet :ii:cncy Tass quoted a Nigerian government newspaper .)IS · s<1yi,1g the Biafl'an surrender \1·as a "'blo1v to the 1ne1chi11a!io11s of l the \Veslcrn powers." and another as ·~aying Nigeria should reject aid fl'om nil ex- t'Cpt those who "supported Nigeria throughout.the crisis.'' Got tlfe m011 on 1N SURED SAVINGS! ItE\'STONE SAVIN GS " " ""'"""' 5 383 "" l rftl&l IC!tYS ,tAH • .,, 1;:· f or the thne being. then, it secrns the Russians \1•ere the ~~.~~· ~~;!~~:; .. ~.;~:;~~ Just Lil~e Otlie•· Folks Starting in 191( Nigeria w;ia perml&sioii to raise i t he J firm was traffickin& (n at,ns a British colony and pr~ number d d.iplomat.s in ~ir • t.p Niger~. ,v i Q l,a t in g lectorate. Its people did not Lagos mission. They sent SW1tzerfand 's nt!utrality. YOUN GLA ND will remain closed MONDAY and TUESDAY, JANUARY 19·20, to prepare fo r our fcimo11:; ANNUAL CLEARA NCE-Watch for 01•r RIC AD in Tuesday's, Jan._20 edition of_ th!! fl.Al~ 'f •. PILC>i Katy. an English !'heep dog. gives her seven pups a ride 111 a baby cnrriage. Ka ty 's O\vner, David Boddy. l11dianapol1.s, says Katy has learned to put her pups in, the .cacriage.. Lhen push them around the house. 'rhe pups, no\v 3-\vecks-_old1 fin d the ride quietln~. think cf themselves as more than ZOO teehi.Jicians with Eventually the 8 r it Is h Nigeriarui, but as Hamas, the planes to Ntrr1'. Thay ~lose4 titey' had beea~!iteP: Jbcs, Ycrubas, Benins, Efiks made <llfen' of poltwar1 ptn, up anris supp~ )<t and membcn of other tribes economic "'Ip. They ~nde\f 1federal Nigtiria an.;l~ere ft!'- having litlle in common. The credit.s for ~ war vi<Ung up 16,2'! perunt.gt_,t.he North 's culture derived from:_:ma~te~ri~el!'.::·:_Th~•'!:Y~ba~ck~-.~dc._:•'.._~'~:ountry~~·,'.._~wo~a"'.pon".'.'.'.ry~.:;.·_·!.T..'.'h'.:e:.'..:::=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:::::=:=:=:=:=:=:============== ancient f\.1oslen1 ccnquest.s and Last :plane waded Jts people were Islamic and Arabic-speaking. The Sol!lh ·, , and West had been ~ lianized by 1nillionartd. 111 Biafrct by Gu11 . . Nigeria had a mulUt>licity ci , languages and dlplecla. NOT CHOSEN . • LIBREVII.L &. Gabon ( API -The last plane out W Biafra had 40 passengers and a '"'a1t1ng l i~t nf 1n11!ions. The 1nan who dCC'!dcd who got (ln board enforced.his choice with a rifle.\ lt \\as S.:iturdar ni~h! at the t:li airstrip. and tn·o French Rf'd Cross plane~ fro m L1brev11!e had lcuchcd do,\'n, hunt ing for children eaugh! 1n the war and l:Cttin~ instead Biafran officials. tht>ir wivl:'s oind friend s. f The man holding lhe rifle. a Col. Achuzia. stood at lhP bot- tom of th e DC4's steel ladder and checked off the nan1es of pPOple as they got on. The Biafran tell ing the story said : "! too k a slep forward and he pointed lhe thing at niy chest. So I stoPJ>C?. there "'as nothing else In do. I looked arcund ;ind sa..-:-oniebot.l y r knew . a chap w~.wruked v.•ith lhe Overseas Press Servic£'. LEGAL NOTICF. _ LE .... ~AL ~OTlC_E_. __ 1 l ·ltSrf , ~lJPt:RIO R COUi t os lH,: ~TATF. 01' (ALll!Ol!NIA ~01 THE COUNT Y OF ORANGE N~. A·••H HOTIC£ OF HEARINCf. OF J1£lrT!Olol l'OR l'l!O!IATE OF WILL AND FOii lEnERS TESTAM6J'ITAllY E•lot• of M.<lE A!ITOlfll:ll£ P ER• llAlJLl-ALl WEGG HEYWOOO, Ottea~· " N011(E I~ flfllF_I V (;IVl 'I lhal GEORGE E ~<>ERLlNC., JP h•l t/ltd "'" n ~ n~1•! ~n I<>• e>foh~•· nt -..ill ...ii tor "'u~...:• 01 L•n•·~ l•,Mm•nllrY 1o lt>P p~tohone•, 1.t•••nt~ to ""'''" ·~made I~• tu•fl>•• pa'1<rul•''• •<><' '~"' !ht Il- ona Pl~<• al ""~"no •h• '~"'" ha• ~ ••I "" J•nu,.ty '0, 191Cr, •• • JlJ ~ "'· '" '"" courT•"""' 01 0•<>•".,.""' Nn l o! ·~·d ,.,.,,, ~· ;oo c.~,, (•nto• l'l•"" W••'· •n t11• Cn• o• ~•<1la •~~. (~l.•o•n•a O•.'~" J~~u••• o. 1~10 W ( Sl Jl'llH/1 Lr.,'' • •. GEOl!GE £ SPERLING. JR. All,,,.n•• •t LI"' Jt4S W1l>h!tf lloult~••tl I H l~<1•I••. Cthl ,_l4 "rt!: U111 WEblfer 1·1'1'11 l'•lili.o11<1" '" P ro Pt• Publ•,~"'1 O••~q• u..1· t J•nU~'Y IJ, I•, 19, )~)0 LEGAL r\UTICE LEGAL NOTICE "·"' ". NQTOCF. IS HEAEBV C.IVE tl !"~\ 1''" •n•1ow1n" 01•<n·. or tound ~· '"''~ u•<••''• ""'' bl'·~ "'Id b• lh• ,.ollc• Ot·~'<'''""I ,., '"t c11y ol C~•~ ""''" lot • 1>er>C<l '" ••<"'·• ot f'·n•tv 190J d•f5 u \ Rovot "'' 7'. c~I "'""" "' IOI bl&<~ ..,,.11,1. r..,o 111ac1: b•>•1. ,.,. ou• al• b'~~. 0<1• reel ll•~• '"'o Q'''" t ••I l""r l>h1• bl~··· 0.... b•~r (O'V ""'""'·"· 11\"Jll(E I~ FURT11£"1 c;ovE•l '"•'. ,, ..,, Cl"""' 11>Pt•" l l>CI rt""'' ' ,.,..,,,,-v, 0 <!I ""' o•.,.,.ttv w·'"'" · • • n , ' 1 II••• •Qll•w•M '""J "bl•caunn •' '" • .,.,, c•. •h• t.tio tM'•,.t •h•ll ""'' '" '"" • ~~"· + '""' t>o ""',.ar '" '"" C·<• •' c;h.10 /.'"I, "' Wh•<" ta•o tho ~ tll"••'• , .. 011 bo ,0.., a! 1>utilic 1w<l•ot> al • ,,.,., •"<:I ll•t• to IM' """"unfoel OAl[ll J•nu••v 19, ,.Jlo • o ! llETI• (·rt n! Po'c• ""b' ""' O••n~• '""'' n~·!~ " ' J•"'""' 19. 1~rn ~o '• LEGAL NOTICE ----;o-r1cr-OF SHE~IFS'~ \•LE v ~ P[f r ., •' Pin••''" "' ""v 1~0N0 i l!IP~\\·N 0•1"•ndn• Nf' 111•Q ev vr"U" n' '" ' ••rut1nn '' u"<I "" 1 I !')•tPmb•r 1"'0 'l• +no ~UOO<•C+ (n,,r>, roontv ~· 0'""""-5'·"" o• C•l•1•"'"· !•OOn • 1.-dqm•~• ••l.,"i:I •~ '""Qt r• ~ I(. P!'[T ... Rlt<i•ll roMA!l .• nd w • ri;:(T •nd A111u1•P rn.;~·1 "~"'Q .... 110~·· •• TPIANGLf 1"vr~l··r1>,T ro. ~' !vdomr..i ("dllM• ''''" ,,., •. , .1 l!AYMOllO [. 1!11 ')1\ ti •• 1udnmrn! <lrb tor, •how•ng e n•I b•'M" • 'II ''1l~S11 ~•ll'tli• <lu• tin ·~•d !uonm"'' nn 1n~ """ nt !l\O l~•u•n•• n• •~·~ ""' '' "~· I ~••• l•v!Ofl V00<1 •II ·~· riq"I ., .. , "'·" lnt•,,•t M .,,d io>d~m•n! r<•L•N '" t'•• ll'!>l>l"I• '" tM Co.,nh ~ Or•n~~. jf,11• oo l•Mc•n•~. •e1crlbod A\ f<>llow> Lot 1], 81o<~ 1: Af P.••\·<>~ l•~•' In ll>e C.••y o• N•,.~~·1 P.• • ~. (NPIV-rl Or•-· Si.le ot (•l,l<>•n••· •• o«r m•n rKC><0-0 I+• n·~• 4 P.,.. 11 '' ..,,K,ll•n•bU• "'"P' '" 1n• n•I•<' af t~t C"""ty 111tto<.,.' r+ ·••d LIM Oly TOlll!'ther Wllh All ""' , . ...,via• l~o 1~nh. "'"'fl•l•,..•r'• """ •~ 11urttt1enc•• ,,,..,...,.,,o t<f'<"'"' ('f '" .... wi ... '"""'""""'" NOT IC E I\ Hf'llt rev r..rv1•1 •~·· "" ,, ''°'U.Ol'V lt70. ti !lt·tl'I ,..,,,..~ A 'I M Mf lft lOflbY, COIJ"l'W>U\0, /Oil l:·~lr C •··'·• D'1 ... '11"1 (IOO W Ill\ ~r I (llY r+ !t.111 '• ,.,,.., Coutttv of °"'""" ~·•'• n• Ctll!ONllO. I "'"' l •I! .,i PVDhr ,, •I~ · '" lloc hit'""'! b;oo.-r 104' <t• ~ •' I ' ......wv of tho' VnUt'd Stt!r. tll "· • ' '"*' tnd lnl9 .... I OI ••kl !IHI~"""'' d•~I'• !ft tht ebovr 0ncrlll4KI P•l!C'"I•. t• ·~ "'ll(tl tlll'Nlf!i. --litc ~J. ... 'V IQ •~rl11' 1•11 •11,t<..illeft. wl!"' orvV'<:I ...... , •nd (Ofl.. • 01!~ t i S.IU• AM• ColffO"l'>e. U J•n11111 f. "" JAMES A. MU'llC1¢, '""''" (o\#>" al 0.11'*'· (t11lo<"' 1 l'lr c .... Jt11M1lf, O•Plllr • MICUlltY. Jr. ....... l(liff oi .... ~11111 tit .....,., c.1111. ~ t~ lolfrb<\• !/ ...... ,.,... , -..lfl> Ot!IY f' '~' "''"'"'"' .... ,.. (•hl'Offll-. J tl'\lllr'I I•, '4 ••I( n!.!fl'll 11111 ' I The boundaries had. not ~ I re did :i 'ery strange thing. chosen by Niseria'i,peopteDut I Jr told me. as if he were em· imposed by the co 1 on 1 a 1 barraS5C'd al>out wanting to powers v.ilhout re~ for get out, that he was escorting ethnic and c u I tu r·a t. dll- a student group. Jt was an in. .ferences . l\'llh indepeode:nc~. -sane kind of story .and11aug"Ji: ""Nigeria inheriled the ~ rd. darles, becoming the molt SOUGffT Wl.FE populous nation in Africa. The "J"st ,~ C-I. Achuzi'a Britlsh,Jefl behind a legtey ol '~ "' adminJ.itrative structure and'a ~tarted looking for his wife lo nucleus, for self gove~at. gel her on board. but he 50 that \theoreUcally Niieria couldn't pick her· <1ut in the was prepared for the iD- da rk and he began calling fer dependence which came ·Oct. her, then left his post. J, 1960. ··1 went up t11e ladder. And The ptO!pecb were good. only a niinute later one of th e Nigeria was relatively rich in f'rrw 1.1·as closing the door. 1be agrlcuhural products and a t·olnnel and his \\'ife ne ver got variety of metals. Oil had on ., been discovered. The con- At the same time Saturday slitulion divided ~ country night, lRc Biafran said, Gen. intc four federal region.'!, each Odumegi\·u Ojukwu, the of which was to retain a large Bialran leader. was at the measure of local autonomy. clll6r. end cf the field, saying I~ was a time of. a watershed goodbye to his staff and clim· of independence 11,1 an Africa bing. m«i a Fokker Friendship lorig under colorual rule. A for his trip into exile. new ~r~mble by a new sort ol Tht>re \Vas 00 v.·ay to con-colorualism .already had firm this · Libreville and lh !>'gun .. involv1111 opp o 1 e d ., ~ · ::J -:: e Jdeolog1e& as well as opposed F rcn9h J:>zlot of lhe HecJ Cross _nationa l • inlerW. Russians, plan~{ierr~ Masso.Mat, said Chinese, British, Fr en c-h , be saw no aU"~r~ft 1.1ke a F'ok· Belgians. Americ:aru .all were ker ~ ~e stnp while he v.•as scekJng influence. l~adlJ)g wha t_ turned out I~ be Nigeria went th~ wa,y « his 11oth. -ond last -flight many ll!lCther 10.c a11 e d out of B1afra. "eraerging" country. There Refugees who made It to was a bloody COUP: earJ,y in 1.ibrevillc told tn:ctay of t ~ e 1966 by army offJce'rs. A haJf lasl days of the B1afran nauo~ year later lhere was another O)Ukwu proclaimed, on May 30, Jed by a 30-year-old colone:i 1967. . · named Yakubu Gawon. Who They said lhat although the ~ made himself a m a j o r surrrender did net come until general, set u,p a mllij.ary Monday, the war clearly had government and became tts been Jost for .a month . 'fhe head and supreme military fata l blow. said one, wa s a c om'man.der. Tribal Ni~erian thrust i n t o Abch animositiea: '5Urfaced. Provi nce, a fertil e are a counted on for a large part cf B1afra·s food su pply. DIVlS IOl'\ CRmlBLED The 1 llh Bia[ran Division 1-rumbled before the drive. A ll~d Cross "•orker told of !\l'eing Biairan soldiers walk· ing away from frcnt-line areas t«1rr_ving their rifles on their head~ and laughing. Others begged fo r rood or confiscated s11ppli£'s n1eant for children. he said. •·'J'hcy sce1ned to ha ve t>nough ammunition." the Red Cross ""'Orkers reported, "but I hey 'vere exRausted. That \\'as about two "-'eeks ago. 'fhrre \\'as an aimless quality ;.illout the v.·ay they looked." After earlier defcalq in !he :xi n1onths of fighting. the H1afrans had al \\-·ays been able lo reg rou p and form a ne"' froo1 tha1 '«KJld stitbilite. This 11111r they found the Nige rian 1nf<tnlry pushing ahead quick· I~, b~·passi'.1g their old techni· que of stopping to wait for 1:1rt.1J~ry to be moved up. TI1e Bia(ran leadership \\'BS rtitorted to have held a series of m~ngs'>Oeginning Jan. 2. in ~rhicb possible courses of action v.'ere1dtscussed. Ojukwu reportedly wanted to ccntinue the fight. ,A Bri~. Eze called for seeking terms for an nrmistice. The military chier ol stlrr, Maj. Gen. Philip Ef· Oong. and the chief justicf' or thc ~t1premr ccurt. Sir Louis ?l·lbanefo, took 1niddte posi· tiOl'S. Tht' cllnvcrsation~ "'£'te In· 1 onclus1\·e. But by la'll Thurs- 'd<Jy events overtook the m. Thr Ni1c.rians broke lhroogh al Okpuala and quickly came into sht'llin~ range of O\l'<'rri. ll!nfr.l"s last n1ajor to1\'n, l'nday night Owerri "'a s :ibandoned. and the Nigerian 1r11()p~ hegan n101•ing in. A ta~l stall 1neeting '"as heltl Saturda.v morning m the 11rra of At11i le discuss 1\'ht'thcr lhe ~o ve rn men t ~hould "go 1nlo the bush.'' Ojuk\\'U rtjectcd the idra. as hr ett(JiCr ignored Eurof)('an rn1h1ary ad vicr lo cmphasizt> ll\ltrrills and terrorist opr.tA· tinn' 1ns:trad of siand;ird, fron. 1;1! fi;;huri; VIOLENCE ERuPTS Extreme violence erupted ln the NOl'.th. Thousands of Ibo lrit>esmen died and hwdreds of thousandl ,fled 1o,t11•East. ithere a young UeUtenant-col- onel named Odumwegu Ojukwu, a t't~ governor and friend of 1 declared • secessionist "Republic ol B\afra" on ~fay 20, 1967. Gowon \!Owed to crush it. It "''as comic opera at first , v.•hen Nigeria's 1mall and bad· ly equipped army went into actiai1. Jt soon · be c: am e tragedy. compounded b y power politics. . . Even before the finl battle, Welfare Hike Urged . SACRAMENTO (UPI) - Sen. Alfred E. Alquist in- lrcduccd major w e I f a r e legislation ?11onday proposing an $18 millicn increase in the Aid to FamiUeJ with Dependent Children program. 11le bill proposes a 30.6 per- cent increase and alllO would pro\1de that recipient. be granted an annual C01t-of-Uv- ing increase. A si111ilar Alqui"" measure was klllcd on the Senate floor last yea r. It proposed a $15 million increase. The AFDC grant hrui in· c-rea.sed cnly 2 perctnt since 1957 while the cost cf living has sky rocketed dramatically. Nude Dancing I,a,., 'Obscene' SANTA CRUZ (UPI) :_ A proposed crdinance outlawing nude dancing In Santa Cruz ha s been dropped by t.bt city council without action. Councll wom ml Anne Cami said !he prop<ll!ed law'J ex- pliclt !Isling or "itich portiom of lhe female anatomy are fit for public view wu so "ob.'K'cne" $he coukln'l ask a ~rcrctnry to type II. f '• ·. . ' JAN UA Save on fine Fashion· Manor traditional furniture no ~ l :,; • t· ' •' ' " , i ., U11 P1nney1 Time Payment Plan Ptnneys fumiture prices include delivery within our loeol delivwy a* • . ·, -. •· ·-.. -· f I • ,,,17 >. ">' :<:~A ' . , ~ El99qnt traditional styla four piece bedroo m g:•c,, ! ... The set .,ij,,sists'.of a 78" triple dresser, Orig. $789 NO I mirror, 5 drawer chest and.full or queen size lattice panel h~adboard ", in finest pecan vene~nd pecan solids .•• oil drawer1 dove iled, dust-proofed and center.guided. "l'f '.; ".'~·;! ·~ :·~·~ fl~ jl\ ~ ¥J'~l • I I ~ /.. ·,.~ .... ••I { I . ' ( ... 11 t II 'I A4'tlitieftel pit«• .. Mltth rhls 1et and n v• HQ sf1ncl Or •. $US NOW ................... $79 AnMire Or •• $420 NOW .. _____ $266 .. ... Deluxe four piece tradltio"ol bedroom CJrcvp value ..• The set consists of o 68" triple dresser, twin mirrors, chest.on-chest and king lat· lice headboard in finest pecan veneers and pecan solids .... intricate pewter- washed solid brass hardware ... conted corner posts on case pieces. Orig. $939 NO W $ • NOWI THESE VALUES AT ANY ONE Of THESE PENNEY STORES! CANOGA PARK DOWNEY FULLE RTON HUNTINGTON BEACH LAKEWOOD MONTCLAIR NEWPORT BEACH VENTURA -----i SHOP SUNDAY, TOO 12torp•lt • J . • ---------------------------~~---------------~~---~--~~--~-- SAIL-OFF WINNER -Barney Flam of Long Beach Yacht Club sailed Herb Johnson's Columbia-SO V~tor in winning the Long Beach sail-off to deter- mine who WO\.lld represent the host club in tht Congressional Cup final s. Other area sail-offs are scheduled later thi s month. Winds Lit,en Action 111 BYC Wi1iter Race Cool. brisk winds t i1 a t follo\\-'ed Friday's rainstonn held throughout the weekend to provide yachts entered in Balboa Yacht Club's Winter series some lively sailing on both inside and o u t s I tJ e courses. There were nearly 200 boats in 16 classes. Trophy winners were: OCEAN RACING -(I) Do r othy 0, Robert Beauchamp, NHYC ; ( 2 ) DestJny 11, John Hooten, BCYC. PHRF -(l) Patience, .John Homme, NHYC; (2) Laughln:; Lion, Barber & McGregor, LlYCi (3) Bonita, Goldie Frencl1 Have Sl1ow Boats The French government. \\'hich is exhibiting for the first time at the Southern California Boat Show Jan. 23- Feb. 1 has informed show of· flcials their display wlll con· !)isl solely of sailboats. Net mention was made if this decision was prompted by the recent spiriting of French gu n· boats out of Cherbaurg harbor by the Israelis. Show chairmanPaul Albrecht doesn't plan to in- crease the Pan Pacific securi- ty forteS, figuring the Jsraehs probably don't have much need for sailboats at the mo- ment. Joseph, LIYC. f\-10RF -tl) Aloha II, Glen Reed, SSS~: (21 Malahan i, Jack Bostwick, BCYC. P-CAT -(I) No Way. Tom Omohundro, BCYC; (2) No. 163, John Barton , BCYC. _RHODES.33-fl) ~1istress, Bill Taylor, BYC ; (2) 1'1aruja, Bob Kettemholen, BYC. LUDERS-16-(l) Kildee, Ben Hromadka , LYC; (2) Windsong, Bill Fundenburg, NHVC. ENDEAVOR 11) Aphrodite, Bill Lang j ah r . SSSC; P.C.-Misty, Ted Congdon, NHYC. CORONAD0 -15 --1 l) Shillelagh, Beattie Purcell, A YC: (2) Slippery \Vhen Wet, Jim Linsky, WYC: (3) Swartz, Dick Deaver, BYC. LID0-14A -11) i\tacic, Dave Ullman, BYC; (2) OitlO, Bill ~tcCord, SVC; (3) Lowly Roman, Rolly Lohman, BYC. LIDC)..148--(1) No. 2 7 3, Hank Humann, BYC; (2) The General, Marshall Beck, BYC. METCALF -ti) Hassel, Jack Shol:l:, BYC: (2) Rogue, John Thorne. BYC. KITE A -(I) Duk, John Gaigh, NHYC; (2) Plumber, Sue Barneson, NHYC. FLYING JR. -(I) No. 2494 . Les Armstrong, VYC; (2) Ball of Fire, Hurwig Gallian, SSSC. SABOT A -(l) Blue Angel, Mark Gaudio, NHYC; (2) No. 4431 Barr Smlth, NHYC. SABOT C -(I) \Sabotilo. Becky Rudy, BYC; (2) "Blasl, Scott Uhl, eve. _4 livays in seasori .. l'1•ople, chani:;:e acli\·iry \.\hh 1li e 11f'a101H1 ul the )f'<1r, take Vi1Catio11~. mo,·8 fron• on•· 10"-11 to anolhf'r. Bui thrir hahit of rt"adil'lR: ne\.\~1•apcrs &r ldorn 'Hri1·~. A 101·:1 1 n1~ .... 1•a· per ~i,•es resirlf'nl.: the v.·ord o n their fa,nr• i1.e ~lore's _wet·_S..I ~ "a ir ... !'\'Clll, "'hilt• j.!r•·rl ini:-; ,,51tore w1lh 111ror1n:il1nn ahout 1•nh~r1ain· 111enl, rlining, 11lac,..,. lo"'''" Loral n c ll'A ANI) adi·,.rti1ing are 1o0·rlrn1n"' l'nn11un1(nl11 o{ A 11e1o0·~paper. Newspaper c•ttulation i' co115tant l!~rou111 the ye.fr Y onr frip,1ul for all The Orange Coast seasons .•. DAILY PILOT • L • Bids Accepted Congressional Cup Shaping Vp The 1970 Cai.1gressional Cup series -to be sailed for lhe first time in Columbia-so sloops -is already taking shape with one Southland sail~ off con1pleted and six coin· pelitors from out of the state accepting invitations. Barney Flam will represent the host Long Beach Yacht Club by virtue o( having defeated 1969 contender Tom Pic'-ard. -and Roby Bessant. Ted Hood, noted saihnaker rro1n the East Coa st v.'ill represent the New York Yacht Club. It will be Hood's first appearance in the l,BYC match racing se ries which will be sailed this year r.1arch 19- 22. Others named as having ac- cepted invitations w e r e Thomas K. Fisher, Grosse Point Farms, Mich. represen- ting the Yacht Ra cing Union of the Great Lakes ; Ted Turner, Atlanta, Ga. Yacht Club: Patrick \V . O'Neal. Larchmont , N.Y. Yacht Club : \\'illiam R. lbs Jr., New Orleans Yacht Club, and Ches Rickard of the Royal Van- couve r Yacht Club of Canada. Turner. Fisher and Rickard have. all appeared in the Congressional Cup competition before. An eighth. finalist is being selected in an area saiJ-off being conducted in Hawaii, and two other Congressional Cup skippers will be selected in quarter-finals the weekend of Jan. 31-Feb. 1 in the San Diego. Newport Harbor. Long Beach-Los Angeles and Santa 1'1onica-Santa Barbara areas. Semi-finals are scheduled the fc.llowing Saturday and Sunday matching the San Diego-winner against th e Nev.· port ,. champion and the Los Angeles and S a n t a ~tonics.Santa Barbara win- ners. An area sail-off planned for San Francisco under the chairn1anship of Hays McClellan was cancelled. earning Rickard the invitation as \\-'inner in the northwest. The CC7I1gressional C u p n1alch racing s e r i e s , in- augurated in 1965 thr'ough a deed of _ gift from U1e U.S. Congress. has become the world's most important n1atch race series. Each finali st races every olher in ~S in- dividual boat-for-boat matches over a five-mile wlfldward- leeward twice around course outside the Long B e a c h breakwater. Emphasis Is on skippers' and crews' efficiency, an ob- jective assured by assignment of entrants by lot to one of 10 virtually identical Columbia- 50 sloops. The d r a w takes place a day before lhe open· ing race. Del Rey Club Proposes Race to Mexico i11 '71 With one Mexican yacht race recently completed and another scheduled to aet under way In Jess than two weeks, Del Rey Yacht Club at Marina del Rey has proposed still another which is in lhe plan· nina stage Cor February, 1971. On the Southern California Yachting Association caelndar for Feb. 6, 1971 is ORYC's proposed race from Marina del Rey to Puerta Vallarta on the mainland or Mexico. The race would In part help to celebrate the completion of a new breaKwat.er in Puerta Vallarta which was designed as a haven for the cruising and racing yachtsman. The new race would be ap- proximately 1,000 mi I es • Puerta Vallarta is in the center of Banderas Bay south of Mazatlan. It has long been a spa for the international jet- set and has a large American colony as well as numerous luxury hotels. Puerta Vallarta and nea rby Yelapa has long been ·a stop- ping place for yachtsmen cruising back fron1 Acapulco or coming north from the Panan1a canal. Until the ad- vent of the nev,• brea kwater, the bay itself has been more or less open rOadstend and not an entirely safe anchorage for yachts. , The area began attracting the non-yachting set during and after the filming of "Night of the Iguana" starring Richard Burton. It is also a popular spot for gam e fi shermen . DRYC says the projected race wiJI bf for single-hull yachts and \viii be scheduled bienniall y so as not to conflict. ""Hh other Mexico races. At present there are three major Mexico races -not in· eluding the Newport t o Ensenada race. The 1.400-mlle San Diego to Acapulco race is held bien- nially in even.numbered years and is scheduled to get under \\-'ay Feb. I. The 1,000-mile Los Angeles to ~1azatlan race is held every two years on even numbered years in tht month of November. The Long Beach to La Paz race is also a blen- nlat .event held on---~().. . numbered years during November. South Shore Sailing Club· of Newport Beach tried to engen- der some enthusiasm for a Newport to M811zanillo race a few years ago but only two races were ever held and drew only a handful of entries. The proposed Vallarta race holds similar advantages to the three other existing Mex- ico races in that there is ade· quatc air transportation .to the resort for friends and relati ves \l'ishing to follow the race and fly down for the finish and post-race festivities. DRYC says invitalions will be extended to all SCYA and PIYA yacht clubs. as well as to yacht clubs in Mexico and Brilish Columbia and olhcr parts of the country. Committee chairn1 en have been appointed and a r c alrendy at work to make cer- tain all the varied aspects or the race are handled in such a fashion as to make it a topflight international race, according lo g e n e r a I chairman, Gerald Blankfort. Inqu iries should be directed to Blankfort at Del Rey Yacht Club, 13000 W. Palawan \V ay, Marina del Rey 90291. I SEE BY TODAY'S WANT ADS e UNHAPPY }JlPPY ? Be happy, healthy & 1rin1 with a Niaga1·a cyc lo·rn:i- ssa;e unit. • Mone)' Isn't the only prir.-• ed giwncry ... hel"C 11re llne En1cralrl stones and r11~5 from $21 to $50, hnll prk,.. • Can't kttp a .secret . fl~ll~ "'ho the fail-e't 1, ... Cold lc:tf mhi'tlr and mntchlng ICOTIC~ Mondu, JMulr)' 111, 1970 Tool chest ~ and cabinet sale! Thru Saturday only SAVE 'SI SEVEN DRAWER STEEL TOOL CHEST Two full lon91h drawer1 and five part drawer1. Full length piano .hinge, Fofd-awoy front panel lock1 when lid i1 closed. alack. crinkled finish. 20" x 8112" x 13% ·, REG. 29.99, NOW 24, 99 SAVE '3 TWO DRAWER TOOL CHEST WITH TOTE TRAY Heovy gouge steel con1truclion, full length piono hingt, Center tumbler lock with 2 keys. Block crinkled finish with red drower1 011d troy. 20"x8Y2"x10\{", REG.16.99,NOW 13,99 ., r-cfQINA.(>y k ~ Ng\G"'< ~~,,~ ... ~~' ··-: .. ~ ·~l/.J ·'.l~'-J I T SAVE 'IOI THREE DRAWER STEEL ROLL-AWAY CABINET Heavy gouge steel con1tr!Ktio1t with full 1u1ptn1ion draMr slideL Tumbler lock with -2 key.. iide handle. Charcoal gray finish wlm red drower1. 26*~ x 17" x 32\1.i•. HG.S9.99,NOW 49.99 65 PC. SOCKET SET WITH 19 INCH STEEL TOOL BOX Set includH 1.4"', l/J" and li;• revertibl• ratchets, exten1ion1, sockett, optn end wrenches, hex key 1et,., all trlple platM wilt-. copper, nickel a nd chrome for r•t resistance. Tool box ha1 lift:Out troy. -Special purchase on steel stora91 shelving ••• neat! These specially priced -' shtlf 11011 $forage shelves ore a a real inexpensive solutfo1t to many storage problems. 48" x 24" x 10". Economy hand truck value Quit carryin9 trash cans! lightwelght, with a single hondlt for .aq OM hond u&e Jn 1-iandllnG 1maU tro•n con• and cor19M . .. ot o low price you con affont. NOW! THESE VALVES AT ANV ONE OF THESE PENN EY S10RESI 3.99 CANOGA PARK OOVJNEY LA.KE\'/000 MOf'lTct.AIR FULLE RTO N HUNllNGTON BEACH N~'itF-ORT SEA.CH VE.NT URA 1.99 SHOP SUNDAY, TOO 12 to 5 P.1,t! I 1 -. • -~--·-·-- --- - 4. OAltY Pli.or Moncli11, Janu~ 19, 1970 Weleome Alloar<I Many Coves ,4t Island By ALMON LOCKABEY ........ ~ ... •trffCt San Jose lslaDd in the Sea of dangers surrounding Ult pin· Cortez offers several coves on nacle rocks known as Los Can-deleros and made the passage the ·Westward side that are with caution, using a hand- protected from the prevailing drawn chart. At no time did 11orthwest \vinds. we Und less than 1&,fathoms of Chief of these is Alnortajada water. _ Bay where good anchorage Puett.a Escondido (Hidden Harbor) lives up to its rave can be found in six to eight notices by other cruising fathOms. Tlie indentation that enthusiasts who have sought it rorms the bay between the out as a perfectly landlocked southYlcst e)(tremity of the and secure harbor for small island and Salinas Point is vessels in any kind of weather. ~bout four miles wide and Alter passing through the nearly two miles deep, Protec-narrow (75-foot). entrance you lion from tM northwest winds gel the impression1you are on is provided largely by Cayo a lake rather than: a body of lslet which lies about a mile water connected with the sea. n o r t h w e s t w a rd of the Although the charts and H.O. southwest extremity or San "26 and those \\'ho have been .Jose island. Cayo lslet is there assure you that the en· about a quarter of a mile long trance channel has ni ne feet of with a height of no more than '\\'Ster at low tide, it is well to 40 fee t at its souttw!rn end and cross the bar c a r e f u 11 y , 10 to 15 feet at the northern especially if a tidal current is end. running. NEAR Tll E 1niddle of the IF YOU DO not maintain VIEWS HANDIWORK -Olin Stephens, nate<I New York nava1 architect, stands at the dual ·helm of the new Palmer Johnson·43, one of his latest racing· cruising yachts being displayed at Ardell Marina, exclusive West Coast agents for the new Finl an9· built racing ma'Cbine. Cup Designer Pays Harbor Area Visit islet there is a break over adequate steerage way you \vhich the sea \\'ashes at high can be set off center and onto ".l'ater. A reef proje c ts the sand as the cunent moves northward for about a quarter swiftly and not always in a of a mile fr0m the northern straighl line. \Ve crossed at end of the island. low tide and found seven feet Olin Stephens, one or the Stephens .expressed con1· The northwester \VltS still under our keel. world's foremost Yach t plete satisfaction with the con- bJowing n1oderately when we On both our visits to Puerta designers, was in Newport s_truction and appurtenences of left San Francisco Island for Escondido we were fortunate Saturday to view his ban· h d. k · th f f th the new PJ-43 which is ex-San Jose so we c ose a cuurse to have a full moon at night 1wor 1n e onn o · e around the eastem side of San which etches the reflectioos of Palmer Johnson-43 s a i I i n g peeled to offer some keen Francisco to take advantage the hills in the water as does yacht being displayed at co mpetition to two locally of somewhat smoother water. the early morning or af· Ardell Marin1:1 . built 43--footers -the Colum- Later jn the day the wind ternoon sun. Ardell, exclusive West Co<ist bia-43 by Bill !Tripp and the abated considerably providing Puerta Escondido is formed agents ror the Finland-built Cal-43 by Bil Lapworth of us a chance to cruise fairly by the peninsula of which Pun-PJ-43, held an open house Newport Beach. close to the islands and in· ta C:Oyota is the eastern ex-Saturday and Sunday to in-Aslo being displayed by !!pect the salt camps and tremity. The harbor is about a troduce the new yacht to Ardell was the PJ-36 which ranches in the area. mile long north and south and Southland yachtsmen. was also designed h y We finally dropped anchor in a quarter of a mile wide, It Stephens has Q.esigned near-Stephens. midafternoon in a cove near has depths of four to seven ly all of the •J 2 ·meter lncorporatetl in U1e P.J-43 is the north end of San Jose fathoms. You can anchor-close A'merica's Cup defenders in the dual rudder -steering Jsland. Wi th the; outboard out to shore almost anywhere and the last decad e. He designed rudder and trim tab -which or commission , \Ve rowed fi'l1d complete solitude. Columbia, the 1958 defender; most observers believe was :r.shore to a sandy beach. The THERE IS a large concrete Constellation which won in largely r e s p on s i b I e for place was deserted except for wharf ()Utside ilie entrance 1964; Intrepid, 1967, and a new lntrepid 's smashing victory the usual pelicans and other and a structure ()r two which twelve whlch is being buill for over the Australian challenger bird s life that can be seen reportediy belong to a San the 1970 trials which start in Dame Patty in the 1967 raiding. the fish. Francisco family which plans June at Stamford. Conn. America's Cup competitior" AFT ER OUR experience to build a resort hotel in the As is custom ary i n The com bination requires t\\·o ""ith the tiny jellyfish we were area. America's Cup yach t s . wheelS -()Ile to control the still wary of the water for One can arrange !'or 'vater Stephens decli ned to discuss ru dder and the other the trim F.wimming, Nearly all of the from a small village near the any design innovations in the tab wbicti can be set for sail- islands -at least the ones we harbor, but the best bel for new yacht he designed for a ing to weather and on close visited -and the coastl ine of Juel. supplies and ot h e r syndicate headed by Robert reaches while racing. the peninsula is a shell col· necessities is a few miles · McCuJlough·of New York. Asked -if-·the dual rudder Jectors paradise and our cargo fa rt her north at Loreta . A "The yacht is now being system on so-called cruising continu ed to mount. good road is reportedly finish-framed and is ex"pected to be boats sug'gested a trend , As time was growing short ed between Puerta Escoodido in the water in a few weeks," Stephens replied in t it e on our final destinati on at 1 _•_n_d_Lo_r_e_1a_. ________ s_·1_e_ph_c_n_s_s_a_id_. ________ n_e~g_a_ti_ve_. ________ 1 Wreta, we got a before-dawn start the next morning and pointed our bow ac ross the channel to the peninsula where \ve planned to spend the niWlt at Puerta Escondido before continuing on the s h o r t distance to l,cyreta, the first c;i- ty and ancient capital of Baja California. Our landfall on lhe pen h1sula was San J\1arcial Point. the ~outhern ex t remi t y of beautiful Agua Verde Bay. \Ve detoured '\\·itl1out stopping at Agua Verde -planning to vi sit it on the return trip - and spoke briefly with the vacht Petrel anchored near ihe shore and behind a reef. On board 1,1.-ere the Ed Ri pleys and Jiln Spears of Los Angeles Yacht Club who were enjoying ~ leisurely. cruise of the gulf. BETWEEN Agua Verde and Candeleros Point we hooked up wi th a dorado (dolphin fish) on one of the trolling lines. This is one of the prized delicacies of the area -more commonly known in local 1·estaurant s as mahi mahi. \Ve had been warned of the T1·ans Bay Rat:e Sails Saturday California 'i' a c h t Club's Malibu-Trans Bay Rat'E'. first nf the 1970 Overton Series for Ocean Raci ng Yachts and 1'1att Walsh Series for l\fidget Ocean Racing and Paciric Handicap yachts will be sail· ed Saturday. Entries are open to all yachts owned by or under charter to members of yacht clubs recogn)zed by the South· I crn California Yach tin g As- sociatioo. 1 Ocean racing yachts musl I lioJd valid Cruising Cl ub or An1rrica rating certificates. \1 0Rf and PHRF mu~t be current n1embers of their re· spect1ve hand icap as~ocia tioos. Handicaps will bf: based on current published lists. l\nney1 AUTO CENTER Complete custom brake overhaul 3 days only! &~-=:z::z:~ Q)?~~:?h only 32.88* Most Fords, Chevroleh and American compacts *Volkswa9ens and most other American cars .. 41 .88 OUR SERVICE INCLUDES: ln1talla tion of new bonded linings, rebuilding of all wheel cyl· inderi, re1urfacing of brake drums, bleeding and refilling brake system, repacking front wheel bearings, installing new front grease seals •.. more! LIKE It ... CHARGE IT! 7'hf' starting Jlne "i ll be es· tabllshed by a commltttt bnal :incllored off "S" mark on the r·urrent Marina del Rey chprt. Ocean racla, yachts .. 111 ~ail 11 43-mile course from the start leaving a spcir buoy off the fl.'Blibu Pier to port., ~11Jm; -v crdP.j whl!itle buoy VI port and back to the NrUng llne to rtnish. I THESE STORES OPEN SUNDAY TOOi 12 to 5 P.M. CANOGA PARK CHULA VISTA DOWNEY FULLERTON HUNTINGTON BEACH MONTCLAI R NEWPORT BEACH VENTURA (Orange!horpe at ) BUE NA PAR K {closed Svnday5) V11lk1ry View , ~ I ·- Avalo1t To .4ivard Trophies Buddy Builds Trophies in six classes of contpetltion will be presented by the City of Ava lon to win- ners of the first day's leg Feb. 7 in the second annual Long Beach to Catalina Isla nd Cruise-Race for offshore power boats. A fleet of as many as 25 boats, varying in size from 16 to 32 feet, and in power from a 100.horsepower outboard to over 1,000.llp twin SWn-<lrives is expected to take pirt in the tw<><tay .race from Long Beach to Avalon and back to .Long Beach. First day a".l·ar.ds wjlJ,be pre- sented on behalr·or the city by Mrs. Kay Stonebreaker, man. ager of the Avalon Chamber of Commerce, at a dinner at the El Galleon restaurant, Av- alon . Overall results in the Pacific Offshore Power Boat Racing Association event will .be bas.. ed on a total ·elapsed time for the two legs of the race -60 mile,s on Saturday from Bel · rnon~ Shore Pier to the wesl end of C<1rtlllna Island and dO\Vn the oc ean side of the is land to Avalon: 44 miles Sur1- day frorn Avalon to Ship H.ock and then across the Catalina Channel back to Leng Beach Harbor. Huge Wave I-lits Boat SAN DIEGO, Calif. (AP) - \Vitnesses were alarmed when a 12·foot wave smacked a 45- lfoot boat. n~arly overturning it and tossing 21 people into the sea, But nobody was hurt. Lifeguards said tater the n1ain rea son there Y•erc no injuries or dro\vnings was th at nearly al! the 28 persons aboard the converted sport fishing boat '\\'ere skin dive rs. Some were \Vearing divi11g gea r when pitched overboard. The Coronav Diving Club l1ad t'harlered the boat Sunday fflr a dciy of diving and sen rehing for gray whales migrating south. 24 MONTH GUARANTEE WITH 6 MONTHS FREE REPLACEMENT Gv•ront•• •1•i11tt lft•d .,..,,,,.,, II your tltt w1011 out du•ing lho fi11t ho\I ol tht gvoron!et ptr;od, rtlun• it wilh you• g uoro11tet (ttlificot• o"d 1'tr111ey'1 will ••· plac1·your lirt whh a new lirt, t ha•ging yo" '0% len thon 1'11 tutrelll "lli119 p•ict ind11d· i1111 federol E•ci1t To•; ii yo11r !it~ '"'o" out duri1111 the .. cond holf, you pcoy 2'% le,u !ha11 !ht (\lrrtnt 1tl1i119 ptic t •~duding ftdu11I ~xci11 T11~. G111ro11t.1 •11111111 f~ilun If'"' rtploct l~t tlrt during !he frto '<~·~<r· mtnl pt•iod, tl>ttt ii no cho•gt; jf Wt repla<• lht lift ollt< tl.t l•te·•eplo(tmtn1 p11iod, you pay '6% o• ~'% 1tn then the (Ulftftl 11lling prlct oft~• li•t i11cluding ftdf!o! f~<i" lo•. Ctm1'1tKi.I u .. Thi1 guoron"9t u void '"~•• po111ng1r llrn ott vstd on tr<k~1. ,.,,d for b111J,,.11, or driven o,,., 30,000 "'"''in ont yoou . Here's how your 1uarant11 against failure works: [nli,.. 1111untet period ... , ••. :1 '"onu11 No 1itr1 eo•I ptriocr. .. _, ................ l·f montll• $0'!0 off period ~·····-············ ...... 7•1J montn1 2$'41 .tt lflriod .......................... 1•·24 '"0nllls Actor Designs Catamaran yachlinc. sport car racing and big game Ushing. Kimberly recently put up a catamaran sailor and pro-handsome troptiy to be award· ducer, is building a cruising-ed lo the winntir of a race racing catamaran for Jinl between Ebsen's Polynesian K i m be r ly, inlernal!ona lty concept and Pat Douga n's 12· known sportsman from Pahn meter C:Olumbia -a contest Buddy E b s e n , lele\'i.'lion personality and wide ly-known Be h Fl to determine which is the ac , a. ·id faster, a well s a 1 e Ebsen, a member of Balboa catamaran or well sailed Yacht Club. started out as a single·hull . Because of din~hy sailor' in the Thistle weather conditions unsalisfac· Class, later moved into the I.Ory 10 hrlth contestants, the Ocean Racing Class with his rivalry. was never definite ly L-36 Turquoise, and fi nally decided. started racing ocean-going \Vhile in Palm Beach con· catamaraiis a few years ago ferring on .construction O f with his 35-foot Polynesian Kimberly's new catamaran Concept designed by Choy. Ebsen did some boating saft!tY Ku1nalae and Sean1an o! films for the U.S. Coast Guard Newport Beac~. . \vhich sent a crew down from A fte~. w1 n ~J n S l h_e Washington for the project. Transpaci11c Mult.ihull race 111 ___ _ -- 1968 he announced he had purchased the plans f o r Polynesian Concept and \vould produce i l corrm1ercia lly through the W. D. Schock Co. of Newport. PUT CASH IN YOUR POCKET Last year he raced his ov.·n Polynesian C o n c e pt. in England. Ebsen is building the new catamaran for Kimberly -the first off the production line -for spri ng delivery. SC!t un,vanted itC'ms \vith a DAILY PU.OT Classified Ad. Kimberly is an heir to the Kimbe rly · Clark fortune and has g a. i n c d considerable notoriety i11 Lhe fields nf plu~ fed. tax and old lire l lACKWAU TUIElESS PHONE 642-5678 Size Orig. Fed. tax 650-13 •.•...•.•••.• 13.95 ............. 1.78 700-13 , ............ U .9S ............. 1.96 695.1 4 •.. , ••. , , , • , , 14,9.5 , , •. , , • , , , •• , 1.9A NOW$15 plus fed. tax and old lire llACKWAU TUIElESS Size Orig. Fed. tax 735.14 •..•.•.•.•..• 15.95 ••. '.'.' .•••• 2.04 775-14 •••••••••.••• 16.95 ,,,, .•.•••••• 2.17 560-15 ............. 15.95 ............. 1.75 775-15 ....••••.••.. 16.95 ............. 2.19 NOW$17 plu' fed. tax a nd ald tire BlACKWAU TUBELESS Siie Orig. F.d. tox 825-1' .............. 18.95 ............. 2.33 855-1' ............. 20.95 ............. 2.53 815 -15 ••••••..••... 18.95 ••.••.•••.••• 2.3S 845-lS .•....•.....• 20.95 ............. 2.S3 WHITEWALLS ONLY 12 MORE! THESE STORES OPEN SUNDAY TOO i 12 to 5 P.M. CANOGA PARK CHULA VISTA roN HUNTIN GTON BEACH DOWN EY MONTCLAIR NEWPORT BEAC VENTURA BUENA PARK (Oraogelh0<0Aat) (ciosed Sundays) Valley View • ' BARBARA DUARTE, -9466 MHMr. 1-..rT 1•. 1m I .. _ II 'No Fighting or Arguing' AFS Feel Students at Home The merits of the American Field Service were exPiained lo Mission Viejo residents interested in starting a chapter recently by Laguna stu- dents Manfred Heine, Margie le Roux and Fem_ando Gaja. As introduced by Mrs. Marshall Houts, president of the LagWla chap. ter, the Laguna Beach High School trio shared some. i~p~essio~s with the gathering. "The best part of being an AFS student IS bvmg with another f~y." observes Heine. . . . . Pets in the home were a surpnse to GaJa as most people m Spain live in apartments. He was interested, also, to see so many churches which weren't Catholic. Miss le Roux finds school the biggest differeoce between countries. "Tb.ere is less pressure here," she finds, "and the relationship between student and teacher U much closer." The program, which is finnly established in the area, work~ on the basis of community families providing care and affection for foreign ~t~ dents. Transportation is provided by chapter members to enable the vtSI· tors to see all facets of community life •.. from picnics to weddings. ' The local chapter raises the $850 participation fee for each student in their school. Contributions from service clubs, churches and individuals SUP.port the program, AFS students are seniors, participate in student government. and ex· tra curricular activities, carry a full academic program and graduate in June. •.. ----·-·-.. -.. ·, As summed up by the student from Spain, "People aU over the \VOr\d , all races, all religions, understand each other because of AFS. Nobody asks what you are, they just understand you are people. \Vhen \Ve visited Watt.S, no one judged against me. People can understand each other with- out arguing or fighting." ENJOYING 'THE ART COLONY ATMOSPHERE -Amelican Field Service Students (left to right) Fernando Gaja of Spa.in ; Margie le Roux of South Africa and Manfred Heine of Germany take a break on the high school lawn. The students have been sharing their impressions and experiences in the United States with residents and schools in neighboring districts. • DUO PIANISTS ANTICIPATE CONCERT -Believing th at good music means much more than mere entertainment, Mrs , Donald Vanderbilt and Mrs. George H. Thompson (!ell to right) have been staunch supporters of Laguna Beach Community CO!>- certs. As they anticipate this month'1 piano concert, they can Jook back on service which includes membership on the board of directors. Quarter-century Mark Csmmu.nity. Concerts Play ., Lasting Role Laguna Beach Communlly Concert Association is celebrating a quarter-century of community concerts in Laguna Beach. F'irmly established as the oldest concert association in South- ern CaWomia, it has achieved eminence by preserrtation Of disting .. uished and exciting concerts over the years. Since the aim of the organization is to maintain Carnegie lia11 standards and to ·bring highl y qualified artists to more than 800 com-. munities in the United States and Canada, members need not travel to large metropolitan centers to hear and see the world's finest artists. \Vith programs featuring the Dolmetsch-Schoenfcld Ensemble (vioLin, cello, recorder and harpsicord) and the New York Lyric Quartet behind them,. members TIO\v are anticipating the next cone cert of the current season which brings brilliant du~pianists Dolores Hodgens and Samuel Howard to the stage of the Laguna Beach High School Auditorium on the evening of Jan. 29. The season will bow out with a March concert present~ by young college student Shigemi Matsumoto, a soloist with the San Francisco Opera. With a membership in excess of 550 drawing from the area be- tween Laguna Beach ·and San Clemente. the association features young artists aa well as those established in their careers. Launching a membership drive each spring, the association ha~ established a fee of $8 Jor adults and $4 !or students which entitles. members to attend all~other concerts given by affiliated associations in Southern California.~There are no tickets available for individual concerts. Serving as president of the association for the current season ls George M. Cunningham. Other officers include Dr. Lawrence F. White, Col. William H. Roley and Mrs. ·White, vice presidents; Mrs. Arthur S. WUey, secretary; Mrs. John G: Loncaric, assistant secre- tary, and Mrs. Amy Godsbaw, treasurer. Art Gallery Reiect Puts Her a Bad Frame of Mind . • DEAR ANN LA NDERS : A relative has taken up painting as a hobby. She has ju~t presenled me with an enormou1 portrait of myselr. It is an ab8ttact monstrosity in the Picasso styl&-OrJe brown eye and one blue eye, a gr01sly ex- aggerated n06C and blue hair. Tt Jook1 more like a cartoon thaa a palntlng. My husband and children couldn't rtop laughing when they saw it. To make mat~ ters worse, this relative went to ~ ~iderable e~!e to have Ule thtng fram- ed so, of course, we are upecti!'ti to han& II. We've had Ille picture U--kl .,. t•ve just about run out .of excu9el. Tha artist tlas bee" here 5"etaJ times and keeps asking about the J!Orirait. ff4111 can I get out or hanging il-gnce!ullyl - 1lARPOCfNED I ANN LANDERS DEAR HARP: Voa ctn'I, oo be a sport and Ue1 the &olderli tiling. It 1hcNJd be a -· ........ 11oo pie«. After • couple elf months JMYe K to aaotller room aad 111e, .. Ille •Ille. DEAR 41'.~ LANDERS: A while back you p:ilt.I a leUer from a Peader who s.a~ it w• cruel of parent.I to 1addle tlw:lr d!ildien )rilh p«Uliar nm nlm<O jl.fA be<:au• they thooght it was "dif- 1""'11" or .. _.Ing." In your reply, you metiUontd mu i.m. Hogg and every lhird perllO!I ho Te• WTOlo lo 11y llley knew her or were related to her. t have just r..ead an article Jn a magazine that u:rs a capridoal lelection of n&ITMS can aerioiJ.,Jy hamper a child's chances for happiness. One young fellow had a difficult time all through school because no one belltved hl1 name waa Toosllllil ,,..,.., When he tried lo enllfl in the Navy he encouttred the same doubta. Further investlgatJon revealed t·hat Ton 1llltl1 had three brolher&-Mening!ti•, Appendicitis and Perllonilil. A P')'Chologi<t pointed out that childre!! 300letlmes develop urelong complexe1 because of their names. An outstanding example was a shy, introverted young woman whose moniker was Alpha Omega. W'hen asked about her name she hesitatingly explaJned, "Mother didn't want me. She wished everyone to know I was her fim and hopefully her last." J1 it any wonder lhat more than ~.000 people a year petition the U.S. courts to undo the aamage done to them by their parents? I hope you print this letter for the benefit of Moms and Peps who art lemfted to get <We'IJ cute at baby-nam- ing time. -i'LAI" JANE AND CLAD or rr. DEAR JANlr Ap(la~;u, Sbaft~•re wu wrong. n ere'1 plenty In a name. DEAR VAN: OI coaro• His u<1....,, people we admJre disappoint u-1; blst wht )'Gut COUJIJi does II hit bali~~a. 1 have no idea what his marrl1ge wa1 Ilk~. And neltbtr do yoo. Now &bit lie tJ unmarried, hlJ relaUoolblp wltlt &H ''other woman" ts kosbtr. If yGa don'& like her, dea't aee ber. See rdm aklM. DEAR ANN LANDERS: Two years ago a coosin of whom I always have been fond, took-up. wlUt a woman who cao't compare with his wile. No one could understand it. Five roonths ago hl1 lovely wile gave him a divorce. Everyone aauned he would marry the other woman at the first legal momenl He has rd done IO. They still maintain separate apartmentl but they go everywhere When fO!TIB.nUc glances furn: to wann embraces JS 11 love or chemistry? Send together and are invited to aome highly · lei' the booklet "Love or Sex and HOW"it respectable pll.ce11 as a couple. I consider Tell the Difference," by Ann Landers. the •laUonsblp Immoral and have told Enclose a Jong, atamped, self-addreoed him ao. He ofitn no defense. envelope and 3S cents in coin with your request. Please teU me the correct ·way to think •bout this offensive relaOonahip. t.fy coosln i3 M long-tt "chMtlng" sJnce he Is not a married C\lln. J Med your objecUva viewpoint. -V iJI COUVER Ann Landers will be gla~ to help ,.. with your prc>!>lem8. Send them-lo htt I• ou• of the DAILY PIOOI'. enc1 .. 1n1 a self-addrtssed, stamped envelope. • I • -----------------------------------------~----------.. • DAILY ~ILOT New Officers Light the Way Guiding members through the ne\v year will be (left to right) Mrs. Louis R. Raymond. Mrs. Chuck Kleiss and Mrs. Richard A. Brumner. vice presidents and president of the Blessed Sacrament Altar Society. The ne\v officers will preside during the next meeting of tile group taking place at 8 p.m. Tuesday, Jan. 20, in the Westminster church. Horoscope January Selections Zonta Honors Coeds Each month the Zonta Club ol N~ Harbor honors one senior tf'rl from tach of Uie Newport-Mesa high schools as the 1.onta Glrl-of·the-month. The selection. is based upon leadenhlp, ci,izeoship, sc.botarahlp.and service to her school. At the end of the school year, the coeds telect the one they feet most qualified to be named the Zon- ta Glrl of-the.Ytar for their school and the recipient of a $50 savings bond. ESTANCIA Miss Beth Newman , daughter of llirs. Estelle Newman ol Costa Mesa, serves u CSF secretary, Girls' League Senior Representative, Commiuioner ol Community Service and is a member of' the SeNor _Class CounclL She was named Freshman Girl~f-the-year and received a jeweled Gold E for her se'rvice to the school in her junior year. A member of GAA and AFS MW Newman alto has served on the drill team and as a JV cheerleader. During her sophomore and junior years 'She wu a volunteer af Fairview State Hospital. P..fiu Newman pfarui to at· . ESTANCIA Beth Newman tend ucr and major in psychology. NEWPORT HARBOR NH HIGH Deborah Tucker the drill teant and ASB co· treasurer and was the reci- pient of the Outstanding Book- keeping Award in h e r Curr~1t Pep Club president, sophomore and juniors years. ASB Pep Commissioner and Miss Paplham also is the Executive Council Member, current winner for he r school of the DAR GOod Citizenship ~ss Deborah Tucker was Award. named Most Spirited Sailoret· te in ·1968. She has been a CORONA DEL MAH member of AFS, Spanish Club, Pla nning to attend San Drill Team and CSF. Diego State College and major in fine arts and psychology is / The daughter d Merchant Miss Sue Minkley, daughter o{ A • D t H t.farine Capt. and Mrs. Cyrus Mr. and ~1rs. John Minkley or quar1us: on urry ~~~~·~·::~;~~r~ eo;~~a;~'h~1~; Uague vioe president, a member of the CANCER (June 21-July 22): Fairview State Hospital and yearbook staff and Surf Club TUESDAY JANUARY 20 By SYDNEY OMARR ARrF.S (March 21-April 191: You get more done than you thought possible. Key ts to open mind to contacts. TAURUS (April 20-M'ay 20): Tie ·up some loose ends. Op. portunity abounds.. But you must be selective. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Guard valuables. Some who take you places can be careless w i t h belongings. Stress ability lo write, com- municate. Hoag Memorial Ho. s p i t a I , Secretary. Cycle cont l nu es hi&h: Presbyterian as a Can- however. something you took dystrlper. A Girls' League represen- tative in her sophomore and for granted may suddenly She plans to attend UCJ and junior years, she was named change. major in biological scia1ces to Girl-0[-the-quarter in Spring, LEO (July l3-Aug . 22): , become a teacher at the high J9&9. Re a 1 l z e that m In or school level. Miss Minkley also does disturbance is not major COSTA MESA volunteer work. at Fairview . .. CM HIGH Sue Paplham CdM HIGH Sue Minkley step out or your car and i nto Patri cia's calamity. A CSF Gold Sealbearer and :State Hos pi la I. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22 ): member of the yearbook staff,,p;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;-.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;'-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;mj Study Leo message. Your am-Miss Sue Paplham plans to at· bitions are strong ; you want I.end the University of results. you get them by South ern California and major heeding what appears to be in accounting. l Sale Significant savings on selected pieces/groupings from America's great furniture makers . . . I •, • He11r€don "Custom 1:olio Three" 41." DltVING TABLE 1i;i1.lr T1vo 20" Lent·es Re9., .409 .00 . SALE 249 .00 , • .. MA,TCT/l,V(; o/DE <:HAIR TAHU; A/\'D fO {J R CHAIR SET Reg. 119.00 ' 'sALE ' 69.00 Reg . 885.00 !Alf 525.00 This. sale has always s.ignified something special -.. the quality that endures." The 87th hos changed in o nly one respect -there's mort of it ••• so 'that this is the largest sem.i -annual anhiversory sale in our history. All the s!letttd pieces and groupings ore from the regular J . H. Biggar s·tock. These include full d ining rooin col- ltclions, bedroom groupings, cabinets, tables , lamps, accessories, carpeting and upholstere~ sofas and 'i chairs in designs, colors and patterns ••• bearing . such honored names as Drexel, Heritage, Henrtdon, • Thomo1villt, ju1t to name a few . Annlvenary S.vings at All Three Stores! PASAOENA Colorado al El Molino 792-6136 POMONA Hol l, East of Gory 629-3026 SANTA ANA, MAIN at ELEVENTH 547·1621 unorthodox advice~ The daugther of Mr. and UBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): MC rs. MEugeneh Pa1plha.mpol No day t.o follow \the Ct'Ol•:d. osta e!a, s e a so is ep Some will claim yma· are being Club president. GAA treasurer diff . f i. o( bei f aod Spanish Club secretary. ertnt or sa"'e ;\ 'ng di -She has bten a member of fertl'lt. SCOJl!!!>,._(Ocl. 1tNov. '11 : A maneuver ~ thlf occurs behind the scenes may have direct effect on your progress. Be independent witheut beillr amirant. 1, · SAG11TARIUS (Nov. 22- Dec. 21): Friendship and money)ending do not mix to- day. Use yClUr intuition. Follow hunch. CAPIUCORN (Dec. n-Jan. 19): Position of those at helm could be less than ... ateady. & knowledgeable, alert, ready to 1tep in with alternatives. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb . 18): Diplomatic approach is best one today. Avoid trying to force iSllues. One who works with you may come up with in· teresting report. Be analytical and not in too much o( a hur- ry. PISCES (Feb. It-March 20): Emotional reactions a r e ddinile and dine!. You get what you want -but self-con- trol is a requialtt. Take-off Tuned In A take-off on the "man on the street" type radio in- terview will highlight the Wed- nesday, Jan. 21, meeting of the Officers' Wives League of Orange C-OUnty in the Balboa lJay etub. . A social hour at II :30 a.m. will precede lunch at 12 :30 p.m., accordinJ to Mrs. J. P. Aynes, coordinator. In charge of the program are Mrs. Aynes and Mrs. !:. L. Zielinski, both of Corona de! M11ir. Prizes will be given to each person interviewed. The league ia open to wives and widows of retired military officers of all branches of service. Anyone wishing in- formation may contact Mr.i. Aynes at 675-1564. SEMl·AfiNUAL SALE Slv• ovtr 5°" on Arnerlt1'• le1dlnt f11hion 11\oesl Hurry now to enjoy th••• tremendous v1luta. SUH 1 tint .. ~on, tlthOUlh not 1v6ry styf• In 111 1iz1s. 5.99 to 7.99 2 99 CASUAL GROUP... • Ft1hi•11 l1t•114 N•wporl l t t ch H1111fi119fo11 C•11l•r Hw111i119to11 Iri e~ 5•ullo Co••• Pl•r• Co1!1 M111 '-~-----~---·------ NOW ••• THERE ARE TWO CROWNING GLORY BEAUTY SALONS TO SERVE YOU IN COST A MESA 1. 2. Crowning Glory (formerly Caprice Coiffures) South Coast Plaza, Costa.Mesa• phone 546-7186 • Crowning Glory Costa Mesa • 267 East 17th Street phon" 548-9919 ~ PRICE PERM SALE Bouncy, beautiful curls can happen lo you! Hold that glamour set with easy·care perms! Look ready to go without fretting or setting, All at jumbo savings! Complete. 520 MAGIC CURL $I 0 525 GLAMOR CURL $I 2'o 535 REGAL CURL $17so Badget JMrm always $5.95 (norn1al hair only) ~BEAUTY BARGAINS- Prices · skyrocket everywhere but here. Streich your beauty budget and enjoy a Uattering style. EVEN MORE SAVINGS ON MON .. TUES. WED. NON .. ruts .. WtD. LATER WEJX SHAMPOO-SET $245 $295 HAIRCUT $1 so $200 HI STYLE SHAMPOO·SIT $295 $395 HAIRCUT $200 all week CrowDfog Glory BEAUTY SALONS Appoi.nt~ U"*lcome b1u not al100JJ nece.J.JtJ rY OPEN EV!NINGS CROWNING GLOR fforlftfrl., Caprice Caiff11rnl SOUTH COAST PLAZA L•-.r l.nof-N11t t• Seen PHONE 546-i'l 86 OPEN EVENINGS & SUNDAY CROWNING GLORY 267 E. 17th ST., COSTA MESA PHONE 548·9919 .. ' \ I •st-""*! -"'"''" ·~ ---~~ .. "'r ' ' I Women Have Roles Defined Why a Republican Woman! will be answered when th e HunUngton Beach Republican Women's Club meets at 11:30 a.m. Wednesday, Jan. 21, in the recreation center. Mrs. Barbara Bunker, im· mediate past president of Orange County Repuhllcan Women, Federated, will be the 11peaker and all area Republican women are invited lo attend . Presiding will be the newly lnstaJled president o{ the group, Mrs. Lee Stewart. Serving with Mrs. Stewart for the coming year will be the Mmes. LeRoy Benson and Bernard Gage , vice presidents; Wil Hain Campbell, recording secretary: O an Coplin, corresponding Dinner Planned sttretary; Ernest G 1 s I er, treasurer and Mamie Seltzer, parliamentarian. Chalnnen include the Mmes. Ray Mlller and A r n o I d Podsade, membership; Vernon Langenbeck, budget, finance and Americanism; Paul Richardson, chaplain; C. L. Aisthorpe, historian : William Regan, sunshine, and Seltzer, hospitality. The Mmes. Gl!ler, Campbell and Gage also are serving as members of the Republican Slate Central Committee, and Mrs. Gage recentJy was ap. pointed chaplain for t h e Orange County club. Plans for a fund-raising luncheon on Wednesday, Mar. 18, will be discussed during the meeting. Fifteen Years Marked Family Service Association IX. Orange County will com- memorate 15 years of serving area residents with marital and family problems at an an- nual dinner meeting Wed- n;esday, Jan. 21. :saddleback IM, Santa Ana, Will be the setting for' the 7:30 p.m. dinner which will be preceded by a &:45 social hour. Guest speaker will be Dr. Wiiliam Te~e, vice presi- dent of P rdine College, and on the gram will be election of officers and in- Fund Drive Prefaced stallaUon of two new members to lhe :JO.member board of directors, Special recognition also will be given to past presidents of the association as well as members of its aUJ:iliaries. More than ID,000 hours of counseling were Jogged during 1969 by FSA, a nonprofit, nondenominational organi..ta- tion that partially is aided by United Fund. Problems most frequently handled are lack of com- munication between marital partners or between parents a n d children, indifference, jeaJousy and lack of common social interests. Posture Topic Members of the Women's For All Seasons 62919 1! ~!t r J, f ~;t ~,'4.N ~ ' I \. This charming design by Patrick de Barentzen with panels top-stitched and neaUy tailored is a great way to travel and a great way to score! Buttondown tabs hold in place a self or pur- chased belt while the stand-up collar silhouettes Ute face. Try it in tangerine gabardine for chillier days and something crisp like linen for warmer climes. Other fabric suggestions: lightweight wool, flan- nel, double knit, pique, cotton, synthetic blends. 62919 is cut in Misses sizes 8-16. Size 12 requires ap- proximately 2 3/8 yards of 54" fabric. A coffee meeting Is planned Auxiliary of the Jntemational by the Women's Division o( Brotherhood 0 f Electrical the United Jewish Welfare Workers, l...Qcal 441 .,..,ill gather To order 629l9j state size, include name, ad- F'Und of Orange Count Y tomorrow at g p.m. in the dress and zip code. Send $1.25 plus 25 cents first- Wednesday. Jan. 21, al ID a.m. Union Hall. Sanla Ana for a class postage and handling for each pattern. Send in the Irvine home of Mrs. lecture and demonstration on orders for patterns to SPADEA, Box N, Dept. CX- Victor Washbkin. .11 be ,1 posture and figure control. 15, Milford, N.J. 08848. Guest spea er Wl 1• rs. --------------------------------Dan Finkle, director o( the Jewish Family Service, a part of the Orange County Jewish Community Council. Mrs. Robert I!. Aaron, · president of the Women's Division, will explain how the welfare fund functions and oo.tllne the preliminary work for the 1970 campaign opening Feb. 1. YOUNGLAND will remain closed MONDAY and TUESDAY, JANUARY 19-20, to prepare fOr our famous ANNUAL CLEARANCE-Watch for our BIG AD in Tuesday's, Jan. 20 edition of the DAILY PILOT MCHMfay, January 19, 1970 DAILY "LOT J7 Students Give Annual Program Service Mothers Every third Thur1day U.S. Air force Mothers, Flight 19 Khedule meetings in Calltornla Federal 5avtngs and Loan building, costa Afcsa, at 8 p.m. Eastern Star Ma.sonic Temple 1n Llgun• Beach la the meellnf .. 111nc when Laguna Beach Ch1plef 521, Eastern Slar members ptber the fin\ and ~ Fridays at I p.m. Life In GreqilJnd and Chile will be dlscuutd for members of Newport Harbor Panhf'llenl~ Wednesday, Jan. 21, during a. 10:30 a.m. meeting ln the South Coast Salling Club, Newport Beach. Speakers fur the aMual American Field Service pro- gram will be Margart'the Kleist of Q~tl!staddt, Greenland and Angela fl.tassman."' from T e m u c o • Chile. MIS! Kleist, who b called A1eka, attends Estancia High Schoo{ and re!ldes with the Robert Aloodya of Oos1a Mesa. She plans ~ return t o Greenland after her stay in the United st:ites and study psychology. Chile's representative Is a senior al Costa Mesa High School and makes her home with the Lee Wadsworth faml-1:;~~~~~~~~~:~~~~;;;;;;~~~~ ly of Costa ~tesa. A native Ir Chilean, Miss MassmaM is or German dj:!scent and is a fourth generation south-<if·lhe- border resident. She is lntere!rl.ed Jn the sc iences. particularly biology, but has not yet decided upon a career. Also on the busb-tes.s agenda Wednesday w i l I be: a discussion of Panhellenic's up- coming fashion show in the Sturt Shirt restaurant under the direction of t.trs. C. Ray Lenahan, chairman. Hostesses for the January meeting will be the Mmes. C. E, Saunders, Godfrey Lumsdon, Claude Harmon , Richard Elliott, Ri chard Jen- ness, Roger Turner a n d Robert Taube . Luncheon and bridge will follow the pro- gram. ' ' - ' •• ., ... . • •• • t ., "' . ~,,~ . ~ . I r;. . __L -• • ---· . ·--. . - JUST LIKE THE GOOD OLD DAYS New creations in bridal sell based on yesterday's designs. For your old-fiishioned girl. Pear. $345. Round, S225. Emerald cut, $350. Oval. $375. .. Methodis t Women SLAYICK'S Two · Events Scheduled NEWPORT BEACH -644.1380 18 FASHION ISLAND Two important events are "'ill show slides and tell about scheduled a day apart by the her v.·ork leaching math and Your Ch1ri;it Account Wtkome -BMU.1'1'11rk 1rcl, M•1lt1' Ch1ri;it , -. Opn Moltdoy & hkl•r 11•til t :Jt Women's Society of Christian [j~h~e~r~li~re~·~··~·th~a~na~t~iv~e~r~am~ily~.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Servi ce. First United ~1ethodlst Church of Costa Alesa. Instead of the regular meelhig, members will gather In Thompson Hall at noon Wednesday, Jan. 21, for a luncheon. Reservalions are being taken by Mrs. Virginia Wedesweiler, chairman, at 6t2·1D30 through tomorrow. This month is designated as Wesleyan Service Gui 1 d month, so the guild will be honored during a joint meeting of the two societies at 7: 30 p.m. Thursday, also in 111ompson Hall. Speaker will be A1iS3 Jean Yamanaka, a member of the church wtio has just returned from two years with the Peace Corps In the Philippines. She ONCE A YEAR CLEARANCE SALE Starting Jan. 15-31 SAVINGS IN ALL DEPARTMENTS SPORT COATS ,..,.•39 Up to 511• so Larv•· HAllllOlt Cl!NTl!I e 2100 HAllOl e COSTA MISA MONDAY. THURSDAY, FlllDAY TILL t P.M. Ph. 646--4242 Open • Kings Charge Today • \Vomen interested In the 1 :;;==================;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;/ fund are Invited to attend the Ir Semi-Annulll Sale meeting. Thoughts Bloom Thoughts on the Garden will be highlighted when Gamma Alpha Nu chapter of Beta Sigma Phi meets at 8 p.m. next Wednesday in the Foun- tain Valley home of ~trs. Joe Pooley. Mrs. John Bower will be the speaker. BE FREE ... OF' FACIAl. HAI" f'OPIEV£R. L ET US SHOW VOU HOW EASY IT IS TO REMOVE EXCESS H~IR WITH MODERN ELECTROLVS1S, MEDICAU.Y AP~ROVED. • • SAi"£, ,AST, GENTLE . CONSULT WITH OUR LICEHCl:D TECHNICIAN ltf OUR a~UT'I' SA\.OH, REDUCED! SUPER-RICH CREME FORMULA WAVES SEE WHAT A DIFFERENCE A REALLY GOOD PERM MAKES~ THE SECRET1S IH THE INGREDIENTS .ANO THE EXTRA CARE THAT OUR PERM.ANENT WAVE SPECIALISTS GIVE YOUR HAIR. I N OUR FRENCH SALON , REG. 35.00, NOW 17.50: IN THE ROBINAJRE SALON, REG . 250 001 NOW 12.50, BOTH ARE .COMPLETE, INCLUDING CUT. HURRY IN~ AT THESE LOW PRICES YOU CAN 1. AFFORD TO BE GOOD TO YOURS ELF! OUR BEAUTY SALONS. MRS• TOBY DECKER OF NEWPORT BEACH HAS RECENTLY JOINED OUR OUTSTANDING STAFF AND IS LOOKING FORWARD TO SERVI CING HER CUSTOMERS IN OUR BEAUTY SALON. ROB NSON'S ., ' Sears of Blue Package • ,, an ties r.BARGE IT o,, ~cars Revolvin,it: Charge ' , It bippcns only rwice a 1cv. And escb year more women seem to hear about iL fam~s fine quality ~Jue Pacb.ge P.&ntics~ here, now, ar Reduced Price1! The,. re the Jund of BOOd·fittHl& long-wesr1o.g panues you buy in bunch~ because it's six months 'til the nC"Xt sale. Finest Celanese acetate with elastic w.isu thac last the life ol the garment. DoublC fabric crotch. Si.te1 4 to 11. Prices Effective nesinnln1 Today ' J~ ' t· I ., ' '1 < \' I ' " / I I r b, Replarll Bond Lee DrleL 77c Ea1" .un._' 1. c. Resular 81,25 Full Lea Pon•r-97" t:'""' •*•-1.17 cl. Replar 81.2S Band Lies P•nt7 97c 111:1,...;.~.1 .11 , _________________________________________ _ ""°"' ,..... 0 MOtm l5INO iNACK ftCO.... l'CMON4 ------... ' I (AHOC)Ar.-Ol.INDAle OLYNttt•IOfO INoJTAN'fA =.c.CDAll'~ I ROBINSON 'S NEWPORT I ~ ~ . ~ -IS I :::::"SM«ll VAlt(Y I ,_ ________________ _,._ _________ ..__..j_.1 "'--------------------·------ears,.---~----~·--=-:.., si., MMll.ylflrMt' ~..,NClkM ... NO P.M .. ~ II.._ ... ,,M,. ---• "So1hfectf4NIO.,.,."t••detY6wM.ney ..... ROBINSON'S NEV\IF0,,1\T • FASH/01'! !SLA!'JD • 644-2RO ' l • ' ·~. Monday, January 1". 1970 Crittenton Meeting Tale of the Seo Nationa I Officer Due T rave/er to Lecture A 30-year-0ld man who has stay. The groop will depart by tra\'el in his blood, Sldnl'y bus at 9 a.m. on \Vednesday, Jn the Air r.tiss Cheryl 111cKibbin. daughter of f\ilr. and Mrs. Frank f\1cKibbin of Corona del ~1ar has completed training as a TWA flight hostess and will be based al Logan International Airport. Boston. She is a graduate or the Uni- versit.r or California. Santa Barbara. ?-otrs. Robert L. Falkenberg Jr. of Kansas City, f\1o , rnen1bfr of the nation a I Florence Critt.C}nton H o m e board, ""'ill be guest speaker for the annual meeting of thr. Florence Crittenton Home o[ Orange County Thursday, Jan. 22. f\.ien aM women c i v i c leaders throughout the county will gather in the Newport Harbor Yacht Club for the noon event which will include election of a new slate of of- ficers. f\trs. Falkenberg, a prac- ticing attorney, also is a direc- tor of lhe f'amlly and C.'hHd Counseling Center and vice president of the He a 1 th, Welfare and Reereation Board ol Kansas City. She is a sister of ~larilyn van dcr Bur, a former Mi ss America, and the mothe r ol t1Yo children. The topic of her address will be the Crittenton Challenge, an appraisal of present youth problems. fi.-lrs. Edgar Hill of Newport Beach, Orange County Cril- tenton \'ice president, is handl- ing area arrangemt'nts, and \\lillia111 J. i\1cGarvey of Francophiles Meet Professor on Podium Ire d'Etudr.s of the Un1verslly of California in Bordeaux, J"ranC"e. STILL i I GOING Dr. Leonard Johnson, prl)- fessor of French at the Unlversityof C at i f or n 1 a, Berkeley, \Viii be the speaker when the Alliance J?rancaise de la Ri\'iera Californ1cnne . ' meets Friday, Jan. 2J. Servin~ (\11 the hospitality i:omn1itll'e \Viii be the l\o1mcs. George Vodi cka, chairman, and Vinton Cerf. Robert Dor· r1s, J{obcrl Leclerc, Robert Ray and Helmut \Veiss. I ' i . I • I I , I ' ON! $,,.., 011 popul•r Y''"" du•· lrit our J111u1ry 5111 i nd our Super Sp1ci1I- llOTHll: KNITIING '129'° MACHIN! 11_,111r 114'.JO THE KNIT WIT South Coast Plata \.OWllt M•\.L Acretl 1111111 WIO!WOrlll'I COITA MEIA Ph. 5H·Zl12 The 8 p.m. gathering \\"J\I lake place in the auditorium of Harbor View School, Corona del ~1ar. Johnson, v.·OO holds degn.'<''I from Harvard University anrt ha s studied at lhe Uni versity of Aix-P.iarseille, the Universi· ty of 1''lorence and Ecole Nonna\e Superieur in Paris, will speak on L"Universile de Califomie en Franei!. Jlis interest in A1nerican students pursuing 'Fr c n ch studies in France was heightened by his service as assistant director of the Cen- XEROX COPIES 4 ,,,.. COLLATED FREE V 20¢ MINIMUM 8 x 11 £~ UNRUUNO •GOODWR4~~ers -GL[NOAl( e 41060 SAN f[RtfANDO RO. • 241-~001 INGLlWOOO • 1040' LA C\[N[GA BLVD. • 671.JJJJ SUNS£T DIST. • 8485 SUNSET BLVD. • 656-2997 DOWNTOWN • 623 S. DUVE ST. • (OPENING SODNI WILSHIRE DIST. • 610 S. VERMONT • 383-1391 SHERMAN OAKS • 15113 VENTURA BLVD. e 78J.517? ANAHEIM • 1640 W. LINCOLN AV[. • 716-3270 NEWPORT BEACH • J848CAM!'US DR. • 540968 1 A $2 charge will be made fur gucsls. Niguel Porks Head Agenda Parks and recreations \\'ill be the topic for Laguna !'.'iguel \\'oman's Club as 1ne1nbers gather in T\ionarch Bay Beach Club Thursday, Jan. 22, at 8 p.m. The club will !cam about Lhe YMCA, regional pa r k s, recreati o n cente r s. neighborhood parks and com- mercial recre ational fac ilities. The n1eeling is open to all members of the comn1unily interested in parks and HC- quisiliun of addition a l facilities. For infonnation. t-.trs. Philip Charlton. 495-5238, may be contacted. Nuts 'n Nibbles Laguna Group A1ner1can 1.cg1011 i\ux1h<1 r.v of Laguna Bc<1cl1 galhers the second and fourlh Thursday f:'Vening\' in the Legion Hall. ·SP.RINB SuitiAtqs ) • BONDED BEAUTIES (with lots of pion) •II new sprin9 suit •nd d re11 weight blended f•brics end ecrylics, bonded to ecetate tricof. "Yankee Doodle" combination s, flower fresh pestels, mix •nd metch chMmers. • PLAIDS • NOVELTiES • COORDINATES Som• •r• methin1 washeble, 1ome ere hend we1heble, iOme •re dry cle1n only. 54"/60" widths YD. C URTAINS YARDAGE DRAPERIES South Coast PlftZI -Cotta MeNI Huntington Cent•r -Huntington Beach lria.tel .. '-" Dl•t• fwy-14&.1114 ldlt1ff" a1 laa'h llt'tt.-1•1·10IJ Op•11 Mondew 1hr11 'rldof 10 ·111 t -Sat•rdey 'HI 6 -51111dey 1 l ·S Ful1ert9n.·board n1embfr, ~·llJ be chairman of the day. ElecUons will be conducted by A1aurirt E. Thompson of Corona del Mar and Laguna Beach, vice president and chai rman of the nominating committee. Jan. 21. Rosen, ·will address the Mon-A Day al the Races will be day l\lorning Club of Laguna spent on Wednesday, Feb. 18, on the i\1edlterranean -A at Santa Anita v.·Jth a special Russian Lake? on ~1onday, race named for the club. Feb. 9. For reservations. those in - A Phoenix allorncy. Rosen teresled may phone T\1rs. hu visited 85 countries and Robert w. Roper, 494-9368, or six continents since 1962, \\'hen ~lrs. David Kisselburgh , 830- WEIGHT @. WATCHERS; • Some t•lking, some listening •nd • program lh•I works. l,.. 4 FREE IROCH•JRE-CALl l:SS-SSOS Officers of women's support groups, donors and members of the advisory council also will be in attendance. Although the luncheon is an in- vitational e~·ept, reservations for a limited number of seat.s are available by calling !he Critlenton office, $47-9377. he made hls fir s t major travelogue while ca n1 pin g1-='="='=· =========-=-=-=~========== across Western Europe. Ir DEBRA GRUPE Summer Rite• Hospitality hour begh1s at 11 a.m. in the Hotel Laguna followed by buffet lunch. PIANO LESSONS CHILDRIN 'S lf•tNNIRS GRour LISSONS START IN FfllUART Of>• 1'0ur l..in·lll19<1 let$011 W11r11!H< EieelrOflit Music plf I.ft.Ion The fund-raising erforts of the past three and one half }'ears will he reviewed, ac- cording to Bill Long of Costa l\1esa. chairman of t he building committee. 8€ .. othal Revealed At Brunch Tu•o trips are planned by the Theater and Vagabond Sec· lion. A land-cruise 10 Lone Pine for an overnight stay. then on to Death Valley for lunch will be enjoyed en route to Las Vegas for a 1~·0-nighl l•bO<atort . "'~" 1 10 U , Our """'" itr• •r• pl•llO m•· lort II Ollt loc:ll vnlYet1Hlfl. 11..,I y ... r Pil ... '""" UO! t-.lore than $282,000 has been raised for purchase of the building si te in El Modena and final architectural plans are 1u1der preparation. Ta r g e t date for starling construction is in April. Sally is Top Bana nas On Any Comics Page .~~~!i~. Wallichs Music Ciw lo• Ft1>r~1rr cl1u n . South Coast Plaxa •.. Phone: 540-3165 The fund \\'as recently aidl!d by a substantial grant fro1n the James Jn·ine Foundation. 1'eenage unwed mothers will be served by the facility. Folk Dancers Go European Tr you ha\'~ a yen for l't ungarian dancing, A n do r Cr.ompo \.\'ill teach a special program f or Laguna J."olkdancers on Wednesday, Jan. 21 , at 7:30 p.m. in Ute Laguna Beach 11igh School gymnasium. The Folkdancers. ~·ho meet every Wednesday night, have invited Southen1 California folk dancing groups and those interested in dancing to participate. Czompo, a leading proponent of Hungarian dancing in the lJnited State s, now is a resi- dent of New York. He will !ravel to Hungary this sum- mer to collect new material. Luncheon Set ' The eng<1gen1ent of Debral Jeanne Crupe and Frederick Louis Huss was announced during a brunch in the.I Newport Beach home of the bride-clect's mother, r\'1 r s ., Virginia Grupe. ! Miss Grupe ~·as llraduatedj from Ne\.\·port Harbor High School and currentl y is at· rending Grossmont College in ~I Cajon. Her fiance. son of Air Force I Lt. Col. (rel.) and t-.1rs. Vin-I cent J. Huss of Terra Linda, is 1 an alumnus of San Diego State College wh ere he affiliated' wilh Lambda Oii A I p h a fraternity. Presen! ly the bridegroom · t:lect is enrolled in Officers· Training Schoo l at Lackla nd Alr Force Base, Texas. The couple have selected late summer for their wedding in Newport Beach. Portrait Artist Paints Picture LOSE 2 DRESS SIZES ' • mas little as • ••. the IMYI statement is based an actual records from aur files TODAY IS JANUARY 19 Size 22? ... , , . Be a size 20 by Feb. 4 Sizf20? . , .• , . Re~ size 18 by Feb. 4 Sizt 18? , .... , Be a size 16 by Feb. 5 Size 16? ... , .. Be a size 14 by Feb. 6 SizoJ 4~ , •.••. Be a size 12 by Feb. 7 Size 12? . , . , , . Be a size 10 by Feb. 8 R ESUL 'rs GUARANTEED in writing ••• the time )t takes tar each jndividual to achieve her goal may vary dcpe.ndit11 on ngc and other factors. How. evrr. at Gloria Marahill TC"Sults for everyone is gu.aran. teed. 'J'cll us the drcssalie you wnnt to wear, v.·e will tell you how niaey visits it 11Jtes and guarantee that you will reach your go<l}. ln fact, so positi\·c are we that you will obtain your objective -.-e will even let you have FREE OF CHARGE any an~ 11111 fur!hrr vi~its until you rench your goal. We. are the world's laqest owned and operated Firuro Control S)'SU!m. (26 loutiona in Califomia alone), THIS WEEK, JAN. 19 THROUGH SAT., JAN. 24 5 VISITS FREE! With every Gloria Marshall program reprdless of how lltUe it cost~ v Cell lot mEE Sample visiL Aclua!Jy 'Use, llllder supervision, the Gloria Mar. shall machines including our patented. "Ciro-La·l.1at.ic." No Charge. No Obli· gation. v Private playroom lac!Utics lot omall children. V Come in comforlable casul'll l'lnthes. Disrobing UMet'e!Sary. WE ARE NOT A \.\. ALSO IN 642-3 630 (2 locks Easl or Balboa Bay Club1 A11aht'l11t, Ca•l111, Cre1ttllaw, Dawn•y. Gla1ula1,, L••awaad, Lal Y•1•1, Lo119 hocl\, N•wpol"t laoch, N. Hollywaad, Ontaria, '••• d1110, 5111 Dl .. o, Se11t11 A110., S~to lerbare, S1111lc1111I, Tarra11a. Taua11c•, WhlHlft'. 1840 W. 17th ITR!ET 543.9457 SANTA ANA (cJ Copyrigl1t 1970 Gloria ~Iarali a/l ~rpr ·Salon nlso in Dcnr:rr, Salt Lake City, 'F'rtsnn, Sa crnn1ento, San Jose and many other cit ic:;, ' • I Co f11e, TUMBLEWEEDS By Tom K. Ryan SALLY BANANAS A IJULLETIN!• IT IS NOW SCAl.F' iNVeN'TDRY 1'1Me J., .. 1TIS1\IE'l1MEOFYEAR IN !'MICH WE R?OHAl'rll> ~AN EXTENSIVE SUJIVfYOFALLELIGl~LE1 UNLIF,TEt>,. fN.El'ACE SCAl.PS IN GRIMY GO!Ol M'!1 ENVlllONSiTHUS ENABLll'G us ro SET A QOO!AOO SCAl.PING11l1EREl'Y AIDI~ IN lHE CONSERWmQN OF o.'lE OF 0!)!{1 MAJOR NATURAL ~•HAIR. Nr \f 11 _!::=======:::::::::~~~ PLAIN JANE l rv DAI.LY LOG· MONDAY JANUARY 19 I[ I 1:00 § 111 Ntw1 (CJ (50) Jefry Dunphy.II · m Hu11t1t7-Brinkl1Y (C) (30) Sllv• All111 Show (C) (90) Guests ut Jayne Meadows. Jerry Collins, Bill Htnderson. 0 CHARLTON HESTON-* "THREE VIOLENT PEOPLE"-IN COLOR! 0 Sil O'Clod Mowl1: (C) ''ThrM Violent Ptopk" (western) '57 - Cheriton Heston, Anne B11hr, GU· !Wt Roland. tarJ>etbauers thr11ten an ex.Confeder11e officer'' ranch. and his wife tries to use her seciet p~st lo save him. i Dick V11n Dyke (JO) The f!intstones (C) (JO} Stir Trek (C) (60) (1) ABC News (C) (30) What's New! (30) ('Hi® CBS News (C) (30) iD Pasion Git1n1 (JO) C!') News (CJ (60) Jack Whitt. • The C:ame C:1mt (C) (30) &:JO I KNBC Nen1~it1 (C) (liO) .. 0 lnaln• la Adiotl (C) (JO) 81s· k1tb1tl hl1hlia;hls. 0 @ (]) aJ AIC lfond•J Movie: (C) "How T• Silll I Million" (com· edy) '66-Audrt1 Ht1Jbu1n, Peltr o·roolt, lH W1!11ch, Hu1h Griffith, Ch1rlu Boy1r. An ele11nt Plrlsianl phll1nthropl$I, lllho is in rt.allty 1n1 art tor1er, 11rees to 1How lh•1 French aovemment to 1xhlbit one of his llnest pieces, Ctllinl Venus- ' lake. His d1u1htl!r, ft11ina: the lor1ery wilt be discovtrtd, consplr1s lllith 111 art dtltctive (who his been hi red to 1xpose lht foraer) lo st11I tht statue. (OD.awld rrort Show {C) (90)1 M11t1 Allen 1ut1h. CD T\1 l ie v.rrc, (C) (60) fl) S111brush Titt~lrt (601 mi hpl (30) !:00 D @· 00 M~rrJ RJ.D. (C) (30) Liltlt Mike volunlren to take ure " of Howard'~ talking mynah bird, then loses it. Mike buys • substi· tute bird and bei:s Aunt Bee no! to tell. 1-t'I PERKINS D @ C~ffiHBC Mond1y Movit: (C) '11x11 Atrou the Rini" (com- edy) '6£-0..n Martin, Alain D .. ton Jotr Bishop, Rtlwmary fOfl)'th. Th~ story or th• mi11dVenturu ol , a Spanish nobleman with lll.llJH, AFTE£ nscals and knaves of f'rtlntier Amer· T,t.KIN6 ica. A&&EY SPENC.ER - 0 Hert Co1111 Ult S"'n (C) (60) TO t>lltlN~. Oon Ad1m1 i1 hooored and h1r1uad ' ~M DRIVEi: by 81fba11 Flldon. Ed Platt, leort-1 D€<.IDE5 TO THE PRECEEDING- INFORMATION IS AN eYCLUSIVE SERVICE OF 1\US NEWSPAPER! ll ·' ·• " "' 'l Mr f1V111ite M1rti1n (30J f11J ®Perry Mtson (60) i Office cf the Prtsi!lent (JO) (R) @ HuntlfJ·Brin-lty (Cl (30) Probt (C) (30) aid Stern, Damil1 .lo, W(IO(!y Wood· 1 STOP PJV bury, Hertit Style!, Sindy Biron 1 • J11PGE P,t.fi:ICE~ ~;;c an d Al1n Dnkt. ! • ~E .' ~~ m "" *'~'1 ftl (liO) "" 1 ; . Glimpse of China.w J · /!;"~i~~.:- iI) 1mp1ctos Mu9icalt1 (30) I : If'/ · 9 "' 9:30 ~@Th• Munste·1 nni ml Nl!tidero 34 (t) I ~.O) t?;) KMIR Nein (CJ (:II 7:00 0 CBS Evenin1 'I ~•· ICI (30) QWhifJ My li"c~ ~, !30) P!ll· 0 TONIGHT'S BE.ST BET! * THE DORIS DAY SHOW! . •hsts lor the week are t-eiaY Cess, Alao Alda. Soup1 Sales and Allene1 ffanc1s. D ~ffi"'" Doy(C)(30) "''-MOON MULLINS doesn't worry about the e11nsequen- ces when she ''•kes" sii poodles lrorn 1 priv!te, locked 1utornobil1, !Jut she ul!imaltly finds herself In rovrt en a 1obbe11 ehar11e. llmts Millholltn. Juomt Cow•n. Charfts lant and Is~ Alnal 111est. m I love LUCJ (30) @ Btaf the Clock (C) (30! E.i) Commodity /Mutual fund (CJ !Ill 231 r6! Monday Show (C) (2 h1) "Charad!." Cary Grant. Audrey He p ~llPO fl) o\hoia! 130) t'l_'i IJJ Trvth or ConKqu1nct1 {C)I fD Cts1t'1 World (C) (30) CD TbJt Cirl (C) {JOJ 0 N1trs (C) (30) Bader Ward, OJ l lll lohfts Nim (C) (30) m HorM 01111• (601 til ltlrilf1 M11sic.I (30) 7:~ 0 ~ 11) Gunsmok1 (C) (£101! . "Hie Judas Gun~ l he longtime feud 10:00 ~al Cl) C11ol lu_rnttt (CJ C&O) 1 ~r widowtr-ranche1& Noah Haimes! fli p Wilson and Vikki tall auesl. I a~d Clete Bolden is iekindled by 0 m NINS (C) 160) the romance. of H1imes' onl~ $On 0 O.lli! IC) (60) Otbb•t Drake, ind Bolden's only daughter. Richard The Brooklyn Brid11 and M1rty X Slattery. Stan McClory, Peter Allen 1uest. Jason and laurie Mock lUt!I. (!) Ptny MUGR (fl()) Q gn M1 !f~rid 1!'11 Wileoll'lt lo 0!1 Firlnr Une (C) (&O) "Why Don't It (C)g (30) 0Hr' 11 .• f~ur:Letler Con1tMtWts Underst1nd?" W1it11 Word. El!en Mon~oes 1nS1Jlt~te Roier Rapoport ind Wts fl'lsker-1 _ _[=~!11J~ STEVE ROPER !hat A tommunleat1ons llP exists both sharply erilie1I cf W111itm F. ~e!wt~n her husba~d. and d1u,1hter i Buckley's views-join ludill)' and 1•1, r, supported by Lydia 5 tt hO(I_! ".hen conseryative Hervey Huk1rl lo dis. 11 lohn h~s to _go !ft the. principal cuss tonight's topic.. M !Kf'5 .\Ian Oppenhe1me1 and l 11i111 field "-' C cit M . (30) CO/t/VERSA7JJW J!trest. <:Iii' Utt! u11ns IV!TH THE 0 Stump tilt Stus (C) (30) Hl6HL y C.uesh : Uoyd Haynes, Denise Nkh· 10:30811 trnthia (30) /,'~PRESSEO 0!~1. 11.aren Valenhne. WAITRESS JS O @(}J m II Ta~n I Thiel (C)f 11:00 II D 0 Ntn (tl SJJ{)Df.41LY !60) "The Steal Orfv1n~ Man" Al a Th• Wdtttnllf1 I [.4/0co H'HEN Mundy usks his life on the auto· , .. 1110bile r&eetratks of Europe 10 get O ~~vle: 'loY~, Hate •~d ~1.. ROOCOME5 to ! sete in CoHlona where !he h~nor (drama) 65 -Virn& l1sf, BACK FROM Russians ha~e Cuba type m1111le P.!er Baldwin TH! PAl<K!NG b~se olans Mano Andretll play1 m Pt11on l'lttt /.OT l - h1i;i.1elf a~d .Feinando lamas, Ft ft'>"' So"' Sh• Stid (C) • 110~ f111. O•c~ S111othe1s, Ed'fl'ard UJ '"' Binns and Greg Muil•wr guest. t (jlJ(l)@009CIJN1Ws (C) MIKf.' .. ·I WENT OllT TO CMfC K OUR111'ES 0 Million S Movie: "Th~ (lsy ED Advtnture (3tJ) MJourn1y to Pall· Way" (comedy) '52--Cary Gran!. · .. MUTT AND JEFF COME OW 11.1 : VOU'tl LI KE KAr HERINE! ARE YOU ilJRE 1r ISN'T "N IMPOSITIO~ •• QUIZ' WALK11'1G Ill Betsy Ora~e. l urent Tuttle The J!Cnia 1 ,.,.1,, 01 ~ t•tY engineer. mothe1 o! iE iL'l CD News IC) 1-M-,-~. -,-W-"-.-.:r-'"-1i"_O_S_E_ .~--, .,.---. ~1i-i-l-l<f~S-~-'E_D_l>;_:T_E~ three diild rtn. adds a homeles5 I w r 1• rJI"\ :> l"I 'TtiOSE VJHATS '" yo1mister to ~er brood, then an-.11:10@ (])Cinema Sntnlttn (CJ "Last LITTLE NUMBERS ARET+IE f")E'LEASE iiON~EEAAR:TCHISSTT ~UTIPS ~the1 11\d 1not~er. 011111 Badm1n." !HAT APP&ARON RELEASE ~ "' m Truth or Coni;tqutnu1 (C) (30) ~E BOTTOM END OATES! OATES SO THE E01TOR. ID M1jo1 Ada~' C50JlO) Ill 11:~1 e S (}) Mtrv Griflin IC) 'E~~~~~iT~~S ? wr:~~L~rt"Jf ra TKhnic•I Ollltf { ( ' 0 ID11) mJohnnJ Carson (C) l l~'+ 12-10 'ETC.? IT IN "TI-IE ff) ffenclt Cllef (30J Juli& Ch1I" Ai3n Klng ls svhstitute host this NEWSP'APER.' prepare$ 1 variety ot u1amtl·l•ted week. Jene Morgan auesh. des~rh. 0 llup'1 Show (C) Schedu!td 6a Chucho e! Floto (3()) IYei\5 include Ate• l\1nd rick, S&m· 1:00 0 fI' Laugh·ln (C) (!iO) Gve~t Pete1 lawlord wo1lls up ~ latht• ovtr shaving commt1c11ls. pl1y1 r.~rre W1shingt1X1 ind lnvenb a hit modern musictl. 11rl Houston .lohnson, led M1ttk, ~ .. Ashlty Mon1aaue and Mar1h1 R1y1. r!j' •• 0 C:l) 01~ t1vett (CJ Btrth1 Dtn· j•f nt1, Bob [rliott. Rty Gouldl111 1nd [" John Sebtstian fUISI. { ~.,.\ 0 I $~is1Al I Tha Ben KD.(111 Sho• (C) (30) The '!ory o! 1 1reat l\llfe r. 1 '" m Movie: ''fellow S•y" (wt11ttm) '48 -Grt1ory Ped, Annt 81xt1r, Richard Widmark. GORDO m To Ttll the tr uth (C) (JO) aJ Movie: "0119tr1dots Alt II €i}Stock M11kct/f11i lurts (31)) Tn.-n" (•,stern) '56--Ru Rt8$011, €D World Prtss (CJ (&0) I Robert "'1h111, Kathy Nolin. €E) P1ndor11111 (301 I 1:00 IJ Mowlt: (C) "lalt of ttlt IH· lllflll" (w11\em) '57-Geortt Mont· 8:30 6 ~(fl Htrt's 1.#ct (C) (30f rorntrY, Jtmt! Best. Douglas llen· + Vi;"J•n Jones arri~e$ in Holt)"lrood n~dy 8nd axptc!s LIJCY to m1kt good h~r · promls• to 1rr1n1e 1 d111ner da!t 0 0 lftwl (C) with Uwrenee Wt!k. Lawrence Wt!k, 1 0 c.111111111111 8ul1tll11 lotrd (C) V"rvla n Vance: ~nd M111 J1nt Croll I ·• ft'> Actlo11 Tk1tr1: '1ht Avtn1ers." ~u,.. ~ I•") l ! i """ '" •• u f:::3';;f/!'";' .-=! m "Ctpttlil c.ut1o11• (adventutt) '4G-V'cl0f Mtture, Lao camno. MISS PEACH TUESDAY DAYTIME MOVIES IZ:OO O "tllltr Mtd11111" (corned)') '35 -£1iss1 Lindi, Cary Gr1nt, lyn11t Dve1111~~' 1:30 m ·111t M*11~u1ct111 "....,_, .. I j (drtml) '.t2-K>Mph Cotti!\, °'inti I~ 0 "Ken11 o\ldtkli P'tlY' CllJ!f'j Moorrht1d. · (combd~l ''' -Ji111my L)'don. 2:00 D (C) ''Stet, Tou'r• Killinl Mt" ~wenrr A!dnth SWlno 11• (comtd1)1 (oomMty) 'SJ-Broderkk Cl•Wford. '13-l•m.,,y Lydon. Cttlre T1evor. m "Snt11 C:aftt tt Mm• (wtit· O '1Advtnlurt" CQntlUi•Oll (io t f'll) '5& _ Loi• Albritft l. Charlea mn1en) '46 -· Cl•r• G1b1t, Grttl' O~in!ivan. G•t10n. 4:l0 8 "TM 1111\tr ~11ton sto17'" lbl· 9:)0 0 "C111111 W•V•" \d!~"1~) ~ -Oif'PhJ) ·~r -Dc~•ld O'Connor Sttrllna H1vdqn An~ Birth ~\ , .,.....-. .... ," ... By Frank Baginski L . ' !· r By John Miles 1t:•, Tb ll'li•'"' ,., Trillo•• a .. ,.n•• J. tw); .t.,. '""" By Harold Le Doux ALL Wm WANT TO KNOW IS , 15 IT AN'lfl.llNG WMICH 1-l~S EVElt eeFO~E BEEN EATEN eY HUMAN 1-19 Mond11, Janu1ry 19, 1970 DAILY PILOT JO By Charles Barsotti PEANUTS By Charles M. Schulz ,.,, 1'\A.o:'.E Vf" '(OUR 5Tlfl[) MIND! I• --- -~ .. =·"'----..,'~=-~' Tt:LllVISION Vlll\VS Brody Al so 111 Sbo\v Biz By CYNTHIA LOWRY NEW YORK (AP) -Michael James Brody Jr .. the generous margarine millionaire. not only made the headlines over the weekend. he also broke into show business -at the top. That keen and flexible booker of talent, Ed SuUivan, moVed fa st and signed up the 21-year-old Brody for bi s Sunday night show. Brody had been handing out money for sev~ral day~ and .P r9mising to give away more. Knowing pubhc cunos1ty was running high , Sullivan kept Brody's "singing debut" until close to the end of the CBS hour. WHEN IT came, it n1ay have been the biggest anticlimax in television since the 1narriage of Tiny Tiin. Brody, in casual clothes and clutching a guitar, can1e on stage \Vith his young \Vife and announced diffidently. ·'This is my first appearance anywhere ever." f-le strummed the guitar and sang something called ''You 1\in't Going Nowhere." At the con- clusion, l\1ike kissed his \vife, confided that "I've gol 100 bi·Jlion dollars to gjve out ne xt \veek." and di sappeared. It is very probable that Brody makes a better philanthropist than performer and it is almost cer- tain that Ed Sullivan \Viii have a big fat rating for his show because Brody appeared on it. THE OTHER acts were the standard Sullivan mix -the singing-dancing Kessler Tv,iins, Cassius Clay in a scene from his now-closed Broadway play. a comedy magic turn, and June Allyson singing a n1edley of old songs. Brody. it turned out. bright- ened the Sullivan corner considerably. Most actuality prograins are produced by the net,vorks, \vhich use their own ne\\'S departments. and thus even a well done program by an indepen- dent producer ha s difficulty finding a network berth. "Thirty Days to Survival" is one of those, but. it itnpressed a sponsor \vho lined up a lot of inde~ pendent stations to broadcast it. The progra.rn..J..I!:___ the filmed account of •the experiences of a group 0J·- yow1g Americans -average age 17 -in the moun- tain wilderness of Wyoming. THE EXPEDITION was headed by Paul Pet: 1.oldt, founder of the National Outdoor Leadershir School, \\'ho believes that an experience in survival build s character and independence. Petzoldt and hi s aides taught the young people how to clin1b and descend the sheer face of moun- tains, to cross rushln,i: streams. to identify ~lble roots and nuts. to fi sh, to read maps and follow trails. THE PARTY packed into \vilderness cou ntry carrying their o\vn supplies to learn for a month under supervjsion. Then they were left to their own de~ices GO or 70 nliJcs fron1 the nearest ranch to make their way back by living off the land. They made it. it \Vas hard, and it was the basis of a very interesting hour of television. Dennis tlie Menace . . . :-.. :· --... 1: • .. 1 ' . .. . . I .. • . ' . .. I .. • •• ~ ., j ----------------------------~------------------------------------r----·------ DAILY PILOT . s Monday, JanU.trY 11t, 1970 Year Money's 1fortl1 Pac Tel ' GNP Vp, Bu.tWhatlslt? Bares '70 Finance Briefs THE: NEEDLE By SYLVIA PORTER Jn his State of the Union message 1.ater thia v.·~k. President Nixon will mention ' specific 5tati!itic for oor 1111· Uon'• Grou National ·Product In 1970 and hS!'ll almost su rely ... ~ul that GNP v.•111 ri se to 4 lhe hist.one annull l rate of SI :trQlion belote 1970 ends. Thi~ ~~ctlon, coming from the •WhJte House itseU. will makt. :~dlines the Y.°Qrld over -~iod millions or you Will pick it up. repeat it, rn£morlzr ii, follow ;,_ :.: 'l'llis is the way lt always :goes, for GNP is the single ·great mea!'ure of 1he size or .the U.S. cro.1on1y, the most com~rehcnshc economic statistic the .. artists·· in the st.atis1ical v.·orld have invented &o far. RUT RACK UP e n1inute. Do you really know v.·hat this figurc stands for, v.·hat it in· eludes and does not includ? Do you understand what's behind my simple sta tement that GNP is the market value, ex- EARN lnve tf by the 20th •nd ••rn fr om th• I it on 2•·month full pirid investment Thr ift pressed ~ dollan, or our na· lion's total output of goods and :;ervirc!I? You're lhe rxccpll<m ii you do. so here are some l!Ule known fact.a and sorne sh"rp observations about thill tidy yardstlck : ii) Jt 's a vague esti mate, !hilt's all it is. 11 is far, far from an actual sum cf the dollar value cf its comJX>nents. 12) IT'S EXCEEDINGLY • Inaccurate and always is sub- JCT't to constant revision cx- lending for years after the C\'enl. • 31 It is a very recent in- v('ntion too. The first thne !hr C.:ommerce Dept. issued a GNP estimate v.·as a mere 28 Air West May I ssue Ne,v Stock SAN FllANCISCO (APl - An Air West spokesman said its directors \V i 11 meeL in the near future lo schedule a stockholders vote on a pro- posed $30 million issue of new preferred stock. The Civic Aeronautics Board last nlOnth approved purchase nr Air West by Hughes Air Corp .. a subsidiary of llughes 'fool Co. Proceeds of U1e stock sale 1\·ould be uS('d to mccL net 11orth coinmitmenls in the purchase agreement v.· it h ·Certificates. Or 5 1/i "/. on P<111sboo~ Account$ oo '"Y amount;. Your wit l-.dt-•w•lt honored imm edia tely on demand. 1 billio,1aire Howard Hughes. CALIFORNIA THRTFT&LOAN 170 E. 17th St, COSTA MESA M EM•ER: AM ERIC#IN l l'\IDUSTR l#IL. alllHKEl'IS ASSOCIATION, CAL.ll'ORHI A A.U OC IATION OF INDUSTRIAL. L.OAN COM,.A.N1£S The Air West spokcsn1an :i;aid legal representatives of 1 llu~hcs and 1hc airline \Vere \\Orking 1nca1\\vhil<> to com· 11lc1c rcquirPd n1ovcs for the Jlu ghc.s acquisition. Air \Vest, oprrati11~ ~.non m ll~s uf routes from Ct1lgary, Canad a , to i\l cxico. :u:knowlcdgcd last week that it had been in arrears on payments to so rne airports. 1'he spokesman said Air '\'est had submitted propcn;a\s fr.r cornpletr setllcmcnt over a period or lime. A number of airport managements have reported acceptance, he said, u.1d others have not yet com· pleted action. C1·oss\vord Puzzle ACROSS l "-·-Bulba": Gogol novel fl lntrlgu' 10 International alliance: Abbr. 14 Acllvt caus' 1.5 Talk lo11d and long lb Asian country 17 Rtput'd crlm lnat group 18 Presag' 19 Fuel 2Q Advanct on wage s ii Business teller salutalion 23 Sovereignty 2.5 Vast ar'a 26 Connectiv' "'" 27 Per iod 2' T1im Jl Bob bai! 33 Luxuriant 35 Osiris' wif, 37 Avoid 1 41 Current 42 Ancient I Ila lian godd,s s ~4 Gas l J • • )J -· .. l .CS Kind of bus ineS5 p!~c' 47 Socia! cllmbet 4iJ Corporals, l".g.: Abbi. 49 Child 51 Was illdebted 53 Pi'c' of V'1'St 5( Lik,ly 51 Stat': Abbr. 59 ---· dt 1is bl Kind of n'!laliv' votl" f.4 Holdin g device b1 Pressure: Comb. foun 68 Conlin,nl 69 Perfume "IQ Numeric1l prefix 71 Skatin g arena 7 Z Buzz 73 Exa mination 74 Joint 75 Gains oowr1 1 Pound down 2 Jap~ne51! lslnglass l lniU~t\v's 4 He1bac,ous pl ant ~ Motionless b For,ca5\ 7 Halt R R an~t sections 9 Camped out lCI Pleasant 11 Fragrant' 12. Captured 13 Conlinous1y: 2 word s 22 Put down 24 Grating 27Fint··-28 Pact 30 lnstrumt11l 3Z. European capital 34 Enqlish duchy 36 Pre-ripitalio11 form ......,, ........ -.- .. " 1119 /70 38 Prof,ssional p.trson 39 Sound 40 Noun 'nd1ng 43 Second son of old •b Moist SD Land 52 lime period 54 Kind of super101 55 localton 5b Pastries 53 Arti d1ained by a riv'r &O Exc,ss ivt 62. Bir d 63 Thin mark 65 Horac' or Thomas···· 66 Chitf r~ttutivt: Abbr. " Science Shrinks Painful Hemorrhoids Stops Itch-Relieves Pain finch Way That Both Relieves Pa in and Shrinh P-J., fn Most Cues ' Nnt York. N.Y. (S,.o.J): Sci· i haa found a 1pealal tor· wit.h th• abUit;T, in most -to ahrink Mmorrhold•, Al and nlitT• n. .. ~ aft.er e••• ~t.o r1 ~. wit•• ..,.u,. ,.11 .... , .siSJu actval ttdtadJon (thrlnk· •, •re) took pl ace. Th& atcret is Pr•1'•ntio11. H•. There ia 110 othar formula for hemorrhoid s lika it, Preparation If al11 0 1oothe1 Irritated ti11sut1 and he-Jps p~t further lnff'rtion. I In o!ntmtnt or 1uppo~itory (oJ1 :1 •. years ago; q u a r I er 1 y CtSUmates wertn'l made IMlil 1947. t 4) It has so frequenUy been the subjecl ol wrong forecasts that a few years ago the Na· tional Bure;i.u of Economic Research made a special study of rxperts' errors in GNP predictloru, found thal they came lo a shocking 40 percent or the year-lo-year change. (5) TH E QUESTION, In short. is not whether President Nixon 's projection will be \\Tnng: lhe question is only h0tv wra.1g it will be. To me. the truly fa scinating lale is what GNP leaves out. Let me put this into terms of your ov.·n llfc. -Jr you spend -as so many millions of us across the land spend -manh leisure hours in do-it-yourself painting :iround the hou~. moderniiing building, etc., you produce a blrhgt house . a modem kil· ehen, an extra room, etc. But your c0t1l.ribution to GNP is ZERO. All thal is counted is 'vhal you spend for painl, lum· ber, nails, metals, etc. OUT IF YOU hire someone lo paint, mode rniu, build, etc., whal you pay these workers is a major con- tribution to GNP Their pro· duct may be inferior to yours bul their labor counts. -I( you stay home and clean. \\'ash, se w, cook. all !hat you contribute to GNP is \vhat you spend for appliances, materials, u ten s i Is , in- gre<licnt.s, etc. Your prG- duction -\Vhich IS your home -also is a big ZERO. But if you hire people lo clean. wash, se1V, cook. what you pay them is a significant addition lo GNP. Ag;iin. the results may be inferior to yours but thei r labor counts. A FINl\L paradoy : say you i>lay at ho1ne and your best friend earns $lfl(I a week as a secretary. Contribution to GNP : her $1~. Now let's say you take her $150 job a11d pay hrr $150 10 1rnd ~·our hom f'. t;onlriOution to liNI' is now $.100. And this is only a part of the tale. Since GNP is always counted in dollars. price in· creases \'itally affect thr tolals. ~1uch of t969's GNP rise was strictly inflation; more of 1970's '"ill be. So to make lhe Ogure mO rf' meaningful, the Commerce Dept. quotes it in "cci'1lslant" as well as current dollars. For instance, when GNP ll'as al $942.8 billion in current dollars last year. i1 was only $730.6 billion in 1958 constant dollars (n1eaning price increases since 1958 had been \\'i pcd out of the totals ). ~ow SURELY you un· derstand why I called GNP's i".1ventors '·a r ti st s 1 ' in statistics. And now you can read and hear Nlxon·s forecast \\'ith the skepticism it war· rants. Joins Raytheo11 Wi\Liarn T. Perkins of Huntington Beach has been appointed indus- trial relations rnanag- cr for Raytheon's co1n- puter operation. Santa Ana. lie joined Rc:iy- theon from Packard Be!! Electronics \vherc he \Vas director of com· pensation (Ind benefits. Work Starts 011 Birtcl1er Irvine Site Projects Pacific Telephone Company officials e!!Umate the company will spend $27 ,668,000 lil con· strucllon in Orange County in 1970, according to figures released. Co1npany president Jerome \V . Hull st1id the Orange Coun- ly projects and construction in the re1n ainlng service areas arc necessary to • · a v e r t overloading" and resultant service breakdown and dll· fiC'ulties. Construt.1ion projecls slated fvr the Orange C.:oast includ<': -$107 .000 for central orfi~ fqui pment al 31l E. Balboa 13lvd., Balboa. -$397,000 for central offiN? equjpmcnt at 4302 l"ord Rd ,. Corona del Mar. -$264,000 for central office rquipmcnt a~ 1786 Orange Ave .. Costa Mesa. -$7,000 for central oflic~ equipment at 34175 Pacific Coast Highway. Dana Point. -$270.000 for ccntr;il office f'qiupnient ;it 23011 El Toro Road. El Toro. -$359.000 for central office rquipment. al 13062 Euclid. Garden Grove. -$69,000 for central office cquip1ne11t at 2.1521 Paseo Valencia, Laguna Niguel. -$25,000 for ct>ntral office f'quip1ncnt at 401 Ca 11 e Molin~. San Clen1enle. Birtcher Pacific, _ $929,000 fur a new site, investment-construction firm, building and office equipment has broken ground for the first to be located in San Juan pha1e of a planned develop-Capistrano. ment for Data Computer According to a PacTel Systems, Inc.. at I 7 I 3 I spokesman. the construction Daimler St., Santa Ana, in the involves mostly equipment, so Irvine Industrial Complex. 1he company is to add ooly The 12,286 square feet facili· "200 or !;o·• employes to the ty represents an initial in-payrolls following completion vestment for land and building of the counly projects. of $386,000, according to Art ----------- Birtcher of Birtcher Pacific. Data Computer Systems \Va! founded fo r the purpose of building high speed digital ccmputers and high speed data communicalion equip- ment. Last November Micro- Tcnna Corp. of Miami, Fla. <1cQ11 ircd Data Com p u l c r Systems for approximately $5 ntillion. At that time the of- ficers and d iretcor~ of Data Computer Systems were elected ao; officers and direc- tors of Micro.Tenna. Sensitron ,Gets Order Sensitron lnt .. Costa Mesa, announced that it had received an order fron1 Scnsormatic Electronics Corp., A k r on , Ohio, for 3-million sensitized 1n a r k er s for use 1n Scnsor1natic's "Anli-Pilferage Syslem." The Sensormatic system has "'idespread application as an anti·lheft device in retail stores, libraries, art galleries, motels, and industr1aJ plants. • RESORT PLANNER Walter L. Spicer Spicer Joins Sun Valley DETROIT (UPI) -Chrysler Corp. said Its outlays for er- pansion and modemluitlon In 1970 will total about $300 mil· lion. ThL, will be about Hi percent leS.!i than the compa· ny's 1969 capital outlays. CLEVELAND (UPI) -Cle· \\rare Industries, Inc., has leased sites to build two multi· million do11ar warehouses In lhe Los Angeles and New York Melropolitan areas. The company markets plu1nbing. hardware, aulO{Jl(ltive and electrical sup- plies. The Los Angel es warehouse v.·ill be built in Irvine Park and the east coast plant near New Brunswick, N.J. LIITLE NE:CK, N.Y. (UPI) -A traffic monitoring system that can speed police response lo :iccident and crime calls as ll'Cll as improve scheduled traffic flow was announc4!d by Hazeltine Corp. The system can electronicall y identify and locate any moving vehicle in a fleet, regardless of its course or speed. It uses digitally coded c an n e d messages and a transpond~r in each vehic le. An electroruc roll call will provide a location fix for any given vehicle in the fleet. NE\V 'i'ORK IUPI) American Vel cro, lnc., said It will market in the United States a new, safe, glassless mirror made of aluminlzed polyester film . The mirror was developed by engineers of British Aircraft Corp. Even In door sizt>s, the glassless mir· ror is so light, it can be suspended by lightweight cUps, the company said. ANCHORAGE (UPI) F'orest Oil Corp. announced it will drill a wildcat oil well on thl' Kenai Peninsula of Alaska, :;;even miles northeast of the S1ranson River oil field. The well will be drilled to a depth o( 13.500 feet. The Swanson River field, discovered in 1957. ha~ produred more than 100 million barr~ls or oil. PITISBURGl-f fUPll \\'estinghouse Electric Corp. has obtained a $12 million order for a turbine-generatcr for a new power planl being built bv South Carolina Elec- tric & ·Ga.~ Co. on the Cooper River 15 miles f r om Charleston. The turbine will be built at 1.1.?st('r. Pa., and the generator at Pittsburgh. PHILADEl.PlllA IUPI) - Tnternational Utilities Corp. has boughl 'I'urner & Gee, '1nr.. an institutionai food 1 "'·holesaler at Jacksonville. Fla., for cash. Se111i11al' 011 Co1i11ty Gl'owtli Resched1iled \\'alter L. Spicer has been named director of real estate development of Sun Valley Co. Inc. lie wlll direct the plan- ning. de velopment, sales. and p r o p e r I y managem01t ac- livitics of the all-year rccrea· tional community. Spicer v.•ill leave his position :is a regional vice president for firs! American Title Insurance Company nf Santa Ana and president of its San Francisco sub~idiary opera· t ion~. NE\V YORK (UPI) -The huge Chase 1\-lanhattan Bank 's holding corporation had earn- ings of' $2.93 a share in 1969 <·ompared with $3.12 a share in 1968 because of losses on securities transactions. Earn· ings totaled $93.359 million as against S99.6 million a year erirlier. The 1968 per share earnings were resta!ed to reflf'ct a 50 percent stock di1·i- clcnd paid in ~tay 1968. I\ one-di'l y seminar dealing \1·1th bu~inc.~s gro1\'lh In Orani:;r County :in1I it~ a\. tcndant probll'111s 1rhich \1·a~ original!}' S('L lot• Frid,'\~· • .Jan . 16 has been rcsth~d'llr;d and \viii be held Fritlay, :'>'arch 6. 9 a.m. to 4:30 p,tn !l : the ne1v Airporte r Inn, 18i00 r-.lacArlhur Blvd., Newport Bench . Title!! "Current Pr.1blt•n1s in Finarrcial ~1anagcn1c11t."' the seminar, pre se nted by University of Cnliforn1a Ex· tension, lr\'inc, is coord·nated by Dr . Earl S. Ccncher. associate pmfcsoor of fi11;"1tl('C a n d insurance. Calirnn1i:1 Stale Cotlcg('. Long J;c<irh. Topics to be dc;1ll \1 Ith lrt· elude finuncial gro11·th, the turn-around i;ilu1:1tiot1, con· glon1crate ae<1uisition~ :ind b;ink ronsolidiilion. h 1111 k financing , and the role of in- du~trial rent esta te. Others on the day's program \1•ill be Smith 8. Davi s, finan· clal vice president. Southern California Edison Compsny: Jtobert \V. Bro\~·n, executive \•ict pre~ldent, F'trst \\1rstern Rank: Donald t;. t.icl.arnan, P;icific Coast a r ca ad· n1lni.stralor, S1n31l Busine~5 All M•kft-All Modeh Awl9fMlllll1 -f'lf<l<S "Where Sr r•ic r Mtlt1 th1 Di ff11•~c 1 " "l.W,_tt l tll. 1t111 J4f·MU L•1 Anti ltt •U $. ""'"''' Admini~lration. Ttohrrt F:. Thomas. count y ad· ministrati\'C officer: .J;uncs E. Shel ton .Jr .. corpo1·atr con· !roller. Bcckinan lnstrinnrnlo;, Inc.: Dr. Ronrild S. John~on, a.~sista nl to the vice president, financial m a n a gem c n t , Douglas Aircraf\; Dr. Charles \V. Huegy, vice president of finance and econo1nic plan· ning. Cleary, llitt and Co.: and John Ed. i\1urphy, president or the Irvine Indu stri al Cornplcx. Registration for the seminar n1ay be made at the UC Irvine F.xtension office. Rm . 1m Cra1vford Hall on the UCI carnpus. The fee is $50 and in· eludes lun('h. He is a gradnatr of Nr.\vport 'Harbor lligh and of the Univcrsily or Colorado. t;,~ L l\l crgc r Huntington Savings a n d Loan Assnci;ition witti six of. fi ces in So:.ithcrn California, including Costa f\·lesa, and Ventura Savings and Loan Association have been 1nerged into a new company to be known as A1•ro Sa\'ings and LQan A~ociation. lf the 1969 earning~ hod been reported strictly on banking cperations, as in the past. they would have amounted to Sl22.5 million ro1npared with $119AR million lhl" previous year. In addilion lo losses on securities transac- tions. the ne1"' basis requires a provision for loan losses in operating expenses. OCC Meeti11~ to Dra'v '-· NE\V YORK <UPI) -t~ran cis I. Duponl & Co .. a \Vall Stret>t house, announced TI1ursday it is in process of closing nine branch offices in Rn economy move. They are located at Quincy. f.lass .. Clearwater and Coral Gables, F'la., Be\'erly Hills. Calif.. New York City, London, Paris. Beirut and Kuwait. Top Co1111)ttli11g Ex1Jerts NEW YORK 1UP1) -Brun Tnternalional Recotape Corp. cf tlfaspeth. Long Island, a subsidi ary of Sam Goody. Inc .. has been appointed R distributor of JlCA phonogr~ph records by reason of the purchase nr the reeord and 1npe di vision of Bruno-NC\\. York. Inc., for cash and Sam Goody common .stock. A tv.·o-day meeting drf111·ing rornputer experts from educa- lion , industry and gov('rnmcnt scr\'icc will be held al Orange Coast College Jan. 2~. Entilled California Educ8- lional Computing Consortium, lhe 1necling is expected lo at· lract n1ore than :ioo computer rxecutivcs. OCC \YIU be host to thC' symposiurn. About 40 !1Chools, collrgcs nnd unh•crsities now belong to CECC, pt us govrmmentril :11.;encie~ ~urh :..,: the ll.S. l"orest Service. The nrgnniia· lion is designed to prov ide o ba~is for e~change of in- lonnation nnd lo h e I p ll)CmlK:rs keep obrcast of df'1 (llopm(lnts in the fi eld. lncludlng nr. John llopperton of ra\ifornia \Vcstern: Bernard Luskin of the Orange Coasl .Junior College Oistricl Office of Educational Development : :ind Richard Levi::tn of the Rand Corp . Dlslrlct Supcrinlendcnl Dr. Norman E. \Ynt.~ will w l' I come PITTSBURG!! IUPI\ delegates. hi ' s 1 c TI1e rtrst day Al.oro ~·ill Jones & LaugJ Jn • tee orp. renlure A numb e r of announced it will expand demonslrAtions l.ncludlng one capacity or its Hennepin, Ill., by OCC's data ce11ter; :ind l\\'o cold finish ing mill by ts per- rlemOl\stralions by UCLA on ~nt. A new high speed slitlrng I . b nl y "nd , con n1achint wlll ~ insLailed. rt>mo c JO c r ., · ------------1 sole system. The second day , ... 111 nptn at 9:30 a.m. with a discussion of lhe OCC :t}'Slcn1 by Jack King, district director of dtita prG- (;c:1slng. The syn1posi\11n v.·ill Final Stach In AP Hom• !clition1 1s· MIGHTIER THAN THE ('cN And the man wM knowa jiut how to turn the phr~e to get the tMlt out of the barb ii DAILY PIWT column- ist SydMJI HorrU. He htl$ been called the: modern • doll Hen r ti Menck e n. Jf vou're read11 for ht! me of tht' odd odj •ctive and t hou Q h. t • provoking prose to givs t,tott the need.ls ••• if 11ou want to find something to think about in what you read •.. if you have a .sen.st of humor, you b e l o n g with readeT1 who delight in teUing others what "Sud S<dd .. tri one of the nation'• most • quoted col umftl. Some Sample Barbs Recently Thrown By Sydney Harris: "One of the highest paid jobs Jn Amtrlc1 consi1t1 of standing up Jn front of 1 ml"' <ophont, separating the good recordt from the bad onts -and playing tht bad ones." .. It's a&d but true that while alcoholie1 are the best argument for abstinence, so many abstainers are equally effective ..,.... gument for a little drink now and then." "Most of the 1o-c1lled 'incompatiblllty' In marri1ge springs from the fact that to mo1t mtn, t•>t is an act; while to 111 women, It Is an emotion. And thls dlffer- tnct in attitude can be bridged only by tove.• ••nie sole difference betwee n 1 'dedica· ted crusader' and a 'nosy reformer' co~ sists in our agreem ent or disagreement with his objectives.'' •'The most explosl\/e combination In the workl con1ist1 of sincerity added to Ignorance." 11\Vhenever I am the recipient or an ez- cessively hearty handshake, I suspect fl.tr. Muscles is trying to sell something, hide 15nmething, or prove somethine:." Check The Editorial Page For This Signature It'll Help You Find The Latest Quotables Created By 'The Needler' For His Col- A Regular Feature of umn, the DAILY PILOT Yovr Hometown Dt ily Pffwsp•per ~JI:) t'l·!t"I Vir!I dl'ly of lhr 1nccUng 11 ill fu·1h1r" -.:r1 l"'T/11 n rl rl r r ~ :t f' , I l ... L •/•t:l I:. 1.1 1 a .u~ Itel:.~. rnd \lo·ifh ,. panel discu!Sion -·----------·1 sl :irung ot 1:30. •----------------------' i '--\ ...... -----~---~ 1 1 •• •. ·All 1,000 of Us Had a Busy Day Today ., We cr.eated and delivered ~noiher fresh edition of The DA ILY PILOT ... ·' 1'EAMWOllK produces e<ich day's all-new DAILY PILOT. Often special- ists like Thonias Forlune (left). whose beat is education, work wilh a slaff photographer like Patrick O'Donnell lo get the story bolh in \l'Urds ;ind pictures. The staff shot 70.000 pictures last year to illustrate lhe varii!d stor y of Orange Coast life. Nobody kno11·s how many lqcal stories \l'e wrote. Not even us. .... _ ...... CRi:ATIVITY helps advrrlisers trll their stories and sell their goods 111 the aff!urnl n1arkrt M'r\ rd b~· the DAILY PILOT. i\laury Gardner of d1~· pla¥ advcrt1s1ng tllpJrln1 rnl l11(1hs ovl'r layou t with Dl\JLY PLLOT st11rr :irt1sts Anne l!arnbli n 1 ll'f1 1 ;in1I Charlotte Andresen Thr ari they're di s· <'11ss1ng: v.•111 hr r<·;1dv If• appl'ar in 1hr ncv.·spaper only hours ;if1rr artist~ put final louehrc; on lhc lnyout and it is apprO\'cd hy the advertiser. a lo- cal retail mcrl'.ha nl. QUICK llA1'lOS pl:u·C' l!nl'.<.: of type. ads and cuts (the metal plates UM!d lo reproduce p1c1urr~l 1nro pvge forin s :is the day 's product begins tu take shape. Comµositor Arden fi.1alsbury is only one of a platoon of prinlcrs who ··bui ld" the news nagc_s under pressure or deadlines. work· ing against the rloc·k 1<1 bnng rcadC'rS the latest available informalion in each edition dunng lhe day. ..,,, ... ""' ......................... ~~· • TJELIVERY of thr nrwspapt'r Is 1 speed event, too. Conveyor bt:lls carry 1!1e papers through the mrulroom ""'here lbey are automatically lied 1n hundles of SO and tossed to v.•ailing circulation district managers {like Blaine Robrcf<.:, shll\.\n hrrr. trightl \\'ho speed !hem via 1 40-vehzcle fleet to earnrr!:i for 1lcl1ver~· ;\lailroom foreman George Arauz (left) find his ere\.\' r:1n n101 e 2U,000 newspapers an hour. VOLU!\1E is the v.·ord at the Copy Desk. DAILY PfLOT Copy Desk Chief Norman Anderson (right) aided by Tom Titus (background) and other copyreaders every day sifts, checks and cdils n1ore wire reports from worldY.'ide news services than the average weekly news magazine pub- lishes. Editors scan enough telephotos to wallpaper a living room every 24 hours. Speed, born or cxperiencr, helps them keep it all fresh, too. THE WORDS are ready, J\.1arjorie J ackson feeds them ililo a $'l5,000 computer. a DAILY PILOT investment in speed and accuracy, which uses a logic system to hyphenate words as it reads characters al the rate of 1.000 a second and punches a new lape whi ch will activate another machine for automatically setting type al high speed. The machines can set type at the rate of 6,000 lines per hour. PRESSURE here is both physica l and mental. Charles Haubrick, stereo- type for eman, checks impression 1nade by page full of type on a n1at squeezed by 1.800 pounds of pre!:isure per square inch in the n1at roller. J\.1at can be curved and used as a rnnld to form the cur ved plates ~·hich fit onto cylinders of high·spccd prlnling presses which print the DAILY PILOT. !l's parl of the quiek·paced daily process of reproducing 100,000 words for DAILY PILOT sub scribers to read. l\IODERN equipment helps the accounting department keep up with the "today" pace at the DAILY PILOT. Even as the day's newipaper is being sped lo its readers, Su1irue Chau vin begin~ feeding fi gures into a desk model computer's accoun ting ronsole. It helps keep track of billinAs for ads and subscrjplions. The mach ine. onP of several tied in to the main computer. helps handle S,000 accounl5 a month. ·' " ., 1 . ~;: RAPID communciation \s the name or the ganie. Surier1·1~or "Ni ta" Folsorn and her crew or "ad-visors" handle 1,000 transactions a week by phone , resulling in publication of 5,000 classified ads -\)'Ord::; which help people buy , sell, rent or I e a s e ... even fi nd lo~\ dogs. ~lany of U1e. DAILY PILOT 'S 150 phone lines are plugged in here. lhe cliissified advertising de· parlment, home or •·\Vant Ads" and D1mc·A·Lines. PICTURES, too, get the benefit of sk"illcd: crfiCieilf handling by 1naslcr1 craftsmen who re-photograph thcn1 and then transfer lhe images lo 1...; sensitized metal plates v.·hich are used to reproduce the photos as read- ers will sec !hem in lhe newspaper. Herc. Chuek Ryan takes a· really close look al a negal1ve \vh1eh ""'ill be used lo cteh the nnagc on the metal plate. l<'INISllED PRODUCT is checked by Ell\ood Anderson, press crew chi~r;: f've n as high-speed presses conllnue to roar <il 60,000 in1pressions per hout.• completing the day 's run on press units \1luch re present an 1nvestment ·bf SJ.5 million. Eleven·n1 an press crew \\•ill feed into these machines ll\1! equivalent of a roll of paper one page 11·idc ;_111dl 110.000 rnile.s long _j~ ~ printing the DAILY PILOT this yc<1r . .. ....... · .. , .. I • ... ~ .... ALrttOST before the ink is dry, lhe product of our busy clay ls tosi;cd deftly on your lawn or porch by one of our 700 newi;papcrboys who are important links in the chain of 1>eople it takes to bring you today's news and features today in the DAILY PILOT. And as our young independent merchants, like John ri.1clton here . make lheir deliveries, we're gcarlng up for another busy day -all I ,000 of us. ·' • The "'N ow' Ne ... vspaper for All The Co111n1unities ... ' O f The G1·o~vi11g Orange Coast ' L I I ..---...----------------------------------~----------·---------------·----.. ____ ---- • , · .. ;> .. · -=·~LY PILOT .. ·~-· . . Medical Students Miss Draft WASmNGTON (AP) -On· Jy medical students 'viii be eliglble for college deferment.s under the N i x o n ad· ministration proposal~ t o eliminate draft inequities. Afler a specified date, no other student entering college can claim a draft deferment on the basis of education. However, a Aophomore. junior, or senior with an ex- isting draft deferment when the new rules go inlo effect will be permitted to complete JJ.ls undergraduate schooling. Thi. is the thinking of Pen- tagon officials who have been shaping the Administration's proposals to do away with draft deferments in the stu- deot, occupational, and paren- tal categories. TREATED EQUALLY Secretary of Defense Melvin R. Laird said Jast weekend Pre!ident Nixon "wanl.:!I lo move in the direction so that all young people are treated equally and falrly." ;Proposed measures to carry out this objective will be reviewed by the National Security Council and laid before the Senale .Armed Services Commitlee n e.J t month with indications the ad- ministration will put them into effect as soon as possible. Just when th1s will be is still uncertain. Officials said young men having occupational a n d parental deferments at the time the more stringent rules take hold will be allowed to re- tain them. But, as in the case of 11tu- dent defennents, no new ones will be granted. Unlike the !itudent defer- ment, which officials say will permit exceptloos f<r pre- medical students, there ap- pears to be no prospect of any fiu1her defennents for job or family reasons. except where hardship might be involved. Job defennents have been ~avy in the field or teaching. paljce, and fire department .,,..._ • :AuthoriUes e x p t c t com· numlty needs can be filled adequately by former servicemen and no special deferments will be required in these areas. SAME REASONING The same reasoning applies to hard sklll jobs in the mechanical and t e ch n i c a I fields, It was sa id. As the United States scales dt>wn its commitment in Viet· nam a n d simullaneously reduces the Gvera\I size a( the Mmed ft>rces. fewer and fewer yoang men will be required for lhe draft. The Pentagon ex- pedg the draft will lake about 225,000 young men this year, a drop of 65,000 from 1969. The Jeyel !ihould gG down even fUJther Jn 1971. .&me Pentagon -ex p er t s believe the virtual elimination ol student defennents may In· dlredly help lhe flagging ROTC program w I t h sGme &\udenl6 possibly enrolling as a .iu!die against the draft in- teirupUng their schooling. AUlhorities 11ay provisions ma, be made for al\owlng )'fUPI freshmen who enter col· JeJe before they are 19 to f1n1llli that first college year. lldwever, they. wou1d then bbe' to report for milJlary .er.i.e. 1'ifrd bas st'l'tt5ed the new oslem will keep d r a f t dder°ID!Dls In efftet f o r ~ and hanlshlp """'"'· -'lRA\'El .•. YOUR .·.MATSON CRUISE AGENTS j~;;.,,..""""""" Hllll ltMf ~ ~'*"'C.IH,,.... _Pllot!I 644-4600 J Mond.,y, Ja11uar119, 1970 I a Prices Effective · tbru Tue•day, Jan. 20th Sean Engine Block Guarantee If any part f1il1 due tG def eels in 111ate· rial or , workman~hip wilhin !JO du~ .. from date·of ~ale or 4,000 mile!, which- ever occurs fir11t. we will repair or rr· place parts free of charge. Sears Has Over 950 Makes and Models ALL ARE GUARANTE ED Short EngineBlock• Priced with Tr•de-1 n for Chevy ''283"' or Ford "'292" •All cylinden are rebore'd and boned, $ and the crankshaft ;, reground. All New parts include pi slon~. rings, tin1· ing chain, camshaft l>earing Ask About Sears Convenient Credit Plans ~sears NEW TREADS* Tubeless Blackwall 13-inch and 14-inch siz co Your Choice ••. Any Size Listed $ Plus Fed ~ For SIZE f.E.T. EACH 6.50xl3 Cl2c 7.00xl3 34c 6.50xl4 40c S IZ E 7.00x 14 7.SOxl -1 R.OOx 1-1 Exe. Tax Each .\11d ~ Old Tires f .E..T. EACH 4lc 44e 45c Whitewallo Only '2 Mol'e Per Tire! •Retreads on sound lire hodiea Having Transmission Trouble? '"The Next Best Thing to a New Car" is a Sears Remanufactured Automatic Transmission I Installed J ~-------------------------------------------------, I IUIHA r.ur TA 8·4400, .521-4.530 I\ MONTI Gt 3-391 1 lONG UACH ME .5-0121 PKO WE M26l SANTA AH.\ Kl 7°3371 TOttANCE 542.1.SI I CAHOOA PAO: 340-0661 GltHO..ur rn ~·1004, o 4.4611 OlYMPIC, .soro AN B·.5211 POMONA ED 2·114.5, ,NA f ·.Sl61, TU 6·67.51 SANTA r! Sf'lllNGS 944-801 1 Ul'lANo 915.1917 I I COMf'JOH NE 6·2.581, NE 2~S761 HOLLYWOOD HO 9.5941 ORANGE 637 -?100 SANTA MONICA EX 4·6711 VALltY PO 3-8461. 984-2220 I COVINA 966.()611 INOlfWOOD QR 8°2.511 'ASADENA 681-3211, 3.51 ·4211 ~TH COAST PlAlA .540-3333 VfltMONT Pl 9·1911 ,________________________ _ ___________________ , Sears Shop Nights Monday thro119h Saturday 9:30 A.M. to 9:30 P.M., Sunday 12 Noon to 5 P.M. "Satisfaciion Guaranteed or Your Money Back" l ~ ___ L _____ ---1.-':IL__'.__ ____ ....__ _____ _.__ _____ .......1....._ -----------------·----------------------------____________________ ,,_...., OAILV PILOT !:J 500 Talies Its Toll: Foyt Wins JARRING TACK l E -The West's Greg Brezina (55) and Rick Volk (25) put the clamps to East end Jackie Smith (81) in the Pro Bowl Sunday ¢ter· -noon. The East recovered the loose ball, however. The West came from behind and leads the series, 13-7. To Make Lips Smack County Distance Flash " Has All the Ingredients ~fature beyond his 17 years, boasting academic and athletic talent in the ex- traordinary range, El Modena High's Dave White has all the ingredients to make a C-OJlege track coach smack his chops over the thought that ttiis fine pro- spect might someday be running for him. White ran a 4:15.1 mile a month ago in a meet at Fullerton. A week later he covered two miles in 8:59.7 a1 Long Beach. More recently at Occidental College he ran in the high school three-mile, winning GLENN WHIT~ ..,. ____ _ JJ'HITE WASH --------- In 14:19 (an average of 4:46.3 per mile ). Then after 30 minutes rest he came back in the open U\ree-mile. finishing second to George Scott with a 13 :27. White is described by Jim Schultz, his coach, as having the emotional maturity of a 24-year-old. Perhaps that stemmed from the death of his father six years a~ -a tragedy that resulted in the family moving from San Bernardino County to Orange County. Dave is also described as a serious- minded young man who knows wtiat there is to be done and sets out to do it with no fooling around. For exampte; as a sophomore he was running the 1320. Yet his training pro- gram was designed to build him up - prepare for the distant future rather than the immediate. As a result he finished sixth (3;08) in the CIF Southern Section championships. However, Dave was undaunted by finishing out of tht money. As Schultz puts it. "he enjoys running and enjoys competition. He doesn't run as a means to anything because he has an almost 4.0 grade average -he could get an academic scholarship easlly." He is president of the area's teen-age Republicans an d represented t h a t organization on a trip to Washington D.C. last summer. \Vhite, who aspires to be a laWyer, runs 100 to 140 miles weekly in preparation for the upcoming prep campaign. He'll probably run In the Times Indoor Games' prep two-mile next month, where he may meet West Torrance's great Ron Johnson. The latter covered a mile on the boards in 4:15.7 Saturday night at the Sunkist Invitational. Schultz believes White will be running the two-mile in the 8~40s before the end of the season and C<>ncedes that he may be within reach of the national prep r ecord of 8:41, held by Steve Prefontaine. With his determination and ability, it would seem that Dave White may indeed reach that plateau. In fact, with that last name, how can he miss? * * * John Lawson beaL Olympic cibampion Kip Kelno In the mile and Gary Power upset Olympic gold medalist Wiilie Dav· enpcn1 In tile hurdles. Yet somehow Bob Seagren wa1 given of#staliding performer's award for Satur· day nJgbt's h:tdoor meet at tht Sports Arena. Seagren pole vaulted 17.0lh: and beat no one of any lnttm.atiooal 1tatu1. At the same meet. Costa-.Mesan Owen Gormao finished sixth In the senior mile .ntb a 4:53. He ran fourth most of the way but faded·at the end. Gorman cited &oo slow o( a 1tart and Jack of knowledge on bow to nm1on the boards for bit dl1tant flnlth. Too, he ran In (and won) a flve-mUe race al Westminster Blgll that morning. Title to Bourdase ARCADIA -John Petraglia needed' a strike to win the Greater U:ls Angeles Open bowling tournament. But he got on· ly nine pins -and Ed Bourdase of Fresno got the crown. , Yaz Opposes Flood's Suit; Seeks Ballot BOSTON (AP) -Carl Yasvumski, Ure Booton Red Sox' $130,000 a year slug- ger, opposes Curt Floo:t's court challenge of baseball's reserve clause and wants a~ poll of all major league players to determine their feelings. Yastrzemski called for a poll in a weekend letter to Marvin Miller, ex- ecutive director ol the Major League Players Association. The Boston outfielder noted that the association's board voted 25-0 "to give full support to Curt's legal action, in· eluding helping him obtain the best legal c1nmsel avallable and fin an c i a 1 I y assisting him." "That backing should never have been given to Flood," Yastrzemski said in ex- panding on his Jetter to Miller. "Thls i! what bothers me and I'm going to fight it. Personally, J am against what Curt Flood is trying to do because it would ruin the game. "What I think as a person isn't th.at im· portant, though. lt's wtiat every player in the association thinks that is vitally im· port.ant. I want every player to vote on this thing. It's our right. It's our right, we're all involved. We were never coo- suited and should have been." Yastnemski, "1lo supported th • association in the pension strike last spring, said he wants a secret ballot taken in spring trainJng so 0 every player has a chance W'express his desire'." The three-time American League bat- ting champion and the 1967 most valuable player said he would abide by any such vote. However, he said he would quit the a.ssociatibn if Ule body refuses to take 11.tCh a vote. Flood has filed a federal court suit challenging the reserve clause, which binds a player to the club holdtng bJs con- tract. The $90,000 a year outfielder decid· ed on the suit after tie was traded by the st. Looi• cardinals to the Philadelphia Pltillies. , "I've talked with many -p1ayers, both active and inactive, and all of them were shocked to hear the association backed Curt Flood without taking a vote of the full membership," Yastrzemski said. Milwaukee to Get Pilots? MILWAUKEE IAP) -Baseball Com- missioner Bowie Kuhn said Sunday there is a strong possibility the Seattle-Pilots mlg'ht be moved to Milwaukee ii the American League club cannot iron out its financial problems. Kuhn, who $p()ke al the Wisconsin Baseball Writers Association's 17th an- nual Diamond Dinner. said "there is a terlous problem emerging In Seattle." The American League has given Stattle owners until Thursday to straighten out their £inancial affairs. I "There is a possibility ol a franchise transfer," Kuhn said. "When and 1f there is a transfer, one thing is certain -Milwaukee will receive serious COIJSidcratloo." "l assure you ••• that there is a very deep affectioo. for this community as far as I am concerned," the conunlsstoner told a crowd of more than 700 persons. Kuhn took pain& to say that he was not promising this fotmer major league city anything. Dallas ia also atuclying the Pilot franchl ... "I lvish T could bring you some guarantee lhat would light.en your hearts tonight, bul I can't," he said. He listed several factors in Milwaukee's favor In obtaining another team. "ls there an obligation from baseball to Milwaukee?" he uked. ''Legally, no. But there is a moral obligation to a friend." Among factors in Milwaukee's favor, according to Kuhn, are a m:rjor league lradtUon, coolinuing Jan mt.rost, 1 "devoted group of people working in Ule ln\e1"51 ol Milwaukte baseball" and 1 stadlum. • Gurney Sixth; T wo Hur t in Cr as hes By DEKE llOIJLGATE ot ... """ , .. ., '"" RIVERSIDE -Dan Gurney started on the pole. but he wp out. of contention after 10 miles ol the Motor Trend 500 had been run Sunday. . Forty-four cara started the race, but after 150 laps, ooly 21 remained and j11St. 10 were running when the race ended. Jim Cook, 48, ol Norwalk, veteran local driver who ,,-as the 1963 Pacific C:oast NASCAR champ, was in crlUcal condiUon at a RiversJde hospital following his 114 mile an hour crash into a stack of hay bales at the end of RiVerside's Jong back atraightaway. Another injured driver, Buddy Young of Fairfax. Va., was in good condition with a mild concussion and possible broken arm in the same hospital. Gurney. fiv~time winner of this race, sat in the pits for seven lap.i while his crew tried to find what was causing brake fluid to leak oot of the master cylinder. They located a faulty c>-ring, but by the Ume lL1was replactd Gurney had kissed his chances to ·win goodbye in his first appearance for. the Plymouth fac· tory team. Instead, the race waa won by A. J. Foyt in a Ford at an average speed of 96.711 mph alter Parnelli Jones' Mercury quit 25 laps from the end. Jones brought the fans to their feet as he charged up through the field from his starting position -35th in a 44 car field -to take the lead by the 43rd lap. He led four times for a total of 87 laps. Gurney, meanwhile, drove steadily to a sixth place finish despite numerous pit slop.s. In the winner's circle after the race, Foyt expressed hla pleasure at con· quering hiB personal Riverside "jinx." "I always wondered if I could win a race here," Foyt said after his victory, worth $19.100. "I've spent monlhs in a hospital {he was seriously burt in an ac- cident dwing this race in 1965), and just • about everything else has happened to me." Foyt finished four seconds ahead or USAC stock tar champion Roger McCluskey in a Plymouth and I I seco~ in front. of NASCAR super speedway king Leroy Yarbrough. FoyL's Ume was five hours, 18 minutes, g seconds. Gurney woo ,2,500, including $400 in qua!Uying money that was taken a\lo·ay fron:i .{ones because NASCAR or· ficlals had ruled he had used "ineligible" tires \\'hen he qualified on the pole. TM UJ!f#Wrl In svnd•1'• $QO.n\U~ rac•: 1, A .• F11v1. H0115l11n, Jl?,100, 9t.111 rn.p.t1 .. F11r.i Torino. 1, Rll!ltl" M~u1k•1. Tvctan. st.to>. ltl l•o .. "1.t~" .s::e~.~"· c111urnt1i1, S.Cu 11.3'JO. Jtl le~, FOf'd Torll'ICI. ~. Oon~I'" A!l!ton. Hu•1lown. Ale .. M,500, 1f0 l•PI. ForO Torl110. S. R_l(lll•d PtllY. R111dleman, N.C., J1,'5(1, I .. IAPI• Pfvtn111111! Supotr8lrd. 0. ~n Gurney, COiia Men. ,,,J)(I, lM lep"' P m h ffl'81rcl-7, Nt I h~H••· Cll•r1011e, N.C., 11,150, 119 l•PJ, OodP,. t. FrldlY Jeuler. Cll1!tuoooo1. Sl.SOO. 116 l•P~· C~nro!e!. t, Jtrrv Ol!Ytt, Concord. C1tlt .• llrtCO• 11f t111s. Ok11ml>b!le. 10, Ok~ Gukl1tr1N1, M1nl!1l!tn 8Hth, Jl,JJO, 110 taos. Cllevrok!I • Is It the Last Pro Bowl? West Shoots to 16-13 Win Gabriel's Aerial Paces Comeback In NFL Finale LOS ANGELES (AP) -The long, long, football season is over, untll swnmer, anyhow, anid many a neglected housewife will breathe a sigh of relief. But it went out with a bang Sunday in the 20th annua l Pro Bowl as the National Football League cloaed its books on the game as it has been i:resented for two decades. Game management envisions next year's Pro Bowl: With the merger, it coold be a virtual NFL-American Foot- ball Leagve all-star entanglement. The West won, lfi..13, on a note of drama .that came with 72 seconds re- maining .... a perfectly executed 2tryard pass from Roman Gabriel, of. the Los Angeles Rams, the NFL'a Most Valuable Player, to CattoU Dale of the Green Bay Packers, who has been doing this sort of -thing 'Cot 10· yeah. - The baldinl Dale, an ox-Ram, cradled the ball In the loll e<rn<rol the end.zone. just a slop ir 10 from out ol bowlds, and that was it. 1be East attact, guided by Cleveland's Bill Nelsen and New York 's Fran Tarken- too, hid bedeviled the mighty West defense all afternoon. And the East defen.w had otymied and held the West lo just ... touchdown , Curkiusly, the_game turned around on a two.p!Mt safety by the West with less than .five minutes remaining. A bad center paas saned over punt.er Bobby Walden's head. The Plittsburgh kicker· out-scrambled Atlanta's Greg Brezina for the ball. 'M>e safety made the ICOl'e 13-9 and the East had .. punt. Detroit's Lem Barney ran it back 22 to the West 45. Eight plays later, ipcluding key gains by Baltimore's little used Tom Matte, the West had the ballgame. Dallas' Mel Renfro was the de.tensive man on Dale. Renfro needed no defense from the East coach, Tommy Fears, but he got jt, "1bere just is no defense on a perfectly thrown ball and a great catch," said Fe111s, who caught a lot of them in his great years as a Ram. Fears went back to the play that preceded the errant pass from center that led to the safety. On a vital third and three, Jim Marshall of Minnesota smeared Nelson fer a 12-yard loss to the East 17. Atlanta's coach, Norm Van Brocklin, the West coach and of course another former all-time Ram great, got the game bait Chicago's Gale Sayers wa~ named the back of the game, an honor many felt could be shared with Gabrlel, and Dallas' George Andrie won Lineman-Of the Game launls. * * * Flrtt ..,.. .. , 1111 WM• .. " ll:uslll~ Vl•dl'O• "' "' P•nna v•rd-at "' '" 'l1lurn )'lrdlOI " .. Pis-IS.2'·1 lS.21·1 Put1ls ... ·~ FumblfJ list • ' Y•rdl ptn1!11ed " • LA Falls, 106-100 DETROIT (AP) -While Jerry West and Elgin Baylor head for Philadelphia and Tuesday night's National Basketball AsaociaUon all-star game, the rest of the Los An"les Lakers wlll be thinking further ahead. toward the playoffs. Aft.er trailing Dttroft by u many as 17 points in the fourth quMl.er, the Lakers 1tormed back-but...,. out of time ., the Pistons held on for 110&-100 triumph. IJl'I Tt ... llole DEFENSI VE RUSH -The Easi's George Andrie (73) puts the pres- sure on West quarterback Roman Gabriel (18) in the 20th annual Pro ~wl game Sunday at the Coliseum. Pressure failed to stop Gabriel, however, as he came through with a fourth quarter touch· down pass to Carroll Dale. and the West won. 1~13. Golfer rut llpswing Maturity Aids Douglass In Phoenix Open Win PHOENIX (AP) -Dale Douglass, one of a flock of tour regulars who have come into their own in the' last couple of years, · said a touch ol maturity may be responsible for the rise in his golfing fortunes. • "The last two years have been marktd by a significant change," the articulate, soft-spoken Douglass said Sunday after taking the title in the $100,000 Phoenix Open golf loumament. "I've always managed well. manage<t my game well. But now P.m jllst pla)'ing better. And I'm putting much, 1nuch bet- ter. That makes all the difference. "Maturity may have something to do with it. I'm getting a little old not to bave matured some," the S3-year'1)1d said. Douglass, a lean and lanky mountai.ne!er now playing out of Everareen, Colo., charged , out ol a tightly bunched field with a final round 66, five under par. Douglass, a 6-2, t60-poonder, scored hit first tour victory lalt year in the Azalea Open, a ·minor tournament. then captured the Kemper Open en route to the best year oClils 10-yeat pm career. lie finlahtd the season with $91,500 in money winnings and gained a spot on the United States• Ryder C\lp team. A money .Up, given hhn by·m.mbm of the opposing British team 1fler those matches, incidentally, was taken from his golf bag before his final round. Douglass finished at 271, 13 under par on.the 6,76.S-yard, par 71 Phoenix Country Club course, and has a one-stroke margin over veteran Howle Johnson and Gene Littler, the defending champion and third. round leader. Finl! 1tort1 in •nd ~., WlMIMJ In 11'1<! UDO.cot Pllolnht Offn• D~lt Oouol••i-S:I0.000 71-66-6M6-.111 G.,,1 l !Hltr, S9,7JO •1*41·~12 ' Howlt Joll5e:, ">1$0 ,,-61 .. t'*-j~ om wefik , S3. 10 7).67410-1 lf:Ult M or, S3,JIO 1111-• Lvnn. n . 10 11 l · vt HUI, S3.HO ff< 1l • 1 M•1~· u,no ,,..,.. 1-m r:-;:~,~~~~.,U"00 H:tf~ Jl=Yl Burt G<.ene. S),UO '4-?1-tt'_?!:-l'l · ~~·C!Jifr.:f.=:i; 'il!lfo J1:HJ§JQI ~:~?~J::::!tlll IW" ~ Jim Wl~"-tt. \',ijo *' ~ 'ttr,., DUI, 11, 41..._.l SllYt SPra1, Sl.JlO !f.lfi l J1dt EWll'.JI, $1.U) 10o ·f!-'? Ir.II ~/;lli:'."ll:.Jl·'~ ll:l , f:io11 '"""' ,.,,. ... ~. "" ,._,,_.,, ! Mac MClt!l'ldOl'I, Stl:J ff.11-ff.H-.2ti ~:w, "~7,',!"· "Ii Jtj':~1 I 310r;1 "'lf11U1lr1,1'1 lf 1t t~ \1rrv Hiii..,..,, F.'° 11 1 • 1-1' ,,,.. Aa<on. S1 0 ~ ,. ~~ {ft~~H•JflO ll ' 1't l~l 1*-ifrt111: .. ~ ~""" "--· s}}t o:. ~"~e;. .. " .. tttt I Qo1 Mitr~"'· U2t 6f. J\:-".l'~~~N' ,, .... J"rv.,'-· # !e11n JttQb1. ' 10-1 • I ~ ,----··-~--~--~----·-------------------------·--·------~--~-------~-------·------ -- l I l I 'ff DAILY PILOT Monday, January l9, 1970 :.CdM Nears • • !Rare Sweep Only Ga111e •••• Or Is It~ \In Aquatic s By ROGER CARLSON Of tllt DellW Piiot S!'ff Corona del Mar High School's aquatics 'teams are now in a position to do what ooly one other team in the 25-year history of CIF water sports has been able to do -that to win the. CIF swimming cham· pionships in v.•ater polo, the CIF s~im relays and the CIF swimming champion· !hips in one year's space. _ . El Segund o High turned the trick 1n tH.8, 1957 and 1958 and now coach Cliff Hooper's Sea Kings are in the driver's seat after overtuming\Palos Verdes Fri· day night at Beverly Hills High School fo r ....,. tbe CIF Relays title, 48-40. His water pol o contingent chalked up 'an undefeated yea r in stomping to lhe CIF championship in December. The Sea Kings pulled it off Friday, despile entry in only four varsity events. However. first place counts 14 points and the Sea Kings garnered three blue ribbons for 42 points and added a fou rth place to stun Palos Verdes. The 4 x 100 freestyle group of Bret Bernard. Bill Stenhejem, Kurt Krum· pholz and Bruce Black set a meet record with a :.i.22.6 ('locking. Later. the 4 x 50 breast stroke learn of Jeff Hillman, Brad Jackson, Garth Bergeson and Krumpholz won in 2:00.8 and then the 6 I 50 freestyle team turned in the fir st place effort required to win it all for Corona. Bernard. Hillman. l:itenhejem. Rich Hyland, Krumpholz and Black made up the team and they turned in the 300 yards jn 2:18.1. : Newport Harbor picked up a coupl e or i;econd place finishes along with a third Jmd filth to place third in the Cee com· petition behind champion Sumy Hills. · The Orange Coast area was shut oul in Bee competition through six places. '. Miraleste won the Bee title. Area swim teams continue non-league •cti'oo with the first league meets slalcd for Jan. 28. ' V•,..ltJ • , ~ ~¥ -l, Rlldl9od$ ?. "11tMim l. L.•ktWood 4. 1111 Mllr t8trgeson. J•eklOno DON'T LOB IT I -Costa Mesa 1-Iigh basketball coach E mil Neeme suffers his fif:st., setback \vhen he orders his players not to lob pass, then they do 1t anyway. I TOLD YOU ! -No\v Neeme's anguish turns to anger as the soft pass is intercep ted by an opposing pl ayer, leading to a key basket ~ the waning moments of a bitterly fought contest. !I'm.rd, 8 1•ck , : l .'-':l • ',. 100 trN -1. Cor-clel Mllr Cl tr1111d. Slenh .. lflft, k t\lmptlolz, a lack) 2 • .t.Mkeim J. No!rt Otme. T ime: 3:2!.6.!M"I ret;0nll • • lt m ti.ck -1. Wllsol! 2. Hoo\ler I. P•lot. Vltfd,.._ )1..,.: I:"·'· fMftt rtf;Ul'dl . • 11 JO IJy-1, P•lot Vlrd9' 2, lt.lllCl>O "l•ml~ J. l uronY Hllllc, Time; 1:4 .2. · • l so l:N'te•I -l. Coront del Mir (Hlllmt<'. ~•ct.ton. 8tr1_,, krumpholzl 2. L1kew00d l. r oot11UI. Timi: 2:00.L • 6 •SO fret -1. CorOlll Gel M1r (BtrMrCI, HUlm•n, $\fntllltm, 11v111111, krumllholl, ll••ck) 2. t'•llll V~rdel J. f.t 11twnlt. Tlnw: 2:11.J, • • ,. 100 noo ....o•ev-1. -""'"' m. 2. Su11t1y Hiib l. ti~~ Tl~; l':S4.,~ CorttMI Ml /Mr .. '1. PINI• Yl!l'CIHS (I) J.1rMlllt !mJ:: •. ~bon Ind Redll ndt 24 .. c11 J. 1.t11•WOllll 11111 I~ me t2 ue11. • • 4 " 50 n...:111¥ -l , Mlr•lal1 2. l(irnn\1v 3, Es11~ ti1 Cl. 8 11Merm1n, Wt llef, $tundtul mt: 1:~.t. (Mid rKOrdl • • 1111 free -1, C~tt V111ev 2. Mir• Co.1t1 l. l;f)rOllt Clll ~r !Ofto, OllVI<', ICnimPllOIL Loltr) {l.,w: l:~.J, CMMI rtc:orcll I • :ii so ck -I. Mlr111S1e '1. Mir• Ctnt• J. W "°" .f. E•t•nc 1 (l. llt!ttrnw~. Lovi""''• Wel•l r. KIWI~) Tlmt : 1 :Jl.l. , ' r. JO "v -1. Cretc11n11 Vt ll.., 2. Mir11rst1 >.. Ml~ Cosl•.:... Time: l :U.I. • ••SO iilf"' -I, L•wan 2. V1lenc.l1 3. Mlr1l'"te. Tlf':: J'~ -1. Ml~ Cos It 2. El Oor-3. Cot" MHI IW1ldlllcl\, McAntnv. ll~JUIOI'< MICLe•n. c,,,,...,,,, .. Jlkh1r! J .. E1t1nd • (R. •ncl L. tl!ll· fi';::',~";,2ftw•bt. wer1tr. St~1. $m•llw90dl • • 100 ln<kt medltv -l. Cnlllo<:9nl• Vt ll""' 2. t •W"" l . ICfnnlld'v Tlmt: •:02.3. IMMI record). F!n•I korl"": L Mlt•lt•I• 4' /. Mlr1 C<Kll 45 J. -'resceril1 Vt ll1¥ 42 t. lt111en J . 5. 1Ctnnee11 21 '-f•lt~l1 20. ,_ • 1 x so medttv -1. Sunnv Hiiis 7. A$nC'llO AltmiTO£ ,_ H•Woort Hlfbw 1$nvOtr. $m(l'h, W1U, .... mtrl T_,,.: 1:52/1 "l~-4 .: 100 !'ft -1. Sulll'IV HM .. 2, NIWl'O!'I .,_. ~nv.s..., Smllll, Wi ll, ·F"•rm.,.) 3. Aolll1111 HUii, lme; .\:f ·,:0 JO bide: -l, S\lllllV Hiiis 2. £1ll11<l• ILltt<el, .,Ye111i.r, O.vl1, GrtnO 1. L1kt_, J. N•wpDrt .,~rbor CO'Ellnu, WlltOlt, RoblMIOtl, Quirin), Tlmt: J.:SJ.O. (Mff! R..:GnlJ, l.a\: ... ;t,.~lm-;: \·,,~f~cho Al•mlloa 2. f oothl!! J, · • • .n e11l -1, 5unnv Hllls 2. Loi AllOl l. Vf'n. ~~·;.. .sli"1r''t2'~·t l.v•rlv 11111$ 1. Nnoort H•r-ft>'f !I...,. lnClro,..,, !>m!lh, 5nvder. 81ldllller, ~•rmerl 3. A111<1\o Aleml!Cll. Tim.I· 2:11,•. • 1 • 100 lndO med!ty-1, Foo"'ll 2. t DOr•do l. l"elot. V"""'1 S. E1!..,(l1 tL!INI, Wt-bill<', 01vl1, Cir~}. ~· Mtrlnt /O'Connell, NeUnn, HootlcJr., .,1FIM\· ~,;,.•:~$·,, Su1>nv Hltll ,1 2. lll•ric~ !l1mllC11 M 2. Newoort Hu·tlor 32 4, Faotll\11 XI 5. l;tMweod 20 6. Aolll>!O Hiiia I,, Saddlehacl\: Seeks to Halt Losing Streak Sadd\eback Co!lege'~ basketDa!l tea1n Will seek to halt a three-game losing Weak Friday w-hen the Gauchos host College of the Canyons at l\.1ission Viejo Hi gh. :The Gauchos fell to upstart Victor Valley. 83-82, Saturday night on the \Vin· ntrs' court. '.Coach Roy Stevens' club held an 8(}..79 lead with a minute remaining, but a Sad· dleback pass was picked off by Vietor Valley and turned into two points. :Saddleback follo\\•ed with a two-pointer td regain the lead. But with 16 seronds Jeft in the duel , Victor Valley scored the game-winning basket. "We played a pretty solid game," said Stevens. "We didn't get the breaks." Stevens singled out the play of foM\'ard Bill Noon, who led all scorers with 31· points. Also praised were reserve Bob Lilley, who to.%ed in eight fi rst half PQint.s and Randy Lawrence who played e:.,other consistent game and hit 12 pqipls. tJoon and <:am Smith shared rt· bq!.lnding honors for the Gauchos \\'ith 10. Jo~ard Bill Hyder Jed Victor Valley with 23 points and 17 rebounds. As a team Saddleback shot well, hilting 41~1 percent of its shots, connecting on 33 1)(;79 from the field. Victor Valley hit 31 fil ld goals in 72 attempts tor 43 percent. From the free throw line, the Gaucho! i:Nhed in on 16 of 21 charity throws (55 percent) while Victor Valley connecttd 21 times in 26 tries <8,4 percent). SIM""'"' U'J Yktw vao., 11n ·-.. ft ,. ., " fl " tlJ )2 1 -JI Sin'!• • • • " l dw•nl• • • • • 11}'<1•' • ' ' 'J ·~"" ' I • • .... ~ ••• • (hfltltl>llll • • I • AIC:tlt "°" ' . ' • Lt wttnct . . ' .. erown ' ' ' ' ::r • ' ' ' Mllll!> • . ' .. ' • • • • ..~ ' • • • L111ty • • ' • Tot•l1 ,, ll , •• , 1'•1'1\ )1 "' ,. u Ht tttf ..... ; VlclOr V11t.r d. !Hdltf.ifdf «! ' Pirates Bacl\: In Title Race; Nail 611-58 "'in Ba·ck in the thi ck of the South Coast ... Conference basketball scramble, Orange Coast College faces San Diego l\1esa \Ved. nesday night in the Pirates' gym. Coach Herb Livse.y's club downed Mt. San Antonio Saturday nig ht, 61·58 at OCC. to run its conference record tQ 2·2, a game and a half behind front-running Fullerton. The Pirates can gain more ground \\'ednesday night if they defeat Mesa ·(I• 2) and second place Cerritos (3-1) can knock off Fullerton. The Cerri tos·FJC cont.est will be played in the former's gym . In Saturday night's victory, the Pi rates maintained control of the game all the iw·ay, leading from the opening tipoff. Tile only scare Orange Coast received came with five minutes remaining in the game when 6-6 Ci!nter Ricli Stickelmaier fouled out. A closing spurt by the Moun· ties cut the final defi cit to just three points. Orange Coa st Jed at the half, 34--ll. Sophomore forward Phil Jordan bounc· ed back from a poor performance against Cerritos last week to lead the OCC vic- tory. Jordan had 20 points and did a fi nl' job on the boards, hauling in 15 rebou nds. In the Cerritos game last Wednesday, .Jordan fouled out midway through these- cond hal f. after scoring only seven points. Guard Troy Rolph and Ron Love were credited by Livsey for playing good floor games. Rolph. playing \\'ith a broken jaw, hit 11 points and played an out.stand ing defensive ga n1e. Jin1 Kindelon follO\Ved Jordan in the scoring departn1ent with 18. Or111tt COl$l Ull Ml, S•n Af!tCf!NI (SI) 11.olpt> Klf!dtlOn Sllcktlmaltr Jon:!.n Lcvt 19 II pl Ip s I o 11 1 ' ~ 11 J J J ' ' 1 ) 20 0 J 3 J !iu•!Ord C•noo" ~hetman 11.&m•ev G~""" W•,~!•! Wi•,,i•w•kl Tc1al• ,. 'l u 61 lC!Oi\ !i~1111me: OCC J1. Mt 5"C JC. 19 II "' Ip ! ' ? JS 2 l 1 s 1 ' l ,, • ' J 10 • 1 J 10 1 0 I i l 0 1 ~ ?l1SU!8 UCI S l VllnnlCl'S Still Winl ess UC Irvi ne swin11n1ng fortes \\'1 !1 be see king U1cir first victor~· of the seaso n Friday and Saturday in dual mffi com· petition. Frlda.v afternoon !he Anteaters lr<1vcl lo UC San Diego and on Saturday 1norn· ing they host the jXl1cnt UCLA Bruins in the campus pool with action getting under v•ay at 11 o'ck>ck. In a dual 1ncet at San Diego Slate last Saturda y. lr~·ine dropped its t111rd straight decision, 59-46. Lone bright lights for coach Ed Newland's squad were r.tike 1\lartin and Rich Eason. r.tartin ""on the l.000 and 500 ya rd freestyle events wl11le Eason copped the 100 yard freestyle. " NOT AGAIN! -Poor ol d Neen1e . Son1e da ys it doesn't pay to gel out of bed. Once again it's inter· cepted. Again the opponent scores. l·To"•ever. Cos ta iVJesa survives the mishap to \vin. 7&-70. over Foun· lain Vall ey. \Vhether Neeme survived the ordeal is a matter for conjecture. however. Cage Powers l(eep Rolling By Associated Prt1sR 'You can't kee p a good man dO\\'n • , • f'\'<'n 1f you J.;ick hin1 Jn U1e head. Chnrlie Da\·is was knocked e-0ld by an err<int NorU1 Carolina root. but can1c back to tomplete a he:tlfy, 34-poin! perfonnance as \Yake Forest spilled the sel"cn1h-rankcd Tar Heels, 91·00, in col· Jegc bnskctball Saturday. 111 other aclion involving basketb111\'s rlite. top-ranked l}CLA, second·ranked Kentucky. fifth -ranked Ne"iv Mexico State 11nd J()lh rankll<l J\1arquette played to lnnn. L'f'LA S<J11;ishrrf Loyola o( Ch1cagn 91'< 7:.!. l\f'Olucky rippt.•d Tcnntssrc fi8·52; ' ~1e\1" ~·lexioo State beat 83-iS and ~1arcruellf' Southern l lUnoi~ 67-57. Hardin.Shumons turned bac k Notre Drunc beat Duqucsnl'. 82·G6. Da\iS was d1\lng for a Jo"sc hell \1hc 11 he accl!Jt>ntall.v caught Jin1 Dolaney's root. Davis bl:ickrcl out as the blow sent h1n1 skiller1ng Howe,.·er, some sn1ell1ni: s.1lts rev1\'ed hin1 and he finished out the rc1noinlng nun1;1cs (If ll1l' 0011test. Anolhr r Top Ten 1e111n Wll!i burned dur· Ing !he \\'l'f'kr11d as firecl·Up SL .loseph '11 Pa .. 111ud hy D::i11dy Danny Kelly, startled c1,qhlh·ranke(! na\ idson. 00-81. Kflntucky liprinted to i~o. 13 in a row dl'~ritl' Tcnlll's:-ct's hall t'Ontrol tactic s Dan lssel scored 28 po inti for Kenlucky. Jin1 Eng lnncl had a game-high 29 for Tcnnes:iec. J 1111111.v Collins SC'orcd 30 points to lead Ne" ;\fe.xico State's triumph al)d Dean :O.lorn1nlnger had l9 points in fl.iarquette's :.uccess. \Vashi ngWn picked up a win Satunlay over U1c coldshooling Oregon Ducks. l)rcRon didn't score a field goal in the first 1212 min ute! of the second half, nfter leading 13·19 al halftime. Oregon Stale and \Vash1ngton Slate. ac· qulrl'd 2.2 Pac-8 records after Orego11 State rolled over !he Cougars SG-M Satur- day. It's Ho-hmn Effort; UCI Wins, 72-70 By BOWARD L. BANDY Of tM Dllry 1"11't Sutt POMONA - lt was another ho-hum perf<lnnance by the UC Irvine basketball team Saturday night. After losing to UC Riverside Friday by a two-point spread, the Anteaters came back to win by the same margin Satur. day evening against Cal Poly (Pomona), 72-70. Ironically, coach Tim Tlft fffls his squad played one of its best games of tbe year in lo.!ing but "didn't deserve to win the way we played tonight (SatW'day}. "Jt an balances out, t guess," the Anteater mentor &nalyud following the Pomona victory, "but our kids looked tired out there tonight. "I was pleased with the way they came back at the end after being down but ·we still didn't get the good shots and (Steve) Sabins and (Je!f) Omningham were mis.sing shots tonight." The Irvine varsity will rest until next Friday night 1vhefi it faces UC Davis in the first game ot Ute Cal Aggie tourna~ ment in the northern city. Game time is 8:30, preceded by a game between UC Riverside and UC San Diego. Winners and losers play on Satun;fay. The season.Jong problem for the Anteaters was evident from outset d the contest Saturday night: Too much height tor the opposition under the baskets. In many instances Irvine would get one ahot and no rebound. James Dunn, outstanding scorer for Pomooa, was held to three field goals and five free throws by the ck>ose guarding of Sablnii and Mike Barnes. Fonner OCC and Costa Mesa High star Bart Carrido likewise had difficulty in finding the hoop, alll!ough he brought tire Broncos back into contention several tJmes in the ~ half. The lead changed hands 12 times in the first half and 10 in the second haH in ~ game that saw th e two teams within five points of each other with one brief ex-' ception : in the first half when the Anteaters held a 16-9 or iieven point edge. Gary Fox hit a clutch basket, Moore· scored another and Cunningham con· eluded the lr\ri ne scoring with a pair of free throws \\'ith 33 seconds remaining.• Cunningham had ga ined possessiOfl ol. a rebound after two unsuccessful Bronco; basket attempts. ~. UCI ,,.,h nn1 c,. ,..-~,.IJI !It) ''""''It l9 1t p1 1, H•~1cn !1 1 1 2• Coon n s •~27 8•rr 1!(,26L~ lll ,lS. II&<~ 5 ' • Ii B•rnt n .I O J l Fowler l lJ]O l ou l O S • Sml!h 1 • l f Olendorl ? o J ~ L1wrY11: a 2 2 ta lun~...-s a • IOI Murr•y S 2 ( 12 $1\tnll 2 ~ 5 a P111l••n OlllWoodv 01 11 Tole!~ £5 2l ll 113 10111, ::ia ll 1' t94 Holl!lme: UC ! Fro1h S•, CP Pomoo• Ftco~ •1. i I.IC Irvin• !rll Cit """"'' !IOI 1111,,llt f1U pl !p( Cunnlnoht m • 1 J 1$ P1r~~ 6 2 ~ u MOort 61 J 16T•ylor -1 •312 Gl1v!,,.,,,lch 1 1 J • H1rgrovt J l 2 f S•blnt 1 3 S 17 Ounn J J ( 11 lorn~ I O • 1 C1rr10o J i l JO' Eltan I O ? 1 Oon1ld1Cfl o o 1 O F•rw.11 ?OO•D•vls JlJ t George O l O l Burthttl 2 2 J ' f ox 5 1 1 11 Tot1l1 2111 2J 7? TOtlls ?J 11 :/II 10 H11tt1m1 1co1" UC lrvlnt 31, Cit Pomon1 JO. GOLDEN WE ST, OCC PL ACE HIGH Mile relay teams from Golden West and Orange Coast Colleges ran second snd Utird in a special junior college event . during Saturd ay night's Sunkist Invita~ tional indoor track and field meet at the l~A Sports Arena. " The Rusller fourson\e of the Mi ke i\1ci\fahon, Jim Long, Demlis Maas and Phil Age placed second with a time of 3:31.4. The OCC quartet, running in the same race, was made up of Tim Owens, Dan l\1ooney, Ral ph Dean and Kevin Butler • The Pirates were clocked in 3:32.0. The race \\."as won by Glendale with a ti1ne of 3:29.i. Edison Nails 54-51 Victory ,. Lack or fac ilities to play their =i basketbal l games may be both ering Edison High Chargers. but it would 5eelJ the Olargers have found a home aw from home at Huntington Beach. Edison won its second Irvine League test of the ~·ear Saturday at the same site -Huntington Beach - with a · M-51 vic- to~' over Magnolia. .. Coach Dave Moh!' oottit turned in Jte best effort bl the year Jn the iieconl stanza \\'hen Ute winners ran a\tlu~ out.scoring Magriolia 16-2 in the f'lnal 3: of play. The hosts turned tn tv.•o more qui buckets at the outset Of the thlnt sta · , and the diargen i;rent Into a co ' manding 39+18 lead. Edison, howeve r. kissed away the pr Spt>rily and nearly blew it all when the Sentinels came back to pare the margil to 4M7 with 2:$3 remaining. , !\tlke Arus' two field goals, sandwkhed' around l\1ark Hannon 's bucket., insunld ti~ Chargers of a .500 record in lrvi play at 4-2. In all. Ecllson hit 23 of 51 attempts flP 45.1 percent and Harmoo 116) and K" 1'~unke (10) were high for the Charg~,, MttM!ll Ill) l llffft (f.ll '~" kr~ont W•MI Sll>W1r1 lhel'luftO~ 111eh1, 19orrn :"'f' I fq ll(lfl' 1, .. ,,, )0J l l.ttn 0 0 1 1 l l l l H••man •4tN\ I O 1 1 Fls!>tr l I J j lll,Vl•IO~! l ~l " ~ l 0 I Jt~v.,,...., • I 3 J l 21 •Arut -01 11 1 1 n Mn~•tlf o o 1 F~~~t J OJ n 1 n si T11Tt1, n 1 1t~ Sctrt .-, Ot ";'t'" 12 • 11 1J -'1 IJ7'119-!• ' I ... • i\ll·star 'l'llt F"\T R t C Battered ~·'' epe.a s . r.own . . . · Kin gs Fall AFLComeswEnd·-J\kLO \\A_, In Mat Tournament At Detroit ' DETROIT CAP) -C'.erry Desjardins oJ the Los An.geleg Khlgs woll'ai vdn the Veiina Troflhy as I.tie NaUonal Hockey League's leading goalie. But he shoy.ld get something - like the MedaJ of Honor and 1 Purple Heart. With West Victory ' 'ulHk<E J=\.LIC !l.'S RESTAtJl.'tA.N T' 1<Jl(~.f ul•4U lJ•11f•<\l,1 By STEVE ANDREWS ot "'4 Dt'IP ll'UOI ll•tr Fountain Valley successfully defended its Ora:.1ge Coast College Invitational Wrestling Tournament before a near capacity crowd at Co6ta Mesa High Saturday outpointing se· cond place Bolsa Grande, 8Q.. 66. In winning the tille Fountain Valley had just two chan1- pions, Mike Hollinden a:.1d Bob Walker. Hollinden decisioned .Jim M cNa ug-hton of \Vestminster for the 141..µ0und champiortship, 5-0, w h i I e Walker was pinning Chuck Geist of Orange in 4:01 for the 194--pound class crown. Westminster's 123-pounder Dave Wommack, 17-0 on the year, was 11amed the tourney's most outstandi ng wrestler. \\'onunack took his weight class title with a wild 16-10 v.'in over Don Cox of Bo\sa Grande. Corona del Mar, ~1 a r i n a and Costa Mesa each had two champions. Steve Wade defeated Tony Toledo of Santiago, 9-0 and captured the 98-pound cham- pionshi p for Corona de! t-.lar. The other Sea King to \\'in a first plact medal was Doug Hilliard. He decisioned Ken Eppelheimer or La Quinta, 4-l. Terry Walczyk pinned Miles Matsamoto of Alhambra for one Marina championship in 1he 106ipound class and Bob Haun decisioned Al Lostaunan of Boba Grande in the IJG. pound title match. Costa Mesa champions were Dick Ferryman in the 157- ENJOY "LOCAL" SERVICE ~ SAFECO INSURANCE s.r.eo will l r1 n1f1t you• file lo 011r offi c• 11 "o ch11<11. Nothin9 ch1n911 1~c1 pl +h1 P•'· \Oftll 1tl1ntio11 which you ''" now 11c1i•1! Bob Paley ind A1sociat•s INSURANCE Phone 642·6500 •• 546-3205 · from No rth Or1ng• County 474 E. 17th St. COSTA MESA poW\ders and Jim Miller in the heavyi•eight division. Chri! •llorpel was .the lane t•hampiOll from N e w p o r t Harbor . He decisioned Ross Jennings of Edison, 6--1 , for the crown. c111m11tn1nl1 T~1m 1coorr1: 11 Founl•!~ Vtlltv Ill, II 8ot11 Gr1n0t 66, 3) Co•11 Mss• •~II Wesl111!ftlltf O•, 5) C0toto1 lltl M ... !1. 11 Marini U , 1) lolewoon 1-i•rtior ~. I) L• Qlll11t1 .c, tl Aro1mt1r1 lJ, un E•t1ntlf 22. 111 ElllSOll 11'111 q."1n11t 11, lll Hvntln1ton lle1cll 1', 1') LOJ AmlooJ t, 1'l W111nl1r 1. • tl-WMe ICllMl otc. Tolec!D 151; •·O I06-W1!c:1,11; '(Ml plnnf!d Mab'1,/llO!O CA); 1:0C 1IS-Sllfmaur1 !SC) dee. 81111pltll ICdl,\); 1·1 113--Wommid; (W) OK. Co• illG); 111· " l~H•un (M) o~ L!IUl•V~ll 1!Q11_ l;t-=~~~~n~S~ dff:'Jf1d::. (~~:~llh!Oll !Wl) 5·0 1~t-Ho•P•I tNH) Clfc. J•nnlnt• (f); ,. ' 1S1-FfffYmlll ICM) oec. Lewi1 (fVll f~J<t<Kll• (LOI Otc. Co11,11oe (CMll ,_, . 11'-HIUiara (CaM) det . E1191111elmer ll Q); •·1 ' Ul--Wtl-•r !fV) pinned (;1\11 1011 <:01 HY-Mnl•• (CM) pinned N11 n1nwn CWl; J:O~ ' v1rsLl't Vill• ....... (U) (HI Sin c1-1nt. 98--JOl\OSOll (VP ) plriMd AU ($(); l :1l 106-....,.1u-IYP ) Pinn.cl ,.,m..- ISC); 1:01 , l ls-1.YtlCll LVP) ,!nnflf Ctnnayo ($C); :4.J 1Zl--Ninnb6 lVP) d«. Pl•r CSC)J S.• • . t»-Stiook (VPI d•-J1rrtlt (K); "' 136--Wheei.or tVPl 1•nne<1 J. L°"'' 1sc1, 1:1M 141-Cohino CVPJ dlt. Aolllllns (50; "' 1.i&--01• (VPJ d<N Wt11J (SCl: 7·1 151-ndtrso~ (SC ) clec. Mortll CVP!1 U 145-M ..... 1nd•t (SCJ Dec. Mc0u"'• !VPI; t-1 llJ-8r1u11 {SC) ll>IMt<I 0\111~ (VP11 J:ll ltl--0 Cnemc!H (SCI PlnMd Wt l· kff CVPI ; S:ll HY-T!•Oll' .. >!0~ tVPI •inned ito ...... o !SCJ; t-1 ~ Jlllli .. V1"lly SAn 0-11 (ti! !l•l VUll i!'tl'IC n-'.T!terltull (SCI won bY lorf~t 106--Auuell lSCJ WOf'I bY tOf"kol 115--A<PfOrll CVP) Pinned l llridl tSCl; •:St 1?3--Ys!H CVPI PiMtll McCOMlllt (\IP); ):IS 1lD-IC1rntt (Y,.) PlnMd --C!rCJ; 5:50 \Jl.-V. Loper ($() pln""'O GreHt rd IYP); 1:11 1~1-RONIO!'I (SCI won r;..-lorle!f Ut--Hullhff (VP) de;. Nitftot1 tSC!; µ 151-A«ierh CSC) dee. lloelf IVPJl " 1!.1-0e""'H IS() de<. F•~hrr (VPH " 111--MI~~ CSCJ pinnKI Kll!Uld CVPJ: l1•S 1''-M. Cl!flTIOll (SC) ¥ton by for· felt HV-Kr1~t IVPJ di<;. Fllh>O!l (iC)i ··~ Vtrtilt Htw11orl Htrbtf (7t) lit\ AMl<wlrrl ~t--Hemlllori !"') Ort. A. 8rcwn ~NH); 11.(1 106--V~lvl!fOO (Aj O!!t. Hutcho.V.On (NH); 1.(1 115--Sdoia (NH) Ole. MOn!lno t.aJ; "' 12'--f.11mmt• (#,) dee. Towle (NHll ., llG--¥.Jl!rr {NHJ olnntd 1 .... ner 1.o.J1 1;.i(I lJl.-ff~lltJhCft (A) """'· M. l row" !NH): l·I Hl-TrOl$kY [A) dee. lllvtmkt (NM\1 ~,e 14-HorHI Cl\H) pinned 8<11ITIC'ICl'lt' lAJ; 5:31 151-londri§<lll (NH) pln"'CI W.icfl i .t.>1 s . .a \61-C11rry (NHI dee. Coak• !"'): J.O 115-llullu fAI dee. lt~T9fl" INH); !-1 lt4--Mik1 Brown INHJ °"'· l rl"'I (Al; 1·• HV-HOvn' !NHJ pinned M1rlift tAl; 7;• Jwnlof V1rsll¥ N-lrl Ht r bw 1221 C?lt A11111flm ?l-C-. (NM) II«. Wllltlkllf (A); ,, 106--Yabortlk' (NH) pl~necl Lomnkl !All :SO l l~P!!Prl (NH) dK. 81n11t!1 {A)I "' l!l-E11r1<N IAI dte. 8. JOl\n!IOll lNH); 7.0 100--8ro.dwood {NH) Cir-A-1111M !.t. l; 1·1 DELTA SUPER QUALITY Tires Cost Less Compl1!• l<~• of Fiber91a11 8th•d Tir11 ..,.,,;l.bl1. Prlctt Stort at 521.95 ph11 F.l.T. f ib119l111 Wid1 0~1l1 -Sup11 Prt mium - R1ditl -Si;-01!1 -S•"d l u99y - I 1IJ Si111 Tr~tk Tit•• BERG'S DEL TA TIRES 141 E. 17th St •• Costa Mesa· 645-2010 l 1nkAm1ric1rJ IOp,.1ht lolta 114 loyl M11l•r Ch••9• 2001WIST17tll, SANTA ANA -141·6904 13 JOIS IN ONE l_.....till_,_ (NH) di(, k Y.. !All .. , loli-S-r1 {Al k , l1Yltr (NH)I ,. 14-CrlWllllll CNHI M . It-(A)I •• 1Jt-<tvi.v IA ) cite. Htll'lilloll (NH)I ., l~A>/~~IOI! tNHl <tte., 1to!11 111-P•"•raon (A) dee. Joi!" lNHll "' 1'4-Mldin1r (A) Ole, Gtl'flV lNH); ., HV-TH!ffl (A) •• Mtllor (NH)I .. A_Ml!tlm tn) f'~~1'i".:'..-t M1W V1r1i1Y Wntfr11 nn 120 Marin• ..... Er1<1l1 lMI die. Mll-Y (W!; i .z 106---Wt !c:kyk (M) dK. OoMI lW); ~·1 !ll--&f>ttlt!Y lMJ dee. 5111>1' 1r.•"1·· ln--Oftlt (WI 11 ........ Htrb '°"' .WI I: !I UO---l ob Wlnon IW) l'lnned HJtflt LM); J:25 -• lM-H111n !Ml oec. Mummtl (WI; C:ot Ul-8111 Wiiien (WJ Cite. AnarlOt (Mll '" l.._May (WI de<:. TtYl&r IM); 14 l!1-Jenn!ne1 tMl Jlnnllll HtrP1r IWll l:U IU--Hern1no.z (W) Oec. SmJrt tMl l• '-' . l'l-Mlnnl<k tWJ dt(. At>lx>n CMJ ; 1:2' 194.--Wll!l111"1 CW) dee, Klnl'lldY (Ml; . ' HV-J1daon (Ml OK. $1w1d1 (W); J-l Vfl'llry w1um1111i.1 U41 1UJ s111i. AM ft--8. Membrlllt (WJ d~ PKkl!fm 1~~~11111 (SAi dee. f', Memt!rtlll CW); !-~ l\S--lt"'ll•• tWl (lee, Vl1·IV.l1 l.O l~l--McMUl\cln CS,_) O&e. Noon IWl; :!-0 1»-Gerc.l~ 15A/ dK. Ptrdut (W); 6-4 13'-Pt <llllo IW dr11 0111"1on. ($A);.._ • 1•1-Mt1!1r1 lWl pinned ,,,.v !SA); :Sol !d.--LJUtk IW) dee. A11!ol (SA): 7.(1 U1-5111Pl td IS.0.J dK. Ovlfll•Ht (W)I "' 16a-MtrllMZ \Wl Cite. Oc>ltl119 ($A)/ ., . 171--Mtrroft (Wl jtinrotll l lll"IOn (5A)I 1:07 1••-Swrtr IW> 01c. Hodc1rsmflll CSA); '" HV-M1<~ I W) pinned W1!l1r1 (SAii J;05 Junl., Vt "ll'Y w"rmln.i.,. 1541 ftl S11'1t1 "'"' •l-Stlllon (Wl l'innecl' RIY \SA); l :o.! 1(16.-flkln~ (W) plflflfd G1r<l1 !SA); 1 :•1 115--Plftl\W IW) t>!nned Ame1-ISA__)I 1:15 ' 1»-M•t.,lfll CW) dK, Nld>OIJ !SAJ; It-~ l»-o-ZIYlll tWl won bY 1'of1tll • 1l4-M~!111 IWl dt <. G•rton tSAl: •·I l•l-G•llow•1 IW) OK. L .. ler ISAI: l· • • .U~!:rb tW) pinned &rownlnl (SA)# HJ:.Tholftfl (WI Ille. f1rrlt r 1$A); .._ . , . 161--81'Ylll lW1 dee. PPrklns ISA); \!-J l~Lotf CW) WOl'I bY tori.11 1t1-franlthOl/1e IWJ 1inneO Green CSA!; l :J.I HV-No m1l(!I. V1rsll1' Lffr1 n 11 (ttl flll ll(ll -tcff>ltr !El l'inr.td &v• fl); l:Sl 1Qi!.--Wllllam1 (L) dK. H<oyl !El; H 1JS--FlovJ !El OK-. HOV (l); 2·1 11l--fo" !El de<;. Grl..-Ill; l_. 1))...-G. Fr"llnd (El OK. l'trtl (LJ; ~Munl !ll olnnad Gelle¥ IE!; S::lO 111-110~ tll·dec.. ,,,.r1h CE\·I ,.. 14-Ft!'I (L ) 11«, Alhll"I' CE ; ''° 151-11li:Mlft1Deft Ill 0«. Hu"' IE); t&l.-cr1ton Ill dee. 5nY~r If); 10.1 in-.F~t1 IE) olnr.ed Gorll<>n (Ll; 3:1• l-DFIPO!r (LJ tlftnell Morri1 CE); U~~cnrod! ~ll 01!(. ll r~•r IE): i.1 Juftler V1n ilY f slt nclt I'll (Ul L1tr1 1~1!0.•ri !E) won bv lorl1ll l M-Ylorlc~ \El won by forfeit llS--Oug9er El p!nnecl' Copld (lh 1.~I 1'J.-811v<1• CEl p!"ned Zimmer IL); t:..-8. FrHltrid IE) dK. CO'W""" Il l; tit..z~•·r ~L) OK. o. Mollln Cl!'\; l·O Ul-Elll1 IEl dee. Swston (l); •.O 14-V. Mo!ln !E) IJK, St1Uln CL ); 1·5 157-Vtn V1inl'll IE) pin"'<! Flllffflkl HL.\11'11rc1 CL) 6.c. Sl'!Ores (El; •·J 1'11--Klf111 !IOI p(nnt<I ,.1rlu IL); 1.)0 1tl--no m11cn HV-SCcM (LI WOf' b¥ fl:orlfll v1rsllv l!ollHll IU) lttl M11111llt "-Oldlllt! tE> plnntll lllvrno (Ml/ ~iJ!._,<>1nno1 (E! Ole. ArbTKI !M); 11'1 1u-tc~•UIJ CM) dee. M•"" (fl:._, 1n-eon1cum tEI drWI Arlllio (M!; 1· ~:IO-Wtlw1ndl (E) OllC. It_,. (M)/ S. Vl4-llltnn !El oec. Correl lMl: U·l 1•1'-Wvrskl (Ml <lie. D1Jo!1 (El: 2·l 14-J~!~I IE) p!MH KtlKhtnY 1MJ · J·'-l 1~..'.M.Utfol'd Cl!! l'lnned Dietrich fMl• ,.n 141--Cluff CE\ plnnt<I A~ulr~ !Ml; l :Jl Hl--Clfllr (E drew Stull !M); lO·lG l~t IMl pinned Ct -ell IElr )·41 H"v-C1fl1 (Ml olnned Nor'!O" (EJ; \:~ Junl.,. Vtrslry t!ollHft !41J (11) Ml •Mlll 'J--McG!ll IEl won bv fo~I! 1-Mv<I•"" \El WOii "" lorfell 11s--,.z1r CM dee. P1ntr$0n ~E l; 6·f 1n.-Olfl\ld'I lM) WOii by Ortou1' 1»-llcrt ck IE) o:IK. TotmlY {Ml; 0·3 1»-0o•M IE) won br torlell 1•1-.:1..,..r IE/ won bY tort~! Ul-Rob•rt1 f C! wtin bv frirf•lt 1S1-ln t llllr1 !El wt>" llv forhll l..._Fltlll• (El <l~t. Pull" IMI; 7~ 111-.l"l'llllkll CM) pin,,.., Gr1v" (I"\: 1:11 l t6-R1Ynold1 !Ml pln"td Old!l<ld (E l ; ,., HV-l .. (E) p!nlltd (111'11 (Ml; J.lJ J V Basketball As he has virtually the en- tire session, the chunky net- minder fa~d barrages by the opposition this weekend. And , as usual, his monumental ef. forts weren't enougil to kttp the Kings from dropping two more games. On Saturday night in St. Louis, Im Angeles' leaky defense all<n\'ed the Blues to pepper Desj ardins with 28 shots. The result was ;: 3·1 loss to St. Louis. And in Sunday artemoon's nationally televised game in Detroit, the Red W i n g s unloaded an incredible 40 shots at him before a pulled groin muscle forced him out with 15 minute s to play. Again · the Kings lost 3-1. The two defeats extended Los Angeles' latest losing streak to five games: gave them 19 losses in 23 road games this season and kept them in the \\rest Dl\'ision cellar with an 8-27-5 reeord for 21 points, six below fiflh·place Oakland. The Kings· are idle until Thursday night when the y'll entertain· the Toronto J\1aple LeafS: The entire league is off until Tuesday night's NHL all- star game. Defenseman Bill White vdll represent Los Angeles. White assisted on T e d Ir,vine's loth goal or the year '">hich put the Kings into a brief 1-1 tie in St . Louis before Andre Boudrias sent the Blues jn front to stay. Eddie Shack 's ninth goal of the season sent Los Angeles into a l~ lead over Detroit midway in the first period. But the Red Wings' assault finally wore Desjardins down and, in a 59-second span late in the second period, they scored twice. Basketball Standings lll SlltT Fwl11rton Ctrrlto~ Ortnvt Co11t Mt Sen Antonio !on Oleto 5en 01~ M111 Senti An1 CON,lltlNCI: W L ,.,. • • 311 l l "!1 3 , 371 ~ l ~/ ' ' "' I l lit ' ' "' Stllird1,•1 lt-1111 .. ,.. "' "' "' '" ~· •• '" Ortn91 (OISI 11. Ml. Sen An!OftlO w Ct rrl101 ~. Sant• An• •1 5,,n 01~ Mn• 15, Sin 01..., 7) F~(lf'Mon 17, Ctm~ "encll11011 .H l»O"·lrtout l Wllil"ndt1''1 0 11111'1 S•" D!MO Mell II Ctrr!lOI Fullerlon ot Cerrlt<11 MT. Sin An•onlo t i Si n Olfl<I i1nt1 An•, bv1 No Mile Re1natch In Sight LOS ANGELES -Track addicts "ill have to await some distant date for a remat· ch in the mile run betil-•een- Kenya's Kipchoge Keino and the man who upset him -tWo nights ago, J.ohn Lawson,+ a former Kansu runner npw competing for the Pacific Coast Club. The 3urprist came in an in- vitational indoor meet in rhe HOUSTOI'{ W'l -Big Jim Otto aaw the American Foot~ ball League begin and he was ~ when it died. The Oakland Rakters' center played in the first AFL All· Star game. He participated Saturday In the Astrodome in !he tilth All-Star contest -the final effort of. the league. The West All-Stars, led by pa.;1ing oC San Di ego quarterback John H a d I , defeated the East 26-3 before ~,170 fans. Nett season tht A F 1. becomes the American Con· ference ol the. rqerged AFL Ind National Football league. "This ls1all kbtd of '°'Aching to me,'t Qtto $lid. "I aaw it' all start and now it's all ending. "I don't tllink .we'll lose our Pro Cage Standings Sporta Arena Saturday night •• ,,...,. DIYlilt" before a claimed attendance .w 1. NewYO<'k SI 11 Of 10,010. MllWIUk91 " 1i l1ltlmor1 :!tC1 If The meet obviously was Ph11..,.111n11 16 '' built and promoted around the ~::·11 : n 1968 Olympic Games winner in °''"'11 • w"""' 01~~~ Pct, •• ·"' ••• ... ... .... .~. .. , ~texico City, and until the last A1111111 ., 11 ... Ch!o:.11 ,. :it .4111 two laps it appeared Keino Loo Ai.o•''"" '' '' .•n S•~ "'l llCllCO " 71 .Ill would save tbe dull evening. P-1· ,, ·,, • .an ,,_. B I "-1 d r 30 d s111 or"' 11 ti .,,, ,,. u •u.:o ea o yar s s11t11e 11 ·11· .a.r 11 ' •-lo d . di and La S1Nr•1v•1 «ftUll'll I .....,gan Wln e \'!'SOR Chlc1•0 11J, Mllw1ukoe 1)0, oYll'fl"" pulled Jn front 30 yards from s .. 1111 ,,., P11oe .. 1x 111 81lflrnor1 Ul. 5"' OIWI 11, the tape and won in 4:00.1. IYlllllY'• •-"' llOllM 109, New Yar'lc 102 Keino's Ume was 4:00.7. o.troit 104, L• Antei.. lot K · h Mllw•uk " JU, Stn Fr1ncl11<:0 1~7 eino ends is two-meet Pn1t-1P1111 u1. c11'C1"".11 111 visit al Philadelphia Saturday .0.11 .. ,,, 1u. CMc••• 101 P!>oln!~ 11', l1lllMOr• UJ night, ruMing a g a ins t TM•v't Camts Villanova'a Marty Liquori, No ·~.,:._~~-:.1,,; .. while Lawaon runs the same A11.s11r ,_ •' Pn111"9!Plll1 night in an NAIA meet in 1;,1~•:1v1'*' KanYs City. w 1. Another Olympic champion, ~"!~:~, :; 1~ Willie Davenport. also met c1ro11111 111 21 defeat. his I i r s t indoors in ~~~~ ~ ~ two years. Gary Power. no Ml•m1 14 » pcl\\'er in the hurdles, got ofr w .. 1''"' 01~1,1 ... NN Orl1ans 16 16 .11t first and won wire-to-wire in °'"".,. '' 21 .s.il the 6Q.vard event in 7 seconds 011111 21 13 .JOO " w.1111i..,.1.,. u 2' .at flat. Davenport wu 7.1. LM An111n 21 n ·• A !hi d 01 · · lwnM''' •-lti r ymplc wmntr. o.n~ ... 11s. c1ro11n1 112 Australia's Ralph Doube!I, Lot Ant.in 1n, 0.011 124 •• ~ · t•· I -d TM1v•1 G1ma came 1JJtOU 8 .. In 1..,-,vvoryar in011irw u ICtnNdtr run. A Jut 1_, bdrst won tt'in LN "'"'-'• 1t 011111 2:06.5, with J u r i a Luzin. ---------- formerly of WUllam and ~fary, second in 2:08.t. Naftali Bon or Ke11ya ran fourth in z,10.s. Pro Hockey Standings Hll~I lNIM 1111-Olvllleft W LT,.,.., e.t. ~'tlOll'Ul" nl•t5S 1511111 21 11 le ft 10 lt7 £-~-ti TONl•HT AT I I 1t THI REIYI": ill a ICOUNOR IL.. M Ofll"ATOA MdaAftAWLlllo••• N-Ytrtr; ... lM MonlAtl Ot!rol! ChlClf<I " '' 1 " 1Z2 1041 ;;;;;;;;;;;;;ii;iii~iiiii 11 15 J t1 <111 Mil "''"" II II 1 " na 121 w"""' 01.1.i ... St. l "'°l1 tl ll 1 n ltt ,, h!!tdt lltll!• 10 11 IJ lS IOI 11' Ml"'litOfl 10 16 1' l4 ll5 lts Plltlb\lrt!I It tt 6 JD tt 114 Dlkl•nd 10 ,, 7 17 17 1 .. LOI Anet/es • H J ti .. U2 Sth1'111,•1 Ollllft New York ), Mln._t1 I 011tl1rid l . Monlt'"! 0 O.lroll 5, "M!td.ipftll I Clllc:too I, 8e1t<111 0 SI. loul1 I, Ll!f Alltllt' 1 Toronlo •· ,.lmlll.or•ft o ........ lt ..... lh 0.troll l. LOI Allt-'H I flnton i, Monlrlll 3 Chlc1tt 3. Olkillfllll l Plt11bl.<r1ll '· Phll1dtl .... l1 • T .... Y'I 01111 .. Nt 91m11 .c:ftt<lultd T~'1 01111 .. Alf·111f tame 11 SI. LOull N•c THIATll coar. AClll Of flll rAIKIN• Wll KDAYI OPIN 6:41 SHOWTIMI 7:01 s.t. & S.tt. -o,._ 12 N••• SHOWTIMI 12:JI WHITEWALi. -.:.!!!~ s1910' lff rouow.,.. S!Hl: + P.1.Tr l.9 .. t.• 77$11•" .... f'W .......... ------.J.1• (1Mt Stlll .............. . • ' i WALT DISNEr s • tl'Ohtl/Jll CWIHlt 1~1141•• UYCO fXP<TS WIU: a2s.1.-pi.. '" ···-·· .. ·-··-·--w•1• (lt6t 11111 "S•IS" ,_ hir -·-·-· ->-1• OM9 lltll \ MT~"°" INCl.UOfO. ~ ..._, :"' ....":::'i.!."'"" $69'' ....,._ -·· ..,. .. _.... c- 4 HOUR SERVICE WHEEL ALIGNMENT & FRONT WHEEL BAL ~INTMENT $400 NUDED. MOS! CAl!S \ l_,. HTlOM COIO & F4A&. e l'lY OfMll 11111 IUDMf N ICIO. '"C.IAl ltlAD GIYn MOH GtWl ... IMIS l'llAO Ofll SHOUt.DltS 6MI MOii MAI fJf TUlMS. NO TRADE IHI' lllSTAl.uo ~ ' SHOCl .A~IU HIAW oun -..._ .. -· .... ::.-:.-::;... -. $1970 .... flit. .... _ .... NTAUAftOfll ~. IATC"O (OVllS J.11: • '1 ••Ml '"' - -....... ""' ........ ........, i.., -,..... ••• WW. ...... ~._. .... ,..... "' ............... ,... .... a .......... ..-,.. NO ~1"1Nf NltDID I, .. .. \ IOI DALMATIANS JM 11~" IATID fUN IHOW W9't DfaHt'a "HANG YOUR ,HAT OH THE WIND" 80;6. T BUFFS Ahne11 lee••~., It tho ,,.f., fwll•tlf'l'le ltotflflf •4iter ••t•l"t .... '"' _,,.,., '" °''"•· Cevftty, Hf1 1Hh11I'" , •• .,,, ... of Oaetlnt e114 y1o1htll'l9 f\I Wt It 1 4t lly fe1tvri ef •h• OA ILY ,PILOT. identity though. The rivalrles will always be there. Some ol the younger guys might not reel it so much but the older Ont.' will." Hadl expreJaed di.sap.I~=========~ po!ntment that the leagues r; merged. "l hate to see us lose our Identity," he said. "I hate to see us split up. It just won't br the same." Had!, who completed 18-of-26 passes for 224 yards and one tou<'bdown, was named the ~tost Valuable Pla yer in the All-Star ~ame, "ONE OF THIS YEAR'S BEITTI MOVIES! Fmr, Romantic, ToDdiJll!~-- Lance Alworth, the gifted San D i e g o receiver who <'aught a 21-yard scoring pass! from Hadl , said it "sure wa:> g().'.)rl to go out winning. "Al least we went out with • our heads up instead of down like JOme people said they would be when \\'e got .started." A1Worth said . ~=- KijHARINE HEPBURN as TM (l)ftl)WOMlUl orcmm.i.ar 11 0 -•o-·--- AUO 2001 IAMBS IOllD 007 .. IS BACK! James G•rner G~yl• Hunnicutt IN "MARLOWE" EXC LUSIVE AREA SHOWING SHOW TllltU 1:00 & 9:10 MATINll SUH. 1 "Battle~--~ .rr ofiitftain" ~""--= ;;..·--c.t-.. --... l ........ ~-l'M' ...... ..,,._ ........... _ ~""-"""--~-"" . __ ....., ____ .,_tJil' '"' r awl11IRID;tnr 'w:Mf=:..':""...::~:.I ..... • AIM rt..,lllf • l!J ,''SKI AM E RIC A'' '" r • ·' J .. I '• • ' ----~-·--------·--~--------·------· ·-------~------------------~------·------------ ---·------· - • -' • -1 , !r.Op!''! End Theater I Feiffer Fes.t Fast • . on Feet ' ' By~ TITUS °' ........ iw lhfr : A brulhl-... btilltt·pacod ·-"' bltekout buf· · '-1 b blaallllg off on wttbr)ds tl the Optn End 11thter where_ ntirical car- tconllt JUies Feiffer ~ being PiC'Mted inltl tht space ag& '.from a Newport Be a ch launchln1 pad. ~·A Sm.tie is • Frown Turned .tJJllhle: I>Qwn" ts 1 collklion •111. IMILe IS A J'lllOWH 'TUllfr(.0 Vl'll•• DOWN" "'" erltlf\91 1'1'1\111(11 .....,llfl i..tM on 1M ..,.,. flt J\llft ~11ttw. lll•lf:!l<I bv TW Nllll.,.. *"~1•tlcl11 1r'M1 '°"' 1.,rlQ "° W•r•llfl J. Offefll, eostum~ t'I' Sffiltll'I' Lou TYlrr. ~r.p11., W Mfrtl U~. ut dUl811 bV W•Yl'C '~ •• -WM J'r ldt•I ll'INIOlll !u>1 , """'' 1111111 ''°· n •t '"' Ot>ffl £"~ 'j"'-~· :iru \11111 w1v, N1w.ar1 ' llCll. THI CAST le",. M4"1\tw1 • OHcon, Joy"" -w-11, i. Dtl llooo. llloblt"I 111111~1. 's.dll ...... lMI T•lir, J .. 8 111'11, Olvld ...,.....,., l't \11 Grl Cfll, OtMl1 wtl,.le•. of some 80 sketche8 fram Feif· fer'1 pointed and prolilic pen, .aU done at M exhausting pace UOdtr the directorial v.·h1p of 'ntor Ni~lun. It is a remarkable exhibition o r *"""1blt performance by a company of nine versatile ac· Un and actrtases. The. rtvue makes maximum use ol the: "1--ugh-In" forma t. '1-:rcept that while "socking it to you" il doesn't give you mudl time to "think about it." Spt6d la the name of the game -16mttlmu at the expense: GI character -as the com· pany .11trives successfully to comrnand the audience'• at.- lention wit h minimal lag in 1rai1silion . \\'hile tv;o-thircl.5 of the e'1en- ing is CQtnprised of short. punchy sk.il8 , there are, in· terspersed throughout, longer vignettes and musical pro· duclion numbers using bor- rowed scores with ori ginal lyrics by the Open End'g War- ren J. Deacon. Combined with fo.1atti Lascoe's br e ak n e c k choreography, the end result is a theatrical 1narvel which ae.ems to widen the small stage of lhe Nev:port playbox, COHESIVE The cas · brllll ant ly cohesive, das and off stage amid a Our of cos· tt,Jme and prop changes, rarely missing' a beat. And. ~e the nine company rnemben func· lion primarily .ia a.· finely gear1d unit , there are some ad1nlrable i n d Iv I du a I ac- con1pllsh1,nents s c n I. t e r ed throughout Among ihe5e i re Saundra 1'.1atthews-Otacon's blatantly campy torch song a.aainst lhe backdrop m a male chorus line, ribbing the HoUywood musicals of two decad<!s ago. Jayne Hamil, voluptuous in clinging dancer's 'tight s , reaches out for the heart along with the fUMybone in her aolo. ''A Dancer's 'Life." There is Feiffer's favorite c haracter , Bernard Mergendeller, the perennial o u t s i d c r • disappointingly played by Robtrt-Vaugtit who interpreL.'I him as 'a borderline pansy rather than I.he. aoclal doo'rmal of the cartoon.isl's creation . On the other Aide or the coin ii the huUy lady killer Hughie, portrayed with all the otopo (and ilecibelsl out by Joe Del Rosso. the mo.st Vi.l{orous member of the .casl. Schirley Lro Tyler offers a hilarious skit of a tetri-aAe girl crying fn her d'i ary. Joe Bland v,•11ges a continual war with the telephone company, 'while David Wheeler al)d Paul c;racey round out !he cast in ~1orc infrequen t asslgnme,1ts. FUNNIEST Young Dennis \V he e 1 er , though a little too old for the ··f\fu nroe'' sklt in which a 4. year-old boy fintls hiJnself in the Arn1y, handles lt qui te "'"'!. ThJa b the tonatrt, and J>trh•pa the fllnniest, sequence of the night. Felfterphilt11tnay take iss~ !IOI only j111h .vaucht '• Bunard, bill aJ.ai> Del Rosso'• Superman\ played \tlth a· •peech impediment. Vaught, however, t~ in a fine , funny pc.r(ormance lat.er in the show as a movie 11lar !urned poliUcal candidate. In a program offering so 1nuch materi al in so short a tl1ne, there is little wonder that only 50 to 7~ precent of it i~ gcnulnely effective. And since uG single bit is dwelled upon at great len gth, asi de from lbe producUon numbers, the chances are that if one blackout doesn't grab you the nen one probably will. Finally, there will be the in- evitable con1parilions between this show and the excellent . f'eiffer revue staged three years ago at the Orange Studlo Theater. Aside from the common subject m a.l t er (about a dozen sJdts in the Open End show a1so were done at Orange) there i1 little basis for s u c h comparison. The earlier attraction put the emphasis on -polish; the cur- rent show stre11&es pace ~ both e~nlly successful. "A Sm lie Is a Frown Tur~d Upside Down" continues for live more weekends, playing Fridays through Sundays, at lhe Open End Theater, 2.315 Villa Way, Newport Beach. LA Batting .500 in ,Anti-sex Drive 87 BOB THOMAS L06 ANGELES (AP ) ~ bf Uie city's morals ·have acend 50 ~nt in their drive to prot.tct citizens frnm aJ1ecffly aalac iou a en--· . Lat week producer Lou ·Shaw announced he WU Clo.ti· '.ift& "Ob! c.i.OJU.a!'~ after five "troubled weeks at the Fairfax: "l'beater, • made-over movie ;Mule. The Ntw York revue, in wtich. the erttire cast appeared .nbde and ·ae:r acb were :timulal<d, had twice been nidtd by pollct. On Dec. 29, vice squad of. ll<m ttiHd pOn1s o( lhe 'Sw9dlah fibn ''I Am Curious (Yellow)" at~live Los Angeles lhuttn. Art additional thea ter' .~ilk-'eled sbowM&s of the ,mevie, in which sexual in· 1'lcciUne II port.rayed. alt•\ belns notified of the raid. A I · ·tt&t· theaters had betn wamffl that tM: seizure would take jll .... Backers ot the film won ;:i UmpOrary restraining order '.lpinlt further seiaures and ll :la b6lnc shown in seven Los ·An1e1e9theaten. · 'lltt ac:ti(IN qairult the play ·llll! ftlm IPJ>'ll" U> be part of .._ uphlll 1tn11gle by law en- fercemtnt agencies to clamp down on entertainment that deaJa blatantly with sex. The .,.Ule b uphill they say. 1'ecaUle the U.S. Supreme :cam in recent years hit! rul ed out most or the treiditi<mal pornograph y law1 and has &et dGwn strict guidelines on when the law can interfere in the areas of artistic expressi0i1. Georae Francell, a lawyer in the Los· Angeles city at· torney'a office, sald lhousand'I of Complaints-about "I Am CUriOUI (Yellbw)'-had been receiv~. ~uring lhe monthg it \Vas l!hown prior ,., the seizure. "Wt did nothin g because we did nOt have IJ1e expert testimony wilh '"hich t. o substantiate our case," he said. Francell said an inveJ1,igator was aent throughout CaJiforn ia for tltervlewS to determine whal are the. contemporary community runctru-ds -A main I e g a 1 poinl raised in obscenity cues -in hopes of using his testim.,ny in court Attomty Stanley f lel!ihman, \-l'ho represents Grove Press. diotributor .of U1e film . rleclared the city's method of prq>t~lk~ eese "ridiculous." "°WhS{ they did was to sent1 ai· m V!Md the ~te to ask those who hadn't .<;~en the film if they thought it was obscene. he said. How would they know . If they hadn't seen it? Six bun· dred thousand adulls i n California have seen the pie· lure. That ind lC'ates that it has been accepted." Both sides dec\11re lhey "'ill conUnue the figh t. Grpve Press can v,·ell afford it. Last Met Ma••~ Left year''IAmCurious fYtllowJ'' collected more than $7 .!'i mill ion In theater receipts in 1najor citie.!I, accordlng to Variety. This despite raids in Kansas City, BosW.1. Denver. Phoenix, ~an .Jose a n d f'11llerton, Cali f., and other cilie1. The closing of "Oh! Calcut- ta!" ii; a more crn1Jlcx matter. It had been raided twict. and Pror:hJcC'r Shaw and the ei.ght. ca~t Jn('mbers ·were ar· rested on mir;demeamr counl" for invesligA I ion of lewd and obscene condur.I. Aside from police problems, the 1n anagement was shakt"1l hy internal feuding. Producer Sha1" claimed he had been misled about production c~ts hy Hil lard Elkins. the New York nroducer who· Licensed !he local \'e.r11ion. Elk.ins, in · ,turn, sued claiming he wasn't pAl<I royalties. Nonetheless. 1hP play was still ~urpassing the br~;ak-('ven point by as !nuch as $10.000 a week. Of 1he raids, a company i:il- ~irler SR!d: "The public t!Unks fhat hav. ini:: a show raided i!' great pu b 1 i cit y. It i.i;n't. Ticket h11yers become confused about \l'hether the show is going on or nol. Many are scared away h.v the police action. And besides. the cast v.·a~ com· pletely demoraliied by the lrea!menl tho:?y received dur- ing lhe arrests." It appears that city-backed Lege11d Jean Peters Ends 13 Sheltered Years By VERNON SCOT'! billionaire didn't marry unt.it 1957, aln1ost 10 year s after Liley first met. doing as she pleases, fret or Hughes' ~ecurll.y gurtrds. legal moves are most effective in shutting down pleys, which require nightly performances and steady income to survive . 2 'Men1ory' Plays Lack Significance By l\'ILLIAM GLOVER NEW YORK (AP) -1i1art1n Duberman, a profesror of history at Princeton Univers1· ty. again. lwjst.s some of his vocation into' his avocation or playwriting in "The Memory Bank " which opened unwisely Sunday night at off· Broadway's Gate Theater. The program consist,, of two short plays unreleated beyond a grounding in past event.!r and a two-actor forma!. "The Electric Map .. tells of ;i tav.•dry emotional -sexual c nnfrontation of long· ~eparatcd brothers. O n e operates at Gettysburg an e I a b o r a t e sound-and-light ~how, hence the 1nclodramatic personal revelations transpire against a fi ery background simulation of epochal conflict. "l11e Recorder" bring s together a nervous interviewer "'ho is preparing a hiography and an elderly associate of the f.:imou~ mail· -or is he the VIP himself? Du be r m an lea\'es the point Pinterl shly fJbscure. u•ithout any com- Pf'nsa1ini; virtue in the nar- rfltive for anyone not tililla ted by the: petty escapades of ear· J.v !'PX experience. WAHi TO CLEAN UP • .ON YOUR CLEAN OUT! FOR FASTI FASTI ACTION! CAU DAILY PILOT CLASS· IFIED DEPT. D I A L D I R E c HOLLYWOOD (UPI) Jun Pet.en fell in love with a man and is divorcing a legend. · 'l1te Howard Hughes she met J.Bd married was a romantic. dashin1 eccentric w h o s e weaJth and chann overwhehn· ed 1he Ohio State Unlvmity beauty queen turned movie After lhe ceremony ii. '"a~ as iI Miss Peters vanh1hcd from earth. Jusl as iiurely. she v.111 re. lain an affectionate loyalty loward 1-Jo,vard Hughes, a nian ...,•ho treated her kindl y. .~ho1rered her with riches and affection and gave h e r everything except a happy marriage. Neither item in ''The 1\fe1nory Bank" contains any b;isic dramatic substance and are merhani~lic doodles with the tools of theater. 1'his doesn't ~lop liarold Stone from tlirecOng B-' I.h ough :i;ignifica nce fUled every line of dialogue. ~ T --During oor interviews in her :kith Century-Fox days, I found Je~ a straJghtforward. practlcll girl who derided illJllOI' and HollywoOd preten- tibns. Jeln wu raised on a farm Mir Camon, Ohio. and learn· ed lb http wtth the chores. She 1equiAd the essential at· tribute. of a housewife at homo IJld at coll~ae. She wu cartful with money aM in~ In real est.ale. She also wu a great btauly. Hqhts, ever . .altrt for a stunn ing face. beca1ne eoom«td "' the la!< l!llOs. UilllU molt _ol the girls he ..-, the rlllna )Olin& ac- tr'Ul wanted a ring, not .t lllilf. OutJna one m l1un- dtrstaftding. Jean marrltd buslntsrman Stuart Cramer m Cwho aeparattd last month from 11" •ift. Tmy M ..... o tt·Hughea Jirtfriend). They were married In May, !ISi. d!V<ll'Ctd °""'"1ber J"6. 0.,. lritftd uld Jeon -In lovo wfflt H"""8 tlmiualloul htr monlqt to cramor. t;..,, or.,,,,. atilltlecl low ht ll!l'tt sot .. -the 1lrl. hr whftevtr reason - Jftilblt' t'ftuct1nce or Jt11n'1 CIJ'ffr -the actress and th: ' She \Ya!' not sten nnr heard from in public for 13 years. She became ai. much a myst ery as Hughes. I encountered her once dur- lna: their marriage. Where she had bee"11 friendly and open as an actress, f\lrs. Howard Hughes wa s cautious. frlghten· ed and terse. She wa s det.ern1ined not lo jeopardize her hu:o;bA11n·~ passion for pri\'ac:y. But ~he rr1ained her 1.'ircle of nld fril'nd~: ,Jeanne Cr~in, Vanessa Brown , fl doclor and his vdfe and associ ates from the aludlo. She' lunched v.·ilh girlfr irnds, ~hopflll'd incognito a'11d attended the lheat.-r and !porL.'i event_, alone or In coin- pany with a female friend. The v.•ife of America's richest cititen attended UCLA night 8Chool, receiving top grades. She worked for charit y and traveled almost we,kl)' between one or se veral Bcvf'r· ly liillJ home and h c r husband 'S; Lai Vegas hcad-qu1rters. Still, it wu an unnatur;tl life. She was marrit-d, but not. runy a "'ilt. She had million~ to ~pend, but no ont ~·ith "·horn to 1pend it. In aetking ~freedom. many friends expect bu to return lt'I acting and otbe.r (.rt:allve ;:ic· thities. Ctr111nly, she will rr\urn ~ tbi°'1rovert world 1M U!td to kDt' gotn~ her 0\1'n way, ;\ 80911.s Celli1ai Audrey Hepburn and PetPr O'Toole attempt the fhtft of a C'cllini Venu~. "'hicb happens to be bogus. tonight •l 8:30 on ChonneJ 7 wh1n th e moUon pie· 111re. "Ho1v to .51eal R ~tiJlion " 11 8Creened. EU IV•llach . lhtgh Gri!lilh and Cltarks Bo:·cr co-slar. ), I - 6 4 2 • 5 6 7 8 t DAIL \7 Plt;OT WANT'· ADS ' HOUSES FOR Sl!LI HOUSES FDR SALE HOUSIS FOR SALi HOUllS FOR SALi ..:.:.:;.::.:;;:.:..:..::;.:..::.:.:;;;::_~;;="'-'-~~~ Gtn•r•I 1000 Gener•I 1000 Gentr•I I iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii!ii~ iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiii 1 ooo·oooorol 1000 . -r-a rr_~.-·· .. _.--- PUPPY LOVE ls yours at first sight. Conveniently located near shopping, schools, and transportation. Exquisite ranch style home with pool sized lot with room to grow in thi s 3 Bd. home planned move to 0 r e g o n forces sale al '35,000. Any gro,ving fainiJ y \vould enjoy this home. INVESTORS, SPECULATORS, EXCHANGERS 12 units, newly decorated, close to major shopping, Ioli\ Qf parking, and priced right at $11~,000 i~ West~insttr a city with growing , pams. which attributes to the low vacancy Cac· tor. Owner will exchange up from a $44,000 equity position and may add cash. These- units have excellent depreciation schedule. Act now ror prepaid interest deduction. LAND LUBBER'S Half acre back bay with house. Low taxes due to A~l :zoning. Horses OK. Located in county cprridor af head 'vaters of back bay. Owner would like $28.650. and \Vill carry some paper. Here's your chance. can you \vait ? HIGH ON A HILL VIEW VIEW VIEW This 3 Bd. 2 bath home overlooks Laguna Beach and Newport Beach. With :separate diQlhg. room· and breakfast area in the built· in ·kitchen you will enjoy Jiving to the fullest. Tr~e Slfaded, \vind protected patio for your ch,il4req. Unless you like dramatic views, this home would not be for you. SingJe own· er mwt sell for $39,500 with easy terms. Z6Z9 Harbor Blvd., Costa Me5a 546-8'40 ---· ----·----------·--· Gtner•I 1000 General 1000 REALLY ROOMY 10°/o DOWN · Newport Hei9hts 0\\"JJer v.1ll ca.ny 151 Trust ~-4 bd.1ms 2 batl1s, huie living rooi"JJ. firtpla~ + large family. Heated pool. dbl garat;c, shake roof. Genertl ' READ THIS If you are in the market for a NEW hon)e , see the$e outstand~ ing customized homes , built by Frank H. Ayres and Son, locat- ed in a prime area very close to Huntington State Beach. The homes are priced fron}.._$27,550 to $33,690 and vary in size from 3 to 4 bedrooms, 2 to 3 car gar· ages and 2 to 3 baths, with shake or mission tile roofs. fire"' places, underground utili~ies~ concrete driveways. built-in5 , and carpeting. There is VA and P'H.~ financing available. There are 9 homes available because of credit rejections. Occupancy by March I, 1970 in this utlit. Our next unit is now on sale for ~cupancy in May and J une 1970 and introduces the ne\v 3,000 sq. ft. "El Dorado" model priced from $34,490. Rancho La Cuesta Hom11 on Brookhurst at Atlanta, Huntington Beach 9"'2929 -968-llll ----------------. 1000 Gener•I 1000 RARE TURTLE ROCK RESALE [','ear UCl. Prize. v.1.Min.c 4 bdhn 21,i bath with &triwn • .2100 sq ft. Vacant & ready Tor executive. SeU or lease option. SALESMEN NEEDED $42,500 Newport f\ ' at Victoria 646-8811 (anyt•me) Professional Training program by hi ghly qua!Uied instructors. LEARN MORE EARN MORE SERVE BETTER ABSOLUT[LY I I Three ind four bedroom homts ·All in excellent con- dition and area~. $1.8.500 - :t bt<lt'OOm pl~ family room, 2 baths. Re~ntJy redecorat- e<f $28,95().J bedroon1 3 h.iths, new paint, new carpeting, very perlcy! ! $:?S.43'l-I bed· room pl\lo; ta.mUy room, rt'· decorated through o u 1. &hake root charm. Nothini to do but move in. Take your pick. Lochenmyer Re.l llor 1860 Nel\-port Blvd., Of C.<\LL &t6-3928 Eves. 6~6-2290 • CA~L The The finest value in Saye~. S larie bedrooms. 3 ba.ths - large. low • mainl enance pool, 3 • c11,r iat'a&e. E.~51.1 ~ but subrul decor, to pleas. l the very particular and "''*' wllJ TRADE tor 4 -bedrOOm.. Harb&r Hi&hland1 or \Vest. cli!f ar RnidentiaJ Income Colesworthy & Co. "Asen!'' "for A Wi&e Buy" ~.m1 ----=---- FOREST E. 0 LS 0 N Inc. Realtor& Olso n As~umoble~ Assume FHA Loon Here·s your chance lo save $$. Just take over fantastic low interest F'HA loan. No qualilying! 3 Bedrooma, 2 bath College Park Estate ho~. Separate paneled fam- ily room. Underpriced for Atta at $2fi.950. Be amart, see today, Call 645-0103. SLEEPER At~ of Qrs!A J\leM ', busiest 111tersections. 6 fixer.up homes ro pay 11•ay rnw. This C-2 prop. erty could become vital ftte'<'·ay ramp business site. • 1.-0ATS & WAL LACI REALTOR$ --546-4141- {0pen Evenings) KING SIZE And fit for yP\ll' Queen. This bPautiful, immac 3 !BR & tam rm in r.Iesa Verde. Pa~setter that is really se ttll)g the pace. Feature~ all bit-ins, co11 patio. block v.·alls sut· round this Queen pa.lace. Askini; ~.T..i0.00 Real Estaters Randy McCardl t S46.23!3 3 UNITS $29,950 Eastside Coa!A r.tesa. Span- ish tilt roof, rentalg on large T7xl50' lot. Income $3i5 month.' Our beat income "" IW'R' ih ana'. Exclusive With New pert et Victoria 646.8811 (anytlmol ---. or Commercial. $99,500 on Fee Land. Opon Dally 1424 LINCOLN LANE 1 ID 3:30 \Veekday~ I t.o 5:00 \\leekeoda 673-1550 \-0 THE REAl, \"'-J ;STATE RS t ' I''< DOYER SHORES Ora.ma.tic home, newly & a.r- tiatically decorated. 4 Spt.c. "ioUJ bedrooms. glamorous dining room; colorful family room with pa.neled wall" 4 · eltetric dr11pea, Mr. &: r.trt." master bilth: l•l'ie pool with Jacuzti. S!Ii.OOJ. Ca I J fur a.op't. john macnab (714 ) 642-8235 901 Dover Drive. Suite 120 Newport Beach OPEN DAILY NEAR OCC 2.043 f'alom• Drive Compt, redee. S BR 2 ba. Choice &~a just (JU Irvine cpts/drps, blt-lns. Assume Ave. & :.>th. OwMr simply PAUL•WfilfE 5~% FHA o $140 per MUST SELL JN JAMJ~F. 645·0303 CARNAHAN month . M 10% dn to new All ofi'<i "1yited! All t.r,. at Harbor Cent"r •SALTY co. loan. Only $26,950. CALt. l'OOllJS, dole lo ICbooll; 2299 Harbor Blvd., c.r.t. ...~.,,-, .. ,. MR. NEL.50N 540-1151. !hops. --· --1003 Baker, c.~f. .,...,.. ..... H(>ri!age Real Eatate ~ Ml·$810 UNIVERSITY PARK • 4 + POOL (open '"'' '-"--' 3 BR 2 Ba. home by orig. EASTSIDE C0<1> Mesa quiet • $25 SQO !?l.\ EGE REALTY owner, "'"° has autirown nelghborhOod. N E W ahq ' . .W...Slt~ '"Dinn1e ! netdki~ "'°"bl ~et. cat'pl!tine, 1S x 30 HEATEiO :ie ~tll\JJJ:Jn. + .!:~ml~y Rhallm. , DOVl!R SHORES ~& . •1.:u. ta e, area. POOL. delu!i:e kitdttn Ju.st .a , &g ,,.,_., en .. y , S3.;,500 $32 %0 -h~' • lus~'llvin1 rm. ot>@n beam. 3 ·Brand New w]Vftw Al 1'lnk WEStLL A.HOME · od ""illn•• in JI ft .. tamey OOURTYARD POOL : EVERY 31 MINUTES rm, FUJI ~rate dunng nn. o! bdrm~. l baths + pow · w lk , 540-1720 room, J)6Relled fam rm w/ -· . a er & Lee TARBELL: '"'" ~nnal din nn ""'" Coldwell, Banker & Co. 20~ w .. 1e11tt Dr, 2955 Harbor l:'':i:' t . :_~ 550 Nt~~rt Centtr Dr. 646-TTU • t Newport Booch,°Collf. BUILDER'S REPP $21,950 1 833-0700 644-24SO E tbl ff v· H °"'fltr'a lou en this f Bdnn R1nt1r1 At11nf'1onl . •• u -1ew ome 2 slory home can ·be ~your "'!~""'~'!"'!'!'I!!!!!!!"~' I Specious & imina.culate 5 it R d ·~ by bUlld Almost nothlnr d<nfn r.tow. C I' H Ital bdrm 3 ba ga i. e eco1'8...::u. -In. 3 ·~-s. 4-.,.· ld-1> 0ftVQ Olp !h honle. 1deaJ for er. ;\l) l'lt\V hOU5e fe3ttlttlo ~.... •~ "' NE:\\'. ll6 beds. Lctaae or f&mlly. 149,500. $15CXI do1,·n & assume loan en, bea'lned celU,.1 in 1~ lease option. Pete Barrett ~ of $239/mo l*YI an. Vacant-urloua livioa nn, brick BBQ Offi Bid l e@ anytime. CALL RAY -~place. 54().l1'20 "'· Cit CJ• REALTY GA!JLT M<>USJ "'rl"'' TARBELL 29JS Horbor E.""<l't'llent C.M. location. '" Real E1tate !open e\.~11 CHANNEL FRONT Kermit Rius Rltr. Jsos westc1•• °'·· Ne lusK-EASTBLU~F Jn Ne......, s-" """'" 2S YEAR.5 IN AREA M&.M60 Evt. ~2T.>9 SCORPIO 't'o'll'r! csrtt'l.IJ of monty! AMume this IOI\._ low inte r- ett loa.n on bulkltr'' awn ~ BR.. Spaniih ron temporary tt'ilh 1\11 •xtras, ecmn. lf~l ~far HJ Dist. w:l,fl&I & >'OU ~n 'the land. Hel Plnchin & Auoc. ')00) £. Coast H_..v,v, 67M3:l2 OON7 JUST \VI~lf t:or somtlhin& to furnl&b your bomt , , • fi nd crt&.1 b\o'I Jn tod~y·11 Cl~-$11lfitd Adr;. 642-5200 ~ Owner trans. 4 BR. 2% ba. priced 3 bdrm.. I tarnUy nn. F !2nd •-t , ,, on water, Ortly Sfl.SOCI, u.·e EASTBLUllF 4&FAMILY Back B11y \·1e1". £xtra IJt. lot. &auUIUl ~· 1..afl': exisfing l&&n. SfT.500 "B/B" Rulty 675-3000 LARGE BAL ISLE DUPLEX 4 Bdmt1<. up, J BR. down. Only 4 >'"' old. Good 11pend~ 11blf", ar~&l term•! Exchan1° e:l considered. ua,cm Rlddlo & 11011, Rltro. l:·.",.) &. C,,.,ct ff,..1·. 6TS.m3 am. rm. \lo. .. ....... e. ... 1• corner lot. Only $4~$00. , ... \·e Gthtrs • aleo tt-ntJJls. CORBIN·MARTIN CAYWOOD REAL TY. REALTUJtS 615-1662 6306 \V. Caul 11wy •• NB 30llS E, Cout If.,.., CdM • 541-1290 • " A Touch of Sponla~ l INCOME UNITS \Valltd patio; 3 ,tl. + di". 2 & 3 Bdnns. New ettp6~ ~ t ftm!ly + lae, room ovtr drapu. 811-ini. Prlvatt P'a. praat. R~~ to tm. F'l.~lacn. Tl)f'I }(U. S~1.~ ~ tlon. Owner. 540257 • W•lker Rlty. 675·5200 SCARCE ITEM - l366 Vjt Lido, lli"'B Optn Sun. Octantront lot fll'er 300 fl PLANNJNG to move! You'll deep, Call "~ t,; Seel" ~ an a.mu1na ~wnbet of 8kr. 499.1990 I ~~s-ltf , homo in today's Oualfll"d THE SUN NEVER SETS on Aa•. Chr.ck thr'll r'I0\\1• DAn .• v Pl'/'lT \\TANT,\!);-• -= ,... • -.. HOUSl!S POR SALE HOUSES FOii! SALE HOUSES ,OR SALE HOU~IS F OR SALE HOUSES FOR SAL E RE NTALS Hou1e1 F urnlahtd -·•· IOOOGaner•l· --· 1000 C.... --·-1100 II-To,. 1244 Huntl"91on llM<h 14001 ------'-'-- Mondoy, J"'""l' 19, 1970 DAllV Pll Of., J 7 RENTALS ~,_,Unfurnished Kt:NTALS • •L.-~ • ~ , ~ Apts. Fur.nhhed A pts. Fur nl-. ' Newport S.tch 3100 Ganlf•l 4000 Hdftlintfen IMch 4400 I;;;;;;;;::;;~::;;::;;;:;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;:;;;;;;:;;; II ~~~~=;:;;=;. I Newport ... ,h 2200 LAKEFRONT • Lake Forest Now 2 BR, 2 Ba"'""· Lux· GREAT POOL HOUSE WATERFRONT vory ""'"'' 8 /8 n.. GORGEOUS N.,,, STONEHENGE ' APTS. Balbea tslan~-:-119,0p_al Ave. Assame , 6% % Loan =~~ '1:-'ri.= 1:~~i M.,.?:EN~i ~:~~.Er~vety • BR Ex~"""~'· Adults 0n1y VAL D'JSERE 2 llJl. • BA, •"'1)'1!1, ..._ Tl.ls DUPLEX mutit be sold & es·-w·closed · " .... ,. ,.. 3 ~, ~. llh SWIM nmphm!. mo. 17 3 81\, l IJ&lbJ, &pllt Jrvel S16S Sin& b 2 b F · 1 mt Adultt, "° "*' 2J20 " ~· t•"t -'bdrm2··-w yard. rool . ((O nnls, ucuroom ,..,mew · 2 .. ~ • ._ le-1 r-r 111'111.11'1 ,.. _ _, ,,,..... • lrc Feb 16 to S.tl-,ly creditors on '&QI' IJ'le " ..,. .. ING POOL •-• BR1 • .... tbs • ... ••• .. · ~.,,, · ·· · r .urida ;),)11.2730 • • hot Sln month pays all clubhou11t prlvt. Bel ow "'' ·' ..,..rpet& Corone del Mir . 2250 AVAILABLE NOW S.wla., Act'y Rm, Billiard• =-"'·,,,,__.~,,.;;..,,,_,==I o reasonable offer turned dO\v,n ¥.'ith 10% lnc~ing ta.'<tt, Co""-r lot market price. 494-3463 Drn.,es. CJeaminx: HARO. Bly & Bea¢h Realty, Jnc. Therapy a, 45• pool, BBQ! • OEL·LAKE MANOR cash. "''Ith room !or boat&: b-aiJer. :;;;~;;:;::=====! \VOOD rLOOR.S! Assume }"URN. C&lif. home, 2 BR, 901 Dover Dr, Suite 126 NB2 :000:;:,:p;.,..,..:=;;,,Rd;;,;. =642-86==:::7{! Lee 1 BR 1150, util pd, pool, LOWER uN1T. 1 Bdrm frplc F • .\. heat bit -in All ex!l" lntluding cover-Cor ona del Mir 1250 6% FHA pt-1· annum loan. den,~ a.. encl.sd p&lio, ~w li45-2000 Ews. !t4S-6966 ... po.tio. Small compleJI'. Adulu, & b • .• , ed patio, carpets, drapes & Submit &s low u 12,250 crjm, walk'c dist, bell. 0 j:C:••:':•~Ma::::'"::_ __ ;_4 l~OO~l:~no=pet=•-~Sl&<;·=n~7~.""=.;~~I range ~oven. gar age~ d1sposa.1, plaster intcJ'com. fUV piice ~ down, Tot.GJ payments u Adulr.s 673-1.304, 6'f3..861T 3 e R!ll, den, 2 beth, walls, private patio. 123.500. 540-ll51 Heritage Cairi.O Hlghltinds low ., 1156 monthly. c H t NA Co v e . v le w' ~ar~~~lo~:.•m:S o~~~ ~quna &each 4705 UPPER UNIT -2-Bdrms, hard\Vood floo rs, ReAl E11tate (()pen ewa) 3 & DEN ..-$6f,SOO WE S ELL A HOME beautifully fum 3 BR, 2 BA, ynr's Jea...e & S50 dep. * SUNNY * TtlE N};\V VILLAGE INN All bed room furn. included. 2 car garage with :i car parking. beam C.1·1·1ng, sundeck. ~!!!!'!!!!'!~~!!!'!!"'~!'l o-at view! Lots of extras! EVERY 31 MINUTES $450 mo ""'Y· 644--0906 appt. 1-·a-1 NB "'7·M•• k I Cozy • .t CO~tFORTABLE. '" . w lk & L ·· =·~="==;=~=-=== ACRES formerly Saddlcbac · nn, Quiet, ~n1.c tree 1ocat10n. 3 , :;.c~~~ room; wet I er ee Lido 111e 2351 Newport Haight• 3210 *' · * =a· :,';, ~u a ~~·~: ':Ii'· ~ .. 2 _ """""""' "BZB" RHll\t 675-3000 mo"""°' Bh~. at Ad•nu -------* Motel-Apls * linem. maid, pool. Ia""""' bliU,. •• • falmil)t 11~ ~~ BY • Q\\'NER -SPEC 5'4~9491 01)('n 'til 9 PAf 3 Bdrms 2 bath!!, turn, Jan. OCEAN Vi~\'. 4 BR, .f BA, rnl. Steps to bch. 696 S, Csl OPEN HOUSE Sat./Sun. aft.moon SATTLER MORTGAGE CO. rm. massivf' r.......,... 15 lo Ju1y J111 . $275/mo. b 7201 hearth ll'Plcs. Seeing is TACULAR. NEARLY. NE\V Discrimina t ing Buy•r Pe~ Ban-ett Rlty. &t2·5200 nnnpus room. a1', vrry 1 ~ignal So. oC O.C. Hwy. 4!»-~36/494-. belitvini: & only $28,500 VIEW JiOME IN EXCLUS-4 Bdrm + large! Nc\v crpts, drps, Fairgrowld~ NICE Room, AJ1 studio. kit call: M5-842~ (open eves) IVE CA.i.'fEO SllORES, ~ F amily Room B1lbo1 l1l1nd 2355 painl $365 Lse. :>18-5'766 o.r Studio & 1 ladtoollts p11v, 1 block bea~h •. tor 642-2171 South Coaiit R.eal Estate ~R, 3 al\, J <;:"1' garage, fani· POOL I JITED &. FILT'D, ---------548-537l $30 WK. & UP young tenant. 4!»-3960 ' BR + X'tra Rni For Bus. ily rooin, -fi'Plcs, over. can assume Ju111 int. loan. $370 mo/yrly. F'um/unfurn. D W k M h 1 "'Apt. Also, i lttping mis. 'iz.w pool Loaded \I'/ e:< n-1· htf I 2 BR 2 B' Huntington Be1ch 3400 oy, ee • O•t I 93-1 \V.19th St. 011•ner. (:!13) = · · · · Ch111f'r 11·i!I carry ~2nd. v.: ig u · ,.., e Kllehens l . TV's Jnt:l. Util pd. Jo"rtt TV & n dio. General 1000 General 1000 7= l"A'J, 67l-344S. traa! /\lust.see'? apprec1at1?. Ininiac home Spanii;h mour. frplc, 2 car gar, 2 patios, • p :000 So. Coll.st Hwy. l;;;:;;:;;:;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;I·-;;;-;;-;;-;;:;;;--;.~;-\.=:~=~========! Owner will finance, Call HAFFDAL RllY 8424405 dock. Adults on1y, no pets, $19j HOUS£ i''OR RE.'NT hone i;erv., htd pool I' PARADISE FOR N-port •each 1200 6'71>-1354 aftr 10 a.m. -"'"~~'880------~ 3 Bcinn .. 2 ba., corner Jot, t • l\Iaid i;ervice avail , H 1 1 4975 M• " Th ...... u .,. blk. tot_hopa, n1kt ., bank & 2376 NEWPORT ILVD. o e • _ • lsslng e HARBOR VIE\V HIU.S, 4 Hunting~:»n \VATERFRONT -Lg 3 Br 9 5 THE THRlm Ba f I Ir I modlcnl. ........ , Mari"' 548-7 5 LIDO g,,,,., Hotol • Morina His ON Br, 3 , am rm\\' Pc. Harbour 1405 home, avail Feb. 6, $l50 mo. 11 5 • ;...,._,. v· El ' TRY T · · "" \.hue iew em. $25 p Wk & U s-oal winter monJhly rat· B k 40? Throw av.•ay yow· paint Laridscaping, fencing com·'---------Ownr 675-3803, Bkr 67:Hi900 G C er p ~-. ac FOR SIZE 1 $57500 Owne ,-i;chools, 11•alk to .\\' .... or • • es. Bayfront Lanai Suite • brush; !his owner n1ade all 216 KINGS Pl. ~~~ ' ' r · LIQUIDATION!! New lri· Duplexes Furn. 2975 Hunt. Center. near Douglas. Bacl.ielor & .1 BR:. htd pool, S4G2, Vieiv $tudlo Suite $255. Here's l /3 acre PLUS in improvemenls lot· you. New Open Sat/Sun 1-S level hon1ea. f>l•ices slashed -"--"'------Built-in kilchen, 11 e \V maid ~ivu,:C. ~1tch~ns It up, Kitchenette:a. M a J d, Back &..v \l'ith J txlnns 2 paint outside and in; new Spaciowt 4 Br. 3 ba. on 2 3 Yr old Duplex. Above h\\'Y unbel.ievably io $38,IJO. 3 & $175. N!'\\' 2 Br. Garage -carpet. larg:" fenced rear TV avail. 4JQ Victoria \Nr phone, coUee, ice. Oay-\V~k. bathi:; & l ~x30' pool 11·ith div. avocado <'arpet complin1cn1-leve'-. Have hve.in maid! on Marigold. Good in-4 &Inns. BI d rs I Ag t , hook. up \V/D. Chi Id I' en ya!'d . 536-1345 "'C<'kends or Harbor!. 617 Lid<> pQrk Dr. 6734!800 f'd \l'ith \1'ainut panclino. En-ll'I vestment. $66.500. 01vner. 8'" -. ev-557-6151 ft , 6 p m C ing boa1·d. Try FllA or VA joy your :spacious DiNING Old e r family members? 6'13-2&14 ............,,,., .. ~ O.K. Bkr 5.'J4.6980 a e · · ~ SUS ASITAS RENTALS or 10<..{, down. ROO;\l or have a family Room a!TllJ'lgement provide• , 300 Anahe·im 1650 $120. l BR, nr ocean. Child 4 HUGE Br's, 2 Ba, ll!!\\'\y Furn. 1 BR & Bach. apts. ADts Unfur,.i.W $27,500 •-ot p~·-·y.BONUSrooms L--p I 1 OK decorated & landi;caped. 2ll0 Nell'po11 Blvd, l\ledal-•_;.;:."'-·c.·------1 Newport a l Victoria 644-8811 (anytime) GIANT FAMILY ROOM Yes.' 8. :J Bedroom, 2 Bath Home in ~lesa Del !\far, \\;th ~ 300 sq. !!. added Fam· Uy Room. C.Orne-r Jot "·ith room for boat or <.:sniper StOl'Bt!\'. Laq::c CO\'Crrd pa. tio (or ou1side living, I! you are fan1ily type people and "'ant room lo enjoy lhat family, call now. S:.!9,9j0, S46-2313 ASSUME VA LOAN NO QUALIFYING 4 king size bedrooms + :? pullman baths + BIG FAM. !LY ROO?.l + carpet~ & draJ)('s + ELECTRIC built- in kitchen + CaliJornia fire- place + extra deep POOL sized lot --5 n1inut~ to the Blue Pacific. Sl.000 and It's all yours. -WE SELL A HOME EVERY 31 MINUTES Walker& Lee Z790 Harbor Blvd. a t Adams f>.5-9491 Open 'til 9 Pl\f 5 Bdrms 3 Baths SHAKE ROOF Near a!I schools. $37,000 best of terms. Country. Estate custom built 3 bdrm home • ,lflany extras. Lot 180x300' - cook-out on the two patios ... ,-,,,... Bal-en1nau • •---------· . " with brick BBQ. Private oor· are a studio -1· hobby room. ' Bkr 53~980 Free water & Ira.sh $235. lion by Hotpoin1 . Generil $.~ ncr on a Q-uiet Cul-de-sac • '" "'" "" wv.. "' "'6 ,. k"t h bit ·· t RENTALr ........., 140 & up· A1 • RACTIVE, I P,_1_1~ ... ~ t-•unn'"" e ~0 Settle Esta!• NE\V 4 BR, 2 BA. patio ~0 "215 l2~f';>,:';;J~~~fiV'E::~l=~=:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;~;;1 • e-e-'"'"g. \Vet bar in D"ple'" nr. b"'· yacht club & 1 c en, ·Jn~. crp g, ~ h plenty of room for BOAT "",,,,,,"', ,·u-lte.' ~·-r lea"·-• " " undergr nd util. Very Hou•es Unfurnished 4 BDRMS 1%. bats, ('Orner bdr .. poof, utll paid, garden VENDOME or CA?oiPER! Ne-.v Stater v uir cui..-11hopping, 2 BR's ea unit, dbl · H 1 A he. lot. Vacant. 6 month or 18 living, adults, no pets, 1800 incl. all •I". kitch. 2 r ,..1.,, gor .• ,.,950. Principals only. private. cart o na im: I "'O/ Bkr " Bros. Center, grammar, Jr, NEW ~ 2 inin fi'Onl s .A. frwy, 2 blks General 3000 month case • .,..... n)o, · WaUace Ave., C,i\t. high, high 5C'hoois arid col· Elec.1ar.dooropener. 673-1355 froo1 ne1\' multi·n1illion sl-'--'-'"'-'"------546-4141 MERRIMAC WOODS Ii\™ACULATE .'-PJ'S! I "°" ALL ..,;~ Ior ~~======~I SPACIOUS ' t 3 r • · . . AOU'T • FAMILY Jegc PLUS public park -all ownlwy_ 0 1":;""_500-.' \\•eekd:·:;: by -1306 shopping.business (."0111plex bd •1 '.0 1 1'Y • 0 .. S325 EXECUTIVE 2 story 4 Fum units a_vail. Se, .• e ad un.. SECTIO"Ns A-VAILAB'~ an elUY \Valk!! The value "" ~ L inda Isle "The City" tO<'k dn, no 2rkl rms • ainiy room, BR. 21,'J Ba, formal din, 2 dcr class :ilOO. 4~ l'ltern-Cl ·t shoppl"9 ·P~ortc i• the bes! .. n... $11"""' app'f. Call; • ...,, •= f•t "''·11 ,·.. custom co.rpcts/ drapes, all frpl•s, h"g• ''"'· all bltns. mac \l'•Y· "•c . .,~tv> ose o , ,,.... ... ' '"""·'. MR. ROBIN"~N 1 Linda Is le Drive req. "" ,......,, "· ' ... b ·1 · I · t .. " " " '7">.ru.>\1\1 "n-for four bedrooms 1%. baths · ;;'!tJ 7000 4 BR. 5 BA holllo.! in final c1-ease 1st of Feb. bt\\'11 12-4, UI \.ins, new Y pain eu. Aft 4 pm. 847-3627 .-,~~"--,,,...-~--,--, fr Spackius 3 Br'1, • ua ••• $17~ Initial FHA inwst-Davis Realty 642· 639-4312 $275/mo. Heritage Real ~='°"===;-;;;-,---.;: 1 Bedroom Furnished apai·t· * 2 Bedrooms menr or ASSUME LOW ~-NEWPORT stages of completion. Palos,,========= Estate. 540.1151 (open eves) 4 BR TOWNHOUSE, 2~i Ba. n1ent For Rent. Ca 11 * Swim Pool, Put/gr.en TEA.EST f IN AN C 1 NG. Verdes stone entry & frplcs.l· or 5.l7-7S43 Ava\! tll July $220 per mo. ~6-8191 * Frpl, Indlv/lndry fac'la JIURRY! ! SHORES Fam Rm + billiard rm. Laguna Bei th 1705 RUSTIC Ne\v l Br. 2 Ba. ~C;.""1 _::536-;=-c.1-;"'='""7.-;=:--:::;:-ILGE, I Br, no Children, no 19'5 Anaheim Av•. 'l•l!l!llJllll!!I~!!!!~ 12 Blocks to the ~an ~1 block LB~ndaut. d1','10• 1D155 0-.·000•10· p;,,ant LEA. VING roun.try 6-8 1vks. fam nn, frplc. crpt'd. NE\V 4 Bds., I 11 ha .. cyts, pets. S125. &U Shalimar Or. COSJ'A r.IESA 1>12-2121 r to cumin. recreation center 1 , a Pi•1ced to sell 1m1ncrl. Loan Tustin S:?S;i. li14• 838--3018 <lf)tS, hit-ins 122;) nio. 1st & "A", C.l\(, 21111. llli __ Evening~ CaJI 67J...6ll6 CAMEO . SHORES l'abu!ous \ie1v hom(' Expensively built 1\'ilh rich teak paneling; beautiful grounds lnc:Jude a lath house for orchids pool & patio-deck. '2 Bedroonis & den, lovely dining room An ('_.,;ce!len! investn1cnt in tastf'fuJ living SS9,.)0() . Llt1ted Exclusively \\'ilh 'R:THEREAL ~ E,~'.l'f>JE.JW Btll Grundy 675-3210 -ood-1 -------tail, ?\tr. Barker, 96S-6S34 ;-'i;i-;:":;:...,=:-7::0-::;,;-; & pool.. 3 Bedrooms'! baths, assum11.bll'. \V -i; ass con· S22.;i. ::: BR. Compl. redec. 1 BR ful11. 1150. incl util & firep!a«, double garage, A 1351 str. 2 Br, 2 Ba. bit-ins, w/\v Children & pet O.I\. pool. Aduhs. no pc ls. kiddie haven, • $23,:x:Kl 10% lido Isle crpting. !rpl & view. Int. Bkr 5.3~ LagUl\I Be~_ch 3705 :.4S..2627 or 96&-1740 do"'"· . 1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1 sand blasted cedar; ext. =========I 646-7171 * 546-2313 UDO LOT redwood. Open house Sat & Costa Me•a 3100 BY O"'ner: Lease or buy Su n 10-j or call for appt. beaut. 4 BR. 3 ba home. Choice 35 ft. street-to-street 494-3066. 934 Miramar 3 lk-dt'OOnt. Sharp. Big Yard. Formal din rn1, fRn1 rm. l."01'ner Via lfavre & Soud. DIRTY FACE Ready iininctliately, Owner Canyon vie\v. cul-de-sac, 337·500 .f Unit art. l'.?O )'Cl~. froi'1 tran1<f('\T('(I. S195 IX'l' month. bl l·in kit. be11.mNI Ct"iling, L beach Should gross $9,0CX). \\'r have othen;, D1u11 in and dbl gar. prnctieally no yard NE\\'PORT HEJGHTS Fixer QWSOn l!O,ro:i annual. Needs painl hro11·sc tlauux:h our Rental maint. Ideal for children & • -4 bd 2 b <h Book entertalnine; S300 n10 or upper ...... 1'ge rnt a 3416 Via Lido, NB 6T';H:)62 & clean-up. Price, as is, · Newport Beach 4200 Newport Bea ch • RENT • 3 Rooms.Furniture $19.95 & UP i ~onth·T1>-M1,nl.h Ren.tats \VIDE SELECTION NO DEPOSIT O.A.C. !!YRC Fun~lture Rental! 517 w. 19th. 0 1 548-3481 Costa Mes• 5100 honte • dining room & rum-"""'"'!'t":'!~:':".:!'J!!°!''"'"'I $00,SOO. \Viii trade. \VALRER & LEI: $40,!XKI. 494-&827 pus room & '2 fireplaces, .,, LEASE/OPTION ~fISSION REALTY 4'J.1.0'T3i 2790 Harbor Blvd . al Adams CHARI\'1 2 Br, 2 Ba, Atriun1. BRAND NEW 2100 sq ft of living area 4 BDR!lf, 3~~ BATH 2 BR, Gar. Patio. Crpts, cpts. drps. \\'hi1e \Valer IMMEDIATE • priced for Immediate sale 4000 sq. ft. l<r7 Via Eboli. Mission V ie jo 1701 drp~. s1ow-& 1~fri.i:-. Quiet Vltll'. Pl'iv Bch, Lsc s:m. APT-HOMES . GRAND OPENING at $32.500. F1IA/VA • NO :; car 1;arage, Crp~. drps.l;;;-'-'----'-----1 Tropical Sell inl!'" 1rir Adlts Owner 499-:",638 I QCCUPAN.CY 00\\'N AV A IL. Call 2 Yl'5 young. MAKE OFF-BY 0 \VNER: Transfe1ttd. 4 Only. 1 Blk Shops. $175. 2 BR. 2 BA. View hOme in N. Never before lived in. Prl- 54:)..3424 !open eves) South ER! O\\•ncr, (213) 244-3101, Br. 2 Ba, t"ain Rm, crpls, &i4-0452 C'nd. Lag Bch. $300 ni!'I. vale patio living. Neat Coast Real Estate. eves f213l 246-0700. drps, frplc. ll~\i·shcr. 11,~ CO"-IPLETELY redec. 3 BR Yrar's lease. Eves, 494-9502 Luxury 1;ardcn apartincnti Jxoach & shopping. All new FRENCH DECOR NE\V :l Bdt·m. 4~2. BA Nord Yrs. old . 837-9144 }'.P. New epli:;, dr11.pes. 3707 offering coniplcte privacy, built·ins, dishwashers, . .,,,.;w Condominiun1. J Bedrooms, Bayfront-piei· and s Ji p . -~Cl -1710 FnC'ert yd. Xh11 10<'. No pets. lagun1 Niguel ti d ..,.. pnvate 2 ba1hs. Pool, Bcautitutly Area's best buy. °''-r1er. Int-Sii\ 1me nte l'tfa.."\ 2 child. :i<IS-9737 -=--~'------1 beautiful landscaping & ~i~•~. ng, ra,.-" · ---:! Story 4 Bdrm 2 Ba Liv rm "~ 1naintained, n1ed. oceupancy. 49~-s4lj T iie Is Foll'ing Off 4 BR or 3 +den Condo S225. unparell('led r1:crcalional e 3 BR·2 BA·f,..lc .• pl" .• , ·oo din 1m kil drps rrpti :.! car ~.~ • .J Sj.j.000-3 BR. 2 BA 2 Ba, 2 sty + maintenanee. gar. S250 mo. 1 )T. Jsc. facililics Jri a country • 2 BR-2 BA·patios LIDO REAL TY INC. 119 VIA YELLA 1, both bathrooms. Tenific Clubhoui;c, pools, near OCC. Imm~ --4,...._:;~..., e 1 BR.·1 BA-<Ieluxe si~le 3377 V• L'd 673 7300 r .. 111 0=1 ''" '761 d ~u ....... ""'-""""' club allllOlll>ht'rc, Now C . A t H 1a 1 0 • O\VNER. 1714l 45.i-GWS buy for this 3 BR. fixer-up. .......-o.N eves, ~ &Y.!1 • •• ,. or.s1can p ··-ornes • DU PLEX e per, near beach. Submit 2CIDRM, J Ba th house-1170 RENTAL~-leasing in ~l'"'IJOl't Beach. SUNF1.0\'""'& 'AVB,., N • t B h 1 ·~ R 0 ""~ E Aot•. Furni•hed 'T"' Just a HOP fron1 1he OC!::A: . Hunting on eac wu rlo\\·n payrnent! mo. Ken oss &!............., ve: I--------::::: Blwn s, Main "-Brisml , ' """'"'!'"""'~~~""'""'I :i Bclnn. & :.i Bdnn. plus • . THE HUNTSbJAN 496-1268 646-22.i9 Generil •OOO l\ludcls 01JCn 10 ani lo 8 pm Located '·• mile E. of South TAKE OVER ~ei;t roon1. Immediate Possei:aion 3.1144 Coast H1vy, Dana Point JWIJ\1AC 3 BR, J~ &, fl'Plc. }'urnished or unfurnished Coast Plaza ~pping-Cente'r 5"• ANNUAL R d t "'I -~ O" this cute 3 bedroom Cah· '"';,"":=-·"-='==== "J'• cducl' 0 .)J .... M n 1· Nt' i;chls & i>hop·~. :>IH529 s· I Call. 540-1973 FHA LOAN Graham Rlty 646-2414 rornia Rancho wit~ oor 10 Dina Point 1730 or 673-l4.l4 ing e Rents Crom $155 to $310 on a 3 bedroom Rustic Ranch-Near Nl'l\'port Post Office ceillng pictw·e \\·lndOll'. 21----------=~~=-,,__,.,,..__..,,,. o· k d RBOlt EENS e1u wi th huge private back Baths Thick nylon carpel. 4 BR RANCH STYl.E $126. 2 Bit £.side, g11r.. a WOO . UA GR yard. "TALL FOTLAGE", BAY FRONT Apt suites. Fan-ing. 0.0!!P to scbools, shop· Plus fan1ily room. 3 Baths. fellC1:d yd. SIOve, drps. Cpl 1 ~ ' Sl24 per mon!h pays all on taslic vie'!\·! Dlx 2 BR, 2 pin:; & all.freeways. S22,9CXl Nice residential area. C.om· or I child, n10 dogft. 646-5601 Adults Garden APARTMENTS $21,500 FULL PRICE, Hur. BA. Dock~. S.t4.300 up. 1-~uu, PRltz. G.I. Nu Cash pletely re!u1·bished. Your Eastsidc 3 St'droom 2 Bath sPACIOUS Helen l\tcKeniie, R l tr. A.,r 1 -, 1 Apartments ry o.n this beauty?! Down or ,u,,ume oiv 1ner. choice of carpet co or. Jlange. garage, S170 mo. 'f0\VNl10USE LMNG · WE SELL A HOME 646--0 732 est loan. i'otal paythents $29,500, l..olv, lo"· clmvn. * 548-9-jJG * Lu."\ury a:ingle, 1 & 2 bed· Sermrate adult&: family com• EVE~Y 31 MINUTES BLUFFS · J BR, 2 BA. sjllit· $163 per month. POINT REAL TY 4 Bdim 2 Bathe ttr>tft, 'drps, r6cl'm apru't'ments, turnl!h· 1700 16th Street munities. Bichelor 1-2-, &: 3 Wa-lker·& Lee level rondo, $29.!'iOO or WE SELL A HOME . 34156 Coast 1-flvy .• Dana Point double gar. fenced. S215, nio. cd and llnfurnished, "''l1h Bclnns, fu rn & unfut'n aptJ, leasefoption. 644-2039 EVERY 31 MINUTES {714) '19S-5323 ~S.9536 complete privacy and land-7 14: 642-8170 $110. per n10. 2790 Harbor Blvd. 111" Adams Newport Heights 54~ Open 'til 9 P!lf 1210 W lk r & Lee =:========= llCaped rountry club atmos· a e Apls. For Sole 1910 Newpo" BHch 3200 ''""' ioclooiog . IT',,.,000 $18.1 -2 BR, lower duplex, e Large garden patios ru:n w/garage. ( 2 13) e Open beamed ceilings ,,,._ HOME SITES Priced from S16,950: some on the course! Plenty Ot hulkling acitivity lh !llt>sa Venle, lop locatlons avail· 11.ble, good buys, Time to """' ''1··~1''r'· 1 ~·1 t • I.•., ·• 1, ,\ FIXER UPPER Jn Newport Heights. 3 bdnn. Frplc. Trip~ 1arage on al· Jt>y, Asking S25.CXXI. Grahem Rlty. 646-2414 Near Ne\\-port Post Office LOTS OF LIVING In this 3 Br, home built around a pool, + a J car garage_ $33.500, EZ tenns. VOGEL CO .• Realtors 2667 E. Coas1 Hwy, 673-2()'1{1 2790 Harbor Blvd. at Adams 6 NE\V deluxe 2..U-9-12 TOWNT10USE: 3 BR. 2~, 56-0465 Open 'tll 9 PJ\.I & 24 units. \Valk to - b h A . . BA, ti·plc, patio, pool, 2 car 2 HOUSES 01\ LOT ea c · pprcciallng gar, all bltns, crpls, drps. R-3. 130 x 280' lot. 2 bl:fnn Q a~a. Owner / ~ldr. Lse S215 n10. 871-8811 or \vorth ol recreational facll- itles deHigned and operated just for single people. RENTS FROM S14;i to S300 ranch house with> big fam· Ltndboi'g C:O. 536-2,-,19 642-2497 eves or \vke nds. ily room. separateh l<'rvi·% RENTALS 2 BR. 2 bu., den, din. room NEWPORT BEACH porch, large kite en wi Hou1es Fur nished In Clilfhaven. $300 880 IRVINE AVE . electronic oven. 3 built·ind ----'------Geo~l' Wllliamron. Realtor JRV1NE AND 16th ovens, toaster. rangt> & Rentals to Shire 2005 673-4350 673-1564 Ei·es t714/ &15-0550 mott 3 car gerage. Separ· ale bunk bOU81' with fire· LADY sharc Hunt. Bch. 3 BR pool ho1ne. 1 blk to best GARDEN GROVE place kitchen, big, big bed· house with same. Son1e furn beach. S330/ mo. Fam. room'. Otthard. Room for ok. Prkg, strg. 714: 968-8178 only. Agen! 968-4362 13100 Chap1nan Ave. 695-6482 or see 121 39th SI, e Fireplaces • Rec. Roorris 'vlmd.!I. e 2 pools, saunas, ~unery 1 & 2 BR furn & unlurn. 1150 school. • $175, Cpts, tlr)'>8, blUts, IMi\fED. OCCUPANCY pool, patio. 1525 Placentia 2700 Petel'SOn Way BAOIELOR Apl, 2 Dr'! C.Osta Mesa $ol6-0370 trom Ocean. Fui·n. Utll. Nr. Harbor & Adams incl. $125 ti1'o. Yrly. 842-8148 N d 1 _ EW a u t commumty. l & OCEANFRONT J BR· 2 Br all util pd pool a:hag \Vlnter. 11S5. Garage, yard, crp~ blt·lns dratJes' pr. • 673-8088 • age '1v/sror, ' area. Adu.Its EXTRA spac.ioll8 at1ract fum only, F'rvm S1SO. 546-5990 l'!'any, many tree~. STJ.000. Dover Shores 1227 We ll s-McCordle, Rltrs. I ;;;;;;~~~~~~ 1..:.:.:.::.:....:;;;.:...=. __ _ ""w •""· "'" torh ~ bay. HACIENDA HARBOR Upper 3 Bdrm 2 bath S22S. . , many more unit!, $48,000 • WANTED Female To Share DELUXE: c:ondo, 2 BR. 2 BA. (4 blkl \V. Santa Ana Fwy.) Yaur terms. Hse or Apt 11•/same, Call FrpJc, pool. J2j(l. Baylront 1714) 636-3000 lll!l!!!IJr.1!!!110!1'!'111!1! &12-9610 after SPl\1. apl $350. Agl 646--07:l2 ANAHEIM 1810 Nowpoct Blvd .. C.M. YES YOU CAN IMPRESSIVE - 348-7729 6#-0084 t"ves. SPACIOUS $22,950 c.\itc 2 bdrn1 & den, near downtm•.:n C.!'11. & City Park, Has r<'d brick J.leatilator fireplaC"t. fruit trees &. tilrgc fcnced lot. For ap. pointment to see, call ·Anyone C•n Assume This outt1tartllng • k>an with 'rent like paymenUi. Largt ~ sq. foot homt, .. Udtms. 8 bathi;, Huge separate fa111· .ily rn1. 5,. % . APR J...oan, 540-1720 TARBELL 2955 Horbor tlDO $ANDS S BEDROOMS '2 Bath11. LArste )'Ard. $29,950 GMrge Wllllemaon REALTOR 6~0 673-1564 Eves . 4 Br. 414 Ba + maids. Full length view • Bay & Mtns. High ttllings, S«X> sq. ft. built around court. 4 car gar. £.z maint. Jmmed oect>- St78.000, A11ume 6%% loan. Olvner, 548-7'249. Westcliff 1230 WE DARE YOU To compare for location, "'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'"""'I coostr.. O:llor-scheme and all the xtras in thi.!I 4 Bel. 3 Ba. beauty. $69,500. NOW,'S ~THE R. C. GREER, RHlty -33.l5 Via Lido 673-9300 Unlver1lty Park 1237 MINIMUM CARE ?o1'a.x'lmum enjoyment olfered in this channlne; 4 br to\\'O· bowie, vet'Y versatile floor plan, $34,500, •red hill TIME FOR u .. v. r!E~~;.. ,,., .. Call A11,ytimf 8:\3-0820 i' 41ijlij\mir'flmfllll MIDDLE-aged woma11 to 2 BR home Complelely ne1v NO\V LEASING FOR ff:M471 T!!i'm;&r-sha~ my 2 BR 11.pt, Laguna ln.!lide & out. Ne\\•port Hgt.!!, Beach. Refs. exchd. 494-7860 2330 15th St. &12-9950 i\IARC!l OCCUPANCY 01 RTY DOWG m So, Brookhurst GIRL Over 21 to shal't' house BAYCREST. 4 Br. 2 Ba. (I blk. So. uf J,inooln) Bring Your brillo pads and 11•/ 2 girls on Balboa Island. Fenced Yd. Child, pet 01\. (7l4) m-4500 Jots of elbow greRl!e and Reas. rent. 671-8497 Jmmed Occ. SJ.'JO. 675-482:1 reap. the profits. Needs work BUSINESS Woman dt"shi!a to NO matter whal 1t is. you South Bay Club hut 15 a great starter home. share home w/same. Call • can Bell ii with & OAfLY 3 Large bed•~ and 2 893-3439 after 6 P1\t. PJLOT \VANT AD?! &12-5678 A part me nts baths with built·ms make a 1 .;;;;.;;;;,;~:=,:;.;==~=====-==::=:;;=.!.:=======""" tremendous bargain. w 11 1 O.nerel 3000 'General 3000General 3000 sell G. t. no down or F.H.A.1-"'-;;.:;-"'-----~--'-=;_----------"----low, low down. WE SELL A HOME EVERY 31 MINUTES Walker& Lee 7682- ~140 842·44.'i6 51/4 °/o LOAN .to rwume. Pymnta: 1167/mo, 3 BR. l,i: fam rm, lg, lot. Priced below market, Sub- mit dawn -2nd TO avail. • BRASHEAR RLTY * 1~2 Beach Blvd ., J.IB 841-8507 Eves. 96S-J178 -Hom t Ne.cl• F amily to appreciate 5 bdMlu. dc- aired built • Jn1, bealltiJul yard & minute1 to the beach. All tor $.1~.500. Pacitk: Shorts Realty The Purtle with the Buift-ln Chuckle Oltem-rong• letter• of •lh• ·tour J(romblld word• be· low to for111 four limple word1. I I I' I I I I ID Y KUS I J ·.__· .._I .._I' .._I ..._.I f I PID E ~ I } ~~.s ~--,,.-,.-..-..,--! 'l Cotty rtmork: "She's in her 11 I I 'f . • solad doys, bur sn~·, not ':===~==='._,very portlcvlar obout ktr $12,500 QUICK CASH 1~1 rv~ •• e~~1~231 . THROUGH A BEST BUY "'""'!"G~REA~T!!!""B!'l'!U!':"'Y •I D-, AiLV PILOT EXCLUSIVE UNIVERSITY 3 & 4 Bdrm• -2 Boths 847-8586 ur 5.16-8894 Ir II SC ER ~-·" I·•• h1-i'1 -",1,.,~, .,1-~~1 G) Co111ple1e the dwtkl11 q1101ed by 111111'!1 h, !toe "1lUitlf word yrti11 devalc,, rom _.P No. 3 bt!ow. Cur. E4s"ld• I p,, '°""'" PARK. fnunacu!at. oond. $"3,990 on R·2 lot. Only S3tm On, / '" al WANT AD Tllo roof. hutc Uv nn • SANDP IPER HOMES A. C. ~ITE Ro t°' """""' rcillng. 3 Bdrm, ~~ Ha·~ C'f 548-<1522 (on Brookhurrt at AtlAntel ·~llt!_~ • '!'" • " • 2 bath 1\t"W .....,..1.$, drps, 5678 .. ., -..-(71~1 95"·'35.l to A~t.T P~t ~s Bea•h ~.,. "'me. Bia · 642 bitnt. t"IMIDm JOJ'ldaeaptnr. -•• · .. '""" .. -' TU~ tf'lf:r 6',I" lo8n. Tou YOl ' •rire tha:r\ you a've ges! se~11on ever! Sn ~ d DAfi..Y PILOT WANT AOS! !---------, __ m--'-"'-'-'-"""-·-833-__ =__ -l":, -~----- e j::~7lt~8i~~.E5 r 11 I' ,. r r ! I' , •. 1 I I I I I I I I SCRAM·LETS ANSWER IN CLASSIFICATION 7600 ' Lo1ver 2 Bdrm I ~~ hath $195. 241 Avocado ' 6't2-l925 Adults. No pct. .... 5'19-3&13 VI LLA MESA APTS OCEANFRONT 3 BR. $300 2 BR unlu111, pri patios. htd incl uW. Yrly Jse. pool. 2 car encl'! gar. Chi!. * 673-4724 • d1-en welcome, no p e t a please? $160. 719 W. Wilaon. Coron• del Mar 4250 646-125J . 2 BR. 1 BA •• ,.,.,.. .. & fairway Villa Apts bay. View, Pr1 p atio. Adults, no pell, 3190 yrty, Nf'ar Orange C.o. Airport &' 6'13-7629 ucr. Adu1ts only. ..20122 2 BR, Crpts & Orps, Pool. Santa Ana Ave. S.W-2196 ·, So. of Hwy. Adlta. S16S, ===,...-.::-,,,--,,.-I Least>. Call 67J..8213 SPACIOVS 2 Br, 11,J "Bjl~ studio. O'pts, dt'J)ll. d°'"'• Balboa 43Qo patio. carPot1, No pels. CW:' ----------pie or lam. w/2 children CLEAN Bachelor Apts. Sl50. 726 Joann. Ste Sun 1-5 All ulll incl $8l up • pm Ol' by appt:;--846-1584.•';" 315 E. Balboa Blvd. ll\tMAC. 2 SR, blt-tns; BALBOA 673-9945 ep~/drps, . pllti(i, beamed CLEAN l Bdrm apt, cloae to celling, Adults/no p eta . shopping, Quie t couple only. F"rom $135/nKI. Call Mr. 548-2121 Nclaon ~1151 Herit4"'1 ========= Rt>al Estalt' (open eves)' •• Hu ntlntton Botch 4400 TOWNHOUSE NEW QUIET l BR, nr ocean. New 2 BR, l ii DA Jr: 1 .A. 2 $14j prl dee~ or patio. BR, Crptt, drpa, MU clria: Singles&: cpl:a only. m 14th. ovtn. ~2108. 377 W·. w~ ~1319, 6'73-1'f8.t QUIET l • 2 Br pn:ltn apt. BACHELOR & l BR tum BltM, 1)4ti0. htd 11001 , $140 I.IP· Adults, no pe:ta. adull.$, ho 1)¢\'I. $160 mo. 11301 Kt"Olson Ln 342-7848 5t&-SJG3 • f\Vest ot Beach, ni S111.ter). WSTCLf'}' ~ 2...Br, i'na. o BO S. 2 B . CID. ntw, Am:l8a tm • RM A, pvt patlO, Cocn'll. AdulL11 $210. 1>12-0238 heated poot, washer &. dl')'el' · , ll'OOk up. 962-.~I DELUXE 3 Br, 2 Ba .. trp;c, Cii;,;...::::.;;,o;:.;"':-':;--=-:=I priv pa1io. dbl s:ar. Harbor 2 BR, 'Mi_lk to htaeh, "°sum-1101 .. hta, $22). ~1034 . mer lncrtase? 219 15Ut St.1--"'~--~-~~~ ~ JtB. 2 S«lroom, dnpe1, Wt~ida. · BU·~-~1 I I $W mo. t ~.1:.1.:J• m11 ... ., Pace n * Call S.10.1915 f'ftl. .__ town, ~ Di\fl,Y PfLOT -~---..,..-=~• Clau\fitd 5eallt1n. ~ave VERY Ja1\<e apt, 1160. 2 moll(l'y lime .t clfOrt. Look Bdnn l~ll ~th. Studlo type. llf!l ... 1!1° ' Pool, J""'h• r~"'i01ls. I .. • l r ... .. . , . ' JI Ml~ PllOT ll"Wii'i'ALS Unfvmhhtd c:e.ia Mooe 5100 Ml!llRiMAC WOODS Jcsfcompleted, J or 2 8R. 2 BA 1uni or untum with 1Jr cond, comp). '°'1J\dr111wfcd, .elf .clean.In, OYlllll, \Vood eeUinp, dswhn, lu!ltl land· IClpin& with 3trtam1 &: ,v,. ttrl&us, eie'v&tors, BBQs, du~. u.una1, j1u~unl & 1wlln poola, p-iv rar. w/ •tor.at. Eftr)'thit'ii new, Startin, at Sl40. AdllltS please. Jw:t East (Jt ~'600 Hubnr Blvd, next !(I Nabers Cadillac at 4~ ?l·trnimac \\'ay. ~ MARnNIQUE LUXURY APTS Exttllent park.like !Urmund. · in<•. -poo.1!1. Extra puking. Nr. 11hopping, Adults only, 1·:l l·3BRAPTS ALSO FURN BAOI. 1m Santa Ant.~A~. C.M. ~tcr. Ap! 113 , 6%-5542 ORLEANS APTS. ... ....... --;-,-...-.. -, -.-.-----.... --.--~-,.-----,. -~,.--, Monda1. Ja"111ry 19, 1970 REliTALS Apta. Unfurniahtd Coron• dtl Mar 5250 .-~~~ ON TEN AC'Jt.ES 1 &: 2 BR. Furn I:. Unfum Firtplaces I pt1v. pa.tics I Pools. Tennis. Contnrl Bkf!ll. !(XI ~. Lane, QL\f 644-2611 {MacArthur nr. CoP.tt H~> -------· 2 BR. :l BA, den, crpts. drp.•, bltns, view, $27J. (1) 772--0367, 530--1599 or 837..fl7T. NE\\' 2 BR upper. Bllns, crpts, drp!I\, car. $193 incl util. 615-6737 Lida Jal• 5351 * * * ""' Wh1ddy1 Want? Whaddya Got? SPECIAL CLASSIFICATION FOR NATURAL BORN SWAPPERS Spoclal Rate 5 Lin .. -5 timff -5 buck1 Rut.It -A,I) MUST IN CLUDE 1-WM>I 'l'OV flt~• 19 Trtoa. 1-Wll•I 1ou w.m "' trtOt. ~'t'OUll ~ •n•111r _,.,,,.. •-i nne~ or H v•rtltln& 1--HOlHlNG 1'01l $Al! -Tl'.A0&$ 0Nt.'l'I PHO'IE 642·5678 When You Want it done right ... Call one of the experts listed below!! SERVICE DIRECTORY I SERVICE DIRECTORY Accounting 6500 . Floan 6665 SERVICE DIRECTORY P1perh1nglng COJlilPLETE :'ict ot books thru Unancial 11tate1nents p~paration. · Qlr J'tturns, fl"d,, ~late lax reports. CARPET VINYL TlLE Free esllinate Lie. Contr. J40..1'26'.! 546-1478 P1intlng 6150 To Pl1ce Your Tr1der's P1r1diH Ad Gardening '680 6T;r2490 REAS. rates on lnl. & Exl. Chuck's Pntg. Lie & Ins, Y1·.s. of cxper. Loe refs. 6'1a.-08o9'.Experl \\'Ork. · LARGE 2 BR, liludy, 1% BA, • Interior. Exterior • cp1s, dfl>~. adults, no pets. f'ihe citrus ranch, 31A t r. 12 units+. aose to Harbor ·r1u. & Assoc., Public Ac· Leue. OR 3-7S02 3 br home & out bldgs, $125-& N~'port, Of. Value $97,· CGun;ants, Audits, book· I ·A-L-.-5-G-.,..-,-nln-.-.--La-wn-Aooustic ceilings pl.d, Ub Y'h' fl1. \Vant Orangf' Co. prop. 500. \Vant home, Owner will keeping, lw.cs. ( 714 J fltalntenance. ·Commttcial, cxper. State lie. Pitts \U'S' Huntington le•ch 5400 or gubmil, Equity S80iVI. carry finance 'chgs, Leon 846-4$ industrial & residential. pni.,, M'.3-l7S7 ---------!Sandcastle R.E. 494·8005 Vibert,RltT.~8-0>88anytm.I========= * 646-3629 * I PAINTI NG-INT/Ext. CHEZ ORO ·-. -· any1ime. • Babysitting 6.550 Jack can do that painting '~ '0 ~ ·-----BERNIE'S Gardening & Atlanta, H.B. Nu, 1, 2. 3·1·,~-.~D-le_g_"~c-,-,,,-.-,~,~8-,.. * * * * --job-fas1. clean &: very l<eas? b . 1 U il""' u -CHINCHILLAS & equip-TENDER Loving care tn l..a\\'O fllaint en an e e . Est. 894-3895, 847-1!158 r's. Priv. gar, poo • t hrdwd flrs, frplc. view. Lo ntent Trade !or furniture lovely hm. lg fnced yd, tod· lndustrlal &. Rcside111iaL 2 & :: BR avail. Adults only. rm. 536-8038 or 536-2721 int. Jo pymts, bi returns. or ?i ~? Phone 548-5727, dlers or pre-!!Chl. 54~14 642-6756 EX·PAINTER, now i;chl 2 BDRMS, 2 BA. pvt. ""Ho. Trd, $8,00) cq., NB, CcL'I teacher will paint eveJ & 1i41 Tustin, Costa Me&& J\lgr, Mrs. C&Noo, SU-464.l •-* * * * CHILD Cal'e nty home, GEN 'L ."d. Clean.up, tree knd XI l kn hi heated pool. "·asher & dtycr units or hOmf'. Own. 67"...6314 \1' s. n v."Or laru: p, hook 962-8994 ./ 35. ("HRIS R.oarner Paularino sch! district Day serv. l'Olc>till. Sp r I:: l r Free est. 646-4519, 540-0062 up. Have ; Stereo ta Pe recorde1· .J TUSTIN Vlew Jn!, ru l "'"· or n\te. :;1~ ... :;272 repairs. H au J ·Re a so 11 , C R , 11 . . 2 BR. 2 Ba. Nr Bch. Pool, \V/ extra speakers. Trade • 64&-:l848 •. · Kc Y pa1n11ng , R Rm Bl . 323 14th f 22 al'be 1 1 1 Both free & t·lear_ Trade \Vll.L Babysit for you r child Complete interiors & ex· QUIET. adult couplt only. 2 eek · l·lns. or c 1 'r \l'ts em 5 Ye r .... -TD'' '" ? 613 ..... my lion1r. 7:30 'til 5:30. JIM'S Gardenln& & la1,v11 t ·10-\Vock ~'""'"i••d BR d " d•·• hr St. 531Hi611, 962-0022. hand gun & \\1ioches1er M "' .. • ~ er '"· ,._,... · , f"P$. crp , •••.nW . I ·-------~-49'3-~. Ages 3.4. 962-21-lO Jnaintenancr. Res. & com-Free ests. 538-0155 htd .....,.l. No -ta:. i~. 229a HUG E J BR, 2 BA. Crpts, 30.30 caliher rifle. 548-8832 CHILD \V 18 h mereial * ~l}-4837 .. -.. ~ -cru·e in my . 1. FDR. "·tt P · I · Pacific Ave:. 543-6318 or drps, bltns. Pool. Kids OK. ~tom-built Spartan trail-\VI.LL trade 20 vcnclln.g ma· St hom• 3 o-"•·ng•, Dt: er a 1 n 1 n g • M2-4"9 116', 968-7510 or 847-1594 ei·. Palm Springs·Thund~r. clnnes and buslne~s in Or-· ~.,,,2_.~"1 ~ e~T Japanese Gardener Interior & exterior, acoustic ..., ......., Right price, nice job & elean ·a G46-W77 1 d DELUXE 01'.'tler's unit. 1500 bird area. Will trade for tri· angr County, Cor S~. . . up, ~"rec estimate. 5-18-3354 cei ngs. · nsure · sq. fl, 3 BR, 2 BA. Patio, t.•ouna IM•ch 5705 plex or ? Afternoons and equity in housr. Call (2]..1) \YILhL 1B•hby1dsit in m1rphom1;. CLEA••.up SPECIALIST FIRST Class Painting & bi•"· d....., .....,.ts Dbl evenings, 642-3802 6,S}.;).).11. SC oo r I ren Pl'C . ;;ciic '~ Paper .Hanging. Free ""'• ·...-~. -·., • 11°~ • 2 BR, 2 Ba d"plex. Sands tract , J-18. 536-6903 illo\\'in .. , edgln", odd i'ob!;. t:ar. sno mo. 546-5038 ..... * .. b Estilnales. 545-3459. Crpts, drp1, slove, retrig, i, * * * * Reawnable. 54s-6%5 NT! 0 "· In 18 DELUXE 2 BR, immac &. Good Joe. & View. 613--4017 ''!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!J!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!IJ!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!, Brick, M•sonry, •tc. PAI Nv--£..'ll-t. yrs. quiet. Central ht, dshwhr. REAL ESTATE ''REAL ESTATE E 6560 General S•rvlces 6682 cxpcr. In:oJ, Lie. Fte<-est. JOIS A EMPLOYMENT ANNOUNCEMENTS ;;;•nd..._;_N_o _r1_c_E ... s_~--i Jobi Mon. Wom. 7100 lost 6401 ------~ !..OST: Chate'Olll Toy poodle \\'Cflrln; blnck rhlneatone colh1r, vie Co~u & Plllctntl&, CM. Reward . ... ~-LOSI' Mesa de! Mar tract, Costa J'ttesa, t~emale cal • yellow stripes. 2 yrs ans to .. Peanuts" 546-5392 LOSI' Fluffy white cat with Siamese mkg1, blue eyes. RewanJ 54~72'19 6405 ABILIT!ES UNWfltlT£:D AGEN"cY 488 E. 17th, Sultt 22-1 <1>sta l\1esa 6C.l.fTO RECEPT Sat A Sun Ule r.yplng, Xlnt -opty for eol.legt' tlrl or 'bouaewite . JAvely NB off\c.11. ApPllea.nts SERVICE CENTER Employment Agency Regilll'tr Now Ior Temporary/Pennane.nt Positions flfa le and Female C G P1aoement A TIN By •PP!. &14-49'1 Do you want to be a full time * 500 N~rt Cenler Dr • working profegslonal ? Do I f'astt)on Jg] I Suite 200 NB yriu have the self discipline G _, . APT. M RS. for 15-2 BR to ~ubject )'Our&ot:il to a rig-units. l'tiatTied cpl. flfinor Id British training course &c repail'$. lal\'D & pool care. the artistic hwnility to ac-833-1697 1.~pt minor roles until the 1--=c-'-------- training period is t.'Omplete ? AftiUate If ao THE LONDON LA· BE YOU RO\VN BOSS!!! GUNA A CT 0 RS-WO RK. Re:llable PeJ'9Qn Wanted To SHOP might be ab.It' to help IndepeoctentJy Ov.'n &c Oper. you, No p1·evious ex.pel'ience ate necessary, no age barrier. U.S. POSTAGE Members or this exclusive ST AMP MACHINES group will only be accepted From Your Home On Full upon a salilfat1ory persona.I Or Spe.re Time Basi!, ~rvic. interview \Vi!h the di.J."ector. ing You1· Chvn Tradina: Call 4944404 for appt. Area. No E..'<per Nee. Jilgh * .fULL y LICENSED * P1'0fit St.arts Im med, Life. Reknownl'd Hindu Spiritualist time lm.-orne Routes Req. Advises on all nlattera; Ca.sh Invest Of S495; $1~7a; Love. Marriage, Business, $3450 & UP • Secured By Courtstup, Hea lth, J-fap-Inventory. For Prompt Per· pirK'ss & success. No pro-sonal InteJVV.'. Write About blems too large 01· too Younclt, Incl pOOne no, ·in small. I CAN HELP YOU. letrer to: Capitol PoataJ-e Re:adings given 1 days a Machines, 1831 No. Gramer. '~-eek. 9Al\1·9PM 312 N. El cy Pl .. l-lollyv..'OIXI, ~I. 90028. Camino Real, San OrCallColtect(213)~ Clemente. 492-9136. 492-0076 _A_n~y1=im~·~·~------I Reduce Safe & Fast AtrrO CARRIER Gar. patio, adult:oJ. $140 REAL ESTAT ----------Arcousl. Ceilings 5'i8-J3Z5 548-69.';6 Chnerel General Gen•ral BUILD, R!"modtl. repair RAIN Gutters Ins I a I led * PA INTIJ\'G _ Jnt/Ext. with GoBese lahlets &. ----------1 Brick block co11c r ctc Rainy season almost ttere~ Local i·r.fercncc~. lmmed E·Vap •'1v11ter pill s' For evening or morning delivery of The Refister ln the D a n a Point-Laguna Beach area. 1\-lust be ovtr JS yeani old and willing-to deliver 7 days a 1veek. Good profit for a te1v hours v."Ork f)t'r 1veek. 1.lust have reJiablc c·ar, p~fereably compact. Ideal for calleft student or supplemental In. CGme. If inttrt>sted. cal l 835-1234 or 494-ll8T for ln- lcrviev•. $160 LRG Deluxe 2 Br. 11,; Ba. G.E. Ki1chen. 2 car gar. Adlll, no pell. 240 E. 16th -R'-•-•~1,._l_•_W_an_t_od __ 5_990_1.0::.f::f:.:ic::a_::R::a::nl:.:•:_:1 __ _:6.:.07:_:0 Lott 6100 carpe~try, ~job too sman'. Free est. Rcasn! 968-2'.?08 service. 6-t6-52tl, 6-16-3657 WESTCLI FF PHARMACY Lie. Conlr. 9b'2-6945 DU NN BY DUNN EYELASHES ; each lash ap- PL 548-6432 LAGUNA BEACH Tustin -VIEW LOT. Free&!-'========== H1uling 6730 Painting & Paperhanijing plied separate),y. very Air ConditiOn•d clt'ar. All ut il. Owner will C•binetmaking 6580 r·rer cs!. Reas. 6.42-2364 natural looking $15. Jan. Jn. DELUXE 2 BR. Adults only. RENTAL FINDERS ON FOREST AVENUE finance or u·ade. 67~3243,1----------MOVING And haulinJ;:', ex· iroductory offer, 1st appt. No pets. 998 El Camino Dr., Pree T• t..••'* Desk space available In 499-4206 RESIDEN'rTAL & Comm. c·es..~ furniture and ap-YOU Supply The Paint. 3 Br. halt price. !-louse calls. Lin. C.M. 546-0451 -• w. ,,., c..t. ,.._ newest oUice bullding at ==========I CUstoni Cabinet & Furn. plia11ces or 1n1n. $. J36-.J09J ~~.!Call{~! ~"'KlJ.·8638tche.n Painted, da 846-1690 NICE 2 Br f.r. den tpt. 1 \1 ba, ._;_ ,•,•, ... ,.o~:,1.,."'••flll prlme location In downtown Acr•••• 6'00 io~urn R.c--Finishi:lg. 64:;..oo!ll ('vc. -., .,.., . :::::::::. ____ ...:::•:.::.::1:::=:::::==.=:::::::::=====;;;.; ASTROLOGY Classes Now trplc. Avail t'eb l Sl7a mo. !~:!:~~;:;·~i--~;:";•;•;•::":I Laguna Beach. Air condl-y AR o 1f ;4 r. cl canup. PAINTING, Papi!ring li yrs. d I c 6590 Forming. For infonnation 642--7508 tioned, carpe:e , beauUJu CAl\tPERS. trailei·i. 10 acres., __ •_rpe_n_l_•_r_ln_g~----H.en1ove rrecs, ivy. trash. in Harbor area, Lie. & Call The Sun Sign, 6T:>-6661. N-v dlx. 2 BR, '· EA. Sh•g GOING TO EUROPE? entrances: Frontag~ on 1 Grade. backhoe, 962-874:i bonded. Refs. furn. 642-2356. AUTO SALES r..• near lge lakt', no c1u-.11ds $25 CARPENTRY After 6, Burton 1\-Jor&e -crpts, drps, Immed occupy. Exe-culive m 0 v i n g to Fore!t Ave .. rear leadi to 897-A47 !-IAULlNG, Cleanup. lots etc. * PAPERHANGING 67~2140 Professional training pro- 11""-SI-. """........ Ncv.·pon, Beach. Needs 4 flluncipaJ parking lots. S501=m='=·===='=====lfl1INOR REPAIRS. No Job 1 -m rv-ou ......,...1411;, T S ·" Cab. In Handyn1an anytime you cal. & PAI NTING * 968-:.U:Q ... ~ Bdrm. rental, to $100 mo.; 2 per month for SPace. Desk D 6,1 oo m...... 1net gar-* * * 612_3""" * • * SE M 1 Reti red gent . 1''or recorded information JUst completed. 2 BR. <.1"ptl5, adult!\, 1 child & Jive-in and chairs available for ~. Mount. & aaert 1. 0 ages & other cabinell. """' Non-d rinker. Meet mar-phorle drps, blln!!. Adult1 only, no i'ttald. Business hours anSWl:'ring ----------545-8175, U no answer leave e l-tauting. Have .:i.& ton Plasteritia . ReJ)1ir 6880 iiage minded lady to 41, tXI 8J5.1J75 JldlB. $155. 642-3092 PlcaSI! call agent ti7;,...J662 service available for SlO. LOVELY\ yr old 2 BR, 2 BA msg at 6-15-2372. ll O. pickup. licensed & lnsurtd. • PATCH PLASTERING chlld. Send photo, Box. M9lj, ~==~--.,,-'.,.~~-~ 2 BR unttirn. Dupl~•· Crpt & \VANTED; 1 bdrm furn apt. All utilities paid eXcept hoinc. Carpeting. d rps. Ander.so __ "-~--,,--7 494-1000 All rype~. Free estimates Daily Pilot BARl'tfAID 6:~2:30 ni&"hl drpa:. Middle aged only central 'cos1a . i'tfesa, $80 -telephone. lrplc. a1r--<0nd. ~mog-lree GEN. repair, add.. <·~b. Clean Up and Heul Call 540-6825 BE Amazed at new bc>autiy shift. Tues. thru Sat. S2.25 please. Phone J4s--04:l2 S90 mo. Call alter 6 pm. 222 ~~kp~~NUE TE~tF~C,ULA _1nr Rancho Formica, paneling, m.'1.rl 1tf>. SHI a load, 646·1528__ pos. 00\\'. 968-3ll9 for Dem· :~ ~~a~~itCP~~~.: ~~~ 3 BR a pt, bltn range. crpts, 642-7682 LAGUNA BEACH ~~)ll~~~~~~l $35.000. Owner Anything! Di«k. 67l-l·IJ!'I Plumbing 6890 onstr your home no1v, Lu.tier N. Santa Ana. Santa Ana drps. 1552 A Coriander SL e LANDLORDS e 494-9466 ~---------REPAIR, Partitions. Small Housecleaning 6735 ----------l cCuic.:'~"'~"~'.,;C~""='="="-"=··~· c-:c:o--Hts .. corner Red Hill It J.4&-52& FREE RENTAL SERVICE HUNTINGTON BEACH r> AC. nr Hl'met : :.;cenic remodel. et1·. Nill· or day --.-A-PT-·-.-.. L-EA.o_N_l_",'_G_•_ PLUMBING REPAIR LYNN, Please call me. I Palisadf>S. 53f.6982 hideaway, 2700' et.. 1vtr.. Reas! Call KEN J.Ul-4679 '-·~ No job loo small 1 . .:..~~-===~-~-I Newport Be1ch 5200 Broker " Air Conditioned game. $j(l()O; ~ dn 633-mO REPAIRS • ALTER \TJONS }"ast & thorough 6·12-.~l&I ===·=·~"=~='=""'.'•==:::=I ~M~.,~~~Y=~~R;,.,,.,;;.;.o=''~""~'".:;g*poBp~.~;1T'P5~dN,C.'>'1~ -~~soyn .. I;:;;;;:;:;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;, 5995 ON IEACH ILVD. S..10 AJ\I agl. / . · \Villia111s Cleanir1g Serv. : "'... .,,_.. ....., Rooms for Rent Desk spate availabl e Jn * CABINETS. Ally 111zr JOb JACi..:·s l!OUSEKEEPlNG Remodel, R•pair, 6940 HI Love -Didn't think I'd do Pd. vac. No clientele ttq'd, ----------1nev.·es t office building at BUSINESS •nd 25 yr~ l'Xper, :H8-ti713 Cornplete llouscclcaning it did you! 1.'liss you. Stt ya New grad ~·elcome. Call SPACIOUS now 2 bdem 2 ·bath. Nr. shopping. Mariner Squar• Apta. 1244 Irvine Av•., N.8. $15 \VK &.. up ""' kitchen $30. P.rime location tn Uuoting. FINANCfAL CARPE.N'TRY. Cabinets 54~72-13 642-8931 Add-A-Room tonjght! Capricorn 548-9919 1vk s!udio apt. 2376 Newport ton B~ach. Air conditioned, Remocl. No job loo sm11l!. Remodeling ALCOHOLICS AnonymoU! Billing Clerk Blvd. 5-18-97j,'1 beautiful entrance. Front-Bus. Opportunlti•s 6300 Qua.I v:ork. CaJI &l&-2576 BAY & Beach Janitorial Cuitom Design Service Phone 5'2-7217 O&' write to EXP'D billing clerk, many .:z========== age on Beach Blvd .. rear Carpets, \\'lndov.'!t. floors, etc. 645-0252 -leads to private parking At!iliatt' R.~s & Comntc'I. 646-1401 Free Estimate. 494-0751 P .O. Box .1223 Cbsta Mesa. co. benefi ts, paid holid8,)'ll, 2 Mot.It. Trlr. Crt1. 5997 lol. $50 per month for CANDY SUP LY Cement, Concrete 6600 wk1 pa Id vacation. Call . . spacr. Detik ttna cnairs p • \VINDO\VS DIRTY ? Roofing 6950 Announcements 6410 &IZ..1163 for appointment I!!!! ... !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!' \VEEKLY ra1e~ Sea Lark available for $5. Business ROUTE CONCRE'rE 11urk all types. Yrer ('SI. 15 years ('.xper. LEASE _ z BR lltUdio, ?.fotel, 2301 Ne~ Blvd., hours ansv.·ering service tZ\1o selling invoh·cd 1 Sa\\'ing. hreaklng, haullni; . .Jo)1nny Dunn 64'1·2364 ALL types rock, \i·ood & SENSITIVITY TRAINING BOAT CARPENTERS Ea.stblutt, new bid&:. 2 car Costa Me~ available for $10. All utlli· Excellent tneon11> for few .Skiploalling; Lie. Service & CARPETS, \\llndoii·s, firs, asphal t shingles. LEAKS \VORK SliOP Experienced. Apply 1974 Pl tics paid except telephone. hoors \\'Cekly work . iDays Quality. 842-1010 ,.10. R·' oc Cn,,.'I. Xlnt REPAIRED, \\"ork .,,,Ar , A 1>rogran1 of inter,.....rsonal Placentia, C.;o;f. gar. ?.tuch storage. ush G H 5998 DAILY PILOT ... ~ ~ .. ~ r-Ufft '"'9$· and Evenings • Refilling and CRET n · R r M" AJll 847 113G exercises for sn1all scU-di· * BOOKKEEPER * crpt; bltns; frplc: l/.m palio. ----'-------1 17175 IEACH ILVD. -· * CON E oors, patios, \vork. Reas! cs .. ~ -. $300 per mo. 644-2409 PRIVATE room in licepscd HUNTINGTON IEACH r.ollrct1ng inoney f1'0n1 coin etc. Reas. Hurry bt'Core rectcd groups. r-,Jinln1al For 1-funtington Valley C.On.. ~-•< hom'e for t'lderly '42-4321 Qperated d L~pense~ in Or-rainy season. Don. 64Z.851·1 Income Tix 6740 Sewing 6960 charge call 642-8730. 10 A.\.f. valescent I:lospital in Hunt-FOR Rent Or Lse; Peniniiula .... ~ angr Co. and i>UtTOUnding ,,..~..,..-7'"=-:--=-;:::-C-"''-'--'-'------5 Pl.1. ington Beach. Experiencl" in Pt. J Br. 2 Ba on Balboa gentleman. N °ur11 hi n g Modern Offic•s ar!"ll. \\'e cstabHsh route D.Jncret V.'Ork all t,ypes. Pa· S ., T S · • Dressmaking -Alterations I .o==========~I r-..Iedlcare • :ro.Jedlcal pre!'d. Blvd. at the Ocean. Crpt.s, ~~~:; TI.C. C.M. area $75 si nglf'. $135 2 rm suite. !Handles nan1c brand l"andY tios. P<ll?l decks & block ITTI ey ax erYICe Special on C1lat hcn1s Cemetery Lats 6418 Apply to i'tfr. Sigler, Park- Orps & Bltins, $285 mo . .;;:;:""==========IAir cond. Seery service. and snacksl. $1575.0o cash l\Ork ·Dick 642-1797 * 646-6446 * hurst Retirement Hotel, 9925 Call :»&-7889 5999 parking, ccn1 rally locateiJ, required. For personal inte r-CEMENT Work: Driveways. l'..'lh 'YEAR LOCALLY LEATHER Garments Jlen1· 4 Cemetery Jots. Blue Spru~ Alam«la, Fountain Valley. 2 BR, 2 BA. 0<.-ean vie1\· .. M.~is~c~·_:.;R~a~n~l•~I~•----So. Calif I11t Nat. Bk. Btdg. view in Orange CQ. area, Patio~. Slabs. Smsll jobs Qualified • RE'asonable med, S..,..cial Thru Jan. 1/4 section, Harbor Rest 962..ss.31. ·~· -~ L. d ,,, s1~1 \\'. /\ (B\lll sr-.1JLEY ,,~ -~-,,,--~-.,..--Avail Feb. t!ihl, )'Tly. _.... ENCLSD Gar, ,•ic Tustin C. Robert Niittttss Realtor Sl"nu J1ain<', address and loo. iccnS(' · · · ,, Oil. Fast Seivice. 67~173J. Men1orial Park. LT s.3075 Bookk,.~··Fem·'e 673-1990 I '"A i\ Cerlificd Publ ic A'ccnt ,.~. '"' Adults. no pets. or Ave & 16th St. CM, aHey C..0,,ta J\1esa 642-1485 P 1011t> nuin..,.·r lo 11ULTJ. CUSfOil-1 CONCRETE 1\'0l'k 61~.1121 anytime 6,'6·9666 DH ESSi\1AKING, .salis!ac· JOBS & EMPLOYMENT \Vanted for pleasant lv.'O girl (21J) 2714220 access. i20. nio. 646-6.506. PENTIIOUSE office lOOO sq. STi\'IT. DIST., INC., 1681 \Y. pa!ios a specialty tion guaranteed. Reasonable ofc. J\1UST be; Young, at· 3 BR. 2 ba.. Fpl .. cpts., drps, 54s.6680 ft. -1-deck SJOO mo <util Broad>1ay, Anahei111, CaJi. Free Esthna.lcS * 646-123·1 I . 6755 rales. Call 962-1060 Job Wa nted, M•n 7000 trac!ive, personality & EX- blln d . h h \Valk t · fornia 92802 1714! 7iS.:i060. ron1ng ___ PER 1 1 11 h t•-· s. 1' 11·s r. 0 SlNGLE G11.rage for rent. incl!. 3800 E. Coast 11 .... ..,. CEr.1ENT \VORK, no job too . n u c arge 1u-u beach. 642-3850 Ag!. E~t side, C.fl.1. $20. Cdl\l. Al.so ground f!r oft.'. Associate sn1all. n>a $0n11ble , Free JRONING Jn i\ly llontf'. SI.DO Tailoring 6970 COUPLEd ',~·\sh boEal to "·,o_rk P&L. Prefer 1vith retail Mle1 642-3645 -120 sq. ft. $J 3,j nio, util Incl. rstin1. J-1. Stufl irk 548-8615 hr. Alterations. A J so, Qll or e 1ver. xper. 11 tp. ('Xp. Salary open. 645--0545 Newport Shores 5220! ========== C. \Y. ,\!asters. 673--4120 i\lANUFACTIJHEn. bubysit1in.£!, any ab e , i\lr. Al's Fashion Tailor per, eng, cook. 6754143 or for appt. ----------llncame Property 6000 Best Location In CdM $17,500 lnvcstn1ent into Ute Contractors 6620 anytirne. Call ;,.1~i&l1. For men & \lu men. Clot hPs 67J-47j2 SSOO Plus jOO & 000 no. 1 Busitle~ of thr day. 251----------IRONINC. no slieels. 2:, to :w out Qf stylr, losl or gained Bookkeeper, Fu 11 Chargf'. 2 BR. 2 Ba. Dulpex, lower, $183 mo. Adults, no pets. Eves, 494-9502 1()..2 BUrms. 6 yrs ne\\·. . · 1 sq. /~. , rJrlus<' yr. history· of 11ucce1:.. 1101t Addluons • Rcn1odc\ing \\'clghl? Don't thrcnv t!lem Job Wanted, "''~I. $14,000 dn, 6.6% 1st. office spaces. Avail_ ininic..'d. expanding operations to SO. t"red 1-1. Gcrwick, Lie. pieces for 4:>. You pick up & 11\l'a)'. hii....,. 111 for restyling. Women 7020 Some trarel. Call Lora\J')E'. ".u..J>' Phone owner 642-<>=lo dehl'er. Ci\!. 6-16-:i&ll .... \VestcliH Personnel. 2fM3 Good Jrvera-& ta x ' "~· C1llif. Complete 1actory in-673-6011 * ~S.-21!0 Uncla1ml"d suits. !'i""rt coats &1st Bluff 5242 .. -,.... Westcliff Drive. N.B. 645-mo ;•~h·~'="='=· =A=gl=·~,.,..,=='~g===o ll ROOJ\1 Do1vntown . H11rbor stalled & ready to go. \Vlll Janitorial 6790 a1·11il. Likl-' n<'w. Rl"asonable E>..-PERIENCED In office (fee and Ft't' paid jobs) ... Blvd. ldE'al for Real Estatr, train Principal of l\fgmt. C1rpet Cleaning 66'25 ----------prices. Capri Lai:una Ar-management. secretarial & BuslMSS Property 6050 elc. $85 Mo. 6·12·0212 abilitit!s, Contact iinmed.I DUTQI r-.taint Setv, crpt cade. 1..i2;; ~. Coast Hlly, public relations. 646-0854 Bookkeeper Automotive . OF'FICE space w/recp art•a Once in a lileUme oppor. lo A·OK Shampoo Special $7.50 clng, fir l'.'a.'ling, window Laguna Beach. 49-t.<16$1 Lovely oUlce in beach area, Prestige Location 3 Be~m. 2 story residence 1610 \\', Coast l-il'.')', N.B: cnake !h11.t high income niost rn1 less for halls, e1c. Also ,vashing. Han')' van 8c)·nen :=========== Advertising Agency $.WO mo. Call Kay ~46-5t.LO for Jea.51!. dtlu.xt 1888 S<l:. ft. & Business. Ideal loca!l~n 1'"um oi· un rum. 6464887 people drearn ol. Starling con1p. housecln'g 827-3182 ~137_1 508 if no ans call aft 3 TILE, C•rimlc 6974 Sharp Secretary for fast-JASON BEST I 4 BR .. 2'rs ba.. Apt. Frplc., on main blvd. Eut11oe. =,_====~==~I salary $12,00U + subs1antlal CARPET STEA!\1 CLEAN---· --1----------ced Ne rt Be h A e Employment Agency drape!!, caJ1X't!i. '\'Ct bar, c .r.1. N.B. area. Ideal tor 3345 NEWPORT BLVD. profits. Call Ken Clifford ED No soap. no brushes. Lindscaplng 6 810 *Verne, The Tile Man* ~. Typeii·:io. ~~r1h~n~ 23:17 So. Main, Santa Ana Priv. balconie5·, dbl. g&t'aiC acct. Ins. etc. ph. 67:>-1657 1000 S<l. rt. opposl!c ,'Jewport 17141 774-T050 ,.,,. "•l. 6·'" 1:n·,·1 CusL 1vork. Jnstal.1 & i-epnirs. 100 . II , "" c· 11 11 6T:i 60 '" """"" , organize & to ow thru. DIAL direct 64~78, Cha1"lfl' off kitch. Dishwasher, dbl. pm OTP. 0. Box 716 ily a · >l 1 FOR Sale -Neighbclrhood _ TAKATA NURSERY No job too sn1all. Plaster Under J5. Phone : 642•3910, your ad, then sit back and ',ho""•"'•··pool,,.hooclo,"'•·eni,•,n;_,1~ FULLERTON. 390 FF Brea XBLI Nd T1 t:J c '" port/1-larbor fllarket 1v/3 Br hot1SI' at-Cirpet Liylng & Best Design patch. Le~~Pil~r-5 h 0 we r 42:1 N. Nc>1·port Blvd .• N.B. listen to u1e phone ring! ..... Bl\'d. Cor. Nr. ?.tM S dtvl. v . oca!Jon. 4tiS 5CI It. i n t' h" d _. Com p 1 c t e Repiir M26 Sririnklera Installed 1'1on. • I C 6l2 ""7 I t D · p · I ii I 81i.J957/8-16-{)200 Nly. 2 11.c. E:xc .. oc. nrry _.....,, \\< groc<'r1c5, lnl'a. pro-1------~---r111n 1pc nsla C( ONLY $350 MONTH mtg. 1% 714: 5~1289 duet'. beer & \11n<'. Volume FOR CARPETING Titt trin1 & Clean·up 835 AMIGOS WAY IO:;::=::::'=:====:::.l lndut trial Prop. 6080 appro.-. ~ prr 1\10. OR CARPET LAYING 546-07'24 Newport Beach Business Rent1I 6060 -w/good poli•ntitil for \n. c . A Page &12-2070 M A 9 2 CAR gnragf' on 11mall pav· crease in \'olun1e. Lo1vl==·=======-"'= l---c0'9='=· ~'-'=·~--1----------t'd lot. off street. fenced. ove-rhead. Santa Ana area. El•ctrical 66<40 VIEW APT. 8 / 8 Old Nev.'p1 Blvd, $110 mo. Ph . ~:Hl728 Le· 2 BR, 2 Ba. crp'td, rlrp'd. FOR RENT -STORE r.Jr. Thompson 646-2"86; t".ve COIN laundr1es·F'rigidn1rc ELECTRICAi. Service .~ 2 coV'd. garages. Xlnt loc. 2115 NewpQJ:·1 Blvd .. Nev.-,,ortl,="'=,.,.,==59======= F'roni $6,500 to s 4 2, j 00. rep81r. 24 h~. 7 clays. No nc -~pln•. schls. & church-R · b 1 11 R -1·! & ........ Beach. 5:;o square ftet. en! C • 1 6085 Anaheim, Costa Mesa, JO oo sn1a · e-111 .... ~ · tl-.816 Amigos. \Vay# D. $200/month. 1_o_m __ m_a_r_c_"------I BuC'na Park.-F'u llerton, 8ddilions, 11 It's clec1r1cal, $250. per mo. (yriy.J BAY&. BEACH FOR sal<' 686-698-61S \V. J9th Garden Grovf', ~\·c fix it! 646-477'1 .._; '''·'OSI o REALTY, l~C. St. Bethel Tu'rs Arca. \Vestmin11ter, l-lun1 \nii:ton I,==~~::~~~·~~/ 001 Dovel' Drive, Su1t11 126 NB 5'IS-l76S or 646.74.14, Agf. Beach. &inta Ana, Tustin, -•r 1 L& 645-2000 Eve'. ~8-6966"========="==1 La t.:Umd:-.. \\-'bittier. 1' Call Charil/' j2;>-7S3.1 BUSINESS 1nd 1610 W. Coast l-lill'ay SU14-D lndustri1I Rent•I 6090 FINANCIAL Corona d~I Mir .5250 NB Opp, BBC Cust, Pka· $17:i * Liquor Lie's. On Sale G £NF: RA L LANOSC,\PE Gi\ftDI:.:Nl::R Oean ups. ftt·novating trtt t>.i mming, pruning. DON'T give JI away, 1;et <1u1ck cash for i~ \\'ilb a Dally Pilot \l'Rnl Ad . ANNOUNCEMENTS ond NOTICES Upholstery 6990 CZYl\OSKl'S Custm. Uphol. European Crafts1na1)Shlp 100'~ fin! &ii.1454 18~1 Newport Blv, CM. J S YOU J; AD I N CLASSIFIED? Someone wlll be looking for it. Dial 642- 561' pe,r mo, 646-48!17 E B ILDING lNTER·COUNTY Invest. Wanted BRAND NEW OOWNTO\VN Costa J\!esa N W U TltANSFERS 6315 Found (Free Ads) 6400 Found (Free Ads) 6400 2 BR. 2 BA. upa:11\n ·duplex Pn·me "• .. !! Loc· ....... .-. l2GO: Loi;ian Ave., Cost.a i't1"8 OEAOLJNF.; Fri Jan :n. '70! E>."'PERIENCED SALES £.X. ----------~-'""' CUT "CMUBBY" Brn / lllk I \\'l1t wUh tun deck parto: Cptd., C&ll _ 548-lfOI or ~8-3210 Ellch untJ. .1725 JICI: lt, 2-off. Call Collt!ct for belil i11"iet E . !VE \ri ll Jn\·est $20.IXIO dtp'il.,' ~ C&rqt', compl. . . ir.r.5, 2 re~t roon1~. 110/2'20 r.Tr \\l'lNSI'O~ i2t3) 212 .. 1249 1vHh participation ,.~tall. f:hc 1). 1>J'I" nird size <log. blt>fns. Bt'.aut. ldacpd. 707% R00!\1 Stnlable for J'.'lfl ihc:lp, rltttric, An1plc parklnJ. .LIQUOR llc's. On Sale li11hed busil1{'$.~. Bo:-: ~l·G!IS h1rnrlly, Ha.t1 tai;:-;. Vlc. Of'Chid. szo. ptr fl'l(t, {\'ri)'I mpn'!i shop or lad1t':s 1hop. c Robcl't Nattress RcaHor Daily Pilot Ru~hnT'fl & G n r fl c l d, C..11 Jim Berkshire. 673-940$ Cn~1a J\lcsa 642·1485 Int~ • County Tmn1f1tM1 10:========= !'!62-li.i!l 11Ufto 0 Lie'• As Low A' $6600 M -- - ·M .·.. OFflCE or store, 700 *I· ft. RL-W ~t·I. ll2.i sq, fl. $l20 \\'E \VON'T BE oney to Laan 6 320 BT-:AUTltUL Cat -Tortoise: -24627 Del Prado, Dana mo. l J:>5 Logan, C~I. * UNDf:RSOl.D 1 1 JD L Crry. \\llilc & blai;k. f\ufry Point. 2 blkl Ntw Harbor. 67;....'ill6 \\'lnslOl"l oollttt (Zill Z72-t:?4S s oan !ail, one 11'.'!Z nll v.·h itr. ?.Iale. Sl56 l.M. cltan 2 BR upper. Call 646-mJ. N d d Office Rent1I 6070 11\"DUSfRli\l. Spact"s, tlr sq. PLASTICS Mf~ Bui;. N" 11· tw cpts, eoor, rt.pet, rt!· ft.: 1700 II'! ft. Nt'"' bldg. lnj. moldrtl ph<llo rr.ime~. l.o"'Cllt ln1cre,o,11 A1 ,1ilHlih· ~':·N~~ulti. Gar $10. 1---------1 1240 i.o~an s1. c~t G4&--068t x1n~ 1101enuo1. JS~~ rtP. 2nd JD Loan AI1tPORT CENTER Eflg1ly mOvt'd. 4!)6..1100 A'l"l1t.ACTJVE studio ljlt. J Ntw 1, 2 It :r room deluxe Lats '100 , ,-.rm• ba!td on f'f!Uitv, RR. m BA. cmts. drpt. $Ult{"~. Adj, OllW rnotd & lnv11tment Oppor. 6310 642-217l S4S-0611 bltnL Aw.ll Feb !At. l"l'?fl3urant, MacArtl\u.r Blvd. DANA POINT * 6&1927 .. F'rom $125. Call il4&-7S4.1 INDIVIDUAL ready to ('(Jn• $>i"\1na llDl'l>Or ,Jlft'll ~1 ~ 1~ ICOJ{OlJDu AP1"S. 2 Bil \!ARTNER'S CP\.,-En '1 t'nil 101 • Sl~.5(1() 11tnirt i'lloll!I~ Horne p11rk. Sa!~ltr tA~rt9~•9• Co, I t..i:.,,.r l!wls, • 1 u t1 Io 1. nffict in Stot"t' Bid. R,.nr "r C'los~ lo 11i'!:w !\farina! lnlfl'l-tsltd In 51!illJW 11Jl ro 336 ::, I •lb :;treet Friife&, pool. dhl nrport&. l.io. $7.i. 14! 1UVf'11iidC Ave .. THE 1ru:;.1.~fi\N -d96-t.."6! :"i[J'":. Pl'incipa]i; 0II 1 y . Tiit:: QUTO..-at YOU CAl.l., paiin:.. S11i ~ S220. 6Tl-m8 X n Olf~141f 11110 r,,~~1 llw~ flP rtll Poln1 r.r:,..:i:I IJ or ~~-t1!'6 TllE Qt.:ICl\l-:R YOU ~El.I, " ' ( TIME FOR 9UICK CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOT WANT AD BLACK !Utten. yellow collar iv/green_ stone&.-_v i.c . Fla milton 0.1. Ii 4 6-:19 O 9 1l'kdays l\!!er ~ p111 all day 11ttkrnd. Sli\!'llESE Cat vie Ave: .. C.~f. 54fi..86ZI Lo1t Pierce 6401 LOST: <I ~'lo Old Ci<'man Shrph f'rd & Colden Rt'lrltlvtt, Inn, v.•hilt tip on tail. KNEE-Hi. "SnoOf'y". fl-17--8378 LOsr: Pel Rltt'OOM. Vie. Sanrl Caslll! &: f\111rgt1et'ill", Cdi\t~ P.e.,.,·ard! &t4 .. t370 rosr-S\amese ki1en nc11r c.~r. tmpltal. Re;l'atd. Call 1 5 18-$37~ ' Joh-Mtn. Wom. 7100 Jobs-Men, Wom. 7100 Au1111bl,rt Burroughs Corp. New Camm•rclel Computer Pl1nt MISSION VIEJO Now t•ki"g applic1tion1 for ASSEMBLERS ::it our ne'v plant in h1ission Viejo, Calif, Some experience preferred. Jobs open in January 'viii be at our location in Irvine. Apply 8 am • 4:30 pm Monday through Friday EMPLOYMENT OFFICE 25725 Jaronlmo Road Mission Viejo, Calif. 830-3232 Whol4ver There'• Bu31'ntJS8 There 's Burro.uAh• j •. .-. ....... -·.·-...· "W. "'= .- M<Mq, .i-ry 19, 1'170 DAILY P!l.OT If) JOIS & EMPLOYMENT JOllS & EMPLOYM!NT JOIS i. !MPLOYMINT JOIS a_ EMPLOYMENT 1 Jobo-Mon, Wom. 7100 JOIS & I MPLOYMINT JOBS & EMPLOYM ENT J0 15 • EMl'.LOYMENT JOiis & EMPLOiMli iifi Jobi-Mon, Wom. 71 00 Jobe Mon. Wom. 7100 J obi-Mon, Wom. 7100 Jobi Mon. Wwn. 7100 JOii & IMPLOYMIN1: Jobt Mon. Worn. 7100 Join-Men, Wom. 71DOJobs-Men, Wom. 7100 Jobo-Men, WQO\. 71GO BOOKKEEPER, ro~~ ------1 ~;;;;;;;;;.;;;:;;:~1~-~~;~;;;:··;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;-;;;;;;;;;-;,;,:~i:.:.:.:_..::.::::...::.:.::..:..:.:::1 Check Here wjth the Job Kings! tioniat, medical o ffice, MANICURIST \Ved lhru S.t. .. Sales Laguna uca. Slat• ,,. & FRY COOK S20 Dally Gunantftd Me,.. Office r.,.,......, CAREER OPENJNG ••••••••• MALE Commerciol Credit Sain Mtr Trainee to $'50. 2 yrs college. !i'nance or credit bkgrnd helprul, Supply Order Du k $500 ?.1wt be familiar ~·/elec· trical 1upplle1. Some or- der desk exper. Sain Intl•-$1000 mo plus Engineeri.ng degrl"c or l yrs credited Eng. college. Salttmen to $800 + College & gd sales bk· grnd. Technic:ol Jr. Drcrftsman to $500 2 yrs college or equiv. board time. Accountant $600 ?.fust have good bkgrnd. in all phases of acc:tng. Jr. Soles Rep . $425 + car & 111pl'fl1es. College pref. Good sales bka:rnd. Skllltd Sr. Wekltt·fltter Combination $3.31 Able to read BP's. Marine Carpenter to $3.95 hr itust be exper. Ornamental Iron Wt ldtr $].00 hr EXper in lay-out & insta.l· lation. Chucktr Oper. $3 hr Exper. Unsl!.llled factory Tralnffl from $2 hr FEMALE Rtcept /Typllt to $500 Sharp fTont off. Able to deal w/influentia.1 peo· pie. Acctnig C11Tk to $500 Must be able to do Pay4 roll & double entry J our· nal. Lite cypc. Glrl Friday $400 Fl'or.t off. AU-around a:en 1 off. duties. PIG IOARD lkkp< /Glrl Frltlay $450 11--tust have 3 )!I'S Pxper in peg board. Accurate type. F/C lookkp< to $700 Thru P&L and projec· tlon. qual. Box M 114 Dally Pilot (Eftnin&" sbUt) rell Hair DeaJin, OOt. BKK!'R. F/C""" COASTAL 6~1111. I PERSONNEL AGENCY Apply tn pertOn . MATURE Woman for :zm s. Main, $.A. 2 to s pm molhen btlper. l pm .. T 1 BO~~z::'-14 TheR:!;:.~:~:-n• .AGENCY :;.,,k:~M ;:T own C&rTlet ~ ... Open PERSONNEL ...,.. 3:IJQI. £:. Pacific O>a.!t Hwy, La."Una Beacb, So. Laa;u:na Cbt'ona dol Mar No Ph. eall1 540-6055 Responsible and ~ve. DAILY Pitm Foreign Cir u-henlcs a~ to work km&: hQW'S. 6l2-C2l ,...,. APPLY fN PEMON Good ""· benell1.1, Incl. paid Hollcl. oy HHllh Spo CABINET M a k er s & vacation. if'OUP Ina, Uni-IU Carpenters in boat shop, ex-forms fUmlabed fret. Good 18585 Main, &t Beilch vd. perlenoo:t. Aulo Coast. 1974 comm. ICbedule. Aalt tot A Member of Snelling Five Paints Sboppfn& Ctnter, Placentia, C.M. ~l Joe Moore Ph, 540-lT&t. & Snelling, Inc. f"Juntq:J~ Beach. Clerk GENERAL 0 FF JC E-1 2300 Harbor Blvd. Per1onn•I Clerk Responsible Girl Friday, THE Haltor ~-pl C le morn1"-only. Dictaphone. · .... ..,... na 11" t Loc!ll Mt1., has immed open. .,,... Cost\ Mtsa ing for Personnel Clerk who answer telephone. Nr OC PEOPLE ·;;:;::.,,.-- P.njoys v.·orking ,v/peorle. airport. 50--2476 MECHA.N.IC Shld have Xlntcl~ricaJ skllll. Gi N'L OFFICE HEAVY DUTY Salary commensurate w/ TRAINEE PLACERS Preler Bulck-Opel or expcr. Xlnt potent•·al • ~-Good .. "'l"J\ General ti1oton Experience ...,,.. 1yp .. 1g. ~· ~rmane·r.t, 1 ....... ,..._.,. ~. efits. Apply Personnel Ottlce Independent From ca.st to coast tion for ex;ri'enced • ';& of Personnel Agency 1 n d lnt•rn•tlon•lly able man. Excellent salary Trtnsport Dynamics 1ns.Orana:e Ave., Suite C plua commission, Fine work· Div. of Lear Siegler, Inc. c.r.t. 642-00'16, ~ the world'• largest ina: conditions, modern ser- 3131 Se&:el'strom, S.A. GENERAL OUlce • P/timc. profession al t1mploy-vice equipment Just ott Harbor & Warner S. H. Ne~ssa.ry, Good wt m•nt S•rvict1. All employee benefits CASHIER WANTED figure•. can 615-1133 lnclttdinr I Insurance & Paid Vacation App y Eves After 6 HAlRSTYLISTS, Spare for • SECRETARIAL CAl..L JOE alLANTONJO rent, Perilli Hair StyUng. Port Theater, CdM Call 642-lSOO FOR APPDINTl\fENT •CASH1ER * Car \Vash. Part time position. CALL: 64S-2022 Clerical RUTH RYAN AGENCY SPECIALIZING ~ fN OrFTCE PERSONNEL 1793 Newport Blvd., Ca-I -17931 Beach Blvd., HB 8-17·0017 1042 \V. 17th St., S.A. 547~1 C0~1PANION HSKPR, live in & cook for elderly lady. $200. mo. 6"5-1317 COSMETICIAN, experienced for drugstore. 5.1&-3080 COCKTAIL \Va!lre!s -Ex· per. Apply Mesa Lanes, 1703 SUperlor Ave, C.t.f. * COOK FuU time position APPLY IN PERSON COCO'S # 78 Fashion Island Newport Beach, Call!. * COOK * Expertencea. Apply: SURF & SIRLOIN . 5930 Pae. Cst. Hwy .. N.B. COOK · HOUSEKEEPER. Lido T.sle, Jive out, local refs. 673-1805 DENTAL ASSISTANT Chair side. Exper. pref. X· rays. Under 30. Hours Tues. thru Sat. S.S. Send n:sume & references to P.O. Box 135, So. Laguna. DENT AL ASSIST ANT • Receptionist, Hunt. Bch. Age 25-35. Typing, no dental exper. necess. M8turity & Gd Personality rrq. Call 847-6070 D E N T A L Assistant-Oral Surgery oUice, X-Ray ex· periencc. 548-7719 *DRIVERS* No Experlenc:e Necessary! Must have clean Caftfomla -....,.,.. '"°" YELLOW CAB CO. 186 E. 16th St. Poole Buick, 234 E. 17th St. HOSPITALITY HOSTESS " • OFFICE C.•ta Mua >JS.1765 Jooklng tor mature women to welcome ne,vcomers to the oommunity. M"'t have • CLEffJCAL typewriter, car, and be bon- dable. Apply 235 E. Main, Suite 7, Tustin, Calif. -HOTEL Clerk for beach resort, part day, part night, some typing & accouriting, bond.able & reftrences . Perfect for ~emi-retired or roUegc 5tudent. 494-1196 e SALES e ADMINISTRA JIVE e TECHNICAL Laguna Beach 1-IOUSEKEEPER -Sitter M•n•g•m•nt ]:J0...5:30 pm. f\lust ha,·c Opportunity car. 2 boys 10 I: 12 yrs. 346 Train for an interesting E. 19.lh SI. 67~1381 days dlvenUled & lucrative car· 64:>-8346 eves. etr in the exciting world at t~<S;:KP:_::R.::.._:c..:,:civ-e-in-.-.. ~,.,.,,-I commerce! National AAA open, Eng or Span ok., nwn Co. oflers v a I u ab I e ha Tv 2 -'Ud training. Sucee1sful men nn, , , w• ren. 545-2623 are fuU managers within 2 yean. Ability to com· HOU SEKEEPER r·or elder· municate & relate well ly lady. 2 hrs day, S days w/people. Xlnt f ringe wk. 646--1240 beneiil!i! Earn •.vhlle you HOUSEKEEPER, Live in, leam! Start lrom $5400. mother's helper. priv rm. 2 Call today! Joan Marlin. schl-agers 67:>-0310, 548-7197 HOUSEKEEPER. l day week, new home ne11.r l lun· tina:ton Lake. 847-0163 HOUSEKEEPER • Live In for elderly couple. ~1nture \\'Oman pref. Call 642-6661 *IMPORT e Auto Mech•nlc e Ser vice Writer e Detail & Lot M•n New car dealership, good Ct'>. benefits &, working condi· tlons. Pllone 646--9303. ITT IABSCO INSPECTOR EXPEcRIENCED {Five Years titinimurn) Mechanical inspector for manufacturer oI miall com· n1e-rcial pumps. l nsptietlng of plll'Chruied material and machined parts to assure proper quality and dlmen- sk!ns_ Good working condf.. tio.n & benefi ts. APPLY rN PERSON OR IN WRITING Mgmt Train•• Outstanding opty r or veteran \\'/HS educ. Top Co. in ifs field. Advance at own rate. Full Co. benefits & Co pays fee. Start $5400. Call Gerry White Out1it:le S•l••m•n Progressive mlnded Co prefers collea:e . a: r a d w/sale& exper. Mu1t be ln- sun.ble. Very find fringe benrJit.a & Co pays fee. Start $6600 + car + ex- penses. Call Gerry \Vhlte. Teller Trainee or exper. Lowly loc. & Xlnt benefits Incl. profit sharing; for bright person. Don't mi8s thl1 op- ty! $425. C&ll Sally HaJ.1. Secret•ry Typing & SH aldlta can land th\1 outstanding job w/interestlng Co. Lots of challenge \V/pleasant people. Huny! $600. Split ftt. Call Sally Hart. Gxec Agency for Career Girls SECRETARY One Pl office;. Shorthend & typina:, lite bkkpg, Self starter. Faaclnating com. pa.ny and unlike the ordinary mundane office. Must be very attractive and \.\"ell groomed. GENERAL OFl'ICE Accts. p&¥able, acet1. ttcelvable, collection. gd. typilt, shorthand or dle- taphone. Tv.·o alrl ale. Xlnt """"· RECEPTIONIST Overflow typing. Heavy phones, good telephone technique and get with public. New otficea, beaut. reception area. COLLECTION CLERKS (2) Experl1need. Initiate . own correspondence. Good typist. XJnl company in beaut. area. ASSISTANT ACCOUNTANT Dtgrtt in aeooundnc or he a v.y con..l;l"uctton _ •c· counting. Male or Female SECRETARY/ REC!PT BUtna:ulll, E n 1 I i 1 h & Gt!rman. Prefer some le1al. Shorthand Ml nee;. One girl ofe. Lite bkkpa:. ACCT'S PAYAl!LE CONSTRUCTION ~perlenced. Fa' m 111 a r with contract billing & lien releases. GIRL FRIDAY Dictaphone, &"ood typist, sharp, &ell 1tarter. 410 W. Coe1t Hwy. Newport B•ech 646-3939 Costa Mesa Gtn'I Offic•/Steno $500 ~E~N~G=IN=E'~E=a-. -m",-cn-am-.~,,.L Gd l.yp!!, SH or dlcttt· Exp. in piping design, EQUAL OPPORTUNITY El\ilPLOYER BookkHptir Swift-moving Co ha 1 desirable pos. for op- ty·miruted ;person. Xlnt btnetll! incl. stock option. FH reimbursed. $550, C&ll Sally Hart. newport personnel agency phone cxper. Li le post· healing & a/c. Prefer some ing. f'Xp. apt. construction . 1485 Dale Way Cost.a Meaa, Calif, Mt1cllcor• lill•r !Tom $400 J\Iust be well versed in Medicare an phases. A.cents Pa1 Clttk $95 wk 6 mos CXPE't pref. Offlu Mgr. from $500 G,;n'I office duties. bkkpg Uiru trlaJ bal. Sec'y /Girl Friday to $600 11.girl office. SH 100, typ- t ing 70. Lite bkkpg. I Collection Girl $425 IType 50, g\;'~ofglll, exptr i In collecLion in [)(opt s tore, bank or finance I Co I Fecttiry TralnHt ~ $1.85hr ~d hand dexterily. i ~tory Skilled I from $2 hr 11\fust hAve gd eyesight. manua l hand dexterity, ,knO\\' color codes. APEX 1 Employment j.t Agenc:v •mg EASY \vA'i (uk u1 why) : 1873 HARIOR BLVD. ' 1 (~ block So. of 19th) I .COSTA MESA 548°3426 Balance-Flo Inc. 7 1 4 : 642-5700 Escrow Officer to $750. Fee TK'gotiable. Xlnt stable gro\ving 01-ganimtion. Standard escrow work. 546-~10. JASON BEST Emplayment Agency 2207 So. f\1ain. Santa Ana. FEMALE Factory i>ackai· (TI4) 54~1 ers. 5 Ft 5" or over. $1.tli """'"'"""""""""""""" per hr. to start. 54S-51 Z5 MAIDS WANTED Fiberglass Production * ~7445 * BookkHpero FI C & Accnts Pay. Clerks Several Xlnt p oa. w/top...notch Co's. Tenil. potential. lo $550. Hurry! Call Jean Brown. Secretary Respected tlnn. npty to ad- vance. Front ottlce type, SH req'd. don't mill .this onet To $600. Split fee. Call BilUe Beck. Trainees CM/Fl apply MANAGEMENT trainee, Ag· Bro\.\'ning Mlg. Co .. 1916 gi:esslve young man ln-C11hler/Crtidit Cr. Pla~nlia, Costa ~tesa. !crested In job with tu.lure Xlnt })lace lo start, then 10 :>48-tln In tumiture rental co. 517 to the top. Lite type. GIVE the "United' Way" W. 19th. C.f\f. 548-3481 Interesting. Hurryl Start ;;,;====-="=====<-========-$335. Call Bllllt Beck. Jobo-Men, Worn. 7100Jobs-Mln, Wom. 7100 INSPECTION Electronic Inspector hi .. 2nd Shift Varian Data !i1achines located in the lrvine Industrial Complex , has an immediate open .. ings for a Elect.r<rMCchanical Inspector. 'Requi rements indJude 3 to 6 months experl· ence in electro mechanical assembly or in· spectlon1 and famlllarity wlth"the electronic color coae, components and assembly d:raw· ings. Excellent starting ratas and fringe bene- fit program including 12 days vacation during the 1st year of employment and a stock purchase program. Varian Data Machines · A VARIAN SUBSIDIARY 2722 Mlch4il1on Qrlve, lrvlne, C•lif. 91664 (San Diego Frwy. to Jamboree oU·ramp 1 block S. ol Mlclielaoo Drive) An Equal opportunity :Employer M·F ' I Ronpt/G1l Frldoy Busy cha.llen&in1 &: fun plsce. Phone, type, tome figure work. Start $4:15. Call Blllte Beck. ~R FR.EE ANO FEE JOBS AVAILABLE COASTAL AGENCY 540-6055 21'/0 Hor bor &i.d. t o1ta Me•• 833 DOVER DRIVE NEWPORT BEACH 642-3870 F/C BookkHper to $650 CRP To take books thru P&:L for small grov.'1na; finn. Soc. to $600 1/:i EPF• Corporate, legal exp er helpful tor prlvate in. dustry. Soc. to $600 '12 EPF• Medics!, chemlclll, or almllar backfround tor dlrector of research. Exec. Ste. toi650 EPF* Must have CPS Certificate. (Co. may negotiate fdr more monc:i-· I. Leg1I Sec'y to $550 FHNeg. Probate It collect.ionl e»- P'r. Girl Frldoy to $550 APP• One-rlrl ot8cc. Accntg Clt1rk to $476 APP• ror )'Ollng oraanli&tion. Girl F riday to $425 APF* Irwuranct la u to) back· ground. For ntW Dept of Xlnl c.. F/C llkkpr. $600 IRI'• Jr. Soc:. $450 EPF• Girl Frld1y $500 FHNeg. •&,f, employer J'OY' , .. •APF, 1ppllunt poya , .. •&Rf, COrhjMnf relmitur~s fee ' Proud ti be an A . m mer1can .•. Glad you're a GIRL??? Join up with u1lll AMERICAN GIRL ALL NEW Red, White & Blu1 temporary service Merchlnv •long with TOP RATES MAJOR ASSIGNMENTS TOP BRASS COMPANIES Wt11re recruiting NOW for: Due to gri>wth in Uils area the New York Life has sales openings: the per&0n we want must be age 24 or over, with som~ coHeae or sales background. Muat be mature and arU· culale and work well with people. We pay starting salary plus incentJves as earned, a Z.year professionally supervised training p~ gram, Group Lile and Health wurance. Up- on comple tion of a Z.years·plus training per- iod~ qualified representatives who wish may go into management. P. 0 . Bo• 1850 N1wport Beach, Calif. 92663 Equal Opportunity Employer -M & F Jobi-Mon, Wom. 7100 Jobo-Mon, Wwn. 7100 NttNlng RN or LYN Ca.llfornia License 4-12 PP..1 lhlft avail, 12-8 AM ahift avail. APPLY IN PERSON HunUne:ton Beach Convaleactnt Hospital l8'7'1'J Dela.watt, H.B. N'"iiRsE:s Regi1tered • even. Ing &: night shill&. Ex. benefit&. Apply PeiosonneJ Diteelor, So. Coast Com· munity Hosp., 31872 Coast Hwy., So. lAguna. 499-1311, ext. 356 SARAH COVENTRY baa openings for full or p.art time sales. No lnvf1tment, no dellvtries. For interview. -· Sales $17,157.70 \VAS THE NA- TION-WIDE AVERAGE COMMISSION paid our full lime men last year. We need a good man over 40 in the Beach cttin an:a. Take ahort trlpa to contact customers. Air mall ,}!. H. Pate, Pres .. Texaa Refinery Corp., Box 711, Fort Worth, Texu 76101 PORTER • ·Steady Janitorial work. Good pay. C a ll 842-811{}, Ext 9. SALES P&RSONNEL needed part time for adult PBX Ana. Strvlce Exper luxury apertment complex. Pref. Trainee Considered. Previoua 1alea or leasing Evening Hrs. H.B. Area. e1Cp. requited, Call ~53S-;o..:888=1·------I OAK\VOOD GARDEN APTS 64U11U POLICE OFFICER -CITYOF- NEWPORT BEACH $711. to $172. per mo. Sales SALES~ WANTED to aupervise boya, age 12·16. in newspaper field. You \viii not deliver neMJpttper (If collect. Must live in C.osta 1'1eaa area. SIOl'.I cuaranteeo Several posiUons available llNlt two W<'t!ks ii yau with progressive Pollce De· qualify, Must have station p&rtment, dUe to expansion wagon or van. call l\Tr. In ah:e and &COPe of activity. Valdez anytime at 213: Requirements inelUdt; heiitit 1..:BS::5-_;""'=------ 5'g", 160 lbs. min.. 21--31 m. of aa•. 20-10 """'""'" SALES ed vLsion. High aehoo1 d\pJo.. ProJ'eu1onal training pro- ma. gram. ~ ~cordtd w or. The qualified !hould appear matlon pPone 835-1375. People Are , Our Business th• l•rgut a moat ht1lp service In the to better H rv• our Harbor •r11 custom- era. NEW OFFICE Located at: 448 W. 19th St Costa Mesa at the next wr!tk>n test, 6:30 --------II p.m .• January 28th., 1970. ~s .~ The City Hall Council Cham. _. Newport Bt11ch Off lea & •II Or1nge County f. BHch ClllH. be 3300 N Blvd Fee paid by Co. rs. ewport ., SAMANTHA BARY Newport Beach, California. PERSONNEL AGENCY No appointment netelsa.r:Y prloc to te8t. 2229 S. Mtln, S.A. For further infonnalion, con· 5-IS.226l tact the Ptrsonncl DUice. ,,.,,_....:.:A1="':..:"::'_.:Jo::ba:::.. __ (n4) 673-&i33. Sales WE NEED Men & Wamen ------ll -~~=~-I BILLION DOLLAR PRODUCTION Orgenliatlon has ~Ing far married man o~r 25 at who are available now I o r interesting ••· signments on a tem· por ary basis. Recopt./Typi1t Acctg. Clerk "Mister" Stenos WORKERS once. Opportunlry for $800 NEEDED mo. to 1ta.rt. Righi man can Tl'alnees (If E'<perienced be In management in year. ALSO Experienced lnaptictor for P C Boards Call 438-0316 betw 10"' 12. SALES "First Class" Typists APPLY IN PERSON ONLY BE1WEEN 9 AM I: 11 AM For Recorded lnfonnatklll Phone~ SCR£W MACHINE *TRAINEES* • Secretary e Stenos "P .t "St rive e ec ys. "Rank & Fil•" Clerks 11Typi1t11 with creative writing ability. "Legal " Sec:ys. "NCR" Opor. '# 482 "Med " I" S ICI ecys. "K h" 0 eypunc pars. "Bookk1eper·Secy" PBX Oper. "Stafotical" Typ;sts ''Manuscript'' Typist AMERICAN GIRL needs YOU Coll ovr NEW N-rtBHchNo. for 1ppofnfment 673-4176 REGISTER NOW! DlcHn Electronics $137.'ZS 18SZ2 Von Karmon per week to 1lart Irvine, calil. $1'2.50 !Near 0 .C. Airport} after 30 daya Apply, Z. D. PRODUCTS PROFESSIONA L Sale 3UIO Pullman Caretr • Searching for man Co•ta Mtsa e GenMVI Offlc:e e Receptlqnl1t1 to learn our bul!ness and 540-5432 handl• "'" exeoulive po•I· ~s.-c-'y_A.,cd.,cmc;l,;c.n;-l1t_r_ol-lv-.-' APPLY 9 a.m .. 4 p.m. tlon. Training income pro- ed II I Promotion bu. created open- vUI . Co •••• " " or '"" for an *'1mlni-Ove Monday tllru FrlUJ buslneu exp. Marr i ed ... 542-5623 E.'<I. 321 Secretary to the Controller of a ltading bearln& mf1. PRESS OPERATORS Varied duties req. typlnJ Women • work for plastics oo+, SH 100, proficient on molding plant. Eve ahlft calculator. Exper essential. 546--3370 some oollege pref. Salary TO $400 commtnaurate with exper. Receptionist, Sa n t a Ana, Xlnt beneUts &: potential .• beautiful oUlce. Fee spilt. Apply Penonnel Ole. General Laborers Call Lorainne. WestcllU Per-Tr•nsport Dyn•mlc1 aonnel, 2&t3 WertcliU Drtvt, Div. of Lear Siegler. Inc. N.B. 645-2770 (Fee and Fee 3131 Sepratrom, S.A. paid jobe availahlel J ust oil Harbor·&: Warner REAL ESfATE SECRETARY Top skill.a $415. lndepandent Pt1r1onnel Ag•ncy 1nG Or&nit Ave, Suite: C C.M. 642·0026. 545-0919 •Warehouse worbrs e Moterlol Handlers 3 aalespeople needed now! Immediate lloor time for qualified licensees. Full program includes equity loans. guaranteed a&le1, tra.dl'·ins &: prorireuive training program. Rex L Hodges, Rlty. SECRETARY • Reception~• APPLY 6 a.rn.·9 a.m. tor Archlttctural 0 f c . _ 847·2525 Roc1ptlonl1t $425 Exciting un\UJUl.\l O>. In New· p:irt Beach. Call Shirley 546-6410 JASON BEST Empl.ayment Artncy Z1f11 So. M&Jn, Santa Ana Receptionist Tr1lne• $350 mo. Xlnt opty for adapt. able gal who can type. Beach city, 546-5410 JASON BEST Employment Agency '12<11 So. Main, Santa Ana REUBEN'S Costa Mos• Nnw lnterviewtna: e BUSBOYS Full non. e CL I ANUP/ BUSSING . Glrla • 0.,,. APPLY =~~~::,,c:,,:~ Monday tllru Saturday Lan&uage Skllla Essentllll. S. H. Pref. Wage Dependent on Capability. Send Reaume w/Ptrtlnent Info & Wage desired to Box S4M Daily Pilot. e SECRETARY e to f'llC.'l'eatlori dlrector Salary $516 ... ISJ8. CITY OF LAGUNA BEACH Shorthand, b'Pt, file, varied duties. Appltca&n forms avallab1e City Hall, 511; For- est Ave. Deadline Feb. 3rd, 1'70. To $600 Secretary . Bciokkees>er. ldear Bee.ch area kx:Atlon. C.11 Loralnne. Westi::llff Pemn- ne~ 2043 We11telW ~e. N.ts. 64.>mo Cree and Fee paid Jobi). SECR&TA.i\Y • attractive )'OUf\I.. lady tor work in law ofHce, aood typlat with pleaaant penonallty to mttt public and answer phone. l.tl.auna NtaueI a re a . ·~ Technical & Pnlfesslonol Positions Available MANPOWER 448 W. 19th St Custa Mesa 645-2043 ISM W, ADAMS AMERICAN COSl'A ~ SECRETARY PT/lme ., _ __;:$:::7.:.:.5,:..:oo=o:::? __ , ~~~li.~·~~~~ :. Anaheim 11uooo GIRL per Nee, 4-16 hrs wk. 1'1111 For ~td fnfo detalll to Box 5.'IM, Daily Phone S4W191 Pilot. N.B. SHOW YoU: cu--OIVt a fair mE QUICKER YOtJ CAU.. obaft D.\JLY PlLOT WANT ADSl ••••••••• \I L DAil y PILOT ii IMPLbYMENT Monday, Janu.try 19, 1970 JOBS i. EMPLOYMENT MERCHANDIS! FOR MERCHANDISE FOR TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION ,... MM. Wom. 7100 S<:hoola-lostrvdlon 7600 SAL! ANO TRADE SALE AND TRADE _;;;..;.;;.o....;.~~-~-~- \IEJ!CHANDISE FOR ••t.E AND TRADE FREE TO YOU TRANSPOIJTATION 1---------.1Mobllo Homn Fumfturt IOOO':utnlture IOOO PllftOI & Or91f'lt 11JO N't:EO pmn. homo tor Imported ~-9600 1~ ..... ,.Pd Autos 9600 !IECl\r:l'ARY: Aalltsnt to Pl~ SalAry $500 to •-·-.cau - SERVICE, Station· Grsveyard man, 3 nites "''k. 1.1ust be neat, clea,,. exp'd ' ka.I re:t&. Apply Chevron Station, Harbor Blvd & San Diego Frwy. No phone. SERVICE 1tatkin attend, • exp'd, lull time. Hrly wage + comm. Pem1anent. Good nwking cond. 991'.1 E. Coast Hwy. NB ~V Sia Atlendant, exp. nee . .s78 Campus Dr .• N.B. Airporl Texaco · see JI.like SERVICE Station Attend. Exper Full llme. Prefer older man. Apply 560 \V. 191.h St., C.1'1. SE\\rING: Chrerful )'Qt.Ing lady for fast & accurate ..ewing in Lai:una Bch. 4'1-8779 Shipping Dept. GENERAL -CLERK- for shippillg' department. Able ro lift bulky items • packagifll:'. n1aterials. Call Personnel Oep1. {7141 494-9401 TEL ON IC INDUSTRIES Laguna Beach ii~~==;~~=;;;~;=~:-1:::~==~=· lovable YoUna terr/mix YEAR EMU dof. !Ubrtm, male, -CLEARANCE SALE lalla!tl?r1~i[91: '?~~;!;:;] 2·r.t~~~·t.":: ~~~:. uw $•·a ~ Co. 1001 N. MPln, Sarita Ana 1 ,.,.. • ' I'"" B k s "·-l>ECORATOR Gm CAN EllATION '""' creY iem11.e, -u:i 8 er t .. ...wta Mesa "Lciu.lcr lnTheBtat:hf1 .... , .• OF 1a LUXU~Y A,ARTM~NTS NEw • uSEn. r"'"""· :;u~. Need~ i!..~:'Z,:!" ",1~J:"'~1o ZIMMERMAN Sponish & Mtditefllntlft Futmturt o...,.,, R<built G"""". COU.!E, II ..,, • oJ d, I 8"'room • I both PARK 2145 HARBOR BLVD. All BRAND NEW \VaUldl's C.l!t M0-2830 blk/Whl, mall!', To iood LANE-t.tANOR B[MU.'t oow .540-6410 " d B d S 't · p home only. 842-5846 alter S al Bay1ide Villqe with 196.1 DATSUN \\'ag. Auto 9·pc. mt it1rra naan • room ui • in eclln "T~•~lo~v~i~•~lo~n'----~·~2~0~5 pm. 11pace reqt of only SSl~. tr1u11, new tire~. Sal'rifk-e , DATSUN TRIUMPH '6:! TR-4 IOOd cond. wire wheels, roll her, eood tires w/spal"t', •70 lie. M1111 sell S100 best otr~.r. 499-4347 aft 6. VOLKSWAGEN VW BUGS I Reg, $149.00 I ·-··-·········..-•·NOW $168.00 1 -4 YR. OLD Feniale Ge(IJ\an Wiii help fh'l!lnce 50'.lt. f>honE' el $1500 • $300 l.lclo1v book. MEN & WOMENI Go'9•'r,'' Spanish Custom Built Soft with Lease Color TV or Black & thcpherd Xlnt \Vatch dog, ftt5..16.57 p.m. 01• r .O, Box 833-l46!) COP.1PUTER PROGRMt· matchin g Love Seat-Choice of beautiful \Vhlte. Option to buy. Free good w/chlldren. }')'ff: to 77~16~======~-1":;:::;=:=:;:;:=;=~::;;::;= ~11NG IS THE KEY TO fa;brics. !Reg. $41 9.96) ____ NOW $225.00 ;N:~:io ~posit A·Active good homE'. 842-1029 t/19 -R,ARE OPPORTUNITY ENGLISH FORD YOUR PROITTABLE Spantth OininCJI Sets ·····-·--·······---·--$75.00 (1) 522-US3 4 R.ATS, 3 males, 1 female t.IOBILF. J.JVING on lhe l-;:;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;; FUTURE! Solid Oa~ End Tebles ancl Coffee Tables •. $19.50 !female may be expttting) BEAClf. Limited &~Cl!I 1nl• Clu:ses start aoon. Tell Oecoretor Table Lamps HI-Fl & Stereo 8210 a litlt'l\ cru1 on weekdays new addition to tltiltwood ORANGE COUNTY'S Pilot prorrem ofictinl:' the IRa9. $49.911 --------·--· ........ NOW $11.00 att 4 pn1 546--l6.'l1 Beach c.1ub. 1\lodcls oi1 dis-VOLUME EN.GLISH finest equipment and 'facil· Spanish Hanging Sweg ~amps BOGEN Public address BF..,VTIFUL AKC boxci·. 2 Ptay! C>reelll.e11f Ma lt-11 c. i:ORD DEALER !ties available! Realt-Ume I Reg. $49.95) ··-···---······-··--..... NOW $22.50 nmplifier. 25 wall. likt• Hf"W. )'I'S, 01lh•rt"l f'lalr. lovf'~ I Ionic ~alt'll, 21~62 Pa\•lflc SALES . SERVICE computer programmini:. A decorator drean~ house on display -3~ C0"-1 $M, now MO. 2 "'111111J1 .~ t'hildrcn. l lou~c u·ained, Cat H~hway, l·l.B. :j;l6.Ta1J OVER SO JN STOCK The &n.r1i.L....• rooms of gorgeous Spanish furniture l \l'DS x 12 " 21 ... ~r>eakci·~. bl.Ith 1"r !m-Ol8CI t/19 HOME-=iikc. Panunonnt EX. • 2 & 4 Dr. Mode:s ~IJ reg. $1295. $IO. S..->tl·:::'.:2G ~ pando. all alun1inu111, 1·ll'an, • 2 & 4 Dr. DrhL"(es cf,,__ SACRIFICE S425 r.!·u·'• ,., ..... uii:;rJ inal{' fl('rfc1,:t llbapc:. 2 sn·s, • .! & ~Dr. ~T J\lodeU f>J9. 3031 Ext. 66 ur 67 ~m • • • • • • Sporting GOods 8500 Good '' ilh chndreu, has lTpt'd, ilrps, rt,.,. n 111 i; s' e Statio~ "agons 1970 HARBOR BLVD. -..u-.7 ATT J-:r-.'TION S b shots, 83()..{'86:: t'hoil'e ~pot, eltti<e lo :thop. Many \'.'1th fully a~tornatlc COSTA J\lESA CREDIT AVAIL. NO MONEY DOWN Direct h'O~l ·Hi:l~·ei':~: r.USSIAN Rh1r cat, sp.1yed. pin~ & 1ran~nor1atior1i Adult 1rans., air, radial tire!, ra-1---°"-'-"'--C:CC:..--·1 m n FURNITU C · 1 1 Sohl Adul!s only, no snM:ikin;;. 11<1rk, 1!'173 Nrwriort Ave., ·sp dlo, vinyl roof, WS\V tires. LARGE Unli~~:n~o!:~·ra I RE si:;~~~.~ ~~o~ ~~i· 6Ta-144.1. 1/20, 6. ~r. Ph. 61&--oo13 a~~ N~~sri'rug>r.. SELECTION Suitt 4D r 8' 1~om-pi;i--;---;;\1 '63 Cor,·air.1.lonia who!(' ear '118 24x50, 1~i BA, tarpeted, O~ER NO\V of VW ?r•nta Callf '26" 1844 o ... ~--·~ t' 1 & I •"" available or )'ou rt1novc dr"'Pf'5, part.ly furn, l\lu•t CAMPERS c.1i s.c1-'411 Newport Blvd. Harbo<,••Blvd.l ~·~'i<1 ;;'159'1 c ,., -· ''""' ..,,," """ $87:,0. ""'"· """ ROBTlhNoodS•F••ORD DISSATISFIED? C M 0 I s cu BA GEAR Sl;iO, or LOVABLF;, plrt~f1•l, pa rt lirn?;ton Ey the Sea, Spa.Ct" • Harbour v.w. Osta esa. n " d I I I poodlt'. 2 )r. 6111 •kl~. t'11.mi-121 2060 Harbor Blvd. That you~ going nowhere y u·a e*~ ~~l6m:~n·ycr. ly n1us1 111nl(~ •. 'l'l3--00'6 1.11:1 ;-Nf:\V 2b;60 OF.LUXE, 2 Cosla i\fesa 6\2-C<llO AUTHORIZED in YoW' present job, ---~ -• .; .. OJ' 2 " d -SALES & SERVICE DISCOURAGED? Every Night 'Til 9 -Wed.,. Sat. & Sun. 'Tit 6 MERCHANDISE FOR BLOND!!: t'utl(t+".' P1lfifl>' '· 1 • \, en. crpts tlu'U-. SALE AND TRADE f'rre 10 ~otMI l!Otl)". ""'· r "ri•i & carpol'I awngs, FERRARI 18711 BEACH BL., 842-4435 That you bav('fl'I the kno\v Furnitvr• 8000 A I' 8100 how lo better yourselL I----'------· I PP llnces Mi1celleneou1 8600 DISCOVER I Your new career as a RADIO AlilMOUNCER aa.s1e1 formirig now LEARN' - on professional equipment from working air personal- itiM. CALL 7n-3800 Institute of Broadcast Arts 1681 W. Brnadway, Anaheim Student Loans Frt't' Placement Servic·c SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS GIGANTIC JANUARY CLEARANCE SALEI Save up to 80% Use our store charge plan " l\lasler Charge Bankameiicard Approv.d Furniture 2169 Harbor, Of 548-9660 ROSEWOOD Bedroom ~. double bed \Yilh hookcase headboard, 2 end tables with drav,'.'rs, w/ma1ching lamps and 9 dra1ver dresser, ooly $70. 839-3820. QUAL1n· king bed . quilted me.rtress. Complete unused Sl20, \\'Orlh $260, 812-@6 P\'f'!C.. -------PRIVATE Party. Used httt~. new J·ef.rigC'rator, family size, fl'ost-frec. Pl'rfect con- cli1ion, save a -lot ~ $175. Apartment si~e refrigPrator, ~Ct'llenl. Excellent il!aylag \1•asher guaranteed $75. 2114 Continental A\·e. C.AI. POOL TABLES Secarcl Pool ERUNS\VICK-At.-1F Custom Slate Table From $289 100';0 Financirt; * SEC.ARD P(X)LS * ""-"" Antiques 8110 ::~1~; ~~~eabcd,°;;~ LOUIS XIV CJUeC'n SIU' bt'd Hl-Bck Chrs, SJ() l!a. Firm $300: <.'Olft>C tbl. oval top, Kingsz Bd, $80. Twin Bd, frL'nch leg" SIS(; ladies $10. 5' Antiq Yellow Dresser dres:;cr, · inlaid mahogany & mirror, S.15. 1969 Gibson $350; ehair. Viclorlan sty!r, 'Olh·e Gr("('n Obi Dr 17 C1l It dusty J'Q:,e \ch·c1 upholstC'r-relrig, $200. '69 Hotpoinl ing $:1."1; ~l•air, Vk lorian 11'hi lc "'ashC'r & Dry, $80 ea. :.tyl<', tu/! btitk & sc:il. ulivc Call 6-12-762:'1. \rl1r1 $6.i; \\'a~h :o;!~nd. ~AUC-T-IO_N_* An H'l'it1ir1. ~ 1lr.,n1·1·r~. 1 1loor X $If;;;.: c..'Ofrt•r lah!r, ~,,11111 U you_ w111 sell or bll)' 1'111nd n1;1rhlc lop $325; give \Vindy a tty 545--0615 11~ ?3' roised porch. J\1any c:x-1----------1-lUNTINGTON BEACH 4 Puppies _ :t lemtilCll & 1 hu. $15,500: 642-1350 FERRARI '66 vw. s;,oo &. ~ssunie payl!I. male. 2 \\'hite & 2 black. '61 BEAUT. Gold l\1edal ii x Newport lrn.porl.I Ltd. Or-II Track l\tunlz SIE'reo coo- 646--5341 · 1119 43', 1 Jg. BR. sklrtlngs, lfto"e Count)''• only author-verter, 2 speak.ers. 23 tapes, awning, alwn porch 068-1810 lzed deall!'r. $175. Call Susan 67~ Alt EUCAUYPTUS Log, 2' x ,25'. SALES-SERVICE-PARTS 1 PJ\t. for the haulin;:. 493-49411 Motorcyclu 9300 3100 W. Coast Hwr. ·"'"-,,=~-----~I after a p.n1. 1/19 I---~------Newport Beach '64 V\V Bug, Xlnt cond . FREE -Fat Cat for a thin '611 BSA Spitfire f\1al'k JV, 642·940.? _540..1764 Sunrool. $873. lad . Ph. 6i2-6621 l/19 ~-Stored l yr. 1500 act Autho112ed Ferran Dealer 673-9071 FREE Irish Seiter.Female 1 ml's. Immac. S9Ll, 673-1334 '68 \"V Bus. year old. 64U96? 1-19 or 673-9200. JAGUAR $2100. Call. 1----.~6',..,-H~O~N~D~A:-----l ___________ 1 !KS-2142 itlter 5 pm, t.1ALE KITTEN, 7 mos, old. HiO Scramblr.:-$200 l!lfiO 3.4 SEDAN. Black '62 V\V. Ne1v rebll rn(ine, to good home 83'H493 o.•7,3182 xlnt rond. il1ust sell! 5·.75 o•· ..., beaUtY.! Wood paneling, 1thr ~ " PETS •nd LIVESTOCK .6g llonda 450 &ram. uphol., auto trans., $995. Ph. orfer. f>1S.9823 Dogs 8825 Gd cond. $67:>. Only 1.tr, Gennett days 642-4910 x "63 V\V Camper, reblt eng., 2,!XXI mi. Call 673-5885 373, t'\·cs/"·knd~ 675-ti039 r&h $1400 or best oUel'. ·,-.-,-•• -.,,-Cl-,-,.-,-»c<-!_f_re_e_! I======='"°'""'= '64 Jaguar Xh"E Roadster. f>1S-199J after 5 Auto Services NE'11• lop. ~1v lire3, xlnt ·ss V\V Bus for sale or take 3 females, I male. Toy rolllt'-& P•rts 9400 ·" s~ ,--·-03 Lab & "?~"?Five ,1.eeks oldi----------, C011u. ~VVOI. J.>-.H -~-over payments. ~J and 11'Canc<I. 536-36-t:i aft 4 ATI'ENTION: Sei·v. :;talion~ '6;). J.o\G. 3.S !ictf. ~aut 6-1:~1803 anyli111e Pi\1 11·kdys. Anytinle & garages!! Electronic tune be1gclb!k lthr. lo m1, ,al~ '65 V\V, sunroof, new motOT, 11'eekencls. up :i;cope, diivc on front end P"'I'/ air I: extrai;. 644-4265 xlnt concl. $1095 or bc.!I of- ./ IRISH SETl'ER PUPS. nl!gnn1enl. 360 d~. auto lire fer. 644-4999 ~ J\l1.11ilc h1•r ~loo!,;, 2 st.rp lablcs, coll. lablr, tah!e lamp, Uoor lan111. 11·all she\l'rs. pictw't's. 67;t.43!1 FORCED to sell 8' f.ledit. F.qual opportunity employer Gentry_ Dusky_ \\'iped _ sofa, 1 pc BaASCt din rn1 5('t, SIITER • Llve in H.B. area. Scribe -DRESSING 5 pc Basset BR M'I. c.."'OficC! & Burean, ct\(on')', An1erica11 Auctions Friday 1:30 p.m. $27:i: .lurlges day rourh, ~ik Windy's Auction Barn "!.a w loot n.ist upboli>tcrtng lOij•, ?\l!wport, C:l\I 616-8686 .,,,(XJ. a~wl'1rd l11111r~ ,t· pie-Behind Tony's Bldg. i\lal'I. lU!TS. Lll\e seal 11·h1!e rla. Champ Pt'dicreed Stk. t rhant;er, cigarette 1nach. MERCEDES BENZ 57 V\V. Xlnt for Dune Buggy. Female Jef1 . 191-1021, 49-1-30S'.! New brake:i; & gd tires. Call 194-6632 or &12-506:i • &12-2619 AFGHAN HOUND, 18 M015, Trucks 1967 V\-V~R-,,~,-:illll~.-,-,-. -L-;k-,' $15 J\1o. 4 children, 3 in catty rcnlark: "8le's In end Ihle. 111 826-0080 11Chool. Reft'r. J\iirid le Age. he:t· itnlad days, but she's not 1 •w~u-·1~s~x-·v~,-h1-, -,,-,~,-c-,-,.,,-,-,. 962-3141. 12131 83G--Zi04 \·ery particular about J1er chain; !able. :)'xJ~~· all SHAMPOO GIRL DRESSING." w/Cahriole ll·gs $450. t.1ust ht> licen~I. CONTESSA HAD~ FASHIONS. * 6i:>-338.l .. TYPIST' Call 642-7725 b et w~en i :30-f:30 l\londay-Fti. lITIUTY man, healing & ale main1enance. t.1 us t have car. Balance-Flo lnc. 714: 642-5700 ........................... 61""'39 AUCTIONEERING 8' SOFA. never used. quilted REGULAR 2 \\'"EEK TEfilT floral, sootchguarded Sl:::l. Be in business for yourself! matcllin;: IOl'Cseat $8fl. Call Learn to be an auctiont>er. 116--0j92 \VEST-BEST SCHOOL O~~ ==~~~~~- AUCTIONEERING, 2C6 "'· E~\UT. T"·in b ~c d.ro o rn 4th Santa Ana 638-5000 sui t~. 1 yr old. $32.j. 6'1.J-1161 ' ' · atrf'r:; • •LEARN ABC Shorthand for l'asy note laking. J Life? Time Sat &euions only SlO. -------ROUND Dint'H", NPver J\ler P.laple, 1 lcel. 4 chrs, & llut· ch, Slj(), 6-16-3008 \\'AITRESS "'ANTED: All Write for re:gistration card shifts. Apply in PE'rson at now? "Sat Sessions", 2'73 SERVER~hesf, \\'ood and cane S-15. 8' sofa, rK.'Cds slip 1~00 W. Coa.,t H"'Y· N.B. Ce cll Pl., C.P.I. or call Women 6~6-3.'i:l7 LOAN PROCESSOR TO !50 t~P7IA~N~O~L~E~S~S~07.N~S Newport Br:ach Area Escn;iw. tr Bene-Dcm11nd Knowledge. 100% FREE Oxford Employmrnt Agency 3932 "'llshire Bl vrl. L.A. All ages. &g., J'llt'rmedl· ale1, THEpRY ... ·Il1PROVIZ. ATlON. Reasonable. Call arter 5 p.m. f>.16-1548 =='~21731~386-<~-,""~--I THEATRICAL YARDMAN for Equipment Rental. Over 21, some medl. exp, 5 day week. Red-&R.entals, 2167 Harbor 7900 Blvd., C.M. Schools·lnstructlon 7600 WANTED : BOYS & GIRLS WITH A DESIRE TO BE ON TELEVISION .•. For Free On Camera Aud i- tion In Your Area, CaU Or- ange County, 547-6251. MERCHANDISE FOR cover, S.'JO. 4!l·l-4G8:1 · Office Furniture BOID OFFICE FURNITURE NEW & USED e desks e chairs • lites McMAHAN BROS, DESK INC. 18ro Newporl Blv1L O:>llta J\1E'sa * 6'12·8450 Office Equipment 8011 FROilt Architects ofrice nt''4' 7' Exec Dl!i;k S28J. A. B. Dick mimro $398 & spir!! dupl SIGO. Overhead pro- jector $160, 31" paper cutter ffi H$k uplXllS!l'1'!n~ SHIJ. S{'t• Tr:. u N ~) LE Be-d-Antiqu.ed !('{', oval rlb~d. doiin pi[. dark, distressed lenk \1•1lh I0\1·s $ZTh· l\hsc :11<\-'.l'JOO Slrap hardware. mattre5Sl!s, night stand, cost $2311, sell $149. 10 rolls Schum11cker's l\'allpapc.r. Pr. m11tching drapes, lil x ~ $:i6. 6 rolls foil decorator b Alh r oom SH I PS Anchor Bell, 2 I mari bov. ls, Rnsf'wood fish. 6 Old Fashioned Books, 185:>-181~ 11·/st{'l'I rngravini:;s, Old purple slnss co J I e ct or s wallpaper $53. ;i40-2330 1tl'n1s. Jrg lacquered truy --='-'=~.c.----.--~ \Y/m~el' of pearl f>CW!('!' USED Clothing • Ladlel! ,t ropf)('r, v.·/fold111i; 1>tand. Sl:r.t's Ii &: 10. Good Con- !'ll'in!.. Troby n1ugs, 6 pc·s dl~iou. Re.~nabl~-· 613--44~. "ef1' mrc caramel slai;. l\!lu 1'1~e &. ./132 V r a Ooisonne t!t'n1s . tl1 is s Oporto, Lldo Island. 9A.i\l- ~like·~. 3~32 Via Oport11. ~Pl\1. Lido Island. Cal! 673-l\34.,l'B~E~A~tn=·1~f~U~L-,hc,~"'1...-~pa"";o7tcdc. !IA.i\t.JP~'I. 011 partr8il or you or your ANTIQUES & Junk: !'11arblr.-children {ron1 .a phot~~·uph. fop commO<le $25(). Gold lea f A .,..·OCKlerful 1de.'l lo!f t~at mirrors t.· 11COnl'!;, mahog sl)C'Cial gifl. 6.fft..3629 chcsl, lulled chrs & {'le. QUALITY J.:illg bed • ~ilted Chest .t maple lockers, SU maltress. Con1p\e1e . U""!Sl"d rR 61•1--4011, 6i~J121 $120. "'Orth $260. 842-65.16 Al\'TIQUF.s & srurr rvl's. W£" l\lay Have II'. TOP~Cc,.-.,~,-c,.c,7,,7.h7l,cg"""Couch 21if.? Nr\vpor1 Blvrl, C.:'11. t.· Chair. P11.1·kard Bell Leaded Hanging Sh adls S1rrco. Typc11-rilcr. TV, & • 5'11-2578 * i\l1sc. 646-5252. i\fAl'CHJNG Couchl!'ll. $40 &. Sewing Mechlnes 8120 $35. End tables & coffee StJ each. P.Talching lamps $20 l!l69 SINGER ZIG -ZAG, each. ~6-2668 \\•alnut console, button . ITS YOUR MOVE sso. 496-&491 boles, dcl!igns etc. NE\V & used cloth1ni. Size Guaranteed. $36.00 Cash .Jr 16, 20 • 2D~J. All Sat-su:1. !\ton. from 10-2 Pi\!. 2010 SALE AND TRADE easy 1e.rms? 52G-6616 Dl G N """"' TYPE\\'RlTER. Addi n., -===========-! i\Taple, CM. scovtr • re•t tw Fumltu-vvvv ~ -=0....,,-"CC.,,--:-=~ ____ .. ______ machine, c&lcula1or, \•ery Musical Inst. 81'2S DINING tablr. 4 chairs. Career With The 17 Pc:, Kr'"" S'tle reas., xlnt oond. 892-2421 1---------Port. Niagara eye lo · """21 IMPORTED "viol" ba ~s niassagc unit. Sa..'tophonc. AIRLINES Bedroom Gerage Sal• 8022 guft;ir Md/or Bonhnm ul· 549-3111 -------lra!Jr.x doublE' amp_ ;;JS-9238 e OPERATIONS AGENT e TICKE"T' SALES e RESERVATIONS GARAGE SALE. Furnilu~. sofa, king hdbrds. lablcs. r-.1isc ilt'm:i;. 675-7203. AUTOHARP J ust tuned: SZ:l.50 510-Z!JO Car1M"t layer has fh Lo nylons Sl.99 yd. Shags lL\lnl $3 .50 up + iny lahor, '.lOC per yard. S.17-1519 e AIR FREIGHT-CARGO e COt.WUNICATIONS lar&e 9 drawer dresser, mlr. ror, 2 bed11de stands, king fiiz.e headboarl, frame, quilt. ed mattress, aheets, blank· et.5, etc. Choice o! Spanish or Modem Style A __ P~P_li_••-•-•_• ____ 1_1_00 Pianos & Organs 8130 CARPET Installer has one roll. a1·ocario nylon carpet. Double jute-backed. \Viii sell e TRAVEL AGENT Airline Schools 'Pacific 610 E. 17th, Senta Ana 543-6596 DAD..Y PtLOT DlflfE·A· LINES. You can use them lor just pennle1 a day. Ola! 64~"618 All For $249 S'o down PmU. only S9 mo WELK'S WAREHOUSE 600 W. 4th St., Santa Ana Open Daily 9-9 S&t. 9.6 Sun. U-6 Whlte e.lephanlll? Dime-a-line MA YT AG & \Vhirlpool auto washer, late model. xlnt cond. S6:> each. 546-8612 or 341-11\j REFRIGERATOR Hol- point. Used 9 nlm. '\'h1te, like ne1>,•! Sa\'e! 5.\9-11ZI USED Appliance & TV's, all guaranteed, Dunlap·~. 1815 Ne"'JJOrt, c.r.1 . ;,.1s...nss STAR GA'ZEE1<lt'~ F""'-""-'....---n, CI.A y 1. POLUN---...--,-.. -.. --.1 M v-o.1y J.ctrm1 Guide M un. 11 ~ ....,.. AccotJi,., ,. 111. S/1trJ. "'Y6 • Ill . \ ocr. 11~ ~ To dewlap mnsogr for Tue!.doy, .t-1_20-6..t • NOd words c:ormpcndlng to nu-nber~ 14 .:; of~ Zodiot birth sign. KOt"O °'"''~ H0~.1' 13.lt.:l)." 19-63.8'-87 U.GITTAllU$ NOJ'; 11 .), l'- oti. 11 r~ I 3-S.10.2·· 28-S0.83 8j •• U.PllCOll'I •• 1111 or part SJ/yarrl. 540-7245 . . GRAND Piano. Fischer con- lF you are hu.y111g a Piano temp. $1200. RCA color TV ol' Organ 1h1s YEAR &.: $150. Bolh ebony. 613-2259 are 1ntcrested in some real-v· 1 ly great deals, ,,lease shop TIFFANY Lamp. 1ctrn rr.. \YARD 'S BALD\\llN SJ'UDIO wllh records, SIO and $l'.l 1819 Nel'.·port C.J\t. 642-8484 gold pieces. 67~5258 Open £very Nlte AL·EUTIAN Blue Fa."(, Full ~ & Sunday Afternoon skin coltar. Sacrifice. Call • 6~30.l5 n.NE e1nerald r ings Sl3-450 ' """~~!'!!~~~~""'I nnd stones S21-$SO, dillCOUflt PIANOS &: ORGANS to 50%. 499-1943 NE\V & USED • Yamaha Pianos Organs • Thomas Organs e l{11nball Pi8nos e l\ohler It CsmpbPll COAST MUSIC NE\VJ10RT & HARBOR Costa P.lesa T 63l-2851 Open 10-6 Fri 10-9 SUn 12-S January Clearance SALE! ' Misc. Wenttd 8610 ---------- ----------- Sho1v Dog. l\lauy Ribbons. ne1v. \\lh! \Y/ red int. Gd Hse Pet. r.tu~t Sac. $500. '68 Chev. Pickup A1't-F1'1 S1300. 962-3029 Phone 646-9724 Custom. dlr, Ion,!;' bro. auto, ·w V\V Bug. Xlnt cone!. L!l\V COCKER f'emale AK C V-8. :0.TUST SELL~ \Viii fine mileage. $!Lil. Call eves. EUt~F. Champion Sired, 10 prV1 prty_ ~J925B. CaU KE'n, 833-1367 •• Call ,,-n·•A 19.j.97iJ of., 5-5-45-(163.1. \\'et'..... -;r .... , E'Vt'S. '67 V\V Bus. Orig. o~·ner. • DOBERl\IAN pups, males, GJ\1(1~~ Ton 1v/ utility $1700 Cash. Cnll . Days AKC, shotB. u "·eeks. eau t'ab1fll't lxxly. Ideal !or ele('-'63 MERCEDES BENZ 67~2491. Evt's, 673-2332 ~12~1 11.nylinie tricians, PI umbers or 1900 -I door . se<.Jan dJ1· 1966 V\V 1300 .sedan, iood c11rpenters. $395. Day s loaded! \VU!' take f~rei"~ tt_,. · I · 1 CHIHUAHUAS F'or Sele. Pel 6.16--503.'J, e\·es 646-0081 car in trade. "stnall dn, 1;w co • ..,.1hon, O\Y m1 eage or $ho1v. AKC. Call • -SI.@. 96&-7Sj3 ~46 or !'>41-3874 1966 Ford F-100. r Bed, Lo pymls, "ill !inc pJ'Vt prty, BAS£NJJ Bark.less puppies flli, Clf'an, Call after 6 Pi\1 GZN5j(), c.an Roy, 49-l-9713, VOLVO &16--6534 5~. lnnn Africa . Champ. stock, -~--------11---------- xlnt n1k'g~. tt'1ms. 645-0533. i\1ERCEDES Benz '6'.l 190 Jeeps 9510 SL. XInt cond. Sl800. 8830 1 ·,-7-,-.,-.-CJ-,-w-,-.,-1-C-ho-,-"Y 111~1 52'1-2888 5·-Y-EAJ!-·.· -.. -,-. -,---,-,-1,-.-..,,.-,· l rare motor, big tires & 1960 ?itJ:RCEDES BENZ Hors" l'Ollbar & more. 67J...0020 l!ll SL. Both tops. mare. Good i1how pro-XLNT COND. 673-8108 spects! ! Hunt & jump Sacrifice $T'JO. ~&-62» TRANSPUK r A TION BOits & Y•chts 9000 Ca mpers 9520'1========= -~----1 MG CAi\tPER Shell, ln5Ulaled, 8' "'/boot, cargo door, $250. • rr· ---------- 6~6-4017 evenings Imported Aut~ 9600 AUSTIN ~MERICA MG Sa.Jes, Servlc~. Parts ln1mediate Delivery, All Models ONLY 5 1nOl!i old, 1969 17' Cl:IRYSLER I/O. Bimini top, Juli cover, cathode ~ y stem, etc. Retail nver $5000 • asking $39",:1(), 673-23191 ----------· I 1"9 14' CHRYS. Ru"8boul. AUSTIN AMERICA J1rlupo rt 11111po rt s 25 hp Johnson & trlr, Used Sales, Service, Parts 18 hrs on vacation, Atust sell Im1nedia1e Dc>livery :.SIOO W. Cout Hwjo. N.B. &U-9405 &41).1764 Aulborized i\tG Dealer $99.i 1142-3159 All Models 9010 KENDALL l2 32x11x5, exlremely roomy Atkin off shore cruising cut- ler or ketch. ft ea v y fi~rgl~53. Any stage of completion. 642-8961 an;ylime. CAL 2S-By Owner. Clean, fully equipped, full sail, aux. eni: included. $9000 or best offer. CaU btwn 3--S, 8..U-1234 l'XI 3n. UDO 14, No. 2775, Full rac- ing gear. Good condition. 'Yard ctollt'Y. rover, Best off- er. ofc. 673-6760, hm, 5-IS-7116 LIDO 14 Sailboat, No. 2389, with traller. Call 831-1039 aft 6 PM WANTED: CAL :W or CAL 36. Ptlvate parties only. 544-fil>J J1rlllport 31111 orts 3100 \V, Coast lhvy., N.B. 642·9405 54().1164 Authorized J\IG Dealer MORGAN '57 MORGAN + 4 TEACHER must sac~ •59,,S=lj\J()=''======'"='·i':O'nt Austin America, auto fnlns, I' R/H. $1350. GT:>-6912 aft 1. OPEL BMW '67 OPEL _________ 1 01x. Cpe. -I speed R & H. Sold & ~e!'viced by'U!. (VOJ- 405) e BMW e AH l.todels in Stock for Immediate Delivery FREE $15!1. At.-1/Ft.J RADIO with purchase during our • GRAND OPENING! T&M MOTORS , INC . 8!)11 Garden G1'0Vl' Bh·d. 534-2284 ()prn Sunday 8.<12-5551 $1395 POOLE BUICK OPEL.JAGUAR 131 E, 17th St DATSUN Costa MeM 548-TT65 J 145-WAGONS 165-SEDANS All other n1odels OO\V tn stock. 4 S}K'eds & automatics. Your Be.st Deals Art' Still Al DEAN LEWIS 1966 Hath:lr, CJ.f. 6-16-9300 '69 Volvo, 2 dr, Autom. trans., Low n1ilee1te. l 01\'ncr. S2j()(). •19~-4036 Antiqun, Cl•ssies 9615 '57 MORGAN +4 S!SOO. 642-1724 9700 W~ P/'Y . CASH for u.~!d can It tnicks :tud caJI us for fl'ee ntlmate. GROTH CHMOlfT Auto L•••lng 98Jj ~ LEASE ~ '69 Cud Eldorado, hill pwr .. air, vinyl lop, 1!1,000 1nL, f179 J)tr mo. ·~ C&dlllac Eldonirlo radio, air, vinyl top. Sl59. per mo. '61 T·Olrd Landau, lull P"T., air. ste~ l&Jll': $19. pl'r nwt '61 G11 l.s"<l"' j(N'\, ~ dr 1rt'. Rir. \'in~I top: 1a:l !ll'r niO. SO. COAST LEASING J(X) \V, Cat kwy., NB 64~2182 T RANSPOllTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION Auto Lea1ln1 9810 U<ed C1rs 9900 Used C1rs 990Q CADILLAC BRANO New 16' Hull .tr Deck, 7' beaJn llll liberglu.~. nllst ilttn, $250, CaU 541HJ281 ' TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION Used Cars 9900 Used Can 9900 Used Cati 9900 FORD CHEVROLET ' CONTINENTAL FORD FORD LEASE· RENT lmmecllate delivery on all BUICK 1969 EL DORADO w/alr 58 Cllt." Waeon. Just had cond, p/b, p/s, completely valve job'. New tires. tram, 'st CONT., lla.s Everythlnc! ., 'SI COUf'(l'RY Squtre St& '65 FORD '6' rORS O>nv. XL, R/Ji. equip. $15.IXXl aclua1 mi's. gf!n, brakes, carbureto.r, Pampered by local R.E. bkr. Wac, 10 pus. AJC. l4adtd CPwr. 1tetrln.i, brka, wl~ DUNTON FORD 1970 FOROS & FORD TRUCKS Beautlful Nullnei:: bi'Qwn volt regulatol', clean in and 644-0SM or 644·U33 wl extrul 1 owner. 03unto' Squlxe wq. Full dows) Oun. aood eond.' w/blk Landau top. Un<kr nut "2$. 544-3417 ~ pwr.. fact, alr., low ml S~. SZl Sta~ Rd, OdM. All popular ma.kn. ro1il authorized lcaslnj · 1y1tem, Get Our Competitive Rates Gettu\g New C:..r -CORVETTE '63 Ford F-'·l ~ 3 pd (GCV6921 ~ or SC&-2247 fa ct \\'al'r. Jo'nl' Sale by '61 CHEVY \\!agon, V-8 auto, · ..... ane .,_, s · $1396 ::~~~:~ O"•m:r. $6360 __ . 5.l(>..65_" _·14__ t'Wls pcrle<:t. $Jj(), =· ~=· S250 or belt '66 Ford Fair 500, atick ahift, 2240 S. Main TAl\E.S J\lE TO \\'ORK CAOILI.AC l \lti7 S ed"n Kl ~1597 '64 Corvelle 365 hp, 4 1pd, POQL£ new Rlr cond., added Theodore EVERYDAY DeVille. Silver 1v/Blk pad· new posl-t. Af.f/nt , new '63 FORD J Ton, Cab le featutta, cood cond. #75.. 546-7076 ROBINS FORD ' USES NO on.. ded tp, ;ur, 6 way !ii, stereo CHRYSLER brakes, 12'' lwly tires ' Chass.ls , dual whh. Gd BUICK 1="='"='181=======11''' CHIV. $HS 2a)() li.11.rbor Blvd. VERY GOOD F1'1 rad, pwl' doors & wind, n1ags, Nu t.-ust ~!nt. Jo.lust Cond. Call 642-4930. LINCOLN I ,llu~•Y••· 4 cir., v.1, awto· Costa Mesa 642-0010 TRANSPORTATION. $3200. CtJI 673-77'11. '67 "300" 2 DR. Landau. All see to apprecl $1000 firm 1970 MAVERICK, low 111•tlc, f•ctory •Ir, pow•r Used Cars * FLE~"T SA!.£ * (~) 1968 Chevy 11np11.las 2 Dool' • . • .. .. .. . .. .. SI 700 1j) 1968 Chevy Impalas 4 Door .............. $16.JO 13J I~ Ford Country sedan slat ion 11·ag .... Sl900 (I J 1008 Ford Gala>.ie ~ Door ................ $1600 534-5290 Pn11·e1· Brakes, s1eering, 1958 CAO. All 1KJ11•cr. FAMJ· pwr/air, lo mile, nu tires, 494-3082 mlleap,auto,radio,htater. OPEL.JAGUAR 1t.•rl"f· p•W•r br•kt1, Scat11 & Whid0\\'5. Does LY CAR. REAL CLEAN! shocks & bl'ks. &W-4265 1-005~--Co~cv-,-,-,.-S-tl-,.-,-.,.,-, -371~ $2100. 5.14.MOO 234 E. 17th SI. '66 CON'J1NENTAL Coupe j r•lfl•, ht•t•r. tWIOllll. Need Paint! SIOO. Ser at 281 $395. Call 673-42J3 l"'========:.I cu in, 365 hp, 4 spd, '63 FALCON Sprint, 4 spd, Costa MHa 5'8-M arn/ln1, air, powtr, ne~ '66 MUSTAN6 $1Z9t No. D, Del ~lar Ave .. C.:'.1. '68 CADILLAC Cpc de Ville. CONTINENTAL posi-tracUon, 2 tops, r&h. R/H, stereo tape, xlnt cond. '66 FORD LTD, 4 Dr, 390 V· tires l bait. $2100 t9f..4671 6 c:~L, •tick .t.lft, facl!o, E1·es & \Vken<ls. Or Call 17,lm mi. Golcl·leather u·ini. Xlnt t\'Jnd, l 01,·ner fJ-165. $500. &12-1943 aft 6 pm. 8. Pwr. tact air, FM radio. h••l•r. SPT ••o 64~3844 Perteet! 2692 Bayshore Dr. '66 CONT. 4 dr, gold, vinyl 675-6436 or 644-.l~ *'6' FORD Gal 500, 4 door 46,000 ml. Ntw 11.rts. $1300 MUSTANG '62 GAU.XII $636 1962 Buie" Outstanding t'On. roof, lthr, all xtru. Leaving --Md., V-8, auto. Good order. S3T..ao7~ 4 Dt. Hardtop v.1, fie· tlit10n. Care lul l y main-CHEVROLET country, must sell $2100. FALCCN $650. 5(~1052 1964 Ford Ranchero, 3 1pd, .. ,., •Ir •011clilio11!119, l'IW• tairK'd. Re~nable. 646-7377 Pvt Pty. 830-6254 custom trb1Ia rear cover, * '61 f.1USTANG tr 1t••rh11, ,,c11,, h••t•r. I S ,. 0 U R A 0 IN '66 Impala 2 Llr hdtp, V-S, 63 -BEAUTIFUL condition. '66 falcon Futura PLANNING to mow! You'll prlv party. $8T5. 645-1420 V~, ''4" SPEED l~f~J~·~·~·=;u---cM'ia. CLASSIFIED'! Someone· 11 ill at1lon1. Ji\\T strg/brks, r/h. All leather • !lfl\\'e:· -IO\Y Fully laclol)' equipped, Dir. find an amazing number of 19&4 Falcon Sta. Wq, V-8, Sparklln, orig lime frolt '61 IUICK $2195 bf" looking lor it. Dial 6-11-\Viii fin. Priced to sell Sl51Xl. ntlleage. 642-.152'i aft 5 PM $695. homes in todl.)l'a O•uilled white Private ~ $565 &!ff"· Wcyl Int. Br~nd new .W•bre 400, J .Ir,. l:tl,, 5678 5-17.7751 s.;,, ~9'171 alt 6. & "'knd&. Phone 642-6023 Ads. ~k them now. 644--04"to, &U-2382 ' ' premium "Tlaer Paw '' v .1, •11tomatlc, ftc.lort air, l-::--'=::=======,'.,,=========~==========-.!..i'==':i:::i:======:.'..===========-:,::=:=:;:;:::;,;:::=:=,:=:;,L=====;;:;:::,,===I W I waU1. "Choice" low pow•r 1to•rl119, powar mileage~ from a tine home, brak•1, t•-'i•, fitattt. VHI and only $1799. ?\IARQUIS os• John'SOD•SOD New Marquis, The most dramatically styled car since the Continental Mark Ill. You won'! se~ o medium-priced car like lh•s in a ny other showroom. Morqui~ hos a drorno!oc elegonce, o majestic beauty tho! only rhe erootors of Ike Conlinsnlol Mork IU could inoke. W ilh This styling and lhe :w.irrprising price, 'fO" have rio e.xcuse k) selllo r0t a duLI li11i. c.oc. AS LOW AS 53866 ~lodel No. 63 ONLY AT JOHNSON & SON SOVTHERN CALJFOR.'\'f .<t'S FlNEST LINCOLN·ltfERCllRY SALES FORCE IOI MANQ.AN • ORANGE COUNTY'S FINEST USED CARS • . Jo/11••011 & So11 ffn• The Repul11li<ns Of Ofterhog The f'i11esl Selectio11 of Vied Cnrs 111 1#1e Co1111111! CONTINENTAL '68 MERCURY Colotly P1•1< ~'"· W1oons. (l l'O cl'loose from) VTM 71' rnldlum '69 CONTINENTAL (OUDI'. ROHi --llllk: !lnl11! .. 1111 b it(• fHl ll•r & V.holt l1no1u rool, Lul!ury eq11J~, F•ctory 111, e!C X511. .S80 $5495 '68 CONTINENTAL • Or. Sed. "~"'" llOld flnll;I!, bro....., l1iida11 roof. INlt.8• 111-l•rior, All tlle lu~ury te.rvres Incl. 11<;1ory 1lr. VTPl:M $3895 '67 CONTINENTAL 4 TO CHOOSE FROM ' Dr ~I'd. Bt~ullfu! Berrnudt bl"" rne!alllc finish woth tn1fcl\. Inv lttlllf'r ll'it rk>r. Blick landau rl»I. rultv lu~urv e<1url>OPll ~flC! Mttory ••• condlll""ln11. AM-FM radio, >IO•<'O lnpt dee>.. One.owntr ti•. 6H11!ll•1lly m.int.ilM'd, l k. TTN 010 $3195 '67 CONTINENTAL Corwerllbl•. Pol1r wl!ile will! blond ltelfllr & whl!t ttiP. FUI! pow1r tqulpl)td wllfl lee!. 1lr, \IGY tD $2995 '66 CONTINENTAL Conv,...llbl1, C•l'lffnfl red with bll<-+etlntr .. blk, IDP. full1 lu•ury tllUIPPtd & IKk>ry 111. SOA •ll $2495 '65 CONTINENTAL ~ door. De•trl &11!11 llnllJI wl!I! blllf)cl led!lll"' ln•t•kl• ~ullr lu•ury t011ipped lndudlng lvll pow1r & ll(!Ory air. \Jl'U}UlllY Cl""· Lk. OUW tSJ $1995 '64 CONTINENTAL 4 llDOi'" 11do11. Vtlvt• blttlt 11111111 ,.;,h blKlr; lt1tllt• 1n1rro0r. "ully lu~ury tcrulOPfll lnt!udlng full l)(IWff .. 11ctor1 •Ir. 1.lc. :IYI US $1795 MERCURY · '6' MERCURY tll•orne ytlk>·,. l'nl•~ wl!~ 111 vinyl l~ltdor. Au•o"'9tlc u1n1., po Ntr sl<!""•"ll & br•~"· 1-'aclory "'' con. B ... ullluJ tond. S2995 '69 MONTEGO f,IX I dr ...itn• (l 10 cl!OD~e 1rorn). .lll havt aul'O. uan1 .. ,.. d+D. llt8'"· oowe• !lfff , powtr D-r1kes, loclory 1/r, l1ndau root YWR GM -l ,ODil rnll" $3170 '69 MONTEGO MX l d• M 1. Me<i•um blue martlllc 1111\ftt. ,,,.1,tt1ng 1111u1or ....i111 wnlt• 1•""4111 "'°'· 1.000 m!~•. VWR )11 $3170 '66 DODGE CHARGER Co~. •u1om~llc l••n1 , r~dlo I. llt.ier, t>Ower lllH!rlng, power b•~~oo, 1~.iory "Ir, tur11uol1t flnitl't will'! m1rcn1n9 lnl1r1or. Lie. ~OR lolO $1795 '67 COUGAR 2-DOOR L1rnt !ro1! will! rnotchlnt vlnyl buckeb, •uto., 2" •n11l110, P.S., RI.I", 11ew car !rade.111, -OWfltr Ind ••f"fkt'd by our co~ peny. VOR 1ll $1995 '67 MERCURY MARlj)UIS ! Or Hordloe>. 8t111tllul OOld btlllt llnW! wllft fl'lllc.loillf lrt-ler<or, lv!ly PD·Ner 9C1Ull:opid, l1c!Drv 1lr, ltrtti.u root, -own- tr. Dr·~ OlllV l0,000 mlles .. UZN tll $2495 OTHER MAKES '69 TOYOTA COROLLA 2 D5P. • WO tru11., rldlo a. lll•ltt, Whitt w"llck f~ttroor, 11,000 1c1..,.r mllft. I Mvlllul UllOll. XOC J71 . $1395 '68 FORD F100 8' PICKU~ "•dfll. l!ell1r. ovrcn11«1 ntw by Jol>lo\on ., $On. E~c1U1nt con-f l!lon. Lk:. 091fl1 $1895 '67 IUICK RIVIERA MlrctUt• (o"3ny "••• l!t. wtnl. 9 f)foU. Full powe• tll'U•PPld & SN~!ltul mt•1llk: llnl•ll wUh bl•ck !r,ltrklt, tctulPPtd wl!to elf l•t"3ry •Ir. YWlt 14l IM 1w..11ry poftr ac:ctH . l!•c•olillrl•llr dffn. l ie. UVIJ 011 $3995 $3095 '67 PONTIAC GTO 1·0<. H.T. Gold rn!it mel•lllt !lnl•ll wl!ll black b\lck1t 11111, tulo, !r1n1, r1d k> a. l!Nltr, t>OWtr 11ttrlng, IKIOry 1lr. eeav- 1•1~1 <ondl1i6n. TRJ $11 • $1995 '65 CHRYSLIR NEW YORKER • Of. H1'1ll011. Power 11..,1nv & tlr•kn, 1uto""'·1fc 1r1~1 .. rldk>, rtNter, lull pow1r. Bt1ulll11 Hy mtltt!tln .. , ll.000 D•IO. mllt'I. Lie:. DZD 7..,, $1695 '6R OLDS CUTLASS SUPREME I Or H., lllo. llta!t Automtt k tr1n1 .. powtr •1ttrlf111 a. brl~ft, , ... own1r 1~.000 mlln . Lie:. WU ISO $2595 '67 DODGE CORONET ' Or. Sl!dAft. Autorn1llt Irani., POwtr 1!Hrlno. Ont oW'r!tr 11.ootl actu11 mlies. Be1urlful condition. Lie. VCL 62• $1595 Bargain Corner 111 Oar hftoh1 Conier, we Hft 1111NJen ne4 con. Samo ''""· MN 11ot M er... S.111e ~ •re d11pfk.tloM, SO-.,. ... ltM too 1~11 e11y rt••t tftctM c.ari. .,. rffl Mrt• ... LOOI 'IM OYfRI '66 MllllCU"V MOHTCLltrllllt 110. Uc. UGIW 111 Cl .. 1, .... "" Miit• '137& '66 f'O"D GALAIUI sot '97& I Dt. H.T. ILW 6Q INkt C1rl '65 MElltCU"Y 1·DOOll '127& MflllCl~lr ".T. 1"00 141 ("M T" LI"') '66 f'OlltD GAi.AXii' 5G1 '1&7& i.or, "•rfto' SV,. H2 (Nkt Carl '66 IUICtt l!LICTllA CDHVlllTllLI '1676 Lk. Yl"U 6"'. Nkt cir. '68 CH"'rSLIEll HIEWl"O"T '227& Lk, VVU 4SJ !Nkt (Ir) '66 T·al"O '207& L11111a~. 1tra n•. Cltt11. '69 "01110 TOIUHO '227& ClllYtrtlbll, XII: t:U, Cltlll. ~ohnsOD•SOD [!,~~©@[!,~ ©@~'jj'~~rn~'ii'&ll • ~&OOIX\ ]][. ~rnOO©llJJOOW. ©©llJJ@bllm I 2626 HARBOR BOULEV~RD, COSTA MESA I NEW CAIJS 540·5630 642·0981 l 1 Mile South of the San Diego Freeway USED CARS 540·5635 ~- MO'l1lRS, ooo s.. Cst """· ,;.:6"°1 ~c~o~u~G~A=R -.$"'U"t'"'s Lquna Beac h 61-7503, Hardtop G.T., v.1, •vt!" 546--3100 111•tlc, factory a ir, p-•r '66 MUSTANG 1t••rl"t· paw• r Ilic br1~t1, r•cllo, hatt•t, M•1 V8, automatic trans, CLEAN, ,1 ;•:;':;"~'~'·,.;,TU~0~2~6~1""''" a pufttt ht or 2nct car.11 '67 MUSTAN• $1141 Hurry! Coupa, v.1, 4 1ptocl, t•· Sale! $1299 Sale! .llo, ha•t•r. vl"vl roof, low Mister ''T'' 64.S..1441 milta9a• <27l71 2 Ill H '61 PONTIAC $14H 1 arbor ffivd., C.M. -~,~69~M~u'°"'s=T~A;;,N;,G~"-· II Gra"-' Prix Cpa. V-1, •uto. tr1111., fac.tory air cortdl· Crandf'-351, power steering, tio11l119, ·p•w•r 1ttarl"t• diac brakes, radio, healer & powar braka1, racillo, h•at• traUer hitch. $2850, 536-2442 er. TVL 041 '61 MUSTANG • Sacrifice! take owr p&ymenta:, 6 cyl, stick, low miles 308 E. 18th, or. '69 l\1ACH I 4 apd. $2595. Call 67>-4373 4-7 Pr.f '67 FORD $14'5 Gal. 500, 2 cir. H.T. v.1, aulom•lic, factory air, powtr 1taarl"t• rtcl!o, 1'11attr. TUU 271 '69 CORTINA $12tl Delu.-a 4 Dr., Auto. t ra"'" r•di•, ha•ltr, low mil••t•· 1967 1.Iustang Convertible, Lie. XTE 017 V-", Al\l-Fl\l, dloc bda & '66 MERCURY $14'5 othrr extras. 675--3027 Mo11tclah, 4 cir .. H.T .. v.1, '65 MU&t&ng; Futbacll: 2+2 1wtomatic, f•cl11ry oir, Fully Auto, bucket seata. po w•r •t•trl119, ,__, Private party. 833-1281 br1kt1, r•cllt, h1•tt t. RPG ~~~~~~~-~-"''' '66 MUSTANG . Blue .~~==="""== w/whlte vinyl tp. 1.fany ex· '69 MUSTANG $2495 traa. 46,000 ml. 548-6003. H.T .. V.I, autom•tlc, pow- t r 1fttri119, 1adlo, healtr, '66 MLJgf'ANG V-3 Clean vl"vl tqp. YCU 2J6 e.Jow Whol. ll090. 147 Mo '67 GALAXIE $11'7 Paymenta. lfi...6223. v • T ='-====="'-===-II 500 4 .Ir, H.T. ·I, "' ., OLDSMOBILE fac. •Ir co"-'·· pwr, 1ttar• 1119, pwr. brk,., RIH, whit-all tlrt1, tl"t. 9la11, Y6P 641 '!4 OLDS. $1lO '67 OPEL $1250 Good transportation 536-UU J;al1yt 1Ctd1tt, 4 111aacl, r•· =========:llclio, h•1!1r. VEE 416 '67 FORD Sl"S LTD, 2 •r. H.T. v.1, outo, PLYMOUTH ----------ll tr1n1., f1clory air c!'"~i· tlo11in9, pow•r 1l1•rl"f• powtr ldllcl br•k11, •l11yl roof. # 161941. '68 VALIANT 5 YR WARRANTY * ECONOMY PLUS * Sale! $1199 Sale! Mister ••y•• 645-1441 Zl!X\ llarbor Blvd., C.J\T. 'Eli Plymouth Belvedere JI, 4 Dr. '68 FORD $1695 Cortin1 01.-., 4 cir., a11la. tra"'" f1clory air condi0 tio11in9, powar 1!1tting, radio, h1aler, WXJ Sll '68 MUSTANG $1895 H•rdtop, 6 cyl., •11!0. h1111., powtr 1t1e1i119, ra· dio, h11lar. VZT 550 •«t;-513 .. ' '65 MUSTANG $995 ==========II H1r.llop, V-1, d i,\: shift, PONTIAC r1dio, h1al1r. XTH 012 --------11.61-couGAR $149' '65 PONTIAC Harcllop, v.1, 1ulo. tra111., Bonneville ., Dr, Full p..iT., Jact. ail'., outstanding trans. specilll. (EQV8791 $1063 POOLE BUICK OPEL -JAGUAR 234 E. J7th St. Coata Mesa 548-1765 pow1 r 1taarin9, powtr br1~11, radio, htalar, whit1w1ll tir11, wha1I CO¥• an. UEU •s• '65 MUSTANG $1199 H1rdtop, 6 cyL, 1uto. tra111 .. f1ctorv 1ir co"di- tioning, r1dio, haaf•t, whil•••ll tira1. TYS •s1 '68 MUSTANG $21'5 H1rdtop, V-1, auto. tran1., ftclo•v a ir co"dilio11!n9, powar •l•ari"f, radio, WEU 076 1960 &nneviUe Pontia c ,65 FORD $l09S Hrdtp. Blue w/ wht top, blue lthr uphol. Very clean. Courifry Seda", V-1, •uto. Had xlnt care. $395. 673-4369 tr1 ri1., air co"ditio"i"g, powar 1le•1i119, powar 4620 Wayne Rd, CdM. . brtk11, radio, htatar, lug· 1961 PONTIAC CATALINA 9 9aga rack. NQZ Ill PASS. STATION WAGON.I '631/J GALA.XIE $791 P ower llttring Ir. brakes. 2 cir. Hardtop, V-1, auto, $175 phone 644-4637 alter tran1., factory 1ir co"dt. 6:30 p.m. I tio11in9, pow1r 1l11rin9, 1968 PONTIAC Tempes t, radio, htala1. HGE •IS Satan W<"· Good cooo.' '67 M.USTANCO $12'5 $2000, Day1 6Th-3940 Mr. Hardtop, v .1, •uto. tran1., NI&& radio, haat1r. TRJ 625 ~ ... ,,,PO~NT~JA=c~G~TO~conv-.-P~/s".11 '66 FAIRLANI $15'6 P!B. Air, 15,IJX) mJ. New1 Sq1tfl't Wat'ort, V-1, tlito; paint. Ca.sh & lake overl tr•111., pow'Or 1taari119, fa• pmtl. 838-9429 aft 5 PM clio, h•altr. ZYD 291 '61 PON11AC Station wBgon, '69 FORD $2491 reblt trans. $300. Call 'a1t 7 61la•ia 500 -2 .Ir. H.T. p 536-38&1 v.1, 'tulo. ha111 ., faclort m, 1lr co!Mlltlo11l119, powor LEMANS '63, air, bkts, p/b, 1tttrl119, rod lo, httttt. p/1, r/h, vinyl top, xlnl X7E Jl7 co'1d. Priv prty. 536-2308 'H FORD $2395 ========"'-=-ll .. c111t. 500, 2 .Ir, v.1, awlo. T •BIRD tr1n1., f1c:tory air co11di0 fio"i"9• pow•r 1ftari119, ----------ll1tarao/radio, ha•l1r. #Z4· '66 THUNDERBIRD FuJI pwr., fa.ct. air, R &: H. Exceptional cond. (RUJ275) $1977 POOLE BUICK OPEL • JAGUAI\ %W E. 17th St. Costa ~1Ha 54.i-~' '&l T-Blrd, excellent runnlJ"fl cond., new tires, brakes. •tc. 1'f~c suggest.I $450. ........ '65 Landau, full pwT, air. $1550. Call 540-mJ days. 546--61.~ ~ve!I. I 'ST T-BTn.D. xtnt Cond. $169$, CaU 67'1-4373 .. 7 Pl\t 1101 '6t FO~D $2Jtz Co1111lry Squirt Statio11 W19on, v .1, auto, tra"'·• foctory •i, co"dltlo11!"t• powtr •tearf119 r1dlo, h••f· ,,, WIA •IO '65 FO~D $10'7 Ct1"lry S1.l•11 Wa90", v.1, outo, h111t., air c.011· diti11"i119, pow•r •l••ri119, 1a'i•, .... +.r, 1119919• r1c•. NQt llJ '66 DATSUN $1tl 4 Dr. S•d•11, 4 1p1t.I, wh;t•w•ll t;,,,, NQY t65 DUNTON FORD * '$7 T-BlRO 2240 S, Main °"•'Ml & ""°" 00001110" 546-7076 11500. Call 96>-0231 ... ______ _ • ' --• ' • ' ' -• 'j Almost Beads · Tl1e Newspapers deliver massive coverage of ALL occupation groups each weekday OCCUPATION OF HOUSEHOLD HEAD Professionals 88% Managers 91 Clerical, Sales 85 Craftsmen 80 Other Manual 71 Farmers 70 Source: Opinion Research ~rporation Newspapers reach, in-depth, into all occupation groups every day, as this graph indi- cates. But what should be even more interesting to advertisers is the high pre centa9e of ~an~gement, professional and other high-salary-earning types who read a newspa· f>er every day. They make more mone y, t ravel more, buy more, set the standar._ds for others to follow. 11 you want to play "Follow The l eader," advertise in some other mediu,,;; if you want fo lead the leader, put your message -where he'll read.it •.••. witli ui;, the newspaper. -~· • =-~ > ·•r < -I •• , DAILY PILOT • • I • Newspapers Take Your M~ssage Where The Money Is , Newspaper readership increases with income Under $3,000 $3,000·- $4,999 $8,000- $9,999 89% $10,000 & over Source: Opinion Research Corporation Almost nine out of 10 affluent Americans-those who earn $10,000 or more annuany -read at· least orie newsp•per. A_!!d more than half of those who earn even less than $3 ,000 also read newspapers. And the more money the reader of your ad ha s to spend, the more likely he is to see the m~ssage in a newspaper. If you've got something to tell somebody (or sell somebody], start .with us, the newspaper. DAILY PILOT ~ewspapers: Number One In Advertising! Newspapers are the primary advertising medium 1949 (Millions of Dollars) 1969 TElEVISIOK "' .... .... .... .... .... .... ,,"'"' MAGAZINES ·-~~;~:.. ~a:~'9fora~''' •-;>~ " OUTotlOR .............................................................................. Total advertising figures are _in for ·1969 and, as the chart above sh'oWs, newspapers co.ntinue to be the n·ation's number one salesman. The only other medium showing any dramatic growth in the chart is television and -did you notice -the increase in news~per advertising investment' since TV came on the scene is more than the cur- rent total tele;ision advertising volume. Shouldn1t you ''hire'' the nation's most power .. ful salesman? You can start today, by calling 6'42-4321, the • ' ' i I • •• • ' I • ' ,• ,,