HomeMy WebLinkAbout1970-01-27 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa') 7
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DAILY PILO T • Major ·· l;9lor TV Fir1ns
Na1ned in · ~Fire Beport * * *'1 0' * * *·
TUESDAY AFTERNOON,.JANUARY 27, 1970
~·oun
,.
2 Trojans Go
ht 1st Bound
Of Pro Draft
See Sp~rls Pages .
' . ' '
Nlx(tn Withdrawal Plia1e " .. -~·. -
Three El Toro Marine
\
Outfits Coming Home .<
From Wire Servlcts
DA NANG -Troops of three Orange
County-ba!ed U.3. Marine Corps aviation
squsdrons today gathered c1t seaport em-
barkation points to leave here for home
\Vednesday. under the third phase or
President Nixon's Vietnam withdrawal
plon.
A fourth group will depart for Camp
Pendlei.on, following formal ceremonies
at this sprawling U.S. base, in which Maj.
Gen. Edwin B. Wheeler, commander of
tnc First ftlarine Division addressed
them.
"Well done and bon voyage,'' said the
CO, adding that the jet and helicopter
pilols, their support personnel and the
ampJiibious vehicle battalion did a job
for -the free \.\·orld.
All have been in Vietnam nine months
or longer.
•
Some units of the total of 19 affected
will be deacti vated upon return and Cpl.
Gene Bowen, 22, of Costa Meu, said at
Da Nang today that he wUI change
uniforms when he gets home.
The Amtrac Battalion enlisted man will
be processed out of the Corps in Camp
Pend!eton and rejoin the Anaheim Police
Department as a patrolman.
"It feels great to be going home," ad-
ded L~. Col. James \V. Lazzo, CQm·
1nsnding officer or.Attack Squadron 233,
ading that he hasn't seen his 4-yelft'-old
daughter for more than a year. A
first Sgt. Joseph Sagan. a 2'"Year
\·cteran ~ith nine overseas tours will be
coming back to El Toro with Attack
Squadr9Jl 542 and is glad of lt.1
"It is Qlway~ a good feeling to be going
(Set TROOPS, Page l)
• VOL."-NO. 22.1 Sl(TIONI, U ,AOll
' • er r1son
•
Butcher l(nife Bandits
Escape
• •
• t't .a \ lel'k :Fires
-4--.~ .. ~ite Tini"es
. . . _, -
At Teenager
Two teen-a~e suspects were captured
ri.tonday night after a pair of bandits held
up a Seal Beach liquor store clerk by
sticking a 12lft.inch butcher knife to his
stomach, then eluded a hail of bullets
fired by the clerk.
The clerk, Jim Scotti, touched off a
silent alarm during the robbery which led
to a massive police manhunt and the ar-
rests.·
Held on charges ar ~bing Vog\er's
Bay Liquor Store, 1780 Pacific Coast
Highway. are Thomas M. McCartney. 19,
of Long Beach and his 17·year-old com-
panion.
• Shots, Not Cops
>
County taWyer
Gets Prison
Tern1 in Theft
By TOM BARLEY
OI 1M Deltt ,lltt tletf
AUarney David Cadwell was today
sentenced to one to 10 year1 .Jn state
prison following his conviction on chargca
that he embezzled an estimated $.16,(X)O
from a Santa Ana chapter otthe Disabled
American Veterans 4rganizaUon.
Superior Court Judge Ron a Id
Crookshank sentenced the Santa Ana
lawyer on two counts of grand thtift. The
prison teims wlll run concurrently.
Referring to Cadwell as "a bad apple,'•
Judge Crookshank denied the appeal or
defense counsel Edward S. Ulman for the
probation denied by the prtlbation depart·
ment in a recent report. And he crisply
rejected Ulman's argumenta for a new
trial with the comment that the evidence
assembled in the Cadwell trial was
"much ·stronger than that in comparable
cases."
Fighter Attack Squadron 542 and Al·
tack-Squadron 223 will return to El Toro-
l\1CAS, while Heavy Helicopter Squadron
361 is reassigned to the Santa Ana MCAS,
where it was first commissioned.
F ederal-Agency.l.
Names 122 ~ets
Clerk Scotti told Seal Beach police the
bandil<11 entered his store about 9:20 p.m.
\Vhile holding the knife to Scotti's belly,
the robbers ordered h.im to open the till
and hand over the contents, which were
later determined to be around $150. ac-
cording to Sgt. Sam D' Amico of the Seal
Beach Police Department.
As the youths escaped through the
door, SCott1·ttr~ one-warning shot-in the
Air and four at their legs from a high-
powered .357 magnum pistol. D' Amico
said.
Cadwell filed a $3,000. a~al bond lm-
,__mediately_ O!Lleaving_tbe......cow:troom--~
Ulman predicted that the appellate bench
will "squash this conviction iTI a hurry."
The Thli'd Mld'ine Amphibian Attack
Battalion V/111 return fo tamp Pen<lleton ..
with a tentath" Feb. J arrival date
aboard U.S. Nav1 vessels.
Maj. Robert Booher, staff information
o(ficer at El Toro MCAS, said today the
Corps has not ye~ declassified data about
the Orange County unils' withdrawal, so
he could not comment.
Oraage Coast
\feather
It'll take a good stiff breeze to
blow these clouds away -and
that's whit's coming on Wednes-
day. Temperatufa wilJ ltick CO
their .Jo" 60 rana:e. t
INSIDE TODA V
DuriP1g the day she tostet
1oord.s around and at night 1he
dOf:s tlu: wn1e wilh h1r curvei
but her itudt:nl.s think it'a great
their E'11gU1h teacher dances in
a chorus li11e. Page 19.
C•I~ °*'"" "' Ct.M"ilf Cemk1
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• ' ••n " " • ' " 1•11
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In TV Fire Study
\VASHINGTON (AP) -The National
Commisslorl>bn Product Safety says 122
models of color television sets have been
catching nre at an above-average rate.
The commission's decision Monltay to
identify the models brought an accusation
from the Electronics Industries Associa-
tion that the commissiop was cre•ttng an
unfair competltlvf advantage ror som1
manufacturer.
·The commlssi°'l said . the na,tion's 22
million ~k>r sets nave betn cakhing fire
at the rite of 12 per 100,000. 'lt. said the
seUI it identified were igniting at the rate
of :Kl per 100,000.
Olympic telJ!vieion sets manuracturtd
by Lear Siegler Corp. averaged the
highest rate In iJ,. Industry. the,.;,...
m,isslon stid. It ""Did nine ot tlt1 Hrm'1
• model• were identified as potenllal
haz.ards . ·
A silenl ;:ilarm touched off at the Seal
Beach Police station during the robbery
prompted the immediate dispatch of all
. available police cars who were aided in
tbeir search of the escapees by units
from lluntington Beach , Los Alamitos
and the Huntington Beach p o I i c e
, hell copter.
Officers managed to pursue a fleeing
··ehicle for some distance, saw it sud·
denly stop, while a man who they allege
was McCartney, escaped over a fence.
Sometime later, Sul Beach officer Ken
.Jeoson managed to spot someone fitting
the younger robber 's description at 25th
Street and Pacific Coast Highway and
Immediately arrested him, accoo:Jina to
Sgt. D' Amico.
McCartney was appreht:nded by Officer Oot1 t.fcGlll shortly before midnight when
~ was spotted hiding underneath a
SuDSet Beach home by an informant, in·
vutij'ator1 sakt.
LA Police, Fire1nen
Pay Boost Nears OK
The other firms identified as exceeding
the Industry avtfage were. in desceMlng
order: Packwrd Bell, Ma.gn.avo1, SYtv·
ania, Philco-Ford, and RCA. ·
Six flrms.1ere Identified as havina an · • LOS ANGELES CAP) -An across-the·
incide~e .l ate 'below the Industry . •board .pay boost of !' percent for the
average, although some models caught clty'a policemen and firemen is awaiting
Ore at the 30-per-100,000 rate. The flrm.t. • the sig.Dlllure .of Acting Mayor John S.
in. dute:ndlng order, wtre : Ge.neral ~· Glblon Jr.
tric, .4t~lral.-1'1olorola, E m e r so n , The measure, retr01ctive to Jan. I,
Wnrw~lt (Sears), and Zenith. gained final passage In tht City Council
Westinghouse was .• the only majar l\fonday and Gibson, the.council presi·
brand not meot~ned 1n the commission's -dent, said he will sign Jt. Mayor Yorty
statement. Tlus was because, a ~:was out or the city on a apeaking engage·
(See FIERY TV, P~s· II • -mtnt tn <\Uapta.
.. ,,
NAVIGATING WALKER EXPERTLY, BILL SCOOTS AFTER BALL
'He's Brought Us 1'.'ogtthtr •nd Given Us So Much Happiness'
Qaby Gains Life
Pre·natnl Measles Effects Wane
By BARBARA KREtBlCH
01 IM 01flr '°llet Sl1tf
In the sprinp nf 1966, a 24-year-old
mother or three called her doctor and
told him, "I think I may be pregnan~
again -and I'm sure l have the
measles.''
Joanne SanUey of ~tission Viejo was
right on both (..'()UnU. She was in the first
month of pregnancy and !ht was one of
an estimated 20 mllllon persons slricken ·
in ttre devastating epidemic of rubella
(German measles) that swept tl1c coun·
try that year.
fter fourth child. Billy. now three years
old, 11 one or 30.000 surviving youngsters,
bom with r. .... dple hancllcarn as a result
or the epidemic.
When a woman contracts rubclh1 in the
first three months or pregnancy, there is
a 40 perttnt chance that her child, If born
alive, will have more than one handicap
-sight, hearing, heart, motor abllltlc1
can be affected in varyin~cgrees.
Mental retardation forme ly was con-.
sidcred amovg the likely ndlca ps, but
careful studies have sho that Ulls Is a
fallacy.. Because or .his blindness,
deafness or motor difficulties,. the rubella
baby will develop slowly and , Wfretlmes
appear retarded. But doctors now realize
that carefuJ rehabilitatlan pr0«rain:, can, '
with ptltlence, match his skills with his
native intelligence.
A group or 50 such children In
Australia, bellevtd to have btn mentally
as v.•cll as phsylc~lly handicapped. wu
given auch Intensive therapy. Follow-up
studies after 2$ YeJrs found all but five
were leading active, productive lives.
Joarme SanUey did not know all this
(Stt BABY, Pase I)
The portly balding lawyer had no com·
ment to offet on the sentence impo~d.
H~ wife and small son were wilh him In
the courtroom. / ,
Cadwell, 36, was found guilly by 1
Super1or Court jury last Des. 18 after his
second trial on char:ges Uiat he misap-
propriated funds of the Jack Fisher
chapter of the DAV. His first trial ended,
in a hung jury. ·
Cadwell was indicted by lhc Grand
Jury after it was testified lhal he took
the money while acting as trustee far the
chapter in another legal action.
Witnesses said Cadwell told them that
his withdrawals repr~nted legal fees
which would be roughly e<JU8.I to the sums
transferred from the chapter account to
his own.
Judge Grookshank renected today that
those legal fees: amounted to $110 an hour
and that Cadwell should not have astiured
chapter officers that the Superior cOurt
would confirm the validity of the fees
charged .
"This was not just. the.ft, this was also
ISee CADWELL. Pqe Ii
L.4BELED S.4f'E
!lf AKES HEIST EASY
SPOKANE, Wash. (API --.,
burglars bro~t Into Sambo's Restaurant
Sunday night, tb<y had lltUo \rouble
opening the safe. TM comblnation was
pasted on the door.
Detective lll>wa"1 Prati ,.Id Mooday
the safe combination ha.s bffn c._
•nd the sticker has been removed.
t
"
..
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I DUY rJLOT s
Toro POW
Wife Lands
In Tokyo
From wi.. ll<rvfc<t
~O -Ttrc<I and bitter d"plt. the
fact tbey never expectecl much, an El
Toro woman and three other POW. wives
arrived here today, admltllnl a
wor~wtde mlaslon In behalf of mi.ulna:
military men -theirs and others -hu
!ailed.
They hope to meet with tttrs. Ejsaku
i!!1to, wife or Japan's prime minister, as
well as Japanese Red Cross orficials
befoR depart.lng on the last leg
homeward to the Southland.
Mra. Carole Hanson.· 30, of 24112
Dlrdtoct Drive, ~I Toro, hts visited
mlny nations, inc)udlng the war zone
wbtte their pilot husbands were shot
down, but have been either rebuffed or
offered helpless sympathy. ·
'Ill< four !ilked wllh U.S. S.n. Eugene
?.1cCarthy (0-Mtnn.) ln their abort stay In
P.1oscow and were told he l! u concetntd
over the pllgbt Of draft~Odgera ~
de-1ers abroad u men held In North
·Vietnam prisons. "That really hurt,"
said Mrs. Arthur ~teams, of Los Angele s,
wife of Air Force Lt. Col. Arthur S.
Mearns.
"It hurt to have my husband sandwich-
td ·between des!rtrrs and draltdodger1."
Mrs. Hamon, whose husband, Marine
Corps Capt. Stephen P. ~anson was st\ot
down while flying a helicopter medical
evscuation mit.slon In Laos nearly four
yean ago, said they believe the war Is
Just. "All "'e want to know is If our
husbands are alive or dead and I don't
think that's too much to ask," said J\trs.
ltanson. . .
"1 think v.•e started out on this trip with
1 feeling that our trip wasn't going to
bring any specific answers for us an.d
perhaps we wou.dn'l see the results of 1t
fvr some time. .
DAILY P'ILOT P'lltm W Alcjltrd IC.Hlllt•
BILLY SURPRISES MOM BY STANDING, SINGING SONG
With Patience, Matching Skills ta Native Intelligence
' I . ._,
Nixon Explains Veto
I
Calls $19.7 Billion Bill Inflationary
\VASHJNGTON (AP) -President Nix· Sen. Hugh Scot.I (R·Pa.), s 1 Id federal employes and servicemen attend
lhem. The figure "''IS nearly HOO million
more than the admlnlslration had recom·
on formally told Congress today he Republicans in the House, or if necessary
vetoed ~ $19.7 billion Health·Edu~tiqn· in the Senate, will ~ with N.ixon In La~ iippropriati ca bW because It would nwnbcrs aufficit(lt to all.Stain ttie veto,
feed infllUon, foater lne.f1iciency and although he conceded some t>emocraUc
mended. '
NI.Ion prom ised Only to atudy the pro-
gftm and make rtiommendations later. mltdlruct money, support would be needed. .
Congress boosted the b!11 nearly 11.s The House wDI vole Wed!ftllffll'. H It "FOW' ~$live presidents have tried
&o rtdiace or reorient lhi1 program ," Nlx·
oo ~ "Ytt Ute Conjl"esa llt this blll not
only perpetuales this unfair pcogrem ,
ti adda money to It It ii wrong lo aharply
lncreUe the: Impacted school ald pro-
gram In the face of the need to make
Jon~-0verdue reforms in this Jaw.
bUllon beyOPd the leveJ NJ.coo had m:om· , votes to override, lben, the ~nale will ICf.
mended, and !be Prtsldelt slctled bla later. No time tor a ~le Slot,!< vote
veto message with a ptn tJourilb 'televlJ. hill yet been set. but Democr1Uc Leider
ed lo the nation Moodey night. Mike Mansfield o1 M"'t.na piodlct•d the
Then, today he tent tJk bill back to Senate wUJ v:ote to override tbt veto U,lt
Capitol I~ill along with the lengthy ge'3. the chance. . !
message amplifying his reasons for re· N1xl:'n offered l1tll e In the way of com·
jectlng it. promise to ~ain additional support.. "The admlnlstratiori Yji ll make rtQlm·
mendations for ttform of this program
based on 1 study reque!ltd by the
Congress. I will submit these recom·
menda4ons shortly."
Democratic leaders were pushing to Some legislators had expected him to
overrlde the veto, and some were claim· give a bit on his opposition to a $600
ing hopefully they had the votes t.o do it , million item for grants lo schools in
but those claims were disputed. areas IYbere large numbers of children of
Wilson. Greeted
By President
l"n State Visit
WASHING T 0 N (UPI) -Prime
innister Harold Wilson was wele-0med to
the Whlte House today by President Nix·
on and recommended that the longtime
"special rela\ionship" between the Untied
State~ and Britain be joinlly directed to
wiping out social evils of the '70s and
'80s.
Wilson was greeted on the White House
lawn in overcast but early spring-like
weather as herald trumpets struck up
"Hail Britannra."--
\Vllson said he would "delay not a
moment '' in starting di scu ssions with
Nixon on "urgent and immediate" pro-
blems of the world.
Before starting talks with Nixon at
mi dday. \Vilson said at the welcoming
ceremony: "It is urgent that we discuss
together the immediate prognosis in in·
ternational economic affairs."
Carswell 'A Bit. Aghast'
Over Old Racist Speech
\VASHJNGTON (UPI) -Jud g eUcer or a tUreclor in any country club.
G. Harrold Carswell said today he holds Civil rights groups have ch a r g e d
no racist or white supremacy views and Carswell was a director of a group that
" l'•tl b't ha 1., be 'nde<I turned a golf club in Ta\lahasstt, Fla., aws a 1\ e t ai;: s lo remi into a private course to avoid integration
he ever C!:dvocated such ideas. He said that in 1956 he made a $1~
Carswell made the statement under contribution to rebu.ild a rundown Coif
qut>sllonlng by the Senate Judiciary Com-club house and was given one share of
mitt~e at the outset of bearings on his stock in retuin, but resigned fro rn the
ruim1nation to be an associate justice of club a ahort time later and was refunded
th'.! Supreme Court. $75.
He said he ~ad forgotten about a Some years later, the judge said , his
spe.e~h he mad'?. 111 I~ during a Georgia sor.. wanted to play golf and the family
pol.illcal campaign saying he believed Jn rejoined the club, but resigned again in
wh•te sup~emacy. Reporters in Florida 1966. He said he had nothing to do with
ar.d Georgia dug up the speech last week any land transfers, leases or operation o[
from old news accounts. the club.
"I really was a little bil aghast I had As the hearing start.!:d. S e • a t e
n1ade such a statement," he said. "l had Republican leader Hugh Scott related to
to see it to believe I made it" newsmen that he told Carswell fl.1onday
H~ said he was not trying to deny he "I believe the 1948 speech was a foolish
made the speech but told Senators: "I statement." He said Carsell replied : "It
"But I do feel It's betn a cumulative
eflort and I don't think Hanoi can con·
tinue ' Its present policy if countries
around the world will &peak out for the
Inhumanity that Hanoi Is engaging In ln
rti;lards to these men," J\1rs. Hanson said. BABY REGAINS LIFE •••
\Vilson apparently referred to his fear
th at light money pollcles In the United
States might touch off a recession that
1,1•ould have {alloul effects on the British
<1m not racist. I have no notion -open. was a completely unwise statement of
scrretive or otherwise -of racial my earlier d.ays and I have thoroughly
J\trs. Hanson and three other California v.•hen she called her doctor and heard \1·omen whose husbands were shot down in Vietnam combat appeared at a ne1,·s him say, "If you think you have measles
c:>nference before leaving for Tokyo. The don't come around here. Check it out
olhe.r women are Mrs. John Hardy , 27 ; wJth a dermatologist and co1ne to see n1e ~trs. Roo:evelt Hestle Jr., 37, and Mrs. after you 're over it."
J\1eama. alao 37, all of Los Angele s. . In the next few years Joanne was to \\'hen they get home, Mrs .. Jlanson said, the wives will enc~rage other women to become an expert on the tragic disease
make similar trips. and all its strange ramifications.
"We'll continue to write letters to every The first decision was hers alone to
nation as we have done before we left." make. Knowing what might lie ahead for
she said, adding she and Mrs. Hardy lhe baby, should she request an abortion?
· nd n( t N rth "No one would help me decide that," plaMed lei 1° t.o Parts a co ron ° she ••vs. "Not my husband, or my farnily Vietnameae officials there. ....., Mrs. Han!On said North Vietnamese or the doctor. 1 thought about lt a lot and
diplomats in Vietnamese, Laos, "dldn·1 _ _,,•bou,,,...t-tthpd.,_e other children (then aged one.
even have the courtesy ... to see me." three years) and l knew I
"I stood out In the driveway \Vaitlng for couldn't II with myself if I decided on
an answer, wll'?ther they would set up an an abortion, knew. the baby could be
<\ppointment for me or not," she said. "I blind, or deaf, nd I knew the percen·
could go to any embassy of any country lages were pret bad -but still, you
t'round the world and t would at least be know, there was !ways the hope th at
treated with courtesy. The North Viel· maybe rnY baby Id be one of the nam~se embassy didn't even have the lucky ones."
nd k 'th A virtual quarantine was set up for lhe courtesy to invite me in a spea wi birth, wlth the entire delivery are.a under
me for 10 minutes, and to me. a clvll!ied special atulle conditions. A rubella baby,
nation in the world today dots not behave Joanne learned, can carry the disease
in this manner." and transmit It to others for the first l\VO itrs. Hardy said she thou11.ht it "in· years of his life.
crrdlble" that the North Vietnamese Thia side aspect of the problem was
would not acceot Information on the ir rather flrmly established when little Billy
soldiers held prisoner In South Vietnam came home rrom the hospital an<i his
and Laos. • f3lher, slsttr and two older brothers
From PUfle l
CADWELL •..
breach of tru1t." the judge commented.
"Mamers of the r;tate bar are expected to
behave In an honorable. reputable and
1rustworlhy manner and this case turned
out to be otherwise."
A state bar official today confirmed
that the issue of C1dwell's pos1tble
diabannent from the organization is cur·
rtntly be.lng discussed.
DAILY PILOT
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11111"''' M llMli.i,, 11M fNO!Hlly.
promptly came down with measles.
"He was a big, beautUul baby -he
even looked huskier than my others."
Joanne remembers. "And I really hoped
for a while that he might be all right."
He was not all right. There \vas defin ite
heart murmur and cataracts on both of
his eyes. Ha had difficulty swallowing
and he hardly seemed to grow al all .
"The 01.ly thing be seemed to respond
to was music -he still loves to listen to
the stereo and his hearing Sttms to be
qyl~ good," says Joanne. Realizing this,
she seWe<! little bells on the cuffs of his
baby clothes to g!ve him some amuse-
ment. "Because he couldn't see, he
couldn't grab for things like other
babies."
Before he was a year old, a severe al·
tack of pneumonia almost ended Billy 's
brief existence . But he survived that and
a tUIUngulshed eye doctor performed
surgery on the cataract.B. He began lo
respond to light, but th.e cataracts
reformed and wtre again rl!moved.
"Now he seen1s to be able to recognize
me from across a room." his mother
!lays. ''but of course we can't tell yet ex·
actiy Y>'hat he does see."
This rr.ay come. after Billy learns to
talk -and he's doing pretty wtll In this
department. He can count to 10, ca!I hls
brothers and &:lster by name and give. a
respectable rendition of ''Rock·a·bye
Baby."
"Things that are nice, but rea lly
ordinary accomplishment~ for most
babies are sort of a miracle for Billy,''
SRy:i Jaanne.
The miracle beran last August when
she called th.e Orange County llealth
Depa.'1J"rll!nt to see t: there mlp:ht not be
so!llfl possibility of 1etting Dilly into .11
therapy program .
"He not only wasn't making any pro-
grt!I -he w11 beCiMlng to regress."
she explains. "He would just lie on his
baok all day, staring up at the llgh t. He
didn't want anyone but me fo-do 11nythl ng
for hhn and finally even I couldn't coax
him to try lhlngs."
Frn'TI the health dtpartn1rnt. Shi! \tarn·
ed 1bout the Easter Seal Rehabtlltatlon
Ctnter for Crippled Children and Adult!!
Jn Oran&'-· and at the center 1he learned
of the progr1m del'lgncd by John Caria-
Falla, dlJ'Ktor of the Child Study Center,
especially for pre-ACllool d e o f · b 11 n d
chlldrtn, victims of the rubella epidemic.
Some o( its graduates of "Rube lla Class
'69" had been able lo enter kinde rcarten,
they told her.
Billy was evaluated by an. audiologist,
language and speech pathologi s t,
ix.Jialrician, physical therapist, oc·
cupational the rapist. psychologist and
soc ial worker. A program to meet his
special problems was set up.
Since September, Billy ar.d his mother
have reported lo the Center for 21h hours
a day, 1'1onday thrmJ&h Thursday, every
week. Billy has therapy, in and out of the
pool, does special exercises, lakes speech
lessons, and, best of all, has learned to
enjoy playing with other children and
"y,•orklng out'' with the adult aides.
He can stand alone, take stCps with
help, throw a ball and catch it and travel
around the house in a "walker."
"He's developed so much conUdence -
he 's really proud of himself," says Joan.
ne . "In fact he 's getting to be a show-off.
The other day my husband and I were
rough-housing around with the other kids
in the living room when Billy crawled
through the door. He waited till we were
\Yatchlng , t~en turned a perfect
somersault."
One of the biggest steps came in
December, the day before his third birth·
day, Billy had never been able to feed
hinisel f, flatly refusing W touch a &poon,
or even hold a cookie in his hand.
"For some reason, rube1 l11 babies don't
seem to like to touch things," says Joan-
ne. ·'That day he was silting up at the
table and all of a suJden he p\cktd up the
spoon and started feeding himself just as
if he'd been doing it always."
Billy still won't eat "people" food
thoug h. preferring the prepared baby
foods tha t are easier to swallow.
Ealing reauhu:_ tm an4_ learning to
walk alone are the next two big goals.
But even without t h e s e ac-
economy.
\Vilson also spoke of need for mutual
efforts to as sist in supplying food to
alltviate the "great suffe ring" and
starvation among Bi.afrans.
He said that' he hoped that in the
meetings he will have with American
leaders during his two-day visit to
\\lashington that not only the "ini-
medlale, urgent'' problems would be
tackled but expressed hope that in the
spiril of the U.S.-Britlsh special rela·
tionship. they could take a "longer. cooler
• look at I.he problems in the world through
the '70s and beyond."
l le saicl that the United States and
Creal Britain· could 1hatt: their "common
experience and common thinking" on
common problems c h a 11 e n g i n g in-
duslria!ized nation!!.
•le said the two nations should work
together to prevent urban countries Crom
becoming "slaves of a scarred and
paisoned environment of our own 1nalr;.
1ni;:."
Froni Pnge 1
FIERY TV. • •
spokesman said, ''no problem models
could be identif ied."
The commission, which has been con·
!err ing with th.e industry for three
months on the issue, sent letters asking
the manufa cturers lo recall, repair or
replace faulty sets.
Commission chairman Arnold B. Elkind
said some sels on the list might not be
fire hazards bu! he added the information
~hou\d be furnished to the public "rather
than risk the consequences of !ires in col·
or television recei vers."
•
superiority." repudiated it, and I am no racist. 1 have
Carsv.·e\I also denied he ever was an of· no racist feelings."
Newport Urges Curfew
On County Airport Jets
The Newport Beach City Council Joined
the effort lilonday to curb noise from
PSA jets ir they use Orange County
Airport and the council drafted a set of
suggested rules v.•hich the county could
include in a lease being discussed today.
The rules. which incl ude a flight curfew
rrom II p.m. to 7 a.m., were lo be
presented by Mayor Doreen Marshall to-
day to Orange County supervisors. They
are considering a new lease with PSA,
which is planning W absorb Air Calilornia
in a merger.
The Newport councilmen suggested
that the lease forbid the use of planes
larger than the Boeing 737 and also im -
pose a maximum number of {lights which
PSA can fly in and out of the county-own-
ed terminal.
Besides the appearance b e f o r e
supervisors late today, the city staff will
join as an Intervener in proceedings
before the State Public Utilities Com·
mission when the matter ot the merger of
PSA and Air Cal comes before the slate
aeency.
The council praised efforts by the
Newport Harbor Chamber of Commerce,
1vhich has urged supervisors to Include
noise<ontrol provisions in the new lease
\vith PSA.
.,.. .. :i-.-• w '" •• , "f""'""'"
The alrlfne presently does not use
Orange County Airport, but before the in·
tended merger with Air C1l was an-
nounced, PSA had applied for state ap.
proval for use ot the airport here.
Besides the intervention in state action
and suggestions to county official s,
Newport's staff will meet with represcn·
tatives of PSA t.o determine if the airline
is willing lo cooperate in a noise abate·
ment porgram.
PSA recently agreed to cooperate In
noise control with officials of Long
Beach, \lo'ho allowed the line to use the ci-
ty airport, provided several anti-noise
measures y,·ere Included in the lease.
Air California also has accepted the
L<lng Beach restrictions.
The controls suggested by the chamber
ol commerce are suggested .as interim
constraints until the county.financed
Phase 11 airport master pl.an study is
completed.
If supervisors adopt the chamber's sug.
gestions, <lperations at the airport would
remain al their present level until the
master plan phase is finished .
Supervi~ors were expected to take ac-
tion on the matter sometime late this
afternoon.
1 ANOTHER •••••
complishments, the little boy who used to '
just lie on his back staring at the light E-X-P-A-N-S-1-0·N •
has become very much par! of the Cami· ~'
Jy. He plays happily with brothers
Christopher, ti. and Joey, 4. and his pretty
blonde sister Heidi , 5, even dreaming up
little jokes to play on them . When the
jokes su«X:eed he laughs wilh glee.
. '
"Sometimes l think he 's the best thing
that could have happene~ to this family."
says Joanne. "He's sort of brought us all
together and gi\'en us so much happin<'SS.
The other kids ha ve helped a lot with hi1n
and we're all so plea~ ·.vhen he learns
something ne""" ··
We have always endeavored to furnish the
finest service anywhere for CARPETING and°
I DRAPERIES. Towards this end, we have just com· 'j pleted an enlargmeent of facilities which will en·
able us to serve you better!
Come in and see our huge inv•ntory of fine
carpeting and browse throu9h our new remnant
room, where wa have thous1nds of yards of small
and room·si10 remnants!
"And l'm a teacher too," says four · ye11r-old Joey.
Joanne expla ins. "The two older
chilclrC'n arc in school when we go to the
Center, so Joey conies al ong and '~'hile
Billy's havi ng his therffpy, Joey helps the
speech therap ist. They y,·ar~ed a child
v.•1th nonnal speech for the others to talk
to, and Joey's it."
F1·0111 Page 1
TROOPS ...
home." he 1ald.
President Nixon has ordtr«I thAl 50,000
n1ore American servicemen be removed
from South Vi etnam by April 15. About
60.000 were wllhclrawn under pha1ts I
and 11 whlrh beJ:11n h•sl wmmer.
Cumnt U.S. troop strength In Vietnam
is ~.900. The 50.000 men in the third phast with·
dr1wal "111 all be fe1no\•ed from Vletnnm
by April IS and wll\ brina to 110.000 the
numbt'r of Amerlc1n troop! wllhdrawn
~1nct the U.S. pullout began la5t July I.
l
I •
J .,
UNUSUAL INSTALLATION PROILIMS?
Comt in and talk with tny of our ulasmen-who 111 h1v1 htd trltnsiva
installation experience!
ALDEN'S 1663 PLACENTIA·COSTA MESA
646·4831
CARPETS • DRAPERIES 11 YIA•I ll•VING THI O•AHOI COASl"
••
,
•
'I· ;:a :e e .. . . ' •
'1nntington Bea~h Today's Flnal
N.Y. Stocks
VOL 63,· NO. 22, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CA~IFORNIA ' TUESDAY, JANUARY 27, 197~ TEN ~ENTS
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~.....!.~~~~~-----·~~~~~~~
Edi·son A.wards. Onofre Power Boost Pacts
SAN ONOFRE NUCLEAR GENERATING STATION TO BECOME ONE OF NATION 'S LARGEST
Edison Announces $450 Mlll iOn Expansion of Facility Near Nixon Estate
School Measures Backed
Women Voters Urge Yes on T wo Education Issues
By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI
01 tllt 01llf 1'1111 Sti ff
Both school bond elections sched uled
for Huntington Beach Feb. IO were en·
dorsed today by the League of Women
Voter!.
Th e group urged a "yes" vote on a $9.fl
million construction bond and 50 cent ta1
override for the Huntinrton Beach Union
Hilh School District, arid an 1uthoritation
lo raise the bood.Jntuest r~te to seven
percenl in the Huntlngloo Beach City
Sc.boo! District.
"Our endorsement of both Issues ls
based on the consensus of our members
that it is lmperaUve to develop . Jhe
highest potential of each child,''-Sllid
Mrs. Jack Turk, president of the league's
Huntington Beach chapter.
lf approved, lhe $9.S million high school
bond would be used for the construction
of another high school and revamp an·
liquated buildings on the Huntington
Beach High School campus.
The SG-<:ent tax hike would raise the
district's general purpose tax rate from
its current $1.39 to $1.89 per $100 of
assessed valuation.
District adminislralors say the tax in·
cfeUe 1s nectUary to provide for In·
crea;;rJ costs,and to maintain the eresent
level of educational program• and
wvlCe:s.
The Huntington Beach City School
District measure would simply raise the
· allowable interest rate from it,, current
five percent to seven percent on $4.5
millipn or unsold bonds.
"We recognize the need for a sixth high
school in the area and the necessity of
strengthening Huntington Beach High
School to meet earthqua~e safety stan-
dards set by the Field Act," said Mrs.
Turk. "The lax override is absolutely
necessary to prevent a deficit in the
district's operating budget."
No opposition has been noted by the
Huntington Beach City School District in
its quest to raise Ule bof\d inter~ rate.
In the Huntington Beach Union High
School District. however, the combined
bond issue bas been under fire for several
months by Trustee Joseph Rlbal and
Robert Goalon of Westminster.
Bath contend that the measure Is a
waste of the taxpayer's money and that
bett;.er use of · existing facilities could be
made to absorb expected increases in the
studcnl population.
Wilson Greeted
By President
In State Visit
Carswell 'A Bit Aghast'
Over Old Racist Speech
\YA SHINGTON !UPI) -Prime ~1inister Harold Wilson was welcomed to WASHJNGTO~ {UPI) -Judge G. Harrold Carswell said today he holds
the \Vhite House today by President Ni't-no racist or while supremacy views and
on and recommended that the longtime was a little bit aghast" to be reminded
"special relationship" between the United he ever advocated such ideas.
States and Britain be jointly directed tG Carswell made the statement under
wiping out social evils of the1 ,70s and qu..stioning by the Senate Judi ciary Com· mittee at the outset of hearings on his
'801. namination to be an associate justice of
Wilson was greeted on the White House tht:? Supreme Court.
lawn in overcast but early spring-like llc said he had forgotten about a
weather as herald trumpets struck up speech he made in JM8 during a Georgia
"Hlt"l B 't · " political campaign saying he believed in
.' r1 a~nia. .. wh!.te supremacy. Reporters In Florida
n1ade such a statement." he "aid. "I had
to see it lo believe I made it."
JI~ said he was not trying to deny he
n·1ade the speech but told Senators: "l
am not racist. I have no notion -open,
scrretive or otherwise -of racial
s11periority."
By JACK BROBACK
Of .. Dtll1 ,1111 ,,.,,
The awarding of contracts for two huge
nuclear reactors to be installed at the ex·
isling San Onofre Nuclear Generating
Station within two miles of the Western
\Yhite House, was annouoced today by lbe
Southern California Edison Company.
Company officials term the move an
"al\-0ut commitment" to nuclear power
generation.
Jack K. Horton, Edison chairman and
chief executive, add~. however, that lhe
company must proceed with UM" COO·
struction of two conventional generating
units at Huntington Bt.ach "in order to
meet customer power requirements
between 1973 and 1971.
"But as more and more nuclear plant&
are built. we will gradually reduce our
use of existing oil and gas-fired t111lts in
the-south coastal area," Horton said.
A reaclor contract was awarded to
Combustion Enaineering Inc. of Windsor.
Conn. The reactors will become part of
two new unlU at the San Onofre plant.
Cost of the units will be about $-tf>O
million.
San Diego Gas and Electric Co., a 20
percent parlner in the 450.000 kilowatt
nuclear unit now operating at San Onofre,
will have an equivalent ownership In the
output ol llle two new units. The original
installation cost $90 million.
· The San Oriofre plant is In San Die£o
(See EDISON, Pase %1
Seal Becich Heist
2 l(nif e-wielding
Bandits Captured
Two teen·age suspects were captured
1'.1onday night after a pair of bandits held
up a Seal Beach liquor store clerk by
sticking a 121f.:·inch butcher knUe to his
stomach, then eluded a hail or bullel.!1
fired by the clerk.
The clerk, Jim ScoUI, touched off a
silent alarm during the robbery which led
to a massive police manhunt and the ar·
rests. ,
Held on charges of robbing Vog\er's
Bay Liquor Store, 17ao Pacific Coast
Highway, are 11)omas M. McCartney, 19,
of Lone Beach and his 17·ywo01d com·
panlon.
Clet'K Scotti told Seal Beach police the
bftndil! entered his at.ore abOut 9:20 p.m.
While holding the knife to ScoUl's belly,
the robbers ordetd him to open the till
nnd hand over the contents, which were
later delermined ·lo be around $150. ac·
cording to Sgt. Sam D'Amico of the Seal
Beach Police Department.
As the youths escaped through the
door, Scotti fired one warning shot In the
;1ir and four al their legs from a high·
powered .357 magnum pistol, D'Amico
said.
A silent alarm touched off at the Seal
Beach Police station during the robbery
prompted the immediale dispatch of -an
Father's Tip
Brings Arrest
At Pot Party
A lip from a father that his daughter
was "high on drugs" Jed Fountain Valley
police to a party Sunday morning where
they arrested 12 persons,
available police cars who were aided in
their search of the escapees by units
rrom Huntington Beach, Los Alamitos
and the Huntington Beach p o I i c e
helicoplcr.
Officers managed lo pursue a fleeing
··ehicle for some distance, saw it sud·
denly stop, whlle a man who they allege
was McCartney, uca~ over a fenct .
Sometime later, Seal Beach o!fker Ken
Jenson managed lo !pOt someone fitting
the younger robber's description at 25th
Street and Pacific Coast Highway and
immediately arrested him, according to
Sgt. D'Amico.
McCartney wu apprehended by Officer
Don McGill shortly before midnight when
he was spotted hiding undemealh a
Sunset Beach home by an informant, in·
vestigalors said.
Nixon Withdrawal Phase
Three El Toro Marine
'
Outfits Coming Home
From Wire Service' Department as a patrolman.
DA NANG -Troops of ihree Orange ''It feels great to be going home," ad·
County.based U.3. Marine Corps aviation ded Lt. Col. James W. Lazio, com·
squadrons today gathered .u seaport em-1na nding officer of Attack Squadron 233,
b:1rkatlon points to leave here for home ading that he hasn't seen his -t.year-old
\Vednesday. under the third phase of daughter for more than a yea r.
Prt'sidcnl Nixon's Vietnam withdrawal First Sgt. Joseph Sagan. a 24-year pl&n. A fourth group will depart for Camp \'eteran with nine overseas tours will be
Ptndleton, followlng fonnal ceremonies coming back to El Toro with Attack
at this sprawling U.S. base. in which flt&j. Sq11adron 542 and is glad of It.
Gen. Edwin 8. Wheeler, commander of "It ls alwi.y~ a good feeling to be aolng
Inc First ~1arinc Division addressed home." he said.
Ult!m. Ptestdent Nixon has ordered that 50,000
"Well done and bon voyage," ~id the mort American aervicemen be removed
CO, adding that the jet and helicopter from South Vlelnam by April 15. About
pilots. their sUpport personnel and the 60.000 were withdrawn under phases I
amphibious ·vehicle battal!on did a job and II which beg~n last summer.
for the free world. Current U.S. troop strength in Vietnam
All have been in Vietnam nine months is 469,900.
or longer. The 50.000 men in the third phase wit h·
Fighter Attack Squadron 642 and Al· drawal will all be removed from Vletnftn1
tar.k Squadron 223 will return to El Toro by April 15 and will bring to 110,000 the
MCAS, While Heavy Helicopter Squadron number of American troops withdrawn
:161 is reassigned to the Santa Ana MCAS, sinre the U.S. pullout began last July a.
where it was first comm(ssioned. fl:ew evidence of the Communist
The Third M11.rlne Amphibian Attack t-uildup was cited by the U.S. Command
..
\V1lson s:ud he .would. del~y not . • ar.d Georgia dug up the speech last week
moment" in starting d1scuss1ons w1th------il'bm-old n·ews accounts. -
Nixon on ';urgent and immedrate" pr°'" ''I really was a Little bit aghast I had
Carswell also denied he ever was an of·
ficer or a director in any c:ountry club.
C1\·iJ rights groups have ch a r g c d
Carswell \\'as a director of a group that
lurned a golf club In Tallahassee. Fla.,
into a prJvate.course t.o.avoid..lntegraUon.
lie said that in 1956 he made a SIOO
contribution to rebuild a r1.1ndown golf
club hou se and was given one share of
stock in return. but resigned from th'e
t:l ub '-short time later and was refunded
$75.
All 12, arrested at 6:18 a.m. at 1&533
Elm Circle, wer~ schiduled for ar·
raignment today in West Orange County
1'.1unicipal Court, Westminster, on
charges-of-possenion of-marijuana or
being present where dangerous drugs
were used.
Battalion wlll return to Camp Pendleton, in reportlng1hl: dlsl!'"oV-eryo:rsevefirViet
blems of the world.
Before starting talks "·Ith NiJ:on at
midday, \Vilson slid at the welcoming
ceremony : "It is urgent that we discuss
together lhe Immediate prognosis in il'l·
temational economic affairs.''
Wilson apparently referred to his fe.ir
that tight money policies in the United
Slates might touch off a recession 1:1.\-8;t
would have lallout effects on ·0ie Bfi.ti~
economy.
Wllson also spoke of need for mutual
efforts to assist in supp lying food to
allit:viate ttie "great 1 fUffertng" ·and
starvaUon among Biafrani:. ,
He said U}at. he hoped that In tHt
m~tings he will have wilh , Ame_rican
leaders during his tw~ay vta1t to
Washington that not only the "in1-
medlate, urgent'' probltms v.•oukl be
tackled but eipressed hope that ln lhe
spirit of the U.S.·Brilis:h special rtlp.·
tionship, ~t coo~ bke1,a _ "loager, !l)Ole~
lotk at the probleDU In me wodd lbroup
the 10s and beyontl." • •
He said that tl)e United Slat. ,aad
Great Britain could share their "common
experience and common thinking" on
common problem! c h a 11 e n I i n g in·
du!ilrialized nations.
He said tht two nations should work
together to prevent urban countries frora
becoming ''slaves of a scarred and
poisoned cnvironn1ent of our own n;iak·
1ng:"
Slack ~larkel
NEW YO~K (API .,-Stocki waoderod
deeper tnto lo&lna territory In 11low-.trad·
Ing todaj ..tllh declines leading• a~vances
by two u; OOc., (See quou1tiona1 Pages 10-
11}.
Countian . Held •
On :Robber y,
Kidnap Charges . . .
Police are holding an Anaheim man in
custody today on char~es that he com-
mitted robbery and kidnaP' In a bar
Whert,be waf'allegedly known to patron~.
q«l'Cen ,.~they arreoted Nichol" R.
J'lueres, 24, ~Of 1235 E. SandatwoOd Place, ' . . oo tfl:e charg~ eJter they alleg~ he was
Identified by patroo• of ll'6 bar.
A S"'l"Ct '"'°"odly enterod 0.. Honey
OOJI bar, 'Gp W; ~In Ave . ., It •~bout 2
a.m. llr-illl •'l>'ll•I «•n >hoped like
: 1 ,4kalibtt ldtomaUc. He 1httdtd the
OW'IMlf and pilronl into a back room, tOO'r
an undetermined amount of money and
Ood with barmaid Cheryl 0 . Shipley, It.
oC l203 S. Center SL, Santa Ana , as
hostage.
People at the bar told polict they knew
him ~ "Nick". Fluere.s was arrested in
hts apartment where officers found Miss
Shtpley tled on a bed unharmed. Pol~e
a!M reported they found the money and
U.. gun. .
Alter he was taken inlo cu11:toc:ly. pollet
found he fit the dt1c:riptlon or " suspect
in the 12: 15 a.m. robbery of the Tie Toe
Market at 500 N. East St. .md charged
him with an additional count ()f robbtry.
I ...
Some yean later, the judge said, his
sor.. wanted to play golf and the family
rejoined the club, but resigned again in
19fi6. He said he had nOthing to do wllh
Bl'IY land transfers, leases or operation of
th' club .·
As the hearing sta rted . Sen a I e
Republlcal'\ ·Jeade1 Hugh Scott related to
newsmen that he. told oanwell Monday
"I believe the 1948 s~ was a fooli~h
statement." H, said Car!ell replied : "It
was a completely unwise statem ent of
my e11rlier day! and . I have thoroughly
repl!diated it. and I am no racist. I have
·no rafut fe.flings."
.
Those arrested on suspicion o f
possession of marijuana were Charles S.
Lavlngton, 21, John Arlan , 22. Rodney L.
f\falovrazich, 20, and Thomas C. Smith,
20. all of the Fountiin Valley address:
Linda L. Kansteiner, 20 and Linda E.
Horton, 20, both of La Canada, and Bruce
A. Wilson, n, Pasadena.
Arrested on suspicion of being present
~·here dangerous drugs were used arc
,_1ichael R. Stevens, Z2, Lucinda M.
Newman, 21, and Cecil L. Betz. 20. all of
Pasadena; Janet E. Antich, 21. Stanton,
and a 17·year~ld girl from Nevada.
All were booked into Orange COunty
Jail, except the juvenile girl who was
turned over to juvenile authorities.
Pouenlon of marijuana Is a felony of.
fense·, )Vhile being present where it Is us-
ed is a.misdemeanor, police said.
Bad After Taste
Student Leader Held for Drugs
A high school stulfcnl body president
attending a leaders' luneheon with the
auperinteqdcnt .of t1'c Garden Grove
Unified School Ol11Lrlct was arrested on a
marijuana charge after dessert fl.1onday .
Santiago High School AS8 1>resldcnt
C:urmer Swanson , 17. of 13702 Euclid Sl.,
Garden Gro\•e, was adml\led to Orange
County Juvenile llall on a chargt or
poasesaion of marijuana.
Santiago Hi h School Vice Principal
Robeff Kernan told police he called t.he
youth to hls office and asked what he bad
In hi s bulgins pocket. at whk:h time
Swane:on pulled out a plastic bag of
grttn. leafy material.
'"It's just alralfa and catnip." he
reportedly said.
Kernan appercntly wgge."Sttd It would
be unwise to take the baa along to Jund>
with Supt. David Paynter.
Durln,. tilt luncheon period, Gardfri
Grove police narcotics dttbetlve1 were
analyzing the \fted 1nd_flnall)' declared It
waa more than. aUalfa and cat.nip.
'"ith a tentath·e Feb. I arrival date Cong and North Vietnamese arms caches
aboard U.S. Nav,. vessels. at widely separated points In South Viet·
Maj . Ru~rt &oher, staff lnfonnation nam Monday and toda.v. •
officer at El Tor~ MCAS, said today the Troops of ·the U.S. 25th Infantry
Corps has not yet declassified data about D1v1sion turned up the biggest such
!he Orange County qnlts' withdrawal, 50 storehoufe of arms 40 miles northwest of
he could nbt comment,. • , Saigon. They found I 'A tons of arms: and
So'tne units of the-total of 19 alfecfei:I . <!.mmunition, .Including 20 big rockets. 41
"'ill be deactivated upon return and Cpl. i!\tJiVidual weapons and two light machine
Gene Bowen, %2. of Costa ?Aesa. said at guns.
Da Nang t.xlay that he will change Near the cent ral highlands city or
uniforms when he gels home . . lSee TROOPS, Pa1e II
The Amtrac Battalion enlisted man will
be processed out of the Corps In Camp
Pendleton and rtjoin the Anaheim Police
Thieves Get $30
At Marina Vault
The fire vault at ?.farina High School
was bt'Oken Into over the weelcend and $30
taken, school officials told police Monday.
Glenn Dyalncer. principal ol the hl!h
school. 11id someone had broken through
the door of the Ure vauh where
documents and achool rl!:('Orda are kept,
aoparently searching for l1rae amounts
of money.
uwe have tV(O b.Jsketbatl games over
the weelcend •00 someone probablY
thou1ht there would be a 'lot of money rn
the safe. But under district poUcy we
deposit all money In the bank be!ort lhe
end of the day/' r:xplalncd D)'slngtr.
The SSO taken was from a 1mall fund
for coffee collected by teachers. he ad·
ded, NolhJQa elte :wu taken * tho only
damaae dOtie wa1 totlhe door Of the Jlre
•v1ult, locatfii:t. iri the admlnlllralive Of·
11ces. •
Orange C:oast
We!lt!oer.
It 'II take 1 good atllf breeu to
blow these cloudl away -and
that's what's coming on Wednes-
day. Tempe:ratlU'tl wUI 11.iclt to
the.Ir low IO ran1e.
INSWE TODAY
Durin g the doy she iosats
1oordl around aud al night .the
dqu the sanie with htf cUl"'l1t'I
but her student.s ihink it'• O-reot
thdr Engli1h teach"' dance• in
a chorua line. Page 19.
r
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" ..
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2 DAil Y PILOT K •
Co•gress to Act • Toro POW
Nixon Explains
HEW Bill Veto.
'
Wife Lands
In Tokyo '
WASHINGTON (AP) -President Nix-
on formally told Congress today he
vetoed a $19.7 billion Health·Educatlon-
Labor appropriation bill because it would
feed lnflation. foster ineffickncy and
milldlrect money.
Congress boo<ted the blll nearly $1.3
bUUoo beyond lhe level Nixon had recom-
mended, and the President signed his
veto message with a pen flourish televis-
ed to the nalion t.1onday night.
From Page 1
EDISON •..
County, but Is situated just south of San
Clemente. Orange County's southernmost
community and President Nixon's new
home. The old Hamilton Cotton estate
which the President purchased last year
overlooks the sea at the southem tip or
San Clt!mente.
When it was first proposed in the early
1960's. the San Onofre nuclear plant was
the subject of bitter opposition from con·
servationi sls, surfers and civil defense
advocates. Since its construction it has
lilipped into virtual anonym.lty.
Tv.·o J .1 million kilowatt uni ls will be
added at San Onofre. They will provlde
enough power to serve the equivalent
electrical needs or a dty of Z.5 million
people. The addition of the units will
create one or the nation's largest nuclear
generating stations.
Announcement of the ne\v nulcear units
was first made lhree weeks ago in Los
Angeles by William R. Gould, Edi.son vice
president during hearings oo. I.he Hun-
tington Beach expansion before lhe state
Public Utilities Commission .
Construction of the first of the nuclear
additions is expected to begin next sum·
mer and c'b mm er I ca I operation is
scheduled In 1976. The second unit would
go Into commercial operation a year
later, Horton said.
"Beginning with the San Ono[re addi·
lion we are committed to build only nu·
clear power plants for our major gene-
raUon sources In the coastal basin," Hor-
ton said. "This is another step Edison is
taking In the Interest of cleaner air' for
Southern California.''
''Looking to the J980's, Edison has ac-
C'elerated its continuir\g research pro-1 brams aimed al developing the eniineer-
ing safeguards necessary to permit the
construction of future nuclear plants in
llrban areas close to the electrical load
'hey serve," the EdJ30n utt1.1Uve said .
These sludlf:!I will give prime comld·
eplioq to athetic 11~ envlrorunJrl\ll
vjlues. including the ftutbility of plac·
ing major portions of rub.Ire nuclear fa-
cUities below the surface of the ground.
"In the current "year, Edison wlll spend
i:ibout $500.000 in this research effort,"
l1orlon concluded.
From Page 1
TROOPS • • •
Pleiku, the U.S. 4th Infantry Division
found mortar rounds, rocket grenades,
har.d gnnades and plastic explosives.
South Vietnamese paratroops selz.ed a
cache of 103 lndivldual and two crew.
served \\'eapons 75 miles northwest of
Saigon.
War communiques said fighting was
reJ14tively ll1ht acro1a the nation althouah
Viet Cong guerrillas ambushed an allied
truck convoy just east of Saigon Monday
night . lt wu the first atlack that clo.se
to the 'caplt.al since 1968.
Von Braqn Moved
WASHINGTON lUPI) -Wernher Von
Braun, one of the great racketeers of
modem Umes, Is be.tng transferred to
\Vashington lo llelp the e;pace agency plan
future explorations by man of the solar
system.
DAILY PILOT
OltAHGI! c;OAll l'UaLIW.IHO COMl',11frlY'
ll:t\.1•t N. w,,,
J'rtl:.ettl -li*l .... lf
J.,~ 11. c~·'••
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Then today he aent tht, bill back to
CapltOI Hill along with the lengthy
message amplifying his reasons !or re-
jecting it.
Democra'.tic leaden were pushing to
override the veio; and some were claim· iJ>1 hopefully they hid the votes to do I~
but those claims were disputed.
Sen. Hugh Scott (R·Pa. ). 1 al d
~publicans in the House, or if necessary
in the Senate, will side with Nixon in
numbers 6Ufficient to 5USt.aln the veto,
although be conceded some Democrattc
aupport would be needed.
The House wW vote Wednesday. If it
votes to override, then the Senate will act
later. No time for a possible Senate vote
has yet been 11et, but Democratl.'.: Leader
Mike Mansfield of Montana predicted the
Senate will vote to override the veto if it
gets the chance.
Nb:C'n offered tittle ln the way of com·
proml~e to gain addltional support.
Some legislators had expected him to
give a bit on his opposition to a $600
million item for grants to schools in
areas where large numbers of children of
federal employes and servicemen attend
them. The figure was nearly $400 million
more than the administration had recom-
mended.
Nli:on promised Ollly to study the pr~
gram and make recomrnendaUons later.
1
' ...
I
'
..
•
Ufl Tl_..,.
From \Vire SenJce1
TOKYO -Tir~ and bitter despite1he
fact they never expected much, an El
Toro woman and three other POW wives
arrived here today, admitting 8 w~.ldwide mission in behalf of missing
m~!Jtary men -theirs and others _ h faded . as
c: They .hope to meet with Mrs. Eisaku
.oato, wife of Japan's prime minister as
well as Japanese Red Cross oftklals
before deparUng on the last lcrr
homeward to the Southland. D
_~frs. Caro.le Hanson, 30, o! 24112 B1rdrock Drive.. El Toro, has visited
many nations, including the war xone
where their pilot husbands were shot
down, but have been either rebuffed or
offered hel?,IC:Ss sympathy.
The four talked with U.S. Sen. Eugene
McCarthy (~Mmn.) In their short stay in
, 1'-to11cow and were told he is as concerned
over the plight of draftdodgers and d~aerters abroad as men held in North Vi~tnam prisons. "That really hurt.,. s~1d Mrs. Arthur Mearns, of Los Angele~.
wde or Air Ftrce Lt. Col. Arthur S.
?iteams.
"It hurt lo ha* my husband sandwich·
ed between des:tters and draftdodgm."
"Four successive presidents have tried
f() reduce or reorient this program " Nix·
on said. "Yet the Congress in this bill not
?nly perpetuates this unfair program.
~t adds money .to it. It is wrong to sharply
increase the impacted school aid pr~
gram in the face of the need to make
Jon~-overdue reforms in this law.
Baby Elephaiit Walker •
?ifrs. Hanson, whose· husband Marine
Corps Capt. Stephen P. Hmson ;.., !hot
down while Dying a helicopter medical
evacuation miaslon in Laos nearly four
-J'W'I qo, uJd &bey 'believe the war is just ' \Vhen Ringling Bros. Barnum and Bailey came to
Miami Beach, city queen Coni Ensor invited 11om1
of the staff members for a Ylalk. Her friends balk~
ed at wading in the aurf, but certainly didn't mind
walking the streets of Miami Beach with the curvy
Miss Ensor. "All we want lo know is if our
husbands are alive or dead and l don'l
thlnk that's too much to ask." said Mrs. l{anson . "The adminlstraUon will make recom-
mendaUons (or reform of UlJs program
bued on a study requested by the
CongrellS. I will submit these recom-
mendations shortly.''
YRs Accuse UCI Chief Senate Retah1 s
'No Knock' Part
Of Raiding Bill
"I t~ink we started out on this trip with
a .feellng that ou r trip wasn't going to
bring any specific answers for us and
perh&.ps we wouidn't seA the results of it
for some Ume. In making reform s, Nixon said he
favor~ including a "no hardship clause"
guaranteeing that no schooJ district's
budget would be le.ss than 95 percent of
what it had In 1969.
Of 'Double Standards' "But 1 do feel it's been a cumulative
clfort, and I don 't think Hanoi can con-
tinue its present policy if countries
around the world will speak out for the
inhumanity that Hanoi ls engaging in in
re~ards to these men," Mrs. Hanson said. Impacted school aid reaches into many
consresslonal districts whose represen·
tatlves are wary of any attempts to pare
the program In an election year.
Nixon clashed with Congress also over
tls_ addition of $104 million for grants to
build and modernize com mun it y
hosp;taJs. He cited this as an example of
mlsdirected money on grounds that "a
more pressing net<! i1 to fund ambulatory
care facilities which offer an alternative
to expen!lve hospital care" -as he pro·
posed to Congress last ~prll.
The President said that he would not
have vetoed Increases Congrc11s provided
f()r health research If they had been
enacted separately. He said they
repnsent Jes.:. than half of ooe percent or
the totaJ appropriation.
Egyptian Rockets
Hammer Israelis
CAIRO (AP) -The Israeli general
military headquarters in Sinai \\'as
pounded ~'ilh rockets by an Egyptian
commando unit at dawn today, the
military command announced.
The announcement. carried by the Mid-
dle Ea.st News Agency, said the r1\d took
place 120 miles east of the Suer. Canal
and was on "one of the most important
military target!, since it holds corlltnand
over the entire Sinai army positions as
well as the Gata Strip."
In Tel Aviv. a military spokesman de-
nied the Cairo report even before It "·as
annClUnced by Egypt. He said Arab guer-
rillas fired improvised ba1.ooka rockets at
the Nahal Dlkla settlement in northern
Sinai before dawn but "c11used no
damage or casualtle11 whatsoever."
The board of director• of Orange Coun-
ty Young Republicans today accused UC
Irvine Chancellor Daniel G. Aldrich Jr. of
employing a double standard with re&ard
to Students for a Democratic Society
!SOS).
A resolution from the board said It is
"inexplainable'' that Aldrich woukl ap.
prove hiring of former SDS leader Mike
Krisman as a campus administrator and
then denylpmnisslon 10 the oempus SDS
chapter to host a SOS National Con-
ference.
COilnty Young 1Rep1bllcan Chairman
Colonel Doner charged that Aldrich is
trying to please the community while •I>'
petislng the radicals.
"The chancellor will please neither
group with his inane edict. He must make
a decision to either stand with the C()m·
munity or the radicals. He can no longer
afford to play both .sides of the street,"
Doner declared.
The chancellor was unavailable today
for comment.
Previou5Jy. he has explained that h!
knew Krisman when he approved the hir·
Grier Asks Cou1·t
To Dissolve 1''larriage
LOS ANGELES {UPt) -Roosevelt
Grier. former Los Angeles Rams football
tackle turned televiskln personalit y, peti·
tioned superior court Monday to dissolve
his marriage.
Grier, 37, married his wife Bernice, 37,
Feb. 2. 1962 in Montclair, N.J. They
separated one year ago and have no
children. Grier cited "irreconcilable dlf.
ference" in asking for the divorce.
A Real Fish Storu
John Prt1cott (right), curator of Marineland, and John Fitch, Stile Fish and Game Laboratory director, exam ine a big one that dldn •t
get away -a rare 1._,lool, 250-pound oar fish that W8'hed uhoro at
Leo Carrtlln Beech. The •lender crealure, which normally llvea at
depths or 1.200 feet . lost four foet of tail to a hungry shark .
\,
ing (Krisman fo:Tnerly was UCI student
body president ) and found him sincerely
committed to making cons tru cti v e
changes. Likewl:Je. he said, he knows the
campus SDS students and they have
never done anything disruptive.
He does not know SDS members from
other places and elsewhere SDS has been
in\•olved in disruptions.
But the chanc!'llor has not offered that
as a foll ei:planaUon for his decisions. He
has acknowledged that his most recent
decielo n to not permit tht SOS National
C()nference was political.
He himself Is aware of some ln·
consistency. When told recently by a stu-
dent. "Th is Is the same issue as Mike
Krisman," he answered :
"I know it is and I a1n hung up as a
consequence."
'Sea Monster'
Washes Ashore
PALOS VERDES (UPI) -The body of
a rare, 14-foot long oar fish . a sea
creature believed to be the cause of
many ancient sea mon~ter tales. is being
stuclied at ~1arineland of the Pacific.
The serpentllke , red-finned fish. which.
\\'ashed ashore Sunday at Leo Carrillo
Beach, Is only the fifth found In Southern
Californla durlna the pa.st 100 years.
The creature usually lives at a depth of
1.200 feet and is more common in the icy
waters or Sca ndinavia.
John Filch. research director for the
State Fish and Game Laboratory, sa id
part or the fish 's tall wa s mis.sing,
possibly because of an attack by a shark.
WASHINGTON (A P) -The Senate
voted today to retain in a pending drug
control bill a clause allowing federal
na.rcotlcs agents to stage no-warning
raids.
The idea is lo prevent suspects from
destroying narcotic evidence w hi I e
raiding officers wait outJide the door to
get in.
The action came as the Senate al>'
proved, 70 to 15, an amendment offered
by Aasistant Republican Leader Robert
P. Griffin of Michigan.
The Griffin amendment to the ad-
ministration • ba cked drug control bill
permits issuance of such "no-knock"
warrants but adds some i'estr1ctioris to
ease doubts some senators have ex-
pressed that no knock raids violate the
Fourth Amendment's guarantee of
privacy and protection from unreasonable
search and seizure.
M()ments before. the Senate beat back
twin attempts by Sen . Sam J. Ervin (0-
N.C .), to kill the Griffin amenclment and
to substitute his own language allowing
no-warning raids only if officers at the
scene determined that 'vithout it. vital
evi dence was ctrtain lo be destroyed .
Century Plallia Hotel
Plans Ex pansion
LOS ANGELES (UPI ) -Plans were
announced Monday for a $30 million .ad·
dition to the Cenlury Plaza Hotel, giving
it a 1,&0IJ.room capacity and maklhg it
the largest in Southern California .
The new structw-e, a 3a.story curved
tower. will adjoin the present Century
Plaza and overlook the back lot of the
20th Century-Fox Movie Studio.
ANOTHER •••••
1.1 rs. Hanson and three other Californi<?
,~·omen whose husbands wen shot down
in Vietnam combat appeared at a nev.·s
conference before leaving for Tokyo. The
other women are 111rs. John Hardy, 27 ;
Mrs. Roo::evelt Hestle .Jr .. 37, and Mrs.
A-Jeams, also 37. all of Los Angeles.
When they get home, Mrs. Hanson 11aid
the wives will encourage other women t~
make .similar trips.
"We'll continue to write letters to every
nnti.on as we have done before we left,"
she said, adding she and Mrs. Hardy
planned tc. go to Paris and confront North
Vietnamese ofiicials there.
Mrs. Hanson said North Vietnamest
diplomats in Vletnamese, LaOIS. "didn't
even have the courtesy ... to see me."
"I stood out in the driveway waiting tor
an answer, wh°'ther they would set up an
appointment for me or not," she said. "1
could go to any embassy of any country
eround the world and I would at least be
treated with courtesy. The North Viet-
nam!!se embassy didn't even have the
Cilurtesy to invite me in and speak with
me for IO minutes. and to me , a civilized
nation in the world today does not behave
in th is manner.•·
l\1rs. Hardy said she thought It "in-
crtdible" that the North Vietnamese
would not BCC!\lt information on their
soldiers held prisoner in South Vietnam
.and Laos.
Slate First Talks
BONN. Germany CAP) -Wtsl
Gennany and Poland will begin their
fir.st post-World War II po\ilical talks in
Warsaw Feb. 5, Foreign Minister Walter
Scheel announced today,
E-X-P-A-N-S-1-0-N
We h1v1 •lwtys ende•vored to furnish the
fin11l "rvice 1nywhoro for CARPETI NG and
DRAPERIES. Tow1rds this end, we hive just com·
p l1t1d tn 1nlar9meent of ftcilities which will en·
able us to serve you better!
Come i11 ind set our huge inventory of fine
carpetin9 and browse throu9h our new r1mnarit
room, where w1 hev1 thousands of yards of sm•ll
and room-si11 remnants!
UNUSUAL INSTALLATION l'ROILEMS7
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DAILY PILOT ,.,. .. " •1c111n1 Kttllltr
Bill Y SURPRISES MOM BY STANDING, SINGING SONG
With Patience, Matchi ng Ski lls to Native Intelligence
U.S., Report Cires Big
TV Makes as Fire Prone
WASHINGTON (AP) -The National
Commission on Product Satety says 122
models of color television sets have bet!n
catching fire at an above-average rate.
The commission's decision Monday to
1dentify the models brought an accusation
from tile Eleetronics Industries Associa-
tion that the commission was creating an
unfair competitive advantage for some
manufacturer.
The commission said the nation's 22
million color sets have been catching fire
al the rate of 12 per 100,000. It said the
sets it identified were ·igniting at the rate
of 30 per 100,000.
Olymptc television sets manufactured
by Lear Siegler Corp. averaged the
highest rate in the industry, the com·
mission said. It said nine of the finn 's
models were identified as P2!_ential
hazards. -w
The other Unns identified as exceeding
the industry "-verage were, in descending
order: Packard Bell. Magnavox, Sylv·
Bnia, Philco-Ford, and RCA.
Six firms were identified as having an
Incidence rate below the industry
average, allhough some models caught
P icketittg P i lot
fire at the 30-per-100,000 rate. The fi rms,
in descending order, were : General Elec-
tric, Admiral, Motorola, Emerson ,
Warwick (Sears), and Zenith.
Westinghouse was the only major
brand not mentioned in the commission's
statement. This was because, a
spokesman said, "no problem models
could be identified."
The commission, whi ch has been con-
!erring with the industry for three
months on the issue, sent letters asking
the manufacturers lo recall, repair or
replace faulty sets.
Commission chairman Arnold B. Elkind
said some sets on the lisl might not be
fire hazards but he added the information
should be furnished to the public "rather
than risk the consequences of fires in col-
or television receivers."
In attacking the commission's action,
Jack Wyman, staff vice president of the
electrooics association, said the report
"will result in unduly alarming the public
about the relatively limited problem.'' He
said the problem of fires is small com-
pared wlth the number of sets in
\merican homes. "Television sels are
safe products," he said.
Rosanne Stone (foreground) leads parade of pickets on DAILY
PILOT oUices In Costa Mesa. Group from National Organization for
Women (NOW) &bowed up last Saturday with signs telling jwt what
they think o! the newspaper. Placards refer to DAILY PlLOT's ac-
1 Ion Jn integrating Its want ads in accordance with Equal Opportun~
ties Commission directive not to segregate want ads according to
sex. Action was taken voluntarily by newspaper management . .
'
Tut1d11, JWlll'J 11, 1970 H
Tot's Life: Tragedy to Hope
By BAIUIAllA KREIBICB
ot .... DellY l'fllt flllf
In the spring of 1968, a 24-year-old
mother ol three called her doctor and
told him, "I thirtk I may be pregnant
again -and I'm sure I have the
measles.''
Joanne Santley cf Mission Viejo was
right on both counts. She was ln the first
month of pregnancy and she was one of
an estimated 20 million persons .stricken
in the devastating epidemic of rubella
(German measles) that swept the coun-
try that year.
Her fourth child, Billy, now three years
old, is one of 30,000 surviving youngsters,
born With multiple handicaps as a result
of the epidemic.
When a woman contracts rubella In the
first tbrte months of pregnancy, there Is
a 40 percent chance that her child, if bc:-
alive, will have more than one handicap
-sight, hearing, heart, motor abilities
can be affected in varying degrees.
Mental retardation fonnerly was con-
sidered among the likely handicaps, but
careful studies have shown that thls b a
fallacy. Because of hb blindness,
deafness or motor difficulties, the rubella
baby will develop slowly and soreetim~!
appear retarded. But doctors now realb:e
that careful rehabilitation programs can,
with patience, match his skills with his
native intelligence.
A group of 50 such children In
Australia, believed to have hen mentally
as well as pbsyically handicapped, was
given such intensive therapy. Follow-up
studies after 25 years found all but five
were leading active, productive lives.
Joanne SanUey did not know all this
when she called her doctor and heard
him say, "-If you think you have measles
don't come around here. Cbect it out
with a dermatologist and come to see me
after you're over it."
In the next few years Joanne was to
become an expert on the tragic disease
and all its strange ramifications.
The first decision was hers .alone to
make. Knowing what might lie ahead for
the baby, should she request ao abortion?
"No one would help me decide that,"
she says. "Not my husband, or my family
or the doctor. I thought about it a lot and
about the other children (then aged one,
two and three years) and I knew I
couldn't live with myself if I decided on
an abortion, I knew the baby could be
blind, or deaf, and I knew the percen-
tages were pretty bad -but still, you
know, there was always the hope that
maybe my baby woul d be one of the
lucky ones."
A virtual quarantine was set up for the
birth, witb tbe entire delivery area under
special sterile coodltions. A rubella baby.
Joanne learned, can carry the disease
and transmit it to others for the first two
ye ars of bis life.
This side PpeCt of the problem was
rather firmly established when little Billy
came home from the hospital anc; his
father, sister and two older brothers
promptly came down with measles.
"He was a big, beautiful baby -he
even looked t.uskier than my others,"
Joanne remembers. "And I really hoped
for a while that be might be all right."
He was not all right. There was definite
heart murmur and cataracts on both of
his eyes. He bad difficulty swallowing
and he hardly seemed to grow at alL
"The only tblng be seemed &o respond
to was music -he still loves to ll!ten to
the slerec and his hearing seems to be
quite good," says Joanne. Realizing th.is,
she sew«: little bells on the cuffs of his
baby clothes to give him some amuse.
ment. ··~au.se he couldn't see, he
couldn't grab for things like other
babies."
Berore he was a year old, a severe at-
tack of pc..eumonla almost ended Billy's
brief existence. But he survived that and
a distinguished eye doctor performed
surgery on the cataracts. He began to
respond to light, but the cataracts
reformed and were again removed.
"Now he seems to be able to recognize
me from across a room," his mother
says, "but of course we can't tell yet ex-
actly what he does see."
This reay come after Billy learns to
talk -and he's doing pretty well in this
department. He can count lo 10, call his
brothers and sister by name and give a
respectable rendition of "Rock-a-bye
Baby."
"Things that are nice, but really
ordinary accomplishments for most
babies are sort of a miracle for Billy,"
says Joanne.
The miracle began last August when
she called the Orange County Health
Department to see l: there might not be
some possibility ol getting Billy into a
the rapy program.
"He not only wasn't making any pro-
gress -he was beginning lo regress,"
she explains. "He would just lie on his
back all day. staring up at the light. He
didn 't want anyone but me to do anythlng
for !Jim and finally even I couldn't coax
him lo try things."
From the health department, she learn-
ed about the Easter Seal Rehabilitation
Center ror Crippled Children and Adults
in Orange, and at the center she learned ot the program desjgned by John Carta·
Falsa, director of the Child Study Center,
especially for pre-school d e a { • b I I n d
children , victims of the rubella epidemic.
Some of its graduates of "Rubella Class
'69" had been ab le to enter kindergarten,
th ey told her.
Billy was evaluated by an audiologist,
language and speech p a tholo gist,
pi. liatrician. physical therapist, oc-
cupaliona1 therapist. psychologist and
social worker. A program to meet his
special problems was set up.
Since September, Billy ar.d his mother
have reported to the Center for 21/a hours
a day, Monday through Thursday , every
week. Billy has therapy, in and out of the
pool, does special exercises, lakes speech
lessons, and, best of all. has learned to
enjoy playing with other children and
LA Police, Firemen
Pay Boost Nears OK
LOS ANGELES (AP ) -An across.the.
board pay boost of 5.5 percent for the
city's policemen and firemen is awaiting
the signature of Acting Mayor John S.
Gibson Jr.
The measure, retroactive to Jan. I,
gained final passage in the City Council
11-1onday and Gibson, the council presi·
dent, said he will sign it. Mayor Yorty
was out of the city on a speaking engage-
ment in Atlanta.
"1Yorklng out" with the adult aides.
He can stand alone, take steps with
help, tbroW a baU and catch It and travel
around the house in a "walker."
"He'a developed so much confidence -
he's really proud o[ himsell,'' says Joan-
ne. "In fact he's getting lo be a show-off.
1'he other day my husband and 1 were
rough-housing around with the other kids
in the living room when .Billy crawled
through the door. He waited till we were
watching, then turned a p e r r e c t
somersault."
One of the biggest steps came in
December, the day before his third birth-
day. Billy had never been able to fetd
himsell, flatly refusing to touch a spoon,
or even hold a cookie in his hand.
"For some reason, rube1h1 babies don't
seem to like to touch things," says Joan-
ne. "That day he was silting up at the
table and all of a suJden he picked up the
spoon and started feeding himself just as
if he'd been doing It always."
Billy still won't eat "people" food
though, preferring the prepared baby
foods that are easier to swallow.
I to IO Ye ars
Eali"i ttrular food and i.am1n1 to
walk alone ire the nezt two bl1 goala.
But-even without t b e 1 e ac·
complbhmenlf, the little boy whO UIOd to
just lie on hlJ bact 1!orl"i at the 11()>1
has become very m~h part of the faml.
Jy. He pJaya happily with brothera
Chrl!lopber, I. and Joey. 4, and hil pretty
blonde aia:ter Heidi, 5, even dreamln1 up
little jokes to play on thtm. When the
jokes succeed he laughs with glee.
';Sometimes I think he's the best thing
that cou ld have happened to thia family,"
says Joanne. "He's sort of brought u.a all
together and given w so much happiness.
The other kids have helped a lol with him
and we 're all so pleased ~hen he learm
something new."
"And I'm 8 teacher too," Says four·
year-old Joey.
Joanne explains. "The two older
children are in school when we go to the
Center, so Joey comts along and while
Billy's having his therapy. Joey helps the
speech therapist. They wanted a chl1d
with normal speech for the othen to talk
to, and Joey's it."
Attorney Gets Prison
For DA V Embe zzlement ·
By TOM BARLEY
• Of "" o.11'1 ,11,, Sl•ff
Attorney David Cadwell was today
sentenced to one to IQ years in state
prison following his conviction on charges
that he embezzled an estimated $35,000
from a Santa Ana chapter of the Disabled
America n Veterans organization.
Superior Court Judge R o n a 1 d
Crookshank sentenced the Santa Ana
lawyer on two counts of grand theft. The
prison terms will run concurrently.
Referring to Cadwell as "a bad apple,"
Judge Crookshank denied the appeal of
defense rounsel Edward S. Ulman for the
probation denied by the probalion depart·
ment in a recent report . And he crisply
rejected Ulman's arguments for a new
trial with the comment that the evidence
assembled in the Cadwell tMal was
"much stronger than that in comparable
cases."
Cadwell filed a $3.000 .appeal bond im·
mediately on leaving the courtroom.
Ulman predicted that the appellate bench
will "squash this convictii'hurry."
1'1e portly balding lawy no com-
ment to offer on the sente impoted.
His wife and small son were with him in
lhe courtroom.
Cadwell, 36, was found guilty by a
Su perior Court jury last Dec. 18 after his
second trial on charges that he misap-
propriated funds of the Jack Fisher
chapter of th e DAV. His first trial ended
in a hung jury.
Cadwell was Indicted by the Grand
Jury after it was testified that he took
the money while acting as trustee for the
chapter in another legal action.
Witnesses said Cadwell toki them tija t
his wlthdrawals represented legal fees
which would be roughly equal to the sums
transferred from the chapter ICi:OWlt to
his own.
Judge Croolcshant reflected lodoy thlt
those legal fees amounted lo $110 an hour
and that cadwell should not have ........i
chapter offictn that the Superior Court
woold conlinn the validity of the lees
charged. ·,
"This was not just theft, this wu a1Jo ·
breach of trust," the judge commented:·
"Memers of the state bar Ire erpected to
behave in an honorable, reputable and
trustworthy manner and thls case turned .
out to be otherwise."
A state bar official today confirmed •
that the issue of Cadwell'• possible
disbarment from the orgarrliation is cur·
rently being discussed. -
"I just cannot conceive of this ttnd of
behavior," she said. ··•niere are efforts
that have been made to get the names
across. There have been efforts lo ·
repatriate the sick and wounded. They
won't accept them."
GOP Governor ·
Won't Run Again,
' ST. PAUL, Minn. CAP) -RepubllcaJI
Gov. Harold LeVander ol Minnesota an·
nounced late Monday he will not seet a
second term, saying he never considered
himself a career politician.
LeVander, 59, said he would return lo
private life, which "1 have come to deep-
ly appreciate."
"The damned if you do and damDed ii
you don't nature of the governor's job ·
can make you a cynic," LeVander added.
•216,111 i. l'aiM sar~J ~ilCK Li8ilA1'ilH
fer *ho •ner1a1v1 "o\ ,£ l'ltvias
' '
ReauctiJns on 807. tf
Special &ale hown:
MONDAY & FRIDAY 9 to 9
SUNDAY 12 to 5
J
I
I
..
• ·-
f DAILY PILOT TlllSdly, Jlnuary 27, 1970
Two Weeks Without Food Yablnnski
'The Ma1sachu1etts S u p r e m e
Court will determine whether it is
Jezal for a Springfield firm incor-
~ted as a travel agency to ot-
fer its clients a $1.250 package deal
for an abortion in England. T h e
firm provides a passport, health
c~caie, airplane tickets, hotel
accommodations and the abortion,
which will be performed by a Ii·
cenaed British Physician in a pri·
vate clinic. St•t• Atty. Gen. Rob-
ert H. Quinn said he will ask t h e
court to rule on the legality ot the
opera.tion. Joseph C. Stoth1rt, a·
lawyer and the treasurer of the a~ency, said earlier that be a~ d
h1' two partners had been "mehc·
ulously precise in setting up the
corporation to ellmlnate any legal
entanglemen\s." e I
Fliers Survive in Sierra
JACKSON, Clllf. (UPI) -Robert Sim'. 17, hadn' eoten In two weelro. Illa
only drink water hid be<n sucked from 1r .. ti.illlen ll!IOW and captured In baa> Ued
to tteea.
Starr'~ Jint word1 after his rescue Monday were an offer to pay hospital 1t.
le'tdanll $50 for 1 chocolate milk shake. and a barbecued beef 1andwich. He. 1ot
neither.
St.Irr and Gene. Ebell, 33. were found near the wreckage of their amall plane
which crashed 15 days ago in the. Sierra mother lode gold country. They wtre in
fair cond:IUon today, 1uffttlng from malnutrition. frostbite and etp05Ure. Tbe.ir com.
panlon died In the plane he piloted.
"We had no food whatsoever -nothing," 1ald Ebell, a Fresno insurance sale..
man and physical fitness buff.
"We drank snow and eollected water by tying bags to tree.a and letting the
water run down. We he.a.rd aircraft all the Ume, but they couldn't aee us. I juat laid
still 1nd tried to keep warm.
"We talked about food, we talked about different things, we played cardl."
Starr, of Fresno, was spotted first Monday by 1 rescue helicopter pilot.
The pilot, George Wunburg of Rtno, Nev., decided to ny over the densely
forested, rugged area bercause some.body had seen a wisp of 5DlOke in the. snow-
blanketed region the evening before.. Wurzburg figured the crash victims may have
been trytng lo start a slgr1al fire.
They weren't. however, and origin of the smoke. re.mains a mystery.
"l saw this young boy leaning against a dead tree. waving hls arms,'' the. hell·
~opter pilot recalled. "J landed and he did everything but kiss me right on the lips."
.. The crash victim was identified as Donald Shaver, 35. of Fresno.
Ebell ,.-durlng a brief bedside new11 conference in Amador Hospital, was uked
"·hy he and Starr didn't aUempt to walk out of the mountains.
"ff you've. ever been like that." he explained slowly, "when you're just co~
plettly exhausted, It's so awfully difficult even to move."
Ebe.JI told how the light singl&-englne aircraft began icing up Jan. 11 on a
trans.Sierra flight from Fresno to Elko, Nev.
"Before J knew It,'' he. said, "vte were in the trees. And then J woke up. All I
remember ii trying to get wt of the plane."
Ebell aaJd the pair gave. up hope "two or three times" and "It waa awfullY'
cold."
Hospital attendants c=redited an unusual warm rpe.11 of winter Sierra Wtfther
for permltblg the pair's Jurvival. Daytime. temperatures recently have he.ached into
the 30s and 40s, in cootrut to the 20s normally experienced fn the 7,000-foot region,
approximately 60 miles east ol Sacramento.
"Tbe: weather _had a lot to do with their surviving,'' u.id Robert Paulae.n, ad·
ntinistrator oC Am'aaor H06pital in Jackson, a fonner gold rush mining camp.
Mercury Ban Too Late
For Poisoned Family
ALAMOGORDO. N.M. (UPI) -Gov.
-, ' ---__......., --=it , ..
u,,, .......
SIERRA SURVIVOR GENE BELL HELPED TO AMBULANCE
Ambulance Attendant, Ebtll's Wlfe, Dianne, Support Him
Suspect's
Kin Called
CLEVELAND CUP!) -The wile and
lister of one of three Cleveland men
charaed in the murders of mioe union
leader Joseph A. "Jock" Vablonakl and
his wife and daughter were the (!rat
witnesaa called today be.fore a federal
l!'and jury.
Mrs. Annette Gilly, wife of P1ul E.
Gilly, :n, and Billie Gilly, ru.. ai.ter, went
before the jury, impaneled to determine
whether the. YablonskJs were. murdered
by hired gunmen to prevent Yablonatl
from telling another grand jury about
alleged irregula1ties in the United Mine
Worke.n Union.
~trs. Gilly and h'er sister·ln·law were.
re.ported to have been questioned about
Gilly's words and actions in the presence
ol a third party. Federal prosecutors said
a wife's testJmony canriot be. admitted
agaimt her husband unless a third party
can testify about the same events.
Charles Huddleston, of Tole.do, Ohio, a
brother of Mn. Gllly, and his wife. also
appeared before the grand jury. aJona:
with Mn:. Heter. Schmitt ot Akron, Ohio,
another sister of Gilly.
It wu reported the FBI made de.tailed
lnspe.ctions of three automobiles belong-
ing to the three Cleve.land area me.p
charged with murder in the. New Year's
Eve gunshot slayings.
DRAFT BOARD
NOT SO SAFE
NORWALK, Ohio (UPI) -Vandals
broke into the selective service office to-
day, pulled 11,000 cards from the files,
aet them afire and splashed red paint on
walls and furniture.
Leona Wisenberger, exec u t 1 v e
secretary of the board, saict, "I thought
we were tn the safest place in Ohio. We
are. in a bank and it is fireproof."
David F. Cargo bu called for a
moratoriwn on the u.le and use of
merctay fungicides, but his plea came.
too late to help the family of Ernest
Huckleby, a janitor who tried to stretch
his $84.50 a week salary by raising hogs
to feed his nine ehildrtn.
Paso. Doetor1 said they are au!ferlng
from mercury poisoning caused from
eating the bacon and pi:irk from the
home-grown hogs of Erne.at Huckleby.
"Piere's not much hope. for these Jr;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
kids." aa.id Dr. E. J. Klump, the
Huckleby'1 family physician. "They will
be total vegetables if they get wt ti the Nurff Barbara M11llot cradlts a tltre11-
day-old gorilla in Mr arm.t at ~ood
Samaritan HNpital afkT tht mumal
toaa ta.Un from the Cinci•nati Zoo.
Its mother, seven-year-old Mahari,
would not nurse the offspring, oM of
tM few gorillas born in c:optiviLJI. ln-
fcmt "Sam" itpptar1 to be thriving end
i3 gai1ling wtighC. • When Robert Bohnert'• son came
home from a basketball game at
1 a.m. and said there was a camel
in the Americus family's front
ya,nl1 Bohnert suspected his s o n
had neon drinking. But when t h e
family woke "1' later there really
w a s a camel m the front yard -
daad of exposure. Indlana State po-
lice checked Indiana zoos and the
remainlnf, winter circus quarters
at Peru, nd., but no one was miss·
In& a camel. •
It waa a good dat1 for the-lad-
ies in Brito.in Sunday. The Roy.
al Shake'rpeare Company oomed
it.a: Jirst woman director, 23·~ar·
old Buu Goodb1>d11. Sh.e wiU di·
rect the' company's production
of ••King John" thi! seoson. Val-
erie Hodgson, a 15 • yeo.r • old
school.girl jrom Dove1, 1'1'UMU her
dtbut cu a sportaca.rUr, doing
the' play·bnlatl of a soccer game
for a Dovtr hcupital. Mrs. Les·
ky Pearman of Yardley got
what sM wanted for her 21st
birthday -a white tMddi.ng.
Her huabQ:nd arranged the
church 1Dtdding and champagne
TeceptJon they couldn't afford
tDMn they were married in a
Teotfi,stry office three years ago.
Ernest and bis wife. live. with eight of
the nine children, plllll two grandchildren,
in a neat., three-bedroom stucco house
painted pink and trimmed in black. The
house was inside the Alamogordo city
limitl. The. bop we.re kepi in a wire pen
oul!ide oi town.
Mrs. Huckleby was aeven months preg-
nant ln Dectmbet when lheir married
daughter arrived from Oklahoma City
with her two children for a visit.
Then Ernestine., 8. got sick. Next it was
Amos Charle11, 13. Then Dorothy Jean, 20.
They had trouble seeing. Their blood
pressure. rose. They had difficulty main·
taining their balance.
Alamogordo doc;tor& were stumped. The
children were. sent to El Paso, Ta.,
lllhere • neurologist. diagnosed the
symptoms as sleeping gickne.ss.
The children were. in a coma today at
the Providence Memorial Hospital in El
Explosion Rips
Town in Georgia
BLAKELY. Ga. tUPI) -Two perS(JnS
were killed &nd six injured today in a
butane gas explosion that knocked out
virtually every window in the downtov.·n
area. touched off a raging fire., and shook
houses 14 miles away.
The. explosion sent up a huge, ~·hite.
rnushroom.fhaped cloud and residents of
Arlington, Ga., 14 mlle1 away. said their
bouaea: shuddered. Small bits of white
paper nuttered to th& ground in yards a
mile from the scene.
Mayor Alex Howell asked the state
patrol to man an &fOWld-the~lock watch
over the downtown area to prevent
looting.
hospital."
The meat the family ate was c.on-
taminate<I by mercury residue from
fungir.ide-treated grain . It was meant as
6eed for planting but Hucllileby got mixed
up aOO fed i1 to ilia: hop. Twelve. of the.
hogs died.
Cargo ca!Jed for the moratorium on the
use of the fungicide pending a more COM·
plete information in it.s effect.a on
humans.
Huckleby already knows the. efiecta:.
Train Derails,
Kills 3 Women
In Big Pileup
ALEXANDRIA, Va (AP) -The last
five cars of a Richmond to New York
passenger train jumped the tracks at 80
miles an hour early today and rolled
down a steep embankment killing three
women and injuring scores.
The engine, four baggage and mail cars
and a siIUi passenger unlt ca.me \o a halt
Uiree-quart.ers of a mile from the derail·
ed cars with the. passenger unit's rear
wheels off the track.
Stuart Shumate, president of the Rich·
mond, Fredericksburg & P o to m 1 c
Railroad, M.ld the train made up in Rlch-
mond contained unit.s from further 6Cl.1Ut.
He said he did "not know for certain"
how many passengers were. on the train
but e!>limat.ed their number at 'ro-76.
Sixty-three. persons were laken to the
hospitals from the accident scene just
south of Alel'andria in an industrial are.a.
Most of lhe. injuries wm minor.
New Storm Hits Northwest
Nation's Midsection Finally Becomes More Mild
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•
' Fountain v .. Iley TetJay's Final
.N.Y. Stoeks
VO~. 63, NO. 22, 2 SECTIQNS, 26 PAGES
' ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, -JANUARY 27, 1970 TEN CENTS
' •
Edi·son Awards Onofre Power Boost Pacts
SAN ONOFRE NUCLEAR GENERATING STATION TO BECOME ONE OF NAT ION'S LARGEST
Edison Announces $450 Million E x~ansion of Facility Near Nixon Estat•
School Measul'es Backed
Women Voters Urge Y es on T wo Education Is sues
By RUDI NIEOZIEL.SKI
ot tlMI D1llJ' 1'1191 Slaff
Both school bon<I elections scheduled
for Huntington Beach Feb. 10 were en-
dorsed today by the League of Women
Voters.
'The group urged a "yes" vote on a $9.5
miijion constru<:lion bond and SO cent tax
override tor the Huntington Beach Union
ffilh jthool District, and an authoriaation
-&o t&iic ~ .bond.JaterNt rate to .&even
pefctnl in the Huntington Beach· City
School District. ' •
"Our endorsement of both issues is
based on the consensus or our members
lhat it is imperative lo develop the
highest potential of each child,'' said
Mrs . Jack Turk, president of the league's
Huntington Beach chapter.
If approved, the $9.S million high school
bond would be used for the construction
of another high school and revamp an -
tiquated buildings on the Huntington
Beach High School campus.
The 51).cent tax hike would raise the
district's general purpose tax rate from
its currenl $1 .39 to $1.89 per $100 of
asressed valuation.
District· administrators say the tax in-
creast is necessary to provide for ln-
"reaqd ~ and to maintai'l the present
level ol educational proararos and
services. .
,The Huntington 'Beach City School
District measu·re would simply raise the
allowable interest rate from its current
five percent to seven percent on $4 .5
million of unsold bonds.
•·we recognize the need for a sixth high
school in the area and the necessity or
strengthening Huntington Beach High
School to meet earthquake safely stan-
dards set by the Field Act." said f.1r!l.
Turk. "The tax override is absolutely
necessary to prevent a deficit in the
district's operating budget."
No opposition has been noted by the
Hunlington Beach City School District in
its quest to raise the bond interest rate.
Tn the Huntington Beach Union High
School District, haw ever, the combined
bond issue has beeti under fire for. several
months by Trustee Joseph Ribal and
Robert 'Gordon of Westminster.
Both contend that the measure is a
waste of the taxpayer's money and that
better use of existing facilities could be
made to absorb expected increases in the
student population.
Wilson Greeted
By President
In State Visit
Carswell 'A Bit Agha st'
Over Old Racist Speech
WA SHI NG T 0 N {UPI) -Prime
Minister Harold \Vilson was welcomed lo
the \Vh ite House today by President Nix-
on and recommended that the longtime
"special relationship'' between the United
Slates and Britain be jointly direc~e9,. to
wiping out social evils or the '70s and
'80s.
Wilson was greeted on the White House
lawn in overcast but early spring-like
wtather as herald trumpets struck up
''Hail Britannia.''
Wilson said he would "delay not a
moment" in starting discussions with
Nixon on ';urgent and immediate" pro-
blems of the world.
Before starting talks with Nixon at
midday. \Vll&o;n said at the wilcornihg
ceremony : "lt is urgent that lf'e discuss
together the immediate prognosis in in-
1emaUonal economic 1ff.:1ir3.''
Wilson -apparently referred to his fear
that tight money policies in the United
States might touch orr a recession that
would have fallout effrcts on the British
economy.
WASHlNGTOS IUPll -Judge
G. Harrold Cars\li·ell said today he hold~
no racist or white supremacy views al'ld
was a little bit aghast" to be reminded
he ever advocated. such ideas.
Carswell made the state ment under
qu«>stioning by the Senate Judiciary Com-
mittee at the outset or hearings on his
namination to be an associate justice or
th!! Supreme Court.
•le said he had forgotten about a
speech he made in 1943 during a Georgia
political campaign saying he believed in
while supremacy. Reporters In Florida
ar.d Georgia dug up the speech last week
from old news accounts.
··1 really was a liltle bil aghast 1 had
Countian Held
On Robbery,
K,idn i;ip Charges
Wilson also spoke of need for mutual Polict are holding an Anaheim man in
efforts to as~st in supplyirig food tcp custody today on charges that he com-,. al\E:viate t,he "great sufferlng" and starvation among Blafrans. . .~. mitted robbery and kidnap In·. a bar
He said that he hoped that in the where he waa allegedly known to patrons.
meetings tie '-'111 have .with A'mer:i~an Officer• said they arrested Nlcholas R.
leaders durlni: his two-day vbit to Floeres. 14, of 1135 E. Sanda!Wood Place,
WuhlngtO'n• ll\al .not only the \ '1Jm, II h mediate, urgent'' prob~ms ,;rou.kl .be on lbe cbargts after they a eged e was
tackled bu~ ·e1pr.eased hope that in the identified by patrooa of the b~r. t
llpirit ofc tJ)e ',u.s.~Brttlsh ~I rela-A suspeet reportedly enter~e Honey
made such a statement ." he said. "I had
lo sec it to believe I made it."
H~ said he was not trying lo deny he
n1Rde the speec!1 but told Senators : "I
am not racist. J have no not ion -open.
!.t rretive or otherY:ise - or racial
superiority."
Carswell also den ied he C\'er was an of-
ficer or a director in any country club.
C1\'il rights groups ha ve c h a r g e d
Carswell was a director of a group that
turned a golf club in TaUahassec, Fla.,
into a private course to avoid Integration.
He sa id that in 1956 he made 11 '5100
rontrlbution to rebuild a rr..ndown golf
club house and was given one share of
!.IOC'k in return. but resigned from the
i·lub a short tim<? later and wa s refunded
SIS.
Some years later, the jud~e said . his
~or. "'·anted to plar golf and the family
rejoined the club. but resigne<I ai;ialn In
1006. Hl: said he had nothing to do with
a".Y land transfers. leases l?r operation of
t~ club
Ali the hearing started, Se n a t e
Rcj)UbUcan leadtt Huiih SCoU related to
newsmen that he told Carswell !\'lpnday
"I believe the 1948 speeCh was a foolish
statement.'' He uid Carsen replied : "It
Wij$ a comJ)leJely unwise statement of
tny earlier d~s and -1· have thorou ghly
repudlsted It. apJ 1 am no racist, I have
no racist feelings.••
By JACK BROBACK ,
Of ,.. DllllW ...... fllft
'l'1le awarding or contracts ror two huge
nuclear ructors to be installed at the ex-
isting San Onofre Nuclear Generating
Station within two miles of Ult Western
White House was announced today by the
Southern California Edison Company.
Company olficlals term the move an
11all-0ut commitment" to nuclear power
generation.
Jack K. Horton, Edison chainnan and
chief executive, added, howtver, that tht
company must proceed with tM con-
struction of two convenUonal generating
units at Huntington Beach "In order to
meet customer power requirements
between 197_3 and 1'11.
''But as more and more nuclear plants
are built, we will gradually reduce our
use of exlsUng oil and gas-fired unlt.s in
the sout h coastal area ," Horton said.
A reactor contract was awarded lo
Com bustion Engineering Inc. of Windsor,
Conn. The reactors will become part of
two new Units at the S.an Onofre plant .
Cost of the units will be about 1450
million.
San Diego Gas and Electric Co., a 20
percent parlner in the 450,00lr kilowatt
nuclear unit now operating at San Onofre,
will have an equivalent ownenhlp in the
output of the two new unltls. The original
installaOon cost S90 millloa ..
The San Onofre plant Is ln San Diego
!Ste EDISON, Page %)
Seal Beach Heist
2 l(nife-wielding
Bandits Captured
Two teen-age suspectll were captured
!\1onday nfght after a pair Of bandits held
up a Seal Beach liquor store clerk by
sticking a 12 \.1-inch butcher knife to his
stomach, then eluded a hail of bullets
fired by lhe clerk.
The clerk, Jim ScotU. touched off a
silent alarm during the robbery which led
to a massive police manhunt and the ar·
rests.
Hel~ on charges of robbing Vogler's
Bay Liq'uor Store. 1780 Pacific Coast
Highway, are 1'lomas M. McCartoey, 19,
of to111 a .. u pd his. l7•y..,...ld com-
panion. ·
Clerk Scotti laid Seal Beach police the
bandlll ehtered his store al>rut 9:20 p.m.
While holdlag th~ knife to Scotti's belly,
the robbers ordered him to open the till
:ind ITand over t~e contents, which were
later determined to be around $150, ac-
rording lo Sgt. Sam D'Amico of the Seal
Beach Police Department.
As the youths escaped through the
cloor. Scotti fired one warning shot in the
11ir and four at. their legs from a high-
powered .357 magnum pistol. D' Amico
said.
A silent alarm touched off at the Seal
Beach Pollce slatlon during the robbery
prompted the immediate dispatch of all
Father's Tip
Brings Arrest
At Pot Party
A tip from a father that hi s daughter
\vas "high on drugs" led Fountain Valley
polie! to a party Sunday morning where
they arrested 12 persons. '
All 12. arrested at 6:18 a.m. at 16538
Elm Circle, were scheduled for ar-
raignment today in West Orange County
~funlcipal Court, Westminster, o n
charges of possession of marijuana or
being pr~ent where dangerous drugs
were u~ed.
Those arrested on suspicion o f
possession or marijuana were Charles S.
Lav ington, 21 , John Arian. 22. Rodney L.
Malovrazlch. 20, and Thomas C. Smith,
2:0, all of the Fount&ln Valley address:
Linda L, KanstciMr;·20 and 'Linda E.
Horton , UI, bpth of La C.inada. and Bruce
A. Wilson. '22. Pasadena.
Afrested on SlJsplcion of being present
where dangerous drugs were used are
l\1lchael R. Stevens. 22. Lucinda M.
Newman, 21, and Cecil L. Betz, 20. all o(
Pasadena: Janet E. Antich, 21, Stanton,
and a 17.:ftir-0ld girl from Nevada.
All .were booked Into Orange County
.Jail, except the juvenile girl who was
turned oVer to juveillle authorities.
Polsesslon of marijuana Is a felony o(.
fense, while being present where it is us-
ed is a misdemeanor, police sald .
available police cars who were aided in
their search or the escapees by units
from Huntington Beach, Los Alamitos
and the, Huntington Beach p o I I c e
helicopter.
Officers managed to pursue a· fleeing
"Chicle for some distance, saw it sud-
denly stop, while a man who they allege
was McCartney , escaped over a fence .
Sometime later, Seal Beech officer Ken
,Jenson managed to spot someone fitlhl"
the younger robber'11 description at 25th
SLreet and Pacific Coast Highway &na
immediately arrl!:sted him, ae<:ording to
Sgt. D'Amlco.
McCartney was apprehended by Officer
Don McGill shortJy before mktnl&ht when
he was spoiled hiding underneath a
Sunset Beach home by an informant, in·
vestigators 58id.
Nixon Withdrawal Phase
Three El_ Toro Marine
Outfits-Cl>ming Home '
From Wire Servi~
DA NANG -Troops ot thre:e Orange
Cou nty·based U.S. Marine Corp! aviation
squcdrons today gathered <1l SC!:aporl em-
blrkation points to leave here for home
\Vednesday. under the third phase or
Prtsident Nixon's Vietnam withdr11wal
plc.n.
A fourth group will deoart for Camp
Ptndleton, following formal ceremonies
at th~ sprawling U.S. base, In which Maj.
Ge:i. Edwin B. Wheeler, commander of
tne First Marine Division addressed
th.?m. •
"Well done and bon voyage," said the
CO, adding that the jet and hell(Xlptl!:r
pilots. their suapo rl personnel and the
amphibious vehicle battalion didr a Jo'b
for the free world.
All have been In Vietnam nine months
or longer.
Figh ter Attack Squadron s.42 and At·
tack Squadron 223 will return to El Toro
~.tCAS, while Heavy Helicopter Squadron
:slil is rea11signed to the Santa Ana MCAS,
where it was first commissioned .
Tl1e Third !\t11rine Amphibian Attack
Battalion will return to Camp Pendleton ,
11 ith a tentatil e Feb. 1 arrival date
aboard U.S. Nav" vessels.
tl'laJ. Robert Booher, staff lnfonnation
officer at El Toro MCAS, said today the
CQl'P5 h~ not ye~ declassified daJ a about
the Orange Co11nty units' wlthdfawal. st
he could not comment.
Some units of the total of 19 affected·
"·HJ be deactivated upon return and Cpl.
Gene Bowen, 22. of Costa ?.1e.'1a; safd' 1t
Oa Nang tOOay that he will change
uniforms when he getll home.
The Amtrac Battalion enlisted man will
be processed out of the Corps In Camp
Pendleton and rtjoln the Anaheim Police
Tl1ieves Get $30
At Marina Vault
Department as a patrolman.
"It feels great to be going home ," ad-
ded Lt. Col. James W. · Lazzo, com~
lllBnding officer of Attack Squadr~ 233,
ading that he hasn't seen his 4-)'t!!t~ld
daughter for more than a year.
First Sgt. Joseph Sagan. a 24-year
1·eteran with nine overlil!:as tours will be
coming back to El Toro with Attack
Squadron S42 and is glad of it.
"It is alway~ a good feeling to be going
home," he said.
Pnsident Nixon has ordered that 50.000
more AmE:rican servicemen be removed
from South Vietnam by April 15. About
60,000 wer,e witbdray.iri under phases l
and n which began last summer.
Currtnt U.S. troop strength In Vietnam
is 469,900.
The 001000 n1en In the third phase with-
drawal will all De removed from Vie tna1n
by April JS and will bring to 110.000 the
number of American troops withdrawn
since the U.S. pullout began last July 8.
New evidence of {he ' Communist
t-uJJdup was cited by the U.S. Com mand
in reporting the dlscovery of several Viet
Cong and Nort:1 Vietnamese @rms caches
at widely separated points in South Viet•
nam Monday and today.
Troops of the U.S. 25th Infantry
Division tll'rned up the biggest such
siore.Jwuse of arms 40 miles northwest of
Saigon. They found I ~'i. tons of arms and
ammunition,· including 20 bi~ rocket.s, 43
indi vidual weapons and-two light machine
guns.
Near the central highlands city or
!See TROOPS, Pa~e %)
Orange Co as&
Wea titter
tionship, Ufty coukt UW.e i j•tongtt. eoioltr Don bar, ,30t W. Lincoln Ave .. •t lbout a
look 1l lhe~le111l lo 'lhe world ~·" Lm. brflld'·~•--1 i..11;1 M~ """""Ilk& lht '10s .,,;n,,yohd." ' " .,...,. ~ ·-· ..... He said that ~ Unit~. States 1nd • .fS'..cali~ atftomatlc. He1 herded tht G~at Britain could share their 1'common ownel-and patrons lnto a back room, t.ook
Bad After Taste
The flre vault at Marina Hi1h School
was broken into over the weekend and $30
taken, 11ehobl offlci1l1 told police Monday.
Glenn Dysinger. principal of the high
tchool. Hid t0meone had broken throllfh
the door of lhe fire vault where
documents and school rl!:COrds are kept,
11oparently searchlf\I for large amounfs
It'll take 1 &ood atifl breeze to
blow these clouds away -and
that's what 's coming on Wedne ...
day. Temperatures will stick to
their low eo ra111e.
experience and common thinking" on an undetenn.ined amount of money and
common problems ch a 11 en gin g ln-fled with barmaid Cheryl D. Shipley, 21 .
dustriallied nations. of s c s s A He said the two nations shoul d worlt lZ03 · en ter t., anta na , lls A high school s.tudenl body president
togl!:lher to pnveht urban countries from hostage. attending a leaders·. luncheon with the
becomlnc "slavet of a scarred and ll· People at the bar told police they knt:w t ,1uperin tendent of lhe Garden Crvve
~ eovlrOJlmcnl ol our own mak· him as "Nick''. Flueres was arrested in • tr nifit:d Sc~ Dislrlct was arre.A~ on a ¥" f.r "':'\' t f : ,. Ms lJ)&rtment Wh~rt ofUetrtfoun4 Mba mar)juiuia i:hergc afle~ de.rt Mor>d l:)'. -'-':..:.'-->--'--'--_,...,.._..,, __ .,.. t Sh1pley tied on a bed unharmed. Polk!e Santhligo .·Hlkb sd~ 1,58 Preskf~t Slo~lt Markei alto reported they found the!: money and Cunnrr Swanton, 11~ Of 1.i)702 Eucl11J sl.. : ------------~" the: gun. Garden Crovt:. wt1 •1dm1Ued to -Orante-
NEW 'voRK IAP) _ Srocks wandered. After he .was taken Into custody. ,pollet County J uvenile lifllJ on a cha rge of
deeJ>er into loslnJ terrttory in slow trad-'.oond ht ht th~ descrlpt fon ofa ,au_gpttt possel!ilfili or rrtat1;u-an .
Int today -with decline• k!ading advances 1n the \2 : IS a.m. robbery of the Tic t oe Santiago High· School VI~ Prlnc1pa.I
by two to'·one. (Set quotetlons, Pages 10-MarkC! 111 $00 ·N. East St. and ch11rged Robert Kernan to14 police he called the
11 1: him with an additional count of robbt:ry. youlh to his office ai'ld asked what he ~ad
Student Leader Held for Drugs
In his bulging pocket. at which time of money ,
Swanson pulled out a plastic baa of 1'We have two baaketball game11 oVe:r
~ gretn, Jtafy material, th~ w~k,.eod and someone probably , _ thou&ht tile!" Id 1>c. 1 lot of mOl)tY·ln "It's just al{aUa and catnip.'' nc the o ft. But under-district. polley 'f{t-
reoortedly said. 'd<J>Oi!-~ mooe 'JO U)e bOilk ~ ~
Kernan apparently suggested It would end or the d11y.'~l1in~ Oyitrfctrl" •
be unwite to take the bag alot1g Jo lunch The 139 take,.. was Jrom a .malJ fund
with Supt. David Paynter1 . · for coffee colle<:led by teachers .. 1*·.ld·
Ourlni lh• luhcheon--Wloci; ..Carden -did· Ir.thin& .,,. w•s !al<eri Ind tit<. on'1--'
U}'ove Police na)'cotlcs iAleCtJvea were aama1e done WAS to the door ot, ttM ftrt
"""lyiln, lhe wetd •n<f 'fintbl dt<lleed'll vault, .localed In lhe 1dmi.i1lt1_tl" ol· .'
"1a11 more than alfalfa fJld cstnip. fice1.
•
INSIDE TOD/\ Y
During the da11 she toue1
1Cords around <u1d at night 1h1
dots the same with her c14rveJ"
blll her 1tudtnt.I think ,, •• ortal
tltcir Enali1h teach.er dancc1 ht
a choru1 lint. Paoe ltl,
'
•• .,. ........... , ............. , ...... -.-................ , .... ~·-..i· .. :o • ~ < ...... ":0U:A OU ·T·';t;;•1;:.•:a:pe;ps-••>>••£¥S¥$$U:Z - -' -- -.. ,.---v-..-..·,-':;;olc.= .• o:~==,..,.7"7~~~1!;;:>'~.,......, .... _ ....... _.,.. ________________________ _
•
J OllLY •lLOT H
Congress t o Act Toro POW
Nixon Ex plains Wife Lands
.
HEW Bill Ve·to In fokyo •
WASHlNGTON (AP) -P:resident Nix-
on formally told Congress today he
vetoed a $19.7 billion l-fealth-Educatlon-
Labor 11pproprlation bill because it would
feed inOa.Uon, foster inefBcit1icy and
misdirect money.
Concress boosted the blll nearly $1.3
billion beyond tbe level Nls:on had reCf.lm-
nlended, and the President signed his
veto me!sage with a ptn flourish televis-
ed lo the nation Pi.1onday night.
From Page J
EDISO N ...
County. but Is situated /ust south of San Clemente, Orange Coun y's southernmost
community and President Nill'.on's new
home. The old Hamilton Cotton estate
which the President purchased la st year
ovtrlooks the sea at lhe southern tip or
San Clemente.
When it was first proposed in the e~rly
1960's, the ~an Onofre nuclear plant was
the subject of blfter opposition from con-
:servationisls, surfers and civil defense
advocates. Since its construction it has
slipped into virtual anonymity.
Two I.I million kilowatt unita will be
added at San Onorre. Th ey will provide
enough power to serve the equivalent
t lectrical needs or a city of z.s mlllio11
people. The addition of the units will
mate one of the nallon's largest nuclear
generating stations.
Announcement of the new nulcear units
was first made three weeks ago in Los
Angela by William R. Gould, ~iiOn vice
president during hearlna:ii on the Hu~
Ungto11 Beach expansion before the state
Public UUllUes Commisalon.
Construction of the Hr:iit or the nuclear
additions is expected to begin next sum-
mer and commerical operation is
scheduled In 1976. The second unit would
go Into, commerclal operation a year
later, Horton 1ald.
''Beginning w\lh the San Onofre addi·
lion we are committed to build only nu•
clear power plants for our major gene·
ratlon sources In the coastal baaln," Hor·
ton 1aid. "This Is another 1tep Edison is
takin g in the Interest or cleaner air for
Southern Califomla."
"Looking to the 1980's. Edison has 3c-
<"elerated its continuing research pro-
~rams aimed at developing the engineer-
ins safeguards necessary to perm1t the
con.<struction of future nuclear plants in
urban areas close to the electrlcal load
thev serve," the Ediso n eaecutive said. The.w studies will gl•e pr1me corv;ld-
cralion lo esthetlc and envlroru:rt~ntal
values, 'Including the reaslbillty or ~lac
ing major portions of future nuclear ra-
cllitles below lhe surface of the ground.
"Jn the current year, Edison will spend
about $500,000 in this research effort,"
Horton concluded.
f'rona Page 1
TROOPS' .. ; f
Pleiku. the U.S. 4th Infantry Division
found mortar round!I, rocket grenades,
har.d grenades and plastic explosives.
South Vietnamese paratroops ulud a
cache of 103 Individual and two crew.
served \\'eapons 75 milts northwest of
Saigon .
\\'ar communiques said fighting was
relallvely llght across the na tion although
Viet Cong gu erril\a11 ambu1hed an allled
truck convoy just east of Saigon Monday
night . lt v.·as the rirsl attack that clme
to the capital since 1968.
Von Bra un Move d
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Wernher Von
Braun, one of the 1reat rocketeer11 or
modem times, ¥ being transferred to
'Vashlngton lo help the 5pace agency plan
future explorations by man of the solar
system .
DAILY PILOT
O .. AHC.E COAST 'Ul t.IU•IHG (.OMl'.t.lil'I'
l\tht rf N. 'W114
Ptto GI/II .... '""hol'll!r ,
Tho"'" IC1 1•;1
l!G110f
T~'"''' A. "4.i•p~:~,
M1nt11~1 t.O•lt•
Al'ot,f W, ltltt
AUllClt ll tO•IOI'
HM~tl111tt•11 hMll Offlc,e
17171 lt•t h l oul••tr4
M•ihftt A0d itu: ,,0. I •• 790, t26•1
Otht1 OffltM .. ..,_ •••t" 11l ~ •• .,, .. _
Col!t Mflt llO W'11 IU~ ilrttl
H...,.,t 1"'11: 1111 WHI lklMa 111111¥f,..
J I .
Then '9dlY he sent th.:t biJI back to
Capil<>l mil alone with the lengthy
message amPlifylng his reasons for re.
jecting it.
Democratic leader1 were pushing to
override the veto,. and somt were claim·
Inf hopefully lhey.luitl the volts to do It,
but ~ claims were disputed.
Sen. Hugh Scott (R·Pa.), s a Id
~publicans in the Hou$e, or tr necessary
in the Senate, will sKie with Nixon in
numbers sufficient to au1taln the veto,
although he conceded some Democratic
eupport would f>e needed.
The House will vote Wedneldoy. If it
vote1 lo owrrlde, then the Senate will act
later. No ~lme for a possible Senate vote
hu yet been &el. but Democratl.: Leader
Mike Mansfield of Montana predicted the
Senate will vote to override the veto If it
gets lhe chance.
Nl1<'n offered little In the way or com·
proml!e to gain additional aupport.
Some legish~tors had expected him to
give a bit on his opposition to a $600
million item ror grants to schools in
areas where large numbers of children of
federal employes and servicemen allend
them. The figure was nearly $400 million
more than the administra.tion i1ad recom·
mended.
Ni1on promised only to study the pro-cram ana make recomm endations later. f! . " '
• Frolll Wire Service•
TOKYO -Ttrud and blttor d<eplte lbc
fact they _never expected much, an l:L
Toro woman and three otbtr POW wives
arrived here today. admitting a
worldwkle misl(ion in behalf Of rnlulr'tg
mllit~ men -theirs and others -has !ailed.
~They .hope to meet with Ml"!. Elsaku ~ato, wife of Japan 's prime minister a ~efll as Japaneee Red Cross offklal:
ore departing on the last !er hom~ward to the Southland. 0
.Mn. Carole Hanson, 30, or 24111 B1rdroct Drive. El Toro has vi5lted
many nations, including lhe war zone w~iere their pilot husbands were shot
down, but have been eilher rebuffed or
orrered helpless sympathy.
The rour talked with U.S. Sen. Eua:ene
McCarthy (0-Mmn.) In lhelr short 1tliy in
Moscow and were told be Is ai concerned
over the pUaht of draftdod1er1 and
deer_ters abroad as men held lri No.r:th Vl~tbaiff Pfli6ns: -"That reaU)o Jfurt, •·
said Mrs. Arthur Mtarns, of Loi An&ele:ii;, \\'lf~ of Alr Fdrce Lt: Col, Arthur s.
~teams.
"ft hurt to ha~ my huaband 1aiuhrich-
ed !)et ween dtsaiert and draC}dodift."
"Four Bucceulve presidents hive tried
to reduce or reorl~nt this program,'' Ni1-
on said. 1'Yet the Congress in this bill not
only perpetuates this unfair program.
it adds money to it. It is wrong to sharply
increase the impacted school aid pr<r
gram in the race of the need to make
lon~-overdue reforms in this law.
Baby Elephant Walker
Mrs. Hlnaon, wh01e hulbaiid, Marine
.Corps Capt. Stephen P. Ha!IJOn ,.11 •bot
down Wllil~ llyln1 a lle!Jcopter mldletl
evacuation mlaion Jn Laot nwly four
Yep'I qo, said they believe the war is \.Vhen Ringling Bros. Barnum and Bailey came to
i1iami Beach, city queen Coni Ensor Invited some
of the staff members for a walk. Her friends balk·
ed aLwadini.ill the 1uit 11111 certainly dldn't mind walking the streets of Miami Beach with the curvy
Miss Ensor.
Ju.rt. " -
"All we want to know Is Jf our
husbands are alive or dead and I don't
think that's too much to ask." said Mrs .
Hanson. "The adminis tration will make recom·
mendatlons for reform of this program
hued on a study requested by the
Congre~. I will submit these recom-
mfndations shor tly."
YRs Accuse UCI Chief Senate Retains
'No Knock ' Part
Of Raiding Bill
"f think "'e sta rted out on this trip with
a feeling that our trip wasn't going to
bring any specific answers for us and
perhaps we wouodn't see the resulta of it
for some time. In making reforms. Nixon sa id he.
favored including a "no hardship clause "
guaranteeing that no school district's
budget would be less than 90 percent of
what lt had In 1969. .
Of 'Double Standards' "But 1 do feel it's been a cumula tive
eHort, and I don't think Hanoi can con-
tinue its present policy if countrie!I
around the world will speak out for the
inhumanity that Hanoi is engaging in in
regards to these men," Mrs. Hanson said. Impacted school aid reaches Into many
congressional districts whose represen-
tatives are wary of any attempts to pare
the program in an election year.
Ni1on clashed wlUi Congress allO over
its addition or $104 mill.ion for grant.! to
build and modernize c o m m u n i t y
hosp:tals. He cited this as an example of
misdirected money on grounds that "a
more pressing netd l!I tn fund arrtbulatory
care facil ities which offer an alternatiV'e
to expensive hospital care" -at he pro-
poled to Contru1 laat April.
The Pre1ldenl said that he would not
have vetoed in~ases CongreS! provided
for health research If they had &een
enacted separately. He said t hey
represent Jes.:; than hair of one percent of
the total appropriation.
Egyptian Rockets
Hammer Israelis
CAIRO rAPl -The Israeli general
mUitary headquarters in Sinai was
pounded with rocket! by an Egyplian
commando unit at dawn today, the
mtli tary command announced.
The announcement. carried by the P.iid·
die East Ne"·s Agenc y, said the raid took
place 120 miles east of the Suez Canal
and was on "one or the most important
military targelS, since it holds co mmand
over the entire Sinai anny positions as
well as the Gau Strip."
tn Tel Aviv, a military spo)l;esman de-
nied. the Cairo report even beCore It was
announced by Egypt. He said Arab guer-
rillas fired Improvised bazooka rockets at
the Nahal Dlkla setUement in northern
Sinai before dawn but "caused no
damace or casualUes whataoever."
.. . , .
• •••
The board of directors of Orange Coun·
ly Young RepubUcans today accused UC
Irvine Chancellor Daniel 0 . Aldrich Jr. of
employing a double standard with regard
to Students for a Democratic Society
(SOS>.
A resolution from the board said it is
"inexplainable~· that Aldrich would ap-
prove hiring of former SOS leader Miiie
Krisman as a campus administrator and
then deny ~rmisslon to th~ campus $.OS
chapter tO ·host a SOS National Con-
ference •.
eowiiy Yaun, Republlcari Ch1irman
Colonel Doner charged that Aldrich Is
trylna to please the corrtmunlty while ap-
peasing the radicals.
"The chancellor will please neither
group with his inane edict. He must mike
a decision to either stand with the com-
munity or the radicals. He can no longer
afrord to play both sides of the street,"
Doner declared.
The chancellor was unavailable toda)'
for comment.
Previously, he has explained that h!
knew Krisman when he approved the hit·
Gr ier Asks Court
To Di ssolve l\1a rriage
LOS ANGELES <UP1) -Roosevtlt
Grier, former L..os Anj:eles Rams rootball
tackle turned television personality, J)eti·
tl::ined superior court'Monday to disBolve
his marriage.
Grier, 37, married his wife Bernice. 37,
Feb. 2, 1963 in Montclair, N.J. They
separated one year 1go and have no
children. Grier cited 1'irreconcllable dif-
ference'' in asking for the divorce .
•
A Real Fish Story
John Prucoll (rlJlht), cur•tor of Marlncl•nd, and John Fitch, State
Fish and Geme (;eboratory director, examine a bl( one that didn't
gel away -a rare 14-fool. 250-pound oar fish that washed ashore at
Leo Carrillo Beach. The slender creature, \t•hlch normaUy Uves at
rtopths or 1.200 feet . lo!! four loci or toll to. hungry •hark.
ing (Kriarilan fo!'merly wa! UCI stud~nt
body president) and found him .sincerely
committed to makin& construe t Ive
changes. Llkewlile, he said, he knows the
campus SDS sludenta and they have
never done anything disruptive.
He does not know SOS members fro m
other placts and elaewhtre SOS has been
involved in disruptions.
But the chanctllor has not offered that
as a full explanation for hi• deci.slons. He
bas acknowledied that hll most recent
decision to not permit th! SOS National
Conference w1s polltlcal.
He himself Is aware or .90rl1e In·
consistency. When told rtcently by a 1tu·
dent, ''This is the 1ame issue as Mile
Krisman ," he anawet6d:
"1 know it is and I am hung up as a
consequence."
'Sea Monster'
Washes Ashore
PALOS VEl\DES fUPl) -Th• bOdy of
a rare, J4·foot long oar fi11h. a sea
creature believed to be the caust of
many an~ient sea monster tales. is bting
studied at Marineland or th t Pacific.
1'he serpent\ike, red·finned fish , which
washed ashore Sunday at Leo Carrillo
Beach, ls only lhe fifth round in SOOthem
Calirornta during the l)ast 100 years.
The: creature uaually lives et a depth or
1.200 feet and Is more common In the icy
waters of Scandinavia.
John Fii.ch, research director for the
State Fish and Game Laboratory, said
part of the fish's tall was missing,
po551bly because of an attack by a sh~rk.
WASH INGTON (AP) -The Senate
voled today to retain in a pending drug
control bill a clause allowing federal
narcotic! agents to stage no-warning
raids.
The Idea is to prevent suspect! rrom
destroying narcotic evidence w h 11 e
raiding officers wait oullide the door to
gel in .
The action came a! the Senate ap-
proved, 70 to 15. an amendment offered
by Assistant RepubUcan Ltader Robert
P. Griffin el Michigan.
The Griffin amendment to the ad·
minist ration • backed drug control blll
ptrmits iS!uance of suc h "no-knock"
\varrants but adds some restrlctionl to
ease doubts some senator• bave a -
presaed tha t no knock raids violate the
Fourth Am1ndment's gua rantee of
pr ivacy and protection from unreasonable
search and seizure.
Moments before. the Senate beat back
twin auempts by Sen. Sam J. Ervin (0-
N.C.). to kill the Gr iffin amenliment and
~to subslltUte his own languag1 allowing
no-warning raids only If offictrs et the
set'ne detennined that without it. vital
e\'idence was certain to be destroyed .
Ceutury Plaza Hotel
Plaus Ex pansion
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Plana were
announced Monday for a $30 million ad·
dition to the Century Pl1za Hotel, giving
it 1 l,&tJo..room capacity and making it
lhe largest In Southern Callfomla.
The new itructure, 1 S5-Btory curved
tower, will adjoin the present Century
Plaia and overlook the back lot of the
2oth Ceptury·Fo1 Movie Studio.
ANOtHER •••••
Mrs. Hanson and three other California
"·omen whose husbands were shot down
in Vietnam combat appeared at a ne\\'S
c::inference before leaving for Tokyo. The
other women are Mrs. John Hardy. 27;
Mrs. Roo~evelt Hestle Jr., 37, and Mrs.
Mearns, also 37, all or L..os Angeles.
When they get home, Mrs . Hanson said.
the wives will encourase other women to
make similar trips.
"We'll C<lnt.inue to write letten to every
nati6n as We have done before we left."
she said, adding she and Mrs. Hardy
planned t(I go to Paris and confront North
Vietnamese ofiicials there.
Mrs. Hanson said North Vietname11e
diplomats In Vietnamese, Laos, "didn't
even have the courtesy .•. to see me."
"I stOOd out in the dri veway waiting for
an answer, wMtber they would set up an
appointment for me or not." she said. "I
could go to any embassy of any country
~round the lvorld and I would at least be
treated~ with courtesy. The North Viet-
namese embassy didn't even have the
court esy to invite me in and &peak with
me for 10 minutes, and to me. s clvllited
ns tlon in the world today does not behave
in this manner .•·
ri.1rs. Hardy said she thought it "in·
crrdible'' that the North Vietnamese
lvoukl not accetil information on their
soldiers held prisoner in South Vietnam
and Laos.
Slate First Talks
BONN, Gennany (AP) -West
Germany and Poland will begin their
first post·World War II political talks In
Warsaw Feb, 5, Foreign Mlnlster Walter
Scheel announced today.
E-X-P-A-N-S-1-0-N
w. hi ve •lw•ys endeavored to furni1h th•
finest service anywhere for CAR PETING •nd
DRAPERIES. T owuds this end, we have jU>I com·
pletod an t nlargmoe nt of f•cilities which will ••·
able us to Serve you better!
Come in and se• our huge inventory of fine
carp1tin9 and browse threu9h our new remnant
room, where we have +houwi nds; of yards of smeU
end room-size remnant&!
UNUSUAL INSTALLATION l'IOIL!MS?
Come in and talk with 1ny of our salesmen-who •" heve hi d 1xt1nsiv1
Ins I a llatlon "p•ri ence !
ALDEN 'S'
CARPITS e DRAPIRllS
1663 PLACENTIA·C05TA MESA
M6·4131
ll YIAU IUVtNO ~Hl O•ANOI COAIT
Saddleba~k Today's Final
..
VOL. 63, NO. 22,' 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES
•
Mission Viejo
By BARBARA KREJlllCH
CH Ille D1Uy 1"11111 S\11!
In the spring of l966. a 24-y"r-old
mother of three called her dodOr. and
told him, "I think 1 ma y 00 pregnant
again -and I'm sure I have lhe
measles."
Joanne Sanlley of t.lission Viejo was
right on bot.h counts. She was in the first
mOnth of pregnancy and she v.•as one of a~ estim~ted 20 million persons stricken
In t.he devastating epidemic or rubella
1German measles) that swept the coun-
try lt\at year. '
Her fourth child, Billy, now three years
old, ls one of 30,000 Survivlng '.youngslers.
born with multiple handicaps as a result ·
of the epidemic.
When a woman contracts rubella in the
first three months of pregnancy, there is
a 40 percent clla:rict that her child, if botn
all~ will hav~ more than one h;;r.ndicap
'
,, '
: DAILY P'ILOT l"Plttt 1W •k ll•nl k""lv
BILLY SURPRISES MOM BY STAf!!OING, SINGING SONG
With Patience, Matcking Skills to' Nativ1 Intelligence
Laguna Schools Appoint
Hess to Top Aide Post
Dr. Charles A. Hess, has been ap.
pointed assistant superintendent o f
Laguna Beach Unified School District in
a newly created post that y,;iJI include
district business management.
Hess, 44, currently principal or Santa
Ana Valley High Schou!, v:iU replace
Edwin Hind business m-anager,·retiring
in July aft~ more than 20 years 'with the
district.
Hess will begin at an annual salary of
$2tl.784, a few hundred more than he is
now receiving. Himrs salary is $17,280.
Or. William Ullom, district superin·
tcndent. said lhe new certificated post
\\'iii include a broader range of duties
tt\an i$ now included in lbe position 9f
business mana11er, a greater Involvement
in the educational programs.
gram and planning development of new
school plants.
Ullom said also that schools by 1972
will be required by the sli'lte to link eve ry
budget item to a learning objective, evf.n •
to school busing. This will be part or Dr.
lless' responsibility.
He will also SUV'! as a member of the
superintendent's cabinet in curricull<m
P.lanning and development. As such he.
Will ·confer with the classified supehisOr:
principals and teachers, and w i I I
cooperate with his counterpart in ciir·
riculum, Owen Tait, assistant superin..
tendent or instruc;tional ser\/ices.
Hess was a teacher mor~ than 14 years.
He worked in research analysis for two
years in the district office ~f Santa Ana .
Unified School District.and was vice prin·
(See HESS, P1ge !) •
ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, JANUARY 27, 1970 TEN CENTS
Tot's L-if e: Tragedy to Hope
native Intelligence. - sight. hearing, heart, motor abilities
can be affected in varying degrus.
~1ental retardation formerly was con·
sidered among the likely handicaps, but
careful sludies have shown that th is js a,
fallacy . Because of his blindness,
deafness or motor difficulties, lhe rubella
baby will develop slowly arid so1Tetimes
appear retarded. But doctors now realiu that careful rehatiilltallon programs c.1n,
with patience, .match his skills \vit~. his
A group of 50 sucb childrtn in
Australia. believed to have ben mentally
as well as phsyically handicapped, y;as
given such lntenalve thera py. Follow.up
studies after 25 ye.an foUnd all bul five
were leading active, productive ·lives .
Bir.th Vi~tim Now
Joanne Santley did not know all this
when sbe. called her doctor and heard
him say, "If yOti thillk you have measles
(See BILLY, Poe• II
"Real Show-off'
•
On of re Power Boosted
Edison Announces All Out Nuclear Commitment
By JACK BROBACK
Of ffM OILIY Pl .. I ll•ff
The awarding of contracts for two huge
nuclear reactors to be illstalled at the ex·
isling San Onofre Nuclear Generating
Station within two miles or the \Vestem
\Vhlte House was announced today by the
Southern California Edison Company .
Company officials term the move an
··all-out commitment'' lo nuclear power
generation.
Jack K. Horton, Edison chairman and
chief executive, added, however, that the
company must proceed with lhfa eon-
strucUon o( two conventional cener"tlng
units al Huntington Beach "in order to
meet customer power requirements
between 1973 and 197&.
"But as more and more nuclear plants
are built, we \\'ill gradually reduce our
use or existillg oil and gas -fired units in
the south coastal area," Horton said.
A reaclOr contract was awarded to
t:on1bustlon Engineering Inc. of Windsor,
Conn. The reactors will become part of
two new units at the San Onofre plant.
Cost of the unils will be about $4SO
million.
San Diego Gas and Electric Co., a 20
percent partner in the 450.000 kilowatt
nuclear unit now operating at San Onofre,
\\'ill have an equivalent ownership in lhe
output of the two new units. The origillal
installation cost $90 mllllon.
The San Onofre. plant Is in San Diego
County, but is situated just south of San
Hippie Issue
Tossed Around
Bv Officials
Nixon Withdrawal . Phase
Three · El Toro Marine
,,
Laguna 's atlitude. toward its hippie
population, both resident and floating,
Outfits Coming Home
came In for turthe.r scrutln)' Monday F'rotn Wltt kmctJ
night as planning commissioners, Citizens DA NANG -Troops of thret Orange
. Advisory Commiltee members and plan-County-based U.3. Marine Corps aviation
ner Abraam Krushkho\/ got together for a squsdrons today gathered dt seaport em.
planning workshop. b3rkation points to leave here for home
I. •-· f 1 1a.. \Vednesday, und'r the third phase or Ear 1er, luc ire 0 'some 0 •ic com-Prt'Sident Nixon's Vietnam withd rawa l n1issl:iners had been aroused b y
Krushkhov's introductory comments to ph.n.
the goals report, in which he suggested A fourth group will depart for Camp
. that the Art ()}lony consider takin11 ad· Pend.leton, fo~lowlng form a~ ctr~monie.s va11tage~of the creative talents of the hi~ _ at this spr~whng U.S. base, 1n which ~1aJ.
pie populace and consider it as a possible Gen. ~win B .. wh~l~r: commander of
community asset. tne First Marine D1vW1ion addressed
"In the face of the fact that 37 percent l~m. ,, . of the cit:zeus responding to the attitude Well ~one and bon .voyage , s~1d the
survey listed hippies as our number one. c.o. add 1n~ that the Jet and hehcople~
problem, I'm puzzled by the guggestion p1lots .. ~heir su~port per~nnel . and ~he
that they might become an asset," said amph1b1ous v~h1cle battahon did a Job
Commissioner Robert French. for the free "or!d. . .
••rt mitht be a mistaken ass umption.'' All have been 1n Vietnam nine months
!:aid Krushkho v, "but I assure you it or l~nger.
wasn't arrogant. as someone suggested. Fighter AllacK Squadron 542 and Al·
If we see a problem it's our· duly to try to
lack Squ?dfori 223 will return to t i To'ro
1\1CAS, while Heavy Helicopte r Squadron
:.41 Is reassigned lo the Santa Ana MCAS,
where it was first commissioned.
The Third Marine Amphibian Attack
Battalion will return to Camp Pendleton ,
11 ith a tentati ,1e Feb, 1 arrival date
aboard U.S. Nav; vessels.
1\faj . Robert Booher, staff information
officer at El Toro MCAS, said today the
Corps has not yt:?~ declassified data about
the Oran~ County units' wllhdraWal, .JO
he could not comment .
Some units of lhe total of 19 affected
"'ill be deactlvate'd upon rtturn and Cp l.
Gene Bowen. 22. of Cos{a ldesa~ said at
Da Nang ti>day that he will change
uniforms when he gels home.
The Amtrac Ballalioi\ enlisted man will
be processed out of the Corps' in Camp
Pendleton and rejoin the Anaheim Police
(See TROO~ f•J•, Ii
f!'ld a solution.
"Surely there must be some worthwhile
people among them -many have talent.
~taybe they come here because they
think It's a 'swinging. hang-loose sort o(
to"·n.' I think we could try to find some
good in i~."
.. What 11ood do you find~" queried com·
mission chairman Fred Briggs.
Mrs. Hanson, Other Wives
Admit Missio11 a F allure
"I "iavt two daughter11 at home," said
the pianner, "and these young people
with the long hair and whatnot are h1 aod
out of the house all the time. Some of
them are. very intelligent. I don't know
what their future will be but I have faith
Jn their 11.ood Intentions. After all, it's a
human resource that can't be ignored."
Said Commissioner Charles Johnson,
who had raised the initia l objection,
•·we.·re talking about a transient group
like those who ran the touri sUl out of
Yosemite and ruined parts: oi San Fran·
cis'.!<I." .
•·we have police power and· health and
safely regulations -the means to
regula ,. many of the problems,., said
I\. ushkhov. "Ifs part and parcel of a lot
of things that are hlli>penlng tuday, like
(Set lllPPIF.S, P•ce %)
From Wire Se.rvicts
TOKYO -Tlrlld and bitter despite the
fact they never expected much, an El
Toro woman and three other POW wives
arrived here today, ·admitting a
worldwide mission in behalf of missing
military men -theirs and others -has
failed.
They hope to meet with Mrs. Eisaku
Sato, \vife of Japan's prime minister, as
well as Japanese Red Cross officials
before departing on the la st leg
hl11'rteward ta-th~Southland.
~1rs. Carole '11anson, 30, of 24111
Birdrock Drtve. El Toro, has vis ited
many nations. inc luding the war zone
\V~.ere their pilot husbands were shot
dow n, but have been either rebuflcd or
offered helpl~s sympathy.
The four talked with U.S. Sen. Euae.ne
1\fc:Carthy ID-Minn.) In their short 1tay in
1\loscow and were told he is as concerned
01·cr the plight of draftdodgers and
dc~erters abroad as men held In North
Vietnam prisons. "That really hurt,"
said Mrs. Arthur Mearns, of Los Angeles,
\rifl" of Air Force Lt. CoL Arthur S.
1\1eams.
"It hurt to have my husband sandw!ch·
cd beh~1een des~rters and draftdodgers."
~frs. Hanson, whose husband, Marine
Corps Capt. Stephen P. Hanson was shot
down while Oylng a helicopter medicaf
cvi:t'Uatlon mh,slori In Laos nearly four
years ago, saiJ they believe the war is
ju:it.
Clemente, Orange County's southernmost
community and President Nixon's new
home. The , old Hamilton Cotton estate
which the President purcha sed lasl year
overlooks the sea at the southern tip of
San Clemente.
When it \\'as first proposed in the early
1960's, the San Onofre nuclear plant was
the subject of bitter opposition from con-
servationi sts, surfers arid civil defense
advocatcll. Since Its construction it has
(See EDlSON, Page ti
Carswell Says
He'd Forgotten
Racist Speech
WASH/~GTO~ !UPI! -Ju d ( t
G. Harrold Cllrswell said today he holds
no raclat or whi~ supremacy views and
aws "a little bit aghast'' to be1reminded
he ever advocated such ideas .
Carswell made the statement under
qutstioning by the Senate Judiciary Com·
miltee at the outset of hearings on his
namination to be an associate justice of
th'! Supreme Court.
He said he had forgotten about a
speech he mnde i11 HHS during a Georgia.
political campaign saying he. believed in
wh1te supremacy. Reporters in Florida
ar.d Georgia dug up the !))CCCh la st week
from old news atcounts.
"I really was a litlle bit aghast I had
1nade such a statement." he said. "I had
lo see it to bellev'e I made ii.''
H~ said he was not trying to deny he
n1ade the. speech but told Senators; "I
am not ra cist. I have no notion -open.
sc('reti ve or otherwise -of racial
superiority."
Carswell also denied he ever was an of-
ficer or a director in any country club.
C1\'il righla , iroups have , ch a r II e d
Carswell was a director of a group that
turned a golf club in Tallahassee, Fla.,
into a private course lo avoid integration.
He. said that In 19S6 he made a SlOO
contribution to rebuild a rundown golf
club house and Was given one share of
stock in ,return, but resigned from the
c:lub a short lime later and wa s refunded
$75.
Some years later, the judge said, his
sor. wanted to play golf and the famity
re.Wined the club. but resigned again In
1966. He said he had nothing to do with
ariy land transfers, leases or operation or
the club.
As the hearing started. S e n a t e
Rcooblican leadt.t Hugh Scott 'te!ated to
newsmen that he told Carswell Monday
"I believe the 1948 speech was a foolish
statement." He. said Carsell replied : "It
was a completely unwise statement of
my earlier days and I have thoroughly
repcdlated It. and I am no racist. I have
no racist feelings."
Hess will );le&tn his Laguna duties Feb.
16. Ullom saild, "Dr. Hess will O~vote his
time dexeloph)g the !970-71 budaet for the
district unjll July while Hind i}Ylll con·
tinuc to bi.ndle business malters In the
dislHct."
UUom said ~· new and broader job
ducription developed In the morithl ~
board and admlnlitratlon in\e<fl•wed ap-.
plicants for replacemenL o,t.Hlncl. There
College . ·Trustees Helping Leftist~? Weatller
It'll take a good stlff breeze, to
blow these cloud1 away -and
that's what's coming on Wednes-
day. Temperatures will ilick to
their low eo ranae.
were 72 appllcatlons. • ,
A 19--point list of job responsibilitle1
will be part of Hess' duties. They range
from budgel and payroll to directing all
phases of the classified per!Onnel pro-
Slo<'k Hnrk4!t
NEW YORK (AP ) -Stocks wandered
deeper into loslng territory in slow lrad·
ing today, wilh declines le~din1 ad\/ancts
by two to one. (See quotaUOllS, Pages IG-
11 ),
Analygts sild they detected a dry ing
up of buyln1 as in vC!lors S;Bt on the sid~
linea, waiting OUL the dechne and await-
ing President Nl1on'1 bud11et message
Mondiy.
•
By mrllt~RD P. tll~u,
Of fM o.itr '""' "~' John Bolhweh, student bOOy president
ol Saddleback College, said Monday night
tha t ita tru!l.H.1 and admlnl!tralion by
their repressive political eonservaUsm
are _unw1lliog allies of the revolutionary
left.·
In 1 Iheme he has developed befOl'e.
Bothwell a 37·year-old polltlcal science
major, charged th at the Oedgling school
-although In a politically conservative
area with no minority or poverty prl)o
blems -Is giving "11 hot houst education
dictated by political motivations rather
than educational motivations."
The boa rd and adminlslratlon pre-sup-
posed campus conf rontations he asserted.
.. They gnvt an authoritarian school and
1
•
no rtvolutlonarie1 CllJle," Nld Bothwell,
predicting that admJnlttraUon and bOard
repression could spark radlcaliiation of
lhe campus "and they will call tbt sher·
iff's office lor a little blood and say (to
the. community) see I told fOU."
Bothwell wat one of five youthful
pane.llrts, four or them studtt1t!f, who
discussed a broad range of college cam·
pus Issues with the Laguna Beach
Democratic Club. Saddlebick came in for
a Jfood part of the criticism.
Dennis Franklin, former Saddleback
student now at aoother school. said of
Saddleback, "I don't think I ever heard
what you'd call a liberal fnstnictor. I've
heard 11 lot of conservative Instructors,
someone is dolna something to mike aur1
they aren't liberal."
By example he sal~ some of the In·
terpretations oJ conternporar)' history -
"like Roosevelt" -are amadng. 4'l've
heard a lo'l of garbaa:e." ailhwell nld
the faculty is ouCstandlng.
Franli:Jln said Saddlebacli: 11 not going
to have ari Anaela Davis, tile. UCLA Com·
munlst. He said some pcrtons are
paranoid over "the Communist bit."
Students, he sald, go to hear about Com-'
m1mism· not to learn how lo become Com-
munists.
~fartha Heise. freshman at Sadd.leback,
:ouud the school h•s an obllsatlon .to c1-
po~e tne student.I to dlverat:nt vJewpolnta. 1•S•ddleback Is complete.ly sheltered,"
, 1h! said. "The atudent1 go to a larger
-colleg4! and art k>tt. 11
Bothwell, however t said 0 Uberalt I (In
-
e.d~1caUon) have succeeded Jn destroyina
the American •y1tem i~ lhe eyes Of
young people and ntv'r replaeinl it (wJfh
befter alterriatfve1)11• He said there a~·
too many Ubfrru teacher1 hack)ng away
. at tht establishment in an grades.
Saddleback, he maintained, ii the o~
rwlte. e.xtremt. He called· for obje1.:Uve
ten.::hlng. 1•1r thciy're going to destroy the
fa ith In what e1l1ta," said Bolhwtll.
"lcachrrs hav~ 1 duty to •uaaest
1t1mtlhing lri It! plae:e:·
Bill Kinde/, UC/ student, said of ob·
Jcctlve teaching that any ad \.•nced field
• \.\'Ol.'ld havt dl!ference.t or opl.n.ion, that
there are few au,olute1.
Bothwell s1ld It Is not enough for '"'"
structors to lwlate the problem, they
(Ste TRUSTEES, P11e Ii
INSIDE TODAY
DurinQ the day she tosses
toords orol4nd at1d at l'liQht she
dot.s l11e .ta111e with her cwrw1
b111 her student.t lhink I''' ureat thetr Engl11l1 te<Jeller dcnce.t hi
o chorus Une. Poo• 19.
,
'
' .
j
•
• 2 DAI\. V PILOT l Toud11, J1n1.11ry 'Z7, 1970 '
Capo Faces aig Cuts · if Tax Override Fails
BJ PAMEl.4 RAU.AN
Of .._ lltHr •1111 ll•ff
RtducllOlll In bu1 service, th• hill>
&cbool proiram and J>O.!Slble tlbninaUon
al music and athlellc programs are being
C'Onsldered by the Capistrano Unified
School District lf a 5()..cent tax O\'erride
fills 1n )ifarch.
Trustees, faced with a budget already
pared down because It had been based on
an 85-cent overr;de instead of 50. heard
the grim facts P.tonday during budget
study session.
•·we are optµnlstlc tl)at the override
wltl pass," said Superintendent Truman
Benedict. "But if It doesn't, l can only
aeneralize over what "''ill happen."
He said there ~·ould pro~bly be a
nducllon of llmd• for coat of livlna 11>
cru1t1 ln empJ,oyu' 111arta.
Ho uld the blah ocbool Jl«IJram would
ha'" lo be rtd\lCOd from an ~ lborl
alx poriod day lo a fin period cw .... ""
''Thll hu llnmtdlalAI effects," RICI
Bt.ntdiet, .. We'll haw: to schedule now for
both a five and a six period day."
l·le also 1ald athletic programs even
those at the var1ity level would have \o
be reviewed as would the dlstrictwlde
music program.
Cost loads would be raised and
transpo rtation servlcts would be cut with
walking dlstancu extended to two mlles
whf.re it Is now only one mile and four
miles where i t ts now two miles.
"We'd probably have to cut somelhlng
everywhere. It's going to be a traumatic
Capi-strano City Hall
Contract Finally Given
A contract for the construction of San
Juan Capistrano's temporary city hall
was finally awarded Monday night.
The city council voted 4 to t to award
the contract to Viking Company, the Jo w-
est qualified bidder. Their bid was ac-
cepted at $144,425. Voting against the
measure was t:ouncllman Tony Oilvares
\\'ho gave no reason.
A bid submitted by Maur ice Develop-
ment ind Research Company had been
approximately $18,000 lower but Cjty At-
torney John Dawson advised Qie ~ncil
to disqualily the bid because of irregu-
laritles in the bid's submis1;ion.
The attorney also said that he had con·
tacted the attorney representing the 0y.
hart.ibal family who owns the right of
way needed to get to the city hall site.
The site Is located between Camino Ca pis·
trano and the nood control channel near
Consolidated Rock Products plant.
Dawson said the ramily seemed v.•illing
to provide lhe easement in the form of a
~root wide road if they were compen·
sated for a prior easement and if they
could hook up to uU\ltles the city install!
to serve the city hall.
From Page l
BILLY REGAINS LIFE . ••
don't come around here. Check It out
with a dennatologist and come to see me
after you're over it."
Jn the next :ew years Joanne was to
become an expert on the tragic disease
and all Its strange ramifications.
The first decision was hers alone to
make. Knowing what might lie ahead for
the baby, should ahe request an abortion?
"No one would help me decide lhat,"
she says. "Not my husband, or my family
or the doctor. I thought about it a lot and
about the other children (then aged one,
t\\.·o and three years) and I knew I
couldn't live with mysel! If I decided on
an abortion, I knew the baby could be
blind, or deaf, and 1 knew the percen-
tages were pretty bad -but still, you
know, there wu always the hope that
maybe my baby would be one of the
lucky ot'les.11
A virtual quarantine was set up ror the
birth, with the entire delivery area under
special sterile conditions. A rubella baby,
.Joanne learned, can carry the disease
and transmit it to others for the first two
years of his life.
This side aspect of the problem v.'a.s
rather firmly established when little Billy
came home from the hospital am; his
father, sister and two older brothers
promptly oame dov.·n v.·lth measles.
"He was a big, beautirul baby -he
even looked l:uskler than my others,"
Joanne remembe~nd I really hoped
for a while that he mlght be all right."
He was not all right. There was definite
heart murmur and cataracts on both of
his eyes. He had difficulty swallowing
and he hardly seemed to grow at all.
"The 01,ly thing he seemed to respond
to was music -he still loves to listen to
the sterec and his bearing seems to be
quite good," sa}'S Joanne. Realizing lh!s,
she sewer' little bells on the cuffs of his
baby clothes kl glve him some amuse-
ment. "Because he couldn 't see, he
couldn't grab for things like other
babies."
Before he was a year old. a severe at-
tack or p1.eumonia almost ended Biily's
brief existence. But he survived that and
a distinguished eye doctor performed
.surgery on the cataracts. He began to
respond to light, but the cataracts
reformed and were again rtmoved.
"Now he seems to be able to recognize
me from across a room ," his mother
says. "but of course we can't tell yet ex·
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actiy what he does set."
This rr.ay come after Billy learns to
talk -and he's doing pretty well in this
department. He can count to 10, call his
brothers and sister by name and give a
respectable rendition of "Rock-a-bye
Baby."
"Things !hat are nice. but really
ordinary accomplishments for mosl
babies are sort o( a miracle for Billy,"
say~ Joanne.
The miracle began last August when
she called the Orange County Health
Department to ~ i: !here might not be
some possibility of getting Billy into a
therapy program.
"He not only wasn't making any pro-
gress -he v;as beginning to regress,''
she explains. "He would just Ue on his
back all day, staring up al the Ua:ht. He
didn't want anyont: but me to do anything
for !llm and finally even I couldn't coax
him lo try thlngs."
Fro'll the health department, she learn-
ed about the Easter Seal Rehabilitation
Center for Crippled Children and Adults
in OrangP., and at the center she learned
of the program designed by John Carta·
Falsa, director of the Child Study Center,
especially for pre-school d e a f -b I i n d
children, victims of the rubella epidemic.
Some of Its graduates of "Rubella Class
'69'' had been able to enter kindergarten,
they told her.
Billy was evaluated by an audiologist,
langua~e and speech pathologist.
JX. lialr1cian, physical therapist, OC·
cupaliona1 therapist, psychologist and
social worker. A program to meet his
special problems was set up.
Since September, Billy ar.cl his mother
have reported to the Center for 21,1.l hours
a day, Monday through Thursday. every
"'ee k. Billy has therapy, in and out of the
pool, does special exercises, takes speech
lessons. and, best of all, has learned to
enjoy playing with other children and
"working out" v.•ith the adult aides.
He can stand alone. take steps \vith
help. throw a ball and catch it and travel
around the house in a "\valker ."
''He's de\'eloped so much confidence -
he's really proud of himself ," says Joan·
ne . ''In fact he 's getting to be, a show-ofL
The othe r day my husband and I were
rough-housing around wltll the other kids
in the living room when Biily crawled
throu~h the door. He waited tlll we were
watching. then turned a p e r r e c l
&amersault."
One of the biggest steps came in
December, the day before his third birth-
day. Billy had never been able to feed
himself, flatly refusing to touch a spoon,
or even bold a cookie in hls hand.
"For &ome reason. rube11.k babies don't
seem to !Ike to touch th1ng11." S3YS Joan·
ne. "That day he was sltling up at the
table and all of a su,lden he picked up the
spoon and started feeding hlm5elf just as
ii he'd bttn doing It 1lway11."
Billy sllll won't eat "people." food
though. preferring the prepared bllby
foods that are easier to swallow.
E11ting regular rood and learning to
walk a'°ne are the next t"'o bll 1oal1.
But even without th e s e i\C·
complishmentl, the tJttle boy who used to
just Ua on his back star1ng at the li1ht
hu become very much par. of the faml·
1y. He plays happily with brothers
Christopher. 6, and Joey, 4. and his pretty
blonde &liter Htldl, 5, eve.n drt•mln& up
lllUe Joke• to pl11 on tlt<m. When the
jokes 1ucceed he lau1hl with &lee.
"'SomeUmet l Lhlnlt he"• the bHt thl"!l
that could hive h1ppened to this family ,'
says Joanne. "He'1 sort of brought u1 •II
togeU>tt and elven ua 10 much happint11.
The oilier kid• have helped • lot with him
and we're 111 so pleased ~vhen he learns
aomethlnf new."
"And J m a teacher too," says (our·
year~ld Joey.
Jotnne explains. "The two older
chlklrtn ire in IChool when \\t go to lhe
Center, so Joey comet 1lon1 and whJle
Billy's h11 vtng his therapy, Joey helps the
ipeech tMraplst. They war.~ a chlld
with norm1l speech for the olber1 to tali
I<>. and Jocy"1 IL"
i,
experlenct for 111 of us to face the
altel'll&U•es wt wUl havt to look at."
Charle• Dargan, chairman of the
cltJzen1 commluee ln favor of tbe ovtr·
rl<le ... '~ ~ llrul!!rlance of the ww·· nf•kbll fltm d'eet)lon1 on exactly
what will be eut If the overri&! fa\11. The
board agreed to outline their decisions In
detail at a study session In two weeks.
Benedict also described priorities and
cuts !n the proposed budget based on the
SO<ent override.
Tc p priority was given to single session
kinderaarten which the administration
and cle1nentary principals feel are
neeeasary to build skills necessary in
learning how to read.
Truste.f':; Stan Kelley and Tom Winget
questioned the validity of giving top
Flll S NEW SCHOOL POST
Laguna Admlni1tr1tor H111
f'ro111 Page I
HESS •..
cipal and principal -two years each -
at Santa Ana Va11ey High School.
He received his doctorate In education
in August from USC. fie prepared the
196U7 budget for Sanla Ana Unified
School District, acted as business
manager for six months, has worked in
curriculum, purchased school sites and
recruited teachers.
Dr. Jiess and his wife. Shirley will in·
crease the local school enrollment by
three when they move to Laguna in the
fall. Thei have two sons, John, 10, and
Brad, a, and a daughter, Lisa, 3.
Hess has been a member of the North
Santa Ana Kiwanis Club board and a
member of lhe St. Peier Lutheran
Church board.
Fro111 Page 1
HIPPIES ...
pollution· of the environment - a lot or
that comes from big industries."
Judith Frank, n1ember of the
Krushkho\' team, \vondered Ir Laguna's
"'off be.at" businesses, lhe hi;:i pie-ortented
s~or~s, had much of an impact in luring
h1pp1e types. "The presence or these
shops is a \'ery attractive aspect of the
city," she commented.
f'rench suggested they p r ob a b J y
catered to "plastics''-lhe v.·eekend hip-
pies who come aov.·n .and "adopt hippie
clothes for the day, then go back to
Pomona at night."
The shops also ca!er to Laguna )'OUth, ~aid Doug Schmit.z. "Our kids buy their ~ewelry at these stores. not in the regular
1ewf'l:'y shops." he noted.
"I was trying to suggest a n1orc
positive attitude," said Kru shkhov , ··and
a. respect for humanity. It's always un·
fortunate that young people are not more
involved in plan ning, because after an
they are the ones v.·ho will be. living with
this plan -and paying for It."
Merrill Johnson wondered what other
areas had done .about the hippie problem . :·1 can assure you il's everywhere,"
said Krushkhov . ''Tokyo and Paris and
Amsterdam have the same problem.
Four hundred thousand of these people
show up al one music festival. !l's a
development that deserves some in-depth
study."
CAO Chalnnan Mark Gumblner added
"lt's not just hippies ; it's a whole su~
culture lnvol vlng much of our youth and
some not so young people v.·ho adopt the
same attitude. All we say is '\Ve don't
like them.'"
From Page 1
TROOP S ...
Department 11 a patrolm1n.
"It fetla great to be going home," ad·
ded ~t. Col . James \V, Lazio, com·
1n1uld1ng officer o! Attack Squadron 2"
oiding that he hasn't setn his 4.ycar-01J
daughter for more than a year.
First Sit. Joseph Sqan, a 24·ye1r
\'t ter1n .,.Tth nine ovtrseas tours will be
comlne back to El Toro ·with Attack
Squadron 542 and Is glad of It.
"It is alwny:. a good feelin1 to be 1oin1
home.'' he 1ald.
President Nixon has ordered th1l 50,000
n1ore Amcrl(an st:rvlccmen be removed
lrnm South \'lclnam by April 15. About
60.000 we.re \\'lthdra"·n under phase1 J
and JI "1hlch bf'g11:n lasl summer.
Current U.S. troop strcnglb ln Vielnam
is 469.900.
The 601000 men In the third phase wilh ·
dr1w1l will all be rtmo\•ed from Vlttnam
by April JS and will bring to 110.000 the
number of American troop• wlthdr1wn
since the U.S. puUout began lut JWy •·
priorities to thtle areu at the erpense of
111 the oO>lr1, parUC!.lltt:y remedlal
readln& opeclalilll. "Many atudles In early chUdbood
education are lncHc1t1n1 that ma11y
falluru In readfna come about because of
Inadequacy of progr1ms at the kin-
dergarten and preschool level," said
Benedict.
"Basic communication, basic skllls,
such as listening and speaking ~ Im-
portant to learning how to read . I! we
spend rr.ore n1oney and effort in the
kindergarten area we'll have fewer
failures and more children reading bet. tef~·
He .5aid at the present time each
kindergarten teacher has two classes
representing 50 or 60 children per day.
Under the ne~· plan there would be one
ll•l:lier far 30 childreo and a 1'!J>.
der1arten 1el5lon would be three and one
haU houri Instead of lhl praent two and a half.
"Since a klndereart.n ttacher works a
reJUlar full day there would be tean1
teacher OJiportunlUes as well as better
planning. The program would call for the
hlrtng of ten add itional teachers.
Other budget item! called to the at-
tentlon of the lrus~ees were :
-A reduction of staffing from a 14 per-
cent •rte1 ease to 10 percent.
-Recommending the utilization o( port
lime clerk:al help at the elementary level
in lieu of professional nurses and library
aides.
-Jieduclion of instructional aides.
-Elimination or porl4bles used for
academ.Jc rao~ cent.en.
. -Central ajall and '41nlniltr1Uon rt·
malnl the llmt.
-Retention or $300,000 reserve fund.
-Adding three bmt1 Instead of rour:
two would be district owned and one leas-
ed.
-Lara;e cut In operation or school
plant.
-Restoration of prior formula s per stu-
dent for instructional supplies, $& per
elementary student , $12 junior high and
S2tl senior high.
-Increased funds In comm u n It y
service areas for winter and swnmer
programs.
-Retention of cost of living increases
in .,ersonnel salaries.
Planners, .Citizens Map
Future of Laguna Beach
Planning for ~aguna's future moved in-
to high gear this week as members of the
Planning Commission, the Citizens
Advisory Committee and the planning
team from Daniel. 1'1arm, Johnson &
Mendenhall got together in the city fire
station for their first joint workShop
session.
The l\1onday night meeting, scheduled
for city hall council chambers, was
ousted by a lengthy jury trial carried
over into the evening from the regular
daytime court session. Firemen hastily
rigged up a meeting room in their
9uarters next door and played host to the
planners.
"This Is a crucial time," project direc-
tor Abraam Krushkhov told the com-
missioners, who recently complained
about belng apparently bypassed In the
general Plan project. "From now on you
will have to play an acllve role, because
you are the ones who wlll make the final
planning recommendation to the city
council, on lhe basis of the information
u·e can suppl y lo you."
The general plan study, which started
in July, 1967 and was scheduled for com-
pletion in 18 months, is running a couple
of months behlnd schedule, Krushhov
said, but all the necessary data now is In
hand and the planning team will spend
the entire month or February assembling
it into several different concepts for a.
future Laguna.
By the beginning of ~farch, he said, it
will be possible to sketch out a va riety of
t'ro111 Page 1
EDISON ...
slipped Into virtual anonymity.
Two l .t million kilov.·att units will be
added at San Onofrt. They will provide
enough power to serve the equivalent
electrical needs of a city or 2.5 million
people. The addition of the units wlll
create one or the nation's largest nuclear
generating stations .
Announcement of the new nulcear units
"'as first made three weeks ago In Los
Angeles by William R. Gould. Edison vice
president du ring hearings on the Hun·
linglon Beach expansion before the state
Public Utilities Commission .
Construction of the flri;t of the nuclear
additions is expected to begin next ~m·
mer And commerl c a l operation Is
scheduled in 1976. The second unit would
go into comn1ercial operation a year
later, Horton said.
"Beginning with ihe San Onofre add i·
lion we are committed lo build only nu·
clear pov.'er plants for our major gene·
ration sources in the coastal baJ1in,'' Hor·
ton said. "This is another step Edison is
taking in U1e interest of cleaner air for
Southern California."
choices for a general plan, based on land
use, economlc1 populaUon, social and
traffic studies . With the "planning area"
covering IS square miles, as opposed to
the city 's five · square miles, the
possibilities will include varying degrees
of annexaUon to achieve desired goals.
''We will present a variety or ar-
rangements for roads, traffic, parking,
green belts and housing denslty ,"
Krushkhov told the commiukln. "Then IL
will be up to you to choose a plan that Is
worka!ile ln the light of statistical facta
and most nearly meet.. the community's
goals."
"I can hardly wail to see what you
come up with," commented Commission
Chairman Fred Briggs.
Once a concept is agretd upon by the
commission, "and 1 am confident we
finally will get a consensus," Krushkhov
said, it '4'ill be recomn1ended to the City
Council, which then will hold public hear·
ings before its final adoption.
Krushkhov denied any sharp 'disagree-
ment with the goals statement prepared
by the CAC, but reminded listeners that
goals must be conside111ed In relation to
available land, economics and "the many
out.side influences that inevitably will af.
feel Laguna."
Despite Its ''land locked" geographical
situatl on and the desire of the Com-
munity to retain its individual character,
the planner pointed out, 0 We are still
part of the great regional development
that aome day may vlrtuaUy mate a
single megalopolis reaching from Santa
Barbara lo San D,iego."
Disesnslon between the CAC and the
planning team was revealed in discussion
or future housing and employment, the
CAC maintaining that h!gh land values in
Laguna w!U make it impogsible to pro-
vide low-cost housing and therefore un-
concerned about the apparent "ex-
cluslvi'y" of the no low cost houstn, con·
cept. CAC membe,. \'em Spitaleri said It
\\'ould be an economic fact rather than
any deliberate exclusivity, because of
suaring land values.
Discussion of the nature of Laguna
residents led to the conclusion that people
live in the Art Colony because they want
to, without regard to availability of work:
.and _often at considerable sacrifice of
material comfort.
"It's sort of self-screening," suggested
CAC chairman Mark Gumbiner. "People
will decide to live in some old place here
rather than in a much more modern
home in ~is.slon Viejo. By the same tok-
en, the people who prefer Mission Viejo
\l.Wldn't think: ol coming here."
"It has nothJng to do with money or
education," added Worthington. "Nobody
lives in Laguna Beach v.·ho doesn't want
to -and if he wantll to live here, it
doesn't mailer where his job is. Thia is
why we feel there is less need for em-
phasis on this housing -employment
aspect of the plan."
Krushkhov concluded, "The main
thing is to have a wide variety or choice
and not such rigid goals that we come up
wlth a bad plan. Already there are many
physical constraints -you're adding
philosophical and social constraints. I
think we should try to create a wide
range of choice -within, of course. the
limitations that you and God have
established."
"I think )'OU &hould put God first," said
Tomehak.
From Page I
TRUSTEES .••
necessary to plan for low.wage job must also offer avenues of solution. He ,
growth. said It ill ea11y lo point out defects Jn the·
The majority of Laguna residents, the American &ystem. Suggesting t h a t
committee answered, will continue to socialism and communism Is better. he
work outslde the c:ommunity and to be said, ls "to pervert the minds of the
made up largely ol management and pro-)'ounJ."
fe:;slonal persons, willing to ~ Of the Saddleback hair length con.
subst.anllal distances in order to live fii"""-..ko,·ersy, Franklin said the "enforced
Laguna. conformity ls meeting a bitter reaction."
"La11una is not Toledo. Ohio.'' said He said many or the good students had
\Vorthlngton. "We probably will ne\·er transferred elsewhere.
have an international airport, we don 't He said Saddleback leadership hoped
generate our own power, we probably tha( a cleanr.ut looking campus would
never will be a self.sufficient city with also be a campus that conforms in its
employment and housing for e•·eryone at th inking. All or the three male panelists
every income level. So there are ma ny had hair that curled O\'er their colla rs.
things we don't have to plan for that f'ranklln said his is too long for Sad·
other cities do." dleback but not too long for th~ retail
"I sin:i~ly c11n't conceive of a plan with merchandising job he holds with a large
no prov1s1on fo r new empl oyment." said dPpartmenl store. K.ru.!'hk~ov,. ''It's just against good plan-Referring to a preliminary federal
n1ng pr1nc1ples. A msxlmum freedom of court ii.junction against the school on the
choice in a place to li ve and a place to hai r issue, Bothwell said it would setm
"·or k is~ P.rincipal planning goal." that a reasonable administra tion knowing
Com1n1ss1oner Joseph Tomehak was the court attitude would acquiesce.
ANOTHER • • • • •
E-X-P-A-N-S-1-0-N
We have always endeavored to furnish the
finest service onywhere for CARPETING an d
DRAPERIES. T owords thi• end, we have just com·
pleted an enl.:1r9meent of facilities which will en-
able us to serve you better!
Come in and SH our huge invantory of fine
cerpeting end browse through our new remna nt
room , where we have thouunds of yards of small
and room-stie remnants!
UNUSUAL INSTALLATION PROILEMS?
Comt in and tolk with any of our sal .. mtn-who all heve hid orltnsivt
installation experience!
AL DEN'S
CARPETS e DRAPERIES
1663 PLACENTIA.COSTA MESA
646·4131
11 YIAAI ll•VrN• THI ORAHOI COAST
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I I
'17
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Dea eh
VOL 63, NO. 22, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES
By BARBARA KREIBICH
Of "" l:l•ltr "1111 st•lf
ln the spring or 1966, a 24-year-old
mother of three called her doCtor and
told him, "I think l may be pregnant
again -and I'm sure I have the
measles."
Joanne Santley or Mission Viejo was
righ t on both counts. She was in the first
month of pregnancy and she was one of
an ~timated 20 million J>ersons stricken
Viejo
In the devastating epidemic of rubella
IGennan measles) that swept the coun·
try that year.
fier fourth child, Billy, now three years
old, ls one of 30,000 surviving youngsters.
born with niultlple handicaps as a result
or the epidemic.
When a woman contracts rubella in the
first three months of pregnancy, there Is
a 40 percent chance that her child, if born
alift, will have more than One hanrucap
DAIL 'f "It.OT '°"'"' ~ likMF'<ll "9fflltr
BIL LY SU RPRISES MOM BY STANDING, SINGING SONG
With Patience, Matching Skills to Native In telligence
Lag una Schools Appoint
Hess to Top Aide Po st
Dr. Cha rles A. Hess. has been ap-
pointed assi stant superintendent o f
La.guns Beach Unified School District in
a newly created post that will include
district business management.
Hess, 44, currently principal or Sant a
Ana Valley High Sahoul, will replace
Edwin llind, business manager, retiring
in July after more than 20 years with the
district.
He ss will begin al an anneal salary of
$20,784, a few hundred more than he is
now receiving. Hind 's salary is $17,280.
Dr. William Ullom , district supe rin-
tendent , said the new certificated post
will Include a broader range of duties
than is now Included in the position of
business manager, a greater Involvement
in the educational programs.
gram and planning development of new
school plants.
Ullom· said also that schools by 1972
will be required by the st~te to link every
budget ilem to a learn ing objective, even
lo school busing. This will be part of Dr.
Hess' responsibility.
He will also serv' &s a member of the
superintendent's cabipet in currl~lum
planning and development. As suth he
will conler with the classlfie<! supervisor,
principals and teachers, and w i 11
cooperate with his counterpart In cur-
riculum, Owen Tait, assistant · superin·
lcndent of instructional services.
Hess wu a teacher mort! than 14 years.
lie worked in research analysis for two
years in the district office of Santa Ana
Unified SchOOI Disttie1' and was vice prin-
(See um, P•ce ZI
N.Y. Stocks
ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, JANYARY 27, 1970 TEN CENTS
Tot's Life: Tragedy to Hope
-sight, hearing, heart, motor abilities
can be affected in varying degrees.
Mental retardation formerly was con-
sidered among the likely handicaps, but
careful studies have shown that this ls a
fallacy. Because of ·his bllndnes.!,
deafness or motor diUicuJUes, the rubella
baby will develop slowly and s0tr.etimell
appear retarded. But doctors now rullze
that cartful rehabilitation programs can,
with patience, match his skill.$ with his
native intelligence.
A group of 50 such children In
Australia, believed to have ben mentally
as well as phsylcally ~capped, was
given such intensive therapy. Follow-up
studies after JS yean found all but five
v.·ere leadlrig active1 productive lives.
Joanne SanUey did not know all this
when she called her· doctor and heard
him say, "Ir you think yoo have meuJe,,
(See BILLY, Pa&e %)
Birth Vi~ti1n Now •
'Beal Show-off"
'
On of re Power 'Boosted
Edison Announces All Out Nuclear Commitment
By JACK BROBACK
01 ""' 0111r l'tltt t11U
The awarding of contracts for two huge
nuclear reactors to be installed al the ex-
isting San OnoCre Nuclear Generating:
Station within two miles of the Western
\Vhite House was announced today by the
Southern California Edison Company.
Company officials lenn the move an
"all-out commitment" to nuclear power
generation.
Jack K. Horton, Edison chairman and
Hippie Issue
Tossed Around
Bv Officials
" La&•Jna's attitude toward its hippie
population, both resident and floating,
came in for further scrutiny Monday
night as planning e-0mmlssloners, Citizens
Advisory Committee me1nbers and plan-
ner Abraam Krushkhov got together for a
planning workshop.
Earlier, the ire or some of the cl'lm-
missioners had been aroused b y
Krushkhov's introductory comments let
the goals report, In which he suggested
that the Art Colony consider taking ad-
vantage of the creative talents ot the hip-
pie IX'Pulace and consider it as a possible
e-0mmunity asset.
"In the face of the fa ct that 37 percent
of the cit;zens responding to the attitude
survey listed hippies as our number one
problem, I'm puzzled by the guggestion
that they might become an asset," said
Commissioner Robe.rt French.
"It mi&}lt be a mistaken assumption."
ta id Krushkhov. "but t assure you it
was n't arrogant, as someone suggested.
If we see a.problem it's our duty lo try to
fi'ld a solution.
"Surely there must.be some worttiwhile
people among them -many have talent.
1'.faybe they come here because the y
think it's a 'swinging, hang-loose sort of
town.' I think we could try to find some
good in it."
"What good do you find ?" queried !!Om-
mission chairman Fred Briggs.
"l ~av<. two daughters at home," said
the planner, "and these young people
with the Jong hair and whatnot are in and
out of the house all the time. Some of
them are very intel ligent. I don't know
\Vhat their future will be but I have faith
In their good intentions. After all, !l's a
human resource that can 't be Ignored."
Said Commissioner Charles Johnson,
\vho had raised the initial objection,
"We're talking about a transien t group
like those who ran the toorists out of
Yosemite and ruined parts of San Fran-
cis::o." _
"We have police power and health and
safety regulations -the means to
regula e many of the problems," said
K;:ushkhov. "It's part and parcel of a lot
of things that are happening: today, like
(See IDPPl&'I, Po(< Ii
chief ezecutive, added, however, that tht
t.'OTDpany must proceed with thr con-
struction of two conventional gener1Ung
units at HunUngton Beach "in order to
meet customer power requlmnents
belWeen 197S and't976.
"But a.s more and more nuclear plants
are built, we wUl gradually reduce our
use of existing oil and gas-flred units in
the south coastal area," Horton said.
A reactor contract was awarded to
Combustion ·Engineering Inc. of Windsor,
COM. The reactors will become part of
tv.•o new units at the San Onofre plant.
Cost or the units will be about $450
million.
San Diego Gas and E1eetric Co .• a 20
percent partner ln the 450,000 kilowatt
nuclear unJt now Operating at San Onofre,
will have an equivalent ownership in the
output or the two new units. 11te original
installation cost PO million.
The San OOl?fre plant is in San Diego
County, but is situated just south of San
Ni x on Withdrawal Phase
Three El Toro Marine
O~tfits ,Com:ing ff onie~ ~
1'l9lt Wire -DA NANG -Troops of three Oran1e
Counly·basid U.3. Narine Corps aviat!Qn
squ.i;.drons today gathered •t 1eaport em·
bsrkation points to leave here ror home
Wednesday, under the thlrd_ phase of
Prl'sident Nlron 's Vietnam withdrawal
pl<in.
A fourth group will depart ror Camp
Pendleton, following formal ceremonies
al this sprawling U.S. base, in which Maj.
Gen. Edwin B. Wheeler, commander of
Inc First. Marine Division addressed
the,m. . .
"Well done, and bon voyage," said the
CO, addin& that the jet acd helicopter
pilots, their support personnel and the
amphibiou!I vehicle battalion did a job
for the free world.
All have been· in Vielna,m~nine JQOnUu
or longer.·
Fighter Atta.ck Squadron 54% and At-
lick Squaaron 223 will ieturn \o El Toro
MCAS,L whlle Heavy Hellcopter SqUadron
:Iii ls reassigned to the Santi Aha MCAS,
where Jt was first coritmlsaioned.
The Third P.fvrlne Amphibian Attack
Battalion will return to Camp Pendleton,
lfith a tentath·e Feb. I 1rrival date
aboard U.S. Nav1 vessels.
Maj. Robert Booher, staff Information
officer at El Toro MCAS, said today the
Corps has not ye! declassified data about
the Orange County units' withdrawal, so
he could not comment.
Some units of the total ol 19 affected
will be deactivated upon 'return and Cpl.
Gene Bowen, 22. of Costa r.tesa, sald at
Dl Nang t.>day that be will chanie
uniforms when he gets home.
The Amtrac Battalion enlisted man wiU
be processed . out of the Corps' in Camp
Pendleton Anet iejoln t~ Anahelm•Pollce
(Sff TROOPS, P110 II
Mrs. Han son, Other Wives
Admit Mission a F ailu1·e
· From Wire Strvlcea
TOKYO -Tir1.'<1 and bitter despite the
f:.ct they never ezpeeled much, aa El
Toro woman and three other PO\V wives
arrived here today, admitting a
workiwide mission .Jn behaU of missing
military men -theirs and others -has
fdiled .
They hope to meet with Mrs. Elsaku
Sato, wife of Japan's prime ministe r, as
wttl as Japanese Red Cross ofricials
before departing on the last leg
homeward,to the Southland.
P.frs. Carole Hanson, 30, of 24112
Birdrock Drive, El Toro, has visited
many nations, including the war ione
w~.ere their pilot husbands were shot
down, but have been cllher rebuffed or
offered helpless sympathy.
The four talked with U.S. sen. Eugene
l\fcCarthy (0-Mtnp.) In tlieir short slay in
!\'foscow and were told he is as concerned
over the plight of diaftdOdgers and
deserters abroad as. men' held in North
Vietnam prisons. "Thal really hurt,;•
said Mrs. Arthur Mearns, of Lo3 Angeles,
\vife of Air Force Lt. Col. Arthur S.
ll1earns,.
"It hurt to have my husband sandw!ch.
cd between deserters and draftdodgers."
Mrs. Hanson, whose h~ba.od. 'Marine
Corps Capt. Steptfen P. Hanton "1U Shot
down while flying 1 helicopter medical
evscuatlon mission In Laos nearly four
years ago, said they believe fhe war Is
ju:it.
Clemente, Orange County's southernmost
community and President Nixon's new
home. The old HamJlton Cotton estate
wlllch the President purchased last ye,ar
overlooks the sea at the •uthem Up· of
San Clemente.
When it was first proposed in the early
Jt&O's, the San -Onofre nuclear plant wu
the subject of bitter opposlUon from con-
se"aliooists, surfers and civil detense
advocates. Since its construcli()f\ it has
(See EDISQ~. P11e II
Carswell Says
He'd Forgott~n
Raci st Speech
WA!!HINGTON · (UPI) -.Tu.d I 1
G. Hanold Carswell said today he holds
no racist or while supi:emacY views and
aws "'a Uttle blt aghaii" to be reminded
be ever. advocated such ideu. 1
CirneU made the statement under
qlJf.atloning by the ·Senate Judiciary Com·
mlttee at the outset of hearings on llis
namln1tJon to be an associ.ate-jllltice of
th" Supreme Court.
He said he had forgotten about a
.speech be mad'! 111 1948 durlng a Georgia
poliflcal campaign saying he believed in
wh.lle supremacy. Reporters in Florida
ar.d<Georgia dug up the speech last ~eek
from old neWs at..'COtints.
"I really -was a little bit aghast T hatt
n1ade such a statement," he said. "I had
to see It to believe I made it."
He said he was not trying to deny he
made tht speech but told Senatota: "I
am not racist. 1 have no nolion -open.
secretlvt or otherwise -of racial
s11perlority."
ca,.well ilso denied he ever. was an of·
ficer or a director in any country club.
C1\'il rights groups have c b a r g e d
Carswell was a director of a gr0,1Jp th§.t
turned a' golt club in Tallahassee, Fla.,
into a' private 'course to avoid integration,
He said tl;lat in 1958 he made a $100
con trlbollon to rebuild a rundown goU
club house and was given one share or
stock in return, but resigned from the
club a short Umt later and was refunded
175.
Some years later, the judge said, his
son wanted to play golf and the family
rejoined the, club. but re.signed again in
1966. He said he had nothing to do with
any land transfers, leases or operation of
the club.
AJ the hearing started, S e n a t e
Republican teada· Hu~ Scott related ta
newsrne.n that he Joki Carswell Pi1onday
"J bell eve the 1&48. speech was a foolish
statement." He said Carxll replied: "It
was a completely unwise statement or
my earlier days and I have thoroughly
r.pcdlaled it. and 1 am no racist. I have
no racist feel hip."
. Orange t:oaat
Hess will begin his Laguna duties Feb.
16. Ullom said. "Dr. Hess will devote his
time developing the 197().71 budget for the
district. until July wllile Hind will ·con-
tinue to hahdlc business matters In the
district." College Trustees Helping Leftists? Weadier
It'll take a good stltf breeze lo
blow these clouds away -and
that's what'• t0mln1 on Wednes·
1 ®y. Temperatures will sUck to t Uitlr low 60 range .
Ullom sa!d a new aod broader job
description developed in the. l'{IOnths the
board aod administration Interviewed ap-
plicants for replacement of Hind, There
"''ere 7Z applications. ·
A 19-point list of job responsibilities
will be part of Hess' duties . They range
from budget and .payroll lo directing all1 phases of the classified personnel pro. •
By RICHARD P. NALL. °' ttM ca-t•r ''llf , .. ,.
John Bothwell, student body president
of Saddleback College, said Monday night
that its trustees ~and admlnistrallon by
their repressive poUUcal conservatism
are unwitting allies of the revolutionary
Stoel• 1Harket r
,_ Jcft
• ln, a theme he 'bas developed befort,
Bothwell' a 37-ytar-old polltleal science
major. char&ed lhat the fledgling school
-although In a po\Jllcally conservaUve
area with no minority or poverty pro-
blems -Is giving "a hdt house cdacation
dictated by political motlvatloiu rather
than educational mollvaUons."
NEW YORK <AP ) -Stocks wandertd
deeper Into losing territory In slow trad·
int today, with declines leading advanees
by two to one. (See quotations, Pages 10-
11).
Analysts said they dclected • drying
up of buying as investors ~l on I.he side-
lines, wailing oul the dccllne and awa1t·
ing President Nixon's budget ~age
\tonday.
"·
The board and adm lnl.slratlon pre-sup.
Posed cam pus confrontations he asserted.
"Thty g•ve an authoritarian school and
" • •
no revoluUonarles came," aald Bothwell.
pt<dictll\g lhat admlnl1tr1pon and board
repression could spark radicalization of
the campus "and they will call the sher·
Jrra offJce for a little blood and say (to
the community) se.e I told you."
Bothwell was one of five youlhful
paneUsts. four of them students, who
diacussed a broad range of college cam-
pus iisuts with the Laguna Beach
Democratic Club. S.ddlel>Rk came in for
a ltood part of the criticism.
Dennis Franklin, farmer Saddleback
student now at another IChoOI, said or
Saddleback, "l dOn't think lever. beard
what you'd call a liberal in*tructor. I've
heard 1 lot of conauvatlve instructors.
someone is doin& tomethina to makt 1Urt
they aren't libctaJ."
' '( '
By example he said JOme or the In·
terpretations of contem!)orll')' hi story -
"like Roosevelt" -1rt 1mazlna:. •1J've
heard a lot of •garbage." J))thwell said
the faculty Is, outttandlna. ·
Frantlii1 aakt Sa<ldleback ts not ,1oin&
to have an Angela Davis, Ult UCLA Com·
mlfuist. He' sa1d some person•· are
, paranokt over "the Commun1st tilt."
Studenls, he 11ld. ,. lo heor obout l:om-
munltm not to learn how to bfcome Com-
munist s.
·AJart.,_ He~. (re~hman at Saddleback,
sakJ the school has an obllgaUon to ex-
pollle tbe students to dJver1ent Y1ewpalnLS.
''S1ddlebock Is compi<ttft 1helltr<d.'' •he said. ''The studenta 10 to a Jaraer
c0Ue11 and.are k*."
BolhwC!ll, however, tald "liberals <In
cd!1cation) have ~U~ffdtd: ui~deilroylnj ~
the At'nerk:an 11ste.m in the iyea ·of'
young people and never replaclna It (with
better altematl.ves)". He sakl •there are
loo many llbti:a1 teachers ~•eking away
a[ the eatiJlllsQmeth in all· ll'•des. •
Saddlebltk, he:. maJntl.tned, 1 ii the op-
' potltt: extreme.' H~ Called for objective
tMchln1. "ll they're 9o1na lo dtstroy tho
tilth ln whal exJsts.,.., aatd Bothwell,
"teachers hiv~ a duty to •uaest
aumelhlng ln Jt.a pl.act ...
Bill Kln<WI, UCI student, .. Id of. obo
jectlve teaching that any ad.,.anoed fteld ~
wou ld havt dm.,._, ot opinion, lhal
there are rew ao.olutes.
Bothwell Nld It Is not tnough fQr In·
1tructor1 lo Isolate 'tht problem, they
(S.. TRUS'l'EU,·P•p Ii·, ... -••
INSIDE TOOi\ l'
During the doy sht cos,,es
1 tcor.d& "'Ground ond ot niOllt silt
·,doc a the aatnc wlth her curve•
bu t htr 1U.1de11t.t tht1lk it'• great
their Vnglt1h ceaclitr dancea hl •
a chorui line. Pbg1 19. · ,,_ • ,,. ..... '""' " Cllttllillll "'~ ' .. ...... 1 -•• C: ... llt ... ,,.,. °' ..... C:..ty • C:•lc• " , ....... ...,.. " , __ • Sl't'f\ Jj.11 DMffl Mttlc .. • ~M-11 ••lltf'Mt , ... • ' " ·--" -• ·-· , .. ,, ·-• -" ...... r. .......... " .._ .... _ ,,,,. ...... " ..,. .. ,..., ••
I .
I
. ·• -· . -
,2"--"o~•~~!~~~~~o'~~_:..•~~~T~~l!!l~.~!~·Jirl~x~~~~~!L~·!~'~ ,
Capo Faces Big Cuts if Tax Override Fails
By PAMlll.4 HALLAN
OI' ... ~" ••• '"'"
Redoclloas In bL!I ,.rvlce, tl>e hlsJI
6Chool proaram and possible elimination
of music and athletic programs are "'Ing
f'onsldered by the Capistrano UnUi~
School District if a SO-ccnl tax override
1•111 In March.
Trulteea, face<! wllh a bud11et already
pared down bttause it had been based on
an &\-Cent override instead of 50. heard
lht grim racts f\-londQ during budget
study session.
"We art opUmisllc that the override
wtll pw," said Superintendent Truman
Benedict. "But if It doesn't, I can only
ge~rallu over what will happen."
He sald there would probably be a
reductlon t f funds for cost of Jiving In·
CJ t~M• In em(>l_Oyei' 1alarlt1.
Be said tlle·iq:h scb0o1 pro1ram would
ha\'t to be reduefld from an alrudy abort
six period d,y to a five )>eilod da)::-
''Th.11 has lmli\edlate tffects,'1 aakl
Benedict. "We 'll have to schedule now ror
both a (ive and a sis; period day."
He also nld athleUc pro1rJJT11 even
those at lhe vanity level would have to
be reviewed as would the dlstrlctwide
music program.
cost load& would be rai sed and
transportation 1ervictf would be cul with
v•alklng di stances extended to two miles
whtte it is now onlJ one mile aod !our
miles where It ii now two mlles.
"We'd probably have to cut something
C\'erywherc. It's going to be a traumatic
Capistrano City Hall
Contract Finally Given
A cont.Tact for the construction of San
Juan Capistrano's temporary city hall
was finally awarded Morxlay night
The ctty council voted 4 to 1 to •ward
the contract to Vlkln& Company, the low·
est qualified bidder. Their bid wu ac-
cept.eel at $144.425. Voting against the
measure was Councilman Tony Olivares
who ga"e no reason.
A bid submitted by ~faurice Develo~
ment and Research Company had been
a~proidmaJely $18,000 lower but Cl9: Al·
lorney John Dawson advh1id t1re council
to disqualify the bid because of lrre11:u·
larities in the bid's submission.
The '1t\ornq also uid that he had con·
tacted tbe attorney representing the Dy·
h.anlbal family who owns the right or
way needed to get to the city hall site.
1be. atte ii located between Camino Ca pis.
trano and the flood control channeJ near
Comolidated Rock Products plant.
Dawson said the fam ily seemed Y.'il\ing
to provide the easement in the form or a
SO.foot wide road if they v.'ere compen·
aated for a prior easement and If they
could Hooli' up to utilities the city Installs
to serve the cily hall.
Froin Page I
BILLY REGAINS LIFE • ••
don't come around here . CMct It out
with a dermatologist and come to see me
after you're over ·It."
tn the next (ew years Joanne wu to
become an expert on the tragic dl.ff.ase
and au its strange ramifications.
The first decision was hers alone to
make. Knowing what might lie ahead for
the baby, 1ihould she ~uest an abortion!
"No one would help me decide that,"
she sayi;, "Not my husband, or my famlly
or the doctor. I thought about it a lot and
about the other chlldrtn (then aged one,
two and three years ) and I knew l
Couldn't live with myself if I decided on
an abortion, I knew the baby could be
blind, or deaf, and 1 knew the percen-
tages were pretty bad -but still, you
know, there was always the . .hope that
maybe my baby would be one or the
lucky ones."
A virtual quaranttne waa set up for the
birth, with the entire dtlivery ar~ under
special sterile coodiUoos. A rubella baby.
Joanne leamed, can carry the disease
and tran!mit it to othen for the first two
years of his life.
This side aspect of lhe problem was
rather firmly established when little Billy
came home from the hospital anc: his
ratner, sister and two .older brothers
promptly came down with measles.
·'He wu a big, beautiful baby -he
even looked t.uskler than my others,"
Joanne remembers. "And I really hoped
for a while that he mig~t be all right."
He ~·a& not all right. there ""as definite
heart murmur and cataracts on both of
his eyes. He had difUcul ly swallowing
and he hardly seemed to grow at all.
"The or.Jy thing he seemed to respcnd
to was music -he still loves to listen to
the lilt.rec and his hearing seems to be
quite 1ood," says Joanne. ltealliln1 lhls,
she 5tw~ little bells on the cuffs of hi.I
baby clothes to give hlm some amuse-
mtnL "Because he couldn't see, he
couldn't 1rab for things like other
babies."
Before he was a year old, a severe at-
tack of pneumonia almost tnded Billy'&
brier existence. But he aurvlved that and
a distinguished eye dCICtor performed
."\urgery on the cataracts. He began to
respond to Ught, but the cataracts
refonned and were agaln removed .
"Now he seems to be able: to recOgniie
me from across a room," hJs mother
iays, "but of coul"9e we can't teTI yet ex-
DAILY PILOT
Gu.NOE co.f.st ,u,i.1MotlHC) CON#Nf1
lt•llt,f N. W1t4
,,.,illMI W l'"*'"""r
J1c• It, C1•l1)
V~t ''Mlclftlt trA C)-rt Mt"fff(
T~'"''' ktt•ll t:•flOf
Ti-14'•1 A. Mw,,lii11
Mt!Wllint f:lll"'
~lehtr4 P. Ntll L..,...a"tll Cl1~ ldltet
.............. Ofrflee
111 Ftt••' A•111~1
Mt:li11t A,j411111 P.O. I•• 666, t2651
Other Offlttt.
( .. II M .. t: JlO W"I lo, Sl•ffl
/'If-I lt•r"1 1'11 w .. 1 tollloo t"'l•v•"'
"lllllillllfl'I tM4111 lltll ••"'" IJV .. ~tll
actly what he does lff,"
This rr.ay come after Billy teams to
talk -and he's doinJ pretty well In this
department. He can count to 10, call his
brothers ind sister by name and give a
respectable rendition of "Rock-a·bye
Baby.''
"Things that are nice, but really
ordinary accomplishments for most
babies are sort or a miracle for Billy,"
say:; Joanne.
The miracle be1an last August when
she called the Orange County Health
Departl"lent to see i: lhere might not be
some possibility of getting Billy inlo a
therapy program.
"He not only wasn't makine any pro-
gress -he was berinning to ·rtgreu, ''
she explains. "}1e would just Ue on his
back all day, staring up ai the Ught. He
didn't wan& anyone but me to do anythtn1
for him and finally even I couldn't coax
hJm to try things."
F'ro'll the health department. she learn-
ed about the Easter Seal Re.habllilatlon
Center for Crippled Chlldnn and Adults
in Orang'., and at the center she learned
of the program deal11:ned by Jol\n Carta-
Falsa, director of the Child Study Center,
especially for prt·&chool d e a f -b 11 n d
chiktren, victims of the rubella epidem ic.
Some of Ill graduates of "Rubella Class
'89" had been able to enter klndergarten,
they told her.
Billy was evaluated by an audiolosist,
language and speech pathaloglst,
pt. llatrlclan, phys.lea] therapist, oc-
cupatlon1l theraph1t, psychologist and
social worker. A program to meet his
special prOblems was sel up.
Since September. Billy ar.d his mother
have: reported to the Center for 21,t hours
a day, ~1onday through Thursday. eve ry
week. Billy has therapy, In and out of the
pool, does special exercises, take• speech
lessons, and, best of all, has learned to
enjoy playing: with other children and
"working out" with the adult aides.
Jte can sta nd alone, take steps \vi!h
help, throw a ball and catch It and travel
around the house in a "walker."
"He's developed so much Cilnfidence -
he's really proud of him!iielf," says Joan·
ne. "In fact he's getting to ht a shov.•-off.
The other day my husband and 1 were
rough-housing around \v \th the othe r kids
in the living room v.1hen Biiiy crowled
through the door. He waited till we were
watching, then turned a p e r f e c t
aomeruult."
One of the biggest steps came in
December, the day before his third birth·
day. Bllly had never been able to feed
himself, flatly refusing to touch a spoon,
or even hold a cookie In his band.
"For some reason. rubt1lit babies don 't
seem to like to touch th1n"s," says Joan·
ne. "That day he was silting up at the
table and all or a 1u1lden he picked up the
1poOn and started fttdlng himself just as
it M'd been delng It always."
Billy stlll won't eat "people" food
though. preferring lhe prepared baby
foods that are easier to swallow.
EaUn1 regular food and learning to
walk altnt are the next l\'lo big goals.
But even Without t h e 1 e ac-
compllsllmenta., tJ;e littl e boy who used to
just lie on his back staring at the U1ht
has btto1ne very much par~ of the fa1ni-
ly. He plays h11ppily with brolhcrs
Cllrl.stophet 6, and Joey, 4, and hi3 pretty
bklnde allte~ Hfldl, 5, even drtaming up
little joku t& play on them. When the
Jok" 1uccMd he laughc with glte.
"Sometimes I think ho '• the best thin§
that could have happtned to this faml~'. •
11ys Joanne. "Ha's 1ort of brou1ht us all
toeelhtr and liven US IO much happlne111.
The other kid• have belptd a lot with him
and we'n all to pleased ':Vhcn he learns
somethlnf new."
•1And Im a te1cher too," 1ay1 four·
year-old Joey.
Joanne e1plaln.1. '"The two older
children art ln scho01 when we co lo lhe
Ctnttt, ao JotY comes alon1 and while
Oilly'a ha ving his lhtrapy, Joey htlps the
speerh lheraplsL They war~td a child
"'l\h Mrmal speech ror the Olhtrl lo talk
lo. and J0ty'1 lt.1• -.
experience for all Of UI to face the
alternatives W«.i wUl have to look at.'~
Chifla Dargan, chaJrman of the
ciUseOI com'rDlttee: ln fa~ ol the ov,r-fll!i, I~ Ill~ l!ijll!!flanc. of • the bO&rd's ·mitrn, llrin aeCftlons on e1aetty
v.·hat will be cqt If the qyerrlde fails . The
board agreed to outline their decisions In
detail at a study session In two weeks.
Benedict also described priorities and
cuts ln the propOsed budget based 011 the
SO-Cent override,
T1 p priority was given to single sel.'llon
~indergarten which the . edminlstratlon
and elementary principals feel are
nece:u;ary to build skills necWAry In
learning how to read.
Truste(' .. Stan Kelley and Tom Winget
questiontld the validity of giving top
FILLS NEW SCHOOL POST
La9une Adminl1trator Hett
Froin Page J
HESS ...
cipal and principal -two year' each -
at Santa Ana Valley High School.
He received his doctorate In education
in August from USC. He prepared the
1966-67 budget for Santa Ana Unified
School District, acted as business
manager for six months, ha& worked in
curricu~um, purchased school sites and
recruited teachers. ·
Dr. Hess and his wife, Shirley will in·
crease the local school enrollment by
three when they move to Laguna in the
fall. They have. two SOM, John, 10, and
Brad, 8, and a daughter. Lisa, 3.
Hess has been a member of the North
Santa Ana Kiwanis Club board and a
mtmber ol the St. Peler Lutheran
Chw-cb board.
From Page 1
HIPPIES .•.
pollulion of the environment -a lot of
that come£ from big industries."
Judith Frank, member of t he
Krushkho\' team, wondered if Laguna '.s
"of! beat" businesM!s, the hii)pie-oriented
stores, had much of an Impa ct in lurin11:
hippie types. "The presence of \hese
shops is a very attractive aspect of the
city.'' she commented.
French suggested they p r o b a b J y
catered to ''plas!ics"-the weekend hip.
pies who come aown and "adopt hippie
clothes for ~he day, then go back to
Pon1ona al night."
The shops also. cater to Laguna youth,
said Doug Schmitz. "Our kids buy their ~ewelry at lhes.: stores, not In the regular
Jewelry shops. he noted.
"~. v.·as trylng to suggest a more
pos111ve alUtude," said Krushkhov, "and
a respect for humanity. It's always un-
fortunate that young people are not more
invol\·ed in planning, because after all
l h~y are the ones who will be living v.'ilh
this plan -and paying for It."
~ierrill JohnS-On wondered what other
areas had done about the hippie problem.
"I can assure YoU It's everyw here"
said Krushk.bov. "Tokyo and 'Paris a~d
Amsterdam have the same problem.
Four hundred thousand of these people
show up al one mu~ic festiva l. H's a
development that deserves some in-depth
study."
CAO Chairman Mark Gumbiner added,
"It's not jusl hippies: il's a whole sub-
cullure Involving much of our youth and
some not so young people who adopt the
3ame attitude. All we say Is •we don't
like them.' "
Frona Pnge I
TROOPS ...
Department as a patrolman. •·u feels great to be golnA'. hon\e ," ~.
<ltd Lt. Col. Jame5 w. !Alzzo, co1n-
1nandlng officer of Atlock Squndron 233.
.ading that he hasn't seen hi!I 4·year-old
daughter for more than a year.
First Sgt, Joseph Sagan. a 24·year \'eh~r•n wfth nine overseas tours will be
coming ba ck to El Toro with Attack
Squadron M2 and Is glad of It.
"lt Is alw1yi. a good feelln1 to be: going
home," he 1ald.
President Nixon hfls ordered th•t 50,000
n1ore American 1e.rvlcemrn be removed
from South VletnAm by April 15. About
60,000 "'ere withdrawn under phases 1
~nd Tl which began last summer.
Current U.S. troop stren;th in Vietnam
Is 419,IOO.
Th<! 50,000 men In the third pha!e witP·
drtiwal will all be ren1oved lro m Vietnam
by April I~ and will bring to 110,000 th•
nun1bt>r of An1eric•n troops wlthdr11wn
51nre 1he i.:.s. pullout bfgan last July I.
1
priorities to these areas at the ~&e or
all the others, parUculat!y 'teri'ledlal elpeclal~ts.
atudJes In early chJldhood
n are 1Ddlcatlng that many
fallurea ln reading come about because or
inadequacy of progrilms at the kin-
dergarten and preschoo l level,'' said
BenedJcL
"Basic communication, basic skilb.
such as llst.enlng ari'd spe~klng are ltn-
porlant to learning how to read. If we
spend rr,ore money .and effor t tn the
kindergarten area we'll have fewer
failures and more children reading bet-
ter."
He said at the present Ume each
kinderparten teacher has two classes
representing 00 or 60 children per day.
J.lnder the new plan there! would be one
tfacher ror 30 cl)tldren and ~ kln-
dertarten smloo would be tbrte and one
hlilf hours instead of the present two and
a half.
Since a kln4er1arten teacher works a
Tegular full day there WOUid be team
teacher o~portunilies as well as be tter
planning. The pro,llram would call for ~e
hiring or ten additional tear.her!.
Other budget Items calltd to the at·
tention of the truslees were:
-A reduction of staffing from a 14 per·
cent iric1 ea!'it1 to 10 percent.
-Recommending the utlllz1Uon of part
time Clerical help at the elementary level
in lieu of pro!essional nurses and library
aides.
-Reduction of instructional aides.
-EUmlnatlon ot portables used for
ac•dert\IC re~ centers. 1 -Ctn1nl staff and admlniatraUon re·
mains the same.
-Retention of P,Xl,000 reserve fund.
-Adding three busts instead of four :
two would be dl3 trlct owned and one leas-
ed.
-Large cut In operation of school
plant.
-Restoration of prior formulas per slu·
dent for instructional supplies. $8 per
elementary student, $12 junior high and
'20 senior hlJh.
-lncrea1ed fundl in c o m m u n I t y
servicie artu for winter and 1ummer
programs.
-Retention of cost or living increases
in jJCM!Onntl salaries.
Planners, Citizens Map
Future of Laguna Beach
Planning for ~aguna's ruture moved in·
. to hJ&h g~ar this week as members of the
Planning Commis!lon, the Citizens
Advlaory Committee and the planning
team from Daniel, 1i1aM, Johnson &
i1endenhall got together in the city fire
station for their first joint workshop
session.
Tbe Monday night mee ting, scheduled
for cUy hall council chambers. v.·as
ousted by a lengthy jury trial carried
over into lhe evening from the regular
daytime rourl session. Firen1en hastily
rigged up a meeting room in their
quarters nex\ door and played host to the
planners.
"This is a crucial time," project direc·
tor Abraam Krushkhov told the com-
missioners, who recently complained
about being appartntly bypassed in Ule
gen!l'al plan project. "From now on you
will have to play an active role, because
you are the ones \vho v.·i ll make the final
plaM ing recommendation to the city
counc il, on the basis of the information
11·e can supply to you."
The ge ne ral plan study, which 5larted
in July, 1967 and was scheduled for com·
plclion in 18 months, is ninning a couple
or monlhs behind schedule. Krushhov
sa id, but all the necessary data now is in
ha nd and the planning team will spend
the entire month of February assembling
it into several different concepls for a
future Laguna.
By the beginning of March. he said, ii
v.•ill be possible to sketch out a variety of
Froio Page 1.
EDISON ...
slipped Into virtual anonymity.
Tv.10 J.l ml!lion kilo\vatt units will be
added al San Onofre. They \vill provide
enough pol\'er to serve the equivalent
electrical needs of a dty of 2.5 million
people. The addltion of the units will
create one of the nation's largest nuclear
generating stations.
Announcement of the new nulcear units
was first made three weeks ago in Los
Angeles by William R. Gould. Edison vice
president duri ng hearings on the Hun-
tington Beach expansion before the state
Public Utilities Commission.
Construction of the first of the nuclear
add!tlons Is expected to begin ne11 sum·
mer and commer\ca l operation Is
scheduled In 1976. The second unit would
go into commcrciat operation a year
later, J1orton said.
"Beginning with the San Onofre addi·
lio n we are committed to build only nu·
clear powe r plants for our major gene·
ration sources In lhe coastal basin," Hor-
ton said. "Thi!! is another step Edison is
ta king in U1e, interest ol cleaner air for
Southern California."
choices for a aeneraI plan, baaed on l1nd
use, economic, population, social and
traffic studies. With the "planning area"
covering 15 square mJles, a.a opposed to
the city's five square miles, the
possibilities will Include varying degrees
of annexaUon to achieve desired goals.
"We will present a variety of ar-
rangements for roads, traffic, parking,
grMJI .'_ belts _ and ho\lslna_ densi ty,"
Krushkhov tolifUie commlss1on.-1'Then It
will be up to you to choose a plan that is
workable in the light of statistical facts
and mOst nearly mee~ the community's
goals."
"I can hardly wait to see what you
come up. with ," commented Commission
Chairman Fred Briggs.
Once a concept is agreed upon by the
commission, "and I am conOdent we
finally will get a con,&ensus," Krushkhov
said, it will be recommended to the City
Council, which then wlll hold public hear-
ings before its final adoption .
Kru!hkhov denied any sharp disagree-
ment with the goals statement prepared
by the CAC, but reminded listeners thel
goals must be considered in relation to
avail able land, economics and "the many
outside influences that inevitably will af.
feet Laguna."
Despite Its ''land locked" geographical
situation and the desire of the Com·
munlty to retain its individual character,
the planner pointed out, "We are still
part of the great regional development
that some day may virtually make a
single megalopolis reaching from Santa.
Barbara to San Diego."
Dlse.snslon between the CAC and the
planning team was revealed In d!SCU&Slon
of future hOusing and employment, the
CAC malntalning that high land values in
Laauna. will make it impossible to pro.
vide lo~st ho\14ing and therefore un-
necessllO' to plan for Jow·wage job
growth.
The majority of Laguna residents, the
committee aniwered, will continue to
work outside the cQmmunity and to bt:
made up largely of management .and pro-
fessional persons, willing to commute
substantial di.stances in order to live In
Laguna.
"Laguna is not Toledo, Ohio," said
\Vorthington. "We probably will never
ha1•e an international alrport, we don't
generate our 01vn power', .,...e probably
never will be a self-sufficient city with
employment and housing for everyone al
every income level. So there are many
things we don't have to plan for that
01 her cities c!o."
"I simply can't conceive of a plan with
no provision for new employment." said
hrushkhov. "lt·s just again st good plan.
ning principles. A maximum freedom of
choice in a place to live and a place to
\vork is a prin cipal planning goal."
Commissioner Joseph Tomehak was ..
ANOTHER • • • • •
concerned I.bout the appartnt '4u.
clusivlty11 Of the no low cost housing ~n
cept. CAC member Vern Spltalerl said It
would be an economic fact rather thin
any deliberate exclusivity, because of
soaring land values.
Discussion of the nature of Laguna
residents led to the conclusion that people
live in the Art Colony because they Wlflt
to, wUhout regard to availability of work
ahdOften at considerable sacrillce or
material comfort.
"It's sort of self-screening," suggested
CAC chainnan Mark Gumbiner. "People
will decide to live in some old place here
rather than in a much more modem
home Jn Mission Viejo. By the ~ame tok·
en, the peopJe who prefer ~fission Viejo
wouldn't think of coming here."
"It bu nothitl1 to do with money or
education," added Worthington. "Nobody
lives in Laguna Stach who doesn't want
to -and If he wants to live hert, It
doesn't matter where his job is. Thia Js
why we feel there is less need for em·
phasis on this housing -employment
aspect of the plan."
Krushkhov concluded, "The main
thing ls to have a wide variety of choice
and not such rigid goals that'we come ui:;
with a bad plan. Already there are many
physical constraints -you're adding
philosophlcal and social constraints. I
think we should try to create a wide
range of choice -with.in, of course, the
limitations that you and God have
established."
"I think you should put God first," said
Tomehak.
Froin Page 1
TRUSTEES ...
must also offer avenues of solution. He
said it is easy to point out defects in lhe
American system. Suggesting t h a t
socialism and communilm is better, ht
snid, is "to pervert the minds of the
young."
Of the Saddleback hair length con·
trO\'ersy, Fran.klin said the "enforced
confonnity is meeting a bitter reaction."
He said many of the good students had
transferred elsewhere.
He said Saddleback leadership hoped
th at a cleancut looking ca mpus would
also be a campus that conforms in its
thinking. All of the three male panelists
had hair that curled over their collars. 1
}'rariklin said his is too long for Sad·
d\eback but not too long for the retail
merchandising job he holds with a large
department store.
Referring to a preliminary federal
court h1junction a1ainst the school on the
hair issue. Bothwell said it \vould seem
that a reasonable administration knov.·ing:
the court attitude would acquiesce.
E-X-P-A-N-S-1-0-N
We htvt elways endeavored to furn ish tht
fine•! service anywhere for CARPETING and
DRAPERIES. Towards this end, we have ju•I com·
ploted an enlargmeent of fociliti .. which will on·
ablt us to serve you betttr!
Comt. in ind ste our hugt inventory of fine
c;arpeting ind browse through our ntw remnant
room, whtrl wt heve thous.rids of y1rds of smell
and room-site remnants!
UNUSUAL INSTALLATION PROBLEMS?
Como in ind t1lk with any of our 11losmen-who 111 hive hid 11\tn•ivo
inst1l11tion experienc;e!
ALDEN'S
CARPETS e DRAPERllS
1
1663 l'LACENTIA·COSTA MESA
646·4131
II YIAU 'IRVINO THI OkANOI COAST .... ___ _ (
-·--------------------------------
l
...._ ______________________ ._. ___________ ._. ____ _.__ _________ ~....-.~-""""""""----
I
Crimes Jump
Drug Abuse Leads List
SANTA ANA -Orange
County Sheriff James A.
!'iu&lck noted a 57 percent rise
1n drua cases Jn 1969 Jn unin·
corporated areas and contract
cl~les of San Juan Capistrano,
Villa Park and Yorba Linda .
In 1 year.ei1d study of crln1e in
the county.
~fuslck said the increase
was due to a spread of drug
abuse am ong young people
and a 15,000 increase hr
population in areas ser ve<l by
the force .
According to the report, the
total number of c r i m e s
reported lo the she r i ff's
department jumped 2 3 \4
peiunl. "Some 31,089 actual
offenses ~·ere logged by the
c<>unty agency," the report
claimed. compared to 25.226
in 1968.
Robberies showed the big-
gest increase, at 88 percei1t.
Rape was next with a 61 per·
cent increase. follo\\'cd ·by
burglary which showed a 17
percent gain. Auto thefts
de~lined by four percent. he
said. ·
Burglaries v.·ere reported
most often at 1 total of 2,791
times, followed by thefts at
2.654 and auto thefts at 327.
The department recorded only
one murder. which w a s
cleared.
Arrests of adults climbed to .
10,949 from 7,619 the year
before, the sheriff noted.
Juvenile cases increased by
400 to 6,0aa in 1969 y,·hich
resulted in 4,110 youths being
proce~d, he added
The average dally head
count in Orange County Jail
rose from 493 to 655. The
report stated 33,786 individuals
v.·ere booked in 1989. 'Theo
Lacy branch jail showed a
decrease in average daily
head count of 279, v.•hile the
Industrial Farm remained
unchanged wit h an average of
81 in1nates . The farm raised
$52,819 y,·orth of food nursery
nroducts and hay J.or county
institutions . the stJify showed.
Sheriff ?-.fusick noted depart-
ment strength was up to M5,
379 of whom are enforcement
personnel.
New Adult Classes
Slated in Clernente
SAN CLEMENTE - Four
ne.w classes have been pro.
posed for the spring semester
Death Notice$
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Gostt M111 Pait ol llttt", Ji n. JS. Sur·
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Ntll\t "· Sllve•wood. 167J l oulot SL
L1ouro1 lle•t". 0111 of de11n. J1nu•'Y '~
Survived l'v d•uoll!er, M1rh111 LI !oC11Jbe.
L1111n1 fltt tn: s\ittr, M1~1 Sl1rbutk.
Stitl !otlth; bfOl~tr. C.eo•Oft !ort~ltl'.
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ClltPtl. lnttnMnl. 1"1trll1vt11 M-l•l ,-,r11;. lM'lltr lllUlll Stith MMIVf'Y,
Olr.ctor1.
ARBUCKLE & SON
Westcllff Mortuary
'17 E. 17th St., Costa l\1e11
616-488& • BALTZ MORTUARIES
C'..orona del l\far OR 3.9450
Cotta l\lesa 1\0 &-!424 • BELL BROADWAY
MORTUARY
110 Broadway, Costa &fesa
LI 8-3133 • DILDAY BROTHERS
Huntington Valley
&lortuary
17111 Beach Blvd.
Huntington Beach w-m1 • PACIFIC VIEW
MEMORIAL PARK
Cemetery e ~1ortuary
Chapel
1500 Parlfic View Orl\'e
Newport Beach. California
Mf.1100 • PEEK t'AMll.Y
Cot.ONIAL FUNERAL
H0~1E
7801 Bol~a A\'t.
Westm.in1ter P3-U2S • SHEFFER MORTUARY LI~• Beech 494-tm
Saa Cemente 4ft.OIOI • 8Ml11lll' MORTUARY
In Mllllt St.
Huntlnittoa Be1eb
5.1M$11
Andy's Fun
Aik 11'1)' kid. "Ask Altdy" h (11n.
Stt It S1turd1ys I" tile DAILY
PILOT.
at the San Clemeate Adult
School which serves th e
Capistrano Unified Schoo I
District .
The new offe ri.1gs are:
v.•rlting for publication, nurses'
aide, band. and first aid.
Students can begin enrolling
Feb. 2 with in1truction
starting Feb. 9.
In the art category claws
\\'ill include Art I and II,
scul pture, general arl , interior
decoratioo, crafts (ceramics),
meta1craft (jewelry), guitar
and home landscape design.
English courses will include
basic E n g I i s h , lite rature,
speed-reading, English as a
second language (citizenship
English), effective speech and
business English.
Business courses will tn·
elude bookkeeping. o f f i c e
machines, beginnlng short·
hand. beginning and advanced
typing.
Homemakers will be offered
beginning. Intermediate and
advanced clotbin& and family
life education.
In the industrial a r ts
category will be woodshop fun-
damentals, automotive tuneup,
graphi c arts and photography
and welding and metal shop.
Also to be offered are
refresher math , p h y ~I ca I
science, beginning Spanish and
French, government a n d
United States history.
Santa Ana
O.ty Hall
Plans Set
SANTA ANA -Work ls et·
pected to be completed in
June on final plans for the new
Santa Ana City Hall, ac·
cording to architect Don Ram·
berg of t.he Santa Ana firm of
Ramberg and Lowrey which is
de signing the building.
The new city hall , which will
be located southv;esl of the
Santa Ana police building on
Sixth Street, will have a total
gross floor space of 104,000
square feet , when co mplete in
1972 Lhe architect sa id. Tht
current city hall, \\'hich was
erected in 1935 has 30,000
square feet.
The. building v.·i\I stand eight
&tories high and will be built
of textured concrete and
stone. Ramberg said it will
house all of the city agencies
plus some additional police
facilities. The cost of the
building and laodscaping will
run about $3,728,000 he 53ki.
The Santa Ana architects
designed the new county
<'0t1rthouse and the Santa Ana
police building. "We also are
doing some preliminary work
on a federal building for the
civic center," Ramberg said .
Jury Boxes
Deadline Set
SANTA ANA -Or1111<
COunty board of 11uptt'Viaor1
set a MIJ'(h 2 deadline for
bids on expaMion of jury bot·
ts ai:ld lmprovtme.nt 0 r
lighting in the jury boxes in
the new county courthoose.
The changes will he made ln
drpartments IS throuah 20 of
the 111Jperiot court
Only On1
f in.ti stotkS In 111 homt rd!Uons.
That's 1 big dtar? ft Is In Or.ang1
County. Tiit DAILV PILOT Is thi'
only dally ntWSP•Pff ll'llt dtllY·
~~~~~~~~~~~t=n==tM:=P:~:ka=~=·========='I
Liberation
Panel Slated
IRVINE -''Today's
Educated Hou sewife Is
Prostituting Herself" will be
the topic or a panel discussion
by the Women's Liberation
Front of Laguna Beach Thurs-
day night al UC lr\'lne.
The program, sponsored by
UC I faculty and staff wives,
will be at 8 p.m. on the third
floo r of the Commons Building
al Gateway Plaza.
. '
\
bAILY ,llbT I
Viejo Kids Get Special Attention
By PAMELA HALLAN
01 I~ 01ll1 "•ltt S1tff
MISSION VIEJO -E"ry
parent "''ants the s c b o o 1
teacher to take a special ln·
terest in his child but with 25
to 30-students in the classroom
it doesn't usually happen.
One grou.., of parents in
Mission Viejo, how~ver, can
smugly say their children e.re
getting Individual attention.
These are the children in the
C o n t I nuous Individualized
Progress Program CCIPPl at
O'Neill School in the San Joa·.
quin School District. Each
child ia trealed as an In-
div idual y,ith dirferent abilities
and different learning rates.
Pupils in CIPP are not
classified by usual grade
levels. They are divided in·
stead into immature first
graders. regular firp;t graders.
second graders and third
graders.
"This is our first year and
so far the program has been
very successful," said Jhn
Mitchell, principal of O'Neill
school. He attributes the suc.
cess of lhe program lo the
four teachers in CJPP, Chuck
Prl~. Sue Baldwin, Lynn Children in CIPP won't be participate If parents dealre. could be acctpttd for t1lt pilot
Rl thle and Charlene Crandall. rKeivioR th e 381ne rtport eoerd members also have protrarn 200 applications were
He explains that the children cards as most s t u d e n t s e;11:pre1sed concern a b o u t tece:lved. receive the same. school cur· rlculum .as chlldren In regular because progress is meaJUred children in CIPP who ml&ht "Parenta have bteo very
classes but each child "'orks according to attitude and tf· move \o another I c boo I enthuslutlc about the pr6'
at his own speed . In one sub-tort as well a1 achievement. "A'lthout CIPP. But they have f•m," 11ld the prlnclpal.
Ject, 1iUCh as reading, a 6 year The report cards, designed been assured by C I P P 'We've been Ye.ry fortunate I"
old who read.11 exceptlonally by 8 group of 60 CIPP teachers that teach Ing that we have not had one com· ~·ell might \York "''ill\ an 8 materials and methods are plaint."
year old who reads at the parents. "''ere recently •P-basically the same as in the He aald tie hopts Ole pr1>-
san1e level. Hl' 1night then proved by the trustees of the rcgu\1r classroom and thll a aram can be 1 standard next
have math with studf\1ts of San Joaquin EI em en la r y cbild who moves should have year 1t O'Nelll to Involve
another age working at his District with the stipulation no dllftculty adjuatln& to children who would normally
same level. that each par ent must have a another school . be In fourth, fifth and attth
"Class rooms are arranged place lo comment on whether Despite ita newness the pr<>-crade cllasu. Ht allo hopes
"'Ith movable walls ," said the or not the card provides ade· gram appears to be popular. other 1ehoobl' in the dlltrtct
principal. "Children can W-Ork quate Informati on. There 1lso Mitchell r' ported that can bl,stn thelr own CIPP p-o-
"''ithin their own classrooms or -;o;iniiiiiiwiihiiiciih ... ti;he ... iichiiliild ... iimiiai;y..iaiiliithouiiiiil;hi..:oi;n:;;ly~jitl;:;O.:;cll~i~lcl~renl eram.
the y,•alls can be opened and a-[;:::.'=:;;;;;:;=::;;;=::;;;;::::;;;::;;;;:;;
they can have such th iogs OS e JOB PRINTING mu.!iic, art and Sl'lence all
tosether with teachers work· e PUBLICATIONS
ing as a team." • NEWSP He emphasized that the APERS
purpose of CIPP isn't to in·
crcai;e a ch i eve n1ent
ne<:essarily, but to chm1ge 1l·
titudes toward school "'hi ch
could ha"e a bearing on
achleven1cnl.
"The ones who didn't like
school before find !hey like it
now," sa id Mitchell .
Ou•Jity Printin9 and D•p•ndabla Servic.a
for more than • qutrftr of a cantury.
PILO T PRI NTING
2111 WIS1' IALIOA ILYD .. NIWPOIT IUCH -641-4111
GUARANTEED
•
Eam e% per year en minimum b•l•~
of $5,ClXl for rr"ed term of 2·10 ~ara.
A•I• ls guaranteed, earned from date
ot depoalt, compounded da lly,
and paid quarterly.
A THOUGHT
FOR TODAY
""'" "'"'1 Mfft;M .... tlfl .... lltt wt. It al'Wt fl ~ IHdl.
-APllllflMUI
,lll'llHTfO AS A
.. Ul l!C SEllVICI IVlllY OAY •Yi
LH Roofing Co. ,, v .. ,. Ill .........
1W SllWftl' Av.. ..,..
Eam !5~ peryeer Oft minimum
bl!ll•nce of $1,000 for fixed term of
1·2 year a. R•I• Is guaranteed, aarned
from dale of deposit, compounded
d•llyend paid quarterly. ' And don't forgef
5"-,_"'"_ ..
f'tOullr p I 'St~-toOOUft&
All this means that nobody
pays you more, and nobody pays
you In more different ways than
of \he nation's aeoond lar;1at
federal With aeetll aver a bDllon
dollara and accounts ere now lneured
lo $20,CXX>. eome-ua eoon.
Glendale Federal on savings and Investment
accounts. What's more;you have the protection
GlENDAlf FlDULU
SAVINGS----
21 omca 110.: llJM touTMIJIJf C.AUPORNIA
Ar9l9I too l!Klil """~, ,.._,,..., m aovti kwrfyDrt¥t/C9Mlf '-ft.,,,, TopMOt ~......,..ICM•_.. t112t 11a1wNta""'11/ ... -.
1131 Nlwpurt loU:111Wd ~ ll030 MoMwood ltfwt/lf....,.. '°'52 V1!iey M.il/,.....,. UO Morth Hlrtlof 9ou!wwd/ ........ C..... Olla&) Cl .... ....
~ laadl 56111 llMml &tr.et/~ W: loolltti Myrlie Aven11t/MoMr..»&O HonoMu AW/fllW/....,_,. ...... IOO .......,c.tl*,,__ ...... .
1421ltlNllC loW¥ilrd/P ...... 7H fut Colotado Boulaverd/lwl,... 65' Wnt Nlntl'I ..,_., ...... w.iino ....... Orhl/ .... Cllr1111t ....
loulaftrd(TwrttMA M32 *""'N'ldl llN!MtO/V.,,..,,.. •Ta SOU111 M1111 Altld/W.......,,..... ,otaw.arw-d ~,...,,..o-. ... .....,., , 1
NATIDN'a aECDND LAROllT FEOEAAL WITH A&llTS OYEA •1 llLUDN • 22 OFFICEI • MAIN O,,ICl1 QL.lllllAU
'71L%--1/Z ............... . 8"--t.11%IMUlllJ"
I
•
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•
• JO DAll.V PllDT L Tutsdly, J111uart ~7, 1970
Your Money's Wortl1
Most Hospitals Guilty of Misusing. Resources
By SYLVIA PORTER
(Secoad lD • ~rleJ tf F1\t)
Despite our r1smg alarm
aboul the shortsge of hospital
facilltle!i, a maJorlty of our
hospitals still are guilty of
gross misuse or avadable
health care: resources
In Burfalo, ~ recent review
of hospital use by I h e
American Pui, 1c H ea It h
Association found that about
one out of six p;i,l1Pnts did not
actuall y requi re
hosp1tahzatJon
IN ANOTilER study Ne"'
Yorks Columbia Un1\ers1 ty
found that tv.o ou! of five bed
patients would be more ap-
proprial<'IY cared for m a
nursing fac1h1y th;:in " general
hospital
Also 1n New \'ork, lhe
CorneU Un1\ets11y f.1edlcal
Center found lhat one 1n four
long term patients could have
been discharged a month or
more earlier than lhey "ere
discharged
Jn Da} ton Ohio the Miami
Vall"Y Hospital con.luded that
more than one 1n I t v e
• emergency ' cases were not
emergencies at all and some
could have been t.akt 1 care of
1n a doctors office
h~ SYRACUSE N Y, the
County l~eal1h Planrung Coun
c1l reported recently that one
1n four patients should not
ha\ e been hosp1talizcd and 1n-
stead should have received
Yarlous level!! of home care1 outpatient clime or nursing
home care "
1n Columbus Ohio, one ma
Jor hospital fo:.inJ that a full 15
percent or 1L'I beds were nu~
l'lther by palJtnls walling ror
diagnostic tests or a n
ava ilable operating room And
an Ann Arbor, Michigan, study
1nd1cated that for the most
common types of surgery, the
average patient sprnds 11
days In the hospital before hJs
oper.it1on
The length of a hospital
stay, many hosp1lals report.
depends largely on the day a
patient entert the hospital
Since surgical and laboratory
facl ht1es are usually closed on
weekends says the National
Commw1on on Community
Health Services, being ad-
mitted to the typical U S
bosp1al on a Friday ta to
'spend a Jost weekend .
~a1hng for lhe week to begin"
-at extra costs easily run-
ning to $200 and up
EDITORIALIZING ln the
New York Times recently on
our • fragmented non system •
of medical care Dr Leona
Baumgartner, former New
York City Health Commllls1onr
and now a Harvard Medical
School professor, described
the followmg 1ncred1bly 1n-
eff1c1enl s1tuat1on 10 a
Kru se Leave s Board
Of California Federal
Arthur G Kruse of Laguna
Hills has reUred from the
board or directors ~f
California Federal Savings,
the assoc1at1on announced
Kruse wlll contl nue as
chairman or the Alhambra ad
'1sory board of Oahforrua
Federal Savings
Vice chairman of t he
Cahforn1a Federal bonrd of
rltrectors from 196fi until last
tall Kruse earlier \\lls for
m;iny vcars president of First
Federal Savings of Alhambra
~tUch he 101ned 1n l!m, t\IO
years af!er its founding
...
$170 mllhon 1n assets, and a
place In the top 11 percent of
the nation's more than 6,000
savings and loan assoc1at1ons.
before 1t merged w Ith
California Federal 1n 1966
A former director of the
Federal llome Loan Bank of
San Francisco, and a past
president of the Califorrua
Savings and Loan League
Kruse has been a San Gabriel
Valley and Orange County
c1v1c leader. active 1 n
Chamber of Comme rce and
numerous other g r o u p s , DIRECTOR RETIRES
Arthur Krus•
Under his leadership
Federal grew to more
First
than
throughout his 42 year savings ------------
and loan career
State Converts 150
Mor e Vehicws to Gas
An add1l1onal 150 vehicles or
the C:ihrorrua D1v1s1on of
Jhghwa)!S will be converted to
the natural gas fuel system
this year as n further step
toward reducing air pollution
James A t.1oe state direc-
tor of pubhc "orks announced
that 12$ state vehicles will be
con\ertecJ to com p re sse d
natu ral gas and 25 \ltll be con
verted to hqu1d natural gas
The first 100 vehicles "'II be
assigned to the Los Angeles
area and 25 "tll be situated 1n
~1th er Sacrament o 11r S:in
Francisco The entire fleet of
hqu1d natural gas vehicles w1H
be assigned to the San Diego
area
1\fO<' explained that the com-
pressed natural gas fleet will
operate on a dual fuel system
1 he vch1cles will operate on
n;itural gns 1n crowded urban
areas and can be converted to
regular gasolme 1n the open
PRESTIGE "COURTESY
PROFIT
TELEPHONE
ANSWERING BUREAU
83S .7777
INCOME TAX
D•r & Ew•11h1t •ppol11t""~"
llOW ~Al Klied11\lld
John E. Miesinger
~fl-4 r11bllc Ac.c.011,.1a1"
Phon• 842-4818
I
country where smog 1sn t a
problem ~
On compressed natural gas.
the vehicles have a range ol
8(}-100 miles The single fue l h
quid natural gas vehicles can
travel Z5(}J(l(I miles before
refueling
The Department of Pubhc
\\orks, f\.toe sa id IS "ork1ng
with other State agencies to
develop a plan to implement
Governor Ronald Reagan s
recently armounced program
designed to use the States
fleet operations and purchas-
ing and taxing pov.ers to en
courllge and expedite the use
of smog free vehicles
P rintiI1 g
Exhibit Se t
The next major exh1b1t1on of
pr1nbng presses and other
pnntlng machines to be he ld
in the US will be held Jn
Orange County, according to
NPEA Exhibits, lnc,. show
sponsor
The exh1b1tlon The National
Printing Equipment Show, will
be held at the Anahe11n
Convention Center An aheim
June 6 through June 10
Besi des aimmerc1al pr1nt1ng
presses the National Printing
Equipment Show will contain
tvpcsctllng m a c h 1 n e s , 1n-
clud1ng those wh ich set type
e le ctronically and by
photograph} graph ic arts
cameras bookbtndmg and
magazine b1nd1ng ~uipmenl
and all kind~ of spcttalty
equipment for commercial
pnntlng plants
COMMODITIES SPECIALISTS
R. I. O'BRIEN & ASSOCIATES, INC.
members or
Ma1or Commodity E;tchanges
Take pleasure in announcing the
opening of their California 0U1ce
PA msoN INVESTMENT COMPANY
1649 Westdllf Drive Ncwporl Beach
Cahforn1a
Telephone 642 8006
Broken 1n Commod1Ucs Since 1914
Beam Ne\v
County
President
Complete-New Yori{ Stock List
l
I
................... .,...,.. ... """ ....... ._,.. ..................................... _,,_.__,._. __ ~ __ .._,,......~~~~~~~~~~----·~~~~--.....,.,~ I
Tuesday's Closing Pric es -Con1plete New York
DJ Average Dips
To 3-year Nadir
I
I
T"""'1, JIJIU"7 27, 1970
Sto lt Exchange List
l"ii;" ' .. tx I DI\• .. ., ..
tk I iiO lll'.11 ••• ..-1 ..
••tl "" to t..Oll(h °' ,,~,. ~· u, t11u111 _.,
ltllfOll tt •~lrn Ill OI l~"' ,.,. l=~•1w '*" , ... '° ....,,.
lltltlyOr ~ l(G,1.0 litlt l" 1 tt1 lll'IHM!r Y Timi( RI I to Tt-11 A: IY 4(1
Tolll1' ''I ' Tot0Sll1 ~
To it41EG l '' !"""! "i •tl'lt • t rt111UA 1 1 •I'll W ,t,lr rnWAlr .i 1
I•;:::::. ....
tll\K'Oll '° "aw'"' ..... '"" tt f ICI ~:Ttrt ,, '
;.1E:' .ri"S:
r11111111 JOe TIW lf!C 1 TFIW J>I~ IO !RW p!j 4(1
~an GE n wen C1111
OAILV PILOT
hit• ....
(II" I Hltll Ww C'-' (lit
Finance
Briefs
SAN FRANCISCO CUP()
The newsmaker In fami ly
ente rtauiment ror 1970 ac
cording t.o singer Bing Crosby
\\Ill be a multi v111on ex.
pcr1ence of sigh t sound col
or and light
Crosby and David M Sacb
former vice president of the
Amencan BroadcasUflg Co
announced they are forming
fin Jntematlonal nel,11ork o(
franc h 1 sed mllli thealt.rs
where the whole farruJy can
enJOY this mulliple 1ma1e
enterta1runent
Electrov1slon ProducUons
Inc headed by Crosby and
Sacks 1s developing a new
entertainment form w h I c h
combln~s movies slides and
sound In a coniputerlted show
pro1ected on a 181).degree
screen
The new theaters designed
to seat up to 300 pcopl_e1 will
sccen shows producea by
Leslie Buckland s Carlb1ner
Productions e. pioneer co1n4
pony 1n mixed media shows
whlch h111ve been retained by
Crosby and Sacks PN!mJere
date for the company a fu-sl
production has been set for
this i;pr1ng in San Franclsco
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -
The San Francisco Federal
Snv1ngs and Loan A!sociat1on
annual meeting Wednesday
reported 1969 eamin11 were at
an all time reco rd of $2 «ii 317
after federal ta•es
President D o n a I d w
Mltch1ll told the meettna that
the assoc1atlon s reservt1 alao
wert at an 111 time hl&h of
S20 060 674, exceeding t h e
regulatory requirements o(
18 800 000
PALO AL TO (UPI)
TyTMhare Inc Of Pi.lo Alto
and Dial Data Inc o f
Newt.on. Mau. announced
1ireement In principle on a
mcraer to fonn the third
l•rseat comM1ter time aharlne
company In the c:ount yr
T J 0 Rourli.t president of
Tymshare 1nd L. C Clll>Pt
prt~denr or Dini Dai., .. Id
shorehalde.rs 'Would be aaked
10 approve the propo1ed
mersC'J'
I
r T " . I
•
J ! DAILY PILOT
Nixon's
Welfa1·e
Idea 01(
Tuesda1, J11n1u111 27, 1970
s~hool Preg11ant Teens Sta-v .. • ID Helps Progra1n
\\'ASHINGTON (AP) also v.·as told the change In cian who began a pioneer pro-already face in birth. Their from high school are preg11ent, Equipped with more in· for 6 to 8 "'eeks and then
School officials are developing policies, including an end to gran1 to help them ln 1962, births frequent l Y were she :said. formation about theinselves return to the regular school,"
more enlightened p 0 11 c I es punitive expulsions, results Jn said during lbe "Parenthood pren1ature and preJ11alure Followup studies on the 350 and family plannhig nielhod s. Dr. Lyons said.
dealing with the gTowlng num-a loY!'er dropout rate for girls, in AdolesctO(e" wnfe.reoce. babi~ are more suscepUble to girls In the seven Los Angeles Dr. Lyons said. most do not
bers of pregnant teen-agers, n1uch better health for mother ·:~lost had been kicked out n1 en ta I retardation and specia1 schools show nearly all become pregnant again soon. Dr. Carl A. Koner, director
including keeping them in and baby and fewer repeat of school and se.1t to a home deformities, Dr. Lyon:t said. return to graduate, maay go "\\'e keep them in the of speclat education a\
school and assuring them pregnancies. or relative ." she said. And the newly delivered on lo collt:ge when they might classroom right up Io Kalamazoo, Mich.. schools,
WASltlNGTON (AP _ An medical care, acco rding to a Pregrutnl teen-agers were Fe"' i;ot regular medical at-mother who was allowed or not have before, and some use deUvery,'' she said. "They said his county wide program
report to a cooference on "an unserved population until lention or nutritional advice. 1 who chose to return to school schola?"ships which they had may have their fir st labor serves about 80 girls at any
13-month-old experiment using adolescent parents. a few years ago," Dr. Doroltiy she said. heightening the risk was a rarity. At least 50 per-been awarded before they sot patns there. 11ley come back one time out of the populaUon
the basi c principles of Prcsi· The \\' e e ken d conference Lyons, a Los Angeles physi-\\'hich teen-age rn o l hers cent of the rcmale dropouts pregnant. 10 days after delivery and stay of 200,000. dent Nixon's \\'elfare reforn1 _ _c_.:..::::::..:..::.:..::::::..:..::::.:...:...c-'--C'---'-----=---'--'----------'------------------'--''-----------'-::::.::.:.::.:...:...c ___ .:...:::::..:..::.:...:...::.:_c_::::..:.:._ _____ _
proposals indicates the ad·
ministration idea can work,
says the test director.
Acknowledging the el'idence
still is scantv. eronomisl
Harold \V. \Valls s a i J
nevertheless "the direction of
the adn1inistration program i.~
good."
\\'alt.~. head of the Institute
for Research on Po\erty at
the Universitv or \\'i sconsin,
said in a telephone interview
the experiment is designed lo
determ ine how \\'orking people
not earninj!" enou~h lo support
their families behave ~'hen
gi\·en supplementary funds.
SllBSTITUTIOS
President Nixon has pro-
posed s ub s tituting a
guaranteed family income for
the present \\'l"lfare systen1 of
aid lo dependent children.
l\•hich goes mainly to families
without a male \\'age earner.
Counlin~ food stamps. Nix·
on's plan provides a federa11y
J?"uarante~d floor of about
S2,350 a \ear for a familv of
four. regardless of 1vheihcr
!here is a male \\•age earner.
Jn calrulating pa y men I s
needed lo bring a ramilv 10
that level. the first SOO a
month of earnings would nol
be counted. Aho\"e this amount
\\'oulcl be a ll reduction of
federal benefit~ for each $2
<'arned. Able·bodied adults in
families assisled \\'ould have
to acc<'pl suitable jobs if
a1·:iilable or joh traininJ?.
\Valls indicated that
a11hnup<h th~ l"\'idence is not
all in it can be saicl at this
point "a program can be ao--
plied and aclmini.i;lered for the
1rnrking poor .. ''
The lesls. 1,1•hich slartl'd
\\"ilh 75 farnil ies in Trentrin.
N.J .. anrl no11· invoh·es iOll
ramilies in srveral .i;tates. also
inrlical'.!s. \\'alls s::iirl. "we ran
rule oul some of the wilder
h,vpo~heses -either that
everrbod.v quits his job or that
e1·erybody works twice as
hard.
"It :ll)('sn't turn thrm j?rern
nr anything like that. .. he said.
"They can ~n on ahout their
business orelly m1ic1l as thry
af\\•ay'.'I did. but 1\'i\h a little
more money."
\\'IDE VAlllET\'
The tests. fundrd by the
fcd~ra1 Office of Eronomlr
Opportunity. were ~ta r I e d
h<'fnre Nixon tnok oHicc. But.
\\'alls said. "the experiment
includes a 11•ide 1·ariety of
ranges. 11·'de enoueh to include
lho~e !ht> adniinistr alion Is
thinking about."
Rep. .John \\'. Byrnr~ of
"'isconsin, 1h" top ReP11hlican
O'l the House \\';iv~ and ~l eans
Committer \1•hit:h is con-
sid<'ring thl' Ni:-;on lllan. hail
invited \\alts lo sit on the
committee r11'lihera1ions.
Byrnes Shid in an intervie1v
the present welfare s~·ste1n
must be dr11slically rcfflrmed.
He ~aid Nixon's prooosa\ for A
famil y welfare prngra1n is
1 fund11ment111!y sound.
Only such an approath. he
said. ~·ill l!f'! "us out of the
muddle and the can or worms
\\'e now h11ve in thr pre~enl
pro,er:im of aiding dependent
families."
r-IARCH DATE
Byrnes said he does not
"know "'h:il the \\'ays and
Means Committee will do with
the Nixon plan. He said it will
probably be the middle of
'-1arch hl"rore the <."<lmmitlec
makes a final decision.
Recruiliug \Valls to sit in on
C'nmmittee sessions Y.'aS part
of B~·rnes' strategy to C'm·
pha size the 1vork-en-
roura_eement provisions of the
adm inistration proposal.
Although \Vatts expressed
aoproval of !hf' bAsic Nixon
plan he said "it can be im·
proved. I think the benefit
levf'ls "'ill have lo be changed
In time ."
Watts also said the Nixon
prooosal leaves too many
decisions to be mArle ad·
mlnislrath1elv bv lhf' Welfare
secretarv and hlS deJ>Utir!l.
H<)weVcr. R~p. Al Ullmitn.
lD-Ore .. l had strong douhls
about th<' Nixon plan voinJ( far
bevond Walt!I' reservations.
The administration prn.
posals are so loo<>tly drawn
that some families might find
It lo their advantage to buv
tclevi!lion set!l In ord"r to
qualifv for welfare payments.
he jii&Jd. •
Ullman. " mem~r of tht
W1v1 and ri1cans: C<lmmiUH.
said over Um wtt~,.ntf. "It's
tragic -the~",.,. playinp: on
tht hopes of mi!llnn~ of flll"r
All"ericlln1 with talk about pll'
In the sky."
s.
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annual rate
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for Shorter Terms I
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cutton! onnu•I ••I•
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terest!
Choose our regular passbook ac-
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I
' ! 11 I I
Newp~rt D~rhor Today's Final
N.Y. Stoeks
voe. 63 , NO. 22 , 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, JANUARY 27, 1970 TEN CENTS
Newport Councilman Bridges ·Generation Gap
By JOHN VALTERZA
Of "'-D1ltJ !"lift Sttff
\Vbtn supporters of an embattled
Newport Beach radical bookstore and
new.spaper left city council chambers
recenUy, they exited with litlle con~
solal:on from councilmen.
So did a group of students of a Newport
Harbor High School civics cla.u.
And tt.ey were only watching, not
joining in the debate.
From that episode stemmed rumors of
dowdy, aloof councilmen nfusina: to
speak to young persons,
But all that began to change Saturday
afternoon, the council learned Monday
from Councilman Howard Rogers.
''My !On did it all and U looks like it's
wor~ing," he said.
The disconsolate bookstore boosters. all
complaining about police harassment or
Bird In Search ori Cage Bookstore and
the neWlipaper, "From Out or S:>erwood
forest," spoke for nearly two hours with
........ ount • •
Newport Urges
PSA Jet Corf ew
. The Newport Beach City Council joined
the effort Monday lo curb noise from
PSA jets if they use Orange County
Airport and the council drafted a set of
suggested rules v•hich the oounty could
include in a lease being discussed today.
The rules, which include a flight curfew
from II p.m. to 7 a.m., were lo be
presented by Mayor Doreen Marshall to-
d~y to Orange County supervisors. They
are considering a new lease with PSA,
which is plyrUng·lo absorb Air Ca lifornia
in I! m_J!~(er.
The Newport councilmen sugge sted
that the lease forbljj the use of planes
Jarj& than the Boeing 737 and alsio im-
pose a max imum number of flights which
PSA can fly in and out of the county-oYln-
td terminal.
Besides the appearance b c (o r e
~upervisors late.· today. the city staff will
join as an Intervener in proceeding~
before the State Public Utilities Com -
George Gaynor,
Harbor Bar
Operator, Dies
A Newport Beach restaurant owner
struck by a car late New Year 's Eve as
t:e crossed Coast Highway near his
establishment died today of injuries in
Orange County Medical Center.
He was George J. Gaynor, 71, of 2211
Tustin Ave., Newport Beach, former own-
er of Gaynor's Bayside, localed al Copst
Highway and Balboa Boulevard.
Police said Mr. Gaynor was struck
shortly before midnight as he crossed the
busy highway, but motorist Larry R.
Koppes, lt, of 10336 El Monte Ave., Foun-
tain Valley , v.·as not cited .
Rosary Is scheduled Thur sday at 7:30
p.m. in St. Joachim 's Church. Cost;:i
~Iesa. with. Requiem Mass Frida y at 9
a.m. in the same sanctuary.
Survivors Include his wife Dorothy, a
son John. twin daughters, Mrs. Harold
Bishop and Miss Georgia Gaynor. another
daughter. Barba:a, a brother Gerald. and
sisters, ~frs. Kathleen ~tcKeown. f\ir~.
Frances ~filler. ~lrs. Helen Custu.sch,
~trs. Alice Reynolds, and a grandson.
mission when the matte.r of the merger of
PSA and Air Cal comes before the state
agency.
The council praised efforts by the
Newport Harbor Charhbe r or Cominerce,
which has urged supervisors to include
noise.control provisions in the new lease
with PSA.
Tbe airli~ presently does not use
Orange County Airport, but before the in·
tended merger with Air Cal was an·
nounctd, PSA had applied for state ap-
proval ror use Of the aii'pOtl here.
Besides tl1e Intervention in stall' action
and sUggestions to county officials,
Newport's staff will meet with represen-
tatives of PSA to determine if the airline
is willing to cooperate in a noise abate·
ment porgram.
PSA recently agreed to cooperate in
noise control with officials of Long
Beach, "'ho allowed the line to use the ci-
ty airport, provided several anti.noise
measures were included in the lease.
Air California also has a~pted the
Long Beach restrictions.
The controls suggested by the chamber
nf commerce are suggested as interim
constraints until the county.financed ·
Phase II airport ma ster plan study is
completed.
If supervisors adopt the chamber's sug·
gestions. operations al the airport would
remain at their present level until the
master plan phase is finished .
Supervisors were expected lo take Ac-
tion on the matter sometime late this
afternoon.
Harbor Forum
Set. on Feb. 4
A forum on "Currenl Problems in Edu-
cation'' ~·ill be held by Harbor Forum on
Feb. 4, six days be/ore the Newport·Mesa
Unified School District's tax override aod
bond interest rate increase election.
Three spea kers are scheduled for the
noon session -school district critic ~1rs.
Mary Martin. minister Dr. Paul C. Neu·
mann. and Newport·Mesa administrator
Donald Hout.
The forum is billed as the first In 1 se.
ries on "Problems or Local Government."
The forum on "Current "'roblems in
Educt:tlon'' will be at noon Feb. 4 at St.
.James Episcopal Chufch parish hall. 3209
Via Lido. Newport Beach. Cost for a buf·
fet luncheon will be $1.25.
councilmen.
But councilmen remained relatively
tight Upped, because. they agreed, speak-
ing to the subject of the newspape~ would
prejudice criminal proceedings against
Don Elder. an alleged editor of the
underground newspaper.
"That silence probably led lhe Harbor
High studenUi to think we were
unresponsive and aloof," Rogers e3id.
•And from that impression, Rogers said,
the Y..'Ord spread on campus.
0
"My son, Bob, was mad ,at me about It,
and I think that the studtn4 who were
here that night left with the wrong Im·
pression about the council.
"So he asked me .to do something about
it, like join in a meeting that afternoon
with students."
So Rogers corralled Police Community
Relations Officer Ed Cibbarelli. city staff
membus and the teacher of the civics
class, Jim Newkirk.
Bob recruited the student.,.
• Ir
And the adults and students, including
sludent leaders at lhe school. met for
nearly three hours that .afternoon to
"rap".
"I really thinked it worked, and we all
agreed we wopld do it again, even on a
regular basis, perhaps," Rogers said.
He said the sessions would include sug-
gestion.s for new city projects Involving
youths instead of alienating them. and it
might branch out to inc:lucle involvement
by committcts already formed on youth
SAN ONOF~E NUCLEAR GENERATfNG STATION TO BECoM'E ONE OF NATION'S LARGEST
EdJton Announce, $450 Milllon Expension of F1clllty Nier Nixon E1t1te
Carswell 'A Bit Aghast'
Over Old Racist Speech
•
\VASHINGTON <UPI) -.Judge
G. Harrold Carswell said today he hold~
no racist or whi te sup remacy views and
wa~ a little bit aghast'' to be reminded
he C\'er advocated such ideas.
Cars\vell made the statement under
qurslioning by fhe Senate Judiciary Com-
mittee at the outset of hea rings On hi"
namination to be an associate justice of
I he Supreme C6url. .
He said he had forgotten abnut a
speeeh he mad+! i11 1948 during a Georgia
political campaign saying he believed in
v.•hile supremacy. Reporters in Florida
a,.,d Georgia dug up the speoch last week
from old news accounts.
"l really ~·as a Jillie bit aghast T had
m3de such a statement." he said. "I had
to see it to believe I made it."
H~ said he was not trying to deny he
nu1de the specc i1 but told Senators: "I
am nol racist I have -no no tion -open.
scrretive or otherwise -of racial
superiority."
Carswell also denied he ever was an of·
ficer or a director in any country club.
C1 \·U rights groups have ch a r g e d
.Carswell ~·as <1 director of a group that
turned a golf club in Tallahassee. Fla.,
into a private course to avoid integration.
He said that In 1956 he made a $100
contribution to rebuild a ri..ndown gorr
club house and was gh•en one share or
stock in return . but resigned from the
rlub a short tlmt later and wa s rl'funded
$15.
Some years later. the judge said. his
sori wanted to play golf and the family
rejoined the clu b. but resigned again in
196fi. He said he had nothing to do with
a11y land transfers, leases or operation of
the club .
A!> the hearing started, Sen a I c
Hcoub\ican l~adf.1 Hugh Scott related to
nc\V!,men that he told Carswell ~1onrlay
"I believe the ID48 speech was a fooli sh
.statement." He s;:.id Cari;ell replied : "ll
was a completely unwise statement of
my earlier. days and I have thoroug_hly
repcdiated it. and I am no racist. I ~vt
no racist feelings."
S101·I• ~larket
NEW YORK (A Pl -Stocks wandered
rleeper into losing territory in slow !rad·
ing today, with declines leading advances
by t\VO to one. (See quotations. Pages I().
Ill.
Analysts said th ey detected a drying
up of buying as investors sa t on the sir!e-
lines. waiting ont the decline and await-
ing President Nixon's budget message
Monday.
Edison Reveals
Plans for 2 Neiv
Nuclear Plants
By JACK BROBACK
01 lllt O•ll1 1"1111 Sl•ll
The awarding of con:racts for two huge
nuclear re.actors to be installed at the ex·
isling San Onofre Nuclear Generating
Station within two miles of the Wesi.em
\Vhite H'ouse wa s announced tciday by the
Southern California Edison Co1npany.
Company officials term the move an
"all-out commitment" lo nuclear power
generation.
Jack K. Horton, Edison chairman and
chief executive, added, however, that the
company must proceed with tht-con·
struction of two conventional generaling
units at fluntingtvn Beach '"in order to
111eet c"stomer power requirements
between 1973 and 1976.
''But as more and more nuclear plants
are built. we v.•ill gradually reduce our
use of existing cil and gas-firpd units ln
the south coastal area," f!orton ~aid.
A reactor contract v.·as awarded to
Combustion Engineering Inc. oJ Windsor.
Conn. The reactors will become. part of
lll'O ne.v units at the San Onofre plant.
t..:osl of the units \\'iii be about $450
niillion.
Marine Refuge
Patrol Requested
Newport Beach Vice Mayor Li11dsley
Parsons appealed Monday for regu~ar
patrols or the Cameo Shores area marine
C~ll:nty Marines Returning
San Diego Gas and Electric Co., a 20
pc!'cent partner in the 450,000 kilowatt
nuclear unit now operating at San Onofre,
\viii have an equivalent ownership in th~
output of the two new units. The original
installation cost $90 million.
The San Onofre plant is in San Diego
County. but Is situated just south of San
Cle!Tlente. Orange County's southernmost
community and President. Nixon's new
home. The old H11milton Cotton estate
which the President purchased last year
overlooks the sea at the southern tip ot
refup to ward off poache1·:1. .
ParlON wbo lives nearby. asked city
staff to\WOftc out patrol problems in t~
area so thlit the rtfuae could Uvc up to its
name. • . d ., "Six signs and a procJamat1on on•
make a marlne refuge -marlnt life ~
teC:ted from collectors makt:.s a refuge,
he said. In many past meetings Parsons has
compla ined that visiwrs to the beach ig·
nore the signs and deslroy the tide pool
marine 11.fe.
011t one occasion, Parsons said, hht
nwn gardener orrered the vice mayor a
bucket or octopus collected in the refuge.
Parsons urged the Vrange County
Harbor District patrol dlvl\it n lo "get off
their fat boats. once In 1 while ind patrol
tha.t 1rca." Clty t.-111nager Harvey Hurlburt said cf·
forts vc und er way to obtain 1norc ttrin-
gent pilrol by wardens for tht state
oCpartmcnt or Fish and C.ame.
Three El Tor_o Squadrons on Nixon Pullout List
from Wire Senlcu
DA NANG -T~ of thr,. Oran;e
County·bued U.S. Marine Corps aviation
squi:dro:µ; toda.y gathered .i:t seaport em-
b~rkalion points to Itave here for borne
\Vednesday, under the third ~ase or
Presklent Nixon's Vietnam w1lhdrawat
pl on.
. A .fourtb group will depart for Camp
Pendleton, following formal certmonies
at thls sprawling U.S. base. In which Maj.
Gen. Edwin B. Wheeler, tommander of
tnc Pirst ~1arine Dtvlslon addressed
them.
"Well done and bon voyage," said the
CO, addlnf, that the jet and helicopter
pilnlll, the r support personnel a~ the
amphibious vehicle battalion did • job
for the free world.
4 ,•
AU have been In Vietnam nine months
or .longer.
Fighter Attack Squ1'dron 54! and At·
tar.k Squadron US will return to El Toro
~fCAS, while Heavy flelicor.er ~~uadron
~I i!I reassigned W the San a Ana A1CAS,
where. it was first commissioned.
The Third M1trine Amphibian AUack
Dattallo.n wnl rttum lo Camp Pendlctofl,
11 ft h a tentaUve Feb. I arrival dale
aboard U.S. NavJ .veuela.
~1aj. Rubert Booher, narc Information
of1ictr al Et Toro MCAS. ~id today the
Corps has not yet decla1sUltd data about
the Orange County unlll' withdrawal, so
he covld not comment.
Some units of the tota.1 of 19 arrteted
~'ill be dcactlv;a ted upo11 r~lUTl'f and Cpl .
Gt!ne Bowen, 22. or Costa t.fcsa, i ald •I
' '
Da Nang today that he will change
uniforms when he gets home.
'J'he Amtrac Battalion enlisted man will
be processed out or the Corps in Camp
Peridle:ton and rtjoln the Anaheim Police
Department as a patrolman.
''ft feels great to bt going hume,'' ad·
dcd Lt. Col. James W. Lau:o, com-
lllBndlng· offi cer of Attac)c: Squadron 2;J,
adlng that he basn't seen his 4-ytllr-old
claughter for more than a year.
Firat Sat.. Joseph Sagan. a 24-ye11r
\'l'!te:ran with nine ovtrsea.s tours will -bf:
coming back lo, El Toro with Allack
Squadron M2 and ls glad of it.
"lt ·is alway-.. a &ood feeling t o be goin1
home." he .said.
President Nl"<<m '1as ardtred that ~.000
(Se< TROOPS, Pqe II
San Clemente. ....
\Vhen It was first proP05ed in the early
1960'8, the San Onofre nuclear plailt w11~
the Mib}ect of bitter opposition from con·
scrvatlonlsts, surfers and clvll defenH
.advocates. Slnci its construction It has
51ipped into virtual anonym ity.
'J\i.·o 1.1 mlllloo kilowatt unltt Wiil be
added at San Onofre.' They will provldt
tnoueh power to serve the equivalent
c1C!ctrlca! needs Of ii city of 1.S mt\llon
people. The addlllon of the uni ts will
create one of the nation 's laraest nuclear
a:cneraling st~Uon1.
Announce.menl or the ntW nulcear units
waa first mado three weeks 110 in Los
Angeles by Wllllam R. GoU.ld, Edison vlct
prcalaent· during hearings on ,Ul<l llun·
Ungton Beach expans~ before the. state
Public Utilities Commls5lon.
needs by the city recreatlon departmtnL
He said the meeting alJo yielded plaris
to study the city llcensing procedures for
neNspaper solicitation and selling rrom
streets and sidewalks.
''\'ou know, they think we're awfully
~ustere,'' Rogers said.
"But meetlnp like this can breai down
the barriers."
"Maybe we didn 't sa tis fy everyonf!
there, but we all learned a lot," he added.
• _1ne
Board Backs
CofC Over
Expansion
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
Of IM D•!IY l"llM Sii /i
ln a 4 to 1 vote the Orange County
Board of Supervisors went on record l~
day as opposed to any expansion of com·
mercial flights using Orange County
Airport.
The resolution presented by board
Cha!:inan Alton Allen and supported by
the Newport Harbor Chamber of Com·
merce outlined four areas of restriction
until completion of phase two of tl\e Coun· 1Y Master Ptan of Air Transp3rtatlon.
ln addition lo opposing new applications
for Interstate routes, the board went on
record as maintaining the slatus quo of
maintenarw:e operations. prohibiting use
or the airport by planes with 95.000 pound~
dual ~·heel weight and opposing terminal
lcr··-for new carriers.
The dissenting vote was cas! by
Supervisor Robert Battin who said the
no1icy statement would be •·a '1 ra it
jacket on our flexibility of judgment. I
,...,n·t support this resolution beca&Jae to
do so would be to tie our hands fdto the
future." \I
Charles Curry reprcsenUng lhe
Newport Harbor Chamber of Commerce
said the resolution will give the board
·.,,e lo have a complete study made of
county air needs.
The airstrip is currently served by two
commercial lines. Air Callfomia and Air
·,.,! in addition to Golden West Airlines,
a conlmuter servicl!.
Supervisor William Phillips expressed
concern that passage or the resolution -
orimarily the part dealing with new
leases -would affect merger plans
hetween Air California and Pacific
Southwest Airlines. Robert Bresnahan,
airport director said he had spoken to
representatives of the airlines and none
voiced any opposition to the resolution.
LABELED S.4f'E
il1A.KES HEISTEASY
SPOKANE, \Vash. (AP). -\Vhen
burglars broke into Sambo's Restaurant
Sunday night, they had little trouble
opening the sate. The combination was
pasted on !he door.
Detective Howard Pratt said ~fonday
the safe combination has been changed
and the slicker has been removed.
Orange C::oa•t
Weal.her
It'll take a good stiff breeze lo
blow these clouds away -and
th1t'1 what's coming on Wednes-
day. Temperatures will stick to
their Jow 60 range.
INSIDE TODA V
Durino tile dau she tosse1
toords around and at night 1he
does Ute ian1e with her curves
bu& he1' tfudent,s tlri!Jk. i 1'1 qre~t
lhf!lr £11glf1'1 teacher da11ce1 in
a choru~ line. Page 19.
. '
I
J DAIL V •ILOT N
Cottgress to Act
Nixon Explains
HEW Bill Veto
\VASffiNGTON IAP) -Presidtnl Nix-
011 formally told Congre!!s today he
\•eloed a $19.7 billion Hcalth-Educat!on-
Labor <1ppropriation blll _bec~u~e it \vould
feed inflation. foster 1nefhc1c11cy and
misdirect money .
Congress boosted the bill nearly $1 .3
billlon beyond the level Nixon had recom-
n1ended, and the President signed his
West Newport
To Get Dune s
Despite 'S in'
A West Newport resident won hi11 cam-
paign for restoration of the area's natural
sand dunes i\londay despite comment' by
tl1v staff that some of the mounds con·
tribute to sin.
James G. Rourke of 7400 W. Ocean
Front asked the city council to see that
the natural dunes wiped out by the sand
haul v.•tre replaced . He provkled before-
Rnd-after photograph!! or the area near
his home along with his appeal for new
dunes.
But Cily Manager Harvey Hurlburt
said !bat sal'ld dunes in 1eneral -and
dunes on the Balboa Peninsula
specifically -are. contributor• "lo all
aorlt; of nefarious activities."
In jocular fashion Hurlburt said that
the mounds on the beach conlribute to
police problems.
They're also hard to keep clean. he ad·
ded.
Neverthelesl'I, the city ""'ill ask the
~andhaul contractor lo mO\'e sand into
mounds near the site of the former dunes
near the Santa Ana River.
If he will not do it. ci1y staff said,
perhaps city crews could construct some
mounds .
"\Ile have endured great problems in
being able lo just live in our home the1e
rast monlhs," Rourke said, "and the
planling of Ice plant and sea grass would
not be a large item."
He said he and his family y;ouJd
personally water plants on the
reconstructed mounds if they were put in.
And If the city doesn't want to do the
planting, he'll do it himself, Rourke said.
Estancia Holding
Concert to Aid
Paralyzed T~en
A benefit pop concert will be held
SatuWay night, Feb. 7 at Estancia High
SchoOt to raise funds for a Costa t.1esa
teenaJfr paralyz:ed In a school wrestling
mat4'.
Jtf'Stin Ogata, l6·year-0ld Costa Mesa
High School student. recently was
!ransferred to Los Angeles Orthopaedic
Hospital to learn to adapt to paralysis
from the nee\! dov.·n.
The benefit concert put on by cross-
tov.'n Estancia High gtudents will feature
bands "The Love," ''Smokestack
Lightning'' and "Gypsy" and a lighl
show.
The concert will be from 8 to 11 p.m. in
the Estancia gym . Ticket.I will cost U.50
per person and will be sold at the door.
Three hundred phonograph records will
be given away.
Rick Golson. chainnan of the concert
committee. said proceeds are pledged to
go to Ogata with the s!udent body to
raise money to pay for the bands.
Pre\'iouslv, $500 has been raised for
Ogata by a basketball game. and $2.000 is
expected to be raised through a fishing
1rip sponsortrl by Davey's Locker of
f\ev•port Beach Feb. 2.
DAILY PILOT
O .. AliGl t OAST PUlL15.,lliG COM~•MV
•o'ilt rt N. W1tJ
,rt>oCMM .... ,. ... i. .... r
veto message with 1 pen Oourhih televis·
ed to tht nation t.1onday night .
Then tod3y he sent th~ bill back lo
Capitol Hill along with the lengthy
mesgage amplifying his reasons for re-
jecting it.
Democratic leaders were pushi111 to
override the veto, and some were claim-
ing hopefully they had the votes to do it.
but those claims were disputed.
Sen. Hugh Scott (Ji.Pa.~. said
Republicans in the House, or If necessary
in the Senate, wlll side wlth Nl'lon In
numbers sufficient to sustain the veto,
although he conceded some Democratic
support would be needed.
The House will vote Wednesday. If it
\'Oles to override , then lhe Senate will act
later. No time for a po11sible Senate voie
has yet been set, but Oemocrati~ Leadtr
Mike ~Iansfielrt of Montana predicted Ille
Senate will vote to override the veto if it
£els the chance.
Nix0n offered little in the way ot com·
promi~e to gain additional support.
Some legislators had expected him lo
give a bit on his opposition to a $600
million Hem for granls to schools 1n
areas where large numbers or children o'
federal employes and 1ervJcemen attend
them. The figure v.•as nearly 1400 million
more than the administration had recom·
mended.
Nixon promised only to study the prt>-
gram and make recommendation:; later.
"Four successive pre:sidenls ha\·e tried
to reduce or reorient this pn:igram." Nix-
on said. "Yet the Congress in this bill not
only perpetuates this unfair program,
~t adds money to It. It ls wrong to sharply
1ncrea.~ the lmracted school aid pro.
gram in the face. of the nted to make
Jon.,..overdue rtforms in !hi• law. "~ 1dmlnlstraUon will make recom·
mendatloru for rerorm of th is proar•m
ba~ on a study re4uea:ted by lht
CongreNJ. I will submit these recom-
mendaUons 11hortly."
Bumpy Ride Due
For Hovercraft
At City Council
A 330.passenger hovercraft Intended for
commuter use ill port1 Jncludln1 Newport
Harbor mls!it have a bumpy cuahi~ of
air to rldt if It tries to aerve Newport
Beach.
City Councilmt n Monday said they
don ·t like the Idea for the unique
passenger service.
Vice Mayor Lffidsley Par~ons brought
the subject of a proposed hovercraft
service before the councll t.1onday night
and said I.he council should study the idea
"very carefully" before acLin& on the
matter.
A La Jolla finn is proposing the service
betv.·een seve ral Southern California
ports. The matter is being scheduled for
hearings be.Jore the state Public Utililies
Commission.
··1 have had experience with hovercraft
in the servi~." said City Man11aer
Harvey Hurlburt , "and my experience
makes me believe that they're definitely
hard to cont.rol."
Councilman Ed }lirth said he ''iewed
the demonstration of a :iimall ho\•ercraft
in Upper Newport Bay and 11\d it was
decided by harbor officials that it is not a
:iiuitab\e vessel for Newport Bay.
"I think ""'e should be prep11rtd to pr~
test the application. I know what the~e
vessels are like. I know how they operate
and I hesitate to 5tand a~ide and let them
enter the harbor," Par"ons added.
The machine proposed for use between
San Diego and Santa Barbara and points
in be.tween. would be a V o s p e r
Thornycroft VT!, a twin-engine vehicle.
The hovercraft, which travels on a
cushion of air, would be powered by two
tngines. It Y:ou\d measure 100 feel long
and 50 feet ~·Ide. Dead v.·,ight is i5 tons
and it V.'Ould carry 330 passengers and
baggage .
Its owner, Pacific Hovercrart . has an -
nounced it is 1pe:cially designed for small
harbors.
. . . . . . ... -....
'
\
I I
!
J ,.... . '-~.
Baby Eleplaatat Walker
\Vhen Ringling Bros. Barnum and Bailey came to
?.1iami Beach. city queen Coni Ensor invited some
of the staff members for a walk. Her friend s balk·
ed at wading in the ~urf. but certainly didn't m.iri'd
walking the streets of Miami Beach '"ith the curvy
?.1iss Ensor.
Bids for Irvine School
Rejected as Too. High
Contractors• bids for construction of
University High School In IMne all c1me
in over the -price the state will re.fund and
were rejected Monday night by Tuatln
Union High School District lru!lffs.
Bidding will be tried again In a month
after $OITle deleUon1 are made from
plans, Ibo school boan! decided .
The low bid of seven aubmitted last
Thursday wu by W. J. Shirley Company
lo build the fint hall of the o:hool !or
$2.071,000. The. bidS ran1ed up to
11.su.000.
The low' bid wag about five perctnt
above of the slate's allowable maximum
ror st.ate-aided school districts.
Jack Schumaker, Tustin District's ad·
ministrator for special services, said the
University High plans are for Uie same
schoo l plant that came in under lhc stale
allo~vable whein bullt at Ml11sion Viejo.
The state uses a factor lhat Is supposed
to reflect the change in building costs, he
said, but apparently it hasn't ke pt up
""'ith inflation.
TN. bids were to cover the building of
only half the school -an the school
di str!ct could afford v.·ith its local bond
sale money. Recentl y, however. Gov.
Reagan annvunctd he is m a k i n g
available another $2.1 million for the
other half of the: school.
That still has to ht approved by the
state Legislature and Schumaker saitl
school officials feel they can't afford lo
wait to build the whole school al once.
"The buildings lre will be building first
are the easiest to build and we felt v.·e
could have gotten them done In time for
September." Schumaker said . "Now
v.'e're not sure," he said after the re -
f '1•011• Page 1
TROOPS ••.
Jeclion of the bids.
He said he would assume that if the
school were goln1 to be completed just a
coup!~ of months after the start of school
"we would go on double susions with one
of the ez.Jstln1 acbooLs." But he added
that lJ a deciaion for the board to mate.
When the first half or University High is opened new aUendance boundarie! will
have to be drawn. A boundary recom·
mendatJo:1 wu presented to \he board by
admJnlstr1tor1 Monday ntgtlt bl.It the
board held off any action unUI Feb. 9 to
give parents a chance to voice their feel·
ings.
Hal[ a dozen parent$ were present
fl.f:>nrlay nl&ht and Schumaker said board
members thought more parents than that
mlL'it be interested and just hadn't gotten
the word the matter was on the agenda.
The proposed plan is to send this year's
juniors from the Irvine area back again
to Mission Viejo High School ne xt year as
seniors.
Univeraity High would open without a
senior class and draw students now at-
tendi'l! both Mission Viejo and Tustin
high :chools.
Schumaker said by making Laguna
Canyon Road an attendance boundary line
and including El Toro Pt1arlne Air Base
750 students v.·ould be moved to Universi-
ty High, leaving l\1ission Viejo H.igh with
a projected attendance of 2,100 students
next year.
Another boundary line is proposed to be
drawn along t,.1itche\\ and t.Jedallion
avenues In .south Tustin with 400 students
south or the line to be transferred to
University High, leaving Tustin High next
year wllh 2.300 students.
"\Vhatever lines arc drawn v•e v.'ant to
make them good for at least two years.
No one likes to bounce kids around,''
Schumaker said.
Judge Returning
From Retirement
For Court Post
Gov. Ronald Reagan will today reap-
point Judge Ronald Crookshank to the
Orange County Superior Court bench he
left 13 months ago in an action that is
believed to be without precedent in
California.
A reliable bar association source ad-
\·1~ed the DAILY PILOT that Judge
Crookshank, 63, of Santa Ana, is
Reagan·s choice for the 22nd court seat
created last year by the legislature. It is
expected that the $31 ,816 appointment
will beco011 effective lm112.f£iately.
A delighted Judge Crookshank said to·
dav that he is ;·more than happy at this
\.\•etcome nev.·s. This means that 1 can cut
do¥;n on my traveling and settle down to
&ome work in the court I love," he added.
The veteran Jurist has been serving as
a temporary judge in other California
courts. His most recent assignment has
b<!en to the Santa Rosa Superior Court.
,Judge Crookshank presided thls morn-
ir.g over the sentencing of attorney David
C<tdwell and ordered the Santa Ana
lawyer to spend the next one to ten years
in ~late prison on his embeu:lement con-
viction.
Judge Crookshank retired Dec. ~I , l~,
hecause of the serious illness of h.l5 wire.
l\·lrt CrookshanK has since died ntld the cicti~•e jurist has made it \.:nown that his
forced retirement need no longer apply.
A Republi can. Judge Crookshank serv·
ell for 12 years aJ a Santa Ana city Judge
belore being appointed in 1955 to the Cen·
tral Orange County ti.1uniclpa1 Court by
former govfrnor Goodwin Knight.
Go\'. Knight ele\·ated Judge
Crookshank to the Superior Court on
Sf'Pt. 11 , !9$7. A native. of Santa Ana. Judge
Ctc.okshank attencled school in that city
t1nd at Stanford University before ob-tainin~ his law degree fron1 Harvard Law
School.
ANOTHER •••••
Toro POW
Wife Lands
In Tokyo •
fl'(lm Wire Services
TOKYO -Tirud and bitter despite the
f:ict they never expected much, an El
Toro woman and three other POW wives
arrived here today, admitting a
worldwide mission in behalf of missing
military men -theirs and others -hlMI
failed .
They hope lo mcrl "'ilh t.l rs. Eisaku
~ato, wife of Japan 's prime minister. as
well as Japanese Red Cross officials
before departing on the last lee
homeward to the Southland.
P.1rs. Carole Hanson . 30. of 24112
Birdrock Drive, El Toro, has visited
many nations, including the war zone
\v!.ere their pilot husbands were shot
down. but have been either rebuffed or
offered helpless sympathy.
The four talked with U.S. Sen. Eugene
1.IcCarthy (D-M1nn. l in their short stay in
~'loscow and were told he is a! concerned
. ove r the pligh< of draftdodgers and
dese rters abroad as men held in North
Vietnam prisons. ··rhat really hurt,"
~aid Mrs. Arthur Mearns. llf Los Angeles,
u•ife of Air Force Lt. Col. Arthur S.
~1earns. ..
··it hurt to have my husband sandw!ch·
ed between des!rters and draftdodgers."
t.trs. Hanson. whose husband. Marine
Corps Capt. Slephen P. Hanson "'as shot
dO\\'n while flying a helicopter medical
ev<>cuation mii.sion in Laos nearly four
years ago, .JiiaiJ the.y believe the war is
ju:.I.
"All we want to know is if our
husbands are ai.Jve or dead and I don 't
lhlnk that's too much to ask." said P.1rs.
Hanson .
"t thiiik v.·e started out on this trip with
a feeling that our trip 1vasn·1 goin& to
bring any speci fic answers for Ui and
perhaps we wou;dn 'l see the results or it
fvr :some time .
''But J do feel it's been a cumulative
cllort, and I don't think Jianoi can con·
Unue its present policy if countries
around .the world wlll speak out for the
Inhumanity that Hanoi is engagin& in in
regards to these men,'' t.1rs. Hanson said.
Mrs. Hanson and three other California
u•omen wliose husbands were shot down
in Vietnam combat appeared at a ne\1•5
c::inference before leaving fOr Tokyo. The
other women are 1'1rs. John Hardy. 27:
t.1rs. Roo:evelt Hestle .Jr., 37. and Mrs.
1'.1earns. also 37, all of Los Angeles .
\Vhen they get home. l\lrs. Hanson said .
the wives will encourage other women to
make similar trips.
"\Ve'll continue to write letters to every
nation as we have done before we left."
she said, addinj' she and t.1rs. Hardy
planned tc. go to Paris and confront North
Vietnamese ofiicials there. ~irs. Hanson said North Vietnamese
diplomats in Vietnamese. Laog, "didn't
even have the courtesy ... to see me ."
"I stood out in the driveway waiting for
an answer, wh<!lher they would set up an
appointment for n1e or not," she said ... ,
could go to any embassy of any country
<round the world and I \Vould at least be
treated with courtesy. The North Viet-
namese embassy didn 't even have the
courtesv to in\•ite me in and speak with
me for '10 minutes, and to m,. a clvillied
n<:lion in the \•1orld today docs not behave
in this manner.•·
:\·!rs. Hardy said she thought It "in-
crNiible" that the f\'orth Vietnamese
·would not acc~ol info rmalion on thtir
suldlers held prisoner in South Vietnam
3nd Laos.
Warsaw Talks Se t
BONN, Germany fAP) -\Vest
Germany and Poland will begin their
first pos t·\Vorld War II political talks in
\Varsaw Feb. S, Foreign l\finist er Walter
Scheel announced today.
rnore Amtrlcan servicemen be rem oved
from South Vielnam by April JS. About
60,000 were Y.'ithdrawn under phases I
aPd II which'began last summer.
Current U.S. troop strength in Vieln,m
is 469.900.
The ao.ooo men in the third phase with-
drawal will all De removed from Viet nam
by April 15 and will brini lo 110,000 the
number of American troops withdrawn
since the U.S. pullout bti;:an last July 8.
E-X-P-A-N-S-1-0-N
J 1 t~ R. C.urley
\11(t ,,_.,.,..., 1•t C.-11 ~,.,.
Tli.0~1• 1(, ... 1 [dlt .... YRs Accuse UCI Chief
Wt htvt always endeavored to furn ish the
fi n11t service anywhere for CARPETING end
DRAPERIES. Towords thi• end, we hevo just com·
p~ated an enlargmeent of faci lities which will en·
ablt us to serve you better!
Come in and ''' our hu91 invtntory of fint
carpeting and browse throu9h our new remnant
room, where we have thousands of yards of small
and room·si1e remnants!
•
l~'"''' A. Mu••hiftt
M• ... 0•"9 fl•I"'
Jt••"'' F. Co!l i~•
NtWll0'1 &ti(~
Cl!~ EtUOI'
Ne•spert S.ocli Offlt• 1111 Weil l1llle1 l e11lt ¥1rcl
Mti!•~t A44•tn. ,,O. It• lllS, tJ66J
Ott.er Offlttt
Ce•lt ,,,.... UD w111 ••v '''""' l ., ...... •tH.IU m '••n• AVf'IW
M11t1t ... -ludl.o 11111 ••~ a-. .• ¥.lt'll
Of 'Double Standards'
The board of directors of Or~n1e Coun-
ty Yourta Rtpubllc1n1 today accused UC
Irvine Chancellor Daniel G. Aldrlrh Jr. or
employlna a double sland11rd v.•ith reaard
lo Sludtnls for a De:mocratic Socitl.y
(SOSJ .
A resolution from lht bNrd 11id it Is
"intxplalnable1' that Aldrich would ap-
prove hiring of former SOS leader ~like
Kr:~man as a can1pus admlnl11trator and
t:Mn deny ptnnl55ion to lht <'i'mpus SOS
chapttr lo l'loSt a SOS National Con·
ferenct.
Counly Youn1 Republlran Ch1tnn1n
Colontl Dvntr charged lhat Aldrich is
trying to f)lta"e tht con1munlty while ap-
peasing the radicals.
"The ch11ncellor v.•Hl pl•a~e neither
aroup with hl' tnane edict. lit 1nur.t make
a decision to tither atand with lhe Cftm·
rnunity or th e r1dlC'al.!1. 11• can nn longtr
11.fford 10 play both skies or the street,"
r~intr df'clar•rl.
The chane«llor ""'as unavailable today
for comment.
Prevlou1ly, be ha1 explained U1at ha
knew Krisn1.tn when he approved the hir·
1ni !Krlsm•n formerly v.·as UC! sludent
body president) and found hlJn ~lncerely
("(lmmitted to makln1 con st ru ct Ive
ch1ngt1. l,lkewL:t, he nld. he know11 the
c:impt11 SOS students and they have
nf'v•r done anylhtng dJsrupU"''·
He does not kno,.· SOS membf'r5 fram
other place.~ 11nd elsewhere SOS has btrn
in\'Ol\'td in disruntions,
But the chancl"llor has not offered lh•t
II!> a full trplanatlon for his decl11lon1. He
his aC'kno'il'ledg•'d that hi" most rtot:nt
dtrislon In nol ptrmlt the SOS N1tlon1I
Confertnct wa11 pollllc1\.
He. himsf'lf ts aware of !'lome In·
<'Oll~is1 .. ncy. \\1h~n tOI~ rtcenlly by -111t1·
d+-nt. "This Is tn« 11ame ISJu• JS ~like
Krism1n." ht answered :
"I kno"' tt Is and t am hung up as a
C"lf'!l'OUf'nC'e."
UNUSUAL INSTALLATION PROBLEMS?
Come in and talk with tny of our salesmen-who all h1v1 hid extensivt
installation experience!
ALDEN'S 1663 PLACINTIA.COSTA MESA
646-4138
CARPETS e DRA,PERIES II YI.A.Ill llltVINCI THI OIAHOI COAIT
• I . ' )
'
•
Costa ~Mesa Today's Final
• • VOL. 63, NO. 22 , 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGE_S
• ru a 1
Keeps Status 9110
County -Opposes
More Airlines -By JOANNE REYNOLDS
Of n.. OallY P'llM Sllff
In a 4 to I vote the Orange County
Board of Supervisors went on record to-
d3y as opposed to any expansion of com·
mereial flights using Orange County
Airport .
The resolution presented by board
Cha::.,,a·n Allon Allen and supported by
the Newport Harbor Chamber of Com-
merce outlined four areas of restriction
until completion of phase two of the Coun-
ty r.faster Plan of Air Transportation.
In addition to opposing new applications
ror interstate routes, the board v.'ent on
record as n1aintaining the status quo of
maintenance operations. prohibiting use
of the airport by planes with 95,000 pound~
dual v.•heel ~·eight and opposing terminal
lea-~<; for new carriers.
The dissenting vote was casl by
Supervisor Robert Battin \vho said lhe
policy statement \VOuld be "a strait
jacket on our flex.ibility of judgment. 1
''"n 't support this resolution because to
do so would be to tie our hands for the
future.''
Charles· Curry representing the
ewpMt1farbol'-chamtier-or-Commerce
said the resolution will give the board
·•me to have a complete study made of
county air needs.
The airstrip is currently served by two
commercial lines. Air California and Air
··•..,c:t in addition to Golden West Airlines,
a commu ter service.
Supervisor William Phillips expressed
concern that passage of the tesolution -
orimarily the part dealing with nc\v
leases -would affect merger plans
hetween Air California and Pacific
South~'cst Airlines. Robert Bresnahan .
airport director said he had spoken lo
representatives of the airlines and none
voiced any opposition to the resolution.
Three El Toro Marine
Outfits Com~ng Home
From Wire Service~
DA NANG -Troops of three Orange
County-based U.3. Marine Corps aviation
squadrons today gathered .ti seaport cm·
barkation points to lea\'e here for home
\Vednesrlay. under the th ird pha!ie or
President Nixon's Vietnam withdrawal
pl on.
A fourth group will depart for Camp
Pendlelon, following formal ceremonies
at this sprawling U.S. base. in "'hich Maj.
Gen. Edwin B. Wheeler. commander of
toe F'irst l\farine Division addressed
lh.!m .
"\Veil done and bon voyage:· said the
CO, adding that the jet and helicopter
pilots. their sunport personnel and the
amphibious vehicle battalion did a job
for the free \l'orld.
All have been in Vietnam nine months
or longer.
Fighter Attack Squadron 542 and Al·
lack Squadron 223 will return to El Toro
~1CAS. while Heavy Helicopter Squadron
Jlil is reassigned to the Santa Ana MCAS,
\\'here ii was first commissioned.
The Third P,f;irine Amphibian Attack
Battalion will return to Camp Pendleton.
"·ith a tentatil·e Feb. I arrival date
aboard U.S. Nav,; vessels.
Maj. Robert Booher. starr inrormation
officer at El Toro l\1CAS. said today the
Corps has not yet declassified data about
the Orange County units' withdrawal, so
he could not comment.
Some units of the tota l .of 19 affected
"·ill be deactivated upon return and Cpl.
Gene Bowen, 22. of Costa r.tesA, said at pa Nang t.xlay that he will change
uniforms when he gets home.
The Amtrac Battalion enlisted man will
be processed out of the Cprps in Camp
Pendleton and rt:join the An;iheim Police
Department as a patrolman.
"It feels great to be going home." ad-
eed Lt. Col. James W. La zzo, com-
Orange ·coast
Weat.ber
It'll take a good stiff breeze to
blow these clouds away -and
that's what's coTnlna on \Vednes-
day. Temperatur~s will stick to
their low 60 rangf!I
1.NSIDE TODi\ \'
During the day slie tossc.,
1oords around and at iliglit site
does the .ton1e ivith h11r curVf'!
but l111r 1tude11U tllink ifs great
their EngUsh teacl1e1 danu" i11
o chorus lint. Pogt 19,
(•lit.nil• j M11111•I ,V'Wlt U Clltckllll U~ 1 Nllla!lll ....... , •I
C\f!1tlf1911 ltoff Or.,111 C-•l' ' c;..,..1it;, 1J lfh'M .....,., II trMt~ 11 1-"' 1 .. 11
Dl•lll Jrt1tk1u • llMll Mtf11.tt 1•n
Ef,..,... il"I.. t f ... \'hlM U l•..,,1111-t II ~llM'I It
"lltalW.1 1•11 W .. ft!M' I "-~... lf W~I._ Wat~ ,, t.1111 L•Mttt 11 Wtlfttfl1t ....... , IJ.lt
M ...... t 11 w...-1111 ""' ''I
• ..
1nanding offirer of Attack Squadron 23.'I.
ading that he hasn't seen hls 4-year~ld
daughter for more lhan a year.
First Sgt. Joseph Sagan. a 24 -year
\'Cl~ran with ni ne overseas tours will be
coming back lo El Toro with Attack
Squadron 542 and is glad of ii.
"It is alwuy:.. a good feeling to be going
home," he said.
President Nixon has ordered that 50,000
n)ore American servicemen be removed
from South Vietnam by April 15. About
60.000 1vere withdrawn under phases I
and Tl 1vhich began last summer.
Current U.S. troop strength In Vietnam
is 469,900.
The 50.000 n1en in the third phase with-
drawal will all be removed fron1 Vietn11m
by April 15 and will bring to 110,000 the
(Stt TROOPS, Page Z)
Judge Retur11ing
From Retirement
For Court Post
Gov. Ronald Reagan will today reap-
point Judge Ronald Crookshank to the
Orange County Superior Court bench he
left-13 months ago in an action thal i!\
believed to be without precedent in
California.
A reliable bar auoclation source 116·
\'i~ed the DAILY PILOT that Judge
Crookshank. 63, of Santa Ana, i11
Reagan's choice for the 22nd court seal
crPsted last year by the legislature. It is
C'<pectcd that the ·$31,816 appointment
will become erfertive Immediately .
A delighted Judge Crookshank said to-
day that he is "more than happy at th i11
\velcomc news. This means that I can cut
down on my traveling and settle down to
&0me work in the court I love," he added.
The veteran jurist has been serving as
ll temporary judge in other California
cow:ts. •Us most recent assignment has
bctn to the Santa Rosa Superior Court
Judge Crookshank presided this morn-
ing over the stutencinii: o( attorney David
Cadwell and ordered the Santa Ana
la yer to spend the next one to ten year.s
in late prlso11.·ol\,'his embeulement con·
viCt.Jon. ' "'
Judge Crook.shank retired Dec. 31, 1968.
hecause of the serious .lllneS!I of his wife.
P.1r!. CrookshanK has since died and the
aclive jurist has made It ~nown that his
torced retirement need no longer apply .
A Republican. Judge Crooksha'1k serv-
ed for 12 years a.o a Sanla Ana clty judge
belore being ap:>ainled In 1955 to the Ctn·
tral Orange County Munici pal Court by
former governor Goodwin Knight .
Gov. Knight elevated J u d gt
t'rookshank to lhe Superior Court on
Sf>pl. II, 1957.
A native of Santa Ana . Judg'
Crnok1hank a.tten<'C<I school Jn that city
And "t slanford University before. ob-
ta ininit hl.11 l.11w <legree from Harvard l..aw
School.
ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNfA TUES DAY, JANUARY 27, 1970
c
DA ILV PILOT Pllett '' LH •11111
Dow1a tlie Middle
1'.1embers of Costa Tomorrow and the city's Beau-
tification Committee combined their talents Mon--
day in order to beautify Newport Boulevar'd center
divider. ·Joseph Carroll. Bill Bodrogi,-~ali'e-Nelson
and Al Hollister (from left) were among represent·
ative5 ol two 1roup1 who planted 22 pounds of CaU·
fornia Poppy seed along divider in do\vntown sec·
tion-oi-t.he-city • ....Elowers will bloom in 1\1ay.
Estancia Holding
Concert to Aid
Paralyzed Teen
A benefit pop concert \\'ill be held
Saturday night. 1'~eb. 7 at Estancia Hlgh
School to raise funds for a Costa f\tesa
tttnager paralyzed in a school wrestling
match.
Justin Ogata. 16-ycar-<ild Costa Mesa
High School student. recently was
transferred to Los Angeles Orthopaedic
Hospital to learn to adapt to paralysis
from the neck do~'n.
The benefit concert put on by cross-
to"'n Estancia High students will feature
bands "The Love," ''Smokestack
Lightning" and ''Gypsy'' and a Ught
show .
The concert will be rrom 8 to JI p.m. in
the Estancia gy1n. Tickets will cos! $3.50
per person and will be sold a'I the door.
Three hundred phonograph records will
be given away.
Rick Golson, chairman or the concert
committee, said proceed1 are pledged to
go to Ogata with the student body to
raise money lo pay for the bands.
Previously. $500 has been raised for
Ogata by a basketball game, and $2.000 i~
expected to be raised through a fishing
trip sponsored by Davey's LockC'r of
Newport Beach Feb. 2.
Senate Retains
'No Ki1ock ' Part
Of Raiding Bill
WASHINGTON (AP) -The Senate
vo1ed today to retain in a pending drug·
conlrol bill a clause ano,-ing rederal
na.rcollcs agents to stage no-warning
raids.
Carswell 'A Bit Aghast'
Over Old Racist Speecl1
WASHINGTO)I (UPI) -Jud gr.
G. HRrrold Carswell said tod ay he holds
no r11cist or while supremacy viewii alld
~·as a little bit aghast" to bE' reminded
hf' ever advocated such ideas.
Cars1ve ll made the statement under
Mrs. Hanson, 3
Otl1er Prisoners'
Wives, in Tokyo
From Wire Strvlces
TOKYO -TirL"d and biller despite the
r~ct they never expected tT!uch, an El
Toro woman and three other PO\V wives
11.rri\'ed here today, admitting a
1vurldwide mission in behalf or mi~sing
mlhlary men -theirs and others -has
f<:iled.
They hope to mett witll Mrs. Eisaku
~<110. \1-'ife of Japan's prime minister, a.'I
1~r!! a.'I Japanese . Red Cross officials
before departing. on th"e last leg
t:vr:ieward to the Southland.
:-.·lrs. Carvle Hal\SOfl, 30. o~ 24112
D1rdrock Drive. Ii:! Toro. has visited
rnany nations, in<.h;dlng lhe war zone
11 !.ere their pilot husbandc; were shot
down, but have been either rebuffed or
ofh·red helpless sym pathy.
The four talked with U.S. Sen. Eugene
J\1cCarthy (().Minn.) in their short stay in
flloscow and were told he is as concerned
over the plighi of draftdodgers and
deserters abroad as men held in North
Vietnam prisons. "That really hurt,''
said Mrs. Arthur ~te11rns, of Los Angeles, ~·ift. of Air · Force U. Col. Arthur S.
P.1earns.
qurstloning by the Senate Judiciary Com-
n1ittce at the outset or hearings on his
naminalion to be an associate justice of
th~ Supreme Court.
He said heJ had forgotten about a
s~ech he mad~ in 1948 during a Georgia
political caihpaign saying he believed in
\\'hite supremacy . Reporters in Florida
a~.d Geor~ia.'cfug up the speech last week
from old neWs accounti.
"I reall)li was a little bit aghast I had
n1atle iuch ra statement," he said. "I had
to see It to believe I made It."
H!' sajd ht .was nol trying to deny he
n1ade ttie ~peec;1 but told Senators : "I
am not racist. I have no notion -open,
sc('relive or otherwise -of racial
s11periorlly."
Carswell also denied he ever was an of·
fir.er or a director in any country club.
U1·i1 rights groups have ch a r g e d
Cars~·ell was a director of a group that
turned a golf club in Tallahassee, Fla .,
in!o a private course to avoid integration.
He saiQ that ill. 19fl6 he made a $100
C'Onlribl!lion to rebuild a r1.1ndown golf
club hCJUst and wu ·given one share of
i;tOCk in return. but resigned from the
f·lub a short· time laler and was refunded
$if>.
·Some years latfr, the judge said, hls
1101'! wanted to play ROif and the family
rejoined the club. but resigned again in
1966. Hc said he had nothing to do with
a11y land transfers, leases or operation of
thr club .
A~ the hea1·:ng started. Sen a le
Rctlublican l!!adf-t ijugh ScoU related to
nr.wsmen that he ·told Carswell Monday
"I belle\'c the 1$48 speech was a foolish
statement." He said Carsell replied : "It
\Y.as a completely unwise statement of
my e1:1rlier days and L have thoroughly
repl'.diated it. and I am no racist. I have
no racist feelings."
N.Y. Stooks
TEN CENTS
20 Suspects
Held; Mo1·e
Ar1·est'tl}Ue
By ARTHUll R. VINSEL
Of Ille Olltt .. 1191 Sllll
Climaxing a quiet. six-week -probe o(
an alleged camws underworld of nar-
cotics traffic. Costa Mesa police today
rounded up nearly 20 suspected dealers
clod users at both local high schoo ls and
elsewhere.
By noon, more than a dozen person!
ranging Crom 14 to %2 years old were in
custody, with others still being hunted in
connection with the major distribution
ring.
Despite claims by some authorities that
the problem has been exaggerated. De-
tective Capt. Bob Green disclosed today
that virtually e\'ery illegal substance on
the illicit market is involved.
The killer-drug heroin is among them.
P.1arijuana cigarettes and assorted pills
were also taken as e\'idence today alter
being found on students at Costa Mesa
and Estancia hi gh schools, where most
arrests were made.
Quantities of other contraband -lll-
cluding 10 kilos of marijuana in one seiz-
ure alone -have been hoarded in the po.
lice property room during recent weeks.
Oe.tecllve Sgt. Johri Regan said most or
the teenagers and young adults implica·
ted In the case will be charged with sale ot dangerous drugs and, or marijuana,
botb felony offrnses.
Jnvertt,ators have seized aboUt 20 kilos
-·nearly !Kl pounds -of marijuana along
with a kilo of hashish. marijuana's J>O"
1C'nt. relined sap, plus a~orted other ad·
diclive, and so-called mild drugs in rhe
probe.
Heroin. opium. the hallucinogenic cac·
tu!\ derivative mescaline, LSD, as well a~
rl!fferent types of barbltursle tablets and
amphetamine pills were already held as
evidence.
tl-fost ot !he juveniles suspected of par·
!icipation in the city-wide drug traf[ic
were quietly summoned to campus ad·
ministrative offices where they were tak-
en into custody.
Arrest warrants naming them and five
persons over 18 years old \\·ere obtained
from the Orange County district attorn·ey
arter police com pleted tbe wideapread
investigation.
Capt. Green said the roundup was or·
derly, with no known incidents or re·
sistance. He added that he expected IS
persons to be in custody by the ..!nd of the
dav. bra wing on manpower from · other po-
lice details. the squad of four detectives
Jed by Sgt. Re"!an, included investigators
Norm Kutch, Bob Lennert. Wayne Har·
ber and Dave Hayes.
Alleged campus drug violations have
been increasingly in the news during the
past few months. climaxed by withdrawal
of several students whose parents have
put them in private schools.
lnvesligators questiahin~ known offend-
ers with prior records. using volunteered
Information from other sludents and
school authorities have said privately In
recent weeks the roundup was coming.
"Maybe this will open the eyes of somo
people who don't think we haVe a prob-
lem," remarked one lawman today a.,
the arrestees were brought into the sta·
lion.
Slo<'I• ltforket
NEW YORK <AP) -Stocks wandered
deeper into losing territory in slow trad-
ing today, with declines Jeadln~ advances
by two lo one. CSee quotations, Pages 10-
11 l.
Analysts said they detected a drying
up of buying as lnvestor1 sat on the side.
Jines. waiting out the detllne and await-
ing President Nixon's budget message
J\1onday. .The idea is to prevent .11usped.s from
destroying narcotic evidence w h i I e
raiding officers wait outside. the aoor to
get in.
. The action ca:ne as.~,lhe senate ap-
proved, 70 to 15, an 811\!ndmeiit offered
by Aallltant Republican Leader .Robert
"It hurt to havl'! my husband sandw!oh·
cd between dea!rters and draf1dodgers.''
A.frs. HansOn, who:st husband, ?t1arine . Bad After Taste
P. Griffin of ~fichigan .
The Grirfin amendment to the ad·
ministration • backed drug control bill
permltii issuance of such ''no-kr.oek"
\tarrants but adds some restriction.ii lo
ea!le doubts sOmc senaton. have ex·
prrs11ed that no knock raids violate the
Fourth Amendment's guarantee of
privacy and protecllon from unreasonable
~earch iind seizure.
~-foments before. lhe Senate beat back
t\\in atte.mpta Oy Sen. S•m J. Ervin (D·
N.C.). 10' kill the Grlfrin amen<:menl Md
to suballtutc his own lanauagC' allo"''lng
no-wamfng raids' only If of!lcers at the
scrne dC'itermine<I that without it, vii.ill
C\·)dcncc was certalr. to be destroyed.
Corps Capt. Stephen P. Hansoo Was shot
dO\\'n while nying a helicopter medical
evtliuatlon mi~sion in Laos n~arly foor
yeu rs ag11, sail.I they believe the war Is
j11~. •. ' ~·
"All "'e want to know is i£ our
husbands art alive or dead and I don't
lhi nk that's too much lo ask ," sald f\1rs.
Hanson.
"I think we started out on this'lrip wlth
a feeling that our trip wasn't golnQ: to
bring any specific answers for us and
perh&ps we wou'61n't see the results of It
fur some time . •
"But I do fetl il"s bctn 1 cumulative
ctfort, 11nd I don 't think Hanoi can con·
tSee WIVES, P11• JI
Student Leader Held for Drugs
A high 11ehool s.tudent body president
alt.encllng a leadtt8' luncheon Wilh the
superintendent of lhe Garden Grove
Unified School rnstrlct wat arrested on a
nlarljuana charge after dessert Mond•Y·
Santingb 11igh School AS8 President
Gunner Swanson, 17, ol 13702 Euclid St..
f,arden Grove. was admhttd to Orange.
County Juvc.nUt Hall on a. charae of
posseulon or marijuana.
Santiago Hlgh School Vlei Principal
RoMl'.t Kernan tokt police he called the
youth to his office and asked whal he had
in his bulging pocket. at which time
SwaMon pulled out a plastic bag ol
grttn, leafy material.
.. It 's Just aUalia and catnip," bl
reportedly 111\d.
Kernan apparently suggested it would
be unwise to take the bag along to lunch
with Supt. David Paynter.
During the lunchton period, Garden
Grove pollct narcotks df:tect.lve1 w1i-.
analyilng lht. weed and flnnlly declared It
wa$ mora lhan alfalfa and catnip .
..,.
t
! DAILY ptlOT c Tut1d1y, Janulf127, 1'70
Congress to Act
Nixon Explains
HEW Bill Veto
\YASHlNGTON IAP) -President Nix·
on formallY told Congress today he
vetoed a $19.7 billlon Health-Education·
Labor 'lpproprialion bill because it would
feed inflation. foster inefficiency and
misdirect. money.
Con;ress 'ooo6ted the bill nearly $1.S
billion beyond the level Nixoo had rte0m·
rqended. and the President signed his
\'elo m,essage with a pen nourish televis-
ed to the. nation f\londay night.
Then today he sent the bill back tG
Capitol Hill · along \\'ilh the lengthy
message amplifying his reasons for re·
jeding it.
Democratic leaders v.•ere pushing lo
override the v-eto, and some were clalm·
ing ho~fully they had the voles lo do it.
but those claims "'ere disputed.
Sen. Hugh Scott (R-Pa.). said
Republicans in the House, or II necessary
in the Senate. will side \\"ilh Nixon in
numbers sufficient lo sustain lhe veto,
although he conceded some Oc1nocralic
support would be ne<:ded.
The Hou!e will \•ote Wednesdoy. lf it
\'Oles to override. then the Senate \\'ill act
later. No tin1e for a possible Senate vote
has yet been set, but Democrati..: Leader
Mike htansfielrl of fl.tontana predicted th~
Senate will vote to override the veto if it
gels the chance .
NixC"n offered little in the way ot com-
promise to gain additional support.
Some legislators had expec!.ed him to
give a bit on hit opposition to a $600
million item for grants to schools 1n
areas where large numbers of chlldre11 of
federal employes and servlCfmen attend
them. The figure was nearly MOO million
more than the 1dminl11t.raU011 had recom-
mended .
Nixon promised only to study ti)' pro-
gram and mak~ recommendation:; later.
•'Four successive presidents have tried
to reduce or reorient this program," NlJ·
on 1a1d. ''Yet the COngreN in this bill not
only perpetuates this unfair progrm.
it adds money to IL lt ls wrong to sharply
increue the lm!'lacted acbool aid pro-
gnm in the race of the n~d to mike
Jon;;-overdue reforms in this law.
"The administration will make recom·
mendations for reJorm of thi!I program
based on a study requested by the
Congress. I will !IUbmil these recom·
mendations shortly."
In making reforms. Nixon said he
favored Including a "no hardship cha111e"
guaranteeing that no school dltlrlct'I
budget would be leas than 95 percent of
what it had in 1969.
Impacted school aid rtaches into many
con3l'esslo11al districts whose represen-
tatives ar.e wary_ otany attempt!~ to p4re
the program Jn an election year.
Nixon clashed witf, Congress also over
itJ addition of $104 milllon for grants: to
build aud modernize c o m m u n I t y
hosp.'tal1. He cited this U an example of
misdirected money on grounds that "a
more prtssing·need is to fund ambulatory
care facilities which ofrer an alternative
to expensive hospital care" -as he pro-
posed to Congrrss last April.
The Prrstdent said that he would not
have vetoed l~ases Congress provided
for health research if they had been
enacted separately. He nld they
reprrsentJes.:. than half of one percent or
the total appropriation.
Two Teen Suspects Held
111 Liquor Store Heist
Two teen-age suspects were captured
Monday night after a pair of bandits held
up a Seal Btach liquor store clerk by
Sticking a 12 ~1-lnch butcher knife-to his
stomach, then eluded a hail of bullets
fired by the clerk.
The clerk. Jim Scotti. tooched off a
silent alarm during the robbery which led
to a massive police manhunt and t.hr ar·
rem .
Held on charges of robbing Vop:ltr-'s
Ray Llquor Store. 1780 Pacific CoaM ~ishway. are. Tllomas 1t1. h1cCartney. It. •
rif Long Beach and his 17·yl!ar.old com-
panion.
Clerk Scotti told Seal Beach police the
b;1ndits entered his store about 9:20 p.m.
\\'hlle holding the knife to Scotti's belly.
the robbers ordered him to open the till
and hand ovrr the contents, which were
later determined to be around $150. ac·
cording to Sgt. Sam D'Amico ol the Seal
Beach Police Department.
As the youths escaped through the
door, ScotU Jirtd one vtarning shot in the
Planners Okay
Name of Street
There's no place like \Vestn1inster
Plact, at least n>t anymore.
CO$ta l\1esa Planning Commission
members voted a recommendation of ap·
prilval ~ionday night ror a petition by
prope rty owners to re-title their shorl
s:reet.
Neither rain, nor sleet, nor dark of
r.iGhl inhibits the U.S. Post Office, but the
fact that there was also a \Vestminster
Avenue in town played havoc with mail
dPlivery.
Subject to city council ratification. one
segment of the Jenner Westminster
Place becomes t..arltcn Place and the re·
mainder will be 24th Place.
DAILY PILOT
l!~lu•I N. W1td
''Hoft"' ..... "'11tlllllfr
l~o ... 11 IC 10~:1
ldl .. ,
Th'"''' A. Mu1p~i ~1
M1111~..,_ t1llO'
C••'• M••• Offlco
JJO W11t l•v Slretf
Mtll!11t Aclcl1111~ P.O. I•• I t•O, 92,16
Ottrer OHie"
Mt-1 9.,.,,.. 1111 WllSI 8•fb!lt 8.Wk••"'
LtO.,.... flucll: m Forbl ..,,,.....,.
1-111"1...,_ ltoc~: llflS lttc~ l w•wt•f
0•1lY .,,LOT, -,...c1> i. c-i..w ,,..
l<O ••·••nt. l'I -..b ,.,... 01,IY t•("! ...... . ••v "' .. ~••It "'"-. 111" l tO.,,.. ... <;~. Mt-• 1 .. (l'l. CNI• Mn• 1111'1'1oof..,
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l~ .... 171•1 ,.J.4Jll
CleoitM-4 A4•..,Htlitt 44loU7f
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........ ~ el """"""' _.,. lte•"' cit» -It~ Jtf•f •I Hf"'_,. ltMll
••I (Ml• ,,.,.,., (t lll0!'11lt. l .,.,ri.tiet'I W ''"' .. ,,. """""'" w 11111f(tf..11t ......,,.,.., l'lill!lt ,., fftll•,.rl•"• II. -:lllY,
;:rir and four at their leis frem a hi;:b-
powered .»7 marnum pistol, D'Amico
said.
A silent alarm touched off at the Seal
Beach Police station during the robbery
prompted the immediate dispatch of all
available police cars who \\'ere aided in
their search of the escapees by units
from Huntington Beach, Los Alamitos
and the Huntington Beach p o 11 c e
helieojrter. -
Officers managed lo pur!ue .1 flee:ing
.... hicle for some di1t111nce. saw it ~ud·
denly slop, \.\'hilc a man \vho they allege
"'~S McCartney , escaped over a fence .
Sometime later. Seal Beach officer Ken
.len~n m;inaged t<> spol someone fitting
the younger robber's <lescr!plion al 251h
Slre<'I and Pacific Coa st Highw111y and
immediately arrested him , according 10
SgL D'Amico.
r-.tcCartney was apprehended by Officer
Don McGill shortly before midnight when
he v.·as spotted hiding underneath a
Sun~et Beach home by an in!onnant, in·
vestigators said.
From Page 1
WIVES ...
tinue its presenl policy U countries
?f«und t!ie \\'Orid "'iii speak 'lilt fo r th e
11humanity that Hanoi is eniaJing in in
reJ!ards to these men." ~frs. Hanson !laid .
~lrs. Hanson and three other California
~1·omen v.•l1ose h•JslJands "'ere ~hot dol\·n
in Vietnam combat appeared at a new s
c:Jnfertnce before ltavlng for Tokyo. Tl'oe
rither \l'OmE'n are ~1rs. John Hardy. 27 :
~lr:i-. Roc:~velt Hestle .rr .. 37. and Mrs.
!i1enrns. also 37, all of Los Angeles.
\Vhen thry get home. ~frs. H11nson 11aid.
the wh·es "·ill encourage other women to
make similar trip5 .
"\\fe'll continuP to wrlt! letters to everv.
n:ition as v.·e have done befor,, we lert ;j
:;he said. addinp she and r-.l rs. Hardy
planned le. go to Paris aM confront North
\lletname~e ohicials lhtre.
~frs. Hanson snid North Vietnamr~l':
diplomats in V\Ptnamei;e. Lao~. "didn 't
e\•en have the courtesy ... to sre me "
"I stood out in the drh·e\.\'ay \\'<iitins: for
an an1wcr . \\'il"ll1er 111ey \\'ould set up ;:in
;i ppointment for me or not." ~he said. "f
<:ould go to any e1nbassv of anv countrv
;o mund the world and I Would a't lea~! bC
1r<'aled °"•ilh courte~v. The North Virt·
nam~se embai1.~y didn't evtn l1n\'C the
rourtesy lo invite me in and spe11k with
me for 10 minutes. and lo me. a civilized
nation in lhe "'orld today does not beha\·e
in this manner.'·
~trs. Hardy s11id sht thou4hl It "in·
"rtdlble" that the North Vietnamese
\\'ould not acc l!nt infonn11tion on their
s.1ldiers held prisoner in South Vletn3m
and Laos.
Sailboat Gear
Taken in Theft
A 25.1001 s11lboat $0\d by a Santa An~
r1\•ll ~nglneer. then repo~es~ed ind
~tortd at a CMta Jl.lt!a lot "n.s bur.11l1rl1·
cd of '840 in rigging and actes50rh.!S. the
0\1 11er told p0ltce fl.1onday.
Ronald W. r-.1artln said his yacht ~·1s
being ktpt at 940 Yl. 18th St, whtn some-
one broke into lht cabin and carted
a1¥ay the assorted equlpn1ent.
The loss incluPcd 650 feet of rigelng
llne1. t\l'O anchors, an aluminum tall
boom and • s~llt)' stove, according lo
MarUn.
" ' I
• • • · .
Plane Noise
Rules Urged
By Newport
The Newport Beach City Council joined
the effort Monday lo curb. noise from
PSA jets if they use Orange County
Airport and lhc council drafted a sel ot
suggested rules "'hich lhe county could
include in a lease being discussed ~y.
The rules, which include a flight curfew
from 11 p.m. to 7 a.m., \\'ere to be
presen~d by Mayor Doreen Marshall to-
day to Orange County supervisors. Thry
a~ considering a new lease wilh PSA,
which is planning to absorb Air California
in a merger.
SAN ONOFRE NUCLEAR GENERATING STATION TO BECOME ONE OF NATION 'S LARGEST
EdiiOn Announc11 $4SO Million Exp•n1ion of ·Facility N11r Nixon E1t1t1
ThP Newport councilmen suggestect
that the lease forbid the use of planes
larger than the Boeing 737 and also lm·
pose a maximum nun1ber of flights which
PSA can fly in and out of the county-own-
ed terminal. Power Boosted at Onofre Besides the appearance b e f o r e
supervisors late loday, the city staff wil l
join as an intervener in proceedings
before the State Public Utilities Com·
mission when the m(.\tler of the n1erger n ..
PSA and Air Cal comes before the state
agency. Edison Pledges All Out Nuclear Co1nmitrnent The councll praised efforts by the
Newport Harbor Chamber of Commerce.
which has urged supervisors to include
noise-control provisions in the new lease
with PSA.
By JACK BROBACK
Cll IM Dtllt Piiot •ttff
The awarding or contracts for two huge
nuclear reactors to be installed at the ex·
isling San Onofre Nuclear Generating
Station within two mUe.s of the Western
White House was announced today by t.he
Southern California Edi.son Company.
Company officials term the move an
"all-out commilmenl'' to nuclear power
generation.
Ja<:;k K. Horton, Edison chairman and
chief executive, added. however, that t.he
company must proceed with I.hi" con·
slrucllon of two conventional 1enerallng
units at Huntington Beach "in order to
metl customer power requirements
between 1973 and 1'76.
"But as more and more nu clear plants
are built. we will gradually reduce our
use of eKistlng "II and 1a5-fired WlllS in
the south coastal area," Horton said.
Towing Service's
Generosity Gets
Mesa Rejection
A tfl\\ins service's reque~t to share the
\\·ealth in emerge.ncy police calls with twG
other Costa htesa firms handling tbe'm on
rfllatlon basis has been rejected as un·
needect . The Costa ~Tesa City Council voted
against the application of Mesa Tow
Service, 648 Baker St .. aHer listening lo
re commendallons by Police Chief Roger
Neth. lie said there is no need for addilional
service and warned against the possibili·
ty of so-called claim·jumping. a bitter
competition resulting elsewhere i n
roadside fights with tire irons.
Dan R. Ashcrart. owner of Mesa TO\V
Service, denied there would be any such
activities-a major Los Angeles County
problem before controls \\'ere adop-
ted-and said would rire any brawler .
He illso charged bitterly that as a
Southern California Automobile Club
representative. he "·as called to the scene
or an accidPnl by a n1otori~t in\'O\ved. on·
ly to be ordered otr by po Ii ct.
He said the can \\'as gi\'e, to one of the
two low service~ nov.• ass igned to handle
Costa ~1csa accidents and con1pla ined
that other Auto Club customer requests
go 10 his compelitori::.
flsl1crafl said during this presen1;ition
1hat he c11n provide the same service as
the other t,,.,·o companies a! lower rates.
Asked aboul the fee :i;lructure. Ashcraft
said there is a b~sic S\5 charge for a run.
plus additionr:il labor costs in case a ''iC·
tim must be freed from man;:led
\vreckage .
The council vote "·as 4 to I with Coun·
cilman William L. St. Clair in the mlnori·
!y on continuing the present rotation
system among only tv.;o operators.
Teenager Hurt
By Speeding Car
A Costa ~lesa teenager \\'ho said he
w:i~ run off thr road by a motorist pas-
l'111g on the right \\'I S injured r-.1onday
night. when his O\.\'O vehicle carecne<l
through a yard . mo\\'ing down t\vo fences.
Patrick R. Herbert. 18, of 566 Hamilton
S! . suffered 111 cul on lht forehtad and
~aid he would go to the family phy3ici1n
tor treatment.
Pollce said Herbert \\'as \\'e!'ilbound on
\Vilson Street at 7:S5 p.m .. "''htn the aulo
1(11 the road,,.,·ay just \\'est of R8\eigh
Drive, jurnpro the curb and plowed
1:11 C111gh the corner lot.
A !.\.foot se<:ti.>n of six·foot-high ftnce.
~ !maller omamentAI fence. plus as·
~orted shrubbery was levtlfd al the home
r-f [.dwln L. Sorley. 2145 Raleigh Drive,
~lice said.
t:ctihtrY J2la:r.a Hotel
Plans Ex p ansion
LOS A~C:F:'LES (UPI \ -Plan~ '4·err
;innouoced J\lond:i y for a $30 million Ad·
dili on to the Century Plata Hotel. giving
11 a l.600·room caoa.clty and making It
the largest in Southern CaHfon1la .
The new structure. a SS-story curved
lower. '4'i11 Adjoin the present Century
Pla z3 and overlook the back lot of the
20tti Century-t~ox Movie Studio,
A reactor contract was awarded to
Combustion Engineering Inc. of Windsor.
Conn. The re:actors will become part of
two new unll'l at the San Onofre plant.
Cost of the units will be about $450
million.
San Die;:o Gas and Electric Co .. a. 20
percent partner in the '50,000 kilowatt
nuclear unit now operating at San Onofre.
"'ill have an equivalent ownership in the
output or the two new units. The original
installation cost $90 million.
The San Onofre plant is in San Die10
County, but Is situated just south of Sen
Clemente, Orange County's southernmost
comm.unity and President Nixon's new
home. The old Hamilton Cotton estate
which the President purchased lest year
overlooks the 1ea at the southern Up of
Sen Clemente.
When it was first proposed In the early
1960's, the San Onofrt nuclear plant was
the aubject of bitter oppos!Uon from con·
scrvationlsta. surfers and civil defense
advocates. Since Its construcUon it has
slipped Into virtual anonymity.
Two 1.1 mllllOn kilow•lt units will be
added at San Onofre. They will provide
enough power to serve the equivalent
electrical needs of a city of 2.5 million
people. rne addition of the units will
create one or the nation's largest nuclear
;eneratlng stations.
Announcement of lhe new nulcear units
\\·as first made three weeks ago in Los
Angeles by \Vl\liam R. Gould. Edison vice
president durinG hearing! oo the Hun·
Ungton Beach expansion before the state
Public Utilities Commission.
Construction of the first of the nuclear
additions is expected to begin next sum·
mer and commerical operation is
scheduled in 1g75, The second Wlit would
go into commercial operation a year
later, Horton said.
"Beglnning wlth the San Onofre addi·
tion v.'e are commitled to build only nu·
clear po'ver p\anls for our major gene·
ration sources In the coastal basin.·• Hor-
ton said. "This Is another step Edison is
tahing in lhe intPre~t of cleanrr air for
Southern California.''
"l.ooking to the 1980's, Edison has ac·
<'t>lerated its continuing rel'iearch pro-
grams aimed at developing the engi neer·
ini: safeg11ards necessary to pern1it the
construction of future nuclear plants in
urban areas close to the electrical load
they serve," the Edison executive said.
These studies will give prime consid·
eration to uthetic and environmental
values. including the feasibility of plac·
ing major portions of future nuclear fa.
cilities belo\\· the surface ol the ground.
"In the current year, Edison will spend
about 5500.000 in this research effort,"
Horton concluded.
lee Cream Parlor Gets
Cool Reception in Mesa
The COl!'!ta Mesa Planning Commission
dished up a cold recommendation for
denial i\ionday night. alter considering a
zone exception permit for an ice cream
parlor bordering 011 a residential area.
Staff aides had recommended approval
of the Farrell's lee Cream Parlour pro-
posed for 1673 lr\·lne Ave., in a commer·
cial z:one. but Lhe vote was 4 to I. with
Commisllioner ll.J. •·Jimmie" \\1ood in
the minoritv .
The panei also reversed another staff
recommendation. voting approval for a
cflndilional ust pern1it requested DV Yi.ii·
liam Van Heen1skcrck. of 2087 \\!'allace
A 1·e .. lo do auto repairs at Oii; homt.
Nei ghhors had complained in the past
of Van Heemskerck·s home occupation,
but the 68.year-0ld heart patient sub·
mitterl a r.ew plan lo do all the \\'Ork at
the rear of his property, out of their
sight.
A major do"•ntO\\'n area re.zoning
iniUaled by the cltv itself "'as taken off
the Agerirla indeflnltely, pending submis·
sion of a land use study to be undertaken
by a consultant firm .
Details of a contract ·with Willsey &
Ham, of Arcadia, for the first step to-
ward . an . urban redevelopment project
reaching into the ne:ict decade are current·
ly being \\'orked out.
In other action. the commission voted:
-Approval for a tentative parcel map
for di\•ision of property at 630 and 834
Center St.. and 635 and 639 Plumer St., by
Newport Balboa Savin;:s and Loan Asso-
ciali on.
-Approval for a rezone petition by
She rn1an Oaks dl!:vel'lper Alfred Edelsolln
to changl': six lots between Corsica Park.
Harbor Rest r-.t emorial Park. Coral and
Gibra\lar Avenues from single family
home to duplex designation.
-Approval for the Chlld Guidance Cen·
!er of Orange County, al 171 E. \11th St ..
to use t\\·o temporary office trailen: for
a three-year period lit that location, zoned
for adminislrative and professional build·
ings.
ANOTHER •••••
The airline presently does not use
Orange County Airport, but before the in·
tended merger wlLh Air Cal was an·
nounced, PSA had applied for state ap·
proval for use or the airport here.
Besides the intervention in state action
and suggestions to county officials Ne~port's staff will meet with represen:
tallves of PSA to determine if the airline
is willing to cooperate in a noise abate·
ment porgram.
~SA recently agreed to cooperate in
no15e control with officials of Long
Beach, who allowed the line to use the ci·
ty airport, provided several anti-noise
measures v.·ere included in the lea~e.
Air California also has accepted the
Long Beach restrictions.
The controls suggested by the chambe.r
of commerce are suggested as interim
constraints until the county-financed
Phase II airport master plan study is
completed.
If supervisors adopt the chamber's sug-
gestions, operations at the airport woul~
remain at their present level until the
master plan phase is fini shed.
Supervisors were expected to take ac·
lion on the matter sometime late this
afternoon.
Fron• Pqe 1
TROOPS ...
n~ber of American troops withdrawn
~1nce the U:S. pulloul began last July 8 .
New evidence of the Communist
i:'uildup was cited by the U.S. CommAnd
in reporting the discovery of several Viet
Cong and North Vietnamese arms caches
at \\'idely separated points in South Viet-
nam r-.fonday and today.
Troops or the U.S. 25th Infantry
Division turned up the biggest such
storthouse of anns 40 miles northweJSt or
Saigon. They found I 1h tons of arms and
ammunitloo, including ZO big rockels. 48
i~11Jividual weapons and l\\'O light machine
guns.
Near !he central highland!'i city of
Pleiku. the U.S. 4th Infantry Divi~ion
found mortar round s. rocket grenades,
har.d grenades and plastic explosives.
South Vietnamese paratroops seized a
cache of 103 ind ividual and \\l'O crew·
ser,•ed ·,\•capons 75 miles norlh\\·e.st of
Saigon.
\\'a r communiques said fighting \'l'a~
rel~tively light across th e nation although
Vi('l Cong guerrillas ambushed an allied
truck convoy just east of Saigon ~1onday
night. It 'vas the llrst attack that close
to the capital since 1968.
E-X-P-A-N-S-1-0-N
\Ve hov• •lways endeavored to furnish the
fin15t service anywhere for CARPETING and
DRAPERIES. T oward1 th;, end , we h•ve ju1I com·
p!eted •n 1nler9meent of facilities which will tn·
able u~ to serve you better!
Come in i nd s11 our huge invent ory of fine
carpeting end browse through our new remnont
room, where we have thousands of yords of small
ind room-si1t remnants !
UNUSUAL INSTALLATION l'ROILEMS?
Come in and tolk with any of our s1lasman-yho 111 h1v1 htd extensive
in~telletion e1ptri1nc1!
ALDEN'S
CARPETS e DRAPERIES
•
-------
1663 PLACENTIA· COSTA MESA
646·4131
1> YIA•S llRVINO THI OU.NOi COAIT
I
' ,,
Dowta the
Mission
Trail
Christmas lights
Given to Capo
SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO -The city
received a gift at Monday night's meeting
but there were slrings attached.
The gift was strings of Hght-filled
plastic globes which the Chamber of
Comn1erce strung on d o w n t o w n
bus inesses during the Chri stmas season.
Actually the city is the true owner of
the decorations si nce the lights orig inally
purchased by the chamber w e r e
destroyed in a fire. The city then mat-
ched what had been collected so more
lights could be purchased.
Now that the city possesses the lights
they will have to find a safe spot to store
them and the chamber hopes they'll take
the responsibility for installing and
removing th em next year.
e Paddlh1g 1fh111crs
LAKE FOREST -Mr. and f\.lrs.
Ernest Pemberton know there 's mor<:!
than verbiage in the old saying "paddle
you r own canoe."
By sheer endurance they were the win·
ners of the Lake Forest community pad-
dle boat race during Boat Day activities.
"All the competitors were doing great
the first lap, but during the second they
all seemed to gi ve out," said Bob Figiera ,
observer.
But the Pembertons stuck to it and
'vound up in first place taking home a
trophy and some very sore muscles.
e Sports Loops For11a
LAKE FOREST -Community sports
enthusiasts are invited to sign up now for
iwo Lake Forest sports programs.
Boys and girls 11.fe welcome to join the
S\vim team this month in order to begin
praclicing for summer compelition.
There is no age limit.
Boys 8 lo 13 are eligible for the
baseball league which also is organizi ng
for su mmer play. For more information
about either activity. call the Beach and
Tennis Club at 837-6100.
e Officer Co111111issim1ed
LAGUNA HILLS -Gerald Bennett of
Laguna Hill s is one of 15 University of
San Francisco graduates who majored in
academic subjC<"ts and took military
scienee as well, to eam commissions as
second lieutena nts in the Army after the
winter break.
Bennett. an English major, was com-
missioned to serve with the military
police.
e B111l Progr11na Set llp
CAPISTRANO VALLEY -A Colt -Pony
League baseball program will be outlined
for parents of boys 13--16 on \Vednesday.
DAILY l'ILOT SI .. ! Pllf ..
Checking Out the Scenef11
Juan Evans, 9, of Laguna Beach, and Angela Watts,
13 months, of Costa Mesa, get a preview of setting
for Cellini'.s "Salt Cellar," one of living pictures
to be included in 1970 Pageant of the ~fasfers, while
casting about for a part in the Pageant. Casting
calls are scheduled from 7 p.m. to 9 f.m. Jan. 31
and from 2 p.m. to 5 p.m. Feb. 1 at rvine Bowl.
They are open to everyone. All ages, shapes and
sizes are needed for the Pageant.
Nuclear Boom • Ill 1970's?
Power to Double, But It May Not Be Enougli
EDITORS NOTE : Nuclear power
pla11ts are see1t as th e only answer to
providing power for a growing popu·
lation. But !here are problems, both
physica l and psychological. T hose are
explored in a two-part series by Asso-
ciated Press Writer Doug Willis.
By DOUG WILLIS
Associated Preas Writer
The 1970s will be a decade of tremen-
dous change in California, bul wide use of
nuclear-produced electric power won't be
one of those changes, says lhe chairman
of the state's joint legislative committee
on nuclear development
"The problem is the tremendous lead
time for construction of a nuclear power·
plant -seven to eight years," said
Assemblyman John V. Briggs lR·
Fullerton).
but that first an adverse public opinion
must b& changed.
"People are opposed mostly because
they don't know anything about it. The
question is how do you tell the people. I
U1ink the fact that President Nixon's San
Clemente home is 1 ~2 miles from a
nuclear plant dramatically shows bow
safe they are," he said.
He said fossil fuel electric generating
plants -which burn oU, coal or gas -
now are responsible for 17 percent of all
air pollution and one percent or the visi·
ble smog in the Los Angeles basin.
"We have about thr.?e times the smog
that we can stand, so that one percent is
too much," Briggs added, ''but the real
problem is running ou t of fossil fuels.
.. By 1990 California will require es
much electric power as all lhe United
States requires now, so you know we
can't rely on fossil fuels. . .The
alternative is that your air conditioner
'von't work when you turn ot on, or
hospitals won't have power in their
operaling rooms."
Briggs, whose committee has held
numerous hearings since the 1969
Legislature adjourned in August, said he
expects a report from the State
Resources Agency next month on the
feasibility of a "one-stop" agency for
nuclear plant approval and that he ex·
pects to pass legislation this year to
streamline procedures.
He said about 18 months of the
minimum of seven years required for a
nuclear plant arc taken up in ap-
plications, and "we could cut that in half
streamlining procedures."
"Our problem is cutting down the lead
time on nuclear plants," he said. "The
lead time for a fossil fuel plant is three to
four years, so we keep building them
because we have to do something ... but
they aren't the answer."
_r....i_..:...,;_' J:.c'.:.."".:..":-Y27..:.._19_7_0_-=.s _____ .AILV PILOT 3
Cops Hu1na11 Too
Grove Kids Gain lnsiglits
By ASSOCIATED PRESS
"The main thlng I learned,'' Wd the
teen-age girl, "was that cops are hum•n.
too. They bleed just like everyone else..''
Donna Evans, writing in her· student
newspaper at Pacifica High School In
Garden Grove, was telling how her views
of law enforcement officers took a sudden
flip.flop after she participated in a pro-
gram called Code ?.
This is the rad.JG message ofncers
routinely give when they are lunching.
"I never liked cops and I thought I
never would," said Donna. "'Every Ume
a cop even came near me I would get
away from him fast because he was a
cop."
But under the Code 7 program. ~1iss
Evans rode along with a police officer on
his regular patrol . She saw him pick up a
stray cat and take it home to his wife;
she observed him help an elderly woman
with a flooding, stopped-up toilet ; and she
saw him take abuse from both parties
when he responded to a man.wife fight.
The program is unusual only in its
comprehensiveness. It starts with grades
1--3 and carries on, in appropriate steps,
through high school.
It began when Police Chief George P.
Tlelsch erallzed this burgeoning com-
munity had turned up a significant
statistic. Studies showed that hair the
city 's 122,000 residenls were young.
The chief said he also realized that
there was a stereotype among the young
about police officers.
His goal was to break it down and
create a mutua l respect between his of-
ficers and lhe youth of the community.
About 18 months ago , Dave Burn, 27,
was named coromunity relations officer.
Although Garden Grove has no ghettos
as such, police were aware that
teenagers thought of themselves as a
persecuted minority group.
The Code 7 concept began simply. Qf.
ficers on th e day shift took along their
lunches and made it a point to eat with
children at schools who a 1 s G brought
theirs.
"We got some real discu ssions going,"
Bum recalls. "They dealt with everything
from police brutality, search and seizure
to the wisdom of curfew laws."
Since then, the program has been ex·
paneled to regular classroom lectures and
aceompanying officers on patrol.
Bum said he soon learned that only Olle
Hurt Officer's
Twin Here
LOS ANGELES {AP) - A twin brother
flown here from a Vietnam battle zone is
st.anding by to lend encouragement to
Michael Kriha, one of two policemen who
each lost a hand last week while ex.
amining a bomb.
Army Sgt. Gregory Kriha, 46, who is on
military leave from the Inglewood Police
Department, arrived in the city Sunday
after his brother's surgeon requested his
presence through the Red Cross.
Michael Kriha, who lost his left hand,
underwent addltlonal surgery Monday
afternoon at Orthopaedic Hospital. His
partner, officer Edward McDonald, 29,
also laces another operatk>n.
or two o(flcers couldn't handle the sHua-
tion.
This caused him to do some arm.
twisting to get tvtry patrolman into the
program.
Bum mentioned one officer who bad
spent a Code 7 at a particular school.
A couple weeks later he was summoned
to the school to break up a fight.
"The kids recognired him," said Bum.
"He was flabbergasted. The cooperation
was 100 percent."
Is there a key to success?
"We don't moralize at all," said Burn,.
"because that just tums the1.1 off.
"\Ve just pose some of the situations
kids get into. or we talk about anything'
the kids want to discuss." •
Teachers Fail
In Ballot Bid
On Finances?
A campaign by California school
teachers to collect enough signatures to
qualify a school and wefare finance pro-
posal for the June state ballot may have
failed.
Asst. Secretary of State H. P. Sullivari
says the deadline has passed without the
required number of signatures being Pl'O:
duced, but att<1meys for California
Teachers Association {CTA) contest the
applicability of the deadline that fell tut
Thursday.
They claim there is still time to qualify
end with more than 450,000 signatures the
teachers are close to the 520,000 required,_
Of those signatures aDOUl 4,000 were
collected by teachers of Newport..Mesa
Unified School District, C'Otlliderably
short Of their goal of 20,000. Throughout
lhP. county, teachers collected 40,000
signatures -not near the 150,000 CT A
had set as the goal, but then CTA had set
goals quite high to clearly overreach the
required number.
The proposed inJUalive ballot measure
ts jointly sponsored by the CIA and the
County Supervisors Association o f
California. It ~wld require the st.ate to
pay 50 percent of public school costs and
00 percent of welfare costs.
Currenlly, much of the money for these
services comes from local property ta1
revenues.
Back in 1953 the state did pick up 50
percent ol the cost cf education but now
16 years later It is down to 35 percent.
In relatively wealthy areas such u
Newport Beach.Costa Mesa the local tax:
payer -pays an even hlgher percentage,
In the Newport-Mesa District propertt
taxpayers will contribute 71 percent of
local education costs this year and the
sta te only 18 percent.
If the state were required to pick up 90
percent of welfare rost.1 the County
Board of Supe rvisors can fore see a $1
million per year savings on the property
ta•.
If the initiative were qualified and
passed by voters the state Legislature
would be forced to consider other mea·ns
of financing.
The organizational meeting will take
place at 8 p.m. in room 204 in Forster
Junior High School in San Juan
Capistrano. The league is for boys in the
Capistrano Unified School District.
e Land Ilse Approllcd
"And the companies are gu~shy ...
there's the public reaction and govern·
ment red tape . Eighteen federal and
state agencies have to approve a nuclear
plant," he added. *281,111
\. raio• ~ari~a! ~TICK &.i~ilATilH
fer *be lllll'PalV' ceo1. ef 1'11Vi1l3' • ti11SSION VIEJO -The ~1ission Viejo
Company has won Planning Commission
approval to develop tv.·o parcels of land,
totaling 167.3 acres for indust rial and
commercial use.
Ninety-two acres at the western comer
of Alicia Parkway and Jeronimo Road
were okayed for subd ivision into 44 in·
dustrial and commercial lots. Seventeen
commercial lots will result from the su~
division of 75.3 acres on both sides of
Avery Parkway east of the San Diego
freeway.
Picketi11g Pilot
Briggs said two nuclear power plants
now in operation in California produce
less than rive percent of the state's elec·
tric pov.•er. A third nuclear plont Is under
construction at San Luis Obispo anti
seven to 10 more are planned.
"By 1980 we will double our nuclear
capacity ... but we double our electric
need every eight years in California. so in
relative terms we won't be producing any
more," he said.
Briggs said that in the long haul,
"nuclear power is the only way to go,"
Rosanne Stone (foreground} leads parade of pickets on DAlLY
PTLOT offices in Costa Mesa. Group from National Or~anlzalion ior
\Vo1nen (NOW) showed up last Saturday with signs telhng just what
they think of the newspa per. Placards refer to DAILY PILOT's ac-
t ion in Integrating its "'ant ads In accordance wJth Equal Opportuni·
ties Commission d irective not to segregate want ads according to
~e~ Action was taken voluntarizy by newspaper managemenl
MOVING
SpeGial Sale howra:
MONDAY & FRIDAY 9 to 9
SUNDAY 12 to 5
Reductiona 9n 807. tf
I
I
....
4 DAil Y PIUIT TllHd•r. J1nuar')' 27, 1970
Two Weeks Without Food Yablonski
II· TODAY'S NEWS
cc-11llM " "" IMllY P'LW SllfU
The Massachusetts S up r em e
Court will determine whether it is
Iega1 for 8 Springfield !inn incor-
porat.ed 85 a travel agency to of-
fer its clients a $1,250 package deal
for an abortion in England. T h e
firm provides a pas~port , health
certifica'le, airplane tickets, h?tel
accommodations and the abortiO~,
which will be perfo~ed .bY a l!-
censed British Phys1c1an tn a pri-
vate clinic. Stat• Atty. Gen. Rob-
ert H. Qu inn said he will . ask t h e
court to rule on the legality of the
operation. Joseph C. Stothe rt, a
lawyer and the treasurer of the a~ency, said · earlier that h1~ a ~ d
his two partners had been met1c-
ulously t>recise in setting up the
corporation to eliminate any legal
entanglements.'' •
Nu.rs~ Barbara ll-fellot cradlt't a three-
da.y-old gorilla. in htr arms at ~ood
Samaritan Hospital after the ani mal
was taken from the Cincinnati Zoo.
JU mother, seven-year-old Mahari.
would not 1turse th.e offspring, one of
tht few goriUa.s born in captivity. In-
fant "Sam." appear' to be thriving and
U gaining weight. • When Robert Bohnert'1 son came
home from a basketball game at
1 a.m. and said there was a camel
in the Americus family's front
yard, Bohnert suspected his s o n
had been drinking. But when t h e
family woke UJ? later there really
w a s a camel in the front yard -
dead of exposure. Indiana State po-
lice checked Indiana zoos and the
remaining winter circus quarters
at Peru, Ind ., but no one was miss~
tng a camel. •
Jt waa: a good day for the lad·
ie s in Britain Sunday. The Roy· 1!
al Shaktspeare Company iuim.ed
it& first woman direct or, 23·year·
ol.d Buzz Goodbody. She will di·
rtct the company's production
of "King John" this season. Val-
erie Hodgson, a 15 • yea r . old
schoolgirl from Dover , made her
dtbut as a sportscas ter, do ing 11 tht play-by-play of a soccer game I
far a Dovtr h-Ospitol. fl.I rs. Les·
let1 Pearman of Yardley got
what sht wanttd for her 21st
birthday -a white weddin g.
Ht.1 husband arranged the
churc~ wedding and champagne
reception thtt1 could1L't afford
toht.n they were 1narried i11 a ;\
rt.gi!try office three years ago.
Fliers Survive in Sierra
JACKSON , Calif. (UPI) -Robert Starr, 171 hadn't eaten in two weeks. His
only drink water had been suc_kei:t from fresh-fallen snow and captured in bags Ued
to trees.
Starr's firsl words after his rescue Monday were an offer to pay hospital at·
tendants $50 for a chocolate milk shake and a barbecued beef sandwich. He got
neither.
Starr and Gene Ebell, 33, were found near the wreckage of their mall plane
which crashed lS days ago in the Sierra molher lode gold country. They were in
fair condition today, suffering from malnutrition, frMtbite and uposure. Their com·
panion died in the plane he piloted.
"We had no food whatsoever -nothing," said Ebell, a Fresno insurance sales-
man and physical fitness buff.
"We drank snow and collected ~·ater by tying bags to trees and letting the
water run do~·n. We heard aircraft all the time, but they couldn't see us. I just laid
still and tried to keep warm.
"We talked about food , we talked aboul different thing1, we played cards."
Starr, of Fresno , waf! spotlC!d first ~fonday by a rescue helicopter pilot.
The pilot, George Wurzburg of Reno, Nev., decided to fly over the den:iely
forested, rugged area because somebody had seen a wisp of smoke in the snow-
blanketed region the evening before. \V urzburg figured the crash victims maY have been trylng to start a signal fire.
They weren't, however, and origin of the smoke remains a mystery.
"I saw this young boy leaning against a dead tree waving his arms," the helf-
copter pilot recaJled. "I landed and he did everything but kiss me rlght on the lip!."
The crash vlctim was identified as Donald Shaver, 35, of Fresno.
Ebell, during a brief bedside news conference in Amador HospitaJ, was asked
why he and Starr didn 't attempt to walk out of the mountains.
"If you've ever been like that," he ex plained slowly, "when you're just com-
pletely exhausted. it's so awfully difficult even to move."
Ebell told how the light single~ngine aircraft began icing up Jan. 11 on a
trans-Sierra flight from Fresno to Elko, Nev.
"Befort I knew it," he .said, .. we were in the trees. And then I woke up. All I
remember ls trying to get out of the pl ane.·•
Ebell said the pair gave up hope "two or three Umes" and "it wu awfully
cold."
Hospital at tendants credited an unusual warm 11pell of winter Sierra weather
for permitlng the pair's survival. Daylln1e temperatures recently have heached into
the 30s and 40s. in contrast to the 20s normally experienced in the 7,000.foot region,
approximately 60 miles east of Sacramento.
"The weather had a lot to do \vi th their surviving," said Robert Paulsen, ad-
ministrator or Amador Hospital in Jackson, a former gold rush mining camp.
Mercury Ban Too Late
For Poisoned Family
ALAMOGORDO, N.M. (UP!) -Gov.
David F. Cargo has called for a
moratorium on the 53\e and use o(
mercury fungicides, but hi s plea came
too late to help the family of Ernest
Huckleby, a janitor who tried to stretch
his $84 .50 a week salary by raisin i;: hogs
to feed his nine children.
Ernest and his wife live v.•ith eight of
the nine children, plus two grandchildren,
in a neat, three-bedroon1 ~lucco house
painted pink and trimmed in black. The
house was inside the Alamogordo city
limits. The hogs were kept in a ~·ire pen
out.side of town.
Mrs. Huckleby was seven months preg-
nant In December when their married
daughter arrived rrom Oklahoma City
with her two children for a visit.
Then Ernestine, 8, got sick. Next it was
Amos Charles, 13. Then Dorothy J ean, 20.
They had trouble seeing. Their .blood
pressure rose. They had difficulty main·
taining their balance.
Alamogordo doctors were stumped. The
children were sent to El Paso, Tex.,
where a neurologist diagnosed the
symptoms as sleeping sickness.
The children \Vere in a coma today al
the Providence Memorial Hospital in El
Explosion Rips
Town in Georgia
BLAKELY. Ga. !UP I) -T"·o persons
were kill ed and six injured today in a
butane gas explosion that knocked out
virtually every window in the rlownlo"''"
area, touched off a raging fire, and shook
houses 14. miles away.
The explosion senl up a hugC', \\hlt C'
mushroom-shaped cloud and residents o[
Arlinston, Ga., 14 m!les a"'ay. s::iid lhe1r
houses shuddered. Small bits of 1\ h1te
paper fluttered to the ground 111 yards a
mile from I.he scene.
Mayor Alex 110\\·cH ;:1sked the state
patrol to man an around-the-clock v.·atrh
over the downtown area to prevent
loo ling.
Paso. Doctors said they are suffering
from mercury poisoning caused from
eating the bacon and pork from the
home-grown hogs of Ernesl Huck.leby.
··T1lCre's not much hope for these
kids." said Dr. E. ,J. Klump, the
liucklcby's family ph ysician. "They will
be Lola! vegetables if lhey get out or the
ho!ipital."
The meat the family ate was con-
la1ninat.ed by n1ercury residue from
fungir.ide-lrealed grain. Jt was meant as
seed for planting bu! Huckleby got mixed
up and fed it to his hogs. Tweh·e of the
hogs died. .
Cargo called for the moratorium on the
use of the fungicide pending a more com-
plete inrormalion in its effects on
hlimans.
Huekleby already knows the effects.
Trai11 Derails,
Iffils 3 Women
In Big Pileup
ALEXANDRIA, Va. (AP) -The last
five cars of a Richmond to New York
passenger train jumfled the tracks at 80
miles an hQUr early today and rolled
down a stee p embankment killing three
\1·01nen and injuring sco res.
The engine. four baggage and mail cars
and a sixth passenger unit came to a halt
three-quarters of a mile from the derail-
ed cars 1\·ith the passenger unit's re.ar
''heels off the track.
S!uart Shumate. presiden t of the Rich-
1nond. Fredericksburg & P o I o m a c
Railroad, said the train made up in Rich·
mond contained units from further south.
He said he did "not know for certain"
how man y passengers were on the train
but es1i1nated th<:>ir number at 70-76.
S1s!y·thrcf' persons were taken to the
hospital s from the accident scene just
south of Alexandria in an industrial area.
l\tost ol the injuries we re minor.
New Storm Hits Northwest
Nation's Midsection Finall y Beco rn es Nl or e Mild
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Su spect's
/(in Called
CLEVELAND (UPJ ) -The wife and
sisler of one of three Cleveland men
charged in the murders of mine union
leader Joseph A. "Jock'' Yablonski and
his wife and daughter were the first
w1lnesses called today before a federal
grand jury.
Mrs. Annette Gilly, wife of Paul E.
Gilly. 37, and Billie Gilly, his sister, went
before lbc jury, impaneled lo determine
\Vhether the Yablo nskis were murdered
by hired gunmen to prevent Yablonski
from telling another gran d jury aboui
alleged irregula~ilies in the United ?.1ine
\Yorkers Union.
1-!rs. Gilly and her slster·in-law were
reported to ha ve been questioned about
Gilly's words and actions in the presence
of a third party. Federal prosecutors said
a wife's testimony cannot be admllted
agai nst her husband unless a third party
can testify about the same events.
Charles Huddleston, of Toledo. Ohio, a
brother or Mrs. Gilly, and his wife also
appeared before the grand jury. along
with Mrs. llele!, Schmitt of Akron, Ohio,
another sister of Gilly.
It was reported the FBI made detailed
Inspections of three automobiles belong·
lng to the three Cleveland area men
charged with murder in the New Year's
Eve gunshot slayings.
DRAFT B OA RD
NOT SO SAFE
NOR\VAt:l\, Ohio IUPI) -Vandals
broke into t~e selective service office to·
rlay. pulled 11 ,000 cards from the files,
set them afire and splashed red paint on
v.·alls and furniture .
SI ERRA SURVIVOR GENE BE LL HEL PE D TO AMBULANCE
Ambul ance Attendant, Ebell's Wife, Dianne, Support Him
Leona \Visenberger, e. x e c u t I v e
secretary of the board. said, "I thought
"'e were in the safe st place in Ohio. We
are in a bank and it is fireproof."
Get a FREE 'File Cabinet'
And open only a $250 Account
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below at you r neighbor-
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long . On top is a convenient han-
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nila fold ers alphabetically la bel-
ed. Outside is a loc k and we give
you th e key. Whi le they last, your
choice of colors from olive green,
mahogany, or a charming flower
design.
-To get yours • , • no obligation . , •
fust present the coupon below to
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This coupon entitles the bea,..r t. .,.,. ,,_ fUing
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in jMrton of your neighborhood office of Downey
Saving.s * 2043 Westcliff Drive, Newport leach.
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C:ernlk to Go
Czech 'Purge'
To Oust Premier
PRAG UE !UPI)
Czechoslovakia's Communist
Party Central Committee is
expected to complete its purge
of lop reformists Wednesday
by ousting Premier Oldricb
Cernik, head or tbe govern-
ment.
Diplomatic sourcet predic-
ted the fall cf Cefnik be-
cause his govrmment has
failed lo .:1chieve any economic
pregress. It was ei:pected the
group woold ra ce a dl!ficult
task In finding a suceessor.
Cernik was one of the
disgraced "big four" of the
1961 reformist period along
wllh the already ousted Alex·
ander Dul»cet , Jo 1ef
Smrtovsky androta Sit. ' The aourcee: said tbe Central
Committee la aliio .ei1'0cted to
, anno~ the res.ignll,len from
~ it.s rana· of Dubcek, 'yr!x> left
Sunday f~~ new _post as
ambuaa¥r to 'l'\A'keJ.
Ul'I T11fflMIM
De1nonstrators Wreck Store
The· memberlhip on the committee ls the only aigni.fi· A Milwaukee police sergeant jumps over a pile of off the racks. The demonstration started aft.er the
.cant party poltUon lttII held merchandise as more than 100 welfare demonstra-cour.ty board releded welfare recipients' demands
He1·shey's
Draft Order
Suspended
WASHINGTON (AP) -The
Selective Servi~ System has
suspended its long·time prac-
tice or reclassifying and draf.
ting violators of its regula-
tions. in lhe wake of recent
Supreme Court decisions.
The suspension also ap-
parently negates a coo.
troverslal rect1mmendation by
draft director L e w l s B.
Hershey that a n t i w a r
demonstrators be drafted if
they violate the law.
A spokesman disclosed Mon-
day local draft boards were
directed last week to suspend
all processing of cases under
the s y s t e m ' s delinquency
regulation pending • ' t h e
tennination of what action
should be taken" as a result of
a Jan. 19 Supreme Cow1
delcsion.
That decision appeared to
invalidate t h e delinquency
regulation.
A second court decision,
issued only Monday, st.ates
even more clearly that "in-
duction pursuant to the dllin-
quency regulation has not
been authorized by Congress."
Selective Service lawyers
had no immediate comment
on the second decisioo.
"
by Dubctt. He wu rtplaced tors entered the Boston Store Monday, taking cloth· for a winter clo bing allowance. Fourteen persons
as first party sec:retary last ing, smashing display cases and throwing clothing were arrested.
Aprll 17 by Gustav Husak. -..OC----=---''--'--------"----"----'.-'--'-C..:..:'--------------
Should Cerntk lose the
premiers.hip. the demotion
also win cost him his post in
the party's ll·man executive
body, the Presidium.
The soarces said the Central
Committee is likely to oust
mort than a dozel'I of its
present members as part of
the continuing purge o f
Dubcek refonners from the
party's ranks.
Among predicted candidates
ror Cemik's job are hardline
party functionaries Alois Indra
and Lubomlr Strougal. Party
sources indicated lndra was
less eager for the post because
he has been in poor health.
Crail Estate
'Locked'
LOS ANGELES !UPI) -A
superior court order Issued
Monday put a temporary lock
on the contested $1.65 million
estate or the late financier Joe
Crail, founder of Coast and
Southern Federal Savings and
Loan Association.
County Public Administrator
Baldo M. Kristovich obtained
the ord er against Joe Crail
Jr., 26, Crail's disinherited
son. A hearing on preliminary
injunction will be held Feb. 6.
Kristovli:h contested Crail's
possession of 70,000 shares of
stock in three firms -Securi·
ty Mortgage Gorp., Hanna
Realty Corp., and Ploc Inc.
He contended that C r a i I
claims the shares as gifts
from his father. Krtstovlch
said no such gUt.s wert made.
CBS Gives Up Panther Tapes
NEW YORK (AP) -CBS
says it will comply with a
government subpoena for the
tapes from its "60 Minutes"
program dealing with the
Black Panther party.
The network said Monda y
that it had no alternative to
cooperate in a .case involving a
threat on the life of President
Nixon.
West Coast Panther leader
DaVid Hilliard has been charg·
ed with maldng a threat
against the President's Ii f e
against l he President'• life
Francisco.
The film , televised Jan. 6
would be shown to the grand
jury that indicted Hilliard.
CBS was served with a se-
cond subpoena Monday for a
complete record of all cor-
r e ~ p ondence, memoranda,
Man Dies
After 3rd
Heart Fails
notes and telephone calls
made in connection with the
Panther program. The sub-
poena covers mid-1968 to 1970.
Paul Sternbach, C B S
general counsel, said the
network would try lo narro\v
the scope of lhe subpoena to a
~ific Issue before the grand
jury In San Francisco.
The oiginal subpoena, served
.Jan. II, asked ror all portions of
the program, including those
nnt shown.
Big Tower Set
WARSAW (Ae) -Poland
plan,, to build what it says will
b& the world's tallest struc-
lurt, a 2,100-foot radio tower,
near the city of Kutno. The
tallest tower now in use is a
2,06.1-!oot antenna in Fargo,
N.D.
GAO Report Reveals
Taxes Paid to Viets
ANN ARBOR, Mich. (AP) -
Gtrald Rector, a 44-year-old
former operating engineer
whose second heart gave him
hope of riding horses again
some day, died today in
University of M I c h i g a n
Hospital, 11 days after receiv-
ing his third hea rt.
He died at 8:23 a.m.
A hospital l!lpokesman said
Rector might have lived had
the donor for his second
transplant operation b e e n
Iound earlier. Death was caus·
ed by kidney and liver
failures.
WASHINGTON (UP IJ -
Besides paying $25 billion a
year to fight in South Viet-
nam, the United States is
paying SI million a month tax-
es to Saigon according to
government auditors.
·The General Accounting Of·
fice (GAO) said in a report it
is "inappropriate'' for the
govemmenl to spend "billions
of dollars annually" f o r
defense of Vietnam a n d
elsewhere, and then pay
foreign talles.
In a sample audit covering
24 months, the GAO round $28
mi!\ion in property taxes was
paid by the Defense Depart-
ment and other agencies to
South Vietnamese landlords
who Included their laxes in
rental charges for· leasing
facilities to the U.S. govern-
ment.
In the Vietnam review, the
auditors said during this 24·
month period defense agencies
paid $55.6 million in rent.
Property, license, and income
taxes included in the rent
rana:ed up to 62 percent of the
total i.ase.. The indirect tu
bill was between $28 million
and $34 million, the auditors
figured.
The GAO, known as the
watchdog over government
spending, said paying South
Vietnamese t a x e 1 violates
Congressional policy against
payment of foreign taxes
while the United States spends
funds for mutual defense.
The S t a t e Department,
responding for itself and the
Defense Department in the
report, agreed that "the
Unlted Stales expenditures
made for the common defense
abroad should not be subject
to foreign taxation." State
promised a "careful l'lview"
of the GAO fmdlngs at some
future date.
"If we had been able to find
a donor 24 boura before we
did," the hospital spokesman
said, "in all likelihood we
would have been able to save
~1r. Rector.
"The general deterioration
of his k1dneys and liver prior
to the second transplant on
Friday, Jan. 16, led to pro-
blems we were not able to cor·
rect."
"In addi tion to the kidney
and liver failure, Mr. Rector
developed a chest infecUon
which he was not able to
overct>me.
"His heart continued to beat
well up until the very end ."
Rector, who lived with his
wife and 16-year-old daughter
In the rural aouthwestem
Michigan town of Shelbyville,
underwent his first transplant
operation last March 17.
T11tM:lay, Janua,y 27, 1~70 OAIL Y PltOT $
Se~ ·Partf Raid
Shaw Trial Judge
Found Not Guilty
NEW ORLEANS (AP) -
The judge who pret!ded at the
Clay Shaw trial has been
declared innocent of charges
that he supplied aex movies
and women for a stag party.
Judge Edward A. HaQ<r!Y
Jr., 56, wu acquitted Monday
ntghl cm charges of 10llcltlng
for pl'OlllituUon, obscenity and
rtsisUng arrest.
Spectators in the courtroom
cheettd the verdict by one of
Haggerty's colleagues on the
Crtminal Dlslrlct Court, Judge
hlatthew S. Braniff. He heard
the case without a jury.
lt was in Criminal District
Court before Judge Haggerty
that Shaw, a retltet!New
Orleans buainessman, was
found innocent last March of a
charge by Dist. Atty. Jim Gar·
rison that he consplred to
assassinate Pr!sident John F.
Kennedy.
Jn Haggerty's own trial,
Braniff ruled that the Dec. 17
stag party, at a midtown
motel, actually was a private
gathering and that police had
no ''probable cause" to rald IL
Brewer S. Pence, a police
undercover agent who has a
son on the vice squad, at-
tended the party wearing a
tiny radio transmitter with a
microphone hidden under his
tie. It broadcut conversaUons
to Polle< outside.
But Judge Braniff ruled that
the PoJIOO bad nol obtained
court authorizatlori for elec-
tronic eavesdropping an d
thertfore tt wu illegal.
Pence tesUfied that Judge ·
H-rty broutlht In a sack ot .
H X films and when be
discovered that the "chairman.
of the girlie committee'" had'
fallen down on the job, he .
went out and brought back.
three women.
Pence oa!d the judse, a!ttt
watching ae.veral movies of..
various sexual antiea, sl.ood•up
and cried: "Why go on..
watching film when we have~
the real thing?"
Judge Haggerty tl1<ll asked,.
"Who's going to 10 with \f1e,.
girls first?" Pence testified,·
and when somebody inqulred
as to the price he replied.
"about $100." The raid came
shorUy afterward.
Defense witnesses testified
they heard DO IUCh con-
versaUon.
Kenneth A. Reeve.s, an ac-
countant, said lt was a private
bachelor party organized for
him by friends prior to bfs:
wedding.
• 0
I
' \
Madalyn's •Got Religion'
MarkTwain a Saint in Tax·Free Church
Get the BIG 6% at the BIG M
Everybody knows that NOBODY TOPS THE BIG M-Mutual Savings,
AUSTIN, Tex. (UPI) -
, Madalyn Murray O'Hair has
started a religion ror atheists.
She will be her church's
bishop, her husband will be
the olficial prophet and Mark
Twain will be Its first saint.
"This Is not going to be a
pseudo religion.'' said the
atheist, who won a Supreme
Court decisk>n banning com-
pulsory school prayers, Mon-
day. "This Is going to be an
earnest attempt to do some-
thing about the relationship
of the church in this coontry.
"We can marry and divorce
people," she said. "We ad-
minister sacraments and hear
eonfessloos.''
The church Is called the
"Poor Richard's Universal
Life Church."
"I've researched this for •
yr:nr,'' Mrs. O'Hair stild. "It's
absolutely atiriaht. W e 1 v e
drawn from the Monmna, the
ChrlsUan Scientists -we've
drawn from eve1'1'body. If they
try to attack us they'll be at-
tacking their own tenets."
'Ibis latest move by the
world's mo5l mtlltant atheist
actually is another batUe In
her war against the tu~x
empt status enjoyed b y
established churches a n d
rtllglons.
Mrs. O ' H a I r proclaimed
henelf the church'• "bishop''
and named her husband,
JUchard F. O'Halr, u "offic:lal
prophet" of lhe new faith.
"We're even aolng to have
our own salnls," she uld.
"Our (lrst saint Is ao1na to
be the saint of human
laughter, Mark Twain, who,
lnlcdentally, was an atheist."
Mrs, O'Hair said she ba1 ob-
tained a legal charter from
lhe Universal Life Church of
Callfomta. She and her hus-
band both received honorary
doctor of divinity degrees.
"It's the same kind of
degrtt that Btlly Graham
has," she uld. I
"You can help your new
Untvusal Life Chureh, )'OUt
new religion 1nd at the same
time you can profit in your
relationship with the Internal
Revenue Service," M r 1 .
O'Hair said ln a letter to 3,000
persons acrort the country.
"We can purchase and lease
property bad< to you and
under your operation we can
own for you motels, store11 mine,, newspapers, rann11,
every conceivable industry,
public utilities, race trac:b,
dlstUlertes, restaurants," she
In offering the most in earnings to savers.
6% 2 year tenn accoun~ with minimum balance
514 % 1 year lonn account, wilh'minlmum ba:iftce
514 % :;.months ~n119 accoun~ with minimum balance
If you ant a Mutual Saver, now 11 lhe ttma to I-addltlonll fUndl Jn 9-Mw
hlgh-nlo accounll. (lnourance ha been JncreaMd to $20,000.) JI you .,. not a
Mutual saver, now 11 tha time to open your account atTha Big M-Mutual SnllllJL
ACCOUNTS NOW INSURED TO $20,0001
MUTUAL
SAVINliS
........... c:il!lilll
CORONA DEL MAR .. , -.c-1 ...,...,
TMPhOne 91M010
W•ST AltCADIA
tlO West Duarte Road
f'llsphont 44f.<llecl
COVINA
200 North Cllrv• AWnut
TelephoM 339--$411
aLSNDAU ----Y-.icMt41
said. 1-------------------------,---------......:---------'-..:. ! '
-· .. --____ ..
' DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE
Two Juri·es Needed
One of the most Interesting and important recom-
mendations of the 1969 Orange County Grand Jury was
that Orange County would be better served by having
t\vo grand juries impaneled each year. ,,.
The suggestion was that one jury be impaneled to
hear only criminal proceedings and the other concern
itself only v•ith reviewing the el!ectiveness and effici·
ency of county government. Both duties are mandated
to th e Grand Jury.
The 1969 jury's experience was that the increasing
scope and co mplexity of government -and public
problems -in t.he_ state's se~ond l~rgest county makes
1t inc reasingly d1ff1cult for. a single JUry to do a thorough
job of govern1nental review and handle the crtm.tnal
processes, even meeting two or three days a week the
year around.
Pressed for time, the jury inevitably must fore~o
some aspects of governrnent revlew. This can result 1n
a tendency to make choices keyed to controversy or
the importunings of special pleaders.
P riorities can be influenced by the strong personal
interests of individual jurors, by personal' acquaintance
or experience (good or bad) wrth a particular depart.
ment, a nd in some cases the political inter.ests of in·
dlvidual jurors.
The result is th~t each jury_in Choosing what it. will
or \\'ill not devote time to, 1nev1tably tends to strain at
some gnats and swallow some camels -and to give
some operations a cursory look, under the pressure of
time, that results in a meaningless pat on the head or
in a shallow criticism not supported by any real inquiry.
Each year's jury report is significant for the things
jf misses or passes over as well as fo r the things it
deals with \Yell. The recently completed 1969 Grand Jury
report, for example: ,.
-Makes no mention of the problem of agricultural
pros•?V<J, which finds th• county ••••ssor drautng his
feet !or reason• never pubUcly disclosed, but certainly
of public concern.
-Makes no co~ent1 lh fact, on lbe operati911 of the
most powerful. and aensitive slhgle office in the county.
the.offtce of county assessor.
' :...wordes about th• style of negotiation& lo• 345
ac11e8 of free park land, but gives only curaory examina-
tion Jo th.e county park system and offers no comment
oo county Jiark needs.
-Contributes no significant comment to the Harb:or
District controversy.
Whe,ther these and acme other aspects of the re--
ports on countr government au c;ould haye )leen. iJn.
proved U the Jury had b•en able to devote all "bl Us
worklng time lo county rov•mment review cannot, of
coune, be guaranteed. ·
Nor is this in any sense to detract from the many
good reports and beneficial recommendations the 1969
Grand, Jury did come up with, which clearly over-
balance the shortcomings. ·
But it does seem rea11onable ·to believe,,a,s the.jury
itself·dkl, that·if the 50 or more·working days consumed
in criminal matten had been available for more study
of county government, both government officials and
the citizenry would have benefited. ·
The proposal for two juries requires permissive
legislation in Sacramento. This in turn reQuires a v-:ry
strong push fur it on the part of the county supervisors,
the c.ou~ty legislative dtlegation and the county bar
association. ·
The DAILY PILOT urges these agencies to make
that strong effort, to give Orange County a chance to
increase the usefulness of its Grand Jury and therefore
the effectiveness of its entire county government opera-
tion.
Object Lesson on LoW Profile C 'l • • ommisswn
Russia's Role • Ill
\V ASHINGTON -Russia hes now
given us an object lesson on hmy a low
profile policy in world aUalrs can be
made to work.
Kicked out of lhe Congo, Russia returrr
ed with a lowered profile to Nigeria and
now is given public credit by Nlgerlan,of-
ficials for m3klng it possible for' the. cen-
tral government to crush the Biafran
5ecession.
The assistance given by the Sovfet
Union v.•as. according to Nigetja'1 am-
bassador to r.1oscow, "more important
than any othe r single thing -more .Im-
portant than all othe r things together" in
pu tting down the secession.
EXCEPT FOR A response. of pity for
the st.erving Biafrans, and an attempt to
help them, nolhing concerned the.
American government less than lhe out·
come of the Nigerian civil war. There
was no significant public pressure for any
kind of intervenlion. The blacks of this
country. although predominantly of
Nigerian origin. felt no identity with the
Nigerian conflict, as Smith }fempstone
has previously pointed out in the
Washington Star.
It may be said in general that all
througll this period and since the
Katanga seces~ion In the early part of the
Kennedy adm inistration Uie American
go\•ernment has not had an African
policy tha t could be dignified by the
name.
It Is as if "'e llad lost all confidence
during and after the Congo episode that
we or the United f'\ations or anyone else
could i-ignificanlly alter the erratic
course of events in Africa.
c ··~ ... -~'
Richard . Wilson
"
IN THAT WE WERE WRONG. The
Russians have significantly affected the
coorse or events, and it is predicted that
they will now be encouraged to extend
their Influence silently and without
boaating where they think it will do them
the most good. The Russians have the ad·
vantage over us in that they give no ac·
counting of whom they aid with what and
do not have to h.ameas public opinion in
order to carry out a aucceasful policy.
Except on the very fringes of RUMia
itself the Soviet Unloo makes tis In-
terventions far subtler than the Unlttd
States, as it did in Nigeria and ls doing In
the entire Mediterranean area. The net
result is that in a ~lod of about ten
years, and with some se·tbacks, the Soviet
Union has ertended the scope of its in·
nuence in northern and central Africa
and the Mediterranean sea.
TRAVEUJNG THROUGH Africa with
then Vice Presldent·Nixon a dozen years
ago, the observer was able to aee that the
Chinese and Russians were vyin& for
Influence and the United States wa, com-
ing off third best In some of the key
areas. Nixon himself, though vice presi·
dent of the earth's strongest nation, was
given lower precedence than China and
Russia in the seatifti of a state dlnnet in
Ghana, then under the control of tht
r-.1arxist oriented, American educated
Kwame Nkrwnah.
Expectation Was
1 don't know "'hat your opinion of the
1970'& is, but so far I'm not impressed.
Everybody got so \vorn out by the
196011, that perhaps we all expected too
much of the decade to follow it, which
was heralded by its cheerleaders In glow·
ing terms ordinarily employed by real
estate developers trying to palm off a
swamp.
Yt:S, sir. lhe 1970's got a tremendous
adYance build up. Didn't you get the
hopeful feeling that it would sig nal the
dawn or a heller life and a better world?
Well, anyv.·ay I did. I thought 1970
woold arri ve In a blare of bugles and the
·waving of many banners, the dramatic
-striking of f of ag~ld human chains and
fetters . the lifting up of human hearts'
and hopes, flight after flight or bluebirds,
and perhaps even the lowering of a !ilale
sales Lax here and there.
1 DON'T KNO\V ltOW it Is in you r
area, but after the first weeks of the new
decade, I can't see that It has made JOY
striking major Improvements on the
street where J live. In fact, if it were not
-----
Tu esday. January 'ti, 1970
T11e ed itorial pag e of the Dailfl
Pil-Ot 1telu to i11form and 1tfm..
itlate readers by pretnitina tlti.J
newwaper's opinio111 and com-
mentary ot1 topics of fntt-re1t
and $ia11ifk:once, by w ovfdtng a
forum for tlit e.rprusicm of
our rendtr.s' opinions, and bJI
prerentlng the dfwr.st Vif»
pofnt.s of "'"formtd obs1'1'm
o.nd 1pokt:smm on wpic1 of chi a.v.
Rob•rl N. Weed, Publisher
,..,,_..,,..""' .,~ '\•~··
'
'
for the date on the calendar, It would be
easy to believe that we were still back in
the glum 1960's.
Life remalnl preu, much the mixture
as before.
For e.xample:
No rughts of bluebirds have flown over
my house. r did set a droop-.feathered.
shivering robin, his bosom a \\'ilhered
orange. But um early bird was getting no
"'omu; they were asleep deep ln earthen beds.
WEREN'T WE TO get June In January
during the" 1970's? The expectation was a
fraud . The view from my window in New
York show1 the same old vista of ice,
snow ttnd pavement s\lJsh. The trttt
stand budless and bare.
War still wanders the world with b\oody
sword Mtd naming torch. The dove of
puce ttmalns a flying fugitive, and the
olive branch in its beak droops eyer more
Umply.
Wun't tnnauon to be curbed! Where r
buy my crocerles the price ol eggs is still
going up. So. I hear, is the price of prac-
tlcall;r everything else -from free · Jove:
to coUea• educations.
. WAY BACK' AT the start ol the !t60's
weren't tclentist.s predlctlng an early end
to the problems of cancer and the co~
mon cold? But here it is lt7fl already and
mllllono ol poople •re still dying ol the
one and sniffling from the other.
T h e n~w .detade also h ' 1 hardly
brought w 1 golden •Ct Of poUlia. nte
/llafla has yet to produce t national
statesman worthy of being proOled on
llon< 1t Mt. Rwbmore.
Y n, et the moment it 11 1tlll easier to
\•iew with lrepldaUon the coming of lhe
1970'& than It is to point with pride..
•
Nigeria
Nkrumah has fallen from powei-and
with him fell Communist influence, but
now the Russians are Clearly making a
comeback over both their Chinese and
American rivals. There was, in fact. a
Ume when the Unit~ States cultivated
Pre!ldent Nasser of Egypt in the frame--
work of a general African policy 4leluding
an lndepende.nt Israel. But all that has
passed. The Russians, for what it Is
worth, have taken our place in Egypt,
financing the Aswan Dam and supplying
Nasser's diacredited armed fcrces with
mw arms and better t.ralnlna .in . .ftheir
conllnuous war with the tougher'ls:atlis. .
SO, ON THE WHOLE, t(i.e. United
Slates hu stoadlty ...,. down11illi'tn Its
rtlaUcal with Md. ci:inetm forf! and the emergent oa.Uons of, the • con· ttneni. This la undoubtedly w, See. of
State William P. Rogen wtU. shortly
make a lrip throogh central Aft.lea where
he w:IU try to restore the concim felt by
Nixon a dozen years ago wheQ' be visited
the same area. ~
Jn the Kerinedy administration Africa
was given high priority. YcunJ and more
activist ambassadors we.re aeri there. G.
'-fennen Williams, former.. governor of
Michigan, as head of Afr}can affain
centered a great deal of public attention
on African problems but without much
result, and the Peace Corps inarched off
hopefully to Lhe dark continent to· fmd it
somewhat less recepUve than was im-
agined.
Nothing like this Is expected from the
Nixon Administration wh1clt Ja more like-
ly to follow, in its own way, the low pro-
file example successfully adapted by the
RilSslans.
a Fraud
PERHAPS I AM too embittered by a
personal experience -a recent visit to
the barber for my semiannual haircut.
"Your hair ls getting thicker," ht said.
"That so? -I thought it wu getling
thinner," I said.
"I don't mean on top." replied the
ba.rber. "I mean in your ean. And
they're all com.inc in gray. Would you
like me to cut them or tint them brdwn?"
Well. I can tell you that left me pretty
disillusioned with the glory and promise
of the 1970's. What ca n you expect of a
decade whose first noticeable: achieve-
ment is to grow more gray hairs in your
ears?
MAYBE l 'M BEING too crlUcal of the
lt?O's. Whal I'm going to do is to ctve:
them another couple of weeks to prove
themselves. Then, if things don't get a
damed sight' better, I'm going to start
looking forward to the 1980'1. Surely
mankind can't dwell In darkness and
despair forever.
Dear
Gloomy
Gus:
Whatever happtned to the fai{ulous
pl•111 lor bicycle trails In orange
County! Peopl• an wondering.
-P. D.
Would Have
Media Studied
The National C-Ommissi9ft on the
Causes and Prevention of Violence ha&
fed another section into its continuing
survey of news, and it is interesting to
anybody who was interested in Vice
President Agnew's recent attacks on the
news media, so-called.
But this section of tht report ia noL
directly related to Mr. ~w's com·
plaint because it was drawn up before he
spoke out.
The commission itself is objective in its
analysis of the problems of newspapers
and news television in relatiCn t.o the
public welfare. It contains, notwithstand·
ing, a recommendation for meeting a
"cri$iS: of confidence" involving news
media and the people, which is open to
discussion, let us hope without prejudice.
The commission would establish an
"independent" national center for study
and judging new:t media. It specifically
disclaims any intert at censorship. The
center would monitor and recommend
media performance, but have no power to
enforce confonnity. Some nervous
elements in the media may doubt thl.s
detacb.ment, but let us coMlder the pro.
Posa! on its face.
AN INHERENT diffi~lty in the pro.
posal lies in the definllian of "in-
dependent," a word operating at several
levels. The President would appoint
center per50nnel, some from nominees of
the media itself. The dispatch does not
deal with components other than these
nominees. ·
The que.slion then revolves around the
character , background and qualifications
of personnel, Including bureau employes
charged with examining news material .
Good newspapers are not so hostile to
criticism as some critics imagine. Sound
newspapermen (and presiqnably sound
newscasters on the ai r) are quite aware
of their fallibility. A newspaper is only as
worthy. competent and intelligent as the
people who put It out.
In short, it is 2! good as the soc~ety in
which it publis~. If occasloaally It slips
into arrogallCi! or trimming, il must cure
itself. since it cannot be const.itutlonelly
cured frmn without in a free society. In a
closed society tt Is easily cured, but you
doa't read Pravda.
STILL, 11IERE 15 an lntradicablt
polarity in the history of the free
press-the newspapuman and the public
oU1cer ~o not have a common viewpoint
and a common aim. Every city hall
reporter and White House correspondent
knows this, and so also do perceptive of·
ficeholders.
OlUceboklers come In two main breeds
-men dedicat!d lo the public service
and cllarged with ideals, and ~
dedlciltt:d solely to themselves, a dtdlca·
tJon inimical to the public service. ft, Is
t)le job of a conscientious newspaperman
to discriminate between them, and to
thwart. whtn he can, the eellilh pollU..
dan .
The main target of the selfL~ and prej.
udiced politician must be UW: newiptper
which would curtail his powtr, or di ssent
from his course in public oUlce.
That this irrepressible connlct ahou ld
be wagtd with a due rtgard ror truth and
Ju!tice is the vital concern of a con·
struct.l11t frte press. In this light. the con-
stru~tive free press should not resist the
Commissions' pn>p09al, ao kxi1 a.\ It does
not promise to fall Into the hands of
manipulative polllklans opposing: the
public v.-eat.
'Mil dia rill8, I offer .)!)U m;y hand ill marriage.'
Journalism Door
Opens to Women
It look a long time, but finally my pro-
fessional fraternity, Sigma Delta Chi, the
national journalism society, has voted to
admit women as members. At its
November convention in San Diego, the
delegates voted 160 to eight to break the
6G-year-<>Jd "men only" tradition.
lofale chauvinism In all the professions
Is a shocting Pl~ of discrimination and
a denial of full civil rights to women -as
well as a disservice to our whole society,
For· instance, we desperately need more
doctors, but only seven percent of U.S.
docton are women, while in S!'.lme Euro-
pean countries the number is as high as 50 percent
IN JOURNAUSM, women have been
kept in the ''harem" section or the field .
limited to writing about children and
cooking and fashions and such bland
domestic subjects ; only a few of the very
aggressive have been able to break out of
the compound and prove themselves as
able a! men Jn current affairs.
My own view -after more than 30
years in the business -is that women
are at least as capable as men in most
areas of journalism, and even mo re
capable In some sectors that have long
been the exclusive territory of the male.
JOHN LEONARD of the New York
Tlmea not Jong ago commented on the
startling success of the new weekly
magazine, New York, which has made it
against heavy odds in a t.ighly com·
petitiVe medium. One of the main
n!asons he ascribes for the magazine's
Sydney J. Harri11
Ji.
success is its policy of hiring women
reporters and writers to h a n d I e
assignments normally given to men.
Women such as Gloria Steinem and a
handful or others have proved that
politics, city planning, transportation.
and th~ other "heavy" subjects ot urban
life can be dealt with as dextroosly and
insightfully (if not more so) by women as
by men. Indeed. some of the finest
reporting in New York magazine has
come from the distaff side -by women
V.'ho, on other publications, would be con·
demned to lbe.J)ursery.
WHAT WO~tEN !\IA Y Jack I n
"toughness". they make up in guile; what
they may lack in "background," they
mvre than compensate for in sensiti vity,
flex ibility, and the stubborn refusal to let
forms and procedures obscure the human
factor. And the plain fact is that th ey
understand men far better than other
men do; the best Interviews I have read
have bee n conducted by women , with
devastating accuracy.
''et, women in nearly every field have
far fewer opportunities, are ps;id Jess for
the same jobs, and are actively
discouraged from entering fields lradi·
tionally dominated by men. The most
enormous prejudice in the world is this
animus against :>O percent of the human
race.
A Restrained Approach
Standing bef~ the capitol in the gray
noon chill last Jan. 20, Richard r-.t. Nixon
just !naugurated 2! 31th President of the
United Slates, called upon anxiety-rtdden
Americans to "lower our voices" and to
"go forward" together. It was to be the
guiding theme of the first year o( his
Administration.
As he completed 12 months in the White
Hoose, aides credited Mr. Nlxon with
creating a climate of relative peace th at
followed two violent summers. Still
unresolved, however, are two key prob-
lems he lnhe.rlled with the job: Vietnam
and inflation.
Neither hu yielded to reason as pro-
mptly as hoped durl"!I the presidenu.t
campaign. The Asian war drags on,
although at a reductd pace, and prices
still spiral. While awaiting a break, Mr
Nixon has provided \he nation with a low·
key low profile admlnistr111tion that has
yet to produce a clearly identifiable style.
BUT THE WHITE BOUSE is convinc·
ed that the "silent majority" of Amtrl·
cans desires this restrained approach to
the nation's problema. Nlxon adminlstra·
tion officials, In year-end bth!:flnas. 11ay
this delibuate pact is what the nation
needs aifter the emotional flamboyance
ol Lyndon B. Jollnsoo.
Thert la nothing uolq11t about this,
however, for most adivist president.I
have betn followed by men who took a
m<re cautloUJ approach to the exercise
of executive power. Abraham L..tneoln
w a a suctffded by Andrew Johnson:
Theodure Roosevt lt by Wittlam lfoward
Taft: and Harry Truman by Dwight D.
Eistnho\\·er.
H.R.. Halderman, a pr' s Iden t 1 a I
assistant, summed up the prevailing
White Hou!ie vkw : '1He's turne.1 the thing
around Jn Vietnam ... to the point where
Inste a d of building up a war we're
building down • war." The start of arms
,
Editorial
Resea1·ch
• limitation talks with the Russians and
proposed welfare reforms also were citOO
as major accomplishments or the firsl
Nixon year.
MOST OBSERVERS agreed that l he
bulk o( the nation backed the Viet·
namiiation policy and thal the ad·
ministration had bought time with iL-But 1 James Wechsler found that Nixon's first
year revealed "no new visions or the :
man _ .. but rather the shock of recogni. r
Uon.'' Others feared that instead or I
bringing the nation together, Mr. Nixon '3
Vietnam policy and the speeches of Vice ,
President Agnew were polarizing It. 1
On the economic fr o n l , th~ ad·,
mlnislralion was still !lee king the proper t
levers lo control inflation. Inflation and I
high interest rates had not betn curbed.t
11ien! was lncreaslil.g concern that ad.~
ministration efforts were not only pro-t
ductng a slowdown but were also in ,
dang..:r of trlggerlng a recession. • • I
B11 Geo.,,e --~,
Dear George:
Do you have any
Maypole Dence?
• plans for a
TEACHER
Dear Teacher: 111 No. No. 1 don't have any plans
for a Maypole danct. Of coune,
I'm only halfway through my sec-
ond m11rtinl -would you llke to
wrlt.e to me later?
l
• .. .
n •
• •t
'· '" d
" st
"
O·
n
at
'Y y,
et
'" 'Y
" 1d
th
or
ly
Ii· ..
1is
m
l
nd
ed
·st
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et-
•d·
IUt 1 rst ,
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of ,
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nd l
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In • • I
'
Livii1g Together?
Learn New Phrase
By L. 1\1. BOYD
BLOND~ -Exactly
what's so special ab o u t
blondes is unclear. But an
employment counselor of long
experience says, "\Yhen l send
out b o t h a brunette and a
blonde to apply for the san1e
secretarial position, assuming
their qualirications are about
equal, you can be jusl about
certain the blonde vl'ill get the
job."
--··-··-
QUEINll lly Phll lnt1rlancll
"I'm going to a. January clearance 1ale. It I'm. not
heard from in three da.ys, 1end help.10
+ • .. • • • " . .
T11t«laf, Ja11t1ll'J' 27, 1970 DA)LY PILOT 7
GI Takes Big Step
LQseB Foot Co_mple tes Parac hute Sc hool· WANTED
l OYS I .ND GIRLS
AGES 'J TO lt . .
F'I'. BENNING, Ga. (AP) -
Newty ·graduated as a
parachulisi from I n I a n t r y
jump school here, Capt. Buddy
.M. A}l&ood said.Monday, •·no~
J .L':!nk 1 can do. anything in
the war1d I want.!'
The_grilty ;3-ye.ar-old officer
has OJ\l)' one foot.
He ldst the othtr in 1967
when he stei>Ped on a land
mlne soulhwe.st of Saigon. He
coulJ have accepted
discharge, but be told an in-
terviewer :
"1. did a. Jot of soul
searching. I liked lhe Army . I
didn 't want lo get out. I liked
the change in job.i, the
rc.sponslbilily. It had a lot to
, offer a young mah.
"But I knew If I wanted to
make a earcer of ii, I would
have to be able to ac~pt any
assignment. and that meant
parach.u,tlng. t could not be
side).racked because of a han·
dic.ip."
His wife. Linda , was
surprised at his decision,
Allgood sa id, "but when she
found out how 1 !ell about il,
she was behind me all the
way." He was in jump school
a week before his classmates
knew he ~ad an artificial foot.
Some of the1n found h hard to
believe, he recalled, '"but
nobody asked n1c to show
them my foot."
On lhe third day of training,
All11ood was conf, on led with
t the assignment l\e found the 1
most difficult -a four-mile!
run.
"I wasn't as fast as the rest,
but l mode It," he pointed out.I
By the second week of1
training, Allt;OOd was jumplngl
frorn a 250-foot towe., and Ill
the th.lrd week he made his
W"1IH le Ai!MMtle!I Oft CIMM Clr<llll TV
Wl4I 0¥al,IY ,.,
H ........... Tf ... I '•L
AUDITI ONS WILL BE
HELD THIS WEEK
IN ORANGE COUNTY
Ft, "'" Ofl CllNff lftltr<ltw
cau 547-625 lNowl
first parachute leaps from a T•l•nt S••rch l•lnt plane. Cond1.1ctlld by
•· 1 had looked forward . to
that first jun'lp.'' the Colum-1 TAK E I PRODUCTIONS
bus, Ga., native said, "and I HOLLYWOOD, CALIF.
will admit that I was a little 11';::=:=:==:=:=:=:=:=:=;
frightened. But I reallied that/;: l
this wa1 what I w"anted to do Who Listens
and I had to do it." 1
On Saturday, Allgood was To Landers?
graduated from jump schooJ,I
ES!
RIGHT ABOUT NO\Y you
can bet approximately 1,UOO
thunder storrn s arc boon1ing
some where ... DOES
ORANGE PEKOE name the
\'ariety of tea? Absolutely not .
It just identifies the size of the
tea leaves ... FEW PEOPLE
R EAL I ZE , says a
philosophical cardiologisl. that
blushing is a superb exercise
for the heart.
THE COLONEL AND THE
ORDERLY -As soon as ~e
got back from Vietnam, the
young soldier took h i s
discharge. but uncertainly .
And it wasn't more than a
year later that this veteran.
who was still having trouble
adjusting to civilian life, ran
inlo his f.ormer colonel, the of·
ficer a n d gentleman, now
retired, whom he had served
as an orderly outside Saigon.
The colonel was quick tO offer
hi1n a job as. a valet. "Your ---------------------.!!
THE VERY BEST YOU CAN BUY-
ANY CAR!
TH.£ LINGO OF LEARN-
ING -When a feJloy,· and a
girl room together for a\vhilc.,
bul don't get married, that"s
now known a1nong t h e
psychologists as "unstructured
cohabltaUon." \\'hat do you
think of that, sports fans? Our
Language man finds il
humorou s. Unstructured
cohabitation, my U n c I e
Charlie!
CUSTOMER SEllVICE -Q.
"Coµie on, Gro\'er, did you
say skunks don't k i 11
chickens!'' A. Weasels do, but
skunks don't. .. Q. "U'HAT'S
THE LARGEST metal coin
ever minted?" A. That would
be Sweden's IQ...daler piece.
Put out in 1644. It weighed 38.5
pounds and measured 12 b~ 24
DO l\tOST WIDO\YERS re-
marry?" A. They do indeed.
In fact, more than half of them
remarry within five years.
duties will be exactly the
same as they 1vcre in the
service." said the cnlonel,
"and you can start by waking
me up at 7 a.m. tomorr.ow .'~
Right on time the next morn-
ing the ex-0rderly ran upstairs
to the colonel's Qc9rOQ1]1,
shook the old. boy awake, then
smartly spanked the colonel's
wife, lying there 1vide-eyed,
and snapped. "Okay. that's all
baby, it's back to the village
with you."
THAT \\'IDES PRE AD
BELIEF that a drinker can
work off his hangov11F by
heavy exercise is wrong. Or so
say the science boys now. Not
even the s"iftest jogging will
speed up the elimination or
alcohol from the
blood .... AM ASKED .HOW
San Francisco rates on that
list of the alleged healthiest
major cities in the United
States. It's fifth . First four, in
order, are said to be San
Diego, Miami. Denver and
Allanta. Seattle is sixth.
Your questio11s and com.·
ments are toelcomed and
wilt be used wherever pos·
sible "in "Checking Up."
Please address your mail to
L. 1.1 . Boyd, i11 care of
DAILY PILOT. Boz 1875,
Newport Beach, Calif., 92663. •
Restrictions on 1Cement
Delay Hip Operations
CHICAGO fAP\ -Replace-nell's conference Monday there
ment of diseased hips with is no indication as to "'hen the
artificial devices has proved fast-setting cement, called
successful in Europe. but it's methyl-methacry!a'.te. w i J I
going to be a while before this become generally available.
becomes a rouline operation in Dr. Coventry was modi?rator
the United States. o! a symposium on surgery
Tile reason is that the cc· and hip disease at the annual
ment to hold the devices in meeting of the American
place has not yet been ap-Academy of Orthopaedics.
proved for this use by the He said he strongly ap..
F o o d a n d D r u g pro\'es the FCA restrictions.
Administration. and called attention to p a s t
Restrictions are not so difficulties which h a v e
severe in Great Britain, where resulted from too early ap-
most of the work oo artificial proval of drugs. ,
hips was done, and continental European surgeons·h;Ve had
Europeancountries. no problems with the cement
Thousands of these operations used in the hip surgery, Dr.
have been performed there Coventr'y said. The concern in
over the past decode. the United States hai; been
Among those who have had that the cement m i g h t
hip replacements is Georg~ degenerate and cause cancer,
llalas, 73, o"·ner or the he said.
Chicago Bears, who hfld both He pointed out that dentists
hips replaced in operations in have used this same cement in
England. making tooth inlays for i
Two dozen U.S. research in-number of years, and that it
slitution! have been granted also has been used for skull
permission to use the artificia l repairs in brain surgery.
hip requiring a special cen1rnt The most ·s u c c e s s f u I
UC, State Colleges
Drop 12-month Plan
LOS f.NGELES (AP ) -"It may be that many find it
Five years ago, the University impossible to allend a full 12·
of California regents and state week program in the sum-I
college trustees decided to mer." a university official 1!
convert their 27 campuses to observed.
year·round classes. A study ··· "There is -a long tradition I
predicted $113 million savings of students' ea ming money in
over ID years. the summers," noted William
Now U1ey're dropping the 12· Simpson.· an economics pro-
month plan. l'·c1v students -fessor who succeeded Moore
were Wllilng to attend summer as head of year-round opera-
classes and, as a result, ion at CaJ State-Los Angeles.
operating costs climbed in-. (•The wh<ile t h i n g is
stead of fell . The changeove-r ridiculous," said Moore, also
its~lf al.so proved costly. an ecQnoffiist. "We go through
The ch an g e b ac k· has a great deal of effort ... and
dismayed professors whose for what?"
academic programs w ere Under M"oore, $30,000 was · d r !•'-spent in 1964-65 al Cal State-reorganize rom two 11· Los Angeles·for salaries and l
monlh. semei;ters a year to I four three-month quarters. other expenses in pianning the
111any courses were restruc-conversion from sel}'lesters to
lured. quarters. About $100,000 was
spent in 1965-66 and $370,000 in I
'Tl\AGEDY' 1967, when the actual con-1
version was made. · "We feel we've been in-
volved in a great comic
tragedy." says Or. Donald
111oore, 1vho directed the con·
version to a 12-month opera-
tion at 20,000-sl\ide nl Cal
State-Los Angeles. '
Professors, 'under the year·
roond plan. taught only · nine
motit'.hs a year: Some were .re•
quired, however, to teach in-
the summer.
Predictions of the $113
million savings were based on ·
estimates by the Coordinating
·Council !or Higher Education,
an advisory group. AJthgugh
No preeist figures . are
available for the other cam·
puses because plaMlng C9Sls,
officials said. have been
lumped into overall operating
costs.
'Pair Met
In 1942;
Now Wecl
operating costs would rise $94 SAN DIEGO fAP) -George
million. the council said, oon· Crist and Alma Jackson met struction costs wouJd drop $2o'J million because of the better when they were 20, in 1942. Hel · \vas a Marine medic, and she use made of existing !acilili~s. wa! a hostess in the USO.
"The savingo we envisioned After two dates. he was sent I
"'ere not realired," a council to the South Pacific but they
spokesman said. wrOt"e. Crist, in a letter the
The summer session already next yeaf, aSked her to marry
has been dropped at "the him.
University of California at L<is The word came lhat Alma
Angeles and the Universil,y ·ot: married another. Crist's com·
Galifomla at Berkeley, the on· pany of Marines gave him a
ly. universities to convert lo "sympathy party."
year-round study before· the · After the war. he also mar-
regents ordered it canceled. ried but got a divorce, a year
Four slate college tampuS;es ago.
-Los Ange.Jes, Pomona, Sa'n Meantime. she als'o had been
Luis Obispo and f!ayw8.rd -divorced. Crist left Phoenix,
also converted and will.d~scon· ;·Ariz., ana began searching for
tinue the program at the end · Aln1a. He. f0t1nd he r maiden
of · next summer. name In lhe telephone bOok:. ·
tn dropping year-rounded .They~ married Suh<lay.
classes. the trustees ·and p;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;tJI
regents said summer al·
tendaoce al UCLA and UC.
Berkeley had averaged about
35 percent or the level of the
olher nine months and at the
state collegfi it was about 50
percent of normal.
PUT CASH IN
YOUR POCKET
and several hundred hip artificial hip is one in which a .. TOO LOW
RELINED ON
REGUlA'R BRAKES,
POWER BRAKES,
DISC BRAKES.
DOMESTIC and FOREIGN CAR.S.
!We use Bendix -the best linings you con buy)
Brakes relined on any car!
No matter what you're driving, or where It came fro m, new brake linings and lining installations
cost Yf?U half at the Big Brake. We use only Bendix llnings, the best you can buy. offlCl4(
Better tha,n factory standards tor new cars. Give us 00 minutes, and We'll pre-
cision grind the linings to the drums, repack the wheel bearings, rellll with
brake fluid, and adjust brakes on all four wheels.
We guarantee our brakes in writing fo r 30,000 miles or 3 years. And wa ad·
)µst your·brakas free for the life ol your car. Charge it on BankAmeric:ard,
Master Charge, or most oil company credtt cards. Or use our own financing. . .
THESE 4 SHOPS ST ANO READY TO SERVE YOU!
. . ( . ' I
"CQSTA HUNTINGTON
MESA ·BEACH
3181 Harbor Blvd.
(at Sin Diego FrHw•vl
549-4021
GARDEN
GROVE
16091 Beach Blvd.
(at S.n Diego Freew1y)
842-5548
LONG
BEACH
.!h!Big
Bra Re
•• replacements have been done stainless steel ball on a· shaft ' Enrollment was tOo low
in this country. is inserted into the thigh bone they said to justify the exlr~ 1701 Long Beach Blvd.
Dr. 111ark B. Coventry, head a_nd .cemented in pla_ce. This costs of ' runnli:ig large . in· PHONE Mo11. rttt. Prl. ti/I t :OO r.M. •
· Sell unwanted lt~fTls
\Vith A DAILY PILOT
Classified Ad. 13388 Brookhurst
of lhe department of htsintoastrongplasltcsocket stltutiona for an extra three (at Qarden Grove Freeway) (213) 591 .4404 s.r.rtll6:00P.M.
orthopaedics at Mayo Clinic, which is attached by cement months or to have much effect 642-5678 ·638-0911 CJ11it.So11tti •f Poe.Ifie. Co•t Hw.,.I S111. 10:00 A.M. rill ~:oo ,..M.
Rochester, Minn., said at a to the pelvis. on lhe need for ne· w r·acllilies ro 1· I • ' 1 f w miiOiOiiiOiii-OiiiOiii-OiiiOiii ___ .,; _______ ,
1
' 19' r• • • • • "'"'n ¥•ur i • ;, •I fl•k•. HEEL ALIGNMENT/WHEEL IALANCINEJ./SHOCKS/GATES Tl8ES
' \Vhat Does The ~·~n~t)l~c~c~am~p~use~·;· =~~~~~~~~~~~~· ~· ~====~~~~~~~;:;:~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~::i'~::;:~
Bible Say
Ahont Baplisnt?
If it 11 NECESSARY 11 REPENTANCE!, IAcch 21lll. It ;,·RE·
QUIRED t• fl"t llf, I Pit. ]:11 .It will'", ... w•1~ 1w1¥ lh¥
1!n1 ..• •• tht Lord"f n•m• i1 <:•!ltd 1o1pon. Aeh 21:16. Jt !1
1 NECESSARY ''' of ob1di•nct; J1fut 1•id lo DO lt, Mttt.
21 :19-20, Mk. 16:16, J11. l ~l .I, Ac.ti 5:)2, Htb, S1l •f, I S•m,
15:12. It put1 ont INTO Cl1tit1: i11tHi.-bod¥, the church, 611.
):27, Aeh 2:•7. ONLY tho1• IN CMR1$T 011 hit bodyl •ti
, .... d; H• if th1 "•••ior of 1111 100'1'", Eph. S:ll.
IAPTISM i1 • BURIAL of one1 body i11 w1t1r. 1 COVERING
UI' of th• whole body, M1H. J·JJ.11, Rom. 6:1-5, Col. 2;12 .
An t••mpl1 of lllLE IAPTtSM ;, 9;.,,,,. i11 .A.ch l 1JI, " ...
•lld tli1y w1ni dow11 boll. i"lo th, w•l•t . , , .!!d ho b1ptlt1d
hi"'"· IOTM tl11 prt•c.h1r •"° tllt on1 b•ptir•d w1nt dow11 Into
lh1 w1l1r. "~UCl-i WATER' ;, ••Q11irtd, Jn. l t23; 1 cup.full
or di,h.full or ,,,,,u b1fi1t-fwll i1 NOT •nou9h. Tltott Sil'IUNKLlO
or who hid wilt• POUl!fO 0•1• tht"' 1hould 11k th• q111ttion,
"HAYE I IEEN IAPT!2E07" Stt Act1 t91l·S for 10"'• who
THOUGHT th•¥ w1rt proll'trl y b1pti1td, bul who w•r• NOT,
IAPTISM ;, ll'ltttly '" ACT OF OBEDIENCE lo Ch1ill, 11 ,,, "''"Y olh•r 1•li9!ow1 1ch. c • ., ont b• f•~•d NOT OIEl'lNG
Ch1itt? Ht~• YOU ob1y1d Chri1t ;., l ... pt:f"' 1
Wrif1 or phon• fo r boo~ltl Of! IAPTISM: VISIT u1 1nd dltc.u1c
!lilt •nd othtr l llLE 1ubi•ch Ch11rch of Ch•i•I, 117 W, Wil101t
St., Coti• M111. C•, 92617. Pho1t• 5'49·5TI I, 6'46°5 763 . T11nt
TY Ch11t11tl 9 -Su1td1yf, 7iJO '·"'·
dJ . IN YOU.It NEIGHBORHOOD •••
~ · Huntington Beach Offi,Ce of Coast & Sou thern Federal
Savings, where your account is .
Huntington Beach Office:
Locat ed at 91 Huntington Center
at Edinger Ave. & Beach Blvd.,
adjo ining the. San Diego f re ewa y,
in Huntington Beach.
MAIJll Ol''ICt:
1111 I Hiii, LH Anltltt • '2).f361
Ottwr oftlett l
WlllHlllt °"!Cl:
3N1 Wll9hl,. 81W. • 311•12'6
LA. CIVIC CINTIJt:" , 2nd l lt0fdW11 •t: .. t1 oa·
TAl'1A"'A1 "11711'hlllllrl 11'1«.. '4Mtl•
"""" ltOlftCAi 711 WJflllli. lhd •• -.oI••
aAlfNOftOt
10tK a''°'"°• aa1..n4t
WlfT OOVIJtk
ltltlend ~n1Ctr.•211-2201
SAFE ·• CONVENIENT• A~•ILABLE
Market :1uetuatlont don,'t worry Coa~~·th~m 1avar1,
1h1lr 1capl~I It atw1ys riti(lg ~ll'I vaiU'e~~i~t earnings cona.•lenlwlth falaty when you save 11 Coast oothem
IMSUllilCE10 $20,110 /.IESGUICIS 0111 $10 MILLIOM
ASK ABOUT THE INSIDERS CLUB
A NEW WAY TO SAVE MONEY-A. 12,500
84LANCE lt-4 ,YOUR ACCOYNT MAKES YOU n101aLt.
' ~NOIAMA CIT'f:
111t_Ylll Hw7' 11~. • •2·111 1
\ONOllAQ1
.1nl & Looull • .,,..,,.1
HIGHEST PREVAILING RATE
5~ 3 ON &·MONTH BONUS ~ 0 ACCOUNTS
... $1000 OR MORE
Interest Compounded Daily • Earnings Paid From
Cato ·of Receipt to Date of Withdrawer.
I
'
I
' I
, J D41LV PILOT
. Officers
Searchin g
For 'Sadist'
-.le-·--~
Tuesd1y, JAnuary V, 1970
THI Jru.HG( WOil.i>
MR.MUM
LOS ANGELES IAPl -Of-l~~~~---------
!lcers searched today for a
youth they called .. definitely a
sadist" in lhe aftermath of
four savage attacks on wotnen
in the harbor area .
'rhe attacker. v.• h o s e
description went out in an all·
points bulletin ~tonday. has
assaulted his four victims with
a butcher knife. a soda pop
bottle and his fists. thesher·
i'f s office said. Tv.'o of the
women v.·ere hospitalized
The attacks occurred over
the pas! four months in the
south beach area communities
of Carson. Long Beach, \Yilm·
ington and El Se-gundo, of·
ficers relate.
T\\'O of the v.•on1en were
barmaids, a third had just left
a bar and a fourth was driving
home from a drive·in movie
with a friend. In each case the
assailant's mode of operation
was to follow the women's
cars with his O\\'n.
In one case his car rammed
the back of the woman 's car,
forcing her to stop. Jn another
instance he forced a car to U1e
curb.
"This guy is definilely a
sadist," said detective Ken·
nel.h Pollock of the sheriff's
Firestone station. "You don't
do it this way unless you have
a hale on for women.·•
Witnesses described t h e
assailant as about 22. S.foot-7.
140 poUJ1ds, with a heavy ac-
cent and dark eyes and hair.
Fir e Razes
Landmarks
In Town
SONORA (UPI) -Fire
roared WlCOntrolled through
the downtown of this historic
gold country town for more
than four hours early today.
destroying 13 businesses and
causing an estimated SZ
million damage.
One fireman was hospilaliz·
ed because of smoke in-
halation.
The fire was believed to
have started in the kitchen or
the Wagon Wheel Restaurant·
bar around 2:1S a.m. and
quickly spread through the en-
tire block.
Only a rainstorm which
started about two hours after
U:c fire broke out preYented a
much worse disa ster, for
much of Sonora's downtown
merchant! are in centu ry-old
wooden buildings and sparks
could have ignited them , too.
Today's fire was fou ght by
equipment from as far ay.•ay
as Modesto, 60 miles to the
sOuthwesL Equipment from
every surrounding community
and county helped out and so
did state and national forest
r:inger.
The city's most rainouse
landmark, the Sono;·a Inn, was
on the burning block. But it
was far enough separated
from the flaming buildings
that a wall or water could pro-
tect it through the holocaust
ACLU Claims Police
'Escape Prosecution'
LOS ANGELES !AP) -The
American Civil Libertie s
Union asserted today that
more than JOO Los Angeles
policemen have committed of-
f_!!llSes against the public since
mid-1967 and escaped criminal
prosecution.
The group's so u the r n
California unit, told newsmen
the information came from
memoranda prepared by the
Police Department's Internal
Affairs Division.
A police spokes1nan said the
department would not com·
ment on the accusations until
"we understand \\:hat they in·
volve."
Laurence R Sperber. staff
counsel for the ACLU, said the
listing or disciplinary actions
against individual policemen
during the 19-n1onth period en·
ded last May and was obtained
through confidential sources.
Sperber said the offenses
set out were committed by 107
polictmen while on duty and
ranged from perjury to
assault with a deadly weapon.
The 107 were disc iplined for
violations of departmental
regulations only. he added.
Most of the penalties given
the pollcemen, he said, were
two and three-day
suspensions, even in cases in-
volving assault with a deadly
\veapon.
Sperbe r said that in onJy two
cases had the Los Angeles
district attorney's 0 rf l c e
brought charges agalM the
policemen.
Property Tax Relief
Plan Gain s Backing
SACRAMENTO IAPl
Assemblyman Joe A,
Gonsalves had new support to-
day fo r his fight to win pro-
perty tax relier for Calilornia
homeowners through the ballet
bo•.
The Democrat from La
r.1irada called a news con·
ference to announce additional
sponsors for his initiative peti-
tion campaign to put a pro-
posed constitutional amend·
ment on the November ballol.
Among them wa s
Assemblyman John P. Quimby
(D-Rialto), who said, "Tax
reform means nothing unless
there is a majority of approval
on the part of the voters."
The Gonsalves p r o p o s a I
would do away wilh use of the
proPf!rly tax for general public
schoo l support. And il would
limit the local lax rate on
homes to $1 for each $100 of
assessed valuation, or about
$50 a year' on a $20.000 home.
Gonsalves has failed in the
past to get the legislature to
put his proposal on !he billol
He needs 520.276 signatures by
May 27 to make it in
November.
Republican Gov. Reagan
and GOP leaders in the
legislature are ""orking oui a
comprehensiYe tax refonn
plan that could go into effect
without a vote of the elec·
torate.
Capitol sources indicate the
program would offer up to $1
billion in reduced property tax
burdens on homeowners, with
special help for low ine<1me
persons.
The loss in revenue woul<J be
1nade up through higher in·
come and sales taxes, closing
of some tax loopholes and by
the state taking over some
se rvices from counties, such
as part of the y.•e\fare pro·
grams.
That package is expected to
go to the legislature by the
end of the month.
Utility
Rate Halt
Bill Dies
SACRAMENTO (UPI) -A
measure urging an lndefinlte
moratorium on utlUty rate in-
creases <tS a m.eans of easing
inflation was killed Monday by
t h e R e p ublican-controlled
Assembly Rules Committee.
The resolution by
Assemblywoman Y v o n n e
Brathwaite (D-1.m Angeles),
asked that the moratorium re·
main in errect "untll it ap.
pears that the intense inflation
currently being eiperienctd
by the economy has been
broogbt under coottol."
Mrs. Brathwaite noted the
Public Utilities Commission
recenUy gave the Pacific Gas
and f;lectrlc Co. permission to
increase rates an a\lerage of 7
percent and raise its profit
margin by I percent.
The resolution died when
committee Chairman Eugene
Chappie (Jt.Cool), declined to
support ii.
Later, Mrs. Brathwaite in·
troduced a constitutional
amendment which w o u I d
make PUC membership elec·
live. They now are appointed
by the governor,
She said consumers now
have no choice in the selection
of uUllty companies which
serve their area.
Tot, 3, Lost
For49Hours
Found Safe
ALBION (AP) -Sanjl
Rosenberg, 3, who was lost for
49 hours in tbe muddy Men-
docino County hills, was back
with her mother today in their
cabin at Table Mountain
Ranch, a hippie colony.
A doctor at Redwood Coast
Hospital ia Fort Bragg, where
Sanji was taken Monday after-
noon at the conclusion of a
search involving up to SOO
persons, said the little girl was
"in excellent condition."
She was gi ven a bllh and
some food and turned oter to
her mother, Mn. Pamela
Rosenberg, 30, who said:
"Thank God, and thmik all the
w on der ful people
everyone."
Sanji .,,as dreised in a
nightie and T·shirt when she
was found In a muddy gully.
She had discarded her wet
pants and shdes and was chill·
ed froin temperatures which
had dropped ~ the upper
40s.
Dan Brotherton, 19, of Fort
Bragg, found the child when
he slipped off the edge or a
ravine and almost fell on top
of her.
The youngster was only
about a half mile from the
Rosenberg cabin which she
Ilopes on Ai.i· l ~LET';;;s s;:;E ;;;FR1EM;;;DL;;;v I
Posf..auto Boom Purity Goal
Cahbie Shot
In SF Dies;
Zodiac Case?
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -
A taxicab driver who wu: shot
~in the bead early Sunday in
Presidic Heights -near the
scene of an Oct. 11 slaying by
the Zodiac killer -died Mon-
day ni2ht in San Francisco
Generaf Hospital.
BERKELEY ( A P )
California's air can b e
ftltored within 15 years to the
purtty It had before the post
World War ll boom of the
automobUe, says the chainnan
of the state Air Resources
Board's ted\Dlcal advisory
committee.
In a news conference Aton·
day, Ernest S. Starkman said
the cel&.n-up C11Uld be ac·
compllshed by adopting new
limJtaUons on v e h I c I e
emi.sslons -the I a J g e s t
source of pcllutlon -as
recommended by the board
and endorsed by Gov. Reagan
and some members of the
State Legislature.
-Starkman , a professor of :
mechanical engineering at the
University of California hert,
said the auto emission stan·
dards "should keep the al-
mosphere clean until the year
2000 in Los Angeles."
lt you tw.ve new netahbon
or know of anYQne movina
to our arC!a. pleue tell w
ao that we may extend •
friendly \V<'lcome and help
them to become acquainted
In lh!'lr ne\Y llUITOUndints.
So. Coast Visitor
494-4579 494-9361
Harbor Visitor
641>-0174
Charles Jarman, 28, of Daly
City never regained conscious.1-------------------------------
ness after he was found slump.
ed behind the wheel of his cab
parked 10 blocks from where
tax icab driver Paul Sline, 29,
was found dead. .
The killer who calls himself
Zodiac and who is linked by
poUce with five Bay Area mur.
ders bra&ged of eluding police
after lhe Stine shooting.
Along with his boastful letter
to a newspaper, he encioled a
tom scrap or Stine's bloody
sllirt as proor he committed
the crime.
Jarman's slayer took the cab
driver's wallet containing $35,
Police Lt. Robert' McKiernan
said.
Because Jarman and Stine
were both Yellow Cab drivers
killed on a weekend in the
same neighborhood by a shot
in the right side of the bead,
det.ectives were investigating
the posslbility 7.od.lac shot Jar.
ma n.
Both drivers picked up their
last fares near the Tenderloln
district or downtown San Fran-
cisco and both were robbed.
"It's too soon to tell JC it's
Zodiac," said homicide inspec-
tor Bill Annstrong. "I don't
lhlnk so. However. there's al·
ways a possibility."
He said .. There are a lot of
non-&imilarities, too. But we're
not ruling out anything."
Tax Exe111ption
For No Smog?
BERKELEY (UPI) -State
Sen. Nicholas Petris (0.
Oakland), vowed Monday to
introduce legislation which
would exempt smog-Cree cars
from taxation and require
pollution-producing factories
to identify themselves to the
public by flying red flags.
Petris said t he s e re-
quirements would be included
in anti--smog legislation he
plans to introduce in the next
session of the slate Senate.
Own a Cadillac?
Of course you can!
~ !our ~ears old, hu t its classic beauty and ta steful elegance still
gJVe it a distinction that only Cadillac offers. And because ifs endowed
with Cadillac ~gineering and craftsmansh ip, plus so many desirable com-~ort a~d convenience features (you11 even enjoy variable-ratio po\\'er steer-
ing with ~ 196~ Cadillac) it's likely to offer more driving pleasure and
owner satisfaction than most new cars in its price range.
left Saturday, attempting to ;::=========::::;!
follow her mother who had
gone to a neighbor's.
Sanji said or her 49 hours:
"I saw a little fieki mouse and
lots of birds ••• I don't like
the rain . . J'm tired of the
woods.11
ON THE TUBE
For th• .,,,, g11icl1 to wh1t't
h1p,.111it19 '" TV, re1cl TV
WEEK -cll1trib11t1cl with th1
51t11rd1y ecliti1n 1f th1 DAILY
rlLOT.
Turn in ... for tumblers. 'l!XJ8 A previously owned 1968 Cadillac offers so much more th.:.n
many new, fully equipped, medium-price ca.rs. Of co urse there's Cadill.:.c
luxury, .elegance, co~ort a~d c~af~smanship for you to enjoy. But you'll
also be impressed with C.td1llac s big 472 V-8 engine and the precision oF
lts standard power steering and power braking. All this plus the pride of
ownership a Cadillac provides.
Get one of-. beautiful, Shat-R-Pruf
tumblers each ti.me )llQU drive in for gaso-
'Jine at your participating Texaco RetaHer.
"Roly Pofys have hea<Y bottoms -right
them-. ii tipped. Glass inside, plasti·
sol oatsideto "-contents colder, longer.
Dbhwalhor-safe. il Choice "' 8 colols.
Mildilnc 2~ light -· p;tt11er
with ne>drip lip ••• $2.88.• Start
your set today.
Tum In at TeX!lco. Do a good
turn for"your car.
•
~ [MHtoc"-C..DMo"" ..... .,.__
A.7 IV Even the newest model of the world's finest luxury car-a car of
uncompromising elezanct, comfort and performance-competes in price
and economy of operat!on with cars of far less stature. Thousands of Joyal
Cadill1c ownm will testify to th1I f.act, and .ilso to the fact that a C•dillac
wiU traditionally return, on rlffille, a larger proportion of its orig.in.il cost
than any other car built in the land.
set YOUR AUTHORIZED CAOIUAC DEALER'S A TTRACTIV[ sncCTJON
OF NE\V AND Pl1VJOUSLY OWNED CADILLACS TODAY.
< -
Crimes Jn1np
Drug Abuse Leads List
SANTA ANA -Orange
County Shtrlff James A.
?duslck noled a 57 percent rise
In drug cases in J96& In unin-
corporated arees and C®tract
cities of San Juan Capistrano,
VIUa Park and Yorba Linda,
In a year-end study of crime In
the county.
fl.1usick said the increase
was due lo a spread of drug
abuse a1nong young people
and a 15,000 Increase in-
populalion in areas served by
the force.
According to the report, the
total number of c r Im e 1
reported to the sheriff's
department jumped 2 3 \'t
percent. "Some 31 ,089 actual
offenses v.·ere logged by the
county agency," the report
claimed, compared to 25,226
in 1968.
Robberies shov.·ed the big-
gest increase, at 88 perceut.
Rape was next with a 61 per.
cent increase, follov.'ed by
burglary \Vhich showed a 17
percent gain. Au1o theft!
declined by foor percent, he
i;a id.
Burslarles were reported
most often at a total of S,798
times. followed by thefts at
2,6$i Jnd auto thefts at Sf7.
The department recorde.d only
ont murder, which w a s
cleared.
Arrests of adulta climbed lo
10,949 from 7,619 tbe year
before, the sheriff noted.
Juvenile cases increased by
400 to 6.053 in 1961 which
resulted in 4,110 youths being
processed, he added.
The average dally head
count In Orange County Jail
rose from 493 to sa5. The
report stated 33.786 individuals
were booked in 1969. Theo
Lacy branch jail showed a
decrease in average dally
head count of 219, while the
Industrial Fann remained
unchanged with an average or
81 Inmates. The farm raised
$52,819 worth of food nursery
nroducts and hay for county
institutions, the study shO\\'ed.
Sheriff Musick noted depart-
ment strength \\'as up to f>45,
379 of whom are enforcement
personnel.
Ne1v Adult Classes
Slated in Cler11ente
SAN CLE~fENTE -Four
new classes have been pro.
posed for the spring semester
Denlla 1\'otice•
LEAMttfO
Fred P, Lt•mlM". 111} Rull1nd. N~wPOrl
~'''"· 0111 of d•~!~. Jan. 1S. ~urvlved by wife, H•nh ion. Jouph H, Lrunfnt,
Newoorl 86"ch; 1nd !hr" ''"''""lldten. $11'Vk11. WNtteM;11v, l PM, Wurclllf
Ch11>1I. lnlf""lnl, H1rbot A..,1 M-111
Prrlr. Dlr1Kled bv W!"!ICllll (~•Ptl MO"
furrv. """-"*· M(lltlO•
O•nlel P Mclrlae. At• "· of •1' 17th
SI .• Hunt"'91Dn Beec". Dale of Mt!~,
J111. 26. $urvlv..i l1'f' wilt, M1rv1 1ltt• '°"'' RC>bcrt r ft<I B, I( Htcklt n 11t1>-
d1ut1Mt r. Pllrltlt Prrrvr brotMr.
Cti1ri.1 Mt 8rld1; 1,...0 111rers. Orltft9
Ny1-g.er Ind "''"'I ll:OHbolllln• lll•H
pr1ndchlld1e11. Str.lcr1. WedrH:M11v. 1
PM, $ml!~~ c~~Pel. ln!trmenr. ~
Sl'>lpt,erll C•me!ttY. 5.mllh1 Mortwrv.
Olree1or1.
l"ltOCTOlt
VIiia M Proctor, .O.ee 61. o! }l)aO NtwpOr!
Blvd .• No. ~l. C~!1 Me11. Oe•e cl dft!h,
Jrn. 2S. $ur•ived bv dt1>9h!tt, Mro. Ca"
ofYl'I E. Lt11•rd, N•"'"°'' leach; 1!1lrr.
Mrt. M1rv1r11 Gourley. l"enl'l•Yl•t11l1;
'"'' '"""child. Trrrv O'Neil. S••v!crs lod1y. Tue1dt•. l PM. Bell BroaollwlY
Ct1111el, wi!h ltev, J1mt! Plt rcY ofllcl·
r tln1. lnte..,...nr. Mrlrcnr A,tJt>ty, l •tl
8""'dw1y Moriuarv. Olr11:lor1.
ltOllltTS
Normrn A., Robtrl1. 11:13 Ch1rl1t1on St"
Co1t1 Mt!I. 0.11 of detrti, Jtn. 11. 5,,..
'llYH by wilt, Vlr1lnl1; !wo IOOU. "'"'·
Ntw Me•ko; •"If illontld RC>bcrt1, Mh·
1lon Vlt lo: 11lf tr1nckhlldr..,, ltteUllll'I
M111, WM!n•llMY, 10 AM. $1. John ""
81ptl1I Cl!hOllC CllVr,~. lnlermtn!, Good
Shl'CIMrd Ccmelff'I', ll•llr Mor!utrv,
Costt Mtll. Olredor1 S1LVlltWOOD
NeUlt P , $!1vtrwoocl. 161J LC>Ullt SI.,
LtquM Be1ch. 0.1t o! dt•t~. J1nu1rv ?S.
.SUrvlvtd bY a1u1tuer, M1tlon L~ '"""*· Lt!Wnl B•adl; 1l1ter. Mtlwl $!1rDut~.
Stal &tt(h: bro"'''· Grorte ll•ad!IY,
01trG1!1 • ..., tr1n11c11lld tt>ll rwo 1rt1!-
or1r>dchlldren. Servkn, S1!11rd1v, Jrn.
31. I PM. P1clllt V!rw Ci..1>11. wn~ Dr.
01lf11 II:. lurntr otlltltllnt. rnurnm..-1,
S111 G11>rltl CrmelefY. D!rttltd l>Y Pttl•
l!t Vlt# Morh,.•v.
TIMM!ltMA.tf
P1t•lc11 Ltt Tlmm1rm1n. A.tt JJ, o! 1114
ltulllnd 'toad, N"oo•I llt.tth • .SUrvlv"'
by hu1btncl. Mkll11I; 1>1rtnll, IN, Ind
M". Ro~rt Crowrll, N•woorl 8t1t.111
1l1ter. C&rcl Wailers, NeWDer! llttcll.
Prlva!t 1..-vlte• wfrt ~tla t! Btll eroaod·
WIY Mortutrv. C~•I• Mtll.
WAltNICA
ROii H. W1rnk1. Atl 16, ot Uf A Avt-'"0. Sevilla, Lttunt lilll1. 0111 of dtet~.
Jtn. ,S. Survlvtd bV 1t•Pd1u1M1r, Mt1,
81rNr1 McGulrt. L1911111 llt1tl'l1 1l1llr.
M!H Mlnnt Htld..,rtlc~. Sant• Ant: nu-
mtrou1 nlect1 rnd n.:Pti1-.. Pt•! prt,.
111..,1 of Mu phi Mu1lc SoclelY •nil' Art· h ll A11ocl1tlon ol ()\ltrto. St rwlttl.
Wtdn•ldtY. l PM. S!>elter Lt~nt ltK)\ Cl'>IPll. 1111ermtn!, Ftlrl'llvrft Memorlr l
P1rll. Sl'lefler Li tunt 811~11 Mortutrv.
Olrecto•1.
ARBUCKLE & SON
Westcliff J\lortuury
4.27 E. 17th St., Costa ltle11
616-4833 • BALTZ MORTUARIES
Corona del l\lar OR 3.9450
Costa '-1ea;a J\tl 6-ZU4 • BELL BROADWAY
MORTUAR~
110 Broadway, Cclsta ~1esa
LI B-3433 • DILDAY BRCYTllERS
Huntington Valley
J\lortuarJ-
17911 Beacb Blvd.
HuoUngton Beacb
11z.rn1 • PACIFIC VJE\Y
MEMORIAL PARK
Cemetery e ltfortuary
Chapel
3500 Pacific View Drive
Newport llcvrb. California
&4 .... %700 • PF.EK FA!\llLY
COl.ONIAL FUNERAL
HOME
i801 Bolsa A\•e.
Wcatmlnster 893-35%5 • SHEFFER MORTUARY
Lagun1 Beath 41t.1$3$
San Clemente 492.fJDI • SMITHS' MORTUARY m Mela St.
HunUn(ton lk1cb
S.IMS!t
Andy'• Fun
Aik any kid, "Ask Al'ldr" rs fun.
Set It S1u1rd.1yi In tht DAILY
PILOT.
at !he San Clemente Adult
School which serves t h e
CapisLrano Unified S c h o o t
District.
The new offert1gs are :
v.•riling for publication. nurses'
aide, band, and first aid.
St udents can begin enrolling
Feb. 2 "'ilh instruction
starting Feb. 9.
tn the art category classes
u•ill loclude Art I and II.
sculpture, general art, interior
decoration, crafts (ce ramics),
metalcraft (jewelry ), guitar
and home landscape design.
English courses will include
basic E n g I i s h , literature,
speed-reading, English a! a
second language ( citlzenshlp
En~llsh), effective speteh and
business English.
Business courses will In-
clude bookkeeping, 0 fr i c e
machines, beginning short·
hand, beginning and advanced
typing.
Homemakers will be offered
begiMing, intermediate and
advanced clothing and family
life education.
In the indu.9trial a r t s
category will be woodshop fun-
damentals , automotive tuneup.
graphic ari'I and photography
and welding and metal shop .
Also to be offered are
refresher math, phys I ca I
science. beginning Spanish and
French, government and
United Slates history.
Sa11ta Ana
(:ity Hall
Plans Set
SANTA ANA -Work ls tx·
pected to be completed in
June on final plans for the new
Santa Ana City Hall. ac·
cording to archilect Don Ram·
berg of the Santa Ana firm of
Ramberg and Lowrey \'lhich is
designing the building.
The new city hall, which will
be located south\\·est of the
Santa Ana police building on
Sixth Street, will ha ve a total
gross floor space of 104,000
square feet. when complete in
1972 the architect said. The
current city hall, "'hich wa1
erected in 1935 has 30,000
square feet.
The building will stand eight
stories high and ~·111 be built
of textured concrete and
stone. Ramberg said it will
house all of the city agencies
, plus some additional police
faci\lties. The cost of the
bu.ilding and landscaping will
run about $3, 728,000 he said.
The Santa Ana architects
designed the new county
courthouse and the Santa Ana
police building. "We fl.so are
doing some preliminary work
on a federal building for the
civic center," Ramberg said .
Jury Boxes
Deadline Set
SANTA ANA -Or101e
County board of supen1tor1
set a March s deadline for
bids on expansion of jury box·
es and Improvement o r
lighllna Jn the jUry boxes In
the new coqnty courthouse.
The changes will be made In
departments 16 throuih 20 of
the superior court.
Only One
Fln~I stocks 111 all hOme tdltlons.
Tl\.tl'5 ' big dtal? It II In Ora119t
County. TM DAILY PILOT Is tllt
only dtlly nevnp.aper thit dell•·
ers th! p<lCU91,
Liberation
Panel Slated
lRVlNE -''Today's
Educated Housewife is
Pro5tituting Herself" will be
the topic or a panel discussion
by the \\!omen's Liberation
Front of Laguna Beach 'Thurs·
day night at UC Irvine.
The program, sponsored by
UCI faculty and staff wives,
v.ill be at 8 p.m. on the lhird
floor of the Commons Bu.ildinj:
at Gateway Plaza.
·-----------------
IWlY l'l\OT l
Viejo Kids Get Special Attention
By PAMEL4 llALLAN
0t h O.Hr l"Utt IMff
~llSSION VIEJO -Ev<ry
partnt wants !he 1 c h o o I
teacher to take a special ln-
teust In his child but with 2S
to 30 i;tudenta tn the classroom
it doei;n't usually happen.
One group of parents in
1.Ussion Viejo, however, can
smugly say their children are
gelling individual attention.
These are the children in the
Cont I nuous Individualized
Progress Program (CIPP) at
O'Neill School In the San Joa-
quin School District. Each
child is treated as an in-
dividual with different abilities
and different learning rates.
Pupils in ClPP are not
classified by usual grade
levels. They are divided in-
stead into Immature first
graders, ttgular first graden,
second graders and third
graders.
"Thi& is our first year and .
so far the program hAJ been
very successful ," said Jim
Mitchell, principal of O'Neill
school. He attributes the sue·
cess of the program to the
four teachers In CIPP. Chuck
ALSO
Prince, Sue RaJdwlo, Lynn Childrtn in CIPP won't be participate If pare.nu desfre. could be 1¢Cepttd tor tbe pUtlt
Riehle and Charlene Crandall. receiving the same report Board members also htve proiram 200 applkadons •ue
lie explalns that the children cards as n1ost s t u d e n t s exprelled concern a b o u t rtctlved. receive the same school cur· rlculum ns ch.ildren Jn regular because progreNI Js lnea&ured chUdren In ClPP who mlsht '1Parenta have been \1er1
classes btU each child works according to attitude and tf-move to another 1 c h o o I enthualu&\c about I.ht ~
at his own speed. In one sub· fort as well 8$ achievement. without CIPP. But they have iram," aid the prlnctpil
ject, such as reading, a 6 year The report cards, de!lgncd been assured by CJ PP "We've bttn Vt()' fortul\ltl ln
old who reads exctpllonally by a group or 60 CIPP teachers lhlt teach IQ r th.It we·have.not had one oom-~·ell might work with an 8 materials ai.ld methods are plainl" year old who reads at the parents, were recently · ap-baslcally the 1ame u In the He 1ald he hopes the pro.
same level. He. might then proved by the trustees of the rtgular ela11room aod that 1 sram Cl'lt be a &tandu'd ntzt
ha ve math with students of San Joaquin E I e m e n I 1 r y child who moves &hotlld have year at O'Neill to tnvolve
anolhcr age working at his District with the sti pulation no difficulty adjustin1 to chUdrtn who would nmnall1
same level. that each pattnt must have a another school. be' in fOurth, fiftb and alstk
"Classrpoms are arran11ed place to comment on whether Despite Its newness the pro-,-rtde claau. Ht allo bopt1
with movable walls," said the or not the card provides ade· gram appears to be Popular. other ICbools in the dlttrid
principal. "Children can work Quale Information. There also Mltche11 reported that can·btain their own CJPP Jll'I>
V.'ithin their OWn classrooms Or ..,iniiiiiwiihiiiciihiiiliihCiiiiiCiihjiiJdiiiiimiiai;yiiOiaiiiliithoui;iigi;hiiia.OiiniiJy .... tl .. 0 ... CiihJ;;;Jdiiriiien lflm,
the walls can be opened a:nd 11-IF======;;;:;==;;;
they can have such things as
music, art and science all
logether \\'ith teachers work-
ing as a learn."
He emphasized that !he
purpose of CIPP ii:n't to in-
crea se a ch ievement
necessarily, but to change at-
titudes toward school which
could have a hearing on
achievement.
"The ones who didn't like
school before find they Uke it
now," said Mitchell.
e JOB PRINTING e PUBLICATIONS e NEWSPAPERS
Outlity Pr intin9 end Dependeble Service
for more th•n • qu•rter of • century.
PILOT PRINTING
ZZ11 WUT IA.LIO.A ILYD., NIWiaon' IUCH -642:-4121
GUARANTEED
•
Earn 6% per year on minimum b1l1nca
of $5,00> for fixed term of 2-10 y1111.
Rate 111 guaranteed, eamtd from date
or deposit, compounded dally, ' and paid quarterly.
A THOWHT
FOR TODAY
,._ ...,.,,. Mc ...............
"'9 twt. tt 41Wtp ..._ .._, ......_,_
lll'JllJtHfaD Al A
lll'Ull.I~ SIJIVICI 1va1lY .... ., IYI
L" ltMflnt• c .. UYMr.··-
1W """'*' '' --
5~ Earn 5"111 per year on minimum
balance of S1,000 for fiir:ed larm of
1·2 years. Rale II guaranteed, earned
from d•I• of deposit, compci1_"1ded
da!ly and pa id quar1er!y. •
And don't forglf
5'*-t-.................. ..
rtt41*'' ta1t1aa1•
All this means that nobody
pays you more, and nobody pays
you in more different ways than
of the nation'• Hcond llro•lt
federal With UHll over a bllllon
dollars and acoountt are now lnlured
to $20,ax>. C<ine ... ua eoon.
Glendale Federal on sav1ngs and Investment
accounts. What's more, you have the protection
GLENDALE FEDERAL
IAVINGS--,--=
JI Of'PICU NOW llltYI IOUTHllllN CALIPOIOUA.
Arpil61001ouftfhtkMM/...._. ... 17S &oulh I~ DfM/GeMf4 ,.tt 7111 TOJtltf' OM1yoft ..._d/Ctt•a• f1*11 .,,.. ...... -...f ..... _
1l3J ~ lcM11•4/~ 8030 Stonea IDd Str'Mt/11 .._., 10t52 Vtlll')' Mall/'*"-320 NMh ...... louWwllnl/ ..... {JillM..., ......... ...., =:--,_ .. -,-.... /~6358Ml'!MrJ1/M M~llW!Ut/Molltrt>MmGHlnotuft.IA,_,./....,.,.._._,......~pil•P n -•do~/i.i.....,•l6tWntNln1l'lllr•/-om 1nao .....,..,.,._/ .... _."1'1.,.,....
louMwd/T"'"""'9 it32 ~ 9oulwllrd/Veritura 472 Soulll Miil• Aofld/W"lwoM v-.. tollOw.ttwlOd 90UIMnl"""'1teOIMlt_....,.. ..... :L
NATION'S IECONO LARGEST FEDERAL WITH ASSETS OVER f1 BILLION • Z2 OFl'ICll • ll!AlN OPflClt-t'L&llll.U.'
7Jl" ~=~ 8" ~~~'"' 5'°'" ;'.:~&~"""' I~" ;'.::r'"°-I" ::'l:"' tll
•
I
•
,JC!!f._D::A.::l:.L V:.__Pl::LO:.T:.__ ____ ::S __ r:.:'::'"'::'°"' :.:January 27 l '70
Yoar ~foney's Worth
• Complete-Ne'v Y orl{ Stoel{ Lis t
Most Hospitals Guilty of Misusing Resources
By SYLVIA PORTER
(Second in a Serles of Five I
Despite our rising alarm
about the short.a~e of hospital
facilities a ma1or1ty of our
hospitals still are gu11tv of
gross misuse of available
health care resources
In Durtalo a recenl review
of hospital use bv t h e
American Puli 1c H e a I t h
Assoc1at1on found that about
ooe out of su patients did not
actually require
bosp1tahzat1on
LllJ ANOTHER study New
Yorks Columbia Un1vers1ty
found that two out of five bed
patients would be more ap
propr1ately cared for In a
nursing facilily than a general
hospital
Also 1n New York the
Cornell Un1vers1ty Medica l
Center found that one m four
long term patients cootd have
been discharged a month or
1nore earlier than they were
discharged
In Dayton Ohio the Miamt
Valley Hospital concluded that
1nore than one 1n l 1 v e
' emerge ncy ' cases were not
emergencies at all and some
cou ld have been lake 1 care of
Jn a doctor s off 1te
I~ Sl KACUSE N Y the
County Health Planning Coun
cil reported recently that one
in four palLenlS should not
have been hospitalized and 1n
stead should ha ve ~lved
• various levels of home care
outp11t1ent clinic or nursing
hon1e care
In Columb us Ohio one ma
1or hospltal founJ that a full 15
percent of tis beds were filled
either by patients walting for
diagnostic tests or a n
a\a1lable operating room And
an Ann Arbor l\11chigan study
1nd1ca ted that for the most
common types or surgery, the
&\erage patient spends 11
days m the hospital before his
operdtiOn
The length of a ho.spit.al
stay many hospitals report
depends largely on the day a
palient enters the hospital
Since surgi cal and laboratory
facilities are usually closed on
v.eekends says the Nallonal
Commission on Community
Health Services being ad
m1tted to Uie typical U S
hosp1al on a Friday is lo
spend a lost w ee kend
1.1:ait1ng for the week to begin
-at extra costs easily run-
ning to $200 and up
EDITORlALIZING tn the
New York Times recently on
our fragmented non system'
of medical care Dr Leona
Baumgartner former New
York City Health Comm1ss1onr
and nov. a Harvard Medical
School professor de scribed
the follow1ng 1ncred1bly 1n
efficient situation in a
"W"' \.,,,
suburban city of 175 000 near develGpme.nt of ctlmmunlty (5) Equipment 1 hart n 8 !~~ l ~
one of our largest c1ttes ambulatory care cent.ers among hospitals :~1[' 20
All of the cancer patients 1n (2) More stress on hcallb 1n l6l Central mass purcha,.,1ng :~i!Ji'•,-'N
the area could be treated by surance coverage to pay {o1 by all hospitals 1n a given :~m:t•" 1 "°
the radiation tnerapy equip-prevenlive medicine instead or area :;~~rttt c': 1
ment of one of the four forcin" many to wait unlll II II I "1' P•04 1'0tl hospitals but t he other ·"O ! 1 I And nn y 11r more :1::: i;uf.' they must be hosp1tahzed to emphasis on pre adm1ss1on AJ 1fldui1
three are scrambling for have thell' insurance take over tcstinR of hosplLal patient.s _ ~i~:f~ 17 °
money to buy and personnel to the cost.s 1 h h 1 d h A1c1nA u 1 ,,. use the same costly eqmp-a S)lt <.m w 1c area y as A1<osi•rw:i _1,
tS) ~tore stress -through led to ma1or economies 1n !r,!.nci,.'! !,• ment Also one of the four ~M ..... ,. hospitals has supi:rb cardiac incentives l o parhclpabng those tnstltulions using 1t ~i':t~: !i~
treatment facilities and can hospitals -on community PHE-ADl\tlSSION tesling is ~:I~: IJi
perfonn all of the minor hearl wide health planning which simply allo wing pauents to un !lii!ciM,;:11 1s
operations needed by the would prevent duplication of dergo certain tests on an out !li':lsr.d,::
areas population-but another c05tly fac1liUes and heallh patient basis In short you ~:II~~~ .. "'~
is acuvely looking for a heart services "ouldn t occupy a hospital bed ~i~~a5~'70A
surgeon Both hospitals are ( 4) THE USE OF hospital -and lake on all that goes ~~~'sJQ 1111 M
within two hours of facilities fa c.lities seven days a week "1th this -until you really ~~::E; f,.,
in which cardiac surgery at all instead of five needed to d i so :;:::·~:.:nt~ I •-c • I d l•••••••Ollll .. Cllllll'"'"'"'---~~· Amti-< 1>1l YI eve..., an uo.. per orme AAlrFuir 80
Tow3'd the ond of 1969 the OVER THE COUNTER :;•i:::," Comrruttee o n Med 1 ca I 1 ~;:::B~~~M ~
Economics of the New York Am c,n ''~ ACan "' l )J based Health Insurance Amc~m 60 A C~aln I M ASSOCJ.alion of America issued ,.,,,,c,..,11 90
S L d Ar""s"" 1_. a list of sweepmg recom NA 0 1st1ngs for Mon ay, January 26, 1970 Ame""" 111 .. m 0 •11U ! mendallons to private health 11,-1111.,. "''......,.."' "u.r•i.n• 11 •PfH'O• m•it1y , •N ,,...,, NA~o. 1.01,it@ •Oq Insurers -aimed at turning "'"'" .... , IMluCI• ttl•ll ., m•rtc~ ... milrtrdn• ,, <•mmlu-. ~g~:ru Ill:!~
our non system of health into NEW vo11K !API ~ G•' 11, n .1n0 c.. 1•. 1s ~,.,.,., H 1~~ 16, ~;:::E1f.:_,1 ~. a system and thus slashing -1;,. tanowlno tild ""' T11 ll \ 2• 1n0 NU(I '°• '. •,••",•.le~, P ~ ,,~ An E.11 ino •nil •lkt'd OllOll om HIT~ 11 1,1. ',c',',',',', • 1. ,, ~ AE•lnd pl•6 costs Among the recom-',\!1!111.,,\~,, '•',,2'r ~ft P•,• .. 1 • 1~ ""r1...,. T 2• 1s 11~n1n1 so
ijjGll N of-• 5Kurli'it1 ;;,~-Cm Jl l ~ ; 1t~dfl~~I ll ' ll ' -.~n [~:~ ' ' AGnln cl I IO men<.lat1ons 0e11..-. 111< are mo '""' "• 10 1111 m '" 10, 11 ~? ~ o& / • ''IAmHo 1 )()
111 FAR 'JORE l -o ,-.,, •••-•< fm• ,_ I , o• ,., •w-~ 2S • "I A Homo I •O " s ress -;j:..., ·,·· .. , ,,, ···,-_,,,~-9... .. "" •~· '"' P>t1n Pa.c: l • •'• • .. """" o1 1 -·, i ~1~.,11 29 lO Int Mull ! 79,30 ''"n 11r 11 •AmMo}a ., via new form s of health in ~'l'i: "C:' 1r11 .. , :-"s1 ~-• , j 1n1 N< • • • 9 • "~ 11 v • • ~ • Am ,,..1, 110 surance benefits -on org<1n1l •DOro'.1ma~:-'Y '' 03 onrrid a ," •,•• \~\ ~~·Pf 7~ i;) ;~; 01 1 J '" · AMMF iv ~o I> m ~I Wftldl !Mu !on!rln T 6 , T ~ ~ o/ :,~ ' AM*l(1, •O
ed professional home care ~'..~!tleibffn (:~d ='st t ~ :=;•c• nu ~i~!~~~ull ~r· (1: !::.el~~ror:· services, P"paid "r o up """' l''~..,I .,. O!.m Yr 11 1' ,_,, .. p , , J.mNuc.,u ' " o.old Ctld) nttr Cr.,.frd 2! l• la ... viii 79 l JO ,.-' l 1, • 1' Am Photo 17
med'cal P'act''. the e' tlf•ler m•••··· (r~&1 M~ I ' 11 )8(01" I' • s ~ nl<rln "" ' ,, • "••O·· ... cllfl'l<>t th•ouoh (re•• Fo 1 1 JICQun C lj ', 1j•: ~001'c~1 ·;.~~ 1 A~ so~r 1 pans1on of new types of am :iun he d•v Pde~ ero .. co " ) •J J•m w•1 , , 1 ~ Am s~ 1> 60
b I I li d lh :lo not lncludf C•ull't II I. 9. Jim""' F n •9 ~ °" t"~ •. 10 • A Sm-I oO U atonr Care aCI tieS an e rtltlt mtrkUD tvor6 C JI 1 1' > J•m>l'.IY U U I ,,ru~ " , .. ,JO ' om•••,, • 'J m1rl11:lg-CH' cam-O.nlv M 12\• ll J Up Fd• S • }<. ,.-utl. ,.,.H .,.. .....,... m!Hlofl f>all Iha lJI, 1•'4 Kl .er 51 IH• t? Put>S NM 2•, ? Am Sld I AAA Ent 4 0 H• Olllln P 1 , 7\1 K1l•S! pf 11 I 190,. Put> S NC 12 t 11 AmSIO pU 15
A 'APr l• l 261/> Dov Mir 70 > 71 .... Kii@ Grn 4 o S, Purrp1 •'• 1 1 A SuQa< 1 llO !f O '"! S ~ 6 bavls Fd I~ 91, Kt •1r 3" 'Cl Pubis!>< 16 , 1 Am St~•!t 4
1$ 111< 7~ I O«>r I~ IPo 11\.o K1vvn ', ' f' B~nn~I )Q l JI AmSuq_pf 48 AVMC11 11 !2•DellllAP I l.\o,K1tr T 1'oHoPurtyS! IS lt 1Al'fl't&T760 A«ne El !OJ.lo II'" Delu• Ch '*'• ••Y Kel en !~• o, POuo Co s, 6 • Al'flWW~• J6 Acme VII )8 1 ot1Q Det \'"T IS lS\o KellW<I 1! ~ri, Glual CM 1!" 19 r AWWSpl 1 )I AlrOr'n F 1•\t U Del Br '111\, 11 W:eull E 10 1 ~~cl Ovn 7( n AW D<et I IS Altlet M t 9 ~ O...v •m 16 II Ken F b 14 I• JI• I 1 Al 91 )0• Am l nc
l(ruse Leaves Board
... IMrT• ·~ 1G. Oltm (r 2\ )1' ll;,ev1 c ' l '1• Pa~•ll El l'I ~i "'"'•Te~ 60lt
Of California Federal
A!lto Lnd U • 11 "I"' Inc ~ • 6 •Kevil PC I 9 Roy(h CP 1•8 111 A nl"<l»c: eo 'II" Bev • • •~ 0 •er CM ' / ! l(lna !~! 10 It~ 'l•vm C1> )l 14 AMW: co :JO A. Q Pe !\.o' °""''I 1•~1• l(lf!llJ El 1 I Rec<>11 EQ 7) ,, 'A.Mt(, pl])g "/d Aero l f:'> Ooll1' Md 6 • 1~ W:lrk Co U , ll \ 'IPP Ml9 11~ 11"4 AMP Inc 4 Aliff EQ ll'h. 1 '• Oow JM ll i~ Knao vot 11 , r., lier Cr@d •I 4 Amlll'w Corp Alll't ~o t ~ Dovi. 08 12 '1J'"' l{reli!• L, 61 flll@v So 1• 76 Arn1rtd 1'.0
Arthur G Kruse of Laguna
Hi lls has retired from the
board of directors o (
California Federal Savings
the association announced
Kru se "111 conllnue as
chairman of the Alhambra ad
\ 1sorv board o[ California
Federal Savings
\lice chairman of I h e
Cahfornta Fed eral board or
tl1reeto rs from 1966 unl1l I 1~1
t-:ill Kruse earlier \l as for
"lanv years president of Fir.st
Federal Sa\ 1ngs of Alhambr;i
whlch l\e Joined in 1928 two
) ears after its founding
Under his leadership First
Federal grew to more than
Am 8u>n 12 ll"! O<ew NL ,•,, ,, •.. tMC Ott J JI> flo.O Ex 11\4 24 AmOo' -AE!Ltt> 6 6\.:J Oonl<lnO.,. .,., >> > , •• M ,. " ., Am Exor bl 11 69 Ou•l,91' U 17 ~•n<• !n ~ 6 • """ ~ An~cood 1 WI • •m F~rn 1 •"-tsf Sh 1,._ l"o L10ld 11£$ H 11"> llcst!nn I,. 9 • AnchHot~ 80 A Crttt ~ •1\':t CM l •ll 1'/i tfl'i l•llCll In 1 • l"lr. llov C11t .·~· J ,• A11<:0f"PN$v l 1170 ITll'llon Jn ass~. and a • o ' ,.... S O 611 Ltne Wd IP" ll • llvs Stcv ,.. ,. A. 11""-' rn "' l6 ~ l \':t ""' 1f I>\ ll .... L"'°" i 1 ,\, 111'tn Ho 31 JIU. nd Clt1' 1 l'O
I th to 11 t I A Mtlz 8 ll»t I lo El Pl-SE l M 18'111 lt Slldller 6 , 7 Al>Klll!C-1' p ace In e p percen o A M..iico 111'> ,. " Elder B1 '•"",011< t ·.~·a-.... ,, ~'" f. ,,, , . APCGOll 1 111
th h AS! Goo •\lo'! NII• ~· " • APL c e nation s more t an 6 000 Ar.t G D! 11~ 1 , 1 Nuc 11 ,,,~ L11dv ld ,,,, 11 • 11 n • 1 10 A "'" Am 'tflv ?I ' l' l(!cov J 6 ltll CMI ''• • , Sci C11!r ]•o , PL l>f C1 06 savings and Joan assoc1al1ons Ameron :n) J\' E 1rom 5 'i 6 • Ltlsu• c; ;,o 31 Sc rn<1 i Jl.:. APL 111 B 50 A-us B JS, S\lo Et C 5YI J ' •O.. Ll•ln Tn ) ' I kol Soni 361<> JI , A<>ut C~fm before II merged w Ith AMl'fl c ··-t El O•i. , .. U2 L .... 11 BF ", ,_,., St•IP~I H ?1 • :n. ARA Svc " Ar<tll N 11>, •?>..,El MO<IUI 104; 11, t.11 v Ell 139 .. 111""\.o Scr/1110 A 6 0 7, Arc~O .. n I l>O California Federal 1n 1966 A c. Ind 1 ,,,.., Eek C•P 7'\.o 101, Lotll•w 4 , ', Se~•le 111 11 , 1\, A<l•PSvc 1 01 ill~den M 10; 11 EmD5 011 ?•' 11'4 Lo I COY ') 6 Seb Cma H 1t "'I""' OS 10 A former director of the Ardtf! ot :J.4 31 Enerav c U '18 Lo~ E• n 13 1\ S•~l!•n ,. l•l.o Armcos1 l IG
Fede.al l'ome Loan Bank of """' M~P 17\lo n E"'l'ro Re •' s L•ntl'> c u J ~ Sev~" u11 ,, so A mcos f'" 1 Arr,,,. H "6 41V. Enrrll B 9 I M...:t G[I 17'1 !l, ~~I'll N I ll j' Amour 10
S F d l Arvld• 13''1 ,, En""''' ll 1•. M•~I< (.h u HI, s 9r>el C11 I I Armr Df • l!i an ranc1sco an a pas A1CC ao1 w... fl"' e.,,, Coro 1~ , d,, Malt~rr •• ,1 , ~c.1 w11 " ", Arm,rcL Ill
President of the California Auto k • lJ\o •:i.. ~°"'' 0 1 10 10 ) M1!11<r1 ~• 65 ~ s.iNE Tit'! ll 11 • A•rnt~ oil IS AYfll'ICV t • ,.., rlt Tl'< •• ., Mwm1 "' J • J ....,u~ r:s 11 , )) A"llR.vtl I f>O Sa111ngs and Loan League R•t1b1t1 s • '\lo f•Tt<ln • , 1 , Menn M •I• •., sw G•CD u•, 1J Aro c~·~ 90 Krus~ has been a San Gabriel B:~! At ,:h 1%~ F:b cr~" ,'!,• I ,1 ~::'°'M~ :~ 1o !~ 'i!'ac~~~vc u\11 :~ ~~~ ~ di"d io :•1 1 P•l~~ 1~ I ~alrfld T 11 11.,.Mtrm Gr 10111 .. ~!d i>Hll "'' Aid Bre w Valley and Orange County 11:;i.:~· ,~~i,o.:.F:ii'N"'kr 13o1 1u M Bew• J,r.~~.,\',~ss'!', 3• 17 "''aoc; 110
Cl\ IC lead•• act''' ' n Blsln p 6 • 1 F"!NlllV 1'\· ti MIYtf 0 .. " " ....... 1< 1~ A •d Seq 1 0 lltumrl :J.4 35 F1I B~! •l \IJ 0 MCOVV SS ~ 51~r1Q Str !l IJ • Al df '" .o Charnber of "·mme<ce a"d DIRECTOR RETIRES ll•vl•1~ 1p, 12. F••G ll E n 1l Ml'll1c H 1~ n ~ ~rraw c• 'A " AllCtyEI l • ......, B..eh'll. :i.c ~ 3\11> l">IM Inv ,,~~ 2S t M~1rn •711> 41 '> Subsc 'tv 3 • • • AT R cMld 1 num~rous other g r o u p s A th K a,1i. 1 11 17..., "" 11~ 3., l '> Y.t par B ' Sugda! "' ,, ~ 111 Rth Pfl 1s
throughout his 42-year sa\mg; -----'--"-'--'-"--'-·----1•,' •• ",m,k .~.:', ~r ',L .~~~ ~ 1lv. 11'; ~1~~. ca 1~. 1~ • ~~~~y Fd r.~ •,J" :: :,~~ pri J .. .. ......... F.-''" i Nod• GT I• 70 T•rKI~• ,i ,,:· Ale•Ch•m !
and loan career Rl~'r'\.! ~v. "" ~:~1 011 11~ l''· :::;r,1: ~~ r,'111 t~, ~:!1:~' w 13'" es ' Aue. corP B r!(hr S'* lJ F(ISI :!rn! ~~:!'I, MO fl<c~ 1 \' T~nnenl ?1 , 11 ~ ATO Inc M1
State Converts 150 B N 8"'<:k "'' 3Ct. 3f F<11QC!lr .... ) "lot! Sc! I~ toJ, Tl'lle\ Al 1 ! ~' A~•Q•~ Pins e B-... I ·~ "" Foldm H is~• IOl>W~ 0 " '~ rn,,,m A J 5' Aut"""'" Md earn w Bolt Ber lO 10 .... FOl.lr 5'11 71 '>7' Mon<n Pl tJl.,l 4,Tttny Co 18\lolt~ Avco C~ 110 Boort.. c tt\li ?JV, Fmlt.I cl N e. Y-oo•e p 11\':t 11 ~'!Inv " I~ 11 • A~<O all 7'l IOI ("' 11\'ii 11 ... Frn~ln H >.I. 11 Moor~ S 1l 1' > f 1an (;~ 1., 8 Avert Pd 0 rid Sv1 ~ 6C F11t-JI' •• ¥o!Ch M r 8 T a< COQ I 6' Avntt '"' .0
Cofc rkW1' G 73', 1•>M F11q,;1 7J ,,, 9 Mo! Clvt> •1 I• Trncn! G 11 1' Avon Pd I !G ~~·. \', ~ ~ 1:1" ""'"'' IO '• I Mv• I•• rn ·~ ' "'"' 0 1 • l 1111~( 0. c~ County
P1·esident More Ve1iicles to Gas
An add1tional 150 vehicles or
the Cahforrua D1\ 1s1on of
J{ighways will be converted to
the natural gas fuel system
this year as a further step
toward reducing air pollution
James A Moe, stale d1rec
tor of public works announced
that 125 state vehicles will be
converted to compresse d
natural gas and 2ft will be con
verted lo liquid nalural gas
The hrs\ 100 \Chitles \\Ill be
assigned to lhe Los Angeles
area and 25 wi ll br situated in
e 1 t h e r Sacramento or S ln
Francisco The entire flee t of
liquid natural gas vehicles will
be assigned to lhe San Diego
area
!\toe explained that the com
pressed natural gas fleet v.11\
operate on a dual fue l system
The \ eh1c les wlll operate on
natural gas 1n crowded urban
areas and can be converted to
regular gasolme 1n the open
PRESTIGE COURTESY
PROFIT
TELEPHONE
ANSWERING BUREAU
835-7777
INCOME TAX
o., ' ,,.,., .. .,,.,..._h .... '*"' 1ett.d11f-4
John l Miesinger
Cefriflff PvbUc Acc .. 11to11t
Phon• 842--4811
COMMODITIES
country v.here l!imog 1sn t a
problem
On compressed natural gas
the vehicles have a range of
80-100 miles The smgle fuel li-
quid natural gas vehicles can
travel 2.50-300 miles before
refueling
The Department of Pubhc
\\or ks ~1oe said, 1s working
with other State agencies to
develop a plan to implement
Governor Ronald Reagan s
recently armounced program
designed to use the StBte s
fleet operallons and purchas
1ng and taxing po" ers to en
courage and expedite the use
of smog free vehicles
Printing
Exhibit Set
The next ma1or exh1b1t1on of
printing presses and other
prin!Lng mach ines to be held
1n the U S will be held 1n
Orange County accordmg to
NPEA Exh1b1ts, Inc , show
sponsor
The exhib1t1on The Notional
Prtnt1ng Equipment Show will
be held at the Anaheim
Convention Center, Anaheim,
June 6 through June 10
Besides commerctal printing
presses the National Pnnllng
Equipment Show will contain
typesetting m a c h 1 n e s 1n
eluding those which set type
elrct r onica ll y and by
photography graphic a r t s
cameras bookbmdmg and
magazine btnd1ng equipment
and all kinds of 1pecialty
equipment for commercial
pnntlng plants
SPECIALISTS
R. J. O'BRIEN & ASSOCIATES, INC.
members or
P.1aJor Com1nod1ty Exchanges
Take pleasure 1n announ cing the
opening of their Calilornia of!Jce.
PATTISON INVESTMENT COMPANY
1649 Westcllfr Drive. Newport Beach
rallforn1a
Telephone 642 8006
Broke" In Commodlltes Since 1914
James H Beam vtce pres1
dent of the First National
8"1\h Se l••I 'S ~ r.arfnlll 1'\, lj i MutRI El '• • Tr lco Pd lll l 31"
•uctr.tY ~ l~\':t Cl\ S'K U .. 16 "CC Lto 1 '' ,., ~~' l>'> ~~ l Stbo W 1 M
ft rn•-5 -'' G Alrctt •"1 S Nlr•aa C 1• '' '1•111> c• "' •• 0 '' •> rte l•A• -, , , , G KIMllc ~ 1 • 'IAI S•n<I i, 1 , T•"'" Fd 1i 1; 8 •• E , m
l"•I w Sv 11•· 1~. !:RI Ell ~!: ~ ~(~~· c: I~ 1! :1~~ 'Cfu. 'J" ' ll•IG o•a· 50 (Am<O 1! 10 1 Gtol•I '~ 1 I.I I )! , 19 bdn~1>v~1 61) r1non M 71 11 G lf•n ''' ,', • ,,,,>, ~•"o' •I u IU" I vm '' ' llo~uP ! 1 r1nnM 8 ' 11 Gino • .. " • I\' Un McGll 11 p '' Can•t<I SI-6 l Glart•lt l• l\ • ll•' Lb .u; 41 US B~nol IS • 1Sh ~ f r'1> Sow 11 , ,,.., Cle••n w SJ 'J ~) NAii M•a 1• , "' u~ Cfw~ ? 1 DaN< ol Cnl 1 r I IA C:lt:'b Rub l\J • 'II•! Pp! l • • US E~vel ti 0 'l~•~ '11' I r:rch ? ~ ;""Cold lvc 11 ,., 1•1 S•ci> ,, u vs su~Ar ~ •; ::.~1r 1'c,!
C•rte P.1 s . ~Good s 1i:z 1~ ; ~!/ ~~~~ i • ~ ~ ~~ J~~~ 11 I I Bf d CR JS
Bank of Orange Counly IS the ~:~~ {iG n~ n ~ g~;;r ~c,, 16\11 1 ~ .... NEn ~E 11•• \ ' U!•ll ~l d '~: 1~ J:ic~ 'M~v IC
new prestdenl of the Orange ~~1@{.pi ;~ ... il .. g~:~ M~ ~~. ;,~ ~J(h~na ~ ~\., ,i ~~.1 ~r: I I ~ IJa!n Ind
County Chamber of Com ~~~\ 'b l ~ t ~ r.~~. lip~ l~ I n. ~ :\~ ; ~ : :" ~r:.·~ 51 !~ . ~ .. ~:~~<~L~11 i8 merce r~m t.11 12 ., 111, orw111 1n IJ u , NA. R ~c •, N~c w P 2< 11 B3~••L•t1 10 Chn Ind 61~ 1 "~ard Ch 6'• ( • ..,,-,, '" 10 1C 1 v lle~dt I> f ~ I\ V~k( a SO He was installed before f~f'Bv~1I 11 15 cuu •nt 9 10 ..,Fur o 1 , ., ' v~n~... ,t~ ii• g~:· F~~ \
more than 1000 people al the ~~·1·1 rs, ;~ ;~ n~::!i s ,r ';~.~~A_ N~~: ,~ ~ 'Z~ ~ ~~ ls~ :~ ' ~J~D~~ ~a
annual Orange U>unty Boll in ~:.~~(i 0
A :~~~~~~~~ii:~~ :r: :! :·~~ P ~:; ~i ~ ~~~~" ::Q• :~ . :~ ~ ~:rg~~. 1~
the Anaheim C o n v e n l i o n ~1~1:k uM~ ;; • ;: • ~.~,·,~,,F 3l J• ,~ o w~ 11 ,.. "'" ng M ~ 1o il. :::?n~';,.. .60toll
Center l'~vTon , .. J ~doc I~! ~·;,!,,.,QC""•, l r~"'(~~i:' 1n.1 ,fl•I n~con ~11~:.,.,""·o 1~ 'I 1: .. '11111>Yn lj l I&. J ~. Tl' •• 1 ""''" NA ! 9 Bon ' Co I Brig Gen llenr} Hise com {lo ... c.. 11 ' 'Holm EP ~ eJ i ... N• , , ,,, II "/.. ~ l~ ,: n~:;;..;-~ 'tlt.11
manding general Martne Air ~=~ 2., 1:' ~~--~::r·d c; n.--. n1
• "y (c~, •\ l I .~.,~~ ~~ ,•,; ,',: R;~~ ... ,~:;:
F I El T h ro .,., ~ s Huck Mt in l! "~I' r • c nl>•u , rt
stalling ofhcer Aides to Oeilnl roian 5" '' 't 11 •Hug C.•• 15 i& ~' F~ .,., --,, Wl\c PL ' • d• •P~o 111
aci ity oro v.as t e In ro "' " n ,, HV<I PP JJ 3• 1 ~ Auh ---"' s 11 "''"' r 111 ,11 a~~~~ei rn
ro..,<e• ~ s• ~'"': t ~ • ;1 '> ~~~ ~1 C> ~. ~? ~1 ~ n • ~i Be•m•c Co•a who v.ere also installed are t_~ fn;t 1 ' "f ~;!n ,,,'; n n:i.. ~ v o • 11 1J ~ Y•d~v E 1 , 1 , lf~"t"s,'~ 1 tg
Ted Finster Vlce president .._ ... ... , a ~ckO• 1 1'I ~ _.. .-..._ --Bl" •Jot>n .. Boyle E'ngu1eer1ng Co Santa El•" tou9 1 lllock HR ?• Ana first vice president John M I F d s1u~ Bei1 1 111
B Mmell II ol !he law h•m ulna (}J} S !°0:'.!: r~· of Wyatt and f.1 e r r e 11 :~c·~ ... 2~
Westminster second v 1 c e g:i~~rh1 ~11
president and Lloyd H L!l =:i-·--Borgw•r 1 is Be mdns IU Stocker partner In charge of NEW YORK IA Pl Coro Ld ll .. 1! J& I'"" CQA 11 s' IJ Ill P1 (f F u"<I Bll!o Ea ' 1 Oii
Sa l -'f f p t -Tri. lo!l-lnQ QUO-Cnl¥ C•D 11 IO I] IJ In• c,.,.a v~k 9 11 Cr,.!n 2A S7 Ji U B0ou '>\ Inc n a Ana ..,. tee o ea, !allon~ 'u""n~d iwcrn wov 9• b~••n• 1nc1c 1116111~\ ,.. £•• "" 9'6 ''"'"'r so ~1arw1ck and Mitchell and Co int N•t ""•' A•-c n WOAI ton 111• """' Bos 11 &9 , 11 N Har 21 11 21 • Br qqS• 7 ~ •!"" ot Socurl! ,, lleVQn M ~.,, •• I •••IC<• C.•MID 1P•a ~u<>d 10 19 10 u fl• .II Mv I ?O treasurer o~ .. 1~1 In< "'"D•<•' !~c 1001 11'9 10s nd •9! ~·1Pru•~M ••l •8•& 1/-.\• 011 't(°" ne prltn ~ wMcn Oe•~w • 11M17 9~ MU! 9 I I~ 1l" ~ ~ •l 1 ll ldll<~ II•. I Theexecuhvecomm1ltee1n-""~i~ ••tu••l•t P..111 Tr 1011 61 ''"" '"' ,i,Purnam Fun• e .. vH11 ~J111 tould """' bftn O YKI Sh• l J\ l 1 ~.«;I a Bl 9 '1 f ~ i." 9 11 B•lvnUG 1 Jl eluded F R Dick ' f.1arv1n ootd Cbkll .,, tiouwhl Oownr J: ~ n 111 V• Pv 1 ' 111 &rG•o IJ 1' 1\116 e ""'" co
d (aslt~)Mondav Ort•~! 11011s01ln•llnnSIJl•l" 9S•!O!lao ... n(a1>1 vice president an manager 11d ,.,_ O••vf Fd 11 66 n 11 11M1 10 11 Jfj' l~m ~ ., 8 11 11 ... ,, St>A P 1
Secu,,ly Title l"su•ance CD ,",",',,",,' ,• ,1,0 1 n °••v Lv 117&13 " )v \inc • I 8: I )1 i ~~' o :. '~ l' Bwnsn"" 1 SC ll2EAtcn&How11d Jnn~I~ 1l"/l'/l"ll vov•d 8 1\ 9~Bun•wk O:lt Santa A p J Johns ton Atflt •Id e 90 1 '6 1!11 •n ° J.a 10" l(~v"""" funu 1it.., re h , •• 1 •a BucYE 1 ?O na au • Afulrt ,.l tlJ Crwlh IJ71U•• c ... Bl 15J1'19•11P•Yt~ 11 tU]J lludd Cc Ill
.s••sta"t adm!Dlsl•alo• St Afl Am F Ill II !..com S 11 6 ll ' OJ ;o >>JO .. ll&;e"lh I t I 1• EIU11<1•' In ... "' AIPh• Fd l It ll 61 51)KI 'Ill !O II c~~ B• • II 'Y IS• •m Fd 5 1(1 &jl llwttForg ' I~ JO!eph Hospital Orange and Amcap s11 6 31 Slack llll!l" a c~. 10 161 1i1Sc~"''' u J1 10 1 Buio.,.w Ml Arn llVI 291 lnEtll!•ll lll•I••• CU• 1(2 •91 suS(udd•• Fund, BUIC\/~W•l rl Arthur Wagner vice pres! Am Ov0n t1•10 ,SE11•t1 11121l9l !u• SI 11~11v2 1n1 Inv un&Ytla11n~ 11on10
C AE~ •P •ti •t1 Emr11 S' 16l l:J.I u> ~ 9<io10ll Se>cl l1•6l1•6 Bun~lt pfl50 dent Ralph H Sulro O, •m c,.1111 s S6 'Cit Ener;v 11<a11 <a u• J 1 u ! 11 Bii l• SI u s1 Flurl INI 1 «1 Am Inv 6 9t I 96 Entlltse I a I SI u• S QS Sl (om SI 10 J~ 10 lj Surndy 70 Orange •m Mur 1 O? ) 11 Eoul1v I" • 111 Poll• ~ •1 • l• Set "" r J SO l •J Burrohs Ml AmN Giii 7 90 11 EQOI GI~ 1'" 19 Cli K<1 (Ob 6 10 I i.,src Inv ' 17 I 19 Beam servedas treasurerof •m P&c I U '1Ent• j1'tl Kn<•(;! •11rnt1r,1e1 m tU10')
11,c O'ang. C~·nly Chamber Anc1>o1 Grou1> Ev~nl '" i,0• .~ ',', ,~, t~~ o 1~ ~ 01 10 1115~1 ~r.,s \~ ~' ~~ ~: Bu1~un11 JI• vu (1~1 IS6 •llF11r!d Le•lnv r 1•7 •091~ 100 C1t~!Co60 last yea• and was formerly Grw•~ nllunF .. m Bu 1os11os1lr~ lbat 1 ui&s' ~~a ~'l'~V~ce1 F n~n ln<rnf I 11 I 06 Ff:d Cr!~ 111l !) 91 tlberlv 11• 6 Jl 51o In• I I~ 11 '' c .. lla~M I]! chairman or its econornic Fd '"" 1 11 'l6 Fid c1111 10 1111 n 11~ st• " s 11 5 """' 1, ~ ~1 , ~0 c&mpllt. 0 ., A1>1>1tc FU 69?IS6FldFunOt•ll!6tlltl~ln• l llll•~ml~B 9 ~04 (o"fgSp110 developmenl council He "as Anocla 1,., i 1• Fld Trnd n Ol 15 II I"" NIT •I 10 n !wn 1ny 1 1 I )it c~&rtw '°" A•!ton s II I 67 Fllt&n< ti P•ov L"" • IJ ) 71 wlnv c;1 I• can PA( ) 10 fOrmtrly presldenl 0, the A~t HOU9~1on Ovnrn 6l' l!ll"ILoom l< 5&Yt• 011vr !nv 11q<l-'I C~P•C l<1l?o Fwfld A 5 fl) I 4\ lndUil 3 06 • ll Cantd •l '9 •1 911 01<• I ! 11 t 6) (ltnAIR.d I O Orange Commuruty Chamber Fu..o B 1" 11• ln<o<fl • O'/ 6 st Cao 1 10 \l IC..11 1F•m r.1 'O , n c~P c Bdtoi Sloe• 6 11 1.61 VPnl 1 3-1 '13 Mui \J loC ll IC !al~ SI .. ! •S Ml C.rhrun I .o of Commerce and w as sc.1 C• • 11 j 1' "stF v• 10 11 n 1 M•~111n 'u 1 95 s"..,,..•" J:u""' c" 1111e "' B•llllOtl It.I 11411'\llfl 011 166 t.ct M•H Fd 1048!1.U Am Ind IOl~l!J"I ( ca.o s treasurer of the Southern Be/ICOtl 1' '16 "'16 Fsl l~G!h 'lS 10 75 ~~u 11" B ~!as~ Fl~vc 6 '' , ,,. c:;gPtt r.6
Cal'rorrua Biiiy G'aham Bfr9 ICM 9Jj O?!F!! lnitL 1.-ll ,,,M:·;.' ~ll S31 Sc•n ~l! •n CtrPl{~ 160 8!1!t Fd 11&.1121•Fst Mut!I 91• t:llM~•h• ll .. ll"6Slf·" II°' "d' Carr,,,(p 60
C dth lrll 81nrons11t1, .. F1TN11 1l6 I O•M°"""' ¥""'[)~! u1rn1lc1trrG!~ rusa e IS pas a B0>I Fdn 10 st 1 51 J:•t s 1..-1 (l 11 46 11 Mldn 111 :..~v;'i" \"o 0o ll l IJ 1 CM1n\-v alt l0>lon ltO l'l F .. ! CtP ll'O Mooch' tu 1jtOl!1t -~ ll•IU•1 C•1e JI :~tr. 51 H ~ 11 ;: ~~' J,~ f: 169 Mooctv ' 0 1 11 u s1 \:':1.,'s'f' ~ i~ 1~ ;! c,~•lleCt• t0
f•',, 01' tJllFNI Gii> Sl>ll 6l•Mnr!11n F"11n<I• V~<< GI l D .. 11•1 "'"lr 17e
E d G 1 l)rwth j" t~ Mii •o \~1!'°!16 !;(I Coro Xpol'IC onll<!n lSll,.,•1 Foundrs 115 •• 1"~""' 10 •OS Te•<h• ,10 tM CC'«' Ccr~ • ,,, C•o•mr 1'6 1nFcvr~q 9 l6101J 1"1u• !J l''T«hncl J" )I' Celdn•1• a 1 CIP ! l"v • 1' '!•Frint tin Gr°"" MIF fd 1' !I lt<!\nol oa 6t t•I.!~ ~t • 50 Win e
SAN FRANCISCO \ IJPI) -
The f1r~t contn1('rttol ~h1p-
1nent Of Callfor n1t1 \\ 1 n c lo
Germany 1s scheduled to leave
Feb 13 the P a u I f\la~!>Oll
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\\'lllt!rydJSC!f"ISed \i.ednt'Sdrl)' Frn! 9118"1~ Corn St tl !lllH sf""' S~ 51• l"<llM II! l•j'l'°"'o 160!! Th h b d !>11•1111 10:1911 Ful Ad tlJ 111 •IC ' ·~ 5dto I" I ' .rtlf'N Ill e company as o lninc ,l>tCt '111 • •111 tn!I xi'' ?O 1~ •w,•11 • '' •"' v3"~ iJ :ll tri.-w Pl 90
C II thl'rtl(! Httlt'1 Yohn to..iiS)• Pf '~ 14 l~UI' C•!I •S' A t1i1t penn1ss1on to sell al orrua '°'°"'1 ..-dn tt50n.JO 1nco;n 11 s1.sv •. .,. ~'"' ,... ri"'s"i '°"
rod -• l G £11111Y •:16 •nH....,ntCll'I s~ •i 1u V•I L•n 11; If! ~ 1 p u .. ""' wnes 1n cnn:uzy l'un<t io1111 is i-<P1 :Ji :t!N~wi~"' ,;16 J~1' l';.1"1'11 •• fJ! "''""; 1~
forthef1rirtt1me Thrywill go ~~"' tY 'JE"'~"'" in i~~V'v~r UJ'H~~~~ibr'1 i4:112 ~~~'M~"1~
on sale April I throu,1th Jo!lt':f ~~"' 1l ¥: 1 "=fti:j1_ ,~g 'i ~ ~~'~' '~ J \~ :~ ~:""? " • 11~ I~ ~:=:, "\~ Falk Bram1ck of l\fRinz, a~ ~1,.,• 'ptd! 11 ~ ~ 1111 11 g Ot'""f!ft 1 •o 1 it v ~1rio"" :t11 c"""H7' Jiii
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M ii:• I! ;iu 1[11.;: " r;t\~t 1•• 1•1 ¥,:'' '"~\in E•i 11 asl!On said the txport was ~· 'co' 'f,'' J •, , ', ?' ! ,1f ~ ), nrlH'~" 1 ~ •... """ 'I~· o •~ ~ ''" P ti 'the II l I I fl • "" ,fl•l'f'F""l'S•ll• ,-~ 1, •1SP""'' t'lltstepooprnn11:0 1 -•••" 1,00
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Friday's
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J•"""Y 26, 1970
Closing Prices-Complete New York Stock Exc4ange List
DAILY PILOT
l•ltt H-4 I~• I Mltll Ltw (._. Cft•
Final Stocks
In All Home
Editions
JA 'Firms'
Set Mesa
Open House
The 1~ Junior Acb\evemtnt
co1npanles 1n the Orange
County South region will hold
·Open House J11n :ZS.29 at
the JA Buslneas Center 1240
Log11n Ave Costa Meso
It wll1 be part or the na·
tlonw\do observance or Junior
I
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.. " •
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f! D~ILY PILOT
Nixo1i 's
Welfa1·e
Idea 01(
Program Helps Pregna11t Teens Stay • ID s~hool
\\'ASHINGTON !API at50 y,·as told the change in cian who began a pioneer pro-already face In birth. Their from high school are pregllanl, Eqalpped with more in· for 6 to a week:: and then
ScllOOI officials'are deYeloplng policies, including an eod ~o gram to help them In 1962, births freq u en l l y were she said. formation about thc.mselves return to the regular school,"
more enlightened policies punitive ·expuJs)ora, result!! In said during the "Pa~thood premature and premature FolloY.'Up studies on the '50 ;ind family plannl..-11 methods. Dr. Lyons said.
dealing with tbc gfowing nurn-a Joy,·er dropoul rate for girls, in A90le~nee" toofjre~ babies !tt more llllg~U~_e to fir~ in the seven Los Angel¢· Dr, L)'on1 sald, most do not Dr C R K di
be rs of pregnant teen-aa:ers, much belier health for 1nother ··~lost }lad been k!Cktct out m ll'fi 111 retardili~ il!'snd Plffal if:hools show nearly all ·become pregnant again soon. · arl · oner• rector
including keepinc them In and baby and fel'·er repeat of. school and sent to a home ·dcform(ties. Dr. L,toni?~. 1etun\ to graduate. many go ''We keep them in the or special education a t
school and assuring 1 he"' prelftlaocies. or relati(e," she said. Anh .lhe oewlf Cltli~f.ea'" -,n to pllege when they m.igbt classroom rieht up to Kalamazoo, M~h.. school!,
"'ASHINCTON fAP _ An inedical care, aciordlng to a Pregnai1t teen-agers were r~":. gol_regul.a;_~edical at-~r:_~ho ~aJ all~efj· or llot have before, and some use delivery;• she said ... They said his county "''Ide program
repon 10 a ro.irerence on "an unservet' population unlil tent1on or utntlYl,.I advice,' .wti~nme to 1-.::l}l!B"...16 sebool icholirsh1pe which they ~ ' may .havo their first labor 3efVeJ about 80 girls at any
11-month-old experimenl using adolescent parents. 1 few years ago." Dr. Dorothy she slid, tieightenlng the risk wa! a rarity. At least SO per-been awarded bef't".e·_t.per c~ pahls ·there. They come back one time out of the population
lhe basic princi ples of Prcsi-The "'et' ken d conferenct!! Lyons, a Los Angeles ph)'31-v•hich teen-age mothers cent of the female--dropouts ·-pregnant. 10 days after delivery and stay or 200.000. · dent Nixon's welfare reform -~'...:~'.'..:'...'.'.:'...:::'.'.::'..:'.::::.....::'..:::::...::.:.::::.:...:_:..::__:_::_: ______ _:_ ______ :..c.-'...---='-'--'-.:.....-_.::.:.:=:..:...:::..__-?::_,;+_;_--..:...:=:..:...:.:.::::.:.:::::::..=.:..::::..:...::::::__::._:_:..:.:.:::: ______ _ • ~ proposals irKlicates the ad-
ministratior. idea can work,
says the test direct.or
Acknov.ledg1ng 1he el'1dcnce
still is scan11 , economist
ll arold \\'. \\'alls s a i J
nevertheless "the direclion of
the administration program is
good."
\\'at:s. head of the lnslitutt'
for Research on Pol'er\y <it
the L'niv ersitv of \\'isconsin,
said in a tel~phone interview
the exJ>t"rimenl is designed to
determine how working people
not earn1nf;! l'nough to su pport
their families beha\'e .,.,.hen
Jli ven supplementary funds.
su~~r1rt'T10~
President ~i xon hai; pro-
rioscd s ub sti tuting a
J.'U<1ranleE-d family in come for
the pr esent we lfare sy~tem of
aid to deJ>t"ntlent children,
~·hich goes mainly to families
11.1\hout a male W3Jl!' earner.
Counting food stamps, Nix-
on's plan provides a federally
,11u:i ranteed noor of abou t
S2.l50 a }ear for a family of
four. regardless of 11.·hethcr
there is a mnle wa ge earner.
111 calculat ing pa ~· m e n I .'I
nt'f'ded to bring a ramilv lo
!hat lc\el. !he first $60 a
month of earnings 11.·ould not
be counted. Abo\'{' tl11 s amount
"'ould be a SI reduction or
federal l>cnefils for each S2
earned. Able·bodied adults in
fomilies assisted woulrl have
In accept suitable jobs if
a\'nilable nr joh training.
\Vatts ind i cat td that
111\hough the evidence is not
all in it can be said at thi~
point "a program can he '11'1-
ptiM and admini!'tered for the
"'nrkin(! poor . "
The tests. which started
with 75 families in Trenton,
N.J .. and now invoh•es ;oo
fam ili rs in se\'!'ra l states, al~
inrlical'!!i, "'alls !<air!. "we can
rule out some of the wilder
hypotheses -either lh<il
everyboclv qui ts his job or that
everyOOdy works twi ce as
hard.
"It :loesn'I !urn them greC'n
or anythlni; like that.'" he s:iid.
"They can gfl on about their
bu siness nrett y mtt('h as !hey
;i\ways did. but "·11b a little
more mon!'y.''
\\"IOE \'ARIETY
The tc~ts. funr!ed by thr
federal Office Of Eco11omir
Op1xirl11nity. were s I a r I e d
N>fnre Nixon too k orfioe. But.
\\';ills said. "the experiment
includes a "'ide \'a riety of
ranges. w;de rnou11h to include
!hose the at1ministration is
lh inking about.·•
Rep. John \V. Byrnes of
\\'i~consin. th" top Rer11li!lc:1n
on the Mouse \\'av~ anfl 1'1ean~
CommiHer whil'h is ron·
sid<'rins !hf' Nixon plan. hHd
In vited \\all~ to sit on the
commi11ee rleliher<1t1nns.
llyrnf's s:.id in an interview
the prf:Sf!n\ \\'e\farr sysletn
1nusl hr 1lras1ic<11\\' reformed.
lie said N 1,-;on'~ prooosal for a
family welfare progra1n is
fundamentally sound .
Only such an approach . hr
said. will ~e1 "us Olll of !hr
muddle and the can of worn1~
"'e now havr i11 th" prco:ent
rrol!"ram of aiding dependent
fa1nilies."
l\t AHCll OATF.
Symes said he does nol
know what lh e Ways and
r.1eans Committee will do "'ilh
the Nixon plan. Ile said il will
probably be the midd!r or
h-1arch before the rommillee
makes a final rl f:('is!on.
Recruiting \Valls to sit In on
committee sessions "'il.S part
of Byrnes' strategy to cm·
pha size the work-cn-
rouraf{emenl provisio ns of the
admlnistratlqn proposal.
Although Walts exprt.s5NI
llT>proval of tl1P ba~ic Nixon
plan he 5airl "it can be Im·
proved. I think the benefit
levels will have to be chongcd
In lime.."
Walts also said the Ni:i1:on
prooosal leaves too monv
decisions to be marte ad·
ministrativelv by the Welfare
secretary and hjs deool ie!I.
However. R!?p. Al Ullm11n.
(D-Ore., I had 15trong douhlot
about t~,. Nixon plan roinr far
~vnnd Walls' reserv ation!!.
T h e administration pro·
posals are so loosely drawn
that some families might fine!
II to their advantagt to buv
television selot in order to
qualifv for welfare payments.
he uld.
Ullman. a member of Ille
W11ys and Means Commillre.
p;d o\'ff the weekf'ntf. "ll'i;;
tr t: -Lhcv'"" playl'\R on
the hopes of mlllinn!I nf pnnr ,
~Oln.\ with talk about ple l
In IM slly."
• ' • • " •
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S
., ·::·"
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Nation's Largest Federal
annual rate
NINETY DAY
CERTIFICATE
ACCOUNTS
NO MINIMUM BALANCE
annual rate
2 TO 10 YEAR
CERTIFICATE
ACCOUNTS
$5,000 MINIMUM
' . '
..
•
t . .
)• ••
,,
"annual rate
1TO10 YEAR
CERTIFICATE
ACCOUNTS
$1.000 MINIMUM
' annual rate
ON~ )'EAR "!'.ERM
Adjusted RC!tes
for Short~r Terms
0
$100,000 MIN~M
"
. '
eeeand ·our So/o Passbook Account.
cur>•Pt .,,~u•I r>I• ' 1 •
No minimum deposit. Daily compouna1 ng. Interest day~in.to day-ciut.
' . ' . ' ' ' .
More than C\'er, California f'ed-
cral is the place for the n1oney you
can 't afford co cisk . J li e nation 's
largest federal pays y~u higher 111·
tcrcs t!
' Choose our regular passbook ac-
count-or from four new account s ·
...
,vftl1 fi:Jur m:iximtin1 ratts of inter-
est,. compow1ded .daily . Withdraw-
als .!JCfore n1aturi'~y permitted but
subject to some 16ss of interest.
W h ich~ver ac¢ount you choose,
our $l.6 billion assets are behind
your savings. How safe ic is.
California· Federal : Savings
and Loap Associalion •Assets .over $1.6'8illion
Nation's Largest federal
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Gloomy Gus Is ~ C01wtn11nt Olf,,,. 11111111jtll0\Jl Le• An;•1••· Otlll~• end "•ntVfl Co11n11u • "'•O\llll• 1111\l!'tCI 11p to ~2C,OGO DJ m1 f eatrtl b;llQ1 .i. llo•n ln111iin~• GCl/;Cfl.lo0!'1, 1 Pf'm•ntnl •Q•n,1 of in. VtlllN il&l .. ;o~elTll'lllflf:
Your Kind• Guy · ' ,___1-----~~----
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CLASSIC LINE -De·
signing leather is al ·
most a matter of "un·
d esignin~." as simple
cJass1c lines are a
must.
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WHITE DOMINATES
-A favorite color in
lbe spectrum lhls sea·
son ts w h I t e which
looks elegant In this
t\vo-piece ensemble.
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" .
..
•
' . ,• "
• •
No Gems F·ound • Jewelry L·ine
•
Lots of plaitic dis ks
sw iri9 looiely ·fro·m
w.rap·aro~nd cu rta in
cords (above ) or disks
hung. with ta uels (left l
Putti·ng
Lead.s
By BARBARA OOAJITE
or 111e 0.111 '"" llaff
Designer Anne Cha3e is no different
titan a lot of people; she started at the
;:>ttom and worked her way up.
A'riiving in Laguna Beach 2CI yean ago,
:1e· ente'red ~ le~thU fiei~ at the bot-
)1]], In sand.ala. SJie· aod 11 partner ran
h~ business a~ ~estgnf:d footwear until
'"'.partner retired.
She ran the 11hop for a while, then ea.s-
"d out of ih~1·&nd into desi gning clothts
;n leather. "You~re olfered chokes 111
along ln l~e ... ,she phi]OllOphize1, "and, it
you make therrtgtJt: cholce11, you 'll find
the right slol· lft llf~.""
Having alway11 mlde ~ own clothina.
ahe found· leather workin&, quite different
and more demanding. "'lben: are two
1 ways to learn; do ·It yourseif and lurn
from the mistakti, or learn from othen.
J did i lltt1e ot b9UJ."
Leather de1ign leans to the classic line,
almost a matter ,f}_f "undf.!lgning" rather
than designior.
S™PLIFICATION Of' DESIGN
Mrs. Chase, whO has de!l;ned for both
men and. ~ for 12 yurs, takta an
idea and sirnplitie& it. And, with a .tack
of orders piled on her desk, she "doodJes
~·1 Cl!llY _,.btn lhe can find Ume.
Rather .thlll . elopnt, colored lketches ..,.... Im~ lo the public, her •ketches
are actually a blueprint · 1 how I n g ~ and de31&n on &1 email·
piece Ol·poper • .,
Working in btr small Laiuna Belch
shop witll auiltanl Lori Murpjty, the •~
tractive crey-haired deslpu may (Ind .
heraelf IOmtwbat cramped for elbow
room, but flatly ni-lo upand.
"I likt to wort closely with· my
customus, fl)d upansion would probably
find DI• 11!11111.bebind'I dt>k olldflinJ
pajlen," D aaid.
With a worklnJ ocbedyle ol 10 p<rcenl
custom orderl. her falbions 11e worn
from border to border and from coast to
coast. One wom1.9 in Albuq1.iuque wears
nothin1 but leather: an · inveterate
traveler, ahe finds leather pack1 neatly,
doesn't wrlnkle, doesn't rtqulre laun-
dtrlng and can be varied by uJe al ac·
ttaOrles.
FEW 'RARE BIRDS'
~tt»t womui don't know enetty what
they want when they enter the al'lop. "It's
a rare bifd ·who ·hu 1n e11et deetcn ·ln
By MARIAN VHRISTY
.llE,iv · YQljK -When the year 2000
rollll around, people wlll be wearing
severely tailored uniforms -probably
zlp::front Jumpsuits -and the only w<Jy
indlviduals will stand out in the crowd
will be to wear superwild jewelry.
• • Destgnec Geoffrey Beene. part dreamer
and pan astute buslneJSman, certainly is
preparing for that stark eventut.lity.
· Beene is doing a jewelry coUection for
Kramer, but he wouldn't touch
rhinestones with a 10-foot pole. Instead he
has rakted tBe supply houses of interior
decorators who have their hearts 6el on
F~ench Provincial window hangings.
Mene•s · Spr~·sulnmer jewelry -wtli.ch made· ill dequt coast-to-coast last
Wetllt -. f,eatures pieces with dangling
braids,. tassels ahd the kind of fringe-y
COllf' QS'fi.Uy a11S9Ciated with old-fashion·
ed· shade pulls.
"rm cailinc it my passementerie
m'ood," ~~ says in that sUghUy apologeUc to;ie that Is his personality trademark.
Aet~ally,' brainy Beene has been mak·
ing a fe',";' :ibock.ing predictions at Y.'hicll
the· fashion .workl has turned its nose -
but-he;: standing ground. Beene says U1at
skilled 111.bor, which is getting ouUap-
dishly expensive, will cause the death of
"high fashion" simply because prices will
be so ~teep people simply won 't buy it.
His theory: ''In 30 years -U not
IOOMr -Ule faahlon market will be turn-
ing out bllllons of uniform~ that will be
supersimpie body coverings. Period.
Haute couture will be a thing of the past.."
Beene says he already sees telltaJe
signs. ~
The so-called Beautiful People who fre-
quenl P.1anhaUan's snootiest restaurants
-namely Caravelle and GrcnouUle -
have been wearing turtlenecks and pants
under their most suptuous fu rs.
"ll's the antisnob way of contemporary
dressi ng," aays Beene. "Suddenly It's in
bad taste to wea:r fl amboyant clothes that
are obviously •bi&tt-prlced d e s I g n e r
clothes." '
Beene ls so adamant against the ob-
viously rich that ttis second choice in
jewelry is made from ordinary plastic.
Brat1!lets have lots of oval disk! swinging
'LI:'• d iamond
l>eu11tlf11I but
rldlcmlo11•'
loosely. hl'm experimenting realistically
with the materials that belong to today."
None of this has hapJ):Cned ..accidentally.
A few days ago Beene returned from
an extended European jaunt which took
h"im lo, among other places, Amsterdam.
which he refers to as the hippie capital or
the world.
Beene mingled freely with the hippies
and made noLe that they were wearing
curtain cords and tassels around the
"'alst or as bracelets. He nipped because
the look is wonderfully ~utspoken.
"Cartier's $1,050,000 Liz Taylor dia.
mond Is beauliful but ridiculous," says
' Beene. "But a woman doesn 't have to be
a famous millionaire to want and deserve
an equal dose ol drama."
• Becaust the year 2000 Is not exactly
around the co rner and his summer-1970
is, Beene is making clothes that smash
together print, tweed and stri pe. The new
je\velry will fea(ure equally flamboyant
tassels and plastics in colors coordinated
to the fashion .
"It won't be too Clasby," assures
Beene who thinks U..l' occasionally an
eleganle will want µ, escape from her
played-down sportswear when heading
for an important lunch. • •.
Actually, Beene is surpr'lsingl y broad-
minded.
Despite the fa ct that he's turning ou\ a
ve ry successfu l men 's wear conectlon, he
isn't a walking advertisement for
himself. While in Europe, he bought a
.knit suit by Pierre Cardin and a Cerruti
raincoat, plus SO v!'lde ties from Rouget I
Gallet in Paris.
"I have no intention of always wearing
my own clothes," he saya. "I have great
respect for other notable desigoers who
just happen to be my frleOOs."
-' .. --~ Beene has designed a lot of Jewelry
with his famous clients Jn mind. He pie·
lures Faye Dunaway in a black pantsuit
punctuated with hi.s pla:ilic jewelry and
some mj!tal necklaces. "She's daring
enough for multiplicity," he says with a
smile.
And advertising genius ~1ary Wells
Lawrence will be the fir6t to wear his
rope-cord-tassel jewelry because, to·
quote him, "she Is Intellectually brilliant"
and alert enough to catch the new Beene
spirit.
Best F-oo.t Forward-
Leather Designing
'
CRAMPED f DR ELBOW ROOM -Designer Anne
.Chase finds her quarters somewhat cramped, 'but
flatly refuses lo expand. She likes working closely
with customers and doesn't mind lhe lack of elbow
room.
her bead,'' Mrs. Chase n:vealed . "I never
~ a customer for having ideas, but
&ive them confidence a n d en·
couragt:1.oent. For moat women, wearing
Jealhu is a whole new experience."
.\lthoul!l'I most ol. her work has been
rtstrved for women, ahe n1ay be ready to
take down a card n1e of men who are
aw.tung her ~lenl "Men's fash ions used
to be deadly dull, but now they have
become bolder and more ~aglnaUve ,"
SurPfislngly, lealher la not confining, In
addition to dresses, coats, purses, $klrts
(both mini ud more modest!, Mn,
~aat bu dealined evtnlnc aowns In
lt~.
She describes a scoop-neck, form-fitting
gown, Oared below the knee, which she
made for a willowy, rernal~ pedlaltlclan.
Softness of the leather caused It to folklw
the body contour, and, she recalls,
0
whcn
the wearer moved , everyone knew It.
WOMEN COME OF AGE
Although leather designs tend to re.
main more stable than "outlandish''
deslgnr roiated upon the 1)'1bllc by ,;tf.
femlnate designers," ~trs. Chase rinds
women today are more their own boss.
"They will do something absolutely
smashing. such as wear a maxi-coal over
a mini dress. This b grtet. t feel a
woman shoukl wear what'• best for her,
and let the sheep do aii they like."
White has been the predominant. color
In leather this seaM>n, and coat.a a top
11elltr with style favoring lhe fingertip
length. She •uses nothing but ·prime
leather (two percenl or every lannas:e),
ahi.pped out of New York.
Most orders are on a 30-day delivery:
basis. with approximately 14 hours r~
quired for a detalled leather coat Mint
shi rts lake. a 11horter time. ma1i-coats
looger, naturally.
Is ltathtr for everyone? Actually, yes,
s'ay11 the desliner. "But unl«tumi\ely. th~ ralhcr prohibhive cost or leather nar·
rows the field."
!"'-------------------------------------~-------~--~---~-~------------.. ~
J:I DAILY PILOT
Outcasts From Dry Gulch Seek Oasis at Strange Places
DEAR ANN LANDERS: My hal Is oll
ANN -lA N DFRS ~ The ruling was made by the prlnCipal .
Several of us think it is unjust. What was
once .1<Jree period now ii a -rompu~
Study 'Ptrlocl becaUS< a l•W .kid.I gailfed •
chanct, &bere'U be ao more aoot:ta1 off. But r don't !eel It ii unruaonable to •t
a 1trl to refrain from 1tartlna a family
unlll 1he 11 married. Thanks for ltttlq
me have my 1ay. -SQUARE CLAJIA
b) lht bride \\'ho knew how to deal \\'Ith
those c~ who sl&ned themselves
••Outcasts From Ory Gulch." Somt' peo-
ple cannot be trusttd around free boou.
When such is the case, they ought not to
be lnchxled. • '
off. .... ~
Sbol4dr/t the pranksttra have been
punished iodlvkiually' We'd like your opl·
nion . -fi, V. OF DANVILLE
DEAR ANN LANDERS: May I com-
ment on GeoeraUon Gap -the preanant
bride Who lhout)\t It WU rotten or btr
partrtll to voice dl.lapproval of a churc::b
wedding because 1he wu ln her fifth
month?
DEAR CLARA: Aboot l,111 -
pare1g Ud lhe:tr II)', lot, bat 111 9* It
be1l T1tUka !or writlq .
My weddin& was in the private dinin&
room of a hotel. \\'e had the liquor on a
table ¥dth glasses and i~ and mixes.
Three jokers (I didn ·1 want 10 invile
them but my !lance insisted ) walied out
111·lth four bollle1 of Scotch before the par·
«Y was under way. They dilehed the bol·
tits In the potted palms and came back lo
injoy the festi\•itles.
had the nene to say, "You'll never wear
this dress agi!-ln so what's the difference !
lla. ha.'' '
arsumenls 'Vlth their fiancta about lhe
aueot U.1. -WRECKED NUPJ'IALS
DEAR NUP: It's • whe a.ly wbt
~WI lbe Uquld capatlty of btr frleDdl,.
ad at.'j.a aoetrdJngly. U "mtoae'l ltl ..
nd·op'..i, lei 11 be '.fllEM.
DEAR N. V.: PmilbJng: U.e p-oetp for
Ute bad behavior of a few I• aa es:tnmely
efft<!Uve technique. Hell knows no fury
Ulte tbe wrath ol one's peers. When tbc
entire stde•t body must suffer for the
aias of a few, yOI cu hr: sure the in·
ftOCt:Dl will ride bent on the guilty and
apply a little moral suasion.
Parenti do oot owe a daughter a fancy
weddil\a. A weddtni II a Ill~ oot an
obligation.
What awalU you on the other .We of
the marrtq:e veil? How can you be~
your mani11e will work? Rud Ann
Landers' booklet "Marriage -Whit to
Expect" Send you request to Ann
Landers In cart of your new1paptr
encloalng 50 ctntl ln coln and I Jon1,
1tamped, self-addrtsled envelope.
When they started to right , my f1tber
asked thttu to leave. They left, but not
before ont ol them put a fist through the
~·edding cake.
Perh&Jll the .!rlendl or the brldo and
groom mlgl)t think It Is groovy to ... a
bride, tieavY wltb child, waddling down
the aisle, but relaUves and frlendl of the
parenta ml1ht not enjoy such a staht.
\\'hen the dancing started !hey wert
completely stoned. One of the jerks slo-
ped on my go11o·n and ripped II . Then he
What should have been my happiest
d1y wu ruined because of three drunks.
I hope you'll print thlt letter lor the
bene.1t ol olher bridea who are havina:
DEAR ANN LANDERS; RecenUy our
entire_ high school rtudfot body was
punl•hed because three or four kid.I did
1ome1hlng tlley hid no businesa doing.
I hope the principal will Ci>nsider
shortenin,e lhe tum of punlshmenL I'll
bet U be gives tbe student body aootMr
To e.1pect a girl to hang on to her
virglnily until ahc ii married ii, of
course. wildly unreallatic, according to &
Vassar eenlor who visited w rece:oUy.
AM Landers will be 1l1d to help you
with your problem•. Send them to her·ln
cart Jf the DAILY PILOT, encloalQc a
1e.li.addreased, stamped envelope.
Horoscope
Benefit Game
Notables Tee Off Taurus: Accent Health
A ROYAL VISION -Queen of Le Cirque ~1rs. Thomas Sullivan, wearing a l~
foot cape trimmed in blue 5equias and cryitals; .views the royal crown held by
Mrs. Jordan Greer as Mrs. Robert Ta bak adjuau her plumed head plel:e.
Mardi Gras
A bosL of celebrities will lee off Sunday,
Feb. l, at the Costa Mesa Golf and Country
Club with charity in mind.
Heiting their golf clubs will be Cameron
Alitcbell, Chris Lane, Greg Palmer, Ph 1 I
Carey, Jimmy Dean, Edward Buchanan, Tom
Kennedy, Roger Tory, Foster Brooks, J im
Davis, Forrest Tucker, Don Lucas. Bill y Bar-
ty, Richard Long, Tris Collin, Bob Carson
and Lindsey Crosby.
A gathenng Saturday, Jan. 31, at 8:30 p.m.
i11 the Ramada Inn, Anaheim, will kick oil
lhe festivities.
Proceeds will be used to help Orange Coun-
ty's neurologically handicapped c h i t d re n
through the Academic Achievement a n d
Learning Group, headquartered in Oranie.
Orange Countlans may tee off with the
c~lebrit1es and attend the Saturday-evening
dmner by purchasing tickets at $25 \Yhich in-
clude dinner for two and golf for one.
Reservations are being accepted by Kin g
Johnson , 771>-7910 and Miss Belle Garvin, 532·
1639.
!1.<111:1: _______ .,"' -·. =""""J""""
Heart Sunday Chairman
Coordinator Named
_for the eighth consecutive
year Atrs. Al DeLucio has
been named Orange County's
Heart Sunday chairman to
serve as the area volunteer
coordinator for the Oranee
County Heart AasoclatJon's
annual Hearl Fundt Campalan.
Ourina: Heart Si.liday week,
Feb. 16 through Feb. 22, near-
ly 12,000 volunteers will call on
t h e i r neighbors, distribute
pamphlets and accept con·
tributions to the Heart Fund.
Mrs. DeLuclo has been ac-
tive since !9S9, first in the
capacity of Garden Grove city
chairmen. th en as Orange
County chairman and finally
as a member and officer or
the a1soclatlon's board · of
dlrtttors. •
VOLUNTEER
Mrs. Al Dalucio
WEDNESDAY
JANUARY 28
By SYDNEY OrttARR
ARIES (1\1arch 21-April 19):
Someone Yiho y,·as comnlltted
lo your cause may es:perlence
change of heart. Be receptive
to altemativu. P e r m i t
restless one close to you to
have chance for full ex-
pression.
TAURUS !April 20-May lll)'
Refuse to be "talcen In." by
flashy promise1. BuJc jssues
Girls Club
sllli dominate, altbou&h they
may be disguised. Accent on
health. Any diet, unusual ex-
ercise, should get doctor's ap-
proval.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20):
Sudden, perhaps d r a m a t i c
tum of events affects roma:ir-
. tic area. If married, children
could make unu1ual requests,
even demands . If single, you
could end one rellUonahlp,
begin another.
CANCER (June 21.July 22)'
Changes occur at home base.
Money queltion la aettled, but
In very unusual manner. What
you depended upon, ahltt1
gears. A1eam you will have to · •
Teorient your thinking.
LEO (July Z3-A111. 22):
Some of your ideaa appear er-
ratic. But aelf-cordidence Is
lfllstntial. A relaUve o r
neighbor proves lnatrumental
In getting villi program undu .•
way. A funny m e 1a a1e
hlghllghta dey.
. VIRGO (Aug. 2S,Sept. 22):·
Guard posaesalons. Routine 11
\urned around, ups ide down,
!uddtnly changed. Tbil being
so. you could be careleu
where valuables are con-.
cen"led. Be practical about
Director Announced
assets.
!JBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22):
Cycle high : take initiative.
There is electric, dynamic
quality about you today which
is ultra-attractive. Know and
feel this -take advantaa:e of
it!
~1iss Betty Rustenbach has
been selected as executive
director of the Harbor Area
Gir ls Club.
l\tiss Rustenbach, a resident
_.. of Newport Beach for 23
years. slarted her career as a
protram vo luntee r in 1964 .
The nex l two years she was
employed as ·a part.time pro-
gram aide teaching cooking,
machine sewing and crafts. In
1967 she served as teen direc-
tor.
The new director w a s
graduated from N e w p o r t
Harbor High School. Orange '
Coast College and received her
bachelor of arts degree from
California State College at
Long Beach. ·
Assilting her as s t a f f
1 members are 1\liss Sally
Badham, secretary : ~1 r s .
:P.tichael Hodges, mobile girls
club director : Miss Georgia
Sue &ydston. machine sewing
instructor; Miss Bernice Ken·
dall Egan, program aid; Miss
San Diego
Wedding
Arranged
APPOINTED
Betty Ruatenb•ch
Nancy Perrine, teen director,
and Mrs. Michael L. Adams,
program director.
Rebekah Lodge
Triple Link Club of 1\te1Sa
SCORPfO (Oct. 23-Nov. ZI):
Plenty of activity In areas
previously con1idered closed.
The "No AdmiUance" sign
comes down for you. You are
made welcome. Surprise at
home coukl bring joy.
SAGITl'ARIUS (Nov. 2?-
Dee. 21): A friend can do
much good to enhance your
security, but you will have to
be ready for some quick
declalons. Be creative. Do not
feel married to tradition.
CAPRICORN Ille<. 22-Jan.
19): Career matter!' take en-
couraging tum. Your past. in-
vestm~t judgynent tends to
be vindicated. Day when seeds
planled begin to bear fruit. It
is good -act like you know lt!
AQUARIUS (Jen. 20-Feb.
18): You may be impaUent
about matter which la due to
occur in future. Key 11 to. •
reallu that some have to be
made famlliar with certaln
techniques. Distri bu t e
literature -•dvertise.
PISCES iFtb. If.March lll): Rebekah Lod1e has meetings There are some acUvltlea oc.
the fourth Mondays at 8 p.m. curring which are beln&: kept
Jn varioua locations. Mrs . secret from you. Realize this
Douglas Marian at sg...1939 and take appropriate steps.
may be called for add1tlonal Check dcl.all1 -pel'IOrtally. Be
information. · alert, observant. Pageantry ·to Unrold
Her younge1t son, Nat wu
born with a congenital heart
defect which was corrected by
open h.eart .surgery in 196?. He
wa1 chosen to represent the
as10Ciation durlng the 1967-811
Heart Fund year as Prince of
Hearts. Stewardess
Betrothed
The engagement of Suz.aMe•;;====================
Herron and Lambert J .
Ninteman Jr. has been an-
nounced by Mrs. Rita Herron
of Seal Beac h. Pomp, pa1eaotry a n d
revelry will mark Le Cirque . a
1970 Mardi G r a 1 Ex·
travag&Ma to be staged Fri-
day, Feb. 6, by My1Uck Krewe
of Komus.
Festivities vt'ill begin at 7:U
p.m. with a no-host cocktail
party swinging Into a parade
of past kings to open a Javl11h
producUon based on the New
Inner You
Revealed
How Voice and Vocabulary
Renect the IMer You will be
presented tonight ~·hen Alu
Upsilon chapter. Bela Sigma
Phi, meets at I In the home of
:P.1rs. John Coppln, Garden
Grove.
Mn. Dick M1y will present
the proaram. from the book
''Conduct. Eipreadon and
Purpo'f."
Orleans 1\fardi Gru at 9 p.m.
Under 1uld1nc1 of
ringmaster Merrill Hutlngs, a
glittering bi1 top Wlt.h a
brla:lltly colored carousel will
provide a backetound for ilie
royal court aa ·~ by
barker Uiomas.Su)livan. _
Outgolnai court members
who wlll ·bc atUred in elcganl
gowru topped by towering
headpieces are the · 1t1mes.
John Cochrane, Vlra:ll Knotts,
Robert Mehnnann and 1989
Queen Mn. illlchael TruJUlo.
Relgnlna: for the final night
"'iii be King Albert Ftderman
backed by dukes lUchard
Work Session
E a s t b I u f I Philharrnonlc
Associates Y.ill meet in the
home of A1rs. Edward
Maloney of Corona deJ. Mar
tomorrow al 11 a.m.
The work ae1sloo will be
foUowed by lunch with the
Mmea. Frank Cooney, Warner
Bordlcr, J1ck Curley and
James Davies aulsUng the
hostess.
Ale1ander, Joseph Pluala, g:;;:::,_ LUJ1n, anc1 r1>uup Rivierans Bet
Sweeping lnlo .... court They' I I W1' n seata will be the Mmes.
Richard 6hu1ert, Phillip Car· ,
reon. Jack Pina and WllU~ \ ' Rlvltra Club members will
Huntley assisted by 'dukes make ' a $0-SO attempt to
Ater le Cody, s. Clarke Smith, recoup funds for depleted
Timothy Kraft and Geor1e Christmas budaet.s when they
Clinton. spend a day at the races on
Court jesters R I c h a r d
Boucher and Sam Pollart will
announce the mysterious 1'70
king who will oversee a pro.
fesslonaJ variety act before
revealing his true identity.'
Queen for I.he evnlng will be
1\tr1. Thomas Sullivan.
Dancing to the music of the
1\foonlightel'I will continue un-
til the early houra when a
gourmet breakfasl 'viii be
served.
Working on party prepara-
tiot11 arc the f.1mea . John
Meidinger, Jack Tr Ip I el t,
Harmon \Vard , John
Cochrane, MerriU H11ting.s ,
Walter Thomas, Thom 1 s
Coad. Ed Conroy, ~flss Teri
Sullivan, John Cochrane and
Richard Shugert.
Thursday. Jan. 29.
Mrs. Wally Tift · and her
Gadabout.\ Section will board
a chartered bus at 11:30 a.m. in
Alpha Beta parking lot, boond
for the track.
Husbands are welcome, but
reaerv1Uona must be rtiade ln
af1vance. F o r lnformaUon,
members may call Mrs. Taft
at 494468S. ....
NB Auxiliary
The Ladle1 ' Aus:Uiary of
Newport Be1ch Fire Depart-
ment gathers the t h I rd
Wednesdays at 8 p.m. In
v1rlous locations. Information
regarding location may be ~
talned by calling Mrs. T. c.
Dalley. 548-93!5.
Other activities will include
final plan1 for the Sweetheart.
Ball taking place Saturday,
Feb. 14 In the Charter Hoo1e. P.fr. and J.frs. De:nll: Fine will l;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,I
host a prcball cocktail party,
and honored guests will be Mr.
and 1'1rs. Te.rry Faff of
Cypresa. ~tr1. Faff w 111
represent the chapter a1 their
princess.
Epilepsy A ided
\\'ith proceeds earmarked lo
aid the Epllepty F'ound11Uon,
member1 of Huntinaton Beach
Epallon AJpha l ola chapter,
Dtlt.t Iota, wlll 1pansor a rum·
mage sale.
ONCE A YE AR
'CLEARANCE SALE
Just 5 More Days
SAVINGS IN ALL DEPARTMENTS
llil ,,,,_ ..
SPECIAL
HAND TAILOllD
Z rANT SUITS •3910
The evenl wlll like plate HA.1101 CINTll • JJOO HAllOI • COSTA MllA
between t 1.m. Ind $ p.m. MONDAY, THURSDAY, Pl lDAY TILL t P.M.
P.1r. and Mrs. \Villiam K.
Stine of Newport Beach ha ve
revealed the bttrothal of the ir
daughter, Susan Stii:ie of Chi-
cago to William C. Beglinger,
son of ~1r. and Mrs. C. F. Beg.
linger of Orchard Lake, Mich.
No date has bttn selected
for the wedding ~vblch will
take place in Newport Beach.
The prospective bride Is a
graduate of Newpo rt Harbor
High School and attended the
Unlvcr1lty of Hawaii. Current..
ly she is a stewardess for Uni-
ted Airlines.
The benedict-elcct .attended
Farris SI.ate College In Mich-
igan and presently is enrolled
al Oakland College in Detroit.
P.fiss 1-lerron also la the
daughter of the late Mr.
Robert J. lierron Jr., and her
fiance·s parents are Mr. and
Mrs. Lambert J. Nlntcman of
S11n Diego.
A graduate of Immaculate
Heart C o I I e g e , Hollywood,
~1iss 1-lerron attended
California State College at
Long Beach, where 1he wu a
charter member of Gamma
Phi Beta sorority. She now it
on the teaching at.art of
McCaugh School. Stal Buch.
The bridegroom-to-be is a
graduate of Loyola Un iversity,
Los Angeles .
The couple plan to many
June 20 in the Immaculata I
Chaj>!I, University or San
Diego.
XEROX COPIES
4 ¢ COLLATE~ IRif
;n, MIN~r.~11,,1
x x l :
I A ilr•AOU'.0
ti ~Eft~E~~~~~~~
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TUMBLEWEEDS By Tom K. Ryan SALLY BANANAS
SUNIO<'S HAIR 51"1tE: l'P'SA'!'SJll1'ER
A INFORMAL, WINP-8J..OW£l' llOP-
l'Ol.ORI SORTER'lWr.<T lltJ.C1( 'II £XTK1
8LACK-CONl'ITTON:PRJME1'Gall1!
'i1001' A 10 l\?IITTER-tlfFto<S: ....
lV ·DAILY LOG ' '
TUESDAY
JANUARY V
1:00 8 Ill NIWI (C) (60) Jtrry Dunphy,
0 @ril Huntt1r·Srinklcy (C) (30)
0 Ca~ Ye• Top This! (C) (30)
Wink M1rtindal1 hcsts. Ma rey Ams·!
lerd1m, Danny Thamas ind Siu
cmram 1uest. I
0 "FAIL SAFE"-l'arl II * HENRY FONOA!
W 11 Till tl11 T11101 (Cl (30)
frtl CD ABC "'" (Cl f30) EE stod: M1r,et/r11h1r1 (30)
al Ois«ltlltqut 1-G~Gt (C) (Ml)
l :JO 0 3 (j) RM Sllalto1 IC) (60) t
JiM Powell aueitl.
O @@ml•ll• (ti (30/
"Sioux Me, Don't Woo Me." Ioli•
Is outfoxed bJ an 1unss1vt td·
mlrer. P111[ Winfield a:uesls. o 1Hl rn m ABC MO¥i• ,, ttit
Wetlt: (t) "Clrt1r'1 Army" (dr1m1)
'70--S\ephen lklyd, Robert Hooks,
Susan Olivt1. A tou1h. bla:ot!d clll·
etr In World War tr ls put In com ·
.111nd ol an 11!·black unit.
O One-Min Show (C) (30) Henny
Youn1m1n 1uests. m Dini frost Show (t) (901 Tom
Pod:on, Mnint Surnvan. Helen Gur-
ley 81otm, Linda Lavi n, Mort Sch u·
man 111<1 Shirley Chisholm.
IE Tbt I ii Yllley (C) (60)
PERKINS
LESSEE ... WHAT'S
A ll\CKFOL WAY10 ASI. A FEUER IF HE'S f.-illi fiOT VANPRUFF?
ra Oltitl of the l'r1sid1nt (30)
ED ln\tftlC9 (C) (30) "Man Am·
plili111:" Of. Ralph Mosher. JUDGE PARKER
0 SP: O'tlod Movie: "f1il Slf1"
Conclllsion (drama) '64 -Hmry
foftd1, Waltu M1llh1u. Dan O'Htr·
lihy. Maney Beri. The Prnldenl
must filtd 1 war to prl't'tnl rnass:ivt
11t1lialicn ~ 1 SAC plane, whitll
his be1un the trip to bomb MMCO"fl
dot to mtthan kal failure. c1nnot
be stcpptd.
I WONDER WHEl'E ! POW'T
G Dick Van Ork• (30)
Q) fir FlinblGMS (C) (30)
m Siar Trek (C) (60)
@(I).UC Ntft'I (C) (lO)
ED Whll'• New! (JO)
9 (j) CBS News CC) (30)
fI) l"asion Citan1 (30)
tm Hew1 (C) (60) J1ck While.
9:00 0 ~@ ID NBC TIJHibJ Mo'tit:
wKinp Go Fortll" (drama) '58 -
Frank Sinalr~. Tony Curtis. Natallt
Wocd. Two soldiers stalionr! 111
f11nce durin1 Worid War 11 com·
pete lot the attentions Gf • beauti-
tul Amerlan 1if1.
0 NEW SEASON l'U)'bof Atltr
Dark (C) (6'1) Sonny 111d Cher, Vic
Damon-?, Dick Shawn, Urry 3torth
aOO The Canned Heat join ~u1h
Hefner in Ills penthouse pad.
LET ME O.Ll ™E ATTENDANT
A.WI' MAVE 'tOll TAlk TO HIM
!EFORE VOii GO IM TO SEE
CARI... JUP6E ! >---'"'!...
ra s.11hrush ThNtt9 {tiO) I lfil~~~~ fil N£f Frsti't1I (Cl (60) '"Tiit
World of 01Yid Am11m."
SHE FOff,10 THE KN0¥t 5.Ul!
ArTENl'ANT ?
1:30 0 KNBC Htwurvict (C) (60)
O Steve Allen Show (C) !301
Guests are Ana Maria Alb1. M1rlent
Ver Planck. Pamela M1!o0n and
London Let. '
0 The G1 mt G1mt (Cl (30)
rn Cl'luclto AYe!t;mel (C) (JO)
9:30 0 n 00 Th• Gowtrl!Or and J. J. I ~==::.ic::;.!l!i""'.....""""'L_::ck:::J L--'-"
m Mr r1,orilt M1rti.n (301
(Cl (30) Tht 102gm2 Govtrnor Orlnt•
wattr anrat\.s 1 stray basset hound
to th! t~eeutiva mansion
0 Nun (C) {JO) B1d11 Wud.
MOON MULLINS
1FJ Bill Wlr11 News (C) (30)
01)@ l"tHJ' MaJOn (60) iI) Mniu J' Eslrt!ltt (C) (30) \NOL.It.I> )'bJ
EE /n,estors Showast (30) I C>RE -iD
@ (!)H11nt1ty-Srinklt1 (C) (30) l0:000 3(1)taS 'Repoftl (t) (60) "S~Sf . I "The Growint Crisis in Ed11catkln-AAYTI41NG ffi 1,IJICII'J S.1_r1n1 Ovtf "''I The Day They Had To Clow tht T\t .. IL1r:co 1t.oct1t1 (C) (30) Yiewe11 111 la~en Schools.~ The bmadelst, .;ni news FOR V&nl'W.1'
h1"' abo'' d1rk ptaks and moun-corrtspcndtnt Daniel Schorr 11 rt· Miss
l1111s lo tn!OJ' th~ beauty and ll· porter, •ill loot lnlo ttll probl~ •~Na.?
h1\Jrahon ol 50lrrn1. ol •hy, tor lht ti1st time in hislOIJ',
!jj (j) Tl'lt Mun1t111 (30) the Ame11cao pt0ple decided they 1•17
c~n no lonrer pay lhe han netts· (D Hoticitrt 34 (C) (60)
m KMIR Hf'#l (C) (30)
7:00 0 CBS [ven111r Hews (C) (30)
Q Whal'i My lint' (C) (30)
ID I Lovt Lu~ !lC/)
m IHI t!le Cite~ (C) (30)
£L)Co111J11odity/Mlrlll1I rund (30)
fll 00 l11n!Md (t) (30) I
ID Allor•! (30)
sary lo suppGrt public tducation.
0 m Ntws (C) (60)
0 iro@ m M•rtlll Wtlb,, M.D,
(C t (60) "The legacy."' Dolores Dtl
Rio and Janet Blair 1uest 11 P•·
tient~ 111ho must risk dttlh lo con·
t1nue livin1.
O Oell1! (C) (60) Mayor Sam
Yorty, Si1110 fr1nthi, Mr. Wi:1rd
ind Sammy Shore 1u1st
(9 PttlJ' Muon (60)
(j1) ill F11tur1 (&o)
al) Speculatiot1 (C) {60) "The Now
ind future Theatre." m El P1dre t 1111ica 130) ~ 00 Truth or Con11q11en'-'1 (C) m ld1nds iR tllf Si/ti (C) 130)
al Tllal Girl (Cl (30) 10:30 @?) C)nthi1 (30)
I
7:30 0 ~ (i) L1nc:1r (CJ 160! Jtlly 11 :00 0 0 €I1 aJ "ew' (C) (30)
Hoskins. btr.0mt1 on.e ol the nou j O The Wutmlen
vea u rich• when his card·pl1y1n1 O Movie: wunlon Sblitn~ (mys.
skills e11n him 1n ab1ndoned 1old terr) '56--Wdham Hold1n.
mine 111'/lich dntlOps into I bo_n1n m h,toll f'1att
11. , Anthony Eisley 1nd W1n1lred RI H SIMI She Said (C)
Collin tutst. 11:1 1 • tm@~(i)N"" (C)
ED Re111n P1ts1 Co~ltrtnte 0 13 ~€D l lPIC.4~1 Hi&h-
lllf!b of the laotll AnnivtBlrJ
Rin&lln1 Bras. tnd l11na111 I Balle~
Circus (C) (&DJ Some rJ the world's 11:10 @@ Cine111 Seo11nt1en: "I Wa\t
1r1a\1st circus ids. a speeiat dis· Up Screamin11:."
~lay reyiewin1 :IClmt of lht 11:reat·
t-st momen1s in c1icus his!oiy, per-,
lormin1 elephants, be~ulilul 5how· 11 :15 0 fli ,6) ID Ntn (CJ
rirls ind 1su1h·p1ol'Okln1 clowns
ltalured. Dile Robertson hosts.. 11:30 0 ~ llJ Miff Criffi• (C)
0 @ (3) &'J Mod Squ1~ (t) (601 0 lfovir. "Spetill Dllivtry'" (corn•
"A TownC1lled Sincei1." Pele and edf) '55-loseph Cotten, [va 81rtllk.
line, "h~e on nsi1nmfllll in !'!ni 0 aJ Dick Cavrlt (C)
ro .. to:m• _upon • . sm1!1 v1ll11e m Movie: ''Wlllrlpot1• {mystery)
wll1th 1s bein1 1er1onztd by • mo-'50---Gene Tierney . .low f1111 r. !~le 11n1: To111 Stern. ford W MO¥it: "His Uctll111q" (dr1· R11ney 1nd l111 G1y1 a:UHl mi) ·56---Eiit Ponman.
0 Mltllttl S Mowlr. "'Masll tf
Dh11itrios" (mptery) '44-Zach1iy ~tt. fayt [mef.tan. SidMJ Grien
1
11:45 0 ,j""j (6) i,D lol111ny C1r1011 <C!
street lntriiue i nd murder sui Judy Colhn1. Tony ~111d1l1, M1m1t
iound two people. Vin Doren. D•. 01v1d Rtubtn UI scheduled 1uests. m Truth or Constqu111ces (C) (301
m Major Adams (&0) I 1:00 6 Movl1: "Holt! R1111V1· (ldvtll·
lure) '46-hmts Mason. fD Ttdlnit.11 Corner (JD) 0 Ktws (C)
' ' £m Tll1 Ci1y W1lchen (C) (60) Art (D Adicln Thlatr1: "lribd al th1
Stld1nb1um, Clllflea Chtmplin tnd1 Wo11d.M
;,y 8o)'lf look 1t LOl An111l11
1venb
fil C1~r 41 AIMf" (30)
1:00 O Mov1t G1m1 (C) (30) Sonlly
ro1 holll. with Almf Archtrd II·
sistln1. 01n Rowtn. Dtek Martin,
Gretr G11son, Sll11on farrtll. loytl
Habu and D•11ht N1wton 1ut1l.
.
WEDNESDA Y
1:15 0 """' (C)
1:30 m AH·"IPI Sllow: •·Tht lnh1/lt.
Incl!," "M1nl11 C1ll int" "Thi V1111•
pirt.H
Z:lO 6 N11111 (C)
I
m "St1lrw1y tt Mt1wn• (lan11sy)
'41-Divld Nivtn, KJ111 Hunt!/.
IZ:OO 0 ''WIOM1e1" (my$ltryl '4 7 -
1'11ncy Coltl'M~. Mrch1t! 0'51111.
DAYTIME MOVIES 1:30 m .,. """ OnlJ" (d11m1) '31
: --CmCt lorn~ld, C.ry Gr1nt KtJ
ffll) 0 "Tiit M1jtr an• lht Mifttt• frt ncis.
i lc.omtdJ) '4Z-R•1 M1ll1nd, G1nc11ll z:oo o "Tiit ww. IKk• ('ff1111rn> ·s1 f R'-"" -Anthony Quinn, Ut1 Milan 1
' m '1.epn " ''" httllfl" (Id· j
I 0 (C) "II H.,pentd II la11t• vtnlur1 ) '~8111 W111!1m1. D1"n
ICOll\t!I~) ·~9-JK~ Lt1!UT10n, Doth Richards.
Doy. j
I 4:00 €1 "T1tt111 an• th1 AlflUIM"
l;.O G ~u"111111N1 Yo11U1R (611m1) '!11! (tdvt"lurt) '4$---.lohnnr W•lumt1I
· --M•mf• V1ft Dort11 • .kihn Ru1111J, ltr, Brenlil ~"
MUTI AND JEFF
GORDO
800!
AR1HUI<: JUST
MADE A SPEECH
BEFOl<E T1£
ENTlil\i
SPEECH
tl&PARTMENT f
I
J
i
t .
'
..... -...-
rM AFRAIP YALL
DOllT GET THE
IDEA -f MEAH-
ASOIJT llO<O~ IN
'111.'T CAii llACI<
THEAE.t
., ..... __ _
•
·:.
By Frank llqinskl
•
li
By John Milts
By Harold Le Doux
OKAY. COME MEET . .mr TR.1. THEM lHE OlO
ll4EM .. llT UME~ MAN'S 100 OIFACULT TO
PON"T PO TOO NOi HMWLE. .TMAT ME SHOULP
TALKING! IE SN A MENTAL HOSPIT~L!
-·--··-
By Ferd Johnson
1WO LE.AVIES Of
LeTT!laWITH \11Nll<OA~ ~
By Al Smith
.. ___ ,.,.., .------By Gus Arriola
'\ I t ... .... 1,
L ··-"1-•• ._ ... •
ly hhll
DAILY PILOT JS ~
By Charles Barsotti
TELEVISION VIEWS
Bette Davis
Real ,Pro
By CYNTHIA LOWRY
NEW YORK (AP) -President Nixon appeared
on television Monday night to explain to the ~~rl·
can people his reasons for veto mg the $19. 7..t.ill~on
appropnation for the Labor and Health , Education
and Welfare departments -more than $1 billion
over the amount he asked for.
HE EXPLAINED in simple terms his concern
about increased living costs, said the measure was
inflationary, and pledged that if his veto is sustainM
ed, "no school will be closed, no child denied an
education." Then the President, in view of the TV
audience, signed his veto message.
It was an effective use of television and a de-
parture from tradition. But his appearance on short notice was rough
on network scheduling. ABC interrupted a feature
film for the period of the address, less than 15 minM
utes. NBC postponed the start of its Monday night
movie feature. CBS pr .. empted a hall·hour pro-
gram, "Mayberry, R.F.D." and filled the time lelt
in the ~ri:ilnute period with two congressmen
arguing for and against the President's postilion.
REP. JOHN BRADEMAS (D.-lnd.), called the
Nixon talk misleading and fired oU statistics like
machine-gun bursts to support his point. Rep. Al-
bert H. Quie (R.-Minn .), spoke for the President's
anti-inflation point of view. Dan Rather of CBS, in
a postspeech analysis, called the veto a political
move in an election year.
BETTE DAVIS, theoretically the guest star,
took over Monday night's episode of "lt Takes a
Thief."
Miss Davis, who seemed to enjdy the nonsense,
was seen on the ABC hour as Bessie Grindle, a suc--
cessful lady thief who bad fallen on hard times be-
cause of age, arthritis and safes that are harder to
crack.
It was really not much of a script, but Miss
Davis swept gaily through several di sguises and
overcame the sticky dialogue neaUy. Robert Wag-
ner, the star of the show, was more or less in the
background in a story about how Bessie took her
revenge on an old enemy,
Bette Davis is a frank and interesting person-
ality who would be welcome on television more
often.
BOB HOPE'S Christmas show on NBC Jan. 15
was seen in almost 28--million homes which was,
according to Ute network's audience research de-
partment, the largest audience in TV history for one
program shown on a single network. Second on the
list was the final episode of ABC's 41The Fugitive"
in the summer of 1967.
The 90-minute special of course topped the na·
tional Nielsen ratin~s lists for the week endin§ Jan.
18. The "Dean Martin Show" wa s second and 'May·
berry R.F.D." was third.
NBC came out ahead in average audiences dgr..
ing the period with a rating of 23.4, follow ed by
CBS with 21.5, and ABC, 15.5.
Dennis the Menace
•
•• 1$ § J . 'l ! '!l!!!f c ~ Cj • s a ! s ! '! i ! "* f..!" 9 ! i 1 '.f 4 ! t:e::tmf f!¥ V1'Zte.Lf ....... e+=• P•'f 'lf"'t! Y¥*"ii!il'1' 'I' ... ~..-··-~~~--~---~~-~---.--. ... -· ........
J I DAILY ~ILOT TutMtiy, J•'"""7 Z7, 1970
Bradshaw No. 1 Draft Piel{
N1W YOllK (AP) -The Plttaburgh
Sletton, ltlllnl the f~ot pick In pro foot· bell'• aMUll draft, &elected quarterback
Ttn')' Bradshaw of Loulllana Tech, to-
dl)I.
Jlrldshaw, 21 , a 6-loot-3, 21&-pound Lit·
tJe All·Amerlcan, threw for 3 9
touchdowns and 1ained 11,589 yards pass· inc with a 52.5 completion average in his
Clfftr with the Shreveport schoOI.
Ht led Loul.5.lana Tech into two post-
seaton 1ame1 and caught the eyes ol pro
football's ICOULs with hiJ outstanding play
in the North-South game at Miami , Fis.,
and the Senior Bowl at Mobile, Ala. He
was named the game's MOit Valuable
Player ln the Senior Bowl.
Picilng 22nd, the LOii Angeles Rams
chose Tennesstt linebacker, Jack Rey.
nolds. a 6-1 , %JG.pounder.
Green B.ay, which got the No. 2 pick
from the 01.icago Bears in a trade,
Wheeler Mav •
Succeed Coon
At Vike Heln1
By ROGER CAlll.SON
Of l'flt 01llr Plitt Sii" Lem Wheeler, highly successful foot-
blll coach at Momlngside High School in
Inalewood apparently is the No. 1 man in
line to become Marina High'• varsity
football coach the DAILY PlLOT \eamed
exclusively today.
Wheeler's appointment lo the post
would be contingent upon approval of the
Huntlnaton Beach School District Board
of Tru!tees, who meet tonight.
It ls believed that Marina will recom-
mend to the board tonight that Wheeler
8ueceed Jim Coon n tta varsity boss.
Marina officials decltned to dlscuss the
mttter, aaylng any comment would have
to follow tonlllit'• board me<llng.
Wheeler baa been al Morningside for
five yean and hls 1966 and '67 teams won
Sky League championships.
Ria 'Ml ootfll compiled a 12·1 record
and made the CIF AAA ftnals befort fall ·
ing to South Pasadena, 2,8.13.
The following year his Monarchs turned
in a 10..1·1 mark, los.lng to Temple City In
the Hmifinals.
Hls teams have compiled a 32·10.I
record in the la.st four years.
Coon wu fired after the 1969 campaign
when the Vikes finished in the Sunset Leacue basement.
Bruins Hold
Commanding
Lead in Poll
By THE ASSOCIATED Pl!ESS
Unbeaten UCLA continued to hold forth
aa the nation's No. I college basketball
power today with a commanding margin
over runner-up Kentucky.
'Ille Bruins, who won twice last week
for a 14-0 record, receiv ed 29 of 3% fir.;t.
place votes cast in The Associated Press'
weekly poll. Unbeaten Kentucky picked
up tht remaini ng three -one Jess than a
week ago -from a nationwide panel of
1&porta:writers and sport.scasters.
UCLA Jed the Wildcats in total points,
63~
St. Bonaventure, one ol two other ma-
jor college unbealens, at 12-G moved up
one place to third, with 464 points. The
ot™;r, 13-G Jack10avllle, remained No. 6.
behind South Carolina, which slipped
from third to fourth, and New rifexico
1--~-i tale, 16-1.
Kentucky !.>9P.Bted its season mark to
1>0 ondiy nla:ht with an 36-71 victory
Alabama. South Carolina trlmmed
Clem.son 97.715 for a tS.1 mark. UCLA's
nert staN are at Ca\Jfomla and Stan-
ford, Friday and Saturday nights.
Plff• Te•'" w ... ..&._,I VII_,
I. UC:LA 1'-0 •Jt
1. K'"tlld.Y U·O .w.I J . St, lorl•.,..turt U.t 464 t. :.wtl'I C..ro!llll 11·1 OJ
f. H .. Mt•ln lltft 16-1 JO
'· J•U:...,v!Ut 1>-1 n1 7. Mt '11uftt9 ll-1 ffJ t. H""" C•••Hn• 1111, ll-1 :!OS t. MDfl!I C1rellll• U.J 1k 1'11. llllltllt 11·1 ,.
11. O.vidM!I 1).1 1'1 n. H.vtt.1 n., tJ
IJ. 1)1119 Unlvt<l•IY n.1 ..
I.(. ll>-yl¥1111t U·l U
IJ. ~ft CtiHtr"lt II).) ·~ •~. Of•-• n • o.1 17. C•lumblt TJ.J lt II. ,,_,..,, lllll u 1 11
It. l(t,...I lltlt U·l 11 "'· '""' •·• ,, OIMr Ntmt r«tlwi,,. ¥tlb In t l,.ii.INtlct l
...... : 111¥141', 0\.111:1. DllllutU!I, G111r11t , 4-...
..._ 0 .C., L4UllY111t. "l•r••t, ""'I 0.11'\t, 1)11111
,,. .... Oll:ltflOltll, S.1111 Cl "· T...,,n'"· T1•1,·EI
,.... Ultll IUte. VllllllO'tll, Wft"'n 1(111h,11;~y • .._ ...
"tected Mike McCoy, lhe huae All·
American defensive tackle from Notre
Dame.
Cleveland. which got the No. 3 pick
from f\11ami on a lrade, selected All·
American quarterback Mike Phipps of
Purdue.
Each tean1 was given 15 minutes to an-
nounce a choice but the flrst three selcc·
tions were made in rapid fire fashion. All
thr~ had been expected to go fast
Boston, picking f o u r t h, named Phil
Olsen, an All-American defemlve e n d
from Utah State.
Buffalo, picking fifth, named Al Cowl·
lngs, a 6-S, defensive tackle from
Southern California. and a second team
All.American.
Ph.iladelphia, with the No. 6 pick,
selected Steve Zabel. a 6-4 23S.poond light
end from Oklahoma .
CincinnaU, No. 7, plucked ~fike Reid .
All·Americiin defensive tackle from Penn
State's unbeaten learn.
St. Louis, picking eighth, selected run-
ning back Larry Stegent of Texas A & M.
He was the first running back picked.
Stegent, 21, was picked ahead or Steve
Owens. Oklahoma's All-American run-
ning back and winllef' of the Helsman
Trophy. Detroit, picking 19th, selected
Owens.
Owens was present at the draft 9e:Sl!Jion
at the Belmont Plata Hotel.
San FranClsco, ninth in the draft., pick-
ed Cedrick Hardman, a &-foot·S, %~
pound defensive end from North Texas
St.ate. He was the first "sleeper" to be
named.
New Orleans, going 10th, selected Ken·
ny Burroughs. 6-5, 215-pound wide re-
ceiver fron1 Texas Southern.·
Of the fir st 10 playm picked, five were
deferu;Jve linemen, and two w e r e
quarterbacks. Of the other thret, oae was
a wide receiver, another a running back,
and Uie third a tight eod.
Denver, picking 11th, grabbed Bob
Anderaon, All-American running back
from Colorado.
Atlanta, picking 12th, took linebacker
John Small, 6-4, 230·pounder from The
Citadel.
The New York Giants, NO. 13, took Jim
Flies, 21, a 6-4, 215-pouM middle
Unebacktr from Oklahoma.
HOO!loo, picking 14th, picked LiWe All
American Doug Wilkerson, a 6-3,
240-pound guard from North Carolina
Cenlral .
San Diego, picking 15th, grabbed
Richmond's All-American wide receiver,
Walker Gillette, a 6-S , too-pounder.
Rams Trade Gossett to SF
In_ Exchange for Alexander
LOS ANGELES (API -The Los
Angeles Rams h a v e acquired defensive
back Kermit Alexander and a second
round draft choice from the San Fran·
cisco 49ers in exchange for kicking
specialist Bruce Gossett.
In another trade, the Cleveland Browns.
lrying to land a top-flight quarterback
from the current college crop, traded
away Paul Warrie ld, one of the top re·
ceivers in pro football for an early cholce
in today's pro football draft.
Alexander. the 49ers' No. I draft selec·
tion in 1963 after starring at UCLA.
started his seven year National Football
League career at free gafety but was
later switched to right comerback. He
was also used on San Francisco's punt
and kickoff return teams.
Gossett, a Fountain Valley resident,
was signed by the Rama u a free agent
in 1964. In stx NFL seasons he scored ~71
points, only two short or the Rams'
record set during 194~2 by Bob
Waterfield.
In Gossett , the 49ers are getting the
NFL's third leading scorer in 1969 -102
points -and an accurate kicker -all 36
poinLs after touchdown and 22 of 34 field
goal attempts made.
Kicking was one area which hurt the
49ers, who finished last in the Coastal
Division with a 4-3-2 record. Tommy
_f'/· ;rr ·
Davis and Momcilo Gavric, sharing the
booting job, hit 22 of 24 PAT tries but on·
ly six of 21 fie ld goal attempt!.
Gosse tt also holds the Rams ' field goa l
record with 120 in 203 attempts and has
an unbroken string of 165 conversions.
With Gossett gone. the place -ki cking
duties will be left to second-year man
David Ray from Alabama, acquired in a
preseason trade with Cleveland. Ray ·was
the hooter for the rit ontreal Alouettes of
the Canadian F'ootball League in 1968,
hilling 11 of 18 field goal attempts in-
cluding a 54-yarder to tie the CFL re-
cord. .
Alexander showed himself to be a
sticky-fingered defenseman, leading San
F'rancisco In interceptions in six of seven
seasons ineluding 1969 when he nabbed
five passes for 39 yards in returns. He
also leads all-time 49er intercepters with
36 for 4D9 yards.
Rams coach George Allen expressed
pleasure with the acquisition of the
second -round draft choice. "That almost
amounts to our having '"''0 first-round
picks," he beamed.
The Coastal champions have the 22nd
choice in the draft but the 49ers pick
ninth, Los Angeles kept its first-round
selection but traded away the next five.
The Browns traded the 27-year-old
Warfield to the Miami Dolphins Monday
,. •
Ota tlte Ropes a1td Out
In exchange for ritiami's top draft choice.
That means the BroWll.! pick No. 3 today.
ri1ike Phipps or Purdue ls one of the
passers the Browns reportedly are in·
teresle<l in to back up Bill Nelson. The 29-
year-old Nelson led the Browns to the Na-
tional Football League's Eastern Con·
fcrence title desoile problems Y!'ith his
knees. However, the Brow~ were cream-
ed by Minnesota in the NFL !Ille game.
11le Browns paved the way for t h e
\\'arfleld trade Monday by acquiring New
York Giants' ace receiver Homer Jones.
Cleveland gave up rookie running back
Ron Johnson, defensive tackle Jim
Kan.ickl and linebacker Wayne Moylan to
the Giants to get I.he 28-year-old Jones.
Browns' owner Art Model 1aid this
year's "college crop of passers is the
finest. that Paul Bixler has seen in all of
his years 811 our head scout. We felt that
we should try lo land one on them even
though the price might be high. Getting
Jonea enabled us to deal with Miami ."
Jones and Warfield both are six-year
'("ei~.rans and have similar records. Jones:
has caught 214 passes for 4,845 yards and
35 touchdowns . In 1967 he led the NF~
with 13 touchdowns. For 1969 he caught
42 passes ror 744 yards and one TD.
\Varfield has caught 215 fOl' a career
total of 4,346 and 44 touchdowns.· His 1969
record was 42 for 866 yards and 10 TDs.
Jack O'Halloran, of Boston . slumps on the ropes as
former Olympic heavyweight champion Geor~e
F'oreman retires lo hi s corner during the rount 111
a New York bout. Foreman knocked O'Halloran out
in tbe firth round with a series of smashing rights
that earned him his lSlh consecutive professional
victory .
State Ponders Horse Racing Bu.siness
LOS ANGELF.S -California iii con· lidtrin& png into the horse racing
bufbMl:I, a prospect termed "quite
rt'fOI~" by the owners of strike·
bowldtracb.
The CaUfornil Horse Racing Board
IUQtlled Monday lesislation w h i c h
would empnret ll to conUnue racing dur· 1"' unJon.manaaement negotiations lf a
--llktfy.
Ul'fllel' the propoo1!, tilt b<>enl would
dQte t trultfflh.lp to operate the
ltlcl<I. • LOS ANGELES -Stven high Jumf""
who )\ave cle•rt<t the 7-foot marlr "''11
CQ!lpet< In the Loi Angeles Time& Indoor
G1ma Feb. II 1t the Forum.
\
The jumpers. announcM r.tonday. 1n·
elude the Southern California Strlders'
Otis Burrell, the Pacific Coast Club's
John Rambo, the Callfornla Track Club's
Reynaldo Brown, Washington State's J im
Voss. Japan's Hldehlko Tomizawa and
S\\-'eden's Kenneth Lundmark and Chri11
c euon. • SAN FRANCISCO -Basketball grttsl
Nate Thunnond says he'1 qullllng the
sport that pays him an estimated $100.000
a )·ea r, expressing dls1us1 over lhc
di5abllng lnju.rles thal have belted hin1
out of one st~son after anolhcr
Only three things C(luld concclveably
make him change hit n1lnd. he told a
b05pllaJ news conference Monday; fBllurc
to m;ike it financially out.i;lde basketball.
the return of Rick Barry to the San Fran-
cisco \\larrlor lineup and a desperate plea
to stay from \Varrior owner, Franklin
tilleuli.
"As of now." the 6-foot·ll<t'nter sadly
said. ..I am definitely retiring from
basketball."
The 28-year-old owner or a 22.11 National
Basketball Asaociation scoring averaJie
landed In St . ~lary's llo5pltal ;ifter a divt
for a ball In a game with the Philarielphia
ifi'rrs fin Jan . 1~. • SYDNEY. Australia -U.S. Davis Cup
~lar Arthur A~he hec11me the first negro
to 'A'in tM Australian Open Tennis cham-
pionship.! Tuesday when be defeated
Auatralian Dick Crealy M . 9.7, 15.2 at
White City.
The U.S. thus scored a unique double,
"'llm.ing the Australian singles and
doubles titles for the first time in the
history of the 14-year-old n1tionals. • NE\V YORK -Three plus.JO·Point
games ha\•e boosled Los Ange.le11' Jerry
Wc~t furthfr 11head In Lhe National
83'.'lkctball Association 1corin1 r11ce .
\Vtst fired In 4Q points against San
Francisco and 30 and 39 against Seattle
last week to boc»it hiii league lead ing
average from 3L2 to 31.6, league
statl.sllcs revealed today.
UPIT~
MOST COU RAGEOUS ATHLETE -Fred Steinmark, the gallant
University of Texas safety who lost his left leg to cancer after helP:
ing the Longhorns to the No. 1 college football rating was named
MoS'I Courageous Athlete of the Year by the Philadelphia Sports
Writers Assn.
Strain Still Coaching
Ex-Estancia Spike Boss
TellsAboutSamoanLif e
From today's mail call comes a letter
from Floyd Strain, former Estancia High
track coach who Is now residing in
Western Samoa :
Dear Glenn
t will l.a,ke lhls opportunity to bring yoo
up to date in my activities while 1 have
been in Western Samoa.
I am now the director of athletics,
coaching tennis, track, weight lifting,
basketball and rugby .
Our tennis team went undefeated this
year through seven games "''hile our
track group finished first. second and.
third In three weight classifications.
Next year we will win all three because
of our experience and foundation . Before
coming to this school they had no pro-
fessional coach and thereby finished last
every year in these competitions.
It is amazing what a little professional
l'lelp can do to im prove the performance
of a team or individual.
We also had an interesting sport feat
occur from our students when we had 89
Pal111er Na111ed
60s' Top Golfer
NEW YORK (AP} -Arnold Palmer
began and ended the 1960s winning go![
toomaments.
That's impressive enough. but it "''as
what happened in bet"·een that helped
Palmer charge away with the AS50ciated
Press' Golfer of the Decade award Mon·
day.
"Winning to n1e n1eans everything."
said Palmer. '"ho stuck the word
''charge" in the front or the golfing die·
tionary.
The Jong.hitter from Latrobe. Pa .• won
the 1960 U.S. Open at Denver and ended
the decade with a typical rally, tomlng
from six strokes back to capture the
Danny Thomas Classic at Miami Dec. 8.
He won four Ma 11ters tournaments -
three in the 1960s. His 1960 Open victory
was his only one. but he tied for three
others, and lost In playoffs. He also cap-
tured two British Opens among his SO
winning tournaments.
Palmer collected "l '1 of the 633 votes
from sports writers and broadcasters
·across the natk>n. He liter ally charged
1way (rom the fleld IS Jat.k Nicklaus, the
broed·beamtd belier from Columbus.
Ohio. was a distant SttOnd at 75lr2 votes.
One writer put both eolftrs on tht No. I
ballot.
Biii Casper of San Oltgo and South
Afrlca'1 Gary Player tied for thlrd with
.J.ight votes nch, followed by Orville
~tOOdy, four ; Lee Trevl!'O. thret ; Frank
Beard . SAm Snead and Charlie Sifford,
one each.
Nicklau11 cut down Palmer in se\·eral
head·t~head matches. II 'A'is the Golden
Bear who stolt lhe U.S. Open Utle from
him In a nall-bltlna playoff victory In
1961.
boys enter the national marathon and had
73 finiJh.
We also had the winner, who \g only ri
10th grader. His time of two hours and 48
minutes is not really spectacular by
world standards.
I have been elected president of the
Track and Field Association of Western
Samoa while also serving as president or
the Track and Field AssociaUon for high
schools.
I will be glad and relieved to get back
to the U.S. where I can give my full eott·
centration to one activity.
I also teach math. geography and
church history in the classroom besidea
having three classes of physical education
per day.
Just recently I returned 1rom the SOuth
01.INN WHtT ..
.... _____ _,,_
WHITE
WA.S H -------
Pacific Garnes where I representtd tilt
United States as its I.rack coach. We took
five athletes wlth us who made a very
poor showing only because this: country is
far behind the rest o( the world In just
aboot. all respects.
The best any of our athletes wa5 1ble
to obtain in this compttiUcn was a sixth
place in the marathon and this was the
little boy from our school.
I now have a scratch handicap In golf
and hold a championship of thh1 coontry .
I also won the New Zealand Latter Day
Saints championship over the holidays.
I ran in our nation.al maralhon cha.m·
pionshlps and finished with a great time
d. four hours and two minutes (I was just
happy to finish).
Tell all the people in Costa Mesa I ml.sfl:
them and particularly I.he athlttts I had
at Estancia. I am happy to see them
(some or them) doing so well in their at--
titudes and production.
Too bad we don 't have more of the~
good kids to lead against many of our
gruesome minority Jong hairs who now
S""1 to run our country in many
capacities. -Floyd Slrain
PI LOT MOYE GETS
iUOR E OPPOSITION
J OAKLAND (AP! -Growlni OPf>OliUon
to the proposed lrender Of th• Seattle
PilW: to Dallas-Fort Worth or "llh•auJtot
wa11 reported -Ss American Leaiue
owners mel today to decide whit to de
with the hotly-debated franchl~.
Ch.rill 0. Finley, Oakland Alhletl<I
president and con!crtnce host , sald;-
"Amerlcan League owners do DOt want to
pull out of Seattle."
I
I I
I
~~~~~ ............... ~~ ................. .., .............................................................................................. ..,..,,_,...,.., ............ ~~..->"'...-~~~~~~··•~•~~-·-~~.~·-·~·~•~•...,..-.""~'Y""?"~~·~•""'"'"'~'~'~"•~•~••••P~••o*"o~»•> ... +"'.P'"V r · .-' .-
For Triple-A.
Griffins Still Top
ClF Cage Ratings
• Relatively ,(ew changes oc-
curred in tht CIF pnp basket·
~ball riUogs with S a n t a
·earbara High OM) ·sun
cl1tmlni first pface ln AAAA
circlea.
Loyola's Cubs moved up a
notch to sixth place. The Cubs
lost .a 74-87 decision to Mater
Del ln non-league action.
Mater Dei's AngelUJ League
contenders picked Up nine
poinl8, good for 12th place.
The only•other county quintet
• to receive votes tn AAAA com-
petition was A1•rlna, garner-
ing one tenth place vote.
• fr
AA.AA
~ Place Team Points
I. Sant• Barbara (15">) 13" ~ 2. Palos Verdes (17-3) 123
3. PacU'.ic (16-1) 107
4. l\.1illikan ('.7-2) 93
5. Morningside (16-3) 66
I. Loyola ( 15·3) 57
: 7. Santa}1onlca (15-4) 41 i. I. Cres~ta Valley (IS.3) 37 ~ 9. Pasade.;il (16-S) 34
1 JO. Pioneer (16-4)· 21
" Others : Compton 19, Mater
Del 9, North Torrllr'ICi! 6, South
Hills, Notre Dame a n d
" ArcadJa • each, Burbank 3,
J Bllfna, Ramona , Marina, Long
Beach Wilson I ec.ch.
AAA
: : 1. Los Alamitos (17-1) 132
,. 2. RighetU (11>1) 12'1 :! 3. Verbum Del (12-3) 110
•: 4. Lasuen (I~) 104 ~.5. (tie) Aviation (16-4) 72
•;. Foothill 14-3) 72 t,·7. Rancho Atamllos (1"2) 53
8. Chino (13-4) 43
9. Santiago (16-3) 36
10, Northview (16-3) I&
Others: Villa Park and
Bosco Tech 5 each, Pomona 4,
Mlraleste 3. Victor Valley 2,
~ona, Sonora 1 each.
Clippers
Sparkle
,In Meet
Leslie Remsen. in the 9-
year-old girls' division and•
Tracy Cook of the lG-year-old
·girls' group, were winners for
·the Coast Clippc~ Aquatic Club
p,t the recent ~1esa Verde CC
. Invitational s,,.:im meet. other
Clipper results:
!·Yr .old tloY•. 7'·Yd. frtt, A!h. Tim 'L~:~.01~6·:1r1,, 25 yd. Ire.. 2nd. Llu
llt'"'"M!n, 16.). ... . ··r·-okl bors, 25·vd. ti.ck, 11h, 'om
Harr '°"' .)1.6. M • • 1·vr.~ld l)<)Y•• )()·yd. frff, 51h, &• 'Wl1111, G.t. U.Vd. ll'f', 41h, Mtrk W11111,
tJ.4, 100-td. lndo, 4lfl, M1rk Wlfllil, 1''r;.~· . .-bov1, »VII. IH"•11t, '11'1, Todd
"Cl1rt1, S2.0. L ,, • •·r•.•kl tlrll, lDO·rd. frff, lit, ti ' ltemlftl. 1 :U .S. SO.rd. bfttll, 111 lie, l.nlle RH115e n. .Q~~ bMk, ?nd, l.nlle R...-. • ...,, 11.0.
JO.rd: Mell;, 2nd, l.tslll RtrMI", 11.0. • IOll-vd. lnClo. hi, l.nH• A.t<nSf!'\,
Los Alamitos continues to
hold on to first in the AAA
rankings with Its 17-1 mark.
Other cOUnty quintets rank-
ed in the top to are 'Foothill,
Rancho Alamitos and Santi-
ago.
Santa Monica H i g h ' s
seventh-rated team in the
AAAA category will have its
rating tested Saturday at noon
on television.
Channel 4 will beam the ac-
tion live between the Vlkings
and North Torrance (13th) in
a Bay League ls.sue".
Monarchs
No.I Again
In County •
Orange Countf's p r e p
basketball ouUks took another
shuffling in the rankings of the
official Top 10 poll with Mater
Dei reclaiming the No. 1
honor.
The Monarchs went on the
road in Angelus League com-
peUtion and came t)'lrough
with two vital victories. in·
eluding a tw1>point declJ!on
over Bishop Amat
Los Alamitos• cl~ Grif·
fins dropped a notch to second
despite rolling to their 17th
win in 18 outings.
The Griffs had trouble in
disposing of two 11 g ht I y
regarded Orange League foes
-thus the switch.
Newport Harbor's ·two
Sunset League decisi ons over
the weekend moved the Sailors
up to third while
Westminster's 59-43 Joss to
Marina dropped the Lions to
ninth.
~iarina's re~try into the
elite (seventh ) gives the
Sunset League three spots in
the group. The Vlkings came
through with conquests ol Hun-
tington Beach and
\Vestminster.
Huntington's first l w o
league losses after 44 straight
wins over a Lhree-year span
dropped the Oilers out of the
top 10.
TOP 10
Place Team Points
I. Mater Dei ( 16-3) 36
2. Los Alamitos (17-1) 33
3. Newport Harbor (1$-4) 32
4. Santiago (16-3) 31
5. Sunny Hills (12-4) 23
6. Foothill (14-3) 21
7, Marina (13-&) 14
8. Rancho Alamitos (14-4) 13
9. Westminster (13-7) 5
IO. Villa Park (12-5) 3
Others : Huntington Beach,
Katella and Fullerton I each.
•
•
Jrvi1ae Coast Leaders
Newly elected o!!icers of the Irvine Coast Country Club senior golf association
are preparing for a banner year for the 160 men_iber group .. Urban Beh, New-
port Beach (seated) is the new president. Standing, l e!~ to r1g~t : Harry Sykes,
Balboa Island, secretary; Bill Kern, Corona del Mar, vice presi dent; and C. A.
"Chick" Higbie, Balboa fsland, treasurer. --------------
•
Fot• Coast Area Cagers
Lightweight Summa1~ies
JAY'lll •ASKIT•ALl.
c._ ... Mir Ull C4'1 Vlllfl'
C-(1) F UJ AtlmffO
Kllllltr (al I" C•I lltndlr s.....,,_ (II c U> C"""'nth<lfn
Dlttt (I ) G !211 Thoml1
Conl'O'I' (I) G (0) F ltkh
kof"llltl $11bo : CCDml McF•rl.,.,, 2
l.•11trlo1t .._ Ntlh 2. L-9re a. Ovenn
2; ISA'll Y0\1!111 S.
M1i.r Otl (411
NfllfV (7) F
Pr"'"rN$1 Ill) F
l fel'"' (3) c lr.llev I•) G
Cloulh 14) G
UJ) StNlft
(1) CtmPl""rD (151 WtlbUtn
(2) PrtncltYlllt
(4) Ktren.r
C 121 Slll'f>01.r
St.Ht bJ OWrttn
~ltr Del 1• l 11 -•1
Storv•tt 11 1' 14 lf-1l
H11nlf11fllln !Ill
AX•klln 01) r
Cr11'1k Ull F
Gerlt"" C10l C
C!•rk n1 G
lllollcMr CJI G
fHl N-rl
flOl Bowmt" UI lluro
(I) ll:eYnol<b
(JI You"'
l SCOf"t " O~•rflfl Hun lnwton JO 13 11 16-IO
"'"'"'' • l 10 1--311 korlng subt: H...,t111111on -L•w-
'"'C• 4, Benc1t;r I, T!I 1 ll:1vrnono 1,
Htrbl11 l . Mtntllt f,
DAILY '1LOT J 7
Orange County Raceway
-A Bustling, Happy Venture
By PHIL ROS.~
01 ,.,. Diiiy ••1e1 ., ...
In a county where
Disneyland has gained ln-
lernational fame, a goodly
number or the other major
sports a~d entertainment ven-
tures which were initiated
here have either taken their
sideshows elsewhere. sunk into
early oblivion or have only en-
joyed a minimum of succeS!.
The old Anaheim Amigos
American Basketball Assn.
cage squad packed up its
multi-colored basketballs and
moved to Los Angeles to look
for its still elusive pot of gold.
As for the Orange County
Ramblers (semi-pro football)
and the once -thriving
~f e I odylancl Theater-In-the-
Round, both operations failed
due to poor support, a!'d the
California Angels b a s e b a 11
team seems headed in the
same direction unless drastic
attendance changes c o m e
about.
A notable exception to those
failures Is Orange Courity
International Raceway, a
young, bustling o p e r a t I o n
located ofr the San Diego
Freeway adjacent to El Toro
Marine Base.
Last year it operated in the
black .
"Drag ra cing", claims ~1ike
Jones, 32. vice president and
general manager o( the cor-
poration which operates the
track, "Is America's fa!ltest
growing spectator sport and is
cepUon are atlll acUvely a
part of the group.
William T. While !U, 28. is
currently president of the cor.
poration a1Jd a distant retaµve
of the prominent Irvine family
who owm the land where the
raceway iJ located.
And Larry Vaughn, 31, is the
present secrelary-treasurer of
the outfit.
The fourth~ member of the
trrltlal bunch, Daniel McKen-
na, 36, is no longer active.
Jones, while working for Bill
'Mlomas Race Cars, was
originally inlerested in pro-
curing the parking lot area or
Anaheim Stadium for drag
racing, but the idea never
caught on witb the City of
Anaheim.
He notes, "It became ap--
parent to me that it just
wasn't feasible , so then I took
my proposal to the Irvine
Ranch Corporation, they ac-
cepted \Vith Bill White's help
and now they're o u r
landlords.••
The group has a S>yea r
lease on Irvine property and
hopes to expand its present
seating capacity more and
Karts Run
At OCIR
catching lire worldwide." Formula and enduro karts,
more as the ttrm1 ot that
agreement progress. •
Jones says, "Drag racln1
achieves more spectator ap-
peal and visual.Uy than other
types of auto racing and with
the year-round r a cl n g
posslbJllUes a n d conUnued
growth of acmethlng · like
television, we believe the sport
has unlimited paths ~d of
it, especially in met·ropolttan
areas like our own bere. '1
"Smalltown dragstrlps en-
joy more net prolft on 11 per
capita basis, but the future of
drag racing lies in the hands
of larger tracks (like ours) in a larger area."
Average purse races at
OCIR are held weekly on
Saturday nlghts mOll of the
year and Sunday afternoons in
winter, plus grudge races, or
amateur, no .purse com-
petition, are the features .Wed·
nesday everilngs. .
Major events are run about
once a mooth or 14 times a
year with sUghUy larger than
average purses offered.
Although Jones concedes
that the corPofaUon will never
permit a larg~ale rock con-
cert a la Northern Callfornla
to be held at Its facility, he
says that a smaller-type one
was held successfully there in
1968.
Despite the numerous proi.
blems and headaches involved
in managing the raceway,
Jones states, ''The who~ thing
has been a very unique ex ...
perience to all of us and I'd do
it all over again exactly lht
same way.
He adds, "Orange County also lovingly known as mini-
and the entire s 0 u l h e r n cars, take their first crack at
California area are In the pr1> a full 2.1 mile road race cir-
cess of accepting drag racing cuit this Saturday and Sunday
on a more enthusiastic basis." in the featu re·at Orange Coon-HB STREAK
"We presently have an ty International Raceway.
11,300-seat capacity which Is In last Sunday's feature, ff 0 N 0 RED
normally filled during our Gary Burgin of Garden Grove
regular events and we have won the open gas supercharg. Prior to start of the Hunt-
ed event in an upset over fav-ington Beach-Newport Harbor accommodated as many as orecl Skip Hess and Manuel basketball game Saturday
15,000 fans for some of the Herrera. who both lost by way night, athletic director Ken
larger gos." of red light starts. Moats of the Oilers presented
The track, which achieved The mini-cars have evolved coach Elmer Combs with a
No. I st.atus in the National from single engine, sit.up type plaque on behalf of the school',.
Hot Rod Association CNliRA) machines to lay-down, multi-coaching staff.
l"tunl•IR Y.ilrt {111 (J.I} L11r1
Wtllttr CU F 110) A.llCIOet
MJUtr (1'1 F (11 Mcl.«ld
Pl!rt on c fl) H11r1ora
~in~ Wiil: Mllf< Otl -Potll!>I"
1, .t.l<h,,. l, Sntl-3; s..-vl11 -FLln·
"!'Ml 2, H.or!lt• 1, Srcwn 4, W1!Ch 10,
P:ellor 6. Htl"lll!"5 S.
Ctcl) Mtrln1
in 1969, became a reality on engine affairs. The inscription on the plaque.
paper in September, 1966 with 1'hls weekend 's starting read : ·
the fonnation of a corporation times, both days, consist of "This award is presented to
and went into actual active time trials at 8 a.m. and rac. Coach Elmer Combs in recog-
status Aug. 5, 1967 when the ing from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. nitio n for his 44 consecutive
first real race was held there. A $2 adult general admission league victories in varsity ~!~~1""11:;i.11 ~1 11Jt14> ~,""\ ~:,:;::,': lo addition lo Jones. two or ticket is good for both days, basketball, 1966-1969. Congrat-~~1t 1'.'1°)1 ~ 1111 11N~1:~= the original four principals in-while children under 12 are ad-ulations -the Oller Coachini ,
Gtrber 1111 G (11 H11ru!"'""
FOCltl 111) G Ul Sllnd1tY
Scorl"G s .. ~1: l'Ollnl•I" VtUey -
C1rrltr1 l, 8ovl• l , MOlitllltl i. I."''
-C,,.dtionll 1, HltVIJ l. CtMl" 10,
Woll I.
Ctlll MtWI un C40 Mltlltllll
Allt" (11) F C91 Wll~1111
Young f'I F !4) L1lfertr
RllKI 1111 C C4J AtlftliJ
Slm•Mm {1) G (2) W1~ler
M1cl.11n (6) G (t) W1!ltl"~
Scor!ow 111bl: Cc1!1 Mei.1 -Mar.
chlorl1!1 L S1k1r l , 1!11Chl1y 4, Orlir
l. MttnOllt -AoberliCln 7, St"l\011 l,
G1t1dl5 2. adlun CNI (NJ l!tlllM:ll
A. Tllamtion (I ) F 021 Frltdlrsdorl
811<11 (111 F (ltl lelS<IOrf
C1rlson (I) c CJl Contv
Mt NIV POI G (10) Killer e. Thompton (II G f10) SllW&rd
5torlnt 111i.: Edis.an -S11rcti.m 4,
WlllllfY\s 15, CJntrtU I; E1l1nc:ll1 -
HIYI t , Ford '· H1lllim1: Eo lion G. E1!1nc11 JJ.
$0\ltllwiclr UI F !I) llogdon
MOrf'Ofl' (IS ) F CUI Slf!Clln
Sierntr11 tin c n11 e uu ~ltl UI • G 01) Mllltr
Br•1111 Cll G 0 1 Wt9'Mr
S<;orln9 111b'I: ~rlnt -Moorebt:I!
'1 5.,,nh 4, RtWA!dl '· Ad1m1 •. w, ••.
.,,lnster -l,.1n!11f 1, M•ndoit 3. 5ml11!--• Ha~tlmc: M.lrlnt •~·JI.
Hult!. •c~. Cl11 (1fl N ...... , N1r111r
OrdwA'l' 110 F (I) Swl~~
Cl1r1lll (0) F (l1) 1Ct1mtr
Wlll!a (16) ( fll He!~lt
WMtlle!d ntl G no1 Gento11
W11k1r !l•l G {4l Cline
Scorlno l \IM: H11nll"'91Cln SMCh -
B~i JO, Worthy J. NewltCrl HarbDr
-khnl'lder 11, B1$0nnellt J.
+Ylftl .... : Hll'l!lfl9fon lJ, N1-r1 JI.
5111 CIHMnll lnJ { .. ) l.tl\INI 8tKh
\11lor1 f\01 F POJ Nllrw-r
1Ctlol1 {U) F (10) Whlrfllll
Saj!ers c•i c (21 BNllll
Peler (II G 00) («win
LUfll (01 G (4) GIU1t11ll
Ev•n• 111 F C'l Glil@..,,1e volved in the cornnration 's in-milted free. Stalf-1970."
IC.,1 by Ollltft•I ML11lon Vleoll . II •If U tt-11
lhtnnon t11l F fltl 0ww1n 1 _ _.::cc::_::.:..;::::_:::'j-'.:~::.C::..:.__:...:.::_ _ _c.:;cc__: ___________________ _
l.lllU,.. 81.a! . IS 11 11 U-64 Ml111on \llela "llli= Sltl119h1er 141, Brown (1) tnd Bul(X (I). L111un1 lltl<I! lllb· lleck!M {6).
Hu11ll111lto11 Ull UJI Marini
A•t,.,.,,. i.) F 111 H~i!I
Cr11nll, H6\ F (fl A0\11•1 y.,·11nd IUl C Ill ~t!l'bf
C!trk tJl G 11) SttPhc.n..,,,
Bendtr ()! <. rlll Swanson
H11111me: H11nlln1ton Be1ch 11.11.
Mltlnt U41
Speek1 (I) s--(!') W111-r lJ)
ll:as1r1s tt4J
' ' ' G
C'71 New~rt
II) llowmtQ
U) 8e1rd
U) lGllVler
121 Burt
!01 Holmtl
)Coring 11111i: Mlri'll -Ashcr11! 2,
lelllle 2, &oci..t1hl1r 4. H\lilt 2. Stur--n l, $11Phtm11n 11 NIWll001 -K•ltn-
badl ! LtrMl'I 2. Ywn1 '· Otlby 2, WDOdw1rd 1.
Cll IAIKIT8All.
1'ff~0·1or HI"" Pein! Troof>V -I.tine lt~:~id bo'l't, 100-l'd. lrN 41h, C.11•
w 1..,,1:l1.•. ,,.
JO.Yd. "'"''· Slfl. Gr" w1..,, .... S0.'1'1! back, Ml! Gr" Wlllfl~-.i.J.
SG-rd: ""· '"'· Gr" Wint, lU.s._, loo.vet llldo. "" Grev w1n1, 1:-. . 10.vr.~ I tri., 100-Vd. lrn , hi,
Prep Swi1nn1ing
Sc.~rl"t subs: S.." Cl-nit -S.
P11..-4, Aincller 2. Gltnnestr11 1,
Emnor 1', c-12. L1t11fll Betch -
11:-•.
Ht1111,,..: Stn Clt......,11 JO, 1.ttll'll
llUCll 23
"I-~ IMI Uf) Mvllll111ton
COiie• (11) F (10) Nllrk-sltl
W1lltn 101 F II! NtJU
T,,.,.,.,_ !Ill C l2! lun1
Ttlrlntlll !Jl G 111 Alol'llonl
Al!m1" 10) G t1) PIUml'ntf"
l rK'l' 1!r. :Ol.D. ' .50-pd. I I, 2ndt..TrltC'l'C< ... ,.,'," JO.yd 71'111 Tr«'l' oak, . , !tl-ro'. 1tv. 21'111, tr..:v CGOll.. Jil.7,. __ ~ 'l'OO-Ycl. Indio, ht, tit Trl<'l' .....,.,, 2'~~ l"olnt Tr~I'" w1 ..... r -Tr..:y
ci:ra IH"•••t, •lfl J-ur1 .u.6. 'l(IO:..,d, lndo, Ill he, JtM lJrtj 2:U.1. 10.Yr.•kl l)(rf1, 100-rd. Ir ... 11 Jim Poth. 1:16.l. ~. br-t, tnd, Jim Path, 11.1. 11·'1'•.•0ld 1lr11, 100·1'd. lrn, hi, aec~v Otnltla. 1:1D.•. 100-rd. br1t1t, 4111. Beckv Otnltl1,
1 't!:~il 11v, 3rd, Bl'tkr 01"1111, :11.2.
• :ioo.yd. 1n00, 3rd, SKk'l' 01"!111, ~::~"'' bttt1I, hi, l.111r1 RlllTIM:n. ':7~Vti. bid<., 3rd, L""'' ll111T11en, l :~"' lndo, 3rd, l.t11r1 RemHn, ~:17.1. _ < •· < ·-J ll·Yr.-eld bo'fl, 11..-Y .... 111 , ""
Ll"'I l.outff, l :$$.'7. T < l>Yr.-old tlrll, 1-....:i. fret . :l!>CI, tr
lmllll, 1 :IM.O. < '' • • 100-Vll bid! ht, T1rl Smith : ....
''ZOO-Yd'. lndo. lsl, Ttrl Sfnlllh 2,·'3.ot. 100.V!I. brtt1!, Siii. Jtntt htrrv •
.1 ::11.I:..... ,..... >d, Ellen W!IHtm1. ., 1•"'· .~ .. 1:07.1,
Area Prep
.. Wrestling
<
VlnlfY
C.lt ,,..._ {UJ Cl6l MllMlll
• ........,_ ICM) Otc. LAturno fMl1 .,
·IN--Moort (CM) de(. C, Arbl11<1 (Ml1
U• • l1!-Kna11f1 {Ml dllc, 1(11111 !CMh ~l
l~P. Mini~ lCMJ die. M. Ar~Ml IMh ,.,
1311-&hhlltkl CCM) dK. Tormt'l' IM)1 ...
1 1~111'11!1 fM) dK Plukt !CM!:
17·• . Ul-P11rct1! (CM) •ll'lnfltl W11r1~Y
4M l1 l :1t
Ul-OHhllll (CMl '"'""' Ktltdlt-mV
'Mli J:OS IS7-Ftrrvm1111 {CM) ..... ....,, Dell•lc•
IMh :U . ' 1~1tllcle (CM) die. Atu rr~
fMl; ... ,
IN-S...,,ll (Ml Wiii II Y d11-
1111ellfkt ll•n • lt4-IEllw11lh (CM! tit<. Sllbl (M)I ~·tv-ertlt CMJ ...., by tomlt.
Cage Tiffs Set
Crestview League basketball
IN.ms play their lhlrd circuit Pme In nve days with a full
1blte on lap tonight
Tesla involving 0 r I n I e
€U.!t area teams are San
Clemente at Mlaalon Viejo and
l:.lguna Beach hoslln& El
~t~ena. .... Sooi pmes are al 7 o'clock.
""'"' -E1l11Klt IUI "*"'-' Mli'MI' 1•> HO MtdleY ll:tll'l' -1 E1 trw:I• 11C1wtlte, Johm!on, l.l!ttll, Stlllldlrl) Tlmt: l:Sl..4
l'Q) "'" -1. Ktnt IEI t. ,.,.,.,. tNH) J. A.the INH1 Tl"": :Jt.S SQ FrH -I. G..-(NHI l L. 8111-ltrmlln fEI J. z.nnir11 tEI n .... : n.1 200 .,,,, Vkllll l Mfdil'l' -1. S. 'f~'"f (El 2. SmlTn INHJ 3. Kt~t J1i1n 1~ l.'1~-~dblltn (E) 1 H1r1 ~Et, 3. ~1rker (NH ) New tchllol retort!) 01&1•;~~ l. Asl\t INH\ 1. lllttU lEJ
J. Norris fNH\· Time: /:00.I \Oii FrM - . Smllh NH ) 2. ?1nrie11 (IE> J, Sllmdtr1 IE) Time: Sol.3
1DO IK!r; -I. L. Blltterm8n lEl 2 K1w1bl IE) I. Snyder (NHI Tlmt: 51 .•
.00 FrM -I. $. W1blltr (El 2. Lii· ltll IE) a. Horrk {NH) Tll"9: 1::111.J
100 8rttU -I. White (HH/ '· Pvrin.t (£1 l. JohMl<ln llEI T mt: 1:10.J
co FrH lll•••v -1. E1llll(lt CL. 811U•ln9!). K'n,!, 5"nd11"1, S , Wtblttr) Tll'M: J:.u,j
E1tancl1 (t4) N=... MlorW Utl
2'00 Mlldlty Atll-). N I wt Gr I Herbor, Tlrnt~ 1:51.3
70C1 FrM-1 SINl!wolld CE/ >. ~l~~:M.~~HI 3. ,..,..,_ NH).
JO Frn-1. JI., llHl•mlfl (El J. 9u1c11tvrt (HHJ i. T""'Mhtnd !El. 1me: ,5.a. IDO IMIV1dutl M..:tll'l'-1. Put!toUJ I NH) 2. R Wl'lllllf CE! l . JollntlCltl IE1lcioTJ~1~':t111i fNHI t. R. Wtbrottr
(IE > NQ 1hlrd. 1lrnt: 1 :~.t.
1DD Fr._1. ll 8llltffrn&11 lNHI '· htc:helDr INHI l. T~. (NH), Time: 5'.J.
JDO atdl-1 Cllrk1on 1""1 '· l.cv-r~ CEl J.. Wttntr NH , Tlmt: ·=~·,r-1 . s .... 11 ..... llEI !. W•M
lHH l l. St1111llbllrr (HHI. TI!Mi" •:.0..2. 10d Brtttt-1. J~ E\ t p..,..1_1 !NH J No ttolrd. T...,.: f: S.I. '°° Fr" lltYY-1. 51tenc11. Tlmt: 4:1S I.
HtwWt Hll'lllr cm I atf8..m no
100 Mtcllel' Reltv -1, Ntwport H1rbor (Wlkax, Kll..,.nlfnllll, Lin· dr11111, Otl.aQl/el Tr .... , '::u.o.
2ilC FrH -l. Roblrtton (NH! 7. Flllltr (El 3. 01l.nC1111 (NH! f1mt: 2:11.4. JO Frft -1. Farmer CNHJ J. Grover CE) ). L0111 INHI Tlmt : 16 •• 100 llldl'lklllll h\t(lln' -1. WllCOI INHl 7. 01v!' CEl l. Kll""MR'lllll
NHI Tlrftt: I :Ol.I . JOFv -1. Otv1CE I1 Wtll CHH)l .
Frtw• tlE I Time: '1.S.
100 Frtt -t. ~etClll• \HHJ ' JloOtrfton tNH) J. FOllltr II!" fllftt: SI~. leek -1, FrtHr ltl 2. Wiicox INl"I) J. Oli\M (NHI Tlmti :t?.~.
SO llrtnl -1. RNCIY !El t. Kl· lnftfllmllfl INHI l. W•tlll OtHI flmt:
34,,. " -MIO FrM Rtln -I. N...._I • ~Del.-. llMlrolll. Wttl. Miiier)
lmt: 1 :•.5. VtttlfY
S•I C"-1!1t {Ill ISi Stlltt AN YI"*' :roe MldllT ••ll'l'-1. 11!'1 '""""'' fi r....,-. llurl'll. kllottlt, MCC1t11n1. i;;z:,i;:.t.:_ 1, Ill S"trllhn CIC1 J,
Htrtm1n (SCI S. i•rt (Kl. 'rlml: 1'i:'1F -1 SH fSCl 1. LltWd IKI J:"3. Sm1iller1~\. -rffile: 2(,.
100 lndhMllll ~Jn -1. Mr:(!"" ~K l 2. Wt.'lt tKI J, ,,._In K l. 1fm.\n:i: ..:1i. "'1ttl'lfl IK ) 2. Vkk IKI
Ntet11• P~ts\ 'J./.:ee 1111 lKI '· ~It 7KI ), 't,Q\1 *fSAVJ .. Tll'M 1
"1Jr•'" -•. ''"lll'r "<> •·.J•• '\~ J.,e . lm.!.."''l' IMl:ir1i!r'isli\"'•· i. ''lt";~Kl S.. ·~'°J'IJIAI " "rJr'r.cr ,.'M,rltnllft lRJ. i""'t
"!Ii 'lt"'L -< f'V " IK,\ > ....
C§J ·,~tll{tf::'v_. {.~ 1~1J;.ntt
Ill. Smltntr1, l.IOyd. 8 rough1Dfl, SPrln•-
t rJ. Tlmt: ):~3.•.
s.11 c11m1n1. 1"41 ~nl S•ft1t Ant v1111,
200 MedltV RtYY -1. S..ntr '"' 'l1!11v !Nellon, Morrll, No r a I , verl'IOl'll. Time: 1:a .o.
7911 "Frn -I, Mlllfr 45() 1 lrllWll ($AV) l. Mtthtl /SCI. Tlm1:
H•nli"""" IMI IHJ M1r1N1
0'1!WIV 112) " It ) BoQdan
·Cl.lrell! fl) F tll! 51,..,,trl
Whitt !I I c (111 91/tt
Wllilfltld !'I G !U l Mllltr
W1Jlctr ltl) G (t i l.ew1101
korl11t1 M 1 -~rln1: $m11n 12).
H11n1!1>eton llrOOl!s CllJ.
Hl!lllmt: Jl).30. 1'U·t;:," -1. 0 11N1nc1 !K) 2. v1,k
{SC) 3. Hlbon \~)>'-~ Tlmt: 7!.7. W•ltrft t!7l UtJ N11Wpart Htrtrw 100 l""lvld111 ....,..iey -1. Burris H1ll1gtr 1121 F 1111 Swltk \S).~ 2'r IC._t_ (SC) l. Nolrot MclCenilt IU) F IJll K•1m1r SIOO )fo:1r1~'1.'':~i!i.11rd (SCI 2. Sur-lalter (11) C I•) IC~l~ll "! !SCJ No l!llrd. Tlmt: 1:11.0. Sur1k (17) G ~ISi G1nl11I 00 Fritt. -1 Mturmen L!tC/ J. G11lllen 1!1 G f2f Cl!nt
SCl!ttle cscJ 3. Vernon ISAV>. T m1: Scorlne •ub1: WU!frn -P•r• l,
5' O Jol'lnu.n 1. Ntwl>(lr\ Herbot -JOfl••
Scere br 0111t1tr1
"'-""rt 4 u ' 11 -34
HvM!f'tOICln II 10 6 4 -lt
Scorfn11 1ubs: NtwPOrl -O'Fl1111rty
l, l Hlt ial'ln J, Cllrk '·
Hoop Scores
1!111
Pr!nctton ''' Fo•dh-ltm Sol C<:>nnectk~I 90. 8a.l~n U, 11, OT
Auteer1 16, u. al 111111110 70
\0. 9Kk -1. Mllhlt (SC) 2. Tlkoll 2, McKinney '· Sc~ntlder 1, SDr,tn !K> 1, Ntlson ISAV), Tlmt: J:Ot.O Mll1 .. 1I I "' florldt 71 a rt'f -1. Mii!('!'. fSCj 1. Hottfn•n 2, 0-~uHr 1. ICt'flllltk 16, Al1btm1 11 CSAV) l. l.llllt-1st). Im•: 4:1S.2. l"lt!!lltmt sc.ore: NewD()tl Hlrt>or lf, Sou•~ roll .... '7, Cltmton 16 1~ 8r11c-, -I. Olmend (~l 1. West1rft :16. •ff GfOl'Gll , MIHlllll>DI $11!t 16 ·i~~-r ( VJ J. HlltrO ISCl. me: H\llltlntton !')) (tll Stllll •~• LQllll!I St, fl Tinnc111t $' 1'a °Frtt ll:•l•Y -1. Stn Clemente Alltl$0n !121 f 1121 FlctP\ M ... ~
\ll11rrl1. Dlfrtond, Ttkott, Mllhes), Cr11111r C2•l f (S! !.oo"ll!V Mi1'M.tot1 H, Chica 1.: 1)
llM: J:Jt.D. Ger11nd (Ul c (II l(llngt'flbfr• Orilo SI. 11, Gllorll ecll 11
., ... ,.... Cl.trt. 111 G (11 w .. rk~ KtnllJ $1. 11, Ollltl'lo!TY $111• '°
'"-"--..Ch 1221 IUI Vt)9ncJ1 Orauflt (t i G !lJ lr11w" Olilll'IOmf fl. WMhlnt!On, Mo. 60 * Mldlev lll1141Y-t. V1lencl1. Time: s~ " o.,..rlln Ne. 111. N. lltvler, Otilit "
l :::;l.Frn-1. A.. Wirt (l.} J. Brow" 't.~i!"':,:'1 I~ 1! ~~ 1t!~ lowt !lt1f fl. l<lnttl "' OT
II.I J. T11r"'llllll I'll. Tl!M: 1:02.J. Sc«lfl:ll tubs: H11nf!ng1011 : HlrDln t; Fl' Wnt
511 Fr-I. l"lct.1·111 CYI 1. "'l'dtr Stnlt Alll: Thomls J. Montl "I 101, P«llll'ld St. tJ.
I'll. J. lllmM1' ll.I. Tl,,..: 1t.S. -=~=~~~~~=================; 7QI ll'ldtvkl11el Mtdll'l' -1. C. W1"1! j:
Cl.I 1. Grth1m CV) J. !>Pier ('I),
45cNGI rtt!lf'dl. Tlmt: 1:1f.4.
Olvl..,.._1. Qlllnltfll (V) '· CftlPfl\1" I'll J. Flllll"* CL).
100 Fl'/-1. 0 . Wirt ILi L "'"rdtr
I'll J. 5'11tr IV). Tl""': 1:0.S.!.
lllll l'",.._1, Morr\1 IVI ,, PlckrtH
!'I) J.C. Wirt ll.1. Timi: Sl.1.
100 l1dl-I, Orahlm l\11 J. I-KY
Ill J. McCletlntlllll (l.I. Tlmt: 1:1U.!. 4 Fr .... 1. A. Wirt Ill 2. T11r111111l1I
'"' J.. er.-IL). Tlmf: .,u ... IOI ., .. 11-1. Oiltli. (VI J, Trlllr 4VI
I. l"rodt 11..1. flrN: liOl.7.
MIO ,,... llttltt-1, 'ltlenclt. TllTl9: J;ll,4. ....
OUR RICKERS CAN MOVE right quick when
need be. But that's not too often in Jack Daniel Hollow.
You see, we pride ourselves on the time we take to
make a batch of Jack Daniel's. Every drop is seeped
for days through ten. feet of hard maple charcoal LltllNI lttcll 1111 fJ.41 'ltltllelt HO 1'""-1. T\lf"nb\111 1\11 1. Wllllffv
!Ll. 1 Na third. TllM: ,:10.0.
.911 Pf"ft-1, St'nllfl (\ll 1. Ptlllf"&On
(VI J. Fltl\lve fl.I, Tlmt: Hi.I, 1 before aging. And this slow Tennessee process,
100 lndlllldllll Mtcllev-1. ~ .... ('I)
'· Ktnlu IV) 3, MINTHle (l.l. Tlrne1 1101.t,
100 l""ret-1. T11rnb\ltl tVI '· Mol">'ft .. CLI. No llllnl, Timi: Jl.7.
100 ltct<-•I. Smllll (\I! I. Alhll nd
(LI J. l"eltf {\II. Tlmt: 1:15 1.
o101 Frte-1. Ptlttr-I'll J. Wtlllt,.,
fl.I J. N9 third, f lf'flt: J:Ol.4.
1111 Fr,o-1. °"'9111 !YI '· Ho MCond
... third,
1111 llrHsl-1. ll:tlllll fV) 2. Atlllotl'ld
(I.I J, He thlnl. Tlmt: l :U,J.
G l'rff atltY-1. Vlltnc:lt, T-t
l :"'-1. , ...
LtWlll atldr fUI lttl V11tMl1
,. MldW. lttlot-1, Vtltnclt. Timt:
t :lt.1. 1'tt ,,..._,. D, ~' lLl 2. •11~ !Int IL I 1. W1l"'1 (V), Tlmt: t :H ,J.
.911 .,.,_,, Amldtll (l.I 1. Ptr'°""
ILi I. Plclr;rtn I'll, Tlmt: 21.S.
IM 11111rv111uat Mtdlev-t. t<oh•tl! IV)
'· "Mwlll Cl.I l. l1llev (l). TltnP: 1:11 ... JO '~-1. lltftolt\t ('II t , l(m. ILi 1.
11111'1' Tl.I. Tlmti: 31.t.
1llll l'"rt+-1, Nntdfn fl.I '· P1._... !Ll :t. Wllllttt (VJ, Jlll'otl llt'J.I.
JD S1c.11:-1. 011¥tr" (Vl '· Hl..,11 rYI J. lr91~_. !LI. Tlmti ,__,,
_.. lttMt-J, Kret fLI t. 0!1...., !Vl l. l lnswtllftl' I'll. Tllnt: ).1.1. '°' "'" ••11¥-1. l.•tlltlt flucll IP•'"'°""' A1M11111. Sl!Mlll;,, l rothtr· fllnl. Tl"'41! 1 tSJ.L
go:
San Francisco• Gakland
San Jose• Sacramento
San Diego
Lowes1 air fares. So go. From .... l'OU
Los Angeles. Phone your travel agenl. -a llllC'
called charcoal 111ellowing, gives
our whiskey i~s rareness and
taste. Down through the
• years, we've learned that
hurrying only harms good
whiskey. And, so far as we're
concerned, it doesn't help
people much either. •
•
CHARCOAL
MELLOWED
6
DROP
6
BY DROP
TENNESSEE WHI Slt(Y ~ 10 PROOF BY CMO,CE e1•J•trh*httll.f>U.~ .......
DISTILLED AND IOTIL!D 1Y JAC~ DANIEL DISTILLE!f • CY"CK,UIQ (POP. JIO. llRL
____________ _..;._ ________________ _
....................................... ~-..... ------------------~------·-·. -.....
I• OAll v PILOT Tutsdey, January 27, llf70
LA Music Center
Ame1·ica11 Tl1eate1·'s 'Giselle'
Ballet Wanes in Second Act
By T0~1 BARLEY
Of "" O.i" ,.1111 St•U
II our orders Saturday even-
ina: had been to quit the Los
Angeles l\tuslc Center at the
first intermission and rap out
a review based on just Act
One ol ''Giselle" the11 we
should have had to tell the
\\•orld that the Royal and
Bolshoi ballets have a brand
new but brilliant competitor
bre athing down their
distinguished necks.
Yes, the American Ballet
Theater 's production of the
glorious Adam classic was
that good. Gues t stars Carla
Fracci fin the title role) and
Erik Bruhn were a joy to
walch in that superb first act
and they got the }tind of sup..
port that prima ballerinas and
their princes usu.ally have to
dream about.
But the pace of this gllt..
tering production and the
enormous demands of a gru,1-
ing second act told thelr tale
and our epitaph has to be wbat
the overall staging deserves in
terms of analysis: a good
"Giselle'' and perfectly ac-
ceptable to a critic who rates
the balld very highly in his
book and who tends to be a lit-
tle harsh on those ~·ho do not
measure up to standards.
It is in the secO'l'ld act. of
course, that the choreographer
makes his real demands upon
those who would d a n c e
"Giselle" and it was here that
we had lo stop comparing this
young. ambitious company
with the illustrious organiza-
tions whose names have
al ready been dropped. Miss
Fracci kept her pace and poise
well to survive an error or two
but Bruhn was never qu ite the
same Prince who so won our
applause in the opening act.
Our stars were summoned
by an enthusiastic audience to
take at least a dozen curtain
calls and thls was all very nice
if somewhat surprising. Our
trips to the theale.r these da ys
seem to fall into t w o
categories: Orange County
concerts where the audleoce
practically refuses to applaud,
and Los Angeles offerings
where a n ave rag e
performance draws the rave
reception we witnessed Satuc-
day night.
The production bears lhe un-
mistakable stamp of David
Blair and, being more than
famil ia r with that superb
director. we would wager that
the second act is no more
satisfying to him than it was
to us.
We ~·ould be inclined to look
to the second act work of Roni
Mahler, Karena Brock and
Diana Weber, the three priil-
cipal Wilis in the production.
Crossword· Puzzle
ACROSS
1 Toronto footballer;
Info rmal
5 Welghl unit 10 Bugl e cill 14 Tow
15 Very, very
po1Uy
16 Automobil e
assembly 17 High spirils 1• Avoid 20 Repo1t minutely
21 Ont of
a malt
threesome 22 Knotted
23 BookkHp·
ing entry 25 Harden 2!t Sllght
JO Russian river
Sl ---·house
S2 Cuttl efish Uuld
53 Bird
55 Gasp
57 3 on 1"5-yJrd hol e
58 Eiposure lo public view
bl Ceylon
mciss "4 Ont who makes
things 'ltar
"" Self: Prell~
67 "The Thinker" sculptor
68 FestlvJI
69 Shepherd's lnstrumtnt
70 Joints 71 Card
1127/70
10 Prorlc!tnl 42 Facial workm1n featur e
l'l Make 45 Tr espass
'hetrlut 48 Nol 12 Twist traversed 13 Propel 50 Very
18 Cover int elligent
24 Pltc' of peop lt:
wood Informal
t.1iss Pitahler was never the
imperious. regal My r t h a
de1nanded in "Giselle" and
she quite failed to put her
stamp of authori ty on the
SC1mber proceedings.
The corps de ballet work
was adequate In the second
act and magnificent in the
(irst. Mistakes are infectious,
particularly in ballet, and It
may well be that a sad slip or
two ln the opening scene of the
second act influenced the
balance of the performance.
Ian Horvath was a highly 1
competent Wilfred, Pa u I
Nickel was good as Hilarlon
the gamekeeper and Helyn
Dooglas caught lhe eye as
Berthe, Giselle's mother.
But the high point of the
evening was the dancing of
Eleanor D' Antuono and Ted
KJvitt in the first act: they
broughl the house down with a
devastatingly clever pas de
deux and some inspired dan·
cing that deserved every
handclap.
Deeor, lighting, costuming
and staging of this produclion
were superb and very much on
the lines of that experietJced
earlier in the week with the
glittering production of "Swan
Lake ." This young company
deserves the highest praise !or
ensuring the-best possible
backdrop for Its dancers, an
altitude that is, alas, an un-
familiar one at th.is leve l of
ballet production.
''Gaiete Parisiennc," that
rouslabout, infectious ballet
based on Offenbach's bawdy
score, was on the same pro-
gram but your critic can tell
you tittle about it since he left
after "Giselle.''
We have no quarrel ,.,.ith
back to bac k staging of plays
or ballets provided that the
selection is in keeping with the
nature of both productions.
We are not convinced thal
"Galete Parislenne,"' which
we consider to be an utterly
charming ballet. is the type of
work (o be mia\yzed in the
afterglow of "Giselle ." lt~s
like asking someone to sit
down to lashings of sausage
and sauerkraut after two help-
ings of strawberries and
cream and hardly the kind of
programming we can endo~se.
"G iselle," to our mind,
stands alone. It should have
been offered that way.
Distinguislaed Guests
Dolores Del Rio and J anet Blair guest star on "Mar-
cus Welby, MD" tonight at 10 on Channel 7. Each
plays the part of a patient who must risk death in
order to live. Robert Young stars as Dr. \Velby.
Gomer's Discharge
Paying Off for Jim
By BOB TIJ0~1AS
ltOLLYWOOD (AP) -Jin1
N <t bQrs' mutlimiltion·dollar
gamble has paid off.
Earlier this yea1· the bashful
lad from Sylacauga, Ala., as-
tounded the television trade by
announcing that he was taking
An honorary discharge from
the Marine Corps and his
series ''Comar Pyle." \Vhal
baffled the trade ~·as why a
star woo ld turn his back on an
obvious gold mine.
As a series, ··Gomer" held
the 1>0tential or many more
years of life. ln its fifth and
last season in prime time, the
series was the SCCQnd most
popular show, finishing behind
··Laugh-In."
But Nabors had his reasons:
''You know smething'~ I sti ll
find it difficult to believe this
kind of acceptance. I still don't
trust it."
"The mail I got on 'Gomer'
was mostly from children," he
remarked. ··Now the majority
of the letters are from adults.
Most of them say how much
they appreciate having a show
11•hich thc>y can watch with
their children."
'S andburg'
Cast Listed
In Fullerton
"I live to sing. And I thought a
\'ariely show of my o"·n ~·ould Casting for the Fullerton
be more rewarding to me Footiighters' upcoming pro-
personally. A3 to the money. I duction of ''The World or Carl
didn't kno1\'. But as it tur ned Sandburg" has b ee n an·
out, doing the variety show nounced by director Brad Fry,
ha s mt!:ITtt more c:nney for who will stage the show :it the
me.;. _,.. f\.tuckenthater Cultural Center
So.he is doubly pleased \\'ith next month .
Medley Returns
For Fine Show
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
Of "-Ofllr ~Ill ll•ff
Bill Medley, one of Orange
County's homegrown en-
tertainers, returned to U\e
county • at Anaheim's 'Off.
Broadway \Vest, wowing his
audiences i n oulltanding
shows Friday and Saturday
night.
Medley, who sang with Bob-
ToaJtltt et 1:00
2001
UC Irvine by Hatfield as the Righteous 1 --------:--::-:
Brothers until 1968, displayed
his versalitity during lhe hour-
lung show, singi ng r o c k
favorites. selections r r 0 m
musicals and gospel numbers .
The young singer received a
standing ovaUon after s.lnging
The Irvine R e p e r to r y a medley of songs he said he
Theater will open Its 1970 hoped would typify the 1970's.
season with a production of The son&s included "Abraham,
!ifartin and John.'' "Wha t the "The Misanthrope," opening \Yorld Needs Npw ls Love,"
Feb. 11 for two weeks at lhe and "Give Us Peace."
Repertory
Sets Show
Studio Theater on campus. Hi s deep baritone voice
Herbert Machi?:, a pro-gives Medley hi s "soul singer"
fesslona l director in his third quality and makes his delivery
season with the UCI company, of son~ like "Swing Low.
wUI direct the Moliere cos-Sweet Chariot•• and "Swing l'=:== Do w n Charlot" something tume comedy. Bob Currier is special.
stage manager, with Steve f\.1cdlcy was playing to a
Johns and Betty Tesman partisan audience F r i d & y
assisting In the production. night, many indicating they
we.re from his hometown of _Comprising tbe cast are Fullerton. His orchestra was
Oakley llall, Tom Culp, Jon also Introduced as being from
Law, Anne Cohen, Jack Orange County.
Gardiner, Manual Diaz, Donna The young audience agreed
Fuller, Aaron Nichol.son, Pam with him when he told them be
was glad 10 be playing at a Brown, Larry Lott and Don much-needed Orange County
Free man. night club.
"The Misanthrope" wi ll be The amazing Tiny Tim is
presented Feb. 11-14 and 18-21 . scheduled to "Tiptoe Through
Other productions in lhe lRT the Tulips" at the discotheque
season will be two weeks of _t_M_s_F_r_id_•_Y_•_n_d_S_a_tu_rd_•Y_· __ ,.
one-act pla ys, Aprll 27 through Sally is Top Bananas
t.1ay 2", and "The Rimers of
Eldritch," h1ay 27.30 and June On Any Comics Page
...
+ """' HW.. al M af-•IND. : lltMll' NAC:lt • ......OJtCI
NOW EXCLUSIVELY!
aJ..IJ .. lP'Cl\.llQ .. WT11L!'f1Xl.t1'(11!.-
5 ARBRA OMAR
S!REISAND · SfWllF ~~;}
,l~J GIRI.
or _,,.,,,., ........ -. ... ,,_., __ _
'6. . 1•--------;;11 Reservations may be ob-•n•n• cMllUI ,.on '"...., P11&0 ""'"
tained at the UC! box oHice or NGC THIATlE COi,. NOW THRU TUESDAY
l~by~c;al;H•;g ;833;-66;1';· ~~~II f oi·~~ 1
ENDS TONIGHT
"ON HER MAJESTY'S
SECRET SERVICE"
"' "GUNS OF THE
MAGN IFICENT 7"
STARTS WIDN£5DAY
~ Dilt9 ,,._,." ........ 516-1711
ACllS OF fREI PARKING
SHOWTIME 7:00
"rib
cracking
comeclJ"
-JUOtlH CRIS T.
TODAY SHOW
l h1 most
.. • •IAC:H •i: . AT •LLla + + ••T. COAIT HW'I'. • ... H 0110 0 'l'W'f'.
14J'·9•09 • HUNJIN(ITOlll •-.AOH
,•
•
,.
'
l l Ch•r11e with gas
34 Hock and sack
DOWtl
l Did Uie same
25 Cl1ss 53 Room
2& E. Indi an 5~ Young
'Stl'eetcar'
Tryouts Set
the success of "The. Jim adcrs "'ill be Joh n \Vard.
Nabo rs Show." The NieJsen.-~ecl:anie Otey and ~largaret
ratings indicate that it is the rritt. Dancers are Karen
most popular of the shows that Ha , Donna Edwards and
debu ted this season. Nabors Carly Field. The chorus will
even perfonned the fea t of consist of Katherine Luckett,
defeating the s upposed I Y Vickie Budd. Kathy Wright.
unbeatable Bob Hope, when Alice Mallet. Herb Mallet,
the latter slarred in his Elizabeth Deveny. Karen
revival of •'Roberta ." You can Valerie Reinert, Shiela Stof-
bet that the sagacious Hope fregen, Barbara Otey and J im
will not soon be doing any Noack. ENDS TUESDAY "
36 Another time 38 Compl tl~
turn:
Informal
3' Ont more
41 Cry out
43 Mal dt ·-44 Unfa stentd 46 Squelch : z words 47Ad1111l as a member 4' Btak
2 Country
bumpkm:
Sl ang J Oversupply
4 Spanish pol
5 Wound
b Conn t clicut senal04':
Nlckna111e , 7 Occupying
leased
premises
S Neckwe ar
iltlll
9 Abound
pundit anlmal
27 Fabr ic 55 Jack-·--: TV 28 Not personality
rtgulattd 5!. F'ver
2'f Chane~ upon, 57 Lift up
31 Bt slcic 5' Large 32 Oialect of coll ection
Dakota 60 Anatomical
33 Contest in passage
a sports &l IOU p1ogra1n b2 Can. 35 Peel off footb•ll's
37 Ota I Inti --··Cup with sound 65 Company:
40 Ac!Jecllv' Fr. su fl• i.bbreviation
1127 /70•
T h e \Vestminster Com-
munity Theater has chosen
Tennessee Williams·· classic
drama "A Streetcar Named
Desire" as its next production.
and will hold auditions for the
play on Sunday, Feb. I.
Doris Allen, who earlier
staged the original play "The
Haunted Wood " and won the
group's best actress award for
1968-69, is directlng. A cast of
five men , five women and one
teen-age boy is required.
Readlngs will be held at I
p.m. and 7 p.m. at the PTA
building on Hoover Street just
south of Westminster Avenue.
ON TH E TUBE
For th1 b11t 1Juid1 to wh1t'1
h1pp1ni119 on TV, r11d T'f
WEEK -di1trihut1d with th1
S1t~rd1y 1dilion of th1 DAILY
PILOT.
Wit!~i
-.,......: 2•os lot' CetK' Hlthwoy
ENOS TONIGllT
"I ATTLE Of llUTAIH"
i T ... JITS WEONl'IOAY
''THI llCllTI OF
SANTA YITTOllA"
mo re book-musicals. And he 'll Jack Gittings is musical
doubtless avoid placing his director for the show with
specials opposite Jim Nabors . Masami Kuni handling the
For Jim the new job is a choreography. The folk rock
breeze after seve n years film· ensemble \viii be under the
ing situation comedies -dirction of Scott Owens.
before "Gomer" he did a two-, Th A d G ·r Described as "an evening or year stint on ' e n Y n · music, dance and literature
fllh Show." and of mixed-media en-"For eight months a year on ~ 'Gomer' I was up at S in the tertainment." the production
morning every day," he ~·ill open Feb. 20 for three weekends al the center, 119 recalled. ··~fy work wasn 't Buena Vista Drive, Fullerton. like Jim Arn e s s , in
·Gunsmoke.' \1·here he comes!,;:==========:,
;, two days a week. Or Fred BALBOA
Macf\.1urray on 'My Three 673 04I
Sons.' I was in e~ery shot. -4
'"And for the first four years OPEN
of !he sho\v I didn't trust my •:45
success. Every weekend and 7ff E. l•lltoa a.ri.o. P.nlntula on every vacation. 1 ·would !~-------= lake off to play nighl clubs
and roncerts, figuring that the
\\'hole thing would blow over
some day.
Exdusiv1 En119menll
TONIGHT AT I & 10
THE REIVER : is1SCOUNDREL,
•n OPERATOR
•nd 1 BRAWLER , •••
ENDS TONIOHT
"Stolen Kisses"
"Al ice's Restaurant"
STARTS WEDNESDAY
._, -
er!# -u. , ''I ~ "Jechnlcolor" 1t0111 • Panarlslon'" ~· lln1ltdArt1sls
Darill Nlffl
"THE BRAIN"
Bargain
Matlnff
Wednesday, 1 p.m.
ElliLalM11:b Warren
Taylor Beatty
"Tiiie
OdyGamme
m'Jna;wa11 -In.fl!~ OC ll!lE l!!I
''Tl>o G~IY G-I~ ,....,..,
'"'""' OlllY ,,_ ,,. ~.M.
~. SM6l1r ,,... ,(. ~ ...
CO-Hlf -"IANDOLERO"
Or1n91 Of\I)' 1t l :JCI .. 10:JCI
'"Th. °"'' a-..
-
,,,_.
Shto_, At
1110
1-t C-,1• -.:.a _ 1,1s P.M.
.......... -.. '1' ••
C stereo103FM
thesoundsoftheharbor
~d.~~7-youve never heard it so good
LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICI LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE Lg(IAL NOTICE Romne y
Running
Or No t?
WASHINGTON CAP) -A
top Mlchlcan Re pub Ile an
rtads Otorae W. J\Omncy'1
near diaclalmer of Senate can-
didacy 11 a 11 .... 1 lbe bOllalng secretary, or bh Wife, really
want to run 111tn1t
Democratic incumbent Sen.
Philip A. Hart.
Of the four men President
Nixon tt:crv.iled to his Cabinet
from tl\e natk>n's state houses,
Romney now appeara the mo1t
Ukely to held back: into elec-
tive politics -personally, or
as the hueband of a candidate.
Jf ~ does not make the
race , hls wife, Lenore, may -
Jn fact, Romney said Monday
she would be the better choice.
The fonntr Michi1an
goveroor who now heads the
04!partment of Housing and
Urban Development has urged
Michigan Repub\lcan11 to agree
on another candidate to
become a consensus
challenger to Hart.
But in a Monday news con·
ference he did not totally rule
out a Se:nate campaign, for
himself or for Mrs. Romney.
Only if the party cannot aaree
on another candklate, Romney
said, would Mr1. Romney con-
sider lhe race.
A leading GOP flcure, in·
listing on anonymity, said the
message appattntly is that
Romney or his wife will be in
the runnin1;.
Romney•s-btnt ot 1J08'.Slble
availability is likely ilseU to
prOYe a barrier to a consenSW1
on any other candldate when
party offlciab meet in St.
Clair, Mich., Saturday to talk
about the comin1 campaign.
R'Omnty's wtfe campaigned
at his aide during hit state
house races and his 1hort-Jived
bid for the Re p ub l ican
prHidential nomination two
years ago.
The party heJr.11.rchy Is like.
ly to prove reluct1nt to tum to
another candidate while the
Romneys remain possible en-
tries. "They would start with
a tremendous advanta1e," a
state GOP leader ~aid.
This poses a tactical pro-
blem for Rep. Donald \V.
Riegle Jr. of P'lint, 32 years
old. serving his .second term in
the House, and Interested In
biddin1 for the Senate.
Riegle is trying to decide
What to do In vftw ol the
neither in-nor-out R o m n e y
position.
An earlier protptcl, Thomas
E. Brennan, chief justice of
lhe Michigan Suprtme Court
already has declared himself
out of the running .
The party source said Bren.
nan's move may have been
prompted by adv1nce word
the Romneya were not folng to rule out candidacy.
There has betn !peculation
about three other N l z o n
Cabinet men as poe~lble can-
didates for Senate Seats, but
no 1uch move Is likely in any or those cases .
Robert ff. Finch. former
lieutenant ( o v e r n o r of
California, now secretery or
health, education and welfare.
w1s said to be hoping for a
chance to seek Senate ~l~ctlon,
but the way appear'! barred.
Republican Sen. Georae W.
Murphy la runninf ror re-eltc·
lion, and there Is no polltlca1
room for Finch.
There a1110 w1s speculation
about Tran1po r tatlon
Secretary John A. Volpe, who
re11ifned as govPrnor o t
Massachusetu to enter the
Cabintt, as a posaib l e
cha1len1er to Sen. F.dw11rd M.
Kennedy (J).M111.),
It has faded. as have the
guesses that Secretary of the
Interior Walter J. Hickel
might seek" to become a
tenltor from Alaska. Hickel,
also 1 former pvernor. hu
ruled out 1ny Senate bid, a
apoketman 11id. T h e In·
c:umbent there is S e n .
Theodor• F. !'.te~ns, •
Republlcon Hickel appointed.
Week Start
For Solons
SACRAMENTO (AP) -The
telistatutt ls off to a week
start this year.
Introduced so fir are rcsolu ·
tions prool1lmtn1:
Jan. 11-25 as Callfomla Ski
Week. Jan. 2$-31 u Junior
AdUevtmtnt Week, Feb ... 14
11 Electrical Week, School
Nune Recoplllon w .. t 1nd
Ntp Hl11ory Weelt, Feb. Ji.
II 11 Sertoma Freedom w .. k
·and NaUon•I i:npn..ra w .. k.
March 1·7 a1 Industrial
EduooUon Wetk, Aprtl If.II 11
Envlronmtntll Ht1lth Weck
lllCI Schoolbus Safety Week,
P.1ay 3-1 11 Welcome Wqon
Week an<I Columbian Squlm
Wttk and Stpl. 8-13 u Square
Dance: Wttk.
" .. . . ; # •• "' .. ,, . . " •
DAil V PILOT J p
Hi, Tea~h
AT NIGHT SHE LOOKS LIKE THIS
Jinn y V ses Words , Cur ves
NEW YORK (UPI) -There
a.re some _wJlo _believe girls
who work in i v i e d lowers
shouldn't toss curves.
And that poses a problem
for Jinny Jasper, a beautiful
(37-23-35) blonde who teaches
English by day at an exclu·
slve Manhattan boys' school
and dances by night in the
chorus of Ann Corio's "This
Was Burlesque."
Authorities at the school
don 't really approve of Jinny's
double life. especially when it
is mentioned in lhe newspa·
pers. They'd be just as happy
if nothing were ever printed
aboul the school except what
goes out in the illustrated bro-
chure s.
Her students. s e v e n t h ,
eirhth· and ninth-graders. take
a diHere.nt view. At that age.
it's areal to be the only kid
on the block whose English
teacher l.s a1ao a dancer.
People in the audience who
recoflliZe her think U'1 a gas.
''My 1tudenta bring me clip-
pings from home-town news·
papers all over the coun-
try ... "Jinny says. The audi·
ence reaction ls friendly.
"While we're dancing, we
can see the first nine or ten
rows of seats. Now and then.
J see someone pointing at me,
and I have a pretty good Idea
what he's saying.
"One number takes us down
in\Q the aisles. Occasiooally,
some-0ne who recognizes me
from my pictures will call out,
·Hi. Teach '!"
"This Was Burlesque" Isn't
really a burlesque show. It'!
a fond remin iscence of what
burlesque might have been
like 30 years ago -but hard·
Jy ever was.
"There's a lot of slapstick.
and no real nudity.'' Jinny
says. "At most. the strippers
only gel down to panlies and
a g-string.
"The c h o r u s does some
bumps and grinds, but in a
modified way. It 's a stylized
dance step."
Jinny spent her early life
in Yorkville. Ohio. but her
parents took her to Daytona
Bench, Fla.. when she was
still a little girl. Now 24. she
is a former Orange B o w I
queen and Miss University of
Florida.
Her husband, Andrew Yoh ••
also is an English teacher in
the school where Jinny teach·
es. He moonlights (or perhaps
sunlights is the proper word)
as an actor-singer Jn stock
during summer vacations.
The Vohs share a handsome 1 Wesl Side apartment with Ka-
buki, a fi ve-year-old pekingese
who moonlights as a photog·
raphers' model.
IN DAYTIME SHE LOOKS LIKE THIS
Report Card Dropped
In East LA Sc hools
LOS ANGELES (APJ
Start.In& Feb. 2, elementary
tchool pup\~ In predominantly
Me1ican-American East Los
M1e~ no longer will rteeive
repGl't cards.
Inatead. nys Asst. Supt. ol
School• Herbert C a d w e. 11 •
''Partni-Teachtr Con·
ver11Uon1" will be tried.
Cadwt.11 told 1 newt c~
fer~nct: Weclne.aday : "Report
cards will be pot asldt to
make way for conversalions -
1fmple, inlorma1 talks betwftn
par~ta and lbe men incl
women who leach t h e I r
children.··
At the end of the school year
there will be a general pro-
gress report, also given In
conversation (orm. Students
who lag tn some: subjects: will
be moved along to the next
grade and givtn special http
on those areru:.
ParenlJ will be encour,agtd
to make a~polntmenls for
these conv~tlons. Jn cues
whert t11ti is lmp.ractkat,
tc'achtrs wlll ao to the home •
•
• '>0 DAILY PILOT Tutsday, Janu.uy 21, 1<170
Everyone~
S-etfllnt Jl,ot
S--S..Wanfl DAI
I
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$29,950
pres!lge corner location.
Ooc of e. kind .,..•i!h large
fo1nily roo1n w I BBQ.
OVC'ndzed n1astC!r b d r n1 ,
ma1sl11C' used brick
fireplace, 2'~ spa r k l ing
bnlh1 & \\'nlk to r.tarincrs
Sthoot. Petite lwa!('(i &
filtcl'cd POOi.. l,rired to
8C'll at $39.9.:iO. CA L L
5'1.>-8424 (opc_n <'\'l'S) Soulh
Coast Rt!al Esl<1li'.
HIGHLANDS
Just listed this be(te.r titan
ne1v spacious 3 Bt + fam-
11 roon1. Builc-i n oven,
111ngt' &: dishll'asher . Car-
pels, d r a p e s, beautifully
h1J1clscaped. Priced to sell
in the loll' $40's.
* * OCEAN FRONT * * Pounding llllrf breakiui owr
lhe rocks below ·your
private balcony, with the
• 6E'& broeze ll.lowlnc your
e.11res away! Th; 11 ex-
ceptionally lovely 3 BR 2
BA O-Y-0 has approx 1100
fl . of lu.xurlous livlns, pool
& recreation •rea•,
elevator, double parkin:
spa<.-e in g~. Anxious
0\11\el'S will flnanct'. .&·
ceptional buy al $51,500.
J( you a1e in th e 1narket Ior a
I\"E\V hon1e, see these outstand·
ing custo 111ized homes, built by
].'rank H. Ayres and Son locat-
ed 111 a pr1n1e area very c~ose to
I !uni 111gton Slate Beach. The
hon1c!I ilre priced from $27,550
IO $3J.ti90 and vary in size from
J to 4 bcdroon1s. 2 to 3 car gar-
ages and :.! to 3 baths, \Vith
~hake or n1ission tile roofs. {ire·
pluces. underground utiliOes.
toncrete drive\1'3ys. built-ins.
11nd carpeting. There is \'/\and
l•'IL\ financing available. There
are 9 hon1es available because
of <'redil rejections. Occupancy
by ~1 arch 1. 1970 in this unit.
Set on approx. V,i acre near back bay. J.las
existing out buildin g!'. A-1 zoning for horse s.
OvJner asking $2a,650. Submit all offers.
JUNK THE LAWN MOWER
2 story spaciou s t\\PO Bd. condo1niniun1. Patio
kitchen. gas BBQ, plus 420 sq. ft. OOnus roo1n
with dark room. All this, and just steps to
s parkling pool. Priced at $26,750. O\vner \viii
sell. lease, or allow a lease purchase. O\\•ner
transferred and in a hurry.
COMMERCIAL DREAM
164' fro ntage on 1-l arbor Rlvd .• suitable for
restaurant or medica l building. S1500 per
fron t ft. or n1ake offer. ;\dditional i{-2 prop·
erty in 1·ear.
Eaau;ide Costa i\1e~. Span-
111·· We roof, t'('.n tlilll on large
Tix150' lot. Income .$385
n1onth. Our besl income l'C·
turn in area.
Exclusive With
Newport
at
1'10RGAN REALT)" 67"..-6612
---UNEXCELLED VIEW
B/B uf llarbor & ocean. Altr.
Victoria EA!:l"TSIDE.COST,\ l\llS..-\? splil le\'e:I hon1e on R-3. 5100
Three !>edrooms, lien, d1nu~ i;q. I!. lol. Ideal for 4 Apl.
64'-8811 1'\.IOlll, nkt• kitch1•n. rovc>1'Ptl units. $225,000. :?"JOl Ocean
patio. Owncr .,..•ill flt:l'l'Pt 10111
l•nytime) down 11ay1nent (roni qu11li-Blv., CdM . By appt, only. ::iii=~~~~~i ll<'d Buyer. PriCC" . S.ll,jC(). Linda Isle Development
----Availablr for oceuriant'~'. BILL GRUNDY ff75.l210
''Ginny" i\!ornson haf; only IMMEO. POSS. Bay & Beach RJty, Inc., -MOfiE-VALUE 1--
hc . .'e n 1,1.i(h COLLEGI:: HEA i,. 901 Dover Di·. Suitr 116 NB . '
TY two 111onths s, 1111.~ Hl· 6r 2COO E . • "18-6.956 4 BR. W;C'. romC"r lot. liar·
l'<'ad.v 11ttftlHN:l 1Lt'1' 1;o<1I for 5 BR & FAMILY ·>-vc~ .. J hor Vi('111 llills. 2;jjlJ &I. ft., FRENCH 1) 1·s. new. Now only S6i,900.
.January . OVER $1~5.U~'tl TOWNHOUSE A ··,\1Usr SEE"!
IN SAL!::S~ !And orH~ n1vre This largr fa111il.v hon1e i11 ~ &lrnis. _ 2 Ba!h~ "B/B" REAL TY
RIV IER,.\ REALTY
::O!ll8 COAS'f HIWA'i
South Laguna 499-2800
M ission Viejo 170I
PRICED Tu Sell! La Pu
llomt. Custom Xtras. Very
Clean. By ()lvu. 837-9144
D1n1 Point 17l0
2 COMMERCIAL LOTS
147' F'ront&a"e by 133' deep to
alley. Corner location on
n1ai11 access , lad to harbor.
Priced lower lha1• any Cl ln
D.P. at $68,500. Term,.
Our ne xt unit is no'v on s a le for
occupancy in !\'lay and June
1970 find introduces the new
3,000 sq. ft. ''El Dorado" mode!
priced froin $34.490 .
DREAMS .... DREAMS .. _ .DREAMS ....
Become a reality in this 4 or 5 bedroo1n C'O·
Ion ia! castle. Large n1aster be droo1n en-
doY.1ed. $33,000 and on a cul-de·sac, \\'ilh
large fruit bearing trees. Seller \Viii pay all
assumplion co sts.
ll l'l.!k 10 i;o~ t No1·1h Costa J\f4•sa 1virh all Cundondnlu1ll . POul 67!r.30CO 51S-S868 Eves.
:::hr has OVCJ' $:i()(l.()()(I Jn Ji~!.
lng.'I si rlL>e f'Olning to COL.
Ll:;Cl!:. lier ~Olll fur 1~70 i.~
at lc11st SI00.000 in sul~~
~·at·h month. Looks like she
has a i;:OOd slurl~
th..-buil!-tns inclut11ni;: a wa. Pnvnle Piitiu
Irr· c·unrlltioner needs a lit1tr S.'12,jOO fOR Sale ~y owner, house Z..
TLC. Priced w1:1y under mill'· LIDO REAL TY INC. J;Rl'tlf;C.apl. Oil 1 lot. Each 2.
kr1 , l~Ul'l'Y. this 11•011·1 lasf. Br, 2 Ba. Tol11J intoine $400
3377 Via Lido 673·T;l00 0,0. 11.1·11, "•co·I """"ralc 0:-ILY S:W.9.'JO FllA, FIL\/ " "".--
POINT REAL TY
:Hlj(j Coast Hwy., DB;n11. Point
(714J 496-5323 Rancho La Cuesta Homes
on Brookhurst a t Atlanta,
Huntington Beach
968-2929 -968-1338 2629 Harbor Bvd., Costa Mesa
546-8640
Sv lisl 111' IJuy rral ,•sl1Jh'
fru111 a w1n11~·r . Sl.'C or c•all
•·cinu.v" at COLL l~U !.'.:
VA. NEED 240 C-2 Ft?-guesl Bdrni & bath. Price
!Tave 8-30' tt. !or_. wl!h \'&ry .. $49.500. Art 4 pn1, 494-9836
ing in1provemenrs anrl rell•~.
Use "as i.s" 01· build tge. Lido Isle IJSI
dt•vrlopn1t>n!. t!.!,j()Q Each. 1----------
DANA POINT. By owner.
Duplex upper &: loW1!r .
Ocean view, nr be&ch &r
Shops. Good cond. $39,500.
49()-;)91-4 P.EALTY.
R. C. GREER Realty
llii Vi11 Lido b7.~9300 LEASE/OPTION
~ BqRl\I, 31,: BATH
General 1000 I G e nera l -----
1000 I Gener1I IDOO
~~~~~~~~~~' l~AYF'P.ONr PE/l.'Tl-fOUSE '
546·5110 ---1Panoran1iC'0 vie11·. 2 BR. 2 Ba. (ne~iciMmallltlb!) Costa Mesa 1100 Docks. $.16.500 10·.~ dn. 7%
.WOO sq. n. 107 Via EOOli.
3 car garage. C1111s, d111s.
2 yrs )1lUng. ht 'JIB OFF·
ER! 011·ner, {Zll) 244-3101,
e11C'5 I :rul) 24Q.()700.
Apft. For Sale 1980
h
NE\V deluxe 2.+g.S.12
& 2-1 unit1. Walk to
beach. Appreciating
,.. area. Olvner I Bldr.
-Lindbor&' Co. 5.16-2579
Builders Close Outl I
$1 ,400 Down 5°/o
fo 1.0\\', LO\\.' Ul!l'N'~I in
Bca1·ti ;\rt'I\~ .\I Ass Iv!.'.:
BEDf!.00.\!S plus ~pra.,..·l1ng
l1\'1ng .V_ fA'.\11L\' HOOi\I
1111h flour lo 1•1J1ng t'IRE-
J~LJ\CE! 1Jr1i:h1 as sunshine
Ca!1fcwnia i:11nh'11 t_•lt•tl ric
k11rhrn 11'llh 1tibhw11shC!r.
Plush shag 1·11·1K'1~ r1~un
Rl:;,\:O.IED ('[II.ING \i \•111i:;
1i111n1 10 ~i-clud~'d 111;istt'r
lll"droon1 11h1s ~l'run1ptoui.
11ulln11:in n1ar!lll' U 11 1 h ~.
POOL ::17.ED. hlcw,:k walll'd
batk ~ard 1111h profrs~ional
ly landliCapc;i front 11 j ! h
~pnnkll't'S. TOTAL ONLY
$3-1. IOO. :O.lOVE NO\\!! we SELL A HOME
EVERY JI MINUTES
\Va Iker & Lee
2'7!)) J/a1·bor Bl\·d. al Adams
:>15-r16l 01lC'u 'Ill 9 P:>.1
Missing The
Back 40?
Jll.'rc·.'I 1 3 at'l'<' PLliS In
Bat·k Ra.11 11 llh ~ O.tr111s :.!
baths ,r.,-1.·1x::o· pool 1111h div.
ing llllanl. 'fr,11 f'llA 01' \Ii\
or IU', 11•1•1 n
$27,50 0
Newport
at
Victoria
64~Bll
(anytime)
NO GIMMICKS
$1 TOTAL DOWN
TO G .I.
St;PER :::llAllP ;: llC'dro-)o.Jlll,
2' balh II 1lh ;ulih•!I ~·.111111,';
Hoon1. f<'i•1l.lll'~ C;il1lo1rn1;1
h11ck F1r1•pl,11'•'. U11Q .. ind
n1oder11 Ut11!1 · 1n kitrlH'rl
C1rpc•1~ and 1·1H1un1 dr111X'\
llU'\lllblKHIL \\'ill •11su sell
ln1v rf0'.1 11 F.11 A, S~.i,900
WE SELL A HOME
EVERY J l MINUTES
RARE TURTLE ROCK
RESALE
N<>ar UC!. Pt·izc \linning 4
bdrm 2 1~ ba1!1 11 ilh a1nu1n .
211)(1 sq f1. Va1:;1nr & ready
fur e.xccu!t\'C, Sell ur ]ease
op1lo11.
$42,500
N ewport
a t
Victoria
For Sale/Mesa Verde
~h.1rp P;;if'l'."1'1 11•r " 1lh a!r1um
t'll!l'y. Nl'11·ly p::iinted intrr.
1•11·. ~ho11' lw11u11rull y. 01111-
' r 11·.1ns(('11('d 8: ha~ !'l'nl
111-t'd 10 sell. QtJt(·k possr~·
i.1011. Offcrro at S3:i.950.
For Lease
PARADISE FOR
THE THRIITT
Thro11• a1\ay your 1minl
bn!$h: lh1s u1vnt•r made all
lmprovcrnrnl~ for you. N1•1v
p;Hnt ou1~idc 11nd tn; new
11\'tJl'IHlu CHrtll'I l'Oll1 Jllinu•n1-
f'd \111111111111111 p;inl'lini::. ~~n
juy ~'Ollr ~ri:•l'IOU~ DIN ING
f{OO:'ll or h.•1vr-11 h1n11ly
L'OUk-0111 on !hi' 111 0 11t1t ius
'' ilh bl'Wk UBQ. Pr1 V!-llC' cor-
n,•r on a 11ui1·1 Cul-dC'·~a 1' .
/Jlenl,\' or roon1 rur ROAT
Ill' C,\~!PER• N1•11• S1111t•1·
Brtl~. Ccnlt:r. i:::1·an1n1ar, ,I r.
high. l11gh school:i and t•ol-
1<':;:1' PLUS public park • 11JI
ru1 r;1sy wulk! ! Thr 1·alur
i~ th•· llc~r pa1·1. , .S21,;i00 ..
for four IJ('(lroo1n.~ I'; harh.,
. .S1i0() ln1t111l fllA 111\'r~•· n;,~,u or i\S..,U.\IE LO\V J,\'.
TER l::~wr ~·JN 1\ NC I NG.
11u r:.RY ::
LLEGE REALTY ---------1 int. i\lct\C"nzic. Rltr 646-0732
Surrounded By
the Calm 1
:==:1:"":=.,.,.=:":"':""=·"'= I SOUTH BLUFF'S • '3 BR. 2 BA. split-c CAST lcVt":I t."Ondo. $29.500 or
lease/op1ion. 6.14-2039
In that old fashiuned atn1os.. FOREST E
pht•rc ot rural prival"Y on a •
sl~t of (·Ustom l)'Pc' hon1-o L s o N cs. 4 l11 rg(' t!('dl'OOlllS, !lin-
ini: !'00111 and 11\1).:<' l<.1111ily
1w1n 111ilh wood bu1'uini,: f\1'•"
1i111cc. lk•rt• 1s ro1J111 fur liv-Olson A~sumables
111g, Wth ~n~id<' and 011L~1d~·. Assume FHA Loan Prc~tu::c 1'~a,1sHlt• atld1Pss.,, $J..),500. ll1'1<'~ ,1111ur i.:hnn('t• tu su1r
Colesworthy & Co.
SS. Ju~1 tak1· •J\'('r fu111us 11c
lull' u11e1't'sl Fili\ luan No
1111;1l1fy1m.:~ ;: B«<h'IJ0111,, :.!
hat h f'oJIC'j:1' JI.irk F:~late
hu111e. &•Jlllr.i!e j)(ln•·lo•d f1;11n.
!h l'UOfll. Undl'rpnc1.'d for
;irea at $16.!.l'iO, Br sn111r1,
N.~ IOdl1)', Call ti l:rO:\C::.
ln1· Rc•11l1or,
645°0303
nr llorbcll' Crn!t•r
2'2'99 Harbor Blvct . (.' ,\/
PLAZA i~ JUsi 2 nunures ~1\'ll\' from Newport Heights 1210
rh1s l Bcdroon1, 2 ·a ;i r h
llon1r, A b!ock 11·1111 sur · OWNER
rounds the large lo!. 11 i!h .. , pl1·nty o[ J"OOm for a pool. I I\ 111 f!n;inrr-'!11s ·I hd1'1n 2
If you nt'<'tl a I l::li•lh'OOin b11:h hon1e \\'llh .pool . Only
hotnt', <'lO!k• 10 ~. Coasl lQ '. do1\n .; ~10 poinls to P~Y.
Plaza , !hi~ 1;; ii _call now~ Asking .~4 •. 5CO. Call office
P riceU al s::2.J!'{l, for part1culru·s.
546-231J
TIP TOP TERMS
Lachenmyer
Rea ltor
1860 Ne"'JIOrt Blvd .. Cl\1
CALL 646-3928 Eves. 646-Zl90
In1mac. 4 Br. 2 tia. ··cunr1ul-.FIXER UP-PER-.-
lrd C'lima1e" home. ran1. Close to school.~
rm. cov. palio. :! car ga1 3 Bdr1ns .. fireplace
In !\1csa. Nott~ areu. L0\11 dn Tl'iplc garage' on alley
. ~upcr finallt'Lng. $30.Jro Asking S2a,OOO
",\$!1'11l" "For ,\ \\'is.: .Buy"
1
[""""""'"""""""""""""
612'-7117
_R_id~le & Ro5s R~!rs .• Graham Rlty. 646-241A
$1 One Dollar 3.,,tl 1' •. Coa'1! lhry. 61 • .r7Zl;, Near Ne\l·port Post Orrlce
Moves You In HON~Y::'otOON CO'ITAGE G .I. LOAN
No Down -No Costs and •nl'Omc on co~ner .lo!. or S3.::.coo has been approved
Ve t s Both hOUSC'S IC'nC"" patios. on this J bC'droom . 2 bath w .... , do"'ns: 71~'.f ls! trust hon1e with pool ,-• J .,. 5 !rcnirndous bctlroo111s. 2 u d o f ·~• ~ ' haths. Built 111 11:i1ch(•n! -<'C ,; ivner a trr 6 p.m. garagr. Qualified V!'lC'1'<1llS
NE\V 5 Bdrm, 4~: BA Nord
j&_ylront-)>ler and s 11 p ,
,A~a·s besl buy. ().\'Tier. Im-
med. Occupancy. 494-6415
RENTALS
Hous•t Furnished
Huntington Beach t40o R•ntal1 to Share 2005
$44,500
Tili·IC!vcl wilh large basc0nlC11t
including 2 fireplaces. 4
bdrn1s :i baths, .,...ith assum·
111.ilc 61~<;~ F ill\ loan. For-
n1al sepal'alc dining roo111
large kilchen "'ith delu.xe
applic1nces, cozy den or fan1-
ily room, traditional living
roon1, approxim11.tely 3000
sq ft. Thill i! a mus: to sec.
l,!11'&~-
51/4 °/o, LOAN
lo assun1e. P)·mnls $167/mo .
3 BR, lg: fam rm. lg. lot.
Friced belo111 market. Sub-
1nit down. 2nd TD avail. * BRASHEAR RLTY ._,
!69.j2 Beach Blvd., HB
817-8507 Eves. 968-1178
BY Ch1·ner -3 Br, tam rm, 2
Bath. $29,.:iOO New paint, 2
FEi\1ALE \Vanted To Share
Nice Home w/same. 1
SC"hool age boy OK. ;125.
642-9610.
YG. man :1eeki~ momatc
for choice So. Bay Oub 1 Br
Sll5. 642-4723 or 6'!6-8078
N.U.
ROOl\1-AtATE needed. female
Ocean view, hug1t apt. priY.
parking. 6n.2.181
Costa Mesa 2100
1-~~~~~~-1
LARGE 4 BR. 2 BA, htd
pool. Family rm, frple.
C1'J;ls & drps. bltn!, dshwhr,
freezer. \V/D, $38.1. 6 mo
!St.'. 5:15-2413.
3 BR. 2 BA, house, 6 mot
lease. Avail Feb. 15th. $270
mo. $-OJ.47
Newport Beach l200 Tl! RF: E PROrE:.SSIO NAL
OFFICE:'=. l::ac•h $100 01· all
ll11'N' aJiou11ng for $200 . ..,.,.",."•"•"~''~' .. c~·,.,11.,.;1.~.,.1.,.'5iil"U""
l;11 •,11 luc11 tlon on San111 Ana
Al'rnur ju.~1 off 17~h Strct'I.
-College Park
Model-
Origina lly On Cover Of
Better Homes &
Gardens
Fan1ily Room' P11!lu ki1ch-:~l~~394 see 1hi.~ today~ Voi;:C!I Co.
<>n & Dishwash<'r. Homaiillc BY O\\'NER: 3 Br. 2 Ba, 2667 East Coast Hwy , Coi·-
fireplllcc: Cai1}('1s &-Drap-carpeots. drps, lovely yard, ona de! J\lar. 673-2020
blks from bch, o!f•l-----------1
B1·oo khurst. 22101 \VATERFRONT very private
Cap!st111no Ln. GI Joaii 4 BR Exec.1 unusual at-f>1a~~. Only $4;J00 dn. $;iOOO mosphere. $515 mo. 615-2717
2nd TD. $168 .mo. 968-41.12. OCEANFRONT 3 BR. \Vlnler
BAYCREST'S
FINEST r~! Ncvr.i· ltvrtl Jn:! ,\ sprinklers, nr. Parochial &
BUILDEllS CLOSE 0 UT public schls. S 3 1, J 00 . Newpor t Shores 1220 cu~1on1 p]l'gill'll'P. rhruout in
1his : Bit. :: Ba . hon11• tle-
r i1:Md i.,1 l·•ri;<:. IH'!J\t· l;1n1-
il~: 11f"'I, lalll. rn1 .. h1U11,1d
ri'11 .. 1·1·1 1·1o1,, ll' SIHl,O:xl.
L:n\quc tuunt• . 4 lx'C!rooms
plus e~i:11ing ramily room.
llugC' us1•d brick fireplal'e
1\1 lh Bar . B. Q rotisserie',
&·autiJul new carpets and
dra/Jl'.~. Liirg<' rornC'r Joi •
roo111 fur bo11!, lJ'ailC'I', f'IC .
Vasi posi;css1on. $29,950. 15~:
only ~~ hour 1'1 thr Blue Pu.1 ,'=''='·~XS=I========
cilic and thf' snu11•.1ipfll•d ----
111ounta1ns. FULL PtllCB I cM~e~s~a;._;O~e~l~M.;;.::a~'--~1~1:::05
I tl1 :'11 AC UL ATE J Br.1 _o~c~4~92~-~3~280~"=.,-,===~ S185. Garage, yard
DuplC'x. Si:i,!>:i0. F'rank 2 STORY/5 BDRMS * 673-8088 _.
OWNER WILL ~
FINANCE
EASTSIDE
.i .x' c:.1.-1.~ur. 1j0\Vll.
646-7171
S2'~.!ISO. we SELL A HOME
EVERY JI MINUTES
Walker& Lee
3 INCOME UNITS
L\Ta1·shal! Realty. 67:1-4600 Owner trans/Must sell! OCEANFRONT 3 BR. $300
2 .~ :t Bdrn1s. N<>11 carpC"ts & Dover1 Shore s 1227 dntpl'~. Bil-ins. Private P11-1.::.:..:.:;;c::.::::.:.: __ _:::;
Terrific buy/Only $35,950 incl ulil. Yrly lse.
Lovely home in mosl dcsir-~==*=="'=:1-<""nt==*=== I able 11.rea.. • hos. Fircplact's. Top loca-
tion.~. 0 "' n er. PrillC'"1pals
only. S.li . .aoo. 54&-0'151
IMPRESSIVE HAFFOAL REALTY
SPACIOUS 842-4405
Br. 412 Ba .i... niaids. F'ull
Corona d•I Mer 2250
Close To W•stcliff Coldwell, Banker & Co. 2790 Harbor Blvd a1 A1h1n1s
Dandy ~ Bcdrooni in excel· 550 Newport Center Or. ,.,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,.•l·•·ii;,;.ii-.,'.," .. 1.,0 .. -~""•"••''•'1•'..-1..-''.,1iii_ Mesa Ve<de lt•n! l"Ontl11 io11 on large tn-e h C l'f 1c.;,:.;.:_;.:;:..::.;, ___ ~l ~l ~IO:I
'1"0''0 10• "'"h ,i;,, ""'""· ,~;~t;,'t Beac 644'.'2~io DOVER SHORES .. ESA VERDE
ll'nglh vir w . Bay & l\Hn~t GREAT BUY
High c<>iltngs. 5(JOO .sq. ft. 3 & 4 Bdrms • 2 Baths
built around cout't. I car $23 990
CHINA Cove, view ,
beautifully furn 3 BR, 2 BA,
~mo yrly, 64~ appt.
pll'n1) of t'UOm ror boat & FANTASTIC m
lt•<tlct·. -"'""· "'"'""'-======== BA YFRONT """' L<>! MAJESTY
gar. E-z maint. In1111ed oecp. •
S\78,000. Asstune 6''i~O loan. SANDPIPER t;IOMES
011·1x•1-. 518-7249. Ion Bt'ookhurst at AUantal 1"1' 1u11! 1'ashcr included. Sh H VA loan L11rgr 'l-i;rory hoinr on fill rt 01·crlooking Chin& Cu\'t.s 5:!>,;)(':~ -$3500 do11•11 and arp ome • lot 111ith p1,•r & slip. S1n1'fl l ,t· ll111·1lor En1r11ncl'
1/\1r1er11 ill carry TD at 1i,i,• ~ !<!Sll'CRl:'I.' lead~ from ~pac. E\rrllenl <'"flOSUl'f'
646-7171 This;', bd1·n1 tllC'sa Highlands iou.~ t'ntry 1tl IJ'<'111e11dous Clo~r 10 B.1v & 01•<•an l)l.•achcs
Li1(' "likr a l'-in1:" 111 tl1!' ~~:;'~~~;:=';;;;l~m~·~ll~002~-~·1353~=~10~A~M~-1~P~~1
:i ht'<iroon1. :: bath bcuu1y! University Park 1237
B1lboa 2300
OLDER Oceanfront • 4
Bdnn . $300 leaAe. Fl'llnk
l\farshall Realty. 67:>-4600
hon1,. is l'"('Cl.'\lln~ly nLCl'. n1a~ler suit(', I Bcdroonis. Custo0111 plan$ for
BeaLLl iful C31"'''1s S: dra[K'~. I I I I ,,~ 11ri,::(• orn1'1 11·111;: 1'00111. clci:;anL ilon1r in(·lurlPd Dleondra lawn h·ont .t t'l'llr. r ·1 r run1 y roon1. rnarblc h'f'· s.·11,5CO
~~IJLL y AIR C'ONDITJON-· 1 ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ II Huntington EU, bl'1H1Ufully carpeotrri i• Harbour ~nu clra[XXI. CU&TO~l land-I Assuma ble Balboa lsl1nd 2355 1405
Lo1v in1f'l'<'s1 VA loan cun be Walker & lee l•c•.,"'10""m""v"";•wiiiiiiiiH•"'m""• ...
plaC<'. l"orn1al du11ng roon1. Listt'<i l'.'\clusivPly 111th
... SSIJ!lll'd $29.500 •12f!O Sq, I!, srW.500.
~ coArs john macnab
x·apiny sc.!s off this "jC\\'cl"f Low Interest \YATER r Ro NT home. IOIO SO BAY FRONT
lo f)f'r ecu~.11. Ju~! rNIUl'C!tl rot<' loan and easy cal'<' yard custom bll l story on 56' lot, •
to S-16.000. SO HURRY'.~ your husband will lovr You 3000 sq ft, 3 bdrms 3 baths, l to 10 y1·. lease for best Joe .
WE SELL A HOME .,..,ill lovr the 5pMciou'sncss den. L'"ix46' living rm deck & ~l\Ut. 4 BR. l~ bath homt:
EVE RY 31 MINUTES of having a Jargr j br home. dock on niain channel in & 2 BR, 2 balh apt. & 2 boa I 7&'\2 J:".dlr1~l'r
;, 10·~1140 g 12..-1 i;l.;
fi'*•t1
DIFFERENT
3 lxlrn1. 'P•t· 'n ~pun.
t<Mrn1in1> sk~l1:i;hl 1•r.
fl'Ct. Ufht[Ur p111in, f.1n-
tas!lc l10111e fnr c•nl1•rt11111·
Ing, J;;L'\'111 fur rvrryday
living. &'i" rn IX'l1c111·!
SZ7.:.00. An\1ous ro ~1·ll
to Ol)l'"'1·inl1\·r buy1•r.
BUILDER'S REPO
S15Ccl do" n, :l 11<11111' i t>.1lh~.
r<imlly l\IOJll. ~1·1 Ii"(' l>'ll'Ch.
firt•pltltr .I: ,.Ji l•u.11.1n~. J\
fnn!asllc buy 111 lusr )'f'ru-i;
111·1l'f' of S2:i. 7:f• I' \ L L
:i'*<J.1151 .111•r11e1,:l' It• ;ii i::~
talc 10Jl('n 1·w~ 1
COVER-SHORES
3 Brand New w /V iew
COURTYARD POOL
>I bdrm5. :: balh1 ... po11!l••r
room, flll~l~d lam rm 11
frplc. ~·orT't'181 din rm. t"1u 11
SJOO,l'OO Ro)' J. W1ui:I Co,
1-tl'I Gnb•'> Dr. 61G-ll.\O
OWNLR d1·~~i1•. A11~u1n~
:i1,'. lflll/1. opr. -4 llcrlr1n.
<len, bui:<' farnlJ.y 1111, 1·nlr)
hall, lull d111lnic rn1. hullt-
ln11, flrtphi.c.-e, brk., $29,:.llll.
5'10-17211
DOVER SHORES
P!'rt1t1 _fsmily home 1vilb
4 txlrms & den, 3 1 ~ bath!,
formal d1ni1Jg l'!lOm. plus
n~"'a l ion pool, A 5 k·i n g
$115,000.
~ WAL&LACE 1714) 642-8235
REALTORS !!Cl Dov<'r Dnvr. Suit" 1:.!0 Walker & Lee Your children 11ill love the H.M. Sticrilice $95,<X».terms pier l.. dock, Furn. $1200 g~nbC'lt~ 11nd ti~ flOOls. & financing a\·ail. fllr. Jones P'r month.
1'hr price'.' Under $40,000. 31~2504 or 12131 5834i006 Linda Isle Development -546-4141 -Nt>1vport B1~rh 2()13 \Vcst~·liff Dr.
646-771 1 Call us !or details. Bll.L GRUNDY 6TJ-3nO
Pete Barrett ~
JGfu ~\~!~1~1 ~1: ~
642-5200 ~ ..
INVEST-
''our 1,-.nt • O\l"n vour l)ll'n
"fllitious J bdrn1 2· blt!h, 1111
liUl l?·ln.~ ltl('ludin:;:-di~h11•Ash-
1•r. 1·arpl.'1~ .~· t!raf1t.:s. $1~ ·
11111 11ars ttll. (',\LL J.AC"-'.
llA1'.l:O.IO~D ll1•ri1u ~c l{C'al
EslHlr ~IO.l\jl ~opC'n c\'£'sl
-A-T0uch of-Spani$h-
fOpen Evenings)
Office Bldg.
~:,1·cl l1·nt r ~I. I 111· J1 t I u n
SIJO.OOfl i,:ood !C'rn1' . .fl 4CO
1110, il1(,ll\H'
3 Separate Units
roo111 fl)r n101•r ~ POOL .t
f111Jc,. $16.i inco1ne, SSOOO
t'hl, priC'r $50,DOO.
Kermit Riggs Rltr.
2!"1 \'l::A RS IN AllEA
Golfer's Paradise
\l'allt•d lh1t1u: :t Bl~. ~ dln Bcl\UI ho111r un 10th £T~c11 or + lamib .J., l11:r. 1·00111 u1rr Ber111ud11 l>uik"~ -finest drs.
i:arag<', Rf'duttrt 10 rr1 l"OUrsr: nooin) J BH, l
S~1,!)j() BA, Pool, furnishl:ll honie,
Walker Rlty. 67S.S200 lncls 2 goH C'arts. Club m1•m·
lJ66 ViA Lido, NB 0f)t'n ~n. llf'rsh1p «111111. Askin• SB.i.000
LUSK-EASTBLUFF ~ xlnt tr rnis.
O..\·ner 1ran,;, 4 HR. 2•:1 ba. Linda Isle 01ve lopment
t·an1. r1n. "·/2nd frpl Lg~. B iii Grundy 675·3210
1•01'flC'r lot Only '49.500 1.,..,...-_.,...,,....,....,
CORBIN-MARTIN -COLLE<:a;-PARK-
n~; \LTORS 67a-1662 A~11 n11' ;;i,.--;. loon, no c.'O!ilS ·ms E. Coast IhrY .. Cdi\t Slili 111() Pay,. :lll Prtl. hn· mur :: brlm1, 2 l~ith & !nm -$44,5~DUPLEX roon1. :i lll'l'pl111"·111. 1111111<'!1.
~,, of 1111)' lntonl". 1 Jlr f)Vfill Lu.in &I SlS.:JOJ.
l1i•11l un11 • I Br., full) flt1N:" S32.:icKI. O....m:r 11ill
rur"li. n•ar unit, :! C-•r r:tn-r. r11.rry 11n111ll 'ln<I Oi11·11
0~ r~r OC'l•upii.ncy + rcntul, f'ri-Snt-Sun. 12-l P\I. ~:ZO
"8 /B" REALTY Huckllt'll Rd. 0,1 nc r,
6i:>~ 67:1-%009 Evrs. G41·1S·t3 r rln. only.
I
LIQUIDATION!! New 3 level
• Red Hill Realty homes. Prices s I ashed! $370 mo/yrl.y. Furn/unturn. CU&LO:O.I hom<'. Vacant ~1 Univ. Park Ccntc•, 1 -•11~' Delightful 2 BR, 2 BA, 2907 Baker Street
bd • ~.11 c:: • '• .._ l''rom S-15,500 to $38.7;-,o, 4151 llrre's 11 ;:rC'a l ··:\lrSB VC'rdc" rins. " '"'-I!<. • panish. 1 • Call Anyl in1r ~~~ "°'!O '-le, 2 ear •"· 2 pa"-·~40. ti' I ~ Branford SI. Bid rs/ Agt. "'"' ....,,., hon1e 11 ilh lonnal din. r1n., llCl't', ... ,., c . ..:<'C'U \'C flOO ·I~~~~=~~~~~ 84G--0609, eves ~1-fil5l dock. Adults only, no pets.
fam. rm & l }'('11.l cood !Oic'(i 5 Bd 3 B th l year old. 0\l'IM?r/AgtnLI .---========='I 6,._,..,
txlm1s. V.11t•a111 11111\. F~Jl" rms G S fllary Joe tllcl.cod !H&-41•11 Irvine 1238 --,,,.,,,..,,,.,.._,.,,._.,-,--,---;;-;c:-' S 642 ·~-.. '-""'-----...:.:::.: Santa Ana Hgts. 1630 AVAIL lmmed. Lovely 3 B•, t'Quipped i;tandard pool. A HAKE ROOF -o.w -
"Canlbndgc-Sr1•1rs" horne. Near all ~choob. $37,COO • ,1 BDRM _ S20.500 Sl.t ,_, Opportunity 2 Ba Home. $22,j ti-io. No
bc'st of 1ernis. bl J N HORSES OR UN ITS • \1 ac 2 Students. li7!Ml223 '•6·'810 aMuma t.> ?an. ear good Knocks r I d I 2 ~ ~ srhls & l\i<'sa Vt'rde cc. Br. rp c. ht poo . stalls. Duplexn Furn. 2975 (rEGER~:rr~ Country Estate $29,500. O....·oer. 1861 Ne\\' Only Once tack rooms. 0\VNER,
l!:OO Adams •IH~ibor.CM. C1.1ston1 hu1!1 3 IKln11 hon11· • Jrrsey, c~r. S-5-noo Ltl\1'C, lea&e option or pur-,13=:1·~""=· :54.;· 5-$=='=8==== I $1~. Yrly rental. 1 ~ lov.oe.r.
.,,,..,....,.~~~""""""! ninny r\J1·as. Lur IS0!'..)00' • cha!(' this outslRnding netir· h Nr oce11n. All ulll. pd. Pet
ARIES niany, 1111111.1. 1 1,.1.,~. S7:-0JXJO. 1 _N_e_w_~po_,_t_B~·-•~c~h-.....::1200 !lt"\I' :I-bedroom, fllnilly room, L•guna Beac 1705 o i.-. Bkr, ~s34-6980
You ha\·(' ;i h('art for husi · Wells-McCardle, Rltrs. CAMEO SHORES 11'2·lmt h homt 11djolning a RENTALS nrs~~ You 'll rt't."&.;n1l'~· i.1 hiu·. 1810 Nriipur! Bli·d .. , C.i\l. park. \\'Ml rould be bC'tlrr BEACH Hou1e1 Unfurnished
gaiu in !hi~ top Nrl\'f>Ol1 !W~7Tl9 6·1~.!J(i.~I rv<'ll i-;njuy lht• 1Jlt1111.'ll!' in luxury for y<lll and )'Ol.lr 11n1:tll·fr~·
11 · 1 1 lh'.inj:' 111~1 rutrrta1ning in lhtln lhis k>vC"ly ho1nr on A CONDOMIN UM G I .......
"1tt 1t11 ai~·o, lOnir, l'l'rluc--LIDO SANDS th15 go~•'(lll.~. 1·u~ton1 built, quiet cul·de-~'r ~tr<'l't SPACIOUS 2 IR· ener• -
rd S6.00o to onl.v Sll.;iUO. J S BEDROOMS 1op quali1y h1>1111' s1tua14XI call Ull Abaul T1·n1111 2 BATH FREE RENTAL BOOK
HH.., :l ~tlhS: pool · :<ll<'t! l U:i.th.~. Lnrj:c )'111..t. uu A hugt' pr11111• rornrr sl1e 01~y $31.900 J.'acinr beautiful laill'c pobl SHA""' """"'AN 2 Bedroom y11nl. lk· qu1l'k or 1)1' ~orr~ ! 129 950 6.,., un1> f ,.....--..........,. .. , Hal P inchin & Assoc. G .,
1
. providing !hi• 11tn1oiir 1n 11ri· •.)-...,.,., Just 100 yard~ rom private monthly $175. Super Sharp
3900 E. COtUtt HllJ tir.i.IC:S2 eorgR~AWLTOt hR•mton \'llt'Y. S111X"rb 1nt<>nor design. beach, l..agulll arr~'. pcrl~t 3 Bedrooin, 2 bath,f'las bull!.
"" inc. 4 Bdnnlf, dc'n & huge for )'C'St round hvlllg, in-ins near inaJor shopping $28,500 673-4350 67J.1564 Eves. lanai, n1atter B«\·1n 20'x31', ve•tn1cnt or rentals. Se:lling Jea~ $725/?ik>, We haY~
5 Bedrm + F amilv Rm SACRJFJCE'. 4 nR2-f.\.\, 5 b;11h' &: i;:ta111ou1~u' p1Yd. completely turnisbed In strlk-others come look throua:h
r \'Ill, Sttiudf'd pool. Sl9S.000.1"'==========::0 ing locale decor. Two story our l>Ook. £."rcut111r lan11ly l.o~. 5 scp fan1 rn1, 2 st). Jl t'd pool .,_A i-•oy. 'l-.. ~-,• I• wllh •-•·-• I 11<1 ' d' •. I ~< ~ .. " c~ El T wW" auport, ,,......, WE SELL A HOME Ul"\lroon1 or den, x-lra ball~. "'Ii c ,. I\' "" /\'r \VC"._., r 1• r•y• nR co. oro 1244 lound Full 'nt ·~ .. _, e!IV\n 1 11· ~ ~.,. " ....., ry. Y m.•1 •11~ EVERY 'I MINUTES huce 111111t1y nn, 11ith n1tut-~ • ......,.;i. """""' 111· J,.IUU. (7l4t 614_.1910 1----------gorgeous grounds include 2 ,. .
al brirk ftn'pl11l"f', rntt-y haU. $41)..i;,n · W lk & L ri1n1~ All. j~O.lr.19 l·O\=cl.~N~E~R~T~,-,-,-,~,,-,-,-,-1-. FIXER UPPER ~ Great L.N~hT.,FRBORNT. l..!i.kc Forcs1 ~ .. Is; m"k"1".". ,·ho'',',··,:n~, ~-,'°1 a er ee
TARBELL 2955 potcnli.sl. L:1~ " bdrn1 ~iv . 2 Ba home. l.u:ic-"" • "6 u.>ro Harbor lllh111, F.11111ly 1·111 h d 11 r. 11 b -·~ Edi Xrwl'lOrl litlljht~ l11>mt' _ ur1ou.~ s ag C'flll!!, rapes. II')', o:..°<C<' t'nt uy, OlU!il r-npr 4 u1t11• lm . 11-;n-r;, lh"C'pl1u.•('. cr111·y hall. full •lhiini:i ronm & rump~ rooni BoaHni:; & fishing In front K'I! lo appr«:ialc. Shim'" ~J0..51~0 842"" ·
\\"1•st...:hff Plr.111 ari>:1. shall dlntnR rn1, IJyJll .u1~. 'H·' _ 2 fircplon.'oi _ 2100 ~Q tl of y1t 1·d. P ool, 1rr.nl1, upon applml by 01\·ncr,
<'PIS. 11ht1rlr h~·r11. rnt.::.00. ballt~. brk . $2:1.:iOO, .110-1731 h\'IJ\t: arrn. Pritttl fm· lm· clubhou~ prlvl. Be l ow phone .f99..2J;jl or 837-0791,
t\in1t3oi'\I R.E \ll ;:.zm NJ-:\\'POH1' llPl:,:hlll-n1n1hl· n1t'dlt1tr snit• nt S.12,.iOO, _!!llll'kt"t pri~. 494-3'63 L>Atl. Y PILOT D 1 ?.IE . A .
l\f-1 2llrt\l lt,r. \\ 1:-111;!,lt In~ l'IHM·h llf)lf' 3 hlrn1, Fl{;\/VA lt\'All~hl<'. CALL.M'"S Bt'ach hOUllC! lime. Big· l.JNF..S. You can use them
r~r. 132.:m. t 'rank :O.llu~hn111 s1111kc· l'oof, frplc. ~ !)j(), !ir,..&124 topcn l!\'C~) South gl!sl Jl('lec11on ever! See the for just pc.?nniCI a. day. Dial
fkn_lty 61....,1600 Kln1tRllrd Rt:. tiff 'Z-2222 Corult Rral F.statc ' DAll.Y Ptl..O'l' \VANT AO$! 642-56'73
SPACIOUS 2 1tory, la1'e f
bdrm It fan1 . rm. all blt~ln11,
immed. pou. Ne w I y
dewf·ttlcd. $200/mo. CA
H"rill.it Rell Eitati
~U51 (()pt.n e~l.
..
rut~, January 27, 1970 DAil Y PILOT ! I
REAL EsTATE
General
,...,...,...,...,... ................................. ,,RENTALS
DAILY PILOT Hou1u Unfurnlohtd
RENTALS
.
.CJ,ASSIFIED INDEX
• . l ' Fer fut ~ervlce and ,.,..., AMht•nc•
DIAi. DIRECT 842·5878
Hou111 Unfumlihed
Gtner1I ~Huntf.,ton Jeach 3400
• llEL.P! P.tUS'r Rmr $180. 3 BR, 1'1 BA, 2 "I>'
1'G Hou!ICI & A~. fl.. ' Coucto. Cprt1. cltJ>.1, 11lovt.
w.1-ea11. I Rdnn 10 7 Bdrn1. p11llQ, c urporl, ()()(ll,
S75 lo $400. Av&il Imm. olubhEC. 96:1-2630 or
• C.U Susan &15-2-Mi~ 4 213/342-:Wl
~e~ti'HJ!-t~lE• C0Vltl$ = 4 BEDROOM :i~.~O~R~,~.~.~,c, .. -,~-~,-.. -,-.. -,.
oe:Ne:ltAL 1111 Ml~C. RENTALS ""' S280 nlQ. No pcolJI c11l~dt-pj. \\'alk lO ~hop-
HOUSES FOR SALE
(OSTA MISA .•. , ...... , II ... l'+COM• PlltOPf.lltTt ....... .... ...,... ·s13 • I I ' 2' / ""-
RENTALS 1 ENTAL~ 1ENTAL5 RENTALS
Apt•. Fumt1hod Apt1. Fuml1fttd Aph. Unlwnl•'-Apt1. Unfumlohed
Costa Mt11 4100 Coran• def Mir _.;.o...;...;..;,;;.. __ ..;.;.; 050 c .. 1. -· 1100 Newport Bff<h 5200
* *
SUNNY
ACRES * * * Motel-Apts *
1-~~~~~~~~~1
1 BR., pu.rlly fum. Ne\v c-pl.$.
\ dt'B\>t'S. '\rlllk to shnpping.
$IM ntonth iticl. utili ties.
HARBOR GREENS
&:.-enlc ProP"t1ies GTh-5726 APARTMENTS
2 BR. 1 ·BA, blk/ocean & SPACIOUS ~· View. Pli pat Io . TO\VNHOUSE LJVlNO
t.AR.0£ UJX> ISL& 2 Br,
JShkb'i 1,,: ba., ?"t>tl• dtl)I,
adulta, I~. bR 3-1502.
Nowpo!! ShorM 5220
Rentals W•uted 5990
Ml.Sii DEL M.111111: ............. ,tltl lltl$1NfU PllOPE•TY ~ • ~I 11 "1:· -;J mo. ""' 1 ,,· ... --• .. _ of oc 111•SA v•ROI! .......... , IHI lltAillilt PAM.CS tOet -~16--1141 •'wu ;;:y. ' • COLLf.Clt: PAltll .............. tlll ~SINISI •t:fllTAL ........... $1<1(). 2 Br duplrx, SIO\'f', i.:ur, ~ ---------Fairlrounds 1o11wro•r ••ACM ......... 1to1 ""'"1c• 1t•~TAL ..... t1111 child OK Blue "'·<-" ' BR TO\VNHOU0" 2\1 Ba St .. •' '1 1~ HIWl'OltT KlitoMTI ......... TJ\I IHOUfT•tAL PROPEltTY ..... 4'1t ' DO: .. '"" " 1 ,,r~, ' IKOO w roomJ
Adult,, no peb. $180 yrly. Separate adult A f11mUy com·
673-7629 munlltes. &chel.or l·2· Ir 3
FURN. l Br. NCllr Be•ch & Bdrms, furn &:: unfum 1ptJ,
Shoppll\I. SlTh per mo. Call SUO. per mo, &: up. ltndlords & l rokenll
Cor°"e d91 Mir 5250 Help •tamp out broken.up
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii I bouse1, apts k "''einl ten.
1~1MACUl.ATE 3 Br. Apt.
Leue nu per n10. f'rank
latiU'ah&l.I Realty. 675-4600
ULIOA covts ........... 1tu tOMMllt<IAL ............ &l5-0ll\, C.1\1 . Avail tit Aug $220 per nw. $30 WK & U?
Hl'#l'OltT SMOltlil '"""""1DI INOUSTll.t.1, ltl/CTAL ........ ..,. Cll)\ 213/844-~l 0
•AYClllST .. " ............ tru .. on . . ............ t i• 4-RENT-2 Bdmt. Bll ni;, Day, Week, Mot1tfl
m-3153. • • l.a1'£e gflrdf'n patios
EXCEPTIONAL 1 BR. beam e Open beained ceilings
clp, sh, crpt. 1 adult, no e f1l'epl11.-.:e1 ... Rec. Rooms
fll'!ls. S165.yl'ly. 673-7629 • 2 pools, saunas, nursery
•AVIM01t•$ ............... 1m Ill.NC"•-' •· ............... 61M ca ...... ! & drapes Sl!IO 3 DR. I ~ Ba, bll·lns, drps. • l\:llchcn.1 ~.TV's incl. OOVElt IKOltE1 ....... ,.,..1ft' ClTltUI OltO'fE.I ............. 601 •1-· · W•ITCllP• ' """" •• ,. t.CllAOI .............. ml .. Call SUSAN 6il-UH :-.rln * Cl'pts. Nr r.tnrhm, Douglas • Phone serv., htd pool ..,_11011 HIGMl..AH.01 ........ 1UI l,.tlC.8 •UIHOll """"" tJti ·-& •hoppin<>. 847 '216. • •f•ld "'i"" ,,,,.,'I ..,11111vE1111TT ,.••K ........... ttn J1110RT 'ltOl'ElltTV ....... •tu LEASE or Ophor: ro Buy 4 '"b -. " sei •""" ..... 1 · rJIVIHI'. .............. 1fM OtANOa 00. ,.ltOl'ERTY ..... UO dR 3 Lath!!. nnau!lful 1285 VACANT: 3 Br'11. 1 ~ &'i;, 2 Jl76 N~POIT ILVD. aACll IA Y ... , ............ ,ll'lt OUT OP' NA.Tl PltOf' ........ U• u;. 1;><: r.i•9755 CASTILUfP' ................. tMl ..... ~, ..... OElllT ....... '211 to SliO. DellJ l)..l&.411.f Stoi-y. Lease S250 r.to. Call ------ll T•.. 11W S\llOIV•llON LUO . ... •tit =""'-=-~""'-,,,-,--~, I 5l(l...4263
111v11>1E TEltltACe: ........... 1tu •EAL EITA.T1! 111tv1CE .... tJll $150. 3 Br. 2 Ba. f~nred )'d ~-·~~~~--~-• BARGAIN -Large 1 BR. CLEAN Bache1or Apts. co110MA oeL M.111111: .......... 1u. 1.1. e::r;cHAMGe: •nt 1 •• child-" & ""1.~. Blue S26.i l\10. 3 Br. 2 stor.v 0011$1'. smnll 1 Br. ulil Incl. All util Incl .... -. up •ALIOA l'EMIHSUU. ......... t• 4, l . WAHTl!iO 0 41 ..,. ••" r-"°" :::c?.U:Js . ·::::::: .. :::: BUSINESS ind Bee.con, &ii>-Olll. c.~1 . 9M2 B<-rmuda Drl\'c, H.B. Bncht-lor util incl also. 315 E. Balboa Blvd.
LIDO ISLE 1u1 FINANCIAL F'(IR lease Feb. lt1. New Ufl. 962-0121 Ad1Jlt1, no pelB. 398 E. BALBOA 639M.l
4300 B•lbo.t
tiChool.
11\tMED. OCCUPA NCY
270o Petenon \Vay
Cl1t• }.fcsa MG-0370
Nr. Harbor it Adams
ORLEANS APTS.
~b
ON TEN ACRES
l & 2 BR. Furn & Un.turn
Firep.laL"el I prlv. pa.tics I
1100ls. Tennis • Contnt'J Bkfst.
900 Sea Lane, CdM &i.t·!.'611
l l\tacArthur nr. Coi>st Hwyl
&lll!i.
*SPEE0 DEE NEWS*
Abtolutely Free
645-2471
RELIABLE Yoong couple
with baQy would like 2 Br
unfurn. hOfne. Wiil pay $180.
Good refs. sn..8669
e LANDLORDS e
FREE R.ElttAL SERVICE
Broker 5.14-6982 •ALIO A !SUMO ·::::::::::1.1H 1ua11>1•'' 'Ol'l'Oll.TUM1t11Es '* fur". Valencia., cc11.1·....,1ed. In Csmlno Or. C.?<-1. 546--0-l:Jl ~~=~::~ig: ~~~~iu • ·;:::·::..'1 1u,1t<11ss WAHTEo ... '* Le'::.._ \Vorld SJ0....6rog Fount1in Valley 3410 Huntington &e1ch 4400
LIND• isLI! 1_. •M"WasTMEMT o,..rt ..... ;11e1 •. tilt ""~"=""'======= I·---·------$lS. Per Wk. & Up . 2 &. 3 BR 11va11. Adults only, FOUNTAIN VALL EY .......•.. Ull •'"•'•'•'~MTlio"r,•.•,HTl!O .... '1U -
LARGE '.1. ~· ~~ft Ba, ROOM fur rent, 1 peraon, Dup~cx. C1pls. & Dtps. Lots &Ober. pvt bath. $18 week,
of Storage. l:ncl gar. $250 1502 Orange Ave CM SIAL ••ACH ............ ,,tUt ,iBOMlA.L LOANS ........ !;'J For lease: Chlldl't'TI & pelll Bnt>tielor & 1 BR, hid pool, e DEL-LAKE MANOR 1741 Tustin, Cost• •1e,, tu1>1saT •EACH , ............. 14» JllWEL•Y LOAMS ............ mt Costa Mts1 3100 0 K _ rt , lld " OAROEM OllOVI ............ ,.14n COL'U.TlltAL LOAMS ::::::::·'*35 ----------·I .. _,., sq . . .. rni mnld se1"Vke. Kitchens & Lgc 1 BR $150, util pd, pool, Mgr. t.lrs. Carson, &i24641
y1·ly. 673-2-102 .. . .
LONG IEACH .............. liOI IU.l «STATE LOANS ..... •Ml hon1e. Sl!p. 1naster bdrm. TV av11.il. 4"" Victor ia (Nr patio. Small complex. Adults, 3 BR. 2 BA. ~love, re.frig .. ..A1te:wooo ............... tiH M01t.TCIAGIS. Tnw o..e .. ti-ts 4 Bedroon1, 2 ~a j h, o-.~·n. d' l' R ~ "-0-,.---==--~~-l•ANOS. coUHTY ............ '* .w>tll't' w...,.TIO '"-Form. 1n. area, an1. m.. Jla1·bor) no pel'I .)36..6717 1 f &\'aih1ble Frb. 2nd. $260. ~~ :: ~;~~: .... ::::::::::::: .. ::: ANNOUNCEMENTS ~y~."~~~11~, 1:0:;·11~~~ Breaklasl Rm. B 11 ·in I. MER~IMAC WOODS STONEHENGE APTS. airway Villa Apts I "'"'='::"":o::="'==·~"r""'=·=·=== ~Ttfr1:.~rtr1t .. ::::::::::::::::l:l~ and NOTICES per 1nonth. Great loca1lon, ~ts. dDrpsQi1~ flrepl. .. C~e Furn units itvail. See ad un. 2 BR. 2 BA, dlshv.·hr, rec. Corona del M" S"!O
Mt OWA'r ~ITY ................ Ull FOUND,,..._ Aftl .. ""'" t4tt rie~r l(:'hopls and ilhoppin,K . n Y ·• c-sac, O.<JC dC'r c-Jass 5100. 42..'l lde1Ti-rm. Adults, no pel5, Z320 Nf'll r Orllni;e Co. Airport & 1.
SANTA AHA ............... Im LOST •• . .............. _. I . . I book lo H.S.. Elem . Sehl.. Nr. ''''' \Yoy .•• ,~ o•-,.,.,., ••. "02'7'>" UCI. Adult• ooly. --·-UNTA AMA KGTS ............. 1u1 l'l!l:IOH L ............. I 1 1n OW' re11ta ·at ¥............., " ,..,.,.. '"" ~w...11 BRANO NEW 01tAHOe: ........... uu .t.HNOUHCIMl!MTS ........... "'" \Yi\LKER & LEE IL">\y, \\later pd, 1 yr. li;e -"-"'-.:C::e:._::::..;:::::_~--l.,c===,-.,-oc,-~---,,-1 Santa Ana Ave. j.J().2796 f\ISTJH ............. IMt l tlltTMS ' ............. '411 niininium. S27:i n10. (71,\l SUS CASITAS 2 BDRr.1S. 2 SA, pvt. patio, 2 BR,'.! BA. upstairs. duplex
MOlll:TK TUSTIN ........... 160 PUfll«IALS . .. ............... ,, 2790 Harbor Blvd. at Acla1ns 81" ... ,, f'ut·n. l BR ''''· Adull•. hell.led pool, V.'3ShCl' &: ...... er•-.,,,,..,~~=~~~~ \l'ilh sun de ck polio•. Cold. 'HAMl:IM ........ IUI l'AIO OllTUAltY ........ Mii .--CV ..... ,, I VILL· MES· 'PTS llLVEllADO CANYON ......... \HS FUHli.AL OWIECTOltl ....... 6'14 2 BR. ~ar. Palio. Crpts. ' BR. ~·,-. p,, •to. '""' 2110 Ne1vpo1't Blvd. J\ledol· hook up. !llii.8991 " "" dlll'd,, encl. garage. con1p1: LAOUMA MILLS ........... 17" ':i,'"' ......... 6'11 I I • ,.. Q . ....... l> "~ ,. b 2 BR unfurn, ,,, patios, "Id .,, . n . Id 1 LA•UNA lf.ACh ............. 11tS CA 011 'l'MAMKI ........... "'" I l'p!I, s O\.'e tt>u·tg, 111ct \\'11tcr & 1>1"'!1. Days ion y llotpoint. &12-9286 I " " •In~. gc/IUl. scpd. 071,~ u.outta Hll)UEL ........... UUJ' 1H 1M01t1~A.1 .,. ........... '41' T1"0pk.i.I Srttin.i;: for Arllts '' Sant• Ana 4620 poo · 2 car encl'! gar. ChiJ. 01't'hid, $225 pea· n10. (Yrly)
MISSION VIEJO ............ 11tl CIM•Tl!lll:Y ,LOTJ ........... 6411 Only. l Blk St-,... ,,.,-,, &12-4210. Eves 545-~ • NAOOAU PALl>IS • <lren \\'{']l'(lffif'. ill.I p.,, I-AM CLEMiMTE ...... ,1111 Ct!M•TlltY CltV,.TS ....•.... 6411 .., ~~ " ,,5 ,o•o 0 """ JUAN CAl'ISTlll:ANO ..... 11tl CINllETEltY (ltV•TI ......... 6411 ;H~52 1 BR furn apt. Pc>ol $130 LARGE, cheer(ul 00\'o'ly please! Sl60 also furn $185. >' . > CAl'ISTttAHo I EM:M ........ 1ru :••MAT0111:11s ........... "2t L•nun• Beach 3705 fu1·" 1 BR •et 11 ·1· I• I 719 \v \V1·1 ""1"1 · OAMA ,.D!HT ................ t1N "IMOlllAL PAltllS .......... 64)1 $350-,.IO. lease. 'Avail 7(15. 3 • 17'1 22nd SI. SU.36-15 " l ·P x . . son. <Mt>' ~ -''N'QWQ' a. .. CAllU IAO .................... 17H 'UC:TIONs ............ MM B I 1 d D"' I 2 BR " I Bltns, garage. 1 Tnfant OK. DELUXE 2 Br C'P" D OCEANSIDE .................... UJI 'VIAT!Ofl, Sl'.ltYICE .......... tuJ r. \\' \V cps. r p ~. ,_, . • 81.SO un nm. N ' 2230 So Ce t SI . ""· rps, u.H 01EGO ........... 1m TIAV•L .......... 6'U gardelll!r. EasUidc CJ\f. FOR LEASE Adlts, no p<'I.!!, util lncl.18&1 !No P"11.'· 1 • n er · bit-Ins, priv patio. Adj.
Rooms for Rent 5995
2 ROOt.t Studio For Rent In
Priv. Hon1e, CdM. $73 lofo.
Call. 673-7469.
NE\\' Sl'paralt furn studio
room, ha.th. Older ¥:oman
onJy. S72 nw. ti46-Ql7.
Sl:l \VI\ & up W/ kitchen $30.
\\'k studio apt. 2316 Newport
Rlvd . S.18-9'ia5
Motels, Trlr. Crts. 5997
\\IEEh.'1.Y r11.le1 -Sea Lark
J\lotel. 2301 Ne\lo'J)Ort Blvd.,
CM!a 1\-lesa ••VEll.llOE COUHT'I' ........ 1 .. Alll Tlt.ANSl°OltTATION ............ "''' -1'ghbochood. o•o -s2. Charming E"'~•ish Tu d 0 r 'lonrov'1a. ~·on""' .. arner . clOled gar. ~1• •'"o'' HOUS1!S' TO II! MOVED .,. .. ;I. AUTC) TltAMSl'OtlTATIOM .... Molt "" .,..o-..i1 ''I:>' .,..............., ......... "'''6 CONDOMINIUM ........ ltH lliCIAL NO'flCES .... '4H home. Prime No. end loc. 4 story, No pi•ts, adults only. OUPLElCES FOii SALE ... ,,. IHJ OEltMAH • TUTOlllM'O HM E.fJDE 3 Br, frplc. ne1v Bdrms. Fireplace. Bt'anl l BEDROO~I furnilihed laouna ee1ch 4705 $170. Call 640-74.11
A 11'RACT1VE studio apl. 3
BR. 21 1 BA. crpls, drps,
blt11$. Ava II f''eb L~t. I-"=========
Al'AltTMEHTS FOii SALi .. · "" SERVICE DIRECTORY crpl~, dt'fJS, redcc .. lcnced .1 ro a1»1rlme11t for rent. Check -1.-;;;o;=~~--,.-~~~ RENTALS ACCOUNTIMO illl ydatl. gar, 2 children, no 1~1 ings . .-omial din. l,n, r.lalc Apts. 2831 So. Bristol TIIE NE\V VILLAGE INN 2 lsDR?t1 unfurn duplt-L bltn
H F • h d AHIWlilt/HO SEtlVICI . •SOI Spec gl"UUnd.s / ouses urn1s e All'l'LIAHee ·•El'Aitts. ,.,,11 '"' pet~. $18j mo. ~S-9137 " · $3J5 ~fo. T\\'O 1 BR API'S Furn $ll5 }'ormcl'ly Saddleback Inn, ra~. w w Ca.Ji>Cls, pnlio,
OEHlttAL . ,,, ... 21t1 Asl'HALT, 0111 . .. ... •sn iji()V,\CANT 4 Br, Den. 2 Unfurn SJ 2:.. · · Laguna, fl'o1n $28 a \\·~.k. garb dlsp!. no pc1s. Sl55.
ltENTALS to SHA.RE ..... ,,.102 AUTO.J!EPAlllS ... •SH r.l i~lon Realty 49~.(l131 • Call 61~1o•s . ,.,-.ly ''''· All ''''''·" ~~&-;,,:;21~81~.-------COSTA Ml!SA .......... n-AUTO,, ... •tits. TIPI, EiC.'"' Bu. 01\ for Priv. Jim or ll!n .... "" ~ " :-M£SA DEL MAit ...... " tlH l.t.SYllnlHO ........ tSH 9 "'"' ""o BRIGHT dclu:"le 2 BR, 2 BA. linens. n1ald, pool, laundry 2 BR. elcc blln11. No -··· 2 Mll:SA VltlDE ................ 2111 IOAT MAll'TlftAWCll! ........ "SI & Du5. 93~ \V. I Th . ..,..,,...t..,.,, I II d 1 BR New Crpls bit ln ,,.. COLLEGE ll'AllK ....... llU llllCK.. MA'OHllY. •IC. ....... u" \\'a lctl Pit o. Ocean si c. • . .' • 11· !'Ill, Stepi; 10 bch. 696 s. Cit childl'Ctl ok. 9$ No. 1 NaWl'OIT 1EACM ............ ttlll 1us1H'ESS 1E11v1c1s ........ '"'' 3 BR k dt'n, Coll<"ge Park. Lca.sc $295. ()v.>ner 199-3638. SIJ;i a !'llo. \\'est Side. Adlts Hwy 494.!M3fi/f94.7Z0) Valen ·ia 540-9680
HIWPOtlT HG Tl ............... :nu IUILOallS ................. SH n...J w/m";"t No ~·· 127,-l===o-;=====:=':l ..':~~·~·y~"~'':'!.91 art 5. • • c . MEWl'OllT SHORIS ......... 1m CAfllltlMO "11 ~::""''"" ;:,, ~0'><:. ,"",, ,-• u 7S VO:I . ..... •• . . I BR. Ulil pd, Ocean View. 3 BR 2 BA Condo. C1•pt• •AV1MOllEl ............. ms CAllNITMAICIHCI ............ tSN .............. ..., ..... ~ p.m. Oupltxas nfucn 32 1 BR 1,,., 114a incl u11l & "" DOV•lt SHOllES ............. tm CAltl'e:kT•lllHG ............ 6.SH • • • . Single p<'l'SOll. d1~. blllL~. pool. Palio,
we:sTCLtFF ............. mo Cll!MEN)'. Ceou•t9 ............... DF.N + 3 BR 2 BA cpts lt2.\. 2 Be. )'•<". RIO. Chi'ld ,""",. --· A0d,u!!;.11Ar:> Pel s. '* 4'.H-7\)79 '* •"'""'· 1225 mo. 5-15-5Z70 UNl'Wll!ltSlfY l'AllK .......... nn CKILD !:ARE, Uc••"" """""" d ....:...._ i _ __.· " ~~..... """ ...., 11v1He: ....................... :tPll COMTlt.ACTOll! .......... u11 rps, gar. ,,,, ... s, enL..,.., 1 8 k ~======"==== oSJDE IACll IAY ....•............ U4t CAlll:PlT CLEANING .... "31 $220 mo 5-18-9:136 &. p<>l v.c conic. ro er -Hotels 4975 er 1 BR, frplc. w/w l!AIT ILUFF ................. 1142 c,. ••• T U.Y lHG. ltEPAlR ,.,, 1 :==~~·=7:.:=0--=7"-~ . Cl'pt. Pri patio. l adult, no El Tot• n41 011,.,lllllES ........... MM ~BR 3 BA l.se lnur,crl OC.• N t •-h 4200 11~ I 6-~ .,..,..., 1ttv1H1. TEtUtACE ........... nu 01EN1ot.1T1aM ........... UlS · · · .,.. RENTALS ewpor llMIC LIDO Shore1 Hotel & Marina J>{'t1. .,., yr Y· i.r •u~" COltCfrlA OEL MAit ........... 21,\1 DllAFTIH9 IElll:VICE ............ :11 cup. $300 mo. Ask fo~ .-em , I I hi I IALIOA .. .. '* IL1!CTltlCAL ..... I C t 54(}..1720 Apts. ~urnished Special \\'II er mont. y ~. NEW dlx. 2 BR, 2 BA. Sha& LIDO ISLE .. ::: .::: .. :: .. :::::2n1 aoUll'M&HT llENTAi.S"::::::: .. ,. en · Newport Beich e~: B11yh"Unt Lanat Suite c1111s, drps. lmn1e-t occupy.
IA'r ISU.NOS ................ 21JIHt FIHCINO "' ........... Utt LEAN 3 BR Lar~ y11rrl ~-ntr•I 4000 I·'"''· View Sludio Suilo 12.\S. $!~ •. $180 "'"1913 "'~2321 IAL&O._ ISLANO .......... 1 FLDOlll:1 .. .. ............ '661 • ' . ".. ' vw n>..: ,,,. ...,.,.. ....,,..
MUHT1NGTON aitACH ........ 'Hit FUltNACIE 1tEl'Al1tS. l!tt. .... "" Adul ts. t\o pets. Sl;J.J 1no. GRAND up. Kitchcne.ttes. Ma I fl, LGE 2 8· R. Pool.· "· I. & l'OUMTAIH VALLEY .......... Mii ,Ul:NITUltE ltESTCllll>IO 638-7333 s ~· ' Sl:AL •EACK . .. ........ ,MH a 11eF1N1SHING ''u 1,,:;;,,,,::.:_ __ =-~~. • I phone, coffee, ice. Day-Wei!k. •. ,. LOMG IEACH .............. Ull OAltOEHIMG ........ t611 RENTAL ~ BR 2 BA 1ng e 617 L'd p •k Or 673-8800 drp.!1. Kid:i; ok. 19!18 t.1aple 0111:AHGE couHTV ........... ~ a11o1aaAL 1Ell'f+CfiS ......... 4'12 • · • OPENING 1 0 al · Apt 3. 5.m-2808. IAl>ITA AHA ............... u1~ OIAOIHO, 01sc1HG ........... •.u To\vnhousc. JXIOI & recrea-RENTALS 2 WESTMJHSTElll: . . ........ ···?!1,, ouss .. . .... .... .... ..... ti.,,1 fac S2l:i mo S.M>-678'1 U f .Led BR. O'Pts, pool, patio. No
• &15-1927 * Guest Hellmes 5991
COROLIOU APTS. 2 BR. l----~---
l..011·cr il'VChl, s I u d i 0 II •
i'T plc11, paol, 1lbl carports,
patios. Sl'J!i • $220. 673-3378
2 BR, 2 BA, den, crpts. drp,.,
bltns, vie1v. $275. fl) m.().'j{j7,
53()...4599 or 837· ll 77.
Univ•rsity P1rk 5237
PRIV. Roon1 lor eldf'rly lady
in lie. guest home. Call
6·16-3391 .
Misc:. Rent•l1 5999
lllx20 GARAGE wesl·skit
Costa J\leM. Could hold lee
crmper. $25 mo. &12-3392
POOL, Tennis courts. hugo: I =="========'I
master Bedrm suilc Business Rental 6060
"'/[rplc, patio, fncd yarrl,
gar, priv bath. Shar entire
house w/ 3 students. Ideal
for 2 edult11 or v.·on1an with
c:h!ld. Pct 0 1\. $13.'i. &12-5192
B1lbo11 l1l1nd 5355
LUXURIOUS 3 Br. 2 Ba,
flt'C'place, bit-Ins, S32J mo.
67j...36J:2 or 673-fil'Jll
PR1i\.1E bu tli n es s Joe.
d0\l·11tov.·n Costa ~I e 111..
20x95'. Cnll 5"8-3401 or
5-IS-3270
ROOJ\I Suitable for a:ilt shop,
n1rn·~ shop or ladiei1 shop.
Call Jim Berk&hire, 673-9405
Office lentil 6070 MIDWA"' c1TY ............. 0111e:11>1 TMUM• ............... •111 1 · • Ad A ... ts. n urniMI ""'' 0, •h'ild-•. $1.15. 313 E. ~~~:AtHA MEIG~~-s_:::::::: .. ;: =~:l~':.0~LUIS ················:; c II p k ults IMMEOIA TE "'t' [1\11 Pl .. s.i2.:&49'J uouNA 1EACH .............. ms HAULING . ·:::.:·:::::::: ... ,,. o ege Ir 3115 Gener1I 5000 · · LAGUN• BE'CH LAGUWA NIGUEL ............ VII MOUSllCLEAHINO . .. ..... 61U ' · BACHELOR 1110 . I t'I "' " MISllOH VIEJO .............. u. IHT•tt1011 OlCOIATINO ..... '1111----------OCCUPANCY ' lllC u I .
Hnntinr:itan Beach 5400
iAH CLaMEHTE .......... n1• INCOME TAX ......... •u• 4. BR 3 BA. Fam rrn. L•--ucy "ogl•, 1 "2 ~d-VEN DOME Adult>t onJy! 998 El camino ru1·11 or Unfurn Air Conditioned '""' JUAN CAl'1ST1tAMO ...... 2m 1aoH, OrNn'ltlllt1, Ere. ........ t7~ • . ...... •u o.: ""' Dr. 54G-()451 ON FOR.EST AVENUE CAl'ISTllAMO •&:ACM ......... 1131 lllONIMO ............... ~ ..... t1H Collegl' Park. Avail ln1n1ed. 1uo1n apartn1ClllS, ru1·ni sh· .~~~=~-~~-~ 2 BEDR00~1. 2 bath, private De&k bl DAHA l'OIHT ........... ,, .. 1wsuuT1tto ............. 1 .... "'' J2fil n10 &t;J ... ?5J:2 e-' ·•i<d unru11,,·,1, ... , •·Ith 2 BR unfurn. Duplex. c.,,1 & patio. One blk to 5 Pointg space avalla e ln tllVl!ltSIOI COUMTY ........ 2190 IHSUllAHCE .. ·:.·•."' .. ("""',,. . -:u A t.'U Luxu 1·y garden apartments ~"MACULATE ·~s nc11.·est oUlee bllllding ., VACATION ltEHTAL1 ......... t•• IHV1!1TIOATIHO. ~· ... 1111 • completl' 11rlvacy and land· u•1 ;v-. ! drps. t.11ddle aged only !-:tori'~. Cpts, d1'8.pe!:, bui ldns suMMIR 11.ENTAL~ ......... 2911 JAHITOtt lAL ...... 67ff Ntwport Beach 3200 1 b offcl'ing co1nplete prJ,·acy, ADULT & FAMILY please. Phone 54S-0422. from $1•1D. 7121 Elli!!, Apl. prime location in downtown COHDOMIHIUM .............. HSI J!.WELltY llEl'Alll, l[j(, ...... tllCI s~11ped f'{JUlltry cu atmos· Utguna Beach. Air condl· DUPLEXES FUllM ............ ttn uNoSCAl'1ri10 ............... •n1. ----------1 phere including ST::iO.OCKl l~autiful lnndscapin.i;: &. CISECT1IONhS AV~PLE k • BARGAIN -Beautifu l Jge •t 842....ill21 or &12-2835 tiont:d, carpe!ed. beautiful
RENTALS ·.ocKsMiTM ............. "tt 2 BR .,, ...... :-·•. 'il•h'" l\'01·th of -·1•011·o·" l•<il· · oie O 1 opp .. ._. ar 2 BR l 998 !'I 0 -I ~'EZ ORO APTS. ~· •---~"
U f . h d MASOHllY. •111c11 ....... ·"" ~ ,,. ~.._. .... \• ,...... •uu unparaJleled r~reationa.I * S 1 3 Br' 2 Ba ap . ~ ..... m no \.on ~ enuas ... es~ /t ,..,.,fa&e on Houses n urn1s e Mov1tto • sro11Acr: ............ .,-go. 2 ch<'IJ-n l.· ""' it'C's designct:. and operated pacous 1• Dr c J\I 5."' "'.ll Atlanta, H.B. Nu, 1, 2, l Fores! Avo., -,, teodt to 0.l'HElll:AL JIOI l'AIMTIHO. I'•_...._ ........ ,. ... ·~ .~ facllitl"li in a countr¥ * 2 Bedrooms ' ..• ..,...,,.. '" COSTA MESA .. :::.::::::.:.~'" ~:~~JlNO, 1'9M ........... "5J OK. f'cnc:cd n!'ll.r' yd. $1ovr., JU.II (or 'ingle people. * Sv.•im Pool, PuV£:1'l'f:n NI:.\\' 2 Bclnn Duplex, lge br'1. Priv. gar, JXIOI. Uti l Munclpa.J parking lots, $50
Mru. OEL M.liltt .............. ,11:1 l'MOTo'o••PMV .. · ...... ~ l'f.frig, di~h11•shr, .i;: a r h . RENTS FROM club atmosphere No\v ~t 1 • ., /\-•-· 1 t d •-Ind nn. 536-8038 or 5.'J6...272'7 per month for space, Desk MllA Vl!llOE ................ JHI ,U.STliltlMG,,. IU.~ If'...... SJ'1j to $300 · *,'I', nwY ..... ,,. ac'll pa W. 1-ps, Snug cpts. ry ~~1#:ooltET ":E"."'ctt ":::::::::. :~ l'LUMllNO ....... ~~ ... :··"" fa~im'~ ;:;,1~r r~~=~in! lea.sing in Newport Beach. 1845 Anaheim Ave. area, garage. S17.l. 646-1380 li'IL\1ED. JIOSll. 2 bdrms. bit· :!1~~ ~~:..:r~
HEWl'OltT MGHTI ........... :.3211 FET, Olt~lllNO .,.. , ·1 . d "I" ~~ .• o NEWPORT BEACH OOSTA ltIBSA &12·2824 2 BR unf Newly drc New In.'! &. refri.i;:. Adults only. ,,.,,,_ a·-"able •-$10. Hl!'#POtlT SMORl.I .......... >m ,.DO ... SE .... 1ce: ........... tm (.Cp. Avai 1mme . ~ .,...,,.,"'3 od 1 • · SJ50/mo includ. utilities. ..... ..... Wll' .1AYSMORl<S ............... Jm l'OWl!lt SWU:l'INO ........... 1•u eves. 64;;...1691 days t.I es open 10 am to 8 pm crpts k clrps. Adul!s, no All utilities ... ~1d except DOVllt SMOlllS ............... m' l'UMI' s1::111:v1c1: .............. u1t, --"-",C-'='=o"'----880 IRVINE AVE. e RENT e pcl•. 6,1,. '"'"" .• , .• , 0000116 Tradcwinds Reltlty 847.gjll _. wl!STCL•P'" ............. »30 1tool'1Ho ............. ••H 1 · B/ 8 IRVINE ANO 1611 Furnished or unrul'nished vMJoN " ... .,..,,...,.. telephone. UNIVEltllTY l'Alltlc: ........... nu RAOIO, 111..-1•1. Eic. , .. .,.,.,,,. 1 2 Br cont.lo. Garage, palio, 2 DAILY PILOT ttYINE ..................... Jttt REMODELING a. REPAIR 67.IQ Adults Only 1n41 66-0550 Rcnl!i from $15..'> to $310 3 Rooms Furniture N 1 B h 5"00 pool~. recrcalion facilltie5• IACK •AY .................. n 41 IE.MODELING. KITCHEN• .... 110 $l 9 95 & UP ewpor 11c " 222 FOREST AVENUE i~'~.,!LUFF .................. ~!: :;~~~:1 s~~·"~ . ··:·: .. :::: 3 BR. 2 baths. split level sw:> GARDEN GROVE Oakwood . Lease. rl36-4546 LAGUNA BEAot
'
_,,, T•HAC• . 3241 lliWIHO MACMIHJ •I PAllS 6HJ 2 BR. 2 baths, ......... $225 1:0nth-To-M1"1th Rentals 2 BDRMS 2 BA pvl t' 494-9166
cO'itoHA OEL ,..1 ·::::.::::::me ~%rL'Ji i~N1ts. ~ a1c. .. :;;: AVAILABLE NO'V 13100 Olapman Ave. G d \VIDE SELECTION llt'a!ed ~I. 1\•a~llt'r & :;;
::;-?tu.Nos":::::::::::::::::: T•RMITI comt0t."'::::::;:: •• n Bay l: Beach Really, Inc. (·I blk.t \V, Santa Ana F"y,) ar en JllO DEPOSIT 0 .A.C. SP2Abc.1,0hu. SNr".'w·h•lpbdpln'::'. hook up. 962.m.I Modem Offices LIOO ISLE W1 TIL•, CWMNt .. .. ...... lfl4 9Ci Dover Dr. Suite 126 NB (714) 63!)...3000 A • $75 sin<>] $135 2 au.it uL•OA isuJfO .. .'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'. *'" TILE, l..lMtllllll • ..,., ........ 111 6~5-2000 E\·es. 518--6966 partments Hl'RC Furniture Rentals Mariner Squire Apts. t & 2 BR aplJi, crp1s & drp.ir .... e. rm e. NEW,OllT WEST .......... :Ull TllEE SEltVICEI ... '"I "NAHEIM 517 'fl. 19th. CM 548-3481 bru11d tie\\', Across from Air con<!. Scct'y Nrvice. MUNTINOTON aeACK ...... ,... TELe:vn1aH, •1~1 .... Ere ... 1t1s TO\VNHOUSE: 3 BR. I " ,... 1244 Irvine Ave., N.B. pal'king, centrally located, HU NTINGTON HARIOUlt ..... i~ UPMOLSTlltY ...... ,.. 11 1700 16 h s 64' '25" shopping Cl'nl{'r. 842-7062 l'OUHTAIN vALLEv .......... Mi• WE.Lo1MG .......... ttu BA, frpl c. patio, pool. 2 cal' NOW !..BASING FOR t treet Costa Mn• 5100 rv " So. Calif 1st Nat. Bk. Bldg. ~EA'D:H&~c•"'ovE ............... :~: WINS W &L:;;ING ...... ·'"' gar, all bl!ns, crpls. drps. 1-fAROI OCCUPANCY I M~~~iA~Wc)o:oii l ..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,., NE\V 2 Br Duplex bit-ins. C. Robert llattress Realtor L~:o 11ACM .::::::::::::·:,...JOB · . PLOYMENT l~o;e S215 mo. 8TI-8811 01· 277 So. Brookhursl 714: 642·8170 MERRIMAC WOODS Cl'pt~. drps, Slj(]. AdHs. On· C.OSta t.1eu 642~1485
ORAHOE COUNTY ...... !, ..... Mtl JOI WA.HTS.D, Men ........ ?tel "·'2-2497 ev•" or \Vkends. (I blk. So. of Lincol«) Ju<t co 1 t d I 2 BR 2 BAYFRONT ly. 1508 Ollve, 53fr.&i23. SANTA AHA .......... ::1 ...... 2'11 1g• WA:~:g• W-11 ........ 1~H ""' ~ mp e e ' or ' AIRPORT CENTER :~J~':~~1~: ................ ::: M1:att~Aw0Mltt ",1m 2 BR. 2 be .. den. din. rooni !TIO 772-QOO BA furn or unfurn with air 2 BR, 2 BA luxury ap!s Prl. S1nt1 An• 5620 New 1, 2 & 3 room deluxe
SANTA .t.trtA ME iGHti ·:::::::::)UI KMOOLI • tH1t11ucT1ott '..: 1* In Cflffhaven. $300 S th B Cl b MESA MOTEL cond, comp] soundrpl'OOfed, ter1-ace, clevalor!I, sUbte!'-;c:;:_;:.o.:;;;_ ___ _;:= suites. Adj. new motel & COAITAL ................ )1111 JOI Plll'.•Alll:ATIOM . .. .. 11M OU ay u self clean1n" ve ........ LAGUNA IE.ACM .............. IJM TME.t.TllCAL .. .. 7tlt G~rgP. \Villiamson. Real!ot• • LO\V \VEEKLY RATES * . -~ 0 ns, v.·uuu rancan pk'g. All elee. Pool, $105 lo $13;). LARGE 1 &. 2 restaurant, r.racArthurmvd.
uouNA NIGUEL ............. i111 MERCHANDISE FOR 673-4350 673-IJ&I E\'{'S Apartments Kitchen, TV'l!, maid set" ceilings, dswhrs, lush land· 50fl 11'a!er, boat dockll. $350. Br. studio Apls. (tri·plex). From $125. can 546-7843,
MIS51Cfrl VIEJO .............. n• S'LE 'ND r••oe scaplng wUh streams & Wll· up. 3121 \V. C•oot HI"", N••-~ I •-1 I f I "'" CLEMENTI .............. m• "" "' ""' ONE 2 Br. & 3 Br. homes: on no vie<'. Hl'ated Pool. (All 1 ......, 'J .... ,.ts, l rps, ... ., c. ge am· Best Location in CdM CAl'IST1t•MO ........... ins ,u1:1t1TU•E .......... "" 2.,,. The G...,,~GEOU5 New 6J6..96Sl !er s, e evalol'!I, BBQ1, Port. 642-2'100 Jy kllclien w/bltns. 1 child 500 & 1000 f
CA,.ISTltAHO IEACN ......... 11• OFFICa 1'u•1>11TU1t.E ........ NU :yearl;, lse. $185 I.a ' "" nw. y AL' D'ISERE · clubhouse, saunas, jacuzzi &: . ~ sq. I. deluxe OAMA l'OINT , ............... ,,. OF,1C• liOllll'M.l!MT' ......... NII Cu)'\\'OOd Realty sitS-1290 \VATERf'RONT 2 Be, 2 Ba •Wlm poo'-. p"v goc. )"/FOR Rent. or Lsc: Perunsula. ok, no pets. Nr s. 2230 office spaces. Av11.il immf:d. CONDOMINIUM ,\' ...... 1 .. \ ,,. STOtl:• f 0UIHIEN1' .......... IO'll ,. I l b ' b . 13 ' • So. Center St. {Nr \Varner). oUl'LEXISUH~11•N. , ........ w11 ca.11• •ESTAUlll:Af'lT' ........ •u -1ngc· r·'2' r. Furn.·unf. rrpl, crpts, drapeA. Avall storage. Everylhing new. Pr . 3 B1. 2 Ba on Balboa Fhoncowner.64l-9!l50. R_uENTAL~"TALI .... ;~·· '!" =1=:t"D~~;.1:::::::::::J: Newpo.'"t Heights 3210 ~una. Aery ~m. Billiards l't·h. I to June IJ. $200. Starting at s1,io. Adults Blvd . al n_1e Oct~n. eti>t1. ... MARINER'S CENTER
• F • h d OAltAGf SALE ' ......... •u erepy & 4."i pool, BBQs 96~-23-11 pleaSC". Just East of 2bOO Drpi1 & Blt1ns. $285 mo. Call La9una Be1ch 5705 Offi1:e in Store Bid. Rent or
"'pts. urn11 e FURHITUlll AUCTION ........ IOU /LARGE 3 Bdrnl, 2 bath & 200} Parsons Rrl. 612·8670 llarbo1· Blvd, next lo Nabers 548-7889 Lse $75 149 RI ld A OlHEltAL ........ ., ........... :=~~~~~~'' ........ ·:," pool. Nr. schl fl. $28> mo. SAii~ INN t.10TEL. \Vkly & , __________ OCEAN VIE\V, l BR, . . vers fl ve., ~0E•::v~~~E .. :.:::::::::::::.::;: SEWJNO MACMIHI ·::::::::.:i: l:!IJI ·121 -16.11 $87.50 1 Bl' incl util. n1· monltlly rates. 6 75-1841 CadHIRc at 425 t.ferrimac BAYFRONT IUXtll'Y apt. 2 stove/l'e(, cpl, patio, yard, N.B. 646-2414
ttl.Wl'OltT llACH ........... 41" '>'usrcaL 1HSTllUMl!NT ..... 1121 1lores. Adulls prer. Blue 1rorn, 281h St. & Ne11.·port Way, M.>6300 Br. 2 BA . Elevators,(: bont u1i1 pd, 2~• blk.s bch. SEE 2 OFFICES + lobby at 1736
fr(llWl'Olll:T HE,OHTS .... ., .... 4111 PIANOS. Ol:GAMS ........... IUI 2 Beacon 645-0W c '' Bl"d ''!::~~~~~~'!!!!~~I d-k• .. ~ II MoK•··lo 0 IRST •I 2811 Rou•••v•I A"•h••'m St. 112.\. I of1i-al NIWPOltT SHOlll:EI ........... 42'1 tlAOIO " ................ l2tl Irvine 3 38 . . . . • 1 · ....... • ..,.,.,. • .... • c ....... .... ... ..
ws1TCLIP'F ............. •2• re:LIVtSJ:H ................... nu '--"'--------z========= 13 BR, 1 B.a, 1:;: blk 10 bcach, BRAND NEW 64S-0732 TetT, then ph 213: 944-5141 1740 Anahcin1 only $50. ~=~~E:l1T.,.V ~~~IC .::::::::::~= ~~:~•1:e:c=~~U".'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'·::~ 3 BR + f'~Rm. Rn1. On Par+r:. Costa Mesa 4100 126*~ ·Klth. $2.JO yearly. O_E_L_U_X_E_1-·o_w_o_hmue--. -,-.-R-, coll . GU.2654
UST l t..Ul'F ............ GO tAMlllAS • 9GUIPM!HT .... UOI Xtras. 1280 A Mo. V11.c11nt. ·------I 6-~19 2 BA -1 I lg u· COlll:OHA. DEL MAil ..••••••.•• •ue "01•• SUl'PLlliS ... . ...... 1411 Sl4G & up -ATTRACTIVE. 1 1.r-1... . s 150 & 5170 ...... c. Poll. e pa o. 5710 SHARE furn executive office IALIOA ....................... VOll'TIHC 00005 ......... S»I Owner -494-2335, 646-1224. bd I ,., id _ _._ 2 BR furn.""'""'· 1·= -$2.'.il. lt1cl\enzic. R l tr Sin Cle ment• suite. $125. Costa ~tesa. uy 151.AMM ................. 4HI 111>1ocou.1ts. sco,11 ........ nse r .. pao. u1 pa , ga..iu.::n ...... UTILITIES PAID 646-0'7:12 LIDO ISLE .............. •H1 MtSCELLAHE1ous ............ MM -f 3242 living, adulls, M pets, taJO $175. Cpll, drps, bltns, pool, . ----------2 BR Duplex nn, frplc,, 700-4=~1~"=°'=675~,.,;=rn~~=" IALIOA ISUHO .......... •US MllC. WANT 0 ............... NH E11t Bluf lo I " 2 Bdrm 2 JWIOl pools VIEW I ' HUNTINGTON IEACM .............. MACMIMEllt'r, Ek. ............ 11" ----------1 Wallace Ave., C.M. pat . 1525 Placentia • · apt. l..argC' rooms, tt · carpets, dJshwm;her, view. 3345 NEWPORT BLVD. FOUNTAIN VALLET ......... •4'11 1.UMlllll: .. . ............... llJt Adults o~ly, noP ets. 6-t2-3535 stove, bath. Slnglt! adult On· 192-3161 or 213/(1.19...1123 300 f . N IEAL lliACM .............. •451 1T01tAGE .. .. .......... •n) EXEC. Hom<' East Bluffs, LRG 1 Br . .t"urn. No 1.M. No OELlJ)..'E 2 Bl'. Wcgtcliff loc. Day1, 645--0283 1-:VcJ. ly. "6S mo. "8-""n• l!Cf. t. opposJte ewport ~oNo •EACM ............. uot IUILDIHO MATlltlA.Ls ...... "" Near Aet"Onutronic, 5 Br'i. child or !>('Iii'. Sl2.i. 6~1 Pool 6t bit · .Ad Jt.s S250 "' .,.., ~""' TIME FOR City Hall, 6~l601. ~ttANOI! COUMT'r ............ "°' SWAPS •m S·I~, ,,., •• ~ ..... ,. 644-15.>l . SI r D No ICM•. 64°1~~ ... ,,A u . ~~ A.voe,., .... ,, s,~.c, .. ,·,M··· DELUXE 2 Br. \Veslclilt IOC'. . toA1tOEM otto'ir ........... ,1..u11 P;ETS •nd LIVESTOCK ~-"' · 1a 1n1ar r .• "A". C.J\!. ~ .. =~ ,.. "UICK CASH OFFICE or DESK reni.,1. WISTNllHSTftlt ............. , .... ,, f>ITs GEMlltAL '"' -(Behind Kol\>ta11 off Harbor Pool & bit-ins. Adults.. $225. ... 1610 \V Coo I H NB ..,IDWAY CITY ................ ,. CAh • .. ............ H G t 3000G I 3000G I -N I "A'> "21·' . II wy., .. 1.t.NTA AHA ... . ............... ,. 0001 ·::::::::::::::::::::::.ms tnera lnera 1 anera at corner Rutgers 8i. Avocado o case. V'l-u " THROUGH A Furn or unrum. 646-4887
IANTA ANA KE101fTS ............. lfOtlSES .................... , NJf -3 BR 2 BA f-1 '""" .................. -" • .,,,_. ................. "" MARTINl"'UE ' · Nrooeao. ''"'' DAILY PILOT COSTA Mosa officu. A/C, coa.STAL . .. ............ 41N "' dshwhr. $2.15 nwl yrly. No crpts drps Parking 15S5
"''"' "''" ................. CALIFORNIA LIVING LUXURY Am -"· ... -w• '•-., WANT AD 1 ·-• · "0
; • i;:,~~:::. Nvi:-.~~L .:::::: :'.::: .. ::: MUltlEltlE"• ............... u S@\\~}\ /& t.tfis• 1 .o~=;~===·=~=~="=~==---..:.:~::.::....~=---:.=~=;":·=~==833;;:0:'="~11=475~';1c1 IAN CLEMIMTI ............. 4111 IWIMMlftO POOU ........... .,.. -Excellent park.Jikf: svrround· OAHA POINT ................. 41'1t l'ATIOS ..................... ltH lni:s. pools, Extra parking. ~::'~':,.';,::J".···:·::::::::: .. :=: :~~~ ........... : ........ ::l: T' P f 'f' f' B 'fl f C1 1/ Ne.""°"""'· Adults only. ~ 1 ST' ""R ·G __ ""':ZE"1Dtl(1tr. ' ttoT1L1 ....................... tt11 TUN'-PORTATION ne urz • w1 n ne u1 .. n nUClll e 1 • 2" 3 BR APJ'S ~I\ .l'1 .l'1l.. ...&'-.,..
MENTALS IOAn. YACMTS ................ OR lett I'S ol the ALSO FURN BAOI. .Uta ' BrGLAYJ.l'OW>l----r-..,,~.::...t 0.A,_~ts. Unfurnished ,.. ~~:':"~:.VisE••·:::::::::::·:; ,:r"°:mbled' words b. -...,. 1m Santa An1t. Ave, C.l\f. A WM.ti Ji. YovrOalfyAdMly~ M sur.u~u.£n. co " AL .. · · ........ .,. lf'llD-1111 •oAT ........... HM lowtoformfouralmpl.'WOfds. f
1
}.far, Apt 113 646-$12 ~»··,, ActarJln11lo.llt•Slan. Y •' · STA MSSA ............ ., ... 11• IOAT TllAILEtll tin r rnl,.7J:,:~ To develop mes.Savi forWecfi~·, ocr.JI MESA Vl!IDll: , ............. lllf IOAT MAIHTliMAN(l .......... ttl. rR A L c EN I -0;-,.~ ~ .. ~.-~,·-.. -~ ,&.':";"': .,..-:.F.11 HlWl'Olll:T al!AC H ........ Jut IOAT LAUHCH+HO ........ HM "' o 0 1 ,,,.._ !"':'""'"""'....., • .., ,....._,.. .!{~!_,{}..') HIW,.OltT HlilOMTI .......... Jilt MAltlNe: EQUll' ......... NH } u gf ...... rzocllocbl ...... ' •
"EWl'OllT SHORl!I .... ,,,. IOAT IL1P. Mo01t1No".'.'.'.'.' .. i' • j I j II 1• ~ • 3 Bdrms 2 ·sa.. $150/nio ~TAUIUS ,~ ... .. '#1!.TCLIFF .... J2>f IOAT SlltVICEI 17 , < )---•Ml.'1' 1h 311ltW11' 61Pre!WQ JCO~IVIO UNIVl.llllTY ll'Alll:ll ........... 1111 IOAT ltlMtALS .:::::::::::::. F.7' • 3 bdrna2 balh!I, many eX• ' ' 2kitnlft ..... lZColl 6211111'4 oc r,u IACKaAY ............. .,,.. '°"' (HAl:Tftl ............... 1' ' -' 11'1'1, ~/month. "~~_.WA!lO l~ 3JS.... 630f HOf'. ll
0
EAST l lUFF ·,, .......... SMI l'llMIHO 10Atl ................... I ~~~j .. ,.11,10•11•Nt• 34Wony... 64You ' CORONA 01.L MAit ........... HJI IOAT MOVING ............... ,.., BERLE I •·I Bdrms 2 baths. $250/n10. !SJf,..rr • STao:u. 35 .. 6Sc..trei ~·~?·l,· .. LIOA .............. u.. 10AT sT0111:11.01 ............ ...... J 0r:::J' Wells McCa di Rlt .... ,.. •Y.. :UT• 66c..difft ~~-"""' ~~J'.o 1~1~1NDs ·::::::::::::: ... ~ :?.AJJA-:/'NTlO '.::::::::::::::?: L-~J_.l_L•_~j_._. l} _,.__,, ) l8JO Nf:WJIOl'l rBlvd .• c.~~· ~WA'l2f i~.,... ~~ ~~'» r-SMllTTMIUS SALIOA !SU.NO ............ RU f'L.Y IHO LEl~I PIH _ • • • • • :WS,7T29 6u""e• '·fJUJf>t 91ttif!i l91-6'T• HO'f,"lt~
ffUHTtNeTOH ll:ACK ......... Mt MMILli HOMES .:::::::::::::.,.. \.;:~llllllU!:! ......... _) . 'OT'YDO'f eves ......... ~ ,. IOfollooif -«>Mlt i'0"-11 ..,:. 2f POUMTAlfll VAl.l.t:Y .......... Ml.I MOTOlt MOME.I ............... nu .a. r.N!~·1S.32 l lT011o1 Al~ 71........ -~ ... -ti~~,·~ .............. !'"="'·ICVCLEI ................ ms I SCSH E I r -NEW adult co1nmurtlly. I. ':<~:!!;1..80-l~U~ llll'NIQl004lor1 4~ n"-' "1-IAC ............. ~. 1LaCT1t1C CAltl .......... .,...tut -~-r::-r--.--r--i I r IJV.-.r 4lr-. nc..'t 1..5641 ::","•",•,-,,-"!"', ...... : ...... ,. ... 1i11M1 •1•••...z..:·"·""""'" .. nn r4 I' I j j So-Lel-'s odvf-, "Don"" 2 Br, all tilll pd, pool, shaa ~"*:Ill 1•wowi1 .wF.. 7•Vw WllCOtit .--v" .. ,.._ ....... Nl'I MOtO.CiYCLiJC• .,,,.,.,..,.. tJll Ul Uf . -1 ..,... blti d ••of21 SAN As--"' -.,~ wasTMhnrf1t ............... Nq MOTOltcOOTal:i ............ fist c • .,,s, .• ns, rapes, £All< '"', _,.. •-1 •_,.• ote..JZ4\ M•OWAY Cl't'r ..................... AUTO llltVICl!S. l'Atn ........ merry for money. You c.an age w/ator. Al'tl. Adult.a '"'', l&Do.M "6Undw 76 Luc.kf • 1Ni." NHTA ANA .................... AllTO TOOLS• ltUIP • .,,.,,,_,.,, r---------.~-OW ft • f t170f 41Todtr 11~ sAHTA AtrtA 1t1te"T ............ r1tA1L• .. r•Avn .: ......... Mn I LA 0 p 1 L I._, -. only. •rom ttso. "' l g:j '!~ 7',.,~. ~ 1usT1H .. . ............ ,... nA1L•11"' Ulllltf ............ "N • 1 .. 11 HACIENDA HARBOR .. .,.,_ '' fl:t':..." llACM ·.::::::::: .. ·= C.AMPll!lt.I ................ mt ~.,_;~r"""1~T,.;:_9,-91-I 0 ~ltt• 1ft•.dlutll• quaffd UC) rir-u-~=:' :rr::.. .t.QUAIJUI uouMA MIOUl!L • .......... ·;.1,., I:~~:* .... . ............... ;: bv 11li"11111 the"'~ word 2.-1 Avocado 6'2·2915 ~ Jutr, 1t 22SM, siAhi l'cu, '""··~~A
$A" CLlllllNTI ....... ,, .. CAMPll: lllNTAU ........... "" . }'Oii ~lop lrom "'P No, :f btlow. QUIF:f, dlx 2 Br, bllm. n;~ • .we.11 2)'1m! "1,,,.. 13 = ,,,, ,.
LUI JUAN U.PllTltAHO ..... J1'll DUMli IUOOllS fSU a\ ••>NT r r r .. .. :2,,•Gttn ,SI"'•"'""' " ,., .. R IU POtlfT TE '"' IMll'OltlSO AUTOS ................ v IN !"1"""'s1 so'u''P,,l(Ts nRS r r ,. I' I ~ts/tlrps. beam ct 11 . -"-!'"3) :26 Which ~... 13~ ~ EAL ESTA , lll'OltT UtlS ........... 11 n n _ >'\dtJllJI, .._, J>{'IS. t"rom $133. ~ :56~ MY111 · 4
r-I l MTtOlJIS, CLAISICS .......... 11 ii 'DWttl .51~ 110-~ •
v.nerl ltAC• CAllS, lt001 ............. ,. "' UNSCtAM I I I I I I I I 516-3386 nn 6. " 21C.. .51V--·~ r111PL1A. '"· ...... ,.. luTo 1v111Ts .............. ff,2f v 011 '"'sw",i, LfttERs to -,'lthfd "~ "'""-' ~
CONDOMINIUM ........... ..,. a.uros '#AMTIO ............... ,.. ....... • • • . • • • • Sill. 2 Br +.pie.~. BUna:. u 30....., .cc;_,.. • IOTtM.rollll "' . ~'-----' l::k~·:.:·:;:: .:::::::::::::. :~:. <t:: .... ·:::::::::::::::m: SCRAM·LETS ANSWER IN CLASSIFICATION 9600 <ept ... .,,... Avail I/I. Blua 't~ -@Goo! @Ad-f)~ '·'°-"-'-'_ .. _•_•_._ .. _ .. _ .. _ .. _._. _._-__ ,._.,_._"'_•_•_._ .. _ .. _ .. _ .. _ .. _ .. _ .. _ .. ~ -------'---:.c.:_.:...:::..:;.:...:.:...:::.:_;.;..;__;::_:::_:.:::..::;.:..:_:_:_::.:-=..:..:.....:-=.:.:--' Beacon, 6~5"-0111, C.M. -----•·
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D~lV 'llOT Tllt'..U,, J1niw1 27, l97CJ lliiiiii~iiii .. 11!1111 .. llll!lllllllli!iilllli!ijl~U~I NESSand * * * * * * FINANCIAL
1015 & EMPLOYMINT
Jo-Man. WOffl. 7100
f.tANUFACTURER
$17 ,500 Inve11mt.nt Into tht'
110, I Bu&ll"ll!M of the day. 25
yr. history ol aucctu, no>A
4.1xpaodll\it oprratloM to So.
Call!. Coinplctc factory itl--
stu.llP.d & 1-cady to iio. \\tlU
iraln P:rlnciJ)Rl Ill i\lgn11.
ul.11l1!lf!s. ContQct irnn1ed.
When You
Wont it done
right .•.
Accts P•y•ble to $SOO
Fl!e paid
$4M,\NTIU. 8,\RY
PrASONNEL AGENCY
2m S. Main, S.A. 549-nM
AJao lee job
ACCOUNTANT. Part-lime.
Can tie 4th yr acrountint
maJoi . tu·1. can be ar-
ra~. Call 6U-68Gl ask
for fl1 r Bro\\'n
~ Once in a lifetime 011por. to
Whaddy1 Want? Whaddya Got? u1ctke that high incon1• !Mii
Call ane af
the experts
listed below!! ACT'JVtrY Dlreeto1· • FuU
Thne Openln;: For Con-
vale:scept H01PltaJ. Ca 11
sn..2..110. SPECIAL CLASSIFICATION FOR :f:~ s~~~ll :'~u~~~~:~ SERv1
1•c·E·-DIR·E·C·T·O·R·v-·s·E·R·v·1•c11E•D•"1R•E·c·r·o·R·Y-·s·e·R•v•1c···eD·1·R·E•c•r .. oRY
NATURAL BORN SWAPPERS pl'ofita. Call Ken CliUord
S~ci1I RI ,.. i714) 774-7050 Accounting 6500 Cement; Concrete 6600 Landscaping 6110 5 Ll"e' -.5 times -5 bucks ---------·I ~.;;.;..;;:.;c;,;.;.;;::.... __ ::.;;.:.;1Adverti1I~ A19ncy
llUllS -•O MU$T INCLUOI! CUSTOM CLEANERS Cl. ~1PLE'TE Personalized CEl\1ENT \YORK. no job too GENERAL LANDSCAPE Sharp SeCTetary lor fast-~ ,.... """" IO "'*· t-Wl'lt1 wu ••111 "' trt0t. k I Sn all bl G RDENER Cl -• N •· •· ....• 0 .. , _ ,.,,-·-· •--l llrws .. H¥•"'"t1a. . i..,.,, Book ·eep ng Servitt. 1 , 1-casona c. F'rt'e A can ups, p&r..-.:u e'~"?Ol'tucachrqen. ' " -....,.... Fully ~U!pped pre5!1 s,"'t' .,..,,,_.... ,,. S.-NOTt;INO 1"011 !.Alt -TIUOES ONl YI Specht.ll~ing in s n1 a I J Estlnl. H. Slufllck 5~~1;j Reoovatlnj: trtt ll'imn•in .. , r:y, •1yc w-TD. Sho&'thand
T Pl Y T d r' P d.,. a~ Cood bus., TOP location. -.. 100 o 1c• our ril e s 1r1 I -Sl6.500 businesses. P.U. &. Deliv, •CONCRETE floors patios pruni!'lg. . Ofl"tnb:!' 4 follow thru.
PHONE 642-5671 Graham Rlty. '4&-2:414 \,:968-8:=;'00=, ;,5.16--<::;:t.;6::===-etc. Any u job. 'Reas i,. IH2·821<1 ~~~r 35. Phone: 642-3910.
J .,_ 11.B. TRIPLEX 11 \th h;gh l\ea,· New•""i1 Post OlflL'i? Guaranteed? Don, 64~14. _ 25 · Newpoft Blvd., N.B. Lo\lt'ly New l Br, oa .~ B1by1ittin9 6550 Moving, Stor•ge 6840 AIDES -for oonvaleacence.
ff-• Fob••i""§ Oce11n '"'' 1'f!tw11, near beach, newly Concret wm-k all IY"'~s. Pa. y'" · ........ · n. CJI NJ:: Sho "" . !!lderly care or family care Lacuna. Wint lot, T.D. Or redecorated. n'ant properly 1'.IA · l P · ov.'l'ler MOTHER of 2 y,•1she1 to tios, Pool deck!! & block MOVING · ilauhng. na 1 Homemaken -:'..i?-E681 '
Income. $19.000 Equ11y. Call or !>t'C'Oncls in North San Di. retiring. Small 11hop, nice babyiit days n1y home, v.-ork. Dick 642·1797 too , ~1091, Best late eve '"l'I
• MS.176.ll'Agent. eguCo. tl·1l4) 753-8731 eves. bldg. on 1i acn! M·l prop. Balboa Isl. Playroom, lots o, early AM or ~126 ASSEMBl.ERS ipr camper
WiU Tndr. Newport Sch !lave unique RI 3 BR 2 BA Call owne.r 642-260l or of toys. 67>164·1. Contractors 6620 factory. WoodWl\'kina: exp.
T.nnl. Club family Mem· "·/pool, College Park, CM . S.l8-326l ~lATIJRE '" ·1 ----------'-Pall'Mlth•nglng ~fa.le or female. App).y Ma· · · • On S I " "oman SJ your Additions • ftemodellne ,..-)01"4'ay 1169 W llth C Ptt benhlp, SIOOO Value, for Or-\\!ill trade near beach units * Liquor Lie 1. • • home eves &: \vknds. Sl.23 Painting 6850 ' · ' · ·
lental ru,s, antique.\ ? ? East LB, J.lB, NB/CM/CdM INTER.COUNTY hr. After 6 pin _ llpm ~ ll. C:rwick, 541:2170 Apprentice or ~xp.
544-1288 eves & \\'kends. from ownel'S. 546-0011 TR.ANSi"'ERS ;,.j,8--4389. • lnt•rior •Exterior e Silk Attttnirlg. C.ll
.j Be F llt k Have 4 Honda l\folol'cycles DEADLINE: Fri Jan 23, '70? Acou~tic ceilings ptd, 12 y111 after 6 P
0
M: U Si42U
"Ill. acres, a ll"OO . Call Co!lel'.t for best p, ice BAB)'SIT inlant11 on I y , C1rfMt Cleaning 662.5 ex""'r. State lie. Pittsbu .... h • fomc Avocado trees. S2S.f00 «: I~' Outbol.rd Ski Boat. kd• , y hon1€' "··!""" ,.... •o !\Ir WrNSTON f213) 272-4249 \\'ff. Y in D«......,.. pnts. 5-13-1787 Automotive • Tit'f' Val .. clear. Tr11de for in-\Vant Furniture. Sn1alJ Car. Penni. Q\\•n ll'allsp. Refs. A-OK Shampoo Special ,7.50 ~'Ome Ne"-po11·C~ta ri1es11. Ven Or ?, StilA LL RESTAURANT, s;3-808:) nn1le1s for halls. etc. Al.Y.I INT&: Ex! Pntg. Frtt ests. Mark C. Bloome
Corbin-Marlin 675·1662 Call 5,;7.8Zl8 newly re-decorated. beach CHILD CARJ-; ui iny home. comp. housecln'g 827-3183 Loe refs. 30 yrs exp. Lie. & TOP SALARIES
Ce11sna TU :l~. 1968. 6 place TRADE clear '69 C.On1inen· area. Substan!lal down &: A 1 \VII School CARPET STEAJllT CLEAN· insrd. Call Chuck 6-lft-0809 * Tl RE SALESMEN terms 642--0724 crosg l'orn son or J im 54&-0405. BRAKE turbo • cl\arged. Loaded! ta!, white landau top, white · on Pluccntia, Ci\1 545-5026. ED No soap, no brushes. *
Low time&-clean . $6M t'Q. interior, 2 door FOR 2:1' • 6320 BABYSrM'lNG. iny home, For esl. 646--5971 ./ PA IN TI NG-INT/Exl. MECHANICS .
Trade tor camf)l!r, real ,s-23' l\lotor home. _M_o_n_•_v:_t_o_L_00_• ____ 1 Ch-1. Daily, Infant & up. ;F:
10
=
0
=_========I Jack can do that paintina: * TIRE MOUNTEltS
late, etc. 837·TI19 548-9806 1 T 6.J6.S7n2 , .. 6665 job-fut, clean & very rea.s! FOR. BRAND NEW
LUXury car. \Viii t rade t(IU· \VANT 213 acre or more C2 st D Loan CARPET VIN'" TILE bL 8M-389S. 847-1358 C.USTA MESA STOllE
0, •, 1-1 ~ •••• Co. 1-m BABYSITTING, Near Heller • .. EX-PAINTER, now PA .. , References. 5'" d•u• "'1ll ity for duplex, aparlments, " ...,,...,,...., •u " _, H r Im " Co .....,,. .,.. "'7 ...
G • G Bl d h [..oy,·esl Interest Available Park. l..rg ian.1 , Ot Lunch. rtt est ate .. ic. nlJ·. teacher will naint eves & train. r.1edlcal lna:ura-,
or wh.at havf' you. 8l en l'O\'e v . s0ut . 2 d TD L Mon-Fri. 645-2754 ;>40.7262 &46-4478 ...--· ... ,. Phone Trade JO acres Palm Sprg5 wknds. Xlnt worknlB.JlShip, profit sharing & retireme.il
499·29'10 area. Value S20.000. 536-1131 n oan \VILL babysit your hon1e 5 Free es1. 6.i6-4Sl9, f>40.-0062 plan, manqement opport\m-PA•~! SPRINGS . 12 mod· !l<I "' ~lob"l H Pk Te bA d 1 days or evei1. \'ou lurnish Gird•ning 668° C. R. Kelly pa in 1 in g . ity.
fm ~nits, k1ngsize pool, for i\l:~e 1\~a:-'n!ton, 642.2JJ1 llC .on ~S-~11 transportation. 642-l.W7 N£'\V la1vns, 1·e -sel!dlng. Complett intei.iors & ex·
large yacht lsaU or po"'cr/ good hun!ina; f!lC. Trad' for Servin.I!! Harboi· area 21 yrs. i\fY Home, fenced yard, hot Cumplete la\\11 care. Clean terion. \York guaranteed.
APPLY:
l.fil,10 Brookhurst
Gan::lf!n Grove . or ~ Ru.ss i\lcCrea, 733 E. Or;uwe-Co. or San Di<'go Sattl•r Mortsi•SI• Co. meals days only. nr Harbor up by job or month. Free F'ree ests. ~l;l.l
Vista Ouno. P .S. Prop. Brkr. 6iJ.C>116 !36 !::. 17th Sll'eet Shopping Cntr. 6~2-9919. estim11te1. Jo'or info. caU * PAPERHANGING
EQUITY 4 UNITS. STUDIO
APT. C.1\1. TAKE ANY-
THING OF VALUE. EL-
DERLY OWNER.
21' Flybr!dge Cabin Crulter =======::;:==IBABYSIITING i\ly Home. s.ls.-0932 bcl. 9 AM, afler & PAINTING * 968-2425
Mo TD 63 5 M V ~ A A ,~ 4:JO PM.01·weckends. N _, d t · 11 Xlnt l'Ond. Sleeps 6, Tl'ade rtg•gu, • .'1 4 esa eaue rea. ges ·J FOR Bell.tr pain ti ng, ew a1iu use .. S rao1ght Iii! .•
AUTO SALESMAN
'2200 eq. for trailer boat, P1'l!f. Ca ll 540-1911 AL'S Garoenlna; & Lawn Interior &. exterior aooustic Prefer e.'l(per1ence. Excellent
camper or ?! $l500 2nd TD on excellent k M l\laintenal1C:e. C.Ommercial, ceilingll. 646-4077, insu!'ed. opportunity for youn1 , a1-
CALL . 673-3200
Call &IS.4619 OCf"an view lot, ION, .,,. Irle , 11onry, etc. industrial A ~ldentlal. a:ressl•re man lo Proatt!S tn .,. 6.560 * 646-3629 * PAINTING-Ext~Int. 18 yrs. modem, harbor area Buick
One Acre lot F1aeslalf. Ar.
izona ~ub-dlvision, $3000 val. u'. TRADE for California
property or ? 0 w n e r
!i-14-6418 eves.
What do you have IO trad• :"
List II here -in Oran~
County'• IarR:est r&ad trad-
U. post -aM make 1 d€'al.
1st TRUST DEEDS TO
$140,IXXI Trade for clear
vle1v condo. or Home New.
port, or 111 down p.lyment
on incom€'.
(714) 459-3103
Old est. Gen. l\ferchanclise
!lore. sraOO \'a.I. Trad!'! for
vac. lot. hOUSe equity, boat,
mobil home, or. ?
6r>T.l82 Owner
lerest, due 3 Yeatl. 20% ==~~-~----exper. Ins .. L. 1c. fu€'• est. Dealenihip. A II •mployet d'·~ .......... 1 49,1...... GEN 'L yd. Clean-up, tree A t c 1 ••g ·~ ""Y"" · .,-•w BUILD, Remodel, repair __ ccous · ei ings "' ...,.,.,, benefits includi""' paid vaca. serv. rolo·lill . Sp r I :: 1 r ~ "• Brick. block. conc r ete , 1 R PAINTING $12 ave ra g• tion an .. hOipllalizaUon. 6350 rrpciirs. Hau · ea 8on . '"' carpentry, no job too small . 64i;..5848 room. Rrliablr, fas1. 10 yrs Jack Brown 548-7765
----------Lie. Contr. 962-6945 ~===-~----ln area. 638-7333, 4-GP rif Poole Bu ick
20% Ne! Relum-1 yr payoU FREE Est. Brick. block, JAPANESE Gardcnrr, * PAINTING • Jnt/Ext. 234 E. lith SL, "osta ft1en l TD · €'Xp'd. Counlt)' yard servic€'. st on pnnn'! rnobile i;tone, planters & entry f{C\iablC', tree eaL 642-438!1 1...ocal references. lmn1ed BABYSITTER v.·anted, my
home elev. Adj. 1najot· col· ways. :)31-4973. State! Lic'd. sci vice. 6'6-5242. 646-3657 home, 2 boy!! 71 ~ &. 5,
Jege. $'ll,000 rr q u I red ·I========== Jil\J'S Gardenlni,: &· la1vn DUNN BY DUNN l\fon-Fri 8-5:30 Ne iv pl .
6'16-1234. day or Cl.'e S 5 2 n1aintenarice. Res. & con1· · Business ervice 6 6 P"i nting &: Pa....,.rhangin"' Shores art's. Must have own n1crcial * 540-4837 "' .. ~ ..
Mon•y W1ntM
SEEKING 2nd loon h-om Frt'e est. Reas. 642--:l:'.IH transp. 645-J.i!l;) aft 6.
*
priv. party. Honl<' loan, COi\IPUTER printed address EXPERT Japanei;e Gardener
about $3000. 54~24·11 I labels. Your name &. ad· Right price, nice job & clean YOU SUpply The Paint. 3 Br, B AB"! SnTE~/Housekttp.i d I t k hed · Liv RM &. Kitchen Painted, .Er. Live-Jn. Girl 5, boy 3. * * * * ---. ----------·--ANNOUNCEMENTS ress 11 · ey punc 11110 up. FrN' estimat~. :>18.J35-I !Kfl. Call 5.17-8638. &l2--S"192 or &4z..s823 .
• nd NOTICES 18~1 card~ Files matn· CLEAN-UP SPECIALIST """'
REAL ESTATE
General
JlEAL £S1A.1i ta1ned & updated 673-Sl:itl PAINTING, p.-.. ; .... 11 ~. BO.AT CARPENTERS ~-·orol 1---------1 ='::;;::;:,:cc:::::::·c::c~;;_,, l\lo\\'ing, edging, odd JO' bs. ....,,....~'6 ;•~ Y9l1 TYPING · b -in Harbor area, Lie. & Experienced. Apply 19Tf
----------Found (Free Ads) 6400 1 Y profess. Reasonable. ~ bonded. Refs. furn. 6'tl-2l56. Placentia. Costa r.1e1a
6070 Lots 6100 1----------1 secrel.ary. G c n er a I & JOHNSON'S GARDENING engineering. Student rates. B OOKKEEPER: FamUl.&'r 1----------1;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;;;;; YNG. Tan &. a:rey, shllggy 961-9824. Yard care. Oean-ups. Prun-Plastering, R•p•ir 6110 iv/all procedures incl cost
Office R•ntal
HUNTINGTON BEACH Cock-a-Poo lypc. Vici:========= ing, plantini:. 962-203:"J accounting. 64213TI.
Al C nd.' d SAN CLEMENTE Westminster Pl C ~I k •PATOI PLASTERING r o 1t1one f>.12--%342 " · · C1binetm1 ing 6.580 Hiuling 6730 All types. t'ree e!ltimatcs BEAUTY Operator -Exper.
ON l!ACH ILVD. Ari~ollS !'E!ller will SflU this c II 5'1°"68'2~ Male Pref. Guar. Sa1ary + De~k spate avallablc In 80'.0 s<J rt lot .,~rith low down. Bl.ACK cat with 1vhile 8pot RESIDENTIAL & Comn1. "i ARD / GA r . CI canup. 3 a Comm. Call 84l-gj95, Peler.
ne1vest office building at 00 ohcllt. Identify. ''''"i••I Cu1torn Cabinet & Furn.
P•lm• location In ll"nl>'n"· \\'ell located for excellent " 1• •·r · . h'n 64~ ~1 f{Ctnovc l.L'l.'CS, i\'y, trai.h. ' u ... & Goldenrod 675-42:;;) nf!€'r 6 urn ru:-1n1s J g. .,..,,,,., I"' ton Beach. Air condition('(!, view of the Pacific. Askini:: Crarlf". btickhot', .... 2-87·15
beautiful entrance. Front· Sl3.900 \\'ith 10% down. For pm, 6590 e HAULING. llnvc i.; !on
age on Beech Blvd., rear more inrormation, please FOUND: Black A v.·hite Cirpepterlng pickup. licensed & insllrcd.
leads tn private parking c11.U K. \Y. SmaU Spaniel-type dog, v; c. CARPENTRY 491-1003
Plu mbing 689«) BOOKKEEPER
PLUMBIN G REPAIR Part lime. ~l hour. Full
No job too iimalt charge. Beach area. Call
• 642·3128 a Loraine, \Vestelili Person·
===':;:;_:;;:;='=:=cl nel Agency, 2043 Westclit[ lot. $50 per month for Eckhoff & As soc., Inc. N I d Hu nt Be h C II °"'==::;:=:::;:::;:=:=:= Gpace. Dc•k llna cna1r1 .:. t'W an ' · ac · 8 f.tINOR REPAIRS. No Job ~
available for $5. Business 1018 \V. O\apn1an Ave. 8~2-4776 Too Small Cabinet ltl (::BJ'. Housecle1nlng 673.5 Remod•I, Rep.ir, 6940
hours answerlna: service Ortinge, Calif. RABBIT Vic !ltcS&. Dr. & ages A o t be r cabineti;.
Dr .. N.B. 645-2770 (fee and
ft"<'C job5)
available for $10. All utlli-541-26Zl, Evf!s-\\'knds 53&-5971 Birch, Santa Ana Hchts. 54>8175, u no answer leave
ties paid except telephone. I~~~~~~~~~~ 549-3813 m,. at 646-2372. IL o. DAILY ,ILOT
17175 llACH aLVO. Acr••ve 6200 r.lALE Ct'r. Sht-p. puppy, Andef90:;."~~~-~~
HUNTINOTON alACH \'ic. Alph11. Beta, l.cii;una CARPENTER \\'ork. Family
M2..U:Z1 •JUST 11 Brh. 49-t-l-110 rooms. rcmodcli"'"'• ><pair. " • SI' 10 acrf!s near ·~
SMALL OUice on bu.sy cor. lsrgc~t hike. Take o~r ~25. FOUN D Large male Collie. ,\JI 1vork g u a rant e ed.
ne-r Cos!a '.\lesa S551mon1h mo. 7l4-89l-47~3 Vic. 19th & Orange. Call .&l0-<06~· ~=-'---~--7 urilitle1 included. 6-12..WSO &tZ-0739 ft 6 p:\I ;; a • . GEN. repair, add., cab.
lfAVE laI'l:e 2 roo1n office Mount. & Desert 6210 SIAMESE cat found on Forn1ica, paneling, marlitc.
BAY & Beach Janitorial
Carpets. v"indo1vs. fioors,
l'IC. Res & Con1mc 'l,
6.J&..1401.
JACK'S HOUSEKEl::PlNG
Complete Housecleanin,C!!
5'18-72t:l 612-8931
i\lesa Ch~anini: Scrvil'l'
Ca11K'tS, \1'1ndo1\'S, floors rlc.
RPS. & Commc'I. 54S4iJ I
Add-A-Room
Remo d•linq
Custom Desi9n S•rvice
Fre• Es+ima+•. '49~-075 I
~fln9 6950
BOYS 10 °14
Carrier Routes Opn
tor
Lquna. Beach, So. LaauM
DAILY PILOT
642.(l1l
ALL types rock. \l'OOCI & * CASHIER * Car Wa1b.
asphalt !\hingle!\. LEAKS Part time position.
RF.PAIRED. \Vork itllar.1 ___ C_AL_L_,_64_>-_>m __ _
suite lo Iha.re w/)l:>Un&: Dakota Ave in ~lesa Verde, Anything? Dick, 673-4459
pro!'I. Cd~!. GT"171 l_--.-C--·------1/22. Call 5·\(}..-0702 rtEPAJP., Partitions, Sm·'! 67'0 a . nr Hemet: &eenic .... Income T11x ..
BEAUT. air conditioned of. hidea\\·ay, 2700' el., wtr., remodel, etc. Nite or day I----------
847-1136 CLAIMS REP. $471
F'et' paid
Sawing 6960 SAl\1ANTHA BARY
!ice. new carpets i paint game. ~; $30 dn 633-mO Lost 6401 Rell9! Call KEN 54{H679
$110 mo . Call ~::i days 8-10 Ar.t <lit. ---------'REPAIRS * ALTERATIONS
. . PERSONNEL AGENCY
• Dre~smakinc . ~Iteration!! '2?19 s Main S.A. 548·2263 Smiley Tax Service
Industrial Prop. 6080 R. E. W1nt•d 6240
READY TO BUILD
ru11y improv~ parcel. GOOd
south Santa Ana local.ion.
Priced st $28,500 per acr<'.
t•rom l lo S aL't'eS avallablc.
F'or more infonnatlon please
f"All K, W. Small.
Eckhoff & Assoc., Inc:.
1818 \V. Chapman Ave,
Orange, Calif.
"41·7621. Eves-wknds 538.sgn
./ BUllDER OFFERS NE\V
,
If you h11.ve a 3 or 4 bdrm
home for i;ale or rent in the
Ha1·bor or Cosla l\lesa al't'8.,
CRll u~ today, \\'e rept<escnt
:.evcraJ large firms moving
lo the I !arbor are1 &. they
rnu~t havp housing.
PAUL•WBl'lt CARl'IABAN
&IALTT Co.
Hll:: Baker, C.;\l. 5~40
:1.~ sq. II. delu.xe bldg. '!'!' ... "l!'!!!!!!'!!!'!!!'!!!'!!-
Leued, choice Or a n g e QUALlflED buyer desires
County a"'a. Properly spacious 3 BR, 2 BA, laun-
elear. 011.oner wfcarry lst dry room, l story hou.~r
TD 8\ii%. Prepd int. ok. 1111h vie"'. approx 2100 sq ft
s.J)...3645 am, 828-5430 pm. in La-'l'Una Niguel TerraL-e.
20' x 30· huikllrt1; for rent, P.O. Box 573, So. Laguna
L&Juna t.anyon. \VANT To Buy: Duplex Lot
494-8918 or 494.517;; Anywhere. \\'ill Pay Ap.
Commerci1I 6085
fll'OX. $0000, &12.-6001, bctv.·n
1&4 P~1
1----------11ST TD'S to $140.000. Trade
for clear vicv.· condo. home
or inron1c ('qUily. 17141
4ill-3103
FOR sale 686-698.GIS \V. 19lh
St. Bethel T.,.,•n Area.
MS-1768 or 646-7414, A£1.
lncfustri1I ltentel
NEW BUILDING
1260 Loian Aw., Colla. N'.CM
Eaeh unil. 1125 -er ft, 2 off·
lcea, 2 mt rooms. U0/2'20
r l«tric. Ample parlclna-.
C. Robm Nattttsl Realtor
Costa Mna 642-1485
Lots 6100
BUSINESS ind
FINANCIAL ------eu1. Oppottunitte1 6300
COIN !AundriCJ·Frigidalre
From S6.~ to $~2.SOO,
Anahdm. Costa tit e" a ,
8ut'1fl. P.11rk, Fu ll erlon,
GA rd ('n G r <I''"·
W 1 1 tminster, i1untini;:1on
Beach, Santa Ana. Tustin,
La l\llrada.
Call Charl\r
REAL STEAL HUNTINSTUN BEACH for rlirht P<'l"50n, Jmmt'rl Of·
f'Upa.ncy fully equlpprd
:Z + AC'R.£S • ZONf; C-4 P.tady for bu~it'lf')'I S~
\\'arrie. AliW!. M,l.r Be•ch Blvd 1nven101'Y c>.:!Ju. \\'on1rn 1
SELL or EXOIANGE \I ear 11ho11. Seal Be11rh J:.,111,
R. 0 . Sl1te1 RHltotl !l >Ml. O"·nf'r 1'ttfnri;, · t1lll
$.16-8801 430-3001 nr j98.l21f ---'--"----
'YOUNG Black t.lal' Cat. * CABINETS. Any size job
Part Siamese. Ovenlzed 25 yrs eXfX'I'. 548-6713
frnt fert. Lost or Strayed in CARPENTRY. Cabinets
C.i\I. Arca. 540-4fl70 Remod. No joh !oo runall.
WSf Black Lab Pup. No Qunl 1vork. Call G.16-2316
Collar. Vic. Hunlington St., REri·IODELING : Cabi: ·1s,
H.B. Rcll'ard! 5.1G-2S80. Gel"lt'ral Rf'pair. No Job Too
Small. Reas. Anytime ,
0P.:"'-":.:o:.:":.:':.:l•:_. __ _c64:._;0.;..5 1 64:.:-3210
ACTING Cement, Coner•+• 6600
Do you want to be a full lime
working pn;ifestr.ional ~ Do CONCRETE \\"Ork all t)'p('i;.
Y"U have the self discipline Sa11,.ing, breaking, hauling.
10 subject y0urself to a rig· Skiptoading: Li . Service &
id Briliiih !raining ~rse! Quali 0
the artistic humilftYto ac·
Ct'Pl minor role15 untU the
e l21h YEAR LOCALLY e
Qualir1cd · R€'asonable
\V. A. (Bill) Sf\llLEY
Ccr1if1r.d Publlc Account'!
642·2221 anytime &16-9666
Crnlr~l Busin('.~s &t•\'icr!\
eTHE TAX ADVISORS
Pe1·n1. o(iice-Rca"> Ra tes ::ts No. Newport Blvd.
Oppo~He Hoog Hospital
For Appl. Call 645·1MOO
DAILY PILOT Dlt.IE ·A ·
LINES. Yo11 can use lhem
for just pennies a dAy. Dial
PILOT Claaitied ad.
Destgned to !ULt you. · Al!IO 'tee job
Call Jo * 6.if>.6446 CLERK • Femal(!
TILE, Cor1mic 6974 PRODUCTION
* v"'"" n.. r;1, Man * CONTROL CLERK
CUst. work. Install &. repairs.
No job too fin1all. Plaster Roequired by company rnaPIU·
patch. Leaking sh o '"er facturing data processlna: ~ repair. equipn1ent. r.1inimum :l yl'B.
==="="=·l="=·;='="=~=O=»;::;:=:::=I experience nee. and requlJ'. es 50 wpm typing, Xlnt op.
portunity in expandlna: 1.'0. Upho!st•ry 6990
CZYKOSKI'S Custm. Uptxll.
European Craft.maMhip
100~~ lint 6'2·1454
1831 Newport Blv. Of
Apply in per1t1n -
P1riph•r•I Business
Equipm•nt, l"c.
17344 F.a!tmM St .
lralning period i~ complete!!============::;:===~
If i;o TME LONDON LA· ANNOUNCl::MENTS ANNOUNCEMENTS JOBS & IMPLOYMENT
Irvine Industrial Complex
Santa Ana. Calif. m~
GUNA ACTOR s \YORK· ind NOTICES and NOTICES CONTROLLER
Job Want.d, Men 7000 Resumes held In C01Tliden« SHOP might be able to help
you. No prtt\•lous experience Personals 6405 Announcements 6410 n\. if now cmplo)·ed. Several
RE'l1n.p0 Ma f' I n e Officer years eicpcrif'nce and degree
desires job In sales and/or in Accountlna required. Ca.II neceuary. no age bl!rrlfr.l----------
l\.lfn1bers of thi.1: exclustve FATHER 77, alone ~·
group will _only be acccptrd homeless \\'i!h cockrr dog,
upon a 11A!l!l.!atto1-y P.'rsonR.l desires to pay $200 mo for
\11ter.rlcw v.'llh the director. home care & drive my car,
Call 494-44<H ror nri111. 83.'l-OJJj
* FULLY LICENSED * NEED H.IDE to OC a1rpo11 Rek~wncd ll!ndu .Spin!ual1st' \'ic. from rilission Viejo daily
Arlv1se_.. On . ;ill mntrers: \\'ill shlll"<' cxpenM's. Call
L-Ov~. ~farru;,lfc, Bustll('Sli, BrUN' s:r;.~117
Courtship, II L ff. 11 h, lfnp-, ,
p\ness k. SU('('t'I~. i\o pi'O-hL!::CTROLYSIS tUn1vanrcd
blf'rns too l&rgl' or !•)I) il&lr Pcnnanenlly R~1nt)\'·
sn1/\JJ. l CAN HELP \\lU. rd1 By 1\pp1 18700 i\la1n St.
Rcadinc• :;::IV1:n 7 ~luys ,, 11.n. C1Lll 812-7i'lG
w~k. 9Ari1·9Pj\1 312 N. l:J REF'TNED. caJ)lblc \\'Oman
Ca m I no n r a I . S 11 n "'ill shop, 1~ad, \l'rilc or ac·
Ocn1('nfe 492-9136. 492-0076 ronipany you. Exch. rtfs.
* M-en c~':EUJR Alcoholiun
related dilon:le:n.
646--5130
FIND YOUR GnlL 1'11E
S~l .\RT \\'A\.?
547-6663
64.'>-2.Sll or
A.LCOHOUCS AnOeytnoua
Phonl 542-7211 o.· WTlt• to
P.O. Box 12%3 Co~ta Meu. __:i l'lour l'l"l-O!tlln; BUSIEST mnrkt•lplAce In
S!Nt.;LES Dance t'\'t'ry '\'rd. IO\l n. Th• DAILY PILOT
8 .. 1() 1u 12, fox !rot, 511•lnl:. CIAHlfled scctlOn. Save
l,a11n, ~lr.11dowlark Cvuntry money, time i c:Uort. Look
Club, H.B. 3 n1L \\". ol now!!! Rfoach ofl \Varnt>r, Artnl fJ ....:_ ...... ______ _
•
SE.~SJTIVITY TRAINING customer rtlalions. Plea~e Ann, \\'estctltr Personnel
\\IORK SMOP ca.II 2'1W46-T46f aft 5:30 Agency·, :lQ.13 Westclllf Ortve,
A program of in1c:1·pcrsonal PM or write to l\11ljor N.B. 64.\-2770 (Tee and Fee
('\11rcl1cs lor ~n\8.ll ~elf-di· William Donovan, 311 N. 7th Paid jobs)
l't1·!{'(! 1:ro11p11, l\11nlmal St. A.pi r.f, Surbt.nk; Ca. COS--M-ET~-C------· t
charge call 642·8730. 10 Ml· 91:xJ1 1 I SALES H.B. E~·
5 P'' 1 ,;~=========-i perlenced, for dru~tort. · · ean 536-m Job Want~, ~~~--~--
Card of Thinks 6416
\\'E \\'0111<1 L!kt" lo E:irrires11
Our Slneere Th1n1ks To AU
Out• F'rl€'nd111 During Thi-R~
1'f'nt Lo!lll Of Our Be.loved
Jl u..,,band lo F11.tht>r. TM
UITTY Ray i\toor r arn1ly.
JOBS & EMPLOYMENT
Job Wanted, Men 7000
GEN. i\iainl. Exp. 20 YI'·
Plumhlns. elf'(·. carpenlry,
pain\ini:. ~l\Nttnlnc. Pn>fer
largt plQtU or co1npany.
612-11~1
)J,ET!rtEJ) Chl1•r Boats11·1111n'11
nia~(' ~t'l"k1n-;: l"n1plf/)'n1<'nt
in 1111n·lrK' !)'Pt' tif work
P .O. Be>:, :l l4, Co•ta !llcsa,
CA 9'!6~7
Women 7020 COASTAL AGENCY
-'-'-''"-'-------Professional
SECY. AVAILABLE Employment
Feb. tat. l-..~ce1lcnt likills. ·A11ist1"ce
•II pha.M-!I of!iec \\'Urk. Diet. A niembe:r of
Tyt>e, T11.1>1:s, 111lmeo, ~le.. Snellifl( & Snelling Inc..
t'ull or Pfl'lmc. C'lil "44-1400 :mo llarbor Bl, CM~
or Gra-3!133. Harbor Blvd. al Adiuru
DA Y\\IOR K . Gofld • ('OOK * Experienced
r.ft.renct:1. Nowport-Cofit1 Apply: SURF 1-SIRLOIN.
r.teu.. Own l~ 1>'6-6000 5900 Pac. Cst. Hwy .. N.8 .
Jobs-Me"* Wom. 7100 Count•r Glrl/C•shler s:m ro ~t«r1.
Accntt pay. Cl•rk lndependant
Rl'•ch t1'#1&. ttt n"hi11l1~d . Per•on•I A91ency
$1('() to sla11. Olht-r IL'~ jobs 1716 Oningc Al't', Suite C
inllll. c.~t. 617..()026. 5~~0!)70
lndapend•nt flON 'T JU~ \VISll for
Person•! Ag•ncy li0mf!!hln1 to furnl1h your
1716 Or&llfl:e ,\\'t', Suite. C hon1f! . , , find ireat buy1 in
C.M. 6~2-00'16, ;;.is.0979 tod11y'11 Ch1s-ifled Ad!!.
No Matter What It Is
\YOU CAN
SELL IT
WITH 'A
DAILY
PILOT
WANT
AD!
DIAL DIRECT
642-5678
CHARGE IT!
,
:·
" .
;
" '
-llP"'-----..--------~------~--~-~--------·---' . .... .. --,,c----0-------•
'·
" ·' '
JOIN THE
'SELLERS CIRCLE'
WE'RE
SAVING
SPACE
FOR
YOU •••
~
~
~
~
~
~
~
~
I
If you ull a service and qon 't advertise in
the DAILY PILOT Service 1Directory, you're
doing business the h a rd way· The Service
Directory (classifications 6500 -7000 in. the
classified ad section daily) g iv e s you an
advantage you get through no other adver·
tising medium. It reaches customers who are
ready to buy. Be there when your prospects
come into the market looking for the services
you have to sell. If your service isn't listed,
we'll start a category just for you.
Pick up the phone r i g h t now and reserve
your space in the "Sellers Circle" •
Your Direct Line to
Directory Results
642-5678
DAILY PILOT
CLASSIFIED AD DEPARTMENT
Tutldlt, J .. llltY 27, 1'70 DAILV PILOT ft
JOBS I IMPtOYMENT JOllS I IMPl.OYMINT JOllS I !MPLOYMINT JOllS I IMPLOYM~l~N~T~J ~~~~~~Nf JOIS i IMP[llYMINT
Joi.. Mon, Worn. 7100 Jobt-Mon, WOM. JIDOJo~n. Wom. 7100 ,..., Mon. Wom. 7100 Jo~o Mon, Wom. 7100 Jobo Min. Worn. 7100 --·---~----
DENTAL. Secretary w/man-
.,.nal abWt)'. Pttmanen1
~Hon. Newport Center.
J. C. PENNEY CO. -FASHION ISLA ND
NEWPORT BEACH
DEN,T AL ASSIST ANT
Chair aide, bper. p~r. X·
n.ys. Under 30. Houn Tues.
thru Sal, 14. Send resume
& refereDOes to P.O. Bax
L1:'i, So. L&guna,
h•• lmm•di•t• openl"lt fer
Cooka e Waltr11111 • Butboys
D E N T A L Rtctplion lit I
Sect'y. Exp'd • .\over 25 pre-
fened, but will conslde
others. 548-7<h<I
\Vlth some experience or willing to learn. Top
work ing conditions and environment. Com·
petJtlve wages plus meals and tips. Outstand-
ing bene!lls including hospitalization and pro-
fit sharing.
Apply In person 10 a.m. to 9 p.m.
Monday thru Saturday. OISH\VASHER. day lhift, 5
day "'eek· full time. See Penney's Fashion fsl1nd
Wayne, RANCHO S A N
JuAQUIN GOLF OOURSE, An equal opportunity employer
18021 Culver Rd, Irvine. Nt.l~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~!I UCI. 833-0112 I~ -
DENTAL ASS?'. Orthodonlc Job~n. Wom. 7100 Jok--1'\en. Wom. 7100
ehl.lr11de uaiatant. Call &U-1408 HOUSEKEEPER wanted -4
* 01 h hours only -pn•fer Fridays Keypunch 1 washer & Refs. Call 546-7817 aft 5:30
Busboy "'eek <lays, a n y t J me
Full time, days or eves.
APPLY IN PERSON
COCO'S
weekends
HOUSEK!:EPER. live In,
n1ature, Rcondary educa-
ti<>n (some Engl.) 4 ch!ld. &.
reso. parent& Beach horne.
#78 Fa.ahion Island Refs required 892-1006.
_N.,.•_wpo'=rt=B=·7·='"=·..,,c.;c.,""'-' _,HOUSEKEEPER -Spanish * DRIVERS * SP<aklog Pref. Choo., Your O\\'tl Hrs. Call &14-4194.
No Experience HOUSEh'EEPER -Li\'e 1n.
Necessary! Exper Glrl Only. 0wn
P.!ust have dean Ot.Wornia Room, TV. Top Salary.
drlvtns ~rd. At1pl,y Hunt. Harbour, 846--0106 or
YELLOW CAB CO. __ c.___=...· -----
186 E. 16th SL HOUSEKEEPER-Live in ror
Colla Meaa business man-single. HB
Driver area. <:a11 for appt. 7-9 pm,
Part time driver. Must be _84_7-_311_, _____ _
OPl!RATORS
$533 -$606
IBM KEYPUNCH
HONEYWELL
KEY TAPE
T\\10 YEARS EXPERI ENCE
PREFERRED. START ON
SWING SHIIT 3 Pl\1 TO
11:30 Pl\! IN LONG BEAOf.
Outstandini;: employee bene-
fils: l\11Milca.l; -Stock pur-
t•hase, Olsablllty, LUe In-
surance, Sick leave, Retire-
ment plan etc. Apply :
Thursday, Jan. 29th.
9,30AM
EDISON neat, personable I.: have ex-HOUSEKEEPER & child
cellent drivtni reeord. Guar-care, 5~~ da. wk, $50 "''k +
ant<:e $100 mo_ + $2.50 hr. rm &. brd. Pd. vac. S.KJ...9212
over 40 hrs per mo. Perfec t HOUSEKEEPER. 1 day wk, SM· Main SI., Huntlnfton Bcb.
OPP. for retired genUeman. $2.50 hour, Bluffs area, NB. An equa1 opportunity
Shollld be av-ilab!e for work 644--0963 employer
upon rea.sonablt' noUcr. l j;i;iili;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii l ----~:_ __ MASTER I'
SPECIALTIES
COMPANY
164o l\fonrovia Ave.
Co.sta P.leaa 642-2-m
DRIVER &: ~neral Helper
!or rapldly g r o \11 I n g
business. Xlnt chance for
future opportunity !or .1111
aggressive. ambltloua
\\'Orker. For appt, Apply In
person only. 2221 Fairview
Rd, Cr.!.
ELECTRONICS S u pp I y
Counl1r Salesman. Exper
Not Neeess. We will train il
yoo have an t!lectronlc
backgrouOO. H. \V. Wright
Co., 1770 Newport Blvd.,
C.l\.f.
ENGR MECH to $900
Ftt paid
SAt.fANn-IA BARY
PERSONNEL AGENCY
2"'-19 So. l\1'ain, S.A. 5'19-7Xi
Alao lee job
EXECUTIVE ~ta.ry .
Bkkpr. High respon1lbU!ty
po11ltion. 67J.-U66
EXPERIENCED
IMPORTED CAR
MECHANIC
Jquar, TOyota, Volvo, Alfa
Romeo. Ca.11 BClb Thompson
at:
.l\IARQUIS MOTORS
900 So. Coaat Hlway
Laguna Beach * 494-7503
EX P ER IE NCED
Hairdrftser Colla 1'1eu..
Apply Immediately,
545-8570.
INCOME TAX
Male
E1rn $5,000 commi11ion
thi1 1eason in high vol-
ume office .
c,11 Western
Business Services
642.0212
------lnsur1nce a9enc::y girl
Self-1tarter. Personal lines,
underwritinc & rating. Ex-
ptrlencc necessary, r.trs.
Bradley, 494-1~7.
ITT JABSCO
h•• an lmmedl•I•
opening for an
ENGINEERING
-CLERK-
Ex<"l!llent oppo1iunHy for
per90n lntere~ted in en-
elneeting, blueprinting,
loa·kupln1 and .ome tYP-
in1 duties.
EQUAL OPPORTUNITY
EMPLOYER
1485 D•le Wev
Costa M•••· Calif.
l\lachlnists
A progressive manu!ac1·
uring company, "''Ith ex-
cellent work1ni conditions
and fri~ benefits has
immediate opt!nings for
Autom atic Screw M•·
chine Setup ()pert -
Brown & Sharpe,
Praub, and Acme.
Harding• & Scr•w Op-
ers, Bench Miii, deburr
and drlll press opera.
(F'trst .l-Seeood Shilt)
Apply at
Sia Fas!, In<:,
926 So. Lyon
Santa Ana
MAIDS WANTED
• SM-1~'5 *
1'1AINTENANCT: Man, lull
time employment. Park
Lido Convaleacent Hotpltal.
Ph: 642-2410
?\IAINTENANCE Man lo dO
Janitorial W1)tk, p/llme.
Call 968-7906.
MECHANIC WANTED
ASSISTANT
MANAGER
EXJ>trlt'nctd only. Good nl-
a1')', many compar.y benelils,
Apply In person, Grant'•
Gull Service, 1740 NeWport
Blvd., C.M.
MEDICAL front oUlce, top
u.Jary
MUST BE SHARP Foreign Car Mechanics
Good r.o. benefit&, incl paid
vacation, group lna, uni. (71-IJ 54.~1 Write Dally Pilot Box P-916
fonna f\lmllhed free Cood or call 962-~ alter 6.
comm schedule Ail tor JANITOR -Male. Hunt's •tIDD' r ·~ 1 • • · D-h u · Id .....,..."6~ woman o J . .;;°':..,:,"::"'::".:.,,:P,:cho_. "=~'::™=· -1 P\: area. /4:J yrs o . 12 ha 1ove1 .. b ~-I f -am -S am 7 nltes J'('r wk 5 re v ay uvll ap *'*" F'RY COOK. w11h exper. Good pay (2131 43~ •1167 0 · with elderly woman. Mu1t
· Apply in penon. 562 W. 19th 12131 833-4441
1 r drive. Licht houaekeepina: '
St. C.t.L · coo~. Private room &:
GARDENER Tft.AINEE. No Jr Secretary I ba.th plu• modenate Wary.
Exp. ~c. Xlnt opp. CTI4J :\1nt rim',, gd benefHa. S•IOO ~l~rence1. Box 699, Dally
546-908..J t1nytlme . to start. Fee paid. Other ree =="cc·=...,,.,.,...,~=-
Gtn•ral Office Train•• jobfi avail. MATURE sUter in Cdl\-1 area
Good benefits. sm 1o stal1 Independent for occaislonal afternoons Ir
Independent Personnil Agency evenings. 67J..5649
P1rsonn•I AQtncy 1716 Orange Ave, Suite C l\10DEUNG SCHOOL
1116 Orange Ave, Suite C C.~J. 642-002ti, 545--0979 needs 2 part time eve. ln-
C.M. 642-0026, M5-0979 slruclon;. Need 1 be•utlclan
G 'I Off' t u50 LITE housekeeping, no (or hair 1tyling, I cos-tn 1c.• O '" babysitting, 9 11.nt to noon, meticlan for makeup. Muzt I~terestlng, varied ~utlea. Co Mon, Wed, Fri. Balboa be altractlve, txp'd, &. able
1nsuranre plan. Friendly at-Wand. ~f r 1. Carrington 10 lt!11.ch. call Miss Prim,
mas. ~~1 0 875-1532 ...,... '''""' t 1 t -"-.. JASON BEST . --or P ''"~"·
Jobo-.n, Wom. 7100Jollo Mon. Wom. 7100 ... A __
Offlco T..,JIO'Ol'Y
Proud to be an
Am . m er1can ...
Glad you're a
GIRL???
Join up with usl I l
AMERICAN
GIRL
ALL NEW
Rod , Whito &
Blue
temporary service
Marching along with
TOP RATES
MAJOR
ASSIGNMENTS
TOP BRASS
COMPANIES
We're r•cruitirt9
NOW for:
N1wport B•ach
Offlc•
& all Orang• County
& Beach Cities.
•
Recept./Typitt
Acctg, Clerk
11M1st1r11 Stenos
"First Class" Typi1ts
11Privato" Sectys.
"Ronk & File" Clerks
"Typist" with
creative writing
ability.
1'Le91P' Secys .
"NCR" Opor.
# 482
''Medicel '' Secys.
"Keypunch" Opers.
11Bookkeeper-Secy''
PBX Opor.
"Statistical" Typists
"Manuscript"
Typist Employment Agency
no7 So, Main. •5!'11A Ana
GUARDS: Immed. pt. timt
.positions avaU. Ill So .
Lit.gUna. Beach a r e a .
Un iform• It equip tumlahed.
Clll' A: tel. req'd. Equal Opp.
Employer. App: 13 9 l 2
Pondff'ON, Suite "F", San-
ta AOL
RETAIL
TOP EARNINGS
FOR MAJOR SALES
SPl!CIAUSTS WITH
! AMERICAN
GIRL
HANDYMAN
MAINTENANCE
'
\Vt are looking for !hat
ONt ma.n Who II a jack
of aU trade. Prtfer a
man who It retired and
needs aorneth1f11 10 do
and IOme l'l'lpol'llibWty.
Need a man to take care
of a. 24 hour laundromat
Nl!W GRANTS
• APPLIANCES
e FURNITURE
• CUSTOM DRAPERIES
•CAMERAS
GRANTS
GIVES YOU:
•
on 17th •trttt tn Costa M 5 al Me ... Mino[' Rtpaln to Top comm . P J~ (~pee. s t s comm.) Better
"""""'"· ,,....,.,,,..... total income. Full quality Uno. Oppty. for keep W'l.tcktul en on advancement. pd. vac., Holiday & sick pay,
'""· 1r YOU .,.. tht• Rellre plan, Group Ille le med ins . Emp disc.
man, WT!le A tell u• Jf you want to learn more about our money
about )'OU~lf. We wUI making proposition in one of the counties
cotit&ct )'OU tor an lntr:,... fastest tzrowin4 retail orglnizatlon -come
"1ew, Write Mr. r11htr, prepared to discuss your sates know-how ,
Bo:c J8U T~. Calli. ahd your previous experience. Come in and
90010 see.us, W. T. Grant C(i., Grant Plaza, Adams
1101 IC l MA 1 0 , , le Brookhursl, Huntington Beach.
deYol ... tc. _,,... An Equal opporlunlty Employer M&F.
I
needs YOU
Coll our NEW
Newport Buch No.
fer •ppolntment
673-4176
REGISTER NOW!
I AMERICAN
· GIRL
newpolt
personnel
, agency
ProfelJlonal S.rvJn
f•r th• employ1r •nd the appl'-'t
U3 Oowr Or., N.8.
642°3170 54f.27.Q
Nurs.i111t e e LVN'o M :30
P•rt Tim•
callfornla license nee.
Apply In Perso"
HunUncton Beach
Convaleactnt Hotpltal
tSm' Delaware, H.B.
NURSES Regilte1'ed -even-
ing A: night shifta. Ex.
benefllll. Apply Per90nnel
Director. So. Coast Com-
munity Ho.p.. 311!7:1 Coast
Hwy., So. ~ 4!&1311
ext. 356
Nunli.,:
lixperienc•d Aides
All zhlfts available
Huntin1ton Valley C.Onvalet-
cent Hospital. 8382 Newman
Ave, Hunt_ Sch. 842-5Mt
Nurse Aid!! Traininl
2nd oI ~larch. Tu-o lVMk
claaa. Employment ottered.
Apply,' Personnel D•pt .,
Ho•1 Hospital. N.8. * * NURSES AIDES * * Experienced .. ..,,,.,
e e NURSES AIDES
Houri 8 to 4130
Apply In peraon
Hunl1nglon Beach
C.Onvale1toent H0tpltal
18792 Dela"'·are. H.B.
PERSONNEL
RICIPTIONIST
REAL ESTATE
3 salespeople needed l'lllWI
Imrn~l•te ., •r Um 1 tor
qualitted !~Nees. P'u1l ,,,.,... inCludeo .qulty
loal'll, ruan.nteod Alea,
trade-ins & prosreff.ive:
tralt1lna progn.m.
Rax L .Hodges, Rlty.
Recept. Tralne.
Ute twine. Nlce pe:tlOnality
A phoM habltl. lndepondont
P..-oon~I Afoncy ins ~e Ave, Sl&ite c
C.M. 1142-. S4$.0l7I
$400 Roeeptionl1t * fee paid (Air.a fee Johll Call Lonhw, WestclW Ptr-
aonnel Aa:ency, 2043 Wut.
c=llff Drive, NB ~2'710
Resta\ll'IUlt
'·.
EVENING
BUSBOYS
NIGHT
DISHWASHERS
DAY
HOSTESSES
APPLY JN PERSON
RIUIEN E. Ll!I!
151 E. Cout Hwy.
Newport Beacb
RESTAURANT HELP e WAltRESSES e Ot.SHWASl-IER
Part or fW.l tlme. Swisa O\a.
let, 414 N. Newport, N.S.
~75,000?
HYLAND LA8 For ll«onf<d Iola ,,_,,....191
netds sharp, alert glrt to I •iiiiii&i;i;;mili••I screen appllcanU, handle
heavy phone, and moderatA!
typlni require& 50 wpm,
shortba.nd Pl>tferred,
II you enJoY mee~ people
In the atmoaphere ol a fa1t
moving de p&., conl.act andy
GurilKln, 540-5000
New. n1odern facU11ie.1 and
Mde range ol benefits.
HYLAND LAB.
3300 Hyland Avenue
{Corner Harbor Blvd . &:
San Olqo Freeway)
eo.ta 1'1esa, caUf.
POLICE CLERK
$474 to $576 Per Month
CITY OF
NEWPORT BEACH
One current ope ning
ava.il&blc. • Require• 50
w.p.m. typing, b I & h
tchool diploma, one year
or recent reneral clerical
experience.
Apply befot'I! 5 p.m., TLJt~
d,y, Feb. 3, 1970 t? the Per.
.onnel Office, 3300 Newport
Blvd., Newport Beach. Calif,
8'26e0, (TI4) 813-6633.
POLICEMAN
ST32 · $874 a month
Aie 21 to 31, up to 35 with
approved experience
HEIGHT. 5' 8'' minimum.
WEIGHT: in pn.portlon to
height. PHY SlC,.LRE.
QUIREMENTS: High school
aru:luate, valid C&lll. oper-
ator. UcenH, U.S, ci tizen.
File: application at City HaJJ,
1200 Wtltmlnater _.\ve,, \Ve1L
mlnater, Calif. before Feb.
13th, 1970 5:00 PM. Written
exam Feb, 23th. mo, tn4>
893-otjJl Ext. n.
QUICK WAY
TO BETTIR PAY
by "'i-'fftntina:
Texas (l)emlcal Co.
Air mail J .A, Crawford Pna.,
Boll 52, Fort Worth, Texaa.
REAL Estate Sales. Young
man with license Jar beat
selling Mw horn.es. Start
immediately. ~
Sain
Olk' or the nalion'a lariat
MUTUAL ,UNDS seuq: Orsaniza.Honl
11 now alao ottmrw
LIFE INSURANCE
He~·s a MONEY • MAKINO
OPPORT1JNITY for )'OU ln a
llletime prestige career. Now
you can eXpe.nd yoctt income
by •Dini" BOTH -muh&ll
tund.1 and Ille illJllranot.
\Ve are one ol the nation'•
larae11 and futelt-srowtna
mutual fund orp.nlutlona.
\Ve provide you with tree
tra.lnlnf, gro\lp tnedical In.
aura.nee, group life insur·
a.nee, profit sharina. and••-
cellent opportunities to ad·
vance In saJes tnanal"m•nL
NO TftAVJ;L REQtllRltD
Write or phone
Raymond W. Dt ~Iott
Olvtaional Manaatt
WADDEL A REED, INC.
Central Tower #40
Union &nk Sq\lan!
Qranae, Callfomla.
Tel: ln4) 541-2525
Interviews: Momi"I' onty
Sole•
Do You TaJce
<SALUMEN
WANTED ADS>
with a ara.ln ol alt? Can't
u.y that I blame )'OU. I fol·
lowed a few m.)'ldf only t&
be disappoint.cl. The job
teldom lived up to th t
claims In the 6d.
DO YOURSELF
A FAVOR!
'ANO
EXPLORE
THIS ONE!
If >,,._. 1VOUld like to mW
S300. per week lmtn.edlatdy,
With an opportunity for
much more In the fu~.
I wou1c:f UJte to talk to )"OU.
If ~r qualtnoaUon1 matdi
our nquirementl, thft could
be Ult' career yuu·ve bHn
looking for. Call tor penonal
interview bet. 9 am to 12:30
pm
--~o-Man. Wom. 7100 Jobe Mon, Wom. 7100
SALES •
All Departments
Work for the new Gr1nt1. GROW with 1
00.ah••d comp•ny. Full time ind pirffl,.,•
positions av1ll1bl•. W• h•v• optnlnt• for th•
working housewife. Full comptny beneflt1
incfudln9 discount purchase plan. Cerne In
ind'" us nowl
Mon4oy Throuth ,rld•y
10 o.m. to 4,30 p.m.
W.T. GRANT
GRANT PLAZA
Ada1111 and lroekhunt, H.I.
Equal Opportunity Employor
''°1~ ... _,""'"'"'""',..""'"""==l'""'""'"""..,""'..,""'"""""'""'~~''l;!.quno~~Bc~~~h~.!*~4&<-~ll!!!CSl*~'~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!l!!'l'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!B
--------------------------------~
·~---------"" ........... -----------------------------------------~-~-----------·----.. ' -~-.
I '
l
I
•
•
~~~
:J/ie :J..•ojfituJ
fiou,je
Cake Decorating Instruction
Art Supplies -Gilts -Rentals
Complete Home Baker Supplies
Beginning &
Advanced Classes
2384 NEWPORT
Schools and
Instructions
AIRLINE & TRAVEL CAREERS
For Men and Women
e Travel Agent
e Ticket S•lts
• Communications
• R11erv11tions
e Air freight Cargo
e Operations A;ent
Day and night cl111e1
AIRLINE SCHOOLS PACIFIC
Accredited:
Santa Ana 543-6596
610 East 17th Street
National Association Trade & Technical
Schools
Approved for Veterans
Eligible institution under the Federally in·
su red Student Loan Program
~co~~ltfl 14.rm>t~~ill
GJ JJarrelf
STUDIO of CHARM
And MODELING
Phone for FREE Brochure on
"SECRETS OF BEAUT Y"
Classes Now Forming
Hours: 9 a.m. to t p.m.
Course approved
by the
(hll<ll"tn'I ""''·
Calif. Supt. of Public Instr. * Modell11t Clftd T e1 .. 1,100 * Charm & Penonal Dnelopment * ·Dramatlcs.Spuch-Litflt . Tlteatr• * Special Cour"lft for Homemakers * Care« Girls
FLORENCE SMALES
Director of Our State Licensed
!ftodeltna Agency
1519 N. Main. Santa An-547·6971
196S Sunny CrOil Dr. (Sunny Hiiis YIU.gel
Ful ... o• 897-1000
Out of
Life!
GOLF
INSTRUCTIONS
lndi .. idu•I or
Grovr. ln1trvctio n
$9 or 6 w11~1
••ch Thura ., t A.M.
SKIP MAY
Pro.Owner
Compl1!1 Sloe• of
Golf f-quipm1nt ...... ,,.,. ..
I 545.9993
COSTA MESA
GOLF RANGE
2717 Newport Blvd.
Costa Mesa-9 am-10 pm
., Oraot• c_,., "''"'°",..
I
SAUCERMAN SCHOOL
ORANGE COUNTY FAIRGROUNDS
Ila FA IR DRIVE • COSTA MESA
Grades 1 through 8
Small group and individualized teaching will
met't the realistic needs of youngsters who
have been under too much pressure. Aver·
age and above and below average abilities
\v1ll be challenged by good teaching and a
variety of educational materials so that
more effective learning will result.
MOTIVATION
Operates only from within a person -not
from the outside. Good teaching can slim·
ulate motivation within a youngster by
building on successful learning experiences.
Nothing succeeds like success!
WHERE THE PROGRAM
FITS THE CHILD!
Willard H. Saucerman, Ed. D.
Telephone 541-1751 (eve.I
School : 540-4060
IJ·Y·~·T·T·S·T·~ ·Y· F?
Foreign Language? Gibberish?
NO!
It means: D[J Y[JU l:IEED T[J TAKE STEPS
T[J lr:IPi\[JUE Y[JUi\ fUTURE?
If so, at no cost to you, you can ba tested to see whether
you qualify for a career In thll Comput.r Field-th•
thlrd·larae•t but festnt-arowln1 Industry in the "WOrld
today. Don't be satl•fled with second bestt Test your
qualifications FREE et Th• Academy of Computer
Technolo1Y.
Ph.on• or Write:
U11l .. hMS11119N
S.11tlt , .....
S11ite 4D o,..,., C .. lf., tl666
S47-9471
,Olt Flf[[ INFOltMATIOH S[NO THIS COUfOH ·············-····-···--···----·-·······
Name--------Phone----
Address City ----
County----State----Zip ---
•••••• ~~ .. '!'.,~·; •• "~~-~~~£.::~-::.si ....... I
This variety of fine schools
could introduce ·
you to a new tomorrow.
For further information re9ardin9 the Daily Pilot
Sc.hool$ and ln1 tructlon Directory
CALL 642-5678, EXT. 325
LEARN
TO
RELAX!
LET Us Show you how to enjoy
1 leisurely g•me of
golf.
. FOR GOLF LESSONS
See Mike Evinger,
Jack Saenz.
Dean Fuller
COSTA MESA
GOLF & COUNTRY CLUB
1701 GOLF COURSE ROAD
COSTA MISA 540 7200
COMPLETE LINE OP
GOLF E9UIPMENT.
Newport Air Associates
Flile School & Flying Club
LEARN TO FLY
$500.
IFhtisnc:i"t A•ailebS.I
Compl•I• Covr11 lnclvd11:
'40 Hours flight t ime in Cessne I SO's with
20 hrs. dual instruction. Club membarship.
2 Month's free duei. Ind ividual instruc.tio n,
tailored to YOUR abili ty .
OTHER AIRCRAFT AVAILABLE
at LOWEST RA TES IN ORANGE COUNTY
learn to fly now -•nd have fun!
• Fly Mt•lca and Canoda
• Special" Rotes for Commercial,
Instrument, or Aerobatic Studtnt1.
f or Compl1t1 D•t•il1 C•ll NOW
673-0313
NEWPORT
UNDERWATER
INSTITUTE
SKIN & SCUBA DIVING
SCHOOL
ADVENTURE
PROFIT
FUN
HEATED POOL
BOAT TRIPS
EQUIPMENT
N.A.U.I. CERTIFICATION
JOBS & EMPLOYMENT
•I
MERCHANOISE FOii MERCHANDISE l'Oll '
S.~A;;:L;;;.E .;.A:;..N..;O_T.;..RA...;.;;D..;E;;_..;S::..A;;:L.::...E AND TRAD!
Furnltur• IOOQ':umlture IOOO
Or.tDl • Full, pa.rt·time'l ;;;iii;i;iiii;ii;i;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~iiiii;ii;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiii~iiij needed for: child care, com·ll
panion, Aa:ts 20-65.
Y.'e Sit Better, Inc.
South Cout Agency
&Jl.0274 l====='==I· PUBLIC NOT·ICE
School1·ln1tructlon 7600
-DECO RA TOR GETS CANCEUA TION
OF 18 LUXURY APARTMENTS
Sponish & Mtdi1'n'.,t1n Furniture
AU BRAND NEW
A decorator drean:' house orydisplay -3
rooms of gorgeous Spanish furniture (was
reg. $1295.
SACRIFICE •••••• $425
9·pc:. Mediterra nean Bedroom Suite in Pec.11n
IR09. $349.0DI ·--.. .,.. .......... -.. NOW $168.DD
Gor9eous Spanish Custolrl Built Sofa with
matc.hin9 love Seat-Cholc:e of baautiful
MEN & WOMEN! fob.ici. IRe9. $419.951 .......... _.NOW $22S.00
COl\IPlfrER PROCRA..\f. Spanish Dining Sets -----······-·····-·····-·--$75.00
Jo.·UNG IS THE KEY TO Solid Oak End Tables ·end Coffee Tablas-$19.50
YOUR PROFITABLE Tall Decorator T1ble lempo FlfrURE! Classes start soon. I Ra9. $49.9S) ···-··-··--·---··NOW $11.00
Pilot pt•ogram offering the Spanish Hanging Swe9 ;.amps
fines! pquipment and fac1l· fRe9 •'49 95) NOW••• SD
!ties available! Rca.J.unie CRED1T AVAii·:-·N·o··-·M···o···N···E-Y. OOW ... N • computer programming. ]!....~ mm FURNITURE
I Tamologyffi 1844 Newp~rt Blvd.H .. ~;'e1vd.>
1 U•1•~·~•~.!:•" Costa Mesa Only Suite 4D
?rant•• Calif., ""' Every Night 'Til 9 -Wed.~ Sat. & Sun. 'TU 6
Cell 547-9471 •
112S
RADIO
NEEDS TRAINED
DELUXE Nech I Sewing FRENCH SelmC?r tenor sax,
Alach. w/consoJe. All Ac· beaut oondilion, comb. case
cess. $75. Slereo amp & $300. Aft S pin 5'18-2.389 198 1
Gamm:! lurntbl, $4(). 6 draw Buoy St.. C.l\1.
ANNOUNCERS
\VhE'n you !min \\'ith the
INSTITUTE OF
BROAOCAST ARTS
YUU LEAR.!'.l
commode. $25, hidC?abed, I ;;=====c---
nur nu, S97. rivin bd cornr RICKENBACKER s upe
bl $20 sonic amp & e&.Sf'. LesH~ 1 · ' !HP wak'r punip. speaker niod. No. 41 Good ne1v cond, SSO, a.pt por1
Wll!lhlng mach, $."JO. Oth<'r cone!. 540-7478
1130
hsehold Item's. Call aft 6: 30
0P.cM.:.,:646-<07ti:.:.,~==~~-I Pianos & Organs
e WANTEO e -;;;======;;! on professional equipment.
fron1 1vorking Wing chair (prefer Chippen-•
air personalities. dale style); in need of re-
cove1·ing O.K. A.f us t be
moderately priced, please
642-3589 aflf'r 6 PM.
IF you arc buying a Piano
01· Organ this YEAR &
Institute of Brl'.ladcasl Aris are interested in some real-
l&ll \V. Broad11'ay, Anahe1n1 IOf:.:.:fi;.;<:;•c.f:..;;Ur:;n.::l:.:lu:.:r~e~~8::0:_:1_:0 I ly great deals, , lf'ase shop
Student Loans \VARo·s BALD\VIN STUDIO
CALL 772-3800
free Placc-mcnt Assistance OFFICE FURNITURE 1819 Newport, C.l\I. 642-8184
NE\V & USED e desks Open Every Nite !IT'S YOUR MOVE • chairs e files & Sunday Afternoon
Discover a Great New
Career With Tht
AIRLINES
•OPERATIONS AGENT e TICKET SALES e RESERVATIONS e AIR FREIGHT-CARGO e C0~1l\IUNJCATJONS e TRAVEL AGENT
Airline Schools Pacific
1
610 E. 17t h, Santa Ana
543-6596
McMAHAN BROS.
DESK INC.
ll!W Newport Blvd.
Costa ,.lcsa • 642-8450
Office Equipment 8011
RE ~1 INGTON Type\Vliter
standard, x!ra long car-
r111gc, 11e1•·ly 1-ccon<:htlor;ed.
Gray metal type writer
t11blf'. folding E"nds &
111atching mer al posture
ct.ai r. like new $75. 496-29-18
TYPE\VRITER, A d d i n g
machine, ealculalor, v~i:y
rea.s., xlnt cone!. 892·2423.
AUCTIONEERING Ga•a s I
REGULAR 2 \Vl-:EK TER?.1 ge I • 8022
Be in business for yourself~ GARAGE SALE: House hold
Learn to be an auclioneer. furni1U T"C'. 12-3 ?J\I Jan. 29,
\VEST-BESI' SCHOOL OF 30 & 31. 634 Ham ilton Apt D
AUCTIONEERING, 206 \V. C~1"
4th, Santa Ana, 638-5000. l;pO.o'-1"VE'°Rn-=1,,-.~~--too 11, hand fool!!
PIANO LESSONS loys, n_101orcycles. misc'. items. 7382 Quebec. H.B.
All ag('~. Beg.. lntcrmedi· =='=======~~
ates, THEORY -ll\1PROVIZ. Appliances 8100 ATION. Rea !'<lnabl,. Call
PIANOS & ORGANS
NE\V ~ USED
• Yamaha Pianos 01-gans
• Thomas Organs
• Kimball P ianoli e Kohler & Ca1npbell
COAS T MUSIC
NE\VPORT & 11ARBOR
Costa l\lcsn f-632-~l
Open 10..6 Fri IQ..9 Sun 12·j
January Clearance
SALE! e J-IAl\11\fOND e Organs
• Pianos • Speakef!I I
OPEN SUN. 12-4
HAMMOND
in COrtON A DEL l\1AR
2854 E. Coast Hwy, 673.8930 !
PIANO CLEARANCE! * alll floor models *
• \Vurlitzer e Knabe e EV<'rt'll
GOULD MUSIC
after :; p.n1. 5 16-t:l~S KE ----------1_2o.1_,_· _N_. _,_,,_;,_,_s_A __ ,_,1_1.fl68_1
~ NJ\o!ORE \VASHER. cou-PIA NO LE~.NS: Ex-per. pie sizu . $12.) ($40. Jess than
!eacher bcg1nn1n1? lo leach ~I). New condition. used
1n !\l:_sa Verde area . only 3 or 4 times. Call
549-284a 831--1239
THEATRICAL
H,u,1r.fOND Steimvay Yam·
aha. New & used pi&nos; of
n1os! makes. Best bu)'I 1n
So. Calil. at Schmidt Atusic
Co. 1907 N. M;oin, Santa Ana 7900 KENMORE Auto washer &
l'rigidairc auto w as her ,
both xlnt cond. 545 each. 1 o=R"G"A"N"""C~L~E"A"R~A~N~C=E"l 1 546-8672 or 847-8115 WANTEO :
BOYS & GIRLS WITH
A DESIRE TO BE ON
---..,:.,,:;::."---• all floor model! *
IDEAL •Conn • Wurlitzer • Allen
Coup!r size Sears re!rigera-e Hammond e Lo1vrcy TELEVISION .,. tor. Like, new, Priced S4D GO
For Free On Camera Aud i· under co~t. $115. Ca.II 8374239 ULD MUSIC '.
tlon In \'our Arca, Call Or. REFR 2(}15 N. Main. SA 547·0681 angc County, 547-6251. IGEr:-ATOR · freeze -2 dr Philco 19.6 cu. ft. no CONN \Velnut Dcluxr. Minuel
MERCHANDISE FOR h'Osl like new, niust sell Organ iv/in-bit L.e s 11 e I
SALE ANO TR.ADE '$';;20tl~-"'";-:""'~":.:'-,-,-c-~--speak c r e h Ime s &
KENi\IORE Model 6 O 0 percussion. Llke New. $1350. ' 67~art6 pn1. IOOO mobile dishwasher. Lale
model. xlnt cond. $6..l. LESl'ER Spinet Plano &. Furnltur•
"'" -12 847 ~15 hl?nt."h. Xln't rond, Just tU"· 20 Pc "MADRID" -~ . ~· . .. • _ UPRIGHT freeze r & ed. $375. 646-:197! eves.
3· Room Group Relril:"crator. Reasonable. NE\V & USED. Piano~.
FRO:\I 1'f0DEL J10i\1ES Call ~>19-2634 Organs, Rebuilt Grands,
Includ es: Quilted sofa a.nd U'~SE"'"'D'°"A-.pp:;h::.,-,,,.-&""'T"V"'•-.-all \Vallich's C.~I. 540..2830
chair -2 end !ables k cof. guliranteerl. Dunlap·~. 1815 PIANO TUNING g, Repair
fee ta ble -2 lamps -dress.. Newpor1 , c.~r. ;»S.-nss Expe11, reasonablr:
er.-111irror -~a~board _ KENl\IORE Auto \Vasher & Albert Aarncs.c; 6i:;...roG7
quilted bo'.'I !!pnng It mall· 0 53."" h 536-84l l \VURWTZER 4002. l2 note
ress - 5 pc. dining room: ryer. 1 enc · ~al, sustain, sep lone cab.
table &: 4 hi-back chairs ,.,-T "--COMPARE AT $749.!i:i Antiques 1110 a. erm!(, tra, .... &l:>-153D .
--...... ~~~~~~~~! $399 -----
WELK 'S WARDfOUSE ANTJQ. F"'"' Lamps, mlr-
Tel•vlslon 8205
rons. cut & colored glass..
Jobi-Men. Wom. 7100 Jobs-Min. Wom. 7100
beaut. chin.a. r.-tuch ~1orc. Lease Color TV or Black &
Jobs-Mel\, Wom. 7100 No down-f'mts only $16 mo. ·":::· ':..-::;"':.:';...,.~~-=~-White. Option to buy. Free 600 \V. 4th St., Santa Ana :-L d·' H I Sf'rvlce. No deposit A·Activo
SALES REP JR
$4'15 + e11r & cxpenst>s..
Sharp )'OUl!g mnn, 2 Yt'I
0'.111~. IJ!lle& background.
APEX
Empk>)'nlt'nl Agency
1873 Jlubor Blvd
(1i t»oc:k So. or 19thJ ...... ,,.
SALES PERSONNEL
needed part time for adtllt
SALES
For Recorded lnlormahon
Phone~
SARAH COVENTRY ha1
openings. '°" fuU or part
Ume We-. No lnve11tmen1.
no deliveries. fot lnlerview, ......,,
luxwy apl. com plex. ---------Prevl\>O' Mlct or kui"I SECRETARY
up .....,in.I. C•ll TO REAL ESTATE
OAKWOOD SALES MANAGER GAllDEN APrS
(714) 642--8170 Pref. Matu~ S1able Lad)' 1v/ ,.,..,.., .... .__,..,..,.,. .. I exper. in Real Est•le, Es-crow oc f'1Mnct. No Bea1~
nt>n:, PlraM. 1 01 L.'f'Gt!lt
Bid~ In U.S. Out&tanding
trlnae benefits, redrtment.
tic . .l a Sal.try commf'nsu.
rate w/)"OUr txper. Top Rel· r.r R.eq, OJJ Mn!. A-tiddlelon
betwn 8 Al'IJ.S PA1", 5'40-7810.
See 8e1.b' Bnice at
mi66 Gxec
As:tne> lot C.rcer Clrt1
41.0 W eo..t Hwy., N.B.
8)' appotnl. 841-M
•
Secretary, Exe.c.
$547 up. t'ce negotiable. Dy.
namlc na\'I Co. Top beneiits.
54&·5~10
JASON BEST
SERVICE Station AHc nd.
Expcr. Full Thne. Apply Jn
Per!IOn, 2096 l-l11.rbor Blvd.,
C.i\f. 646-.1558.
SHEET J\IETAL i\TEN lor
F.n1ployn1ent A.iel'lcY Sign shop. 54{).JG.).l
m7 So. M11.tn, Santa Ana HARBOR NEON SIGNS
SECRETARY SllOE SALES: J\lalt It
Some bkkp1ng required. No Female. Exper. NectM.
SH. ~ to 111.1.M. Local Co. f'ull k p/llme. \\'e5tclill
Independent Shots, N.B. f.lr. 1.tuowitz
PersOMI Agency ~"=8-8684=~· -~---lTI6 Oranre Ave, Suitt C SITI"ER • my home. nuitllre
C.l\f. &12-0026, s.B-0079 womllll Tues-Wed·Fri 8:31).3.
Secretary To $600 Sat 10-2. 75c hr. Stl--7062
whh bookkec:p\na-' knowlcdp. H.B.
Cali Loraine, \Vl'stelltf Per-$ =E=R=v~s= .. -~.~,,.-.. ~ .. -,,-,-,._
IKlnrwl Aguncy. 2CHJ "'f's.I· nee. 4678 Campus Dr., N.B.
clllf Dr., N.B. 64S-mo (Fee Airport Texaco • 1tt. ~ttke
and 't"ee Paid Jobi! TE I. EPHONE A~\\'trin'l
SECRETARY PTfime ~rvice Operato r. tX·
(Prrml. Offh.-e Dc111U for pi tlenccd In mttUng and
~tfr"• Rep .. Typ(i. S.11. E'.'I· tl'lklng to bulll~s' people.
per Ntt. ~-16 hn wk. Full Evcining i.hifl 3--1 1. Call
dl!tatls la Box 5.1M. Oail)' 49-4-1003, 496-2072 or
Piiot, N.B. ~~187 ·--'-----, (
TEL. An~1,·f'rinJ,": ~rvice.
Exp flt'l'f<'m'd or "'ill train.
Call 5-l(l....2ro2.
TUBE BENDER
Marin,. harchv'lre rotnpa.ny
npandlng, has opcnin11: for
11\1\t\trf' man. cx[lf'rienced
in matine: rail and pulpit
manUfllcturlng,
Our taclltie1 am located
near the Orsngc County
airport, Northcai.I of lhfl
Nrwport/S.n Dleco frne.
v.·a.ys. Call or \'ilJit for 11.d-
ditional informti.tlon: Don
?-foyer.
R.C. 'rtti111"4' Produrt~ ht(.
a sub11\diary of \I!:! Corp.
171?'.l Armstrong Ave.
Santa Alla, Calif, 92700
Phone: tTI41 ~)().93~0
\VELDER: Apply in person. Open Dally 9-9 ea 9U ang_ "I Shades TV Rental Co.
DE WEY 'S RU BBI SH Sa t. 9·6 Sun 11-6 * S41·2a78 * {11 572-115.1
'cE,;,RV1CE 2U3 C!l.n)'on Dr .. L0.,,"",11-~y s·,"'1 ,'",·,'~1 "'. r l~-""'-1'. Sewinn Machines 8120 1-"'0TRON Electronic camera. '"" ..._u • f" Tnkr!i> piclurei; in dark. * \\1AITRESS • Two yrs. chguarded Sl35, n1ntchlng SEWING MACHINE 1 .. ifctimc <l1•velopini: <'Qn·
experience. 20-40 yrs. only. lo~e~at $8."). Private party. Sear!! l\:cnniui'I' Porlflblf'. tract. Coc;t SlOO. si•lf $200 or
l\ltL!il bt' fa~!. One evr. iffi.ill fh>.-0592 Sc11•5 r 0 r \\'a rd 1-e.,•rrse. make offer. fi.IG-:>178
oprn oow. Apply in penaon 1 QUAUTY king be<'. IJUil!ed darns. buttonhole~.' Exccllenf 21·• RCA Color TV. Worit1
PM lo 3 Pr.1. t.1r, r.toorc, mallresl. Complete unlllf!d oonditian. Only SJj, 837-4239 good. m. Alt 5, 64&.657Z
12924 Beach at Carden SL20. ~"Orth $200. 8-12"536 ANTIQUE Singer b'eadle 6442 Larkspur Cir, HB. ~G~"""';,,,;;~FO:""'~·~·~G~.G~ . .,.....~-lc""'~~------. ~... i================•i• ,--;; · &eWlllg mauww:, Vt'Orks $25.
\VAITRESS fo~ Lunches ~ FOR SALE; r.1aple Bedroom :;:J6...&m Sporting Goods 1500 1
ly. Ap~y in Per1on, M!I, port dshv.1Uhe.r It. bbq, '
OelanP)' s Sea Shanty, 6:KI TV, llrt equip 1. misc. call Sewing Machlnu 112
Lido Park Dr, N. B. MM47T after 1 PM. * t-WAITRESSES-Ex· USED IOf& A chlr.tr $6'.!'19.l 1969 SINGER. ZtG ~ZAG .
pcrlrnced only. Apply, S62 U!K!d pair red~ hl·M<'k walnut conaole, b\t I ton
W. J!tlh SI., Cog1a M,A. In chairs s;s each The Fae-ho 11!!1. dealsn• etc .
pnTOn. 1 lBB:5 H·...._..:. .,..,. .,.,,.. Cuarantced. $36.00 Cash ..ir 011'· .......... ~ eaq terms! 5.26-fl616
\VAITRE&5ES -Coc:li:t111il. t.t usr SELL S1>unlsh rnodem • . . • . Bu& girl~, di~hw11shtn. AP-furn Candtlabro. h 111 n ~ INE Sc.IL-cl Ion OI Us~ 7.1;::·
plv l\lallrr De 1700 19th SI I . "I . ~-b f g · Zag Machi~. G11111rn111('('() C t.t ' " anil)!, room"~·..., Y urn. :'\ln't !'cwin1r COnd. Prictd
· · tie. Call l-ls--0.t)S Rea11onably . Sup ply
I \\'OMAN To blbysit 2 year ZENITH Color TV, g· Fipen, Limited. 'i~ Olde Sewing
old girl my home. Call a1tcr Sofa, Pole lamp, rrplc tool•. r.t11chlno ~l)Qp, 3519 E. Cou1
5 pm, 962·'7523 Call 543-7700. lh''Y· Cd!il.
I
SKIS lit<'p In bindings. 31,i. f
bootll & I~. pnlts. Xlnt 1
cond. $100 aft j, 54S-il)j9
\VTLSON GoH aubs & Ba~.
xlnl cond. * Ph 5 10·71~ •
1600
QUALI1V king bed • Quilted
n1aHre11~. Corupll:'IC . unuM'd
$120. "'·or!h $260. 812~
r1•e1.
I
PETS ond LIVESTOCK T RANSPORTATI ON T RANSPORTATION
~ ii'tl.ii;'fis"';'. !oW!lle Homes · '200 lm~rtod C1r1
' 111 ~. ~:; it.-..:;~ r!:
'AKC-WIJIT STUD ~ ... -.;;;;'f'r,;;ll·~rfl;F~.,.~;m;;...,,.-I .,~~ • ~~~!I S A~t'iw.nr:iis w ho llvoo In on•I"
~PANISH M'DITElRANEAN A~'{!. ':-.:5 wlYJm.1
fhow _,, ' Floor 51mplos . Foctory Cloooouto ~18!3 Alter 6 P.M. 1Sli~' ~· • ~· S:!l!tiit.f:is " fl
3 OOMS OF FURNITURE $389. ......._ 1uo Plli!llR tr. e pc. authentic Spenlsh Bd rfr!. set, e 96 ~ M Bl -am ._on u. -· · ·
fn. AUllted sofa with 56 lrt. m~chl ng 11(¥! 5 YEAR old, strawbttry .Q OJ, IJm.iled spaces in All t.todela In Stock
TRANSPORTATION l
D41LY PILOT -CORVAIR
"'f"lf.J •p<;"";"".,'.:"63 :.fONt.A •
' to, good Iha.pt! $450.
plrty. 615-0994
... tt or ch11r e 5 pc. Spl'lflh lnttte, ~IC ~tl~lareffu~• ahowJ"·-p''°: E. addition to Driftwood for Immediate Delivery .
tiblp top e 3 hea vy M.dl~rrinean m•tfhl'\I &st ofr st&-62~, ;n,.2259 h ~'!h'ra~todels 011 di5-SALEs. SERV01CER~. PARTS CADILLAC
11-::t:· top du rable eno\fgh fo r Fl1mtnop ree eaf ~fob I l e T&M MOT S, INC. OPEL '69 VW Bui, l'ii yr WUT left. ___ _:__:_:,.:.:_ __ l1M71'"'1i:AR>;R'.';-;n;;
D1 Ing. Will tell pl1c.1 lndlvldu1lly. . TRANSPORTATION Sales. 21462 Pacific i!rel Garden Grove Blvd. qt Jflghwa¥,.H.B. 536-~ 13f.228{0penSw:idlyS92..$Ml ----------1 AM/FM rad. Crali 8 Ire.ck.
Shpp First! Then S•t Our Unbeli•••ble Buys!
1001 other Item s with terr ific 11vln91I
Bank Terms Store Charge Master Charge
BankAmerigJrd All Accepted
Botts & Yacht1 9000 '6T VlKINb .,00C'O'J,OOD ,A • '69 OPEL CT. Red. w/ Blk Comb C.mper · 8 pass bua. .., a.n ~ int. '1 speed. 102 HP. U.000 Paneled A crpted. No Hot
¥ 57· Oil.Ible exp&ndo, DATSUN ntlle1. lmmaculat.e .. $29'J5 or Rnd. $2800 or beat otr. TI-IE wbru..o·s LARGEST 0'1allty coin1tructlon . ,_ ....... _...... ..A .. ~ Ev ,., ---------uaue. "'~ ~··· ts. CATAMARAN. New 55' x ~rnplete.ly akirted: window ========:.l,70-.,-;;...,c;;-;;-;;"7';= ..... DODGE
• ,. ,... .. 10, Lux Salo", 2 ....... , 38' carport ..... re PORSCHE '66 SQUAREBACK.
M Csb!"', 2 Mda, 2 Q»e<" '1'' 9 x . lll>' ''""'""' ••tsUN ' "'1 dio I air, cu,.om ~, ~•.·'!ii. JM.llt~!>OU.W!l.j~Uf'•· fm!11 .. , 1 .. ~lllf!i'i;;-·N~, '!;~
aablneta. Power T knts, Sail . Nicely landacapN ln a ~261 · 't~f· . . · ·3 • !" tiVt btfb~ bed&. Teak dtch. Teak ifv!h with g\ulC!ne inserts; w.a, -a fa h tch, l owner. Good COD!I· !'r:t. ~,,~ 2Qti. fl•v• .., !~,..,. (n ~
30 kn~. Price 1110.000. SIDr Adult ""' ln "LtadZlerMlnMT.._/ltRM&d!AONtf .. " 1968 PORSCHE' 911 '6' KARMANN Ghle-au'ji>'. !illwien 4 9 P ' I Pit!,__, ,. Ternu • Will trade, part ~1'. hfesa. 714-342-7699 ERi SportamaUc. Call \Vktnds, Beaut. bronze cpe. $2318. isrr -13Aatttiif E:P.MW-aM · ; • :!i :
ca.sh. part clear real estate. •7NEW 2tx60 DELUXE, 2 ~fr. J1.t11ea 673-9191. \Vkdaya See No. 1 Beacon Bay, l'fB. ·v1ue. i'llil l&Ctory ~ ~r· ~.... -MlifG,.. ' .
Make oUtr. 536-0083. P.O. lijl. 2 BA, den. crpts thru· 2145 HARBOR BLVD. ~rs. BroWn, 11uuo. 675-0621 New tires. Runs ptfui:il)I -=.O'·~-,,.,.!'-".'"""I
poX°l9i!. H"·B: f'.\ll, patio & carport awng1, 540-6410 --B'°'u°"o"""ro=R~SA"°"LE~-Sl2SO. 64&--061 . • fa1°00n 'flt, 2 cir, 8 eyl,
.1r.k~~J'NDISE. FOR 8610 REINEiJ., '69, J/O, 121 '-len: 3!1' r aised porch.. Muy ex-'67 DATSUN RDSTR ,58 PORSCHE Speedster. '&t '65 vw Ex~ cond. '&t CAO. Sl39S. auto, rood eond, mlllt sell
SAL ANO TRADE --miiser. 9 hn, dlxe trlr, q,.. SW.500: 642-1350 1600, 4 spd, ;::,, all original, sc Eng. \Vebor eari,, _Dol*-J §1}@87 2IE6 PLACENTIA * S:.~ * Mlscell•neo~~ 1600 $1.W. ·.·• '·-~' ~', :.~e~ .. ~:died.•617:~~. M!torcycles 9300 ~';5: :;Ati~~~1=~T::C; ~:~1·~:·e:L~ ~ ~~P.I ·!me~~~:~~ eooo FORD
1. I ~11tNITU•E ! '1S!" .rvw" older American car or small b611. $2200 or~?~ &It '"j .;ti-MTU nap. Car. S90 Or Btat
f\1R . ./)L'· fashion cu1ton1 ' q.r I • ~ • ~ ' 63 Yamaha 305 &rambler. down. UR.EtriJ. can Phil l'ii;vvl;"jiti'~~'i:i~I ~· !l!!)r,~Cai~f~968-6U7~~~· -,-'66 Fa~lane.!500 XL 390 v.a,'
!Ailor, & It" & t J o"' • , A,ebl~~~ ~ • ' Jfi· r Craft 50 hp Ji\1 eng. 2tKXl mi. Big tire s. 494.9773 or 543-06ji&, •67 PORjffiil ~1 :• air, '511~~~ :'!?'· J;:r,! '59 P,DILI.AC 2 door dr, auto. rib, fact air, Pl•.
remodeling Jor men & -~!'fa:' n••,.. -t~· its e~ ' v. trailer , I tdd f.frf. shape. S400 or Best ORANGE COiJNfViS h . h , "~ d GOOp cond $395 . p/b, orig owner, xlnt Coftd. "'Omert Alsp !,tpcl~lmeA -~~ " • !m' "1· r. CQAl'I, ~-,..,,,.. (}fferr Of.z..5919 'NO. 1 c rome_" •··. -' •P211 • ~ --_ *.....:. .. 146·.... Sl500. Ml-1108
1 vii.I -~ ·~ 'If' s ~p -wor--V'~U'r.'I Webera, gg ,, . 7 1''!1! •-'6S VWF-s o-• sullj.r:ue S150,now.$30up, I S .. 1 ·; • 1 • • • -'67\'AMAHA DATSUN DEALER S.\V.; .· t4j. ..,.u. ,. '6'"C&dlllac Sed de Ville 1964 FAIR..L.ANE Station
•Potl i;oats val<>e 115, now ' • ~ 51 liiifl.;: 9010 100 Twln 1100. DOT DATSUN Priv. pailJ;. ~-' ~-...._., ! 1 bdtp, 18,ooO ml .. tilt whl: WllOll. al• cond . .......,,
$15 • ~1 pants value S22. • Stfort s. 548-$n Alt. 5, fORSCHE-IS C' . . ~ ~ Iii.: , air SUT5 897 2123 motor. $600 • ..-Evu. "°"~up. lik• new. Csprl FREE TO YOU RENDALL 82 ....,. 18833 Bt&eh Bl,.,, ml'o. Whlti. rd .' O.;.;,, ijijbl~k ~ ~-. . • .~84 .. 1...,-"'===o:-...,.-I
Hot.el Ar?de. 1425 S. Coast, 32x1lx5, ~ely room)' ·~·· Honda 450cc Mpeed Hunt1na:to11 Beach S299S. Pri. pcy: ~.Jack k vffiYl liil~ na!O'-."'Outfi! CAMARO 19TO MAVERICK, l o w Lagu~ SUPER U1ly: z healthy 5 Atkin <>ff &ho~ ~lliltna: cut· Scrambler. Clean, x Int 842-T781 or ~ Eves LI 84008 -xtru. Mt-t011a.ft 6 pm mlleaie, auto, radio, bMt.er.
* AIJ-CTION * week old rejects. Last of Ill· ter or ketch. Heavy ;rj,cb. cond. $700 or make NEW '70 '66 pQRSCHE Blue flDl• IS VW. S\uiro9f. low mil!JP· I ;::;-:::----;:-:-:=":""-1~$21~00:,. ,;534-.ll90~~~~~-1 ter •. ol 10 pup~ies. Mal~a -flberJlua. Arry 11.&ge of OQer. 496-9289 . · w Gnt nn@f' ,.._ ~ '68 C&m1ro R. S. S200 Down •'64 FORD Gal 500. t1 door
U ~Will .&ell or buy Bia. ck '"''~vh1te t r 1 m. com pie ti<> n. M2-8981 DATSUN PICKUP int. 5 speed, Radio. Needs owner 545-:5037 i T.0.P. Call 646-7814 after -~ .• V-8, , ..... ,._ .. ..-....~.
M WI.. ..... .i9·1. 1838 53;) t.I t f6(' TR r u Mp H BON· body work, near new tires .. 1---'·-----'-~ .... ~ ~ _ •• ve YI .. _,. .:'t.l.-~ · on erey • anytlme. NJVTLLE. 6,!nl mi1es, Xlnl W/camper, 96 hp over~ad $3400 firm. S7Sollt'1 191i6 vw sunroof, radio. SPr-.1. $600. or beat otftr, 549-1(15.2
AucUors rriday 7:30 p.m. L.B. 1117 ··-· =tt(Nftl-U--cfnd." Cati S42-3872 ca.in, 4 spd, dlr, 6 ply ttrea, , wfw. xll)t cond!Uon. 0r11. Win.c(y's A uction B•rn TO Good '.10me, beautiful North Sail•, ~-.-•,, motor, back Up lights. You name PORSC'hE 83 S 1700 CC. 0..,,.ner SllOO. 84$-~ CHEVE'·LE '68 COQ'NTRY SqWre station 207MS'.l'j nort CM ~ w)rtte Husky femaJc, not ..,,.,,.., 66 305 HONDA ii! Serial # Pl.521208873. Am IF M/ Sh I ,.,.ave . , • • =~~n:·• a/c, '70 Uc.
Behind ~OfiY\81 iJidig,VMattf;' titllli· l p , pld. Lo\lt1 §!!R~!flJJ -jfA.~lt.,f!!'l!ffll EX. CONO. S400 1'"'ull price S2009. Take small Red/blk. Many xtras. Prlv 69 SQBCK, auto X xtras, In
P60L children. ~6-5479 aft 5 ~=::.u/!Ss.:d<J~:W:~ • ~18 • dn or tra.de. Call PhU pty. 71415.lS-1671 t.·arra~t~. ~: makPtye of-'69 CHEVELLE SUper Sport Sec~~ pm. vl/29 slip. ntt&M-4394 or (2l3) '69 KawaaaJd Macli w 500 4~·9713 or M5-0S34. ' 1965 PORSCHE model c. fer. A 1 ' pr. · 396. New p:ll)'llu Urea.
BRUNSWICK-AMF LOVABLE male terrier mix 38>3l12. cc, 3 ey! .• like new $825. '68 Datsun Sta Wag, llllJO Red. Good condition. Low VOLVO $2425. 531--0607. After 6 prn·l--CO-LO_N_'i __ S ___ I
CUstom Slate Table dog. l\1alium: llsebroken. 645..2243 atttr 4 ml, autoni, Bill, rack. mlleare. Muat seU. SU-ml caJI SJ&...1335, aak for Gary '&l Park ta. Wq .
From S289 Shots. Gd. adult home. c~~1.1·~~ta:i': '68 !Honda 175 str eet $1450. Pvtpty.499--a£2 1956 PORSCHE Coupe. lmo1--1-4-5 WAGONS .:0~· ~~0::~1:'' JWI,
100% F inanctne Older children O.K. ped for crrulaing. Ship to scrambler xlnt condition 1969 DATSUN, 12,000 niileR. N. Ca.nary Yellow. Chrome -* SECARD POOLS* • 633-5J.cll l/'l1 lhon!, boat bath, nt' etc. $350. Phone 673-6294 Xlnt cond. AaJ:dno SlSOO. Whls. Call 67J.9403. 164 -~EDANS C.HEYIOUJ '86 Mere C')'clone. V-1, map, ., ... , All o!her model~ now In with 4 1pd, new tins, Mw
l23 S IW . ~1992 On. 2 ShYR be.~d, ~:~ ~rmc: call Bill Headden, 646-9273, '68 Honda. 305. XLNT ~nd. Aft. 6. 557·9665 or 833-6027 ~ I ~R~H~.1 ~11 extru stock. 4 ~s &: automatic&.l °',-J.-------.1 tran1. $~. $48-pa
· a.in · nge " ep · 0 I <>Uice. 835-4343 '70 regis. $450. Muat sell! 1967~~ Datsun 1600 convt. nc a r . .:>1t.Cnl cc. 541-8713. Your B••t Dctls·Ar.e Stlll At '68 CAMARO RSI==="====':==:.!
I DEAL home. wl big yon:! &. love&. 2.r ISLANDER. Sip. F.G. Jnb. 536-7816 Good col'kl. R&.H, brand new 13~ E. 151h St., s .• A. "JAN uw111r: 4 Sp, "327" Air
(buplt y;iZe Kenmore wul\. ~~~~anion 8 hi P · Aux. A·l. l\lany extras. -169 HONDA 350 tire. r-.ta.ke ofr. 6~2686 aft 5 S9 PORSCHF; ifiJttf¥. ~ · · "' 5-Yr, wamnty
in&: ma.chine $125. S40 !us 1121 Sleepe 4. $3995. SI i p S400. 675-7707 VERY Cl.EAf': EXTltAS \IM ~~'*"'-"' Str 7f'09
than co.1. It~ in "'w condL F""' to g<I home w/f•nced avaUablo. '91--0311 x 0014 ENGUSH FORD 11350 U 41$-4519 •!I~ u;.,,,lil\il· ·•..I I $ 9 "' BLUE CHIP
tioo. U;ied orny 3 or 4 """'" yro, malo mix pup Wdm/ wkdsy" · Auto Service '61 912 1iJilSdii;, s opd WW ~ d'l!'f ... -.tt,.. 1 99 Safe! , AUTO SALES
Call 837-4'139. Lahr. 5 mils. old, blkw/frost. NEW SABOT & P •rta 9400 tranii. ~t c.ohd. !ft 1 u~ me lt ;(:tt Miiter ''J'' 1145 HARBOR BLVD.
15' Campinf trtr, xlnt cooo, "' 1rny. h•briu>. '"""·Very ~ pl t I . il ORANGE COUNTY'S 61>-4ll!, fli:«l46~, . lft~ ~ .. I 645·1441 COSTA MESA
k ~-pl•vful, older child. 8~7-4004 ....... m e e w racuia &a fO HP V\V eng, needs work ~ * S ma e arr . ......,U@e tbl, dbl ...., Special $.239. 645-02'12 VOLUME ENGLISH . ~ · ~ 7l~5 MU TANG * bed frame&. mattress. 9 dr. SEALPOINT S I AME s E, $85. Also many other VW Pl · ! \Jo 1225, 2'100 Harbor Bl\-d., C.M. t SPECIAL SALE *
dresM!r, kit. lbl, 4 chr1 A male, iu yr•. old, good ""th e SABOT e pa.rt.s 364G hp. 675-ll44 t="ORO DEALER .. , Wint co ,r.; CHEVY w•"""' Clean n • M •·-·-'f ni: " ~· Complete-••~5· SALES ·SERVICE s::se. ::;:ttv•, 1 '"·', • ft' ·1 " --·· • ' ua ... ,, •••••••••• ~-buffet. J\1ust sell immed. chi dren, ho1.111ebroken. 646-S46-l823 Aft 6P M 196S SPftl1'11;. .... A ~: . . & out, new tlret, b'anl"pn, '66 Muatana: rah, auto Pt.
Ltaving Feb. 1. 646-8522 or 3594 arier 4:30 pm. er · · Trailer, Tr1v1I 9425 OVER 60 IN STOCK many extrU • bii·'btal iJll votvo. 40,000 mt. ~)c... ca:rbw;9tor, Just ,had vat .... air. vinyl top, Nd ":f/blck tnt.
531-6981 GERM.AH Sheph<~ 8 COLUMBIA C-lS Fibertla11 e 2 & 4 Or. Models otter. AIRO ~· bJer, 11'11 SUOO. Afttr f. M1-8Elq job. $300. 5'4-3417 '86 Mustans rldt, auto, vtnyi •-u pup, s 1 0 p Comfo ... -ble D•v AJRSTRl::AM '69 29' Am. e 2 & 4 Dr. O.•uxu --i __ _. &M _ _.1 M• -• ·-"-~~U~thOe~ .. f 8~h~ ;~~~r. 1.f.:1oc. ho~~ck w ~~ Saile~. $'75o. 54~5;7 ~ =~:O!n~~~:~~;d~I~ • 2 & 4 Dr. GT ?.fodels 5
""" .. v. ... ltion. ··~, ~ ~·· 51 -:.· '66 Malf~~' SS .:M:.:· :::::~· .. ~~ ~n~
table, \vicker & iron, chlldrrn on.ly. 540--06741/26 LIDO 14 Sailboal. No. 2389, cOnd., x.Jnt cond. Pvt. owner :;i;t~~th"'i~ automatic TOYOTA Avt6 [N.Cng 9810 CDftYi. Tr1nlJM1rt1tlon C•r• ~~r:r:e:;~ ~~~ ~e~~ A.BpUT 8 nios .. blick male :i:~ ~lier. c.a.JI 837-7039 714: 644-50'73f trans., air, radial tire•, ra.. Auto PS/PB Yellow/Bk Int. $99 up * c;pocia l Sale
Cat \\•fwht i;pot on cheat. dlo, vinyl rool, waw tln!s. TOYOTA LEASE . RENT TFY 488 54G-'1392 * 642-9700 ~~:i. ~~n $30. ""' Need• good homo. <15-4233 • 9020 Truck• 9500 BRAND NEW STD, 2 DR. Mork II Wogon• lmmodloto dollvory Sala! $1099 Sale! IM.I MUSTANG CONY.
a.ft. i; p.m. 1129 Power Cru1s.ers $1785 FUU.. PRICE HI Lux Pickups on 1111 / Mister 'T' 2t9 • v.a w/ manual 3 spfed,
BAR-Custom bit. 4 x 4. Black FREE Bas~t Hound. Male 6 28, J96J SS Fairl\rl(!r Fly '68 Chev. Pickup ORDER NOW Land Crulsars 1970 FORDS & R I H. l)fMACULATE!I
padded arm rest, mai·ble yrs. Obedience trained, Bridge, radio, pulpit, marlin Custom, V.fl, long bed, dlr. Theodore Wagons FORD TRUCKS 645• 1441 Black top, ~Uow body, new ~:~~~ :p, st~~~I'! li1t~~ Ilousebroken. 968--4514 alt 1 chair, swim step. Stereo, ~tusr SELL! Will fine prvt ROBINS FORD PLUS OTHER All PQPUlar n1aket. 'FOid 2100 Ham., Blvd., C.M. bt.ttery. $995. ITM493
glaues. Seats 4. Like new. PM 1/26 outrig:er1. $1500. 673-6769 prty. Taite older truck. 2060 Harbor Blvd. ,HARD TO GET MOO~ authorb:ed lcaai.nf · 1Y1tem. '6& CUSI' El .Camino <mun '86 MUS?ANG .a, COJ'lv. Nu
Sacrifice 1Ai price. $100. GOOD compani<>n for lady eves, 548-0897 days. 959'>~~c.a.u Ken, 494-9m Costa Mn& 642-0010 NOW IN STOCK Get Our ~~~tlUve Rat.es m cu In. Ntw iz,;;'.,. top, Xtru. tact alt, 41.000
5..'i7-7'181 alorM? or couple, lovable '67 30' Chri .. Ts. Well equip. or · Your Beat Dealt Are Still At Thwvuore paint. 0ir~ 1'J.rltJ, r-.A,, ml SU50. 615-(1684 eves.
PREST!G l OUS Dl'MI:• male 1e1·ri" mix, has •hol" Well Maintained. Mltlng NEW '6' GMC Sub. 3 "'" FERRARI DEAN LEWIS ROBINS FORD ..,.itt&ctfon..-.·-· 'fl lllllf'l'ANG V.S, Ct&!¢
County Country CI u b hsbrkn. &16-6828 1/28 Sl 2,j00· 546-1871 aft 6· -::;. ~~;i°. ~l :-~ril~c:.: 1966 Harbor C.t.f ~9303 200J Harbor Blvd. '61 Ir.tPALA &.!per Sport M&11. Good Cond. Bs:t Ofr
r.lembership For Sale & \VHITE cat, about 3 mos old. · · Cotta Mesa 64UI010 Air, reblt ena, """""' cond: Ovr J:mO. 549-lTOG, Sl@vl!, · 5pood Ski •~---~" plebee. Dlr. S4IJ....9680 FERRARI BJT T MAXEY ·~ •-Transfer. Ca. I I aft 6 PM. Blk tail & blk spot on ear. -1'9 ~ ....._, 6~791
f2l.ll 541-1913. Vic Rcp"blic • Wndoo, CM. 19'8 SEA .... 11' Bi--• 68 Chovy l08 Spori Von. N.,...rt lmpo'1• Ud. "" "' LEASE "' '55 CHEVY, 2 -·~·-. OLDSMOllLE . ,...,. · ""':" Auto, heavy duty .springs, ange C<lunt)''a Ofl11 author-1 ·--_,,
SEWING MACHINE 548-1441 l/27 wired •n.ter. lnb!4.1111!itril ne"° Jittfi, runs perfect b':ed dealer. ITIOIYIOITIAJ '69 Cad Eldorado, ful l pw'l'., Best oiler!
sears Kenmore Portable. PUPPY 10 "'k. German Mere cnuser. ~ HJIJ Pf f4U57i SALES·SERVICE-PARTS air, vinyl top, 10,000 ml., *5'1M720* CHERRY 'SS Olds 442, f1W1Y
Sew6 f 0 r ward, reverse, Shep. Loves ptOple, cat.a It hrs. 53000 i.nclftt_ ft~~-Jtp. ·~ilSel! * Goin 3100 W. Coast Hwy. 1Ull BEACH ILVD Sl'19 per mo. •gg Chewlle Statton 'Waion. extras. Must ad1 th 11
dams, buttonholes. Excellent dogs. Hsbrkn. Sbot1 covtr &: t1'11ler. ~ -· fri. .56 g Newport Be&eh Hunt. 8eich 147.aJSS '68 Cadillac Eldorado pwr 1teerlng, auto. tranf. weekend. SJ0..1156
condition. Only $35. &3'l-039 673--0507. 1/26 14' .LONE s~wiinffin ~~~~!i. '400 / r:;f;; 6!,~:0~zed Ferrari~~~ J ml N o1 Qlut Hwy on Bell radio, air, vinyl top. nTso. '194-9951 1964 OLDS convt. p/1, pl}),
BEAUTlruL band painted FREi Puppies. S wks, small Ev1nrude re• •tmls. ~ · ' Sl59. "N!r mo. '65 EL CAMINO clean i550 01,)'1 6*4533.
oil portrait of you or your mixed toy cocker. SuC! ~tras. Cost IJllD ~!tY-lfe u "=filiF'.!oilc •, ton. JAGUAR ·~ndToyop~'4 ~:.CoMron1.StAUlr '67 T-Btrd Landau, full pwr., ·1·="'='='=67J.'6=o:il9====·:=1 S28-7087 Sl){l Mr ~~ '*"§!H ft o ·oa ""' .,. · _..v. "v· ust · a.Ir, stereo tape: $79, per mo. Auto trans, J)m\ltr 1teertna.
children from a photograph, 2 3· .. ~·__.,,. --· ~m~Jtpped. VS. Mwit 546--0732 '67 Galaxle 500, 2 dr HT, bnJces, air cond.
A wonderful idea for that 2 LONG haired puppie1 8~i ( l ) ~ -la•i. . . . Call Bill An.. I vi I ••9 '
'al ill •~•~ 16'SKI ~'M l! rntftl -~ •¥ ..-ar, ny top;.,,,permo. r-•-1 $1199 Salel •pee • ~~, wttla. Hou .. bl'Oktn. !! ••t"""' J-,.,!· ~· i.~ r. 114f>.9680 " DESPARATE. '63 J&1 VOLKSWAGl!N SO COAST LEASING ....... • CARPE'l' Installer has one •842-7890• New lll!Mli fl!" paver ~~~i. •• ~ XKE Rdstr. 4.2 Ltr. AM·FM ' M itter i1T" 64S.144J 1---------
d Boa"t i>,if ·~· . Ste·• al lll!EV"!i To". VS;' •pd.. ad'· Ch · hi Xl 300 w. Cit Hwy., NB 6l5-2lS2 2100 K·~ m-~ c '68 VAUANT roll, avoca 0 nylon carpel, LOVAB'E ····'ul 9 moo . " . Jilt ' m W'll I LI r ..... rm Wire w s. nt vw BUGS ........... ...... .M, ' "' ' "4J'' ' ., $Ta" li'ffi0 D,... 6 ·He I ' 1 Ina.net. c. nd \Vh I hook pouble jute-backed. \Viii M!ll Tom Kitten, to eood home. ...., • · t~ ~ ·'"'.·-_ N . Call Bill Appl ebC!C!. 1
00
2000· 1. ",,, TI$2250. Sac Autos Wanted 9700 '58 CHEV. dOOd transp. cu. 5 YR WARRANTY
all or part $3/yard. 540-7245 836-4493 1127 '61 Ski ormft71ii lfpiijw•· Dir. 540-9640 um. "1o>"l 1 ext 25l Must tell, be&t offer. * ECONOMY PLUS * ~·.••wing mach., mplc C()f· New UPhal!li MW =r· 'r· days, or 968-318'1 eves. FROM w~ P-"f --.. ,, ' ,, • VALENTINE Puppies, select $399 "' " 11o .. ~. I fll 1 ' $ala! fee 1bl, to.uter, elect can Bc11.ut , Perl caoo: In@ 11 '"Pl 9510 1960 3.4 SEDAN. Black CASH '. . ~ot i-77zJ=--. . opener. odds & ends. ~iJsr adopt Feb. 11~ $750 firm. Rod 675-3949 beaut)'! \Vood paneling, lthr .. · ~*~ -· Mflf'er. ''T' ~~~~·twin beds, modem FREEBeauttyroldallcn!d 1~~~1i;!.c:e~·0~1;;~ i:vJE~~.w~~~~: ~r~·~=~t'~~~··~i91g1~~ OOODSELECTION ~· .. ~ m· . B ~ : ii ' ''41•1441 ~: ~~=:t~~aid~ =~ sheU cat. ~,';& 00-7181 o~tt>efr~.~~ Cl182o~ip. ~:l i:~~ .:~~~~;~~:.9 nu c . :.~;.,, • V~ ~11\, . ·-,, -~.-~: _rFT IJ!"orNfl&Bl"1.C, C.M. ••••~i BLACK Cocker Spanie l , n-.. t Slip Moorl-_,, ~ paint, radials, chnn whla, t!lf•~: . paj
J'fG""O'J• male, likes children &: needt 1gy11 ... ~ l1Il.rfARY JEEP $950 or tcp ahape! $2500. 646-f.649
SEARS Reh1geratvr. couple fenced yard. 962-5404 1/26 NEWPO RT Lido make oUtr. Ga\e• tire!l,1-========:=
slit. LIKE NE\V. ~ced ~~ 3 nNOIES, 1 female zebrp. Peninsula, 22' pnwer boa.t, hvy duty ch r 0 ta. e rims, MERCEDES BENZ II~ mu Btar.h .Uvd. * 64Z.2'm * Stick, Air, utw TI re ••
under cost. $lla ca & 1 pair wax bills. Call side Ue. $2. per ft. 673-6741 673-779'l rr 6 W H U ton Bea.cb '~ 837-42.19 545-:ll!KI V29 a . J~ Wl na 3331 '6.1 CHEVY. 2 Or. 2&1 4 spd, Gauaes Xlnt Cond S1915
\VANTED Quality \Vhi"'·orth Mobll1 Homes 9200 1962 JEEP. Sliver. IQ .. 4~ posl. BEST OFFER. Call <2iJ.) 592-223'1 Eves '
tool.l to fit British nut.s &: TWO long ha.ired puppies, 8" Che\iy. Many extras.. M9-3031 Ext, 66 er 87 . WE PAY WH 648-0019 wktnds.
bolts. 54&-6380 8·:i pm. wka, 0 1 d • housebroken. YEAR E .. L> tell. ~rm WlO tIARBOR BLVD. EL Camino, 'SS CU.tom. 311, '"68"'PO=rm=A"C;;-C""a'°1a"1"°1-n a
PAINTING: Boat or House. 842-1890 1129 CLEARANCE SALE Du-B•-111 COSTA MESA FOR YOIJR W Auto. New llru. ·w Down Conwrtlble. P/S, Pf8,
By the ~ Very C0CKAP00 Puppy· femalt. AU.. SIZES ,,.... -• &: T.0.P. Evt1. 548--7243. Low Mileq:e. Xlfl't C.OM.
Reuooablt. ~9 _Rod 2 mo•. IW&-1044 UZI NOW ON DISPLAY EL U.bre •70 liertotn.tfon, LARGE "OHHELL 68 SS 396 CbeveUe, 3 op co .. 11995 Or Bell Oller, es,,,.11.,..,. has Hi Lo 2 RABBITS • ca1•. BAY HARBOR ""'' "" Jhle ...re. Mekt SELECTION _" ~Im~ 111111 iklll1;ft=""':i&l""'•·;_,....,,... __
eytoM ll.9! yd. Shags 548-<»16 UZI Mobllo Homo Solos olfu. 968-23!1) of vw CHIYROLl1 • Q~, # · 'fl, Pf"~lr4 a : ~4•to tnno,
from $3.50 up + my labor, ADORABLE kitten, needs 1425 Baker St., Cocta Meu. CAMPERS .. · ;~ • .... , ~llf.W· --~ 8411519 ""' __ , •• .__ I> block Eut o! Hube.-Blvd. Imported Autoo __ 90c per ,....... · ho~ by \ n\<llUay , O'ft1'~ .. C<>&ta. Me1a (TI'1) ID!M70 ff b v w
\\.ANTED WATERFORD MIXEDPuppies,allcolora,4 SCRAM-LETS ar our . • ;;~:wt,,.,., '4~· g;{, i.-;....sntw: Gntld 'PrU.
CRYSTAL. u-.. ..,. w••, •illt ""•"'"· ~ Owner Anxious! • I-;;~;s· -.. "'4· o ....
lem. Reas.call-~ PJ'T!.-LIYl fTOCK 20 v:lcle, 2 BR, adult, pets, MC AUTHORIZED ' ~· 'Ml,! ,
1 i · . ---w P!-M *'
6UAL ''"' qltd. bedopl';i. ' :i. ~; _ .... t WAS ""5. ANSWERS Sslet. Slrvlc" PU'ls SALES. SERVlCE all ·, Rq .11ri4.' " " as , ..... , ..
bl/rm. 11s. Twlp bed, '°'' pe11 _ * ,, .. 11 NOW $599511 lmmedtste Delivery, am B!;ACH Bl., 842-ml 'll>eaclotw l!Oblltt ~·~•M~llil::::;:~· ~ .. "!~:::-=:;;:;;:--:~ ,,,a1 ...... $30. 546-168j. ~!'il11~ ijQU~Q " "'.;, * S49-09S9 * Loncer -Rabel -°"" -All A!odw llUN'l'tNGTON BEACH 2060 -Blyd.
RCYrARY '°"" """'" W. .,_ !'oc· Many ~\blion" Gd MOBlU: Home 198 8 Pallld -CHEAPER '!7 VW SU&. Oria. Owotr. C.M. 6'U010 CONTINENTAL THUNDERBIRD. 12150,
'itereo $33. 8 mrri pmjecU#, Hat hi. lll!Jtt In· '500. S.crUJce! Set Up ln N~ Bachtlor'1t .advt91: "Don't S1100 Cub. CaU • Da,yt WPORTH WANTIJ) New eTtJine, pllnt I: Jn.
camua. Jltff S41f. 847-Glt p~. 6'16-972'1 Adult Pk., Nwpt Bch. C.ll = ~°'OO:V~~ can m..utl. Evn. 670-2332 Or.llllt n.cs. ,'53 ·-~UTirllL condlUon. ttrlor. ~
NEWPORT Beach Tiniiii * OOBERMAN pups, malta, betore 10 AM or aft 6 PM ·~ VW Bus. 1500 CC ~blt mu. TOP~O?A All lea ther-9owr-l6
club, family mcmbenhip, AKC. Rhols, 11 wks, terms. 648-0752 AUSTIN AMe-m•cA 3100 w. Cciut HW)' • N.a. tnaine. New clutch • bal· ma ..ea. 8Ml. mileage. &f2..l52:3 alt s JG T ·lllD
1$4:50. 549-2286. eves 540-5844 Ce.II 642.-8961 anytime 'JIJI .\LJO Trailer, Awnina ll . 5.IU 642"'4m r>f0.1164 tery. Call 548-4797 R. Bein. Pb.~ Nf..a &: wke.nda • • 1---------1
fuV1NG Tank. 11 C1L It, will> MlN. Scllnabur, female • 6 ·-cal>inet m w. . USTI"' A M CRIC Aulhorhed MG Dealer 'ST vw. Excollont Clltt,p '84 CONT., Has p;v.fythlnaf '65 T·llRD tin &: mask $15. mo. AKC champion sired. WllAOn, Sp. 26, C.f\.t. A ,.,. ~ A TF ~trioo Le.at ~rltR XPEG. Tranaportatlon. hfa.ke Oller. U .. d C1r1 f9oO Pam= local R.E. Bkr. "Air'' PS/PB/PW Sb!n$>
·, 548--0341 Shou, crupped. 84...,., llb!SO ROD and Rcol. perloct Sal•• S.:=~ ll''U Kept & P"tlalfy C•ll 96>-1182 or 844-1133 A Be&0ty
ROTA!\'¥ eevi-'tr ~r,$$5 ,\KC' ~U.ni.s!tm! Dachshund cond. lllneA forces 1a1.. lmm«liate , 'RI~ Delux Acoe•. '66 VW Fastback inc. 4 tracl( * FLE.E'T SALE * '66. OUTSTANDING. A.Jr, 1 ypw 'JO
.,,,... 135 !Imm "'°~ 'l"'Pplu, • !loorilico. Mf.4ll . All ife.''4 . Nu top. 11850, ..,. deck • -· alt 11) !iU Qllvr · -ll'llM -tlM --· 11111 •1"9 ·•I '"lf8 U•-~ ll1'4lfl. I ,,,_ i > '' ' ::"tfi~ 5'MT24 I Dear ,,•,,,,,,,,,,,. $11111> 1'175 -'!\ T' "-· ~·,"';,_ • ,.~,__ •_, u:.\:l'll'"N:'\'l,lrJ"l 4 ... .--.wa.,l~l!lil"""'""* · · ~I
Mlst,;\¥1,,,_. 1111 1/:8.:rr~"".; a..~·J:J1-it•~ MGA ..,.., ... 1.!l!f.,'""11~1 1Jit~~ .,_ C l ..... , .. 1 i#t; . 'llwniJly. ( ., ' ' -.................... J!llll ' :1100-""'·· c.M. .. ~~::~~.~\ii' .. = itKC. a.!~ m-: ~~1 "=' :.i-r1J .1r:1 ""'A "!I~. ~...i °'" "~ ~. "= 111J!!'.~.~. ~. ·enJ?:Wo!t'ru ~P!.
&M-.2J117 • ~9446 rent $40 mo. $2250. 842-4G24 Aulhorfltod lfO Delllrr SOOO * M.i-4893 enilne. 6f&-258T ~ &W4f00, C!'(t 2SL a.c. I~. bit otr. -.m
MERCURY
MUSTANG
PLYMOUTH
I " •
JI DAILY PllOT Tutscily, Ji1111ary 27, 1970 •
I . .
800 I
PRICES EFFECTIVE WEDN!SDAY th'.o'!flh. TUESDAY,
JAN .. 28: .29; 30, .31 ,_{fl!. 1, 2, & . 3 iscou:n.I .. ~'·~ ·
. ... .. ~· .. . -. -'
;•' .. · ''"tr ~~· ; .......
•
. • :c •• '~ .;• ·-. , ·'-.;\"r;" '' '...-, . '! A& .. . .,,..~ ... ·-~' " af. fO ToUI , .... · "' :1
• • --:. -. j ~
'" -. '.'. ..
. DUBUQU!. "ROYAL BUFFEl•
SANDW1CH STYLE
*
S.-,i'IDWIC:M STYLI.
' _. ....... ,_ ..
POAK SH()VLOI."'
PICNIC "'''"''"' ~ "~ ,,. . .,~ .. ~-··"""''""
CANNED
PIC"IC
3-lb. can
USDA CHOICE.I FULL CUT
~• I \
rices I
FEA,,.lllG EVllYDA Y LOW
DISCOlllT MIA T PRICES!
USDA CH OICE e EXTRA ' LEAN, TENDER
T·BONE or
CLUB STEAK 1.25
Lb.
FARMER JOHN e 8-0UNCE PACKAGE
Skinless 35
Link Sausage · c
USDA CHOICE e OVEN TENDER
RUMP
ROAST 83~
McCOY'S IRISH • LEAN & MEATY
Corned Beef 89 BRISKET ~b'.
rtN 'N QUIU PIMENTO & JAlAPENO 47c
CHEESE SPREAD ·~; •• ~;;
~SLICED AiL VARIET:,:: 3i1. oo,
~MEATS ·~~·
•:~!v 'o' .. c~c· 25c
•
'''"•IOGI ,~ • 11.oz. SIZE
ALL V .... IETtfS
SAVE 2lc
CAKES
QfL\ FRENc'f 0
". IAV1 ..
75c . 33c
•
USDA GRADE A
COUNTRY FRESH ' • FRYfNG . . .
CHlCKEll ~~iE
USDA CHOICE • OVJ;tol· T.ENDER
BONELESS
SHOULDER CLOD . . .
USDA CHOICE • 4
FIRST CUT
CHUCK STEAK · .
SLICED • 1 ·LB. PACKAGE
FAD BACON
USDA CHOICE e LEAN AND MEATY BEEF
c
ROUND
STEAK ~BRtAD
'1fZl iiiiiuwtE'·
\'S!l'IE
. ·,
65° SHORT RIBS , • 3.,. c:
lb,'
~ FRUifE COCKTAILSAVE ,,
~ DEL MONTE o NO, 303 CAN o SAVE 6<
• ~!!~c~~~M~N~~~~.~ES
•
CAKE MIX SAVE 10.
amY CROCKER l·STEP ANGEL FOOD
CAKE MIX 1 ~~:.·;~··
ZEE • 60 COUNT·• SAVE 3c
MELAMINE o ASSORTED COLORS 6 8'
Fondue .Plates 53~~ • • Spice Tone
NAPKINS
· FONDUEsAFORKS 99c
POLY QUILT• 26"x26" SIZE
• GRAPiiiuil'3ac . JUICE · .
iii Piiiowy FOAM ~~~D 188 I
FEATHER-FOAM O 20-x26" SIX!
FEATHER AND FOAM lllUD
BED PILLOW SAVI
1.00 111
• • (
SALAD SIZE • RED RIPE .
TOMATOES
" . CRISP, GARDEN F~ESH
LETTUCE
ROMAINr•REDLEAF , 1,.. 1. t1 '·
'eunER ~ SALAD BOWL . ' :
ESCAROLE • ENDIVE . ' bunch
. CRISP, GARDEN FRESFl
GREE MS
MUSTARD ,• COLLARD
' . SWISS CHARD • RED CHARD
SPINACH • KALE • TURNIP TOPS
"''G ·'
lb.
~ • . EVERYDAY LOW PR ICES ON FARM FRESH PRODUCE
• • RED GRAPES 2 lbs. 29c
WHITE'GRAPES 2° lbs. 29c
J~jCE'ORANGES !Oc lb.
Bql.K PREMIUM RUSSETS lOc lb •
BU~K WHITE ROSE I Oc lb.
Y Ji/h s 2 lbs: 29c
TANGERl('IES 2 lbs. 29c
A VOCAOOS 3 for 1.00 ,
•••
f
,.
•
;
,,
.,