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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1970-01-29 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa17 l'Vitte rea s ---~ •• SIO!JOOO in Nar~o . ' . . ' Evideli~~ Displayed --. -- ·uy Mesa Offi~ers ' See ·P.nolos Pogo 21 • -· ' -wa .., ........... , .. ~- FreeW~y Drivers . .-. --·- Se~· Cou'1tian .. Die " In -Plane Crash ' . • - • • r , DAILY PILOT • * * * 1oc * * * THURSDAY -A'FTERNOON, .. JANUARY 29, 1910 Ha'7aso Honey UPI T1 .... M11 While mQsl of the nation strugaJss:through a TOugb winter~ Nancy Sims, peilched on )a piece·of LQndon Br~<lge~sOils·up"sun~hine at L~ke Havasu City on tt\e lo~r Colora~~ -River wh~~ the brtdge Is be1n,g rebuilt. N ency obviousJY has Qne JU mp on the bndge bwlders -she s fully ass~mbled. Irvine Company J!reaks Silence on Bay S.wap Irvint COmpany· President William R. Here Is Mason's complete statement: fl.fason , e6ded long sltenct today oo the 11The lrV'lne COm~ny has been silent Upper Bay land exch~nge .. Itlacked on the issues ~of the Upper Bay uchange Supervtso'r Robert BatUn's, alternate since the·btginning of llUgaUon In' Orange plans declared thatithe state granted ttie . Cpunty1Superior ,Court. We have felt that bay f~r d~~klpment'as a hittior ahd sa~d parties in uucauon before the courts the estUary•s marine env'irOnment has shbuld remalh silent so that the legaf already,:cbten dest.r()yed. 'issues can 6t prope!rly detennined by thf! MaS91), ,.after a one-day dt:laY . issued courts without the interf.erence of elthd • his flht· public opinion of ttie land public emotions . or political pressure" development (inn s1nce the controversial However, since this procedure has been exchan,ge enter~ the c00rts in a test oC c:ompletely ignortd by the other parties constitutionality. to the UtlgA~ion. including two He brought up three fresh points in the superviJorl of Orange County, ft'hich is a yews-Jong debate: plaintiff in the action. who have •sue- -Orange County is charged by the gested an alle.mafive plan and a mutual tidelands grant by the State of California revocation without an alternative : 1 feel with the n:sponsibiHty ol deydopmg ·a. it Dece.uar)'•to comment on '911\e ol'tht· harbOr. peftlnent issues. -Supervisor Battin's alternate plaq to • ''I can understand and appreciate that abandon .ll>e;exchange 90 that the ,&mty ·the Upper1 Bay ls already becoming a ~·ould develop the lower portion of tbe 1 political foot.ball for the next election and harbor\ was "ple<:ed tQCelher on the that the Politicians and government ~een- demanU of a limited few" without the a.I are enduring them wllh phone caJls benefit 'of lechnologic1il studies or public and letters, but the abandonme.ot ol the hearings. ~ general pobllc's Interest at thl1 time in -Thit last year's record noods Javqr or ~·plan at 111, or a hall.Uy drawn rleslroy'ed the marine envirqoment tn the plan, Is neither C01.1rageou.s or prudent. estuary by de~ltlng \wo-t~lve-feet or "T am certain that ail or the 1111 and mu<I on the bay bottom. • (S.. IRVINE, Page I) ' • .. • :II' . ·- ... .~. Mouiri.sts See Fatal Air CrllSh A La Habra missile engineer was killed 'Vednesday when his rented lighl plane clipped the 819-foot KFI Radio tower in La Afirada, showering his body and aircraft debris to the ground below. Glenn Foss, 45, of 621 W. Greenwood Ave .• was on a· land ing approach to Fullerton Airport Y:hen the plane clipped a guywire and disintegrated, aulhorities said. Foss ledves his wife and five children, 8-16 years old. Federal Aviation Administration e..1· pert! today beg8n the meticulous task or reconstructing the wrecka ge in their al· tempt to determine precisely what hap- pened. The spectacular. 4:45 p.m. accident ?.'as witnessed by hundreds of homeward· bound motorists on th.e Santa Ana Freeway, some of whom were en- dangered by the de~ri.!l falling from above. Fullerton Airport authorities said Fos_.~. 8 fonner Air Force pilot now employed 1n Corona as a Navy missile systems elec- trical engineer, had rented the plane 20 nlinults earlier. "He was On a nonnal nifht pattern IG Increase his proficiency,' said Jim Dodge, sAles manager for Tri·Avlation Corporation. based at the field . The $16,000 Piper Cherokee lost a por· tion of Its right wing when it atruck the towering radio anteMa, which sustained no sttlous damage. "He came between the lower and a guywire an~ he nicked• il," said Ernesto Afiartlnez,, 26, of Norwalk , one of many who watched FOii' death plunge. "He traveled up a few feet, but the \Ving broke off .and parts started falling all over," added Martinez, employed on a painting job near:tbe X ene. "I ran inside,'' be said. A. major fire was narrowly averted \vhen the Cherokee's fuel tank plum· meted through t.be roof of a furniture warehouse and splattered over packing c~ses, but railed lo erupt in names. One wlng and a wheel ~ to rest on the roof, while Foss' body and as!Orted other debri.!l smashed into the parking lot outside: the-firm . Reds Seek Offensive SAIGON (AP) -The Vlei Cons'• P' .. v~ionlll revolutionary govemr,nent his held a meeting and called for a ~ trywide olfen&lve against allied forces, the secret Liberation radio said today. The broadcast reborted the meeting wp held In tnid.Jat'luary unrler l h • chairmanship ol Huynh Tan Phat, who heads tho Viet Cong regime. ., " 'lo °""' Drug Raid· ·Booty Worth $10,00.o By ARTHUR It VINSEL 01 tkt 011" Pllft Stiff Stragglers mlased m·4a houn •of" roun- ding up suspected campus drug dealers were sUJI sought today, as Costa Mesa police put on display $10,000 worth of con- traband seized, lrom mild to deadly varieties. The table full of narco~cs could turn on_ lhe entire city. Detectives arrested.one more adull and four juveniles Wednesday, meanwhile, bringing the total captured to !2, wilh three more n~ in unserved arrest warrants. One 18-year-old adult was arraigned \Vednesday in Harbor District Jud1cial Court, while the others have posted bail and are due before the benci) next week. Robert Whitmore, 18, of 2758 Portola Drive, Costa Mesa, was arrested on a charge of sale of marijue.na :Wednesday, as a result of the six-week probe of drug· dealing at two ·campuses. Detective Capt . Bob Green said today "'hen questioned· that the mass roundup begun Tuesday morninJ: does not involve an actual ring, such as the underworld syndicate-type operatlon,t "You couldn't llart ·out wilh a pyrilmid of organization and trace ·it to ' any one person," said Capt, Green. who added that most of the suspect.I do know each other. The 18 juvenile boys and girls in custody are from both Costa Mesa and Estancia high schools, &lit two Were pick· ed up Wednesday incidentally to the 1 original investlgaUon. Most are charged with sale or dangerous drugs, lnvolv!.ng heroin, LSD, Fr~w.a y Wreck lnjmes Pair ·,fan Anlhti"1 ·mOtorist and a Baldwin Park truck driver were hospitalized with major lpjuries at Martin Luther Hospital this morning: following a Santa Ana ' Freeway crash that slowed northbound nlSh """' ttofflc.l<> a cra'fl: ., · ' California lllghlfaJI patrolmen said Pifary Weave.c, 23, of 200&._WJ fta Palma Ave., wns northbound and exiling on the Brookhl:!nt Stree' ramp when her car swer•ed out· of control and beaded back to the /roeway. Because the ramp lies on a ateep tm- b11nkment, ofOcera Mid , the car wa11 alrbome when It t lruck the truck-driven by Daniel Acero, 23, of Baldwin Park. Patrolmen said the truck rolled four times blocklna two of the northbound lanes. mescaline, opium, barbiturate and amphetamine pllls, hashish and a~rted liquld compounds. One chunk of hash alone -the potent, refined sap of the marijuana plant -is worth fl,100, Detective Nonn Kutch di.sclosed as the array was laid out \Vednesday. Special agents were used by the police depart.meat in gathering evidence prior to issuance of arrest warrants by Harbor District Judicial Court Judge Donald Dungan. Investigators said more than one sale wiJs made on the Estancia High School campll! baseball field as they watched the transaction from a distance. H untirtgton Lass Double Winner In Junior Fete Huntington Beach's Rhonda A-fartyn took another step 1 toward \he California Junior Miss Utle by capturing first place in physical fitness comPetlUon Wednesday night in. Santa Rosa . That makes two ,events (pois~ arid ap- pearance w·as lhe'other)"""tfie Marina High School senior has won In tbe week·long contest. She ha1 a chance to succeed Jackie Benlngton, 'her friend last yehr at Marina, u California's Junior Afiss. .Kenneth Martyn, Rhonda's father, said th.ls morning the entire family •is "very proud of her aod what more can we say." "She's having a good lime In Santa ~ and it's a aood experience for her. That's. what Is Important .• " said Martyn. Ht al8o expalne(l t~ JDCthod of com- petition employed In ju(Jjlng In the Santa RoiJa Jl!nior Colleae Audltotlum. site of . the Jaycee event. A total of 54 girls are compellng, he explained. On SUnday, all -..ere lntr~ duced, then divided Into three W for competition during the week In cat• egoriu -poise and 1ppearadce, ttfenr* and phvslcal fltnes9. Juesday~ ,Ugbt. ,fl,honda .W'on n11t rJhl po1$t and appearance In her group. Wed- nellday sHe took honors in physical fit .. neu. Toolght ahe an<I h<t competitors will be Judged In the ttlent category. While Rh«lda •as winning her share in l¥t"o cateeorlu, the two other groups were 111190 competing for slmllar honorl. Cyn. thie Pahmr of Turlock also has betn a double winner, ,capturing honort in phy• lea! fitness and t111lent. A fourth event competed In by all girls Is !Chol1rshlp. •• Horrified NeighboTs • See Wreck A Costa fl.fesa boy who recentlY. com- pleted a police bicycle satety-courle was fatally Injured Wednesday when his blkt: \'eered into a heavily traveled ·roadway: and he was struck by a'car. Jeffrey J. Dietrich, 9, or 3111 Platte Drive, died of a skull fracture and other head injuries about 1:30 a.m. today at Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital. Horrified neighborhood friends watched late Wednesday afternoon as he was hurl· ea into the windshield of the car on Paularino Avenue, 100 feet ·west of Platle' Drive. fl.1otorist Laurie J . Pike, 17, of 3055 .:ohnson Ave., skidded her small British sports roadster to a s{o~ and the boy's body tumbled to the pavement. "The lady got oot and screamed and \Vt took he r Jn the house. Then the pal\ce came," said a 12-year.old girl who saw th:i tragedy. Police tt. Hal Fischer said today the car was being checked over by investigators, but it a~ared Mil! Pike could not avoid the acadent. "God •.• I hate to see tt happen to kids," he rematked grimly. Officer John C. WhJte said the Dietrich boy was riding west 1long lhe rough shoulder of Paularino Ave~ when f\e swerved into lhe roadway !ron# In front of a parked car. • . , Only after the Initial Investigation wa~ compleled . did PQ!i~ .. dl-·v•1 .tloe !Ilia!~· ' . 1se'e''8ttti:,'fll°ij; Z) • I Orange ·.·Ceu& • Wea Iller The •hot• wind• Jlow' down ' l~ .. night, but the hot ·-ther ._. · tlnues '(by' d111) Into· P'rldly wllli temperatures hitting 70, but alnkw 'Ing into the 30's -, ~all. INSIDE TODA l: /JU,~/\ ~f\I'~ ~ -; 1 at ·f'fnaafftt Nl.2f!ll'r '/frat llfG' • ., • as ~otll o/ ... ~u "'°'"'" h • ·" thtre wo,, .,tltrtXZtion in ih.t 1 prtme. Po.Qt. 1. I > I 1 DA!lY l'ILOT s Yah~lonski Driver Dr unk? ••• I • . . . . \ FBi Agenti:Testify He . Hit Guq,rd Rails in Esca pe '-.. ,, •• . --~ _.i-.... -~EVELAND (UPI) -A care.fully wile, ~fargaret, 57, and bla daughter. from the river. • -· One of =three, Claude E. Vulty, 27, re~ar;ted e~ape arter mi.lie union or: Cfiarlotte 25 were shot. the getaw1y ~ $ources said Ptilllipl w~w~ 11 under . ~nt ,wij,h Phillips on • licial .w.nh A. "Jock" Y~kl and hli driver h·~ rdlms-•iowlld by ~lcobol han been )be arlver ol lhe ei! ~I.~, ~Ul'llary e' hl v.....-n. Ohio, Id r-:-~ ' · ·. r ' :out and w11 m>laced by~ l'llh \ enother cue. . wife Qd daughter were murdered was:-sideswiped two guar.dr1U. near lba home wbo received o.,eoo. It was allo rtpmi.ed other fOUtCts reported Yablonskl'1 nearly dimlpted because the driver ol t.h,e as he drove away. the trigeer man lo the slayings recdved killers ~ete paid more than S2.000 each. ~etawa~ car gof drunk, it was learned to-Jame:i _c. PhllllJ>fl, 4%, wno allegedly $1,700. . "·•t it wu not known who hired them. day. , ~ backed out of the plot to kilt Yablonski Two FBI atentl acorled Phtlllpa to the "n1e grand j~ ii' trying to find out. FBI agenu told a f~ral kfand jury· and theo 't:Dld the story to the FBI. was WQrtboute Wednelday for hJI. ene.hoor Veak>1,._P~ E: GillJ, 36; aid Al!bra11 t~sftaway·~ sat lnlhe:ttlto outside reported .to have told the grand jury bow appearance. · _ W. 1'fm10.i 2S, ~ char&ed with .the the Yab'loMkl's •etarklvllle, Pa .•. ho.me the slaylnp were rehearsed. 'Phlllips' · testtmonY, Uke that of all murder of Yablonski, 1 long-time Un1ttd drir.l:l!!g beer and tossing lhe empty beer The rehearsa1 includecf the tossing of others here, wu secrel :But sources said l\1ine Workers Unk>n ofrlclal, and It.is wlf1 can& on the lawn. They said fingerprint.s dummy .. weapons Into the \1900ngahela Phillips wu in on lhe original plot, then and daughter. None ol the lhrte men hat fouod OD the beer cans helped lead to the River about llv~ miles from the pulied out al Qae last minute and gave tht. appeared before Ult. grand jury, allhouah arl'UI of'three SU!!pecla. • Yablonski home. An ·Ml rifle and a .18 FBI Woqri,tlon thal lad lo tho arr..U the wives of GiJly and 11¥\in testllllld The agents 18,id aftt.r Yablonski, 59, his caliber revolv.er have been recovertd last week <(Cbret men. -Wednesday . .. . Negro Boy, 16, · "°.,._· Held in . Tee.n . BARB.RA STREISAND WJTH CANAOA'fIRUOEA1l"'·'--:~-. . ; .. •. . . • . ' ·~ ~ An Ev.tiing of Ballet ariif' BuffaTo Burgiis G 'A k "r. '· •. • . ~ t~-, . ·' · , .. . !'!·, ... · a~,-ttac .. s ". llarb.-a P~•~~.:-PM . ::!F~?:F:J.:·r.~ -• --------• --------nesday ot ·whtte students on·ttie1r·way·to Tr udeau Takes Sta r to Ballet Santa Ana Valley High School The youth was tenta tively identified as OTrA\VA (UPI) -Prime Aflnster arrived at the mcxlern cultural romplex. leader of one gang of about 20 Negro Pierre Elllott Trudf.au took Batbra Trudeau jumped out of his ~t and dodg· teena1er1 who allegedly roughed up three Slrtisand out i.rl ouawa Wednesday night ed past Roya1 Canadian P.kilnted 'ppuce white atudenl4:. for an ev•nino of baJlt.t and buffalo to personally open the door fur. (J.fiss Pollce estUDate that altogether there -Streisand. , . were betweea-70'and 100 young blacU.fu. r burgers. • ~ After watc;hin& a perform~: of tbe :' volved in attack&. Some were armed "'1th·· P.fis.s Strel&al".d.;.arr Oscar winner fOJ • ...ll~~ ... \Vuw~· Ballet Co-mp any , ...-"FuMy Girl ," d"'1· the so.iear-old Trudeau Md Mis! Streisand went to the ' clubt; ~ ud bottles. .. bachelor prime ~r Wt fall irben he salon of the· arts center ·aod sarp)>!:ed FOIU' 'wbUe students were • lnJ'lred, visited New York' ~..cttr. She was tr aditional 11{Jnitoba foodi.. Jnc!tidlng treated al Rfyf.t\4ew Hospital and~· Trudeau'r:iurprlse gue.a-at a program burgers made ff'om buffalo meat ed. One suffered a broken arm and head \Vednesday marking the .~ntemtlal of the · When they leit a television reporter injuries. province .. of Manitoba..,. . . asked him. t'When ilre you going to have There was only the one arrest. Trudeau, !ti evening clothes, and ~tiss her back here again?" Rudy Francis, a Negro security guard Streisand,.Welirll'lg a'low..cut. long white , Trudeau ·did not reply, but ~Uss u·ho patrols between Valley High and 1;own, -.W.· • lhcrt. 'fU.r-tr:bnmed. jacket . Streisand leaned over from within the car Smedley Jqn)or High School said the and whni·fbfhlt;:.a.4 inuft..;)ftre amolli and sald,:~<.You're supposed to say 'arrtll "rjclal" incident was the result or an at·· hundreds~( VlP1~ .lh&":'N~ .. ~ · ttW n:ian'~" -. a re.fe"F!ee to Trudeau's tack on Negro 'itudenls by wb.ltes Tue:i· Center.~. • .-· · . _ · somet1m~ e'Jbhc ire ~t.newsmen for as~ day night ,rt.er school. ll'helt' ,Ibo. <prlqle-111lnisler'1 • llmOll5ine '!Iii him Sboljt his persohaJ life. ' •· IJT. Ch~ R ... , 1!'"1cipal of the -.· -· . . r.. ";, ' . ~,.. . . tchool, stated the. figbtjng WM ~[{ c~ ~ ~ .'JIU!'."and·biJ nolhlng-'1.o 'do with the . . F rom Pqe· J . ---lcJ>cloJ atall." · lRVI ltt STATEME:N-T... .-,~~~.~"f..~~.~~ . S\!,peQr\tendeat for business of Laguna .U..cb IJnlfolld School D~tricl, beginning ne.s mooth._. Supervisors an aware ~t Orange Coun· :..· ~ .COUnty declared I.heir cooperation ~d ty is charged6,-~t"'9iacts grant from 'f w -lo give atlenU~n to this malter lhe state of -.catl:tornia with the also. The county's plan was meant to responsi~illty of developing the Upper ··.c~ an environment or quality that all Bay inlo-at8u:bofo1 'Ibii§.camc& be,fioee .;.-Mgr;tllJJ.i o(·,414 publiqicould 'ltjoy. ·~ . .\ \\'ithout I.hf Cooperation of those •who . ''CUJ!renUJ lhere are studies undtt1'8J owned the land around the water and tlfe . . on the· m.nne ecology to determine Dr. H~e:re have been no •·on campus" lftCJd at lhe school which has an enrollment of 2,050 students. a third 0( wlllch are N.e~ and. ~tuican • .i,jl'.'9'1ciin:""~ '!.,""I? :.Qf'tli$ black group' are hot students of'VJDty High School. They are older and Oul&iders," he said. islands iri tt: nae Irvine Company. owners methods of preservation and enbiln· of all the Uqid, h{ll never beeri adverse to c~ment. The public should be aware, . the public acquiring the enUre Upper Bay hov._:.ever. that the majority of the marine and asimiiliii the reiiponsibllity for' its habitat in the upper ·aay ia Uooer tWo "to Junior Cotleg-es development as a harbor and park area five feet of silt from la st year's floods I only . However, the public agencies have clestroying the marine environment. Exe mpt From Sex continuously assured us that .taxpayer "During the past 10 years of stl'!i)', . funds have never been available and that public hearings and litigation. we have . It would be .. irnpossiblltty for them to seen DO reason In abandon l!>iS plan Educatio11 Curb s acquire the lands Mcessary for the whi¢l is based upon the exprea&ed ncem J development of the harbor and, therefor~· of the .I!lajority o( the people~ 1be C\,trrent SACRAMENTO (UPI) -~ Attorney bave proposed a joint ~velopment fDr a extjl.ange provides the maximwn.'benefit ee·neraJ' 'nM>mas Lynch llld mday that mutual trade. An excllange bad been at the le~ taxpay~r cost. jurJor coUeges. Ri:e ex.elnpf from a new "Supernsor Batun's instant plan J>ro-state law .restric:Ung lhe ~ or sex reco~en~ and propmed by many :· po6ed recently and u;der study by-·lhe -educatton_tn·'tbe elementary ana secon- pu.~bc olf~als for more than ZO years, -county is without the benefit-of ----4il'Y sehools . . ~ INme Companr entered into ~ technological analysis or extensive pqbllc ... The. la'llJ, ..authored. b~ ~n. John G. ongi.na1 agreement w~th the ~ .~ hearings. It was pieced together to matdl ~ Schrmti-(R·Tustln ), prohibits the govern· their request to assist them ta:-~ the demands of a llink.ed few and"tom-· ing board of an elementary or secondary development of the harbor. Numamus pletely ignores the general public-. ill-school from requ iring that students at· changes w~e prnpos~ ~l the many terest, the.ir pocketbook, the county'i. own tend family life and sex education public h.eanngs by vanous mte.rests. !he master plan of parks, or the Jeg8f and cc.urses. . county incorporated many of these mto engineering questions. These are all ex· In an opinion prepared by Deputy Al· the current plan. to create •. balance4 . pressed 1n. the ,or(glnal plan which, •by torney.General Richard L .. Mayer~. the proeram. 'f:hese. included boating, w_ater comparison cost rive years of sludy and Justice Department said tha! technically skll.ng, boat morrag.e. par~, regio~at · l.'4 of a million dollars in its development the junior colleges are not considered ~acillti.es, boat launching, swimming, h1k-7he nlajoritf or the public. ~n though ~econdary schools as far as the new law 1ng, p1cnicldng and, when requested by they are silent, desen'es fhOl'e cOn-is concemed. the St.ate Rtiouttts. '?CPartm~nt at ~e sideration than Mr. Batlin's proposal. The Jaw prohibits-a school from re- state Lands CommlSS1on heanng lo . in· 11.'0T ADVERSE quiring that a student attend such classes elude Wands for ~ological preservation, "\Vhlle we. have..ne.ur been adverse tO if his parent files a y,·rilten .objection with the public acquiring \and that it needs for school aulhorities. DAILY PILOT l :"..,.,...... " ......... ..... ~ .......... ,~ c.. ... _ · J••\ a. c.,,1.v Vio:t Prn'lltnl -c.tft..,•I M-Of<" 111 ..... 1 "••·" Et1!fr . .A :--.. ~ ~-.11.v I'll.OT, wlltl ~;. ~ ll'lt ,p!-.-.rn1 . .' 11 M '"""" W•I,., ft<lft M • .. ~ ... -··-... """' ,., LAellM ·"""· ,..,_, ••tdl. C..lt ....... Mwootlolt' ... .. ..,. ..... '-·"' ,, .. _., ...... """ -'"'"""' ttit-. Of"-C..11 ,,_~ .... ~ .. lfl ................ •I )Ill Wftl ,.... .l .. _. .._ •MUI. ¥A l• WtJ.f .. , $frwl, C:..19 Mt:tl. ,...,._. t'l141 64)-4))1 r harbors or park purposes, we are certain Schmitz, a junior college teacher. said that every American citizen will join us be intended lo exempt community coJ. In total opposition to government ac· lcges .. becauae "of lbe ~~roblem.s you quir ing private lands and le&sing them to h.ce. He noted that some __!tuderlb are others to develope tn competition y,•ittl 24-year-<1Jd war veterans aM that ~-ey private landowners as proposed by ~\'OU.Id~ 'bted ~ oote from lheir parenta .ob- Supervisor Battin. The role of govern· Jechng to .'!W',dasses. . . n1ent is government, noi business. The o-pm100 ·was requested by Sicjney "\Ve feel the legal questions should be Brossn'lan, chancellor of the cammWJity detennined through the present case c0U e11es. • rather than 11 dda:y tor another five yeais whi le sonre·o1her ptan is proposed which, in turn. will probably be allacked by other se\1-iflterest groups. Delays and obS'tructions ·by the. vocal few who pro. post: lo do nothing hurt the public ma- jority who are J)Jliently waltln1 to enjoy I.he water and P'fr~ activities provided by the harbor's development. \Ve believe It hnportant and necessary to everyone that lhe conslituUonality of the exchange prin· C'.iple be · determned before a n y aU.ernaUye p18ns are.decided-upon." .,.,..,.,. Page J BIKE ... accicltnl ocdlrred just IOllr feet outside city 'Omit.a. ·1n a narrow count' strip. R~(s ol the accident probe were to be forwarci(!d to the CaUfornla lUghway Pttrol. which hasjm'ildlcllon In the arf!!a . '"· Young Dietrich ~ whole mother rode \vith him hl the ambulance recenlly - lrwisferred. to SI. John the 811 pllst C1tthol i.c School. after hiavlng attended IJca r Strett Elemeoiary ~.chool. Police 1ave a mandatory bicycle solely rUnic there less lh an two mooth!I a110. Nixon to Spend More 011 Water WASHINGTON (UPI) -The While House said today President Nixon had decided to spend the full $lKM> million Congress authorized for water purifica- tion project~. -~ Nixon had uked for S2lf million (Gr y,·atcr purilicaUon. n. lawmaker a Jx>olt:- t'd the money levtl almost four times over, but Nixon uaUI today did not In· ttnd lo fPl!nd more than the amount he soo1ht . Press Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler saJd Nixon had now decided to ov@rrule rtc- ommeoda.tloru: of the budget bureau and to authorite the lnterklr Department to spend the entire amoui>L ~T~ m<mY woukl go for matcl\1ng grants to local 1~ernments to build w1111tt treatment plant.. Some Democrats In Conaresa had bttn upsel by report.a that Nlxon would au- thoriie spending only .Ql-4 mllUon ol the appropriation 11 a means of keeping fed· llral spending down as part of the admin· l8t r11Lion's Antl·inflaUon program. • • D41LY 'ILOT ,.. ..... ~ f'IYM Rolled and Reod11 But these marijuana cigarettes 'viii never be smoked. That lettering on cigarette paper re- fers to evidence file at Costa M e s a Po l i c e Department, which has been coocenlrating recent drug roundup on l}VO local high schools. For an ·idea of what drug pushers have been pushing at high school students, see Page 21. N. Viet Leader Returning To T~s With N.~w Orders ,. PARIS (UJ!ll ~ Lt'Dilc Tho, pollUcnl teider of ~ North Viet.name~· peace "! taIP .delegation, la rcturninf~ 14t· ~Paria with apporent -oos lo Ir)' lo )Jreak the year-old vietMm ~ Com· munbt dlplnma~ IMlllfces iald toola1. The source1 sild Tho, u.e .1eruor Com- munist offidal with the North Viet- namese delegatlon, wtD arrfve in Paris on fo"'riday. He has been In Hanoi and is now in Moscow for talks with Kremlin leaders. The Commtmisl sources said Tho ap.. parently is bringing new instrucUons to Xuan Thuy, the leader of the a~tual negotiating team from Nortb Vietnam. Thuy has boycotted the last several sessions on grounds President Mfon bas "downgraded" the talks:1 Budget Dire.ctor Seeks Tax Job Orange County Budget Direct.or David G. Hitchcock today anJiO!lnced he will seek the nonpartiain poat Of tax collector which will be vacated by the reUremeot of Don Mozley. In his announcement Hitchcock said, "The office ot Lu: collector offers a uni- que opportunity for continued public service to the people of Orange County." J!ltc,bcock has worked for .tbe o:>Ullly since 199. Hilchcock, 42, of JOO Clarissa Lane, Tustin. is a member of' eeveral organiz.a.. lion! tncbting the liil<l "AN.• Klwlolio Club, Soothern cautomia Cr Im In a I Justice Adviaory Board and the NatiOnal Association of County Admlnlttrators. , The ~mwllJls said Tho would brlll( with him the latest thinking of'the Hpol l~aderstilp thalassumed command ~r the 'ealb· ol Pmldent Ho Chi MJnh IUt Sept, 3, ~tlc ~~ In -~ have "po~ the J!anol lea4~rshlp divl4- ed anlOll( .b-and dovu and ~ru­ ing aP.Cf rn-Moacow laqtons. ,~ · . The irnl!IS"'••t •t)>e P,atil lfID re-mained as solid as ever. At today's session, Allied and Communist diplomats traded accusations and made proposals which lhe other side rejected. The North Vietnamese used loda7's meeting lo laotncb a strong ·Ptlliml against an alleged bombing raid carried out by U.S. air force jets against areas north of the demilitarized woe. They said three U.S. planes were shot down \Vednesday. (Set story page 4.) In Saigon U.S. military sources did not comment on the report but said a Com· munist Mig shot down an American rescue helicopter with 11ix men aboard while it was trying to rescue the two man crew of an F105 figbter-bombtr shot down earlier · near the borders of Laos and North Vietnam. British Diplomats Ousted by Poland • WARSAW fUPJ) -'Ille PollJh News Ageocy acknowled&ed Wedne.eday three British diplomats in War&aw have beel expelled in retaliation for the ouster of three Polish diplomat.s by tbe Briti5b government The agency Hid the three Bt1il<ll dlp...,ta w"" apelled becaule their "acltVftY wa.$''n0( in accord with the status" of embassy peraonnel. _jJ. J. (Jarrell~ SEMI ANNUAL SALE! For lasting elegance, enhance your home with fa mous HERITAGE upholstery ' 15% OFF HERITAGE UPHOLSTERED FURNITURE "'"'-bptiOklMMI pices fnttJr91he ~ tetlve styling and proud creftsmansliip that have m.de Harit1g1 a INing tradition in furnf.. ture. 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Stocks VOL. 63, NO. 24, l SECTIONS, 36 PAGES Irvine Irvine Company Prtsident William R. itason ended long silence Hiday on the Upper Bay land exchange, attacked Supervisor Robert Battin's alternate plans, declared that the state granted the bay for development as a hiirbor and said the estuary's marine environment has already been destroyed. h-fason, art er a one-day delay, issued his first public opinion or the land development firm since the controversial exchange entered the courts in a test or * constitutionality. He brought up three fresh points In the years-long debate: ~ange Counly is charged by the tide.lands grant by the State of California with the responsibility of developing a harbor. -Supervisor Battin's alternate plan to abandon the exchange so that the county would develop the lower portion of the harbor was "pieced together on the demands of a limited few" without the Yachtsmen Urged To Speak on Bay By ALrt10N LOCK.ABEY 01 tll9 D.lllY f'illt $ .. ff A. E. ''Sandy" Sandling, manager of marinas and recreation for lhe Irvine Company, Wednesday urged boating and yachting interests to speak out in favor of the development or Upper Newport Bay as a prime recreational area. Speaking before the Newport Harbor Yacht Club weekly yachtmen's luncheon group, Sandling sald the area is in danger of becoming a "bird bath" unless in-- terest.s olher than the bird-watchers and Driver Dru11l~ ln Yablonski Case Escape CLEVELAND (UP!) - A carefully rehtarsed escape after mine union of- ficial Joseph A. "Jock" Yablonski and his wift and daughter were murdered was nearly disrupted because the driver of the Jl'.etaway car got drunk, it wa s learned to- day. FBI agents told a federal grand jury the getaway driver sat in the auto outside the Yab\onski's Clarksville, Pa ., home drinking beer and tossing the empty beer cans on the la\\'n. They said fingerprints found on the beer cans helped lead to the arrest of three suspect.s. The agents said after Yablonski, 59, his ~ife, Margaret. 57, and hi5 daughter, Charlotte, 25. were shot, the getav.·ay driver. hi5 reflexes slowed by alcohol. sideswiped two guardrails near the home as he drove awa y. James C. Phillips. 42. who allegedly backed out of the plot to kill Yablonski and then told the story to the FBI, was reported to have told the grand jury how the slayings were rehearsed. The rehearsal included the tossing or rlummy weapons into the Monongahela River about five miles from the Yablonski home . An ~tt rifle and a .38 caliber revolver have been recovered {rom the ri ver. Sources said Phillips was supposed to have been the driver of the car but pulled out and was replaced by another man who received $2,000. It was also reported the trigger man in the slayings received s11.100. Two FBI agents escorted Phillips to the courthouse \Vednesday for his one·hour appearan~. Phillips' testimony, like that of all others here, was sec ret. But sources said Phillips was in on the original plot . then [llllled out at the last minute and ga\le the YBI Informat ion that led to the arrests last week of three men. other so called ecological groups made themselves heard. Sandling said only one side or the many-sided Upper Bay controversy was being heard at government levels from the Board of 51,;pervisors up and down the scale. Sandling declined to comment on the proposed County-Irvine land swap which is now in the courts. Sandling prefaced his talk with an ex· plan.ition of what the Irvine Company is plannir.g to do with the marinas it con· lrol'\ in lower Newport Bay. "I've bad people ask me if the Irvine Company was trying to do away with all private p!ers in the bay and replace them with publit. marinas," he said. "Acutally, the Irvine Company only controls about 800 of the slips in Newport Harbor and we are taking these over as I.heir leases expire and plan lo improve them," Santi ling said. "This does not mean," he added. "th at the company is engaging in a program or building: marinas where none now exist but to take over and operate existing marinas on Irvine property. "At the present time, there are eight such marinas in the lower bay complex of Newport Harbor. These include, starting over by the Balboa Yacht Club, the old Richardson Landing which Is now OC· cupie-1 by Bahia Corinlhian Yacht Club, Bayside Marina on Coast Highway. Swales Landing and the Nc11•port Harbor Yachl Landing. "That is all of the \\•alerfront on thr lower bay complex that we either rontrol or have out on lease. or the landings mentioned. the com- pany has taken over five of thttm as the leases expired last September, and the other will be taken over as their leases expire," Sandling said. "As we take over these slips and Ian· dings we are trying to rebuild and im· {St:e SANDLING, Page %) Lincoln School Get s Computer A computer system valued at S8.SOO has been given lo the mathematics de· partment at Lincoln lntennediate School in Corona del Mar. The gift from The Digital Equipment Corporation of Maynard, Mass., will permit Lincoln School mathtmat.ics and science teacher Larry Lutz to continue the computer program that has been going at the schoOI for three yt!:ars. A U.S. goyernment grant runs out with the end of the rail semester thi s week. The school previously has not had ils own computer but with federal funds has participated in sharing time on a large computer. The model the school received Friday from Digital Equipment is desk lop size. • ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, JANUARY 29, 1970 TEN CENTS Bay Swap Silence ' benefit of technological studies or public shou1d remain silent JO that the ltgal hearings. Issues can be properly determined by the -That last year's record floods courts without the lnt.erferenee of either destroyed tbe marine environment in the public emotions or political pressures. estuary by depositing two-ti>-flve-feel of -However, since this procedure has been silt and mud on the bay bottom. completely ignored by the: other parties Here is Mason's complete statement: to the llUgaUon, Including two "T!Je lrvlne Company has been silent sU"perVisors of Oran1e County, which is a on the Issues or the Upper Bay excPrtge plaintiff In the action, who have sug- since the beg inning of lltlgatio in 0range gested an alternative plan and a mutual County Superior Court. We ha felt that revocation without an alternative; I feel parties in litigation before " aUrt.s It necessary lo comment on . some o( lhe pertinent Issues. "t can understand and apprtciate that ~ Upper Bay Is already becoming a political football for the next election and that the politicians and government agen· cies are enduring pressures from the small self-Interest groups who have been inudndatlng them with p h o n e calb and letters, but the abandonment of the l{eneral public's interest at this time in ravor or no plan at all , or a hastily drawn plan, Is neither courageous or prudent. "I am certain that all of the Supervisor& are aware that Oranae Coun· ty la charged by the tidelands granl from lhe state of Callfomia with the responsibility of developing the Upper Bay into a harbor. This cannot be done \vithout the cooper(lUon ot tbole who owned the land around the water and lhe islands In il. The Irvine Company, owners of all the land, has never been adverse to the. public acquiring the entire Upper Bay (Set IRVINE, Paae. J) Pair File for Council Rolled 011d iteady But· these marijuana cigarettes \viii never be smoked. That lettering on cigarette paper re- fers to evidence file at Costa ~1 e s a P o I i c c Department. \\1hi ch has been concentrating recent drug roundup on two local high schools. For an idea of IA'hat drug pushers have been pushing at high school students, sec Page 21 . Internal Revenue Se rvi ce Also Beckons Lear y f"rom Wire Scrvi~s \VASRJNGTON -Candidates for po- litical office must disclose financi al deal· ings by law now, but the lnlernal Reve- nue Service \Vednesday did part of it for aspiring California governor Dr. Timothy Leary. The IRS charges tbat $125,000 reported by the former Harvard psychology pro- fessor -currently a\valling a narcotics trial in Orange County -was not report· ed cotreclly. Or. Leary, a sometimes-visitor to La- guna Beach. claimed in returns for 1964, '65 and '66 that the $12.5,000 sum was in- come of his New York·based Castalia Foundation. The IRS claims it was not. that i1 wa~ his own private incnme and that the nol- ed researcher owes $6l.893 in back taxes on it. ' Lido, W estcliff Residents First in Newport Race A lawyer and a pharmaceutical repre- sentative filed candidate'!> papers today and became the first contenders for four council seats in Newport Beach to be filled In elections April 14. A third declared candidate, former Newport Councilman Al Forgit, picked up his papers, but has-not yet filed them. The two candidates in the races thus far are Lido Isle lawyer Roy Woolsey, who will seek the post left vacant by re· tiring Mayor Doreen Marshall. and West. cliff resident and parks commissioner \Valter Koch. Woolsey filed first. bringing in his doc· uments early this morning, accompanied More Suspects Soiight by Mesa In l)rng Raid . . By ARTHUR R. VINSEL 0t Hit O•llf Pl• St•ff Stragglers missed in 48 hours or roun· ding up suspected campus drug dealers · were slill sought today, as Costa 11-tesa police pul on display $10,000 worth or con· traband seized , from mild to deadly varieties. The table full of narcotics could turn on the tntire city. Detectives arre.'ited ont more adult and four juveniles Wednesday, meanwhile. bringing the total captured to 22, with three more named In unserved arrest warrants. One 18-yeai'-old adult was arraigned \Vednesd•Y in Harbor District Judicial Court. while the others have posted bail and are due before lhe bench neitl week. Robert \Vhitmore. 18, of 2758 Portola Drive, Costa Mesa. was arrested on a charge of sale of mariju~na Wednesday, as a result of the siJc.week probe of drug- dealing at two campuses. Detecllve Cap!. Bob Green said today when questioned that the mass roundup begun Tuesday morning does not involve an actual ring , such as the underworld syndicate -type operation. "You couldn't start out with a pyramid of organization and trace it lo any one person," said Capt. Green, who added that most of the suspects do know each other. The 18 juvenile boys and girls in rustody are from both Costa 1-fesa and Estancia high schools. but two were pick- ed up Wednesday incidentally to the orijl:inal investigation. ~1ost are charged with sale of dangerous drugs, Involving heroin, LSD. mescaline, opium. barbiturate a n d amphetamine pi\111. hashish and assorted <See RAIDS, Page Zl by former Newport Mayor Dora Hill. Koch returned his document this after· noon. Koch, who has served as chairman of the city Parks. Beaches and Recreation Commission, will seek the seat left va- cant by retiring councilman and former ~layor Paul J. Gruber. Forglt, If he returns his papers and of- ficially enters the race, would oppose Councilman Howard Rogers, \\'ho will seek reeleellon to his seat representing central Newport and Balboa. The only other council dh;trict at stake is that of Corona del Mar Councilman Robert Shelton, who has not fonnally ex· pressed his plans. No candidates have yel filed for that district . Woolsey, who has lived Ott Lkto Isle for 10 years, has pracliced law for that period in Newport offias. It is his first foray into politics. He took the step, he said today, to "carry through the fine programs of the city and lry to fill the gap left by Mayor Mar· shall." Koch, a former coach and high school teacher, currently is serving his second, four-year·term on the PB and R Com· mission. •le lives at 1112 Cambridge Lane. 'Voolsey's residence is at 113 Via Ven· ezia . Favorable Reception Airport Panel Accepts ' Newport Flight Curbs Propouls by the clly of Newport Beach to include curbs on Pacific Southwest Air- lines Oights at Orange County Airport have merit, the County Airport Commis- sion declared Wednesday. The commission voted unani:nously to accept favorably the Newport Beach re.s· olution asking that three methods of noise control be included in a new lease wil.h PSA, the large airline planning to a~ sorb Air California . Newport's City Council voted to sug· gtst a fll,ht curfew from 11 p.m. to 7 a.m.; limitation In the total number of daily flights, and forbidding the use. of aircraft larger than the Boeing 737 pres- ently In use at the terminal. The one suggestion by Newport which "'On lukewarm response from the com- mission was that of restricting the total of flights by including It in the lease. Commissioners agree that instead of in· rluding the Aight freeze In a lease, that the County Board of Supervisors instead warn PSA that it has the right to limit the number of fligh ts. Other proposal s by the city of Costa \\fesa, essentially the same a!I those from Newport, \vere not accepted by the com- mi!sion. Commissioners declined to accept Costa Mesa's nolst-reduction suggesUons be· cause they included a specific decibel limit Thal fact.or, commissioners said, Mesa's CofC To Take Stand On School Vote waJ under study by a !late committee. and local action on specific decibel meas. urements would be premature. Similar proposals bf the City of 1'ustin also were passed over in favor or the Newport Beach solution. The commissi·.n agreed that It should not recommtnd lease restrictions on '°'" ta! nights, because the county'& Phase It airport master plan study is not yet com- plete. That study might yield dif!ei"trit lnfor- matjon, commissioners said. Representatives or PSA did not 1ttend the meeting. Several representatives from Air Call· fomia aUended, however, but did not ac- tivtly address the advisory commission on the lease matter. Czechs Return To Regime11tatio11 VIENNA (AP) -Czechoslovakia Is re· turning to strlngent economic regimep.. tation now that Lubomlr Strougal has re- placed Oldrlch Cernik as premier, plaP.. ning chief Vaclav Hula made plain to lhe Communist party Central Committee in Prague Wednesday. Strougal, 45, an ambitious pro-Moscow hard-liner, took over lht government reins after Cernik aubmUted his resignll· tion earlier in the committee meeing. He obviously ~·as forced out. Hula in a Jong speech made clear that revitalizing the badly lagglng economy is one of the chief goals of Uie Communist regime and that tile party iz reverting to exacting economic targets and expec:L.• I.hem to be fulfilled . One of the three, Claude E. Vealey, 27, ls uoder indictment with Phlllips on a burglary charge in Youngstown , Ohio, In 11nother case. Other sources reported Yablonski's "killers were paid more than $2,000 each, i...,l it was not known who hired them. The grand jury is trying to find out. Motorists Watch Air Crash Directors of Costa l\fesa Chamber of Commerce today were. to decide whether lo endorse Newport-Mesa Unified School District's tax override and bond Interest ralc increase election. Orange Coa&t Vealey. Paul E. Gilly. 36; and Aubran W. ~fartin, 23, are charged with the murder of Yablonski, a long-time United ?.flne Workers Union official. and his wife and daughter. None of the three men ha.s appeared before the grand jury. although tht wives or Gilly and Martin tesUfied Wednesday. ~~ys Cl ub .Forms Marching Band Slrike up the band, say s the Boys Club or the Harbor Arefl. A marching concert band•for boys I lo 13 years old Is being formed, with the orgAnlzatlonaJ meeting set for 7 p.m .• Bandmaster will be Steve \Vinaor. Boys fntcrm.ed In joining may call him at tht club. I ' Coun~W.,i Dies cu Plane Clips La Mirada Radio Tower A La Habra miuile engineer was killOO Wednesday when his rented llght plane clipped tbt 819-foat KFI Radkl lower In La Mirada, showering his body and aircraft debris lo the ground below. Olenn Foss. 45, of 621 W. Grttnwood Avt., '"WI& ·on 1 hn1ding approach to l''u!Jttton Airport when the plane clipped a guywlre and disintegrated, authoritits !aid. Foss leJves his wUe ind live cnfktren. 1-16 yean old . Fedtral Aviation Administration ex· perts today begain the meti culous task or reconstructing the wrecktage In their 111· lcmpt to determine precisely what hap- pened. The 1peelacular, 4:45 p.1n. •ctident \V3S witne!sed by hundrl!ds of homcward- bound motorisls on lhc Santa An11 Freeway, wme of whom we.re en· dangered by the debris falling from above. fullerton Alrport authorities said Foss, 3 fonncr Air Force pilot now employed In Coruna as a Navy miMile systems e1tt· trical e.ngtnetr, bad rented the plant 20 mil'IUles ear1lcr. "tie wa s on a normal llig'1t pattern to inrr ease his proficiency,'' said J im I.>odt:e, sales manager for Tri·Avlatlon Corporation. ba5Cd al the rleld. The $16,000 Piper Cherokee lost a por· tlon of 115 right wini \fben it struck the lo~·erlng radlo antenna, which sw:talned no serious damogc. "He came betwetn lhe lower alld a iro.vwire and he nichd tt." '11d F:mtsto (\f;irtincz. 26. of Norwalk, on&-of MtnJ' wt:ii v.•atcOOd Foss· denth plunge. r ... ' "He trave.led up a felt feet, but the v1Jng broke off and p8rts starttd falling all ovtr," addtd Martinez, employed on a pa1nlln1 job near the &cene. ••1 ran Inside," ht sakt A· fnajor · fire was narrowly averted \\'hen the Cherokee's Juel tank plum- mo(ed iltroogh tho n>0f of a furniture war-ebnu!e and Splattered ove.f packini cia~. but fallL'd..lo erupt in names. Qn< wing and a Wheel clln~ 10 r•st on tht. roof. while 1'~058' body and a"°rted olher debris smashed Into the tarting lot oulslde the rirm . ot'her ~it.• of wreckage la-,..dtd on the :1dJitt'nt freeway end F I r • • t o n e Bo~lev•rd, occordlng lo polico. 1 hi pcclden1 .,,, tile fltll ln~olvlng' the tadlO tower. Ra1fo !'tatlon KFT rl!maln«I on tha atr following the accident. A mall ballot Is being taken of Newport }!arbor Chamber Qf Commerce directors on how they feel at19ui endorsement. The propoied ovei;:rlde tax increase of up to 86 cenll per StOO ol assesstd valna· Uon and bond permlsaiblc interest rate hike from five to seven pet.cent will be 1•otcd on Feb. 10. a week from next Tues· day. In d~ldln1 whether tO, endorM e11J\er. or both meuure3 today Costa. Mtsa O\ambcr'11 21 directors· wue-to hear • Spt'tktra pro and coo. , ., A volt last .,,-eek by 1h~ smaller tduca· Uon committee, following prJlenlation by, •nd questioning of Schools Supt. WIUl•m Cunningham, was )oconcluslve. Com .. mlttce members voted JO.O to eJ'(forse ~ Interest ratt Increase on prevlously•p- proved bonds but 1plit ~ on tndorst_rp_cnt of the oveM'lde. Re1~lt1 of the polling of NewpOrl. Harbor Chamber's J5 dJrectors are ex· , peeled to be known about the middle of next week. Weather The hot wind! alow down ~ night, but the hot weather ~ tlnues (by day) Into Friday wtlh temperatures hlUlng 70. but sink· Ing lnlo the 30'1 by nlghlfall. lNSWE TODAY Europeon t1ttt11papcr.1 looktd at rr~ridtnf)Nnon"l1 Jfr1t 'rear • t11 OR qf. moderate success bMt thtrl wot re:strvation in lhe · pra.i&e. Poae 7. • tt • ... " " .. " • " .... " " ,( DAILY ,tlOT ttlWf't .... ltkl.-nl ICM!l .. r Cut to 2 Jtlllllota Volunteer Army Needs Outlln:ed \Vf.SHINGTON (APJ -Secretary cf Defense Melvin R. Lalrd said today that to attain an all-volunteer force. the Unit- ed States would have to cut Its armed strength down close to two million men and spend heavily on 1 strengthened Na· tianaj Guard and Reiterve. This would represent a stash of nearly 1.3 million from the present level of U.S. Pot Clogs Vp Toilet During Narco Raid An urgent, croes-country teletype from Ohio led to a Costa hlesa drug rald \Vednesday, netting two alleged mid· western dealers and enough marijuana to clog up their tollet in the corifusion. Investigators said someone among the five suspectl arrested at the Shalimar Drive apa~t !lied to flush away the evidence. 12 plutic bags plug1ed Uie convenl drain. foraea. "I personally believe that you have to get down to a level. before you can aet down to an all-volunteer service, near the two million mark," Laird told a Youth' group of the Pentagon. The lowest figure he previously has In· dlcated as the target for an aJl.voluntttr. drafiless force, Was 2.6 million' inen: abou t 100,000 fe~·er than U.S. anned strength when 1his country became In- volved on a major scale in tbe Vietnam 1var. Laird said a two-mllllan-man force could nat meet U.S. obligations unless. at the 11ame time, measures were taken to build up the National Guard and Re· serve to back up the smaller resular military establishment. He spoke or a "tremendous ~nse" as being needed to maintain an adequate reserve. "I'm not sure we have . . . sup~rt presently for that kind of fundini: in the Congress." Laird said. A presidential commission headed by fonner Secrttary pf Defense Thoma1 S. Gates is winding Lq> a year-long man-pow· er studv. It is expected to report to Presi· dent Nixon \\'ithin a few weeks on its proposals for moving to an all-voluntetr force and away from the draft. CRUMPLED BICYCLE, SPORTS CAR WITH SMASHED WINDSH IELD TELL STORY OF TRAGEDY ON COSTA t,IESA STREET The suspects -including two Orange Coun ty men attendi ng college in Ohio - \Vere booked on charges of possession of marijuana and possession of mari· juana for sale. Recently. scurce1 on the commission lndlealed the grcup was about rtadf to prt>pose measures. Including higher pay for first enlistment troops . designed to attain an all-volunteer force of about 2.5 million men. Mesa Boy Killed When Bike Veers Into Car's Patli, A Colla Meaa boy \\'ho recently com· pleted a police bicycle 1af1ty course was From Page 1 IRVINE STATEMENT • • • and UIWning tbe re!])Oll!ibility for it1 also. The county's plan was meant to deVelopn\ent es a harbor and park area crtate an environment of quality that all only. However, the public agencies have liegments of the public could enjoy. continuously assured us that ta1payer "Currently there are studies underway funds have never been available and that on the marine ecology to determine it would be an Impossibility for them • to methods of preservation and enhan- f:itellY injured Wedn~ay when his bike acquire the lands necessary for the cement. The public should be aware, veered, Joto a heavily traveled roadway development of the harbor and, therefore, however, that the majority or the marine and he was struck by a car. have proposed a joint development for a habitat In the Upper Bay is under two to Jeffr!:y J. Dietrirh . 9, of 3111 Platte iTiutual trade. An exchange had been rive feet of silt £rom last year's floods Drive , died of a skull rrarture and Other recommended and proposed by many destroying the marine enviro11ment public officials for more than 20 years. "During the past 10 years of study, head injuries about 6:30 a.m. today at ''Tbe Irvine Company entered Into the public hearings and litigation, we have Costa hfesa Memorial Hospital. ori,inal agrtement with the county at seen no reason to abandon this plan Horrified neighborhood friends watched their request to assist them in the which is based upon the expressed nC!eds tau Wednesday aILernoon as he wu hurl-dev!lopment of the harbor. Numerous of I.he majority of the people. The current ~ Into the windshMld of the car on' ,, d&q,aeg we.re pro-poud at the many exctwige PTDvjckl the muimum benefit JUbllc bearing& by vartoos intereslfi. The at lht 'least, t.Qpij_e.r co!l. Pa~Jarino Avenue, 100 feet we.st of Platte: county incorporated many of these into "Supervisor Battin's inst.ant plan pro- Dnve. ..the current plan to create a balanced posed recently and under study by the Motorllt i.lurle J ; Pikl, tf', of m p~ . .DMte included boattftl; w•ter:. couocy-. .b. wJVJou.t !~M ,blt~flt ?f :ohnsoi'I AW., ak!ddtd ht: sfnall BrlfWt ,.~uuna. ~ manage, parks, regklnal lech1,10loalcal anaJrs1s or e1ten&Jve public sports roadster lo 3 slop and the oo;,·, faelllli.es. ho.at launchlng, swimming, hik· heanngs. It was p1ered together to match 1ng, p1cnlck1ng and. \\'hen requested by the dem ands of a limited few and com· body tumbled to the pavement. the St.ate Resources Deparlment at the pletely ignores the general public's in· "The lady got out and screamed and State Lands Commission hearing to In-terest, their pocketbook, the county's own we took htr ln the hou&e. Then the police elude islands for ecolo1,1cal preservation, master ~Ian of p~rks, or the .!egal and came" said 8 12-year-old girl who saw the counly declared the1.r cooperation and engtneenng questions. These are all ex- th .. u'.aaedy intent to give allention to this matter pressed in the original plan which, by · • . comparison, cost five years of study and Poli ce Lt. Hal f111rher said today the 1.4 of a million dollars in its development. car was being checked over by Super:ntendent The m11Jority of the public. even though invuU1ator1 but It appeared ?ttias Pike ai 1hey are silent, deserves more con- could not av~ld the occldent · sideration than Mr. Battin's proposal. ,; : MYI' ADVERSE God ••• I hate to set it happen to Says c rackdo Wll "While Wt have never been adverse to kids," he remarked grimly. the public acquiring land that it n«.ds for Officer John C. White said the Dietrich w "ll c • ha rbors or park purpose11, we are certain boy was riding west along the rouah f, Olttinue ~at tvery Am7~can citizen will join us sheulder af Paularino Avenue when he in total oppos1bon to government ac- eil I h d f Administratars in the Newport..~1esa quiring private lands and leasing them \o &Werv nto t e roa way rom in front Unified School District don't ntcessatlly others to develop in competition W·i th of a parked car. like heaulines implicating two among private landawners as praposed by Only aft.er the initial inveslig1lion wa5 their fi ve high school campusts In Supervlsor Battin. The role of gavem· completed did police discover the fatal widespread drug sales and dlstribuUon. ment is government, not business. accident occurred just fou r feet outside They like somelhlng else even less: the "\Ye feel the legal questions should be city limit.!, Jn a narrow county strip. fart af it. determined through the present case Results of the accident probe V.'ere to District Superintendent Wtlllam L. Cun-rather than a delay for anothe1 five years be fOrw4rded to the California Hlahway nineham said when questioned about I.he. \\•hlle some other plan is proposed which, Patrol. wblrh has jurisdiction in the area . issue Wednesday that he has nothing lo in turn, will probably be attacked by Young Dletrlrh -whose mother rode add beyond \\'hat has already been of.her se\f.Jnlerest groups. Delays and \vith him in the ambulance recently covered in print. obstructions by the vocal few who pro· lruntferred to St. Jahn the Baptist He also made it clear the get-tough post: to da nothing hurt the public ma· Ci.lbollc School, after having attended policy \\'ill continue. jority who are patiently wa iting to enjoy Bear Street Elementary School. "We've been working cJo5eJy with the the water and park activities provided by PoUce gave a mandatory blcyrle safety police and we will keep on," said Dr. the harbar's developn1enl. We believe it rlillic thert lesa than two m·onth1 ago. Cunningham. who was praised alon& with important and necessa ry to everyone that other school personnel by the in-the constitutionality of the exchange prln- DAILY PILOT ••Mrt M. W114 ''•lftrlt '"" ...,ilolwr Jtocl. I . C"1l•v lllct ,.,._ ... , t fAI G-.ol ,,,....ttf' ,~ ..... , ic •• ..;1 (ti .... H1•"'t• A. M~·~liift• Ml~ ...... Idol<>!' J•r•"'• ~. Ccill •~• ,._,,_~ '"" 1.dllW 1111..,,,.,.. ...U Offif.• ,211 Wtol 1.1~ ... lciul•••"' I-lain~, A44r1n: P.O. 1 ... 1115. tZ,,l OtUf Offltn C.te M•u1 >lit W••' ••• S•~ U'fll9f """"! m Fe'"' •-• H~IM Stfdl; 11!h htdl IN>f.Y.ffd vestigatlng officers involved. ciple be determined b e f o r e any "Yi1e \\'iii continue to cooperate until we alternative plans are decided upon." get this slt.ualion whipped ," he lidded. Or. CuMingham said thal, lf anything, the arrests of Costa Mesa and Estancia high scl.ool liludents should hllve a hellt hy effect on the comi ng J-"eb. 10 school bond ave1Tlde elecUon. The dlstrlct superintendent said the crackdov.n shows educator! are all·are of 1he campus narcatlcs problem and are fighting it. Students, for example, \\'ere used by police in setting up alleged drug transac- tions over t.he J.oBSl few weeks. prior to the se•.ies or arrests set in motion Tuell· da)» "\\'e didn"t try lo sweep anything under the rug,'' st id Dr. Cunningham. "\Vhe.never you're ready -we're ready,'' he said, quoting the district's policy In partici pating with ,.allce by call· Ina in the suspected viol1tors for arrest on court-issued warrants. Court Summons Four Oil Firms SANTA BARBARA IU Pll -The di5friet attorney's offlre says It will ls1ue cou rt summons for lhe represenl•lives of four major oil com panies who fa tled to ap pear far arralinment Wedne~ay on chtir.i:es of pollutlna the Santa Barbllr• Channel. TI)e companies, Union. l\1oblle. Gul f t1nd Tex11co, apparently did not nppcar because of 11 ~lltlon flied Tut!lday f'ro11• Page 1 SANDLING ... pro,·e them." Sandling said, pointing out th at mast were In a rundO\\'ll condition because the lesse~s were no l \\'ilUng or able to spend money lor improvements .. Al thr present time. Sandling ssid, the coznpany is in the process of rebuilding everything fram the Balboa Yacht Club to the Balboa Isla nd bridge. There are other areas, not now OC· cupit1l by nu1rlna.s, \\-here tl1e company planit to develop other properties such as restaurllnls motels. shopping centers - particularly in I.he area of Villa l\1arina and the surrounding waterfront, be said. Another project planned by the Irvine Company is lhe de\·elopment of what will be kn<>\\'n a.a Pramintory Bay which would creal~ another Linda lsle residen- lial area alone lhe lan dward side of Bayside Drh·e In the Beacon Bay area. The plr.n . he said L~ to create an ln~r basin on which 'A'oulc1 fror.I 1bout 61 lll"mes. In addition there would be one or l'A·o marlnos 'A'ith 50 or 60 slips. All of the compnr.y plans, Sandling said, \\'OUld be in keepinR \\'Ith m&lntainlng the aesthetic volue of Newport Har~r. Gf!ltlng back to lhe Upptr Boy COi\• trover~y. Sandllng said the onl y people bcl ni. heard are thou: who would keep the err3. u a bird refuge. Those who woul,I prefer the develop111ent or the area for r"rrr.11t1n.1 purposes nre not speakln; out. Cycle Salesman Arrested in Mesa A motorcycle salesman allegedly speed-testing a 1970 model on a Costa htesa high school athleUc field wound up in jail late· Wednesday night on rather low-paced charge. ·He was arrested on suspicion of prowl-· ing and trespassing. John L. Vallery, 26, of 166 E. \Vilsan St., sped off when Patrolman Jack Koch drov e into the parking lot at Estancia lligh School, police said today, The officer ch~ked the school 's track field and found it torn up by motrcycle tires. but was approached In the mean- time by an area resident. Victor J. Ordaz, of 91§ Joann SL. com- plained that there was a ·motorcycle parked In his b1cky1rd, Wttb somebody hid,in1· JJnd~ fh~tfltubberJ.>I ,"-:;> i: '' Offiar K<!th dtloliate~ V~Jl.etY.~.i.IJl:o: po'unded the suspect vehlcl~' pend1ng.fut· ther investigation. They were Identified as: John B. Santangello. 18, 1.1ichsel 1.1. Snoddy. 18. and Ronald G. Hutchins. 19. who listed their address as 792 Shalimar Drive. Costa 1.1e11a, plus Robert W. Bell, 20, and Dennis L. Fogt, IQ, of 909 S. HarbOr Boulevard, Anaheim. Investl~ators .fleiied. among the evi- dence, a dozen soggy plastic bags of marijuana totalln• up to more Uuln a pound, plus a dozen packages of. cigarette paper!. Detectives Norm Kutch, Bob Len~rt and Dick DtFranc\sco were sent to the apartment about 7 p.m .. after local auth- or\Ues received the bulletin tip from \Yoo.ster . Ohio. Paul Garver, chief of detectives fnr the W006ter Police Department. said in the teletype that Snoddy and Sant.angello mi•ht be al the Shalimar Drive addrelis. The bulletin transmitted direct to avoid being delayed In the intricate cros.s- C'Ollntry communication system alleged that the pair were In the area to pick up a shipment of ha.sh ish and marijuana. Santaniello and Snoddy are well·known to Ohio authoritiei, Garver explained to local police. Inveslia:ators aald Bell anct Fogt. of Anaheim, attend Kint $Ute. University, Kent, Ohio, and Lorain County Commun- ity College, in Elyria, Ohia. But critics In the Defense Department contended these proposals, with a price tag of about S4 billion, were unrealistic. There were reports that the ccmmlsslon has been restudying some of Its Ideas be· fore submitting its report to Nixon . Fron• Page J RAIDS. •• linui d compounds. One chunk of hash alone -the potent, refined sap of the marijuana plant -is "''orth $1.100, Detective Norm Kutch rlisclosed as the array was laid out \Vednesday. Special agents were used by the poUce department in g11thering evidence prior to i~uance of arrest warrants by Harbor District Judicial Court Judge Donald IJo•ngan . lnvesljgatars said mare Ulan QrMl.. S!lole was made on the Estancia HJgh School campus baseball field as they watched the transaclian from a distance. JJ. J. 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'46-0275 f t T 1 • I j 7 -.-r ... , * ..,., Costa Mesa EDITION VOL. 63, NO. 24, 3 SECTIONS, 36 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TH URSDAY, JANUARY 29, 1970 • a1 s' 00 l ' ' ' • 1 • OAILY ,ILOT""" b" 11""" W .... tw BROKEN BICYCLE, SPORTS CAR WITH SMASHED WINDSHIELD TELL STORY OF TRAGEDY ON COSTA MESA STREET Mesa Bicyclist, 9, l(illed hy Car Horrified Neighbors Watch Tragedy on Paularlno A venue A Costa Mesa boy \\'ho recently com- pleted a police bicycle safety course was fatally injured Wedn.?sday when his bike veefed into a heavily traveled roadway ;ind he was struck by a car. Jeffrey J. Dietrich. 9. of 3111 Platte Drive, died of a'skuU Jrecture and oUler head injuries about 6:30 a.m. today at Costa Mesa l\1emorial Hospital. Horrified neighborhood friends watched late WedJlesday arternoon as he was hurl· ea into the windshield of the car on Bombers Attack North Vietnam Mi ss ile Base WASHlNGTON (it..P) -U:S. Air Force figbter bombers attacked an enemy an· tiaircrart missile base Wednesday inside North Vietnam after an unanned recon- naissance plane was fired on by surface· to-air missiles, the Pentagon announced today. An American F\05 fighter-bombe r car· ry1ng two men .tnd an Air F-0rce rescue helicopter WP!'C shot down. All crewmen arc listed r.s missing. The Pentagon aid it did not know how many were in the t1elioopter fEarlicr Story, Page 4) The incident occurred when an RF4C reconnaissance plane escorted by several fl05 and F4 fighter-bombers "was taken unaer fire by SA~f missiles in an area 12 miles northeast of Mu Gia Pa~ ,in North \'ietnam." the announcement said. Thi! would place the location just io· side North Vietnam. The Pentagon said that escort planes, defending an unarmed reconnat"ance craft) "responded by attacking the SAfl.1 launch site." Prit.r to the Pentagon announcement. North Vietnam repreaentalives at Paris ;iccu~ U.S. planes of raiding North Vietnamese territory, and called 'the raid P "very grave" '&Ct Of•War. 111 reply a U.S. Stale Department ~ooke11man acb1owledged that recon- na1?oSance planes and accompanying pro- teclivt crart ny 1over North Vietnam but tlenied that U.S. bombing of the North ha! bef>n renewed The Pentagon 1aid one FlOS was hit by tnemy ground fire, crashed and WI!'! destroyed. A JifJOkesman Mid the FlO.~ l\'3~ downed by c<ln•cntlonal antiaircralt t1·capon$. Paularino Avenue. 100 feet west of Platte Drive. •Motorist Laurie J. Pike , 17. of 305.S .:ohnson Ave., llk.idded he:· small British sports roadster to a stop and the boy 's body tumbled to the pave ment. "The lady got out and screamed and \\·e took her in lhe house. Then lhe police came," said a 12-year-old girl who saw th:-tragedy. Police Lt. Hal F'ischcr' said today lhe car was being checked over by investigators, but It appeared ~1iss Pike cNJld not avoid the accident. "C.od ... I hate to see it happen to kids.·· he remarked grimly . Officer John C. White said the Dietrich l?cY was riding west along the rough shoulder or Paularino Avenue \\'hen he S\\'erve<t inlo the roadway rron1 in front of a parked car . Only after the 1niliat In vestigation \\'as completed did police .discover the fatal accident occurred just four feet outside Three File for Council ; N ervcomer_ Joining Race Kic~ink Off the 1970 Costa ~esa ·City Council campaign. three men took out nomination papers today, with the younges t, under 30, adding environmental quality to the usual•t:lection issues. Incumbent Councilman George A. Tucker. challenger Jack Hammett. and surprise candidate Eli Kayser were the rirst in llne to join the race. Councilman Wi llard T. Jordan , al!KI op for another shot at a four.year term in April 14 balloting, has declared he will run again but hasn 't obtained filing papers yet. Hammett, 809 Presidio Drive, showed up with a delegation of fellow Costa Mt!a Plannin1 Commission members to get his documents from City Clerk C. K. "Charlie'' Priest. The Bristol Park Medical Center ad- ministrator is former chairman of the planning commission, foiiner president of the Chamber of Commerce and remains a~tive· on bbth. He is also a senior reserve officer on the polk:e force . "I lttl t should use my experience gained in 10 years of public and private seivici .• .the people of Costa ?.1esa are 1>aying the taxes and they deserve more ror their money." he said. Kaysu, of 1735 Pomona Ave., will pr~ bably Inject an eltment of youth by cam- paigning for' a seat on lhe council , al!!t> adding some (rtsh concepts in eltt· llonetriflg. Ke i1 U. and studyil\g at Orange C'.oast College for I career as a hfslory teacher, \Vorklng part.time 111 1 carpenter whlll" being involved as an ad visor In childrcns· service •activities. ''I really don't have a prepared state- ment," said the former Army sergeant. recipient of the Douglas l\lacArthur Award for distinguished leadership with an inf~ntry unit in Germany. He said he is a longtime member or \hr Sierra Club, intcre~ted in environmental quality -not quantity -adding that not enough ls being done to \viscly limit Southland urban development. '·People talk about going to oi higher le\Fel." he said, "but it must start at tht t'Olllmunity level." Tucker, 1715 Palau Place. is a United California Bank officer at the Mission Viejo branch and hu·taken a widespread interest in Costa Mesa civic activities. He is abo past prealdenl ol lhe Harbor Area Coordinating Council. and today issued this statement on his second cam- paign for a four-year tenn: "J will work for conlinued im· provement! in the social, economic and physical environments of Costa Mesa ," nnd will "remain flexible to new ideas brought aboot by advanced technology.'' Jordan, 2269 Santa Ana Ave., is an :irchitecl and former mayor, with more than six years' council experience. plus a variety of other community and Chamber of Commerce leadership duties. lie wlll make a strong issue of crimt reduction and Increased good relations between the Cosla Mesa Police Depart- ment and the community at large. lrutrumental In orgarrlzina: lhe newly appointed Colla Mesa Crlme Prevention Committee. the architect i1 also deeply (Ste COUNCIL, Pace !) city limits, in a n~rrow county st.rip, Results of the accident probe were to be forwarded to the Califor.nia Highway P?trot.' which has jurisdicUon in the area. Y;oyng Oiclrich -wh~ mother rode 1vith him in the ambulance recently ln ... nsferred lo St. John the Bapttst Catholic School. after having attended Bear Street Elementary bchool. Polict! g11ve a mandatory bicycle safety clinic there less than two 1nonths ago. Orange Coast College Okays Building Funds A $2.113,000 budget roi"· a prefabricated di.strict administration bulldlng was i'P: pro\•ed Wednesday night by Orange Coast Junior. College District Trustees. Bids rrom rclocaUon building manufar- ·1urers will be sought immedi:ilely and it is hoped the n1ove of administrative and business funcUoru that involv.e both the Orange Coast College and Golden West College campuses can be m8'de ·by ·Au- gust. I TIJc adminis tration building· i~ to be lo- cated on a one-acre plot west of the OCC football stadium at Adams Street and the campus "S'' Street. · Administrators, including Chancellor Dr. Norman Watsoti, currently are housed in a· 1939 "temporary" bulldlng 'built ror lhe Santa Ana Army Air Base wh!Ch later became the ooc can1pus. 1Spa'ce;l5 shared with. the OCC campus admin!Stfatioo which will remain behind 'In' the old building. The board of trultees We<fnesday~nigh1 employed Lang and Wood of SOtilh La· guna 'as 1andsCape. arcliltett; fOr trte· ad· mlnistraUon building: William Blutoelt and Partners of Corona1 de! 1'1ar 11 the architect. The proJ'IOsal is to lease-purchase the building . spreading payment over tour years. The building will be suitable for Ullf: as classroom space when and if a permanent admlnis1raUon building is con· gtructed, Or. \Vatson said. ' Storlt llf•rket New YORK (APl -SloCkl Jell sharp. ly today, with decllnlnf ISStlU outatrlp. p:ng advances by better lb11n four to one. <See quolatlons, Pages 26-27). Mesa Police Arrest Toll Now at 22 By ARTHUR R. ''JNSEL OI tt.e 0•11' 'll•t lt11t Stragglers missed in 48 hours of roun- ding up suspected campus drug dealers were still sought today, as Costa Mesa police put on displP:y $10,000 worth of con· traband seized, from mild to deadly varieties. The table ful1<0J narcoUcs could turn on the e!\tire city. Detective's arrested one· mori adult and fo1,1r juvenfles Wednesday. meanwhile, bringing the total captured to ·22. with three more named In unserved arrest warrants. One 18-year-old adult was arraigned \Vcdnesclav In Harbor District Judicial Court, while the others have posted bail and are due before the bench next week . Robert 'Vhitmore, 18, or 2758 Portola Drive. Costa ~1esa, \\'as arrested on a charge of sale of marijutna Wednesday, as a result of the six-week probe or drug- dealing at two cam puses. Detective Capt.· Bob Green said today when Questioned that the mass roundup begun Tuesday: morning does not involve an actual ring, tuch as the underworld syndicate-type operation. "You couldn't §;tart out with a pyrarniJl, of organltati6n and trace jt to •Pr ont person,'' utd Capt. Green. who' added that most or the SWipects do know each other. ; • Tht 11' Juvenile l.!oya and p-ia in CUol\>dY l!l'• l~IJ1 boih <;oo.ta Mi1a •nd Estancia high &chools, btJl two were pf ck· cd up Wednesday locidentally to the ori,R:inal investigation. ~tost are charged with . sale or dangerous drugs, involvlng heroin, LSD, mescaline, opium, barbltll?ate a n d amphetamine pills, ha!hlsh and assorted linuirf compounds. One chunk of hash alone -the potent. rrrtned sap or the marijuana plant -is \Yorth $1,100, Deteetlve Norm Kutch rlisclosed as the array was laid out \Vednesday. Specia l 11gents were used by the police department in gathering evidence prior to issuance or arrest warrants by Harbor District Judicial Court Judge Donald l)l•ng~n . th.vestigators said more than cne sale \Yas made on the Estancia High School campus ba~ball field as they watched the transactions from a distance. * * * 'Poilet Clo gged By Marijuana In ~esa Raid An urgent, cross-country teletype from . Ohio led to a Costa Mesa drug raid \Vednesday, neltlng two alleged mid· "'fStern dealers and enough marijuana lo clog up their toilet in the coofusion. Investigators said someone among the five suspects arrested at the Shallmar Drive aPartment tried to flush away uie rvidence. hut the 12 plastlc bags plugged the convenient drain. The suspect.! -including two Orange County men attending college in Ohio - 1vere booked on charges or posst!!sion or marijuana and possession of mari- juana for sale. They were identifie'd .as: Jo~n B .. Santangello, 18, Michael M. Snoddf, 18, and Ronald G. l!utchins, 19. wha' llllted their addr'ess as 192 Shalimar Dri~e. Costa Mt!!a, plus Robert W. ,Bell, 10, and Dennb L. Fogt. 19, ol 909 .S. Hart>or Uoulevard. Anaheim .. Tnvesug.,tors gel.zed, amoni the evi· denCe, a doun . soggy plastic baas or marijuana totaling up to more than a pound. plus 1 dozen packages of cigarette papers. Detectlve11 Norm Kutch, Bob Lennert and Dick DeJl'ranclsco wtre sent to tht apa rtment about 1 p,m., after local auth- orlUts received the bulletin Up from Ylooster, Ohio. Paul Garver. chief of dcte'Ctlvcs for the Wooster Police Depanment. said in the Celetype that Snoddy and Santangello ml,;ht be at the Shalimar Or!Ve• addres1. Tht bulleUn transmllted dlrec't lo avoid ht.Ing delayed In the-ln(rlcate cross. country communication aJlil.em alJeg~ that the pair Wert In the area to ptck up a tbipment of hashllh and marijuana. Santangello and Snoddy are welJ.known !Ste RAIDS, Pare %1 ---·-·----- Today's Final N.Y. Stocks TEN CENTS ' ftolted and Ready But these marijuana cigarettes will never be smoked. That lettei:ing on cigarette paper re-- fers to evii:lence f'Ue at Costa Mp s ·a Po I i c e Departme qt, WbiCh has been concentrating recent drug roundup 'on two local high schools. For an Idea ot ·what 'druf' pusbers baV• been pu•hipg at higjt rchclol students, see Page 2f. Superintendent Says Crackdown Will Continue Administrators in the Newport-Mesa Unified School District don't necessarily lik~ h~ai>lines implicating two · among their five high schoo l campuses Jn widespread drug sales and distrib\ltion. They like son1elhing else even less : the fact of it. District Superir.tendent William L. Cun. ningham said when questioned about the isstie \Yednesday that he has nothing to add beyond what has alr'eady been cov.ered in .print. He al!O made it clear the· get-tough J>')iicy will continue. "We've been working closely with the police and we , will keep on." said Dr. Cunningham, who was praised along with other school ~rsonnel by . the in· vestigating officers involved. "We wn; continue to cooperate until we get this .!.ituatlon Whipped," he added. Dr. Cunningham said that, If anything, the arrests of Costa Mesa and Estancia high sd.ool studenlll>" ·should hav.e la he:ilthy effect on the coming Feb. 10 school bond ove1·ride .election. The district superjitteqdent • said the cracliido'il n shows educators are aware of the campus narcotics problem and. are fighting ii. Orange C::out ' . ' • I The hot winds slow down. te>- nlght,: bot the. hot wuthtr con-i tlnues (by day) iito Friday with. temperatures ruttnw 70. but sink· ing inlo lhc !O's by\nlgh~all. ~S~bE TODA l' . European 1itwspapcr1 looked at Preslde11t Nl:ro9'1 first 1110.r as one of ntoderotc s14cces1 b"t there •Qflf . re.s1ruatlo1l In tltt prol1c. Paae 7. • ' . . r;::;:::::::":'=====:;:;::::=:-::-::.-:-::-.::;::::::::::::;;=~::::;;;="'"-=-:---------• .,. .... , ·-~--,... ~--• • ~ I p , .!.'~ ~1~},'19 Irvine Conlpany Breaks SilCnCe on Bay Swap • Jrvjne Cotnp1ny Pr~lkl!nt Wlll11111 R. rilalOll erultd loris 5\ltncc today an lht Upper Bay 11nd eicban&e, 1tlacktd Supervisor Robert Blt!in'• 1llem1te :'plans, declared that the state granted the bay for development as a harbor a!)d ••id the estuary'.J marine environment has already been destroyed . M1son. after a one-Oay delay, isi;ued his first public opinion of the land · drvtlopment Orm since the controver1lt1I exchange entered the courts in a test of consUtutlonality. , He ·brougbt up three f~h points ln lbe 'ytan-long deblte: -Or•n&• County Is charaed by the lideleids ,vant by the State of catlfomia • 11·lth the ruponsibillty of developkl& a • r baJ1>ar' • 1. :_supel"\'\ICJ Blttln'a alttrnate plait to abando011fe 1'!cl\anie oo lbat Iba COWllT ...Wd develop the lo!Jer por11ou .ol ~ harbor • wai "ple<td ~"iii\ \lit · d~ o(.o•jlmjtocl'lt•" .wllhout tbt . benellt " tachnoloSJC&I 1tudlea or public bearlngs. -That last yelt'a record floods desb'-0yed·lbe ·Mlrfnt envir.onment In the estuar)' by dtpNltinl two-to-five.feet of sill aod mud on lhe ~Y bottom. Htrt ip. Mason'i. toqiplete stat.tfr'ltnt: •IThe lrvtne Company b11 been silent on the issues Of the \Jpper Bay a;chanae slnce th~ beglnnJils of Ut11at1on tn Orange Coo.nty Sttperlor Court. We have ftlt that parties ill lill&aUon before lhe court.I :·Plane Clips Tower Wire; . . . . County Engineer l(illed A IA H1br1 missile eDJineer w11 tllled , WedneMay when hi• mited light plane <lipped the lll·fnot KFI Radio tower In La Mirada, ahuwtrlng his body and alf1:Z'aft debris to the ground below. Glenn FOii, 45, of 621 W. Greenwood ·Ave.,· WJI on a landln& approach -to Fullerton Airport when the plane clipped 1 fUYWlre and dlslnterrated. autborttles ~!Id. F011 le•ves his wife and five c/\Udren, S.15 years old. Federal Aviation Adminlatralion ex· ~rta today began the meUeuk>us task of rteOMtructing the wreckaae 1n their at- ttmpt to determine: precisely what ha~ pened. Tbe: spectacular, 4:45 p.m. accident. wa1 witne.ssed ·by hundreds of homeward ... \><>Und moloffita "'! the Santa Ana Freeway, somt of whom wtre en- danaered by the debrll l•lllng from,· above. Fullerton Airport 1uthor1Ue< &aid FOSI, 1 for1iler Air Foret pilot now employed In Corona u a NaVy mlallle system• elec· tric:al"englneer, had rented the plane 20 l'nllll Page 1 COUNCIL •.. conctrnM with curbing envirOnmental deterioration. Jorde cite:s noiae. itr ind water pollu· tion -like Kayser -11 major problem• which must be faced and corrteted, while he ha1 allO bee'I heavily involved in parks and ~eation devtlopment. A fOQrth ann60nced c a n d i d a t t, TheOdm'e C. "Ted" Bologh, 1.¥ Dtl Mar Ave .• will. be going after a stat on Q>t rounciJ .UtW a(iy ,~D .Pfiar. ClmP,!}11!'. that fallM.' ' · ' He ran:ly mi1ses a city council mfttini iind almost as rarely mis!fs 1irin1 hls views on local i11ues Wore the panel in lively dialogue. 'Bologh's 1970 campaign will be cur~il· ed somewhat by 1 \enilJly trip to Europe, including his native Romania on the itinerary. Younger Slates Speecl1 to YMCA Evtlle J. Youns:er. district attornty for Loi Angeles County and caDdidite for $late Attorney General will be the 11peaker at toniahl's 10th aMu1l dinner meeting of the West Orange County YMCA. WiUWn E. Dolph, dinner chairman !aid th• event i! &ebtduled fl)!" 8:45 p.m.. in the Edaewater Hyatt House, Long Beach. Office.rs to be lnstalltd Include James Obrien. Pfe•idtnt: Frank Noe, A. C; Erickson. Dr. Russell Lindquist, and &ob Bonnet, vice president; Jim Franklin Jr., secretary and Arthur Kni1ht, treasurer. HunlffiJlon Beach braneh chairman is Don Boni•. For Garden Grove It is Robert B4ker and the Westminster chairman ls James Turner. DAILY PILOT k•li1•I N. 'W,,, ""''"'" .... """Wit!' J•c~ k. Cwrle'f' V<•t ,.,_ ..... -Gto>tr•! MIMO~ Tho,.,•• .i: .. ,,;1 lfi•r C1tl• M ... OHie• lJO W1.t lty Sl•t1I M•a:~, A4J•1n• ,,O. l•r 11•0. •162• OHM-r Offl1 .. H~<I t1-i11 ))!I We.1 lllMt ..... !Wt~ l..,,... hH~. m ~ ... ,, ., .... ..... ~"'"""~' ••t<ll: 11111 ltf(~ lioullYtrf • minutes earlier, "He was on i norm"l flJgl:lt ~attem to In~ease hl9 proftclency,'' «~id Jim "Dodge; sates manager for Trl·AvieUon CnrpbratiOn, based at the field . The $16,000 Piper Cherokee lost a por· tion of its right wine when lt struck the to...,•ering radio antenna, which sustained no serious dam~ge. "Fie came betwe~ the towtt and a guywlre and he nicked it," said Ernesto t>.1Artinez, 26, of Norwalk, one of many wr.o watched Foss' death plunge. "He traveled up a few feet, bqt the wi11g broke off and parts ltaried f•lllng all over." added Martinez. employed on a patnting job near the scene ... "f ran lntlde," he said . A ma}or fire was narrowly a.vtrted when the Cl'lerokee'1 fuel tank plum· meted through the. roof of ~,.furniture warebOuse and splattered over packlnl cales. bot failed to erupt in flames. One win& And a wheel came to rest on the roor. while Foss' bOdy and asaorted other d•brl.!i smashed into the partlna lot outside the firm . Other bits of "'7eckage landed on the adjacent Lrteway and F I r e s t o n e Boulevard. according to police. 1·hf. acctd.enl wt• tbe first lnvolvln& the radio tower. Ratllo Station KFl remained on the air following the accident . Mesa's CofC .To Take Stand On .S.chool Vote -. · ... ) ". . . 1>irec:tor1 of Costa Mesa qiambel" of Com.mtr« today were to decide whether to endorse NeWfl(lrt-M:esa Unified School District'l!i tat override and bond interest rate lncrease el~tlon. A mall ballot is beln& talcen of Newport tll1rb0r Chamber of Commerce dlrtctors on how they feel about endorsement. The proposed overTlde tax Increase of up to 86 cents per SIOO ol aa~ssed valu•· lit1n and bond permissible Interest rat~ hi.kt ftom fi\•e to seven percent will bt ,·oled on Feb. 10, a 11ir·eek lrom ne1l Tues.- day. tn deciding whether to endorse eltl'ltr or both measures today Cos.la ~1taa Chamber's 21 directors were to hear speaktrs pro iind con. A vott laAt ~·eek by the smaller educa· lion committee. following present.atkm by and questioning or Schools Supt. Willlam Cunningham. was incontluaive. com- mittee members voted J().(I to endorse the Interest rate increase on prtvlously·ap- proved bonds but split ~ on endorsement of the override. Results of ~the polling of Newport i.tarbor Chamber's 35 dli'k'toti are tx· pecttd tO be known about the n\lddle of next \Yeek. Internal Revenue Service Also Beckons Leary From Wire Services WASHINGTON -Candid .. •• l•r p;. lilic.I offke MIJSt dl.!iclose f\J\ii'leltl dt•l· ings by law now, but the Internal Reve- nue Service \Vednesday did pllrt of It for a~plrina califomia .aovernor Dr. Timolhy Leary. The IRS charges thal $125,000 repOrttd by th~ former Harvard psycholegy pro- fessor -currently awaiting a narcotics trial in Orange County -was nol report- ed eOrreetly. Dr. Ltary, a 1omet1me1-visltor to La- i:una Beach. claimed In retUrns for 1084, ·ss and ·gs thiit the St».000 sum "·11s In- come ot his New Yerk·bastd Castalia f oundattOtJ, The IRS claims It wu not. that '' was his own private Income •rid th1t the Ml· ed researcher o"·es '61;ats In back taw on iL Boys Club Forms Marcltlng Band ·strlkt up !Ii< bind, 11yl the Boy1 Club j\r '"e H11bor Atta. A m•rchlri1 conctrt baM for boy1 I I• 13 yea.r' old ·la.bcln1 formed. •Ith the or,,t1nliational meeting set for 7 p.m., Bitndmaster will be Steve Wln53r. Bo)'t !"!~rested In joining may call him al the r' Ii • ' . aboqld ttmaln lilent ao that-<be lepl lutits can be properly dtteno.lnti:i by the courtnotlhollt the lnterlertntrof tl!her, llllc """""'' or fitlc~pR1111rt1 . :liiiS:" llili ' ' baa been p)itfl" i'"' i;d' J>Y • 'parltea ~..., the r ufl;.UOn; 1ricl1Jdln1 1 .. • 1upervisors of Orange C'.owlty, Which ii • plaintiff in the action. \\'ho have 1u1· gested an altemative plan and • niutUal revocalloO without an alternative: I feel it n~ssary to comment on 11ome of ~e. pertinent issues. "t can under1tand and appreciate that tbt Upper Bay is already becoming a poUUcaJ football for the next election ' 1M that the paliUcians and aovemment agen· cies an endurin& prwuret f"°'1l tht PT A Sponsors Drug Class for Kids, Parents Mothers and daughten, fathers and ions at Davia Intermediate School hav1 viewed films Ind heard Cotta MHa police officers lalk on drugs. Programs Monday and Wednt!sday nights lhi1 week have illuminated the ~NI prob~m parentl at the school have been particularly concerned about •Ince two fathers withdrew their 13-year-old dautt1tera and leveled accusations of widespread achoo! ctn:ig use. The motber-<laughter and father-IOn program1 oo drugs are onJy the flnt in a PTA-eponll«Od aeries lbat will brfn1 lo lhe acbool ln the next 1emal ween ftlm1 Ind dodon lo gpeak on human reprodlie- Uon and on venerul dl!tue. The evenln1 dmg present;Uon1 this week were atttnded with pare:nt by about -third Of Davla' llO atudentl, Principal \Verner Carlson saJd. A que.stlon asked Monday night of Coita Mesa Officer Ron Palmer and Wednesday rrlght of Dave Casey was bow ?revalent Is narcotics use in the area? Both answered that Jt ls more extensive than people are willing to admit, Carl&0n said. He aid parents expre.s!ed their frustraUon Ind sympathized with the pOUce offlctra' frustrauon over the pro. b!em at CeUing It IOUtcf.S. ·~re 11 a real paradox here •• Carlaon aid. ''They (Police) could gel io Ute IOUZ'Cet f.U1 if all of U! didn't hive clrtaln civil rlpla." l'nllrll\>I oa Ji!!man reprodudio!I 1nd ~ and llmlopment will be held •veek after next, Carlson said. Films wtll be "BoY.Jo M~n" and "Girl .to Woman." l. ··1t,tr11_ ltlll;be iii. Jol!A ,Apjifi&ite for he mo ller1 aild dapghitts arid Dr. N11lhan.lel Coben ·for the tather1 and 80l'lt. The following week the program will be venereal disease wilh films and speaker Dr. T. J. Albert of th• County Health ~pattment. The Davis PTA executive board tldeen- ,.rf the films and is •ponsoring the 5efle1 of programs. Cycle Sal.esman Arrested in Mesa A motorcycle salesman aUtiedlY 1-peed·~Ung a 1970 model on a ~1'. r.teu. h1&h school al.hleUc field 11'0Jnd up in Jail liite Wednesday night on rather Jow-pae«I charge. He was arrested on suspicion of prowl- ing and trespassing. John L. Vallery, 26. of 186 E. Wilson SL, sped off when Patrolman Jack Koch drove inlo the parking lot at E1tancia fligh School. police said today. The offictr checked the school's track field and found It torn up by motrcycJe tires. but was approached in the mean- time by an area resident. Victor J . Ordaz, of 914 Joann St., com- plain~d tl'lat there was a motorcycle parked In his backyard, with somtbody hiding unde:r the shrubbery. · Officer KOch de.foliated Vallery and in\· J'Ounded the suspect vehicle pendinf fur· the.r invutlaatJon. Mesa Man Found Dead in Auto The body of a 21-year-old Costa tifesa man "''' dlsoovtred \VednesdaY slumptd over the steering wheel of a car near Pl1ctntl111 and Superior Avenues In Newport Beach. • Coroners investigators today ldtntifled lhe bo4Y as that or Larry Donald PoU of Costa ~1tsa. The address v.·as not · Im- mediately avallable. The cawe of death waa not lm- mf'<llat.tly determined, lnvtstigatore said, but they said an overd05e of drup was toelna lnveiti11ted. Definite c•use. of dtlt.b would bf: made afte-r chtmlc•I U.1ts. Police said they disco,·ered the body alter 1 phora report hy a p1S$tr-by wbo 11ald he thou1ht the ear contained a dead body. f'rem Peg• I RAIDS .... to Ohio authofltie1. Gan·er tllplahttd 10 loc•I police. lnvtstlgators said Brll and Foat. of An1hein1, 1l1tn!I t;:ent State tin!Ytrslty, Kl!nt . Ohio. and lAra\n Coun1y Commun· II \· Collt@f'" in Elyrln. Ohio. amaU self-Interest croups who btve been deVtl09ment aa I harbor and park ~rea lnudndatlna tiiem' ~lib· ~ b' on•' ~la "I'll'· .Howevu, tbe ~ubllc 1gtn<les bave Ind lettel1, but th< aban,lonmeat Of th< ~tnUOUJly anurtd "' U..t tallP<)'.er, ienettl P'1blic'1 ihltrut at thla time in IUnda have never betn avallAble and thit faYor or no pltn at an,·or a hutllY drawn It would be an lmpo1slblllty for~lht.'l'n to plan, 11 n~ther coul .. eous or prudent. acquire the ltinds ne.Cessary ror the ''l am , certain that all of I.he 'levelopment of the. harbor and, therefore, Supervisor• are aw•r~ t~a~ Oran&e Coun· have proposed a joint developmB11l for a t.v ia charged by the tideland.a grant ,fron1 mutual trade. An exchange had been the state or Californla with the recommended and proposed by many re1j)onsibllity of developin·g the Upper publlc officials for more than 20 years. Bay into a harbor. Thls·canriot be dooc "The Irvine. Company entered into the without the cooperation of those who ti original agreement with the county al owned the land around the .water and the their request 1 lo wist them in the !~lands In it. The lrvineCQmpany, owners development ol the harbor. Numerous of all the land, has never J,ffii. adver~ to changes' were J)lOpo&ed at the many the public acquirjna: the entire Upper Bay public heartnga by vatioo1 lnleresta. 'The and a.ssumlng I.he respOnalbllity for Its county incorporated many of these into Getaway Driver Drunk In ¥ ablonski Murder? CLEVEl.\ND .. CUPll -A carefully rebelraed escape after mine union of. ficial Joseph A. "Jock" Yablonski and hiS wire and daughter were murdered was nearly disrupted J>ecaus~ the driver of the getaway car cot drunk, it was learned to- day. F'Bt agents told a federal grand jury the getaway driver sat in the auto outside the Yablonsld's Clarksville, Pa., home drinking beer and tossing the empty betr cans ow the lawn. They said fingerprints found on the beer cans helped lead to·tht aereat Of three JU!peclJ. 1 • The· i1enta uld ·after Yablonski, 59, his wife, Mar1artt, 57, and hia daughter, Charlotte, 25, were shot, the getaway driver, hl1 re.D~ea al~-bf ~tcohol. lidtaWJped..i.wo znardralls near the home u be drove away. ' Jamt1 C. Phillipa. 42, who allegedly b1cked·011t of the plOI lo 'ldll Yablonski and then told the story to the FBI. was reported to htve told the grand jury how the slaytn11 were rehearsed. Th~ rehearsal Included the tossing of dummy weapons Into the Monongahela Rlver about five mlle1 from the Yablonski home •. An Ml r1!le and a .38 caUbe:r re.volve.r have be.en recovered . from the river. Saurcts aald Phillips was supposed to hive bttn the driver of the car but pulled out ind wu replaced by another man who received. $2,000. It wu allO reported the .trlgaer man in the slaylngs received 11,'f\IO. . ' " 'J'.w• FBI 1..,. .. eacorted .PhUUps lo' the courtl'l:Ouse Wednesday k>r his one-hour IPJ!fPl'lnct. , · , : Phllllpo' tetuDtony, like that. ol -.oU othtn f\erf, waa .tecret..!ul aourcet.sa.!d PhUHP:i w11 Jn on the original plot, thf:n pulled out at the last minute and gave the l"Bl information that led to the arrests last week of three men. : One of the three, Claude E. Vesley, 27. ls under indlctmenl with Phillips on a bur,l!'lary chiiree in Youngstown. Ohio, in another case. Other sourc reported Yablonski's killer• were paid more than SZ.000 each, '-·•t it was not known who hired lhem . The grand jury ls trying to find out. Vealey, Pall;I E. Gllly, 36: and Aubran W. ?tfartin. 23, are. charged with the murder or Yablonski, a long-time United Afine Workers Union otflclal, and his wife and daughter. None of the three m~ has appeared before the grand jury, iilthough the wives of Gilly and Martin testified Wednesday. 2 Apartments Hit By Cat Burglar A cat burglar looted two Costa r.1esa apartment.a Of jewelry and cash while oc- cupant! slept und isturbed, the victims told police Wednesdiiy, Rita A. Bums, assistant manager of apartments at 2245 Fountain Way, said two wristwatches, a cigarette Ughler and miscellaneous items worth $4-0 were mi.Ising. Officers said the intruder used a blade- like tool to 11ip the Jock on a glass patio door to enter the apartment, while the bur&lar climbed through a window in the other case. Ulla .I. ~v1tt, of.994 Valencia Drive. said her Joa wu i30 in cash. ieportlng the burglary aboul the same time as Mrs. Bums. the current plep lo create a balanced proar~m. Tbele lnc!•ded boatit1f;.,111r ~. bolt morrue, pa.,P, npn.1 ftcilitles, boal launching, awlmiUJrig. hlk· Ing, ph.11lcking and, when requested by the Stute Resources Department at the Stale Lands Commission hearing to 'In· elude islands for ecological presfrvallon , the county declared their cooperation and intent 10 give attention to this matter also: The county's plan v.·as meant tn create an enYironment of quality that all seamenb ot the public could epJoy .. "CurTently thert are studies underway on th~ marine eoology to determine methods of preservation and enhan- ce1nent. The public should be aware, ho\\·ever. U:al !he majority of U1e marine habitat in the Upper Bay is under two to five feet of silt from last year's nooc1.s dei;troying the marine environment. "During the past 10 year1 of study . public hearings and lillgalion, "''e have seen no reason to abandon this plan which is based upon the expressed needs of the majority of the people. The current exchange provides the maximum benefit at the least taxpayer Cost. '·Supervisor Battin'.s instant plan pro- posed recently and under study by tht county is without the benefit or technological analysis o~ extensive public hearings. It was pieced together to match the demands of a limited few and com· pletely ignores the genefal public's in- terest. their pocket.book, the county's own master plan of parks, or the legal and engineering questions. These are all ti· pressed in the original plan which, by comparison, cost five years of study and 1.4 of a million dollars in Its development. The majority of the public, even though they are silent, deserves more con. side.ration than Mr. BatUnts proposal. NOT ADVERSE "While "''e have never been adverse to the public acquiring land thiit it needs ror harbors or park purposes, we are certain that every American · citizen will join us in total opposition to government ac- quiring private lands and leasing them to others to develop in competition w i t h private landowners as .proposed by Supervisor Ballin. The role of govern- ment is government, not business. "\Ve feel the legal questions shoold be determined through the present caae rather than a delay for another five years while some other plan is proposed whlch. in turn. will probably be attacked by other self-Interest rroups. Delays and obstructions by the vocal few who pro. post: to do nothing hurt the public ma- jority who are patiently waiting to enjoy the water and park activiUes provided by the harbor's-development We bell:eve it important and necessary to everynne that the constitutkinality of the e~change prin- ciple be determined before any alternative pl&ns are. decided upon.'' SEMI ANNUAL SALE! For lasting elegance, enhance your home wilh famous HERITAGE upholstery 15% OFF HERITAGE UPHOiSTEREO FURNITURE l"-u~ p.ee. featufe the ~ Utiw styling and pt'OUd crafUmllnstiip th.rt Nvt med• Hiwittge 1 livirig tradition in furnl-- tutt.. TI\ere are mor• than 175 desi9f'!5 -~ one • lts10n in priainltakW<.g worl(mansnip and u~ilite dl!ltailing. And. to Sltisfy yrour mc>$t •itecting cMconting ~. there is a choke or ovw 900 outstanding febrics and ""'""' oo- tion.I dtcoratlvt fU1Ul'f!L Our lnt•ior d~ signers MU ti. most ~ to nslst W. your ~kttoN.. -TRY OUI llVOLVING CHAIGI - • Yovf' fovoriu Jrit•,f•r dtrlgncr wilt bt hoppg to antst ~ou .•• P~l:>F!SSION.i.L INTERIOA OISIGNEAS 011en Mot1., Thurs., J: Fri. Ev11. I 22 IS HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA, CALIF. 646-0275 I -· . . . -• • • "'mJ;jii!AW .... ' "P.""' ;; ;QAu:::v" • • • -... • • Doniington ~ea~h N.Y. Stoeks ·vol. 63, N0._24, 3' SECTIONS, 38 PAGES OAIL Y PILOT !1111 P~1ho FIREMEN BREAK OUT ANTI-SMOKE GEAR AT PAOOOCK Fire et Huntington Beac:h Bar Interrupts Gay Life Early Evening Fire Hits ' Beach B(Lr; Loss $4,000 The gay life 1,t ~ Paddock Bar in downtown Huntlrlgt.on Beach tame to a 1uddei halt Wfdnesday night ias billows ol smoke poured out of tbd ba!ement from 1. $4,000 fire. Investigators are still detennining the cause ol the 6:43 p.m. blaze which tied up downtown traffic for two hours. The possibility or arson has not been ruled out. Three fire engines and one snorkle unit l''ere summoned to the watering spot on 113 ftiain St., as dense smoke rushed from the windows and doors of the tw~story brick building. Damage from the hour-long fire was confined to shdwer stall.I, localed in the basement directly below the bar, 1nve1· tigators said. No p1trons were threatened by the fire 1ince the bar was unoccupied al the time. Earlier in the day, at 4:54 p.m., fire· men extinguished a carp<¥"t box fire be· hind the Alpha Beta Market corner of Springdale Street and Edwards Avenue. Store manager Herschel Dardorff re· ceived minor burns and singed hair as he attempted to douse the flames with a hose, firemen said. The blaze itself was blamed by them on an arsonist. Huntington Man Cleared Of Obscene Movie Charges A Huntington Beach man has been cleared of charges that he participated in the showing of obscene movies at Santa Ana's Guild Theater. The prosecution abandoned three-year· old charges against Bruce C. Schmidt, 32, of 6392 Tyrone Circle, as he prepared to face trial in Santa Ana ri.fnuicipal Court with two co-defendants. theater manager Gary Noel Johnson, 29, of Santa Ana and ticket seller Lenore J. Linden, 22, of Anaheim. Johnson was placed on one year's pr~ bation. Charges against Miss Linden were dropped. Schmidt was arrested in a Jan. 3, 1967, raid on the theater which a1 the lime, was showing two allegedly obscene movies - "Take Me Naked" and "Prince and the Nat~re Girl." Judge Paul Mast led Santa Ana, police officers in the raid which dis· ' Orang,e Coast Weat.ber The hol winds slow down t~ night, but the ))ot weather corr tinues (by day) into Friday with temperatures hitting 70 •. but sink· ill& into the :io·s by nightfall INSIDE TODA l' European newi'Pa~rs l<>?ked ot Pre1ide11t Nixo11'~ /irsl -v~or cu one o/ modtmtt ruccesa bul there toos rexrvo!iono j•t the prai1e. Poae 7. ' C.. ..... 1111 t c:...._ (lf'lltf tt Ctttd.ltlt u, ' Q.flfflfllll •JiS Cltlllkt ,, a-~wtr' II DMlfl Mllk11 It °'""" ,, ff!lwMI ,.,. I .. ~ ... 111"""'1 11 ~lllM!ct """ ,.,..._.,. 11 A1111L........ 11 ' \ rupted a matinee showing of lhe spicy movies. Part of the arrangement that led to disposition or lhe case was that "Take l\1e Naked" would' never again be shown in Orange County. lt will not. the prose· cution had been assured, be shown again at the Guild Theater. The Superior Court's appellate division has upheld Judge Mast's ruling on "Take Me Naked" and held the movie to be ob- scene In Its "display of blltanUy perverse sexual conduct which deviates grossly from any concelvabl community ~tandlrd in the state of California." Five Injured In Surfside . Head-on Wreck A head-0n collision on Pacific Coast Highway near the west entrance to Surf!i'de early today sent three Navy men ai:id two others to hollpita\s. The accident occured at' I :20 a.m. as vehicles driven by Walter A. De Laney, 22, of 57S2 Edinger Ave., Huntington Beach, and Ke!Ujrd L. Taylor, 21 , of the l.o11g Beach Naval Base coUided in the n1iddle of Coast Highway. Leonartl Frisbie, traffic officer for the Sea! 'Beach Pbllce Oepartmerlt. said it has not yet been detennlned which vehi- cle t'rossed over the cent.el: line. He said he ~ P\)l ruling out the.. pOAiblllty that botli fniy have been in vtolation. • T1ktn .io, ..,Los Alatrdks Oener&l Jlos;J\11 Ml.lmetge"'J 1\reglnitnt of · bruises aifd ~ts wefe uei.aney and his passenger James R. Denckert, 22. of 16162 Sandra Lane, Huntington Ueach. Both were later transferred to Orange County Medical Center. Recovering at the Long Beach Naval \.iospital are Taylor and his passengers Melvin Vantelt, 21, and Gerald R. Lene, 21 . all frcm the Long Beach Naval facili- ty. All three w're tran11rerred from Los Alamll.os Ge.ne:ral Hospital as well. • ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, .JANUARY -29, 1970 TEN CENTS . , • Drivers See Flier Die . ~ ~ ... \. .. _-... ·j -·- _/ . La Habra Engineer's Plane Hits Radw Tower A La Habra missile engineer was killed ' \Vednesday when hls rented ligflt plane clipped the 119-foot KFI Radio lower in La Mirada , showering: his body a'nd aircraft debris to the ground below. Clenn Foss, 45, of 621 w. Greenwood Ave., was on a landing approach to Fullerton Airport when th e plane clipped a ~uywire and disintegrated, authorities said. Foss leaves his wife and rive children, 1·16 years old. Federal Aviation Administration ex· perts today began the meticulous task of rt'Ctlnstructing the wreckage in their at· Parent Starts Drive Against Beach Bonds By RUDI NIEDZIEU>Kl Of tllt O•llJ Pllll Iliff "There is no need lo construct another hi@'.h schoo l in the Huntington Beach ~rea," claims a Westminster parent who i~ ca mpaigning against a $9.S mlll,ion school bond issue scheduled for Feb. 10. Robert Gordon. chairman of an oralanizatlon he calls Cit.ii.ens Organized. to Support Schools, said he has uri]:ed several citizen groups, including PTA's ttnd homeowners's association to vote against the meuure. "There is evidence sugResting that the live existing bigb schools are already adequate to care for the upect~ ·In- crease in echool po@Ul•Uon," he.UIM!ftl. "All that is required,-ia ~me the Wstiq schools efficiently and effecUvelf!' Jf modular scheduling were adopted and I! .the lensth of the tchool Clay were el<feoded In just one of IJJt exiatlng high schools, Gordon arguea, "We could have the capacity of the propcsed slrth high school now, not in tm. Overcrowding could be lliroinated now. And taxpayers would save almost $8.S million now." Officials of the Huntington Beach Union High School District have defended the hond issue on grounds that a roof must be placed over the heads of 3,000 additional students who are expected by 1972. They predict extended day. schedules. split schedules and double sessions for all stodents in the event the measure should rail. About $8.S million of the bonds would be spent for construction of the new schoo l, while the other $1 million would be alloted for the rehabilitation of t'l.:issroom wings on the Huntington Beach High School campus to comply with earthquake safety laws. To be combined with the bond election -and unopposed by Gordon -Is a 50 cent ta1 override which school districl administrators say Is necessary to pro· vide for increasing operational costs. in· eluding salaries. Should it pass, it would raise the present $1.8'9 ~ax rate to $1.89 per $100 aseessed valuaUon, plus 34 cents for In· terest and bond redemption. Members. of an orgaoization, called "I'm for KIDS" (Keep Improving District Schools) are going door-to-door ufR]ng voters to support both the bond Issue an<f tax Increase. The pro.bond force, which according to ci:1mpaign coordinator John Venable Is 800 strong, will continue making house calls right up to election day. NEW YORK (AP) -Stocks fell sharp- ly today, with declining Issues outstrip- p;ng advances by better than four to one. (See quotations, Pages 2&-2'7). ' tempt to determine precisely .what hair pened. The speetacul~r. t f;4S p.m. accident was witnessed by hundreds of homeward· bound motorists on the Santa Ana Freeway, ~:ne of whom were en· d.:inrered by the debris falling from above. ll'ullcrtv~ Airport authorities said· Foss, a former Air Force pilot now employed In C:orvna as a Navy missile systems elec- triCal engineer, had renttd the plane 20 minutes earlier. "He was on a normal fligtil pauern to inr.rea1e tus prnflclency," said Jim DAILY PILOT Plllt1 "' L!,i PhN Rolled aHd Re•tly . -Bui these marijuana cigarettes will never be smoked. That lettering on cigarette paper re- fer~ to evidence file at Costa Mesa Police Department, \vhich ha s been concentrating recent drug roundup· on two locaJ high schools. For an idea of what drug pushers have been pushing at hid! school students, see Page 21. 2 Men 'Burned' At Stearn Room A pair of West Orange County men got burned in the steamroom at a Costa Mesa health spa Tuesday. Floyd A. Colglazier, of 2831 Tigertail Drive, Los Alamitos. and Louis VI· fl.fatz, of 4055 Selkirk Court, Cypress, lost $26 and 17 credit card.'! between lhem. · The men told police Colglazlerrhad just joined the Holldiy'Heatth Spa, 1300.Har- bor Blvd., and they went in for a steam· bath to unwind from their office jobs. The new member secured their cloth· Ing in a loclier wltll a 98-cerit comblfla· lion pad\oc:'k bought at an adjacent drug store. but somebody cracked it while they luxuriated. Dodi•• ,.lea m1nacer !or Trl-Av!Jllon CorporaUon.'bfled at the field. • The $11,000 Plpet Cf\erOkee lost a por- tion of hi ,right wing when tt Struck the towering rMlio antenna, which 1usta.lned no serious damatf. ~ .. , "He came betWeen the · tower and a ~ guywire and •ht 'nicked It~'· said Em~sto l\1~rtlnei, 28, of Norwalk, one or many who wale.fled FOIS' death plunge. ''He. traveled Up a few' feet, but the 'ving broke off and parts started ·falling all over," added Martinet, employed on a pa1nling job near the scene. "I ran inside," be sald. Beach Realtor First to Seek Council Post ... ·Phy Ills Galkin, 1 real estate broker, today became the nrst 'candldate to take out nomination p1t1pers for the city coun· ell race in the April 14 election when four positions on the Huntington Beach gov- erning body will be filled . She was the only one to appear at the city clerk's office up to press time today. Mrs. Galkin,· a businessman-here. since 1965, was recently named f\ealtor of the Year. the first time a woman has· been so honored. . c:.u~ ""* ..,,.._ •.Pr!. tl!I• year m M-tor ,Jac'l: Gr .. o, Ted But, lett, Dr. Hiney l\fu!n)tn one! Alvin ~iltn. ~II" ore eo<pecte4 1<>_;9"~ n1le<Uoo al- thOuch, none has ~·lt";)~t. First to ·annoM latt !"i!t wu Jooe~Fe!il, head or the Property o..n. trt ective ~aaue. He WU I 1911 ca(ldldate. Mrs. Galkln 1tatea her goal u .a coun- cilwoman ls to work toward brillj(ing Into the clty•sorqe of the things. which should be a part or a well balanced community. · These include, she says, a teen cen- ter I na centralized. area, a pu~lc trans- poi;taUon stysem, and more lnduatrle1 to broaden the tax ba.se. She endorses the city's Top of the Pier Plan which·she hopes ·j~l ll bring a great- er variety of shops and merchanta to the beach area which is verv Impres- sively landscaped and lighted." "If existing property owners can de- velop thla area in teepJn2 with the Ur· ban Land Institute'• well thought out plan, than hurrah for the American way or life." states the candidate. "I would rather see the property own- er upgrade hJs own property, but if l'te is unable then he should sell as much for his own good as ror that or his rel - low man." She calls for a ma1ter plan on apart· ments with full puhlic hearings for resl· denls or designated areas. Teen Ma1·riage Rules Urged SACRAMENTO (UPll Assemblyman Jamea A,, Hayes, an author of the 1gep ·divorce refonn law , has moved to make it tougher for teenagers to &el married In Callfornla. The Long Beach RepubUcan Wed· nelday introduced a measure requiring both boy• and elrla under 18 years of qe to get written certification from a mar· riagc counselor or clergyman declaring their prior 1pprova l. w. County Crusade Set Five Groups Or_ganize United Fund Campaign Five charity organiutlons have joined to form the West Orange County Unlted Crusade it was announced Wednesday. The merging organlzatk>ns are the \Vest Orange County United Fund,· represent l ng Ga rd en Grove . \Vestmlnster, Fountain Valley and Seal Beo(h, and the Huntlnaton Beach Com· mi..nlty Chest. , l'resent al a press conference Wed· nes<lay announcing the merger were mayors of three of the cities J1ck Green of Huntington Beach, Kathryn t.. Barr, G.1rden Grove and Edward JO:!lt, Foun· ttt ln Valle)'. 1 Arranging the formation of, the new organization were George Honold, 1969 president of the Weit Orange County lirited Fund and Stephen Holden. 196! pre1ldent of the Commun1ty ..chest of Huntington Beach. Signing the merger agreefftent were 1970 Community Chest President Walter F. Young, manager of emp'°Yment for McDoMell Douglas Astronautlc;s and tt70 United Crusade Presldtnt Ja::i: reetian, d\1trlct managt!r , Soothtm Countlts Gas Co. The signing solidified an cUQrt this year when, as th111 cllmai to five month• of cooperation. lhf. two organlialkms· ro1Kd In excess of t4&5,000, 1 10 per\,'tnt lricrease over 1958 campe~ns. Outgoing: Huntlniton Beach Chest Pmldent Holden hailed the new ellort u a "more ef_llclent operaUon. ", 1n11tallatJon :>r offlcer1 of . the newly f1 r1ntd United Crusade will be held Feb. 27 at the annual awaz:d and reco1nitlon bt:nquet at' Disneyland Hotel. Feehan ~ads the'united group. Serving with him are Young, Westminster Pollce Chief Conner C.llacott, Ralpll P11ter. llarold Jot\n&on, John Land , R. J. KtllsJcy, L. A. C.lllM Jr.. Dr. P1ul /Berger, C. E. Wooda, Captain F'. F. Jl!wett, II, Howard. Mii~y. Norman Hansle.r. Holden, Jack C&lrns, and Mrs. Shefdon Singer, - \Vlltiam F. Lani1an is area crusade chairman for 1970-71. Malo ornce ol the tP'O•P •ls th< Com- munity Seflllce Center, 11412 Stanford Avenue, Gar"'n Grove. A Huntinfon Beach branch uffie,e w\11 be locate at 18:J82 Beach Boulevard, Suite 211 . . . . A major Hre was narrowly-averted wh'en the Cherokee'• Ntl tank plum. meted throu&h the roof .of a furniture wa~se and aplattereq over packing cases, but failed to erupt In names. One wing and a wh"' camt to rest on the root, )YhUe FoSlll' bbdy and assorted other debriJ smashed into the, parking lot outside the firm. Other bits of wreckage landed on the adjaCent freeway and FI rest one Boulevard, according to police. The acckl.ent was the, firsl Involving the radio tower. Ra1io Station KFI remained on ,the air lollowiilg the accident. I , •A ""' SHE'S IN THE RUNNING ( ..... ell-C•ndl~to q:Olkln HuntingUJn Lass Double Winner In Junior Fete Huntington Beach's Rhonda Martyn took another step toward the California Jun\Or Miss title by capturing flnt place in physical fitness competition Wednesday night in Santa Rosa. That makes two events (poise and ap- pearance was the other) the Marina High School senior has won In the w.ee.k·long contest . She has a chance to succeed Jackfe Benington, her friend last year at Marina, as California's Junior Miss. Ker\neth Martyn. Rhonda's father, said this mornlAi lhe entire family is "very proud of hei' and what more can we say." '1She's having a good time In Santa RoSa and' it's a good experience for her. That'• wl'lat Is important," said Martyn. He also expained the method of com· petition employed in judging .in lhe Santa RO!a Junior College Auditorium, site of the Jaycee event. A total of 54 girls are compeUng, he explained. On Sunday, all were intr~ duCed, then divided into three groups for competition during the week In three cat- egories .... poise and appearance, talent- and pby1ical fitness. . 1\tesday night, Rhonda w~ first in poite and appearance •ln her group. Wed·· nes8~y . a~ took honors in physical fit- nesa. Tonfght she ~~ her compet.ilors will be judged In the talent category. While. Rhonda was winning her share in two categqrles, the two other groups were also competing for similar honors. Cyn- thia Palmer of Turlock also. ha11 been a double winner. capturing honors in phys- ical fitneas and talent. A fourth event competed In by all girls is scholarship. ' The new Junior Mis.s of California will be named Saturday. Judges wiU first list three wlnner1 ip each category as well as the scholarship winners . Then one girl will be Chosen lops 'in Poise, ta.lent and phy!llcal fltnes1, rea~Uvely. The new junior mW will be selected from that gNiup. Magic Sho~ Set In Tri-City Y It" mal!1< -1nd the trl-cl\y YMCA servJna: Fountain Valley, Wf6lmlneter and seal Beach will prove tt this SatW'~ day. f • Al 1:30 a.m. Todd Michael, a leJlltl<red magl<lan. wlll star\ an tight-wee~ mq)c ()ub ror boys and gtrl! t-12 years Oki. '1'11• Trkky YMCA sponsored club will meef Saturdays In the West Orange County YMCA liulldlng, tl771 Bt1ch Blvd.. Westminster. C.sl ol IJJt •lab~ wee• magic course ls SIO ror YMCA """mber' and $11 for non-members. ,\ ' UavastJ Honey .... While most of the nation struggles throu gh a rough winter. Nancy Sims, perched on a Piece of. London Bridge, soaks up sunshine at' Lake Havasu City ,on the lqwer CpJiSrado Ri ver where the bridge is being rebuilt. Nancy; obvl(>uiJ7 bas· one jump on the bridge builders -she 's fully assembled. Cities League Continues Fight on Harbor District The Orange ~1 League of Citie1 Green's statement was prompted by an has not abandoned ila drive .to put the assertion by Alton Allen, chairman of the future of the county Harbor District to a ttt ,·ote of the peoplt, IWUt Pl'Mident Jack county Board of Supervisors,. as e Green said wedneW., resu lt of a meeting recently, neither the '-~ 1 , \~(~Cl.of-county wanted an election. C,rten said Asseniblyman John V. College Okays Building Funds A $293,000 budget ror a prefabricated district administration building was ap- proved W!dnesday night by OraAge Coast Junior College District Trustees. Bids from relocaUon building manufac. turers wilt be sought lmfnedlately and it ls hoped the move or administrative and business functions that invol\Pe both the Orange Coast College and Golden \Vest College campuses can be made by Au- gust. The administration building is to be 11> cited on a one-acre plot west of the OCC football stadlum at Adarm Street and the campus "S" Street. Administrators, including Chancellor Dr. Norman Watson , currenlly are.housed in a 1939 "temporary" building built ror the Santa Ana Army Air Base which later became the OCC campus. Space ls shared with the OCC campus admlnlstraUon which will remain behind ftl the old building. The boa.rd or trustees Wednesday nlahl employed Lang and Wood of Sou th La· euna as landscape archltecu for the ad· mlnl!traUoo · buildlni. William Blurock and ParUJers of Co.rona del ?.far is the architect. The proposal Js lo lease.-purchase the building, spreading pavment over four yean. The building will be 11ultable for use as clB..!ilf'OOm space when and If a ptrmanent adminis:tratlon building Is con- structed, Dr. \Vatson said. Briggs (R·Fullerton) would introd uce a bill soon, possibly today, to put dlssolu- , tion Of the Hairbor District as. a separate taxJna·qency-to a vote. Allen's 11tatement came d u r Ing Tuesday's meeting of the county board. l~e told of a session attended by himself, Supervisor . Wllliain Hirstein, Harbor District Manager Kenneth Sampson. and officials of Huntington Beach, Newport Beach and Westminster. Green said a propcsal discussed at the meeting had nothing to do with the league's move to gel the issue to a vote. Allen said proposal& came out of the meeting to expand the district's functions to include recreation and park1, expand the boundaries o( the district to Include all of the county, and add two members to the Harbor Commission lo be named by the League of Cities. The five·member commission oow in- cludes a reprcsentaUve of e a c b :-11pervisorial district. Kennedy Group . .Plans Car Wash The Robert F. Kennedy Memorial Society "'ill stage a car \vash SaLurday and Sunday from 10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. at Harry's Gulf Station, Edwards Street and r.1cFadden Avenue, Huntington Beach. Anyone is invited to have their car "'ashed for 99 cent.a to rair.e funds for the Kennedy Society's communJty program!'i. • "#'¥+'¥ i f~ 'I' .. +' P1'"'\• ii ¥ t' +...-t' t • I u I ·' ~ = ·---· • . .... Yabloris-ki~ ·-Driver Dr~nk? • \ ·F!Bl Agents Testify Be Hit l;qq,.d Ra~ls jn,:R.sfJ.ip~ . . ' -... .. ... .. ~..,.. ...... , ... , ~ fQf!> -J· .,,,e111111 ,.Ue, MArP.nt. 11, f!ld. his ~•\iihter, 'from the rtrer. • • o.: oi iAe it-; crd(.z. vea1.,., 1T, ~ tiCipe. ~ izi1' qttiott of. Charlotte. 211 were Uot. the getaway SoUrces aald PhllllPI was supposed to ll undi'r bid1ctmt.nl ,rub Phillips on a fldal Jooeiih A. "Jock" Yablcmstl and hi1 driver, hil ...n.-ilciwed by alcohol, have been the drl~ ol the car but pulled bu""l"'Y cllarge In YOU111-n, Ohio, In . . oot and was replai:ed by another man another case. wife and daughter were murdered was nearly disrupted because the driver of the getaway. ear got drunk, it was learned ~ day. FBI ag~nla told a federal grand jury the getaway driver sat In the auto outside I.be Yablonstt'1 Clarksville, Pa., home drlnt1ng betr and tossing the empty beer cans on the lawn. They said flngerprlnil found on the beer cans helped lead to the arrest of three suspects. The agents said after Yablonski, 59, his Svalstad First To Enter Race In Valley Incumbent City CouncUman Bernie Svalstad was the rirsl candidate to pick up an application for the April 14 council election Utls morning at Fountain Valley City Hall. Candidates have until Feb. 19 to pick up applica!lon11 and return them to the ci· ty clerk if they wa nt to run for city coun- cil. The two other lncumbenU up for elec- tioo this year, Georae Scott and Mayor Edward Just, have aa1d they wtll seek re- election· and are eq>eded to pick up ap- plications this week. · No one else has publicly announCed an intention to run for the couocil. Feb 19 Final Date for April Voter Signup February 19 is the last day residents can register to vote in any. of aeveral local electlon11 acheduled for April 14 in Huntington Beach, Fountain Valley, Seal Beach and Weatmlnster. In order *°'rtailer' a· resident must be 21 years old by-the date of the election (April 14), a U.S. cltizeri 90 days prior, a resident of California one year, a.nd a mldenl o1 ,-·pnclnol•M.ip",jlrja' lo the election. ~~ •r Voters reglstered in Oranae County who have moved 11ince their last registra- tion may re-rtitster by mall. Voters who have changed _pl'.'fCincts· in the aame city must re-regtster: For further lnfonnatlOn ca ll the Voter'• ReglstraUon office in Santa Ana, 962-2424, or your local city hall. Four city council elections and one school tax rate election are scheduled April 14 In lhls area. Four HunUngton Beach City Council seats will be up this April. Some Ht;illngton Beach resident& ·also will be asked by the Huntington Beach City (elementary) School Dl11Lrlct to a~ prove two tu overrides totaling $1.90 per $100 assesud valuation. In Fountain Valley, tbree city council se.ats will be the line. In Seal Beach, three council 11eat11 are up, while the West minster council race inv<ilves two seats. Reds Seek Offensive SAIGOr! (AP) -The Viet Cong's pro- visio nal revolutionary government has held a meeting and called for a coun- trywide offensive against allied forces, the secret Liberation radio said today. The broadcast reported the meeting was held in mid.January under the chairmanship or Huynh Tan Phat. who heads the Viet Con~ regime. sideswiped two guardrads near the home who received $2,000. It was also reported Other aources reported .Yablonski's as he drove away. the trigger man in the slaylngs received killers1were paid more than '2,000 each, James C. Phillips. ;42, who allegedly $1 ,700. "·•t It was not koown who hired ·them. backed out of the plot to kill Yablonski Two FBI agents escorted Phillips to the The grand jqry Is trying to Und out. and then told the story to the FBI, was courthouse Wednesday for his one-hour Vealey, Paul E. Gilly, 36 ; and Aubran reported to have told the grand JW'Y how appearance. W. Martin, 23, are charged wtth the the slayinp were rehearsed. PhllUps' &estlmony, like that of all murds of YablQMkl, a too,_wn1 United The re~arsal -l~uded the tossing of others here, wu teetet. But IOUl'CU said Mlne WorUn Ui:uon olficlal, and hll wife dummy weapcns into the Monongahela Phillips wu in on the ortgtnaJ plot, then and da\teb"1'· Noae ol the tlu'te men.bu River about five mil~s from the pulled out at the last minute and gave the appea1'd, before the grand jury, althou«h Yablonski home. An Ml rifle and a .38 FBI Information that led to the arrests the wifes or Gilly and Martin testlfled caliber revolver have been recove1ed last week of tbree men. Wedneeday. For Volunteer Force Reserve Army Boo~t Seen WASHINGTON (AP) -Secretary of Defense Melvin R. Laird said today thai to attain an all·volunteer force , the Unit- ed States would have to cut its armed strength down close to two million men and spe.nd heavily on a strengthened Na- tional Guard and Reserve. This would represent a slash of nearly 1.3 million from the present level of U.S. forces . "I personally believe that you have to get down to a level, before you can get down to an all-volunteer service, near the two mllllon mark," Laird told a youth group of the PentaJZon. The lowest figure he previously has in- dicated all the target for an all.volunteer, draflless force. was 2.&. million men , about 100,000 fewer 1than U.S. armed· strength when this country became in- "olved on a major scale in the Vietnam war. Laird said a twc>mlllion-man force could not meet U.S. obligations unless, at the same time. melt!Ure! were taken to build up the National Guard and Re- serve to back up the smaller regular military establishment. He spoke or a .. tremendous e11pense" as being needed to maintain an adequate reserve. "I'm not 11ure we have . . . support pre11ently for that kind of funding in the Congress." Laird said. A presidential commi11s\on headed by former Secretary of Defense Thomas S. Gates Is winding up a year-long manpow. er study. IL.ls expected to report to Presi- dent Nixon · withtn a ftw week$ ·on ·11.s proposals for moving to an aTl.volunteer force and away from the draft. • Recently. soui;ces on the conyn!sslon~ ' lri<Hcated' tt1e gr00p Wli '8ffmtt i"e:ai!y '10~ propoie 'measuf'el, • U,Cludf111 tugfier· pay for first erdlstment· trodps, designed to attain an all-volunteer foree of about 2.5 million men. But critics i.n the Defe1111e Department contended these proposals, with a price tag of abOol 14 bUlion, ...,.. umeallaUc. There were reports that the coinmlsalon has been restudyll]I aome of ita ldeu be- fore submlttln& Ila report lo Nixon. Mrs. Hanson to Leave Japan for Home Friday From Wire Serv1cn TOKYO -Nearing the end 'of their mercy mission around the world, the wives of four missing, American pilots learned today that J a p a n e a e newspapermen may hold the key to learning their fate . r.trs. Carole ·Hanson, of 24112 Birdrock Drive, El Toro, and her Los Angeles County traveling compani'Jns. will depart from Japan's capital Friday for their Eiouthland homes. The group which has sought word of the (ate of their husbands in a dozen foreign nations met for 30 minutes with Viet Foreign Minister Nobuhiko Ushiba. Los Angeles television personality Robert Dorman, who has accompanied the four on their odyssey, revealed that the Cabinet official said Japanese newsmen may obtain the answers. They have been met with sympathy. bul little else ln other capitals. "He (Ushiba) suggested that neutral Japanese newsme9. ~requently visit Hanoi Do an• that he b!'l1"'\ l"jll llFY Would lJ>iulre rm an. . Wlttt Dorman were Mrs. Hanson. 30, and Mrs. John Hardy %7,l~ Rooae.•elt.. HeaUe Jr., 37, aod Mrs. Arthur Mwna. 37, all of l.oa Anieles. After leaving the·foreign mlnlstry, they relumed lo their hotel, plcke(I up an tJI.. terpreter and drove to a meeting with Miss Shizue Yamaguchi, parltamentary vice minister ot the economic Plannlni agency. They had lunch with Miss Yamaguchi, a former socialist who ran and won a sea t In Parliament as a liberal Democrnt in the December elections. The California women are seeking a meeting with Mrs. Eisaku Sato, wife of the prime minister, but it hu not been scheduled. Donnan and the women arrived ln Tokyo Tuesday night follow ing stops at Moscow, Paris, New Delhi, Cairo, Vien· tiane and Laos. They had lunch Wednesday with Mrs. Armin H. Meyer, wife of the U.S. am- bassador to Japan, and met with Red Cross officials in the afternoon. The wome;i are trying to find out if their husbands: are still alive. The North Vietnamese government has reufsed to produce 1 list of captured Amertcans. SEMI ANNUAL SALE! For lasting elegance, enhance your home ,wifh famous HERITAGE upholstery • DAILY PILOT ClANq,l COAST PUl \.l,lol!NG COMl'ANY R1il•rt N, W,.C ..... :.. ... -""""lollv $10,000 in Drug Haul 15% OFF HERITAGE UPHOLSTERED FURNITURE I J•,lt R. CYrl•v VI(• l"ftlldll'I! •!Id Glin•r•I M--r r~'"''' "''"u lidll .. Tho,..11 A, Mw••hi~t ,..,.,... .... f.dl ... Albt •I '.'I, lt•t1 ..._'-'' t•l1 ... H11lltl .... • lnth OHie:• I 7t7• 111'~ leul1v1•lll Melling AJd11111 l'.O. le• 7,0, •16•1 ---l.1911M ~~ m ,., .. , "-c...rt ~I -Wftl ... , l ltNI 111-1 a .. c11: nu w•1 a.111oN eouine,. Shown by Mesa Police By ARTHUR R. VINSEL • 01 "°" O.ltr Plitt lllK Stragglers missed In 48 hours of roun· cling up suspected campus drug dealers were still 90ught today, ai> Costa ~1e1a police put on display $10,000 wort1i of con· traband seized, from mild to deadly varieties. The table full or nartotics could tum on the r1ti re city. Dclecth,es arre51ed one more adult and four juvennu \Vednesday. me1nwh\le, bringing the total captured to 21. with three more named in unse.rvtd arrest warranls. One 18-year.(lld lldult was arraigned \\'cdne~av ln lfarbor District Judicia l Court. wh.lle the olhtr11 have powted ball pnd art due btfore the bench next ••eek. Robert Whitmore. 18. of 2758 Portola Drive, COsta fl.1eu. v.·a1 1rresled on • chArge of sale of marijuana Wedneisday, as a rt.suit or the sil·WCf!k probe of drug· dealing 1t two c1mpu1t9. Detective tapl. Bob Gretn gid today v.·hen quutioned that the mau roundup begun Tuesday morning does not Involve an actual ring. such as the underworld !lyndicate·type operallon. I "You couldn't start out with a pyramid of organization and trace it to any one person," said Capt. Gretn, who added that most of the suspects do know each other. The 18 juvenile boys and girls In r11.stody are from OOth Costa Mesa and Estancia high schools. but two were pirk- cd up Wednelclay incidentally to the original Investigation. ri.1ost are charged with sale of d:ingerous drugs, lnvolv~ni:i heroin, I.SO, m('scallnc. opium , barbiturate a n d 1Jmnhetamlne pills, ha11hlsh and assorted liquid compound1. One chunk of hash alone -the pote.nl refined sap of the mariiuana plant -Is "''orlh $1 ,100. Detective. Norm Kutch disclosed as the array was laid out 'Vednesday . Special agents v.•ere u~ed by the police department In gathering evidenot prior to iMUAnct or arrest warrants by Harbor District Judl clsl Court Judge Donald l)l •ngan. Inves11gaton 1ald more than Ont sale was made on the Estancia High School c11.mpus baseball field 111 they watched the transacllon from a distance. ~ ---,...,.. ... .., .. ~ t•tive styling and proud cr1ftsmtnlhlp thst hive made H«itage • living tradition in furnl-- turt. Thert trt rncM't thtn 175 du.igns --=te cne • tt9i0tl in painstaking WOfkm¥15hip arid e..qulal1t deta ili,.._ And, 10 111isfy your most tx.actint dtcoratlng Midi, tMr• ii • choice of <Nfl 800 OUUUf'lding f1bficl Ind rneny Os> tM>nal decorttlvt f•tur& 011f k"lterior d ... signll'I -'J bl ~ ~ to "5ist ;n vour -- • -nY OUR HVOLVIN• CHAR•I - \•ou r fa vorite intn-ior dcafgner wfU bf Mpp11 to autat 1101& ••• PROFESSIONAL INTERIOR DESIGNERS Op1n M•n., Thurt., I Fri. Evts.. 2215 HARBOR ILVO. COSTA MESA, CALIF. "46·0271 ) I Re Cata Bea•· It Alice the bear looks like she's eating a mouse, but acluaUy she's carrying her th.ree-day-<1ld, half-pound cub around her quarters in Folsor:h's zoo. The only ' objection from the little fellow comes when she puts him down. At that point, he's all lungs. County Gives Preliminary Health Service Center 01{ Orange County supervisorS' Wednesday approved in principle the development of pl ans. for a health servi~e center in southeast Santa Ana. with the slipulatlon the plans be studied by the county Com- prehensive Health Planning Association. County Health Dir.ector Dr. John Philp said definite plans for site aqulsition, staff planning and equipment needs will be drawn up following the 1board'1 ap- F·reeway Wrec~· Injures Pair An Anaheim motorist and a Baldwin Park truck driver were hos~talized with major injuries at Martin Lulher Hospit~I this morning following a Santa Ana Freeway crash that slowed northbound rush hour traffic to a crawl, California Highway patrolmen said Mary \Veaver. 23, of 2006 W. La Palma Ave., 'AIS northbound and exiting on the BrooKhurst Strut ramp when her car swerved out or control and headed back to th e freeway. Because the ramp lies on a steep em- bankment, officers sa ii.I, the car was airborne when it struck the lruck drive'n by Dani el A<:i!ro, 23, of Baldwin Park. Patrolmen sai d the truck rolled four times blocking two of the northbound Janes. British ' Iliplo1nats Ousted 11y Poland WARSAW (UPI) -The PoliS:h News Agency acknowledged Wednesday three British diplomats in Warsa\V have been expelled in retaliation for the ouster of three Poli sh diplomats by lite British government. The agency said the three BriLish diplom ats were expelled beca use their "activity '\\'BS not in accord with. S:he. • :;latus" of embassy personnel. proval of the center. John Traband, executive director of \be health planning group sald the center is slated for study by his g:roop Feb. 16. The OUlRCltient clinic issue was brought before the board Jan. 14 by Carlos Ramos exeeuUve director of the county's Community AcUon Council who aaid Jack of readily available medical help wu"one of the key problems cited by many pover· ty level residents of the area where the center will be established. ' Junior Colleges Exempt From Sex Education Curbs . SACRAMENTO (UPI) -Attorney General Thomas Lynch said today that jur.ior colleges are exempt from a new state law restricting the teaching of sex education in the elementary and seCon- dary schools. The law. authorefi ~y Sen. John G. Schmitz (R~Tuslin), prohibits the govern- ing board of an elementary or secondary school from requiring that students at- tend family life and sex education courses. In an opinion prepared by Deputy At- torney Gene ral Richard J... '-layers; the Justice Department said tha~ technically the junior colleges 1 art ·not considered secondary schools at lat as the ne~ Jaw is C<ln<:i!rned. 1 ' 1 · The law prollibils a , school from re~ quiri ng that a student atlend such cl8sses if his parent files a written objection wlJh school authorities. " Schmitz, a junJOr college teacher. sa id he intended to exempt community col- leges because "of the problems YQU rt.ce." He noted that some students, are 24-year~d war veterans and that they would..need a note from their patents ob- jecting to the classes. The opinion was requested by Sidney Brossman, chancellor of the community colleges. Four Injured In A~tacks On Students Santa Ana P>llce Aid tod&y they have an.sled a lf.~l'Old N...,, youth In connection wt.th several attacks Wed- nesday of white students on their way to Santa Ana Valley High School. The youth waa tentatively identified as leader of one gan1 of about 20 Negro teenager:s. who allegedly roughed up three white students. Police estimate that altogether there were between 70 and Ulll young blacka in· volved Jn attacks. Some were anned with clubs, rocks and bottles. Four white students were injured, treated at Riverview Hospital and releas· ed. One suffered a broken arm and head injuries. , 'Ibere was only the one aJTeSl Rudy Francis, a Negro security guard '\\'ho patrols between Valley High and Smedley Junior High School &aid the "'raCial" Incident was the result Of an at.. tack on Negro student.s by whites 'J'ues. day night after school Dr. Charles Hw , principal of the school, stated the fighting was off cam- pus "and has nothfng to do with the .school at all." Dr. Hess Tuesday announced his resignation to become a s a I s t a n t superintendent for business of Laguna Buch Unified School District, beginning next month. Dr. Hess noted there have been no "on campus" incidents at the school wh ich has an enrollment of 2,050 students a third or which are Negro and MexiCan American. "1be leaders Of this black group are not students of Valley JDgh School They are older and outsiders," he said. Orange County's New Courthouse In Dedication Orange Cou!:aty's newest courthouse was dedicated today in ceremonleS In which county aupervlson, judgel aod key officials participated, Supervisor Alton ' E. Allen, board chairman, offered the welcome at the 2:30 p.m. formalities which will present the completed North Orange County Judfclal District courthouse to the public. DIBtrict Attorney Cecil Hicks was mailer of ceremonies. Featured speaker was Judge Warren Ferguson, a form~r or~n.sa Countr .iui:ut )'ho 1s """ °" u., 11.S. Dlstrtct Cpurt bepch In Loo Aniol.._ Judge WJllam .Spe!ra of Newport Beach, prWdlng judge of the Orange County Superior Court, represented his court at the ceremony. The $1.9 million ·courthouse opened for buslnw Monday and 11 now serving the cities of Anaheim, Brea, BuE:na Park, Fullerton, La Habra, La Palma, Placen· tla and Yorba Linda. It houses the only branch of the Orange County Superior Court and all municipal courts for the area. Barbra Squired By Canadian Prime Minister OTI'AWA (UPI) -Prime 1'1insler Pierre Elliott Trudeau took Barbra Strelaand out in Ottawa Wednesday night for an evening of ballet and buffalo burger,. MJss, Streisand, an Oscar winner for "FUllJIY Girl," dated the 50-year-old bachelor prime minister las-t fall when he visited New York City. She was Trudeau's surprise guest at a program Wednesday marking the centennial of the province of Manitoba. Trudeau, in evening clothes. and Miss Streisand, weari11& a low-cut long wh ite gown, with a abort fur-trimmed jacket and white filr b.lt and muff, were among hundredJ of VIPs at the National Arls Center. When the prime minister's limousine .. . arrived at the i:nodem cultural complex, Trudeau jumped out of hia .seat and dodg· ed. past ftoyal Canadian Mounted Police to peraonall)' open the door for ~1iss SU:clsand. ·/\fier ... watching a perfonnance of the Royal WiMipeg , Ballet C o m p a n y . T~au and MJss Streiaand went to the salon ·of the a"rts Ci!nter and sampled • · tradtllonal Manitoba foods, including burgers made from buffalo meat. Vf'IT ....... BARBRA STREISAND WITH CANADA'S TRUDEAU An Evening of Ballet •nd Buffalo BurQ•r• Wl'len they leit a television reporter asl(ed tiim, '1When are you going to have ber ba ck hue again?" Trudeau did not rtply, but Miss Streisand leaned over from within the car and said, "You're suppose.cl to say 'arrest th11t man'" -a rtfe.rtnce to Trudeau's sometime public lrti at newsmen for ask· tn1 him shout his personal Ille. Hess Family Visits BERLIN (UPI) -Rudoll Hes" the former Nazi deputy, wlll lefohls wile and aon Monday for the eecond time In 28 ye•rl, an allied apoktsm•n aakf today. The meeting, like a •miUar awlon Dec. 24, will take place In the Br1U•h Mllttary Hospital Jn Berlin whe,.. the 7f>. yeaMkt Heu has btts1 under trealmtnl "Incl\ Nov 24 for a .stom&ch ulcer. Thllrsd1y, J111ulr)' 29, l97D H OAIL Y PllOf :J $800 Million Set 12-year-old 'Hallucinates• On Anything' For Clean Water WASHINGTON (UPI) -The White Howe said today President Ni.on bad decided to spend the full l800 milUon Congress aulhor~ for water purlflca· Uon r--ojeets. Nlxon bad' asked for $214 million for water purificaUon. 11le lawmakers boost- ed the money level almost four Umes over, but Nixon until today dld not In- tend to spend more than the amount he sought. Press Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler said Ni.Jon had now declded to overrule rtc- ommendatlons of the budget bureau and to authorize the Interior Department to spend the entire amount. 'The money would go for matching grants to local governments to build waste treatment plants. Som.e Democrats In <;ongress had been upset by report& that Nixon would au- thorize spending only $214 ntllllon of the appropriation as a means ol keeping fed· er~I a~lng down as part or the admln· istration's anU-inflation program. Nixon tut week proposed that $10 bil- lion be spent over the next five years for municipal waste treatment plants in a program to help clean up the nallon'a rivers and slreams. But the President did not say bow much of this would be federal money. ln a related development. Nixon named lntorlor Undersecrttary Rusaell E. Train totfaf u head Of a White Houae council charged with finding ways to end p:>llu- tlon of the environment. In making the announcement. Nl:ton said the drive against pollutJon could tum out to be his ••major domestic prt. ority in the 1970's." Train, 49, was named chairman of the Council of Environmental Quality. Robert Cahn, 52. Pulitzer Prl1.e willlllng reporter for the Christian Science Monitor and Dr. Gordon J. F. MacDonald, 40, an envlro~ mental, expert from the Unive.rs.ity of Cal- ifornia In Santa Barbara, wer:e named to the other two posts on the council. · Madam Nhu Loses PARIS (UPI) -Madame Ngo Dinh Nhu, sl.rler-ln·law of alaln South Viet- namese Premier Ngo. Dinh Diem, lost a libel suit Wednesday against th e magazine L'Express, which had called her a "dragon lady." 1be 17th civil court said the ~enn "dragon lady" was not defamatory. Diem and Madame Nhu'.s husband were slain in the 1963 coop in Vietnam. NEW YORK (UPI) -Isabel Salazar iwaa 11 )'Uri okl when• boy friend put oome LSD Jn her glan of ,mllk. "l rully turned on," she &aid. Now, : ""e • y..r 1 • .,..,. •he a<1in111 that .. 1 l\alluclnate oo anything." She al!O admits UBlng herOin, amphetamines a n d meth:drtlfetas iwell a.s LSD. Isabel Is. the daughter or I f~r Cuban ambaaudor and prom In en t .psychiatrlsL Monday , she ran away. £ram > ,, home to New York'a hippie East_ VJ!Ja~. A publlc appeal for help by her father led to her return hOme Wednesday. Dr: Guntemio Salaur ,who threats ad· dicta at Gracie Square Hospital, said be did not dlscover his daughter was an 00· diet until after her grades dropped 'at school. Isabel said that to get money for drugs ahe would tell her-father &he needed money for clothes but would spend it on oarcotlC>. When her mother dJscovered two months ago that Isabel wa.s laking drugs !he took the child to Honduraa to get her away from her friends. The effort proved futile. As soon as they returned Isabel ran away. .. '" UICI It ... C!IAllOE ITI • • •,·· Hinging Ivy b11lcet1 are for making your patio and porctie..prenler .nd greener wit~ eesy-tc>grow ivy in ·7% .. baskets. · 1oHle llru1h, w1x Jeef privet, Mexican fern. All in S gel/on co~era for• variety ofh11dy omamon- f1I lhlvbt for-your g1rclen, I ' ~ • A ; .i. .1 J 1 .. ... .J 1.66 YOUR CHOICE 2.77 ' .. .. . t . .. Tim Juniper ind J1p1nese b14clc pine in 1 g1llon conlainers for .illr.!cl1ve evergreen land scaping for your y&td. · lelgi1n 1zell1s in bud or bloom f0t Nistant c:oior in your yard. Thefre growing in .4" pots for grouping and enioying now. .. • YOUR CHOICE . ' ' .-----------. ~---------·. . ·~ Mexic1n painted hinging bowl fo r planl1ng you r f.ivorile plonls in. 1.99 YOUR CHOICE 66c ... ~ Au1tr1U1n I•• tree in bud or in bloom In 1 gallon cont1lner. Round le1f vibumum in bud or in bloom In 1 gallon contelner, Mother fern for lecy green 91r- dtn beeury, 1 gellon contelner. 01rdeni1 pl1nt In 1 g1llon cont1lner for fr19r1nt ••· otlc bloom•. 66• Mexicen p1inted dish for use as 1 picluresque planter fot your favorites! 1.39 Gold Oval. pl1nt for v1ri.. geted green l••v•• in~ 1 g1llon cont1lner. 661 '. , L-~~~;;._~~~~~~~~~~~~~ NOW! THESE VALUES AT ANY ONE OF TH ESE PENNEY STORES! ·' DOWNEY MONTCLAIR NEWPORT BEACH .-~~~~~~~1 SHOP SUNDAY, TOO • 12 to 5 P.M .! 'IWl.V PILOT (( .......... W tlle 0.llf Plllf Stttl) ·~'Organizers of a charity fair in Cunnlslake, England, tried to get Outen Eltubeth to donate some- OUDg for the occasion. But s h e 'irrote back "No." 'They tried Prime Minister Harold Wilson. He too wrote to say "No." But the fair ,,W go on anyway. It planned to •uction .off the letters from the Queen and the prime mlnlster. • ThurWay, Jan1&111 29, 1970 WomenCall Carswell A 'Sexist' WASHINGTON (UPI) -Judge G. Har· rold C&nwe.11 was accused today of being 0 a sexist" who should not be elevated to the supreme court. The charge was made by Betty Friedan, bead of the NaUonal Organlia.· ti.on or Women (NOW), as opposition witnesses to the nominaUon of the 50- )'W'-<>ld Floridan concentrated on the allegation by women that he wu a male supremacist. &p. Pat.y M'ank (0.Hawali), tettUled, "male supremacy, like white supremacy, is equally repugnant to those who believe In equality." Carswell had been subjected to two previous days of aomelimes sharp qu~ tlonlng baaed in part oo white supremacy chargea growing out of a llHI segrega· tionist speech he made, and his later in- volvement in a segregated golf club at Tallah..,.., Fla. Members ot tbe Senate Judiciary Com· mittee seemed in agreement that the Carswell oominaUon would be approved by the group, although a few days more of testimony may be required to give. more opponent.. a chance to be heard. ~trs. Mink led off today's testimony, critici%lng Carswell for his role in a li>iirt case where a \\'oman with teen-aged children was denied a job by the fi.tartin Marietta Corp. The woman, Ida Phillips, charged in court that the denial was a violation of civil rights law prohibiting discrimination in employment for reason of .... MANSON'S NEW LOOK Gone Is His Beard Judge Enters Manson Plea Of 'Innocent' Then Take Sniff ,U.S. Rescue Senators Pass Helicopter Drug Reform Bill Shot Down WASHlf\GTON {UPI) -lt waa a for a closer insptctlon. Some of them on· SATGON (UPI) North Vietnamese perfect setup for a raid by narcotics ly examined the brick but others took a Migs, lri action for the first Ume since agenll. More than 80 men In a room and sniff or two. the end of the American bombing halt quite a few of them mlffing at $3,000 over the north, shot down an American worth of marijuana. hellcoptu trying to rescue two U.S. But no one was busted. The Or'l'.&le pilots near the Loas.North Vlelnamese room was the Senate chamber in the U.S. border on Wednesday, tt was reported Capital and the Intrigued gentlemen were loday, Eight men were missing. U.S. senaton, presumablv having their COmmuniJt groundfire shot down the " 'fbailand-based Fl0$ '111underchlef with first contact with pot. two men as It was carrying out attacks 'The "brick'! of marijuana was brought near the borders of Laos and North Viet· into the Senate c~mber -presumably nam. The deputy North Vietnamese dete- also a first -by Sen. Thomas J. Dodd gate at tbe Paris peace talks reported (0.COM.), as the Senate enacted major three other American planes were shot drug ."Cform leglalaUon. down the same day in the American On an 82-0 roll call vote, the Senate ap-bombing attack on North Vietnam. proved and sent to the House a bill wlllch 'Ibe U.S. cammand in Saigon had no would sharply cut federal penalties for official comment on the heJJcopter wbJch the ule and cse of drugs, ranging from was Oytng alng the border ln search ol marijuana to ncroin. · the tw1HUan crew or another flghter- 11ie legislation, strongly backed by the I bomber in the "secret" war againlt Nixon administration, would crack down Communist forces in Laos. on dn1g traffic by crime syndicates with Military sources said the Jiellcopter stiff i;entt:nces for pushers. \\·as an H53 r~cue craft based In Udom, But a college or high school youth, Thailand. The H53, similar to the "Jolly picked up at a "pot" party, would face Green Giant" used in rescue missions lighter maximum sentences than current during the bombing of North Vietnam. law provides and could even escape carries two pilots, two gunners and a~ without a criminal record. least two medics. u,1 r11e1111tt• American miltiary infonnants said The "brick" wrapped In brown paper U.S. F4 Phantom Jets were scrambled was a stellar attraction for senators as Next Draft Chief? from several bases inside South Vietnam they voteo on amendments to the bill. but were unable to engage any of the Sen. Allen J. Ellender, sitting in front Charles DiBona, a civilian em· ~figs, apparently flown from bases ln· of Dodd, picked up the package and ploye of the Pentagon, report· side North Vietnam. started prying away at the comer before edly is in line to become next Hanlo said three planes were shot down putting It back. director of the National Selec· and others hit by ground fire In what it After tt11t .ators wol:'"' cast their tive Service System, succeed· called a "glorious victory" for the North Victor, the Kodiak bear 11ow appear· illO at New England's Sportsmen's and Camping Shoto, sits quietly in a barbers chair, lathered up and readt1 for an ••even-1o-gcntl11" trim. Bruton Hotel Somn1et'1 barbn-Jim Cusi· f(lanO agreed to groom the bear fol- lowing a request from OWMT George Allen. Howevn, Victor'• future ap- J)(!ars to bt unkempt rince ht'll weigh about 1,200 poundl and st.and about 12 feet taU when fullll matured. Camn1J voted against a rehearing of the case after a three-Judge panel dedd· ed the denial was not because of 1e1: alone but both because of ses and the fact Mrs. Phillips bad cblldren. ballots and amble over to Dodd's desk, ing Gen. Lewis Hershey. Vietnamese. LOS ANGELES CUPO -Over ~e b=';:;;:;:;;:;:;;::;;;;;:::=:;;;;;=:::~;:::;~==;:;;:;;:;:;:;;:;;:~====~~;:;;:;:;;:;:;;:========;:;;:;:;;:;:;;:;:;;:;:;;:;:;;:~ shouted object!Ollll of Cbarles M. Manaoo, a superior court judge entered a plea of innocent Wednesday in behalf of the hip- pie cult leader in the seven Sharon Tate- LaBlanca murders. • • A suit asking $500,000 damages has been filed In Los Angeles against Playboy Magazine, charg- ing a nude picture of Nancy Sin .. tr• was published without the pho- tographer's permission. Ron Joy, the photographer 1 said the photo o1' Miss Sinatra was given to Play .. boy to inspect for possible publica- tion. The suit alleges Playboy cop- ied the picture and published it in die December issue without com- )ltnsating J oy. • Cuba ha.r atart.ed a cmitt.st to name the 11'001' thief of t 1& ~ 1 week and lte'll be given a moral f i n e , Radio Havana TtpOrU. Theft won't be the only way to · enter thf! competition, however. In voting to deny a rehearing, Mrs. Mink said Carswell "demonstrated a total lack of understand.ink of the concept of equality" and that his vote represented "a vote q:alnst tht: right of y,·omen to be treated equally and fairly under the law." Mrs. Friedan followed Mrs. Mink to the witness table and added her criticism of Canwell beeause of the Phillips ruling. She said Carswell was a "sexist" and 'Was in.seDSitive to problems of working mothul:. Mrs. Friedan said the issue in the Pbl!Ups ""'" seemed to be "motherhood versus fatherhood." She saJd the effect of the decision was lhat a woman could be denied a job because she has children while a father of small children is not. Flori.da Folks Long Winded WASHINGTON CAP) -/. :io.pound, 2,860-fflOt long teltgram was delivered to- day to the Supreme c.ourt aaking it to reo:onsidrr its order requiring desegrega. tion of Florida schools by Feb. I. Represe.r.itativeti of Western Union said it .vas the longest telegram it ever had delivered. "Your honor, I object to any further proceedings," Manson said. "I object to the grand jury system. I object to the in- dictment. I object. to the heinous behavior of the establishment in relation to the in- dictment." Judge George M. Dell interrupted, and Manson 1houted, "Hold ii." "I'm not going to hold anything," Dell retorted. "I enter a plea of not guilty on behalf of the defendant. Mr. Manson, you havt puraued delay far the sake of dt-- lay." Manson, clean shaved for the first time 1ince he bas appeared in court, paced nervously ln the prlloner's box as he tried unsuccessfully to delay again entering a plea in the case in which he is acting as his own attorney. At the end of the hour·lont ·bearing, MllUOll'a trial date wu a.et for Feb. 9. Jt was expected, however, the trial would not start until much later becaui;e two of the six defendants are resisting e1lradi· tion In other states. Manson, dressed in a white blouse with a red, tapestried vest and his hair falling to his shoulders, said he was so "mired down" in legal procedure that be had not had time to prepare his case. The broadcast monitOTed in Mlami said that particularly truck and tractor drivers who let cane fCJll off their vehic~s - who a.re .slopP1f and let cut cane slip through their fi11gns will be considered al.so. The commit- Ues for the <Ufeme of the revo- lution, neighborhood spits of the Fidll Castro reaimt", wiU dil· pense the pena!tUs for augar pilftrage or loss. The message, sponsored by Florida Slate Senator Tom Slade of Duval Coun- ty, was on five large rolls of paper and wu received at local Western Union of· fices over the past five day1, a 1pokesman said. Dell then produced records showing that Crom Dec. 11 to Jan. 20, Manson bad had 48 separate visitors at jail and that some of them had seen him as often as 15 times. "l'm not going to let you stand here making soap box spetebes about not be-· Ing able to prepare your case when all these people come visiting you," Dell • Pvt. Rlch•rd Keck, who calla the military his home, thinks he's found his niche at last. Keck's mil· itary career began when he joined the National Guard in Ft. Dodge, Iowa, in 1955. Eighten months lat· er he enlisted in the Marines. Three yeacs later he returned to civilian life, but 90 days was enough and he si~ned up for a six·year hitch in the Navy. He left in 1965 and join· ed the Air Force eight days later. He decided the Air Force wasn't for him aI\d left last September. Keck signed up for the Army a month later. He says he plans to finish out his 20 years this time. U.S. Steel Sets Hike in Prices PIITSBURGH (AP) -U.S. Steel Corp., the nation's Jar~st i;t.eelmaker, said todaJ it's raising prices on a number of prodl•ds used in the manufacture of . autoinoblles, appliances and machinery. The products -hot rolled, cold rolled and coate<! sheets -account for about 36 percent or total industry shlpments. Although other producers have ral&ed pr ices on these products over the past wetk, U.S. Steel is believed by Industry 10Urces to hold the largest segment of the markeL said. MOVIE ENLISTED IN EGYPT FIGHT CAIRO (UPI) -The Egyptian govern- ment has ordered the state-owned television to show the film "Battle of Bri- tain" to help ~repare the ~ple for further possible Israeli air raids, officials said today. Authorities said the scenes of deslruc- tion in Brilish cities and fire-fighting drills would give Egyptians a preview of "'hat could happen here and help con· ditlon and train them . New Storm Socks East Roseau, Minn., Nation.'s Icebox at 15 Below Calif om la flit~ Ltw ''""' L01'1tl.. II•-no<!llt1\I WIN' ,.,,l#M 1crou ~" C.1llton11t lft- cltv. """' ""lotll t•l!l'l'llM'H <Htr Miu Jowl illtlll!~ t oolt• le<nNr'111•ti. ,.,.... -9 11,_ 9U11V WINj\ ~ low ttM ~""°"' lft ll•t LOJ .. ,,..1,,, .... wlll'I tie.Ir lok•n. Tiie "'O" Wti 111 .nd tlMI •""lcm! low tor !9"19111 wlll bf '2 '" !hit Civic C.tnltr wl!h ~ """"'""t!U•ft I• '"" Wbliftn SOIJTHEll:N CALIJOIHllA -Ftlr 111...,.ri l'r...,,.. GvllY loc1tl~ ,,,_ -"" '-,,.,....,..., ,..;,,o,. 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" S• 1$ ... ,. 14 ·'' " " ~, .. .. " 31 '' ,, Jl • • FRIGIDAIRE Either Side-by-Side or Top Freezer. Buy now and save during our Either-Or Sale. Limited time only. Hurry! · Frigidaire 15.9 cu. fl Side- by-Side. Just 32" Wide. • C01M111tnot. HMdJ ~ 1'1111 IYtt)'lhlng wllll11 -y-11. • ~ l'OOl!l.11.lcu. ft.DMflll.64 c:q,ft. ,,_,., ltltl hllldlup lo 11811)1. • No clflf09Ull0.1t•1100"A. frotl·l'roof. • ! .. y lllO'Ylng. Smoarfl. crlldt l'1'oll rOl!tr.1111" Mll'llllll Md ~ ...... Frigidaire 16.6 cu. fl Top Freezer with 154 lb. Size Freezer • 411 E. 17th St. COSTA MESA Ser.,lng Tiie Bnrllor Area SIM-e 1947 D•ily 9-9, S•lurd•y 9.6, Closed Sun. T•I: 646-1614 , l 7 7 " Fountain ·Valley Today's Fl•al ~OL. 63, NO. 24, 3 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES OAl\.Y 'ILOf S .. 11 l'Mi. FIREMEN BREAK OUT ANTI.SMOKE GEAR AT PADDOCK Fire at Huntington Beach Bar Interrupts Ga y Life Early Evening. Fire Hits Beach Bar; Loss $4,000 ... ' The-gay· lire at the Paddock Bar in doWl\town Huntington Beach came to a mdden halt Wednesday night as billow.1 llf smoke poured out or the 'basement rrom a $4,000 fire . Investigators are still determining the cause oI the 6:43 p.m. blaze which tied up downtown traffic £or two hours. The possibility or arson has not been ruled out. Three fire engines and one snorkle unit were summoned to the wittering spot on t 13 Main St.. as dense ~moke rushed from the windows and doors of the two-story bricl building. Damage rrom the hour-long fi re was ' . ,. ~' . ' cOnnnid ~ s~ower stalls, located in the basement direc'Uy below the bar. inveS* tiptors said. No patrons were threal~ned by the fire since the bar was unoccupied at the lime, EarUer in the day, at 4:54 p.m., fire· men extinguished a carport bol: flr e be- hind the Alpha Beta Market corner or Springdale Street and Edwards Avenue. Store manager Herschel Oardorff re- ceived minor burns and singed hair as he attempted to douse the names with a hose. firemen said. The blaze itself was blamed by them on an arsonist. Huntingto11 Man Clea1·ed Of Obscene Movie Charges A Huntington Beach man hat been cleared of charges that he participated in the showing of obscene ·movies at Santa Ana's Guild Theater. The prosteution abandoned three-year· nld charges against Bruce C. Schmidt, 32, of 6392 Tyrone Circl~. as he prepared to face trial in Santa Ana Mnu.lcipal Court with two co-defendants, theattt manager Gary Noel Johnson, 29, or Santa Ana and ticket seller Lenore J. Llnden, 22, of Anaheim. Johnson was placed on one year's pr~ batlon. Charges against Miss Llnden were dropped. Schmidt was arrested in a Jan. 3, 1967, raid on the theater which at the ·time, was sho)Ving two allegedly obscene movies - "1'3ke Me Naked" and "Princt and the Nature Girl." Judge Paul .Mast led Santa Ana potice officers in the raid whlch dis- I 0r ..... Coul 'feather The hot winds slow down to- night, but the hot weather COil· Unues (by day) into F'rklay with temperaturu hitting 70, but sink· ing into lhe 30's by nighUall. INSIDE TODA l' European newspapers looked. at Pres ident Nixon's first year as one of n1oderate 1uca11 bul tlttrt waa reserva tion in th£ praise. Page 7. rupted a matinee showina of the -spicy movies. Part or the arrangement lhal led to disposition of the case was that "Take Me Naked" would never again be sbown in Orange County. It will not, the prose· cution had been assured, be shown again at the "Gui.Id Theater. The Superior Court's appellate division has upheld Judge Mast's ruling on "Take Me Naked" and he_ld the movie to be ob- scene ln'lt.a "display Of blatantly perverse sexual conduct which devlates grossly rrom any conceivabl community standard in the state of CaWornia." Five lnjul'ed In .Su .. fsid e Head-on W l'eck A ·head-1>n collision on PaclEic Coast Highway near the west entrance to Surf(de early today sent three N1vy men and two olhers lo hospitaJ.s. The accident occureJ at 1 :20 a.m. all vehicies driven by Walter A. De Laney, 22. ot· 5752 EOinger Ave., Huntington Beach, and Kenard L. Taylor, 21 , ol the Lo.1g Beach Naval Base collided in the n1iddle of loas~ Highway. Leonanl FrlsbiP, traffic of ricer ror the S;eal Beach Po,lice· Department. sakf it has not yet been determined wh.ich \"Chi· cle rrossed over the center line. He said he is oot rulln( out the possibility that both IMY have been in violation. ·raken to Los Alamlt ., General Hospi.tal . for emergency ltf:alnient of bnf ·e1 'nd cuts were Oel.aney and hi!!: passenger Jamt:. R. Bcnc.kert, ~ of mu ~" '"'"'· '1111>un11"' aeaa, Both were Jal.Ir trans(erred ·to Orange County Medicar Center. Recovering at lbe Long Beach Naval Hospital au Taylor and his f\l.Ssengers ~felv1n Vantelt, 11 , and Ger11d R. Lene, 21, al: frwn the Long Beach Navil faclll· ty. All thrtt wert tran11rcrred from l.os Alam:tos ~ncral Hospital as well. ) ORANGE' COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, JANUARY le', 1970 TEN CENTS Drivers See Flier Die La Habra Engineer's Plane Hits ~adio Tower A La Habra missile engineer was killed \Vednesday when his rented light plane clipped the 119-rOOf RFI ltiWo tower in La ?i.1irada, showering his body and aircraft debris to the ground below. Glenn Foss, 45, of 621 W. Greenwood Ave .• was on a landing approach to f.~ullerton Airport when the plane clipped a guywire and disintegrated, authorities said. Foss leaves his wife and five ch ildren, 8-16 years old. Federal Aviatioa Administration ex- perts today began lhe meticulous task or reconstructing the wreckage in their at- Parent Starts Drive Against Beach Bo11ds By RUDI NJEDZIEl.SK.I Of t1111 DallY 1"1191 Sl1H "There is no need to construct anothel" high school in the Huntington Beach ~rea." claims a Westminster parent who is campaigning against a $9.5 million school bond issue scheduled for Feb. 10. Robert Gordon, chairman of an nrganization he calls Citiu.ns Organized lo Support Schools. said he has ure:ed several citizen groups, including PTA's and homeowners's association to vote against the measure. "There is evidence suggesling th.at the five el:isting high schools are already adequate lo care for the expected In· cre<ise in school population." he asserts. "AU that is requi~ is to use the el:isl.ing schools eff.iciently W ,effectivW~" A If modular scheduling were adopted and If the length of the school day were eJl'.tended Jn jus~ one of the exJsUng hl£h schools, Gordon argues, "We could have the capacity of the proposed sixth high school now, not in 1972. Overcrowding cou ld be iliminated now. And taxpayers \vould save almost $8.5 million now." Officials of the Huntington Beach Uninn High School District have defended the bond issue on ground, that a roor must be placed over the heads of 3.000 additional students who are expected by 1972. They predict extended day schedules. split schedules and double sessions for all students in Ule event the measure should f11il. About $8.5 million of the bnnds wnuld be spent for construction of the new school, while the other $1 million would be alloted for th e rehabilitation of classroom wings on the HuntinRton Bearh High School campus to comply with earthquake safety laws. To be combined with the bond election -and unopposed by Gordon -Is a 50 cent t.ax override which school district ltdmlnistrators say is necessary to pro- vide for increasing operational cos ts, in· eluding salaries. Should It p_ass it would raise the present. $1.39 ~x 'rate to $1.89 per $100 a~!:essed valuation, plus 34 cents for in· terest and bond re&emption. Members of an organization, called "I'm for KIDS" (Keep lmpro,•ing District Schools) are goin~ door-to-door ur~ing voters lo support both the bond lisue and tax increase. The pro-bond force, which according In campaign coordinator John Venable is 800 strong, will continue making house calls right up to election day. Stoel• ltlarkeC NEW YORK (AP) -Stocks £ell sharp. ly today, with declining Issues outstrip. p;ng advances by better than four lo one. (See quotations, Paaes 2&-27). tem pt to determine precisely what hap- )>('iled. The spectacular, t.: '5 p.m_ accident "'as witnessed by hundreds of homeward· bound motorists O!J the Santa Ana Fri!Cway. some or whom were ~n­ dangered by lhe debris falling from above. ~'ullerton Airport authorities said Foss, a former Air Force pilot now employed In Corvna as a Navy missile systems elec- trical engineer, had rented lhe plane 20 n1inutes earlier. "He was on a normal fligtit pattern to incl ease his proficiency,'' said Ji1n llolled -.aud Read11 But these rharijuana cigarettes will nev8r . pe smoked. That lctlering on. cigarette paper rc-- fers to evidence file at Costa Me s a Police Department, \vhich has been concentrating recent drug roundup on two local high schools. For an idea of '"hat drug pushers have tieen pushing at high school students, s~e Page 21. 2 Men 'Burned' At Steam Roon1 A pair of \Vest Orange County men gol burned in the steamroom at a Costa ~1esa health spa Tuesday . Floyd A. Colglazier, of 2831 Tigertail Drive, Los Alamitos. and Louis W. Matz, of 4055 Selkirk Court, Cypress, Jost $26 and 17 credit cards between them. The men told police Colglazier had just joined the Holiday Heal\h Spa, 2300 Har· bor Blvd., and they we.rt in for a steaID- balh to unwind rrom thelr offi~ Jobs . The new member secured their cloth· Ing In a locker• with a ·98-cent comblna- llon padl(){'k bought at an adjacent drug store, but somebody cracked it while they luxuriated . Oodg•.-1ales manager ror Tri-Aviation Corporation, based at the field. Tbe..$11,IXXI .PlperJJ:ICJ:Ol'e~ a pnr- tlon of its right wlng when it struck the lowering radio antenna, which sustained no serious damqe, "He came between the tower and a guywire ~ he nicked it,'' said Ernesto ~1~rtinez, 26, of Norwalk, one of many who watched Foss' death plung~. "He traveled up a few feet, but the \1•ipg broke off and parts started falling all over," added Afartlner.. employed on a painting job near the scene. "I ran inside," he said. Beach Realtor First to Seek Cou11cil Post .. Phyllis Galkin. a real estate broker, today became the nrst candidate to take oot non1ination papers for the city coun. cil race in the Apr\114 election when four positions on the Huntington Beach go•· eming body will be filled . Slle v.·u the only one to appear at the city clerk's office up to press lime today. Mrs. Galkin, a businessman here since 1965, was recently named Realtor of the Year, the first time a woman has been so honored. Councilmen whose ter(TIS: expire this r.~ar are ?¥1,ror Jack Green1 Ted Bart· e'lt1'Df. Rtni-y KaUfm'an ana AIVin Coen. AU are expected to' seek f'e-f.lectlon, al-th~.lf none has annouhce£as yet. , First to annou~ 1Juf week was J~ Fern. head of the Property Own· e~1 Protective League. He wa1 1 1961 Candidate. 'Mrs. Galkin st.ates her goal as a coun· cilwoman is to work toward brinllin' into the city some of the thln~s which should be a part or a well baJanced community. These include, she says, a teen ctn-'. lcr i na centralized area, a public trans- POrtallon stysem. and more industries to broaden lhe tax base. She endorses the city's Top of the Pier Plan which she hopes "will brin,e a ireat. er variety of shops and merchants to tQe be11 ch area which is ver1• lmpres-- sfvelv landscaped and lighted." "If existing property owners can de- velop this area In keepine with the Ur- ban Land Institute's well thought out plan, than hurrah for the American way or Ille." states the candidate. ''I would rathe r see th e property nwn- cr upgrade his own propert'.\". but If he iq unable then he should ~I a' much ror his own good as for that of his fcl· low· man." She caUs for a master plan on apart· ments with full public hearings for resi· <lents of designated areas. Teen Marriage Rules Urged S ACRAl\.fENTO (UPI) Assemblyman James A. Hayes, an author of the 1969 divorce reform law, has moved to make It tougher for teenagers kl get married in California. The Long Beach Republican Wed· nesday introduced a measure requiring both boys,and girls under 18 yea rs of age to 'get written certification from a mar· rlage counselor or clergyman declaring their prior approval. w. County Crusade Set Five Groups Organize United Fund Ca1npuign l'ive charity organlwtlons have joined to torm the West Orange County United Crusade ii was announ~d Wednesday. The merging organiiations are the \Vest Orange County United Fund, rep resent Ing Ga rd en G r o v r:, \V~stminster. Fountain Valley and Sea l Etnch. and the Huntington Beach Com· mi.nlty Chest. ' !>resent at a ~press <COQfetcnce Wed-' ne!lf'lay announcing the merger ·were m11 yor1 or three of the cltle' pack Green! of llunlington Beach. Kathryn t.. Barr, G.trden Crove au~ Edward J~t. Foun· taJn V1dley . Arranglns the formation Of the new organl11tlon were George l:JQrold. 1!169 prr.sldent or the West OraP41'.c County Uni ted Fund and Stephen Hold en, 1!169 pr~sident of lhe Community Chest or 27 at the annual award and recognition I lunllngton Beach. b.'.i.nquet at Oisneylant: Hotel. ~ignlng the merger agreement were F 1970 Community Chest President Walter eehan heads the united group. Serving ~~. Young. manuger of employment for wilh him are Young, Westmlnater Pollet ?i.fcDonnell Doug/a.' AstronauU~s,and 1970 Ch.ief Conner CollacoU, Ralph Pagter, lfr.hed Crusade President Jack Feehan. Harold Johnson, John ~Land, a. J. 1lli.trict manager. Southern Counties Cas Kclisky,. L, A. Goflins Jr., .Or. Paul Co Ber¥er. C. E. -W~!i,' CIJ)tlln F.' F The signing solictUJed ~n ~!fprt . this. Je'Yetl , ll, llow.~rd . Maf~y. Norma~ ywr when, ,~s tn1• clima:r to five _months -. Hunsler, ,Hokle9; Jack .. C.irns,. and ~r•~ of cooperation, tht' two ' organµa,tlons Shtldon, Singer. ra1.std in excess ur $465,000, a 10 .perci:nt. \VDUain F. Lenigan ls 1irea crusade increase over 19"...8 cumpalgn1. chalnnlr\ for 1970-71. outgoing Hunth111:ton Beach Chest Main ofrlce ol the group Is the COm- f're!iid~nt llolden hailed the new effort 1.1 munlty Service Center, 114l2 Sta;rl nt a ''more eff,klent o~ratlon." Avenue, Garden Groye. A Huntlo on tnstl!llolion t ofllcer1 or the newJy ' Beach branch office will be local at f1 rmcd United Crusade wl\I bt held l"eb. 111582: Beach Boule vard, Suite 211. ·' I\ A major fire was narrowly averted \Vhen the Cherokee's fuel tank plum· meted through the roof of a furnJture wartbouse ana splattered over packing cases:, but failt!d to erupt in (lames. Ont wlng and a wheel came to rest on the roof, while Foss' body and asaorted other debris smusbed into the parking lot outside the flnn. Other bits of wreckage landed on the adj~cent freeway and F I r e s t o n e &ulevard, according "to police. 1'he accident was the first lnvolvlnl: the radio tower. Ra1io Station KFI remained on the air following the accident. SHE'S IN THE RUNNING COuncll ,Canllluto Gol~tn H unt:ington Lass Double Winner In Junior Fete Huntington Beach'.s Rhonda . Martyn took another step toward the Callfbmia Junior Miss title by capturing fil'Bt place in phys:lcal fitne ss competition Wednesday night in Santa Rosa. That makes two events (poise and ap- pearance ·,,vas the other ) the Marina HJgh Scboo/ senior has won in the week-long contest. She' has a chance to succeed Jackle Benington , her friend latt year .at Marina, as California's Junior Mills, Ke!nneth Martyn: Rhonda 's rather. said' this morning ijle ~ntire fa~i/y is "very proud Of her and what more can we. say." "She's hsving a good lime in Santa Rosa and it's a good experience for her. That's what is important," said Martyn. He also txpained the method of com- rieUtion eml)loyed In.Judging_ in the-Santa Rosa Junior College Auditorium, site. of the Jaycee event. A total of 54 girls are competing , he explained. On Sunday, all were intro- duced, 'then divided into three groups for competition during the week In three cat· egories -poise and appearance, talent and physical. fitness. , Tuesday night, Rhonda won first In poise and aJuiearance in her group. Wed- nesday s~e took honors in ·physical fit· neu. · Tonight she · and her competitors will be judged " in· lhr: talent· category. While Rhonda was· winning her share in two categories, the two other groups were al.!O competing (or similar honors: C)'n. thia Palmer of Turlock also has been a double winner. capturing honors l"n phya. ical fitness and talent. A fourth event competed In by all girls is scholarship. Tile new Juni'or Miss of California will be named Saturday. Judges win first list three winners lb e&ch catigory as 'vell as the scholarship winners. Then one gU:l will be chosen tops ~n Poise., talent and physical fitness. respectively. The neJV junior miss wilt be selected' from that group. Magic Sho'v Set In Tri·Ci'ty Y Ifs ma~c -and lbe trl-clty YMCA . serVln1 Fountraln. v1'ney, Westrn1nlttr a~ Seal Beach will prOYe tt this ·St.&m .. day. • I ' f • ~· t ::io a.m. Todd Michael, a reglst'erlld , ma)Jlcl;ln,. wtlt start an eight-weell: ma;lc club (or boy• and girls t-12 years old. The Trl-<lly YMCA sponsored club will mep Satuntay1 in the West Or1ng11; County YMCA building. 14771 lltoch Blvtl .. Westminster. Cost or t}!e eftht .. wctk m:iglc course is $10 for YMCA ,... .. ;;,!'for" 11n<1 $12 fnr Mn·memhcts. • DAILY Pl~OT H ' ' Yablonski · Driver Drunk? B'avasu Honey While most Ot ~e nation struggles.through a. rouah \l.'inter, Nancy Sims, perched on a piece Of London Btldge, soaks -up sunshine at Lake Havasu City OQ the lower Colorado River where the bridge is being rebuilt. NB!lcy obviously bu one jump on the bridge builders -she's fully assembled. Cities League Continues Fight ·on Harbor Dist1·ict The Orange County Leal"• of CtUea ha1 pot abandoned !ta drive to put the future of the CCJUDty Harbor Diatr:lct to a "ote of the people, leasue Prr.sldent Jack Green sald Wednffday. College Okays Building Funds A $293,000 budget ror a prefabricated district adminlslration building was a~ provf!d Wednesday night by Orange Coast Junior College District Trustets. Bids from relocation building manllfac· turers will be sought lmmedtately and It ls hoped the move of administrative and business functions that involve both the Orange Coast College and Golden West College campuses can be made by Au· gust. The administration bullding is to be lo- cated on a one-acre plot west of the OCC football stadium at Adams Street and the campus 'jS" Street. Administrators, including Chancellor Dr. Norman Watson, currently are housed in a 1939 "tem porary" buildi ng built for the Santa Ana Army Air Base v.•hich Jater became the OCC campus. Space Is shared "ith the OCC campus adminlstrallOn "'hich will remain behlnd in the old building. The board of trustees Wednesday niaht employed Lang and Wood of South La- guna as landscape architects for the ad- ministration building. William Blurock and Partntra of Corona del Mar•l& Uie architect. The proposal is to lease-purchase the building. spreading payment over four years. The buildlng will be suitable for use as classroom space when and If a permanent admlnJstraUon building Is con- structed, Dr. Wat.son said. DAILY PILOT Green's i tatement w11 prompted by an a&Sertlon by Alton Allen, chairman of the county Board of Supervisors, as the result ot a meeting recently, neither the cities. or county \\'anled an election. Greep said Assemblyman John V. Br.Ina' (R·Fullerton) \fOUld introduce a bill toon. JX1$1lbly today, to put dl1&0lu- .tion of Uie. Harbor District as a aep.arate tax.in1 qency~ a vote. A!Jen ·S sl.alement ca me du r Jn g Tuesday's meeting of the county board. fie told of a session attended by himself, Su pervisor . \Villlam Hlrstcln, Harbor Olstrict ~1anager Kenneth Sampson, and officials of Huntington Beach, Newport Beach and Westminster. Green said a proposal discussed at the meeting had nothing to do with the league's move to get the Issue to a vote. Allen said proposals came out of the meeting to expand the district's funclions to include recreation and parks, expand the boundaries of the district to include all of the countv, and add two members to lhe Harbor Commission to be named by the League of Cities. The five-member commiulon naw in- cludes a representative or each s11pervisorial district. Kennedy Group P lans Cai· W asl1 The Robert F. Kennedy ~temorial Society will stage a car '''ash Saturday and Sunday rrom 10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. at Harry's Gulf Station. Edwards Street and ~1cFadden Avenue, flunllngton Beach. An yone is ln\'iled to have their car washed for 99 cenl.8 to ralse funds for the Kennedy Society's community programs. Svalstad First To Enter Race In V alley Incumbent City Councilman Bernie Svalstad was the first cahdldate to pick up an application for the April 14 council ~lion this morning at Fountain Valley City !hill. Candidates ha ve until Feb. 19 to pick up applications and return th~m to the cl· ty clerk if they want to run for cily cowr ell. The two other lncumbentl up for elec- tion th.ls year, Geor1e Scott and Mayer Edward Just, have said they wlll seek re· election and are upected to plck up ap- pllcatlons thla week. No one else bas publicly announced an intention to run for the counclL Feb 19 Final Date for April Voter Signup February 19 la the Jail clay resi4enla can register to vote in any of sever•! local elections scheduled for April 14 in Huntington Beach, Fountain Valley, Seal Beach and Westminster. In order to register a resident must be 21 years old by the date of the election (Aprll lt), a U.S. cltlztn tO day1 prior. a resident of Califomla one year, and a r.a!ildent of one precinct "-~~Y}_,pi;ior to lhe elecUon. . , · •• . • Voters reilftered in OTittae" Cowlty who have moved since thelt last reifa:tra~ tion may r~reaister by mall. ~otere who have chaJlled preclncls ln the aame city must re-regltter. FOr further·lnfonnation call the Voter'• Registration office in Santa Ana, 962--'2i24, or your local city hall. four city council election& and one school tax rate election are liiCheduled April It in this area. Four Huntinrton Beach City Council ~eats will be up th is April. Some Huotlngton Beach residents •lso will be asked by the Huntington Beach City (elementaey) School Disl.rict to ap- prov e two tax overrides tolaling $1.90 per $100 assessed valuation. In Fountain Valley, three city council seats will be the line. In Seal Beach. lhree council seats are up, "'bile lhe Westminster councU race invo lves two seats. Heds Seek Offensive SAIGOl'T (AP) -The Viet Cong's pro- visional revolutionary government has held a nieeling and called for a coun· trywide offensive against all ied forces, the secret Liberation radio aaid today. The broadcast reported the meeting \\'al held in mid.January under l he chairmanship of Huynh Tan Phat, who heads the Viet Cong re&ime. OltAH~C COAlT l'll.Li,HIMO c.o.Y.ftAM'f' 1to~el'f N. Weed ,.,,,: .. 111 •114 l'llllllt!W $10,000 in Drug Haul Jtclr It Cu,f•Y Vlot ,.,_.,.,, ettf ~ti M_,.. Tilot'lltt K•t~ll '"let Tit•"'•~ A. M•rplii11e ""-"'''"' l lflter >.llo•rl W. ltlt1 Ao&eleft 11111"' H••lllft•• ...U Office llt1' l•t•h l •ulr<'trd M•lf\119 >.cli1tnt P.0 , l •it 7,0, •1141 o""" Oflfk• L..-.. K~i ttf ,.,_,,,A~­ (D~!f MIMI JlO Vl'HI a1y ""'' frll.,.,or( lktdl; l!ll W•I 11•1--8G~le11tr• ,.... Sho wn by Mesa Police By ARTJIUR lt. VISSEL Of 1114 0.l!Y '"'' $l1H Stra11:glers misi;ed in 48 hours of roun· riing up suspected campus drug dealers were sti ll goo~ht today. as Costa li-tesa POiice put on rtisplsiy $10,000 ..-.·orth of con4 traband seized, from mild to deadly varieties. The table full of narcotics could turn on the ,. ... tire city. Otlecllves arrrsled one more adult and fou r juveniles Wedne&day, meanwh.11e, bringing the total ciiptured to 2:2;, with thrte m<l'e named in unserved arrest warrants. +- One 1a.year-old adult WD!I arraigned \\'fflnesd~v 1n Jfarbor Olstrlcl Judlcl11I Court, while the others have posted ball and are due Mfote the bench next week. ~Jtobert WhltMOle, 181 of 27$$ Portola Drive, Coe;ta Meaa, w•s arrest.ed on a ch arge or sale of marlju.tna Wfdnesday, as o re!lnll of Uie slx·week probe of dru&· dealing at tll'O campuses. Det<'clh·c Capt. Bob Gretn said tod!\Y wht.n questioned that the mass roundup btllJn Tuesday mtJmlng does not Jnvoh•t an actual ring, such a1 the underworld syndlcal c·l»Pf operation. "You couldn't start out with a pyramid of organization and lrace it to any one person," said Capt. Green. \\'ho added that moat or the suspects do know each other. The 18 juvcriite boys and girls in r11stody are from both Costa f\fesa and Estancia high schools, hut t\\'O \\'ere pi"k· ed up Wednesday incidentally to the orll{lnal Investigation . Most are charged "'ilh sale of dangerous drugs. lnvol\•ing heroin, LSD, mescaline, opium, barbiturate and emf'!hl!tamlne pills. hashish and asM>rted liquid <'nmpound s. One chunk of hash alone .-the potent. reJlned sap of the marijuana plant -Is '''orth $1,100, Dtteclire Norm Kutch dlsclo~ed as the array was la id out \\IMnesday. S~ial agents wore used by the i:xillce dcpirtment In 1ntht.rlng f"vidtnce prior f\'I r.,suance of arre~t warrants by Herbor Distrl<·t Judi cia l Court Judae Donald Di •rigan. tnvesligalors said more than one 1ale "'al made on lhe Estancia lligh School ('8mpus baseball field ai. tbty \\'ate.bed lht" lr•n•ectlon from 1 distance. One of lhe three, Claude E. Vealey, 17, Is under lndlctment with Ptlilllps on a burJ[lary charge In Youoastow{I, Ohio, in another case. Other llOW'ces. reported Yablooski's killers were paid more than Q,000 ei¢1, ... ,t it w1;1 not known who hired them . The grand jury is trying to find out. Vealey, PauJ E. OUly, 36 ; and Aubtan W. MarUn , 13, are char&ed with the murder of Yablon•kl, a Jont(ime United Mine Worker1 Union olflclll, an4 bls wife and daughter. None of the three mtu baa appearad befott the arand Jury, althoqgh the wives of Gll\Y and Martin teltilJed Wedneaday. For Volunteer Foree Reserve Army· Boost Seen · WAS!llNOTON (AP) -Secretary of Deferu:e Melvin R. Laird said today that to attain an all-volunteer force, the Unit- ed Stat.ea would have to cut Its armed .streng'th down close to two mllUon men and spend beavtly on a strengthened Na· Uonal Guard and Reserve . This would represent a slash of nearly 1.3 million from the present level of U.S. forces. "I persorially believe th at you have to get down to a level, before you can i;i:et down to an Bil-volunteer !lervice, near the two million mark," Laird told a youth group ol the Pentai{on. The lowest figure he previously has in· dicated as the target for an all.volunteer, draftless force. was 2.6 million men. about 100,000 fe\\•er than U.S. anned strenjlth when thii country became ln· volved on a major scale In the Vietnam war. Laird said a two-mllllon-man force could not meet U.S. obligations unless. at the !ame time. measures were taken to bulld up the National Guard and Re-- serve to bat"k up the smaller regular: mllltary establlslimtnt. ' He spoke of a "tremendous expense'' as being i>eeded to malntaln an adequa te reserve. "I'm not sure "'e have . . . .support presently for that kind of fi.Jndlng In the O,ngreu." Laird !&Id. · A presidentia l commission headed by former Secretary of Defense Thomas S. Gates Is winding up a year.Jong manoow. er study. Jt Is expected to report to Prtl'!l- dent Nixon "'ilhln 1 few ""eeks on Its proposals for moving to an all-volunteer force and 1w1y ffom the draft. · Recently. sources on the commission ·Indicated the rrouP was -about ready to proppae rpeasu~s. lnelud~ htgheJ'.' pay for rim enlistment troops, designed to attain an aJJ.voluntffr force of about 2.S million men. But .crttlca ln the Defenae Pep1rtment conltnded these propoaalt, with a price tag of about $4 billlon, wen unreali!~c . There ware 1'Porll thlt th• comm!salon has betn restudying some ol It! tdeu be· fore aubmltting lb report to Nixon. Mrs. Hanson to Leave Japan for Home Friday Frem Wlre Serv1ce1 TOltYO -Nearing the end of their mercy miaalon around the world, the wives of four missing American pilots teamed today that J a p a n e 1 e newspapermen may hold the key to leatnlng their fate. Mrs. Carole Hanson, of 24112 Blrdrock Drive, El Toro, and her Los Angeles County traveling companions , will depart from Japan's capital Friday for their Southland homes. The group which has ~ought word of the fate of their husbands in a dozen foreign nations met for 30 minutes \\'ith Vice F"orelan Mtnisler Nobuhiko Ushiba. Los Angeles television pe1'60nallty Robert Donnan, who has accompanied the four on their odyssey, revealed that the cabinet official said Japanese newsmen may obtain the answers. They have been met with sympathy, but little else in other capitals. "He (Ushiba) suggested that neulral Japanese newsmen frequently visit Hanoi ancJ that he hoped that they would inquire Dorman. · With Dorman were Mrs. H1naon, 30, and Mrs. John Hardy 27, Mrs. Rooaevelt Hestle Jr., 37, and 1.1rs. Arthur Melms, 37, Ill of Los An1ele1. After le1vlnf the fore.Ip ministry, they . returned to their hotel, picked up an ln~ ·. terpreter and drove to a meeting with Mlu Shizue Yamagucltl, parliamentary vice minister of the economJc planning agency. They had lunch wtth Miss Yamaguchi. a fonner socialist who ran &nd won a seat in Parliament as a liberal Democrat in the December elections. The Ca!Uornla women are seeking a meeting with Mrs. Eisaku Sato, wife of the prime minister, but it has not been scheduled. Donnan and the women arrived in Tokyo Tuesday nigh t following stops at Moscow, Paris, New Oelhl, Cairo, Vifn· tiane and Laos. They had lunch Wednesday with Mrs. Armln H. Meyer, wife of the U.S. am- bassador to Japan, and met with Red Cross officials in the afternoon. The women are trying to find out if their husbands are still alive. The North Vietnamese government has reufNd to produce a list of captured Americans. SEMI ANNUAL SALE! For lasting elegance, enhance your home ,with famo us HERITAGE upholstery 15% OFF HERITAGE UPHO LSTERED FURNITURE '"'-aPfolift•td pilClt ftffDN 9'e • ...,._, Utiw itvlin0 end proud Cl'l~lp dwt Nvt mld9 8-'ltlfl • liwlng tradition in fumf-. ture. Th«• 1rt mort thin 175 dealp -ech one• ,..,,. in P1instSinQ worlc~ip ind uqultlte dltalUno. And. to atlsfy your most ...:ting dlleonttll'lf ,._,., thtrt Is , ci'lob of (Nf/( 900 outstanding fabric:a Mid mmt op- tionll dtcomiv1 flll\lfts. Out interk>f' d .. ' ,;..,.,.,, will • lllCtlt hfPPY to ••ift ift your ..i...ion.. -n v OUR llVOLVIN• CH A••• - Your tovorltt iflttrior deiigncr wlU bi hopw to 411itt '101' ••• H.J.G ARRtff fURNITLJRE PROFESSIONAL INTERIOR DESIGNERS Open Men., Thu''·• & . '''· Ev1i.. ' I 2211 HAR80R nvo. COSTA MESA, CALIF. 646-0175 17 i • ' ... • • • Saddleha~k • ' \IP[ 63, "'-0· 24, 3 ,SECTIONS. 38 PAG~S ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA • I < .T.Uy's Final ·1'.Y. Steeks ' TH.URSD.~;(,_JAf'l~ARY 29, 1970. ., . TEN CENTS • • ana-00 • • .. .1xe SEEKS COUNCIL SEAT l!ltun• Planner Tomehak T o'";chak Says He's in Race For Council By BARBAl\.l 'il!EIBICH Of 111t '*Ir ,_ SM" Joseph Tomehak. 4%, vice chairman ol the Laguna Beach Planning Commtssionµl today aMounced his candidacy for the Laiuna Beach City Council. A Laguna Beach resident for the past four years, 'fomchak is a professor of anthropology and· archeology at Orange Coast College and an extension lecturer in environmental studies al UC Irvine. He hi! served on the Planning Commission since 1968 and is a forme it member of the Costa Mesa City Council. Describing himseU as "a specialist in the long-ignored field of human ecology and envlronmenl," Tomehak said, "Re- cent developments COlk.."er,ning Laguna Beach make it imperative that we try to identify what we feel the city should be ..• at one time the cliffs and hi!IJ ·discourag· ed unwise development. Today, we're faced with the hazard of irrevocable people-packing, apartment-slacking e1· ploitation, if we're llQt careft;tl. .. 1 •• As a mtmber of the Planning Com- mission, I feel that maqy of hut-serious concerns for Laguna Beach can be resolved in our favor. Citizen. re~ to the questlonnairc prepared' by the ad· vtsory committee to QUr general plan program has helped poin' our important area5 of concern. The positive side of what's been going on Is that solid citizen input of creative alternatives hu never been hlgher. A good interpretation of how the people feel, plus a knowledge of the problems facing our to"tn are the (See T0~1CllAK, Pace %) ' ·~aguna, Oemente ' ' 'filing Opens With No Takers The city council filing period opened' qUietly in Laguna Beach and San qemente today with no nomination p..,ers picked up in a late pre.noon check. Vo~ers will cast their ba.llol! in both cil-JeS, on April 14 lo rill three council Poe;ltions. ; Laguna tenns of Mayor Glenn Ved· d , Vlce Afayor Joseph O'Suntvan and ncilman Richard Goldberg exptrt. V~der has declined to run again. o Ulvan will seek re~lecUon and G dber( probably will. P~ c.m. nissiof\er Joseph Tomehak a1so has an· nouiiced ·NS' candidacy with others ti• · pfctect to ann0tD1ce. • Positions to be filled in San Cltmente arc hekl by one tenn coupcilmen Dan Ctiillon and 'lbomas O'Ket(e. 'J'ht third ls held by Mayor Wade Low..-, retired den· till and councilman since his ap- pO\utrnent Jan. 7, 1951. None have in· ripted whether they wlll seek re-elect\On U)et. San Clemente haa 7,57'1 rtgistered voters. said City Clerk Max Btt'g. jl'hcre •re more U\aa &.000 voters ~stered In La&una with no Urm f\gllre at yeL Registration and ffiln& conUn1tts uulil Feb. 19. I ' El Morro Bus Safety Steps Slated The State Division of Highways is ex- pected to call for bids next month on overhead warning signs and a center ac- celeration lane to improve bus safety for Laguna's El A1orro School. 'J'h\5 was the assessment o r Asserr.blyman ·Robert E. Badham (R- Newport ~ach), . who WllS asked by school district officials to work in behalf of a highway safety program for busloads of children driven onto busy Coast Highway from the school access road. Although there has not been a bus ac- cident, school offlcials decl.tr .. there have been some near misses as the lumbering buses try to enter the traffic lane! in the vicinity of deadly El Morro curve. Badham noted that a relocation of "'arning signs had been ace<1mplished and said relocation of warning beacons Is underway. A contract has also been let for electrical conduit to power the plan· ned overtiead flashing signs. Howf!:ver, Badham said In a letter to the schoo1 district that a speed survey of traffic past the school had been con- ducted with no plan to change the 50 mile a~ ~ spe~Jiqtfl • • • ..... , ~ f: • D•lt:-f;,1LOT .... ~ ....... ' -• • I "' , • THE SIG/I OF ANOTHER ERA LIES AMl D PILE·OF BROKEN PIPE IN LAGUNA pEACH I • -. ·-:-r ' ~ ' . Bombers Attack North Vietnam Missile Base Pottery Sh~JI Spins'.'to Ualt WASHINGTON (AP) -U.S. Air Force End of 25-year Era Comes for Bra,y~on Center fighter bombers attacked an enemy an· By BAA.BARA DUA RTE tiaircraft missile base Wednesday inside 0t 'llf 0.111 ,.1i.1 51111 North Vietnam after an unarmed recon· naissance plane was fir.ed on by surface· The end of Sn era in the Art Colony lies to-air missiles. the Pentagon announced buried ainong broken pieces of pottery. today. rusting vats, piles of pipe and rubble, and An American F105 Hghter·bomber car· in a.small corner of an upstairs room. rying two men .tnd an Air Force rescue There, on ' seveJal neartly-arrangcd htlicopter were shot down. All crewmen shelves. rests a variety of pieces of are listed as missing. The Pentagon aid unglazed pottery ... replicas of Hummel it did not know bow many were in the children, bowls, vases, a drunk hanging helicopter (Earlit=r Story, Paget) on a lamp, Japanese figurines ... a dan- The incident occurred when an RF4 C cing ostrich laking a bow. reconnaissance plane escorted by several If the ostrich were a swan, she might F105 and Ft fighter-bombers "was taken be .laking a bow for a business which sup· uooer fire by SAM missiles in an area 12 ported many a starving Laguna arlist miles northeast of Mu Gia Pass in North during lean Depression years and pro- Vietnam," Ule' apnouncement said. vided a livlihood for many others. This would' place the \GCatlon just In-The· would-"be. swan could dance to the side North Vleinam. sounds of pop musi.c wafting through the The Pentagon said that escort planes, open, second story frati;iework looking on- <lefending an -unarmed reconnaissance--+ to a pho\(lgraphy sludao. next door. Her craft, "responded by att.acking the SAM spotlight could be hght . ~treamlng Jal.inch site." · through.a gaping ho!~ In the ceiling. Priur to the Pentagon announcement, Next rrionth, ostrich, music and t.hc North Vietnam representatives at Paris s.tudlo next door will be gone ... all vie· accused U.S. planes of raiding North lims of p~ress. . . . Vietnamese territory and called the raid Bratton Po~tery, a quaint bu1Jd1ng a "very gtfve" act of war. anchoring the Art ~nter at the corner of In reply a U.S. State Department Glenneyre and Calbope, has been vacant spokesman acknowledged that recon-~or nearly a. year. Wha~ was on~ a bustl- nai!sance planes and accompanying pro-mg enterprise employing 25 arUsans su f· fered a setback as Japanese poUery flooded the .rila~ket in ,. the 194.0s. but managed fo iustaln itseJf until.last year. But, looking back 41 years, Brayton Pottery griw. like Topsy. along with th~ dreams of its creator, the late Durlln Brayton. Brayton purchased a lot ·in 1927 in the 1400 block of Coast Highway, then an old rock and oil road with very little, travel. With an eye for art., he built a home over a deep gully where the Fleur de Lis now stands. Working as a delivery man for the Los Angel!s Ezaminer in lhe early morning hours and as a carpenter during the day, evenings were devoted to his ~rue love, developing mould! !or casting pottery. ' With $300 borrowed to purchase, a kiln, he produced his first ware!, bright pu[-ple arid yeUow dinner.w.ar..e~Ydltclt..._ h..e dillplayed on a broad fence surrounding the gully. Adding to the home, he was able to in· crP.ase prod~cliol) and his home became a factory . By 1930 Brayton POttery was known nationwide for its arUstic designs. As lhe busines! grew with a payroll of more than $,15,000 in HMO, Brayton moved the ope.ration into the present building (See 81\A\'TON, Page I) tective craft ny over N6rth Vietnam but denied that U.S. bombing of the North hat betn renewed . The Bentagon said one Ft05 Was hit by enemy ground fire, crashed and was destroyed. A spokesman said the F105 was downed by conventional antiaircraft \\'ea pons. Mrs. Hanson to Leave Arrested Laguna Girl Not Held 'A Laguna Beach girl arrested by Costa Mesa nar,colica officers Saturday was freed after questioning, Costa Mesa Po- lice confirmed tod2y. No charges were filecl against Susan -Axelrod. 19, of t76 El Bosque, poliei! "'&lid. She Jfal ~\eel In a-l'l;l<jJlg IQ! ool· . · side li'lllllffan'~ Mntiow lo Co<ta M._.., 'lkwlll wlil!iJ'liuoo·.C Tlleakor. II, ol 1319 Cleo SL and Dooald L. Carlson, 23, ol Collta Mesa. when police who stopped to question the lrlo allegedly found nar- cotics ln lheir car. Sloeok /llarket Nl:W YORK (AP) -Sloe ks Cell sharp- ly today. with declining Issues out.strlp- p:na advances by better than four to one. (See quotations. Pages 2&-27). Pessimiam In the naUoo'1 economic ouUook prevall1 In the market pla~, aay analysts, with lncentlvt: to buy very low. .. • Japan for Home .Friday From Wire Serv:et1 TOKYO -Nearing the end of their mercy mission around the world. the wives of four missing Americarr pilots learned today that J a p a n e s e newspapermen may hold the key lo learning their fate . ~trs. Carole Hanson, of 24112 Birdrock: Drive. El Toro, and her Loi Angeles County traveling companion1, will depart from Japan's capital Frklay for their Soothlaod bomf;s, The sroUP whidl 'has sought word ol the fate -or their husbands tn a dozen foreign nations met fOr ao mlnut.ea with Vice Foreign ~1in11ter NObubiko Utblba. Los Angeles lelevtsion • person:illty Robert Dorman, who bu ace<1mpanied the four on their ody11ey, '°"vealed that the cabinet official laid Japanese. newsmen may obtain the-answers. They have betn met with 1ympathy, but little else In other capltals. "He (Uahlbal sun.SW thot neljtrol Japanese newsmen frequently vls~t Hanoi ant: that ht hoped that they would Inquire Donnan. With Dorman were Mr•. Hanson. 30, and Mrs. John ltardy 27, Mn. Roo1evelL > -. . Hettie Jr., 37, and Mrs. Arthur f\.fearn~. 37, all of Les Angeles. Arter leaving the foreign ministry, they returned to their h0te1, picked up an in· terpreter and drove to a meeting with Miss Shizue Yamaguchi , parliamentary vice mlnlster of the economic. planning agency. . They had lunch ' with M1ss Yltmaguchi, 1a ;rormer aoclallst who ran and Won a seat In ParUamenL as a liberal Democrat in'lhe ~ber ei«llOflS', 1'he · C.lif(l'tlla women art aeeking i meetini: with Mrs. Elsaku Salo, wtf~ or the prime rrllni!lter, but it bu not been scheduled. · Don;nan and the women acrived In Tokyo Tuesday nl&}lt fonowtng 1lopii at. ~fotcow, Paris, Ne# Delhi, talro, Vien• Ilene" ind Laos. They had lunch \Vtdnesday wJth Mrs. Annl.n ll . Meyer, wife of tht: O.s. ~m­ bassador to Japan, aDd qtet With Red CroM oUlclals Jn the afternoon. The women are tryin& to (Ind out If their husbands are stlll allvt:. The North Vletnamcse government has 1 eufted to produce a list of captured Americans._ ,. , ·1-i: NILY "''"'°' ..... . . - SADNESS ltlFLiC:flD-<. ! r-• • 18r1yton FllUrlne • • - Fire Hits Carrier BOsTON CAP) -,, Flreli1htels: had lo cut nuinholc-slz.ed boles. In two decks of the aircraft. carrier WM{> early lOday to get at a stUbbc.im nre ln a star111e area. The two.alarm blo:r.e bu~d throuah stored maUresstS afl4 bunk. 1inern1 on the foUrth deck below the main deck before ~Ing contained by 1 lcrm of !O Boston fl,re fi&hltrs . , ., -,cl ' I.. '*ew Study ' Requested By-Ll\FC - By JOANNE.REYNOLDS Of .... oelt ""' ...... • Proponents o( the Caplstrlno Beach· Dana Point incorporation were temp- orarily turned down Wednesday by the Local Agency Formation Commllllon whlc.h told them to redraw ~ boun-- daries and restudy economic feaaibility ol. incorporation. before appearing before the board again. The bid for cltyhood was 11den.led without prejudice" after three houri o( testimony before the comrula&ion. Mais-"'' . .. . tant County Counsel W. J. McCourt. said by taking such aCtion comnuulon members have made It possible for the. incorporation group to reappear at any lime. If the request had been fiatly denletl, incoorporation proponents would have to wait a year before filing a&ain. Several problems in the plan presented to the ~ission wert note;<t by com· mission Chairman David Baker. He· cited c;onQ!cllni bolmdarles of opeclal ""'"ty ~ce dlsfn'ctl wilhin 1he .,.., boun· dary change! dut to incorporatioa dele- tion !'ll•esi, .from ~-and !hf need tor a mon compitte ec.omic leulblll[y aludy of tbe .,... altar the -.... ·=illf to your re)X)l't," he told Ill-ts, "~ wW lllitfll!lo ·• diy tu ... '&II: ilhil eoid>ty """'"" dlltrlctl' bo dillolvtd. Unlartunat<!y blsloty· lbiJwa us that ~ special dlltrlc)a do conUnue so you wJD hav~ a caae of dtllble taullon." "cCourt. said the. Jdltrlcta In question can·only be dl~lved by special elections ~nenta ·Or' J¥iiP,oratlon: led by Dr: Roaer ' SA~rsqn and attorney Bernt Lo6r-Schroidt said incorporation w0uld help preserve the individuality of the community. Dean Evans ~ho made .the economle feuiblllty report far Incorporation said in 1970-71 the city · would reee:ive 1 abQut $278,000 In rivepue and .w®ld have close lo $280,000 in expenJes for items such as police. ~·~ recoll)lTlended a cl\y tu lo balance the buqet and "build a fund reserve." Opponents or the lncorporatlon aaid they were pleased with county control ot the area and lllf.iited incorpcratlon would onty bring "another layer of. goverrunent and tues that we don 't need." Bloodmobile Due In iaguna Beach The American Red Cross Bloodmobile haii scheduled a vlail to Laguna Beach on Mi>nday, Feb. 2, from 2:,30 to 7 p:m. The bloodmobile will be stationed outside the Commuplty Pr!sbyterian Church, tl5 ,Fort.st Ave. and donors who wish to ma~appoln;nwnta ma)\ do so by calling tH-6557 , '1. '- Red CrOSI coordinator Mrs. Mary DoWner and ·vt1lunteera froin South Coast CommUnity ltospltal ·are, attemptina to coot.act all eligible donors in the Lquna area to help repllce dwlndUna blood sup. " plies. DonaUons may be alllpecf' to in- vididual, club, or.or1anizaUon •CCOU!lls. Or•nge c ... , ' ·Wea~er The' hot ·wtnds slow down to- night, but the bot weaUw con. , Unues (by day) Info 'Friday - lomperalum hilllnf '10, but link· ng lnlo fhe 30'• bf, DlchUaJI. INSIDE ftMY Europ«an ntwlpaper1 looked ot Pruid"'t Nhon.11 /trit .,._ ~ brtf of ~le IUCCfll bl&t there wo.a nurvoUon '" &ht frafae . Page 1. • " • ..... .. " " " • " """ .. " IN,,. "119M II ..... ii --. --... -.:.:" : I!!!! ... . --........ . ·-" ....... " -. """"'" """ ,,,,, --.. • • • I .. -......... _ _.. -...1-·----------"'------"""---~~-~-~-~--------..:.._...;._ ... ;_,; ... _ _. _______ ... ___ ...,._ ___________ _ ' . Trudeau Takes Star to Ballet O'l'TAWA (UPI) -Prime Minster Pierre EltioU Trudeau took Barbra Streisand out in Ottawa Wednesday night !or an evening of ballet and buUalo arrive;d at the modern cultural complei, Tl'U!!eau jumped out of his seat and dodg· ed past Royal Canadian M~ Police to personally open the door for Miss Streisand. burgers. ~"wa$chlpg a performance of the Mi5s Stuisand, an Oscar winner for -Roy¥ 'Winnipeg Ballet .C om p a n y • ''Furuiy Girl," dated the 50-year-old Trudeau' and Miu Streisand went to the bachelor prime mb:Uste.r last fall wben be salon Of the, attl center and sampled visited New York City. 6he was tradlilo~ Maitlloba foodl, including Trudeaa's surprise guest at a program bur1en ma4e from buffalo meal \Vedne&day martt111 the centennial of the When they lilt a televWon reporter province of ManitobL asked him , "When are you,,Olng to have Trudeau, In even.Ing· clothes, and Miss her b;lct ~-again?" · Streisand, wearlrig a kJw-eut Jong white Trudeau did not reply, but Miss gown, with a short fur·trimmed jackeL Streisand·)~ over from within the cir and white fur b.rt and muff, were among and said, "You're 5UJ>PO$ed to aay 'arrest hundreds of VIPs at the National Arts that man''"" - a re~erence to Trudeau 's Center. si;i m·eume public ire at newsmen for ask· When tfte prime minister's limousine ing him shout hls personal life. Cyclist Hurt; Mowrist Cited in Lag"'na Crash . " A oolUDon betw.een a car ani:f, I motorcycle on South Cout Highway Wed- nesday arternoon resulted Jn a dlation for a young Laguna ~ach driver and a trip to the hoopltal for the cycliot. Eric Joseph J.,.ph, %1, of Lakew9!t'1, Ohio, was treated at South Coast Com· munlty Hospital for cut hand! and an ankle injury after be was knocked from From Page I BRAYTON. • • which was built In 1939. Through the Depm:l'le11 years the buslne1s hWlg on, providing an Income for some 30 Art Colony residents and royalty checks for artlst.s who designed better-selling plett! such as Brayton's famous Purple Cow. ·rollowtng the war, the government set the Japanese up with equipment to pro- duce pottery, a move that was to drive some 60 artisans in Laguna Beach out of busineu and provide W&J'fl for major· retailers which Operate today. Next month, contractor Jim Schmitz will raze the 1~451)..sqlWe·foot bulldJng to make way for eight new Art Center shops laid out in an L-shaped configuratlon. Designed to blend In with the rustic al· mosphere of the 25 pr~t ship!, the building will still cater to the arb, ii in a different sense. DAIL\' PILOT Olt.ANCil. G0.UTPUILl4HIMG UJ/U/IJfY "•~•" N. 'Wnl ~NllllMt .............. J., .. 1. c ... 1.,. v.-.... ~..,.~.1.....,. n-•• ec ..... u I.titer lh•""'' A. M1,.~hift, Mt~ .. lllt Cd1l9< ~ic~t•d P. Ntll Lt.-lt•dl Cl•,hltor ~ .... ·~ llJ fo•t•I A~.~~· 1r4,;1;ft, Add,_.,, t .O. lor '''· fl6$l 0...... Offlcu Ctttt ~· J• ..,...., It,'''"' "......,, iw.oi: 2111 ..... , ••""'-............ ...,._,._ &ai.uu lllfi 1...u. •~"'•1 • ,.,.... f7141 ..... ,." cw.-.....,..MJ-4Jl1 <...,,....,. ...., 0-. ONtt ~ '-"-· ... ~ ,..,..., m,...,.,-., .. 11 .. 1.. _.... .. .. .... ~., !IP ... .... , . ·~ ................ -· -.. ................ -. .._ U..• _,,.. .. i. "' """'""' IMClll' -(fol .. .._.,.., c.i .... ft .. , ...,_,_. ... ., .......... ., ~ltl ., 11'1>11 ... ,. ~, ~ ,...,..,,,.-_ NM ,,.,.,tft., • ..,, . ' hii; motorcycle -as be tode north on the hJghwiy 1t ·3 "p.m. Mary Lucinda Saw)'er. 19, or 51 Lagunila. whose car collided with the cyclist, said she failed to see ~im ap- proaching as she turned left onto the highway from Nyes Place. ~be will be cited f<I' failure to yield right of way, police uJ4 Ah ambulanCe sli'm WU bllined for an . earlier ·~ent on )i~. Which resulted ln damaae to lwo cars, but no lzl.. juries to their drivers. oi1Jie Fiedrtck Sayer, SI, of Hollywood tolcl: police he wu northbound on Sooth . . . Coast lfiltiWay al 11:20 a.m. when he heard a siren and looked around to aee where it originated In so doing. Sayer liaid. be failed to see that ~ tt.dflc signal pn Bluebird Canyon Drive had changed to red. . He attempted to stop but wu too late to avoid striking a vehicle drive by Laua Ch°', 17, of Anaheim, who was turning le(t onto the hlghw1y from Bluebird, . police said. Sayer was cited-for failure to stop at !he red light llmll line. From Page l TOMCHAK ..• qualifkJUons we should look for in the candidaae&." Tomehak 1?121kes his home al 330 Cajon 'Terrace with his wile, Sandra, and their three children. Daphne, 11, a senior at Laguna Beach High School, John, 15, a sophomore at the hi&b achoo! and Oanlel, 14 a fre.stunan. A member of several archaeological and anthropological professional aS&OCI .. lions, Toml;hak directed the l:xe1vatlon on the st~ :Ann's Drive site where Laguun Howard Wilson discovered the "La~ Man" and alto d Ire ct s archaeological excavations on Irvine Ranch for Orange Coast .:Ollege. A graduate of Ohio State UnJverslty, he "'On his M.A. degree at California State t.ollea:e in Long Beach and his Ph. o; at tl.e University of Neuchatel l n Switurland, where his doctoral dJsserta· tic.n wu aa analysts of the growth ind devei~ ol coutal towns ID an at· tempi to Identify aimllarltl•• ol paU•m between thotl of Clllfomla'1' IOl.rthem cwll and !he Medllerruun cout ol f'rlll)Ce- tn UMl-62 Tomehak was awarded a Na· tlcnal Sdtnct FoundlUon grant at the Ur1lversity of Southern California for an analysts: or the Southern Califomla C'Oastline and Jn 1963 a similar grant at l'C Berkeley for 1 &ludy of an· U1ropoll glcal upec:b of envtronmcnt. He "·as a fulbrlght e.xcllan1e scholar h1 1963·64, lecturing I n envlronmenhll :-:udles at Cambridge Un I v er !11 I y. t.ngland, under the auspices or the U.S. S1alc Department. Tomehak Is firrt vice pre!ldent of tha Laguna Beech Civic Lea&lfe, a mei;abtr of St. Catherine's Church and of the Sier· r:· riub. I ' . • ··Yablonski , Driver ? Drunk. ' .. ~ .. . .. -~ ;,.'E;!J l .4 gents Test~fy He Hit.'?~~?-~~~ i~ ~W"J!~: .. ·,,;.; : ~ (!rel) ,.._ i. •cudill1 lrlfo, MMpret, il, and his daughler, lrom ihe~river. · 'o.O of ll:.1 !Jim. Cliuae.E. Ve ey:11. • ~~Pi· i~ ~ ullkio ol· , a.ulotte ~ were 111'1~ the getaway Soun:es said Phill~ ,..., auppooed to la under lnd1clment .. PbJlllps on .• • . · · _,.. ,. • , , ' ' • hive been the driver Of the car but pulled 'buritlary charge In Younptown, Ohio, m flda Joseph A. Jock Yab!on!kt and his driver,· his refleJes slowed by alcohol, out and was replaced by another man another case. wife and daughter were murdered was sideswiped two guardrails near the home who received $2.000. It was alllG repo(ted Other sources reported Vablonsk.l's nearly disrupted because the driver of the as be drove away. / the trigger man Jn the slaylrigs reCt.lved killer! were paid more'than h,000 each, getaway car a:otdrunk, il was learned tO-James C. Phillips, "2. who allegedly $1,700. ""tit was. not kno-:n who .hired them. day. backed out of I.he plot to kill Yablonski Two FBf ai;:enls escorted Phillips to the The grand Jury-Is try1ng to find out. fi~BI agents told a fed~ral grand jury and then told the story to I.he FBI. "'as courthouse Wednesday for his one-hour Vealey .. Paul E. Gilly, 36; and Aubran the getaway driver liat in the auto outside rtpcrted to have told the.grand jury how appearance. W. Martin, 23, ar~ char1ed with jthe the Yab!onski's ClarQvWe, Pa., home the slaylngs were rehearsed. Phillips' testimony, like that of all murder of Yablonski, I lona-ttme UnJ&ed drinking beet and ~ the empty beer The rehearsal Included the tossing of C>tbers·here, was secret. But IOUrcts said, Mine Wori~ Union of~ial .. tld his wif• cana on the lawn. T~y said fingerpri.nU dummy weapons into the Monongahela Phillips wu In on the ortg~ plot.. 1hen and dauah~1 NODll cl tbe f:bret men ))as IOUDd on the beer cana helped lead to !he Rlvor about Ove miles from the pulled out al the laot mlnute'and pY4 the appemd belore ~ ~"'1 iUr,1. a~ arrest of three ampect.s. YabloMki home. An MI rifle and a .31 FJll infonnation that led to the arrests the wltes O!" G~ anq Mll'Ub teswK111 The agents saJa alter Yablonski, 59, bla caliber revolver have been recovered last week of three men. Wednesday. Dana Institute For Marine Studies Marked A IJ!p marks the spot In Dana Point Harbor. . It is a three"acre spot deatiDed to house A Marine Studies tn&titute, innOvaUve in · · its educational approach to oceanocraphy and !he rm of its tlnd 1n the u.s. The 11ign was positioned Wednesday in a brief ceremony attended by county. sctlool and university officiaJ:s. A three. day fonnal dedication of the 1ile will be held May I, 2 and 3. It Is to include visiLs by Navy shtps, Cmdr. Don Walsh of !he Trleot, un- derwater eKploration vessel a n d ocemqrapllen from Scrlppr lnstlbzte in La Jolla. . Sludents of llllrine science from Capistrano Unified Schoof District will plate exblblll. San Clemente fishing boats wru take visitors on harbor tcNrs alll! acuba diving shows will be held. The institute la unique in the fact that it wQl offer oc!anographic educaUon to students from kindergarten through university graduate work in all or Orani;:e County aod tventually, all Southern California. Dr. Andreu 8. Reehnitzer, pmldenl of the lnsUtute'1 board of trustees, said sotne cluswort is to be held on the site before the laboratory before t h e laboratory and classrooms are built. Tidtpooil of San Juan Rocks are adjacent to the location. A fwd-rallinl campalp wm be con· ducted ·by trustffl of Capistrano Unified School Diltrlct and others to obtain fund> for the project which is expected to cost $3 million. Land for pie ln~tltute was Biven by,courity· supervisoriaJ·eetlon. AUendlng .. the Wednesday algn place- ment were Dr. Reehnltzer, Dr. Robert Peterson, cOunty superintendent o f !lchools, Kenneth Sampson, director of harbors beaches and parks for the coun· ty, and institute trusteea Raymond Oliver and Robert W. Scholler. New Turtle Rock School Building Begins in March COnJlrucllon Is expected to betlln in March on the new Turtle Rock· Efemen- lary Schor!. Trustees of the San Joaquin Elemen. tary School District aettpte_d a la"I! bid of $863 000 Gl!bmitted by Harwick ant. Son of New1port Beach at a special meeting Wednesday. The bid must first be approved by the stale, acoordtng to Finance Director Rex Nerlson. Then construction can begin. The sChoOl ls erpected to be completed around the flrlit of neJ:t year. Nerison said children will be using t:.e school as r.oon as it is completed, even if they have to move midterm. Jn other business. the board approved lhe application for state funds for a pro- ject allowable under the Elementary and Secondary Education Act, TiUe Ill. . Mrs. Marilyn Harris, director of in· structional services, said the proposal will be for an integrated language arls program. Mrs. Harris explained that the new program will take traditional langu~e skills such as grammar, spelling, reading and creative writing and will put them together. The end r~ll will :r>e better communlcalion bot.b written an .. ora1. Water District Transfer Oka yed The county's Local Agency FormaUon Commission Wedneliday approved the proposed transfer of county Water Workt District No. 4 lo lhe City of San Juan Capistrano. Most of the di.strict lies wlLhin city boundaries. ExcepLions are Dana Kpolll in the aouthwest corner and another ma in the northern most section of lhe distrkt. Commission members exprtSJtd concern that residents of tbe areas t..1.1t.side lhe city limita woulJ nol rteelve equal treatment Ir the district weft aive.o to city control. James Okau.kl, special counsel for S..n Ju11n C4plstrano. !iakl city ofOdall "were attultly aware of th(' protlen1 ot these people." He proposed that an advisory \\•alJ!r district con1mlas!on be formed con· slsling of two members from outside I.he city llmtls and thr~ from Inside and thnt lhere be no dlUerence in rates for rasldents of lhe outlying area!. LAFC mc1nber1 approved and aent lhe entire propo~al to the eot.~l.y Board of f ...,.rh·•,,,." t .. r f1 .. ·1l 1>Ctlnn , . ' DA.11.Y 'ILOT ,_..tr .... , ..... Rolled and Read" But these marijuana cigarettes will never be mtoked. That lettering on cigarette paper re- fers to evidence file at Costa M e,1 a P o l i c e Department, which has been concentrating recent drug roundup on two local high schools. For an idea of what drug pushers. )lave bee n pushing a~ high school students, see Page 21. Th1·ee in Capistrano Race; ' Wife Eying Husband's Jo~ . ' ~ By PAMELA HALLAN Of fM 01l1J '11et S!tff Three potential city council candidates have announced their intention to take out nomination papers in San Juan Capistrano. One Is the wife of a present councilman. t-.1rs. Dolly Olivares, 31411 Ganada Road. said today she is planning to run for the geat vacated by her husband, Antonio Olivares. who ls not going to seek another term. Councilman Olivares has served nine years, being a member of the first COUD· cil elected in 1961. Mrs. Olivares said she wwld mate a fcrmal ataternent of her objectives Iller she has r~ved tbe required nmnber of signatures on her petition and has filed it with City Clerk Ernest ThompSOn. Others announcing their candidacy are \Villlam T. Reid, 32222 Del Obispo and Gary Sodikof! of 30152 Silver Spur. Reid has been a rancher in lhe Capistrano Valley for 20 years and Sodlkoff is an attorney In San ClemenLe '4'ho has lived in the city ror one year. Belore moving to San Juan Capistrano, Sodlkoff was active in civic affairs in San Clemente, servin1 as founding president of the: Junior Oiamber of Commerce and director of an Explorer Scout Troop. He is currently chairman ot the nnancial committee for the Capistrano Q:wnber of Commerce. A total of three terms will be expiring in April. Besides Olivares, Coorlcilman Don Durnford's and Mayor Ed Chennai'I ~ also will be up tor reelection. Durnford has served for nine year! and Chermak Is oom pletlng the unexpired term of the late Marco Forster. Both Durnford and <llennak bu atated that they "" undecldecl about runninil tw I re-election. Durnford sajjl today that he b particularly interested lo new rules which require pubHc officials and candidates for public office to disclOse their financial holdings. He sakl. lhe couoc:il ia ~iii.an uproar" over the new Jiw. ~._ Political sourees have hinted that other' possible candidates wiU biCJude 'Mn. Carol Helm and Mn. Ann Schauwecle.r and city plaming commluion memblrs Art Lavagnino and Jerry Ga!fney. Filing ol!lcially _...i today and anyone wishing to run for the coundl may obtain nominatie. papen fnm Thompson's offw:e. Completed nominallon papers """ taining the algi;iatttres d between five and JO regioter<d voters within !he city llmlts must be filed on or before Feb. 19. Laguna Planners Meet With Citizens Group The Laguna Beach Planning Com· mission and members ol the CillHN Advisory Committee will meet at I p.m. Sunday in the board room of the Laguna Beach Unified School District, ~ Blu- mont St., to continue theU 1tudy oC the general plan goalJ report. The session will be a continuation of study iauocb<d M'lJ!<lay night in a meetin1 with representallvN of the plan-- ning firm of Daniel, Mann, Johnson and Mendenhall. The DMJM team will DOt be · represented at the Sunday artemoon session. JI. J. (}arreff ~ SEMI ANNUAL SALE! I 'For lasting elegance, enhance your home :with famous HERITAGE upholstery 15% OFF HERITAGE UPHOLSTERED FURNfTURE · n-•itAltlitd pt,.. flltlJre tt. wcto~ tltiw styling Wld proud crattsm..h's> thst brivt mad• H•itlSlfl • living tradition in furni- ture. Thwtl •• rnon than 175 designs -hdt one • 1.-in In P9instak"'9 wortmanship •nd ~quiilte ~iling. And, to satisfy your most ..-acting d9cor•ting ne.ds, thtr• it• choice or ovflf 900 outstanding fabrics and mtny OP'" t10nel dec:oratlvt fNturn. Our interior d .. ~ wtn be mosc hippy to Niist in your ·- Your faooritt interior dtrignn PU be Mm to as1i1t uou. ••• !ROHSSIONAL INTERIOR DESIGNERS Open Mon., Thut1., & Frt e .. ,,. I 2215 HAR IOR ILVD. COSTA MESA, CALIF. 646.0275 I ' I 17 I .. -• Laguna Beaeh TodaY's Final ~ N.Y. Stoeks V,OL 63, No: 24, l SECTIONS, 38 PAGES ·ana- SEEKS COUNCIL SEAT L ~gun1 Planner Tomeha k Tomehak Says 8e's in Race For Council By BARBARA KREIBICH Of "'-O.ltr P119j Steft Joseph Tomehak, 42, vice chairman ol the JJagUna Beach Planning Commilsion, today announced his candidacy for the Laguna Beach City Council, A Laguna Beach resident for the past four years, Tomehak is a professor of anthropology and arche<1Jogy at Orange Coast College and an e11:tension lecturer ln;environmental studies _at UC Irvine. He has served on the Planning Commission since 1968 and is a former member of the COsta Mesa City Council . Describing himself as "a specialist in the long-ignored field of human ecology and environment," Tomehak said, "Re- cent developments concerning Laguna Beach make it imperative that we try to idenllfy what we fee l the city should be ..• at one Ume the cliffs and hills di.scourag- ed unwise development. Today, we're faced wit h the hazard of irrevoca~e people-packing, apartment-stacking u - ploitation, if we're not careful. "AJ a member of the Plannipg t;:Om- miS!lon, I feel that many of obr serious concerns for Laguna 'Beach can be resolved in our favor. Citi.ien ~sponse to the questionnaire prepar~ by 'the ad· visory comm illee to our'-general plan program has helped poiol Our importa\1t areas of concern. The positive side of \Yhat's been going on is that 10lid citizen iriput of creative alternatives has never been higher. A good interpretation of how the people feel , plus a knowledge of the problems facing our to_wn are the (Set TOMCHAK, Page !) ~guna, Oemente Filing Opens With No Takers The city council filing period opened quietly In Laguna Beach and San Clemente today with no nomination papers pjcked up in a late pre-noon check. Voters will cast their ballots in bolh ciU11, on April 14 to fill three council positions. Jn Laguna tenns of Mayor Glenn Ved- d~, Vice Mayo r Joseph O'Sullivan and ~ncilman Richard Goldberg expire. V~der has declined to run again. O'Sullivan will seek re-electJon and GOkfberg probably will. Planning Com- miJsk>ner Joseph Tomehak also has an- ~ his candidacy with others e1- p:icted to aMOWlce. Potilions to be filled In San Clemente are held by one tenn CQUncilmen Dan Chllton and Thoma• O'Keefe. Th< third Is lleld by Maybr Wade LoF. rellred den- ~ arid cOUncilman Ince his ap- pointment Jan. 7, 1969. None have in- dicated whether they will aeek re-elecUon as yet. San Clemente ~11,516 registered voters, said City Clerk Mas Berg. There are more lhan 8,000 voters registered in La1Una with no firm figure as yet. Regislration and filing contin~ unti l Ftb. 19. ' ' El Morro Bus Safety Steps Slated The State Division of Highways Is ei:· peeled to call for bids next month on overhead warning signs and a center ac- celeration lane to improve bus safety for · Laguna's El P.1orro School. This wrui the assessment o f Asserr,blyman Robert E. Badham (R- Newport Beach), who was asked by school district officials to work In behalf <1f a highway safety program for bus1oads of children driven onto busy Coast Highway from tbe school access road. Although there has oot been a bus ac- cident, school officials declare there have been some. near mi.s.sel as the lumbering buses try to enter the traffic lane£ in the vicinity of deadly El Morro curve. Badham noted that a relocation or warning signs had been accomplished and said relocation of warning beacons is underway. A· contra<:t has also been let for electrical conduit to power the plan· ned overhead flashlng signs. However, Badham said in a letter to the school district that a speed survey of traffic past. the school had been con- ducted with no plan to change the 50 mile an hour speed limit. Bomhers Attack North Vietnam Missile Base \VASHINGTON (AP ) -U.S. Air Force fighter bombers attacked an enemy an- tiaircraft missile base Wednesday inside North Vieblam after an unarmed reeon· nalssance plane was fired on by surface· to-air missiles,· the Pentagon announced today. An American Fl05 fighter-bomber car- rying two men .ind an Air Force rescue helicopter were shot down. All crewmen are listed as missing. The Pentagon aid II did not kno"' how many were In the helicopter (Earllcr Story, Page 4) The incident occurred when an RF4C reconnaissance plane escorted by several FIGS and F4 fighter-bombers "was taken under fire by SAM missiles in an area 12 miles northeast of Mu Gia Pass In North 'Vietnam," the al)JlOUncurient said . This would place the location just in· side North Vietnam. The Pentagon said that escort planes, ciefel)ding1 an unanned reconnaissance craft, 11rtsponded by attacking t'tle SAM launch site." Prior to the Pentagon announcement, North Vietnam representatives at Paris accused U.S. plants or raiding North Vietnamese territory and. called ~e raid a "very grave" act of war. • . Jn reply a U.S. state I>epar-Upent spokesman acknowledged that reCon- naissance planes and accompanyin1 pro- tective craft Oy over North Vietnam but denied ·that U.S. bombing of the North has been renewed. The Pentagon said one FI05 was hit by enemy ground fire, crashed and was t1estroyed. A !!pOkesman said lhe F105 wM downed by conventional antiaircraft "·ea pons. Arrested Laguna Girl Not Held A Laguna Beach girl arrested by Costa Mesa narcottcs of£lcer1 Saturday was freed after queslloning, Costa Mesa Po- lice confirmed today. No charges were filed against Susan Axelrod, 19, of 476 El Bosque, police said. She: was arrested In a parltlnai: lot out- side Finnegan's Rainbow in Costa Mesa. along with Janice C. Theaker, 18, of 1289 Cleo St. and Donald L. Carlson, 23, of Coet;a Ptfesa, when police who stopped to 1:t1.1estion the trio allegedly found nar· coUcs in ~r car. Slffk l!f arket NEW YORK (AP) -Stocki fell sharp- ly today. with declining l1sues outstrip.. ping advances by better than tour to one. (See quotaUons, Pal" 21-27). Pessimlmt Im the natlol'• economic <1ullook prevan1 tn tht mal'\et place, say analystl, with incentlve to buy very low. ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, JANUARY· 29, 1970. TEN CENTS • 0 1xe < • •. • --. "· - , DAIL T PILOT ....... 'f llldMll"ll KRl!IW' ' ' .- ~ew Study Requested By LAFC.. By JOANNE Rfl:Yl'lOUlS Of ...;D.n, l'lllt '"" Proponents of tile Capistrano Beach· Dana Point iocorpciratlon • "'ere · temp. orarily turned down Wednesday by the Local .Agency Formation Commlasloo which told them lo redraw propQled bounr daries and restudy economic feasibility ol incorporation before appearing before the board again. , The bid for citybood wu "denied without prejudice" after three hours ot testimony before the commission. Aas is- tant County Counsel W. J. McCourt said by taklng Such action cornm.1811ion members have made it Possible {Qr the incorporation group to reappear at any time. If the request had been Dally de nied, incoorporaUon proponents would have to wait a year before (illng again. Several problems in the plan presented to the commission were noted by com- mission Chairtnan David Baker. He cited conflicting boundaries of •pedal county service d!Jtrlcts within the area, boun- d_ary changes due ti incorporation dele· uon requests from ,andowners and the need (or a more comjl1ete ecooomic TH f,R ERA LI E,5_.~ D Pl \J 9f, !IRO~~ PIP~ JNGi(o -~ leUlbQfi)' study of 1!i< If"'' after !hf ,, <te~. •• Pottery Shap Spins~· to Ila End of 25-year Era Comes for Br~y~on Center . By BARBARA DUARTE Of llM D•Uy Plltt S!.tf The end of an era in the Art Colony lies buried among broken pieces of pottery, rusting vats, piles of pipe and rubble, and in a.small corner of an upstairs room. There, on several neartly-arranged shelves, rests a variety of pieces of unglazed pottery. , .replicas of Hummel children, bowls, vases, a drunk hanging on a lamp, Japanese figurines ... a dan- cing ostrich taking a bow. If the ostrich were a swan, she might be taking a bo\V for a business wh ich sup- ported many a starving Laguna artist during lean Depression years and pr~ vided a livlihood for many others, The would-be swan could dance to the sounds or pop music wafting through the open, second story iramework looking on- to a photography studio next door. Her spotlight-could-be light streaming throogh a gaping hole in the ceiling. Next month, ostrlch, music and the studio next door will be gone ... all vic- tims of progress. Brayton Pottery, a quaint building anchoring lhe Art Center at lhe corner of Glenneyre and Calliope, has been vacant for nearly a year. What was once a bustl- ing enterprise empk>ying Z5 artisans suf- fered a setback as Japanese poltery nooded lhe: market In the-l94Ds, bul managed to IU$laln itself until lasfyear. But, looking back 41 years, Brayton Pottery grew like Topsy, along with the dreims of its creator, the late Durlin Brayton. Brayton purchased a lot in 1927 in the 1400 block of Coast Highway, then an old rock and oil road wi lh very little travel. Wllh an eye for art.. he bu.llt a home over a deep gully where the Fleur de Lis now stands. Working as a delivery man for the Los Angeles Examiner in the early morning hours and as a carpenter durin1 the day, evenings were devoted to his ~rue love, developing moulds for casting pottery. With UlO borrowed to purchase a kiln, he produced his first wares, bright purple arid yellow dinnerware which h e: displayed on~a-broad fence JUfrounding the gully. Adding to the home, he was able to In- crease prod uction and his home became a factory. By 1930 Brayton Pottery was known nationwide for its arUstlc designs. As the business grew with a payroll or more than $15,000 in IMO, Brayton moved the operation Into the pusent building (See BRAYTON, I'a1e %) Mrs. Hanson to L.eave Japan for Ho1ne Friday From Wirt Strvlces TOKYO -Nearing the end of their mercy mission around the world, th~ wives of four missing American pilots teamed today .that J a p a n e s e newspapermen ruay hold the key to learning their fale. Mrs. Carole Hanson, of 24112 Birdrock Drive, El Toro, and her Los Angeles County traveling companions, will depart from Japan's capital Friday for their Southland homes. The group which has sought word of the fat e of their husbands in a dozen fore ign nations met for 30 minutes with Vtce: Foreign Mirllsttr Nobuhlko Ushlba. Los Angeles television per19nallty Robert Dorman, who baa accompanied tht four on their odyssey, revealed that lhe cabinet offtcial said Japanese newsmen may obtain the answers. They . have been met with sympathy, but little else in other capita~. "He (Ushi ba.) suggested .that neutral Japanese newsmen freq~Uy visit Hanoi and that he hoped that th41 would Inquire Donnan. With Dorman Were Mr1. Hanson, 30, alld Mrs. John !lardy 27, Mrs. Roolll\'elt Heatle Jr., 37, and' Mrs. Arthur Mearns, 'J'l , all of Los Angeles. , After leaving the foreign ministry, they returned lo their hOt~I. plCked· up an in- terpreter and drove to a meeting with Mlss Shizue Yama1uchi,. parliamentary vice minister ol the econorilic plamlng agency. They had lunch with P.Uss Yamaguchi. a fonnet eoclaUat who ran and won a seat in Parliament as a liberal Oe.mocral in the December elections. The California women are aee.klng a meeting wllh Mrs. Eilaku Salo, wlle: of the prime minister, but It has ·not been !dleduled. Donnan and the women arrived in · Ti>kyo Tuesday nfcht. (ollowlng s'Ops at Moscow. Paris, New Otlbi.. Cairo, Vien-· · tlane and LaOI. • · They had lunch Wednesday wltb Mrs. Annin H. Meyer, wife o( the U.S. 8.M. busador!. to Japan, and mel with R,cl Cro11s officials In the afternoon . The women are trying to nnc1 Ol.ll if their husbaods sre 1tlll tillvt. The: North Vietnam~ government has reufeed to produce a list of captured Amflrlcans. SAONESS ,RIFLI CTI D ll reytoo Fltvrln•> Fii-c Hits tarrier, BOS'tON,"fAPI -FlrtH1hte" hod lo . c1.1.t manholtslzed holes In two decks of the aircraft carrier W!Lbrp. early t.oday to get at a stubOOrn fi re In a storage area. The hvo-alarm bJau burned through stored mattresses lnd'buok linenii' on the foµrth d~k below the main deck before btlna contained b'y 11 term of 50 Bo.tton fire nghtcrs. ) -!':According to your report," he lold propontnts, "you will insUtute a city tu and ai1J tbal coonty eenoloe dlttilots be dlalarhtd, UnfortW11tely hJ.tory ahows us that illMf special districts do Continue so you wUI have a case of double taxation." McCourt said the ldstrlCts In que~on can only be dlasolved by special elections. Proponents of incorporaUOn, led 6y Dr. Rog~r Sanderson and attorney Bernt Lohr-Schmidt said incorporaUon would help preserve the individuality of the community. De.an Evans who made the economic feasibility rtport for lncorpOration said in 1970-71 the city would receive about $276,000 In revenue and would have close to $280,000 in expenses for Items such as police. Evans recommended a city lax to balance the budget and "buUd a fund reserve." Opponents of the incorpor1tion aald they were pleased with county control of the area and hulisted incorporation would only bring "another layer of government and taxes that we don't need." Bloodmobile Due Ii( Lagtina Beach \ The · American Red Crou: Bloodmobile ha$ scheduled a visit to Laguna Beach on Monday, Feb. 2, from 2:30 to 7 p.m. The bloodmobile will be stationed outside the Community Presbyterian ChurcH, 415 Forest Ave. and donors who wish to make appointn}mta'may do so by calling 494-6557. • Red Cross coordinator Mrs. Mary Downer and volunteers from South Coast' Community Hospital art alt.empting to contact all eU1lble dMors in the Laguna area to help replace dwindling blood sup- plies. Donations may be assigned to ln· vididual, club, or organizaUon accocmts. Oraage · Coua Weadler the hot winds slow dow n ~ night, but the hot wealher con- Unu" (by day) lnlo Friday with ~emperalures hitting 70. but UM· ing lnlo the 30'1 by nlghU1ll. INSWE TODAY EuiOJ>(o·n newspapert looked l l ' l ' at Pt'etfdtnt ftlzon't P.nt ror . i Iii iorie of.."]Oderat& .fMCOtu, ht 1 1 Uatrc "'°" 'r11krwlk>n ht Uat Pratti. Poge 1. · .. _ . (tfffl' ~ " Cllltdtlllt "' f (I-Ill" »Jl C•lllkl It Crett_. It Dellllil ....... • • .. ~ 11 .-... ... , .... .-~......... " llllN!pct M-2t "~ 11 AM l ..... rt I) f ~v mot • .. . .. · u,., ,....,. BARaRA STREISAND WITH CANADA'S TRUDEAU An Ev.nine of Ballet and Buffalo IUr .. r1 . , Barbra· Dates. PM .. Trudeau Takes Star to Ballet 01TAWA (UPI) -Prime Mlmter Plem: Elliott Trudeau took Barbra Streisand out In Ottawa Wednesday night for an evening of ballet and buffalo burgers. Miss Streisand. an O!car winner for "Funny Girl," dated the SO.year-old bachelor prime ·mlniater last fall when he visited New York City. She was Trudeau's surprise guest at a program \Vednesday markine the centennial of lhe province of·Manltoba. • Trudeau, In eve!ilni clothes, and Miss Streisand , wearing a low-cuL long white gown, with a abort fur-trimmed jacket and white fur h~t and mulf, were among hundreds of VIP& at the NaUonaJ Arts Center. When the prime mlnllter's Umousine arrived at I.he modern cultural complex, Trudeau jumped out of his s~t and dodg- ed past Royal Canadian Mounted Police to personally open the door fof Miss Streisand. After watching a performance of the Royal Wlnntpeg Ballet C o m p a n y , Trudeau and Min Streisand went to the salon or tbe arts center ·and sampled traditional Manitoba fooda, Including burgers made from bulfalo meat. When they let't a tele•islOn reporter asked him, "When are you .going to have her back here again?" Trudeau dld not rt ply, but Miss Streisand leaned over from wllhin the car and said, "You're supposed to say 'arrest that man'" -a reference to Trudeau's sometlme pubJlc lrt at newsmen for ask- ing him &bout his personal Ille. Cyclist Hurt; Motorist Cited in Laguna Crash A colllsion between a cir am! j. motorcycle on South eoa,t Highway \Ved. neJday afternoon re11.11ted In a cllatlon for a young Laguna Beach driver and a I.Mp to the hospital (or the cyclist. Eric Joseph Joseph, 21, of Lakewood, Ohio, was treate~ at South Coast Com· munlly Hospital for cut hands and an ankle Injury after he was knocked from From Pqe l BRAYTON. •• which was built in 1939. Ttlroua:h the Oepreasloii. years the business hung on, providing an lncome for some 30 Art Colony residents and royalty checi<J for arUsta who desiined better-selling pieces such as Brayton's famous Purple Cow. Following the war, the 1ovemment set the Japanese up with equipment to prc>- duce pottery, a move that was to drive some 60 artisans Jn Laguna Beach oul of business and provide wares for major retailers which operate today. Next month, contractor Jim Schmitz. will rue the J ,.fl(Hquare-fpot building to make way for eight new Art Ce.nter shops laid out In an L-sltaped configuration. Designed to blend in with the ruslic at- mosphere of .the 2S preaent fihips, the building will still cater to the arts, if in a different sense. DAILY PILOT Ou.MG& COAll 'U"-"'"ING COM,.t.H'W" R~trt N. W19' ~ ....................... J•clc R. Cwrl•v Vici,., ....... 1111f 0-tt ~ ,,..,,.., l(,,.;1 •• 1 .... Th•"'•• A. Mwr,hi~1 M-.....E'1i.. . lti~~ :~~·II Cl,.,11111111' ............ Offtc. Jl~orttl A~t~Wt Mtili"t A441tu1 P.O. lt1 666, 92•S2 ON~Offk.H c..i. Mtol.t: J» ..,. .. , .. , 11r .. 1 l'fNllli't ltldlt ml WKI. It(-lolwlr+<t .. t.llMll!I .... f<M,cll: llllJ •• .,, l<N .. •ti• . h,iS. ifio1o~cJe. as he rode north on the 'highway it 3 p.m. J\.1ary Lucinda Sawyer, 19, of 51 Lagwi.ita, whose car coJtided with the cyclist, said !he -failed to see him ap- proaching as she turned left onto the highway frqrn Nyes Pia~. She will be cited for failure to yJ~l4 ~right' of way, police.said.. 1 ,"< • An ambulance slrerl w~s bl&med for an earlier accident on Wednesday, which resulted In damage to two cars, but no In· jurfes to their drivers. Gayne ·Fredrick Sayer, 23, of Hollywood told police be was northbound on South Coast Highway al 11 :20 a.m. when he heard a siren and looked around to see where it originated. ln so dolna:, Sayer said, he faUed to see that lhe traffJc signal on Bluebird Canyon Drive had changed to red. He attempted to stop but was too late to avoid striking a vehicle drive by Laua Chol, 17, of Anaheim, who was turning left. ·onto lhe highway from Bluebird, police said. Sayer was cited for !allure to s!Dp al the re<l llght limit line. Fro11• Page l TOMCHAK ... q1.:allficalions we should look for In the cimd1dates.'' Tomcbak makes his home at 330 Cajon Terr ace with his wUe, Sendra, and lheir three children, Daphne, 19, a senior at Laguna Beach High School, John, 15, a sophomore at the high school and Daniel, 14 a Creshman. A member of sevtral archaeological and anthropaloglcaJ profesalon1l usocla- lions. Tomehak directep the excavation on the St. Ann's Drive site whel1! Lagunan Hqward Wilson discovered the "L.a.guna Man" and also d Jr e c t s archaeological e1cavstlons on Irvine Ranch for Orange Coast .::Olle1e. A graduate or Ohio State Unlv1rslty, he won his M.A. degiee at Caltfomla Stale Lollege in Lang Beach and hll Ph. D. at 11.e Unlveralty of Neuchatel in Swlturland, where hi• doctoral dluerta· Uvn was an analysis of the arowth and development of coutal towns In an al· tempt ·to Identity almllartlles of pattern betwetn 'those of Callfornla '1 southern cvasl and the 1'tedllerrancan coast of France. In 1981-62 Tomehak wali awarded a N11· tiGnRI SCie.nc:e Found1tlon fr&llt at the Ur1i\•ersily of SOuthern C.Hfomla for an analysis of the Southe:rn California coastllne and in 1963 a similar grant al UC Berkeley for a study of an· thropoligical 111pects ot en\ltronment. lie was a Fulbright exchange scholar i'n J96U4. lecturing In t0vlronmental 11tudies at Cambridge Un I v er s It)', England, undt.r the ausptces of the U.S. Slate Otp1rtment. Tomehak Is first vice president of the Laguna Bc11ch Civic Leitut 11 membtr of St. Catherine's Church and of the Slcr- r;1 Club. l ·Yablonski } "''" Driver Drunk? ' i . f~l A,ge.nts Testify. He Hit Guard llails in Escape f • . !H\'~ l!l!'!l -· ,~ ~relully rebMnecl "°'pe 'Of\et mlM union of· ftclal Joseph A: .. Jocku Yablonski and his wife and daughter were murdered was nearly d1srupted because the driver of the getaway car got drunk , ii was learned tO. day. FBI agents told a federal grand jury the getaway driver sat in the auto outside the YabJooskl's Clarksville, Pa., home drlnklng beer and tossing the empty beer cant on the lawn. They said fingerprints found on tht beer cans helped lead to the arrest of t.bree suspects. The agents said afttr Yablonski, 59, his Dana Institute For Marine Studies Marked A sign ~arks the spol ln Dana Point Harbor. It Is a t.hree·aere SP9l destined to house J\ Marine Studlu Institute, tmovl]Uve in its educational approach tO oceanograP;hy and th' firs! ol lta kind In the U.S. The slgn wu positioned Wednesdly In a brief ceremony attended by county, s.:-hool and university officials. A three. day formal dedlca1l9n of the site will be held May 1, 2 and 3. 11 b to Include 'Vlslts by Navy shir>s, Cmdr. Don Walsh of the Triest, un- derwater exploration vessel a n d oceanographer& from Scripps Institute in La Jolla. Students of marine science from Capla!rano Untfled School District will place exhibits. San Clemente fishing boatl will take visitors on harbor to\'rs and scuba dJvlng shows will be held. The Institute js unique in the fact that it will offer oc!anographlc education to students from kindergarten through university graduate work in all of Orange County and t:ventually, all Southern C31Jforn1a. Dr. Andreas B. Reehnitter. president of the lnalltute's board or trustees, said some classwork ii to be held on the site before the laboratory before t h e laboratory and classrooms are built. Tidepool1 of San Juan Rocks are adjacent to the locaUon. A fund-raising campaign will be con· ducted by trusltea of Capistrano Unified School Distrl~ aDd others to obtain fund.! ror the project which iS expected to cost M million. Land for the institute was Given by county supervlsorlaJ action. Attending the Wedneacla.Y sign place- ment were Or. Reehnitier, Dr. Robert Peterson. county superinter.dent of si:hools. Kenneth Sampson. director of harbor.a beaches and parks for the coun- ty, and ins.ti tu le trustees ltaynlond OUver and Robert W. Scholler. New Tw·tle Rock School Building Begins in March Construct.Ion is expected to ber.·n in March on the new Turtle Rock E emen- tary School. Trustees of the San Joaquin Elemen- tary School District accepted a low bid of ~ 000 si.:bmltted by Harwick an!.'. Son of New'port Beach at a special meeting V.'ednesday. The bid must first be approved by the state, acr.ordlng lo Finsnce Director Rex Nerl!O!l. Then c.:onslruction can begin. The school ;s expected to be completed .1round the first of next year. Nerlson :iaid children will be using t:.c school as soon as it Is completed, even if they have to move midterm. In other business. the board approved the application for stale funds for a pr<>- jecl allowable under lhe Elementary and Secondary Education Act, Title Ill. . Mrs. Marllyn Harris, director of 1n- structional services, said the proposal will be for an integrated language arts program. t.trs. Harris explained that the new program will take traditlona.l language skills SllCh as grammar, spelllng, reading and creative writing and will put thetn together. The end result vdll .be helter co1nmunicatlon boU\ \\'rltten an .. oral. W atcr District Transfer Okayed The county's Local Agency Formation Commission Wednesday approved the propose<! transfer of county Water \Vorks District No. 4 to the City of San Juan Capistrano. J\.fost of the district lies within city boundaries. Exceplions are Dana Knoll s in the southwest comer and another area h. \he northern most sect.ion of the cliltricL Con1mission mem~rs expressed concern that residents of the areas wtaide lhe cJty limits \\"OUIJ not receive equal treatment if Lhe district were given to city eontrol. James Okaiaki, special counsel for San Juan caplstrano. said city officials "wel1! .accut1ly aware of the protlem of the:se people." He prCJPQSCd that an advisory "·atcr district commission be formed con- 11isli11g of two members from outside the tlty limits and three from tnslde and that there be no difference in rates for reiJident s of the outlying areas. LAFC members approvtd and sent the entire prop<>sal to the COL:1ty Board of s~1et:rt\'~C'r.S f"r ri. ... , ~f'fl""' ' wlfe, • Marga.rtt, $f, W his daughter, Charlotte, 26, wef'\ ahot, the getaway t1rtver. his renexes 'slowed by alcohol, sideswiped two guard!'ails near the home as he drove away. James C. Philllp11, 42, who allegedly ba cked out of the plot to klll Yablonski and then told tJ1e story lo the FBI , was reported to have .told the grand jury how the slaylngs were rehearsed. The re.hearsal included the t.ossing of dummy weapons Jnto the Monongahela River about five miles from the Yablon1ki home. An 1tfl rifle and a .38 caliber revolver have been recovered OAILY ll'ILOT fl'Mtt IW Let'''"" Rolled and Ready But these marijuana cJgarettes will never be smoked. That lettering on cigarette paper re. fers lo evidence file at Costa f.•J e s a P o I i c e Department, \Vhich has been c.o.ncentrating recent drug roundup on two local high schools. For an idea of what drug pushers have been pushing at hlgb school students, see Page 21. frQJn the rl\rtr. SouroOI iald Phlllli\I .w11 1uppooed to have been the driver of the car but pulled out and was replaced by another man wl'to received $1,000. II was alao reported the trigger man in the slaylngs received lt.700. Two FBI agenta escorted Phillips to the courthouse Wednesday fw hi1 one-hour appeara~. Phillips' testimony, like that of all others here, wu secret. But 10U1ce1 said Phllltps wu Ill on the orl&inal plot, th!'J' pulled out at the last minute and 11ve lhle ia!f ~ok":r'~ee ~!n~e4 to the arrqta One or the three. Claude E. vUley, 27, la under indictment. with PhWlp1 on a burglary charge in youngstown, Ohio, in another case. OLber &OUrces reported Yablonski'• killers were paid more than h.000 each, 1-..,t it was not known who hired them. The grand jury is trying to find out. Vealey, Paul E . Gilly, 36; and Aubran W. Martin, 23, are charged with the murder of Yablonski, a lone-time Unlted MJne Workera Unk>n offk:ial, and his 'file and dallghter. None of the three men lw appeared before tho gTand illl];. althou&h the wives ol. ·Gilly and ' MarUil tesUfied Wednetday. Three in C~pistrano Race; • • Wife Eying Husband's Joh By PAMELA HALLAN 01 1111 DtllY l"lltl Sltlf Three pat.ential city council candidates have announced their intenllol\. to lake d'Ui---n~lnat.lon papers In San JuRn Capistrano. One ls the wife of a present councilman. fl.1rs. Dolly Olivares, 3141t Ganada Road. said today she is planning to run for the seat vacated by her husband. Antonio Olivares, who ii not golng to seek another term. Councilman Olivares has served nine years. being a member of the first coun· cil elected In 1961. Mrs. Oilvares said she would make a fonnal statement of her objectives after she has received the required number or signatures on her petition and has filed it with City Clerk Emesl Thompson. Others announcing their candidacy an \Villiam T. Reid, 32222 Del Obispo and Cary Sodlkoff of. 30152 Sliver Spur. Reid has been a rancher in the Capistrano Valley for 20 years and Sodlkoff Is an altorney In San Clemente who has lived in the city for one year. Before moving to San Juan Capistrano, Sodiko{f was active In civic affairs in San Clemente, serving as founding president of the Junlor Chamber ol Commerce and director of an Explorer Scout Troop. He ls currently chairman of the financial committee for the Caplslrano Chamber of Commerce. A total of. three terms will be expiring in April. Besides Olivares, Councilman Don Durnfurd's and Mayor Ed Chermak'• seats also will be up fot. reelection. ~ Durnford has served toe nine years and Chermak la comPleUng the uneipired term of the late Marco Forster. Both Durnloro and Chermak has stated that they are undecided about runnin& for re-election. Durnford said today that he la particularly interested in new rulea which require public officials and candidate& ftr public office to disclose their finandal holdings. He said the council is 0 in an uproar" over the new law. PolltlcaJ source! have hinted that other ~sible candidates will Include Mn. carol Helm and Mrs. Ann Schauwecker and city planning commission members Art Lavagnino and Jerry Gaffney. Filing orflclally opened today a~i\d anyone wishing to run for the counc may obtain nomination papers from Thompson's office. Completed namJnaUon paper• con- taining the algnaturet of between five.and 10 registered voters within the city lbn1ta must be filed on or before Feb. 19. Laguna Planners Meet With Citizens Group The Laguna Beach Planning Com- mission and members of the Citizens Advisory Committee will meet at 3 p.m. Sunday in the board room of the Laguna Beach Unified School District, 550 Blu- mont St., to continue their study of Ille general plan goals report. The session will be a continuation of study launched Monday nJght in a meeting with represmtatlves of the plan· ning firm of D-.niel, Mann, Johnson and Mendenhall. The DMJM team wtll not be represe.nte.d at the Sunday afternoon SeBSion, ' JJ. J. Qarrell~ SEMI ANNUAL SALE! ;For lasting elegance, enhance your home .with famous HERITAGE upholstery a 15% OFF HERITAGE UPHOLSTERED FURNITURE n--.od~-..... -tative styling Ind JWOUd craft5l'l'llftlhip tNt have made Heritage 1 living tradition in fumj.. ture. There 1r1 more tha'I 175 delign$ -tech Ont I ll!llOn in Plinstlking workrnamtJip Ind exquishs deuiting. And, 10 satisfy your most t:xlCting decontlng n.:ts, there h: 1 choiol of OVW 900 OUtltlnding flbries and mlt'IY OP-I tton.1 decorltivie t•turtS. o" tntsiot d .. I ~ wiU bt 11101t haoPv '° .mSt in YOW" - -TRY oua RIVOLVIN• CHA••• - Your f m:orl11 tnttrlor d11fgn1r wUJ b1 happ11 ro cusitl "°" ... H.J.GARRETT fURNll1JRE PROFESSIONAL INTERIOR DESIGNERS Opert Mon., Thurs., I Fri. Evei. 2215 HARIOR ILVO. COSTA MESA, CALIF. 646-0275 • I • • WHAT'S IN- OUTDOORS? by Jack Anthaoy The return of the sun and clear skies has brought U\e fish front their hiding places and angle rs arc catching nice stringers of trout, bass and crappie at most of the rakes reporting. The trout plant at Vail Lake last \Veekend produced good fis hing. The largest trout taken over lhe weekend was a fi ve-pounder netted by Ray Dunlap or Stanton. Dunlap was trolling a bottom-bounding plug when the brute hit in Bayou Bay. The George Lobaugh's or Newport Beach and their grandson David caught full litnits. of trout to two pounds on spinners. Bass and c ra ppie fi shing also picked up at Vail Lake. fl•lany nice limits of bass to four pounds were weighed In by anglers using rubber worms and deep running plugs. Crappie ~·ere active in some areas and hititng on yellow and white feather jibs. Another load of 5,000 pounds ol (rout will go into Vail Lake in mid-February. For boat reservations and in- formation phone (714) 676-4611. 1\ci if>tt Good ••t IJnl~e Ue11sl1a1v Anglers fishing Lake Henshaw are finding good action on bass and crappie. Bass are hitting In about 2S feet of water 'near the northeast end of the lake and the crappie a re being picked up by drift fishermen. Channel catfish were slowed down a bit by the cold weather of a few weeks ago. Reports indicate they have come back to life and are hitting cut mackerel in the ~up channel• and the area near the dam. Closer' to home, Irvine Lake continues to provide trout i:nen with plenty of action. H. Serizawa of Huntington Beach has fished the lake three times since it opened and has limited out on trout each time, using a special cheese b•it he prepares a t home. Other anglers a re picking up nice stringers of trout on salmon eggs, TNT. 1nars hmallo\vs. and flashy lures. Bass are slo\r to bite and only experienced anglers are nic king up these i;:ame fresh \Valer fighters . Anglers ~shin~ the drop offs and deep channels are getting the bass to hit on 'vorms and very deep running plugs, but the bass are running only to about four pounds. When ttie water warms up a few degrees the bigger b,ronzebacks \Viii s ta rt to move. :: A fe\v nice crappie and catfish are al1'o being ca ugh I, &\it the action on these t~10 \varn1 v.•ater species is rated -f.ery S]O\\', Scltm1ificall11 Ca11gl1t Fisla : Today more and more fresh and salt water anglers .are-relying on the latest in electronic fishing equipment n. help them c atch more and bigger fish. This is true not Only for the commercial fisherman but also for the eportsmen. . • Ed Miller of Costa Mesa h as developed a new wlec· tronic •id which should help all fishermen catch more fish. Miller is the president of Sea Sensors, Inc. of Costa Mes..,.and he manufactures a temperature reading in- ~rument which tells you at what depth of water you are i;nost likely to c11tch fish. ' ~ It is con1n1onl y kno\vn that both sail and fresh water fi sh have a t e1nperatu rc in \Vhich they are most active aiid prefer to feed in. It is not the sa1ne for all game fi."-h and this is \Vhy this 1en1perature gauge is so help(lil to anglers. If you can find the ril!ht ten1i;>erature at the ci.~ht depth. then ,.<J11r chances for a successful fishing ftip are improved. J\1iller ha s \\'ri11cn an infonnation s heet on \Valer tf!mperatures and their effect on the habits or fish. For a c;opy send a sf'lf addressed stamped envelope to Sea Sensors. Inc. 1240..D Logan Ave .. Costa ~1esa. Fishing, Hunting Briefs The 1969-70 bag of wat,rfowl 011 California's pubUc hunUng ereas v.·as up 33 percent from lhe previous year, the Depart. nlenl of Fish and Game reported today. A record 103,444 hunters utilized the 14 state and federal areas on which the Db~G mane,ged shooting during the season which ended Jan. ti. They bagged 200,807 ducks.; 12,494 geese, and 5,339 cools, a total of 218,660 birds, for an average of 2.1 birds per hunter. During the 1968 season, 96,411 hunters bagged 164 ,31~ birds for an average of 1.7 per hunter. The Grizzly lsla'rld and fi.1en- dota slate wildlife areas had the best duck shooting, with µ:;;:,i;.. .. hunters taking 43,484 ducks al Griu.ly and 27 ,857 at Mendota .• The Sacramento N a t i o n a 1 \Vlldlife Refuge produced ~.891 t-'~r"': geese for hunters, roore than three times tile total of second place Delevan NWR With I,IJU Hunters at the San Luis · \\'astev.•ay state area had the highest average at 2.6 birds per hunter. follov.•ed by the San Luis N\VR at 2.S and Sacramento and Dcle\·an at 2A . ------·--------- Tllursd.ay, Januarr 29, 1970' DAI~ y PILOT Iii LEGAL NOTIC& LEGAL NOTICE IN TMI MUNICl,AL COtHl:T-01' OllANOI COUNTY' MA•tollt l'»nf JUDICIAL DIST.ICT CIRTl,ICATI Of IUSIHllS COUNT'f' DP OlllANOI 'IC11TIOUI HAMI ITATa OI' CALIJ'OlllHIA. Tiii vndf ....... dD f!WfltY 11'1rt lrt c-........., 1111t condU(!I"' 1 bloltl-tt m -lllf Av1 , SllMMOMS 5ullt 6. l•lbol 11111111 1119 • "'611 10-111 C..Fllomll. Ulldtf' "" llClll1tut thm 111m1 l:OH 0, MILLE• tfld THOMAS of AMll:ICAN THfMES Md 11111 NM HA•Of STY, Pllinlltl1 VI. M. HALEY nrm t. -Id Ill ~ Iv•'°"""' "'"'"'· 1nd IHl••Y •·HALI!:"(, Ind M. HALIY' """""' 1141""" Ill f"Q end flKn II Ind SHeR•Y l . MALEY dol!ll tll.lllMU rtaldtllCt 11e It tollDWtl as OGNI• •tATS Ind TH( 1.EOPA•O ltlc.llltd T. Ct"I""'" Jr., 299 llub~ SPOTS, tlld OOEI I ll'lrwth V. lnc:lvllW, A"I .. 11111111 11111111. CtUI. 9'1U2 Dellnellnl1 J""" L. Clrrlfltloll, 209 •utiw Al'f THI!: Pll!:OPLll!: OF THE STATE Of' ll11bot 11111\d, Cttll. '7"2 CAllFOltNIA, 0.tlid Jll'lu.trv U. 1'1• To 11M lbovt 111mtd Otllfld111t1: M. ll~rd T. Cltrlntlon Jf. HALEY tna IHE•iltY 11;, HALEY J-1 L C1rrt111loll You ar1 dlrtctH lo 1111 wit!! 1111 cltrt STATE OF CALll'OlltHljll, Ill' lhl1 court 1 WiltlTIEM Jll.fADtHG In O•AHGE COUNTY: r110011H to ttw eotnol1lftt WQUll!t -'"'' Gfl Jtnu•n lt, 1'10, betort mt" t ~l'~ ... ., ......... 1YllU I~ ,..... ,......,, ffllltlfd •tlll>ll wllhlll Nolll'\' Putllk: I" Ind for .. 1(1 ,,,,,, TEN dlY1 ttlef' 1111 Hrvkt Oii WOii fll 1hl• PtnOMllW t-red J-' L. C1rrl ... to11 "' 1ummon1. Ii 11,.,.td wll!llft 11>e tl:iout and llllth1rd T. Ctrrl119!011 Jr. •-n II n1mtd County, tr wllllln THiii.TY DYi If 1"111 19 M 1111 11t1G111 w!1e11 "'""' 1rr Hrved 1t1tw~trt. iul1Ktlbt4 to '"-within lnltrumttll '"' \lou 1r1 110tllltd Th.ti Uf'lltta you M flit ickiwwlfd9td !lley u.11<11tld .,.,. 11m1. 1 wrl1t111 ,.1oontlV1..iffdln1, "Id pllln· (Offl(ltl s..n 11111 will 11•• IUdtlmffll lot' l"l' -Y or Cll.,ltr I", $t11sllurY ....... _ dlrntndld 111 11\t: tomP1tlnl IS NOi.,., Pllflllc -C11!!or"I' 1r!1\111 u-eontr1tl. tr wm IPOIY lo 1"4! Prl11tlPll Oftlct In too.irt lo<" '"' 0Th1r re!lel Cltmtr.dld 1n Ille Otlftlf County compl1lnl. MW Commlnloll EJ1plr,1 Oiled July 11. 1t6t, APl'M n, 11n M. MAMLI N Publlslltd Ott"9f Cots• D•llw Ptlor, ci.rk Ill' Ill• 1bo¥e-entll1"1 Court. J1n11111 \5, 22. 2t 11111 F.tir.,.,.. ~. 8• Ja.n Clemt• 1'1'0 '1•10 DIPlllY Clfrk •SEAL) \111 llllY Miii lllt M¥kl ti ltl tlt-W LEGAL N011CE 111 lflY 1111ttlr ~'" wltlll .. <-t--------~,....~--l>itlt1I tr tlll1 __ .. wai llHnlfl' HOTIC• TO CltlOITOlll .._ .. Ill c-ttff wllttlt1 IM llmt IMft SUPll:!Olt COlllllT 01" THI ll•IM .. IN• --· ttr 111119 • ..... STAf• 01" CALll"O•HIA 1'0111 1111 ,._.,.. .. It 1111 c-olllftl. Tl(I COUNTY OJI O•ANOI: MA•WOOO, SOD•H • AOl(IHSOH NI. A..W2t Uf Htw-' Ctlllft Drh>t Esllte DI MA•GA•e:T J. GILLEnf. Nt...,.. llldl, Cl~I Dlc:HHd, Tll (111) 64"1·1JIJ NOTICE rs HEREIY GIVl!N lo , ... All-n ,_ Plll11Hlh . cr<ldllors of 1IMt tMvt 111mH dKl(l.,,I PubH>hld °"'"'' COii! 011IY Pllol, 11111 Ill PlflOllt hlYlllt crtlm• 11tln1• 1ri. J'""''"' Jt, ttllll F...,*911'-J.-12-11· utd -~ 1re··~f'fd-tr1Ht ~. 1t7' !71-IO wllll 1M lllUUI"' vouc ..... I. In ltw ollke cf tt.. clolrk of Ille 1bovt 111llli.I court, er !o or111nt 11\en'!, .. 11n Ille nle'll11n r--====o-ccc==~,..--r vouc""' to 1111 undtr1i911td ,, lhl ollke CERTll"tCAl• Of IUSIHISS of lier AllorMYI. Frt,,klln tnd Fr111k1!11, LEGAL NOTICE FICTITIOUS NAMI 101 E. 11th St., Cfll• MIM. Cttllom!e Tl'lll undenl11\td dotl cerilfy 1111 Is con· n•21. wn1e11 b 11111 Pleet cf bu•lntu of d11tllne 1 bu1!"t11 ti 1•~12 l1rn11tblt lht und1nl1ntd In tit m1ller1 ftrltlnrn. Clrclt, lfunl!n1I011 811ch, C•ll"1rnl1, to Ille ftllll of 11ld dteedllnl, wllhln four uno1r 1111 llc1H1ou1 llrm n1me ol llANA, moMlls 1n1r flo1 l!tll Pllblklllon cf 1111' LIMITED Ind, ... , 11ld firm II comOOlld llOllU. of the lollowlnt Ql!rlpn, wllola 111m1 In Dllfd JllllJI"' t, UJI. lull 1nd olt(I Ill' flllclt!lce II 11 fOllOW1; GRA,CE •UHF Kt .. n LtRH OtmP1ev. 1 '4. 2 E~ta1•rl• of WI!! ll1•111t1t11t Clrtll, Hunt1119ton lletCl'I. of 111e tbovt Mrned dt(Odtlnl Ctlll. '1'41. l'IANICLIH & ,llANICLIN 0tl9d JAn••tr'I' 71. 1tJG, Altlrlll'VI If Lt• IC1ren I.. ~HY ',. 111 •· 1 ... St. St1t1 ot Ct!ltor11l1, Gr1119t Ceunl'r : Ctslt Mello C1IHll"r!ll fUlf On J111. 11. nre.. belere me. 1 Nolt"' Tel. Olt! .-.w1 Pubi!t Ill al'd tor 1tld Sllll, periQlllUY A"""4111 fW IJrK~ltia 8Ppetr"' IC1rtn LtR H 0.mPltY llno-P11l)lllMd Ortnet C-1 OtllV l'llol, 10 ,,,., 10 iw lllr ""°" wllo5f "'"'' 11 Jin"'"' u, 22, 1f 1nd Flbr111rY s. subscribed to Ille wllll!n Instrument 1116 lf7t •·10 1c~-ltd9ed ..,.,e•tculed !he"""'· (OFFIC IAL SE.Al.I J"n l. Jol>sl No!•"' Publlc.C1lllor11\1 LEGAL NOTICE T·JtUt Prtnclo11 Ottlte In Or111111 CounlY NICE CATCH -John Lansa\v, skipper ol the Frontier, out of Art's Landing, Mr comm1n•011 Elllll•t• Reports from anglers In· dicale sil\'er salmon planted in Lake Oroville last spring ha\'e gotten excellent grov.·th and are putting up good battles· for fishermen . the Department of Fish and Game reports. holds 17-pound \\'hite sea bass caught by Ida \Villiams (right) o( l\1anton. l'u1111::ic110~;..!!? cwst 0111v 111o1, ----~------------"--'----------"-----------IJ1n .... r1 :it 1nd F1t1rutrY 5, ll. 1'. ltJG 11 .. 10 NOTICE TO C•IDITOJIS SUl"ll•IOfl COURT 01' TM .. lt•tlf O' CALll'O•NIA 1'01 THI COUNTY O" OJIANOI ........... One angler returned a $5 reward tag taken from a 3- pound , 3-ounce, 20 1 ~-in ch sil ver that Yl'BS among 50,000 seven to nine inch fi sh planted du ring April of 1969. The DFG said recent reports Indicate the fish are feeding neer the surface on threadfin shad planted in the big reservoir, and fish ing should be excellent during the "'inler and early spr ing. During February, more than eight tons o[ catching-size rai'i1bow trout from Willo\V Beach National Fish Hatchery \1•ill be stocked in the Arizona· Ne\'ada section of I h e Colorado River be I v.· e e n Hoover Datn and Bullhead Ci- ty, E1llle of LOLA JEWl!Ll Cl.All K. Dec••-· Lightweigl1t Hoop R~sults NOTICE IS HEflEIY GIVEN It ,..... er.oil~ or tht •INl¥1 n&med ~eftt1t ~--7.=7C==c----lhll Ill IHlfMlll hl .. lnt Cll1"11 .. l lMf h LEGAL NOTICE w ld dtcedtnl 1r1 '""Ired 10 fill them, NIWl'OIT·MISA UNll"llD wUh ffle Jlectwl,.,. '>'(11;(1'fr1, 111 1119 offkl SCMOOL OISTlllCT ol ltlt clerk of me lbO°<'I enlltlt<:I court, or LEGAL N011CE NOTICE INVITING ••Os lo present tti.m. "''"' llM ntcHH..., JV IA$KliTIALL Hvnt1n110" t6J! C!.trtlll OJ F' Whitt 01 1 F' Wlllll!tld (7(1) c &took$ co G W1lktr ll JI G un WH!mlnl!tr (Ill Morro,. Ul Olt1ltk 1101 H1l1 !fl Sltmtns Ul llrlOO • C1111 Miii till /\Tien C?ll r Yount !11) F fl•td (101 c SttnolOll !~) G !") f'dlM!" 01 R. Tnom'1.on !I fl lia><.11 (•I r~•lson {S} M!N1y II. Thom11~on NOTICE IS HEllEIY GIVEN lhll !!It W\lt!ltri, to rt>e 11nd1r1l1nt'd 11 lt!ir offlt• 801r11 of Elhlc1tlon of the NewPOrl·Mew of IOONE I. SATCHELL, Attor...v1 If MllllOll Vlllf (lfl Sin Cllll'ltnh Ofl Unified School Ol•l•ICI of oringe coi,'"IV, Lew, l60.S Loni 811ch lovlevlrd, LOOf DIYl5 !9) f II ?) V•lare (1Hlornl1 "'Ill !KtlYt 5ffltd tlldi UP lO lltldl, C1lllornl1 fOltlJ. Wlllcll 111111 Pl•c• Price l1) F Ill) El!lnor ll :OQ A.M. on 11\t 6111 dlY ot Ftbruery of bu$1M15 of l"-ul'dtr51tMd 111 111 "'tt-Morr Ul C Ull 1<•101• 1910 11 tht ottlct of ttld S(llGOI Dlllrlcl. ltr1 per11!nlnt to lht nt1t1 of "Id dee• Evtn5 !6) G IJl COlll loci!ed •t !I.II Plt~lll A'"""'' Co.ti dffll, wlll\ln lour monrh1 1Utr tht fir.;! Sl\lnnon {11) G 111• $1ll1n Mni, Ct lll'llrnl• 11 whldl 11mt ltld bldt publ\c111on of 11\!I natlu. k cr!n\, '""'' Co•1• Mr.11 -M.,._ ~corlnt 1ut11: Minion Vltlo -Sl1n· will bt! pyblldY opeftt'd tnd reld fQ<: D1lecl J1nu1"' '-lf10. M1cl..•td 110 G c111arl1\ll t. Hor.I 2, Eod1ltY l. Ortlf ~. tor 2, lrlck 6. Sin Cltmtnlt -Ptlers Wlr~se 1lock 1u1111llt1 Chirle1 II. Cltrk Scorho9 1ubt-Hun!ln9!Dfl' Dlvldtcn Edlwn _ llurchtn I~, WhHim• !, Ctn-6 l..una 1 11 101-1. Adm lnlllr11or ot '"-111111 (JI, wor1111 tn. Wt.imlns11r: 1..111100 ' · . 0111,.,, ~rtL p1pf,,, OuPnttllnt, ot tl'MI tl:>ovtt ntmed dKeMnl. !6f. 1~11 ~. H1lft1m" M'"ltcn Vlelo :U, 5111 Cl.. Ari, Audio Vlwtl , Llbrl"'• llldu,!rltl IOOH I &. IATCH•LL H<tlfrl<M' Hu"UnttOll l1. W11tmlns-H11llH,,,!: Coslt M"" jl, Edli.on 16. men11 :U. Arli. klenc:t. He•lth. PllY•ltll Educe-IY1 D. A. IMnl ler 21 · liF~=====================~Fil lion. Cuilodlt1, Ltm11$. Uts ~ IM<lt l!vll. A!! bldl trt !(I bt! In Kcord1>1<t with Llllt INdl, C61M ..... , (Ofldlllont IMtrucl\ofts 1nd SPKll1ClllOllS Tel: OIJJ l,._..'1 Mtrifta (JI) llllCIOn Ill StnOtrs !I ll !lull (Il l Mlllttr 110 llew11dl 1111 ' ' ' G G 1•n A1111>11m (II McCulllr ffl G1 rrt !I 01 1..1"9""' 01 l tvltn UI 5llOU51 Sctr•n9 111bt : M.1rl111 -W1oner 1 H11nimt,; Mtrlnl 22·1l. El MOde111 1171 F'ollO" IOI F GOY~ 110 F Wl\llt ().I) c Loni UJ) G l..eont (~l G fill Ll-NltlwM<lll" /Ill WF\lln1h CH J1ml1on C•I Corwin 130 ) GllltlPlt !') . ,. .·'·. . lwhltll ,,,·now°" t•le In Tht otlkt of fllt! Attw ... v1 W Allnl1l1tr1tw 1 Purcfl11lflll Attn! ol 11ld SC-I Dlslrlct, Publllh!CI Or-1 COl11 0.IJY Pllltl, \lSI PIKtntl1 Avt....... (flll Mesi, J•nwfll I. 15 ,., n, 2t, 1t7' 1].J~ C1lllornl1. EO(fl bidder mull 1u1w1111 1 bid dePOsll LEGAL N(]l'ICE In !flt form Ill' 1 eerllflftl or u Jlller's FLYING FUN! by WAYNE CHASE d>tClt or I bid bOfld t<l\ltl lo l!Vt Pf'rttnl 1-----~=~-----Dicl you know th1t tht pri-th111 1i9hh 1r1 110t COii• U ... I of 11"1 amount of 1'M ~d. "''"" P.J:Mtll P•Y•bll lo the 1rd•lf of ll'le NewP0<1-Mn1 Cl•Ttl'"ICATI DI'" I UllNl.11 "''' pilot in I little 1i119 l1 Ill• lrolltcl. Unlllecl Sd\001 Dlslrld. A Perlormtnu l'"ICTITIOUI "'"""' gni1 Tri.~1c1• h11 11 much Afwivi repoil vour poii· llond '"'" M rMUlred ti lfll_dtocre!Jon of Tiie ul>dersl1MC1-. c1rll"1 ~• 11 nn-''thl to t irJpl't 11 1 7071 ~ I b Ille Olslrlct. In IM tVf'l'll of l1!lur1 IO dlKUnt 1 111111-11 ltJt Pilktn Pit<• lion to i~• co11iro low1r 1· tnlt< Into ludl conlrlcl, Ille IW'OCHdl ol Cll!lll M111. Callfornl1, u""'• tht flo-Her1in li11 th1 ptobl1m: lore 1,.d Juri~'J vour •P· !lie thtelt wrn M lorleltfd, or 111 Ct3-f oft llllou1 llrm """' of G. '· Tll!:CHHICAL •• lho ,;, fill• with "'''' ,,;. I. Al • I I r bond. IM 1\111 """' ~ will be $EltVICES tnd "''' 111d flrm 11 com-pro1cn . Wt\11 ttp I er or forlfllfod lo 11ld Sdlool Ol1trlcl ol OrtnOf. POUCI of !ho! folloWlftl per:IOll, W'>o!t v1!1 piloh t¥1r\I J,,..,, l1w\ olhtr 1ircr1h. Counr1. Mmt In lull 1nd pl1ce of re1ldt11Ct 11 11 fer 1ir lr1lfic co119111io11 mu1 t I b fl NCI bldatr mtv wlll>Cl•tw 1115 bid for I folloW1: b1 lmp•Clvtd. Thi no11-profe1 · A et! re•pon1i 11 yin9 I period cl forl\l-J!Vt (fl) din ll!fr Ill<! George Morrl1 ~o•. 1'51 Pellet" Scoring 1ubt: El MCH11n1 -W11v1r r11h wiih tht pilot. jd•I~ VI lcr ttl8 001n!nt1 thtreol, Pltct. Cosll Me11, C11llornl1. '· WIHm1n '· l..1o~n1 llt1cll-Pol1el11 , 1ion1I pil oi 1hou!d l1k1 •dvdn· , Tho! llo1rd ol ll!:ductllon of Tiit N~PO•I· 01ttd J1nu1r1 70, 1f1G. The special coot season held 5. I t19e of 1v1ry 1icl in 1r.,ff;, ;1,'11~:.~,·~~b ::r::T~~~.,;;: ce2it,;. 1~:~~ ~111:~~K~1 !!1!~:ctb1~~t·;~J :i 51111 "uc:r11:,.:f::'~!.F!~,1., countY: the pasl hl'O weekends on the H11t1!me: El Mod1n1 41. L19u1141 co11frol f,,c iliti11 fo r hi1 o ... n ly, Pr1v111 111o1 <•v~• uts. c1u· l't(.,11,11y icc11>t lllt iowesr bid, 1..:1 10 on Jtnue"' 10, 1,10, before me. 1 Deparlme"l of f'r.sh a 1, d &e tcn 37· I 1•l1tv 111d 1111 11ftl\f of other ~· lilt 1r1tv lt.Jt tft ltt\lr, Ch1rek" waive 1n1 1 .. rorm1!111 or lfftQultrlh In No11,.,. Public 1n ind ior llld Stilt " Rtoultlloll' 10·1!1. ,;,,,,,,, lit flllV Sl4.M, ,.,,.,II lft.1111 AP41clll 1n¥ bid !Kl!1¥1'd. . Ql!r1Cn11ly IPPHrecl G.O•lt Morris Fo~ G m.'s lrn""rial Wildlife Area 1st Ovtrllm" 71·11. "' tn lllwr. W• 9!f1r 1111 1111111 11r-oited J1nu1r1 71, 1170. -nown 10 me to be IM P1r:1G11 wl\oM • "' ---Al the ptifo•mtnct of <rtll. lflllnKll~ tn~ r1!11 II Mll,11· «EWPOllT-MESA UNIFI ED ntmf It IUll1Ctlb9<1 to 1f>e within In• at the southeast end of Salton ,,.,,, ,,,,,,,, •.• ,.,.... ,,, IOll AVIATION , Jl41 WtNlll" .,.,.. 5CHOOl OISTAICT of J!rum,,.,, Ind 1cl'.nowlldted ,.,. llfKU!t'd S I t BOAT BUFFS mnM. 01'1ft '"'"'""'I" I• IU... Or1nlf Co!intY. Ct!llo•~I• ·~· 11m1. ca was a comp e e SUCCf:SS, 1 ~ill1 of pr iv1!e pilolt mu1t Ml UHy, "l rlnt kl..,, ~111111111 '"" II• 0orc1ny "'''"" itlllltr !OFF1c1111.. sEALI rt ' d' t I · G I tit Y"'' hi tilth! ftr "''Y U.M". p .. -,,, •• ••~I , ' I repo S 1n lea e. Almen lec~•b•• ;1 thi 0111, • 10 1mprov1. r11l1r vi9i · y''" ,,.. r1ncts M. or Ck B I S f ' "I J k d h J I c '~l·1 10Q NoflrY Pub!k·C1lllornl1 :-01ct lace I. ef or ' ftl I Ja ~e The two-wee en u n fu tl-tim t be1ti119 1clitor worki"g anct •I viii now Intl lim1 ii Pub'lll>ed Or1n<1~ Co11t Dtl!\< Piie! PrlnclNl Olt1(t In removed 3,534 coots and ended on '"' 111w1p1p1r in Or1n91 br;1f b1tw1111 ij9hti119 •nd WATCH NEXT Jtnu•"' 71. "· 1t10 tH·JG Los A"9eln count"f' d ed i C ~ H' I I •••••"• o<l•'oo. WEEK FOR NOTICE M• Commlultll E.lt>lrts • This weekend Vail Lake will host the Southern their ex cessive epr al on on oun • ., .. 11 •11c u• "' _covt••9• LEGAL A119u11 '" 1•n tallfornia Outbot"rd Assn. fifth point race of 1970. The green fields of grain grown of bo1hn9 i ncl ¥•chf1n9 n1w1 How1v1r, the ri9hh io lh1 BASICS OF p.inn Publlllltd Or11191 co11t 01nv Pllol, •.specially for geese wintering ·,",,'o't.ail., f11tur1 of the DAJL'r ,;, for priv1t1 piloh m1y 1uf· NAVIGATION CE•T,',',',',','ro'u'•'•'•"•'•IHESJ ::;;""' 'U, :it •tod Febru1r1 Jiu.\~ t•ce will last for two days and competition will be keen fir ;f th1 few who ~;0 1111 fie more than 80 entries have been made. The race will ii'i"i'i"i'i"i'iei'i·!!!!iiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiii :~=~~~~~~~~~==::::;;~~~~~~~~~-1d~"":"~1':! ~s .. ~er~':1"';1~ cf.'.: LEGAL NOTICE ~ set up 10 that it will not interfere with t he fishermen '"'' Mew. c1111ornL1. llndrr ~ 11c·1-------------.,... !lllout tlrm 11.11"'1! of AVON Olll:APE "·Ut11 qn the lake. CLEAHEJl:5 Ind lhtl Uld nrm 11 COfl'I· CE•TtflCATIE OP IUllHISS POlfd of 11"1 lollcwh11 HtlO<\ wl>ow ,ICT1TIDUI ,.AME Bnbcal 01• t 'ox G11aranleed • Thi!ii past \\'cekf'nd this v.•riter spent l\vO days in the mountains above Delano in quest of either a bobcat or tox. Joe Orth, a li censed ,l?uide in the a rea, has been suc- c;essfully bag.1?in!l varm its for hunting pa rties for the J>asl six years. The best time for his hounds lo trark l these game va rmits and trophies is nO\V \vhen the ground is '''C't from rain or sno\vfall. . Our party of four hunters became a s excited as the dogs \vhen the hounds picked up the first scent and let out their hov.•Js. The chase \Va s on . and a ft.er treeinJ? the f9x twice and hiking over the hill s for 21? hours , Orth ftnally called the hounds off. :: Hunters have the op1ion or kil ling the game or Jetting ~e treed anima l li ve to becom e a more c unning varmit. Orth guarantees that each hunter ~·ill bag either a bob- dnt or fox and if a hunte r fails in his first attempt he May return again. on a n unbooked \reekend. : Orth boasts an 80 pe rcent success on the first trip and ~ 95 percent successful hunt on the second trio. The j?uide service includes a horse. food. llld ging and jeeo. Optional service includes delivery of the trophy to the taxidermist. If you have thoughts of hanging up your guns for the season. don't forget that the varmit season is just r.eachin.i? its peak. For more information on Orth's hunt phone (213) 443-6415, evenings only. ' ' INSTALLED CHAIN-LINK FENCING Basketball Backboards 12.95 & 14.95 Basketballs 4.95-5.95· 7.95-10.95· 12.95 Wilson Leather Basketballs 19.95 8.95 Converse All Star Basketball Shoes Collegiate Basketball Shoes Basketball Goal & Nets 11.95 3.95 & 5.95 Champion Handball Gloves 3.95 to 6.95 Outdoor Handballs Indoor Handballs Volleyballs Playground Balls Soccer Balls Baseball Shoes Soccer Shoes Track Shoes • 95c each 1.10 each 2.95 . 8.95 . 12.95 1.59 & 3.25 3,95 to 19.95 9.95 15.95 . 19.95 8.95 & 14.95 12.95 • 13.95 • 19.95 Rawlings Baseball Mitts • 5.95 to 42.95 Wilson -Dunlop Tennis Rackets Tennis Dresses Ladies Tennis Shorts Mens Tennis Shorts Mens Tennis Shirts Ladies Tennis Shoes • Davis -Bancroft 4.95 to 46.00 13.95 to 26.95 7.95 & 10.95 4.95 to 12.00 4.95 • 6.00 • 7.00 7.25 & 7.95 '• Mens Converse Tennis Shoes Mens Jack Purcell Tennis Shoes 7.75 8.95 . Duck Feet Fins-Blemish 6.95 pr. Duck Feet Fins-Regular 8.95 pr. Masks 3.95 . 4.95 5.95 Snorkles 95c • 1.95 2.95 Speedo Swim Suits & Trunks Ping Pong Paddles 95c to 7.95 Table Tennis Sets 5.95 to 11.95 Dartboards -Darts Bikes -Parts -Tires -Tubes n1mt In lull •nel Plitt of rt1ld1nce Is •• Tiie U'fldertltMd don <fl"lllY ,,. 11 con-folloM· ductlll!I I llu1l11tt11 11 102' lllYl!dt Dr., Ch1r"1 F. Porltr, 17'-1! C , ... ,,, NtWPCr! lle1C11, Ct llfornl1. ufldtr llW! f1C· G1rdf'l'I Grovr, Ctlllorn!t lltlou1 nrm nlfT\t Ill' THE PEODl..Elll: tn4 Dllfd JtnutrY 1~. 1'1!1 f'lll 11ld llrm I• tllll'lllO•td of "" foltoW< Char! .. F. Porft• I"' Pll'flon, wllcH 111mf In lull tnd PIKr STATE 01' C,0 1,.IFORNIA Ill' rnldence ll 11 follcw'= OlllANCE CO UNTY: Oiied J1nutrY 1•, 1t70. On J111u1rw H, 1t7D, btlort ""' I Ron11d Ill:, Keum p Ncttt1 Pub lic Jn tnd lor u ld s111e, st111 ot c11tfornl1, o,111t1 cou.-t"f'~ ... flOlllllY IPPl~•..,i Cll1rtes F. Porlttr On Jtnlllfll lt. 1110, btlo<t "'"• I known to m• lo bl 1111 Pt•lOI' who1t Nolt"' Publlc In 111(1 for ,tld !felt , n1m1 11 1ub$(rlbt!d to !flt wl1111n In· per10ntll1 tPOl!lrfll Rll-llt ld It. K1um1 11rumen1 tnd 1ck110w!Hltl'ld lie e•ecu!ed kiwwn 10 "" 11 111 '"" HrHn who!lt lllt oame. 111me rs 1vb1Krlbtd to "" w1Thln In. (Olll,111 Sei l\ Jlr\/tne!ll tnd ICIUIGWltdQi=d ,.,, e~tculld Ml"' IC. He~ry . lht ••Mt . Noter¥ Public• C11!111rnl1 !Ol'FICIAL 5EALl PrlnclPll Olllct In Mtr!lt M. llru"ln1 Or1ntt Counly Notarv Publlc Mr Com,,..ln!on e~a1re1 51tte ol C11Jlor1111 NOY. 14, 1171 Prl1ttlp1t Otlltl In Publlslltd Ortnot coa~t Ot\1¥ Piii!, Orin•"' Coun!Y Jtnu1..,. lS. ,,, ff tnCI Febr ... ry !, MY Comml11!on E~Plrn 1910 n.711 Stttrmbtr '· 1'10 T-SU2' -___ L~E=GcA,r,. '-N•O"TCICCCE~---1 PubTl•l'led or-• Cc•!I Ot!Jy ,.llot, p.JJNt J••utrY n. n 1tod 1'1Uiru1"' s. it. ClltTll'ICATE 01'" IUSIHISS 1t7' M1·l'O PICTITIDUI HAMIE Tltt v.,.,,,,....., w.. c1r1111 11e It con· LEGAL NOTICE ducllnt 1 bulll!nl 11 UO w. 17111 SI., --:::=c=::=:-=:::::o:-=o'-:Oc:--C0111 Mt:11, t.r1tor11f1. undfr ll>t fie· "-''l!llD• COUllT 0, THI llllou1 llrm n1,,,. Ill' HA 111110 Ill STATI OP CALIPO•llllA POI T•EljCHtHG CO. tlld 11111 111d f!,m Is THI! CDUHTY 01'" D•ANfl tom~ ol llM fel1owln1 Pll"IOjll. whese. N9. A..mt 11tmn Ill lull Ind llltl " l'ftkltncl trt NOTICE OP HIAlll!fO OP PIETITIOH II !ollcrwl: POii ,lllOIAT I! OP WILL AHO l'Olt Dolltll H. trld ll!tl1n E. Sln!.Cfl, .... LfnP'S TPlTAMIMTAllY Olk SI .. '°''' tMstr. C111torn11. Etl•lc of Lurh1r Dow It. M.rr. o.i:11 .. Dt~ J1n. 14. 1910. ed. Oon1ld H. lll\IOn NOTICE ts HElll!IY GIVEN Tllaf J11t11 LllU111 E. StnlOll Lff Mirr ll1s lllfd "4!rtl11 t "'111co! fW llllt fll CllllOmll, Ort"'I (11111\IY; trotlllt of wlM Ind tor h11U1MI of llllftt Oii J1-rY 14, 1'70. befort fM, t Tnl1,...nt1ry lo P~lll-r, rtftrllnU "' Noll"' Plltlllt I" 11111 tor ukl Sttlt. w!lkf\ I• mldt for turll'ler 11rtleu1tr1. 1"11 Ol!rwntlly •01111red Oelltlot H. $111!.0l'I A "''' .,.,. l!me end 01lc1 of 1111rlA1 l~ Llllltn IE. Sa-1v1own 10 ,,.,. le bl l1lf 11m1 '''" llttn "' for Ftbr .... ,.,. I), lt10, otrlOllll wllow n1mes trt 1ubsc•tbtcl to 11 t:ll! '·"'·· 11'1 Th~ courtroom ol Oeo1l'l-!lll wllhln ln111um1n1 11'd 1cl(110Wlfd9ecl m~r Ho. l of 1lld covrt. 11 m CIYle lheY fXtKVlfd '""' Hm~. CMttr D•1~ Wt1I, In .... (llY of S..1111 t0FF1CIAL Sll\Ll A~~. Ctllfo"111. MlrY k. HtllfY DMtd J1,,u1rv 76, 1t70, Ho!~'V l'ubllc•Ct!llofnll W. E. ST JOHN, Ctt1n1y Clerk '•Incl~•· Ofl!(I In L""hlr It. ,,..,,.,., 0rt"9f County fft flu!~ IUllll 'VIII• 11111• Mv C1,,,m1ulon E~~lfe1 l11r-•~•. Ct ll""1111 '1511 Nov. 14. 1tn Tiu n•Jl M•·J.fll P111111tllfd Or1nte Co11t 011!1 PllOI. AlllNlff f9r Ptllll-J1nu1ry IJ, tt. :rt Inf Fetru."' l, P11bll5rlfd Orlnte Col1t Deity ,,1111, 1t7' 1t-7t JtnlMlr'I' tt. 2t tnd PtlN'v1n t, 1'711 1'°"1'0 LEGAL N011CB LEGAL NOTICE ______ .. ••• • L Thursday, January 29 11170 \!If DAILY PILOT "I" our Money's Wortl1 'l Some Ho spitals Fight Costs • By SYLVIA PORTER (Tblrd la a serlts of fJ\11l We are or courlie doing •: some Unnp to reduce or at least to slow down 01e soaring costs o( hospital cnre For instance, most hospitals have turned to such nurse-:iisv ing fac1lit1es as recovery rooms and intensive care units in which skilled nursing care a n d sophisticated mechcal equipment are concentrated These facilittes help slash the need for murderously ex pensive pr1val~ nursing In ur dividual rooms A1A.NY HOSPITALS are ni corporaUng progreSSJve pa tient care' -ta1lor1ng medical services to the actual needs of each 1ndlv1dual pa tient Some pattents need only diagnostic care wh.ich can be conducted o \J. t s I d e the hospital others need 1ntens1ve survedJance by h o s p 1 t a 1 personnel still others can best be taken care of In their own homes with the help or special equipment a n d occasional v1s1ts by hospital personnel ~ ~l~~;rse:~';! e:0~~~1~al ~~r o~ a hospitals most cosUy skills and facd1t1es Computers are as you might expect being used on a mounting scale to slash costs and save precious time As J!Justrat1ons In several New Orleans hospitals a com putertzed menu p I a n n 1 n g system has not only reduced by 95 percent the ume needed for planning menus but also has achieved savings of 16 percent on raw food costs In the Chicago area 16 hospitals LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE have set up a compulerlted blood bank Information system .... h1cb can locate raw blood tlouors 1n 20 seconds and wt11ch reduces blood spc1lagc by 2 500 plnlS a year -for s1p,;ir1gs of S70 000 annuol\y In Salt l.3ke City th ... Latter Day Saints Hospital has Ueveloped an elaborate six hospital heart morutor1ng system 1n which a computer continuously monitors post-0pernhve heart patlenlS There are now over 1000 central servlce bureaus \v1th computers to do record keeping chores ror hospitals MORE ANO MORE hospitals are turn1ng t o disposables in all areas to help trim costs At Doctor s Hospital 1n San Otego meals are being served 1n throw away tray sets 1n an ex per1mental cost reduction prt>- gram P r e a d m I ss1on testing (PAT) 1s a basic cost-<:utt1ng technique being adopted by an expanding number of hospitals to 1nake more cff1c1ent use or both hospital space a n d hospital equipment With PAT tests can be scheduled -often several days before adm1ss1on -on days and at hours best for hospital and pahent Blue Cross 1s now g1v1ng PAT a big push by agreeing to pay for certain outpatient diagnostic tests One 1n three Blue Cross plans will pay for su<:h vlslts today PAT OFFERS key benerits slowing of health 1nsura11c.-e rate increases freeing of hospita l beds for Uiose v.ho urgently need them reduction 1n the need fo r addlltonal cos tly hospital ac1hties reduc lion 10 the amount of work time lost by patients through h o s p1tahzat1on convenient scheduling of diagnostic tests so that they do not interfere wtth the patient s 1ob and home respons1b1bltes Also 1ndicat1ve a Melrose 'f.lass hospital has launched a • surgical day care plan tn .... h1ch a patient needing only minor uncomplicated surgery can check 10 during the morn FAITH" IS AN EXlllA INGllDl!NT by TERRY GRANT R Ph At we fill eoch pf'flCrlprio11 we h1111w tl!ctt 111 oddltio11 to the IMJredinB tMt yo11r ph.,.lclu apecltl.s there h. 011 oltto h1 tOlllflb~ i119r.dlo11t thot don aot """' la wrltlnt It 11 Faltll th~ tllro119h hl1 ltnowl edge owd eipHIOJ1te he hit\ priKCrlbed o medic:h1e that wlll help to curo or rollo•e 011 Ill .... So111tt1mo• this Fohh co11 lie .a lm,olfo11t 01 tho medl cl11e 1h0ff We too ho<re a trfft dMI of hlltll h1 the occ:11roc;y of tho preM:rlptlo"' we dlt,.llM oftd we deri•o m11ch 1ot!Jfoc;t\on wt.et. yo11 tell •• c111 a fvturo "lilt thot someone 111 yo11r 101111 ly " 11ow well YOU OR YOUR. DOCTOR CAN PHONE US wh•" you "''d • dfll "''V We w II dtl v•r p 0111pt1v w tho~! •Wlra d1• 9• A q e~I m•nv people el v 011 Ut for l~e ~e•lih "''d' w. w~I eOl'fl• 1•qu ~1h fo dtl wt y tt w Ct <'"d ckt IJf •C•OU" I PARK LIDO PHARMACY )51 Hotplt1I Ro•d Leadership Tl1eme Set For Confab Rear Ad1n1ral \V1\ham C Chnmbbss (rel l \Vlll focus at lenllO" on Effective Business commun1cauons \Vatter F Dunn (rel) will discuss Or gamzauon and How to Take Command at the morning ses SJOO Following the luncheon Dr E F r..1arr1ner medical d1rec tor of Autonetlcs D1vis1on of North America n Rockwell Anaheim \Viii lead the af ternoon session Hts topic will be What Js the Occupat1onal Jlealth Nurse As Seen by r-.1nnagement and Medical" ' County Loan Totals Told PRESTIGE COURTESY PROFIT PSAtells 0 Co • ------------ PG&E Earnings SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) - Co1nplete-New York Stock List /tlarf~et Synibols l I I I I I . ·~ .,~ __ , ____ _ L DAIL V •llOT 17 Thursday's Closing Prices-Complete New York Stock Exchange List 1------------·1 ........... llll ............. ,,. .... .., ................ I0:3fj 111111 Miio-------~-----, !l.elft NII .Min Jilll r Cllff I Nitll L-(le'-C"' '""''Nitti ~Ci.a. Cllt IMl1.I N\tll L-c ... CM! DOW JONES AVERAOES STOCK LEADERS !~ 111"" "° n !m n• U" , W•tt111• _,,. "'• nir,, "",. "'• -H '"'1°'"° ·" i.u ~ TJ" !!:" ::J" M k Hi A • -I I 1 \It 111.i l '• wtbO °"' ,. jt ~\ WIO DIJ"° 1 > ~ " t T :\..;~t 21\\ 1 = ._ N""" 'l'cw1t!A~JJll NI 00\N_, f~ffff' Wtll ~I M ~ l:' ~ j:' :1 NeJ..'~11,1(17A~~~~tc:.,:.T rlu ~ :I ~ .. ~ ~ '; ~ a1· et ga111 'i~.~~f!.l~ 1l n~~ ~ g u _ STOCKS O"" H~ll l• C~ Nf1 =:.~1!1. \'.~n .u ''"' 10 10 -· IJlld Ml di-ol ""l!lttn mot K =· ·~ I "' * ... .to j Q Ult >..-~)Cl ,1111 7J1fS uo. 14.tl 14 Jt-1t.•Wttil,.. .JOI .. lll• ,. ~ )61.11 -•Vo ~· 1!oclr;1 ,, .... on "" NV SI.at E• tVI; r.'° 1 ' t;, .... lij -io Ttt MUft 1 1, 111 ~ WI lo -! 1t T " U) ...... 1 1'4.a 16$.71 -I.".,...,,,. Ut ,, M~ ~ri: :r: =1 ~ ~Fc.n. ,.,. 1ii n.. =1:: ~~I~· t ... -w l~~~.~ :i1~ :: ~ ~~ 11\. .: ~ !! r~· i:'o'? :,'!! ~:tr: m:; = 'n ::'i~' ,L.- , • 11~ 2•\lo ,." _., l!"' &ii" , '5 =='"' !;'I:...,~ ,, ~· , "' ''" =J1• t·~:r ~ "' .... ,:a l ~ _. t, v~ .. ":•cll9ft• ... 111iCb .,,.. 1n ':1'l'-l.i.. :;:,::'4' .. ic" -L.-Ni" c!~;., l i.:~ -lf"' 1 •1.2 1 l~ f~ ,' B H s llin ' ,,,.(Oft • ' ~ ~ '°'•"' ., , •n n1 ilii w11uTt1 • ?II !ti.lo I~ U• .. ~ ,i,m Ttl ftl 11' l'OO ~1 1 + i.., Pr1111 I h ~ • -" y eavy e g Tr.,11c!I lny It-! I ,. 11•1t II' -1? UT t~ !Pf..00 Wn IJft pU.iOii t !lo,) 2t1-hyt•ec 11..fOl:I 1t\oo _ ... ~·.. j lo + \o 'rt n1ltr011 " ·~ '.k ,,_ tJ ''k JMT~IOOWl'l\ift 114' I J6 • 3''1 :)I• Pol•~ IOIJOO 100 t -..i.. rn .0 1 \II -i.. 1 •'lflt" lilf H i ~~ )n, -~ Wt:11i1EI I l; ~\= m: ~t = ~ ~~;fj~ ''~i ~ft? .t"i; ": 0 ~:r.lJ uj ~-• n ~l •-:: \: T ·~~ ... ,a:,:. I; ~ lO ~=I , ~::~co .. , OJ 71 Lt ~:\ 11 -••TtltoX Cop IM 1-it ":j:'"' 11f;;.,_i.0 '"lll"l -1, ~~:~;nal?~ 1, 1:~ 4"' ~'1-'-'I ll ltol Ntt:•YMr:,.1: '.', ·~,, ''' '~J ... Pv•tll Cora '•fi a' -1,. I 0,, , • i -· k l 1·.~ l"f 1 17" :i..\l lS H -1 !Mt I Mttl't Ltw er. .. Cllt =r'tt~ rt J" •• ' -.,x .. a• ca 1 • -... n• ~· '1 j l• "' '4+\lo "'-'E\V YORK (UPI) The sl~k mare was --·•)O • rn~ ,,,. 111 -• -•n I 11J 'l ~l'l!-"4il!:ll'ltfTA! ' -4loo 119v1 ~1 ij l'I 1'1-\1 ·~ -""" t11wPf~.-:lfN"'I'~!' ,, •, ,",~ ,",•.•• !',~ -" 0 ""1 ' cma ,.. 00 ' "' -+1~• ..-o "lA 1 "' 1 ... 1 =' •.. mowed do\vn by another round of selling today tn r~~ ... r:E n 11 1~ n • ' • -Un • ut 1 " 1111 11 "' 11 " -\!lo :Jlr..'1 ce r.60 ,.. ,, ~I . .O ~ .,.. , TWt:ft Cini ld U-ti 'I 1'1 f \o UnUI 1>1115 U ff~ l~'~ 1'~ -~ Whl!tC11 4b ll h,'rt I~,"'. /,,'"• = ~ ""' •• ;;-!'"'" l,.."'l: ~ j~ ~~. ,1tt. -"" n1oderately active trading -U V-~~v~~e 'i: .~ J~I~ 1 .• ~l"' =n~ w1i teer11 " 1 ..... ~ "-In the (1ftn consecutive setback Lhe UPI mar· u ~ "' uftrviiy (tnp "' '~ ) 11 ..,,, +tt• :Z::i:T .. ~ 2 35 tt"' ~ ... tt~ -_~," !Ml J Hl#ll Uw (llM Cllt ~.1' I ~ ... m~ -_ ... t,i 1-!~~cbl>C lo ~ ~ li ~ _, • ~~1:'"11~ '° 40 ~ tt ~ H" f'.M~ +llt WIO.toCorp I : Ui! ~i\4 l~': + , P•tt&l at , ~100 as~ ""' •s"" _.,. ~-;;,,_~ .. 11o ...,. '5 -i! ket 1nd1cator measuring all stocks traded ,.,,a s ~~cc•"" ~ ,j fi , !!:! ~·[~'"l. 1Mi.. ~~ t ..; Ht? ll}! ='n :lr?'I~ 1~ 1 1104 11.., 11,.. _ 1' P•c "1" 00e • 1'1-t 11 11 v.1r°" Do11<1 a f'1 20 -off 1 32 percent near the fin al gong on 1 552 issues u ... co «r 1 •• fl"' i u M 111110 1 •1 •1 •1 -a w1111""' .,.. 31 t'4 1 11.o + ~ Pt:mkJI tJ 4 11 U 1 -'lo --D li ln b d d Uni NV'"' :t ~"' ~ J \~ U .., SO ,... 20"4 lM\ 10 wm,lr ~IO 1) 1 "' tt'h ~ _" "'"A1111 •1r " l i lt l•"" 1•~ .._ crossing the tape ec nes ou um ere a vances ~" c:i:i• 1 14 "' w, "'"' -~ 1• :;.~ " I)• "'"' •114 iJU = w11111Dt• 1 u 1111 ii ,.. .-... 41 -\lo Piro"'" WAlr :ttJ~ 11'\lo 11 '-i l!t~ -\\ J!ff:!'i".1~,, '! ~ !!!>~-~ -U J 064 tO 27,, n C1r O• I SOJ ~ ' lol..;,~ -"'•~I n PG '" > ··~ JI Jll'o _ V. Wlrw1 Ol•le 1 • nl'I 70\'lo '1'VI +J P ..... EP 1-'0 3) ~ H\<.o I 4 ,.. .._ -, U1'1oft (1 I ~ l • •"•' ,,·~ -. 0 .. ,f,, O .. !I a >I• '' .. "" -. ~ W!1 0 e1:;-,' ,•, '! 1f" ,r• ,m ="' =::i.:~." fl'* 31 f~h fl~ il~-~ :.:. E:W,1' ?~ t·, i ~ ~~ ~1e Th e Dow Jones industrial ave ra ge of 30 sele<:t u,u~ ~,"',1 p1!.so,.10 ,11; to ~~ '° .. -, V1r1an Auo tt• t•b ,.-'.. :: :uf Cf! " 6 u ~ 10 , 11"' _ \o P1r••• Pf1 "' 5 •1\l <&S...., no...~ ~c'o ·* lif#. '"" f 1 t, _ , u::oiic.f'~ '° Ill "Jl ii~ 41\<.o -\} vno1r 1 '° • )t 2'14 K\to -~ Wof'l'ww st 1 ult. 1,.,., l•v. -.,.. ••rk•D•w11 1 31• 1"' Jl\to ~"' ffd!M11 n1 ~' ~ '. + • ed blue chips which edged still closer to Its 1966 uocit pn '° *ft ltw. ~ vt ~ •• =, 1 ~~"'C: 1.. ~ ~ ~'\: ~,, _ t~ ~co n 19 n""' '11' 11 :i.i +••r11Htn 1 • 1 46 \, -16lft. •+\\ ..,,,.,.i_. .: t.11 we -•• bear market low of abo'• 745 lost 1049 to 74835 unf>ec '" 2 ili 11"" •111 -1 v1cicomo JO """ ""~-1~~~~ .~ " ~ """ n"' -Ill Ptrll Ptft IO ,, ltl'o, 11\.'lo l M1 -~ .i.ctm '!"' ::! !1 \lo -1,_. "'~ Ul'l~K' ' l ~'14 JI"!:< 11_. + "'VIII l6 t ·1v. 1\\ ._. .. _.w.,, "' 11 7S 1• '' "-"" Cent ' 11 tt '' 11o\t -~ T11ectv(:' "' \ I 11 _.,. u11 ec of .o ' 1 1 1 v.it~~ 112 :to1 n.: 11 '• 11 •=I' Wotlw .t2.Jt Ii 211i :rG1 .. 21)\jo _, PINID ¥ '° • u" 1'"'11 1o1ti1o -~\ !...,.. •• i ~ +1ai. near the close un 1 "° , .nU 11!1. n 1 "' v•E" If' n 110 100 100 100 w-otid ,i,1rw-r 'l '°"' ,,"' 1,04 -1•. Pinn i<ry 1 u 111 11l4. 12 • -it .moi." ii: ,, t\ I• ~ffi:i:: -~ un ,...,11 111 11, 1~ ii~ ,11'1 _ .., v115.,, "' s ,10 ~ '"' 11" _Ii< ~-hi•"'• ",. 51\lo s1 s1,,.. + ~ p,...,..., JC ' 1'"' •1'-41"' 1,"',,. --" j=" ,111 1•1 ~ ~. , _.... A turnover of around 12 million shares u111•0,11 Df 1 12'0 101 1 '" 101 v1£P pf• 10 .to s. s. u --~' rtr 11 10111 t, 10 t \lo P1PwL• I 60 rt~ !j'\t 11..., -· ., •• ~ 1 ,. •• "' OftlU>OP 30 1U lf Ii ll -i , vlrn.ito 11 llh l»o 111. Xt•o• C:• 60 1s' 2s1, 2•\lo 1su '"" P•PL 111 • 50 '~ :1"' + , •..u -"' ,11~ ,~ f. 2,11o _ " \vas about 1 5 mtll1on shares ahead of Wednesday s vn 1A1«' ''° Ji!? 11 11 ,, v , coo ,. , 12 :n n x1rt:.. "' 60 11 !I JI 'l4 PtPl of • fO l~ 63 'J • Ttt~Tff\ I olD ~ 21 ~ Un I Ca IOt ;; I0\4 't'.: 0\\ -~vu~~ Mt! I 11~ II II -'l Yt>tlSO !JO I~ r,'! r, 1 1; -~ ~:::;: ~~ 11 ~!~ r.5 ~ rs" =l '-l:= tlil 4:... \\ ~ i,'' =, pace ~~ ~'~ ~ (:n ll u.., ,1 1 .~~ =I:: VW Un I 11 w'x y' z_'" It~ + i::.f:r-.. .!: l) :n~. l l • " -\ Pen111Uft llO n1 3014 "' ,.it -Ill\ 1·· l111 3' U!! '"' Harry Laubscher a vice president ror the \Vais Un' Ind '° " ~) '' '. -m•Nor Ill 1 1: ~1 ~ ~ -"'~=~~'9 .. 3~ ~ ~~ ;,.oj ~\~ =1 ~ ::~1·~~ .: ,.f 1 "' iii'" 1~1: =,1-1 ton & Co brokerage said ' \Vall Street 1s disap-8~ ~~~ 1~ ~ J~~ ls lJ-4-; !.: w.111 ttn t s 2P\ 21 u -"' .~i~rr1:'0ri:o I It .. " -2 l>to9Gt:s 1H ll ~ ., JOtN. +~ t• I b'.'s' 2j \II '"'°~-Ill d Un P1r. Mfl • S fll ., + t W•I~ H 1)0.o 1 d'\ '°'.µt oU&t -11 urn Ind 11 " ,. ,'!'' 11"' _ ~ Pw11ca 1 "' n'i sii.; SJ ·~ d ·~ 21 1•tl 1•;,, ''"" + ~ pointed with corporate earnings reports an many usF ... s ; ... • :JO, "" .. :JO -~ w• Mw v ' 20 '°~ co..,,1,Mee "" , 2 '• 21 _ 141 Ptl'G Bot ., 30 1t 17._ 17h -~ '••UI 1 61 61 5111 n sl -• d I b k ,; f p d l us F ""' 1 "'° Sii 7• \ 22 . ti'-_,., w1 wta "' Co IS 14 .,r• "'' -.'.''\F"'=='"'===========~ 19 1 , a1. 1' -~ P1rtec1 "II"' 1• l 11 n -• Ttd""" f<I 51' l i. 1114 l I'> -11, tra ers no\Y are s tl1ng ac W8lung or rest en usGYPtm l• is ~ s:t1\ s• -~ w1 dFa 1.101 u 20 • .,, 20 . 2lS H '> JS ~7\,-'lloP...t:n Em JI •I '1"" i \'1-Tf•ln Dl?ot t V.i l 114+ ~ USGYD p!l lO l l1 lll 1"1 ~ +l•W1rna~o 'O I 2'0\o ~"' 10\.'t -L " n· n ~-1 \~ Pel nc 1 D 22 39"' !! ... ,. -... TtX1 n pfl "'° lJ 11u HY, nv. -~ Nixon to deliver hJs budget message Monday us lndun •5 !JO Ult 2J n • -1~ WI !'I ... 1 •• J Q.... ... ll -1., F1n•I Stoc:.s i I "' I'!~ ~'ii Pel hie "' I 1 10•1 ·~.,. 20 .., -"' Tl\ oil.QI .. 71 'lo II~ nv. -• us p vCh I• 111 26"" '•"' 1.l•o + lo W••L•... 10 Ul r.·~~ '' .. ffh -"· 1 'II l , ""° -"" Pet In(" P• ao 1 2n~ 21'" 21l.. rrio...a.1 o• • 1o11, """ "'' Pnces al so sagged on the American Stock Ex usPcn OIJ JO ao ,, io u w1"' aw t '4 n »., n 11t -Vi lo A" Homo ., tll.\o 620\ t l -+ • PtleP•u• I 10 • 2S .. 2JV. U l'I Tl'lonl rod 40 11 '°"" 1'\o r:1• + • USP(n pll '° • 211'11 2l•o n •• -w11G11 In 17 2,t_ "~ " 261 :io11 111 .. 29'• -vi Pe1rar1ne 911 ' .i,., ., .. •1 "" -l T~omJw 7h 1 1111 j1 114 -•• change 1n moderate turnover us Shoe s1 • 21 , 1 , ,, w11~'' 10 1 ""' ..-. 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H '> l'lllEI p"" l l.0 65 ,5 ,5 + .,tmk118ll0 1S 29~ ,., •• SJ lO~o 1JI• 1~\o l\lo Ph !El oU .0 1§0 'l 11 61 + Ed1hons la P~l!ft pU )0 21 0 Siii> SI st ~ Co1nplete Closing Prices -Atnerican Stock Exchange List ~ '"/ i:.1 otlto 1to s1 ~ s1 't 5•"'t-' " 'j'•, ll Ph Uti Morr 1 Xll 3'1'1 11•• 34 It t \o I • -t\ P~/IMor Dr • JlOO 51V. """ s:w. -~ :JO 11 16 • 16\ .... l'h Iii Ind 1' " 11 141,0 u -2 • :it llt:. 3\'o 1"'-,P~/ '"" p11 lS 20"lo ,. 1• -J' 1l0 5t St St Phi P1 l:l'l lO)'f 2UI 10t~ l llo-+-o UO 'Xl\lo 19'ill 19llo -Pt>l VH I IOI 60 19 11"'• 11'1. -1 1 's s~ s • sv. --Pm1tiu v J l6 11 ''"" 601.< 40l.l -~~ 'M"' 34 0 3c,. _ .. 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'°"'" -,, A.utorn11 P~G I• ?O I lt • 10 1l !l -11 llvHTOQI 61 1J 1• • I• o U o AVC Cop :SO ti I II -N-ll:voe Jy• -JO II 06 1 II 1 to! 1 -:i,, A"CD CD<D wt U ! , 5 ~ -$-A"t n lnc I l J• A.Vl !rodO II lo Ut 1) 22•• 2'J , -\o Avona l'Oa ~I , J1 , l ?] o JI > l t -1 o IACM In.I"" 17 11 11 4 IS-lo 15'-S\t -!16¢Coa <Cl~ )S 71 , 1 11 41 •l-o"2 8•0.''""" Jl7"•?lo IOI lot~ >Do•' lJ\'> -~. fltld OH 110 10 " il'1 2) 21~• ' 711., '• 81 d Sec Xia • 11-o J tJ 2Jlloo 71 )'1 11Y, -llo 1111111 0 JI 10\o 10 1 •ISi W~ '5 ~ -'' 11,,.!'un w1 Jt ... • Ill 2J\'i 1,1,L 134 -~ 8tnkUI 17• J J) 32'-6 I'll ., IV.+ '<!l•nne t""u• I 6 6• l-1 21o.;, 15 ~ 1SV. -·~ 81 blynn J1 • ''• t 2 -'I ~ .. -• ... ~·­"" -• -10 . -1\o +• ~ Finance Briefs 11 ••" 1614 1611 -lo. l •rne1 Eno 1 I• • h 2l 1 \lo llV. \\~-,..llernwt ml 6 l o I II 16!'11 lo .... ltyi -"llo1rrv RG 9 IJ 0 IJ'o 10 Sl Slh ~. +:-1-yWrl )Cl II 1 • Uo ~ ~!1 ~ ~~' II = \~ :: ~ s~~J J3 ' 1! ! '~. s • JI' 51" + • 8~ ton (Ind "' 9 I I 6 • 6 o 611 -h 8• uth Fo1 1' I ~ '1o1; •I I -1 Btt~ rod J IS • 15~ JO 714 ,,,_ .. 8,1 Etc~ • lo I • ~ Oo ,,1-. + l8t,.,.v1 Coo .~ ''' JJ '" lt BeoB""i JJ1 11 t 10 0 t') t\1 ->lt~B 0 5 I .. , Ii i • s>t 5 1S -I'! II, 111 Co p • I I • o 21~ JJ 'n -""•e~ Ca :io 1 1, •• l1l •ll'llU ll•"'Co JOr '••••• 91 3• ll1~ JJ • -•lever v E" 1111 'I> )I ' 115 IO\.\ ..0"'1 .a,) -'<I '~"' d• IOo 1J 2,s,. • ,,., 56\4 S6 llkl "''"'• J' •• U IH• I ... 11\lo -l\ Ille BPI A I 2 ltV, U ,. •'\ 610 6 .. -\ltlnMf 1JCI l lJ o l2"o V ~ 11-\ 1"--'-lo 81slloo Ind 71 1 6 WASH INGTON (UPI) -The Interstate Commerce Commis- sion has ordered reopening of merger negotiat1ons between the Chicago & Northwestern and Milwaukee Railroads 1n the hghl or stock price trends 10 recent monU1.s The ICC 11ld 1t may be necessary to adJUSL the proposed t er m .s for tx change of common stock11 JI ll l•· l.lto-~."'°"'.' 11 l-1 , ... 1. 111 'l I'• 1•1 -~ llvtlllrd Inc 7• • • I •?lo ?l » -~ll11t:bdwl IJ l 1 71 «I 1' JI _,,,., hl'l•c~ 70t Jt 71\oo tllo 1911 6; 6)~ 6>11 -"-lo 1,,., Ind 14 t l l ti ~14 11'1 lf\!o -~ ~Ir lmf J Jl;, S • 011~2172-h Ctl!7J1'3o 1' j'-~-"' v~ to 1n 21,.72, •O '9) 1 • 11 -""Bfclld ICol I II 1•'1 nl ll ll • 36lo -1' ll••ndv• n I 11' '3 f :14 3• :W -1\ l•ntw Y,I J t , t o ?• IG lt ~ lt'~ -1 " I ,,_,.,I A J I :I' t, t • JO 2t ~ 10 -4 I IKlftll • Ill ll llh I 2l ' 71 !1 -1•1 lr1u~ Ell l1 ? 1 lo 11 , l• Uo , • ._ •S -'•lttff 11 ll t ll • "••'• "•" ~' +_1 1 • P11 •lo tol 7 ~ u l 1,1.1 -I P,t "''~ I 11 11 lS !~ ... ~til ll lo -\to t.;.P,•~I 201 ,~ 1: ~ 1~J. 12J O >lo «IW! -40""-lhll-Fll 40b 11 1'0 0 10 \ "'Ill< 1 1 "-ID-FJlftO t 5 S il J 'i ~11'1 •tvt -V. 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I ... 1 t -, ; m t"" , ''fl.; 1 rlo IC 'II 11 f• 211 -I l lttftl't l PALO ALTO (UPI) -zo., con Corp a subsidiary of Syn tex Corp says ii and Agrlcul t u r e Department scientists have deve loped a chemical bai t thal will lure cotton boll 1,1:eevlls into trafs II Is a syn thetic version o pheromone a se1 allure secretion of Ute male boll weevils Boll weevtli: are highly destrucUve to lhe cotton crop HOUSTON (UPI) -Tnas Eastern Transmission Corp has agreed to explore for oil and gas in I 7 million acres off the Allantlc coast of Moroc- co 10 a Joint venture wllh the Moroccan Government O 11 Com pany The concession h~ off the cities of Agad1r and Uni MELROSE PARK , m (UPI) -Jewtl Companies •1111 Food Host USA lno of U~ oln Neb have announced a joint venture to open 1 th~ or family ltyle rtsturanta .. the rre1ter Chlcaco area TOLEDO (UPI) -Slltatl' Globe Co announc<d It II 1~­ tering the modular bua:tneu. '111t a>mpany said It el~f win buy an existing moduJtt home maker or launch Its Oll'n produ<:t line l I . •' .. . . .. -· ·' .... ·' .~· .... ~ DAILY 1'11.0T DAIL'( ,ILOT SIMI , ... ,. MERCURY MAN WORKS OUT NEW SAVINGS INTEREST PERCENTAGES Leonard Shane Puts Emphasis on Human Approach to Butfness Mer~ut·y on Way Up President Stresses Community Service -By TERRY COVILLE Of Ille DaJlr ~Hot ll~lt Leonard Shane is a modest chap but don 't let him kid you. He's the man that's made Mercury Savings inlo one of the nation's fastest growing savings and loan operations. He'll ten you the success of Mercury Savings lies in its personnel -not in one man. And he's right, except for ig· noring the fact that he is responsible for the quality of personnel working there. It's Shane's own humanistic philosophy applied to business that makes both of Mercury's branches, Huntington Beach and Buena Park, click. "Community service has made us successful," pro- claims Shane, who sits as president, managing ofricer and chairman of the board or .. Pt1ercury SavJngs. 37 PERCENT INCREASE For proor or his success check a few figures for 1969. Mercury Savings grew 37 per· cent on Its savings ·accounts while other S&L's were lucky if they didn't Jose. "We grew more lhan any other Savings and L o a n Institution in the nation," said Shane. "We attract a lot of local support because or our com· munity orientation," he added . This is where Shane's face lights with pride. His proof that a business can be humanitarian. Emphasis is placed on com· munity involvement and the way Mercury employes participate in community af- fairs and how they treat customers. Built into both Mercury of· fices is a community room. Groups ranging from weight watchers to boy scouts use iL The YMCA in Huntington Beach often uses the room for various classes. Shane, himself, spent some time on the board of trustees of the ~an View School District and was once a Pony League baseball coach. Community service is also the byword of Mercury Sav· ings' savings and loan opera· lions. "Most of our savings ac· counts are small ones. We don't go after big accounts - of course we don 't turn them down," he explains. ?I.lost loans are made to home owners or small Cflntractors. "We just don't get involved in backing major projects." SMAIL ACCOUNT He likes to tell one story \•:hich he feels explains the success of Mercury Savings. "One day in our Buena Park S,. "' ... ~ ' '· ·' .; branch a little boy came in with 37 cents and wanted to open an account. One of our tellers took his money and opened it for him. "The boy left. About 10 minutes later a man came into the office, with the boy trail· ing behind. He demanded to .know ,.,.ho had opened his son's account. "Everyone was a little shook up, but they explained what happened. In a minute he smiled, said 'thank you,' and promptly transferred $10,000 from another place to ours with the explanation that anyone who would take sucll good care of a little boy's money, would surely do the same for his.'' In stark figures l\1ercury Savings is not yet a giant in the industry. It was founded on April IO. 1964, with a $2 million capitalization and nine backers. Now its capitalizatioa is $17 million with stock on the open market. "Our next steps will pro· bably concentrate on acquiring some other smalJ Savings and Loan institutions," said Shane. But whatever t h e future may bring, Si1ane emphasizes that Mercury Savings will stand by its policy of total community involvement. . ' ' "'. ... : ·Big Repair Bills Laid To Detroit WASHINGTON (UPI) The auto insurance industry, tired of paying claims of several hundred dollars for fender-bender accidents, came up with a report Tuesday showing that Detroit and its bumpers are largely to blame. It reached that conclusion 1 by slamnling together 1969 Chevrolets, Fords, Plymouth! and Ambassadors at a speed of 10 miles per hour -the speed of a man jogging. A car moving at IO mph was driven into the rear of a stan- ding car and the average repair bill was $510.15. The estimates were made by ex· perlenced adjustors. The costs ranged from $595.85 for the Ambassador SST to $449 for a Plymouth Fury I. Jn between was the I Tal·k on Natu1·al Gos $510.25 bill on a Chevrolet Gene Girdler, a community service representalive Impala and the $485.45 bill on for Southern Ci:>un'lies 'Gas Co., \Viii demonstrate the a Ford Galaxie. The average repair costs for "cold" facts of liquefied natural gas during a lunch· staged accidents in which the eon meeting of the Laguna Beach Kiwanis CI u b front of a car moving 10 mph Wednesday, Feb. 11, at the Laguna Beach Country hit the side of a standing car Club. His presentation deals with the scientific prop.. was $673.66. The Plymouth erties and the uses of natural gas •. eost $710.80 to repair, the Ford --------------''---'------ $702.80, the Ambassador $641.20 and the Chevrolet $639.85. These figures and a film portraying the staged crashes ~·ere presented at a news con· ference to Sen. Philip A. llart (0.Mich.), chairman . of a Senate subcommittee which is investigating ''auto repairability," by Dr. William Haddon Jr .• president of the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety. The institute said 94 percent of the claims paid by one ma· jor insurance firm were for less than $500, indicatin·g that most of the accidents then covered were relatively minor ones. ··one common denominator to all of these test results," Haddon said, was "these automobiles are far more delicate than p r e s e n t engineering knowhow necesitates." Specifically, he f i n g ere d today's bumper as the culprit. He said it is pul too close to the grille and rear of cars. - Twenty years ago, he said, "there was more space between bumpers and the structures they were intended to protect -as you can see by looking at the Model A Ford." . ,. Italian, U.S. Tea11i To Make Luxury Car PROVIDENCE, R.l. (AP) -American car like the Roll s· A high-priced luxury car call· Royce. An individually styled ed the Stutz Blackhawk will be car fo r people of great taste." assembled in P r o v i d e n c e The Stutz Motor Car group, beginning this spring, James · \\•ith 30 investors besides D. O'DoMell, president of the O'Donnell, put up $250,000 for Stutz Motor Car Corp. of the first model of t h e America, said Wednesday. Blackhawk which \\-'as exhibit· The Stutz, resurrecting the ed this week at the Waldorf· name of a car popular in the Astoria Hotel in New York, early days of motoring will be O'Donnell said. assembled by a team of Stutz has applied to the SEC Italian craftsmen who will link lo issue SI million of corporate ·Italian bodywork to a chassis stock for over.the·counter and engine made by General trading, O'Donnell said. Motors, O'Donnell said. The car is designed by Virgil O'Donnell, president of Exner, a former designer for Scott, Gorman & O'Donnell, an Chrysler who later designed investment banking firm said the modern-day Duesenberg the Blackhawk is a $22,500 which was unsuccessfully pro· two-door hardtop with a 400.. duced tv•o years ago by cubic V-8. The body will be O'Donnell and others. made in Modena, Italy.---o'DOnnell. attnDUtiiijf in· A lismousine "for people like adequate financing to the tfie Shah of Iran or the Duesenberg's failure. said the President'' will sell for $75,000, car will be assembled in O'Donnell said, emphasizing Providence because the Italian that the latter-day Stutz will draftsmen "~'ill re e I at be an attempt ''to make an home ." " ;•-.. _, -•i . . ' ' "' ' : . :~ . .. ,_ ,;. ·Fl.NAL . 'STOCKS~ '· " ;: ' .... . .. l. ' ·.' . -'. . ........ -., : .... • ' .. 1 ... _, '·' , .,, ,, '' ~ --. · .. \ ·' •· ., . . ~ ·,. '; .• ~i.>\ • .. l i . .... '' . . • l . .... I -' i . ' ·~ l . ·" .· .. '. ' .;. :.., .,. ~ ... ~ i '. ~ , .. ' . " . ' ' ,,; \ ::: -) .( .. ; . ' ... . ... ' . : -:'" . " ... 1 • ' -....... ,. ; ... ~-.:.~ .. ., ,., . ,., . ,, ,· ., ... '"· . . ·.' ': . ..• ' .. .... 1, .. ·-·. .,. " .. . .. " Employs 30,000 Norton Simon Moving to East He likes the \Vest Coast, says the president of Norton Simon Inc .. but bis giant fii-m is moving its headquarters lo New York because "I don't feel you can run a company of our size from }t~ullerton." The company headed by David J . Mahoney employs 30.000 persons and has sales approaching St bil~ion a year:. Announcement of this year's move was made late in 1969. "There are more companies in the East th an in the West. The Wall Street complex is in the East. We hope lo build our European business and this way we can be closer to it. The headquarters of most of our 19 advertising agencies are ln New York," l\fahoney told an interviewer recently. But he ht1s nothing against the West, the 46·year-old businessman hastens to add. "There's a difference in location but not in pro· fessionalism. This is a viable niarket: there's no question of that. It's more of an activist n1arket. the people get out more and you'll get an opinion from them on anything," he ~ays. "In style, I feel J'n1 closer to these people than the eastern establishment.'' Norton Simon was formed in 1968 by the merger of Hunt Foods & Industries. Canada Dry Corp. arid McCall Corp. The company bears the name of financier Norton Simon, a noted art CCJliector and philanthropist who serves as a University of California regent. Simon severed direct connections with the company last year to devote more time to his other activilies. Although he was born, reared and educated in the East. the move lo New York is causing some dislocation in h1ahoney's life. "My children are not wild about the idea." he says. ''Uprooting your family can be difficult but even that has merits." "A move really does 'Quality Control' Night Set The next meeting of the: Orange Empire Section of the American Society Ior Quality Control, scheduled for Monday at the Revere House, Tustin. has been designated "Quality Control Educalivn" night. A feature of the ~vening will be a t:linic at 6 p.m. 011 ;,Jo~inancial Jnvestments" con- ducted by Dick Bryant of the Dean \Vitter Investment Co. After a social hour, the dinner meeting will begin at 7:3( p.n1. The main program will be ~ panel discussion on "Quality Conlrol Education." Speakers will be Steve Kozich, director quality assurance, Atlantic Research Corp.: Professor Lou l\felo, coordinator in· dustrial technology, San Jose State University : Dr. Paul Kleintjes, ind u s tr i a I tech11ology department, Long Beach Slate College : and Or. Don Morgan, i n dust r i a 1 en gin e ering department, California State Polytechnic College, who will discuss the subject ''Quality Cont r o I Education.'' .!omething for you. Sometimes ;============; it's worthWfiile picking up the whole thing and moving and shaking it and seeing what happens." ltfahoney says. "My wife says thE easiest thing for me to do would be to get a DC·9 and furnish it." , '· . .. • -. ";) . . .... "' ' ... ~ ·, ·!·' '~ ... ,,, '· .... " . . :· . -: .... . .. "1 ' ' Who Cares? No other newspaper in the world cares about your community like your community daily newspaper does. It's the DAILY PILOT, ' ' , ' ' • ". • .. -' .... ~ -'."! ';_J'.~ ••. \ ~,,,. -~ ~"' "" . : '" : •\;. .. " ,:·, ~-· ... + ' ;~:~ ;, ·:, .. '• Newspaper ' ' '• ' I : :...,; :~ _ . .,. •·'>I ' j;~._ I •• ' "·;, -. I .. ~1"... • -i': ·~ ;. . ~ ' . ' ,. 1' ~ .. r .• ,, , . •' .... . "'·' r"' . ., ! " . ' ' • : " ' ' ' .. • • ~· # : • ' , . ,. . ,. .,.1 '. i ·~ " .-' . ·.' . ~· ,, I•· jO\ > • ·11 ' ,,. ~ ... ' -'.\ .; ~ ~ . ~ ,.,, • v ! . ' ·" ... ~ . -:. ' u., -· ·•i !1,, ·•I • . . •• ,, _,.J .. •o~A~· • •• . ~.·. .~ . . .,.;J . !,, .}! . ' •· ' . -• '.4, ~ ' • .* ' .·; ... ~.·-! ' , ·.~·'· .. ~·;..,. ~ ; ~ ~. .;j:.< .. ··1,; • •' ,.• l ·I • , ·•-1'\\( l, I \1, > ~;I• -'" 1-,r,·".'' ~ •. • ·, ·~~-lr,, \" ,,~•.· ;-~ r ., -'"· · ·"' .t, .. , . • : 'I. ·"·"··!'"' .. , , ~ . -.. , '. .. f• ·~ : ' ... • .> \ . ..;-• • • -Xi',\ ' . ' ' ' (.~ , , . .. u;. ~· ... • ,., ., i';e,., ' ' ,. ' ' ' " ' . "·""' 77'' ) .. ., ' Ii \; 1 • ' ' . ' ' . ' . ' .,. ''. . .. , •* ~· .. ,. . ·I·. ' ... ". '. ' .. ' ..... . ·. • ::::1 i ·' ' .. ' ' • , ,•I, "' , ... • I . • i -.. ' . •'• . . ::·· ~.:: ' •': . ' ..... .. . ·-~ .. ' . --' . ' .. .. ' . .. • .. , . ... ... ·< ., ., . , . •.. .. ' .. ' ~· ' ., • .. , . ·;· . + ' .. -· ... .. , _, .. .... '. ,. ' . + ••• t ., .I : . • ' . .. : '. ' -. ~. 'i :~. :.'-;:: Edition ,,_ ... . .... ' ' ·• ,/ • +; ;I" -"!° . - ' Mission Trail ' Building Begins 0 11 Dana Bridge DANA POINT -The first 2!>-ton con· crete beam was placed on its T .shaped concrete support Wednesday In con- struction of a large bridge between the two marina bas i n s or Dana Point Harbor. · Part of the $20 million recreational p~ Jett to be full operational next year, it will carry tw'> lanes of trallk and pedestrian walkways. The basins. pro- tected.by a breakwater, are divided by a causeway with the bridge in the middle. e F lr e ma11 Pro1noted P..flSSION VIEJO -You might see ' Donald L. Cate i.s all fired up over his ne1v promotion. The resident of 25742 Serenata Drive is now a captain In lhe Los Angeles Fire Department . Active in his community. the father of two girls is the current chairman of the Girl Scout Sustaining Membership Enroll· ment in the Saddl~ack Valley. e S lreel Light OK'd SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO -Members of the city counciJ have voled to place a street light at the Intersection cf Avenkla Aeropuerto and Camino Capistrano. The tight will be Installed by San Diego Gas and Electric Co. with the city paying a rental ree or $7.01 per month. e Col11 Chill Co11ve11es LAGUNA HILLS -Members o( the Laguna Hills Coin Club will meet Monday to study the topic, money. Mike Kilman w111 be the guest speaker at the 7:30 p.m. event. He will trace how money originated and how it has changed £rom then to the present. The public is inv ited to the meeting in Belmont Savingii and Loan building. Re- f reshments will be served. e Crossh1g Work Set EL TORO -Work is to begin soon on an overcrossing of the Santa Fe Railroad tracks where they intersect El Toro Road. Completion ls expected in 12 months. County Supervisors this week awarded !lie contract to Griffith Co. for its $637,681 bid, the lowest of five. The wori win in- clude approach roads and a 156-foot box girqei;, bridge over the lracks. e Serra110 Adobe Opens EL TORO -The massive doors or the 110-year-old Serrano Adobe will again be opened for the public Saturday. Residenls of the Saddleback Valley are l~vited to view the old Spanish furnishings in the six-room home between JO <.'.m. and 4 p.m. The adobe can be reached by taking El Toro Road toward the mountains turning left at Trabuco Road and turning into the first dirt road on the left. The building once was the home of Don J ose Serrano. It ls now on property own- ed by C>Ct'idental Petroleum Land and Development Corp. UPIT.-ie He Can Bear It Alice the bear looks like she's eating a mouse, but actually she's carrying her three-day-old, half-pound cub around her quarters in Folsom's zoo. The only objection from the litUe fellow comes when she puts him down. At that point, he's all lungs. Laguna's Jeanine Benton Now Miss Winter Festival Jeanine Bentori, Laguna Beach High School senior and homecoming queen. ha~ been name1 Miss Winter Festlva1 1R7D. She will preside over the llkiay Avenida Pico Extension Work To Begh1 Soo11 Work is to begin early next month on a $169,382 two-lane extension <if Avenida Pico in San Clemente oceanward or the freeway to an intersectton with El Camino Real at North Beach. The haU·mile link, initially two lanes. is to be finished by June. It will bypass the' city industrial area, passing the north side of the new sewage treatment plant on a 100-foot right of way to a point near the municipal pool. Brigham Yoong University, owner or the former Reeves Ranch between Shorecliffs and Avenida Pico, gave the ci- ty six acres of the right-Of.way. celebration at the head of a corps or 500 Art Calony residents pooling their l&lltnU to the 35 scheduled FesUval events. A complete program or the Winlcr Festival, which will run from Fe.b. 20 through March I, IS available at the Chamber of Commerce, 280 Park Ave. The listing. includes a number of new event.I, amor.g them a rodeo, a chuck wagon barbecue, mildren't ballet, dart tournament, and programs of old silent films . Now-traditional Winter Fest Iv a I speclattieJ inchtde the gounnet dinner, Palriots' Day Parade., art shows, flea market, surfing contest aOO craftsman's fair. ~1any of the events are admission free, others will charge a minimal fee. Laguna Tennis Tourney Slated This Weekend Mini-skirt Crowd Would Tennis buffs will find free, all-day entertainment this weekend as 2tl semi- finals and finals matches in the 12th Arr nual Laguna Beach Tennis Tournament are played on the Irvine Bowl Park courts. Rather Switch Than Freeze By FRED SCHOEMEHL ot Ille Oell'f Plltl Steff RECENT CHll.L Y MORNINGS are posing a problem for the mini·sklrted crowd on lhe Laguna Beach High School campus. They've been finding their legs cold from the damp and chilly air around Laguna. Many girls. including Da_phoe Tomehak, Jan Zitnik, Carla Rankin, Martha 91811!, Jo an n e Parker. Christine "Ch.icten" 'fheine, and Carolyn Fee, have gone to the long, full-length dresses for wannth. Someone $8.ld the mini-skirt wwld be gone soon -looks like they're on the WIY out. * ASB President Howard Hill! made quite a name for him.self last Monday night when he spoke on a panel before the Brea-Olinda PTA. The busineaa suited Hills changed the conception tha t most ~med to have -that he was 90me type ol radical. unclean. unshaven hippie. Hills made several statements to the parenls and faculty concerning his edu· cation philosophy of Involving students on a respectable level in planning Curricu· lum and school policy. •1e also stre.sscd the importance of stu· dent Involvement In political organiza· lions. sayinJi!, ''\Ve may not have had to face the technological problems we have today If traditional education hid been better. ~taybe in the £utur!. we lfOO't tee Viet.nams, but rather ~emmeots that expre5! lnve. not hate.'' AT TllE END of his remarks, Hills re· celved a mund of applau~. from an audl· ence that greeted him with hostility, and la~r. crowded around him to heat his Ideas. * . Donation• have been coming In with strtat enthusiasm to .. Rev\val"-the ntW Teen Center. Richard Ja.hraus, president nf LaJnJna Lumber, has donated paint to "f1cellft'' the Interior of the place. Chicken Llttle's Emporium on Coast TTlghway donated four far-out, psychedel· le posters which have bten hung around tho "Rcvlvnl." Lagun a Teen Corner D.ike's Bura:ers ill South Laguna gra· ciously assisted by Mfping with the ~· freshments for last Saturday's jam and dance. The Essllngers, who own the eat· ery, gave t'Vps, lee, and Coke, which helped make the nlg"""ht a aucces! behind lhe bar. A SPECIAL ntANKS from the coord- inating committee also goes to the band. "Incubus," which played for free last Saturday. They are one of the besl acid· rock bands to play In Laguna and tumed- on a lot of kids who were there that night. Looking at what some LBHS students arc doing. the word seems to be traveling. fledy Buzan. who completed her senior year at the semester break, wlll be leav- ing for Yugoelavia Feb. 22. Terri Perrine and Sharon Kl'IO\'l'lton, who Olis year have been going to school in Grana·da, Spain, SI"! planning to re. tum Jn fl.fay or June, In Lime for gradu· a lion. CA111V COUJNS, who was a Laguna AFSer to New Zealand, re.turned to La· guoa last week, bringing much newa from the ma "down under." c.o,r.tulatlonl ... In order to """" ol the .. wbtz tlda" on camM for ttttivtng Lelteni of Commendotlon from the NI· tional Merit tcholarshlps, taken In their junior year. Jim Orl...,.kl, W • n d y Walnwn,h~ He<ly B11211n, Ram,.y Rldd•ll, and Mary Kanne wlll probably Dnd financial aid •asler to rind wlih !he backlog of that schola.-,hlp rroup. Gra.ndsLand seating Is available at no charge, according to city recreation director George Fowler, whose deparl· ment is sponsoring the tourney. Semi·finals ·scheduled for Saturday are : 9 a.m . -M~'s B Singles -John Ohslund n . Jrerb Burridge; Roman Casto-Leon vs, Roco Demateis. 10:30 a.m. -Men's A Singles - Charles Scribner vs. Gary Webb; Bob S1nith vs. Art Wahl. 12:30 p.m. -Men's B. Doubles - Reister-Burge vs. Ohslund-Jacobson; .Sanders-Goet.z vs. Turner-Mang. 2 p.m. -Men's A Doubles -Peacock· Scribner vs. Engen-Taul; Upton-ll:ulky vs. Powell.James. Final matches scheduled for Sunday are : 1:30 a.m. -Court 1, Men's C Singles; Court 2, Women's C Singles. 10 a.m. -Court J, Men's A Singles; Coort 2, Men's B Siqles. 11:30 a.m. Court I, Women's A Slngles; Court Z, Women't B Singles. 1 p.m. -Court 11 Men's A Doubles; Court 2, Men's B Doubles. 2:30 p.m. -Court I, !\filed A/B; Court 2, Women's C Doubles. Leisure World's Residents Stay Physically Fit A repart issued by the Leisure \Vorld °tducaOon and . Recreation Department makes it plain that, whUe the com- munity's residents may have retired rrom wori, they certalnly.haven't retired from the action. · Compiling sLaUstica on recruUon favored by Lelaltt Worlder>, tbe depart· ment found bUllards topping t h e participation lilt, wlih m.~ devoted fans. Swimming followed tn popul1rtt7 with 104,009 avowed enthusiasts, followed by golf, with 88,117, Sbuffleboard d'"w 45.567 part1clpant1 ~d 44,811 listed adul t education classes es thtfr lnteeit. --------- -· JMlw1 29, 1910 5 DAILY 'tlOT 3 Ear•h SU,p Vi~ti•ns~·wait ' Clemente Family Eyes W eailier .From Half House IJ IUCllARD,_P. NALL ..... .,..., ...... " AS.. Cl<mente,famUy, reduced to llv· tlll In hll( • house by tbe --" • backyanl earth s!Wle, Is waiting for tbe winter nlns and wondering what happeruo nmct. '111.,Eugene Seets family got out ol bed on ·1 damp.Ind foggy morning la~ week to find their lives depr<sslncly chall8e<i for UM! worse. The 11* behind their magnillcellt ''"" home 11 the llO-foot level In f!>t San ct.. South Lagunan Beaten, Robbed A South Lagunl man was at1$:ked Ind robbed In a city parking lol •atl)' today, La(UDI Beach polic< .. ported. Jooeph Frank Anderson, 45, of 11513 Monterey, South Laguna, told PQ)lce be was set upon by three men at about t : 15 a.m. when he pulle(f lnto the parking lot between El Pueo and the boardwalk, in- tending to go into the Breakers bar. · His assailants struck him with their fists, knocked him down and took his v"allet, containing $8 and identlflcaUon cards from his pants pocket, AndeNOn said. mente hJllo bad allthorod down .i;m, lliJe coeyM durin1 the nll)lt without w•tlnc tllom. Ila ., ... olope WU "lliaced •by • sheer earth cliff Iha\ 11arted 'about eliht or JO feet from the mutir bedroom ud dropped 7$ f .. t strai,ht down. The family since hos camped In the fallilly -· llvlnc n>Ol1I and cuage of the three-bedroom home wblcb had been on the .marUt for a yeu or IO at prices ranctni from 131.950 to $35.000. The two yowipters are sleeping: In sleeping bags. Se:ete, a 35-ytar-0ld engineer, said the other tJ er so homes qn Avenida Colombo faced the sune potenUal hatard, porttou. larly thole on the ocean aide of the road. He said he doesn~ feel very aale tn the house but isn't sure yet what they can do. He said be.hid no Inkling of the slope prd>lem and had pllCe<I the -oa !ht market to liquidate the eqully. The family had Uved in the home aince it was contpletecf 5'ri: years qo. With 1 big Investment In !he.home and no· ab'rioas way to recovtr. ~ nld. "We're sort of in a state of flux. We're going to set: what the city says wben tb•y dl!Cllll ti witb !he councll nut week." Seetl said the city's main CQllctm, how- . ever, bas been over nearly 2CJO.feet of sewer Une that was carried away when the more than 10,000 cubic yards of earth tumbled away. The city has been Jllmplng sewage Jnto Air M{.ster Plan ·Hearing. Slated The Orange Ooonty Board o I Supervbon.se~Feb. 3 for final heattn1 to sete<:t a consul(ant for the leCODd phue ,study of the county'• muter Plu ol air transportation. Airport Director Robert Brunah111 said the selecUo.1 committee -composed of . him,aelf, Plannln1 I)irettO(': Forest Dlclwon, and Cumty AdmlnlJtraU .. Of. n ... Robert Thomas -had .-th• three iowell ,_,. .to pment their plaoa for !he 1tudy to tbe boord. Bruiajlan 11ld the . three. conaultanto m Ralpli Parsons CO., or Loi ¥&<1'1, Qllinton-Budion&, ol Santa Ano ml Us .\J)geles, and the '.Standford Raearth lmtltute of Palo Alto. UICI ff ••• C!IAACR m . . • • • • • • •••.•• ·~1 .... .:::.I:". • • ......... ivy: H1•ttt1 are for m•k,lng your pttio •nd porches preftier ind 1gfeener witf-1 e1sy·~row ivy in ·7V," bei.kels. ...... -. -· ltel'l'ri"'· --·-All Ill 5 g•llon ~t•iners for 1 variety of Mrdy °"*"'""' tal shrub. Jor your garden. 1.66 YOUR CHOICE 2.77 1'•rn Juniper •nd J•p•nhe bl.ack pine in 1 11llff containers fOf' ~ttradive e\lergreen landscaping for your yard. lelgiln ai•ll•• in bud or bloom for W t•nt colar In your yard. They're grtJWing in .C" pot• for grouping YOUR <:;HOICE Meaic1n p•lnted hinging bowl for planting your f1vo1iJe plan1s in. 1.99 • ind enioylng now. YOUR CHOICE 661 ..... Auatr1llen tu trN in 1lvd er 1fl ltloom M 1 e•lt. C#t•IMt. louM 6e1f villurn..., lft ltutl er· In bloom Ml 1 11U01t cent1hter. Moth.I' fem fH f1qo .,M11 91r- den IM•"'Y• 1 eall ... Cilnl1iMf. · G1rcle1d1 pMnt in 1 g•ll• cont•kt•r ,., fr..,•nt ••· elk bloom•. HOW? THESE VALUES AT ANY ON£ OF THE SE PENNEY STOftESI DOWNEY MONTCLAIR NEWPORT BEACH " • MexN:an p1Mted dlth for we as a plcluresque pl•nte r for your f•\/Otilesl 1.39 GoW Dult ploM ....... 1ate4I 1re•11 le•••• I• 1 ~--·· 66- SHO!' SUNDAY, TOO 12 to 5 P.M.! • • ',•• .. ' •t.~ .. '• ' ., '- .; . ' . .. , , ... .·. ·' • . . . . . , ' • • ' •. ' • ' l • ' ! ' ! ! t . ' 1 \ I • llAll.V PILOT ~ .... Dallr , ... ,...., ' .. 1 Organizers of a charity fair in ,t;unnlslah, England, tried lo get ~ Ellubeth to donate some. :Jbl.n& for the occasion. But s h e :wrote back "No." They tried l)'rllM Mlnlaltr Harald Wlloen. He !~ wrote to say "No." But the fair )Orill go on anyway. It planned lo ~uction off the letters from the ;queen and the prime minister. I • Tlland>y, JoftulrJ 2\ 1970 WomenCall Carswell A 'Sexist' WASHINGTON (UPI) -JUdge G. Hal' told Ca......U WU aCClllOd today of b<ina "a sexist" who ehould not be elevated to the aupreme court., 1be chlrre wu made by Betty Friedan, head of the NaUooal 0raan1za. ttori of Women (NOW), u opporiJ.Uon wllneuea In the nomlnalioo o( the 50- year-old Florldan conc:entrated. on the allqallon by women that be was a male supremacist. Rep. Pally Mint ([).Hawaii), tutlli!d, ''male tupremacy, llke white IUprtmlC)', II equally n1_.,n In lbooe who believe in equallty.'1 Canwell had bltn subjected to two prevtous dly1 of tomeUmts sharp ques- Uonln( baaed In part on wlllle aupremacy charges IJ'OWiN: out of a 1941 1eire1• llonllt tpeeeh he made, and his ialer In- volvement in a aecrea•ted golf club at Tallahuaee,Fla. Members of the Senate Judiciary Com· millet IM!lltd In agreement that the Camt'e11 nomlnaUon. would be approved by the group, although a few days more of testimony may be required to &1ve more opponents a clwtce to be heard. Mrs. Mink led off today's testimony, criticiUng Carswell for his role In a court case where a woman with teen-aged children was denied a job by the Mart.in Marietta Corp. The woman, Ida Phillips, charged in court that the denial was a violation of civil right.a law problbittng discrimination in employment for reason cf .... MANSON'S .NEW LOOK Gone la Hla Bt•rd Judge Enters Manson Plea Of 'Innocent' Tlaen Take Sniff V.S. Rescue Senators Pass H elicopt,er Drug Reform. Bill Shot Down WASH~GTON (UPI) -II wu a for a cloter lnapectlon. Some of !hem on· SAIGON (UPI) North Vietnam .. e perfect Htup for a raid by narcoUcs ly e11mlned the brick but other• took a Mlgs, il:l action for the first Ume since agenta. More than 80 men in a room and anllf or two. the end of the American bombint halt quite a few of them sniffing at $3,000 over the north, shot down an American worth of marijuana. helicopter trying to rescue two U.S . But no one wu busted. The ol'l!ate pUoU near the Loas·North Vietnamese room wq the Secate chamber in the U.S. border on Wednesday. it was reported Capital lftd the intrigued gentlemen were today. Eight men were missing. U S t bl h 1 ......... 1.. Communilt groundflre shot down the · · HD1 ors. presuma Y av""' "'~ Thailand-based F105 'Thunderchief with first contact with pol two men as it was carrying out attacks ''nle 1'brlc1o" ol -·~Juana WM b-·fi'! v " .. ...., , '.,.. near the borden of Laos and North iet· into the senate chamber -pre.suma ly nam. The deputy North Vietnamese dele-- also • flrst -by Sin. Thomas J. Dodd gate al the Paris peace talb reported , ([).Conn.), u the Senate enacted JDAJor three other American planes were shot drug :eform leairlatim. down the same day in the American On an D-CI roll call vote, the Senate ap-bombing attack on North Vietnam. proved and 1em to the Houu a bill which 'l'he U.S. command in Saigon had no would sharply l'Ut (ederal penalties for official comment on the helicopter which the sale ancl c.se of drugs, ranging from was flying alng the border in search or marl.Juana to ncroln. the two-man cre-.v of another fl1hter · The Je&islatlon, stronaly backed by the bomber in the "secret" war against Nixon admtnistraUon, would crack down Communist forces In Laos. on drog traffic by crime syndicates with f.1Uitary sources said the helicopter stiff tienltnces for pushers. "'a$ an H53 rescue craft based in Udorn, But a college or high achoo! youth, Thailand. The H53, similar to the "Jolly picked up at a "pot" party, woold face Green Giant" used in rescue missions lighter maximum sentenctS than current during the bombing of North Vietnam . law provides and could even ucape carries two pilots, two gunners and at without a crlmlnaJ record. least t"ll'O medics. UPI TetulllM American mUtiary infonnant.s said Thi" "brick" wrapped in brown paper U.S. F4 Phanto m Jets were scrambled was a stellar attraclion for senators as Next Draft Chief? from several bases inside South Vietnam they vot.eo on amendments to the bill. but were unable to engage any of the Sen. Allen J. Ellender, sitting in front Charles DiBona, a civilian em· 1t1igs. apparently flown from bases In- of Dodd, picked up the package and ploye of the Pentagon, report· side North Vietnam. started prying away at the corner before edly is in line to become next Hanio said three planes were shot down putting it back. director of the National Selec-and others hit by ground fire In what it After that 1ators wou1•1 cast their live Service Sys1.em, succeed· called a "glorious victory" for the North Victor, tilt Kodiak btar now appear· ing at Ntw England's Sportsmen'• OM Comping Show, sits quietly in a f>arber's chair, lathered up and rtadtl. fbr an "tvt11-1o-g1nUy" trim. Boston ftottl Som111r1tt'1 barber Jim CU.Ji· ~ agretd to groom the bear fot. I01Di1'9' a requc1t from owner GeOTgt ;-ttun. HOtD"1ff, Vfcior'1 :future ap-~ar1 tb be untempt itnce ht'lL weig1' iibo•t 1,200 poundr CITld atand about !: ftd toll when fully matured. Carswell voted against a rehearing of the case after a three-jud&e panel ded<f. td the denlal W8' not because of sex aJone but both becauae of sex and the fact Mrs. PbUlips had children. ballots and amble over to Dodd's desk, ing Gen. Lewis Hershey. Vietnamese. LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Over the Ir=====~~~~~~~=~~~~~~=~~====~~~=======;;; • • : A suit a•ktng $SOO,OOO damages !las bHn filed in Los Angeles against Playboy Ma1uine, charg- t:Dg a nude picture of N•ncy Sin .. tr• was published without the pho- 1ograpber's permission. Ron Joy, the photographer, said the photo of Miss Sinatra was given to Play- E to inspect for pouible public• a. The suit allegu Playboy cop- the picture and published it in December issue without com- pensating Joy. • Cuba 1\ai 1tarud a contest to namt tht augar th~f of th t iott1' and ht'lL bt oivtn a moral ff" t, Radio Havant! rtp0111. Thift won't bt the only way to tnkr tht competition, howtvtr. Tht broadca.Yt monitored in Miami said that particula,.ly truck and tractor drivers w ho Ut cane fall off thei,. vthicle1 - who are JloppJI and let cut carte slip through tlleir finoen will be considered atso. Tht commit· Uei for the defemt of tht f'tOO- lution, neighborhood spies of tM Fidel Castro rtOim.t, will df.s· pense the pt!naltier for •UOGT pilftragt or lols. • · Pvt. Richard Keck, who calls tile military his borne, thinks he's found his niche at last. Keck1s mil4 itary career began when he joined the National Guard in Ft. Dodge, Iowa, in 1955. Eighten months lat-er he enlisted in the Marines. Three y,ears later he returned to civilian llf'e, but 90 days was enough and he signed up for a six·year hitch in the Navy. He left in 1965 and join-ed the Air Force eight days later. He decided the Air Force wasn't for him and left last September. Keck signed up for the Army a month later. He says he plans to finish out his 20 years this time. ln voUng to deny a rtheartng, Mrs. Mink said Canwell "demonstrated a total lack of undtrslandlnj of the concept of equality" and that hJ! vote rtpresented "a vote qalnst the right of women to be treated equally and falrly under the law." Mn. Friedan followed Mrs. Mink to the wttneu table and added her criUcism of C.nweU because of the Phillips ruling. She aaid Carnrell wu a "se•lst" and W• tnsenslUve to problems of workin& mothen. Mrs. Friedan said the issue in the PhUlips cue seemed to be ''motherhood venus fatherhood." She said the eUect of the decision wu that a woman could be defied a job because she has chlldttn wlilt: a father of &.mall children ls not FlorUJa Folks Long Winded WASHINGTON (AP) -A »pound, 2.-foot long telegram wu delivered tir day to the Supreme COurt asking tt to reconsidr.r it.a order requiring desegrega. tion of Florida schools by Feb. 1. Representatives of Western Union said it .V8' the longest telegram It eVff had delivered. The menage, sponsored by Florida State Senator Tom Stade til Duval Coun- ty, wu on five large rolls .or paper~ wu received at local We1tarn Union of· flcts over the past five days, a spokuman said. U.S. Steel Sets Hike in Prices PITrSUURGH (AP) -U.S. st .. ! Corp., the nation's largtst sleelmaker, said todaJ It's raising prices on a number of prodl~cts used in the manufacture o( autoinoblles, appliances and machinery. The products -hot rolled, ct1ld rolled and coatee sheets -account for aQout 38 percent of total industry 11hlpmer!ls. Although other producers have raised prices on lhese prOdueta over the past week , U.S. St.eel is believed by industry sources tD bold the largest segment ol lhe mark el shouted objections of Charles M. Manson. a superior court judge enlered a plea of innocent Wednesday in behalf of the hip-- pie cult leader in the seven Sharon Tate· LaBianca murders. '1 Your honor, I object to any further proceedings," Manson said. "I object to the grand jury system. t object to the in· dlctment. I object to the heinous behavior of the tstablishment in relation to the In- dictment.'' Judge George M. Dell interrupted, and Manson shouted, ••Hold it." "I'm not goln1 to bold anything," Dell retorted. "I enter a plea of not guilty on behaU of the defendant. Mr. Man11>n, you have pursued delay for the sake or de- lay." Manson, clean shaved for the first time since he has appeared ln courl. paced nervously ln the Jri•ner's box as he tried unsuccessfully to delay again entering a plea in the case in which he Is acting aa his own attorney. At the end of the bour-Jan1 hearing, Mansoa's trial date was set for P'eb. 9. Jt was expected, however, the trial would not start until much later because two of the six defendants are resisting extradi· tion In other states. Manson, dressed in a white blouse with a red, tapestried ves t and hls hair falling to his shoulders, said he was so "mired down" in legal procedure that he had not had time to prepare his case. Dell then produced records showing that from Dee. 11 to Jan. 2<1, Manson had had 48 separate visitors at jail and that some of \htm had seen b1m as often as 15 Umu. "I'm not 1o1J11 to let you stand here making soap box &pef'Ches about not be- Inc able to prepare your cue when all these people come visltina you," Dell said. MOVIE ENLISTED IN EGYPT FIGHT CAIRO (UPI) -The Egyptian govern· ment has .. ordered the stale-owned television to show the !ilm "Battle of Brl· t11in" to help iJrepare the people for further possible Israeli air raids, officials said today. Authorities said the scene s or destruc· tion in British cities and fire.fighting drills would give Egyptians a preview ol what could happen here and help con· d\Uon and train them. New Storm Socks East Roseau, Minn., Nation's Icebox at 15 Below CaHfertd• c ...... ''"""'' IO'll'llft ........ ...-1111 cf'tWllY Mff "'-'' l'IO ~ IU'l'I'· Vtrittlt ... 1_ nlwtil """ 'Mnllfll "°"" .... dlf!llftt ""'""''" ~ ,, " '° kMll ._,. .... H'-'"9l' MW 61. C•thll ~lwn r1M't t~ ti to 7'. lftlMllj ~~ r9fl99 ,.....,, • hi 76, W1Mt ~f\lr'e fl, Sun, ..,....,., TUel TMUIUNY ._ .. "''" .. hJ• '·"'· ,,, l«.oM i... . ft XI 1,f!I, l,f ,J;IOA'f fl'l ... t 1'11$11 , . ••• . • . .. .. J100 1,m, I.I , ..... , ...,, ........... 10:00 ··"'· l .J $KOlld lllth .......... 4:11•"'· 1.• St<tnd lrfr ..•. J:OIJ.111.1.J Sv11 ae.n f:U 1.fl'h Mfl 1:11 '·"'· Mooll kh 11:11 • "'· V .S. Sutt1mar11 A ntw llttm -" KntU .... GrHI ~~" 11'11 N""'"t .. rn ••1m !Od11' brlfttlllt ,,_, r1ln 1ftll hlth wlNh ,_ .... .......... ,, -llOlftll. 0 rM11'1111t, lll•lrtt• ~ """ Widtft ..,, .... tl'lt nltM 10 lwlrlt The ltltl tfit rlWI ,,_ " ,. l!Klll .. 111 1'111 •el• et 1'111 1tomt 1 beMI o4 did l lf 1-1 _l ...... lnl lttot Uft. --~ .,,,.., WHI~ whkl't lltt eomlN~ !flt St\lll'tttllt'" lllln. t~ (Old lnnl Wfl Knimotl "i<td bl >l'IOw• ltl IM ~Wtn lr9"\ L011l1le"1 '' '"'"'"""''"''· . AIMlllWr fttNI( lton'tl Wll 1-l~t tow1rd !tie Htrll!Wtll, '-"""'" C1ll-tor~lf MllCIYMI w1rm, W!'l"I' Wtt!hl, •1111 -hlfh "''"''· TN fl4llloll'I Wffm ~II Wl'dMMlll' Wit JI ti MCAllMI, ft'(. r 1 • AlllUQINl"fl\19 An<t>or"* """"" ll;tk1nl1•1C1 11!1.,..ltdl. Bol>e 801ton fll'OWll•vll11 C111c"o (ln<lnntlt o.t!V•t Don Moll'lt1 o.troll F1lrti.11k' , ... , Worti. ·~ ..... _., l(IMll ("" ...._, v"'' LOI A-'tl Mll<'nl Ml"""lol>Oih "'"' 0.!ltl\S New V•r1t Norlll Pi.""' 0 .... 1 .. .w O•O•l'IO!Tla Cltr .... " "''"' ~· '"'" lltllltl ·-· ,.l!llllw1'91\ Porfltnd 11..if(!t"f lfltdll\lfl ·-'''''""'"'o 5~11 lt~t Clt'I' S111 Olffe Stn Frtncc1i<O k•tri. '"'°"'"' T!Wrmt! WttJ!l119l()I\ Mltll Lfllf PrM, si ,. 11 Cl ,;i:, 6t JS " u 17 ~ .(M 40 11 ~· 3• ~ " SJ Jr T ~ " .1J •• 14 ti '° T " H .12 ·11 ·11 .0. IJ tJ " .. " . • n .. fl .. ,. n " JJ Tl )1 II ., ., " . .... " . .... •t , • n '' " n " n SJ ~ ... .. " u " .. " n " " " Jt i• .e1 .. ~ 51 •• 4) )S ,, ,, ,, J1 .. . FRIGIDAIRE Either Side-by-Side or Top Freezer. Buy now and save during our Either-Or Sale. limited time only. Hurry! Frigidaire 15.9 cu. ft. Side- by-Side. Just 32" Wide. • Conv.nMnoe. Handy SI~ pui. •~Ill; wllhln • ..,. rttc.tl. • Mort r6cMI. 11.8 cu. rL1luiwltll S.M cu. rt. hl<Elf 11111 holdil up 10 1 M lb.. • No fflf'Mll~g. 1t'l 100'llo ft(ll..,,roel'. • EnylllOWl!le-Smoolh- llicll nrlOll rollwri 111111• •IMnltll Md lflllWICI ...,.. Frigidaire 16.6 cu. ft. Top Freezer with 154 lb. Size Freezer. 411 E. 17th St. COSTA MESA Delly 9.9, Saturday 94, Clo...r Sun. Tel: -1614 Barbor Are• Slnre 1947 I --.----------------------------------------------------------------------------·---~-·----= Two More News Spi~ I Unmasked - Israel J ets Hit -Egypt Guerrillas Protestants Turned Back A THOUGHT FOR TODAY LEE ROOFING CO. M 'l"Nr. Ill IVlllltU 1'f.I s....-... ""'· '42-1n1 Booby Trap Catches Thief-Expensive ly DES MOINES, Iowa <UPI) -Mr. and Mrs. Edward Briney ri~ a ·shotgun in their farm home to protect them from thitves. It cost them $35,000. The Brineys, who ovmed an SO.acre farm ne&r Eddy\riUe in Mahaska County, had put up the "trapgun" in the bedroom of thelr farm home in 1967. It worked. Jn July, a prowler was wounded in the ankle by t~ trapgun. Marvin Katko., 27, was charged with breaking and entering and pleaded gujlty to a· l~ charge o( larceny in the nighttime. Katko was fined $50 aod released. Then Katko sued t h e Bcineys.Jn ~r. 11189, he won a-$30,000 J ud gm~nt against them, plus $5,000 for court costs. At a sheriffs &ale Tuesday, the Brineys' farm home as sold for $10,001 to make partial payment to Katko. The farm was bought by a com· mlttee which plans to keep the home in a trust for the Brineys. State Sen. Bass Van Gilst CD-Oskaloosa), said he ls working on two bills to solve the problems of protecting life and property "wilhout going too far." c .. ash P .. obe In S. Africa JOHANNESBURG, South Africa (UPI) -South Africa today set up a special board of inquiry into the train·bus col· lision Wednesday that killed 23 school children on their way borne Crom 5Chool. 'Mle accident -left 13 other children injured, si.1 critically. lt sfJlnned the nation and Prime "'Minister B. J. Vorster Issued a statement calling it a •·great tragedy w h I ch will cause sorrow in m a n y homes." More than JOO mothers, fathers and re lati ves held vigil outside the Vereenlglng Mortuary as doctors still tried to identify all the dead children. So far 18 children have been identified. Id•• m • swums-IMPOkIED OO'JlR1J'flt& AND ll'AT JIRE.\S WASH PAloin DAil Y PIUIT 5 loins GM, Chrysler Ford Co. Reveals Massive Layoffs OPEN TONIGHT • TRIM THE • FAT QUT OF INC MEJix; We u.m.t ,.... tiohtt-' • ' · ~ In inaklnv cWl.dtot11, ol'KI IOTH $ """""' ,... ,.._, ... flDIW .... 11.oabows m.. AID hkl"'11. w.'I "'*°..,. STATI · you "' .,.,, i..•lllO-dedudlon--cmd mcDlilnum ao•l119d Our serwJc• i1 quldr,. COft'l'9Ntnf and In--UP 1111_ .......... 0 UAUMTB"" ........ "'!!' .. w • .-. .... ~,_.. ,,...... ., _, .. --tf -... ., '"9n th.t .. yw .., ,.....,. ., "*'""· .... ..al ~ .... .:...;__lty ., lllte!Wt. Amerie&'s Llrg .. TIX s.mc. with ()\.., 4000 ~ ' ' ' ' :t PACIFIC PAYS MORE AND THEN SOr.tE $100,000 minimum belanc:e, 1yeertenn 1 year or more term accounts with $1,000 minimum balance 2 )'811!'8 or mQ" term accounts with $5,000 mlnlmilm balance • 3-month or more term accounts with $500 minimum balance PER ANNUM RATES Regular passbook anlnp accountl eam 15.13'5 when our R current annual rate 11 compounded dally and maintained for a yeer-11nilng1 paid from date of receipt to date of wtthdrawal •!•n for one d•J· ASK HOW YOU CAN RECEIVE, SERVI~ CHARGE FREE 1. Safe Deposit Box 4. Tickets to _Sports 2. Traveler's Checks and Theatre Attractions 3. Collection of Notes (Ticketron) 5. Many other FREE Services Twelve Offices to Serve You . TEMPORARY Cl!RRITOS CENTER lllWICll WU II! OPlll IOOll DOWNEY-LAKEWOOD 10000 Lakewood Blvd. 773-3061 • 923-9601 DOWNEY·FIRESTONE 8211 E. Firestone Blvd. 862-8194 LA CRESCENTA 2621 Foothlll Blvd. 248-8120 EAST LOS ANGELES 5401 Whittler Blvd. 728-8956. 72M28& TOPANGA PLAZA Canoga Park, Callf. 883-1550 ARCADIA 41 E. Uve Oak Ave. 44S.OSSO INLAND CENnR 8111 Bemanllno, Callf. (714) 884 8456 MONTEREY PARK 201 N. Garfleld Ari. sr.1710 MOUNT VERNON 400 N. Vennont Ave. tes-1181 SOUTH COAST lltAZA Co1ta M-, Cant. (714) 54MGe8 WHITTIER DOWNS 1121&E.Waahlngton81wd. 692.o357 BELL GARDl!NS • 5740 E. RorenceA¥9.· 773-5011 MAIN OFFICE: l40t WlflTI1ER IOUUYAllD, LOI ANQll 'I; CAWORNIA •\ • ., " 'f • DAil Y l'llOT . Clllldl!llf Up . Vmegar . . Ctits Odor Of Smoke • lly L. ,M. llQYD A TV. q(;irnNc; TEcam· ~ -b-hilt"'"'' • a woman on earner• look ·-· •. IF THE $MELL ol 'clc ........ tmns Y<JU off, YOUl\I lod1. JOU might set 'out a aaucer of Vinegar: That cuts the imOi:e odor ... :A r BMINlNE SUBSCRmER, who Ub not to be fully iden- tified, aays her true first name ls <Malaria. •. A SAN FRAN· asco psychiatrist contends people who like to gossip are the most well-balanced ln- diYiduals, and if you'll lean cloee I'D whisper the fellow's iwne •••• AVERAGE AGE of married men nationwide is fl, ot married women 39. J TO SERVE THE PUBLIC - So you're thlnkfn& about open- inl 1 store of your own, are you? Eicellent. But do JOU Jmow how many potenUaJ cuatomers you 'll need to make it pay? Neither did I . Howe:ver, some experts. have come up with estimltes in u..t maU.r. A gro<e\'Y dare, they uy, can make .It even ln a town Of only 550 peoJlle, bUt • toy ..... needs about 7$,000 people. Otherwise : A restaurant., 750. Pharmacy, t ,Zli O. B ak er.y, 2 ,5 &0 . Hardware, 2,750. Shores, 3,SOO. Women'• clothing, 4 , 5 o O. Jmlry. 1,000. Florist, 1,000. Appliancel, 9.000. Sporting 1oods, 50,000. Photo supplies, 11,000. I WHY AREN'T 1id<walkl painted with dividlng li11e1 for window shoppen, stroller& and fast. wa1kl!rs? That's what 1 alked. Am now informed the sidewalks of S y d n e y , Aiistralia, are marked off in tlii1 manner .•.. MY FA'l'llEIWN·LAW, E. E . Slrange, now vacationing on the Texas Gull Coast, wrttes: "OoYr'n here we catch a lot of fish we don't want, throw them out on the beach. and the Cows eat them up." 'lb.ink of that! Fish.eating cows. CIJ8TOMER SERVICE -Q. "Wbo eatl the most potatoes, the Irish?" A. The Poles do. , , • Q. . uwao FIRST SAID, 'To keep them happy, keep them barefoot a n d pregnan!'?" A. Somebody call· ed Dr. Henler, that'• all t know ••• Q. "rM. AWARE most Americans drink. but how m;mY ol them drink fe11,Jlarly?" ~· About two out tf Ove. 'ROYAUTY -A client asks If Queen Isabella, the lady who linanced M r . Christopher Columbus. was thought to be parUcularly attractive. Maybe she had a certain aromatic a~ peal, who knows? In her later yean Isabella made a publk: pttinouncement of the fact &he only had taken two bat)µ:· in her life -on the day she was born and on the day she got married. However, at the time a rood clean queen was a nrity. Wl'l1I A LITTLE ,.. pe:rlence, Aquarians tena to develvp tnt.o remarkabl y smooth operators, says our Planet man . Both Abe Lincoln .,..i Franklin D. _Roosevelt were Aqu8!rlans, tncli:teriatly , , 1 ,JEWELERS REPORT 5:30 p.m. is the approxlmale time of day when most men damage their watches, but tti,y art at a l~s to explain v;fiy. ! Your questiom and com. ~ti art: welcomed and imii be used wht rt:Vtr poi· rible in "Checking Up." Addres.s mail to L. M. Boyd, in care of DAILY PILOT, 80% 1875, Ntwport Beach, Calif., 92663. Fossil Found ROME CAP) - A studtnt dU& up part_ qi a m.ammolh'~ -just oil Rome's old Via f.IFlnia and ~tnl11ta have no. unearthed twO tuW, each l(tibut tiio ymt~ ~Jong. They .,_ c1111h!g for the 1'11t of the foist!, whk:li . IJ!ey. ~eve ls ll0.000 yean old. . WANTED ,..__ ..... c.tls ""lilf TAO· I l'IOOUCTIOllS HOUYWOOD, CAU,, .J SINCE 1929 WHITE FRONT COLONIAL .MAPLE BUNK BEDS . fs!y American map~ finish 2 9 88 bunk beds. Also make twin beds! Comple~ w/ladder & guard rail ! Bedding availa· bleateQ!lalvalues! · Hf Ar Wf U. 01 JlfflllCMI ·G.E. t~~~ GAS AUf'OMATIC DRYER • Aulomatic selectot button establishes cooed drying time for each load •·No guessWO/k; dl)'er slllts ott automatically wlien load is sufficiently dry. OUR REG. PRICE 179.97 G.E. 406 .LB. CAPACITY UPRIGHT FREEZER • 11.'6 cu. it. .. omy fOOd fife!~ ~ Shelves hold tlems oHen '°'' d • J . """"' u1ce can -.diS- venser Shelf at bet. tom • )umJJJer I sec.res door ock ,_. ..,,, """ed • All stee( cabmet •iM glass : l1ber msulation. , WE S'TINGHOUSE 2-SPEED WASHER ·- BUTTON TUFTED I CUT VELVET SPOT-I G.E. 11 W: CROSS-I ADMIRAL 2-DOOR I G.E. PRESS-CYCLE·I G.E. HIGH-SPEED I O'KEEFE & MERRITT I WHIRLPOOL . AUTO. SWIVEL ROCKER I RESIST CHAIR BUY I TOP REFRIGERATOR l REFRIGERATOR BUY I Automatic WASHER l AUTOMATIC DRYER I 30" GAS RANGE 1 ALL-FABRIC DRYER Cont~ ~tyhng. Wlth I Popular ~ern 6es1gn_ wrtfl I F~ll-widtll cross·lop f1eezer I Never n~eds defrostjng! Door I Special ~e_1manent P.re ss I Special cycles lor all fabri~ I Fully automatii: ligh.ting. fuU : [liminales gue)swork! Stops wood Sjllndle trim. C001ce of I fluted lru1twaod·f1n1shed I w1ttl full length handy door I shel~es.1~ both s~bons. Per· I cycle. Pos1t1ve water fill of I Huge hnt trap. Porcelain I width therm!lstat1c oven . automatically when clothes gold or blacl · base, button· tufted back and storage, big porcelain crisper, I ce!ain cnsper, dairy keeper, water pressure. Water saver enamel clothes drum. Built to Smokeless bi oiler. High·low l are dry. Has special cycles for - l'llKI" I seat. · I Umitedquantities. ·tall bottle rack.12.3 cu.~ I co11trol. Delicate fabric cycle. I commercia l requirements. I burner3. [X.Cellent va lue!! all fabrics, even no·1ro n. IN. ·•1 I au1 IEG. PllCE 11t.t1 I I ·umited quantity. I Limited quantity. I Limited quantity. t Limited quantity. I Limited quantity. s:~E $ 681 ·s:s~E $ 68 ! sti~:'$i'6·6 ! st~;'$i'Cj·91 5t1~E"$'i'i6 ! M"$0j 43 i }~~~,·~ i29 I ;:i~~-$wl'8'6 -""2'~_..-~!!!!."!..L~~~!.~[~~~.L-------·-1---------1---------~--------l~~:..-----~---------­ ....... OR "MRS." I SQUARE BISCUIT I ADMIRAL 16 W: 2-I ADMIRAL UPRIGHT l 6.E. BIG PORTABLE I 5 W:. FRIOGETTE l 6.E. 3-WAY WASH I FRIOGETTE LOUNGE CHAIRS I TUFTED CHAIR I DoorREFRIGERATOR I 700-LB. FREEZER r Family Dishwasher 1 COMPACT FREUER I PORT.DISHWASHER 1 REF~IGERATOR BUY ContetnlQl'llfY· s~ling beauti-I "X" frame cll.lir with lJ!lt· I Nev~r needs defrosting! Dairy I 20 cubic foot capacity! Six. I Top load styling with power I Only 24" wide x. 24" deep, I rront-load dishwasher with J. I fully covered in bfonie ~r I ton.tuftedback.&seat.Cho1ce I bar 10 ~r .for b~~r. eggs, I package-deep door shelves I showerandpowertowerwastf. I but with 5 cu .. ft. capacity. I way washing action. large I Cf!'Jsed~ratorfabnc.Use1n I of bronze, olive or cherry. I cheese,m1lk.~11m1d1f1ed.lr.esh I ~ithcircalatin~c.o!dair.Built-I ing arm. Oelu.xe.model, r~!ls I, For.kitchens. boats, o~f~es, I capacity. Rolls to sink or I pairs or srngly. I I vege~ble crispers. l 1m1ted I in door lock. Llm+ted quantity. I on casters. Limited quantity. I cabins. Holds 175 lbs. L1m1\ed I table. Maple cutting board top. I ot111t.,.K11ot.t7 I au111G.P11c11ot.97 I quantity. I autt£G.PtlC£259,95 I SPtCIALYALUEI I quantity. I Limitedquantity. l 5l,.~1· $68 l 5~~1 -$681s:~~$249l 5t2~E_$249 I $ ,37 I sfi~E'.'$'j'2"'"'9r I s~J:~·s·1'0CJr6" I Full width cross top freezer, big 'see-thru' crisper, door shelves, egg tio!der magnetic door latch. for office, den. l imited quantity. SPECIAL YAL\11 • ;1WUs• 1• I 111r tr lil 11 JrnrtStll 5Tn£ I I I I __. I . ---------$96 lONGHO~N HANDLE OlllllUUI LOW DISCOUNT PllCE 1.97 , ------ BARS Give lha l old bike a • brand new look ·with these chro- mium handle bars, QUAKER STATE MOTOR OIL ·ll.Jart ca1s of lubricant -top ,quality "for automobile use-in 20 and JO weiglt• COMPAU IOc QT. -~ 3 ill 1200~FT. MYLAR RECORDING TAPE White Front's own pro- fessional quality re· cording tape. Big selection of top quality tools. Saws. hammers, wrenches and much rmre in this group. OUl llG. PllCr 77c EACH BIG SAYINGS IN OUR RADIO DEPT.! lllTll DIT ACllAlll SPIUHI • AFC locks in FM • Vernier slide.rule tun· ing with 30" folding ante1111a, 4" speaker. COMP All AT 4t.t7 • 2 speakers with over· sized magnet • Light· ed slide rule dial tun· ing • AIC tor FM; solid state. PLAY If II to $1(0.lfDS • [asy instructions iocl. • On--011 switch controls • 25 keys. 6 oom • Polystyrene mahogany finis~ with rnusic rack OUI llG. f'llCI 14.tS ·1297 Assorted dec- orative pieces -book ends, cand I eslicks, cigarette hold- ers, cups, etc: FURNACE FILTERS ~~~, can be used in central air ~'1 conditioning !;)stems. • 14"x25" • 16"x25" • 16"x20" • 20''x25" f'lUS MANY OTHfl l'OPULAI Stl£S :r~I 3: $1 49c IA. R PA l MOL IVE · RAPID SHAVE 1 ARRID ANTl- 1 PERSPIRANT I Regular, menthol I or lime aerosol I sha ve cream. llAPI P Price-off label in-· I SHAVE eluded. I • • COMPAIE AT1 .1t I 6·oz.3ero sol can deodor· ant includes price· of f abet. COMl'AI[ AT 1.29 .63cl ~~~-----1-------­Ul TRA BRITE r GILLETTE ~:~o TOOTHPASTE I RAZOR BLADES I Large 5-oz . I dentifrice in-I eludes p1ice I off label. I COMPARE I AT 8'< I 49c I "Sp-0i ler" double- edged a3c blades. . COii,. ii 1 U CLEAR OUT ON SPORTING GOODS! \ MEN'S OR WOMEN'S. GOLF SHOES B1ushed pigskin in a choice ol sues and colors. Manufactirred by Endicott JohnsOn . Men'• #601 • lad•es' #34+35 MADE EXCLUSIVELY FOR WHITE FRONT! Comfiiete with speedometer: fulfy id~ justable padded conl011r saddle. ~eavy action Hywheel 101 long seN1ce. ' ·o. ER ops hes for '"· .,,, -- UY :zer, joor ietic de~ • r 11 ·. s f c -;. 10 ; ' • I ~'S ES icz of ttured 4+35 7 ·-BLE <E IONT! ~ •d· Heavy t 7 )MPUl '11.n ' 'I ••• G.E. SL IM LINE .18 IN. E~t. PqRT ABLE' · eHILCO 18 INCH !it!Ji PG ·RTABLE TV , ZE ITH 23 INCH lw.~ COLOR TABLE MODEL •. SINCE 1929 WHRE . FRON·J .. '· w ' .. RCA GIANT 23'' ~3.t COLOR ·CONSOLE • • l', •,. v .. ' l;tlear black-and-white reception ~lightweight, sturdy cabinet •\Ill -cha nnel UHF/VHF tuning ~p-front controls • Big view screen in slim line cabi- net with built in VHF/UHF antennas• Clearly def ined black & white pictures. EMERSON 23" 5-f.': l MOTOROU 23" ~ : RCA 23 INCH Si ZENITH 23 " ~ : PHILCO DELUXE 6.E. 12 INCH :it: l DELUXE m:: l G.E. DANISH StJI•· COLOR CONS OLE TV I COLOR CONSOLE TV I COLOR 'REMOTE ' COLOR CONSOLE TV I PORTABLE TY BUY P 0 RT ABLE TY I STEREO CONSOLE 1 STEREO CONSlllE . : Mediterranean style with rare I Twin speaker sound, AFC con· 11 • f ul1 lunction remote control • Handwired 25,000 volt 1 1 • All-chan~1 UHF /\11f"tu ning • All -channel VHFIUHF tuning I • AMIFM fM stereo radro :I • 4-speed stereo pho~g;apn 1 •.. earth p)!osphor tube, tw1~ .I trol for instant-perfect co IOI'. • 25,000 volt ctlassis • All chassis • Atl-chanhel UHF/ • Lightweight, hi-im~ct ca~e • Lightweight hi-impcKI case I • 4-speed stere1J pl!onog1aph I • AM/FM-FM stereo radio .• speaker soond system. all· I Lighted channel indicators for I channel VHF/UHF tuning • VHF tuning • Wa!nut wood I • UIJ'lront Cijntrots and sound •Up-front controls _& sound I • fu[ly solid stale amphl1er. I 6-speaker sound 5y ~IJ •·. ~ channel l/HFJVHF tuning. I all chanrtfl UHF/VHF tuning. I Rare earth phosphor tube • cabir1et • Poweriul speaker I • S1.ms~ield with earphone ·Clear black and wh1terecep-I and tuner for instant sound I Solid state amplifier. 'funer . Lit;kted channel indicators. I Walnut tabinetry. I Maple Colonial cabiriet. system. I • UceUeftt bargiini Buy now! t1011 anywhere you place ii! I • Spanish style cabinetry I Handso~ '4llllt eibinetry. OUR l(G. PRICf 51 •.• 7 OUI JIG. PRICE SS2'.t7 I OUI H G. ••Kf57t .t 7 OUR.,,_ PIKl 4ff.t7 Otll llG. PltCI n .t7 OUI 111. Pi la ..... , SPICIALlT PllCID OWIK PIKl:Ut ,, . .. • SAVE $449: SAVE.$449' SAVE $499 1 SAVE $439: .SAYJ $69 SAVE $75 : $169 : SAYE $19'9 sn I 581 I $81 $61 I $10 . ,$10 I I S~I --------+--------~---------1---------~--------~---------r---------T--------•· AD MIRAL 16" WJ.c I ADMIRAL 18" ~;:I MOTOROLA 18" it I PHILCO 23 " S't. I RCA 172 SQ. IN. I ZENITH 18 INCH ~ I PHILCO SPANISH I SYMPHOlllC ,mi:,·· COLOR TV & CART : COLOR 'REMOTE' l COLOR PORTABLE l COLOR CONSOLE: PORTABLE TY I PORTABLE TV SET: STEREO CONSOLE I STEREO CONSOLE Cart included in price. Wal· I • Full function remote control I • AFC control for perfect co.lor I • Exclus1v~ tuning eye control I • Alf:channel UHf{VHF tuning I • Al1-chan~er UHF/VHF tu~ing I • 4 speed ~tereo chang~r I 4-SPEEO STEREO PHONG nut grained cabinet has dipole I •AU-channel UHF/VHF t~ning I •All-channel UHF/VHF tuning I • Perfect.mstantcolor.so~nd I •Built-i n antenna. handle I • ltg~etght. sturdy cabinet I •fully solid sta te 1ad10 l • 6 speaker sound syste.m antenna, carry handle. All-• Built-in antenna • Walnut • Bu~~-in antenna• l ighted •AU-channel UHF/VHF tuning ·Up lrant controls and sound I • Bu.1lt-in_antenna.e;arryhandle • 6 speaker sound sy~t~m • Wa!nu~ ~ood. conlemP!irary channel recept ion -Great I grain case walnut cart • Rare I channel indicators • Rare I •Kon -glare bonded p1ct tube I •Light, dura bl e cabinet •Brings in clear picture e~e11 I • So11d state amplifier I cabinet 1s fine f'urn1tlire . second set.. personal ·set! • I earth 11110Sphar tube. I earth phosphor tube. I • Walnut wood cabinet I • Excellent reception. 1 WI weak fringe areas I • S1~-fool-long peca_n cabinet I • Wonderful value at t!lls !!fict · ou111G. r11c1299.97 I sr1c1.t.L SALE r•1c£ I ou11rG.r i KE1St.t7 I oua11G.PIKt 4H.t7 1 ou111G. r11c112t.t7 I oua 1r1. r11cr 124.•1 I ouR 11G. r.i1cr un.t1 ( sp~(1~u.f r1itiD 1 ' :<" i~~E $2 691 $399 l ~~1 $2991 5A~1 $,419 l s:,~1 $119 . I :~:E $10·9 l :~~E $299~1 ~1,4·9~ .. , ,· COMPAU 1 3 3 AT SI .99 t· --------r------- Al KA SELTZER I BOTTLE OF 25 1 .Antacid I tablets I al savings. I COMPARE I AT 73c I SAVI 30c I JUST WONDERFUL HAIR SPRAY I ""'= I I Hia h com· pression stap- ler with built· in el tractor. fer cirpentry, uphBlstery. iJtWlati~g. OUI llG. PllQ<l..t7 SAYE SJ CHROME CAR SPOTLIGHT n volt-plugs into cig- arette tighter for emerr- ency mad trouble fo r . realfing signs, street Oiniliers • .f>!-55~V ~ out IK. PltCI &.:it ·G.E. HEAT PAD PUSH BUTTON ~~'.'.:~~ CONTROLUO HEAT High, medium and low heal selections for maximum comfort. Wet-j)roof inner covers, pertect for wet packs. lhermostatically . controlled. Washable outer cover. Model #P4~. GLAMORENE BUYS ' .. . NEW, MOD.LOOK LAMPS I FOR lA8l£. 1'1. HAll, ElC. I . . I Three-color bases with '8" I round glass · globe. I FIRST APPEARANCE IN LA. I AREA. VERY 1970! KITCHEN ACCES SOR IES I . ' :• ' J ' -' -• .. .. Easy pushbutton operation. Mixes, cho ps, beats, blends. 32 oz. container. Stainless steel blade. Model #944. CLICK'N CLEAN CAN OPENER FAMED CLEANING CHEMICALS l DEC 0 R ·AT.IVE, ~W.OOD · MAKE HOUSEWORK A BREEZE : KITCHEN AC c:E.N'T,'S i. 1288 • SPIAT IUG SHAMPOO , , , • 24 OL • DIT IUG CLIANSEI ... ,., 'I.I GAL •LIQUID CAll'IT CLI ANll •••• , •••• , •••• 1h GAL •OYEN CLEANER •••••• SPU T CAN • POWllfOAM llPHOlSTHT SHAMPOO .,. ••••••••••• 16 Ol. "" I u 1· I I GREEN ENAMEU£D.W000ErfK[fCllEN WARE, BRIGHTLY TRIMMED IN GOLD, OAANGE MD WHITE. · • . Items include date slate. Jelt!r, ker and knife holders;, spice, rli;k, SI~ llld.~ pepper sets, market minders •.. Oii Ill. LOW PllCl'l ,tT ' ' •, OAILV PILO{ 7 En.rope ·~ G1·ades I Nixon ' .. . . LONDON (AP). -A numbec of ~~n' rlewspapers see Prt~lde1Jt .Ni~n'1 first year in office. ai a ll)Qd"erate success, but oone ,pr'afses him without fffl!:tvatluo:. . • . "~ Yi~lnam policy or ~1r. Nixon rather .¥ems to be a suceesa;'" .commented t h e Belgiln \conseriative Catholic da{ly .tJbre Be,lgique. , "He sdught support from the silent majority:, which was in- dispulably,·cllY.tl','' the paper add~. !'&i Mr-i. Nixon b far from tht. end of hi• troubles. He has· not proposed many solutions:"• : · In' Cerm.~y, tfit Jibefal Frankfurter-Ruodschau said: ''CeneraQy. speaking, wpport. ers ~ ·op~n1,s .agree that . the flrsi yen.NlXQn spent ·as president waa ne\thu. -yery succ¢$5ful. 09r· . very .unsuc· cesslul; bi¢i. .rather went-by somewhat drably,1•, The ')>aper-Nid-N.ixon · ... kept none of hls arand "election pr1>-· miles, -b1.1t· Jte .;..also · dld:·not dlrecdybreat.on-e of them. He rathtr dll:f: and·Jeft undone a bit of everything, just as much as seemtd1 necessary to safely emerge u·nscatbed from all al~ fairs."· -· · ' Tht cOn!ttvati•e :W.e'S'i· German daily' 'Die Welt silid · NlxoO~.tt!l\'IOOk.t upon foreifn ~cy :~~ ·:oi:ie':or bis striing po1nfs, bUt feel s It is no lonier his biuest worry. "NOW ·U&at Nixon h a s managed·"io'ftake IOine •of the 1cutehed . 'from t h 9;. con- trover,;1 ovet Vietniim by Vielniuhlzing _the War; his at- tention focuses on social. and domestic problems:" · The ' newspaptf .said lhe Prestdent•ls "convln~ be ha! the Vietnain· prob'em urider control and he 'wanti lo retute the aCcu!li.tlon tha.t' lie Is :1es• concel}'led with ·Matteis of reorganizing Amerlcati · sOcie--ty." . • : The Times or London satd Nixoo=s state of Ole' :Ulik>n theme · ·ot .; "revHati:uUon at home ... coo.Id be · "called · .the new isol*Uonirni In the ume senSe. that his caU for •a read- justn'tei!t iri: fielsUons between Wash!pgtOO ·and •the states ,1n his new ' federaUsm."' The Timet · vol~ed -concern th1t Europeans w o u 1 d · tate casuallY Nixon's desire for other countries to do more i~ defense of the West. ''Euid'Pt may ~ ·America's f i r·s t strategic ·PriO,:ity, but that does oot preclude Ameriean wlthdrawala on -a. scale -that could 'chaa,:g~ the. --mµitaiy climate dramatically;'' · · -. The ~nservatlve ' w· e s t Genna~1~ _dally Frankf.u~r Allgem~ :Zeltung also wat concerntd with defense 'Of Etirope b)r. the' United st.ates" "The American forces trt ·tG be reduced 'by· aboUt IOO,o(le., ~n before . 1he .mJ<ldle of 1971," the paper noted01: ''Furthermore. 160,000.clvlliaA em ployu or ilfseiv~'s are to be released • ,. • lri .anni~rhe1lt pi;fluctian; ,ilie· lfnlled s..ie, oJJylously C9P.cz.t~~ateS.Oh ':tlie rtlfllUficlure ·of· r o c It e t s • neglecting. Co ·n Vf. n t Ion a I artnamep~ .. AU. thi~ will have its effecf{I on Etirope."· 1 l+ €0rrim1.tni!t:::neW:spapei'S Irr E8"'tn Europe lciok ; dim vi~w of ~izon'.s _fU:st )'e,&l'. (n; ornce. '1After 12 months Jn power the Nlxorr :administration ha' not yet 'seUl~ any ·of 1ihe COlJnlry's ']>roblems a Rd it ;qlri; not' seffie theui unUI. 'American imperlalllril , has ended · u., · aglttssiOO IQ~ ~~east ,A~a . ailcl reduces 1 1J.S utropomJC: .. military upenditure/t ' said ~~ the-1 Bulgarian trade union newspaper Troud ... i;;;;;;i.;i'' ~=~·; .A P"ight .. Fort:b~11s;. SAILl!l)AT,S ond, FISH&RMIN ' ·, ' , . . ~ .. ' .I ~. ' . . -· 1 • ' • ... Ol>IL't M Lii. I , I t ' I I ' ' . • - I • • ' ' ' • •. DAD.Y PILOT EDITORIAL •~GE An Abuse of Office?· If you are an Oran&• County l>Ulinesaman, land· owner or taxpayer -one with 100 buck• or so to spare -the aeason seems to oUer plenty of opportuntty to boy a Uttle social prestige with some county polltlclans. Taxpayers can hardly be blamed for wondering 11 lt 11 olljy. social prestige that can be bou&ht. The county has been blessed, it seems, with a flock ot hlgh..priced cocktail parties and dinners "honoring'' office holders. The propriety ol these affairs must be questioned , particularJy in view of the pres1ure applied in some cases to induce Orange Countians to buy tickets to bobt a cup to their "favorite" politician • County Assessor Andrew J. Hinshaw bas had a din- ner and a cocktail party in his honor since last sprtng. The price in both cases was $100 a person -certainly a price with considerable room for a margin o~ proOt. Another affair, a more l'°lttlcally routine one tbis time, comes up next week; it s priced at $12:!!0 a bead (table for 10, $125). to buy tickets. The use, of Ibis;~';'"'"' and what It lm-pliea Is a clear-cut use ol poll olllce as a club. Such tactics• must have caught the eye. of Super- vi1or Robert BalUn !or Battin now, ha• held· two cock· tall parties in hJJ own honor. Th9 price lJ somewhat more modest ('100 a couple) than that of tbe Hin· shaw affairs. After all Battin is just fresh In office and his office is leas powerful, economically, than tbe ... sessor's. But Sattin'1 bald use of his office raiaia even more questions, for he isn't even up for elecUon thla: year. BatUn told the DAILY PILOT the mo~y would be used for conducting the affairs of his olllce, but ·he wasn't very specific about how or where or what. The fact is, the funds collected from such aHalrs are only loosely accounted for -11 at all. They can be uaed for office exp1nses, for personal experiae1 'for their own campaigns -or as very welcome C&QlpaiCJt contribuUons to other candldate1 who may share or help promote parallel political goals. It might be pointed out that the U.S. Senate's re- cent censure of Sen. Thomas Dodd aroae out:of similar circumstances. Hinshaw is up for re-election thJa year. But up to this point there is not even a whisper about an oppo- nent, and bOth those \Vho like and dislike Hinshaw corr cede that he looks virtually unbeatable at the poll1 Ibis year. Yet. long in advance of even the filing date, tarae funds are nind for his benefit, larre fulids with no airings attached, and no accounllng rendered to donors. Several businessmen have reported pressure was applied by one of Hinshaw'• deputies to encoura1• them It seems unlikely that the personalities ol Super- visor Battin or Assessor Hinshaw -pleasant as they might be -would motivate many people to fork over $50 or '100 for the possibility of a nod, a handshake or a polite word. So, quite obviously, it is the power of the office they bold that Induces others to sip and dine. We cannot help but qu .. llon seriously whtther the proprieties of political fund raising and in fact tbe pow- ers of public office are not being abused. 'lm't il qUIJint how Ma maNJ8t1d to maintain Ilia simple e:Wtence ill IM midat of W. lllOdem age of OllTl 'f' A Sliglatl11 PJaon11 'Proud Old Tradi ti on' Hitch's Plan for Tuition He Pays Cal $12.87 Weekly For 24 Years Why Some Men Turn to Spying Accon1inc io news 1: c c o u n t s California'• ''proud old tradlllon" of tui- -higher e:lucatioo will be •hat· tered if the University of Cllif<fllia's J'elenls accept 1 proposal aubmitted by the tcbool'• president. Somt of those ex- preuint·dilmay are guilty of fuzzy think· ing. In the fll"lt. place the "tradition" ts sHatillY pUzy, llioce-almdy .,. cblrpd ""ftu:,'' $300 a yar for NIJdents """ '1,400 !or -Less lndi· tJon..coDlcious IChooh would call lll1Cb fees tuition. Apparently the subterfuie ~ longer will fool anycne if the rerents 10 aloof rill ~ Qiarler J, Hltch's plln for aizabll ' lncnll!I Jn l!Cudent charle& Over a two-~ar period the f~ for rtlidflrts: ~ more than double, rising to- CAUPOftNJA, moreover. could O() Ion&« 9el'Ve as a shining example for ttxwie who advocate "free" hi&her educ•· tian for eveeyooe. It'• just u well, sirlce Clllfornia actually has }oog been • much better eumple fer those who ura:e 1 more nasonable course. RelaUvely tree echoolinl hu permttted the entry of quite a few dubiou• spec;;tmens. Campua violence' by MiQWll has been limited to Clllfomla, but there 1Uttly lw been a lot t:A_ it there. V arioul IChool a&. mlnidn\On, there and ellewbett, afiUt- that the rioters include their ••best" students, but that may mly prove that xademk abillly alone lhould not guarantee an individual admission to the academic community. COMMUN?ftll, after an, are com- pJIOd of -'<-Too mony of the student ·~ -lo deey that fellow -dilinollllOd to . . In the ndlcllli ~tar .t:' ave' U'f rightl whatMYer. UndclubtedJy a number ot academic -WO. hid bocome er~vety --wwelll-ct dllil(e. 11111 tbere "' -• tblq .. peacelUJ pro- teltj lt't bd to • hiW an ·lnltltution can be lmproood by dellroylng It. Any community cab ar:rvive only if its member• work out ways to live together. An education. at any rate, ii something of value, aomelhlog to be porcbued with lim•, dlort 11111 mOney. ''Something for bothlo1" la quite likeb' lo bo .. orlh precisely that. THIS DOES Nat mtan that atudent.s willing IJld .able to prof~ from higher edllcaUon should be denied It for l~ of fundL ln thil coanection it's worth DOllflg lhal hBlf of the money to bo raised by the in<reued dwr<l In Calilomia would 10 for increased financial aid to studenls and to pay I.be risin& coet. of student -.. In Califond1 as elsewhere, a &rtat many parents ar'! perfectly capable of. financing their -children'• educatioos..Nor ls it really cruel to suUJli thlt ltudents may appreciate their schooUnc mott if they help rmance it with S111111Dtr jot.s or part-time employment. It' doem't ntake a lot of. sense· to suaaest that the college C-OSls of everyone, whatever their financial ability, should be cheerfully as- sumed by the general run d taxpayers. AND, MAKE NO mWake oboot I~ tho coots would be paid by all lupl7ers, DOI ju!I a few. Fred Dattoo; 1 Calilomla r11fl!t, appean to think' tbat the stat.e'a educational 1piendin1 is financed solely through luOI Clll corpcl'llions and hiiher Income lndmdoals. The lrulh ts thBt cor· porata tueo -· lur<IY paid by con-sume.n, in pricel. and other tua a.re paid m•lnly by mlddle and lowe!'·locom• indlviduala. No m:.tter how hard anyone tries to "soak the rich," there simply aren't enough of them. AS A FURTHER objection to higher unlverally char& ... Mr. Dutton 11)'1 up to H,000 atudenla would be "forced" Into C<JOUiluDJty collegea, 11111 thBl lbls would mean hllher property taxes for Califor- nianl. The belt antWer to that problem would be increaMd f~ at the com- munity lnslltu\ions, with I Iar1e part of the funds to bt ule(f for student aid. So C1liforni1'1 "proud old tradllon" is going. A mud! better principle, and one far more flnnly founded in America, woukl be that the commqnity will dedicala lt1tll to belplng those who need help. Tllollpjl Al Llrfe: Since the pay Is ao poor, and the future 1 so uneertaln, one might wonder Vo'hy ''F<iif~i.t•l~1' some men turn to espionage as an OC• "Hello, Fire Department? My bouR is on fire. I'm calling from acroa the street Help, for God's aakes, help!" 1'Never fear, sir. Your Fire Depll'f.· meot stl!lds rellly to entngui$ any .....,. flalf!'lllGo at any hour of the day or night. Would you like one Ute enifne or two?" "What's the dllfen:nce?" 11About $17.IO. We can let~ haw ane <Jlllne for llO or two for II'/ JI. Of coune, it's 5:45 p.m. now. H yoo want to . wall l5 minutes, yw can take advanllfle of our reduced evenlnc rates!' "WELi., I BATE TO economize in a caae like this. But I am a lltUe short on cub." "No Cash neceuary, 1lr, on approval ol yoor credit card. This sacred principle of American government wu established back in 1970 by Governor Reagan in his famOUt Deferred Tuition Plan for the Uni- ver1ity of California." "Ya, I know. I've been pa)'in& 112.17 a week far my UC education for the pa.st 14 yean. And I've still got ten .m«e yean to go." ••you COMPLA.INING, Mister? You're not a Comtnle or somethlq, are you?" cupation; the beJt psychological ea:· planation was of!ered by Johann Nestroy, when be-.Ved: "Spying Is a One thing -you get the enjoyments of a thief and still remain an honest man." • • • Man .arrivea at old ace bavini 11r1eiy foraotttn what Jt. wu like to be young, and beln( lar&oly finoranl abOUt whBI It ls like lo 'be old -ao while hla opinion allould be lleeded .., areas laJllnr within hla apeclal compelalce and upuleoce, his opinion on 1enerational living ls useless. • • • The beJt way to start a grtm day is to thin.I< of people starting It In hospital beds, on baWefieldll, and in prisons -to get a neeessary perspecUve on our own life situaUon. · • • • Plty there Is no modem equivalent to take the place ol that fine okt obsoleted epithet: '«:oi:comb." • • • PerhaP' the largest irony of public health today 11 that nearly every month medical sclence is finding new aDd better dlagnoollc and pre.di-tic ledmlqU<S for detecting different ailments -but the foUow-up and thierapeutit programs re- main as confused, dilatory, and haphuard as ever before. done to avert the crlal.s; unfortunately, statesmen who pogsess the former lack the tsu.r, so lhal they are always getting us out of OXea their own insensiUvity has COi. us inlo. • • • Possllfy ~'11\0St uselul maxim ever tlprwod In so few words u Samuel Taylor Coleridge's: "No man doel anything from a aingle m o t i ., e • ' ' (RecocnJllon el this would drain most ol the poison out of fanatical behavior.) • • • Sex, in our society, has been hypostatlzed u a substance or object. which it ii not, rather than regarded as a preens, which It is; thus, we mistreat it as something to be achieved rather than to be realized . • • • Work ls healing if it gives you no time to brood, but It is soul-killing if it gives you no tJme (or disposition) to think. • • • Gamh~ing Thrives • Ill U.S . "Gosh, no. I wu rea11uck:y. I went all through elementary and high school whil• they were still frff. I do worry about my son. thoucJt. He's in the fourth gr~e and he alreldY owes the govtrnment w .sa.20. y .. lhould ... him •Igo his liUI• promis- 9ory notes each term. But with six per- cent compound Interest .•. " • • • There are two prlncipal forms or prl(. tica I inttiligtnce: kmwina: bow to act in a crWs, and understanding what must be Whenever 1 see someone desperately trying to make an impression. I wonder if he has ever considered for a moment how few people care that be ii living and how few will be affected If he dies - and what monstrously delusive vanity drives auch persona to waste their time and enero nJnging themselves against the muslv• indifference ol the world,. whk:b will scarcely note the ripple of his pasalng. When a tatnbler $&)'! "dime," he -not I -coin but I bet of $1,D. '11\e Prt*lent'• Comm1uion on Law EM>rcement and Administration of' Jultice hu estimated that up to 50 mlOion cUmes -that is $50 bUlion -are bet JDepUy In tho United states each year en numbef't, horse ractnc, sporting eventa. dice..,..., 11111 In ru.g1I culnoo. It ia further dtlmated that «1anized crime'• prolll lram Ill gambllnr -·· tionlf nmt u high as one-third ol gross rev-. Part of the profll Is used for tirtbin& Jocal avm10Derit offlclalt who mlpt Olllenri,. cnck -. on Illegal pmbllnl. -portion helpo to -tho acqulsllloa of leillim•l• ....-.... by criminals. rrtUit 111& l'UIUC stems to att tl· died by lllopl l'"'hllnl only when tho namts al pr1)1ninent athletes are con- nected -i--t.auously -with it, Mljor 11pGrU-1ambllog epi-s 'of the ~ lndUde the Blad Sox acandal of ittt, the 1•1 coneae bastetball bribe ' W-1 ' • -•I 2 \ cues, suspension of NaUonat Football League stars Paul Hornung and AIOI Kanas 1n 1913 and, last summer, the Dap over New Yort Jets quarterback Joe Namath's auoclition with kn o • n 1amblers. A similar cloud bovtred over lhe 1970 Super Bowl pme. Kllllll City Chiefs quarta'bKt Len Dawton wu oae of. several pro footblll pll)'el"I who9e names were linked with a c:urttnt Dettolt grand jury luvesti(1t!oo of gamblln1. The Chief•' .-, victory ir-ved the repulltiou el lloWIOll Ind pro fODlbaJI, even if Jt did 1t1ve numerous·Minnt'9lt Vlktnp aupporters oul of pock•L 'l'RE EXTENT OF aambllng fever can hardly be exaueuled. Confllcated rt«ll'd1 ahowed that one New Yotkier lost $103,00G on a Chicago Bearl-Orffn Bay Pac:W. pme in 11164. The U.S. Internal Revenue Strvice knows ol at Jtut 3,oeo penon.t who hive 1 bookmaker•' credit ralln1 of """"' $1,000 a ...er. 11111 «IO or so ptMIOnl who have a c:redtt line of s1010llO or more. Most betton, of count, wager con· slderably loll than 1 "dime," which may up1aln the CUn"t!nt boom in pari-mututl pmblfn&. '"-'Chbrod """ hamesl radn1 haft Juel finllbed thtir most spec- tacular )'Ill' ever, wtth attendance 1t &4 mllllon .... I boUlnl hind!< or IU blllloo. M I .....it, JI lllle goverlllll01lls ncetved 1 tGtaJ of fllO million In tu rtvtnue. So lar this lt&IOD. buslneu at the Hellywoed, Fla., dOI track Is up by 51 percent. Fred Van Ltnnep, owner o£ the llollynod trxk, bsl 1 1tmple .,. pllnatlon for the """"" of bll business. { "At a time when the cost of everything is going out of slcbt," be II,)'&, "you can 11111 buy a pari-mutuel ticket for 12." IN TERMS OF beUing l<:tivity, the Super Bow1, the World Series and tht Kentucky Derby conltitute the Big 111rff: cl major sport.in& events. Most observers believe that major leap but:ball ls the favorlle sport of bellon, lbllowed by pro football, college football , college buket· ball, horse racinc, Pl'Cl basketball, hockey and boxing. Government-run IOUtrlts or sweepstakes sometimel are propoeed as a means cl combatt.ing UJeral gamblln& and nJsing additional public revenue. However, the New Hampshire Sweepstakes and the Ntw York State k>t- tery both bavt produced less money than upected, IJld D<lther bu put any booklu out of bw.ine&s. 'Ibe odd• a1ainst wUminJ • kltttry prize are Infinitely greater than -against plcllnf the winner of a root.ball game. Furthermore. there ls • n:laUvely long period between Ucket puh:ba~ a.Del drawln& of wiMln& • numbers. 'Ibe habitual better wants shorter odd& and faster action. Dear Gloomy Gus: There should be a law pnlllbltJnc 1a1 staUons frGm puWnc·u, t:rad- 1111 stamp alps, then t.utac c:us- tomen arter they've boulht ru that the station Is eltber oul of stamps or doesni l!;ve stamps wlth regular gu. Thal'• fraudulalt ad-- verUsing. -E. £. D. T~!• fell!ilff rttlll'lt ""'Mt' vllwl;, 111J ""-"IY *tv • ""' _., ..... ._. ,._ ,.. ......... ....,,., .... ..., ,. ..... "You don't think that's fair, mister?" "Oh, heck, sure It II. Thole who 1e1 beo.ilts from the rovemmeot ahould pay for them u aooa as they are able. It'• just that I was In· the. Army fer two y1an and ••. " "Oh an u.C.t. I auume you cof a G.I. ~n .. then. Haw much are you paylnc on that?" "LET'S SEE, •u.n a week for the food, housing 11111 unlfonna they gave me and $17.7t tor weapons 'and ammunition. I gueu I was pretty ettravagant with 1m- munttton. But you know how it was in Vietnam -shoot or be shot. It almost drove me crazy." "But It cUdn't, eh?" "I couldn't afford to co cruy. You know what these mental hospitals charae. I "u afraid they'd c.re me. And even with a iG-year note, th• payments •.. " "It'• eood to du11rith a m1n who wor- ries about his cndlt nlinr. Tell me, do you have IJIY other outstsndlng Joans!" .. No, I never use the parkt or the libraries or tall the weather or vote. And as I've never been sued, I've never had to pay a judge's alary or a jury'• fees." "Fine, air. J think I can approve your credit rauna:. We'll have yoo.r two enitnes over there in a JUty." "NEVBll MIND. My bollle just bumed to Ult gttlW)d. Good htaveml There's 1 gang of lot>ttn pn1 through th• ruins alrbdy. cartlnc off everythjng •orth 111· v.,tn,." "That'• a shame, str, I'll switch you to tht Police Oepanment. tllty11 send 1 aquad car fa< only 114.JO." "P1tue doa't. T can't pay. I'm wtptd out.1'0 have to Co on welfare. Oh, l'TI be In hoclc the r.st of my DI•." "W•I~ don1upect11\Y sympathy from me l'lfac, only thing that prevents our a:ovtmmtnt from belnc atrong, solvent and turninc a decent profit ii deadbeats Tlke you." Thurmond Adds PO'W er W ASlllNGTON -Sen. Slmn 'llurr· mond is In the process of adding another poteot pillar to bis. already caislderabl• power b.,. on Capitol HJJL Barrlo1111 unltl<ely last·mlnule change ln backstal• plans, the lean, athletic a. year-old South Can>lio1 Republlcan iJ slated to be made 1 member of the Senate Anll-Truill Subcommittee. Thurmond will be named to the vecan· cy created last year by the dea\h of Senate Republican Leader E v er e t t Dirksen. The subcommittee, IQ aaeney d Utt 17- member Senate JudlcWy OOmmlttet, b headed by Sen. Philip Hart, O.Mlch. It consists of six Democrats am three ~bllcan~ Senior Republlcan ts Sen. Roman Hruska, Neb., who mowd into that place followtn1 Dlrklen'a demile. AS TOP REPUBUCAN llniata wlll decide who &els the vacancy from among the seven GOP Judlclary c:ommitttemen. Senate Republican Luder H\l&h Scott, Pa., has lodkated Interest in the teat, u has Son. Charlot Mathiaa, Md • tt is-authorUaUvely u n d e r 1 too d , however, that both have e:xptlkd wiU.. 1ngne,. to bow out In fa..,. of 'l1urr1!lan4 -who hu manllertod Jntmlon to fight for tht appotntment lf nectlW)'. The South Carolinian Is ranked only by Scou, ind Is very eaaer to. rel ·on this 111&1>11 imJIC)<lanlau- ln thal 1Splrlllon, ht repinealy llali the backing of S... -· wbo u inort ct.,.17 1Utrned to 'l!lunnond'a economic •nd polttkal v1ew1 Utan Scott'• or Malhla1'. Hruska ii understood to have made it clear he intendl &o df:llpate Thurmond. THE ANTI-TRUST SubcommlUee Is one of the moa Important aaenctea of Ult ' Judiciary Co<runlttee, which is among the moat lnlluenllsl In Coogress. In addition to posslng on all judicial appointment.., the J"11dary Committee also has jurildjction over a wide range of legisla- tion. It bandies approximately 50 percent of the measures considered by the S.nalt:. The Anll-Trust Subcommittee I I parllcularly lmpoNnl at this Ume because of the lsaue of busineu mergen. Tbunnond'i appointment to the sub- committee would be considered favorablt lobualne.sa. With the pc>wtrfuJ commiUee seaU Thurmond already holds, this addition 'tl1II mah hlm one of the most influential Republicans In the Senate. The South Carolinian Is the second· ranttna Republican on the Armed Servtc<s CommHtee 11111 a member of the Rulu Committee. He b allO on the Stna!e Republican Campaign CommlUee, 11111 ererts much lnfluence In the COP PelJCJ Committee. Dur Georit: BJ Reberi 8. Alt•n and Jab A. Goldamllb Do yw have ""l' lips on how I can become a volunterr work;er? Otar D. F.: Boy, do It ...... ,.. u. !. First.. take out thl1 "' uel ... , .. 'ol •n !Ct, Sa t it ian me , .. !ly ler ent nd Jty :ne lSI ·Id, ol • he on .... as .•. nt he II ne •• J>. de ... "' al d· .s "' le •• IP :n Ill I Burglary Ring's Plans Revealed I GRAFFITI ---·- Thun411, J......, 2', 1970 DAll.Y Pn.OT f ~. Reagan Maps Battle on Drugs youngst.en. that "the kids are Rtagan in the broadcast ap-hlrinl of an utta 21 narcotlca doctora ln danaer of btcornlna even smoking wheat, Je.ttuce pearant.-e called his program qents. possible rela:utlon of addicts. and carrot tops wllh cru.ehed "the most comprehensive ba~ search and aellure laws, '1For too Iona now, we have aspirin." Ue plan for an all-out war denJal of bail to anyone who \eft ~ucition on dru1a to BEVERLY llll.1.'! (AP) -Marcoo, ow Son Antonio, < The Oro poUC< cl>ld' ol San w11ete be bad been police chief '' MlleOI, Tex .. planned to leed for a1x years. SACl\AMENTO (UPI) - Gov. Ronald Reagan today mapped . a "batUe plan for an alkut war" on narcotics e.nd danpn>us drugs star111111 In the Ont ,grade classroom and reachlJll Into the courts and Jail. ln a special lf.pa.ge special against narcotlcs and drug commlb a "H:riOUI crime" apologllll for the d r u I messaae to the legl!lature -abuse that has ever been while awalllnJ trll1 9fJ a ctl)turt.." the savemor told and in a fUmed televilkln drawn in the nation's hlstory.,, criminal offeme and 1 ~n-lawmabrl in the mwqe a 1an1 of burglln and raid his old town, ••YJ Be'i'erty Kimble said Dial was one of Hills Police Chief Joseph the newest members of the Kimble. gang. which he said is lm· speech -he proposed new live tducation protram for diltributed Wednesday. laws and ouUined doiens of As a major first step,1;====================.: The Republican governor said I.bat the tenacles of the dru& colbJre to threaten an enUre 1eneraUoo ot CllUornla administrative restrlcllom to Reagan announced he has STARTS WIDNISDAY The f9rmer-chlef, Wayman pUcated in the burglary of . bring lncreulng n1rcotlc1 and · created by execuUve order a WORLD PRIMllRI INOAGIMINTI Allen Dial, wu one or 12 $40,000 worth of 1 o o d s drug abuse to hie). new state Office or Narcotics N111'81dtl•UlllS ainder arrest today and booked · recovered so far. •' . , ro in !ti ti r bu g1 1 ...... :., .. •·• ..... r ve I• on o r ares The tang allO Included a l'1!i:l~i!i.\i~!.;l~~::>ir(:1:~11<:i'.~ In the Los Angela area. retident from a fashionabl e •--.----~ Dial, 3S, to appear In nearby suburb - a "Bel Air 1t1unicipal court Tuesday. was matron who put tbe finger on fired when word reached the the homes of her r I c h 20,000-population town of San friends," Kimble said. 3 Get Jail Santa Barbara Pier Barred in Protest and Drug Abuse Coordination .._ .,. .. --·-which will organize drug abuse _ .. , war prevention, treatment and -,Jor BllU-educaUonal project.s. a-. 9tl1 "If we don't work togelher," o 16EIRJE SfEVElfi.fRED KIJllllR ,.u:i. he said, "we run the risk ol ...._~a .... la'l'>"-w-•• l06lng a generation.•• a_. -• --.. His message did not say how '*tlflrfi.OtD\ .. air.. UISINll~)tl'tilltt.,..11111111••• For Valley Takeover much it would cost to put his kt'.PIUll .. r.w.ntlrfwi.taJlllll a:llltlrfl!w. llllllJ SANTA BARBARA (UPll -Under the banner o I entire program into operation. UDO, NEWl'ORT--ORANGflJllYE-IN About 500 pu&OM sealed off Environment Ri&hts Day, con-_:K~e:!'.y_e~le:i:m~e~nt..~l~nc~lud~ed~th~e~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! MID-WINTER SALE SUITS & SPORTCOATS REDUCED 40% =-rrcnn=-r1rr• . ·= . MID-WINTER CLEARANCE FROM ()UR WOMEN 'S SHOP AA•• the entr~ to the municipal cemed clUzens and politicians l pier here Wednesday night for held the "January 28" anti- one hour as a pro\est to oil pollution conference. LOS ANGELES (UPI) drilling In the Santa Barbara Included In the speakers was Three of 20 studentl convicted Channel. former l n t e r 1 o r Secretary on multiple felony charges ln About 25 city police and stewart Udall Udall sakl drill· the 1968 seizure of two sheriff'• deputles stopped the inp: In the channel should be buildings at San Fernando demomtratora from moving baited and oil companies Valley state college were onto the pier. There were !lO reimbursed for the mlllions sentenced Wednesday t o arrests and the protestors they have spent an the oil prison for terms of one to 25 11i'ere later allov.-ed to march leases. years. onto the pier. Udall said that during his Superior c.ourt. Judge ~fark The confrontation endtd an eight years In office what he Brandler placed IS of the oUierwlae peaceful obaervance regretted most "was that we other students on probation of the first anniversary ci the didn't do more for the with either time in jail or fines Santa Barbara Channel oil American Indian and the San- and dismissed charaes against ..'.'plll~ _ _:_ ______ ~ta'..:Ba'.'.'.'.'.:rb~ar~•'.:e'.'.:il~sp~i_::IL:_" __ ~============================ one defendant. Marita Peeten.- 19. Brandler imposed jail tenns on Archie Chatman Jr., 22, Robert Lewb, 22. and Eddle Dancer, 21, be.cause the thret were the most active participants in the takeover. Defense and prosecution at- torneys agreed that the con- victions and sentencing of the defendants represented the first mass prosecuUoo in the United St.ates of campu.s mllilants on felony charges. Eight ol the defendants, lo- cludlng two women, were sentenced to up to one year In the county jail as part of their probaUon. '' Russ Visitors Tour Studio LOS ANGELES (UPI) -A delegation or visiting Rll!sian Journalists brief]y d __ e_l a y e cJ their tour of the NaUonal Broadcasting Co. s tu d I o 1 Wednesday to watch a group of chorus glrsl rehearslna: for a television variety show. Several of the So v I e t newsmen, who are scheduled ; to depart for New Orleans to- '.. day, carried cameras and snapped pictures during the 4S.minute tour of video tape facilities, color studiot and the news department. ~b BIDTIQU§ .. • • H.l.S. REDUCED PANTS e LADYIUG They appeared to lake special interest in t h e technical a n d enaloeerlna: aspects of American television. However, E. E. Manedonov, deputy chairman' of lhe committee of radio and I television, said through an in terpreter, "we were here too short a time lo really tell " much about the differences e TOOTIQUE 400/o SWEATE~S e JODY \IESTS e DON SO~HISTICAT lS AND MORE SKl,,TS iii ILOUSES 3'*67 Via lido • Newport Beach •Phone: 673-4510 l,.l111ty of Fret r11li11t Fer Seit D1 y1 -All Oth1r D1y1 T1ol between Soviet and U . S . methods. ~ ~. ~·li~-· •• Sears .__ ___ __, Enjoy the Lu:tury of Soft Water with an Automatic Water Softener Sears Automatic: Takes the Work ()qt of Softening Water WITH SOFl' WATER 1· J~t Save M*J ' I on d.i.r,.nts, I I KMps thinp clun· 808p &nd cloth· Yet Wort {t;\I er without effort, 101 Juts Jonrer eliminates bath tub '--------' rin,.a SAVEflO TbbWeek .:tc:.. So. Coast Plaza, 3333 Bristol St. Phone 540-3333 -------------~-- Get the highest rate in the world on insured • savings guaranteed for as long as 10 years. Jgy choose the way to save that s~its you best. GuairarrtMtl --Minimum MlnlmuM ......... TypeofAcceunt Annual aae.4 Annnl YSeltl "-"' To"" -Pa11beek 5% 5.13% $1.00 Unll1111hiol Quanerfy Guaranteed Rat• C.rtlllC411• #I 5.25% 5.39% $1 .00 90day1 Qualter!y Guaranteed late Cetflflcille #2 5.25% 5.39" $1,000 llO""" Quart.ty -. Ollaro,,..... late c.ttlflcate #3 5.75" 5.92" $1,000 I year .Querterly . o ...... ~ .. c1 late c.ttlflcate #4 6" 6.11% $1,000 2.10,... .. ~ly GucirqntMci lat• Certificate #5 6,50% 6.72% . $100,000 60·19days Quarterly GUClfGldHCI late CertlflcClte #6 6.75% 6.91% $100,000 90· 179 cktys O..rterly G ............ late Certificate #7 7% 7.25% $1001000 I I0-364 olays a ... ...,,, Guaran!Hd Rate CettlflcClte #I 7.50% 7.79% $100,000 1,_ Quarterly ' ' J'or-1•-itol •nd prof-1aMI 1u1.i.-1n ,i.nnlnt yourllnondelfutwte~Cillll(211)6H-Glll anti lllllt.r• WerW Snlfl .. Meney MtlH1•r. ' TM ottlp ..... ._, Uien i"ll OW'oltwta..._. In ............ i.,...--.-.. Ir 1*1 • Cdll:11il .... 1ft7 \NDRLD SAVING • • NtO LOAH A88001ATIOH I -OYlll UIO-: ...... -. ... aw.-··--OM!-l .................. .,.. ....... :"",--5 l~INTWOOD l.ACIUNAhACH LYol.~=~ 11801 Wllehlte tt lion Vloento 292 l!outh OOalt HIJll!wty 11ll'O f.ollo ........ c-, ....... DaUy Dtlly Daly Dtlly Daly Dcilly Dtllly Daly Dcily NOllTHIUDGI OHTMIO IAN IJlllJiWIDlllO WQT AllCADIA 9038 -Baul_ II Nerdhott 521 Nor1h l!uclld A..,,ue 1°'5 liQI Hl(jhlend 120<! ~ llaidWlll et iMrtt - WILIHIM-Al.VAllADO WOOOUHD HJU8 IAll -= Wll\llllro 8Jvcl., lo1Angole1 23325 Mulholland O!M at Valley Ciro.I' Road 1170 5th Avonvo 11B 811911 E Comlno81l\lPpk!g Oont« j • ' i I l I I II • l • DAILY Pl~QT Thursdar, Januart 29, 1970 . Do~tors CJJre Too Dean., Student De 11 y Couiplacency· Rafferty Due At Peterson Testimonial ANAHEJJ\.f -California Supt. of Public Instruction Milli' Rafferty will be the featured speaker Friday at a pre-campaign testimonial din· ner for Or. Robert Peterson. Orange COlhlly superintendent of schools . ''The li1agic of Education," is the lltl~ of Rafferty's ad· dress to be given at the Crest Hotel, beginning <ii 1 p.rn .. 11•ith Pepperdlne College Vice President Dr . Bill Teague as rnaster of ceremonies. !\lore than 500 are expected to allend the $12 .50 per person banquet, at which Dr . Peterson will discuss ac· eon1plishmcnts. l'Ufrcnt pro· grains and future goals for county schools. Chairman !i.irs. H. B. Pearce Silid interested parenls n1ay cal1 l\1rs. Handsel. ;:ii 535-3463. to place their reservations. Lol8 Okayed By THOMAS FORTUNE ot .... 0.11~ l'llet "'" IRVINE -Doctors, COO· se rvalive as a group. still are humanitarian. The dean of UC Irvine's Medical School and a medical student both made that point Wednesday. Dean Warren Bostick ·ex· plained why he thinks doctors are conservative: "They are trained not to flit around and experiment too rnucb," he said. "~1edical school is a ~relly established !Ort of a sequence, there are strict benchmarks, and it all lends to a guy not going out on ~ sortie but sticking pretty close to the traces." Jle suggesled, "It .may be you expect physicians because they haYe a hu1nanitarian component to be more liberal. You don't expect it of J banker. You wouldn't wan t anything but a conservative brain surgeon." Secood-yeer medical student Dean Bristow said or his classmates: "There are a lot of cage r people. They are four years older (than college un- dergraduates) and are apt lo direct their efiorts to im- proving a program rather than protest." His reply to an image that doc\ori nre CQn1placent - mbre lntercsled jn n1ooey Ulan helping UH~ir relJO\V ITI8n - was that they are not . Spt'aking: of his elassn1ales ngaki, Bristow st1.id. "~'rom the way I s1zl' thbn1 up they are very interested i n hun1anitarian things." · ~le seld he thinks doctors helping. the indigent a r c receiving more publicity now than in the post. UC! Chancellor D a n i e 1 Aldrich. who had invited the medical school representatives lO' His monthly press con- £erence, orfered his thoughts Qfl why doctors are considered l'Onservative. ".Every professional is con- seo"ativc-111 .his licld." lhf chancellor said. "Mc related \'el)' carefully to the. preCi!plS. maxims and slandarrls of the profe&sioo . The differe11cc witb medicine is il is in the JJUblic arena and the in1agc CWlles across in the i>ubilc eye.'' Bristow. 31, is ullcntling incd!cal school after seven years as an Air Force transport pilot. lie said he doesn't feel any less SOl'ially conscious th;.111 the I 4 fresh n1<J n t.:l<1s~ n1 c d i ca I sludcnt.s \\'ho this year refused lo accepl the gift of a black n1cdical bag ul instrun1e11ts 4 Jurors to Disciiss Human Relatio1is fro1n H pharma1.'t.'Utltal Coro· pany Asketl v.hal u1cdical :.tudents are doing <ibout the drug problem, he said, "They are learning what they can 111 their course In ph armacology so they can deal v.•ith ln when they have an opportunity." •le said there are no plans to e1nulate anything like the free drug clinic put on in Laguna Beach by UCI medical school instructors. The medical sludenls have no plans (or action based nn a group consciousness, he said. But he noted some students individually "have sparked their ov.·n concen1." One slu- dent is teachin~ the others Spanish and another Is con- ducting a well·baby clinic at lhe UCI married students quartCN. Senio1·s Se t 2 Excursio11s •runtington Beach Senior Citize11s are planning two trips in February. according l.o Irene Edwards, tour direc- tor. The group \\'tll go to Las Vegas. Feb. 2-J, a three..ciay, two-n1ghl trip for $30.50. The prier int·ludcs a refund of $3 111 ni o.:kPIS on arri\«11 and two chuck wagon dinners and one brcakf;1st al the Mint liotel. On Feb. 17, the Senior Citiz;cn~ \1·t11 join in Cl one-day trip to the Indio Date Festiv;il Cost, including a dinner al the San Gorgonio Inn and admis- sion to the festival Js $7.50. Those interested may' call 536-2 642 . Forty acres located· .at the. norlhcast corner of MacArthur Boulevard and Main Street in the Irvine lndustrii1l Con1plcx have re<:cived coun1.v plant1in~ commission approval for s1•h- division into se\'en industrial loL~. SANTA ANA -Four Religion and Race. Synod ol member's of the '1969 Orange Sollthern California, UnJted County Crand Jury w 11 I Presbyterian Church. discuss the pros 8'tld cons of'---'-------------------1 WHll•m H Fox A11e 90, o! 2!1 [)rt,oll St. Hurufn9ton flt•th Dllt ot de•I", Jano•rv 11. Survlvod bv ..,ltp, Marv E l'o• s ...... ite>. S••u•dtv. II AM.~ ... !!"' Cl\•'). •I. Ff11111 •tSllllt nlltt. P1<••k: View Mt- MOrltl P•·--s ... 1111• """''ul•Y· Dl•t<'.ID•I GAYNOll G-J. ~vnor. AH 11. of 72!1 Tu,1111 Avt.. NfWPOrl 8tac)I Oi't of cl<'tll\, Jt,,..••• 11. Survlvrd l:w Wll•. Dorotlw; ..,.,, JohnJ lh•n d.tu9Mtn. M ... Harold IH1hcp. (DOIA MtlA: Mln4't f.to•<1if l"d fl•l'M•• Gtvrior, NewPO•I 6ttth: bn>ther. Gerald c;,,,..,,, Color1<1o; '""' ~1sre,., Ktthlten MtlCll'OWn, lltlnoll: Franc•• Miiier. L-Bttch: Heier-ll(u1tu•ch, t111. nolo; Allee Flt•"Dld•. Gt~'<1i•• ara<•d•nn. Sein Jostoll fll<J>ao. llo•a•v. !onlaht, Tt>Urldav, 1 lO PM lle<iulem Ma•1. F <i· dtv, t AM. tlelh At 51. Joaclll<T>• (Atllo!•c Cl\urch. lnte•<T>fn!. Good 5ftoohr<d C•· met1•v. Bell B•Olld"'8• Mo•1u•rv. D•· recrcr1. LAUVER Annie Mlll1 L1uve• 1l)(I H1rwocd SI. LM An9rlt1. Dllt o! dt•ll\, Jnnu1ry 21. survlveG bv ..,.., Lo.i W W1.,11n, cl Simi, (1111 ; d8u91>1e•. Dororl\v M ll<tY, Nnr- -1 Be•tll: 1wo 1llltro, Htl•n John<t9fl, Lln..,ocd; l•A rtu•W'll. ~co!lnnrl; 11.,.,. 11r1nd1•1•"· ~t,..,lce• will be lleld Frld1v. 1 PM. Ptcitlt V~w (h1MI. wl!ll Fe1 ..... O.vld /I.. Cru<rn oltltl<tlin<t. lnl9f<nenl, Pttllk: V~w Mtmo'>•I P1rll. P•tltlc v-Mor!uary, O<rt<lo•• SMELTOl'I ll°"'rl W. ~llelton. •WI ~. el llO W. •n1Mlrn, L01'19 BtAth D•lt of llR•lll. J•rwtl"Y 1'. SurYlvecl b'f' b•O'lltf, George s11enan. Co.I• Ml!'A: litter. M1x1,,.. s.,,,..,er. Con<:oro. (11!! Grevt•IOt <••v· lctl w!ll be htlO Friday, I Pr.I. H~rbDr 11 .. 1 M'""'°'l1I Per~ Bell Bra.o-1v M«!u1rv. 01r~tor1. TAl'IHl!HILL Mri. Minnie T1nntllll!. Jtnldent el Coo11 Meu. O.te ct "9A!I>. Janu••v 11 St•v•tH .,..,..1,,.. 1t Wtt!th!! (h1pel Morlui••· ......... WOOD w·11111m Nel•"" WllOd De•1 of delt>•. J..,.11,ry 15. lle\lden1 o! •1111 •••• 1lnce Hlti member o! Chris! Cllu•tll by lte SN. Survived bV wl!e, J•rM M. Wood, ol BelbOIH d6ulilh"'· Alk• M. I! ........ of crn••Y· c.111 ; M>ns. Jo1e11h M Weed. (Ml• MIHI : Ed..,Jn 8. Wood, f>~s1<1en1: 1111er, S1r111 Be1!l1. of A11 .. m11r~. •loll! grnrldchl!Oren M>d lwen!v-one ~re1I <>••n~· d!lldntn. ~rvltDI were l\fld Wednt•d•v in P111den1. !Vt• '"" WAHfll (o . DI· r..:1or1. ARBUCKLE & SON Westc.llff A1ortuary 427 E. 17th St.. Cosla !\IC!lil 6li;.u88 • BALTZ f\10HTUAHIES Corona dcl Mar Oil 3·9150 Costa Pt1esa !\II &-%414 • BELL BROAD\\' AV !\10RTUARY 110 Broadway, Costa Mrsa LI S-34" • Oil.DAY BROTllEftS llunlin~n Valley J\lortuary 17911 Beach Blvd. llunllngton Beach 84!·77'11 • PACIFIC VIE~' f\IEJ\fOHIAL PAHK Cemetery • f\lortu11ry Cbapr.I lSOG Pacific View l>rlve ~·ewport Beach. Califuml1 1•4-1700 • PEEK FAMll.Y COLONIAL FUNERAi. "\\'hy Orange County Needs a Human Re I at ions Com- n1ission" Saturday at Santa Ana College. • The panel discussion is sponsored by the Human Rela- lions Council of Orange Coun· ty ~·hich now meets regularly at Santa Ana College in the }''acuity Lounge. The meelh1g gels under way at 9:30 a.m. and is expected to last until aboul noon . ll is open to the public. Members of the discussion panel include Mrs. Josephine Caines of Orange, Mrs. ~·lary ritil\cr of Ne1vport Beach. Richard Hernandez of Santa Ana and Andre \Vh\le ol Orange. Moderator for the panel wlll be David Collins of A·,1ahelm. 1·icc chair1nan. Con1tniltcc on Parking Lot To Become Scout Camp IRVINE -T~·enty Orange l::mpire Boy Scouts are plan- ning lo turn a parking lot into a Boy Scout camp Feb. 7. Ifs ail part of Boy Seoul week, \1rhich will be observed throughout Orange County . The camp site, complete 1vith tent and fire ring. will be one of the demonstrations given by Troop 36 al tile eastern edge of the Irvine Ranch lnforinntion Ce n t c r parking lot. The Boy Scouts v.·ill also build a look-out tow·er and dcn1on~trate Dutch oven cooking nntl survival crafts. The displays and dcmonslra· lions will be. held betw~n 1 a.n1. and 3:30 p.1n . The public is invited. V cl Prexy \\'ESTl\ilNSTER -D r . \Villiam H. Hun!\cy of \Vest minster. a small animal vetl'rinarian. has been in· stalled as president~lect of the Southern California Veterinary Medical Associa· lion. HOME 247 8roodway 71111 Bois• Ave. L ..... IMcti-494.9114 ~ Wt1lm.ln1~ 1~:; i,-;H=o;u;ra:;·;1;1;1;.m=. t;o=10=p;.m~·~i I SHEFFER MORTUARY ;; Lacuna Beacb: Ctt-IUS I ON THE TUBE San Clemenle 4n.&100 • .. .... b••' ··"· ...... .. C7 r.taln St. .VllK -4111,ibuttd with th• 11hrtflty tf11+let1 of tht DAILY lluntht.(t(ln Beach ''LOT. 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Another Ortho quality quilted set at th• lowest of the low Ortho prices! t4e1t~ ~~ -LAKEWOOD ANAHE IM ·' FOUNTAIN VALLEY 16131 Harbor Blvd. 4433 Cand!ewoo d Dr. 1811 \''/.Lincoln Ave. I NeJt te lo4y's1 Phone: 839°4570 Phone: 634~4134 Phone: 776-2590 • ·' fltundq, J.tnuary ~9, l<J70 OAILV PILOT JOA Army May Cu ·t Division Strength to 12,000 Men WASHI NGTON (AP) Some general5 believe a 25 percent cut ln the iize of Army divisions would improve thelr fight ing cffecli\'Cncss and reduce their cost. Army planner argue that There w:.i~ no t>stun<itt.' uf how nlUCh money n1lill\ be saved by such a slimming down. en11blc !.he Anny to 5tave off a sub:shtntial cu t in the number of Its dlvl.l!Jo1l:;, Son1e generals have forera i.:t the Ar1ny n1ay Qt down to ti or 12 divisions by 1975 from Lhe 1iresent level or 17 nnd a third divis ions. smaller divisions could runc. tion more effectively than two larger ones. assuming the alrmob11 e division would be equally 1uc- cessrut In Europe because ol the major strength • n d sophlsticallon of Soviet an. tiaircrafl and anUhelicoptcr armament. War 11. ,.., · be tter animunition, artillery and tanks, plus more efficient conunl4nications and other ad· vances make it possible tr> trim present divi s ional stren gth from nearly 16,000 men to aboµt 12 ,000 or 13.000. Secretary of DtJrnsc l\lclvJn R. Laird cstin1::ited recenlly that deactivation of a fu ll tn· fantry division yields a savu1g of about J500 million a ~car. Armored, mechanized and ai r1nobile dh•isions cost more beca use they incorporate larger numbers of s u c h ve hicles as lnnks, armored personnel car r i c r s anrl t:~licopters. Rudget pressures con1bined with a redirected ·U.S. foreign pulley aw ay from oversea:-; ;u. volvements point lo a Nnlailer Arn1~'. as well a5 reductions in the other <l'rnlCd services. At1n'y generals sha pir.;; the force of the future think it's highly possible that, with ad· vanccd cqui p1nent already 1n being or 011 the wny, thrtt Some experlmentatlon has been done with a new concept combining the best fighting reatures of armor an d helicopter·borne forw in a single division. Although the ai r mobile division, equipped with more than 430 heli copters, proved a 1najor innovative success in Vietnam, the.re is little en. thusiasm among a e n to r generals to convert any more divisions to that fonn . Also, tho generals who think about the problemt ot con· venlional war in Europe feel the alrmobile division Js not fitted to take and hold growld. as is an inrantry, mechanized or armored division. Searching for the right formula, the Army has gone through a series of dlvlslanal reorganizations back to World 'l'be triangular division of about 17,000 men aod three ttgimenta was followed by the Ptntomlc division desJgned to live on the atomic battleCleld and rangtng in size from U,$00 to 14,800 men. Then, seven years ago a new "building block concept" .. ,. adopted under which diviaioas ~ere formed of v a r y in g numbers, types and coin· btnatlons of battalions to suit the mission and Objective, 'l'his, essentially, la l h e present divisional organiza. tlon . Oral Healtl1 Week Slated The week of Feb. 1·7 Is "Children's Dental He a Ith 'Veek" in Fountain Valley. Edward Just. All citizens were urged to observe the week and pay epecia( attention to the heaJth habits of young children. -Flll Jet Will Test Nixon Vow W~SlllNGTON (AP) -The Flll's persistent technical ptoblems 1pparenlly will test President Nixon's 1963 cam· paign pledge to make the pJarte 11into one of the foun· cfiticns of. our national securi· ty." The then·candidale's con1· Jl'ltllt was recalled over the weekend when Secretary of Defense Melvin R. Laird rais· ed the possibility that future Fill production may b e canceled. Fifteen Flt I's have crashed , the latest in De~inber, from reasons ranging from con- 1truction flaws to pilot error. The Air For~ said Monday tll e December accident that killed two crewmen resulted from faulty steel, which caus· ed 1 wing to break off ni?ar the fuselage. BACKED PROGR,\M It was Nov. 1, 1968, the eve of the presidential election, that Nixon publi cly endorsed the Fiii program whlle cam· pajgnjng in Texas where the General Dynamics Company builds the plane. Al Fort Worth, Tex., where thousands Of Gener a I Dynamics em~loyes' fu tures were tied to Fill production, Ni2on iss ued a statement say. Inc ' "I stand . . . with our def!nse leaders who h a v e ctrUfied th, capabllitie8-of-the Air Foret version of the locally produced F 111." The new plane ~·as a con- tinuing problem for t h e Democrats racing accusations that forrner ~Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNama1'a overrode the mii!ta ry by awarding th e multlbillion· dollar contract to General Dynamics rather than Boeing of Seattle, Wash. Mechanical bugs have con· tlnued to plague the Fill since Nixon's campaign statemenl, prompting Laird to note Sun- day ·in a televised interview that it is becoming a Republican problam. FACING UP •·since I have b e e n secretary of Defense, I ha\'e not had to face up to this JJlue," Laird said. "But I am having to face up to It in 1971 because then is the tim e for dectaion as to whether we will io forward with a fourth wing or whether we will cancel the program after the fourth wing or before the fourth wing." The Air Force would like to bay more than 600 Fllt's but baa been give n the money in recent years to pay for 491. Thia includes funds for S6 of tO planes required for the fourth wing Laird referred to. Only 238 have actuall y been built. with 223 In the inventory after the 15 crashes. JAides say Laird Is likely to de-pend solely on the Air Force's recommendation on wf*}tel' to continue future Fl 11 productlon. Tbe Air Force reported It dou not know yel whether the ateel defect Whlch caused the December accident is an 11o1attd problem or affects the entire fleet. Afl operational Flll's have been grounded pending inspection. LONG A CRITIC Senator John f\.1cClellan 1 D· Ark.), long a crltlcof the Fll l program, has served ootice to Laird he plans to resume his cOngressional investigation of the plane. McClellan sald last \veek that if the latest proble m af· feels all Fil l's Then the Pen· tagon 5hould cal'lce\ the prcr gram instead of m a k t n g furU1er heavy expenditures for repairs, The Air Force says that at 1hiJ point It h&s no estimate on hoW much it might cost to rtmtdy the steel fl av.• should the defect be found in other Flll'a. Tbe Air -Fnrce lut year had to modify the aln:raft arte another attlous atructural pro bltrn tamed up during faUgu: llld stress tt~ts of a \Vlng rl r "" the ground. "\Ve're ahnost forced to go this way because of the. cost." one soGrCC' said. "But v.·e should be doing it anyway." Develop1nent of sntaUer, n1ore cffcl'live divililons 1nighl Strategists warn a g at n a t It has been so ordered by proclamation signed by Mayor ANOTHER NEW LUCKY DISCOUNT SUPERMARKET OPENS TODAY AT 1222 NO. AVALON BLVD. and ''L'' ST., WILMINGTON • DOORS OPEN 10 A.M. Prices ci•• Oi5co1,.,ted E11.cept 011 foir l •od"d Cl'ld Gove r-Hnt-nf Cont•olled ltem1, 1 2~ 70 •LOOK FOR THE LUCKY BOND ON THE PACKAGE ••• IT'S YOUR UNCONDITIONAL GUARANTEE OF COMPLETE SATISFAalONI STANDING RI LARG!IND -.. ~. CHUCK ROAST GROUND BEEF ROUND STEAK ROAST 1~1 T·BONE STEAK BLADE CUT 4 7 ( LUCKY BONDED LB FRESH, FLAVORFUL 5 3 c LUCKY BONDED LB CENTER CUT 85 LUCKY C BONDED LUCKY BON D ID BEEF 7tr.. TAILS UMOVID LUCKY BON DID BHF $1~.7 BEEF • : .. l'.ANNED FOODS~ ... . BUTTER.NUT ~:~:.101 ... 78' BUTTER·NUT ~~~:.1cA11 ••• s1 '' I (OHU --MOCHA JAVA '"'·"'82' FOLGER'S IMlfAMf (O"ll S.1" !OOl.JA• ........ MJB INSTANT ~:~:.'J•R'l 1' APRICOTS "" u• ...... 31 ' llA~YUT OAT,llAl'i'll ' CLING PEACHES:.·.~~;:: ............. 29 ' PINEAPPLE :'~',~~!~~ .................... 3?' ... l:Jr;"&f~-...... TOMATO JUICE HARVEST DAY 39( 6 PACK SY2-0Z. CANS CHE.RRIES ~:~·~:!~.". ...................... 29 ' FRUIT COCKTAI L ::W.'i ........ : ..... 25' GRAPEFRUIT 0flMONlfHC1'10NJ 31' 160t, CI N . .. ..• ,.,.,., MOTT'S APPLESAUCE "" ...... 44' MANDARIN ORANGES ::~~.·;:: .• 26• APPLE JUICE ::~1:~:" ................... 44( BllF " BEEF LB. SMALL END •••••••• , 91c u. RIB STEAK 1ucu10ND1o mr ........ ~ ... . .89~ •. CROSS RIB ROAST ~8~:~·:~ ••.• '"'· p •• PO P•• 83~. PORTERHOUSE STEAK 1~1~,·:~ •••• mr ........ $1 3 ~. r.~~~~.!~1\1 TU,~.K.~~s .... J9~. r.~J.~~.~E~ !.~~~~YS ··• 45 ~ ~'~~~~~~~~~.~ .................. 89c !,~~~~.~ .. ~~.~.~ .. ~~.~.~.~ .. -· 77c ~ •..... K6tfkt~ CUT GREEN BEANS STOKELY is•;,.oz. CAN lie , ..• J'.AHNED .... FOODS ' CHUNK TU NA {Ml(•lllOlfNIUI. 32< 6'10L(lN . .,., .• ,. • .,,,,, CHILI WITH B E A NS~~:~.'~ ..... ~ ... 39' ~BE EF TAMALES ~;~~.1iaN .......... Jl ( PEANUT BUTTER :~'::.j!: .......... 61 ' GRAPE JELLY ~1~~~·la1 ................... 28' SYRU P ;~::~.·:~t",. ...................... 68( OiHlRJJE .. M.J ..• ?.r . PIZZA PIE MIX (NlllOl.lt.OflCllJIU S7 ' ""oz.,,.,,''""' .. '" CANDY (UIH1S flllll!ll ,l•lli.S.1~ 22, l lll I UIM (II IU!Tl~l l~Gll I' ,I,),, TEXIZE K2R ~'0°1'. ~1:!11 ~~~·~ ............. 17' ~-'f.·K6t"&t~ SP AGHETTI SAUCE ' APPLE JUICE !~t.~~~ ................ -.. 20' POT A TOES ~;,~:l ::~::i~~t11to1. , ....... .34' CHlll & BEANS:C::.~~·: .................. 26' SLICED BEEf ~;~~~!!·:.~.1.'.~.~~.~.1.~~~ ... ~l '' PERCH FllLET ~~':t'::i~ .................. 61 ' CHEESE PIZZA ::'o'? .................... 62' .. ·K6t&f!r---. MARY ELLEN JAMS STRAWBIRRYOR 53 ( BLACKBERRY 20.oz. JAR POOR BOY SANDWICH \:~n ... 79' GINO'S PIZZA \1t::~~:.~~·~·l·~~~~~~.1~ ... 78' BEEF STROGANOFF :~·~:~i ... 51 • HALI BUT ~':t::~~~~~.~.~~~.'.~.1.~~.~~ •••..••• 85t COFFEE CAKE IA•A Ul l UHHll•IUlll 79' 111~ or.,., ............... .. JOHNSON PIES "·"·"'······· ....... 69' ~•,ti. u111t•••. 1~1 t un1•0 lUCK'f SUCID BACON 1 LI, ,.,. 73c ~.~.~~~.~-~~!.~.~~~~ ~··· 85 c SLICED BACON 79< IArl, IWlrt, llOIMU. Ill. Pit •• .,, ......... ,. ··KJrrTS..t~-­ STOKEL Y CORN WHOLE KIRNIL 17-0UNCE CAN lie "··.~JfAtiltll"rmvw.;a~it· ~'M.Ul.Jil'l~H.ll!HX~ ~BLACK PEPPER!<:~~::.~~.~~.~~39~ C&H SUGAR "'"""• SS' Ill.Ill , ......... ,, .... , .... , DOG BISCUITS ~.":,~::: ................ 39' KAL KAN DOG FOOD::~~::;~ .. 27• TABBY TREATS l:.':~ •.............. 16' ~jiiiUlir".. . 'ft 6~····"' ZEE NAPKINS '"""""'"' 11 • ,,,.,,. .. (f , ,, ............ . FACIAL TISSUE ~:::~.'::,~~~~ ........ 27' TOILET TISSUE jf.:W oow ........... ·27' ORCHIDS' NAPKINS "''"" m ... 55' SANITARY NAl'KINSl:':t .. , ..... 77• TIDE DETERGENT , .................. .'1" TEX I ZE :'o't.~~~. ~~~ ......................... 89' FRESH FRYERS U.S.D.A. 29 GRADE A C WHOLE . c:i~::Ns LB. ~~.!;!~Pl~~!~~~ ................. 33! ~!s~~o'!~~.~ ........................ 79,~ IOW IVftrDAY DISCOUNT rllCIS ON FllSH OIU n1•s OSCAR MAYER WIENERS 69' .llllUT•.11.lUU,tlLP&,.,,,,, , ••••••• ·~-~~~'~!~~~ .. ~~. 68( ~~II'!s~l~~N.P&t, .. , ............... 34 C r~~.~~!.~ .. c.HEESE SPREA·D·· 4) c ~R~~c~~~~.~,~~c~~~·.~:~~: .. 68c ~~2~~~!,~~.1,~R~u~~~: 34c ~~.~~.),G;~.~~,oK.ED. B.EE.r. .•.. 63' ~Y.~~~!~!.~!~.c~.!r.s. .......... 8< BEEF SALAMI CHUBS 68< Q'Hl.ll tl.rll..... . .................. . GALLO ITALIAN SALAME 49c (IN.1'11.n tcn ... lkllll.PH.StlCfl .. '. DREFT DmRGENT ~"·"'·········82' JOY LIQUID~~':.',\"; ..................... 83' FANTASTIC ~;'o'i~~~~~~.~.1.'.'.~ •..•• ., .... 75c BOLD DETERGENT '"'·"'·········· 12' FINISH fl1:r:i~~~.~~~.·.~~.·.~~ ................. 67$ DASH DETERGENT ""'· ........... '2" SAFEGUARD~:'::~~~~ .................... 20• SPIC AND SPAN l~1.'I,. ............ 31' PINEAPPLE JUI CE ::\' •. m ........... 33• SCHILLI NG'S MI X 1V2·0Z. PKG. )Jc ~· --K6t&f l LIPTON TEA BAGS f';:J!i0 .,, LOW DISCOUNT PRICES ON HOUSEWARES £ BEAUTY AIOS LE SUEUR PEAS "" "'··············· 33• WHITE CORN ~:~1,~t!~~: .................. 26' Our LOW Ever)<lay_Pricc! HI-CLASS DOG FOOD 5 POUND 59c BAG CUT ASPARAGUS f:1~1;t't:~ ........ 36' PEAS WITH ONIONS 1:1•:~::~ .... 27 ' STEWED TOMATOES ::: .......... 25 ' MEXICORN otlt~tl!l~I 26< IJOt .tlN •• ,. .... .,,..,,.,, PORK & BEANS ;,u:!:~ ................. 25 ' HAMBURGER CHIPS \:~~.~~~~'. 32• LARGE RIPE OLIVES:•:::::,:•:•·~ .. 46' GREEN OLIVES 11t1,<1uf1Hll!I n utr10 56, n;or.u t .,., ......... . Our LOW Evcr)<lay Price! HAIVl5f OAT ROUND TOP BREAD DILUXI 33c 24-0Z. LOAF LAS AG NE \·~~~'.~::.~'~ ..................... 33' BABY F000 :.·~~~·~1.s,'_:~.1N10 ............ 9l J U ~!I OR FOOD ~·1:~~~·11l~··1 ........... 12• PAMPER DIAPERS ~~:'.~~x ......... '1 s• DISCOUNT PRICED PRODUCE! BANANAS 100°/o CHIQUITA BRAND •.• THI FINEST QUALITY YOU CAN BUY. 11~. POTATOES U.S. NO. 1 RUSSETS 1 0 c:L~g~~G 48 C 100 COUNT BOX $)09 PACKAGED GOO~.~.' '. ICRISPY CRACKERS l;~\~':l •......... 61 ' PACIFIC CRACKERS ::~i'm ....... 38' STA-CRISP CRACKERS ....... , ... 29' ~Van de Kamp'sw AN OUTSTANDING VARIETY OF FRESH BAKERY GOODS • CAKES • PI ES• BREAD • !TC. • (AT MOST lUCKY STO RE5) WWlllllllllW Wlllllllfl WOK FORKEY BUYS ·11Y ins~ ....... ...-.. .... ,......., -· ...... ,.,,,,....;,,....., .......... n."lfY IUY" ii-. 111111 ft Jut ' hw " .. -.. Q\'1 ,.., • .,., ... ,..,.,, • ....,. I • ,' R:~~ r-....... • ._ "llY lll'f" Jl'<": '..i.""1 .... ,...... ....... . ...... ~.a;·, CtUJll lYltYIAY SAYl•5SI _ ~~ ,.. HEAD & SHOULDERS SHAMPOO FAMILY SIZE IUIE ..•••. 11" FAMILY SIZf. LOTION ..•• 11" flM ILY SIZE JAR 11° fll t llltllf, -Ult~ltf \CtlJ ••• ••h. FAMILY III! SCOPE MOUUfWASH Ust ii 11c1 l1 tM .. , •• 111, 1•• 1•• "111• ic lwtll II ••J. · 17.oz. IOTll[ PLACE MATS :l\~~~· 111• ltth4 ,Jn tlc II I Hf!ltp II Jll· lttll, •iltl 11111 •i1' ' , • ., ,, .. ,, $)15 8Jc SCHICK INSTAMATIC BAND CAITRIDGI 111 Hllllltl fff PIG.Ofll 11tt1t•1 tf Cltur. .. ,. Utlftftl,!1 $127 ''"'''· OUllOW,IKI BOTTLE OF 100 BUFFERIN TABLETS Quick r1ll1f fr1m mi· nar ach1s Ii pain of k11dac ~1. colds. flu. ·-- ou• tYIRYDA 'f LOW PRICI 99c MAGIC MOMENT FOAM·IN HAIR COLOR 111•. 1111111 ttllf ~j:! t1111t·l1 1$ 11slty 11 $21 f , ••• , •••••• 11111 1111er. '· SCHICK PLATINUM PLUS DOUILl IDOf RAZOR ILADK PKO.OF S 65c ou• lOW PllCI l I I "I ' I I} Je8 OA!lY PILOT School Petitions Hit Court WASHlNGTON (UPI) - The Supreme Court Is receiv- ing thousands of petitions, resolutions, telegra1ns and lel- ters urging ll to delay total school desegresallon h1 the South untp next September. The court fixed Feb. I as lhe desegregation deadline in a aeries of cases f r o m Louisiana, ht i ss i ssi p pi. .Alabama, Geor gia and Florida. The court's landmark school desegregation ruling was handed down in 19f>.1. Although Florida G o v . Claude R. Kirk Jr. was not a party to the case, hr has ask- ed to intervene to request a postponement. The s c h o o l boards of Bay and Alachua coonties in flo.rida which were parties, also have asked fo r a reconsideration. other Florida pol i t ic al figures, notably Sta le Sens. Tom Slade and Dan Scarborough, have urged the court by letter and telegram not to lruist on "a drastic mid· year change.'' Slade sent the justices round·trip airline tickets to Jacksonville so they could view in person the con- sequences of their decision. Although most or the justices declined to discuss their cor- re spondence, indications were that the tickets have been returned. The office of Justice William J. Brennan Jr. said his had been sent back. The court itself and in- dividual justices receive mail 1111 the time relaUng to their decisions. Thu rsday, J•nuary 29, 1970 • Ul"I Ttl...,_ .. ~~nct~'n1~ do:·~~'~" ~~'.i lfedditigs Are fo1• Sleeping for a case to get to the court A edd' b 1· · I t b t h ' before they write. Mail started w 1ng ceremony can e 1r1ng or any gues , u w . en you re only t\VO coming when Mrs. Madalyne years old it can be exhausting. This proved to be the case at a recent wed- Murray O'Hair sued in federal ding at St. Theresa's Church a t l~arvard , Mass. Little Timothy l\1ad.igan seems district court in Austin, Tex., __ to_le_e_l_t_h_is_b_e_n_c_h_is_a_s_g::ood-;;;a~p;la;c;e~as~a;n~y;t;o~g;o;l;a;st~a;sl;e;e~p;. ~~~~~~~~!' to stop astronauts from public praying during space fli ghts. I If a writer asks fo , in-Po{JUlal"ity Bad\ formation, the Su preme Cou rL clerk's office tries to supply it. LONDON (AP Otherwise, the leUers go 1 ) -The I lftlaMWered since there is no popularity or Britain's ruling secretarial force adequate for Labor party has dropped to its a flood of correspondence. lowest in five months, the In any event, the members Evening Standard reported in of the court cannot take a public opinion poll. ll said judicial notiCe of entreaties by the party hatJ.-the support ofr37 persons not directly connected percent of the el ectorate . com- wltb the case. Under the pared v.·ith 52 perCC'ilt for the American system of govern· opposilion Conservatives. ment, Congress is the branchl~:;::::~:;::;:;:::;::;::~ll es tabli shed under the \I Constitution to bend to the popular will. -0..--.,...,, --.. M • rMI 911 gatlwt"' Tony T ovatt Sez lhe ml tO·t•Uert 01e GO· ING te TOVAn'S APl'LIANCES eH GmlNCi • thrill, checkh1g ... , lite _,..10111 .. w M'")llD• ••• Color TV'• h1 011r ll•i"'· rooflt•like demo111trotlo" roorM. NIN f11n1l1Md clemo111trotlo11 rH!m ot 011r k1111tol11 \lotl•Y 1toro! TOVATT'S APPLIANCES 401 M9'11 St., H11llri11tto11 loocll ll,·7561 l rookftont le War111r h11Mol11 v.11., 962-2456 " SIDE. DAN & BYRON FENLEY Not long a90 ""' reed \n the piper cl • •pot -"'" oe•il of 9old1n 1il1nce -whic.h ;, t\.1 qui1te1I pl1c1 on ,,,;).,_ It i1 tl.1 81 11 Teephone leb in ~ur· riv Hill, Ntw Je .. ev. He ·•. 1t11dy i1 medt1 of mu1lc sound w'"''· the humen voice e11d other noi•el in orde• lo ;,,.,. p•oY1 the telephone 1v1tem. The 1\le.,c.e here i1 profound. Th, ..... 11, fnd ceilin91 '"'' lined 1 w;!h five-fool -1leb1 ol fiber 91111 <11nd the floor is I net of c.1ble\ strunq et high tension from the well1 lo cr•dle 011 room 111>!;,,1.., 1eperel1 from the re1I of the bulldin9. In thi1 dev of whoopi119, 1woop· I in9 ieh <l"'"""~d. ~ 91111 o f honking c••s ""d lruc~s on Ille 5lre•I ""d h;91>w~v•. beboo. juk1bowe• ""d •ll-n:9ht disc. jock1v pro9r•m1, thi1 would b1 1 p1rf1c.l h1ven for th1 h"9- 91rd individu•I who c.en, on •"V 1lre1I corner, b1 lle,,rd to .,.,.,. fullv w>,h fo• • "l:11le P'"'' otnd quocl". Spe,.k'.n9 ol "pe,,c.e" -lh"t'' e••c.lly wh•I you'll h•ve if you ev,,o l you11elf of our prot,.c.ljo'!. Come inlo BYRON FENLf;Y IN- SURANCi:, 902 Mein, Hunting- ton Be•ch, ~nd 1,1 ul te ll you eboul ou• c.omplrle in1ut""'' p•oq'""' for you, whither ii ;, 01rton1l, co..,merco ~I or indu1- fti"I CO"t"•Df VDU need . Phon1 111 "' 5lb 0752s. Fresh n eivs . JVo reruns ~ ~ :~ <'.·:~ .:~ ,: .• ·.·· . n ····.· \\'hile atl\•cr1ii;e111t•nli; on other n1e1tia mav h1: lhe 1i1n .. for a snack or an inlru5ion int;, an l'nlf'rlaininµ: hour-pcoplt-~njoy ad\·l'r• ti~in~ in lhe nc.,.;opapcr. lt"11 prohnhlv IH!• ~·au'!e lht>r•"'-' a t·hance to f'i rf'lt·. ('lip. 0111, 110~1 , rf'read lhe il,.n1s lis ll'd in a paper. An1f lhe ad\·erli5in.i;. as lo't'JI as the reto t of thr: papC'r, can he read al onea con\·cnien1·c.- "' ht"nt','t'I" or "'herevt'r 1here05 linu•. Newspapers TY 67':4 30% 25 72 People •Jook forward~ to .advertising in newspaperl get it 1vhile iL'$ fr es h i11 lhe ••• DAILY PILOT Nigeria Expecting Boom Banks Have Mone)· to Lend; Oil Production to Doubw LAGOS (AP) -With the caMoru stopped, businessmen and bankers are settling back in t ·ti e I r made-ifl..Nigeria swivel chairs to listen for the peaceful booming of t h e ecoaomy. And. II the eCQnomists are right, it will come Incredibly soon in spite of the gigantic reconstruction jog ahead. Banks are bulging with money to lend. Investors are waiting wilh more o( it. Foreign governments a n d organiz.ations are rushing to get In. Before the final richochet, oilmen scampered to the former battlefield to find out what was left. They expect to double Nigeria's oil production by the year's end, now already hi gher than before the war. Hausa hefders trekked-their cows to the mea\..starvcd East the minute word reached them the war with Blafra was over. Local commerce reflourished immediately, barbers and tailors were back at the job. first planes bringing flocks of newsmen also carried stacks of Jellers f r o m businessmen exp 1 or l n g possibilities. The World Bank ls lending $10.6 million to resurface the 188-mile lifeline highway from the North, pounded to ruts by traffic diverted from the East. Pe8f!Uts -worth money here -can lhen come down more quickly. American special a1slslance should total $25 million for rebuilding works vital to the economy over the next three years. Besides, the oil, only palm. products were choked off by the war. They are already up to half their prewar level and soon should be back to normal. Cocoa, peanuts, tin and in- dustry gave analysts o f Nigeria's economy the Ir favorite word: "resiliency." \Vilh added oil revenu es, the economy shows remarkable promise. Seventeen stocks light up Lag05 ' Big Board. That's not many but, a rarity in black Africa. A lot of indigenous businessmen hold the shares. Nigeria's industrial index rose slightly since the star or the war, meaning that growth In the res t of the country made up for the cutting off of the East. When Eastern in- dustry resumes. the index should leap by J>t!rhaps a third. Toward the end, Nige ria was spending an estimate $1 .4 million a day on the war. Its internal debt went from $494 million b.e_fpre JJ!e war to $907.2 million by the end of March 1969, the last available figure.· The foreign debt is about $150 million, mostly in short- term credits from exporters willing to wait. The army bought Its bullets in hard cash, receiving first bid Gl'I Nigeria's strained cur- rency reserves. 'l'he Central Bank has held a minimum floor of $1:>0 million by dellly- ing payments up to six months. Tight rest riclions on imports and exchange should re.main in force th roughout 1970 as the govemment climbs off Its war n1achine. Meanwhile, U1ere is still an army of 170,000 to feed and clothe. During the war, a German specialist rtgured Nige ria's oil should earn $1.2 billion in royalties and payments by 1973. Biafran air raids put is schedules off. but eng_ineers are struggling to make up for Jost time. Nigeria 's huge Port l-larcourt refinery should be working again in April, and the Nigerians are talking abou t building anothr big one. THE PANT RAC YOU'LL these SAVINGS TRADITIONAL Re<J. 9.00 ea. PANTS 2 for 1288 Re<J. 10.00 ea. FLARE 2 for 13SS PANTS Re<J. 11.00 ea. 2 for 148S KNIT Reg. I.OD 4" SHIRTS Reg. 9.00 S" Reg. 10.DO 6" VELOUR Re<J. 14.00 SHIRTS ass BODY Va1un 8.00 to 12.00 SHIRTS SALE S",, 9 " 8900 Warner (at Magnolia) Fountain Valley 842-5376 ~at~h these groovy • • pr1~es FOR OUR BIG SALE STARTING SAT., JAN. 31st WIND BREAKERS Re<J. 15.00 SALE PRICE 8" JACKETS LEATHER VESTS Reg. 30.00 Reg. 27.50 Reg . 22.so Reg. 21.00 18" 1611 1311 1711 --~~w~~IB®-- Levi Denim ...........•••. $5.98 Levi Cords ................ $6.50 Levi Nuvos ........•....... $8.00 Nuvo Flores . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $9 .00 Levi Bells ................. $7.00 Levi Striped Flares .....•••.. $8.00 Sorry no layaways, returns or refunds on sa1t items. Special value certificates will not be honor- ed during sale! C stereo103FM the sounds of the harbor Jd~~7 youve never heard it so good 11 rts tin . he •ar ••• md "" oil in b.Y IS ers for ·ort be ind ing ne. I ---------------------------------------------------·---------~-----.----. -------------~------~---·-- Vital §tatisti~s for tl1e Orange Coast Area Marriage Licenses JAN, J M.EllUllAM .... OITl!llt, TllerM1w .. 26,111 lit N. G1rtleld, S...11 Alll 111111 lltnff l ., 2S. al till Chey-SI~ Coaltl ...... LAVOIE.CRAWFOll:O, C~~ L •• 'lO, ol IUt l"KMa Ave .. WttlmlMIW 111C1 El!Ubelfl M.. lt, of Int L Huron, S.ftll .-.n.. RICHAlfOSON.f'lllJITT, o.111• V., 11, ot •M 0.11111 Aw., Ind Gtll L , 21, of 1ll0 ,,,.., A-..., bolh ol CCII"-clel .... Wl-41TE-OETTNl!R, l""' I! .. to. al ~ fldien AVI. ~ IC1ttllffn I., II, !If 27ol0 De SOio A_.... bath ol "511 ... M. .. ' I ~ ,• •I . DDl'T MISS THIS ' ~ac· I $Hl!l1DAN·•tl.l"SNVOlll, DwtlM J .. u. of 1'2lt tU1tlllell, ,. .... •NI ~r ... A., 1.C. ff 1aa. 0.lu;Y Ori ... , NIWport lot.ch JACKSON·lllYANT, Hel'lllr't W., JI, llf 11Hl" L.......i.-~ ...... G,..., 1"'41 Mii_.. O., 11, al W I Nwlh Ot1vc, Hl.lftlllllloll l wcfl. .. ,. ... ' e RlJB.A·DlJB.DUB protita~ beach bUsineu, cOijf operated laundry ha• :lO machln·!s and 6 dryers • , • wtll be much in de- mand thia summer. , • Be on the. "Best Dreued • fl.ten's list: choose from undalmed ,iearl) n e w 1uits,, sportcoats, pants • guaranteed tailor mack: fit., Jess than % price. e .\ swttthurt for your Val- entine! 3 year old Straw- btrry roan, a:ood for show -hunt and jumps. Make an otfef and be a winner. 3ss ·MELAMINE ·DINNERWARE i:::r.=AMt ll's 1"' peifiC!R~Mf."Millll: Wiitil stain resistant, it's prantffi ~fuu ""1 aplnst ctizint. cracking or breaking, The d11l111 ~ tastlfuf~ stn;pft ind seb '°"" " the modem decorator colors, Harvest Gold or Avocado. The ~!Vice for four people includes J~incl! dinner p~t1!, cups 1nd liucers. and extra Iorgo bowls for selld, ooup. ct deulrt. Ifs 1 )eat settlnr at 1 11ut borpln prlcl. Huntington Beach Office: Located at 91 Huntington Center at Edinger Ave. & Beach Blvd., adjoining the San Diego Freewil'f, 1n Huntington Beach. .... -WlutflM Of1tCI: *OWll-11 ......... , • . ' --·-~ ~ ... ~' .. ..: -·-.... 11• Wtl .... 19 llH. • *4F4t ·=:~ .•.•. ·-' ''Artistry ln Moving'' for the BEST MOVE.· of YOUR LIFE Call: ''"'I\'. .. ;· ' •• '· '.• . ., .• t11y-c1r• activ• w11 r for men 111d boys bl•1ch1d blu• denim flar•d i••ns men & boy1 1i1t 1 494-1025 580 Broadway li111•1ft'l1rl c1rd • '"''''' c~•'1• 1 f1shlo11 l•l1nd, n1wport D11ch * 644-1070 ' " ....... --0 ,... • .... ,. IN YO• llllGHBORHOOD ••• Huntington Beach .Office of Coast & Southun Federal =fr· wlwe your account is · COllWlllllllT • AYAllr' PLI ,. .. -ttuc1U-dtln1W«fJC.. I SOUtllom ....,., -oifll ... ii ~iljt rllfn01n -Highest MIOlngs ...w.tintwffh Mlety _you_ at COiat l Soulllem. 111111111:1 Tl $ii; ... / IUlllCIS •YEI $1H llLLIGI ... ~­lNBIDl!lllS CLOB A HEW WAV TO SAYE NOH£Y -:A fi2,SOO BAU.NOE fN YOUl't ACCOUNT MAKe8 "°"' EUO!IU. ~···~ lltlYlnlfllll..._,,..,.,,, .__ ,,., ....... .,., .. 1 HIGHl;ST PREY AILING RATE 5~ 3 ON I-MONTH BONUS ~ 0 ACCOUNTS ... $1000 OR MORE lnteroat COmj)Ollnded Diiiy • Eamlnge Pold From Dote of Receipt to Date ol Wlthdrawll. 1' DAILY PILOT 11 Bible Thoughts C.Wltt't l~..cflff: ••• ii r11I or fj,. tlon117 If flcti111ol, who 11U1d 1w1y 1111 •ton• ftom th1 tomb 111d 11111 hU bodyJ ni. •• who .n.,. It .... hr, dhclpl11, '"'"' 1•pl1J11 how th1v 1v1d1d tho 9011rd of soldi1r1 pl1c1d tti1r1, Mitt. 27 :•?·66. Al10, If hF1 di11lpl11 co'"mltt1d 111t.h • fr111d, wo11td they b1v1 b1111 willin9 to 1~lf1r 11'•rs1clltlo11 1..0 d11th FOR A LIE1 II Cor. ~''·Il l. If Chriit'1 ENEMIES ltolt tl11 bolfv 1w1y, would th1v not h1•1 hi11r11ph1-tly procl11c1ll Jt l1t1r 11 PROOF th1t 111 did 1101 ,;,, fro'" tho d11d? Tho ''"Ptv to~b h11 n•~•r b1111 11li1f1clorily •?t1lnod by C~r\sl't 1nomi11. Th1 EMPTY TOMI procl•lm1 Chri1t'1 r•11lfrtctl1n to be REAL. Thi Chl11i1n c111 confidently b1li1v1 !I'! Chri11'1 clivlnily h.· c•D•• of th1 F1..CT of hi.-r1u1tt•cli1n from !ht d1•d! Art YOU.• boli1v1r h'l'Cliri1t'1 d!vi11itv? If not, ht dltd in ¥tin 1114 ..,,, ••\ltrr1ct14 J11 '¥1il'l0 •1 fir 11 YOU 1•1 cenc1•111d, Thi1 h • tE.,~SONAL 11'11tl~1. b•tw1111 YOU 1nJ Jo1u1 ; ho 11i4, "I•· hold I li,i•W ot #11 ~oor 111d •11oc•1 If 1nv mo11 h1or mv •oic1 . 111d opo~ ttlo doo~. I will come i11 to hitn-". (ll1v. ]:201. Ontv YOU c1n opon th1 door! Study with 111 1bo11t J11111, 111111 of hhl'I, OIEY kim, b• SAVED. Chwrch of Chrili, 111 W, Wil1on St,, C1il1 M111 , C1. 91611. T11n1 Ch1nn1I 9 -Su11d1y1, 71JO A.M. A ~RtC •'S LARGES T F•MI L Y CL OTHING CH A IN • • ~ I ENTIRE STOCK ' 1 I • OF MEN'S WORSTED AND SILK SHARKSKIN SUITS 95 originally 67.95 SAVE llO ... on l11xurious1A'Onted o111d ~il k ~harkskin ~uils noted tor year-round vcr~at ility il.nd well -groomt.-d good looks! SAVE 110 ... Ori )Ourcho!C.'f' or the ~rason's most-\\'11nted sio,1dc·brca~lcd 1nodcls in pJcr~ctt ing 1>o1ttcr11) 11 nd 00101·~1 SAVE 110 ... on the fast-selling favorite.'i in our stock with well-drml-d men everywhere! In 1t.i.'lll..1'1, f1K1rt1, longs. OPEN SUNDAYS 11 TO S • COSTA M£SA, 1601 Newport Blvd. at 16~. Garden Grovo-12372 G•rd~n Grov• llvd • I . ~ . l • I l : I l ' I j • • • • • • ' • I I l • • • • • • , I I • I I I I j I I J ! DAILY PILOT QUEENIE By Phil lnterland i "l'd be glad to help you-v.·hat are you tryinr to do?" Inauguration Mystery Of Hayes Cleared Up W ASl-llNGTON I AP) -A historians' controversy over who ·was present w h e n Rutherford B. ·Hayes took his presidential oath in the White House in 1877 was cleared up apparently by papers and documents given to the \Vhite ll ouse today. The donation consisted of 15 cardboard boxes filled with lclters. photographs, clippings and White House invitations and programs belonging to Abby Gunn Baker, a freelance ne\\'spaper -magazine writer who covered Washington early In this century. \Vhite House curator James R. Ketchum said the collec- tion is "very valuable" be· cause it fills many miss.ing saps of information. The dispute over who was present at Hayes ' inauguration was cleared up in a letter! from l-layes' son Webb to Mrs. Baker, written in 1915. Jt took! place in the Red Room at the White House on March 3, 1877 in a private ceremony because the official inauguration day, March 4, fell on a Sunday that year. The lelter to Mrs. Baker said the oath w a s ad- ministered to Hayes by Chief Just.ice Morrison R. Waite on Saturday evening, Marth 3; in the Red Room while guests , were assembling in the nearby Blue Room for President Grant's last State dinner. The only other persons present, for the oath-taking, the leUer said, were President Grant and his private secretary. U. S. Grant Jr. Crossword Puzzle "ACROSS 47 Ntgauv.: l Conlrovtrsial reply 49 By noblt riot controj b irth: c~ical Germ an .'i Kind of 50 Cut ~imber 1 play SZ Exuding 10 E~ypHan fragranct C ristlan 54 Englislt 14 Sttd police coverln3 body; IS Charge 2 words particle 58 Ytrtic1I II> Spfodlt t''' 17 Lay by 59 nil of 18 Rivtr lo lht Ionizing Arabian Sea radiation 19 Cat &O Listen 20 Long liZ Distanc e sltnder units piece liS Touch 22 Shar p b7 Adtquale narrow reason spade b't ~/in ter 24 Color ground 25 ltls out for 1 cover ttmporary 70 French tilt "" 71 Gtrman :7 L\osl city strangr 72 'ilest Coa~I 29 ?!hat btallli u11ive1s1ty is reputed Abbr . to bt 73 Check 32 FJ1!ort 74 lnlimida\ 33 t.~rs. Burton 75 Sk111 34 Taste with oleasure l.101'.'N 36 Rl9hteo11~ ~O Unt1s11al l Religiou ~ i11d1v1d1+JI servic e Slang 2 Russian se a ~2 --·-· gu'l : Advanced 1•1 44 Leah's ~o 1 soc ial 45 An9le-culture 5axon god .t Number 2 • [?lli " .. " , ,., " ,.. 21 rn 2S 30 lJ y " ... " ., ., .. I 'W& !ti!!<' -SI 54 » S6 " ~ ' .. , ' •• • i!I " J ~ ,. . '" IUHIA PARK Mercury Slvines Bld1. Valley View 1t Llnr:oln ******* Wk " ., rn , , 22 ~f lJ " I 5 Trum an's l!elicy; Z words ~ frminint nam e 7 Purg es 8 Short closed carriage q Followed after 10 Pres idential nickname 11 lion rust, lar ont 12 Tactics 13 Btl1tl ht ld te bt t1ue 21 Tei mlni 23 Part r;if tl1t e,1r 2& Die t ga""t score 28 God 2'1 H1g'lv.ay sign 30 Meving Prtli~ " . ' " ;, " l/29fl0 31 Might JS SI. Lawrenct er Hudson 37 Profound respect 38 Eng lish river 3'1 Raveling 41 Trus t 43 Ort9s 4& Biblical m111 48 F lawe1 SI Did crtdil le 53 Abatrs: 2 words 54 Ac1oss : Comb. form S~ Sm ok ing, lor ant Sli Elicit S7 Stagt prrsenlat1o n &l African an tr lope &l list &~ Hit bli Pre -·· b8 Sun Ya! -·- II 12 " lJ 0;.' ,. ' 21 ~! l2 '•! ~ " • " J7 .. '';1 .. .. ' .. " ". . 2 J • ' .. 'l ,, In " . ------~ l/Z~/70 Mercury Savings Bldg. fd ineer 1t Beach ' ' . ******* , ·-------------·------------~ -\ • • • .. , .. , ... I ••• ... _ .• ''!:~· .... -. . .Cal_if~tr~ia ··Hit ·by. ,Po~~ti .o~·;:~~:~.1-itice~; . . SACR:AMENTO .(.,\P-~Tht ·-· ~It-=s·~s~•a·popular politics or pollutlon, .. dr.amatiJ;.... is.tue,.one .leglslator .. is a!rJid ed by the Santa Birb~a loil , of "p611lic;d , oyerkill." S8ys le~k one ye~r ago,· a.r~ • bUD-. &PW>!lcan 1\ep: G't,}rge ,W. bling over 1n ·the 'Califomta . . · . Legialature ·and into , tt)e.1970 ~ MJ)jas, 1cha,1rman :· of t ~ e political .races: 1 1 'Assembly Natural '· Respurces Conservatton J Js,expecttd-.to· .cMuru.uee: ~., · bei a "°min.ant .~ue in•Goy. "The leglslati•e haUs..,today Ronald Re'agiln 'ifcampilign fdr are,llterally polluted with pro- re-elecli00:1 · ' · posilS1;,JJlani, ttports, .resolu· In the 1970•1 e,g Ls I a;:t l1vie~ tions, meaS\µ'es and ·spetehe5 session, les.s lhan.;a'month 'old all PUJ'P9rllng . to establish about haJf .tbe ·600 mea~ ~~guic\ellnes tfor the pro- introduced•deal 1with1 the~sub-. tecUon and control of our en· ject -rrotn banpµlg of trie viranriienl.~" · gasoll~~ ~~. th~_( .. He is;;a 1m1rnb:fr o!.a:.selecl establlshmeot .. .Jof a n en. Assembly.committee, that will vironmenti:J.~w cif :ri&IJts. ' ' scrien)1he bill! ~ prOpose a " ~ .. .. . . 2666 ·:HARBOR ·BLVD. 546.;7080 ·coSTA MESA ·WEEKDAYS 9 to 9 SATURDAY 9 to 5:30 SUN.DAY 10 lo 5:00 0 Ah h1h, our my1ltr~ it1m ol th1 w11k . 0 II vow c.1n t1U whit ii i1 from !ht pic.tur1, vou 1howld 1pply lo; my jo b. 29' ·-• D v,., ''''"' '"' "''' fi~lur• with c.h .i11 111d ·1ro·o~1 C , Chq;<•. of gold with 1ith1r while or bl1c.k h im. 0 llerv 11ic.1 for 1nlrv DJ li.!119 <oom. 15'~·1123 GLIDDEN ACOUSTICAL · Ceiling Paint. 0 ~s~1·w~it1 1cc.ou1tic1I c1i1i114 p1i11t dri11 q11ic~ly, 0 ~0.11 oi. llftoolh i nd 111y with 1p1c.i1I roU1r w1 1111. G Or•u11 11 O-lipiif·vo1r'r1 111Uy•f1t1•r. ,~9 · GAL. 7 INCH ROLLER AND . . ' TRAY -SET -.,~~/ \ 0 ,t.t th11 pr\!'1,you ' c.111 1111 ind ton. · 0 'Y61r'1I 1·•"• ~•IU1ble c.11111 up time, 0 And you'll n11d th1 1;,.,, to 0 -Tip your c.1Jl in9 . .69' .~~ff\BIR'·S FRIENP ' U9I\. thi..4, th1t-V1e11111• b14ut(f"'.~h111y._111111d ii, • • ~ ~Q.'.,..l.z.y lbit!haf<ll.t...YOU • ,,11_tM(~h11r1P.•.1 yow cowld'11..-1 pl111fy, . ' . 0 Worlit 9ood 011 1topp1d i 11p 1i11•1 or lollt h. ' . ·---~A·t~ ... .;..~;;;;c;::.'.~~~~~-i: .• ~ ' betUe ·-plan-In l h e en· vlronmental field. Milias said he w o u I d •·reoommeiid orlly tho s e mc~ure.s. whlCh heve ·serlous Jnteat ~d them and which will aid...,jn .. the • proteclion·-of our environment.'' Reagan' m~de_ the en· vlronment the keystone of his annual State· of the State message .to the legislature. 'nle Republican g o v e r n o r pledged an.antipollution cam· paign that would preserve "the , m!l'gjc of C.alifornia." That· was two weeks before President • ~lxqn's 'strong UPolluUon··wonls·ln ·hls Slot< of the Union addres.,, Reagan's .likely Democratic opppl)ellt, Assembly Minority Leader Jesse M. Unruh focwr ed on the Santa ' Barbara oil spill and declattd in an in- terview;, "\Ve ought to be able to stop the dt illiog in Oie Santa Barbara channel. If ·we can't do that, I sw:J)ect all the other stuff wiU be rhetoric." The spill occurred outside the three-mile limit, 1 n a federal 1ease area not subject to state qmtroL Re.agan says he suppcrts ~a ,curr .t state Cl.t.L\Zl!D '1'00'-S INDOOR/OUTDOO.R ,, I ' ' ' ' "• CARPETING 0 ·Nie• c.olor1, ••IY i11Jt1ll1tio11 , D Thi1 i1 the tlwff !hi t 9011 1nywh1r1. 0 E11y to cl1111, 1pill1 . '"ip1 up quiCk/y, J79 YD. MEDITERRANEAN LITE Th11 it l i~1 1om1thil'HJ out of old New Orl11111 . t o In your c.hoic.1 of whit1, 9r11 n, 1mb1r, or· ruby. I D Sc1Uop1d 1"lti1I 1h1d1. i 11 88 No. • 1147 DISPOSABLE TRAY _., LINER.. 0 Mor• tim• 11..-in9 9oodl11 from th1 Wond•1ful World of Rimi . O E1p1ci1ll y h1lpfwl if you 901 • l:M9 job 1...a c.1n't do it •II 1f\.onc.1. - 10 FT. RAIN GUmR 0 l i9htw1i9hl 9uH1r it q1lw1ni1..d, 11ipioint, 111d •old•rl111. 0 Pr1..-111h pl111t 1MI 1oil .1ro•lon. 'J I Nowl wh1t ~ ..... yov 901 for f1 li119 heir 71 85' RECESSID SOAP AND GRAB 0 So1p di1h th1t'1 ·• t11I 9r1bb1r, Q H1ftdl1 h1lp1 VO CI oul, n1w1 r in. 0 ln 1hiny c.hro..,, for 111y cl11ni119, 12.?.. ... ,. ' ; ' .. -: -; . . o ··H•r1'1·-•.itoOl.t1bl1 whit r••lly i1, c.em • po?ro..-1c;cit •nd t•ka!Yf111f piU . . . . . 'II '' ,.. '' ,0 w •. 90!~ ,'th• u1111I h•rnmv•· 1cr1wor1..-•r•. •• ,~ P'l111 "oil nu •• wr1nc.h11, 1prin91, h1rdw1r1,-p1~1. 1111rlc1rs, ind ·•Ytr'J' kin d 1f w1i;d 9,;d91! ,nc.ludin9 m1 9n1h , '' . O All "'''" w• 1toc.~ th1 ·t1bl1 d1ilv 10 don't worry 1bo11t tu nnin9 1horf, no liPQlt c ea. ;1CARPETAK , :r.· , ~r·:. ... . "~ 'I•-' ' . .!_,. ·r D-!E11y-u to inli1ll th• ':. , r1•w c1rp1Jin9. , ;D Or u19f~r •r•• ru91 -l-~•w1ttt-411191re111 ,,Jippi .. 9. 1J ("Slic\y ~th 0.tid 11, I iu•t 1nip off whit you n .. d. .249 • C).;'.:J:i,111~, II ....id_ g!•mour , -to 1nY')room. , [ji -Mi:r<J•,~t.h'• f•11.ci1.1, ~ ·..1.'<CMrl).,-.:.•nd juit.fini1h · • ~ pirintfn•rth• •ill. eJ •Good 11l1c.lion. aac _" 5-INGLE .1SWITCHPLATt, ' '. &' ,1 19 •l :• I '' , e ' ".it'~eE'PTM:U ~ ....... : f.: ". J P~Atl h";!~"" . , • • • r"""""""'•""'"'~'!!!!'""!!'ll!'lr""~-!!'!!,.,...,"""""""""~""--""'"""""''"' ... --...... --...,,.., ....... ,..,_,.,. ..... ,..,...,.,...,,..,......, ...... .,. .... ,,.t:\i .. WW"_..,,,,.,..,_.,...,,.,, _ _,,.,.,..,,,._,," ...... W~K~ .. 4Jlii->~W~~"" ________ ,,._ z • ---•••'"• ' ~men 'f11111'M4!f, ,,...,.,,. tt, 1,1' .... I, To Continue ' Bringing world famous orchestras and soloists to Oran1e County ls the continuing S'tory of the Ora nge County Philharmonic Society. Jn order to do just this, the organization conducts an annual Contin- uance Fund Drive which will be launched Sunday, Feb. 1. More tlnln 850 vo lunteer members of the 25 countywide women's committees will uaist in contacting subscribers and members of the community. Each contrtbu· lion entitles the donor lo membership in the society. J, Donald Ferguson, society vice president and drive chairman, stated that Continuance f'und membership supports the society's very nec- essary policy of signing internationally famous orchestras, conductors and soloists from one to two years in advanc:e to.assure their availi:biltty. ''This support also keeps the cost of concert tickets at a realistic Jev· cl. Othervt'ise they would be prohibitive," the chainnan said. Funds also help underwrite the continuing annual free youth concerts program, which serves all county districts plus many private and paro- chial schools. The programs, designed for fQurth through eighth grades, are presented'by'the full Los Angeles Philharmonic Orchestra, Collfornia Symphony and the Debut Orchestra. In the 13th _year, t' b e youth concertt will have reached an utimal· cd 19,500 children with 11 concerts during the 1~70 season. ThJs brina:s the total audience to approxiJnately 146,500 with 85 concerts. The Continuance F und also helps support the annual scholarship achieveinent awards program for gifted students majoring in music at UCI and Orange Coast College. Plans for the upcoming concert season include five concerts by th e Los Angeles Philharmonic Orchestra With Zubin Mehta, music director and internationally famous guest conductors and soloists ; the Philadelphia , ,,.Ji! · · · ,, · · · t>eoildac:l!I!',' ... JU•llt.'A'lllllllll:IOr " ""° .., ,. · ~'"' !lo! ·' , I ,'ai1il-tli'l~!'lgi!~·'l'ttillt!ftiti'; ''.':,'.1,_· outstanding sy1nphonic orchestra, conductetl by Bernard Ha itink which is rarely heard on this continent. ' Socie1.y directors on the committee as1.!isting the chairman are Mn. . 1 -• A,. Bayard Dod Jr,, Clillord Hakes, Dr. Wils~n Little and Edward A. Pelle-grin. · ·1, Mrs. John Store is fund chainnan for"-Jhe women's committees with ~1rs. Charles E. Hirsch serving as co-chaiti);an. ENTHUSIASM DEMONSTRATED -Ready to marcb for the Orange Coub'ty Pb~armonic Society's Continuance F u n d Drive, whie:i opens next Sunday, are (left to right) Mr&.. Johp S\or§!, drive cbainnan for all county women's committees, 1*5· John Arnies and Mrs. Thom as A. Baume. No Hands But Yours ~ . .,, ---r .. , . . .. , * .. -... ~~, .. h · '.~--~,.-\._rittenton ·vision Brig ter SCE NIC TOUR -Seeing the sights of Newporf'" JI arbor after speaking for the annual board meeting of the Florence Crittenton Home of Orange County is l\1rs. Robert L. Falkenberg Jr. of Kansas City; Mo, (Jen), member of the NaUonel Criltenton Board. Her U>ur guides are Mrs, Edgar Hill ( seai- ed), new president of the Orange County board of directors, and Mrs. Pat Mellott, new vice president. By JO OLSON No matter how society ca talogues these 01 "'• 01ur l'lllf 11.tt girls. there still will be an estimated New officers and supporters or lhe 400,000 babies born out of wedlock across Florence Crittenton Home of Orange the country during the coming year and County went away from the annual 44 percent ol them will be born to meeting of the yet-to-be-constructed teenage mothers. home with a new vision of the challenge A total of $7 million was spent last year that awlits thCm. to administer the 49 Crittenton homes Delivered by f.~rs. Robert L . across the Uioted States, not to mention Falkenberg Jr. of Kansas City, Mo., a the thous_ands of dollars worth of practic)nJ..Al~orqey __ and member qJ the volunteer l1ours U~t were donaled. 'Notloi\al 0!'~111. 'llli'Wi&u~·~'·mANKS 'A'as a five-part quesUon : "One year from now, will the girls you serve be continuing their education? Will they have healthy babies? \Viii they be anticipating marriage? Will they have strong tics with their community and families? Will there be a real future ahead for them and their babies?" These volunteers work "for no thanks" and with "no guaranteed success," Mrs. Falkenberg said, asking the group, "is it worth it?" She cited an example of an incident that changed the We of Cecil B. De Miile, great producer of Blblical motion pie· lures. De Mille, aa a youngster, happened BORROWED CREED to be the only person in an .audience when ·Mrs. Falkenberg, a ;>elite, ralrhaired, a great minister came lo his town to con· bubbling woman, borrowed a former du ct a worship service. Miss America's creed for her-opening Instead of postponing the service un til statement : "You can achieve fantastic ·40 or SO could gather, the great minister things for yourself i( you set definllQ cond~cted the sc~ice just for De Mille goals for a definite time." and instead of seeing the empty ro,11s of .,.Jt-~~.w~~~~~~e.sav.: only the lad , a person with a • 1or100-crrnen·t.0n l'fOrn~e. When ITTiiia]"y is ·· ne be me~ .. built in Orange County. How different De ftfille's life and "There will be a continuous parade or career would have been had the minister scared, desperate girls who never turned away to wail for a group of many thought this would happen to them." people lo influence, fttrs. Falkenberg Part of society regards these girls .es said. "immoral sinners," part thinks of them "liow important is il lhol we look at 1s "victims of predalOry males," and just one girl7" aome think of them as "lonely, misguided seekers of Jove and security," she FOUR THRUSTS elaborated. The four major thrusts of the Cril· lenton program were described by the speaker: professional counseling, ~rly and sustained medical care, information on child placement and education. Crittenton homes stri ve for ''innovaUvP. and professional quality programs." shr. said, "and California is a leader in tht'! Crittenton program.'' All homes emphasize crtucation and outpatient care, since the tee nage unwed mothers have a high dropoul rate. "Criltcnton hoines have been keeplng up for 87 years," l\frs. Falkenberg told the group. "'The program has gone lrorn a rescue miS!lion to a multiservice pro- gram. truly a comprehensive service. .. Who is going tu execute the pro- gram?" she asked. "Crillenton is jusl a nnme.'' Mrs. Fal kenberg concluded with an \I. Justration or a town in Europe t.hat wa,, rebuilding its church after war destruc· Lion. 1'he last project was to reconstruct the statue or Christ for the entrance to lhc church. The stones were found one by one and placed bcick in the original shap<', but when all the pil'Ces were picked up and re placed, the hands were gone. lnstearl of molding new hands, l\1rs. r~alkcnbcrg related, the townspeople placed a plaque at the feet of the Christ stating "I have no hands but yours." "This is the Crittenlon challenge: there are no hands but yours." r He Who WaFmS-··,:lCe-'"Cuhes :._fi.nds,~lclimseJf Catching J DEAR ANN LANDERS; All those "lee Drips • ,PJbe" letters were too much for me. If inen admire virgins so ardently, why \ don't they leave a few around ? Since 'Your ma.II reflects a strong preference for Intact brides, pray tcU where are these untried maidens going to come from ? it appears Iha~ a great many hi&h·minded £ellows who worship al the shrint of 1 chaslity will be obligated lo setUe for someone else's discard. J\1en who try every trick In the book lo I idown a glrl'1 resl.!tance, then call tramp, make. me sick; ,One f ... given he'rsclf to 1 man who spokC oon.. vlncingly of marriage. After he fln1lly had l11s way, h!: wrote her 1 letter saying. "t CiXlld never marry you now. I am • td politely if he would please remove his shoes. (Wiping on a mat does no good. It A till leaves tracks.) The man kloked at me as if J had lost my mind. When I repealed my request he yelled, "You're 11pctless carpets an 10 Important lo your llfe, I 1u1gest that you put down newspaper• or old ru11 or a plastic she.t i. Delivery men abould not bt uked to take off their sb~s. nuts, Lady!" He dumped the crate and DEAR ANN LANDERS: I divorced my stalked out. husband 15 ye11rs ago. Our son Was then compl.?tely disenchanted." cu'I be all bid. I was so upset l called his place of I. I settled for 11 modest lillm ot money Jn a recent column you aald, "No man empl?yrncnt to make a report. They give becauae he didn't have much.. lie agreed h th 1 • ., to DEAR ANN LANDERS! Last winter me the brushoff. At dinner we discussed to support the bqy until he was 21 and puL as e r &>•1 dtp1•nd • prlatlne bride my carpeting wu ruined by delivery men thil incident and my husband sided with him through. college. l{e kept his word . unlus he can brtng to the murlap bed who tracked throuah the hou1t with b</X· the delivery man. Our two teenagers Slx mont.hl 'liO a relativ e Informed me the ume quality olpurHJ." PleaM h1 tt et, packaau and auch. We r1Ctrp1ted Jn aereed with him. P.1y mother sided with that my u ·Husband i! making money ~' >,_ t ,.IW\MU-Yl.!1111~:i.i~•l '1 ·~(, • , ~!,I: ··~A•er flltandllvesllkeaklng .. (He , •·~et: ._.= · ~~'mt~l\IQl!lf J1. . '!Y• ' ·•tt.lod and hos u young f•mtly.) tb.an:i yoa. And It mlpt turpn1e ,... to pod. ~n b( .-af l'I ~ !!hotJlif die. and nol n1cntlon my son know, my dear, tbt mu1 male1 .,,,... This morn1ng 1 dellvtry man started to -YONKERS in his will, can we sue his estate and col· lo upre11 Ibo IUlt polat el "°"· A clomp tllroop t11t holloe tn hla muddy DEAR VONK1 So"J', tho .. le It lour !eel? -SLIGHTLY REGRETFUL JN n .. sender t.b1L cu ceme t&nap Ukt THAT •hoel. T caught blm Just In Ume and ask· to two. I'm wltb the oppotiltloa. Slace LINO iS ' ,\ DEAR SLIGllT LY: In llllnol1 a partnl need not Include a tbtld lo his will U be chooses not to. Ir a parent dle1 witflout 111 will, however, the child Is enUlled to something, a1 a natural heir, Gi"'e in or lose him .•• when a i\IY gives 'you this line, look out! For Ups on how to handlc'lhe super sex salesman, check Ann Landers. Read her booklet.. ··Necking and l)etting -What Are 1"' Limits?" Send your re~uest to Ann Landers In care ot Olis newspaper enclosing SO cents in coln and a long; stamptd, sclr-addressed envelope. Ann Lander• Will be glad to help YOll "'Ith your problems. se.oo them to her Jo. care of the DAILY PILOT, tncl°'1ng 1 Mlf·addrl!ssed, sl11tnped envelope, ,i I • • ) \ \ l i l .. • • J4 OAJLV PILOT Thursday, Ja11uary 29, 1 q10 Ji ngle of Dimes Grows Louder at Silent Auction Secret bids will benefit the March of Dimes when Huntington Beach artists includi_ng members of the Huntington Beach Art League donate their works for a weeklong silent auction taking place in Hunt· ington Center beginning Monday, Feb. 9. Making Your Horoscope Tomorrow their offers are (left to right) the Mmes. Richard R. Wh ite, 1'"'red Crane, Walter L. Gregson and WiJ-, liam Ashby. Bid cards will be available from league members hosting the exhibi.l, and \vill be accepted until 3 "J}.m. Saturday, Feb. 14. Capricorn: Don't Be Careless End Seen for Boring Stores By NADEANE w At.KEil Greene,. say they definitely she says. and 1.As Angeles have beco1ne. wi.11 not be permissive parents. "Already they can keep As lhe molher of the ·LONDON (AP -"I think mlnls"rt (which 1·nc1'dentally f.1ary says, "l don 't agree premature babies alive in in-11.1 the oexl thing will be clothes that today's society Is cubators. and that's the first she says she never expected to from vending machines and permissive, or that I h e step." cat.ch tn lntemationally In the the end of boring shops,'' says miniskirt has Pr 0 m 0 1 e d s· ·• 0~-~ her first -volu"onary way 1·1 has), how Mary .Quant. permisslvenesii." S b e con-Ince NJf ri:'""" •"" u cedes' h.wey.r' that "I may Bazaar boutiqul in Chelsea in does 'lary Quanl fee l about "We've already got !ilot It • hayc Conlr·1butcd lo Jo1·ng 1955 and shortly . therea er I di 'th I t I ho wea r machines that sell stockin11s f d .A a es w1 a egs w "' away wilh some neurotic in-became queen o rea y-w-II I Id 't' and su rely the tendenry is ror M Q a t has spread i> when they rea Y s 1ou n · hibitioos and hypocrisy." wear, ary u n all clothes lo get more like her design network over the "I guess I feel exactly like stockings, all in one and Mary Is Uny, thin-faced, western world. They say at everyhocly else -that It's a Strelchy WI.th no 11·tung prob-with a lose fitting cap oC dark least S<ven mllllon women I hoose t ' pity !lOme peop e c o lem. I'm all Io r letting hair, deep bMwn eyes and an have too Quant label in their show orf thei r worst features. machines do th. borl·ng J'obs air of nervous, quicksilver wardr·•··. . . 1.:rt ~~ I deny that the m1rus~ was and -~ people '-'-., enerav. lier husband ls as tall °"' u~. 11:>,1 B 'de dresses she also or '· n' 1decen::'Ws'··orn with as she is small. as fair 8$ s.he eSI s , ..., ... The creat.Or of the miniskirt !urns ,.,1 ·ughts underclothes tl'gh'·, as J al ys show 1·t." is dark. He affects Southern • • ""' says she has been misquoted plantation style clothes and a s h 0 e •. jewelry, accessories, When Alexander ungallantly as oa'ying that body cosmetics meu·cs and even v1"•m'• ment1·oned ••-t •1ary used to courtly roamer. The~ met at cos -. .... • ..._.. u,.. " will eventuall y replace clothes. Co 1 . p·11s be ralher plump herself, she Goldsmiths Ari ege 1n 1 • ' 1 W I th tiemitransparent London vl'hi!n she was 11 ana ~1iss Quant and her husband hung her head-and admitted it. clothes, body cosmetics a n d he Was 18. say that: the most amazing "l brainw ashed myself into jewelry are becoming inore The ai1ly thing thal bothers thing ir1 fashion at the moment believing that I hale potatoes, Jrnportant. Clothes are .no Mary abovt having 8 baby Is-is th111 --similaril betwttn bread and sweets, and oow it's longer prlm&rUy lo keep us that it takPS too long. "I quite American and British taste. reully true," she said. "I go ar.m.,...and ~thcy're no longer expect that scienee will find a amon« the young, at-least, and 'Ugh!' every time I pass a prestige, status or class sym· way of sbortenlng the time,'' how adventurous New York cake shop." bols etther. People don't dress iiiiliiiiiiliiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii to show they've got a million dollars anymore." At 35, and after 13 years of marriage, Mary Is expecting her first baby nex t March. She and h e r husb and-business partner, "1!exander Plunket Parents Invited To Talks Classes to educate parents in husbanc!-coached childbirth will begin Tuesday, Feb. 3, and Wednesday, Feb .. 4. in Midway City and lluntington Beach. The eight-week I cc t u re series, which will lake place in instruclOrs' homes. w i 11 e m p ha s i z e family-center maternity care with both parents being Jnstrucled in physical conditioning f o r pregnancy, delivery and after the baby 's arrival. Classes will be conducted In limited groups which v.'ill enable the instructors lo meet HEMPHILL'S SEMI-ANNUAL SALE Further Reductions! r """"'·· MEN'S SHOES _......,._,&, t FLORSHEIM •::-16.90 to 18.90 34.95 . PORTAGE ''''"""" 12.90 to 16.9o1r 'EVANS ''''"""·" Now 12.90 L .:-.., .,,... •• ._. _ . .,_ .----WOMEN'S SHOES---.. VALLEY-JOHANSEN-DELISO-VITALITY LADY FLORSHEIM-PARADISE KITTEN SBICCA·MISS WONDERFUL EDITH HENRY 12'0 to 1490 VALU£5 TO 20.00 VALUES TO 25.DO DISCONTINUED STYLES e BROKEN SIZES e ALL SALES FINAL FRIDAY JANUARY 30 By SYDNEY Q,\1ARR tonight. If in charge of reservations, double check. Pleaty of business ladicated bul there Is also confusion about money and directfon. with display of confidence. But don't attempt to buy affection. Greatest assel is common sense. hang 00 to past, wasteful pro-individual needs and provide cedures. Act accordingly. the opportunity to prepare for husband-coached childbirth . 1831 NEWPORT BLVD. COSTA MESA HEMPHILL'S Basic or native di 1 b ts dominate menus t o n I g b t . There is a return lo specialties which depict specific nations. J\lany prefer to din e out ARIES (March 21·April 19): Pefmit associate, m a t e , partner lo make financial decisions. Back up loved one TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Surge of popularity indicated. Bat don 't be a victim of false fla ttery. Son1e may be out to lake you in. P..1essage should be clear by tonight. Delay any l:Ontracl-si gning. SCORPIO (October 2 3 · Expectant parents vi'ishing lonltometic:•td November 21): Depending on additiooal infonnation are in- olhers may not be wise. Slrivc vited to can t.1rs. Dale for greater degree of self-suf· -~Lc~ch;l;m;•;n,~RN~, ;";';·';'"'~· ;;;;~=~=~=~!!'!!!!'!!!!'!!!!'!!~:~ fic iency. Heed Inner voice. Your intuilion apt to be cor· reel. Don't antagonize mate, partner. • San Joaquin Teachers GEMINI (May 21·June 20): Work through until details are understood. mastered. Then you can relax. Strive for balance. SAGITTARIUS (November 2'l·December 21 ): You may be delayed by requircmL"llls of one who is incapacitated. Be patient. conside rate. Don 't al· tempt to do too n1uch too qu.ickly. Your horizons expand. Couple Wed March 21 is the dale se lec- ted for the wedding of Joanne Jackson o( Tustin and Gary Paul Barker of ~lission Viejo. Miss Jackson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. T. Burr Jackson of Riverside, was graduated from the University of Califor- nia, Riverside with a BA in mathematics. The future bridegroom, son of t.1r. and 1.trs. Charles B. Barker of Mission Viejo. is an alumnus of the University of 1.1iami where he received his BA in physical education. The couple are teachers in the San Joaquin School Oistricl. The Firsl United Methodisl Church in lliverside will be the '~edding scene. Coffee Garden Opens Gates The Coffee Garden in Corona de\ Mar, v.•hich has been closed Io r the past three monU1s to enlarge the flo~·er gardens. will reopen Monday, Feb. 2. The garden is the principal ways and means project of the Newporl Harbor Ser v ice League. The committee is chaired by t.1rs. Richard V. Jordan. Information regarding special parties may be ob- tained by calling t.1rs. Donald Peek al ~2373. 1'he establishmenl serves sOUp, sandwiches and pastries 1'Jonday through Friday from II a.m. to 3:30 p.m. The gar· den and art gallery are open Saturdays from 10 :30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. Wives Sponsor ~ights Group Representaliv~ of t h e Woman's Liberation Front of Laguna Beach will speak for the UCI Faculty-Staff \Vives tonight at 8 in UCJ's Galewny Plaza. Today's Elevated Housewife Is Prost/luti ng lterself will be the topic for the group, an organiUttion founded on the bcller that womm arc among the most oppreMed peoples :.ind must demand their rights. • March CANCER (June 21-July 22): JOANNE JACKSON Bride-elec:t Some of your wishes are sub· jcct to revision. Stress is on being practical. You cannot get all you want. But in· telligent compromise ca 'fl bring good results. Read behvcen the lines. LEO (July 23-Augusl 221 : Actual costs are revealed. You could learn much th at previously escaped observa. lion. Be ready, willing and able lo fa ce facts. Older person deserves courtesy. at- tention. VlllGO I August 2 3 • S e P· !ember 22): Avoid travel unless realty necessary. Take lin1c to revie\v basic silua· Hon s. Relati ves may :;cem unreasonable. But If your ;.ip- proach is creative, you gain essential point. LIBRA !September 2 3- 0ctober 22): New approach lo financial si tuation i s ad· visable. Clean house; get rid of debris. There is no need to CAPRICORN (December 22· .January I9J : Check details. Be observant. Ovcrcon1c tcmplu· lion to throw caution tu \l'inds. Carelessness can be extra costly today. Friends \Vho ar· gue may try to involve. you. AQUAR IUS (January 20- February 18 \: Hidden clement co.1nected v.1ith home, property could come to light. Consult authorities. Don't attempt to be your own lawyer. Day to seek and obtain information . PISCES /February 19-March 201: Demand by relative that vou revise long-range plan ~hould hr eons i d e red . Diplo1nacy ii. best course. AC· cent harn1ony, especially al hon1c. Don't give up something of value for mere proinisc. To 11n<1 wt mar~ ;!bo</! vou•1~1! ftnd ~~!rOIO!JY, or<!..-Svd~Y Om1r•'1 jO. Pl!Qf booklfl, lh• Trut~ Aboul lltirotogv, S•nd bi•lh<!ate a~d ~ cen1, •o omerr Eklok!er, lh• Dlltl Y PILOT, 8011 ll~O, Gr~...r C.•nrr•! ~ttHon, New Yo•ll, N 'f 10011 IT IS OUR PLEASURE TO WELCOME persona l •tyli•t to Mrs . Rose M. Kenn edy lo our staff. Mr. Veni has bllon a'soc.iated with the l ily Dae.ho' Salon, Miami; the Plaza Hotel Salon , New York City arid Sak,' prior to joining Heir Hu!lters Salo'ls, Newport Beach. l'I addition to being styl ist to Mrs. Kennedy, Mr. Veni was c.on5ulting stylist to fashion designer, Cardirialli. RS SALONS Fa1hlon Island, Newport Btoch Tow" & Country, Santo Ano·Oran9c Lo Clen t90, Los An91lts 644·2151 I' Open lo All racully and staff 1vlvts at UC!, the preaerr\aHonl wlll fcaturr a panel dlscuss1on . t:roup t.c~s lon1 an Uj 'efrc&:hn1c11t~. • ~;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;;:i;;;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:::::='>'"=:;:;::---- ' .- BIG SELECTION Values to $1.79 yd. SALE STARTS TODAY! 45'' Wide Wet look 60'' Wide 100% WOOL JERSEY JERSEY Value to $3.00 yd. NYLON 50 }.,!!!t~. ,cd 56'' • 60'' Wide Values to $4.00 yd. $1~~ 56" Wide, Many Patterns & Colors, Machine Washable HAWAIIAN TEXTILES 50°/o OFF le ture to ask about our FABRIC CLUI -You'll save 100'• of$$$ during the year. FLEECE Value to $6 .00 SANTA ANA 5027 W. Edln9er lft C II ('•It""•\ Cv11 y ll~n ~ 30 to 12 SANTA AHA 2710 "(" W. Edinger ... ,.,,., M.tl'oh l,,., (vtr'f T11t1., to 4 .~CI ~..,\ " Sign up now for ow Cr11tlw-1 Sewing Lt11on1 1t1rtlng soon .---SPECIAL NOTICE ---. We have .S new locotions throughovl Oronge County for your convenience. Checlt listing below for locotion1 ond the doys w• ore open ot eoth, ANAHEIM HU~TINITOll IUCH I fUWITON 410 $, lvdld 420 !. TOii! St. 464 W. Commonw11llh •~•e"""'o""1 Tw<I... I., flM W_.1ji.. "'Ill* tt...<h VIII ... C ·rry T11t1. 9;30 It 1, [y1ry frl. 2t00 lo '4:30 P'" (v1ry Wed. 2 ft -4130 pm -----' ·-- ,.. ______________________________ ,....., ............................................. ~ .... ~~·· ..... ·~·~·"'""' "··~·-·-1·~~--~--.........-.--. ..... --. .... ,.....,...,._. ~..--.---..--·-._, ........................ _.....,_,. •, • . · • ,. Sea Theme Selected For Second Meeting Sea Shells by the Seashore will theme the second annua l coovenUon or the S t a t e Federa tion or Chi na Painters of California Thursda)I, Feb. S, througlt Saturday, Feb. 7, in Laguna Beach. Included in the sessioru in the Surf and Sand Hotel will be demonstrations or china Emblem Club Gathering for busines s sessions and programs are members of Newport Harbor Emblem Club e.very second Tuesday at 8 p.m. Jn the Elks Lodge, Newport Beach. painllni.· teclmlques, leclqrt• by art.isl! from varlow parts of the Unit.ed States and II· hlblts. Glenn E. Vedder, Laguna Beach mayor, wUI welcome guests to the Fr~ evening dinner meeting where Robert Metzger of Colorado Sprlni• will be guest speaker. Mrs. Harry Fagan. of South Laguna, stale president. ls in charge of arrangements. Mrs. Thomas Lacy is serving as hospitallty cbainnan and Mrs. Donald Dunbar ls arrsnging aceommodaliom. Anyone wishing lnlormaUon may contact Mrs. Fagan, 499- 3507. OPEN SUN. HUNTIH6TON IUCH .14 Large Sizes ,, · To avoid disappointment, prospective brides are remlllded to have their wedding stories With black and white ~lossy P.hoto- graphs to the DAILY PILOT Women s De- partment one week before the wedding. Pictures received ,following the wedding will not he used . For eng_agement announcements it ts imperative that the story, also accompanied by a black and white glossy picture, he sub- mitted six weeks or more before the wedding date. II deadline is not met, only a story will be used. To help fill requirements on both wed- din~ and engagement stories, forms are available in ail of the DAILY PILOT offices. Further questions will be answered by \Vernen's Section .staff members at 6424321 or 494-9466. Sitton Gu ild Thursday, January 29, 1970 OAILVPILOT J5 ' Pa t Nixon Preventive Medicine Bleaching Hono rary ' Cha irman WASHINGTON (UPI) - Pal Nixon will be ln!talled u honorary cbalrman of the Girl SCouta of. America in New York Wedneaday, Feb. 4.. The White Houoe said the Flrlt Lacy also may do some ahopplng that ~'1 before returnlog lo Wl!hlngton lo prepare for a two-day trlp, ltarting 'l'huroday, Feb. 5, with the President lo ill- dianapolls and Chicago, Mrs. Nb:on will vi.sit pro- jects lo enhanco the en- vironment during the mldwest lrlp, tnc•.itn1 a slop al a Prairie Parkland P r o j e c t outside Chicago. Cl inic Tests Kidneys Jl'abrlca containing rayon can be bleached : aome rayon finlahel, h o w e v e r , are sensitive to chlorine bleach. The /Kidney FounclaUon of Oraii8e-Rlveistde will t e • I Capistrano Unllled S c h o o I Diatr!ct elementary l!Chool students ln grades three, four and five Monday, Feb. 2, through Thursday, Feb. 5. According to Mrs. Charles 1113'den, health chairman of El family pllyllcLln. The fOlllldatlon ld(ls 7$ per- cent of patleDtl now on a kidney machine could have been cured JI they had ~ tested at en early 11•. Members or the woman'• club will ass1at medical of· fldats of tbe foundation: CM Auxiliary ' The flrll 'l'hu-y of the month members ot \ h e ~ Legion Auxiliary , Coltal)f'eaa Unit 455· gather in the American Legion Hall, al 8 p.m. cam.lno Real Junior Woman's.;:::;=================:::; Club which 1' 1J>01180rlng the cllnlc, students who have parental pennlaalon will take part in the kidney and urinary tract infecUon detection pro- gram. The faundsUm reports an average of 8 percent or aludenta tealed ihOw some form of kidney disease. Treat· ment ls prescribed by the Women Golfers ~arn Plaqu,e Bob thinks ... SYLVIA, MOONIER'S ,, ' Orientation Planned A plaque honoring low grosa winD'en of the past year for Laguna Beach Country Club women goUers was presented to the group by president Miu Gracia Johll!on . Oil PAINTINGS . ~ .. . , . ' ,• , -' ·, ' '· ·' , At lo1t - Ponty Hose In large sii:e • o nd fashion colors. $3.50 pr, SIZES 40.50 hip over 50 hip t. ·. yNor'sHALF-S IZE SHOP ~... c .. ~B~~. NE~~~~~e~.',~~ St.I .m l 84 HUNTINGTON CENTER Orientation tours of the Albert SIUon Children's Home wt.II be conducted at 6:45 p.m. the flnt Thursday of each month and additional orien- tation ls scheduled for 1 p.m. the third Wednesday ot each month by members of the ' Albert Silton Children's Guild. The guild meets at 10 a.m. the third Monday of each month in the Garden Grove Community Church. The home is the only county facility for dependent children, and guild members work to assist children in the home Lunch Honors Area Official achieye a better life. The group recenUy fonned a speaker's bureau to provide lecture! and slides o n activities and IChooJ.J.ni the borne offen. Sbowlnga .,.. by •ppointment ooly and. may be ICbedUled bY calling Mn. Gene Peebles, 545-6388. Olher services provided In- clude individual COUD!t:llng to aid students with t h e I r homework, transporting youth being trained tn industry, and sewing and filling grooming kits for children to take when they leave for foster homes. Birthdays and holl<!aY• are celebrated with gamis, glftt, prizes and refreihlnentl, and a library cart 11 maJntaioed to distribute bookl and magazines. • Weekly ml blwoekly ~I Members of Auxiliary 2360 ln cake decorating, good of World \Var I Veterans will groom.Ing, knltilnt, cralll and honor District 8 president Mrs. exercise are cooducted, and Ruth Wade at a luncheon monetary gtfta prov I d e Tuesday, Feb. 3, Jn the emergency needs, shoes, Masonic Temple, Huntington magazine subscriptions and .Beach. specified field trips. Rental of An area meeting will take educational discussion filmJ place on Saturday, Feb. 7, at l ..-""'-in_c_lu_ded_moo __ lbl_y_. __ ,1 p.m. In the ball. AH veterans and their wives are invited to STARS attend. Sydn•v Om1l't' It en• of tfi• H1nthttfo• leach IN•xt to ..,.... lru. ....,., Those interested in in-world'1 tr••t 11tro1.,.,.. Hl1 ··-~ Also: n• c11rANa•P"A1111 MALL. P.il91tlll formation may phone Mrs. •olum11 h e111 •f th• DAllY •l!!:=:=:=:=:=:=:=::;:=:=:=:=:=:=:=::=::=:~~Ll~oy~d~N~e~therco~~tt:a~t~536-~7033.~_J~';";0r~s;,;:;•N;•;•~h~•;h~~~===='I ~..: ~ • . · ' , ' ;-,, ·~ " ·{ . CLEARANCE FUR SALE szso,oo:o. WORTH ·OF FABULOUS FURS SABLE LYNX BROADTAIL WAITING YOUR INSPECTION • JACICm • COATS • STOLES • CAl'fS AND MANY OTHERS M. ACQUES lll•lller Ftorrler 8'-JNS 14 Fashion l!Ilalld I The rulld also coordlnatu activtUe• of many outside groups and organlzatlona In Orange County. Membert: at- tend club meetlnga Jo explain and auaest ways for In- dividuals lo serve in guild pro- jects. Winners were Mrs. John Poor with a 72 ln A flight and Mrs. Comeliw Toomey in B rught with an 85. ARE TERRIFIC Mrs. Ktnneth Boston Is s,uperviJor of the receiving home and Mrs. Robert Howes la president of the Sitton Guild. Welcomed as new members at the regular meeeting were Mrs. Walter Davison and Mrs. Murray Shiffer. Members of the Western American Golf Association are looking forward to attending a tournament at Soboba Springs on Tuesday, Feb. 24. out As pri ,...r.100% Reg. 59~ yd.~,.,., Printed Pique .Brilftt print• for fun fa•hion tpiirtswear. 100% cotton. 44/45"wide. Formerly $1.19 yd. Flocked Sheers Delicate spring sheers for blouses and dresses. 65% polyester, 35% cotton. 44/45"wide. Values upto$1.98yd. Luvlin 99 Pretty linen look for all your spring sew-NOW (: ing.100% rayon. 44145" wide.Rei. $1.39 yd. yd. Assorted Woolens Novelties arid basics in a variety of colors for all your winter sewing needs. Various' fiber contents. Various widths, Values up to $3.99 yd. NaW$1~ Polyester Doubleknit $3 Easy-care action fabric In a variety of 88 colors and textures. 100% dacron poly- esler.58/60"wlde. Values uplo$6.98yd. NOW yd. ELECTRIC SCISSORS! Y9Y En= Electric 5clssoJl. Has two $399 cutthig 1 s fOr sheer or h fabrics. Built-in llglrt to Illuminate c~g lines. Blada iuard, Rei, $8.00. NOW The SINGER I to 36•Cr•<Ut Plan la deslcnecf loftt 1t11111 budpl. -i""'}#'-1oelHtllNGIR .... r SINGER for 8dcht.a cf h •tort ,...,est you, -whit. P11t1 under ~INGER OOMPN#f COSTA MISA UM H•"9r ll'tll. IU f.11" .. _._ HUNTINl>TON llACH lflflttr .i IM<ll ~ "1·1 .. 1 ".....,,... l..cll '"'"" SANTA AN.A --IU WMt 1 .......... ' •AIDIM •IO'fl "" °''""" ....... on. c .. ,., ....... ' • I. I j ' l l \ t ·======... -;:--:-;i:.; --~·--~----------..,.,~---· ... ..-........-;-•• * ~ .• --:-.·.~·T"t C:~-~~,-.,-,,.-,-,,,-..,--~·-.; ... ---·· ..... .-.. .,._. ........ -..----·---- • DAILY I'll.OT ' Hobby · Keeps Man ·spinning · ·TRONA (UPI) -"Iltey don't turn out cloth, but Boyd Shaflenberg keeps rlgbl oo making spinning wheels aa carefully as thole of more than !Oii yean ago. Tbe spi.nqj,ng wheel& are just a bobby for Schallenberg, who ls employed as re1ldent manager for lhe R S. Andenon Co., contractor for American Potash and Chemical Co. 'nlere a r e several cf his wheels on .display , tbrouJ!xiu\ ~ h l 1 Soulhem, ca1µ.nu, -~ ~g'1 1p.innln1 wheels· are mocteW ,after one turned~ 127. -yeari ago by lsiac, May!Wd of ' Marlon County, Mo., where Schallenberg was born . walnut, aged eJ&bl yeara. la a . . f~er'a barn. 1 '""Ilte wheels that I produce are flu wheels, .. Scballenberg aays. ' Mayfield · died In t Ii o . However the quality ol hls spinning wheels Ja ·, I 11 JI remembered · by bis name !lamped In the woo<L Schallenberg says be hopes be will be remembered for the quality of his wood work. "Everyone. should lea.ve on this earth something of his own creat19ft. or craft." he says. ·"Memories· IOOD 1 art forgotten but· crafted l(ems live on and on." • Nylons Useful .8challenberg's wheels -like ,Mayfleld'a _ are thlnga cf Old nylon at o ck l n g a, beauty. launder11 ~-balend .. ~led~-~1ke Schallenberg, 63, ha.a return-so wa~Llll .,.narua or ed lo Marlon County .., 1tuffed dollJ, anlmalJ Mil casionally on vacation. 'Ibue =te=le=Vl.!J=on=pU=low='=· ===:;II he loob for small lumtier 1 ANDY AND SMOKE -Celebrity judge Andy Devine and bis partner Smoke, stars of an upcoming Wonderful World of Disney two-parter, shake hands. Devine will judge 19 dental health posters designed by county second graders in South Coast Plaza Monday, Feb. 2, at 10 a.m. Three winners will be named. mUll, WRJallr operated hy ooe Mako 1 Shorp man. He aays there you flud T rede·, Use the best wood for making spin- ning wheel!. Dime-A-lines His hltest wheel ls oolid NB Actor To Judge Tots' Work film and television star Ahdy Devine 0£ Newport Beach hu been n a pl e d celebrlty judg~ of 19 posters representing children's artistic concepts of good dental habits. The celebrity will join car- toonist Frank Interlandl and several other judges Jn selec- tion of a countywide second grade winner and two runners.- up in the finals in South ~t Plaza shopping center st.arting al 10 a.m. Monday, Feb. 2. Finalists will have posters on display in the mall area next wee.k in conjunction with the Z2nd Nationa1 Children's Dental Health Week. Top winner will receive a $150 savings bond and bicycles will be awarded to second and third place winners. Secretarie~ At 6:30 p.m. every second Thursday women ol Bahia Chapte r o f National Secretaries' Assoc I a ti on lntemationaJ assemble in dif- ferent locatioro to attend meetings. Mrs. Lloyd F1eming at 673"6360 may be telephoned for additional Information. Beta Sigma Phi Clubs Gathering for Brunch committee for lhe new council are the Mmes. Eldon Dvorak, Huntington Beach; James Eales, San Clemente; Allen Felex, Huntington B ea c h ; Charles Agte, Anaheim, and WORLD PREMIERE ENGAGEMENT "T_,,._, -' .....,. et .._.,, ._. .. -L.A. Ti111•1 -lHlutfc COMHy -1111t lll!~.ffl: l'lll!DIS Ellzaheth Warren "nlJlor • Be•ltJ • The OnlyG•me la'lbwa I!! ID.II irl! Ulll' ShMh ,_.,. r,..i.w, ..W.,, 1~1 -LIDO ONLY ORANGE DRIVE-IN e LIDO THEATRE, rt The second brunch of the newly formed C a I if or nl a OraD&e Coast Council of Beta Sigma Phi will lake place Saturday, Jan. 31 , al 10 a.m. in the Mesa Verde Country Club. Xi Kappa Lambda chapter or Costa Mesa will host and Miss Dorothy Dunn I s chairman. The Mana Frances Ballet School ol Newport Beach will present the pro- gram. Neil Mitchell, Orange. I .. tJ'-;;:.i Further information may be .... oblained by calling Mrs. Baney at 67>1665. Assisting with arrangements are Mrs. Robert ~1arquardt and Mrs. Robert Balley, decorations; Mrs. Carl Sipes and Mrs. Don Knox, prizes, and Mrs. Mickey Holt and Mra. Marion Bushling, tickets. Members of the steering DAR Schedules History Talk American history will be the topic for the Patience Wrlght Chapter of the Daugbten of· the American Revolution as they gather for a Tuesday, Feb. 3, meeting in Hotel Eastern Stars ·Laguna at 12'15 p.m. Mrs. Albin B. Wethe, chapter chairman and state Play Cards vice chairman of the NaUonal Standing Conunlttee of the The first monthly card party DAR Museum and California of t,he Laguna Beach Chapter Room in Washington, D.C., of the Eastern Star geU will speak on A m e r l c a n underway tomorrow eVenfhg Hi.story .,.. Impressions. at 7:30 in Laguna Beach Ma· Hostesses will be the Mmes. sonic Hall . Gerald Preshaw, Frederick Dessert will be served and Paulsen. Dean Clanton and bridge, canasta, pinochle will Edgar Axtell. be played during the evening. ;========= Reservations at a cost or $1 per' person may be made by phoning Mrs._ N o r m a n Chrlstenaen at 499-1743. Who Listens To Landers? SAVINGS OF 25°/o To 50°/o SAMSONITE -LEED'S AMERICAN TOURISTER TR~TAPER LUGGAGE BANKAMERICARD MASTER CHARGE SOUTH COAST PLAZA -PHONE S40-3110 RETIREMENT LIVING IN . STYLE GRAND OPENING Like Jiving in a luxury resort hotel; Parkhurst offers the ultimatc~n retirement livin g. A com- fortably modern, air. conditioned building de- signed especially for those seeking an inde- pendent yet worry free life. It combines pri· vacy, comfort and convenience wi(h many hocel cype services, such as maid service, (ransporta· tion and meals wi(hout the usual high cosc. Our food service features a continental breakfast and snacks anytime in addition to (he three meals a day served in our dining room. Medical services including Physical Therapy are also ·available. There are rooms for letter writing, reading. eotenainiog guests or for billiards, cards, S<wing "and baking. Self service laundry facilities are provided. A large enclosed patio in the center of the building provides for outdoor ·activi(ies. A full time recreation and activities director will implement programs requested by the resident guests. Religious services·. will be held weekly: Parkhurst is within walklng._distance of shopping. banking. library, Post Office and a new public gt>lf course. It is only a short dis- tance from the beach and within minutes of Huntiaston Beach, Westminster, Garden Grove,· Costa Mesa, "Newport Beach, Santa Ana, Leisure World and Seal Beach. Single and double occupancy is available and each room has its own ba(h. The rooms are also tempera· mre controlled by individual thermosurs. We invite your ~isit and inspection of this new idea of carefree retirement living. REFRESHMENTS SERVED 2 to 6 P.M . DlalCTIOllS from Long Beach/Lakewood area -take the San Diego Freeway cut ro the Brookhurst offramp. Go north on Brookhurst approximate_ly ~ mile to La Alameda. Turn left on u Alameda half block to Parkhurst entrance. f arrlthurrst RETIREMENT R1i51DENCE .. LA ALAMEDA AVE. FOUNT, VAU.EY CALIFORNIA 12101/,, !IUllN1 " !'---~ • .-..--------------------~~~ ~---------------' I I ,. JANUARY ·WHITE SALE AT SOUTH COAST PLAZA Lowest Prices of the fear frernenclom IGVlrqp on top qualhy brand ,..... ..... of.,, ..... , __ .,.,.d~ -..-............ I I ·''Petula'' Bedroom Ensemble cooa ounno-wASHAlu SPREADS S' 1999 ~-ao 2499 :U."! 2999 KING 'MATCHING YARDAGE 1 99 45" wlile ........ 1.,. S. yil, • yd. ~~:.~~':!lnL~.~~ ...... lq. $45. 29~' •. MATCHING PLEATED SHORTIES I ·~· ... 24 Leng 3" .. ,, . ....... W Loni 4 .. ,.,, . ....... 36'7 L9nt 4",.,, Reg. 7.00 45" L.nt 5",.,, Re,. 4.00 V•l•nc• 2" ••. SALE! LUXURY SHEARED VELVET TOWELS BY J. P. STEVENS ··: .. "NOCTURNE TOWELS" 20 fASHIOH COlORS HGUIAll 2.60 1 9 9 UTHSm e UG. 1.50 HAND , •••••••• 1.29 n llG. 65c WASHCLOnt ••• • • 55c eca. RIG. 3.50 IATH MAT •••••• 2.50 ea. Steel! •P tkM ll1tn c19Mfl wftti ffite t1eallty toweh &. .a.... bf StettM - Co~ hr ...,,. decor I• pleh1 colors &. J.c--4 ....,.. -All ., low soJe ,,1ces. FORMAL ELEGANCE ''IORTUNA TOWELS" UG.3.SO 25"X4r IAT'HSID 249 :13: ~i~~~Dci.C>r·H· • • ... 1.79 -. • • · ••. 69c ea. <'Al~I NO-IRON "lealltl·Blend" " · I:. Percale Sheets by J.P. Stenns " . e CPLORS e WHITES e PRINTS WHITE PERCALE I REG. 4.50 359 TWIN SIZE FIAT OR FITTED R•t· 5.50 full ••• , , •••• , 4.St R•9. I .SO QvHll o, •• • • S.99 Ret. 11.50 Kif19 ••• , •• 1.99 R•9. l .10 C•1•• •••• 2.H Pf. COLORED PERCALE REG. S.7S 4so TWIN SIZE FIAT OR FITTED R19, 6,75 Fvlt ••••••.• 5.50 R•t· 11.50 King •••..• t .9t R•9· l.10 c•t•1 •••• 2.99 Pf. [ NO IRON PERCALE FASHION PRINTS I ' • J ..... c. • ,...., r.. • bee""" Stripe • rte. . REG. $6.lO 41s TWIN SIZE FLAT OR FITTED R•t· 7.50 Full •••••••• 1.79 R•t· tl.50 Ki119 •• , ••• 10.H R•9. <4.60 C1t•1 , ••. l .10 P'r. "SYROCO .. W11ll Plaques -Mirror• -Clocks ............................ 1/1 to l/1 OFF "GUILD .. Cookie Conteiner1 -Serving Piec.es -···································-· 1/2 OFF ''llGAL" lath Rt.1'11•· ell colors l sites ·--·····--··········--·-···-·-I/a OFF "RUllL" Che'e1e Boards, l color1, l si1e1 ·······-·--·· .. ······-················· 'la OFF ''IUDI." Fondue l Ch•fin9 En1melweer -·········································-··· l/2 OFF "KI NG K.AlYIR" Imported Steel C1rvin9 Seti ···············-··-····················· 1;, OFF "CAROLINI" Frin9ed Round Print Cloth1 ·······--··········-··-···--················ 1;, OFF Trav~ Drapes Decoratar Pillows :-::::·· 20% ............... 0 e ~·-OFF : ::::.';;;;'...-20% : ~=-OoFF • wu..1a..1e ' Cost• Mt11 Phone: ~12 j l . . . ' • • • • ' ' " . . ' ' ' ' . ' " ' • ~ ' • I ~ St. ·Joachim's Setting For Afternoon Nuptials CPI~. MRS. T. L. ROBINSON C1thollc Rltn Ezcbanging wedding pledge\ and rings .in St. Joachim 's Catholic Church were Pamela Ann Beauregard and Terrill Lee Robinson. Tbe R e v • Thomas J. Nevin officialed. The bride., daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Felix A. ·~auregard of Newport Beach,. was, at· ·tended by Miss Christy Lynn Beauregard, her sister and maid of honor; Mrs... Jef[rey Hanson, and Miss M a r y Brown, brtdesmaidS. Peggy Sue and TammY: L~ Troegne.r, the brl.de'I cousins, were flower girls. John Paul Robinson wi"S his Cupi·d' s Arrows Aim at Princess By MARGARET SAVILLE WNDON (UPI) -Princess Anne i! the kind of girl who likes to kick off her shoes at a fancy~ss ball and play foot- ball with the pink velvet cushiom. Or shake and stomp along with the audience on stage al the tribal rock m u s 1 c a I "Hair." satisried by dark-haired David Penn, 21, a stockbroker who amuses her wflh his black bowler hat, umbrella, and dark, pinstriped vest and suit. He lives at SL Jam~·s palace, near Buckingham Palact,·with his fathef, Lieut. Col. Eric Penn, an extra equerry to the Queen. David took her to the musical "Hair" and ~t the Or feel at home at a finale, they both joined the discotheque, snapping h e r cast on the stage. lingers to the beat of LOndon's Another friend is crown top rock musicians. prince Carl Gustav of Sweden, Lively and reJued, the the only heir to a throne in Queen's daughter at 19 has an Europe who could prove her anny ol escorts, a wardrobe astrologist's prediction right. of miniskirts and trouser suits, A good friend of Prince and a long list of favorite Lon· Charles, Carl Gustav has don clubs. visited Buckingham Palace If a famous old astrologer is several Umes and stayed at right -he predicted she Balmoral as a private guest. would become a queen and The Swedish prince shares wed at 20 -Princess Anne Anne's Jove of riding, saili~. should be married by next swimming, and winter sports. year. But Palace observers say brot.ber's best man. Ushering guests to their seats wett! Jahn Scott Robinson, another brother and Harold'blndell. The formter Mi·•·s B~auregard grad4ated :-ifiom Corona de! Mar High 5Chool and attended O'range ('past 'College. · ·The bridegrodpi, son ·of· Mr. and Mrs. John-P. RObinsob ol \Yestminster, Jfaduated ftom OCC and is a aenl~ at California. State College at Fulle~. ' The newlyweds are at home in Sa,nta Ana. The Tee Tattler But few think it liRly. The there appears to be little more Prince!f, who made her debut than friendship between them . into London society only last Anne's "boy .next door " is ·A ·1· Mesa ux1 1ary· y~r, is playing tbe field and Guy Nevill, 23, the elder son of enjoying every minute of it. Lord and Lady Rupert Nevill, American Legion Hall In She has no steady boyfrlei1d. the Queen's closest friends. Costa Mesa is the setting ror She likes to date one young Guy, who will inherit his the meetings of the Auxiliary man for a while and then go parent's mansion In Sussex, is to Barracks 1249, Veterans or on to the next one. She takes the Queen's godson an(t was World War J. The first. ~­ pride in the fact that the her Page of Honor as a boy. day or each month members technique baffles tile gossip-Guy was the first boy allow· gather for a business session mon&er&. ed to lake Anue out alone. At at 7:30 t:i·m· and the third Her current boyfriends all 17, She went to dinner with Tuesday fo'r a social and belong to the court circle, sons him at London's Savoy Hotel potluck 't 6 p.m. of sons of relatives or friends and they danced at a ;====""======;! of the royal family. Ranging fashionable cabare t af· Glo.omy Gus . Is from Nicholas So am es , terwards. Now, the couple go grandson of Winston Churchill to more modem young spots Your Kinda Guy and son cf Chri sto ph e r ~to::::g~e:;;th;';;'·======~:;::::;::::;::::;::::;::::;::::;::::;::::;:::::(J Soemes, British ambassador ,r in Paris, to Lord Burghersh, son of the Earl and Countess of Westmcreland. They have all grown up with the Princess, and are weU known to Queen Elizabeth and Princ:e Phillip. If you were , to take the Princess out on the town, you would not be allowed to pick her up at Buckingham Palace. You would have to wait at an appointed meeting place, probably with a party of four or six 8.5 that's what the Princess prefers, for a palace limCJUsine to deliver her. On return -probably at about Z a.m. if you were taking her to a night club -she would go home unescorted In the same llmoosine. Definitely no public goodnight kisses. Many will be watching for clues into whom she writes during the royal . family's Pacific and Canadian tours nes:t: year and who she invites up to Balmoral Castle to join the royal family for August holidays. The estate. with its gardens, moors and wood, is an histori~ royal slte for Intimate tete-a-tetes. Not even a detec- tive will be around then . Many royal romances have been cemented at Balmoral. The Queen and Prince Philip, whof were privately engaged for two years, made the of· ficlal announcement in the rnarision's rose garden. ·one of the liveliest of Anne's escorts Is Nicholas Soames. A han~me 21-year~ld, h ls sister Emma is ooe of Anne's long-standing girlfriends. The Princess flew to Paris a while back to attend a ball at the Soame1 house and she and Nick started playing football lv\th the pink velvet ballroom cushions shortly after mid- night. Anne's love of music ls LtTS BE fRIEIDL Y U 1ou have new ~hon or know of anycoe movln& to ouf arH. please teJl UI IO that we tn&1 extend a --·andbelp t!>efn to become acquainted tn Utclr new amroundlnp. So. Coast Visitor 491-0579 494-93'1 .Harbor Visitor ' ~174 ~price fashions for ... Fashion Island, Newpo~t Beac h price-slashing •. SACRIFICE ! ! 1 on ·famous-name brand ' merchandise drastically red~ceCI ( for quick clearance. · ) our loss • • • your gain , but be quick -sizes and . colon are broken. good ~lectlJ for those who act fastf --J ROBES ••• GOWNS· SLEEPWEAR ••• 111.or• .,._, 4•11Y 11 a.m. 'tll 6 J.M.: mtf'I. an4 fr~ 'tll t ,.m. Wl HONOR ANY MAJOR ACTIVI CRIC'MT CARD Teacher Will Wed Mt. and Mrs. Kenneth Mid- dleton ol Newport Beach have revealed the betrothal of their daughter, Shafon Lee Mid· dleton ' to Robert Edward Greene II of Newport Beach. Miss Middleton, a teacher in Anaheim, received her BA in English from California Slate CoUege at Fullerton. Her fiaOce, son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Greene of San Gabriel, attended UCL "*" l"Mllf Thursdu, Ja1111ary 2'· 1970 DAILY PILOT J7 Hood-Marr Names . Troth Told at Party The engagement of Bonn.le Jean . Marr and Jame s Newman Hood was announced at a coclrtall bufret party in the home of the bride-elecl's parents, Mr. and Mrs. JOhn Elliott Marr of Emerald Bay, ne couple will be wed .fa Sausallto on P.tarch M. Group Studies Interaction Interacilon between t h e blind and sighted will be discussed a'.t the Monday, Feb. 2, meeting of Orange County Blind, area chapter o r Catilornla Council of th< Blind. SHARON MiOOLETON F,utur• Rites No date has been selected for the wedding. BONNIE JEAN MARR The bridwlect at~ed San J OSe State College where she affiliated with Delta Gamma sorority. Her future husband, san of Mr. and Mra. John Tyre Hood of San Mateo, attended San Jose Stale and is in business In Vancouver, 8.C. He was a member of Alpha Tau Omega fraternity. The meeting in room 120 of ·Santa Ana Health Department will include a social hour at 7:30 p.m. March Bride GET THE . l5a1•e Roof RooeJ All the · Finest Grade MOST WITH •.. * PC1scal i *Peace * Showtime * ~ropicana * Matterhorn *Buccaneer * First Prize * Eiffel Tower A /c: Mister Lincoln *'Fragrant Cloud *Summer Sunshine *Sterling Silver *Chrysler Imperial f}fctdio fu j BULBS * 3s Co!~:-· ,, ·' J I ,J • I * Charlotte Armstrong .. and more . We'll Show You How To Plant Them * Tall or Dwarf Varieties * Top Quality·Heavy Blooms * Plant With "Super Bloom" Pric:ed From $}69 __ ... _ ----....... ~----··---~~-:::J.~ ........ ..,...,. ...... ._ .... ,.,.. .... ~~ ....... :~ The only product designed for blade grasses .and ·combination blade and dichondra lawns. Priced From CRABGRASS PREVENJION GUARAITEED CONTROLS ANNUAL BLUEGRASS KILLS LAWN INSECTS FERTILIZES HOUrtS: MON, 111,w FRI. f te 6 5Ut-I. 10 •·l'l'I• lo SP·"'· SATUrtDAY 9 '·"'•to 5:10 p.,,,, 2640 Harbor Blvd • COSTA MESA CALL ·54&-5525 ' ' Doz. I t : .. ~ I .. 11 l, ·.~, ,. H f~ L' . '-: .. . I l 'l ·1 ' , 1 \ ' . ( \ j " 'Unfair Lo Goliath' Casual arid Amiable By '\'ILLIAJ\:I r;LQVt..:R NE\V ''ORI\ (AP) -The ""inning quality In "Unfair to Golialh." ""hirh oprnC'd Sun- day n1ghl at nfr-Droadv.'ay·s -Cherry Lane Theater. is a casual <.1miability rart.' in · revur cntcrtainmrnt . The malrrial alxiu t :-:undry -· 101blcs n( life in prl'senl-day Israel has been shr11\1dll' cull- ed fron1 books h~· Ep.hralm ,,. .. ~,..J\lshon. a Tel i\111 humorist ; • who crosses Jlarry liolden ' . '. '. •• l ~j Tryo uts Se t ,,.._ ~~~For Dran1a ·-.:. • I Clemente Audllions lnr fhl' l·:ml}'fi Wlll la1ns dr::ini:1 ''N1ghl lo1u3\ fa ll:' lhc next product1on of the Sttn Clemente C<lmmun\ty The3tcr, will be held Sunday <.1nd Mnnd1i.y t Roi:M>rt ~'loc, who dirt'('lt.'d • "The Dark at the Top or 1hc ~ _ Sl.iir1f' and st.iirrcd in "l.11v·· ~ for the SM Clemenl.e group, ts i "· 'staging th• play. Roles aro ~,~:.opc11 for rour rncn :ind rive 1 -'.•Wnri1Cf'. ~~ •!,' Tryool.t arl' ,irhcduled for 2 .;_'\ p.m. Suorlty 11nd 7·30 fl n1 \ , •• Monda)' 1 at lhe Ca b r i 11 o : WPIS)lhOUSC. .202 A \t t! 11 j d w • -~ Cabrino, San Clemente. The • ~ • Illy will opf.n j th rw-wcckt At ·, on on March 12. I folksiness with J.:imrs Thurber urbanity. The cast ol f1\'e has bcr.n dLrccteQ by Kishon a n <'I llcrbert Appleman , t he adapter. \\'ilh some easy , low· pressure yivac\ty so that essential mcrrin1ent never gels. lost ·iR produ~tion effort. Four or the players arc non- JcwlSh, and thcir di ve rsit y of style gives sketches and songs a beguilling universality. The titular episode gives a ~atiric twist to the Old 'l'esta- 111cnt story as it is retold by a contemporary Frcnchm<.111 of non-Zionist leanings. · Moses and his desert band i.:et a genial reappraisal, too, and so do such probl~ms as the vagaries or immigratio n into a new homeland, 'ociological adjustments nnd o nc-upsman!hip. Not C\'CryUtlng i.s uniformly liUC- <'C~srut, but the aVt"rage Is lu~h fl.l<'nachcm Zur provides r.<nTic ~piritcd p I a no ac- cnmtwnimrnt \\ith uoosten- tal lou51.v Hvcly songs for whlth Appleman sup p 11 i! d lyrics that rhyme more than lbcy sorne:timcs m an. The enlt•rtainen include .Jim Brochu, .lay Devlin, llugh Alc:icand1·r. L<iura May Lcwil!l 8nd Corlnor Ka1uJl'I who pro- vides the pr<11.ceQJna1 with 11 1 lcw kirelinc~ and dancer's gr1:1cc. "UnCalr to Golialh" merits 1 warm shalom. JAMES BOND "007" "ON HER MAJESTY'S SECRET SERVICE" CHARLTON H!STON "NUMBER ONE" Tollltht .r I & TO M11tl-.ii Sot. & $1111. from 1 p.m. THE REIVER: is 1 SCOUNDREL. 1nOf'ERATOR ind 1 BRAW\..ER ••• • "'Ba I or1J.liru,.~ . j llMJ W.W. Prmltn ' ._. ._. M ' • ..__ zt-I ••• ~ rrTecll!rlcolct' "•t• l'lrinlllOA'"' (!}.::' llntltd Ar11111 ,ALSO A NIW COMID'f DAYID NIYIN ILi WALLACH "THE BRAIN" Mo11. thr• Fri . lottl11 ot 1145 ·1:c .... s.. •..., ,,.,. 1 . .Prltl~~ National Theater 'Beaux Stratagem' Impressive Play ~ Jbuth Coast Repertory "" '• ·'· • ' .. /I . "Th• Onl~ Game In To-." S,,._ At 1 :30 $P/Ef,'f i ~lffil_Dl~ll'. cHAR1rs .".'" F 0--·~SOUTH COAST ........ - DICK · . VAN DYKE'.~ SHIRLE: Y Mac LAINE JOHN McMARTIN L .. TE SHOW TONIGHT -ALL THEATRES SEE IOTH l"EATUllES AS LATE AS 11:• P.M.. · Wt.U'1tJ\!\~ Hl·WAY 39 DRIVE IN -~-.---~ IJ4.t 212 P'mr l'Olld1 • All CCl!of "EASY !UDEil" fll) "COLLISION COUii.SE" 1'•111 N'wmu1 o All cololr V.... "llUlCN C .. SStDY 6 THE ~UNOAN CE KID'' (Ml "CtlE" !Ml Ptlff U1llnov-All ColOr "VIVA MAX" !0) Pl~• ''lHC WAY WEST" "l'AIOll'T HILL" !Xl C41Dr "DI ».De'· (X ) Ctlor Ne .,,, wlldtr II •dml"ff Rkll•l'll l11rlDn--Ctlnl 1!~11wooll "WHEltl fiAGLE S DARE" IMI CtJor "111 ltll'LES" !Al Ct!tr "F'"o~~LXT~~i ___ iJ;i~!!,I ao~e~:~;y~. ~~4e:s ----Sat. and Sun., S:OO SIG IMllP...!J!!!ir .,_ 1m to1 • Uf.2711 NOW PLAYING · No One Under 18 Adm itted He made evil an art ... -· From the COIJnlly 1ha1 gave you, "I A WOMAN." "!NGA" and "I AM CURIOUS (YtllOW)" GEM£Rll PLAZA THEATRE CORPllRAllOll San 0.qo frttWQ at 8Ji1tol • 546-2711 MATINEES ONLY AT 12:30 and 2:30 SAT. FEB. hi MON . JAN. 31st SUN. Feb. 2nd 'l'he mo5t swpem•f•d fairytale aduenture of you• lifetime! ALL #EW! All LIVE! ALL SEATS 7Sc EXCLUSIVE AREA SHOWING SHOW TIMES 7:00 & 9:30 MATINEE SUN. 2 STAN.EV KRAA£Jrs ~or • I "1HE SECRa'OF I SANIA VIITORIA" ..... ANTI10NY QUINN VIRNA HARDY SERGIO LI SI • KRUGER' FRANCHI [-ANNA MAGNANI.-! .... _ .. ~'"""""'··-. ..... -""---·---·--.. ...., .. ___ ,.,_,, ... __ ..,_. __ ,.._., __ _.,_,_._.,._., __ PANAVllfON'ttCHHICQlOR' I I $> -..,, ... ""'''"" ...... M $ugft1tM f• M4TIJM ANllllotl ,,.._..,.. ""''"'''o .... ~., .,t_ - -...... , ... ...c<ol_ ..... ~ -LlnltldArlllll , r 2001 ••• • •• .. .... . . . . ... ... . • "°"ST MWt •1 "•C•U~U~ ILVO. • lllWl'!lll'I tr~~M • 'U ·D7t0 6th EXCLUSIVE WEEK COJJ161"Cll.IC• RASllll~ - BARBRA OMAR STREISAND · SfiARJF \~_ii~;; ~'~1i G11R..r + • Ol!:•C H Ol: D, AT l!LLIO • • • ••t. COAll "WY, A ..... l>t•IO IJ'W't. • 0•'1-11900 * HUl'<lf tNOTON O•ACH NOWI hi AREA RUN A man went looki ng for America. And couldn't find it anywhere ... 'ETElt Ol'NNI$ FONDA "O''Elt • 'I.US JAMEi COl llltN In .......... I IN TH~ Wl!STMINSTI!" Cll!NTI!" -............. "" ...... "'"-···-·· .. . llTllL~ GUiii" CIDVI • ...... DIEOO nllL Comedy Combo -------------------·-- TUMILIWEEDS 't'ER NOT, Ell .• , JV ·DAlll :LOG THURSDAY JANUARY 29 6:00 IJ Iii& NMn .IC) {60} Jerry Duriphy. B m HunU.,.Brfn~., (C) (311) ·eea11 '" r., n111 (C> 130> Wint M1rtindtle tlclSls with Dick Gautier actin1 11 ttl• resident )oke· tellw of the wi&wMs' stories. Morey Ambrd1m, Dinny Thomas ind stu Gilliam 1uest. 0 "RHINO!"-IN COLOR * ROBERT CULP! fD WtllliflP,t Wtft lo lwle• aJ l'Tt'!lltt CZ Ju) •·0ormilorio Plfl Slft0rila1." uo o @rn m ,.,..., 1t1 (60> ''rdtft Is tht Pltct Wt Lt1vt." Chief lronaldt b 1 woufd·bt ptlrA· m1kef in 1 dlsputt bttwun 1 S.- lllOiln cllll Ind Oftt of tbt (R)Up'I lllOll PfOmlnent members. P1trick Adilrtt, Jill Townstnd, John Maril)' I 1nd Jimmr l1n110n rufll. 0 loll111 (C) (90) o @m m-(C) (301 "f1blth1'1 Very own Stm1ntha." Tabltht zips up t mottler I« her- self becauw Sam1ntb1 is sp1ndln1 ,, mud! timt witll lht baby. m DMl1 fml: .._ (C) (90) Lu· dltt Btll. H1rrr Goz, Tom Woth 1nd H1ny Lomine 1utst ID T1lt: llf: Yllloy (C) (60) ly Tom K. Ryu SALLY IANANAS ly Fran!! laglnsld COMPUTER DATING PERKINS O Sii oraea Mft: CC> "Rllille" (~Urt) '64 -H1rry Gu1rdi110, Shlrl,Y Eaton, Robert Culp, I tO· olorlst. llo9ln1 to e1ptu11 white rhinoeerot to send to g11n1 ore· :tlf'ftS. 1mkl'MIWinaly hirn 1 hunlet· tumed.·poacher as his 1uldc. m Oftlco ., tht l"mldtrrt (30) I fll) ... ..._ (t) (9~ ''Tht Wrtlt Off;" 1 pl1r baad on !ht L--------------' L-------------' L-------------' true fllPlfitnco ot 1 wccessl'ul, 49-1 0 Dick V111 Dyle (30) ID n. flinbtonu (C) (30) ID Stir Trff (C) (60) @ (}) ~C Nen (C) (JO) fD Wbt's Ntw? (30) "Missi$1ippi Rivtr! ft (J) CIS Ntn (C) (JO) ID l'nion Citln1 (JO) CE ..... (C) (60) J.ek Whit•. 9:00 y11r-old 1dvtrtisin1 u1cuti'lt, who 1fter 16 ye1r1 of prodllClivitr, Is I fifed for no 1pp1r1rrt rtt9011. I B ROBERT TAYLOR AND * RICHARD WIDMARK IN THE CBS MOVIE "THE LAW AND JAKE WADE." II IS (i) CIS TllvnilJ M0tlr. (~) "Tiit llw 11111 JtU WtH• (wntern) -SS-Robert T.,ior, RJch. 1~ W'ld1111rk, Pttricil OWens. Rob- ert Mlddleto11. OflCt the member of 1 notorious 1~d nrthlm 11n1 of GUl!IWS. Jakl Wtdt is now Ille , .. spected ma1S111I of 1 Ne'# Mo:ko I toW1I with no idw of how suddenly and 'iotenUJ his pest will ctttll up with him. MOST OF THE TIME, PERHAPS MRS. MR. WlNTE~ IS VE~ WINTERS COIJLD CONFL15Ect! A.CTUALL'(, c:iEi ~ER HE lrrlEED~ 50MEONE AITTNDANT IN wrrn MlM TWENTY· o~ TO GIVE FOU ~ HOil ~5 ! VOii SOME REE TIME, rus! 6:30 0 MIC HtwMrviu (C) (60) 0 Stiff Allen Show (C) (90) Guests art Pit Harrinrton, Pacific C.s and Electrlc, Stev1 Rossi, Slappy White Ind Debbie Dr1kt. Q TM li11M C11111 (t) (30) m My Fnorile M1rti1n (C) (30) @rn ""' M1son (60) 0 @ CIJ m Tt• Jo11u (C) (60) llL-=:.i.::-:::::....::...1 !:....IC-'5 Guests: Joni Mitchen, Geara:e Ki1by, MOON MULUNS m 11MDr1 s1111wase <3o> @@ HuntltJ·lrlnklty (C) (JO) fD To S.vt Ttmouow (30) ~ (!) T'H Murrsteri (30) &I) Noticlert 34 (C) (60) ED IMllt N1tr:1 (C) (JO) 7:0ll IJ CIS EYflnin1 News (Cl (30) Witter Cronkllt. G Wbt's MJ Une? (C) (30) m I LM LICJ (30) P111I Ankt. fB Sallbrd Tlr.utrt (60) 9:lDO@@ ml Dr•tntt (C) (30) "Hom1cid1-Who Killed wtlo1" Fri· d1y 1nd GtnrtOll 1nsw1f 1 mult!ple homicide call 11 an old apartmtnl houst 11111 wor•in1 witll l!lllllf dues. lin1lly aof'll tilt bilarre crlmo sprtt. G """ (C} (30) Buter Wud. m l ill Jtllln• """ (C) (30) ID loll tM Clod (C) (JO) lD:OG 0 @00 m D1111 M1rtl1 (C) El)Connnodity/Mutu11 fund (JO) (60) Ptf'CrawleJ, Michael Lindon, ...,. r..'1 Tiit A rte Wut (C) (3m S!lecky Greent and Charin N1l1011 -~ me an "' R1illr 1ue:st. fll:l Alllrt! (JO) 0 Nns (C) (60) Tom R6cldin. QI (I) Tntlt If CoftS1q111nct1 (C)1 0 @ (])a) PAiis 700D (t) (60) m!Trut M¥tntur1 (C) (JO) I "Ko Place To Hldt.~ A11 A1111rican (E) Tll1t Girl (C) (30) citizen dies lollowinl SUfllfY, 1nd 7:30 IJ 9 ({) r1111ily Alltir (C) (30) Audree Norton, 1 member of the N8lional Theater of the Olaf, a:uests 1s 1 doctor whom Uncle Bill en· li~ts to 1icl 1 handicapped chl!d bt- lriernled bJ BulfJ. Mar11rit1 Cor· dova. Di1nt HoUJ and Lee Casey also 1uesl I O Ci)@) ml i lhCi!' I Lt wt II Tlwtm11 \11 Ntw Gulntt (C) (60) B1tnnan ttlts to question th• doc· tor .mo Ptff«mtd the Oj)ll'llio11. Jot Camp111t!l1 ind Nini Fodl ,...,.. 0 Delltl (C) {60) Rod Ser1in1. Thi Blossoms, Jeny Van Oy•• 1111st. m fllews (t) (30) Geor11 Plll111m. ID PllTJ MHOll (60) f.!il 11M ""°""' (C) (60) (R) fl) D Pldrt Cl1rniea (JO) "Pal.Joi Into tht Unknown." Amon1 lD:JO fl) Cptttio (30) !ht hirhti1hts of this P"'ll'•m art ~~~:~:sb~~n=~ll:OOllDDfll• (C) the first !Hmin1 for television of 0 Tiit WtSllnMrl a11titnl tribal 1itu1la. O Mwir. "111t Dq tilt blftl 0 @ ~ oQ) Pat Pnlsen's H11f CtuPt fJrt• (ICi-11) '62 -J1r11t A C.'"ldJ Ht1tr (C) (30) An1it Dick· Murw, Leo MtKlfll,, inson is specitl guest. Pat Paulsen m hJln l'llC8 .1uumu tht 1Uise of "Mr. Scitnce" m Kl Said. • Slid (C) to de!iVtr 1 dlStOurse on weather. @(l)@@fi I]) Nows (C) pl1ys Lucif1r In t slie1ch tilled . (C) '1:hildrtrf1 Lttters lo the Dtvi!." £0 Wtd11n(M Wiiii lit Rft'lft eonducts 111 "lnten"iew with 1 R1t."1 (R) and other wise 1oou 11 u11 throu1h Ill m ED fllfWI CCI !tit wron1 incl of !ht telescope. Mlss OicklMOn p!1ys t 1ir1 ha,lnl ]1:10 @ (I) Clnt111 Stw111t11n: "The trouble with her TV set. P1rtidp1t-Senator Wis lndlwttt." in1 In other skelctiu 111 Sherry Milts. Gtora:e Spell. Pepe Brown.11:301J fS CJ) MIA' Criffitl (C) Gutsh V1nett1 Ro1er1 and Bob Einstein., are Jant W)'mtn. Dick Shnn. Fty Ci.J lltllio11 $ Movit: "Slit-HtlMls McKaJ, Loia Wilden tnd Albtrt lT"lth tflt Dtvll" {drama) '59-J1mu Brooks. Cllflt1, Don Murra1. Oan1 Wynler 0 ~@ ID Win"' Cll'MJI (Cl Alt Americln shtdent i~ lrtland Scl!eduled 1uests: Gwat C. Scott. ~urlnt lht days of the Irish Rebtl-1 June All)'son aM Llfll Cantrttl !tOll, w1nb no ptrt of tht under-U M.nr. "DI 1• sclln" (Id· vound JllO'iement -"'" tlloulh ; 1( his father hid been a leader. I ::::::> 51-John Ire and, Wtrnt m Tratll " Comequt1ttt1 (C) D al Dkll CMlt CC) m 1111"°' Ad .. , ''°> m .... : ..,,....... <myst•"' QI Tldlnlul C.ner (30) •50 -Gent 11tn'ltr • .1o1t f.rrw, m nun '"' (C) 1301 1t1ch11d eoni.. flth d1 Allltr (30) mMMit: "S,rl11tl•t 11 1111 hctill"' (m111lcll) '42 -lllttJ 1<0'-1.S m •• •-ltl (60) Vikki Cart l\IUb. g Ml'llt Ci11111 (C) (30) Sonn1 foa ..... o 1111 ro m "'' "' '" '"' "1lJ Br Nl1h1.• Part I. Ann Mtrie. PISSl!l'lltr in 1 small storm·lo$Sl!d plant. i1 so unntmd thrt sh• •ts alllS fmm hw pasl Ruu John· IOI (UesiL m Tt Tiii tllt Trudi (C) (JO) HJ,_. Mtftlt/Ftltlft (30) FRIDAY DAYTIME MOVIES 9:00 D "Tiit L11ht Ttltl Ftlltd" {dr1m1) '40--Jlonald Cotm1n. Will• Hu> M, llllllitl An1t111a, Ida Lupi!IO. O "hfond 1111 Cuftlln• (drtma} '61-E~• 81110•. Rich1ul G1Hnt. t.30 D "SlHI 11111111• 111r1nMJ '56- ~ BtvtttJ G1rl1nd. Perry Loptt. GBbl1, John PIJllL 1:0011 Mww. sf~="' 1.1p111• (comedy) ' Mort, 0111'11 Cilento, Sallf An1 ~ OQ-(C) D C.IHllltJ l•lleti111 1o1r4 (C) mt Aditll n.atrr. "Ttrrat Is 1 Min" m "lf'ltl .~ (dBm&) '47 -<:ttlt Jof!MO!t, Tlf'l'Or ltowi1d. l2:0D D .., ..... a. Huntlr"" (tdvtnturs) '54 -Clllrlta Chiplht Jr., OnslOw SIMl'IS, frtddie Rldlt'l'IJ· 1:3D m "Clctpt ftt• S11wt1• ldt• ma) '63-Hllcle11rd1 Htll, H1rry Mertr. 2::00 Q "1111 IC ....,... C11Mntut1I ''57-Eno/ f~n. Rostnn1 Rory, m °'CHIM" (dr1m1) '49-l•mes MtlOn, B11b11 I 9el Ct6dtl. •:30 D (t) "Ull ot ctt111itf" (t1M• If••) '59-Gorntl Wlldt. MUTI AND JEFF MISS PEACH \(EU.i sc~I.. Srvof~T Cow:r 0 ly Saunders and Overgard -!""'~ '•"°,-m'":,"'OQ""'COO<=:::'ff'°'IM='E..,,-----::--::-.,_,:'7-,,t< 1 WH00o·!EE! SOMETIMES • 'WEllflEFTTDRltl ™T DOH'T WORK/-BUT, TIME"""' LOCK... UMCLfS l!OYS GET TIJllNEl) AROUND .. JRiAk'S M KE-« WHEELS LOtJfE IN A C~oaEP SlJ. , .. ~ ,:'MtmAL/21'16 7J/E S'UPl,!1tECUT1 tw:K At;41N T It:. [ N<111, W!'ll Be LOHIJ GONE •' ly Al Smith - MLJTT, +lAVE YoU GOT A COMPASS (N YOU~ POCKET? ·---- ON '\'ME O!Ma: MAND, HOWEVER:, l HAI/It T~(S FIELNG YOU'1tE LYING •• , DAILY rlloT lt ly Chaites l•IUttl TELEVISION VIEWS Danny Thomas Show Usual By CYNTHIA LOWRY NEW YORK· (AP} -Danny Thomas' CBS special Wednesday night was a good, workmanlike hour, not inspired but well put togeil'ler. The stand~ ard ingredients were there: the clutch of guest stars, the dance production number, the song marathon and, of course, th·e sketches. AND IT WAS the kind o! show that one forgets almost as soon ·as the station break commercials appear. This situaUon, · however, is becoming common am id the welter of variety series and variety ~ ials. Often, loo, the viewer has a strange fecllnir be -is wacthing a remake of-an-old show with new characters and can predict the pay-off linea or sight gags. Thomas, as host, was busy. He appeared in a short skekh wllh bls fonner -and probably future -TV family of "Mate Room for Daddy." He was Ille patient in a sketch with guest Bob Hope playing a doctor Interrupted In the middle of hi~ golf game He joined singer Dionne Wanvlck in a med.J.ey of song hits. IN THE most amusing sketch, Carol Channing and Thn Conway played a pair of astronauts blast· ing off on a two year trtp to Jupiter and floatin g through a weightless weddJng in their space ship. In addition to perfonnances by Hope Conway Miss Channing and Juliet Prowse, Tho~as had ~ sizeable bag of stars for cameo appearances. Jack Benny played three choruses of "Love in Bloom" on his fiddle. Ann•Mara:ret was under wraps in a "Laugh·ln" type blackout. Dean Martin did a ql!ick booze .joke and Buddy Hackett had some gags from the audience. MERV GRIFFIN, now working out of Holly- 'v.ood for a few weeks, may be trailing NBC's "To- '"!-ght S~ow" by several Nielsen points , but CBS in-~1sts it. Js happy and that the late evening program 1s ma_k1n~ money. CBS is not happy, however, that a few of its affiliated stations have decided to move the ~minute show frQm late evenlng .to afternoon. ,Dick ~avett, V.'ith about a quarter• of Carson's audience, 1s under one ABC pressure to 'step up the pace_ of .his show by . spe~ng up; tightening up or eliminating his opeomg monologue. The few lJlin.. utes at lhe opening seem to be the weakest point tn the. show -and they come at a critical time al.nee view~rs shopping for Jale evening diversion cou14 easily pass Cavett over while he leisurely reads signs held up by Kis studio audience and reads pre- pared an~wers lo planted quesUon cards aUesedly from the audience. Denni• ilie ltlenace .. • ~-·· •·l9 ' r· ' • ' ' ' ' ' ··~·-----,.-;.: .. -.. ·; t.:·.;~.;="""'~~--""" __ _,.,..,,.._ ___ ,.__, •. __________ ....._,,.,.,.,,.,...,..,~~ =~ .,_ 4-;;--,-;---~-n»' _____________ _ aOSTA· MESA • 524 West 19th Street CO STA ESA ' Hundreds of Rolls, Roll-Ends SAVE UP TO· 70 o PICK YOUR PRICE! SAVE UP TO 70% -ALL COLORS, ALL SIZES Roll-Ends & Remnants OESCRIPTION Herculon Gold Avocado Tweed Hi Lo Avocado Sculptured Gold C1rvod Gold Le't'el Loop A't'ocedo Hi l o Sea Mist Velvet Plush Hot Pink Commerciel Avocado Twe ed Level Loop Brass Tweed Gold Tweed Commercial Axtec Gold Avocado Tweed Avocado U~o Sh19 Orange Commercial Kitchen Avocado Pink Sheq Bronie Gold Tweed Rod Sh19 Ru1t Send Gold Tweed Liqht Blu• Gold Sh19 Orange Tweed Com'I. Gold Sh19 Oren9e Tweed Ccm'I . Pin k Sh1g WAREHOUSE I 2xl I. IO I 2xl9 12x14 I 2xl4.4 12xl S.7 DESCRIPTION Hi Lo Sea Blue Commercial Cinnamon Hi Lo Avocado Carved Bronie Hi Lo Avocado Gold Oyster Gold Hi Lo Gold Aitec Gold Beige Royal Blue Hi Lo Green Olive Short Shag Hi.Lo Gold Tweed Com'I. Gold Tweed Putty Plush Green Avocado Shag Gold Green Tweed Avocado Ei rca 70 Green 11 .t x 18.6 Surf Green Hi -l o 12xl5 Green She9 12xl6.6 Brown 12'18.l p,tty llx14.4 Gold Sh19 12xl8.I Gold Twe•d 12xl9,J Red Twe•d Hi-Lo I 2x20.9 Nylon Shag Arc tic White. 12x20 I Sic I 5.7 I Sxl•.'1 G old Tweed Caramel Crm Honey Beige Nylon Avocado Green To ne Rust Tone Tweed 524 WEST 19th ST. COSTA MESA M ANUfACtUltEltS CLOSE·OUt\ Commerc\a\ Car pet $)9~ 'Tightly wo"•" riy\on. e Installation Available • Many Mor• Specia l Values , , . Too Many To Listi OPEN EVENINGS 'TIL 9 F0< lnfor ..... llon-Phone 642-4305 SATURDAY 'TIL 6 SUNDAYS 10.5 SALE NOW GOING ON! Our Huge B~ng Power For 30 Carpet Town Stores Saves Y',u More!! PICK. YOUR SIZE & COLOR Xi" : -~ . TIM.irsdaJ, January 2', 1910 DAILY PILOT 2 1 Mixe ' Bag of Mi~d Mara~der s i n Custody HASHISH -Amid polled marijuana plants, boxes of pills and other drugs and paraphenalia being catalogued as evidence, narcotics investigator Noi-inan 'Kutch of Costa Mesa Police Department displays wedge of compressed hashish (refined martJuana resin) valued at $1,100 on illicilt market. KJL0..$1 -'Kilograms, or ''Keys" ol marijuana weighing 2.2 pound's each cross the border from Mexico in this ·form. Brightly wrapped in red, yel- low and blue cellophane, then wrapped again in 'i>laln 1p:aper, the packages measure a~ut one foot long, eight inches wide and three inches deep . • • GRASS -This Is a closeup of opened kilo of Ul1· manicured marijuana. The round bits are see<!s. Stems also are visible. The smoker ••manicures" this raw material by rubbing it betwen his palm:i; or oth erwise straining out seeds and stems. \Vhat Hashlsh'and other items spread over Kutch's desk were collected during police rbundup· this week of suspected drug pushers -adult'.and juvenile -who allegedly were focu sing their activities on CoS'la Mesa and Estancia high schools. Rough cut marijuana inside looks like dried alfalfa and Is compressed like bale of hay. Current street price run's from $100 to $150 per kilo. Often a kilo sole{ to unwary buyer contains large quantities of alfalia, catnip or even dried seaweed. remai ns Is the cr umbled IeaI \v b1ch is smoked. Seeds sometimes are planted In attempt by smoker to cul tivate his private garden of marijuana which gro ws well In California . .. MARIJUAl'jA -This is what lhe pl~nl looks like. 'Call' it marijuana, hemp. weed, pot. M~ry J ane, 1ea1 g¥ge,,grass. By ally name it specls trO U.ble. ll _is illegal to grow it, sell it, possess it, or s1nokc it . SYR_INGES -Hypodermic springes -soinc com- mercial, others homemade from medicine dro ppers -were among paraphenali a col lected by pol ice during this week's roundup whi ch centered on l\\'O Costa Mesa high schools. Needles, usually of dis- posable type, have pliabl e plastic base whic h ho lds 1' Giggling , reddened eyes, drooping eyelids and 8 peCuli a r odor on the breath cha racterize the habit· ual user. Police found this seedling being culivated as a potted planl. well around medicine droppers. Spoons a re used to n1e!t powdered drugs so they can be injected. lleroin, methedrine (speed) and other drugs a rc ''shot" with these tools. Dirty, community needle used by several shooters can transmit hepatitis, other diseases . • DAI LY PILOT Ph otos By Lee Payne • I~ • I PILLS AND WATERPIPE-Homemade hookab or water pipe 1above ) also was among Items CQI.. lccted by Costa Mesa police. It is made from wine nask commonly found in Import stores and converted so that marijuana or hashish is placed in pipe bowl at top. Smoke passes lnlo flask spout, through water, then back Into cha~ ber and out what used to be spout. Then It 11 In haled. At Jelt is mixed bag o( barbiluate and amphetamine pills. 1'hey come ln all shapes and .~dZC!I. '1 I I ·1 • I I I \ ~, DAILY PlLOT Executio11 Stay Give11 To Seattle What ·ueeaQle of LonesoDte End? BERK.ELEY (AP) -The next chapter ol the Seatfle Pilots will be writt en F'eb. 6 al 1 locaUOn yet to be made knO\\'O, FT. LEAVENWORTH, Kan. (AP) - Ever wonder what became Ot Bill Carpenter. the famous Looesome·End of West Polnl's football teams of 1'53- 597 •, \VeU, he's now litaj. William S. Carpenter, Jr., a student in the Army's Command and General Staff School at Ft. Leavenworth and he still has his hand in football. He also is the veteran of two LOur5 In Vietnam, and bu recetvtd the DlJUniullhed Strvtce Crou, the na- Uon'I aecaod blgbest -.Uoo, the Silver Star, Brooze Star, and lw<I Pur· ple"Hearta. He'a coach of a team In tfie 1-U)· yeaMld football league al Ft. Le'aveoworth, and hls boys haven't done too bad. They tl<il for second plact tn a ai:r: team league with two gamea won, two lost, and one Ue. ' Carpenl<r'a own lhn!e IOll!, William S. CarpeDter II, 7 years old. Kenneth, s, and Sl<phtn, 4, are too youq for the team, but they're ptting ...,. pre-indoctrluaUon training from dad. Maj. Clrpenter became: a national mysteey and converaaUon piece when he, WU playing under -Earl "Red" Blaik. Carpenter never joined the huddle, yet he always .aeemed to kriow wbat wu golna to happen. leet. IDd aupplemmlal by tho ..... lloos of Ille arma cl Ille back neaml bJm. N°" •elll>h>f lll powxll, Carpente: "' dole to hla ployinl atrq1ll! CuperW ~· bis bfpest fOOlblll thr1JI came la hla Junior yeor: "That wu beatin( Notre Dame and Novy, along with beatln& Rico In lhelr own blet yard •t Houston." The Amerk:an League baseball club. whtch ha.s seen deadlines come and go, was given nine more days -to within two. wetks ol the opening of sprmg t.rlllnlng -to find enough cash to keep I.hem in Seattle. A business group. headed by hotel ex· ecutive Edward Carlson, was handed that deadline here Wednesday by league owners as representatives of Dallas-Fort Worth and MiJ":aukee stood by ready to step in il Seattle conceded defe;:it. Porsche Gets B·est of Ferrari Ashe .Not American League President Joe Cronin nnnounced that the meetings had been reoessed in order lo give Carlson more time to arrange for the financing that would aJlow his group to buy the Pilot.s for $9 millk>n. For reasoru: best known to himself. Cronin declined to say when or where the next mefting 11,·ould be held, but Carlson confirmed the Feb. 6 date. "I would say thars encouraging.'' Carlson said of the deadline. "\\le !old the o"•ners we thought "'C could get lbc money. There's a hell ol a Jal of v.·ork tu ht'.' done." At Mondav's session it was announced the present O,..·ners of the Pilots, headed bv Cleve land businessman \Villiam Daley, h3d lowered their asking price from $10.3 million to $9 million. Daley would retain 25 percent of the club, lowering the ac- tu :il cost still further. But a stumbling block stiU remains in a $.1.5 million bank loan that is recallable if !he club is sold. In addition, at least $2 million is needed to operate the club this ) car. Carlson remained opt imistic abou t the !Jnancing of the sale though, and was even hopeful that the bank loa n might be U'orked out. '"Mle bank said. 'Bring us a pro- posal,' " Carl.son said . "We 've got to linaliie the financial package.•· At Monday's session, Carl.son men- tioned only a $2 million line ol credit that h11cl been established , but the league said that was not enough. He also said com- n1unity ownershfp of the club was still being considered. though the owners ap- peared unenthusiastic about it. The leaj\le owners never even heard from the Milwaukee or the Dallas.Fort ~rorth groupS, though two owners. Bob Reynolds ol Califomia and Ewing Kauff. nia n of Kansas City, did infonn these ~oups of their decision. "I guess you'd say lhe league is very "cterm.ined to keep the franchise in Seat- tle." said Tommy Mercer', who, with Lama r Hunt, heads the Te:r:as team hunters. •·Our contention has been," Mercer rontinued, "that it is a S0.50 chance that the club will remain in SeaU le and if it moves, it is 90-10 that it will go to Dallas." Alla n Selig, the M i I w a u k e e businessman ~·ho heads up his cit y's 11;ould-be bu yers of the Pilots. said he thought that ~tilwaukee stands at least an even chance of getting the team if it leaves town. DAYTONA BEACH, Fla., (AP) - Porsche got the best of Ferrari in the first formal practice for the Daytona 24-- Hour Endurance Race, but a spokesman for the Italian worb team said "We haven't even wanned up yet." Three o( the new Porsche 917 pro- totypes, backbone of Gennf.Jl efforts to retain tile world end urance tlUe they won lasl year, turned the fastest laps in day and night sessloos Wednesday to win the initial showdown bet.ween the two foreign beheniot.hs. Third-ranlied Boonies Suffer First Defeat PlULADELPlilA CAP) -Villanova blew all but two points of an II-point lead in the final sis minutes as the Wildcats handed third-ranked St. Bonaventure its first defeat of the season, 64~. Wed- nesday night at the Villanova fieldhouse. Villfno~a jumf?Cd to a . 6--0 lead . ar_d never .trailed as 1t gained its 11th win 1n '16 gama and snapped the Bonnies' 12· game streak. St. Bonaventure was held without a field goal for the flrif. four minutes and two seconds and fell behlnJ by as many as 13 points twice la the first half. Si:r: field goals by senior guard Mike Kull helped the Bonales cut the Villanova margin to 4G-34 at hatrtime. Bob Lanier, who had averaged 32 points a game for St. Bonaventure, scoreQ ooly six in the fir st half against Vinanova's varying zone defenses. Lanier, however, came back to score 15 in the second half as the Boonies almost pulled il ouL .. F'ran O'Hanlon made a free throw be/ore Gantt scored lwice from t.he field to make it 64.Q with 2:05 left to play. USC llires Yoder LOS ANGELES (AP ) -Pete Yoder, 29 coach of Pasadena Blair 1-:..igh School's C~lifornia lnterscholastlc Federatioo charlipions. has been appointed to the football staff at the University of Southern Califocnia. it was announced Wednesday by Trojan coach John ht cKay. -. -,:))'. I U,I T1t"""°lt No Ri1ag Necessat•y Brad Park (2) of lhe N.-York RBngers and Skip Krake o.r lhe Los .\ngeles Kings each get in so1ne good shots a s they sta.rt a minor free. ror-all In the fi rst period Nt lhe Foru1n Wednesday n1 ght.,_Both play· r r~ we re given ti me lo coo l off in U1e penalty box. The Kings broke an clght-ga1ne lo5ing S'trcak ''1th a $4 victory. ' I seuiona. another member o£ tbt team put it more succinctly: nectlcut drivers, Sam Pooey ol SbllOll and T<lny Adamowlcz of Wllten. Both lap. Perturbed One of the 5-lll<r. 11-cyllnder PONChes lapped the 3.81 mile Da~ tract and road course at 126.'165 miles per hour - more tban four m.p.b. over lbe old course record. Two more practice sessions are scheduled today, in the afternoon and at night. Qualifying for final grid positions in Saturday's 3 p.m. starting field will be held Friday. Until then all 9ractloe times are unofficial. "This ia a new car. We'll need a couple of days lo gel aorle<I oul Aller !!!!~ we 'll go as fast as anybody." Whatever the new car's troubles, a COU· pie of Jut year's Farrar! IU prototypes -3-liter machines that give away more than 100 horsepower to their more sopbi&tJcated brothers -showed they pod i .. under the course -. "-1 B R f al =· UUll m.p.h. and Adamowlcl---y-:e us __ Jo Siffert of Switzerland was at the • A Ferrari spokesman said two of the new 600-horsepower 512 prototype! suf- fered gear box trouble in Wednesday's will not be counted out. · The two 1inaller cars, entered by the North Ameiican Racing Team of. Boston, were handled in pracUce by two Con- wheel «. the fastest P<nehe Worb ear, an oran1e and blue, 12-cyllnder, eoo- honepower mach1oe entered by J. W. Wyer Enalneetlng of Britllin. Another Wyer entry, tltis one uaJaned to Pedro Rodriguez, of MeDco, wu clocked at ill.Oii m.p.h. '"'' ,,,.,...,. AMERICA'S HOPES AT DAYTONA -Dan Gurney (left ) of Cos'l.a Mesa and Mario Andretti look in- tently down the straightaway at Daytona Beach, Fla. They are two of America's hopes to compete with the 10 foreign countries entered in the upcom- ing Continental 24-hour race. Both will be driving the new 512-S Ferraris although not as a team. Carlos Caught in Grid Draft World's Fastest Human Picked by Eagles NEW YORK (AP) -Controversial sprinter John Carlos, Ute world's fastest human, will seek a whopping four-year pro football contract totaling between S&00.000 and $1 millioo although he has never played organized football, ac- cording to his advisor. "He's aoing to be some drawing card; his drawing power is fabulous," Robert "Pappy" Gault said Wednesday nlght after the 24-year-old Carlos became 1 I5th ·round draft pick or the Philadelphia Eagles, who will try him as a wide receiver. l ' CAPETOWN, South Alrlca (AP) - Support for Arthur Albe, the Nqro l<n- nill player who w11 refuaed a visa by South Afrk:a, be1an to buJld t.oday. The American Committee on Africa tasued a two pace statement attacking South Africa'• poaftlon and called opoo U.S. Athletes to refuse to portlclpate Ihm. Albe blmseU ....,... unperturbed by the turndown ... I won't min tt at all," he lald. The American star -led that he wu aurpriJed at bein1 refused a visa. "I tlloqht I WU ~I South Africa I favor," he aaJd. "I've bent aver ~· backwanll to be rike to them to the ... tent that some of the black mf1llantl back borne think I'm nut.. "Now I've given up hope of tNet going. I think I have exhausled all dlplomallc channels." In New York, /Jutalr B. Marlbi, pml- dent cl the U.S. Lown Tennis AsloclaUon, said hla group was gr.ally fnteruled In the Albe affair. EXPEC'lll SUSPENSION "We expect," said ~!artin, ••t11at So.Ith Africa'• memberahlp In the lntemaUonal Lll'in Tennis Federation will be suapend- ed. It ls a clear case or racial dlscrimina· tion and rules of the IL TF e:r:preM:ly pro- hibit this and any violation of those rule.s ls ground for expulston ." South Africa's stand on Ashe'• visa refusal fs that the tenniJ player a~ plication was, in Ashe'• own wonts IC· cording to Waring, an attempt "to put a crack in the racist wall down there" and not juat for the purpose of plaYina -.. 0 It come.s as no surprise that the South· African government has denied Arthur Ashe I visa," &aid Georlf: ffouaer, U• ecutive directer of the American Com- mittee «i Africa. "It ls patently cleat that black athletes are not welcome ht South Africa. "The Importance of this declslon ls not confined to the rporta fitld, .. Houser con. tlnued. "It ls • dramallc clemcmtration of the mnm.itment (#. South Africa to a rlci1t -1Gn and !ti denlol of human rllflts lo the non-wbJ.te South African majority." BA CUD BY PLA YEM Albe, who had requeated the Vila to play In the South African Open Tennis Championship In Moreb, alao got backing from a fellow player, top.r anked American Stan Smith. "I think llOIDe of the pl1ym will boycott the tournament," aaid Smith." I ha"' not entered, but ff I had I would think twice about playing." Another Amerkan, Bob Lutz, said he lhoulfll the ded•lon might -11 in SWlh Africa being ••eluded fmn lulu!< Davts Cup play. "We might Juat find another place to play if that's the way they feel about tt" said Lulz. ' 'nle decision, which was announced by Frank Warin(, South Africa's tport.s minister, stirrf.d a Uvely debate in the local pre ... 'M1e anti.government Rand Daily Mail called the refusal .. predictably obtute" and said the ban .. will be seen 11 naltf!d raclali~m. a remarkable compound ot opo- portun1srn and prejudice." Die Transvaler, organ of the ruling Na- tionalist Party, delended the decbton agal~st Ashe, who, it said, often tried to publicly embarass South Africa. Streaks Intact: Lakers Happy, Rockets Sad SAN DIEGO (AP) -Both the Loo Angel.. Llkera and the San ot... • Rocttta kepi their 1lr<lb lnlact Wednu- d1y nip~ but only the Liken were hap.. PY about IL •• 1be Liters beat the Rocttta llHOl lor the •tzth •trllght win for Loe Angelec • •• and the aeventh ltraf&ht defeat fot San Diego. Both t._ •re Idle tonight, with tho ,;:. Lltera playing host lo Atlanta ind the , Rocketa welcoming Seatile Friday nllltl ~:· Jerry West and Hippy Ha!nton com- bllltd lo shove II points In for the Laker•' ·:· victory. Well and IWntoo •ach hit clut<h JO.footers 1ft<r the Rock& pulled to wllhln !Of.IOI. West, leading the National B"ketblR AuoclaUon In ....mr, got 3f points, while Ha~aton made U. Elvin 111,y., led , San Dle10 with 21. ' ........................................................................................... .-~ ... ~~ ... ~~~~~~~~~~~~--~~~~~--·--·-· ·----........ - • DAILY 'ILOT ........ ht O'o...11 IT'S A RACE FOR THE BALL AS WESTMINSTER'S RICH MANN (13 ) TRIES TO OUTLEG HUNTINGTON'S GARTH WISE FOR A LOOSE BALL WHILE THE REST OF THEIR MATES MOVE DOWN COURT Saddlebacl\. Turns Back occ, 76 :67 Oilers Share Lead, Slap Lions, 65-53 Hot Colony ln67-54 Win By CRAIG SHEFF 01 lh9 Dellr P'ilel SS.ff Saddleback College basketball coach Roy Stevens commented before \Ved- nesday night's game with Orange Coast that the Gau chos: needed a win badly to prepare for Saturday night's encounter with Desert Conference foe Mira Costa. Stevens got his wish as Saddleback t urned back the Pirates in surprisingly easy fashion, 76-67 at ?.1ission Viejo ,High. lt was certainly not the b es t performance or the season for either club. Both teams were cold from the floor in the initial half as the Gauchos, leading all the way, held a 31-21 lead at the in- termission. Saddleback missed it3 first JO shots before finally connecting .with 16:29 left in the opening half to \<Ike a 2-0 lead. OCC also could not find the range early, missing the first nine tin1e:s, not getting a bucket until a minute after the Gaucho two-pointer. Jn the openlng half, the Pirates could only score nine field goals In 39 attempts (23.1 percent) while Saddleback was not much better, hitting 12 for 41 (29.3 per- cent). Both teams warmed up considerably in the second half, hitting at a 41 percent clip. In the :second half, Sadd l eback gradually pulled awRy from the Pirates, holding a 69-49 advantage with five minutes left. Orange Coast then decided to play bet- ter basketball, ripping in JO straight points in l\.\'O minutes to cut the margin to 69-59. But the spurt came too late and lhf' two teams matched poinls in the clos- lnr three minutes. Both clubs lost their learling rebounder!! early in the second hair via the foul route. Saddleback center Cam Smith sal flovm just five n1inutes into the half while OCC's Phil Jordan '~;is hit with his fifth personal "'ilh 11 :25 left. OrlMI Co11f 071 S•dd1eb,ck 116) " 11 pt .. 11 II pf .. Jorden ' • ' • "~' .. ' ' " OIUle ' ' • ' Ldw,~nt• • ' ' " Stlc~etm1r1r • • ' " ~•nlln • ' ' ' AOIPll ' • ' .. C"rl•!•""" • ' , " Holmt1 • " ' " Edw•/'111 " • • • Klni!tlon • ' ' " All•n ' ' ' ' Cwo ' ' ' " Liii~ ' ' ' ' Pl1" • " ' • Tol~t1 ,. '' 11 " 10"11 ?I 17 '' " H1llltmt: Slddlel>llclt 31. OCC 11 Valley Gets Coach 2 DOOi HAIDTOP By GLENN WJnTE 01 the O.llY f'llOI S!1fl Certainly one cannot accuse HWltington Beach High basketball coach Elmer Combs of being a greedy man. Moments after his ftM"ces had upended host Westminster, 65-53, Wednesday night, Combs was asked if this might not be the beginning of another string of Oil City victories which might someday match the 44-game streak which was snapped Friday. "\Ve'll just settle for six in a row,'' quipped the Oiler boss. "That's all it , • .., 1teerhHJ, ou~ic.. whito wol11, •Ir c:o1ullltlo..,, Li· would take to make us happy." Six in a row would clinch a fourth straight loop ti- tle for the Oilers, who ar.e currently in a four-way snarl for Sunset leadership with a 4-2 record. Westminster, Marina and Newport Harbor are the other members of that massive tie with six circuit contests re- maining. Huntington could do no wrong against coach Don Leavy's crippled Lions. The Oilers fired in 51 percent of their field goal tries while Westminster could find the range only 34.4 percent ol the time. Combs' ouUit bopped off to a &-<I lead on three baskets by Lee Walters and the Oilers never looked back, once leading by 18 late in the third quarter. ~avy's troops, victimized for the se- cond time in five days, were decimated on the boards with the loss of 6-6 Steve McLendon, who was lost with an ankle in· jury. He was averaging 20.7 points per game. Further, a 6-9 Eric Southwick was also absent l;iecause or an ankle sprain, leav- ing Dan Broderick (6·Slf.i ) to hand.le the work load. ALL '69 CHRYSLERS & PLYMOUTHS AT HUGE SAVINGS 5199. BELOW DEALER F\ACTORY INVOICE SA.l• «HOS SUNDA'I', , ... 1, ltN, At 6 ,.M. AL ROBERTS Chrysler -Plymouth 10080 GA DEN GROVE BLVD. Broderick got 23 points despite being double and triple teamed. However, be was the only Llon to score 10 or more. And he was unable to handle Walters and Cate inside. Walters ripped the nets for 19 while Cate came through with a Over Marina personal high of 24. H~"llllllell IUI fstt'I" w"111111111w un W•llt rt C•!• Wl1t .... C1r111111 TO!lll t l 1 It Bred.,kll: I t 2 1• Minn 2 2 ' ' Ntwhou11 • 2 1 10 Mtltenhllm1r l O t 6 H1wltl' P19non flla~111tr ••• Tol1la " fl If " ' 5 5 :u • 1 5 ' l l 2 ' 1 2 0 • ' 0 ' .. l 0 D 2 1 •• J a o 2 o llllll SI Mesa Trips Edison, 75-73; Shares Lead By HOWARD L. HANDY Of tllt O.llY f'lltt lllft Bob AusUn hit three .successive field goals to open the fourth quarter and went on to gain scoring honors with 32 (the number he wears on his back ) as the Costa Mesa Mustangs moved into a three-way tie for the Irvine League leadershlp with a 75-73 win over Edison. The game was played on the Hun- tington Beach High hardwoods Wtd~ nesday night and found each team leadJng by IO points at one point in the 1econd half. The spunky Edison Chargers moved tn- to the lead Jn the first quarter and held the advantage at halftime, 3$-31. At outset of the third period, Mark Harmon, Mike Bates, Mike Arus aDd John Fisher hit successive field goals to boost the Charger lead to JO polnl!, 42-32. Coach Emil Neeme 's charges hit 13 points to three for Edison and the score was tied at 45-45 with 3:39 left in the third period. The two teams remained within strlk· ing distance and at conclusion of the period Jt was 57-56 In favor of Edison. Austin's outburst to start the fourth str1nu moved the Mustangs in front and before the barrage was ended, it was 69- 59 with 5:16 remaining. The Mustangs ap- peared ready to break the action wide open. But lt was coach David Mohs' Chargers who bounced back this time, closing the gap lo 7~ with 1:33 remaining. The ever present Au stin made it 72"68 and Scott Neville hit a pair or free throws to make it 7H9 with 32 seconds to play. By ROGER CARLSOK Of ""' o.llr '"" , .... PICK OF THE CROP USED CARS '67 BAR~!~~!_ $1499 ,..., ........ Alt •••• 1e1 ........... , ............... u. _....._ncm. '67 BARRACUDA $1499 COllYllTllU ... ..., ......................... , ............. ... u. .... N_.,. JOL 711, '67 V.W. FASTBACK 4 • SPllD a.,.,.._ ... 1 ..... Liu-. N...._ UH Jll. -G.M.C. 2' If It '1 § ' ,(' I ff CWLY 'llOT Thurtdq, Juu117 29, 14170 =sea King Swimmers .. . ~.Zip to 81-5 Victory Corcaa del Mar kept up its ~ pooe In the !nine 1-IWlmmlnc slandings 'II-,, u Cliff Hooper's •,.'Je.a KJnas drtocbed invading f-£cusoa, 114. ~ Mtanwhtle, other 1 r v I n e "~li(IUIUc activity saw Co.sta Mesa drown Fountain Valley's Barona. '7f.14 and Estancia nrim past Santa Ana Valley. -· 'Over in the Sunset League, powerhouse Anaheim o~rwhelmed Westmtnster. 67· it. Western eked by Hun- tlnatoo Beach, '8-47 and Marina beat Newpor1, 51~4. The Creslview loop had Laguna Beach dunking Tustin -$$49 and Foothill in an easy, ~ .'n-18 win over Mission Viejo. Tar•• Vlkl11gs . , ·-ifl!Mlflt cn1 '"' ,...,....,, ""ii.r , 20t Medi.¥ Rt~l'-l. M•rL"• CDe~ Wlll~m1. HCllJOll!et. Mc.Con- M\IDl'IW) •. Time: 1 :~.L 2!ID ,-,.._.1. Ferrer CNHl ?. Melle., '!Ml 1 Herbclol (M). Tlm1: 7:00.,. • lO f're.-t. McC-wlwY (Ml !. GrHt' CNHI 1 Br-.illeld !Ml. Time: ni:., lndl\'ldusl ~tY-1. Wtl'TW'C~t lliHI f. JoMiot1 {Nt) 1 Htrllly IMI. Tfnw: t :11.'-Dtv.,._,.,I. De:tes tMI :. f'e,.er (NH! l . Kll'!ll IM 100 fl-1. ,t. (NHI 2. Hclkl"t" IMl t Werl!Kt:;e tHIH. Time; 1:'1.,. 100 Fr.e-1, MCC-\lllMV {Ml 1. Grttr !HM) 1 Brooml!eld. IM). Time: l1.0. lOll Btdt-1. Oevkj$0f> !Ml 1. Stl~Oer (NHJ t John'°" (Ml. Time: 1:07.1. MIG FrH~ ~ INHI '· /,\s!lbJ IMl ~. F•rrtr IHHI. Tirne: 4: It. I. 100 ll"'tH-1. WHllemt (M) t. Whl!t IHHI 1. HtrdJ fMl. Time: 1:10.4. 000 Frtt RtltY-1. H•w.,orl H1rbor fi,~. Ferr1r, Grrtr. Wtrnttkel. 11mt; J:0.11. .... N .. ,.,, .._,._ 140 1421 Maol'illl tcl':'r11=."i:::1·N'::tt."":°'J1~e~ (Ml. Time: l:ff.t. l'OO F..-1. RolllM (M) 2. Sli!n!burf (NH) ), Rlbl":i.on (Ml. Tl..,.< 1:111.5. ~ Fr-I. HlllMln (M) t. Pll'l<I! {M) ~. Boo!~ (Ml. Timt: tu. 100 llldlw clusl Medl8't'-1. Per!eoin fNHl ?. Slllowkt (M) 1 8111!"01 {NH). ·Tl-; l :OS.O. 100 Flv-1. Nor!l'I CNH) 1. O."iel1 (M.l l. !loot!! (Ml. Timi: lrU..9. , J(XI FtM-1. SI~ tNHI 2. ... eUIClll (Ml l. '""" (M). Time: SI.A. 100 8t<i.-l. Cll,_IOl'I lliH) t. llollltls <Ml 1 l'tlll'rirvg IMJ. Tllfll: l:Ol.1. • CICI 1'"9-1. Narl!! {HHI 2. ll°"'rt'°" (Ml l. OlllWI (Ml. TI"'9: •:U..t. ~ 'lllD 8rwellt-I. 1hlostkt IMI 1. ..-J-.-fM> 1 hrtfCIUI (HHl TllM: .·1:1U a FrN Rd..,-1. NIWllO"I H ... bor l 8tklwlar, R~oon. Cl•rk1on , St1nst1urvl. Time: l :.ko. ,_ Hew"" Hlrllilr 150 llJI M11ln1 20ll Melllley Rel•v-1. HtWPOft Htrbor fOtl111q,1e, Smltti, s. W111. L f\lllrotri). Tlmt: 2:00.1. !00 Fr.e-1. Ftr-r INH! 2. C1rdent1 lMI 1. K. Wtll HtHJ, T1lfll: 2:06 5. Sf> fr.e-1. 5. Will INH) !. O'COMell IMI t Glel1..-(NHl. Time: 2'.I. UICI lnlllb•ldlNI Mfod~V-1. Smllfl {NH) i. Mcrvlck CMI ii:n"O.nimllfl itoo. Tlmt: 1:06.0. JO "1.,-1. 5. Wiil INHJ '· Kl"O !Ml 3. Llnlllrotll (NH). Tlmr: 'lt.I. • 100 fr--1. F•rmer !HHJ t. C1rdt"tl (Ml 1 Gl1lzer (HJ.U. Time: ~.2. SO Bldl-1. ~Lr\Ollf. CNHl 2. HorYkt (Ml 1 Fu~ !Ml. Time: ll.3. M BrNd-1. $tn!ltl HOO ?. O'Connell (Ml 1 o....ie1 /M). Timi'; .n.a. :IOI Frw lltlt'l'-1. HrwPOrt H1rbor fFtrl!'lrf. Llnlllrotll, Oele•-· Gl1lll!r). Time: 1:0'.6. Jllesa·Baro11s .. Versify C.Slt ~ 01) 04) l'Mo"'llll Vt U.IY 2(111 "'91111n lltl•Y-1. No iwlmmtri. ~" Mils.. dli<IU•llllt'CI. 100 Fr..-1. Ml1lollto. ICMJ 2. a11! lCMI 3. Rletie-, (CMJ. Time: \:SS.t. $11 Frt-l. W11d1nd'I {CMl 2. Ek~ (FVl l . Me.AM..., ICMl. Tlme:l4.1 1Do llldl'lldwl M~-1. H.tl {CMJ 2. • Somewle tCMI 1 CttPlrt~f (CM). • flmt: 1:1t.I. • 100 Fty-1. Mhlolel< fCMI 1. 11:1"\l<MO (CMJ 1. Hell ICMl. Tlmt: !9.S. • 100 fr,_I. MtAnent., !CM) 2. Kln- yer. {(.Nt) l . Eldl l FVl. Tlm1: 5l.~. 100 Sidi -1, Ct....,l•r ICMI 2. WtilertltlO CFV) l. lilo11 (C MI, TJmo: 1:0.S.5. a frH-1. ••nnon ICM\ 2. Hill ICMI l . 8r1I ICM\, Ttmr: 4: 1 .•• l!IO llr1t11-1. ll:l<:fley (CMJ ?. Lt"'" f'Mr$ tFV) J. O'Br~ (CM) Time: 1;11.9. .• olOO Frte llrllY-1. Co1t1 M~•I fWt!Mlkll, Me.t.MtleY. Mllloi..... Kl<>- • YMl. Time; l ::U.3. ·-""""""' Ve"" (Ill CSU Clllt Melt XIO Medley RNY-1. No 1wlmmer .. botll .,..,.., llll-""~-1fl0 Fr..._1. Wtiulff fCMl 2. Eldi (FV} :l. Zfot (,,-V). Tltnr; 1:10.J, '° ",_' 8tt11l"' (P'V\ " Cllllllhitr IFVi J. Scluler (CM}. lmt: 14.1. 100 l'ldlYldl.Nt MedleY-1. $Ott {FV) l, , , Ytrwoocl fCMJ 3.. J~ (FV J. Tl-: 1:0].), 100 Fl.,-1. Mt<Letn {CM\ !. NOi~ IFVI l. U1nc1 CCMI. Time: !:OJ.I. 100 Fr-I. 8trltnl (FVI t. Wtltrr1 ICMI 3. C.1119'1..-fFV). Tl!NI: 54,,. 11111 ~1. Solt (P'"VI 1. Wtltrrs (CMl J, ?lV fl"V1. Timt: 1:.,.1. 4DO l',.._l, Noel'! fFVl '· WDllltl (CMI J. £Id\ fFV). Time~ 4:X'.2. • lOO Brtetl-1. Ytrwcolll ((Ml ?. • ,:\Quilt' CCMI 1 Mtrlubun' (CMJ. Time: 1:11.l. 4C10 P'rH Jl:tll.,-L Fwrt11!11 Vtllt'I' lhr11"I, Clll19l>lf, Hoell, $o!1, Tl"": 3,'1.l. ,_ Fw11111t1 V•lltr 1.-nJ CJl\.'i) C•"• -100 MIClln Rtlar-1. "°"'"'ti" VtlltV fR~. •r-ne. Odl1iwr, Shi••dJ. T!;;:,.t;:0.!:1. Me.1.llltml lP'Vl 2. Witt. m•fl (FV) :a. Holll11tr CCMJ. Tlmt: ,,n.1. ''"' .j(I Ftte-1. llou fCM l !. !o!Uttlll ~ I T.,,.,.lm fCMl. 'time: tt.I. ' 0100 lndlVldlNI Melllll.,-1, Rkt (FV) ..-,, Odl.-r (FV). J. L1.,.\I011 (CMI. -,_: 1:07.0. SO l'..,-1. Jl:kt !FVJ 1, Mtrron tCMI Ho !hltd. Tl.,.t: tt.S. '' TOO f',..._\. SPOl'\9911 ICMI 7. t be~ Ml!Tlt IFV} eMI llou (CM). 11;:;e~s1.2.:..1. ltu11!t' fl'VI 7. FlllmOI'~ ICMl J~le bt'lw...., OdllM' (FVJ tnd .. Hom111r C(MI. Tlrnt: JO.). .,.,. ,, .,_••I-I. llrowM CFVl 2, Sk111er (C.Jl l. e.row" (l'V\. ilmt: 14.t. 200 P'ret: ltllrt-f. c,,.,. Mtt• fWlll,,,_t, ltOU. 1.'"911tol'I, SPl>nt"tl, Tlmt: 1:#.7. !llV ·K11lgl1U f)ller••We1tern ·-W"'1VI l•J 01) ........... 8MO 100 Mfdlcy RellY -J, Hurol1"thlll lleldl (Ev-Jonn-. P'lgllf', HlrOkll lime: ·~~,s 200 l'rH -I, 8t,.tr {Wl L liollmtM (WI t • ...,..,,, fHll Time; 2:01.• Jt Ff'N -I. Herftf't (H8l 2. How\U.1 (Wl ). HllW'Y (HBJ Tl1111t: 2t,l 21111 !l'ld~ Mellllf-y -J. ler1 (W t. "K ... (Hiil 1 Jwce IHI) Tltrtt: 2'lliJ~-l. J.-.1 (W) L sin.-1 (WI l. oleftd (Hiii ~; h.J 111) F -.I. £Ytnt (MB} . L•fJ (WI l. Soug n (I II} TIITW; K.J \00 Free -~Hffr1r1 IH81 2. Cl•rld!le (Wl 3.. 01•1 Tlllllt : .si.J 100 heir. -I. Yl"l (H'll) t. JOYU lHBI J. Arlhe (W) TN: 1,02.4 G Fr" -l. ~ fHBl 1. BtrMr fW) 1 IWllmen fW Time: •:)7.0 \Oii llrttlt -I. Otrklgf (WI 2. Kirov (HBI I. Slllow (WI Time: 1:10.• a FTtt 11:1i.' -I. Wester". Time: 3:Jt.5 .... Wett.r11 I.SI 071 """°" ..... llttt~ !Ot ~"' Rtltr - 1. W1tl1rr1. Tl,...: 2:11:1.6 200 Free - 1. MIH• IW) t. BlrXer (WI 1. D. Reed IHBJJD: t :ltl SO Frtl -I. l"fllll (WI i. Noltn (HB I 3. Ku"r (H81 T : 26.l 100 h'ICllYld!Hl Medley -I. T. ll:eell IHll 2. J!Jlltll (W) l. S ... w tW) Time: 1:111.• • 100 ,,,., -I. J111\•n (W) Ho iCCOrld or Third Time: hll.1 100 Frn -I. KOlll (W) 2. Arkle (HB) No llllrd Time: lot.5 100 llledr. -I. O.l~nll tWI !. T. llttd J HllJ l. Phlll(llf Timi: 1:10.S «IO l'rH -1. Mll11 CW) :. Btrkcr (Wl No lfllrlll Time: 5:0S.I 100 BrNI! -1. "'11"fll (W) 2. KIS!lo CWJ 1. 0. Reed (H8) Tl .... : 1:16.1 4!XI Frtt Rrl~~ -I. We!tllm. Tln,c: •:ll.S ,., HH"lltfltll 8t•Cll (SI) (10 Wtsltrll 200 Medin Rei.., -I Hl.lnlll'IQlon l!tkh. IKlrlo.. HMrtll, Fruonkl, lOrl!ll Time: 1:St.e 200 Frtt -1. Penll., (H9J 2. O•l• (HBl J. Ranitr {WI Tknt: 2:09.0 .!O Free -1, long IH81 t. Sergent CWl l. N1119nt IW) Time: l0.5 100 lnd!•lchltl M9dltV -I. Hoirrt!I IHB! 2. l(fht (Wl No thtrlll lb1>e: 1:10.0 ,JO flt -1 Frtrril IHBI 1. Otlc CHBI Ho third T1me: Sl.I 100 Free -1. Pt1tltJ (HBJ !. ll:i lfler (WI Ho lhlrd T"1le: 1:00.0 ~ B«k -J. 1(1 .. (H8} l . lonq (HaJ l. Rffil {W). Time: Jl.S ~ Bret•! -I. H1rrtll (HBI 2. Krh l IWI l. LllldMV \Wl Time: ).4.1 200 Fr .. Ritl•Y -1. Hu1lllf1Qtort Bttcll 11'11'tdl, O.le, long, Klri;I Tl"11: l:St.1 A rtlsts•TuJJtl11 YlrlltY l.1911n1 ltt Cll (jlJ tll) TM~lft 100 Medley Rel1v-1. """"· l!111e. 1:.11,,. 200 free-1. A. Wirt Cl lll ~-l!rown ILB) 3.. Schier IT). Time: 2:0S.6. .!O Fr•e-1. C. Were ClBJ 2. War· rl ... e (Tl t 5>mltl1 CTI. Time: 2•.2. 20t ll'ldiYlouel M~ltv-1. Crvl'!'lllty f\j 7. MC:Ci.iw111" (Lfll 1 Hoover (T). Tim.: 1:149. U1•"1o,-1. Proppc (L B) 1. Tr1PD tTI l. l'lthelu (lfl). 100 r,1v-I. 0. Wirt (Liii 1. Tt..ey Ill.Tine: l :IM.5. !00 f-rtt-1. C. Wirt ClBl 2. 111 ~'"Hfl :.urnner !LB ••IO Werr1•rc {I J. Time; il.9. 100 Berti-I. $1-GwJll., <LB ) 2. $cllirr lf) l. Hoalll ill. Time: 1:10.1. olllO F're .. 1. A-W•re ll•l 1. Brown tLB) 1. lissllln {TJ. Trme: •:JD.2. lQCI Brte•t-1, Crumley ITI t, Hoo'nr ITI J. Proi;-ILi!). Time: 1 :1 ~.1. .00 Frtt Rel•Y-1. Lt g ...... lllKll to. Wtrr, B•l!Wfl, A-Waft, C. Wtrei, 1 lfloe: J:.u.l. '"' l•.-(II) (II 1 •tll!! (Ftr1tffl Ml ._ree-1. W1H1frJ tLBI /lo lel:Olld or ml•o. l!mc: 2:J1.1. 50 Frre-1. T•bor (l8) 2. fl1hel11 (LBJ No 111"0. Tlmt: lO.J. 100 lodlv1-I Medlrr-1. Morre11t {lbl tlo :i.c<:onO or lhlrd. Time: 1:2~1 100 Frtt-1. Elhllng (LBJ 2. Ttbor C~b) Ho third. Tlmt: 1:11.4. 100 S..d<-1. Mofrtei. (lll) Ho st· Lll<l<I or 1nl<d. nme: l:ll.j. 400 Frre-1, WtU$1r., (L J Ho JKorld or 101ra. lime: J:Jl.I. 100 Bre1$1-lf E1nl!"I! ILB) No -,_or lhlr d. lme: l:ll.t. 400 f ree ll:el1J-I. Ltov,.. e11cl'I (Morr111e, Fl•fllli1, Well1try, E1~1l"~J. l 1mt: 5:111.1. Ctt1 T•lli~ !01 O•J 1-ep,.. lllKll 2,~1.Medlev Rrllv-1. luJll11. Tlrm: '20il Fr-L S!OWJ~Y (l8 ) 2. lllOl!vltt CTl l. Bvllfll!lg. Tlm1; 2:2L4. Sil Frte-1. F1rrer ( T J 1. Am$dem tlbl J. Pii1r'>OfU (LB). Time: 21.L M!CI lllOlvlduaF Mot1f1¥-I. Roltlld CTl 2. Metll'I (T) 1 llalle., CL8l. Tlmt: 1 :oe.1. 50 Ft¥-1. $PJ!•r (Tl 2. Krtu (L811 HolU~sllela fl l. Time: 30,1. 100 Fr-1. Ami.oen !lBI 2. Ferr•r Il l J. Ptr~ llBI. Tlrn11 l1«L.5. lO kd.-1. iltol•nlll CTI 1. Slowlky Cl8 ) 1 1,_111 CTI. Time: fl.t ~ art11t-l. Krt1 llBI t. $petr (Tl J, lndQUl11 (TJ. Tlmt: Joe.I. 1,Ir.1 Fret Re!1~-1. Tu111n. Tlmt : Eagles-Valley Cdlll·Cfa•rgers C•• 1111 ,X.,.'"r.() jil If!• 200 MeOln' Jl•leY -. Coroftl Otl M t , (l+e~. JICUot'I.. 8ar111r4. e1.a.1 Tlfl'lll: 1:411.5 100 l'rN -'· l(rum9'lolt ICOMJ t. ._,,_,. (COM) 1 t..olflitr !fl Timi: l::.s,,... - 1. H~CCOMJ j· ... , «><'iL WtlMI' lC Timi: :U. ~ -1,Bff910Cln t~ l L S'9nhflem (CCrMJ I Holwotb (.CONJ TlrN: 2:1).0 "~~IY tCDM~· -,, l~1f1~~07'10M' TL1r:: r;:._1. Si.MllM!l {COM! 2. HU01111 ICOMI ). J~ ICOMI Tl)ol:~ -I. N.-.omb tct>MI L W•lktr (COM,) J. Bledl. (COMI Timi: 1•0...) ·o Free -1. Krumd\Olt !COM) 1. ~ tCOMl J. Dwvw tCOMJ Time: J.t'Dil• ltMlt -I. Hlllm•n CCDMI 2. 8~-(C.0Ml S. E$1~ (El Tlint' l:.J Ftff Rell., -l. c:.or-det M•r IK~r. 8-rd. S!er'llltltm. llltck! Time: 3:11,7 '"' C_. ·1111 M• (.SI CUI lfi"' 2DD Medic., Jl.1111 -1. Clll'-Cltl M1r (l{emmtrlY, Miik~. M. O!!o, Loin) Time: 1:54.J 100 f rre -I. BOU!lhr., (COM} 2. l(rump1to11 lCOMl 1 M.orl!Qli.t !fl ri;.ie:F~~·'-I. 0 . Oflo (CDMI 2. Brown u;11 Holl CEI Tlmr: 11.l 1• lftdlvldull M.-!LeY -I. MUk!I 1f:0Ml,Je l(rvr;ril (COM) l. 8ulullf I 11.o T F1v' !.:0'i. M. orio (CDMl 2. WOl'ller (Ell. W1110f1 (f) '11mt: 51.1 lO<I Frtt -l. loll• ICOMl 2. O. 0110 fCOMl l. Mllk;ll ICOM) Time: ~J.t !CID Beck -I. Worst'r !El 7 .M. Olto ICOM1 l. PePC>i CE I Time: 1:1».6 -Frlf -l. 9-Mr CCOMI t. Bukofl (E1 l. Wlho11 (E) TIIN: 4;ot,I 100 llrt1U -1. Mnlc!I !CDMI t. HoC,Olike (COMt t Wtil IE) Tlmt: l: ~/xi] Fr•e Rile., -I. CorOlll dtl Mtr !O. Otto, 801111l\c.,, .:rumllho;llr, lollrl 11,.,.: J :31.4 '"' c...-ft! Mer IUI (II) l•I• 100 IMlll~Y 1111ev -1. eor-chi Mt r tPal!!w". JOr41n, S 1 I I• llv r Y . Dtvlet! Time: 1:46.5 200 Fret -I. Stlllburt ICOMl 2. Meulh11r..er IE) l. CIM ICOM) T!mt: 7 :~.2Free -•. Woolllllfllll ((OM) J. McCormkk tCOMJ l. Mc~I" tl!I Tl~: l~rYlltUtl Medlev -I. 0.Ylt• fCOMJ 7. P1lrner CCDMI 1 Wtrt tEI Tl~:Fl~D'! 1. McCormic:t fCOMI l Mvt llllouter (El ~-hWrlffll~I !COM> 11:o;'.' ~~:.,, -1. Stl!•bu"' IC0~\1 1, Jo•don {COMJ l. Ct>e ICOMI Time: jl;I, Btck -I. f'tlrner !CDMI 2. Otvle> tCOMJ l. Woolllhe.od (COM) T'W's~~., -1. Jordon (CDM) 2. MCCOWl!I lfl J. Coorier lCOM) Tlnie: J.!~ Frpt lteltY -I, CcrOf\I totl Mtr tWoodhted, MCCormkk. r.\1rlenth•I. CIMI Tllllr: 1 :~.( Llo11s•Anahelm Vt,-affr AMiii!"' un en) w11tm11t1tw !00 Mt-Ole., R1llY -1. Arlllltlm. Tl;;:: J~!!-• -I. ltosbor-"' (Al 1. H~""l"OJOfl \WI J, J-• iWl Tlmt: l:::.IFre.-1. Kfflll~ {Al 1. lllll• IW) l . ""'"'"''"" rwi l lmr: 21.• !00 lf'ldl.,.ltfVctl MedltV -1. SINO! CAI 7. Frt WllY \Al J. 8u•govne (W) llme: l:~i:1 -1. Tr"ne IWI 7. ~lMlhln (WI l .,t!1tr (Wl Polf'lh: 11.to 100 F!v -I. Arth IA) 1. Rose (Al 1. 811•110Ylll (WI Timi: $1,( 100 frtt - 1. 11:,al!~ (A} 2. Ke,._ "l"!ltor! (W} 3, 11••11!"0 IA\ Time: Ml.! 100 lllldt -I. ll),.brook (i,) 2. 11:..,_my IWI 1 0Wer11 (WI Timi: Slk, Frte -I. Rosborough l•I 2. li!Oll (Al l . J_. IWI Tlmt1 e:20.4 llO Brll'I -1. Smoal t•l 1. FrewleY (A ) 1 er1t'Clfme" IWl Time: 1:a4 a FrM Rtl•Y -I. M tMlm. l!mt: 3:36.• •1e1 Allllltllft (6•1 1\7) W•1lml"ll ... ofOCI Medin' RrltY -'-,t.ntlwlm Tl;::,,~:·~ 1. l 11hlll'olll< t•I ?. Heft (A) l . Hltd)oM lAl Time! 1:00.5 so F1tt -1. teonerlll 1•1 1. H•ldl !WI J. °'°""""" (WI Time: 1J.6 100 1ndMdu1I Medl1y -I. !«19" (•I ?, ~vmMrey IAI t Mevere CWJ Tlmt: 1 ''nl FlY -I. Smn~ tWl No stCO!ld or t!ll•C. nme1 1:2'.4 . 100 F'" -I. D1vtser. IAI !. ~uml't!r•Y (Al 1 0-Y (W} TllTlt: J1i:.0 Bid! -I. $olllt11 l•l 1. Murr1v Ho'"'"" Timi: 1:._1 «IO Free -I. l•lhbrook !Al 1. ~eff (A! t Hedlol" IA) Time: 4:1'., 100 8re•~I -1. l....,ard l •I 2. TMIM (WI l. P..ece (Al Tim~: 1:12.t fOO "'" 1tel1., -1. A111~r1r". Tlm1: )~ J.(.0 Swimmers Honored At Banquet Age group swlnunon . were honored Saturday at the Meaa Verde Country Club swim team awards banquet. Leading the llst of Individual honors were Larry Johnaon and Unda Johnson, who, were accorded. swimmer of the year laurels for boys and girll. ljodMdual awanh: Boy swimmer of the year - Larry John!on. Girt swimmer of the year - Linda Johnson . J\.1osl Improved swimmer (boys) -Jerry Wyatt. Most1 Improved swimmer (girls) -Trish Grierson. Most Valuable (boys) Mark a.tcCartln. Most Valuable (girls) Ellen Williams. l'ltmt Vahaable willtin age lfOGP Girls 5-6 -Jeanne Johnson. 7·8 -Kelly Robertls. S.10 -Lorie Schweitzer. 11-12 -Kathy Gerper. 13-1' -Jennifer Mllllrilng • 1~17 -Laura Manning. Boys ~-Lindsey Riley. 7-8 -Greg Jot?nson. 9-10 -Jeff l{reit.lu. t 1~12 -Peter Muhlhauser. 13·14 -Robert Webster. lf>.11-Ed Clifford. Basketball Standings High School Wrestling Vtfl!IY. Wtmfllllltlr Clll fM) Mtfll ff' M -•• Mtmbrllll tW) plnntlll Mtrmtn (M)1 1:4' C1n 106 -Elll.IM lWl 1ltt. Cl!_., (Ml; ... e!Klt lHI ri.-rt~te Alll Vllltr Wtsl~l~'"1' U71 Ut) AM!Mlm 5-~ll -PlnntY (W) plMtd THMll 'lOO Medley Reliy _ I. IE•t•ricle 100 Meif!llY lttll'I' -I. Wtl1Nilllttllr (Mh l :9t 12en"111, Lltt~ll. f'•trlne, L"! Tim•: ~w. '11111\pt. Slatl\lm, H•bf:r, Btll! ltl _ llll'l'll....,. fM) dtc. Hoort (Wlf l:S..J 1;f'~i!:·!_ l . Htber fW1 l. 11:,tl•t 9-l 200 Frtt -I. 1(1w1b. It!!) 1 l•l l. J. f'llUll'°' (W) Tl"'e: l :tl.I lltl -$(1ff!C ... (M) cite. Penni. (Wh It~!"'°" 1SAV1 l . Mc:Kelvtr CE! ~ FrM -1. Aker CAI J. lltth•m 1 U i lmt; 1 :os.~ tWI l. Chebrt IAJ Tim" 26.6 4i» -HOPlt!M tWJ WOii by llltft ul! .50 Fret -1. lenrielt (El ?, lH 4£1 ,_ •->•'"•OI Medlff -T. W. ''' _ •• , .. -(WI •1l'IMll ln\1111 J. •rv"td'>e (SAV) Tlmr: 15.l "" '"' "" -..,. •• JOO l""IYklutl Medll., -!. Kenl IEI 'Miil" (WI L Ctrmorit (W) Tlmt: (M.I' 5·'1 2. Willer (£1 l. 81,_le, llEl Timi : ''!!·1,.._ _ l. Htrt11" !Wl ?. C.rmoN 1Q _:. (ril (WI llllC. Coil• tMll 7·S 2:11.1 -,. 'II ll t 1$7 -LtHlll (W ) P!mttl V9!1 Se~ 100 FlJ -T. lllltll (£) 1. Ke"! (El IW! l. Al-1M (Wl me: · ln.,er fMll 5:'8 l. Yolgl !S•V) Titnii: 1:05,I 100 Fret -1. Alit• C•l '· Htblr (Wl ••• _ •o" (Ml 111«. Ml•l!Mr IWl: ,.. Fro• I l ' <\> > ). Joi!"'°" (W} Tlrnf: 1:00.S -•~ w -. •Al'l<I I . Ml a1dt -I, W. i-~l!l!o• !W) 2. Stll 6-0 Bru"•Cllt IS•Vl l . lee (IE! 1me: W> j' "' 1-_ Wtek• ~Ml plnnt'll Merrett 1:!4.S .I \Wl 3. Httmori I ,,.,., · '" 100 8tck -l. K~wtbt !Er t Wt!ler 511 e.rt&ll -1. li:Yr tl !•) j· !Utlht l'l'I (W\J ):19 (El 1. ll:011ln1011 ($.AV) TllN! 1:0'1.t fWl 1 Cllllbrt fA) TITM : l s. 1'4 -Boyd (Ml ftlnt'lld Frt"kl'lollll --< ';:: ( \'I ., 11)(1 Frtt lttle., -1. Wt1tm1Mter -1 '' -.. r!'I! - . llPI Mc,.,elYtY • >>>> ••~( (W)I : ( ·-M"" IE! J. TllcmPWll C Vl T "'!' l :]IDA fJatlll$0n, C«fr'IDnt, II Pl,"'~"" HV -Jol!MOll (M "' ...., 100 BrN•I -1, PrlrlN llEI 2. WlllY Tl..,t: 2:n.s tWll )•Of CSAVJ 3. lltrklev fEl Tlmt: l:tl.I ' hfllar Vtl'etff .,,:r:.,_F~rmc:R!~:r.s -1. S•n'• Ant wn•m!Mttr (oHJ nn M•rf•lr '"' ti -C.dorult (W) di(., H•rmori (tlMlrle un UPI Sert!• .. ,.. Vtlln Colleg1"ate IM\1 10.0 h JOO Mtdl•Y lht•v -l. E1!11'1CI• 106 -lot! (Wl pl"""' Woollltrd !M)I flo¥111Dtr. 01111\, lt•eOY, SoT>1llw<MMll 1·11 11"'t: ?:M.6 "ns -Alm•IOll (WI ~lt!Mlll l•k• 700 J.rt' -1. R llltftlrmt" IE) 1. H R fl CMh l!JO 8n>Wr> ($.r.VI l. Htlwn ($.AVI Tlmt: oop esu S In -MtVitrlllt (W) 'lll!llO JllCr i:;·'Frtc -1. t oYlnQ•r lli:I 2. Nol• (Ml; l :JO (El J. 1Hlll1>9rr (SAVI Tlmt o 21.S na -Z•v•lt (W) dee. Orr 1Mlr lM 100 11'Gl~klull Medi9Y -1. Nolrot DtYto<I ti, E••ler" Mk~. 11 1:16 -WIJlltn:ll.n (WJ llltc. s.t<Ktr lSAVl 1. Sm~llwoolll (f:I i. Htrt (El O.n~tr,.. Air l'Dl'CI" (Ml• 5.0 T!mf: 1:11.1 > U >O> <. M> O> 111 -C•llOWl'I' IWI lllrt" Smlttl 100 F!Y -1. 01v11 CEI 2. Grt~I !El Ho. Ar tOM • ' t ' nn (Mll 1·1 Nn '"lrd lime: 1·111. WMttlcr lit. Ct! Ttcll n 1q -limb CW) Ott. G1rnt1!1 IM}J .. 100 Frtt • 1 Sm•llwocld !El 1. liolY Cfllll ff, s arlntHeld. Ml", u '°' ·-V'•'• WO!dtu~r (SAY) J. Ollftwllk (IE) i<t _ 0¥t'11teel (W) dtc. 5•trte:ff l'"..it!IH Ut) (Ill Mbtitll ,.,.. l c;o::81~C:·'__ I Crl~I IEI 1• lovlfteer P'nwllllr"'" 51, SI. Jo!l"'I SI. OT fl,\\; J--0 10I Mlillle., lltlt.,-I. l'ootllltt. Tlfnl: itl 1. Morrlu !SAVI l!mt: 1:01.7 VIHt..-f M, S!. 80111;vr"!1lfe 62 16' -Loft (W) lli"l'lt'Cf APONrt (Ml l l :!;.f-,,.._,.L Culllf111 (F\2· Plnk•rhln 400 Fl'fl' -1. It. 8l1tttrm1" CEl 1. l'erll!Mm 15. Ntvy 6:1 2:1! 1,t)J. 91~ (MVI. lmtt i:tt.S. a row" tU.VI J, Otvli IEI Tlmt: li*l,l 111 -V.., Hult.ii (Ml plMtd Mllltr -'-,Wiii\.!~.> J, ~ IMV) J, 100 Br•~•I -1. Riffv IE) 1. •Ill· Mo Ctr. ts, Alhldft Ill Acllm 6J IWll J:" ), y,., ... ~ lrttrr (SAY ) No third Time: 1116,1 M'""'lenill S2 Du~• SO 191 •1ttc1orn (Ml cl« ll;Qtk (W)r p ~f IMdlf.,_1. l'ur"1tt fl'I 400 Ffil'I Itel.., - 1. $-11tl ,t.t11 -• ,., -• He ,.;CINI « Jlllrlll. Tirne: l"'·'· Vt!lt'I' TllT>ll 11 ltltn Cltm-9l. f'urlMn '1 HV _ Ovt lltrti 1.Y.I dfC. Ht"ley Dl'o1l'll-:-1· He1~Vltl',~i, ~ .. llMle (Ill CKI lnfll ..... \ltlltf" Se. c ... II, Vt. 1~11 54 IW11 M 1,:_I l-w~'Zi.r CP:i 2. wl:."-1,;;;;;;iiiiiiiiii;ii;;oii;ii,;iiiii;;iii;i;;;i;;;ii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iio.,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ ·~~ .. Ni:."'1;111.w~~r:.iim,"' (Fl .:i. ...... r (MV . Tlnw~ n~ ff) J 1• :r'kf;lj :~uwtk#I (M 1: 100). • ,_,, C19'111N Cl"I t . '""""°" .,~..., ~~1. ~1""'1r1~;Altldlka (MV) Hrf~f: ~di,"'~· .. ::'.L ,.. . . ~" (JI) Air Ml• ..... \llt.. . ttt INdtlY -.i..,_1, FoolllUI. TltM: h r •, HlmftlN" !Fl t. WllMll ~~'''"' I, I'") I. "_. (Fl MY) l 1. " a-111:1 . ..,~ l!J?::.'· ~,., •• """' « ( . ""' ..... .. ~1 1,: I. {MVI I. Wtlle, !. !'f"!I ICLl li:tY.wr ONC E A YEAR CLEARANCE SALE Just 2 More Days SAVINGS IN ALL DEPARTMENT SPECIAL HAND TAILORID 2 PANT SUITS .$s9so ,,, ; ~~· '~V}fj'i~t.::..1.t,1 (#IV), Tll' I •119!\'!L I. SK# l''~"-~I, ~ ; :i~~o HAllOI ClNTll e JJOO HAI.IOI e COSTA MIU rJ?-' H1rt1e:k. '*'. MON DAY, THUllllDAY, ,klDAY TILL f ,.M.\ ~-.., ""'--Ph. _., Open • Kinta Chu·90 Tod•y n:;, r.m" ,.;;;. -•. '"""'·L..;;;;;;;;;;;;;;...;... _____ ....;. __ .... ______ .;;;..~-"'': I Orange Coast Area Golf: Highlighted by Tourneys Golfer of the )'ear honors have been determined at two Orange Coat ma COl1f1el in the put week and a myriad of tournament.a for· .both men's and ladlet' clubs hlgbll&h\ the area golfing picture. Cent• Ille•• A 2Z handicap golfer who has been ploying i..-. than three YW'l la the c...ta Mesa men's club goUer of the year for 1969 after winnlna: an 1~ hole compeUUon from 11 other monthly champion&. Jllll Barnes fired a 95-22-73 tof,aln the coveted tille. &ck Blackketter fired a 74 to win low gross honors in a men's sweeps over the week- end. Jack ValMel< hod a 11 for low net honors followed by Gary Horton and Bill Wallace with 72s and Fred Ensburg wtlh a 73. , The Costa Mesa.men's club Sunday team defealed Los Alamlloo, 33·15 . Jn a ladies most pars toumameat, f\.fe.1llee Dungan had 12 to gain first place. Vi HoskJns and Mary Evelyn Imler each had 11 to tie for the runnerup spot with Gerry Watson next In line with JO. In a best ball partner, blind draw tournament, first place was won by Gerry Watson and Nadine Maze with a 69. Vi Hosklns and Merrilee Dungan tied with Fran Lewls and Hazel Web!iter wJth 708 for the runnerup position. The ladies will bold a guest day Moriday, Feb. 9 with president's cup play listed on three dates. March 9, 13 and 18. Pro Jack Saenz wtll conduct a beginner's golf class that runs for six weeks beginning Saturday. The class is a mixed affair and Includes equipment and golf balls for $18 per person. Each of the sl10 seasioru--will last for one hour. Lag1111a Niguel Harry Hilke and Bob ?r1arvin combined talents to fire a low net score of 62 to win a men's partners best ball tournament at Laguna Niguel over the weekend. Marvin, in additlar.1 to playing on the winning team, also paired with Oscar Kum· mer and Harry Godwin in separate entires to gain a dou· ble tie (or the runnerup spot at 63. In a mixed best ball tourna· ment held Sunday, Mr., and Mrs. Frank Leensvaart had a 63 for first place. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Shaw took second with a 64. A tie resulted for third place with M a r i o n Au s nes s and Frank Leeosvurt on one team and Mr. and Mrs. Wl1115 Carpenter on the other at 66. Seacllff In a ladies day criss-cross tournament held Tuesday at Huntington SeaclHf G o I f Course, competition was divid· ed Into two filghts. Winners in the first flight in- cluded Cuba Curl, Shjrley CUmmero, Liz Brandenberg and Rosemary Erickson. Second Oight winners in- cluded Cay Durham, June Fit4 tin, Polly Browning, Olah rttorgan, Roberta Andrews and Jean Brown. Jllesa Verde A best ball of foursome tournament at ?t1esa Verde Golf Course was cut short by •lack of daylight Sunday aft~ 13 holes. Winnefs included fl.tr. and 1.trs. Don Crowell and Mr. and Mrs. H. Crallhton with a score ol 43 for the 13 holes. In the runnerup position, Bob and Shirley Kinder team· ed with Edward and Blanche Cicourel to card a 44. Third place went to Je"rry and Marge Hayes teamed ·with Paul and Louise Robinson at 45. Bu1atlngto11 Beacl• In a partner's best ball breakfast tournament at Hun· ttngton Beach Goll Coune, Jim Sommerville and D. Cowden teamed together to card a 58 for championship honors. Foor teams, composed QI' one old and one new member, tied ror the second spoL 'llley included : Herb Day and An'c Millica ; Buck Jordan and Bill Rardin ; Doc Wllllarru and Gary Chaney ; and B 111 Perkins and Matt Inouye, each team with a 59 • Santa Ana Santa Ana Counlry Club I• currenUy in the process oJ detennining president'll cup winners In the ladies club and the three divisional seniors champions for the men's club. In both events, first round matches are still being played. 1912 HAUQI ILYD. COSTA MISA D•lty 10.t e s.t. t-6 ••rlkAllllt'ktril • MtJt ... QI ..... J·ONES TIRE SERVICE 2049 HARBOR ·BL VD. (at Ba.y) Long F 0 NYLON CORD I R COSTA MESA $ 540-4343 646-4421 ' 95 ' ' I , i;;:.._ -~ ~ • Good traction and skid resistance • Super-Syn rubber compound for more tread wear, better mileage SIZES 855 x 15 845 x 825 x 15 15 815 x 15 775 x 15 670 x 15 ALL MAJOR CREDIT CARDS BRAKE RELINE 40,000 MILE $ 9S GUARANTEE _ • Export Workman1hip • Quality Repl1cemtnt P1rt1 e Spo<11I Low Prtc11 Gua r :.:a.ntee . All l Cara ~ ExCOfll Olaes ' • 2049 Harbor Blvd. (11 lliyl Costa Mt ... Phona: .140-434.'1-646-4421 • • "' ........................................ """"'""""""'"""""""'"''""'"""'"""""" ..................................... ""' .... "' ............................... ~ ... ~~ .... ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--.....,.._._.. ... ~.~·-----··----~:~~~~~~~~~~ ' WHAT'S IN- OUTDOORS? Tbe return of the sun and cJear skies has brought the .fish from their hiding places and anglers are catching nice stringers or trout, bass and crappie at most of the Jakes reporting. . The trout plant at Vail Lake last weekend produced good fishing. The largest trout taken over the weekend \Vas a live-pounder netted by Ray Dunlap o! Stanton. Dunlap "'as trolling a bottom-bounding plug when the brute hit in Bayou Bay. The George Lobaugh's of Newport Beach and their grandson David caught Cull limits or trout to two pounds on spinners. Bass and crappie fishing also picked up ~ Vail Lake. 'Many nice lintits of bass to !our pound s were weighed in by anglers using rubbe'r 'vorms and deep running plugs. Crappie "'ere active in some areas and hititng on yello\v and white feather jibs. Another load of S,000 pound s of trout will go into Vail Lake in mid-February. For boat reservations and in· formation p~onc (714) 676-46ll . Action Good at Lake Be11d1a1c Anglers fishing Lake Henshaw are finding good aC:tlon on b1s1 and crappie. Bass are hitting in about 2S feet of water near the northeast end of the lake and the crappie are being picked up by drift fishermen. Channel catfish were slowed down a bit by the cold :Weather of a few weeks ago. Report& indicate they have :-<0me back to life and are hitting cut mackerel in the : ~"P channels and the area near the dam. :· Closer to home, Irvine lake continues to provide trout ; men with plenty of action. H. Serizawa of Huntingt~ Beach hu fished the lake three times since it openect and has limited out on trout each tim1, using a special .chfese bait he prepares at home. Other anglers are picking up nice strinj?ers or trout on salmon eggs, TNT. marshmallows. and flashy 1..,,res. Fishing, Hunting Briefs The 1969-70 bag ot waterfowl 0i1 Calilornla's public hunting areas was up 33 percent' from lhe previous year, the Depart. ment or Fisll and Game reported tod1:1y. A record 103,444 hunters utilized the 14 stale and federal areas on which the l>t'G managed shooting during the season wtuch ended Jan. JL ' They bagged 200,&YI ducks,• 12,494 geese , and s.~9 coots, a total of 218,660 birds, for an average of 2.1 birds per hunter. During the 1968 season, 96,411 hunters bagged 164,314 birds for an avf'_rage of 1.7 per hunter. • The Grizzly Island and Me~ dola state wildlife areas had the best duck shooting, with l-"1ill""'• hunters taking 43,484 ducks at Griuly and 27 ,857 at Mendota . ., 'l'he Sacramento N a t i o n a 1 \Vildlife Refuge produced 5.891 ~ geese for hunters, more than •· .~ three times the total of second ., "' place Delevan NWR \Vith " J,886 Hunters at the San Luis \Vasteway stale area had the highest average at 2.6 birds per hunter , followed by the San Luis NWR at %.5 and Sacramt>nlo and Delevan at · 2.4. NICE CATCH -John Lansaw, skipper of the Frontier, out of Art's Landing, Reports from anglers in-holds 17-pound \Yhite sea bass caught by Ida \Villiams (right) of Manton. dicate silver salmon planted in ____ _,_ __________ .::_ _ _:_ ______ :_::__:_ _______ _ Lake Oroville last spring have : Bass are slo\v to bite and only experienced anglers are t>icking up these J?;ame fresh water fighters. Anglers ;fishing the drop offs and deep channels are getting the :f.ass to hit on \Vorms and very deep running plugs, but ~he bass are running only to about four pounds. When 2-he water warms up a few degrees the bigger ~ronzebacks will start to move. '!-A fe\v nice crappie and catfish are also bei ng caught. :put the action on these two warm 'vater sp~cies is rated .very slo\v. gotten excellent growth and are pulling up good battles for fishermen. the Department of Fish and Game reports. One angler returned a $S reward tag taken from a 3- pound, 3-ounce, 2 0 ~~ -i n c h silver that was among 50,000 scve,1 to nine inch fish planted during April of 1969. · Lightweigl1t Hoop Results Scle111.lflcnll11 Cu11gl1t Fish ' Today more eiid more fresh and salt water anglers The DFG said recent reports •re relying on the latest in electronic fishing equipment indicale the fish are feeding :lo help them catch more and bigger fish. This is true not near the surface on threadfin "4mly for the commercial fisherman but also for the she d planted in the big tportsmen. reservoir. and fishing should • be excellent during the winter .• Ed Miiier of Costa Mesa has d~veloped a new elec· and early spring. tronic aid which should help all fishermen catch more During February more than ~ish. Miller is the president of Sea S.nsors, Inc. of Costa eight tons of c~chlng-size . Mesa •nd he manufactures a temperature reading in. rainbow trout from Willow ''.Jtrument which tells you at what dep_th of water you are-e ea:ctlNatlonal Fish Hatchery ,most likely to cetch fish. 11•111 be stocked in the Arizona- Nevada section of t h c Colorado River be l ween Hoover Dam and Bullhead Ci- ty. 11\arlftl U7) 81l'Ooll (21 Sll'ldrr' (11) &vii fi ll Miller 1111 Rew1!d! (121 ' ' ' G G (4ll Aftllttlm UI Mc.Cull<ly U) G1rrttt If) l.1119SOll !ti 1111<111 Ill Shc><IM S<:or11111 wb1: Mlrln.I -W1911er ' li1Unmt: M1rlM 2'1·11. I I MOHlll Uri (&l) l.ltuNI Fol'°" CO) F N~•wtrider Ill) Gc~r no F w1111....ii nci Whitt !lAl c J1m!1011 !ti lOll$ (2JI G Corwin ()111 1 leoroe UJ G Glll&SPll (i) sc:orl1111 11.jbl: El Modt!M -Wt•.,.•1 •. WIHmo11 •. l.11u,,. 8eoct>--Pol~t1n . ' ·: It is commonly kno\vn that both salt and fresh water '.tish have a temperature in which they are most active _find prefer to teed in. It is not the same for all game fish and this is why this temperature gauge is so helpfuJ to ~nglers. If you can find the ri)?ht temperature at the -ri~ht depth, then your chances for a successful fishing .trip are improved. : Miller h a s "'ritten an information sheet on \Vater .jemperatures and their effect on the habits of fish. For a ·:copy send a self addressed stamped envelope to Sea .:Sensors, Inc. 1240-D Logan Ave ., Costa Mesa. The special cool season held the past two weekends on the li•1"1""' El Moden• ~. l.111un1 1 Be~cil 3'. I Department of Fish a 'll d R"u1111Dn: 10.111. Game's linperial Wildlife Area -:::;::"=' =o="='="m:;::":;::"=·'='·:;::=----=-=-=. at the !outheast end of Salton .- '.: Sea w" a complete success, BOAT BUFFS FLYING FUN! by WAYNE CHASE Ojd _ypu kno.,. tli1t th1 pri. vii• pilot i11 1 lillle 1i119la .,,._ 'i"'• T•i-P1c•r h11 •• mud• ri9ht lo 1irsp1ce 11 1 7077 Htr&in li11 the problam: A1 ih1 1ir fiU1 with "'ore pti· ·••h pilot. •v1ry d.,y, l1w~ for 1ir l1tffie con9e1tio n m111l bt improv1d. Thi non-profr,. 1io"1I pilot 1hould l1k1 1dvt ft• 1•91 of 1w1ry 1id in lr.,fl;c eon lrol f1tilitit1 lo• hj1 o ... n 11f,1v ind the 1•f1ly of othar ,;,,,.,,. thue -ti9lih •r• not !rolled. con· Alw1y1 rrpod y11ur pa1i· lion lo t\.1 eonlr ol lower b1- fo11 lftd durin9 your •p· pro1ch. Alw1y1 ••ep 1ltr l ror oth1r 1ircr1ft. Altrl r11po"1iblt fly in9 rt1t1 with tht pilot. At HARIOI AVIATION wa tfttr ine llMll cllrb t•ln In Or•n•• C1un· ty. '•lw•lt pl~ ctwrw SHJ, Ctn- na Uf 1nty tt.H 1n -·· Clo•"'~'' lit l<llY 111.J~. !Wiii en~lnt APlth• ''' 111 hf.wr. Wt !Iller flM ti-I tlr· crtlt, lflllrvertn 1n4 r1tn 11 NAI· ao• AVIATION, JUI 'lll••MI' Avt .. 144-1100. 0"" l"'m Mlflrlll 19 IM,._ Mt Ollly. "lrlntl lot l\lr Cllv,,... ""' t•I l'IY• 111 1111n1 11r anly U.llO". reports indicate. Almo11 Loek•b•v i1 +~• 011lv The -tw1>-weekend hunt full-tim• bo1ti119 •ditor wor~i"' WATCH NEXT .. Bont Race Sci ,.,,. Vnil Lake Thursdl.Y, January.2', 1~70' DAJL Y PILOT 2a LEGAL NOTICE LEGAi, NOTICE removed 3,534 coots and ended on 1ny 11•w.p1p1t in Or•"t• : This weekend Vail Lake will host the Southern their excessive depredation on County. His ••elu•'"• .e""•••t• ..... ,; ... , •ctio". WEEK FOR LEGAL NOTICE ~alifornfa Outboard Assn. fifth point race of 1970. The green fields of grain grown of bo•tln9 ind y1chh"'i "1w1 How'"''· th e ri9hh to th1 BASICS OF l"-lSflt A1 !ht p1•form1nc1 of li9ht 1irc r1fl improvt1, the 1~ill1 11f priv1ta piloh mu1t 1110 improva. Grelol1r vi9il· tnc1 11 vil1I now th1t timt i1 bri,f b1tw••" 1i9htin9 ttld .;..ace will last for two d"ys and competition will be keen especially for geese \\'intering. ~ILO~~i\y fiitur• of th• DAILY ;~: 1~{ ~~~"·~::i!:'~0111 :j0~;:; NAVIGATION CEJIT~i'i~~~~u~,.N~'at"Ess ... s more than 80 entries have been made. The •a•e wo'll in the area. t ~~~~!~~~~==::::::iiiiiiii~.1 The vndersig.....i dee• cct1UY M 11 Cot>-, "'GAL NOTICE • iiiiiiiiiii!!!!iiiiiiiiiiiiii ducti1111 I bys!"u 11 41 Ef'I 17!~ SI~ ~ ;be set up so that it will not interfere with the fishermen cos11 ww, c111fo!'n11. 111111..-""' "°'1 ------==,,------ h !ltiovs Urm nll'!T>e Ill AV()N D"APE 1"4't1t 'On f e lake. CLEANERS •nd ltlal 111d firm b COtTt-CIJITIP:ICATI 0,. aUllNllS 811bcut 01• Fox Ga1nrn11teed : This past \veekend this \vriter spent t\vo days in the :mountains above Delano in quest of either a bobcat or :/ox. Joe Orth. a licensed 1?\lide in the area. has been suc· :Cessfully ba1?giniz varmits for hun tin g parties for the _!.past slx years. The best' time for bi s hound s1 to track :these garne varn1its and trophies is no\v 'vhen the :ground is \Vet from rain or snowfall. :. Our party of four hunters becan1e as exci ted as the dogs "'hen the hou"nds picked up the first scent and let ~ut their ho\\•ls . The chase was on. and aft er treeinj!: the 'ffox: t\\•ice and hiki ng over the hills for 2'h hours. Orth .finally called the hounds off. ,,,. Hunters have the option of killing the game or letting ~the treed a nimal live to become a more cunning varmit. ;Orth guarantees that each hunter "'ill bag either a bob- :Cat or fox and if a hunter fail s in hi s firs! altempt he :!flay return again. on an unbooked "'eekend. :· Orth boasts an 80 percent success on the first trip and :~a 95 percent successful hunt on th e second trip. The ~uide service includes a horse. food. lodging Rnd jeeo. ._optional service includes delivery or the trophy to the 'taxidermist . , ._ tr you have thoughts of hanging up your guns for the 'season, don 't forget that the varmit season is just :reaching its peak. For mo~ infonnation on Orth's hunt, J!llone. (213) 443-6415. evemngs only. INSTALLED CHAIN-LINK FENCING · Basketball Backboards 12.95 & 14.95 Basketballs 4.95·5.95· 7.95-10.95-12.95 Wilson Leather Basketballs Converse All Star Basketball Shoes Collegiate Basketball Shoes 19.95 8.95 11.95 Basketball Goal & Nets 3.95 & 5.95 Champion Handball Gloves 3.95 to 6.95 Outdoor Handballs Indoor Haildballs ' ' YolleybaUs Playgroond Balls Soccer BaNs BasebaO Shoes Soccer Shoes Track Shoes • 95c each 1.10 each 2.95 • 8.95 • 12.95 1.59 & 3.25 • 9.95 3.95 to 19.95 15,95 . 19.95 8.95 & 14.95 12.95 • 13.95 • 19.95 Rawlings Baseball Mitts • 5.95 to 42.95 • '1 Wilson -Dunlop Rackets Tennis Tennis Dresses Ladies Tennis Shorts Mens T enriis Shorts Mens Tennis Sllirts Ladies Tennis Shoes • Davis -Bancroft 4.95 to 46.00 13.95 to 26.95. 7.95 & 10,95 4.95 to 12.00 4.95 • 6.00 . 7 .00 7.25 & 7.95 Mens Converse Tennis Sh.oes 7.75 Mens Jack Purcell Tennis Shoes -. 8.95 Duck Feet Fins-Blemish 6.95 pr. Duck Feet Fins-Regular . 8.95 pr. 3.95 ~. 4.95' • 5.95 . . Masks Snorldes 95c • 1.95 • 2.95 Speedo Swim Suits & Trunks Ping Pong Paddles 95c to 7.95 Table Tennis Sets 5.95 to. 11.95 ·oartlioards -Darts Bikes -Parts -Tires -Tubes ' I pOHij or ""' lollowlng _.....,, who.e ,ICTITIOUS N.IMI ftllr>e In full 11111 11l1ct or reslNnce II I I Tile uMltrlfflned dPet Cffllh ht Is ~­lollowl: duefln1 I Mlntsl 11 lo:l' llYlklt Or., Ch1r1H F. Porter. 114'! C lu1ro. N-JOrt Seidl, c1nm1111. Ulldtl' thtl lie· G~rdirn Grove, Caltlarnlt 1ltlovs n"" ...,,,. 111 TliE l"l!OOLEJI .... D1ffd J110u1rv U, 1f10 llllf 11ld firm II compened of tlM folllw-~ C~arltt F. Por!tr 1119 ~. whole n1m1 In fvll incl 'llct STATE O .. CALl!<ORNIA or rttlM!w:t !1 '' lollowl: ORANGE COU11TV : 01ltd J1...i1ry lt, 1t10. On J1r1t1arJ u, !91C, t•tg•• ""'' • "°"'Id fl. k1um11 NOllN Pub!lc I" 1"<1 fo• s.ald Stale, $1119 orC1Hlornl-. °''"" CounlY : peri<)nllfV apptare!I Cn;wlu F. Po..,rr On JanuMY It, 1t70, befvrt mt, 1 kncwn to mt lo Ile I~ PC<.lOl'I whofl HotlN l"llbllc; In -for Mid ,...,., n1mt !1 sutHcrlbl'd to lllt wllllln In· penot11Uv 1~1rtd Jlon11d JI. klllfT'• strumen• 1nd 1(k...iwled1fd ne e•oteultd kMIWrt "' me "' be tr.1 --Wflllt• !hp itme. 111me 11 wbKrlbed to !tit wtlllln In. CD!llclet Se~11 11,.,,m1nt 1"1 1ck.-IRltied 111 l'lltcuteu M1rv k. Henrv Ille 1111me Not1rv Put>l'c . Calitornl• IOFFICt.i.l. 5EAI.) Prlncl1>1 I Ofltce tn Mt•He M, erunlM Ort,,.,e Counl'I" Nol1rv l"llfl!lc Mv Commti11on E~plres Slife 111 Cilllornl• Mov. 14, lt11 Prl"d"I Olflct '" l'ubllshed Or1111e COis! Oallv Piiot, Oranoe COl.IMl'I" J1n111rv U, :n, :I' 11\d FebrulN S, MY CDITll'llulofl E.ulres lt10 72·10 $t:P1"'1'1bet 1, tfJt -___ L_E_G_A,L=N~011~_C_B_· ___ 1 l"uti111hed 0.111!:1~~'' 0111' '"'""• l"-3S"' l~'lllltV f.I, 2' Ind FtbrUl/"1' J. 1!, Cl:flTll'ICATf 01' IUS INl!SI 1110 lt7·l't l'ICTITtD\11 N.lMI! Tnt 11nc1t .. 1.,ne11 c1Ms ce•""" '"' is eon. LEGAL NOTICE dudlll\I 1 bu1 lnt1t 11 660 W. 11111 Sl.,i-----~~=~==--C01l1 Mn1, C1llhlrnt1. llllder the fk· S\/Jtl!JllO" COUl:T OJ' TM• ltlklu1 firm n1mt of M A II: I 0" STATe O' C.ll.IJ'OJINIA 'Oil lll:E'NC HING CO. Hlf tlllt wld fl"" II THI (OUWTT 0,. OllAM8 ~ or "'' 1o11ow1nt IPf!""IOtlS. wtiou NI. lr4Ml:I . ••1tntt Ill, f\ltt Incl Pl<lct ..,, mldltu trf NOflCf OP: Ml:.IJllNO 01' ,..,.ITIOM II lollowl i ,OJI "ll0U.Tf 0,-WIU. AMO L'Olt Oolltlrlll M. Ind l.ll!11n E. ~-· ,... l.fTTl:l"S TllTAMINTA,RY O.k St .. Clll(lt1 Mui. C1Hlarnl1. Et.lits ot lvtr.irr Dow JI. Mirr, oeu. .. 011ft1 JM, 14, Im. IO. Oon&!d H. S-fl NOT1CI! IS HEJl.EIY OIVl!N T,..t .hill& l.UHlft E. ,_ lit Mirr hll llltd herelll I "lltlD" '°" Slllt or Ctlllomll. 0r'"91 CouflfV: lll'tlblM ,, "'II lfld for IMullltt crf l.tt .... , Oii J1nu••r '" 1'70. before me, 1 THll.....,11rv kl l"ftlll-r, ,,,.,.tMI too Hol1rv Publle I" 1nd fer wld St•fe. whldl II midi IOr lilrllltf" tNl'fkvllra. 11111 "'t0n•tl'¥ fPN••IO Oon11d H. StMOll ~ "''' fM 11me 11111 Jt11e• or Mtr1111 ttte um111 E. II"'°" lrl'IO'lil> to "'* to 111 "" ,.,... 11&1 hen "' for frlllr111ry n. 1t111, .,.,_ wlloH ,......, 1r1 subKl'fbtd to 11 t :)ll 1.m., In lhtl courlrOOlll crf O..rl• lf\t w!!Mn 11151rvmenl 1nd eckllOWleC!led """' Ho, 3 of uld CDUrt, 11 lOO (Iv ie lhev nec~ltd tne 11me. Cfl'ler Orlvr w111. In Thi Crtv If Sa11t1 (OFF ICIAL SEALI .I~~. C1lltornl1. Mfry K, Mtlltr D1tld Jenu1ry H. lt7', Not•"' l"lltlHO-C1nw .. 11 w. I!. &T JOHlf. Cotmtf Cltf~ P:rlnc:l111I Ollltl 111 Lltl-JI. Min" , D"""" Counl'V Hf S.U!!t l11t111 Vl!.11 llr.U Mr CommlHlon E11lr11 lurN•. C.llftttllt flMJ · NOY, It, 1,12 Ttl: ftlJ) l'lf·Mlt l"ublli.hed 0•&'19r Cot1I Otll'f Plitt, Alllr"' tw P:llll5-J•n111r' 1S, U. 211 Ind Fl-tlrlltr' S, Pvblli.lled Orlf!tt Cotti 01111' Pllfl, 1f10 1WCI Jl-rY 2t. 211 Incl F•....,.r't. lf1116WO LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE ri::'.lil•--~l(ti~>!;'~~?':~"-·:-•!:""'7~':'"1"7"""' ., ........... ~,...,..,....,,......,.,..., ___ .... ....,. _ _..,... ____ ....,, _____________ ,,...,. __ ,~------~-~------·--··---· ... .... -- , f I 1J1 DAILY I'll.OT s '-· ...,,....., 2'1. 1970 Year Money's Worth Some Ho spitals Fight Costs 117 IYLVL\ POllTER !'Nrl lo • •rt.. " 0 .. 1 We m, of course, dolng ao.me ~ to rtduc8 or at 'lust to •low down the soaring "'""' " hospital .,. ... • For lmtanct, mOJt hospitals ~ have turned lo such nurse-uv. lnc (ICJ.Uties a! recovery roomt: and intensJve care unlts in whlch skilled nursing care . a n d sophitticated medical equlpmtnt are concentrated. , These facUWes help slash the need for murderously ex· pensive private nursing in in-. dlvldual rooms. MANY HOSPITALS are h1· corporati~ "progressive pa- tient care' -t ai lor ing medical suvica to the actual aeeds of each individual pa. • tient. Some patients need only • diagnostic care which ca.n be • conducted o u t s l d e the ,"hospital; others oeed Intensive · .survelllan~ by h o s p i t a I personnel, still others can best :be tak!n care of in lhe.ir own ··homes with the help of special · equipment a n d occaaional vlslts by hospital personnel. . Progres.sive jlatient c a r e allows more economical use of .a hospitals most costly skills and facilities. Computers arr, as you might etped., being used on a mounting scale to slash costs and save ptteious time. As Illustrations: In several New Orleans hospitals, a com· puterized menu p I a n n i n g system has not only reduced by 95 perce.nt the time needed ror planning menus but also has achieved savings or 16 percent on raw food costs. In the Chicago area, 16 hospitals LEGAL NO'l'ICE LEGAL NO'l'ICE ClltTl~ICAtl!! OI' •Ut1N•ll have aet up a computerized blood bank lnfQf'matlon isyatem 'A'hicb can locate raw blood dooors in 20 seconds And which reduces blood sp0lla1e by 2.500 pints a year -for savings of fl(l,000 annually. In Sall Lake City. the Latter Day Saint$ llospltal has developed an elaborate six-hospital heart tnonltoring system in which a com puter c ontinuou s ly monitors post~perative heart pallents. There are now over J.000 "central serv ic e bureaus" with computers to tlo record-keeping chores for hospitals. MORE AND MORE hospitals are turning lo disposables in all areas to help trim costs. At Doctor s' ffosplta l In San Diego, meals are being served in illrow· away tray . sets in an ex- perlmentaJ cost reduction pro- gram. P r'e ·a d m I sslon testing (PAT) is a basic cost-cutting technique being adopted by an expanding nUtnber of hospitals to make more efficient ~ of bolh hospital space a n d hospital equipment. With PAT, test! can be scheduled -often several days before admission -on days and at hours best for hospital and patient. Blue Cross is OO'cf giving PAT a big push by agreeing to pay for certain outpatient diagnostic tests. One in three Blue Cross plans will pay for such visits today. PAT OFFERS key benefits: slowing of health insurance rate increases: freeing of hospital beds for those who urgently need them; reduction in the need for additional, cos-- Uy hospital !aciUUeJ: reduC· lion ln the amount of work- lime lost by patients through hos pllalization; convenient scheduling or diagnostic tests so that they do not interfere with · the patient's job and home responsibilities. Also indlcattve : a Melrose, Mass .• hospital has launched a "surgical day care plan" in which a patient needing on1y minor, uncomplicated .surgery can check i.d during the morn- "FAITH" IS AN UTIA INGllOllHT PG&E Earnings Comple~New York Stock List "'" ..................................................... _.., ___ .,.,.. ......................................................... -~--~-~-~------·---~----.......-"T'--·---...... -···-_,..,. ......... ··-··-.· . . ·""""' ,1'70 DlllY Pl~DT • Complete Closing Prices -American Stock Exchange List ' I ST. LOUIS (UPI) • ?itonsanto Co.'1 c1pitaJ a- pelldlW... this ytar wlU · IJo alloat SIOO million, compared>. with t110 ml!Uen In 1 .. , chairman Charle-1 H. Sommv said TUeJday. 11tt t• ll·r ptndlt\I,.. iplln.d !ram •tis millloll tht prevlow year. MINNEAPOLIS (UPI) Ap•ehe Corp. anllGUll<td tri •l>P•r•nt llft' oil dl1covuitt in lht Hlfhiqht I I 1 I d lit· C1mpbell Councy, Wyoml.,. II they bear out lnlUil t1- pectat1ona, Apache will haYt broufht in four succt'8ful wells in the HlfhUfhl field within • year. One or the tut wells drilled f1owtd at • bar· relt a day and tht olhtr al aao barrels a day In early tt.sts. NEW YO~K (UPI) -· American Electric P o wt r Sy8Uim has annoul'ICN a ncord <Olt!lnldlon budfet .C $480 mUllcri for 1170, an lft. cre1111 of about $15 mJIUon from the elllmat.td ouU'Yt for lllff, Of the !t!O l<>lal, '2111 mlllloft wtll 10 f~ "" 11n1rattn1 capacity, t 1 Sa, mlJUon for LransmJ11,1on llnea and the rest for mlscellailftus projtct.1 • <I f • I' I ... .J • . D.t.tt.Y·"'*"'~ ..... ·MERCURY MAN WORKS OUT NEW SAVINGS INTEREST PERCl!,.TACJaS LHMrd Sh•n• Puts Emph••i• on Hum•n ApprNch tel ' lu1lhn1 Mer~ory on Way IJp: · ; ' President Stresses Community Ser'vi:C'~ By TERRY COVILLE Of ,,,. fl•llr "'"' ll•tf Leonard Shane is a modest chap but don't k!t him kid you. He's the man that's made ritercury Savings into ooe .of the natioo's fastest growing savings and Joan operations. He'll t.en you the success of Mercury Savings lies in its persmmel -not in one man. And he's right, e1cept for ig- noring the fact that he is responsible for the quality of pel"50lll"El working there. It's Shane's own humanistic philosophy applied to business that makes both of Mercury's branches, Huntington Beach and Buena Par~ click. "CommunHy service has made us successfu~" pro- claiins Shane, who sils as preSident, managing officer and chairman of the board of ... Mercury Savings. J7 PERCENT INCREASE For proor ot his success cheek a few figures for 1969. Alercury Savings gfew 37 per· an\ on its savings accounts while other S&L's were lucky j( they didn't Jose. "We grew more than any othe.r ·Savings and Lo a n JnsUtution in the nation," said Shane. ••we attract a lot of local support because of our com· munity orientation," he added. -.. i. where Sballe11 laceJ .b~ a 1ttiie ,boyPnJ• jn light$ with prlde.1 H1a ;roof Wtt.h 37 cents and want~ to that a busines.s can be open an account. One of our humanitarian. · Emphasis is placed on com-tellers took f his money. and munJty involvement and the opened it for biln: 1 • • way Mercury e m p I o y e s "The boy left~ ~ 10 participate in community af. minutes tater a man ciine into fai rs and how they treat the office, .with .the· boy trail. customers. ing behind.' He demanded ~to Built into both Men:ury of-know who had opened his Socl'1 fices is a community room. account. • Groups ranging from weight "Everyme was a little shook watchers to boy scouts use it. up, but they ei:plaJned wbat The Yl!CA in HunUngton happened. In a minute he Beach often use,, the room for smiled, said 'thank you,' and various classes. promptly transferred $10;000 Shane, himself, spent IOll'le from another place to . ours time on the board of trustees with the explanation that or the Ocean View School anyone who would take such District and was once a Pony good care of a little boy's Lea~ baseball coach. money, ~Ld Sllfely do the Corrummity service ls ·also same for his."·· the byWoni of Mercury sav-In stark tipes Mercury inga",11vtifcs and Joan opera-. Savings .is ~t yet a giant in tp. "Molt,of our savings ac-the industn. It was founded ~ta pt small ones. We on April 10 •• ~9!64:, with a $! doil~ after big accounts -million ca~ and nine of course we don't turn them backer!. Now Its capitalization down," he explains. t.fost is $17 million with stock on the loans are made to home open marb:l owners or small contractors. "Our nei:t steps will .. pro- "We just don't ·ae"t involved id bably concentrate on·•cquirlnc backing major prof~·~ ~m· other-small savings and Lou inat1Wtior11,'' said Shane. SMAIL ACCOUNT BUt whatever t h e future He likes to tell one stori · may bfina:, Shane emphasizes which he: feels, explains the.· U\at : !tfercury Savings will aucceS!I of Mercuiy SaVtngs. stand by its policy of total "One day in our Buena Park community involvement. lig .Jlepair Bills Laid Ttt l)etroit1 ~,1,.v-.:Jo,000 Norton Sinwn ' WAsHilllGTON (UPI) The·~-~. tired of paYfn1 clolms of Moving to East several 1'1,lndred 'Clollars for f·~-·11.·­up ·with a -'l\JeldO)' a'-ing that· De-alid tit bumpers ., .. /~rely to btsme. It reached thal conclaslon by • 1Iapunln1: topther ,11111 ChevrOleja, F•fd• .. Pl~. and AmblssldOrt at a~ 1~ · of. 10 milea Per houi -• u;. 1peed of • man jopg. · A car movm, at 10 r1.1ph w~ driven into the rear ol a sta. ding car ,and !tie averaae repair bill. was .'510.15.1 The estimates were' made , by ex~ perienced a4juotors: • The cost& ranged 1,...- $515.15 f0r :the AniboooadO< SS'!' to $441 for a Pl)'lllOUlh . Fury r. In between was the • Tdk on i\'ataral Gas .. He likes the · West Coast. says the Pl"'.1""1t ol Norton • Slmon-tne., but his 11antfirm is moving its: headquarters to New York because: "I don't feel you can run a company of our site from Fullerton." The company headed by David J. Mahoney employs 30,000 persons and has sites approaching $1 blllioo a year. Anoowlcement of this year's move was made late in 1969. ' . PHl.25 bill on 1 Chevrolet Gene· 01...:11er. , a community se~e representative Impala.and lie $415.U bUJ on -~ •• ,. ·a ford Galuie: fat Southern1Counties Gas Co., will demonstrate the ~ "There are more companies In the East than In the West. The Wall Street complex Is Jn the Eas!. W1; hope to build our European business and this way we can be closer to it The headquarters of most of our 19 advertising agencies are in New York," Mahoney told an interviewer recenUy. But he has nothing against lhe West, the 46-year-old businessman hastens to add . 1))e\aver.,. repair cost& for '"cl>ld" facts ol'llquelled naturafgas·during a lunch-· ...,...._t. ln•wblcb the -meeting of the Laguna Beach Kiwanis CI u b front ol a car movini JO mph Wedneldiy, Feb. 11, at the Lagllna Beach Country hlt the 11.de of a ~ car Club. His presentaUon deals with the scientific prop-..,. 111ua., :QI•' J"ljmoutb, ~'11~• ,"'4 tpe wea of natµraI gas. ~fllt.lW>'torepatr,tht'Fonf..,.....,,.,..,,;-1<~•-:~;".-"""-~'-'-'---"-------­ $702.IO, the ·Am b·a.s s 1 do r $641 .30· and the Chevrolet $839.15. ''There's a difference in JocaUon but not in pn>- fesslonalism. This is a viable market; there's no question o( that. It's more of an acUvist market, the people get out more and you 'll get an opinion from them on anything." he ~ays. "In style. I feel I'm closer to these people than the ea.stern e3tablishment." · These figurea and a · mm ponra)'ina tlle·atared crashes were :presented at. 1 news con- ference to Son. l'hlllp A. Harl (().Mich.), chairman of a Senate sU:bcommittee which is investtrating ''auto repolrabillty," by Dr. William HaddOn Jr .. president of the ·lm'tiraoce Institute for Highway Safety. 'MR institute sald 'M peretnt of the clalma paid by one ma· jor insurance firm wm for Jess than $500, indlcaUnt that most of the accident.! then covered were relative~ minor Onts. "One common denominator to all of. these test results," Haddon said, was "these automobiles are far more delicate than p r e s e n t encineierlnr knowhow-necesitates." 1talian~ U.S. Tea1n To Make Luxury Car Norton Simon was fonned In 1968 by the merger of Hunt Foods & Industries, Canada American car like the Rolls-Ory Corp. and 1.fcCall Corp. Royce. An individually styled The company bears the car for people of great taste." name of financier Norton PROVIDENCE, R.I. (AP) - A high-priced luxury car call- ed the Stutz Blackhawk wtll be as.embledin Provide nee bqlnnln1 this spring, Jame.1 D. O'lloQnell, pttsldent of the Stutz Motor Car <Jorp. of America, said Wednesday. The Stutz, resurTecllng the name of a car popular in the early days of motorina: will be assembled by a team of Italian craftsmen who wlll llnk .Italian bodywork to a chassis and engine made by General Motors, O'Donnell said. O'Donriell, president o f The Stutz Motor Car group, Simon, a noted art collector with 30 inveilors besides and philanthropist wbo serves O'Donnell, put up $250.000 for as a Urllverslty of California the first model of t h e regent. Simon severed direct Blackhawk which was exhiblt-connections with the company ed this week at the Waldorf-last year to devote more time Astoria Hotel in New York, to his other activities. O'Donnell said. j ' Although he was born, SWlz has applied to the SEC reared and educated In the to issue $1 million of'corporate / East. the move to New York is stock· f o r over-the-counter causing some dislocation in trading, O'Donnell said. Mahoney's life. The car is deslgned by Virgil ''My children are not wild Exner, a fonner designer. fqf about the idea," he says. Chrysler who later deSigned "Uprooting your family can be the modem-day Duesenberg difficult but even that has which was unsuccessfully p~ merits." duced two years ago by "A move really d o e s 'Quality . Control' Night Set The next meeting or the Oran1e Empire Section of the Amei-ican Society for Quality Control, scheduled for Monday at the Rev.ere House. Tustin. has been designated "Quality Control Education" nighl A feature of the evening· will be a clinic at 6 p.m. on "Financial Investments" con- ducted by Dick Bryant of the Dean Witter Jnvestment Co. After a social hour, the dinner meeting will begin at 7:30 p.m. The main program will be a panel discussion on "Quality Control Education." Speakers will be Steve Koz.ich, director quality assurance, Atlantic Research Corp.: Professor Lou Melo. coordinator in- dustria1 technology, San Jose State University: Dr. Paul Kleintjes, ind u s trial technology department, Lone: Beach State College; and Dr. Don Morgan, industrial e n I i n e ering department, California State Polytechnic College, who will discuss the subject "Quality C o n t r o 1 Education." Specifically, he flncered today's bumJ)er as the culprit. He said it is put· too close to the grille and rear of cars. Scott, Gorman & O'Donnell, an investment ~king firm said ihe Blackhawk is a $22,500 two-door hardtop with a 40I).. cubic v.a. The body will be made in Modena, Italy. O'Donnell and otheni. something for yoo...8ometimes ;==========;;;:; O'Donnfll, attributing in-it's worthwhile picking up the adequate financing to the whole thing and moving and Dues'.enberg's f~ure.-said the shaking it and seelng what car will be assembl~ -in happens," Mahoney says. Providence because the Italian "My wile says the easiest draftsmen "will f e e I al thing for me to do woukl be to Twenty years aio, he saJd, "there was more 1 p a c e between bumpera and the structures they were intended to protect -IS you can see by looking at the Model A Ford." A Usmousine •'for people 1ike the Shah or Iran or the President" will sell for $75,000, O'Donnell said, emphasizin& that the latter-day stutz will be an attempt; 0 UI make an home." get a DC-9 and furnish it." Who C..res7 No oth'r ntWSpaptt' Ill the world um about your community IJke yOUT' community dally ntWSpaper does. It's the D .. LY PILOT. -· ·v 1 _ J. OI'K ·'"" k ~(( t . ''"' h l',xe i nge • ,. ,,,; ' •'·~ . .,. , " •'P •"~ ~!'· '•X\··~. t.~"' ""''L'\ ... % "~"' r • ' .. ,.;.•;, ... J, .,,,.,, I . . ,,,.~ . ~ ~-·~ 1 •1 .... : .. ()f~, . ...;·· ··:·,, ,,~ . "'·" ;t .. : , .. I• "' " . : ' ' l • < •. .. ' ~ ..... .. , ' _., ' ' ' ' .... .,, ~ . 'I. •c :/l , •. ! '· . • • ( l \ ·"''' .... .;;..,.~! ,_. · .. , 1,. ,,1 ; , •• '.e .. t. ,~~ :.;' ~~ ~· ,.,0 .l A·i;'l ~'.II . ... , i . -. ' . " " ,, " ~ i ~: I ' a ,,. .; ~;:: :~:~ ~-~'' ·1 •' -1 ··~"· C> ' .. ~ ''"'·•+'·';_,, ,.~ <; ;\~ _,,;. ,, .. '.'. /-7.'.' ' .. .i. \", f;·: .,.. ,.: • ~ ............ ). .''"·~:\'< .•• , {~iOSlJJ~ ·.•, f '1 . \ '·• . ·,; _; . ~· . '\ ·~ • ,__ -':·,' ., .. ' ~ •'. • • - • ... i<:!l :~ ... (lllJt(. • . ,. .~ I ., .... .;.. ' . '. .~ ' ' . ,·.: .,: " + .• j I "' " •• y< "' " at lo w of SI jo di T th ti• m •• M J• h• th " " I" ~ I " .. " " di "' " "' " <i ti S• "' T " d lit " ti " u \\ o· • • n • n ' r. ti ti ' u n a lo " p • " p A ' l' I t p e ' c ' ~ r ( r l ! c ' t l l l . Thursd'7, ,bnlj!'1 r.,1979 IAll.Y Pit.OT Jt I: Diploma - Not Vi~ql On These V.~ii~ait Takes Look ·at,':.~·M~~··~,~:fl:l~ket . Sales f VAT!QAll~Cl'zy (AP) -The statement I~ a that tickets at the mu,.um golngon.'I I 'j 1 "" elriji~1 GI .• l~t ad. 'anctoafflllCl.ReMl-ncearlln more tha~;.-0.000 1 year • Tu• V~ 'lodly.thal It ,.port by llalla, a ..... , ogen. hod been !alsllled on a Iorgo The 11'!!"' lfD!r. spoke 6r, mlnillra+..r .,.. has Iha world. Tens of lbouunda from m111111111 tlcbtAla. was looking ti<:tel saleo al ey, lhal blocki ol Ucl<oia to tho o<ale. "grave wrongdoings" and beenlel!{•m· Al llje enil ol ol lourltta vlllt eldl year. the lamouS Viflcan muselun~ museum were· rcund IO ~··· ":t"• admlnlslrallvO II· "conspiaious" sholl•B• I n-.1969 .;;,.,~rlt 'rotlied llocauae The muoeum .,contplti fn. • Guns Collected II said no "'"°'doing had been appropriated by •• : ~ ,llai •loeen found, at . !unds.~.0~~! P<'stllS ) they'-rud>i4 ~ "'llJ?eni eludes the Etruacu; J1oo.na11 By JOYCE LAl1'I ~.~.,jlsco~~ "at leas& ao employes'Ofthemuse:urnp"'fot ''-least so Wf ln the m.Jl~ of had been retired befOre the age." · • · and Egyptian. mueunv u ~~,~~ The VaUca.n s~kesman, the their f'-11,yee.r1 " .• ". sale.s of tidc:els at the ~tr~e or~ ptnSion ~e as a . The VaUcan.haa Mt·rtvtaJ.. well. u a palnUng aalllry,. ll?,OOO rOUDdl cl ~ "Name some jobs !or young ljl.Rtv. Fausloj,llain<, also Thlf. llJl.lowllll ~ all'J.~ of the Vatican .mll!etl"'!'·" . ""'"I .•( the . V!lican's II)-ed the 1969 Income ,from the papal apartment. and the ~ \jlan tc:l .,.._In people who don't finish high d~led that a museum In tilt·..:~ ~, V:'!P· Y~Jainc 11Altt \ "!~ !s v,esti&11tioo . . . .museums, •Whlch~ contain the Slstjni (]hap.el~ • . a tGey coUecUon 4rtve, Utt school. What can they do to eq'jpklyett bad fired: daily (P.a. e:ie ·Sera .last 1!!,".:~.'~ ~,, , 1 ·~~}.norm, at; cl~.: .f,re Msil'~ Vallainc ~aid "so r~r,. rnost ~1m~t collecUon of The• V..1~ ~y Wra. ta. ·acwenunePt announced. earn a llvlng? Al a v0lunteer1"7", 1-r'--'"---------;....;..,..,.. ---,.-, -"'I' '..fr.:::,,,.,.,..,.J....,..,,'.,."~'i'.,>rir----.'+.-;;;r-------~---"-~-..,--'"~-'-------------""'---------...,..---- youlb .worker, .fld 8PPff:!C!~Je \ \ · •· '1 -. ,,.. .. '· CQncrete ·suggestions. nOt a •· I 1', " sermon on educl'uon." .. This is a real pi'oblem • about o~i:. of Oye teen'.age~ leaving school lopay does fo without a high school diploma. Thanks to the Department or Labor's Bureau of Labor Stalisllcs, here's a round-up of jobs that mliy be open to diploma·lesl a p p I tc a n ls . Training may be available on the job, and/or through voca- tional schools, governmeni manpower training programs and apprenticeship. OCCUPATIONS·' WR I CH MAY BE LEARNED ON THE JOB Cashier -applicants· '11ho have taken distrib.1,1tive educa- tiao prefetred. ~_ppini: ~ r~iving Clerk -business subjects: useful; ·teen com- petition. Automobile p.a.r t s counlerman -a few thousand openings annuallY: contintied employment growth. Retail salesman or ·Saleswoman - dislributive eduCation courses use£ul. Cook' and chef -ex-' celled e· in p flo y m e n t op- porlunlties; cooking school course helpful. Hospital aitendant -rapid rise In employment. Construc- tion laborer or hod carrier - good p1')'sical condition; usually must be at least 16. Truckdriver (local) -Usually at least 21 ; good physical con- dition; have c h au f feu r's license. Over -the-road truckdriver -same· qualifica- tions plus good driving record: :some companies hire only those over 25. Appliance serviceman - need mechanical .a bi I i t y •• \Vatch repairman -many openings due to shortage; some apprentice. Electric sign serviceman -eleclrical and mechanical aptitudes needed; several -hundred openings an· nually; rapid increase in employment. Several other possibilities for which a hifh school educa- tion is preferred but not essen- tia l: machine tool operator, s h o e repairman, furniture upholsterer, farm equipment mechanic, factory assembler. automobile painter, manufac- turing Inspector, j ewe Ir y repairman. mail c a r r i er , postal clerk. electropbtter, wailer or waitress, power truck operator. production painter and productian welder. APPRENTICESHIP RECOM· A-1ENDED FOR T~E Although apprenticeship Is the preferred background for lhese occupations. it Is possi· ble to learn informally on the job. Carpenter, pa i nt e r or paperhanger -many openings each year. Diesel mechanic - very rapid l!mployment in- crease. Asbestos -.. and in· sulaUng worker -several hundred openings annually: m o d e r a t e employment in- crease. Auto mechanic - more than 20,000 job openings yearly; moderate employment growth. Other apprenticeship opportunities : floor covering installer. stpnemason, marble setter, tile setter, motion pic- ture projectionist, 1 a t h e r . brickJayer. plumber, pipelit- t e r , structural-ornamental· reinforcing iron worker, and automobile body repairman. REQUIRES SPECIAL TRAJN. ING Licensed pr&etical nurse - must usually be at least 17 or 18: at least two years of high school : a State·approved prac· tical nursin~ course : pass a lict!nsing exam. Cosmetologist -·license re· quired: usually ~t· least 16: have completed ei&blb' grade On S-Otne St:ates, leath or lwel!th) and a Statetepprcwed cosmetology course1 ;;· FOR MORE INFORMATION. Consult your State employ· ment service olfic:e. Also, check bbraries for the Oc- cu pational Ou~look ~ published by th• U.S.'.Depart. ment of Labor (details on oc- cupations), and Lo Y ej oy' 11 Career and Vocattonal School Guide {a directory <# ''trade" schools 8nd subjects). If you-need a job now, don't .. • • ' ' ' 1 • I . ' ·- • \ annual rate NINETY DAY QRTIFICATE I . AC<:OUNTS NO MINIMUM BALANCE · annual rate . .~•· 1a 'I • • • . • , f • ...... a • # I r.-: _. · ... ' ·r e annual rate 1TO10 YEAR CERTIFICATE ACCOUNTS $I ,ooo· MINIMUM • · · annual rate 2 TO 10 YEAR ONE YEAR TERM CERTIFICATE Adjusted Rates ACCOUNTS for Shorter Terms $5,000 MINIMUM $100,000 MINIMUM e~e.~nd: ~~r;.~~~~s~~f< A~coun~~ Nci mfn1mum dej1011t. Daily eoinJ)oilhamg. lnterett·day.'ln to•day-out. ' . ~·,. . 't, " I , '"i • " j ._, More than ever, California Fed· with four maximum rates of inter- eral is the place for the· n1oney you >,,· ~ . est, compounded daily. Withdraw- can 't afford to risk. The nation 's als before maturity permitted bur largest federal pays you higher in· subject co son1c loss of interest. terest! Choose our regular passbook ac- count-or from four new account s Whichever account you choose, our $1.6 billion assets are behind your savings. How safe it is. ,. ' I / 1 '' ,. . " j.!' • • •• '· Nalioi:is Largest Federal " i ' .. overldolt' the want-ads. 1------------------------------------------------------- I I ' .. . ' .... ... " i • • ' ,, • DAil Y PILOT HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE 0.-el tOOOGener1I READ THIS If you are in the market for a l\'E\V home. see these outstand- ing customized homes, built by Frank Ji. Ayres and Son, locat- ed in a pri1ne area very close to 1-funtington State Beach. The homes are priced from $27.550 to $33.690 and vary in size from 3 to 4 bedroo1ns, 2 to 3 car gar- age:-> and 2 to 3 bath s, \vith shake or n1ission tile roofs, fire· places. underground utilities, c:oncrete drive,vays, buiJt·ins. cind carpeting. There is VA and FH:\ f111ancing available. There are 9 homes available because of credit re1ections. Occupancy by March I. 1970 in this unit. Ollr next unit is now on sale for occupancy in r.'lay and June 1970 and introduces the new 3.000 sq. ft. "El Dorado'' model priced fron1 $34,490. .. Rancho La Cuesta Homes on Brookhurst at Atlant•, Huntington Beach 968-2929 -968-1338 EASTSIDE FOUR BEDROOM Enjoy the charm of EAST COSfA !'ttESA. 11 stone':\ lhl'OIV from \\'ESTCLlfF PLAZA! Quiet rrce _ lined avenue 1\·ith alley t"ntra.nce for your camper! ·1'.!xJ& nia..s· ler bedroom 11.uile 1\'ilh i\lr. & l\l rs. 11·arrlrobe and pJi. vale bath. Your childn.·n have three large bcd1wn1s, :sepiu·&tcd fi~n1 }ours, and 1heir own bath! Dclighr your 11ile v.·ith a redesigned ki!ch· en, spa.rkhni:;: countl'l-S and quality gas rangr and 01·en. All this for $26,0(X) -O"'·ner 11·\JJ hclri finan<.'e! ~ PROTEST PROOF! A beeutiful $62,00o home for !55,000! Great tor entertain- ing and happy living. \Vhat. cl'er you 1vaot -!his hoUSo! has it! Call and ask! Colesworthy & Co. ''Agent" "For A \Vi.!W: Buy" w.1m • HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE HOU5ES FOR SALE HOUlll ~OR SALE HOU51S FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE 1100 Newport Helfht1 1211 Hunt.flt'*' Beach 1400 H_untlnglon Buch 1400 FOREST E. 0 LS 0 N OCEAN VIEW HOME GIANT 0 .1. LOAN (){ $33,000 ha.a been approved on this 3 bedroom • 2 batb home with pool and 3 car GREAT BUY Original Harbor View Hills with BAY, bar-FAMILY IOOM ..,...,, Quallfiod "''""' bor, Ca talina & LlGl-fTS outstanding from tee thlB today! Vogel Co. th· l f 3 I Bd 2 BA t 'led Id Yes, a 3 Be<11wm, 2 Bath 2867 East Coast """'>'• Cor-1s oca ton. rg rms, , i go hardwood n..... ....__, In ona del Mar:. 673-2020 BDRM + F medallion kitchen . slate entry, quality crpts ·-"'"" 4 · AM. & drps tbruout. Lrg Terraced patio, 2 way M-Dfl Illar, with • 300 3' BRM. Lr yanl. Den. & RUMPUS frplc, garage opener & more quality EX· ICf, ft. Fam.Uy Room added. $29,950. Fnlnk !'.la rshall Cortler lot with rootn lot' Rulty. 615-4600 WH AT'S THIS!! TRAS. $55,000 & terms. OPEN SAT & SUN boat 0, cam.,.. La!ir• cov. $I S,SOO PM. 1014 Sea Lane, Corona del Mar. ertd 1>1Uo for autJidf: llv-Dover Shores 6«-290S OWNER * Ing, U "°" ue f•mlly type And only 6 year:s YOWJi. ran. people and want room to en. IMPRESSIVE - Inc. Realtor:> 1227 3 & .C bedrooms, 2 bath home1 In beautiful Huntington 8aach. $23,990 Cell (7141 962°IJSJ 10 AM 'Ill 7 PM SANDPIPER HOMES On Brookhurst at Atlanta tastic terms too! Get lo· joy that family, call now? SPACIOUS - 1 gethe1· Sl.300 and that's all OOO $29950 4 Br, 4~J Ba + makls. Fall Corona del Mar 1250 Huntington Beach 1400 you need! 4 i:ood sized Genera l 1000 General 1 546.2312 646-7171 length view _ Bay l: Mtns.1----------i bdt·n1s -2 baths _ kitchen ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;j Hi&"h ceilings. 5000 !IQ. ft. 11~lh lJuil1·ins, fo'amily + bUilt around court. 4 car SO CHARMING •·ump"' room, Beautl!W, NEWPORT SPECIAL • FORl!ST E. .,..., E" malnt. lmm<d ""P· 11efl kt!pl. •rec lined com-0 L s 0 N $178,CXX>. Auwne 61h% loan. In every detall -2 bedrooms and convertible den with built-in bar -2 baths. Top quality ll'ool carpets. beaU- titully decorated 11·ith low maintenance Del Plso tile throughout entrance and din. Ing area. Warm and ehaJ'lll· ing and ready for your C'.are· free enjoyn1ent. munHy. Wh<re in lh< wmid $25,950 l~~~~lliiiO•\;Dwn<~•;:_:· "";;;""~'~-== can you fiod a bargain like I": "'''· M"o '""' Dial 6"~12:; ? HOUSE PINCHING? 1_U;;n;;lv;;e;;;";;;lty;;;,;P;;u;;k:;:;;;l2;;;37 Bt!at this ir you can. Inc. Rnalton~ I• COUNTRY LIVING It's lovely ~ bdrm 11.a Move up to tbe comfort1ot a Assu...:• .. le VIEW! ~J'.'.~~~t/6~t COSTA MESA :.....hdrm-!. =~ .. '!:ii°; Low i;;:,.,. LAGUNA HILLS AGE. LARGE YARD ASSUME 6°/o FHA Vacant ~ d oan BuUt in ""'-and'""""" yanl ,t, roon1 for BOAT or · kitcMn, carpeti &: d~pei )'OUr tiuli.nd wW b_ve. You In the Bluffs and only - $39.500 673-lllll Country Jiving at its best! TRAILER too! Sound Beautiful custom home just & large paUo. Full price wW l?Ve the sp<¥:1oumess Unusual 2 story hon1c with nice?? It's (l\11'\tACU-mlnutei> !rom the beach. 3 $26,950 _ assume FHA S% % of haVUll a larre.:> br home. view and ocean bt'CCU'. J LATE & ,., 0,,1, iako, a large bt'droom!!, 2 baths. KJt. ,___ / Your chlld1-en will love the 1U01..11 -$145 mo. paf5 all or '-·It nd ~-1 1..ing sized bedrooms. J large VERY S:\·L\LL DO\VN' cticn 1vith deluxe built· Ins. submit terms. CALL 540-ll5l g>ttnu.: s , a u~ poo 1. o THEREAL 1'."'. ESTATERS berhs. Ranch size. fireplace. PAYMENT on FHA Rich maple paneling. Cu1-Heritage Real Estate (open The prlce. Undtr $40,000. I !ugr. 2.l ft. family room. terms. Don't wait!! tom cabinets and built in evesl Call us for details. 1 ~~::::::::::::~;o:::::= . ·. •'·' Seller forced 10 n1ove, Low, bookcases. Enormous brlck1'!:!~~~~~~~~~1 e Red Hiii Re•lty VIEW_ HIDEAWAY lo1v do1vn pay1ncnt. Truly a • COATS fireplace. $20,000 FHA loan j' Univ. Park Center, Irvint Open Sat., Sun. 1-S fantastic bargain; Don't be & at 6% aMual percentqe Melli Verde 1110 Call Anytime m0820 Just a few 51eps 10 bc&.ch, la1e~ Dial now 645-1245. rate. Lo1v montbJy paymenll\;'";:':::;:":::.=:::~7:~1•!!!!!!!!~~~'!!'!!!!!!'"'""1 shops I:. dining. Modem tri- 645-1245 al Harbor Cenlcr 2299 Harbor Blvd., C.!'tl. RARE TURTLE ROCK RESALE Near UCJ. Prize 1vinninc 4 bdnn 21Ai bath with atrium . 21.0o !Q ft. Vacant &: ready for executive. Sell or lease option. $42,500 Newport at iWALLACI include Ta."(es. PrtC'!d now 4 BDRt-.1 -$20.500 S't. ~ FIND OUT1 level tioine 11ilh ~raciow; REALTORS al $27,j()Q. Dial &l;).()'J03 a.~sumabJe loan. Near good About the ''Easy l.ivip' "In open feel ing, $5.1,500. -$46-4141-schl_s &: Mesa Verde CC. Univ. Park. Comm. po&ls, 330 POPPY (Open EYenings) 645•0303 $29,;JOO. Owne~. 1861 New tcMls courts, lovely &'rttn. University Rmlty 673-6510 Missing The Back 40? Here's l tl acre PLUS in Back Bay 111th :: bdrms 2 bathi.. & JJx:IO' pool 11·ith div. ing boartl. T1y FHA or VA or \IV, dw1n. $27,500 Newport at al •farbor Cenlf'r Jersey, CM. 54>7700 belts, handy >ihopping. all 3001 E. Coast Hwy., Cd.1\1 :mo::::::":':;""'::;':;B:;lvd~.,:;c:;.:;M:;. Ef ~N;e~w~po~rt Beach 1200 CAMEO SHORES Lido Isle 13SI this: plus sharp 4 BR., tam. nn., 2~~ ba., 2 frplcs. dbl. gar., bit-in kitch. w/dish· wllhr. Sounds like more than f ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; 3 UNITS $29,950 Ea.sllide Costa :r.rcsa. s,an.. i~~ tile roof, rentals on large 77xl50' lot. Income $385 month. Our best income re- tw·n in art!a. Exclusive With Newport al Enjoy the ultimate in luxury S3 :,soo -bener lf't lH show 0 H Jiving and entertaining 1n this one to you right a11•ay! . pen ouse 1-5 this gorgeous, custom built, "8/B" REALTY Thurs/Fri/Sat & Sun. top ,,a11<y hOm• '""'led ~ Eves/'673-"" Street to Strada on a hi.lie prime corner alUi provtdtna tho utmo.t tn p,;. TURTLE RO\:~ HILLS 110 VIA CORDOVA vacy, Superb interior design. Just listed "like /tew" 3 br 3 bclrms. double garage, pa· ing. 4 ~rms, dtn &: hu"e with Joe fam'il• tooin. Sell lio. In1mediate occupaney. I I ...,. "' J Nev•ly painted. n('1v 1v/1v ana , muter Bclnn 20'x31 ', clnning ovtna. sprinkle1-s cupetina. 5 b11tlu • 1lamourou. pwd, F • R. tltc ~ open" JEAN SMITH rm. Secluded pool. $195,000. and many more' extras. Fee ASSUME F.H,A. SV• INTEREST S MIN. TO THE BEACH At $131 per month total )'OU can 011'0 this spacious 4 bed- room, 2 bath Cotcag:e, Sep. arate Di.ning Room, brick Fire pl a cf'. Built·in kitchen, lush carpel throughout, are only a few of the extnu. Stt. ing is believing. WE SELL A HOME EVERY 31 MINUTES Walker& Lee 7682 Ed~er 540-5140 . 842-445l MODEL HOME $33,900 3 bdrm 3 bafh.'2 ycara new. Formal dlnlng room, large living room, bi'ick fire- place. lush carpets'&; drap. es, kitchen 1vith electric built·ins. tile counter top, block wall fence. F.aiY matn. t.enance, landscaped, sprink. le.rs. Comer Jot. Just beau. tiful. ~'IHI' 2 STORY /S BDRMS Owner 1ran1/Must Hiii, Terrific buy/Only $35.950 : Lovely honie in most cJesir·! able al<ea. I HAFFDAL REAL TY 842-440S ' Huntington Harbour 1445 "' tod•Y. M". Ouk. land all for oru1 $49,.,., REAL TOR WESLEY TAYLOR CO. e Red HI• Realty 646-l2SS \VATERFRON. T ···me, 17141 644-4910 Univ. Park Cf!flter. llvlne ll\I Victoria Victoria ~ Call custom bit 1 .st.oTy on 56' lot 646.8811 646-1811 \VE.,, ......,ffT • H AR B 0 R Anytime S3J...083> LEASE/OPTION JOOJ sq fl. 3 bdrms _l _batlu, ( • H!Gtll.ANDS. Beauutul 3 For Sale/Mew Verde anytime) I;:;:;:;:;:;::: 4 BDRl\I, 3~2 RATII den. l:>x46' living nn deck I: l•nyllmel bdnn 2~is bath home wttb BON ·~ 07 d k · ha 1 In Sharp Pacesetter with alrlwn • \=iiiiil~Z~i:\ large ccn.y family room over-US ROOM 'fWU sq. ft. 1 Via Eboli. oc on ma.in c nne entry. Newly painted tnter-l .==~~~~~:;i:~; DOVER SHORES" looking delightful, heated &: plus 3 br and 2 ha for only 32 car &"atage. Crpts, dill&. ~·~Sa~rilicc ~L~ ~~tennsJ lot'· shows b<autiMly. Own. FANTASTIC IMMEO POSS tilt<red pool. Wonderlul cor-$35.450. 18 'x 30 BONUS YTil yo"ng. M 'KE OFF· non• avw ""' -. er transferred & ha& real VIEW . . ner location • beauttful.ly ROO~f can be a dorm •. a ER! Owner, (2131 244-3101, 846-2504 or <213} 583-.6066 Evenings Call S.tS.2'1:il need to sell . Quick pos!iCs· View Lot landscaped. Spar1ding built-ganit: room, a d~n, an ofti~ c'=,v;;":....::'213;;=:)-'m-07':;700=;·~--LIQUIDATION!! New 3 level lmiiOiiO;;i;;;iiOiiO---•I sion. Offered at $35.!t.JO. O.·erlooking China Coves Beautifully landscaped home 5 BR & FAMILY in kitchen I.'. formal dining. o~ a hu~e master br. It s Prestige Lido Home homes. Prices s l as h ed! Le'isure L'ivi'ng & lla1·00r Enn·ance 1viU1 t'Ou1·1yard entry lead· Piicf'd for immediate aale different. CUstom bit. 011 50' lot. 4 Bcf. From $45,500 to $38,75(1. 4151 •, For Lease Excc!lent e:.:[)O~ure in,.. to panoramic vi l' 11·: e Red Hill Reilly + Branford St. Bldn/ ........ h This la1-ge fainily hon1c in at $39,0CiO • CALL 545-8424 -den, 5 ba.: terrazo cntiy. ,... in THE BLUFFS TH R EE PROFESSIONAL Close 10 Bay .t· Ocean beaches lal"S(e liv ini:; roon1 1vith view North Cosla ~tesa \\'Ith all exclusive ivith S 0 UT ti Univ. Park Center, Irvine ]()' ceilings, Xlnt Inns. Ap-:"="""'°'=='="""'=="='.mt===~I B"'""'"' v;•w horn-,., top OFFICES. Each SIOO 0, ,u Cus1om plans for or the enlirc bat:k bay. Den: COAS'I' E Call -'""tim 833-0020 p't o-•y. ' '""' "' " cl !he buiH-ins includil1s a 1va. R AL ESTATE n .• ,, e -1u location. 3 bdrmii 2 baths, lhree adjgi.Ding for s:tSO. egan~ home includl'tl 4 large bcdroo111s: I spacious R C GREER R It Great location on Stnta Ana $51.500 baths: all Plectric kitchc11; Ir r cond1lioner needs a litUe 8/ 8 . . ea y large dining area + extra Avenue just oU 17th Street. Listed exclusively 111th dinini:;: morn: 1n;1rble fire· TLC. Prit'Cd 11·ay under mar-SURFER'S SPECIAL Eastbluff 1242 335.:i Via Lido 673-9300 large fenced patio. This I o ~ OOO ft ket . l ~u111• • lh.is 111on't last. \\'E5T NEWPORT home has n1any added ex· ll al·r. vcr ,,, ~q . · ON Huntington Beach 1400 ...., ....... ., -~~ • h b VA. howiie. Built-in kitchen. Vi~w ''1 . I --------- Santa An• Hgts. 1630 HORSES OR umrs·-1,i.ac 2 Br, trplc. hid pool. 2 stalls, tack rooms. OWNE R •. $31.500. 545-6948 ' '' ••, L•'v-• ,·n b.•· adull~ .. Buy ~ 546·$110 $8!1.500. I LY $30,!lj() Fl IA. FHA/ AUracllve t wo btdroom MOVE UPI it for only s+l,250. LEGE REALTY 10 ft macna r; of ocean. Easily maintained. So much h>oi-e for so Jinle. Unbelievable -Near -..11M11t1tr;cil (714) 642-1235 in ,t 001. Just atep1 to a:ood 4 BR. 2~ ba., din., rm., d:n; The Beach 901 Dov('r Drivt>. Suit~! 120 q: !I_, __ . I beach & atteuible lo hi&h· htd. It rut. ~I. Nearly 2500 $750 Down Total Buys Laguna Hills NEWPORT NewpoH Bf'uch ii• 1~·ay Pl'i ce $39500 sq. n. 70xl3l Lot. Perl. thir 4 bedroom, 2 bath Beau. ---------REA.LTV' Bay· & Bea.ch Rtt I cond. Added extras make it LEISURE World Laguna RANCH ------642-1771 Anytime 901 Dover Dr. SUHe !'2s ~ better than new .. 0111er ty. Modern btl~ht kitchen I-tills. Barcelona, Vacant. Lachenmyer Realtor 1700' 186() Newport Blvd., ~i CALL 646-3928 Eves. 64~·1655 I'll=:::::;:;::::: ll*JJtwJ"· o ..,!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!..., 64.>200) • E 6..; '""'~ tra.nsf. Priced reahst1cally 1vith built-lns. O ose lo shop. lntmed Posscas. 2 Bl'. Db This low lying rancb home ,,--·-·· -' ""~0-=~;:v::'~'·..:::·~=W>N at $57.:,00 • best pride of ping. schools and frrewa,ys. 1\·as custom built for com-ORIENTAL SHRINE HOME WITH FIXER UPPER _ Gttat ownership location! S'14.000 F'ULL PRICE. Pullman BA. $1.l.000. Ph. fol'table, carefrel'.' livifli:. The Decor is Oriental i\Iodcrn. GUEST HOUSE potential. ~ 4 bdnn "8/B" REALTY WE SELL A HOME 49~ or 837-8330 BAYCREST'S 5 King Size bedrooms. 3 Hou~ is the shrine-. ;\lain· Ca thedral N.r1rport Hei(hts home -615-3000 Eves. 615-2986 EVERY 31 MINUTES bath . ._, large fan1ily rooni, tatned 10 11crfcc11on rhis ~ B~'au11ful split levrl A ra1-c find! 01arming 3 bed· d1nlng room k nunpu.s room .. . .. Walker & Lee FINEST custom elegance thruout in this .; BR., 3 Ba. home, de· :gigned J~r J·1rge, active fam· ily; po"!, fani. rn1 .. billiard ru1. wet j,;11, etc. $119.000. j .:JC Clu.;l,~o.J1. ........ panlly .~ basement will de· bdrm & fam rui is ready ro 11·i1h high, cathedral, 1uo1n hon1e plus separate -2 fireplaces -:noo ~ft of BLUFFS -Linda plan. light your entire fa mily. All move in & ~·upy. Laro;::c· 1·ov h l' <1 111 c:eilin&'. ln1• l bedt'OOJll guest quar1ers. living area. Pticetl for im-Cholctsl greenbelt Joe. In this. localed on one acre in patio & ix'autilul t-car l;111d~c 111aculale condit1<>11, D~tightful secluded patio mediate AA.le at $32,500. itdult area. l·Slory 3 bdrm., Ne1vport Beach. Full P1ice compl1n1cnts the l nvrly ~hag carpet, pool·lll-and i;arclrn. Nice Ne1vpor! t~llA(VA available. CALL 2 baths; IRnal. Lge. ~!'11ed $92.COO. hoinc, Nv1v just S:!i,34.:0. hll' si1.e Iamtly roon1 llci.t:hts location, Space for 545-8424 {open eves} South patio. 0\VNER • 644-4558 546-2313 111 i I h fireplace-~) boat or trailer \Von·1 last Coast Real Estalc Acro~s from go l t Joni: 111 $33.500. · 'I _____ ;._.:_ ___ I Corona del Mar PAUL· WRITE CAR NA HAN ?.S ALTY CO. l'OU1'SI'. Only $44,950. 1.A1.7171 FRENCH ~~ TOWNHOUSE 1250 Coldwell, Banker & Co. 1 ....................... .., SSG Newport Center Dr. Unbelievable Value l :l;::::c~~:;;:::::;; 1C9J Baker, C.1\1. f)1~Csci\ ,;~c ')\\ .11t'' . 546-5990 ,, :': Bdrm.s. -2 Bath.~ Condominium • Pool Private Patio HARBOR view HILLS Beautiful View Newport Beach, Ca lif, Only !1:2~.9;;(1 in lhe hc11rl ol 833-0700 644-2430 Costa r.tesa, Immaculate all $22,950 ASSUME 6°/o LOAN $32.500 :J Br., 2 ba. tam. rm. Sell or LIDO REALTY INC. Lre Optlon. $51.500. \\'rile 3lT7 Via Lido 6T3-i300 Box 55.\f, Daily Pilot. i'&S2 Edinger 540-:ll40 8424455 5 1/~ 0/o LOAN to assume. Pyn1nls $167/mo. 3 BR. lg fam nn, Is:. Jot. Friced ~lo1v market Sub- mit dO\Vn. 2nd TD avaU. i-BRASHEAfi RLTY 'It 169:>2 Beach Blvd .. f!B 84,.. .S507 Eves. 968·1178 BY Q.,.,•ner -3 Bl', fAn1 rm, 2 Bath. $29,500 Ne1v paint, 2 NEED MONEY? 5 ldrms 3 Baths SHAKE ROOF Bcaulltul hon\(', paynients Or'I FOR Sale by 011·ner, house !! blks from bch, oft L•guna Beach 1705 Hurry! Hurry! Hurryl This older nol'tti end duplex in prime rental &I\!a consist- ing of fl\•o l·BR 1 BA unlta, both 1vlth ocean & city vlc11•s. No v1te11ncy hert:! \Vould you believ~ $25.500? RMERA REALTY . J~ COASf HJWAY. South Laguna 499.2800 CONOOMJNIU!'tl by owner. 2 br. 2 ha, built.Ins, eleVator. Cliff Drive $45.000. 494-8128. Mission Viejo 11Qt 'To buy a ne\\' ho1ne '! ln\'esli. gale our guaranteed u·;1dc in plan. Let us an!il~Cr your questions 11•ith no obhcauon. f'a.ir l'nough '! 1K'11·ly painted in.tout. High quality w/w ca rpet!\ lhtu. out. 3 bdrn1s 2 ~t!h! fu1n· ily t'UOlll, all built·ins .. Beau· tirul 111va rock fircplucc in L R. \\'alk 10 5Chools. Nt'ar aJJ schools. $37,000 best of IC'ITTIS. CUil" Z bdrm & den. T1C'ar downto\\·n C.1\1. & Cily Park. Jin.~ \'f'fl br!rk Hcatilator fil'l'Jllii<'r, rniil ln•cs ,t· lu ri.:r li•1K·rd lot. For ap- pointn1ent to .~ec. 1·aJI lo1v.'1&1rm,3hl\ths,enlry PANORA.MICVIEW i;:-arageart.onllot.Each2 Brookhur sl. 22101 hall, dining rn1, Hugr fam[.ly 2001 B11.yside Dr. Beaut. Br, 2 Ba. Total income $400 Capistrano Ln. GI loan ---------·I rn1, liulll·ins, 2 slory. shake roof l·sty. 3 Br. 4 bo. 1110. 11·i!h vacant separate 51.~%. Only $4.500 dn. $j(()() PRICED To Sell! La )'az , Country Estate Cus101n btult 3 bclrm hon1c - n1any extras. Lot lSOxlOO. - many, many trtts. $75.00'.l. Wells·McCardle, Rltrs. 1810 Nc1vport Blvd .. C.!'t1. SIJ.lf20 1vatelimnt borne, xlnt silfim. gUcst Bdrm & bath. Price 2nd TD. S168 mo, 96&-4132. Home. Cuslcm1 Xtra6. Very TARBELL :.19.·,;; Harbor ming beach. Ne11·ly redPCOr .. 1,;S4=9=·""°=·=A=rt"<;i;pm=, '=......,.===:;;'='='=92-:.3=2=<;=====~=0="=n=·,oB;y=Ow=""· ="'=-='="='='-I ORANGE COUNTY'S LARGEST 2629 HARBOR BLVD. S4M440 OPEN EVES TILL 3,30 Golfer's Paradise PAUVWfill'E CARNAHA N 3 INCOME UNITS S180,000 SHOWN BY APPr. 1 & 3 Bdrnls. New carpels & Linda Isle Development IG ::.•~""='.:•;,.I _____ l;.:000:::.0.:.;:•;:n•:;;rc;•;:l ____ ...;.IOOO::,:c..;Go;•;:n;;•;;.•;;•I;_ drapes. Bit.ins. Private Pa. BILL GRUNDY 675.3210 RE L Y COMPANY 1ios. F'hvplncrs. Top loca. HW Bakt•r. c.~J. :ilf>.'.il·tO ,,. .................. ~ ... ·I * 642-l n l Anytime * lions. 0 IV 11 (' r. Principals • HOMES • :=:::=~;::=:::=:. ./ i'Et;DED: (.JI R.E. vnl}. !17.:>oo . .:HS-0257 3 BR. 1 Ba ......... ,. S27,(Q) SALES Pl::RSONNEL 0\VNFR d t A 4 BR. 2\i Ba. ·•· .. • $34,900 2907 Baker Street Fl ,. t d Roma nce & Riches -, , : 1 espera e~ .,,S:u, me 5 BR. 2 ba. + fa m, •• S-13,000 oor 1n1r no 1~ull'f' . J • ' oan., op~ . ., ~·1 rn1, 3 BR. 2 ba. + pl•>TOl. •1.1,iOO lier-e's " <>rr flt "l\h•s:i Verde" 1-Cot'Ono dcl Mflr East 8luJl11, Eeauti!ul Po1pu Beach on 111<• ftt'n ''''"" ' n I ~ QJeo-• kit.~ cf the ..,. " • "' •11 •11 Y rin. rntry Graham Rlty. 646-1414 "u'"' td b hQnlt' 11\lh fonnal rlin. rm. t-Nrwpo11 llC'iizhl s / Do1'•'r i;at'flf'n l~ll' of 1-:111 i. lln11ai1 ~l:ill. rull 1t1111ng nn. bu ilt· fl.'ear Nr.ll I'!~ 0 ,.._ fbur ICl'Ol!'lbl w«ds e- lam, rm.131-cnl good !iized Shol'es. 1.COsta i\1esa, I-Lido Lovely Jr1'l'I hlt ~'OO'i.2W' : nu, Hl'l'placc. brk .. $29.500. NEE 'PO ··""t ""'""' low to fonn bit" •lmplai words. •&.ALTY C tli. 54S-m9 64-1-068~ eves. S~tt4ll1A-" £!f S" The Purz/e with the Built-In Chuckle bdrn111. Va11u1t 0011•. >'ully Jslanti/\\'r st NewtlOl'I, rrank r IP f' fur 1Jrl'elopn1C't1t. 510...lT."' D 240 C·2 Ft? I WEY ALE I l'Qui11J)('d standard pool. A !'tlarshs.ll Rlty. 67;)..4600 $160,COO. l::ves. 61.).21.J:: ()\VNEI~ Tr · n f d 4 ~avi.'. 8-30' ft. lo(s "''ith vary. 11 I I' I' I Beaut hOmt!-on 10th gr..oen of "Cambridge Srries" home. HAPPINESS IS Pete Barrett ~ . " s ere . ing improvements tnd rents BcrmUdll OulX'•. !Jncst des--Bdrni. t ;J.nilly i·ni -Use "as is" or build lge: rrt course! Roomy 3 HB, 3 ~ 546·5110 Living In a 1'po\11 •ss 4 BR :! REAL TY r1~-cpl11t·r, <.'1111~ ~all, full rli'.'vclopn1enJ . $22,:;oo Each. BA, Pool, Jumi~hOO home. (lltllftiMINllWtr!l ba. hu1ne & bring alilr to thn1ni:; rn1, b_u'.ll·U~, :1:tr11. R. C. GREER Realty 1-G~E~D-H~E--ll J! llEGE REALTY 1\:ilk tu ~·hool with your 100.. \\'c~11.:hf! Ur., T\B b!\lh ... , bl'k .. $2.1.aoCI, .>I0-1720 3li'l Vi L'd 6~9300 .. • lncl112 iolf ca.ru. Club n1crn· ISOO AdarnsatH.1rbot,CM. fi·iend!. $2:>,950. I\ ----a 1 o 1; • I I I I be~hlp avail, AskJng $95.000 I "'""'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ I CORBIN • MARTIN 642-5200 '<""' H 0 NEYMOON COTTAGE llAYFRONT PENTHOUSE • xlnt lenns. HAPPINESS REAL.TORS 61$.JfQ '"'~C:-d~M"""H'!!l~L~L~T!!'O!!'P~!l!ll l and lncomc on ~r lot.Panonmlcvltw.2 BR.2Ba. Linda Isle Development ::1036 E. Coe.st llwy, Cdl\t Bolh hl)utl'~ t~rl{"" • pstlos. Docks. $56.500 10" dn. T~ l_;.M:;..;E;.,C._N~l--ll ? Bill Grundy '7S-32l0 -6 Br., Pool, View Low dOw'n!I: 7 ~<::. ls! tni9t Int. r-.tcKermte, Ritt ~132 .. 1 1 -lll An cld trC!W pt~hed him- '. h.vl"" a roon• "I yO"" A Touch of Span ish s Hathg, T\\·o 2 car gal'. F'or-d .. 't'd. 011·TK'r ahcr 6 p.m .. 1~-,;,,o=;=:::;::..:.;=....:.::..::.: I I' II . ..., " ... " BLUFFS 3 BR, 2 BA ~11 se en a telephone wire. Ho PISCES very O\\ll, ,')tv. lhi1 :-, bdrm \Vallcd patio; J BR. -+ rl1n. ma.I din. rn1 'c Arrr. Vc1·y .~l&-'23!H I I ~ $29 U:...,,... • -• • • , •• h ho •"" ,.._,.. + family -'-lg . roon1 o\cr :.ound bul no'Nl, itr, .... ,111in«. B\' ()\\'i\'>'l' " B 2-;;:-<.''-T • ,......, or --------~ was atttmplin9 lo moke a You love originalltl'! Sec !hi~ ~ .,.., mf' fl! ............... " • I i ,: .l r. °"• lease/opUon. 644-2039 .. , I 0 c-by ... ·.r~~· t~~ ... ·h~ .. '··1'··:::1. CAUDELL REAL TY G•f'tlit'. Rcducl'tl to Rl•,1111·1 ·d s1n.ono rl'l·s~7.JOll. carpet~. dt'f>S. lovely )'<inl • ..;;;===-="'-='--I P 0 Ml EC _ _ highly Ind Iv Id u a I bc&ch 5-16-5-MiO Ew.s. 54>3310 $4i,!l;:icl Riddle & Ross Rltrs. sprinkler~. 11r. Paroohhd & I r I I' I I hOoae w:llh &Unken ... ~~on·lsh Wa lker Rlty. 67S-5200 ::;.:ij E. Ciin11oi IJ11~. 67j·'i.?15 public scllls. $31,500 . TIME FOR tub In the Ma1ttr ...,..room. SACRIFICE! 4 BR. 2 BA, 3366 Via Udo, NB Open Son. -s:;7.~ll.i.~I )'Oil dwllop rom attp No. btJo.,,. Ne.-er than ooW mndi1lon, 1"'11 ftm rm, 2 11y. lll'd flDC!I DOVER SHOR ES "-.,:.;'=~=~---I QUICK CASH Low down. 137.SOO •/ ,,,,.. • d;v bnt. N< LIDO SANDS 3 Brand Now w /Viow HUGE BONUS ROOM e PllNT NUMe!l!O I' I' r 1· ,. r p 1: l H•I Pinehin' A11oc. iccho .1 1 s. $.'Wm dn, SIS,500 5 BEDROOMS COl'RT\'AltD rooL PLU~ ·I &lr1ns. Near all. tETl(RS IN SOUA.!£S I --=~-~--'29,950 IYJ<Jnl, p!lnclltd !3rll rn1 11 Rllr. 6~~-!1730 Ew r,\S-£17'10 V .t.NSWIR 1000 • 3!kX> £. Cbut HW)'. 6™397 &I0-7lil :? Bath~ Lam ya11t I lwirms, 3 baths + flO\\·der Prh.•lif •iahl at $29.SCXI. THROUGH A _""...:;""~"::.IAMat:.:.,._' _'o_• ... l_L ..... l_._l ....11_.. I I J NEIVl'ORT IT•lgh!S <'mbl· ' BR l'i ho, lam rm, • . DAILY PILOT 1,. rtndt atylc 3 h1rm. \VHlchft Plata art•. ahag Geor gt William1on lrple. fonn:tl din rm. fro1n UNJTl~D f'UND -Have j ,l\alM tGOf, frplc. $2!.000. cpt .. ~hnrle httl. $28.500. JlEA.::rort ,.l f'M;.rm . Roy J, \\'nnt Co. Vn11 CnntrlbutC'd! ~CRAM LETS ANS h,,.,..... R.E . Ml 2-Zli2 K,,,.,..,,, ".: Ml•-= 67J.4JSO 67~1564 Eves .• ~'''"" D,, 1"&1.tl!t .,.o ... ~r. .... _G ... 1t1_1:.:.'''::..";..':.:.''""'-'--'---W_A_N_T_A_D __ , _____ • _____ W_E_R_l_N_C.:.L_A_S.:.S.:.IF_l.:.C.:.A.:.T.:.l..:O.:.N~8:;8:;0:;0:_ r L I I . •• __ .,... ________________________________________ _ .., __ _,.. ' • M'l'tff...,. "'•Y place tWr "'• •1 t1l1,...._ -~ Phones Are Ope~·a:oo a.m •• 5:30 p.m. 9 to Noon Saturdoy -Closed Sunday DIAL DIRECT ••• 642-5678 HOUSES Fort· SALE ~~!.nVl•lo 1708 NEW 4 A F.U! R~t l •tor'>'· 4 8dr A: 3 Ba. Lge tam nn •l'blr. Full crptt & drpa, self-deaning oven. Lie 1."0Ytred pa1.tlu. Pvl. club. $39,!00. La Pu R.E. 8:»-0700 SAie~ center, """"" Vl<jo RENTALS RENTALS RINTALS RENTALS DAIL V PILOT 31 RINTALi HoutH Unfurnl1hocl H_. Unfuml1hed i ..,;~::i::;;·..;F..;u::m.::.:.:llh00ocl::::.. __ 1 ,_:,Apl1.:z:_::;..;U::nfu="'n:;;l"'=od=-----U-nfu~m.;.il.;.h..;IM.;._ c;; .. -;.j --;.;.ti ...... Booch 3400 Coti• Mu~·;;;;;;;:-~4~100;1~~~~··~'ftoiiiii••iiiiiiiiiiii5~1~oo~c;~ .. ~·~··M;iit~Hiiiiiiii~5~100~1 RENTERS: LOOK!! llOUSE Fat ftfnt. 3 Br., 1%. SHAlJ.P Bachelo!' unit. Cloae Hundred• or Housea & Apt.a. Ba. Encl Patio. Ooee to to OCC I. UCJ. $135 pays Mo1t areas. 1 Bdrm to 1 bch, tchOol & ahopptnr ctr. all. Rcftttnce1 required. Bdnn. i'r.i to $400. Avail lmm $25() 1tfo + dePOI. 83U1ll AvaU. 2111'70. Evt1 A Wffk. * Call Susa.n MS-~64 * alt 5 or Dl.)'S *28Z>, ext endi ~ GRANP OPENING! SEE AWARD WINNING MERRIMAC WOODS! WESTMINSTER & NORTH COUNTY DIAL FREE 540-1220 oan• Point 1730 =c.:;_;..;.;;;;.,. __ _ $2.ID. <I BR. 2 BA. crpt1. drps, 2'0. 1$125'~..;M.;O~ID,,;.,LX~M~obll~•~llon~-~·. I range&: own, 1ar, childru S180. S PR. l 'ii BA, 2 11)' compl tum. htd. poc.I , welcome. Blue Beacon, Condo. Cprta, drpa, 1tove, Adu.ltl:, no pell . .a Sea.aon·1 fio&S..OlU C.M. patiO, ce r port, pool, Mob. Est. 2339 Newpor:. clubhar.. 9 6 2 -7 6 3 D orM -,-,'""'~,;332;;,=~~===-I +.-RENT-2 Bdrm. Bltns. ~ ORANGE COUNTY'S MOST BEAUTIFUL APARTMENT COMPLEX n ... A POI""' B ea ....... t & dra"'" $11A). 2131342-3531 MERRIMAC WOODS Just com~letecl, I or 2 BR., 2 BA. with elr concl., <.<I", .,.. >' owner. .,,., I d I d If I Duple)( ul)plt • ID\Ytlr. *Call SUSAN 645-2464 sdn * 3 BORM! 2 baths, 2 car 1ar, Furn unitl avaU. 5ee 8d un. comp••• y soun proo • , •• c ••nfn9 ovens, Ocean v\tw, nr beai:h & Jtl-ThtEDIATE POSSESSION. cpi,/drp1, Walle to lho~ der ciua 5100. 425 Meni· '!W'ood c•lllng.s, dlfhweth•rt, lua~ land1c•pin9 Huntington Beach: S40.1220 L1911n1 Beach: 494.9466 Houn-Reguletions-Deedlines &¥p1. Good cord, $39,500. Immaculate 3 bdrm 2 bath pin&. $225 /mo . Bkr. mac Way. 5'3-6300 with •tr••m• I: wat•rf•ll•, •l•v.1tor1, BBQ's, 1110111 AherHMn thevhl check tfMl'r Mi 4ellr •ftll """ hM'9111•t•fy ilfTOMI 496-$14 home· $190/mo. Also 4 ~G-4l<ll • SUS CASITAS clubhous•, 1aune1, Jacunl A Swim poor., prh•t .,, Mltclu.atflcation .. THI DAILY PILOT •IMllMI ll•Wllty t.t error• enly t• ========= bdnn 2 bdth +bonus room-3 Bdrms 2 balha. A brl&ht I Furn, 1 BR apt.a:, Aduhs. g•r w/1tor•9•. Ev•rythlng n•w. St•rtln9 et the extent of ""lllhhtt the HwrtlNtNnt cernctly..,. tlm.. Hou••• to be $350/mo. Also 3 bdrnis 2 clean home in cood tamUy only, no J>ft•. 2110 Newport •t40. Adults pl••••· Just Eesf of 2600 H•r· Movtcf 1900 baths + bonus room. at'l'a. Vac11.nt. ;225/mo. ~-BlYd. 642-9298 bor Blvd., next to N1b•rs Ceclill1c •t 425 M•r· DIADLINI POI CO'Y AND KILLS: l :JO PM. the .. y..,.,. "'"lic•tlen. 1a:apt $285/mo. CALL Mf>-8424 546-4141 u=<e'°'&;,._;u_p ___ A,;IT=M.=cr=JV=E~.~l rirnac Wey, Coste Mesi. Move In Now. ,.,. WMkW Ultlon .,,. Mend•r MC.tklna whllt ct°""I tlm• ii .s:• P.M.. MOVE n1 (open e~sl SOUTH t'OAST 2 BR, l.al'!lle lot, sep. Iara.ct· bdr .. pool, uW paid, garden 5'46.4300 PrWay. , Modern, movable ottice bulld· REAL ESTATE $.165 mo. 17568 C&meron St, .~i~"""'~·~orl~ul~u~,ino~pe:u~, ~l:fl'.Xl:i~!!!!!~~~·!!!!!•!!!l-,!!!!!!!1 i~pvtittoned into 2 olfi~1. H.B. 493-4215 \Vallace Ave., C.11-1. YOU MUST HA.VI KILL NUMllll Whitt kllllnt •it .. .._, .. ef 11ukk IWUfh, · Costa M•sa 3100 · • "'L:t -lte iure ho m•k• ' r.:ord ef the ktll numMr tlven rev "r yew Ml t1k•r II Great fOf' .alts office or 4 BR TOWNHOUSE, 2% Ba. LRG 1 Br. F\irn, No Lse. No Apt F I ... _ _. Coat• Mt1• 5100 YIM"lftcitlon of y.ur call. mountain cabin. $"7,W> FUlJ.. ----------Avail Ill Aug S220 per mo. child ar pell. $125. &UI--""""'~· "-'"~'"-"'~'-c:::.__, l;;;;;::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;::;i;;;:! PRlCE, 1ubmtt Yo\ll' tenns! 1• •. ~.• .. uEST Call ?13/S84.7981 Shalimar Dr., ··A", c.r.t. Huntington a..m 4400li . WE S&LL A HOME I W ; BR Sol v-.a $225/mo. TRAII.Elt-Re tlrod or 1tu· ARE YOU READY? ,....., .n.rt 11 .,,. ... to kill or correct • new 'M tMt he1 Men or4ert4. ltvt w. c•n· Mt 11111r1ntH '• do so until th1 IMI h.11 ,,,..'94 In tho ,.,.,, EVERY 31 MINUTES Your rcnl • own your o\vn Avail. '1U July Isl den1 $67.50-$80. cau 548-9287 STONEHENGE APTS. DIMl·A·LINI Adi are atrlctly c•ih In Mv•nc• lilr mall or •t 1nr .,.. ef eur efftc-., NO pheM ....ren. Wa Iker 9. lee '""""' 3 bdnn 2 both, all Ol7.sss3 B"T. 1193-4152 alt • "'83&-7440 alt '· ' BR, 2 BA, diohwlu-, rec. WE ARE! Cl l.-!•llt·ins including dishwa&h. 3 BR hou.se, ~ts. buill· • NASSAU PALMS • rrn. Adults, no pets. 2320 New . move in now \Ve have rou We!tclitt Dr. &16-Tlll er, carpets & drape~. S185/ Im, fenced ln rear. double 1 BR turn apt. Pool tlorida. 536-2730 &n ldUlt communfly that le: thl DAILY PILOT '"'""tho rltht t• claalfy, •It, CH .. r er ref\IM •ny .. ..,.. l.:o=:======= t!Mmlnt, and t• ch•nsi• Its r1t1s •n4 rewulatfw wlth1ut prier netkt. A!ta. for Sale 1980 mo pays all. CALL JACK ga~. Corner lot. 96:1-8>47 177 22nd St. oo.3645 FREE UtU, him. 1 Bcinn dote to aQ. 1 4 2 Bdrm. aJJ HA~1MOND Hetitage Real DLX l·:l BR, allO unfurn. apt. Nl!!ar beach. $125 up. util. Jltid, P<>OJ. sbec e&r- E!!tate M0-1151 (open eves) S•nta A".1 H•lght1 3630 Adlt1, no pe1', utll lncl. 1884 536-3777 536-7282 536.1366 pets, blt·lnl, drapta, l&rllt , M•li Acfdm1: lo.ll 1175, Ntw,.rt IMch, Callhirnla CLASSIPllD COUNTERS are located 11 follow1: 6 NEW delUM 2-f.6.S-12 &. 24 unita. Walk to be a c h. Apprecialing ,... area. Owner / Bldr, • Lindborg Co. 53~2579 DESI RAB•E w/1torage area. Adulta only. ~ ~ Acre. small 2 bedroom ~ Monrovia. 54&.-0336 2 e oru.1s. 2 BA. pVt. patio, Hurry on the1e. P'i'om Sl50. HOME den. $165. 1 BEDR00?-.1 fu r ni s hed Mated pool, waaher & dryer HACIENDA HARBOR 2 Br., 2 ba, Cflld, drp&, forced 64tHWG9 apartment for renl Check hook up. 962-8994 11.ir heat, Garb.disp, blt·in1, -:::::::::::~=~=:::::;;::;l j•~t~at~o~A~p~u~.j2S3§l~So§:.2s~ru~to~I 241 AVOC11do, Cort& Me11. frplc, patio, garage, water ": 5 A 4620 Between Vlcv.ria A Wlllon furn. Ar!ults only no pels. L•pun1 Biiich 3705 I BR. New Crptl, bit-Ins. ante n1 Jmt west of Newport Blvd, RATE REASONABLE FOR LEASE ~~ a ~~e'!1~!:e. Adlt.s $130 LARGE, cheerful newly Ph:>ne 6'&2-2925 Deily Pilot Classified RENTALS Across from Country Club Charmlng En,gllsh T u d 0 r Y· '. . · tum 1 BR apt (trl-plt.xl, ~~~"'~.;;,1!!!!!!!!!!!!!111!!1'1 275 ~tesa Dr. * Ph. 548-6700 home. Prime No. eDd loc. 4 SSS & UP .... Nice 1 & 2 BR Bltm, &:are.gt. 1 infant OK. NEWPORT RIVIERA 4 Bedroom, Z ~a I h, Own. Bdrmi. Fireplace. Beam Trlr. 133 .:... 17th SL, 0.1. No pets. 2230 So. Center St THIS ONE WON"t LAST CLASSIFIED INDEX Hous11 Furnished General 2000 HOUSES FOR SALE MNtUL COfTA M•IA MIU DIL MAI MISA VllDI COLLIOI PAllll: llWl'OIT ll"'!N OW'l'OIT HllOHTI ULNA COVIS l...,.H:T IMOlll UTClllllT MY1HO&•S eo't'll SltMU WllTCLlrP MAll:IOlt HllNU.NOS WNrvlltITT PA.1111: ll'llHI ~i~.ru; .. .. , ... ll'llHI TllllACI COltONA OIL MAii IALIOA l"lllllNIULA ""'°" .... ., UHOA ISLI UV 11\.ANDt uoo"" Ml.HA Ill.ANO INMTINeTON llACM llUfllTINITOfll HU:IOUI HUHT1'0t VAUIY 11"'1. IUCN IUNllT IUCN tAIOIN OllOVI I.OH• IUCH LAa1wooo •AHOt COt.INTY OUT OP COUHlT 0VT 0 .. ITATI ITANTOlt WISTMIHITllt MIOWA'I' CITY IAllTA ANA IANTA AIU. N•TS. ..... N •• "'"'" _.TM TVITIM MIAH•IM llLV••ADO CMTOll KAVA.SU U.K• U..UllA HJ\.lS u.eu11.t. t1aACH u.eu•A MIOUl!L MllllOM VllJO IAll CLIMl!NTll 1M JUAN CAl'llTRAMO Cil'ISTUNO lllACH OANA POINT UaLll"D OCIANStO• u.11 01aeo 1.rv1•s10• COUNTT MOUlllS TO •• MOVIO CONDOMINIUM OU"1.11xws "°" UL• Al'Al:TMIWTS •o• SALi RENTALS Aots. fu,.,l1hod 1111 OIN .. •AL - COSTA MISA •I" 11ts MIU VllDI •111 ... 1111 NIWIOOIT IUCH .... 1111 ""''OIT n••m ~II 1111 lllWPOIT IKMll 41M 1211 WllT'CLIPIO ft3lll 1111 UlllVlllSITV PAllK •UJ Utt IACK IA.T CM tm llJT •LU'"' •to UU CORONA OllL MA• -t25t 1221 IALaOA ... 1tll IAT ISU.NOI ~ 1W LIDO ISLll tHI 1U1 IALIO.... ISL.ANO 4llJ IUI HUllTINOTON SIA.CH .... 11'1 l'OUNTAIN VA~T "411 tlO S•AL lllACM 44N 12'4 LOHO IUCM 4MI nu OllANOI! COUNTY ..... 11JI eAltOllN OllOVI •1t lltt Wl!STMINnlll ilf11 1Hill MIDW ... Y CITY ilfll 1JN SANTA ANA ilfll IUt SANTA ANA NlllHTI .._,. lllll TUITIN ~ 1W COAIT".. •1111 14M U.OUNA lllACM 4111 ,.., U.OUNA JUeUl!L '111 1411 MISStofll 't'llJO ~ , ... SAN CL9Ml!NTI •111 IUI DANA fl'OINT 41• 141J TllLl'Lll~ tk. .... IMI COMDOMllUUM .... !!: HOTILS ........................ 4tlS ,,. ReNTALS ~:~ Apt1. Unf&Jmlthtd' 1~11 OllNl!IAL ... '"' COSTA Ml!U 1111 UM Ml!U. VII.DI 1111 1111 Nl!Wl"OIT Sl:IC'lt " .,.. 1611 NEW,.OllT Hll•HTI 1111 l'M Nl!WP'OllT IMOllES IHI 1tu WISTCLll'I' • U)t lU. UNIVl"llllTT l"AIK Wf Ulll 1,t.CK IAY ft41 1•11 EAST •lUl'I' II~ 11111 COllONA DSL MAit ntl 11'1 SALIOA. IM tm IAY IJU.NDI UN l lOI LIDO ISLE Ull 1111 HUNTINGTON llACN J4M 17" P'DUM'fAIN VALLIY 1~11 tns l ... LIOA llU.ND JJllS 1nt ll!AL llACM MM lt41 LONO llACM Ulll 1111 OllAHOI COUNTY .... Im GAllOl!N 0110'11 NII 1• Wl!STMINITl:ll Mlt I'" MIDWAY CITY "" IJH INtT-. ANA MM ltrl s-.NTA -.NA Nll•HTt MM lhl TUSTIN ... COASTAL JJtl L.ADUNA llACN J1'I RENTALS LAGUNA NIOUl!L 1111 MISSION VISJO S70I Houau Fumish9CI s.u. c~1MeNT1 1111 HNlll.&L Mt SAN JUAN c-.!'llTIU.WO 11" llN'fAU TO IW.t.11 21M DAN.& fl'OINT 11W COSTA MISA ,",,", REAL ESTATE, MIU. OIL MAI I .. .,. vE10• '"' Gener• COLLIGI l"Aalf 2111 Tll~Ll)lt, etc. ,,_ llflWfl'OllT ll!ACM Htl CONDOMINIUM ffM llflWl'OllT MeTS. t111 lllNTAU WANTIO ,,.. NIWP'OllT SMOlt.U rm llOOMS 1'011 ••NT ms IA'l'SHOlllS 1nJ llOOM 6 10.&llO '"' DOVl:I St'OlllS ml' MOTIU. T'ltAllll COUll:Tt ltfl nsTCLll', IUt OUllT NOMIS .... Ullft\19.lllTY !"Alt« 2217 MllC. lllllfTAU Mt llf'INI !!"o INCOMI P'IOPlllTT HM UClf IUY .., l \Jllllfl!ll fl'llOP'lltTV ... IMT •LUPI' :no Tlt"JLl!lt l"AlllfS .. u .. T•rt H" IUl lNISI lllM'fAL ._.. ......... TlllllACI n•s OP'l'tC• lllNTAL "" *ONA OIL MAI rut INOUITlllAL fl'llOfl'lllT't .... •ALIOA tJlf C'OMllllllCIAL ..U UY Ill.ANDI 1Ht INOUSTllAL llHTAI. llH Lroo llLI till LOn ,,. IALIOA ISUltO 1»S rtAN CHIS llN NUHTlllflTON IEACN t4tf CITltUS OltOVll 1111 l'IMIWTAIN VA.LUY tilt AClll:AOI 11" IU.L ll:ACH tut L..MCE •LSINOtl: •Mt IA+I• llACN UM lll:IDllT l'llOl"tllTT t1tS tlAMOI COUNTT ,... OllANOI CO. P'llOP'llTY tMI INITA .&NA tllt OUT OP ITAft l'rtOP. '"' nnMINITllll MU MOUNTAIN a O•IEIT ,, .. MIO'Jl'AY CITY S.14 SU&DIVlllOtl U.110 Qlt UMTA ....... HllOHTI 2lll lllAL l!tTATa 1111't'K9 •tn CMITAL tltl It.I , l!XCHANGI fut ~.UNA llACM 11• 11. I . WAN"TIO dM u..IJNA NIOUIL 1111 BUSINE5~ ind """'°" 't'IE.IO .,.. IAH CLEMINTI tnt FINANCIAL .... 'UAN CAP'ISTIAHO f7U (4PllTllANO llACM 17M IANA "°'"' ,, .. IMllllOI COUNTY Ult :: AC:ATION lllNTA.U "'" DOMINtuM 1'H LllXIS 'UIJL •11 •UllNISI WANTIO IN'llSTM•NT °"""""""' IUltNlll O~fl'OITUNITllS INVllTMINT WAHTIO MONIT TO LO"M !'111.0NAL LIAl'tt JIWllLllT LOANS COLU.TIU.L LOAffl llAL ln.t.TI LeANS MOllTOMll, ,.,... 0.-. MONIY WANTIO ANNOUNCEMEHTS .... ''" ... &Ill "" "" "" ... ... "" ... Sl35 LOVELY 2 BR triplex CIMIHf, c:..... .... W/W crpbi, sundeck, kids, ~:~!=*~::::-:: ,"'="=·=B~"'=· =-==·=·=== c.ti111111r u.v1N1 a 11,.A•• ••n Rentals to Shire 2005 OllAP'lllllS ...,. DEMOUTtolt MM DIAl'TIN• SUVIC• ~1 •L•c:TR.cA.1 .... IOUIP'Mtllt1 l:EllfTAU "5t P'l!NCtN• "611 •t.oou -P'UllNACI 111,.AlllS, l!tc, "" 'lll:H ITUll. 111'.ITOlllHO & ltSf'ltfllMIHI "'1 OUGe.llflH• 6* ••N•~ n1tv1Ca ..., •llACllfft. OllCIH• ..as OLASI 1Ht OlllM T"UM• •1tt OUN SHOI' • '11t MEALTllt CLUll 17": KAULlllMI 4nt POOL, Tennis courtl, huge master Btdnn s u I t e w/frplc, patio, fncd yard, gar, priv bath. Shar entire house v.•/ 3 .students. Ideal for 2 a.dulls or .,.,'Oman with child, Pet OK. $135. 832-5192 ROOMMATE Service. r.tale or fema1e lo share apt1 from $15. Blue Beacon, 64>-0111, c.r.1. er translerred temporarily. celUnas. Fonnal din. rm. 642-1429, 642-1265 (Nr Warner). LONG. Falxdou1 4 Br Town. Says, rent n1y home: $1!18 Spac. crounds. ~. Avail Immtd. 2~ Ba. per month. Great location, Sl35 ti.to. Newport S.ech 4200 lequna auch 4705 Sepr dininJ nn. frpl.c, CJ'P* near sc~!:o and shopping. >•~ll~-~"~Re~al~ty~:::;:;•~M<J~73~1 11N.;;;;.;t&;;ii;""---11;;;1,;-;;;;:ylij:Afi£-t:bru-out, encl patk>, 2 ctr It's in our rental book at ;: Newport S.ach 'mE NEW VILLAGE INN pr, chlldttn &: pet.I OK. \\'ALh"ER & LEE Mission Viejo 3708 Formerly Saddleback Inn, Rec. ctr & Olympk: sz pool. 2190 Hu1·bo~ Blvd. at Adams 1------'----GRAND Laauna, from $28 a week. M~berlitip Incl: AvaU on 2 BR, Gar. Patio. Crpts, NE\V 3 Bdr & tam nn, c111ts Lovely apt.a. All util's, 6 A-Io Sub Lae at S300.!Mo. To drps, stove & refrig. Quiet & drp1. View, lot $250. Xlnt OPENING linens, ma1d, pool, laundry Inspect CaU Mn. La.Vole Tl'opk:al Selling for Adlts cond. 3 Bclr &. lam rm, din rm. Steps to bch. e96 S. Cit &1).8497 afttor 5 PM. On!;.·. i Blk Shops. S17S. rm, custom crpts & drps. Hwy· 494-9436/64-7201, 54.J.-OtS2 Near pvt. club $300. IMMEOIA TE 1 BR Apt; also sleeping mu. La Paz R.E. 830--0700 Util pd. Free TV & nuilo. Saleway Center, l\11ssion Viejo OCCUPANCY 1':.~t~'. :"~ v; .... Sinale pet'IOn. BRAND NEW $150 & $170 UTILITIES PAID MOUSltllAMtN• '11S INT•l:IO .. ot.COllAT!Ne 4nJ INCOMI TUI 1741 lllON, °"'91M111at. II&. 1171t lllDNINe •1" ~ 1\10. lea1e. Avail 211.i 3 Br, ""'/W cpt8. d rps , gardener. Eruitsi<le C ~1 • Nice neighborhood. 5-lS-3782. A TTRAC 4 Br Townhouse • FEMALE \Vanted To Share Sublet. Crpts, drps, frplc, Nice Home v.·/same. 1 palio, 2 car gar, pool. school age boy OK. $125. ~l17 &12-9610. t ~~~~=-~~- Duplex•• Unfurn. 3975 bn •• * 4M-71.Yl9 * l.uxury aarden &par en .... HUN T IN GTO N BEACH offering complete privacy BEAUTIFUL JA.rae Bach. DUPLEX ' apt. Walklna; distance to : BEDROOM, 1 bath, ex· bea utiful landscaping &: beach I: shops. Ocean v\ew. ce llent n e I&' h b or hood . unparalleled l't!a'e&tlonal B it-ins. Lease $170. 494--2449 Unfurnished. $135 month. facilities in a country or 494-5303 1 & 2 Bclnn, 2 fWlm pools. Adult& on!¥. nop eta. 642-3535 Days, 645-028J Ev11. 307 Avocado St., C.M. See Mar on prerr,tan (Behind K-Mart oft Harbor at corner Rutrera &: Avocado INSllLAT1Me 11M INIUl:AHCE 1'19 R 0 0 J\l. M ATE netded, INVISTl$.lTINt. ~ '"' female. Ocean view, huge JApUTt>alAL Int $200 VACANT 4 Br, Den, 2 Ba. OK !or Priv. Hm or Hrn & Bus. 93-1 W. 19th. ~~1968. 'l'#ILllY ••P'.&tll. 1t$. .... a pt. Prlv p1.rkirc. ~2187 U.MDIC.t.,.1l• ut1 I ~====::::=:::::::::= 5 BR, l BA. We. lmmed oc- lOCKIMfTIJ MM 2100 cup. $300 mo. Ask !or Fern, Cill153&-6602. I===============; 2 BR. Clean. Middle Aged club atmospht~. Now Hotels 4975 Empl Couple Pref. No Pets. leasln& in Newport BeaCb. UDO Shores Hotel & Marina Re&.ll. 646-6142 Special winter monthly rat· $125 LOVELY 2 BR Dupl~. Model.I open 10 am to 8 pm es: Bayfmnt Lan.at Suite Stove. Yard for ta.mlly. Pet. Furnished or unturnithed $462. View Studio SUlte $255. MARTINl9UE LUXURY Am MAIONllV. llllCK ""1:C:•:·'~·:..::Mo:::;M:;:. ___ ;;.;_;c;, I MOVINe a ITOllAI• .... agent ;.ID-1720 ::::~:::: ~=-·"" = 3 BR, 2 BA. house, 6 mosc ~~I.=E~A~Nc..-o,~.=R=-. ~Larg--,-y-ml'"'. P'ATIOS , "" lease. Avail Feb. 15th, l270 Adults. No pets. $155 mo. l'HOTOOltUMY 61111 &•" n~•7 ooo ,,,, Bkr. 534-6980. R ,_I •J« t $3 up. Kltcht!ne tte1. M a Id, Excellent Plll'k·llke surround· lngs, ])00].s, Extra p.arkfnr, Nr. shopplna:. Adult.I onq, P'LAIT•l'N .......... ., ·-mo. J'tO"W'I ..,,.,..,...,,, en ... rom ..,,,., o 10 u o w-k. RENTALS phone, co ee, Jee. ay-"'~ 1·2&3BRAPI'S ALSO FURN BACH. ~~~":~~INe = 1 BR Gue1t Hie, com p! !ur n. RENT AL • 3 BR, 1 BA ,.OOL •••vie• •rt Private. ParQ &pace. SllO Townhouse, pool & recrea· Apu. Furnl•hod Oakwood :~:;~;;'• 0 '· '"""" POW•• IWtll",... ftll mo. 96Z-4981 eves/wknds tio.t !ac. $215 mo. 540-6784 l'U~IO l d'\llCI "11 •°"=n•c..'cc•• ____ 4ooo_ I Garden Apll. Unfurnl"'ocl Im Sa.Illa Alli. Ave, C.M. A-fgr, Apt 113 646-S$42 llOOl'lflCe '"' 3 BR, J11:e fenced yard. Jst, llAOto; • ....,... lk. lfJt I $100 cl ' Ret. lll!MODllLINe • ltll'Allr .... ut, earung. . l:EMOOILINe. tUTCMIMt .._ $195. 645-2469 --.... tlWIN• .... 1 Bdnn fUrnished house. tlWINO MACIOJI• lllfl'All:I -.1 $130. AduJ~. 333 W. Bay St. llll'TIC T~IU, kwlrt. at'° fffi! (QJf;-) Collage P•rk 3115 ,. <I BR, 3 BA, Fam nn. College Park. Avail immed. S1.6.> mo. 645-2532 Apartments Gon•r11 5000 ORI.EANS APTS. 1700 16th Street VEN DOME TAILOlllNG •n• 1 -=~=--======== I Tl!1rM1Te co111T1toL "" Newport Beach 3200 TILL dnmlc ''" H ~ •-h 2200 TILi!, Llllflwm a Mt""' "1J awpo~ t u.IC Single Adults 714: 642-8170 IMMACULATE APTSI ADULT Ii: FAMILY 2 &: 3 BR avail, Adlllta only, 1741 Tultin, O>sta Mesa l.fif', Mn. canon. 6t2-46U ,. ••• s.lllVICI ,,.. FURN/UNFURN. TELll'lllllON. ··•"'-lie. ''" \VATERFRONT very private ~~~:'i~~llY !: 4 BR Exec, unusual at. Luxury single, 1 le; 2 bed· room apartments, fuml1h- ed and unfurnished, t1o'1th complete privacy and land· &':aped country club atrno• phere lncluding $750,000 .,.,'Orth of recreational facil- ities desJ.&netl and opera ted Jui1 t for sina;le people. MES MOTE SECTIONS AVAILAJII.E A L CloH to shopping, Park 2 Bedrooma. New w/w WINDOW Cl lAfONI .... "'1 mosphere. $525 mo. 6'JS.2717 JOBS & EMPLOYMENT OCEANFRONT 3 BR. $300 JO• WANTWO. MM .. incl ulll. Yrly IR. JOI WANT•O. ·-n• * 67J.-•f72,1 * JOI W.t.HTID, MIN & WOM.llN SCMOOU • nisnUCTION '01 P'lllP'AllATION THE.t.TalC:AL "" .... --MERCHANDISE. POR SALE AND TRADE P'Uli:NITUlll .... Ol'flCI lllUllMITUl:I ltll G'l'ICI IQUlfl'MlllT ltll STOltE l lUll'MeNt ltlt CAl'I. llllTAUllNJT •H IAll EOUllOMllNT W11 OCEANP"RONT 3 BR. Winter $185. Students ok. Garage, yard * 673-8088 Coron• del M•r 2250 CH I NA Cove, v i e w, beautifully furn 3 BR, 2 BA, $4:i0 mo yrly, 644-0906 appL 2355 HOUSEMCLO eornis ... B•lbo• l1l1nd GAU.DI! IALI Int 1----------:~:~.~~r:. AUCTION :: 1010 so. aAYFRoNr AHTKIUEI tllt t f best I SIWING MACJllNll "" I to 10 yr. ea.e or oc. MUSICAL IHITltUMllfT ,,. Bel\UI, 4 BR. ]~ bath home P'IANDI 6 OIOAHt llM & 2 BR, 2 bath apt, ,l 2 boat llAOIO '111° t11.5v1110N '* pier & dock, Fu.in. $1200 '41·fl a ST1•10 111• per month. TAl'I lll!COIDllll '"' D I t cAMEllAI 1 l!ou1l'MlflT •• Linda Isle l'YI opm1n HOl&T IU,.l'Ltll .,... BILL GRUNDY 67&-3210 SP'OllTINO 00001 tltl llNOCUL.Altl. IOOPU .... $370 mo/yrly. Fumlun1'urn. MISCILL...LHEOUI ".. Delightful 2 BR. 2 BA, ~IS(. WANTIO Mii MACMINlllT. II~ • .,.. frplc. 2 car gar, 2 patios, ~¥::::. :;?; dock. Adults only, no peta. IUILOINCI MATlllAU ,, .. I c"'::.:>-~7880=----~~~ IWAP'I '1fl AVAIL Jmmed. Lovely 3 Br, PETS •nd t.IVESTOCK 2 Ba Home. ma Mo. No P'aTS. GINll:AL CATI • Students. 67:;....oz:3 ••• 1,,,=====:::::=::::= \1le have several choice 2·3-4 Bdrm. hOmei avail.; clean, vacant & ready for immcd. occupancy. Lease rates from SJ25.S500 per month, includ· ing all or the marvclous BLUFFS features, Gall us today! RE!'tl'S FROtl-1 $1"5 to $300 * LOW WEEKLY RATES * * Spacious! Br'' J Ba carpet, separate l1undry Kitchen, TV'1, mald scr-* 2 Bedroomi room, paUo, lenced yard, vice, Healed Pool, * Swim Pool, Put/&ffffl clOltd 1an.p. WaUt ta F.ut 646-9681 * Frpl, lncllv/lndry f&c'la 17th Shopplna Center, $140. PLENTY Ot privacy, J.t& at· 1145 Anaheim Av1. ADULTS ONLY. BKR. trac, 2 Br, l \i Ba, btwn bchlCXl.;;ST;A;.;M;;ES;•;.. ..... ~;;;;;;; 1 . .;.~:-':"''---:-=-~:­.1: bay. New crpts, drps,[!.. ;:':; furn. N• pe~. 1195. • RENT • falrwaJ Vila Apts l Rooms Furniture Eaatbluff R•alty 241.J Vista Del Oro Newpon Bt>ach 64-1-1133 2 BR carpelcd, attch'd garage. 2 children & pc! OK . fo'ent:."td rear yd. Stove, refrig, dishw1hr. g a r b . disposal, waler pd. 1st & la.~t n10 rent + cleaning C:ep. A\'ail immed. 5'16-5348 eves. 64.>-1691 dayl'I WATERFRONT 2 Br, 2·&, $ 9 S & UP NEWPORT BEACH kpl, "'"· <cope•. Avo;t 1 • 9 Feb. l to J une 15. $290. l~onlb-To.M1'tlth Rent.ala: Near Oranrt Co. Airport &: Uct. Adults onJ.y. 20122 &nta Ana Aw. 5'0-2796 880 IRVINE AVE. IRVINE AND 16th {714) ~ 962-2341 WIDE SELECTION SAll. INN A10TEL Wkly & NO DEPOSIT 0 .A.C. monthly rates. 6 7 5 _ 18 41 H1'RC Furniture Rentals GARDEN GROVE lrorn. 28th St. & Nowport 517 fl. 19th, CM 548-3411 13100 Cha A Blvd $125. 2 BR. crpts, dips. bllna, pman ve. ............ ,_ t' Bl "·--· (4 blkt W Sant• Ana Fwy.) 3 BR. 1 Ba, % bUr to bea~h. •"' ... ..,..a ion. ue """'4lUH" 1ri4l 636-3030 126~1 40th. $240 yearly. 64>-0lli. C.l.r . B/B Adult1 Only ANAHEIM '1>-3249. 1165. u,... 3 Br. 2 &. bttns. 2 BR fum &: unfurn. Sl.50 _ ch!ldren ok. Blue Beacon, Sl7~. CptJ:, drps, bltra;, pool, 645--0lll, C.M. 3 BR. 2 b111h::, split level $26:i NO\Y LEASING FOR 2 BR. ~ baths .•....•••• $225 :r.tARCH OCCUPANCY AVA:LABLE NO\Y 277 So. Brookhurat Bay & Beach Realty. Inc. (1 hlk. So. of Unooln) 901 Dover Dr. Suite 126 NB CTI4) m-4500 645-2(X)() Eves. 54.S-ii~ TOWNHOUSE' 3 BR. 21\ South Boy Club BA, frplc, patio, pool, 2 C1tr Apartments patio. 1525 Placentia $100. 1 BR, 1tove &: rtftig, FOR two adults turn 2 ~ child &: pets ok. 81.ue Apt . Winter SllO per mo. Util Beacon, 645-0111, CM. paid. 113 23rd SL NB FURN & unfurn 1 BR ap11.t.C;.o;.:1c.1•;..cMoN,.;.;..;_ ___ .5_lOO_ p...,). No chlldroo or pet&. HARBOR GREENS 2405% 161h St. N.B. 646-4664 VILLA MESA APTS 2 BR lmlum, pri paUot. hld pool. 2 car encl'l p,r, OIO. dren welrome, no p • t 1 please! $160 al.lo tum $185. nr w. w111on. MG-12S1 kTOWNHOUSE * 2 BR, 1 ~ BA, crpts, drpe, patio. Adult.I. Sl.60. 134 E. Melody L • n e.' 6«Ul1i. 5'8-1168. , ' gar, all bltns. crpts, drpt1. 1--:,--.,;,===-,,.- DELUXE 2 Br. Crpta, Drpt, bit-ins, priv patio. Adj. cloood .... pool, - story. No pets, adults Ollly. $170. CalJ 6t&-74ll Lse S27;'i mo. sn...m.i or The GORCEOU3 New DELUXE 2 Br. WeslcllU Joe:. 642-2497 eves or wkend1. V Al D'ISERE Pool & bl t·lns. Adults. mo APARTMENTS TERRIFIC 2 bdrm1 1% SPACIOUS baths, sharp, carpeta/drap. 2 BR 2 ba den din room SlngJe.J br·2 br, Furn.·unf. _No ltue. 642-Ei274 A 1200 f 1 .... HOlt:Sll Ll'IEITOCC .. ... "" . .. ' . '-=====""=== TOWNHOUSE LrvtNO ea. pprox. 'II t., enc. Jn CllUhaven. ~1M Sauo• Act'y Rm B W!a.rds I'" a d A 11 2111'-$'""1 B h 2400 _,., ' Ml 4250 Separate al!ult It f1JT1lly com· '=". va · •v, w.1 l2l0. Huntington ••C Gl!Or"Ke Wi!UctJnson, Realtor Therapy & 45' p(,ot, BBQ1 Coron• dtl r munltlei. Bachelor J.J. 4 3 Four Star Realty 835-4C22 lo 67J..4350 673-1564 Eves 2000 P1rtons Rd. &&2-8670• ---------1 CALIFORNIA LIVING 1 Br duplex, lrpl, pat · 1 ~ Bdrms, tum & uatum apt&. BEAUT. 2 Br. New. Drpe, NUtt•••t•• "" garage. small backyard $l£i DELUA"E Townhouse. 2 BR. 4100 1 SR., partly furn. New ept&, SUO. per mo. & up. carp'd, stove, &arb. dl.tpl., sw1MM1•• POOU •• mo. ~n46 2 BA. Frplc, pool, lge patkl.1 ~C_os __ l•_M_•_•_•_____ .\drapes, Walk to i;hoppln&;. priv yard, No chlldrert OI' :~~':11 ::1 ==='='====== $250. l>lcKenzlc, RI Ir SIM month Incl. ulllit~. • LArae a:arden p&t\oi pelt. USO.. &tMl12 YAUTtOHI .,. DupltJres Furn. 2975 i .,:&l&-0.,:.;,."'.,,._~~----* SUNNY * Scenic Properties 67$-5726 e Open beamed ceUinp DELUXE 2 B r, 2 B&. TRANSPORTATION i.::==;;;...;...o"'-'---ONE 2 Br. & 3 Br. homes; on BA CHE LOR Apt, blk e Firepllo.:t1 • Rec. Room• Townhou1e Blt·lnl. _.., ond NOTICES l'OUllO lf'rM Mal .... $tli UTI L pd, I BR Duplex 85 ACRES .... be 11 e • I -•-'°"" • YACMTI ,.. yeul;, 1 ... SI ~ tr.. $250 mo. * * ocean/_,., am c e • , • poo s, 11unu, .nu.neq ru,,1, encl pr. Clbhle A ... ~~:"~~\ltllll :! in choice are•. Caywood Realty 548-1290 w/w cpts, 1 adult, no ptlt. school. Pool. S19S. C.ll Sf0..4179 ... , IP'la~a1 MATS ... I ~=-.;B,_kr,:.-~534---69!0___ -M ! I A ! SlOO yrly. 673-7629 IMMED. OCCUPANCY l BR. Range .t: own. 81f..lt11, ,.ll:toNAl.J ANllOUNCIMlm llllTMI PUMlltALS !"AID OllTUAllY f'UNlllAL 01•ICTOIS f'lOltlJTI CAllO Of' T'flAMKI IN MIMO•UAM CllMETaltY lOtl CIMITlllT Cl'f'f"h CllMATOlltal MEMORIAL l'AltU At.ICTIONS AVIATION t••""-"8 TltAVIL Allt TltAMtl'Ol:T•TJOH AUTO TllAMSP'OITATIOlf LEOAL MOTICIS OllMAH a TUTOlllHe :: =~ ~~~\~~IK9 = RENTALS ... _.. E11t Bluff 3242 * Q e · p $ * 2 BR, 1 BA, blk/oetan I 270o Pttert0n Wf!,,,..,.,,. Dahwsher. Crptt Ir nu drpl. "1111 loA• U.UNCMIM• ..,. HoUMI UnfUrnl1"9U bay. View. Prl pat io, Costa Mesa _..w.u Child & pet OK. $120. CID .. ",',1 ::.:.;":Ll~~~llNct :: EXEC. Jlon1e East Bluffs, l lfanal So. of O.C. Al!ulls, m pell, $180 yrly. Nr. Harbor 4 Adams M8-l"150. G ... r.t 3000 Near Aemnutronlc, 5 Br's. J'a•-.. ~-S -..,=~~-..,,.---.. u I0-1" lll:YICll -"" 1 "==c...-----............... 673--7629 MERRIMAC WOOD .-:.i! :g:; ~==~;~~ ,.. FREE RENTAL BOOK $42S w/gardener. &t4-lSSt Sr.lo AT ...... FURN. 2 Br. Nea r Bea.ch A Just completed, 1 or 3 BR. 2 3 BR, 2 BA .• New crpt.a. .n1 f'llMINct ao..ti.n ,.. $30 WK. & UP ~1 ..... ll'IS per mo. Call BA turn or unfum with alt 1.,.too1,1~~ .. m .~-~..':~~ Frah17.,.~ .. ,. •OAT MOV1Ne _. SltARP CLEAN 2 Bedroom, Coron• d1I Mer 3150 ft... w ... Montll ......... " .. ,. pl ........ -..-~ \CU ""'·''·""· l"TI .... .,.,, 10AT 1rou.01 .... monthly $175. Suptr Sharp ·------r• • 67S-3J.SS. • cond, com ...,... .................... , encl llf. $lJ5. rBo-3680 ..,. 1a.t1 WAJfl'IO '°" l Bedroom, 2 bath, &ll.t buUt. SHOWPLACE near oeean, a Kilchen1 I. TV'1 incl, EXCEPnONAL l BR., ~ aclt ~ ovtNI, wood ~-',--==-""-"-,.....-'-- .. ,. AllCll.UT ',',".. '"'· .,. •• m-~ ~pt~. 3 BR, foret'J air ht, 2 ha, • Phone 11rv., bid pool .. i-, ·•·• ~t 1 ·•uJI, no ctll1Jll1, dswhn, IUlh land-I 2 BR, Cfpta1_. drpc, encl ::= -t'o~',~' ~-=s ""' .... ..,.,. ...... ., . .., bar. w/w rpt, 2 1rp1-. '• •Maid &ervlce avail. ._. ---r ..., .,_M ..... with ltrt'a.rn. A .,._ Jat . .Adults onay. No pets • ... MOTGll ...... "" leise $22!5/Mo. we have ~.. 2176 NEWPORT ILVD. pets. $1'5 yrly. ~'7$29 , .... ..:..~.·~ lltvaton. ~ Vic Hartior . 8Uu-SMp'1. ..,.. llCTCLl.S ,.,.. others, come look throua:b encl patio, i::ar, $295 1st. ~ Sl3S M2-23B9 .... eLeCTlte u.•• mt our OOok:. Jo'urn or unf. 673-t:WM 548-9755 lalboa 4300 clubhoU91, .. unu, j&CU%Z1 A · • = ~~~=~"y~sLll -::: WE SELL A HOME 4 BR. 2~ ba. spilt level * WINTER RATES swim poola, p-t.-car. w/ 3 BR apt, bU·ln blllt. .ltl•TotttcOOTlllJll tMt EVERY 31 MINUTES Don v. r-·rankUn, Realtor If you 1tay lhru summer rv.'~ CLEAN Bachelor .Apt:s. •to~. Evtrythtna new. c•~t•. df'll>ll*. 1552·A SERVICE DIRECTORY :313 ;:r..ef'.\~f,.~'' = e &f.t...2222 *• n malna tho 111me. 1 Br turn All utll Incl .m up Start1nr at $140. Mutts Coriandtr St.. 54f.Qit, ACCOUNf lNO '* TIU.ILi .. JU.VIL "., Walker & lee I ==~===== ap& $1.25. Furn Bach •ot1 315 E. Balboa 8lvd. pl• ... Ju.st Eut of 2600 1 BR n.-1ex W/fhcr, ~-.. AHSWl ll!NO 111tVIC1I .... llAh.111, lllJlll' tdl -Harbor B!Yd t to N 'bttt ""'°'' -· """"'I: ,,,.,.L1,.,.r1 111 l'.t.1u. l'lt'tl "" nuut • .,.. Huntington Beach 3400 $1lS. See Mnu, 2ll5 Elritn BALBOA 613-llMS • ""' a shop's, no pets. Ad\altl onlJ, Al'f'l:All•N• #ti '''" ~ "'' 1682 Edinpr Ave, Apt 6, CM. Avail Ft b Cadillac at d5 ?io1trrlrnac S100. 5&Mi95t.. ~'."c~·~~c~~ s••m• = ~=~~ ll•JttAU • 5t0-51«1 8424-135 l>IY Be•ulltuJ 3 bdrm 2 balh lat. Huntlntton ... ch 4400 WI.)', 56GJO :.:2 :,,BR.c,:...:.ptly;o_;;cdrtt:.:pd~-. bf=1.~i;;;:-pr-·.' Au 10 1ttfl'A111• A 011111 IUM11s = SPACIOUS 2 a tor)', large 3 home. carpeted I draped, $25 p Wk & U •· -Adlta, ti. p I :~~~.~~.:-*' ,.., 1"° = =':%.:-"* = bdnn 1: tun. rm, all blt·lns, electric built-Ins tnch.ldlna • er . p e DEL.LAKE MANOR . no Pl • t o. IOAT Mot.INTI...... ... "'"*'"' Q.AlllCS tfU lmmed. pell. N ew I y dishwuMr. $2Z/mo. Lease s.c.hlklt • 1 BR, btd pool, Lc:e l BR '"°· UIU pd, pool, :.:"'"c;.:.:123.\~~-~~~- ••ICK. MAJONllT,.... ._,. •.«t<•c.us."" "" decoralld. ._/mo. CA1J.. only. ln excl u1 ·ve m11.Jd 111rvkl:. KUcftt.na A: paUo.smtUcomplex.AdulU. e 38drm.s2balhli.m&nYeX· 3 BR 2 BA OoMo. Os>ta. 11,!llMESS llRVJCU .. AllfO llYlftn ... -tral $225/mont)I d bl ~ PllJo, IUILOI U ..,. AUTCI W.\NTID "" Heritage Real !: 'ta If neighborhood. Bier. ~ TV avan. 4J(> Vtetorla (Nr no pets. ~n7. • 4 !dnn1 2 btth•.'JZIO/mo. l"pl, Ina, .......... ~::~:~~-'"• !: :;'0 't1!t]11,.. :.': 540-ll:il (open e~I. Eves. 5.l&-S86G Harbor}. .-.EW Ql.IIE:T 1 8Jt. nr oet&n, W1ll1-McCardl1, Rltrs. ll\n&e, $225 mo.~ CAAl'IHTl•tN• "" USIO c.A•• ... LEASE or l..lplU)f• lo Buy 4 $265 MO. 3 Br, 2 story bowit'. A'MTLAcrtVE 2 som.t $\50, pr1 dtek or Pf'tlo. 1810 Nl!:wport. Blv..J,. C.M. NEW dtx. 2 BR. 2 BA._~ DR 3 bltbl. Baautitul. fl8j 90U Bermuda Dm·I!, H.B. $14S x uttl. Pool, Adults, no Singlet A ~11 only, 202 14th 543-7129 ... .$.0684 tVQ O"Ptl, tfrp1. Imme 1 OCCl.QIS' •. to mt>. Delta M&-4C14 96Z-0121 pelt. 2272 Maple. S4S-<11~1. 536-1319, 673-1784. St7'-.,1Ar. ~"' ''n'l, !W&.S321 I ·----'~------------· .. --. ---------' ' • I t I f • I I .. ' ·~· n DAIL V PILOT TllursdaJ, January 29, 1970 RENTALS ' Aph. Unfuml"'od *' 5705 ~· Miio 5100 L..,.n, lloocll 1~~~~~~-'-~ -~~~~~-1 Qlllln', dlx 1 111', bl .... OCEAN VJ£W. 1 BR, Cllbldrll'ro , bea.Ql c et J • stove/rel, cpl, palio, )'U'd, Mllta, no pet .. From $U$. ullJ pd, 2\i blks bc:h. SEE 516--6316 ~ 6. FIRST al 2811 Rounaevel 28n.. 1 Ba. c:arpot.s. di'apw•. TerT, then ph 213: 944-SlU buUt·iN. al-aara;tc, =coU=-=======I c:ouplff only, no ptt&. ref.I. Sl.25 mo. Mfi-MSt · San Cl.,,...nt• 5710 LG.E 2 BR. ~. Crp1.s It 2 BR Duplex nn, trp.lc. dtpa. Kids ok. 1998 Maple carpl!tS, dishwasher, \'lew. Apt S. 548--21Q. 492-3464 or 213/fi3S..Il23 * * * * * """ 2 ,BR unturn. Duplex. Crpt & REAL EST ATE Wha~dy• Wont? Wh1ddy1 Go!? SPECIAL CLASSIFICATION FOi! drps. MMidle a.red cnly Gentral pluse. Phone 548-0m. --------- • BARGAIN -Beautiful lge 2 BR apt. 998 D Camino Dr, C.1\1. 546--0lst Rentals Wanted 5990 NATURAL BORN SWAPPERS Specl1I Rote · 5 Lines -5 timai& -5 bucks llULES -AD ~If INCLUOI!. ,__ .,.., 1111 ...... "-· I-Miii .,.., ..m "' '"*-BACH. elec bllns, J'•.'lrlg, util pd, St.al. l\t.aturc adulrs, no pets. 99.'l Valencia. 540-9680 RENTAL ANDERS ,.,.. l• L•il•* a-TOUll ,,_,. t llOlllr -.... t .J lllQ 9f HVtrllllnt. 6-HOTlotlNG FOlt SALi' -f ll..IOES ONLVI _ 4• W, 1fl!I,, Cnlt ,,_.... To Pl1ce Your Tr1der'1 P•r•diM A4 PHONE 642-5671 h ·-MS.1111 Newport Beac -==-•.wn•n11 •Ull•"1• EQUITY 4 UNITS STUDIO r-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ I ~~~-~:;::;·~-~·;::"'":;":' J . I' APT. C.1\f. TAKE ANY· I THlNG OF ~ALUE. EI.- land ords & Brokers !! DERLY O\VNER. SPACIOUS new 2 bdrm 2 bait\. Nr. a.hopping. Mariner Square Apts. 1244 Irvine Ave., N.B. 645-0252 Help 1tam(' out broken-up CALL 613 3'l09 houses, apts k underslrable • · t£>nant1, One Acre lot Flagstal!, Ar. *SPEE·DEE NEW.S* izona sul>dtviston, $3000vai. Absolutely Free ue. TRADE !or California '4S.2471 property 01· ? 0 w n e r I"'"'"~!'!'~~~~"'"' I i"'liLY<>r<i;i;;i;;;-2i>F 644-6488 e\•es. BAYFRO_N_T __ FAJ\llLY of 4 desires 2 BR 1st TRUST DEEDS TO house unfurn., i:;ar. 1 :Z BR, :z BA lll'Nry apts. Pri. Permanenl. Laguna, s. $~40,000 Trade for c ear tP.rrace, C"le\'a1ors, subter· Lsguna area. $ID$17S mo. view condo. or Home, New- ranean pk 'g. All elec. Pool, 499-2179 port, or as down payment soft \\'ater, boat docks. $350. • LANDLORDS e on income, (TI4l 459-3103 up. 3121 \V, Coast Hwy, New. FREE RENTAL SERVICE Improved 20 aere . horse port. fi.t2.Z'.ro2 Broker 534-8982 ranch, Northern Cahf., for FOR Rt-rit or Lse: Pt'ninsula ==-.,-..,.-=--'"""'~ yacht, hoUSe or apt. $-16,000 Pt. 3 Br. 2 Ba on Ba(boa BACH. Apt. C1\f area. Under equicy Owner .SOO. Utilities pd. 5.171388 aft °<7141 ti~ Blvd. at lhe 0cefl11. Crpts, 7P1\f Drp11 &· Bltins. $285 mo. Call =========! Have Industrial Building 54g.. 7889 Rooms for Rent 5995 \Vant LARGE LIDO JSLE 2 Br, Units, T .D.'s, or 1ubmit study, 13~ ba, crplli, drps, NE\V separate furn studio Nancy J. 1\1oore Realty adults. Lease. OR 3-7502. room, bath. Older \\'Oman 673-3101 NE\V 2 Bdrm 2 bath tri·level only. $72 mo. &16-68lT. Sonar OtaUenge1· '62 Ship CoOOon1inium. Pool area & Ei\IPL. lady, home prlvil. $60 To Shore 1\Jarine Radio. fireplace. $225/mo. 642-4744 mon th: Costa ~1e11 a . Good as New, \\'ill trd !or or Bay & Beach Realty &t2-5076 after 4:30 Sm. boat, property, C.B. VIE\V apt. Large rooms, rel. $15 \VK & up w/ kitchen $30. radio. etc. 540-6997 stove, bath. Singh~ adult on-wk studio apt. 2376 NeWpOrt 8 units, 3 sto1~. restaurant, ly. $165 mo. 548-2394 Blvd. MS.9755 vac. C-1 lot, duplex + DELUXE 2 Br. \VestdiU loc, PRl room, kit. privs. Nr 21st home. \Vanis Trlr Pk, AC', Pool Ir. bit-Ins. Adults.. $225. Ir. Sanla Ana. $17 per wk, or ? · ~· $200,(KM) all or No Jeau. 042~4 J\1en only! 64:i-12!M. part. P11ce Rlty. 548-3209 SLEEPING R00il1. TO\VNHOUSE: Newport, ? 3 BR, 2 BA. Nr ocean. Ftplc, l Adull. $4{1 BR, 2 BA. New cpt, Jge pa. dshwhr. $235 mo. yrly. No 333 \V. Bay St. (Ofticel' ti<>, pool. S6M cqty. \Vant pets. f>48.-0897 wk-days ~5 1 ----~----Prescott. Ariz. property or ROO~t For rent, l person, ., .,., ., A"'ent 646-0732 Newport Shores S220 &0ber. pvt batb. $18 week. · · · · "' 1502 Orange Ave., C.M. * * l·lave 4 lfonda 1\Iotorcycles & 14' Oulboard Ski Boal. \Vant Fumitutt, Small Car, Van Or ?, Call 557-8218 TRADE clear '69 C'.01lrtnen- tal, white landau top, white intC'riol', Z dOOl' FOR 22' ~ 2Il' l\Iotor home. ..~- \VANT 2/3 acre or more C2 or 1\1-1 Orange Co. from Garden Grove Blvd. south. Trade 10 acres Palm Sprgs aJ"ea. Value S2il.OOO. 536-1131 50 Spaces !\lobile Home Pk Moses Lake \Vuhlngton, iood hunting etc. Trade for Orange Co. or San Dh?go Prop. Brkr. 6T;M)ll6 2·1' F1ybrids;e cabin Crulaer Xlnt roncl. Sleeps 6. Trade $2200 eq. for trailer boat, camper or ?! Call &164619 Old ei;:!. Gen, Merchandiae store, S1500 \'al. Tracie for vac. lot, house equlty, boat, mobil home, or • ? 675-7282 Owner Have 4 beaut. view acres in N. San Diego Councy. Want mobil tra.Uer home. Lee Pereyda Real Eslat<! 499-1990 01'. 494-5-188 HAVE 1st T.0. plui;:can acid other properties, \Vant In- come uni!ll. Prine. Only, Broker/iXvner P.O. Box 623 South 1...:!guna, mn * * * ThfMACULATE 3 Br. Apt. Lease $235 ~r mo. Frank r-.tarshall Realty. 675-4600 Motels:-Trlr. Cris. S997 !!JR!!JE!!JA!J!L!!E!'S!!l!!A!!TE!!!!!!!!!!!ll!!!!!!!!!!RE!!'A!iL!!"!!E~S!!T!!JA'!T!!!E!!!!!!!!!!!!'I \VF;£KLY rate1 Sea Lark General General East Bluff 5242 ~~·~~~Newport Blvd., -Ol-f-ic_1_R_e_n_t1_1 ___ 60_7_0 -M-... -.-t.-&-o-.-,-.-,-t-6_2_1_0 VIEW APT. Gunt H-5991 HUNTINGTON BEACH Lg. 2 BR, 2 Ba, crp'td, drp'd. ----------1 Air Conditioned 2 cov'd. garages. Xlnt Joe. PRlV. Room for elderly lady ON IEACH ILVD. nr shopping, schls. & church. In J!c. guest home, Call De~k &plu .. -e available in e11. 816 Amigos Way # A. 646-3391. newest off!~ building at $:m per mo. (yrly.) ========== prime location in J{untlng-Mlsc. Rentals 5999 ton Beach. Air conditioned, _________ 1beautiful entrance. Front· .• ouoto 0 -··;, ca.a Coron11 del Mar 5250 •• ~~;._ ' ON TEN ACRES I & 2 BR. Furn 6 Unturn Fireplacea I prlv, patics I Poob. Te nnis • Contnt'l Bkfst. 900 Sea Lane, Cdllrf 644-26U {MacArthur nr. O»st Hwyl BRAND NEW 2 BR, 2 BA, upstairs • duple:ic with sun deck patio! Cpld. drp'd., encl. Ji:&l'age, comp!'. bit-ins. Beaur. ldscpd, 707~2 Orchid, i225 per mo. (\'rlyJ I r '7S.605o 0 -•. ,. .., ca..& FULLY enclosed .. arages age on Beach Blvd., rear • · leads to private parking $25 per mo. lot. .$50 per month for * 548-2921 * 11p11.ce. De:!;k 11.na chaLn tox20 GARAGE wes t-side available for ~· Busl~~s C:O!la Mesa Could hold Jge hours ansv .. ertng service : "·'" ~~-avaitable for $10. All utlli· crmper. S25 mo.~" ties paid except telephone. Buslnffl Property 6050 DAILY PILOT 17175 IEACH ILVD. HUNTINGTON IEACH 642-4321 Medical Qldg. Site ArRPORT CENTER Across from Huntington In-Ne~ l, 2 & 3 room deluxe tercommunity Hospital. Call swtes. Adj. ne\V n1otel & now. restaurant, MacArthur Blvd. R. D. Slates Realtors From $125. Call 546-7843. 536-8801 !\lARINER'S CENTER =========IOUice in Slore Bid. Rent or Bu1ine11 Rent•I 6060 Lse. $7j, 149 RlvcrsiC:e Ave., N.B. 64&-2414 AITRACTIYE 1200 Ml· . ft. SHARE furn e.'l:eculive office room, suitable. for. artu;t. !luite. $125. Costa ?-,tesa. profess. or retail bus1neu. 2 M2-4I63 or 675-5127 Blks from Lido Isle 67a-47471~==~~=~~= PP.IJ\tE bu11lne11s loc, 3345 NEWPO~T BLVD. d~-ntown C.o&ta l\f e s a, 3!J? sq. ft. opposite Ne\vport 20x95'. Call M8-340l or City Hall. 6Ta-1601 548-3270 OFFICE or DESK rental. ATTRACTIVE studio apt. 3 STORE FOR LEASE In 161D \V. Coast Hwy., N.B. BR, 2~~ BA. erpll, drps, Pamric Bldg., next lo Furn or unfun1. &llHSST bltns, Avail Feb lsL Bcrk~hires Restaurant. Inq. COSTA M~sa olllccs. AfC, * 64!>-1927 * 673-9405 Mrs. Franke C'rpls, cirps. Parking. 15.15 COROUDU API'S. 2 BR. HOUSE Zoned for s\Ol'e or Raker, 646-4833 or 548-4757 Lo\vct levels, istudlos. office, <'IC. 000 sq. ft.15 car SJ\IALL Of_fice on busy cor- Frplca, pool, dbl carporu, park'g 642-5851. ner Costa 1\le.sa $55/month patios. s115 • $220. 673-3378 I ~~:'.=';.'::;=:;===;~~I .~"'~"~;,~;·~·~;"C>'.'~'"~"~"'::·.!"~'>:"""~-~ 3 BR, 2 BA, at'ove, retrig .. Offic. R•ntal 6070 1-IAVE large 2 room orfice available 1'~eb. 2nd. $260. LAGUNA BEACH suite to share '"/young 6T>-2698 534-1358. . Al C ndltl eel prof!. Cd~f. 6'1<>-6171 f/ 2 BR, 2 t3A, 2nd story apt. ON :o~ A~NUE B~AUT. air conditioned .of- BIDls, $200 mo. Desk space ava!Jable In lice. new carpe~ ."-. paint. 675-3430 newest office bWlding al $UO mo. Call 645--0aia days NEW 2 Br, den, 2 Ba vtew, prime location in dO\vntown Crpt11, drps, sundeck, S285. Laguna Beach. AJr condl-Industrial Prop. 6080 772-0367, 5.'J0...4599. 535-31164. Uoned, carpeted, beautiful --------- entrances: Frontage on f/ BUILDER OF'F'ERS NE\V Huntinqton Beach 5400 CKEZ ORO APT8. 8234 Atlanta, H.B. Nu, 1, 2. 3 br's. Prlv. gar, pool Util rm. 536-8038 or 536.2727 Il\~IED. poss. 2 bdmts, bit· ins & refrig. Adultll only. $150/mo incl\ld. uWities. Tnde~inds Realty 847-8511 ATTRAC 2 Br. crpts, drps, gar, kida ok, $130. 1744:? Queens Ln. 968-7510. 811-IS&I. 2 Br mndo. Garage, patio, 2 pool.I, recttalion facilities. w... 53&-4546 Forest Ave., rear leads to Alunclpat parking lots. $50 21.500 sq. fl .. deluxe bldg. per month for space. ~sk Leased, choice Orange end chain available lor s:;. County area. Property Business hours anSl!.'C'ri~ clear. 0\\'n!'r \'11/C&rry 1st service available for $10. TD 8',1_%. Prcpd . Int. ok, All utilltle1 patti excepl S30-364a am, R2S-50l pm. telephone. DAILY PILOT Commercial 6085 222 FOREST AVENUE LAGUNA BEACI{ f'OR sale 686-6~15 W, 19th (94..9466 St. Bethel Twrs Area. PR=IM=E'°"Ofll«"'°' -, .. -.,.-.-:200)=:-,c:ql ~17ti8 or 6·1&7414. Agt. ft In Irvine Tov.·er, Newport FI nan c I a I Center. Qv. lndustrl1I R•ntal 6090 erlooim.; N"''Pl Harbor & W BUILDING Padllc Ocean. s..,..rb loc. NE tat clau exec. oUlces. Avail 1260 Logan Ave., Collta Mesa 5 AC. nr Hemet: 11cenlc hideaway, 2700' eL, wtr., game. $5000; $jQ dn 633-7710 8-10 Ai\1 agt. R. E. Wantod 62'0 QUALIFIED buyer cle1ire1 spacious 3 BR, 2 BA, laun. dry room, 1 story house \\'ilh view, approx 2100 Ml ft ln Lagullll Niguel TerTaet!. P .O. Box 573. So. Laguna \VANT To Buy: Duplex Lot Anywhere. \Vill Pay A~ prox. $6000. G42-0061, bctwn 1&4 Pi\t lST TD'S to $140,000. Trade tor clear vie\v oondo, home or income equity. (n4) 4~3103 BUSINESS and FINANCIAL Bus. Opportunities 6300 INEW OPPORTUNITY I Reliable people will be select- ('cl in this area & surround· ing cnl)''s • refill & collecl n1oncy ftum New Concept or Vending ~tachines, Co. establishes loc. This is a ground floor oppor- tunity to obtain a very prof- itable & new business. Start pan or full lime. \VrltC' 01' ph. SOUTHLAND VENDING 336 E. 17!h St. Co!ta J\lesa, Cal. 9'1627 ( 714 ) &.$6-04&1 Associate i lANUF AC'JURER $17,500 lnvestrnent Into the no. 1 Business of the day. 4j yr. history ()f .success, now expanding opel'alions to So. Calif. Complete factory In- stalled & ready lo go. \Vill train Principal of l\.f.;mt. abiliUes. Contact lmmed. Once In a lifelilne oppor. to make that high income mosl prople dream of. Starting 1 88.lary $12,000 + substantial profils. Call Ken OIHord 171 ·11 7i4--7()j() 2 DORMS. 2 BA. pvt. patio, hesWd pool . .,.,.,.,. & dry<r hook Up. 962.-3994 lmmcd. Re q u~r e11 relm· Each unit. 1725 aq fl, 2 off· NOW'S THE burme.mcnl ol $5227 In e."· Ices, 2 ttsl rooms. ll0/2'10 l1tlng oU'K:e Improvements. electric. Ample parking. 1 I: 2 BR apta, crpb I drps brand nrw. AcrOM: lrom ahoppifla ~M. W..7002 NEW 2 Br Duple" bJt-lnc. O'pla. drpt. Sl!iO. Adlts. On- ty. 1508 Oll\'t. 5J6..&S23. l\tonlbly .Rental 'On S yr Jse. C Robert Nattress Realtor TIME FOR 111 $Ul'i6.16, or S3c per 9Q ft. Costa l'i1esa &12-1485 CaU 6f4-:519l. Modem Offices LOTS 6100 QUICK CASH 175 oingl<. $135 2 nn .otte. J;;;;;;;V;;;;l;;;;EW;;;:L;;;;O;;;;T=;;J THROUGH A Al• rond. So<t'y 1ervlce. NEWPODT HEIGHTS parklni;, centn.lly located. " S.nt•An• 5620 So.C•lillltNaLBlt.Bldr. $15 MA DAILY PILOT $'ln 1 2 C. Robrn IlattrHI Realtor ,UUU ':_ 'd.sio Ap~;,!,in:J. O:lfta !\lesa • 641-1.sJ ?trTOTI Really ~?-Im WANT AD Cl'pt., -!l'plc, la• l•ml-Best LOClllOll In CdM f1 ldlcben w/bltnt.. 1 cl\fld 500 A 1000 it<J. rt. Mlwce LINDA Jgle Joi 50xMI. :JS.000 olr no pela. lft tchoola. 2230 ottlce Q)aces. Avail lmmed. for equity In lcuehoJd. B)' 642-5678 ~: c.nttr St. tNr Warner). rhOM O'MK'r. 6~2-99j(I, ov.·~r 67;>.'l'i((). \• ( t ' Are You Letting Cash Slip Through Your Fingers See If You Have Any Of These Things A DAILY PILOT WANT-AD 1. Stove 2 . Guitar 3. Bob~ Crib 4. Electrlc Saw 5. Camera 6. W•1her 7. Outbolrd Motor I. Stereo Set 9. Couch 10. Clarlnet 11. Refriger•tor 12. Pickup Truck 13. Sewing Machine 14. Surfboard 15. Machine T 0011 16. Dlshw11her 17. Puppy 11. C1bln Cruiser 19. Golf Cort 20. B•rometer 21. St•mp Collection 22. Dlnatt• S.t 23. Pl1y Pen 24. Bowling Ball 25. Water Skis 26. FrHter 21. Suitcase ~---21. Clock Will Sell Fast! 29. Bicycle 30. Typewriter 31. Bar Stools 32.. Encyclopedi1 33. Vacuum Cle1ner 34. TroGical Fish 35, Hot Roc:f Eaulpm't 36. File Cabinet 37. Golf Clubs 38. Sterling Silver 39. Victorian Mirror 40. Bedroom Set 41 . Slide Proj•ctor 42. Lawn Mower 43. Pool T•ble 44. Tires 45. Piano 46. Fur Coit 47. Drapes 48. linens 49. Horse SO. Alrpl1ne 51 . Organ 52. Exercytl• 53. Rare Books S4. Ski Boots 55. H;qh Choir 56. Coins 57. Electric Tr•ln 58. Kitt•n 59. Classic Auto ~. CoffH T1ble 61. Motorcvcl• 62. Accordion 63. Skis 64. TV Set 65. Workbench 66. Diamond Witch 67. Go-Kart 68. Ironer 69. Camping Tr1f11r 70. Antique Furniture 71. Tape Recorder 12. s.;rboot 73. Sports Car 74. Mtttrht, Box Sptl' 7S. lnbo1rd Sptodboot 76. Shotgun 77. Siddle 78. Dart Gtme 79. Punching Beg 80. Biby Carriag• 81 . Drums 12. Rlflo 83, Desk 14. SCUBA Goar These or any other extra thln9s around the house may be turned into cash with a DAILY PILOT WANT-AD so Don't Just Sit There! DIAL DIRECT 642-5678 ·. llUS11W$ fll4 . • . r-• .i..,,,, 29, 197e ~.Y PILGf 33 == 1 JOllS .r. EMPLO.YMENT J9BS t. EMPLOYMENT JO•S & EMPLOYMEN'o JOBS & 111\PLOY~ENT· JOllS i EMPLOYMENT --' "IQNCtAt'-· .• --· 8u1. OpportunJtl11 6300 Jobt-Mon, Wom. 7100 Joi--Mtn •• W~o~m:·?.,7~100~,~Jo~·bt;;;;;M;•;n~,;w~o;;m;;·;n~oo~J~o~IN;,;;•~Me~l\.~W=om:~· ~7~100: Jo-Mon. w .... 7100 :..:_~ _ _:__~.:.._:~ l;::c-;:,E:;;R-;;K-. :;F;~ --·~ 1--------1 •g:>Y:".~;., !';!;::~ PRODUCTION J, c. PINNEY c·o. ·=.c:r =~:": ....;.-. ""-""' "" .,.. CONTROL CLERK FASHION ISLAND ""' •""'· a.... a ....... •aneed. Coll l54J.Q6l w NE)VPOR'!'. BEACH l0-16 -°'· om.= .1----'----h COIN laundrle~Fnald&•no W en Yoo nom S6.SOO to t.i2,50o. ""'"""· ""'" Mesa. -Wont. it done Buena Park. Fulltirton. . Garden Grove, tight ••• for Mr. Brown Requ1Mf by company manu. MODELING SCHOOL Accnt1 IMY• Clerk fa.Ctwina data P~ hat lmmedltfl opening• for needs 2 part time ew. ln- 8"ch atta. Fee reimbursed. equipmeot. Mln.immn 1 y:ra. co.a e Wiltreasaa e -8U&llfoya i;tnictots. Need 1 beautician $400 to start. Other lee jobs ~l>f'rfenee hCC. a.1¥1 rea:u'lr. tqt hair 11b1lrc. l C05- W • • tmlnlter, llUDtlngton ~i;..f.'.' .. Ana, ru...... Coll one of Call Charil• 525-7833 h -' RACE CAR DRIVER l t e experrs avall. e11 so wpm typing, Xlnt op. With tome exper'lence or wUiinl to learn. Top mt.ticlan for makeup. Mur;t lndt~ndent portunlty in expanding oo. worklne conditions and environmenl Com· be attn.cUve, e.xp'd. I "hie ,,..., In•"' backing. y,.,,. 4 J ( listed belo.WIJ Per1on•I Agency Apply 1n perstin -peUttve Wages plus meals and tips. Outstand4 to teach. Call Miu Prim, ins Oran&e Ave, SUl!e C ing benefits including hospitalization and pre>-962--2'666 for Interview. $$$. Ca1J Mr. Edwartl Whit· { / ,• '· ed/ Bus Mgr. 675-5743 after· ' ~~-~ ... ~!!" .. --........ ~' ·~ .............. ~ .... ~~ C.M. 643-0006, 54~ Perlpher•I Buslnn1 'flt sharing. P..10TEL. Aulatanl m&l'!I or ACTIVITY Director • Full Equlpment1 Irie. Apply tn person JO a.m. to 9 p.m. h'8.lneea & maids wanted. ::'!me Openin& For CDn· Monday thru Saturday. 237() Newport Blvd, 548-9755 valescenl Hospital. Ca 11 1811 Reynolds Avenue NEWSPAPER Auto Route. ""'"'· SERVICE DIRECTORY SERVICE DlRECTORY SERVICE DIRECTORY J1,1ACHINE Shop • owner retiring. small shop, nia! A~counllng 65QO Floore. 6665 Paperh•nglng bldg. on \i ac1T' f.1·1 Pl'Oll·I'·---------Painting 6850 642-2410. !Nine Lndustrial Complex ' Penney's Fashion lsl•nd Early AM. (.Apprnx 4-6 Call owner 642-2001 or C (. t.tPLETE' P~nalized CARPET VINYL TILE 548-3261 ,Uo ok,\ceeplng Service. Free estima~ Lie, Corltr. -~ Advl!rtisln.:: Agency S1'fALL RESTAURANT, SpeCialii1ng in sm·a.11 S.W.'i262 5464473 newly re-decorated, beach busincWs. P .U. & Dt:11v.. ·- • ll'llttrlor. e .xterlor • Sharp Secretary for last. Acou10tJc ceilings pin, 12 yrs paced Newport Beaeh Agen. exper. Slate Uc. Pittsburgh cy. Type ~70. Shorthand pnta. s.il-1787 100, orgaltie &. f0ilo1v Lhru. area. Substantial do\.\·n & 968-8100. 536-4156 G•rdening 6680 terms. M~ 6550 COIN launchy, 20 machines, Baby11itting , _ 6 dry. 301 Palm. £alboa.. --------- tfake offer. 847-J856. J\1ATI.iij,E \Voman sit your Money·to Loin 1st TD home eves ~ wknds. $1.la 6320 hr. After 6 pm -llpm 548-4389. L BABYSITTING. Near Heller oa n Park. (Jg Yard, Hot Lunch. Mon-Fri. 6-1S-77~ 1 Lowest Interest Available · 2 d TD L \VILL babysit your home 5 n oan days or eves. You futnLsh NEW lawns, re ·.SI! e d Ing. INT &. Ext Pntg. Free uu. Under 35. Phone: 642-391(1. Ct.1npl~te 111.~rn care. Clean Loe re~. ~ yn up. Llc. &: 425 N. Newport Blvd., N.B. up by job or month. Free lnsrd. Call Chuck &CMl!l09 ARTIFICIAL W1B estimates. ror info. call ot Jim ~ -1.1ANUFACl'UR1NG- M6--0!132 bet 9 Mt. alter ,/ PA IN TING-I.NTfExt. MATURE, CLEAN-CUT, H.S. 4;30 Pt.f. or \\'ffkends. Jack Cl.JI do. that painting GRAD, SERVICE C01.f· AL'S Garoe~ & Lawn jotrfa!t. clean & very reu! PLETED. l\lainlenancc. Commercial, Est. 894-J895, &fT·1358 \Ve will train for mold- lndustriaJ &:. residentiaL EX.PAINTER, oow schl ing of plastic, artificial * 64&.3629 * teachel' wlU paint eves &: feet. Phone !Ol' appoint· men!. GEN'L yd. Clean-up, t1-ee wknds. Xlnt \\'Orlananship, serv. roto-hJI. Sprl '.il r Free est. 646-4519, M0-0062 *KINGSLEY ~IFG , CO.* • I 548~ll6 to am to 3 pm 1·epairs. l1au ·Reason. c. R. Kelly painting. BAB\'Sll,.ING, n1y ho1ne, 6-16-5848 Complete interiors &. ex· A FUI..J.,.TThifE telephone & Cf.1. Daily. Infant & up. JAPANESE Garden e T, teriors. Work KWll'!lnteed. misc. oUice \\·orker. Coast transportat1f!n. 642--1407 Terms baSed on equity. 642-2171 545-0611 1 ~rving Harber area 11 yrs. 6-16-8702 r.x11'd. Country yard se1vicc, ,1~''~'0o'='~''~'·=S38--0155_··--~ cE='="='"~l=c~&l=&.=24=-"---- Sattler Mortgage Co, I========= Reliable, free est. 642-4389 BEFORE You paint, check ASSEMBLERS fol' can1per '==33=6=E=·='='lh=S="="''=:::.IBrick, Ma11onry1 etc. JIJ\.l'S Gardening & la11•n my price&. College student l>1ctory. Woodworking exp. I· 6560 n1a1nttnance. Res. & coin· Ca.II Steve: ~8-4:>19 t.faJe or female. Apply Ma· ~Mo~r!!tg~•:\!gos~,_cT'.;.0~.'1!__:63~4~51;;;;;;:;:--;;:=::;::-=: mercial * 540-4837 c*;=.;P"'A°"P"E"R"HC,A~N=G~IN=G joN'ay.~ \V. 18th, c.r.1. -~ 2nd TD BUILD, RenlOdel, repair ~E"'x"P"E°'R=T~J,.'-pa-'-=G~~-& PAINTING • ~0240_,-ASSEf.fBLY Trainees. Day $.wuu • on ex~ll~nt Brick. blocl-:, concrete, R' h .., a .nesejob au::~ner :ivo-shift, fen1ale. Age lS-28. No ocean view lot, 10 ,o Ill· carpentry, no job loo small. tg I P•1<'C, nice & uean FOR Betler Painting, exp. nee but must have good terest. due l year" 20~,, Loe Cono• 96.., ""'= tip. free estimat.:. :HS-3354 lnl I & I ,·or ti . .., , ~ er or ex er , acous c eyesight & finger dexterity. l=d="'°""=='=·=4=93-=1=1116°'====I . , CLEAN.UP SPECIALISf ceilini;:s. &16-10i7, li:isu~. Apply in person, SAE FREE . Est . Brick, block, :r.towlng, odgl~. odd Jo'• ' t I nters & t .. o '-PAINTING-Ext-Int. 1B yrs. Advanced Packaging. 1357 Money W•nted 6350 'one, Pa · en ry Reasonable. 5-18-6955 E Edi Sa 1---'--------· 1 \.\'3)'5. 531-4973. State Lic'd. expel'. Ins. Lie. Free esl · ngT. nta Ana ~~-~-d J.T•*~ 00f.1PANION needed tor el· An equal opportu~t~'employer . Ptttme lncom•. Pr• r der!y lady & Ute hl)usekee~ Matutt M a r rte d Peraon 1og for 2 adult&. ~Just live in. Job.--Men. Wom. 7100 Jo~n1 Wom. 7100 Call 54()...3006. Ret's nee. 494-7786. NURSES Re&ll~red • even· CONTROLLER EXECUTIVE &!ere UTE hoUM"keeptn&. no Ing &. nt&ht &hiftl. Ex. Resumes held in confidence Bkkpr. High ree:po!ZuI~ babygl.tlilll. Ii am to noon, beoeftta. Apply Pmionnel ii now employed. Several po6ition. 673-U66 f.lpn~ · 'Ved. ht. Balboa Dl.rector, So. Caul Com· years experience and degree bland. ~{ r I. Carrington mun1ty Hosg., 31!?2 Coast in Accounting requi~. Call EXPERIENCED 675-15.32. Hwy .. So. Lquna.. C99-llll Ann. \V_e.stclili Personnel IMPORTED CAR Jr. S.Cret•ry ext. 356 '''""'· 2043 wo .. <lif! Ori"", MECHANIC ~1nl flrm, "" """""· $400 N:;;un=..lLc.,------I N.B. 64.>2770 IF~ and Fee J~ Toyota Volvo Alta to start. TypJn& 45+, SH 80 ·Experienced Aldn Paid job&) Rome0. can &b 'Ibo~pson wpm. FL!e pald. Other fee All shlttl available COSMETIC SAW '"MARQUIS MOTORS Job• ·~pendent-H: .. "':f:,:i~.'.i, cs= 900 So. CM.st Hlway Personnel Aa-ncy Ave, Hunt. Bch.t 8'2-M.il P\111 time. l\lature, e.xperlenc-t.a;una 'Beach * 49'-1503 1716 Orange Ave, Suite C Nurse Alde TralninJ: ! ed. Excellent salary, com· . . c.~1'. S42 ~ 5"' ""79 kl n1fs5ion and benefits. call Foreign Cir Mechanics ....... v, • ..,,._ Znd of March. Two Wff for appt.: 540.51l3() ext. 30 Good co. benefits, Incl paid. Legal Secty Trainee class. Ernplayment offered.' vacation, group ins, unf. '450 mo, Xlnt opty to be Apply, Penonnel Dept.,j JOSEPH MAGNIN lonn• fumU""1 !roe, Good ""°"' wllh line law ottlo< Hoa• HoopltaL N.B. comm. schedule. Ask Jot in beach city. 546-5410 .. * NURSES AIDES * * Jae Moo~ Ph. S4G-17611: JASON-BEST ~rte~ I Equal opportunity employer •• FRY COOK, wtth exper. Employment Agency 549-3061 * COOK * Experienced. Apply.In peraon, 562 \V.19th 2207 So. l\Tain, Santa Ana 8 e e P IE MAKER Apply: SURF &: SIRLOIN St C.~t. " Responsible, )'OU?ll man to 5930 Pac. Cst. I-lwy., N.B. Gen'I Office to $600 .~ learn tfir: pie ma1dnc bufl· DENTAL· Secreoa.., w/man-F~ neao. ·Unusual Co. I gal JllACHINISTS n•"· 6 d.,., • '8 hi' w!<, '""'' aaeriaJ a~\Jlty. Permanent office. Varied duties. ~10 into gOOd future wifh crow· position, Ne\\·port Center. JASON BEST SECOND SHIFT ing com~. Apply in per· IHG-4871 Employment Agency aon V1'1 Pies (9-12 noon) DENTAL ASSISTANT :!207 So. Main, Santa.., Minlmum3>ur"""'""""· 191'E. l•lh SL, C.M. 21J% Net Return-l yr payofJ JOHNSON 'S GARDENING Accoust. Ceilings 54~ BABYSITTER \.\'anted. my lit TD on prime mobile Business Service · 6562 Yard cai"I!, Cll!a.n-ups, f>nm. PAINTING Sl2 avera,ge home, 2 bo)'5 24 &: 5, Chair iide. Exper, Pref, X· home dev. Adj. major col· · · ing, planting. 962-2035 room. Rehable, ~ 10 yrs l\lo~Fri S..5:30 Ne \Y pt . rays. Under 30. Hours Tues. lege. $25,000 re q u rre d. COl\IPUTER printed address GORDIE'S mow & edge. in area. 638-7333, 4-6Pr-.1 Shores area. Must have own lhru Sat. 8·5, Send resume 646-1234 day or eve. labels. Your name & ad· Po\.\·er vac. Reasonable! * PAINTING _ Int/Ext .• ""-"'~p.764=5-=14=o.;=· ~•171_6_. ~-& references to P.O. Bo.~ GIRL.S OVER 21 Do own ll!tupg. have own The Gallery Discotheque t.ool.s. 810 E. Balboa Blvd, Balboa. 673-9961 or (713) 774-0956 ~ceUent arowtti opponura itles. overtime, trlnae ben· efit&. POLICE CLERK $474 to $576 Pu Month ; ANNOUNCEMENTS dress hst·kt>y punched inlo %8-l!l70 or 5-15-Snl l..ocal references. Immed B AB y SITTERfHousekeep-1>\ Ni. Laguna. GUARDS: lmmed. pt time IBl\I cards FI . I==='======"-I G' t • bo 3 DENTAL ASST. O ..... A .. onic posltlona avail in So. and NOTICES . 1 es main. gefVice. &16-5242, 646-3657 Er. L.ive· n. 1r .,, y . • '""'"' , '""'na Beach a r,,. tained & updated. 673-8158 General Services 6682 ., .. , c792 64" •023 chrtlrsirie assistant. Call -· DUNN BY DID.'N ""......, or ~ · 64-i-lf08 Uniforma &:. equip turnllhed. , Found (free Ads) 6400 TYPING by p-ro fess. RAIN gutters inst a 11 e d , Painting & Paperhanging BAR ~laid: All shills. Apply 1 =-~------Car & tel. req'd. EquA! Opp. secretary. General & Rainey season almost hrre: Free e~l. Rea&. 642-23&4 in p!'rllOn, Scotties, 436 E Dental Assi&tant, ex· Employl!r. App: 13912 YNG, Tan & grey, shaggy engineering. Student rates. Free est, Reaim! 968-220S. YOU 8,pply The Paint. 3 Br, 17th st., c.~1 . perienced or school trained. Pondero.a, Suite ''F", San· Cock-a-Poo type. Vic ...,.., 9824 548-7074 c~=...:::_;;.·~=~---Liv R~1 & Kitchen PaintC?d, BOAT CARPENTERS ~==~=-~--I t ··•:....::A:.:n•::·------Westminster Pl., C.M . HAVE TYPEWRJTERt H II 6730 d A 1974. DESIGNER OR -642-2342 \VILL TRAVEL'. au ng =l:.;"'1,:c·~Call==;,'-·=7·_863S_·· ~·-=-Experience . pp\y D" '~SMAN I Li h. · PAINTING. p,~,.,.· g 17 vrs, Placentia, Costa r-.1e51l ,........, • o g ling RED Male tabhy cat. \\'ear· 644 -• allo 3 30 YARDIG11.r. Cle&nup. ~ ,. F '•t""'' o•· So -'f;;.rt ... r : tn Harbor ai-ea. Llc. &: BLUELINE OPER. Full .. , u• meone Ing red tlea collar. Can1eo!==~====== Remo\•e trees, lvy. trast.. al \VfTalent in Thts Field. Shores area 673-filQJ alter 4 k 6580 Grad!!, backhoe, 962-8745 bonded. Refs. furn. 642-2356. time open1n~ ln Comrnl!rc1 Pl A ly Wood I h . · -Cabinetma ing Blueprint Shop. 5~(}..9373. ease PP L g Ung pm e HAULING. Have " lon R • 6 SO Fixture Co., 4020 Campus FOUND: Black & \\'hite RESIDENTIAL & Comm. pickup, licensed & insured. Plastering, epinr 8 BOOKKEEPER Ur .. N. B. Spaniel-type cllY.! vi e: custom Cabinet & Furn. 4s.i..t003 •PATCH PLASTERING • Part Ume. ~3 hour, Full * Dishwasher & Newland, Hunt. ~~ch. Cali Furn Re--Finishing. &15.00!lli l All types, Free estimates chlit'ie. Beach area, Call B b , 842-4776 l\IOVlNG -Hau ing, Sl5 a Loraine, \\'estclitf Person· U$ oy C . 6590 ton, 536-1091. Best late eve ~====ca='=' ::"'=0-6="'='==::. nel A,ency, 20-13 \\'estclif! RABBIT Vic R1,... o-. & arpenter1ng rl .. 1 "° •u6 (Ml " ..... , or ea Y tu• or"""""'-' Dr., N.B. S~S.2770 (fee and , Birch, Santa Ana Hghts CARPENTRY Plumbing 6890 free jobsl 54~13 RJINDR REP,-m• No Job Hou11ecleaning 6735 ~ " ~-1---------PLUMBlNu REPAIR Bookkeeper F/C 1.fALE Ger. ~hep. puppy, Too Smilll. Cabiriet lo gar-BAY &: Beach Jarutorial No job too small Local area. l girl o!c, Start- \1c. Alpha Beta., Laguna ages & o t be t cabinets. tnd fl e 642-3128 e ing sala..., $500, -Brh. 4M-i410 ~175 U no answer leave Carpets, '~ O\\'S, oon;, '"' , ' ('tc. Res & Commc'I. Independent l LARGE Black & \.\'hlle bird . msg at 646-2372. IL O. 646-l40l. od I R · 6940 Persoitel Agency Vic. HarOOr View Homes,, c.:A.cnd:;';;."°="------Rem •, epa1 r, 1)44.5349 1· ~tesa Cleaning Service 1716 Orange Ave, .Suite C GEN. reparr. add , cab. ea· 1 ·-•o·· n _ tc Add-A-Room C.1\1. 642-0026. 545-0979 LACK Ca F · 1· rlit 'pe :;. 11 ''"·--' .. ~. 00'"· e ' d I B t w/white face, orm1ca, pane 1ng, ma e. Rt>s. & Commc'I. 548-4111 R1mo e in9 BOOKKEEPER: 4 Jin; per '' front paws, back legs. !11ale. Anything! Dick, 673-4459 Cu5tom Oeii9n $11rvic1 day. :ri.tust be familiar wtall 548-4615 REPAIRS * ALTERATIONS Income TIX 6740 Free E,timate, 494-0751 phases c.I Peg Boarc:'. Ac· FOUND Small black kitten, * CABINETS. Any !lize job I========== I 1'.!AKE your homl! more counting, Call F'rldBy Aft 1 flea collar vie. 35th St., N.B. 25 yrs exper. 548-6713 Computer ized !Jveable. carpentry ,'le pm, ask for Mr. Sugarman, 1 673-6434 after S. CARPENTRY, Cab1ne!s remodeling, ri!liable & 5-16-5945. Full ume. days or eves. APPLY IN PER..~N COCO'S #7S Fashion Island Newport Beach, Call!, DISHWASHERS APPLY lN PERSON, NEAT IN APPEARANCE FIVE CROWNS RESTAURANTS HANDYMAN MAINTENANCE We are lbokini for th11.t · ONE n1an who \5 a jack of aU trade. Prefer a man who is nti~ and needs 50tllt!~ lo dG and wme respon1ibillty, Need a man to take care ot a 24 hour laundromat on 17th 5lreel In Cost.a Mesa. Minor Repafn to machine•. maintenance, keep watchful eye on store. If YOU a.re this man, write &. tell us about younel!. We will contact you for an Inter· view. Write Mr, Fisher, Box 3848 Torrance, Calil. .,_,10 *Auto, Screw Machin• (1lngte k multlpal spindle) * Punch Press * Drjll Preu *Turret Lath• APPLY AT ·Shur-Lok Corp. 1300 E. NormandY Pl., Sonia Ana (1 bl.k N. ot McFaddtn, 14. hl.k W. of. Grand) MACHINISTS A progressive manufaci:. win& ~. with C • cellent 'M;lrldn&: conditions -&nd frlnce bene11ts bu immedlate openinf1 for Autom•tlc Screw M• chine Setup Opera - Brown & Sharpe, Traub1 and Acme. H•rdl~Hand.Scr.w Opera.~· -·-·· · CITY OF NEWPORT lll!ACH One current o p e n l 111 available. Requlrff 50 w.p.m. typlfll, b 11 h 5chool diploma. one year of recent &flneral clerical eX{ll!ril!nce. Apply befure 5 p.m., Tues- day, Feb, 3, 1970 t') the Per- sonnel Office, 3300 Newport Blvd., Newport Bel\ch, Call:t. 9'1660, <n4) 613..fiSll. POLICEMAN S732 • $874 a month Age :n to 31. up to 35 with approved experience HEIGHT. 5' 8" minimum. WEIGHT: in pl'Lportioa tD height. PHYSlC"L RE- QUJREMENTS,-Ht1Jncbool gr·u1uate, valid CaUt oper· ators liCerue, U.S. citizen. FUe appllcation &t CltY Hall, 8200 'Vestminster .\w., West. minster, Calli. before Feb. 13th, 1970 5:00 PM, Wrttten exam Feb. 28th. lBTO, (n4J 89.>-011 Ext, 205. FOUND Large male Collie. Remcxi. No job too sm~H. I TaX l'easonable. 642-1l55 BOYS 10 -14 Vic. 19th & Orange. Call Qual work. Call &16-2576 ncome Carrier RQutes Open ·pl~, ... ~01 E. Pacific Coast Hwy, HlGH call"'-u : • Bench '~llf.,' de urr O:irona del Mar ..... r OU-Jee manager REAL Eatat.e Sales .. YOUl'll man with license for beU \ell1n&; new homes. Start immedlately. 838-5120 ~ 642-0739 aft 6 PJ\-1. REl>IODELING: Cabr "s. Roofing 6950 for --==:,:;c...:.=--1 with bookkeep!ng &: anddrlll pre1sopers, DISH\VASHERS (3) wanted 5ecretarlal up. Auistant to (P'int & Second Sbiftl $400 Recer,tionlst ! SlUIESE Cat w/tlea collar.1 General Repair. No Job Trio $5 & UP -~a Beach, So. Lai.UNI Vic. Ford & MacArthur Small. Reas. Anytime, FILE EARLY. ALL types rock, wood & DAILY PILOT t Blvd. 1)4.4..&188640-·=·=· .:.32~40~~~--~7. CALL FOR APPOlNTl\fENT uphalt .shingles,. LEAKS 642-4371 Day or n\ght the prel!ldent. Call for appt. Call 673-4530 betw 8 & 5. 892-8344. AMJlY at ~ fee paid (A '° fee jobs) Call Lor&ine, WestclUf Per· sonnet Agency, 20U Wut- cllff Drtve, NB 645-:n:ro ~ STATE & FEDERAL REPAIRED. 'Vork guar. -~~-~~---''lf'OUND: A white cat. near REPAIR. Parl1tion,,, Small 847•1136 BUSBOYS OR DISH\VASH· * DRIVERS * HOTEL MAID. 6 STA FAST, INC. 1 EA:linger 11.nd Bolsa Chica. remodel. etc. Nne or day lnconie Tax Service -=::::::::::====== ERS, morning shill. Apply Jdl!ntity, Call 596-6024 Reas! Call KEN 540-4679. Pen'tln Rlty Bltlg. 6~2.17n S -, 6960 in person, 3099 Bristol, C.M. N E • day 11 / Wttk, permanent. 9'26 So, Lyon o xper1enc1 Laguna Beach.·• 494.1196 * Santa Ana. Restaurant ew1ng CASHIER: Exper 1".ecess. Necessary! HOUSEKEEPER ""''"' • • -~MA=1-=D~s~w~A~N"T=E=D~ EVENING BUSBOYS Lost 6401 Cement, Concrete 6600 Smiley Tax Seriice ALTERATIONS, ReaSo111lble, Arr>IY In person, Delaney's f.tust have clean Callfomla hours only · p~fer Fridays. * 646-74411 * drtvina record. Ai;iply Refs. Call 546-7817 aft 5:30 -="".,:,:""";:....~-- REWARD CONCRETE ~rk all """'· e 12th YEAR LOCALLY • expertly done. · 645-!m7 Sea Shanty, 630 Lido Park Dr. N.B. YELLOW CAB CO. week day!, anytime MA~ANCE P..lan, tull 186 E. 16th SL weekends tlme employment. Park ---------Lido Corrvaleaoent Hosplti.1 . ' Very triendly gray &: white Sa~ing, . break~ng. ha~hng, tiger itriped n.ale cat, ! Sk1pl.oad1ng: Lie. Sel'Vlce & Qualified • Reasonable DRES£.,1Afrn';'G, reasonable \V. A. (6il1) SMILEY r<t les, fas! &ervice. 2Ml • CASHIER * Dir 'Vash. PArt time JlOSltion. Costa Mesa HOUSEKEEPER • Spani~h Ph: 642-2UO ELECTRON ICS supp I y Spea.k\ni Pref. Choose Your cMED:..::.:..:Jc;CA:..L=l=-... -n-,-ottl=,-.-. -... NIGHT DISHWASHERS ld V'·c J St Quality. !l-.12-1010 mos. o . • ames ., ,;--c...-cc-~--=- C.M. s.JS.4j37 after 6 pm ConCl'et work all types. Pa· ~LDERLY Sick lady lost 7 tio~, P°".'I de~ks 7& block mo. old Bluropolnt Siamesro \Vtnk · Dick &I •179 Certified Public'Account't Pomona, C.~1. • 6~2-2221 11nytime 640-9666 ..:..:::::::=c..::::,:.c. __ ~-• Dreo;~maldng. Alteratiom CALL: &15-2022 COASTAL AGENCY Profe111ional Employment Assistance Counter Salesman. Exper <hvn Hn. Call 644-4liM. aalacy Not N""'· W• will train ii "UST BE SHARP DAY HOST!SSES kitten, wearing flea collar CEMENT WORK. no jQb too Central Busines~ Services Designed 10 suit you. eTHE TAX ADVISORS cau Jo * 646-644< Perm. o!tice-Rea., Rates .128 No. Newport Blvd. Oppn~ite Hoag Hospital For Appl. Call 645-0400 .:::::::::::=::;;::::::::~I you have an electronic JABSCQ M background. H. W. WrlKhl ITT WrlO. Daily Pllol Sor P -916 Co., ino Newport Blvd.. or ca1J ~2529 after 6. APPLY IN PERSON 932 Presidio Dr, C, i\'l, Small, reasonable. Ft't!e 5'16-2127 Eslim. J.1. Stutlick 54s.8615 LOST: Female Silky Puppy. ~fesa Verde Area, C.:.1. Contractors 6620 .Reward! Call Collect (213) AdditJf!ns -.. Remodeling 923-9647. JoTecf fl'. Gerwick, Lie. H.K. Clark TAX SERVICE 2317 Rulgf!T'S Dr. C.J\l. 548-52SS. Appolntmenl, • your home or mine. • TILE, Ceramic 6974 * Verne, The Till:' r.ilan * Cust. work. Install &. rep.ai~. No job too small. Plaster patch. Leaking shower repair. 8~7 ·1957 /846-02t)i OUNG Black f<.Iale Cat. 671-IDU * S.19-2li0 Part Siamese, Oversized!~======== trnt feeL Lost or Strayed in Carpet Cleaning 662S Ironing 67SS 6990 lc.M. Area. 540-4970 "---"--G-l-----~U:.::p:.;h;.o;.:ls_..te;.:r,.:Y ____ _ "'Dl".S eo·r---• .,, d ,. ng A.OK Shan1poo Special $7.SO lRONlN n my homl!, .,..., "' uuu • II f halt Al S1 Hr. Alterations &: CZYKOSKI'S CUstm. Uphol. R:IU5el lost at Bullock'1, nn ess or , s. etc. 5') Babysitting. 54!).7&11 European Cra1tsmansh1p S.A. on Sat. 5'l6-9Ml comp. hou~n g 82'7-3183 100% fin• 642·1~ ' ..uST Black Lftb Pup. No CARPET .SfEA.'1 ClL\N· L1ndscapi nq 6810 1831 Newport mv, Ot Collar. Vic. Huntington St., ED No i;oa ~. no bn1shes. JtB. Reward! 536-28&1. For est. 6-16-5971 GENER AL LA NDSCAPE Window Cleaning 6997 , IT 'S "'ONDERFUL th e GARDENER Clean ups. ~1:Coro,re~1°'' boH"h bL1ke, manY buys 'in appliances Renovating tree trlmmlna:. WJNDO\VS CLEANED. vie. s a .. e11a 1£ , ic. yo11 find in the Qasstlied pruning. Reas. Dependable. lT268. Reward. 548-6801 Ads. Chcc.k them "°"" ! fi42.S..'14 . Call 847·1'164 ....... 1. 640;1- ... =YH~~;l~~~i•t ANNOUNCEMENTS ANNOUNCEMENTS JOBS t. EMPLOYMENT Advises on 11\1 matten; and NOTICES and NOTICES Job Wanted1 Men 7000 Love. r.ran·lllie. B111ine!I!. - Courtship, H ea Ith, I{ap-Person1l1 6405 Announcem_1_n_t_• __ 64_1_0_ 1 GEN. Miunl. Exp. 20 yn. A member of ~nrlllng & Snelling Inc. 2790 I Tarbor Bl, C.\{ 510.W:..S Harbor Blvd. at Adams DON'T JUST \VISH for &0methin;;: to turnlsh your home •.. find great buys ln toda y's Clas;;\lied Ads. C.l'l<I. EXP'O. girls v.'anted for pt. timP, full time maid & housecleaning jobs. Must have O\\•n transp. Start $2 hr. 64:z-5.%t TitF. QUICKER YOU CAIL, THE QUICKER YOU SEJ..L Jobs-Men, Wom. 7100Jobs-Men. Wom. 7100 Burroughs Corp. Nt"W Commerci•I Computer Pl1nt MISSION VIEJO Now t•klng 1ppllcatlons for ASSEMBLERS 'piness & Success. Nn pro-1---------SENSITMi-Y TRAINING Piwnbing, elec. carpentry, blem11 too large or t(ltl .JJ. \VORi'" SHOP p111ntlng. gardening. Pre.fer at our new plant in Mission Viejo, Callt. small. t CAN KELP YOU. A proarom of tnlt'rperson11l lnrge plant or company. Some experience preferred. Readinp ai\-en 1 day& a af'il'Jl'f exercises tor "mall gel!-dl· 642-4434 "-ea, 9AM-9Pr.f 312 N. El r rected srroups. 1.Hntmal RET·"""'1"RE"'=D--m-an-.-.-coJ"'1a"'b~le, Apply 8 am • 4:30 pm ~::e~~~ .. ~~~'.. 492~ n . / I Cbal'ge call 64U730. lD AM· xlnt ref. Ba.n'Y. 864 Blueblrd hionday through Friday fl.)irflida1y_ 5 PM. """" °"· LQuna..Buch * M JOBS & EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT . OFFICE en · J' Job Wonted, ha• en lmmedl•t• opening for •n £NGINEERING -CLERK- Ext"elll!nt opportunity for person interested In e~ gineer1ng, blueprlntlnr, log-kteplfli and some ~ ina dUtieL EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER 14'5 Dale W•Y Costa MN11 Calif. <n4) ~1 JANITOR for manut•cturina •re•. OU!iea Include lubrlcellon of ~ulp~nt, as1!1ttng maintenll.l'IOll and plaqt cleanlnc. Advancement opportwlltlu. APPLY CAOILI.AC CONTROLS . Andy Job Wo ntad, Men 7000 __ W=•m='".c....---7_0_20 25725 Jeronimo Roed Mlnlon V11jo, C11if. \FIND YOUR GIRL nu: Rrn'IRED Chltf Br'lltsW&ln'1 SECY. AVAILABLE 130-3232 DMSION OF Si\1ART '"AY! Sperling mate aeeki111 employment Feb. 1st Exceillent •kills. EX-CELO OORP. 547·6661 1n manne type o( work. all pha.ses office wnrk. Diet. -~ m 1S&6 WHrmER AVE, :rt hour recordlna" P.O. Be>. Mt,. Cost6 Meaa , 'T'ype. TlPf!I. mlmeo, etc. ~ • COSTA t.fESA rA Till<:R 77 I .l ELECTROL'L'SIS (l'nwan!ed CA 9'1627 Full or P/Tlm4 Call 644-140() 640-2491 • , a one H••• ~anen"y ·---. -6~3833 ~ • !'lorn l w1th k ,t,,,. ... rc•u• u "''"'ivv ACMVE Rell~ .. nlle~n or •J'" • ~ An equal -unity . e tu coc er U"111• ed) Bv Appl. 18700 i\fain St. ~ ~ v,...... · deslrf!I to pay $200 n10 f{'lr ll.B C.all ,42_._.., Is •vallable a1 pArt-tlme DAYWORK . Good Wh y.c. , 1meloy1r home care A drlV11 my car. -=· ==·~"-"---rlrtvtr 'vhen. re•pon~t.blllty nferences. Newport-Colla erever '"'"' 8 JANl'i"6R -Milt. Hunt'& 833-0CJS ALCOHOLJ~-ArlOl'l)'mOUI 1~ of lm('IOrllnce. 5.JG-4138 l\-1esa . own trani... 646-6090 Buslne&& There'• BurrouAhs Bch area. U/4S m old. 12 Phone 542-721'1' 0t wrlta to It Your Ad 1n o 11 r AIDES -tor convale&cencl!, arn -I am, 1 nlte• rer wk. Po Bo•J223Costa'Joga • ....,..,..""",, .. ,,_,., ..... ) 43' - Seti Bett;y Bruce at REUBEN E. LEI 151 E. Cout Hwy. Newport Beach m,,,, l:xec AgenC) tor Ca~ Glrll tlO W Cout tlwy., N.B. RESTAURANT HILP e WAITR?:SSES By t,ppolnt. 646-3939 e DISHWASHER Part or full time. SWiu 0... let, 414 N, Newport, N.B. Jobt Mon, Worn. 7100 JoM-Men. Wom. 7100 ---· ... -~··. -· RETAIL TOP EARNINGS FOR MAJOR SALES SPECIALISTS WITH NEW GRANTS • AP.PllANCES e FURNITURE • CUSTOM DRAPERl~S • C>;MERAS GRANTS GIVES YOU: I Top comm. PMs (Spec. sales comm.) Better total Income. Full quality line. Opf.ty. !or advancemefl!, pd. vac .• Holiday & 1 ck pay, Retire plpn uroup !He & med ills. Emp disc. If you wanl to learn more about ·our money malting proposition In one ol the counUes fastest growing reran organt.aUon ~ come prepared to dlscuss your sales know-how. and your previous experience. <;ome In and see us, W. T. Grant eo:.i9rant Ph1za; Adams & Brookhurst, HUntlngwn Beach. An Equal opporl1tnlty Emplayer M&F. OOMMUNICATJONS GROUP • · " " • rla1F-lllf!l'111'.' Som~one will M. "'!derly care or ft1.mlly care. Goo<l pay. <•.w j•l•11• or lrt0kll'IC! far It. O!nJ 642·ri67!1 Uotn1U1'11Lkt.rs.. :t-17-6&\l .................. ., ................................. !!!!!' (2'.13) SMA.f47., "---=--------------... .11 Ma..2513 or &16-Jl.'U) Whil e elcphanb;! Otme·•·llne ·.,...==::'--.-:-.. -'---~ .• ~ • ..:.:~• -~ -==-='-""'------~ ~ \ • ' ·' •• JOIS I EMPLOYMENT ' MERCHANDISE FOR MERCHANDISE FOR MERCHANDISI FOR MERCHANDISE FOR MERCHANDISE FOR SALE ANO TRADE SALE ANO TRADE SALE ANO TRADE SALE ANO TRADE SALE ANO TRADE Th11rsd1J, Jatrllll')' 2'. 1970 MERtHANOISE FOR SALE AND TRADE PETS and LIVESTOCK Dog• 1125 Jobo Mon, Wom. 7100 1 1F~u~mi;ltu~ro;.iiiiiiijjiiijjll~Dll~O~F~u~m~l~tu~r~o~iiiiiiiiiiiiill~C>~OO~jl ~F~u~rn~ltu~"'~iiiiiiiiiiiiiilOiiO-iiQiiFu~m~ll~u~ro~iiijimj~IOOO~~l;S;po;rt.:;ln;O_G;ood;•~~·=S~OO;I Mlacell•neous l600 ---------I SERVICE Statk>n Attend. ---------BEACit..E Puppies, A:\C, IDcper. Full Time. Apply Tn SKlS i~p in bindhtB•. 81A QUAUTY klni; ~d • qLU!tl.'d pennanent •hOI• + rabies MM!, Wom. 7100 ------- REUliEN'S P-. ZJ!16 H·-'--Bh'd., -·· • t 1 XI mattreu, Compl~lt ·unused vaL-cine 1 n'l0nll1!1 J SO. '"_.,, .. ._ ....,.,..,. tw, po tll, . nt Sl.20. worth $26(1, i-t?~ 847-4096 Co.fa M••• c.~f. 64S-SSSS. cond. s100 af1 5. SU-7059 -'='='='=· =======: AKC Dachtihuod St ud SERVlCE St~lion att<'ndent. WILSON CoU Cubs &: ~ • 4·12 pct1 1hift, 6 nites "'k. xlnt cond. Misc. W•nted 8610 Red, long hatred Apply 2160 s. Harbor, C~1. DKORATOI: GETS ClNCBJ.ATlON • Ph. M0-1413 * S.t6-182l Aftu 6 P .?tt. SERV Si. All•""'"' "'· Of 11 lUXURT APARTMafTS SPANISH MEDITERRANEAN HEAD >wt<• Skis, I.A"'' $WE BUY $ MIN. Sob"'"'"• l•male. 6 e 9USllOYS NI Tim• n.,,., ?i1on-f'rt. ntt. 46il Campo.s Dr .• N.B. Jb;its, New. Parka Boaner mo. AKC thamplon si?M. Airport Texaco·~ titike Splllisli & Mecrrtwnot11 F...-... Show Room • Floor S•mples • Factory Closeouts Pant•. 613-1607, $1841~. $ FURNITURE $ Shots, cropped. 64&-6385 Must be rtea.t in appearance SITTER • tor wo•ki 0 • AU. BRAND NEW 3 ROOMS OF FURNRURE $389. APPLIANCES BEOI.INGTON T•l'l'I" p<1po, mothf!r, In my Cdi.\i honie,:; A decorator dream house on display -3 e 5 p c. •uthentlc Sp•nlsh Bdrm. Mt, e 96 M iscell•neou1 1600 coiop TVt-,.i•11a1-St•r•o• AKC. champ. 11:it'1?d, show APPJ.Y l!f:6 W. ADAMS COSTA J.tESA d• '1'k, 61J.7SJG rooms of gorgeous Spanish furniture (was In. quilted sofa with 56 In. m atching love t "Me ... H .... hll quality, non-.shed. 615--38!7 TELEPHONE Answering reg. $1295. atit, or chair e 5 pc. Spanis h Dinette, oak * AUCTION * CASH IN JO MINUTES AFGHAN PUPPIES SALES ~~:~NI 0 me!!~~~ ::d SACRIFICE • • • • • • $425 t1ble top • 3 he1vy Medit•rrant•n m1tching • 541--4531 • $100.-(TI-I) 538-5210 taJklng to buslntss people. t11blts, top dur•bl• enough for Flamenco FRIDAY -JAN. 30 Hors" 1130 ror ~ Jntonni.non ""'""~ f:vrning :>hift J-.-LL C..U 9-pc. Medit•rr•n•1n Bedroom Suite Jn Pec11 n Dancing. Wiii seil pltcts Individually. 7:30 P .M . FREE TO YOU ~94-1003, 495·2072 or tRe9, $349,001 ........................ NOW $161.00 Sh F' ti Th S O U b I' bl B I NE\V & USED F'URNITURE 1--------''-S YEAR old, strawbeny roan mare. Good 1how p~ s:pects! ! Hunl .Ir; jump • e.e~t ofr 5-J6-62:l5, 673-2259 op 1r1 •n •• ur n e 1evt • uy• A'M'N Lo · amll :;.;:;...o-187 Gor9eous Sp1ni1 h Custom Bu ilt Sof• w ith Beautiful l<ent-Cotftt Bed-: v1ng F y. ~lust 1001 other items with terrific ••Ylngs! Set r d ho r 1 blk TEL. Ans\\·erl.flg Servi~. m1tchin9 Lovt S•1t-Choice of beautiful B k T S Ch M Ch room , liedroo1n set1 In in mt 01· uz:cy pup, """ -Do You TiW I SALESMEN I ., NOW $225 00 an er1n~ tore arge aster arge Spanish & ~todern 1 p Din. 7 mo's. Love11 t'hildrtn, ~,, prefemod or "'ill ll'ain. f•bries. Reg . .;n l9.V5J ···-··-·-· · • BankAmericard AU Accepted . -' c .. _e .... k ... oth•t""""" .. _wilt Call 5-10-2052. S · h D' · S I $75 00 Ing Sl!t with china cabinet '"' w '"" .. ,,,., "" s:~d"o1k1 nE~l T :bi.;·~;d··c~·1;·~·~·-;:~-bi;;::$lt:so Hutche8, Cedar 1.'hesis, eock.'. havt to go 10 the pound. can BA 'Ji' GELDI~G Part TenneSStt \Valker S'..!00 with tack. 5-18-4633 WANTED ADSI whh a &Hin ot -.It! Can'I ay that I blame you, I fol· lowed a few myaelf only to be dlaappointt!'d. Tht job R1tlarn lived up to ! h e claims in the ad. DO YOURSELF A FAVOR! AND EXPLORE THIS ONE! TYPIST CLERK-II -CITY OF - NEWPORT BEACH $452 to $549 per month 'T'Y•o oµl.'nmgs in the t'ity L1b1'aJ1". Rrquu:es High &hool diploma, one year r~ent clerical f':\"Jl(!I'• lentt, ~ \l.'Pm typin&:. Apply before S pm, Fcb- J'llary 3rd., Pen;onnel OU· ir~. 3300 Newport Blvd., /\'ewpon Be a c h. Calif. l Tl4) 673-{;633 T•ll D•cor1tor T1ble Limps tail tables, CredeMas, Din-you help'! Call aft 6 ettet1, Desk, Divans, Occ 613--5436 1131 IReg. $49 .951 ·-·---------·-·--·---NOW $18.00 Chau'I, l\lattttssea {all 8~ Spanish H•n9ing Swag :..•mpi es). La 111 p '· Pil.'tures, LOVABLE FemaJe teITier mix, l yr. old, and 2 mixed terrier puppies, 4 mos, old, Jlt'ed good home \l'ilh ref\Ci'd yrd, 5-16-72Ca bl.'Io1·r 11 am alter 2 pm. 1130 !Reg. $49.96 1 ............................ NOW $22.50 Chests, SteJ'l"O!'I, l Color TV's CREDIT AVAIL. NO MONEY DOWN (like: new;, Packard Bell Col· mm RJRNITURE ====I ~o;~~n~~~~~'."11R~~e~~;:: l&I Offlc1 Equipment 8011 Sewing Machinet 8120 ton, Free-let, \\fashers, Dry-TO Good ~10ine, beautifu1 t"rs, Sto ves & MUCH white Husky rentalt', not 1844 N rt Bl d (at Rt:~11NGTON 'l'.~v.•ritcr FINE &lection of Used Zig-1'1'0RE•••• . ewpo V .,.~ .... quite 1 yr. old. Loves •Hubor Blvd.) ,.,,. • ..,.., x<ro loog "'" Z•g M"""''· Xlot "wiog WINDY'S AUCTION chitdreo. >1~19 •fl 5 1·iage, nC'\vly ri'COnditloned. Corid. Priced Rea.sonably. Costa Mesa Only Gray mf'tnl !ypev.•rilcr Supply LimitOO. Ye Olde pnl, vh':?9 tablr, foldin~ £'ncls & Sewing ~fachi~ Shop, 3519 COJVrE BRO\VSE AROUND f'ree 10 gd home \\'/fenced matching mc1a1 poi;ture E. Coasl Hwy, Cd:0.1. 2075~~ Newpo1't Blvd. yrd, 1nale mix pup \Veim / chair, likl' ni•iv $7j, 496-2'J.18 ANTIQUE s· g n di Behind 1'ony'a Bldg Mat'ls Labr, 5 mos. old, blk\1•/frost. !n er 1'!a e C:Osta Mesa • 64&-8686 ei..! gray, hsbrkn, shots. Very Fum''luro 8000 TYP~RITER, Adding i1ewing machine, ii·orks $2J,. OPEN DAILY 9 ! 4 playful, older child. 847-4004 Every Night 'Til 9 -Wed., Set. & Sun. 'Til 6 JOB> °' cMPLOY MENT TRANSPORTATION ~ts & Yachts 9000 THE \\'ORI.D'S LARGEST CATA)lARAN. New 55' x 20' ~eeps 10, Lux Salon. 2 i\f Cabins, 2 Hds, 2 Queen bet.ls, Teak <leeks, Ttak cabint'll'J. Power 7 kr1t1, SaU 30 knts. Price Sll0.000. Tern1s -\Viii 11·ade, part cash, part e!ear real estate. !\lake offer. 53G-60$3. P.O. Box 1913, N.B. lf )'OU \\'()U}d likt' lb ffiilke $300, per \l'ttk lrnmcd1a1ely. \Vit:h au opportunity !or much more in the future, ---------I Schools0ln1trudion 7600 1 would like to talk 10 you. \\/ELDER: Apply in person, I---------- If )'Ollr qUIJifications match DEWEY'S RU.BB i SH ----------1 machifK>, calculator. vecy 53t>--lH03 ° -•-t -• 892"'" '"EN Q COCK·A-Poo pup. loves 20 Pc. "MADRID'' rcas., ""-!' couu, -~. ..;: 1\.1 RI:: Sewing 1nachine, BARGAIN! BARG AI N! 40 small children, h a s n1osl walnut r·abinet S . 5-lQ...j398 Unclaimed suit~. practically 3 Room Group G•rage Sal• 8022 aJtl'T 4:30. n<'\\'. value $150 l'IOW IJO. :>hOt.~. black, male, i·ery i;mall bret!d, 832-5899 18' Lyman w/Grcy Inbrd . Prtce Incl'& slip rental nr Pavilion, $1 8 7 S. Call 67f>..5466 eves. 1968, 14' Stat Craft, so hp !'>1erc, EZ trailer & ski equip Incl. $900. 673--7735 our requiremrnts, this could SERVICE 2lll Canyon Dr .. be tti. career )'OU've been 01 lookina: tor. Call tor personal --------- il'l'NTview bet, 9 am to U:JO * \\'AITRESS * Tu·o ~Tl!. pm ~perlenct", 20-40 yn:. only. ~lust be ia.sL One e''f! shift open now. Apply in person 1 P,..1 to 3 P!\L r.1r. ~loore, 17.124 Beach at Garden Gl'O\le }T\.\'Y,. G.G. $75,000? }'or Recorded Info ~ 543-3191 SALES\\'OMAN FUil time. Experienced ptt. iem!d, Iadita y.•ear. \VAITRESS tor Lunches On- ly. Apply in P1rson, Delaney's Sea Shanty, 630 Lido Park Dr, N. B. RADIO NEEDS TRAINEO ANNOUNCERS \\!hen you tratn with the INSTITUTE OF BROADCAST ARTS \UU LEARN on professional equipment, from ·w!M'kini; air personal!Ueii. CALL 712-3800 FROi\l 1.!0DEL HOMES . . S49.9i Sportsroats value $75 eves. l/30 Includes: Quilted 90ra and SUPER.Sale: Antiques, ski.s, Music•I Inst. 8125 OO\v Sl~S20. Pants value $Zl chair _ 2 encl tables & cof. rypewnter, sin. appha111.-es, now s=>S10. Guar. fit by fllr. CALICO Cat, female, has lee table _ 2 lamps _ dress-T.V .. _ frames. records, misc. f''RENCll &lml'r tenor sax, Al fa stuon tailor for men & !111\\"ttt disposition, ne<'ds gooc1 _s_a_il_boa __ l_• ______ 90_10 er _ mirrot _headboard_ clothn1g, 10)'8, d<'COralor bf>11ut. condition, con1b. case ladies~. Allerations. Capri home, 67J.33l4 alter 6 quilted box sprilJi & matt. hems. 1'hur1. lhru ~un: 279 $300. Aft 6 pm 518-2';>89 198 i\lot<'I Arcade (opp. art pm. 1/30 SPECIAL NOW! ress -5 pc. diflini room; Albrl'! Pl., C.i\1. off !';unla Buoy SL, Cll_I. ____ CE'nler) 1425 S. Coast ~tv.'}'., FREE To good home CORONADO JO tab!@ & 4 hi·back chairs. 1-A_M_A_v_,_.______ RICKl:NBAO\'.ER i; u pt r Laguna. w/fenced yard, adorable "ith pulpit, lHe lines, lights, COlHPARE AT $749,95 !IIOVING into trlr. ;\lust sell sonic-an1p & j'as.". Leslie =::==POO'---,-T-A_B_'_E_S__ furry Lassie type female .., .., complf'te galley, head cush-$399 bed~. 1bls. la1nps. sp<.'akrr rood. No. •17. GOOU Secard Pool collie miJ., :Z mo nths. ions, engine, Extra bc;nus: WELJ('s Ev r I' y I h 1 n g imaginable. t:ond. ;l-10.7fi8 BRUNS\\'l'"-"-A'I~ 892-3050 1130 WAREHOUSE ~~=~~-~---....... 1' r main & jib sail ($:)05) now! Park 01l~~0<deN, do nott d•8''1 1"drh FENDER 12 string guitar Custon1 Slate Tabl(! AKf' BEAGLE Ir i-co lor, $13,995. nlgr, .,.. eivpor v " S100 . .-6'16-2986 l-"rom $289 fen1ale, 2 yrs. old, loves \'Act-rrS ROYALE INC. No do1,n-Pmts only $16 mo. C.l\L No. :: 1001;0 r~inancino oh•'l<I<•". m"'' h,,., l'"'•d 600 \y 'th St 0 _ ,_ •· .==..:..:c_:c______ , • " .. ., ....... 2912 W. Cst Hwy, Nwp Bch · " ,,...u .. n.ia SE-E>: I bl I I k * SECARD P00'S * < "'" ~0 1/30 Open Daily 9-9 ·• • '. OVil ,., ~:r iac ' Pi•nos & Org1ns 8130 532-1992 .. y&J • ~ eves. 645-0810 Sat, 9-6 Sun 11·6 down pillo11·5, $1.iO. Lov_e I ;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;~1 SEALPOINT SI A ~1 ESE , CAL 28 Ce Ce II. Outstandlna: .~=~~------1 !!Cat, \\'1l11c d<1n111:;k S9J. 323 S. tlain St. Oa·ange male. 1 ~~ Yl'I. old, good with APPLY IN PERSON e DESMOND'S e # 3 }~ash.ion Illand Newport Beach SARAH COVENTRY has openinp for full QC pu1 time sal~. No inwstment, no.ddiwrin. For interview, \\' AITRESSES • Cocktail. Bus girls, dilhwashera. Ap- ply r.iaitre De, 1790 19th St .. C.M. 1.c,~O~M~E=N,_·--,Fu""u~.-p.,-:-·t-~ti-m~,· I Inslltu!• of Broadcast Arts needed (or: child !.'are, rom· 1681 W. Bl"oad1vay, Anaheim panion. Agts 20-65, Student Loans !llOVING-Qual. Kng bed, oil· Chall', "oho!!I & cane $90. 1----1-D-E_A_L---'-rat'ing l'ecord. Fully equip. childrf'n, housebrQkl.'n. 64G-d J " Sh' t ed \1·alnu1 & cane hdbrd, Coffee I-able, french legs. pe or Cl'U1s1ng. ip o nia~ching conunode $100. Bx ova I, S 8 J. 1\1 i "c Jfo' you al'c buyu1g a P iano c;oupl~ siz: Kt'n~orr wash-3,j9;1 after 4:30 pnl. shore, boat bath, raff, ell.'. springs & matt $150, Ta.pes-itenis ~18-2900. Ill' Orga11 this YEAR & zng niachine. $125, $40 le~s ABOUT 8 mos .• black male call Bill Headden, 646-9?13, We Sit Betttt. Inc. Free Placement A!SJ~tance try 81'<.lsprcad, $100. Sell all . . are 1n1crcsted in son1e real· than cost. It 111 in new condi. Cat \1'l\1'hl spot on chest. otfi~. 835-4343 $J:il. 2 n1al(•h loun;:i' l.'ht's &: ~~JR~!J ~~h~ryf ~T~·uii;. ly gl'eat deals. , lease l5hop go~! ~~;tly 3 or 4 (Jmi's. NP.eds good home. 67:>-47-'...5 2.J' ISLANDElt Sip, .t'.G. tnb. orton1a11 $12$. fruit11'ood n el'l"'s uig -:.e u 1 en~s. \\'ARD'S BALO\\'IN srUDI01=='::..::::..=:=·'------al.. 6 p.1n. 1129 Aux. A-1. l\lany extras. d1'Qplcal tbl 1110. AntJ(I . hat SoniP Europl'an Anti~ s. 1819 Newport. C.~1. &t!-8-184 15' Camping trlr. xlnt cond, FREE . One \'C'I'}' rotten ra· Sleep~ -t. $399:>. SI Ip """"'' South Coast Agrncy 612-3274 WOMEN (II IT'S YOUR MOVE SAµ:s PERSONNEL rlffded put time for adult luxury apt, comp I ea , Pftvioul ules or leuinz exp required. Call To Work Pfl'\me At Ttlt>- pOOne Order Desk. S2 PP!' llr. To St.alt. For Intervi~v Call fl(r. Dines &ti-153:?. Discover • Gre•t New 1"d('k, tt'VOlving t()r:i StiO. ~ lro1111 ood. Co~IPge .~ark 0()<.'n E\'el'y Nllt n1ake olr. CoUee lb!, dbl coon. r~emale, 8 n1o s. available. 897~11 X 5014 Slant boa.I'll, $8. Rt'inforced Easi, ~al Bc:h. 4.ID--8 lilti. .'\: Sunday Afternoon bed frame&. mattress, 9 dr. :>.1~3931 1/30 ,1.kdays. !:inuw Kin~ tu-e chains. QUAL. Furn. Obi. f\1<111 ,t dN'Sl!er, kit. lb!, 4 ctu·1 &: OAh."\VOOO- GARDEN APJ'S {TI4) 142-8170 SA VIN GS .l LOAN need• Eirl who i11 ma.tutt. emb~, and able to meet the public. 11 you are. l\'e may hav~ a permanent position for ,_.ou as a teller-new account.a clerk. Frin&e benefil!I:, good work· Ing rondllions. No ex- perience necessary. WORLD SAVINGS & LOA.i'l Schools-Instruction 7600 292 S. Cout, La~na Bch l ~;!;!;::m:.a:t SECRETARY TO REAL ESTATE SALES MANAGER P\"ef, 1.tature Stable Ledy"'' exper. in Real Estate, Es- t!l'f:T'N or Finance. No Begin. nen, Pkue. l Ot Largest Bldn .in U.S. Outstanding frin&e benefit!;, JTtirement, f!fc • .&: a Salary commensu. ra.te "''/yoor exper. Top Ref- MEN J. WOMEN! COtit:PUTER PROGRA~f. 1.llNG IS TiiE h"EY TO YOUR PROFITABLE FUTURE? Oll!Sn start soon. Pilot program ottering the finest t"QUipment and facil- ities available! Real·time computer programming. er Req. Call 1.fni. liliddlt"ton The A.....1-, betwn 8 AM-5 PM, M0-7810. l"Jl,;CIUtdllJ S.cntuy To $600 elf Coinpe--- v.ith bookkeeping kllO\l'lcdl:e. Iii. 101r;c•m Call Lon.inf', \Ve11cllff Per-I(. 8Jnnel A~ncy. 21)13 \Ve.-.t· dill ~ N Unlott lank Sq,1,111r• u~., ·6 · 6-l5-77'iQ (Fee South Tower and Fee Paid Job~I Suitt ~D SECRETA RY PT/iin" 4>raft9•· c·attt., '2U6 (~nn}. Oilice DetaL.I !or Cell 547.9471 Career With The AIRLINES e OPDUTIONS AGENT e TICKET SALES e RF.sERVATIONS e AfR FR.EIGlIT-CARGO e CO;>.!MUNICATIONS e TRAVEL AGENT Airlin• Schools Pacific 610 E . 17th, Santa A n a 543-6596 IT'S YOUR MOVE D iscover a Great New Career With The AIRLINES e OPERATIONS AGENT e TICh"ET SALES e RESERVATIONS e AIR f"REIGHT.CARGO e C0~1l\fUNICATIONS e TRAVEL AGENT Airline Schools Pacific 610 E. 17th, Sant• Ant 543-4596 The Newport School of Busin••• io.lisc. 67J...2943 aJtns. Lido bxspruigs. Gardrn tool~ .t· buUet. tl·lust sell imrnecl. flll'XED Puppies, all colon;, 4 CAL 20 No. 7-17. n1any racin;: Isle. . mlsr. Hun!. JI a T ti 0 u r ....... ~,....,,..,..,...,...,I Leavin~ Feb. t, 6J6...8522 or 11 ks. old, \\'eaned. ;).tN!l78 & crn1sing exh'as. Genoa., 2 PIECE Spa.iish ,.1, • '·v•"'" ~::,.>'~"~-~~~~-·I PIANOS & ORGAN3 531-698 __ 1_______ CUTE Friendly Bunnie rab-boat bath, 6 hp Evin incl ..,_ "' ":' NE\V USED bits. Assorted Color~. Call Slip a1'ail. SlSOO or otter seat $169.95. J piece sel-MAPl.E DrupJeaf Tablf" -1 " CITIZEN Band, 2 John.son 9b"2--0ti8 Spani.~h -2 end, l cocktail Goocf i\J1sc. f''urniiure. 1147 • r:in1llha Pianos Organs ti1essenger Ill's., I 64fr1390 1/30 tables $49.9:>. 2 Spanish llv-Charlr.~ton, C.\1. • 'l'huinas Organi; i\tessenger II , X super mag, FREE Puppie6. 8 \1·ks, small NEW SABOT I -• Kimball P111no:l 2 nlObile stinger~ & cable, nuxed toy cockel'. Sue C:On1plcte w/1·aci,.... !a D ing room amps S2:i. The ESTATE SalC' 10 ;1111 •• 1 p nl .. ., r·actory, 188J Harbor , Sat g, Sun. ;i05 Aven1Jo •Kohler & Carn11bell '.'l:!nt cond. $350. Also desk 8:lS.70S7 Special $239. &t5-0ZZ2 54~2 l.01'f'n'lo, N.B. COAST MUSIC mike tPStf'r, othe1· goodies. YOUNG male "Tabby' cat, LIDO 14 Sailboat, No. 2389, cc~~=-~~~~~ I Nt-:\VPOR1' & 1-lARBOR Sacrifice. S.ID-4296. t bl , ~~1 1'"' d "'ith trailer. C··" 831-10'" USED l)(l{a & chair $69.95. 2 ,/ GARAGE Sale: Color TV. Cusra ~lesa + 632-23.;i! very ovf'a e. ,>J -;;oa ays aft 6 Pl\T ..., .>J matching t.pbolstered furniture, misc. 17jj2-A 0 ,..,.,n 1n 6 Fr'o l0-3 SU 12.~ \VALNUT Desk, paddf'tt or 613-334·1 l"\'es 1130 ,,~ "" n a chair both $50. <I Chairs, CO'U'IBIA C 1· I"'-I patlria green print <:hairs, Geraldine, HR. 5 i\1os. fem Schnauzer/pro-.. " -J Lucrg 11.~g bo!h for $69.95. Antique -' January Clearance tabl£', \l'icker & ; TO n. dle. Shots, lovable, 67>1385 Sloop. Comfortable Day \vhile end & cocktail tables PATIO Sal{'. Sal. 9_am-,, pm. \ICalhC'rbeaten S7. End !able 1130 Sailer. $7j(} f>.18-45-17 19 h Th F-IO ,..5 Ml San Be1·narrl1no Ave.. $l Skii:: Slj, Danish teak ---------°" I========== eac · e ac ry, .ioo N 8 N' ·1 Ch , SALE' FREE Boby Dutch 1'abbits. l·l••bo•·. ~ .• n ,,.,,2 . • 1~ r e111~ cap. , couch. blue /..,...,cn SJO, !\lit·· p C • .... .,...,..,..,,.. ... ~ l\fl 6-filt'l 1130 owtr ru1ser1 OE'UXE N N "'-, SOFA, chair, S\vuig sf't: e JIA!i<1MONO • Organl5 ror $4. 5'18-2.194 9020 u • ear ew """"1ng · tt 472 Abb' II' 2 LONG haired puppies 8~ 28' 1965 SS Fairlincr Fl l\lac:h. \\'/console. All Ac· misc. em11. . ie ay, e Pianos e Speakers BAITERED & beaten stu-ii·eeks. Housebroken. Y !7" St & C.~l. Slit & Sun. &16-4738. OPEN su~. 12-4 clent deiik, baby <'hest. net'di1 Bridge, radio, pulpit, marlin <.~i.~. :l, ereo an1p 0 •8~2-7800 • chan". swin1 sll'p. Stertt1, Garrarrl turn1bl, }10. 6 draiv . llAl\L\I :\'D rl'paintlng: S10 ea. 9x12 \\'OOl 1 -~--..:.C.'--'---~-~ coinniode. s2.-1• h"ideabed, Apph•ncea 1100 in CORONA DEL l\tAR at~a rug \\•/pad. shades or T\\."0 long haired puppies, 81~ outriggers. STj()(). 67U'169 Necci. $97. ti''" l>d rornr * * , * 211;)1 E. Coost H'l'Y. 6'i3-1!9.':0 gret'n. good 1·ond. Sij, \\'k~. o Id , housebroken. ~'~v~'~'·~;~l~8-08=9'l=d-•~Y~'=· ~= S.14-2069 s1:..<S90 1129 ;67 30' CJ-IRIS • TS. \Veil 1bl. $20, 1HP _water pump, Usod F'rigidiurr ,,a~hf'I', 1a1e y Ch ' I cc.:.=.:.... ___ _ llf'\\' '('Ond, $j(], _apt pot1 morlel $30. Frigid a I 1•e OU r 01ce p RE ST I G I 0 u ~ Ol'ange BABY crib & mattress, sheC'I equip. \Ve 11 maintained. \1·ash1ng. mach, $JJ. Other refrtgerntur Sj(). N 0 T 2 r County Country CI u b & blankets. Also play-pen & Asking $12.500. 5-~1827 aft 6 hsehold. •l•_n1s. Call ah 6:30 drver S:iO. Acliniral Color TV Cable-Nel!IOn or \\'urlitt:cr ar1-i11emben;hip For Sale 4 pad. 612-5790 1/31 I=':' =========I P!\f &16--10 o '' lsl consolr, \\alnu1 '\'1th 'T' ..1 c It f 6 P~I • s:JO. All thri;e: and il!ORF. a1 ,,"',-,",•,,",·_191•3. at 1 ; R,\BBJTS, 3 females • \l"ht, 1n.itrh11~ ll('rl{'h, S6!l9. ·· ASSORTED rncl tab I est, l-lo •111ler1'<ln 's, 18i7 llarbor GOULD MUSIC b\k /11·ht, brn/11·ht. 962-6888 cocktail tabl£>1 SJ,j() each.'..! Blvfl., C'.\i. :-..is..-01:.J. Oren SEWING MACHINE 1/31 antique \1•hite f\\•in bookcaw n1ost evrs 'Iii !l P~l '.!C4j N. ;\la111. SA :-t-17-0681 ScaN1 Kenmore Portable. 2 VERY affectionate temale headboard.~ S7 .9:i each. 1 1,F:N;>.JORF; \VASl!En. rou-~e11·11 forward, reVCTSe, cats. 9 mre::. need good 1\'alnul douhle _book c 11.se pi<' S.JZl'. $l2::i IS.to. h·:.~ 111a11 llA:\ll\IOND ~1c1nway. \'am-darns. buttonhole~. Excellent home. J IS-6202 1131 headboa~tl S9.9.i. :!'he ~ ac· rost) NC'1Y co11cl ilio11. usc>rl a ha. Nc11 & used plat'lOs of t'Onditton. Only $3J. 837-t23!l CUTE oran~e & \\' h 11 e lory. 188.l l-larbor, ;.J-10-G/fl only 3 or 1 tin11•s, Call 1110.~t. u~ake~ .. Best_ hu~·s ~n BEAUTIFUL hand painted slTipe(! fnbby cal. :: n10'1. e WANTED • -'~0_1-_I_'..':>_,,_______ ·~· C,dil. ,a ~lnn~rlt ro.tu~1<' oil Portrait of you or your male Call 518·7~41. l/31. \\.'Ing •·hair lprt>f{'r Chippe.n-KENl\10Rf':! A11to 1v11o;hrr & Co, 1901 N. ).l.~1.11, Sallla An;i. ehildren from 11 photograph. PETS and LIVESTOCK Spffd-Ski Boots '1030 NEED someon(! to lov(!. 16' inboard ma~. sk1 boat, mint cond. $1500/hesl offer. 6-12-7781; 2871 Bayshorel!, N.B. 'Mfr'a Rep., 'fype, S.1-1. Ex· I '"~~!'!'~~~~.,. I Jl@r Nee . .._16 hrs "'k. Full PIANO LESSONS FeatUl'PI weekly l'f'ffeshPr rourS£'~ in thP skills yllu nE!('d lo gf1 I hr lob you "'M l~ dlllt> stylel ; in ne«I of l'C'· Fr1g1da11"e 111110 \Yashrr , -~-~------'A "'ondertul idea tor that cov~ri11g o.i-:. l\1 u s t be both xln! cone\. $·1:1 f'Uch. SAC'HlflCE! \Vu 1· l 11 z r r 1pecial gift. 6·16-3629 Pets, General 8800 1nodel"Utely p1i('ed, pleaSI'! =r16-8672 or 8'1l..at1:, Splnt•1 P1;ino. X!n 't Cand. CARPET Instal1£'r has one 1!168 SEA Ray 17', Black 11•/red inl(!l'. lnbrd-<>utbrd Mere cruiser, 120 HP; 110 hrs. $3000 inclds convt top, cover &. traill'T. 6·11-2768 14' LONE Slar 1vith 20 hp Evinrude l'f'n101<' co11h·ols. E."(lTa8. COi'! $1200 SacriliL-c S350. lllr. Jones ~2:1CU or f21ll 583--6066 detall1 to Box 53M, Daily AU ages:. Beg., lntermi'f.li· PUot,. N.B. ateg, THEORY· JMPRO\'IZ.. 83J Dflvl'r Or .. N.13. &1~·~870 SECRETARY. Typing 6;;, ATION. Reasonable. Call ..,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;..,;;;;;;;;;;'"'"' ihorthand 911. Int"restini;: ='1~'~'~' ~5,,_p_.m.c·~>t6-~154°"'~S~--AUCTIONEERING divrnitied \l'ork for self· DIAL direct 642-5678, Charge REGULAR 2 \\'Ef;K TERi.t 1tartu. Sygtt'm~ Corp your ad, then sit back and Be in bus1nl'!;~ !or yourself! t.frs. Hayes ~771 li8!"n to Ute phone ring! Learn to be an auctioneer. Jobs-Men, Wom. 7100 Job~tn, Worn. 7100 SALES All Departments Work for th• new Grtnts. GROW with • GO-ahead comp•ny. Full time •nd p.1rttim1 position• •v•lleble. We have openings for the wortc:lnsa housewif• .. Full com,,.ny benefits fncludlng d iscount purch1se pltn. Comt in and'" us nowt Mondoy Through F rldly 10 a.m. t• 4:30 p.m. W.T. GRANT GRANT PLAZA .t.•111s and lrookhunt, H.B. Equ.:al Opporlunlly Employer • \VEST-BEST SCHOOL OF AUCTIONEERING, 2tti \V. 4ll1, Sllnta Ana, 638·5000. PIANO LESSONS: teacher begi11nillt! In fllesa Vl.'rde r.19--18'1.'• E'pcr to leach area . THEATRICAL 7900 WANTED, BOYS & GIRLS WITH A DESIRE TO BE ON TELEVISION ••• For Free On Can1era AUtll· IJon In Your Are11, Call Or- ange County, 547-6251. MERCHANDISE FOR SALE AND TRAOE Furnitvr• 8000 BEAUTIFUL ,._lodmi 7 Pc. dinette., $'13. Al!IO, Ouncnn Phy{~ Droplt>al i rhr1, $38. Call 61~ 1849 ClJSTQ;>.1-Bulll mund liOlid birch tablr lop \\TOught iron l:iaw 54()..4118 or ~16-2342 One Twin Ollk Bt"d, Complete, $4J. 646--9762 l'i .. \\'i lb $12.i. AR~ft.ESS 8e<f Divan, Olive T\\cf!cl, Ltk.r Ne\\', $32.j(), Dall 642-8171 ~ fOLDING Chnin, t°0."111'1 robbe-r 5Nl1$, tan. $S v11Ju SS. T.iltc Nu. Oc-~k ~ valu ror 5:>:'1. 613-0!lil 6•12-3:189 after ti P~f. 1''5 ,~ -'16 61' '1'7 :,c~'=~~--'---71 RErnlG£RATOH . fl'f'C7.<'r ''-' • l.>-.\b< OT .... " roll, avocado nylon carpet, LOVELY 8' 11ofa. never used, -'l cir PhilL'<> l!l.6 ~-u. IL no Nf'.:\V & USED. Pianr•~. Double jute·bat'ked. \Viii ,:ell Quilted f Io I' a I. M»1· ll'ost like rK:1r, n1u~l 1'1'.11 01'Jl:nn~. JlC'buiU Grands, all 01· part l.'llyard. 5-10-124j ch,,uarderl $13:l. matching I""'. "·1""22> \I Ill I ·, c \I ~ "' ·>0'>" "' ......., ~ ~ a ,. , .... ;,i..,..~,,...., TV, sewing 1nach., nipll.' co{- SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS 77IO~'e:;!1 Ss:i. Privatr party. KENMORE l\todrl 110 0 0 t I .,...,,....,., PIAN TUNING & Repair fer lb , IOO!\J!I', e e<'I can Leeway_ I tcd!!:e _ i\Tince _ n1obtlc chshwasher. I.a ir C:'\pC1'1. reasonablC': opellf'r, odds &. f' n d s. USED assorted headboards modrl, xlnl rond. ~-A!bto1·t Aarr'H"s:< 67;t..6967 64~LJ6. Compel -Pl-IONE CA\\' 11 ch USC'l'.I a rted nd -'---'=-------An old ct't!IV J)("l'Ched hin1. ' ra · sro e !':M>-86i2, 847..SllJ \\llJRLITZER l602, ::2 note CHESTS. t\vin beds, modem lables $3.;;o each. U~ UPRIGllT F'rl'f';t i•r .t . b , sell 011 a lrlephoiit w1rr. lie 11~sor1ed night stands $1.95 R Jl('<hll. sust;i1n. ~"I" 1 .11._ rab. <'1tina cab., ri1nelle, 1·a1clcd 11·as aUemp1ing to niake a ~"~ elru::rrator. Rro!'011Bblc. S'.l!l,-1. TC'rins, 11·1101•. M:'J...l:'"n. ru,s. naugal•"de :10fa, Call PHO'~ Cl\V each. The factory, loo.o C 11 ~ 11._.2634 ,,,., v I==·'=~=·=·==== Harbor, ;,.iQ.-6S.;2 .:::•::...:·'::::.· .:::'"-----~ 8 .\LO\\'IN A~·1'0sonlc SpulC't. r>tS-861! FR PROV. Dining table 4 USED Appliance I. ~v·l-. a~ Xlnt t·o11d. Sl7..fl6.13 ~901 PAINTING: Boat or 1-fousc. Dogs 8825 11· Classic Century, n1ah1?:., inboard. New ~3 eng. Tan- dom trlr. M2-9:2'78 Boat Slip Mooring 9036 NE\\'PORT Lido Pt'ninsula. 22' f'Ml\\'1'1' bo3t, side lie.$'.!. per fl. £7~-61 11 · -p , ' guaranleed, Dunl11p ~. lSlJ flonl) 11 Or, llunl Bl:h. By the Hour. Vet y uphol. charr1. ort. Nia~ N """'l'I C flt ~IS.-i7tl.~ R•a-·obl•. 675-~'9. Rod Cyclo i\lasAA.gt> un11. c .. ,~ · · · ' ...,,, .>J'I ;,\9-3171. KEN!\IORF: Aulo \\':1,he1· & Televis ion 8205 Carpel layrr h.:1.s lh Lo nylons $1.99 yd. Shags from $.1.50 up + 111y l.ilxlr, !10c per yard, 847-1519 AFGHAN IIOUND, 18 i\10!!. Mobile Hom•s 9200 Show Dog. l\lany RibbonN. Gd ----------'" U"ED . 1. & h 1699• Dryer, s.~-. rad 1. j,',r1--S-ll! " SU :.a (' 3!T , J. - U~rrl pair fTd Vl'l\'r\ hi-back , cha1\·s s~i9 each. Tht' Fae· A ntiques 8110 ~ry, 18S:> Harbor. :J.l()..(jSl2 ANT(Q. Furn; loll111ps. 11111'· ~lUST ~l·:LL Spanish 111odt'rn rorg, cut & l'Qlorcd l'.:ho;s, turn. Candelabra, ha Tl g. boau t. china. ,..luch !\lore. \an1ps. room div. baby tut•n. 897·9!1-IO l'1c. Call 54&--0l58 A_N_T_l_Q_U_E_S-.-,-,-,-,,-, -,-1,-,-,-.. QUALITY Sofa bed. 1.'0sl S3j() top t'flnu1JOC[C' $2~. Gold leaf ~II $1~JO. ·~ Reill et•1·11y b{'d niirnu·~ ~ S(.i)ll1'I'~. 111;"1.lllll: ~20. Xlnt ~-ond. :i.1&-9~i18. rhr ,(1 , ll1f11'd clu·.~ 8; f'tr. ~•1floo911D ClJP(t ,ti niarlr t'l'W"kc1-,;, S\5 SPANIS!f den group :l-7 rt . Pa, &14-4nl7, 61:'>-~1 21 sofa..,;. 1 C'Orner tabl<'. l lamp ANTIQUE r1r: sAVE $149.!lj The t'adot'y, }._~ )\ALL r.1rnnoR Harbor, 540-6842 6-12·18.'U QUALITY king ~ • quiltf'd L•aded Hanging Shades mattre5~. GJ1nplrte unuSt!d + 5 11-'ljj)I • l120, W011h $~60. S.C.WJGJ========= Sewing M•chints 8120 ('0~11>0Nf':NT Slt'l'r'n· '..! lir11r1·r1i11y SJ'M"akcr:<, Bolgen S.62 1urntablr. 1 SOunct (.)•,1h~11i11n arnp. Cost r>IOBILE Radio Phone. 11r \1· S17;), g;lc for Sl2S. transistorized, lour channel. Lr 8·S136 Xl11t ttl.'eptlon, Besl oller Lr.11:<f' Color TV or Black .~ tp.kes. ~()...!1032 \Vhllr•. Qplion to buy. r~ BASSINE1', Ma It r ~ 111 & i:t>l"\'IC'I'. No rlrposit A·Active cover $10. fl1<''1h playpen 'l'V Rental Co. II ith pad s1.-1. a.!()...2321 art. 11 1 SZl·ll:.:'. -'~"~'~I ==~~~~~~ F01'BON 1-;IN'lron1e can11'rJ'. NF.\VPORT Besc:h Tennis T&kt>' p1ch11'f':< 111 dark. l.'luh, lan11\y 1nc1nben;hip, J.1fct1111P rlt'Vl'IOp\llj.':' con-s.t::io. 519--2286. t'\~ll ~S&M lraf'I. Co~ S.tm. !Oell S200 or DIVING TA.nk, 71 cu. fl, ,.,.Ith mnlw olfe.r. 646-j:JiS fin & mask $75. RcAT7 " T11hlr l\todrl. Nc11• S.ls--0341 pu·tur,. tul>P C'>. P1'ck11rd 8 F't, Rll:t.~11 Surfboard P>1.•ll 21 Con~le n1odcl S30 Exrtllen1 ooMition $SO, J IS.-1::9:, &tfrlOI~ 2r--RCA Color 1'V, \\'ol'lts i\tlNK Sto1,.. exquisit~ l5nioky Office Furniture 80-10 SEWING MACHINE i:ootl. sn. Ah 5, 6t6-6378 ~>" Lut1h11, EmhA, pd $89j, ;_;...c.;;... ___ _..;,_ ___ , Scan 1'C11morv Port11ble. 64·~ L.ar\u;pur Ctr. ltB. now S145. &\')...96,,"6 OFFICE FURNITURE 5'>w1 t 0 r.,, 1 rd. 1't"Yl'1"Jl('. I .::=,::.:::=======-1"";;;-'c,;.:i';::..;8;::;:::;;:1:;:kco,. NE\V It \JSED • de\kt rlnn1", huunnholr• Ex.,l'llt·nt H l-F'< & Sltroo 1210 POOL Tablf', runsw c "·· 11 1:..;;.:...:...;;:;..;;,.;.:.;;.;. __ .;;..._1 t~~" 5h1tr, lealher pockets • Cnn.Jf:'I • 11'., 1'111Jd111on Only SJ.i. 837 .. 1'23!1 .. G t"' McMAHAN BROS. r.tUST N!ll · 2 Vok~ 01 'l'h<-·1 ,:S.:00;::::.·.:.·•:::1:.."':.::::-:.· ---- DESK INC. 1009 SINCE?l. z f G ·1. A I:'"'; Thr11h't' Srll'aJ.:('r.~. t"h•hcr I r.!Tl Bu'-lnt'tll Cl.'111f1ca1e, ""' ... l\'tlnut con~ole, ti u 11 "n Am", & oval tr n t b I , SHlO 01J1COunl or make oflrr. 0:i~! ~~c~:e1vpo~l Bl'~-.11JO ~~1!~~j,.1>~.c$~~~~a~I~ 54J.~9!l or $1tio-6006. c"'~""'-5'97~~· ~=~~-- 0.\ll.\' rruJr \VANT ADS! r1115y terms? ~16 ll lV~: ltlf' •'Unitc>rt \V.ny ' Cll,\RGF. IT~ '..C."-'-"---'---'------ ) Hse Pet. i\tus• Sac, $500. Phone · 646-97'..!4 GREA'r Dan(', Registered, 3 yrs old. S7j, 2027 Orange Ave, C. l\t. ADORABLE toy poodle pups, 10 wks. Loving home pritne requlsit('. !tl:>-4j12. AF"GllAN HOUNDS Al\'.C reg. Qualit.1-. SlOO up. 962·9989 21i !\lo Old &nnoyed Puppy. ~lal(", Pl'd~t'. Very Lovablt'. Ph. 67;,..J?M BEAl.JTl ftJL Blaek Poodle, femaJc, 6 \\'t'f'k:oi old. s.ia Call :.~1379. PART SIK't'p dog puppl~~. ~i."' l\l'l'k~ ol1\. Looking for a good hon1t $10. 646-,lG,..'(i Ar:c ~llnlature Dachshutld puppies, S1J. * TI.C/862--6360 * .,, OOBLTu\IAN pups, 1n11.Je11, J:\ \\'k.is. rrOpJM"rl, ~hots. Tt'.rms. 642-8961 anytimf'. LOVE./\BLE i\Ti1lt' t.'Ol!lt> P\Jfl, A KC, shot8 k \\'Ol'med. 3 ITIM. $100. &12--.1·12-l \\"h11c Eh:!ph1111I!<': RARE OPPORTUNITY r.iOSILE LIVING nn Ill(! BEACll_ Lin1itrd s1ntc1·~ 111 tll.'W addition 10 Dl'if1v.·ood Beach Club. ~1o<lel!1 on tlls. play! Grcen!eat ~Io b 11 e ltorne Sa.Jr.s, 21462 Pacific C~t lligh1v:iy, ll.B. 5.16-751 3 Went to buy or sell7 Let US Help You I Used Specialists S & K MOBILE HOME BROKERS • 63'-0921 • DELUXE 2 0 x 6 0' CA:\1- 0RTDGE Lrg 1"'1t'Ch, A1111· inR"s. Stor. thf'od. Slt8:l(I, 1\dult 5 :Siar Park. C.:\t. 616-1:1612 i\IOBTLE llon1" J !'168 , SftcrlfiN'! Set Up In NICt! Arlult Pk .. N\\1>1 Sch. CaU btfort 10 At.\I or 11'1 6 P~I f;.16-t)'l';,1 LEAVING """" &>uth Iii :: clayg! 11 x j,j, 1 BR . s<111!1, pr ts Sacrlll\'t'? S ·12 ~ O s12~::~::9 O\VNER \VIII nmve tOtiftyl 10 x 4~ furn. I RR. artulf flk , "W'til 510 1110. 22:11. SIZ.-6..~l 1 Th11rsdl}', Januvr 29, 1970 DAILY PILOT 3S TRANll'OltTATION TRAN~PQtlTATIQN 't ]RAfdl'OltTATI~ TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATloH TUNli'ORfATION TRAHSl'OllTATION •Homa 9111 T..:lctt. 1 •• "°1tiii1 ~Ca,.. :Jii ljirJt,,i Autos 9600 I~ Can 9'oci tmportod ,..... -Ayt'-...... Jlll !!~•rt ."I VW C.r1 flOO :., * · ~ '!.,et;:i.~~~ DATSUN MCiA . TRIUMPH vo1J<1w~Ci114 . ~;i.~T · AMIVIOUT '""ilOu " ~ Jim .... ~:IMlll !Pl· ·Xlll! -· Mako D5f ~IG~ Converilble. Good 1963 nM11111> ~ ·it vw Bua, 8 ........... l~'"lt ,•lhlity · C 0-r ~.; • $ conc11lloil. xn.·t OOnd. llm erra. ,..,. cood. 11m. """ "''' 11t1 all '68 CA MAIO RS 'l'l FOllD Gal"'·' d.. auto, o,per 68 °""" 108 Sport Van. .... llATIUM -l600 * -Call m-,l245.• w/trade °' ltn. Pvt pty. 1'70 ,ORDS " 'Sp, .. ,,,... Air p/~ nu -• b&tl 1 own. TRAILl!R SALES Auto, hea"l' duty ,...,..,, · <9>-4789 l'ORD TRUCKS Jl.Yr. ......... ::".'pt.m':.· ~~~ "Ivy fr.n •....,, now "'°'• """ pu1ect MGI ·VOLICSWAGIN '19 SQBCK, auto+ ...... In AD -'6r ..._._ Fotd Str ml9 ....._ • whallvHTri-1" 64U57< "LeculodnTbell<a<h Citlo•" ,...,,..ty. $'495~.makaol-•u-, ~· .,.. ..... Salt! $1999 Salt! ·====-=,._.,...,,... WE SER.VICE NEW ... GMC 'IO IOO. ZIMMERMAN '67 MGB YW BUGS ftt. Alt ~ ~135 11:· "'>• Get °'!' Oim>J!lllUvt Ratn Ml 'T' '6B OOUNTRlO y Squlro mtloo WHAT WE SELL! Camper .. ul ...... "3. Mu>rt 2845 HARBOR BLV 'Tllooilont mt -pu1., tic, '11> Uc. ,.11 Se•. 25500. Call Bill A~ D. R.d>rtT., <•pd., d~, wl,. whig, 'till VIV Campe•, lo mil.,, ROBINS FORD $2!8!. '4<-2248 32-i So. Harbor, Santa Ana r 540-6410 racing red ext., plush black J'ROM xlnt coOO. Beatlcttu! ' 645-1441 ~=:R ~:u&ha 5ll·l066 .~e;: ~lt"w~:.14 &pttd, ORANGE COUNTY'S ~'k x:~t Co~ thru.ou~~ $399 1968 v! MS-l!".:; k eo.:. ~ 81~0 2100 H¢ior Blvd., C.M. 1 :c!:l~'t°an. CLEAn•~cESALE 7.l56plytire1.(37Tl9C)w\U N0.1 aeo ertracorsm .. , mUJ . Dal' '58CHEVYwqon.Oeuln ~c.uh.961-46218. ~ \ finance. Call BW Applebee. DATSUN DEALER down. TRB~. CW.I Ken. GOOD SELECTION ..,.ue. plnstrl.Pl!d.· xtraa. A 00~ new tlrn. kaol, pn, '15 Ford Van w/'ST eiw:!M. NOW~ 8~~ 01' . ........, DQT DATSUN '""173 "545-003<. ~ ,rt<lO. '7:;.<453. 537~· A-·W1ntad 9700 -to~ bad val~ Many litru. Muat ""· IA y HARBOR • l\tust ScU * Go.in1 18833 Beach Blvd. '65 l\fGB 48,000 miles, Wire '63 vw buJ, pxt ·oond. new • • Job, m. 7 96L4009 aft 5 pm, .titn Mol>l1a Homa hlff """'''"' Fri. '56 Doda• Hun"""'°" Bu<h ~·~~MUST c °" ~t'.1'..:;:. eood llru. Wll.l».Y . . . '66 • MaUbu SS ••· LTD W110n. Ill ,...., tC!S Babr St Cotta M Mail Truck. $400 I olfer, 842-7781 or 540-0442 ~ CASH AM/FM •te~ nlafU' ex· le: Eu( • esa 536-4963 1964 J\tGB. Good c..'Ondition, ~ 65 vw Sunm>t' low mlleaa:e Conv. bu. 6f6..10161 ~~Me,. o!f:~1@ NJsw '69 GMC ~b. 3 seat. ENGLISH FORD ~~ ~irclli 's ~-,, ~~;~~F Orl&lnai Auto PSJ~~ow/Bk Int. '6t FORD ICONOLINE '67 VIKING EDGEWOOD Ill ' auto., •< oacrilice. '67 MG" ~T ff ·-VW. Auto. --M·~ for -eon. ln1cb ~ "'-'~! $1099 "'-'-! l3000 * .. ~19'0 • S7' Double expando, Ser. 29131. CaJI Bill Ar>-~ . newly re-· uo ulUG. ..... -n ._~ '-... ~ ~ Quality c o~stru ction. plebee. Dlr. 540-9640 ORANGE COUNTY'S painted, perfect condition, aell. Still on war-~•-tr. ..nm.ta. Milter 'T' -... UNCOLN ~ple~y ~@d; window '69 FORD Van long E 300~ V~~~~E D~~~~~H 28·000 miles. 6'~28S.l Ms. mt nrt. 66 or 81 .;:; :=· ~~~-GR01H CllYRQltr ~·1~11W"'."~ ~""!u~W---·~ALES~JIYICE " ... PQRSCHI -~~~ $1700 Cash. CaQ. Da,ys ..... ,...-...;..... 2100!!:~~.1c.M. i:. .. u.r.:. ~·~ wet. NlceiJ' l&ndocaped • ,_ 9$10 • 2 ~.Di: " PORSCHE GE '"' vw back f ~ -'65 CHEVEtLE SS. 3"7-3SI). ..-lnl, JI'!' ...... i,;;. pon:11 w!m ,.ra:a.ne : lMllf' ·~ = ->491. EVff. 67$-2332 11211 S-h Blyd. I 1~:; .....,.. """ Stu Adult \!' "'~ '" !'!,Jl·..... · s.c. couPE 1964 sw noN l!lll! ..111~ 111ui:.~ __ . !<! W3!I . ~~~~ • ""'iii> 11M·•· ;: ~-;:::: :;:;,;-• . ~ 'i.l!!l".l.''ILl'I..!: ::.:,::;111.,-.• ·r-""':'.~. · •-,, .. _.... blll"" ._.•;~-N l!$l -·~· _,,., BR. 2 den, crpta ttJru. hvy duty c hr om e r lnuo. l\iany \\'Ith fully a~tomatlc upunkt A!Yl·Fm. McA1ee CAMPERS '66 VW Fastback inc, t track Ml&ke Ottr. Call MW706 the' ~ wtwlwfi\t, a Ml out. pa le carport awngs 673-'rl'9'2 an 6 trans., air, radial tires, ra-, . la, fog lites:, etc. Vaaek ff b v-w ~, = ~·· •Jr •1 · · W ~ ·Conv.l:-.Full pwc, ~ ~w:;. . .:: .... w· ~ 28' porch. 1.l&JI)' ex: 1962 JEEP .. Silver. 283 ~l~~ wSTD"" tlre2 o'·R. alt ~ e.Xclu.sivel.y. ar our • • co , . J l'f cond. 10% above Wbolna)e. • ....._ . W.LlSO ~-· • • CONS1JW:S 40 llmii Ill It ~ hd !J AM.:_ Ill !O _ MftftH•_J · • .. .. ,. Many exttu. M"'t 117115 FUU. PRICE PORSCHE 4nl@.Q ' Jr.: .• ~l'Jq J~ .. -~~Ill· ra . ~ -· · --!!!!!!!""!! Owllir Anxious! ""· "2-7771 ORDER. Now ~PEEDSTER 19if , . :.: • •iii!;:. ..,.T' "4ll~-! fl!Ui'l,.'t!!l.1jua;:»~c· · !fm;"'i~-i;,w ... WAS . Dune Bugglu 9525 ROBINS FORD ! Vuy Ch<n-y! Loaded• NGTON BEACH Good motDr. Ide '°'Dune 1l!iP 516-UOO d., ·IA,.~. $825 'or P/S. p tvt: IW!. 20 wide, BR, adult, pets Theodore 'Emost cla1slc Porsche rd . Eh " m:.«35 ·68 -VW. Beift.!'ai ixlf. ~Blvd. an. ~11lib ·~MUSfl'N(i"."'2 'a.I - NO 'till DUNE BUGGY A "'"' ™ Hubo< Blvd. A "ha"''· N•>1 ban. iii VW IU"'-JluuY. W."'8. -_; -~.111• ;,, malt• on.,. 646-63911 C.M. ~~~lnl * 912 Pcrschc Eng radio Costa Meaa 642..ootO • petition roll bar, ~ .. ·• W ....,-F '18 BUSY El-OOiiltlir."IJ!H never on dirt. J.fint cond. eng, etc. Very quick. Vase N'ear new, honey ~reme exl., VOLVO :m · ' '66 Mere~ Y-1. _,. 20x40' 1\!l>BlU} Home. 642-1357 FERRARI restored. $3800. push"""' int., 4 spd., dlr. fr. .. ~ u can, paint Chr n 1 r&h "~ ... __ ... ' I "··k .,.~ sed . cu in. N7w lraN' 6: with 4 -.1, ~· _; Capiatn.-Area. Exclus, daya, 836...&414 ev14. P..fust sacrifice! Take old!:r ;ll , · S.,: George Ray · m ' ' trans $1500 T ---------l.·~'°":iiii'iii:c.;;=cc:7:,:..:~1 145 -WAGONS , Rir.bin1 Ford po.gllTactlon. $1400. 536-1235 -~=·==· ='!2--~-1 parJt. ,..._.,._ Encl patio. Import·' Aut-9•~ FERRARI ··~"~ -te' •1tt car in trade or smo.IJ down. SEDANS . ·:o; LUXURY ,...,,.. i1fi'CUiY .... I Comer !ft'.""i.. Space Rent!-~-----··----S(j~~Webo• ~ VXTI.32, Call Phil,.....,,. 164-Bl•d. '65 EL CAMINO ,,.w 11tt:'.'"Ju§f ~ ' Call aft~ (Il4) 493-4M8. ALPINE Newport ~ Ud. ()r. cf!erry Body. Leu thap or f>.l5.063.:I. All kother ~el• t now I in {41. . 642-0010 Auto trans, power •t:eeriJW, S225. 673-7615 - • anae County• only author--1,jioo mi's en eng !lnce I'9:' 'LS VW stoc . 4 spttds au oma1 ca. -Jjj·wANTED brakes, air cond. Mini Bilit! ·91PI 'I!l Aljjlbe -.q. ~ ·=ftil'711!B-i>Al!'rs ~L $2200 °' trd. 8J8..642" d J Orig. 0...,;, """"'°'· ta<h. • ' 0"'DEAN"i.EW\'s "' · ~ Sale! $1199 Sale! MUST~·· '69 VICTOR Minl Slkf ~ rad~, MINT ~Q: .... c3i W. Cout Hwy. -many oth<:r extras. $795. 1966 Harbor, C.M. 646-9300 _ · TOYotA M ister ''T" 645-1441 ·· •• 4 • . ..,, Beach '67 PORSCHE 911; alf1 ~ •739 81..• 2100 "--~Bl d C.M * '67 MU~ da 50 '""· Spark .µr<.tn. .• ~ '"" • . "540-176' chrome whh., 5 op~! •·~ "tit VOLVO 4 1pd. Good roM. It .,_._.. · Ph. •Ml40!!! •=~• v ., . V-8, "t"' ..,._ AiJSfililAMEllreA ,.. .F_.,t-Wf.b"" Pl..,UI•, AM /F., 'titi . SQ.UAR.EBAC.K. Will lrado 1., dune buggy; ...,.... '68 CHEV Malibu, •ta..,., Spulillng orla . a..t S.fl.; C.Obatt blue. $4,Sfq. fi:ad10 I wr, custom trailer ... ~ motorcycle go to 160-CC \i..il'.Cttf ~. '900 V-S.. pwr islffrtng, r A b, rreen. vinyl inL mw IMa._t_o_rcy_..,.~-----9-300'-"' AUSTIN AMERICA FIAT Pfiv. puty. 536-95n M<h, tow"''· Good""""· with cuh. 673-2164 All ' -. -c.~-, IA<t .u-. nr.,. 833-lm •"""""" 'T'&f,w" wt •sf YAl.tAHA • PQJ:tSOIE '65 C Cpe, 44,tOO 548-426l pm IUl._,K walls. Tape de ~c:Jdce" 100 1\vin noo. Sales, Service. Parts 1.968 FIAT 850 ~· brand raj's. White, rd lnt. aeaii. '69 KARMANN Ghia-auto. '63 Valvo J22S. 4 dr sedan, 1-CHRYSLER low mlleaae -a ftne ~ 5. 54.8-SSil Aft. S. lrnm@di&te Delivery new whit~ '1·all tires. ~1v •• Pri. ply. 644-2442, Jack Beaut. bronze cpe. $2375. $800. Xlnt cond. Eves or ---......--• home, and only l•. MAJt,. NJ.-0628 All Models battery. L11te new! Call J1n1 Eies Ll 84608 See No. 7 Beacon Bay, NB. wkends -t94--0664 'fl!i Sulc~ ~vltn.. full pov.-er, + lmpre11lve lmperl•I QUJS Moro~. p So. C. betv•een 10 A~I & 6 Pr.r . 6Ta-0021 ~lnYI ~p. Ducket seats. 1969 CHRYSLER IMPERIAL Hwy, La 1u1\8 Beacb. '67 YAlf,lu.o., lOOcc, dirt. .,.,., """< ''60 PORSCHE 912/4, ]~-. 1965 VOLVO. 40,000 mi. Aik· Y.R.Ulllll E _,151J.1 •~• ~u.. u">->U• 1970 VW 4000 · ~ "L BARON". luxurious, .. .,.,. . ,,,_..,,~oq-Comp. r~. expan chamber. ~ate cand, Ch r om rn1, p\'t, pty. Ing SUOO. After 6. 5S7..fl665 f1ll:<J :. -·· .. 11.... "''·-'---;--;;;:; Knobble1, Moto • X bars. JAGUAR w~. AM-FM 962-7635 AIJ n:KJO, Radio, lite blue. or f!33..&)27. ti-EflllijfOutitancting COi). BJ>t.t ..... ~ onyx .;...._._ ·4 Dr '65 J\.lustang. :o.. Xln't $300. A-1'..p>nd. 646-1310. 6pr.1orwknds. European purchase. a1Uoq: e~refully main-Rd, w/landau top, plu:ah tires &: oorX!. '65 ntu"I-..., 650. nu reblt 3100 W. Coast Hwy., NB. * .69 JAGU ~o 'SO"PORSCH~. mue w/ blt. 675-2974· Antiques, Cla11ics 9615 ~. ~nf.b!e. 646-'T.J'n black 1enuine calf akhftnt.. Bl1tlsh Grttn. ,(k'M) tnMI ,... n..1-. ""WANTED '69 VW · trad t111t1 BUmR" ~·I rk 2 d all apace Qe power a.u!lta. mi's. Prlv. :l. ·-_ $1$0. eni. W/pp,:>of. Xtra chrome 642.s405 541).1764 XKE CONV laj. 5 speed. Radio. Nttd1 : in e 1931 MODEL A Ford Sports ~ ·~~ ..., a r. AM/1'""M 11ttteo + ''DUAL 642.-mSl l\1on, Fri. plU'ta nm or best oUcr. Authorized MG Dealer A "rare find" \\'/J·~sf 14109 ~Y work, near new tire•. for '67 English Rover 2000 Cou Ch 1 ~ardtap, '-/a, JOOd tirei. AIR CONDJTlO'"•'G'." Uo. · ... mo · "7"' • -TC 6T.hll742 or 673-7792 pe, vy runn ng gear. IA<ill •~28 n&.1' 1.ur MUSTA .. ~ONV 6'f3..{1239 local milC's! Sp ark t i n; ~ firm . 67~1144 · Ovt-r $3000 invested. $10':1.I or t-• ~ der transferable r.ew car ~ ''111 '"' • '67 Y~ 305 Scrambler, BMW Primrose yrllow w/black POJUiC'FtE '63 S 1700 CU. 1962 VW, new battery, new be1t offer 64•1-9248 eves. Q..&Dl•·LAC warranty. No I e1 "Whole-289 • V-8 w/ =· qteed. NUtJW.~Spd.200)mi.Bli natural leather, A:.'1/Fi\I Am/F?.t/S ht wave. heads~_',710.~7a_c:s,,7~o:'.,"cond. ~ If sale''bl~bookis$4600.Buy ~ •• ~._H1, I_1U.:. TI;!! tiJ1!L Ped. ~: ttEIB '' n4iA. ~mP • ..-bJI a.id/blk. l\1any Jt\raa. PrtY Must ~ ... a. ~......,.,.. Auto Leising 9810 thl1 riaht for only $4395! DMl.U\ op, Yt~,.-, DtW Beat Otter! 6t2-59l9 ~Jc~·-·,,A a~ car for ~ pty. 714/~lm 1965 VW Bug sunrool, ~tl'B.I, MARQUIS MTftS. 900 So. bt.ttery. $995. 61!:f493 '68 HoMa '50cc ~J>"d uncommo? j,,~·" $<500. '65 PORSCHE !Cl. Immac '1!>t """"'""" Q<il ~w>iof. t' LIAll /II! l;M. llW!!J1 iHlH'l ll@IE!lt 'Iii lt!Y§l'ANQ Y~llonv. Nu Scrambler. Oean. IJ.? I MAl\QUlS T¥: '° So. Cond. Deep Ruby Red, &'h-&163 '69 Cad Eldorado, tun pwr.. 4%'7503 or 51).J)OO. top. Xtru,. lad llr • .fl,000 med&. copil. Pl ~ iiliki f;t..JikWf~r ~AeJ!1 tiifch&n depend. 548-7601 '58 VW, good cond. New air, vinyl top, 10,000 ml., ~Is. 31 ·· actual m1le1. 1965 CHRYSLER Ne\l110rt, ml $la!.~ eve.. offer. -t~ • · ,64-PORSCHE All extras tires. $350 or best offer! $179 per mo. Jl9fPl 1 • f.!w ·Ml: !!Exr,ecu!ve'a ~ ... P~.:...~,!a_tt..,~.,*= ·~-~!rGood_\ANG~, ~ '68 TRJUJ\f PH BON * DESPAR.ATE. '65 Jag ~air. Sacrillce! 541~3. 673-3653 '68 ~c Eldorado mi ~ ~ "'" .. VWll ~ -·-•• .._. ........... .,.., YI.I" NEVIU.S. 6,000 miles, Xln; ~ Rd1tr. 4.2 Ltr. A~t-F1 -E . l!lth St. S.A. '!i6 VW sunroof radio w/w radio, all', vinyl 1!8· - -., c; T .or~. -. • =Ovr SU!O. 5&-1706, Steve, ' ' cond. aj ~ BAYSIDE MOTORS radio. Chrm wire v.·hls. Xlnl • x1nt co~\llo11 'g~·i ~· (li9. ~!JM. "'11 ~ -. ,.,. 1'00 W. Coa" Hwy., N.B. ro>KI. Wlale book $2250. Sac I"i§ PORSCHE model . C. low :"' l)j.,;· .;,,., I •tff T·\iih! Landau, lul! P'IJT·• IJlil ., e.111, • n· . . ~ .. Ill' 66 """" HONDA • BMW • $2000 ti.rm. 833-1717 ext 25.2 X\rt conchtlon. 1st otfJr ~· . \:"'ii -~ , -.lrl ~~rt' ~Rtli fflj 91, 1'\ft: §18-.i _ . S:::V~ ~ EX. COND. $400 days. or 968-3787 eve!\. ov_er S3ClXl takes ll 842-7771 Ji-VW-SUS ' •Q 'G&l&xie ~. i ' Br HT, ·~r.·:IVJit~e~~.cnm., -.. i.~ ___ C·· 0 ::._MEJ ·a_w,.' \ti9~1Ah, °'"""a1· ·,,, ,...,· 9 • p&o-2918 ~ All J\.todels in Stock 1960 3.4 SEDAN. Black lq:;J: pORSCHE lfiOOS C.OUpe, $125<1 • .f.l6.3645 alr, vinyl top: ~ ·rir mo. .. ., wiu , for Immediate Delivery "".'f ~ o <I •IN" 68 H~ 173 '' '·'·' t SALES . SERVICE. PAR.TS beauty! \Vood paneling, lthr ldj>t mech. "°""· 113511 o• ol· lfff VVf !IYG ~QI. CO T •Ii •--_,, !'I !'!W ~ 1111 rlr. ·~· IUlp, ;:mblqi ~nd1t1on T&M MOTORS, INC. upOOI .. auto trans., $995. Ph. fey. 968-5470 $400. 'SfG.1193 300 w. Cit wy., NB 645-nSI .f!I~ ~: -B ..... ;63 ci,ME'J' sra&it" :Jeon Xfn•t..... ·~ Own. . ~ 8lE1 Carden Grove Blvd l\tr. Jennett days 642-4910 x r55 PORSCHE $950 Jl!lll· ~ pd. 673-7549 radio, good wo1il: car. '250'. $2900 or oft'.______..!_ ODl. '89 SCRAlfBLER 175cc, 2 534_2284 Open Sunday 89'2.sSst 231, evea/wknda 6T';i-6039 4!JG.3645 lmportttd Autos 96001mported Autos 9600 . '"'es. _ 84&-3841 1 .'.59 OU>S. e~ rut>nlna stroke, ~ condition, ex· '54 J aguar XK-t20S . '!Iii" CAPmfAe · convertible. Ni1M Cond. '$275. W ccm11dtr ...... 6734!097 IORGWARD IV/Compl. .... bit '57 "" RENAULT l'•w ~.~--·All co -j;,;,;.. ·1 ~ .. colot' . 1Callalt6 1967 Hon@ ~-Must sell. . eng. Nu Int. l\Unt cond. • • HARBOUR v w fcct~ff· Far below I. pm. 504596. ilnt conct1-1ow mileage. 'JO 1958 BORGWARD run s (21Jl 411~· '68 RENAULT RlO JIOOk. '™'· ~l. '64 CONT., Hu Ewrythl.ntf .,61;,-,0ldt,.;..~W= ... "-~-n-.=,~s,-P-ta-,1 tq:1. ~ rood. JUXI P,ha _'Il~-~~tra ~ MARK . 1X J a_& u a r a~ cond itioned, low milea(I. • • 'if ~t:ll~C'QOUpe de V·llle Pampered by local Jt.E. Bkr. AIC New trans. . mile,. '611 TRririlPH fi611fiY 650 E~. jiW lit sii@. ~ t S;ililA. 09Pd·q:iP.l)i~1 MEill-11JSO. 646-4941 full f&CW ~r. New tir· ~or Sff..1133 Make otter! &ft C OetUI, mUlt sell. ,S7S. ot . , -* 646-1710 * '60 RENAULT. ?-.fotor Rurii. fl. Ruql perfectly. $1250. '£>.LOADED! 1 klcal owner. CHERRY '65 Oldf'{G. m_aiv hot otr. 5<&-3793. 8~TJllN Clutch Busied. $45. 400 <Otj> ~ $1700. 0.,. 5<7-rut, ,,,.. extru. Must #II tbh ... H°""! Mini lflU s·:. -.::.: . ; " JM t· N•wport Idand 'i1 cA!jjLLAC, Good 645-2221. wetkeM. IOO-Illl! cellent COffdftfOn, n.s.-~ NEW '70 t9li) RENAULT caravell(. 'J'r&nsp. {!jr. f90 Or Beal '66. OUTSI'ANDING. Air, 1 1984 OLDS conv("p/•, p/h, ,.._1011 DATSUN PICKUP l!!»"°"'''" na"'•· 119!· pu.,. !'!@JI !168,&87. owner. !500 under v.iue. clean !550. D&>f S<Ml39, '69 YAMAtl"l25 Enduro. 850 Cj.11 ,847-0690 lj9 CJJTitl..AQ, 2 door. $2275 Terms. 546-3356 eves ™ru miles, ~t cond, $300. W/camper, 96 hp overhead ~OOD cgfll. ~-====='!!!"==:;I ~"''.Pl!" 348-417<. cam, 4 ,pc1, "''·.ply tire•, ROVER ·"' ~, .. * CORVAIR '69 iiONDA 350 ba<k up lighi... You nome l=i.'=====-..11 '69 DUNE BUGGY •-•~" ei:95 " ""' . . ---PLYMOlmf ., it! Serial # Pl.521208873. '&rROVER 2000 TC. $1995 qr tXYll 110 .,U CAM.ARO '66 CORVAIR one owner, M~ 6~1707 FUll price $2009, Take smaU b!'t offer. Or trade for '6'1 :s .....,,.,~ ~ 21,000 ml. excellent con. '68 VAJ'ANT '"' HOD.\)<A. v • .,. Cl•an. d• or rrade. Call Phil, vw. 67W'2. 67'-ml '68 vw BUG ..... '~'"· ..... $1695 . * ~.~ .. :N-SUN I ditto• ms. ~183 or S .... l D'rt M~ '"'9773 "" -· •tit•, •llf-llC Jll(ll '"" eal! ~-~ATSo~~TE '67 '58 l\femedes 190. Yt?ry clean. HNI. tvuw nt) ·~NVEI\~-.:~,· !!iu;::;~,. :.!: ·'6~73-5.198:-7'°"'" =~--- xlot runni•g rol>d. A •loal., ~--S:.:P...:R...:l_TE __ _,.11 '64 KARMAN• QHIA ~~.·.,.",'"'· $896 ~ • ·~ -lll64 CORVAIR, oew paint A 5 YR WARlfiANTY * EC'ONOMY Jtl.US * Salt! $1199 Salt! tr•ller, lr;•vel 9425 1600 Roadster, ~ spd, dlr, at S47S. &U-41i88 r-_ -n ..... ~"' 1r w/black top It Urea, xlnt condition $5!50 --~;,...----Sharp, hdtp, sun r@((, plush ========= ~ SPRJTE. tape deck 4: IU!Jh b viflyl Int., AIT, ,54:::,.m;:..::.::::;,· ,,..,.==-- '66 Nilllrfd Riviera tent black int. xlnt cond. Must MG "l~ extras $9j0, or be1j '&4 VW BUG ,10,~.··,',",,'•· $1095 IS, · et~. "Note; thlll -* ,63 MONZA* Mister 1T' 645·1141 ' trailer, f.dd-A-Room-drop &aerifice! 11499. Take older otftr. Also 1961 Ramble!11 .. i:ar he.a i!ttb' 17.631 milei & R&:H, au\o, rood shape! $450. eUrtalna. ~eeps s. butane 2 American ettr or small down aqxt condition. 1250. 546-034Y !s 'old Wl"' a transferrable, Private party. &7S-09M ?Iii! Harlto, Bl'ftl., C.M. btimo< 1lov•. now tire•. URF.643. Call Phil ,,._,,.,; MG '66 TOYOTA WAGON ~~!~;,:::;"· e1195 rew cai: f!<10.,. wamrnty!'" 1965 COR.VAIR MoM& "°"'" PO"'"ii:C· Spue w1J1'4 4 ~!!I· ~f'l ~ ~. ~. ~ll~~, · ~ TOYOTA .,.. {Jnly mi&· MA R QUI s 4 ed Ori n "~ buy at 1499· 345--0630 .it ., ~· !1!11 So. C.. Hwy, •pe • i 0"'"''· $650. PGMTIAi •ii GTO .;M. LITTLE "'-•m.• "" .. I'' "1. ~. ~:m. nck. AU· "" TOYOTA '88 DAT!Ull WAIOll r.r.~ ="' 1111 ~~. 8 ••• ht •Mi ~i~no::;,:'IOilll~===:!:: Sllck, ~. New Ttr ... romp. "~\:~;-~!! ij Uli1n:1ATllUlf, lf,illll "'11ft. Mork II Wagons 'i,! ~ Jt" 1200·0own COUGA..-G•Ul<I. Xlllt "'""· S197!1. ,....._ SJ"'•· tised"•-Xlnt """"· """"' 11600. H~.~·c~~~!'."i.' '67 DATSUN ~,:-;,,:-;v.~~"" S1115 .i ~.o.P, till ~71" alter -,-,.,--'COUGAR XR·7 ~> -Evfl • $1800. Aft. 6. 557·9665 or 833-60Z7 W•gons .§flfit. ffi'dtp ~ 35-- Truck: p63-321' .. 9500 ~.~:'.""t~· u,::;,!'.'d~;. s:;~:· Coul Hwy;.~;~;. IW'o"~8G'i,i.''~~DE" '81 YW IUI ~;jJ· ,m"'· ... !Im . e11H ~ c~·m«: '. ~~·~wt'\if. f~ ·~,.l~ - "'""· 11495. 642-3611> Au lhorl'ed MG Deale• NOW IN STOCK ... UR ...... a1'IA k,,:!~ ~\','"· S1 UI ... l'lEtvJilt,1,1: Super SJICl{I ~ ~\IU ~t ~ ~ti'iiiil Prtx. UATE ''9 f!2: V-8 Super Van Econollne Sport. T.0.P. of p.:; mo. !f pay oit $B)O. S46-tl57. 1968 DATSUN \Vag. Auto MGC.CT '69 must sell im-Yqgr Beil OeaJ1 Are Still At llA II ft ~ ~39R-~i1' JIPIY&laa ~· make -1•,,. Full¥ Joadd.. Clean! trans, new tirt>s. Sacrifice med. Best offer ove r DEAN LEWIS . 5fl.(lilJJ, After & pm ..., ~ * 9tt..'"8 * :h.f.:"S400 ""'ow book. ~~~1 •. whvblk 111tt "''· 19!1 """"''-cM. 646-93!\1 '11 IHIA '"l"i.!.~~~"!..?'"'" 11411 1 ~µ.;, ~ ... ~ , i.liOi srx .;===-=,,..-"· 9~=::..I ...69 Toyota Hdtop · l•h"!'l»,_ =======I T-lflit ·::0:~. ~. c;!'}; .... 7~ '88VWFAST840I ~;:;:~ S1295 *l]MOLET DODGE ,65 T·•*D elf. UnbeJievable 9,986 m\. j -afEVi 2 ~ 28.l 4 spd '66 Dart. p/1, p/b, rlth, S "Air" PSIPBtwr. Stereo ~.'."'c~d,e·l"w·/bSparldlk "''"I '67 YW BUG ~";~·"~;'"'-. $1295 e...,'!'J.4!• • Beyf OFFER'. cyl, $,OOO ml, 11o•5• A Be~;.; "lr""' b ''"j' t v1JU1 .,...V""Vt"4f 833-2490 afler 6 pm YP\Y sm ~~ o':,: 1~:.W~l •ea VW DAMPER ~:·.:.:-, $199& · f C4ti>~ '65 cw.1om. w. ~1!'.'~u =~~. ::0. :~ Salt! $109t Salel ti)IS ?rtO'I'ORS, 900 So, c.1 · tTWt. '*', uto~ N!"W lite,. $200 Down Call 536-4016 Mis.,;;, 11 'T" Hwy., La1una Bea~ T.p.~~es. 5C8-72U. =:;=:=====•I •• 4'1-151J.1, ""'3100. '60 vw BUG i·:.::-.::t"i.. $896 ill ~w; ,.,,., Sport. FORD 645·14'1 * _'67 Toyot• Spt. S,d, ~l~,a'!~l enc, sood cond. 2100 Harbor Plf/., Clf. 1-WRONA", v.•/auto tran111 '1,.-,•"tt . ~~---1946 Ford Sta Wqon. Hun-'64 T·BlllD' ~. etc. s;>arldi~ ~ bluj dreds of houri 1pent on L&nclau iop, ti.cf. alt, f'll1l •{like new blue, all vlny metleulou.s ,reatOra11on or ir·,T, dtr, pliuh ~ tnL Int. Choice 1ocal new c•r J:;~,;,\!!:;;:~-~--1 ~ & e-xtmor. Needs only .Banken car. ~t new tf'!de • In w/jU5t t-t.278 mil. rou.ttnc mech. y,·ork. $850. earl Mutt allf-"Wm ftnc e'I Only $1395. ~L\RQUI• Pvt p~. Evts. 494-4870 pt1v prt;y. VJXfU, Call Pldl ~.ln'.!So.C!t.Hwy,~ .,,_~~~~~llll&t FAIRLANE S tatton 494-911lor5t5-0llf. itma Beach. 494-7503, MO-llllf Wqon, &it cond. re-llullt DESPERATE -Mjjt au At .Q-IlL MAXEY motor. !600. &16-IMOI Evt1. Loo. ·54 T-Binlj;Nt pwr 147-6745 1.c. $730, bit oft, P, m .' e ·11M1 '6R ... 8' roR.D Go! 500 •• -IJIOJYIQITIA,I HARBOUR v.w. led., v~. oulo. Good otdu. VA~A ---· -9UICK CASH !650. or .... oUn. "1~1062 --111t1 llEACH BLVD. I96' Falcon Sia. w ... v ... STICK Shllt 4 >Ir 111!nt. Beach 1474"5 AUTHORIZED SALES & SERVICE 1Hl0UIJH A w!>lt•. Privale party. $525. Volianl. !2l0 Spm S 1fJ N. or O:ut HwJ. on Bdl s.s~o. &K.2382 ~~2529. 18711 Be•c.h Blvd., Huntington Biiich t AILY PILOT "7'o:n::::-:~':tt:''l':::-::=~I ·rrtroyolA 4 DI'. Corona. Alf U1.&HI "' 1'61 Font Gal&Xle S d.. pl~ '66 Vali&At. trw. ~Prlv. Ply. MUil Sell.I -WANT AD t1M6"" ~·11w 18 ~.J'~ adP<ol • h , ·--, I I ' " PROJECTOR SALE! 30% OFF Movie & SRdt ProJ«tors Example: Honeywell 640 •EG. Slt'-'-OW $149,50 BAKER'S WESTCLIFF CAME~S WESTCLIFF 'PLAZA PLUS Glm· & PAPER PARTY GOODS FOR ALL Q.CCASIONS :._ PAPER UNLIM~TED WESTCLIFF PLAZA 548-7921 f !.A;IT OF M~.l~IT IASUTJ . - MARKET :rASKET ' . SPE.CIALS ' •aOrEN CUT UP FaTINCl 'RABBIT:S .... ,.k ... DISYI · DETERGENT " oz..:~~;,, lUSSIT POTATOES ... u. .... 5~ 49:. CULO WHln 49~ GRAPEFRUIT • u. .... MAltK~T ·~-$1l·ET . WfSTCLIFF PLAZA • .. l .. .... GARJAGE DISPOSALS IN~SINK-ERATOR MODEL NO. 333 $3·195 REG. $59.95 . . . OUR PRICE . . . . . . . • .M od~l lll'-1 Yr. G1niri11t~• ,;,oDE.L NO •. sss . $.4. 688 REG. $69.95 · ,QUR PRICE .......• Model 555-l Yr. ,G1111r•.11f•• -• ' ' MODEL NO. 77 l5496 '. REG. $79.95 . · · OUR PRICE . . . . . . · Moc:ltl 77-5 Yr. G11t rt11tM INSTALLATION AVAll.~BLE RION HARDWARE WESTCLIFF PLAZA 1024 Irvine Ave. ''L I'' JSO Spray Disinfedant kills Household Germs ••• Prevent Mold & Mildew. 1.49 14 oz. Size OPEN EVENINGS 'TIL 10 P.M. WESTCLIFF PlA%A NIW?OllT IU.CH 41 TOWN I COUNTRY OU.Mal ( ' . 'one-stop'. ·'-~~P,:pin, ' a.t ~t~~t:t~~fti ··';.·· .. 10PEN THURSDAY-& MOlWATEVEfqJNGS . ··~ . . WJN HIS HEART WITH A LOvtLY HAIRDO ·Co.nvenient Entrbncts . . . ~ . . · · l~t~ Friendly . • . '. '··~s~liff, :'l!I~· · . ·. I ·~1 ~ ' • ·'" I • • 2;'.0FF Of. W~t:C<LIFP DRIVE • .J . -. . • • 3 OFF OF lRYINE AVE~ . • 2 OFF OF RUTLAND ., CLEANING SPEC.IALS . . HOUSEHOLD BLANKETS, RUGS, & 'BEDSPIEADS CLEAN ONL y ..... ·----· 50¢, .. . 5 .... ··' :· . . · · . 1ono wm ·o~1v1 :. ·: _ 6. ·~¢ ·. WEATERS Rog. 97c lo $1.29 . .. . . . . •. • 17 " ' . t· . ' . ' •.. . ' . . ' Mont9of1'1el'y Cleaners & Laundry · OPEN. DAILY l ·A.M.·9 P.M., SAT.I A.M.-4 P.M. . RE.STYLE NOW Wltlri Tiie "" •... , T~& Ne.- HM• · · · ' ; 4 I ·cbNYlf111~T SlfOPS i""ct10lli:m: MO.,.. '4011 .. C:O..t.H ..... oy e N'EWPOltT llA(jH -J4JJ ¥* Lide e 74 FASHION ISLAND -N1.-port lnclt · e Wl•TCUFf.PLUA - 1 tOl lnilt1 Awe. -Newpert ._. e a.w ... ·• Fnllin 111-4 ' . . ·Optometrist Or. Lou ROy Elder ·: e-CONtAeT LENSES -• ~RACTING .. .. • ·eye 'WEAR ST-YUNG .• PRESCRIBING , . . . ~ . . . WESTCLIFF PLAZA .. 1124 IRVINE . NEWPORT BEACH ·642;()72o MEN'S FORMAL WEAR SPECIALISTS darrell's dedrick TUX SHOP ,SALES -DELUXE RENTALS . f(f,tfl" FASHION ~1~· SQUARE Sente An• 547-6341 le Hebr• 191-0715 WESTCLIFF PLAZA 11 lO Irvine Newport 8eech M6.8191 •