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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1970-02-24 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa• • • ', - Newport Y aclit Tranq.u .ila Goes Aground ·in Mexico TUESDAY AFTERNOON, FEBRUARY, ·24. 1970 Two Jffe11 Held Walkie Talkie - Thieves in Mesa? By 'ARTHUR R. VINSEi; .....--., .. ~ --:tNlll~ A military man and hls companion to- day ire accused by .police of prowling a crime-ridden area of Costa Mesa in search of burglary tatgels, keeping 4 loqkout for lawmen wllh a walkie·lalkie radio setup. They allegedly told coRfliclinft stories aboul their purpose late ~1onday night. when arrested in a section of town that bas a phenomenal burglary rate. One claimed he was a voluntary police underco.ver agent. according to Officer Jim Wagner. but the patrolman he nam- ed as his contact denied any connection. Army Pvt. Andrew E. Price Jr., 21, of :161· Victoria St., Costa r.1esa. and Robert L. Payton. 20. of 3342 .SU Knoll Or iVe, San Clemente. were subsequently booked for investigation-of burglar). Police booked Payton, a civilian, on an additional charge or possession of dangerous drugs , alter allegedly finding a barbiturate pill in his pocket. Crime statistics are kept on certain ~ectors of the city designated as special theft targeL areas. thus requiring ad- ditional surveillance and questioning of suspicious persons. One of these is the Harbor Shopping Center and other boulevard commercial areas stretching norlh toward Santa Ana, police e:<plaincd today. Patrolman Wagner was pa s s in g through the intersection or Adams Avenue and Harbor Boulevard at 10:•5 p.m. Monday when he spotted a man Car- rying an unusual object. The pedestrian turned out to be Payton and his walkie-talkie unit. Questioning Jed him to say Price was <1n the other side of a large apartment complex al 2700 Peterson Way -anothe't frequent burglary target -and Officer Frank Jordan picked him up there: Pol ice said Payton claimed he was doing volunteer pollce undercover work. mentioning Officer Robert Neal, while one of several other stories was lhat he and Price were nterelyiesUng the rad!~. ' Tl:sy didn't work at that distance, orit suspict volunteered. · Investigators questioned Payton and Price into the early morning hours, bring- ing, in Military ·· Potice from head- quarters in Santa Ana to interrogate the soldier, who is on leave. The radio commllnications equipment. their clothing, 'ind some pry-type tools were conliscated as evidence, although no potential burglary loot was linked to the case. Coast Yacht Tranquila 11 · Goes A ground By ALMON LOCKABEY INl!ftt Rdlter A local yacht returning from the San Diego to Acapulco race was grounded on a Mexican beach sonfe 1,200 miles .south or San Diego last Friday. Word reached Newport Monday that the Cal~8 yawl Tranquila II. owned and skippered by Robert A. Garrison of Newport Harbor Yacht Club, fetched up on the beach al Black Rock, 40 miles south of Mam:anillo when an anchor line parted. None or the fi ve persons on board was seriously injured. Mc.s. Robert L. Koehler, a guest with her husband on the ya~t. su!fered a fractured shoulder blade before the party could gel off lhe vessel as it rolled in he~VY. surf. Koehler said the anchor }et go at 2 a-,m wbile those aboard were sleeping. · "The first indication we had that anything was wrong was when the boat hit the beach," be said. Koehler ·sald the parly-'luid to swim on-· 4 ly a few .feet before getting to shallow enough water to wade ashore. . . A Body :in Bay~rest -l. -- High Coitrt Sidesteps Any Rullng ' .W:<SH!liGTON (UPI) :r ~.Supr~me Couit ducked an opportunity to step 1nlo Ille aborllon law --.Y "'*"· turn . ~, ~ a p~e&-frOm CiJifria iot• revjew of cili\lfJ<lllng judldol "8Clll6u ~ a case ilivolving Or. Leon Belous of Beverly 1lills. -. • The brief• Order denying review left $i t: standing a state lupreme court opinion ~ . holding thaL aborUon law1 , may not ,v.·r , b1'1!1ifly'IJ\vade'' ., •• , rJihla Ip Ille ~anli'lo choose whetherto'bear children. WHILE COLLEAGUES AWAI T CORONER, OFFICER WILLIAM KYSOR·WARDS OFF THE CURIOUS ' 19 NeWport11 Fa1hlon1ble B1ycr11t Section, the Neig hbors ~Ind • Bod y Grand Jm·y Tabs _ Newport Man Murdered ; Dizzy Dean . ~ __ In Gaming Probe Theft Shootout Hinted. DETROIT (UPI) ·-Hall o! Fame By JOHN VALTERZA Pitcher Jerome "Dizzy" Dean was named OJ,,.. D•l"1 ,1ret st.it today as a coconspirator and 10 persons The body oC 8, 60-yea:~ld Newport were charged with gambling conspiracy Beach man, who was possibly the victim in a rederal grand jury indictment. bf a shootout With burglars, was found sprawled In his rront doorway e4rly to-The sealed rlndl.ctment. -was handed day;--a pistol in ·hh!r hand and a gunshot down 'Feb. 11 by a 23-member grand Jury wQUnd in .his chest, "Prelilninary indications show ·a strong · possibJIUy ol burg)ary," Heeres said, , ''t}l.lt we still ar~n't sure,.'' . Heeres declined to ~Ive a model.or type or weapoli ollltctied In Harris' r1ghl hand. rA ll btit otie Jnelghbor said they heard nothing' dUrhlg the night. ' That ·opinion struck dowh as 1.m- constJtutionally vague· a C a I i f o r n i a .statute permittln1 an abortion to bt legally, performed on .a woman only when "necessary to preserve tier life." Subsequently. 'a federal judge In th« District of Columbia, leaning heavily on lhe California opinion, struck down a federal law in the district that permitted 'it>ort.ion-only when "necessary for the preservation of the mother's Ufe or health:" .Thus no lictnsed doctor ci:n be pro- secuted for performing abortion,, and theoretically they can be had for the Uk· ing. Some 35 states have traditional abor- tiOfl laws based on phrasing slmllar to the in~alidated D.C. and California statutes. ·Jn two of them, MassachuSetts and New Jt!rsey, the state's highest coUrt has upheld the "tradition.al la~. .. In ils petition-for Supreme Court review. California asked not so much thal ttre· Ca!ifOrnia Supreme ·eourt be reYersed aS that some clarity be •brought to the confusion surrounding ;lthe clear· c:Qnflict ·which now exists among the highest courts of three states and lhe Dl5trkt ot Columbia .'' The Califor11ia statl4e was aclj~d1ed In· valid after Jt had already bean replaced bi liberalized Jawst perrlliUing abortion when bearing the child woufd injure lht mother's ~physical -Gr mental health lor · wben· the pregnancy was •the ,mult ~ot ! ra\>e. or Incest. 1 • Similar liberalizations have be e n enacte~ in other st;at~ •. bu~ none rhas bqen chaOenged in higher t'OUrts yet, although the 'Ame'r~al'I IVIJ Liberties IS.. ABORTION; P•C~ %J , I • I.• • . ' ", ·Orange·· Real Early Bird First OC Fi ler The stranded party, which included Mr. and Mrs. Garrison and a Mexlcan na- tional Garrison had hired at Acapulco ~·ere ai9ed by a Mexican family which lived at a coconut planlation near where the boat went aground. •• part of the government's ~rackdo"1n Police tentatively ruled the shooti ng a on big Ume gambling. ~ homicide. But O'•le Woman living 1 next. door said she heard CO'llmotlon and noises which possibly were shob late Monday night. : (;oast \' ' .. Robert L. Citron ma"de certain this nlOrninc that he became lhe first person to file for an Orange Count.)' political office. Citron, a deputy tax collector for 10 ytars, arrived at. the county Vote~ Regi1trallon offiti! at 5 :4~ a.m., tomplcte with a tomato crate to sil on, a heavy coat, a thermos of 004. coffee, a radio and a. morn- ing paper. Citron, 44, or Santa Ana, seeks to su"cceed Don. L. tt1odey who is retiring. Charles W. Moi.ley, a brother of the Incumbent, Is cam-- paJgn manager" for the ntw can- didate. Previously Joe R. Greene, 41. of Tustin. associate<! with the ta.x col- lector's ofrlce since 196.1 took O\lt papers for the post. • • Dean was not> maicted. He "".IS named The victim, Wllllam Jfari'is of 2Ql2 in the indictment opened today 8s one or Ancl1or Way, was shot to deall\--possibly by a burglar -sometime before dawn lO- flve coconspirators who could be called dl!y, Newport detectives said. as witnesses when those Indicted come t'I Harris' body had one bullet hole in the The Mexican tanner took the pArty part way to Manzanlllo in • tnick and trial. lower left chest made by an unknown weapon. Several otbcr bullet holes were found In the well-!wn.ished residence in the city's Baycreit aubd.ivision, Detective 1 capt: Lou Hceres said. Ibey were able to hire a taxi the rest of Dean wa searched but not arrested In the. w"'Y.· ~ · his ,Uis Vegas motel rooni when the The Koehlers flew home ·Monday but federal investlgaUoo caine' into the open the GarriaoM r.emalned in Melico to try on .Sew Year's Day. and salvage the boat. Ont of the other four coconsplrators Later reports said boat wu aunt In l5 named was P1ul Dean Jr .. believed to be feet of water when a Mexican t~ boat the nephew of. the one time Sl. ~Is hauled il !roe of the lhon. The ~nklng C.nllnali oce. was apparently caused b)' the bolt being •• ~"ny McLain, the: star Oe:troit 'nger partly filled with waler u It willowed In p1tdior ll>lpel\ded lasl ,...k !or aUeied ·the surf. There was no Immediate in--·involvement lri a Flint, Mich .• gambling dication that ·the bottom was seriously operaUon to J917, tesUfled berore. the damaged. ' graod jury after the Indictment was Koehler said Garrison got oCf a radkl handed down.: Hi was not named In tile Mayday (distress} message when-hls -IDdictmen . boat went aground, but tht. onl1 l'Qp.?nse U.S. f,ttorney James li, Brickley sald w~~ ll'om the Coast Guard al Mlamr, Fla. •he "coul4n'l tpeeu\ate" About futurt 'ln· Gjrrlson also nred narca and 11 zmall dictmcnts but was "sure1' morr \\'OUld be (S" ACCIDENT, Pa10 ti lorthtomilii. _ Harris lived alone. He was . recenlly divWctd, the lnvesugator s'aid. ' , 'I'he body, lying with the fft!l keeping. a . screen door ajar. \l(aJ foui\d ~y a neighbor taking his daughter lo achoo! al 7:28 a.m. ~ buttons had been ripped ~ff hia . coat Again.st a window on the southeast side ; or the house a ladder rested, possibly ~·here . the .killer or killers entered the grej houae. - Harris wa4' fully dressed In a .-ray su\t. llC 'v•s lytng on his tert sld~ appare.11\Y where 'he Cell aft.er trylng to run out of h\s· •homr.. · '· • ' I She djd _i11ol lnycstlgate, however. The en\lre Bay~resf.and WestcliC!1area 1 have been J>i,guesl by burglart in rec~n~ . months. While 1dete1ctl'ves from lhe butgla-rJ detail taJltll: lo residents o~ Ute. itUlet · nelghborhbod, pati-olmen scoured busbeS,.. planters and trash cans searchln1 for I weapo11s.1.'\'\<Y luM\"d up ool"ing" 1 Harris,.. retired, tilld .. llved 1n the area ror at least 10 yea'rs, his friends shld. He wa! deterlbed i!S' a iood-lialurtil~ever\. l@'lpered man who had UVl!(t • a1one 1ror years. \ • •. • ' 1 The hou!e seem<d lmmal:ultlely< kept. The lahd..ci~lng lias' been k e p t mjlnicurid.' 1 ' ' ., Neighbors seemed mil£ed. lllot they ha~ heard noU\ln1 through the r.\g~l. "l can't under.strnd us not heating aoylhin1 . r guess we-all grlnstde and lock things up tight and don't hear wheL go<> on In the 011l!ldc )'IO(ld," one i\>0£k· ed woman said as she gated across ibe, street. -• . ~eaCllel:" , ! 'Tile ~IC. sprtng·lllt weather m11 be on lLs way Otl as the "'..eather- man ~Chance of raJn · 1 todtgiit. along with some gullly• t . ..tods. 'j'he rain ·m1Cht'l0st lll>oul l ~.days •• ,. ~ ... 'I ••• , ~ . I l , i · INSmE• '1'8P.\ l " I ' A /r~lf!C'JJ cnuh turned b1to a JlaminQ. fioico 101\en to1U n.,, tentioncd Terciters ·dropped · a flare in 1piUed ga&bltnt, Page 9. _.. . -.:: .. I'='-.I _.. """ ·--~'"* "'!. ,...,. __ I ! -.. ......... . ~-""·· I --.. " . • f'ltes Rut Threat I I I I I I I I Pentagon As.ks I I • 1 I More ABM Funds WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Pentacon, cltlol Soviet mW!le !tlla since the 1ttates1c •rm• talks bqu, asked Coo&ms 1'tdaY for aperoyal o1 a third Saleguanl AnUballlsttc Mtntle (ABM) sj~ and lunds 'for advance work on five ~en• Secrolarl' Mtlvtn R. Lalid told two Senate committees that the tbii-d ABM ai!t would be at Whiteman Air lillne llue, Mo. Sltea at Malalrom AFB, :\foat.,,and Grand Forks An1 N.D.', were approved last ye1r. David Packard, Deputy De f en 1 e Secrelary, said in a statement, "aince the beaim\latl of SALT (Sttatqic Arms Limllatton Talks) In Helatnld wt N....,_ ber, the S..teta ho•• !tll·flred ...... than twtie u many strategic mi11Ue1 as we baw. ult ii lmperaUve that we continue with 6uf sti'ate;tC pro~ams, such a s sa!epard, untl.1 and uriles1 we acbJeve an ag-wtth the Sovtela wbidl irtU enable U1 to·,pmerve the 'lllCWlly of the cOIJnl.ry la some Other way." RUSS MISSILE FORCE GROWING. SEE PAGE 4· ' alJo would Include empla~ments ln ctn- tral Califol'llla, Southern Caliromla, cen- &ral Texu and the Florkla-Georgia aru.. Laird aaJd. the total cost _of ~ sit.es, utlnlattd at"410,J blllion last year, had grown to llU bUllon. He attributed the im:r!ase to tnflatlca. sh-etching out the time needed to compltte the program, and.to design cha.Q&es and better esUma- tions. Lag·una Man fjadly Beaten By Marine Pocbtd lnllated that the .U.S. ABM PJ"Gll"llll hod not tnterfend with the SALT talkt, Khedu1ed to moft into full t.aiuna Beach restaurateur Harry &wing at Vienna Aprll 11. Moon is recoverlng at hi• home today Laird and PresJdent Nlxm warned last alter suffering a severe beating 1.t the week that the Soviets: now have mere hands ot a young Marin~ hitchhiker he ....,.ational lntereontinental Balll!tlc Mis-picked in Lo B h t nt ht ~~ (ICBM) than the United States · up rll eac as g · -1,100 lo 1,054. with 1,.290 Soviet missiles Moon, 42, who owns the Cottage expected by December. n.e u.s figurt Restaurant at 390 N. Coast Highway, - aot •-~ de .-. N • n .. 1 .. ..1 .... _.. stumbled into the Lguna BeacJi rolice -~·u -•TY·•~~--O.partmeot at 3,21 a.m. b-·•··• and Poatidon missiles, however. 1 ~ Laird'• request for tuncts for adv.... btffiltn1 from se•ere cui. on hl• bead. w·here tlae Boys Are .. Near Drotctalnp .. .. Tot, Luguna M~n, . ' Saved in Water ~ A retired bUslneumln from Laguna ln"aqotHer~Case. WUllam V. Gorham, HUis and a 2-year-old Newport boy were 59, ol 374 D:cUUUa Ave., Llg\tlll Hiils, reccverlng today alter separate Incl.dents was revived by' relcue unH1 after he was pullid ""!\)le. and not br.athing from of near drowning. Newport Har~ Monday nigbt. Young Shonne Glatte was found at ooon He was 1)>parently walkln& on the deck floating face down In the swimminc pool of bll txiat, EvenlDg Star, which Is dock· of a family hl• 01other waa vlsltln&. Ron ed at 115 Via Oporto, Lido !ale, when he Mathews, 17, of 1015 White S.ils Way aald 5!1l>f*I and fell overboard: 1 he saw the child when he came out of the A i>e.lghtlor, G. John Gr1t1ath of 3446 house. • .. via 'OpOrto , dragged Gcrtiam onto a Mathew s pulled the unconscious child neighboring dock where he adminls~red from the water and with the help of the first aid ·to revive him until rescue units baby's mother, Pat, revived him before arrlved. the Fire-Rescue Unit arrived. Police estimate Gorman was in tht The mother, who lives at 812 W. ocean water fOr about 10 mtnutea before he WI.I Froo,, said she didn't know how the boy rescued, but had lost consciousness fro m got oot or the house. He was inside two inhalation of waler onty a few mlnuts minutes before, she told police. before Granath spQtted him. World Condemns Arabs For Ambushing of Bus By mE ASSOClATED PRESS acts can only make more difficult the CondemnaUon of Arab t e r r o r I s m search for peace In the Middle Eaat mounted today In the ,.,,ake cf the ambush of a busload l'Jf American Ch ristians in \\'hich is 04r overriding goal," Becker Israel but the Cairo press was defiant.' said. A State Department spokesman said h1rr.Melr'lnel 'vlth-envoys from 18 na· the U.S. government was shocked. tions in Jerusalem, thm told the Knesset: Premier Golda Meir cf lirael dencunced Israel's parliament, that effective step1 Arab governments ror financ jng and must be taken against terrorist organiia· shelteri ng Palestinian guerrillas "lacking tions "and · l those Arab countri 1'~ -~ience--1JK!l • .;espect for humao._ aga1ns es life." fr()YJ1 which tbtfy'·come.". work on live more JJO.'Dble ABM allea While he was undergoing emergency . , ---· =~=~=.~~1::::.1' to 10 ~_l'=~~~~:f~:;~ __ Sandra Vesper is a Sidney, Australia, m~el who likest~ spend some Those five · would be in the upi>er AJbert F'i.sber, responding to a bulletin Ume ontl'il1)m~~Treason enoulh:;-i+-woukl~, for-sf)ffte-t)f- I Northwest.. probably in. Washington fr~ Laguna, Jl!cked up his suspected the boys to .spend tbe1r fi.me at the beach, too. It JS summer down State; Warren AFB, Wyo., the Michigan-ass&Uant, wbo JS being held pending _:"=n=d=er'-''-'y.:.ou.:.:.ckn..c:::o.:.w.:.· __________________ _ The Swiss and West G erman In a voice trembling with emotion tihe _Ohio border area; the Washington, D.C. Jssuance of a complaint from the district it.rea; and Southern New En&land.· attorney'• ofO~ .. possibly In Muaacbusetts. Ht was ideqti!Jf;d as James Burkett, 19. Ne specific sites were mtntloned olher a Marine from Camp Pendleton who than Warren AFB. reportedly Is wanted by m 111 tar y The first task in the preparatory work aqthorllies. Js to look for government-owned land IR At the time of his arrest at Coast ttie areas and to seek other property U no HlgbWay aOO Balboa Boulevard, police federal property ls available. said, the suspect was driving a car Laird testified at a joint meeting cf the belongina: to Moon's partner in the Senate Armed Services Committee and restaurant, Art Frink, which Moon bad the ,Senate detense appiopriations sub-taken to Long Beach MonJay nJght. committee. The meeting was cloeed but Moon told police he picked up a hit· the Pentagon made publlc portions of his chhlker at a tralflc light In Long Beach, prepared testimony. Threateitlng him with a billy club, the If the Saieguard system is; expanded to young man ordered Moon to drive the full lJ sites ortglnally tovlalooed, it thn>ugb Looi Beach repeatedty demand· Marine Corporal Son of Judge Killed in Vietnam • ' ~Marine L!Cpl. Warren "Jack" Ferguson Jr.. 18, eldest son of U.S. l)lstrict Court Judge Warren J. Ferguson, )\as been killed ln action in Vietnam. Judge Ferguson, who was named to the federal bench from the Orange County S;uperlor Court four years ago, will read the eulogy Friday at hls aor.'a funeral. ·The Fullerton Jurist learned from the U.S. Defense Department that bis aon died while serving on a patrol in Quang Nam province. The young Marine was in tWs sixth wetk of active duty in Vietnam. 'LJCpl. Ferguson enlisted In the t.1arine C.Orps Wt April and received boot camp training in San Diego and advance in· fantry training al Camp Pendleton before bring shipped to Vietnam with lhe 2nd Battalion of the Fifth Marine Regiment. -.High mass at St. Philip's Catholic Oiurch in Fullerton will be followed by a military funeral. Burial will be at Ft. ~ranJ National Cemetery in San Cpl. Ferguson Is alllo survived by his er, Laura. two slat.en Faye, 19, and t.reSa, JS. and a brother Pettr, 14. The. amity resides at 1031 Cerrlt.os Drive, Fullerton. DAILY PILOT ............ ..,_ ..... H•!llMttMIMt• -·- ClltAll.G£ COAST PU~l$HIHO COM,,AH'I" ~· .. N. 'W-.f ,,... ......... .....u.w ., ... 1r .,.. c ... 1.1 Vlei P1'tldelll M'ld C'.lnll'I Mlfittlr Thi"''' k11wil .~, .... Tholl'l.ti A, M.,,,111"' ,,.. ..... "" 141"' -CMll M-: .QI Wist .. ., StHtt NI•...., fNuo : "11 Wftl ...... ~,.. l..,..,... ....... 1 1lt , .... , ,,,_ ~-htdll 1/&IJ h<ldl --rll ) icg money. They arrived at a motel in C-Ompton wbere .u;. ausped realfzlng Moon hod OJlly a few dollars w!\h him, allqedly·beat him on the bead, tnfllcUog dee_p scalp cula. · At Moon'1 suggestion, the man took the wheel oC his car to drive to Laguna where htoon said he would get mo~e lT)oney. Directing him to the Laguna Beach police department, Moon jumped out of the car. The auspect drove off immediately, police said. Frona Page l ACCIDENT .•• fishtna boat reaponded but was unable to help. . Finl report cf the grounding came from Gtorge Stqrgea:, navigator aboard another of the racing yachla; Deb ·Beauchamp'• Dorothy O Imm NHYC. Stur1es said the Tranqulla U and Dorothy 0 were both at ZIJuaUnejo on 'Vedneaday and that he left ahead of the Dorothy 0 , stating that be plaMed to stop a couple of times en route to ti.1anianillo, cne of the principal ahlpplng ports en the wt!\ coast of Mexico. Sturges said he monitored Garriso n's Mayday message but was unable to res- pcnd before Garrison signed off. Sturges said he talked to Mrs. Garrison at Manza11illo Saturday and learned some of the details of the accident. Al that time Garriaon had hired a commercial tug to go to Black Rock and haul tht boat off the beach. Word \hat the boat had sunk came fron;i John Hogan, who crewed en the Tranquil.a II during the race. Hogan said Garrison's son told him Monday that the boat had sunk when It was hauled off the beach. The Garrisons are still In ~iania.oillo trying to make arrangements to have the boat raised and taken to Manzanlllo (rom where it could be: shipped home aboard a freight.tr~ Garrllltn had owned the boat only a few months before he entered It In the Acapulco race. The Tranqulla Ii was a Cal-48 built by JtnJen Marine of Costa Mesa bu1. later was redesigned and rerl&· ged as a yawl by Ted Hood, not&d East Coast yacht designer and sallmaker. The Tranquita II was the four1h boat tq finish the Acapulco race and was second in Class A on corrected time. Market Bandit Gets $100 Ha1.:1l A bind.It with a .4S callber 1utomatlc pistol and an Invisible accomplice took $100 from a rount&ln Valley market ur- ly1 thta mornlna. PoUce aald th• bandit forced ator< clerk Barry Prim to re-t.nter the 7·11 market at Garfield Avenue and Bush11rd Strett at 11 :04 a.m., where he tnok the calh and told the clerk that a friend ""ilh a. rifle was w1tchtn1 from a nearby ff'n1ci 1t.1llon. The . rlnt-tottna a~compllc:e w111 never se111, potlct said, and the Ural bandit tae1ped with the money. I govenunents also condemned Arab ter-told the lawmakers Israel "will do its rorists, but their protest& wert a rt~ull.of duty" to protect its air routes. She did Pair of Car Wrecks l(ill the crash Saturday of a Swlssa1r Jet bound for Tel Avlv in which 47 persons not say what steps she planned. were killed. Arab auerrlllas are pe!ieved She asserted that all airlines 1hould be to have rel o!r an explcsion that caused free to fly planes to and from the Middle the crash. East and that "Israel \Viii not tolerate 2 Countians; Hu~t 5 Others The busload of American pilgrims was attacked t.1onday north of Hebron in being tlle only country to v.·hich this rule Israeli-occupied Jordan. The wife of a does not apply." Baptist n:tinlsler Barbara Ertle. 31 , er "The terrorists know no li mits," 1itr1. Grand ville, J\1ich., was killed, and two 1'1eir said, "and unless lhe world com· From · Wire Service• A pair or one-car accidenla on desert and mountain highways Monday tilled two Orange County women and left five. other Southland residents j n J u r e d , authorities said today~ . Most of the victim.ii were lhrOwn from ~e tumbling veJ?cles, one·~f ~ich tolled over twice in the roadWa'y, whlle the ether hart.led down a mounlaln em- bankment. The dead were identified as Linda D. Bertoldl, 22, of Garden Grove, and Janet Woman Suspect In Heist Jailed On Narco Charge An attract.J.ve redhead whc was once accused by Orange County sheriff'& deputies as one cf two women members of a holdup team which took $128 al ~n­ polnt from a Dana Point bait and tackle shop has been convicted in Superior Court on drug charges. Judge Howard Cameron ordered Carol Ann Price, 19, of Laa Vegas lo serve four monlha in Orange County Jail for poMesslcn of marijuana. She was al!o placed en probation for three years. ti.11ss Price was one Qf five occupants of a car which was halted by sheriff's deputies last March 22 shortly after the robbery of Phil 's Fish and Bait Shop, 34210 Coast Highway, Dana Point. She was booked for possession of marijuana when deputies found a plastic bag con- taining the weed on her person. Officers identified Ralph Edward Lemke, 24, cf El Cajcn as the man who used the weapon in the Dana Point rob- bery and Lemke is now serving an in· definite term in the California Reh abilitation Center at Corona. He \vas found in Superior Ccurt to be in danger or becoming addicted to narcolics. Judy •1anley, 23, of Las Vegas, was sentenced le 90 days in jail and placed on probaUon for three years on charges of being accessory to a felony. Freeway Paving Work Stalled, Resumes Tonigl1t Slalled by windy weather, minor mishaps a'ld George \Vashlngton's Birtll- day , the nighttime pavemenl-wlde.nlng job on the Newport Freeway Is Jeheduled to resume at 9 o'clotk tonight. Work by the Kasler-Ball Company, a paving contractor. shul down last Thurs- day due to bitter Santa Ana wind con- dlllona that literally whJpped the wet con- crete like soupy Ice cream . Two giant paving machines are laying down new 12-foot wide Jones on the Inner dividing strip of the roadway. working toward each othtr over an el£ht·mJle Strttch. The expansion job Is being done tn l:Z.. hour shlfl.s during nlgbt and early morn- ing hours to avoid dangerous traffic con- gatlon during lbe most hca\•ily-travcled hour~ ~. G. Bulens, lt, of La Habra. Cllifornla Highway Patrol investigators al Barstow said the Bertoldi woman's small car hit a median strip on Interstate 15 near the Nevada line and rolled ever twice. Pautngen Sharon Role, 20, and Meal Kendrew, 23, a1ao of Oard.en Grove, Wtt't nuna out cf the rolling vehicle to the pavement, suffering severe injuries. The Bulens girl was killed near Flagilaff, Ariz., when a camper.truck hit a slick spot on Interstate 17 and shot over and down a SO.foot embankment. Jim Hughes, 21, his wife Joallen, 20, both of Fullerton, were injurtd along with a third camper passenger, Fred Abata Jr., 22, of WhJttler. · Mrs. Hughes was treated and released at a Flagstaff hospital, while her husband and their companion were adm!Ued for additional care. High Court to Hear Voter Rights Appeal WASHING TON (UP!) -The Supreme Court agreed today to hear a legal test of the effects of the 1965 Voting Rights Act en local elecUon procedures in the South. The court will hear oral arguments later this term and hand down a written opinion In lhe appeal filed by four of six defeated Negro candidates and two Negro voters at Canton, Miss. I'm mad for Mediterranean . .'.mericans and an l"°aeti guide were munit-y puts a !top to this terror it will wounded. l\lrs. Ertle·s husband. destroy civil aviation.·· Theodore, was sitting nexl to her but escaped injufy. - Israeli troops began a massive aeareh cf the rocky hills in the area. Hebron is a center of Arab agitation on the Jordan River's West Bank. Terroriats ambushed a bus traveling f ~ Beusheba lo Hebron tut year and one American passenger. Arab guerrillas have warned foreigners to stay out of occupied territories and have advised Christian! not to make pilgrimages to Israel because "we are at war." Robert W. Becker, a State Department spokesman, said in Washington the U.S. government was awalling a report from its embassy in Israel but "deplores ter- rori~m against innocent civilians.·• "Such irresponsible and Indiscriminate Gas Fu1nes Sealed Off After Pipeline Break Crewmen wearing gas masks required three llours of work in LaP .Ima l\1onday to seal off a plpellne after a construction worker severed the three-inch pl~ v.'hich v.·as spewing fumes into the area. The break occurred v.·hen an earth mover driven by Cal Denham of Hun· tington Beach hit the line on Moody Street souh of LaPalma Avenue. No residents ·were evacuated. A nearby school was closed for George Washington's birthday, Fron• Page l ABORTION • • • Union and ethers arc preparing such moves. As stated by California, the Issues the Supreme Court should decide are whether the preservation of the mother's life is suf!i ciently i?xa_ct to form a basis for liplillng permissible abcrtion, a n d whether a state has "sufficient ~om· pelling interest at stake to allow the state to regulate a woman's fundamental rijht to terminate unborn life ." The California case arose from the pro- secution of Dr. Belous. a prominent Beverly Hills physician and outspoken advocate of liberalized abortion laws. Belous was accused of referring a piegnant young woman and her iiance to a physician who performed an abortion on her. According to trial testimony, he made the referral -to a physician ht knew and trusted professionally -on1y after he became convinef:d the woman was "absolutely desperate" and would carry out a threat to secure an UleJal Mexican abortion under conditions he deemed clinically dangerous. Belous was convicted and sentenced to pay a $5,000 fine and serve two years' probation, but the Sbate Supreme Court ruling vacated the conviction and 1en- tence. The carpet they both chose? Bigelow's Barcelona BarctloM combines the caaual, wlnd·t06Std shag look or today with an elegant Spanl1h grille patteJ'.11. The lcn1. slender yarns have a sort, shimmery glow ... the dramatic mulU. colon a.re i\lcdilerranean-insplrflt. Use Bar· celcna In a Spanish or l\lt'dih.•rranean 1ett1nr or \Vlth ultra-n\odern or mixed rontempo1·ary . . , for 11 truly stunning ertect. And because the fiber's nylon, ~rcelon1:s ao $ <'UY lo care tor . Seil doean't 1 Q95 show ... &nd pile 1L1Yfi crisp and atJdngy. A fine bey for 11ny· MJ· ytll. one \l•JI:, '-''anU gt't'llt styling • , , a roomful of luXllry ... at 1~"°~~ ~n"!~~; a down-to-earth price, 111rw.111o11 6 Swy Mediterranean Shades ALDEN'S CARPETS-. DRAPERIES Midlt11rn~e•n Mats Antique Amber • Spanish Poppy Spe.ni•h Leath11r • Oran•d• Gold 'At1vio'Avoc1do I 100% approved Bigelow nylon ptlo e ll Yf;AAS StAVING THt O~NWE COAST e 1663 Placentia-Costa Mno Phon• 646-1831 . ~ ,1 II ·1 1' I 1 I I I I , llnuti11gton He1l~l1 Today'll Final N.Y. Stoeks I "' VOi.. 63 , NO. 46, 2 SEC\IONS, 2,4 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 1970 TEN CENTS • • • •• Abortion ·· €·onf 1-ict\-.. High Coulit Won't Review Old Law DAILY PILOT "'" ....... WASHINGTdN .(UPI), The Suprema Court ducked an op1>2..rt111Y~Y ~ step into the abortion Jaw controversy t~y. tum· ing down a plea from California for review of cootlicting judicial decisions in a case involving Or. Leon Belous or Beverly Hills. · Tbe brief order denying review left standing a state supreme coart opinion holding that aborUon laws may not broadly lnvade a woman 's rights to life and to qioose whether to beat children. * * * 'High Court · €louds -Fate Of Dr. Robb By TOM BARLEY 01 "'-Dell¥' 'tit! Stiff WHILE COLLEAGUES AWAIT CORONER, OFFICER WILLIAM KYSOR WAROS OFF THE CURIOUS In Newport's Fashionable Baycrest Section, the Neighbors Find a Body -The United States Supreme COurt today refused to review the California Supff:me Ccurt's reject ion of a 123-year-old abor· lion law and appeared to uphold, In ef· feet, the l9wer court's implied recognition of the Therapeutic Abortion Act of 1967. Newport Man, 60, Slain; Possible Bu1·glar Victim By JOHN VAL TERZA Of tt>f O•ll"f Plkll Slofft The body of a flO..yed:-old Newport Beach 1tnin. who was po-ssiDJy tht victim ol a shoOtO\it with--..tiiitgla rs, •was-found tprawled in his front doorway early te> day, a pistol in his hand and a gunshot wound in his chest .Police tentatively ruled the shooting a homicide. The victim. \VHliam Harris of 2012 Anchor Way. was shol to death-possibly by a burgl ar -sometime before dawn to· day, Newport dete ctives said. Harris' body had one bullet hole in the lower left chest made by an unknown weapon. Several olher. bullet holes were found in the well-furnished residence in the city's Baycrest sutidivlsion, Detective Capt. Lou Heeres said. Harris ·lived alone. He was recently divorced. the investigator said. The body, lying with the feet keeping a acre.en door ajar. was found by a neighbor ·laking his daughter to school al 7:28 a.m. Two buttons had been ripped off his coat. Against a window on the southeast side of the house a ladder rested, possibly where the killer or killers entered the &ray house. Harris was fully dressed in a gray suit. He was lying on his left si de apparently whe re he fell after trying to run out of his home. "Preliminary indications show a strong _possibility of burglary." Hceres said, "bu t we still aren't sure." Heeres declined to give a model or type of weapon clutched in Harris' rig ht hand . All but one neig hbor said they .heard nothing during the night. But one woman living next door said sl;le heard commotion and noises which possibly were shots late Monday night. She did not investigate. however. The enliro Baycrest and Westcliff area 1St-e J\.IURDER, Page 2) Newland Experiment Teacher T1ainees Get 'Real Thing' in V al,ley An c.ld concept -that o( training classroOm .J,eachers in model schools on college campuses -has been in-Validated al Fountain Valley's Newland School where 36 to 45-would-be educators wOrk in a real school in the real world . The school has }ust been selected by Cal State Long Be'ach as its first model school to train college g~@a!e,s to become teachers. It's a tough test lor the prospective teachers. They must learn how to test children to pinpoint their learning defi· ciencies. design lessons and materials and to pace lessons according to eat;:h child's abil ity. But, according to Mike Br I ck . superintendent or the Fountain Valley School District. such tasks are crucial to the development of teachers and not just tedium. ;'The experience and training they receive at Newland School give these new teachers an increased skill and com- petence which benefits the children in their 9.«ssrooms throughout the district," he maintains. "For years colleges and uni versities have been attempting to develop this type of program in on-campus laboratory schools. Not .only have campu s laboratory schools been extremely eltpensive: but they were isolated from lhe everyday situations the teacher faces· in the com- munity school. They presented more or an 'ivory tower' experience for the stu- dent teacher." The "associate teachers," as the stu- dent teachers are call~ at the New\ancP project, are under the supervision of ex- perienced t_eachers and are awarded a Standard Teachi ng Credential by the state after successful completio~ of a half-year internship. In addition to providing' field ex~ perience for the associate teachers, , • , I.{ ' ' 1• 1111 I l -/ Newland School will auwne the function of becoming a cternon&ti'atk>n otnter for , Cal State Long B'8eh's edueaUoo Courses in such areas as adol~nt psychology, English, reading and arithmetic. , These deinonstrations might be on site in the schOol or relayed to Che college by closed circuit television, video tape or olher means. according-to Brick. ~ . 'Although Newlan d School ls. the col· lege·s first field exj:lerience ·center, it is expected that five other centers will be added in various parts of ·Southern California during the 1~1o:s. 2 County Women Kill~d on Il.oads; 5 Others ·Injured From Wire Strvklts A pair of one-car accidents on desert and mountain highways Monday killed two Orange County women and left five other Southland residents inj ure d, authorities said today. Most of the victims were thrown (ro111 the tumbling vehicles, one of which rolled over twice in the roadway, while the other hurtled down a mounlain em- bankment. The dead were Identified as Lmda D. Berioldl, 22. of Garden Grove, and Janet G. Bulcns, 19, of La Habra. California.Highw.ay ·Patrol investigators .at Barstow said .the• Bertoldi, woman's timall car hit a .m~dian strip on lnttratate 15 near the Ne•ada Jin¢ and rolled over .twic e, . · · Activn, eir rather the lack of it, by the high court Immediately raised specula· lion iri Orange Couuty on the impact of the decision on the case of Dr. Robert Cwnming J\obb, 67. the Laguna Beach pbysician ·recently indicted on abortion charges. It brought, predictably, claims by each side i~ ·the controversy tbjt· the . high <lllf~'•. st,anao· '""'"' theif .1f111nle!>1' jll ~e1'obb case. , . Attorney Joseph Anderson, a.a as.soci~te of Or. ·Robb's lawyer1 Mose9 Berman. argued. that the high C®rt decision "was bound' to4 color the thinklnJ of any jury that might be asked to rule on Dr. Robb 's actions. :"While it mJgl\I. be argued that tbe high C9\}rt did not rule on the 1967 act itself, it can also be ·argued that the court rec(la:· nlz;es tPe vital need .today for a more ll~ ei'al in.terpre.tatlon of outmoded abortion statu tes," Anderson said. "And It should ~ pointed out that the 1967 act its.~lf has not yet been challenged at U.S. Supreme Court level." Th~ supreme .Court ruling could lead, Anderson predicted, to t)le sweeping aside·of .abortion Jaws in m~ny of the na- tion 's states and leave CalUomia with it! "admittedly more liberal liW of 1967. "The situation then would be contrary to what California wanted when the therapeutic abortion act was passed," Anderson commented. "We would tlien be upholding an abortion law while physi- cians in many stat.es would be carrying out , abortions with no fear of puni!h- tr.ent." Chief Deputy District A t t o r n e y James Enright does not see it that way. Harbour Oil Well Owner to Face Criminal Charge· State authorities today promised to file , fonnal cotnplalnt.s against owners of an oil well near Huntington Harbour which has spilled oil on the waterway's surface in recent days. No More 'Tin C·an Beach' .. Meanwhile, workers began spreading straw on the water In an attempt to soak up the crude oil which, h&s coated the a~et ii) some spats. The slick .spread Into Christiana Bay Sunday . • Federal Grant Aids Cleanup at Bolsa Chica "We will file criminal complaints against the Grover-Collins ·Corporation, owners of the well, for pollution of slate waters," state game warden Capt. , Walter Putnam said this morning. By ALAN DIRKIN CM "-" Dell¥' 'II" Sttll The Solsa Chica Slate Beach, tor years lcnown as "Tin 1Can Beach," is gC>ing t~ be cleaned up ahd rully developed for vlSit.ors. · The neWI thal the strand will lose its infamous tag came · with an an· no11ncertient today that the · state had received 1:t federal grant to acquire a 5lrip of beach that had been holding up all the state's pl.§ns for Bolsa Chica. Huntlngton Beach city officials and State Parks and Recreation Department aides were jubilant over today's ac- qiiisition . The Interior Department granted the gtate. $1 ,377,000 lo acquire about 3tl acre11 ot a~ndoned Pacific Electric .R.lilroad right-of.way between tile Bolsa Chl::a State Beach and Pacific Coast Hlghway. The State will provide matching funds. The land is a narrow. two-and-three · f1Uarter·mi1e stretch of sirnfy beach, f11Vcragi11g1 ~lightly more than 100 feet 1; '. wide running between the cities of Seal travel trailers and 52 pick·ttp campers Jo "It might take two days to clean up the· Beach and Huntington Beach. It rutls use the p!rkin( lot. mess," l}e 1p:ld. "Some of -i.t appeared to from about warnt:r Avenut down to the -Fourteen buildings that will senre as be pretty thick ." rest rooms and dressing rooms. The oil seeped Into the H11rbour channel blu!(s. -Five concession buildings for snack wJien a gasket broke on a wtll behind The otale will now develop the lan<t bar; •. wrf~board 111<1 umbretta 'r<ntalo. l(arbo\ir Vt"' &ci'OOI, SundaJ~ad putting in 1resl rooms, concession statidS: -Twenty-elgllt lifeguard muons along over <the chanilel waters, clinging to the and p;tking spaces f(!f' beach visilofar •: the' stntch, 1n a~tjon 1*t a combintd • .si4.e;s of· boats ind ~-in ~thk1 film. Carl A. Anderson, state deputy difeCtOY if,guard and park otnce . BOat o~l'I and. residents In ~e liun· 1 for parks and recreatlo'n. said in Lqi" · .:...JJ'wo entrance 4iauons •ODe for cpm· i' 1 t~ Harb9ur area h•vet~ Oil. their Angeles today that the. strip had beenJ _ .1,mer~J ve!"f,les•81Jd. oni f~r Ute pUbUt. 'o~ .cl~up · oi>eJations sl11ce , the i ii ck blocking all the state!s plans ror tt:te area. · ..Ahderson 4 d}d not have ih'e colt' or fir at appeared, Sunday. "We couldn't go in and !!lean. up che lhe 'P'rojet:ta .aVAJlaflle, "ft was Just a big black mess then," trash because this was private land Anderson said the Bolsa Chica Slate 11ld one unhappy resid,ent. • before. Now that we shaU own it, we shall ·Beach has euctl)' 'tS,463 Jintal . feet. The oil leak wa:\ stopped Sumfay. but hav"t crews down there cleanlng it. up as about 2% miles, o( ocean footage with at' nol ¥tore aome of U seeped Into the !OOn as possible. We'll gel right on 1t." least 35 acres of usable beach. StN plan· chaMtl. Ander:son outli®d the proj®ts the ners estimate its Capticily _.at 15,2" A spokesman for the Hmittnaton Beach parks and recreation department has in persons. Harbor• and Buc,he1 ~par.tment 1.aid mind for the beach. The proposal;.wlll be Anderson said the slate • ls woddng tht ~tick wis '1• mess, but~ h bid as part or the department·, requesta in the t losel:rwlth th~dty ol iw.u~ ~th 1 ooe Ion""(' ,~en. 1 tanlter l~oked Into 1970-71 state budget. to coordinate development 6i the. straflct· the charu~ . " -2,169 car parkk11 spaces, plus 26 'l'he city 's harbor and beach~ develop-·The HunUnaton Harbou~ 1rea is a parking spaces for buses. / tncnt dJrector Vince M00thouse con· r!!:sldttntl•I development buUt around • -Ott·scasorr 1mnaemcnls ror 36 (Ste SANDBOX, Paae. •• system of channels. ~.l That op1n1on stru ck down as un- consUtutionally vague a C a I i f o r J'I i a statute permitting an · .abortion to be legally performed on a woman only when "necessary to preserve her life.'' Subsequently, a federal judge in the District of Columbia, leaning heavily on the California opinion, struck down 1 federal law in the district that permitted abortio!J only when "necessary for the preservation of the mother's ure or health." Thus no licensed doctor c~ be ~ secuted for pei;fOrming aborlioft8, · and theoretically they Can be ha'd for the aak· ing: ... • . Some 35 states have traditibnBJ abor· ~°'J laws ba~d on phrasing similar ·.to Ult invalidated D.C. and Callfomili statutes. Jn two .of them, MasSacbuadls and New Jersey, the state's highest court has upheld the traditional· law. In 1ts · pe~iPon for Supreme Court (See ABQRTION, Page ti Harbor Board . ~ Dissolve .Bilf. Hearing Set The assembly bill on dissolution of the (!range COunty Harbor District ~ill come up for hearing ·by the Assembly r.aci1 Government Committee on Thursday. March 12, Assemblyman John V. Brigs CR-Fullerton ) announced today. The measure calls upon the county supervisors to hold a special election to place the question of the district's fulure before voter.s. In addition to Briggs' blll, another met· sure aulhored by Assemblyman Kenneth Cory ([)..Anaheim) proposing expansicin of the harbor dislrict would be heard at the same time. · "The full question of the harbo~ district will be in front. of the eom:mlttee 'in lhis • ~earbq:," Brigs said. , • Brigs also ~d uie Leaaue· d. Clues. •hlch bN advocated1 the ditloluUon of lt!e-Harl>of llillrict wlh be ,..Pf""nled al Qie . heart114. The hearing will be held at 1:4$ p:m. 10 room 2133 of the state cap. ital. ··• AGROUNO' IN 'MEXtcbh J 1NlwP.rt Y•cht'Tranqulla 'II'' " Newport Y aclif. Gof!~: Aground · · Ori Mexico Bea~h ' ' By ALMON LOCKABEY ' .... i .... ,, ... . A J~al yacht returning from 'the San Diego to AcapOlco race wa! grounded on a Mex ican beach some 1,200 miles south of San Diego last Friday. Word reached Newport Monday that the Cal-48 yawl Tranquila ti. owned and ski ppered by Robert A. Garrison of Newport Harbor Yacht Club. fetched up on the beach at ·Black Rock, 40· miles south of Manzanillo when an ancbOr line parte<l. None of the fiv·e. persons on bo'.ai'd was seriously injured. Mrs. Robert L. Koehler, a guest wi~ ~er hUsbati~on ·.the . yacht, suffered a fracluff:d shoulder blade before the party could get off the · vessel as it rolled in heavy surf. Koehler said the anchor let'go at 2 a'.m. · while those. aboard were sleeping. "The llrst Indication we had that anythipg was wrong was w~en Uie boat hit the beach," he .saJd. ·"' . . Koehler .said the party had to swtm on- 1~ ·a ·few feet •before· getting· to ·shallow enough water to ·Wade ashore. . , •The •tritnded part.y,which included Mr. and Mrs . Ganison and ar MexU:an na· tipnal Garrison had tu.red at Ac.a.pulco, were aided by a Mexican family wblCb liyed at a · coconut plantaU011 near w,herellte'boat·went •groun)I; . . U the . measure passes the commjUee It will lhen" be heard on the aaaembly floor ,and if-approved there will be refer· red , to a senate-committee for rorther hearings. Spot Was Fine For Fishing But It's Illegal . , The art of being a good fisherman I* to find a good spot. About SO f~hetmen theught they lound paradise Monday at the tip of the Hun· tington Beach Pier. There it was, fishing holes cu t in the planks, room for everyone. All they had to do was move I feW little fences, probably there to keep out bird watchers. · "They were having a ball," commented Vince M001·house; director of harbors and beaches .. "But they were fisbing in a hazardous area and we had to run them out." The flsherman'a paradise they found was actually a portion of the pier being prepared for construction work to fix rot· ling timbers and weakened flooring. • "In a week we plap to cloee the entire lip of the pier while a 200-fooLsection is repaired. The rest of the pier is and will be open." saJd Moorhouse. · Once work starts, lhe ocean end of the pier will be closed to. everyone -bird watchers and fishermen alike .:.. for about »«> days. For lhe present fishermen are asked tD have a little patience and leave the con· stfuctlon barricades up -those holes in the flooring are not for di'opplng tines. ' Orange Coast I , , , 1 . n,e Mexicen. farmer k»k,..the , p1rty Pi"'. "'!•Y to Mam:anlllo I~ a I ruck ·and they were able to hire .a tUillff'rest 'of . the•)Vay. • .~1 '' _! I l ""i J The nice sprtng·lik e weather mar be on its way out as the weather~ • man predicts a Sl).$0 chance ol rain tonight, along wJth ~some gusty wind•. The rain mltlllt tail obouf three ·daysi , · ·· ·• · .. . The. Koehl1rs new homo ·Maoda.Y but th~1GarrW;>ns remiined ·in MC!xlc;b-to1tty. o!fd s,t,age Ille boat. . ., Later reports said boat w••· sunk in 1$ feet 1or weter when a Mexican tua boat ~ fretwov ~.sh i14rn1d into heuled it.tfree ¢ the. !lhore. ~e linking a flaming fia$CO wht'n wtft (n.. was apparently caused by lhe &oat ~lng tentioned rescutrs dropped a partly fined with water as: it wallow.eel 111 /for~ ill apilled aoaottne p4gt 9. the surf. The.re wll!; no Immediate In· ' " ddicatlonedthat the~ttom was ·1eriou1ly _ -~~= u! 1 ; C:.. ....,. .. ~ ,,J__ amag , . am1 .. ,~ ~~--··-Koehlet said Garrison aoi ofC a rad:io :_-:.,..... 1: ~ ,.., , .. ~ • Mayday (~str.ess). message wh~, his · =:...t':=. : ''"' .,..,. "'11. boat.went aKfOtpld, tNl1 the only,reapcae •""'tfMlllll'ttolt 1 ~ • 'l was trom the Coast GUatd at Miami, Fla, r.::r_ 1•1? :=-.~....,, i1oi: a~mson also fired narcs and a.~amau AM ......,. ,, *"' .,.... .. · !Set ACCIDENT, Pase II '~smE . TOOJ:)' - 'I I 1 I I I DAIL~ PILOT " 1,.14o1,. rti...., a4, 1910 ' SANDBOX : .. • fSmed th.IL the ell)' w11 tn •areement Wttl) tllt ttato on llhortllnt de••lopmenL Moorboule Wll elated at the IC· qulallloa "ll'1 lllOlbu ~p lo helping .,.... a proper lzn&1• for the city of lluntloston Beach. It will be a bl1 ad- dlUon-1.o the. community. "Everyone Is talking about preserving open space, bul it's good to sec sjmethtni Is being done about It. This Is a blg atep In the tot1I development of the whole coastline." Moorhouse al'° hoped that lhe slate's su~ woild help the city In Ju bid for fundA to acquire a 21ii:-mlle fb'ttcb owned by the Hunlllllloo Beach Company and thua llnk the HunUngton Beach State Park, the municipal beach. and Bolsa Chict bu.ch into one vast i;tretch of pib:Ucly owned and publicly maintai ned Oceanfront. From Pflfle 1 MURDER ••• ha•• been plogued by burlliar& In rt<:enl monthl. While dttedl .. s from the bur1Jary d•lall tilked to realdenl< of tbO quiet ~ei(hborhood, potrolmen scoored bulhes, plantm •"II !rub cans ... tchinf for Wea.pons. 'l)ey turned up nothing. Harris, rttired, hid lived in the area for at lea.st JO years, his friends said. He was described as a good-natured, even- tempered man who had lived alone for years. The house seemed immaculately kept. The landscaping has been k e p t ma.tricured. Neighbors ,..med milfed that they had hem! nothing llirGJgh the night. - "I can't Wlderstand us not hearing anything. I gueu w• "11 go Inside and lock lhinp up llgllt and clon~ hNr wblt goes on in the oullide world," one lhoct· ed woman said a.s she gued aero.ts the 1U..L. Harris' body ·WU removed to 1laJ.ll Corona \!<! Mar Mortuory. · No next of kin for the dead man have been located. He hid no children, poUce lald. Missing Woman Safe Back Home A mis.sing Huntington Beach woman, who left behind a deserted car and clothing in the El Toro area. has turned up alive and well with her partnts in -Sheldon, Iowa, according to Detective Sergeant Monty McKenaon. • Shetry F. Madoon. 21, 0111111 Golden West St., a former teacher, was the sutr ject of aw~ police search;lncludlnS the Hunliqton Beach police liellcoP.\A!r; when her car and i!IOme clothing was found two weeks q:o, deserted on a lonely stretCh of El Toro Road. Sgt. Mcltennon said Sherry's si!ter- phoned him over the weekend to aay that the girl was at the family home In Sheldon. A phone call to Sheldon police confirmed the report, he said. No explanation was given for her straAge disappearance and the matter is now closed, l81d police. 5 File Papers In W estmllister Thrtt new candidates and two in· cumbe.nls have filed nomination papers for the April 14 Weistmlnster city council elections. The newcomers 2N! Sal Guzzetta, 34, insurantf: agent: William C. French, 42, co:nputer systems administrator. and J, Aflchael Bish, Insurance agent. They will seek the seats of incumbents Phllllp L. Anlhony, 34, an arospace research and program manager. and Buel Jarrett, 58, a retired furniture man· Ufaeturer. Both will &eek reelecUon , aC4 cording lo City Clerk Kathryn Harper. Deadline for filing nomination papers was Feb. 19. DAILY PILOT OltANct£ co.liT ..UaUlklNG COMPANY leDert N. w,,, "~"''*'"""'' J111\. 1. CY•'•v v ... ,,...,.,.,, '"' Gtntt-11 ........... Tllo"'•' K., .. a IEdl .... T~•"''' A. M11111lii~t ""' .... "" lllfllfM' Alb1t1 W. l1tt1 .-,»Ot411t EGI• ... H .. ri .... • IHcJi Offit• 1717, ••• ,i. .... 1, ••• 11 M1ili111 Add11•11 ,.0. aea 7f0, '2i41 --L..,.. ._,,; m I"~ ,,_ C.tll ..... _! J30 W.1 .. ,. '""' ,,.....,, a-:111 2211 Wt1t .. u •• tOl.llfllttrf ~ 'I Where tlae Boy• Are Sandra Vesper is a Sidney, Australia·, model who lik es to spend some time on the beach. Slie's reason enough, it would seem, for some of the boys to spend their time at the beach, too. n is summer down under, you know. Abortion Law in State Unchanged, Lyne~ Says SAN FRANCISCO rUPI) -Attorney General Thomas Lynch said today refusal by the U.S. Supreme. Court to review California's old abortion law Will make no chanae in the slate's current law on the subject. The hiJh court in a brief order today refoeed li>'revfew decigions tnvol9ing pr. Leon °Belrm of Beverly Hills. Tho high From Pflfle J. • ABORTION ••• review, call£ornla a1k.ed not so much that lhe California Supreme Court be revereed as that some clarity be brought to the confLision surrounding "the clear conflict which now exists a1nong the highest courts of three ista!fs and the District or Columb~." The California statute v.·as adjudged in- valid after it had already been replaced by liberaUied laws permitting abortion when bearing the child would Injure the mother·s phy&lcal or mental htalth or when the pregnancy was the result of rape or lftcest. Similar llberaliialions have b e e n enacted 'in other states, but none his been challenged h1 higher courts yet, although the American Civil Liberties Union and others are preparing 6Uch movts. As stated by California, the is5ues the Supreme Court should decide are whether the prese.rvalion of the mother's life is sufficiently exact to form a basis for limiting permissible abortion, a n d whether a state has "sufficient com· peUlna interest at stake to allow the state to regulate a womaa·s fundame ntal right to terminate unborn life." Mail Delivery ~a y Be Started In Rural Areas · Home maH delivery may be about to come to resi dents of two of those pic- tu resque . holdouts to modern postal service in the heart of West Orange County's urban spra\vl -Sunset teach .and Surfside. The precise areas involved 11re small, however, and home delivery wtll only be made if a majorlty of I.he residents re- quest It by filling oul a fonn at their U.S. Post O!ftce branch. Conaressman Craig R. Hosmer (R· Long Beach) announced today that u:ndtr new rural delivery guidelines revealed by Poatma:. r Oener1l Winton M. Blount, t.he home delivery Is available. CJtiuns llvln1 lesa than a qu1rtt1r mllt from tither the Surrslde or Suruet Beach Post Office, however, mutt a:tlll pick up their mall In penon. If they live more lh•n a half !'l'llle from the br1nch . they are stl ll Ineligible for home deli\•ery, due to laek of carriers. •lJt 11 Important to point out that th is new strvl~ will be available to tha relidtnta of these are11 only Jf 1 ma· !·orily request 111" 1ald Congresaman tosmer. • I court left standing a state Supreme Cow1 ruling that the law may not invade a woman 's right to choose wbether to bear children. That opinion struck down JJl old California statute petnllWne an aborUon onJ). when necenary to sive the mother's life. '• Lynch pointed out that the state has already replaced that statute with the new therapeutic abortion act, wbich authorizes a committee of doctors to order an abortion when the mother's "physical or mtntal health" would be im- perlled. He Indicated the fact that the old law is already moot may have been one reaaon the U.S. Supreme Court rerueed to hear it. The ntw law aliO permits aborUon when the child would be the reault of rape or Incest. Lynch said it has alrudy be.en challenged at least twice in the lower courts. In Sacramento, Sen. Anthony C. Beilenson, author or the 1967 llberallttd statute, praised the court'11 ruling and said It "enchances the validity" ol the C11llfornia tribunal's decision. However. the Beverly Hills Democrat noted that "if we hadn't superseded the old law with my therapeutic law, we wouldn't have any restrictions (on abortions) at thls time. Long-time Demo Emma Miller Dies GROVE CITY. Pa. (AP) -Emma Guffey Miller. at 9S the oldest member of the Democratic National Committee, has died after suffering a etroke. Mn. Miller seconded the nominaUon tn 1928 of Al Smith, a Roman Catholic, althou&b 32 years later she supported Lyndon Johnson over John F. Kennedy. ~!rs. ~tiller, admitted to Grove City Hospital Monday, died several hours later, a hospital spokesman &aid. She was acnve in the fight for women's suffrage and Jor ending prohibition. 1 She altended her first convention In 1924. At the 1968 convention in Chicago she recalled how back in the old days she went by lraln instead of flying. Population Boost Studied in Valley · Mtmben o/ the Fountain Vall•y City Council will huddle with olflclab ol Foun- l<In Valley School Dlotrlct at 8 o'clock Lonlaht, In the Community Ctnttr to discuss a rapid rise In the dty'a popul• lion. • New proJtct1on1 show the tlty ntar+n1 the 40,000 mark by the tnd of the year. represenUng a sharptr population m. crease then originally expected. The City Council 11ked for Joint study ses.~lons with \•irious school bo1rdl ttrV· Ina the city to Inform them or the ntw populallon figures and •llow them Ume to plan for It. Current population_ of Fountain Valle)' Is ju!l over 30.000 . \ Allen Files For Return To Board Superviw Allon E. Allen made his bid tor re~lectlon to the Fifth District seat on the Board of Supervisors official today by being one or the first of a line of can- didates for public office to file with the coonty clerk. Allen, 72, of L.a(lllla Beach, put his name to documents: that announce his in- tention to seek a third four·year·tenn on the board. Allen will be oppoaed in the June primary by 11vh111 and ~· es:ecutlve Ron Caspers of Lido Isle, Costa Mesa ci· ty councilman Robert Wllaon aod a can. dldate to 'be named by oragnlien or an antl·AUen recall mov~meot througbQl1t the Fifth District. COunty Clerk Wll1lam St John alao ac- cepted fillng1 today -the-first day for such nominations -county recorder J. Wylie Carlyle; buainn:aman Joe R. Greene and county official Davld G. Hitchcock and Robert L. Citron who are all candidates for the office of Orange Honors Bes .. towed . , r Crusade· Gives Volunteer Awards It's baak·slapping ll{ne ror the Y<IM!1--lctn ol lllt \Jnlled CfulM!e. Tiie West OrlUI• County Uftllad Cru.aade bas schtduled 1ts sls:th anhual award banquet for Friday at 6:l0 p.m. in Uie Disneyland Hotel, Anaheim. Civic leaders, crusade workers and · celebrities wil l honor campaign volun· teers and contributors who have helped the United·Crusade to reach 81 percent o~ its total goal or $4S2,000. Huntington Beach, formerly Huntington Beach Community Chest, went over Its $135,000 goal last Friday to become the. first community In West Orange County to reach lta target. A "Man of lhe Year" will be honored from among crusade workers and there will be presentaUons of Gold Oscar awards to ciUzens who have contributed leadership to community organizations and civic affairs, as well as to the United Crusade program. The evening's festivities will include a sludeol choral 11toup, the Madrigal Slngen d Golden Weal COiiea .. and also the famous Salvation Army Bras! Seit.el. Other entertainers: wru be Mike ~11nor! <o->ur of CBS lllivllion'i ''Ptttl<ol Junction." The Gold Oscar awards will be presented by Don Marthall, c»!tar of .\BC's "Land Of The Giants.'' One of the top awards of the evening (Will be the Woodro\9 D. Cannon HUmanitarian Award for Press \Vriting. Door prizes also will be given . The evening will pay tribute to two 1969 Presidents, Steve Holden, outgoing presi- Qenl of the ,!iunlington Beach Community Chest, and George Honold. who w~ president or the West Orange CQ!.mty United Fund. Jeck Feehan. manager ol Southern Counties Gas Company, will asaume presidency of the amalgamated organlza· lions, now known as "Orange County United Crusade" doing business as "Wut Orange County United Crusade." Other new orncers wtll be tnstalled. Reservations may be obtained by con- lacllng the United Crusade office al l.!o· 4'70 "' 962-5505. .. Fron• Page 1 BOAT ACCIDENT ...• • County tax collector.' · Also filed was the application of fishing boat responded but was unable to Bernard Wocher a candidate ror a seat · trying to make .arrangements to have the boat raised and taken to Manzan11lo from where it could be shipped home aboard a fN!ighter. on the Fourth District Board of Equaliza. help. I. First •rt of the grounding came IOn. . i..a.te filings today Included that ol from Geor,-e Sturges. nav igator aboard Garrison had owned the boat only a few months before he entered it in the Acapulco race . The Tranquil• 11 wu a Cal-48 built by Jensen Marine of C:OSta Mesa but later was redesigned and rerig- ged as a yawl by Ted Hood, noted East Coast yacht di!Slgner an<hallmalw .. Laguna Beach attorney William Wilcoxen another of the racing yachts, Bob u a Republican candidate for lhe 35th Beaucbamp~s Dorothy o from NHYC. Congressional Dlitrict; Assemblyman Sturges said the TranquUa II and Roberl Badham who ls seeking re-eiec-tion tO the-11st DtstriCt;-Mltrnblyman,~· ..J:lor<jjiy ~ere both at Zijuatinejo on Robert Burke of the 7oth District and Wednesday and th;tt;Ten 8btid of the COl'llfUSl1WI James B. Uttoi Santa--Ana. Dorothy O, slating that Qe planned to Alio accepted by St ·.J.ob:n W'1'e the stop a couple of Umes en route to The Tranquila U was the fourth boat to finish the Acapulco "race and \Yil ltCODd . in Class A on corrected time. rilinp ol Q)eriff James P.tuaick and Manzanillo, one or the principal shipping ' Manblll Norril, the SUpertor O:\Urt clerk . ports on. the west coast of 1ttezlco. who will endeavor in June toi>replllCfl Sturfes laid be monitored Garrison's Musick in the offices of sheriff and COtJn. Mayday trieaage but was unable to res.-Census Takers Being Sought ty coroner~ pood before Garrison signed ofr. ~ Sturge& Mid he t11lked to P.1rs. Garrison Benefit Dance For Valley Youtl1 Set for Friday The Troika will headline a benefit dance open to all high &chool students in Fountain Valley, Friday night in the rom· munity center. 10200 Slater Ave. Donations rrom the dance -8 p.m. lo midnight -will be turned over to the newly established teen problem center at 9f.tS Hell Ave. The problem center was optrred this month with the backing or Parents AnU-NarcotlC!' Infonnallon Cen1er (PANIC) .to give teens a voice and place to turn for help. Two phones, a teen help line (531-4357) and Jobs for Teens (531.()200) are now optratlng at the problem center. A limited number or tickets are available 11t The Pant Rack, Magnolia and Warner, and Mr. M's for Men. ~tagnolla aod Talbert. Market Bandit Gets $100 Haul • A bandit with a .45 ~liber automatic pistol and an invisible accomplice took $100 from a Fountain Valley market ear· Jy this morning. Police said the bandit forced store clerk Barry Prim lo re~nter the 7-11 market at Garfield Avenue and Bushard Street at 12:04 a.m., where he took the cash and told the clerk that a friend with a rifle was watching from a nearby service station. The rifle-toting accomplice wa& never seen, police said. and the first bandit escaped wllh the money. at Manunillo Saturday and learned some of the details of the.aCcl~nt. At' that tJme Garris<>n had hired a cbmmerclal tug .to go to Black Rock and haul the boat off the beach. Word that the boat had sunk · came from John Hogan. who crewed on the Trilnqulla II during the race. Hogan said Ga rrison's son told him Monday that the boat had sunk when il was hauled ofl the beach. The Garrisons are still in Manzanillo Trustees Seek Tax Rate Boost flow do you .a~k voters, lo r~tSe. Oteii' own ta1 rate by $1 .90? That problem ~·ill be batted around by trµstee.s of the Huntington Beach City School District at 7:30 tonight in the li- brary of DWyer School. District officials have asked permission lo eiace two issues -a 40-cent fnqea&e for opt-raUng costs and a $1.50 increase for pay-as-you-go school con~ructton - on the ballot for April 14. Now trustees must decide how to tell voters about the need ror the money and argument.'! for the proposal to be printed on the ballot. Ping Pongers Start Tourney on Saturday Tournament play for the Huntington Beach Parks and Recreati on Table Ten- nis Club starts Saturday. Entries for the tourney are now being accepted at the recreation center, 17th Street and Orange Avenue, between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. Awards ~·ill be given in open divisions for men, women and doubles. Anyone is eligible to play for an entry fee of $1.50. ' For W. County .The U.S. Bureau of the Census needs local people to work on the 1970 Census of Population and Housing in lhe West Orange County &rea , ii was announced to.- day by Roy Gordon. dis tr ict manager of , the census. Jobs to be fi lled will be as census lakers who will call upon hou seholds thal have not mailed back their census forms or who have mailed back Incomplete ones. Generally, they will work near their own neighborhood s. Jobs 'will last from three to five weeiul in' April and Mlly. Same worl!: will be done evenings and on Saturdays as some people are at home only during those times. Pay will average about $2 an hour. Those interested should apply at the census office, IJIOK E. Edinger Ave., Santa Ana, or call 547·7639. Valley Looking Far in Future? ' An erroneous glance at the future ls forecast on the agenda of the Foontaln Valley Parks and Reecreation C.Om· mi ssion at 7:30 p.m., Wednesday. A typographical error has com- missioners reading the minutes of a Jan. 28. 1979 meeting. keeping them 1lighUy ahead of their time. But a real look .at the future is pro- mised \\·hen the commissioners study long range plans for park development in the city . select an architect to develop those parks and inspect conflict of In· terest legislallon to guide future actions of the commission . The.carpet they both chose? Bigelow's Barcelona Be.r~lona combines !he C'asu11.I, "·ind-lossecl shag look of today with an elegant Spani~h &rlllr: pattern. The long, slender yarns have a soft, shlmmr:ry 'low ... the dramatic mulli· cGlors are t<tcd1t('rranean-lnsplred. Use Bar-ttlona in a Spanish or l\tedit('rranenn setUng or wllh ultra·modern or mb:ed cont6Tlporary ... for a IJ'uly !lunnint effect. And becall5C' t~ fiber's nylon, Barctlona's so $ "uy to care for. Soil doesn't 1095 1how ••. and pile ata.yg crisp and rpringy. A fine buy for any. -.. ,... one who wani. great 11.Yllng • \ , a roomful of luxu..., at ~ ",...._ .. ___ ·~ • • • ttoro wllt! t'I .. a ...,...u•to-e&rth price. ~lln 6 Smy Mediterranean Sha;s M'.edittrnnean MOit Antique Amber • Spa;nit]l Poppy Spenl1h"l-tltl'l1r-Gtanlde-GOld. ALDEN'S CARPETS-DRAl'lllES At1vio A•ot•dct \' 100% appr<>••d Blcelow nylon pile " ~ IJ YlAlS !flVJN!# THE OkANc;E COAST e 1663 Placentia-Costa M11a Phone 646-4131 I • \ i I I •. . • -. . ' T....i.:t. rol>rultY 24, 1970 H DAILY PllflT # . . ~ Grand J u~y Tabs f i--ti 'Dizzy' in Probe~ DETROIT (UPI) -Hall ol . Ferne pitcher Jerome "Oltz)''' De1n was named today as a cocorisplratot and 10 penons were charged with gambling conspiracy in a federal grand Jury Indictment. The sealed indictment was handed down Feb. 16 by a 23-member grand jury as part of the govt.rnment'1 crackdown on big time gambling. Dean was not indicted . He was named in the Indictment opened today as ooe of rive cocoospiralors who could be called ~ aJ witnesses when those lndlct~d come to trial. Dean was searc~cd but not arrested in his Las Vegu: motel room when the federal Investigation came into the open on· New Year's Day. One or the other four coconsplrators named was Paul Dean Jr., believed to be the nephew of the one time St. Louis Cardinals ace. Denny-McLain. the star Detroit Tiger pitcher suspended last week Cor alleged involvement in a Flint, Mich., gambling ope ratio~ ln 1967, testlrJed before the grand jury after the Indictment was handed down. He was not named in the indictment. U.S. Attorney James H. Brickley said he "couldn't speculate" about future in- dictments but was "sure" more would be NAMED BY GRAND· JURY Hall of F1m1'1 Dun Laird Reveals llonor Gtusrd.,~'=.-='.':':'""'=--:-"9--"~ ,-. . forthcoming. Plans to Reduce · ' An honor guard of Wbife'House police attired· in dre11 u'illlonn,-of ce~fnr~F....-Praidll)t Geor&•• Pnmptdou today. Because white tunics and gold braid wear their regular-issue blue caps With oi" wideSjlree~ thOy"ha:ve ollml'nalecl black·vtnyt-ceromonlil'-"-L·-R· ' e~'Ear· ly B=r~ -Militai_.v...:_Da1,· ~~-,....~"'• _w_hi_._te_sI_,tpco_v.:,e_rs,.._CI_ee_lfl_l _a_s_t_be.:.y_st_and_,_·n_fo_rm_a_tI_on_.., .. d_u_rl_n..,f_.,.._1com1n_--'l:;__h_elm_e_ts_(r_igh:;_t;_) _o_rl;:ct)_na_D..:yc..cdes-'Ig'-n_ea_._fo_r_n_e_w_·unll~-•-rm--'s,"-_ =--·---lU • U ./ ~ ' -...,. ·-. ' WASHINGTON (AP) -Secretary ot Marine COrporal Son .of Judge Killed in Vietnam Marine L/Cpl. Warren "Jack" Ferguson Jr., 18, eldest son or ' U.S. Distrid' Court Judge Warren J. Ferguson, has been killed in action in Vietnam. Judge Ferguson, who"was named to the rederal bench from the Orange €oonty &qierlor Court four years ago. will read the euloo Friday at his sor.'s funeral. The Fullerton jurist i..mes· 1rom the U.S. Delense Department uiat his son died while serving on a patrol in Quang Nam province. The young Marine was in his sixth week of aeUve duly in Vietnam. lJCpL Ferguson enlisted ln the Marine Corps last April and received boot camp training in San ·Diego and advance in· fantry training at Camp Pendleton before being shipped to Vietnam with the "2nd Battalion o( the Fifth Marine Regiment. High mass at St. Philip's Catholic Church in Fullerton will be followed by a military funeral. Burial will be at Ft. Rosecrans National Cemetery in San Diego. L/Cpl Ferguson ls also survived by his mother, Laura, two sisters Faye, 19,_and Teres~ 16, and a brother Peter, 14. Tbe family resides at 1031 Cerritos Drive, Fullerton. CHP Detectives Honored for Joh FRESNO (UPI) -Two California Highway Patrolmen were honored today for investigative work which led to the arrest of suspects in the Sharon Tate murder case. Officen James L. Pursell and David P. Steuber were cited for their work in a resolution approved by the st a t e legislature. Pursell was praised for his in- vestigation of a number of automobile fires-and !Uspected aMIOnl. His wort led to the arrest of Charles Manson, who bas bee~gtd In conned.ion with the Tate m .• W oild Condemns~ Arabs For Ambushing of Bus By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS . Condemnation of Arab t e r r o r I s m mounted today In the wake of the ambush. of a busload ol American Christians in 1sraeJ but-the Cairo press was defiant. A State Department apoi:esman said the U.S. governmenl .J'"' lhocted. Pr<mler G<llilCM<Jr' of uriel dbioum!ed Arab governments for financing and sheltering Palestinian guerrillas "lacking all conscience and respect for human life." The Swiss and West Germ a·n governments also condemned Arab· ter- rorist&, but their protesli were a result of the crash Salurday of a SwissaJf jet bound for Tel Aviv In whk h 47 persons were killed. Arab guerrillas are belle'ved to have set olC an ex:plO.!km that caused the crash. the buaload of American pilgrims was auacked Monday north of Hebron in Israeli-occupied Jordan. The wlle of a Baptist minister Barbara Ertle, 31, of Grandville, Mich., was tilled, "-nd two Americans and an Israeli guide wtre wounded. Mrs. Ertle's h u 1 b a n d . Theodore, was sitUng next to her but escaped injury. ' I.sraeli troops began a masaive search ol the rocky hills In the are.\. Hebron is a center of Arab.agitation on the Jcrdan River's West Bank. Terrorists ambushed a bus traveling f r o m Beersheba to Hebron last year and killed one American passenger. Arab guerrillu have warned foreigners lo stay out of occupied territories and have advised Christlans not to make pilgrimages to Israel because "we are at war." -Robert W. Beeker, I Staie Department spokesman, said in Washington the U.S. government was awaJting a report from its embassy in Israel but "dtplores ter- rorism againat innocent civilians." "Such lrrespoolible and lndlocrtminate acts can pnJy ,make more dlfflcult the search fir peace In the Middle East which ts our overriding goal," Becker said. • r Mrs. 'Meir met with efVOYS from 11 ·na· lions in Jerusalem,· then told_ LJte Kn'esld, Israel's parliament, that effecUve steps must be taken {l&ainst terrorist organlu....: tions "and agatnst'ihose Arab toUntries from which they come." In a voict trembling ,with emotion sht told the lawmakers Israel "will do it.5 duty" to prot<ct ils air 10UleL She <lid not say what steps she planned. She asserted thit all airlines should be free to lly,planes to and from !he Mid.die East and that "Israel will nOt tolerate being the only country to'whiCh'thi! nile does not apply.'' "The terrorists know no limits," Mrs. Meir said, "and unless the world com- munity puts a stop· to this terror 'it wUI destroy ciYil aviatl'on." Draft, Voting Bargain Asked WASHING TON (UPI) -Senate Democratic leader Mike Mansfield today proposed raising the draft age lo 21 unless the voting age is lowered to 18. Mansfield urged Congress to lower the voting age for all elections either through a •constitutional amendment or by legislation. _ "If they (the 18-year~lds} are denied this right," Mansfield said, "we should seriously consider as part of any future draft or "conscript.Ion law that no man be subject to the draft unless he can vote -and that would mean 21." Mansfie ld's call for lowering the votlrig age r~ived sp~d suppoi;t•dur- ing a brief Senate debate. But some Senators questioned whetlie1 ll.eould be accomplished in r..ny way but lhrough a Conslllutlonal amendmenl Third ABM S.ite Req·ueste·d . . Laird Tells Senators of So viet Missile Tests . . : : WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Peplagan, citing Soviet mlasile tests since the strategic arms ta1ks began, asked Congress today (or approval of a third Safeguard Antiballlslic Mis~le (ABM) site and funds for advance work on five more. IJ<feO.. S".J.1ary Melvln R. Laird told tWo Senate commlttees that the thlrd ABM site would be at Whiteman Air Force Bise, Mo. Sites at Malstratn AFB, Mont .• Ind Grand Forks AFB, N .0., were approYed last year. David Packard, Deputy D e f e n s e Secretary, sa)d In a statement, "stnce the beginning of SALT (Slnileglc Anni Llmllallon Taibl In Helsinki Jul 11....,. ber, the Sovtetsi'lave test-nred more than lw1ce as many '1tra\eglc mlssUe:t as we have. · . "It la Imperative that we ct>nt.IOue with our sirategic programs, sucb a 1 I · SafWJard, until and unless wt achieve 1n a~enl wilh Iha Sov.lels which ,will .,.bl• ua to p'reierve !he tJeCUrilJ ol'lhe C<JUD!ry In oome other ... , ... l • RUSS MISSILE FORCE GROWING. SEE PAGE 4 Packard lnalsled Lhal lhe U.S. ABM program had not lnterfared wltb lhe SALT talb,.ICheduled·.to move into full JWin( al Vienna April It. Laird and President Nls:e11. warned last w<elt tblt the Sovlett ..W have .,.. operational ~'"11Iat1c Mi. si!OJ ·(ICBM) than !he ·u-Slates -1,100 to 1,161, wilh 1,llO -- espected by Decomb•m 'lloa U:S fipre doea 1101 Include lhe NIVJ'I Polldo ITld Poseldoo mlPlles, howmir. h'alrd's request for fUndl lor tdvance wort on five more ~e ABM sites would not be a oommllri\1111 to fO ·ahead wllh depio,menl of ABMs. • ' . ~ five would be Iii !he upper Norlhwt!~ probablY In Washlq!on Slale ; Warren AFB, \Vyo .. the Mlofil.-n •. Oblo bordor 1iu; the Wubiqtoq. D:c. • I • area; and •Southern New England, po'ssibly In MtSiachusetts. . No •P!'clflc Sites were mentioned other · than Warren AFB. The first tali:k in the, preparatory.work Is to lbok"for c:ovemment-owned land In the arw and to ,..k olher property if no tecSer..i.pr~ ts1available. , LablJ teitllJed al I join! meetinl of !he Senale Aniled Services Commlltee and ~ Senate def..,. approp~ - -lilltte,O. Tb•,. meeting ""' ~'but lhO P<Dtqon made public portlciaa. ol hla ~s.=iy.c.m 1s ~d to the f\lll 12 slles oriaJnaIJy envlaloned. II '190 W11Uld tncfude •tacementa In cen· lrll Calflomla, ~m Callfornla, cen- tral Ttxas and the ~-Georg\I area. Lalzld • said the 11!111. coal ol 12 alle!, esUmal«l *'10.3 blRlon !Jal year, had ll'OW1I to •11.1 billion. HI, a(lrlbuled !he ln.,...at to lnllaUon, stretching oul lhe time nied;ed to 1C901plete the proa:ram, · and 'lo design ·ch""'5 .and better esUmt· tloas. - • F • -i OC F 'le Delense Me1'1n .R. Laird 1\11'1 Tuesday lTS t J'. -lhe Penlagon will annouztce: ~~lllHO!ye~ base reductions within the next 30 dayL ft.Obert L. Citron made certain J:.alrd told a news conference that "'wen this morning that he became the over too bases" In the United .states wUI first person to file ror an Orange be involved. County political oH\ce. Citron, a deputy tax collector for He dropped · the remark. without <:SF Studenfs Face Hearings .. .. 10 years, arrived at the county elaboration, during a br1efing . wttfl Two Cal State Fullerton ~tudents ~o Voters Registration ornce at ~:"5 newsmen on the Nixon administration's are accused ot using abusive language a.m., complf!te with 8 tumato crate proposal to broaden the Safeguard an- durlng. a recent speech of Gov. Ronald to sit on, a heavy coa t. a thermos ti missile program. Re•• Ill f d J I l 1· h ri of hol coffee. a radio and a morn-Defense sources Indicated that Lalrd'I -o•n w .act a m n 5 ra ive ea np reference to well over 100 bases bi con- Thursday. Qr. Ernest ·Beeker, dean of ing paper. servallve. Citron. 44, of Santa Ana, seeks to students anDOU~· today. succeed Don s. P.iozley who is The.1! sources spoke of sever.al hµncired The students are Bruce F. Church and retiring. Charles w. Mozley, a bases involved, with outright closing ot David A. Mji.cKowiak. brother of the Incumbent. is cam-reductions. ' ' " paign manager for the new can-Some major facUILiea may face the ex. The colle~;• fle~~. are separate didate. tnclud!N some Mavai ahip yardS, tt wat rroni miaC!!nieanor coinplaints filed Previously Joe R. Greene, 48, or indicated. . against the pair by 'the Fullerton Poli~ Tustin, associated wllh lle tax col· Laat OCtober, Lalrd ordered the shut- De artrn I Th • ··• duled f Ieclor'• office •Ince 1963 took out ling diiWu or reduclloo ol 1111 ·bua In lhe P ep . ey were o:MOue or ar-papers for the ~t. Unit.eel States i nd oveneaa at a ralgnment today ln Fullerton Myiµcipal calculated annual rate of about $G09 Court. ·• • million. 1~--------......... ~~~~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; ....... ~i;;;;;j" I ' .. ' . LAST WEE 'KI : .. i. ,. ~ ".:i AT THUE PRICU(I' ' . . ' . PHONE US ••• COLLECT (213) 728-7283 OR 123-33·11 .. e'llclean • our -enes .. ~··· ... .. I •1: WIDTH ·2~!·w1DTH ·3~!·WIDTH '· Unllntd UI' te J ft, font Unllnecl J' te I' lont Unflntlll 5'· t• t' &.,.. CHAltOI IT! CHA.IO I lTI CHAIGI ITI PRICE INCLUDES TAKING DOWN AND REHANGING·! I . . 48 HOUR . SERVICE! . I P•~n1y1 1xclu1tv1 new pro~111 cl11 n1 all typ11 of dr1p1ri11 .b11utifully1 dr1p1ri11 th1t could n•vtr be cl11ned before liven I . . bt1uty pl11t1 at no 1xtr1 ch1rg1). t.41k11 them look t nd. f11I 1lmo1t like new. We .. ,,.., .... rtmfte .t r•••••I• prfc-.. ·PINNIYS CLEANING SIRVICI . • draperl• • lieclspreada • bla11kt11 • decoratar plllaws ; ~cunt ru91. . . --~~~~~~--~~~~.~--~~ • ' -• > t • • • ! I • A--Doll\. Y 'ILDT -Senate Moves to 'Ell •'Forty patrolmen in Columbus, <Jfdo have been promoted to ser· l¥&nt In the large!! single pn>mo-ilbbar class of the force's history. BUI 11 may be wme llme before the Citizens of th•· town will be able to ideotlfy their new police officers. The city doesn't seem to have <:llOugb gold-plated •ergeanl'• b_id•e• 1!> go around. -~ . ' • Until recentlJI, women 1taN btn barred tram the world marble-playing champiomhipl bfcouse offl.ciaJi were afraid that ahqrt skirt. and tight pm.ti woul.d be a distraction to othtr pla~s. TM captain of a t.o0mttt'1 champonihp ttam f't· ptfed, "Nonsense, most women wear tight.. In any ea.st, tM men should be concentratng on tM QC17W!, not looking at our kMes or bottoms ." • . WASlllNGTOlll (AP) -TIMo S...le focused todly oa men now Jll'Opooa1a 10 broadtn the -ol a ochool lunch bUI af1tr votJnc IO aullloriJe the federal government ~Y the lull Cost ol briJJl-ing free or uetd .. prtce lunches · to needy '¢hool ldren. Amoag the lertes ol am<Mmenla la be offered durti>g !1ocr debale II one by Sen. Jacob K. Javlla (R-N. Y.), making ellatble for school luliebes alt chlldren from famJlles ti. four wttb M,000 or leu annual income. Soviets OaiJn Big Advances In ABM System MOSCOW (UPI) -'!be Soviet Union has broken a lengthy ailence on Its an- UbaJllstle mlsalle (Ami) with clalml the system can knock down incoming missiles "1t great distances irorn the def~ target." The top-ranting Soviet mlUtary man~ Defense Minister Andrei A. Grechko, gave the Soviet ABM brief mention Mon- day In a lengthy report on the slala of the Red army. The artlcle, ln Pravda, waa to mark Soviet Armed Forces Day. Grechko boasted of the masalve of. fenslve nuclear missile capability of the Soviet armed forces, lbeo ..id: "Great changes have taken plact In the A couple takin~ a police "\letter air defense forces ol the com.try. They d;riviDg' coune m England were have at their disposal the capability of iJijured Sunday when the police-r<llahly hiltlng bolb the alrcrut snd Ill< JPan drlver o( their demonstration rockets of an enemy regardless or the car.~ a-hedg,.-Tb&-~-heighl C11C opeed o!,!llib~ and.. Al ~t man al So suSWned minor in Juries. distances from the defeodfid taratt." -•• --TIMo Soviets had long-ren.atned lllent.on their ABMs, presumably to avold lending unlnlantiooal support to NU.on ad· -mmi!traUon arguments ln favor Qf developing an American .. Safeguard" system. For eif}rt weeks, S.m Friend of Aldenbol", Englind sean:bed through 500 homes looking for bis missing cal He finally found the fickle feline sitting on the roof of an abandoned house. "I knew I would find bim one day," said Friend. • Kennedy Urges Pulling. Troops Out of Europe Javila -provlda Io r equivalent ad].-for dJU.,..nt .WO families. UJMler the <UITODI program, Jn. dlvldual ochool , prlndpals detennlne ellglbillly by ~ widely varyln1 alaodardt. ..:.. · Sen. George s/McGovem (D-S.D.), chalnnan of the . tPecw Senoia hunger corwnlttee, -la· IO II approval Mon· daf ol the ammdment 1lepplng up fed· eral partlclpailon la, the progr•m. The 100 percent_financine feature over- . rode the s..ate ~ COmmltt.<, which hod wrlllen tnlo the mwure au- lhorlzaUon '" the federal government to pay IO percent ol lbe COii. Other provlalona ofth e McGovern am- endment w'N'd: Require tach •late to submit a plan designed to bring every school district and every eUclble child under the na· tlonal tcboQl lunch program. Requfre each llcllool to report monthly Ille number or· children eligible !or fr<e WASHINGTON CUPI) -Sen. Edward M. Kenoedy (J>.Mau.), called today !or wilbdrawaJ.of more than balf of all U.S. trQolls. ltaUooed in we!tem Europe. Kennedy was the first of a· procession of senaton appearing before ' Demu:ntic Party commltlee studying re-arrangement of national priorities, an arm of the Democratic Pol:cy Com· mlltee. SENTENCING OF CHICAGO 5 PROTESTED Mn. Abbie Hoffman Check• Not•• In New York Park . ' ... Kennedf, Senala Democrallc whip, ' quesUooed a series or items In the Nixon .administraUon's defense budget, in- cluding fwtber deployment of the Safeguard ABM system which he opposed In Ila Initial form lad yesr. 'Chicago Seven' Atto.:Uey Confident of Reversals Britain 's Prince Charles ha& a part in a Trinity College Comedy Revue entit~d "Quiet Fl-Ows the Don." Bt.· sidts the bubble-blowing sequence, tlie prince sits on sta ge i1l a gas mask 0 11d swim Jirl1 and <recites /1U lines. • In Atlanta, Ga., Vice President Spiro Agnew declared he will not cease his public statements in the face of liberal criticism. According to Agnew, "To penetrate that driv- el disseminated by the liberal news rnedia, we need a cry of alarm ... a strong voice to penetr,1te the ca- cophony of seditious .drlvel eman- ating from the best-publicized clowns of our soicety and from their fans in the fourth estate." "Last year J believed that S<1feguard was a waste of money:" Kennedy said. .. Nothing I've heard or learne<. since then had changed my views." Another contribution to cutting c:osta, he said, would be to bring home "the ma- jority" of 320,000 troops:, with 250,000 dependents, in western Europe. "We should . . • let the lnc:reaslngly prosperous nations of Western Europe contribute more to their own defense," he said. He added, "I believe that If wt ex- amine our national situation with a new realism we will see that wt are truly tak- ing riskl only If we faJI to reduce and reallocate military spending," he said. U.S. Libraries Shut NEW DELlll CAP) -The U. S. Information Agency Is closing it.~ libraries ln five state capitals within 90 days at the request of the Indian govern· ment. The libraries are located in the clues of T r ivandrum, Hyderabad, Bangalore, Lucknow and Patna. WASHING TON (UPI) -Defense A~ t.orney William M. Kuns\ler f'eels there is a "reuonable ~ce" hlg'her courts will reverse the contempt and incite to riol convictions leveled against the Chicago conspiracy delmdants and theJr at- torneys. The appeal.a, which Kunstler said would be. made within two weeka, are being fU· ed to overturn lhe convictions of Abbie Hoffman, Jerry Rubin, ReMie Davis, Tom Hayden and David Dellinger for croaaln, State lines to incite rlot' during the Democratic National Convention - a vlolaUon of the 1967 Antiriot Act. Kunstler, in an interview from his home in Mamaroneck, N.Y., said "I think there, la a reasonable chance that it (the ap~I) will be successful." "An I can ® is just hope that we pruent a good case -as 1 think we will -and that they react accordingly," he said. Kunstler said Prof. Arthur JGnoy of Weather Mo·stly Dry, Mild Arctic Air Sends Mercury Plunging in New England Ca,lfond• IOOTHl•N C#i\.ll'Olil:NIA -Mo&tly cltol.ltlY T1t11.dt'J' flltM IPf'ftdl111 a.outh 0-CO.till ·~ ITIOUfllll!t l •H t w!lh ,_ lhowen I/Ito l'IOl'lhlrn l11l1tl0t Wtd· Midt'J', A llllle w1r1mr moll ,,.,, Tllttdlr nlthl; Gvstt wlr.dt fnd coolt r n.tt'I tnd Wiii _.ti-WldfotM11r. 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" l"ortWortl'I " • ·" Ftnno " " ·-" " -· n " T 1(1111.a CITY M .. 1..1•1/-~ q ·--" ll M""'' " " Ml-POii' • " Hwo,.e.rn: " • -· ... •I " Pfllrlll Pl1tle M " Olik1'11d " " Otr;I"'°""' C:l!V • " ... .... .. " ,, ... P•t'" $"""'' • M Peso lltotilu " .. ·-· " ff Plllsb\1'911 • " ...... .. .. llt•l!kl Cll'I' • " lled llufl " .. ·-" " lil tPl"""!O " ~ S11t Ltll• t !IY " ~ a..11 or"' .. ,. •• Mii Pr111ClKO .. .. 111111• " " 1-M .. .. ,.., ... .. " W1t111ntlon " " \ Rutger! University, attorney Leonard Weiaglass and a number or oUter lawyers will handle the appeals . Disruption Case Could Be Guide For 'Chicago 7' WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Supreme Court today addressed itself to the ques- tion of a criminal defendant who r.houts al a judge and deliberately disrupts a trial. The outcome could be a guide for the "Chicago Seven" appeal and other similar cases. The case concerned William Allen, con- victed In Cook County (Chicago) criminal court for a $200 Lavern holdup in 1966. He was sentenced lo a jail term of from 10 to 30 years for anned robbery. Allen refused a court appointed lawyer but I.be judge as,,igned an attorney to "sii In and protect the record.'' While the jury was beiri.g chosen. Allen began to use abusive language to the judge and finally said, ""·hen 1 go out for lunchtime, you're going to be a corpse here." The judge warned "one more ouUireak of that sort and 1'11 remove you from the courtroom." Allen Ignored the warning and was remov~. Later the judge told him he could come back if he behaved . But Allen said: "There is going to be no proceeding. rm going to start talking and rm going to keep on talking all through the trial . There's not going to be no trial like this .. "' . w Rhine Flooding Reaches Capital BONN, Gmnany (AP) -The worst flooding In two decades brought the Rhine River to the doonteps of the West German parliament and the Soviet Embassy today. Documeola In sn IMel to the parlia· me:nt were endangered by the river, which had risen 18 feet above normal, At the U.S. Em.busy, sa.ndbais were emplaced around the compound. Floodllli In other parla.of ., .. i.m and southern Germany reached n e a r catastrophic propo~ons after rain an"d a sudden thaw cau.R the Rh/rie, Main and Danube river And their tributaries to ove rflow their bnnkJ. The Uoodin& has claimed at least Uvi liVes. -\ • ·- 1.-and the number who actually rece!Ved them. Bue Ille allotmenl .of federal lundl to . each stala for free and redoctd price JUn. ches on the number of f.amllija 1n U,. state •Ith annual tncomu of M,000 or less. The Agrlcullure ~ttee bid v<>lad to 1111ke the Jncome·f-13,000. Also adopted 38 to M wa! a· McGovern amendment to make an addlUonal $1DO million available .for the school breakfast program over the next three year1. State vs. lJ .S. ' ~ South DUatan tald this tboukt mal:e It J>O"lble -to clft fr« bruklalla to thrff million ~ c\IDdren by lfll. TbiJ program his -a pllol 11a1e bUt now abould be ~. he talc!. McGovern aald Prtaldent 'Nixon hu proclaimed a goal ol tielng that a !ne lunch ls provided to evuy. American child who needs It 6y nen Thankqlvlng. Bu~ he added, funding Jeveli SOU1ht by Ille pr<sldenl, will fall WI million 1bort of meelinl lbla 1oal. Georgia Caught On Sc-hool ·Laws ·~)'. . By Uidlflf,,.... lalm-al Georgia oc~ ·~JI}• were caughl lo- day beJweeo· i:dtfili:jli11 alate and federal laws on d~ea:at1on. 'Ibey fa'Ced a ~r:~c::re:~ •. ~1n'. ':~~ ot !ederat Gov. Lesler'Maddoi<)lpnday signed an act patterned all<r '~·New ,York Slato freedom or Choice ~ 1tatute tblt pro- hiblta race as a factor in:the aal&mne.nj of students to &ehoolf. 'lbe biU ls a.CCPY ol an antlbusing law enacted in New York last year. that Georgia's law includes teachers as well as students in transfer restrictions. ~ Georgia school di.ltrlcts, .in-cludmg -Atlanta. au uiiifer federal eourt- ordered desegregation programs that call for the transler of students and teachers to achieve a racial balance. The first test of the new law was to come today in HOU!ton Co\mty, Ga., where about 130 teachers and 3,500 pupils Hanoi Moving -~ War Materiel To North Lcws SAIGON (UPI) -North Vietnam is moving war materiel southward along the upper portion of the Ho Oil Minh Trail in northern Laos at the highest ltvel or the Viefnam war, o£tlcial sources said today. Tralfic ls "tremendous,'' the tourcet said. There was no immediate explanation whether the men and materiel are for a new ofrensive in South Vietnam or to back: the North Vietnamese offenalve that overran the Plain of Jars and then ca~ lured the town of Muong Soul today. U.S. military sources have predicted a spring campaign by Communist troops would begin sometime next week. But the official sources said North Vietnamese and Vlet Cong units in the south were in· capable or launching a sustained of- fensive because of a lack of manpower. The official sources sald the traffic was even higher than the period preceding the Tet o£fensive of Februs.ry, 1968. There have been almost daily r_eports of American bombings along the so-eaJled trail which Is a network of jungle trail!, roads, rivers and bypaths. The United Slates s·ent more waves or B52s Into Laos today to pound the supply lines to the North Vietnamese troops and also resumed 852 strikes in Sooth VIU- nam after a 24-hour suspension. The stratofortresses dropped moi:~ than 180 tons of bombs this morning on guer· rilla troop concentratloM and base camps near the central highlands city of Ban Me Thout 165 miles northeast of Saigon, military spokesmen sald. Dollar 'Rival' Urged in Europe PARIS (AP) -Financial leaders 0£ the European Common Market' agreed today they want to set up a European currency, a rival to the dollar in world trade. It will be a long, uncertain job, IUlng 8·10 years. Much will depend on wbethfr the European currency will include the British pound. Britain does not belong to the Common A-1arket. but negotiations may start this year. ,. were to be shilled In aJederal d_... tion program. "I am urglng'the educaton tllroughout Georgia not to place thermelves in viola- tion of the laws of the state," Maddox 11aid Jn slgnfng the new law Monday ln Atlanta. "I am sure this is a position they would not want to place themselves in, because they all are law-abiding citizens." • . Three other JOUthem slate& :... South Carolina, Tennessee and Louisiana - have passed slmllar freedom of choice acts based on the New York law and Alabama and Missisaippl are considering IUCb move. . . In Soutb Carolina, bow ever, aponsors of. Ille act tald federal law bu prloiil)' oter &tale law and the move simply wu to dramathe the inequality between federal enforcement of desegregation Jaws ill the North and Sooth. Gov. Albert Brewer told Ille opening nl a special session of the A I a b a m a legislature Monday night its only ~ was to enact the New York statute "to give the school children of Alabama the same rights that school chlktren have in other states in this country." He ttetived a rousing ovation. In Mississippi, State School Supt. Garvin Johnston told a legislative com- mittee 1.fonday massive desegregation had resulted in a total loss of 27 ,260 stu- dents -in Mississippi. Many of the child- ren now are aUending private schoolt. Less than a dozen ot the 562 white students in the Benton County, MJu., school district reported £or classes Mon- day, leaving the ac:hools almost entIJ:ely to 1.198 black pupi~. The shill ol elemenlary school sluden:la under new deaegregatlon orders ·~ent very well" Monday, according to Caddo Parish (county), La., officials. 3 Suspects Not Kin of Governor LAS VEGAS (UPI) -The widow of a former Nevada governor has denied reports three women narcotics suspected over the weekend are distant relativu of her late hllllband. Mrs. Vail Pltlman, whose husband was governor in the 1940s told police the women were not related to him and ahe Y:ould prove it by furn ishing family records. The women, Lenora Pittman. 59, who claimed she was the niece of Pittman: her daughter, Ava, 41, who said she was hi s grandniece ; and Paula Linn Pittman, 21. reportedly a gran<!daughter, were ar- rested Saturday night on suspicion of possession of heroin. U. John Sleeper, head of the police department's narcotics division said ~tonday he was more inclined to believe the governor's widow than the suspects. Poll Lists Dec1-ease In >Nixon Popularity NEW YORK (AP) -The Harris Poll rtpOri! that President Nixon's nallonal popularity has declined from S2 to S8 per- cent since Dectmber. The decli ne was directly .due to public dissatisfaction w I th administration measures to curb tnnaUon and the state ol Ille economy, the poll aald Monday. The President was given negative marks on "keeping down the cost ot liv- ing" by a margin of 88 to 27 percent. Pani~ Over Pill Woman Blames Senate Hearings w ASHING TON (AP) -A woman birth control specl11lst told a -Senate au~ committee today thJt Ill hwin,gs into the salel)' of the plll hid c:realed tn- temaUonal pan1c and prompted• wave of unwanted pre~ Dr. Elizabet!( B. Coralel1 ol Cohtmhla Unlvmlty laid a s11pup In prqnancles "strtltu profound fear tn the hearla of those .,ho d"'l dally with .......,, and populallon problem~" She also critW:ized some of the con- clusloM reached by wltntaet at htartngs last month by the Senaio monopoly su1>- c<1mmittee. Testimony then linked the pill to scores of su1pected 1lde ertec:tt. in- cluding cancer~ fataJ blood clot ting, diabetes and heart trouble. "Fron\ a purely scientific point of view, much of the lnformetlon displayed thus far can be likened 14 lbe relationship belweeo a drunken man snd a lig!lipost -more for supPort than for U- tumlnatiou,'' she said. Dr. CoQuell, a mother of six and the first ..-. to las!Uy at the heartnp. said even the most vlole11t of critla of tbe pUI bad to coocede h1I data WU Umiled snd lbal many of his conclU1lonl were baled on Ulllllpported speculaUon, She c:ommtnted In lasllmony pApared for dtlivery her ... lbe panel headtd ~ Democrat Gaylord Nelson of Wlacontln. The subcommittee 11 rcsumlna ror tW1:1 days hurings on the pill. Dr. Connell w11 Invited lo le!Ufy 1t the Wllttl'lCt ot RepubUcan member1 or t h e sut>- commitlee. Some of the GOP membe:rti have Mid the hea,rlnp and others ln a three-year probe by Nelson of drug I~ dustry pricing end practices ha\'I boen biased apinst Ille Industry. • I I • I I , I I ( ' I , I .. FouQ~D vane,:. . I > ' . • • • ·r-.,,'• l1ililll , .., -""' ., •: I ' N. Y. S.toelul ·. voe. 63', NO. '40, 2. SECTIONS, 24" PAGES . . ' 'oRANGE c6ufiT,Y .. c;A;llfoRNIA TUESD~Y, ~RUAR!:.1.4. -I~~"' -,TEN CENTS • • " -! t ,f ~ ~ !If' • 0 ·• Ah·o.rtion~ ~ ,e·onf lict .High Court~ Wqn't Review Old Laip l\'ASH!NGTON (UPI) -The·Slipreme Court ducked an opporiunlly to ilep mto the11bortion law c.controversy today, turn- ing down 1 Pl<• from Ca!l!Ornla for rtvle" or coofilcllng Judicill decisions In a cue lnvolvlnl: Dr. Leon Belous of Beverly Hllll. · The 'hlidt order dei!fing "vi.". lefl standlnc 1 '\&le aupreme COlli't opihiOn hot.pn1 that 1bortlon Int -not broadly inv"""·•'-..,'•'riclds IO-llf• and'to chooii;.-toi-.chllilr...: • • * "* * High .(;our.t · • That oplnlon struck' down as Ui'I· constlWtionally .vague a C 1 11 f o r n i a statute , pet'Qlltting I.JI abortion to be leaally W(ormed on 1 woman 'on!y·When "necessary to pre!erve her lite.'' Sub~uently, a federal jU111e In the District of Columbia, leaning heavily on lhe Callfornia opjnlon, 5'tnlc.k down a f~ral law in the district that permUted 1abortlon only when "nece.aary f0r the _pruervatjon ·of the mother'J life <lr health." .. Thus no licetlMd doctor can be pro- secuted (or. ~r~ abortloi>a, and theoretkally they can be had for the 1U:- ing. I • •' Some 35 states have traditional abor- tiM lawa bjtM:d on phruin1 aimllar to tbe invalidated D.c: and C.1~prnta atatulel ' In two o/ them, Maaaclalaeill .,;.. Ne.w Jersey, the state's hlsheal court bas upheld'the triqlµonal law. · In its pe'ltiori . for ·Supreme Courl (See ABORTION, P1ri ZI Harh~i· Bo~d Dissolve .Bill . ' . . ' . Clouds Fate Ot.~J,7....__,_, lkatmg~ set""'--·. ._.._, D.t.IL'r.'iilLOT•S,....f'--, . . ' \ . . WHILE COLLEAGUES AWAIT CORQNER, OFFICER WILLIAM KYSOR WARO~OfF.THl;'CURIOUS· • In Newport's F•shionable B•ycrest Section, the Nt.ighbors Find • Body NewportMan, 60, Slain; Possible . Bm·glar Victim By JOHN VALTERZA Of "'9 Oaily 'lief St.tr The body of a fiO.year-0\d Newport Bea.ch man, who was ·possibly the victim of a llhootoUt with burglar:s, was . found •prnled in his front' doorway early _to- d11,• • piltol in bis·haod and a gµnshot wound ln"bi! chest. -- Police tentatively ruled the shootiog a homicide. The "Victim, William Harris or 2012 Anchor Way, was shot to death-possibly by a burglar -sometime before dawn to- dav .Newpt>rt. detectives said. H~ris' body had one bUllet hole in the lower left chest made by an unknown ~·eapon. Several other· bullet holes were found in the welJ.fumished reside.nee in the city's Baycrest subdiv-isioo, Detective Capt. Lou.Heeres said. Harr-is lived alone. He was recently divorced, ·the invesLicator said . The body, lying with the feet ke;eping 11 1ereen : door ajar,' was found by a neighbor ~king his dalfghtl!r to a:bool a~ 7:21 a.m. Two buttons had been ripped off his coat. ' Against a window on the southeast sidr: fJf · tbt house a ladder rested, possibly where the killer or killers entered the gray, hOt18e. Harris wu fully dressed In a gray suit. He was lying on his left side apparently, where he fell after trying to run out of his home. -.. "Preliminary indications show a strong po.uibility of burglary," Heeres said, "but we still aren 't aurt." . Heeres declined to give a model or type of weapon clutched in Harris' right hand. All but, one neighbor said they heard nothil!Jl during the night Butt one woman living next door said she heard C1>mmotion and noises which possibly were shots late Monday night. She did nol investigate, however. The entire Baycrest and WtstcliU area fSft MURDER, Page!) Newland Experiment Teacher Trainees Get • 'Real Thing' in ,.Valley An old concept -that or training classroom teachers··1n model ac:!hools ·on college campuses -bu been Invalidated at Fountain Valley's Newland School wbere-30 to 4>would-be educatora work in a real -school in the real ·wwld. The sch09l has ' JtlSt been selected by Cat State Long Beach as Its first model school to train college graduates · tO become teachers. ' · It's a tough . test tor the pros~tive teachers. They mu~t learn how· to test children to pinpoint their learning defi- ciencies, design 'lessons an~ materiaJ" and to pace lessons according to each child's ability. · But, according lo Mik~ Brick , superintendent of the Fount!Un Valley School District. such tasks are Crucial to the development or teachers and not just tediutn. · ·~ experience and -tralnlng they receive at Newland School give these new teachers an increa.sed skill and com· petence which benefits the children in · lhf:ir classrooms throughout the district,'' he maintains. "For years colleges and universities have been attempting to develop this type of program in on--campus laboratory schools. Not only have campus laboratory schools been extremely expensive, but they were isolated from the everyday situations the teacher faces in the com- munity school. They presented more of an 'ivory tower' experience for the stu- dent teacher." The "associate teachers," as the stu- dent teachers are called at the Newlardl project. are under the supervision of ex- perienced teachers and are awarded a standard Teaching Credential by the state alter successful completion of 1 half-year internship. ln addiUon to providing field b:- perience (or !he associate teachers, Newland SChoof:lrill.olliun\e·tllt'lunction .,,~·· "' . . -·-Cal ' . j/1"111Ga·- in ~ -,.;dlfJtaO,' English, ~ad.arithmetic. 'These ·dema&ratiOns: mlght· be. on1aite •in the ochoOI or•rdaf<d to lhe·college by closed , d.r(.illt 'television, . Video' tape ··or other me8.ns', iccordlng tO Brick. ' Although· Newland~Schbdl 4is. fJ'le c61~ lege'a first. field experience .center, 1lt Is expected that five other centeri will 1be added in' variouJ parta ·of.:..-Souu;ern - California·during the -197G's. 2 County·Women Killed on Ro'ads; . . . -. ·5 Others I~j_ured From Witt Service• A pair. of one-car accidents on~desert and moonlain highways Monday killed two Orange cOunty women and left five other Southland resident& i n j u r e d , authorities :11aid today. Most of Uie victims were tHrown from lhe tumbling vehicles, one of which rolled over twice in the roadway, while the ·other hurtled down a mountain em- bankment. The dead we.re identified 111 Linda D. Bertoldi, 22, of Garden Grove, and Janet G. Bulens,, 19, of 4 Habra. . California Hlghwa)' Patrol lnvesligator~ at Barstow s!Ud the Bertoldl woman's small car hit a median !trip on Interstate IS near the Nevada line and rolled over twice. N·o More 'Tin Can Beach' \ f Federal Grant Aids Cleanup at Bolsa Cliica • By ALAN DIRKJN wide running between tht citie. of Se'll travel traUera•and.5i:;t.ck·up·camper:11 to 011t1t 0111"' '*' , .. " ~ach and Huntington Beach. lt runs U!e the parking,•1<(.. Tf'e Boin OUca Sta te Beach, for years from about Warner Avenue dwn to the -~ buildings lbat will terVe as kno1m as ''Tin Can Beach," is going lo rest rooms and,dreuin« l'OOfM. be e~anred up and ruUy developed for bluff~. -Five ~ bulldin&I for mack vi!llora. The · state will now deveklp the land; -ban, surf 119ird ud·umbrella ~Is. The' news that the .tt.rand will lose its putting in rut rooms, coocenk>n stand!! -n,:~ty-etptM~ staUohs ·along infamous tag came with an an-and parking 1J*e1 for beach Yiaiton. the Jti'etcb, lo lddtUon ID a combined nouncement today that the state had Carl A. Andenon, state deputy director llfegaard and part oftltt. received ii federal grant to acquire a for parks and recre1tlon, said in Los -fio: ~ iCatiorvi one for rom· atrlp ot beach that had been holdtng up Angeles today that the strip had betn ·mercl.aJ ... vehlclei: and one f~r the pUblic .. all the.atale'• planl for Bolu Chica. blocking all the state'1 plarll for the area. AnclettOn did . Dot •have , the coat Of Huntb'IJtOn lleach city officials ind "We coolm't &o iD and clean up ~the the_projee(a: a~blie~ 1 state Parb and Recreation Department trash becaUJe thia: wq private IJM -'•Anderton ,.uid tbe JlolSI Chica 1State. aide! were .fUbilant ovtt today's so-before. Nn that we shJll own lt,"We lhall Beach tw .. exlCtfy •15,40 U\*I fet-tl qubWon. • have crews down the~.t~ It up as .about 214 ~.of ocean1 r The 'lnterlor Department granted the JOon as pusslble. we•u get right on ll. '' least as acm of usable beach.1 1tate s1,m;noo to acquire al>old 30 acres Andtram outlined the project.s the: . _ ner.a .•• estlmale; ~ .~ ..... of al;f:nd<med ' PICH'lc Electric Railroad parks and recreation depariment has 'in pet~, • a':L~ righ(-o!-way between the .l!olsa C)llco .mind for the beach. The p,._b will be And<"°" said the stkte [s SUit< Beach and Pw:fflc'Co"l Highway. part of th! deparlment't requeiu in the cloOely with the city ol'Hlll!tingt<Jo'lleich The 1late will provide matching (unds. 1970-71 !late budget. t.O coordinate development of the11frahlt. The land is R narrow, two-and-thr;.Cf!--2,169 car parklnJ !paces, plus 21 , The city's harbor aad beaches devellp. riuiNr·mlle stretch of sandy l:M!0cff, -parking :11paces ror bu!tls. rtlcnt ~director Vince MoorhOUH con·· a•~ &llahtly more than 100 Cee~ -OH~son arraneemcnts !or l6 ISee SANDBOX. Pa1t,Ji --·- ., . By TOM BAfiLEv7 ,Of .......... _ ............. - Tho United Staie. Supreme Courl fl!day· refused to revJew tbe.~ciml.a Su~ Ccutt's rejec~rof a~~ar,-okl~abr:· , , lion ·law. and. . .,pNrtd 'tofe~ ... ln.,e(r ,, feet, the lower cOurt'! impUed reCopiition of the Therapeutic ~bortioa"Act of 198'1. ' l' . ' Mt\911, or· rathOr °I' lack o/ It, by the high cquit lm~~y" .raiaed'. ~ lion ln Orange Couuty on the tmpact of tfie deci&ion on the case of Dr. Robert CummJng Robb, 87, the Laguna' Beach pflYs.ician reCeiitJy· indicted on abortion chal'ges. It broU(ht, predictably, claims· by each sid'e hr the cbntrnveny ' that the hiih court's slince favored 'trteir...,..uinenb bi the· Rob6 'cateJ i. ' . p -• All*aq.~Anderaon; .-.;ili . 61 ·U.~ .llolb ... •.!ftier, M::i ........ "irptd-thal0 lbe' hJih coort decl>loft ........ bound 1o oo1or ;i11e ~s o1.uy m 11/•1 mliht bt :..-i. to rii!f .. Dr' llolll\:• 1,cuqns.""·'v ... ,.,, · "Whit. u n\Jght·!JO _argued Iha! fhe·h!lh c.Uri;ild net rUlt on the-!161'acl.itSell,Jl can also 'be artued that• the.· COUr11 ~ ni»u rlheiv.l.tal·~ today:."'-a .m~~-~ •til'i ·i.~et.itlo · o/ 'ou~ed alioi'lion sta1µJ;.;"An.ier.:lidald="'Anil '11 should-. be pointed1oUt'thit1the l1t11:-act.•itlelt has not yet beep challenged at U.S. 'Supremt Cotqt 1evtl." · • · · ' · •'11!e\SO:ptrine c6urt iulhl& ·'cOuld CJead', And~raon pnidiCt.e4, to ·the sweeping aside Of abortion 'law a in _many of the ~­ tiQn11 It.ates 'arld ie.ve-CaUlorD.ia with illl . ' "Jtci' W ' ·1rj M lU\:p ',~r. · t': ~~~, ·t1.i;.:~!1~ · 11 . , ' '! : l , ! I N.e~p~rt" r ~!.~:i , .. "admittedly, mOrt liberal law of 11167. G · -, A : ' : ~L •...:J, 1 ~ • "The s1'1fatlon then ·would be contrary 008 JJT.OUllU 1 · to what California Wlnted· ·When the . , e · ~' . , thefapeµtic abortion aci -was palled " · • · · f AridersOn.cemniellled:·•w<'~ -~ · On ·M~ico· Be"'..J...: upholdlr!g an abortion law while phySt-. . . 1 • • • • ~n cians In many ~te.s . wottld be ~g . By~ AilllfON LOCKABrl · · out ·a!>ortlons ·with no fear of purush-. httlM ,,,,.... · ment." ' ' ' ·A local yach~ retumfng trom1 the San Chief °':puty· District A_ t tor n·e Y Die'.gO to Acaj:iulco race was grourWied·on James Enright doe! not see 1t that way: M · · he 1• 1 -' ·1 th . Harbour· Oil Well Owner to' Face ~ Criminal Charge ' a .. wean ,c1 SOftle ..-~ll'3 1 110U o( Sari Diego last Friday. · WOrtt· ieic'hed ' Newport M0nday ·tl'lat the ca1:.a yawl tranqulla n, 01Wned 'arid skippered by Robert A. Ga~ri~· or Newport Harbor Yaeht1Club, fetched rup on the beach at Black Rock,: fO innes !IOllth of Manzanlllo when an anChor line parted. None of the rive persoM on boar<r v.-aS ~rk>usly injured. l\frs. Robert L. Koehler, a guest with her husbend on ·the yacht , suffered 1 fractured shOuJder blade before the ' Party could get ott ·u,e vesael as It rolled In heavy surf. . . K?fhlJif saict-fhe anchor let go ar2 a.m . whne tho'Se aboard1were sle'.eptng. • "The nm Indication we had that anything .was wrong waa When the boat hit the beach," he said. , Koet\ler ytd the patt,y bat( to swim on- ly a feW .'fet't. 'before .getUrlg tO shallow enougti'watel' t'o·wade !\Shore. · ' ' · The str.an·~:pa'ny. 'w.hlch included Mr. and ·!,In". Oqrrllon and il Mexican na- UOnal· Gafrl99n 'halt · hlied at :Acapulco; wer~ aided , by, a ¥exican f~mlly wl1l,cti liyed ,iJ 1 a cocohlit p)a'ntatJO., ileu: where 'U\e bOa.t w~nt igrowid. · ·· The,;~~an ·retiner; too~: ti)<,. perly e-H "'ay to lMan.zal'llllo ,In• a trutk:'and f/l'Y ,. ... iPI< \0 hflt I lixl 'the r.it Of ~ Waft} ,._ .' ' ' • . ~ IKGl!Jii.ri' rtoow home MOnd<? 'bOl )lie: 9•n'ltpnij•n1'itidl 'In Mexico' to~ L (me..r.· ,. ---v.ace. -i., . . 'i.,1er, -~;Jrift"~~.-,,.., ~J.~Jf'tl\<·~~J ,~~-:rv~~ .. : ~~~~ r ..... ~,..,. ·dji;tlcil\.. """' the • bottom .... ,..l!oui'7 aamaftcf. 'I I ~ ' ' Ko.lite; ~ Carri•"',~ oli t radio Maydi~, (dlsj....,) m...,., ~\h!I/ bOtt went olll1ond.-IM P"'oll!Y ~., w.. rroni thi Cool G~anl 11 Ml1n\l,.F1&. OatrilOn al.o» fired fln"'8 ind--• _.. lkt.,A(X)IDINT, P~I)'' • •, T~ as9e.mbly. bl~I on dl~luUon 'of the Ontnge Counly Harbor Diatrkt will come up for he~tng· by Uie AUembly LoCal G?ve~ent Com,mJttee 10(1 Tbuna,.; March 12, Assemblyman John V. Briggs (R·Fullerton) AMounced today. The measure calls upon ,the rounty superviaorai•to, hold a Speeiat electfon to place the questio'n . or the diltrict'.1 future before voter!. ln addition to Briggs' bill, another mea- sure authored by Assemblyman KeMeth Cory ('():Anaheim) pro~ing ex°pui1on of the h'arbor district would be hurd al the sa'me li~e. · "The full quesUon of the harbof diitrict will be in f~nt :of tht-Coinmiuft ill lhis huriz;!g1'"•BtiW'said. . . llriQI ai.o, said the•'Lea~ o1 ae ... ' whl<h ~ ~;..,.ltd !he" ~t!Oo .i the Hat'tior: Dlatrlct Wiii be nl'fU'!nted at the ·helrhir.The hear!na wlll he .held 11 1:46 p.m: ·1n r00m .2111 ol the alll<·ca~ Ital. . . ,r U' the· measure "paaea Oie ~et Jt· 1¥ill then be hard an. the i.aieembly lloor·and U approwdllben wilfhe r.r.~ red, lo· a ·aenatt· committee tot• 'futtber hearihgs. · . ' Spot Was· Fine For Fishing But It's Illegal . The art or~~ a good fiabermaft-b 'to find a good spot About ii>.rishermen lhouJtht Ibey found parathse Monday at the Up of ·the HUJl. tington Beach PJer. There it wu, fiibiilC holes cut ln the planka, room 1for every~. All they had to do was-move a few little fences, probably there to·teep out bird watchers. · "They were having a ball," commented Vince_Mooi·house, dlrecior of harbor1 and beaches. "But : they were fishing . in a hazardous area· and we had to nm them out." The . fiahennan'a paradi.!e they found was actually a purUon of the pier being prepared for construcUon work to flJ rot.- ling timbers and weakened fJooring. "In A week we plu to. cloat the entlre Up of the pitr while 1 ZOO-foot section ~~ repaired. The rest of the pier is and will be oPen," said Moorhouse. .., Once work staru, tH. ocean end of·~ pier will be cloltd to everyone -btid watchers and fishermen alJJte -for about lJO.tO days. · - For lhe present fishermen are uked ~ _have a Uttle patience and leave the CCIII· st.ruction. t>vr"icades UP. -those hoJea m the f\oormg are no( for Cln>pplng !Ina. I . ; ., ' 'We•tller I 1 ! , I The nk:e aprtng~lk• weather 1111)' , be on its way out u the weathv- man predlcla 1 ~chance ol. raiJl tonight, aleng wtth tlOme gulltJ' winds,· The rllo might 115( 1bou\ IL-1-'., 1 ~. d-.>'S• I ! ; INSIDE ToD.\.'Y ! 1 ' ·"' ' -· I • I , DAJLY PILOT H ,,__-P .. e I SANDBOX .••. ftnDtd tbal the city wu. lll aareement w1th'Ule llale on lllortllne de'Ytlopm"'L Moorbaule wu elated at the •~ q&'leM'N' "Jt'• uoUtei' ltep in belptac -• -...... ,,,.. the d\1 "' lllmllncton Beach. It wtll be • big 1d- dltlon to the cunmunl\1. "Eveeyone is talking about presuving open space, but !l's good to see ~ Is being done aboot It. 'J'hls ls a bli lf.ep In the total dovtlopmenl al the wbote coasWne." Moorhoose also hoped that the alste's SUC1*1 wou.Jd'belp the city ln U.s bld for funds to ~ 1 2\lrmile liretch owned by Ibo Hun\Jnct<>c Belch Compony and thus link the Huntington Beach State Part, tbe municipal beach, and Bolsa Chica beach Into one vast strttch of publicly owned aad publicly mainta ined oceanlronl • Frol!l Page 1 MURD ER •. _. ban been plagued by bUl'Jlara in """11 month&. While detectives ·1rom the buraJar1 deloll talked lo reslclenls of the quiet neighborhood, patrolmen ICOU1'fJd bulhes, planters and tr!Jb cans aearchlna tor weapons. They·ttimed up nothinJ:. Harris, reUred, had lived lo the aru for at. least 10 years, hls friends aald. He was described as a good-na~. even. tempered man who had lived alone for ye&t'I. The house ... med lmmJculately kepl The landscaping has been k e p t manicured. Neighbors seemed miffed that they had heard nothing through the nl&hl "I can't understand WI not hearing anything. I guess we~ all 10 inslde and Jock thlnp up Ught and doo'I bur·what ·aoes on-lo-llle-.-td," -lhock,_ ed. woman said as abe gazed across the atreeL . Harris' body WU removed to Baits Corona dtl Mar Mortuary. No nest of kin for the dud man hive been locate<!. He bad no children, po!Jce a.aid. Missing Woman Safe Back Home A mJuin& 'ffuntingtoQ Beach woman, who Jell behind a d.,.rled car and clolhlng In the El TO<o area, bu turned up alive and well wtlh her partnla in Sheldon, Iowa, aceordlng to Detective S<rpant Monty MeKennon. Sherry F. Madison, '4. of 17llt Goldtn West Sl, a former teacher, wu the tub- jtct of a wide pollct search, Including the Hun\lngtoll Btach p0llct helicopter, -n her car and some clothing wu found two weekl ago, deserted on 1 lonely atretch of El Toro Road. s11. MeKtnn0n aald Sherry'• alster pbooed blm over the weekend to say that the girl waa at the famlly home In 6beldon. A pllooe call to Sheldon police confirmed the report, he aald. No explanaUon was given for her 1lr'a.rlp disappearance and the matter is now clooed, aald polle<. 5 F ile Papers In Westminster ThrM ew candidates and two ln- cumbent.s ha\'e filed nomination papers for the April 14 Westminster dty council elections. 1be newmmen are Sat Guzutta, 34, insurance agent; William C. French, 42, co:nputer systems 8dmlni~tor, and J . Michael Bish, lnsuran« agen They will seek the seats of I bents Phlllip L. Anthony, 34, an a pace research and program manager 111d Buel Jarrett, 581 a retired furn! man· ufacbJrtr. Both will seek reelect! • ac- eor<lln@: to City Clerk Kathryn ll r. Deadline for filln& nominailon papers WU Feb. 19. , DAILY PILOT CkANGfi. CO.UT PUIUS..INO COMl'Al'ft "•bert N. Wewl PrM:otnl w4 l't*lllMI' J•c\ a.. c •• ,.1 Via l'miltftl ""0..-1 ~ 'tlio,..•• K .... n . ""' 'f1i,..,., A. M.,,h;..,. IM.....,.. Uilw Al~ert W. l1H>s ,._i., ••• u ... H..tt ..... IMcll otfit• 171lS .. ,,, 1011,,,.,,4 Merfl11t M dr..11 r.o. 101 790, tt••• --.. Lt011M '4ldl1 m ,..,,., .. _ 0..11 ~I J:llt W.1 lty !ttrtet H....,..t hlell: #II Wini .. ,. I~ Allen· Files -For Rew..n· Donors Bestowed CTitsade Gives Volunteer Awards__ 01.her enlertainen will he 1-!lke Minor, CHtar ol CBS televlalon's 1(PeMIQolt JunctklG. •• Where tlae Boy• Are Sandra Vesper Is a Sidney, Auatralia, model who llli~• lo apend some time-ctn the beach. She11 reuon enough, jt would s~ _for som'-of tht boy• to sptnd their time at the beach, too, It is sununer down under, you know. Abortion Law in State Unchanged , Lyne~ Says . SAN FRANCISCO CUPl) -Attorney court left standing a 1tate Supreme COUrt General Thomu Lynch said today ruling that the law may not invade a refusal by the U.S. Supreme Court tO woman's right to choose whether to bear review California's old abortion JaW will children. make no chma:e in the state's current That opinion struck down an (lid la'tP on the subject Calllomia statute permittlni: an abortion The h!Jb court in a brief order todly only when necessary to save the mother's refuted to review decisions involvtn1 Dr. lile. Lton BelOUI of Bevtrly I!ln.. 'Ille hi&h Lynch pointed Out that the lllate ·bu 1 ·already replaced that lllatnte with th< From Pqe I ABORTION ••. rtview, Callfomi1 ubd not so much thlt the Call!omla Supreme Court be rtversed as that some clarity be brought to the confusion surroundlng "the clear conflict ~'hich now exists among the bighest courts o( three atates and the District of Columbia.'' The Callfomla statute was adjudged in- valid aner It had already been replaced by liberalized laws permitting •bortion when bearing the child would injure the mother'a physical or mental heahh or when the pregnancy was the result (lf rape or incest. Similar Uberalliatl(lns have b e e n enact.ed in other 1tate1, but none has been challenged in higher courts yet. although the American Civil Liberties Ubi(ln and (lthers are preparing such moves. As atale<l by California, the iasues the Supreme Court sh(luld decide are whether the preservation of the mother'• life is 11ufflclently e11ct to form a basis for limiUng permissible abortion, a n d whether a atate has "sufficient com- pellln1 lnteresl at aUlke to alJow,the: state to regulate a woman's fundamental right to termlnate unborn life." Mail Delivery May Be Started In Rural Areas Hpme mail delivery may be aOOut lo C(lme to resldenta of two or thote pic- tureaque holdouts to modern post.Al service In the heart ol West Orange County's urban sprawl -Sunset Beach and Surfside. 'nle preclae areu lnvol\·td are stnall, however, and home delivery '1t11l only be made lf a majority of the reside nts re· qUtJt It by filllo1 out I form al their U.S. Post Office branch. Congressman Cralg R. Hosmer (R- Long Beach) aMOUnced today th1t under new rural deli very guide.lines reve1led by Poslmas, r Ge.rieral Wlntoo 1.1. BkJunt, the home dellverr. l• avallsble. Cltlunl Uvlng eq than a quart.er mil& from elthtr the Surfalde or Sunstt Buch Poll Offlet, howevtr, must still pick up their mall in person. · If they 11\lt more than 1 h1U mUe. rrom the branch, they ore sUll lnelll!ble for home delivery, dUf to lack or ean1er1. "It la lmportart to point out that thla new 1e.rvlte will be 1v11Jable to lbe resldenta ot these arei1 ()l\)y ii a ma· jorlty requeat I~" llld Congres11n>11 Hosmer. ' new therapeutic abortion act, which authorizes a committee of doctors to order an abortion when the mother's "phyalcal or mental bealth" would be Im- periled. He Indicated the fact that the old law la already moot may have be.en me re.uon the U.S. Supreme Court rtluttd to hear il The new law also permits abortion when the child would be the ruult or rape or incest. Lynch aald it hu already been chaUengtd at lea.st twice in the lower courts. In Sacramento, Sen. Anthony C. BeUenson, author of the 1967 liberalized statute, praised the court•a rullq and Nld It "enchancea tht validity" of the. California trfounal'a ded&ion. However, the Beverly Hll1I Democrat noted thal "if we hadn't superleded the old law with my therapeutic law, we wouldn't have any reitrJctiona (on abortions) at this Ume. Long-time Demo E1nma Miller Dies GROVE CITY, Po. (AP) -Emma Guffey Miller, at 95 the oldest member of the Democratic National Committee, has died after suffering a stroke. Mr11. Miller secoltded the nomination in 1928 of Al Smith, a Roman Catholic, although 32 years later she supported Lyndon Johnson over John F. Kennedy. Mrs. Miller, admitted to Grove. City Ho!pllal Monday, died several hours lat.er, a hospital spokuman said. She was active in the llgbl for women's suff'rage aod for ending prohlb!Uon. She attended her nrst con~tlon In 1924. At tht 1968 convention In ChJcago 1he recalled how back in the old daya she went by traln instead of flying. P opulation Boost Studied in Valley Memben of the Fountain Valley City ~II will huddle with offlclab of Foun- tain Valley School District al I o'clock tonight, In the Community Center to discuss a rapid rise In the cll)''a popula· Uon. New pro)•ctloni show the city nuring the 40,000 mark by the end <l the yur, represenUnc a lharptt populaUm in- crease than originally .expected. The City Council 8'ked lor joint lludy swlooa with vsri()W achoot boMdl Mt'V- llli tht tlty to Worm them o/ tht new populaUon figures and allow them Ume lb . plan for it. , current population ol Fowitaln Valley • ls Jusl ov~ 301000. • c To Board Supel"llJor Allon E. Allan made hls,bid fot re-elecUon to the ll'Uth D11trtct seat on the Board. of Supervisors offldal today by being (lne of the first of • line of can- didates for public oftlce to file w1th the county clerk. Allen. 72, of Laguna Beach, put his name to documtnls that lllllOUDce his fn. tenUon to aee.k: a third four-yw-t.enn on the board. Allen will be oppootd lo the June pdmary by .. vtnp aiid loan Htcuttve Ron CUpera (lf Udo Isle, Costa Mesa ci- ty COW>Cflman ltobert Wllaon and I can- didate \o be named by °""""'" of an anU-Allen recall movamant lbroolchout the Fifth Dlatricl Ooonty Clerk William SI John ,alao ae> c:epCed Dllnp today -the lll'lt clay for such nomlnatiom -county' recwder J. Wylle Carlyle;' buslnesaman Joe R. Gr-and county olllctal David G. Hitchcock and ltobert L. Ci-who are all candldateJ for the ollfce ol orange County tax .collector. · -_ Also llled was the appllcaUon ol Bernard Wocher a candidate~for a seat oo the Fourth Dlatrtct Boaid of Equallza- lioo. bate filings todoy Included that of Lacuna Beach attorney Wlll!im Wilcoxen u a Republican cancUdate for the 3Sth Congre&a!OOAI D!llrlct; A.oaemblymm Rebert Badham who ls ,..king rHltc- tion lo the 71111 District; A.aemblyman Rebert Burke, ol the 70th Dltlrict and Congreaaman James B. Utt oi Santa Ana. Also ac<eplad by SI John wtre the fillnp al SberW Jamea. M~llck and Manhall Norris, the SUperio1'.Ceurt cltrk who wUl endeavor in June~ to replace Mliif<:k In lliO oflliea ol iherill and-couo- ty coroner. Benefit Dance For Valley Youtl1 Set for Friday The Troika will headline a benefil dance open to all high school &tu.den!.! In Fountain Valley, Friday night in the com· munity center, 10200 Slater Ave.. , Donations from the. dance -8 p.m. ·to midnight -will be turned over to the newly established teen problem center al 9445 Hell Ave. The problem center wa11 open~ls month with \he backing of P a r t s Anti-Narcotic~ Information Center CP IQ to give teens a voice and place to \um for help. Two phonta, I tetn help line (5.11~57) and Jobs for Teena ($31--0200) are now operating 1t the problem center. A limited number ol tickets are available at The Pant Rack, Magnolia and \Varner. and Mr. M's for Men, Msgnolla and Talbert. Markel Bandit Gets $100 Haul A bandit with a ,45 caliber automatic pistol and an invisible accomplice took $100 from a Fountain Valley market ear- ly this morning. Police said the bandit forced store clerk Barry Prim to re-enter the 7·11 market at Garfield Avenue and Bushard Str~t at 12:04 a.m., where be took the cash and told the clerk that a friend with a rlne "'as watching from a nearby service station. The rifle-toting accompllce was never seen, police said, and the first bandit escaped with the money. It's back-slapping tlme ror l he voluntear -ken al lhe United ctuude. '11>0 Jleol Ota1118 C-Unlte4 Crusade bu schtd!ilad Ila slsth annual award banquet for Friday at 8:30 p.m. tn the Disneyland Hot.el, Anabelm. Civic leaders, crusade workers and celebrities will honor campaign Volun- teers and contributors who have helped the United Crusade to reach 81 percent of il.s total goal of $452,000. Huntington Beach, formerly HunUnrton Beach Communlty Chest, went over lt.s 1115,000 goal wt Friday to become the first community in West Orange County to reach its target. A "Man of the Year" will be'honored from among cri.isade workerl" and there wtll be presentations of Gold Olcar 1ward.s to cltitenl who have contributed leadership to community orgp.niu.Uons and civic affairl', u well as to the United Crusade program . The evenlng'a fesU-rlUes will include a atudent choral group, tl)e: Madri&al Singers of Golden We.at College, Ind alto the famous Salvation Army Brass Se.Itel • The Gold Oscar 11•mli will be presented by Dori Marihall, co-•tar of ABC's -"Land-Of.!Jbe Glant.s." One or the top awards of the evening will be the Woodrow D. CannM Humanitarian Award for Press Writln&. Door prtzes al8o will be given. The evening will pay tribute h:I two 1969 Presldentl, Steve Hokltn, outgoing prtst~ deot of the HunUngton Buch Community Otest.. and George Hmold, wbo wa.~ president or the West Orange County United Fund. • Jack Feehan, mana1er of SouUlern COOnties Gu CGmpa~, Wilt UIUJl'le presidency of the amal.&amated orsani:a.- liOCll, now known u "Orange Cowtty United Crusade" doing bualneu u "Waet Orange County United Crusade." •Other new officers will be lnatalltc4 ReservaUon.1 may be obtal'ned by eon- tacUng Ule United C,rusade office at ISG- 4679 pr 111%..ISOI· From Pagel BOAT ACCIDENT ... fishing boat responded but watunable to help. First report of the ground.in&: came from George Sturges, navigator aboard another of Ule racing yachta, Bob Be.auchamp'1 Dorothy O from NHYC. Stura:e.s said tilt Tranqulla 11 and Dorothy O were both at ZijuaUnejo on Wednesday and that he left ahead of the Dorothy O, stating that he plaMed to stop a couple of times en route to Manzanlllo, one of the principal &hipping ports on the west coast of Mexico. _ Stur&gJaid he monitored Garrbon's -Mayday message but :wu unable to res- pond before Garrison ~gned off. Sturges said he tslked"to Mrs. Garrison at ~1allUUlillo Saturday and learned some of the. details of the accident. At that Ume Garrison had hired a commercial tug to go to Black Roclt and haul the boat off the beach. Word that the boat had · sunk came from John Hogan, who crewed on the Tranquila JI during the race, Hogan said Garrison's son told him ?-.1onday that the boat had sunk when it was hauled off the beach: The Garrisons are stll1 in ?otanzaniUo , 'l'r ustees Seek T ax R ate Boos t How do you ask voters lo raise their own tax rate by tl.90? That problem will be batted around by trustees of the Huntington Beach CJty School i:>lstrict at 7:30 tonlght In the li· brary of Dwyer School. District officials have asked permiasion to place two issu!-' -a 40-cent Increase for operating costs and a SI.50 increase for pay-as-you·go school comtruction - on the ballot for April 14. Now trustees must decide how to tell votera about the need for the money and arguments for the proposal to be printed on the ballot. • P ing Pongers Sta rt Tourney on Saturda y Tournament play for the Hunllngton Beach Parks and Recreation Table Ten. ols Club start! Saturday. Entries for the tourney are now being accepted at the reereation center, 17th Street and Orange Avenue, between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. Awards will be given in open dlvislons for men, women and doubles. Anyone is e!Jglble to play for an entry fee of SL50, trying to make arrangements to have the boat raised and taken to Maniardllo from whe"' It could be Shipped home aboard a freighter, Garrison had owned the boat only a few months before he entered it ill. the Acapulco race. Tbe Tranqulla a Wu a Cal-48 built by Jensen Marine of Cost.a Mesa but later was redeaigned and rtr.11· ged as a yawl by Ted Hood, noted Eut Coast yacht designer and sallmaker. The Tranqulla II was the fourth bolt to finish the Acapulco race and wu tecond in Clas.s A on corrected Ume. census -T akers Being Sought For W. Co unty The U.S. Bureau of the Censua needs local people lo wor~ on the 1970 Cen!us of Population and Housing in the West Orange County irea, it was announced • tlay by Roy Gordon, district manager or lhe census. Jobs to be filled will be as cen.ms take.rs v.'ho will call upon h9Useholds that have not mailed back their ceruius forms or "'ho ha\•e. malled back incomplete ones. Generally, they will work near their own neighborhoods. · Jobs will last fro1n three to five weeks In April and ?i1ay. Some work will be done evenings and on Sattudays a.a some people are at home only during tbclM times. Pay will a\'trage about $2 a.n hour. Those interested should apply at the census office. l310K E. Edinger Ave., Santa Ana, or call &47-7639. Valley Looking Far in Fu ture? An erroneous glance at the future is forecast on the agenda of the Fountain Valley Parks and Reecreation Com- mission at 7:30 p.m., Wednesday. A typographical error has com- missioners reading the minutes of a Jan. 28, 1979 meeting, keeping them slightly ahead of their time.. But a re.al look at the future is pro.. mised when the cornnrls!lone.rs study long range plans for park development bi the city, select an architect to develop those parks and inspect conflict of in- tt:rest legislation to guide future actions of the commission. The carpet they both chose?· Bigelow's Barcelona BattelGDa combines t~ casua.l, wind·tmsed 1ha.i:' look of today with an elegant Spe.ni&h irille pattern. The Iona:, slender )'aI1UI haw a aott, 1hlmmM')' tlow •.. the dramatic multi· 'colors 11'1! MedltetTanean-ln1plred. Use Bar- celonA in A Spanish or P.tedlleTTantan setting or with ultra-modem or mbred cmtemporary •.• for A truly stunnlnr etteet. And btcause the flber'1 nylon, Battl!:lona'1 ao ... , to .,.,. for. Soll .... n't s1095 lho\t' ••. and pile it.a.Ya crisp and 1prtngy. A tlne buy tar any-... "' one who wants gre1.t stylln~ • •. 1 roomful ol Iuxucy ••• 1 t lrtcllldlfto ""•"-" a down-to-earth price. ''-' ~: - 6 Sanny Mediterranean Shades ALDEN 'S CARPm -DRAP&IES • \ MeditentM•n Mot1 Antlqu• Amber • S~nl1h Poppy Spt.ni1h 1A1thtr • Gnn•d1 Gold Atavio Avocado v ·= appmed Bigelow nylon pUe e I J YEA•S SEAVING THE OR.ANGE COAST e 1663 Placentla-Costa Mfta Phona 646-4t31 I 1 I j .( I I ( ·- 1 ; • • Laguna ~~eh_ Today's · n.al N.Y. Stoek.8 VCIL 63 , NO. -46, 1 SECTIONS, 24 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUE~DAlf; FEB~UARY. 24, 1910· .TEN CEN'TS PUC Agrees s. Coast Free Toll Rates Unfai.r The state Public Utilities commission ,However, toll-free calls between to the Saddl<back Valley 11·ea, inclq<finl a,,....i in principle to go along with any Tbe PUC, adcording to Robert Haatings test to the PUC ~~~n<d ~ the has responded to a letter from the Laguna Beach and the Gapistrano Valley 588, 830 and IS'I prefilea b&f been the sub-plan agreed upon by Pacific and the who has been pursuing the phooe problem SaddJeback and Dana Point chlmbers Laguna Beach Chamber of Commerce area will go into effect 'Dec. 29, 1971, the ject of many meetlngs, the PUC stated, PUC, the chamber.was advised. !or the chamber, must coOsider statewide and the Laguna Niguel 'CoordinaUnl seeking immediate action on exteMion of PUC stated. This will include 493, 495 ~d and Is awaltin& a ft~ propasal aod. In-However, it was polnltd out, public rates in granting any major reduction, Council whlc)l i! organizing aimilar the toll-free telephone rate area. The PUC 496 prefixes in ~a Niguel, Dana fonnal acreement w1lh the Pacific hearinp· on redistricting the Santa Ana . agrees that .the present rree routes are Point an~ San Juan Capistrano. this now Telephone Company. An 'lnlti11! proposal, exchana:e, which Is essential to the final !Ince elimination of, toll calls In a gjYen complaints from 40 or Ila member "inadequate ," but indicated ihe 30luUon is a ICl-ctnt toll area. ~ rejected by the PUC, Is now being revis-solution, would be neceSsary, since SOIT'le area could result in a need to · inc:!reasi!: org.~n~tlons. The San Clemente and Sa~ of the problem may take more than a Ertens'ion of the toll·free 1rea, or ed. phone company customers would be base rates in unrelated area"s. .Juan Capistrano chambera also are ex· ye1r. reduction of the 20-ceot charce for calls General Te~phone Company h1J' adversely affected by a Change in rate. • Meanwhile the Laguna chamber's pro-pected to c:Ooperate. State Ruling Stands ·By High Court WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Supreme Court ducked an opportunity to step into the abortion law controversy today, tum· ing down a plea from California for review of conflicting judicial decisions in a case involving Dr. Leon Belous of BeVeily Hills. The brief order denying .ceview left standing a slate supreme court opinion holding that abortion laws may not broadly invade a woman's rights: to life and to choose whetber to beu children . That opinion struck down as llTI· constitutionally vague _a C aJ I r o r n i a statute pennitting an abortion to be legally perfonned on a woman only when "necessary to preserve her life." Subsequently, a federal judge In the District of Columbia, leaning heavily on the California opiniorr, struck down a federaJ law in the district U1at permitted abortion only when "necessary for the preservation of the mother 's life or health." Thus no licensed doctor can be pr~ secuted for performing abortions, and theoretically they can be had for the ask· Jng. Some 35 states have tradilional abor· lion laws based on phrasing similar to the Alton Allen Files For Third Term As Supervisor Supervisor Alton E. All~ made his bid for re~lection to the Fifth District seat on the Board of Supervisors official today by· being one of the first of a line of can- didates for public office to file with the county clerk. Allen, 72, of Laguna Beach, put hi! name to documents that announce his in- tention to seek a third four·year·term on the board. ... Allen will be opposed in the-Jyne primary by savings and loan executive Roo Caspers of Udo Isle, Costa Mesa ci· t1 councilman Robert Wilson and a can- didate to be named by oragnizers of an anti·Allen recall movement Utroulhout the Fifth District. Couhty Clerk. William St John also ac- cepted filings l.oday -the first day for such nOmlnallons -C0W1\y recorder J. Wylie Carlyle: businessman~ R. Greene and county offtclal DaYid G. HltchcOclt and Robert L. Citron who are all candidates for the office of Orange County tax collector. Also • Oled was the application of Bernai'd Wocher a canctidate ·for a seat o(I the Fourth District Board of Equallza· lion. Late filings today Included that of Laguna Beach attorney William Wllcoxe~ aS a Republican caodklate for the 3Sth ~gress~I District; Assembi)'lqln Robert Badham \fho Is seeking re-elec· uon to . the 7lst District; .Assemblyman. RObert Burke ol the 10th District and COngressman James B. Utt or Sant.a Ana. 1AlsQ accepted by St John were the filings of Sherill J,ma Muaick and Marshall Norri•, the SUpe!for COqrt clerk wt>o will end!!avor in ' Jihe to replac* ~{ustck in the offices of sheriff and coun .. ty coroner. . invalidaled D.C. and California statutes. In two of them, Massachusetts and New Jersey, the slate's higbest court has upheld the traditional law. In its petition for Supreme Court review, California asked not so much that the Callforriia Supreme Court be reversed as that some clarity be brought to the confusion surrounding "the clear conflict which new exists among the highest . (S.. ABORTION, Pose %) ". * * * High Court Clou,ds Fate Of Dr. Robb By TOM BARLEY Of .... o.I~ ,,lft , .... The United Slates Supreme Court today refused to review the Call!ornia Supreme Court's rejection of a 120-year-old abor· -tion law and appeared to uphold, In ef· feet, the lower court's implied recoinition of the Therapeutic Abortion Act of 1967. Action, or rather the lack of it, by the high court immediately raised specuJa. tion in Orange County on the impact of the decision on the case of Dr. Robert Cumming Robb, 67, the Laguna Beach physician recently indicted on abortion charges. It brought, predictably, claims by each side in the controversy that the high court's stance favored their arguments in the Robb case. Attorney Joseph Anderson, an associate of Dr. Robb's lawyer, Moses Berman, argued that the high court decision "was bound to color the thinking of any jury ' that might be asked to rule on Or. Robb's actions. "While it might be argued that the high court did not rule on the 1967 act Itself, it can also be argued that the court recog- nizes the vital need today for a more lib- eral interpretation or outmoded abortion statutes," Arxlersoo sakl. "And It should be pointed out that the 1967 act itself has not yet been challenged at U.S. Supreme Court level." .. The Supreme •Court ruling could lead, Anderson ,predicted, to the sweeping aside of abort.ion laws In many of the na· tton's stales and iea:ve California with its "admittedly more liberal law of 1967. ... "The SUuaUon then would be contrary to what California wanted when the therapeutic abortion act wu passed," Anderson commented. "We wo~ then be upholding an abortion law wbtle physl· cians in many states would be carrying, out abortiom with no rear of punish .. rnent." ' . Chief Deputy District A l t o r n e y James F.nrtght doea not see h that wa1. "What the state Supreme Court abolisbed by lti Opinion ls an old law that simply de1ft wtlh the black and white of any ·il!IUe and refused to recoaruze the existence of any gray areas," Emi&ht said. ./ ''Dr. Robb's case hasn't been ·diacuased by lhe htah court nor have any Or the iuues In thia. aee.'J.1U. l'tterln pro- ·....,1or _ _. •His 11..,.. nliaht say that thle>b the be81nnhll rl the 1Weeping IS.. ROBB, Pare II 00 eav .. -~ DAILY ,!LOT SJefl ,._.. . ' WHILE COCt EAGUES -'\WAIT CORONER, OFFICER WILLIAM KYSOR.WARDS OFF THE CURIOUS' In Newport's Fashionable B•rcre1f Section, th• ~•JthbGr1 Find • 1 Body Newport Man, 60, Slain; Possihle Bm·glar Victim By JOHN VAL TERZA Of HM Diii)' ,, ... SleH The body of a 60·yea:-old Newport Beach man, who was possibly the victim or a shootout with burglars. was found sprawled in his rront doorway early to. day. a pistol in his hand arwi a gunshot wound in his chest. Police tentatively ruled the shooting a homicide . The victim. William Ha rris ·o1 2012 Anchor Way, was shot to dealh--posaibly by a burglar -90tneijme before dawn to- day, Newport deteetlves said. Harris' body had one bullet bole in the Joftr left chest made by an unknown weapon. Several other bullet holes were found in the well-furnished realdence in the city'• Baycrest subdlvlllon, Detective Capt. LOtJ' Heeres said. 1Harris lived alone. He was rec.ently divorced, the investigator said. The body, lying with the feet keeping a screen door ajar, was found by a neighbor taking his daughter to school at 7:28 a.m. Two buttons had been ripped off his coat. Against a window on the. southeast side of the house a ladder rested, possibly where the killer or killers entered the gray house. Rlrril waa· fulJy dressed In a gray au it. H~ wu' lying on hls left side apparently where he Cell after trying to run out of his home. "Prellminaey ~sbaW 1 strong· posslbllily of ~,~ H~<et •aid. "but Wflrstt\l frfj;'t lliri." • •" f """'~~~ .. ~riypo; . or "'•pon clufclie"4 lti llama"i:'!Jb! blind. • All 11111 .,.. neigii1>oF1i1d l1W heard rs.t· M\JllDEJI, P•l• 11 PIQS 1\dv1Ut~e Niguel Homes are 'Go' Despite Rockwell Sale A 75().acre planned community near the Autonetlc.s plant In Laguna Niguel will go forward , a spokesman for North American Rockwell sai.d today, despite the for sale sign on the $23 million plant. Plans ror the construction of a total community were announced in October St. Pat Salute Set for Vief o Green will be Mission Viejo's color March 17 when the community salutei St. Patrick's Day. - Preliminary plans for a big parade and other related activities have been made with community organizatio"' being urr· ed to start thinking about their noats. "'The parade will begin at 4 p,m. at Mission Viejo High School and will end a\ the Mits:ion· Viejo Golf Cl,µ~;" said Jerry Curran recreation ceQter director. "The Marine Corps band, the high school band and assorted celebrities have been invited lo partlCiplte," he said. The golf club will make avajlable 40 golf carts on a first.come, first-served baSls to ofganizatlonS Who wOUld like to build a.float al'OWld one. T0111111Y:Mllchell a~ the gd~<Jub wW be Iii dlai&e ol cart teservallons. · · , ' ·- , i;;v~ · llnlnt ~ .Jll'Odt r'o\lte .,.m be invited to wear 1run and jOln. the .parade. a·s It marchU lty .on tts1w~ to the 10U club, l'Qera corned !;eel and ublia1~ ' dlnnera· will be ,aeryed; : · ' . by KNR, a corporation fonned by Rockwell and Earl G. Kaltenbach, architect and developer. It was said lhat construction would start in January. "The company ill proceeding on schcdUle and does plan to go ahead with that," said a Rockwe ll spokesman. "My understanding Is that the (county) plan· ning commission sUU ha's to act on the .zoning." He had no time esUmate on start of construction. Questioned later, Roy Gohara , county planner-workiQg with planned com. munities, said, ''I haven't seen them (the developers) in-about thret weeks. ,Norm.ally it Y9U wanted lo put something ~hrou'h lik~ tl\ls, ypu )VOUld be on top of 1t all the time, someone would be calling every day," ~kwell officials announced Ja9t week that due fo loss of contracts and employ· ment cutbacks the Laguna Niguel plant was being J/1t~d for sale. RockWell also maintained that Ir a buy,er is not round. tbe compan,v will use · lhe facility. Completion. delayed ,by rain and strikes, ls expected this year. spokesmen said. Gohara said \he plans ·for I.he com· munity1 ranged from .a mobile home park through s}ns~ family l).omes, aparlmenW and even estate sl,ze deyel(tl)ment with batf-aire lots. '·. ... (\ohara· aakl·roucl>:WO!i< on, tl)e planned -.1lyi~ cli1J1ole\e<l llut'•stlmalalf il • .would take 8\ l~Hl three monl)la for lhe pl_4ii~ ~otntpuplly .Id clear ~t~rlnfl at ,the pjinnlng comrnlsslon ip board of supervisors• II the d~ve~rs 10 full· Steam ahead. · . , " • Override, Bond· Issue --- At Stake By BARBARA KREIBICH -l>t tlle DlllY ,1191 Shoff Voters In the Laguna Beach Unified School District turned out early· and tn substantial numbers today as ballottn1 In the school tax override and bond elec· lion got under way in nine precints. Most precincts reported a heavier· than-average vote during the mornina hours. • "ll's too eary to tell yet," said di5lrid buslneaa manager Edwin Hind. "but when l went around this marnlnr there 1ee~ to be ·more people than usual. It looks like a falr)y flOOI) vqte." . The poll• will . be open unUI I p.m. ·Ballots will be counted after that bCllr al the dJstrict offices, 550 Blumont Sl Results will be available by phone al 494-&\46. ·ey mid-morning, Precinct I at. El Morro Sdiool had logged 121 voters out of a potential 1,000, which a precinct worker described ·as ';fairly heavy for this time of morning," Al' Top of the World Elementary School, JM of a potent1a1· i,200 bad casl their votes. Hilid described this as "ex- cellent." An election Worker al Aliso school, where 110 of the pteclnct's 1..100 votm ha.d cast balots, sald. "lt'a preUy heavy; we 've nally been ruahed." The polling place at Sterling Really, 608 N. Coast Highway, had handed oul ballots ·to 141 of Its 1,181 voters, bUt 1 . pre'clnct worker said · he'd rate this I! "poor. so far." At. the Fulmtlr garage, 1455 Santa. Cruz St., voting was · deteribed aa "steady," with 116 of 1,200 voters can .• Ing ballots in the early hours. S tock /lfqrket NEW YORK !AP) -The stock markel was moderately lower on average~• trading pace slowed late this aft (See quotations, Pages: 10-11). . Price changes by key Issues ranged lo a paint or so but the ceneral patten was of fractional shifts. Orange Coast Weatlaer The nice apring-llk_e weather may be on Its way OOl as the weather· man predict~ a :I0-50 chance of rain tonight1 along wil;h some gusly winds. The rain might last about three ,days. . , . INSIDE TODAY , A. freewo.11 cra.!h '"med ln.to a flaming fiasco when welt fn· tentfoned rc1cuer1 dropped a flare i• apill<d Q<1$0llne, Page 9. ,, • ...,.... 1 ....... • Ottdlllllt u, 7 ......... """ ... c....-. ''"" ...... °"""" t ~·~· .. 'l~ =rr ... :; ~--, .. t ,._ ........ ,, ....., "-•. .,...... It ............... t ,,....., • pi.-, .. ,, ..... • ........... '' ~ ..... ,.,. """ """"• 1• lllJWW MM ... Don't Forget to Vttte; •• • • I 'I I > • -,. • • I DAILY I'll.OT· L Tu~, f~. 24. 1970 Behler Plan Plan~ers~kay Modern Lights Lqtma Beach plaMing COIJl!nissioners. In a study r;esalon Monday night, gave their qualified b I es s i n g to green marbe.lit.e electrolle.rs with mushroom· like taps for street lighting in the Heisler Part area when ulilltiu are plaetd underground. The commissioners had sought advice from the Chamber or C o m m e r c e beauUfkl.tion commit.tee in attempting lo select a suitable light standard, but did not see eye to eye ~·ilh the ch.amber group on its selection. Commissioner Charles Johnson favored continuing to seek other posaibilllies, but Ediaon Company representative Jamb Kennedy told the commission his com' pany is anxious to start the project and would. apreciate a decision. Jt waa agreed, without controversy, to ask Kennedy to proceed with cost estimates on the green marbelite job, which comes in a 17-foot street. model Wilh a matching nine-foot standard for lighting park walkways. However. the door was left open for sublUtuUng Capo Residents Urged to Unite In Bond Vote another standard If OOl'lmlaaioners CID rind one more to their Uklng. Concluding their study of the goals statemet1t prepared in conjunction wltll the general plan revi,alon, commissioners decided to pclSI on to the city councll their reeornmendation ol pagea 14 through 18 of the U.page document. This section ctinlatns only the goals outlined by the Citizens Advlsory CommUtee, with minor revisjon.s or wording in so~ in- stances. Regarding the balance of the report, commissioners decided to leave the ques- tion of imple.mt.ntaUon of the goals up to the counclJ and also to include a criticism ~r the social problems section prepared by Daniel, Mann, Johnson &. Mendenhall. planners engaged by the clty to rtvise the general plan. The comrnls,,loners were critical ol DMJM's e:1tended comments on Laguna's hippie problem, and what ~ey C9QSidered inadequate commentary 111 other areas and will so advise the council. Requeated by sign manufacturer Earl Stcot to take a position ·on the posslbWty of amending the sign ordinance to include aeatheUc review requirements com· mleionen &aid they could m~ke no decisions at a Sludf 11eMlon and deferred the matter until "their next regular meeting, March 2. r---,~=UnUled School . residents are being urged to unite wUh a group called ARVY 's Friends to support the March 10 bond and tax election. Laguna Man Badl -Beaten ·By Marine I Charles Dargan of San Juan Capistrano has been named chairman of the croup or about SO persons. Hundreds of othel'3 art. beinS{ recruited. ARVY, said Dargan. stands for Area 'Residents Vote Yes. The group is at- lempUng to acquaint area residents with the election issues. Dargan said the school board's request to increase the bond interest celling from five to seven percent on $4.2 million in unsold hoods is essential if construction of classrooms at Richard Henry Dana School ls to begin soon. He sa.Jd al.!IO that a second high school for lhe district could be built sooner if the -bond interest is approved. "We all know the tig_ht money and high interest rate story," said Dargan. "Unless the school bonds are made saleable, there will be a major shortage of classroom!!! in the CUSO a year from now." He uJd the tax ovenide of SO cents would cost the average homeowner about $30 a year if approved. "The school board must hive additional money next year or our chlldren'g educa· tion will be reduced to a level no thinking parent would want to accept." Dargan said.· Serving with Dari::an on the execuUve committee of ARVY's Friends are the followinl! citlzt:ns: . SPEAKERS -Dr. Ricbard \V. Baker and Ronald steelman; advertis ing - Doug Walton; tfansportation -Art Holmes ; finance -Mike Darnold and George. Wbite; publicity -Doris Walker and Lyn Hicis; white cards -Wilma Bloom. Area leaders include: .CONCORDIA -Dwayne Berger, Beverly Holst and Roma Marks; CROWN VALLEY -Jody Parsons: RICHARD HENRY DANA -Carolyn Williams and Sue Jaynes; • LAS PAI.MAS -Alice Shinkle ; OLE HANSON -Jeannie Needlts; PAUSAD~ -George White and Elaine Hubbard ; SAN JUAN -Bambi Comer and Jim ~underson ; CAPISTRANO SCHOOL -Jo an Alwater and Rita Nieblas; MARCO FORSTER JUNIOR RIG H - Nancy Thayer : SAN CLEMENTE WGH -Jan Dusek. Other committee leaders include Al Pierce. Margaret Rhoads. GI or I a Bouman. Helen Wright and Bob Elston. t DAILY PILOT Ol!ANGE CO.fJi? '1,lllBHING <.0M'AH't' •oli•tl N, W1M 1'1ntll..,I ltll4I 1''*1..,,... J•c• R. Cw•lty Vee """"""" or;ol 0.-•I M.tn"Otr 1\•111•• Kt tYil l!lllOI' T~•,..•• A. M11•11hin1 M.,..,.int l•ltor l'ithtr4 '· Nill L .. IN ... ,~ (!!~ l!dllor L..-. ....... Offk• 711 ~••••• A,~1n111 Mellrnt Aiireu• P.O. lo• '''· •1652. °""'' OHk" C.to Mftl! Jlll •••• ,.,. , ..... lol-1 ••..:": m1_,11111t• ....,,..,.,. iwntlne"" ••di• .,.,, .. .ui ,,.._. Laguna Beach restaurateur Harry Moon ~ rtcoverlng at hi' home today .after suffering a severe beating at the hands or a young Marine hitchhiker be picked up in Long Beach last night. Moon, 42, who owns the Cottage Restaurant at 380 N. Coast Highway, stum bled into the Laguna Beach Police Department at 3:21 a.m. bruised and bleeding from severe cuts on his head. While he was underi:olng emeraency treatment at Soath Coast Community Hospjtal. Newport Beach politi! officer Albert Fisher, responding to a bulletin from Lagiina, picked up his suspected assailant, .w.ho Is being held pendl111 issuance of a complaint from the district attorney's_ office .• He was identified as James Burkett, 19, a Marine from Camp Pendleton who reportedly Is wanted by m 111 t a r y authorities. At ·the time of his arrest at Coast Highway and Balboa Boulevard, police said, the suspect was drlvlng a car belonging to Moon's partner tn the re11taurant, Art Frink, which Moon had ta~n to Long Beach MonJay night. 1 Moon told politi! he picked up a hit- chhiker at a traffic light in Long Beach. Threatening him with a billy club, the young man ordered J\toon to drive lh rough Long Beach repeatedly demand· ing money, They arrived at a motel in Compton where the suspect realizing ?I.loon had only a few dollars ~·ith him, allegedly beat him on lhe head , inflicting deep scalp cuts. At Moon 's suggestion. the man took the v.•heel of his car to drive to Laguna wh2re Moon said he would get more money. Directing him to lhe Laguna Beach police department, Moon jumped out of the car. The suspect drove off immediately, police ~aid. l'rona Page 1 ROBB. •• away of abortion Jaws but it could just. as easily be the court's implied recogn!Uoo of lhe much more liberal abortion measure of 1967." Dr. Robb was indicted by the Ora11&e County Grand Jury on charges cf in- ducing miscarriages In three women pa- tients. all of them single. That Indictment was delivered at the request or. Dtstrlct Attorney Cecil Hicks after Judge Paul Mast or the Santa Ana Municijial Court ruled the earlier pro- secution of Dr. Robb to be un· constltuUonal . Judge Mast threw out the dlgtrict at· tomey 'a argument that Dr. Robb had unlawfi.illy aborted four pregnant women in a ruling which rejected the language of the Therapeutic Abortion Act. Judge 1'tast commented: ·~we cannot permit a legislative theory which decrees that life begins at conception. To do l!O would be to blandly adopt the philosophy of one of the country's major reUgrons (Roman Catholic) an act which would clearly be ln violalion of ll:le First Amendment or the United s t a t e s ConsUtution." "JJ there wert life present at con- ception." Jucl&e Mut said "abortJon would not be permltted In c1se or rape or in~st ... any more lhan It would be pcrmltt~ to tennlnate the life or a one- ye1r-01d whose life h~~ come as the result o( rapt or incest.' Dr. Robb has been ordered to aUend a special Superior Court hearing Thur;day in which his lawyer ~lll challenge the Orange County Oraod Jury lndlctment on th• groundJ 111•1 the panel b "111 Illegally c:onsUtut.ed panel that responds solely to the wht.ms an~prlces o( the dlslrict al· torney."' •·· I • ' OA1lY J'lt.OT Sltfl J'lloN lforkitag i1a Glass Cites Btu• Threat .... Peritagon~sks More ABM Funds WASHINGTON (UPI) -The PenU.100, citing Soviet ml5111le tests since the strategic arms talks began, agked Congre.53 today for approval of a third Safeguard Antiballlst.ic Missile (ABM) site and funds for advance work on five more. Defense Secretary 1'felvin R. Laird told Lyncli Say s New Abortion Laiv Stands SAN FRANCISCO (UPli -Attorney General Thomas Lynch said today refusal by the U.S. Supreme Court to review California's old abortion law will make no change ln the state's current law on the su bject. RUSS MISSILE FORCE GROWING. SEE PAGE 4 two Senate commit~es that the third ABM· site would be at Whiteman Alr Force Base. Alo. Sites at A1alstrom AFB 1'f0flt., 'an~ Grand Forks AFB, N.D., wer~ approved last year. David Packard, Deputy Def en s o Secretary, said in a statement, <;siri.« lhe beginning of SALT (Strategic Arms Limitation Talks) in Heltinki la.st Novem· ber, the Soviets have test·fired more than twice as many strategic missiles as "''e have. "It ls imperative that we conUnue with our strateg.ic programs, such a s sareguard, until and unlesa we achi~ve an agreement with the Soviets which wUJ enable us to preserve the security or the country in some other way." Packard insisted that the U.S. ABM program had not interfered with the SALT talks. scheduled to move into full swing at Vienna April 16. Vern All ie touches up glass figurine in his booth at Laguna Beach Arts and Crafts Fair being conducted at Festival of Arts grounds in conjunction with city's annual \Vinter Festival. Fair is open without charge from 10 a .m. to 5 p.m. daily through March 1. The high court in a brief order today refused to review decisions Involving Dr. Leon Belous of Beverly Jillls. The high court left stand ~.1g a state Supreme Court ruling that the law may not invade a ~·oman's right to choose \~hether to bear children. That opin ion struck down an old Calilomia statute pennitting an abortion only when necessary to save the mother's life. Laird and President NlxoO warne d li st week that tbe Soviets now have more operation{ll ln~tinental Ballistic Mis- siles (ICBM) '(han the United States -1,100 to 1,054, with 1,290 Soviet missiles expected by December. The U.S figure does not include the Navy's Polaris and Poseidon missiles, however. , Laird's request for funds for advance ~·ork on five more possible ABM sites would not be a rommitment to go ahead with deployment of ABMs. Litguna-M-an, NewpoPl~Tot Saved in, Near prownings Lynch pointed out that the slate has already replaced that stalute with the new therapeutic abortion act, which -authorize! a eommittee o{ doctol'I to .., order an abortion when the mother's "physical or mental health" would be im- periled. From Page 1 Those five would be in the opper Northwest, probably in Washington Stale; Warren ~B .. Wy_Q~· .the M1cldg.an.. Ohio OOrdir 8 re.a; the Washington, O.C. area: and Southern New England, possibly in ~1assachusetts. No specific sites ·Were mentioned other than Warren AF&: The first task In the preparatory work Is to look fOf government-owned land irt the areas and ta seek other property if no federal property is available. A retired businessman from Laguna Hills and a 2-year-old Newport boy were recovering today after separate incidents of near drowning. Young Shonne Glatte was found at noon floatins: face down in the swimming pool ol a family his mother was visiting. RM Mathews, 17, of 1015 White Salls Way said he saw the child when he came out of the house. 1'1athews pulled the unconscious child from tbe water and with the help of the baby's ~Uler;r Pal. revived him before lhe Fire-Rescue Unit arrived. The mother, who lives a111.12 W. Ocea11 FIW!t, sa.Ut ·Q'ie didn~\ know .bow the "ooy got out of the house'. He was inside two minutes before, she told police. Jn another case, William V. Gorbam, 69, of 374 D Castilla Ave., Laguna HUis, was revived by rescue units after he wall pulled purple and not breathing ·from W 01nan Suspect Iii Heist Jailed On Narco Char ge Newport Harbor Monday night He was apparently walking on the deck of his boat, Evening Star. whicb is dock· ed at 345 Via Oporto, Lido Peninsula, when he slipped and fell overboard. A nelthbor, G. John Granath of 3446 Via Oporto, dragged Gorham onto a neighboring dock where he administered first aid to revive htm until rescue units arrived. Police egtimate Gorman was in the water ror about 10 minutes before he was rcacued. but had lost consctousnw from Inhalation cf water only a tew minues before Gr1nalh apoUed k~. I ·~·· Real Early Bird First OC Filet ABORTION ... courts of three states and the District or Columbia." The California statute was adjudged in- valid after it had already been replaefil by liberalized laws permitting sport.ion when bearing the child would injure the mother's physical or mental health or when the pregnancy was the result of· rape or incest. Similar liberalizations have be e n enacted in other states, but ~ bas been cha llenged in higher ~rts y,il. although the American Civil Liberties Union and others art preparing such moves. As stated by California, the issues the Sup reme Court should decide are whether the preservation of the moUler 's life is sufficiently exact to form a basis for limiting ·permissible abortion, and whether a state has "sufficient com· Robert L. Citron made certain pelling interest at stake to allow the state this mornlng that he became the to regulate a woman's fundamental right Laird testified at a joint meeting or the Senate Armed Services Committee and the Senate defense appropriations sub- committee. The meeting was closed but the Pentagon made public portions of his prepared testimony. If the Safeguard system is expanded to the full 12 sites originally envi sioned it also would include emplacements in ~n­ tral California, Southern California, cen- tral Texas and the Florida-Georgia area. Laird said the total cost of 12 sites:, estimated at $10.3 billion last year, bad grown to $11.9. billion. He attributed the increase to inflation, gtretching out the time needed to complete the program, and to design changes and better estima- tions. Pill Gulper Said 111 Fair Condition first person to Hie for an Orange to terminate unborn life." County polilical office. The California-Case arose from the pro-A Laguna Beach man was in improved Citron. a deputy tax collector for secution Of Dr. Belous, a promlntnt condition today afler assertedly gulping 10 years. arrived at the county Bevtrly Hills physician and outspoken down · about 50 tablets. believed to be Voters Registration office at 5:4:> advocate of liberalized abortion laws. secon_al. in view of a policeman Monday a.m .. complete \11ith a tomato crate Belous was accused or nferring a rnonung. to sit on, a heavy coat. a thermos pregnant young woman and her flance ta A spokesman at Orange County or hot coffee , a radio and a morn· a physician who performed an abortion l\1edical Center listed the condition of An attractive redhead who was once ing paper. on her . According to trial testimony. he C.regory Alan Lathrop, 2t of 1774 accused by Orange County sheriff's Citron, 44, of Santa Ana . seeks to made the referral -to a physician he Rimrock Canybn Road, as fair today. deputies as one o( l"'o wtimen members succeed Dc.n S. J\lozley who is knew and trusted professionally -only Lathrop had been in critical condition of a holdup team which took $t28 al gun· retiring. Charl es W. A1ozley, a aft er he became convinced the woman 1'1onday. point from a Dana Point bait and tackle brother of the incumbent. is cam· was "absolutely desperate" and would Officer Larry Warren answered a call shop has been convicted in Superior paign manager for the new can· carry out a threat to secure an illegal that a man had slashed his wrist in a Court on drug charges . didate. Mexican abortion under conditions he suicide attempt. He said Lathrop Judge Howard Cameron ordered Carol Previously Joe R. Greene, 48, of deemed clin ically dangerous. bleeding severely. grabbed a handful o( Ann Price. 19. of Las Vegas to &erve fou r Tustin, associated with the tax col· Belous was convicted and sentenced to red pills from a pile and swallowed them. months in Orange County Jail for lcclor's office sini:e 1963 took out pay a $5,000 fine and serve two years• \\'arren said Lathrop claimed he possess ion of marijuana. She was al so papers for the post. probation. but the State Supreme Court ""·anted to die and said he "'ou ld refuse placed on probation for three years. ruling vacated the conviction and sen-medical aid. It was. however ad. Miss Price '"as one of five occupants of I ,~=============='l:":':'·=============n:1:in:i•:'':':'d=·========·=;--a car which was halted by she riff's deputies last ~-larch 22 shortly after the robbery of Phil's Fish and Bai\ Shop, 34210 Coast Highway. Dana Point. She was booked for possession of marijuana when deputies found a plastic bag con· taining the weed on her pe'rson. The carpet they both chose?· Bigelow's -Frorn Page 1 MURDER. •• nothing during the night. But one woman Uving next door said she heard commotion and noises which possibly were shots l3te f\1onday night. She did not investigate. however .. The entir'e Baycrest and Westcliff area have been plagued by burglars In recent months. While detectives from the burglary detail talked to residents of the quiet neighborhood, patrolmen scoured bushes, planters and trash cans searching for weapons. They turned up nothing. Harris, reUred, had lived in the area for at least 10 years, his Iriends saJd. He \\'IS described as a good-natured. even· tempered man "·he> had lived alone for yea rs. The house. seemed immacul ateJy kapt. Tilt landscaping has been , k e pt mBnlcured. Nefghbors seemed miffed that Uley had heard nothing through the night. "t can't understand us not hearing anything. I gue~ we e.11 go Inside and lock things up li,:iht and don't hear whot goes qn !n the outside. world," one shock· ed woman said as she gazed acr~s lhe street. ttarrl5' body was removed to Baltz. Corona del Atar ~fortuary. No J1<!Xt oi kin for the. de8d man hnve· been located. lie b.!ld no children, police said. I • ~ 6 Sunny Mediterranean Shades MediterT•ne•n Mo1s Antique Amber • Sptni•h Poppy Spanish lA•ther • Gr•n•da Gold At•vio Avocado .J approved Bigelow nylon pll• Barcelona Barcelona combtnts the casu11.l, wlnd-toul!d shu'. look of today Y:i1h an elegant Spanish ~Te pattern. The Ion;, slender yarns have a sott. shimmery glow ... the dramatic mulU· colors a.re P.1editerranean·lnspired. Use Bar-celona In a Spanish or Mediterranean setting or with ultra·modcrn or mi.Iced contemporary ••• for a truly stunnina ef!ecl And bcc#use 1ht fiber's nylon, Barct!lona's so $ easy to care for. Soil doesn't 1 ()!5 show: ••• and pile stays crisp and sprinl)'. A fine buy for en)•· ~. one wbo wants gre1t 1l)'lln1t ••• a roomful ol lu-run. •l lt><llllllnt ""'-'"'" ~-.... -tlOn ""'"' .... a down·to-earlh price. ~llM• - ALDEN'S CARPETS-DRAPERIES e fl YEARS Sf .. VING THE O•ANGI COAST e 1663 Placentia-Costa Meta Phon• 646-4131 • ! I I • I 11 i • • -- r .. F~ery Fiaseo on 'Free~ay Fire Water No Help-B~t ~Flare Far Worse . . SANTA ANA -Tblngs gol hellllbly hot Monday, so JemJS ,G. Vega dld whai seemed best -he took a lltUe taste of fire wat.r. · Trouble b:, said th e Calilomla Highway Patrol, be WU barricaded In hll blazing car, Jollowlnl a rear.end coi-- lblon oo ihe Santa Ana Freeway that lnjured two men and destroyed two can. Veea. rt, of Los Angeles, wu driving oorthbound with no lighta early Mond111y mom· 1ftg when his car was rammed rrom behind by a minibus van, aocordlng lo C H P In· vestlgators. The im2act rnp_tured lhe. aasollne lank ol Vega's vehicle and the van, carrying Mark T. Stul'f<l, 18, of Los Alamitos, and Stephen H. Cap'ps, It, of Cypress, overturned: · Arriving on the s c en e seconds later, twin brothers David and Dale Green, 22, of Oranse. pulled over and did what see.med best -they lg· oiled a highway flare. The laid the nare in the Narcotics Court Set For County's Study 11pnled gasoline. still grappled with the sltua· 1i~1ames erupted. Cries ot lion .• alarm rang out. 'nle Green Opining ~the OJ>PC)llte door, twins tried to rescue the Gumtct ·dragged:tbe allegedly Potential thin4 victim of the relaxed Vega out of harm's accldtnt, as fire danced about way, ju.sl as a CHP car·rolled the wreckage. -up to'the•scene .. Vega, said CHP officers -Moterist Sturre and his happily drlnklng from a botUe passenger were taken to of wblsky -refused to budge. Orange Elounty Medical Ctn{er apparently content with his for treabnent of their accident nre water. injuries. EUorts to get him out of the Vega was taken to Orange car were fuUle until another County· Jail, uninjured, but motorist. Michael Gum.lck Jr., N!portedly well Pnesthelir.ed . 28, of Mira Loma. happened for booking on a charge or along while the Gree,n brothers felony dninken drivin(. Public Post Bills Pushed By Burke • • Seeh's Title Fields To Vie For Seat .. DAILY 'ILOI' I JllOTIC.I T01CAIOITOllS et'-WLS TU...,11 ,..., ,,,,,,.. v.c.c.) 1_..., 1•1m trftfk9 ii """" t 1¥ffl i. ... C'rNlht• ot Cllfllt• L. Kf'9ft 11111 IUrllN S. ICr,.n, TrtMl-a, wl'llllt MINw ~ " 1'00 EM! Cottt HithwtY. N-9 ilfdl, CN'tl'f ot a.-..,.,, ltti. of Cell1ontl1, lfltot ~ llulll lrpnl,.... .. •llDllt i. .. """' to 1 Sft'<:I Ht ..... Jf'. 11111 Vlcl!Wll H_NI, Ttll!IWtu. wl!otol' aw.I-lddr... 11 .,, l'oll\Mfllt ·-· "'-... ,,,,.,, ORANGE -A sixth can-,....._. ttte:"-c11.111f'f "' or.,.... ''"• of C•llf«11!a. dldate, Harold E. Fields, has Tiie ,,_,"' i. i. ,,,,..,.,..., •• loutM ced I the f th ti S* e .. t CHlt Hlthwl't'-S4/IM I , announ or race or e N9-I' '"""' c-tv " 0r11111, '·"'' Fourth Distil.ct Supervilorlal ot ~~.,:;,.,. " ""'1l.i 1,. _,,.1 seat held by Wllllam Hirstein. 1,: An itoc.k 1n ,,,.., tllrtur ... 111~1.,.,...1 Field! a resident ol Ora.nae 1no ,.,. Wiii • t!ltl fl'G!J'IC1I r11 .. ' ''O ' Hu•rlu111 WPlllltt Ml-11J1oW'1 •• said, "Orange County is beset "fxoflc ""' 1.t111erklm" flMi 11<•'-' 11 • h IOU -bl ' 1 · uoo a111 c..1 HftllWl'f', ~ 11t1cl'1. wit rnomen s P•v ems n eou11tv 111 °"'"" s1,,. QI c,111wni.. health · educatiOD welfare TM-bulk "'';le' wrn i. -'• • ' ' "" or 11tw Thi ird "11 of ~I'd\, lf10, •I pollutlon of the enviroament, ,,•·P.M. ,, u111'9d c1i1"'1111 .. ,.. "" lack of mass transportation "'" C••t H1.-.w. c.r-d•• ,.,.,, t ~ntv qi 0.-•"'t;111N d ·CAll.,.,.,.lt, io.!IS O( preciOUS pub\IC ocean -So !tr 11 "-11 !ht TrMfff .... I ll d · d f th Ml-"""'"' •lld IOcl,..... .,... lrl' access an myr1a o grow r,1111,_. ,..,. lfl• """' ~ ••tt ""' problems." •••· ....... Fields, an electrician, joins 01'"~H'.~1,,., Anaheim c i l y councilman S.d H•.-.n~ If· ' Calvin 'PePley, Vllla Park -~111~-';::_ c.n1 o.hr· Pl_.. ~i-' 171·10 Ma.tor James Workman 'l·-~-"--"''-"l''--,,....-==---- Anah•lm bll!lnessman Burr ' LEGAt NOTIGJI . ' Williams, Tustin aUomey Paul • · ' • ' ' ' SUPl!tl«MI Uft'f -·TN STATI OJI ~l'OaMIA • .... TMI COUlf1'Y. OP1RIVl .. IN CAii _ .. ._ .,,. ~ • ' SllMM9WI , Bell and slate official Gofdon Bishop ln the race. Hirttein announced be would oot •k a • fifth term. UNITl!D CALl .. OllNIA·•AHK~ I Cl l'- 90l'I "°"' ''-lrt!IH -Vi: ~ 0 .. I'~ TT M~CURY CINTRI, IHC..-.\..C.llfwnl1 ~ttioftl WIL,lllO Ii. MOPJ!ATT ltld IAAIUON MOll .. ATT. o.fllldln+I' SANTA ANA -A atudy has ' been 'I-by Cowity of. fidals on plans to set a special court to handle narcotics of - fenses. way to judge effectiveness of county anti-drug abuse pro- grams. Patti \.Villiams, a 21~year-old senior at Cal State Fullerton, is one of SO contestants who will compete for Citrus Queen title at the National Orange Show SA:CRAMENTO -Two bills April 2-12 in San Bernardino. affecting public officials and-~-------------------­ the bodies they serve on have Jell y fish Studied Jll!O .. LE OF THI! STATE 0 f CALIFORNIA 19 ttle 1b0tt 0 NIMCI Deftndlllhh y.., 1r1 di~ 1o 1111t wo11 lltt ci.""' ol lhh Clollrl lft W!lfdt. 1f11, IOow entffled WlOll 11 bf'(IUlhl I Wl'lt* •1Hd1111 ]ft ,~....., .. 1o ""' wrlflM totr'nflllnt wn11111 The suggesUon for the new court was made to county supervlJOrs this week by Supervisor Robert Battin. supervisors agreed that the Idea had merit and voted to ask Superior Court Presiding Judge William C. Speirs to meet with Dl.strict Attorney Cecil Hlclt.s and other county· officials to eiamine the Idea. Battin told fellow la......, be'lhougllt the-new · -""1it could provide a better ------- For the Death Notlees 1-coot>•• 0,...,., C-r. "" 1t, ot ln.I Plrt St .. Hunlllll'*" a.ld'I. 5unllv~ by P••wnbt Mr. Ind M"' H1rrlton C-rl twotllw, Vlchlr1 1h1tn. Mra. Giil Madrid, Ml$1 .su .. n c-r. 111.,..,.,, 1on1e111. T"'"49v, 1 PM. Smllti• cr11,.1, R111u1.,. Ml..,. W..snetdt'f, 10 AM. 5S Sl'"°" lo JIJCll C111'1ollc ChUrdt. Smith-I MorhlarY, Olr~ ,,,. ICJOSLIY Chod• 1Cnl1•'· IOI Jo!lll Aw .. Hu11llnelon 1t11ch. krlfltn H.,,..l,,. 11 Srnllhl fo/q· ,119•1'. NOYIS Miidred JUl'I Kovn ...... !Cl. of 1101 Sltr· ,.,. i\w_, Hunll"'tor. hKh. 01te el dMth. 'lt>rwn' n. :klrvlvld ltr hvlJNl'MI, QlelM L"' KlWtll molMr, Mr1. Mff ludtllM. Colll Mnll """""''· Olltln , 8udtllnd, of LOI AMtlet.! sltlet', Gr~ • LAPlldl, tow1. Sfnkn, WIHIM.O.'f', 11 AM. .. II 8rMdWl"I' Cfllpel, •ltll ll..,. Chfr)n Snlllh Clfflcllll..,. lnll'frNfll, Mil'· 'W Rett Mem0!'11I P1rtt. 11111 l~'f' Mlrl\Jln', O!rtct0ta. .... ,1at111 K-'l'I """· nn ~" A111 A ..... Aloi. I(, CO.ta M .... Datt of 611111. Ftb- rWn' n. SIW'llYl<f" 10n, 0tr11"""'9r, of V"'ltl!i "'°"""'· Mia. O~ ltldd~, of Pldut.""-lf.fl'lfVdllr, s.noltft ud lntt,.. mtnt will i. lllld In ,.ld\IC1h, Ktntuc:-Y. • h i! 11,..._'f' ,,..,,,.,.,y, f-ltdllll di-. ........ auMSOLO Ctrrlol lturnbltld. 21SYI AbllDM Aon., 1.11-tioe wa1if •• om of ""••h. F.tt. n. sur. vlvtd by hlllblNI, Cf\lrMI W: lt,vr!'l~ld, et tM hOmtl 11n1. charln s., of l1lbolo • 111..-idl J1mtt M., S.nford, N. C•rollMI • John w, Rumbold, ol' Aalror•. OlllDI 11 .. • t.rt. Mra. Annt K. 011111n, :S.rll!Odllt, 'CllftMCfkul1 Mn. H•1tr1 81rtrll, f(or1fl , R1!1doipli, Vtrmor1l1 I tr1ndchlldnft ' Ind -trHt-.rlftlkll11d. SfnlUi Wt0nf$Cl1y, J PM. ,..c;lfk v~ ,,.,.,,,, 111trri• ... 11t, • PKIHC View Mtm0rl11 Pirie ... MTlllY IUll• ''•"'' t1lolt wl1hlnt lo ,.,._, rM1'\9":l•I ' ICOl'ltrlbut!om. lllrlM i;Dnlrlllult lo Ille ; H-Mtft!Ot1•1 ~1111 lulldl111 Fund. : '•clfk View Mlr'hl•l"f'• Dlrrctota., • • ARBUCKLE .. SON Welldlll M-.,. 0'1 E. rnll 5'.1 C.O.ta Meaa ·-• BALTZ MORT\IARl&'I c.r... del -OR s."541 C.la M-Ml WCU • BELL BROADWAY MORT\IARY ' llt Br"'"'Li~ .. _ .,_ ' . DILDAY llMl'llERS · Bullllfllllo valley . Merlul7 J7tll _. Blvd. Hualtngloe Beath 14J.7711 ·-PACIFIC VIEW : -MEMORIAL PARK Cemetery e MMloary • . .. • • . • IMIPadtle~Drtve Newpool -. Collhnlo -• PEEK Jl'AMILY COLONIAL Jl'IJNBllAL ROME 17111 lolaa An. Walmluter-e ; 8RDtEll MORT\IAllY • 1-a -~ 4M-I .. ! 'Slo a.-w UMHI : . IM?l'RS' MOR'l'U RY Ill Moll SL -·---- BaUln said he envisioned the new court as an Integral part of the county's anti.narcotics programs. "One of its benefits would be the allowing of more freedom for judges to experiment with disposition of drug cases," he said. The plan wUI be discussed for feasibility by Judge Speirs, Hicks, Administrative Officer Robert Thomas. M e.n ta I Hygiene Director Dr. Ernq:t: ·Klatte and Health Officer Dr. John Philp, Record been Introduced by Assemblyman Robert Burke (R-Hunlington Beach). The first of lhe t w o measures, Burke said, will prohibit the appointment or any remaining member of a Disneyland Awa rils · Oii Th ursday city. county or district govern· ing body to fill a vacancy on that board where the unex- pired term exceeds one year. -'I'he bill, ~d. woUld also apply to any person relit. ing from-a governing board . ANAHEIM -Twenty-four Orange County community organizations will div 1 de $30,000 nt the 13th annual com- munlty service awards lun- cheon Thursday at the Disneyland Hotel. RepresentaUves of 2 t 2 organizations which submitted appllcatJons for lhe grants are expected to attend the luD· cheon. In recognizing more than 6.5 million hours devoted to com- munity service by nearly 150,000 members of ·these organiz.atioriJ, Dt.meyland will grant a top award of $5,000, three $%,500, Ulree Sl ,500, nine fl,000 and eight $500 awards. "The measure trie~ to eliminate a questionable ap- pointment practice." he said. "Some fuzzy language in the elections code," Burke said, Is lhe target of his olher pro- posed law. Sierra Cluh Hears Lagunan SANTA ANA Len Thornback of Laguna Beach will be the featured speaker at the Orange County Sierra Club meeting March 3, at 8 p.m. at Smedley Jwior High School, 2120 W. Edinger Ave., Saata Ana. Thomback also will show a film on cross country skiing. Providing the Thrust ""' ...,. •"" ......... k ...... "' ... County Youth to Pedal At Irvine ~M,tt ...... Wftllt11fllt ...... '"""' ,..,..,.., ... ....... tMrfr ...,, • ~ ...,....,., fu«PI tlllll I, "'9 K- llorl 11 ltllMI TM SllM -"""' II ke- lloll 111.S of 1111 Codi qi Clvl! '"~'•• • From Mexico to Canada IRVINE Jelly!'·" and w11n1t1 1• ,.... •• , vou .,.. 1111'11''" 11wot -w • Ul'll•H ~OU '° Iii. I wt'llN!tl r __ ,.,. their relatives may. be the .~. 1t.. 11111111111 wm t•k• 111""""' . • for .,..,. _., ... (1.,,. .... ftmll!Oed Ill bane ol surfers and swun· llle""C-111111, " ,,_.._ -contr•cl. mers, but scientists find lhem or w111 _,.. to "" c-t tor .,.., oNr · GARDEN GROVE -Kent Andresen, a W-year--0ld Santa Ana.. College studenl !tom ~carden Grove--plari!"lO llllie the entire length of the West - Coast from the Mexican to Caoadian borders. The 2,300-mile hike is set to begin March 1-at a small Mex. ican border town called Cam- po, Calif., eas~ of San Diego. His parents y:ill drive him to the starting point. Andresen, by silt:ial ar- P ark Parley Sched ul ed In Anaheim ANAHEIM -Tbe city Qf' Anaheim ls sprucing up for the forthcoming 22nd annual California and Pac 1 f i c Southwest Recreation a n d Park conference which starts Satu rday and runs through March t at the ~nvention center . Speakers include San Fran· clsco Mayor Joseph Alioto, Dr. Paul R. Erlich, professor or biology at Stanford University and author of "Population Bomb;" Floyd H. Hyde, assis-- tant secretary or the federal Department of Housing and Urban Development, and newscaster Clete Roberts. The conference is sponsored by the California Park and Recreation Society and the National Recreation and Park Associ ation. Theme of the five-day event is "Influence of _Leisure on the American Dream." Officers Sought For Coin Ch ili ttlltf ~ Ill 1111 CemJlllllf. rangement with college of· very useful 1n problng for new ""NY..-""...._" .. ......., ficials, will use the trip as underatandlng . of the eO:. ::.::" .-.::: = ;:. ':..:; cffilit for C9Qlpleting the two . ..Ytronmtnt-andmedlclne.~ --·-=::::=..-=::::-.,:: courses he enrolled In at SAC The researchers know them ....... -. ... .......,.... this spring -Ca 11 for n i a as coelenterates -a. groUp-·Of <SEALlOONALD o. SUlLtvAti g-aphy a n d C1Womia simple animals which includes c_.., c_r.rt: ...,. c11tt1 fll ""' '"'&' ----'1<1Perlor Collrl fll h h4itOry. corals, hydra, sea anemones stat•., cattfonl11 w 'lhl .-Most of the trip will follow ~II tfi)elshman-of-war, as well as ~~':f P":i~":=.m tugged mountain and desert Je Y · 01...i Die. ll, Ifft. country. His minimum altitude Representatives of f Ive :":u~~~~::•K0""· sMAI'••• WI.If be about 2.000 fe<t near California universities have "" •1hhl,. ...... ,..,,, 11111te itet . l . F b L" A~""'· c ......... .... Mojave. Maximum altitude been Invited lo UC rvme e . T•h nu1 UWMt through the High Sierras will 28 to dl~cuss the coelenterates "':'::'~' t~,:" ,_, 011"' Pl1&!, be about 13,000 feel at Whilricy and their research uses. F•11tu1,., l• •<W M••cti J, 10, 11. 1m Pass. He plans to climb 14,900-The colloquium Will be •·10 foOt Mount Whitney when he hosted by Professor Howard LEGAL NOTICE rtaches that point later this M. Lenhoff .. director of the summer, weather permitting. program in marine biology,l--,-,-,-.,=,~,.,.=,.,-.,0=.~.,.=~,,=,=.,~,-- Tbe hike has been planned and Richard C~pbel.1, ~ -Tiit ....,.,.':w~~·= :!:~ '" " _.. out carefully wilh forestry tant profe.ssor of biological 111Kllft9 • 11u&1MM •' ''" PIKlfltL• 1H1. • Cott• Mnl, C1lltol'ftl1, ..-r the fk. rangers. Andresen will carry SClenci!s. 11tlOll• 11rm _,.. .i 1 u f ,. AL o 144 worth of maps. "llUILDfRI ..... "''' Miil llml .. ("7'- POMf of ftM ttUowlf'll --· ..... His equipment {Or the nine--111 NII 11\d $(1 llt r.ie-a II n month-long walk will include Benefit Slated "'~riu t.emorin. 1ttt 1o. ,.....,i. the u,sual camping utensils and t"'..!i ~.:'n. "'° equipment, dehydrated food, B R k B d 01m11 Umcll'* water and first aid kit a book ' y 0C. Q Q 8 Siii• of C.tttomlt, Or ..... (wnfy: • _ • On FtbN•l"f' n. lt11. bl'tor• ,.,., • on edible plants, sleeping bag EL MODENO Tb Nltty HOt•,., Publk 111 lftlll '°" .. w 1tttt:. d bl c hlkin -~-.. -e _._ • ..,. ,_,.., Dlrr•D ~ an anaet, g 31.111'1".S, ~ G . Di B··• and the ~ 1o ""' "' bl 1111: .....,. w1'loM small tent a pancho raincoat ntty. rt .,.., , ,,_ b Wbtcr!Wd "' the w11to1n ln- 75 feet of ~ylon rope, goggles: Sunshine Company w 1 I I :::=:.. '"" ~ ...... flt uKulld snow mask ice axe fishing perform Saturday afternooo at (Ol'FICl.AL sl!ALl 1 • · El Modena High School a1 a Mlr'I' K. Hltl!'f 1 1 po~· pack saw, boots and bear benefit fo"r the National Cystic ~= ... r'~~~~'°'"' whistle. Fib 1 Rese rch F d ti o,_, c1111ntv Andersen plans lo average Tbros 5 rf a ounwilla on. My c-"•kln eu1re1 e pe ormance be New. 1.1, 1m about 10 mlle! a day. He'll from 1 m 1 3-p' • the -Pvt1~ • .;,....,,~---•0111r ,.11111, h M · b th d f · P· • o· .m, m Flbru•rY 14 •lld Mllrcfl J, io, 11, 1t10 rcac 01ave y e en o sdiool l)'m. ProCeedll will go m-10 the first month t~en take a toward Cyshc Fibrosis l ---,---AL--N-O'n-~CE---week off to replenish supp\Jes reSearch ~ for the trip up the High Sierra -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;l;;;;;;;;;;-;;:o;;;;;;;;...-y;o..-.;; Pacific Crest Trail. He plans'' WANTED "'i'~IC1Tw0l 1:1~.NT•i= 1:u:-::l~: periodic rest stops all along 1•vaaA••s the 2,300 mile route. , TO wttOM iT MAY co:c·~ ,. ,,,. A freshman student at Santa $\IDIKl '° •-nil 111 "" 1ic-11- Aoa College. Andresen has ::=,::;.:"::.!:...":": '.:.~" ~~ been an avid hiker most of hil IOYS I.ND GllU ...,...,,... •I 1111 •r1m1-. ,_,.IMll .. AfiU J TO 19 ,...,, life. He admits. however, that 21ot w, oc.... """"· N-t It.cit his longest walk lo date has • .,.. i. A..,.,_ .. ="' 111 '!.':::. ~~~~ been 88 miles. Oii ClllMf Cl""'" TV d Akollolk. ..._._ Collir.1 .., LsMIWIC• 'I Ill "' CNlllly ,..,. "' ,,.....,. " .,, ikll'llllk ..._._ He figures his da1 y cost w H•llywMlf T•i.t ,..L 11«11a1 1.,. ~1 .,., tlM:M -• .. run about Sl.50 and he has AUDITIONS,, WILL H "''~~SALE ••ER saved $600 to ¢ver the ent(re HILD THIS WUX A""'-m1r/"' .. wotnr "" t..u.nc• trl·p -"00 for food and ol' wen lkef\H 11 ,...., fllt. • ...,mt.i ..... .,.. IN OIAN•I COUNTY ,,,, II '"' otlk• " .... ~I "' necessities, $200 for emergen-Akollolk ._ ... '"'"'"· • .., men 1e ,..,. Prw On c.e-...,.,... ..... OtHrt-1 ol' AIDMMlk \l<Wtt .. cie!I. CCHl!rol, 121J 0 ffrffl, ,S.U#Mlllo, Forest rangers all along the 547 625 J C•11'°'1'11• '5111'· "° 1$ "' ti,. nulW(f wfll'llll JO dly1 af ""' 6ltoJ' !Ill '•,,_.., route have been alerted and Call • Nowl '"'""'!"" w..,. 11ri1 _, ... 1t111M ....,. th 'If be tchl f h' ff 11)1' drfl!1I ., •111¥..., lrl' lew, TM ey wa ng or 1m. T•I• t saa • 1 1 ,,.,m, ... ,,. -ik-... fO' ~ M.,"' he doesn't' arrive within a " re 1 "1 1leDflcllk .,.""""' n.. fDf'm., ...mtr.. SANTA ANA-Nominalions reasonable time· at a certain TAKE ~-;:;::u~;IONS :::'O:f,1i::111'1:111* fl'ilm lll'f olflc•., for offiC1?rs of the Orange point, they 'll st~rt' l~f khin~ folnr HOLLYWOOD, CAUF. Publl~ ";'::;:· ~~., 0111y ~1..,,, County Numismatic E r r o r him to determine 1 e s F•btll•r., ''· 1t10 Ji1-10 Club Wlll remain open until the trouble. f~==;:;:::".'=;::::==:=="'1---:;;;;:;-~;;;;;;;:--- March IO meeUng, according There will be various check LEGAL NOTIC.'E LEGAL NOTICE . to SoMy Witt tlf Huntington points along the ~te wherel--;,~1;;,;;,;;,.;;"~':;,0,-;0;,~,ltu0.11;;,;;1;;.,.--1----~~~--~-- Beach, chairman of the elec-An.dtesen will CQP'Jl'D.Unicate fl1cT1r1ous JU.Ma NOT•c• 1# l:':oeTHS Ith hll I II d Tiie 1,11'10tr11gllld odOll (lrltt't< flt • o;ol'I--lion committee . w rang~rs. &m y an duc:l!rit • 1111111\tf.1 II "'" MldllOn A•• SUP•••oa COURT Dfl THI The club meets on the sec-friends • • '11111 M•... c.u11)1'111.. lll'ldtr 111t 1k: s;:~•cru .. wi:,oa0'::,.:" Wh ~ bf f lltlaut fl"'P llMll ol' PROGRAMMED .......... ond Tuesday of each month at !I s reason' or ~IJNtCATIONS 0, CALIFORNIA £11119 "' llUTH ANNA MAll;l.A, at the Orange Coonty Library, ing the long trek' .. • ... he ro,~~ ::::0,:.1~ =::'tu':.: CLAlllKEL OKHtoll:I: 8th and Rois Streets:, Santa says "whv s anyane climb •ltc of NINlll<I 11 ,, 1-o1-.· HOTICk 1s HEAEIY GlvaM te ..._ • J, G IU¥1-an M.ti A C'l'Hlton of Ille ll»Ye llllMd ,...,., Cartoonist Virgil Partch of Corona de I Mar (left) hands over his !reshly drawn poster for 1970 Cancer Crusade in Orange County to William Pells, president of American Cancer Society's Orange County branch. KnJ gbt on poster is thrusting sword toward county goal of $375,000 for this year's fund r'!ising dri.ve which begins in April. ~Partch is honorary chairman . Ana a mounta '11 ' ... vi., llMlt 111 ..,._ 11n111e cf.lrns ... 1Mt "'-r-;=·==============~·r=======,j (Diii Mfll, (•Ill. Ni41 rMCeowrt 1,. r-ll'tll lo tlle -01'9d ,.tll. n, ltN, Ollfl 1(1v•Mtll wltl'I the _...,.., ~ ill ,,. ~' .J<•te ttl C1rllomli, °''"°' Ct1mtl'; of tfll clll'k Of !ht ltloYI fl'ltltllril OIUr't .., Sloomy G111 11 Your Kinda Guy , . Now!PSA • . every minutes to Oakland! 7:15 1m lo 8:45 pm. Both w1y1 . 7:11-1:4sf10:1 f.11 :45 1,,..1 :1S.2:45+4:1 W :4S.7:15·1:45 pm. ' Mort on weekends. I Wf\V worry abollt a ru1rvaUon when PSA h•• over 1&0 f11ohls • d1y? Sueh •n 1aay.t<Hem1mbtr 1ehedut11 you can carry le around In YoUr head. Why remtmber 1ow11t rares? Or 111 Jttt? Or oreal terv1ct to San Francisco, San Jote, S111 D/190, ind 64icr1111ento? Or that kidt under 12 fly PSA (with their partnta) 1or half fare? Sllll want a rt1erv1tlon? Ju1t CB~J<!U' trewl 1a1nt orwh1t1lt1n1me 11rtr,.,.., ~..._,_, .... \1 FREE • RedUCtll 81tk· 9round NolM ·• No Cords or Tubt1 Custom Fitted r W SMAL LllT'' IUN !o\IRACLI'• °" Ftl:lnllry ,,, tm Mlor• ,.... • IO """"'· lhMI. WI~ ""' ,._,, .., • ,.._ • • ¥OUCfMl'l. to !ht undlrl .... ,., fM. i.w lf'f U '"' In tl\lll tor Nld $fllt Offket of McOwM t. Or9'1'1t S!111 I O\ltto __ r,., ._,I'd on., "'"'"""" _" • .,.. 0r-, .... ,.1. ,,.., · """ .. ktoDwll Ill IM hl bl lfle ""111'1 Wl'IOM ., "' ' ' Ill-IS .utlwlbtcl lo Ille wllhfft ~ II lfle •Itel of llOllMu d Ille - ''""""'' 1"41 1ckftewlfl!ll'd flt tlltwllld dtts19ned '" •II m•n1r1 Mfhil"I"' "' """ ff11 N.... * tllJlt, of -.Ill cllC:lllttlf1. _ :-tf'lln "'" (Ofll'ICl.iiL $EAL) mQl'llftl 9fltf fl'll tlr1I M~tltll of 11111 JOMOl'I E D•wl1 rooll«. Na11,., .. Uenc<•IHOfl\lt D•lld Oth:IW n. 1..,. PrlMJNI Offltt! In 1'Ultl.,.MI\ H•llll!fff 11\d Or.,,..e Coun1v Mlf'f lrt"' U"""'*° My Commtulorl El•lrt• E11eculrk9I of h Wiii ' J.,,.. 21 Itta of "" *"" l'llmlll cttctdfnt PubllSllrd g;._ CHll 0•11• .... MCOWl.N • 1 11a1N I ' Sit I . C"'9rMll , l'lbrU!l•Y 24 •nd Mlrtll ), 0. lt, lt10 Or•-· t111ftt"'9 ...., :U.-10 Tth t11"1 UJ.ll" 11------------1 .......... ,. -hafltfrlCtt LEGAL NOTICO Publl'11td Of'... Ca.If Dtll"( ptlof, ~ l'WV.f'Y ,, .,.._ Mtrtft , 1t. ,,, •• ,. For hive ,JSifflcul-11-----,,~.~.~ .. =----• """' t1e11 hearing convel'llllons in HOttCl TO c1t•DJT01ts LEGAL N--_ groups, movies •. church oi; IUPllttolt CO\lllT OP TN• V ll""D on the T.V.-The•limple In· 1i:~·~.f#1:r:,::.::.11 P-lltll expenatvc ~URACL.E J EAR &1111e "' vt#iL4~0llNSON, ••., caa',',"c','.,"-• °" .. ';."M111N•t1 will sharply lJ'U\ hetring ""' ''Back Into Foeut." Umlted •lit 11-• v. c. 1toaueSON. 11,. Tiit ....,....,..., ... cwltf¥ .,.. tt•-. k"!W" 11 Vlll;IUL C. 110111!.,'PN. 0.U.ti 6ilctll\t 1 ........ ti P. O .... .... supply of Thf Revile& Mir• ..,_ ,,..,""" ·a11Nt1M, '*' ....... .e fle-acle Ean will be c:lv(D MOTICE II HEllllY Gl\IEN lo ..... "'"""' ttM'll -., Wl'llllllOW: C1H lm O' !ht ........ '*'°" dKrolltnl Sl!Jl\l'IC1'S .... ~ Mfd ffrM 19 ._ lliWJ.)', ~I Ill--· r-tM ct.Writ Htfhtt h ,..,. If 1f19 ltllllWlrll--. ...... "*"9 FRll OffD UP1•1$ MARCH H, 1 t70 totld """"'' •1• ,_w.-19 1111 """'-Jl'I ft.I" •nd lllllCI ti mletrlct It • ._. ., wltfl lf'lt • ....,., YOUdltrt. In h oftla .,.._. '""' 1rt "*"•""' 11'11'1' IC-"'" wlll!O\lt olllJtttjtll of !ht tllrfl If IM Mow lnlltltd _,.,,., ,t~ L. c.rr.tl .,. ""9tlert Wtv, " -tnt "'-wfl!I ""' '*_,,.., C•" MtM. Cdftrnl>I nar. Nim• • • ••• '' •' '' '• •• '.'. • • '' •' ' •• • • • •• • • •' • • • • ' • '• '. '' ' Juillr••• • , , • , , , , • , •• , ••• , , • , , , , , , , , •• , , ••• , , , , , , , • , •• , , CU1 , • , •• , , ••• , • , • , • , • , ••••• , • , , •• , , il"hon• •• , • , , , , , • , , cu, -''"' '" .... '9: AMER[CAN HEARING AID CENTER P.O. Box ·695 Mtisa, Calif. 92626 • _....._ " Ito. """""""" ., ..,... (If. 0.t.f ,.....,,. t. ma. lie.. Of ft'COWEN l CJIE.IN. UO I . N•l'C't l (.,, .. DM•111-n. Or ...... C1HllWlll• tH171 whjdl 11111, ol' C111twrii., or ..... CWftf'fl It Ille llM• 91 M~ .... llMff•ltMll Oft jl'111Ntf'Y L 1"9, ...... ..... t Ill •" ""'ltrt "'ulrlttie ft 11\t ttt1t• °' Nol•r, ~le 111 tf111 tw Mlf lflft . U~ -~!, Wllftfft ,fful L'!!"lfM '""' HrtONlflr ........ ......., l . Ct11'tll 11111 ""'' ~""' "' """ ....... ~ "' ,,,.. ,. .. llwt .......... ~ °''" """'"'" .. tt7'o nlftlt " """*'.... " -... ... '"' •,1rtti ~ ~ .... !~...... tll'WNll' tNI ......... ..... •IC!.t .~ ...... -.: ' .... __ • l!ICOWtC:.:".la11t ~~I IOllJllC:;.,alA.L) :.:..~~.;: ........ , ~ . ~~;rj~:""' T•h tn11 .,._.,,. °'""'' n All..,,.,. ... •RIC9tlr • ffrt C0l7l"I . IOI'! e,1rt1 PvblltfrlH 0...llftl (OM! D•llr ,.no.I, NO¥. 14. mt lrWwr,. H •rid MtrOI ,, 10. )1, 1t10 '"""'ltd Or.-. CMll Oa!l't "'°'' 1»·10 lltbrutrY L I• 1r, 14, 1m 1n.111 ' • ,.. .................................................. ________________ ~~~~~~~~~~-- 1J OAllV l'lLOT .. I LEGAL NOTICE I • LEGAL NOTICE ,_ ' I • , ' ~ Tuesday, f'tbruary 2-4, 1979 • LEGAL. NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE • • Save 01a -Taxes·-6 • York Stock List ltlarket J' j J II 1· I J I JI I I/ l L' DAILY "I.OT JJ • ' I ' " ---. - ----------------.,---------------~ -------------------------------------~---------. --· --· . JJ OAll.Y PILOT Tu.sday, FtbrUlry 24, 197~ In B!gfa Gear Buick Goes 'Mod' • With Swek GSX By CARL CARSTENSEN O•I" 1"tW ~1¥41 1.41Uior Buick division, always con- sidered somewhat staid and conservative, bas let Its hair down a little with the in~ ,lrod~n of a sleek new .sports coupe, the GSX. The new two-door hardtop model, whiCh----WUlgo on sale aboul March I, features front and rear spoilers, hood mounted tachometer, super -wide billboard Ures, power disc brake.s and special paint strip- ing. BUick, off to one of Its top years now joins most of the domestic auto makers with a new mid-year offering . Although this might be con- sidered somewhat of' a "warmed over" enlry the new coupe is certain to bring new s howroom tr a ffic .t o dealerships. The csx•1s basically a cs 455 with spoilers a n d distinctive paint striping. It Is available with either the regular A55 cubic inch engine or lhe Stage 1 option, which includes a high lift camshaft and other special englne COm· ponents. Chrome ~heels, a rallye- lype steering whee~ r.allye clock, outsid~ rear view mir- rors to match the erterior col- ors, bucket seats and interior and extl!rior ornamentation complete the special equip- menl. EXCLUSIVE COLORS The car Is offered in two ex· elusive exlei:ior colors - Saturn Yellow and Apollo BIBL E THOUGHTS ETERNAL PUNISHMfNT i1 propottio111! to knowltdgt •nd opporiu11ity. J11u1 11id, " .•• flttt 1tr~111t whic.h ICNEW lii1 l ord'1 will -ntither did -hi1 wilt, thtll b1 b11len with MANY llrip11. 811t he th1t KNEW NOT -1h1ll bt bttftn • witli FEW 1lrip11." (lk. 12 :47-47 1. A ltfenled mtn in i•i1 fot life, i1 1orh,1r1d bv fhcu.19htt of lod op- p<ffhrniti11 111d wisted icnow1iod91. NOTH ING ctn bt don• to riotno¥• lh11• p11ni1hin9 thou9hh. An i9nor1m111 , in j1il for lif•, m•y~ myll, triO l1j11ff•>d!i.J _pJLni1l"J11nt is lit t.t. 2 P.t. 2:20-21 condiomn1 Chri1ti1111 ,..-ho h1 w• hop1l•11IVT.rt.n-• ,iiito ih1 end 1ttf1-1, ""··lh1 l1tt1r •nd is won• with th•m th•n th1 beginnint. fo~d·b11'n b.tter for th1m not to h1¥1 lr.nown thio w1v of right.011111111····" Th••• mii1 H11¥1n end 111ff1r rio· lftor11 11Mi rio9r1t 1tiorn1lly. ht .. ing KNOWINGLY 11 j1ctioi:I" op- portvnitiios. NOTHING c1n b1 don• or 11id to 1111 thioi1 ••9r1h. Thi Bibl1 doe1 not f11d1 LITERAL 1h11t1 of gold in Hio1v1n: lhi1 i• 1 FIGURATIVE w1y to d11crib• th1 be111lifUl "Nioith1r ..!.o.IJ _it_ t1 1cli LITERAL fir• in Hill; thi1 FIGURATIVELY d1- 1crib11 th1 l•rribl1. REMORSE ind REGRET of tlios• in Hill'' I who mi11ed H••vef'l I will for1¥1r tort11r1 them 11 fire. R11d Jn. ll:-47.-41. Re ... 20:11-15, l Cor. 5:10, 11.-. 21 :1·5. Yo11 "'"' KNOWLEDGE of Chri1t. Do you +1lr1 ... ,,., OPPORTUNITY to obioy him7 VJSIT Church of Chritf, 217 W. Wilton St., Co1!1 MioJ-1. STUDY th• BIBLE wit!. 111. . • - -, I Age· ~1 · Violen~e Prof Warns of Protest$ SAN FRANCISl:O <(UPl) - A criminology professor warns there may be more violent protests by Young radicals and blames strikingly different at· titudes betWeen them and their elders on the right to private property, Many youngsters simply "don't feel property damage Is wrong," said Dr:Bernard Dia- mond,, acting dean o f criminology at the University of California in Berkeley. . Djamond ~id he witnessed 1 rior last Monday io Berkeley during wh,lch at least. $163,000 worth of windows Were broken in a protest against contempt cUatlO\'lS in the "ChJcago seven" trial! w~~= ss~~~~7s o~~~~ :::~e~~~ he described as .''street P,eople" or hippies. Diamond ~aid he asked .several o.f the'm why they ·smashed windows. -! Most of them replied, that BUICK'S NEW GSX TO DEBUl"dleek new sporJ'• coupe features-front and rea r spoilers, front disc brakes, hood mounted tachometer, super wide tires a• .s~nd~rd equ!P.menl. Powered by a 455 c. I., engine, it is available with 4-speed stick or aute>- mat'ic. The osx-goes ori sale about March 1. "They \_hink thelr par n~ put property ahead of people and this is a big.element in the generation gap;" he said, "I 1Everybody · does his' own thing.'_I asked lhe'tn why they wanted to hurt s m a 11 businesses and they said they were sorry about that and were really aiming at banks aild other large institutions." • Diamond ~ra,is e d the Berkeley Pohce Department for its handling of t h e demonstration and suggested police elsewhere use such ·White wilh black striping. 'fhe • center sej?lion of the hood , with its twin air scoops, also is painted black. · A . four-speed floor-mounted ·manual transmission with con- solette is standard on the GSX. A three-speed Turbo- Hydramalic transmission with a full length console is available as an option. The front spoiler is mounted under the bumper. The tapered . black stripe the full length of the car carries over onto the elevated rear spoiler mounted on the deck lid. Iralso comes equipped wilh ' lfl'S BE "FRIENDLY U you have ne\v neighbors "'-or-know--ol'-anyone moving to our area. _pig~.$. ~IJ . w so . that we may extend •- friendly welcOme and help them to-~ aoqualnt~ tn ~heir new surrouDdi.ni'. So. Coast Visitor . 494-057' 494-9361 Harbor Visitor ~174 • a rallye ride control system , dealersltlp. The announcement which includes heal{)' duty was made at a recent sales springs and shock absorbers seminar held for the staff. and rear stabtliier. Fast At the same time Abel said variable ratio power steering that Beach City Dodge will In· is offered as an option. vest over $200,000 enlarging think demonstrations will con-number' than did during the uflue aoo there will be a lot or same lnonth a year ago. An lost property." increase of 12.3 percent in new The GSX also is ~uipped and !mproving existing service with oil and water tern-• facilities during 1970. Work is perature gauges instead of red expected to start soon and no Cadillac salt!s has b e e n Diamond made his ren1arks reported by George w. Har-Saturday in ari h1terview _dur· rison. Cadillac zone manager. ing a conference on . "The Harrison further repOrted that Legitimation of Evil" sponsor- the sales ouUook for the spring _ed_b::_y_lh_e_w_r_,ig:._h_1 _1n_s_u1_u_1e_. ___________ _ selling season continues to restraint. warning lights. inconvenience to customers is * * * expected. •• • • look bright. Most models of the '70 Cadillac are available at the Today's Stocks Today DEALER ANNOUNCES EXPANSION AND NEw' GM Howard Abel. president ot Beach City Dodge has namCd Al Silverma_n general manager of the liuntington Beach CA DIU.AC SALES CONTINUE TO RISE More: Southern Californians moved into Cadillacs i n January, by a size.able dealershiJl$, he a d de d .,~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Eldorado. Cadillac's personal- lype luxury car continues as it has for quite some time as being in exceptionally high de- mand in Sput.hern California. --··- Give Be:fore Yvu Go in l1idiana To help you save -TNlll ANAPOLIS I-AB~ as been..i<lo(ll<<Lby_!l!=<lian=a ~do!jsl= r~'said Rolle rt \'/. Osler, ti me a n d m 0 n e y. diana insurance ag~1}ts are and 38 other states, the managing director oft hf ln-1 --====~-~-~T~-H~e:-~:--::::-::-:":'.:-:-::;-··~"- carrying on a-statewide cam-authorization is, binding upon diana -St3te Association or Life Ir · ., paign to setup a pool Or poten---the dOnor'.s.survjvors. V n_derwriters. "Practically D'AI IV Pl I ·QT tial donofs of hearts and oiher Half the signed card is car-nobody refuses a card." • M I. I · L · human organ~ for transplant. ried by the prospective donor. The association has a poten-. . tial force of 2,400 life un-The agents pass out cards A duplicate half g~s into a d~riters handing out the with which a signer can corn-central register, cards during their course of mit any or all of his organs for During the first six weeks of business. Eventually, Osler removal after his death. the program about 1,500 cards said. as m11ny as 7 ,500 such U n d e r a U n i r o r m have been signed. cards ~~y be passed out each Anatomical Gifts Act which "It has gone over tremen-week in" Indiana. sier to '[.,. e'.numbers • . , Just order a free Personal Numbers boo k from your local telephone business J -office. It has plenty of spaces-fol'-- all your numbers. And should you need mo1e than one, they're yoursfor@ . the asking. ... Pacific Telephone W~re here to help. offers you this 120-page book Sylvia Porter says: If you never needed tax help before-you need it now! The tax fonns which you must fill out this year are entirely nl'M, unfamiliar- more complicated than ever before. But with our 1970 Income Tax Guide, you will be able to: (1) Fill in your Form 1040 and its accompanying schedules with far less trouble and far more confi- de nce than you now believe possible ; (2) Find dozens upon dozens of money- saving hints which .will help you to avoid costly mistakes in your income tax return and to slash your tax to the absolute lega l minimu m; . (3) Save time as well as money on your 1969 income tax uite l' ~)YJllll~ bigger amounts of both than you would now guess. SEND FOR YOUR COPY tODA Y Only $1.25-plus 25¢ fo1"'postage and handling ' USE THIS HANDY ORDER FORM • ' ' I I ····················•1 • S)'l'fil Pertitr'& l11e1•1 TIX l1ld1 • fncett MlUtittt, h•t. MK • rnatt~• • 1r-1.c ... M1io NO CA .... "-eAH Mt~ clltt• or Mo11tJ OrdH to ~$Jiv•• Porter lit Gvidt" • • • • lnclosld is $1.50 ($1.25 plus 2:>c lor postaie and hindlln&l for one COPY of s,M1 Pl)ftt(s 1910 IMOll!I Ta• Guldt. Ple•i• mail to m1 '' follows: - • • ll • •• . """' ____ ,,, ........................................... -....... _. _____ ., ___ ,_,,_........ . • • • • Adlklll ______ , ............... ________ _ C1tf. -·-··-· .. --.-.,-....... -............................. __ • • S11tt .. ---·-----·--·-·-Zip No., ___ ,,,___ fl • •... HH·1 J • • ••• . , ..... ·········~··· ( I --+ I I I I I 11 I I I ; ~ Saddlehaek ~. . -. - VOL 6~, NO. '46· 2 SECTIONSI 24 P~GES _Today's FJnal _ _,, · N.Y. Stoek.8 --• ORANGE· COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDi' Y,-F~8RUA·RY ·24,-1970 TEN (:EN'FS PUC Agrees S. Coast Free Toll Rates . Unfair· 1 The state Public Utilities Commission has responded to a letter from the Laguna Beach Chamber of Commerce seeking immediate action on extension of the toll-free telephone ra te area. The PUC agrees that · the present free routes are "inadequate," but indicated Ji& solution of 1he problem may take rli.ore than a year. 1-fbwever, toll·free calls between Laguna Beach and the Capistrano Valley area will go into effect Qec. 29, 1971 , the PUC stated. This will include 493, 495 and 496 prefixes in .naiuna Niguel,· Dana Point and San Juan· Capistrano. This now Is a 10-cent toll area. Extension of the toll-free area. or reduction cir the 20-Cent charge for cau, to the Saddleback Valley arta, including 586, 830 and 837 prefixes hu been the sub. jeet of many ,rpeetlngs, the PUC slated, and Is awaiting• revised prOposal and in- form&l agreen'ient with the Pacific Telephone· Company. An lnitlill proposal, rejected ~r the PUC, is now being ,revis- ed. · • General l'elephone Company ' h. as agreed In principle to go along with any plan agreed upon by Pacific and the PUC, the chamber wa s advised. However, it was. pointed out, publie hearings on r,distrlcling the Saola Ana e1tchange, which b esseotlal to the final solutlbn, would be necessary, since some phone · company customers would bt adversely' affected by a change in rate. • The PUC, adcording to Robert Hastings who has been pursuing the phone problem . for the chamber, must consider statewide rates in granting any major reduction, since. elimination or toll calls in a given area . could result in a need to increase base rates in unrelated areas. Meanwhife the Lag'una chamber's pro- c -00. State Ruling Stands xho-tt-i>lea Nix"eit By High Court WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Supreme Coui;t duckeCI an opportunity to step into the abortion law controversy today, tum· ing down a plea from California for review of coroflicting judicial decisions in a case involving Or. Leon Belous of Beverl y Hills. The brief order den ying review left standing a state supreme court opinion holding that abortion laws ! may not broadly invade a woman 's rights to life and to choose whether to bear chlldren. -'nta~ ~ ·oPinion stTuck dow~ as ~­ coosUtuUonally vague a C a I 1 f o r n 1 a at&tute__pmg!ttlDg~ a__n_ .!Rgrtion t.L be legally.-perrormed on a woman only when "necessary to preserve her life.'' Subsequently. a federal judge in the Disirict of Columbia, \eaning heavily on the California opinion, struck down a federal law in the district that permitted abortion only when "necessary for the preservation of the mother's life or health." Thu s no licensed doctor can be pr<r secuted for performing abortions, and theoretically they can be had for the ask· ing. Some 35 states have tradi tional abor· tioo Jaws based on phrasing similar to the Alton Allen Files For Third Term As Supervisor Supervisor Alton E. Allen made his bid for re-election to the f ifth District seal on the Board of Supervisors offi cial today by being one of the first of a line of can· didates for public office to file with the county clerk, Allen 72, of Laguna Beach, put his name t~ documen ts that pnnounce his in- tention to seek a third fotlr-year·tenn on the board. Allen will' be opposed in the June primary by savings and loan ekecutiv~ Ron Caspers of Lido Isle, Costa Mesa ci- ty councilman Robert Wilson and a can· didate to be named by oragnizers of an antl·Allen recall movement throughou~ the Fifth District. County Clerk WilUam St J?hn also ac· cepted filings today -the first day for such nominations -county recorder J. Wylie Cirlyle;· ~businessman Jae R. Gteen IDLJ!l!tfily.:._otficial Davicl G. Hitchcoclf and Robe.rt L.. Itron Wfi-0 are all candidates for the office of Orange County tax collector: Also filed was the applicalion of Bernard Wocher a candidate for a seal on, the Fourth District Board of Equallza· tion. '· i..at.e filings today incluued that of L8guna BeaCh attorney William Wilcoxen as a Republican candidate for the 351h Congressional District; Assemblyman . Robert Badham who Is seeking re-elec- U9n to the 7lst District: A~mblyman Robert Burke of the 10th ·District and Coilgressman James B. Utt oi Santa Ana. 'Also accepted by St John were lhe filings of Sherifr James Musick and Marshall Norris, the superior Court clf!rk whO will endeavor in June lo Tet>lace Musick In the ol!ices of &heritf and coun- ty coroner . Do·n't - invalidated D.C, and California statutes. In two of them, Massachusetts and New Jersey, the state's highest court has upheld lhe traditional law . In its petition for Supreme Court review, California asked not so much tha~ the California Supreme Court be reversed as that some clarity be .brought to the confusion surrounding ''the clear conflict which now exists among the highest (See ABORTION, Page Z) * * * High _CQurt Clou,d,s Fate Of Dr. Robb By TOJ\f BARLEY OI tftt 0•11'1' Plltl S11K The United States Supreme Court toda y refused lo review the California Supreme Ccurt's rejection of a 123-year-old abor- tion law and appeared to uphold , in ef- fect, the lower court's implied recognition of the Therapeutic Abortion Act of 1967. Action, or rather the lack or it, by the high court immediately raised specula- tion in Orange County on the impact of the decision on lhe case of Dr. 86bert C_umming Robb, 67, the Laguna Beach physician recently indicted on aborJion charges. It brough t, predictably, claims by each side i:l the controversy that the high court's stance favored their arguments In the Robb case. Attorney Joseph Anderson, an a&SOCiate of Dr. Robb's lawyer, Moses Bennan, arRued that the high court decision "was bound to color the thinking of any jury that might be asked to rule on Dr. Robb's actions. "While it might be argued that the high court did not rule on the 11J67 act itself, it can also be argued that the court recog. nizes the vital need today for a more lib- eral interpretation of outmoded abortion statutes," Anderson said, "And it should be pointed out that the 19;67 act itself ha s not yet been challenged al U.S. Supreme Court level." The Supreme .Court ruling col!l,d lead, Anderson predict~d. to the sweeping aside of abortion laws in many of the na· lion's states and leave Califo.mia with Its "admittedly more liberal law of 1961. "The situation then would be conlrary tO Wfiat ~ilifomla-w&ntea-when' the therapeutic abortion act was paJSed," Anderson commented. "We would then be upholding an abortion law while phys:i- clans in many states would be carrying - out ahortions with no fear of punif.h· n:ent." Chi ef Deputy District. A l-t-0 r n e y James Enright does not see il that way. "What the state Sui;reme Court abollshed by its opinion is an old JaW that simply dealt wlth•the black ancl white of any Issue and refused to ttcognize the existence or any gray areas," Enright said . ,J "Or. RBbb's case>hasn't.been di~~ bY the high court nor have any of the issues in that case,'' the .veteran pro- secutor added;-''Hls lawyers might say that this Is ·111e beginning of Ille -Pinc (See ROBB, l' .. e %) • , --... I ' . , , , . , . , i 'D.t.ILY Pl Of stiff•~""" WHILE COLL~AG~ES AWAIT CORONER, OFFIC.ER Wi"LLIAM K'(SOR . WAf!DS OFF THE CURIOU$ 0 'In Newport's 'Fashioneblt Baycr•1t Section, thl Neighbo~s 'Find' a Body . . Plans. Advance · Newport Man, 60, Slain; Possible . ' 'I Bm·glar Victim By JOHN VAL TERZA OI ,~, 01nr Piie! Siii! The body o( a 60-yeo:~-<ild Newport Beach man, who was possibly the victim of a shootout with burglars. was found sprawled in his rront doorway early to- day. a pistol in his hand and a gunshot wound in his chest. Niguel H6ities are 'Go' Despite Rockwell Sale Police 'tentatively ruled the shooting a homicide. The victim, William Harris of 2012 Anchor way. was shot to death-possibly by a burglar -sometime before dawn to- day , NeWport detectives said. Harris' body had oile bullet hole in the lower left chest made by an Unknown weapon. Several other bullet boles were round in the well-furnished residence in A 750-acte planned community near the Aut.onetic.s plant In Laguna Niguel will go forward . a spokesman for North American Rockwell, said today, despite the for sale si gn on the $23 mHlion plant. . Plans for the construction or a total community, were announced in October St. Pat Salute Set for Viejo the city's Baycrest subdivision, Detective Green will be Mission Viejo's color Capt. Lou Heeres said. March 17 when the community salutes St. Harris lived alone. He was recent11 Patrick's Day. divorced, lbe.' investigator said. Preliminary plans for a big parade and The body, lying with the feet keeping a other related activities have been made •screen door ajar. was found 'by a with comnlunlty 'Organizations being.urg-. nei'ghbor taking his daughter to sc:hool al ed to start thinking about their rtoats. 7:28 a.m. "The parade will begin at 4 p:m. at · Two ·button& had been ripped of£ his Mission Viejo High School and will end at coal. ~ · ---the Mission Viejo Golf Club," said Jerry Against a window on the southeast side Curran recreation center director . of lhe house a ladder rested, po:isibly "The Mariii~ Corps bahd, the high where the killer or killers entered the school band and assorted celebrtt1e1 have gray hOOse. been invited to part\Clpate." he aatd, Harris was fully dressed In a gray suit. The golf club will make avai11ble'1 40 .He wasJ ying..Q..llhi_s left side ap~reatly golf ruts-on a tirst-come,~J ::siFVia. where-he Jell after leying to run ~t ot his bas ls lto;'organizatlons tw'.ho ,would UR to • home ... ' build a naat around one. Tommy Mitchell "PreUmla•ry lndltaUons show a strong at the· golf.clµl>'will 'be in charge of cart ,poulbtlity' QI bUl"glary." H..,..., said, rise"1alloQI, • . ..,'but!wt' atlll aren't sure." i Everyone lining the. parade route will : Hettes decllned'to1give a modef« type ht lhv:U.ed to'1 Wtar green and ;om u~ of weapon clutdled in Harris"'r!P.t hand.--1:-t parade as.itm1rehe1 by..on Its wayto..the · All bill one nelghbo~ said <they heard gblf l'lu6 where <»riled bed •and cabb1p (Seo MVRDER, P11• ll dlml<n wUI be· !Uved. . }> -·-·~--·-·~-·' ~···-·-~ by KNR, 1 corporation fonned by Rockwell and Earl G. Kaltenbach, architect and developer. It was said that construction would start in January. "The company" is proceeding on schedule and does plan to go ahead with that," said a Rockwell spokesman. "My understandibg is that •the (county) plan. ning commission still has lo act on the zoning.'' He h8d Jio time estimate on start of construction. Questioned later, Roy Gohara. county planner working with planned com· munities. said , "I haven 't seen them (the developers) in &bout · three weeks. Normally if you wanted to put something through like this. you would be on top or it. all the. time, someone· would '~ calling every day." Rockwell officials1a·nnounced •last week that 'du.e to loss of cootracts and employ. ment cutbacks the Laguna Niguel plant was being listed for sale. Rockwell aloo maintained that If a buyer is not found. the company will use the facility, ConipleUon, delayed by rain and strikes, is expected .this year, spokesrren said,' ·Gohara said the plans ..for the 1 com· ml!ni(y ranged from .a ·mobiJe ltome--p:a-r.k ough single ra·mi,IY·-hOme'~ aJ14ttmeniS 1 and even eslate1 &1ze develepmenC'1 with half-acre ,lot!. 'il 1 , ' , • Gohara said rough "tork on lhe-pla rtned1 commuhlti ta corhpleted-buf estimated )t would ta)(e· at least thiee monthS'for the 1 planned community-fo cleat heat1n11 at ~ planning coinmlsilon .ond ·board o1 supervi,..p II .Ille devolopen ao Ml· steam ahead. • test to the PUC has been joined by the Saddleback and Deina Point chamber•· and th,e La~a Nlg\iel Coordinating _Council which is organizing simllat complaints from 40 of Its member orgahizatlons, The San Clemerite and -San Jua11. Capistrano chambers also are' e:1· pected to coo·perate. · · eav Override,· Bond..:.lssue~= ---· At Stake By BARBARA KREIBICH 01 1114o Dlollr Plllt Sllff Voters In the Laguna Beach Unified School District turned out early and in substantial numbers today as balloting in the school tax override 8nd bond elec- tion got under way in nine preclnts. ~lost .pr.ecincts · reROt:ted a heavier· than-average'"'YQt during thc-mornini- hours. "It'll too eary tQ tell yet,'' said dislrict busiuess. manager Edwin Hlod. "but when I went around, thia monililf there seemed tc. be1 .more peopfe than wual. It looks , like·a fairly good 'vote." ~.,__ The ' lb will be o ilnlll 'I g ' 8 iilois will be coun aner that l\Glif.!jit,- l;ht district offices. 550 BJumonl St. • 1 , · Results will be available by pbone 1t-' 194-8546. '. By mid-morning. Precinct I at El Morro School had logged 122 voters out of a potential 1,000, whlch a precinct worker described as '1airly heavy for this time of morning." At Top of the World Elementary School, 158 or a potential 1.200 had cast their votes. Hind df!scrlbed this as "e1- cellent." - An election worker at Aliso school, where 110 ot the precinct's 1,100 voters had cast balot3, said. "It's pretty heavy; we've really been rushed." The polling place at Sterling Realty. 608 N. C<>ast Highway, had handed out ballots to ·141 of its 1,188 voters, but a precinct worker said he'd rate thia as "poor. so far." At the Fulmer garage, 1455 Santa Cruz St... voting was described as "steady," with I 16 ol 1.200 voters cast- ing ballots in the early hours, Stock .tlnrket NEW YORK (AP) -Thi stock market was moderately lower on average as the trading pacC< slowed late this afternoon . (See quotations, Pages 10.11). • ,. Price changes by key Issues ranged t0: a point •Of SQ but the eeneral pattern was of frac tional shifts. Orange Coast \\'eatlaer •The nice 11prlng·lbce weather may be on Its way out as the weather· maJJ.,predlcts a'°"'° chance of rain tonight, along with some gusty winds. The rain might last about . three d~ys. -. INSIDE TOBI\ Y 'A freeway~cr03h £urned into • o. flaming /fasCo ' whtti well Jn- tentioned rescuer" dropped a flare in..1piUed aasoLilte ,. Pao« 9. • I --------·------------------------------------------------------------------.. ------- C ·GAILY l'ILOT L -t"ebler p~ Ii'---!-~ lanners Okay I l Modern Lights Laguna Beach planning commissioners, another standard U commisaloners can tn • 1t.udy &eSlkm Monday night, gave find one more to tbe1r liking. llf d b I · to Concluding their study o( the goals their qui ie e 5 5 1 n G green stalement prepared In conJuntjion with marbelite electrollers with mushroom· lhe general plan revision, commissioners )ike top& for 1treel Ugh Una; in the Helsltr decided , to pus on to the city council IJ>art area when utilities are placed their recommendaUon or · pages 14 •·· .....,__,,..,. through 11 of the 23-page document. This u ....... .,........... section contains only the goals outlined • The comm~ionen bad sought advice by I.he Citizens Advisory Committee, wilh from the Chamber of Co m m e r c e minor revisions of wording in some in- ~utiflcatlon committee tn attempting to Uanoes. 1tlec:t a suiLable U&hl standard, but did Regarding the balance or the r~port, . commlss.ioners decided to leave the ques· not aee eye to eye with lbe chamber Uon of Implementation of the goals up to lf'OUP on its seled.lon. the council and a1.w to lociude a cr:ltlclsm Cc>m.nUasioner OW-Jes Johnson favored of the aoclal problems section prepared.' 'continuing to seek other possibilities, but by Daniel, ~fann, Johnson & Pi-fendenhall, Edbon Company representative James .. planners engaged by the city to revise the Kennedy told the comml.salon his com-general plan. The commissioners Were pany Is 1nxlou.s to start the project and crltiCal Of DMJM's extended comments would apreciate a decision. · on Laguna's hippie problem, and y,•hat 1t was agreed, wllhoul controversy. to they cOnsidered .inadequate con1n1en tary ask Kennedy to proceed Y.1th c:ost In other areas and will so ad vise the ,.est.Im.ates on the green marbellle JOb, council Which comes in a 17:fool street Jnl)d.el Requested by sign manufacturer Earl with a matching nlne"foot standard for secor to take a position on the pogslblllty ligbtirC part walkways. However, the of amending the sign ordinance to include door was left open for subatltuting aesthetic review requJrements, com- mJssionera said ~ could make ·no CaJ>9 Re.sidents Urged to Unite In Bond Vote . ~.e__lslrano Unified School Dl!trict P '---1'-siaM"ti""ire Deln,-utgettto·untte~th a group called ARVY's Frlend11 to support tht March 10 bond and taX election. decisions at a studf session a"4;1 deferred the matter until their next regular meeting, March 2. Charles Dargan olSan...Jyan Cap~lr~o has been named chairman of the group of about 50 persons. Hundred& of others are -· -bein~ recruited. Laguna Man Badly _Beaten By Marine Lqµna Beach te•la11nlf<ur Jl.arry Moon la recoverJnc at hl• home today after suffertng a severe beaUng at the hands of a young Marine bJtchhllm' be picked up in l.oDi Beach 1 .. t night. ARVY, said Darxan. stands for Area Regjdents Vote Yes. The group ls at. .tempUilg to acquaint arta residents with the eted.ion lslues. Darsan said lhe school board's request to increase lhe bond intereat ceiling from five to seven percent on H.2 million in un1<>1d bonds ls essential If constroction of classrooms al Richard Henry Dana School is to begin soon. JJe sald also thal a second bi&b ochool tor lhe.district could be built sooner if the bond interest is approved. .. we-111 know the tight money and high Jnte:re.st rate story," said Dargan. "Unless the school bonds are made saleable, there wi.Il be a major sbortq:e.of ClassroOms in th! CUSD a year from now." He · said the tu ovenitte of 50 cents would' CQSt ttie_.verate hom~r ihoUt Pt a year U approved. "The school board must have addlUonal money next year or our children's educa· tion wlll be reduced to a level no thinking parent would want to accept,'' Dargan aaid. Serving With DarRan on the erteutive committee of ARVY's friends are the followinsr: citizens: SPEAKERS -Dr. Richard W. Baker and Roriald Sttelmsn; advertising - Doug Walton: transportation -Art Holmes; finance -Mike Darnold and George White; publicity -Doris Walker and Lyn Hicks; white cards ...._ Wilma Bloom . Area leaders Include : OONCORDIA -Dwayne Berger, Beverly Holst and Roma Marks: CROWN VAU.EY -Jody Parsons; RICHARD HENRY DANA -Carolyn Wllliam1 and Sue Jaynes : LAS PALMAS -Alice Shinkle: OLE HANSON -Jeannie Needles; PAUSADES -George While and Elaine Hubbard ; SAN JUAN -Bambi Comer and Jim ~underson: CAPISTRANO SCHOOL -J o a n Atwater and Rita Nleblas: MARCO FORSTER J UNIOR lllGH - Nancy Thayer; SAN CLEMENTE HIGH -Jan Dusek. Other committee Jeade.r11 include Al Pierce, Margaret Rhoads, G 1 n r I a Bouman, Heltn Wright and Bob Elston. I DAILY PILOT OIUMGE. COAST l'U•Ll~HIMG CAMl'AH't lt o.t rt N. Wt~' l'rnlltftf .,. Publitllff J1clt It. Curley \111:1 l'l'ft~ .... 0-11 MllMIW l llflll IC11•if ...... '' A.. Mu111hl111 M&Ml!llf 1411W lticJ.1'4 P. Nill L•,-a..c11 City hlNr L .. '""' IMff Offke 111 F••ttf Avt"ll' M1il!"t .A.44r•u : ,.0. 11• liU, •?,I? -°""" C•lt ¥a.e; JJf Wt1I tt\' $!•-Jt-1 11e«11: n'.11 w.1 ,,..,.. a.u1w1,. """"~ ltuf\1 11111 kKl'I ........ ,, • I -·--- · Moon, 42. wbo owns the Cotta1e Restaurant at 380 N. CDut Higbway, stumbled into the. Lafllna Beach Police Department at 3:21 a.m. bruised and bleeding from severe cuts on his head. While he was under1olng em"ergeney treatment at South Coast CommunJty Hospital, Newport Beach police officer Albert Fisher, responding to a bulletin from Laguna, plck«j up bis suapected assail.ult, who la beln1 held pending issuance of a complaint from .the dillrict allorney'J office. He was identified as James Burkett, lt, a Marine from Camp Pendleton who reportedly ls wanted by m 111 t a r y authorities. At the time of his arrest. at C.aast Highway and Balboa Boulevard, police sal~. the suspect waa driving a cir belonging to Moon's partner In the restaurant, Art Frink, which Moon had taken to Long Beach MonJay night. M.oon told police he picked up a hit· chh1ker at a traffic light In Long Beach. Threatening him with a billy club, the young man ordered filoon to drive through Long ~ach repeatedly demand· ing money. They arrived at a motel in Compton where the suspect realizing Moon had only a few dollars with him, allegedJy beat him on the head, inflicting deep scalp cuts. At Moon's suggestion , the man took the wheel of his car to driv e lo Laguna where Moon said he would get more money. Directing him to the Laguna Beach police department, ~foon jumped out of the car. Th.e suspect drove off immediately, police said. ROBB. • • away of abortion laws but ll could Just as easily be the court's Implied recognition or the much more liberal abortion mu sure of 1967." Dr. Robb was indicted by the Orange County Grand Jury on charges of in· ducing miscarriages In three women pa· lients, all of them sinfl:le. That indiclment was delivered at the request of District Attorney Cecil Hlcks after Judge Paul Mut of the Sant.a Ana Municipal Court ruled the earlier pro- secution of Dr. Robb to be un· constituUonal. Judge Mast threw out the district at- torney's argument that Dr. Robb had unlawfully aborted four pregnant women in a rulln& which rejected the language of the Therapeutic Abortion Act. Jucr,:e Afast comn1enled: "\Ve cannot permit a legislative .U1eory which decrees lhal life betlns at conception. To do so would be to blandly adopt the philosophy of ona o1 the country'• m•jor rtllgions (Roman Catholic) an act which would clwly be in vlolaUon of the First Amendment of the United S t a t e 1 Constitution." "U there were life present at con· oepUoo, ·• Judge 1'fast said "•botUon would not be ptnnlU.ed In case of rape or incest •. , lll11 inor• thin II would be -pumitted &o terminate lhe llfe of a one- ye1M1ld who$e life h~d come as the result of rape or l~t." Or.·Robb has been ordered to RUtnd a &pedal Superior Coun hearing Thursday in which bis lawyer \Viti ch01llenge the Orange County Grand Jury Indictment on the 1round1 that the panel Is "11n llle:gally constituted panel lh11t re~ds 50ltly 10 lhe whims arid caprices of lhe district at· lorooy." " ,.. Cites Rvss Threat -Pentagon-Asks ·More AB;M Funds ' , . I WASHINGTON (UPll -The Pentagon, ciUn, Soviet milsile tests since lhe strategic arms talks began, asked Congre~s today for approval of a third Safeguard AnllballisUc Missile (ABM) site and funds for advance work on five more. Defense Secretary Melvin R. Laird told Lynch Says New Abortion Laiv Stands ' SAN FRANCISCO {UPJi -Attorney General Thomas Lynch said today refusal by the U.S. Supreme Court to review California's old abortion law "'Ill make no change in the slate's current Jaw on the subject. r-~~~~~~--,--. RUSS MISSILE FORCE GROWING. SEE PAGE 4 Jwo Senate committees that tho third ABM site would be at 'Vhlteman Air Force Base. Mo: Sitesw at ~talsltom AFB, Mont:, and Grand Forks APB, N.D., were approved last year. David Packard, Deputy o ere n s e Secretary, sai d in a sta tement "since Uie ht ginning of SALT (Strat~JIC Anni Limitation Tailts ) in Helsinki lasl Novtm- ber, the Sovieta have test-fired more than twice as many strategic missiles as we have. · ''It is imperative that we conUnne with our strategi c programs, such a s Safegua rd. until and unleas we achieve an agreement with the Soviets which' .will enable us lQ preserve the security of the country in some other way." Packard insis ted thal the U.S. ABM program had not interfered with the SALT talks, scheduled to move into full swing at Vienna April 16. WorJ,i1a9 it& Glass The high court in a brief order today refused to review decisions Involving Or. Leon Belous of Beverly Hills. The high court left standing a stale Supreme Court ruling that the Jaw may not invade a \\'Oman·s right to choose "'hether to bear chlldren. Laird and President Nixon warned )1st y,·eek that the Soviets now have more operational Intercontinental BalllsUc Mi> siles (ICBM) than the United States -1.100 to 1,054, with 1,290 Soviet missiles expected by December. The U.S figure does not include the Navy's Polaris and Poseidon missiles, however . Vern Allie touches up glass figurine in his booth at Lagu~ Beach Arts and Crafts Fair being conducted at Festival of Arts grounds in conjunction with city's annual \Vint er Festival. Fair is open without charge from 10 a.m . to 5 p.m. daily through March 1. That opinion struck down an old California statute pennilting an aborti·on only v"hcn necess ary to save the mother's life. Laird's request for funds for advance work on five more poss ible ABM site., would not be a commitment to go ahead with deployment of ABMs. . Laguna Man, Newport Tot Saved in. Near Drownings Lynch pointed out that the state has already replaced that statute with the new therapeutic abortion act, -which authorh:es a-committee or dOctOrs-to order an abortion when the mother's "physical or mental health'' would be im- periled. Fi;om Pa9e J Those five would be in the upper Northwest, probably in \Vashington :;tate;_ \Varren..Ali'B, Wyo., the MlclllgaJi.. Ohio border area ; the Washington, O.C. area; and Southern New . England, possibly in ft1assach usetts. No specific sites v.·ere mentioned othe r than Warren AFB. The first task In the preparatory work . is to look for government-owned land in the areas and to seek othl'lr property If no federal property is available. A retired business man from Laguna Hills and a 2-year-old Newport boy were recovering today after separate Incidents of near drowning. Young ShoMe Glttte was found at noon floating face down in the swimming pool of a family bis mother was vis!Ung. Ron Mathews, 17, of IOIS White Sails Way said he siw the child when he came out of the house. Mathews pulled the uncoruciow child from the water and with the belp of the baby's mother, Pal, revived him before the Fire·Rescue Unit arrived. The mother,. who lives at 112 W. Ocean Fpiot, said she didn't know bow ~boy gotoi.l,t of ~tl>e boUJe:..lie wu· lnaide two minutes before, she told poUce. In another case, WlIUani V. Gorham, 69, of 374 D CasUlla Ave .• Laguna Hills, was revived by rescue units after ht was pulled purple and not breathing from Woman Suspect In Heist Jailed On Narco Charge Newport Harbor Monday night. He waa apparently walking on the deck of his boat, Evening Star, whlch is dock· ed at 345 Via Oporto. Udo Peninsula, when he slipped and fell overboard. A neighbor, G. John Granath of 5446 Via Oporto, dragged Gorham onto a neighboring dock where he administered first aid to revive him until rescue units arrived. Pollee estimate Gorman wi.s ~n the · water for about 10 minutes before he was rescued, but had lost conscloumess from inhalation of water only a few minues before Granalh spotted blm. Real Early Bird First OC Filer ABORTION •.. courts of three states and the District or Columbia." The California statute was adjudged in - valid after it had already been replaced by liberalized laws permitting abortion when bearing the child would injure the mother's physical or mental health or when the pregnancy was the result of rape or incest. Similar liberallzatlons have been enacted in other slates, but none has beep challenged in higher courts yet. although the American CivU Libtrtles Union and othera; are prepartna ~h moves. As stated by California. the is&ues the Supreme Courtshould decide are v.·hether the preservation of the mother's lire is sulficienUy exact to form a basis for limiting permissible abortion. and ·whether a stale has "sufficient coin· Robert L. Citron made certain pelling inlerest at stake to allow the state this morning tha.t he became the to regulate a woman's hmdamental right Laird test.ified at a joint meeting ol the Senate Armed Services Committee and the Senale defense appropriations sub- committee. The meeting was closed but the Pentagon made public portions of his prepared testimony. • I! the Safeguard system is expanded lo the full 12 sites originally envisioned, it also would include emplacements in cen· tral California, Southern Califo rnia, cen· tral Tez:as and the Florida-Georgia area. Laird said the total cost or 12 sites, estinial.ed at $10.3 billion last year, had grown to $11.9 billion. He attributed the increase to inflation. stretching out the time needed to co1nplete the program,, and to d~ changes and betler estima· iions. · ' Pill Gulper Said In Fair Condition first person to file for an Orange to lermh1ate unborn life." County political oHict!. The California case arose 'rom the pro· A Laguna Beach man wa s in improved Citron, a deputy tax collector for seculiol'\IJ of Dr. Belous. a prominent condition today aftU assertedly gulping 10 years, arrived at the county Beverly Hills physician and outspoken down about 50 tablets. believed to be Voters R.,istration ofrice at 5:45 advocate of liberalized aborUon laws. seconal, in view of a policeman A1onday a.m .. complete with a tomato crate Belous was accused of referring a morniJlg. to sit on. a heavy coat, a thermos pregnant young woman and her Hance to A spok esman at Orange County of hot coffee, a radio and a morn· a physician who performed an abortion ~1edical Center listed the condition of An attractive redhead who was once tng paper. on her. According to trial testimony, he Gregory Alan Lathrop, 24. of 1774 aceused by Orange Cclunty sheriff's Citron, 44, of Sant.a Ana, seeks to made the referral -to a physician he Rimrock Canyon Road, as fair today. clepuLies as one of tlvo "·omtn mem bers succeed Don S. filoiley who is knew and trusted professionally -on.Jy Lathrop had been in critical condition of a holdup team which took $128 at ilJn· reti ring. Charles \V. fifozlty, a after he became convinced the woman A1omlay. point from a Dana Point bait and tackle brother of the Incumbe nt. is cam· was "absolutely desperate'' and would Officer Larry Warren answered a call shop has been convicted in Superior paign manager for the new can· carry out a threat to secure an illegal that a man had slashed his wrist In a Court on drug charges. dldate. Mexican abo rtion under conditions he suicide attempt. He said Lathrop, Judge Howard Cameron ordered Carol Previously Joe R. Greene, 48. of deemed clinically dangerous. bl~ing severely, grabbed a handful of Ann Price. 19. of Las Vegas to serve four Tustin, associated with the tax col · Belous "'aa convicted and sentenced to red pills from a pile and swallowed them . months in Orange County Jail for lector's office since 1963 took out pay a $5,000 fine and serve two years• \Varren said Lathrop claimed he possession of marijuana. She was also papers for the post. probation, but the State Supreme Court "'anted to die and said he Y.'otrld refuse placed on probation for three years. ruling vacated the conviction and sen-medical aid. It "'as, however, ad· J\.flss Price was one of five occupants of J~============:!:::':•:nc:•:· ============~m~in~J~st~er~e~d=. ========::;-a car which was halted by sheriff's deputies last March 22 shortly after the robbery of Phil's Fish and Bait Shop, 34210 Coasl Highway, Dana Point. She was booked for possesslon of marijusna when deputiel found a plastic baa con- taining the weed on her pe.rson. _..; Fro1n Page I MURD.ER. •• nothing during the night. But one woman llv\ng ·next door 11id she heard commotion and noises wblch possibly were shots late Monday night. She did not.investigate. however. The entire Baycrest and Westcliff area have been plagued by blfrglars in recent months. While detectives from the burglary detail talked to resi dents of the quiet neighborhood, patrolrneq scoured bushes, planters and trash cans searchh1g for \vee:pons. They turned up nolhlng. 11arris, retired, had lived In the area for at least 10 years, his friends 'aid. He was described as a good-natured. even- tempen!d man who bad lived alone lor years. r The house seemed immaculately kepl The landscaping has been kept m1nlcurtd. Neighbors seemed miffed that they hid h•ard nothing through the night. "I can't understand \II not hearing anythlng. I gue~s we 111 go lnslde and lock things up lifi!hl and don't hear v.•hat goes on in lhe outside v.·orld," one shock· cd v.•oman said as she gated across the street. Marris' body "'IS removed to Balti Coron• del ~lar ~1ortuary. No ne);I of kin for the dl'nd man have been located. lie had 110 children, polite 11aid. '· I'm mad for Mediterranean . 6 Sunny Mediterranean Shades Medite1Ttnt•n Mos1 Antique Amber• Spani1h Poppy Spanii:h Leather ;·c·ran1d1 bold At1vio Avocado 100% approved · Bl~ow nylon pile The carpet they both chose?· Bigelow's Barcelona Barceloha combines the casual, wind·tOYed shag loolt ol toQay With an elegant Spanlah EriJle pattern. The long, slender yarns have a 11oft, 1hlmmery Riow ... the dramaUc multi· colors art Mi!ditelT&nean-lnsplred. Use Bar-celona in a Spanl'!.h or 1'lediterranoa.n scttln~ °" with ultra-modern or n1ixcd contempi)rary .. , for a truly stunning efreet. And because the fiber's nylon, ~Iona's so $ easy to c~ for. Soll doesn't 1095 show ... and pllt stays cri1p and tpringy. A ftne buy for •nl"· -.. p . one who wants great styling ••. a roomful of Ju:rurv at ""ludlt!o 1.,.t911 .. '"-·-• ., •• ' !Ion ""'"' Ml """' a _, ... ,.•lo-earth price. ...,.,.,. .. ALDEN'S CARPETS-DRArERIES e ll YEAllS SElVJNG THE O~ANl&E COAST e 1663 rlacentio-Costa Mna Phone 646-4838 • ., , _( I I \ : • • ~ewrfort '_Beaell Toay's. Fiiiai -nnr;ro·-.-,..-~ • VOL. ~3, ew State RttUn,9 Stand• ' Ahott Plea Nixed By High Court WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Supreme Court ducked an opportunity to step inlo fhe abortion law controversy today. turn- ing down a plea from Caliiornia for review of conniding judicial deciskms in a case involving: Dr. Leon Belous of .:ijeve.rly Hills. Th~ brief order denying review left at.anding a state· supreme court opinion holding that aborlion ·iaws may not broadly Invade a woman's rights to life and to choose whether lo bear children. AGROUNO IN MEX ICO ·Newport Yacht Tri1nquil1 II Newport Y aclit Go es Aground On Mexico Beach By ALMON LOCKABEY I MH!ot l!lfllw A local yacht returning lrom the San Diego to Acapu lco race was grounded on -A Mexican beach some 1,200 miles south of San Diego last Friday. Word reached Newport Monday lhal the Cal-48 yawl Tranquila II, owned and .skippered by Robert A. Garrison of Newport Harbor Yacht Club, fetched up on the beach at Black Rock. 4tl mile.'> south .of Manzanillo when an anchor line parted. None of the five persons on board ~as serioosly injured. Mrs: · Robert f:.. Koehfer, a guest' with her husband on tbe yacht, suffered a fraelurtd sboujder blade before the party could get off the vessel as It rolled in heavy surf. Koehler said the anchor let gp at 2 a.m .. while those aboard were sleeping. "The first Indication we had that anything wa11 wrong was ·when the boat hit the beach," he said. Koehler said the party had to swim on- ly a few feet before getting to shallow cnoUgh water lo wade ashore. The stranded party. which included Mr. and Mrs. Garrison and a Metican na· tiotlal Garrison had hired at Acapulco. were .aided by a Mexlcan family which Uved a~ a coconut plantatioh near where the boat went aground. The Mexican farmer took the part;- part Way to Manzanilla In • truck and they were able to hire a tui the rest or the way. • The Koehlcrs flew home Monday but CSct ACCIDENT, P•1• II I l That op1n1on struck do.wn· as un- constitutionally vague a C a 11 f o r n i 1 statute permitting an abortkln to be legally performed •on a woman only when "necessary to preserve her life." . Subsequently, a federal judge in the District of Columbia, leaning heavily on the · California opinton, struck down a f~ral law In the dlatrlct tliit--permitted abortion only when "nectss1ry for the preservation of the mother's life or health." Thus no licensed doctor can be pro- seCuted for performing abortions, and ~heoretically they can qe had for the ask· 1ng. Some 35 states have traditional abor- tiO'o laW! based on phrasing similar to the invalidated D.C. and California atatules. Jn two of them , h-fassachusetts and New Jersey, the slate's highest court ha5 upheld the tradilional law. In its petition for Supreme Courl review, California asked not so much that the ca:Jifornia Supreme Coort be reversed as that some clarity be broUgbt to the confusion surrounding "the clear connicl which now exists among the highest courts of three states and the District or Columbia." Tbe California statute was adjudged in· valid •1\1!1' it 'had almjly. beo 1eploced by llbeialited lows penn1W., ~bol'llon wben.bearing . the child wOuld injure the ·m0ther's0 physieal--..r-mllllol Walth -"t when the pregnancy was the result of rape or incest. Simllar liberalizations have b e e n enacted in other states, but nOne ha~ been challenged in higher courts yet. although the American Civil Libertle~ Union and others arc preparing such moves. As stated by California, the iuues the Supreme Court should decide are whether the preservation of the mother's life l~ su fficiently eJ:aCI lo (orm I basis for limiting pennissible abortion, a n d whether a state has "sufficient com- pelling interest at stake to allow the state to regulate a woman's fundamental right to terminate unborn life." The California case arose from lhe pro- secution Cf Dr. Belous, a prominent Beverly Hills physician and outJpoken advocate of liberalized abortion laws. Belous was accused of referring a pregnant young woman and her !iance. to a physician who performed an abortion on her. Accordi'ng to trial testimony , he made the referral -to a physician he knew and tru sted professionally -only after he became convinced the woman was "absolutely desperate" and would carry out a threat Lo secure. an Illegal Mexican abortion under conditions he deemed clinically dangerous. Belous was convicted and sentenced to pay a $5,000 fine and serve two years' probation, but the State Supreme Court ruling vacated the conviction and sen- tence. ff * ff Action by Court Ma y Cloud Fate Of Laguna Doctor By TOM BARLEY Of fflt o.I,_. Plllt SMft Th.? United States Supreme Court today refused to review the Cllllfomla Supreme Ccurt's rejection of a 120-year-6ld abor- tion law and appeared to ·uphold, In ef- fect, I.be lower court's impUed recopUtion of the Therapeutic Abortion Ad of 1917.- Actian, or r•lher lhe lack of It, by lhe high court immediately r1Jsed specula- Uon in Orange Qowity on Q>e impact of the decWoo cin the cue ol Dr~ Robert Cumming Robb , 17, lhe IAl\!lll Beach physici'an recently indicta ti abortion charges. It brought. predictably, claims by tach side iil the controversy that the hi1h court's stance favored Utelr araumenta in the Robb cast. Attorney Joseph Anderson, 1n associate of Dr. Robb 's lawyer, MORI Bennan, argUtd th1t the high court dficision "was bound to color the thinlttn1 of any jury that mi1bt be lllked to rule on Dr~ Robb's 3Ctions. "While It might be ar1ued that the high court did not rule OI\ the 1917 act ltielf, it can also be ariued that the court recog- nizes tht vital need today for a more llb- CSee ROBB, Pile II' . :~ . . . . .an. ~ :onn ' • • r.. ...... • • -, DAIL)" PILOl lterl Piie!• . . WHILE COLLEAGUES AWAIT CORONER,. OFFICER Yfll.LI AM KYSOR WAROS OFF THE CURIOUS In Newport'• F'•shtonable l 1ycrt1t Section,' tt{, Ntlghllors Find a 8ody · ~~~~~~~~-=-~~ W alkie-1 alkie Tlie1t" S~pects Nabbed . in Mesa By ARTHUR R. VINSEL OI IM o.IW '11•1 Sl1ff A military man and his companion to- day ar~ accused by polic! of prowling a crime·r1dden area of Costa Mesa in search of burglary targ~ts. keeping a lookout for lawmen with a walkie-talkie radio setup. ~ They al~j!gedly told connicting stories about lbejt purpose late Monday night, wben arrested in a section of town that has a phenomenal burglary rate. One claimed he was a voluntary pollct undercover agent. according to Officer Jim Wagner, but the pelrolman he nam- ed as his contact denied any connection. Army Pvt. Andrew E. Price Jr .. 21, cf 351 Victoria St., Costa Mesa, and Robert I,. Payton. 20, or 3342 Sea Knoll Drive, San Clemente, were subsequently booked for investigation of burglar}. Police booked Payton. a civilian, on an additional charge or possession of dange.rous drugs, after allegedly finding a barbiturate pill in his pocket. Crime statistics are kept on certain .sectors of the city designated as special theft target areas, thus requiring ad - ditional surveillance and quesUoning of 1uspiciou.s persons. One er these is the Harbor Shopping Center and other boulevard commercial areas stretching north toward Santi Ana, police explained today. Patrolman Wagner was pa 1 s In« throqh the • intersection c! Adam~ Avenue and Harbor Boulevard at 10:45 p.m . ..Monday when he spotted a·mah car· !See ARREST, P111 %) '. DAILV PILOT Srttf "'41f ATTENDANTS REMOYE "°ov,' OF D.EA.D ,MAN . Did N1wrrt M•n"Dit in Shootout With lur1l1rs? Coast Freeway Will Stay Ne,wport, Mesa ~ust Pnite· to Mo v.e ~oute Pkui . ' • TEN CENTS • a1n Burglary Shootout .. Suspected By JORN VALTERZA Of ,fM ~lll't Pli.t Stiff The body . of a 60.year-old . N"'JIOl't Beach man, who waa possibly tht victim el 11 shootout wltb burglars, waa falnli •prawied in his ff0f1t docx:wn early I<> day, a pistol in' hia band and a l\Ullhot wound in his che1L Police tentatively ruled the shoolin1 a homicide. . -TilLJiic:!lm. 1U~ of :IOll Anthor W'ay, wu shot to de.lth--iiiiiiffi1j by a burglar -someilme bef91"e dawn tD- day, Newport detectives said. (' • Harris' body-had one bullei hole in the lower l!fl chest made by an unknown weapon . Several other bullet holes were. fOund in the well.furnish~ residence in the city's Baycrest subdivision, Detective Capt. Lou Heeres said. Harris lived alone. He wil s recently divorced, the investigator said. The body, lyin1 with the feet keeping 1 screen door ajar, was found by a neighbor liking his daughter to .school at 7:28 a.m. Two ·buttons had been ripped off his coin. · Against a Window an the southeast silk of the house a ladder rested, po1sibly whefe ·the killet or killei's enterfd the cray house. . . Harris Was fully dressed in a sray autl Ht wu lying ori his lelt std< ~ti\tly • ;:. i-. fell """r'tl'Yinl to ""I tut I)! his 1Prel~inary lndicattons show • ltrMg P*!b!Ht7 of•-bllrglaryi' H....,._leid, ·:but w~ still aren't sure.'' Heeres decliM:d to 1ive a model or type of weapon clutched In Harris' rllht hand. All but one nei1hbor aald they, ~eard nothing during tbe dla:tlt. . But me woman living next door 1Jiid she heard commotlqn and nolsea_ whkb possibly, were shots late Moriday night. She dld not investigate. however :i., ~ The entire Beycrest and Westclil1 ar"8 have been plagued by burglar1 lD rec.tit .. months. • While detectives from the burglary detail talked lo ruidenls of the qul<t qei&hborhood, patrolmen acoured bulhes, plantera and trash cans searchin& •for weapons. They· tqrned ~ nothing. Harris, retired, had lived in the area for at least 10 years, his friends said. He was descrl~ as a g~natured •. even. tempered man who had lived alone for years. The hotJSt seemed immaculately kept. The. landscaping has been k e p t jStt MURDER, P11e Zl 'To~my Gunners' Nabbed in Stor.e Costa Mtu police captured three machine gun-carryln1 fu~lt.ives Monday night, but .there wu. no VKllence. One was S years old, thret feet tall, and very remorHful . Patrolman Robert Berg was dispatchtd lo the·K-Mart dilCOunt 1tore, 2200 ltarbor Blvd., after the shoplifters; aged 5, a and 11, were apprehended, each with a $S toy machine gun. They were ·turned over to their fam- tlies afterward, pending juvenile court1 action on petty theft and lack or parental control charges. Orange Coast By TlloMAS ·romJNE route .ind it died for' lack ol a second., city council Is Willing lo let Newport work ., ... ~"'.""' ttlff ·Jf11ningll uid he, donn'l ! attach 'any 1 with the s~te OiviS\on· of }11Q\'fllYI .on ' The chairm1n .:.f Jlie californla Highway , llgnlftr.ance to that phraai,ia and. that ,as . enlfnetring ttle route but : emPhpUcally w-tller Cummiaaion,. indicated today the Pacific f111s he Is.conCerned it waa the ,.ll)e tf. J • .. Coast Frenay route is staying put ftct·U if commi&&loner1 had specl(lcaUy , states It does.not want a route reopenin1. unleaa Newport Buch city otfk:ials can dtol.ed Newport'll request tor reiefudy. , "So what &hey live wltbfthe;right haDd' 'enlist city· of c.oat.a Meaa JUppiOl't to move The long ailence that followed they .take a"ay with the. left haild," J'en- lt. · CriaUna's motion. be: said, had to be an · nings commented, ' Any ambiguity, in the decision ol la.st lndicatJon "that no commi .. ioner wanted He said that frankly had he been on the Thursday WN unintentional, chairman of lo make a motion to reopen the route. Highway Commission seven yean •Co the ata!e commiu.ion Frfld Jennings said. The future Pacific Coast Freeway when lhe route was adopted he would "I d6n't thi1k anyone ' should read route, adopted seven yeara 1101 bugs the have favored al\ Inland alignment. Bul he anything into it exctpt reluctance to blu'f( ak>ng Plclfia Coast Highway uid itit la not w1n1n1. to vote for ~- reopen the route l n the face cl op-betweee.n the. Sllnta .. Ana River and itie · ' m, ''highly contrO'lersial route malterl"' • position." Upper NewpOrt Bay bridge. The.Newport • unltts &he·k>cJI CQmmunlUa come In And The nlct apl1ng0llke weather m11 be on Its way out 11 the weather- man predicts a 51).50 chance of rain lonlghl, along with .. me gusty winds. 11le raJn mi&hl last about tbret days. ' INSmE TOD~ 'Y A /rtewar1 crash tii:mcd tnto Cl • flomtng /ioaco when w.11 tn.- tetationed, rucattri dropptd a flare in apilled· ga&oltne. /iage<S.' He said be hadn't polled lhe other Beach City Council position is that the jofnllr """"t It. Newport Beach and Highway Commission members blll he route should be inland of Roag Memorial Coeta Meu did In , , the caae of the ct111flf'ft1t ' ; :C.. ' couktn't aartt with the inter:pretation of J{otpltal and acrOSl -He~ HGPta. Newport Flrteway. he reminded, and tbe 1.:_, ~~~~·~·~""!::;"'~.~~·~~ ~:~~ l+: aome Ne"wt city olficials that the com· This wouJd put It clost to Costa Me'sa· City rO.Jta1was reoptned. ~_...I" ~ ...... · · •1-:.:;: ,."! ..,,, . rrduion diMpprovef oC the prntntly \(.rnjts and eosUi Prjesa,ofUclala eant.eod He.-said, ''A lot or people· havf made ,• ·-=·::"'-"'ll adopted route. t •~eu ,rJmpa for a Ne)Yport Jf'~w11 in-plans, bought or sold property ov11-. the • :=;::,:,...:;: The rt~ f« uncertain •mttrprelatlon terchanae woillc1 iiltnade"lnto Coit.~:-. year~.~ and tt. would I>\' utremtl)' unfair ,._,..' 1~:I ...., • ._,,,that HiJbway ComnlWioner V~n Jennl~s also ~·on' tbf.~ly·OI to thlm to "°~n tllt 1m1~ wfthoutll'tll I ::.~ ,. =="'•.._ 1>-iJ 1 Criatino • .-lo·llllllin tlle·ldopted· . ~M~ olfi~l.'"°'~~·~;~,ljia CS.. FllEEW4Y, .. I) , ' .. , •• • I I • ' . . J DAl<Y #ILOT .~ Me.a Hopet..is ' ' ~ . • -' .. Ex .. ~ewport • I Candidate.s :Night ~Tiff' Predicted " Man Facillg ~ -Murder Rap ' Tiie fu,t M"" lhe Caooldat,. l\liht in .ht 1970 tos;ta Mesa City council cam-p.ign is being organized for Thunday, with a hint of friction voiced by one amOna t~ sev'n would·be. winners. Oraitge County Assessor Andrtw J. Hinshaw. ~ two lQCwnbent council can- d14ata aml five_c"fij\Jtn&era wilJ be tn· vii.td IQ lhe 1:!0 p.m. 1eeaion at the Es- taneia High school Forum. . Mesa Verde Homeowners As.soc1a~on leaden decided their regular meeting would-be well timed for the maiden pub· lie pertortnanCe of the seven 1970 elecUon i;eekers together. Theodore c. ''Ted" Bologh '8id today the quickly organized Meet. the Cand.1- <iates Night was a surprise to him'. but allded that he will appl;' pressure for a new version or tht old format.- Twice unsuccessful, in the tHe and 1968 races. Bologh saught a court order two years ago lo prohibit a city-sponsored candidates' night in Civic Center cham- b!rs. He wa.a virtuallv rebuffed by Orange County SU-perior COUrt Judge James ~· Judge, whose words he quoted today 1n saying auch faciliUea should be used by the taxpayers. . Bologh announced intentions to stage, beghmlng March 7, weekly Town HaJI. style medinp. Saturdays from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.. in the Co!t.a Mesa ·avic. CeD-ter. . . U refused. be !!&id, he will challenge Ille city'• action by slqini the meetlnp In lhe Civic Cinttt parking lot, with the field-open to qUelUons ·from voters . He said -as he has frequently done at A1onday night council meetings - Uiey should qu~on incumbent council-. men George A.-·Tt.icker and Willard T. Jordan about communlly issues and pfob--term. ' Bologh added .that he .has contacted .... o~r ctialleogets and they share some of his concerns over the pre-election race and their odda against organized efforts to elect others. "We do not .want the 'king makers' to make a moekery of the candidates," said Bololh, in obvious reference to Planniiig Commissioner Jack A. Hammett's bid for a council Aenu . . _ Hammett ls known to have c0mmitted support from many segmenta ol the com- munl(y, With a str-0ng local • activities background. including two term s as president ·Of the Costa M~a Chamber of Coml'l)erce .. · Bologb Ch&l'.ied tie aSked for a· tittle chamber support.himself and.w_as told he was wasting time for everyooe con- cerned. . · The race for the ApriJ 14 council elec. lion ls expected to beCome inc:rea.siftaly 1Jvely, with a cut of "-~en candidatts, the same number in ttie. i.t c:ampatln.· .. Besides two lncUmbthti, Hammett and Bollflb. the field lnclud .. David· Yamal. En· lWet and newcomer Tborim A. Mllllll Jr. who filed hli ilontlnaUon pa- pen bvely before thO de.ctHne last Thursday. -· . ' The other lour men are bfl!eO -·lor--=v!twpdlt!~·Uld: ~ Ol:ft·- presslon. but Y amal, an opet:atlng en- gin~, has ·acldrwed · clty -<lllctala iri outapoken whlon befprt; . • Posing J\1ur•e· Helps Bicyclist Norma ' Martinez, ~8,. -crossed Monrovia Avenue a( 19th 1>treet ·in Costa Mesa Monday just as taught In scboot-but accidents happen. Blinded by setting sun, motorist ~ylene Yax. 32, of 1801 Whittier Ave., Costa Mesa, stopped her car, then DAILY ,,DT Plotto kY l kll•,,_ Ktl~ .. r • ~i started UP. she told police. Norma. of 979 Arbor SL, was knocked to the pavement and bruised but not admitted to the hospital. Passing nurse, who de· clined to Identify herself, knew just what to do. -E're•-P age;i,--'---N. ew por rt. ·"ibr.·arv efficia. l· ACCIDENT ... -.J An amended complaint charging mur· der instead of manslaughter has been filed against a former Newport man who allegedly beal his stepso n to death in Newport last spring. Michael Shear, who presently Is on trial in San Bernardino in the alle&ed beating of another son, Z'it·mol'lth-old Eric Shear, will bt retumed to Oriange County to stand trial on the murder charges as soon as the other beating trial end!. 'Newport Beach police allege Shear killed his st~pson Patrick Tudor last Mey. The bOy was found Ooating in a b~thfub and was declared dead shortly afterwards al a hospital. Coroner's investiga tors initially ruled the death accidental. • The boy had suffocated. and an autopsy also showed lacerations of the Jiv_er and pancreas. · They sa'id the boy had died from in~ , haling stomach content!, a condition which could have been caused by .futi le life-saving mef.sures. which Shear said he applied. . But the case as reopened earlier this vear when S at and his young wife brought in their infant son, Eric, for trea t· ment at a Fontana h<>spital. Doctors there called police after finding bruises and other evidence or child, bit· tering on the iilfant. . . Lie detector tests and other 1nvestigl• tion led to the prosecution for felony childbeatlng in the case of Eric and ma1>- slaughter (later murder) in the deJtb of Patrick, 3. -Sbear-ha1 entered'"a.pJea;of Jnnocent to the felony childbeating charge in San Bernardino County. Newport Faces~ , - Busy Council Kaser, 29. is an Orange Cout College studtnt once decorated ror disUnctlve -leld~'"1·-hi•· Anny infantry unit. Manw. in bis early 20s, was recently discharged ,from the U.S. Marine Corps to return to col1ege. the Garri&0ns remained in Mexico to try aod salvage the boat. ~ ---- Will -Quit-Won't Disclose 4'he. Sheari moved to the Ontario atea sh ortlv after the death of Patrick last ~fay 31. Meet Tonight Speed limits for Irvine Avenue, re- quested estena:ion of the American Legion Post lease. disapproval of the U.S. Anny C:OrJll of Engineers sand haul. the Corona del Mar Main Buch food concession, and formation of an alley paving assessment district in Newport Heights are on the Newport Beach city eotmeU agenda for tonight. • . The session Is set for 7:30 o clock Jn council chambers at City Hall. ' The recommendation for the apeed lfmJt on Irvine A\ltnue Is to make it a uniform 35 miles per hour from 16th Strtet to I.lie oorth city limits . , _ · A letter has been re«lved ,..qQi.Ung exteulon' of. the American LegiOll.· Poat No. 291'1 lease ul'IUl.1985. The completed U.S. Army Carp's sand haul of Santa Ana River channel a11t to eroded beachei in West Newporfls'lookld on by the city with disapproval because of the rocks left on the beach. MOllE MOllE MORE MORE MORE NB COUNCIL ADD I L Approvat of the construction of a second Corona del Mar Main Beach food concession stand Js coming before the City Councll for the third time in three weeb. The assessment district would cost resi· dents or Newport Heights about $800 each for paVing their alleys with concrtte. Protest cJ fifty percent of property own- er! would spike the project. ;Robert Cooper . ;Dies in Illinois ' , Robert W. Cooper, 48, fonnerly of Cor- xma del Mar, died last Friday in Bloom- ..dniton, Ill. He i6 survived by thr~ sons. ill'imotby, D, Christopher, 18 and Andrew, 04 all of 112 ~tarine Ave., Balboa Island. t While be Jived in the harbor area from ~9!9 to 19'5, Cooper wn active In Boy ~outs. the Youth Center and the Church IQ( Rellgloug Science. ' I ' I l ' " ' I I I I ' I ' ' DAILY PILOT 011:.1.NG~ (.0.1.Sl l"lJlllSMING tOM,.._Nv •obtrl N. w,,~ l'•Hlll ... t ANI 1'>1~11,M• J•c• R, Cvrltv \loct ''Ulf¢nt INI Gl~rtll M1MtV Th•lflll IC11vil £01!~• ·7~'"''' A. Mur,~i~1 Mlftll\rlt fO!!Ool' l hOlfl11 Fort>1n~ N~"""6tt 11~.ch (111 EOllO• Hsw(Nrt leedl Offiw 2111 Wost l 1l0.1 loulev1<d M1ll!ftt Aitlr111: P.0 .101: 1175, •2661 .......... " COii~ Mn.-' JJO W .. I ll•Y <.11111t Uovtlf 11_,H Jt) ll&rt<I ·-H\tllllfllfOl'I 1..Cll: 1111~ lkltll l&Ovtevlrf --!·~-_l...,!ltf!tLl7JM '4t·fil.L_ ct-'fW ~ .. 642·l~7· I ,_.,io"I. ,.,.., ll••"ft' Wll ll'lltll\llt~1 ~ Me flt""* •l'Wltl, !141Jll•I...-.. ••lt"Mt: -'lft ltl lOdWf'll••"""i. Mfll~ /MY ... ~M .. Ht'Ml\11 aMCNll M•· ..... , ... t#Y!'llM ....... . """ c:-.V ........ 1' •I Hf"l'IJl)tl M 'fll Mt C..11 '°""'' (;llltlon""-L!bW .... IOo'I W u"lllr UM ~'YI IW -·· fl.SO ..-i11i,y1 f!l!UI_,. lltlJ~ioll\. Uf'O "'°"llllf. • ' From Page 1 ... ROBB ••• " eral injerpretaUon of outmod~d , 'abai1ior;1 stalutea," Anderson said. "And Jt ·111tou1d be pointed out that the 19e7 act Itself has not yet been challenged at U.S. Supreme Court level." The Supreme Court ruling could ltad, Anderson predicted, to the sweeping aside of abortion laws in many of the na- Uon,'s ~tat~~.'°d leav, California with it.s "adn!l\f<dlrii1Qre·Hbfral law· ol 1967. "The eituali9fl then would be contrary to Wl!il · C.lffern!a · wanied When' the thtr1peuUc abortioh act · Wis ' P8Ssed.'' Anderson commented. "We would then be upholding an abortion law "~Ue~ physl- c1ans in many states would be carTying · out aborUons with no fear of puniah- n:.ent." Chief Deputy District A t to r n e y Jamea: E;nright does not see it that way. '1Wbet the state Supreme Court :abolished by ita opinion is an old taW that aimply dealt with lhe black anil wblta ol any issue and refu!ed to recognize the existence of any gray artas," Enright'. said. "Dr. Robb's case hun't been discussed ~Y tl)~ ~igh ~urt nor have any oJ the issues in that case," the veteran pro- secutor added. "His lawyers might say that this is the beglMing of the sweeping away of aborUon laws but it could just as easily be the court's implied recognition of the. rnuch more liberal abortion measure of 1967." Dr. Robb was Indicted by the Or8J'lle County Grand Jury on charges of in· ducing miscarriages In three women pa- tients, all of them single. That indictment was delivered at the request of District Attorney Cecil Hicks after Judge Paul Mast of the Santa Ana Municipal Court ruled Ille earlier pro- secution ol Dr. Robb to be un· constttuUonal. Judge Mast threw out the district at- toroe)f'• argument that Dr. Robb had unlawfully aborted four pregnant women Jn a ruling which rejected the language of the Therapeutic Abortion Act. Judie Mast .,commented : ''\Ve cannot permi1 a legisjalive theory which decrees that life btgina at conctptlon. To ·do so would be to blandly adopt the philosophy of one of the country's major religions (Roman CathoHc) an act which would cleaily be in violation of the First Amendment of t}le United S l a t e s ConsUtution." "Jf there were lift present .at con· ceptlon,·• Judge Mast said "abortion would not be pennltted in case o[ rape or incut •.• any more than it would be permitted to terminate the life of a one- ytar-old whose life had come as the result of rape or incest." Dr. Robb bu been ordered to atttnd a special Superior O>urt bearing ThW'Mlay In ~which his lswyer will challenge the Orange County Gni.nd Jury indictment on the arow>dJ that the panel ls "an Illegally conllltutad l!'ntl that i'elpon<ls solely to the whims and CJl)Tlcts ot the district at- totney." Walk Out on Strike tater reports said bo at was sunk in 1~ feet of water when a Mexican tug boat hauled it free of the shore. The sinking was apparenUy cawed by the boat being partly filled with water as it wallowed in the surf. There was no immediate in- dication that the bottom was seriQUsly damaged. ' Kotbler said Garrison got off a radio Mayday (distress) message when his 1>oat went aground, but the only response was from the Coast Guard at Miami, Fla. Garrison also fired flares and a small fishing boat responded but was unable t<> help. First report of the grounding came from George Sturges, navigator aboard .another :or :the racing . yichts, Bob Be.auchamp's Dorothy O fr<t)n'NHYC. • st1111•1. ~~ th•" ll'<111quila . u ·and Doi'othy O were both -at Zijuatinejo on Wednesday and that he left ahead of the Dorotlly 0, stating.;tbat he planned ID stop a couple of times en route to ManzaniUo, one of the principal shipping ports on the west coast of Mexico. Sturges said he monitored Garrison's Mayday meuage but was unable to res- pond before Garrison signed off. Sturges said be talked to Mn. Garrison at Manzanlllo Saturday and learned some of the details of lbe accident. At that tlme Garrison had hired a commercial tug tO: go IQ Black !lock and haul the boat oil tl\e beach. Word that the boat had sunk came from John Hogan, who crewed on the Tranquila II during the race. Hogan said Garrison's son told him Mobday that the boat 11ad sunk when it was hauled off the beach. The Garrisons are still in Mamanillo tryin1 to make arrangemenl! to have the boat raised and taken to Manunlllo from where it could be shipped home aboard a freighter . Garrison had owned the boat only a rew months before tie entered it In the Acapulco race. The Tranqulla ll was a Cal~ built by J-n Marine of Costa Mesa but later wu redeslped and rerig- ged 8$ a yawl by Ted Hood, noted East Coa!t yacht designer and sa:J.lmaker. The Tranqulla II was the fourth boat to finish the Acapulco race and was second in Class A on corrected time. Fro111 Page 1 FREEWAY ... strong support of the communities in· volved.·' He noted that a restudy has absolutely no meaning unleis everyone reeognizes tliat the outcome could -be a recom- mendation for reopenlng the route. "Otherwise it is just an exercise in futili· ty,'' he said . Jennings said testimony was taken lasl month in Sacramento and originally no additional testimony was scheduled for last week In El Centro. But the Highway Commission listened to presentations for an hour and a half, "On such a sensitive issue we wilt always give any group en opportunity to be heard if It is pertinent and both sides are reprtstnted.'' he said. He remarked he wouldn't have allowed comment ii on- ly one side was present and the matter h~d to be carried over another month to glvt the: other side a chance for rebuttal. LOUJSVILL!i:, Ky. (AP\ -About 60 percent of the state's ~bile school ' dlatrlcta were closed In ihe first day ol a te1cha'1' strike and tht Kentucky> Educa· JeMinis Is a semi-retired land deveklp- ment execuUve who lives in Riverside. He has a house on Balboa Island where he spends most weekend$. -tltin-AHOdatl...-pr<dlel<d .. tbtt-teechero•-,,.-----rr--v --- would Jot• me n1bt today for h1cher pay. _ eyer F1 ls acancy The AAAOClaUon said about 11,000 of Kehtucky's 31,000 talchm did not rtport WASHINGON (AP) -Prtsldcnt Nl1on to work Mond.,y, closing about 118 of the today nom\naltd Robert L~ M.eyer or San 193 g:hool dlslr!cts. St.te. education of· Mtrlno, Calif .• a 'Rtpubl"an to a four· ficl1l1 made roughly Ute aeme t stlmate ytar ~!]l at U.S: Atlorne)t f<>r the Ctn· of tbe &tril<e'1 elite~ tral Dl5trfot ol ~ilfornla in Los Angel.,, I Roger W. Hardacre today announc ed he will resign from the Newport Beach Board of Library Trustees rather than comply with the new state law requiring discl06Ul'e or :inancial asset,, by public officials. "I have rarely tiubmitted information on my finances, and then only in confi· Fro1n Page 1 ARREST ... rying an unusual objtct. The pedestriail turned ou•. tO be Payt.On and his walkie-talkie unit -- Questioning led· him to say -Price -was on the other side of a-large apartment complex at 2700 Peterson wa·y .::..ranb'ttier frequent burglary targel -·and Officer Frank Jordan picked him up there. Police said Payton claimed he · was doing volunteer police undercover work. mentioning Officer Robert Neal, while one of several other stories was that ·he and Price were merely testing the radlo6. They didn't work at that.dist.ance,.one suspect volunteered. Investigators questioned Payton and Price into the early morning hours, bring· ing in Military Police frori1 head· quarters in Santa Ana to interrogate the soldier, who is on leave. The radio communications equipment, their clothing, •nd some pry-type tools were confiscated as evidence, although n<> potential burglary loot was linked to the case. UMW Le a ders Testify CLEVELAND, Ohio <AP) -A recteral grand jury investigating th~ Yablonski slaying case opens its fourth week of hearings today with several United Mine Workers officials on hand to testify. I'm mad for Mediterranean . dence, so that I don·t care to have de- tails regarding by business and personal investments a matter of record available to J,he general public." be said. Hardacre has served on the city library board since 1966. H1s four-year term ex- pires JuJy l, but he is making his resig- nation effective April 15 when the new law goes int<> effect. Last week-'.he Newport Beach City Council acted to send letters to about 35 active applicants for positiorui on city boards or commissions advising them of lhe financial disclosure Jaw. J!ardacre, who is a tax consultant and -~kke~r •. sent .c~pies of his .lett.er of reSig11afiOn tO state sena:t9r John· Sctimitz iR·Tu.>Unl, -.A!semblY111ao_B®ert c8ad- .ljam (R'New~rl Beach), ·and· rlewipa· pets. · In his Jttter, Hardacre wrote : "I have enjoyed my years on this ·board very much and take gre.at pleasure Jn the served the citizens of Newport Beach." sen 1ed the citizens of Newport Beach. Leslie Freeman Succumbs a 63 Leslie D. Freeman. a 31-year resident of Newport Beach, died Saturday tn an Oceanside convalescent home. She was 63. Mrs. Freema n lived in Newport from 1935 to 1966 when she moved to Ocean- side. She was active in the harbor area P.T.A., Ebel\ Club; the Assistance Leagu e and Unity Chw:ch Gt Newport Beaeh. She is survived by a husband, Henry E. o[ Ckeanside, a son. Dickinson.a . F...re~ man of Costa Mesa. a daughter, Mrs. Ann Blackburn of La Jolla. and a sister, Mrs. Julia Arroqui of Cordell, Oklahoma. Funeral arrangements are pending at the ·0ceanside Mortuary . Front Page 1 MU RDER ... manicured . Neighbors seemed miffed that they had heard nothing through the night. "I can1t understand us not hearing anything. I' guess we all go inside and lock things up tight and don't hear what goea on in the outside world," one shock~ ed woman said as she gazed across the street. - Harris' body was removed to Ba1t:i Corona del Mar Mortuary. . No.next.of kiri for the dead man have been IOcated. He h8d no children, ·police 'd ' 'll Sal .-~,.:· . . CJOse ·friends Said Harris had been re- tifed Joi' the past 10 years and hadJ>een a mem.l>U ol the Balboa Bay Club for the aame length of time. Harris apparently had worked for many years with the General Electric: Company, then went into studio work in Hollywood in an unknown capacity. His only relative, a close friend aald, was a niece in Philadelphla1 Pa. Multi Birthday Pariy Scheduled Many happy returns will be wl.1hed Saturday lo George, Abe, Jimmy, Kevin, Bobby, Harold, Chuck and many Jess- famous people. The Boys Club of the Harbor Area will give a birthday party for members born in De~mb_er,_ January_ancLEebruacy_. honoring them right along w l th presidents Lincoln and Washington. Boys may sign up for the party with club librarian Cathrine Lewis. at the ctn· tral branch. The carpet they both chose?· Bigelow's ' Barcelona Ban:eloria eori'lbines the ca.suet, wind-tOGM!d 1.h&f look o1 today with an elepnt Spanish (l'ille pattern. The Iona, slender ya.ms bave a 90ft. shimm_,. .:Iow ••• the dramatic mult1-colon are )teditetT&nean-lnapired. Use Bar- celona ln a Spanish or M@dltern.M&n aetUnr er with ultra-modern or mixed contemporary ••• for a trul7 stunning effect. And becanw the fiber's nylon. Barceiona:s so ..., to can: •••. Soll ....... ·1095 show ••• and pl]@ st.tya: crisp 'P 'and apringy. A fine bey for any. ... p , one who wa.nt11 t;ttat 1tyllng • • . • roomful ol Iuxury ••• at 1r11:11111i.,, 1rm.1i.. • down-•-· ........ pr1 ,., "'"" .,, i.i-....-.: ... "' ce. del'tulllJOrr 6 Sunny Mediterranean Shades ALDE N'S CARl"ETS -DRAl'EJtlES I ____ _M~tet~IJ.._ .. n Mqtt_~­ Antique Ambtr .* s,,.nJ1h Poppy Sp&nt1h Lffther • Oranad• Gold Atavio Avocedo ··--·.Joo%---~ •-t,.-.YfAU-St-VrNG'TH£ 00\NGE 'COA'sr .-- approved 1663 Placentia Costa Mesa Bigelow. Phone 6<46-4f39 nylon pilo • • --- - - - - - - - --------------:"---~---·---""'""'"Tl-~~---=,,...._.,... -..-,... -'"' ~ ,_. ., "-' "f - , ,.. . VOL. o~, NO . 46, 2 SECTIONS, 24 PAGES ORANGE COUNfY, CALIFORN IA TUESDAY, F~BRUARY 24, 1~10 SUlte ·Ruling Stands • Abort Plea Nixed". By High Court WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Supreme Court ducked an opportunity to step into the' abortion law controversy today, turn- ing down a plea from California for review of .cooflicting jl,ldicial decisions in A ·case involving Dr. Leon Belous or Beverly Hill6. ......... The fbrier oraer..=.dMyliig review tert standlng a state supreme court opinion holding-lhat abortion · laws .may not -~Qi.dJy..in_yade a woman's rights 1G life and to choose whether to beat children. Thal opinion struck down . as un- constitutionally vague a C a 11 ( o r n i a statute pennitting an 'abortion to be legally performed on a woman only when "necessary to preserve her life," S.ubsequently, a federal judge in the District of Columbia,_ leaning heavily on th€~Cillfomia opinlol'i, struck down· ' federal law in the di!trict U1at permitted abortion only when "necessary for the- preser_vaUon_oC the ~IQQ1h.tt'..L.li!! . C!L_ health." Thus no licensied doctor can be pro- secuted for perConning abortions, and theoretically they can be had for the ask· ing. Some 35 states have traditional abor· tjon laws based on phrasing similar to the invalidated D.C. and California statutes. In two. of them, Massachusetts and New Jersey, the state's highest court has upheld the traditional law. -~:~ , . 941\.y ,PILOT siafl Pllll• In its petition for Supreme Court review, California asked not so much that the California Supreme COurt be reversed as that some clatJty be'. brought to the confusion surrounding "the clear CQndict which DOW eXist.s amonc the 'hi__gbesL coui;ts ol .three sta1's 'and the Qtsbict of WHILE COLLEAGUES AWAIT CORONER,·OF.FICER WILLIAM'KYSOR.WARDS OFF .. THltCURIOUS -----'---l•_··_N_ow_:po_rl_'•_Fa1hion1ble· 8aycre1t. Section •. the Nei9~bor.s ~ind • Body ' AGROUND IN MEXICO N•wport Y•cht Tr•nquila II Newport Yaclit Goes Aground On Mex~o Beach . By ALMON LOCKABEY ... lint l!drttl' ~ ~~ ~liit. ;.,!a~Oil1n'. va~· .ij; It ba<l.·~d)',.been ~aced , .. by_ llberalized_laws_permittlDg &bod.ion when bearing the child would injure the mother's physical or mental health or when the pregnancy was the result or rape or inc;est. Similar liberalizations have b e e. n enacted in other states, but none has been challenged i'n higher courts yet, although the American Civil Liberties Union and others are preparing such moves. As stated by California, the issues the Supreme Court should decide arc whether the preservation of the mother's life is sufficiently exact to form a basis for limiting permissible abortion. a n <i whether a state has "sufficient com- pelling interest at stake to a11ow the state to regulate a woman's fundamental right to terminate unborn We." The California case arose rrom the pro- secution of Dr. Belous, a prGminent Beverly Hills physician and out.spoken advocate of liberalized abortion laws. BelQUs was accused of referring a pregnarit young woman and her fiance to a ys1 an w o ,,erformed an aboftion on her. According to trial testimony, he made the referral -to a physician he knew and trusted professionally -only after he became cGnvinced the .woman ~·as "absolutely desperate" and would carry ·out a threat to secure an illegal Mexican abortion under conditions he deemed clinically dangerous. Belous was convicted and sentenced to pay a $5,000 Une and serve two years' probation, but the State Supreme Court ruling vacated the conviction and sen- tence. A local yacht returning lrom the San * * -tr Action by Cotlrt ' 1-lieft-:Suspeets N·abbed i1i Mesa ' . . • By AR'fllUR ft. VINSEL 01 ttt. O.llY Plitt 51-'1 A militar)r man and his companion to- ~a.y ar~ .a~used by polic:? of prpwling a cnme-r1dden area of Costa Mesa in search or burgla'ry targets. keeping a lookout for lawmen with a walkie-talkie radio setup. They 'allegedly told conflicting storie!i about ·their pu~e late Monday night. when arrested in a section of town that has a phenomenal burglary rate. One claimed he was a voluntary police undercover lieDt; according to Officer Jim Wagner, but the patrolman he nam- ed as his contact denied any connection. Army Pvt. Andrew E. Price Jr., 21, or 3&1 Victoria St., Costa Mesa, and Robert L. Payton, 20, of 3342 Sea Knoll Drive, San Clemente, were subs~ent_!x booked JDrlnvesUgation ofbtirglai;. ---- Police booked Payton, a civilian. on an additional charge of possession or dangerous drugs, after allegedly finding a barbiturate pill in his pocket. · Crime statistics are kept on certain sectors of the city designated as special theft target areas, thus requiring id· ditional surveillance and questioning of suspiciQUs persons. One of these is the ·Harbor Shopping Center and other boulevard commercial areas st.ret8\iog nortb toWard Santa Ana, police explained todaf . Patrohnan' Wagperl was p 1 s s Ing through thf ,intersection · of Adams Avenue and .Harbor Boulevard at 10:45 p.m. Monday when .he spotted a man car- fS.. ARREST, P11e I), . . • • . ' • ATTENDANTS REMOVE BODY OF DEAD MAN Did Newport Man Oit in Sheotout With BUrgl1r1? Diego to Acapulco race was grounded on 1 Mexican beach some 1,200 miles south of San Diego last Friday. Word reached Newport · MondaY. that the Cal-48 yawl Tranquila tl, owned and skippered by Robert A. Garrison · oJ Newport Harbor Y~cht Club , fetched up May Clo_ud Fate Of Laguna Doctor Coast Freeway ·Wi·tl· St~y ' . on the ·beach at Black Rock. 40 miles By TOM BARLEY 01 ftle Dlll'll Pl-' Staff south of Maru:anil\o when an anchor ·nne Th·? United States Supreme Court today N M ' M LJ • 1.,C "R ' Pla parted. . refused 1o review the eaurom1a su,...... ewport., esu . USt U ite to ... 1r1'QVe . pute 1.t · None of the live· persons on board was Ccurt's rejection of a 123-y,ear~li, 1bor;- , 5e!Tiously injured. Mrs. Robert L. lion law and Appeared to uphoM, tJt '!!f· . . Koehler, a guest with her husband on the f ect, the lower court' a implied recotnltim By'1'HOMAS FORTUNE' yac~t. suffered a Cractured shoulder 01-the Therapeutic Abortion Act of tte?. ~"" °'1'' ""''"" blade be!!\fO fh• party could get .off the Action, or rilher the lack ol U, by lhe The cbairlnan .~I fhe California !fighway vessel ,as It roned in heavy. surf. l!igh court immedlltllJ railed specula•. ComQ\ission inC:Ucated today the Pacific Koehler said lhe anchor let go at 2 a.m. tlon. in· Oranse Cow\ty tn the Im~· ot Coa1t Freeway route ts stay inf, pul while those aboard we~ ~!~ping. the deciaion on the cue· of Or. Robert wiless NeWPort Beach city ol!icla s can "The_ first Indication we had that Qunming Robb, '7, the. .Lguna_Beacfi .. enlllt city. of ·Cosfa Mna'IUpport kl move anything ·was wrong was when the boat physician recenUy indicted on abortion Jt. hit the beach,0 he said. charges. Any ambiguity In the dec1Sion of last Koehler said tha party had to swim on-. lt brought, predictably, claims by each Thursday was unintentional. chairman of ly a few feet before geWn to shallow side in the controver1y th1l .the high the state commission Fred Jennln_gs aaid. ough water to wa~ ashore court's stance r1vored their arcuments in ''I don1t think anyone 1houfd read stranded party, which · luded Mr. the Robb case. anything Into il except reluctance-to 11nd Garrison and a exican na· Attorney Josepb Anderson, an allSOCiate reopen the route in the face of o~ Honal Ga had hired t Aca pulco, of Dr. Robb's lawyer, M~ Bennan. position." ' ' roUte an'd It died for lack of a s~nd.. 1 clfy council 11 wllling to let Newpor.1: work . Jf!lning~ .said, ~e Q~'t ·atta.~B ·an~ f ·With' the 11ta~ Di~iaio,n• of"1Righw'iyt' on Slgil~(:in<;t to. ~hatiphras.i'!J ·aftd lhal ·811 e g·fleeri g the route 1'1ut f!rf.p'haticaJI,,' ' fat as be is concefneCI it wa1 lhei-ume ~f-n 1 n · . 1 '1 ... 1 , OJ . r~t as ii commis!loner~ h4d !peclflCally ~ states I~ doe, ,not .want a rovte r~pt!ilng. denied NewJ>brl's're<iiiP.Jt 'for,restudy.• •'So what they give with the right· )\and The t9ng Siience .ihi:IL 1 followid. ~ey take away wilh the left hand," jen- Ci;lstina's moUon, 'he sai~, ~a<{·tq be an n1ngs commented. . indication that no comm1ss1oner wanted He said that frankly bad be been Oq the to make a m(!f.lon to:reopen lhe roote. .. Highway Commission seven fears ago The future Pacdlc Coast Freeway when the route wa,s adopted he would route, adopted seven year! ago, hugs the have favored an in,18.nd alignment. But ~ blurt along Pacific Coast Highway said he is not )Villing to vote for reopen· betweeen the Santa Ana River and the ing '1highly controversial route matters" Upper Newport Bal. bridge. The Newport wlless the local commupitles come In and . •· N.Y. Sfeek• • TEN CENTS ' •• a1n _Burg~ary· Shootout Suspected . By .JOHN V;\J;TERZA Of "" Dllff PMtt ...., The body of a 60-year-old Newport Beach "man, wbo was possibly lhe victim of a shooto!Jt with burglartl, •was· found sprawled In h~ front doorway wlJ I<> day, a pistol in big hand and a gunshot pound in his chest ' ./ Pqlice tentatiV~!y ruled the ~tin& a h~,.., . The vK:tim, ·wruiam Hartis Cit 2012 Anchor Way, was shot to de.ath-posaibly by, a burglar-sometime before dawn~ day, NewpOrt detectives sad. ----- Harris' body h!ld. one bullet hole in the lower left chest made by an unknown weapon. Several other bullet boles were found in the well-famished residence in the city's Baycre!t subdivision, OetecUve Capt. .Lo11 Heeres said. Harris lived alone. He was recenUy divorced , the invesUgator said . The body. lying with the feet keeping a licreen door ajar, was found .by a neighbor taking ·hi.8 daughter tO school al 7:28· a.m. · Two buttons had been ripped .pH bi.s coat . .Against·a window on the -soutbeait ,sitf'! of the house a ladder rested, poislbl)' Where · the' ,kiUer or killers entered the 11.'!I' ~-' • ,HWif l'!!•f!l!IY droaMd in• srall\lll. He -.:as lylng on hfs left sJde apparenU; wbm•bt fell allor !rim, lo run oot ol bis 'ho~.-1· ~ . . • · __.__'_2_ __ "Preliminary Indications ·show'a strong pOQibiHty of · burglary," Heeres »aaid, ''but we 1atill aren't sure." Heere1 declined to give a model or type of Weapon clutched in Hartis' right' hand . All, b\lt one neighbor said they ~d no(hing during the nl$ht. But Cme woman living· next door said she heard comihoUon and noi!ies which possiblf were'shotS1ate MonCSay nigbt. She did not 'i nvestigate, baWever, The entire Baycrest and WestcliU area have been pl,agued ~Y burglars In rectnt months. While detectives from the bur;Jary detail talked to. residents of ble quiet neighborhood, patrolmen scoured bulbes, planters and trash cans searcbini for weapons . They turned up nothing. Harris, retired, had lived in the~ area tor at least IO years_. his frierlds said. He ~as described as a good-natured, iven- tempered man whQ had lived alone -for years. The house aeemed fm1T1aculately kept. The landscaping has been k e p t fS.. MURDER, Page I) 'Tommy Gunners' Nabbed in Store Costa Meaa police captured three ~achin~ gun-qrryine ~lives Monday rught, but there was no violence: One was 5 year1 okt, three 'feet tall, and very remorseful. P.atrolman Robert B'ere was diSpatcb'ed to the K-Mart discount store, 2200 'Harbor Blvd., after the shoplifters, ·aae<f 5, 8 and ti, were apprehended, each with a SS toy machine gun . _They were tµrned ()Ver to tbeir;fam- lhes afterward. ,pendli:ig juvenile court _ Jclion on petty theft aDd lack of parental control charges. • Orange €oast ., ! < t I 1 r ' The nice spring.Jike weather may be on lta way oUt as the ,weather- Jllan predk:11 a ~SO chance of rain lonlght, along wilh lilm• auaty windJ. Tht rain ml1ht lall about. 'three days. ' ~ .. ~smE TODAY ' ~ Jreewol) cnuh. turned into 1o flomln g fia&co when well ht-· tcnt!oncd re&Clltra dropr>td o jlare ~" llpfUed QCsoU-(lc, Pog1 9. J \ w.ert....~ 6 Mex.lea amlly which ar1ue(_that the hi~ c;:ourt decision "was He said he hadn't __ P9!Led lilt other l ived al i c ~t aiiiiflo11 ne8r -b0uri(l to-co1or tile -ililnklnToT-any Jury lnihwaf-comriii ri-'On~15eri ·blir;Jfe Beach City Council position is that lhe joinUl-~st It. Newpcrt. Beach and ooi.:·1hoOld'r>t.1.itiffil"lfl'mllg"M"1iiliiil1-co;1ii m!i-ditlln 111; m. 01 111e - Floapita1 and acroS! Newport Heights. Newport Free\vay, he remiflded.J~ tht -·c•...,-...i., ·Mfi -·· c ... u, 1 ............... w l --r- where the boat went a d. Uiat might be uked to rule on Or. Robb's _cooJdn't agree with the interpretation of The Mexican tanner took the party actions. some Newport city officials that the com· parLway to Manianlllo in,_a tn.tc:k and "While it _mj&}lt be ar:iued ·that tbe high mJ3~iof1 dlaappmiea__ of the presently th<Y were able to hire a taxi the rest or ct1ur1 did' not rule on the 19'7 act Itself, it adopted route. the way. • · can al1c> be argued that the court recog· The-reason for uncertain lnlerpreLation The Koehlers Ocw home M~day~ but nlzes the vital need tOday for I "mOrt lil> WIS'that 'HilJtw&t ~iT\triiAsioner Verooi\ , """-•t'CUIENT, P•1• I) (Set ROBB, PU• I) Crbtlna moved lo. auslaln lhe adooted ' ~-- This would put it ck>6e to Costa Mesa cily route was reopened. • limi~ and Costa Mesa oUiclals contend He said, .. A lot of ~pie have m1dt access ramps for. a Nriport,Freewly'in-plans, bougtit or SOid property over .Ute 1erch,ange woultt mt.rude Into COsta Mesa.. yeari, .and tt wouh:l •be extremely unfair , Jennlngr also commented OO' the. city• ol • to them to reopen the matter without teal Costa Mesa olllclakpooltlon IJl.wllich .fhe fSeo f'UEWAY,h1t·I) i Cllii...... l\-t' Of' .... ~ t ""'"' ll ·~..... .... •• c~ . • '""' ,.." Dtetll ,...left ' ....... ,.... ,..,, NlterYI ,,.. ' ,......,,.... II ··~......... . . ~ . ,.._. . ,... ........, _. .:.-~ J: .. ==-~ ..... 1Jo~ -·----~---- ,I DAil Y PILO! c • Mesa Hopefuls (;aitdidates-Nighi ·'Tiff'· Predicted--. 'lbe first Meet the Candidates night In in ·the CiVic Ctntu par.king lot, with th• the um Costa ?i.tesa City Council cam· Iield ORen to questions from vot~s. • rur.l"" is being or~anized for Tbut'$day. He said -as he has frequently done .,.. e·· at Monday night . council meeUngs -with a hint of friction voiced by one they should question_ incumbent council .. amoog the seven would·be v.·inners. men George A. Tucke.r and Willard T, Orange County Assessor Andr~ J · Jordan about community issues and prob- ltln$baw, the two incumbent council can· Jenu. didald and .five challengers will be In· Bologh added that he has contacted vil.ed to tl)e-t -:3il p.m. Se8Sion at the. Es· o!-fter challengers Pd they share some of tancla -High SchOol Forum. _ his COncenu over tM pre-election race Mesa Verde llo~t'I ASSoCialion and their odds agahm organized efforts tea.de.rs decided their regular . mettJng to elect others. would be well timed for the maiden. ~b-"We do not want lhe 'king makers' to li~rformance of the seven 1970 election make a mockery of the candidate11," said s er11 together. od Bologl\..,in obvious reference to Planning !Odore C. "Ted" Bologh said t "! CominJ'i,Jooer Jack A. Hammett'• bid !or the quickly organize<!. Meet tbe Cindi-•· a coonCll term. . dates Nlght was a ,:urprlte to him. but Hammett is ~ to have connnitted 3dded that he will apply pressure for a support from ~ny segment.! of the com· neW vergion of the old ~onnat. 963 munJty., with a strong local • activities Twice unsucc~sful, 1n th_e 1966 and 1 background. including tw~ terms as races. Bologh SolJght a cOUrt order tw~ president of tbe Costa Meu._ Chamber or years ago to. pro~ibit. ~ clty-«P0090r Commerce. . candidates' night 1n C1v1c Center cham· Bologh cbuged he asked for a little bt-r1. chamber support himself and was told he He was virtually rebuffed by Oranie was wasting time for everyone con- County Superior Court Judge Jail'les ~· cef~d.. · ~ Judge, whoge word!! he quoted today in The ract ·for the April t+ council elec· ~aylng such facilities should be used by l~on is eipected to become incre.asin&IY the taxpayers. hvely, with a cast of sevtn candldatts, Bologh announced intentions to stage, the same number in the la11t campaign. beginning ?.1arch 7, weekly Town Hall-Besides two Incumbents, Hammett and slyle meetings. Saturdays fr~ ~O a.m. Bologh, the field inclu<l~ David Yarnal, to 2 p.m. in the Costa Mesa CtVJc Cen· Ell Kaser and newcomer Thomas A. ter. . Manus Jr. wbl> :filed :hia -nommauon pa.. tr nfused. be said, be wm challenge pen . barely .before . the deadline Jail the dty'o action by lllaglng the meetings Thunday. Tbe other·lour men are bettn known • . ' Passing Nurse Helps Bi.cy<;,list Norma Martinez, 8, crossed Monrovia Avenue at·.19tb Street in Costa Mesa Monday just as taught in school -but accidents happen. Blinded by setting sun, motorist Kaylene Yax. 32, of 1801 Whittier Ave •• Costa Mesa, stopped her car. then s~rted up, she lold police. Norma . of 979 Arbor St.. was knocked to the pavement and bruised but not admitted to the hospital. Passing nprse, who de- clined to identify herself, knew just what to do . Ex .. Newport ~ -M~-Fa~ing Murder .R.ap ' . An •nW•ded compi,ip\ ch'!'Bin& l\1ut· der in11tead of manslaughter has been filed agaiMt a former Newport man who allegedly beat his steps.on lo death Jn Newport last spring. Michael Shear, w.ho pre.-e.ntly -is on trial. in Sap Bernardino in the a"Jftged beatin&' of anotber son, 21~m6nth-old Eric _$hear, will be returned ti> Ora nee County to stand lrial on the mll.nkr charges ag soon as the other bta'uiig tr1al ends. Newport Beach police allege Shear killed his stepSon Patrick Tu.dor last May. The boy was found fioaUng in a bathtub and wu declared dead shortly afterwar~ at a ho!pital. , Coroner's invesUgators infUally ".rulea the death accidental. The boy had suffocated, and an autopsy aJgo ·showed la cerations· or the liver and pancreas. They said the boy had died from In· haling stomach contents. a condlt!on \\'hich could have been caused by futilt life-savi ng measures. which Shear said he applied. • But the case was reopened earlier thi11 year when Shear and iUs young wife brougbt in their infan't son. E1ic, for treat- ment st a Fontana hospital. Doctors there called police after finding bruises and other evidence of child · bat· tering on the inf ant. Lle detector tests and other investig.a· lion led to the prosecution for felony childbeating in the case of Eric And man-- slatighter (later murder) in the deaijl of Patrick. 3. for their viewpobMuctlll<thods ol a · · From p 1 N t F e•Q--prtalcm. but Yamal, u =-en-. . flfl8 · ewpor 1IC =~;~::.~· · bf-ACCIDENT -· N ewportLibraryOfficial Will Quit-W o_n't Disclose hear1las entered --a°'Plea-of innoeent~to­ the felony childbeatingefharge lri San Bernardino County. · Kaser, -29. iS an .Oranae Coa!!l .College · • • · • : .B·u·"'y Counc1·1 stude~t .on_ce ~~!ll<t..L~llY•-th G . .O Jeaderabip in llis AritiYlmantry unlt. e amsons·remained in Mmco-to'try -Manus, ln hJg early 20s, wu recently· a~ salvage the.boat. discharged from the u:s. Marine Corps Later reports said boat was sunk in 15 Meet Tom• ght to rt tum to college. feet oJ water when a Mexican tug boat _ hauled it fru of the shore. The sinking wa!I apparently caused by the boat being partly filled with water as it wallowed in Speed limit!: for Irvine Avenue, rt- ciue.sted extension of the American Legion Post lease. disapproval of tbe U.S. Army Cofllll of Engineers sand haul, the Corona del Mar Main Beacb food concession, and formation of an alley paving asses!ment district in Nell'porl Heights are on the Newport Beach citY council agenda for tonight. The "&ession is set for 7:30 o'clock in council· chambers at City Rall. From Pa9e 1 ROBB ... the surf. There was no immediate in- dication that the bottom was Rriously darnaged. Koehler said Garrison eot off a radio erat Interpretation of outmoded abortion Mayday (distress} message when his stall.Jll!:s," Anderson !laid. "Atld it should boat went aground, but the only response be pointed out that the 1967 act itself hag was from the Coast Guard at Mlami, Fla . not yet been challenged at U.S. Supreme Garrison also fired f1aru and a small Court level." fishing boat responded but was unable to The Supreme Court ruling could leid, help. Anderson predicted, to the sweeping First report or the grounding came a.side of abortion laws in many of the na· · tioo 's states and leave California witb its from George Sturges, navigator aboard ''admittedly' mOre liberal law of 1987. . another of tht radrig YlclitB, Bob Roger W. Hardacre today announced he will resign from the NewPort Beach 80&l'd of Library Trustees rather than comPIY with the new sLate Jaw requirl!lg~ discloeiure of :lnancial assets by public oUicials. "[ have rarely tubmilted information on my finances. and then only in confi· ' From Pqe 1 ARREST •.. rying· an unusual ·object. · Tbe pedestrian turned ou~ to be Payton dence, so that I don't care to have de- tails regarding by busines!I and personal in'lestments a matter of record available to tne generar-pu01ic," he said~ ---· Hardacre has served on the city library board since 1966. His four-year term ex- pires July 1. but he is making his resig- na_tlon e!fecliye April 15 when the new law goes into ef!ect. _ Last week ~e Newport Beach City Council acted to send letters to about 35 active applicants for pasitions on city boards or commissions advising them of the financial .disclosure Jaw. The Shears moved to the Ontario ma · shortly after the death of PltriCt last ~fay 31. Fro1n Pqe 1 MURDER ..• manicured. Neighbors seemed miffed that they had heard nothing through the night. "I can't understand us not hearina: anything. t guess we all go inside afld lock things up tight and don't bear what · goes on in the outa.ide world," one shock· ed woman said as she gazed across the street. ' Hanis' body was removed to Balli Corona del Mar Mortuary. No next of kin for the dead man have been located. He had no children, police The· recommendation for the speed Jimif on Irvine Avenue 11 to mate. it a uniform 35 miles per hour from 16th Street to the north Clty limhJ. ~- A letttr has been··receJ.vf(I requisti~g e~ension or tbe Amerkan J.1tgion Post No. %91 's lease u~til 1995. "TbtC<ltuaUon·then would be contrary . Beaucharrip~·Doroth)'OfromNHYC. "alfd hJs walkie-talkie unit. · , , Hardacre, ·who is. a. tax consultant and bookkeeper, sent copies of· his letter ·of resign•tion ·to .state Senator John Schmitz · l l\-Tu!llnl,;~AmJnl>lyman· ·Robert · Bad·· ham CR·Nt!wf>ort Beach), and newspa· pers. li&id; . . . -.. .. -. - The completed U.S. Army Corp's sand haul of Santa Ana ruve.r channel gilt to eroded btacbes In West Newport is looked on by the city with disapproval because of the rocks left on the beach . MORE MORE MORE MORE MORE NB COUNCIL ADD l L Approval or the con5truction of a second Corona de! Mar h1ain Be.ach food coricessioa ,;land is coming before the City Council for the third time il'l three \\'eeks · · The ~ssess.ment district would ~t resi- rients of NeY.'J)Ort Heights about $600 each for paving their alleys with concrete. Protest of fifty ,percent of property own· ers would spike the project. · Robert Cooper Dies in Illinois Robert W. Cooper, 48, formerly of Cor· ona del Mar. died last Friday ln Bloom· Jngt.on. Ill. He is survived by three sons, Timothy, 22, Christopher, 18 and Andrew, t• all or 112 Marine Ave., Balboa Island. While be lived in the harbor area from 1959 to 1965. Cooper was active in Boy Scouts, the Youth Center and the Church of Rellgioua SCience. DAILY PILOT CltA~GE COMT PUILllMtNG COIA,ANV T~o,,.11 ic .... a E~J>ot C..t. M .. OHie• 310 w.it 1 • .., Str1•t M1;1;"f A4't•ut P.O. lo• IS•O, 'll16 o ........... .... WllO'l &Mt.II: ttll w.s1 a.lllOll leo.l!t¥1 .. L""'°' ~: m F-1 AW.- to11111t1'11!CW1 eMdl: l1PJ IMdl ..... lt!lar- 1;14!\ v ,IL.O', ... a~ -f'! I• tonollfNd ..,. "'"'"'°'"" i. M •1ft·~ f1;1¥ tl(tllt "'°'' -_ ...... )II f"Jl'9''~ "°'lie-"\ fl" 4-t-"'(~. Jl.-t MtOI. C111•1 MM, ~t~ - ia.c,.'I .,. ~i.ltt 11•11•'1'• ~'°"' wllll ..., ••!t"fl d!I~"-0• ....... (NII 11'\l&lbllfflf '°"'""'t ll'i..tlflll •1""~ .ftt 11 Ull wtol .. , .. , tM.. Htw.ort htu.. ,,.. JlO w.• l•r ,,,..,, ~ Ml.11, ,..., ...... ,,., , .. 1 ... .a21 ---c.icwl-.• •• ,.,,.,., •. i&t..Ull,_ ~ ·- c.,.rWit. I ... , Of._. Ca •tl ,u911~ ... ~"Y· NI -••=•· mw.1r11..._ d J,,.,191 _.. .. ••--'•..-• ~ .... _., M .....-.e-• wlftleVI ~ .. ! W · ........ ~...-. ....., C*t _, ... ,..14 •• ,,.,.,., ltldO .... C#'-M4111. Ctl!!Wft••. ·~~-.,, tH~llY t:• -"'"' IW "''II U .. ~I~. .. "°"' ...... ~"""" .,_... -:titr. I to what ;Callfonila wanted when ·the stU:rgeg saii!--thes-.rranqw1a ·n and th11:rapeulic abortion act was paiaed," Dorothy O were bOth at Zijuatinejo on Ander!ion commented. "We would then be upholding an abortion law wblle physi. Wednesday and that he left ahead of the Cians in many states would be carrying Dorothy 0, stating that he planned to out abortions with no fear of punigh.. stop a couple of time!! en route to • Questioning led" tiim to say Price was on the other side· ot a large apartment CQmplex at 2700 Peterson Way -.another frequent burglary target -arid Officer Frank Jordan picked him up there . ment." Manzanlllo, one of the principal shiPPinC Chief Deputy District A t torn e y ports on the west coast of Mexico. James Enright does not see it that way. Sturees said he monitored Garri.!IOTl's • "~at the state Supreme Court Mayday message but was unable to re> abolished by its opinion is an old Jaw that pond before GarriSQn signed off. simply dealt wUh the black and white of Sturges said be talked to Mrs. Garrison any Issue and refu&ed to recognize t.qe ... at MJ.!UIDillo Saturday and learned some existence of any_ gray areas," Enright ' of the detaila of \he a~cldent. At that Ume said. . Garrilon had hired a commercial tug to "Dr. Robb's case hasn't been discussed go to Black Rotk and haul the boat off by the high court nor hive aey of the the belch. issues in that case, 1• the veteran pi'O. Word that the boat bad sunk came s«utor added. "Hls lawye~ ml.ght say from John Hogan, who ere.wed on the that this is the beginning of the sweeping Tranqulla II~ during the race. Hogan said away of aborUon laws but it could just as Garrison's son told him Monday that the easily be the court's implied recognition boat bad sunk when it wag hauled off the of the much more liberal abortion beach. measure or 1967." The Garrisons are still in Manzanillo Dr. Robb was indicted by the Orange trying~ make arrangements to ~ave the County Grand Jury on charges of in· boat raised and taken to Manzarullo from dudng miscarriages ln three women pa-where it could be shipped home aboard a tient5, all of them single. freighter. That indictment was delivered al the Garrison had owned the boat only a few request of District Attorney Cecil Hicks months before he entered it in the after J udge Paul Mai;t of the Santa Ana Acapulc:o race. The Tranquila II was a Municipal Court ruled the earlier pr°'" Cal-48 built by Jeftsen Marine of Costa secullon of Dr. Robb to be un· Mesa but later was redesJgned and rerig· constJtutlonal. ged as a yawl by Ted Hood. noted East Judge Mart threw out the distrlct at· C:O.St yacht designer and oallmak<r. tomey'1 ariument that Dr. Robb had The Tranqulla II wu the fourth boat to unlawfully aborted four pregnant women finish the Acapulco race and was second in a ru1tiJ& wbk:h rejected the lanilJage of in Class A on corrected time. the TherapeuUc Abortion Act. • Jud&• Mast commtnted : "We cannot permit 1 1egiJlaUve theory which decrees that life begins at conception. To do so would be to blandly adopt the philosophy of one or the country'• major religions {Roman Catholic) an act which would clearly be il1" violation of the First Amendment or the United S t a t e s Constitution.'' ''If there were life present at con· ceptlon." Juda:t Masi said "abortion would not be permitted in case of rape or incest ... · any more than it would be permitted to terminate the life of a one-year~ld whose We bad come as the result of rape or Incest." or. Rob!> has bten ordered to attend a special superior COutt. l'leatlng Thursday in which hll l~wy<r wtll challenge the Or .... County Grand ~Ur)' Indictment on the ~th~t the panel Is "an lllega!ly con.Ututtd panel that mpond• solely to the i<hlmi and caprice• o! the di1tnct a~ torney." W.aJk Out on Strike . From Page 1 FREEWAY •.. strong ~rt or the communities in· volved." He noled that a restudy has absolutely no meaning unless everyone recognizes that the outcome could be a recom. mendaUon for reopening the route. "Otherwise it is just an exercise in futi!i· ty," he said. Jennings said testimony was taken last month in Sacr&mento and originally no additional testimony was scheduled for last week in El Ctntro. But the Highway Commission listened to presentations for an hour and a. half. "On such a sensitive issue we will always give any group '" opportunity to be hurd il It lo pertinent and both side! are repre$tnted," }le &aJd. He remarked he v.·o\lldn't·have allowtd comm-e.nt If on· ly one fide .was present and the matter . had to be carried over another month to give the other side a chance for rebuttal .' Police said Payton claimed he was doing volunteer police undercover work. mentioning Officer Robert. Neal, while one or several other stories was that he and Price were merely testing the radiog. They dldn't work at ·that distance, one suspect volunteered. Investigators questioned Payton and Price into the early morning hourg, bring- ing in Military Police rron1 head· quarters in Santa Ana to interroga te the soldier, who ls on leave. The radio communications equipment. their clothing, and :some pry-type tools 'vere confiscated as evidence. although no potential burglary loot was linked to the case . UMW Leaders Testify CLEVELAND, Ohio (AP) - A federal grand jury investigating the Yablonski slaying case opens its fourth week of hearings today with several United "Mine Workers officials on hand lo testily. In his letter, Hardacre wrote : "I have enjoyed my Years on this board \·ery much and take gteat.pleasure in the served the citizens or NeWport Beach." served the citizen! or Newport Beach. Leslie Freeman Succumbs a 63 Leslie. D. Freeman, a 31-year resident or Newport . Beach, died Saturday in an Oceanside convalescent home. She' was 63. Mrs. Freeman Jived la Newport from 1935 to 1966 when she moved lo Ocean· 11ide. She was active in the harbor area P.T.A .. Ebell Club, the Assistance League and Unity Church of Newport Beach. She is survived by a husband, Henry E. of Oceanside, a son, Dickinson R. Free- man of Costa Mesa, a daughter. l\1rs. AM Blackbum of La Jolla , and a sister, Mrs. Julia Arroqtii of Cordell. Okl8homa . Fun·era1 arrangements are pending at the Oceanside Mortuary. Crose friends said Harris bad ~ ft.. tired for the past 10 ye us and had been : a member of the Balboa Bay Club for the aame length of time. Harris apparently had worked for many years with the General Electric Company, lhen went into studio work in Hollywood in an unknown capacity. Hi• only relative, a close friend Rid, ~·as a niece in Philadelphia, Pa. Multi Birthday Party Scheduled Many happy returns will be wished Saturday lo George, Abe. Jimmy, Kevin, Bobby, Harold, Chuck Jnd many Jess· famous people. The Boys Club of the Harbor Area will give a birthday party for members boru in .December, January and February, honoring them right along w I t h presidents Lincoln and Washington. Boys may sign up for the party with club librarian Cathrine Lewis, at the cen· tral brancll. The carpet they both ch Bigelow'~ B.arcelona ' Barc~lona combines the ca.sual, wind-t.oa«I shag look of too.ay with sn elegant Spa,nilh p1lle pe.ttern. nie Jong, slender yarns· haVe a acaft. •himmery glow . , • the dtatnatic mu1ti· cclors are Mediterranee.n-insplred. U&e Bar· cel011a in & Spanish or Ml!dlterranean setttni or with ulb'a-modem or mixed contemporary • •• for a truly 1tunninr eUect. And bl!!cati&e !ht fiber'• nylon, Ba.ra!lons's 30 s1 ·0! ...,. to <are to•. Soll doeon't 95 lhOw ••• and pile stays crisp and springy. A fl.N bll)' fot fl.TI)'• Jll. one who want.I gn!at styling . ••. a roomful of luxury •.. at ':wi""!r111 ":"'!' • down·to-drth pr1ct. derwtfllel'I . LOUISVILLE. Ky. (AP) -AbOut 80 perctnt or the state's publlc iebool districts we(e cl05ed in the flrat day of a tt~cbtrt' it.rl~e and th• Kentucky Educa· Jtnninas ls-a stml·rttired land develo~ n\tnt dtcutlve "'ho lives In Riverilde . He baa a .house on Balboa Island wbere he spend& most weekends. 6 S~nny Mediterranean Shades ALDEN'S CARl'm-DRAl'Elll!S -.tioo.Amcl1Uon.predlcted otbu..teacl\tt would join Ult fight today for hlaher pay. Tli< Aasociation 11ld aboul 24,000 of Ktntucky'1 3'2,000 teachers did not report 10 wor~ Monday. closin& 1bout Ill of the 193 school distri cts. State educallon or. ficlal1 made rou&hly the same estimate of the ,llrtkf I elf eel. ~ieye1; .. Filfs ·-va-can.cy · Medlt•rr•ne•n MOit -Antlqu•ft.mDtr· •sptiiilh--P-oppj- Span.lth Le1thtr • Grtn•d• Gold Attvlo Avoc:1do approved 1663 l'locentio-Co1ta MHO "J.orn --_ 1 . u '(fAks. srt.v1N&. t.1:t1..0RA~•e_.co.t.sr .... WASHINCON CAP) -President Nixon today nominated Robert L. Meyer of San !lfarlno. C&lll .. a Republican to a tour· year term at ·u.S. Attomf!y for the: Ctn· tral Dlstrlct of Clli!«nla in Lo& Angelu. Bigelow_ Pbon1 646-4131 nylon pll• - ' . . -·· . AFTER THE FLOOD OF '69, THIS WAS LAGUNA CA.NYON HOME OF ART~STS1UNG!liR, FONTAN ' , Hon~e Rises Like Pb.oenix ' New Laguna Home Built Near RuiriS of Old By BARBARA KREIBICB ~yw. ogo.JA..djl y ~II!< c..., Yon home oceupied for 15 years by FesUval artists Ray Unger and Jadt Fon· - r,....,, ftbr""1 24, 1970 s ' . -Laguna Street I • Re surf a_cing Set A project thal ~, deocrlbed '' "noisy and comparoUvely dlrtj" and probably will burn the leav., off lower branches ol Cutbacks Due ' II Election fafls in; Capo -• A cul.!:lclf ln "<docatiOMJ o!lerlnp In CopJWado Ullilled School Dlitlrct Is ett· 11111 nes\ Yem: If l!ddlllonal fullds are not apProved at the Mardi 10 override elec· Uon •• , t• riua WU u':( -.ineill of, Truman Benedict, dlalil<l ~ntendenl, In a re- -'meeting •M,,lnemben of tile tOauna Ntcuel ~l*,I'· ARocisUon. Benedict aald bodiit !grecasts for next year Indicate about ~,000 would be needed to matnteln the· Mme genetiJ level "of education. . If the lllOO!y Is not avallable, he said, heavy j:Utbaeka will" J>e nqulnd at all levels ol adiool operations. 'lbe.w would Include larger m-s, a baaill five-period daj' al the b1l!i ochool, .-educed ..mces •and a :::ubltantlll feductlon in the number of chlldren tnmport«I .to school. Benodlct aald diminishing local and tr... alOllJ aome of Laauna Belc:h'• downtown atreeta has been approved by the City Council. .. But It's all for the good ol Llguna, City Engineer Joseph Sweany assured the city fathers. • The Public Works Department, he ex· plained, has about $30,000 In Its budget since last year to pey . for ruurf1cln1 porUons of Ocean Avenue, Beach Street and Forest Avtnue. The job coo Id ·not be,. banifled la at year because the department waa oc· cupled with diSaster repairs after the February floods. • . Now it la ready t.o call for bids on a speell!.I procesa that involves the UJe of a heater-planer to remove the lOp half loch or existing surface prior to resurfacing. The method, said Sweany, reduce$ the cost of resurfacing and has been U5ed saUsfactorJly In other cities, despite some un~cslrable side effects. Theae Include the -lblllty that the heat may burn some of the krwer tree branches so they will not leaf out this year, but, Slya Sweany, the tree.s re. foliate the following year with minimal damage. atote ..,ppori; ptus r1a1ng cn11s due 10 1n. Laguna Sem'·ors flaUon an ~ gains !P enrolhnent --the-flmftdal·c:risls.. .... ---· He reported that CUSD preaeoUy pro-Set Volleyball . jects Its per-pupil spending to be below Mission Trail y.gic No Use lti Arithmetic '• \ .. SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO -Ualni' logic lsn 't alway• the best way to exp1aia1 arithmetic, Juat ult Bob Peduzl , fourth grad O< teacher at San .Juan School. E.plalnlng the dllference between ti"! numbers 14 and 21 the teacher uked R- pupll "Would yoo rather bave 14 cooldei or 21 cookies?" "Fom'leen," said the. Qt1PU. ~ "why," asked the perplexed te~ seeing his point go down the drain. "Becallle t couldn't eat 21," ,, e Teen Dence Frlu!f ' LAJIE FOREST -Junior high teens are invited to dance to all the late1i records Friday. . _ The dance· wlll take place from 6:30 10· to p.m. in the Beach and Tennis Cluti: niose attending may bring a guest. All must sign up at the club by Wednesday. :~ e Muter Pr.n OK'd ' SADDLEBACK VALLEY -'l'nllteea of the San Joaquin Elemeullry SChool< District have voted to authorize the. ado~ mlnlstraUon to prepare 11 master plan ~ the district The plan is. to be prepared by the cor.... sulllng firm of Oav1s-McConnell·Ralstono" lt will include a survey of fatjlltlel'.': niiln1enance operations and dfstrld groWtli'patterm.a¢ 11111 be desilned ~ help administrator! plan effect!vely. for"' the future. tan collapsed in the WOrst flood the "'-"-- Colony had seen in 30 years. ·the lllte ........ The ~t -aald voter opptoval onbe 50-<ent -over· ride In school Ill~ would forelllll the Tourney at Fest reduction ol ochool programs. a l'Vetc Day Class Dean ! A torrent of water rushing down the lit- tle canyon at the top of C'anjoo Acres Drive shUted the huge rock that !ttVed • • as foundation for the frame and shingle dwelling and it crumbled against the hillside as its ·terrified o c c u p a n t 1 !Crambled Qlr'ough a rear door. From 2 a.m: until dawn, Unger and Fontan, who was bleeding heavily· from cuts suffered in the escape, clung to the hill in the downpour. When daylight came, they realized their home was goDe beyond :epair, together with all its contents, a $30,000 !OSI. This week, the two are preparing to move into a new home, buill ju.st SO feet from the old one, on· tbti.r thrk .ere pa.rctl, or what was Jen of it wtieil tbe ralnl eoded; " · ' UNIQUE IN AREA The house, as befits its remarkable history, ls unique in the Lagunll' area, an octagon perched on a steel and concreto column that extends 35 ,.tr:et Into thf: ground. t "So much of the. hillSkle was washed away," says Unger, "it was' the only way to build another house there." The design wu devised by Sam Carson, a young Los Angelea architect who conlacted the artists after Sttlng a television report of their dis..ier arid of. fered to design them a new hdme fret of charge. After in!pecting the site, Carson came up with his aerial octagon. niree pie- 6haped rooms, a large living room. kikhen, and bedroom with bath open out onto a railed balcooy that runs all atound the.house. Both interior and exterior are finhiled in wood aod five 12-foot 1llding glass doors provide access, light and ven- tilaUon. DISASTER LOAN The house was built by James Schmit: of Laguna Qeach and financed through a federal disaster loan awarded the two flood vicUms lo rrebuilding and refum- lshlng. During the year it has taken to Com- plete the new home, they were "kept afloat, .. says Under, by i3,IO> from the Laguna Flood Victims Fund, organl7.ed by gallery owner 1Ucbard Oiallis and Mn. Helen Keeley. One hundred artists donated pictures for a benefit audion ar~ ranged by the fund. One of their major problems was preparing new collages rn Ume for the 1969 Festival. Fortunately It was a suc- cessful year and provided enough ~· ditional income to put them back in busineS•. though the loss of home and fumlshinga probably can never be wiped out. ' , "t -'t wont to go through it again, but 1n a way I'm grateful.'' II.YI Unger, "becauae something wonderful has come cut of 101DethJng terrible. People have been maritlOUs, frcm ttie flrrt day our itory appeared. even stopping UI oo the Laguna~ Tops As Book S·alesman ' Jn addition to scoring scholasUc hooori at Yale unlversily, Llguna Beach High School 1161 Ill'-lllke Totten bas - -been--ed u • top.rank dictionary 1a!esmu by the Southwestern Company of Nullvlllt,''ftM., prlntirs of fiebster'1 Dlctlollar7. ONE YEAR LATER, .THIS IS ARTISTS' NEW HOME street · to offer help. HUNDREDS OF HOURS "Jimmy Schmitz spent hundreds of hours w<rtlng out problems ..-wtth the architect and the government and the cl· ty. Bill Wilcoxen helped with all the legal matters. Stuart Weber of lhe Red Cross kept calling to make s'ure we were 211 right and the ~le at the city were great." A major crisis, he re~unted, came when the Federal Disaster Office sent a letter advising him that plans' for the unusual house could not be approved for their loan. "We were suppo!ed to have the house finished by Ftb. 2," says Unger, "and the letter arrived just 11 day1 before that date, when It wu almost complete. because Schmitz bad gone ahead 'with the construction while the. loan was being processed. "Fortunately Clyde Sprlngie (city building director) jumped in and wrote the government a wonderful letter ex- plaining the topography and cerUfyiJlg that the house was absolutely safe, buOt in CQtD:pliance with all city re·gutatlons and bad passed all lnspecUons. So they decided to approve it." : 'Iliere will be just one fan11liar Item in the new home. "'nle stereo was built Into the. :*all o£ .-the. old houat,'' 11.y.1Unger,1'ao it !ram't eompletely amuhed, julll 6)1ed up. with Lcrgu11a Maloos Riglit Move ' mud. Beacon Tel~vision had a man spend two v;bole days cleaning it out and get· ling it back in operating condition. "And they wouldn't accept any pay· ment. They said they figured we had enough trouble." Winter Festival Schedule LiSted Shuffleboard, silent movies and art1 and crafts .will be the Wednesday of· ferings in Laguna's Winter Festival. A free ~·shuffleboard exhibition will begin at 2 p.m. on the Heisler Park courts at 45.'I Cliff Drive. The second presenta t ion or "Momorable Movies of the Silent Era" wlll be screened al a p.m. in the Forum Theater on the Festival groonds. 'nckets are $2. The Laguna Crafts Guild's Arts and Crafts Fair will continue on the Festival grounds fro-m 10 a.m. to s p.m. Admission is free. . Lay Institute Slated by Church A lay lnstitute for evangelism will be held Thursday. Friday and Saturday at ' . the First-BapUst Church of San Clemente, with Drew Ramsey of The Campus Crusade for Christ as principal speaker. Removal of "No Right Tum on Red Light" stgrui from street.a en-SeMi~ will be held from 7:30 to 9:45 terlng Coast Hl&hway tn t.aguna p.m. on Thursday and FridaJ and from 9 Buch baa greitly Improved traf. a.m. to 9:45 p.m. on Saturday. Enroll· 'fie flow. City Engineer Jooeph ment Will be at the Thursday session. The Sweany baa reported to the City tnsU!ute ta designed to train ~rch Coundl. Tott.em'• pmnta, Mr. and Mn. Harold T-~r. of 19111 A!y Llguna Blvd., l•aroed lhls-•eoli lllal--he-hao been- 1w11'ded I plaq~ u one of the 109 salesmen In 1 sumfner iilea program tn- •olvlng students from Y~le, Ha"ll'd, M.r.r.. \linderbltt;-ouke and t11e- un1ventty of Woshlngton and will be ask· ed to return as a 1tudent manager In the ~...,amthtzl1lll\llltt. The signs wett mnoved on a members in positive communie1tlon. -mau1a11 .. elloll\.a montb.ago_Wlth. ---.South CoasLcbruclies parUclpallng are can permitted to make a right Coast Dible ChurCh, Community Chri• turn after a stop, Sweany uld, de-tlan Church ~nd Capistrano Valley Bap. fay1 weft alleviated, On hit recommendation, the->-tftl..CburclLof San ~uan Cap1$1rano : the council voted to ""'°" the ~i"' Vnlted ·Presbyterian and F~st Baptl!t permanently. " Churches of $8n Clemc.nle i ·and the South .. ______ 1111_.rl Sllore.s BapUJt Chl!fch of South Llguno. • ·-~. Voten w\11 alao decide an increase 11' The first annual senJor high boys and the Interest celling from five to seven girls beach volleyball tournament will be percent 01. bondl previously approved for construction. C.Ost or the two proposals lo held durin1 the final weekend of the the average homeowners would be about Laguna Beach Winter Festival. $31 per year, Be:nedJct said. The tourney will begin at 1%:30 p.m. both Saturday and Sunday tn front of the Revival Teen Club on Main Beach. Clairvoyant Slates Session in Laguna A demonstration of mediumshlp by Dorolhy Vallas, nationally t now n psychic, will be given at the women's Club of Laguna Beach under sponsorship of Spiritual Research Associates. Competition ls open to any boy or girl attending high sehool. The Saturday tournamenl will be boys doubles and the Sunday tournament will be for mixed doubles. MISSION VIEJO -Wiiiiam Wllllam!,' chairman of . the Saddleback College~ soCial science dlvilJlon, has been asalgnedi additional duty as assistant · dean or ~ tended day classes. · Williams joined Saddleback COiiege lft· 1968 and lives in 'l\Lstin. He succeeds Howard H. Marcou who assumed the ne<.tt pMition of Dean of Admlss!Ons and• Records this year. e IA• Vegas Anwone1 ~ MISSION VIEJO -Adults who wouJdl like to spin the wheel or fortune art'\ asked to sign up by Saturday for the~ r~Uon center's Las Vegu lrtp. 't Open to any resident of Mlulon Viejo. · the trip will toke place on Saturda1 March 7. Mn. Vallas is noted for giving names, places and dates through use of clairvoyance.end trance mediUmship. She has appeared on radio and television. The meeting will be held Friday at 8 p.m. at 286 St. Ann's Drive. Admission ls by donation. The tournament is co-sponsored by the ci(y · recreation dtpartmeilt and Sporta Work!. Leonard Brockman of Sport.'I World will provide trophies for the first plaee wlnnen. Ribbon! will be presented for second, third and' fourth place win- nm. Record album1•wtn be presented to all contestants. The deadline for entry it Thursday. The bus will leave the center 1t I a.m.._ ~lalt"thal ntpt.. TlcUU ". •1Uo'wlll-lilchiile tran.porlition, buffet,- c:ocktalla and free chips. CilJ the recrutlon cent.er at u1..-1 Those entering may contact Doug Allen at the Revlval, Ill Oce11n Ave. for reservations. ' (. _, --- LAST W t 1¥1 · AT THUi Pit1mi1 -I • \°'. • PHONE US ••• COLLECT (213) 728-7283 OR 723-3311 Wfi clean • enes •1 -c:= Wl.DTA 'le:! WIDTH ~3~ WIDTH Unllne4 ••.,. S ft, lent • CHAI.GI ITI Unlll*I S' to S' '°"I CH.UGI ITI Unllne4 ... t''-I CHAll•I ITI ' PRICE INCLUDES , TAKING --DOWN AffD IJEHANGINGll 48 HOUR SERVICE! Penn•y• •xclu1ive naw proct11 cleen1 tri ty·pes of draperle1 b.eutifully, draperia1-that-could-nner--bt cleaned ~fore lt•9" betvfy plett1 et no extra ch1r9el. M1ke1 +h•m look and·feel almost like new, w .............. , ...... , ........ ptlca. • ' l'INNIY.S c;LIANING SIRVltl • ' ' draperies • "!'ftpnada •· blankell • decorator plllowl • accent ru._ f ' • • • • • ' ' • ' -- • • • j . ~mite Mo:ves to F ill · ·tunfil . . ,• '• . Buckets WASHINGTON (AP) -The SenaU! locustd today on ·-new propooals to broaden the ocopo ot a ICbool lunCb bill ati.r v«Jng· to authorise the federal governm<nt to ~ the fuD ·coel of bring- ing free or reduced ,. price lwicbes to · J~f!idy &chool chUdren. tc-llM w 'IM Oallf ..... •t.ttl t':Foriy· pi;tro!men in Columbus, ~o have been PrOmot.ed to ser· in the largest ~ingle prom~ class of the force's hislory. ~ be some time before the c\tiZelu ·or the town wiU ·be able to id'tntify their new . police officers. iJ:ie city doesn't seem to have f!jOUgh gol~-plated sergeant's iadges to go around. • UnUl Tecentl11. toom.en have bee·n barred from the world marblt·playing cha.mpiomhipt becawe officf.als tD4l're· afraid that short skirt.s and tight pants would be a diatraction to ot~er players. The captain of a women'• champonahp team re· pl~. "Nontmse, moit women teear tights. In an11 case, thJ mm should b1 concentratng on the oame, not looking at our knees or bottoma:." I • ! A coupte taking a police "better isnvtng' cours~ 1n _England w~ra tnjureil SUlldaY when the polic,. rnan driver of their aemon.strallon Oilr"dr<We-tnto a hedge.:'l'be \X!!!Ce. man also sustained rninoriDJuries. -• -For eight weeks, S.m F riend of Alder&hol, England searched through 500 homes Jooking for bis missing cat. He finally found the fickle feline sitting on the roof of an abandoned house. "I knew I would find him one day:• said Friend. • Britain's Prince CM.rU1 has a port in a Trinity College CMMdtl Rniue • entitltd "Quiet Floto• the D01l." Be- ai<U1 the bubble-blowing seq~nce, the prince sit.s on .stage i'n a ga.s mask ond swim fins a·nd recites hit ljnes. • In Atlanta. Ga., Vice President Spiro Agrlew declared he will' not cease his public statements in the face of liberal criticism. Accordjng to Agne\v, "To penetrate that driv- el di ssemjnated by the liberal news media, we need a cry of alarm .•• a strong voice to penetr..ate the CB· cophony of seditious drivel eman-· ating from the best-publicized cl'owns of our soicety and from their fans in the fourth estate." """"" the ~ "' .-.. 11 .. be olfered during floor debai. II 'one by Sen. Jaco.b It Javlli. (1\-N.Y.), maldnti eligible for echool lunches all children from f amllle1 of fout With '4,000 or lea annual - Soviets Claim Big Advm;ices In AB_M System MO&:OW (UPI) -Tho Soviet Unlon has broken a lengthy allence on Ila an- tiballlstic missile (ABM) wtth claims t'1e system can knock down incoming· mlsslles "at great distances from the det:ended target." The top-ranking Soviet military man, Defense Minister Andrei A. Greehko, gave the Soviet ABM brief mention Mon- day In a lengthy roport oa the state of the Red army. Tho article, In Pravcll, WU to mark Soviet Armed Forces Day. . Grechkri bouted of the maSsive 'of. femtve nuclear m1al1e capability or the Soviet armed forces. then said : "Great changes have taken place in the air defense forces of the country. They' ve-at-tho!r dilpo11Lthe eopalillily reliably hiltlog both the 1~craft and the rockets of an enemy regardless of the . heiihl or IJ)<ld. of Dill>!, and ot gr .. L cpstinceiffom the-aeJ'ebded'target.••· The Soviet.I had long remained silent on their ABM!, presumably to avoid lendln1 untntenUonal · support to · Nixon ad· mini!traUon arguments In favor of developing an American "Safeguard'' system. Kennedy Urges Pulling Troops Out of Europe ' WASlllNGTON (UP!) -Sen. ·Edwatd M. K..,,,.ey (D-Mus.), called today for willldrowal ·.ol men lban ball of all U.S. troopo 'llailooed In -Europe. Kemtedy WU the Cant of a proeeuion of eeoatora appearing before . a Deni>craUc Party committee studying re-arrancement of mUonal prioriUes. an ams' of the DemocraUc Polley Corn. n>lttle. Keonedj>, SenaU! _Detn<>crallc , whip, questioned a series o( It.ems tn the Nixon administration's defense budget, in· eluding further deplo,Yrnent of the Safeguard ABM system which he opposed 1n its initia1 form last year. "Last. year I believed that Safeguard was a waste of money," Kennedy said. "Nolhlng I've beard or leamec. since then had chanpd my views." Another contribution to cutting cost.a, l'le said, would be to bring home "the ma· jority" of 320,000 troops, with 250,000 dependents. In wt!stern Europe. "We should . . , let the increasina:Iy prosperous nations ot Western Europe "contribute more to their own defeme," he said. He added, "1 believe that If we ex· amine our national situation with a new reallnn we will aee that we are truly ti~· tng rlski only if we rail to reduce anr reollocai. 1!lillllry spendln(," he said. . U.S. Librar ie11 Shut NEW DELHI (AP) -Tho U. S In!onnatlon Agency ls closing IU. libraries in five state capltals within W , days at the request of the Indian govern· .ment. The libraries are located in the cities of T r ivandrum, Hyderabad, Bangalore, Lucknow and Patna. • • Javlta amendment provides for equlvllent adjustments ror dUlerert slie families. Under the current procram, In- dividual school prtndpals determine eligibility by applying widely varying :standards. Sen. George s. McGo""11 (0-S.D.), chainrian of 1 ~e ~cla) sen.ate hunger committee, won 38 to' SI approval Mon- day of the amendment stepping up led- eral participation in the progr!im. The 100 per«nt flnancln( feature over- ' rade the Senate Alricultllre Committee, whlc:b had written 'Into the mea.sure au· lhoriuUOtl for lhe federal government to pay 80 percent or the cost. Other provisions olth e McGovern am- endment would: Require each 1tate ·to 1ubmtt a plan dellgned In bring every school dblrl<t and every ellglble child under the n1· tJonal school luncb, program. • Require each M:bool In report D!Ollthly the number of chlldrtn eligible for ft<e ' SENTENCING OF CH ICAGO 5 PROTESTEO Mrs. Abbi• Heffm•n Check• Notu In New York Park ·- 'Chicago Seven' Attorney Confident of Reversals WASHINGTON (UPI) -Defense At- torney William M. Kunstler feels there is a "reasonable chance" higher courts will reverse the CC11tempt and incite to riot convictions leveled against the Chicago conspiracy defendants and their at· torneys. The appeals, wliich KumUer said would be made wiUtin two weeks, are being fiJ. ed to overturn the convictions of Abbie Hoffman. Jerry Rubin, Rennie Davis, Tom Hayden and David Dellinger for Croulng state lines to incite riot during the Democratic National Convention - a violation of t.he 1967 Antiriot Act. Kunstler, in an interview from his home in Mamaroneck, N.Y., said "J think there b a reasonable chance that it (the appeal) will be successful." "All I Can do is just hope that \\'C 'preseot a good case -as 1 think we will -and that they react accordingly," he said. Kunstler said Prof. Arthur Kinoy ol Rutgeri University, attorney Leonard Welnglass and a number of other lawyers will handle the appeals. Disruption Case Co uld Be Guide For 'Chicago 7' WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Supreme Court today addressed itself to the ques-- tion of a criminal defendant who ~.houls at a judge and deliberately disrupts a trial. The out.come could be a guide for the "Chicago Seven" appea l and other similar cases. The case concerned William Allen, con· vlcled in Cook County (Chicago) criminal court for a $200 Lavern holdup in 1966. He \\'as sentenced to a jail term of from 10 to 30 years for armed robbery, Allen refused a court appointed lawyer but the judge assigned an attorney to "sit in and protect the record." Weather Mostly Dry, Mild While the. jury was being chosen, Allen began to use abusive language to the judge and finally said, "when I go out for lunchtime, yoo're going lo be a cor pse here,'' Arctic Air Sends Mer cur y Plu nging in Neiv England The judge warned "one more outbreak of that &Ort and I'll remove you from"lhe courtroom .~· Allen Ignored the warning and was re.moved. Later the Judge told him he• coold come back if he behaved. C'.Jlf°"'I• Co..,., _,...,.. <Mft ....,, t.-.M ....r .. lilt ..... "''"" fflCI ~ ..,. .. c.1\1111 1111/111 " MIVl'-t ... 1• ""°" M """'°°""' IOdly. Hllll tcldt'I' -r f.I. °'**' .. 1tmllfl'llllr:'.J:"'"-'~ • ..... '""flll ""'"' f' ... ..,._ 4' to n. Wt1tf lftnHfl)lire Jf. 8 1111, ,,...... TWu. fV•SOl.'t' k<ond """ ,.,. . •.•• (llf'M!I, ... ..-w. i.;:..;• • 1l;Sof •. m. 4.1 ,...a.aso.t.T ~ lllflt .............. J:lt 1.m. '·' 11-l!'lf lllW .............. 11 :0. .,,,,. J.1 ....., llftft .......... . 4:••·"'· l,t ..... """ t•'(•.!i'""' 11!11 '·"" ••• kl! ..... 1l11 IA Ith S·f.S 1.1'!1. r .• •1'1 '""" ..,. ,ill ··"'· r ..... ..,,,....t,,,..,, But Allen .!laid: • /11Mutf'IHI• /lf'(l>or•09 1111.1111 8•~er11leld 81Mn••cll. "'"H 80Sll!!> 8row!'llVll!• Clllt"° C!f'(IP1111H -.. DH Molnts O.!rolt F1frtl9'*• Fort Worllt Ft-··-..... .,. K1111n<Clt. .... ""'' LOI llnMln Mltfl'll Mlftnff.-11 N.,,. Orlffns Htw Yett: Horltl Pl1tl9 "''""' Olt1al'lorlo• cnv °"''"' P1lm S11tlnn P1so ltobltt ,,_,, Pllhlllltlll Porl .. nd ltitpfd-(111' •Id lllvff ·~ .S.c11men10 St!t Like Cll'I'· .S.11 Oi.to S.11 Fr111Cltc0 $telllt ·-~ Thtrmll Wtil'llMIOll 1, Hltll LIPll' ,rY<, "There is going to be no proceeding. .ol I'm going to st.art talking and I'm going to keep on talking all through the trial. There's not going to be no trial like this " " " " " n " • " " " " .. • " " .. • • " • " " • " " " " " • " " " " " " " " ., " " " •• " • " H • " " " " " ,.. • " " " • • " .. " • • " " .. • " .. .. .. " " .. " " ,. " " • .. " " " " " " v ·" ·" T ., Rh ine-F looding Reaches Capital BONN, dennany (AP} -. The worst flooding In two decodeJ brought the Rhine River to the doorsteps of the West German parliament I.lid the Soviet Embassy today. .OJ Documents In an anne1 to the parlia· .os menl were endangerfll by the river, whlch had.risen 18 feet above nonnal. . At the U.S. Embassy, sandbags were emnlaced around the compound . FloodJng in other pans of western and southern Germany reached n e a r catastrophic proportions after rain and a sudden thAw caused the Rhine, Main and Danubt rive:r and their tributaries to ovcrnow 1helr bank.!!. The Hooding ha.t claimed at least ·nve lives. ;. hmcba Ind the DUJU1* who octuolly recelved them. ·~ Boe the allotment ol lederol funds to each ,tai. for f,.. Ind r<duced priQO lun- cbe1 on the number of flmilla In the stai. with ~ Incomes of fl,000 or 1 ... , The Airlculture Oommltlee hid wted lo mob the -... fldor 11,000. Allo ldoptad·• In M wu 1 McGovern amaxlmenl to mUe ID 1ddltlanal •tlO mUJtoa 1¥1ltablt for the lcbool br<Ulul P""'"DI over Iii illJ\ three yeorL " "'-· v.s. Georgia Cau·ght . On Schoo·l Laws By Uattod Pft11 JoteruUoal Georgia school offlclal11 were caught to- day between conflicUng .!!late and federal Jaws on desegregaUon. They faced a choice of being state or federal "lawbreakers." Gov. Lester Mltddoz Monday signed an act paUe:rned after the Ntw York State freedom of choice achool statute that pro- hibits race as a factor in the assignment of student& to IChools. The bill is a copy o( •n antlbudna: law enacted tn New York Jut yeai', that Georgia's law includes teachers u well u atudent.s In trander restrfctlons. -• Some-G<!orgta school dlltrlcll. ln- cludln( Atlanta, II" under 1-11 court. ordl!l'ed deeegregation programs that c1U for tho tranlfer of studenll Ind teachen to achieve a raclaJ balance. The first test of the new law was to come today in Houston County. Ga,, whel< 1bout 130 teachen and l ,IOO pupils '" Hanoi 'Moving War Materiel To North Laos SAIGON (UPI) -North ,Vietnam Is movtnc war materiel aouthward alona the upper portion of the Bo Chi Minh Trail In northern Loos '•t the higbelt level of the Vietnam""'• official .......,.,.ia fodoy. Traffic Is ''tremendoul," lb&-IOllt'Cel aaid. --~ There wu nO Immediate explanation whether the men and materiel ~ lot a new offensive In South Vietnam or' to back the North Vietnamese offensive that overran the Plain of J"1's and then cap-. turtd the town of Muodg Soul todl)'. U.S. mUltary soo.reet have ~cted a .!!pring campaign by Communist troops would begin aometlme next week. But the official 10W'Ce1 aald North Vietnamese Ind Viet Cong 1ltllll In the aoolb wm ln- capa?>le of launching a aust.ained of- fensive because of a lack of manpower. The official sources said the trafllc was even higher than the perlod pttceding the Tel of£ensive ol Febru3ry, 1968. There have been almost daily reports of American bombinp along the so-called trail which is a network of jungle trail!, roads, rivers and bypaths. The United States sent more waves of BS2s into Laos today to pound the supply lioes to the North Vietnamese troops and alao resumed BS2 strikes In South Viet· nam after a 24-hour suspension. Tbe stratofortresses dropped more than 180 to't'I o{ bombs thls morning on guer· rilla troop concentra\ions and base camps , near 1he central highlands city of Ban Me Thout 165 miles northeast of Saigon, military spokesmen said. ' Dollar 'Rival' Ur ged in Europe PARIS (AP) -Flnallclal leaders of the European Common Market agreed today they want to set up a European currency, a rival to the dollar Jn world trade. It will be a long, unettla.in job, taking S..10 yean. Much will depend on whether the Europe.an currency will include the British pound. Brllaln does not belon1 to the Common Market, but negoUaUoDI may slart w._year. were to be shifted in a federal desegreca- tion program. "I am urging the educators throughout Georgia not to place themse1ves in viola- tion ol the 1aw1 ,of lbe state.," Maddox saJct In signing the new low Moocloy tn Att'anta. "I am sure this ls a position they would not want to place them.selves in, becau1e they all are law.abiding citizens." Three other southern states -Sooth CarotinJ Tennestet and Louisiana -have~ slmllor freed..n ol choice act! based on th~ New York law and Alabaina and M!Jsiss.ippl are considering • suCb move. · ht South Carolina. however, sponsors of the act said federal law has prlbrity Oftr sta'te law and the move sbnply was to dramatize the ln<quallty between federol enforcement of detelregat.ion' laws in the North ,anif South. Gov. Albert Brew!< told the openlng of a special aeSsion of the A I a·b am a legisloture Monday night 111 only purpoee was to eoad the New York statute "to give the school children of Alabama the same righta that achool chlldrt_n.bave tn other states in this country." He received a rousfng ovation. In Mi"tssippl, Stai. School Supt. Garvin JobMton told a }egta:laUve com- mittee Monday massive destgregation had resulted in a total ·1oss of 27,260 stu~ denll In Mississippi. Mony of the child- ren now are attending private schools. Less than a doztn of the 541 wbltl . students in the Benton County, Miss., school district reported !or classes Mon- day, leaving the schools almoal ·en11re1y,.. In 1.191 blaCk IJUPlll.. . . The shill al elinlenllry lcbool slucleilb under new delegrtla.Uon orders •-went very well" Monday, according to caddo Parish (county), La., oUicials. 3 Suspects Not Kin of Governor LAS VEGAS (UPI) -The widow of a former Nevada governor has denied reports three women narooUcs .!luspect.ed over the weekend are distant relatives of her late husband. Mrs., Vall Pittman, whose husband was governor In the 1940s told police the women were not rtlated to him and she would prove ti by furnbhlng family recorda. The women, Lenora Pittman, 59, who claimed she wu the niece· of Pittman; her daughter, Ava, 41, who said she was his grandnlect : and Paula Linn Pittman, 21, reportedly a granddaughter, were ar- rested Saturday night on suspicion ol possession of heroin. Lt. John Sleeper, ~d of the police department's narcotics division old Monday he wu more incllntd to believe t.he governor's widow than the suspects. Poll Lists Decrease In Nixon Popularity NEW YORK (AP! -The Harris Poll reports that President Nixon'.!! national popularity hu declined from 112 to 58 per- cent since December. The decline was directly due to public disaatJsfactlon w I t h admlnistntlon measures to curb Inflation and the state of the economy, the poll said Monday. The President was given ne1allve marts on "ll:~lng down the cost ot llv- ing" by 1 Jllltjin of Ill to '¥1 percenl Pani~ Over Pill Woman Blames Senate Hearings WASHINGTON (AP) -A woman birth control specialist told t Senate sub- commiltee tOOay that Jb hearlnp )nto the safety of the pill had created in-- lernaUonal panlc and prompted a 1'1Ve of unwanted prtpanciea. Dr. Elizabeth B. Connell ol Colwnblo University Wei a lttpup ln prtpancles "•trikes profound fear In the heartl of those who de1l dtUy with women and population problems." She also criUclz.ed some of the con.. cluslons reached by wilnessts at heartnga last month by the Senate monopoly suJ>.. committee. Te1Umon)' lhen Unktd \he pill lo scores of suapected side effects, In- cluding cancer, rat.al blood clot Ung, diabetes and heart trouble. "From a purely scientific point of view, much of the lnformaUon diJplaytd thus far can r lik.ned to the ftl1tloo5hlp . ··--.. between a drunken man and • llghtpogt -more for R1ppol1 lhan for n.. lumlnatlon," Ille uld. . Dr. Connell, a mother or six and the first woman to ~b' at Ute heartnp, . oald even the -violent of c:rltlcl ol the pfll bid to -1111 dota ... limtted Ind thot 111171)' of 1111 •-were bued oa unaupported iptculaUon, She --l!1 testlmonJ -'"" for delhtery befor. the pone! htlded i>f _De-rat Gaylord NtlSOD oLWl-.Ja. __ _ 1l>t aubcommlti.e II "9Umlnc tor two d1131bwtnp1>n the ptll. Dr. c...noU w11 Invited In testtly at the lnoltt<nce ol Republican .. membera of the aub- commlltee. Some of the GOP mtmben have said tht htorlnp and alhen In 1 three-year probe by Nelson of ctruir I"' dustry priclna and pracllcu have bertn blaald qalllil tile indualty. • - TutsdQ', Ftbnw'J 24, 1970 DAIL V Pn."-f Pompidq_u Greeted ~ QUEENIE By Phil lnterlandl 29 Feared Dead New Swiss -Slide Buries 48 ; I French Chief, Nixon Start Talks ----1-RECKINGEN, Swttierland (tiPJ) -Tom of mow that had hun1 menacingly over this village for more than a week broke loose loday In a thunderina avalanche I h a I engulfed a Swln Army camp and five houses. Twenty-nine WASHINGTON (UPI\ - French President G e o r g es Pompldou received a la vish welcome loday at the White House where he and Prc!ident Nixon exchanged expressions of friendship and pledges to work together toward common goals. Pompidou, who spent his fi~t ~ight on his U.S. trip at Nixon s retreat in the Maryland mowitalns, Camp David, arrived by helicopter to begin two days or talks and exchanges with Nixon who visited France last February. "We will find that nothing fundamental wHI gt and between us," Pompldou said in colorful certmonles U(lder a bright sun on the White House grounds. In his opening remaOO. Nix· on told Pompldou: "'We recognize that France Is our oldest friend, our oldest ally in the world. As we discuss Pay-TV OK'd . WASHINGTON (UPI) - The Supreme Court Jet stand today an appeals court ruling allowing the Federal Com· munications Comm i 1515 ion (FCC) to license pay-televisio n stations. (world problems) we know we shall work together toward the goals or 200 years ago ' .. liberty and independence for all people." Pompldou spoke in French, with his remarks relayed to a large crowd of government workers and their families. After the ceremonial welcoming. Pompidou a n d Ni:r.on retired to Nixon's office for their first business talks, v.'ith French sale of 110 Mirage jets to Libya expected to be a prime subject. This is the French president's firsl state visit sioce his election lasl year and he said it was natural tq come to the United Slates. "our oldesl and greatest and our mosl constant ally." Po m pidou, accompanied here by his striking blonde wife, Claude, promised that his talks with Ni:r.on would be "trustful." with nothing fun- damental standing between them. 1s for the attitude of French leaders toward the Washington talks, Pompidou said. "both our hearts and the center of our national interests require us to understand each other and work. together and to serve peace for the good of our two nations." The French president ended Vl"I Telt'MM his brief remarks with a spirited cry : "Long Live the. United States <>f America and long live our friend.ship.'' Demos Set ForNewTiff Over HEW Explosion Hits . Draft Offices TOTS KIDNAPED BY BEATNIK DUO Tina, 3, (left) and Sister Tiffany, 2 TUCSON. Ariz. <UPI) - A bomb planted at the front door or the selective service ofnce downtown Monday n I g h t blasted out 17 ~·indows and three plate.glass doors . FBI Ente1is Kidnaping; MomS011ght BUTLER. Ala. CAP) -A search for two small sisters kidnaped by two young men was extended nationwide to- day, the FBI said. Officers said a stepbrother <>f the mother or the children is sought for questioning. Fletcher Tompson. Mobile FBI agent, said an in· vestigatlon is being made to determine if the case involves a violation <>f the federaJ kid· nap law. Choctaw C<>un\y S h e r I ff Leon Clark said the girls -3. year.tJld Tina Caln and 2-year- old Tiffany -were taken al gunpoint Monday by two long· haired men who tied up the girls' aunt in her trailer home. The sherifr quoted the men ;is saying the father, Alan Cain, owed a $4,000 gambling debt. Cain commented later. "That's a lot of bunk." Cain and his wife, Debra Cheryl Cain, have b e e n separated for a year and she was last reported in Tucson, Ariz. Clark said Mrs. C a l n telephoned the aunt, Mrs. G. W. Rozzell, from Tucson Moo· day and said she had heard a radio news report of the kid· naping. The sheriff said the mother asked about t h e circumstances. Officers said Mrs. Cain's stepbrother, Donal~ Bradford Lee Jones, 24, of .tacksbOro, Tex., was 10Ught f<>r ques- UoniJ1e. They said no charges have been filed against him. GM Plants Lay Off Due DETROIT (APl -General Motor• Corp., S1YJ II will lay off 2,200 workers tnde:nnttely :M@_rch ID al assexnbly planll In B•llimore, Md .. Kansas Cl· ly. Mo., and Fremo~l, Call!. The nalloA's largest · <1utomaker also announced A1onday . brier layoff• a t nume:rou!I p1anll ln thO nett THE BIG BRAKE SAFETY CENTERS -BENDIX- BRAKES! THE VERY BEST YOU CAN BUY.! 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HUNTINGTON llACH I.of\ kid! •tWI. cno ffMm: 111•1 "1"'11 {l~1t Slollltl of S.11 Dltp (0111 llock ... th ti I.aft O"" ,.,..,,j l'rwy,) GA.DIM G•OYI LONCJ llACH 11* lt'IOkfl..-.1 II. 11tl L.1n11 ltlCll ....... cnn &ll..,11 nu1 ,,.,.....,. (Olle l!Kk Hwlll II Otl'flll CJwsl s.tll .. f'ICltk (M1t ........ ,,..,,, ltwy.) OTHll LOCATIONS TO SllYI YOU IN "TanoKa, 1 .... WMtf, hwafaww LA .. W. U. A ....... com .. S. .._.. .. , .. ..._ Hlth., "Y• ""' Wt "°""" Ywr •tllkA'""PN, Miiter Q1"" Miii OH CrMtt Cel'll "' Utt 0.-,1Mnc:l111 "'" -•io '"-""' 1er 'l'"r """' "'"'"""· Ihle• Tift.I. WllllC ••'-IKlftt * SJllC.k ,. ... ,_ -· MARVIN K. 1'.FT PUBLIC ACCOUNTANT Announc11; the Op1nl119 of Ml1 NEWPORT BEACH OFFICE For !ht '''ctlce of Accou111tln9, T er Pr11t•t•tion encl l u1ln111 Men19e1111111t •• ll•S NEWPORT BOULEVARD SUITE 210 NEWPORT BEACH, CALIFORNIA CAcro11 from Newport le1clri City Hell) COMPUTER ACCOUNTINW FOl THE PROGRESSIVE Offic• Hou" \.y Aptteittmi1111t Piton• 61S·J!44 or ''l·S46Z NOTE: To meet your growing need for electricity, contracts have been signed to add two of the world's largest nuclear generating units to the existing Nuclear, Statio!l at San Onofre. Here is what visitors to the site want to know about this peaceful use of the atom. Q, Is my home using electrici!y generated by nuclear power? A. If you ·re a customer of Southern Cali· fomia Edison, you're probably using some electricity generated at the San Onofre Nuclear Station. It began operati on over two yea.rs ago. Q. Do nuclnrplants createsmogorother prOducts hannful to the environment? A. No. Nuclear power plants can help meet the critical needs for elcctricily witlr out hann to the environment. Because of the nature of the plants and the care taken in their design, nuclear generation of elec,. tticity represents progress without environ· mental problems. Q. ls there dancer of radiation from a nuclear power plant? A. No one ha~ ever been injured by radi· ation from any commercial nuclear power plant in the United States during more than 12 years of operating experience. And you can safely breathe air around a nuclear power plant for a lifetime. After all, even President Nixon lives next door to a -nuclear plant-when-hc~...-at-t-hc.-;---­ "White House West" in San Cle· mente. It's less than 3 miles from the San Onorre Nuclear S.tation. Q. What"ll•s a ''mllHrtm',to do wltluadiadoll1 amount. If a person lives in mile-high Den· ver, he receives about 50 addi tional milli· rems a year. Q. Who sets the safety standards for nuclear power plants? A. The Atomic Energy Commission regulates all nuclear planu to make certain ihey arc designed, built and operated according to stringent safety sta~dards. Q. Can a aactear power plant be ballt anywhere? A. No. It can only be located at a oite approved by ibe Atomic Energy Comm is- sion. And sinoc water is needed for con- denser cooling, it should be located close 10 a large body of water. • · Q. Is dl1ch1r1ed water barmfal to ham ans? A. No. You could drink tbe water used to cool nuclear power plantcondensen and suffer no ill effects ,!r~m radiation. How· evet, at San Onofre, the water would be salty because it comes from the ocean. A. A millirem is a 10easurement of radiation. Everything on earth is radioactive (o some small extent,. and the average person recclvca 125 milllremJo! radiation per year. A person Uvlng,nexl door to~ nuFlear power plant would be cxJ)O'Cd to only about 5 more mllli· rcm5 a year-an insignificant __ ,..,_,..,.. ___ Sao _ Q. Is dl1cbarged water at Su OllOfr:e lwmfol to -life 1 A. No. Although the diocbarpl - is warmer in the immediate vicinity of tbs outlet. ocean studies at San Onofre hi.vs revealed no harm to sea life. In fact. some marine ecologists believe the temperature increase to be helpful. Q. Do aaclear power plaDll lake • ..... time to balld1 A. Yes. For CJ<ample. it will lab &Ix or seven years Jo build the two new ...,..U. ing units at the San Onofre Nuclear Sta- tion. (That's two to three :ioan Jonaer than for a conventional unit) The firat"of ~ additional nuclear units could be suppJY. ing electricity in 1976. Meanwb'il•, in order to meet customer power requim- menlS between 1973 and 1976, l!dllm must proceed with the COllltnl<tioo of nro conventional generating unit& at our Huns. ington Beach SWion. Otherwise. a ~ supply gap could occur. Q. u .... lllldl addlti-1 eledrldtJ will be _led at Su o.otn? A. The new unit• will have a generatfnj capacit;yib exce11 of 2,000,000 kilowa1ts-enou1b to oupply dependl.b!e, l-powoc- to more than 2 million people-or three cltiea the alze of San Fran-· cilco. San ·oiego Gas a EJOc1ric Company will particlpate in tllil project u ii did Ill Ille odslaal .... clear development at 9111 Onoln. _ The new project wW cOot about $450 million. e . . month. GM uld the closi1115 .. STOP AT 810 BRAKt-YOUlt LIF['S ATSTA•EI" are being made lo bring auto'! _~!!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~I production In lln• wllh saleL I· _ ,w .. -.c...11~•-"s..· a.;,... oa l'ltcfflt C.. HljltnJ. u·,;o-ll1lt to _____ ,___., .. _...,"" \l ~ 11 •• 11 II .1 • ., 1 ·I I " • I ,I ' • • DAILY PO..OT EDITORIAL PAGE • -Mitcliell's -Appoin lnent If Orange County's ~rue char~cter .is as. ultra rlg~l· wing and occasionally bizarre as imagined 1n some cir· cles, Governor Reagan found the pe~ect representative for us In appointing Clay Mltcbell o! south Laguna1to the state Board or Education. Mitchell's appointment still must be confirmed by the Calllornia Senate. There is little doubt that the gov· emor and slate schOQIS chief Max Rafferty swing enough political weight to get their man through falely. • But the SenBte certainly should not confirm Mitchell without an examination into hJS views-to at leasl1re- assure many who doubt that he fundamentally believes in public education. . . His performance as a member and president of the Orange County Board of Education-a relatively harm· ..., less and powerless body-was enough at times to draw expressions of concern, disbelief or despair from edu· cators. from fellow board members and from the pulr lie. Even the 1969 Orange County Grand Jur.y was mov· ed -to grumble about some of the board .activities with · which Mitchell was particularly identified ... His all-out support for the county superintendent's nutty "ba.rbershop polls" is among Mitchell's more re- cent claims to educational leadership. He bas been A strong ally on the board of Dr. Dale Rallison, a vocal and persuasive member of the John Birch Society. llis most colorful performances revolved around his motion to keep the book 'jHiroshima" from a school library-even though be hadn't read the book. Orange Countlan, Democrat: ~rman Commons who raised plenty of hacklestand ·•Y•browa wtiile ~rating from the other side of the pollttcal spectrum. But the fact·1·eouli111,ihal aeithu the governor nor , the county GOP orfaniialloa make themselves look v_ery good-la or ou of the party-with thls aPP,Otnt-ment . ' Cranston's Voting Record Sen. Alan Cranston (D-Ca!Uornla) ts: ( ) A liberal whO fiads little la common with the Nixon admJnistratlon; ( ) A conservaUve who fiads UtUe in common with the Nixon administration; ( ) A moderate who more often than not sides With the Nixon administration. An analysis of the voting record of· California's junior United States Senator provides results that may be so~ewhat startling, according•to the respected Con· gress1onal Quarterly. • That analysis reveals that Senator Cranston vot~ in support of President Nixon more often than he op- , posed him duriqg their first year in office Further Cranston's recora of supporting the PresideDf J3st year was equal to or higher than that of 40 other Senators of both parties, including former Republican President- ial nominee Barry Goldwater. , ' ~1itcbell has been an avid supporter and worker for Rafferty. the state superintendent of public instruction. SacwmentO sources say Rafferty put his relationship wit.h Governor Reagan on the line in urging him to ap- point Mitchell to the state post. although both the coun- ty and state Voards are supposed to be non-partisan. On foreign policy matters, the · record shows that Cranston voted with the President more often than did California's R~publlcan Sen. George MUfPhy. Th~ questions are: Is the Nixon administration more liberal than the public has generally believed? Or Is Cra!1ston more conservatJve than the public gen- erally believes? ----~ 'Welcome to Cuba, tire i<kal sockty!' There is irony in the 11itchell appointment. The man he will replac~ on the state board iJ anoth.e.r Using Bad Facts In a Good Ca:use It annoy" me, out of a common sense of juslict!:, when anyone arguet1 in a gooc1 cause using bad facts. It hurts the argu- ment and weakens the very doctrine 11 seeks to sustain. Fo· in!tance, a recent issue of ''Na- tiO'l'll Bi.:riness" magazine rewarmed the old comment that factory workers In Russia have to labor six times longer than their U.S. counterparts to buy the same amounts of meat, _eggs, milk,. bread, sugar, cigarets and so forth . THIS IS TRUE but misleading and pointless. In the first place, il has nothing to do with the "evils'' of communism. Many backwards capitaliJt. countries have as low, or lower, a standard al liv- ing, and ttiere is no doubt that the average worker ln Russia is far better off than he was a generation ago, or before the Revolution. For another, the Russian government decides how much things shall cost, and which shall be cheap an(l-which cost!y. Rents, for ir.stance, which take up about one-third of U.S. workerS• incomes, are fbsurdily low in Russia, often Jess than one-tenth 1 income. ALL SCHOOLING is free, and so is medical care. There are large areas of expense for the American family which cost little, or nothing, to the RUS!ian family. The Soviet government decides on such priorities. This is no defense of the Russian (fstem, which is manifestly inferior to ours in ma:ny ways, and whose standard af living ls much lower -as It is almost ,Sydpey J .'Harri11 -,..), .. everywhere in the world outside the U.S. BUT ECONOMIC facts alone prove lit- tle, one way or the other, about the virtue of a system. What ls wrong 1'ith Russia is that Jt is tyrannical and repressive, not that the people have to Work longer to buy a pack of cigarets or a poUnd of beef. J._dare lljlY lhat most. of-them prefer to ptif a little more for their consumer good~ as Jong u they know that renta will not soar, or that a crtppllni lllneu will not leave them destitute. What they Jose on tbe swings, they make up on the round· abou t.s. BESIDES, THE argument is weak, for even U Russia should in<.Tease its pro-. ductivily and standard of living to match Ol!J'S -which is not impossible, seeing what their technology has done in space -it would still be a terrible system for the human spirit to live under. Its sin is not so much how it distributes its 1oodJ, bu• how it monopolizes the most precious and irreplaceable commodity of pertooal freedom. If we judge nations by their material index , and not by the moral thtuJt of their lnslitutioflll, then in a peculiar way we are Cllpitulating to l\.1an:, who used economic welfare as the 1nain criterion. It is nol our ·cost of beef that makes us better, but our freedom to bee!. The Glory of Freedom There are two aspects of public life which cause endless trouble, but in the fundamental nature of men they are in· eradicable. One is the use of expediency as a means of staying in public life. As we know in our everyday aff airs, upediency often cOnfllct.s with morality, or in more abstract terms, the public cthlc:. Not to employ expediency at all Is a form of polllical suicide. The trick is to employ It u Utile as possible. and to adhere ta the public ethic as clO!ely as possible. It was a trick ably learned by Abraham lJncoln when he faced the great moral issue of his Ume. If he did not employ expediency at all, he would fe'l the moral Issue. and would not even ha ve had a chance lo tackle IL THE SF.COND troublesome factor In public life is inevllab!e change and growth, u men mature and learn by ex. pulenct. This ts ba1Jc tn our everyday affairs. Take the case of racial prejudJCC!, which la one of the great moral Issues of our imm~late day. 1btre 1J not a consclenUou.s citizen among UI who hi• not chansed his view of race ulations 1n this generation. Consult your awn attJtudes and those of your fri.nil•, llJ<f the 1tUtudes of public men. It b tho pry of freedom lh•l we can chaq:e oar mJ.od4. can &e.e and inform .---•• o-i:se -- Dear Georp: I'm so lurlOul al your oontlmled -al !Od•y!• rude l"1Hlg•1S llloll'll ~a Jeller demanding •t f>15l1 '1efirld and l 1m malllna: it IOf ........ _....,.! FURIOUS Dafr~: Junior will gd o kick oot ol I~ rm -. I (, I ourselves aboul inequity, and move to rectify It. We have been doing that since <lttr very beginning, and the human COJ)o dition we accept for our own com· monweal differs radlctlly from those ac- cepted by Washington, Jackson and even .Lincoln. The other day Pre!ldent N I x o n nominated to the Supreme Court an ap. pears judge named G. Harrold Carswell. AFTER CARSWELL was nominated, some civil rights senator1 protested that when he was 2.a he made a white aupremacy speech while running for tbe Georgia legislature. The judge, who now Jives In Flarida, did not denY it. but after seeing the text be told the committee be was "aghast," and considered It "obnoxious and abhor· rent." lJe said he now had no sense of "racial superiority." Opponenb also llsted him aa the "founder" of a ftt'!greaated eountly club but he denied It categorl~a!ly, and the charce unraveled. There ls ni cb&r1e of conflict of Interest, or bbs ill judlci1I rullnp. wblch thworted the conllrmalloo of Abe Fortaa. OPPONENTS OF Judi< <:arswdl had- better come up wUh eomtthlna far more · compeJJlna, or vote to confirm. Nobody 1n middle q:e can be held to atilwf:r for l!Oclal view• held II years qo. Certainly you and I cu ;t. You Uve..and learn, to oolD a_ pllr..._ MOit of •• hive !tuned In a 'bare tao years tbal wan of convenlenol an lift. moral We are leamlns rtcht -we ran't' Utter our, fl'lvinlftlnenl Ute a Neanderthal c1tve. a.ic111 pttJudlc• Is Oflo Jy one of the l"u~ In the P"bll< domain subject &a progreJSIOtt as we irow oldrr, as the natlan grows oldrr. • School Prayer Ban ls Still a Lively Issue Eight yean after the Supreme Court ".:anded_ dovm a decision banning prayer 1n public schools, the i!sue remaJna a Uve- !y one. There are at least five cues pen- cllng in various courts around the coun· try. ln the last rew years, a half~zen other cases have been decided - all upholding one of the Warren Court's most controversial rulings. The most re<:enl case involves a three- room 6Cbool house in Leyden, ~ass., a -'\,~ S:. ft'> Edito 'al -.... lf.elleSrch , hamlet near the Vermont border. Since September, students have been attending voluntary prayer and Bible-reading se~ions before classes begin. Stale of- flc1als have sought an injunction against Leyden's voluntary prayers, saying they violate constitutional p r o v i s i o n s establishing separation of church and state. Similar cases are in the courts in Pennsylvania, Tennessee, Virginia and New Jersey. In the New Jersey case a judge ruled on Feb. 9 that a local sc~I boa~ could not order the reading or operung prayers from The Congressional Record and bill them as "Inspirational remarks." An appeal is expected. FEW SUPRE~1E COURT opinions in recent years have created greater furor than Enget vs. Vitale, the 1962 case In which the high court r u I e d un· constitutiofial the compulsory use of an official 22-word prayer in the New York State public schools. Speaking for the court, Justice Hugo J . Black said the prayer requirement was In violation of the First Amendment clause forbidding laws "respecting an establishment or religion." Four years after the ruling was handed down, Senate minority leader Everetll McKinley Dirksen (R Ill .) championed a proposed constitutional amendment to le£aliie voluntary student participation in prayer tn the public schools. Dirksen car- ried a maJority wilh him on the crucial roll call.-5ept. 21, 1966. But the vate-49- 37 -fell nine short or the two-thirds ma· jority ~ssary to propose a con· stltutional amendment. "The crusade wlll cootinue ," Dirksen declared. He set about trying to persuade two-thirds of lhe state legtslature1 (34) to petition Congr~ for a Federal Constitu- tional Convention. If this were ac· complished, the minority leader argued, both lhe Supreme Court's "one person, one vote" reapportionment ruling and the school prayer ban could-be set aside. BEFORE IUS DEATH last September, Dirksen saw his propc>Ml accepted by 33 !lf11tes. Since then , however, Utah and Wisconsin have backed away. ''We ought to let thia resolution 10 to rest as Senator Dirksen did, and we ought to remember him for some of his other attainments," said one Wisconsin assemblyman. No one In Wuhingt.on has taken up the Dtrll:aen banner, and most authorities feel that the Con•tltut.ional Convention has been aidetracked. Leo Pfefftr, special counxl af the Amutcan Jewlll> Congrm, hH figured In many of the a<hool prayer cases. He told Edllorl•i Resemh R<porl1 prayer llll(atloo will conllnue lo sulfa_. f0< ecrneJJme. ,,.... 11 lllUe r.al· challenge lo thal parl of the En1el rulln1 wblch prohlblll a lllte from drattinc a prayer ind re- qutrtn1 cblldren to ttelll it. Bui . the - •NrC:h conttnues at the grau-rOots level fl'li, tomt means of expres~ing rellvlou~ ftellnaa In the claurooqi or at least liftt on whit i1 truly voluo~ry. . . , • Vi:r9itiia11 Defects F1•01h Pa-rty A New Jo·lt t o Democrats W ASHlNGTON -A 1 I but unnoticed, Rep. John 0 . Marsh Jr., D-Va ., has given a new jolt to the leaderless and all but lundless Democratic Party. Marsh represents the Se v e n t h Conire:nlonal O I s t r i c t in Virginia 's Shenandoah Valley. During four tenns in the House he has compiled a conservative voting record, often siding with the Republicans against his fellow Democrats on key issues. Recently Marsh a n n o ~ n c e d to his consUb.lents that he had decided not to seek renomination as a Democrat. He ad· ded that he, was not seeking the nom.ina· tion of "an9' oliler party." In his annOuncement, 11-1Vsh made it clear that he was not turning his back on political 14fe and said: •11 do not nile out the possJbUity that.. I may offer again for elective office ... " ON ITS FACE, the congre!Sman's an- nouncement was simple enough, and It seemed to have no broad national signifiCTince. Asked v;hether he pl.1nned to switch parties, Marsh replied: "There · have been no offers, no deals." Then Marsh's friends began etplaining to party leaders the wide range of alternatives wtiich Marsh had left open• for hlmself. WAile he was not seeking the GOP nomination, it was pointed out, Marsh was free to accept it if offered. Considered more likely, however, '\\•as an Independent candidacy by the 43-year- old con,ressmAn. Such a canrlidacy would carry the implications that h-tarsh could vote with the Repub licans or with the Democrat~ i'1 r -iizing the new Co"<?ress next January. Thus the prospect w~ opened for-party , ..... -., ' AJ!eu-G olds111ith ' leaders or a number of Marshes-a group of conservative Democrats. announced and elected as lndcpendents-\\'ho could be extremely influential U the November eleclions produce a closely di\1ided House of Represcnlati~·es. BYRD ON SPOT .._ Il quickly became apparent t h a ~ there were other im-_ plications of l\1:arsh's announcement outside his valley constituency. ln the !~rst place it offered another opportunity for the GOP -in once Democratic Virginia where Republicans now hold t h e governorship and five of ten liouse seats. The announcement also sef\·ed to ma gnify the problems of Sen. Harry F. Byrd Jr., 0-Va. Byrd. whose father was the domin:int figure among Virginia Democrats for 30 years. Lives in the con- gre:c;sion.:il district represented J>y Mar:c;h, "Young" llerry is up for reelection this fall. He has been \\•oocd by llepublicans in Virginia "·ho wou ld like to see him switch partirs. There have also been rumors that Byrd might seek reelection as an inc!epcndent. Ptfarsh is kno~;i to have informed Bvrd, along with his other congressiori:il 'col· JeaP,UeS. in advanrc of his surprise an- nouncement: So the rumors of an ln· dependent candidacy by Byrd ha,·e been revived. lt10RE 11\fPORTANTlV. the questinn Is now r?.i~e1 in long Cfl'l<:en·tiliV'f', ne\\·ly Republican Virginia : "lf Jack l\iarsh can no longer describe himaelf u I Democrat, can Byrd?" · None of this feedback from the Marsh announcement would jolt a strong and aggressive party leadership, but It Is clear that the Democrats do not have that sort of organization. Marsh made his announcement on the same day that Sen. Fred R. Harris, D-Okla., stepped down as natioaal chairman leaving the party with a S7 million campaign debt. Harris gave up the chairmanship to free.himself of'U1e "constraints" th~ ap- ply to the job, and it is clear that some party leaders want to continue and even to tighten those constraints. There Is aen· timent for a "nut.& and bolls!' .pro- fessional as chairman who would apply himself to party mechanics and leave policy making to others. TJIE IDEA WOULD be to· give the Democrats the kind of leadership which technician Ray Bliss supplied for the Rt>publ!t'.'l'l Natinnnl Committee before l he GOP won the \Vhite House in 19€8. Bliss addressed hlmseU to the party machinery and paid little attention to na· tional issues. A nation11I chairman of that sort would be popular \\'ith Democratic leaden in Congress who fancy themselves as the party's policy makers and official spokesmen now that the White House is held by the Republicans. Senate Democratic Lrader MI k e l\1ansf!eld: l\1ont., is quite candid in saying that the party chairman should not try to take a strong stand on coo- trovc rsial national Issues. "It's a tightrope job." says Ptfansfield. By Robert S. Allen and John A. Goldunlth Steal the Tires Instead ''STUD ENTS SHOULD go back to their old schools and not get 011 the first dorntd bua. The11 ough t f.o flat.- ten the ti res. Somebody should lei the air out of them nnd steal them" - GoffmOr Lester fl.1addox of Georgia OD scboot dnegregaUon. SCENE: The third grade class of the Jefferson Let Stonewall Elementary School. A portrait of the Governor. under 'crossed axe handles, hang11 on the wall. The teacher, Miss Melissa Sippie, an elderly belle known as ""11ssie," tinkles Uie clast· to order. Miaale: All right, boys and girls. It's Show and Tell Time. Who wants to be first? Johnnie? What have you lo show us this momlng, Johnnie? Johnnie (proudly holding up his treasure l: A hub cap off the school bus, Ma'am . I swiped It all by myself when none ol those federal men were looking. I A rt Hop pe stealing hub caps? Ho\.,rs he going to maintain law and order if litOe boys steal hubcaps? Johnnie (hangdog): I'm sorr)', ~·la'a1n. !\1issie : You're supposed to steal the tires instead. Johnnie: Gosh, Ma'mn, l know. But those tires ... \Vhy. they're !\Vice as big as I am. Atlssie : Land's sakes, Johnnie, no one elCpects you to do ll all alone. litany hands make lii:lht work. Now 1e1's just run. through ou r lire stealing drill once agn1n, class. .lohnnie : But we did it seven tilnes yesterday and h111cc already t?Cfay and l\1111le (frowning): Johnnie, I'm very l\UgsJe <firmly\: r r a c 1 i c r n1ake.-; much ashamed of you. Sleallng hubcaps prrfect. s h P mO\'PS over 10 a dumm v is agalnJt the l~w. Whal would. our belov-sehool bus). Now this thnc. \\'ho v.1ilf be ed governor think of you, gomg around _..Qll the jack handle? All right, Dob and Dear Gloomy Gus: _ How .. ~ I avoid driving "lthtn %5 miles of my home? Th1t\1 Where mo,,t tr.We •cddtnts happen. -W.0. M. nit ,..,..,... l'ffltm ""'"' ,......, '"'' _ ..... u, lllOM .. 11111 ,._ .. .,, itllll Cn rol and Ted and Alice. and \Vho \\'ill turn the lug, \\'rench? Fine. John and ~1ary. Ready, set, go! t!hc liltle moppets expertly jack up the bus and remove a "'heel) l\1y land, that wa.s fine ! The governor \\'Ould be proud of you all. Ye!, Johnnie? Johnnie (!UlkJ lyl: Well, Ma'am. I just don'I see what's so nil-fired lmport~nt abou~ stealing Ure.s. Stealing hubcaps i11 a sii::"ht easier. ~1lssle (p3tleotly): _ Stenllng the tlr'es dclnys the bus. You must IC3rii tf'ieiffi.- poruince of delay, Johnnie. Jt'1 worked julit fine for more than 1$ year!J now. .Johnnie: Vt~. ~1n'am. But I don't see wti:ll !Ul'n'i nJ:: tire~ ha s got lo do w'llh law anl1 order. AUa;sie: W11¥, Jobt1nle, &lealins Ure& la • l , • upholding Jaw and order -the old laws ;u1d the old order. Now have you got anything else lo sho\v the boys and gir!J IOOay ? Johnnie (hesitan tly holding up a black object with dangling wires ): Well , just 1his. Ma 'am. I took it off the bus. But I don'! rightly know what il is. " ~lissic (clapping her hands): Oh John· nie. it 's a distributor cap! To think wt have a third-grade pupil do ing eighth- grade work. \\'by, you just might grow up lo be governor :rome day -If you study hard in high school and do well in Driyer's Training and Bus Hijack.ing. Little l\1illlcent (eagerly): Ma'am. can t show the "tarshal't badge I lifted aff <lne of those foderal men? ttllssic : Now now, Millicent. It'& flint ror current events. Today we're going to talk about those long-haired white trash on those ca1npuses up North and how they're defying lhe police and violaUn&: the law and crealing disorder and , • • ., ----- Tuesday, February 24, 1970 The editorial pag8 of th8 Dailr Pilot 1eelc1 eo inform tJnd 1rt,.,... ulat1 rearlt rt by pr1stt1 ting this n1w•pa per'• opiniom and com- m~tary on topic1 of intereat and 1fgnifieanct , by proofding o forum far the t%Jlte11fcm of ..Q~ rtn!!~L _opfnfoni. and bit prt~itnflng t~I'! divtttt tttttD'-- Poi'lt.1 af fnformtd ob1aven attd tpoketmen Ott COJ)ta of-th1 da~. Robert N. Weed. Publisher l • • Fieh Knife Murd-e Weapon SANTA Bf.!\BARA (UPI) - A boot-hondled ~th knife with a four inch blade ap)>41'enUy WtS Ult weapon u11ed to kiJJ a Vietnam war ~ero and his fiancee on a lonely 5tretch of beach, police e~d Monday. The stabbed and beaten bodies o( John Franklin Hood. 2~. Oxnard, who was dlscharg. ed from the Anny lut month; and Sandra Garcia, 20, were found under a green blanket Sunday by early anivata at East Beach. The knife, whjch had a saw blade and a regular blade, was found burled beneath the fully clothe<! bodies. Bolh vicUms had betn bealtn and stabbed repeated!y. Friends and relaUvea of the couple were being q~lloned by officers in an attempt to trace the victims' weekend movements. 10 Cyclists In Custody In Slaying Volunteers Pushing Lower Vote Petition OXNARD (AP) -PoUco say 10 meri described by Dettctive lll Joe Hawkl.ns__u motorcyclists are In custody in conneetlon with the knifing death of an Oxnard man found dead in his wrecked car. The vicUm, found early ?ttonday_ after .an anon)'n:\ous telephont tip, was Chris Leroy Schaffer, 29. • HawkinsandDet'ectlve Robert Kelley said they were infonned there had ~a fight in a bar and that v·c- tim drove off after ng assisted to his car. He died. the officers said, 1bout four blocks from the tavern and his car rammed 1 parked auto. 2 Under Arrest In 3 Deaths LOS ANGELES (AP) Sherifrs officer• say they ha'e arrested two young men and booked them for · In- vesUgatlon of murd@r tn the slayinr of three burglary vic- tbm. SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) - Hundreds of volunteers at supennarkets and hospitals circulated petitions Monday tn an all-out effort to get 200,000 signatures for an initiative ex- tending 'voting rights to 13- -year;:olds. -- Main backers of the drive. a group c a I 1 e d Independent Vob.mteers for the Vote Ex· tension (Involve), planned to go to court to try to overturn a Jaw: prevmtlng1hose under 21 from circulating the petitions. Involve needs 520,276 v1lid voters' signatures by AprU 6 in order to qualify the 18-year- old vote initiative for the November elect.ion ballot. The group has already col- lected 1 0 0 , 0 O O signatures, hoped to get 200,000 more Monday and then go over the top on another signature col· lecUng day March 21. James Armstrong, NorUlern California chairman f o r Involve. said petitions were circulated at 25 shopping cent.era and hospitals in San Francisco. About 100 peti- tioners were out in Berkeley llOd about 200 in Marin Coun· ty, he said. In IM Angeles, B i 11 Livermore. lnvolve's 19-year- old area chairman, said "a CHECKING •UP• Mosquitoes Like Men Wearing Blue ByL M. BOYD THE PREFERRED DRUMSTICK -When a chicken sleeps, it tends to put itt wela:ht mostly on Its right leg, which makes said leg somewhat muscular. So when cooked, lt's tougher. The.rtfore, a host in Mexico, knowing th l s , customarily gives to a auest of honor the chiaken's left leg, whlch is tenderer. No, I dJd not make up thll bit of wtumsy. A Mcx- ic1n chef named P1blo San- lege graduates. CUSTOMER SERVICE: Q. "Take a t~pound side of beef -how much of it Is fat?" A. Maybe 2S pounds . . . Q. "WHAT DO YOU call that hangover remedy of half beer and half tomato juice?" A. Belives that's known as a Calgary Redeye . • • Q. 11JS THERE ANY country where everybody can read a n d write? A. Only one I can think of ~ Iceland. jenit: said that's how It's done OUR PLANET MAN s ay 1 and why. that color most befitting a THE J E W E L E RS in Capricorn girl usually 11 Hungary report about 45,000 ~n. one shade or another ... wedding rinls 1re sold an-IT'S C LA I M ED a new nually. The l.lcenat clerks In translation of the Bible turn& Hu111ary report about 5$,000 up about on~ a month ... AS couplet are married annullly. TO THE WllD!ABOUTS of -the !argat cololly of af· couple of hundred" worken w e r e clrculaUng peliUons. More than 1 score of petition circulators were working in Sacramento. Armstrong said Involve planned to file suit In federal court Wednesday alleging the requirerna1t that t h o s e circulating pe"titlona must be "quallfied electors" is un- consUtutional. ·, He said the ;requirement mans ta.yUMilds c • n n o t cJrculate petitions "and our attorneys assure us th l s violates the First and 14th amendmentJ to the Constitu· ti on." State Drug Coordinato1; Appointed SACRAMENTO (UPI) Arthur Suddjian. new fleld commander of Gov. Ronald Rea1an'1 war on narcoUc and drug abuse, says the dangers of marijuana usage have been underpll.)'ed for years. "Thert are real danger• In marijuana -paycholOllcal hann," SuddJlan told 1n in- fonnal news conference Mon- day. "We're afraid now we un- derstated them too king." Rea11n aummoned reporters to his Capitol office to announ~ the appointment of the 43-year-old Fresno Democrat to the n e w I y created posl of coordinator ol the .state Office of Narcotics and Drug Abuse Coordination. The Job pays 111,000. Suddjian currently Is health education pd llrul abuae In· formaUon coordln1tor for Fresno City School!. He ls: a former F r e s n o policeman, youth 1ulhorlty couri,,etor and te1cher . Rea1an satd he was 1 drug consultant to seven western governors. Suddjlan told newi;mtn that unUI aboul a year ago the d111ger1 • of marijuana usage had been "understated" and that new research indicates th1t pot causes "paycholo1k:al harm." Re said drug researchers have "real concern now" about the hannful effects of marljuan1. FBI Arrests Pair, Gets Art Works AN AWGATOR get.. alu&' tedodly effeminate fellow1, glsh when the temperature that'• San FrancllCO •.. om drops to Iii deg...., F. He YOU KNOW no reptile 11 doesn't bite. Tha1'1 why the •limy, not """? . . . AP· PALM SPRINGS (UPI) - movie makers film alligator. PR.OXIMATEL Y '1 percent or Federal a1ents M on d a y acenes on refrigerated sell. the ·adult nigh~ school students: recovered stolen 1rt works, In- A SCIENTIST avers his ar1 single, divorced or widow· eluding Picasso etchlnas. stume-.· fJrove moequltoes will ed. valued at 'lOl,000 and ar- btte a clUzen dteued In blue NAMU -A client askl If rested two men here .on I"·· d ··--"' charat1 of l nter1tatt quicker than a c wa.oi:n r~ it'1 now customary anywhere in any otber color. He l~lats. for men ·to .take their wtvea' transportation of stolen pro- He 11 adamalll names at mania1e. Don't ~ed wue Gerald lrl LOVB AND WAR - T ~ e btlltve IO. But remtmher Kata, •· West Loa Angelet, llllllJ'ter 1"" are, the luckier ::=,~'': S:J, 1~ pd llamoo M. Ramlra, 44, "1 you ire ln love. So II.YI Paul ........... _.:.._ e hi -.........-...1 Indio. C. Glick of th< U.S. Bureau of ._,_,.,,.o:y, 1 --FBI agenll Aid the art the Cenlul. Hll etuclles in-wtre was Betsy Oram, a woru were stolen ln a dlcai. the coUe1....Sucaled feminist, and when she qrted burglary In Oklahoma City couple• auc:Ceed In mania1• to marryteh~m. lie a"'f1toto ~~ Dec. 11. Ill tlma oul ol 100 wlillo blgh corpora er name n ~ The FBI alao .. 1d John school dropoutl 1uceetd Jn own. Only IUCh tnatanct thlt Edward Soart1, 41, Okl1homa 'morrt_.,nlr,ffcllm,....it-ol~comes to1111nd. ----CllYr w .. armlod-ln.J!hooPll, 100. IntemUnc. But our Love Your quut.tonJ and com. Art&., and Larry Lee, +4. wae 1nd War man _thJnb tl\e '-mt.nu ..are_wlcomtd.. cftd amllfd 1t his home la ftsurt• are m I 1 I •a d I n I . tom be uud ,.,,.,...,. -lJktalioma Cffy', on llit Wile Dropoull llo not nectaaarlly •lbfe f~ "'Chtckfng Up.• Ch!r1ea. fa.II tn mlrttage because they Actdrcp mcU to L. M. Botld, Aaentt sa\d the arretts were ""' •tupld, he contends, but fn cara of l>A!LY PfLOT, coordlnattd through the Loo btc..,. they ttn<I to marry al Bo• 1315, N01Dp0rt Bench, Angtl.,, Oklohoma Cll1 Ind far earlier 111 ... than do col· Calf/., 92643. Phoenll< FB!rlcea. t . " " . --- T..,dq, Ftllt"'7 24, 1970 , GAIL V .,ILOJ l _a:n ,. • • -----------~----- • SNEAK A PEEK TOMORROW NIGHT! I ·.;v_ ~,\ ... t..:-'1/'~ Huntington Beach , ~~ -Newest Grants ... Will Be Open For Business a~~6 P.M. To 9 P.M. Jl"'T..,..:w:-,~ Wednesday, Feb. 25th. J :-.... Steal a march on yourfriends .•. getfirst choice of Grand Opening Sale values.in fashions for the entire family ..• home furnishings ... garden equiptnent ... major andsmalf - ! appliances ••• sports eq_uipment ••• home en~tI , Bring the family and meet your new friends at Grantll F"O .... new and exciting department store. ---~-- \ :lil!:~!!:i::it'.l2:~::;:;:~.w."l;\;."" COME SEE US ... HERE'S HOW TO FIND USI ~ BROOKHURST & ADAMS g;· HUN'l'I NGTON BEACH '"' ~'-,, "• ,,,. 'll!GHfr "' -' e •• ... N ·-I I:: OFllCIAL GRAatD OPENING THURSDAY, 'FEI. 26th 9:30 A.M. * fl .. l1t1f for Drewln1 for F fl I ! COLOR TV In 1u• Apftllanco D1pl. Orawlnt will be hold Sund•y, Mar. Isl. *-!fl I E 0 fl C Hf D S to first 500 ladl11 on Thurtday mernlnv, F•b. 26th. * Fflll NOVILTY PAINTING ~hlla you watch. In eur Paint Dept. Thurtd1y' Friday only, ~ob. 26th '27111. * Live entertainment anti r~lo broadc•tt S•t., felt. ltth. * MAnEL® t.•Y ....,_.,,atlon and '""'"" c-.,. Setvrday, Fob. 21th. ' /;,'1\ STOfll HOURS : 9:IO le 9:IO, Mond•y lhru s.tv ..... y1 lundey, IO 'tll 6. GRANT-PLAZ~ .• ·aROOKHURST & ADAM$ j HUNTINGTON llACH ., • • i. • ... I I DAIL V PILOT Fullerton Footllghters -. -·--... .. ... .... .. ... ... • 'World of Carl Sandburg'. New Play 'Norm~n' B.;ndle-of Laugh s Touching, Whimsical Shaw By WlLLtA!\I GLOVER uproarious result~. scaUering NEW YORK (AP) -A moralistic bronudes as he brlght bunch of laughmakers goes and reaching al last ;f provide Broadway with a quirky adjustrncnt lo the new welcome bundle or merry, permissiveness. By JOANNE REYNOLDS "The \\lorld ol C a r J Sandburg" as explored by the Fullerton Footllghters is a charming and touching world full of whimsy and tragedy. A production that shouldn't be missed by any coun\ian who enjOyS the writer's works or a \\•ell-done theater production. The show opens with John \\1ard introducing tiimself and three other readers, Steve Parker, ~1argaret Merritt and f\felanie Oley. Th;e casual tone set by this opening Is main· The evening of readings and mngs directed by Brad Fry is I ~ I . "; 'Quaranti1aed' \Vally Cox prepares for an operation in the rnaae- for-tetevision rriotion picture "Quarantined" which may be viewed tonight at 8:30 on Channel 7. The . story e\.'olves around a cholera epidemic. Mitch Vogel. 14, of Costa Mesa also appears. • I See by Today's Want Ads • Lady In \Vhitt. , .white uniforms ~ 11).13, rea· t:onable, also v:hite shoes 78, • Too beautiful lo hide. , .4 panel Oriental screen, ap- prail'l!'d at $1050. e TRADE rest for ieat. •. trade your Mountain or re!IOrt cabin tot' this cta- tom built 24' Trimaran with new ails and paint, 1963, excellent condition. Crossword Puzzle SJ In a br1qh! m<1nnrr SJ Ocran 57 Qppos1tr ACROSS l Large nu11btr 'Mr. Dii lon 10 Little demons 14 Custom ,. ol grren lS Roman god 1111 Cromwell's nickname 17 Sorrowful sonq lS Pro 19 Newsprint sourte 2Q Particlr 21 Imposed 1 penalty 22 Highway 23 Sodium chl01ide 15 I• tonllngent 27 Curb 31 Strike 32 Wan In blu r: Slang ll l.lalay arch lptlago Island JS Horse 39 Litttr 11 Have fun 43 Rust 01 Martin 44 Tree 4&o Arrangement •B Each 49 Oamagt 58 Where Abadan Is 59 Ingratiating 61 Voy~e 65 Tit le 6!i Air: Prefix fi7 Call up f,8 Slave of old 69 Reclined 70 Lariat: Vilr. 71 ltlustrlous '" 72 Kind of r1cr 73 Misplay DOWN 10 Br1vr 11 Ont with low IQ 12 Argue for 01 against a claim 13 Indulges In winter sport 21 Natural 1 Noah's son ability 2 GySsy 24 Ll.an's 3 Ai nicknam<" c Condensation 26 Sort rO<ld 5 Animal 27 ·•• ·dub: enc losure 2 words ' G1oup of 3 28 M.an's namt Canadian 2q Hied provinces 30 Literary 7 To •... · work Everyoiie : 34 Going baC'k 2 words l& In good .l II Carrltd ordtr 9 Business . 31 High 38 Ont and -"" 2/23/70 ~n Caustd to 1tca11 42. Ralional ~s BaUlr of Britain h!roes: Abbr. ~7 Vitality SO Coarse 52. Situated br1ow SJ Hraprd ~~ Got up SS Ch ili ton ····• 56 Wea\hrr· man's word hO Diva 's solo spot &o2 Loud nolsr &3 Prtposltion M F1uit 67 BtlOfe 112!no hdned through two acls. pro- 'lid.lna: the perfect atmosphere lor Sandbur1'1 pieces . The production also includes songs from his "Songbag'' col· lection which are soog by a 2().. member chorUs directed by Jack Gittings. The chorus sur. round5 the audience, so their singing has a stereophonic ef· feet. f\1ost or the musical . numbers were lnterpreted in dance by Donna Edwards and Carly Fields. Their dances, which t h e y choreographed Friglatetaing Reactio1a new-old nonsense in "'Norman, Maureen Stapleton. a cam· ls Thal You?" a Thursday edlenne of eruptive charm. night arrival al the Lyceum turns up late in the show as Theater. the spouse disenchanted by Lou Jacobi, a master of her escapade. Her or- churlish glee, presides over porlunities are llml!ed far i;el· the caper s~ifically written -.!i_ng int a 91t col\ecllve uproar. for him by Ron Clark and Sam bu~ Stapleton docs1,.l Bobrick, a team that whetted miss a nuance. · their wit.s previously on TV's As the youlh!'i. r.1 art In Smothers Brothers show. And Huston and \Valtrr Willi!'On • .t to cinch the fun, George Ab· Broadway ne\\·comcr~hal_ldle bott pulls a jaunt)' directing roles, that might e s 1 l Y combeack. become caricature. · ~ The show· is the ·ti3lh pro--forthright , inoffensive way. ductlon in which Abbott has Ah.\'ays lhe Abbott touch keep.-; been involved and it makes up rarcical fri\'olity in sharp for several reeent thespic focus. A beguiling trifle. themselves, were well done Dikki Parkhurst's compassion turn:s 'Lo fear as ?\1ichael Bielitz refuses to ~e- without detracting !rom the lieve her father has left home in this scene from the Rancho Community skids. --~------- U you get tech n.i ca I , ANIMAlogic •• ,,,..,. songs. Players' drama '.;The Death and Life of Larry Benson," continuing Friday p nd ''Norman. etc .• " is just that 1.z: The weight of the success or Saturday at La Paz School, Mission Viejo. primeval family situat ion O comedy cibout hara ssed parents and sa"y offspring. brought up to date for boy-boy romance. But it's deftly done, and even Aunt Nellie shouldn"t be scandalized by t h e homosexual context. the show Hes chiefly with Miss ....:==:::::~::...::=.::...:=-:==::::..::.::=::::_...:..:.:.!:'--------------­ Merritt and \Vard . They in· terpreted most of the readings and poetry selections. Ward's folksy familiarily was particularly effective in the final sclecllons from Lin· coin's biography. Allhoogh there is no ph ysical resemblance between the two, Ward became Lincoln in a short speech to his friends on leaving Springfield for Washi',1gton, D.C. ti.1iss P.1erritt opened !he show with a poem about an In· dian baby and continued to show Jier sklU in readings of .. Fog" and an unpublished piece on love. lf t r in- terpr~tation ol a funeral as seen from tile eyes of the descendant was <me of the high points of 1.hc evening. Miss Otey and Parker were mostly limited to the , songs which they did quite well. Parker seemed to be having a case of opening night jitters as he fluffed a few lines and Seemed to almost miss his cues. In spite of his prablems. he managed to turn in a fine performance on a poem en· tiUed "Be Calm In the Face of the Next War." Blesud with a strong con- tralto voice. Miss Otey was at her best when singing or delivering shorts such as the jdkes during the comedy relief phase. There are more pieces from the show that deserve recogni· lion, but there isn't space to print them all. rt is the type of show that lcrt the audience begging for mare. "The World or Ca r I Sandburg'' continues Fridays and Saturdays for two more weekends at the Muckenthaler Center. 119 Buena Vista Drive. Fullerton. Joins Cast HOLLYWOOD <UPI) Veteran character actor John Zaremba joined the cast of Stanley Kramer's "R.P.l\t" \\'hich stars Anthony Quinn and Ann-l\-largret. ~ I .... o..... I "Hont YoMr Heit Oii tli1 Wind" "101 DolmotioM" ~"~"~'"~OM~• ~"~"~"~"~'~o~• ~ .. ~,o~•~•~"~, .. ~j: . HELD OVER : 9 Academy, Nominations llARGAIN MAT-INEE Wodnesdoy, 1 p.m. 11ri 11,JllSHMINTI Met1 ... "'"'laJ•• s1 .oo Miss Reagan on Stage She Mixes Sito-iv Busi1iess, Politics Jac<t'bi comes on as ti.1idwest shopkeeper whose wife has n1n off with his brother. So he like tt," (2) "I don't need hies to New York. hoping for By VERNON SCOTT "My environmenl was filled wl1h music and civic ac- HOLLYWOOD (UPI) tivities, so I don't 1hink it's l\faureen Regan, daughler of unnatural for me lo be in- Gov. Ronald Reagan and tcrested in both." h " (31 "!' 1 •• sym pathy from his grown-up muc · m azy. sOn. Instead he finds the lad Lazy she isn't, ho\\·ever. immersed in liaison wllh a As soon as her three-\\·eck chum addicted lo epice.1e stand in Las Vegas Is over. domesticity. actress Jane Wyman, opens M Maureen concedes t ha t Las Vegas Thursday with a-heredity may be responsible handful or other sec 0 n d for her talents. but life '1'ilh generation performers. molh'er and "the guv'1... en- l\1aureen will be stumping for The burly star s c a I es her political clients. 1 molehills of complicalio~ wilh j . W-;;kdavs Box Office Qsit:ns 6:45 -Show-at 7:00 P..fareen is a blonde with her couraged her multiple ac· mother's wide-set eyes, her iivities. father's. self confidence and. Maureen has a sense of evidently, endowed with a humor about -herself and her j si nging voice which she owes famous parent s. to neither. Maureen will co--star with .. Until 196fl I was always in· troduced as Jane Wyman·s Gary Lewis (son of Jerryl. h ·d "A d Deana ?\1artin (Daughter of daughter,"" s e sai · n since then people introduce me Dean), Patti Gr 3 Y 5 0 11 as Ro,1ald Reagan's daughter. {daughler of Katherine ), and Michael Marceau ~son of "I didn"t ,1•ork for Dad dur-1 ti1arce1J. ing the eleclion campali;n. But Amon~ them all IJ n 1 y I'll do whatever I can in the ~1aureen is t~ daughter or nex t one."" 'f r l 'itt l e ' two stars. 1• au recn \\'Ca ~ I or her appearance at makeup because (l) "I don't F.=====~I Caesa r's Palace. l![Qduced by 1 -- Stan Seiden . Maureen said . yet, and mother i' dclighl,d,I NEW IALB$'A "Dad doesn't know about it A:HE lUXURIOUS She'll be there on opening night" THEATRE Mauree11 has no difficulty ...., ____ -ca- separating the spollighl of HOMI o• I OCJIHG (lt>.J ll lOGU show bi:.: and that of politlcs. 1 .J., ~ n~ fAST IAllCIA !lYD. Site's involved "'ilh both. !A~30A P[RrnSUl~· 61l·'D'I She runs her O\Vn political public relations a n d ad-Now · Ends Tuesday vertislng fir n1 . P.f R EXCLUSIVE HARBOR Consultants. One of her clients AREA SHOWING..:.:~!- is seeking the Republican I nomination for California aL. · ·•. Iii , torney ge..1erat ii · • I She is Republican orienlcd : I ~ J and. at 29, steeped In ··'R "" I California's GOP politics. "If I had to give up show ~ .. , business or polilics."' she said. ~ "I'd forgel about singing and concentrate on political mai- lers. J got started in both careers in 1960. "I was singing with small bands on the Easl Coast, and working as a secretary in \Vashington. I have no political ambitions myself, and I don't1 know how ambitious I am about singing. Scott Signs TiOLLY\VOOO (UPI\ George C. Scott Vt'8S signed by llniversal Pictures to co-star with Joanne Woodward in .. They P.fight Be Giants" film· ing in New York. HELD OVER TWO ACADEMY NOMINATIONS A man went looking for America And couldn't find It anyWhere ... Alie IU•T 1..ANCASTll DllORAH IC!RR ' ''THE GYPSY MOTHS" TAKE · IN 1\ JllOVIE THIS WEEK The most explosive !fth~ teDIDrY ! •• I ... I 'I'OPAZ NOMINATED FOR 2 ACADEMY AWARDS MGM rr-nls An Arthur P. Jacob. t'ToducUOn eterOToole Petula Clark "Goodbye, Mr.Chips" TONIGHT AT I P.M. FllDAT AT l :JO SATURDAY 1 :10 & 1:10 CINEDOME J~-:;!f,e. @!) :: ' ...... h, " ••••• ·~ ~ .. . ;, -HELD OVER _,, IE LUXE ASMIWS• NMMll nGOOCllOI •tUASED 1JJ 2o. -. Nomin1ted For A'cademy Award - BEST CARTOON PORT THEATRE CORONA D!l MAl-2905 !. COAST HWY. -671·6260 7 ACADEMY AWARD NOMINATIONS BEST PICTURE BEST ACT.ORS Dustin Hoffman and Jon Voight BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS . Sylvia Miles BEST DIRECTOR -John Schlesinger BEST SCREEN PLAY BEST FILM EDITING SHOW TIMIS 7: &. 9:30 • I • Matinees Sat .• Sun.-Mon. 01lMll PCMtS_, PJ..o;T!il'IO'.u:loti- BARBRA. OMAR STREISAND • SHMIF ~i~:} "'""'G•Rl.r .,,'+-J l<OllOa .. -COST~ llLU,. -,_..,..., .., _________ __ 2 ACADEMY AWARD NOMINATIONS lut Actreu-l llo Mlnn1lll n..Jten1e (ud«:>Q ~ .., -Liu Mlnnellt enre"" AM -All McGtow 111 ''Goodbye, Columbus" , I e STARTS WEDNESDAY e i---•'""'"'W!(;.!I~--....., , 1 : 11aur.r lnorln I M311118U OOl'OIMn · 1 raern~ I'> I ' F1011ur v 1 J !;J e-~-. cruJt!llMD •• ~;' L-,_,,,.._._ ,.._,,.. - Int SMpportln9 Actor - Robert Crou1 Steve McQueen lheReivers Pl1s.-Jo11Qtlu111 Wl1111n h1 the Co1t1tdy "Viv• Max" MATINEIS SAT.·SUN.·MON. WALT DISNEY rllDIUl:llCilll' ~ ,ltClllllCOlOll' ""! ::::-011 Plvt "lt'1 Te.911 t1 M • l lr4"' •l•o "A C••ll•"'tl lo Jlotth1 Ho ... " e STARTS WIDN!SDAT e f Ac...._., Aw01d NomlWl•M- .- • I I TUf..i.t, FtbtlwJ 24, 1'70 I DAJLV P.JLot f LEGAL NC7r!CE ' .. : ... _ i Fiery Jfias~o · o~ Freew~y : ' ... , ,, To Vie 1--..,-..;;:;,~,,~.~,~.~ .. :o.,;.;;.,;;;;,;;:""'= -• D, IULI( T•Alfll"lll lhn. •Hl_.t., U.t.CJ .. _ ,.., ,,..,,,. NCl!kt I' f'ltAibY lllfftl ft ttll Crtill(lws Gf (111'9<'0 1.. K,.tt 1111 • .,...,_ I, Kf•ll• Tr•fltflfon. ..._ tluPleM: ,..,_ i. UOllt (11! (OMI Hl111W ..... NewtlOt'I 96llch. CO\fnl'r Gf aor-, Sltll .. taUlenll1, tr..t A 1111111 lr-'tr ii Pwt to M mMill to Sl~d H ......... ~r. I""" \lktwi. H_., Tr•nalM""1, wi'IGM btnl,.... .iktrns It ·Fire Water No Help-But Flare Far .Worse For Seat SANTA ANA -Things got hellishly hot Monday, so Jesus G. Veaa dld what seemed best -be took' a lltUe taste of fire waler. '· ' Trouble 1s, said lh e Callfomla IDghway Patrol, he WU barricaded in bi5 blazink e1r, following a rear-end cot: Uslon ozi the Santa Ana Freeway that Injured two men anc1 c1estroyec1 two ears. Vega, 67, ol Los Angeles, was driving northbound with no ll1hts early Monday mom· inl when his car was rammed from behlnd by a minibus van, according la C H P in- vestigators. The impact ruptured the gasoline tank of Vega's vehicle and the van, carrying Mark T. Sturre, 18, of Los Alrunitos, and Stephen H. Capps, 19, of CYPress. overturned. Arriving on lhe sce n e seconds later, twin brothers David and Dale Green, 22, (){ Orange. pulled over and did what seemed best -lhey Ig- nited a highway Oari!. The laid lhe narc--in the spilled gasoline. Flames erupted. Cries of alann rang out. The Green twins Vied . to rescue tbe poteotjal third v lctim of the accident, as fire danced about the wreckage. Vega, aaid'CHP officers.- bappUy drinking from a boll!• of whisky -refused to budge , apparently content with his fire water. Efforts to get him out of the car were fiJWe unW another motorist. Michael Gurnlck Jr .. 28, of Mlra Loma,, happened along while the Green brothers ·still grappled with the sltua· tJon. Opening lhe opposite door, · Gurn1ck t!ragged the allegedly relaxed Vega out of harm's way, just as a CHP car rolled up to the scene. Motorist Sturre aod his passenger were taken to Orange County Medi cal Center for treatment of their accident injuries. Vega was ·taken to Orange County Jail, uninjured, but reportedl,y well anesthetized, for booking on a charge of felony drunken driving. UI Polnwttlt A_, eor-dlt .,,,,,,, ORANGE -A sixth can-NIWPOrl h .cll, Counl'r .. o.-.,..., 5t1te . llf C1llhlrnl1. d1d11to. Harold E. "Fields, baa Tiie ......,tv 1e .. lir"lflllfffld "' tocMi1 announced for the race for ihe ~' ... !: .~. ~ ... H:r;-:~tt51,f; Fourth District Supervlsorial al C1tHornt1. I I b I Sal!I .,_"~ ., dfKtlbell In ·-· seat he d y W lllam Hirstein. ••: Ail •toct. 1n ,,..,,., r11111,..~ -.i.m.n1 Fields a resident ol Orange '"° .tooct w111 .. ""'' .,.,1tt1 11111 ' ' HU.rlum 11.111PllQ Ml-kflOWll •• said, 110range County ls beset "E•olk: Ritt A<iU.rio.tfn" Ind letlltet ., with momen•Aus problems in 1'00 E111 c-1 H1111w1v. ~,., e..dl. w County llf Of111tt, St•ll .. C.,,...,.11. hea1th, 'education, welfare, TM bu111 1r..-i•'"' w11a. 111 __._,.- poll ' f th I Ofl OI 11'9r ,.,. Jrtl u ..... MUd\, ""' .i uhon o e env rorunent, J:OO P.M. 11 unfltd c11HorJ1l1 ••'*• lt4l lack of mass transportation E•st c111t Hllll\fln. c-NI -· . ' c.,nty llf or-. $t1te " C..Jlftfllll. h>ss of precious public ocean so ••r •1 ~-"' ,.,. Tr1n111•""-•If d ' d f th OU$lnHI nainn Incl .odrHM$ UMd tl'I' access an myr1 a 0 grow TrlntMron for 1t11 lllrt1 YNrs 1111 PIS!, problems." ,,.: ....... Fields an el ..... "lclan Joins 011ed: FW114!Y "· 1tn. • """' ' \llctorll Hf'lt(ll Anaheim c I t y councilman ~wd Ht"!"li. Jr, c•lvin Pebley," VIII& Park PubUt~:fU~::-.:. (efsl 01t1¥ '"flDt. 'Mayor James W o r k m a n , Febr11 ... ., ,.., ""° , , m .10 Anaheim businessman Burr t.EGAL NOTlcE Narcotics Court Set For .County's Study Pttblic Post Bills Push ed ·By Burke Patti \Villiams, a 21-ycar-old senior at Cal Slate E<'ulle_rton, is one of 50 contestants 'vho will compete for Citrus Queen title at the National Orange Show April 2-12 in San Bernardino. Williams, Tustin attorney Paul Bell and stale official Gordonl--,-,-.,-,-,0-.-,-0,-,-,-.~0-,-,-,-.-- Sishop in the race. Hirstein sT.1.T1: op cAL1foAN1A fatt announced he would not seek a ™• c'..~~"rvMo:.:•;:11D• fifth lenn. UNITED CA~l~=··aANI(, • _.. por1llon. Pt1lntlff \11. M 0 F I" A T T MEJl:CUllY CENTRE, INC., 1 C•llfornt. corper1llon1 WILFRID E:. MOFl'lATT llld SANTA ANA -A study has been launChed by county of- ficials on plans to set a special court to handle narcotics of- fenses. 'I'be suggestion for the new court was made to county supervisors this week by Supervisor Robe.rt Battin., Supervisors agreed that the ldea had merit and voted to ask Superior Court Presiding Judge William C. Speirs to meet with District Attorney Cecil Hicks and other county officials to examine the idea. Battin told fellow lawmakers be tb®gbt th_e new J court--eould· pmide a better For the 0-tll Nodee.~ way to judge effective ness ot county anti-drug abuse pro- grams. SACRAMENTO -Two bills MARION MQFFATT, ~·nOlntl PEOPLE OF THE STATE QI" CALtFOA:NI#. lo !hi 1bovl .namffl· Oelenct1n_ll1 Battin said he envisioned the new court as an Integral part of lhe county's anti-narcotics programs. affecting public officials and----------------------- the bodies they serve on have Jellyfish Studied Yw ••• dlrecred to 1111 wllh tlle Cler11 ol !his Court In whldl ,,,. lbov. entitled 1ctlon 11 ~I t wr1tlM 11otadl"9 In r-M to !ht wrttled (omp .. tnl wllll!n tit! ""' ,,.... Ill• """'" .. -.. 111111 -If Mrwil wttMll .... ..... .. llllltlll cWnl'r .,. wlllllll 11111'11' ...,. If , ........ ft....twno, (t•C"" !Nol If IN IC> non ts "llMI IN 11111 -Wini 11 S.C- llon 111.J .. me Cl!ll .. CIYll l"rocl(!Ut•• "One of its benefits would be the allowing of more ~reedom for judges to experiment with disposition of drug cases," he said. been introduced by Assemblyman Robert Burke (R·Huntington Beach). County Youth to Pedal At ·lrvine • The first or the t w o measures, Burke said. will prohibit the appolntment of any remaining member of a cit y, county or district govern- ing body to fill a vacancy on thal board where the uriex- pired term exceeds one year. From Mexico to Canada IRVINE -Jeuyflsh nd wlllltn ,. 61\"l.I TM .,. notified ,,.., a "nlns """ 50 111e • wr111en '""°"'"'' their 'relatives may be the .._..,lflt, the 1111n111t wrn tlltl 1uc111,,....nt nd · for I AY -• or ci.m.tn ~ In bane of ~urfers a swim-"'-c-llhlt, .. ..t11"' ""°" contro.d. GARDEN GROVE -Kent Andresen, a 20-year-old Santa Ana College studenl from The plan will be discussed for feasibllity by Judge Speir~. Hicks. Administrative OUicer Robert Thomas, M e n t a I Hygiene Director Dr. Emest Kl~nd Health Officer Dr. Disneyland Awards On Thursday . . Garden. Grove plans lo hike The bill, Burke said. wo~ld the entire length of the West ~lso apjllY to any ~rson rebr-_ Co:an__from_ tb&-Muicao to Jo Up. -mg from a g-ovem1ng board. Canadian borders . '.'The measure 7 tries lo The 2,3(11)-mile hike ls set to eh~lnate a qu~1?,nable .ap-begin March I at a small Mex- pomtment practice, he said. lean border town called Cam4 -:--.;..-- Record ANAHEI~f 7 Twenty.four Orange' County community organizations will d I v I d e inn, 11' M1r1ne, &altio. 1s11nd, 1::10 $30,000 at the 13th annual com· "Some fuzey,!anguage in ~e po, Calif., east or San Diego. elecUons co9e, ~urke said, lS His parents will drive him to the target of his other pro-the starting point. posed law. Andresen, by special ar· p.m. munity sen•ice awards tun· °''"'" CCIII ll'MI ll'rllll M!ns Li:rd!re. T..-np11 sr..ron, 611 w. H•mllton. cheon Thursday aL l he cm•• Mew. i :1s p.m. Sie1 .. ·a Cltih WEDMISDAY Disneyland Hotel. COJl1 M•~•,_ lJans CIOb. Od01·1, Re t · f 2 j 2 211 E. 17111 st .• Colt• Meg. ' a.m. presen auves o H La tl lue Flame T-1"""~' Cl ub , ch ' d ears ' g tlD ' fl 1C1p11n'• Rtst1uran1 , Sou1h co.ut organizations whi subm1lte _ Pla11, COJ!• Meu. 1 a.m. 1· · f lh l Hunt11191on Beact•E~ch•~ c 1 "b , app 1cat1ons or e gran s are $Mr1ton.!lntl'I Inn, H\fA!lnglo n expected to attend the Jun· SANTA ANA L en Bt"'h. l'IOOfl. Th ba k f La n. h cos11 M., Rol•rv c 11.1b, c~11 Mes• cheon. om c o guna .....,ac ~-•nd Cwn1ry c111b. co,11 ""'""· In recognizing more than G.5 will be the featured speaker at wn1m1n,t•• e~ctwu'>oat! c1ub. H1'Pe""'I' million hours devoted to com-the Orange.County Sierra Club tnn, 1.:w1 Beech &tvd., W1>1mln111r, 1 meeU'ng March 3, al 8 p.m. at -· munity service by near y c1111 Mna op11m1., c111t1. c1111 ""'"' l50,000 members of these Smedley Junier High School, Goll ""' Coun!ry Club, 1101 Goll • ,_,, D<ive, ~111 Mua, l'IODn. org .... ~ .... ~ .... , Disneyland wlU 2120 W. Edinger Ave .• Santa He-1 H1rllol-Bir Gfouo>. ltlt _......uvi.,. Mi'l'IM, io~ a.~lde 0r1v1. NelltJIOl1 grant a top award of $5,C0'.1, Ana. eem, n :u p.m. th $2 500 th' $1 500 m' e <lrhomback also will show a Fount•lll \/•tin .&~noe Cluti, Fr'""' ~ , , ~ , , n Park Parley Scheduled In Anaheim ' mers but--scienUsts flnd them or w1u •Htv 11t'11W"eeurt tor 1nw 111Mr ' re!llf dlmln<lld Ill 11'11 c-i.1n1. rangement with college of· very use~I in ptoblng fur new y.v rn-:.= ~ .;:.111~ ficials, will use the trip as understanding of the en-:_.:r .r "'' ""-. SYcll • ....., credit for completing the two vironlllfJlt and medicine. := i:--:.::=..~ .:=.. ":"' ~ courses he enrolled in at SAC The researchers know them ~ tit "" -'-~· this ·spring -Ca 11 f o r n i a as coelenterates -a group of (SEAL> DONALD 0, sULLIVAN geography 1 n d Calirornia $ims>l4 animals wbk:lflncludet ~1or'~r19: ~°'IN history. corals. hydra , sea anemones s11i.,,, c11Kom11,.,.,,. Most or the trip will follow ~the man-Of-war, as weU as ~ir P~'-~°'""" ruooed mountain and desert Jellyfish. Dltld o.c. n,,,,.,. 00 ---.:r--r: ti "' -f • O!!NDll'.L.-A•s.KOI"'~. s.MAPIAO COurit?y--:-His minimum altitude ncpresen\a ves ut l v e a ou1nN•A will be about 2,000 feet near California unlvcrait.ie;s have t: :11i:, ::.:;.-:-::;:,. Mojave . Maximum altitude been Invited to UC Irvine Feb. t.i: 0111 ~ through the High Sierras wlll 28 to discuss the coelenterates A~':'t:".,,,:r :,:~,::111 , .. ,, D•llf lltllt, be about 13,000 feet at Whitney and their research uses. Fltbru•rY 21 '"" M•rch l , 10, "·:S:: Pass. He plans to climb 14,91»-The colloquium will be1---'----==,,--- foot Mount Whitney when he hosted by Professor Howard LEGAL NOTICE reaches that point later this M. Lenhoff, director of the summer, weather permitting. program in marine biology,1--,-,-,-,-,.-,<A-l~.~.,-,~,~.~.~,~.,:-- The hike has been planned and Richard Campbell, assis-TM ~~~·= ~i:: I'll· 11 ~ out carefully with forestry tant professor of biological otuc11"" , 1out111111 11 1u1 l"i.c.titi. IHI, .,1·e""<S Cost• Mecsa, C1llfornll, uncltr "" fie· rangers. Andresen will carry -. '"" · n11oo.11 firm ..,,.,.. .. • "F F AL o '" worth of maps. 1tEau1LDE1tS •NI 111.i 111c1 tlrm re. ~ "'"--.:! 9f !I'll fe!lowlnt Mr!Oll. wlloit llis equipment for the nine-111m1 tn tull 11'111 ,11c1 of rnldenn: i. " monUt-long walk wlll include Benefi\ Slated 1o1~;,,,, L•monc11. 1m so. Forni. the usual camping utensils and !lnl• """· c.a111. DllM ...... ,., 2'. lt10 equipment, dehydrated food , B R k B d D1rrett i.-ic11 Waler and flrsl :tid ldl, a book y OC -an 8 Stell of C11ilornll, Or•-County : On FlbNIN 1), 1f~ brforl ""9• • on edible plants. sleeping bag N1111rv Putinc In •nd tor 111c1 s1111. and blanket, hiking shoes, a EL MODENO -The Nitty _._..111 ,_,.., o.n411 ~ small tent, a pancho raincoat; Gritty Dirt Band and lhe =: :ibKJ',,~ :'..:":'1111n In-co11·, 11u1 a.iKh e1w .. Hlll'l•ln;1ot1, $1,l)XI and eight $500 awards. film on cross country skiing. CDOPllt _ _.::'="~~~·'~··~.U'..-".;p,~·~·~~~~~~-'-'--~~--''--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Or_,,,. c-. AJe.I•, of 1~ P1rl! St., ANAHEIM -The city or Anaheim is sprucing up for the forthcoming 22nd annual Ca1ifomia and P a c I f i c Southwest Recreation ·and Park conference whJch starb Saturday and runs through l\.farch 4 at the convention center. Sunshine Company · w i 11 11rvm"'' •tMll ~ 111 n:acvi.d 7S feet o( nylon rope, goggles, pertonn Saturday afternoon at :~ .. ~AL sEALf Hlmll!'ll'lon 81tdl. Survl'l'ed W par~ll. Mt. llfld Mrs. H¥t'holl ,_,, trrllltwr, \llctor/ 1l1ttn. Mrs. Glill Mldrld, MIU S4.1 .... C-. 1t1111ry, tionl9'1t. TINtdtY,. 1 PM. Smltlll CMptl. 11!;1q1,1llm Mau. WMMtdl'I', 11 AM. SS SI~ & J\lde C•ltlolk ClWrch. Stllllhl Mortu•l"I'• OlrK-"'• KMtlLIY CIYft l(n1tll'I'. Ml JOlllf .._.,.,, Mlll'lll"9!0n leldl. llrvktl l*ld'l!ll at StnltM MtK-tu1rv. NQ'f'IS MJldrN JUN NO'l'tl. ..... $0, of '701 Si.t'· w... Ave.. Hunll,..,_ affdl. 0tt1 of dt1111. Ftbnl•rY n. Su"'lvtd w llusblnd. Cl\tt.~ LM N~tll rnolfler, Mrl. No-. 1\ldl!Md. ccme Mela1 brOttwf", CNorles l vcklllld. of 1.os Anttlls1 1l1!tl', Gr.<1 lt1nldl, kMI. $fMllcel, WtdntW.Y, 11 AM. lltH lll'GldwtY 0.-1, wlltl R ..... Cll1r1tt Smllll ofnc:1'f1119. 1nllrmtf01, HM"- hw It•! M-1•1 Plrt. fl•ll 8r?1o.rtv Mettutrv. OtradoB. .... J9hn Ktn111ltl 11: ... 1312 Santi An1 Ave .. .vt. K, c-i. M..... o.te of 6'1111, fib- "''"' n. IV~ bf•· OlrlitoPllfr, of \llflk:IJ "'°""""' Mn. G~ fl:lddll, of P.-...C.11. Kl!ll\ldl:Y. ~ nd lnflr. Pfllfll Wiii k lltld In P..il\IQll, ICtnlvcin'. h ll ar..,..111 MOrl\lo9t'I', !orw.rdl"I di-,....... ltUIM~D Clrrll Aumb&lll. 21M Abllone Aft., 11•1- bel l11and. D11t of dftl'll, Fetr. :P. Sur· vt'tld .,,. lll.ltNn4. Cfllrtn W. RL1'1'1beltd, Of tM PiorM1 -Cfllr1n $,, Of 811bot hl1nc11 J1rnes Nt., Sanford, N. C1rolln11 Jllltl w. A11mbold. of Auror1, Ohio; tl .. ""' MrL Anni K. o.,..n, 5'>rlll9d1te. Ct111nt<!lcut1 Mrt. ttlll<ln 81rrt!I. Nol'111 A•ncloi,ll, \1'""°'1h • tl"lnclchltdr9tl and -''""-'•ndclllkl. 51.,,1cn Wednadt~. 1 l"M, PIClflc V"9 Ch1pel, lnlt""tnl, l"-cllk Vltw Mtmarla1 l"1rlt. F.mll~ llltl• '"'' "'*" WW.Int lo m•k• mM!(ll'1tl 1:111lrltlutlDM. plffM contrlDUle lo Ille Molt MtmerNI Hot11t1t 8ultdlll9 Flllld. Pacific View Morf\Jary. Dlreclllra. ARBUCKLE lo SON WestclW Mortaary 421 E. 17tli St., Coeta l'tlesa -• BALTZ MORTUARIES C...n• dd Mar OR 3-1450 Costa Mesa ' !\fl 6-Z~4 • BELL BROADWAY MORTUARY Ill _.,., COata -uwm • DILDAY Baorm:RS llutfqloa\'.U., 1111~..i. U ........ Bea .. 111-m1 • PACIFIC VIEW MJ:MORIAL PARK Ce......,. e MoriurJ -~~Dri .. l "'" ... ' ~ CaHlonta • PEEK FAMILY COl.ONIAL nJNEIW. HOME 7111. 8oha A ... Watm'•ter .... • SHQF!R MORTUARY • ._._. 4M-Ull ! liil Dna I., _...I. . • • IMmll'MORTUARY Cl7 M•I• $. HOl!a~f!adl -• •• • 1970 < I CRUSADE " ~roviding tlae Thrust Cartoonist Virgil Partch of Corona de I Mar (left) hands over his freshly drawn poster for 1970 Cancer Crusade in Orange County to \Villian:i Pelis, president of American Cancer Society's Orange County branch. Knight on posler is thrusting sword toward county goal of $375,000 for this year's fund ra isi ng drive Y.'hich begins in April. Parlcb is honorary chairman. Gloomy Gus Is Your K1nda Guy • ~PSI\ .every minutes to Oakland! 7:15 1m to 1:45 pm. Both w1y1. , 7:15·1:45-10:1 S..11.:45 im-1:15·2:45-':1 ~$:45-7:15.,:45 pm. Mort on weekend•. ' Why worry about a rtMrvaUon when PSA h11ovor1&0 llJ9f'lt1 a Cay? TuCtlanU~m9mbet ac ue Yo\t-CitrClnY'Tt-- •round In your head. Why r11member rowell f1 ra1? Or 111 Jett? Or great seMce ta Sin Francl1co, San Jose, S8(1 Otego, and Sacntmento? 0£. that klds undtr 12 fly PSA (wltf'I lhelr per&nlt) for hell rMe? S!lll W&nt a reseMt10F1? Ju1tc111,10Ur tra>t•f 1gent Drwh111ltanarne 111'11n ... fSA!~,..aallt. • • c;:~~~~ri~~:~ ~~lit:,r~~~ Paul R. Erlich, professor of biology at Stanford University and author or "Populatlon Bomb;" Floyd H. Hyde, assis- tant secretary of the federal Department of Housing and Urban Development. a n d newscaster Clcte Roberts. The conference is span.sored by the California Park and Recreation Society an d the National Recreation and Park Association. Theme of the five.day event is "Influence Qf Leisure on the Am erican Dream." Officers Sought For Coin Cluh snow mask. lee a:xe, fishing 1 " HlftrY pole, pack saw, boots and bear El Modena High Schoo as a :t:t'J.; f11111ic..c111torn11 ,.,.hislle. benefit for the National Cystic PrlndNI Ofrlcl 1n Fibrosis Research foundation. ~:~'f:l!n 111irn , Andersen plarni to average The performance will be Niw. ,., ''71 about JO mites a day. He'U r 1 1 3 in th Publl'11ed 10r1"" C011t D•Uv .-11111. · h M · b th d f rom p.m. o p.m. e FIOrlll"' t• 1nc1 Mlrdl J, 10. 11. 1t1C1 reac OJave y e en o school gym. Proceeds wUI f, · ,..,. the first month then take a I b toward Cystic F r o s s LEGAL NO'J'ICE week orr to replenish supplies research. for the trip up the High Sierra -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;I ------~'----­ Pacific Cresl Trail. li_e planstr WANTED "~~te•tN': ':,."~('11' T:L~=~~ periodic rest stops all along 11v1AAGl'1 the 2,300 mile route. TO WHOM •T MAY cDN~~ 20. '"' A freshman sludenl at Santa Ml«t 10 1uu1iu ot ,... lklnM •~ Ana College. Andresen has IOYS .t.ND GllLS :::,::.;:t~~":'t° '~";1'1.~~ been an avid hiker most of his AGES J TO 19 :;:;;:~n 11 Thi 1rM1ian, Mscrlbld .. life. He adtnits. however, that 2100 w, 0ct1n F•enl, NtwP<W'1 &etcll his longest walk to date has w1"' .. " AIH!ltltn !'~rs"'"' to 1uch ln•entton. Th• un-<1eri1,,,.., 11 -l'fl"9 1<1 1111 0-r!IMl'll been 68 miles. °" ClltH Clrtlltl TY of Akdll'lll' ••v•r•t• c .. tn:tt for l"'1lllt1 I 101M1 Olttlll~•r by tr1nM1r of •n 1lccl!otl~· blvlf".,. J~e Cigures his daily cost wil H•tlr,.... T• ,...L 11, ..... 1or 11u111111.., 111ne 1r""i. .. run about $1.50 and he has AUDITIONS WILL IE lot~: SALE &EE• saved $600 lo cover the entire HILD THIS WRIC Anr-dfl1r1,,. t• 1rM1t t11t i.-nc• trip _ S400 for food and ot wch 11c-1t1 ,,.,.. 1111 • ...-rlflld 11ro-IN ORANGE COUNTY ,.,,, II .,,., otfk:• of tlle 0-.rf!Mnl of ne.:essities, $200 for emergen· Akol'lolk ...,.,_ Control, .,. w ,,.,.u " "'' ~,.. Dfl Cl-• IMwy... thee O..trtmenl llf Alalllollc ~a cies. Cot11ro1, 1115 o s1,...i, $1Cr-'°· F'<irest rangers all along !he 547 6251 c111torT111 ,,.,~ . .., 11 10 be """'* within )0 d1~1 llf fllt dth Ille I~ route have been alerted and Call -' Now! Pl"Mll•e• ,...,. 11r11 POllH. ,1.11,...,..,..,. they'll be watching for him. If TAient s .. rch l•lni ~~:_1·~ ... ·~~: i::"'wi."; he doesn't arrive within a CondU<,.. ._ 11Coholl( IM!vw11n. Tiie torm of.wlttf~ •1 Hon m•.,. be obltlnftl ••om •IW oflk:e ti SANTA ANA -Nominations reasonable time at a certain TAKE I PllODUCTIOHS llM Dtpa•tmet>I. ror officers of the Orange point. they'll start looklng for HOLLYWOOD, CALIF. Pubni::i~:;· ~~" Dinv Piiot, ,,.,. County Numismatic E r r o r , him 10 determine if he's in Ftl>rll•rv 2" "'° Club will remain open until the trouble. l~==;:::;:::;==o==:o=""~ll---;-;-;;;;--;;;;;;:;;;;;--- March JO meeting, according There will be various check LEGAL NOTI<:E LEGAL fiiiOTICE to Sonny Witt of Huntington points along the rou.t&-where\-~c'-•~•~1;;.,;;,'"';;;";-...,;;-;,;;:,~,;;,.~1;;.,~-1----~~=~---- Beach, chairman or the elec-Andresen will communicate . '1ct1T1ou1 lfAMI NOTte• a:: =o•tOtll Ith h, f il and-Tiie unOtrslt.,.. doH urtllY "' 11 ~ lion committee. w rangers, is am y duct""1 • 11v11nn1 ,1 an Medi-Aw., suP111:10tt COUAT °' TM• Tl\ I b t th friends . C111l1 Nitta, C1llfoml1, unftr Ille lie-STATI' D' CALl,OllNIA ffOtl: e cu ,mee s on e sec-; . 1111ou1 11"" ...,,.. of l'ROOAMWED -™• co~NTY..::.,aA•lf•• ond Tuesday or each month What s hL!I reason for mak-COMMUHICATIOHS OF CAL IFORNIA E I t of :uTH ANNA MAit'~ th 0 C I Lib I II I t k' "W II " h Ind l'Nol uld firm 11 tomllOMd of 1J1t 11 • ""' at e range oun Y rary. ng 1e ong re • e , e 1o11ow1.., Hr111n w~ ""-In tull NI CLARKE, Dtc.11.ed. 8\h and Ross Streets, Santa says, "why docs anyone climb 11~• of .... 1c11nC. r, •• ~•1owt: • NoTicE 15 HEAEav GIVEN 10 ,.,. Gfltf, 1(11fl1111tll Jl)l7 M1dl1on Avt. «ftlltors ot .......... All'f'ltd dettdln.t Ana. fl mounlaln ?" c0511 Mew ,,111 • ' "111111110•10n1111v1.,. ci.ln11111ln1t tt11 -,:======================,\ D•ltd Ftf> 'rl ttn u ld dtc:tdtill ''' ....ulr«I to f!ll lfltn\t .i Giiii K~v111.,' 11 wllll Int nec.tdrT WlllClltn., In 1111 otl'I~ SI I ( of 1111 Clll"lr. Df 11\t l bovt tntlltid c.ourt, ~ FREE • e No Cords or Tubes e Custom Fitted TO THl.1' HARD OF HEARING I IOI tfHornl1, 0<1"91 COtlftl•: IO ........ nt ll\lm, llrtlllll !M flkl ... l'Y Oft F~N '11. 1'10, belor1! me, I vaudllra. ti 1111 VNMrtf9fled 11 1111 1111111 NC111ry Publlc ln •nd !or Mid S!tll office Gf Mc:0w9n lo Grffll. s.50 !. (ht .. Pf•-llv .•-red Glln ICtw ....... tNn A.,. .. Or•l!lll• ClllflrnN '26'7, wl'll(f\ k-n i. "" 111 be the _.ton WfloM I• 11'111 Ptln of tM!ntu Ill 1111 .,.... Allftt h ovbtullled lo 1111 wllllln Jn-*''"'*' lo 111 ~n.,. Mrl•lnlnt te 1119 llNr!\ef!I Ind ·~1...-... tlllCuted 111111 of Mid Olcadelll, •1111111 """" • ~F'~L SEAL} "'°""" 1ntr 1111 first .-utillu!Min' of lfll• Free j~ f: Dt¥1f nollCI. ' NoltrT Piilllk<.tUfornlt 01ted OctolM!r 2t, tMt. • Prlnci.11 Off1a .., , Rull'! ANI. Ktllfl,,..r llftd I t oductor Ora.,..1 c-tv M1rY .,..,,. U11ten!IO ft r y M, COmml1tlt111 E-llrtt Extqilrlciie ol ,IM Wlll ... J\fnt ,, ·1'11 of •"-1tiii:iw lllmad ~ Offer' ~ ' \ F..':_l!blldled O;lrlllt Cot1I 01!!v "llot, =c:'~~·IN • ... 1111 .... '' •nd ,,.,.,,~ ,, 10. u, lt7fl Orl!IH. c .......... """ "NIW SMALLEST """ T.i1 (110 tD4lf• 11"-----------IA"'"""' ._.. • ....,,..,.. HIARING MlltACLE H LEGAL NOTICE P~bltslold °''"" c..,1 o.11y .-111t, ff------------Ftbr~ry 24 lnlf Mlrdl S It. 11, lt10 For those \\•ho haVe dlfl~C!l.11-IAA nn mo" tles heerlng conv~UQJ\S h1 HQTIC• Ta <••01T01t1 groups .. movil'!ii, church or SUl'l!!Ata• (QUAT 01' THI LEGAL NC7r!CE On lh" T.V.-Tn• 1tmpl• •-. STAT& 01' CALll'OllNIA ll'Qlt '" ,-.u1 Tl!• CQ\I NTY QP OltANOI 'l'**1U Cllpenslvc ~l lRACLE -EAR .... A"*4 Clllll,ltAT• 01' &USINIU \Vllt sharply llUl hearing E1l•le Gf VIRGIL (. ltOllNMIN. SA., l"ICTITIDUS MAMI • •· k (n , -'" •tlo ~-n 11 II, (, ltOllNION , 1!1111 n.. Ul!Olnltnld ._. urt1fY ft ii -· .... e to Focus: Llmlto:u k-.. VlltOIL c. AQllNSOH. Oet'I!•• Mlklt • M•-·" ... o ........ SUP.Jlly QJ The\ Rc1>llca Mir· "· •""'"" c11110n\r., '*4 "''*' ..._ ''°' a-c1;. Ears "'' LI be given NOTICE' u Hl!flllY QIVEN lo th~ lll!Wt llr!'!I ..._ °' IUPS~IOll ti.\\'""· Credlltrrl of !lie ,.,.... ... mtd ~ SlltVIC:ll Mid .-!Nol Mid lln•1 II'"""" ...., That ttl ...-..,it ri.vrn1 (lltlfnl lltllltt I'll e ot 1111 follOWI"' ltll'WI; '#"-t MN Plllll O•P.11 IX,lllS MAfC"H 20, 1 t70" Mid ~1 1'1 fMllll"M " fl~!Mrl'I, "full Ml ~ -~ It M ftl-' ~ 1111 ••11•ry -"«•· 111 "" offi(t 1 Tllnl 11"1 A'IOllll ,_ rNt K•' FrM wll~ olll!Hllon Gf the cltr\ ol"" ttrwl 1nt1Hfll -rt. ti' ffll'ln' !,., CW,..~ jClfO Ml,1111 W1r. 10 ttrettnl """°' wltn !tit '*"6t'Y C.t• ,......., C.I'"""• '*'· ~ 10 ,.,. 11NM!'t1tnt11 If JW of. o.i.. ,-lllnllrY i; '"" flttt of MCOWIN a OltEiEN. UO E. HIM'I' 1,., Cll'l'lll CMol'Mll. Or'llllt> C•llflinllt nM7, 1'hk:ll Siil .. ff C.lflWllll. Or..,.. CNllY I ················································· Aclcl111t ,.,, •• , ••••••••• ,,,,,,,,.,,,,,,,,,,,,. ••••··••· Is It'll !HK" ot Wtlnnt ot -. °"*'•lttlld Oii Frbr\llrr t. lt)I, ........ 1'1111 I In •H rNlltl'I ttrlti.tlflt 1t IN etol•tt ot No'-rr fut)!\c ~ 111111 '9f Mid ....... lllCI detitdlMI, W!tllln .'°"" -"" ~ tll'lllMl1¥ ..... l'H NtntY L. C:-n Ci..._ r.:r , oT--.-. l"'fT• n .. .......---.-m..-.--.-n-nNro"•·• ,..,., rr•~ ,,,,_ .llW ""' Mlltlll.,. tf Ill .. llOI~·~ ~ _i. Ill~ '9. 0. .... ,..,.__..._. ., ' -OilM' F°ffi!'\loV'f"'W.--inr. -l'I ~~ " flrlt -.1911111 I~ \llrtll c .• _._. J,. 't"'""nt tnCI ..,.. ................ EUClllor .. tllf W(N n,. -· ot tllt .tie•~ lllllllCI etudtf!f 101"1'-ICIA!.. SIAlf Mf:Q-,tlN I &alllf ~rr It, ~ Stf I, CMt1111t11 Oltry l"utilkrC11!fWftll Or•nt•·• C.itltr~1• nur rlnc:Jtltl Otrkt Ill Tth Ct11). bMIM OrltlM C....l!IY AltM""'" ftr lllCllfw M.w Commtnlon IUll'lt Pullll111td Or•!ttl C111t D1 ll"f !"Itel; N .... M. tTn l'.-..W•Y 24 1111111 M•rUI J. )O. J1, tt1'0 l"lllJll"-ed OI'..,.. COtlt Dtlhl .?:,Uo!t iu-10 '*11•r•"l. 11. 11.1.a. 1t" ,..,,." AMERICAN HEARING AID CENTER · P.O. Box 695 Costa Me1<1, Calif, 92626 .._ ___ _ .... = = -- • ' •• • • s Tutsday, Ftbrury 2~. 1970 LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE Save ota Tues.,-6 e. ical ~ules .-Vary LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE By SYLVJ.A PORTER t la coUabWaU.a wfth tie Rttearcll lnatUrle. of America) Jn the sphere ol medical ex- petlse deductions -in which so many mJllions of you are so deeply involved -there were both favorable and un- favorable Treasury rulings and decisions In l~ I'll w,ager i! you are not directly affected by one or more of lite following, you k.1ow someone who is. To take up the un· favorable items first : YOU CANNOT deduct as a medical expenSt the cost of traveling to play golf, even though your physician recom- mended that y:>u take up the game to help with your particular condiUon. The Tax Court decided this In a case in which two phys\· cians reeommended to a third doctor who had pulmonary emphysema that he play golr to get the needed exercise. The court likened this to an earlier situation in whi ch a physician had pre s cribed dance lessons to improve his patient's health. The dance lessons were held to be nondeductible personal ex· penses and t~ same rule ap- pUes to the cost of traveling to play golf. The physician's ex- penses or actually playing golf ,..,.111 weren't before the court, but CIRTIP:ICATI Ofl IUflNISl had they been. the odds are LEGAL NOTICE •tCTtTtOUI .... ,... ••R "" h Id h \'f' d Tiie UflffnlgMll dCt:I ctrt~ lhfy •r• NOTICE TO ClllDITOllS I ey wou not ave qua l IC coMudl.., • buslntu ,, mt lllrdl SI., SUPlRIOR COUllT OP TME as medical exrv>nses { 0 r H..,,art BeMft. C..lilor!'ll&. ...,... !ht 11<-· STATI! 01' CALl,OIUUA 1'011 l"- tillcM flmi -• LAGUNA I.ANO TMI! COUNTY OF OllANOE precisely the same reason. may help lwndrecll o I thousands ol you with your medical expeue dtductJona: lf you, as partfttl, paJd Wi· tion \0 1 preparatory IChool for disturbed boy~. th1J tuition may be partially deducUble as a medical expense, said the Treasury in 'D -lhtrtby agreeing, with an earlier court case to lhat effect. 1n this c~se. tl1e school did not qualify as a "special" school for which the entire t.ul· lion • would constitute 'a medical expense. Therefore, only the portion of the tu1Uon specifically a 11 o c a b I e to medical care could be trtated as a medical expense, 'I'tlls "'boo! char1ed a $10,000 tui- tion <fee for 12 months, com· pared to a usual fee or $3,500 for a regµlar prep school. for the same period. On the basis of the psychological care given at this school. the extra $6,500 a year was acknowledged_ a medical expense, IF YOU are a parent of a retarded child, you can deduct as a medical expense the cost, iocluding board and lodging, of keeping your child in a specially selected p r i v a t e home, as recommeilded by your child's psychiatrist. Treasury regu:latioos had allowed the cost of board and lodging to qualify as a medical expense only if incurred at an "institution" to which the pa· lienl goes for medical care. The Trulury'• new llberal ' ruling wldtn1 lbe mean1n1 of inatltuUon to include 1 s~la:Uy selected bomt even lhougb !hen are no other pa- tients and the home~is not Of· fered 're1U1arly for t bi s Pl'TJ!O&t. A child's inability to re11d was diagnosed by a pedlatri· cian a.s dyslexia!.. a condition caused by congenital brain damage. T h e pediatrician recommended r e m e d i a I reading courses to help cor- rect the condition. T h e Treasucy ruled tha~e feta paid by the fat to a 'specially quallfia;d te er for such remedl1I reading con- stituted medical tIPen&ea. A ~tENTALLY ill wife prematurely Jett m ,_ n t a I hospUals twice -titer havi.ng voluntarily entered them for trealment. lier physicians ad- viS'Cd her husband .fhat her recovery depended on unin- terrupted therapy. To achleve this, a lega l guardianship was se1 up which kept the wife hospitaliz.ed until she was discharged •fter about a year. An appeals court held that the legal fees for set· ting up, conducting and ending the guardianship qualified as medical expenses to the extent that they were aUribulable to her commitment to t h e hospital. Next: Stock Investors. Auto Owners. =".7"' .:"' to1'l::t:111..=., 11 W:: es111, /11 w1~t..~ E••o. oece1" Another unfavorable '{ax :1:'.;!.'"'11 .,.,_.i.c._.__...WMU_lf .. NOT ICE IS HEllEBV ,GIVEN le "" .. Court deeision covered th! Mldlff1 E. si.1111• m:i StnclPIPtr D• .. cm1ior. /11 tt>t •bow 111mtc1 cttc~n1 common situation in wlilcli a com ""'"" C..i;t<wllltii CoMW A. co~ lfW a11 --,.,.,Mi <l•tms , .. inst ""' physician recommends that a nil Forll•nt Aw., 0.WMY, C1t1fonllti Hid dt<-..1 I~ A'Wlttd la fl~ lhtfl'I, ~ T ~In«. '" ~.-. with tN ll9CnMl'Y _,_.., 1 .. tht: ortlu patient who has had a heart or u.Un. 11Ma1. c.ffforfl1-. ..--cirt Ill -•boW tntllleel courl, or attack should not live alone o.'M.ii Ftbn#an " ltJG. lo PAHflf """"' wllll Ille r-as .. l"i Mier-I E. S1•1111 ~ ... 111""' ... ~i.~ '' -o1t1ce but should at least have a live- -Slow Buying Starts As Market · Hits Low Dontld A. COii ot h~ 1t1'0i"IWW! PARKER & SEELY, -k · h h "",.. T. Gwnb!Mr NMll'I Mt111 strftt, Sulle 1111, ""'' A111, in wor er to assist wit c ores •ol>Mt LMll" c1111or1111 n1111, wfllkll 11 "" 1111u a1 and call for help if necessary. Editor's Note: William L. Wltrotu flD tlw lltl'ltlvrn ff Mtnts1 of ti. vndfflll1....,, In t11 mlltten 0'8 N · rl B I Mldlffl E. s1 • .,., eon.w "-co~. ..n11nr"' to 111e "''~ ot .. Id ~t. The Court ruled that if this vron, ewpo eac ~ 11111 Mtrtt T. G\lmblftlf wtthlft four"'°"'"' itter"" 11"1 PoJltllc•· li ve-in worker is neither a securities broker, and cot. STATE OF CALIFORNIA I !loft ot 11111 l!Otke. such a t·rip. Th~ follow ing art some of his current views and comments. couNTY oF 01t.i.~E 1" 01ttc1 "'"'"'.,.., '-H1'1. practical nor registered nurse lege lect1'rer, 'f)triodjcally °" Febr""rv s. 1'1111, Mfor1 ""' tt>e Th0ml1 Er•o and has ch1'elly bousekeepo·ng travels to tile ea.stenl fi· Wall Street is wailing. undtnlfflld. 1 Notlf'1 Publlc In tncl ~t Ad,.,lnl1ffftor ot IP!e Ellllf uild stitt . .,_1,,, _....arec1 ",,_, ot "'' e11avoi fltmed ~' duties, no part or her salary nanciat markets to 1nake The 25. percent drop or the L""'"'' .,._,,,, k.-11 N"" _, ~""' PA11:1t•R & s••LY 011 the s~t aP•lyse• and Dow Jones I n du st r ,. a I ,.IOI'> wllOH """" 11 111t1Kr1btd to '"' • Nll'tfll Mllft SI•"' can be treated as a medical · -,,v .... """''n in,fnl!IWnt .. • '11111-tMr•to. '""'' • ex""'nse. eva!"Uat1011s of the course Averages in the past yea r is Mio*""'" IN dulJf ~ dolNtM:I Incl Slllf• ..._ (lllf. ft1fl ,,... I th t'· t k I I f uild: 11Mi' ht rwsio.s "" '"-''"' v111tr¥. Tll : tn4) s.1 ... 1 o e economy, ·~ s oc oo y a coupe o percentage ci111em1t. ""' "' ... praftll _. ... Atlw!ltf1 1er MmlnFJ1ttter NOW LET'S turn to the market and ""'ci'"c stocks. pom' •· less than the dron• 1'n MJd*I E. SI_, °""'411 A.. Cn. "" Putilllhed Or-• c,..sl Otll'I' Pllol, · """ J • '-' """ Me~ T. ~. --ll't ~" -. Fltbnltry 1e. 11. '' •ncl M•rch l. HIO favorable developments that lit has ju.st 7'ei~rn.ed f-rom the bear markets of 1962 and ti1m to lit '"" -.. ..-.. clHU"*' "' "1•10 1~• M t I f d •nd wna ntc:OteO 1111 Hkl w11'tr1n 1~ ~. u ua un managers rlrll!M!"' 11 ••rll•• 111erm. 11t11. H11 Ind LEGAL NOTICE are almost entirely in agree- c11i1Ytr "" -..... tl\lll ll\t Ulkl p t ti 'A V' • TAXES h h Mldlttl E. s1-, 0on11c1 ..._ cox. •Nlf----~=----11 It 1.e "' lit ment t at t t market is at, or ,,,.rt T. Gurnlll•r duf'f 1<111-IHlted 1n P·Mln e y e 'ts I ""' !ht -d wld tfflant, ""''"""' u:· CIRTll'ICATIE 01' SUSINISS v r n ar, I OW. 1uey are @Olleel"" .. ,,,. tnd ""'tie. u1c1 tffll111, P1CT1T1ou1 •AMI • h S l · p , N B k not rushing in. but they are -" .. ,, ·-,_,,... "' "" -·•"" " "''"' "'"' •• iv1t y u1.a orter s ew oo · 1 1 b •·· 1 1 d 1 •· "tmt" 1 wFtMU ttwrtto. CO!lduet"" 1 11u11ntH ,, '" E. 11111 s1.. s ow Y uy"'6 se ec e s OCA.3 WITNESS MY MANO ANO OFFtt:IAL. Cati• ""'"· C11Jfor11lt, <lllder lht II<· and bond s. SEllL. O!lous llrm n1m. cf PACIFIC PRO. (OFFICIAL SE.ALI "EllTY MllNAGEMENT co. '"" 11111 MAIL THIS HANDY ORDER FORM r· ODAY -,'l"he favorites or the In· ll1rNr1 11. IMl1no wld firm ls tomP01td of tlll fo!loWlflt -'.L" Nelt<'Y "1Jblk;.C.llfor11l1 .-WM. .,..,,,_ ~ In full tntl OllUI StitutionS £or the year ahead f'rlroclNI OHk>t lft ff 't'tiOeftA •re 11 1111'-'t $ th · f o··-COlllT!f ch•r111 H. Pllt•, lOS5 Jor111S011 sr.. Only 1 25 plus 2Sc for are ose companies o a M• c_,,.iu1on E""lt" Ca111 Mew, ~1lf9tn11. service nature 2nd n o n • ""'· 11, 1tn Rlc,..,.d ..._ NnwH. n.t c1ubtiouu • /J1ndling •nd posfag1 f'u91lolletl O••lltt' Cont 01111 Pilot. -Ro .. cos11 "'"'· C1ff1otnl1. durable products. Such can· F•~..., 1e. 11, ~' ""' Mt•d• J. 1m 01lfld Ji""-21. 1t10. • • • • • • • • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • •1 didates are department stores, :tl6-71l Ch1rln H, Plkt -------,-----1 •1c1wO A. Newtn $rfri• '•rt•r'i l1C••• Tii 11111, I discount and chain stores, soft LEGAL NOTICE s1111 111 ~lflor•l•. °'"'" C.un•v: drj-•·. banks, toy and -·•··I °" Jin. 2', ltl'O, ti.lore <M, • Not1r1 flWCttt hWlcltinl, Doi• 1111 NO CAetl ~U.• I •~ ~ Pllbllc 111 "" tor Hiii si.1e, """"'tlv " .... •-• -supplies ""' etl d -----=~,,.------(_.,., CMr1" H. Plkt ""' llldllro A. Jnutt P'llt'I ,...., • Ortll' I • ...vsm CS, rugs, Alt nM Ntw•H v.own 1a me " .,. 111e Pt"<N lfltnka. C•••. OlllO to "S,trll l'wtlr Ta c.m• 1 fasteners and life insurance. MOTK••To CR•o1To•s ~ "'7u ,:;-' su:-C'1='.: ";;;1~111 I Expectations are that the tUPIRIOR .. «:.°"•.T .... T,•.•, ec'u1td .he ,:me. •< now ~· Gross Nat1'onal P~·-1 c··· STAT• Ofl -Llfl R I (OFFICIAL SEAL) Etltlosed is $1.SO ($1.25 plLtS 2s, fOf post11e and lllndll..:..i for Ol'll I IVUIA' LU~ TH• co':.'!.TI..::.?"""0• -H1rrie1 J1.,. "''""" .., value of all goods and services £11111 !If MOOESTA ER•o. •Ito known ~~/:.C7'...':~~~·1~ta•111• toVJ' of Sylvie Porttr'1 1970 lncom1 Ta: Gvldt. '11111 mil to 111t I produced ln the United States) •• MOOESTA RIOS. O.C..secl. 0 c lo I NOTICE IS HER.EBY GIVEN lo "" ..... ounlY IS fol WS: will approximate $9811 billion crtOt!Orl ot fhf •bow riamtcl cltctdfnl Mv Commk1IO!r Eu!rt'\ I d liar h tlltt ,11 111r-.. ,,1,.1.,. c111r111 "111111 "" akll•ri."':'~i itn I o s in t e year ahead -up wlll dte:tdmt •~ rtC1!Jlrld to fllf lllfm. AllorM'I ,1 Law Hamt ............. --·-···---.......... , •• _,_,, __ ,,,_,_,,,.~----from f932 billion last year. wl111 !ht lllC.eUIJY vouct>tr1. In -olflte ' ~---I of 1'111 cle ... ol !M •bow flll llltd c;ovrl, or '1' 1''1 Uth Street. Addreu The Federal Reserve Board Ill Jrntnt ttiem. wllll ""' ..eusurv Cttlt ""'"· C11lfoM1il nn1 ...... -........ M .. __ .... ,, ........ ,. __ ,, __ ,,_,,, __ ,, ............... -....... I "!\ od I 1 woud'lfr&. Ill 1M 11110f .. '911td •I Ille off!tf. Publllllt~ Ort"'llr C1>1tl 01ilY J'llot, WI m etat~ Y ft ease ad· "'"It •ttorM11: f'A1t1CE11t & SEELY, .. Ff'l>nllrv J, ie. 11. ,~. 1011 ,,1.111 City I di"···' fun•· so that for ••· ~::r::1~7,"~~e :'Iii.~~.:.::":; ---.. --.M-.... -... ~ .. ~-·--·-----·---.. -I bal:n1; of the year we can:: ,_ ,, ,, LEGAL NOTICE Stitt .... _______ Zip"°· __ ~ 111 "" """'"letled'"' mi ""1•-----:0::=-----ll I .......t about a 4 percent in· Mr'tlft .... to ~ altfilJ fll Ult.ii OtcWent,i· T·lftM I""'-' wllhlll '°""' monllll lf!tt "" flrll aub!IU-IUPIRIOR GOUllt 011 THI HH· 1 J I crease in the money IUpply. fiOll !If this Mllct. , Dtflod FtbrlltrY '· lt1t. STATI OF CALll'OllllllA l'Oll J Total inflation, which rose Tllomtl Erro TM I COUNTY 01' ORANOI •• •• ---· ••• • • ---···----- "°"""111rth>r of lllt! E1•••• NOTICE OJ :.°A:.t:J11o, PETITlON 1·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~1 approximately I percent lasl PA•w:•: :'\~ ......-lit<tdfnl flOR PROSATli 01' WILL ANO 1'-0R year, will be t b r 0tt1 e d Ll!nl•s TISTAMINTART h t Jo 4 t . -""""'Mio!• 1'""' Eslllt af ETH.EL L GILLESe,IE. b ttled somew a a perctn rise :'.:'. ':'-CttM. t1111 DK.11sec1. t in the year ahead. This will be Tl!: tnt) t-17•1 NOTICE 15 HEllEllY GIVEN Thi! 0 wa er -fleeted 1'n 8 de-age In the ·~ ... A•IM!nrt... LLOTO M. CHAnERTON ll'ld ltUTH '" ...... Pllbll1htd Or•nt• Co.11 Ot11y Pllol, CHATTEltTO N hi~' !lied heltlll I Pl!ll· . pr1me rate (the rate of in-fll'llrlllrY 11 u Jt 1nd MtrUI 3, lt70 1'°'1 tor 11n>bllt! ol Wiii •l'ld !Of luwrKr cf • • nt-~ L1t1t'f'1 Tu1-11rv la ,,.. 1H:t1t1ontr1, ttrest charged by major banks -----------~~;;::ci:,l.to.:,h1:,,;·,i:~ ..... '";,.Jy;::~ a to their top-rated customers) Mtr(ll I, lt10, ti t:.1111 1 m., In lht -do I b LEGAL N011CE • hllrlnt rtie -1111 beef! H1 1,,.. 1. s l::;ov~'\ from the present historical av1 -----------caurtr_,, o1 Oe p1rtmt11t No. J o1 uild percent wn to percent y f'4'UI COUT'I, 11 10CI Civic Center 01!Yt Well', In 'd d 7>' I b ClaTtfllCAl'E OF &USINl$S IM CllY ol Slnl• Alll, Ctlllornlt, nu -year, an n percen y PICTl1'10US MAMIE 01'-d Febn••rY 16. "111. ,, / ,, /_ year end. Thi urtdlr1l111td don C9rtlfV 11111 cori· W. E. ST JOHN, County Cll'rl< • • • '_// / olltllnt , 11us....,_ ,, 1rN Niw-' ,..,•ic•R, •1110, toRo & soLow101L ti ~'/,,.: /: Y.; Today we ue In a "get ...... , ... -· '"'""'"· ....... ,,, ........ ....... pnmt vie. //,%·~%-~ -ad, .. ~ ••••••. denced by • ticffllout """ n-If Miit. T't SPEED Pi,,....., Catlftnllt '11'1 ,,,,,_ '· '" "-. Pllt rNTING aftd ""' uild """ 1t com-Tth 11111 n>-Jl fl ,, gloomy and falling market. _.. If lllt folicrwlM --wnou A~ ftf P1IH'-r ,,_ 111 11111 11111 •l•ni 01 riildtM• 11 PutillM'ltll °''"'' C011t 01!1Y P\lol. This is the time to acquire ,, to11.ws. Febrvtrv 1'' 11· '" 1'70 HI 70 securities of good value. The o~'::''c.~ior:~-· ll1' vt"" Avi.. LEGAL NOTICE American economy Is far from o.1t111 Ftbr111rT 1. it11. being senile. There is no ques- Thornl• G. Moreno P»•lfl · '-· th 'th' '"• d d lltlf ol ~•tornlt. °'""" C.UnlY: ClllTll'ICATI 01' IVS1NISI lion 1nlt at WI Jn\.>"' eca e °" FtbrvtrJ ?. lf11. btfort mf, I JICTITIOUS fllRM NAMI! of the 70'!\ the vibrant Htiitt..., f'ullll(. Ill •1111! tor ll141 ~tilt, THE ONOE•s!GNEO Oo llt~ certlfv ,....,,,, •-••eel •T1romt1 G. Mo•tn0 th11 1 '"' c01"1011C11111 111 111 .... 1me111 American economy will con· k-,. IN Ill Dt 1'111 --,,..""""' s. .... 1ce1 .. MllllDlnlllll bullntts II P.O. ,. et -sh-wd f ,..,,_. 11 iw~rlbtd 1o 1111 wllhln In· eox 1104>, Senl• "'""· c1111. n111, ..,,.., 1nu O grow. 111e '" ar· ctrwnll'li and tck-leclttd ,.. uctc:ul~ ttie i1ctn1w1 orm n•rn• o1 OATAC:OM IN· sighted investor will take ad· 1!w ...... VESTMENT co., Ind 11111 Hiii ""'" 11 ··anta1e of the buym' g .• ~ (OF,.ICIAL IL\LI ~ af llw folk!w"" ""'°"" ~ • r -...., IC. HentY .,."'" '" 11111 ....i Pit<~ ot rnldtnc:• •r. portunilics that exisl at this NoltrT Pllblic-C1lifornlt 11 !Ollows. lo-wU: ,.._ ~MINI Offlct '" Altn L. SMrtMll. HOS fol. Mint Ume. Or.,.. c-tr l1t1t. Slnt1 AM, C111f, tl1't'! ,. ,,,,,., C-IPlon lllJlr'll WITNESS "'r lllnd thi."" •tr of Ftb, O'Bryon currenUy s con- ~~-t:;,:: coe.t Otllr ,.11o1. 100 Al•n $1\tl'tT)in · ducting a class on investments ,..,_,., s. ft. 17, 24 ltN 200-10 STAT I!' OF CALIFORNl,1 ,--. under the auspices of the ---c=::-:-,...,:-.::==---1couNTY o, OllANOE I•. 0 c t E I LEGAL NOTICE ON THIS t111 ~w " ,.,....,,, A.O. range oas v e n n g 1110. ti.tor• OM. Jonni. "· 11rotn1M, • College, such as he has been Hoitt)' Pllbllc 111 tllCI lar fbl Wiii COIM!Y 1 T•• n shoi.. rnlll'"' ttwt•lll. <1u1r COITWl'I••· doing for the past 20 years. MOTtCI TO c••o1Totts •lontt<d '"' •-n. ottlOMllf •-•'" The curren1 class is held on IVf'lltfCM COUlllT 01' TH I Alllft L. S"*rn•n knawn lo mt Ill lit ~ f •'•T•.,. tALriro•NIA Po• De•1011 --ht 1ut1Kr1btd "' •~· Wednesday evenings rom 7:Xl ntm couwTv OP OllANGl •'"''" ~1,_1• ,,.. •c~11twlMt.o '° to 9:30 al The Mariners .... ,........ mt 11111 ht tJttalltO ""' Ul<N. Eftllt. t11 MA•IE ANTO•NE"E PER· IN wiTNEss WHElllOF. 1 " ..... Jn "" a~e_ o F automa1 1c i(c makrrs .ind .st>lf-cl raning ovens, School, Mariners Drive and -...ULT ,a,1.lWEGG HfYWOOD, Ole.ff•-.,...._, 111 "'~ titf'ld ind l'ffl•tf ,,,, ... Jrvine Avenue. In Newport •;.o,.JCf 11 ~•E•'f GfVIN ta 1111 ~:11:.:1 ~ .~ ~7:tt:.-' 1ft fflll your bottled \\'altr sySlt'm is about .is 1nodern .1s an ict box. Beach. There is no admission ~ fll "" ....,. _,.. dKtdfl!f 1011,1c1Al sEALI Besidrs 11kfng up vqlu.iblc k1h::htn :.part. bottled \\'ctltr dis~ charge. .. •II ,_,_ N\111'11 Nlml $11111 11W Jeni! .. P. flrwnto11 ... ~ _ ,...1*11,. .... IMfrl, Not..., l'utrilc • c111fern11 pensers art un att ractive, uneconomi t".il <lnd rcquirel.==='========:;I ... "" __.,, ~Ir! ... ~ Prine/NI OHlct Ill I ="::::fl-.-:;:..,,...._~ :.,~::,. '""""' fr equent rrHI ing. ....,..,... ,. =::r ........ ,.."'1114 ,.. -"'°' Mt•. t. "" There is a much better , .. ·ay ••• The Lindsay Company hat ~ ~~·~ ~~.:C.,~ ~ .. ~ ~~::Vs. "l~ developtd a uniqu~ Sf'Jf-cOntainrd water purification fYlh~m ~ ~":"" --W::.."• '::r-----------'-•-•.1 that ls inslallcd out of Sight beneath your kitchen 1ink. (~ ..,,,.,. "'1•""'-,. ""' "'1'-fl •111•------------.1 utilizcs tht procns of rever~ osmosis to rtmove 90% of thr °"" ....... wltlolll .... _.... ...... _ ... .A THOUGHT ~ FOR TODAY flM M11u1te11 • .ws '*"'· Only Ont jmpuritie~ from your lap "''alrr and providts a conlinuous .,....~,., .. ,,,.. • :=..L"'~ J • f'NI Jt.oeks Jn 111 hOmt tdltions. "upply of pure, lrr!ih drinking \\'altr lor aboul 1/5 the C'~I of -:':!1*!..:"'.nr~ Tll.lt's a btt du!? Ith ,., Oran;t bott!rd \\ ;iler. ·r hrrr i .. no in'!tt,1'lc1tion chOAr>:e -all yoru pdy -Cou!tU'. Tiit OAJLY PllOT Is tht J9 So.50 ptr mon1h tor tht use of thi.s n1odrrn _,_ .. l; c.... _, ~If-!'-' ~ VIit d1Jlr· puri(icati<ln •xsttm. fo r full detd1is, «•11 or LINDSAY ...,.,.~.....,., P• write Tht Llndsa Come_~ny, PO. Bo'< :!100,_~ ~ ~,....<:' Ofl" ;:"• ?\cwJ}on Bt.i ~. 9;:oo0 lil4) o~2·oSol. ..._,... r I Vk:lllrltt In -•r lhtM Wilt ... '""' ill .. ,,,.. -TIWNt W. HltOIM 1111"sl!'Nreo t1$ a, PUBLIC SE•v1c1 tV!llV Q,t,V ll Y; LH Roofint Co . 1tio .. ,. M t onliiii, IW ,.,.,..,. A'l'I. to-1111 ''-~~~~~~~- • . '... . ' ' • II' .. ' . . . . ' ~ . " Who R ads the Stars Pl'rl'SBURGH (UPI) Aluminum Co. of America bu infonned workers of lb die cutlng foundries a~ Hillside, Ill., and Edl.00, N.J., that It b ~ buyers for lhe two plants. Alcoa aakt both are un- profitable operaUons and ii "° buyers are found, It may ha-.:e to ell* them , The Illinois plant employs S40 and the New Jersey foundry 250. LOS ANGEl.f:S (UPI) - North American Rock we 11 Corp. annouoced at Its 8.flDIJ.al meeting it bas agreed in prin- ciple to join a ~ venture with Air Products & Chemi· cals, Inc., to i:ntroduee advanc- ed welding techniques and non- destructive testing nieQJods develof>ed in th~ ase:rospace lnciu:;t.ry into the commercial market. Willard F. Rockwell J~ .• was 'named the compiny's chief executive on the retire. meat of President J . L. Atwood, who is 65. NEW YORK (UPfl-Uniteil States Lines, Inc., a subsidiary o! Walter Kidde & Co .. an· llOIJnced It plans a public of- ferlng of $32 million in govern· ment Insured bonds. 'Ille bonds are-insured under the federal merchartl marine program and proceeds will be used for the construction of l~·o containers and modernize· lion of eight other vessels. Goldman Sachs & Co. will manage the underwriting. OKLAHOMA CITY (UPI) - Cleary Petroleum C.o .• brought .-tn-a gas and con"dl!!n!ate11---~ discovery well in the Morlan Field In Wtstem Oklahoma. It tested at J .7 million cubic feet of gas and a potential of 12 million feet a day at depth of 9,420 feet , plus 100 barrels of condensate. LOS ANGELES !UPI) -1 California's paramount posi· tion in the nation's military ! aircraft industry is riding on the decision on the upcoming B·I bomber program, a North I American Rockwell executive . said. Richard F. Walker, who heads the compa ny's Los AnJ:eles division. said if North American Rockwell doesn 't land the contract, it may be the end or califomla's period or supremacy in military ai('craft output and that a substantial part or the state's a e r o s p a c e technological workers might leave California lo take j o b s elsewhere. NEW YORK (UPl) -Na· · uonal Industries, Inc., baslf-·-li!1 •. ; broughl in a third gas discovery well ob its 1,800-acre tract at Len01, Oblci. The well indicated by electronic test that its now would be In the neighborhood of eight milli"' cubic feet daily. L'OS ANGELES (UPI) - Data World Corp. has agreed to buy Bubble Up Delaware. Inc., for six million shares of stock and to change its name to Bubble Up Industries, Inc. Bubble Up is a carbonated beverage resembling lemon lime soda. MILWAUKEE !UPI) Time Holdings, Inc., has agreed in principle to buy Investmenl Insurance Corp., or Jacksonville, Fla., for $1.4 ~-.. ,..~-. .. .. For the Star . . ~k • million In convertible deben- tures. LOS ANGELES (UPI) - Pacific American Industries, Inc .. has agreed tentatively to bu y Hires-Pepper Bottllnl Co. of San Diego for cash . / Economic Growth Due To Decline SAN FRANCISCO !UPI) - The worldwide rate of economic growth will declbe in 1970, but the greatest dani'fer Is still inflation, ac· cording to a forecast issued Wednesday by an international banking combine. The report was published by the Soclete Flnanclere Euro- peenne, a multi-nalla:ial bank representing m a j or com- mercial banks in Britain, Prance, Gennany. Italy, the Netherlands and the United States. It was released . by Bank of America, the U.S. member. "~°!:~h some slowing in the of world marketa it expected in 1970, strong underlyt:ig demand a n d widespread lnfl aUonary psyehololfY wlll undi>ubledly preclude extensive or l<iifg· lasting rectssion." the report said . "Indeed. a greater dangtr la the resurgence of lnflaHonary &rowth before Inflationary-ex· pectallo1t~ ha ve bttn 1uf· ficlcoUy restrained.'' It's Sydney Omarr And now thjs articulote writer who hos bee~ c•lled the :'.•slrologers •strologer" re•ds the st•rs for you. Sydney Om•rr. • longtime personoleslrologer to m•ny of Hollywoiid 's •nd tj1e liter•ry world's most f•mous slers, is • DAILY PILOT columnist. Omerr's record for eccuracy ot predictions based on ostrologicol enolysis is omozing. Whether you reod astrological forecasts for fun or os o serious student of st•r-g•2ing, you 'll enjoy SydneyOmarr's d•ily column in the DAILY PILOT .. - • • Ml 1,000 of .· Us ·Had _a_ Bus y _Day Toda y '·'W e created and delive red another fresh edition of The DA I LY PILOT TEAMWORK proUuces each day's all·nC\V DAILY PILOT. Ollen spccial- ~ts like Thon1as Fortune tlcfti. \1•hosc beat is «lucation. work with a ftaf{ photographer like Pa!rick O'Donnell to get the story hotlt in words and pictures. The staff shot 70,000 pictures last year 10 illustrate t.he varied story of Orange Coast life. Nobody kno"'s how 1nany local stories we wrote. Not even us. CREATIVITY hel~ ad vertisers tell their stories and sell their goods 1n the affluent market served by the DAILY PILOT. l-.1aury Gardner of cli.\- play advertising department looks over layout with DAILY PILOT staf( artists Anne Hamblin (left) and Charlotte Andresen. The ad they 're dis-- cuuing will be ready to appear Jn the newspaper only hours after artist '\ put final touches on the layoot and it is apQroved by the advertiser, a lo- cal retail merchanl QUICK HANDS place lines of type. ads and cuts (the 1nclal ph1tcs used • tG reproduce pictures) inlo page forms as !he day's product begins IQ take shape.' Compositor Arden fiitalsbury is only one of a platoon of 1 printers who "build" the news pages under pressure of deadlines, work· • ing against the clock to bring readers the latest avail able information in each edition during lhe day. ' I DEUVERY o( the newspaper ls a speed event, too. Conveyor belts carry the papers through the mailroom "'here they are automatically tied 1n 1 bundles of 50 and t<Wcd to \Vaiting circulation district man agers (like 1 Blaine Robrets, shown here , (right) who speed them via a 40·vchiclt> 1 fleet to carriers for delivery. fi1ailroom-·foreman George Arauz (left) and his crew can move 20,000 newspapers an hour. VOLU~lE is the word at the Copy Desk. DAILY PIT.OT Copy Desk Chief Norntan Anderson (right) aided by Tom Tilus (background) and olher copyrcaders every day sifts, checks and edits more wire reports from worldwide news services than the average weekly ne\\'S magazine pub- lishes. Editors scan enough telephc1os to wallpaper a living room every 24 hours. Speed, born oI experience, helps them keep it all [resh, too. ~-.~o - TIIE WORDS are ready. Marjorie Jackson feeds them into a $25.000 computer, a DAILY PILOT investment in speed and -accuracy, Which uses a logic system to hyphenate words as it reads characters at the rate ol 1.000 a second and punches a new tape which v.•ill activate another machine for automatically selling type at high speed. The mach.lnes can set type at the rate ol 6,000 Jines per hour. PRESSURE here is both Physical and mental.. Charles Haubri ck , stereo- type foreman. checks impression made by page foll of type on a mat squeezed by 1,800 pounds of pressure per .square inch in the mat roller. !\1at can be curved and used as a rhold to form the curved plates which fit onto cylinders of high-speed printing presses which print the DAIL Y PILOT. Jrs part of the quick-paced daily process of reproducing 100,000 words for DAILY PILOT subscribers to read. ~IOOERN equipment helps the accoonllng department keep up wllb the ··today" pace at the DAIL~ PILOT. Even as the day'a newspaper is being sped to its readers, Sunnie Chauvin begins feeding figure!.Jrito a rlesk model rompu tefs accounting console. lt helpa keep track of billings tor ads and subscriptions. The machine, one of several tied in to tbe main Cbmpoler. helps handle 5,000 accounl.I a month. ' J •• " I -:; .... ~ t RAPID communciation is the name of the garne. Supervisor 'tiita " Folsom and her crew of "ad-visors" handle 1,000 1.ransactions a week by phone, resulting in publication of 5,000 classified ads -words which help people buy, sell, renl or I ea s c ... even find lost dogs. JI.Jany or the DAILY PILOT'S 150 phone lines are plugged in here, the classified advertising de- partment, ho1ne o! "\Vant Ads" and Dime-A-Lines. PICl'URES, too, get the benefit of sk illed , efficient handling by n1~ler craftsmen who re-pllotograph them and then transfl'r U1e images to a sensitized metal plates which are used to reproduce the photos as read~ ers will see them in the newspaper. Herc. Chuck Ryan takes a really close look al a negative which i,yill be used to etch the Image 011 l~e 1netal plate. FlNISllED PRODUCT is checked by Elwood Anderson, press crew chier, even as high-speed presses continue lo roar al 60.000 impressions per hour completing the day's run on press units which represent an investment or $3.$ million. Eleven-man press crew will feed into these n1achincs the equivalent or a roll of paper one page wide and 110,000 miles long in printin& the DAILY PILOT this year. ALMOST before the Ink Is dry, the product or our busy day Is t<>Med deftly on your lawn or porch by one of our 700 newspaperboys who are Important links in the chain of people Jt takes to bring you tod ay 's news and feat ures today In the DAILY PILOT. A,nd a11 our yoong independent merchants, like John fl.felton here, make their deliveries, we're gearing up for another busy day -all 1,000 of us. \ frhe 'Now' e1vspaper f o r All The Communiti es ' Of Th e_~;r9wj11g J , -~. . . . ' 01·a11ge__,_ f;oast • '· ' .. - I • I I I ' ... ., JI OAJl.V PILOT Tutsda~, Ftbruary 24, 1970 I• High Gear • Buick Goes 'M od' .... With Sleek GSX • ......... . .. .... ... ~ .... ': : ·: . . , . . : .. ' . ' . . ' , ' 1 • I Ag~ oi Violen~e . Prof W urns of Protests SAN FRANCISCO (UPl l -Diamond said he witnessed I A criminology professor warns riot last l\1onday In Berkeley By CARL CARSTENSEN s h o w r o o m I r a ( l I c t o °'::";'-;:::::":;"':'--....,,... during which at least $163.000 there may be more violent warlh of windows were broken protests by young radicals and iD a protest against contempt blames strikingly different at-c;itations in tbe "Chicago tltudes between tbem and Seven" trial . C.llr 1"11111 •"'-''"' f.thv Uuick division. always e-0n- sidered somewhat staid and conservative. has lei it s hair down a little with the in- troduction of a sleek 11ew sports coupe. the GSX . The new two-door hardtop model, which "'•ill go on sale about 111arch I, features front and rea r spoilers, hood mounted fachomelcr. s u pc r -~id e billboard tires, power disc brakes and special paint strip- ing. Buick. off to one or its top years now joins mosl or lhe domestic auto makers with ii new mid-year orfering. Although th is might be con- sidered somewhat or a "wanned over" entry the nc1v coupe is certain to bring nc1v dealerships. The CSX is basically a CS 455 with spoilers and distinetive paint striping. It Is available wilh either the regular 455 cubic inch engine or the Stage I option, .which includes a high lirt camshaft and other special engine com· ponents. Chrome wheels. a rallye- type steering wheel. rallye clock, outside rear view mir· rors to match the exterior col- ors. bucket seats and interior and exterior orftamentation t-omplete the special equip- 1nent. ~"' EXCLUSIVE COLOJ.IS The car is ofrercdjnJwo ex- clusive exterior colors - Saturn Yellow 'and Apollol Bl BLE THOUG HTS . tTf:ltHAl PUHISHMENT ;, propo1tjon1I lo knowl..49• •nit opportvnily. Je•ul ,,;i1, ··-·-t~•I t••••nt which KNEW Iii, lord"1 will -neither did -hi1 ""ill. 1h1!1 b1 b11!111 w:th MANY tlrip11. Bui he th1t KNEW NOT _. d11U b1 b11t1n with FEW 1tt1P•n" I L~. tl :'47·~7 l. A l11111tecl m•11 in i1:I for lift. i1 lorh1t1d bv tho.,.ghh of lotl OP· po1l1,111iti1t 111d w1ittd ~11owl1d"qe . NOTHING-c111· b1 do111 lo 111f1ov1 th1t1t punithing lhoughh. An i911or1mu1, in itil for lilt, !T\it\I in-joy the fret metli tnd lei1u re; hit punithmtnl i1 li9ht. 2 Ptl. 2:20-21 cond1mn1 Ch1i1li1111 who hive hop1l11ily 1;11111 into 1in i ncl 1!1tlt1, "··-!ht l1tier end ii wot1• with them lhtn th1 b19in nin9. for ii hid bttll bitter for th1m 1101 to ht•t k11ow11 the w1y of riqht1ou1neu---." Th111 min Hit""•" tnd 111ff1r •t· IA~--l·~Motti 111d r19ret tltm•llv. h•11i"'I KNOWING.LY r1ject1d op• porlunlti11. NOTHING c111 be don• or 11id lo •••• th1i1 1191eh. Tht l iblt doe1 110! tetch LITERAL 1irttll of gold i11 He111e11; thi1 i1 1 FIGURATIVE w1v 1o d11crib1 the beeutifuL Ntilh"r do11-tt--tt1cl1 LITERAL 1;.,, ;, Hell; tha_FIGURATIVELY d~· 1cribt1 the t1rribt1. REMORSE i nd REGRET o( tho11 in Hill I who 111iued H1111enl will lo11ver lorh11i them 11 fire .• Reid Jn. 12:<47-~I, Rt ... 20:11 -15. 2 Co•. 5:10, Rev. 21 :1·5. You h1111 KNOWLEDGE of Chri1t. Do you lit~• '"''" OPPOlfTlJNITY lo obtv him? VISIT Churr.h of Chri1t, 217 W . Wilson St., Cotlt M111. STUDY th1 BIBLE with ·u1. ' ' . ~· , BUICK"S NEW GSX TO DEBUT-Sleek new sport's coupe features front and rear spoilers, fr.ont disc brakes, hood mounted tachometer, super wide tires Wh1te with black striping. The center section or the hood, with its twin air scoops , also is painted black. A four-speed rloor,mounlcd manual transmission w'lth con- ~soJette is · standard on the GSX. A three-speed Turbo- Hydramatic transmission with a run length console is available as an option. The front spoiler is n1ounted under the bumper. Th e tapered black stripe the full length of the car carries over onto the elevated rear spoiler· mounted on the deck lid. It also cames equipped with a rallye ride C1ljltrol system .,,,,hich includes heavy duty springs and shock abso·rbers and rear stabilizer. Fast va riable ratio power steering is offered as an option. ' The GSX also is equipped with oil and water tem- perature gauges 'instead or red warning lights. • • • DEALER ANNOUNCES EXPANS ION AND NEW ·P'M Howard Abel. presidCnt or · Beach City Dodge has -named At Silvcnnan general manager of the H.untington Beach thelr elders on the right to , Jle said few of1the protestori; private property. were students ~ut were what he described as ''s treet Many youngsters simply people'' or hipp~s. Diamood "don't reel property damage is said he asked sevi!rlll of them wrong," said Dr. Bernard Ola-·why they smashed windows. mond. acting dean o f criminology at the liQiversity Most of them replied that as standard equiement. Powered by a 45,5 c. i. engine, it is available with 4-speed stick or auto- matic. The GSX goes on sale about March 1. of California in Berkeley. 'Everybody does his own thing.· l asked then1 why they "They ' think their pcents wanted to hurt s ma J I put property ahead of pie businesses and they said they and this is a big elemen in the were sorry about that and generation gap, .. he said. ··t · b ks think demonstrations will con· were really aiming at an dealership. The announcement \vas made at a recent sales seminar held for the staff. At the samf:l time Abel said that Beach City Dodge will in- vest Qver $200,000 enlarging and improving ·existing service facilities during 1970. Work is expected to start soon and no incoovenlence to customers is expected. • • • CADU..LAC SALES CONTINUE TO RISE P.1ore Southern Californians moved into Cadillacs i n January, by a sizeable number, than did during the and other laTge institutions." tinue and there will be a lot or same month ~ year ago. An lost property .. , ' Diamond pr a i s e d the increase of 12.3 percent in new Berkeley PoUce Departmenl ·caOillac sales has b e e n Diamond made his remarks ror its han~ling of t h e , reported by George W. •lar-Saturday in an interview dur-demonstration and suggested rison, Cadillac zone manager. ing a conference on "Th e palice elsewhere use such Harrison Jurther reported that Legitimation of Evil'' sponsor-restraint. the sales outlook for the spring __ ed_b.;_y_lh_e_w_r..:ig'-ht_1ns_ut_u_1e_. ------------ selli ng season continues to look bright Most models of th e '70 Cadillac are available at the Today's Stocks Today dealerships, he a dd ed ·t~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Eldorado, Cadillac's personal- type luxury car continues as it has for quite some time as being in exceptionally high de- mand in Southern Califorliia. \ LET'S BE FRIENDLY Giv.e Before You Go in Indiana To help you save time and money .If you h11.ve ne\v ne}:hboni or know ol anyone moving to our area. please tell us so that v.e may extend a friendly welcome and help them to beoome acquainted In their new surroundinp. So. Coast Visitor INDIANAPOLlS (AP) -In- diana insurance agents are carrying oo a statewide cam- paj.gg1a set uupoo!J>(_poj.en- tial dcinors of hearts and other human organs for transplant. 'll>t _,. )la55'-""L.Wds 494-0579 494-936' with which a signer can' com- , mil 1ny or all of his org~ns for 'T ,:-removal after his death.· Harbor Visitor 646-0174 ,_ Under a Uniform Anatomical Gifts Act which ' has been adopted by Indiana dously." said Robei-t W. Osler, I and 38 other slates, the managing director of the In· authorization is binding upon diana State Association <if Life e donor'.s sur_yi_yors. Un derv.·riters. "Practically Half I.he signed card is Car-nobody refuses a Cira." ried by the prospective donor. . The llssociation has a po ten-. . bal force QF 2,400 life un-duplicij~ hair goes into a -derwriters handing out the central register. ~ards during their course of During the first six weeks ~f busi ness. Eventually, Osler the program about 1,500 cards said, as many as 7 ,500 such have been signe'd. cards may be passed out each "ll has gone over tremcn-\\'eek in Indiana. THE I DA1lY""-PlLOT-I offers you this 120-page book .sier way -to ~w;M e_numbers. I ----------· J ust order a free Personal Numbers book . from your local telephol\e business office. It has plenty of spaces for · all your numbers. And should1 you need more than one, they're you~ for @Pacific Telephone the asking. Were here to help. " '''· Sylvia Porter says: If you never needed tax help before-you need it now! The tax forms which you must fill out this year are entirely new, unfamiliar- more complicated than ever before. But with our 1970 In come Tax Guide, you will be able to : (1) Fill in your Form 10 40 and its accompanying sche dules with far less trouble and far more confi. clence than you now believe possi ble; (2) Find dozens upon dozens of money. saving hints which will help you to avoid costly mistakes in your income tax re tum and to slash your tax to the absolute legal minimum; • (3) Save time as well as money on your _ • 1969 income tax-quite likely much • bigger amounts of both than you would now guess. . ; SEND FOR YOUR COPY TODA~ OnlY' $1.25-plus 25¢ for postage and handling• USE THIS HANDY ORDER FORM : I • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 1 ,• Sy1•i1 '•rtef's l11c1•1 l•• Cvld1 NO CAaM ~LIA•a M,oe th«l ar Mimey Ordff IQ "Sylv11 Por1tr Tit 'uklt'' • la f1wc1tt h•llc1t1111s, Dtpt Hll •• '• • • I. r1wc11t 'Pltc1 lrHllWic•, C111. Otl30 • • • • • • • • • l"closed is '$1.50 (~1.25 ph11 25f. lor post•a« Ind hll!dlin1l lor ~ copy of Sylvie l'orttr's 1970 ll!tOmt T•~ Guide. Pltate m1i! to m1 as fonowsi • • •• •• N1mt -----·-.......... -·----·-....... _____ • • Addrtss -·---·---.... -·--··--·---·--·-~ • Cllt ---·--.. --·-··---·--··-·---·--·-----·-1 • •· Stilt -·-----.. ·-·-··----...... _._ Zip No.--.:-==:: l • -1 HH.ll r • • • • ,. •••••••••••••••••• 111'.;llll ...... _______ ...,.,. __ ,,. ____ ... __ ..,..,_ .................... __ ..,_ ...... .,. .......................... .,,.. ........ .,,.., ... ----~~~-~--~~~~~------·,. .... _ ,...._ .,._._,. .. __. -~ •• -•• ..-.,,.-•• --....-... - ' • I • ~men . "'"" At1 w .. ~ (/larlltM .,.,,_ Youthfulnet• Is ftafurtd in this gown, featuri"I short puffed 1IHv11, scooped neckline and watteau train. Fashion Lingo's Big Word: Mixi By MARIAN CHRISTY Hello, rvidi·mixi-maxi. Goodbye, mini, goodbye ; its been good to know you. Hottest fashion explosion of tlte 70s Is tbe long hemline. Designers in the influential Rome-Madrid- Paris fashion circuit gave hemlines the green light and thus the big push Is on to make women react in a po6itive vein. Before you scream outrage. get one fact straight. "Long" can mean anything from just below the kneecap to just above lhe: ankle . And if the word mlxl sounds foreign to you -now Js the time to get the au courant fashion language down pat. Mixi ' means longer than midi but shorter than ma1i. It's a pl ay on the word "mixture." meaning a mix of mkli· maxi hemlinei.. adve nturesome as lhtir customers. If tt1ey didn't gel the Idea lhal women we re receptive to certain looks, they wooldn'l risk going ~ankrupt. After the roar dies down. long skirts will move Into acros::-the- board prominence much the same way short skirts '1id. Every major magazine. slore and New York manufacturer is plan· ning to push hard for long skirts. YOU· won't see it for spring-sum· mer. But, oh, my dear, the revolution wiU splnl onto the fall-winter 1971 scene -and alJ your arguments that midis and maxis are ugly and dangerous just won't hold water. A year from now only stubborn dlehards will be m.ini'd. Two things can plummet long skirts Into qulck promlnerwe. The YOWli have never worn long skirts and, to them, it's a new kind of fashion' adventure. And another source of receptivity Is the fact lhat the skirts now on the fashion scene are the longest since 1947. The mere U10ught of a drastic drop in hemlines brings on instant dulrage. Livid women scream they are being "duped " by Europe 's i~ nuenUal designers. These same women hollered long and loud about lhe Indecency of minis, the general slackening of the strict m<ral stan- dards, the cheap naunlin1 of se1 via .fa.sh.ion. The consenswi is that It's time Upheaval always is relaled to im-for something jarring to happen In £ashlon. Long helhlines could give pact. rashkin ~the pep and stimulus it Now that legs a're under etiver. need1. Fashion hu to have a new anti-long-skirt excuses will be revolution every 10 yeara or so - ~anufactured. or how else can it survive? ~ 1But-the t'ruth of the -;;at~ -Bu~ lhe -othe;:-hand, IOna t.hnt designers can _only get 4ai skirts must hurdle obStaclet. 1• • ' ' , • • • • I ' . 1 Chains of venise lac e dais ies trim this chemise bridal 9own of or9an1a. BRrDES CL1NG TO PAST; I ' • • 1A whole new youna generation has grown •up and found ltsell. Now it is ready to step out into the future. Scoffing at tra~iUon and asserting that tl)ey have to do their own thing, the y.ouths emp_haslze irkllvtduallty and 11 Create -their Own styles in fas Ill.on and in their ~ of living. - But when the long-awaited moment o< matrimony comes, they a r e aen-- tlmenlallsts at heart. They like Jong, nowlna: dre88e11 whispering with lace and ribboril. Relying momentarily on tradition, they look to their ancestors for sty1ea from the Gay Nineties or they chooae folk cos. tumes ,from far away, romantic coun· tries.. · Planned . perfection characterizu their wedding ceremony, whlch may be f sUpple eatherip& Jn' an open nekl •1th on- ly folk mualc and pcetry roadJill ,as embelliahment.s or an elaborate, tradl~ tiOnal ceremony in ·a churclJ with ample ~idelqiaidl and groofXllinen. ' To ,go •Ione with their deflnlieneu In _ tafte, they insist that their wedding gowns ·be unusual and say somelhing~ about them. Lone and narrow, tht aowns are shaped in the ·empire line and are made dislinctive with Victorian collars and alttves,and yards ol lace trim. One typical sown Is a Vic_torian empire organia ._.... wlih' long, f~I 1leeY01 finished with deep cul/1. Veniae 1- trlma the clllf• and • hJab -.. p -and la .. ~ .. the bodice. fonnirc two bordeni whicb extend to the aklrMo emphaliae the &hope. - ,Gractne the front, between the borders 11 a froatlna: of Swia lace. An att.ched chapel train boi'<lered ia matdiinll.venlle· laC. completes the look. The empire lilbouette ls repealed ht m1ay different dreaes, IUCh u an ot- toman ribbed shirtdreu with a ruffled jabi>t bodice and curfs. Another la covmd entirely on the bodice and .. .... With Scblllll embroidery' A -Victorian '°"" certainly In the romanllo _,.., 'la a white ......., empire dnli with short' puffed aleeYel, ~ accenta the oc_.i neckline and 1letVu, and ·veniae llc:e flowers form 1 pinel clowii the f-and aro tcallend on the wlftuu trlln. -Equally fenillline and demun 11 I llleer oraanu cheroloe with a taffeta unclenltesa. The ohort-aleeved ..,,. With rolled collar la trimmed with cbalna 0( nnfae lace dolalel oa the -~-prlq-brldu-fa Jm-wlD bo •illt·ll do --+-• their own lhinl beautllUll) -11flctloa tlleir. 111 Important aown. --All "bridll ~ ... from lhe Sprllr, mt collectloil Of Pe1111ty 'a. . 1 • .......................................... _. .. ._..._ ... """' ............................................... ..,.._~~~~~----- .._.,_ , __ , .... Mom Reserves Right to Decide ma ~:n.io ... • ...,. W. M ' 1Z1 '" wbe laad Ille ii t .... .,,, ,.. .. ¥ .... -• e.!l:al! rl-dla '" IS • fl .r aflJniDcl! '-"-._ alllf. -...... miUmo. ()idWin • dm aaaD'J' .. ido:S" ....... mmilll'. __ ..,.. __ plaa.My "•W• l an (:alML., .t wt·....-. .. .. -n. OiurU,. ...... IDC -llli'S-...._ ltJ >usbaad ""' I bW; .... diMm -... nnt !!'II.ft. .... --• 6o rilflt • -THAT ---~ se-1ne ...-dlardll aai1 nm p:waa mmclll ---""' ... -.. Mbol; -• ~ .. ;pol - .-• "'" • nmr pnptfari--=a ... --"1 Tll< wwfd -. ....... -. ............ ......, ...... l!melk;; 11 ~ M:mJ' c a & lraderJ ftlt '911 W d _o.-.t __ ... .,.._,...... ·~·---­¥1r I fZ!I; Jfotflifr" cha -.., tar AU. .._ -E1llJGHl'EMm -~---· l••er ------l·•••e ~ a =f !drrl ........ 11. 0. .... ..,,~.._Dr. .. w4 L a... a C 1 ' •I 1 ,..,... ... Inda • Ba••• -..-Dr ................ -.u.ru-.. ..... fall tlt a I OIRll If•'• I it ..... .. ii I., ... ......,. ., ._ •.• 7 ........ liL n...· ........... , di • cwirfl ., ANN LANDERS ~"'c' ,, .............. .. 1~pa · ............. . ~sw. d·zot f ... T# 1 arcm • ci•zm• •It ••c• Mt ......... 1"ri6lz: - ' ......... ., .. ................ c.-a.c a ~· ,..... ........... , ............. _ ...... ....,_ .. ,., , ............. .... • • 1 • srrf ......... 0 f If· 'ftt ...., • ....,..,,..n ~·· ................. ,, ,~ ... ,...._ilem..,..,.8--_.X ., .~ ..... 'lllil ..... __ •••t --·--IEAJl A.UC !Ac'1ll!ES.: --...,,., .. ac. .... &l'l • Di .. b p .. ..,, n._. l!lt laib'? Jlf ....., .. _. .,.., wD • --. ...... --mid-. tU dw. an VD!: &my-mu ~ b"f: CO' SaiJ' ii • Wd.. TbiO is -'"""'"'-T""1 .....,. F i,. befarw. ll:Jl. 1rt •tn m;t •D mr cbiJdrm ac 7::311.. ftil mm& I !!ad • m. a tetr.;Gd. ~ ac ll a.a ~ 0.,-"'"°" ,..,, ... --al -• ' bd tam a lieCIBI lmdt • 1. nil mant lbty-'lat ___ .. , •• Trojan Guild Members - f--1 _\liew Film by.-St.ucl.ents Mothers Sponsor Showing Horoscope Cancer: ' Love Reigns - -- . : J, • t Cntm.a ti) w· a&-l m~ Gu5d. C"l1:'hrn & cg.ctmn¢J JO !ff 1he ~8t tmdaa ¥. 12 armr;al T r • J a 1 Gadd D1aJ a It a.m. '?illnday', f'eb. 25.. m H:woct audiotiam "° ~ t'untnitJ « St:ur:ben ca?ifDnua camp13 ~. P.unard Ka 11 ' 1t r, ~ " ~ l-SC divlSlOlt .• cl. a.?ma and ~ dean d the Scblol d Perfornalc Arts.. ~ tlt'l'tnf mm.. Qtif RICDm. flt ril dixm! the coriu ... mial mb)ld al ~ D!inp and an ct.ey .........,._ Tbe.,,...~acmmaSC b.tbeeldataod ..... -"' ils tiDd .. the .... ard tone.-~. pnct W 1111 IU fidd... Ccild mnrl'#r.t p r o • i de flC:il'!ldaJ Di tn • o m: e 11 " 'nr"' ~ c ~m.pas. ..,.., -..... tlie arrr;mJ c>1ild day. "-It ......... . er::: iD Ton :c:d C.0-a:lkr' ~ ~"""' a.. am will t-A!': lbt Mmes. W'1ll1am ---,,.... -- Funk Art Reviewed ...,.,.,. , An ..w ... • .....,... by ..,_Joyce ............ .i-lh<Tcnm Ari Lap ......... loJI p.m. twdiiM ia tbt: Sama Aaa ib"Y. Tll< ....,; ........... and as wia is affiliatld rill tbt Ca>w> G2llay. Siie bolds • ,,,_,, dqru wl Is • ""'" umt ir:llroc:t« at Ch;r;:msatt Collqoc He-ta!> will b< a<· ~by slides. HB Auxilia ry Amcricao Lqloo Aalll'.ary ., l!ucUr.r"'1 -pibrr> · in Ibo Am<rlcor> LcC)on IWI at l :JD P-m. the fine 'fbuB.. """ "' ad> """'°'-On ,,,. '"""' 'lbar""1 -· .D12J a lLllt.1 . ..,._-. -Q&..rtn. for location ~ -- Sorority Pro;ect r ~~~~~~~~ June Date Selected Tbe n:ppmrnt ol lifiu om.. f'Jjpbr!h en.es .. Jmu ~ 1rill Wil! al)- --• •4 dutmc a cr:duil pat· ., '"'" .. .,. -boci< "Xr. and ltn. c.n -!CmGm.s.~d Mn. Non c...... d &!boa am. JGtn Cobun Grna Jr. "' South Pasadma is a ~ of tht L:..,rnzry " -. c;.lilomi;i ..,.,.. ~ was a member o( Delta Gm)- ma. Her Cwicr. an abmtnus o( Georpa T tciL att.ml'.h the Tburwlttbmj Gradm!e School ot l:atemational )lmag:trnell io Plloni::I.. He ~ four Jars in the Savy as a -Hls parms art" Mr. and Mn. Ra}"mond R W i 1 I ol Panama '9bln 'iFilt is --of Ibo Paoama Canal. A Junt 111eii:!itli iJ btiq: .,....,... I . ; t Chapter Plans Visit ·: 1n wpq with thtiT m. ! tena iD crippled dsiJdra and ; dJdr atfds. rntmbt"n ol tbr . ' j Republicans ~To Celebrate SclJO> Coa.!I Ahmmat Chapter GI z... T:W Alpha wjJJ Ybll Ult Rebabtlitabcm O!:altr (or Crippled Olildreo and MllJIJ 'lllund>y. ,.,,_ 2'. The naUonal soronly klr llW>Y'J<m iw aided cnppled c11lk!ml .,...__n, by -proj<ds .. making opoclal........,.. for clUldrm .. nhibitin& ibtm wtLb "1'ior -all •round the .-Id. Ata--ci.m- tloa -IOd """"'"""" .. ...._. __ IUdi • the -&h"m lO Loi AnC<les °"._..,. llnsplw by -Calif..,,;. z.w. -wbblne fnfonruollon on tht l :• p.m. -ol lhe nhltlilttatioll center ml)' can ""'-Jmy-lfaol>, -.......-""'--~-~ -. ~-oche'~ _ ... by~.~ C..,.,,a . .beltfil •!Im the M1i111n' a» ti ~ Tat Cllat>On' a 0. l!Sv_,. " SUi6a. c:afi6nia ~ i:ts am9illll ~ eYeat -,.. Fd>. a. The ~ -will .. Ch< ...... "" "" t·:tt - -., ---.. -IDlft man. a tneads.. a1am-- ~ and pat"fliU flt Xltt'e memben ., bem. irYWd. -, .. ._.,, . mockt: tbeD" -· dot!riq ...... --· "" all =-~%~~ Ma Tmu \lcC«nhrr. •1 S11IU1'" cw•n aJES ·-:rt-Apt 1'1: f ll!nil: ... ,. MSt. !lflt ., ...,. " ezy ;JWc ,_ "'"' ...... krril«y. 'nliert ii s e;,,, el fj .. j tqllit ed. I" JZ ••••""' ttfl l a l -bf ...mp. T&11111l5 (Ajri •lloJ a 1: Stras Cit -to ::=at ctaa,.,, ril!l:la s .... i ., yaar fml:i. Bt a pod. thnwd d:ea'Ttr. Les cba'1 • 11".oK « U. t.i!tin&. Y cu an lean .., . GEXN Oby U--.. Sic y., pill -bf~ bowler:lp.-.. r. ... tuaJfi:!'. ,. lean ~ ~ Cc..es (be pap1. Acc:rm (111 ~ With British flavor Chapter Pours Tea A ant pany and BrtWb tea will .. .ua.it by .......... d Ill< •.........a. a..;w. Dq!>&rn "' ... Brliilll ~ Cll Th;aiiday, IUrclri i. "" ..,,. .... ml olf«lll& Cit Frclsh h omemade prerrves. !atJSait rolls and Wa will btf!I ,..,.. -"" thr BrilDD: fbDr ia S;.ura '.\Udn. the rum pnJttt ot chaptttl l:'i. S •1tile r 11: c.tdonu. Viejo Meet Trains Eye On Youth family Picked 8-lt a 0-Family n3 tbr: toplt' wbe:l Pa: c..,,.,. "' ... f...W,--A.,...wm ~ '° t II t Sm•i'htiid Cab al. Runrmgfm -loc!oy. Tbof...,, ___ tim is -qmt:f wtidl pn> Tid!s cu1ridq Rniots for _.and family ,.ooi. .... Rummage on Sale -., colllnc lits. P•l Sdw!*. -·--· Pr_wil ........... W c:llurl:b baildin( fi..i. I TRY THIS UNIQUE ISLAND DEIJCACY HJCl(()llY F AllMS OF OHIO BANANA CHIPS T•WW:• J oar tut• btich with this tropic l1l1nd 'IJUCk food. Hickory F1rm1 of Ohio BANANA ODPS u1 proc.ns.td ill the Philippin1 11l1nd1. Thi u tiY"• fNit Is i&1l for th.Lt product ..• combined witli. c.oc.onut oil honey a.nd 1ua1r to enh1nce tht b1.na.na 6.a•or. TtJ 1omt nibt out of tha box for betiAe.t.l'I ~'1 tru tJ. or add lo muffins. panuk•t, akr mau. itr creui. topp1n11 and crrr1\1 for • rtdy oobG i u ie., .Svvr at }IXl~ p1rt11s to add 1 l:nlr ~W::!d a~piterr. llUY fDIS1' IOX AT REG. PRICE 511 GETSECOND =g~ 10<: WEDNESDAY, FEI. 25 thru SATURDAY, FEB. 21 n Boss arrives at our esent her new 7 0 Do meet her ~iew her simply ions . occosion dress in white en · s Better Dresses. ON'S ' Tea will be ""'"' ciunn& l1't ""''· ROBNSONS NEWPORT • FASH IC, 15..ri'.D • .64 4·2800 '1 r l ( I ~ I I ~t ••• s u a c s s a s e : e pa; o a s a ; P : s a s ::s o s ;xs es: P.¢&.t•£Ut>+ .... vvs<•1:++•t1••rv: .. •i)tj•;?>J•FPt¥'•1•1 ,, :01••p<>F• ,•·1--r-r-~ .... --·· ..... -.-.-......... ,..,.-.... . TUMBLEWEEDS TUESOAY ' ,., , .. ....,. (C) (60) Jetrr Du11i1hy. • -·-(Cl (30) Cal '" '" Tllil? (Cl (30) ' 1:»8KMC ._. 1ci (60> ... Mn a. (C) (90) Louis H)'I, bthtr Mami,rs, Dennis Wtz· ver, Dlahn Wllllems and Alln•Mllil Btnnslrom ruat. • 1-C..a..(0 (30) ~, ........... (30} ....,_(IO) ._...., (C) (30) IP hf (..,._ (30) (j)'lllt -(30) Milldarl M (C) (60) JOlllR Jkwa (C) (JO) . ,o ~rn c.!:!' ..... ,,-..:: (Cf (dratn1) '10 -1oll• Dlllnw, Guy, Coll~ SUWI How1rd, Gotdo1 Pinlllrt, 011 ftfTOM, Cofdllct ..., mtmbflrl of 1 f1mou1 ~ fHIHJ ii owr· . shadoWli br th• ttirtet of • chotltl'a ~ ~mlc ' In 1· ftmllr-owrtlll cllni~ • ,,,. rn a-• .., .. 1 .. : l "-(C) (IO) IJ WATCH .!'MOVIN'" with· I l "I"' ..., '"" !! '""• • U I Cfiaft." Dt,1i('ilfy MaDmll lliibfM *SPECIAL GUEST STARS •" "°""'" •-., ,...,,.,. PLUS C~EVROLET'S -litld '11iOtMr ~ fHr of sUrl'fJ iftANtJ \{£W CAMARO =t•~~moa!° ~ aw;:_;:m tht B ill Cll lllill!IJ -(Cl U hllil <Cl liOl "°"' ""'"· (60) AndJ -Wliillftiiltatr hi I _JllU· CleYtiZIMll Nrrlirt. Miia-ft• Piao• Jiq!-c:omeclt' sp1Ci•\. lanlnt top\ and Ult "tum of Allct McGnith ape! .a~ from telhilioft; motion.pie-Biuct Tt(llOI' (lllSt. ·lures. du~·s and th• cone.rt st11e. , ,.,,., ..... (60) . . . ~·tltl (C) (60) .DQ} ~.m I Dfu•. II .Jta111., "(I) (:IS ..... s,tcial (C) (30) 1ro {30)., Je11111l1, the _Rzcordinc o hfr• 11n1lcl (30) ~1t1ry. TonJ's MltctiOft ll I 10:30 'lftlt WMf. WM11, Wllw1, Wtty t.andidate for • "H~ of the ' ( ) (30) "Tht Environment Cru- Yt1r''. award caum p1obl11111 for side." waller Cloftkilt r,por11. Jtann". QI (I) rlltllrt (30) 0 ll1l ffi Ell ... ""' (C) (IO) 11) Cjirtlo• (JO) '1h1 Deacrty Jn." Thi . lite of 1 YoUnr postu11m IKlft 11 in· dan1., 11:00.auemm""' (C) bec1use sht witnnied 1 syndlc1t1 1't ..... ,.. ' • slaylnr: Guests 111 Lynn Lorin1. · Mlrit: (C) "'"n M!llrul" (sd- Bert freed ind Don Dubbins. I venture) '52 -A1111 ladd. Ylrainl1 ._ Q Million S Mtvit: "Cr1tk i• t111 Ma,o. Mlrn(' (drama) '60-0rton Welles, I ~ill,";: Sell (C) Juliette Greco, Br.dlor~ Dillm•n. rTI,,... m -ITI 11 (C) Ale.1nder l<nox. SIGIY 1nvol'lll 1 \JlJ -\V 16.!J ~ ... murder I~ P1ri1, 1 courtroom dr1m1 ltzilll Pmt Cfffw..ct and I clouble lova trl1n1lt. 11;15 a}) CJ) Clne1111 SiftntM11: "Break· m Trlrtlt ltf Clll*ilffllctl (C) (30) last Tn Bed." m llll}tf MIM' (60) 11:30 II Qfi m lllitl"f Criflh1 (C) Jim f.E Tadlnlul ConMir (30) (10 Jrlabor1. Taul An~•-ROI)' Calhoun, fD TIM CitJ Wltdltfs (C) (60) J1ck C.rter 11'ld B1t>r Doi 1uzst. GlCm .. ._ 134) Q @(j)&J --(Cl f'rorr•m or11lft1tti trvrn 811rti1f'IL '"'e ~oo m., ... •.,....1<> (30) "How To Sucutd HI 1111 Slocll Mafktt Without Re1!ty Tryina." ' Wh1n Debbie and-Ch1r1ottt become stockl!OidtfS. tilt stocl 1111rkel auf. leis aomt rtptreuuions. Groucho M1rx, OU11 and H1rritt Helson, Rose M1rit and Jtcoutlint BIPtt ru•st. 0 MM : "Clwr Cirt" (musical) ·« -G•n• llelly, Evt Ardtn, Phil Si1m s. 0 a> Didt Cal'ttt ft) OUo Prtm· ln&ltl', Dusty Sprinlfl1!d and 8ro!ller Theodora ruest. DMQ '"" (C) (30) Danny Thomas, M1r111d O'Brltn, Rtf· mond St Jtcques anti Rostm•IJ Forsrtht 1u1st. m Te Ttl Ult Trutti IC) (30) fJl W.11111 1M1 Ult Mitt .. (R) Ill-•·-(C) llOl 1:15 g) otflc:t el tM PnaitlMt (XI) (R) u o B ill Cil "' -(Cl (Ill) Mlck«J Roolllt' and Tinr Tlm runt Audrey Mudowl tnd Jtc:klt Coopn alao appttr. D @ @ G) J1ile (C) (30) "Gont With Iha Whim." Julia's n1!(tlbor l)'llQ 04aitl Scott) lh111b her l\US- b1M hu t1Mn 1 li-i111 to Julta. 0 ,... ..... Slttw (C) (JO) Comt· d1111 M1rtJ Brill suuts. .. DAYTIME MOVIES t:OO D "Diiie" (dr11111) '63 -.111111 Ct.wtord, Dlar1t• Bk:klOl'd, "Thrtt Mtft I~ a ltat" (comtcly) '5S- L1urtnet Hamy, M1rti11 Hunt. D "Slrt•p Cttp" (dtall'll) '40 -Oar• C1bl1, .lcl111 Cfllllflrtl. QI TYRONE POWER-BETTY * GRABLI:, 11 :30 KTTV GI Mtvlr. "'A Yid II tlll R.A.f." (1dwntur1) '41 -Tyrone Powtt, Betty Gr1ble. ID lltiM: -r-.. 111111 I lllllrlltl" (dram•) '47 -Join Bennett, IJ07'll ftl)llfl, 1:00 • ..,..: "TIM: ,... Alll1111" (1!11111) 'SI -Hedy l11n1rr, J1111 ftwtll, Gtdl;t ftadtr, Jan Sltrl!~s. DO-(C> It Al .. llM Slltw: "lovt Story,'' '1ht Pathflndtt tnd tht Mohteln.~ "Stran~ of lbt Swamp." 18 ~ Thih : "Nl1110f11." m (C) "Olrll'• e..,.. .. (Wiiiem) ·U..:V1rrlnl1 M•.10. 0111 Rob1rt1011. l~JO D .,... - --· (comedJ) '44 -Jtck ltllfl't, llllfl Ortw. l:JO m ''lln Te • 114• (dtltl'l'lt) '1i>-Jotn fontti11t, ROfltrt R11n. 2:«1 D "Tiit lll'IMl,lded" lmf'l•IJl •f1-Jo111 Ctullltld. Q1ude Rtllll • m ..... '"' "d"' i.,..,> "52-Rostmund Jo1111, Hurh Slndalt. PLAIN JANE )( ., PERKINS -~ 3 !' , . . MOON · MULLINS Mun AND JEFF •r •, GORDO MISS PEACH fU'l'u~E f2eS1DEN1l' •r f\r . ().1'f D I S1'ATES ~"' ,., ' .. By Tom K. RyCl!ft · . . ~, ... SALLY BANANAS \ ' . ' .. , ...... ..,.,.....- c,., ~. . . . I j t r i ~ • ". .:. ' . . \ .. , •. • ( ' • • ' I , • Tuescliy1 February 24, 1970 DAILY PllOT J /( ly Frank taglnski "I.;. -. / /; ...... • ly John Miles ly Al Smith ly Gus Arriok!, ... '\ I 1 . ~ . . ,,. ,_ .. ... "\. .. . . " . \ ly ChaNs i.tottl ~~~~~~~--. ' . , 1;;..·~ ~ ' •U l'1, v..' <ft I1/IM Ill! UT1l!Lla! o~ . ~J:l_ ~ -~~v . . ' \.._ .: s ~. ' -;;; I I I .. TELEVISION VIEWS Oaters Now On Way Out . By RICK DU BROW ' Schn. ' . ' HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -This television season 1aW a cutback in Western series partly because of the anti-violence sentiment that followed the as. sassinations of Robert Kennedy and Martin Luther King . SUCH SENTIMENT is, ol course, still strong -if not exactly as potent as a year ago. Neither ol lhe schedules announced by CBS-TV and NBC. TV for next season's prime time includes a new West· ern series. In fact, each of the net,vorks dropped one -CBS dumping "Lancer" and NBC disposing of," aniir"Boone." which actually \vas a Crontier taJ.-more than a straigfit oater. According to trade reports. however, he current network attitude toward Westerns sterns in great part from a Ieeling other than mere opposition to violence -a feeling that the cowboy tales are no longer as p(jpular \Yitb the key audience video· is seeking. THE SHOW business weekly. "Variety,11 in an articJe by its television editor, Les Brown, note1 that W~stern series are a "a tough sell, and the reaRon ts they tend to appeal to the wrong elements of the audience -wrong , that is . from the stand- point of youth·happy Madison Avenue." Adds Brown : "That's not universally the case no!. when the shows are in the top 10 Uke 'Bonanza; and 'Gunsmoke.' but it's the reason why 'Daniel Boone ' and 'Lancer' are finished at season's end \Vith low-violenc.e scripts, the oaters of yore have turned into period dra1na form that is not notably popular with the young 'crowd." ~ THREE OF NBC· TV 's five new series ne~t sea· so~ are variety shows-hosted by Don Knotts, Flip W1ls~n and Red Skelton (who is movln$ over from CSS:TV). Another series will be a situation comedy and 'the fifth an unannounced drama. CBS-TV's ne,; shows. meanwhile. will consist of three situation comedies, one variety program and two dramas . No Westerns an}"vhere in sight thus far. . As for this season's new shows, the series tn.. spired by the late .James Thurber's work, "My Worl d and Welcome to It," has been canceled. Pre- d.lctably, but sadly. a televis ion situation comedy simply . was an awkward place for the Thurber worl d to reside each week. OVER AT CBS-TV, by lhe way, tho long-running' Skelton series will have its time slot taken bver ne~t s~ason by the hilJbilly version of .. Laugh.Jn" \vh1ch 1s entitled "Hee Haw." One of the competing shows that this hillbilly entry wlll try to ·kn ock oU is "JuJja," starring Diah~nn CarroU. , De1inis the Menace -' . • ~· i-4 . I I, • • ·-if llAILY rtlOT I Williams Sa ys He Will -Not Pre'!ju-dge McLain . , POMPANO BEAal. Pl>. (UPll -'lllo W& JU)' to l.bt world IO cmdtmn anybody b Ted Wlll;ams. • lk kMn the loelln& ol caldllng ll r"'" all Pdes. Ht baJ be<o clowo that ~ and knowri il can bt: a dark and looely .... Ted W'llliams is a manager ~. Ur1ing bis seoood lime around with the WultngtoD Senalors. llut be still bas the .....,.D playa's pMJooopOy and hi> baiic a.a.incl is for a fe!.lo9' abllptayer. 'Jbe' ont thing Ted Williams won't do ls pre-judae Dmay Md..ain. ,..I "'-tly docfl 1toow enoup about ..... , happened." Ted Williams says. "AU GLENN WHITE Sports Editor Anteater Nine Gains· Split On ·One-hitter Bob Barlow pitched a one-hilter in the seven inning nightcap but needed a clutch bue hit with one away 1n the final frame by Tom Spence to gain a 3-% victory over Antelope Valley Monday aft.emoon on the UCI campus diamood. TM victory gave Irvine a split of the two games aft.er act hurler Denni• Nichollon was nicked for rive runs in the final IMlng of the opener to give the visitors a 7-5 decision. Barklw pit.ched strongly . in t h e nlgbtclp, limiting Antelope Valley to 1 run-producing single by Jell Cable in the third Inning. He atruck out 10 balt.en in seven lnnlnp, walked two and hit catcher Jim Godde twke . Barlow singled to open lhe 'bottom half of the 1tventh with the score tied, 2-2. but waa erased on a flekter's choi~ at aecond. Bobby Farrar stole secood and Rocky Craig WU purposely passed with Spence belting the first pitch to left field to bring F'arrar across. , NichollOn. bothered with a sore fl:loukler since h.is complete game vAcwry .Ner UCLA, attempted to pitdJ the final inning of the opener after Dave Wollos had done an outstanding job in reUd of lltarter Ben Wetzler. Nlcholaon gave up a hit to the leadoff Hatta but he was erased on a double play, He walked the next man and pinch l;lJlter Wayne Allison singled to right. Another walk loaded the bases and a ~ single to short right center field broUght two ntnS across. • Short l10p Terry Nel10n then belted a h"1i drive over the left fietd fence al 1bout the -'oot mark for a two run 1113B\ and what proved to be the winning ...... Wednesday afternoon they entertain Cal Stale (Fullerton) in a r;ingle game beginning at %:30 wilh Nicholson penciled Jn to start on tht mound. ..... ,. .. ,, A.tit. Vtl"' r71 UC l'"'lllf (U .. 't .... C•blt, 111 J 0 o o LIM. ti l 1 I 1 He!Mft,u 11 1 ' ~,rl •O ll \',,......,..., II • t I 1 °'f*l'L c; J f t I WM-Iii 1 10 0 a.11,a '''' 11(.tfll, e I 0 f I ... lllMA. "' 1 I I 0 10 ....... . WtltM.e 010 0 Ft rr•r, 1t S~i<Qr•, 1b (•1111, ct """"' , I 0 s..-•. ,, H•nMfl, u )I ...... ! .• 5/WIW.., t Wtot1ler, e Wo1lo1. 1 Pi.111'11. pl\ Nk llol.ori, P o·connor.o T1t1!1 24 I I e To111l 'olM• l¥ '""""' 11 f I rltl , 1 0 0 • l l • ' I 1 0 . ' ' ' ' . ' ' ' • 0 1 0 I 0 I I • 0 • 0 l 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 0 0 • 0 0 0 0 • 30 ' I l IV!lfloPt Y•tl~Y 700 000 1 -I I ) UCtrwl"' 0710101 -~ll WiN!lnl 111!ctorr -Kthl. Lo1h''!ll P!1d>tr - Hk/IOlloflfl Ct·ll. SECOND GAM• A111. VNlri' UI UC ltvlnt U! .. ,,,.i •~r,,... ~: ! ! ~::.::.~.II : ! ! : JOODCr1l1,<1 'ltl J I00~,10 4111 OlOtS.•1.if lllO '10 tPll ... rd.H 7010 101 1G.-er.:rttJOOO 1tOO A"''"'"·' tllO ti' IOOOtl••loow•ll JOIO •1111oo s.1n.-1.• 0010 ~ lfOOSt>tlJ,...,c ttoo •• ' 0 '""'°"'' ~:i. 0 • 0 0 11711 Tot11t 3710 1 kiwi "' , ...... , ..... V•tltr 111 Ollu 0 -1 I I .,,.,,.. 100 DOI 1 -> o 1 n... ..... ..,.... Wlflll""' ·~~ teor'H. .....,,.. eWcMr -••• i..... l••lnl eltdltt - '!•· I mow if •·hat t ttad. From what 11mn ol him pusonalJy he'1 a hd.luva nice Cu,. I feel !OtTf for him and I bope l.ho9e thlnp I rud ami't true. U I.bey att. he made (ft lttribit mistak~" Many players oa I.ht Wasbingtoa roster att in their ZO's and ltlll lmpressiooabLe, bJ1 Willlam5 didn't lttture than On gambllog D< being careful ol I.heir associatloos after the Md..aln affair came to ligbL '·Therf was ne need to." insisted the Washlngtoo man.ager, sitting in hlJ small office here fo1lowin& ~ intaisjve four· hour wortout during wftich he watched the activity from IH'minCJY everywbek. • • ..,..,. ... -things. ""' -automaUcl.lly," he oomrnmted. Williams. desipated m>nager ol the ,,.., In .... AmericaD League last ...... "i>en be guided the Seut.on '° u a1molt unbelitvable .. 11 roam! and founh pboe In the Eamrn Di.W.O, i.ou much more rdutd lhb spnog tbaD last. ¥f ban to say I feel a little more at eaJt.'' be owns us:i. '1bis time last year I'd haw. WWW stand beside mt and uy ... pobXiog out I.ht playen: for l'Df'. I didn •t !mow the routirw last year." Ted W"tJliams, •nwiager, sUTI is something of a novelty and still draws _.. 1!0io .""'"'1 to ,.. hJni; .. be'a .. 10 P1orWa to go lbhlng. He ...,,t to the DOI bdai ,.iJed elld Wgged lb& illJ, 811 World --and waldled among tl>atnyllJa>maayde<nands~bo--._GU Hodges. the......,., of the a year qo. Tbe mt.dia sUU .eeks aut Mru: .-S a ooHimt manager of the . W1lliaml but oot as mudl or as Smatata. r rolettllossly u last yur, and be -be's 1'llO llling that im,,......i Williams hippy about that. mast lbout Hod&es was that be never "I didn't mind coopenlittg at aD am! I -10 IOI ucil<d oo the bench. realise II bad to be doo!," be ..,._ "Al a "I a.ted bim what kind of plllJ he manager I knew I had to make cntain IUel lo kefp calm,·• Williams laughed. adjustments. But this way 111 have more fnim the World Series, WUllams went time to oancenlrat.e oo the job at bllld -on afari to Africa but his mlDd wam·t the playen. In all booesCY I'm pma fly entirely oo the animals. 10 wort banter daiQI UW thil )'UJ'." "I'd lay in the tent at ntgbt aod think When he finished his first yur as who we cculd trade for," he said. DJ8Mf"r. wmi.ms didtt"t rush rlglll boct When be got back for the t>ueball meeUna• In DeCflllber. he ond llab lllort, the senators' owMr1 tried to twine fl delJ for Nolan Ryan. ttie Mets' r11b~ fireballer. The MeU wouldn't Co for tt. ~n't understand why not,'' WilU&tm say1. "We damn near gave 'em the franchise tor him." Someilmu a ball club like Wasblqtcn. which is in an obvious rebuilding prooeu, flru and falls back. Wllllaml thinks otherwise as far u the Senators go tb1t year. "I think we can be better than wtwre last year," he say1. "U not. we'll be dlaappointed ... NCAA Playoff Decision Due Wednesda y • UCI Wins Han·dily, 1.02,. 7 4 By HOWARD L HANDY chairman and the other two committee °' ... o.i" ""' ..... members are Les Habegger (Seattle· 'Jbe jury'' out and a prolooged wail for Pacific) and Cla.renCe Kellogg (Regis a verdict has begun. eou I ) ' Coach Tim TUt'a UC Irvine basketball ege, Co 0· team romped to an easy IOZ..7f victoey Tift was impressed wilh the Anteater over vlsWnc Stanislaus College Monday victory Mooday eVl!ning. ''The kids night lo Crawford Han. played well. lt was their best game The Anlelten are now awaiting recmtly but you can't knock 10 of 11. Wednesday morning and a telephone "We'rt hot now and if that has any hookup to find out if they quaJify for an bearing on the selections, we should have NCAA College Division Western RegJonal setiot15 consideration.·• playoff berth. Thornton is cognizant of the University The waft i1 lt5I l.han two days but of San Diego (14-10). IEltlTll lib mt eternity fer. lhe·c-1'..U. ieo..-''We will have to hold a~~ ,review squad that has won 10 of ill last 11 ol lhe situation. That means checking the games. II of the last 20 and has posted a mutual opponenl.s of the teams. how each creditable lM 11ea.soo ~. ha! fared .agaiMt university class com- Ftnal two tu.ms and site of tbe'playoffs 'j)d]tiClrl and the ovm1ll records." will be determined by a commitlee of Thornton feels the UC! schedule is five including Ors. John CaJne of Cal tougher than USO and the won lost State (Fullerton:) and Ray Tborntan of record speaks for Itself. USO plays UO. · Loyola University tonight. Larry Kerker of Humboldt -S~ In Mooday'1 action , the Anteaters College in Northern California i 1 started like they were in a bargain base· - Chamberlain Decision Due By Lakers • LOS ANGELES (AP) -The Loi Ante~ Lakers plan to decide tonight wbether Wilt Olamberlain will sit out the rest''of,.the stason or ttjoin the club for the playoffs. ROCKET ROD AT FORUM -Rod Laver, a resident Of corona del -'Jbe-1ioot-~1 centtr· has been sidelined f\1ar and the world 's premiere tennis player, will face F,td St9Ue since Nov~7 when ht severed a Jendon in in Thursday's feature singles match in the $2.1,500 Los Angeles Classic ~ ~P in a game a"ainst Phoenix. at the Forum. Laver will team with Pancho Gonzalez in doubles and · 6 the duo is seeded into Saturday night's finals. He undel'Went surgery the next day and -------------'----''---'-'--------'.~. in recent wetu bas been working out on , ~ ~1 ~, lifting weights and playing Sports ita Brief Angels E y eing Torborg As Successor to Azcue HOLTVILLE -The California Angels. entering their second day Of spring l9ining today. are eyeing Los Angeles Dodgers catcher Jeff Torborg as a possi· ble successor to holdout Joe Azcue. .. .... , ... and ouUielder Len Ga'brielsoo -all big guru in the Dodger attack -remained unsigned. All • but~ ''ha\'e .not even contacted the ~~'Hallet haa been given permiasloii fu re.Port a week lale. vofleyball. General Manager Fred Schaus said he will diacuss Wilt's ~ible rttum with Laker owner Jack Kent Cooke and Dn. Bobtrl Kerlan and Frank Jobe before .tonight's game against tile visiting Atlan- ta Hawks , who are two games ahead of second-pla~ Los Angeles in the Western Division. Kerlan, who performed the surgery, said : "I'll present the medical facts at the meeting and they will be evaluated. If • decisk>n ia reached, we will al\ be behind it. It wt1n't be one of those things in which be can play but I don't want him to play." Chamberlain £eels he Is ready to return. Golf Hopes Soar ment where a two-for-one sale fi'll tn progress. They doubled the output of Slanlslaus for the first 16 minutes. UC lrVIM (1'21 SI ... ..._. ('41 "It"" CllMir!ll~•m I ' 2 22 Udl•J ~ 4 1Jf 8 rlmmt, Geort• 2 O 2 4 P1llO'I S..DI~\ 10 I 1'11 Wr"fll l1mtt •OllDv"""• 811,111111\aM ' J 5 14 L..ilN a.Ml I 0 I 1 Sllfll.., 1'1..,,.JI 4 O J I Po.,.,_ Gllvl-kll 0 I 0 I Coll lllktr I J 2 • HolirK• S11ehorn D D I 0 Fo1 1121 w11Hrm1n I 2 I ' .,, .. ., 2 J I f J J I t l •• t 1 I J '2 ' J t II S I I 1 1 I I S 0 I I I I I I l 4 I l I MlntO !001 Tor111 ~ 16 2l 107 Tot111 2' n 11 11 1o11lftln\t: UC lrl'kW ~ l.tMilit.i...___.!! ucr ,,..,. U'll · cs Piii..,.. Cffl ... _ ,.,, lUtc• lt•rvli: FO'#Jtr :Smllf> "".t"' fl.f!l'fr. J •l lOkolf tJl21 l •l 10Jlllllcl n 1112 I I •2• Nd!, 4 2 t it •I 2 • Cl!Wml!I I 2 Jll 6 $ $ 17 Stlm1ltl 1 0 I I OO IOtto•ll'lfllOll llSJ Aluor1t I 1 l I J-. lOJJ T011f1 1• ?2 16 10 Tift~ 30 t 8 • Hllhrme: UC I """"' u. F11lllrlon :0 UP I Tt191>Mt9 Torborg, however . is also a holdout. 1'he 26-year-0Jd righttuindcr. backing up Tom Haller. batted .185 in 51 games for the Dodgers in 1969. Atcue. a mid-season acquisition from Boston, batted .223 for the season . " I don 't Jnlenct to go look ing for any Gf the five,'" said Al Campanls. vice presi- dent for player personnel. "They know where we are. When I.hey get ready, they'll be here. I'm not concerned." "I'd like to st.art practicing with the team,'' Chamberlain said, "afttt tbey come back from the next road trip," a three-game set eDding March 4. Schaus, thlnltln&. ahead to the playoffs. said: "1'.m not saying we couldn't win it without him, but I think we'd have a much better shot with him." EveryUling's coming up roses for Arnold Palmer (right), who accepts the Golden Tee Award at M&Uopolitan Golf Writers Association 18th annual awards dinner. Comedian Bob Hope (left ) makes the pre!e&- tation . Both are said to be less than happy with their pr esent clubs which has led to suggestions Lhat a Torborg-for·Aicue swap Is in the works. Angels General ti1anagrr Dick Walsh said : "Just last week J t.alked to Dodger Vke Presidenl Al Ca mpanis about Jen Torborg. We were lhe only major league club tr claim him and . believe me. we 're interested. ··1 saw Jeff when I was with the Dodgers and I know that he is a su perb defensive catcher and a hiller who Is vaslly underrated," \Yaish said. "I asked "'hcther the Dodgen: want a young player r<!_r lhe future or a man who cirn help them now ," he said: "I expect to talk to Campanls again this week." • VERO BEACll. Fla . ..._Most of the Los Angeles Dodier a were runn.ing ' :iround Dodger town today, setting in shape fDr the bastball sea.500. But five of them were si tting back playing a waiting gnme with the front office. Pitchers Bill Singer and Oofl Sutl.On. c1ldltr1 Tom Haller and Jeff Torbora • KANSAS CITY -The National Collegiate Athletic Aasocl.aUon announced today selection of 10 at·large college basketball teams inv ited to compete In NCAA regional playofls fer berths In the nationBI tournament. Announced first we.re Eastern lime zone teams. Included were: ~t. Bonaven. lure 19-1, Villanova, 174 Niagara 19-f, Jacksonvi lle. Fla., 20-1 and Notre Dame 21>5. Also invited were Houston, 20-3. Mar- quette University. 19-3. New Pilexico State and UU1.h State. • Some observen have said Chamberlain should concftltrate on preparing for the 1970-71 season ind forget about th.is one sioce he might not be able to operate at full speed, handicapping the Lakera who now· depend on running and paS!ling. But superguard Jerry West, also sidelined, disagrees. "We deflnlttly could use an ef!tctlve Wilt in the playoffs," he said. Schaus added that Cbamberlain might be able lo contain or neutralize centers such as New York's Willis Reed . and Milwaukee's Lew Alclndor. West pulled a ham1trlng'ilfuscle lo last satu.rday night's game agal:olt San Dtego DA LL AS -U n I es s two pro-but ii expected back for Friday night's feaslonal teMis organlzatioos seUle lhe.ir game agaiMl Chicago. differences with the U.S. Lawn Tennis hA prolonged rest wouk:ln't help Ju· Association. defending champion Rod ry," aaid Schaus, "becauae he ha.I to play Laver may not be In the field for the U.S. , to fetaln hill fine timing." Open iri September at Forest Hills. 1be Lakers also pointed out that West Mike Davie!!, excculive director of '\f. the NBA scoring leader with If 31.1 World Championship Tennis ind Ge<rge polllf.s.per-game average -but will have MacCall. head rJ the NatiQflal Tennis' to ~y seven ol the club's rernafrUng 13 Uoag\)t. said lhe dlscuS!!kms with the ·1amu to meet the 70-game mlninium lo USL TA had been discontinued. quallty for the crown. Rupp Delighted About Being No. I Team Again By TliE ASSOCIATED PRESS Kentucky is back atop the college basketball heap for the fir.s t time in eight weeks, which is just fine with Adolph RupP -until the next four weeks go by. "Naturally. we're deUgh1ed to be there.'' the Baron said Monday night after his Wildcats: deposed UCLA by a whisker as the nation's No. I team io the weekly Associated Press poll. "Wt just hope we 're up there when March 20 comes along." Rupp's target date happens to be the night of the NCAA championship game, which could pit the Wildcata against the defending champion Bruins. first-place ballots and Jacksonville got the other. Kentucky was No. t until the poU of J 1n. 5, when UCLA moved up following 108-77 romp over high-ranked Notre Daine. The W i I d ca t s had nipped the Irish 102-100 six days earlier. UCLA held the top spot until Mooday, tightening its grip alter Kentucky was upset by Vanderbilt INl on Jan. 31. Until they bowed at Eugene, Ore., U\,e Bruins we.re the only unbeaten major power. uhn,_ T~ger Brass Discuss McLain UO..A '1 stunning 1U5 loss lo Oregon last. Saturday night. which snapped the Bruins' unbeaten streak at %5 g a m e ! several hours after Kentucky outgunncd ~islana State and Pistol Pete ~1aravich 111·105. htlpecl put the 'Ca rs on lop for the n..i Ume ~nee Dec. 29. Except for the Olp-flop at the top, the order of the first seven teams was the 1 same as last wee). Florida State, beaten '&>al by Jacksonville. dropped from the No.~8 spot to 10th. Marquette and Iowa moved up from 10th and 11th, re.spec· lively, and Oavldlofl dipped from No. g &o No. 11. f'IKI T-"-lllol ....... I. 11'.ifttudf Jl·I 1M 'l UCLA 21·1 Slit l. SI lcw\6Yfl'l!Vrt l'J.I CJt ~D, '1L (Al') -By oow It is ...,."'"" 1noJolotfle that aa .. ball eom. mW1oner Jlowle Kultn .00 Otlrolt Tiiier bra• ... u.,..upped •!!DU• th< Denny MclAJo litaatlon. • Jiu\ Tlatr officials art even wary about olmplf ldmlltlDC they had • meeting I --li<ll>lllt1 wlla• comm'eetoner. '"Maltllti' -meetlit1!" QJJ<lllonod manapr klyo Smith after the Tiger' ran throuah 1 s"' hour prlCllce Monday. ••J wtlll '°Tampa for dlnnt.t." SpeculaUon on lhe meeting rose when Mayo left practice on hour early with seneral manager Jim Campbell Sunday. "You ctn surmlle th re might have been a meeting," was all tht' c;iutious Campbell would say. However V~ Pre.~ldcnt Rick f'e.rrt•ll saJd thtre was liuch a meeting tit -ll.edlnglM Reach nc.ar SL Pcttrs.berj.J whe~ Kuhn ls 1il11ylng. Ht ackoowlc<lged · that he, Smith and Campbell \\•ere therr. ''Vta we did meet, 1 thought th11t much was known:• he 11nld . "I think Jt was ju11t a mailer of ln- formeUon , that Kuhn was trying to secure to help him in the investigation," he added. "I'd rather not mention spetlfics." -McLain was su.spended indefinitely by Kuh n Thur!Klay after a meetlna with f.t1 mpbcll-ln New York. Kuhn saJdlt.e &e· 1.~1. was taken Ill 1 result of A~ltted statementll by McWin assoclatlng h I m with lll eg11 I bookmaklng actl vlllc1 in 1967. Kuhn itaid the suspt.nslon would la.51. .•t 1 a.s t until Ute llrobc is com plete, but he has atven no indication how long lhal might be . Kuhn visited the Pittsburgh Piratts' training camp in Clearwater. Fla., Mon- day ahd wls qulued about the McLain case. He stuck with his earlier restric· tlve statements and said : "\.\'!le!I the time ~es I will have a good deal more lo say." · - "I think he wants to investigate in his Own way •nd I don 't want to get l11to that," Ferrell said. · ., Kentucky rtttived It first-place. volts. to II for UCLA. and outpointed the Bruins $34-532 in the weekly ballot of a panel or 29 sports writers a n d sportscasters. The \\'lldcats, who won twice 1111 Vo'tek, and the Bruins each took 21·1 records Into this week's play. St. Bonaventure. 19·1 through last 'rcckend's games, remained in third plact, followed b~ South CaroUna. New Mtxleo State, Jacksonville, Pennsylvania, Marque tte, Iowa and Florida State. In lhat order. South Car<Mlna nleeived three I 6. Soul!\ C.llltlr\.I 11.t S16 S, Ho• Me•ic. Stitt ,,4 DI 6, Jf(t;-IUt JO.I fl' 1, P....,lylveftll JJ.I l~ I. Mt•Qlltlttl , .. , 141 t, ~ , IM 111 10. '"'Id• $!lie tl..J 1-n. ~Vidlltl Jt•4 Cit U, \'1111!1•" Ktntvt~r lt·t IS U. Ne1r1 o.-lt.l It Tl.. N••lh C.f'911M S11t1 IJ.4 II IS. HOOAIOll tw .a •• 0.U;t ,... JO 11, K1ni.oo1 ~, .. ,, , .. , n 11. C~ll .I JO It. Nll'llr C.rollnt .,.. lf fl!. Utl'!I· '"" ~ • .,..... 'N AIM rt<tl'll!le ....,.., Ill tlptotOtliul 0!'1ltr: ('~ Clfl!lll!, Dllll:t. Lone llMCll Slllt, Llflllllll'Ule, Mktflr .. Ollll 1Jnlwr1Uv. OtlOOll-PYrd111, San11 O.rJ,; ICllllf'lo ltf~ CArtrotnl•, l-1e1, T111 ... EI P110, Ultllo ~ll18!'1ov .. W•Wllnolln II"'"· ·Sea , l(ings Host Glenn CdM Alter Repeat I.st . R.oundWin For the fourth straight year Corona del Mar High School is the scene of a ClF basketball playoff opener tonight -this time an AAA duel with in. vading Glenn High, ruMerup in the Suburban League. Tipoff ls set for 8. And if the past is any in- dication. things look rosy for coach Tandy Gillis and his Corona del ?.1ar quintet -the champions of the I r v I n e League for the third straight year. On each prior occasion the Sl•rll"9 Ll11t1.111 C.W"'11 ft! Mtr Gltllll ,,, At.MY F kijli.n &.3 4-1 110)1eY F Gflellh ,.] •·> Mol'•tn ,._o fMQVllrO l-1 Voru.,.,. c 11v1.. &.J G Holltl\Cltr $-1 G Conrov ...0 Sea Kings have dea ll the In· vaders a first round loss. The Norwalk-based Eagles, however, sport Impressive credentials, including a 19-7 overall mark and an 8-2 league record behind champion La ~1irada, which dealt the Eagles their only two loop defeal.'i. Coach Robert Lougee's five ha s, i'mOOg other things, defeated Excelsior (4·A San Gabriel ~ague champ) and Lynwood (San Gabtiel run· nerup). The Eagle11 won the Norwalk District Tournament and they've racked up their good record on the strength of a man·~man defense and the hot shooting of Dave Morgan. Morgan, a 6-3 senior, chalk· ed up a 23.6 league scoring average and mate Ross Bogey {6-t forward) averaged 15.8. Included in the starting lineup is Nonn Maggard, a S.. foot senior who's a younger brother of Gary and Dave 1.1aggard, a couple of former all..CIF performers. The Eagles won the Suburban title last year but fell lo Rowland in the first round of the playoffs. Corona del ~1ar enters the tiff after winning its last three games in Irvine battle to cap- ~the title. Chief among the Sea King riecutioners has been fotward Don Killian, a 6-3 junior who has come on strong. JUs mate in the front line is sophomore ,.Uke Sevier, 16-3) who's held his own against the op· posllion's tallest p I ayer ustially in the Sea Kings' man· fo..man defense. · Tim Conroy is Corona'g top ball-handler and noor leader. ·He has an excellent turn· around jumper move from outside. Killian was especially ef. fective in the Estancia fracas SalUrday with good ri11ht- handed moves from the lefl side Or the buket against man·to-man pressure. CORONA DIEL MAR ru.111 • NewllOll M••bar llor"!1ltl , " (1llf0t,,l1 Hl•h " " LIW!ll 81..ch Mlt!lt1n .. " Domin_, • " $1v1,.n1 " " L1ttwood ., " W1•1l!~ " • R1mon1 " " M1t11Jln1t011 S.1ch ~ " W1rrfn • " l l)llt a..c11 Ja.rd1n " " Edli.on ~ " Fount1lnV1ll1v .. " Co•l• Mt11 " .. lot•• " " 51nl• A"' V1llfY " " E111nd 1 ~ ff Eo9l1on ~ .. F-!1ln V111tv ~ " Mtf.-.0!11 .. " Cotti MIU , ,, " Loer• ., " S1n11 Ant V11ln " " Etllnc!1 • GLINN !lt -11 " S1nt1 "~ " ., flt11110*ff " " E•ce111of • " Hdl .. ~ Ha.rwt1~ " • l• Mlr.O• ~ " lurt.MI " " St" Gtbrlfl Mfl-1'°'1 " " .t.rr&Yo " M HorWtl-" .. Slt HI " " LY!'tll"OOd " " Lt Qulnit " .. lvn....:ocl " " MOllM V11!t " • W1rr•"' .. .. l• Mlrtdl .. " '"' .. " Gt hr M u MtV!t!r " " Ar!e111 ~ ~ ·~!t~lr-.lt " " " C.•11• ., .. .t.rt1111 " u M1vt1I• " oAn. Y "'LOT 11• """"' Gatacho Two•poi1ate1• Sadd.leback College guard Eric Christensen scores basket in recent De.sert Con· fererice basketball action, The Gauchos have won five straight conference games and end the season Saturday at Mira Costa. Christensen is a fresh.man from San Clemente. · First Playoff Tilt f 01~ Eagles; Aviation Ha s Big Front Line Coach Bill Wetzel and his Estancia Eagles enter the CIF AAA basketball playoHs for the first time in lhe five-ye ar history of the school tonight when they travel to Redondo Beach to do battle with Avia· lion High. champion of the Pioneer Lea,gue. Tipoff Is at 8 o'clock. The host Falcons present a Wetzel's EstanciR club will try to counteract the Aviation attack with a run-court man· to.man defense and an of- fen~ive attack geared around center Skip \Yilllams (6.fi) and forward Gary Orgill (6-0 ), who are comrtantly dr iving towards the basket. \Villiams is lhe leading scorer for Estancia with a 17.1 ''eleran lineup that consists of s1.111..,. LI-• three all-league performers '"' ""~~;ntl• F Je>11!::.'''°11 ._l from last year and they 4--0 O••IH F Ho11v ,,.. ._& Wlllllm~ C Coke--~-J possess a front line of &-5. 6-4 S-1 Htv• c; 81111<1! ~-0 and 6·J. 5-t 511tOllllr.M.$V G Monl81t\1~ ~-1! Dlr11;llons If Avl1tlon HI"" Center Fred Coker 16·5), a Nnr111 .., S•n D!evo Freew•v to Htw· ' ·or h v g-• 16 por·nr 111orn1 a1vd. ''""°"· Nortll °" "'"'' JUru • as a era = s "'°'"'• 1~1 on M.!f'tti1n~n 1111c11 e1~d. per game and was a first.team sc11001 1oc:1ted 11 ms Mioo•n•n selection in the P i o n e e r -'-'-"-"-'-'-"-· -'"_:'~-=~::_":.::.'"'::_· _ League as a sophomore. The rest or the Pionccr quintet sports finely balanced i;coring slats with b o I h forwards and a guard Y.'ithin fractions of one another in the l5·point range and guard Sam Bunch hitting at a 10-poinl clip. The Falrons like to run and shoot and sport impressive wins during the campaign. Among others, the Pioneer League diamps have beaten Long Beach Pol y and Verbum Del and lost to AAAA power Palos Verdes •. 56--54. Twice tbey've h.it JOO -points or belier in their last five league outings. league average and is !he sole rebounding strength for the Eagles. The rest or the Eagles 1neasure no mi>re than 6-0 and with Williams out of action the Estancia crew resembles a five-guard offense. \Vllliams fouled out with 3:52 to go In the lltle decider wilh Corona de\ Mar and has found himi;eU in constanl foul trouble during the course of the campaign . The hosl~ have won league championships lhree times in the past six years and are a consi.!rlenl entranl In the playof fs. Coach Ken Brown of Avis· lion says his tea m Is not fa st -"but quick ." \Vell·balanced scoring I !I Aviation's fort& according lo Brown. •sTAHCIA Cl .. 10 SJ N~WJIOfl Harbor •r SS Wt•lrnin•ltr 11 ,. l•ltlll'• "••Cl ., " Mlulon l/~lo SI 51 Lo• "l1m!to1 JS "'K~1 ~ s• Trw 111 SI Servllt! JS IO S..rv11e •1 SS fir-et il '5 El Oflr..,-o 54 61 COih Mf:lt 11 •• M•tnot11 is s• S•n'• An1 v111ev ,. SS lo.•1 67 14 Founl4ln V1llf'1 I.I 12 Edltoft ~· 36 Ca.rOM del Mir s~ TS C01t1 Mtll M 61 MHllOlit •J 64 1•"11 Alli V11!tv 0 SS L06tl .IO .IO Fou"t1 l11 VtlltY JJ Joi Edli.on :19 "'6 COl"Olll *' MIT JI AVIATIOM (U•O II Leuril'lff• 4J W Wnt lo-rr•"« n 14 Rtdotldo U ll l.O'l'G'Y " J'O Wint Torrtll(t 11 S1 a19Mo MoflttorM,., 4 1J l-Si:Kll PolY W Sol 00w...... " S4 Pt101 Vtrdet 5' W H-tt>or,,.. SJ 76 Mtr1 Cos!t 10 n 1..,111'l'OOCI w IS ..... trbl.rm Del '4 4' ~"''' Mot1kt Sol SS •om"' Hiiis SI to"'LtllllOW " 71 Cufv1r C!ty '1 1' a.wrlv Hilla U tt Ltutlfttl'r 5J 11 l!I ktu""° U M Ltw...,1lt s• 11 M!r1lar1 '° 101 l•!>llOK 41 l'O !lev1rtv MlltJ< n ., El s...u~do 1f 100 L•wlld1lt SI 18 Mlr•lelll U Mater Dei To·ps Final Poll P.tater Del. Santa Barbara and Los Alamilo5 have re· . t.ained their No. I rankings in the fhlal county and Clf basket.ball polls. for third place hono:-s follow- ing Los Alamitos in second place. AAAA Place Team Polnu J. Santa Barbara CZU) 1%9 2. Palos Verdes: (234) 107 3. ~1omingslde (21-3) 93 4. fl.1illi.kan (2J.3) !II 5. Cresccnta Vallty (z.1.3),4fl 6. Notte Dame (19-S) ~ 1. Compton \18-3).. 49 a. Pacl!le 12 .JI l1 l~ills 4, Soulh •!Ills 3. Buena On.ANGE COUNTY TOP ti and Dominauei 2, St. Anthony Plare Teim Points and Santa ftlonlea I . AAA l. Mater 0.1 f:!MI 31 I. Los Alamitos (25-1) 1IS 2. Los Alamitos (25-1) J4 2. Verbum Dt-1 (21-3) 108 3. (0€) Westminster 3. Rlghetll !22·tl JOO (JUI 33 4. t.a.ucrr C!3.J) 81 (li<l SanUago (22-4) 33 ~-Aviaton (23--4) i t 5. Marina (IM) 28 6. Chino 121~1 !16 1~ Sanliago c2\-4) 49 6. VIiia. Park <IM) 20 a. Nonhvlew (22..1 ) 411 7. Randlo Alamlln&,lM) 19 fl , Raocho Alam itos (10--a 21 8. Troy (17·7) 9 JO. Villa Park (JO~I JI 9. Kaftlla f21Ml S ..... , .... •..-·-·· DAILY PILOT 1.t Marina, Lions Face Diahlos Face Griffs . LB Teams Los Alamitos Ha.s 25-1 Record rr momentum carries any Wi!ight, fl.1i.ulon Viejo High School 's varsity basketb111I team might be in line to pull off the stunner of the year tonight when coach P a t Roberta' crew invades Los Alamitos In the opening round oI the ClF AAA playoffs. The host Griffins have posted the best overall record Two Long Beach p r e p quintet. -runnerup Poly or the Moore League and Angelus League champion St. Anthohy -will furnish firsl·round op- position to the Sunset League's tandem or champion we~tminster and ru1merup tl1arina in lhe ClF AAA.A basketball playoffs. Thus -coach Don J.,eaver,'s s1..-.1111 Ll11111•• Mia*o v11i-..._ Lt1 At.ml• Westminster outfit hosts a oe .. 3 Athtt•ft F C111"1t1..,.... •·s it met in early season battle -~., :;:;! ; ~,.. ::! ind lost 78-71 in the S·• Holtt>tt G Gr.,.,_. •-1 Westminster-Marina touma· c•~•~w="='"~'-..,,.0:.....::.°'=""'::::.. __ ;.';.°' ment. b1 Orange County with an \m. Marina faces a ball-om~rol posing i&-1 mark that includes outfit-that stormed to a S.1 It --lltraight Ora.nae.. League Angelus League record. St. wins .• Anthony will be the home And, they're seeded No. I In team. the 32·ttam affair and were Of the 32 berths 1vaJlable, 3t voted, lhe No. I team in CIF have been filled with the: AAA circles in the final balance of competitors to be sportswriters poll. released Wednesday. . They ha v'e, hov.•ever. been Undefeated Santa Barbara virtually unopposed in league drew, the No. 1 !;eed, meelin.g play with the exception of Santa Monica In the opening Katella 's dangerous crev.•. ~alvo. Mifslon Viejo, 1nean\vhile. ..... ll•"' l r•cktl Slllllt Monka ti S•nll l•rbt" Mor11lrttt1d• t i l•nWOOC ~Int tt 11. Mn-v Nol'l't 0.mt II "•ude11t llll'lllV Hllll 1t "tcllk Arc"'-II lolrlll Mlllt Oomlllfi,N:I ti Mlllttt" Wftl Torr•11t• •I Pioneer l.9-lf"kktl lutlMI •• "'"" Vudn Wttf Cowlflt ti E•~lllor PIV. lll: ti Comllfool Wll\ttllr •• Nor!ll 'fa.rrtnc:• • ..._ .. Trtv l-~tCI "•"" •I W"""'"''"' LoYol•- cr-•• V•lte¥ M ~ ... u,_ '""~" Slnlt P1ui. ti L• Ctntdt •lcloll'tlMloll 11 U .. wn~ Wllwn "tllft""1pr'"9s .,_."•I• Vffdl (81¥11191 Centr•I 11 "'l'UC•IH L-lr.O.t! 141,_ Gr•llCl1 al Flllmor• Wlll'IVl el .. llo.,dtM k~f· '1'111:1 11 1111 1,.ula 0.~ W01"1(m111 •I tWrt Wilt Plavs ,/ Volleyball At Laguna The Laguna Beach Jligh boys' gymnasium will be the scene tonight at 7:30 of ooe of the most Wlusual volleyball exhlb!Uons held anywhere. The feature will pit a three-- man outfit of Laker blsketball star \Vilt Chamberlain and com·es Into the le't on the heels or a six·g~e wh1ning string in the rugged qreistvlew League and they did It with a * {:; '{;{ MISllON VlfJO l"·t) " K11t!t• n " Norto • " Edl1D11 • " Loer• " • S•n!J An• V•llt • " " SM1<1~~1c.1! • " Ell•M'-" " S•fl c11mc1111 -" " .,_, " " lltul\I h•t~ .. .. St<'vlte " a Footlll!I " a o .... ,. • M "EIM..,.... " " Tinlin " n Ltt""'• l1•cll " il V.IUt Ptrk .. .. Sllfl C!trMr>lt .. " f'oollllll " n O••nte .. .. IEI MOdefl• ,, .. Tllilln • 1111 l..ltDU!">I lttd> " M VIII• PtA " • $1n Cl.men!« ,. t..01 ALAMITOS lt!-1) n lfNTI " " 5•nlleve " " lot11 kee~ r o1v " " W•rrll'll " • F oun11ln Vtll•Y .. " Wt1tern " " Fonl•n1 " " s.o" Clemtntc " " EMt"d'I " M Wet1t•~ .. " M1h!r Ol'I " " Sf>"' Clemen!t ~ n ....... " " IC1tt1l1 .. " LP"'"l-" " Vtlt f'lt lt .. " 8 r11 " a Stddl~ " " Et Do.-ldO " • ""'" • ~ ~~!• " volleyball g r e 1 t s Gent Selznick and RotLLou ogalll.01 Rustler s Host a si:r·man Laguna Beach All· Star squad. ff h T • I t Me mbers of the Laguna a r Or Ollig 1 rlne fast-break offense that at times runs hot ind cold. l.41ely, the streak has been on the hot side with guards Rick \Vaqsley an~ Rudy liolmes &Jong with center Dan Kralt. who have b e e n responsible for the Oi&b1o surge. ( partlcul1rly pleased in dra 1 ing ~Vsslon Viejo. I Just ~ that we can stay wllh them 10(. two or three qu.arters a~ wear lhem do'Ml phy1l.c.ally,1?l says Vain HQrn. Coach Ezra Van Horn of Los Alamitos says lhc major st rength of his Griffins is m the 2·1·2 zone defense lbat they present. In all. I.he Gr\ffs have allow· ed 39 .8 -points per gan1e to their opponents -and-il figures out jusl slightly over 44 per game ou!side of op- position ullli.zing istall tactics. "As the top.seeded team in the playoffs, ~ l'm n o t Leading Uie Griffins a(,. Mike Grimwoe>d and Dall' Soderbtlg. who have average¢ JS.I ind 13.7 per game alone "'ilh sophomore guard Rick Quinn. 1 l There seems to be no we<lk spot b1 the Griffing' arrnof' with the shortest starter checking In at 6-1. Diablo hopea wtte rockt.d somewhat after starter J1 Afaisterson turned his ri ankle in practice Moodl)'. He'll be replacet4 by Ste Ashcraft, a junior. • Two MV Players • • • .. • ' Em·n Loop Honors ~ Mi ssion Viejo High's guard combination of Rlck Wads- ley and Rudy Holmes garnered all·league bertM ln tM DAILY PILOT's listing of the o(!icial All.Crestview League basketball team. Wadisley 1\·es named to the first quinte~ while tlolmea grabbed a second team berth. The pair has bee.n primarily responsible for the Dtabloa third·placl! finish in the Crestview League and the Diablos. are currently involved In CIF playoff hoe:tilities -1 first, evj:r feat for Mission Vie"o in any sport. Pl•ycr .oflbe-Year Jaure.is went ' to Foothill High'! Bill Boyd, a 6-7 junior. l Bill Oates of champion -Villa Park-was named coach of ~ the year. -:..· ·tr ·tr . ~1. * * ·~ "' ALL-CRESTVIEW LEAGUE l!'trst Team " •• Playe r Scbool Holgbt Class Avg.,.l, Bill Boyd Foolhlll 6·7 Jr. 23.2 • Maril Olson Villa Park S-0 Sr. 15.S , 1 "lark Johnson El ~fcxlena 6-3 Sr. 19.1 Wally Hamer Orange 5~ :;ir. 15.8 ·~ Rick Wadsley Mission Viejo 5.9 Sr . 16.5 • Second TF1m .:• Sal t.ombardi San Clemente S.10 Sr. 14.3 .. J;>aul Zyskowski Tustin 6-S Jr. 16.0 Stan HeJn Villa Park 6-2 Sr. 13.t ,, Rudy Holmes Misaion Viejo >-9 Sr. 12.l t Craii Grimm Foothill ~5 Sr. 10.4 •C ·' Player of the Year -Boyd , Foothill f"oac h o( the Year -Bill Oates , Villa Park • .. Lightweight Basketball": JY •AHC:•T•~LL team are Phil Anderson, Dan l!1t111C1• 1•1 , .. , c-1 *'Mar MacFarland, Toni Ling· o, Tom Golden West Co I I e g e 's Fl'ltdtrldorl (o) F no11C11ttttr bask.{b.11 •--m has l t1ltdorl (Ill F 0 2) surnMr Wells, Chip Harrell and Dave Ka wo more eo"''r n1, c (n 01t1r Cottlngton. chances to Improve on Its ic11,.,, ct1 G 1n c11t1rev d. mal ••ason re d h th s1...,,rit 10 G 1,1 c.mer1111 Two e1cellent w o m e n ' s is ,,... cor w en e korlM wb" core... dtr ,..,., _ volleyball units -the national Rustlers host a pair of OUMn 1. w11st J, LorttPt"e 1• e111,... South. C a 11. ( I C cit> -HtYn 11, Fa.rd J. lillist Long Beach Shamrocks rn ° r n 1 on· w11i...11111er 1.-i cM1 M•rl"' and the Southern California ference foes this week. ll•n""• rn F n11 •051dor> Champl·on W'•dJammers _ Tonight, coach Dick Morrow 1•1 , (O S•Pllltr' •. s . kl. • f L Olt•I•-fil l c IHI !lull .-·.,· will square off in the co-tnc in s team aces A ,,.,, n1 G u 1 ThlHm IMI• An• v1nn uu "'1 c• t • le.lure. Harbor and Thursday East LA M...ctctr• 121 G nu •ew•llll Frrsllt (01 , 111 ~ · d Both ·11 ..__ Sc:orlftll 1Ubl: Mtrl"' -'-\or•~ J. ltlonltl llll F 1'1 IClll!fow Leading the Shamrocks into tnva es. games WI uc wn11111"ner -Helt '" La"ttff 3. Alim•" roi c 1111 5.....__~ action are Olympians Ninja played at Orange Co a s I •11,,.,!~~';9" tu1 ,,uun::':~, ~:U ... 7~:1u1 ~ 1s'1'b..C:: Jorgen50n and Barbara Parry College and both get under .. IC.II cn1 F 1111 z.11e1or1 Sc°'r"" wbl: /SAVI F'llkfs 1. cu"" I Way at 8 Pm -McNtY (10) C 1111 C...•o• •'-.. -' c-•••• '' ,,._I --• Pus all·American D1111e Hoff. · · ... ''""'11 ''' • <•1 ,, •• , ~ ... ··· "" ~· ..._,., ..,,_.., Golden Wes( h •21 "" W.IM I, L-re " C~hdl 1. Mc,.,,. man and National rookie-Of· as a ,.. •· T"'"'""''°" CJI G 111 st-•rlf 11nc1 1. Grlt•b~ 2. the--ar Belli Holl;••er. Olher season mark and a 1·9 con-l!dl•on tubs: w1111•m1 t.,, •· r"""""' ·1 . ,. ~ ( d ton !ii. C•rlton !11 •Ml kl'looi.r U). H•llllmt: Coren• dll Mir :rt. l..A., out.standing individuals on the _•_re_nc_e_re_co_r_. ______ ·-="="=M="='~"~'='n=1="~· -----~v~·='"~·~'='---------.;, naUona l championship team include Cathy Hollinger , Barbara Brushert, Ca thy Brushert and Shirley Ammon. The Windjammers, who are noted for their travels to faroff places and for their oc· casional television ap. pearances, boast of three \\'Orld 'class players -Miki f\.1cFadden. Janette La lrielle and Sharley Buhlig. Also in the Windjammer fold are AAU rookie-of.the-year Cathy Gregory and a 11 • American Christy Hahn, Linda Phillip, Rose Ann Wegrich and George Jean Garvey. Admission for tonight 's af· fair Is $2 for adults and $1 for students and children. All pro- ceeds will go to the families of the Puerto Rican g i r 1 s voll.eyball team which was wtped oul In a recent plane crash In the Domi n ican RepubllC. Area Swim Honor Roll Of•1111t CO.II trn 1wlrn honOr •Oii 111~ Of! wlnnlnt llll'lf• Ill v1r11.-, <Omo Hltflol\ 81\lf. 100 M .. ltv Rtl•f -I. (~ fsl MAr (atrt~ J.tdllOfl, """'"d' lledl 1:41.S J. Cot" Mtst 11•.1 J, M•rl"' 11 ... 7. 1!11 F'IM -I. l(rvll'IOll(ll, !CdMI l:ft.2 '· Sltnl'ttltm ICdMI l:n .1 J. 1..0 CCOMI l :Ja.(. M r:ret -1. llf•"•rd ICllMI 77.1 J. HlllnMfl (CCIMI n .1 ). Grftr CNHI n .t. M tllC[i.lfWt Mfdlno -1. fYllll fHfll 1:N.t 1. IC"""""'*r !C4Ml J: ... I J. M..t!Mft CSCI t :ll.J. lDI ,.., -I. IEWlllS lHa) .W.S 1, ler111rd ICCIMI SI.I J. MCCIMIVIM't (ll'llT~I Jl.6.. Ml trret -I, llfc.11 ICdMI n .1 1, C. W•rt fl~I Sl.t l Mce-.ll9flty CMtr1ftlll JI.I. 100 ltcJI -1, Ml1loltk ICM\ .W.I 1, L. 1'-"'"""'fl (l.11,wiclt ) l;OOJ J, ''""' tH•I l :D0.1. «10 '"" -1. ICrtlfl'l-4\0lt (CllMl 1. IJ• eiPlwM"' l outlleY tCdM) t lld Hl,IOl\el tCdM) 4104.1. Windsor, theonlywhi born · high in tile Canadian Rockies. ,.--.. , " '( . " ., .. • The P.lonarchs, who finished their campaign with 1 20·6 overall mark. ~ere Mar· unbealable against Orange County opposition, defeating Los Alamitos, We8tminster and Rancho Alamitos during the COUIM! of the season. Five of the sl1 Monarcn 1Wia were lo non-Couiity team•·· 9. Loyola C!l-4) 22 Others: La Mirada 4, JO. Sunny Hills (IMl 3' ICO lru1t -I, J. UO..ttlt ICM! 1:6',t 1. f. 5_.1t!r /CMl-1:01.J J. wunemt 11MrlfM1~1:tf.'•-- - WINDSOK~ll!t;CtNl\DLUf+ lhe smoothest whisky ever to arne oot of Canada!. '{ I ---• ---=--+-i i Westmlnmr tie<! Santi•&• Kalt lln,-MIU!eMc al!lr-vt~-othett!·-FOllll1111, IHlon tory VaUey 2. Sanl.a MarJa and Viejo, HwiUnaton Buch Glenn 1. each. 10. 1'a&\dtna (21;~) 18 Others; North Torrance 10. Pkmecr 8, Montevla 6. Sunny 4QO l':i'ft lt•l1v -1. (Of11111 HI MM ,.._ ~ft.tTMrd, S!tf!M(f"", IC ' 11111 I l'I I I I ' CWOWIWlllfll;Ntl.UO•M lltllll •-'tll'lllllTIMll.lllflWllll'llOMn .. 0'1111 , -.r I •••ttl Jin.• 1. c.,1, Mn• J:ll.4 i. .. ., • t11111c:I• J:12.1, I--------;--------------...:.-------~-----,;_ ) I ~ .~ .. " ' -·- . • • • . • • • • • • . HOUSISPOltlALI IHOUSIS POii SALi HOUSIS POii U.tl !HOUSES FOii SALE HOUSES FOR SALi I HOUSES F~ SALE HOUSIS FOR SALE ......,.. • 1!!! -II . .10!'0 O~r~I , . I~. o.,,.ral ' llOO O...al 1111_ Oanoral 1111 ~~ clal Mar:..__!250 Huntlntton Baacll 1400 ~OUSES FOR ~LI H'li\ll~pton Baacll 1400 . T u.li N . 0 N 11 A ~ w A IM ' HEART n~% LOAN, NO PTS. FOREST I. r your Io v e d one a~ ..... ard. her wltb a ttartior "View' Hllls. 4 BR. L s o N ONLY $29,500 S BDRMS/2~ BATHS N>'par1<& ..... piJ1t.IO)ll1'C. homt in ve1:Y desirable .art1. HAFFDAL REALTY l • . . ' READ ·THIS If you are In the market for a NEW home, see these outstand .. ing customized homes, built by Frank H. AY!'<• and Son, local· ed in 1 prime area ve·ry close to HunUhgton State Beach. Tb• home• are priced from S27 ,550 lo $33,890 and vary in alr.e from 3 lo 4 bedr<>om.s, 2. to l 'car gar- . ages and 2 to 3. b•\h•. with shake or nlission ' tile. roofs .. fife.. plares. undergrQun~ utWties, concrete driveways. bullt-lns. and carpeting. Tbere la VA and FHA financing available, There are 4 homes available because of credit rejet:tions. Occ~tJ:'ancy by March I, !1171l in °!Js ljltil. Our next unit is now on· sal t for · occupancy in May and June 1970 and Introduces the new 3,000 sq. tt. ''EJ Dorado" lllodel priced lrom'31,490. . Ranlhe La Cuett• H°"'es en a ,-eokhurst at Atl1Rt1, Huntlnt!oft Baalh ____ ,,. --- --. --·-- ---- ·SOUNDS FISHY r . 1000 ... but __ irs a whale. of a buy. Hunlinlton Beach 4 Bd., 3 both , dining room. and built ms. Only $35,500 and a greal neighborhood. ORANGE COUNTY'S LARGEST 2629 HARIOR BL VD. Sf6 • 1640 Ol'&N EViS TILL l ::JO ·Gen.rel 1000 DOYER SHORES FOREST E IAYFRONT • twinkle of nlle ll&hla, by opentna the drapes 'ih thls lllllll4e llaven .:.... enchanting 3 84,, 2 bath home.01Utod.on a bluff winking' bac~ 3l th.,.clty of 'Huntlnfton Bead<. Wolll4 you believe only 125,l!OO. See this cozy. warm charmer and "dlc" the potbelly !irepli_ce .. . 'w1 •,_ .•-.u Broadmoor home only i yn. o · dreamy k11<:hen th •pact abo1111dlpf. Sep-old. Roomy • well planned. arate laundry room. Y.t b a t b of( kitchen 1.$. cor!wr lot. lfe•t view! 111v11 kiddie traffic. 836,900. Owner will 3 Car pr. Qwner w/cat'r)' help finance thta 4 Bd. home In 11'AA" area. 2*J. Juat mfucod to $67,900. · <eve-. 54MM8l -r,,-, ........ »- ' OltANOI COUN'rY'S LAROIST OkANGI COUNTY'S LARGIST' t-2629 HARBOR aL VD. 546 • l640 ~11 11 ,\111U11 Ill 111\ '" ' 2629 HARBOit ILVD. •541 ·t640 OPIN" IVIS TILL l taG Ol'IN IVIS TILL 1:30 ' -1======:;;::;:1-;=::======IFORS)iLI BYOwNIR I;===========:.=;,=""==== Gentrel 1000 Newport a..ch 1200 Howe le pri.1e apt on l 101. G!!)!r•I 1000 I General 1000 1-;;;;;::;;ii:~;;,;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;. ---------E "h 2 br, 2 ba.. Rear untt .............. _...., __ -'-"'--'---------1· 8/& C'Un'f:nt inctme ms mo. w AL K TA!<E YOUR PICKi NW' Ne ...... Harbor Yaoht awm1,,. fN>nt wtit. Frplc, to the b t a c h. Spotleas 4 Bd., & bath and Golf cour.. Club! Between Bay and bl)' winck»I" Pine panell""t. formal dlnlng rooin horn~ plus manY" extru. P:elrway CutteMt Ocean. Attractlve OUf'LEX Vacar-t &. ready to move In. Ownet ttan~trred, so for $37,950 you had $67,toO to $19,JOe • one bedmom each unit. .Price $49,500 with ne,ooo better burly. ... Capri LIM Larse front patio, ·out-0f. down. C9.11'673-5218. t.ovely bll Mme of oo~ State Owner hu reduced 2501 OCEAN ILV'D. block construcUott with ele-price and wUI cal1')' paper OPEN DAILY 1-S , .. ted fairway view. Z BR, • No loan coat to BU¥er. Spectacular, panoramic vlt\v 1511:25, beamed celllnp, 'nldi-$34.~. of entire ~y, ocean 4 Cat. OkANGI COUNTY'S LARGEST ant heat, lots ot Korea~ ••Y: & .. •ch Rlty, I~. aHna. Fee simple. 261' HA)t90R ILVD. 546 -1640 etc. Quilt unmual -~\IP. 9'1DOYerD-tve,Sul~J.26NB Rich lrwfn, Realtor OFIN •vis TILL 1:30 1116 Jamaica 114 .... iotlO Eves. 173-LSM 2443 E. eoa.t Hwy ... i "'====ii:r=0:::::=7::i==:i::::=====•I Aboltt 4.otlO '4 n hol't "1••· S~ICfiCULAR VI IW Mac Arthw-. CdM """""" OeMral tlOO Ganer11I ..... '"'-""-~---lllllO turlng black wolmif .. ,..,. of :l:JR•OR e "-l D•lly 1·5 e ina: p]ore, atr cond. 1ame l LI ISLE ..,.. 5 Units lorns $8,400 Sl'IOl1 \IJalk lo the bea<:h, I j block to t1'tt eenttr 61 lo'A'JL Large 2 bt.aroom un its al- 1\~'I rented. EXcellent fin. anclng i.vana blc and 1110d rttUrn on lnltifl inwstmMJt. Pneea-to setrat $&9,jfld, Colesworthr & Co. room tn addil~" to 1oun11y 716 L RKSPUR dininc I.: breakf.ut rooms. lmmaculatt 2 BR. home FULL PRICE. Nea!, apac-very, eleganL 3 Bedroom + extra rQOm . La.rp, covered patio. lout. t\l·o M<lroom. ~lh JOIS Ceuntry Club O'ln Exlatlnr !oan 7~. 1st TD OOH V. FRANKLIN EXTRA LA R G E DlNING Wrapped around a.n ovtnlz. REAL TOR ~~I. &erVice porch, built. td atrium, !hill outitandlrte: 231 Santa Ana A\'t, • •JJ.22:22 • tn oven and ra .. -HARD-(8. ot QUI Drivel ... ~. larat family~ 11 sltuat· BEAMS & BRICK \\IOOD F~RS. carptta td alo~ the 16th fairway ol and drapes included. Over-the bf~ Verde Coontry Sil,000. BY O\VNEJ\. So. of Hwy. 2 BR. on R·:Z lot, 1IJ.td doub~ ~~ 9x Chlb _All large roomt aU 675-3982 at Jul )'elJJ price! .Add :!O' 111"0rkshop. An idnl b.ay thl! ~1 and euy-to.'~. BLUFFS ~ 3 Br. 2 BA. l unit &"live "paYment !rft". .JocatedNEARST.JOACH-G6Ll'EllSTAKEN0TE' level, corner rreen $29,5()0 •. IA1'S CATHOLl~ CHUl\af; ~ · • belVvlew. Cov. wa lled-H1I PIMFiln & Attoc. ~ .. Silt patio, cu1. drps 1: thUllffl REAL ESTATE ---(Mlf~thlltllt ~ extras. \V&llc to 1hops, 3!IXI E. Coa.sl Hwy, 67So4392 . , f_E! ~~TY UM HI. Ownr $32,SOO. SMALL 2 BR HOl:IE -rf,11. 64MZ63 For y,.-ukends or everyday BAi'ri«Sfiir PEN'lllOUSE UviJli. Brick lrpl. utU. room. $23 50~ Pal'iotamlc view. 2 BR. 2 Ba. patio, comp. fenced pvt. , Dock1. 2M;l,50Q 10% dn 1¢> yard, 2 car 1araa:r.. Int. l\ofcKtnilt. Rltr 646-0132 MORGAN REAL 1'Y 673-6642 6~1 this ln1ma . 2 BR & --34ll E. Cout Hlll'Y, CdA1 tam rm Freneh Quarter N H I h 1210 $19,500 .:;.-----= ---=-- Inc. Realtort 3 UNITS ON 1 LOT $21t900 M2-4405 ttun1l•1ton Harlteur HOS LIQUIDATION-New J BR homes. U9t Branford St. Just $3.i,500!! ! Blcin/Art, 846--0EiO'J. · ev,e• 557-6151 1 hoUle pl\11 2 aott. Only 5 block• from tbt beach. Apts. are 1reat mone;.r make1'1 dutinr warm month!. Own-•-H 1 16M er will finance 11ilh mini-.:.Sa:cn_t_a_-_,a-' . .,1_a_. --~ mum down. Now return.s S?,300 Summer n1onth1 high- er. ni.: won't last 01·er nlaht. Bttter be ttrsl and ca.ij DOW. Qlal 96'1~. 962·5585 19131 9rookhu1'11 Hunth11 ton Beach 3 BEDROOAf. hdl\ii noors; large Jot, close lo elem . !Choo!. Furnished-with cpl.I t d1"f'ls, ranzt, rtfrif., dishw1.5htr. washer/drytr. S-?3.800. Vets no do1vn, lllA low dn. Brier. 546-0814 Tustin 1640 SPANISH ' HACIENDA TUSP~ M!adowo: • br, 3 IN OLD HUNTl"IOTON "'· 1hake mo!. ALL'°°'"' BEACH crpted, drps, wuhr &: dry., C.I. no cash nttded~'fl on land~. w/sub-troplcal fruit this i;eulde ~m. le win& trtts. l\tany xtra1. Ftf:ar Yd cafl)ttt and dra s. An fact a lrv\116 Ranch. 6% lit ideal starter home tor new· loan. By Owner. 133.2129 or t .. •1 · M4-MTO yv.'edlr. $23,000 lw pr1ce. I;;;:;======= Don't miss out on this once In a lifetime \'al11e. WE SELL A HOME EVERY 11 MINUTES Walker & Lee 7682 Edi~r 84~ 5'61).5140 BASEM~llT 4. Bdrm& .. 2'00 aq • .Jt. ot lux· ury livina:. lnci'L lo"•er came rm. \V/Irplc. Formal din. rm., fam . rm., il lge . llv. rm. w/frpl. Auunie 6~1% FHA loan w/rno. pay. mis. or sm per mo. Full price $44.500. La1un• leach 1705 BEACH CONDOMINIUM SPACIOUS 2 II!· 2 BATH New1t0rt Beach OUkw J.Oll_ Bay!.kle Drive condominium &: carelre llv-_•_w_po_rt __ •.-•-'-'--Balltoa Penl"1ula 1300 IEACH HOME lng.·Ca11 now for appt to •ft. OPEN Daily t.S. 3 Bdrms &1 _________ I·-;,.,,,,.=="""""" 0011t to p.ndy bPach Pool. 3 ear 181'1$· Broket1 BALBOA PENIN POINT LAST ONI Lllft ractng beautltul larae pcol JusU!ML)'&l'dl .from priwte beach. J..acllna area, perfect for year round llvinr. In. ve1tment or rentals. Stlllna: comp?mly fllrni1htd In strllc, ina: locale decor:-Tv.·o ·~ with 1o~·,r· carport, storqe, laundry. f'ully maintained rorgeous grounds include 2 poob. te:tnls, etc,; close to super mkt., 1hopplna, Coa1t Hwy. Excellent buy, m1111 ite to apprtclatt. Shown upon applmt by a.vntr; phOne 499-2152 or 137-0191. Lagu~• Nlguol 17117 2 ledroom1 ' conY. den wtlcome. 522 El 1'1odtna. 3 BR. 2 BA home on cotnitr $17,900 FULL PJtlCE Uvtna: room with Voa:el Co Rltrs. 2667 E. View ot heh, ocean &. mta. Low, low payments, SUl per PAN0Rk'1IC Octa.n View FABULOUS l[lp ca~rll ceillflf Cout Hwy. CdM. rn.-2020 Lra: sunny prlv. patio. i.ow month, !or this 3 bedroom. 2 cor. lot. Pvt bch. l\tonarch HOME and brick fireplace: main!. yard, carpets,, I.a. bath beauty v.·llh rich thick Bay, $25,9.50. f99-13f 4, 6i5-l930 w.mr ' Jult com.pitted. 4,650 IQ. ft. ' Bl)rfront home "''ith huit 1Jvl:ng room, family room wiUt beamed ceilings It v.·et bar. Eormal dlnin; room, mui:ive kitchen de&l&ned to mett tht needs of tht rouc. met cook. 4 H~ btdrcom1. z.story entry with 1plraJ lta.i:rcut, ltadt to IJlacioul muter bedroom with flre- .Piact". $169,500. Double door terrazzo tnfr)', BuU1-in appHancea '42.1n1 Anytlrfte Newpert Shores 1220 heal, 1hu1ten. hdrn·d On.. carpeting. Wt o:'IC in this 4!Q..4519 4 lar;e ~s. 1te-p Private paUo tlbl gar, blt·in stereo wiring price range. llLUTY, immedl· ==:-:-=====:;I down LR with btautitUI m.soo NEWPORT & ant. Access prlv, heh &: ate poliiession. 0 LS 0 N """"''"""" fi"pla... Lllted Exclusive~ Wilb 4 IR & FAMILY SHORES bo•t ramp. Salt by Ow"'r. WE SELL A HOME· T\\'O fuU batM y,•ith klads or 2 be, lSOO*l l.t. t % yn youna, ISOO.co:>> 613-31U EVERY 31 MINUTES tile. Mute.r bedroom b: pure i..• mL to ocean. Very r.harp $25,500 Wa I k & L Inc. Realton San Juan Cap istrano 1720 PAY $141 MO. tux""' with""""" wb and • 1'lean. 131,ooo. 2 Blocks to the"""' li block Linda lslo 1306 1 er ee p'°"'"ooL'"'HOSUn;~E 1ard~n atmosphere. T oo ..,. WHY PAY "ORE. I Newport to comn1. rttreation center1 ;;;;:;;:;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;,; j 7882 Edinetr M • many features to rnentioll. & pool. 3 Bedrooms 2 baths,11 842-4455 S.W-5140 32S02 Dtad\\•OOd. Spuk1trc Move in~and take ever 5~%· You must lltt thlt for only •t fl1'epl11.<:e, double garage. . WATERFRONT LOT cltan, nearly new 3 BR 2 aftnu!!.l '% nle loan. 3 bla ~~and aood termsalfaU REAL TORS Victoria Lowest priced home in tlili; Excellent ~1 fl Llnda J1le GI No Down BA, lam rm, frpl . Dramatic bedrooms. :? baths. delu."lt fine ana. Try 10% down. leasehold lot. Xlnt bu.y al 16:'<36 pool \V/Hlwailan mo. kitchen wilh•b.dll·lns. ~au. 673-4400 646-111 I 646-7171 only $.15,000. • POOL * 2 Story, 4 bdmui, tit. Fruit t~1 galore. Pri· iohn macnab Realty, Co. (714) 642.nU 901 Dover Drive, Suite lJ> NeWpOrt Beach ,, ••• PRE-TIGHT $S$ MONEY $$$$ iuMy 3 BR on qu~t cul-de- • aac. nr IChools, cilurch, ll· .!brary. btaxlmum pri\'acy. :Stone !Wplaet:, raised et1J. ;na, fresh new paint lhr'u-. ~~~~;~io:;s ~~~!· 1 ldeal location, ideal terms, J:lnt time adv. Beyers only! l29.9'0. . ')1 1 ·~1'\'· I, '" ". . . . 546-5990 - ---- titul carpets • n d drapta. Linda l1le D1velopmtnt 1~1 ba!h!. hat<hrood f.lrs, va.cy. $30,000 bracket. Fi~place. Alley a~ss for (•nytlm•> Bill Grundy 67S..3210 ne1v cpts, Intercom. Fenc. Ebbtkltt Realty yoor can, boat and trailer. COSTA MESA rel, cov J)ll!io \\'/ias BBQ-Pit. 3(11! Coatt Hwy, Dana ~ l\lin11te1 trom th~ eea. Clean SliARPIE Lido Iii• BRASHEAR REALTY -:==,.'96-4604,:;,,===J air llvln~. HWTy on this um Bak•r. C.l\1. 546-5440 a, ... IS a whistle. Hutt 3 BEACH BARGAIN 1;;;;~~~~;;;;;;;;U;;5;;.1 I 847-8507 E\.'es. 642-0421 - one: Call 645-0303. '"'""'!"!'It'!'!!'!'!''!"'!'!''!"'• I bedroom hom~ with double , ~""''" c SR. 3 •·. F•mlly D Sh 1227 1· CLUIHOUSE .....,.~ ..... over ore1 5\4% GI loan. By owner. 3 ''"'" 8"'""" "'!Ung with rm. N • w <Pb., dra""" SPACIOUS B 2 "- Dan• Point 17JO 645·0303 at Harbor Center :?299 Harbor Blvd .• C.i\.I. ••.. ,-, '"ok n-pl•-REGAL -SPACIOUS . . " ~. tom rm. 128.0.10. -~-----1 AND POOL '• "u s un '" ..... , .. int, bllrul, &. l'O&ler htr. CU •· · t •· e Stu I N & d Dou COMPLETE VIEW stom built family home •~e-.v pain • nr. -a:::h. ott nn n.g contemporary 5 ewcarpets · rapes. · \\'all!: to ocean. On':·S37.9.'.IO. 4Bclnns d•· 3• b•lh Brookhur11, 22101 BR 2 BA home, ca-ted, available at a wry low cost hie detached garage. As-CAYWOOD REALTY Say &: »ftns. 4 Br, 41~ B1 ··s16"500· '" s. .,... t h"· U tn "" I 7 000 FHA ., Capistrano Ln. $~000 dn, near Dana Harbor, new o you w ur YoU ve 1nui 11wne 1_, s ~. 10-...,,,., \V. Coast Hwy., NB + m1.ld1 H·gl eeil i · • ~·-2 .... -.i ·· •~--~·.. """" · . 1 1 ngi. LIDO REALTY INC . JS,OOJ 2nd TD. $168 mo. Im-iru. S28 Al bracket Ebbo-u.:u•-m, .,.u, -.v ..... ~ na ptrtentage. -• w•u• e "'"1290 e 5000 q ft built nd t ho In ••· H" t ~-t .,.."' 1 arou . cour · 3377 Via Lido 67'7300 med posses. 492·3285, tide Rnlty $4664. SMALL DOWN me .,.,... a1ect'ft ..... · pl\Yl'Oents ot $155.00 P.J.T.l.1-::======== 4 car car. E-Z ma1nt. Im-i..-96S-4l3:Z Hart1111'00d noon. double oar WE SELL A HOME 1'" d S178 ooo f PAYMENT """"All.., oo111.;,,. and IVIRY 31 MINUTES Cetta MaH llOG me oo:cp. ' . . um~h· ENJOY ----=R.,.U"N.,...---DuploxN fO< Salo 1'75 Hefti' a btsuty with 3 huae m•""h -·-h -for oruy w "'e,·f.:~9. 6\i % loan. Own. LIDO ISLE -.... and 2 batl<&'Got· ,,.j.00,'"-...... . a Iker & 'lee OWner Transferred .. ~·~ Th is Summer DOWN • DUPLEX POSSIBIUTY geot.IS bMck fireplace. Dish. 546-2lll So no down G.1.'s or nlin. R-2 zoned ·i.stoty hc:'imt', ma I. '"t·• "• d'•h Unlversltv Park 12l7 4 BR. bayfront home \\'ilh '" FHA 3 BR + pool Little money e-ndl•·-5 r "' =!m ~·1.,, • • !790 Hitrbor Blvd. 11 Adams , ----'''-""-'-...C'"-'.. pier & &lip, Fron, Slj(},000. · • · ,.,,... '"''"' 111'l1sher. ~autiful carptts k 5-15--0Mti ~ 'UJ 9 p~f !\fut sell lmmedia~ely'. Spa<:· Slf2% INTEREST Walker Rlty. 67i::52"" The Real Ettat1 Mart tor ttconverskln. Lowly drapc1. Older couple ttlir· k>us 3 BR & ramily + ertel " uv 147-1521 neighborhood near Dane Ing, sayi; st>ll "'ith $1,400 CORONA DEL MA.It patio. Shake roof. bllns, Ye~. YOU may assume the 3366 Via Lido. NB Open Sun . harOOr. A •teal at $33,000. tot.al down on FHA lt't'l'ns or •.;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;IS BR. 3 bathe.-Choice loc. room for boat & camper. existing loan on lhi• one: at 3 BR Den 21~ Ba. C.On-DOWNTOWN ••OCEAN VIEW'!! '**' NO DQ\\:N VA. Call for an 1' W&:ST IAY AVINUE One blk. lo beach. Lat· pa. NO DOWN PYMNT G.J. OR 51 fl'/o with only $15 transfer len1~rnry • A re hit e c I Near La~ Park. 2 Br., 2 Ba. Ebb!Jde Realty 4g&...4964 llP_polnUnf'nt. tio. Exter. Mwly ptlnttd. LO\V DOWN FHA. i\!lking let!! 4. bdrms & fan1ily designed '& bit Lo 1 t home. Large lot. S28.500, Ex· RENTALS WE SELL A HOME Ne1v Ll!litlJ. Yes, wt have a G i· ea I for tlUUWnln&. only $27,500. Call f>ID·ll51, roon1. 3 baths. Tile roof. trafl5ftl'able Io. n ~. cellent lerms. EVIRY· Jl MINUTES ehal'rninz 3 Bdr1n. horn• $49.900. Herltaae Real Estate (open E.i:lensl\'tly & bta.utifully O\vner. Phone . s:S..2854 lo~ R. D. Slata1, Realtora __ H_ou_s'-•-•_F_u;...r_n..;ls'-h-"od"'--1 with a dlnlna room &: a "Our 25th Year'•' eves.J landscaped yard. This ape!. 536-880l MG-212!1 General 2000 ---·---'= Walker. & Lee ,.,... '"""" .. t .. + l>'•k· wesL· Ev N "ch ..... 1 .. ,.. 1, v ER v • , . , ' a·boo BAY VIE\V. Onl)' • ' 3 BORloil, 1'~ BATit. Lrg REAl.ISTlCAU.Y PRJCED2 BR. Attract. Xlnt Cond. BOUGHT ANOTHER .. .DCEPTIOtf~L mo Harbor Bml. at Adams $36,000. WU ~nti;. TAYLOR CO ramUy rm. Ranae & l'elrig at jU5t $34,950. O\l·ner '>'111 carry back A HAVI! TO MOVE S~~-p~~i! ~;· Npoot~~ J .... ~! FINANCING Pete lanett . \ Roalt'ors Incl. Will sell on lo"' c\o\\•n P&TTIT REAL TY CO. Lrg Monrace. ~\v do~ 4 Good slit bdrm!! & ram rm. . .. • ;;.i;;.~.191 Optn "J.D 9 P~t ordilcount lor cash. Ch1·1)Cr. "The Hout• of Home•" Ba~aln ~I S4J,500. Phil Glen Alar, c wn tht land. ~·"•7· B,,•,,,r_. 53~H9!0"7""'"'=-'~-~ l.&.rp bedrooms. ,4 bath."! FIXER UPPER.I REALTY · NE\VPORT CENTER 838-&'lJ.I &33-0101 Sullivan • 5:\s-6761 S2i,5CO. 0 \Y n e 1· A1enl . $\65 Utll pd. Nlet: 2 Br home . :le a hea!l-d &: fllltred pool, 1111 San Joaquin Hills Rd. I..,., ~E~S~T"A~T~E~S"'A"'L~E-----~~'!""~iii;;Oiiiiiij BUSIEST marketplace! tn 982-1062 eve1 k wkends. renCE"d. F•mlly &: "t. IUcr •tn Newport's be.st artl. 0n1.. '' · BR 1 Cc· F!Dr 160& \Vestcll~ Dr .. .NB '44-4910 'n TH 53'-69lf) v assl\i! n . ......-.1.•2 '200 .._.,, ......................... 12 ·Bedtoom hQnh'. Eustsidc A Wltalo of a B"y tov.n. The DAILY rILOT t.; SUN.NEVER. SE"l'S on ""'"'°',.----...,--== •'69,900. May auume low in· PLACE 1 b' " BBQ -~ ~ .. ., 'terell. loan. · Pus ig pat... · "'!!'!!!~~~'!'!l!:!IJ~• I Cotta Mesa. R-:? zonc. Lol On a quiet ttsidcntial lrett Cla.nlfied section. Save Cla.ss:Wed a achon power. $90 Near ocean. l BR W 3 bedrooin$, 11t bath~. dou· .... FANTASf llC GoHer's ,... 30 )( 127. lNCO~tE POTENT-trafUe !1 ... • • cl 5 ' money. tlrnt &: eUort. Look For an ad to 1tll around lbe Tri·plex. \VJ\V d rapt I I alter Haue bl• ••~~· and •-·-• ,,_. . . ean as a 1 ,, 1~ dial .,.56_ 5. 1 k s~ .,, _ ·-..~ u:, .... ..,... •u. IAL. Principals only, please. ii·hlslle: Tl>e Joe. & dn. now... C.,.,;JI, .....,. •o. 1ng~so ..... .............., • . , caut ome OQ h lrttn o ..,.,. or .,,,;, · pay!. you have ~n Jookina I'!.:. ; ......... Needs pilnl and t .L.C. Ter· B h 10! f ••T118 Oil •~t • . r Wc G.I. loan ASStn.1ABLE C'QnM'r localion. One or. a Bf'nnud-Dunes . flftt'lt des-OWNER Must Sell!?! 3 for! Just $30,500 for thlJ v.n•r•I 2000 I General 2000 I Generel 2000 : , ~~ll~~':ic~;:~~I! SE& ktnd\\ilhlargeramilyroom, ll'rt('Ollrat.! RoomylBR.3 BR, 2 BA. laniily im. 2 spacious3 BR.homt. 1---------~-----~·--"'·---------1 (1l•a• .... & C.. WE SE.LL A Lll\U.E o.,..trsized master bedroom, BA, Pool, tumJshtd home. frplcs. blt·lns, cpls. drps. • RH Hill R111lty Ill Nawpert Center Dr. , • .,..... mallSil't f~plact" and spark-Incll2 ao1t carts. Oubmtm· Ortvt: by 328 Bucknell Rd. Un1v. Park Center Irvine ; ... .,.,. leech,·c~~I!;. w!VERl'ky ,. M,·1NULTESe ~~~kht'~t~c~:~~~~ ~l~=·JAsklna~.000 CM ' . Call Anytime 833.m2o ..... ,"'4-..... a ·er e \\1tttcllU lhoppl,,.. ~.~. L'-'" Isle ft·v•lopmant SACRIFIC£! Leaving l>tat~. ,.. i!IB!!!!!!P!' •-• I ., .. ,_ I" m.. ..,. Low down T o alngle tam1 l BDRM DY OWNER. Less ~ .SI 20-tl ·Wttt"etUI Or. lamlly rthrtd .apd "°"' ,. IUI Grundy •15.3210 1y hOmes ~ ~mer lot. we~~ than 1 'Yf' old, \\'alklnc dist .. • 1 ·• SQUARE T!:E"I' of II\'· 'llttl a:rtl. F'l11e rt1kle ·an.. ~l lmmediaie poi· •..ton. lmmaculale ~ bd· , ~rm. tiofnt, clinin; rm &: 1'tam.Uy rm. Xlnt corner lo- 'aatioft • rtlOnl for boat. trail· l«' cir pool. Adja.ce:nt' to ptl'JI Mil -CALL ,........ ~ Cloul "9&1.Eltate. :s~I DlllVE " . OCIAN Vl•W .1'trtl, """""· °"'· --.lafot 514.llO 0 ........ 11 ........ llUl.1011 ' 67).4UI .,,., ... ·- Slt,t50 fl.I Jot. 2 BR. 1 BA. polllloil 11) A out. new (l'1>tl. l"O\' Pl· Uo, new driVevoa,y, £11Wdt, l~··•ttw' -,,. ... ,~ 641-7111" • hard to ~~~ &f la'.~. •!11!!!9"~'!'!!!!'!!!!!!!"1!.,.I """.._ Shopp*-Ct:nter. to .schools A shoppina center . CALL 54...., SoJ!tj) CJoOat Q "'k .. .;, -w• ·~ 833-Mno v-. Rt-I.I Ettatt. .. lllC '1il e ~S-23M after 8 pin . 3 BR~~~ a:: Cathedral 4 BM rm + fi'em1ty rm. I "lclnns 3 ~ 191111..1 Four bedroon1s • 11\'0 baths Meu Verd• 1110 l"elllng~. Prlctd for quick Si4,950 . all bllllt-lns • fireplace ... .__'ME~ 1 r S20 500 Mic by owner. 833-723·1 .autUul· ,Eni,ry halJ:· 1arie SHAKI· ROOfir family roon1 . cari>els • ~u . , 'oan o , 1 ""' nn .. all modem l<lt· Carpet~ drtPts, built. Jns. •parkilnc condl\ion. S28.9SO. on 4 big BR 11 + ran1 rn1. lrvfne IUI chen. atmoat nc, down. f!rt-pJ&ce, pt.Uo. Near a If Good lermt. CAU. ~ 180(. IQ It, deror. drapt.'I • ------~ !~0..11'20. ' r.lloola. $37;000 btft ot South Coast Real E.ot;late. ~-sTi,ooS'J,S,{bJ by Ol''ner. 3 Bn. 2 8.\, lgt fam rfn. TAA'llLL ftu Harltrw tmn•.. V'W" pool. tenni1 courts eti;. Wellt-McCartlle, ltltrt. $21, 950 I 3 BR. 2 BA, family m1, 2 C1vt1, drp1, many other ex· A,, ..... OlliliPii lllO Ntwp0e1·8h>d., CJll.' f llclrm l family rm tl'!llcl. •pmklr. 132.500 . t..s. oolor TV. tape dtcit. lnlo tbt exddnc wortd Of tM 561-1'129 ""°614 •vts. Sharp 4 clean. entry hall. Prine OJllY, ~I tt". $42,~. s;n.2399 motr ncMtvt ~ dJniic rm. fireplace, lCtrl :::;-.::.. °:,i~ iJ $21,000 botho. bulll·ln 1pp&nc<1, Nowporl Baach 1~ Co_. dol Ma r 1250 rms, 111 a.. -1/1 Am i:°~':iLL 2955 Hffw e DUPLIX • HOME pool. Roy J . Ward 1\ooltor •• bedn>o"" '""" hill. h"at • • NEAR oc;:AN AND IN~ME 1.u:I Galaxy Dr. •tsoo. tamily rm. wlth nrtpl9\."t'; rH"' ., VA l Bdrms. • 2 bath• eadl 1t050 di lnc bull I l Sr., l '.l bL. North O>lta W\lt. 91i1 this dtluX'C '1U-On the ocean • of Hi~ 4 IR. -$25,.., n room. I· n appll· Mt5!1.. CltM to 'all Aehoolt. p\ex. U\lt In one & rent tilt WI,)'. • 2 Bedroom me with s,otJeu! Nt\lt' ca~t•. Crap. ancts. Park like l/J kl't. CUI~ lneomt apertmenl al...,."I ta. bllil'll bdwd fttl. 2 M<l·1'720. e-sttc. oU'let ~.M>O. ··- Ba""-aon:i..i.1. Pnv. ot"1m Ti\llllLL 2911 Harllor DAVIDSON R.altv Or .... ln Riiy. 646-2'14 ""'ed. club. \V•lk to aJI schools! DON'T J0n WJSH for ~460 Evtt. M~Ws Ntal" Newport Post OUlce C:OltllN • MAR:TIN 900Wthlna to Nrnlsh )'Ota' 1• \'our Ad tn 0 u r: BLUFFS· 3 BR. J BA, split• REALTORS 8i3-1882 home ... rtni ~t ~in elil.slt.ltds?' &:nneone..wUI be te ve!. c0ndo. l:N.1.il _!!_t ~ !:. "C0o.'11W1,· ClilM lOdi;-'1 o,,.r¥ Ad°L -tooklng_for ft. l>laU@~l8 le.,./opf\o,, ~ SCQ\\~lA-~"Btrs· The l'uizl• ~ith th• lui/f./n Chuck/• IHOTUM I' i-.J...-' T:, ,..,, .......... "'1· I Form~1o 1or -1n 11o1- ~--~--'·-'-' lywood. It Isn't who you r 1 .,-,,..-----., know.,lt'a - -~ H_Y·L LOW I J•l• "'' ..,,,, .... _..-1 ..,.1....,...1 --1·.-t • Comp .... '"' cl<u;li. --"" 1.i11... In tho ...... -' ,.. -!.... ... No.1 .. \ow, •:-I I I • I I • I I I . CQM;LETS ANSWERS lfrCWlTFfCATION_tOOo_ - I • ( . ' l I ~ t ' r 2 r ' ' c ~ 1 E • p p Li Bl ii t • A ~ a: e• A •• i" ,, • D 1 "' ii I -~ 1 SU .. $11 Y< $Ii rr 111 •• $3! '" .11• " Bl• "' sn .. Sll " SIS .. Bh m N .. m R K i:A .. & -Cc Fl! .. " ' M 64 Pa .. .. l .. s. ., li\t "' Si .. '2-:- ' I.< M 2-. dr ,. l 'tu "' I~ ••t ii .. •• ~ UI :;i .- ~ .. 111 ... ,.. ................................................... ~ ................. ~,.,, ... .,.,..,...,.,,.,.,.,.,..,""'l"lll"'l,..,..,. ... ..,.,. .... ~..,, ... 'l"',...,,~.:--..-..~r.~ .. ..,..~.,...j ;...-; ... ~., , ... , .. ,:r-,• ••• ,. .... ,-• . ,·,,· •o', .·,,·''I"• ,•I RINTALS RENTALS I lllNTALS..---11l!NTALI • . I Rl!NTALS •• HoutM Unhirnloht!_ A!ilL '""'l1hool _ 'Apll. furnllhod _ ~· Ullflirnl......_ ~·· Unfuml"'td Ront•ls 1 Slt•ro ps ! iN~.;w;po~r1~1 .. ~c~h=J3l~200!!J;c~ .. ~··~~~!4i~ .. ~;~·!!· ~-'"!··~·~""'~"~·~·~·~,.~~aoo~l;c~ .. ~,,~,..~11~11~;;;;s~1~oowc~ .. ~·~·~~ffii~~·~1s~100~. FEMALE To'""" 1.,.., tii>1 J · 11/I * SUNNY * Newport -., RI NTALS Houn• f'urnllhecl w/2 worl<ln& •~I•, prlv ''I'! Aduh1 _0..ly • "'--& rd WI I all •ID ;.d .• ,., .. 16>" n10: 3l'IR,2 l>a.h:, •:>llt ltvcl llCl GRAND ~ .. ~ nn"' Ul\i Dhunond, Ba I boa I BR. 2 l>atho .......... 1:m * ACRES * MERRla.}AC u>OOD-S! Island. 61i>-T789 AVAtLABL& NOW I .... "' " DEPENDABLE •Uddl• ... Bay o B<ach R•al.,,, loc. * M l J Ahf * OP£Nln11 ~:1.:'1~ !.::':.:' ...:: :~:,'"' nr. ~=· ~~~ l ~! e~ ~I !.c. I IMMEDIATE Oran9• County's Most leoutlful or "'"' ...... ootfa(o. TOWNHOUSE:. 3 BR. 2\i Fal-.. ~. I Apartment Community 1146-3716 BA .,,, . pal~ ,..1 ' ···-M OCCUPANCY FCATURING A CLUB ATMOSPHERE llOOM ~\ATE wanted t~ ,.;, an 'b11.,, ·...,,11,' .:::. ~~~~:*Jr' FOR YOUR COMFORT AND PLEASURE sbare 2 1Bdnn 2 lalh 'apt. Ue S11S mo. 8n-A81.l, or • 1 blk from be11.ch on Bal. 642•2(97 e\'e1 or wktnds Dew, w.-, Month r:.UXUi·y aarde.n apartments Just complet..e 1 or 2 Bedroom, 2 11th. Pe tn catl rra i.. 673-3175 OE XE · · • Kltchena ··TV'• tncl •I furnlshff or Unfurnished. AIY.-cond., btam n · ~" tu Toivnltouse 2 Br, 2 •Phone•"" htd pooi oUertnc complett prtve.ey, rf lrlf>.alrl 1o shr 3 Br apt. Ba. ll'plc. pool. $#50 .• Maid servt~ ava1l ctill"ll, dl1hW11htr1, lush l•nd1c1pln9 with ov•r 21 .• Prv rm, Npt Ba)'fronl apt $330. Aft. U76 NllWPO•T ia.vo. be&utltul JandacapJna & 1tre1m1 a w1ttrfafla, •l•v1tor1, 810'1, club- Penlniiula. 61i-013& 646--0732 5'1-'75S _ unpanlleled rtertatlonal houM with sec:l11 activities, 11un11, J1cuul t.ADY Will ihart 3 BR home EASTBLtirr ~ec. bomt. 5 CASA r OllO tac:JJJUes In a country & swim pools, private 91r19t W/1tor1 ... w/ pool. Prer. lady 33-4.1. Br. Jmrnac. $390 l\1o .. ltue Cuu&l CaJJf ~vi ~ • dub atmosphere. Now FROM $140 • S210. Adults plnM. Ju1t 1!11t Ref'•. 642--7445 aft s. ~ Alta Vlsta ~~ls.it · • . ..., l1C .. nn of 2600 Har bor ::i;vd .. next to Nabers Cldll· &fed, atmosphere. "dou1 Jtasine: in Newport Beach. I 425 u_ I W c •• u_ S4S. a BR. 2 Ba dup!ex, new cpll, color co ordiflat 1 lapta ac1_1t m.rr 1c 1y, oa..., momu. Cowt• M11• 219() drps; dshWhr. bltns. Nr ~. Des.lined .,4: f u r;_n. f f 0 ; 63w. E'lflrythlna MW. Move In nowt $230 mo lse ~~'1573 , Models open 10 am to 8 pm I '!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!'!~!!!!!!!!''j'!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ 8ACHELOR House: Single . su·le &: comfoti.. •1 P\·t pa. --=::c.. ' ' tio * 8-B.Q * shq: cplli FUrnlshed or unfurnlsl.. ' ~1~" ~~~1 S90 r.tonth. Cerone det M1i: 32SO * Car w/ itorage * H11ated Rents from $135-$3l0 Gtn1r1I 5900 Cost• Mes• Th1MACULATE 3 Bdrm. pool • Kitchen w/·lndJrttt dup~x. cpls, drpg bit-Ins. nr llghtinc, delu.'<e o v f n & &thools Ii: llhop'e:ttnter ~ ranae. ~ BDRM. J175 lnrl: 5100 :r BR, 1ar, patio. Quirt tropical setUn1 for adults. l blk .tiops. Stas. 5#-0452 613-2402 utll. 2 8DRr.t. $195 lncl. uUI. 2200 Adults, no pet1. ~ W. \Vil· N1wporl Blad! SI ... •=1 1 -~~------Huntington a.1ch '400 500 • _,..., ~ hloblle Home · Bayview. --· ------ Adults. $150 Mo. Call. TO\VNHOUSE. 3 BR, 1~ HARBOR 675-1767 . BA. cpts, drps, carport, • pool. 962-9911, 4-6 P..M. ?.1on, Oakwood Garden Apa.rtments 1700 16th Street 714: 642-8170 Bolboo l1lond 2355 Wed .. Yri./Or 962-5i70 s.1 TOWNHOUSE SO. IAYFRONT =·=Su~·~~~~~~ 2 BR. 2 BA, frplc, dshwshr, HOUSE U.11\tAC. Ex. Lri 3 br, 2 ha 2217 Harbor near Wiiton 1 blk to beach. Yearly. • RENT • l Room• Furniture $19.95 & UI" :' ·onth-~M1'ltlth Rentals WIDE SELECTION NO DEPOSIT O.A.C. Hl'RC Fumlture Rental• SJT W, 19th. CM 543-WJ Costa Mesa 5100 HARBOR GREENS APARTMENTS sPACIOUS TO\VNHOUSE uvtNG Stl)art.te 111dult &: family oom· mun!tl~s. Bachelor 1·2-A 3 Bdnn1, furn & un!urn apts, $110. per mo. & 1~,.. • L&ric aa:rden patio11 • Open beamed ceilings Tt/Udq•f-~. 1970 • DAILY l'ILOT 1 • • • 1 ledr'm 2 '"'rm 2·a.dr'm I Dtn '19 Bayside Dr., N.B. ON TEN ACRES 1 &: 2 BR. Furn Ir Unturn l'lreplacea / prl"V. pa.t1e1 1 l"oo1&. Temds . Contnl'I Bkt1t. 91)) St& l.ane, 01M 644-:?ll I !MacArthur nr Coa1t.Hwyl For Rent Duplex. Crpt, drps, blt·ns. e t BR Townbo115e 1120 Call 673-2455 Little Pelboo Isl. Lrg. 1"'1Y prl~. yard: Gar. • Hoat...i pool • Ad u!J only I========= iiiiiiiiiiiiiimmiiiii~iiiiiii 1 • F'tttplt.~• • Rt:=. Roomt e :l pools, saunas, nurse:cy f'OA. leaae n\fly l Bl' apt. HAR. BOR hoot over car, Nr Sth & Orchid. + huge ~rk 1. S195. Rf> e ~o rts. Adj to shopptni Corona d1I Mar 4250 1l!rht on the water 111/ 1ancly 1;pon. Mamed Adib. 842-32T61 j!~IJ!.,,jjji~i(i!!f!!J!iij!!!!i~,/ ;~;;;;;-;;;;;;;;:-:-;:;'-;;;;;';;: bc:!i & buoy. Comer hse, NEW H6ME FOR LEAS! CHATEAU LA POINTE' 1:!R,G,1E 'u1utildio ap~Sl~.mo. covered w/cedar shakes, 4 Br. famliy room. 3 Ba, car. Lovely 2 BR apts w/ pool, S'"ar !iuxJs pd. ui..-1055 aJt furn. Liv. rm, S br'li. 3 ba's, pets, dr-•pes less tha.n mile carports. \\'~ to Zlhop'g .• -==,..,·~~-~- 2 frplc's, Modern kitchen, to beach. oniy Sl25 monthly. AdWt.11, no pet&. $LSil).$1Bl 1 ROOM Bachelor Unit 1I~M£D. OCCUPANci CrpU, drps, !ilOVe, rtfrlg, :roo Peterson \Vay $165. Avail Imme<:. 548.4~7. TOWNHOUSE °"'" ..... 5-10 ,,,,".,." 0 c;. .. '""',..~"o=":o-· ~ Nr. Harbor .t Adams COROLJOO AP'I'S. 2 BR. roof deck. ln1med. Occup. DALBEY REALT\' 536-253.3 per mo. 1941 Pomona. 01. Small. compart. clea11. SllO. itntll June 16th. Couple or Util incl. 673-2125 221T Harbor near WUaon e 2 Br l'tl Ba. Townhouse $12S4135 LUXURIOUS-NEW Lo"·er levels. st u d I o 1 . l'"'rllJcs, pool. dbl carpotta, patiol. Sl'i~. 673-3378 family, S350 mo. Priv. pty. LEASE OP'rtON Lo\lely like Sl3S PER 1n". Dix Molllle Wl ol9T·1313. new 4 Br 2 Ba, frplc, blt·lnt. Home con11!l. furn} Htd 1010 $0. BAYPRONT crpts. drp11, fenced. $al. pool, adults. 4 Seaaon's FURN. Bachelor apt. for rent in CdM. $U5 1ncl util. Qulel, clean. sn.91Dl $150 & 5170 HUGE older I BR,"'",,.._ Sttp!i to bf!ath Sl73. • Heated pool • Adults only • No pets • AdJ to shoppirc 968--6.382 eve!i. ".?.!ob. E1~ me Nft .Blvd. All UtllltlH Paid 61U90& 1-to 10 yr. le~fol'.-bt1t kle. ~~ - Be11.ut. 4 BR. l~ bath home 4 BR. 2 Ba, blt·ini. fireplace. ===~~~~--B•ll~oa ltl•nd l .k 2 BR. 2 'lw:ntmolJ CLEAN 2 BR. crptJ, drpa, AdWIA only, no pets. $195 incl utll. Avail l\farch ELEGANCE a!- Hacienda H.cirbar 4255 ~sR 2 "-h $230 mo, Jst & !ML DKLuxt 1 br. Jut com-""'~ • u..t apt.&.2boal 842·2956 pleted. Frlrtdlire ap. pier '-dock. Furn. S1200 307 A\'Oeado St., C?\f. L 6T~ ' See l\.tgr on premltet '. · DELUXE Bayfront 2 BR, 2 1 s,._ 2 BR. $150-$110 per month. VACANT. Lovely Be a ch pliances. Qu«n u. bed, Lindi Ille O.v1lopm1nt home, 3 B1·. 2 Ba. Family eompl crpted. CaJ} • 548-T021 Btu. GRUNDY 610>-3210 only. 126.S nw. 968-7489 :-':"=5-·~~-~~~- BA, lrplc, garage. Avail im· Util included. NO PETS med. to June 15. $300. Adult living in a 675--7156 or 675--4000 J\fedile1·ranean Atmosphere BA"°. "LB=o"•-1'"',~1 .. "'•:,..C· '-'1 '-8~R-u-,11'-r I Blt·ins, shat Crpts, drps, ·<Behind K.Jdut oU Ha.rkr ~ 1 B~ Quplex wlnr:. ~\ovt/ atcornerft.utaersl.:Avocadol refi'1.r:. fu!nl1Ji"e'.d. 603 Oil,) 6U.J535 eve fi.15-0'.!83 f\tantold. 54Mfi6l, 642-_1470 . . . . -·-,; , l BR duple:ic, parflt.lly furn .. ia10 mo/yrly. Furn}unfurn. Fount•ln Valley _ '4l0 Y.·ater & 8,arde!Vt pa.I.cl. No apt. SUndeck, quiet. $135 mo garage w/ttorate. PoOL De.li1htful 2 Br. 2 Ba, frpl. 2 children, no pets, elderly ear i:ar. 2 patios. dock. n...l'd 1100 97'8 w yearly lease. 673-7397 24·1 Avocado 642-2925 Fairway Viffa A'pts Adull' "nly, n• • e I•, 4 BR 2 "' I I bit . .-·~ · mo. "" · " " ,. ' ..,a, rp c., ·IM, 17th St. 54i-G31 575-7880 cul-<le-qc. $230. Av al I ~fngton Be.ch 4400 MARTINIQUE Near Oran1e Co. Airport & ucr. Adults only. 20122 Santa Ana Ave. ~3894 CHARl\.11NG 3 Br, Furnl!ih· ed, Beach house, $250 mo, Avail Ul June 20. 673-4685 .... 4 81t tuie. rum. IJj() !\To. yr. Jy. Ulll paid. 811-ins. Call 646-1130 Duplexes Furn. 2975 1 BR tum Duplex In Costa bfeu.. Quiet. No dop. "'~"'" RENTALS Houses Unfurrtlshed Gener1I -·--~--~~~~~ ** RENTALS ** $135 uniurn 1 BR coltaae, Pf!t OK. $ll0 untum 2 BR hse, Ind yd, child &. pel OK. $170 unfurn &side 2 BR hm. f111lc. families Y.'tlcomed. $140 urtfurn 2 BR Dupleic, 1tove, relrie:. lot ok. $85 furn I BR apt. Utll pd. Acfu.l.ta only. $140 furn 2 BR apt. Play • a.na far child. Avail now. ?.IANY QTI{ERS F '" to Landlords Blue Beacon Rental r1nd'1'1 433 W. 19th St. CM 64S--Olll $175. CLEA.J.l 2 Br hOu.se, t.oced yard, child & pet ok. * * * * $140. 2 BR duple>i:. &tove &: rtfrlc., near stores * * * • $150. COZY 2 Br, &tovt, pnge, children ok. FrH to L•ndlordt Blue Beacon 645-0111 SL~ Lovely 2 Br Duple:\', New W/\Y, drps. family A pet.. Skr. 534-698o $135 Real nice 2 Br, 4-plex. RIO. w/w. drps. carport. Kkls Ok. Bkr. 53H98J LAKEFRONT Lake Forest new 2 Br. 2 Ba. plw;h crptt, & drps. S300 mo. 49'1-846.'1 Cosio MoH 3100 FINE 3 br, 2 ba home in be&t Mta near Wcstcliff Plaza l schl11. Ltg fam rm w/frplc. 2 cu 1ar, fen~ yd. Avail March 15. Lse $2:;0 ~10. Call ~TU er 833--0226 4 BEDROOM 3 BA'rH Partly fumlthed. Vacant -.nil reedy! ~ per mo. A;ent 546-4141 l Br house $210 . Redecorated, lge yRrd. 202ll Bayview. RUr . 64Z.m2 or OU-4416 l~l"Mt\C".5 Br. 2 &. Crpl1. dn>&; bllns, patio. Xlnt toe. $235 per mo. Families only. . ~ aft 6, Ownr/Agt. '.!. 3 I: 4 BR w/poo\. Xlnt 1 Loe. Near fo"wy. Alt!nt • 1 ~ 2 BDRM, Ntw carpet. I I dr4pes, wllh slDVe. $1TS. 2'51 "C" ot1rce AYI., C.M. 1 3 8R. 2 BA. blt.in1. 3 firepta~s. drapes. Collt&• Park. mo. 5'W\06 ID&WXE TownhoUM 3 al\ 2 BA. Ctpll, drp.. bUm ...... I $223 n'IO. 833-3M0 J BJ\ hOuse. Adults only. No pc-11. Sl'Tl. lfl.10 Pomona Att. C.M . •-Cott·:-..t-81t. SIU..., AU UUI J)lid. Adul!J. l'k'I peu, J.15-eZ!M or 5514400. 3/1/70. Call ~ •QUIET 2 Bdrm Duplex. ========:I Wt.\rui, aar. ptllo. £.aide. 3705 Adults, m JM'lt. 364 16th Pl. 64i.129S L1gun1 Beach NEW SOUNDPROOF PRIVT l BRs avail Feb. 20 & P.1a.r 1 B:oct lo a«an. Garages 20'.! A 14th. 31319, liiJ.1784 Spacious EroUnds w/ park· like 1urroundlna:1 w/ prl· v&cy. Patios & pools. Nr. shopping. Ad·:Jts onl)'. QUIET DELUXE APTS 535 r.r~~t ·rery Drive: 2 BR. MERRIMAC WOODS den.1 .• BA, 2.eat ear. FUm. f\l.m units nvail. See ad un. 2 BR. Pool. Adults only. S200 or unfurn. Avail. Apr, P.lay der class .ilOO. 425 P.ierri· mo utll pd. 17676 Can1eron. & June (ow;.er occupiet mac \Vay 5'G-63ro ~""='=~=1~"~-~~--~ from July thro Au&}: avail. --.""'.-· ===~-l·BDR~I., newly dtcorated, for ¥.•Inter rental !rorn Sept. SUS CASITAS BACH., 1·2 I: S BR's im Santa Ana Ave. C.M. Mgr, Apt 113 ~2 ORLEANS APTS. on. Call collect after 6: 213: Fum. l BR Apts. Adult.I $13a Per mo. incl. utll. 175-3069. only, no pets. 2110 Ne"'POrt Trade"·lnd'S Really 847-8511 TERRIFIC 2 bdnn~ 1 ~ 2 & 3 BR avail. AdWta only. ·baths, &harp carpets/drapes. ========-I BIVd, C/.1. •l2-9"6 Laguna Niguel 3707 BA01£t,OR apt. Furn. 1 4 BR -2 BA. respo,Jiible adult. No pets. 2 • fam -nn, !'lw ·~from Newport & 22nd cpl, drpa:. e:ardnr, view, St. $1)0 pays all. $(9-3813 fenced yd. $350 mo/lae. ;;;;:-';==-=-,,.-.-4gs..2110 LRG 1Bachelor apt, nlctly =========I fumJ employed adult. Mar Duptexn Unfurn. ~7~ ~~,~~~ Apt A. Pl!:NINSUL,A Point 2 BR... l 1 br. Util paid. $105 den, 2 bath, next to bay & month. Want fnaturt man. beach S350 mo. yrfy. ~ afl•t 4 PP.f • 642-6197 E. Balboa '5d. No. A LA C 6Ta-6952. (2 &i..1146 R E 1 B<lnn new futn. ===~--..,.1----1 crpts drp.11 bll·lns No pell R&NTALS 2W ?.l~ndow. 5~5421 Aptt. Furnished 1 Bdrm furn/unfum. Orp&, Laguna Beach 4705 Approx. 1200 :sq. ft., frnet'd. THE NE\V VLLLAGE JNN )TU TU&tln, cnta ?-.f•u Avail. ]/1/70 $15(1{i:no. !!'(el, Mar i\trs Canon 642-4641 &: y.·kabd1. S6-0713. Formerly Saddleback Inn, ; · ' I-====--='"'°'=-:--:--J..aauna, [rom $28 a week. I ~=~~='""'~=.-DELUXE 2 BR. Crpts, dtpe, Lovely apta:. All util'i, VILLA MESA APTS. bH·ln$, prlv. pat Io. Adj. linens, maid, pool, laundry 2 BR unrum, prl paf.101, htd dosed gar.. pool, !iln1l• rm. S:;eps to beach. 696 S. pool. 2 car encl'l ear. Chil. story. No pets, adults only. Coast Hwy. 494-9-136 dren welco~. no pet 1 $16.5. C8..ll 64~7411 OCEAN Front studio apt for please! $160 also furn $185. LUXURIOUS 2 Br. I ~) Ba. one ava.llable until July 1. n9 W. \Vllson 646-lb, all elec. Cl"pU, drp,, GE No garage. $105 mo. Mature BARGAIN -Dix sml 1 br un-khoh., patio, •ocl ear. nr penon pref. -194-4000 furn, util pd. No chldrn, no bus. $150 adulta, ?.1gr, 12-1 E. pets. 998 El Camino Dr,, 21'.lth St. BACHELOR. nice, utU. pd., CM 637 =~· ~~~~-=~-= near beach tc town, $95 to · • ...,.,a 2 BR Duplex. rully crpl'd, June. 494-4925 NEW TOWNHOUSE drpd. Carport, fenced yard, Gener•I 4000 ,vfW crpti, pool, pvt ba · Hotels 4975 836-S794 an 3 pm. or --------- 2 BR, 1~; BA &: I & 2 BR. 1 or 2 chldrn ok. No pets. Crpltl, drps, .oclf cl~ (al Re.fa. $1Jj n10. &1~2191 oven. 645.2108. Jn W. Wll10n 2 BR. Yard. $12:> including NEW dlx. l &: 2 BR. Shag util . Nr. l~arbor 11hopp!ng crpts, drpi;, bltlns. Im med center. 5 4 2 .. g 8 8 1 , eve occupy. UfiG.$180. 541).1973, =833-~12T3~~~~=-- 54.J.2321. SPLIT level.2 & 3 Bdrm apts Single Adults 1 BR. FURN. APT. Lido Shorn Hotel 1831 S, Brt1tol. CM Bayfront kitchenette suites from S250 mo. Suitl'S & FURN. 1 br apt lllcl util. rooms by day or wetk, Reck rm & pool. 1959 ?.faple: Phor.ei;, maid. colfee. ice. Ave., C.M. ?.lgr. Apl, 5. 617 Lir\o Park Dr. 673.SSOO e NASSAU PALMS e RENTALS 1 &. 2 BR. POOL Lu:rucy slnale, l & 2 bed· li7 E. 2'Jnd st. 642-3643 _A¥p~•-s_. _u_h_f_u_rn_l_ah_od __ rocm apartments, fumllh. FURN bachelor apl. $90 un General 5000 ed and unhunished, wilb Incl. E.!ide. &Ingle Y.'Orklna: complete privacy and land-man only. S1S.TB70 s~.aped country club al.J'Ml~ b~==--~~~ phere Including $750,000 Ji30 VERY nl~ 3 BR. Mob. worth of recreation.I (acll. Hm. $93 2 BR lrlr. 132 W. lt:el'i des!~ and operated 1=W~•-lro~n~:-C~M~·-"'_.__,,_n __ jUJt 1or 1ln1li people. $165 BEAUT. furn. 2 BR ex· RENTS FROl\1 pando r.tob. Hin , 13.1 E. ltllh $143 to $3Ca St. Sp. 16, CM. ~2733 Newport B1•ch 4200 ----------- VEN DOME D1tlACULATE API'S! ADULT & TAMltY S!:CTIONS AVAD..ABLE CloM to shoppl"I, P•rk * Spacious 3 Br's, 2 Ba 1r 2 Bedrocun. • Swim Pool, PuVe:reen * P'rpl. lndiv/lndry fac'l.s 1145 Anaheim Ave, LOVELY 2 br. Ctpt, drps, .gar. wuher, dcyr. Adultt. No pell!. 2260 Placentia. Call 646-3160 e DELUXE I & 2 BR Garden Apts. Blt·lns, prlv patio. heated pool, frJ!lc. AdullJ $145 n10. 54&-516.'I 2 BR. bltns. crpts, closed g111·age. r.tature adults. Sl30 mo. 5"8-4513 or MS.-2884 J,RG 2 & 3 BR. Crpll, drps, 1 or 2 kids ok. 2714 College Ave., Apt. 2. 646-0627 LARGE 1 BR. elec builtlns. nr OCC & S. Cst Pl.au. $133 'v / refrlg, ~,.l().9680 NEWPORT BEACH 880 IRVINE AVE. JrtVINE AND 16th <n•) 60-0550 GARDEN GROVE NEW 3 & 4 br. 2 ba, frpl.c. l~ blk lrom bay &. ocean. rurn or unf. $275 i $300. Mo. C.11 673-ma e BARGAIN -BtauHrul ~e' .,,..,~~!!"'~~!!!!!!!!•I 2 BR apt. 998 El C&mino TIME FOR Dr. C.M. 637-95&> t'OSTA MESA 642·2824 l.'1100 Chapman ;.,., 2 BR 1""1 • unlurn. 1il6 -"UICK CASH 2 BR. 2"' d•h1xo •P< Cl'PI•, (4 biks \V, 88.nta Ana Fwy.) $173. CplA, drps. bltnl, pool, ,. drp11, blt·i-ns, \;lt i..,.Ptlio. mo .,.._ .,u.. 1.\25 P1a"'nt1a THRQUGH A 1m. "''-4lllli . · CT'fltl &. ~. blt·ins No pets 2885 Mendou 545-5421 l BR Apt. $150 mo. No pets. 646-6835 afl S pn1. 2 BR, 11:& BA. Opt.I, dfp!;, garage. $152.!50 utll pd. Us4 Monrovia . 54s.o336 JUST compleled 2 BR. crpts, drps. blt0ins. $153 mo. 2451 Elden Aw. 642--3092 DELUXE 2 8R. Decorated. S~ciou~. Palk>. Adults. SJI) & last. 6i6-4760 aft $133. 2 br. 1mn1ac. E cl patio &: gar. l Infant OK. ·~tr;. 54D·0STO D E LUX Individua l lOwnhoui;c, 2 br, irplc, palio. illr. SJ;,Q 518--8423 Men Verde 5110 ANAHEllyf NOW J,.EASING FOR MARO! OCCUPANCY 27'1' So. Bn'.IOkblll'lt· (1 hlll:, So, ol Uncotnl 171 ll '1'l2-<lOO South S.., Club Apertmonll 2 BDRM. "'5 mo y•arly DAILY PILOT 2 BR Sludlo. bit.Ina, washer * 2 BR. bl• cl"'"· new lease. Owner/apnt. l\fr. WANT AD & dryC!r. ~. Sat&:. Sun crpl, drps, Avail. anno. 1:Gund=:='ii"'i:":·,,,673-Ql;;;,:;;'==,,.!..-========="-"°"=''::=646-4:=::981===== Adlt.s, no pelt. $150. 5.17.-MOO HOLIDAY PLAZA DELUXE. ~cfot.dJ 1 Sdnn Furn apt ~ _'plwi uti], Heated pool, ample pa.rkina. No chlldl'!n -no pet~. 196.J Pomona, C.M. The GORGEOlJS Nff VAL D'ISERE Si-I b<·I br.1Furn.-anl. Sauna, Act')' Ria. Billlarda Th\!rapy o <!' pool. BBQa 200) Pariioru:, R~ tiws;o c .. 1.-4100 DELUXE Conjo. 3 BR. 2 BA. Drpa, t .,,/w ~ta, dh1hwhr. prvfatio. $2Ul un- lum. $2" "" Nr. all 1ehls. •!em 1nru OCC. ~. SHARP &chtJlor unit. &t to 0CC & UCJ. $1..33 ttaY 111. ~~ulred.:-Av11U - 211no. &Wes A weekends 1141>-0'llS Newport Bloch IAYFIONT 2 BR, 2 BA 1uxtu~ apts, ·Pf1. llu1·ace, elCVaton,• t11brtr.' ranflan pk'1. All elee. Pool, soft waler, boat dcckt. $330, •1p, 3121 W. Coast Hwy, Nn1v. pert. 64z.22QZ NEW 2 Bdrm 2 bath trl·level Omdomintum. Pool area Ir fln!:plaet. t=lmo. 6C2-«744 or Bay &: Beach le.It)> HONEYMOON view a pt . e.lq:1nt CU'flll!lina.·2"asdrm1, flteph1.ce, prace S250. - OE'LUX'e 2 ar. -2 Ba. We4tcllll loc. Pool A bll-ins. Adul ts. 1240 n10. 6421774 1 Bdrm redecOrAted et the beach. No pot1. $12:i. month 'Yoarly. 673-2256 s :-2 tti\, nrocenn. ~1 ... d&hwhr. $233 mo. Yrl.y. No pe\J, S4M$97 Wl«\YS 9-5, Lido Isl• '5351 I BR Apl. l adult. uin furn. Close to bay. 107 Via Florence. 67$.-i.892 ' * PONTALBA APTS. • All E11ctric-Spe.ciou1 1 BR. Frplc, gar, crpts &: drps. S150. AdWtt. 8171 GartleJd, H.B. 96U004 R00~1Y 2 A 3 br'1. Crptd & dl'Jld. Newly decor. 3 br.. 5,,, Lois '100 dbl attach &"ar &: frplc, 3 Misc. R1nt1ls ~ks from bcb. ~J7ll 9.15 t.aruna canyon ltd. A~: 2 le 11·1'R. Pool. S'}'ORAGE Garaae f.or n:nt. LAGUNA BEACH ' Avail 3'k>W!• $1;30: A $l69. t/O"'· Easlllldr Costa Mesa, (Sa\\.·dust Festival Grounds) 1T401 Keel~. ·9 61·T51 a , $20 month. 642-;!657 2.89 acres. M·lA prep., •PP 847-1594 m ft lront.qe on aervice 2 C'.AR. Garage & Lot. Good road lnext to new Boyt' 2 BR Ap!. Carpets, blt·llls, for Storag!~~~ rno. Ca.II· Club bltf&),. a.verap.depth Wllliher/Ocyer 11pact. Gar. vw-.o.JUU Ava il Mar 1·. Call 962-8578 -118 ft. $225.000. ~IJ; do)"l'l1 FULLY enclosed pr&ies. Owner· ·wilJ ,.carey lit i&I 2 BORMS, 2 8A, p\lt. patk>, $25 per mo.. 814% annual r&te. O\vhl!r/ ' healed pool, 'f"Allhtr .l drye.r 2135 El~en,. Ape t. C.J\I. Broker Dofo'tliy f'unk, Real- "4<>k up. 962-I==='=====! tar. 642.J3+f ·or~ pm. NE\V • l BR. & 2 BR. w/ Income Property 6000 frplc. Ctpt11. drp•. Lindberg i ---------Acrue 620;0 Co. 5..)li.2579 INVESTM~NT T·AX•1eo Pictutt book ICl'U with F1Untaln Valley 5410 $260 P.to. ~ &lory TOli'mhoute~ 2 Br, 2 ~ S.8-Q,.new1·,., frig. Dshwht. PooVrec ac. Avail March 15th. Call (213) 3.12.-540'1 collect. SJIELTER U.S. bJ•·ay frontaae In Tradci'I considetf!d l>oomlna San ' Dieao Co. Btautlful 45 wrlt 100% apart. Owner muat sell! $12.000 ment complex. Manager down buya! 646--IZW toda)'! will contln~1 6%% interestl-===='======•I ratt, S!I0,000 cash minimum. Resort .Property ,'211 IM.'C. tnc. owner P.O. Box , . 00, N.B. lllil 64Z-LW, rANYON LAIC& V.. lot by Mr. Llle O'!f'll'. $600 dftt b&l $Ul2 mo. Sonia Ano 5+.20 Incl Inter 1%. -.-. -Buslno11 Rontol "'° M:I. ~rt . 6~10 VILLA MARllJL~l!S 20c ·SQUARE Ff. GORGEOUS vi,.. ~ · BRAND "IW soo.1200-uoo ,q. ft. Ottlce or • , • , SPACIOUS 11<iall ,,0,., 211-213 62rld l1oor ~ Mountns. ' mt s.E. s N . Beac K Y rel m 8prlrwo.· lmomo-'I & 2 IWrm. Apia. t.. """"' "· '' 11' .... 1n. RellckntJal ..,., Adult LJvlnt avail at Travel l.Ad&t M ,, do ~• 711~ tel Owner "21J) 2.U-3101 n wn. oarr:r ...... .,. . Furri. a ·Ur.t~rn. or· vcs <2ci) 2"16-0100 fll.000. Call '42·114), DL'lhwulM!io • Cobo cOordlnato e · • ett applianeei • plwh ~ \VANlfED: Srnall store. IP' R.I . lxdi•ne-"31 cat'P*f. • choice or 2 eol!)r prox. 200 sq. ft, Eltclu.alvt ' -• achemtt • 2 be lbs • •tall I m p 0 r I e d G If t I " GLENDORA CoUntry au'b ·~ • m.Jmrtd wvdo De cor aJors Acce&IOriel. area. lruildf1r'1 honie tor· a· robe doors • Indirect llaht. PllOJM ~ ehante of beach. ll'OPlftt, lng In kttdlen • tn..akhl11l Si'6RE fo'OR LEASE In Northeast . Coit& Mta or bar • lit111 pdnte fenced Plmric Bldt., nm to Newport Uff. l'rtl. bi. patio • ,...,. 1.,.,.,.,1.,. . """'1tr-11oataunnt. Iaq. "°""· $l5.Jll11 eq1111r. m. brlck ...... , I.up heat. m-NI Mn: nun !1&3-l811 ol pOola 6 laml. • SMALL lbopl nr Ntwportl===~==== 31tl le. ltlstol St. Pier. Vutooo mM. -!!:.!:_Wllllloll - II\ llll. N. of lo. O>l.t Plual ~ Pt-NEED 3 811 2 84 llGO "1 It ..... Ano· mW. Balboa. NB '73-701 !tame lor CASH - -PHONl1 "7-l200 SroallSlotl ,Ol<IJI...-QlttidO.Reoll>'- Blvd. S80 "' noo. c.u 5Us1111iU ...i • . -----5620 fl~ l'INAfjCIAL IJOS'., llA LARGE 1 & 2 Offleo RHtal 6'71 Bullnou ... studio Apts. llrl·plexl . ~~"'" -CrPI•, drpo, frplt, iao faml· Boat Locoti... In CdM , · '1idtoho"lrWll>lh•. T '1illlf ,q:-1 • -4'1tlft j. Uji0611ll'J"1 ~·Jlis olt, no pets. Nr lChoo.ls. m q~ 1pri.ct1. Ava ~~. CO, Old e•\UllltM4 h So. _Center St. (Nr \\lamer). thon• owner, MUSSO. Owner rtUrfill. 511- " II ' I •• .. • .. J - I I I " .. .. 1• • ,, ' \; .. • • •. . • • ' • i:: ~ " " •" ' • ... , ; ,~ ... " .. • •• ~: " -' .. ••• ' •i • I • • • -·i • • . I ... 1 I , .. ..... I I; • . . -----..-----....-·-----,-~~~~-.... .......... --"1""-~~---~-~~--·---·----------·-~ ·--------• 20 DAILV PILOT Tvtl:daY, ffbrUirY 24i '1'10 1...;;••!lliilllll!l•-~-mi!'--"'!", ANNOUNClMENTS * * 1( * * ~ NOTICES 'liUs11iEU anOI FINANCIAL It' i....:====---1 llOslneu ~I MOI • DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED INDEX OpporNnltln AF111JATE WORK $MALL blade ttmlle doc h y with Wh.ile marlrinp. Wear-en OU P• Pnt llWTk• alMll t•,...t Alllltanc• lna: white flea collar. Lost W f •t d vlctnUy ~lpha Bela at 17th an I OOe SI CM Salurdav 14 Nam r. h lo\OIELS, IRAltE• COUll lS lllfl PART TIME DIAL DIRECT 642-58111 Our 30 year old, Dun & Brad- street hla:h:y rated company whh f.ac~ In Indiana '1ld Cllifomia. Is rapidly ex. pandlng Us automotive Con. 5lltner P1:odu ... !1 Division and requires local man who can ,,,.ork f~ hours a v.-eek .... -ith his cat replenishing our ad· vert1JCd products In Coln· pany utabllahcd accounts. · · · ~ · · r t Houses FOR SALE c:uEsr HOMES ""'..., ed JlhL Please relurn. Wt' 19 • • • Mlr.t. llEHl .&LS l'f)811 .. k>ve htr! 5'1~2190 G•N•lf•L .............. 1• IN(OMI ,IOP!.ITY ......... ... ~ c /I f COSTA MESA .............. lllt IUJ!NESS PIOPt:llTY 6051 LOST On Lido I •• , '""" Cl one 0 MEJA O•L MAI ........••.•.. Ill$ 111.-,tLF.I PAlto(S .o!t l'I ' • ._. ME'A VEIOf · ............ Ill! tU51NES5 llll!NTAL .,.,,,,,,,-'Mt haired Sla.me11e male cal h' COLl.1!0! PAllK ............. 111 Ol'PICI! ll!IOITAL .......... ,. wearin ... bin-collar w/ beU. t ~ ~xperfs NEWPOIT llACH ........... 11• lHDUSTl lAL PllOPE11't .... ..... . ._ -. Nl!WPOl!T HEIGHTS .......... IS!I COMMfl CIAL .......... .... Am to "Simba," member ol / 4cJ be/ tALIOA coves ......... nis tNous11u•L 111N1.t.L ....... ..... the fama.. slnce birth. ist owl! HIWP'OIT SMOll.I ........... IHI ..OTS ........ ,,,.,.,., ..... 11• ""' Whoddy• Went? Whocldya Got? UJ IAVCIEST · ............... ml 1.ANCHES .. •···-·•·•"f1)41 Please return, fa mi I y I IAYSHOllE5 ................ :::' ClflUS GllOVES ............. '1fS SPECIAL CLASSIFICATION FOR NATURAL BORN SWAPPERS Specl•I Rate heartbroken . Reward. DOVlll SHOlll!' · ............. 113~ .. c11EAQE ............... •• 675-2216 SERVICE DIRECTORY SERVICE DIRECTORY SERVICE DIRECTORY ::'~~~1F:io1tuNos ·:::::::.11lJ '~~~~11~L::0° .. 11EE11r;···:::::::1: NO SELLING P.loden.te investment Io r stock which Is refundabl~. 5 Lin" -5 tim" -5 bucks IUl.U -AO ,.._UIT IMCL UOe llNIVE1$1TT J'Alllt ......... nu 011.t.NGE co. PllOl'EllTY ··--·""' LOST In Balboa, small B.tby1l!!.!_n11 6550 C1r-t Cle1nln9 6615 lncom• T1JC 6740 lllVIN• · · · ............. OM ouT oP sT•TI P110P ......... Dtl ltl-c:o!Ottd female Bassett ---• ....... !MCK IAY ................... 11.. .wUHTAIN & DESIUtT ....... 411• MUST ASPIRE TO EXCEPTIONALLY HIGll I-WM! -11Wo TO fnOI. '-V1'111I 1'1111 waft! 111 lr10L ~YOUI ~ onGICll' ocld,....a. •...,S ftntt crf id\1"1111,,._ Y>earln,g 01!& c:ollar. Name Llc;ENSED child care, 'my CARPET STEA~J CLEAN· f{J\. oirk TA.'C SERVICE ~ts~:r~UFtr ................. ~:~ ~~~~1~1:~~~E1.As~~v1c1!".'.' .. :Wf "Beau". LRG RE!\VARD! home, l\fonday thru f'rid""· ED No soap, no brushes. • ~yrs in area IRYtNI TERl!ACI! ............ :J• f.E. t:KCHANGE . .. ....... '1M \VEEKLY EARNINGS For detail&. v.Tite ~larl«-tihg Dtrector, 2901 Rowena Aven· 'l-ltOTHrf+G l"Olt S.A(IE -fl!.t.01!1 Ot.tl VI Ta Place Your Tr1der'1 ParadiM Ad PHONE 642-5671 "Y • •• COIONA DEL MA• .......... UI ~-I . WANTl!O ....... ,6lM To party who called. wlll in· Playroom & fenced y;o'd For est. 646-.j971 ~285 appt. IALIOA PEN1Nsuu ........ 1* d creue re"--ard. 673-5502 or wiffi plau -·ipment. South • '"'"r home or of.fic'l • •EACON •AY · ....... ··!: BUSINESS in J ~...... A--OK Shampoo Special $7.SO J~ •Av ISL.ANDS .. ............. FINANCIAL 67J...9020 day or night. Coast Plaza area. 549-4038 rm/le« Jor hall•, ''"· Al"' T"" SERVICE I LIDO ISLf. ............ UJI .. .,.. '" tt..'\ • n YDW' IAL•OA 15UND .......... llJS aUl!INESS OPPORTUN ITllS .. 6 HAV1': 29 BRAND NE\V Ll>ST: 3'..J if.lo. SI. Berna.rd VENDING1'1ACH1NES. Puppy. Xlnt markings . \VANT FREE &. CLEAR Large Reward. Vic. 1600 ue, Los Angt.les, Cali!. 90039 1966 Imperial ~edan. val at blue book \11holesa.le. Very Affiliate rood conct. For: lot, TD"s or CANDY SUPPLY ? ? ? See at Lido Shores Ho. DESERT LANr OR ? Block of Old Newport Rd. O"CON!'i"OR 499-19"8 6T>T.~. 1662 Old Newport ROUTE tel. 617 Lido Pk Dr. NB. (No selling invollled) 18" magh. dbl plank uul Excellent income for few boat. 1-IO hp fr&)'. FUily re- hours Wt'eldy 11'0rk. (Days stored,.mint cond .. val $1795 and Evenings). Refilling Md For lot or ? At marina, coUec:ting money from coin Udo Shoreli Hotel, 617 Lido operated dispensers in Or· Pk Dr, NB. Rd. C.f\.l. For MEN only. Rugged I ~ll~OO~Re"-'-w~,-rd~to-r-S~t.-Be~r-n-ard~. Dodge P\Vr \Van. Cmpr. Sis-No question& asked. CaU ler tolusedbyOarkGab-Steve or Donna JelnAtricanmovie Trdfor 675-7568 * 6121h Or c h id, smlr 4 whl cir \'Ch. 646-4643 CcL\1. ange lb. and i;umn.mding 1·1-1A-,-,E~~E-L_E_crn __ o_~~IC-0~R-. area. \Ve establish route. gan v.·oiTh Sl.fT5 \VJ LL <H.&ndles name brand cand)' S\VAP for late ~ode! car, 81l(f snacks). $1625.00 cash or v.•hat ha ie you ..• ~uired. For personal int~r. * 772.9024 * view in Orange Co. area. I c~~~-~-..,-..,.,-­ &end name, address and School Bus Com•ened to phone number to ~fULTI· house car. Sell contained STATE DIST., JS C., 1681 W. New engine & tirei;:. Broadway, Anaheim, Cali. Trade fo, trailer. fomia 92802 f714) 178.5060. * 637·6119 * Havt' Lund 8-f' men'li i;kis. bindingl'I & tyles. \\'ant men's golf clubs. Have •tic· la tion machine, \vant elec. Irie lype"-·riler. &lJ.1466 160 Acre& major U.~. hwy f1'0ntaa:e. boominr San Di- ego Co. Trdd'! $120,000 eq. for lu.<r home. TD'1. listed s!ock. yachl! 646·12.loa today! LOT in Grass Valley. * Famous * Palm Sprgs. 2 br, 2 ba Lake Arrowhead, Brand Name home. Valu $39.500. Eq. value $8500. Trade on $13.500. \Viii trade for hon1e ineon1e unit Harbor area. CAN.DY & SNACK ROUTE heh area. 1277 ~P'\'ell Rd. * 644-2432 "*" (PART OR FULL TlME) fl I (7141 ::125-3376. VERY HIGH INCO~IE Salton Sea lot &: trlr. $4000 \Ve need a distributor in this lmprovrd 20 acre . ho~ 1-'&C !or boaL c1ny1per or area for aur candy (Nestles, ranch, Northern Calif .. or roach. Big Bear 191 f&C Planten;, Tootsie Rolls, Pay· yacht. house or apt. $46,000 Sl500 !or ? 2308 Plaza ala Day. Milk Dllds, etc.) No equHy. 0\YllCr. _ Playa, San Clemente .. selling involved, \Ve furnish lTI4) 6T:>-625.9 ~ eanyon J...ake--">aterfrmit lot, -all accoWlti. You mUSfha\:t 1963 Custom built 2f Trima-elubhou!'.e &. pool $21,950, 2 to 8 hrs. per week spare ran Xlnt a:ind. nu riuing. clear. Will trade !or condo lune (days or evesl. sails & paint Trade !or Dr unit5• Broker • uk tor _$!l® '..:t_Sl.9re l'ttpunta.ln rcaorl cabin or Ruth Lii.uni€. &46·.TI CASH REQUIRED prop. or ? vaJ $3600. 545-3182 PARAKEET, Ille blue, arlli\\"ers to "Pretty Boy." Reward. 881 Joann. c.~1 . 645-1362 LOST: Old English Sheep dog, shaggy Wht w/grey, vie Bal, Isl. Reward 6Ta-6068 Personal• 6405 ------* FULLY LICENSED + Renowned H I n d u Spirit· uallst Adv i $eS on all matters: Love. f.larriage, Business, Courtship, Heallh, Happif!eS& &: Succeu. No problems too large or too small. I CAN HELP \'OU. Readlngti given 7 daya a "·eek. 9AM·9PM 312 N. ~ Camino Real , San CI e.m e..n_Le .J.92..JJ..3 6, 4!J2.<Xi76. -*Men For personal interview In What do you have to trade7 ENGLISH TUDOR nND TOUR GIRL THE )W r area write '"Disttibu· List lt here _ in Orange "High On Hill." SMART WAY! tor Division No. 23", P.O. County's largest mad t.rad· 6 rooms, beau. 5 min Pa.sa· 547-6668 &x 58. Pomona. Calif. 91769 lne post-ar1 make a deal. dena. Trd NB/CM . 54$.8532 24 hour recording • '""""' pho"' "'" .... * * * * *" a SINGLE People who like to OOIN laundrle .. Fngidatr. lj~~~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!'!!i!!!!'~!!J!~~~~!! I meet &: dB.nee with People. From $6.500 to $42,500.I! ANNOUNCEMENTS-Every '\'ed 8:3Q...to 12. Anaheim, Costa 1\1 e sa, BUSl'NESS and r.1eadov.·1ark entry Club, Buena Park, Fullerton. FINANCIAL and NOTICES l!.B. 3 mi. \V. o1 Beach oft/ Garde n Grove. we 8 tminster Huntinglon Business Los,t ________ 640:_c~1 \\'amer. Adi •. SZ.00 Beach. Santa' ADA, Tustin, Opportunitie1 6300 -LADY, You haven't lived till La 11-lil'll.da.. Sl'>tALL Tenier Dalmatian you 've had a lacial &. likln Call Charlie $7833 A~~ia~~ANUFACTURING blk & white dog, male. Red lreatmenl at l..e Salon rle FOR Lease: Reta.ii Titt tlea coJlar & beaded collar. TraitmenUI, 2930 \\'. C.st S ~art I e.. M Re•••rd' o:Ao ......., Hwy, N.B. (714) 6-il-3151 tore, ·~ o '-'=ta esa. Active w/ $17.500 producing · ......,.. .. nu C.Ould be uM'd for align-auto pa.rt1i & distribution. ment. brake, tune.up or llI'I)' Tops in ~pt>Cial field for 25 related auto repair . s~p. years. $12.000 galary + Ideal ;;et up for retail tlre share In profits.. 1.lust have operation. 6 bays, 2 align. managl'rial ability. Call Im· pits, Ready to sro! Contact med. ti14) 774-7052 M. Kenney. (2131 469-5354.J---------- 1715 Newpt Bh'CI, C?.1 6320 WOULD the little boy 1vho called me 1bout a lozt tiger killen, plea.~ call me again. DllYI" 612"-56i8. ask for Jo Ann. Ever; aft 6. >l.84;i37 MAN wantft ride from Brookburst & Adams to Seal Beach or Downey, INo. Amer.) Ph. tor t ime, 54G-!1529 ALCOHOLICS Anonymous Phone 542-7217 o.· write to P.O. Box 1223 Costa Mesa. BABYSITTING n:IY homf!, Balboa Island, a1:1,S'time, lots of loys, back yrd, S¥-'log. <n-2244 BABYSITTING By . T h e \Veek. You furn. transp. No live-in. Call 642-1407. CHILD CARE, fenced yd, lune~. Vic Wamer A Spr· inadale. \Veekly. 8'16-0839. BABYSITTING in my home, dll,)'s only. no11h Costa l'oltta area. 5'1>2201 BABYSITI'ING ln my home, days only, north Cosla !\lesa BJ1!a. 54:>-2201 WILL babya.it v.·eekday eves or f'ri &: Sat nights. Call Mare:e 6TJ--050li or 613-3726 BABYSIT My CM home-day, wk afl sch. Vic ol 1-larper Sehl Exp'd mother. &l2-0560 BABYSITTING, my home, CM. Nr. 191.h & Harbor. Weeki)'. Reas! 6-15-2989 BABYSITTING, nire clean home C.i\I. area. Fenced yd. Hr. day or 1vk. :>57-9828 * BABYSITTING * Ha,rbor View home. 6-14-4965 Brick,. Masonry,. etc • 6560 BRICK-&. CA1tPENTERY work. planters, fireplaces. block walls. cement patios, patio roofs & all typcl 01 repairs. 492-7928 BUI LD, Remodel, l"epair Brick. block. cone re te. carpentry, no job too w;malJ . Lie. Contr 962-6945 FREE Est. Brick, block, stof)(', planters &. entry ways, 531-1973. State Lic"d. Builders 6570 JOFI Construction Co . l\Iedallion Builder, Newport Sch. call 673-93.12 comp. hou~cln"' 827-3182 ho1ne. Yast & eUicient! HUNTINGTON I EACH ...... uot •USINESS WANTl!D .. .. .... J * 531 •=2 * HUNTINGTON HAlllOUI .... 1•~1 INVESTMENT O,,.wtu11ltle ... 6Slt1 Drywall 6638 e DUDDY Dl')'\'·all Co. Lic'd Contractor. Large or Sniall Jobs. Ph. 847-9581 ' Electrical ELECTRICIAN. licensed & bonded . Small jobs. maintenance & r e p a Ir". 51S-5203 Floart- CARPET VINYL TILE Free estimate Lie. Contr. S.W-72Sl 5464478 """"" LINDA ISL!: l;tH INVESTMENT WANTIO ...... Ill. trOUNTAOol VALLIY .......... 1•11 MONEY TO LOAN ............. 6>11 SEAL IEACH ............... 14H l'ERONSAL LOANI ............ 6JU ;UNSIT IEACM ............... 14U ~CWELIY 1.0ANS -···········~ l.c""''''icn,u,_ ____ _;6755 GAROl!N GllOV• .............. 1411 COLLAT~RAL LOANS ........ '2U --LONO ll!ACH ................. 11• llEAL ESTATI! LOANS ....... ~ DtONING:u. my home ~AKEWDOO ............... 1110 MOll:TGAOl!S. fl'llJI 0 ....... = . ' )IANGI: COUNTY ............. UOI MONEY WANTIO · ....... .. Sl I-fr. AHeration1 &. ouT otr COUNTY .............. u4J ANNOUNCEMENTS Babys1ttin.,;:. 545-7&U OUT 01" STATI! ................ ~!~ OTICES -::::::=::::::::::::::::::::::::::::lsTAfllTOfll ................ and N -WESTMINSTE: ............... :::: FOUNO tFrM Aft} ........... .... P ~ti MIOWAV (.IT ................. l'2t LOST ............... '4fl I ng, . ._ IAMTA ANA · ............ IUt PElllONAl.5 .............. '411 ;an.rhanging 6850 SANTA ANA MGTS ............. ,435 •HNOUNCEMENTS ............ '4U --''---~~~---ORANOONIE ..... , .... ··11M lll"lHS ......... -..•... Mil TUST ............ L MU SUPERIOR SERVICES NOllTM TUSTIN .. ::::::::::~~ :~~o"~~l~UAllY ·----::::::::.Mu 642-6037 m~~1:'oo C.1-NYON · ......... HU FUNERAL Dtl.ICTOIU ••"""!l: LAGUNA HILLS llot FLORISTS .. ,. ...... .. P,\JNTlNG·EXT·lNT LAGUNA ll!ACH . ::::::;::::::u~J CAIO Otr THANll.5 ............ '41' ••• .,"•bi• Rale•Li". , ... OUNA NIGUEL "" IN MEMORIAM .............. '417 n.t '"' ... • ........... llGI CEM1!1ERY LOTS ........... ttlf MISSION VIEJO ........... , CEMl"TERT CllYPTS ......... ttlf AVERAGE 1 story .exterior~: f~::g~~5TIANO·:::::::~ CIMETEIV CIVl'TS ......... '41t $25S. 2 story extcnor $359. CAPtSTUNO I EACH ........ 11U :ll!MATOl lES ............... ~ Bo. fro) 81 Chi OANA POINT ......... : ....... 11:>1 'l\!MOllAL l'AIKS ........... "1 nu.~ ue ps. llUIAD It-It 'UCTIONS ............. '4• Intenor prlceli avai l . ~l!ANSIDI! ·::::::::::~::::::::11H 'VIATION SERV1CI! ............ u G d • ,,.. 637 ~10 IAN Dll!GO un TIAVfL ............ u -_•c•:.;;•~nc.:.:•n;,9, ____ _;;-= --RIVl!ISIDE COUNri"":::::::uoo All TllANSPORTATION ...... ..... • / p A JN TING-INT/Ext HOU51!S TO •E MOVEO ..... 1900 AUTO TllANSPOllTAT ION ..... 6«5 ' CONDOMINIUM ...... !Ht LEGAL NOTICES "' .. J.f •HERRING'S ':• mplete Ga rden Servi~ Jack can do that pa inting DUPLEXES FOi SALi! ..... un Gl!RMAN .. lUTOlllNQ ....... job-la,t. clean & \.'Cry reas! APAllTMl!NTS FOil SALE • nit SERVICE DIRECTORY Est. •94-389j 847-1338 RENTA'-S AccouN11NG u,•. ' . h d ANSWEllNG SERVICE . 6 sUBU~B \N Paintin"/Decor• Houses Furn11 e APPL1ANC! REPAIRS, P1r11 .,,, " ' ' b • 8ENl!IAL . . -1tOI AJPHAL T, 011• · 6J2'1 EXPERT CLEAN·UP Per!iOnalil:ed '1ork for particular people. 962-4914 E.-.:pen Guaranteed \Vork. Rl!l!ITALS TO 5HAIE ....... ?Oct!i AUTO Rl:PAllS •U• NE\V lawns. r e. IS e e d In g . 1-)'ee fill No job too lat"'e COSTA MESA ........ 11M AUTO. St•• l•tl'I. Ten, Etc. "" Complete lawn care. Clean . b Ml!SA Dl!L MAii: ........... 110S IAIYStTTING ..... USI ' h or roo $mall. 491--3190 MESA Vl!IDE ................ 1110 IOAT MAlt"TliJrlANCt .... , ... 4J~I .up b)' JOb or ntolll \ Fl"ee ~-----~----COLLEQE PAll:lt ......... 111' lllCK. MA~ONRV, de. ....... "4-1 estimates. f or inlo caU • Interior -Exterior • HEWPOIT IEAC M ........... \JOI IUSINESS SlRVICES ........ •wi ~1-'.'17 OO' •'" ,.,,.,., A ti j(.i td 12 Nl!WPORT HGTS .............. l211 IUILDEllS .............. 4S71 Oil .. ~ cous t ce ngs.,p . yrs HEWl'OIT SKOllS .......... mt CAtEllNG . ..S1S -~ * ANTHONY·s * e:<lpe?'. ,,Ale lie. Pittsburgh IATIMOIES ............. -;-ms CAIJNETMAICINQ ............. "" "The best costs no more'' Budget landscaping ~fainlenance. 6144860 JAPANESE Cardenlni Se rvice . Neat work. Clean-up & yard n1alnt. 968-2303 AL'S Garoetun& & Lawn ?.laintenance. t::.ommcrclal, industrial & residential. .. 6-\6-3629 * COLLEGE Student To Do Gardening. Dependable I. Reas. Call <213) -13k-sl$ 5.r }787 DOVl!I SHOll:ES ............. 2221 CAltPENTERING ............. •JM pnts. ..-tfll'li>STCLlfF ............ 21M CEMENT, C ... trllo _.,. ...... ... INT .,._, . UNIVERl!TY PAii( .......... f1:1J CHILO CAii;, L.Jtl..Wll .... -.. "II & "-'iot Pnlg. Free ests. lllVINi .. : ..... :-: ......... ~ .... JUI CONTa.t.CTOIS .......... uu I..«; rets, 30 yrs exp. Lie. & '•AClt IAT .................. 2241 CARPET CLl!.ANIHG ... ~ ;,;___. '"'~I• Ch -• 64"' ........,,, EAS"T ILUFf .................. 2'lf1 CARPET L.AYINQ a l!PAll UM .,,.,. ... ,__...,. Uu. .,..._,,.,El Tere 4 2144 DRAPERIES ......... "34 or Jim 5#--0405-lllY1He Tl!llACI! ........... 214S DEMOLITION ........... "" ..,,~===~-----1co10NA OEL MAR ........... 21.H OIAFTING SERVICE .... -... Wl EX-PAINTER. l10\V schl IALlOA ............. not l!LeCTlllCAI. ......... u .. LIDO ISl.E ............. 1ll1 l!OUl l'MENT llENTALS ....... UH teacher W\l\ paint eves & I.AT ISLANDS ............ 1UI FENCING ......... u.t knd XJ l km -'-· IALIOA ISLAND ......... ?lSJ FLOORS .. .. ....... 6"' \\" s .. n \\OI" sn .... 1p, HUNTINGTON ll!ACH ........ ti.ot l"UINACE l!l'AIRS. rte ..... WI f'n!e ell. 6'16-<b,9, 540--0062 FOUHTAI N VALLEY ........ 201 FURNITUIE llESTOllNG ==='°"~~-~~~-!SEAL IEACH ........... llH I. 1EFINl5HING Hn CUSTOM Painting. Interior· LONG I.EACH ............ l Sot GARDENING ....... uq Exterior l:.ic Bonded Ins Oii.ANOE COUNrY ........... ''" GENERAL SERVICES ......... MaJ ' ' " ' SANTA ANA ..... , ..... • Jiii GJIAOING, OISCINO .............. 1 \Von'l be underbid! 616-3679 Wt!STMINSTEJI ........... 1112 GLASS .............. H" MIDWAY CITY ......... JIU GIEEN THUMI ................ 1111 PAPERHMGING SANTA ANA NEIGHlS ........ 1UO GUN SltOP ................ 1111 "-11 ., COAST"'L ......... __ ,, .. HEALTH CLuas .............. 4721 ....... "bC LAOUNA IEACH ............. 11os HAULIHQ ............. 1n• 519-04~9 5~8·1.J.44 LAGUNA NIGUEL ............. 1101 HOUSECLEAt<ollNG ....... 11H ~====~-~,:_:::_:::~ MISSION VIEJO ........... ,., 110I INJlRIOlt DECOIATIHG .. , .. ,Tll * PAINTING, lnt-fl:,d. LocaJ lAN CLEMENTE ......... Jilt INCOME TAX ......... UH Jlf\.f"S Gardenln&: &. maintenance. Res. & merclaJ • ~837 I Imm__, . SAN JUAN CAPtlTllANO ..... 1l'U IRON, Onuomt"ltl, ll'-..... ,. .• 15' lawn re erences. "" &et'Vl<:e. C.Al'ISTllANO I E.ACH ···---··"· IRONING ................... 47H com· 64&-S242 OANA POINT ........... 2141 INSUl.ATINO ....... -........ ,,., llVeJlllDE COUNTY ........ UOI INSURANCE .. . ...... . PAINTING -E:itl·lnl lB yrs Ill.CATION RENTALS ......... -INVESTIGATING, 0.19(11~• .•. 11'0 L. • ' IUMMEI IENTALS ......... "11 J"NITORIAL ....•.. •l'NI exper. ln!i. IC. ¥rtIB est. COHDOMINIUM ,,,_,,,.., .. 7tJI JEWELllY ll!l'Alll:, Ii.I, ....... u =°"=========-I JAPANESE Ga r d c n e r. Cabinetmaking 6580 =====--RESIDENTIAL Comm. Cuslon1 Cabinel & fl1rn. "furn Re-Finish.ing. 64f>....099l GARAGE CABINETS. Lo\v air; Sl per !if"I. It. • 5-19--0908 • t>Xp'd. C.01npl. yard service. 1-·ree estimale. 5-IS-82">5. GEN 'L :-.·d. Clean-up. tree scrv. llllo-UIJ. Sprlklr re· pnh•s. Hutti • Rea.son. &16-5848 Accoust. Ceilings. ~i.~za OUPLlkl!S FUJIN ............. 2tU LANDSCAPING .............. "1 . RENTALS ".OCKSMITH ............. . ~AIHNT~~-PapeLri.ng.17bo~~-HouseJ Unfurnllhtd :~~~::~ ~~bC.~GE·--:.:·:: .. : in a ....... 1 area. IC o:I uu-E L lOot PAtNTINO, l'••trMllll"f ..... . e. Refs lum. 612·W 0,,',',"-'···· .............. JUG PAINTING, Sl1n1 ........ 605 • • C .............. PATIOS ........ ..... PAPERHANG'"G MISA DEL MAI .............. 111$ PHOTOGRAPHY 41 * ,111~ MESA VERDE · ..... ,, .. .,_JIU PLASTERING, Pll(ll. l111•ii '.'.'6* EXPER. Jan:•ne11e GardPner. & PAINTING , * Ol:lli'US c,o,'.','0•,•, ',',',',, ........... ·11,,.111 l'LUMllNG ............. 'lft "~ !-"'=======-->=\==I ............ l'ET GROOMING '"' Co111plete Yd Service. ~~ree NEWPORT NQHTS. ............ n11 l'DOL 5EIVICl '"' 7.u rooo Stores FTancbises Money to. L01n Avail. Call 77&-5870 or BLACK & Silver :\. miniature poodlf', 1 yr old. Child'11 pel. Reward! 536-27-19 ,,,.!>_,, all6 PM 1st TD loan LOST: P.la.te Reddish Blonde Business Lo'l\·est Interest Available Toy Pomeranian. Vic . Announcem.~•ocn_n __ 64_1_0_ 1 Carpentering estintates. C3ll 5-10-1332 Plaslero'ng, Patch, Nl!Wl'OIT SMOllll .......... HJt POWEil SWEEP ING0 0 _'_'_'_'_':.' •• ::6'1 IAVlltOll:ES .............. 3121 PUMP SERVICll ............. •nt CLEA-·~-p SPECIALIST Re~ir DOVER SHOll:f.S ............... mf RDOFINO ••i.t 1~-v r-Wl!STCLll"F ............. »Jt RADIO ltl •lrs. 1!1C:""""'"1»1 i\<lo"·ing, edging, odd jobs. UNIVERSITY l'Alll:IC ........... nn REMOi:>ELrNG .. REP'Aiit'"""6t 6590 l;:0 ;p;po;;;;•t;";;n 1;;11; .. ;;;;;;;;;6;300~2nd TD Loan 1..:.~-'-'::-'.~-'-n1-~-~-"-·_ ..... _'""_=_· _'_'•_m. Spaghetti Plate T;,c r.llchelob Bttr on Tap '25c a~ KO, 311-13 C.0a1't Hwy, DanJ Point VENDING IS llG BUSINESS Tenns based on equity. 642-2171 54S.0611 Sl?rvlng Harbor area !l yrs. S1ttler Mortgage Co. 336 E. 171h St reet \\'E 1'lAKE OR BUY TRUST DEEDS \Ve hav~ ertJO)'ed 20 11,='"=:HJS=='='=""=="=m='="="'=·= ve11rs o( unparallelled 6350 integrity deaJing wlth Money W•nttd our custnmers. Our II·---'---------company is e"Jl8nding 107-+ participation. $25.000 again And requirn dis· needed on &hort fenn basis, tributors to servttt secured by li;:t TO on choice roull!.s CJf vending ma· ~loblle Home dev. 646-1234 chines. today! ROUTIS UTAILISHIDI ANNOUNCEMENTS NO SILLINOI and NOTICES NO SOLICITING! JUST PLAIN. OLD Found (Free Ads) 6400 FASHIONID GOOD F'EMALE GermllII Shepherd, SIRVICll -Hi mo'1 old. Vic. Allen C.ar Is miulred! Sl'I: to School, Fountain Valley, ten hours per wuk 2/19/70. 5.11-1010 after 6. can run a !imall roulP.. Income commensurate SIAMESE kllten, about 6 with inVl'!stment and el· mos. old. Sealpoint male, fort. Earnings can a-rnw vie. WU.son &. Harbor. to :SI.COO per month 645-llQ' with imH"lilment ~u.rt· ing u lilUe as Sl.500. UNUSUALLY beautiful young nlBle Persian cat. buff Yell. "''" 1.0,·ill coMidf>T' w/white face. No. Lquna. pert time opPraton 4!»-610-4 2/2-l who are looking'. for an ideal supplemental in· YOUNG Puppy, b I 11 ck come situat..IOn, but he \\'/beige n1arkinp. Ger. or she must ho! e:qien· Shep? Vic. H&rbot k Adams sion minded. An inteUi· 962-2653 gent comr.aiiy-financing If;====..,.,,.,,-.:== plan h. affordl'd after BEAUTIFUL Male Samoyed, initial invcstmenL vk. Palin.de& A. Santa Ana stB. Mfr3475 Please do not 1.0,·utr yuur time or oun. if t'E~IALE Cer. Shep. puppy, )'OU'tP. 1ookin~ to "'play 6-8 v.'kl. old, Brookhunt Ir. with a fev.• vending ma-Garfield arta. 962--6278 LADY'S \\-'ittna.eur w r i g t \\'atch, in oi-nr So. Coast Comm. H06p. Liberal re· \vard. 213: 469-18.'3 coll. PERSIAN Cal, maJe. white, 4 yrs., w /leash. Reward. Q\\•ner grieving. 4~9 BLACK Miniature f'olale Poo- dle. Very shaggy. Bra.kl. cal· lar. Reward. 67J..7436 Open 7 a .m. till 8 p.m. Oo~ Tu~sclays Travel 6435 -------CRUISING AD\IEi'-TURE Panama. r.1i11.mi. n1any slops. \\I ant I or 2 Part or all way. Vega 36 Trawler. 2816 LaFayette Avf!. NB l\Jon. 8 to 10 pm or Thurs pm to 6 NO MATTER WHAT IT IS • • • YOU CAN -SELL IT WITH A DAILY PILOT CARPENTRY ~ttNOR REPAIRS. No Job To<' Small. Cabinet lD gar- ages &: o th e r ca.blnets. 545-8175, U no an~wer leave nug at &Mi-2.112. H. 0. Anderson --.~~=== REPAIRS * ALTF.P.ATION~ * CABINETS. Any sil::e job 25 yrs exper. 5'1S-G713 GEN. repair, add.. rah. Formica. panelin~. ma.rl1te. Anything! Dick. ti73-14;t"I CARPENTRY. Cabinets Remod. No job '"° l!nlall. Qual work. Call &l&-2J76 REPAIR. Partitions. Small remodel. clc. N!te or day Rees! CAil KEN 5'10-46i9. REPAIR-remode.ling-patios LET 1llE S\VEDE DO IT! ... •494-7853• ... CARPENTRY. Rep a 1r s , Remodeling. r11binc L~. No job loo small. Call 6-16-42'14. I 548--69:.0 + PATCfl PLASTER! lll:VINE ................. -.. »• lll:EMODl!LING, KITC HI NS .... '9U R.easonab e. AU types. Free eslirnatel SAC K IA Y .................. ,, .. SCISSORS SHAllPEN ......... ,u JOHNSON'S GARDENING I IEAST ILUFtr .................. 1142 SEWING . . .. -''" Call 540-6825 II Ttro Jt4' SEWING MACHINE IEP.l tRS 6912 Yilnl cart!, Cle.u1-ups. Prun-lllVlNE TERll:ACI" ............ J1'1 SEPTIC TANKS. s--n. lik .. ,,., ""~"' COIONA DEi. MAI ....... ., .. 3210 TAILOIUNG ............. flt -'c"""'-' "•c1'o"c1c'"c•;·~96:;:::2-;·~0~~-Plumbing 6890 IAL80A ............... JIOI tEllMITE CONTROL .......... ••11 * LANDSCAPER * llAY ISLANOS ............... llH JtLE, Carlmk ........ •rn !DO ISLE • •• ........... JUI TIL! L" If & Mattie 1!1J I'· ,._ I-al-. p. o," 1225 PLUl'>IBJNG REPAIR ALIO_. 1SU.Mo ............. lJU .. • 1110 um, ...... , ... ..... ...~ • ..,.,... NEWPORT WEil nn ·•EE SEIVIC .. .. No job too sm11ll NUNT1JrtOTON eeACH····::::: :Hot TELEVISION, ll•INlln. f.IC. .... ... Genera l Services 6682 SUNGUARD \\'indow & glass tinting Frer c~t1matc. * 536-6154 .. RAIN gutters installed. ,Rainey season almost here! f'rce est. Reasn! 968-m8. • 642-3128 • 1UNTINGTON MAllOUR .•. UOJ UPHOLSTERY " ..... ''" -----------l/CuN••ON '''''' l•OO WELDINQ ......... ,6nJ -' · ....... WINDOW CLEANING '"7 Custom Plumb•! CJ '!AL IE.I.CH ............. 3411 ·•···• ••·· n '"•oeN G•ove .............. 34n JOBS & EMPLOYMENT· • >07 ~" • I.ONG IE.I.CM ,. .......... Jm JOI WANTED Mtft 1 ..... '""""' OU.NOE COUNTY ............ ,... 'Joi WANTED: w...Mi. ··:::::.;,.,. SfollTA ANA ............... ltll JO!I WANTED R f• 6950 ffiTMtNSTEll: ............... ltl1 MEN & WOMEN ,.,. ....!!' rng _______ ;.::c; DWAY CITY .. , ....... :Wli SCHOOLl & INITll:UC110N °'.'.:'uot -S ~TA ANA HEIGHTS ........ U)O !JOI Pll:EPAJlATtON ... . ... 1 ~E\\' Roofs. Repairs & c STAL ............. J1IO THIEATIUCAL ' .. mt LM<UNA IEACH ............. )le ERC NOISE FOR Coating of all Types. Boi;s u.c;uNA NtGUEL ............ 1111 M HA 'vorks on the job. "free Mft;"ON VIEJO .............. 11°' SALE AND TRADE H I' 6730 s.tifl CLEMENTE ............. 1111 -•-"-'-"=9'-------eslimaleli. 6-15-1691, 645-2550 CAPJ,TltANo , ......... nu ~UINITUllE ......... ltol • HAULING. llave So ton pickl1p. licemM & insured. -t!»-1003 CARL'S ~1ov1nr. llauling & Cleanup. 1.; Ton P.U. Reas. 1-~N'e E!il. 5'16-8918 JACK'S l\IOVlNG &. ~lAULING Reaii. Frer est. 536-1001 \'ARD/ Gar. Cleanup . Remove 1ree11. ivy. Im.sh. Grade, backhot', !£!-87J:i 24 hr --CAf'lll'flANO l lAC N ......... 11:11 . OANi ,OINT ........... 3740 AU.. """'""s rock ix>d & CONtoMINIUM ......... :ttJ.f '>1 1"" • 'A' ' DUP\E!XES VN~Ull:N ......•.. :rtll asphalt shingles. LEAKS suMNr1 llfNTAU ......... ms REPAIRED. \Vork guar. R.Et1TAL) 847-1136 Apts. Furnished * Roof Leaks Repaired + All Types. Guaranteed one ~Tar 642-4:158 OINEI.\\. ............... tOH COSTA r~ISA . ,., ........... •lot MEJA ~l!ll:Of ............ ,.•lH NEWPCN!T llEACH .......... 0 111 NEWl'OPT HEIOHTS .......... •ltt NEWPO•T SHORES .......... •nt S we:sT<l.l~f ........... •Uo ewlng 6960 UNIVERllTY PARK .......... 4Jll :::;:,;:.""'------.::..:: I.AC It IA T , .. , ........... 4ltt DR ESSi\IAKING ti.sf EAST aL~FF ........... 4141 1 o, ~ BC• CORONA Ol!L MAI ........... 41H OF~ICE FURHITUllE ........ 1011 OFFICE liOllllPMENT ......... Mil STORE lOUIPMl NT .......... NII ; ~AFE, ll:ESTAUr.ANT ......... M14 •All EOUIPMENl .......... MU HOUSEHOLO GOODS .......... tmt GAIAGE SALii ......... ton FURNJTUR I! AUCTION ........ to2J APPLIANCES , , , .......... l lOI •MTIQUE5 ......... I HI l SIW1NG MACHIN!! ....... 1111 • lro\USICAL INSTRUMENT •.• .,.1115 PIANOS & OllGANS ........... IUI litl\010 ............. ' TELEVISION .................. ntJ 1 Hl·FI I 5Tlll:EO ............. n1 t i TAPE llECORDEIS .... m• CAMEIAS & EOUIPMINT .... ll)QI HOlllY SUPPLIES ....... l40t SPOlflNG OOOOS ......... 1 lion guaranteed. ReaMmable 11.~1~A ................ 4lOI I c II 962 l""" &A su.~os ................ UH Cement Concrete 6600 H 1 6735 ra cs. a · .,.,.., L100 1sL1: .............. ,111 ' outec •antng . IALIOA ISi.AND .......... (JSJ llNOCULAIS, SCOPES ........ tJS4 ' MISCELLANEOUS ............ NOi : MISC. WANTEO ............... NH , CONCRETE "·ork all types. Sav.'lng. breaking. ha uhng. Sklploading: Lie, Service & Quality. 8'11-1010 CE~lENT \VORK. no job too Small. reasonable. free Estln1. H. Sturllck 31S-8613 !'>!ORE concrete patio for less mont'y. Artl~lie setting & finishing. 644-0687 CUSTOM CONCRETE Patios. pool decks. etc. I-Tee est. 61~16 --=-----• Drcc.smB.ktni;: . Alterations HUNTINOlaN IEACN ........ 4400 Designed to suit you. FO~NTAtN VALLIY ......... ••lo MilCHINEIY, Elt ............. ti• 1 ~UMBER .............. l lJt f BAY k Beach Janitorial Clrpets, \\"indo'<'-s. floors, r.l c. Res & Con1mc"\. 641i-l·IOI . COl>IPLE'TE quality house· cleaning. £xperienced . Rea· Mnable. 638-'2354 i\iesa Cleaning Service Carpets. "'indo\\11, Ooors, etc. R~i;. & Commc'l. S.18411.1 ,E L I EMN ............. ••J.t CaJJ Jo + 616·6~46 -..ONG IEA<M ............. •Ill :>IANGf: CC\INTY ............ .... GAll:OEN QJOVE ............. 4611 Tilt, Ceramic 6974 wEsTM1N~Tt1t ............... 4'11 ~:.;:;c..:o;;.;;..c.;.;_ __ ~o.; YllCIWAY cn1 .................. ,. * V ' Th 'NI M * SANT' ANA. . ............ 4tH ern . e e I an IANTA ANA NEIOHTS ........ 4')0 CusT. \VOl"k. Install & rt!pain, TUSTIN ................ 46-1• No job loo small. Plaster COASTAL . . ............... t1tl U.GUHA ll•CM ............... ,., CALIFORNIA LIVING patio Leaking shoWCl' UOUNA NIOUI!\. ............ 47'1 . repa · MISSION VllJO ............. ,. NUll:iEilftEI ............. ttu tr. iAH CLl!MENTE .............. u" SWIMMING PDOLS ........... tNil 847.1957f84&.0£'{M) DANA POIHT ................ 41'0 PATIOS ......... -.... 19U STORAGE . . ...... 111) IUILOING MATl!RIALS ..... 1160 ' SWAPS 11 • PETS •nd LIVESTOCK , PElS ,GENERAL ............. tt01 tATS .................... 1170 DOGS .................... MU HOlllE5 .................... Q)I ~IVESTOCt( ................ 11M fltPLl!ll,, etc ................. ttol lWNIN05 ................. mt In.om. T.x 6740 ':ONDOMINtUM ............... .,,. VACA'IONS ittu Tree Service 6980 HOTELS · .................. •ttJ TRANSPORTATION ;_:.;.:.B:.:::E:_Nc.:EccF:_l_C_l_A_l __ --RENTALS1 aoAn •-vAcHTs ............ ,... TAX SERVICE TREES, Hedgf's, trim. cut . Apts. Unfurnished ~A1L10.1.1s ........... "'' ( d h I d 3() Gl!NCRAL Hill OWElt CRUllElfS ............ ttH chlnn. '• Sinrel"4' ~opl" wtio are prepi1red 10 S~tALL powder blue foll~ this company's Parakeet on Dahlia St. WANT AD + CONCRt.:TE floors, pa. H~. masonry. : •y &Z job Rea~. Don. 6~2-Siil~ <'Lit 4. IN~TANT REruND or you IS umps, remove • au c . COST;. Ml!iA .. l!QI liPEE!O-SIO IOAT ........... ftll tl\1e la'=. IKSTANT LOAN \. yn; exp. "fully Ins. &l::!-4D30 Ml!iA VERDE .:.;:::::::.Jilt :g:~ l._",.~~Lf:i..SAN(E ......... = ' -Nl!WPOlfl ll!Af"4 ....... !1rill j 10AT LAUNCHING-........ to.34 prtndtil"< of '"an hon· Cdl\I. 6754068 e1t daJ· ~ pay for an llc00=L~L~foo.,..-u1d-,--co~,=ne~r:-cv~ic~lori=·a hol*l..diiy"a work'" may wrlte. & Newport. C.l\t. 642-Wlt Your first letll:r "hould 11---~M"tN"t'°B=I"KE=-- contaJn suUiCll'"nt refer· Y..fur.t Identi'" t!ncell IO Vl'rl!y. IJ 6f6.59'l4 C.M. AU Jetttts 11~ pr-~on&J. 11 ·ro-U-ND-,-l.o-"1-hal-nol~-Yo-U-.. ly n!;\iftwPd by 1'!r. r.t>· •·hi'-cat. ri.o collar. Vic. cU Uuery. Pr"!:idPnt u:: and OWrmal\ of the 11.lesa Verde. c.a.u S46-0239 Doud. RABBIT. Found in Newport USSIRY 1--.1 ... 17• CHANCILLOlll ROW Beach (NeWJ>t. Height.I.) 64&-'688 aft. 5 or wkends. lost 6401 OALLAI, HXAS SMALL Yorbh~ • Glf'n 752'1 Mil' tnld, HB. SM reward. 96J-t035 •ft ' pm. Att: V .... JM DtY. T.,,. 11,:,=.,==:.=:"'-'"--'--~ __ ,_ __ H•.AHI-8LACKomWl .i,.... ~ child'• pet. Vic. Ad1nu ' .... 11!!!11!!!11!!!!1!!11!!!!!!!!"1 Bnx>llhum. 116>-J&OS ._ ____ _ For Fast SC!rvice & Expert Assistance DIAL 642-5678 DIRECT .. Child Cart, Licensed 6610 NURSER\' School. C.;\I, 7 days "k. 6:30 A~l·9:30Pf.1 . Full. r /hmc. All ~hi. Rate11 for 2 or ~1101,., Tran!-p, l11rn. So Orang<! Cn. 5.1-1-12!!2 Contr.sctora 6620 Addlhons • emodelln; Fttd H. Gt!.n•lck. L . 613.6041 • SIB-'2170 Computer K\IRl'anlet"S hli;h. Upholstery 6990 HEtfll'POIT NEl0'4TS ......... )Jll I MAll:JNE EOU!I' ....... ffll r~I refund •IO\\,.!'l ta.~. "for a ·-'----'-------' "4EW .. OJlT SHOlll&.S ....... '11t •OAT SLll' MOOllN(O ...... 0"'31i WE\TCllFF ......... )?)I •OAT SE1tV1cEs ....... "1 llt11ilcd lime. HOi\tE CALLS CZ\"KOSKI"S CU tn U hot UNIVERSITY PAlll ......... 1u1 IOAT ltl!NTALS ......... HJ , Ii 1, P • IACl<•AV ........ .,. S110 10,T CM Ell ............... JI ' by a p('IL r:umf'IC!an CraftslT\tlnship EAST ILUFF ......... n•i l"ISMINQ; ~~~'' .............. = : 518-31{16 01' 51S-!r1:·1 JOO-N: tln• 642-1'64 CORONA OEL MAii ......... !1'6 IOAT MOVING ................... ' 270 E 11 1 ' C l . ,g , IALIOA · · ........ Jllll I OAT 5TOR .. Ql ............... .... . , 1 . I.. . \. 1831 Newport Blv. er., tAT !SU.NOS ............. JJ!O IOAlS "l'IANTED ........... .. • • 1· \\' 190h SI C 'l LIDO ISLE Slll ............. HM ' -~ '1 ' "' "' " •ALIOA ISLAND ......... Sll$ -IRCllAF1 ............ flit Smiley Tax Service • 1'2lh 'J"EAR !.OC\ll.Y e Qualilled • Jtea 50nahlc \V. A. (Bllll S?ttILEY Certified Public Ac:ount't 6"2·2221 &nyt.hne. 6-i&-96&6 Ceon1rnl Ruslf"I(''.~ S..t'\•k't<s •THE TAX ADVISORS MUNllNOTON llACH'"":--· SIDI l"LYINO LE SlONS ........... ,,Ut l'OUNTAIN \'ALLI T .::::.:::·!-lit ~g::i~E ;g:::;~ ........... .,m: ilE_.L •l!ACH .............. MJt 19'YCLES .............. ms LO .. O ll!ACM · ........... SlM ELIEC110<. C_.llS ............ . OIANGI! COUN'TT ............ N• MINI l llC!S .............. '111 GARl)IN OIOVI ............. S611 lro\OlOll( t(.L"'I .............. = WISTMINSTER ............ wn MOTOltiCOOTlllS ···•• . ~~~;:vA~'r ........ ::;: AUTO SERVICES .. PARTs·:::·:::: t" SANTA ANA HEIOH"" ......... ' •• AUTO rools. l!OUIP. . ..... ,. ~ '• ....... .,. rit••LElll Tll:A ~EL hU. ' !~!~~':. .. " .. :.:::·:::: m: l:"ltt1tS. Ullllt' ...... :',:".:::· \.AOUN .. IEACN .. •••· n0t lftM Ell.S ............. tuo LAGUNA NIQUn . .,.. 5117 lCltS .......... tMI TIME FOR QUICK CASH • THROUGH A DAILY PILOT MN CLl!MliNTE Jiit H! PS ......... ftll ,. SAN ~U•H CAltlSTllA~O i'"l! CAY.PEii RllN1ALS tl11 DIAL dlttcl 642-5618. Chtttge Pcrn\. 0Ulec·He11'l R.1tq. OAMA POINT 'Jlt OVN! I UGGllEI "" your ad, 1hcn ill back And 3'28 No. N~1vpo11 Blvd. REAL ESTATE, :~~~~1 ~~.tu ros .:::::::·::1: listen to lhe phone rlna! Q)))'.IOSite lfoAg lfospital WANT AD Generil ~Ntt0uc,., ct,.s\1t1 ...... -t.iu ,_ - N ! JorAppl 0..lt6&$,IMOO ~ rl'IPLt•. ff(. .. ) lA~t CAI:\. ROOS ....... fftl --==----=--~ ~ --CONDOMINIUM • 'Of U 0 IVENl5 """"'"" "'21 llENlALS-WANTE-0 .,._,. llU4 lUlOS ""'"Nli:O ,. ............ t1• t "···'"· lt'O lol t.W (Alt) 9'11 :::•.F:O·l\=~NT """"""!"I 'UTC LE.AJIHG ·::::::::::::::"II =================================~! ... · Ht IJJ!O CAltl , ~ ................. • •' .• ' ""1111111 ................... ,.,. .............. ~ ..... -....... -............... -------... ~--~--..,---................. _,__,... ______ ~ .. ._,......---...... ---..-·,.. .... -• -••.. ' .••. • --~~~~-~~~~~------~--~"!i!ii!i!'~.~~~~-"":'i~..!.. ~~Y~ Joas a IMPLOY~NT Jou A..,IMPLct~r ~s & E~_L:EVMINT JOis & IMPLOY ~. F'"'-24, 1970 • D.111.Y I'll.~ ·< Job Wont..i, Mon 7000 Jolls Men, Wom. 710CI Jobs Mon, Worn. 7100 Jobi Mon, Wom. 7100 Joi!< Mon, W-. !Oo • ,, • '·' I'm The Kind ·Of ·.: •• . Woman Who :Gets • ·v .; I What She Wants ~tfCP#I,,_._,.._ " ... •ff ,. ... ~·r ~'"· . . •. ~ -'··· . . '· .r,.:. ,...;:'_j,,. ··.•.:' ' .. . . ,_ . . .•. . . • ..... _ ........ ·, • • • Because I'm The • • Kind Of Woman Who's Sma~ E1:10~,h To ' Use DAILY PILOT Classified Advertising &eriev1 me, there's nothing •round our home anymore tMt isn't being used -because the minute I discover somethin9 is no lon9er nH<led , I sen it, while it still has muimum v1lue, thro119h an inexpensive DAILY PILOT Clauified Ad. That way, ins+tad of a clutter of things we don't use, I have the extra cash th.+ lets me hive the newer things ••• the "extra" things my whole family •niovs. Here's whet I mean. The cesh I got for th• good clothes and toys the cl.11dren had outgrown bought f110 the dac:orator lamp I'd been wenting. The musical instrument no one played peid for • big pert of our port1ble stereo unit. The power tools redac:oreted our da119hter's room. And, just for the fun of it, the good chair th.+ just didn't mak:h 1nything enymore ~ my husband ond me out for • fabulous dinner et the fanciest restaurant in town. Go through your home. Maka • rist of en the worthwhile things you find +hot eren't being used, !You"U be surprised •+ the number you tum up the first time.) Then, diel "42·5678 •ny time between 8 a.m. end 5 p.m. end give your t11t to • friendly, experienced Ad Writer. Th1t's el there Is to It. It's Inexpensive tool It can cost you as t.ttla 11 PENNIES A DA YI Wei, now thet you know my secret -isn't it time you got ste~ towerd better, tasier, f.eppior riving with DAILY PILOT Clauif..d Ads? Ster+ being the kind of women who gets whet she wents todeyl • _Call _How_642!!56 78 .u ' . ' .~ " ' -. ' ' • . • -~---. . !" YR& exp. SldpJ>'r, Ena. ••••••.••• ASSIMILEltS ' Cook -~ Deck hand, need yacht to For Cempor Factory . , <lf'PICI work on or dtllvery. " J, C. PDffl'EY t'O. TIMPORARY 6'>--044>, 67>-1752 7f'!,'t ~~ ~ FASIUON'JSLAl/b , n-..i ..:. be AROIJTECT Adl 6 )'1"1. ., ,. 1 ~ rl-W 3D experlencti. Juat returned p I Mf&:, 869 W. 18th St., C.M. • H.u openlne,f9r . from Europe. S'Ai yrs exp. eop e ~Sl'ANT Mana&ft"' tor ., ..... mi . , . SJ>'cl<l'> Shop. "'"" bi * COOi( • * Arner' 'm --.r_· wWU. 4 able to assume 1can M W1nted, rerpona.lblllty, Retail exper:. with aome t•rlence, and • • • . Women 7020 A ~· Apply at Ch r I• wfillna: to learn our llmiled re Fuhlonl, So. Coast Plaza. n1enu. ComPettuw WICftl, w -< --' EXP'D Galley· C..it ... """ Ask for "Miu T." ouhtandll>( benell~ lnclud· Gliil. you're a poaltion on commercial or BABYSITTER. needed oceaa. ina prollt shulna'. private yacht. short trips Days ln my home. Refer G Rlm pref., but will consider pref. We•tcllfl area. APPLY lN PERSON I other. Write detail• to C. 0 64&-1M9 10 AM to 5 PM. ~AJ , ~~!~18e~erry v ur BABYSrITER Needed On • MON!>AY THR~ rRlD~Y • • • iw, .._..,_ Peninaula. 12.6 P~l. YCNr YOUNG .. man •••1••• home•• mi,,.. 67'--06ll5 J.C. PENNEY CO. Join up with us Ill General office l\'Ork. &qi. BABYSITTER. Prefer my credit, llbrary. CM area. home, di.YI. Corona de! r.tar 24 ra11hion Island M'.!i:'· "';=.. '"' Business area. ::'srm:R Eq"81 oppoctunlty •mpl•>"• ~epbo~ ~ ~: Saturdays only 8-3 my home. COUNTER HELP, 2 hrs. .. ,.. • • ' 546--1045 ... ., 6 • m noontime, Mon thru Fti. Ap-or what have yoo? No ~ au ... • week-ends. ~2466 BARBER (Master) for new ply: Chow Bell, 2576 MATURE Woman, Ire e daytime houn 8--3 will liW TLC lo pre-gcbooler. No weekendl. 645-2466 AIDES • for convaletce11e11, elderly care or Camlly care. Homemakers. Call 547.$i81 EXP. SECRETARY. Good skills. Prefer NB or CM, 646--0032 aft & SAYE ·. '£ASH! MANPOWER th• lorg•sl .. ~ comp .. t• tempor•ry htlp strY_!jt In the world h•v• tixjNnded to better Hrvt °"" H•rbor •rt• custom- ers. NEW OFFICE barb@r ahop. Contact Lou Newpori', C.~'I'. Evans 5.16-1421. 21112 CUSTODIAN PacWc Ooaat Hwy., H.B. Immed. o~ning for reliable IJEAUT'l Operah'.lr w l t b some foUowlna. Xlnl work- lnr oondiUons, IUie salon. Nll\IM Hair Fashions, No. 19 Monarch Bay Plata, Laguna Niguel. 491W728, 499-.2221 • man with previous ln- duatrial janitorial exp. Xlnt workin& oond.-, ad. ~ & all frin&e benefita incl. profit sharing. qautornla · InJect!On r.1old1ng. 200 Brlail Aw.. C.M. 546-HliO * BEAUTICIAN, for b\llY, • DELIVERY BOY e popular priced ,C.M. aalOn. Can,yon Auk>. 843 Broadway, Paid vac. No clientele Laguna fk .ch. req'd. New and welcome. DEN1\I Off ice Rettp- Call !he ?ttanag:e.r. ~9919 lloJlts}· Pleue Write Box BIKINIS; Earn over $7.00 57M,. ~· Pllot, N.B per hr., selling Sandpiper Jteaardltir' 'Your Work Custom Bikinis a home History I: Qualif. parties, part time. ,;No in: vestment-Girll 16 m -. a * DR~ * up, CAI\ Hilil Hansen wk No E---'ence days. 545-4088 ,.,.,..-' BookkHpor Nec-ryl $550. mo. Xlnt opportunity_ Mual havt Clean Callfomla Co. wlll relmb. ftt. drlvtnc l"9CDf'd. :\flP!y JASON BEST YELLOW CAB .CO. AMERICAN GIRL AU NEW ' •Rod, White & ,· temporary service Marchlftlalongwlth TOP RA~ .f" ... I:; .. • •• • • MA.JOit ~ ~Sl~MENTS TOP BRASS 'COMPANIES • .c ;..-..-) Locahd at: - 448 W. 19th St Costa Mesa Employroeat._Aa;~ncy ---.,.186 E. 16th St.,~-=-11~ -m7 So. Maln. Sr-nu. Ana Costa Mesa • • - L A s s I F I E D 6 4 2 • 5 6 7 8 • 546-MIO ·------ BOOKKEEPER -P/time perm. Ma~ w/teilauriht exper. Alley West. 675-ln4 * EXEC. SECRETARY • Ai;tive chellenjlng job for ikilled person. Fut moving We' re recruiti119 NOW for: • BOYS 10 • 14 Can1er Routet Open tor Co. need• Yo\J.. $600.. Call II·------- Sally Hart .....,. N•wport lloKh COASTAL AGENCY Olflct t.azw-, Beach, So. Lquna DAILY PILOT ....-mi """°' Bl"" .. C.Ot A all Ora ... County A lloach Cltlol. WE NEED Men l Women BUS IOY Neat appearance. P/time or F/ti me, <Ner 18. Apply In per'IOn. WOODY'S WHARF 2318 W. Newport Blvd. • F/C BookkHpor with C06l system bk&rd. Sta.rt $138. wk. Many other po&i- tions avail. RUTH RYAH AGENCY 1'193 NeWpOt1, CM 6t6-4854 17931 Beach, HB 847-9617 who are available now 1::,,,.--;N;::e;::wpo-"..,aec:::--"-.h=" ~~ BUS Driver tor Private * FIBERGLASS* GEL'c:OATIRS f o r inte resting as-OlrlstiA.n school. Short hrs. Min. 6 months exper. requir- ed. App\y l6l1 ~ntia. Costa Mesa. signmenta on a tem- porary basis. • Secretary • Stenos • General Office • Receptionists Will train. Gd drivinl record req. Apply, 16835 Brookhunt St. F . V - 96>-33U CABINET MAKER • MJLL. ri.fEN. Exp'd, only, Call 546-2860 CAFETERIA Worken: All jobs avail. Start lmmed. Full & p/tlme. Col'ltact Tom Fish. Burrouah'a Cafeteria, Mlulon Viejo. CLEANING woman wanted. Experienced only! 4 hrs per week. Prefer Frlday1 . +•FOREMAN, male, exper 3d. ahlft·ll:l5 PM lo 6:0 Aht App In person aft 1 A?a-1, 1631 Placentia, S-M· GARDENER TRAINEE Experience 1~c. Xlnt opp. (7141 546-0085 G0t10ra1 .0111c:a Good IY!>il>(, Will be - ed on MTn. young: 1haJ'.P. call Lorairi!, Wtstclill Per· aonnel Agency, 2043 West- clitf Drive. References. ~?817 after -------- 5:30 week-days, anytime GIRL week-ends. APPLY 9 a.m .. 4 p.m. Clork/Typlst A a:inale girl iii needtf to as. 11lst In openincs a: promotion activity at service stations. Education or exper. not im- portant. · S"lnni:'IK satarY ,100 wttkJY. tf lnlerested report to the main ofllce, Vacation Villqe, 647 S. Cotst Hwy, Lquna Bch. at 3 pm thl1 sun. only. No phone calls pleue. NO! aales. S4.33. mo. Pu~hulng Dept. . Mo, nday thru Friday Varl.0 dutl•O. Good Co. . JASON BEST ,., ' Employment Agency 8 General Labaren • WaNhouse wortiers • Materiat Handlers APPLY 6 a.m. ·9 a.m. Monday thni Saturday Technical & Professlanal Positions · Available MANPOWER 448 W. 19tll St eosta 'Mesa • 645-2043 Anaheim 774-8018 ••••••••• I 2'201 So, Maln, Santa Ana ....,..,, COMPANION wanted for par. tially sla:hled woman 8-2 HB Must like anlma1a (213) 981.9455 Collect. Job• Mtn, Wom. 7100.J!~ .• _Men, ytorn. 7100 8ESTAURANT MANAGEMENT ••• a faKinating career • • • not just • job OUTSTANDING GROWTH ••• Grant's one of the nations largest retail chains, 0is rapidly expanding Into the res· taurant bu1iness. Almost every new store will include a handsome Bradford House restaurant. 1n ten short years Grant's res~ 1 taurant Sales have increased 100% and will double again In far less time. Over 100 men and women were appointed to restaurant management last year. Advancement comes quickly, depending on abUJty and willingness )o accept responsibility. TOP INCOME A BENEFITS You will flll,d top i~come potential at Grant's! Opportunities to earn '15,000. And more per year in restaurant management have never been greater! Grant's manage- ment incomes are among the best in the food .. <vice iJ!dustry . . And you enjoy a broad benefit program at Grant's Including a liberal retirement program, stock pur- chase plan, employee discO\IJlts and many other "Extras". GOOD WORKING CONDITIONS .... Go with a Go-Ahead company! Enjoy a woi;k 1chedule that leaves Yl>U with time for your lamlly and friends. Take the firat step now: cau for an lnteniiew. PHONE 962-8387 We are an equal opportunlty employer. " W; T. -GR·ANT · - Gr,nt Plan -Adams and Brookhur1t Huntington lloech ''Mester" Stenos "First Cllss'' Typists 11Private11 Sectys. - "Rank I File'' ct.m &p. Insurance Clerks . . • legal Secys. ' Credit Chac:kers Medical Secys. (Frnt Ir bk Ofc} Keypunch , Oj!9rs. NCR Operotors F/C Bookkeeper Asst. Bookkeeper Acct9. Clerlt . PBX ,Operetor Statislicel Typists Repro:/T ypists Rocept.fTypists Menu1crlRt Typists ~ . Ao11mblers -AM~IC.AN ~-~SL ... YOU ~3-'.3232 REGISTER llOWt 2172 -·Ill, Suite 12 "'"'"'~ (Nr. Or-Ceunty Al,.,...) ' • U ___ OlllY PILOT ivtsday, ftbru117 2.:i, l'ftO ·- ~, IMl'LovM•Nr 1 ~as ,. EMPLOYMIN't IJOas,. •MPLOYMENT I Joas,. EMPL~~ I JoBs" EMPL,oYMENT I JoBs .. 1M.PLOYM1Nr M••cHANDISI FOR :r;?.::,o~~~· ~:t,c~io~ll l!s,l!~J1;;1~l..l~o;11~1"~-~;;!,_~~School~~ .. ~l-;!;;uct~io.,~·~11(JO~~S<=hool=~•=lna=tr:uct=lon=7:600: .~•IM!ruttlon 7600 S<'-l•l•1tru<tlon 7'°' SJ;O;i;in.1"""""• 7lilf SAU ,AND Tald>I Ii , I • , , " • PurnltUN • IOOO Furniture 8000 Appllance1 IJOO • LARGE G.E. Relrlatn.lu' '1'0; Women ~ ••• • • • Of ALL A9es ' ' U you are entering the business world or il1'0" ¥• preaenUy..,,.. p)oyed.iind n;«i to Improve your !MAGI!: and INCOME, the ~~· Scblol. al Business . oilers a unlqu. and extreme1y effective , Refinement CourM Confidenu and Competence will be you" in • few 1hort weeks .. p ....... 642-3870 newport school of business Newport Air Associates fllle School & Flying Clllll UARN TO FLY -"$500; .~ ................... , • Co111plete Co"ne IMll!d.u- 40 Hours fli9ht time in Cessna lSO's with 20 hrs. dual instruction. Club membe"hip. 2 Month's fret du•s. lndividu•I instruction, tailored to YOUR ability. OTHil AllCRAF7 AYA!LAILE flt LOWIST RATU IN ORANIH COUNTY le•m to fly now -el\d h•v• fun! • Fly Mexk:o oN C.ada • Spoclal lat11 fw C-orclat, lu-. or A..-c Sltldoo11. Fot Compfet• D.+eil1 Ctll NOW 673 ·0313 [)·Y·~·T·T·S·T·~·'l'·f? Foreign Language? :-Gibberish? NO! II m11no: ml YCJU r:tEED m TAKE STEPS TCl lr:IPi\ClUE YClUi\ fUTUi\E? If so, et no coll to you, )IOI can bt t.sted to ... wtMthef )'OU qualify for • cer-r In U. Computer F1eld -th• thlrd.qrpst but futest-lf'OW!nt industry tn the WOf'kl today. Don't be utbfied witti second bestl Test your qu1lfflcation1 FREt at The Academy of Computer Toch......,.. Phonl or Writs: ' u.r ..... s...,. s.m y..., Suth 41 o,..., c.lff.. '2''' 547·"47! fOll 'lrU IHFOllMATIOH l!Jrl'O Ml COU10# ·········-······························ Name--------Phone --- Address City ---- County ____ state ___ Zip __ Education: Hllh School 0 Collett 0 ··········------·····················-~ COMES WITH MG Typists: Eam More '> • : ' Laam MTST & COMl'OS£R typing 1Jn.hmiieJ Ill E. 17th ST. SUITE ID coftA, MESA 6§2·5792 AIRLINE & TRAVEL CAREERS For Men and Women e Tr•vel Agent e Ticket S.. les • ReHrvations • Air freight Cargo e Opefotlons Agonl e Communications Day and night ,cla1sa1 AIRLINE SCHOOLS PACifrC 610 East !71h Strffl Accredited: National As sociation Trade & Technical Schools Approved for Veterans Eligible institution under the Federally in- sured Student Loan Program LEARN TO RELAX! LET US Show you how to enjoy a leisurely pme of golf. FOR GOLF LESSONS Seo Miko Evinger, Jock Saenz, Doan Fuller Bob Ryan COSTA MESA GOLF. & COUNTRY CLUB 1701 GOLF COURSE ROAD COSTA MHA 540-7200 COMPLETE LINE OF GOLF E9UIPM£NT. -SAUCERMAN ' SCHOO!i ONCE A YEAR BIG sp,eclAL 613-4350 llO or 613-1561 . • 1: FURNITURE MART. BUYS """q"" 1110 ORANGE COUNTY FAIRGROUNDS i Prom 'lO't A.,.tM Fobr-'?V 'Furolture Show ==,;.o.. ___ _ 88 FAIR DR E • COSTA .MESA SPANISH, MEDITERRANEAN, MAPLE, CONTEMP. u ORl1~~AKL , RUG~. Grad• 1 lbroqb 8 ...... f. ~ Small group arul lntllV!duallzed teachlil( will• ' meet the re'aU4tic.J\~eds of youngsterl Who · have been im~er t.O \nucb pres1ure. Aver-a~e and above and 1}Ktlow average abilities will be challenged tiy good teachillg and a variety PL edu@U.Ollal m.aterialL so_ipat more effective Jearll.ilig will result. · · MOTIVATION Operates only from within a person -not. from the out.side. Good teaching can slim· ulate motivation within a youngster by building on successful learning experiences. Nb thing succeeds like success! WHERE THE PROGRAM FITS THE CHILD! Willard H. Saucerman, Ed. D.' Telephone 50-1751 (on.I School: 54M060 GJ .JJarretl STUDIO of CHARM And MODELING Pbone for FREE Brochure OD "SECRETS OF BEAUTY" Classes Now Forming ,, Houn: t •. m. to t p.m. . .:s..:-Cou"' .;;roue~ I ":::,.~ ,-, bu t~e . Calif. Supt. of 'Publ.tc In.sir. ' * M,odoll .. aoc1 TOl .. lsloa *c-..&P-·Dnolopot .. t * -... s,..-u111o "-• * S,..lal CourHS fw Hom .... en * Car•• Girts FLORENCE SMALIS Dtrtctor of Our Statt Lict:mtd !tfodeltng Agency •• !Sit N. Malo, S.ta AN-5A7·6'71 19'5 Saooy C•nl Dr. ISaaroy HI• Yll!ato) ' ......... H7·100D Introducing Frog Lovers To Chopin Parents, don 't wait until your child is out of the Frog Lqvers Age before you give them the gift of music - Yo u wall and it may be too late! Children in the Frog Loving stage (4-8) are the perfect age for learning music. Yamaha, after years of research. designed the Yamaha Music Course lo assure that all children can learn music. You do not have to buy an instrument, there is no home study -just lots of fun for your children while they learn music. Classes are now enrolling -'"on't you please give us a call and let us show you the whole story of the Yamaha Music Course! Your biggest reward will be when your frog lover looks up at you and tells you ... "I ga ve my frog a new name. Beethoven." Yamaha Music School 642-1844 SHOWROOM FLOOR DEMONSTRATORS """'"· -· ,nn.,,._v•• FACTORY FLOOR SAMPLES I, .CLOSEOUTS " ""°"' '""'· 67>-ml ';~~PANISH 3 ROOfilS OF FUR"\ITURE' ftG, $795 fer only $389.95, .unbelitvableJ Sewlrtt MochlnM 1120 SINGER auto zia:·iaa:. 6 moa. old . No attach needed for zia:·~. button hole:s. desirns etc. Guar. S.\O cash or small pa.yments 526-6618 . COLONIAL MAPLE 3 ROOM GROUP REG .• $995 for only $479.95, st• this! LOOKI QUILTED I' SOFA & LOVE SEAT RlG. $229,95 lo• o"ly ,159.95 Musical Instruments CONTEUO ACCORDION 1125 KING SID! 9UIL TED MA TTIESS I. 2 IOX Springs. Salt Prlct $,9,95: Full Si~• Box Sprin9s & M1ttr•11 Stt1, low 111 $39.95 24 key, 120 bass, with cue. $600 val.ue + "easy to !~am" bookl &: iheet mUilc ...... Shop First! Thtn St; Our Unbelie¥ablt Buy1! ·1001 other Items with terrific s•vingsl PERFECT CONDITIONI· $250 or Best Otter 54D-8308 After 3 PM No down on •pproved credit. Use our Stora chtrge, Ban• terms, B of A, Master Ch•~911. SELMER Series 10 clarinet $350. Selmt'r Mark VJ 118.M- phone $500. Gre1seh \Vhlltl Jo'alcon guilar $700. A].. L BRAND NE\V. 497·1634 COMPLETE 5 pc. Ml si. bdrm 1et. Good full sz box sprl~ & matt's. >Jao; twin u. 892-6470 MUST sell? Near Ne:w Req, <lln. rm. set, bd, ann chr, garden tools. 968-4562 ,,, NEW exec. olc. furniture:. M111t sell due lo reJoc.atlon of buslneu. 1610 \V. Cst. ~wy: Sti!!o"'D~-- QUALM'Y king bed • quilted mattreu. Complete-unused 11'11. "wort4l200;-342-65)6 Pianot: & Organ1 1130 e SALE• =====!we MUST REDUCE OUR • Furnltura 8000 STOCK OF PIANOS I DINING Roo 1 b Sal ORGANS BEFORE ll'j- House, solldmt.-t~ple ytable:~ VEN;ORY TAXES ARE cha.In and china cabirlet, DUE. Gt'neral Electric 11tereo, SAVE NOW!!! ~nut cabinet, all in Im-$200 . $JOO ma.cl.date cond. MUlit see to appreeia1e! E.'l:<:eUenl buy! Check These Values 962--0847 SP~. CONSOLES, and g:}f~ 8', never used, revet-PRACTICE PLM'.?8 •• slhl-cushion cot h-•A -i ................. From $299 ~ s, 5 c 5 ....,'"\ BABY GRANDS and ed, $135. r..1a1ching Jovesea GRANDS bu'll 1 .. ,~ SSS 776-0592 .' re I re 1n1 ncu, · i!l&"a.nteed • • • • From S885 MAPbE ':"rin-BR-set. Desk, SPINETS, CONSOLES, and chl"St, misc!. Re8i0nable! CHORD ORGANS • . Save 962-4914 hundreds of dollars on some Cy~~f_j\1ade...Li_ving room .~~ls! New and med • cl bedroom fu rniture for ••• Fknous Brands. sale. Call 673-4*° THOMAS e YM.1AHA !=========-======="'-=;;, 8.Aili\YIN 0 \YURLITZER 8000 I Furniture 8000 · HAMMOND l;jiiii~~~iiiijiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliii~~I OPEN SEVEN DAYS I" COAST MUSIC- PUBLIC NOTICE NE\VPORT & HARBOR COSTA ~fEST e 642-2851 Open Daily 1~ Fri., 10-9 Sun. 12·5 D£CORATOR Gns CA~UATION OF 18 LUXURY APARTMENTS F"'ANCE Co. dem8'xb Im· Spenisll & MtditerTllllM fur9itw. mediale liquidation of i.11 floor planned Splne1 & eon. All BRAND NEW sole Pianos on a cost • + A decorator dream house on display -3 basis. Our loss is your gotd- rooms of gorgeous Spanish furniture (was en opportunity, but you muat reg. $1295. act NOW: SACRIFICE $425 WARD'S BALDWtl STUDIO • • • • • • 1819 Newport, C.M. &12-MSf Open T ~ry Nlfe ! Compltt• Med iterr•n••n Btdroom Su ite in & Sunday Afternoon • Ook., I ~eg. $149.0D I ......... NOW $188.00 " Gorgeoui Spanish Custom 8uilt Sofe with m•tchin9 lo•• s •• t-Choi<:e of btautiful lobdcs. {Reg. $4 19.951 _ .......... NOW f225.00 ~~;:~is~.~in~l ~=~j.;·~~d··c;,-ff~;··;:~·br~~::::::;: _ •tell DecoratOr T1ble Lampi . IR • . 19. '49.9fl .. -...................... NOW $18.00 Spanish Han9in9 Swag :.amps IR09. $49.951 -.............. -......... NOW $22.50 CREDIT AVAIL. NO MONEY DOWN mm RJ~NfTURE 1844 Newport Blvd.H.,bo~·~1vd.1 Costa'. -Mesa Only Every Night 'TU 9 -Wed., Sat. & Sun. 'Til 6 CANCELLATION OF FRANCHISE . ri.takes available, I I m I t eid quantity of all models pt famous piano manufact~. All at huge savings. SaJe ''Gout.> 'Mus1c1 3).15 N. ft1aln, SA 547-06$I • HM.tl\.fOND Steinway Yant· aha. New & uset.I pi&no. ol mos t makes. Best buys in So, Calil. at Schmldt Music Co. 1907 N. l.IPln, Santa Anl JOBS & EMPLOYMENT .jobs-Men, Wom:._!100 SECRETARY. Constru ction office. Xlnt opportunity. Call 645-m50 Toni Goodson for interview Office Furniture 8010 STEINW.\Y Console. N1(!1! tone lr.f very good cond. SECIY/JNS. \Yo rk In Corona del l'vlar. Exp'd In gen. in~.. for lll:ht un- derwriting, claims & Uiln&. Send resume Box 8, Corona d.el Mar. AEROSPACE RELEASEs .su:;o. Ill 17141 774-8150, &tt FOR PUBLIC SALE 5 , • 500 steel _transfer cases ~ OLD upright piano, needs zn Steel &: .Vood ,desks ~ 85, refinishing. $7;,. 1 0 8 1 'I f>.Drawer legal file cabinets Lafonda Circl r Vi ,.. Misc chairs, tables&: cab-!!62-021.S e, ' l· !nets. McMahan Bros ~k tnc. PIANO TUNING &: Repai llllO Newport Blvd Expert , reasonabl e! Costa ~1esa•&42-8450 Albert Aamess 67" --VOX Jaguar Organ, Jobs.-Men Wom. Gara ge Sale I022 1525. Mcriflce $ZiJ. ---------1----~ ' -SELLING DIRECT cond. Eves846-3238 GIRL F1ida3, 1 Girl Office. Must be expe.r In pe:g board system thru trial balance, i,,plng. letter writin& & 1ame s.h. 642-7306 SALES "SL IM GYM" Add Our Fabulous Product j :-;;;;::;:;--;;::::;:::::::;:;:::;:_j .;;~~~=~~==I INCOME T L~. 7 to 3 PM Shilt. NIGHT BROILER f\f AN Restaurant T y L" ~-• \\'ED. -Storage unit; misc • ax prepa..rers, Eas~st way 1., exercise. Sells o our inc . .-.....rn Extra r1lze 10 ladies clothes, new T1lev1slon HM exp'd., houn flexibl e. 549-3061 Good wages&: benetlts. Ap-on liighl. TV leads. Cash & Bonus·s +A Health ~ GlRL for leJephone sales- me.mbenhlp drive. \York from home or office. Ph; Mr. Waadyk~ evta. Gn-8758 Checkers on 10 key adder. ply: The ' Derby, 1262 * NIGHT * * &:U-015~ * Spa Program, Apply In per. jc~lled sweaters. SIJ'oUer, 21" Black & \\'hile, good con- H. R. Block Inc., 1875 Harbor MANUFACTURING Palisades Rd ., Santa Ana. DISHWASHERS Sa . It Loa son, Holida.y Health Spa.. ~!LAC fu{;132 & LI ~~Id dition, reasonable. Blvd, C.M. 642-69-10 -ENGINEER -... OPERATORS ... and \'lfli:S BRANCH 2300 Harbor, c .r.1. ~~~SBr:.h. 847~16tte:r r, 84.2-1598 Jl\NITOR. male. H.B. are:a. Ke:" t.tanage:ment role: in • Spee machine, Exp'd. on BUSBOYS ... NAGER SERVICE Station mechanii: GARAGE Sal ~-ba TV/STEREO A.\f/Fi\I cotn- Under 45. llAM-3AM. 1 fast growing compAny. ft lac garments. Some tnine:e& Savingi ";'Loan Association &: ulesman. F 11 11 t I me . 1 1 e: v .. u,ge: . r bo~ sell for S35. or trade fot nights ptt wk. Good pay. Gregor Yacht Corp. 1631 642-3472 n---'ed locatA-' in Ne~ Beach Blackwell's Rlchfle.kt. 74.~ SIOOS, .J>OO lb! top~ rails_. port. TV w/UHF. 962-4351 (CaJI C21Sl 428--.1637 Pl ti CM PBX CJUEF OPER. ..u c,,. ~rn . w 19th St C ?i-1 t.Usc. ite:ms. l66 Migndtla,1=====~;:~;,j acen a, · : ares, has positlor. avail. tor · · · · · C.M. ~ -Hi.fl & Stereo lllf •. JANITOR. Male. On.ngt MANAGEMENT Op-~~~x~~~· APPLY IN PERSON a ~'1!11 qualifird Savings & Sewing Machine Oprni.tors It f\fOVlNG: GaUers & Sattler .• • ~HAIRSTYLIST · County atta. Under 4.5. 12 portunlty. Full or P/tlme. =~===~~~ Loan Branch Manager. Ex. Seamstreue1. Exp'd., ladlea Xlnt worldri& conditions, lop AM ID 3 AM, 7 daya pet ~'k. Car Necen. 20 hnl wk. $68 PR 0 FESS I 0 NA L Sales L-E L eel. potential & !rlnge hen. sportswear. Top pay, Ideal range, hldea bed, tennis tble, l.1ED Stereo Mt/Ft-1 t tvr ccmun. +. Mim bavt clien-Good pa.y. (2131 4.2&-4637 \vkly. 836--4302. earner-Searching for man 10 Reuusn • ff ellls. Only applicants with conditions with nice people tools & otb&" tum. 349 old $1so • • -~ tt.le. 642-6151 r-.tasscuses learn our busineK and han-15J E. O>ast H\vy, a min ol 2 yrs, Savtngs ex· to \\-"Ork for . App: 1589 Go\'e~r St., C.t.f. &46-6385 , * 962-4914 * \ RSI'YLJsr w/fDll. Earn JONE'S .TIRE SERVICE A'I;TR. congenial i irls to die exeeutlve Ales position. Newport Beach perlence need apply. For Monrovia, C.r.t. !\tOVING: Selling Complete JnOte by.renlln;: apace. Jim 4 expahdlng and rrquire1 n1ett pubUc. No exp. nee., Training incon1e prTivided. REAL Esta1-.i Sa le smen particulars call r.tr. Hensley *TRAINEES* 1-Jougerul. Good Bargalna. C•m~r•s & Scott'• l{air Oea\p, CdM. EXPERIENCED will lraln. Apply in person. Collef(!, sales or business shouldn't you be selling the 1213) 869-0.112. 23 yr old Promot'I. Adv. =C=Al=l=IW&-=!HlO=.-=H=·-=8=· ==:j . ....::E~q:•l:pm:.:::':":'--~·:30I: 675-7321 da)'s/m.o350 eves • BOokkee.per Le Salon de Traltmenl, 2930 exp. ~lai;led. .. hotte11t area Hun I In gt on firm, needs YOU"fi men, Co ii • R.taU Sale.men \V. C&t }fwy, N.B. 642-315'1 a.12-5623 Ext. 321 Beach? We will traln. C'..all Sal"s llstl!d on '" stock exch'li Applloncu 1100 HORSES ~-rd~ "-·• OU$EKPRJSl!ltr, llw tn . MANUFACTURING · · """ '""''· ....... x stiu .. or-001, 4~ daya wk. Will e Tire Servicerntn Phil !\tcNamte Village Real Nat'I TV. IJ you earn less mrral &: f~ $40. -l• (consk!t:t' pt.-tlme ooUep • Front End and • * r.tEC>ICAL • • REAL ESTA TE E!tale 962.-4471 REPRESENTATIVE th.apn _Sl,?O. ?Ii for lnfo an c 0 pp ER TONE ...... delux 5-19-3591 ~--1 ~I Front olfice. be the Dair lot REAL ESTATE SALES Man to call on whol~e ac~ & M. ;;.a4-0.594, dshwihr. si~. GE ··u'l"====o~===-tbaknt. '-"""11 tl'aJl.lip. ""7 , • Brake Mechanics thla bull)' dOCtor. Plush off. SALESMEN •• 1 •1 Ill C'O\lnta. Sportscar trade. Un· S T . ..,,, _. •rMI II Jn W . call alttr 6 pm. Salary"lllus booUJ and ia", . cheerful people. To Ac-tlve Corona ""' "ar o ce llmlted opportunity, u com· . • tat. ~ptst detroal retrig·frfte'rr sao, SCI aneous 8600 ~Su OemenJe company paid benefit!. $400. CaU Jean Brown, lfad»r Are"' i{omes !'.Ci?.ks Uce.Nled sales person-pany is exi:andina national. $450. up. Beautiful Newport 110 A.C. drytr. u;;, Gu,J-------~-1 6 lfj lfi S ~PINC help OpportUnlty lor advancement ~ Income Uni~ nl'I. RepllH held In strictest Iy. Expe:r not nee. wW train. Beath Ofcs. Stable Co. Top stove S:ll. &46-6"192 ./I NEWPORT Beach T~n. ............. days. Appi, AJ)ply: 2049 Ha..'bor Blvd. COASTAL AGENCY AtobUc tfome Parks contidcnoe. ·ro $400. per week to start benis. Call A11s.."I Betty. KENMORE auto. WJSber, nis Club family t.le.m,. ID -Jamaica Inn ' Coata Mesa """" 11 -01·~ c and LanJ Call h>t appo\ntment · ror appointment ............ <71i1i !67-612'1, Abigail Abbot ~r-lal e model. xlnt co~.1 -. bushlp. Call 644-1496 • "'';iv • vu., .1\1. E'I R' hardson 67tt 7225 t""""" .,--• •-230 W w ·~ ••• M*' llotd, $). E. 0out JANJTOR Wanted for C.J\I. 1 ffn IC ~ $.19-5600 1~ ,....,ncy. · ar-Whirlpool eJtcl drye:r, xlnl USED Candy &: e\garet\li ffwJ', COi atta. trans I: phone m.. -MedJcill 2-SC E. 0:.at Jllw1y RN P/fIME SARAH . COVENTRY has ner. SUlte U, Santa Ana. cond. $45. MT"'811S or machl.neg. Re asonablj lfOUlii!XEPPJ!:R Jar e:lderlf qttired. 6 nlte« weekly. Mu11 ' PART TIME 61~rona del M~r6i}.403l Aftemoon1 for G.P.'s Office . openillP for full or par1 TYPIST WIS hor Iha n d . 546--$672 priced. SlS-7927 .rd-lrwalid *ly, lite cook-be exper, dependable It Typist-Medlcal Ins. '"'""'""'"'""'"'""'""""'""'i"" ...... caiiliil ..._..., ................ , time sales. No \nYettme.nt. Youna: sharp girl . .21J..25. 2 KENMORE "'ll!llwr w.llh a.11 U~ Dlshv."asher, used illl ""trW;"I dl1rt:"'6:•-,,m-;-S8t h:lnt----.~nr.w.I"~ E'ipirlencecf. -646-2903 '-no deJiYerles. For n trvfew, ~hrs da.lly, fl:iO hr. 67">5-138 wash cycles. nev.· pump S~l. oven. gas table top. All 'l'll'k ' ...._ Hu lnlnl·poo-(213) 923--S8al Ni&SES ftqtstm!id • even-R.E. TRACT SALES m~ Betty Bruce.l at • ~4 • 5.16-3-lll HB b4f&atns. :.4&-8281 t I dlt \rlc no., Holp.. Ace 40-LABORERS. 2 willln&. to be lng &: nl1ht sblt11. E:f. Lal'&c sub-div. CO!ilB ftfcML • S.Cretary-School•lnttructlon 7~ WASHER &i Dl)'e.r Pa.Ir. llAMMOND Chord Organ 65 INJ.IJG trained for pla1Uc moldlllg. beMlltJ. Apply Penonnel Good c:omm. A hrs. 541>670'2 'iJ:J X€C ,Good 11kill&, F/O a~ce.. BODY CULTIJRE CLASSES Good worklrt1 c:Oncl. Bolh !\1odel S. SlZJ. Orig. Caru!'IO 0 vi!ii£i4i!' .lJve•In Mlnlmui:n.200 lb..qiu req 'd, Dlrte!Or .. , ,So. Cout Coin-./ REAL E&tale Sale& Lady Agency Jor career Girts able to accept rcsp(lmibUlty; tor ladies noW lormlnr only $85' C..U 64S-l308 l'ee.'qtd, make offer. 67~14~5 tor ...... ..... Man, U.S. Jndu11trlal Foam. 15159 munlty Hosp., 31872 CDasl for very busy rtnlaJ office. <llO w. Cout Hwy., N.B. call Loraine, \Ve!tcllft Per· Ltd me.mbe.nh!p, 6-IZ-.n.:>I USED Appliance A lV't, tU 2 BUCKET Seats, NeW. Call tar Qpi NtWn , .. PM, Golden Wn:t CI rr le, Hwy .. So. Laauria. fS'>llll gwn-antee. Full time or part By appoint. 646-3939 sonnel Agency, 2M3 We:st· Le Salon de Traltmentt ~ntced, Dunla.p'a. ·1815 Sult.attle lo.r dune IJuuy, $$) ·Nt-.3115 We11tmln&ter 89f.SGLI ext. 356 lime. 546-4000 cl!tl Dr., N.B. $ti.27TO. , 2930 \V. Ci.l. Hwy, N.B. Newport. C.rtf, a48--T188 cllCh. ~8-7825 I , ' • ·-~---~~~~-------------~-~~~-~~--- ' II ......................... .,. ............... ~ ...... :""'~ ......... -............. ,.. ... -... """"""-------·--·---·-------:--------~-~ ..... ~~ .. _. ........ _ __,,_,...,...__,,..-,~ ... -.-..... -r-. T•nd&t, rtbr>ory 24, 1970 OA!lY·PILO( U MrlCHMIOISI FOii . '~LE ANO.'TRADE MIK•tl•nooii• - TRANSPOR'(ATION : FREE 'TO YOU Boat Services ,.)7 Trucks 9500 Imported Autoo '600 '"'"''""' "'"'" TRANSPORTATION T·RANSPORTATION . TRANSPORTATION 1'1iANSi'OltJATHIH 9900. u.;.,-,."-, --9600 Autoa W•ntod 9700 Used C•rs TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION 2 LOVABL.E pan Sbopherd L __ r-: •.&Ill TOYOTiA pupa. 5 ..... old, ..,.. 1 YACHT """'cc !II r,n .,...,. '63 II TON font. 11/H, AIT, fEl,... MuN'l'Z~ ~ track 1tetti0 t.pe 9m111 breed mixed, 5 l"DOI. Lavina: ~ 1'..tht Se~. ~ Vf. ht\ apr. PUJH. ---'-----__ .....;; ..;:.~,;.:..;..._ CORVAIR Wk: t'A.Y ••• dock with i -02" • old, ne<ds &d tun, w/fencd Call; 151.s<lOafU. poalll'ac'*"' O<lll top fllUIAlll 1969-.Toyott Corolla · 11") ~ eqca.Nd 1n )'I'd. 548-1202: a.tter 2 pnQ/26 w/boat rtiek. Xtra link, Nnrpor\ lrnporu Ltd. Of. Real economy! 3S mPC. White CASH •u MONZA walriut.-S comp 1 e l • • Moblle Homu 9200 cwitom cab, ~tra Sharp! ance Cowitr'• antt audr.or-with red leatherttt• .upbol- auorted 4 tr'ltlt 1~ SILKY TERRIER. S Yl'L ~. \VlU ride k Jeep tied dealC'I'. 11ery, Bucket Ml•ts w/4 lJd,, for tllOd ...._. _ _. caltuas. rne--.ta.. spwt ~ wttb automatic. °"" ...... loetl4' ....... ~ &<lid .... dar. plush mom lnler1t1r.1t11 lllr~ce .. -...... Coil J.P. -.mor~ .• taptt $2 to $3 each'; black muat -~)Omo-with &du.lb Wqonetr .. ~an 5 SAU:S.SERvtCl-PAkTS noor 1hilL Padded duh. and w h 1 t e 2 l' • ~· BEAGU::' with Pl.iwrs. au*, * it Ton y..g 4 pd 8100 w. Cout Hwr. waw tin:1, 2 IPtl clec. wtp. GROTH· CHEVROlff TV-maho1an)' wood loves cbildren, 546-1587 am Jim HIW '68 FORD_!: .,,1~l ;;:;.'n Call• • Newoort JIMch er. w/vdndshield w•sbus, cablnet-excellenl 'NO!'ki.Qr onlf, . SIU UIU Many xtrU. &.,... ...... 1'2-9405 5'0.l7&41 radio&: healer. 19'70 llctn11. c:ondiUOn $35; double ~ LOVULE' black ftrn. cock-Coonar :1 &12-mc art ~ . ...Uthori&td Fermi Dta1et Prictd at only $1450. See and box qirlnp and mat-•·poo 1. yr oJd, 10\'ta r-'66 lntcrnadoniJ., Soout 4x4 drive al 1620.1 Siem St., · CO~VEI 1!....t.. '69 CORVETTI· llAST IACK tress.-dean-no t:rame or children, Mo,trnd, needs id TRAILER ~LES \rery sharp. f'r1ced. t(! teU. JACIUA-Fountain valley: 8J9.3826. M•~ -l ho "B~f-aman 002~11 -----------1 head._.., -: ret power me w/fenced yrd , -1 "''"r -Pr vatc r'arty. mowefwiDJW Brtus and 962--0180 2126 whollveflnonil" 1ff7JAGUAR340 .69 TOYOTA Corolla Slrltton 1tarter--$6!'i: 1.' W"'-~ ho 1 WE SER'IJO:: Jeept 1 9S10 RARE 4 SPD W/0.0. 8,,,."'·i·, ~tuxo .• u_ IFM Auto L ... 1119 9'10 couc!Hqua color-rood con-c~"k •Xl-1 mehl1"-0 r \VHAT WE SELi..! , Lealhe.r 'Inter, rlh, chrom.. dlo"~ 11 :::. ml' "':.-diliQn43.S.,· • 646--0836 or · oc: er, nt or c ..,....,n •. 9 l!; So. Harbor, Santa Ana ilttlUTARt, Jeep SSSO. or of. Wi~ whll, stereo. drivt111 ra ' ,INU L -· 54S.-1249 afty\lme. yrs old. A I J lhots Ir he, 1 Bick So of Bolaa Ul-1066 fer, ij.ea'il'f d·tty Chnmi•rlml li&hl.i, radW tires; Flne1t11' ;897;;"'°'.;;;;;a=lt;;&;:;;;;;;;;:;;;; - -Removabla roOl panell, ~c FORD AUT110RlttD 1pffd. FactJi.). watnnt;r. 6t~T8S -2/26 . & Gatt...uteJ,.G7J.o.7mc ,,.., _..... itt 6 A -..i :q:ex eoz" ~ POOL TABLES FREE to Cd hm W/t.nc«I NEW 20 ll·56 =""":;:·===== ~~ "';~.i;d;' . . "" VOl,k_SWAGEH LEASING SYSTEM 12.000 n'lllc1. •' • 4 ." sms---:,~n:;~or ~~~~ ~:1~ Bob LO~cJpre . '" eoanliA $ltt7 BR.UN~~ yard, 5 pure bred blk/wht 2 BR, 2 BA, den. carpetlnr (ampel's 9S20 1963 c=-JA_G_U"A-R~-3-.8-Sod-,-,, Custmn .... Tahl• Waltt Spaniel P.YJ>&, 8 wkl thru-out 22' raf&td porch, I ---------Black W/\\·Jre whll & YW e•"'s leash\i a! all type car• and Pontiac G.T. l door, -i tp•od, 1tld ,hift, ,1..oclio, h••'•'· ZDX 112. From $2119 old, 9U-Ol80 2/26 carporti • & patio a.,nlnp. 28' CONVERTED BUS, Pircllls ~· in xlnt cond. UQ 1~ F1Danclnr 3 ADORABLJ!: mixed breed Mato' ~traa:. SU.~:On the POWE!\ PLANT. R.CnUG, Mmt ael1 th1f wk. $1250. 'H IUICK ""'"" • Immediate dcl!very from 13&00 Beach Blvd. 6364500 s2121 * Sl!X:ARD POOLS'* pupplta, 6 wka old, lovable bea c h at DRlf1'WOOD ETC. -., 4*'223dl)'l • .Evts49:J..36.ll 532-1992 • cuddly. Need iood homes. BEAO{ Q.UB, H.B. Grttrr * ~ !f_ ·.- over 300 can and trucks '68 CORVETI'E Convert. 427. lllvler•, v.1, f•clorv •Ir • Competitive rates ...... Xlnl cond. Lo mr1. ceMlltl•11h19, pow•r 1lo•r· • New car dealerablp servfee Mt11! Rt to appreciate. lllf, roile, h.otor, whit•· FROM $399 323 S. Main St. Clnn&'l' 894-1.!w ' 2121 leaf Mobile Hon\e Sales. ttf. 'M 3.IS Sedan. Belie I blk * AucnoN * TO Good -·· 311 _ ~· 536-1513, Jomfcni .in.. Oun• 1.,.1,. · 9525 • 1'1hr, P"'l.alr, chnnl - ~"' d '-" ·' ' w•ll tirM.. !; 401. e ,,wu. "tra e .. , ,v .. ue tor ~-Marla/-a!t 6, ,67 MlaCY $l7ff ·-~ II "'his, Mw radia\1. &4._4263 Sprlnaer• SpanlelfLl:br mix, IA Y HA IOR EXPORT Co. l&llln& $2500 GOOD SELECTION your present c11· 4~ • , J e All • ake U St•tle11 W•1••· V-1, e11te. . popua1r m s ava . 68 L88 427 Convert. 4 gpee(I. "'''i' '''"'"'lul.n, po••' u """'' wm .u or buy puppl'1. OA<' -· ,,... Moblle ~ ll'-•-s '6Z XKE R~dster. Xln't J-· OW"'>)O~ '"" ...... ,_ -..-metal tlab, 4 seat, tuU cond N tJtt val live Windy a try ~ COCKER· poodle puppies. 8 , CLEAYIR~llNCIEN.sO•_ LE lenath drive, buggy demo. uphol·. e1:."s1eoo. ~a. ·able New tires. Xlnt cone!. 284 1t•erh1t, r•cll•. h••hr. v1 . Auelloni Friday 7:30 p.n wk$ old, ft-ee lo rood home. "" ~ SllOO. All chrome, loaded For co;~:~ ~~Is Call Kno.~ SI, C~f . ~2991 220t. Windy's Auction Bam '"\Vill pay fbr ihots. 494491 .. ~NOW ON DISP.LAY with aceesigrles, htuned. W'il\I N•wport, CM 64&<686 4 mon"" old " collie. Noeds µ. 16, :lO, 24.~' .Wid" d•l;vcry. ..,.!al financlnc Ji'ERCEDES IE~ Be~ Tony's Bid&. Mal1., I love 549-39911 2124 Up 1) 6o Peet avail. on a:oOd credit. Phone 1---------' 1.eu1,,. ~•11arer '67 .CID LTD $1d' , ThMdore CQUGAR -i ioer horclt11p, v.1, •wto· 1---;....;--.---·11111fli• tr•111ml11l•11, pow4r ROlllR. FORD '69 COUGAR "XR.7, 9000 ml, ·••11!119, r1cllo, h •••• ,, DINING Ro:om &et~)' Salem, .PIT~ ,Ind t\vesTOCK .. ~=is~. Ha ~~~l aft. 7 pm' wkenda Jlouse, 110hd Maple table, 6 . · · a.ta M;M (trl cbain and china dlbinet. P,tts,''Qi'nerj-1 llOd METALFLAKE V\\l Dune General Electrlc stereo, , l . "l • et u.1 1elLyo11r B0&gy. New wide tires, "·alnut cabinet, all ln lm· y · =--_ , . heme. bun1pers, headers. chron1e macWate cond. Mwit •ff' to· ~ ~-· · P"-11r;:t. ' Abs9.lutely no c:cst tc y accessories. Sanitary. Best a~late. Exceijoit b\lyl • ..._ .. -= ' '"· !S&k,.,Ollll f' reasonablcoffer.6U-4689 962--0841 < '~I llROMiERS 68 MYERS Dune Bum" 1lOO AUTUMN Haie Mirik S;lole, Doti 1121-llJl2 Biiaeh Blvd.; G.C. cc V\V engine, completely $250. Rtlaxacller coft\Pl, • 636-(9'n e chromed. 1800 mi. 1\1 u s t $15. Color TV. pert, $115. SI. FAMIL y & PET PARK Sell! Best oUer! 4i6 E. 18th, 40 m•"' sport """ $10. ·s. C'OWE ' PUPPY HUNTINGTON BEACH cc::'::.1 =af::.t ::.4 --~-~ 40 mens suits $1~. Ca.JI AKC. Female collie puppy. AREA. FURNISHED BI::ST Jl1!ANX in Co. Poncbe. 675--0233. 3312 Marcus .Ave, Has had all shots. Phone 2 BEDROOi\f, 1 BATII running gear. 111 a a:• & -N.8. 962-1097 aftt>r 6 P.~1. RE/'lo'T S65 PER MONTlf Indy's $j((l(J Inve sted CONSTRUCTION 9 PUPPIES., .Lab L $z;gj 11alr/tradc 673-0925 EQUIP. (SALE} shepherd, Sj each. MaJe & 545-SUJ / Dir. 8~:?-:m9 ========= 30 skllsa'h'S models No. 77 & fttm, Black &: Bro\\"fl & Blk. N.EW 24 60 Imported Autos 9600 361. ~..,., ......... i!!on-IOO. -7306 -, ·-· J[. "'--~'""""'""-==,,,-,:;;::='.'-I & $tiO ea. 847-'614 wkntll or BEllLlNGTON P"P'" AKC, ~ BT<, 2 BA. d•n, .,.,.,.,;,,. AUSTIN AMEIUCA attn' S:30 wtu:ia)'s. cb. sired, show qu&I. ex. Uu·u .oul, ~llO A: carport NEW bed trame • $7JO; pets, non shed, $200-eL aivntna:a 28 ,ral&td porch. AUSTIN AMERICA chaise loll!fae;-pad nearlJ ~ . ---lil~ extras. In GREEN- 12 , ... .' arrtv'.ed from LEAF PARK in C.?o.r., only, new S ; -· GREAT P)'rt:Dttea. Puppies. $15,500. jomlcra. Inc. • Sa.Jes, Service. Part& lmmediate Delivery All l\todela De~mark, ~ teak. OC• AKC. Terrm. l fem. & 3 • e 642-l 350 e casionaJ chair, $60. MS.-2394 males. 61>1632 TWO 12' x: 10' O.H. com· PUREBRED black mR..leChi· mercial prage doon. com· huahua aJI shots, Adults onl,)' plett, you remow $15 ea. 125. 645-0127 Avail ?A) days. 548-5392 aft S ~LARG==E~•"'tant1~m1--,-,.-,~Co~ll~le, J1 rtup o1: 31111 O.rl ~. DELUXE Mobile llome 24x60, ; br,; ha, din nn. tam rm bU:ln kftcbcn. AU exttr. coitipl. Adult Pk. ~. after 5:30 PM at NB , . 3100 \V. Coast Hwy., .. wkends. • 642.9.i<15 ·-540-1164 MG MG Sale!, ServlC..:, Parta Jmmecl!at! Dellvecy, All P,Jodela J1rlupor t Jl 1 11 µor 1 ~. :>100 W. Cout J{wy, N.B. 642·940:S ~176C Author1nd P.fG·Dealer '57 MGA. Eng. & clutch re. bit. roll bar. fog lights. tape, mags & radio. Sacrifice! Gall 8t6-3238 'IH MGB. Lt blutt. Wr. whl1. SUOO 536->192 5-i9. 3031 Ext, 66 Or 67 1970 HARBOR BLVD. CX>S'J'.A MESA LAR'GE SELECTION of vw CAMPERS Harbour V.W. ~~'." whHowoll """ UON '41. 21* Harbor Blvd, many extras •$2S50. S:U-.1611 Costa ~f!sa 642-00 O ext. 1891. 8-5 pn1 '65 CHIYl1L1.T $111J .;;;;;,;.;;~~~~;;,;,;,;;;1.;~~~;,;.~===~11 hlll'•l•, 1 cloer h•1cltop. V. I" LEASE " DODGE' I, oYlom•lic "'""'1l1Jlon, f1&tot'( •ir co11clitlo11lnf, '67 Cadillac El Dorado, Ml --. csWt~-------11 powor •fe•rlnfo r~ulllo, he•I· P'fl'• a.l.r. black ,,/red Jeath. '88 GER. ful!Y.. equip-er. PF&; 0~1. er int, $139. per mo. peo, excellenl cord.Ilion. '67 FOtlD . $1353 '67 T,JJlrd Landau, full pwr .. $2195. * 6f6.9148 Ce1111try SM•" *(t'911, v.1, air, stereo tape. $79. per mo, '70 DODGE .SiiP.U 8. PIS-••to. ·tr•n•.. ,._, ••••r· '69 O>ua;ar XRT, pwr, air, P/B. Savt $1000:'i'ake ·over 1,,, ,.,..,, brok91, foctory vinyl top. nM •. per mo. ~ti. 548-6523. ''Olen" •tr co11dillottl11t, rodle, so. COAST LEASl.NG DODGE Dart Wac. 'M.'New ~~··~.iYDJtJ. $Z5it 300 \Y. CsJ Hwy., NB 6'.>2182 11.m, brakes. · ec.ni $850. -r• Coo11tri' ~111re. v.1, 111te. AUTHORIZED Used C1r1 9900 After S PM 546-an6 lt•111., f•1tory ,;, co"41· SALES l SERVICE tio•lllf, pewer 1l.••ri119, r•· 18711 BEACH BL., 842-4~ 1---------FORD ·. iTe, h.-•lor, No. 1615 . HUNTINGTON BEACH ONE Ol\·ner 1959 of door·l---...:..::_:_:::,_ ___ 11 '~C ~62 0 V Rambler •m.._erJ.c ....... NNR.TAnoN-CAR....,,. •· ,-D H'T 1 V _LKSWAGEN an. _..__µ -•--, ,,, r, .• ·, P.fetalllc blue, 9,000 mi's on Overdrive, Standard shift. Falrlanc conVt. Good cond. .•uto. tr111., fo c.lory •ir nu f:!ll. Bed, curtains, wr ;rd body and upholstery In a:ood ~-Call 673-7981 coi.clitre111i.g, ,ew•r ,,,.,. t · I G •· t d shape. N_eeds c I u t ch . "'" F., ~N. 2 'r, .,,..,,"' lrtg, pe••r l.r1k•1, . Jl'O••t crp ll1C • u '"'a er, g Sarill " 536-8411 HB "" tu.1..v .... ....... v-'w;M, ..... , r•cliO, k••loi. TO tires.. $1300. Will consider cc a. cylinder, Xlnt cond., ~ I-ii ',~~1!~ older V\V "i>t!g. -BUICK -by cldtrly man.·l')eW lites " :.:,'*::...·-x-W1-ft1~,~1~1=u .,. OAJ.J battery, $700. 5~8 IH . . '66 VF Bus. Otan Inside a.nd ______ ..,..__ 1961 FO.RD Falcon Sfa. Wac. 4 De~ He'4te,: v.1. o.11te. out. Run11 i:ood· Sec at '69 Rtvlera. ru1Y equlp. $lllo or be_1t offtr. · tr1P11., f•cte-ry 1lr c0Mlitlo11• Chevron Station al Harbor Pwdr blue w/Wllt v!n)'I top. 968-1~2 l11f , pewer. 1le•rl111: r•cllo. &: Victoria, Costa ltfcsa. • 54500 OQa. .644-4010. J.964 ralrlane Sta. wa::;. ifita. h••••i'. VZP 4.41 Pf\.t 'Ill n11d.1ilt . &lj...1289 aft 6 8 cyl. autom. p/S, tldlo. .,, Meaeuav $1374 FOR Sale-1969 VW Camper. '64 BUICK Special Wqon :dn't conct. ~ .. it,:.. ~1:11tcl•ir 2 Dr. H.T. v.1, Ordered ln Europe, com· Radio/heater, pl\T stcerlnQ:. 111!0. tron1., foctory 1lr ./ NE\\'PORT Beach Tennia membership for s a I tt . Malt>. St'll to Rood home w/ ... yd. 962-0204 . Desperate • must sell! SCOTTY • Pureb~. 549-133.1 papers, 8 wnks old. QUALITY kina: bed • quilted Call !\ti ~1929 llO $41. ~ STRATQLINER 30 fl. $950 '==A.o"=tho='="='=d='='G=De.ale=='=I OPEL Cuh. 333-W. ~ St., Space I· , -------- plete! All extras, Io \V Good coDdt ss;io. 54f>.7495 MERCURY ' -,I ceMl1Uonl119, pow•r it•or· •~'OM .__ t n i"t• powo• Dor••••· roclio, =·.........,or "'s 0 er. '66 BUICK Skyview Sta Wan. -------.--ll ho1t•r. lPG 102 . J, eo.u .,,,. BMW 1968 OPEL Ka.dell Coupe, $1400. 1139-3679 Sport Air. SlTaO. E:<ffilent con-SFA. Waa. O:H011¥ Park. ·u. '6t PAllLANI $2D2 '66 vw Bus. Ne1v big eng. dltlon. 548-883•t 390, full power. st_.eteO. $2893 2 Deer ~ ••• ~e••-v.1, IYlo. Xln 't cond. Owntr movin& 1961 WAGON Special. Nl!Cdsi ;;"""=·=833-=~11:;49;,,,=====ll ,,,,.,., p-er •l••rlrtt. r•· mattress. Complete unused I c-AD=u~LT~C...~-am-7to_m_al7e--.,..toy cM:.:ot:;;.;:o::.ro;H-'om=.o":.'---'92;:1:.:$ $120, worth SB. 842-6.136 poodle. no papers SZ. -eves. , 546-799.f VIKING ~toblle Home. 1~ ·BALBOA BAY club )'Tlold.20'x60.2Bit.2BA. me:mbenhip ;1000 plu s BOXER pups, AKC Xlntperk.~14~afl6 transfer fees. Box P-919 nailte~. fawn colored, CORTEZ f.totor Home. 1968 Daily Pilot show quality. ~2449 All xtras. 15,000 mi's. Xlnt NE\YPORT Beach Tennis TRANSPORTATION I co@-J2µ) lSJ.,.9.¥8 .• Oub Olarter Membenhlp Boats & Yachts 9000 Motorcycles · 9300 $281. Call 549-3756 days on- ly. ·sc--R--M--l-E_T_S_ BIKE traller, excel cond, ·~ CARPET Layer bu carpel. ·A lites. new tires, chnn whls. Nylon. Kodel , Shag k • $200/bcst offer. 985 Coast Hi-lows. \Viii sell at cost for ANSWERS Hiway, La&. Bch labor. 523-ll88 1~ NORTON Chopper, CARPET ln1taller has one l\1easly _ Obese _ Mouth _ new en&tne. chrome, many roll, avocado nylon carpet. Wholly _ WHO YOU YES extras. ~e to a.ppreclate. • D:Nble jute·backed. Will Fonnula for success in Ho!. 1 Gall Son days only 673-7350 sell all ar part $3/yud. ">""I"'' .Jt lsn't wbo you HARLE.Y 3 Wheeler, .. , ... ·M0-724a l'tl ·--. . it'• WHO YOU YES. nds little WO{k. 1963. of5 c.I.. Carpet l<l)'er h,ai Hi Lo 22· ILEE) custom built cablr\ S300 firm . .fil6..A Jumlne. nylons $1.9!1 yd. Sha.as cruiser. Glu1 bottom ,C4M -;=z;==i':i:'==='"= from $3.50 up+ my labor, enclosed head, -dlriette, Jiis T~NORTON COMMAN. 90c per yutl-847·~19 sleeps 4. Chrysler Inboard. DO. Excellent cc:::lltion. Call .LADIES 29 dlamond dinner Lots of ne11o· pa.in~ $100. J~ ;546-~~~=""""'~',;•:::·m~.C.,,-~ ring 61/100 carats. platinum quire at 119 3"Ui St .. NB. 1959 SUZUKI X6 Hustler. 6 moanting. ori1 cost Sj()(I, after 5 pm. gears. 2 mo's old. Only 1200 S.c 1195. 546-,1215 SWALES ANCHORA!JE mi's. Jim. 54&-3226 HJDE-A·BED. Maple dinette, Coast Hh\·ay 1 t -_yshOl'e hutch. desk, dres&er, chest, Ncivport BeaC'h .i.ince 1935 Auto Service beds, sofa, rocker, lamps, YACHT SALES I & Perts 9400 tables, color TV. ~ll CONSULTING . o.;.. __ _;..;;,: BEAUTll'UL 4 panel Oricn-Boat paints & SuppUis VW • 40 HP ena:lne, new rod tal screen. Appn.lsed at can 548--l!iOl oa~ 9.5 bearlnv it r I r a: a. $150. $1050.Call (11 (Tlof)637-0206 CENTURY Flber1la1 ~~7085: 540-8308. After 6: WHITE uniforms. sizes 12-13. Resorter. \\'/lraller, 250hp -"':,C,C,..-----~ some 10'•· Reaal White lnbrd. C&nopy top &: covers. A~l/Flt1 stereo · radkl for shoes, 7-8. 646-5645 6Th--5626 Late Ford pick-up. Will H OUSEHOLD 1'-Urnlihlnp I ========= trade for At.I. 546--5392 aft 5 for We. call 540-2321 arler 1 _s._1_1,,.,.~-"-----'°-1_0 9425 . 6 PM ,T"r,::•;;tl.::•';.;•,..;.T:..re:.•:..•::I_---'.;,:: 24' ISLANDER SJp. F.G. ~ 6' Co10n1aJ tofa. aYOC&do SQS. Jnb. Aux . A·L f.Iaey e~trq. Dlna:hY $65. Sleeps f. $39'J5. SI i p 538-1572 available. 897-03ll x 5014 ALPINE HAND Painted oil portrait of "'kdays ( you ar your children from .a CAI. 23 -$.~.2.30! ! Outstan-V ... CATION photograph. 646-3629 dlna; buy (his \l'ttk only!! TRAVEL CENTER GLORIA lttARSllALL David Frazer. 3~21 Via Excel .• Golden Falcon 3;i sessions. $50 Oporto. N.B. ('ilof) 673-5252 Olympia -Alpine &fii.725'1 23• O!Day Tempest Sloop. A,.che ·Wheel Camper I-========= wry clean, comfortable day Worlda l&rge1t moet tom· Mi.C. w.nt.. 1610 u.l)er. Call ~79. :~r.ltV vehicle ahoppln& AVON f or's Man D!!Whr .W ... ted.·- Calf8'M325. CiDO 14 No. 2303. Xlnt Cond. &351· Gardtn Grove Blvd GG w/luil "'""' .. ., & ll'lr. • ,. 534°6616 ' M1chlntry, ltc. mo ~Cali 613-0!Ml 21' AtJRcilU Fl)a:ls. Fixed ~ Sa,l. 'Open Sunday kett, head. SIP.s 4. Sharp SMALL Shut& trailer, aletp!i O>ndition! S197S. Ph. 61'>5116 4. ~ 3 times, like new. First 1'7"":il take11 It. 5'18-18.M; Spead Skt Boats 9030 l062 Wallu•. C.M. "L" sealer. Zl"X20", Shrink .wen. If" capacity. Both $700, Near New! MO-M!IS MINI • SPORT Whaler type, 50 h.p. "'Jercury. Low whefl 1790 trailer w/s1>ar9. Coast ,Guard equipped. New full PAlNTlNG O>ntractor~ 30 cover. 'Pulls 2 skien at XI. yrs e:icper. will exchange Haw-new boa.I. must sell , µrvlces tor sood used car, 51S-8322 .-ta. wq or Pf.'Mtl. Clll:so ·-, ~Cl!Rl=~s~-c-..,.~!t-Co~n-nle, 642-5131. 1963. Good cond. Lots of ~Ip. Mmt ,,U! $9500 or '·FREE to YOU but .uer. 137"'871>. -. TrYCk1 9500 '"1 JIORD PICKUP ~ 1:on. Joni btd, xlnt c:ond., 3 1jld., dlr. med. blue ex-t.. black Int. Take small for- eip car or 1mall dn. \VIII fln ; prvt pr(y. For info, Call Phil of94..9773 all 10 am. ·a ECONOLINE Plclc Up wl power Ult &ale. See a.I 20M1 s.w. C)'preu, S.A. Boil Mol-ton ~llata-;;:o:'-==~==-tla AKC Dlimauon male. 'N ClttVY PICK-UP • To rtabt home. No children. ll X PERIJ:NC'ED. "1la.bl1 Ex.oelUml condlUCo 5.1S-l3U 2nl •arnari •kl Ya c 1'l t Call MJ..202 :. WARDROBE. pori.ble TV, nltillteotnoie. '91-2131 OOOGE J!.U. " T. '61 V-1 CoUtt table ii: 1of1 . ao.. SU Moorl 9036 '"*· Ht&V)' d~. $99S. 19fl:I ~121 21211. t.,f .. , .. ~ llt;'mondA,..,....U 3 JUBerrs with ca~. 1 sf~E siJp for ront. No IM Ford OU... Rccllnlna •8'7 .. 1407• · 2114 aa.Ubol.la., s,tts.JWf, Ptdect Cond. ~ 10P Soll. You haul cor. 5th ./ c..11 MG--3141 f Call 567°9528 A,.Potn.ttlo, CdM. VU FOR a.nt. IL7l..,. loot. Up 'fr ECON. Font sap.t Van, CibUCH A chair fttt -to 30', no sallboAts. H.D., auto, r&.!t. lo ml.a, new S.19--0833 2124 f1s.<.s72 brk1. Cail 5.f6..SS25 bef 6 I &16-sro:> BAYSIDE MOTORS 1200 \Y .. Coast Hwy .. N.B. e BMW e 1970 Models in Stock ~r Immediate Dellwry sXl'..ES. SERVICE : PARTS T&M MOTORS, INC. ~1 Garden Grove Blvd. 534-2284 ~n Sµnda)' 892-$551 DATSUN NEW '70 DATSUN PICKUP \\I/camper, 96 hp overhead ,cam, 4 spd , dl.t·. 6 ply tJre1, back up lights. You name it~ Serial l"o. 24"009. Full price $2099. Take small dn or trade. Call Ph11. 494-97'13 or 5-15-06.).1 after 10 am. ...,,DA!N)- "Leader ln The Cearh C1t1es'' ZIMMERMAN 2145 HARBOR llLVD. 546-6410 '67 Datsun Wag. 16('0 f Door. 4 SP<J. dlr, Excel. lent 'condition Small down. Will finance Pn t. ply. Cati aft 10:00 am a.t5--0634 or 49i-!1773. DOT DATSUN OPEN DAILY AND SUNDAYS lSSl5 En.ch Blvd. i:;.~~:nM=· 1969 DATSUN 4 Dr. Like ne .... ·! Owner must sell! ~lake ctrer! .962--6263 1965 DATSUN 4 dr, stick shift. ·XJnt cond. $600. Call ~87 INGUSH FORD .THF. ENCLISll COlNG THING! .- AT ORANGE COUNTY'S VOl..U~fE ENGWH FORQ DEALER OVEk 60 NOW AT Q.E.IRANCE PRICES! . Th114ore ROllN5 fORD 2060 lltil!or 81..S, CnJ:ta l'otesa •• 64(1)10 ovtraeu:. ~tt11t sell tor Sl500 minor repairs.. $ll5 er oUcr.1" d io, h••l•1, YCT 77t or bototr. ""'°"1' 54>-7616 MUSTANG '67 liALAllll s1214 1008 VW Squareback. Ex· '"-PORSCHE ceUenl condition. i\take Of· CADILLAC '68 Mustq V4. P/S. 4 Doer Herclt•p. v.1, •11fe. 68 TARGA 912. Sliver, S fer! 548-3155. 24~ E. 19th St. Xlnl. cond. 51,(D) ml'i , tr0111., f1,tery ,;, co11cl1. 1 peed. A. l-11 FM IS W . C.i\t , $1400. C4J,! ~9867 • tiollilft1, ,.w,, 11 .. ,11119, Bla.upunkt, 2&,CO) ml. Like poWer ~r••"• r•cliO, h••t· new! St'e at 476 E. l!!h, CM '63 V.\\l. Conv. Porsche '67 CADILLAC Coupe 'li6, VS, Pwr 11tieer, Disc or, vlt1yl ioof, UOK ''' aft 4 Pf\'I Sifna] yellow. black top . DtVllle, exec. lse tar, full brakes. Aul.9 tran.~. R/H. ,69 P&LCON $Jff) Perfect cond. SUOO. 675-2847 pwr, air. Al\1/lo r,;, Conver· Reasonable. ~14-8130 '&I C Poncht-, Nu paint, lb XJ d s:n'"" t Oo•r. 6 cyl., 1uto. tro111., '63 '"V B M Xlr""' 1 le. ' nt con · -· 11168 "USTANG Futbck, t ·''>I I Brand nu rebuilt cnglnt, .,., ug, any ..... 6 2 9360 546-04l7 al '" •ctory olr co .... 1 e11119. 100%auaranttt.$2700orOf. Reblleng. $7;,Q, Call· 4 • or ,·es l· xln't cond. P/S. air cond., pow•r1f•1ri"9,r1clio,he•f· fer. 5-16-4007 er 2123· lime green. &14-6573 ~"~· ,:;<c;R;,J .;',;,":,..-~~~ * !d-7Iof4 * '60 VW. Custom top, new '67 CAD. Convt. Full pwr. '66 CH!Y. $107 paint & tires, xtra clean. lnimac. New alass titt1. PL YMO, U.TH IMPALA '62 PORSCHE C Cou~. new Make Offer. Call 53&-4)33(1 >13~1;";·;5<6-9~;;206~o~'~64~Z..~t559~~1:;;;-;;;;7;;~;;:;',;~;:::11St•Ho11 w,9011, v.1, •uto. eng, ~/Im, me ch an . ,63 '"V .;;;._.. '6!1 ROADRUNNER, stereo, trill• .. • ftct•ry oJr con4'1-~~cl'=' by IYttSOn. Call Fully l>t;l~lajned. CAMARO ployglai, a.Ir, sij@~n ::::~·wet:::~.cli~~i.::t 1!158 PORSCHE 16008 O>upe, $69S, Pho~ 847-3496 .69 CAMA.RO R.S. Oranp ~7·:2-~~.uii , ! :er, lilft.pmk. YCk 111 mech. llke new, aood b:>dy, '61 Conv. Red. AM·FM . 350 V-3. P/S, P/L, air. auto '63 BARRACUDA rfh, new 'H ·~· $161) $1350 or be1t ofr. 968-5470 Local car. Call trans. l~.COO ml'1. 673-5811 tires, xJnl cond.' Sl.200 Of 2 Door H•r4top. Allh>. '67 Po~ht S spd trans, 1-~,:m-;;;;.1280:;:,alt~:.5 ;;Pm~. ,,-'67 Camaro S.S 3:iO :m h.p.1.,;bo:•=t :';"':=':· =A=ft='=· =SJ&.=2239==-ll tran1., air c.OMlltlettlftt, Af\I/Fr.1. Pirelli llre1, 37,COJ '69 VW, GOOD COND. 4--&pt;. Must sell. &16-59'.)J orp ,._r itffriftf, r•clio, ,.,,,. mi, Ag.a blue S397l . 497-1625 $1900 or make ofr. S.18-1784 PONTIAC .,. WWD 496 . SUBARU call 646-8049 '68 CAMARO. p/1, p/b, air. .,, ,oto $1511 '63 VW Van, rebuilt eng k auro 1rans, vll\YI top, lo n1i, '68 Tempest Le Mans Ce1111try U11. W9n. v.1, ---------1 trana. $IX!. 779 Shalimar like new S2500. 633-8256 A ~,rg,.,_.1 wrduro Jfffft •11te. tre111.,, foctory •Ir THE ALL NEW Apt No. 2. O SS,.~ -1h hlk iaod 1 "--ceM11tle11Titf , pewor ltrol:e1, F STAR 1969 CAMAR .U.,, ll.000 WI · au op. ,. .. ,. r•cllo, tt_.ter, l1199•9e rocl:. SUBARU F ·1 '61 KARMANN Ghia. Nu miles. $2'600. str. and t:ie factory 5 yr, WXw~M~7~<2~--=-Ii IS tlERE tires, brakes & clutch. New 84i.5925 after 6 \Varrant)' &ook. ;n fOtlD $1HI Tup ~peed !IQ -i mph, up to nd S850 962-8635 Sal I $1 B99 S I l -40 mUes P<r gal. Experts co . . e a • .Golu!o 100 I D" H•"'· i•Y this coJld be the car ol • '10 VW CONVERTIBLE CHEVROLET Mister "T' tep. v.a, •111-•tic tr••· ONLY 700 Mt. · $2350 m111le11, f1ctery eir co11cll• lilt! -ar. O>me m and test 645 1441 · "~ 549-2526 '6Z Chevy Bel Air. 327 • tio11l119, -,..,, 1t••rii1f, drive one today. ._ ._ di h 1 .68 vw 805. Xln't cond. t auron1atlc · runs excellent. 2100 Harbor Blvd. C.1'-t. p•w•r 11t•ll••, r1 e, e• • KUSTOM MOTORS 01vner. 23.00'.l mi's. Must Radio • heater • good lire1 . , ·-''• "".,... ,..i...,.xoz 1515. 84!"> Baker, --:.1\1. 5-10-5915 tlell. $2WO. ~8-4001 $500. Call ~~&-13611 'Gj GTO, 389. tr!·power f.1un-161 cHIYa\'T $1171 TOYOTA NEW e USIO RECREATIONAL VEHICLES • 100 % Factory Warranty Ava ilable on U1ed Toyota• ' 1000 Yllfa or 30 Oay1 • ELMORE MOTORS TOYOTA Factory Direct Dealer New Cert UMCI Ctrt 194-3322 194-3321 15300 Beach Blvd. Wt1tmlnater !TIOIVIOJT!Al M•rk II Wagons HI Lux Plckup1 L•ncf CrulMrl Wa9ons PLUS OTHER HARO TO GET MODW NOW IN STOOi Your Be•t Deali Are sun At DEAN LEWIS 1961' Ha.rbar, C.M. •se Chevy Wq:, st 1 c k , cle 4·•pd · W/Htir&f Sl\ltter, lmplfi~· o,.: H1rcltop. v.i, CLEAN 'GS VW. Xln't run-Wtn.•erdl1W. New eng .. f.faa:s. AM/FM· radio, 'blk )l•f•llJ•lle...• .,.tr•111111i11lo11, nine cond. 40,000 mi"5. S9l5: V" ' lnt 1 owner $MXl 001 W p.-11 ·t+ffrl~ power Call &IZ-5lof7 pa int . reuphol, a ir ., . • iir•k••· r1tlle,'tii.iat.t, ¥111yl c:ond. 548-00'22 Balboa Nbr ~ ~ '"'· Ill ti. 1 . Ul66 VW Squareback ·66 PONTIAC W Fact. Low mllc•ge. Make otfer. lll87 Chewlle ~allbu, air, &J'Oll, '6f11i6RD $2411 * 837-2361 * p/1, vinyl top. Will conaldu air. p.s.. p.b., 9-seater, Filrl•ll• 50'0 2' Dr. Ha,.J. Any rttas. offer. 675-3589 recenUy overhauled, Xlnt top, v.1 , 111tem•tic tr-1111· MUST SILL! '63 VW J. cone!, Pvt pty. l\llddle blue 1111,.ie,., f•et•rv ,1, c0fl4ll. • ~S.1468 sfttr 5 P~I * '66 Imp11.la. Low mllca&e. book. $1650. 675-2226 I VOLVO 145-WAGONS 164-SEDANS AU other mOdel~ now In ttock. 4 speeds & automatics. Your Bt11 OtA11 Are Sllll '.t DEAN LEWIS U6t1 II.I-. C.M. 646-9303 VOLVO '63 S.18, Dependale! Deel cond. tm-1066 da. 214 Walnut St. H.B. aft. 5 p.m. Anttclu11, ''•1•lc1 9615 '&6 TI1underblrd, Xlnt cond f\1U11 1tll/IM!st oUer. * 6'B-61)1 * aean. $1450. , tio11!119, power 1l•ot 119, r•· • 675--Ml6 * 65 Pontiac 6, l 0Yt'1'tle?'dttvr. cllo, Mater. YCU Jt7 Xln't cond. PIS. Ole. 46.000 '67 MIRCU•y $1Ui '66 OfEV. Ca.price. Fully ml'•· Call 64f..3377 o r St1tlefl, w ... ,., Y .. , ""'•· equl!'. Compt Nne-up. Xlnt. 5Q..8133. After 5:30 m«f1 1natil •r•11t•I••'"' falt.ry Cond. Sl.fAl. sq-2646 19'18 PONTIAC Tittblrd. take •Ir c.eiwlltl.M~, ,_.., 64 CHEVY 2 bd Be1 Aire V-3. over ....,.,.,,.ntl, btsl oUtr, tlH rlftt, r•41e: lteot•r. V Stick OA:u'I ~,.,_ 7226f , -s.&m1 ~·~.' 1• 7306 0ce.-.~ 161 l'OiiTQe $1'11 Vt11t11ri 2 ·4, h•rtltop, I OJEVY Van Camper 108. '63 GRAND Prix-Pontiac. I V 1 i • h " ' I cy ., •, ,tfl •In, T•I Auto lrat11, air, rth. self Good l\itech&n.lcat Co.lltl . pow~. rMll• a ht•l•r. cont Xln't cond. 6T5-{i258 R&H . S1M. 642-8475, betwn 00 -il7 ·· 1965 CHEVY Capnc" 1 8 & < l•M. 167 l'OID ! $1411 owner. to mJ. PIS. P/B, ··~s.;;=,G;TO;;:~S89,;,.. __ cu-. ~l,..n."""Trl""'·ll M111ti111, 2· o,.·H•r4t0;. 6 air. $1200. Mi..6395, MS-6331 power. eo., .ratio ... ed. cvtlMlfl\ •fll toMeff• \tra11 .. \VIJI take motorcycle tnd•· 1nl11i•11. pe••r .... rfllf, fe· _ _.C_H_EYELLE in or s,uoo, 531}-Ull2 ~~·, J";;ter, "'""' ''°'· 19611 CHEVELLE SS 396, ·e:.:~~~.~'. R/H, alr 'i7 NliD $1411 p/i, p/b, turbo·hfaro , * !i62-4694 • M11ttenl.'2 rir. H•rclt,, v_: fathom ltl'ffn, xlnt cond. . . I, -i·•P•od, ,,41~. h1•t1r, 5500 ml. ~or bo!il offer. '64 Ponti1c Calt&l1n1.. alt, 'f"i11yl roof. Ne. 1717. S.9-2151 Xlot cond, BEST OFFE!l 067 HSiD ' $1411 9700 ;========I ==.,:•;,,:;il!;X.=';;lM:;•===il M1r1ta119 C•11"rtibl•. v .. , ---------COMET 1• •vt-eti.. .,."'"'"''•"· Autos W1nted WE PAY WH T 0 llRD · · '"''"' "' · """' .. ''" , ___ .;;...;;;,;,;.;;;. __ ,'--~ r.••t -.... rt... '"'·· lltl3 oowrr •Dr. V·l ••"'· ,65 T-llRIJ '"" UKF '" RlR YOUR w --==·*;,;Cal='""=-=·==! Full jiowtr, ""°''· tlr. A CONNELL " pat ..... dlr. Tai« ........ 1 BILL MAXEY CONTINENTAL .... or small down. Coll Kan CHEVROLEl --alter JO 5"<.063·. I DUNTON FORD 8l'flllll _ '65 Continental._Immac,J)l!I T...SUO-a+-df ... r...i.u ru.: IT!OJYIOITIAI C:: ·~ Mf.i·Mm pewr. fAc air. Vinyl top. Air. l\lll Power. !'.Zc. cond. • !QI 11895. llU-091 ~v -·.· '" ··--WI! PAY TOP '" ·~ -00 IUll BEACH ILVD. "IMP<>R.'lll wAii'l'il> Hunt. Botch 1474Sl.I ~ CONTJm;NTAL. M'ual 2• .. A S u..a... ·atlli FUil ,. ..... Good oond, VAUANT .._ • -· l mt.N,ofCoUt Hw,.an8dl Orsnre ~dn TOP I BllYE!l ~ ~":'.;.: L:,: '6$ Corolla. 'IOOO ml'~ !liii. 81U 'JW!EY roYOfA nowt ii' -l tke pymls U!IJi. ~ Ulllltada lt¥d.. S.low Book. 641h1849 1-----'---ll SAlf'JA ANA 'llll,Oarttlntolol. Mint condi '61 Valiant. 2 dr. Htnllllp. • , AD XtftL l'l'tcctl "' .. u. N•w ...... wprr Et\ll'Ml 146-1076 ~ 644--ClSI ·n. Beath. Pb. M74!595 ~ooz..M :::::::~'lf~·~fl~1~-~....:ii...-.-.-.-.-.-..ll I I I • .. • .14 OM.Y Pll.OT / ' - -< --• Tund.IJ, ,.,,.,,. 24, 1970 ' " I •• . 00 @IJ!!~ililf(@) ~@~[W)[ll~~ . . . . • · · PRICES EFFECTIVEWEt>NESOAYthrough TUESDAY. FES. 2!lir26, 27, 28, MAit 1, +Ii 3 j,_ • ' • SHOULDER . CLOD • . -. 2scou.nf . . rices' •• luS'D'll• &-.~p ~· _ IEATURING USDA . - CljOICE BEEi A·T ~ow EV{R.Y DAY DISCOUllT_lRICESI . FAMILY PACK CHOPS 'f34--A .. D. 89 1b· .KAIA. us DA cH01cE it LARGE EYE ,Fu'LL SHANK"HALF SLICED " P.,RK lOIN . . . EASTERN1QUA~ITY • W.fSTERN FLAVOR FULLY COOKED . . c lb. . ;~!;!~ 891t __ ~=~!~J9=4:- ,..,,.....:.....---is~L:'ll~C~-E~. D~-~~~o;/~9~"""c-:; __ =·=-=:;ali•DA . l:ISDACHOl<;E. ·:. BACON .. !il!OICJ .. ~ULLCUT FARMER joHN • 8-oz. PACKAGE • SKINLESS ' 'ROUN o: STEAK , .. c . lb. f»: ii66iivs'i:··· 1'~ CHOCOLATE, COCONUT, !A.NANA CREA11. 91': JELLO Pie Filling !!:;·,, LINK · 33.c @IDus~CHOICE ~~~!!~~HFROZEN 1:aotrr;vmc1ua STEAK TOM 34 c usDAcH01cieLEANANDMEAn'· TURKEY lb. SHORT RIBS of BEEF --HOT • READY TO EAT COOKED CHICKEN 681~. "TASTI OFTHUEA• llNTIN SIA FOOD PERCH FJWT& TASTY KRUNCHlES SHRIMP P,ATTIES COD FILLETS e YOUR CHOICE PRECOOKED 69 it. USDA CHOICE e.fXTRA LEAN RIB STEAK l:IOWI USE YOUR MASTER CHARGE OR SANKAMERICARD {Q PURCHASE f@EEZERBEEF G.UARANTEEO TENDEI! AND FULL OF FLAVOR, CUT AND WRAPPED FREE: 39 ,1,, 981b, . ti scoi'fowirs:::~- • REfRiED0 BEANSvtic . -SCQTIOWELSK •SAVl 6 c fj sii486wiCiiiiA6s ~ COUf<TRY Stvl! • !~POUND LOAf •SAYE Sc ..,-: WHITE BREAD 24-0UNCE oU.VISc fl WESSON.Oil ,... TABBY TREATS e 5112-oL Reg. 2/33c .-·CAT FOOD CONT ADINA • ITALlAN, SWEET'NSOUR, MEAT LOAP:, SWISS ST'iAK N0.300CAN 7 ' . Cook B.ook 2 < c SAUCES s::,E ...... ..,.....~~--~~~~~~~~~~-, ·~T SIZE o SA VI lOC .PUNCH 7 c . DETERGENT .. . ·GEHU'S•IAYJ2c' :STRAINED .- '"'"~··· ·aA8Y .FOOD c REFRIGERATED e S.oz. Tub~ PILLSBURY BISCUITS FAD e l/2-GAllON IMITATION MILK 9c 35c ~ SWANSON •3VAR1ETIES •SAVE6c 43 V:;;r: BREAKFAST ENTREES c SYiJSS MISS e B·irt e APPLE, BERRY .. PEACH FROZEN FRUIT PIE !:" 31 c -SWISSMJSS •S-ln eSAVl4c FROZEN CHERRY PIE ~ASSORTED COLORS o SAVI SOc lfiliP THROW PILLOWS. ~ULTRA BRITE • LARGE SIZE TUBE 1fRP TOOTHPASTE l::' 66c \llJONNT,CATAVl16c 33c ~ FAMILYSIZ!OllQUID O$AVE41c 'l1P Prell Shampoo 124 !OTILE OF 25 TABLETS o SAVI 1Sc ALKA SELTZER 58c .JlONESLTO .. GOODNESS~DISCOiJNl--PRICESl -. .. . --·--··· ~ ~ fAO •PACKAG~OF8 •SlVllc 'i'IP: CINNAMON ROLLS 37c 29c REGULAR OR' SOUR DOUGH . PACiAGE OF 6 •SAVE toe FAD ENGLISH A'\UFFINS SENSATIONAL VALUE NAVEL ORAN.II 1·0 .11.UG I c . RI H • o TUINI" o· lllTS 1 0' o SPINACH,; • CHAID ( o MUSTA•D o °'LI o ~~!II · IU K ....._ ... .AV01~D.OS 1°0 , AIR fl.OWN rat* kAWAfi · PAPAYAS 3 i 100 SANTAANA: C:OSIAMESA.. All PURPOSE. RUSSET POTATOIS 2ell.BAG '· • GARDEN FRESl:f e STEAK SIZE MUSHROOMS lOAQEOWITH V!fAMIN ~C" .IUICI ORANGIS I 0 1i. fRliH • l'IERYMY lOW PIUCES. , • RO~"'I • ISCAIOU C · . LIHUCI .1 o· • UD Wf • lllDIVE ' . , 1unu • SAUllOWl I 3 ' 1 )