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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1970-02-25 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa3 ) or s Qii.intnplet,s Born ' . 1fo Jersey M~ther On Fertility-·-Drug . " (' • WEDllJESDA Y AFTERNOON, FEBRUARY 25, 1970 • Burned .Out Case . - • . . ·Burgl~~ · . -' . 1 . Surprised ' In Bedroom By JOtNNE REYNOLDS or llM Oll1Y '"'" l teff Fatally wounded with a bullet In his chest, Baycrest resldenL W 1111 a m McKinley Harris fired away with his own revolver at hJs murderers before falling dead.on his front porch. Firemen douse rerhainin~ embers of .fire which destroyed four autos and.a garage earl}' thrs m-orping behind Anaheim apartment house at 624-W. Bellevue Drive. lnvj!sligators are probing cause of blaze wh\cb cau~ esti1nated $18,000 In da1nages and brought back mem- ories of m~sterious fire bo111ber \vho set numerous fires like this one in apartmqut garages and carports throughout central Orange Coun- ty. Three. apartments \vere damaged by sriloke in lhis blaze, but no one was in)ured. - That's how Newport Be a ch in· vestigaton Tecon.structed the I a s t moments of life for the 60-year-old rellred movie producer after he ap- parently surprised burglars in his home at 2012 Anchor Wiy ~ionday night. His body was discovered Tuesday morning by neighbors, sprawled across the dooraay of hiS home, still clutching his .38-<:aliber revolver. In reconstructing, \he c r Im e, in· vestigators said the suspect or suspects probably entered between 8 and 10 p.m . througb an unlocked bathroom window al the rear or the home. . Newport E11ds Long Fight flarris was apparently w a l c h I n g television at the rronl of lhe house. ·when he heard intruders and went to in· vestia:ate,. officers reported. Against "Coas.tal · Freeway The victim was standing in a hallway w~ he surprised the would-be burglars in one or the 0bedroom!I. It was then , police speculate, that Harris was shot. By 11fOMAS FORTUNE "• agreemept · wi~ the State Division of oi ,_ q..11, '1"' "9" ,. ~gbwaya to build the fteeway along the Harrls had a .31-<:alibcr revolver which he ,uaed • in. bis losing battle with usallm!U, L' off&CttS explained. A n unkMwn riUmber Of sholli were fired as . the dying' man ctl88ed the suspects down The se.ven year . fi~1l ~· llie .~ewport a<(opted route: Beach C1ly Council. to. ~ the PacJf)c 4 Be£ ore • couhcllme.n sip, hO'wever, COasl Freeway Toute in~ .~~ :engineer.mg problems' will .·have to be ~Y lo ~-ov.er__ ~ _.. ...: 1~i~ >"OUt..-to 'thelr---saUsract10n.· 111at (S-MVRDER, Page ZJ City councll,men said r~r the JJ;s.l Ume / means .. agreement still could.?be. a tool Monday lhey would be wtl~ lo sign .. way ofl. •But CCl\llCllmen, ne>erlhelm, Robbers Force F ert ilit "'' Ur· /1 .• .1 . ~ q ~ Bryigs Qu~~~ .• lt From Win: ~ NEiY. YOl!K -A :!f-n.i:~ld , ~w Jerset~her using fcr1,iUtJidrugt,.o've blrth-io qulnloplcts Tu....., nlgbl. 'llilc- lqn iaid lod•y the' lhr'* 4lrb an<I 't.>o boy1,'ieUvt!red inpnly JO 1, ~ lhelr ill~ c:ritilli1 le"' Ind· "'1• reportec( "dl>Dig fine-." iJ "-i. " ' Parents of \he as-yel uonmted babies Were Mrs. Margaret Klenllt and her hu!band, William, 38, a '-teMJ.an for the Nixon11aldwln DMslon <1f 'l)m!eco. Inc .. and a resldenl <1f Yar IUJ11, J.N. '!'hey have.'ttwo others children. a daughter. 4, and 'I son. 1 ~~; both bol.'n a!te.r Mrs. Klcniif'liiok l!flilltt drogs. MUitiple blrlhs occur about 40 pcr~nt o~ u,e time alltr-taking or the fertility drug" p:ergonal, ~the doctors Sa.Id.· and ftfh:. Kienast had known since the 20lh !See QUINTS. Page IJ I. have-how said they could acttpt'a coaataJ routing_ \lieyJ;ave never llk,ed -aDd and1 • •· r • • • , 1tm don'l -1 .. 1ead <11'· Jn•~Ung: oil· .. Jmpromi ntu Stri'p poshlng•ilie tllllle llllaild. ' : r • The r.elison"'" U~y Jre ~tentng thelr atand 11, their reJlixa\!<!" ljlat ·Wl!h CCllla · Mal< palrona of lhe Bal-Port Lounge in Mesa ct)' o!l'kials -~ ~po;i~ Newport.. Beach fou'nd lhemselves we~;· lhet a[f' never ggtng lo getv &ny:w~ fti Ing l'!d r1ee11 a.nd "®much else following appeals ~ tfi. Sta.e JU~ cf.a>: r ah ltrmed robbtl')! .at the bar at 4507 w. . "!i~(on. 'l'hef most recenUy ~ •P.I~ ·Coast HJgliway Tuesd~y night. ~ ~V in Wbat thej callesl a final i)H,. • Police 11~ a man aild woman, armed ~ lo """"° lhe rouic. t' 1fllh a .lkaUber revolver look abo\11 8''M~ ane~fllr Ibo (nt U J, ll,OOIJ' Ill cub. a woman's diamond ring !1 ~~~~~" .. ·r)'!~YU.:~'i. ~:011:!"10~~; r ~-~ ··~ ~ ~"'" 11 clothn too but they put up such a fuss, weapon -reluslqa: to sign an agreement the IUspecU decfded they'd ~t them keep t,ylng In the freeway with Jocal city ~ c)odm; rather than have a riot on ~lree.ts. . ~ .... one otncer explalned. · "History inay Jook ·vpon what happt~ 1Tbe1b81i:lJta ,Jaerdedr.t.heir victims into here as tragic," said COUncllman Rbbert tM restrooms and told 'lherb D04. to come Shelton, ''but I am also a realist. We have out. Pollt-e said the pair locked lhe reached the point In Ume when .le must buildi ng when Oley lefl. - lhinl< Qf reality,.nol .'iclory or def•&:~ _ Wiie1LP.O.l!'olmcn al)i\t'id"" lhe scene, lfc even urgflt thal s.Jnce the city wlll the7 were.greeted by ltlt lll'Rngtlytloth-. be worklng·to refine the adopted route, It ed victims. "They were wearing anything do so aggressively. 0 The long"t.r we dra1 they coulcf,Jlnd -bar towels or blouSes cur feel and Ulf at windmills tho longtr \he. women had lent them," an ln--- l~~ FREEWAY, Pqe 21 vesCl.gator said. , ' -f l ..-I . . reew • St.rip N.de"-Ballllits ) ~av~ Lady Trouble '. ' At N ewpor-t .B~~ .., ' • • • - • ' ' " .. • • DAIL.Y ,1i.OT ....... .., ·~ •·1.•1 '1" • THIS IS TRAPPED-BUNNY'S VIEW-OF LE15U!!E WORLD'S CHll\F ·RAlllllT' HA'l'i1' H•ttc:f' by Some, Admired by Others, CorneUut ViJnG~tl Pur1ues S1lf.appoint'tc:f T•ak Refenfleuty ,. Rabbits Running R~pant l . . . 1 , Leisure Worlders Battle · Prolific Bunitiel . :. -,I • t t I,., , J .. 'f. ~ '\ By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI Uie rabbit hate.rs,". h9!: explained. 'II realg dn..,S«Q.;tblng.'' he said,J"W~, °' ""' o.i" '"" s"" · mysell will depolil the. tfrst •1~." t''Tlle game d~;:l:"' oaerid A batUc over 1runrue11 has 'Seal 'Beach · Meanwhile, he Is fighting the. rabbits CQme and •st..t ~ tr ' rabbits. Leisure Wor.ld on ltl ear. 1 w!ih cpetnlcal methpc!s Md lfapa. . / s~id tllfll('d tak.~ ~e~to a fje\d, ~ The trouble Ls that Bier Ra..bb.il has , "1 found out a~ut this new repellent ''(Sff-'Rl8Brn5, Pilt" t) lo~ his brlai: patch arnong the nowe·r and had the market stock supplies. :And . beds or the retlrement eommupJcy ~and YOU· .know, ·i~. a year's ,time the;y sold Or .d .. e ". Ci ...... that's proving a thorn)' PJ'1)blem for tht more than 2,000 bottles •o('lt. The,trauble r fl, e • .. , , •. a..., senior citizens. ' is. lhat tb,e people• who .use It h4ve :now • • ~ with traps and c.hei:nlCal chased them Into 10meone e I s e 's , , 1tiJ>eUent5, .the-"rappit tt\&le~s" h~ve , Rarden ." t begun·to wate an alN>ut war against the lie also has.been1to tbe state. Fish arid 1 rampant rabbits. They say Cotton had Game .Dt-partment with his:: wtlt!, ~but better get hil WI out of'I~. ' claimts he received U~Ue help_ "I hlNI a C'A;imeJius VanGcest, 'f'I. a wea.Jlhy llttle trouble gettlng 'to the head blogul, retired merch:lnt hit hale.rs' " urioUlcial but when 1 did, tfiiy .said the onl.Y f'IY 1 leader during the two-year campaign to to get rid cf them Is to &boot them . But bug the bunnies. . we ~ldft't do that.around here with wr "I raised rabblU ln. lhe old ,Ctlllnl.O':t I ~" r · ' Ilke them They're-cute bU\ they'art:)1'0 .. ~y, also 'll;j~~me ji,hb!J~;thi traps/!, a nulsa~," declared the Dutch I~-he added,.•polntmg.to a ,model lh.t qne,oC · migrant. .• ~ , his Criends has just dcstgned. h can be He claims the ral)J>il!I 4re-r1isink haVQC1 bl.Jilt for~·• a copy. · with the gladlolm and the tulips, bur· '1 can't tell you his name/' explai~ rowing holes wider -expensive lawns, V•nGeest. "He1s surrounde<! by raObit ~royllig trees, mating and gMng blrth lovers and rears reprju\s. But he's on patLos and ar, potenUal dlleise'C&r· already caught .U qi them."... • ricrs. ,,. 1 " • -. /\I 'm put~"n1aniim,nedl.ate..or$fer for 1 "And you stkKUd1 ~ thtlr dfoppings/", .JOO of them end plan to le.II thtm at ute • he !l}d. "tbey'r.e. all over our porches • market." · · and. yaltwtys." Jn Addition , VanGeest. aays. the trape, V'anae9t hat worked hhnaelf lnto such which appear to work well becauat they a !allier over lbe bunnlel tblt he Is of:. require only a light trlpplnJ rorce, wW go fcrina $1 ,000 to aoyone who can ~kip up fw sl.le durlna Lei.sure. World't annual an effective birth control p!D for rabbi ta.; arts and er if ti festival, , "I'm now woiklnl on an endowment 1•1r we could just gel 100 rabbil hatera Fund and am oc<epUng donlllom rrom Olll wllll -lrapo, I lhlnk VI• coold i ' I • • ' ' . 5. 1 1 ' . 1 • • ( t ( ( ompiaou.G1ven Polite Reception ~ ·, WASHINGTON (APl -Fttnch Pttsl· · ( dint Georges Pompidou got 1 polite hear· inc in Conarea1 Wednesday -de•plte the ( lnconspk:uous walkout ol one member - as be said Middle !llttrn peice 1hould -( -be sou&ht thtou&h a four.power con-- ~rtnct. ( Rep. Lester L. Wolff (0.N.Y.), got up 1 from hJs seat Mar tht middle of the big \ lloust chamber and walked out u Porn· ( ptdou began speaking. There wu no noticeable stir. ( Pampidou bad just reeeh•ed about t'ro • minutes of applause from the audience • in the leis-than-full chamber. • It appeared lh1t about 300 of the 434 House members and 60 ot lhe 100 !enalors attended. Pikmbers opposed to Franct's Pttiddle Ea5t policy, e.specially tbe sale of planes to lJbya; had oraaniz.ed a boycott. However, House employea helped fill , the vae1nt teats, alon1 with the Cabinet : and a huae turnout of the diplomatic criticized the continuing hostllllies ln the area . "Who cannot see the prtcarious and - ln the long run -sterile nature of the vtctorie.s gaintd?" Pomsi'dou liked. "Who does not understand that there is. no assured future for Israel outside a lasUng eotente with the world wltich sur- rounds It -entente which implies renun- ciation or military conquest and the solu- tion of the PalttUnlan problem?" He addtd, rtferrtn4 to the four.power conference o( the Urultd States. French, British and Soviet ambassadors to the United NaUons: "Such a result, in a situation v.·here feelings are fanaticism are increasing daily, should, ~ be quickly reached, prt> l'ffd from United Natlona action and in parUcular from the agree"ment of the four J)e.rmaneol members of the Security Council lo define and propose lhe general conditions ror·a settlement 8.nd to provide the guarantees for tt." ': ~ Capitol was heavily guarded by police Ind Semi Strvlce ogenla -the 3 T li;hlesl oecurlly, Ollt police olf!clal said, rustees in about It years. Pompldou's speech, translated into English paragraph by paragr•ph, was in· Not Holdi·ng tt"rrupted eight times by applat1$e - never tumultuous. But some senators cried ''Vive la France," as he left, lo J b J 'l"'" applaul<, pausm1 to shake hands. 0 S llegally There wu applauM even whtn tht__ _ .__ F'rench presldlnt said: --• Swfngi1ag Ca11aern11aa1t Us ing helicopter with special camera mount. carr.eroman films still another scene in "Doctors' \Vives," a movie now in production on location in Harbor Area. Cameraman "·as shooting footage of another helicopter being u5ed as air ambulance in the fihn and skies over Coste A1esa was whert lhc action took place. I Mesa Blau --Puzzling To Firemen A vat of chemicals unknown even to tht txper'lisc of the Costa Me-sa Fire OeJl,irt· n1ent bubbled. bubbled and then burst i1>- t1) name late Tuesday nl&ht, causing firemen some toil and trouble. Only $400 damaae was caused at the Narmco l\faterlals Division of the \Vhit· taker Corporation plant, 900 Victoria St., and that v.•as just loss of lhe: batch of chemical compound. Cause of the 10:20 p.m. eruption ls still under invuUgatlon today by the deparbnent's Fire Prevention Bureau, but the probers aren 't even sure what It \\'as that igniled. "They have some pretty ezolie materials now and one alwost has to be a chemist," said Battalion Chief Ron Coll'man. adding that s:ime chemical reaction probably sparked the fire. He said tbe material was idenUlltd on· ly by a plant mix number and firemen haven 't run across anything like it In their categorization of chemical cOm- pounds. Tbe Narmco plant, a throwback to cnetime county industri'I mning, before the area was annexed lo Colta Meai. and developed as a resldenUJI neighborhood, had a similar fire last year. Investigators sajd that blaze, which caused m~h heavier dam11e, tHQlted · from the accidental caMing of a min· type material at a higher temperature than nonnal. Hearis used to induC!: certain chemical changes andt fle proCess cootinued after Hie containers were stored outside fot "Allow me, u a _friend, to tell }'OU th~!___ 'I'hrH: trustees ~f the !funt~'!. Bea£h__ the end of the war In Vletn1m, fOr tni Union High School Dis trict wlll be allow. 1'ro11t-Pa9 e--J---i .eg-al ,4·~cti·o--n .to_ o_ m-i·n~ ~-_ ..ru~':'en~',;':u~~~:.~~~f.':y or ~=~tatea.1 w1~~: :;t r:irth:v:: edJO keep -tlitir -se2ts-even · lhouah tMy onuelf. •1 also hold elementary school di!trlct PoJ!!pldou made no m1nllon in his ad· LrustteabJps, the· Orange County counsel drtu of the al'DlS' sale ot flthe:r specific said Tuesday. con~ersits, and m:nlioned the Middle Counsel Adrian Kuype ruled th t East disputes only bneny. r a ··Believe me," he said, "Frant'l!'s in· trustees Ptfatthew Weyuker, Ra y Schmilt lentions in the face of these conflict• has and Ralph Bauer are not holding lh"lir never been to be detrimental lo any na-dual tt:ats iUe1ally since there is no in· tion nor ,to sen·e another. We ttek, we compaUbility In Uieir roles as elementary want only ptact." school nd hi b He restated France's position that a g achoo! dls!r.lct board lsratl has the right to t-1151. in MCUr1ty as members. an illdtpe.ndtnt and JQvtreien ttat.e, ~d . Dual trusteeships, he declared, "are only illegal when the function of the two Fro,.. Page J MURDER ... the hall and out the door, where he fell 11atally ••o•mde<I. lnvt.Stigators sajd the burglars ap- parently t\ed not liken anything whtn they --were surpdaed. HaniJ' wu car-. tYfnl aievtral hundred dollan and a valuabJe d.itmond rtn1 when hla body wu found, lhfy noted. offices ls inconslrtent." The written optruon wa.: addreslied to high school district Tnl.stee Joseph Ribal who hu maintained that such dual rol~ are .not in the interest of the community. Ribal asked for the statement following a ruent Loa Angeles County -Counsel rul- ing which held dual trusteeships lllepl. ''I have been called lllegtUmate before but nevu llleial/" quipped B1uer, who la alJ:o preaidtl\l o (the Ocean View School Dlilflct board ol !zuotea. . Weyubr ~ Schmltt both strve Ofl lhe Wt1lminlter Elementuy School District board In addltJon to the Huntington Beach Union High School District. Poll<e uld they' .. turn<d up notblJll lo Indicate the uullanta hid betn wounded ln the 1hootln1. H&nil wa1 found clut- c_hlnc hil sun. but the murder ..... pon hat not been recovered, they reported. 1A,11 but one nel1hbor ,.Id lhfy h<ard . nomma durtn1 I.he nl1ht. Hanis' next ddor nel1hbor said she heard commotion Md noises late h1onday nl1ht which she did not lnveltl&aie. "lt seems .to me that if we would 1et our mind more to educ1llon than to dl1· gin& up difficulty and conluslon. w•'d be I &ot better off," 11ld Tru1tee Schmitt. Ribal appeared surprised by the 21tate· ment. "There's apparently a ccnfltct between lhe Oranae County Counsel and the Lo.s Anaeles County C o u n s e I decisions," he ••id . • Rini• lived in lhe ntl&hborhood for about IO years 1ince his reUremenl He 1¥'U deaerlbed by neighbors as a good- natured even tempered man who hid liv· td alone for y1an. He had rectntly been divorced. ·A mtmbfr or the &lboa Bay Club, he wu an acUvt membtr or tht Air Safety Traffic CommlUee prottsttna tbt ex- pansion ol the county airport. Latin Scliool Closed BOGOTA. 1Colombla (UPI} -The govemmtnt CIOltd the National Universi- ty today and sent army troop& to occupy Ill campus In order to break a 1lrilte by the school's 11,500 students. The government said the university, the principal school of higher educallon in Colombia, will rtmaJn closed thrtugh lht Ont stmester of this year. DAILY PILOT ......... ~ "······ ...... &,......... .......,...., ._._ R•t.111 N. 'W••.f ........... .,,,. .. 111o1ia- J11• I : Cvtlty llltt l"ftalHnl -~· Mt .... lt Th•111•• l(ot.il ..... - Th•"'•' A.. 111.,~111• ,..,. ........... -, (.Oe .. MtM: llf Wttl ..... '""" ........ ._,,, 1111 W.1 ..... -.w1n ... L...,. 1-111 M ~ ..... ·-1 ._.lflfllil kot.tu WJ 11Mta ow.,•tr• From Poge J RABBITS •.. hunteni would have fun with thfm." 'Mlt rur has also been ny1n1 among the rabbit lovers who are Ince.need at VanGttst's efforts. They like the bunnle1 and even feed them. A mlnlalure survey of strolling Leisure World residenli. taken from VanGetal's electric cart, however, showed a heavier concenlratJon of rabbit haler• than rabbit lov~rs. "No, I don't like them at a\\." said one elderly gentleman "·ho says he has train· ed his cat to hunt' them down. Another man, who apparenUy fancies continental dishes declared, .. , only like them as 'Hasenpfeffer.' That's rabbit st~w.'' During the courae ol the survey, VanGeest unwillingly crossed enemy llnes and entered rabbit love rs territory. "Hey, are you that rabbit klll1r." e~­ claimed one man who ob!erved VariGeest. tryln& to catch a bunny for a photographer. "Why )'OU miserable man, you ouaht to bt put In jall for It.,:, Get out of here. You're 1 dl1ar1ce." ••. Dentures rattling with furor, he ga"e VanGeest a mi1hty shove which sent him rttllna and searehin1 for protective cover. The man turned out to be an 81-year· old retired railroad frelgbt aaent Ray Henderson, an avowed rabbit lover. "I like the rabblU. They're the cutest lhlnp. t "'atch them by the hour. 'They 're beautiful. acrobatic. Why would anyone want to 1dll them ?" "Why the hell doesn't he 1\ve his $1,000 to hospital children who need help ln!tead of .spending lt on a rabbit birth control plll. It's the most ridiculous thlng I ever hurd of." Henderson says he fetd1 the rabbltJ, but would not reveal what the f~l• so thlt VanGeest couldn't bait his traps with tht morstlt. "I know tht law and If this auy keeps It up, I'm ••Ing lo "nd him back lo Hon1nd. He h11n't got 1ny rabblll. II I ever caught hlm sttllng a trap, why I'd-'" As the furor contlnuc11, bolh rabbit -ll1ten and rabbit ~ovtra ire ecratchlnc their hetda over th6 origin of the bunnk!1. No one knows whtre lhty came from. The only thing that 1ppears certain Is that there are more ol thtm t!\'Cty day. FREEWAY ... this community 1vill suffer without a freeway," he said. ''There is compclition for the gas taX dollar {the source of fun- ding for state freeways)." But Councilman Lindsley Parsons dldn 't see a need to rush ahead. He said the freeway probably is six or seven ytars off and sugge.sled that "wilh preasure from Costa Pttesa to get the Newport Freeway built the Jl igh wa y 'CommiS.!ion may come to us at some point in tllTle." One councilman. Paul J . Gruber, re· malned vigo rously opposed in the af· temoon study session to accepting the adopted route 1vhich hugs the bluff along Pacific Coast Hlgh\vay 'vest of the Upper Newport Bay bridge. AL\\'AYS OFFE1''SlVE "Why should we be content lo move in· to the jaws of destruction?" Gruber ask· ed. "This tw always been offensive to our environment. tt wipes OU• the west 1 end of to~n ind a bu.iness section (Mariilers Mlle in ' 9.'&Y ufat Is !neon· celvablt. This massive structure would be expoted to the view of our bay. I just can't 21ec it" ·But when I( came Ume to vote Monday evenlng, Gruber joined the others arKI made it unanimous to ask the city staff to work with Division of H i g h w a y s engineers to stt if problems ce n be soJv. ed "within the limits of the adopted routt." Gruber later explained that he couldn't win his point so the next best thing was to work with state highway engineers. •·Jn tryina to work this out they can't htlp b\lt know the route"s .not satislac· tory," he said. Harold Glass, a freewy spokesman for Newport Heights property owners, ap- plauded the council adion. "We couldn't believe It ," he said for those in the au· dlence. "We know it's been a hard, r()Ug,h JO for you." ' EXHAUSTED EFFORTS f<.1ayor Doreen i\larshall said, "\\'e h~vc over U1e last seven years. and I think justinably. devoted c on s i d e r a b I e resourCf.s of the city. We'\'e pretty well exhausted our efforts to reopen. \\'e should try to resolve this no"' for the bi:sl Interest of the city as a whole." "Thal statement is indicative of a defe11tl.st attltµde." said Gruber, during the afternoon when the will of the council as a whole still was not kno\\·n. Shelton told Gruber, "There is no strona community sentlmenl for lhe council to puTsue. Lhis farther. On the con· trary, most of whal "'e hc11r is just the opposite." "It will be a purveyor of smog and pollution in our community ,'' prott:sted Gruber. He then argued for no freeWay at all, but Instead \\·hal he called "a super ttrterial system" -feqced.q_ff highways like Newport Boulevard headed up to\qard Costa Pt1esa. None of the other councilmen saw it his \\'ly. Councilman Donald f\1c1Mis conceded working within the adopted route is the reasonable way lo go at this point. "But If I sec the engineering begins con1ing out like a Chinese Wall to emasculate \\'est Newport, there is r:o way 1 lvill sign," he warned. He's Just Part Of the Sce1tery \l.'htn In doubt, a&k a policeman. Thal'• just what a Costa tltesa worru11n did, arri"in& at the Civic Ctnter and anx- iou.s for directions about \\'hcrt lo regl1ter to vote. She a!ktod a handsome youna uniform· ed oflicer, ftanding by wtlh an air of authority, while Ill ClSI of charadcn for I Columbia PJctures• rttMte belua hlmed on locaton bu1Ued about. ~ "Why don't you 11k a policeman, 1111dy?" he replied, adding that hl5 walk-on bit part called for no spoken lines. .fl. I a...-fiberg:lau--resim--end other-such defenst and manufacturing-related matertala. On Harbour Well Leak By TERRV COVILLE 01 fflt CIMly l'I"' $1tff An oil leak into the Christiana Bay area or Huntington llarbour has sprung into a gusher of criticism on the well operator. He is feeling the wrath of properly owners wtM> have threatened civil suits, and the city of Huntington Beach and the State Fish and Game Authority who has also proni!sed criminal complaints. "We feel like somebody is dumping their garbage on us and not paying the hill.'' said Don Ptfll ler. president of the lluntington Harbour Property O"'Oers Association. A spokeSJnan (,Or the operator . Gro\'er Collins Corporation of Compton said this n1oming that t\ls insurance agency, Employers of \Va\Jsau. would handle all complaints includlng those of individual boat owners. Bul some boat owners were skeptical. ''They had a leak from the sam e "·ell site lasl year and several individual boat owners had trouble getting satisfaction ," said P.filler. t.tillcr's group held a meeting Monday Bandits Hold Up Ill-fated Bank lloldup men st ruck the California Federal Savings and l..<llan. 3310 \V. Chap- tnan Ave ., Orange, Tuesday afternoon for lhe second time In t1vo months. The same two tellers, Betty Stauber and Mary White were victimized this time. Police said the robbers got between $4.000 and $5.000. On Dec. 31 robbers, who tellers said may have been the same pair got about ~s.ooo. The FBI and Orange police are in· vesligating . TI1e holdup men entered \hr office shortly before I :30 p.m. and ordered lhe tellers to ''lay on the noor and don 't touch the button." One of lhem had a gW'l. They escaped in a "'ailing car. night, during Which members talked aboul legal action agaJnst the oll operator and set up a lhrte·man committee to s!udy the reason for and possible preven- tion of the oil leak. "We might take legal action as a group," said MlUer. . Criminal complaints ste1nming from the pollution of state \\'aler are expected lo be filed by Fish and Game oUicials. ri.1.aximum fine for that could be $1.000, according to Captain Walter Putnam of lhe Long Beach office. City Attorney Don Bonfa has been ask· ed lo file misdemeanor criminal com- plaints on behalf of Huntington Beach for violation of city fire ordlnanets. ·'Spilled oil can reprtsent a fire hazard, especially in the Marina area where gasoline from outboard engines could easily be Ignited and In turn ignite the nil.'' said city fire marshall Douglas Spicard. "This oil is breaking up and doesn't present much of a fire threat to the marina now," he added . The oil leaked Sunday from a broken gas ket on one of seven wells operated by Grover Collins behind Harbour View School. It see~ into a drainage channel where it ran into the marina at the foot of the Christiana Bay condominiums. "That oil would have never run into the channel if the oil company's properly was properly graded to c:nntain such leaks on its own land." 1-lerb Day. city oil in· spector, claimed . Day said his dcpartnlent is po\verless to do an}1hing about the leak, except ask the corporation to clean it up. The sel'en wells owned by Grover Collins are v.•hipslocked (slanted) and are actually pumping oil from under the Hun- tington Harbour area, Da y added . Don Bun1!, general inanager of Hun· lington Harbour Corporation , said his company is no longer responsible for the ma rina. "but \\'I! \\'ill Ir}' an d help the boat o\rners and homc:11l'ners i;et that area cleaned up." QUINTS ... week of her pregnancy that she would have at least four babies. Although the first 12 hours are the moat critical for such small babies, doctors said they would not be considered out of danger until from five days lo three \\leeks. depending on their size. Three of the babies had difficulty breathing immediately after birth, and were treat~ with heat an{ oxygen. Doc- tors said they suffered from by1line membrane disease, the condition which took the life of newborn Patrick Bouvier Kennedy, third child of the late Pre.Jdent John F. Kennedy in 1983. However, the condition has now been a,rrected in the three quints. doctors said. The quints, six weeks premature, were pul iu-incubators a5 a matter or '·routine," according to doc ton at Colum- bia P~sbyterian Medical Center' where they were delivered in nonnal birth - not Caesarian section. The first , a girl, was bo~ al JO:OS p.m. and weiahed three pounds,;four ounces - the smallest. Another girl \Yas born one minute later arKI weighed three pounds, 13 ounces. followed by a boy al 10: 13 weighing four pounds, six ounces -the largest ; a ·girl at 10:16 weighing three. pounds 14 ounces and a boy al 10:18 weighing three pounds, eight ounces. They were six wte;.s premature, ac· cording to a hospital spokesman, and a learn of 16 doctors and assistants took part in the deli very. He said the "doctors are optimislic" on lhe condition of the babies, the 1nother 11.•as in "satisfactory" condition. and the father \Vas under ''considerable strain ." ' If the babies all live 1hey wilt be the :o;ecorKI set of survh,lng qulntuplels In the United States -and lhe sixth &et in the \\'Orld . The Ameri can quints were born Sept. 14, 1963. to Mr. and Mrs. Andrew J . Fischer of Aberdeen, S.D. The four girls and one boy live in seclusion on their f;:;ther ·s SOO·acrc farm west of Aberdeen and their mother does no allov,. them to make public appearance&. saying she want! them to lead a "normal life." Fro m Ca li fornia Art isans. Engagement Rinqs of lnc.omparable bea uty , • CONVENIENT TERMS IANKAMERICARD MASTER CHARGE J.C. ...Jli11if.../,.1·i.eJ c}ei11ef' !Ill NEWPORT AVENUE COSTA MESA ' H YEARS SA ME LOCATION PHONE 5~1·HOI I \ . I II 'l 'I I I I •• , .. r •unting1on Bt;ae~ I ' t-' f ~ ', I I I, • • , 'ORANGE' ·¢CUNT'/', CALIFQll.NI;. WEDNESDAY., H IRUARY 25, 1970 ·,TEN ~S Oi.l Leak Blaste·d~ -- Harbour Resident;S Threaten Actian : . •• By TElll\¥ COVILLE ot flit D411.tr ~ ..... An ·oJl·le8t1Jnto the Chl:lsUana Bay area of Hunllngton Harbour has 1pruac 1nlo a gust:-r of cr1U~ c.i the well operator. He Is feetipg the wralh of property o'wners who h.ave threatened civil autt.s, and the clly ol l!uotll1(ton Be<ich and the State Fish an d G-·A,uthorlty who has also promised crimfual complaints. "We feel like someblldy ii -ping their garbage on ~ and not payinj; the bill," said Don Miller, president of the H.unUngton Harbour Property Owners Association. , . ' -. THIS IS TRA l!l'EJ> eJ!NNY'S VIEW OF ~E ISl,IRE WORLD 'S CHIEF RABB IT _HATER . Hated by Some, Admired by Others, Cornelius V1 nGHst Pursues Self-a ppointed TiilCRelentles1ly A spokesma n for the operator, Gfover Collins Corporation of Compton said this morning that his Insurance agency, El'{lploye:rs of W•llSaU:. would h.ndle all complaints · includil}g those of iildividual boat owners~ - _ _ _ -~ But some b!:>at ownen. were skeptical. »a-bh' 1·tCQ nu--..... -n.-1.--no. --u -0 ·mp-a·~ ~~eak~=~=.-:fll~ '\, ~ ~I\. -,,o --. J:"\.-IT. ,. ----~--J.-\;R: . J.-LL .. ~~;:._trOuble ge.t~atlsfact~·· · Miller's group held a meeting Mooday I . ·~ · --,. night, during which m~beni talked I! I. Leisure Worlders Battle Prolific Bunn ies ~~!:'~~a~~.:,~i:1ri::'~ By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI 01 '"-o.itr Pit.I Stiff A battle over bunnies has Seal Beach Leisure World on ita ear. The trouble is that Brer Rabbit has round his briar patch among the. nower beds of the retirement community and that's prc:vlng a thorny problem for the Rnior citizens. Armed with tr aps and chemical repellenta, lhe "rabbit bite~" have begun to wate an all-out war .against 'the r~ rabbits. They say Cotton had better 1111 bis WI out d tbere. Cornelius 'V.anGecst, T1, a wealthy retired merchanl bit haters' " unofficial leader during lhe two-year campaign to bug the bunnies. "I raised rabbits in the old country. I like them. They're cute, but they are also a nuisance," declared the Dutch Im· migrant. He claims the rabbits are raising havoc with the gladiolas and lbe tulips, bur- rowing holes under expensive lawns, destroying lree.s, mating and giving birth on patios and are potential disease car-. r!ers. ' ·'Arid you .stioukl ,,. u.olt ~ he W4'. •"nley'tt ill over,,°" . and walkways." VanGeesl has worked himself into such a lather over the bunnies that he Is of· fering $1,000 tc. anyone wbo can devekip an effective .birth control pill for rabbill!. "I'm now working on an endowment fund and am accepting donations from the rabbit haters," he ex plained. "l myseU will deposit the first $1 ,000. ·• Meanwhile, he is flghllng the rabbita with chemical methods and traps. "I found out about this new repel lent and had the market stock supplies. And you know, iI, a y~ar'a lime · they sold nl!Jre•Jhan l,l)llO ~Ules of IL The !i'ollble Is Iba\ 1be people ""' dlt .II have noW (See IWIBJr8, Pate I) study the reason for and (I0.1Slbte prtven- tion of the oil leak. "We might take legal action i.s a group," said M1ije'r. - Criminal complalnls stemming rrom the pollution of state water are expected to be filed by Fish and Game officials. Maximum" nne for th&i could· be $1,000, according to Captain Walter' Putnam of the Long Beach office. City Attorney Don Bonfa has been a~. ed 1o Ole miJdeme;mor crlml~ com· plalnis on bebalf of Huntlf>gton Beach !or vlolal1<11'0f city ni;-·~·· "5(lilled·ojl CUI rep'r'!"'l ~ pr,'h•nM '. ~ \' JluntingtoiIF aces Changes Beach .If rustees • Not Holding oiip!dally In tliC -G-~ii gasoline from outlM>tfd e~ could easily be llJ>ited and In turn ljnite the ojlt' !ald ~tr !II' ~-l)ougl~ Splcard. ~' , . , , "Thi• oU II . . up l!"f -'I prellOOI mlldl ol.= tlriat to IJ>e marilll now," he. In Operation of Schools Jobs Jllegally The oil l<abd from, 1 Jxtj!en gasket on one ol ~ wet& oj!trited by Grover Collins• bthlnd Harbour · Vl~w Sdlool. If ,..ped [nto 1 drainage clllOnel (See llARllOOR, Pap II City Schools Drop Plan8 Undercurrents or another 1,1pheaval in t~ Huntington Beach Unlo 1 High School Dlst.rict ~e apparent Tuesday as trustees a dminislrators began forg· • ing a plan tti rovide quality education ,I despite the failure of a r~nt bond elet· lion and tax hike. 1. Some have suggested lhat cuts be made In educational services while others 1 contend that the solution lies in a radical I overhaul Of district operations to improve efficiency. , \Vhichever ave nue is chosen will large· I• ly be determi~ by a rando1n sampling ' ; of those v.'ho voled in the $9.5 tnilllon I bond election and ta1 override. About 300 ''expressionaries" will be sent to the electorate to sound their opinions in the 1 next 'feW days, according to Dist. Supt. 1 lttax Forney. 11 "There is an unfortunate reaction that II ?.•e,have to cut things," said Dr. Joseph Ribal, a trustee who has maintained thal l inno\;'ations, such as nexible and modular I)! sche4uling , will provide the answer. I "This is a good opportunity for change ! rather than punishing the eleetorate," he added presenting his arguments to trustees and administratlor. in. the form of two typed documenlJ. BasicaJJy, he and Robert Gordon, a the wake or the election failure, Ribal has a1ready offered the following cures: -Changes in the physical educa· tion program to eliminate .mandatory dou- ble periods of activity coupled with after school recreational programs to fulfill the state 200-minute weekly P , E , re· qulrement and close scrutiny of athletic budgets. -Elimination ol the po:;itions of direc· tor of curriculum, coordinator of child welfare and attendance, ancl director of special services and recreation. -Assignment of part time teaching duties to principals, assistant principals, coordinators and counselors. -Formation of a schOot corps of parents and volunteers who woakl help wilh clerical duties and . serve as emergency backup when staff loads sud· denly increase. Members or the District Educators Association whi ch represenl.s around 500 local high school feathers have suggested other means of meeting the crisis. A statement forwarded by the associa- tion's eitecutive board calls for the abolishment of all pupil transportation paid for out of district funds, withdrawal of all athletics and extracurricular ac· Uvities and a live-pirlod day. Three trustees of the Huntington Beach Union High SchJ)Cll District will be allow· ed to keep their seats even though they also ·hold elementary · school district lnl!teeships, the Orange County counsel sa id Tuesday. Couru5el Adrian Kuyper ruled that trus tees Matthew Weyuker, Ray Schmitt and Ralph Bauer are nol holding th~lr dual seal! illegally since there is no In· compatibility ln their roles as elementary school and high school dl!trict board members. Dual trusteeships, he declared. "are only illegal when the function of the two offices is inconsistent." The written opinion waz addressed to high school district Trustee Joseph Rlbal, who ha s maintaioed that slich dual roles are not in the interest or the community. Ribal asked for the statement following a recent Los .. Angeles County Counsel rul- ing which held dual trusteeships.illegal. "I have been called illegitimate before but never illegal.'' quipped Bauer, who is also president of the Ocean Vlew School District board of trustees. Weyuker and Schmitt both serve on the Westmlnster Elementary School District boan:I in addition to the Hu ntington Beach Union High School Di.strict. -' , . Thief Rolls Off . With2 Wagons A thief hitched two authenUc old buckboard wagona up lo lhout 400 horses' worth Of modem truck Tuesday and hauled the antique vehicles away from a Cos:tai Mesa produce market. Richard G. Pejoyan, of 7b2 Hell Ave., Huntington Beach, told police he had just pufuha!td the wagons, valued at $430, from the owner ol a construction site now being cleared. The buckboards, welghihg, aboµt :;oo pounds each, were earked beside his Grower's Ranch Produce, 2011 Newport Blvd., at· cording to <;KllOer George Sperl!n.8. lnvesU,ators !Ogted the stol~ vehicle case u •a grai;id theft, sinct tx,ckboards dorl't qualify under California VehJcle ,..Code designa· ti on. '. , For' Ta,X Ra,te Increase , . ' A propolCd r~uest for. a •1.50 increase in the tax-rile har·blift, ct,mPacl ,by /he Huntington B .. ch Clly School DislrlCI Board of Trustees. . . Thfet 1n1s1..,..-0!ed to \frofi the requC3t -soh61tlled lor 'tl!e· Apill• ti •lttUan - because tA. fe1i'..(that-thef woUld: ·1ose all requests for money 'if Jt. ·wirs on the ba'Uol ; . L · One lrust.ee, Roger ArlderiOn, ba'.Uled lo al..vei die . propdsal ·explainlifg that he felt, 0 voters should have a Choice on how they want' to .buJkt.'acbOola." • District IOfficl.aJs,Md plamed 'lQ request two taz .oven1dea .in '>A~l:. The' $1;50 in- Smoking' Hazards Told iri Movie ere~ was for pay-as.-you·co ~ con- strucUon to replace $f,'15 million 1n ·D ool bonds tHe district can't sell . becau.e'~of low interest rates. A request for a .tkent lncreaae to pay operatmg •cosl! will aUll be. 6n tlje.Aprll ballot. • , • .~ .. "We decided the 40 cent&1'fU rn6reitm- portant than ·the $1'.50," e:ll:pla.iiled tiuMee Jack Clapp. "Several parentl,hal'.e Y,ld us that the $1.50 wu too'mucb to 8*for and both overrides ~would I01e .. , We· .need schoo~. but we really l!On't i<Mw',.,.,...l to do about it now." · Anderson disagreed I 0 1 peijOntny think.then.~ Jo<reaae wollkl'~;JN!oh approved." He hued hla Jnd'ctiin~ m the· narrow defeat of a ptOpola(--:f'eb!~ll to raise.-Interest 'rates on the 'laandi.. Both trustees said the dlllrict w'ou1d probabJy,.ask voterr.in .June. to..raie' the interest rat,e on tbe bonds to 18Vtn .Per- cent (the mulmufn, -bf •lata Jaw.) I I • ' . Westminster parent who co-al/f.bOl'ed, one, ·• :~u:r· .. ~~~~~:.·ii:~~:iled..:.: · Ala·m:;tos· Ba.Q.e End N·ea•? For,, Valley · K,ids •• • ' .. • ' 'J< '. ... ,,, l ' More,.lhan 4,lf!it! younpl.n' are '!.:arn· log ·,t11e 1>ltlo!)I' .mt ·blzatdj ofi mnokirig lbla· nilalh 'u ,· llJe . Ameltcon Caocer _, .. ,-;moblJ& 1111it villts ......... lain vaney School Dtalrict'• tU:ampilses. · "B~l J!ith lnterm rtl•!' rllil1111 I don, think we'll be afiJe -io atll"lbe .. bonCll 'even aa seven .pel'CfJal.' I Ullnt "we'U MV.e, tO come l>ack With a <po,;..~ ....,.. Ill," Anderson llld. " ' I scheduling by September. t a .c ....... Such a plan, they cont~, woWd >Her ... " 1 • ' But for<Aprll't1·1i1ie •:• fnoi:eose ts ""ad. . • ' ,. ' the current CQncepts, of class duration( ~t'.t •· "' • ·. t ~:;/:;~~~=~·:ru7=~~ ·~-!-Faci1U.&1.Coul.d ·Ecue. ·touniy Airport Pressure~ Mltiinld by vnlum&r'·drlv;rs' froili in over Orarige ·county, 14MllHe,0,t6it Movie Mobile iii• 'pj>earlng r~lh Marth I wtOtJree ttterature arKl mms fer ·each · "'f ,. • ' . • I Va rieties or subjects wldle'..at Uie llame . -J Ume freeing teachers to work :wfth $ludents on a more individuiJ ~,..,they C!Jaim. .. , " ~ ~But there are olherli, not&b>fmcmbers of the administration and some odter ll'usl.ees, who are satisfied; "1th the cur:; i'tnt operatk>n of t»te dlstrtct ano cha)lenge ·the claim ·tfWt -;.a draatle . . -ttvllllon hi necessary. . "The election result'5 1ra nO:f, ~ demand for radical change." ~. Jfe ~ • Huntingl9n Beach reaki<liL • "II iiml parallel lo economic tra_\dl. I ~ta It •1!¥1Y .lo economics," lie s0\11. alludiJI& tolii,11 laxes. • , • Whlll! · ..administralora and o th e r tru(tea are stlll pondering o?tl' !he ~4i;et9ry revisions that mdst be mlde In NEW YORK (AP) -The stock market held onlO a smaU but falrl.y firm lc:!ad In alugglsh tradln1 late this afternoon. (See • ijuoliitlons, PageS 48-ft l. -• b~pt for ,, few ls sues Involved In si>c- clar;1ltuations, prices moved in a navo" f&n(C;-. f ... ·. ,"J ALAN oiRXJN he~t off Mile 4 Square," r.t a yo r Alamitos for general aviation <Private stuilent. '1Mlllle1• ii literally• iheater on or,...°',_'"",,.... "\ 'Edwahl Just comm ented. P,lane1) and not commercial craft. wile:els, with a movie screen, 1rghUng and Tht:, fucruslng pdostllt.lily that ~ so<iiid equlpmertt' a,nil r~oka lo,adtd with , -e..i,..._,__ Alamltoa"Naval Air Station h1ay be clN· The mayor-Said he understood a • The BUpervisor also would like to see a brocburea. • · n .-,~. , 1 :''•, ~ ed in~ leJeose cuts t.ook.som!'_~.J.~ decision oo Los Alamitos would come in park.and rttruUon IM,llter wne-cruted 11w1·were 81)•pleased With the Smoking Wh1 1 l'*l· &lllDc? preasure Dldey off ~ ~·s mid-MJrch. in the surrounding area before auch a Sad\iny preJe't'.ltatlonS tut year, we just aa ~·,,...;...r,. :W. ~- seM'Cb forJnOre airpl)rt fldlitles. ·'That was In line with lfanna's state-switch Is ma®. Baker Is lo address Ute dec.ided'our,atUdents·wouJd benef't from clQlada-and.lemptratl ~ City ~ c:ounty JOlftctals "tod:ay Y(ere men( which he. issued after 11 closed-door Rossmoor Homeowner• Auoclatloo on tM~ilfoVie prolf&'{n," sakl Fern ~. i In the 1ower ,,.., '1anr,'thi~Orjali. t4q~a 10ok al a ltatlmenl put -out meetm, with Oefense Secrelary Melvin the futu re hr the·Lol Alamll.oltstaUon on ltieilth sen:lcea 'coo.rdiNtorJ'or Fountain' coast. ,. · Tt!eldO)' by ftell. Rldlanl llaltno (0. LOIN aad oiher Dtlense Departmoot of· March ti.' '' • Va!l!'Y School DUtrlct. "About 3.111 • W-). ffe.lljd tl!e.,..,...,,. Wiii Oclail In Wlllibtcton Tuesday. ~has urg~ elimtoal!Gri of Foun. sludenta.ire por!ldpa,Ung a\ eadl.~ , · INIJli• .,..a\Y ---<W·-ltlli.that Ille 8-Mid operatons at the flOO ' lain Vallei''t lllle Sqliv;i.f.1rkAllt}roln a~ o(~~.';. . • '.l ._ / Wilt '1fllr Sillt ~ llo6irc "llkillbood o1 111< 1M Albiliot lllloo· ' mll1loa air lldllly wllt likel)' be splll up COWlly -.i,titlGi> 11 llrport. F1vom,· ftlml' Include :"'J'!lr, -,.,. , L• P ~, .,. ;,..1 ,,,,,,_,,_._ cloolngln IJ>e_ .. , -.'bu.been ' -~l!'oro.MarlneCorpstJr Station, "When you com~ the llll 1cm 11 ~or "~ M1n1atec1 ...-"'IQ" ,._ .... ·~ - , -1ated." ,~' • Ml/i1na. Nll'lll AJr·Slatlon In san Diego Miit Square •aliil .Ute l,I00.1ims '1t J:.oi llklsirat!nl i:·' )iplds 1il lliioi<lnl,, " '"'i""i ~I lllf ~ .. · M aide to Dl'lld Bak•,-qd~olnlMugoNtval AlrSlationatOt· Allmito1,the~·toUer ,-·onl~ ''Bmlh.lol .<Ir'<' 1 ~pro-, fida~I dotto'I fl'!I hwt o)in: Wbolt dlltrlct ud!t dll Wat Olanly. nant. wa)'," 8Uer'1 alde OOl\UM!l'kd. ~1 • ·· duiiion for teerJ on prob!eml mocll&ed • Paoc 12. • aploiold tllol..lllo) ... ,_. Ha111111lr<aed,however,thaltbellnal .,,,. km qr rptlilary .,...d 'Jb< 1"" wtlll~tni. and "Sli1oltinl PMl'cid -,. -,'• reports retomll\fftd uae.otb:ls AJaml!Os dtcisioo on Los Alamltos, whose near AtamltOe slaUon would Ma COlhmetdal P~,'' wtuch:revieWl 1he ~"of ' l ~~ "1 ~-:: for general aviation purposes if the 1,500 acres make it tfll' largest Naval Air blow to the area. The 'eomliined.!i.nmial -~1:tncludln1 up-~ e\1deta on i~ • g:::=:. .,. .. ~!"'!' / " Defenle' Department doe1 dtckle to clo&e Reserve.. station in the t!otintry1 was not military civ!H1n payroll lt mo...,than •t0· 1 rt1Ultfnl health huard1. t ~ • ~ --• it down. · ~"clear cut." , • • ll)llllon •• 'Ille olltlon ii -•!ty a Tltll,riow meclil ol -1 the pu!Jllc __......, : ~ ..: FOlll!taln Valley olflctal1 wer< hopi Tht: congressman "°"Id like ''° su ll1o ~ tll1d -1 unlll. T1lm m • _ ,..,ldtd by flmdl d • rec.nt Canoer := _ ': -- that Los ..\)amilos would be given over to cillty tumed over,tl\ J>!lrk ~1¥1 reerta· ll#J Nny ICU~ dally per'ICl!IDll ·there ·· Cruladt.· n &n bt Bel up convemently tn 111 • ""-' J use by ,.ivate -plane,..and'lhus take tfie lion ,,.. but the slall<>~ ti.. be<n laqed who lr!ln'4,400'._Rad •-tlola.-r 1nyj>llbllt "neollnc pllco or ..-=..-"1 ="-' spotlight off lhe clly'a Mlle Square Park ror avtallm ""'I""" Jn, timlolr, 1tudle , ~1'1' spokesm .. ,..,. MC iMtlibte bull..,. .,. . 11\dwtrill art1. A C S --• ='1.,- " • possible general i vlatlon site. A 1pokesmao al SiJPe<V'ilo\' 'til'lier'a ill ' 141141 lot ca'""""' oo lhl -·• pooalble V91un'"". Ir& • .,.__ to. dlltrtbulo •-·,I "Los Alamitos could certainly take tho fict Slid Baker ~~ -al Im i cfoaln&. · · · !Jt6r1u. ~ ljlftlOr ..--. .__ __________ _, l' I > ' ' I • ' • .. t. ri ·THI LAUGHS STOPPED ComMl1n l uc11 · .. J?alf,e y _(;,omic , .· Gets ' Lqughs F~r .Himself l'(oii!llljij,_,....,,.Jt 19l'OL.. S11rpri11ed Burglcrs • • • . . • . --~~porl , 1,ct1~m. ' . j -• ·S~ot at Slayers l y JOANNB llEYNOLDB '" .... o.iw ,., ... ,,_.. F1tally wound6d with a bulle~ in his ebe:St, Baycrest resident \V 111 1 a m ·McKinley Harrla !ired away with his own revolver at his murd~ before falllng dead on his front porch. ~at's how Newport Be 1. ch in· veslig1tors reconstructed the I a s t moments or life for the 60-year-<ild retired movie producer after he ap· part'\tty 11urpr1std burglars In' his home at IOU Anchor Way Monday night. Hts body was dlscovertd Tue6day morning by neighbors. spra11.·led across the dool'l'tay of his home, lilill clu tching his .38-callber revolver. , · In reconstructtna the c r I m e , in- nstigatora aa1d the 1u.apect or SUliptcts probably enta-ed between I and 10 p.m. throua:h an unlocked bathroom window at the: rur of' the home. HarriJ WU apparently W I l C h 1 n g teleViaJon at the front of the house, when he heard intruders and went to In· vest,lga\e, oftlcers reported. Tbe. victim was 1tandin1 in A baUWay when he surprised the would·bo burglars in one of the bedrooms. It wa1 then, . polite 11pe.culalc. Uuit karrla WD shot fltrrl! had a .3kaUbtr revolver which he iu;ed in hia . ki41n& ba(tle. with as&allants, of£ioera explained. A n unknown number ol shots wtrt firtd at the dying man chased the suspects down the haJl and out the door, whf:re he fell fatally wounded. lnvestlg1.tors sajd the bw."•lar• ap- parently hid "°'~ tatei; anytftlnl when they were surprised. Han'ta' wu car· rylng Rveral hutdred dollars and a • valuable diamond rina when hi& body was found, Utey noted. Police 1ald they've turned up nothlnl to Indicate the auailanta had been wounded In the ahootlna. Hanil wa1 found clut- chtn1 his gun, bUt the murder weapon ba1 not been recovered, they reported. All but one nelpbor said they heard .JIOlhlns· t!urlni the nl&ht. Ham•' nexl door neighbor uJd 1he htard commotion and noises late Monday night which 1he did not lr.veatlaage. From Page J Don 'LueaA lg a man who enjoys getting ~ a 1aNh out 61 people. ( · In ad be does it for a living. RAMPAGING RABBITS • • • • But 'Ute laughs noppm about ·a mOnth chased them Info someone e I s e ' s concentration of rabbit h1ter1 than rabbit ~-the~~~--~~.. -sufftnd a heart attack after doing 1 ben-He aJao has betn to tlM! !late Fish and '·No, I don't like them al all ," sa.id on e efit .lbOw far the SalntJ and Slnnera Club GIJ1le Dtpartment with hi& woei, but ekierly gentleman who stys he hu traJn· at thfTlaMSnio;Hotel hrtu-Vega · ed his cat to hunt the:m down. Now}\'L Df:lb!t·tu,m to be entel't4fntd. claimes ht· received little he! ''I had a._~,aAooDl!ther man Jr.bo...appar:entl)t-fanc lei - ---Htrr~·VaHey1rttndrbsvQ~ le'ti'OUble ieIDne the head mogul, <;Qnt~ental di§h~ declared_, "I only like -a...~ndJ Lit.Nm _,1..ll...p~_M~ t .Jll -but when .J did;" ttie}!.:.aaid the oniy way !hem as 'Hasenpfeffer.' Th1t'1 rabbit • • • Census Takers , i.' • • I r '' ·) • tbe'.:clm1ei: HOUie, Anahetm. to git rid of them 11 to shoot them. But stew." • Don WI.JI · be oU work •not~ th!ee we couldn't do that around here with our During the course of the: survey, months, and, with a "1fe and &IX kids. peopte·" VanGtta:t unwtttin&ly crossed ebemy that'I not a tunny" aJtuatJon. Arrlnltments "~y also told me about the tnps " lines and entered nbblt lovers territory. for the Dbn Lucas benefit are in Oie handl be added pointing to a niodel that one ~( ''Hey, are you that r1bblt killer,'' ex- o( Mlia Betty Garvin wbo cen be reached his friends ha1 jtJ&t designed. It can be claimed one man who observed VanGeest ati:;~":i.s appeared 0~ auch television ~It for 1'2'.&o a C11py. ,, lrylng to catch a bunny for a how 11 'Ut Taha a Thief " "The ·OUt-, l cant tell you his name., explained photographer. "Why you miserable man, ' !1der1 '! and ·''Bob Da!e .shO:,;.;'' He alngs, VanGeut. "He'•. aurroundec' by rabbit you ought to be put in jail for It. Get out t ~-lnd,,r;tte1 ind hi.a 4ppeared in lnany lovers and fears reprisals. But he's o( here. You're a dlagrace." ~lpt cluba ~hotels In '"Callfornli, Neva. ·~ady caught 23 of them." Dentures ratlllng 'A'ith furor, he gave ~ da "kizoita lhd HP.all. 1l1m putUng in Ill immediate order for VanGeest a mighty shove which sent him Friendl who would like to drop a card 100 of ~m and plan to &ell them at the reeling and searching for protective to Don inaJ .,.ea it to P.O. Box 81$8, market. cover_ FoUntaJ.n VautY: . In addition, VanGeest Jays, the traps. The man turned out to be an II-year· " no. Who would like to do something which appear lo work well because they old retired railroad freight agent Ray for Don, and tn.Jo1 a nlshl of entertain-require only 1 light tripping foret, Will go Henderson, an avowed r1bblt lover. ~ ment and dancln1, ,may uk for tickets up for sale durlng Lelsure·Worid '& annual "I like the r1bblts. They're lhe cutest by wrttin& to 244 S. Glu&ell, Oran.(. Cal· · art.I and qa(ll fe1Uval: · things. I watch them by the hour. They're UOrnli· ... .-'T\Clleb ·for th 1 March 2 "ff w.e s:i>uld Just get 100 rabbit l)aters beautiful, 1~ob1Uc. Why would an,Jone "" lienefit 'In ti elcb. \ ·~1 '·• -~ out ~Ith these' trips. t think w~ could want to k.lll them?" t--really do something," he said, wistfully, "Why the hell doesn't he 1ive hi.a $1.000 .. The game department has Offered to to hollpital childrtn who need he.Ip inatud ,';""fd fh!~d !~fe'f!_eem"apped10 a 11,r14ab!herlti.,The\hey of s~ndlng it on a rabbit birth control · Being 80~4,t · .. ' ...,.. U1 " pill. It's .the most ridiculous lhln& I ever hWlter1 would ha~·e fun wllh them." heard of." Tbe fur hu al8Ctbeen flying 1mon1 the Henderson sayl he feed!I the rabbit!. rabbit lovers who are Incensed at but would not reveal what the food Is so ~ For W. Cou11ty , The U.S. Burtau of the Census needs local people to work on the 10'10 Cemus of f. Pqpulatlon •nd Housing In the \Yest Orange County area. It wa~ announced , today by Roy Gordon, district manager of L the censw:. · Jobs to be filled wilt be as census takers who w\11 call upon households that have nOt mailed b:tck lheir census forms or wbo have malled back lnComplete ooe1. Generally. they will work near their own ntl1hborbooda. •· Jobi wtn Jait from three to five wee);s In April and May. Some wo_rk ~ll be , done evenln1s and on Saturdays as some people are at home onlv during those ; limK. Pay will avera~e 11bout $2 an hour. · Those lntertsttd should apply at the census office. 1310K E. Edinger Ave ., Sanla Ana. or call M7-7635. Asian Fund Asked WASHINGTON (AP) -Prtside11l Nix· on uktd Congress today to pltdge a United States cont.r1but1011 of $100 million to a 1pte.ial fund enabling the Asian DeveJopment Bank to make easy-tenn loans. DAILY PILOT CUHOf CO.UT 1"\11\.1 ... INO [0Ml"ANY Robetl N. W1M .,.,.~.--''*Wll' Jt• .. It. C11rl1y Yke l"rtt"'"' eM ~ti M.tN,.,- Tllt"'ll "'•••" """ Th'"''' A. M11rph;,,, ,........1"11 fll ... Albttf W. 11111 ..... ~ ... l\ol' H•I ..... ._.Otftc, 17111 h 11eli kwl.,••1111 M11lli.t .t.441Hu ,,0 , I•~ 1•0, •2t•1 ·--\. ....... teed!! J2f ,..,.., A¥1111\1t C.... ~I iJo Met ltY •tfttl ,,..,.,..,.., INKfU ftll Wit! .. llllH ~rtl -· Van Gee.st 's efforts. They like the bunnies that vanGeest couldn't bait his traps wit h and even feed them. the morsels. A miniature survey of slrolll ng Leisure "I know the law and if this fUY keep1 it World resident!, taken from VanGeest's up, I'm going to send him back to electric cart, however, showed a tieavier Holland. He hasn't got any rabbits. If I Final Rites Set For Lon g-time Beach Res ident Funeral services for Clyde Knisley, 82, a »year resident or Huntington Beach, will be held at 2 p.m .• Friday al Smith'! Chapel, Huntington Beach. Burial will rollow In Harbor Resl t>.1cmorlal Park, COsta lo.1esa. lt1r. Knisley, a reli red employe of Stan- dard 011 Co .• lived at 608 Joliet Ave. He is survived by his wife , Anna : a daughter. Mrs. Lea VanDeasen of Hun - tington Beach; a son. Bob Knisley of Fullerton; two sisters, Mrs. Stella •lolten and Mrs. Anna Elliot and two brother.!l, Oscar Knisley and Cler,k Knisley. au of Ohio. and four grandchifdren. Servi ces Slated For Mrs. Berube Rosary for r-.trs. Jane lo.1. Berube, 66, of 1m1 Newland Ave .. Huntington Bea,..h, ' will be reclttd at 7:30 tonight at Smith"s 1 Chapel. She ,died Saturday. Requiem h1ass will be ctlebrated for Mrs. Berube, a l~year resident of Hun- tinaton Beach, at 10 ·a.ml. Thursday, in Sts. Simon and Jude Catholic Church. Burial will be in the Good Stiepherd Cemetery . Survivors include her husband, Lionel: two daughttrs, A1rs. Ann ette Ussery of Huntington Beach .11nd J\.frs. J\1ary Ann Grun of Dtlano; two sons, Jean Paul Berube and Leonard B~rube. both or HunUngtol'l 8e1ch. five grandchildren and one 11 .. t arl!ldc:hlld. Bandit Strikes, Flees on Cycle 1 A blndlt riding • motorcycl' drove up to 1 Huntinaton Beach photo-m•l Tue~ day ntaht and drove off with l300 lo ca~h. Police said the myatertou." motorcyclist robbed the photo-mat at Springdale Street and F.dincer Avenue about t :ao e-m' Ht ioJd the girl .. mn11 pholo "'l> jille1 (ha! he had a weapon ana she boiler stve him the money. He rode of( without liO moch at 1 "~oodbye, • police !lltf. I ever caught him setting a trap, why I'd--" As the furor continues, both rabbi t haten and rabbit IOVtrs are scratching their heads over the origin of the bunnies. No one knows where. they came from. The only Ullng that appears certain is Utat there are more of them every day. f'rnna Page J HARBOUR .... whert. it ran into the marina at the foot of !he Christiana Bay condominiums. "That oil would have never run Into the channel If the oil company's property "''as properly graded to contain such leaks on its own land," Herb Day, city oil in· speclor, claimed. Day said his department 11 powerless to do anything about the leak, e1cept ask the corporation to clean It up. The seven· wells owned by Grover Collins are whip.stocked (slanted) and are actually pumping oil "from W1der the Hun· tington HarOOur area, Day added. . Don Bums. general manager of Hun - tington •Iarbour Corporation, 1.1ld hi& company Is no longer responsible for the marma. "but we will· try and htlp the boat owners and hort1eo11.'l'Jers ltl that area cleaned up." Clean up crews, authorized by the Ft.sh 11nd Game Authority, t>etan work 1\let· day with straw and pumps to soak up 1bd suck up the oil. They labeled It a "four. day Job." Most of the oil wu confined to U1e c:ondomtnlum martni 1rt1. Boat owners also took out srub brushe& and started working on some of lhelr black,ned hull11. "What a ·meas," declared one dlstoor11td houHwlft, who found that oil isn't e1sil7 "'"'ovtd from a fiber&lass hull. AboUl 30 boats were oil stained. Conspiracy Case Goes to J ur1ors FLINT, Mich. rtJPI) -1llt t2 men and women who make up the Jury In tht Altitn Motel Federal conspiracy case t~ day win bt told to decide' whit even Je111 expttU dl&lgrtt; on -whe.lhe.r Ult dtftn- dants conspired to commit a crime. • When he opened the trl1l or three white fonnrr !letrolt polle<men and 1 Nt'"' former priva!e ...JU•rd live~ '!...Hkt ·~·­U.S. Dfstrict Court Judae SiiPlien J, lloill rem1rked'th1t a>napiracy waa so vaply deflnl!d that thtre probably are ft many definitions of It as thtrt are judges. OAIL Y l>ILOT """-.., •lclllflll !Utltltr Swinging Cameraman Using hellcoP.ter with special camera mount , cameraman ftlms still another scene in "Doctors' \Vives " a movie now in production on location in Harbo 1 r .o\rea. Cameraman was shooting footage of another helicopter being'used1 as air ambulanc_e in the film and skies over Costa Mesa was where • the action took place. New-port~ Ends ~bong-Fight Hopes Abandoned for Inland Freetvay ~outing By THOMAS FORTUNE Of ffle D•llY Plitt ll•ll The seven year fight _of the Newport Beach City Council to push the Pacific Coa!l Freeway route inland appears to- day to be over. City councilmen said for the first time P.fonday they would be willing to sign an agreement with the State Division o( Hiitlways to build Ute freeway along the adopted route. Before councilmen sign. however, enatneering problems will have lo be ironed out to their satisfaction. That means qreement still could .be a long way off. But councilmen," nevtrth.eless, have now said they ~Id accept a coastal routing they have never liked -·and and still don't -in.stea~ of insisting on pushing the 1oote inla.Dd. t I : I The ' reason lhf:y 'are' 1.o(~igg the ir stand is their realization th!t with Costa f'.1elll city offlcial! adamantly Opposed they are never going to get anywhere in appeals before the State Highwy Com- mission. They most recently los t again Thursday in what they called a final ap· peal to reopen the route . _ So Monday afternoon for the rir51 ti!11e, city councllmen allowed that . they ~light be willing to abandon their ultimate weapon -refus ing to sign an agreem~nt lying in lht freeway with local city atreels. "History may look upon what happened here a.s tragic," said Councilman Robert Shelton "but I am also a realist. We have reached the point in Ume when we must lhlnk of rtaJUy, not victory or defeat." He even uried that since the city will be working to reUne the adopted route, it do 50 aggressively. "The longer we drag our feet and tilt at windmills the longer this co mmunity will suffer without a freeway."' he said. ''Thert: is competition for the 1a1 tax dollar (the source of fun· din& for state frtew1y1)." Bul Councilman Lind5\ey Parson5 didn 't ft1e a need to rush ahead. He said the free'\ey probably is six or seven· years oft and suggested ttiat "with prelll!ure from Costa lo.1esa to get the Newport Freeway built the Highway Commil!liion may come to us at some point in time." One councilman, Paul J . Gruber, re- mained vigorously opposed in Ute af· tcmoon study session to accepting !he adopted route which hugs the blufr along Pacific Coast Highway west or the Upper Newport Bay bridge. ALWAYS OFFENSIVE "Why should we be content to move in· to the jaws of destruction?" Gruber ask· ed "This has always been offensive to ouf t.n'virorunent. It wipee 001 the west end of town and a businesa secdon (P.1ariners f.1ile) in a way that is !11C-On- ceivable , This viaasive struct.ure,,w~ld be. expoied to tbe view pf our bay,..J Just can't.~e it.." Maddox Chided For Outburst WASHINGTON (UPll -Speaker John w. McCormack chieded Gov. Lester fo.faddox of Georgia today for passing out pick and ax handles in the House restaurant. Rep. Charles C. Oigg1 (D- Mich.), proposed to declare t.1addox unwelcome hereafter. McConnack, who issued an order Tues- day that resulted In cleari,g half a dozen of ttie governor's v.·eighty trademarks out or the reslaurant, told reporters today : "lt "ras lna~prlate for (M:Bddox) to do what he did .'' Diggs, one or nine Negro House membe.rs, came clflse to tangling physically with Maddox Tuesday when he discovered the governor was distributing his cel ebrated "plckrick drumsticks" to guests, capitol police and others in and around the retauranl • Diggs said today he was considering fl\. Ing a slander suit against Maddox . who called him 11n "ass" and "baboon" during table where Maddox sit with 1 Georgia state patrolman. Bul "'hen h came time \o vote fo.1onday evening, Gruber joined the other5 and made it unanimous to ask the city staff to work with Division of Highwa y s engineers to s!e if problems can be solv· ed "within the limits of the adopted route .·· Gruber later explained that he couldn't win hls point so the next best thing 11.·as to "'o rk with state highway engineers. "Jn trying to v.·ork th is out they can't help but know the route's not salisfac- ·tory," he said. Harold Glass, a lreewy spokesman 'for Newport Height• property owners, ap- pl8.uded the council action. "We couldn't believe it." he u.ld for ttiose in the au- dience, "We know it's-been a hard . rough go for you." EXHAUSTED EFFORTS r-.iayor Doreen Marshall said, "We ha ve over the last seven years. and 1 think justifiably. devoted consider ab l t. fesources Of the city. We've pretty well exhausted our e((orts to reopen. \Ve should try to resolve this no\v for the best interest of the city as a whole.'' "That sta tement is indicative of !I defeatist attitude," said Gruber. durin~ the afternoon when the v.·111 of the council as a whole still was not l:nov.·n. Shelton told Gruber, "There Is no strong community sen.iment for lhe council to pursue this farther. On the con- trary, most of what we hear Is just the opposite." "It will be a purveyor of &m0g and pollution in our l1Jmmunlty,'' P.J"Ote6ted Gruber :-He then argued for no freeway at :ill , but instead what he called ·•a super l'lrterial system" -fenced-off highways like Ne"'porl Sou\evard headed up toward Costa P.fe sa . None of the other c:ouncilmen saw it his v.•11y. Councilman Donald Mcinnis conceded 'vorking within the adopll.'Cf route Is the reasonable way to go at this point. "But if I see the engi neering begins coming out like a Chinese Wall to emasculate \Vest Newport, there Is r.o way I will sign." tie y.·arned. From C.lilomi• Artis•ns . Eng•gement Rings of lncompor•b le l:ie•uty, CONVENIENT TOM$ -I ANKAMERICARO MASTER Ci-!ARGE J • J. C. .JJu1nphrieJ JewcferJ ! Ill NEWPO~T AVENUE COST/\ MESI\ • l4 YU.~S SA M! LOCATION PHONE 1n.1~01 l I 'I . I, ~s6 Take~P~pers, In Vote ltfle·es -• • The first day rush wos oo at 1he coomty N~~) ID(~ ll. BiJrb<(R· d<rk'• votero reglslr11ioll burt1u Tueo--iluniiilii\On-Belclll. ' ·,; day with 36 eandld11'1 toking out' Jlolh lncum~t ...,.m.iin .......,_ nomlnlUon papers for federal, llllle and lint <>mwe.,_Coo;t' -took 0.1 eowrty olficq. "'~ &Ion !!': Allen, 1'11111 J)lll!IC1 and Prominent among the early bird1 were Davtcf L.. . ..Bater Secoad l>lltr~~ ••• Rep. James B. Utt (ft.. Tustin) and early in llne.. assemblymen Robert E. Badham CR· R;obtrt L •. CI~. a depulyi ta collector Other States May Change ,()n Abortion LOS ANGELES CA~) -.Th< ms. Supreme Court's refusal t.o u~hold Califamla's now obsolete aborlion1law or 1880 may lead t.o llberaliied laws in otlier s&fl!es1 abortion PiQP9fients predid.l ,. .. ,, 8m ao jubilant I can't dfsctitie Ii," Dr. Leon Belous said Tuesday after the court, without comment. let stand the California Supreme Court's decision that the original law is unconstitutional. , fO< ltn yan "" first in line llllq• up anojhu dtpulJ tu oolleclat and I rlvll l&r eolltctor Don S. Moder "" Ibo llnl lo .file 1he rliautr.c! 11 liplwni. Followina ii the Jbl " wididllt .. w1>o look JMIJIOH out 'J\lesday:· U.& ~: 2511> Diatric:I -Alfred Ramirez, Ull N· Idaho Sl, La lllbr1,. real estate llleaman, A qre r t·c an lnd~""'1t. "3ttb District -William J. Teacue. 1021% Slinf.ord, Garden Grove, busl!IOS! administraUon, Republican; V. Lane Knight, J29( Grahan Circle, Cypress, at~ tomey, Republican. 35th Di.strict -James B. Utt (in- cil~bent), U33 E. Catalina St., Santa Atla,tRepublican; William M. Wilcoxen, 499 l;egibn St., Laguna Bei.cb, attOrney, Republican. U.S. Stnalor: John Ortman, 4642 Brlarhltl Dr., Yorba Lind•, engineer, Republican. • CAIL Y ll'ILO't Sltff l'HI• Burned Out Case "I no\ only gambled my license, I gambled on millions of women's live&," he r;aid. Assembly: 69th District -Donald J. Swenson, 11671 Mossier, Anaheim, elec· Firemen douse remaining embers of fire which destroyed four autos trortlcs technician, American Indepen· and a garage early this morning behind Anaheim apartment house The decision vindicated Belous. a 66- year-old Beverly Hills gynocra1ogist con- victed in 11166 -one year before the cur- rent. liberalized law was enacted -after he referred an unmarried couple to another phy11ician for an abortion. 1'.aw's""'simUHT"tl:S"Ciillfaf'nta's-o1d orrc=-- _w_bidl problQited {lborlion except when neceSl!Jary to preserve a woman's life - are on the books in 4 states: The California court ruling -which the Supreme Court con[irmed waa that the phrase "necessary to preserve" was too vague for a physician to know whether he • was acting Illegally. • A leading back~r of liberaJized laws, State Sen. Anthony Beilenson, said: "The Supreme Court's refusal to review the case upholds Jiberalizallon of the law. If applied to those other states it could give a lot of push to changing those laws.'' Beilenson, a Beverly Hills Democrat, was the author of a 1967 revision or the California law to permit abortion if the mother 's menta l or physical health was Jn danger of if pregnancy was the result of npe or iricest. Since the modificat ion was enacted. the at.ate he8lth department utimates, 20,000 abortions -80 to 85 percent or the legal abodi,ons lo the United States -have taken place In California. Beilen!lOfl said be welcomes the ]>OS&ibility that Tuesday's decision may be a step toward undermining his own •lawn in favor of somethin& still more liberal. "Tile state court." he said, "went out of il! way in that opinion to say that if a physician followed the procedures for therapeutic abortions in the new law. his decision could not be second guessed by a cou.rt or jury." The court majority also questioned ,.,,helher a state should interfere with a woman's "rights to life and to choose whether to bear children." State figure!I show that in the two years dent. at 624 W. Bellevue Drive. Investigators are probing cause of blaze.. 10th District -Robert H. Burke fin· which ca·used estimated $18,000 in damages and brought back mem· cum.bent), 8362 Malory, Huntington ories·of mysterious fire bomber who set numerous fires like this one Beach, Republican. in apartmen~ garages· a~d carp'!_rt! throughout cen!J°a_l Orange Coune 71<1 Diolrtct -·Robert E. Badham (In-fy .. Ttiree-apartments were damaged by smol<e tn (hIS blaz~e, ]!ut,,o- cumbent), 1200 Irvine Ave., Newport one was injuted. -llffch, Republicon: JohD S,Woodf,628-5.----------------------:---- B!ckelJ .Ana!leim, newspaper reporter, American Independent. Stale JIGard ol Eqwll-: Fourth Distr1ct-Bernard Wocher,-1Z932 Malena Dr .• Santa Ana, 1<1vemment audit«. Republican. Coanly Tn C.Uec:lor: Robert L. (Bob) Citrone, 152S E. Vance Pl., Santa AM, deputy lax colleclor; David G. Hll<hcock, 14342 Clarissa Lane, Tullin, counly budget director; Joe R. Greene, 13391 Elir.abe'ib Way, Tustin, deputy tu: col· lector C....ty Supervt50I': %nd DiJlrict - David L. Baker (incumbent), 9452 Royal PalrTI Blvd .• Garden Grove. 4th District -Ralph E. Wright. 3581 Orange, Orange, public works employ· menl :.th District -AJton E. Allen (in· cumbent), 2.\.16 Temple Hilla Dr., South Laguna. County C1erk: William E. St John (in· ·clll1lQllllt). im Greengrove, Orange. ··-r.lillc Admbils-: James E. Helm (incumbent), ZMOl GrJnado, 'San Juan Capistrano. Cewlty -r: J. Wyli• Carlyle tin- ! curnbeQt), 24GI N. Flower, Santa Ana. Sbtrtff-Coi'oner: Jamei ' Mu.sick (ill< cu:mbent sheriff), 1806 Louise St., Santa Ana; Marshall Norris, 1316 E. Collin•, Orange, criminal court clerk. County Treuuru: Ivan H. Swanaer (in- cumbent}, 107 La Ronda, Tustin. County Auditor: V. A. Heim (in· cumbent}, 16932 Heim Ave., Orange. Judge -Saperior Coart: No. 3 - Herbert S. Herlando (incumbent), ZS47 N. Forest, Sant.a Anl. ------- Mom Takes Fertility Drug, Gives Birth to Quintuplets From Wire Strviees NEW YORK -A 27-year-old New Jersey mother using fertility drugs ga ve birth to quintuplets Tuesday night Doc· tors sakf today the three girls and two boys, delivered in only 10 minutes, passed their first critical test today and were reported "doing' fine ." Pil'tnts of the u-yel unnamed babies were Mrs. Margaret Klenast and her huaband, W'lllia?JI, 38, a salesman for the Nli:on B,a1d.w~_ J?ivi1ion of TenneCq., Irle .• anctJa·.~~!nl of F~r lr!Ds; J.Ji., They have hro Otbm children, a dauibter, 4, •nd a son, l lk, both born after Mrs. Kienast .took fertility drugs. MulUple births occur about 40 percent of the time after taking <>f the fertility drug, pergooal, the doctors said, and Mrs. Klena.rt had known since the 20th week of her pregnancy that &he would have at leut four babies. The quints, six weeks premature, were put in incubators as a matter <>f •·routine," according to doctors at Colum- bia Presbyterian l\.ledical Center where they were delivered in normal birth - not Caesarian section. The firat, a girl. wu born at 10 :08 p.m. and weighed three pounds, four ounces - the s.rnailest . Another girl was born one minute la18 and weighed three pounds, 11 CM1ces, followed by a boy at 10:13 weighing four pounds, six ounces -the lar1est.; a g1rl"at 10 :16 welibing -three pounds 14 ounces and a boy at 10:18 weighing three PQUllds, eight ounces. They were six weeks premature, ac· cording to a ha1pital spokesrrian, and a team <>f 16 doctors and assistants took part in the delivery, He said the "doctors are optimistic" on the condition <>f the babies, the mother was In •·satisfactory" condition, and the father was under ''considerable strain." Wtdnosd.<r, ,..,,,.., 25, 1970 H DAU. v f'll.OT I ~Dear 'rf!'•••ny •+.~' LA Chief Jabs Smotfaer.s' $hit • LOS ANGEUES (UPI) --'Police Chief Edward M. Da¥11,re- leased a sarcastic leller Tuesday in whiclfho nn.we4 hlf IMd 'IJllh • the Smothers Brothers over a pro-marijuana anU·pollce *1t ~ appeared on their television special last. week..-· ~ • ' . The day after the show,. Davis' iouecl ;a 1taW.Oal !CWN IM· skit, which featured an "Officer J\Jcly" backed by a cboNI' ~ - dressed as polic~ officers and made refel'eiice. fo mariluan,a. '!lie Smothers replied that the police oUlcers w•ren 'I ruJ,1a.i Ill<• •·'tit• Flying Nun' on television doesn1t reaij_y fly. ,. • • Davis' letter to !fom Smothe?s.:.~kl: ':, ·••• ·t "Dear Tommy, T "Me and my kinfolk saw your·.press conference wberl:,you Uild us about the FlylnJ NUii not Cytn' and tho bear>on "!lie Arl4y Williams Show" not bew' a bear aM 11the BeverlY. RillblHit1~11iot Jlvln' in Beverly Hills. We appreciate this Information. Jllln.''-tllll country folk all we know is what we see on television ouLllC-a~ Chatsworth. 1f you don't know where Chatsworth is, it's baltWi:y between Devonshire Downs and the Spahn Ranch. i' 4 "! didn't really think that Officer Judy wao a pollc:el!l8A a1tet l heard him lalk a little, cause a policeman has ·to'""'•·a ptycbia- tric exam an' 1 can't imagine a policeman sayin' good· things about young people us in' dope at such a place as the Wo«tatock ·Fertlval. "Tommy, you might have noticed ayer the wetken<\ abotit the Sall Lake Cily youth who made a tape about his use of pot and LSD and then drove to Wyoming and blew. bis brains out. You llllgtil also seen about three women in Nevada who got rich tieWn' berOJn to high schoql kids, and I reckon you might have oeen tho Feb. 20th Lile Ma~azlne story about a high school kid In a southwest ell)' who got addicted to heroin. · "Me and my kinfolk are sort of old fashioned about d~ and that kinda stuff, and I'm sorry if I was too offended at your•abo:tr. I think you and your brother have a lot of talent which coul4 be used lo help young people in America altaigbten up and fiy right- "Best personal regards, "Chief Davis" (hf• ltllfi). One Walks · Out Vompidou Te-llS Soli}ns Plan for Mideast Peace WASHINGTON (AP) -French Presi- dent Georges P<>mpldou got a polite hear· ing in Congress Wednesday -desplle the inconspicuous walkout of one member - as he said Middle Eastern peace should be sought through a four-power con- ference. Rep. Lester L. Wolff (0-N.Y.), cat up !~m his seat near the middle of the big House chamber md' walked out as Pom- )lklou be11n 1peatf.ns;. 'Ibere wu no noticeable sUr, Pompldou had just received about two minutes of applause from the audience in the lua-than-fuD chafuti"er. . -· fl llflpeared lhat •bout ~ of lfrt 434 House members and eo of the 100 senators attended. Members opposed to France'a Middle East polJcy, especially the sale-of planes to Libya, had organized a boycott. However, House employe11 helped fill the vacant seats, along with the cabinet and a huge turnout of the diplomatic corps, The capitol was heavily guarded: by police and Secret Serrice qent.s -the tightest secupty, one police official said, in about 14 feara. never tumultuous. But some eenaton cried "Vive la Frinee," as he left, to ' more applause:, pausing to ~te hands. There was applause even when the French president slid: "Al)(lw me, as 1 friend, to leU you that lhe end of the war In Vietnam, for the United States, wUI be the most worthy of victories - a victory won first over Ont.self." 'C!111Pldou 111ado 119.tneDillJI ln=•d-dres's of the UTDI .. tr otber controveriies, and mentioned the e East disputes Only briefly. "Btlltve .rfte," he 11:ld, ''France'• ~ tenllom la 1he fac:e of lfrtll confllcla hll never Jrtai ~ Clllrlllllllllt ID. NII n• Uon n61'to . ' another. We lieif we want only petct." He mlaled Prance'• poo!Uoa lhat Israel has !ht right to exist in securUy as an Independent and sovereign state, and crJUclzed lht conllnulng bostllllles In 1ht area, ,1 · 5ince the new Jaw was passed, physicians have approved 93.S pe.rce1.t of ap- No. 8 -Rona1d M. Crookshank (in· cmnbent), 151» N. Flower, Santa Ana. Although the fir'112 hours are the most criUcal for such mull babie.s, doctors laid they would not ·be considered out of danger until from five days to three weeks, depending on their size. If the babies all live lhey will be the second set ol surviving quintuplets in the United States: .-and the sixth set in the 'world. The American quint.a were born Sept. 14, 1963, to l\.1r. and Mrs. Andrew J. Fischer of Aberdeen, S.D. The four girls and one boy live in seclusion on their fcther'i ~acre farm wt.it <>! Aberdeen· and their mother does no allow them to make public appearances. saying she wants them to lead a "normal life .• ,- Pompldou'o opttd!, transl11ed Into English paragraph by paragraph, was in· terrupted eight times by applause - "Who cannot see the pre:carlous and - in the kmg nm -ateelle nature of Ute victories gallled?" · PompidoiU uked. "Who dots not understand thit there ii no UIUred future for llrad outollle 1 lutinR enlenle with lhe world whiCb sur- rounda II -entente which lmpllel.....,. ciaUon ol milJlary COllC(UOll IDC! tlie aolu- Uon of the Pale.stlnlan problem?" He added, referrln( to the four-power confer.nC. of 1he tlnlled Slalel, French, Brilbh and SOvtet 1ml>IP1don Ill the UDited..NaUoos:_ l' i \ plications for abortions. However. illegal abortions are believed to outnumber legal abortions. The new law is being tested in two cases. State Atty. Ben. 'Thomas Lynch said. Niguel Map OK'd Despite Furor Over Salt Creek Dizzy Dean Says He's lnno.cent In Gaming Case PHOENIX, Ariz. (AP) -Bueball Hall of F'ame pitcher Jerome "Dizzy'' De.an, his voice thick with emotion, today denied he had ever been involved with "a bigtime gamblinl syndicate." Dean made a brief statement and then, appearing on the verge of tear!!, left a jammed hotel room where he and hia Trad map bonds for the Laguna Niguel wife met the news media. Corporaticn won approval of Orange A federal grand jury In Detroit Tues· County supervisors Tuesday despite an day named the onetime SL Louis argument that flared briefly over lack of Cardinal pitcher as a coconspirator ()f 10 public access to Salt Creek Beach. men Indicted for nationwide gambling. Both the subdivisiona for which the He was not named u a defeodant..1 county board was asked to approve bonds • '.Dean 1 said his only iiivOlveineot .1n . to guarantee improvements are adjacent · ga!fl~tl ... waa "Vr'her! a.rrteDll aHtd me to the much-debated ,beach between. to make wagers for, him 1and .l ·did. I Three Arch Bay in South Laguna . and lbou.gh\ .there was DO·scnn' it. I .,as DanSu8.!rv01~;r David L. Baker protested fiti!r'1old•it was u.e· ttdnf to· do r -and I ~. l never :red oRe dime : that the Laguna Nlguel:CorporaUon wu "":' ntlt U\e penny." . offering no porvi&lon for public acoeA ~· "J've betn ·&CCUSfd of a lot.of .tbi11J1, . lh• beach. . -1_. ~!ling 11hlelts lo get lnf..,.,_ljon. for · Cou nly C.ounsel Adnan Kuyper ru eu bookmakers ateering 1"111Qli . fo that the board had no ~l~e.imaUve but ~ . boOtmlkers'. •. you namt it ahd J\e'ibeen approve lhfl bonds and improvemenla IS accu!Jl!Q of it,'' he uid. I , , they had approved · the tract· maps alst ,yThere is not a bit or truth to it July. . 1~ue~en. J repeat, it isn't truL· • • Supervisor Robert W. ,Batµn want.ed:._to :r>eap appeared relaied at'flrit. wherrht refuse the action and fet Laguna Niguel entered the room and greeted .eath i::o to court. He lo.st by a t '4? I vote. , newsmaft. -tie was accompanied 1 by his But Board Chal r:man ~ton E. ~11len of wife. and attorney Patrick Reaan, Laguna Beach pointed o,ut . Dla1 a ~--Widdta. Kan . · ' mittee of county department beads wa~ , Jut his 'VQ6ce broU when ht told of working wllh Laguna Nlgllef 'tt~.~Uveo . -nicehlna 1 JetW from 1 boJ .-, 1owlrd lh• provision of• pllblic: -to . Jatber 11'4 M lilm ploy. lbe ·beach. · ' .. , '.,, , · "Dlyjd, t _ • ._..,to ""''l ·bav•'I "We have every r~~son ~ 'iM!uevt Cbele. dOne tome foollah thlnp· m1 m,1 Jife,' bbl efforll will suoeeed. ADen llild. ..,., lhl"C •!'ft never doae 11 !><fom< II>' Th< Silt Creek Issue 1rooe mcn lhln 1 vo!vld In biaUm< gllllbllds," )lean 111d. year ago when It was pointed out tbllt the .uperVisOrs bad abandonod Siii Q<telt Road. stretch or roadway leading from Paclnc Coast Highway to a point near the: beach, to the developers. Laguna Niguel had previously said they wanted to keep the beach private for the ll0,000 people who will cventually__lnbabit lhe development. but reC!ntly they have weakened under pre"ure from reerea·, tion eroupa and the counly. Spacemen to Climh CAPE KENNEDY !UPI) -Apollo 11 astronaut Fred W. H1lae said .today he and James E. Lovell plan to erplore 1. hilly region of 1lle lllOOl1·in April, coli.ct valuable sub-surface 1an;pte1, an d r;;_lbly climb 1 mound J!O to 4-00 foel ' Thm of th! babies _haJj di!ficulty breathing immediately after birth, and were treated with heat ant oxygen. Doc- ton 1ald they suffered from hyallne membrane dJseue, the condition which took the lite of newborn Patrick Bouvier Kennedy, third child of the late Pre1ident John F. KeMedy in 1963. However, the condlUon has now been ct.rrected in the three quints, doctors said. I • ' The other surv iving quints, included ihe famous Dionne quintuplets, born in Callander. Ontario, May 28, 1934 -one' dieu in 1954; the DiligenU quints, born ln Buenos Aires, Argentina, July IS. 1943; the Prieto quints born Sept. 7, 1963, at Maracaibo, Venezuela, and the Mutangua quint.ll borp Nov, l~, 1964, In Mozambique. Latin School Closed BOGOTA, Colombia (UPI) -Th< government closed the National Univeni· ly today and sent army troops to occupy it.s campus In order to break a strike by the school'a 11,SOO students. The government ukl the university, the principal school of higher education In Colombia, will remain closed through the first semester cf this year. . LAST 17 DAYS FINAL REDUCTIONS ON REMAINING MERCHANDISE I "Such I result. ln a sltuatim • ...... feelings •re fanaUdam an · lncreuinC daUy, should, lo be qulcldy "''~ ift'O' ceed from United Nations acllon mid In particular from the ap:eement of' the four pennanent members of the lecurtty. Coonclt lo define and propo .. 1he -rot conditions for a settlement and to proride the guaNq)tees for it." • '; I I • • • • •• • l.) .. . U.S. Bombers Attack ln-vP-ding f~rces ' . VIENTIAlll'l (UPI) -· Nor1h Viet-...,.,. ir..... have captur<d lhe 1lr field at Muoos &o>1 ·ck1plte·1>eavy bolnbbll •~ ~ks . by U.S.' IJld Laotian warplanes. JiUUtary ...,... sold today. · '.l'he.lleld leD late Tueoday, a lew houn ' ' · , all« the Communllta had ca"'• ..... the . ..--(~ WAlt ..... _til!lt @!ff) r-- iobservers ol the Federal·~uruu-:" ..:' a":in:";."'~i:rP'i: cfacy wilt be relieved to note lb•t of J.,._ , IJ!lemal ·Revenue form 21131 h•* been dllconttnued .. The form WH · ' · ei!ttttid : "Wai-Certificate to ABM o t • s t lliect!\OclaJ.SecurttyCoverage·for ' cppone. fi S fil ena e tt.. t'/ Mlbisters, Certain Mem-~rs ol. Raliglous Qrders·and ChrU- tian Scitnee. PractiOners.0 A 1neW fclrm. }loweyerJ has been lntroduc-R Fig· ht o er Si'tes etl:Iti titlt is "Nolice ol Acqulsi· .. enew . . V tion of Stock Pursuant to Conver· sion of an OrlginaJ or New. .Japa- nese De)!! Obligation." . ' .• , WASHINGTON (UPI) Pr!olcknt Nboa'1 propoaal lo tblden llDd npand the Slle&1W'f IJll!balllstic mlHtle syllem laced renewod trooble in the Senate I<> day u opponenta -beian another major al1empl lo dilctrd the controvu~a! ABM. Southern Solons Pushing Nixon's NlJoa'• plan to add a third lite to the - syatem and •trencthen two otbm .•~ proved lisl yur·seemed certain al even- tual approval beclUIO the Hoole 11 ~ in r.vw of the ABM pn>CJ'am. But a complemenW'y propoal lo. be&ln )ll!lllm.lury -k at Ove addltlanal Salepant tdlel appeand lo be In bot water .. Some concreumen dole to .&be ~ doubt~~tee the ,!;;teau= them •. Safeguard opponents promised a major floor fight to cancel the entire syste m. This time they planned to concentrate on the ever-growing cOJts of the ABM - now officially estimated at $1% billion ·ror It wu tbe latat •tbeclc for a.,.i·i.oo foreu in th< North V)e-olJio.otd•• that be1an.Jl'eb. 11, caplured the Plila,ol Jan air fltld Saturda,.IJld -hu mov· ec1 farther ....i toww lbt royal eajil&1 at i.u.,.. Prabeng. · Yoedlq !be o!!tnalve ii wbal iellilal m1lHitry -In Salpa "*" oa,Dad .. .. tremendoul" flow of lllpPliet ia&O L80I from Norllr Vlelntm. U .8. Bii bcinlltta are attacldnl the COl1YOyl ...,.iantly. . From. M ...... SUoi, •here the pern- ment had kopl -ol lta...,, warplane•, the Communist driye wu expected lo push -ard. alone H1Ch1'ay 7 lo lta junctloo _)lllhw., 11. . • Collini Of lhla jiinctlon would Cltt traf· fic .betiteen VlebUane., 100 m1Jes aoulh, llDd i:.u..,. Pr~, eo.m11es -11. Nm111 VlebwjleH troopo. eaptur<d this junc\IOn ·lul aummer but a '"!P"IB< iovenuneat c:outeroffeDllive drove them complatel¥ frillll the .Plato al Jon I• the lint Uine In llvt ,...... .. ' '111e U.S. bmll...,;.t In 1-tiecame men more ~ T\llliday when Amerlcao Em~ authorltlea fA!l!lr.ltito temponiy cuatod1 tlfte.aewoplfll·.fl71ng lo reach a oecnt U.S.·Lfollio )llM al IAq'l'lane. . Loq Tbne bu been olllimlll afnce It became the forward headquarters for the so-called "clandestine army" of Gen. Vana: Pao, a Meo Hill trtbetman,tup- ported, accord.in( to Informed aources , by the U.S. Central Jnte1U1ence Agency. Vote Measure a full l!·dte system. F d al Jud ''What we are wilntsalng, If said· Sen. e er ge \YASHINGTON. (AP) -Key,S.Utl!em , Philip '>,. Hart .(0.Mlch.). "Is a ciuslc , • J • ~ . . John Ke1u1tdt1 Jr., with ri&ttr Coro- Jine (right) wen t 1kUng durina a vb· it to Mont Trtmblont, Quebec. Their mothtr, Jocquelint Ono.sril, had plon- 1ied to meet them t71t. the ,10~1 b u t changed her mind. The children art staving · wtth a .secretaru 01-· their mother. ·I' ' • genatora appear maneu.-ertnr-to-ttt t'he exampl.e ot the momentum buUt into a • • • £.____ ~ ""' •• :--• ~ administration's nati9_n~ide .. vo~ rlg~ts _ weaP!Ofll ay•tem,· • momenwm which Tel'ls Georgw biU-~fote-the S6nate.rather than• pro-:!!~aside all-loeic and-rncwes.toward --_ _ _ , _ pooed"ext<nllm al a 1111$ act aimed solely higher and 1tlgher expendltum." at the South. Hart and S.n. Mark 0. Hatlield (R· Q S ho ls • This .strategy began emerging as the· Ch.), said they could not aee how a few pen C . 0 Senate Judiciary subcommittee on con-million dollan extra for scboola and 1Utullonal rights continued bearlnp to-hoapltala wotild be lnflaUonary-;-while a day on voting rights tn the face of a fast· multlbilllon dollar weapon 11 not. approaching: March l deadline. for aclion. Delense Sercetary Melvll} R. Laird. Southern senators strongly opJ>OSe ex· however, testified Tuesday the ABM t~nsion of tbe t!l§S VoUqg Rightl Act and would coat the taxpayera only •too pr#er the administration meuure if million in the U montM beginnin& July l. Coiignsi Is going lo pass any ieglslatlon Although he· asked 0ongttM to ap. at all in the field. propri&te $1.S . billion for the 1y1tem, he said the bulk of that could not be spent Last J>eeember. af~r , th~ House for another year. The ~ason Is that .adapted the: administration ' bill ._.by 8 Congress was 10 ]ate In 1pproving the five.vote margin, ~. ~nate 1ea.i--the flrat two aites last year work bu barely legislation to Its Judiciary Cornn\lltee ·begun and hardly any of the ln!Ual ap- wlth .lostructiMa llult II report bock b,1 ·• ~tlon lw been openl Marcb l. Bul meantimt, the cosll al the ,Yltem By Uaffed Praa ...,_.lleoal Federal District Judge W. A. Bootle ordered a Gtorgi~ &cbOoJ district to rf:<. open todl.y in defiance of a new state law J><Ohlbltlng deaearqaUon tJl'Ol'lml booed on racial balance. Georgia Gov. Lester Maddox had said any school board violaUng the new stat- ute would become "lawbreakers," but he indicated lale Tuesday night he planned no immediate acUon In the case. Schools in Houston County, Ga., had been closed for a week to implement a Coa1mlu.. members rupporting pleas h1VO continued lo rwell -by-IU billion · fe<fer•l lnlelraUon plan ·~a111n1 for th• tranlfer of 3,500 otudenia llDd llO t<acher1 - to 4chieve a raclaJ balance. Aft.tr ·Maddox· When bus~ ~an iropplllg of-<ivll rtlhtl ·1eac1ers for a meaaurirll-ac:<OrdJng lo PentqOn filuru. '!'he. full oft •lgnificanUy in the d!nin& bam· tendl!IJ'tho 1• '""'!ti'. flJO yan.hoP,6f IJ4lta system Jut yeu. wu Ulfniated 1o at the University ol ·I!l~rlb Cl10-1o 1ub1Utute 11 for 1he H-puoed ad' COii Only IU billion -but that fllun!, It Jina, Joe !a9lu, chancellor · 1 o r _ miniattaUon· bill. _ . _ wu lat.er dlsoovt~, did not ¥ud_e ~-the new Georgia desegregaUon business and finance di4 some stu--1 .But~Stn:.Sain.. &\Ervin Jr., (0-N.C.), related exptnats such u the teattni «il fi. act M~ay, the Houston acbool board dying. He said lbe 6barp drop' In ~ chairman of th< comUtutlonal ~,..,)>. nuclear war beads for tbe ABM. . annooncoct , IC!lools would-be cl6'ed In- consumption-ol cafeteria fare b committee, uld Ihm will ~ ao ~ for d'finlte!y. probably due 1o ·a· recent decbion commltlee actloa belore the deadllni·. lloolle,. without referring lo tbe new allowing donrlitory · atudents to He ·said this ioould mak• th< ad-Court Supports •late mtui., ordered ~•ton·claue~ r.- f · · •lb · · ·~atlon bill tbe pending business In opened today. Maddox. in Wdbington for keep re nger!itor• m . e1r rooms. mJDl,.. · the N.aUonal Governors' Conftttnce; said e the Senate. V D Bootle's order JUrPrlsed him. And he ac· oting ecision cuied tbe, federal jU<fg• of "taking ii on himseU to declare the Georgia law un- constltuUooal." Commtnting of diuent at homt, Gen. WiWam C. Wtst. moreland said recentlt1. "Dt· mocracy a we know -it tr held in contempt b11 sO?M Arnt'ricanr who have· replaced pictufe1 of 1VtUhingt.on, Jefferson and Lin· coln with P.ictures of Che, Mao and Lenin. ' . • Jn his 'message before . !be · AFL- CIO Executive Council, President Nixon spoke of inflation. He said "It is as inunoral to..stop a man '=J.etUng a job for which be is q · ed as it is to allow a· worker to be robbed ol. bb money by in· flation." • Gov. Stan Hath-.,Y of Wyom· ing has announced !bat he wW r;;eek a second term of office. Ap- parently, be b undaunted by the fact that no Wyoming governor has won rHltction in_ 25 y·ears. School Funding Bill Approved WASHINGTON (AP) -lllJ10flna ad· minillratlon wamingS of another veto, a Senate subcommittee hu approved without change the t19.4 ·billion education and health bill Passed last week by the House. The measure. carrying many of the same provlsloM to which J'.>resldent Nixon objetced earlier, wu sent !J'uielday by the group to the 1pproprtaUon1 committee, which is expected to act on it today. 'Jbe subcommittee chalnnan, Sen. War- ren G. 1t1agnuson, {0.Wuh.), aald hls panel disliked the lcka. propooed by the adminlstraUoa, of giving Nbon authority to withhold :ipending of aome of the school aid funds. HOUJWttached riders designed to slow down d~gregations efforts of the Department of Health, Education and Welfare "'ere not touched so that ~ full committee might act on them, Magnuson said. · ·WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Supreme Court made clear today that its "one man one vote" doctrine applies to every government unit of any size wh1ch elect.. otnclals by popular ballot to Perfonn g~vemmenl functions. The 5-3 ruling came on an appeal from a group of Kansas City, Mo., mldenb who Invoked the principle in connection wtht a junior college dl.a:triet election of trustees. The JusUce Department. which came into the case on behllf of the Kansas cl· - tiaru, told ~ court thal about 30 stat.es provide for community college or junior college diltrtct electkln1. The majority. in an opinion by Justict: Hugo L. Black, noted that the court bas consistently held In a long series of cues that the sta~ must insure, ao far u praeUcable, that each person's vote counts as much as any other person's. 'lbb wtnclple lw be<n applied In con· gress(onat elections, state legislative eiecttoiis .. d local eleclions. MaddoX said, however. he ia undecided aboUt his nert move and hasn't "thou.ght much about" any acUve involvement in the Houston case. Bootle, In another middll' Georgia d~ segregation _cue, onlered white parents in BJbb (Macon) County not to interfere with the operation of Integrated classes under pena:lty of· Sl,000 fine or a year In prison. Macon Mayor Ronnle Thompeon had been among the parenli .refualnt to transfer their" children to . other echools, but he said 'fuffday, "I have no choice but to ablde by.~ court qrder.'1 Israel Jet Sale Reported Near WASHINGTON !UPI) -Rep. Roman C. Pudnskl -Cf>.TII.), predicted today that France would IOOn shlp SO fighter planes to 1Srael and that Pre""dent Nixon also l\'ould agree to sell another 25 to the Israelis. _ Mild ·Spell Comes to -an End Puclnskl aa.1a be had teamed this from "authoritlUvt 10Urces~• which be refllstd to Identify. HoWever, the White House said that the President bu not·Jtl mtde a decision on eellinrinore U.S. J!ts to Jarael. This w11 in respome ·to .a televilloa. . report (CBS) that the lldinintltnllon Would IADOllDCe Mius of Arctic Air Movei' ·over Midwest States • """' ..... ll'rlclf,. . " " .JI .. " 0 .ll the l;81t In a few -~-: · ~ L \l,IT ......... FRIENDLY DINNER FOR NIXON$, POMPIDOUS PrHldant ~· Into ~Hhlon Titlk; LikH Ciaudt'a Split Frie•dship~ Style N'ixons, Pompidous Get Together. WASHINGTON (AP ) -Exchanges of expresslom of. friendship and talk about fashions were a highlight of the White House state dinner President and Mr•. Nixon gave Tuesday night for visiting French President Georges Pompklou and his tall, bloode style-c<>1Uelous wife. In champagne toasts Nixon declared that France. which came to the aid of America-200 -}ttal'I ago, '"will always be . our friend ." · He said_ the United Stat.ea is ptolld and thankful "that we shall be working with our oldest friend and ally0 in building a· new W"Orld where everyone will have the opportunity to Jive In independence and treedom·t.hat we have had." Pompldou responded, speaking in French, with a deelaraUon that "the United Slates and. France cannot live In- separation or isoli.tlon from each othu." He said they had deep and convnon In· terest.s and "we must live to work together and must not have ever any OJr position." The 110 guests at the white-tie dinner Included diplomats of the United States and France, senators, top businessmen, newspaper u ecutives and President·Nia:- on's daughter, Tricia, 24, making her first pubUc appearance since a five-week illness with the measles and fly. 'Ibe alter-dinner conversa.!_i9n UV'Ded to fashion under the inspiration of France's first lady, Claude Pompidou, who turned out in four creato11s by. top Paris desiinen in apqearanct1 on her ftm day in Washington. . Mrs. Pompidou · introduced Ute; long h<mllnes -from just below the knee, the Jonguette look, to the maxi coat. . Even President Nixon got into the fashion di scussion: "I like color and high style," he com- mented. Asked If he liked the new Jong klok , the American Presldent said, "Yea." And, Nixon added , "I like the split," referring to a split in the front of Mr11. Pompidoo11 evenJng gown, dealgned by PierTe Cardin. Israel,, Egypt Send Jets Across Suez in Attacks B)' United Pren lllltnlalloul Air ·acUon flared up along the SIHZ Canal today and both JSraell and Egyp- tian warplanes struck targets along the banks. . An Israell spokesman said Etypti~n planes Jtruck tv.'o Israeli poslUons in the northern sector of the canal around 4 p.m. and that "there ware no cuualtles · Guerrillas Get A1·ah Pressure llElRUT. Lebaoon (AP) -Arab governments. alarmed at the In- ternational uproar over the suspected sabotage of a Swiss airliner, were reported today putting pressure on Palallline guerrillas to confine operations to Israel. Pale.stine sources said the pressure on the guerril.Ias was being applied through Al Falah -the biggest and most In· fluentlal group -which bas always op- posed operations outside Israel's horde.rs. At Fatah in recent days appears to have achieved an ascendancy over smaller iroups In the new "unified cmn- mand"· of JO guerrllli oi-ganlzatlons established in Jordan. Palestinian sources said several Arab governments, who support guerrilla ac· tivity against Israel with arms and mbney, were opposed to attacks on civlllan airliners. The, sources o ld these governments wl!re ~ng Al Fatah ln its attempts to .ptraaade, the smaller organlzaUons to atop their' at.taicks on d!f11an planes. among Israell force:a.1• Israeli jets swept across the canal two hours earlier and hit Egyptian military installations In Ute central sector for 75 minutes. The raid followed fierce artillery and mortar duels Tuesday which killed an Israeli arm officer and wounded three other Israelis. In other Mideast actions: -Baghdad radio aald Iraq hall refused .it request from U.N. secretary General Th.ant...lo withdraw its troops from. \he eastern front IR south Jordan and sald _!he UnJled NaUom should demand 11atn that Israel withdraw from oceupieCi Arab lands. Iraq ls rep:>rted to have 12,000 troops In Jordan, most of ~ artUlerymen. -An Egtptlan government spokesman In Cairo said today Eiy-pt does not intend to lake actJon against American oil .com~ panies operating there even if the United States continues its pr<>-lsraeli palid ts. The spokesman, Dr. Esmat Ahl;Sel Meguld, said "this is purely commerclal busioesa.11 Chicago 7 Bail Backed CHICAGO (UPI ) -Congresamen, lawyers, law professors and th e American Civil Liberties Union are urg· ing ball for the "Chicago Seven" and their lawyers during appeal of thei11 con- tempt and riot convictions. William Kunst.ler, chief defenae ala torney for the seven. announced Tuesday that seven Democratic congerssmer. ar~ circulaUn1 petitions in the House 1'hicb say k ts "oppressive and inequitable" for the de!endanta to remain in jail durina their appeal . THE N-E-W LQQK at Your Service for a .. ,,, n ,.,· " " ~ "' ,. " ... ~ WE'RE HAVING A DISPLAY WIG NEW YOU! IN LESS THAN 30 MINUTESI 4 I -- ,... ti ... ,., Sl "" .tl .. " ... , ... " n. ·" a tr ·• SI 41 1.0 " .. .... n " .t .. .. .. .. " . .. .. n " : ~ 1.u q " .. p " " .., ,, l t h .. " ,. " .. ., . CLEARANCE! SAVE 20%to 50%1 fri"'" ht114'MM. tM Mtchltt .. "'"• w;,. th.t • wtH r•ttil et •• "'"'" •• $JJ0.ool s-,..... .. $1f.tl. .,.... ,,.... ..., 1111. fht1t t it 4ititf'y 'Witt frol'l'I •~t 1howct1•t en.4 thel .. ct -111 t wldo 11IMfl•11 t• 1vit yevf l.vdtttl -1 O Hair and Wig Stylists To s.,... You Pr<>mptly- Mellie's MIRACLE WIGS! , , , for "l1t1ttM htiulo" con .. 11tle11ce - 1001. 1Ct11•k•I ... flMt w 1, I Y•tf .... With '11 Wttr, 1t,ft Yt"'rttlf "' tfl'Y ff• • •••10111. P'11h ,..,,Y 11t1tly f,, tt ... ,1 +.ol 17'6 22"' .... , ... , •••. 2f.tl Melo4i•, C .. tlt t 114 lerll, •~t '''''' 1lyli1h, •r• •"•llell lt fer "i111te11! 1tyli11t ef yevr tynlhtllc 'Wlt l " ,. ... .. . "" i i .... ...... ' -'~ .. .. .. " ll ll 250 E. 17th St. -Costa Mesa -548°34'1 6 ~-~ _''"""""""""" .... -.·.-... ·.-... -............ o •• 1.1y.·.11.1 .s.~.o.-.... rh.·.r~ ... ' ... ".1·.·.1;.1 .• •.~.o ........................... ~~...1 1 I I I 1/ I t I , I 1 I \ I, I I· lj' I Jj,mERTY, Mo. (UPO - ~ . lltllo &liters kidnaped t-'tbelr BuUer. Ala.1.bome Jftft found aare In a car park~ td outside a residence In this Kanau City suburb 'early to- day. . Tina Caln, 3, and Tilfany c.m,11, appeared ".,ell carecf.. for .JM happy,'' an officer &aid. The driver bf the car, John CJiorij!s Messk:k, 21, Tucsoo, ArlL,· was arn.sted ~ide the house. He had left a .357 ::,m revolver 1.. a • 3 I . piltol and a .22 caliber rille )11 hi> car wilh the childien when he· weot inside. He ~ no resistance,, ~·~ wae on, tot a ·sec- ond ·man ldentJliod as·Donald Bradfer,f Lee Jones, 23, . of Jacksboro, Tei., the FBI said. ·' Abortion Ban, Repeal HONOLULU (AP) -The Hawaii legislature has passed a bill virtually eliminating , curbs on abortion. The bill in effect repeals a tOl·year~ld present law which ·pennits abortion only to save -the life of the motbet. F-inal legislative action came with a 15-9 vote in the st.ate senate Tuesday. The new measure would permit abortion by licensed physicians In I i c e n s e~ d hospitals if the woman has been a Hawaii resident for at least 90 days and the retus is not "viable." Legislative I a w ye r s in· terpret "viable" to mean fetuses far enough developed to live outside the womb and say it would cover pregnancies up to four or five months. Medically uni le ensed persons perfonning abortions would be subject to a mu· imum penalty ol a Sl,000 fine or five-year prisOn term: Gov. John A. Bl.ires, ~. Roman Catholic who personally opposes abortion, said earlier he would not veto an abortion reform 11931urt but would. lei. it beciiiO 'law without hU signature. Robert Pearson, a Maui lsland contractor who Jed the anti-repeal. forces said be would take the new law to the U.S. Supreme Court i ( oecossary. Man Jailed ' In Beating ' Death of Tot ASHLAND, Pa. (UPI) - State police said today they have arrested on charges of murder a man they said beat his girl friend's young son to death 8nd hid thti body four months ago in an abandoned coal mine. Russell Snyder, 28, o f Ashland was arrested late Tuesday night while he hid in a closet of his home. Police said the body of Ronald ~fcCorkle, 2, of Phoenixville had been recovered a short time earlier from the mine of ?.feniam Mountain, two miles west of here. The child's mother, Mrs. Gloria McCork\e, 20, who moved here reeenUy from Phoenixville following a divorce. was held as a material witness. Slate Police Detective George Durilla said Mrs. McCorkel and her.fathe~ Fred Wallace o f Phoenixville, reported the death to Phoenix· ville p-otlce SUnday.-They told the pQlict the child was beaten to death tn October in Ashland. Durilla said. State police and inspectors from the ,State Department of Mines and Minerals lnd'u,,tries led a search of abandoned strip mines west of here Mon- day and Tuesday. They found the body wrap. ped in 1 blanket aM a sleeper bag. Govern.ors l\leet WASIUNGTON CAP) -The Natienal Governon· Co~ ference am\l!I winter mfftlng tpened today With educaUon, cirlme, the environment and federal-state relationships the key Issues of dl!ICUssion. Forty-five of the S4 state 1nd terrflorM&I governors are on hand for the thret day meetll'if lrhlc:h begjns with a series oC closed committee ....ions. • deJlyering . hia prepared text canin, for an "ope:n window" policy In. for.Ian affoln. '1Tbe conviction ol the Cl)icl&o Seven ·la hllhJy ci- t t op.ab I e C\)nS&jtuUonally," Humphrey sak:I. "It violates •very itaildard ol JustJce. It i&· - my opio&oo lh.t \h(s·convlcUon will ultimately be Uken on to appeals to' higher courll and overturned.'' "I can't conUnue th.le: way,'' he told ~ audience., "I would aal\ you all to (0 i>ome at thi• polnt, I'm leaving." Alps Avalaneh-e Threat ) Said Worst 'in 30 Years GEN EV A. (UPI) -.Swiss · authorities warned today that/ the danger of avalanches lrw the Alps w.u greater than at. any time ovtr"' the past 30 years. A genei-al avalanche alann went out through the Swisa, Auslriiln, Italian and Frend> alps._ Two avalanches Tuesday at Recldngtn, Swlb.erland, '3.nd Lanslevillard, France, killed at least 21 persons and left 19 mlssir11. Four persons wtre rescued alive today 24 hours after the Lanslevillard av• lanche llruck. An avalancbe today in the W<dtlfldq, ftbr•urJ 25, 1970 .TN ~ INK ,4. • We've never announced. carat this time betore. But .tlaen noboclY's ever anliouncecla car like this befolre. •4erllu&iW If it were just·an·onfinary-sportster, we mi~ht have introduced.it.at.the.ordi- nary time.. . J3ut we didn't. • • ·.A:nd;as,you rcanrsee,;timefwas<ron'<>ur side. BecausetweJdidn't•botherJwithythe simulated air scooPs. Or any; otlier; put- ons that might put you off. Instead,we .took the time•to•build·a whole new car, from the ground u_p : In four distinctive versions:·Standard,, Rally Sport, Super Sport and Z28. · We started with a sleek new shape and a low road-hugging stance. So it hovers a few short inches from the pavement. Right down there with Corvette. To that we added more hood. A faster fastback. More window. area.:And ,wider doors for easier entry. On RS models, there's"even'l'a'resHient bumper that surrounds the 'grill~To protect.against.nicks.and knocks. ' ·-·-- .. Compare the·new·eamaro·w1t!i any competitive car in its field. If you can find one. Ttlioutn liuC:lcMSo Nouta• lbudcs. ' Most. sJ}Ortsters :giv~·you two'buckets · in front: And a sofa in _back.\We'.ve done them two better. -The IY.ick seat-'sofa is out::In'are'two rear bucket-styled cushions. Up front the buckets are deeply~con­ toured to put you firmly in place.~ And keep ·you there. Even in tight turns. · The instrument panel is just as functional. It's flat black and ·wraps around. With enough dials and in- strumentation to make you : think you're piloting a 747. Only with this. oneJyou:don't need a flight crew._ The spectzl h1ndlllc is built r1gllt In. Camaro always had a tough reputa- tion when it came to taldn_g on tight turns. Now we made it tougher. • !:.. ... ~ ·i·. . With a fbrward-inountecfsteer::. ing linkage and an improved front and rear suspension that give the new:Camaro' a leech-like grip o'n the road. It's something other cars:will _ha'1.e:a. tougil time coming to grips with. What motivates all this? Six _power plapts up to the 350-'hp Turbo-Jet 396 . you_can~order .• And.four transmissions. · Pick the combination that 'best · suits your driving. · -- Then go pick on an open road. $Qll"r11 Id -bnf7M,1'1u .... .,..., .. ~~ It's only natural . With all that go, you want an equal amount of sto!l_. You've got it. Front disc brakes are standard. For less heat buildup. And more · re.sistance to fade. New Camaro. The Super H~eri, ~ Other cars always feared 1t mig~ come to this. And they were right. Only their timing was wron_g. _· . · Putting you: first, keeps us· fuse.. -a:llmr . ·s.&A&,....a.9i111111,-..~ • . . • i L ! ( l l .ti 1 • "' '" ,, ,. • •• . ::i ·11 .. • ill .. ~q ~· :._ ..... • • DAILY PILOT EQITOBJAL PAGE A Financing Success • Pity the city selling bonds th••• day1, particularly lf tber.11 a 6 percent legal limit on the interest rate. lt leav11 some agencies with a proaram approved. by th• vottra but no way of gettin& money with wblch lo carry It out. Th• City of HunUnaton Beach laced this situation when It got ready to market $6 million worth Of bonds for its parks program. The....upenditllre...had been rtven the go-ahead by r .. ldents last year but it appeart<fthat rising bond prices migbl bave overtaken the 6· percent restriction. So there was no lack of anxiety over whether Hunt· ln&lon Beach would be able to find il blzy'er. To its cred· f~ ~d credit rating, the cily succeeded, with a margin to spare. Bank of America a1reed to purchase the, entire package of bonds at an intere1l rate of ~.94 l>erc;ont. Ji'urthennore, Bank of Anlerica was not the orilY insli· tuUon to upran confidence In ttte city's f)nancl~ ·fu· tqre. Five qther banks made combined bids for the bondJ, and though their rate was higher than .Bank·of Americ1'1, Jt 'averaged under the 6 percent limit. With market condilfon• as ttiey are, the bond place- ment wu gulte a trib,ute lo the city's adminlstratfve staff, the City Council and community as a whole - and to some show of spirit on tlio part of the banks as well. City Administrator Doyle Miller aave the credit !<I the council in citing the bonds as proof th1t it was "a COUllCil that W•• goinf, somewhere and a community that w11 going with it. ' But the city leaders knew well that the sale also was an endorsement of the staff'~ fisc:a1 management and did not hesitate to return Mil· ler's compliment. Manson's ls Not a Hippie Band f Although l riwpber no hippies among my relatives, frlends, or evtn I C· qu1intances, I find it deplorable th1t the band cl vagabond& cblraed wtl!i IN kill· ing of the Sharen Tate mtnl:Je will 10 down in the record& 11 1 "hippie" IJ'C'IP· trom what I can aathq, Manton •nd his weird crew of. cu.Ju.ta ruanble hip- pies Ol'lly in the w1y that 1t1ti.matter resembles matter -u 1 1)eJ'fecl mlrfor.. Image. And 1his is what confu&es people. for we tend '° iud&e ~y • auperficW 1ppearanci,_and not by 11.Jbstanet. - ' MANSON'S LJ'MLE !>and -• long hair. druocd """"'"""Uooally, and livid tn an isolated commuflt -and these few !'iurlace charact.eri1Uc& are enough to brand them, ln the public eye. as "hip- pies." Nal.h.ing could bt further from the truth, or more of a libel on tht hippies. Whatevtr their faults or exceSRs. true hippits are not hurtful people. They try to live by love, not hate. and tSChew violence as the most important element in their cretd. True, thtre .are many thousands of synthetic hippies running around, who do not practice these virtues, bu.l lhert is just as much hypocrisy and deception arnori& mtmbers or the "stral&ht" socitty. MANSON'S GROUP SHms liO have been precisely 1 diabollc inve~ion of the hippie ideal. U reports are accurate, they liYed oo hate and ~. tr*! to pro- mote racial strife, and engq:ed tn dark practices that ICIReiY fall on this aide of ahter lunacy. Dear Gloomy Gus: If tiiore and rnort mtn, women and children In Huntin(lon Beacb and FOW1taln Valley keep goll'\& in for motorized cy<:lint. we'll aoon have* to double declt our slretla and highways for eYery- one 's greater safely. Give l he motorcycles the upper deck. -S.S. T. They l<!opled Ill< ll!Jl!>ie llfHlyle .. 1n e!fectlve "cover" fer their MfariOus ac-- llv1Ues, )Ult u vlllallis lftd swlodlm In &he 5tralght world adopt the cover of mpectab!Uly a!'f convenUOllllHY.}lll IO the frightened and out·rapd ordinary citizen, -the Manson cue only goe1 to show what the ''hippies" are realty capable of. UrE IN AMEJUCA ia tcu&h enou(h for these aoeial drop-oota withOut adding the oous ol ritual mwrder a n d psychopathic JadiJm. They are already unwelcome in mo.st ~nities. beaten up by hoodlull\3 (who commit far more depredaUons than the hippie& do), pt1shed around by cops, and easy prey for bigot!, blackrnallers, and punitiYe prigs. I hippen to think Ulat the hippie life- style it seU-def11Ung, unleas it Is in· wardly llluminated by 1 high religious sense (as Jt Is in too few cases); but they have a rlsht to live as they wtsb and to look N they wlsh, so )orig as they harm nobody but thtmselvtt. And, so far. the scorebol.rd shows, they have I.he lowest criminal record for violence of any ldenUfiable group of dlS&ldents in the country. Bus School to the Kids A century after the Civil W1r, tht North and South ire at IOllJ last rewilltd. A majority In both section& la Yoclferoull· ly againi;t buAin1 pupils to intecrated &Choo ls. Unfortunately, the courts are for it. The resultlnt crisis once a1aln thrt1ttns to •plit our nation asunder -wlth the an- ti.busing facllon a e c e d I n g from the AmerJcap judlci•l 1yl\em. Into the breach. as good fortune would have it., haa.lupt the ftOttd MC\olOlitl, R. Owen 9aaUan. --.•""'Mr:-Basti&n-&0 accurately points out, hardly anyone is against inlegratio.n -at least publicly. \Vhal everyone 1& publicly and piously against is the CO"· cepL af busing the poor little children all the way across town to 50me dlltant ochoo!. The ans"·er lo the ,;chool busin,: crl1is. thin. ts school busing. Or. as Mr. 81stian pul.s it' urnstead of busing I.Re kids to the tchool. we simply bu.I the scbaol to the tkl1.·· MR. 8ASTIAN'S ingenious aolution tn· vWool a ofte..room 6Choolhou5e on tfte btCk a( a natbed truck. The design alone ha1 immtnse appeal to aD C01WrvatJve1, who believe thlt lhe or»-n>om llChoolhou.se. suJtJbly eulpped wttft McOufCey'1 Rtaders, was the hl1h w•ter mark 1n Amtr1c10 education. Thi aavtn&s would be tremendous. Wh!n Y"" OIOp IO think Iii•! lhcrt are •P-~ttly 1,000 umes as many children 1.1 IChooll. U'1 obviously far more Koai>MiCal lo bus Ill< aohool thin Uie --Bdl "' • 11. lhe buJed llChool would tdlle<1 lntqrlli<n. which evlf}'Ollt UYI tbeJ,re fDr, whUe m 1 I nta in Ing ~ school.I, wblch everyone I~ -~~ \ I Art Hoppe ~ \.., ·"' J ........ ~ .......... also favors. For the bused .chool would serve Hveral nel&hborhooda each day. IT hlJGHT START one morning In the ghetl.o, picking up black moppeb at their doors. then proceed gaily, echool bill <l@nliillklO 1 WASP ntl&hborhood for a load of matJ •whJte fry. TM nut day, it could reverae lb route. Th.ls woul~ atve black children a chance to see white enclave& without 11ttin1 bqat.ad •nd white chUdren a look at the ahettou without 1ettlni muued. Th.la is tq\ltl opportunity 11 Its finest. Evary family would Uve just 1crosa the. 1ld1walk from an Integrated achool. Cir poola would become a thine of the pa1L And lnatud of parenll h1vtnc IO t:uc1ie off 10 "hool lor PTA rrtffllng1, tlie acbool would com11 to them -Ill.us pro- vldlol tin!• for 1o...,. PTA meetlnp. lut •vttY pion 1111111 UUle dnwbl<lia. TIDI, OP COUllSE, Isn't lhe ooty oolu- Uon IO tht qilJI. The olher wu ldvl!ICtd at 1n anti·bualn1 rally ln Nnbville:, lawa. by lilt famed Joclctan. Dr. Ser1nion Scrimshaw. He nottd lhat tVt:r'J white '" the au· dlence w11 publicly dedicated to in· ~gratlon. neighborhood 1Ch6ol1 and prtventing bua-ing. He therefore 1u1- -ccsted t.hlt each of them movt Into a blacl< nel1hborhood -thtrtby achievJng all thrte goals In one ftll swoop. Dr. Scrimshaw WIS larred, fealhttfrd and bused IO Decalur, Gtorila, F.O.B .. coll~ Finance Director Frank Arguello provided tho key maneu.vtr in offerina: to transfer· the clt).''1 primary bank account, which contafns about $6 million, lo the low bidder, a move ih-t proved an tffective carrot. ' ' . When the'clty's parks p!'Ogram, with Its lakes, wild· lift and recreation areas, is Complete, and the time come1 •o look back. last week's band sale will be seen as an important stepping stone. Now The y ·Stand Alone Mayor Jack Green's decision to quit bis business association with planning commission chairman Roger Slates may have hurt a lew friendships but it was cer· talnly in the best interest of the city. The fact that Slates was Green's boss in private life wbiJe the siluatlon was reversed in public life posed some questions in the first place. Then, when Slates decided to enter the Huntington Beach City Council race, it made the questions too sharp. ' Two men, botlt in real estate and both on a City Coun~il (or trying to be) could hardly feel hurt ii th• public glanced aokance at them. Even though their action• were honest and totolly objective, the doubt would have been there. Gnen's severance of t.'telr association gives both men a chance to stand alone, as individuals seekitlg a pollllcal office free of Implied bonds. Mayor Green can be applauded for his action . It's d I ff I c u It for a man to give up his private life for a public one, but our system of government requires such sacrifice. H -St1prel*!-~eewt-Veteran . Due.-f.or .Deepei~ Troub.le Douglas' tittl-e Black Book a -Bomb WASHINGTON -A little blaok boot< which Is bound to get Justice William 0. Douglas in deeper trouble circulated In Congress in advance of lt.!1 February It publication dale. Random House is publishing this 97· page time bomb Wlder the title of ''Points of Rebfllion ". It is an astringently·word- ed tiradt against the A m ·e r I c a n "elltablishment." the Pentagon. the FBI and CIA, police. employers and educ1tors, and emcludes that "violence. may ht the only tfftetiYt reapoose" of oulragtd youth. "Georee 111 w1s the 1ymbol arainst whjch our founders made a revolution nOw considered bright and glorioul.'' Douglas wrote. George Ill had not CrQl&o fd ,the ..., to fasten a hn.ip ,,oke on ur. ~I'!: Ill and his dyna.9f.y had eitabllshed ind nurtured us and all that he did was by no means oppressive. But a vast restructuring of laws and in- stitution# was necess1ry if the people wert to bt eonttnt. That rewuet.uring wu not forthcomina: and there was revolution. l "WE MUST JIEALIZE that lod1y's estabtilhmtnt is lhe. new Gtorgt Ill. Wheth er it will continue to adhere to his tactics, we do not know. If it does, the redress, honored in tradition, i.!I also revohrtion. ·• Tttroughout his lnatise Juitice Doualas offers a justification for Yiolence. Ht: actnawledges violence bu no con- stitutional sanction but says injultices may pile eo hl&h~ th•t violence ia the only annrer~ _ l{! other passages lhe Supreme Court juatlce advises American protesters ti'» rl&k ' arrat bclwe the police have no rj~ .. kl ioltrltre with IN!r freedom . ~jJtas'-boolC ls a catalogue of the N6"' Left's complaints against the FBI and CIA -and the vast burtaucra- cy of ·the American system. He reveals some information which &0unds more like Geor&ttown dinner table talk than judicially established facl. Jn inveighing against the FBI and CIA, Douglas as- serts that "certain hottls in Washi114ton !'lave allolment.a of rooms that are wired for sound and even contain two-way mir· rora JO that tht occupa"ts can be taped "establishment" somethln1 dlffertnt Uaan or filmed.'' the established order under lal'? EVERY GOVERNl\lENT conference JUSTICE DOUGLAS concludes all by room ls aNumed to be bugged. he A.!lserts. and every embassy phone is an piously hoping that the revolution he Is open transmitter. Justice Dou1Jas does talking about will not be a repetition of not reveal the source of this astonishing 1776. The reYolulion that is comin&. he information, but it is recognizable as or· says, will arise from .. the search of youth daincd fact in the circles in which the Supreme Court justice moves. for "'ays and means of making the cor· poration state and of government that F'ew would be willing lo quarrel wi!h runs the machine-the servant of man." lbe right of a Supreme Court justice in Thus when Justice Douglas concludes his old age expressing his pet peeves his treatise he is not so high on the rlftf- about W1shinaton even if they do flt !he parts as in the middle passages when his conventional atereo:ype of what Spiro high dudgeon eggs on youth to violence. Agnew calls the "limousine liberals." If Then. ha\llng calmed down a bit, whet Douglas wis~. to ~:s:coria.te the Pen· bolllers him is w h e t he r tht t~gon, the . m11Jtary..indu1trial compl~x. ''establishment"-whatever that Ls-wlR F Bl . snooping, lhe Vletn~ )}"Jr, in* \be wise enough not to ust its "stocltpllt dwlrial ~I persoo~Jtty testa, and of anns" to suppress the disstntel'I, for the atnuent soc.1ety he is not without he thin ks that would brine on an awful company. ordeal. The problem ariaes on the jt11l1fication ol violence i nd revolution by an usociate justlce of the United St.ates Sll'Pfeme Court. not merely campus sit·ins or wre3tlin1 with the poli« in Grant Park in Chicago, but violence intended to overthrow the goverruntnt of the United Stales. Or, is that whet Jw1ice Douglas justifies? Is the •·rystem", the l\1lJCH OF WHAT Douglas haa Written is a summ1tlon of convenUonll libtrll poppycock. II reflects the youth cult men· tality '1'hich enlrances the 71-y1ar'4)Jd justice. This little black book may even· tually take its place with the little rtd book. "Thoughts of Chairman Mao'• In the sacred shrines of the young. .,... Moral Behavior Laws Have Failed Ta the Editor: When the movie "l Am Curious (Yellow)" is measured by the definition for pomo,-raphy in the dictionary there is no doubt th1t the movie Is pornographic. Nor is there MY doubt that a semlnude or nude enttrtaiMr is guilty of indecent eqmure and m61t likely lewd conduct. These kinds of human behavior have been around for a Vtf'Y Jona: lime and all prtvjoua measures th•t have been used to eliminate such beh•Yior baYe failed. l'OllNOGRAPHY, indecenl tipOSUte and ltwd conduct should be considered from a religious and a civil point or view. A relialous polltt ol view tboukt consider the rt11Uon between rnan and his god whtle IN <ivll polnl cl view -Id look into the relaUona · between men. Since there m many dillerenl rellfl""' groups and tach one mey have a different view t111 thia subject., nothing could be &•lntd by llytni IO ellbor1ta °" Uie rel!iiOuJ poirll ot view. OUll MODEllN '°'laly hll many ways cl dttarrnlnlnl OIJl<fiment.slly what cf. feet pomolJl'lphy, ln<leCont •ll'OSll" and lewd conduct has had on the abnormal 1t1U1l beMvlor of Its cltlztn1. The.n there ire those EurQPtan naUons that have stopped enforcing laws pert1lnlna to the moral bthavlor of Its cltliens. The sum tot.I of tMH IOW'ttl of lnformation has Indicated that •try lltUe chanie Jn the violent stx crlmta will resiilt If 1overn· mant slaps oul cl !tying IO enforce moral laws lllll should be left UJ> lo Ill< rtllalou• communll;'. 1N CONCLUSION, when 1 o c I 1 t y ·--·· GeG,.,e --.. Dw Geor10: Al an 1dvlco c:olumnlat. do you have much trouble with quest.tons yoo bmutly can't aniw•? TED Dear Ted : Not really. MmlUedly, f gel 1 IOI of qut1dons l honesUy c1n't answtr. Howeverr J an swer them 1nyw1y ••. ' ·Letter.s from readers are Wi!lcome. Normo.Uy writers should conve11 thetr messages tn 300 wqrd1 or Ins. ·The right to condenae: letttts to fit tpo:ce or eliminate ltbel is reserved. AU ltt· ter1 muit include signature and mail· ing addrtss. but 1111mt1 may b• with- held on reqtust if sufficient r1ason. Is o:pj')(lrent. Poetry will not b1 pub· Wh ed. tlber•lim its lawa on the moral bth1vior of it.s cJUz:ens, much unncceasa.ry friction will be eliminattd blttween the enforcers cl the moral lawa, police ind Its cltliens. llAllRY B. MclXlNALD, Jll- Lt.ten lo Students To the Editor : Your lukewarm editorial loday on "Campus Diirupltrs" left me fumlng at your ability to straddle the fence . You C®1d have interviewed various UCI •1ludent.s .and Lrled pre.1enting their opin· ions. F.ir~t, rny .huaband and I h~ve two sons in, collta;e, one a senior and the other a frt5hman , Stcocd, I lll'et that the UC! student~ who demo(lltrtted a1ainst the GE recruiters showed a lack of maturity ind respect for other's right. but I also feel that Chancellor Aldrich's deeis lon 10 have them appear befote a studenl court should meet with community and campus approval. DESPITE THE difficulti!!& a n J prtl!lures of his position, Ch•ncellor Sensibly Amend Welf 1;1re Rul es en:r., Tt111. Rtcord: "With each pusina day we becomt more arid more convinced the only way to £tl a large segment ol the Americ1n population to 10 to work la to dr15tlcally reduce tht povt.rty programs and doles that support them. There is no logical reason, we feel . why buslneas and industrial Urms and their employee• who work da.v by day for • livelihood shoukl have their e1minp taxed to the extent that tufUclent federal •nd stlte funds ire atallablt k> take care of tbt needs ol eeveral million Amwicans who do not -IO work. II ii our feel· tna thia tondltlon will c!Onttnue to exiat •nd to upand unlU IN federal and lllle pernmonll dralllcllty cul down bn lhelr dol<a ind frte food handoull ind lft'tllbly amend the ruln and r'-1411llons wll!<h qualliy hundred• cl thou11hd1 for lhe relief rolls, food handouts Ind unemployment compe·nuuon who dtl not deserve It." ~Turlock, Calli., Joar111l ; ''Wt hive l!Ol11ethlng IO be srateful for. The fedora! ,sovemmtnt hu. believe It or not, turned r'nwn 1 proposal to set up another 11gen· cy. It was suggested lhat • central ' Pr~ Conui)ents purch1sin1 •atncy for feder al-state-local a:ovarnmenb be set up under the 1968 lnterpvemmenlal Corpo ration Act. Op. pos\llon c&mt chieOy from business. warnlna: lha l many markets might be lost. And the U.S. Chamber of Commerce pointed out that such an aaeney could 'l"tltly reduce or eliminate the op- nortunlty for many smaJler bU&inestn to cornpet.t· .••. ii is cheering t.o learn t.ha~ •t leaat one attempt to swim aa'alna:t the current w.a 1uccusru1." CotiOftwood, ttllnn .. Cpm11t: ''There ls a s:reat furor about se1 education! Schools, churches, and mail order ad· \le.rtlslni are 111 at It. Films. books. ·littr1ture come to out des-almost daily -frnm thote. who purJ)Ort to be e1perta on Ulla subject which our aeneration mu't have dilcovertd. We are no\ aurt how the human race was propagated before we came along and dlsoovtrtd ser -it may forever remain a myate.ry." - Aldrich atttmpts to be fair and fir· sighted and de&erve1 commendaUon. My only criticism of him i• his rttkenct te mention the many tamest Ind sincere studen ts, who also hive a sod.al con- science. Today·s college freshman belha his studies equipped with m o r e Ul'l- derstanding than previous gt11er1Uona ol etonomic, political . s o c i a 1 and 1overnmental ideas and ideals. IN lllGH SCHOOL he diSCOYers causes and effl!cts at an adull level ind thus enters college with intellectual maturity. Often his emotional maturity is in· complete at this age, even if hll partnt.1 have lrled to in still qualities of honesty, responsibility. tolerance, respect for others' opinions, etc.. and It alway & amazes me to see how many youths de apply restraint and reason to tht e.mo- Uonal events around thm. I WONDER HOW many parents lhoW' their sons or daughters the respect they preach, by acUvely listening to their ideas and opinions and dlscusstne moral. polillcal and social issues with lhtm? It we are diliturbed about recent and varied sad eYents occurring at schools •nd col- leges. Jet's really listen lo our students and , hopefully , communicate! smRLEY ISERMAN -~W- Wednesday, February 25, 1970 Th• •diloMol popr o/ Ille Dof!y Pilot 1eeka to fnform cmd 1fim. ulate read1r1 bv J?"fltnlfnO thi.t ncw1paptr'1 opinioru and com- m11n&a.ry on topici of inttrt1C and significance, b~ propt:dfng a foru11i /or tht tzpt'fuion of ~ur rtader1' opinion1. and b~ pr11111nUn17 the diwr11 vlftOo Point.! of inform.ad ob1nwn attd. tpakttmm on topfc.t of th• day. Robert N. Weed, Publi1htr I ' ' I ' I II I· I I ' I I I 1: " I 'I • I ... I • Nuptial Plans Told At Champagne _Party A 'Jllne wedding ls being planned by . Ella Ro!amond · Booth and Karl W 1111 a m Ur land. News of the forthcoming event was announced by the brlde-to-be's parents, A i r Foree Col. (ret.) and 1'.1rs. Raymond W.W. Booth of Lido Isl,. during a champagne breakfast h1. the Woodside home of Mr. and Mrs. Floyd H. Emmans, grandparents or Miss Booth. "Wfdnndq, Fetii'uary 2S,l970 Mesons ' Marry St. Andrew'.s Presbyterian Church, Newport Beach wai the setting for the double ring ceremony linking C a r o I Anderton and David L . Larson. Parents of th& bridal couple are Mr. and Mrs. James W. Anderton and Mr. and Mrs. L. G. Larson, all of Costa Mesa. Serving h~r sister as matd of honor was Patricia Anderton, and bridesmaids were Kit Gustafson and Llsa Anlch, the bride's couSins and MRS. LARSON Barbara Jtrantz. The future bride Is a graduate of Fort Hunt High , School, Alexandria, Va. and ,,; altended t\11. Vernon Junior CoUege, Washing1on, 0 . C . where she was a I 9 6 6 debutante. Best man· was Lar:s J_. Says v~ Larson, the bridegroom•sii",",."0".,",.-...... ---llll brother. Guests-were ushered •01._1 ' Currently she is studying economics at UCLA where she is a member of Alpha Gamma Delta and president of ,\\1gel Flight. Her fiance, son of tltr. and tl-1rs. Karl 0. Urland of Palos Verdes, is a San Pedro High Sthool graduate and also at- tends UCLA. Ue is active in ROTC and served as . com- Cheese and Art ELLA BOOTH June Dete to thelr seats by John Taylor, Dave Johmon and Bob Chap- man. The newlyweds, who will reside in Costa 1'1esa, are graduates of Costa Mesa High Schools and attended Orange Coast College. · mander of tht, Arnold Air;===="=====;:;~ Society .. He plan~ to sludy law at the University of California, Berkeley next fall . The DAILY Pl~OT­ Th o One The! Cares • VIRGINIA'S SNIP 'N' STITCH SHOPPE 333_. Et 1f Coest Hwy. • Coron• del Mer Pho ne 673-8050 .fi/pyhous~ Patrons Fete Playwright's Aunt Mn. \Vend.en D. Van Atta (left), president-of··the cale Balance" is the current production of the play. Vintage Wine Event Come See Our Complete Sprie9 Collec.fioll Of F1 Jhio11 Febrits. SelKted For The Di•eriml~1tint Sewer'• Of Orengo Ceunty. Costa Mesa Playhouse Patrons Association and Hap house. Following the performance Frtday night. ,Graham welcome Mrs. Richard Kean of Laguna· patrons with their special guest celebrated at an Imported cheeses will ac- company a selection of vintage wines provided by Brookside W!nery in Dana Point for Laguna Beach Opera Le~e's seventh annual Grape Festival Wine-tasting event during the Wtnter FestJval. Beach, aunt of Edward Albee whose play, "A Deli-after-glow party in Costa Mesa Country Club. President's Niece . . ' . --. Will Marry 1n June --. ' The engagement nt Lawrene Nixon and Thomas Elmer Anfinson of Balboa lslahd has been announced by Mr. and Mrs. F. Donald Nixon of Newport Beach, parent.s of the bride-elect. . Miss Nixon, niece of Presi· dent and Mrs. Richard M. Nixon, is a graduate of Whit· tier College and presently is a teacher in the Placentia Unified School District. Her fiance, son of Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Anfinson of South Gate, is a graduate of the University of Southern California where he was af- filiated with Sigma P h i Epsilon fraternity. He is a certified public acrountant wil.b Pri<:e Waterhouse and Co. To avoid disappointment, prospective brides are reminded to have their wedding . stories with black and while ~lossy pbotG- graphs to the DAILY PILOT Women's De- partment one week before the wedding . Pictures received following the wedding will not be used. For engagement announcements .it is imp,erative that the story, also accompanied by a black and white glossy picture, be sub- mitted six weeks or more before the wedding date. If deadline-rs not met, only a story will be used. To help fill requirements on both wed· ding and engagement stories, forms are available in all of tbe DAILY PILOT offices. Further questions will be answered by \Vomen's Section staff. members at 642-4321 or 494-9466. Under chalnna,nship Ol Mrs. Jay 0. Pyle, wioe sampling 11'.)ll,be ~ged In HolelJ,agun• on Friday, F~. 27, £rom 7 lo 9 p.m~ at. a COst of-.$2.50 per person. Artists in attendan~ du ring the evening with a showing of their work will be Robert Armstrong, Robert Kun l z , Sally Christopher and Louise Cox. Hosts will be the Messrs. and Mmes. \Vllliam Wittman, \Vales Wallace, Edward Tamblyn, Matteo N a r d I n i , Thomas Armstrong, George Bryant, DeWayne Hurst , Robert Lawson, Col. and Mrs. William H. Bruggere, and-the The couple . will exchange their VOWS in St. Andrew's -------------------- Hospital Meet Fetes Old Board LAWRENE NIXON Betrothed Presbyterian Church n e x t June. Stretch and Sew Art League Presents Noted Watercolorist Technique Stitched Celebrating their second birthday will bt: the ffappy Homemakers when they meet at IO a.m. Friday, Feb. 27, in t h e Community Methodist Church, HunUngl.On Beach. Luncheon chairman for the meeling will be Mrs. Allen Marsh, and among those assisting will be the Mmes. Rudy SUggs, C l arence Stewmon, Curtis B u l t k e , Ronald Miller, Emil Slechla and Frank Rubolino. Board members of the Aux- iliary of South Coast Com- munity Hospital were honored by Mrs. Jack M. Lyons, presi- dent, at a luncheon following the regular board meeting. A special tribute was paid lo retiring gift shop chairman. Mrs. Ha::rry Sowden who has manged the shop in the hospital since It opened in 1959. Lloyd P. Harting, nationally known for bis historical Indian compositions, C a I i l or n i a missions and wintery farm .scenes, will demanslrate dur- ing the next meeting of the Huntington Beach Art League. Open to the public, the meeUng will take place at 7:30 p.m. Monday, March 2, in the recreation tenter. · A native of Minnesota, the watercolorist studied at the state university, the Mrn· neapolls School of Fine Arts, Marital Fight Can Be Right, Do you and your mate know how to fight constructively? U you don 't, constructive marital fighting wUI be in- cluded in a series of seminars ainducled by the Funlly Seritce Alloclation ol Orange Co6nty. 1G...,p dllcualons of marital -wtll begin on 'l)undi.Y, March 5, at 7:111 p.m. In the Tmtin of!Jco. SMOKE CHOKE ( I CROAK ! .-or .... QUIT, and : UYE · LIVE · LIVE -., . la6t how. FREE eont\llt.i·. t\QA on<! .c1e1an.. S"""""'!l ... .......... 1 Anfl.S-1 .. C"'""I; '. cl!t for .Appointment '42-410 ., 67J..5127 "GIJlrinl@d to help you qutt wltftln 10 days! No pro~ lem&t the Chicago Institute of Art and the Grand Central School of Art. During his colorful career he served as art director for Wall Disney's "Bambi'' and other short sudjects and participated in the productions of "Fantasia" and "Pin- nochio." His paintings have-been reproduced on Chris lm as cards for banks and in- ternationally known cor· porations and he is creative director for Brown and Bige- low's Weslern Division. Art league members will hold a three-day exhibit al South Coast Plaza beginning tomorrow. Presenting a program on Stretch and Sew using the new knit fabrics will be Miss 1'1argaret Perrin. co-owner of a Westminster shop specializ- ing in sewing instruction for all knits. Mrs . Jayeees Huntington Beach M r s . Jaycees meet the second Mon- day or the month at 8 p.m. Localion Information may be received by telephoning Mrs. Michael Brooks, 536-7022. The public is invited but reservations should be made today by calling the Mmes. ltfarsh, 937·1611 ; James W. Dick, 962-5157; Robert Cardinal, 847-3898, or Robert Hubbert, 540-0997. Those planning to aUend are requested to bring a table service and $1.SO for lunch. Liquid embroidery will be demonstrated at the March meeting, and a Mexican lunch will be featured-in April. During those years, the ac- tive hospital worker personally accumulated more than 18,000 hours of service, and 1he shop contributed $37,000 to the amiltary for benefit of the hospital. Among those honored at the end of their board term were the Mmes. Tandy Coleman, John Shea, George Kennedy, Gordon Fleener, F r e e m a n Perrin, Mont McMlllen and Miss Fern' Randolph. Special luncheon guest was acting administrator Stanley Oppegard. ''The happy I am - when I'm straight is more beautiful . than the happy I seemed to be when I was stoned.'' The girl in the picture· Js named Chris. For over a year, she was on amphetamine'S, powerful drugs known as "speed." This is how she·describes it:- • 141 think 'speed' Is a lot worse t han heroin. K ids have got to know about it, because they can fall so easily into taking it through the diet pill h'5sle; or needing S-Omething. to help them study. You .kn,o~, that's crazy. Because th e com· bination of amphetamines and no s I e e p 'just blows your memory completelY.. There are whole sectl.ons of my, life which ! just can't remember. It .got to be iust 'do a httle more, dO I Utile more/ until.that was all there .was. And the 'crashing' •.• sometliries the 1cr~hing' ls just really awful! "For me to stop taking It, l bad . to !eel that people were caring. And they were. I was really lucky. I was v-or close to two people that we,.. really Into amphetamines very deeply and I lov~d them a lot. But as far as they were concerned, the only thing that they had was .the ~meth,' and that was their Ii!e. And they're both dead now, • "Dex.ies," ubennies,'1 "meth'' are called "speed" these days. ~-nd-peopte-wturlmo.,....peed know--"speedll-kllls For more facts about druge, write !or lree bookleta to: Natlonal lnsUtute of Mental Health, Box 1080, Washington, D.C. 20013. • Ors. and Mmes. ruchard Drexelius. Anthony Orlandella and Da'vid Erickson. Ticla!ts may be obtained from Olivers' Twist Fashions, Iii!! F., Sooth Coast Highway. Seo Yo11 Soonl ¥tKINIA u .. r-.. u .. ..i...i .. -c .... OPENING-SPEOAl -.1003 :- ·KANAKELON WIGS: ' • I ' USE YOUR 'GRANT CREDIT ACCOUNT . OPENING SPECIAL! Pre · styttd FREE C•rrylne Coto 100°/o HUMAN HAIR ~ The most versatile h1Wj>i- you con own. w-it form- al or casual-no limit t~ the 1tlr1ctive 1 t y I e s you c111 create. VALUE $19.49 ' . CASCADES Pre -styled -FREE styl ing block -FREE Carrying cese. All for only • • · • • • • • . PERSONALITY STYl.ING BLOCK Holds firm-no 11i ppin~. $1 ... 9 ve lu,. SAVI 4tc SY.NTHmc WIGS and FALLS · Pe rmanently cu~ed fens Brush and weir st~etch wigs -Fashion flattery for every age. Many shades includ ing blonde. · sg~!. $14." SAVE $5.00 Wig FOAM STYLING Stand Holder BLOCK wltk IMCtlelt 91C v•lue "' So'ft 4tc -39' $100 l for, ... IROOKHURST AND ADAMS, HUNTINGTON. BEACH • -- • -c-c:--=---.-- ----• ...._ .. --........... , .. ~ .. . . --~--~'"""--....... ... ' . ' . 14 OAJ(Y Pi.OT H Wedlitsday, Ftb""" 2S, 1970 -. M-eetings for ~ Parents, Teachers ·Diversified l I theme o! festival slated· for Saturday, March 7, fr901 11 a.m. to · 4 p.m. Mn. C.M. Kno>i Is festival cha!nnan. REPORTS: Al board meeting, Mrs. Kenneth Ericbon, ju v eii il t protection chairman. reported -sales ol more tq~ 100 ldenUlICation bracelets to studenti. Mrs. Charles Parker, var I et y Dinner Tossed for · Profit show clialrman, rtpOl'led M \'.::':"" of robtWil, and swmi=:.=:=: tatlves cha1n:rma. I • ' • delalb on .-doss \ Valentlneparlles. Fulfon PTO . COMING UP: Gene rat meetJrc will I.aloe .Place tomorrpw night at 7:11 1n - the multimedla r o o m • ' J>rogmn theme b AmeriCan Herltqo, accordini to Mrs. Herbert YOID08ida. program ·chairman. Featured will 1be ihe. New Society who wilt pen~ under the direction o1 -rt OUncer, dll<Clor of vocal muatc. Cltilensbip , awards will be presented · and a nominaUng.O:>rnmitt.ee elected. Eighth c rad e .Wdents will cooduct • -aale. REPORTS: Filming Will bei!n in acbool l"rl4aY. Mardi 1; !If a movie !Ar be produced /bf tbe Smithsonian ,Motion ' P·lcture Group of Walblngton; D.C. Selected by tbe Scbool Ubraey Man- J>OWer Project. tbe school will r~ Fou.ntaln VaUeyw School Dlstrtct..-one of eeven di.!trlds in the na~ lion participating in · the film.. Movie will be used for reeruJ.tment of s c ho o 1 librarians .•. School winners who competed in all-city finals of spelling bee last Monday were D i a n a Coombe, LiQds Bek as , Vickie Haruien. S h e 11 y Seymour and Lene Poppe.--• PJ'O.sponsored B r o w n i e troQp, with leader.J Mrs. Hemy Lange and Mrs. Halsey Chenoweth w e re joiMd by McDowell Sdlool Troop 1000 and Its Jead~r Mrs. Laurence Surface on.a : ·r ' ' ' . neld IJiJ> 1o Busdl Gardeos Monroe Founders Day Program_ Sp_[ced in Vari Nuys. PTO members --·--=-- who uslst"ed' were tbe MemDers of-Morlroe PTA are cooking up a spaghetti right) Virginia Neneitian, Carol McDowell and Tad lofme.o. Stan Kucbingel, Jae-'clirulet'to cominemorate Founders Day Friday, Feb. McKnight. Dinner Will be $1.25 for adults and 65 ques Sctimitz, David Grff,11, 27 •. Sampling spaghetti which will be served ~ween __ J:_CIJts for chi1dre.n, with proceeds to be used lor ---~--<;aJjle_nnan. MSazyynlh.·-6-and•B p.m. in Los-Amigos High Scl!ool-are (left to school equipme~t. Jacboo and LeRoy nu 'n'ooP members m a d e vaJentlnes which w e r e pruented lo patients in llimttngton Va J J e y Con- valescent H~tal. Ing Uie evening, according lo Mrs. Jim Leivas. program chainnan. REPORTS: Members of parents are invited to at· tend. • .Board .will -t Mondsy, March :i, aU;7:30 p.m. in school. Preparing.salad for a dim .. a-dip buffet are Toni Gillman (left) and Lenny Knoth a$$[sted by Mrs. James McLean,• chairman of the Goldenw.est PTA .fund. raising project. ·A buffet of ham, baked: beans, salads and dessert will be serv- ed by PTA inembers and the student cOuncil between 5:30 and 7:30 p.m. Fri· day, March 6, in the school. The public is invited. Hayden PTA Cbry1 DeU.ser ,President REPORTS: Award! were presented at unit meeting to wlMU! of an essay contest entered by all students from first through sixth grades. First plaCe winners were Glen Maerlll, Molly Watt, Belll Llnkenboker. Chris Lankford, Sasau Patiacm and Kathy Macrill Taking se- cond place honors were Bretl Honaker, Barb a; r a Pa"-Jody Sabine, Terri Higginbotham, Joseph Mfn- cini and RonJl}d Stagg•. Placlng third were Mike Provencher, Deena Snow. Craig Dulin. Cindy Turley, MarUn Henson and Alan Farquer. honorary life membership committee selected at board meeting are the Mmes. Duane Ka.sulks. L e vi a s . William Kowaleski a n d Marvyn Jackson . Mrs. Fred Ashley will serve a s chairman. Board members reviewed c ommun ity resource book compiled by Fountain Valley Scho o I District. PTO has adopted Arrow Book Club as a pro- ject and will donate bonus award books to the learning available at 5 and 10 cents. , According to Mrs. Edward ·Muraski, ways and means chairman, the program will serve a dQuble purpose by providing wholesome en- tertainment and r a I ' i n g funds for PT A projects. Public is irivited to attend. RE PORTS: At Founders Day meeting last nigh t, Hun- tington Beach Police Chief Earle Robitaille presented plaques for fi rst and second pl ace to essay contest win· ne rs Tom Tye and Debbie Hunt. Continuing service awards were presented to Gene Martin, school custo- dian and Mrs. Joseph Van Buren, past president. In at· ten dance were PT A past presiden ts , the M m e s , Richard Kellogg, Yvonne Durston, Van Buren, David Van Hom, Virgil Brewster, lV~ Allen Young, Robert •luston, \Valter Yoder and William Creed. Shennan Elliot t. principal , spoke on parental involvement. Founders. Day celebration is tomorrow at 7:30 p.m. in Zoeter School. Birtliday par· ty decor will feature cake , candles and decora.Uons in PTA colors cf blue-and~gold . Entertaining will be the Hut· chlnson Sisters plus Chad, a musical group composed of sisters Marise, Diane, Karen and Lynn Hutchinson and Chad Wackerman. Chairmen in charge of arrangements are John George, honorary service award and the Mmes. Paul Dugmore, decorations; Gordon Shanks, hospitality ; Norman Karkut, flowers, and Charles Wackerman and B i I I y . Rutledge. program booklet. REPORTS : Board served REPORTS : A.merican Heritage essay awards ,ere presented to Susan Yamold. Lori Zemnick, ·filr:Di..Huber, Lisa Barros, Linda Grushm, Laura Hinton, Tim Woodruff. Marl V a· a r a , LuAnn Donaldson, Terr J Hillyard, Linda C1aW and Daryl Robbins. Sweepstakes prize of a $25 U.S:Savings Bond was presented to Paul Yarnold. Serving as judges in the contest were wtfilam Crane, board of trustees ; Robert Sanchis, asslstant superintendent of ed\Jca· tional services; Miss Pi.t Taylor and Mrs:, ste.Ve Stewart, learnina coordinators, and Mr s . George Meehan, PTO pres!· dent. Ready to Celebrate Lamb PTO Mn. Eldon Bay President COMING UP: Rummage sale wtD take place at 1 p.m. Saturday, Feb. 28, in the multipurpose room. On sale will be toys, books, tools, knlck·knacb, game~. lamps, clothing and furn It u re. Relrethments wlll be serv· ed. Additiona1 infonnation can be obtained by telephoo· ing Mrs. Roger Randazzo at llZ-5717. McDowell PTO Mn. Jmne1 ACkley President · centers. Volunteers a re needed' to organize aud iD- visual aids, and _.addition al information can be obtained by contacting Mrs. J ames AckJey at 842-2396. Mrs. Kowaleski, first vice presi· · dent. reported th e program <!t_ Superintendent Parent Council meeting Wednesday, Marcil ~. in Wardlow School will be entitled Special Fun· ding. Program will explore d e velopment and im· plernentatlon or instructional programs through special funding. Roland Gilmore, principal, explained school policies and the physical fitness program. Mesa View PT A Ronald Murray President refreshments at r e c e n t · teachers' conference and a program persented by first and second grade students. Room mothers presented annual valentin~ parties in Westminster Zoeter and McGaugh schoo~. PTA members High PTA made more than 80 bean· Mrs. Emory CWWn Schroeder PT A bags for classes r r om President Mrs. Charles Spade materjals provided by the COMING UP: Founders Day Pres ident school district. Assisting in and honorary life mem· COMING UP: PTA w i 11 the project were the Mmes. bership program is slated James Rhodes, RuUedge , fo M d M ch 2 t sponsor a safety puppet Karkut, Waci:erman and r on ay, ar , a show to be pres~nted by the ·Shanks. 7:30 p.m. in school. Chris Huntington Beach Junior .J.. Gilissen is in charge of the Woman's Club Friday, Feb. Wardlow PTO program. Slate of new of· 27, at 2 p.m. Attending .will ficers will be presented to be all fourth and fifth grade Mn. George Meehan the membership. A I s o students. President featured will be a preview of REPORTS: Room mothers COMING UP: PTO will host an upcoming variety show presented class va\~ntine Superintendent Parint Coun-and. explanation· ·of \!!e of parties under the direction cil meeting Wednesday, funds derived from the of J\.1rs. William Hinds and 1 __ M_ar_c_h_4_, _•_t_s_:so_a_.m_. _A_u __ s_h_o_w_. ------- Mrs. Robert Rivas ... Bicy- cle safety course was con- ducted by Officer James lle nd e r so n of the Westminster Police Depart- ment for students from kindergarten through sixth grades. Third through sixth grade students tried their sk.i1\s in a bicycle course \Vhile Mrs. Stan Sloan puts finishing touches on the decorationa, David Dug- m ore brings the balloons fo r the 73rd birthday celebration of. Seal B~ach PTA. The Founders Day meetin g will take place at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow m Zoeter 1' School. COMING UP: Ezecutive board wtll meet in the home of Mn. David Wiiliams Tuelday; Mardi 10, at 7:30 p.m. • .Art show opens In school today and wlll con- tinue m!UI Frldsy, Mardi 13. on display 1n the music room will be three entries from eadl class ••• Fountain Valley School D Is tr i ct Superintendent Mike Brick will be guest *aker. at general meeting Tuesday, March 17, at 7:30 p.m. Art ' display may be viewed dur· COMING UP: Unit meeting will take place at 1:30 p.m. .Tuesday, March 3, in · the Hope Vie w S c ho ol multipurpose room. Speaker \Yill be Gary Davis of the Huntington Beach Recrea- tion and Parks Department. He will spea)t on spring and summer recreation al pro:. grams planned by t h e department. Report will be presented on development or the Central Park a re a located at Golden West Street and Talbert Avenue. Question and answer period will follow .•. PTA dinner· dance will be presented Saturday, Feb. 23, in lhe Meadowlark Country Club. Tickets, at $15 per couple, can be obtained from PTA members or ' by contacting the'!Chool office at 8421008. PTA members and neighbors or the school are invited. test, and bicycle r l d e T H Jicenses were pres ented , ow those compleUng the test ~ satisfactorily. Students Jer-• •ti• ry Kirby and Mark Wilson pnm1 '"e· tied for first place with a 100 . f , percent ratltig, and tn a nm· ·· . Employment Agency off, Kirby was selected to can ViQU represent the school in an J ~ , area contest. PT A members t "I the Mmes. Richard Keyes, • Ex.:Nuns Locate Jobs Citations Presented assisting in the project were ge f Warren McGinley .. Michael Cobb, Frank Wask, Charles Oak View PTA Spade, Donald Hawuald, Supporters cl the Girls Club Mrs. Hank Stand. ridge John Grosse, Jerry Baker By PATRICIA MC CORMACK NEW YORK <UPI) -The nun in her late 20s wore her babJt the first time she kept a business appointment-· with Tim _J'ogartJ·in New York. The next tlme he saw her, three weeks iater, she wore a mlnf, 1 It i rt. 58Ucer • sized sungliJlel and a floppy·brlm· med ' hat. Tbe new clothes went along with her new job in a Wall Street brOkerage houae. And her new job went along 'trilll her ,_ way of 'i'tl that « ., -.Jar or .u...u&!OUJ or former nun. • Fogarty, ... Suceel t Employment ~· b as helped piloL.M~ of._ neon Jo ...,.i Jobi,' ,.i 1iitO tbe bualnat ot llodlq }Obi for ........ and ..........r:111 .. dotll nine -.... 1IJJ cJJtlltl come fl'om. lllOll1 denominations but the bulk are Roman Catholic. At the suggesUon of a Jesuit ' wha has no lntentlan of becoming a eecular, Fogarty and his colleagues started the specialist. ~I _agency Ju•t !Qi' Jhe ...... 1111..... - "The nuns are easier to place than the prie s ts,'' Fogarty said: '••Banks, tn· surance companies a ad brokerage .housu .accept I.he ex-priests rea(UJy, but most other employers won't even interview them." One hlg)>ly educated ••· prieSt is.• doo~. Another who has two mas ters degrees and a coUeae professorship beblnd him b • counterman in • 'llilJCI-;--. ''The dell man specified be wanted \hat $3 an l1our job and nothlna more/' Foaarty .. 1d. The prie s t wanted d »-Cl b of ... H bor and Donald Miller. something sjmple because, as an · Q\IYI u wn:: ar President he told Fogarty : "I've had Area· pther<d .ID the COMING UP: Magic Show Seal Beach PTA enough problems." Newporter Inn for a Valentine featuring Paul Shropshire ~trs. Saul Mllltteln He's very happy at his deli danner,dance and presentation will be presented by PTA in P•es1'dent j b of lrd school Saturday, Feb. 28, at , 0 • aw 5• 1;30 p.m. Price of admission COMING UP: Mrs. Stan Fogarty has 900 resumes Boya Club regional director for adults and chlldren is 3S Sloan, ehalrman, has an· - from l~king nuns and Raymond Dogden presented cen~, aod popcorn ·will be nounced tbe new elate for lo an ..... «>f·-tOdlltic Jee makers and .. If-cleaning o._ priests. OJU11n:: are wailinl it ....... 1 .. 1 awards to the area 1 out behind coovent ·.or ..,......... yourbottltd,watetfJJfm fs about as modem as an ice box. monastery walls. Th• Ir club which """ ae«pted by Cl b M , k . y llesid,. laking up valuable kitchtn spaa:, bottled wat"' di,. superiors cooperate. -Robert G .. 1-11 . and Dd u . a r s FI rs t ear penHrt .,.. unaltracl!ft1 uneconomical and require Th• oddlty .ol being an ex· Man .. fa. _The awards were frtquent nllJ!!nr. , nun or ex-priest ls being signed bT Pmldent Richard Members of the weic0me ed by seven chlefs In dlarge of Thmli unuch l>ttte''lfty:.iJ:d, The Llnds:IY. Ccjmpany hn removed1 according to Focar· .Nis:on. H Cl b or i.e· w Id d h t meet lanes · ty. He~thlnks that's w"" so . Similar awards.wve given ome u •sure or' 8 ayeac wee• P deftlopedauniquelllkont water purification~ ., ,_Cl Laguna HUii met recenUy to -at all hours of Ille day and • _, f ~-• ben' h •-·tch _,_,: many We leaving. to tbe Glr-a ub, aceepted by hear a report on activity since ni«ht. They arrange f 0 r th~! 11 tn.talln1 o~t o ~·t e•~ your Jr.I m ~ It There are no accurate · Mra. Dawn Bowne represen-the club was founded one year reireshments and atter a utiliitl tht procat of reverse osmosis to remove 90% ol the stati!Uca on the numbers of tJng· ?ilrs. Gleam S m l t h • ago. . rri~ncily sinlle m;t convtr· tmPuriliu from yout tap water: and provides a continuous religious Juvlng but Fogarty former director. 1'1e. honors Treasurer RI.chard Wallen sat~on a~ vet~rans land on supply of pun, &till drinking water for about lJ5 the co~f . says: the number•. leavln1 all were bestowed by Mrs. Don reported donation~ of $1.000' their nati"e soil. b :1.•'rd ..,,.,._ There Is no lnstallJition cha~e _J all '"'U · ay • denomlnatloM has been In. Davis, We!& field Hrvice have made tt possible for th.!\· Other of£1cers of the club tn Olu • .,,.. . ·0 1 "' ; -creasing;-------director. __ _ club to se.r:ve coffee t'09kif:f 'addition to Wallen incllldt. Is.$6.50 per month for the use of this modem ~ • ''Tt;e reasons tht people Guest speaker for tlfe-fiflh and juice to mOre th~n 56,000 · Harry \Vandling, president; Al .PurifiCation syste_nr.-F-#-'full--details;--call or 11N. mv-i ~ leave are u numerous 81 the annual dinner WU Dick Lane, Vietnam veterans returning at Martinso,11, vice president, and wn'le ne t:Jndsay Company, P.O. Box ).100, .,°"' f lndlvlduals themselv..," he film aod televl&lon ll""°""1i• El Toro Mari .. Base. Howard Burleson, purcbuln( Newport ~each. Cali/. 9.2660 (714) 642-6861. l IOld. IJ'. · Memben ol the club, head· agent. • j I I' I , 1 , 1 , • : J 11 • • •• , . \ .P011aiain Valley I • ' ' . TIMla",.,. ···~ VOL:. l>l, NO. ,'47, S SECTIONS, 90 PAGES -..._ --'... . . ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY .. FEIR.UARY 25, 1970 ..-r--·.-.- Oil Leak . Blast~ea~ .. . ,. , . "' .. Harbour Residents ,Threaten Actit1n. . . DAILY I'll.OT """'·.-, 1111111 MIMdtllll THIS IS TRAPPED BUNNY'S VIEW OF LE !SURE WORLD'S CHIEF RABBIT HATER Hated by Some, Admired by Others, Cornelius VanG .. 1t Pursues Self .. ppointtd T•tk R1lentl111ly Leisure Worlder s Battle ProlifiC Bunnies By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI Of Ille DlllY 'll•f lMff Ii-' batUe over bunnies has SeaJ Beach Leisui'e Workt on Its ear. ' ·The "trouble is that Bret Rabbit has f9li}d his briar patch.. among the flower ~· of the reUrement 'community and t~t~11 .~ng a thorny problem for the senior, cit.irens. ,Armed with traps and chemical re~nts, the "rabbit ~t.ers" have begun to t11.·ate an all-out war agf.iml the ram~t ral>blta. They S"Y eouon bad bd.,,.~ l/lfllll.oot 'o1111er« " . <' .... ll!I 'V'~ . T7, ·"' wealt!q' -:•11' (' ' .... • I retired merchant bit haters' " unofUclal leader during the two-year campaign to bug t11e bunnies. "I raised rabbits in the old country. l like them. They'tt cute, but lhey are also a· nuisance." declared the Dutch im- migrant. He claims the rabbits are ra1slng havoc with the gladiolas and the tulips, bur- rowing hrtles under expensive lawns, destroying trees, mating and giving birth on patlos and are potential disease car- rie{s. '~And )'tlU. should set i:heir dropplnp," !!t~· "'They'n all over our PQrcbea ~ Walkwa)'S. ': ~ s • !. • 1 lluntingipnFaee sChanges VanGeesl ha~ worked him.self Into such a lather over the bunnies that be is of- fering $1,000 tc. anyone who can develop au effecUve birth control pill for rabbits. "I'm now working on an endoWmenl fund and am accepting donations from the rabbit haters," he explained. "I myst:lf will deposit the firsl $1 ,000." Meanwhile, he is UghUng the rabbits wllh chemical melhods and lraps. "l found out aboul lb1s new repeUenl and had the market atpck. ,supplies. And you know, Jr, a year~•· time ,lhey 80kl more jhan Z,000 bollles ol IL~ irvlii>le is 1hat the peop~_,,llo o.e-it have no,)f ,(leo~I)~>'•" ' w ' • Beacti ~stees · . ' By, TE RRY cOVILLE Of .... Dliltr ....... ...,, An·oil leak Into the Chrlitlana Bay area ol Huntlncton Harboor bu 1pning lnlo • gusher of tnUcism on the wtll operator. He is feeling the wrath of property ownert who have threltened civil· IUita, and Ille clty or-Huntington BUch and the Sta Ii Flab ·and Game Autl!orlty ·lrbo ·bu also pron;ilsed criminal complaints . .. We feel like somebody Is dumplng their gast>age on us and not paying the bill," said Don Miller, president of the H'unUngton Harbour Propertr OWners Associallon. A sPokesman for the operator, Grover Collins Corporation of ComplQn said this mornll;ta that his lnsur1nce agency, Employers of Wausau, would handle 111 complilnlii includln those or lndlvidllll ·boat 'fwrlen. 1 - But IK>tne boaL owne~ were sk~cal. .. Thg ba.<h JeaHrom·lhe ume;~-slte-_ _Ja_M .nJ!.L ·aml..aeveral_ind.ivldual boat- o.wners had trooble getting salisfacticm," sald MJUer. Miller's group held a meeting Monday nlpt, during which member• talked about legal action against the oil·operator and set up a three-man committee lo study the reasoo for and possible prevea- tlqn of the oil leak. .. We might take legal action as a group," sakl Miller. Criminal complainta stemming from the polhJUon ,of state water are expected lo be Wed by Fish and Game officials. Maximum fine ror··that could be $1,000, according to Captain' Walter Putnam of the Long ,Beath ·office. City Altorney 600 Bonra has been ask- ed to Hie misdftneaoor crtmlnal com- plalnls oo behali or Huntlng1o0 Beach for Ylolallon.ol tjty fin ,ordlnnc<s. . . , "Sj>llled OIL-~ a lite buord, eipeclaily In 'the~ ,.,.. wller< ··-~ ~ ~J.l)O!ild Mitly be-a :~ m fti!1it.~ 1lie oJ~';, Mid~ Ure mo¥i!D. Dougli1 -~~ r---'· - r"l'hls oil It ~ up and 00...'t P"""I Dkll a( Ort th'9I to the nilrinl RW,"''Jil . ' " • I • ~ • . .. 'ij in Oper~tion of Schoois Not-11~1~g Jobs Illegally T)re Oil leali<il ~ from a broken gukel oil one or ...... wtlb operated by Grover _qo)lini .behlnd . Har}>our VleW School. It N!<ped'lnlo ~ dralnaie channel .. , .. ,.,,... ,,.., . 1 ·, -..... I 1 Three trustees of the Huntington .Be~ Undercurrents of another upheaval in the wake ol the election failure, Riha.I has Union Hfgh Scltool District will he ~- lllee liAlulot!li. Pqe.11 • p City Sch~ots D,rop .:Plµ#s . ' Tli f:e f Rolls Off • With 2 lV agons I I the Huntington Beach Unio 1 High School already.offered the following curet: ed to keep their seats even though they I District became apparent Tuesday as -Changes in the l*iysical educa-also hold elemenla(y school district trustees and adn;iinistrators. be~ forg. • tlc;>n pto&rani to eUminate mandatory dou-truste h' lh o· Co 1 I 1 tn·g a plan lo prov.Ide quality education ble ~ri6ds of activity coupled with after es ips, e range uo Y coonse I said Tuesday. F6t ·.'Tax 1 Ka :te lnerease . ! "\ ( ' \ ,/ • f" l ' •I ~. r deJpite lbe failure of a rec~nt bond elec-schoo recreational programs to fullill the I •: nd t hlke slat$ 200-minute weei.1.. p . E • re· Counsel Adrian Kuyper ruled that t • ' . ' , 'Ip ~ ._ •., T4) t . • . • ... • • , I uon a u: · ...., lrustees Matthew Vieyul<er, n .. ., SchmiU I So ha g led lb.I •-be quirtment and close scrutiny of alhletlc ~·-r me ve sug es cu~ bud and Ralph Bauer are not bold1n& ~ir A thief hitched two authentic old made Jn educational service& while others gets. dual seats illegally since there Is no ~ A proposed request for a $1.SO iacrea" -creaae was,fsw par~.'i• ICh,IJtl,..cOo-- In· the tax•i:ole ho's. been duolPecl, lb' 1Jte slru<;tlon lo replace ~75tm1111on-1n.qooi Hui]Hngton Beach· Clfy .SchOOLDlstrlct bond!·tho dialrlco'Clll'l--••lf'.bee..i. ol l d lb t th I t. 1· · ad' al -EliminaUon of lhe po::ltiom of dlrec-"'"' buckh9ar'd wagom up lo about 400 con en a e so u JOn 1es in a r 1c compat1'b1'llty In tbe1·r roles as ·•ementary ~· rh al r di trlct l. 1o· • tor of curriculum, coordinator of child f' horses' wonn of modern truck ote a o s opera ions improve ., school and high school d'·tri'ct board 1 Boartt.c:i( 'trustees, , • Jaw in~est r~./ .4 ; ~.. • .,.., , Tht!e, lnil\ea v,ole!l lo ,drop, tbO ,reciii<SI A requeat !<r •·<!keel i)l\:l!!ue '°' P4l -"I · we1.1are: and attendance, and director or ~ Tuesday aq.d hau !d the an~ue ~ c,iency. special services and recreation. members. vehicles away from a Costa Mesa .Whichever avenue Is chosen will large--Assignment of part time teaching Dual trusteeships, he declared, "are produce 'market. -odiCilUJ~. Ill' the AprH 11,eleCtlon :-operating coois "wlll lllill! .be oa the, A)!ril becayse oI fear that they .would Jose all ba\IOL· · ' ~. ··\ ·t - 'Jy' be determined' by a random sampling duties to principals. aSSistant principals, only illegal when the function ol the two Richard.G. Pejoyan, of 7232 Heil ot those who voted in the $9.S million coordinators and counselors. officu: is inconsistent.'' Ave., Huntington Beach, told police recjuests for money U It wa\i on .the "We dectded' the ~ <eDi. "a/Uiq<e fln- ballilt. . porlimt lhln the 11.so;" espliilnl<l·- t bond election and tax override. About 300 -Formation of a sChoo! corps of The written opinion wa:; addressed to he had just Purchased the wagons, 1 "expressionartes" will be Sent to the parents and volunteers who would help high school district Trustee JoSlph Riha!, valued at $430, Crom the owner of a 0ne tru~tee, ~ger ~~~n, ~llled Jack Clapp. "SeVefal pai'erib :hive toJd to ~~e t.He proposal.explauung that he us that ~ .,l:-sG ·w&s too:much lo ·Uk fi:rr r el«f,oi'ate to sound their opinions in the with clerical duties and serve as who has maintained that such dual roles construction site now being cleared. neit few days, according to Dist. Supt. emergency backup when staff load& sud-are not in the interest of the community. The buckboards, weighing abbut felt, voters s~ld ~ve a .ftlolct ,on how and troth ove(rldes 1'ould loee. "e; ~ the:y1'¥ant to ljQ!Id ICbools. schools, but •we: .reaUy doJi'i kl.ow ·Wbat Max 'Forney. denly increase. Rlbal1asked for the statement following 500 pounds each, were parked D(stJ'k:t•offidala hatf plamed to request to do about Jt now." · two tax ·overrides ' In· April: The St.50· Jn-~ndersoq dlsaU,~.. ,..1 .... pe~Jy 1 ' •'There is ari unfortunate reaction that Members of the District Educators a recent Los Angeles county Counsel rul-beside his Grower's n a n c h we have to cUt things," said Dr. Joseph Association which represents around 500 ing which held dual trusteeships llleaaJ. Produce, 2016 Newport Blvd., ¥· I Rlbal, a trustee who has maintained that local high school teachers have suggested "J have been called illegitimate before cording to Officer George'Sperlirig. S kin H. d I innovations, such as flexible and mcidular other means.of meeting the crisis. but never illegal," quipped Bauer, who is Investigators logged the stolen IDO g' 8Z8r S I tcheduling, will provide the ~er· A statement forwarded by the assocla· also president of-the Ocean View School vehicle case as a grand theft, since I ~'This is a good opportunity for change lion's executive board calls for the Dislrlct board of trustees. buckboards don't qualify under T rather than punishing the electorate," he abolishment of all pupil transportation Weyuker and Schmitt both serve on the California Velllcle Code deslgna-old in Morie a~ded presenting his arguments to pald for oul of dlstrict funds, withdrawal Westminster Elementary School District Uon. . , tt;ustees and ac!mlnlstr~tior. in .the form of all aUtletics and .extracurricular ac-board.bl1Rdctltlon to·the Huntington Beach ol two typed documents. tivlties and a five-period day. Union IDgh .SCbool Distrlct. For Valley Kids ·Bulcally, he and Robert' Gordon, a - -· ~;~~!~=~·~::;.~:: Alam-1·1u . _. e" ~a·l s End Ne·ar? in:~ ~~~~:-ior:.!:.; 1chedullng,by Septembe!.r , • -• , < e ' e t1119 ~th'. aa the Am~an Cancer 'Sucli 8 plan, they con1p1,. would'oll<r • .• Sotlety I mbvte mob!~ Ullit visits FO\Jn; Ille curteill. concepi. ol clalll ~ laln·"..~lley SchOOl lllltflcl'1·11 Caml!U8C!•· class 1iu and class meetlng Pl~ It J .J • Manoed 'by. \oo1unteer; .drtVi!rs frem aU ;i~~e:~:.~~·1:i..,~u::"..': • Facility Cor,im Ea3e C,ou1ity Airport Pressure ~~g~= .. =:;~!~v1: 1 ti,me treeing teachers to wark wtth •' • with. free literature and films for each siUden~ on a more indlvklual •bail, they ... I J ALAN ~, heat OU Mlle i Square," J\1 a Y o r Alamitos for general aviation (private student:".,MtDle'" 'Is literally a theater on clalrii. _ :t or•.,..,,...,...,. Edward Just t d planea) .and not commercla"I craft. wheels, with a movie screen, lighting and lkit there are others, notably ~Mn The Jncruslq pollibWtJ' • tbit · LOa p:mmen e · sound equipmtnt and racks loaded with ~''the administration and some other Alamttoa Naval AJr stauon may be c1os-1be fl!llYM <Sitd he understood a The supervisor also would like to see a brochures~ ltustees who are s1i1tisUed with the cur-ed bt ne. defena..dl\i· cmt IOIDe of N . dedllton. on toe Alamitos would come in park and recreation buffer 7.0nt created · 0 we· were ao pleased .wllh 1ht Smoktng rent oPeraUon or the d(itrlcl and preseqre today ,off car... County'• m~atdt. , , In the surr!oonding area belore such a S1m,my preaentaUom last• year, " think the St .so lncrea., would have ·oeen approved." 'He'~ased'hla-prOdi~ olt the natrow defeat Of a ~I Fib. 10 to raise interest rates ad the bond&: eolh trustees said the dlttrlct n ld probably· ask volerl ln"Juile t_. lhe Interest rate' oo' IA! l>~~•·Ji! .. ven per-cent (the' mlllimUln :'' Dy ltate law.) .. ' ~· ' "B~t, with Jntare;ot:iala ~ ~ don1 think we•n .be ~ble to sell'the.l>Oildo .... as seven·~~L · l think, we'll Mve to come back with a pay..aa-jm.go RfOPO" ta!," Anderlan aal(I. "· But ior April '1('tfie 11:SO' lncr.ae Is dead. · ~ Oruige .. "·c.ue • 'I 1 ~e the claim Uiat a drutkt aearch for'morl airport rlditlel. • • "ft.t wu-ia Hoe wHh Hanna's state-switch Is made. Bakei Is to address the decided our students would benefit frorn 1 1 •vldln is necessary. • ' Cl\y ad CXMlltJ oflldala _. wre meat wb!J'.IJJ Med after a cloaed~r Raksmoor Homeownt.(I As30Clatlon on the 'movie program," aakl Fun Zablen, ,.,,...election results .,,nol .t.~ laldll(I a llc!li ot • lllllw1• II!!\ ot1I . _,.. 'WPW·llllense 'Sec,.tary M•lvln the Mun of the Loi Alamlloi 1talion oa health· '..rvtces c:<iordlnalor lor Fountain al change," sald JOt, Ferm, a 'l'utlid.,y '-1 l!AJR: Rlt:iW'I' -(!). J;olrl.;d~befense Department of-Morch 12. Valley School District. "About J!O Beach reftdenL ~Jt ruM • .. lVMClnlalW), Kl1'1Jld11!,t~· ~~Udsf."' Tuesday. • Baker haa urged elimination of .Fouo-aludenta are_~rUcfpaUng at each achool ~ economic tredltl. J 1ttrl1Mt ll 11mo1ince,,,. but eats ---lbt ~ ~~ llild •ratons at the $100 taln Valley'• MUe ·Square Park 1lt.e• frOllJ 1 lolll _ot 4-." , .., ' ~ lllilctb' to economlca," l'<\lilld. alJlrdlll ~'J:...Lol =~ ... ' '• m1ui. a1f 1lldlbJwill likely he split up i:oonty coosldeiaUon 11 an airport. Favarile nlmi Include "the Huffleu (o lbh tuea ' ·.' • ~Olllii Ii. tbe«i1 ate ' 'his am1191-ll Tn Jlarine Corps Air Station. "When you compare \he 180 acre:s. at Puffi<...a Dragont" and 1nimaied cartoon Ne ..i.;,inbtraton and o th or • ... led." , t Mlntnor Nani Air Station In San Diego Mile Square and the 1,IOO acr., at LOI lllustr•dmt the bwnlo oL •llDOkliil; tf\llll!es ore stlli ponder)l!I ov• the ob -'lo &uporyloor lmld Bqer, and ·PolotllafrN1valAlrSlat11111atOx· Al~lo;. the teeter:totter goes .only~ "8r'"th ol All," a~ Pro. I ~•-e•-r<vilions lhat _,, .. be mode In , -illllrl<I Includes t1* WaHJounly, -• wrJ, Boi:er'• •Ide comm<nted. • ductlon 'for .teens .QI\ ~!'lbl"'1J . .-llled ~ _,, ·...-erplalned thlit the 1111u\ consultani.• Hatna s1-.i:ho,..ver, that the flna · Tiie "'°' GI m!U""' •.. ol 1U,.• \.el i!ilh-!IP<)lln and "Smoktiig. P .. II)'! -"St k •farke t report• recommend use or Los Alamltos • ;at:1s1on on;l.., A)amltos. whQse ... 1 ~m1\;;~on wouJd be·~·~· ~ril," w~h1 rev(<t•• the ·~ or· ~ " for genertl ov11tion purpose1 ff the ,1.1\!l •cre.s mllie.lt tbeJorS-.t Naval Air blow tq the ara. Tl\< ·'W'""''i! ..,pral. t1illll(Co;:1"cj"41,'lC1uj>IO-\la!• ev1'!.eirii< .oil 0ere..,. Department does cleclde>lo cl.,. Jlelerv• a11Uob 1n the country, wu not ' mUllorj d.tU"l'fl1rilll l1 mon lliliilJO ~-'!!~.~ .. -, ... l""b"" NEl!'·Y-ORK (AP}~ '!'he llloclc mfrtel ' li<kl onlo a s\ilall but fairly firm lea<! In 1klggiah. trading lite. this afternoon. (See i<f!iotalloli."PagB ~· --- &-ctpl for a f~W 'ssues inv.olved in 11pe- l dal 1ituattons, J)flces· moved In a narrow rqe. ·-- j . : -·-·-------,·-c"'·"· • lt ,down. • ~ • , .. clear cut." ' ; f ~ 'nW: _. 11 : ~ by 4Z 11M ~;-·~""•me no"" , Fountain Valley officills were hoping • 'The con1tmman woald lfke lo '"F tho squlldrons and ~ ilallo. -~:.'"""'· ,_-!:wu ~ b)' lm·ol • rpcent ~ lhal Los Alamllol would be &l.ye1i.oY.ei to__jacJU~y~ ....-to ,l'!'li-•nd "'.,....-t ,~·r1r.,....-euve ~Yl!iriiiiii'if there O'allld!. I\ cin be sol up C<J1veot.n\li'cln uae J)yJ)rfvate planes Ma-thus take the · tlon u1e3 bllj. the stt&iOnJ\as been ,~Qed whO train •,400 ·~~· Any pUbl.Jc meeting · pltce or-~ spotllght orr the clty'1 Mile Scfuore Park for avlallon.purpo..,lli\ ~ty l<udie1. Mllltarr spoktlni .. """ DOl-Il•bk bualnai or. lhi1111lrlal' area. ' 'AP S, as a po!Sibte general a91atJon site. A 1poke1111ln at SJ!;pervltor Baker'f'of· todb" lortomm!nlon the bue'l~bl;e· .V1Jluntefrt ate pment to ~nM.it'.e ''Loo Alamitos could certalnl7 take the lice oald Baler wojjld favor use ol'tos clollng. ' literature and .""""r queollol\a_· • '-------'-----' l . ' ( • • • '' • • ~ ' • ,1'1 S11rprl1ed B11rglar1 • l { ~ ~ { THE ~AUGHS STOPPE D Comedien Lucis ~ Valle y Comic : Gets Laughs ~For Himself 1 Don Luc11 b: a man who enjoys 1etUna: ' I J1Uah ... t of pt0pJe. In fact be doo It for a livin1. 1 Bul the laughs stopped about a month . a10 when the Fountifn Valley comedian 3\lffertd a.. heart attack alttr doing a ben. e.flt ahow for the Sainta a.od Slnnen Club at the Flam1ngo Hotel in Las Vegas. Now lt'a Don's turn to be entertained. His F.cunllJn Valley fr!end1 have pltMed a benefit for him at I p.m .• Mif'df21 In. the Charter House, An1helm. Don •1U b& off work 1nother three months. and, with a wife and alx kld1, that's not 1funny1ltuation. Arrangements , for lhe Don Luca1 benefit are In the hands lll Ml11 Betty Garvin who can be reached. .. W.JllOI. . Newport '1:1,ctim' • • Shot at Slayers By JOANNE REYNOLDS Of fM C .. IY JOllfl lhlff Fatally wounded with a bullet in his chest, "Baycrest resident \\' It 11 a m McKJnley Harris fired away with his own revolver at his murderer! berore fa11ln& dead on hls front porCh. ' That's how Newport 8 e o c h in· vestigators reconsLructed the I a & t moments of life for the SO-year.old retired mo\•le producer after he ap- partritJ,y surprised burglars in his "home at 2012 Ancho r Way Monday nl1ht. lil1 body was di3covered Tuesday morni ng by neighbors. sprawled acroS's the doo~ay or his home. still clutching hls .38-caliber revolver. In reconslrucUn1 the c r I m e , in· vesUga.tOrs aaJd the suspect or suspects probably entered between I and 10 p.m. through an unlocke<l bathroom window at the rear of the home: Harris was apparenUy w a t c h I n g television at the front of the house, when he heard intruders and went to in· ''tltigate, officera,'reported . 'the victim wu 1t1ndina ln a hallway whtn he wrpr!80d the would-be bllrllara Jn one of the bedrooms. It was then, j)Ollae ape<Ulatc, th<t lllnil Wl!li 1hot. Harris hatl a .3kallbtr revolver which he . used in his kilin&. ·bit tie with i S!lailants, officers eij)lalned. A n unmown number of shota ftrt fired as the df lng man chased the swpeclS down the ~ll and out the door I wM:l't he reu fatally wounded. lnvutlg~tors said · the bur'lar1 ap- parently had DOI taken ~"" wh<n they were surprised. Hatrll' wU car- rying several hundred dollars and a valuable diamond ring when his body was found, they noted. Politi! &aid lhty'vl turned up nol.hlng to indicate the U11llanta hod been J'OUJ\de<I ii\. the shootinfi. Harrla wa1 !Ound clut- cfilng his IU"· but .the murder ,weapon has not been recovertd, they rtpoi;ted, All but one n•l&hbof nld they beard .nothin( durtng t.be nl&ht: · Hartif'' next door neighbor said 8he heard commoUoh and .noises late Monday ni1ht Which 1he did not ir.vestiga1e. F rom Page l RAMPAGING RABBITS • • • chased them irlto iomeone e l 1 e • s aarden." He ldao ha1 been to the state Flah and Came Dtpartfiienf with hiJ woea, but claimta ht received little help. "I had a lj~l! ,!rouble s<ttJn..t:lo the head mo1ul. but when I did. they Said-the. -only Way to &et rid of them Is to ahoot them . Dul we -coul.dn't do tbat around here with our pt0pk." concen tration of rabbit haters than rabbit lovers. "No, 1 don't like them al all," said one elderly gen!leman wtiO 11ya he fiiiTrain- ed his cat to hunt thtm down . Another man, who apparently fancies continental dishes declared, "I.only like them as-'Hasenpfftrer. •-That'• rabbit 11ttw.'' During the C()Urse or the survey, VanGeest unwitUngty croaaed enemy Jines and entered rabbit lovers territory; Lue11 bl• appear~ on such ttlevtslon showa 11 "lt Takes a Thief," "The·OUt· 5ider," and "Bob Dale Sbow." He alnas, act• and writes and has appeared in many nilht clubl and hotels ln California, Nev~ "They al.lo told me abotit the trap1,,. he 1dded, polnUng to a model that one of hll friends hu just de.sliJled. Jt can be bil!Jt·ro;-n..so ~ ci>py. "l cin'l tell you his name," explained VanGee&t. "He'a aurroundet' by rabbit < 1overa and fears reprisals. But he's "Hey. are you that rabbit killer," ex· claimed one man who obaerved VanGeest trying to catch a bunny for a photographer. "Why you miserable man, you ou ght to be put in JaU for It. Gtt out of here. You're a dlsirace." . Dentures rattling with roror' he 1a~e VanGeest a mighty shove which tent him reeling and sea:rchin& for prote<:th·e cover. da. ~ and Hawaii. · . J'rltndl who wouJd like to drop a card IO 0oa. may addreaa lt to p .0. ~I 8158, Foonllln Volley. ThoM! who would like to do aomething f~ Don, and enfoy a nla:ht or enwtain- ·. me.nt and danclna, may 11111: for Uckets . by wrttina to 244 s. Glwe11, Oranae, Cal- lfOrnia taMI. Tlcketa for the March 2 benefit are $2 each. • ; Census Takers ~ Being Spught 1 . . ~ For W. Co~ty • :' The U.S. Bureau or the Census needs -~ local people to 11o·ork on the 1170 Census or PopulaUon and Housing In the \\lest Orange County area .. il was announced :· today by Roy Gordon, district manager of the census. " Job& to be filled will be as census ; takers who will call upon households that -. have not malled back their census forms · or who have malled back lncOmplete · ones. Generally. they will work near their own nel1hborhoods.. Jobi will last from three to fi\·e week! ·. In AprU and May. Some work will be 1 done evenings ind on Saturday!! as some · people ire at home only during those times. Pay wlll "'·era!Je about $2 an hour . ·,. Those Interested should anply at the :_ ceNus office , l~lOK !. Edinger Ave .. t' Santa Ana, or call ~7-7635. ~ Asian Fund Asked WASHINGTON CAPl -Prtsldeul Nix· on aaked Congresa today to pledge a Unlted States contrtbutlon of $100 million to a apeclal fund enabling the Asl.&n De\·elopmtnt Bank to makt easy-ter1n loans. l DAllY PllOT CitANtS CCAIT PV•\.l ... lt<tei CCMl'ANY R•lletl N. W • .4 JO•et:.M -..,....,.,. Ji1k l . Cwr11;y \t'(t '791-1 .,,. o....,'1' IN,. ...... Tlle111•1 "•-"iJ . ' ldlle< T\ff'll ll A. MY1,1i1~. M•"6011ot '"*' Alittrt W. 14111 ........ 111• l!l•ltl' M~ .... O"lc• 17171 .... ~ a.y1 .... 11 Melft11t AJ11, .. u ,,0, 1.-1•0. '16•1 --r....-'*"' m •w•" •-""'° ..,_.., ut Wfl4 •• , '""' .........,a.dlJ Pll w... ...... '"'-,. • ! ' alread1 caught 23 of them." · "J'i:n putting ln an Immediate order for ·lO('I of them and plan to sell them at lhe market·• . In addlUon, VaQGeeet .iays, the traps, which appear to work well be<:ause they· requlrt only a llght tripping force, will ao up for sale durina IA:isure World's annU,11 arts ind crafta fe1tival . "If we could Just get 100 rabbU haters out with these traps, r think we could rtally do aomelhlng," he said, wi1Uully. •t-'J'M 1a~ depart.ment bu Offered to come and get the trapped rabbits. They ~ th&''d take \hem to a field where the hunters wouur have fun with them ." ·, ~fur.has alM> been flying among the rabbit lover1 who are· lncensed at \'anGeefi"t'! efforts. 'Mlcy like the bunnies and eren feed them. A miniature i;urvcy of slr()liing Leisure Y.'orld residents, l!ken fron1 VanCeesfs electric earl, however. showed a hesvler Final Rites Set For Long-tune Beach Resident Funeral services for Clyde Knisl;oy. 82, a 50-year residf!nt of Hunl ington Beach, l\'ill be held at 2 p.m., Friday at Smlth's Chapel, Huntington Beach. Burial will fo1\ow in Harbor Rest f\.lcmorial Park, Costa r.tcsa. ~Ir. Knisley, a rellred ernp loye of Stan· dard Oil Co., llved at 608 Joliet Ave. · He Is survived by his 'A'lfe, Anna: a daugl1t.er. fi1rs. Lea VanDeasen of Hun- tington Beac~; a son. Bob Knisley of Fullerton ; l'A'O ~isll'rs, ~Ir~. Stella Holten and ~lrs. Anna EIUot and two brotherli. Oscar Kni~ley and Clerk Knisley. all of Ohio, and four grandchlldrtn. Services Slated Fo r Mrs. Beru be Rosary for ~trs. Jane ~1. Berube.~. of 17721 Newland Ave., Hu ntlngton Bea"h, will b! recited at 7:30 tonight at Smith 's Chapel. She~!.~ Salurday. Requiem Pt1ass will be celebrated for ~trs. Berube, a 15-year resident of 11un- tington Be,ch, at 10 a.m., Thursday. in Sta. Simon and Jude Catholic Church. Buria l will be in the Good Shepherd Ctmetery. Survivors include her huaband. Lionel : two daughter&, f\otr1. Annette Ussery of Hunllngton Beach and ~1rs. Miry Ann Green of Delano: two Min!, Je11 n Paul Berubt and Leooard Berube, both of Huntington Beach. five crandchlklren and one great grandchild. Bandi t Strikes;, Flees on Cycle A bandit riding 1 motorcycle drove up tq a Huntlngton Beath photo-mat Tuea· d11 nl1bt and drove off with P>O In r.uh. · Pcilltt 1ald·the mysttrlou1 motorC)'cllst robbed the photo-mat at Sprlngda1~ Street and Edinger Avenue about 9:30 p.m. He told the Rlrl selling photo eup- '"'' that he had 1 weapon and 1he better glvt him tho money. He rode orr wJlhaut so much 11$ .l "'1'coodbye," pollc:e said. The man turned out to be an It-year· old retired railroad freight 1gent Ray Henderson, an avowed rabbit lover. •·1 like the rabbits. They're the cutest things. I watch them by the hour. They're beautiful. acrobatic. Why would anyone want to klll lhem?" · "Why the hell dOean't he 1\vt his f l,000 to hospital children who need help il'latead of spending it on a rabbit birth control pill , 1t's the moat ridiculous thlng 1 ever heard of." Henderson l ay! he feeds the rabbill, but 'A'OU]d not reveal what the food 11 so that VanGeest couldn't bait hta traps with the morsels. • "J know the law and If this guy keepa it up , I'm going to send him back to Holland. He haan·t got any rabbllll. If t ever caught him setting a trap. why I'd--" As the furor cuntinues, both rabbit haters and rabbit )O\'et5 11e scratching their heads O\'er the oriain of the bunnies. No one kno \\'S where they came from. The only thing that appears certain is that the re are more of them every day. Fr o1n Page l HARBO UR ... \\•here it ran into the marina at the foot of the Christiana Bay condominiums. "That oil would !)ave never run Into the channel if the on rompany's property ~·as properly graded to contain such leak! on il.s own land," Herb Day, city oll in· spector. claimed. Day said his dl'partment is powerless to do anything about the leak, e~cept 1ak tht C()rporation to clean it up. The seven ~·elhs owned by Grover Collins are v.•hlpstocked (!\anted) and are actually pumping oil from under the Hun· t1ngton ~larbour area. Dsy added. Don Burns. general manager of Hun· lington Harbour Corporation . said hla cumpany is no longer res~lb\e for the nu1rin11. "but v.·t will try and help the boal o-.·ners a11d homeo"'ners gel that are& cleaned up." Clean up crews. authorlttd by the Fish and Game Airily, be&an v.·ork Tues· _day 'A'lth slra. ~ pumps to soak up and suck up U1e . They labeled'"ll a "four· day job." fi.1ost or the oil was conflned to the. condominium martna area. Boat owners also took out sruh brushes 11ncl started working on son1e of their blackened hulls. "What a mes9.'' dcclart.d one discouraaed house~·ife. who found that otl isn't easily reQloved fro m a riberglass huH. About 30 !>Oat.a 'A"ere oil 3talned. Conspiracy Case. Goes to Jurors FLINT. Mich. (lJPIJ -The ti m .. and 'A'omen "'ho make up Lhe Jury in the Al1ltr1 Motel Ftderal consplr~cy case to- d1y will be told to dtck!e what even le1al experta disagree on ""' whether the defen- d1nll conspired l(rcornmlt a crtmt. When he opened the trial of three white former °'"troit policemen and a N•vo former pr:ivate guard Jlvt wetka aao. U.S. District Cour\ Jtidft S(.tphen J. Roth rc1narked that con1plr111y was so varu•ly defined that lh~re probably art 11 man)' dtrinltlons of it as thcrt are Judges . r . . - • . ·~ . \ Swinging C~mer~tnan ' .• 1 Uslng helicopter with special camera mount, cameraman films still another scene iri 11Doctors1 \Vives,!!. a mo.vie-now in production on locaUon in Harbor Area. Cameraman was shooting footage of another helicopttr beini used as air ~bulance in the film and siies over Costa Mesa was where the action took_place. -.· ·Hopes A bandoned for Inland Freewa y Routing By THOMAS FOl\TUNE Of 11'11 C1ll1 JOllll Sl•ll The seven year fight of the Newport Beach CJty Council to push the Pacific CO.St Freeway route inland appears to- day to be over. Clty councilmen aaid for the first time 1'1onday they would be wUling to sign an agreement with the St.ate Division of Highway& to build the freeway along the 1dopted route . Before councilmen sign, however. enaineering problems will have to be lron:td ·out to their satisfaction. That meanr q:reement still could be a long way off. But councilmen, nevertheless, have now aaid they could accept a coastal roulina they have never liked -and and still don't -inste~d or insisting -tn pushing the rQUle inland. The reason they are softening their stand ·ls'thelf reall;u.tJpn that wi~b Costa Mesa clty olfl~al• adamantly ,opposed they are never going to get anywhere in fppeal! before the State Highwy Coin· ml861on .. They most recently lost again Thursday in what they called a·rinal ap- peal to reopen the route . So Monday afternoon for the first time, city councilmen allowed that they might be willin& to 11bandon their ultimate weapon -refusing to sign an agreement tylna: in ~ freewa y v.·ith local city streets. "History may look upon what happened litre as tr1gic," said Councilman Robert Shelton, "but 1 am also a realist. We have reached the point in time when we must think of reaUt y, not victory or defeat." He even urged that since the City will be v.·orking to refine the adopted route, it do'° ag,resslvely. "The longer we drag our feet and tilt at windmills the ·longer th is community will suffer without a freeway," he said. "There is competition for the aas tax dollar (the source (If fun· ding for state freeways)." But Councilman Lindsley Parsons didn't see a need to rush ahead. He &aid the fretwa)' ·probably is six or seven years off and suggested that ''with pressure fr0m Costa Mesa to get the Newport Freeway built the Highway Commission may come to us at aome point in time ." on, councilman . Paul J . Gruber , re· mained vi5orously opposed in the af- ternoon study f,ie!slon to acce pting the adopted route which hugs the blµff along Pacific Coast Highway west of the Upper Newport Bay bridge. ALWAYS OFFENSIVE "\Vhy should we be conte nt to move in· to the jaws of destruction?" Gruber ask· ed. "This has always been offeruiive to our environment. It wipes Oll• the west end of town and a biJsiness section (Mariners ~1ile) in a way, that i! incon· · ceivable. This massive siructure \\'OUid be exposed to the view of our bay. I just can't see it." '·;, Maddo x Chided For Outburst \YASKINGTON tUPIJ -Speaker John W. fi.1cCormack chleded Gov. Lester Maddox or Georgia today ror passing out pick and ax handle& in the Houae restaurant. Rep. Charles C. DiggS ([). Mich.), proposed to declare Madd ox un"'•elcome hereafter. McCo rmack. who issued an order Tuea· day that r!sulttd in clear;rig hall a dOzen of the govtrnor's ~·ei ghty trademarks out of the restaurant. told reporters today: ''It 'A'a& inappropriate for (Maddox) to do what he did .'' Diggs , one of nine Negro .House members, came cll')SC to tangling phy!ically with Maddox Tue.sclay whl'n he discovered the governor v.·as distributing hia celebrated "pickrick drumsticks" to guests, capitol police and others in and around the retaurant. Diggs said today he was considering fil· Ing a slander suit against ~taddox, who calltd him 1n "aas" and ''baboon" during: table where Maddox sat with a Georgia state patrolman. But when it came ti"me to vote 'f\otonda y everiing, Gruber joined the olhtrs and made it unan imous to ask the city staff ttJ work with Division of Hi ghwa ys engineers to s-:?e if problems can be solv· ed "within the limits of ' the adopted route." Gruber later explained that he couldn't win his polnl so the next best \bing was to 'A'ork wllh !late highway engineers. "In trying to work this out they can't help but know the route's not satlsfac- tory," he said . Harold Glass, a freewy spokesman for Newpo rt Heights pro~rty owners, ap- plauded the council action . "We couldn't beli~ve it." he said for those In Ult au- dience. •·we.know ifs bee11 a hard, rough go for you."' EXHAUSTED EFFORTS f\fayor Dore~n 1'111rshall said , "We have over the last seven years. and 1 think justifiably, de voted c on a i d e r a b I t: 1 resources of lhe city. We've pretty well ' exhau!led our efforts to reopen. We should try to re.solve thla now for the best interes t of the city as a whole ." "That state1nent is Jndlcall ve of 11 defeatist attitude,'' said Gruber, durln« the afternoon \\'hen the will of the council n a whole still was not knov.·n. Shelton told Gruber, "There is no stronK community sen.imen t ror tht council to pursue this farther. On the con· trary, most of what we hear is just the opposite." "It will be a pur veyor of smoc and poUutlon in our community," pro\e11.td Gruber. He then argu~ for no freeway at a.II, but inst ead what he called "a super arterial system" -fenced.off hlghways llke Newport Boulevard headed up toward Costa J\.fesa. None of the other cuuncilmen saw it his way. Councilman Donald Mcinnis conceded 'vorking within the adopted route .jg the reasonable way to go at this poipt. "But ii 1 aee the engine~rln1 beilns cOJTiina: out like a Chinese Wall to emasculate Wt1l Newport, there is no way I will 1l1n," he 1'amed. From c .li lomi• A,fa•ns. Engogomeot Rings of locomp•r•ble uovty. CONVENIENT TERMS IJ\NKAMIRIC~D MAS TM. CHAR&E ·\ J.C. .J/.umphrie6 Je,;~fer6 I !Ill N,EWPO~T AVENUE COSTA MESA l 4 YIAU SAME LOCATIO~ PHONE 141-HOI • iagu na :Beael·: . DiTJ.OM • I VOL, 63, NO. 47, ~ SECTIONS, .'90 PAGES . ' . . . .. \ . • ; ~NESDA:Y, FEBRUARY 25, 1970 • • . . . . . . e - , u ··r\v Q ,.. ' - . Tas, bk.re1se A Precinct YES NO J, El Morro 223 306 :,; Sterling RJty. 131 310 I. City Hall 120 320 f High School 248 4.15 6. Top ol World 292 3.18 8. Fulmer Res. 184 279 t: smith a ... 140 271 3. Allso School Ill 273 , .. 3 Areh Bay 167 296 TOTAL ' 1628 2868 . ~bsenlee 18 31 <fJiAND "ror AL 1646 211119 -; .. • • L~gu~an~ -• . . . ,- , • • CJse .1n ... l -·- • ·voted Bond ·lssu~, -... ~ 'i" • > .. ll . ' T•• lecreue B T~ hcrt11tC lleildaD Tllal-Ttlallle&We 3 Override· YES NO YES till Y1ll 209 321 %31 296 J3ll 121 320 114 '1112 llJ l2I 3211 121 31$ UI 225 . 473 247 441 172 281 363 307 343 316 181 ~ 194 266 :· 135 274 139 273 10'/ 276 120 215 121 151 305 169 -294 173 1538 2944 1672 2807, 1729 20 30 21 _28. 22 ' i;sa 2174 1613 2835 1751 NO :v.a., illlO 5-1%" 188 4.11 328 4.15 421 105 3.10 157 257 468 272 412 2S2 387 2'3 468 2748 4535 28 so 2776 4585 V•rs 1317 .11118 1347 1727 1215 UM3 1078 1087 115$ 11,207 ' 40.9% -Bills Beaten .-.· 1; RICHARD P. Nill. < ...... c...,., ,, ...... ~ Be,aeh. Unified School District suffered en aeroas lbe bolr(I ~~a,t Tues- day as vOtert ~ndingly shot' down ijlree tax override ' me1Sures and a bOnd 1'sue . • . Gloom a~el.ecU<!o~lra!.~.disttlct I ' M I 7\.T L l... p •£flees. w\lere' leochm, pm n l 1' .l "\. New J el'~Y . om rate -J.~1'ei!i-uuors . rotes·t ;'r~f.'::.i_~;:~~~~a~~~.~~; ~ of vote tallying-wore on. 1 • .- u slll• g Birtl1 Dru g · · · Tbe early evtnlng trend with only two , ' • • · . precincts In was a sln>na vole 1galllll 1 1 1 -H-as Qum. • ·c1--.·plets -=-N OlSY-E.ater-v ~in:Lagu .... n ...... :a,,_. ---'~"--wi.'---~~1t'J.11Q!l -!l1!£" ''" .J-7 precincts reported. The' <1ere119f ·th,.. ~ I From Wire Services NEW YORK -'A Z7-year-o1d New Jers~y mother ui;lng' fertility drugs gave birth i. ·quinluple1'1 Tuesday nigh!. Doc- tors iaid today the thref: girls and t~·o ~s. delivered-in only 10 minutes, passed t~ir first critical test today and "'ere reported "doing fine ." Irritated by congregations of hippies in 1lld around the Tacu Bell, a group of Laguna Beach property owners and businessmen are demanding the city move to declare the eatecy a public nuisance. permanent and floating hippie com- munity. override lax lisues and the bond ilsue ap- proached a 2 to 1 m·argin. With a surprising larae turnout of 40.9 percent of tht electorate, 4,SBS or tJ,207 r;eglstered, results ""'ere : 0 • d 't " " 'I " l>- .'t u- lh " lk -Parents of the as-yet unnamed babies .,..-ere Mrs. Margaret Kienast and her husband, W~li~m . 33, a sil~man for the N!>O" Bal~Wl9 DivJ•con of Tenneco, Inc., •i!d a resl~enl of ~"' l!Ws. ~.tj. They have two other$ ~n. 8 .dauj:b\er, 4, •nd a son, 1 'II, both born after Mfe. Klena..'1. took fertility drugs. A petition signed by more than ISO merchants and residents o( lht area around 699 S. Coast Hlgl-"'ay was presented to City Manager James D. Wheaton Tuesday • The paper stroqgly urges Wheaton's or- fice to '.'commence proctedlngs to have the Taco .Jleu Rmiurant dee~ a public ~Ybiihuie:'O( ~WI~ assem~ly (ond) injaanltary C11ftdttldni from lack qi proper ontrol u to Ul1¢n1 and loltd. tt ' ~ Uni>jokileof~ ID the unhappy pell. tlonen, Pldljp1, _ the TOrranc,·bued chalJi now .~g • new H~ Ben WfsteftHwe lfattlecuc beef ~-chi~. ' Undir constant surveillance by Laguna Beach parcotics officers, the area is the scene of frequent drug arrests. A former manager of the Taco Bell once appealed to the City Council for help in ousting loiterers from the tables and planters In the restaurant patio, bu t was advleed police ··could ·net provide such servlee on private· property. An Ol'.dlna.nCe probib:IUQI siUin& or, l~ln& on Lo~· 1ltkw10..· has ""q -hat ' ;,, bl preilrvJng. the pallllc ri , ·WI)' o u i o I d'e lhe restaurant, but has done Ut:ti. \o dilc<lur"" lol!etlro-wlici d r·~ p e tbemalvea arOllnd Iha P'ljo walls. Tl-. city manqer'l<lfOC. llld Tuelcln 11>e pet1t1on would "" ltmtH '"'•r to t11e city 11torne1 for 1 lfiOI Oi>lnJon, } -ProptslU.. A, IS-cent override, l,64e yes \'Otes,' 2.899 no ovtes. ' -Propoo!U.. I . 40.cent override, 1,551 yes votes '2,974 no votes. -PropoliU. C, ZO.:Cent override, 1,693 yes votes, 2,835 no votes. . -PIOJIOl!lloo D, lf00,000 bolll\ Issue, 1,7$1 yes a,nd 2,771 r.), , . • . • l f(IGH 'T\llNOYf I I ~ l . "r:·~~T.: :i ~:: World' · 1 hed " 1 :t..1 o1 ............. ~ Of •Olen, 'Iii "' l,IA~ .. ~' ' .. ~~l'Od ·ll!f y~ ~al>· there Larl)l lf'l'!GI' ICliool ~DI, cali<d IN~ di~ bbt )ild the boon! will-b,,. -~-now and AIJI. l lo bolance 1 bud(el lnd sel • ' . ' . TodaY'11 ~ • l'"· 8•• ~>.:. • <' .. ',TEN CENTS . •' • • . e • ill ,. ,, ' ng ~I no he •n- hc JrfJJltlple births occur.about 40 pe~ otihe lime alter laking or the. ferlilltY drug, pergonal, the doctors said, 'Ind A-1rs. Kienast had known sinef: the 20th w!ek of her pregnancy that she woukl have at least four babies. Although the first 12 hours are lhe m~t critical for. such small babies, doctors aald they woy.ld not be consldt::red out of danger until from five days to thl't!e Weeks, depending On their 'size. _Three of ,the babies had dif(iculty breathing rimmediately after birth, and were treated with beat anc" oxygen. Doc· tors said they suffered from byallne membrane disease, the condition whlch tOok the Ille o( ne,,.·born Patrick Bou\'ler Kennedy, thl~d child of the late Presideiit Jahn. F. ~nnedy in· 1963. However, the condition has "°'' been c ... rrected In the three quirtf.s, doctors sa!Ji. Taco Ben l'Tesicl,enl Robert "fcKay an- nounced that-, ownen of the existing 311 l\:1ex1can cliOw out~ts Will have firSt. chanct: to op!n Hickory Bells, on or near their ~· sites. T~t should wake up the Sleepy HoUow conipltlnantr, ii not five them outright indlg~Uon. , The pc;~Uoft w11.1=ircUJated by realtor H. A. ·o·s~. piesldent of the Laguna Beach frorit Property Anociation and was siened by'most of ua ioo members. Ortega Uighway Speed Limit Cut As~ed iti' 4po San .Juan Capistrano l\1ayor Ed Chennl;k, concerned ibOut" the number of recent ·traffic ratalluts, cilRed for a 45- niue P.'!' hour maxln\um spttd limit on the ,ortega Highway at Tuesday'• eouncil meeUng. prioritlff·f~ "Fl year. · He sakl there; Is no mar&ln for any defldt l]iondJnc, """"' hi ve been ll50d qp, "Yt'hidl may or may not mean we'll have IOfDe deep cuts." Taylor Slid be pel'IO!llll)i, wuu)d not apee lo another tu electJoq this year: "I \HtJld tither spend the 13,!IUO Celedlon Cillt) O.. 11>mtlhl n1 else." Niguel Tra~t Map OK'<],:· Despite Salt Creek Tiff .. nd e<! al •r S' up led :he lut >UI "' he 1: I I ' i Tbe quints, six weeks premature, were put . in incubators as a matter o£ ''niuline," according lo doctoni at Colu~ bia Pl.'e!byterlan Medical Center where tbef· were deijvered in normal birth - not.,Caesarlan section. ~ . The fi~st. a girl, was born a~ 10;08 p.m. and weighed three pound!, !our ounces - the 1smaUest. Another girl )'as born one minute latei' a~ weighed three pounds, 13 ounces. foUowed by a boy at 10:13 weighing four pouiids, six ounces -the la.'rgest; a girl at 10: 16 Weighing thret PQUnds 14 ounces and a boy at 10:18 ftl.lhlng three pounds, eight-ounces. "rbey were six weeks premature, ac- cor4ing to a hospi~ spokesman; and a t&un of 16 doctws and assls~ts took p8rt1 n-1he--deliVery.-He iaii!~~;~aocton are optimistic" on the condJnOn .of ..the babies. lhe mother was in "sitllfactory'.' cOndition, and the rather }'II und~r· .. considerable straitt:" If the babies all live Wy will be the s!eond set of surviving lJuirrtµpleb In the United States -and the lixbi set In the World. The American quints w.-e bom S.ept. 14, 1963, to Mr. arnt·Mra. ~rew ~­ F'tscher of Aberdeen, S.J). Tile Jour 1lr1'1 ariit , one boy live in seclusion 'on the}r ftther's SW.acre farm west. of 'Aberdeen and their mother does no allow, them to make public appearances, aaylng sM wants them to lead a •-normal life." The ol.her surviving quints,Jnciuded the ramous Dionn e quintuplets, · bom In Callander. Ontarlo, l\1ay •~ .lt.14 -one died In 1954; the DillgenU qutrits, bom in loenos Aires! Argentina, July 15., 1MS; • the Prieto qulnta borii Sept. f. 1111, II , Monocolbo, Venezuela, arid the MUtarwda· qUtnta born Nov.1.1,Jll64.,ll ~e. ' . Eban Leaves Bonn t li.oNN JUPI), -• lsroell Foreign M1111ittt ~bbo-6t;on-ended Pb tirat vtsl~ to-Weal Germany .and ileparted for Lux- fmlloln'i locliy stl)I surrooricled by ex- traordinary BeCUritJ ~e:aUtlOM. Bban left lhe West German cap\t11l oiioard a federal border police helloopter \l.·bfth took off rrom the \Va1Jed garden l(ehlnd Cha1,oo;or WWy Bran41'• olflce. I Many otherSwith homes or bu.slnesses itr the> bipPif.haunted Sleepy Hollow. area also signed the petitton, evidently fed up y,;ith t~ who eat Qie:re, they Hna:er on Hke a breath of chili and onions. A copy of the petltlon,.seeklng closure and probably destruetion of the Taco Bell has also been forwarded to chain pres]· dent McKay. The Coast Highway establishment has been the target of complaints for some time. It Is across the highway from P..fystlc Arts World's psyched~lic gallery and store, also a fa.vorlte gathering ptaCe for melrlbers of the Art Colony'1 Nude Swimmer Found By Laguna Officers The City Council voted to postpoDe. a decll1on until Counci}man Tony Forster coold lllf!'1 with the Orange County ·Traf- fic Commltteeto diSCUSll lhe milter. Chermak' said that ucessl~e tiaffic has been created because or a nearby hot spdngs which lies outside the city limits v;hlch has become a "hippie haven."· He sa'id rt ports have shown that many of ·the accidents were influ~ed ·by the drivers' USe ot narootlca. · Chermak 'Said a petition should be circulated .asking the Orange County Health Dept. to close the hot springs. CouncUman Don Durnford 11akl that no parking signs shoulsf "be placed along the Ortega within the city limit.a as an added -rety pr,ecauUon. • St.Ck Market Responding to reports of a nude swim· mer "acreamirig'. afld yetlbl1" In· tl)e ·suit oft U)e 1500 bloc:k ol S. coist Highway ·at 1:.30 .•.m~ today._~•· Beach, pollct locatiil'lhi voCll;atblete era.Ung~-; NEW YORK (-AP).-The &tock-markel on bai Hands" ~and · ~. • no lotiif:r • beklAftto' 1 1ni'lll but fairly finn lead ln ~~~ • • 1 " • slualilh~tradl!'l~llfe this afternoon. (Set •om -ed ~"'""" N Good 22 ol quotallom, ·Pqa. IMtl. 11 ~ • -,.-~ • ' ' • Except ror' fd•l!sues involved in spe- ••• S. Cout111t1tnray, ~.Lljuna, oa da:I alt'ultkld, }llicts moved in a narrow -lclon ol'belril h~ lh public. r1111e. • Ta)llor ~d the bpard would begin lhl~ at the next meellng about prkXtttts and areas or cutback. :JpNkb{g ol the ·CJ1uroom nUo of puplls ID · te1cben: on. whlcA Lqu111 schObl offlclalt pri<!e lhemKlve•, .Toylor said, 04lt w• W"1t from a 25-to-l to 1 35- (S.. ELECl'ION, Pq e IJ Laird Explains . . Base Reduction· WASHINGTON (AP) -The upcoming maHtve reductionl ol. additional U.S. mUltary bases lndicli<d by Secrellry of Defense Melvin ~R. Laird is in keepln1 with riduCUon 6r American armed forets as Peiita~ IOW'Cta aay Involvement ln Vietnam lapers off. • Laird said Tuelday ·the reduction would Involve "wtll, over. 100 bues." other Defense. l)ep&J'tintnt olliclals said the cutback could afleCl u many as several hu~ •buea, IOme of which may be clooed~!(tgl!!. ~ Pentagon move1 which Laird saJd WOflld be opel!<d ·OUI In detail wlthtn a morilb, comes on top ot reductions or clooliip at IO'/ bl,.. In the United Stalu and-'·abroad annniuV'ed as -an economy measUrt illt· ~/. .. ·.36 Can·didates Ill Lists , . .... . ' V~ Badhani A mor~g First to Get Papers Tile l'frsl dlfMh 'ftl~ 1ltht county .• ,. taJ coJlector Don ·s. Mol.iey was the first U~. Se~tor1 ,J~ Ortrntn 4642 c)«kl1 ¥Olen ~ blirMU T\IO-to. nl• the'requlrtd 20 signatures. Brl1iihlll Dr .. Yorba Lindi,' 'inl!tietf, diy' wllh • cindkloliel lllrinl oUt Followtna Jo the llst of candidate1 who Republtcan: · --Piii'!!" IW '"'1erll, ol&le Ind. toilli ptperl olll Tuesd•Y • A_My, 19th Dlllrlct -Donald J. Tract map bonds for the .Laguna Niguel Oorporatlon· won approval of Orange Cooritj 1u)iei'vilor1 Tuesday despite an .lr1Uft.t.~lihat19a~ ·brl.efly, over lack or public ·actess fO.Salt,Gfeek Beach. Both ~ the s'ubdlvlsions ror which th e County board wu asked to approve boads to guarantee ln)jlrov~men&.s ~ a.dJact'nt to the mum.debated beach between Three Arc~ Bay· fn South Laguiia. and Dana Polht. SUpervlsor, Dav.id L.. Bi~r protested Uiat' ~'e Laguna N!guel qorporaUon was New Playhc;>use ~~ur Thurs<{ay · Gillded 'tOOra of' the 1 new · Laguna- Moulton Playhouse and a Mexk:an 'dlnner Wll1" tiiihlilhi 11Nrsd8y Wiiitfr Festival ..I • ~ • 'I ' evenls m· Laguna· Beach. · TOuni' of' the ~layhoust ilt 606 Laguna CanyP.'1,Road will be coqducted free or ch!rP trom t. to S th.ml.- The~ ·Women's Society o[ Christian Service ol th& Laguna Beach United Methodist Olurcb, 21e3:2 Wesley Drive, SQulh , ~11. Will Jerve •a "Comlda Mtxtcafx:"~ lit~ ij,urth f1'<1m 5 to 7 p.m. 'l'icbts'ote IUO. . Aloci. .. -Tl)wsdJoy, Winier FUtiY111 vt!ltoi;s mll}•.,vjN-workshoRa in session al the 'Sc?>OI <(1 Art and Design's all-day 0(><51 -at·630 Loguna Canyon Road. A<lmlailoil. ~ f(OO., The ~JIUM'. Cla!i, Gulkl'• .Ari! and CraltS Filr continues on 1Jlt· Ftstlval of Art111•1riti lr1111•IO lo 5 p.m. Adnl!Albn rree.1 · i!. , • .~. 1 • • • CG01111Y ollll;a. I ,\--• U,I. Cwtr••> 1$lh Dhilrlcl -Allred s-. 11171 M .. ler, Aneholn!. elec- -....., !lie Ptly blnli wert Ramirez, JIG 11. Idaho Sl, Lo Habro, Ironic•· tachnlcl... Americon lrdepen-B' a:..rv. -10 Tes~if"y Rep. James , 8. UU. (ft..IJ'UIUri) and rul tltl~ -.te-..n, Amer I c 1 n dent. ·. , __ ,~ 1 ...... bl,_,_ E. --(11-I~ . 70lh Dlllrlct -Robtrt H. Burke (Jn. • I Newport Bed) o!!d Robert H. Jl.urke CR· :l<lh Dlstrlcli'-WU\lom J .. T•-· cu'!'benl), 1311 Molory, 11\Jntlnlt<>n· "1!'i\5HINGT9N (UPI) , Sen. Birry Hunlin~ Beach). ·102'2 Sta~_Gorden Grov \lluliMP .Belch, ·Repu~. ... 1 ,. voiawaler (II-Ariz.), •ald lodoy be pl1n1 Both locurnbeot ce·repo;eien-admlni!<ra R<publlcan1 y, ',I.One 7taU>btr1cl-' lloliert B. 8'idbain (hi·• ID.' ,i .. • I deposKlon In San Wronctaoo tin& <>ranp eoa.t too~ out •KiiJ,ht, lltl ohlf\;Cll'clo,-~ ij.-,'WrnlWtnt), UJt <1"1M A•.t .. \(°"'"" MaY9" Jo11•pl,.Aliloi.11Ubel-'"1l1gllllll papers. Allon E. All • tltllrlct w tl>IM,, it.ii, " ., 1 • 1 BHeh, Mi>ol!Uoon0~• t..wold.: .. s.. ~ llqa>ine·al lht r~l of ,AJJoto'1 Povld L. Bal<er Se<ood Dlltrlcl, were 3Sth Di1il!ct.m Jon\u' IL UJ\' ffn. li~el, :aMfielm. ..,.,._pet'~. anornay. • early In \lne. cumbenl), m:i ~· Catalino' SI.; Si\ita I An¥ricon. !~,,..... ·· • -· ~ Goldw1ter Hid he .did not know . IWl>i!rt L. Citron, 1 dlpuly tu collector Ana, R<publtca~,'. ']1'1111~ M. ·Wilcoxen\~ -,....., ol ~·· ovl1jl onyililna about prl_~!J>al>.' Jn, tlie Looi< for \en years w11 flrlf ln \lne liking up 411 Legion SI., r..pna lleacn, attorney. I Dlltrlct ~e.1111n1 W)Jl:l>ir. lllll ll• lltOf)' for which Allilto la llllnf'Look lor another depu)l tu colocl« and 1 rival Rtflubllooo J 1t -,.. • IS.. CANDIDATil, PIP I) NU llllllloo. ~ . ' ' , ' • offering no porvlslon for Public aocess to the beach. County Counsel Adrian .Kuyper ·ruted thal the board h.ad no alternative but to apJ)fove the bontfs and Jmprovementl as they had approved the 1iract, maP,1-alat July. · ·· ' 'i.1o · Supervisor Robert W.' Ballin W.ntecfto ileruse lhe action and Jet Larina Nlgy!I go tD court. He ~ by~a 4 to J vote~ t But Board Chairman 'Alton E. Allin or LBgµna Beach, pointed OU,t tha,t .'a "cqm- mllUe of ~ty tjepor\meot heads was worl<lng with l'8(Ulia NJiuel executll'!!s l:iward 'the proyJslon 'of j>UbUb ICC'eU to the beach. • t .....,. "We have every reason tObeU~ (he&e efforts win succeed,"~llen laid ' The Salt Creek.tuue arose1 \nl]~ thin & year ago when It was pohited out.jlfat 'tbe supervisors bad a'liandoned Salt Cr"k Road, strelctl·,.,·rudwlf 1t!ldlng !roll\ Pacific COul H!ilh•ay liJ a poliil near lhe beach, to llle d6doDeri. · Loguna Nipal had prevlciosfy ia)d 1Jl<y w'\llted to kttji the bead> priv1le !or' 1~ 1111.000 pe<iple who Wtll eventua\ly "1"1Wbif Uie ~velopment, but retently they have weakened under' preSSUJ'e tram reetea· tlon groups and, the cou11ty~ • ''Oranj e -•' . Coast :.Vea.titer ' t . t Whf '11lln a good lhlng? lt'fl be just• I:' IUMY Thurlday, ·witJl•hl&ll cloitds and temperate tefi!per1~ In the .Jower 7IJs a1.,;g. lhe ar..,. Coast INSID • • I . I f, 1 OAILV PILOT L -Solon Walk• Otat ......... _ ..• Coast Man • Pompidou Given .. Died Firing, -' ' Polite Reception WA5"1NGTON CAP) -Frtnch Preoi· dent Georsts Pompldou l't'l a polite hear- tnr in Congress \Vedne1d1y -despite the incom:picuous walkout of OM member - a1 he said Middle Eastern peace should be sought Utrouah 1 four-power con· ,,...,co. Rtp. !,<lier L. W•llf (0-N.Y.), got up \} frotn hlJ: litlt near the middle or the .big ( HOUH chamber and walked out as Porn~ pldou began speaking. There ~'1$ no noticeable r;tJr . } Pompidou had just recci,,,ed about two ~ mil\ute~ of applause from the audience l in U,. l11~l111n-lull d!lmbu. ~ rt appeorod U.ot •bout :soo ol lilt 434 HOIUe mfmbol$ 1M IO of U.. tOO litliatorJ •tteftd•4- 1ol!m"1• opJIOHd to Fr•~~·· r,liddl< \1 Eail.pollcy, u1~ct1)ly U.e oal~ ol plan!• to Ubya, had •1'1•~ a boycott. Hpwtver, Jioqtt employe1 helped fill ,( the viclnt 11e1t1. alon& with the Cabinet } "'1d • hlll• lurnout or U.e <llplomatlc C(lrpS. · The Capitol wu heavily guarded by poll~11nd Secret Service 11enta -the J tl1btest aecurllY. orie police offld1l uld, ~ ir'I •b«lt 14 )'91rJ. ~ POf"pldotl't 11peech. tran1l1ttd into En&llsh P1r•P'•Ph by par•cr•ph, was in· terrupted el1ht lirr'es by 1ppla~ · - never tumultuow. But some stnators cried "Vive I• France," as he lert. to mart applaine, palltinJ to dl1kt h1nd.s. 1'ltra w11 1ppl1uae even w~n the · l'T'"cll pr11ldent '8id' •I ~1101' me, ff a fritnd, fO fflJ YOlJ that U.e ,.4 o! 'the wor In Vietnam, !0<.-U.. United Sta~s. will be the most worthy of victories -a victory· won first over . oneself." Pompidou made no mention in his ad· dreu of the arms sale or ether specific controversies, and mentioned Lhe Middle E11t disputes only briefly. • '1Jelleve me.'' he Wd. "France'• \n. tentlons In lhe face of these conflictt h1.s • never bttn to be detrlmentaJ lo any na· tion nor to serve another. We .seek, \\•e \\'ant only peace." lie ristated Fr8Ilce 's position that Israel ha1 the right to exist ln security 1s an Independent and sovereian ala,!e, and criUcilod tile contlsnllnl hosl!lllle1 ,lq 'the area. "'!'ho -... tile pr0<orl9UJ and -In the lw nin -mrile 111lllre or the victories &~Md?" ~rnpldou uktd. "Who does not understand that there ls no assured fqture for f.sr1ei ~ide a l1stin11nteflt• with tht-worl~ whle!h 11.1r· rounds It -enteti~ which lmpllea renun· claUon of military conqu111t and tbt 10IU· Uon of the Palestjplan problem?" He added, referrln1 to the four-power conference of U)e United States. P'rencll, Britiih aitd Soviet ambassadors to the United Nat1on1: "Such a reaull, ln a situation where fetllnp~ are fanaUd!m are increasing dilly. should, to be quickly reached, pro- ceed from United N11ions action and in particular rrom the agreement of the four permanent members of the Security Council tq dertne •nd propose the gener1l cqnditions for a •lllement and to prqvide the auaranwes for It." • -Wilcoxen-Takes Swipe At Utt in Kickoff Talk •' .· William Wilco1m'11 . c1mp1lan for Congre11waan 't 11 lontly Tu~aday. APJ)f'Oxlmttely 200 per10T11 attended a kicltoff luncheon In Laaunt Beach and heard him ratlle the c11e or h11 arch con· servatl\Tt oppoMnl. F-tp. James Utt IR· Tustln). who has held the 35t.h di1trict seat_•!net 1~. ~ Wilcoxen said, In tSlitnce, that his op- ponent b 1ppalllng1y OU1 or tO¥ch wJlll llle times and doesn't even understand the problems of hi1 dllitrlcf. ·Youl\I and old listened and applauded the hometown boy. Many pled1ed telephone or precinct work and money. '"There ls an uraent need for repre5cn· tat.ion In Lht »th District -tepre5en· taUon that la: not afraid of Lhe real pro~ ltms or lhe dey," t1id the Laguna 1 Beach Republican. 1 "All the counlry -and the world is ..... eingagtd In committing collective suicide. -. f\ly opponent ls urging the destruction of f. Vietnam to save It -is talking about the dangers of rock music and is urging us to sever relations with the world. • "He eit.btrdoesn't know or Vi'On't worry :._ about the real problems of the day as he tilt11 against one wlndmill after another.'' During his talk. the 37·year-old al· torne~·. a Jong.time \\' o r k i n g con· ser\'allonist. hitched his waR;on lo both en vlronmtntal issues and NI x o rt Republicanism. He also took frequent jab1 at Utt. , Said Wilcoxen , "One of p resident Ni~· on·s conctrns is ending the war in Viet· nam and I airee ~·ilh lhe President on ~ this issue and in his methodology. .. "The nectsslty for population control and conset\'llion or the quality of life i! ab&0lutely crucial. Richard Nixon .says it is now or never. "That is my conclUJilon. yet there is no evidence that ~1r. Ult evin reco&niits ~ny problem. That would be humorous If it "'ere not so tragic." \Vil cortn i>aid he had not been active in partisan politics and belong1 to no faction o[ the Republican party. "I have been too busy solving problems," he aaid. "l have DAllV PILOT 0AAl($1 CO.t.ST ,Ul~l.MitHG COMl'AH'f l•ltrrt N. w.,, ''h ll!MI .... ,.Wbi.tr J .,~ ~. Cvrl•v \"tr ,tH>t ... t ''' G.nt•tl Mtl'llW Tht,.11 IC11~+I .ldl .... Tbo'"'' A. Mv111~•nt M•~tllftt l••1t• _;,~,r4 I'. Nill L•"""t trot~ (It~ IGI~ L..t ... h•• OHkt tit "••11! A"t~v• M•ili11t M41tt11 ,,0 . &t1 666, •t65l Otti.t Offk" C•I• Mtu;,. Wo• ••v '""t Mt*WI a.t<ll• nu w"1 •11Mr a...11~••• ~lllfltr'I iMdll Hf/I kW. l "l•l •t•• boon lifhtln( and rtprtsenling people - trylna: to 1ave a little bea.ch here -a park in the Capistrano Pali1ades -and Stl up a drug clinic. . Wilco1f:n. who battled .In court to sa ve access tO Salt Creek, s1id he had written Utt "relatfve to shoreline and coastal zone protection ... "and his answer In- dicated a tot1I lack of a1vareneaa that any problem exiJt.ed. '' The ctndldate · said the problem is urgmt. "I know ~'hat is happening in lhe 35th district todty -not 20 years ago - but · today ." Wilcoxen :iaid the old courthOUse in Santa Ana moved lo a 11'.leaming skyscra per and the rinches have long since ~rought ln execuUves who u?lder~land the (acts. "Ytt." he said. "\\'e heve horse and buggy Congressional represrntation and it is not Rood enough . It is not grea t enough fot the most dyn a1nlc. excitlnl!: district in the country wlth vast potenlial for greatness but equal potential for disaster.'' Wiicox en asked how many persons mo\Ted to the district so they could breath. He said they could still swim in l.a.guna Beach but they can't in "1onterey Bay. The candidate said. "I kn a\V this district from f'olUltain Valley to La Jolla, from Scripps Institute lo the Ford Plant at Corona del Mar. J know the people and their problems and I know I c1n represent them all because f have done it." Margei·y Maa s Services Slated funeral iser\Ticrs "ill b4 hel · at 2 p.n1. Thursday in Sheffer La;una Beach Tltortuary for Tl1argery Tll. Tllaas , 57. who died Tl1onday at her home, 1154 Brooks St.. Laguna Beach. A native of New York City. !o.lr1 . Tlfaas had been employed by the J. C. Penney Co. for 15 years and was ~·ilh the firm·s Fashion Island branch prior to her retirf-' menl because of illness. She is survived by her husband , Frank \V. ~taas. of the home ; 1.1 son. Frank W. lilaas Jr. and a daughter !o.-1rs. Joanne S. !o.larUnseo. bolh ot Santa Ana: her father, \Vslter S. McCullouah of Laguna Beach; a sister ~irs. Jean Harrell of t.aguna Beach : and by aeven grandchildren. Interment wlll be a Melrose Abbey. Phyllis Benett Funeral Friday Servlcts will be held Frld8y 1t 2 p.m. in Sh~fler Laguna Beach Mortuary Chapel for Phyllb Benett or 481 Cliff Drive. Laguna Beach, who died Pt1onday 1t South Coast Community Hospital. She was at. f\.trs. Beneu., a natl\•e of flllnols. had Jived In Wruna for 10 )'tars ind w11 ac· tl\Te in the: 1:-lsun• Beach Woman's Club. the Garden Club and the O.ught111 of the American Revolution. She: ls survived by a aon, John \V. Benett ol C•noi• P1rl<' 1 doqhter, Mrt. Sw:aMe Welch of Sen Jose; and by ttven ara~hlldren. Pri te intennent will bt at Oakwood hlem al Park. tSbtf er Laeuna Beach Mortuary are director a. SUPPRE SSED DESI RES -Starring in one ol three one-act plays Friday and Saturday at San Clemente High School are ( fron1 left) Barbara Olsen . Mike Peduzi and Tricia Bohrer. Curtain time is 8: 15 p.m . Play bill includes comedy-farce, plus a tragedy and, for closers, a melodrama. From Page 1 ELECTIO N ... to·I ratio. w! could cut out JO ll!achers but ~·hat's the result goina to be? .. Taylor .said ht hoped U1e election results were not any indication of dissatlsfacUon "·Hb . school progra.tn. ''fl is qulte cvldenl rrom all the tests and in· rorinallon 1hat the staff i:!I doing-an ex-. cellent jo b," he sa id. "I have to believe that the results are definitely lle:d Jo the finan cial outlook which may or rpay not rightfully exist in the country today." .The loss was the second defeat at the poU.s in less than one year fqr the school district. A Sl·cenl override was defeated April JS. 1969 with 1,772 yes votes to 2,292 no votes despite !he fact that all seven can· didates for the school board had endorsed it. LOStNG MEASUllES The dcfeal~d propasitions, which could have passed or failed indi vidually or cllmrnulatively, were for : -A. 'library 'bOoks. ·CI ass room materials, text books. ln·servict tralnini, health seM'ice. additional staff groWth. teacher salaries. and transportation. -B . Transportation, maintenance. operation, equipment replacement and additional fltaff aod sat1rifs. · -C. Bus purchase. -D, Land acquisition and deve\OJ)ment ror both recreation and a future school site. \Villla1n Ullom, distri ct superintendent, said he did not ihink the vote was a defeat of the program since the edu ca· tional program was not under fire during the election campaian. REACHED LIMIT ''Taxes have reached the upper limita ror the majority of our taxpayers," said UUom. "Better communications must be tstablishcd the voters on per student costi; in the district. \\fe made an effort to communicate with the leaders of. the community but apparently didn't do a very good job." Ullom'said that areas of cutback would have to include a study of the pupil· teacher ratio. He said areas of cutback 1,1·ould also include a serious look at ex· tent of transportation that can be given and also at supplies and materials. Ho1vever. he said. "Any major savina 11:ould have to be in the area of person· ne:L" ... /\fler th:inkins pupils, parcnls, ad· ministration and board_ members '\\'ho worked for passaae of the propositions. Ullom said, ''Perhaps our morale is low but ~·e are a tight·knil group and we'll come back with the evidence that will allow for proper community support.'' Clemente High Staging. 'Evening of One_-acts' San Clemenit •ligh School drama classes will present their annU.tl pro-_ ductlon, ''An Evening of One·AotS" on Friday and Saturday. Three different styles of plays wlll be see n. The first is Susan Glaspell's "Sup- pressed Desires." II is a comedy.farce on psychoanalysis and st.ar1 Barbara Olsen. Mike Peduii, and Tricia Bohrer. They are all mCmbcrs of the International Thetpln 1Soclety . 1'he second play is a !ragedy. Lord Dunsany·s "The Jest of Rahalaba" is a production that includes spirits and magic. It stars Don Cro~·ell , Rae Threadgill, t.tark Mannina and Drew Anderl!Oll. A melodrama entitled, "Ht Ain't Dolle Right by Nell" will ~lose the evening. This caat Includes Brenda Quinta, Kim H1milton, Sam Besse, Renny Klutcher. Pam Burnette, Chuc-Raht and Jim Ashbrook. · ~ ' . ' Maddo x Chided I For Outburst \Vi'-SHINGTON (UPll -Speaker John \V. ~tcCormack chleded Gov. Lester r..taddox of Georgia loclay for pas.sing out pick and ax handles in the House restaurant. Rep. Charles C. Diggs ( D· t.1ich.), proposed to declare Maddox unwelcome here1fter . TltcCormack. who is.sued an order Tuts· day that resulted in clcar:ig half a dozen of the go\·ernor's weighty trademarks out or the restaurant, told reporters today: ··11 ~·as inappropriate for t~1addox) to do ~·hAt he did.'' Dl1gs. one of nine Negro House members, came close to tangling physically with Maddox Tuesday when he discovered the governor was distributing his celebrated "plckrick drumsUcks" to guests. capitol pollct and others ln and around the retaurant. Diggs said today he '\\'as considering fil· ing a slander suit against Maddox. who called him an "ags" and "baboon" during table where ~laddox sat with a Georgia sLate patrolman. 'fhe curtains part at 8: 15 p.m. in !ht Trito11 Center. Tickets "'ill $1 _!_or childre.11 and students with a stu:lent body card and Sl.50 for adul!.3. They may be purchased at the door. Mrs. Ca se Plans Co tu'l Ac tio11 Tilt years have not been kind to Alice Case. F'irsl she l0&l her only child, U1en her husband. Now she nlay lose the home she planned to spend a peaceful retirement in. Her home was builL on the wrona Jot in Capistrano Beach and for month& she has been qulelly waiting for tht legal tangle to be straightened out. But today she told the DAIL'(.PlLOT that she b,g!ling to court. . • 1 She has ln!truded her atlolJiey to file a suit against tharles Larraway, the Newport Beach contractor who agreed to build her home. Vernon Stanley. supervising deputy of the Contr8ctors State Llcen1t Board in Anaheim said that a formal complaint 11sainsl Larraw11y has been filed with lhe attorney general 's olflce . The contractor, who claim! the mistake was made by 11 subcontractor, has been lrying to settle with the owner of !ht wTong lot, t.trs. Stella Randall of La Habra. lie reportedly offered her $4.000 to be paid in one year at 10 percent interest rilus Mrs. Case's lot which Is adjacent to ~1rs. Rahdall 's property. Mrs. Randall \Von 't budge. So ~1rs. Case must go lo court. \\l hll e her nearly completed home stands empty at 34580 Via Verde she pays rent on a small apartment in Dana Point. She already has exptl'lded most of he r life savings on her new home. Now she has legal eltpenses and a continued strain 1•t'hich she says has undermined her health. Despite what promises lo be a lengthy court battle and an uncertain future t.·1r1. Cast. is determined lo ha\Te her home. "I'm not going lo give up now ," she said. .Police Say 8y JOANNE REYNOLDS Of tM .,...., 1"1111 '"'" Fa;ta.l\y wounded with a bullet in hi~ chest, Baycrest reildent W 11 t t am McKinley. Harris fired away with his o.w.n revolver at hif·murderers before f•lling dead on bis front poi'.ch. That's how Newport 8 e 'ch in· vestigaLors reconstructed the I a s t moments of life for the 60-year-old retired mov>e producer after he ·~ pare'1Uy surprised bur1lar1 in his home al 2012 Anchor Way P..tonday n!Jh!. His body was discovered Tuesday morning by neighbors, aprawled acros! 'the doorway bl his home, still clutc:hin1 hi s .33-<:allber revolver. In · recoostructjng the c r i m e , in· vesligators said the suspect or suspects probably entered between 8 and 10 p.m. through an unlocked bathroom window at the rear of the home. Marris was apparently wat c h In g television at the front of the house , when he heard intruders and went to in· vesllgale. ofricers reported. The victhn wa s standing In a hallway '"hen he surprised the '"ould·tw; burglars in one oi the bedroom!. It was then, polict speculate. that Harris wa• shot. Harris had a .38-callber re\Tolver which he used in his losing batlle with assailants, officers explalneQ. An unknown number or shots were fired as I.he dying man chased the suspects down lhe hall 'and out the door , where he fell fatally wounded. ln\lesilgLl.Ors uid the burglars ap- parently had not .Uiken anythina; when they were surprised. Harris' was car· rying several hundred dollar! and a valuable diamond ring When his body was found : they noted . . · ·• Pol!ce said they've turned up nothing In indicate the assailants had been wounded in the shooting. Harris was follnd clut· ching his gun. but the murder weapon has not been recovered. they reported. All but one neighbor sald they heard nothing during the night. Harris' next door neighbor said she heard commotion and noises late P.1onday night which 1he did not ir.\'estigage. From Page l CAN DIDATES • • Or.. Santa Ana, ao vernment auditor, Republican. County Tax Collector: Robert L. (!Sob) Cilrone. 1525 E. Vance Pl., Santa Ana, deputy taJ: ~ollecLor; Dlvld G. H.itchcock, 14342 Clarisaa Lane, Tustin, coUnty budget direclor; Joe R. Greene, 13391 Elizabeth \Vay. Tustin, deputy lalt col· lee tor Coun ty Super\·lsor: 2nd District - David L. Baker <Incumbent ), 9452 Royal Palm Blvd .. Garden Grove . 4lh District -Ralph E. Wrlaht. 8~1 Orange, Orange, public works employ· ment. 5th District -Alton E. Alien On· cumbent), 2535 Ttmple Hill.5 Dr .. South Lagu na , County Clerk: \Vllliam E. St John fin· cumbent), 1332 Greengrove, Oranire. Public Administrator: James E. Heim (incumbent ). 28401 Granado, San Juan Capislraoo. County Recorder: J. Wylie Carlyle (in· cumbtnt), 2401 N. Flower, Santa Ana . SherUf.Corone r: James Mu&lck On· cumbent sheriff), 1&06 Louise St.. Santa Ana : l\Iarshall Norris , lB\6 E. Collins, Orange. criminal court clerk. Cov,nty Treasurer: Ivan H, Swanger (in· cumbent), 107 La Ronda, 'fustln. County Auditor: V. A. Helm On· cumbent), 16932 Heim A\Te .. Ora115e. Judge -Superior Court: No. 3 - 11erbert s. Herlands (incumbent), 2547 N. Forest, Sant11 Ana. No. 8 -Ronald M. Crookshank On· cu mbtnt), 1505 N. Flower. Santa Ana. Cory Alleges Road F und Trick ,From Colilomi• Arfaons , Eng•g•m•nt Rings of lncom~•roble oeouty, .' SACl'l~1ENTO <AP) -A.sse.1nblyman Kenneth COry ID·Gardert Gr.11e l, say9 a S47 million surplus has been 'fn.1ilt into the State Highway Fund bud11et I.ls a glm· mick Lo avo id raising taxes durlng an election year. Cory·s comment came during a hearing by the Assembly . Finance and"'Taxatlon ., Committee on a bill to reduce lhe gasoline tax by one rent lo six cents per gallon . Spon80red by Assembl)'lTlan Mike Cullen (D·lcng Beach). the bill was ba s- ed on Highway F'und figure.s \\'hich in· d\cale $47 million in highy,·ay projecl& ~Ill be deferred in the com in& fiac:al year. The tu cut would only lad unUI the deferred project.ti were reactlvattd. 1lle bill provides authority for the gov~mor lo declare I.ht return lo a full seven<ent ga!IOllne ta1t. Thomas Carroll. represenUng the Public Works Department. said the ap- parent st:rrplus sboukf not ~ rttumed to motorl11la In ti ·rorm of a....W cul- bccau1e. It would be needed as paft of the department's normal ctsh flow. CONVINIENT TUMS IANKAMERICARO MASTER CHARG 1 J.C. J/uttip~ric6 JcweferJ llll NEWPORT AVENUE COSTA MESA 14 YiARS SAME Lc:iCf;TION PHONE 5~1-3401 "We bnve no 11ecret account.'' C.irroll told the committee. tn rtpty lo C01')''1 1 ,remark~ ·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~__) ( r \ I '1 I I I I I I I I I .. I CINIWlf l lYt, .. , CllNINAW POMe1111- POMON• 'fAlllY CINTll I ti.I Of I ·fOUllTAlll·YALL MAllOI llVI , t lllN r' " y.. I { llOllTN LOllO lllACN f, IOUfN 111111 Al CIUllY -LH•OIACN- lOi COYOlll, IPllNG Al WOOOIUIP AllANllM·llUl llA PAllK llACM llYD. I UMCOlN NUllTlllOtOll UAC IOlDIN ¥f.llf & llHNGll .. Wtdn@sda1, J~nu1ry 28. 1970 -------..r·----- YOUR CHOICE Values to 1.50 AllANllM.fULlolllTOll WIST COVIii~ OIA"IGl lMOl,I Af LIMON AtU'A A'tl, Al ,Uf N11 _SANT ll AIL_ • OAllOlll OllOYI 111. GIANO AVI, If lffM 111111 CNAPMAN I ll00•11Uttl llOllTNlllOOI. •••••• t l VO. If ••voHtltll llUllllAllK IAN Pll,..ANMI l lVI , Al IUllAflllf DAILY PILOT f f .. ......... Cll M.tWINOl:NI l lVt;' lr-rr.tATtt;mt._ CA-A l'Allt( T<IPi,..,,_ CANYON l 'VI, Al IOIC .. I -• fl DAILY PILOT L Wfdntsdi11, February 25, l1J70 :Save ota Taxes -7 "' .f)'O: Investment, Auto ' . , .• ·' • ·" . ' .· Mean Deductions .•·By SVL\llA PORTER ; <tn coUJborallon with The , ~kt.!iearch lnstllule of America) • : , 1r yOU are a stock market 'fuvcstor. you may be able lo deduci the cosll'i of your trips lo your broker's ofJ1ce -de- : pending on the reasons for )'OUr trips. IN ONE CASE, a woman ' Investor lived and did htt work in a one-room apart· :ment i~ New York City. About once a Wetk, she traveled by taxt to and from her bank where she ha<t a custodial aC- count tor her !ilocks, and about once a month, she took ta:tis to aod fram her. broker. • The Tax Caurt accepted her e&limate !hat it cost her $3 for a round trip lo lhe bank :1md $2.SO for a round lrlp to ,her broker -and permilted .her to deduct these amount! '.a.'> expenses in canneclion wilh her investment act.iviUes. But, in another case, an in· ·vestor drove lo his broker's office during lunch hours prl· marlly to watch the ticker tape in order to get a "feel" for the markeL He too de- ducted his travel expenses to and from the broker as invesl· rnent expenses. The Tax Court. however, couldn't !lee ho1v tape wotching helped h1n1 in his stock transactions and decided instt:ad that it reflect· ed "pen;onal interest. enter· Jainment or curiosity." brokers a~ut developments In the vicinity, checked pouJ· ble maintenance prabletns on the property, etc. It you , an an etnploye or 5elf..employed puson. use your car partly for pleasure and partly for business travel, you can use a shorl-eut to figure your allowable auto de- duction ror I.he bw;inw por· ti on. 1NsTEAD OF keeping track of and deducting au your act- ual business travel expenses, simply keep tr,ack or the number or m.Ues you drove on buSi.rtess and then deduct a nat IOc a mile for the first 15,CKKI of ' business mUes and 7c a miJe thereaJ'ter as aJ. lowable business travel ex- penses. For instance. if you drove ZZ.000 business miles in '69, you can deduct $1 .500 (IOc per mile {or the flrllt 15,000 miles) plus $490 (7c a mile ror 7,000 miles), or a total or $1.990 as your bw;iness car expenses. Promoted SO lF YOU claim-a ·deduc· ~tion for trips to yoor broker. be ptepared lo show reasons :more substantial than \\'atch· 4ng the stOCkliCker tape. A similarly tough attitude against deductions claimed ror the expenses of simply "looking" at investment prop- erty turned up in the case of r.tr . Ha nley. who lived in lo11;a and owned undeveloped acre- a~e in the vicinity of Tulsa, Oklahoma. where his mother resided. The properly consist· ed or timber and pasture land v.•hlch produced only nominal income. and dur ing SC\lera l visists to Oklahoma he "look· cd at" it. llanley then tried lo deduct 20 percent or his traveling cost! between Iowa and Oklahoma on the basis that this portion represented cost applicable to his invt!l· ment property. But the court turned down his deducti on be· cause he simply went lo 'look at" his investment property and accompUshed nothing else. But ir you bought a car last year or are making time pay- ments on a car, the optional mileage method may not be your best choice even lhoogh it's so simple. The reason 1s that lhe oplionDI mileage deduction is allowed ini;tead of "operating and fix· ed'' costs allocable to busl· ncss use or the car -such as costs of "gas, oil.laxes on gas and oil. msurance. Uce tags. and depreciation." The Treasury recently added to this list of it.ems replaced by_ the optional deduction-an-iif..--locable portjon of sales tax omas · Grady, 41, and interest on purchase of vice president of manu· Hanley's chances of 11uc· cessfully deducting his travel expenses ~·ould have been much better had he -on ar· ri ving in Oklahoma -asked fhe car and the instrucUons facturing for AJ\.1F's lo the '69 Form 1040 now wheel goods division specifically require that any has been promoted to sales tax and interest you the nc\v position of vice would other.vise claim as president of operations itemized deductions must f1r5t for A~1F's \V. J. Voit be reduced by the business Rubber Corp. in Santa portion covered by the option· Ana. Grady resides in al mileage rieduction. Costa ri'1esa. SO IF YOU bought a car _________ _ Last Decade Shows Dip in State Growth California population growlh slowed during the past decade, Security Pacific Na t Ion a I Bank report s. An ave rage an. nual statewide gain of 447,400 during the 1960's is down fron1 513,100 per year during the 1950'1. " Declines have octurred in Cross,vord Puzzle ACR OSS l Suri ounded ,, 5 Boc's re latlvf! 9 Bowlf!r's problem 14 Number l!I Ort ldt what 1pptars In pr(nt lb ··· lin rn l 7 Yl ort out lri detail 19 ·····Isle Str31l 20 Asla11 m onarch~ 21 F',u\ ol tilt htad 2) Check 24 L!osl b1na1 27 t.laglstrate cf Ven ice 2'1 P.rf!pa1 f! fer lnt1t1std p!'od uttlon: 2 wcrrls 31 Kind of trlmrn1l 35 Anclf!n\ Roman goddess 17 Callt!d J'J Ont cubit '1\tter 4a Express son ow 47 Malhematlca l re!ationshlp 4'1 Numbt r 50 Ofl1te workrr: Informal 52 Ccmmunieallon 54 Not cclcrf ul 50 Belitt le 59 Eurcpf!an bZ Alflrmativt rrply b4 Rtslllura nt pa\rcn t.5 Removed b7 Th t! fct: 2 ...,crds Yeslf!rda~'s Pu1tle Solv~d: • ., 9 Rrl1trd • '" ' . co ' . 2125170 7a Orie preo111· tng fot ~ '11ny day 71 Sat1r by blood 11) Donates ll<1sonic 11 Livr!y tun e ord~r 72 l'irlshman's name 73 Of Qutst1cn• ablf! me11t 74 lndependr nt 75 Sp1nlsh 1rllsl DO 'Ulj lZ Land body 41) And not lJ P1onou11 48 Fish · 18 City 111 ratll\9 Nrw York mammal Stalr S 1 Happy 22 Steal 53 Removrs 25 Spanish 55 "Aw1yl": ladlrs: 2 words Abbr. 57 S1dl119 26 Mass or mal rrial 1 C.oncrrnln9 abnormal Sa Cit/, of 2 Fo1.11-m1nu\e tlssur Ila Y man 2S Anrsthr\1c 59 Footba ll J "I don'\ J~ -·--srrv1tudr play hrlievr 3Z Tending lo 60 Brightly 11•" dress up colored lish 4 words 11 Oo a house -Cl C:.u!y ~ P•o aud con hold chore slate of dlscus~ioo )~ IJa l dr •·•·. pum~c~ 5 P.t10srs~lvr Hr&d.1cht b) Arcturus, (! St1tr: Abbi. 35 Bird~ lor ont 7 \.ot1tion Jb Fuel fib Annoy No rthrop Tells Sales lue1·ease Put the 'AX' OVER THE COUNTER I.It TAXES 42 Echc rani;· 1ng df!vitt 44 British Is le s native 45 .. Macdu ff!": 2 words 8 F11me en JS P1ssf! b8 Cclcr which a bed ~l Thought 09 Co.mpa~s is !aid Sf!flous ly po1nl 1vi.th Sylvia Porter's Neiv Book • ' • ..-irr-rr-,......,, ' MAIL THIS HANDY ORDER FORM TODAY Only $1 25 p/v125cfor • handling and posf19• • ... -. . I Complete-New York S ~ck List . Uln Ntt ''*·I llflfl ltwC .. Cft• . Market Sy11abols "1 \ ) ... v -·~••••..-1 ·•• . . ··~ ... • I· -'-~ • I ·Wednesday's Closing Prices-wmplete Ne~ York Stock Exchange List -. • Prime Rate Drop .. • Tu l ., .... lell Sends Market Up :u •· • :tr:' • " • a.; .. • .. NEW YORK (UPI) .-A. reduction In the prune I .. interest rate by a small Phllodelphla bank sent " " sl<>ck prices soaring late Wednesday in stepped·up " trading. , • l;r· ~ lo a matter of minutes the Dow Jones Industrial l ~ average, the closely watch,blue chip barometer, l''"-~. ~ ,.,..u .. : climbed more than 10 pol ts and s4ortly before ~~; " the final bell was up about 13 point.I to 767.42. !·-• The UPI'marlcet lncllcalor, measuring all stocks r•11'-• ·-• traded, Was ufa 1.06 &t'tcerrt. near the close on 1,567 l'•lllC11 • ~~=,. .. issues on the pe. these, 1M5 advanced and 394 TE' ~ declined. l' Oii 1 " A turnover of around 11 mllllon shares compar· tr., .... 1" • " ed with 10,810,000 shares on Tuesday. II~' ,. Among the most active stocks were Occidental !=." ;; Petroleum, Jersey Standard, N1tional General and ~ Xerox. s·~Et: " Occidental announced a i:,1fb•r 1969 net. and .. Armand Hammer, chairman the firm, said the ~"' " board ot directors will consider an -addJUonal divi-,_ dend at a later date. Co I • Occidental has been paying a 25-cent quane}'ly '""' • ~ • dividend. The oll group in ~eneral traded In narrow. .. .. ly irregular fashion follow ng .some sizeable gains . -· • Electronics moved over a fairly wide range and • on both sides of previous closlng1. ~ lf1ll • .. ~ " .. L • • ... DAILY PILOT -ff• ., '· .!- .. t .. i·~ ~ "'\; I ~~ ·1J. +t fit ~e ·t _, lt . .. !'" .~ ,_1"' f.~ ·-r -American S~k Exchange List Complete Closing Prices • I , - ISO DAil y PllOT ••• -,TUMILEWEEDS ~:~~----, ,• • . • ' ( -' . " ' . ··~ • . • • . I - W E DNl)DAY FtlltUAftY 25 :•:m 11:"-(C) (60) Jtn'J DuflPhy. --(<)(30[ I .... (C) <21n hi) °" ...... Ki}lfl VI Ml111111011 Horttl St1n It Minnnat1. • L.A. TV DEBUT-"THE I * SCAPt:GOAT"-Bette 1 D1Yi1. Alec Guinness D SD: O'Cloct M"11: "'i\t kl,._ IMl'" (mysttrY) '59-Alee Guinness. IWtt Dni1, Nicole Mturey. An Et11· llsll ldlooifl'llst• Is tri<:bd Into ,.,., H I Frtndl nablanaft llld ff/ida. tits lift filled witll -.... II Ill bec:oma lilt llClllllDlf of 111 ICICIWlltlc f1mily. ::..:: :: (30} , .. (C) (.,, (f} UC ""' (t) (30) ., ..,,,,.,..,,.....,. "~ i~ I ....... ~ (30) "IJ.lt. Com· munications. M I IJJCIS -(C) (3.0 ......... (30) ._ (C) (60) Jad Wlula. 1:45,. ™' .. ..,..,._ (R) ....... --It) (30) ir.n. Oantitt. " -. ., L"" (C) (30) 'ID LUCY TESTS HER SEA - 1* SICK RE.llEDYI 1t 7 l'M ID VINC[NT PRICE-LEROI * JONES-fROST 1:30 PM ID-'"" -t<l !!O) L•Rol Jonu, Villl'Mll Pritt, MMe· lint Ktlln, .lohn Abr 111d Gmf Gr•111•r ILllSI. II) TM lie V1Mt9 (C) (60) cm liMtrim (30) 1:45. 8"llClllll!I (]0) ''"'. Qll Cll ·-I """' (C) (!O) Mlf'Cldet "Mcc.mbric11• flldS IS • dtdlcltlCI '*4 •~ ll1lo Ms suf. f11e4 MWl'll· minor lltoku 111d ii' lllltlclifll litf lllrious lr11fJ' ton4i- tion to •¥Did losi111 h• ,lob. Ill KRAFT MUSIC HALL '* Eddy Arnold, AniU ~ry1nt, Arte Johnson m Gtorce Putn1m Means 1* Ntw1 JO PM on KTTV-11 I ID·-!ti (601 ~ m bttlbtrt " .. ...,. net ccrrl.60) Mll!Ofl BtlM', Clfmtll I Mclat, Dlff• Ind Ny1H DIWTI Por· '" •unt. I II W.! (t) (60) StOIJ' Mrtclllll. Mtuftllfl Rttlt~ 1~ lOflJ Jot Whitt ruts!. I m""' ,._ (60 fm Ml•taaad (C) (30) "Johll M•rt· ford: Tht ll'Oll Mountai11 DIJlot." flt 0 "*' Cll'nlca (30) TH U''.0.",Y I nu) '47 -ll:obtrt Yo11nc. S11M- Hl)'Wlf'll. JZ:He "Jte Meclll:ll" Cm~lltry) '$6- DAYTIME MOVIES 1 'Pt~ Douslta. ll:lflh bmtn. t:JO a"Tllt lit llrwt" (cemahj '4Z i9&'1 W.W ·.,.... (4(11iu) ,41 \ ~ foMI. Lucille ltlt. . -lttJ MillMd, v-... IAM. 0 It) ....... ""' -,.,,.. ,..,, ... -,... -· Soot• krair. .... Z:OD D "'TM hr"9 M' <•rtmtJ 'SS ....clrtlOfJ ''"' lrtnclt °' .. flt! .. • ly Tom K. Ryan PLAIN JANE PERKINS JUDGE PARKER MOON MULLINS ' SALLY BANANA$ B Frank Ba9inski STUFFE!lo SMlRT !!! __ By Harold Le DoUJC I 'O RA.TMER: MOT SEE 'YOU MERE, SAM! COiJLC> r ros:i1eLv ·srOP ev YOUR A.PARfMENT ~ OH, IT'S !'•ALLY SIMPL•, MM11• •• ...... HARTBUl'N sHow•P ME How 1'0 PLACE AC/ILL ON ff.- OH· HE 'S ')t)UIJG ANP cur• .. LONG CUF<LY H,.llR .• M<J!> ... T,.li<oS HIM· 'SoLF Vof'Y So!'/O~U~S;·::." r-rc')f ® ~-' ' " MISS PEACH 1llt~IHTHIS C\.ASS' WOULD MA"f R<>TT•~ MIJS9AN0f ... !(El'Y St..-oot. }fuSIA~O I C•ALV.1~ 1 C,O.lf1rrte J1::==, ...... ' I DoN'T LIKE TO·BE CHEATED ANDI CHEAT MYSELF! OH, I DON'T HOW COULD THINK I YOU CHEAT CHEAT B UT YoURSELF I COULDN'T WITHOUT SWEAR KNOWING IT? E$1'!CJAL\.V IRA . "4f.'{ so l.A1Y. TO IT.1 ,-~-- it1ctMT. A WIA.I... COUL..D STA""E .-ARl1£DfO ~IM, . yol,..l ...... , NOT . .-.~1111ou r fNOU8M1 . !/lA. MYHAND IS QUICKER THAN THE EYE! By Mell I 5T...,..D ~fAPV TO TAICf avf.lt AM'f GIR,L.'S rA'fl<ER'S 8USl"ESS ... " PEANUTS By Charles M. Schull ..,....----,,.., TELEVISION VIEWS TV to Cover Sun Eclipse -By RICK DU BROW HOLLYWOOD (\lPI) -One of the most spec- tac_u.lar -~ofl_r_all_ hapeehings of nature, a total eclipse of the sun.-w1lltie cOVlfeiflivt and at- lenght by the three commercial television networks March 7. · The daytime Saturday broadcast of the eclipse. which will cut a path over Mexico across the gu1f and up Lhe eastern coast or the United Slates, will be seen in color. NBC-TV, v,rhich plans to originate its coverage fron1 near the small village of Miahautlan in the southern coastal part of Mexico. has scheduled a 00-minute broadcast. starting at 9 a.n1 . PST. ABC· TV and CBS-TV \Viii present one-hour programs, beginnin g at 10:00 a.m. PST. Charles Kuralt will be the anchorman for CBS· TV, Frank McGee will serve the same function for NBC-TV. and Jules Bergman and Frank Reynolds are to handle the chore for ABC-TV. The rarity or the phenomenon to be covered Is indicated by the fact that it will be roughly a half century before another major eclipse is visible from the United States. A solar eclipse occurs when t.he moon passes directly in front of the sun and casts its shado\v on the earth. ON THIS particular upcoming occasion, nearly all areas of the continental United States will be able to see a partial eclipse. But on the East Coast it will be total or near that. Ne\v York City. for example, is expected to ex· perience a 96 percent eclipse. In Savannah, Ga .. and Norfolk. Va., it will be 100 percent. But in Port· land. Ore., is will be about 19 percent. FOR THOSE who watch an eclipse in person rather than on video, there can be the danger or injury to one 's eyes unless precautions are taken. Very dark filters, for instance, are considered the kind of minimum requirement to help avoid harm. But there is beauty too in this awesome event. Robert \Vussler. executive producer of CBS-TV's eclipse program. observes: "\Vhen the moon comes bet,~een the sun and the observer on earth. sunlight vanishes for a fevv seconds. Birds and animals be- come suddenly quiet. A brilliant red ring surrounds the "'!OOn. and the brightest stars and planets ap· pear 1n lhe sky. It 's a breathtaking sight." NBC-TV executive producer Robert Northshield meanwhile, is enthused about the Mexican origina: ti~n point for his coverage. The nel\vork says the v1\lag~ locale ""•ill be the gathering pl ace of about 200 scientific expeditions" from around lhe world. . SAYS NORTHSHIELD : "It is virtually .the first p~1nt of land that the path ol totality of the eclipse \VJI! cross as the shado\v of the moon S\veeps" in f~om the Sou~h Pacific. He adds the "'eather condt- t1ons there figure to be good for see ing the sun ~nd that t_he totality will last longer than any plac~ 1n the United States. De111ais tlie !He1iace ' I, , I I , I '. • -·s"d111 '" ... VOL. 63, NO. ~7. 5 SECTIONS, 90 PAGES • 0RAN6E COUNTY.~LIFOllNIA WEDNESDAY, i;E8RU.ARY is, 1970 T~N~S • ' • • . ., ; --O'S·e In . . , •• • • How Lagunans .Vot,e~··· , . " Bopd :Issue, . .. . . . . 3 ,Override • • Prte)ocl l· !JI Morro .2. ·Sterlio! Riiy. 3. Gill Hajl 4. Wah,School S. Top ol World 6. Fulmer R~s. 7. Smith, Re1. I. Aliso School 9. 3 Arch Bay TOTAL Absentee GRAND TOTAL Tu lecreaae A YES . 223 134 119 24& 192 t84 t40 I It 167 1628 18 1646 ~o 30tl 310 ~.!O 453 353 279 271;-m 296 2868 31 - Tax lncrtaJt B YE:i 209 t2t l!t 225 281 18t 13.\ 167 158 t538 NO 32t 320 319 473 36.1 28.1 2il 276 305 -20 30 1558 2971 Tp: 1Dcrtue C YES NO 231 %91 144 302 121 32S 147 4431 307 343 '"' 2"6 139 273 /2Q 265 169 294 1672 2807 21 28 1893 28.15 . -.n YES l30 153 118 271 !ti m l2l 178 Im Z2 NO 300 288 :J ~ '330 257 • 272 262 18.! 274& 21 1751 2776 I TaW-. Vojtq· m· 451 453 705 M7 468 4.12 387 468 4535 50 4585 " Toll! Re·i!i'itered •Y-. ' t \ ~1317 11111 1347 1727 1265 1043 ···Bills iJ·eaten t078 t087 1153 lt,207 40.11% By 1\ll'CHARD P. NALL Gt"·tllt o.lft' ,. lf9ff Lagupa Beach Qnli;ed Sdiool District 11\iffered an acroas the !Mlrd' defeat Tues- day as "otcrs resouJMim,Jv ahot down three tax overclde measure!' and a bond issue. M Gloom at election etntr1l, the district I N hb P office3, where teaCbers, p 1 re n t 1 , New Jersey om . rate ei·g or_s · rotest · young•ten.·•"11 o1ncia1s gathered. seem-ed replactd by res.lgn1Uon u the evening Dr or vote·talb'in1 ·wore on: Using-Birth ug ; 'nitmiy·e,.iiln('miid'wtur1m!y m - rr:.s.-Q1iintu_p1eis _Nois y Ea1ery in Laguna ~~~~~~~::0:1:':: R-u ---.J~ -· · .. precincts reported. Tht: defeit of three From \\'Ire Sftvlca NEW YORK -A 27-year-old New Jersey mother using fertility drugs gave birth to quintuplets Tuesday night. Doc- tors said today the three girls and two boys, delivered In only 10 minutes, passed thr:ir lirst critical test today and \Vere ~rted "doing line." • Parenl.!I of the as-yet unnamed babies were· Mrs. Margaret Kienast and her busband, William. 38. a sa:lesmllh for the " Nixon Bald"win Division ot Tenllec-0, Inc .. and. a resident of Far Hills. J.N. They I . • have twO other1 children, a daughter. 4, • and a son, I". both born after Mrs. Kiena.i"t took fertility drugs. ?rijllltlple tllrtha occir about ,. percent cf:uJ, timl after taking or t~ fertility d~, pergonal, the doctors Said, and Mrs . Kienast had known since the 20th w~ek or her pregnancy that she would have at lea!! four babies. Although the firrt 12 hours are the most critical for such small babies, doctors said they would not be conslde.red out of d'anger unlit from five days lo three Weeks. depending on their sl.ze. Three of the babies had dUltculty breathing immediale!f after birth, and were treated with heat ant" oxygen. Doc- tors said they suffered £rom hyallne membrane disease, the condition which took the We of newborn Patrick Bouvier )S:ennedy, third child of the late President John F. Kennedy in 1963. llowever, the condition has now been et..rrected in the three quint s, doctors said. The quints, six weeks pren1aturc. were put in incubators as a matt er or '1routlne.'f according to doctors at Colun1· bia Presbvterian Medical Center whrrc they Were. dellv!!:red in normal birth - not Caesarian section. Irritated by congregations of hippies Jn :ind around the Taco Bel}. a group of Laguna Beach property 1 owr.ors and businessmen are demanding tile city move lo declare the eaten a public nuisance. A pelilion signed by more than ·100 merchanl!!i: and residents of the area around 699 S. Coast Rlgt-way was presented. to City Manager James D. Wheaton Tuesday . The paper strongly urges 'Nheaton's of. rtee to "coinmence proceedl~p to have the Taco Bell Re,s(iurant declared a public nuislinq! btcaiJse or unlawful as~mbJy (p.ndl . ufitlanltary' cOndltions from lack or proper ~trol as to littering and~Joi~ring." U~nst to the pnhappy peti- tiOn<n, perhaps, Ille TarQl~b!'1ed chain nOw es(Jbllshlng a rwifr• Hkkory Bell Westem-tYP,e barbecut Wiif fran· chfse. Taco Bell President ROOert McKay an- nounced that owner11 or the existing 381 f.fcxic&n chow outlets will have first chanCe to open Hickory Bells, on or near their present Aites .. That should wake up the Sleepy Hollow complainants, If not give them outright indlgesUon. The petition was circulated by realtor JI. A. O'Brien, president of the Laguna Beach front Property Association and v.·as sl1neO b}' ino3l of its 100 member&. Mariy ethers with homes or buslneases In the '1iPriie·haunted Sleepy Hollow area also s1fned the petition, evidently rea up with thost who eat there, they Unger on like a l>reath of chill and onions. A copy or the petition seeking closure and probably destruction of the Taco Bell , has also been forwarded to chain presi- dent l\tcKay . The Coast Hlghwa y establishment has !ncn the target of Cf>mplainl..'I for some time. It 'is across the highway from Mystic Am \Vorld'a psychedelic gallery and store. also a favorite gathering place for members o( the Art Colony's Nude Swinuner Found By Laguna Officers The first. a girl , was born al 10:08 p.m. and weighed three pounds. four ounces - the· smallest. Another girl v.•as born one minute later and weighed three pounds. J3· ounces. followed by a boy at 10 : 13 weighing four pounds. six oun~s -the largest; a girl al 10 : 16 v.•eighing three pounds l4 ounces and .a boy at 10: 18 weighing three pounds. eight ounces. . Responding to reports or a nude swim- i'hey were six weeks premature. ac-mer "screaming and yelling" In the surf cording to a hospital •Spokesman, and a off the 1500 block of S. Coast Hi""way at team of 16 doctors and assistants took .,, part In lhe deli\'ery. He said the "doctors l :30 a.m. today, Laguna BtlCil poltoe are. optimistic" on the cooditloo of the located the vocal athlete crawllnf"uhore babl!s. the mother was \n. "sall!factory" on hl1 hands arKi tJiees, no Jobaer Cf>ndltion. and the fatber ftS under screa~, -. ' .. ''conaiderable strain." .. • ,· .. .f qi Jf the babies all live 1ht1·•lll be the Of~lcers ~k~ Nathan t,. Gqod, 22, secood set of survivi ng quln~uplefl th~the. 31~ f· Coa:R HllllJW,ay, SoU&b La~, on United States -and ~e tistb let 1n llle fUIPidon oLbeln1 drurik. in pubr : 1 permanent munity. and floating hippie com- Under constant surveillance by Laguna Beach narcotics officers, the area is the scene or frequent drug arrests. A former 1nanager of the Taco Bell once appealed to the City Council for help in ousting loiterers riom the tables and planters In the restaurant patio: but was advised police could not provide sucb service on private properly, An ordjnance prohiJltting sltilng or lyin1 on La1Una sidewalk! ' has been aomewhat e.ffec!ive In preserving the publlc . right~f·way o·q ts Id I! the restaurant, but ha1 dl>ne lit e lo diacourage lolieJlrs Who. d r a p I themselves ¥OOnd ~ patio walls. The city "ll!JMer's olfice said TueJday the petition woUld be turned over to-the city attorne~ rdr a leg at oplnloo. • Ortega Highwa y Speed Limit Cut Asked in Capo San Juan CaJ)istrano Mayor Ed Chermak, concerned about the number of recent traffic fatalJUe s, called for a 45- "11le per hour maximum speed limit on the Ortega Highway at Tue!day's council meeting. The City Council voled to postpone a decision until Councilman Tony Forster could metl with the Orange County Traf· fi c Committee. to discuM the matter. Chermak said that excessive traffic has been created because of a nearby hot springs which lies outside the city limits which has become a "hippie haven." He said reports have shown that many of the accidents wer e infiuenced·by the drivers' use of narcoUcs. Chermak said a petition should be circulated asking the Orange County Hi>itllh Dept. to close the hol l!lprlngs. Councilman Don Durnford said that no r>arking signs should be placed along the Ortega within the city limits u an added :!?ty precaution. Stock itlnrket NEW YORI (AP) -The stock market held tmto a small but fairly finn lead in 1luglsb ~ late this arternoon. (See ~uotaU1111, Pages 43-<91. · El~ fcr 1 few Issues hivolved in spe-cial lltu.'UoRs, prices moved in a narrow r•nf<!: • ~ v.•orld . The American qui"ls rin bo"!'. J. ~ .;. ·~ , '. "'-• Sept. 14. 1963. to ~fr. and ~Andrew J, •" t ·1 i:. • "' • override tax issues and the bond Issue a~ proacbed a 2 to t margin. Wlth a surprising large turnout of 40.9 perctnt of the electorate, 4,515 ol 11,207 reglstered. results were: -Propultiel A, GS-eent ovettide,..1-MI yes ~~.i.'.: no ovta. -, . B, 40-cent override, i,511 yes "Voles 1,174 no votes. -PropollU.. C, 20-cent override, 1,683 yes votes. t,113$ no Yotea. -PrqP,G!!Uoo ll,' '400,0llO bond is8Qe, l ,7Sl'yes aJi4 2,77! no. HIGH T\lftNntm , .• , . Thi onf3' ~~I~ qme c)ooe I0.~!111 • 11 'I'~ of 'U.0 ,World School whldr-' 1 i( ~ -11-Jhllj tf 1;111 . . ' . .rr-Kion f ~ 1fl 'rt• ...... )hen and 343 ne """'· ,, .1 • -1 .. .. , 1 Larey t_,;w. ~--,~~ celled the;;.:;;i,..-MsPI J!pi i!o!l lild the board ·.ri11-.~~r~ now apd Aug. I io balahCt· I· liudci •nd ,.1 prlorltl,. f0< neil'>'"!· He said there · Is ·no-ma rain. for any deficit spendJnc, teM~t.h•~e been ued up, "which may or n:&&Y not mean we'll have some deep cuti:." Taylor said he ~lly would not agree to another tu eltCtion this year. "l wbuld rather """" the IJ,OllO (election cost) on somethtftl el1e." 'l'aylor said lhe be.rd would belin thinking at the non meeting about priorities and artu of cutback. Sptaking of t~ · clauroom raUo of puplb to teachers, • on whlcb Lasuna 1chool officials pride themselves, Tiylor aald, "Jf we went lroi:n ·a ~to-I to ,a ~ (See EU;CT!OI', P1ge II Laird Explains Base Reduction WASHINGTON (AP) -The upcoming mas1•ve reductions of addllio'naJ U.S. military bases Indicated by Secretary of Defense Melvin R. Laird ii in keeping with reducUon of American armed· forces as Pentagun !OW"Ctl 1ay involvement ln Vietnam tapers off. Laird said Tuesday the reduction would Involve "weli over 100. bases.'' other Defense ~nt offtclals taild the cutback could affect as many u several hundred bi.ses, some of whkh may be c!Oeed Olltr:iaht. •. " The Pentagon move, which Laird said would be spelled out tn. detail ·wilhtn a JnOf\th, comes on , top of reductions or closings a.t 30'7 bqes Ip tJye United States and abroad arinoubced a11 1J1 econOmy me8aure last OCtober. FischerofAber<lee~,s.o,Thef?"rgirl1 , 1;,•' '36 c d•·d t and one boy live tn seclµeion °".theft 4 -• an I a· e S ftlher's IKM).acre fa rm wtll of A}>e*'n \ "*'~ , · and their mother doet 'no allow ltleti to ... Ill Lists make public appear~ ''Jay~ ~ ,. want~ them to le1ad1 ~a "~1_.Mfude''<. ~·~ ·• .</' J • , ... , ' r.~':!:the~;; '.;' n~ ""'~; '!; • , t • ·.-fJ.tt, .Bad.ham Among First w G-et P(J.p~rs · Callander. Onlario1 a. lat ,_.ant: ~ . , died in 1954; the D!llgenU .,lnts,.born In fjnl -.y t':-= 1f the county tu collietor Illa S. Mozley wH the lint, 11.W. ....,.., John-·onm.n, - Buenos Aires. Argentina, July ~ 1111!.•, cler~~...... bmuu ,.,. 10 &• tht•111111ulnll 7.0 signatures. Briarhlll ·Dr.; ,Ybrba Linda, 'engineer, the Prieto quint s born Sept. 71 llD, at · tJ1f .. ....... tlifnl -oat Folf,pwj.as la thl 11.ll ol candidates who 11.epublican. t ·1 .1 • / , Maracaibo. Venezuela. iUld th< !hllnpl llOlldnltlGo.-llr'fodnl,'t!N 11111 1"'*~'111esd•y : Ao...,totyi 11th Dlitr!cl -bon.ld J. quinu born No•. t4. 1161, ln MOUlll6kjot. ...nry ollloes. II : '5th District -Alfred ~w,,_;, lt!7t .Mouler. Anaheim, tlec- ' ~Promln<OJI m_ the '"'t::::i ... lllmhl. N. Idaho St., La fflbra , \roillcl technician, Amertc1ri Ind_,. i:, • • OJ re•l aQte aleiman, A m e r I c a n dent. · • Ehau Leaves 1Jqnn • .~~= ~·~ J.R-Baahaiii. (~ independent. 1oul D111r1e1 .:, ~rt ·H. ~ (tn· BONN (UPIJ -Israeli F9relgn Pifinlster Abba .£ban ended hit first v!Jlt to West German)' aod departed for Lux- embour& today slUI surrounde1! by ex· traonllnary aecurlty precautions. Eban Jert the West Gennan capital aboard a f.edtral border police heUcopter which took off from the walled garden bf:hlnd piancellor "rllly ~Brandt's office. ,. --·--~ Nowport ~ch) 11/d Robert H. Burke ffi. 341h Dislrld -WtJllam J. Teague, C\lm~nt), 13112 Malory, Huntll)cWo HunUnaton -· tOHI Stallfor<I, Garden Grove, busln"' Belch, ,n.,iuhllcln. -"' • l!otll .Jncwnbent aupe"'i'°" ..,,...,.,... adminiatr'ilion, JllpubllCan, V, Lane .i11i J?lllrlcl -Aobeil E. llllfhim.ttn- ting Orange Coast dl!lricll tOok c;ut Knight, 9291 Orsh~ Clrcl~ CyJ>ress, at.-cumbtnt) •• UOI Jrvine AY1r1 Newport papen. Alton t . Allenr Flflh Dltttict and tcrney. RepubUcan. a.ch, Republlcao; J•t, lfocda1 lll·S. Da•ld L. Baker 'Second Dillrlc~ were 3.IOI Dislrlct -Jamet B. Utt (In-Bld!el, · -Anll)elm, -.pope, .<eporter; early In line\ ' cumbent), ms E; cWauna §t.. Sa.nta American J~ndent. . I Robert L. Citron, a deputy tu collector Ana, Republic•!; 11\(''111'11" ftl . Wiicoxen, • lll!tl aon:;.-........ , Fllll'lh • for ten years waa rlrst ln line taking up 49t Legion St., i.agqna Beach, e~tomey,, Di.tric:..i:_ Berur41"~. '-,.;1-., anolher dtputy tax collectj:ir and a 1 ival Republican. w • ~ 1 , C.re C6"01D6~ PIP ~) \ ~. • • • "-. J --- . . ... . ~ Nif.~l Tract ~il:tip OK~d f I ', .. , ' ' ,., ! • I ' ' • ' De~p~t~ Salt Cree.k Tif·f · · . ' • • T(act map bond1 Ior il\t ha11J.!la Niguel Corporation ""'11 •Pl'<ovil of ~· Ccunly supjrtlaot1 Tueidiy dril>lie '•n ariy.ment lbat nartd. llniny o~ei-lack or public acCess ~to Salt Crttk Beach. Both tbe subdJVl1lons for which the counly boan:l •as·a!lked to approve h9t1ds to guaran~ lmi{rovements.are •cUa~nt to the much.Qebated 'beach betlften' Three Arch B'!Y in ~th _Llguna aJtd Dana Poirlt. " Supenilso~ pavld L. B~ker prot~ted thaf the •Laguna• Niguel _Corporation was . . New Playhouse To1_1.r · ~~'1!~ay ,. • • .. J. .. ' o!fefing no ROrvlslon for pUblic acceta.to the Moch. · ' , , ' CouDty oianseJ Adrlfn . iKuyper ruled lh~t the board had no altenMJtive ·but to iipprove the bonds and ilmproyeMents as they , had apProved U'le, lrat:tr.1"ap1 a1st ~ulf. · ., • . • Supervbcr Roberl· W: BafUn.,..ant.ed1o (•fuse lhe action and let t.gu,,a, Nliuel go to court. !:le lost by a -to 1 v.ote. , But Board alaintian Alton E'~ 0AiteO of ~~na 1¥~ pOinted oilt that a cam. mlttte of county departmetjt heads "~~ work1ng with Laguna ·Nlguel >execuuves toward the Prm1on or public 1Ccnl· to the beach. ' ... -.. I "We haft everyre11son to believe.uiese eCfof1s, will' 1ucceed "·Allen u'Jd: r .-·~ • . (lltjljed :t00<s ,.cl, \he ·new• 'llailina· M~lton Playhouse.Ind a1Mexlcanlliriner wtll'hig)iiigtt1·'l!M1<1.y Winter ·Festl"I eYfllte+tlttLl~actk . ·· ' ...__ ' . '~ra Of ,!hf !P1aybo,U"R :at 806 . Laguna Cani") ROll!i'ljlll-'bio d>oducted free of Charp,tro!i\J 'lo$ pJJJ. I The _Silt Ortell il~ue arose·~ tlibl .• year· ago .when !l was lftilnleil wi:.t11at tllO supervisors had abandoned ''Safl"'cteelt Jjoad, streldl-.j ._., lofdl,. ·floom Pa~ific Gout llli~IY to iil*rt ntar lhi be.ach, lqJbt~;~.;,.~ .. 1· ;i I '. ~fli!ui,NitlU<khid ~ NJd,tbef lJ'antOd'-tc 1r~p the be..ii Wt"l'ta fir Ult a!,olio' ~pie w'ho .w:ttl ',.,..,tully -I the':...VelOpniantrbol,,._ill'OllillleJ;Ny.,.,.\o. ,,._ ___ 1- weakenOd under ,,,_.' lfam,~ .The w:o"meu·s 1 SGC1etr ·or r 'Christian S.rv!C. ~ ~ ~' B,tach · Unltld Methoinai Cburch, 2t831 Wuley Drive, South i:.,w,., win ~.erve.. a·. 1·1com1da. Meiicotiii"' 11 \he ~h fn>in I le 1,p,m, Tfckljs are S!.IO, , '"Alla on .,'J\µr..,_, ~Winter Festival· villt.Oto--v!Otr wark!IJ9pl-Jn !l'J"*' II llie SdJool 'ol Al:! ll1cl ,Deoiji1'1 i!Htay open boolse, at~ L.launa ~.Rood .. A\:hNastoft ii 'ft'M: 1 ' , , . · 'n.! Cigu0a•C/1n 'Guild's ·Arla aoil CNIU~t...cdi-cin the Pdttvli of, 1f<N!lda'f\Oft,\<I~ to l ·P·'1" AdmiMllJ!I f •. 1·-... ,. ' ' • ' ' ~ . .. ....... ~.- tloh groups anp tl)e ~ ' , ... • "! 11'•• r, ••t .fJ .'10 "''···,•t i Wl)Y '\UP , a J.ll\><! fl!lN! · flit! bO' 1 )ult u 1111/1/J :1;11ar~!..L~.llf_lh • clouds and em;;..i.~ in !lie 'r'(r 'Its itq Utt ·iiranfe C.Ut. . ·l . , INS'9~· . 'l'O·~~~ 1 .\l)'lrMI ~~im<l'I T Fl"'~ lfrlbl lill 1 ~' ~ i "1~·""' tbf '"~''°"' , ('l""'t Jo<1ii'i' ·llCI ~•11 fl/""', ,'Pogt1~. · -,! 1 ' ' ' s~ .. ~ . =:= ........ 1· "' , ........ -. . ·-.... ..... c..ia ..... .. .,_,. 0.111"11 ............. . '.,.. ...... 1•1 --.. .. ~,-': =:.=--.-: • .....,.?, "~· p ....... ............... . ................. 4'' __ .....,. ............ ,..... -. ----... . .. t • ,: - I I •' ... WtdM*Y, ''tbniilf 2..\, : • ' . Solon Walk• Out P~mpidou l!iven· Polite Receptio·n WASlllNGTON (AP) -Frtncll p,_.j. denl Georges Pompldou &ot 1 polite hear· ing ln Contress Wednesday -dtsplte the inconspicuous walkout of one member - as ,he said Middle Eutern peace should be sOu&ht-throu&h a rour•power con· fe11nce . '1 't llep.' .Losier L• 'Wolff CO.N.Y.l, go\. up from his sNI neal' the. middle of the 'big House diambtr and walked out u Pom· pidou began speak\Pg. There was no noticeable stlr. Pompidou had just received about lwo minutes of applause rr0m the audience in the iu,.~n-full cbambU.. . . It a,....,..i lhet about 300 of the 434 HOUM inembera and eo of .. the 'tc.i rinalora attended. . ~ Member• oppoeed to Franct-'1 Middle E11t policy, ••pedally the aale of planes to Libya, &ad orgaNsed a boycott. However. HOUR employes helped fill the vacant se1lB,, along with the Cabinet Md a hu1e turnout of the diplomatic corps. . Th• Capitol was heavily guarde.d by police~~ Secret Service ~1ents -the tightfit aeeurlty. one police official sai~ in •~t 14 years. Pempidou's speteh, translated iflfo_ Enallsta 1>1raar1ph by paraar1ph, wu in· ( terrupted ,tght limes by applewie - nevlr' -tumultuous. But some senators cried "Vive la France," u he left .. to more oipplause, pausing to shake hand.!L United States, w111 be the most worthy of victories -a victory won first over oneself." Pompidou made n:> mention in his ad· dress of the arms sale or other spt:cilic controversies, and menliontd the Afiddl• East dl1putes only brteny. "Believe me," he said, "Fran~'s in· tenllon1 in the face or these conflicts has never betn to be delrfmental lo any na· lion nor to se rve another. We seek . .,_,., \Vant only peace.'' - He restated France's position that Israel has the right to exist in secufity as an independent ,ind soverel1n state, and .ultic~ed Ille "'ntlnuin& holtlllUea Ill the area. ~, "Who ca.Mot lff lhe prttartOda and - . in "1e long run -sterUe nature or the victories gained?!' Pompldou aaked. "Who does not understand that the11 ~s no assured futute for Israel oubide a lasting entente with ~world which, llUr· rounds It -entente which lt11plles renun· elation of mllllaf')'. Conquest and the 90Ju- Jion of the Pale!tihlan problem?" -He added, rererrlti& lo the rour-power conference of the United State&, ·French, ·British and Sovtet ambauadors to ihe United Nalions: "Such a re.suit, in a altuation where reelings are fanaUclJm are . lncreasing dally. should. to be quickly re1Ched, pro- ·ceed from United N•tiona action a.nd In particular from the agreement of the four permanent members of the Security • SUPPRESSED DESIRIS -Starring in one of three one-act play1 Friday and Saturday at San Clemente High School are (from Jett) Barbara From Page l ELECTION ... Olsen. Mike Peduzi and Tricia Bohrer. Curtain time is 8: 15 p.m. Play bill includes comedy-farce, plus a tragedy and, for closers, a melodrama. ' • ast Man ,_ l~d Firing, ~ ... .,., -!.. ~:Poli~e Say By JOANNE ftEYNOIJ>S ot ftl9 IMllr '°''' ••" Fatally wounded with a bullet In his chest, Baycrest resident W I I 1 i a m McKinley Harris fired away with his own revolver at his murderers before falling dead on his front l)Orch. Tilt '• how Newport Be Iii ch in· vt&tig&tors reconstructed the I a s t moments of life for the li(J.year-old rcli~ movit: producer after he ap.. pare11Uy surprised burglar& in his home at 2012 Anchor Way Monday niJht. His body was discovered Tuesday mornl,n& by neighbors. tprawled across the doo~ay of ha home. still clutching his .38-cal!ber revolver. In recons tructing the c r I rn e. in· \'Cstigators said the swpect or .suspects probably entered between a and 10 p.m. throuah an unlocked bathroom window a~ the rear of the home. ltarri& was apparently watching television at the front of the house. when he heard Intruders and went to in· \'estigate, o(ficers reported . The victim was standln1 in a ha)lway v.·hen 'he surprised the would-bt·burglars in one oi the bedrooms. It \\'Iii then, police speculate, that Harris w& shot. There was applause even w.t>en the Frt.nch president said : "AllO'llt' me, as a [riend, to tell yaii that tlfe 'nd-o! Ill~ war 1n-v1<mam;tor-lhe Council to define and propate &he 1eneral lo·I ratio, we could cut out 30 teachers con!:llUons for a settl~.~vlde . 'butwhll'.s the.remit aoina:JO:be?." Clemente High Staging 'Evening of One-aets' Harris hall a .38-<:aliber revolver which he used in his losing battle •with assal1ants. officers explained, A n unknown number or shots were fired as the dyin & man chased the suspect& down tbe h&ll .aad out the door, whtre·he fell The·guarlnfees for It." Taylor said he hoped the election litany woonded. · lnvutlg1ators said the bur1lar1 · ap. parenuy had not taken !lflylhlng when they were --;surprised. Harrll' w11 car- rying ·several hundred dollars and a \'a luable diamond ring when hi1 hotly was found, they noted . Jf ilcoxen Takes~-Swipe . . At Utt in Kickoff Talk Wiljlam Wiicoxen'• campaign ror been fighting and representing people - Congrt1s wasn't 11 lonely Tuesday. trylna: to save a little beach here - a Approximately .2:QO persons attended _• park lo the Capistrano PaJisades -and kickoff luncheon in Lag11na Beach and set up a drug clinic. " heard him rattle the cage or his atcH con· .Ii. Wilcoxen, who. battled 1n court to save servaUve opponent. Fep. James Utt (R.' > actess to Salt Creek, sald he hid written Tustln). who hu held the 35U\ di$trict Utt "relative to shoreline and coastal seat 1ince ltsz. zone pro_teetion ... "and his answer in· Wll<iixen ;ild. in ea&enct, that his op-dicattJi a total lack of awarentSI that ponent Is appaUlngly out or \ollch wJtb the any problem e~sted." tima and doeJ.O't .,Yen undentand the ..,, ~e candidate sal4 the problem is pro6lems of h1I dlstrf~. YOl.lOI and old vrgen~. "~ kn°'\' what is happenina: In the li1tened and applaudtil the hometown 3$th district today -not 20 years ago - boy. Many pledged telepbont or .Pt¥inct but today." n Wilcoxen said the old work ~nl1 ·money. ~ . ~ c;ourthouse ln Sanla Ana mo\'ed to a ';There is an urgent need for rtprestn· 1 )leamlng skyscraper and 4ie r'fnches ! Ul.ion in the 35th Dl!trict -tepresen· '.have· long since br6ught In executives talion lhaL ls not afr1ld of the>r.eal prob-who understand the facts_. ~ !ems of the day,'' sald the Laguna ~ "Yet," he said. "?.'e h11ve hor:;e and Beach Republican. ~u,i:gy Congressional representation and 1 "All the country -and the world is it is not good enough. 11 i8. not g_reat ! engaaed in committing colltttlve &ulcidt. e~ough for the most d¥nam1c1 exc1tJnR ri.ty opponent 11 ura!ng the destruct.ion of district In the country with vast ~tenUal ~ Viflnam to save it - is talking about the f~r gre~!ness but equal potential for danger1 of rock n1usic and Is urging us to di sas ter. sever relations with the v.'orld. Wilcoxen asked how many ~rsoni "He eith~r doem't know or won't v.·orrv moved lo the district so 'they could about the real problems of the day as h'e breath. He said thfy could, s~ll 5Wlm in tilts against one windmill art er another.·• Laguna Beach but they can l 1n Monterey During his talk . the 37·)'ear-old at-Bay. . . " . torney. a long-lime w 0 r k in g con· _The candidate s~1d. I know th15 ,. servalionist. hitched his wa11;on to both district f~om Founta1n Valley lo La Jotla, en vironmental Issues and Nix 0 n from Scnpps Institute to tht Ford Plant Republicanism. He also took frequent at ~oro'a del Mar. I know the people and jabs at Ult . their problems and I know I can Said Y.'ilcoxen, "One of Pces ident Nix· ~er,resent them all be cause I have done nn'g concerns is ending the war in Viel· 11 · n•m and I agree .,_,.ith the Pre1ident on ~ this issue and in his methodology. "The necei1slty for population contrl'.ll and conservation of lhe quality of lif~ is abso lutely crueial. Richard Nixon says it is now or never. "That is my conclu!iion. yet there is no evidence that Mr. Ult even recognlies any problem. That .,_,·ould be humorous if it were not so tragic." Wilcoxen s1ld he had not been active in partiaan politics and belongs to no faction of the Republican party. "I ha\'e been too busy solving problems,'~ he said. "I have DAILY PILOT Ot..t.JrlGll COAST l'UI LlllHNG C.OMl'AIN' ., .. ,,, N. w,,J l'•nOd~ n •Wlltll1• J1c\ •. c~,, .... V1t• l'•n'dt~I t•d lit<!tr•I M1•1gtr T~'"''' 1Ct1•il lf•lof 11.·;..,,;·A. M ~·~lli~1 M•~tJl•t (5,1,, .litl••·' '· 1'>11!1 L ~t""f IU<~ (I!, •• ,,., i..t•1t• ltM~ Offlc• JJl Ftttd A•t "•' Meil!Rt '-'~••o· ,,0 . It• •••• •J41Z 0 "'4ot Offlut C.le Mttt : J:lf Wnt ltf tlftitt ~ 911c'>1 1'11 W .. I It-ffl;lltvtrf .. IH'llllltlt., ........ 11./J ••tU> 11111 .... 1. l / .. Margery Maas Ser vices Slated Funer1I servicn "'ill be heh' at 2 p,m. Thursday in Sheffer Laguna Beach flfortuary for l\fargcry li.1. r.1aas, 57, "'ho died ~tonday at her home. IS4 Brooks St., Laguna Beach. A nati ve or New York City, Mrs. l\11a1. had bttn employed by the J. C. Penney Co. for IS ~·eaN and wa~ wilh the firm's Fashion J,Jand branch prior to her retire- ment because of Illness. She is sur..-ived by her husband, Frank W. f\-1aai;, of the home: a son, Frank W. Mau Jr. and a daughter l\trs. Joanne S. Marlins.I n. both of Santa Ana ; her rather, \\1aJ tr S. l\lcCu!lough of Laguna Beach; • si11ter ti.lrs. Jean Harrell of Laguna Beach : and by i;pven grapdchiklren . lntem1ent will be a ri.1elrosc Abbey . Phyllis Benett Funeral Friday StrviceA will bt held Frld1y 1t 2 p.m. In Sheffer La1un1 Beach Mortuary Chapel for Phyllis Benett or 411 Cllrf -Drtvt. Laguna Beach, who died Mond1y at South Coast community Hospital. She "'IS II. ftfrs . Stnett, a naUve of llllnot .. had li\'td in Lagun1 for 10 yeart and w11 ac- tive In the l.81una Be1ch Woman'• Club, the Garden Club and fh• D1u&httfl or the · American Revolution . She Is survived by a son. John \V. Benelt of Ct.nop P1rk; a dau1ht11r, Mra. SUUnne Welch of San Joie: and by 1evtn ~andchlldrtn. 'private· tn(ermtnl will be flt Oak"'-ood Memorial Pork. Shefre-r Lagmia Beech 1ifortuary a.re directors. ' -results were not any incUcaUon or diasatisfaction with schQol program. "It islfillti t:Vldent rrom-an tl'le tests and in· San Clemente High School dram1 formation thai lbe st&ff Is dolna an ex· cl.uses wiU present thtir annual pro·. cellent·job,"' he-:Sald. ''I have to -believe ductlon, "An Evening of One·Acts" on lh1t the results are. definitely tltd to the Friday and Saturday. fln 1ncial outlook which may or may not Three different l!lyles of pla y& will be rightfully exist in the country today." The Joss was the second defeat at the seen. The first ii! Susan Gla1pell's "Sup. polls in Jess than one year for the school pressed Desires." It is a comedy-farce on di5tr ict. psychoanaly1la a.nd stars Barbara Olsen, A ~ent override was de.feated AJl'il Mike Peduti, and Tricia Bohrer. They 15, 1969 with l.m yes vote3 to 2,292 no are all members of the International votes despite the fact tha:L all seven can-Thespin Society. The turtains part at 8:15 p.m. ln the Trito11 Ctnter. Tickets will $1 for children and ·students with a student body catd and $1.!KI 'fo r adulll!: They ma y be purchased at the door. Mrs. Case Plans Court Action didates for the school board had endorsed I The second play is a tragedy. Lord The years have not been kind to Alice L C Dunsany's "The Jeat of Hahalaba" is a ase . LOSING ~IEASURES production that includes spirits and Firit she lo.st her only child. then her The defeated propositioll!, wl\ich could magic. It stars Don -Crowell, Rae husband. Now she may lose tht home she have passed or failed individually or Threadgill, Mark Manning and· Drew planned td spend a peaceful retirement cummulatively, wert: for: . Andersont in. Pollet said they've turned up nolhil'lg to indlcate the MSallants had beeii wounded in tht shooting. Harris w11 found elut· ching his gun, but the murder weapon has not been recovered, I.hey reported. All but one neighbor said they heard nothing during the night. Harris' ne1t door neighbor said she heard commotion and noi6e.s late Monday night which she did not lr.vestigage . f'roin rage 1 CANDIDATES • • -A, library books. c I as l'r o om A melodram.a entitled. "He Ain 't Done Her home wu built on the wrong lot materials, text bOok!, ln~setvict training, Rla:ht by Nell" will close-the evtQing. in Capistrano Beach and for months she OJ .• Santa Ana. government au4itor, health service, iddttlon'al staff gtowth, This cast includes Brenda. Quinta, Kim has betn quietly walling for the legal Republican. . te1cher salaries, and transportation . Hamilton, Sim Besae. Renny Klutcher, tangle to be straightened out. County Tax Collector: Robert L. (Bob) -B . Transportation, mllntenance. Pam Burnette, Chuek rt and Jim But today she told the DAIL~.{ILOT Citrone. J S25 E. Vance Pl., Santa Ana, operation: eqtllpmenl replacement and Ash brook: . ., ... . . . . .... th-t she ~$Ung to coµrt. ~ deputy to:~ollectai:; Dffjd.G. Hitchcock. additional staff aftd'talaties. -· Shen~ ect her •ttomey to ,file. 14342 Clarissa Lane, Tustin, county -e. ew ·purChue. sull aga ns t' Charles Llrrawiy. the budaet dirtetor; Joe R. Greene, 11391 -D. Land aciflllSltlon and development Maddox Chided Newport Beach conlr1ctor who agreed to Elizabeth way . Tustin, deputy tax :_eol- for both recreation !nd a ruture school build her home. lector site. V.ernon Stanley. supervising deputy of t County Supervl1or: 2nd · District: - \\lllliam Ullom, di6trict s11perintendent, b the Conlractor.11 State License Board in David L. Baker (incumbent), 9452 Royal said he did not think the vote wag a For Out urst Anaheim said that • formal complaint Palm Bl vd., Garden Gro\'e. defeat of the program since the edu~a· against Larraway has been filed with the 4th District -Ralph E. Wright. IS81 tional program was not under fire dur1n1 WASHINGTON (UPI) _Speaker John att()l'J1ey general's office. Orange, Orange. ·public works employ. tin: election campaign. W. McCormack chieded Gov. Lester Tht contractor, who claims the mistake ment. : REACHED LIMIT ~faddox or Georaia today tor passing out was made by a subcontractor, bas been Sth Diatrlct -Alton E. Allen (in· pick and ax bandies in the House trying to settle with tbe ownu of the cumbent), WS Temple Hills Dr., South "Taxes have reached the upper limits restaurant. Rep. Charles C. Diggs (D-wrong lot, Mrs. Stella Rand all of W Laguna. for the majority of our taxpayers," said Mich.), propoied to declare Maddox Habra. County Clerk: William E. St John (in· Ullom. "Better communlcatlon.11 must be unwelcome hertaftu. He reportedly of[ered her M.009 to be cumbtnl), 1832 Greengrove, Oran1e. established the voters on per student McConnack, who Issued an order Tues· paid in one yea( at 10 percent interest PabUc Admlnl1tntor: James E~ Heim cost.! in the district. We made an effort lo day that rtlulted io clear':'!& half a dozen plus Mrs. Case's lot which Is ,adjlcent to (incumbent), 28401 Granado, San Ju1n communicate with the leaders of the of the governor's weighty trademarks out Mrl. Rlndall's property. Mrs. Randall Capistrano. community but apparently dldn't do a of the restaurant. told reporters today : won't budge. Couty Recorder: J . Wylie Carlyle fin · very good job." "It waa inappropriate for (Maddox) to do So Mrs. Case must go lo court. While cumbent), 2401 N. Flower, Santa Ana .- Ullom said that areas or cutback would what he did." her nearly completed home st.ands empty Sberlff.Coroner: James Musick lln· ha\•e to include a study or the -pupil· OIQs, one of nine Negro House at 34~ Via Verde she pays rtnt on a cumbent sheriff), 1606 Louise St..' Santa teacher ratio. He said areas of cutback members, came close to tangling small apartment In Dana Point. Ana ; 1.larshall Norris. 1316 E. Collins, \vould also include a seriou!I look at ex· physically with Maddox Tuesday when he She already has expended most of her Orange. criminal court clerk. "' · tenl of transportation that can be given discovered the go~rnor was distributing lire savings on her new home. Now she Coun ty Treasurer: Ivan H. Swanger Jin· and also at sopplle11 and materials. hla celebrated "pickrick drumsticks" to has legal expenses and a continued strain cumbent), 107 La Ronda. Tustin. However, he said, "An·y major ~avin& guesl!I , capitol police and others in and which she says has undermined her County Auditor: V. A. Heim Cln· \1·ould have to be. in the area of person-around tht retaurant. health. cumbent), 16932 Helm Ave., Orange . ntl." Diggs said today he was considering fil· Despite what promises to be a lengthy Judge -Superior Court: No. J - After thanking pupils. parents. ad· ing a slander suit against Maddox, who court battle and an uncertain future Mrs. Herbert S. Herlands (i ncumbent), 2541 N. ministration and board members who called h.1m an "ass" and "baboon" during Case is determined to have her home. Forest, Santa Ana. worked for passage of the proposllloM. table when Maddox sat with a Georgia "I'm not going to give up now ," she No. 8 -Ronald M. Crookshank (in· Ullom said, "Pfrhaps our morale is low stat.e pi.lrolman. uid. cumbent), 1505 N. Flower, Santa Ana.~ but we are a tight·knit if'OUP and we:n !;::.=========:-:-::.:::;:~============================~ come back 'With the evidence that wdl allow for proper commwdty support." Cor y. Alleges Road Fund Trick SACRAl\tENTO f APl -Asllemblyman Kenntll'I Cory (0-0arden Grove), 1ays a M7 million surplus htis been built into the- Stalt Highway Fund budget. as a gim· mick to avoid raising laxes durinS an election year. Cory's comment came durina a hearin1 by the Assembly Finance and Taxation COmmiltee on a bill to reduct the gasoline tax by one cent to si1 cents t>fr gallon. Sponsored by AS>tmblyman Mllce Cullee (0.Long Boach). the bill wu ba~ ed on Highway Fund figures which in· djc:ate $47 million in hlghw1y projects will be deferred in the comin1 fiac.11 )'tar. The tax cut would only last until lht deferred projects were reticUvated~ Tht bill pro\'ldea authority for the 10\'emor to declare the return to a full 1even-cent g1110llne tax. Thomes Carroll. repre1entin& tht Public Works Oepartmtnt. aald the •P. ptrent turplt11 1hookt not be returned '° motorlsta In the form of • tax cut htcause II Would be n~ed 11 part or lilt departrMnt'1 normal c11Jh now. · •1we hlvt no secret account" C•rroll told the commltlee. in reply to Cory's rt:markl. • From uHomio Artisons. En909emont Rings of lncomp oroblo b.outy, CONVENIENT TIRMS iANICAMERICARO MASTER CHAR~! I Ill NEW~ORT AVENUE COSTA MESA 24 YtA~S SAME LOCATION PHONE 141·140 I ., lj ! ! I \ •, ' ·-.. ' .. cl ~ " d 1 " ,. • '• ,. ,. • Ne rt Bea~h ,, ':C ' :~ VOl. 63, NO. '47, 6 SECTIONS, 98 PAGES , . . . .. ew or .. ,; .. . . . Newport ~Yicti·m . _:Shot at Slay~·rs By JOANNE REYNOLDS Of tM DallY Pli.t Sl•lf raially wounded with a bullet in his chut, Baycrest resident W i 111 a m Mc~ley Harris fired away with his own revol\rer at his murderers before falling .Jiea4.'_on..hi.a.Jront Poreli. . . OAILY I'll.OT SI.,. ....... POT 801 LS AT NARMCO Smoke In Coste. Mt11 M ys te1·y Liquids Cause Bl aze At Mesa Pla11t A vat of chemicals unknown even to the e:t~l.se of the Qista Mesa Fire Depart- mt1ft bllbbled, bubbled and then burst in- to Oame late Tuesday night , causing firemen some toil and trouble. pPly· $400 damage was caused al the Thars how Newport B e t c h in- vestigators reconstrucied the I a a t moments o( life for the 60-year..old retired movie producer after he ap- pareTJtly surpn.sed burglars In his home Ill 2012 Anchor Way MondaY. n~t.~ llis body was disCovered Tues:<lay morning by neighbors, 15praWled across the doornay of his home, sUll clutching his~.38,caliber....revolver.. -- In recOn,,tructfng the c r i m e , in- vest.lgatars said the suspect or suspects probably entered between 8 and JO p.m. • through an unlocked bathroom·wtndow 8.t the rear of the home. Harris was. apparently watch Inc television at the !ront of the house, when he heard in&itden and went to in- vestigate, of£lcen re.parted. The victim was standing in a hallway when he surprised the would-be burglars in one or the bedrooms. It was tfu!n, police specuJatc, that Harris wa!. shot. Harris had a .38-caliber revolver which he used in his losbig battle with assailants, officers explainerl . An unknown number of shot.s were fired as the dying man chased the suspects down the ball and out the door, where he fell rataµy wouilded. · Investigators said the buritars ap- parently hid not taken anything when t~y ww ~rprise4. 1!arris' was car-ryq t ... al ·hundred dollars and' a · valuatill, ...,,_ ring,wben 1111 body wu foilnd, Uief110ted. • Polit;< said they've turned up notb!na to Indicate tbe usallants had been -in the l!hooling. Hanis ,. .. found clu\· ching hle: gun. but the murder weapon has~ been recovered, they reported. AU but one neighbor said they heard nothing d\lring the night. Htrrls' next door nel1hbor said she heard commotion and nolaes late Monday night which she did not ir.vestigage. Drug Discussion To Be Presented In Mesa Lyceum Something new will be offered tonight al a panel disCUMion on drug abuse at Costa Mesa High School's Lyceum, with the whole event videotaped for replay at later dates. The 7:30 p.m. session is primarily for f!arent~ Instead of !ltudents, according to Assistant Principal Bill Vaughn, but not llmited to Costa Mesa High f.chool alone. • . ORANGE' et!>UNT'(,. CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY' 25, 1970 • :S .reewa DAILY P'ILOT ,. ..... .., 1M ,,,_. Sea Hay Takes to F~ag Landlocked boatmen attempt lo remove 24-foot Sea Ray from San Diego Freeway i••l north of Harbor Boulevard in Costa Mesa. Dnver Dill Oldfield of Anaheim, whose truck is just out of photo to the right, was headed to Huntington Center ~t show with the'craft this morning 'when he was tOrced to · stop-abruptly in northbound lane. Boal, from Harri• ·-son's Boat Center, Santa Ana; ·nipped off trailer through fenc e and into south bound lane. 1 PSA Releases Agreement To· Acqqif~ Air UilifQruia ' . Pacific Southwest Airlines announcect Tuesday the term• of Jts agreement to acquire financlill:N>l•e¥ed Air California. If all partJa •Jll>fOVe. the ~ is expected to be <"'11Pl•teif by mld'4pril with Air Cal's 4,098 itockhoklert,. reot!~· ing shares of PSA stock CUJTtnUy worth $4.5 million. The agreement is conUrttent on Air Cal's lolal deficit not exceeding $3.82 mil· lion on the clo!ing date or the transaction .. Air Cal curnntly bl in debt aver $3 mi~ lion. PSA 's offer to buy the Newport Beach- hcadquartered Air California first was announced Dec. 16, a llttle more than a month after Air Cal rejected a first PSA offer as not being in the best interest or shareholders. PSA, based in San OlefO, is already the nation's largest airline operating within one state. r The aireement announcett Tuesday cal~ (or the tranoler of 181,Cl shares o[ PS~''iocl<-!o Air =fl<ickhold••>' 'PSA clolied It 24 and 1,14 on tlie New Yori stocl: ""'&a:ri the ....... mrnt fs worth ft liltlion at present value.-· .,, . • A provfalon of the qreement Ls that PSA· will cut I.I! ltoct ilsue bY 1.lltlO sha rts for each PS,* Alt cal's debts erceed 13.44 mlllion. · . The purchase is subject to approval by Air Cal stockholders, the st.Ile Public UUU~es Commi!!lon and lenders of both companies. It may require prior approve! or the Civil AeronautJca Board, PsA .said . Earlier this month. Jn anUclpation or the acquls!Uon. county tupervlson ratl· fled a lease transfer from Air Cal to PSA at Orange County Airport. In doing so, supervisors forced PSA to limit t.be num- ber of lllgbta out ol the airport and the nol1e of Its aircraft and to not ~rate at olght. Airport lmpaci Study Consultants Selected A coosult.ant lo conduct. an airport Im· cies far the county-operated airport were pact study for the city of Newport Beach set. · was selected Monday by the City Council. Willf:Y and Ham propoR to do' the 1tudy The consulting firm of Wilsey and Ham, 1 _ _...of •~ lltltJ to •u 11t1tJ 'Tbe r ch a, a "'~ ..,.,, -· . range, o Arcadia, was osen after C),)UJ')C.i)men a 1pokenaa lakl, it 1ttrlbutable kl the also heard a presentaUon by a delegation unknoW,n amount of documentltion that from Quinton-Budlong, ol Los Angeles. wUI be requited. ol DOiie and econprnlc Newport to Bill Engineer Corps li'or.:R~ ~&!'in~ The U.S. A1Tft1 Corps of~ lJ goma to pt b,llled by1ho Clb 1'fwport seaCh ftir ~ cost of re r rocb from ~~~.,port ~. ' In a ' """'1~ reoollition, dly councilme Y iafjl thel do.111 ... cept tM Cor;>o' ciut that-It 11 'b<oia "'1'I there I! no money l~t In !ta 111nd hlulhil contract. . The city says it wa nts the SS.000 or. more it will coil to clean the beach with- held from J)8yment to contractor Chad· wick and Buchanan. The firm hauled silt trom Jhe Santa Ana River channel for the Corps ind de· pMlted It on the West Newport strand. "The Carps has obvJously constructed an erosion barrier. That Is what ws have, an ero,sion barrier, not 1 ~ach,' 'grum. bled Councilman 0ona1a Mclnnla. Councilmen nld Ibey wlii try to bring pressure to bear on the CorPll lhrOOgh Congressmen James Utt (R-Tustln) and John Tunoey , (D-Rlverildel, b/th .or whom McGinnis said vlsltod tbe beach and heard. Corpa offlcen: aaaure th~beacb would be clean. · The council was particularly put out with Col. Robert Malley who they re- membered lini'ed them everything would be taken Clfe of. "He gave us 1 mow job/' saJd Lindlley Parsons. ,\ "He 1ure had a nice smile,'" said How· anf'ltogers. 1'Jesa Physician ' N1rmco Materials Division of the \Vhit· t¥ei' Corporation plant, 600 Victoria St.. a~ that was just Joss of the -batch of ~mial compound. Instructional films are fine. but fre. quently shown, campus officials explain- ed Tuesday. so the drug abuse symJ)O.L ium is ·to be almost a talk-show type or format. A thrtt·rnan panel including C o s t a Mesa Police Chief Roger E. Neth, Long Beach..Police Lt. Jim Miller, In charge of ihe lJBPO narc:oUcs , buerau, and a .,.ycholo(ilst, Oiarles Dames will dfl<uss ,. Gouncilmen said they were impressed impact. by Wilsey and Ham'1 promise to worJI; ~men uked tht city staff to pro- Gettfug Better · "J;ause of the 10:20 'p.m. eruption is ~-1 under investigation todaf by the ~partment's Fire Prevention Buruu, tittt the probers aren't even !IW'e what it was. that ignited. • :t !They have some prc~ty, f;XOUc materials now and one almost bu (o be a d\emist," said Battalion .C!tft Ron Q9leman, adding that 8(Jti,e cbemical ~action probably sparked Ute ~ -lfe said the material was idfrlUfje(( on- 1f. by a plant mix. n~ and firemen liiYen't run across an ythinli, llke it in Uielr categorization of .c.al ccm- pounds. • ;.The Narmco plant. a throwback to ooeUme counly Industrial zoning, before tJje area was annexed to Cotta Mm and developed as a residential ne~, had a 1imil1r fire last yur. ' the drug problem. · Quesllons will be &n""7ed by the team of experts, ind a ll5t or 11 good ttfertnce sources for parents with a family drug problem .. 111 be provided to •!low thilr own homework. -&:boo! off Idols stoged. a· Olmillr sym· postum 1111 year, but ntll!tpote a hlllhe< degr .. or tntemt thl! .tlm< due to JIMJW· _ Ing IW&ttnlSI or the problem ~ n.. cent headUne-maklhl cmnpui cues. The ftMlslant principal uld the affair fs not plauned lo< )'>Ulllller1 bec:aUle u,., -the Caito -ffa1>pooing, • dl)'-IOOI em Sobmfl)', which hu bee11 In tbe -U for the pUI yfu, ' , .lhveatigators said =Jae, 1'\ll<h df,OM!d mttch heivicr remfted "" · 1mm .111e acc1<1en1a1 ca :_ .. , ra11> Zoliing Exception tiPe malerlal at a l\lgher-"!l'l'"f•luro than normal. ·.. • Oka d f Ce J:Ueat is used to Induce cerliln chemical ye or -,nter ~anges and the proceu coe~r . ... -. ti"' containers were •torod ~)lot ~~Mm plannlng commlllllorl mem- dipment, causing eventual tgnJUqn. ... UC1• •ppnwed I 1.0nJ m:iept.ion. to allow 1:rhe plant produces a Variety or the tsbblld!ment d. a day<1re center fiberglass resins and other such defense for pre-school children in a home at Z50 and manufaciutln&·related materials. W · Wilson St. . • The $enter, which will be run by Mrt. •.NEW YORK (Al') -The stock market Mid onto a smell but fairly firm lead In iJ-uggish trading lale lhls afternoon. (See quotatiom:, P1ges .....,,. - Wallace Romsen of 1225 M~1ck Lane, wlll provJde care for 8 maximum or 10 chUdren five daya a week. Planning commissioners were told the center Would operate from t to 11 :30 a.m. or from 12:30 to 3 p.m. and will be open to chlldren 1ge thrtt to five . ... ·r ') cooperaUvely, phasing in ltUdiet, with pare 1 pa 1;D11l ~·lntb wor1: pballl ""°ther aJrpOrt coosultant recently hired so tbey C!OQld do\:fdO how much Ibey wlll bY the Oran1e C:O:Unty Board of Super· be wflllni to IIiel>d ., tJ1ey go ·along . vllors. Aulall <lompton, Willey ind Ham vice Cooncllmen uld they wanted to get·in-• pnildent who will head tbe study, aalif put• of N~'i position Into the count)' · he MllevfS "tbe communltl' lJ at a study before it was aimpleted and poll~ cr'OISl'Oldl now. Jt WjJJ-.take deep •and seriOUI study. There bl a JlmJt.ed amount or quietnw now .-Ith narmal commetce . at the ai(port.." ' Thief Rolls OH With2Wagons Cr!t!qlil111 the: pr•"'111tfon otthe o111er COl1IUltlftg firm, ~1......-.,, Coun- cllmn Llndlley P...-lald, "It wu my •eulon they ,....Id be Vtt)' IOOd U we wen4oing to buUCI 1 new alfpqrt.." ·'nl~ollerwu 1~,000 A tlritf bleebed two authentic oid atudT; ; • • -wagons up to aboot 4!11 ' A Costa M..., obyslclan who accldenUy !hot himself· wtth 1 .311 caliber derringer carried for .. K·J>'Otec\l<>n Is now slightly lmflfoved (rom tM .ne,&r·fatat incident. Dr. Melvin Shatavsky, 45, is still listed Ill serious condlUon, however, acCGrdinJ!: ta authorU~'at Hoag MemorlaJ lJospital. The doctor ,.u working on h!J car;SUn- ~ at his ollJce at 140 .Baker St .. when the -11 .,,..Pon. camed 1h 1111 coat pocket illscharged, burying a slug In his cheat. 'Suri...,. was performed, although hoo-Pllai olllcllll wero concerned about hta kiN of btoocl, and tbe lormu Los Anaela pradldoller baa pined . back -· ......,ii.. . c ' ho,...' wortb ' of modem• truCI< ., ,.., =:1t~d. ~ .. = , . Be•I '.I ople88· llldill)I 0. Pejoy'an, of M Hell ' " ' • -' .. Bar A .... a...m,i.. Beach, told po11ce ri' · S H-' J · ~~!"'.:.;;".:.'1beU:.::r8:r~ r'atr'!ns tripped, ew up constructlon lite DOW being cleared. • I \ . 1be bdckboanfs, wei&hhll about -~ II Ille flal-Pori i..u,.. Iii ' U..ir clothoi ..,.., -hHI I riot .. • 11t1t • poGnds eocb, were paite<I ~ Be"'°' --· nir· tlltlr handa " ..,. olfte!r ~ned. belldo . hill Grower's R ~ ~ch Int red f..., end llO! JllUC:h elae follOwIO, the b;;/11a heTded their victims ITI1o Produce, 2011 Newport Blvd., IC• an 'an\led .-l'l' at the bar at 4IO'I W. ' ·tJlo.rdt"'°"" and told thlln .oiot'to come conllng tq Officer ~ Sperling. Coast Highway Tusday night. • ~ 'POiice said 1be pair Iochd the lnvestilltonl ~ the stolen Poli~ Aid I mefi and woman, lfmtd !Mid.Ina: when they left. ·vehicle case u a grand theft, 1lhce with 1 .JktUlier revolftr ,took about .... Whtn Pf!troimen anlwd o,i OM! acene buckboards don't '!"l!Ill' -undef fl,llllO' 111 Clib. "'waman'1 dllniooil'rlnJ ll•y won (ll'9efA!d by'llle cir1.,.1y 'cl.ui'. Callloml1 Vehl~ .9!"f dtilgna· a..i all tbe-ln>on 10 nllle ,-,_. ed vlcllma. ''1!iey -wearq. ~ lion. .'. • .' "l'M)r ~to toiiO Ille ,_,.uta' tlJq oouid find ~ bar lowell or blouiu" \; ' .. 'c-too but Ibey l"'l,Ufl ""'' .. 1..,, tile ,!.,. ~ lot u.e.n,· .. In-' tlltt~ decWed tl)q'd let.tllelll..... vt!UIM« ~ I ' " i -.. ' • • TOday's F111a1 -·· . -TEN CENTS .. ~ . ~· ButGrUher Refuses • To Give Up By THOMAS FOfmJNE 01 ""' o.11y '1111 stltrt The seven year fight of lhe Newport Beach City Council to push the Pacific Coast Freeway route inland appears te>- day to be over. City councilmen said for the first Ume A1onday they would be willing to sign an agreement with the State ·o lvilion of HtgbWilji1Ci'bulld the rreewa7'aloog tht adopted fO!Jte . ~ore councilmen sign. however, ~ng1ncerlng problems wil!..bave_t.o.Jte ironed out to their· satisfaction. '11!at means agreement st.Ill could be a long way off. But councilmen. nevertheless have now said they aiuld accept a coastai rouUng they have peyer . liked -and still don't -inste~ insisting on pushing the route inland. The reason they · are softening their stand i! their reallu.Uon that with Costa-- ,.1esa city official! adamantly opposed they are never golng to get anywhere in appeals before the State Hlghwy eom: mission. Thty must receoUy lost apln Thursday in what they called 1 final •Po peal to reopen lhe.tpute..., So Monday afternoon tot the first time city councilmen allowed that they mi,hl be willing to abandon tbeir ulllma!e wea~ ·-refusina: to lien an alJ:eerhent tying In tbe freeway with local city ltre<ts. ' "History may look upan·wbat '""'""iied he~e .. vap:," said Councllmao Robert Shelton., ··~ I am also a realist. We )iave -tht,poinl In Ume when '.'!' inusl thlnlt ol reaJllr, not viclGry or cltlul l' lie· even !"geil thal since tbe dll" w[lb be w«klnc to reline the ldopted rou(t, tt do so 11greulvely. ''The longer we drq our feet and tnt at wtndmfllJ the IOrnler this community will sufter without a freeway.'' he said. ''There i! competition for the gas tax dollar (the source of fun· ding for state freeways)." But Councilman Undsley Parson11 didn't see a need to rush ahead. He said the freeway_ probably is six or seven years off and suggested I.bat "with pressure from Costa Me58 to · get the Newport Freeway built the Highway Commission may come to us at some point in time." • . I one councilman, Paul J . Gruber, 1'.&- mained vigorously opposed Jn the af- ternoon study, session to a~il)C the adopted J'OOle, which bugs the' blUlf .iong Pacific Coast .tfighway west ol the Upp;er Newport Bay bridge. "Wh'y should we be content to rPove In. ta the jaws of destructlon'!" Gruber ask- ed. "T)'ll! has always been offensive to our environment. It wtPes 001 the ,west el)d of town and a buSlnesa secilon !Mariners Mile) in a way that Is 'inctm· celvable. This massive structure would be exposed to the view of our bay. I just can 't see it.'' Bu~ when it came lin.e to vQte Monday. evening, Gruber "joined the others and made it unanimous to ask the city ataff to Work with DiviHon of_,H i g h way 1 engineers to aee Jf ,IJl'Ob~rnt·ean be soJv .. ed "within tbe llmlta ol lhe adopted route ." ' · ' Gnt!>er later explain~ U\al ~ coukt~'t win tns point so the nu:t be1t thing 'f"•• to work with state hlghwa)i t nglneera.. "fn lryinJ to work Olia out Uiey can't (See FREEWAY, Pap I) Oraage Coast Weathr . ' Why ruin a 109d thini? Jt'D be juSt .. IUDOY Tburllday' "'"' hlJh clouds and lemperale lempmitur;a In Ule lower 70s ltOng the Orange Coast. INSmE TODAY When HEW Stcrtforl/ Robert Finch shtbs hil toe, UkrGLr wince. but tM pre&identfal cOn- /fdant doe~'t gtt• hurt ofttn. llao< 12. • -n --.. ............. , .. .. __ " ... .. S'ftwft l'#tlr .: :::.:· ......... ·--TiiMIWt = ....... ~ . =...-• ........... "t1 • ' • • ' t · ... .-. ~ &, o,A!\• i:i10!., • .,, ." ., .• "(M...,,""""" n, 1'70 Prote•~• Witt I ...• L. "· Alley in. Newport ' . . Won't B·e ··Paved A proposed allty aiseasment district for Newport Heights was defeated Mon· day nighl by an aroused crowd of 126 ptraons that more tha:n filled every seat In the.Ne¥.'J)Ol't Beach City Councll cham-c> ' ~ uer. \' City councilmen voted to d1asolve pr~ ceedinis that would have cost 481 resi- dtnt& $f00 each ror alley pavtnc. The ortrwhelming sentinmit ol property owners was that the price was loo mucti. Al.SO party to the proctedlncs "·er~ 25 pioptrty owntra of one. block ln Batboa ( who would have !\Id to pay MOO each for paving ol U'lelr somewhat Mrrower alley. ~ pity Clerk Laura Laglo& aaid .274 pr~. ~ lfft letter1. pa,t cuda or slgnaturei . on pttitJons had been rereJved. Anothtr 15 ( post. carda v.·ere handtd in durln1 the i hearing. ~ Tht total, if ill were valldate<I as prqp- ( erty owntr1, clearly wu more than the : 50 perctnt protest neee&W')' to dl•so~'e 4 the ~eedin~. l, TWf:nty.four persons spoke during an hour and a hair of testimony. Toward the • Jat.,-14gt1 when It was rather apparent ~ thfJ' woold' def tat tht asae11ment district, 1pea;ktr1 aaid they did want better alley1 and would like the city to contribute • Newport Delays American Legion Site Decision NiWport Beach city councilmen Mon· day po$tponed aettn.c on American Legion .Post .291 s. request for an txttnslon of tu ctuhl'rcuse-t:lt!. city-owned property lease eutraUon from 197$ to 1"5. .Cit;y councilmen said a review of all ci~.owntd lease property Is in order. That property Includes tht Balboa Bay Club. Beacon Bay, the Balboa Yacht Ba!ln and r.tarihapark Trailer Park •d· jactnt to the Le(lon building. "A gtUdy might indicate a more 11ull· able locaUon for a Veterans Memorial Building 11 the new civic ctntu ," Coun· . ~man Und!lley Parsons uid. "Water· frlici! \>r~nr ·a1'ol'ld bt recreartonal for •ll lh•··~hens. not jtist•v<teransl" : · CWnctli'n•n PiUI Grub<r tiid ht was saU$fled with the American Legton oetra· tioa oo the bay· at 15th Stre~ halfway out the Balboa Peninsula. He i~id he ~hi the City ~nc:jr .,.ed lhe' l'.efion •. m1n11itrt •a'-decilfon ,fn the llf!< Mur<. Tbe Ltiinn11 req\itst "'". 'dlarltd" ' unut APril 17, 1fl<r the ele<tion of new ' City' C.OU.ncil members and after 1 plan. t ned mttttng with cltv pbnntAA: eornmi· sioner1 to discuss 1 Newport 'tomorrow 11tudy that called ror re.view of city~ p~r1J . t> The city be~an Jea~ing the "old camp ground" Sitt: to the. Ltlion In 1130 and t. !ht prtt.:ent M0,000 building was COD· ~ struct.ed in 1950. The Newport Harbor Legion Poet h1'S shared Its facilities on occasion with some 20 othe~ community organizations l.nd the Leeon and lll·Womsn's Autillary 11pensor 15 youth programs and acUvi· tfea: rtc0gnlzini community servi«. , Appraiser Hired • : For J\farine Study The NtWfJOrt Beich city councilmen 1'fond1y night hired apprais:er Cedrle White, cf Anaheim, for a fee not to tx- ceed $500 to 1ppralse the impact on Beacon Bay and Balboa Yacht Basin of the Irvine Company's proposed marina and home development below Promon· lory Point. "We will have to get Into severance d1m•ies to Btacon Bay residenti for telocatln& Bayside Drive," City Attorney Tully Seymour advised. mort than '50,000 to the '350.000 e1Umat· td price. . There wa1 applause when speakers asked for M-50 city participation and sev· eral pe.rsons made the polpt that digging up the alleys to put in Cablevision and re- pa.lr pipellnet ·contributed greatly to de. lerioration of tht alley surfaces. The fl\'O city council candidates seeking to represe nt, the. area each made iii pitch. Ro.y Woolsey said he believes !here is a distinc t chance the freeway rou!e will be reope.ntd and in that case some of the homes w~ld be taken out. He 1.rgued that lo J)lve the alleys now would just pasa on greater cost to the state in con- dtmnatlon: Cir! KymJJ argued it is normal prO.. cedure to create an auessment district by petlUon. Hthe city has waived thl11 and (One the protest route," he said. Kymla also aald the city should have sent a Jett.tr to t1ch homeowner ln\•olved telllnti: him when the hurin1 'l'OUld be and the flnancfal int1>1ct. CJtv ,Ui'cial1 told Kymla they h11d dnn11: exacU.v that and Mayor Ooretn Marshall pointed out t~t on~ of the protests had ('f'lme from an absentee pf'operty owntr livlnq in Virginia. Asked w!iat the city plans to do now, Miyor ManhaU-saJd, \"T think the mes. sage ia Jood and clear. '1'hl1 is tht ueonrl tlf11t in iiix years the city has COOJ>f:rated "'ith residents who want tliefr -allen r.iaved. The cilv has made evffv eff0tt tn put It together and Jf the piopte up there don't want ·it. so be it." Conncllmtn Donald f.fcJMis said it wi!J be up to lhe clliiens of Ille area ff) d~ide lhtrmelves what thev \Vant done and come tn the city ·v!th a ·prooosal. Ht said !hilt was done recently in'We11l N'ew· port after proceedhi•s ~ere dil!iSOJvtd on a cllv attempt to form an alley paving $1itlricL Councilman Lindslty ParAon~ lillltf he could not in izood faith ask hls Corona rlet f.far c:on~titutnts to pay toward the Ne"·oort Jieight.~ alley1;. City Policy, it was pointed out. make~ allev improv,ment the responsibility of th" adjoining propet1y owner. Several ptrsons questioned whether the roe);: and Oil treatment ~lven the alltys in 1948 wasn 't acei!pled by the city. and i[ p<>!. in so many worda then at Jtasl by virtue of the ·city ·haVlilg used and reoaired the alleys for 22 yeiiis since. City Public Works Director Joseph Dev· lln noted, "Strfft improvement rtandards of New..,ori Bt1tch are ht~. adm ittedly lhev are bjgh. But to be ftJr ~Y have t& be the !amt 11 for nt'( dev'11lpJ>e}'11.'' ff~ said ft wa's prop(,Seit l}le 11lleys· be paved .a1th concrete. The cod. fnr six Inches or concrete. he said. v.·ould be about 11.15 f)er Sf'IUare foot compartd lo .about SI.II\ for nine inehes or asphalt, which would not last. ProDtrtv owne rs wanted In knnw Vt'hv city streets then are not paved with corl- ctetfl. Otvl/n said cl!y i.treet.s can ht fli\'ed c~~aflf'r because paving machlnell tl'I compaet the asphalt. the most important operation. can be used. Alleys are too narrnw for the asphalt paving machines anti have to be peved by f'land. he said. Alsn. he ncited , streets are paved high· er in the mlddle with runoff to eoncrete curb!! &t eithrr side. Alleys , without curbs. are constructed Tow in the mid· di, with runoff down the center. ln a relati vel y few years watt.r runoff breaks down the asphalt in the middle, he said.· • t ' f • .,. .... . ' r ~ • .. DAILY l'ILOT ll'llf'9 '11' •ldllrol KWt .... Swl•a11in9 Cameraman _, Usir\t• · helicopter with specla"l camera mount . cameraman ,t1Jms still another scene in "Doctors' Wive&," a ·movie now in J)rbducUon on location in HarEor Are~. Cameraman was shooting footage ,, of another helicopter being used as air ambulance in the film and skies over Costa Me'sa w3 s where the action took place . . . Summer League Baseball Registration Announced ReiistraUon for Harbor Area 1ununu baseball wlh run from March IS lo March 19 for boys in grade1 seven through II , accordilli lo area baseball commlssicmer Newport, Toro Meet on Flights . .A meetin1 on t.farch 23 with officer11 from El Toro l\farint Air Base wai; scheduled ti-londay by Newport Beach city oou.ilmen to discus.! military flights over J,he cl~. · . Cooncllmen saj4 t6" prpbl<m subsided ror some~tlnle af~~r e,ruer talks with the air bafie officers .hut jets are now creep- ing back In over ~rona del ~far. Counellman Lindsley Parsons said he particularly is concerned abou:t flight s earlier than the 7 a.m. Testrictlon on takeoff from Orange County Airport. Congress Selects Poet Consultant WASHINGTON (UPI) -An Oreaon poet and college professor has been nam· ed consultant in poetry lo the Library of Congress. it was announced today. \\'illiam E. S!arford, an English professor al Lewis And Clark College in Portland. will succetd \VllHam Jay Smith in September. Rod MacMlllian. Opening day for the. junior bigh and high school leagues will be Pt1ay lit, he said. The first two \Veeks of April will be for registration of fifth and sixth graders with play opening June 6. MacMi\lian said. Second. third. and fourth graders wUI register in the last v.·eek of April and fi rst week of May. with league play starting June 17, he added. Specific registration information will be distributed lo area schools prior to regiJtrallon, he said. The program Ji; sponsored jointly with the Co1ta Mega and NewpOrt Beach r c c r e a t i o n depa rtments and the Harbor Area Boys' Club. Mesa Seeking Walkie-talkie T11ef t Complaint Complaints charging a Gt and his buddy. allegedly ca.sing a Costa ,_1esa apartment complex while comrnunicat· ing with walkie talkie outfits. were being sought today from the District AUorney. Ot:lective Art Courteau said he expect· ed the complaints would be issued dur- ing the afternoon, depending on evalua· liolf'"of lhe evldenc r. Annv Pvt . Andrew E. Pr ice Jr .. 21. of 361 ViC!oria St. Costa Mesa. and ~obert L. Payton. 20. of 3342 Sea Knoll Drive, San Clemente. were arrested f.fonday nil(ht. Both v.•ere book'd for investigation of burglary, while the civilian wAs also charged with possession of dangerous dnlj8. Police said Price and Payton "·e.re: ob· served around the apartments at 2700 Peterson \\'ay -a high crime rate with burglary leading the list -and carried walki&tal.kies. Mor.ni11,g Stop For Coffee Ends In Car Sivik1t A Costa Mes{ln on a coffee break caus· ed a fellow citizen some car trouble Tuesday. in a caper that could have been prevented perhaps by a second or third cup. The trouble : The car itself. 1"he moral : Never park your bronze. 1967 Chevrolet El Camino next to another bronze, 1967 Chevrolet El Camino when lhe sleep is stil l in your <.yes. Patrolman Gary Sperling was dispatch- ed to the J\.1r. Donut shop, 135 E. 17L'i St., on a suspicious circumstance caise after one motorist was marooned by the other. They parked on one sidf: and had coffee on the other. Puzzling over why anyone woUWI steal the car keys and leave behind l 1valuable set of 10U clubs, Officer SperllA(', the vic- tim and his companion soon learned. The embarrassed man drove up in the identical E1 Camino, in ~hlch the key11 had been left, exchanged cars and apologies and departed agai,1. · The only difference in the can wa& a single missing hubcap. ''That's the fir&t time In my career this ever happened," sald the policem11n. who didn't take down the men's names, because the case was officially closed. · Semh1ar Slated On Drug Abuse A seminar on drug abuse and what can be done to curb it will be held at 7:30 p.m. Thursday at the Little Theater at Corona del Mar High School, according to Ed Cibbarelli, community relations of. fleer for Newport Beach police. Clbbarelli said the seminar is beini sponsored by the high school's student council and PT A. The session Is beinr held to educate parents to the drug pro- blem and to generate ideas to help con- trol it. Parents and 11tudents arc welcome tn the seminar. he said. . . ' I I I' rona Pag~ J' FREEWAY ~ •. help but know the roote's not satisfac· tory," he said. · Harold !jla11.-a fr'!'WY apok-.,jn> N~wporl H!llbll ~ ......... ap. plauded the council action. "We couldn'I believe it." he said for those in the au· dience . ''We know It's been a hard, rough ' ao for you." EXHAUSTED EFFORTS ~1ayor Doreen Marshall said. ''We ha ve over the last seven years, and I th.ink justifiably, devoted consider ab 1 t resources of the city. We've pretty well exhausted our ef(orts to reopen. 1 We should try to 1eso1ve thiS l'low for the be~ Interest of tfie city as a Vfhole." "That statement is indicative oJ 1 defeatist attitude," said Gruber, durin,r the afternoon when the ,viii of the council as a whole still was not 1-:nov. n. Shelton told Gruber, "There is nn strong community sen:iment for' the council to pursue this farther. On tht con· lrary, most of wbat we hear is just the opposite." / · . ~ , "le will be a purveyor of smog and Pollution in our community," protested Gruber. He then argued for no freeway at aH , but Instead what he called "i' 111per arterial 51stem" -fenc!d-alf highways like Newport Boulevard headed up toward Costa Mesa. None or the othtr councilmen saw it his way. Councilmen Donald Mc!Qni1 col)Ceded working )'t'ilhin the adopted route is the reasonable way to RO at this point .. OJ8ut if l s~e the engineering begins comini oul, like a Chinese \Vall to en1asculate ~est Newport. there is r.o way I will sign.' he warned. SVGGF.sTED COVRSE Parsom. chairman of the eouncil's freeway committee, suggest~ the coqrse that ¥.'On approval . He""'also proposed thal Assemblyman Robert Badham ( R • "Newport Beach ) go ahead and introduce ler;:islation saying the Highway <;:~m· miefon should reopen in cases when the adopted freeway route lies entirely within the limits of lhe requesting city. ~fclnhl.s said that might prevent the same thing that happened to Newflort from happening in other places. Righway Commission policy. P·arsons said be is pretty certain from (lbservl• tlon, is that the commisslc.n won't in- terpose between two dl1putlng political agencies. (In other words, Costa Mesa killed~Nt.wport's chances). ParsOns said the first µriority for city staff attention should be working out re- maining problems on the Corona del Mar Freeway. it being the most immediate and most urgently needed. Other coun· cilmer: aareed. Shelton suggested the city appoint-an advisory freeway board of architects and landscape architects and q,thers of capebUltiea not found in the city staff., "I think the state would not oppo5e .but welcome this kind of participation,'.' he said. J{is SUigestion v.·as well received by th< i;est of the co•ndl. ' . ' He's Just Part • ' Of the Scenery When in doubt., ask a policeman. That '& just what a Costa l\fesa woman did, arriving at lhe Civic Center and lllX· ious for directions about where to register to vote. She asked a handsome young unifonn- ed officer, st.andln& by with an air of authority, while a cast of eharaclers fOr a Columbia Pictures' release being filmed on location bustled about. . ""'hy don't you ask a policeman. lady? .. he replied. adding Iha.I his walk-on bit part called for no spoken lines. Bridge Clahus 376th SAN FRANCISCO (APl -A youth v.·ith long blond hair leaped to his death (rom the Golden Gate Bridge Tuesday night as a bridge patrol car tried to reach him. The victim was unidentified. Hii; n·as the 3i8th known suicide from the span connecting Marin County and San Francisco. DAllV PILOT From C.lilorni• Artis•ns, Eng•geme nt Rings of lncompar•ble oeauty, QR.t,NC.t C.0 .. liJ t'U.lllHIHG (¢M~AN 'r ~·~•rt N. W,t, !Orn....,. llfl4I """.,.._ J,, .. It C11•lty .Voct •rn •O•ftf ... Citll"tl MtM19f! T~t111•1 Ktt•;I iGh'r 11'& .. •\ A. M111111'i,., r.\•"tfll~I lit•••• Tll1tt"''' fort"~' u1,....,n l•f(" c111 li"o••o• H..,.rt hMll Offlu 211 I W 111 ltltlt• hMlt vf14 "6.1ilit1t A44rtn: ,,0 . lt• 111S. •1661 0'"9-Offkn Cw!I• .o.1._~~ JA Wn t lloy " ..... ' "'"""'' "4io<11: m ,11< .. 1 ..,.,.~ • MllftllfljlMfl -..cf!: U.1l l•ttlt ·-~ ' OAIL Y 'ILOf 111ft "'"" Read11 to Parade • S.ddlebeck High School drilJ.·team memben .(from left) Robin Kuy· kendell , 16 and Linda Sujlshl, 17. help Fairview State llo•6i!aJ drill team pre1ldent try on her new uniform al Costa Me11 racll!ly Tues- dey. Marching with them In a recent parade. girls of the Sllnta Ana campus drW !earn decided to make brighl, new outlits"!or all their performing collegcauts from !he hospital for mentally ret•rded. ,,. . CONVENIENT TUMS IANKAMERICARD MASTER CHARGE J. C. .J./umphrie:J Jewefer:J f Ill NEWPORT AVENUE COSTA MESA 24 Y£ARS SAME' LOCATION PHONE 541-140 f I - DAILY MOT I ~et· NafJNd . ·aumphrey Hooted QUEENll lly Phll lnte~ I • I . · Kidnaped ~i~ier~ • Found Unbarined Heckiers Halt Univ~rsity Talk · t t • .. • f .... • ,,. • ... ! AMHERST, Mau. (1JPI) -dellverlna his prepared text my opWon'tti, this C<lll•lctlon Hubert H. Humphrey Lied to calling for an "open _window" will ultlmatelJ be ta.km on to !Ilk about fore!~ 'a!falrs. policy In Con!IJl!l affairs. appeals lo blah<r courts and 'Ibey wouldri't let him. ''The coo~ction of the overturned.'' LmER;Y, Mo. (UPI) -J-t..j~.\(.1:­ 'l'wo lillle listers kidJllped llebble,iCllD. It, OI . , from their Butler, Ala., ,Nome Ariz.., 9" matber Of 'ha , . -' .... Chicaa:o Seven Js highly .quea-"i·can't contlnue this way/' i He tried ·to 1'. ... about the t Io n ab 1 e cansutuUonally," he told~ audiei:>ee. "I would Cblldnn. ' . ' I 1 were ,found safe In a car park· , ed outside a residence in this Autbortties declil)ed to iden- Chicago Seven cosptraey trial. -lfumphrey uid. "It violates ask you all to go home at this They threw popcorn ·and blew ~very 1tandard ol justice. It is poini. I'm leaving.•• whlsUes. , tify the ftlldents·ct the -Kanau City suburb early to-where M.alck· Wll _._up datf~ Cain, 3, and Tiffany but eredJted ':hem witb, IOhl- Cain,'2, appeared 1'well 'eai'ed-ti~ of the em. and ha "We I~ a ·•~~~· t•·,-for ppy," an officer "" "'41&1 -" <N laid. last night ._ -people, ,,,.; driver of th< car Johjl wbo oaid Ibey had been Charles Messick 21 TUcson noti{led tJle little girls were Artz.. was arresied inside t~ ... ~ ·broogh~ to. them," the bouae He bad lei\ a .3S7 · offl<tr·sdl lodljl. FBI agents, m~ revolver, a • 3 a ~ troOPera·,and: men from cali~ pistol aod a .12.ciillber ~ ~ C>iaril)'~ ~ . .: , Ul"IT ...... ACTOR SUCC}JMBS Conr..i\NOtoJ, 72 A small group of-dissidents at the Univenity of Massa- chuaetts preveo\ecf Hwnpbr<y for vefy long. A group of 100 militant Students completely ovenhadowed a crowd of 4,000 persons who jammed an auditorium ~sday night to llst!:n to lhe farmer vice pr~l­ dent. Alps Avalanche Threat Said Worst in 30 Years · rifle ~ In bis car wlth the I..-.:' _ • oat '"" .__ ...u ~ when ha ~tdnolde. ,..... wattma -Meailck Re oq.rt:d no~: d""" up._ i .a.m.)n a A lfArcb WM oa for a 1ee--pmk Cir' w~· ArllDnil tibm1e Md n\an idenlilled u Donald plataa. • Bradford Lee JOlllll',!?,' of Tl>!r ,.iJlod lll!4il l1e . bad Jacksboro. Tex., the FBI iald. gooeJnlide·and ""~led from tbe -belore.niOV· i"I In. lie ... taken lo the Hawaii 0 f(s ~ii,~ c-tr jlil 1a Kansai i\11 ~· laid the house where Meulck waa an.oted wu them.De of "close friends or diltanl · nlaU-I'm nol Kure which:" · • AbortiQn Bcm Repeal Actor Nagel 'Dies at 72 , NJ1;W YOfl!C'(AP )•-Conrad ~;the actor'wbo' mado tbe tr~ti<m from sil•t pictures to tatktes and1 Who was co-- founder of the Academy of MoUon P!dur< Arts aod Sciences, died~Tllesdlrof a beart attack .. C eniphysema. He WU 72. , Born In Keokuk.'lowa, Nap! bqan his stale. career in 1118 in ''Forev~r After.~· GENEVA (UPll -Swl8'' authoMties warned today that/ the danger of avalanches inl the Alps was greater than at.. any time over lhi pail 30 With occasional profanity, " the protesters j~red. and year1. ,A general avalanche booed every time Huf11Phr!!Y alarm went out through the tried to speak. there' were Swi~. AuStrian, Italian and shouts of ~·~t him speak,'" French alps. and "Sit down and be ·quiet," Two avalanches Tuesday at but the militants kept up a · Reckinc_en. Switzerland, and nmning barrage of Insults as Umslev1llard, Fraoce, killed Humphrey ltied to deliver his at lel!l 21 persons and left 19 address from a makeshift missing. Four persona were at.age. rescued alive today 24 hours Humphrey first agreed to after the Lanslevillard ava- student requests to discuss the lanche struck. Chicago Trial lmte&d ·o f An avalanche today in Uie • HONOLULU (AP) -The Hawaii legislature has J)lsSed a bill virtually eliminating _curbs on abortion. The bill in effect repeals a lOl;year"ld present law which pennits abortion only to save the life of the mother. Final legislative action came with a 15-t vote in the state senate TUOMay.. ~ 'The new measure ' would pennit abortiol) , by licensed physicians in licensed hospitals if tbe ..,.oman hu been a Hawaii resident for at least 90 days and the fetus Is ew-c :amaro. . ·b •. th. . -- not "viable." . . Legislative 1 a w y e r s in~ terpret "viable" to mean fetuses far enough developed to live outside the womb and say it would rover pregnancies up to four or five months. Medically unllc ens!d persons perfonning abortions would be subject to a max· imum penalty of a $1,000 fine or five-year prison term. Gov. John A. Burns, a Roman Catho li c who personally opposes abortion, said earlier he would· not •el9. An aborUon reform mu.iari but would let it become law without his signature .• Robert Pearson, a Maui Island contractor who led the anti-repeal forces said he would take the new law to the tJ.S. Supreme Court 1 f necessary. Man Jailed . . In Beating Death of Tot ASHLAND, Pa. (UPll - State police said today they have arrested on charges· of murde:r a man they said beat hi& girl friend's young son to death and bid tbe body four months ago In an abandoned coal mine. Russell Snyder. 28, o f Ashland was arrested late Tuesday night wh ile he hid in a closet of his home. Police said the body ol Ronald Mt'Corkl!:, 2, or Phoenilvllle had been recovered a short time earlier from the mine of 1.ferriam Mountain, two miles west oC here. The child's mother, Mrs. Gloria McCork.le. 20, who rnoved here recently from Fhoenixville f o 11 ow Ing a divorce. wu held as a tDaterial witness. State Pollce D e't e ct Ive George Durllla said Mrs. · .ftf<:Corkel and her r11ther, Fred 'Wallace o f Phoenixville. reported the death lo Phoenix· ville police Sunday. They told the police the child was beaten to death in October I n Ashland, Durilla said. State police and inspecton; from the Stale Department of li,flnes and Minerals tndilstrlu ted a search or abandoned 1trlp mines west of here Mon· day and Tueaday. l They found the body wrap. pet! In I blanket and a sleeper bag. .Governors Meet I WASHINGi>N (AP) -Th< Na t ~ o n a I ,Governor1' Co~ ference ~ual winter meetin1 opened today with education, frlme, the environment and tederal·state re\atJonshlps the key i,sues o{ dlscu~ion. Forty-five of the S4 state and territorial ,governors are on hand for the thr~ day meeUnt wbich begjna with a We've ..-rannou11eed a carat thls -t1111e befOle. 8Ut ttaen nobodn ewer announced a car like· this before. ........... If it were just-an-ordinary-sp"ortster, we m~ht have introduced .it atJhe·_ordi- nar_y time. , -. l'qt. we didn't.; : · And,as you,canlsee.;time!was~on!our side. • BecauselweTdidn't•botherJwithJthe simulated air scoops.' Or anyiother/put- ons that might put you off. lnstead,we took the time•to•build•a whole new car from the ground up. In four distinctive' versions: ·Standard,.Rally Sport, Super Sport and Z28. We started with a sleek new shape and a low. road-hugging stance. So it hovers a few short inches from the pavement. Right down there with Corvette. To that we added more hood. A faster fastback.· More window,area.:And,wider: doors for easier entry. On RS models, there•s·evenra•resilient bumper that surrounds the'grille • .'.l'o protect _agairat nic'ks and knocks. ~ ... _ Compare the new-Camaro-w1Ui · any competitive car in its field. If you .can find on e. TWo em a lludma. Noeldi. budcs. Most sportsters'giveryou two'buckets in front. And a sofa in .back.\We:ve _done t hem two better. The back seat'sofa'is·out.1In'are·tw.o rear bucket-styled cushions. Up front the buckets are deeply 'con- toured to put you firmly in place., And keep you there. Even in tight turns. · The instrument panel is just as functional. It's flat black and wraps around. With enough dials and in- strumentation to make you . think yo u're piloting a 747. Only with this; oneJyou;.don't need a flight crew. 'nle Ip I Cll f hlnclUnt Is bullt rill•t In. Camaro always had a tough reputa- tion when it ea.me to taking on tight turns. Now we made it tougher. •• 1 With a f'Orward-mounted·steer) ing linkage and an i mproved front and! rear suspension that give the new_ Camaro' a leech-like grip on the road ._ It's somethin_g other C;ll'S will_have~a tough time coming to grips with. What motivates in this? Six power plant's up to the 35ij..1ip Turbo-Jet 396 . you _ can. order.,.And_f_our transmissions. Pick the combination'that;best -suita your driving. · · -- Then go pick on an ope n road. lari;d7·1 d cllc llne'"t' :ftMi sUp •well•J'IMIP. It's onl;y-naturaL , With all that go, you · ·want an equal amount of stog. You've got it. Front disc brakes are standard. For less heat buildup. And more resistance to. fade . . New Camaro. The Super H~l,., ~ Other ca.rS always feared tt mig!if come to this. And they were right. -· . Ortly their tifuing wa.s :wron.z .. ' . Ptitting you firSt, keeps us firsf. .... leelC.Att.,....a.11 111.U·---. -.~- . J • • • t • • ' • • • • I • j ' ; • ,., !O '£ :ll ld ·b ,, '"I Is _,j ::> :11 ... -••• ~q '&! ,,, • ' , • • J , • • • ' • ' ., • .. ' • • ' " • . . ' ' ' J ' -. , ' t • .. ., • , !erles · of closed commlttct ~ ~ktns· • --~---~--------;._~--------------~--------'.'9'"'--~~--... --............. __ ..... ____ ~--------::: • .,.., : .. ) ' • - - .. ---~~~~~~~---~~.;__-----------------------~ -- .. -.. ., . ) •DAILY PROT EDITOR~ PAGE Stretching Th• teacher. In front of hi• cla11, pve a spell-out cheer of a !our-letter word for fornication. He did not lose his job. ,, A majority of the school board members of the Newport·Mesa Unified School District !tit that the teacher in question had abown above-average prorn.i t1e as an educator and in their vtew the penalty for his first mistake -the Ont )>rouaht before them -was not de serving of dlsmiual. \ So the teacber w11 back In the classroom, the next day after a reprimand.1 He ·had uaed the vulgarity, it wa".s explained, in an t tttmpt to"arouae1l cla1s from an apathetic di splay or indifference. The teacher also had ahown contritenes s. He brought the cla55 back ·together on the ••m~ day of the incident and apolocll:O!d to th• ·students. . Bui contrite or .not1 he dispt~yed such a $erious lack of judgment that it I• hard In explain away. It can be arrued that some, or part. or all. of the 'students had heard the word and thus should not have been or. fended . But few Indeed are <be parent. -and, we would hope'.tnchers -who would agree with that contention. At a time when Oducation lo und•r micr<>1cop!c scrutiny by the people who fln•nce It, situations such 11 this hardly add to public enthusiasm for our schools. Tn fact, they are luel ror the hard-core critics wbo spend their time chipping away at public trust in the educa4 tion1J system .. The issue boili down._ to this : The teacher displayed ei:traordlnarily bad judgment. The school board relt he deserved another chance. It obviously was a difficult deci!;ion for the trustees Manson 's ls Not a Hippie Band ... ~ ' . -. ' (. ,· ' . ' _Syduey J, H,arri~· .• _,,.,,.;.-!,~•JO.. ;:.,· . " Although J number no hippit.s amoni my relatives. rnends, or e\'eD ac- quaintances, l find it deplorable lh1t the band of vagaboqd1 cllariecj with tne..kill- ing of the. Sharon Tile menace will &D down in the. reeordl u a "hippie" group. Dear Cloomy Gus: Do tilt rer,rts In the OAJL Y Pl· LOT abou tht tvo yun of tMal inaction on t h e bike trails mean that the Parks, Beaches and J\ec. reation guy& are off the hook ? A great plan i& buried in the city's bureaucratic mire. -J. R. C. ''" ,..,.,.. "'""" .......,... ..... -~ .................. ... ,.., .......... II ........, 9411&. .. ltr l'IMf From what I can 11tber, -M1n10n and his weird crew of cuJti1ta rtJtmble. hip- pies only in the. way thal antl.matter resembles malter -as a perfect mirror· image. And thi:I is what confuses ~le, for ""e lend to judge only a 1uperfJcial appearance. and not by 5Ubstance. MANSON 'S LITI'LE band wore loog llair, dresled uneonventionaljy, and lived in an isolated commune -and these few surface characteristics are enough to brand them, ln t.he. public 'eye. a& "hip- pies." Nothing could be further from the truth, or more or a libel on the hlppjes. '!!My adopltd the hil'l'i< lilwtyle u ., tffecUV'I "cover" for thtir neiarklul IC" llvlUe1, JU# u villains and .,.lndltrs in the str11atl world ad&pt the covtT or ... poclab!llly llld COCWtnUouU1y. Jul to lhe. frighieoed and oul·raaed ordinary citizen, the Man.son case only IOtS lo Mow what the "hlp?fes'' are really capable Of. \Vhatever LMir faults or excesses, true hippies are nol hurtful people. Tbey try - to live. by love, not hate, and eschew \'iolence as the most impcirtant element in their creed. True., there are many thousandJ of 11ynlhetlc k.ippies running around, who do not pradlee these \•irtues. bot there is just as much liypocrigy and deception amon1 membe.r1 ol the "straight" societ y. 1\14.NSON 'S GROUP &ff111s to have been precisely a diabolic inversion of the hippie ideal. If reports are accurate, they lived on hate and violence, tried to pro- mote racial strife. apd encased in dark practices lhal scarcely fall on this side ol shetr lunacy. UJ'E IN AMERICA is tough tnoogh ror these social drop.out& without add ing the onua or ritual murder a n d psychopathic sadism. The.y are already unwelcome lyi moat commu11ilies. beat.en up by hoodhuns (who commit far more. depredaUon1 than the hippies do), pushed arOund by cope. and easy prey for bigots, blackmailert. and punlt.ive. prigs. l happen lo tblnk that the hippie life- style i1 aelf-defeaUn1, unleu it i1 in· wardly illuminated by a hich religious se.nae (as il la in loo few caae1); but they have. a right t6 livt as they wish and lo took as they wi5h, so Jong as they harm nobody but themselves. And, to fer . the scoreboard showa, they have the low~l criminal record for ·.rlolence of any identifiable an>uP of dissidtnti in the country. Bus School to the Kids A ctntury after the Civil War. I.ht North and South are at Jona lut reunited . A majority in both secUons is vociferOU&- ly apinst bUJln& pupils to lntecrated Kho61s. Unfortunately. the court.a art for it. The resultant crisis "once apln thttatens to split our nation asundfl' -with the D- ti·bllsing faction s e c e d t n i rrom the American judlcial l)'Jttm. Into the breacb. u aood fortune would have It. has leapt the ncted soclololist, R. Owen Bast.Ian. ' •• also fa vors. For the bused school woukl: a.erve se.vtral neighborhoods each day . ' Tolerance i~ !liey' evalu•ted what action would be in !he best in- terest of the student.. In term• of community support for lhe school 41atrlc~ there is little doubt !hat dism iss· al would have been the more popular action. \Ve hope that the trustees-and the school system they govern -. "'UI n.ot find that they have stretched tolerance tn I.he breaking point. The real question Is, did the school board, adminis- tr1tors and teach e r~ learn enough of a lesson from thi.s so that Ule're. just won't be a j•next time"? Status and Stability Take an outfit as large as Philco-Fo rd Corporation and move the headquarters ror a division y,ojth world· wide operations to your community. You have a real feather in the local cap. The· community had that occasion to take pride last week when Philco-Ford announced all space and de- fense operations with 15,000 employes will now be di· r~ted out of Newport Beach. John Lawson. who was httad of the Newport Aeronutronic plant, heads the new divblon. Law.son could have been moved to corp()rate head· quarters in Philadelphia to take the new Ford-Philco executive vice president post. but instead 20 person s are bein~ sent to Newport Beach to form his headquar- ters staff here. It's a mark of status -and economic stability - in the world of big business. N Supre~ CO.Wt' Vetffan. Due tor Deej»er Trouble D~uglas: tittle Black Book WA:iHlNGTON -A little: blark book which 11 ~nd to get JusUce William O. Dougl1s in dttper lrOtJble circulated in Congress in advance of ils February It publication date. Random House is publishing this 97. page ti me bomb under lhe title of "Points of Rtbtllion ". ll is an astringenlly-word- ed tirade against the A m e t I c a n "e.,,tablishment " the Pentagon, the FBI and CIA, police, employers and educators. and cOncludes that "violeMe IJllY be the only effective response" of outraged ~h. "George Ill was the symbol a1a.inst whkh our founders made a revolutlon, now considered briJht and glorious." Dou.glu wrote. George Ill tied no~ ems-4 td ij)e teal to (aaten a foreign yoke on ur. George Ill and''hi11 dynasty had e.slablished .and nurturtd us and all that he did was by no means oppressive. But a vast restructuring of laws and in- stitutions was necuaary if the people were to be conten t That restructuririg was not forthcoming and there was re.Wllution. "Wt: MUST REAUZE that today 's rslabllshm.tnt is the. new Geor1t Il l. Richarq " •• Whether it \\'ill conlinue to adhere to nis tactics, we do not know. If jt does, the redress. honored in tradition. is also n:!volution." Throughout his treatise Justice Douglas offers a jusUficalion for violence. He acknowledges violence has· no con· stituUonal sanction but says injustices may pile liO high 1hat violence is the only answer. In other passages the Supreme Court justica adviaes American protesters to ritk arrnt because the: police hav e no ri1ht to interfere with their freedom. Douglas' book is a catalogue or tht Ne\f Left's compla inl.!I against the fBI and CIA -and the vast bureaucra- cy of Ole AmerJ can system. He reveals S11t11e information which sounds more like Georgetown dinner table talk than judicially established fact. In inveighing again)t the FBI and CIA .. Douglas as- serts that "ctrlain hot2ls in Wa.ahin~on have anotmtnts of rooms that are wired for sound and even contain tw1rway mir· ror1, !O.Jhat the occupants can be taped pr filmed." EVERY GOVERN~tENT conference room ls a11umed lo be bugged, he asserts.' and every embassy phone is an open tran1mitter. Justice Douglas does not reveal the source of this astonishing information, but it is recognizable as or- dained fa ct in lhe circles in which the Supreme Court justice moves. Few would bt willing to quarrel with 1he right of a Supreme. Court justice in his old age expressing his pet peeves about Washington even if they do fit the convenlional stueotyP.t of what Spiro Agnew calls the. "limousine liberals." If Douglas wishes to excoriate the Pen· tagon. lhe military-indmtrial CQIT\plex , FBI snooping, the Vletriam War , in· clustrial personnel peraonality tests. and the afflue nt society he is not without company. The problem arises on the justification of violence and revolu Uon by an auociate justice of the United States Supreme Court. not merely campus sit-ins or wrestling with the police In Grant Park in Chicago, but violence inlended lo overthrow the government of th-e United States. Or, is that what Justice; Douglas justifies'! Is the "system'', I he. a Bomb •·establishment'' somethir1a different than U1e eslablished order under law? JUSTICE DOUGLAS conclude' all .by piously hoping that the revolution he it talking about will not be a repetitien of lii6. The revolution that is cominc, ht says. will arise from ''the search of yOu'th for ways and means of ma_king the cor· poration stale and of government tha~ runs the machine-the servant of man .", Thus when Justice Douglas concll.¢es his treatise he is not so high on the ram· part s as in the middle pass.ages when ltja high dudgeon eggs on youth to violenCe .. Then . having calmed down a bit, what. bothers him is w h e I h e. r ihti "establishmenl"-whatever that i!-wi~ be wise enouS}l not to use its •·stockpilt- ol arms" to suppress the dissenters, for. he thinks that would bring on an -awful" ordeal. lt1UCH Of" WHAT Douglas has written i!. a summation of conventional liberal poppycock. It reflect! the youth cult men· tality \\'hich entran<.'ts the 71-year~ld justice. This little black book may even· lually lake its place with the: little red book, "Thooghts of Chairman Mao'' in the :sacred shrines ol the young, ·. Moral Behavior Laws Have Failed To the Echtor : When the mo,•ie "l Am Curious ! Yellow)" is meaaured by the definll i<>n for pornography in the. dictionary there is no doubt that the movie. is oomographic, Nor is there 1ny doubt that a seminude or nude entertainer is guilty of indecent exposure and most likely lewd conduct. The1e kind• of human behavior have been around for a very long lime. and all previous measures that ha ve bee·n used to eliminate such behtl/lor have. failed . POJ\NOORAPll'Y, Indecent exposure and lewd conduct lhou}d be considered frorn 1 reUalous and a civil point of view. A religious poln~ ol view lbould consider the relation btlween '"'" Ind h~ pl whU• the cMI point ci vlow should look Into the relations betweeil men. Since thtre are miiiY dlffertnt reUcioos f'"P' and uch one 11\IY have a differtn vltw "' lhi• •ubjtct, nolhlnc coil!d be 1•lntd by lly!ni to el•bor1t1 OC1 tht rel1'i<Ns point of view. f I • lel!t .. lrom rt~fl l •t wtlte"'!I. l<ltrl'lltll~ Wtl!t rJ f#Wl\lld toll ...... ~Ir llMHtth I~ Jiit _...•Or lelt. Tlli 'llhl "' Ult!Of"M llll11r1 It Ill NKt or ,Uml· ""' 11i.1 It ,....rwa . .lll 1er1,,. mutt 1nch.oll1' 11 ... <lll~rt IM m-lilf"• !ldd•111, b\11 ntn>as m tv Ile w11h~•IO Oii reci~•I I! 1u111e1.i11 '"''°" 11 '"''"''" ._..,I' •!II .... bl PllblltMd or it.I citizens. much unnecessary frict.ion will be eliminated between the enforcers or the moral !1ws. police and iii citizens. HARRY B. McDONALD. JR. SetultlvlCy Tral1&ln9 To the Edlto" I hope that Dr. Norman Lotti WIS beln& f1cttious when he Rid that if there was an unpatriotic boy in a ela51 ana sensitivity training could make him pat(iotic then it was valuable In that regafd . (DAILY PIL.CYJ'. Feb. 11). The intent or sensitivity training is not to change attitudes, nor is it a "brain· washing·• .d~vice of any sort as Mr1. Pa t Walker said. The intent is sua1e,ted in lhe "namt : i.e., to help a. peraon become. more "sensitive·· to, and in touch \\'ilh, .hi~ own feelings and ideas and to the feelings and ideas or those persons he is involved with . Surely this could be of some value lo a teacher faced wilh :IO or 50 dlvene and very individual children every day. ANDRE;A J. LINGLE Dr. Norn1oii Loots, assistant sup- trift.ttndent for instruction in t he Nt1DpOrlrflfts11 3choot district, $<lid, "If sensitivity training means chO:ng· ing attitudes, then more of it should toke place in the clcu1room." -Ed itor Praise tar Flre1M1& To the Editor . Last Sunday our home was dntroyed by fire. but our faith in fireme", policemen, friends. neighbors, even wel\- wishing strangers will ever be with us. We have nothing bul praise for the fire department units which arrived very quickly to find the garage engulfed in gaS<lline and natural gas-fed names. NOlhing much could be done to save lht remainder of the house, but. through their thou&htful conslderateneSll, family pic- tures, keepsake.!.. and treasured item,, were saved. ~-~·~..,-~...,~oAIJOd~as!§!!lia!!JLt: so accurate ly points out, hardly anyone Is against irltegraUOn -at least publicly. Wh al everyon1 is publicly and piously against Is the con- IT rtDGffT START one morning in the ghetto, picking up blatk moppet& at t.htir door1. then ptOCeed 1aily, achoo! btll clanglng, to a WASP 'n•ichborhood for·• load of 1maU-whlte fry. OUI\ MODCRN toclety ha& many· ways of ~ifirmlnlng-eijl0rlfilontany-im1t-t1~ fed pornOfT1phy, tnde.cent erposure and lewd cot1duel ha• htd on the abnormal aeaual bthlvlor of Ill cltli.en1. Then there ire those. Europe1n natk>n s that have stopped enforeln1 laws pertaining lo the moral bth1vklr or its citizens. The sum total of Ulelt aources of Information hl!I ~ied that very 11101 change In tht vlollnt 111 crime• will result if 1overn- ment steps oal of trying to eetarce moral llWI thet lhoclld be let Up to the Sensibly Amend Welfare Rules THREE OR FOUR young people whose ider1tity we were unable to obtain worQd terribly hard llfUn1 furniture over f1nct:ii to safet y in a neighbor's yard . Total strangers to us, yet such a wonderful help. • cept of busi ng thr poor liltlt clilldttn •l1 ~the way across town to somt dlltant school. The answer to the sctKxJ I busirl& crb:I•. then. la school busing. Or. as Mr. Butlln put. It' .,lnttead or busing lhe kids to the 1chool, we limply bus the sc:hoel lO the kids.'' • rtllL 8A$TIAN"S in;enious solution tn· visions a One-room schoolhou5t on the back of a Oatbed truck. The delisn alone hu Immense appeal to 111 conetrVltJvel. who bt.lle\•e that the oM-room tchoolhoule. suit.ably euipped with McGulley'a Readers. "" the high water ma.rt in American education. The uvin&I .. ould be lrtmendous. When you stop tb think that there are ap- PfOXimal<ly 1.000 tiJna aa many children 11 lthooll, ll's ob\riously fir more ...nomlcal In bus the tdlool than the children. Bet! of an. the buoed tchool would achlev~ fntter.Uon. whJclJ everyone oys t~'rt tor, while m1lnltlnlng Mf&hbothood schoo~, which evet')'Oll< The ntlft day, It ~ht rever1t l\l roatt. This would give black :tbildren -, ch•nce to aee while enclave& without aettlni busted and white chlldrtn a look at the 1hettoea •lthollt aetUna: mugaed. This ii @(fl.Ill opportunity at Ila rtneal !wry family wD1Jld live Jutr tcNlll the aldewalk frorn an lntev.ated ICbool. Cir pool1 would bccome a lhlnl of tht put . And lnltead of pannts having to tn.dle off l9 school for PTA ,intttinp, t.6e tehooJ would come lo lhi'P\ -· thUI p v!dlftc Umt !or 1o..,.,. P:fA me,eUnp, Jut. e"'7 plln 1111 ill lililt c111...eca: • Tllll, or cou11111:, bn'hlie oi11y sob. nl!lioul communlcy. ·~ ' ' .,. IN CONCl.llllONt ... ~en n c I • I y 'Ubonllw !!a 111'1 on \ht -ll 1Mh1v!or • Uoo lo the crlsll. The • WU ·-II an anU•buolnc rail!' In f{11hvllll, Iowa, -, ___ By Gft,.,e ---. i1~1~.med lo&tcJ111, Dr. Scfanton Dear Georre: , He n0ted thtl every wltlle In the 111-/u an IC!v!et .. 1umnf11, do you dieflCfl was publlcly dedicated to ln· have muc:h trouble with questions tegrauon, ntlehborhood scl\o6l1 aM you hooeatl,y can'l &nlw•? prevenllnc bulin1. H• lhmtore rur· 1ED gelled !hat t1ch o/ them move Into a Dear Ted ' black nelghborhooc! -thereby achl,vlng Not really. Mmlttedly. I gt! a lot all three toa!a In one fell swoop. of quest.Jons 1 honee;tly can't · Dr. Sc:rimahaw w11 lllTed, fe1thertd answtr. H0wtve.r. t answer them Ind buoed to Decetur, Georsi1 , F.0.8. 1• n~oy coiled. "·· · · · .__ _________ _, atro, u•1, Ith each pa1aing day we become more and more convinced the only way to get a large segment of the American population to ao lo work is to drastically reduce thr. poverty programs and doles that suJ>POrt them. There is no logical reason, we feel, why businesa and industrial firms and their employees who work day by day for a livelihood should -hive their earnings taxed to the extent that aufflcient federal and state hinds are available to take care or the needs of several million Americans lfhO do not choose to work. It ia our fetl· Ina thil condition will continue lo ex.1st •nd to tllj)lnd unlll the loderol •l\ll 1111• governments drNtJc11Jy cut down on their dolts and fre1 food handout.A and sensibly amtnd the rules arfd reiul1tlons which quaUly hundred& ol thouslnd1 for the r.lle! rolls. food hfl>doul.! and unemployment compenpUon who do not dettrve it" Turlock. Calif.. Journal : "We hive oomtthlng lo be grattlul tor. The foderil governmenl has. believe ii or nol. turntd · own a propo.~al to ffl up .11nother agen· cy. It "'llS suggested that a central ,, . , Press Conurtents b purchasing agency for federal-stat&-local governments be set up under the 1968 Jnte:rgovemmental CorporaUon Act. ~ poeitlon came chiefly from bu!inW. warning that many markets might be IOrSt. ,And the U.S. Chamber of Commerce pointed out t h a t such en agency could 'greatly reduce or eliminate the 01>" nort1.1nlty for many smaller businesses to compet.e1• , •• il is cheering to learn that al least one attempt. to ~im again.st the currtnt waa succesaful." Cottolwood. Mi.Jul., Cllnttt: "Thtf'4 b a IJ"at furor about .ex education! ~hool~. churches, and mail order Id· vertising are all 1t It. Films. books, literature eame to our dtsk almost daily -from those who Pll<lOrl to be 11peru on lhls sut>jtct which our generation mus~ ha\'e dbcovered. We are not gure how lhe human r1ct was propagated before we came along and discovered sex ' -it may fottvt:r remain A mystery." rt is our hope that maybe: they and the many olhtrii who offered assistanct will read lhis and know how grateful we ariR and how blessed we feel to bf.. the rtci· pients of the many well wishes extended to us. MARTHA AND CLARK SOMERS -llml!-- Weduesday, Februa ry 25. 1970 Tltt tdttorta' pb:gc of I.ht Dail~ Pilot 1eflr1 to inf°"" and atfm. ulatl rtadlrt bu prt1m tino thif ntwlf)O.Pfr'1 opinioni and com. mtntarr on topic. of fnt•r••t and 1fgnl/icance, b11 provid'fitg a forum for the c.rprtu:fon of our rtadtr.s' opfrltom, and b11 prt.stntfng tht diVtrlt crit!D" Points o/ fn/ortMd obitrtrtrs 1tnd spolctim.tn on topica of th t dau. Robert N. Weed, Publisher • 1 •. l , I l ( 0 'ILOT -AOVERTISER N Wtd11t!day, F'1bruary 25, 1970 ., { r ' I , ' .. • , J • • '1 • ·, • ) . '. . widiitolq, ''""it1 25, 1970 . N °"'1. J Pilar I OPEN EVERY. NITE TILL t:lO. 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CENTENNIA.l: H'1NTING ll!FI;~ . . -·f4. ·Le .. r Action ·cerbin•· lnllld c.inrntm. .r1tlv• MMlllion. . . aa· 88 Orrg. 119.95." .. . .. .. .. .. NOW . ·• • ··1 • " , DELUXE CUSTOM POOL 'l'A~LE I' _Playing Surf•••· 21/i" Stffl ReinforceCI Bed. Top Quolity Rubber 299 o·o Cushions. Ori9. 399.00 NPW . · • • FASHION ISi.AND. NEWPORT BEACH WILSON STEEL SHAF1: WOODS . Geno, S.riur Sipaturo. 1-3-4 S.t. Orig. }1.00 NOW . .. • ' -. PACKAGED ROSES ' . .. . Mainy V1rfetle1 & Colors. 179 1 "a9' Pitnl Nowt Orig. .99• I .79 NOW • • , If • . 4 YEAR WARRANTE BA mRIES Spcel1I Purch••• of Our N"ow· " 17.' 88' finest a.tt1r·le1. Orig. 23.95 . ,. -. A I •1' I a... ___ .;.......M_A_1N_-R._0_oo_~R_-__ ~.I ._I -__ uP ..... P_Ea_-~_EVE_. _.., ___ ·_.'_ .. IT !· .. ;1 •• LJ _ .4 . LOWER LEVEL -I n · --WOMENS HALF SLIPS Nylon In mini •nd ~wt-short l•n1t1u. White, -1. 99 lihi1t, nucf• in M1t1 Xii t• lont .................... NOW • WOMENS fEnl PANTS Nyl.n with -..c• 'trlin. '" 99 Whit• & Hlttlt .,,, ............................................ NOW • ' . . . ' WOMENS NYLON p1EFS 11'"'' '" nylM ....... 3/ 1 00 White 1n4 pa1Nf1, sl111, S-M·L ........ NOW • WOMENS FASHION ILOUSES AND TOPS lbM a24I, 1119 l·M·L. 1 88 3 88 "'""· Hiid~ Ori• UM.II NOW 1 • ' MISSES AND JUNIOR ANKLE PANTS "'" , .. ""llht l'I ~ NOW 3.88•6088 •.................. OrJt S.11- • ll!ISSES AND JUNIOf. SKIUS ;• # · ., ltr1l9ht A.fine ind ,l•tM 1ty_lln• . l!.111 ctlr• f1brlu & •uort. ~Now 3.88•5.88 •..................... Ori• ~-11 WOMINS ALL-OCCASION COAT ~tll• ~ ... '911 atylln9. -. '. · ~ 3? O 'ully llHll ......................... Ofl• 50.0I NOW .• . TAILORED WOMENS SUITS· WM11 •Ml r:r•tera. 3. .. ~~.;,~~ :......... NOW 21.00•24.88 MISSES DRESSES M•ny atyl• ind f11trlcs. 7 88 ... ,, luhlon. ....................... Orl1. 16.00 NOW • JUNIOR DRESS CLEAN°UP Cottena. poly•t•r• 4 88 6 88 tn~ -I• Orlt. 11.00-1'.00 NOW • a • MINS TAI COUAl.-DRESS SHllTS « . Wlilte only In •••orfM 1ian. Shirt ll•v• 1tyllng .. ···:··· .. ····· Orl1 •. J.91 NOW 1.18 100% POLYESTIR KNIT DRESS SHIRTS Ptnn•Prut mMM M lronlnt· 2 88 Whit• and celorl ........... -..... Orl9. I.fl NOW • lfiliR SPORT SHIRT CLEARANCE AUortod •tyl" ... color• Not oll 2 88 4 88 atylea In 111 1\1.u. -.................. NOW • • • SPOIT SHIRT-Sl'ECTACULAR C"'"'9 from wwen tollllf1 ., plaids. 2 50 Auorttd knit 1tyl• , ................................... NOW • ITALIAN DESllONEI KNIT SHIRTS Hl1h fa1hlon with ,.,,.,11 tletallll'll· fuhl .. ·-In "''"' •bn. NOW 9.88a 13.88 _ ............ Orl9. 15.ff.lf.N folENS ORLON CASUAL CRE~ SOCKS . Lit.It popuhtr celor1tion1o 50 OM Ma fib 111 •.. !. ... _ .................................. -··-·· NOW • MINS UNDIRWEA1t CLEARANCI ~1:":,.b;lf 1!o'. -~~·~.... ...... NOW 2/~ .2_2 MIN'S CA\uAL 'SLACKS 1""11' ., ''"" ..... '•1• 3 99 Sia• te H. ····-'-·~ ....... Or .. S.~7.fl .. OW • MIN'S DRISS,SLACKS ........ 1 ...... •• IM•lltlns. ........................... Orl9. 10.11 NOW 4.88 MIN'S, NYLON SURf· JACl!l'f • . :::~,~~& ~~.~: ............................... n:.,--·· NOW 4.18 I MIN'S WALKINIO SHORTS - Olf•• tf'ly. . 1 •• 1-11 ~, ............................... Orlt. 4.tl NOW • ,t.LL WEATHER COATS ~"..::.:::'".':: ................ :.. ............ _.JIOW 29,88 CHILDllNS .sHOI CLOSIOUT -•tylol ... '"""' 2 99 3 99 CMldNn• & ,,.._ ky1 J~-6. NOW • & • SPINNIN6 WHllL FLORAL ARRANIOIMINT . • Pl11tk ••" atwl 9r1,.._ 2 50 En!Mnc• yeur dee.,. ........ . Or~. I.SO NOW • TELIPHONE WALL PLANTIR Antlll"' wootl .... ~ , · ' l•rly Atnerican .. 1 •• : •• ~ •• ~ ... -: •• Orl1. 1a.01 DICORATOl TAILE LAMl'S various •lfriL · ' ..... -··········--··· .. ······;·········-· 0r1,. S4.tl Hrna PIECE GOODS Rtductd fer flnel clNnup. .N(lw 7.SO NOW 25.00 Group 1 .: ........ '..... .SO ,.i. o ... , 2 ............ .88 ,.i. WESTllN PRINT CAFE CUITAINS lrewn col11r enly. 25 Only 21 ,.1r ....................................... 1 ............ NOW • ,,. "1A'THROOM HAMPER . ' Eatre l•"I• c1pac.lty. r1111.,.-~•11.tM dulgn. ........ Orif. 11.tt . EXTRA THl"K IATH TOWELS. , ~ ;:..1MJ'd-a,.n11t. ffll1n. ' Dec.orator color1. .................... Ori9. 2.25 NOw .. 6e88 ~ .. ,. NOW 1.88 SIERRA OAK IOOM ENSEMILI FOi INFAl'(Jl . • Two '"1" et•.-.-_chun. 49 99 59 99 dr., 1We crlll .......... .,. HOW · • & . • oTO~Dl.11 SIZED ASSORTED PAJAMAS : r:'.::. "1·,1~:'rJ:1~ .............................. -.. NOW 1.so · HANSIL I< GlETIL DE CORA TOR GROUP """•Int Mtnkm & """"' 88 2 22 Minimum 1hrlnke... ................ NOW • I • SUl'IR WATllPIOOF TRAINING PANTS 111% Acet1t. trk9f. 88 In M1t11 I to 1. ·--·············.-····-··-··.,.---·-·-··-· NOW • GIRLS SPRINIO DRESSES ~ ':.':'~''. '.'.:' ... '..'Y':'.: ..... NOW 2.8.,•4,88 . . . . •'"· ' ' fULL FASHION, CARDIGAN SWIA TIRS , lH'/. "'Y d<" tcryll<'i< -2 77 In hl1h ttM colen. ..................... \.-........ -... NOW • ASSORTED STYLI ANKLE PANTS All oro hith 1"hlon. 2 66 3 66 Fer 9lrl1 111• &-14 .................... MOW • • • GIRLS SEAMLESS NYLONS b0:,%,1::':1t~·~1;,''.~ .......................... NOW 2/1.00 ASSORTED FLANN'EL.11 WOYIN PAJAMAS All are MIJ urt wllh. 1 99 In t lrla 111• 4-14. .......................................... NOW • HIGH muD PULLOVlr SWIATIRS In M•y '"" loloda. 2 88 ,., 9lrla. 1IM 1-14. •....... ,_ .............. , . ..; ............ NOW • IOYS FLAH IOTYOM PANTS J.On ... •lock otyl .... ,...,_ HIW• 1 33 3 88 anti ~laHIL -Oflt, J.,._.,tl .NOW • • • IOYS FIREHOUSE JEANS :'.:;~s:.r:1:~n~::lc~: .. __ ..................... NOW 1.33 IOYS WINTERWllGHT JACOTS . Woolo ... , .... vroy. . 6 88 8 88 H-.. atylh'f. 111• 12·l4. ... ~ NOW • Ill • . - Pll SCHOOL JACKETS Nylon ,_.,. ........ 3 99 pleeq 11"'4 Slue 4-4. .................................... NOW • IOYS SPOIT SHIRTS lutton d"'" c•Uar. ~ 1 99 lh•t ol-SI.., 6-11. ............................... NOW • IOYS un1GHT KNIT SHllT ltr9tdi!M ,., "'1,Mt ftt. 99' . 1"% ... ,Nt,fo: .. -S.L. ..... o.i.-~11 'NOW • I IOTS CAIOIGlN ~WEATIRS • .. !:::.""4°~~.--.. ·-· NOW 3.88 te 4,99 IOYS f·SHllTS 01 lllill'S :::.. ~ =r.-~.., ....... _, ....... NOW 2 / ,99 JOWNCRAfT l'l8' PAJAMAS .~,= r.::t .. ~ .... ..:... ___ ... NOW 1.99 APACHI SCARPS SeiW1 •l'MI ,.tfWM.. 66 1 •3 -rl-0rJt-.IM-UI NOW • lo ... • PENNEY'S NEWPORT BEACH-• I PINNIY'S SPRAT DIODORANT COLOl:f.Y. llOlill.TltEATll 295 -14 rn. Ptctvr-T.,.._ Glrtlrd Chlftf"'• .,,. ~ii· 6tt.M NO;. 644,00 °""''" ••Y "'1" ,... . . 29 la1tlnt pr~~I~ .......................... -....................... NOW •, AM tfM .stllEO CONSOLI PINNIY'S HAii SPRAY ~ a.iw 1t1..,.1cNu1 .. ··Dlftltll "'""Wft,. .~ ..... or1,. ~t.OI NOW 2990,00 lt"ul•r & henl te hold. · • 44 Cry•ttl clNr. 11 e1 ....................................... : ..... NOW • . . LIFT' AND DIOP TOP W1'STI CAN TAIU· MODIL COLOR T.V. Ir.,.... Wein"' 9f "",.._ .... Orl9. in.ts NOW 288.00 ::~~rt":!;:t~.·~ ... :-·····-·······: .............. : ..... NOW 1.47 11 CU. FT. SXS REfllGIRATOI KING·SIZI DllP LAUNDRY IASKITS :~ ~~~:~~!aer ......... OrJt. 4it.ts NO~ 37r-.~O ~~;'.,::.~.~ .. ~~'.~~.~~ ........ -.11ow .f~ 17' IMPllilAL RlfRIGIRA TOR . • -DUMP-Ill PL.Uno IAGS IN THUi TYPIS ~1.".i.'~:!;' .......... •. Orl1. ...... NO." 288000 ~-z'J'=~'.'.~~':~w 3aplu./ ,97 I ' /141DIT. SOFA RID TO~~~.,SIGNIR LUGIOAG.I • · · .. -:.""::1:·.~~ ........ Orif. Mt.H NOW 277,00' ::. ,...::~s.M."'.:'.'.:~~•···-·-NOW 24.88 G'OLD TWEED CLUI CHAIR · • · llLL ~,;.~.~II. CAM~t · ~%"!!.~'.'.'.~--·10rl1. 2St.H NOW 144.~0 :::.rl~~~~-·~i.! tt.ts . ~\,w 81~8· SOFA llDS W /INNIRSPRING ' ' ' · 11LL .I<· HOWILL MO.VII CAMIRA • : =:-.:..:.:''..~'. Orif. Ht.H NOW 233.00 ~ ~.~ ~ t,_•i;,,~., NOW 124.81 QUON SID SOfA HD -MOYll QITOR : WI//<#!.............. 269 oo' 22 ... bt. Ylo)flnt -· ·-·1·" . NOW l'l•l8 H~..,. tf"i~ ............ Ori• l:tt.H NOW o with °'"!'-· "";"· ....... ,_. Orit: 1'.11 . .. ' KODAK INITAMlnt CASIS Sl ... LI llASS HEADIOAlD , wm lit -s IM, 1a "'· '"m ~.~.~~ .. ~ .. 12.fl ... Al II OHi. y . 6.00 IA. llnM ~"'!",et·:--·· .. "-·-Ori• ~ 'NOW ,_,,; FO~IMOST CUSTOM POOL TAILI ' . , I•" ~r.~n-ei:-.:·~·.i.~ ~ .. '"' ... 233.oo· ·--·-·.· ......... ---------' • .. NOATHwlsm'li snu sHAfT wciori, .. I ,·GARDEN Sl:IC?P ' · · 1 I r.::~ .. ~ ... ~~. Orl1. :17.to NOW· 12,81 --. --.-.--------1 , ___ _. MACGRl•OI STllL SHAn WOODS' • • . . . YIGOlll:i S!l.\I~ IAIT . . . t:': ::.k~~~ .. ~'.~.~-~~ Orl1. 47." ' NO;,. 2•.11 ;z' ,._"' -~~~~~:~~~···-········-···········-· NOW .7,, I ' • ~ MACGREGOR ALUMINUM SHAn llDWOOD IAIK CHll'S ~:~: .. ~~~Ool"l"""· NOW 120H1;. ~£!i:~;~;~::~::;.'.'..~NOW 1,77 JIM TUINISA STllL SHAFT Pr•l•t•• ....... ,., your 11wn. ANcc~ ~rens. ........ J. NOW .a91 ,_., 2,111 Ml• ff ................... Ori. S.41 .... ~ ............ ¥•. ""· -IA. scom SUl'll IONUS FOi DICHONORA ' NOW 4091 ' '"""'-............ -.. 10 8 5 TrMfl 2,.tOOMt • It: .......... Orl9. 12.tl NOW ' ..,... SATILUTI IOWUNG IALL Cy l'-lto. 1' I~ ' II 1 88 2 aly ............... _ Or~22·" .._ H9W I • IA. TAILE TINNIS ~~ . . Cenvert1 I' peel ft~,., ta•i. hlfHtl1o ' .~~~:~~".'..°.'.'.'.'";J.:. .. ~-:~·~·" Now21.18 • 'e - GARDINIA l'µNTS ............ lhede tr IUfto - ........ _ ............ Or~ 4.~ . ·- NOW 2.tt ., ' ~. LUND G5DO SK . I . , ::;:;;;;;:,:1~s°'i• ... " Now "~'8 ._I ___ A_u_t_.o_c_E_N_T_E_R_-_..;;;_, 0"4 •I•;,, khoo. All --· 1 18 " :l~~:LE,. ... IXU-.. t'~··· °''•I.fl NOW • · ~~~~~TIC FL0013 M9A1TS . "• , .• ·~, ·: ~ull frenta MW ······-····"'· • a..r._t.-41i• Th,.._.y~ ,' 8.88 AllJ.,•W• ......... 0r11.1l.fll N~W / '· C~GH MAIO WHHLS , • _ . q..i ... 01t. ,.,. '-" .. ,,. .. •A .00 TUll'LINICI!~ ,SNIRTS • · 1\ • 1,l"d -tlii. = .......... Orlt. U.H' N0¥J·?"'!'W' !Mitt__...,_ ti. a ........ · ' 1 I ' MN Ill.Ts-MANY -S1ZJ$ -' • ' Nyloo .,. ,......_ .... ,.. .......... Orit· .... NOW • . ..,i w °"~' ~·· -. . _, 11 MATCHING l'iSHING COMllNATION .... ;i..ty. ,._ •. .,.. ............. ,. ............. _, .. MeW • 'IAo ' lovth -11... .... 4 88 IMPI MAIO 2 PllCI WHllLS '1 .... •Ml fine htd.,.._ -...... Or .. 7.ft NOW • · WW. with r.cy '""-21 Aft RAPALA woaua. PISHING LUii · • . . v.w. -ltl •• _ .............. 0ri,. 11.H NOW ~ ,H•-..4J;.-......1,_ , . CONYllTllLI TAPI DICK ' w-... _ ....... 1 22 88 ......... --.... o..I ..... .-:, ............. Oftt.~t.& 1.., NOW • & • INlanc• c.,.trel ............. Orlf. 114.ff NOW . . ' LUND 11!1'11 GLASS SKIS . STIRIO TAPI WITH lt<DIO • 1.;1• -.. MNI-hll:j• ~I"" 14Jl8.. .,, ... , 4 & f lrKk wl ...... br & :1 • '1'09.00 =~;~Ii ~:.ITS.fl . N-~==·~~·O~~·:::', -·. lit -•II ,......_ -, 1·.aa• <.a+<·f7 .......... >-<·2 .. 1y ••• _ •• -.. ~-......................... Ollt. UI • ! ,_ _. ........... _ .. Oflt. 1'.11 I ... .,.- 11• i!!Acr w9111 SHIRT ' I l'LASTIC TAPI CADDY ' hltft.PTNt l"'t ....... • ' 2 •• Wttt..d........ ~ t •• -... INken 111• llMn •ly. ·-· Orlto I.ti NOW • fer ... ~-·----· • ----.. -.. NOW .. . ' . . 116 MAC WORK PANTS .,. . , , ... PIM ,.,_. ..... M"""" & ctfteft. . 3 88 -.,. -· .... _ ........ °"9-l.IM.tl NOW • 4 rLY •011 nomas nau ....... .,, .. ""'"'"' . . '11 °"'' 11w • .n111s 1111111 -. .......... .,--.. -, .. • • LIKE IT • •.•. CHARGE :1111 • 1 ' " .. " . ..... .. . .• -· .. ... • . ••• .... ... •• .... ' ' ' I I I :! I .. • •-• . I i I • ' • I I II ' . J JI DAll.V l'llGT ~n"'1a1t11 'Vnd~ s~u~"·-· ~P~e Harljld of Norway (foreground) sails the Norwegian entry Crei't In the secorid race -ol the 5.6• meter world cblUllpionsbi~ at Sydney, Austra- Jia. Prince Harald is second in the standing:i;. I -· • • • ••• • . . . Termtnal I1land CG Safety Cenwr Sta rtS 3rd Year ·catalina Regatta Race Ma~ks Beg inning of LAYC . Whitney Ser~, A!termatb of the mammoth SoUlhenl eolllom!1 Yecbl!nc "-lll!!ln l\l{dw--ita Tiie Coast Guan! BoaUn& amjned, lllOll of these were wlll·'be. aailed WI< Wftttod Safety Center will begin 119 e..Uy corrected by the aafely ~'J.os J.ngeles Yacht Club Vltien the Ocean jlacilng Fleet third year ()f operation at the conscious bolt operator after shove$ off on the annUpl Tmninal headquarter• at 10 vlsitinr the center. Midwinter Calalina l s I a n d a.m. March 7. Powen Squadron members race. the Lo:i; An&eles Harbor belon& to a "on&-desJgn" class race allowed. There will be B..maler to atarboard and in wlllch at lout .one rle!rt in m.ctaH;m· or,.,.,...,,. back to the atartlng line to that claaa bas _.,,,......i t1Y.every boat wblcll · 1 finish. ror an ..... ndng ctrtlfi-or u.. Whitney f1t Starti!il Jines for both fleets cate. Wbllney racq wlib JI'! have been set up Jn the vicltil.. The Whitney Series cons:iJte: tenUon of eo,mpl~ ty of· the Ftlh Harbor ,Buoy,-;;:o:;f ::oslx==race=s::owl==th::ol"'O==::odm=p.o::out:;='•::oc:;e.=====:;i;;1;;- No. S In Los Ana•les llutlor. " ' .J!:..i:'JF mJ::. °!:.= o~":J.J!'" BoallJ1I Safety Once ~wn as the Brqkaw --i• In! · Cenl~ and the Trophy Race, the Mldwinler with M"9'--11i9Pli1s-dellgned to Catalina Island rac'e tradl· Eligtblllty for both racos Is limited by tntllatioa t. roember1 of ncogniied yacht clubs. Ocean racing yachts must have a ct1rrent Cruisin3 Club of America r at I p a certificate. MORF y acht s must have a CCA rating or I . ,.,_ I. ~"' ' · · • and t tn Coast Guard and Aullllary are glve qwe:-. accura e · tionally marks the beginning forpl~~ W the Southern available to answer any ques-of LAYC's Whitney Series for California boating public. tlons regarding boating an~ to offshore racing yachts. Besides 1 1ride asllOftriient provide tnformatiQn on the At the same timt!, the or Hucaiional Pa m Ph I e l 5 fret boating courses available Mld&et Ocean Racing Fleet dev~~· iafe boatlig· -ptac· through USPS or the CGA, will salt In the OJI Islands tices, ..: 'J>rovided by various race, marking t~e start of the Ch F l oreanizations which promote 'I'tie Boating Safety Center, LitUe WhJtney Series for sail· eaper Ue sale booting.the U.~. Weather local<d at the Coast Guan! tng yachto of 30 feet and Bure<U will provide on-tho-Bu. do Terminal JslaOO, will under. Bin Proposed spot marine WMtber irlorma· be open every Saturday and Cius A ocean iacing yachts ticm. Sunday and on lnlJOr holidays will receive the fin:l starting SACRAMENTO (AP) - A While ~ the Safety from It a.m. to f1p.m. signal at 11 a.m. with.elm B, biJl ·to. make natural gas a Center for the latest In-Tiie Cout Guan! llaie ta c and D starthrg 1t five cbelper fuel for automob!J.s forma~ oa tafe bQaUng, located en the sobth ' side of. minute Intervals thereafter'. bi.s cleared one Assembly bqat, owaeq may have their the main channel of Loi 11W! •course will take the fleet committee and still has one to ~ ~ to insure that A.nge,l~• IJ•rqor. If Y9U" are around 'Catalina 11.Jland, leav-go. it~~the pfloper safefy equip-: traveling by automobile and ing ·the !•land to port, and Sponsored by Asseinblyman ment and that the boat meets trailering your boat, take the finish ·back at Los Angeles Peter f · Schabarum (R- all federal and atate boating nearest freeway or, city street Hatbor, a dl!tance of ts miles. Covjna), the measure would regulations. to Terminal Island, go west on The MORF wijl sail a 20-tax natural gas at 3 cents for I See by Today'~ r·. Want Aas . ' e LONESOME? S.i-.n 1:1 e.a dance,~ countr ; club, every Wednet41y. ' Kiekhaefer to Form The Sileiy Center Is Seaside Ave. (the main slreet mUe course from the starting the amount equivalent to one tlperated by the Coast Guard, on Terminal Jsland) which will line Jeav.ing µie Pl. Fermin gallon or gasoline. The. Coast Guard Aurillary, U.S. lead you to the main 1ate of Buoy to port, Esther Oil Island guoline tu Is aevtn cents a PowerSquadronsandtheSea-~tbe~Coast~~Gulnl~~B~""'~·:__~·~~to:!'.po~rt~,~ili~e~ce~n~t~cr~sec~l~ion~ofr__~gaJ~l~on~.~~~~~~~========:============:;===========:i;:::Jti# Scouts. lt is lt<e to the public. 'Business Venture No citations will be issued for violaUon of the fedttal <>r state_ boaUng regulations. ''Last year the p u b 11 c re5pon5e to the Cout Guard's E. (J• ''U. --'-r.o.-.-1•• an..i.a..--now baa a -ii-.;ppec1 new plea for safe boatiz!I was very Sl"nll ll.4JI ~ "~....,...... encouiagtng," Said Lt. Cmdr. fer, foundei-ol the Kl-eler plan! thal l.s getting under way Peter F. stertiling, cbief c4 the Corp, -'-d_Jder· wtth--proJeets_-IOIJ1e on lllh COO! Guan! .Dlllricl CUfY ..,-, bal mlgned •---.. > ;;,,,.., .. Sal n---• u chalrman founder ol Kiek-power p~ anu ..,.. on ......,. ety ~ _., •-~ M -• Ina f!ll&ioeering: a e r1 v Ice a -"Because ol the court es; ,..aer ercury ..... u ugµra-lncl_udlng ~-!t'ood~ _ -~ .. .::w ..... ; .... u-...... ted ~a new business venture ~-~-._. "" known as Jaekhaefer Aer~ metal pattern .and .mold mak-ducted by t8e Coat' GUard mvinc Motors, Jnc. ing. , . ·-Auxiliary we were able to Kiethae.fer, after spending "We have ·a 1r.~pped ~.over.tZ,000 boat owners mechanical fab 1with .{iiodem d016'arty UOO tndividu.al crafl 31 years u president of the cfynamometerB~ate' able• during the summer of last coritpony be founded In 1139 Cmdr ·~Un aid he be felt it -'er1ble to to provide and -year," • S=u g said. "' -development lel"Vic:el oo elec· He point«! out lhat allllough ccmpk!trely separate himself ~mecbaniCJI· dt.viCP," he diJcrepeae&es were' found oa Irom Bnmswinet Corp., the added. · over 2,000 of the boat.I ex· !Inn that bought him out 1 -·--~---,.....-------------·-1 number o! years ago. Jn his new line of endeavor he will be accompanied by his eon. Frederick, ai mechanical eneineer now eqapd in graduate wort at th e University of Wisconsin. Kietbaefer commented that •IUW1'fl afe many 1ntereatini opt)Ortunities in new fitJds as ...n 11 new JWOducl.s In old fiekls f~ tomorrow's W<JrJd." .. Our new venture will haft the name of Kiekhaef.e r At!'OIDUine Moton, Inc., a .W'!9CW\lfn dirporation fotnled by me in 1964," Klekhaefer aaid. ''Wh i l e Klekb a efer Aeromarine was started as a ~aJ estate holding company, and OWDI some 700 acres Of land u well as other Ulds, it Winds Make Races Wild . Strong winds off Adelaide, Amttal.la, are providing aome wiJd sailing in the world dlampionsh.ip for the Flying Dutchman dinghy class. The battle for the world crown appears to be between two British sailors Joh n Truittt and Rodney PatUson. The latter wa!i the gold medal winner in the class In the 1068 "Ill"' O!l?npics. others hi contention are Jeff Smale, New Zealand: Hennan teible, Frm::e and Craig Jiitwortb, .Au.tralia. 1be lwo American entries, Chris Cbatain of Michigan. '!lid Lt. ScoWAllao of Newport Moc11 .... listed among the flnt 10. ' Siiveon Ini1ian I nS_pi;ed Brushed Leather S_quaw Boots I . 17 ',, ... ~~ •• ,, &oath foat ?Im " .. Exercisers and massagers .•. c;mll sale priced thru Satu rd ay! ... 1~ \\ I r I ~ • • • ' I • A NOW! TH~E VALUES AT ANY ONE OF TllESE PENNEY STORESI , B ' I • . • • A. SAVI $10 ON OUI m 1!X11C11a AdjUllablo hedlobataod-. w ....... -· difw, cha"'""""" -... -lion c.ontn>I. REG. 39.99 NOW 34.99 I, SAVE $!0 ... 3 WAT EXllClll CYQ9J·;·:y:· · Pro-Am hOl rowing crdion handl.&ar ... ; ·'Jo.'~ -· hoo"f)' duty .... '°""""'Ion,-~' ploted tractor Mat. -' REG. 59.99 NOW 49.9·9 C. SAVI $10 ON OUR llETTR lllLT -- D. ltuggod .... designool .. -....... quiet adlon and long laolhot ............. ••• t4 HP, all -.I CDflllrdtllofl, 2 *'"""" rnouager. REG. 69.99 NOW 59.99 -SAVl .$10 ON'OUI llST .. T MASSA.OH P~ % HP, cdl...., C0Nt1Mlta.9 '*" Witb ~It, .voriabl• motor control, UL ~ , ... a. - REG, 99.99JiOW 79.99 I ' ., ' • l- -\· ·1 • ·' I ... I ' r;, ~ ' _,. .. • , , I ..; '! '.Ji . • ' • ,.. SHOP SUNDAY, roo 12 to 5 P.M.! I I I ....... S• D ... 1 p.y. COITA MUA CANOGA PARK DOWNEY FULLERTON HUNTINGTON BEACH LAKEWOOD MONTCLAIR NEWPORT BEACH VENTURA .~, I • / I I j \ ' -· \J (;osta Mesa • T...,,"9 fl•el .. * ,.,. •-.. ·voi.:. 63\ NO. 47, 6 SECTIONS, 98 PA6ES . ' ,, • ew St1rprbed Burglars ' ·~e·wpo.rt Victim " Shot at Slayers I By JOANNE REYNOLDS That's how Newport B e & c h ln-°' -. o.ilY P111t 1i.tt vestigators reconstructed the I a s t li=at.ally wounded with a bullet in his moments of life for the fiG.year-old c~~ Baycresl1 resident W i 11 i am retired' movie producer after he a~ Mdinley'Harril rired away with his own pare'1Uy surprised burglars In his home re~r at his murdereni before falling at 20l2 Anchor Way Monday night. =de::~::;:oon_h_ls_r,,ron:=-t '-porc=h=. =====--His body was discovered Tuesday - · POT !!OILS AT NARMCO Smoke in Coste M11• Mystery Liquids U.use Blaze At Mesa Plant A v1;1t of chemicals unknown even to the expetUse of the Cosla Mesa Fire Depart- ment:bubbled, bubbled and then burst in- to name late Tuesday night, 1 causing firemen some toil and trouble. S. OnlY· MOO damage was caused at the Narmoo Materials Division of the Whit- taker Corporation plant, 600 Victoria St.. aild that was just loss or the batch of cliemlCal compound . . Cause or the 10:20 p.m. eruption is 8t1U under investigation today by the dipartment'a Fire Prevention Bureau, b@:t the probers aren't even sure what it ~·AS that lgnlted. ~!They have some pretty e:rolic materials now and one almost has lo be a ciimlsl," sa id Battallbn t'hlef Ron Coleman, adding that · some chemical rtactkln probably sparked the fire. 1He said the material was identified on- l)t by a plant mix number and firemen haven'l run across anything like U in ttieir categorization or chemical com- pounds. !J'he Narmco plant, a throwback lo ohetfme county industrial zoning, before ~area was annexed to Costa Mep ~ developed as a residential neighborhood, had a similar fire last year. · . lnvesUgators said that blaze, which c•faed much heavier damage, resulled rtotn the accldenlal cannini of 1 rutn- typt material 1t a higher tm:iperature ll'llli normal. ~.Heat is used to induce certain chtmkal ~" and the prOC<SS continued 11111' thi.. conlaintrs were stored outside for sfiipment, causing eventual ipiUon. -..'ftle plant produces a variety ot f~lasa resins and ~r &UCh delense m111ufactutjna·re.lated materials. . EW YORK (AP) -Tho •tock market onto a smell but falrty firm lead ln W trading la te thi s afternoon. (See ti.a. Paaes 48-49). \ --monili'lg by neigbbors, sprawled acroA the dooraay or his home, still clutching his .38<aliber revolver. 1 tl'L.l~trucUng the c r I m e , lo- vesligators said the suspect or suspecLt probably entered between 8 and 10 p.m. through an unlocked bathroom window at the rear of the home. Harris ·was apparently watch i ~ g television at lbe front of the houae, when he heard intruders and went to in· vestigate, officers reported. The victim was starxling in a hallway when he surprised the would-be burglars in --0ne of the bedroollllll. It was lhen, police speculate, that Harris wcu. shot. Harris had a .38-callber revolver which tie used in · his losing battle with assailants, officers explaineO. A n unknown number of &hots were fired as the dying Ihari chaJed the guJpeCll down the liall and oul-tbe -· where he fell !~-·· . laiallplora iold the burglars ' ap- porenlly ~-not tWn anytl>lllc when they wert ~· Ha:rrll' wn car. ryinc 1ev.nj' hundred' dollars and a Valulllle fllaiiiond ring When his body WU lolind, lliey Dl>ted. Police said th<y've turned up nothing lo indicate the usallants had tJeen wounded in the shooting. Harris was found clut- ching his gun, but the murder weapon has not been recovered , they reported. All but~ooe neighbor said they heard nothing ourlng the night. Harrl1' next door neighbor said she heard commotion and noi.., late Monday night which she did not icve.st11age. Drug Discussion To Be Presented In Mesa Lyceum Something new will be offered tonJght at a panel discussion on ~rug abuse at Costa Mesa High School's Lyceum, with the whole event videotaped for replay at Tater dates. The 7:30 p.m. session ls primarily for parents instead of sludenlS, according to Assistant Principal Bill Vaughn, but not limited t.o Costa Mesa High School alone. lnslrllctiona1 n1m11 are fine. but fre- quently shown , campu11 officlal11 explain- ed Tuesday. so the drug abuse sympc>F- ium is to be almost a talk-$how type of format. A lhree·man pane.I including C o s l a P.tesa Police Chief Roger E. Neth, Long Beach PoUce Lt. Jim Miller, in charge ol the LBP-D narcotics buerau. and a J>SYcholoil&t. Charles Barne! wUl.,ll!cuu 'th•<inAR~le!I>" Quesli\Wll.will be answered by the team or oxperts, and o !Ill ol 11 good rtfeienc• --~-,.Ith a fonllly dnlc • ~;:!:Lf provided lo '~!Jow their own .. School ollidola staged a similar ·-· poaitun lat year. but ontiCipate a hiJher del!l"" ·or mteroot. thb Um< due to grow· lni awarenesa' <If. the pl'oblem and re- cent beadltne-makhig campa1 c&leS. The RSslstant principal sald the allair ii nQt planned hit ~.because they have the ~ Mela llaf>penlng, a dlY-long fftnl ~' which ha been in the works for the pat year. Zoning Exception Okayed ..for .Center t:o.ta,M ... pl.....,. COIMllaalon mem· ben eppmecl a -...,.. lo allow the ma-"-a da,...,. ~ter for pre-school children in a home at 250 w. Wilson s~ The center, Which will be run by Mrs. Wallace Rellllen · or 1325 McCormack I.Jane, wlU provide care for a maximum ot 10 children five days a week. Planning commissioners were told the Center would operate lrom t to l1 :30 a.m. or fron1 12:30 to 3 p.m. and will be open to qbildren aae three lo five. .. s ' ' WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 1970 tlAIL V PILOT Plltll .lilr LH 1"1r111 Sea Rafi. Takes to freewa11 .. Landlocked boatmen attempt to remove 24-foot Sea Ray from San Diego Freeway just north of Harbor Boulevard in Costa Mesa. Driver Del Oldfi•ld or Anaheim. whose truck ls just out.of p~oto to the right, was headed to Huntington C~nter boat show with the crafL this morning when he was forced lo stop abrupUy Jn northbound lane. Boat, from Harri- son!a Boat Center, Santa Ana, flipped off trailer through !ence and into southbound lane. ' TEN CENTS • • . ' '• I But Gruber Refuses To .·Give Up By mOMAS FOR'IVNB Of .. Dlltr ........... The .seven year fight of . the Ne,rport. Beach City Council lo jlUlh tho Pacllk Coast Free.way route inland appean to--day to be over. City COWlCilmen said for the first time Mondoy thfy would be willing to tl&n an •~nt With the State Dlvtaloil .<>f Highways to build the freeway &loo& the adop~ route. • ~l'ore~ councilri'ien 11ii;,-nowevtr, eng1neer1ng problems wil? have to be Ironed out to their sat.L9facttMJ That mea ns agreement aUll eould be-a--long way off. But councilmen, nevertheleu, have now sald.thl:rcould accept a coutal routing they have never liked -and still . don't -inste:ad of lnslstJng on pushing the route _!n]and. . The reason they are sortenlng their stand is their reallzaUon that with Cosll Mesa city officials adamantly opppsc!d they ·are never goJng to gel anywhere in PSA R I A N Bill appeah before tho State Hlghwy .Com-, . e eases greement ewport to . ~::~y~~h~J..~~~~ E , C peal·to reopen the route. . . • • . a • r , 1igineer -orps . s. r.tonc1ay an.n-ror the nn1 ume T A . .l .... :...1if . .. ~ly C!Mljlclbilen allowed tbat uiq !biahi .o . . CW:JU'_ ' · .• ' e ~Ir -~. HJ. o. ..~Ila '. ·t'e.f' JtQC., ·.k Mpti1~g wra:i"g ~~ .... u:,1r..,.~ --,._ .-q ~~-Ill:' rroewn with lqcal .di, . The U.S. ArJnt Coflll of ta cal~ !or'f!>e -Iller ol 111,421 ohares of PSA 1tocli to Air' c,J ~!don. P8A cle«ed at t4 and 3/4 ~ on the Hew York Stock Exchanie: Thut !!It ........ ment IB ·worth $4.49 million at present value. . Paclllc Soutl>1Hll AirlJnQ ........,.i TuOMlay the tern\I of Ill agreement lo .acquire flnanclally-p!a~ Air California. If all parties approve. the purchase is •xp<cled lo be cojnpieled by mid·A[>rll \Vith Air Cal's 411DJ atockboldus receiv- ing shares or PSA stock currently worth $4.5 mill ion. The agreement is contingent on Air Cal'11 total deficit not exceeding $3.82 Jilli· lion on the closing date of the transacUon. Alr Cal CUtTently is in debt over P mil- lion. PSA's ofrer to buy the Newport Beach- headquartered Air California first was announced Dec. 11, a little more than a month after Air Cal rejected a first PSA offer as not being in the best interest or shareholders. · PSA, based in San Diego, is already the nalion's largest airline operating within one &tale. The agreement announc.ed Tuesday A provi11Jon or the agreement t1 that PSA wlll cut Its 1tock l.uue by 1.<MXI 3hares for each $25,000 Alr CaJls d~bts exceed $.1.44 mlWon. The purchase is subject to approval by Air Cal stockholders, the state Public Utilities Commlss.lon and lenders of both companle1. It may require Prior approve! ol the Civil AeronauUcs Board, PSA said. Earlier this month, Jn anticipation of the acquls!Uon, county supervisors rati· fied a lease transfer from AJr Cal to PSA at Orange County Airport. In doing so. stipervlaor1 forced PSA to limit the num- b..-of flighti out of the airport and the noise or Ila aircraft and to not operate at night. Airport Impact Study Consultants Selected golng,to gel blllld by the Cily of •"l!l!lorJmailoot QPOD what happened Beach · for Ille ~ of reDlO\'lnl rOeU boneu tiql<," ~ Coundlman Robo!I · from '.Ille· il'eat'!'~ beach.. . 8'lllaai •i.ij I am llm• realiiL We ¥v.e. In 1 strGUly....n!ed ltsolut(00, city ,.cbed tho Point Jn Ume when we mUBt councilmdl .i~y said they don't 1c--thfhk o't reflity, not victory or defeat.''· cept the COrps' out tbat ii 11 broke and lie •ven urled tbat olnce lhO city wm there is no money left In lts "nd haulln( ·be·woJ1<l!i1 to refine the adopted roote ti contract. do so a~veJy1 '"The Jonger we ·tkag The city say11 It wants the SS,000 or our feet and lll~ at 'lt'lndmlll11 the longer more it w:lll cost to clean the beach with-~ communJty will suffer without a held from payment lo contraclOr Chad-freeway," he ~· "There' ls compeUUon wick and Buchanan. for the gas taz dollar (the aowce of fun- The firm hauled silt from the Sarita dhig for .slate freewa)'s)." · Ana River channel for the Corps and d'e-~ut Councilman Undaley · Panons posited it on the West Newport stfand. didn't see a need lO rmh .ahead. He II.id ''11le Corps has obvlowily constructed the freeway probably is tl:r: or seven an erosion barrier. 'ntat 111 what wt have, years off aod suggested that "with an erosion barrier. not a beach." grum-pressure from Costa Mesa to get the bled Councilman Donald Mcinnis. Newpo~ . Freeway built the Jtilh•ay Councilmen said they wlll try to bring Commission may come to ua at some be point in Ume." pressure to ar on the Corpe through Congressmen James Utt (R-TUatln) aod One couocllman, Paul J.' Gruber ~ Jobn Tuni;iey (0.Rlveralde), both of mained vigorously opposed In u.e' al· whom McGil!nls said visited the beach lernoon _study oesaJon to acceptlq lbe and heard Corps officers assure the beach adopted route which hugs the blaff along would be clean. Pacific Coast Highway west ol Uie UpPer The council was particularly put out Newport Bay bridge. with Col. Robert Malley who they re-"Why should we be·conlent·tomove Jn. membered assured them everything to the jaws qf destruction?" a~·'-'r·,' ••• would be taken care of. • • .....,. -r "He gave ua a snow Job," aald•Llndsley ed . ~·Tills haa alwaya been offensive. to Parsons. , our environment. It wlpq Ol1l the, weat "He sure had a nice !mile," uJd How· end or tow~ and a bualne11 aectiot1 A consultant to conduct an airport Im· cies for lht: county-operated a'"""" were ant 'Rogers. (Ml!'iners Mile) in a Way that la incon-cl d r th I r N h .. ,,.... ~ ceivable •• This massive. at.ructure . would pa stu y or e c ty o ewport Beac set. f be exposed to the view of oUr f>ty. I Juat was selected Monday ~y the City Council. WUif)' and Ham prOpote to do the study can't tee it." The consulting firm of Wilsey and Ham, al a cost of f.*1,000 to $50,000. Tbe ·range, M Ph ' ' of Arcad ia, was chosen after councilmen a spakesman llld, Is attrtbUtable to tbe esa Y81Cl8D But whtn it came Ume to 1vot.e Monday a\&0 heard a presentation by a delegation unknown amount of documentation that · evening, Gruber joined the others" and from Quinton-Budlong, or Los Angeles. will be required of • and econonllc Ge . B made it unanimous lo Uk the dijr staff to Counci)m•n said they wero imprwed impact. tting etlef work with Division of HI J b w a y 1 by Wilsey and Ham's promise lo w0<k Councllmen uked tile dty ital! to pre-engin<:e ... to oeo If P<~of.can be oot .. cooperatively, phasing in studies, with pare a ptapolll dtv¥ed 1nto Work phases A Cost.a Mesa physician who accidently :!it:"!IWn the llm1ti of • Ure adopted another airport consultant recently hired so th(}' could 4ec1de, how ,much they' will shot himself with a .38 .caliber derringer 1 • 1 , by tbe Orange County Board of Super· be wlllJn& tO rpend as they go along. carried fot self-protecUon l! n'.ow alighUy Gruber l~ler a:plaJned that be coutdn' vl!ors. Au,u.tt Compton ·WI~ and Ham vlce improved from the neAr-rata l Incident. win his po~nt so the. Mn best thine wa1 Councilmen said they wanted to get in-president who wuf head the .study, said Dr. Melvin Shatavsl<y, 45, b still listed lo wqrk Wlth,.lllale htalnray engineers. put of Newport's position into the county. . he beUev~a "I.he community Is at a In 11erioa11 condition, however, according "In trying to work Ud.i out they can't •ludy -~ ... , ILwu. completed and_pQli,_ (',[QU[Oldl -·-lL will.Jw .. ~ •noL. Jo aut!>ortl~ _!LH_.?g Memorial Hoopll_I!_ -(W FllEEWA Y; .... II Sf>riOUI . .tudy. Ther! ta.a limited amount The doCf.Oi .. waa workiMR on his car:slln-.. · ~ -- Thi.ef Rolls Off With2Wagons A thJef hitched two authentic old buckboard wagons up to aboUt 400 horses' worth or modem truck TUelday and hauled the antique vthlcles ·away from a Costa Mesa produce marbl. Richan! G. l'ejoyan, of 7232 Heil Ave., HuntJnclon Beach, told poUce he had Just purchued the wagons. valued at fQJ, from the owner of a conttructlon s!1e now being cleartd. The boddlol1ill, ...;ghinC about IGO poandl -1>, "''° parked bealde hi• Grower's · R a n c b Produce, 2018 NOWf'lrl Blvd., ac· ', conllng to Officer ~ Sperling. tnvestlgalors logged the stplen vehicle case a11 a grand theft, 1ince buckboard• don't o.Wlfy under cauromia Vehicle C'ode deslgna· lion. \ of quletneu now with ndrmil eommerce day at his office at 7t0 Biker St., when at lhe airport." lhe small weapon carried In bis coat CrlUquing the pre1ent.aUon of the other pocket discharged, burying Lslug In hJs consultin'g firm, Qulnton-Btldlon&, Coun-chest. · · cilman Lindsley Paisoril taicf, J lt wa11 Surgery wu perfonned, although Jtos... my Impression they would be Vf!f'/ _good pital offJclala were concerned about •his if we were golng·to l?Ulld 'a new alrport." loll of blood, and vie rormer Loi Angeles The ~Budlong offer wu a 130iGOll practitioner has gained back ...,. study. _. llron(llh.. • Beat· Topless ~ar P,i.rtrohs_,_§tripped, Held up Malo._ ol.,tlla .aaJ.!>.t 1-e-ln their 'Ctothoa -tban bave a riol on Newport -!G\JDd·u....ai.. _,.. lhllrbando.''•-qplalnad. Ing red faceo and 11°\ -11 6e followlng The bmdta htnled their vtctimo 1.to an 'arm<d rolililrv' at the bit al 4I07· W. the reitroomo al)d told them not to come Coast HirtnrO!' Tuesdly nipL out. <Po1lce Aki tho' pair 1odied Illa Police uld a man and woman, armed l:itJlalng: When they Jen. with •a .llklllber revoiver tool< about ~ potrolmen arrived on the acene, 11 ,00l,ln cub. • woman'• dlamood ring they ~ere greeted by the 1tronply clolh- ond all ll)e-clolhea~rom 10 ma1' patrons. ed victims. "'l'hey were wearing anylblng t ""l'lie7 lllil<ll to .... , l1Je foor ,~rs· they, "1"'14 find -bar towell or - clothu W 11Ul t~ put up .UCH a !""!• the women had lent them," •• In. '--------op--' Ill< I~ il!dded !liOY"dfl them l\eei> . VHli&ator said. .. ' . • ... ' Oraage. c...c l 1fet1daep' • • W!\y ruin a J.ood !hlnf! It'll be just H IUllQ)' T~y, ~ hiltl clouds ud tomperalAI laln[llnllJno in the lower 7'11 aJoac lbe Or-. CoasL .. t I , • • ··~ ' \, I ' 2 ~hf(Y PtlQT " C , ~l!l~~Y:;~'~J'.! 1)1 ~·10_ ltrote•ter1 Win f'to'I' Pilf9 1 . } AI·Iey in Newport .. JlRE~WAY ... . " i/p but krt0w !he route's not satisflc• tocy1..,, he said. -: ..:.,. Ko lf~d G~1 tr,m._1111~ !or lltJ>Orl HeJl!il! P<Operlj> OWnetl, op. ~ _plauded .the cdirlcjJ ·action. "We couldn 't i~ be!Jeve II," he said for those i·n th I } l ~ -~ I . l ! I ' l t ' ! I ( ' I i -A ]ll'Opoatd alley 1ssessml':nt district for Ntwport li•ights was defeated Mon· day ni,ght by an aroused crowd of_ 120 peraons that more :han ruled ev~ry :se~t in the Newport Beach Clcy Council cham· ber. Clty councilmen voted. to dil(!llO}ve pro- tetdlnp that would have <mt 461 1tsl· denta $600 tach for alley paving. The Overwnelming. sentiment of properly owners ·was that the price was too mUch. Also party to the proceedincs were 2S property owners of one block in Ba1boa who would have had to pay MOO eadt. lor pa.vine Or their somewhat narrowtr alley. . City , Clerll Laura Lagios said Z74 pro- test 1etttrs. post cards or signatur.es on petitions had been rec:;tlved. Anolt'!tr 15 post cardt1 were handed in during the hearing . The total, if all were validated as pro~ erty own"ers. clearly was more than the SO percent protest neceuary to dissolve the procwlings. . Tw~rtty·fout persons spoke durli\I an hour aiid a half o( tesUtnonj. Tow~rd the later stages when it \fa! ralhtr apparent they would defeat the ·assessment district, speakers said they did want better alleys and would like I.he city to contribute Newport Delays -.American l..egion Site Decision Newport ·Btac.h city"counci}men Mon· day po1tj)Ontd acting on American U•lon Post 29J'g request for an extension of IU clubhouse-site. city-owned property lease expiration from. 19711 to 1995. . City councilmen sald a review of all city-owned leue property is in order. That property includes the Balboa Ba y Club, Beacon Bay, the Balboa Yacht B11;ln and" MeriJlapark Trailer Park ad· jecent to the Lellon building-. .. A study might lndlca~ a more 5Uil- able location for a Veterans Memorial Dutldlng is the new civic center," Coun- cilman Lindsley Parsons gald. "Water- front j:>rOl)erty should be recreational for all the cltlz.ens. not Jwt ,,eterans." Councilman Paul Gruber said he was t1atisfied with the American Legion ontra- tloh an the bay at 15th-Street halfvt'ay out the Balbo,a PeninSIJla. He said he , thou!dtl the City Council owed the Legion , merribers a decillon. In lhe nelir fUture. The Legion's request was "d!aried" unti l April 27. after the election of ne\,. City Council members and after a plan- ned meeting with clt.v planninc commi- sioners to dlRcuss a Newport Tomorrow studY tliat called for review or city-owned propert:-i. The city began leasing the "old camp ground" site to the Legion in 1930 and the present $40,000 building \•:as con· structtd in 1950. The Newport Harbor Legion POiit has f shared its fa cilities on occasion with some 20 other community organizations and the Legan and its Woman's Auxiliary sponsor 15 youth programs and activi- ties recognttlng community service. Appraiser Hired . For Marine Study The Newport Beach city councilmen 1-f.onday night htred appraiser Cedric White, of Anaheim, for a (ee not to ex· ceed »OD to appraise the impact on Beacon Bay and Balboa Yacht Baein of the Irvine Company's proposed marina and home development ~low Promon· tory Point. "We will have to get into severance damages to Beacon Bay rt11idents for relocating Bayside Drive,'' City Attorney Tully Srymour advised. DAILY PILOT JleHrt N. Wee4 llf'tllhllf .... l'l!Mlllltr Jt¢~ R. Curlev --Vlff ,....,, _~I MfMJtl" l"·-· 1e .... 11 atlltr Tlie111t1 J.. M•1•M~t Mt,..,,. .. itw -c .......... JlO W'•tt l-. Sft•tl Meili~t Mi1mr P.O. h• 1160, tJ6li ' °'"'°"""' .,.,...,, t.c11: nn Wiit ..._.. .__...,,.,, IMIN a..c.111 m ,-.,.., ,.-- Hwll•hlt*' "•ittu 17'1S lllldl l<Mwe..i mort than •S0.000 to the $3SO,IXKI esUmat· ed price. There was ~ppla11se when speakers ashed ror 60-50 city participation and 5ev- erill persons made the poil:it that diutn& up the alleys to put In Cablevision and 11ea pair pipeline• contributed greatly to d&o terioration of the alley sutfacea. The lwo city council candidate.s serklng to represent the area each made a pitch. Roy \Voolsey :i3ld he believes lhere is a ·distinct chance the freew·ay route v.•ill be reopened and in that case some of the · homes Would be taken out. He argued that to pave the alleys now· would just pass on greater cost to the state in col'l- demnalion. - Carl Kymla argued it la normal pr~ cedure to create an aasessment district b~ petlti®. "The city has waived thf.s tnd gone the protest route," he said. J{ymla also ,said the. city should have unt· a leUer tn,each homeowner involvffl ttllint him Whtn the · hearing would be Mtt the financiat lmnact. · Cltv offlclals told Kymla they had dnn-: exactly that <1nd t)fayor Doreen l\farJhall pointed out that nne nf the protests half r.nme fmm an absentee property owner livintt in Vlrtinla. Asked 1vhat the city rilans tn do no1v, !\favor Marshall said. "T think the me.s· ~aee Is loud ·and clear. This is the secnnrf time in sf:t years the city has cooper.itted with re.ciidtnts who wint theJr allt!vs ~ve~. Th~_~iJv ~s _m¥de e.s:e!l' .ertnet fii -JXJt-lf 10,qether i!fif1f-1fle people up th•re don't want It. sn l5e it." Cnuncllman Ol'ln~!d 1'.fclnni~ sairl il will b.e up In lhe citizens (If the are;:i lo r!et"irie thems•h,~hev. want done anrf crime In thl" citr •v!th a ·,,J'tloos..,1. He sair! that wa~ done recently in We~t New-nort after proceedin2s were dissolved nn a citv attempt to tonn an alley pavliig dlir'rlct. Cnuncilman Lindt'l~.v Parson~ ~11lrt he coultl not In il'nod faith ask hi,: Olrnria tieJ Mar rnnslituenls to pay toward the Nt•'J>Ort Heiglits alleys. City policy, It was pointed out. make:c; alley fmriroveme nt the resJ'l(lnslbillty of Ui" ad inining J)roperty o~'Tler'. Several J'l"rsons auestloncd v.·hether the rock and oil treatment givett the alleys ·~!l 19~~f.\\•asn'I p.ccepted by the city, aritl 1f not In sn many y,•ords thtn it lea~t by virtue of the ,city tiavlng u.~ed and ren:tlred th~ 11Tleys fl'lr 22 years slrice. City Public Works Director Joseph Otv- lin noted. "Street improvement stand1rrls or NewP,rt• Beach are hl.rh. adriiijtedly th~ 1rt hfgh, But tc. ·be (air they ha,•e to he the s11me as for new developers." He said Jt ,_,as propo~ed the 3!1eys be paved with concrete. The cost for 11i:ir inchell of concrete. he said. wnuld be about ST.JS per sauare fMt compared tn abnut $1.10 fnr nine inches of asphalt, y:hich would not last. Prooerty nwners wanlerl tn knnw why cit.v litreets then are not paved v.ith cori- cretc De\·lin said city streets can be pave<1 cheaper hecau.se pa1·ing machines tn compact the asphalt, the most important of)er11i011. can be used. Alleys are too narrow for the asphalt paving .machines and ha1•e lb be paved by hand, he said. Also. he noter!. lilreets are paved high. tr in tl1e middle v.1th runoff to concrete c4rbs at either :side. Alleys, v•lthnut rurbs. are constructed lo\v in the mid- dle with runorf down the ctnter. In a relatively few years water runoff break! down the asphalt In the middlt, he said. Swinging Canaeraman Using helicoP,ter with special camera mount, cameraman films sUU. another scene In "Doctors' \Vives," a movie now in pi'oduction on location in Harbor Area. Cameraman was shooting footage of another helicopter being used as air ambulance in the film and :skies over Costa l\fe sa was \vhere the action took place. Summer Leaguellaseball. _Morning Stop_ · For Coffee ·Ends ·Registration 'Announced Registration for Harbor Area summer baseball wifl run from March.16 to March 19 for boys in grades seven throus;h 11 , according to area baseball commissioner Newport, Toro Meet on Fligl1ts A metting on ?>.farch 23 with officers · from El Toro ~1arine Air Base was schtduled Monday by Newport Beach city councilmen to discus.a military flights over the clty. · councilmen taid the probll.m subsided for some time after earlier talks with the air base orficers but jets are now creep- ing baCk in over Corona del Mar. Councilman Lindsley Parsons said he partlcuJarly is concerned about fllQhts earlier than the 7 a.m. restriction on takeoff from Orange County Airport. Cougress Selects Poet Consultant WASHINGTON (UPI) -An Oreaon poet and college professor has been nam- ed consultant in poetry to the Library of Congress. it 11.•as announced today. \Villi11m E. Stalford, an English professor at Lewis and Clark College in Portland, will succeed \Vllliam Jay Smith in Si!'plember. Rod 1'.facMillian. Opening day for lhe junior high and high school leagues "'Ill be May IG, he said. The first tw&.weeks of April will be for rogistratlon of fifth and sixth graders 11•ith play opening June 6, l\facMillia.n said. Second, third and fourth graders will register in I.he last week of April and first week of J\1ay, with league play starling June 17, he added. Specific registration information will be. distributed to area liChOola prior to registration, he said. The program is sponsored jointly with the Costa l\1esa and Newport Beach re c r eation department.! and the Harbor Area Boys' Club. Mesa Seeking Walkie-talkie Theft C.Omplaint Cemplaints charging a GI and his buddy, allegedly casing 1 Costa Mtsa apartment comple:t while communicat- ing with walkie talkie outfits. were being sought today from the District Attorney. Detective Art Courteau said he e:irpect- ed the complaints would be issu~ dur- ing the afternoon, depending on evaJua- tion of the evidence. Army Pvt. Andrew E. Price Jr .. 21, of 381 Victoria St, Coata ~lesa. and Robert L. Payton, 20, of 3342 ~. Knoll Drive, San Clemente. were arrested Monday ni~ht. Both were booked for invest.Jgation of burglary, while the civilian was also charged with possession of dana:erbus droQI. Police said Prtc! and Payton were ob· served around the apartments at 2700 Peterson Way - a high crime rate wlt.l't burglary leadini; the Ust -and carried walkie.talkies. In Car Sw itclt A Costa. h1esan on a coff~ break caus- ed a fellow citizen some car trouble '" Tuesday , in a caper that could have been prevented perhaps by a second or third cup. TM trouble : The car itself. The moral : Never perk your bronze. 1967 Chevrolet El Camino next to another bronze, 1967 Chevrolet El Camino when Uie sleep is sllll in your 1..yes. , Patrolman Gary Sperling was dispatch- ed to the Mr. Donut shop, 135 E. t7ta St., on a suspicious circumstance case after one motorist v.•as marooned by the other. They parked on one side and bad coffee on the other. _, , PqzzUng over why ·anyone would ,teal the ear key1 and leave behind 1 v~luable set of 1olf cluba, Officer Sperling, the vie· tini and his companion soon learned. The embarrassed man drove up in the idtnUcal El Camino, in ~vhlch the keyg had been left, exchanged cars and apologies and departed agai.1. The only difference in ~ cars was a single ml.saing hubcap. "That's the first time in my career this ever happentd,'' said the policeman, who tlldn't take down lhe men's names, because the case was officially closed. Seminar Slated On Drug Abuse A serpinar on drug abuse and v.·hat can be done to curb It will be heJd at 7:30 p.m. Thursday at the Little Theater at Corona del Mar Hlgh School, accordina to Ed Cibbarelll, community relations of- Clcer for Newport Beach police. Cibbarelli said the seminar is ~ing sponsored by the high school's student council and PT A. The session is being held to educate parents to the drug pro- blem and to generate ideas to help con- trol it. Parents and students are v.·e]come LG the seminar, he said. d., eau· Jenee. '\Ve know il'11 bel'n a hard, rQY h go for you." g EXHAUSTED EFFORTS . Ml:lyor Doreen Marshall said, "\Ve ha vt nver the lalit seven yea rs,' and 1 ·think justifiably, devoted c 0 n s i d l f." b 1 e resources ~f the city. We'vt? pretiy ·wtll 'exhausted our e!Jorta to reopen ' Wf shou ld try to resolve this now for tht best interest Of the city as a whole." "T~t statement is indicative of " defeatist attitude," said Gruber, dilrin,11; the afternoon . 11•hen the' will of the coUncil as a \\•hole st11!·was not 1:00110• Shelton told Grubfr, "There Is no stron~ community sen.imoni for the council to pursue lhis farther. On fhe con- trary'. most ol what we hear is just the opposite." · "It .wi ll. be a purveyor or .smog).and pollullon 111 our community," protested Gruber. He then argued for no freeway at au. but instead what ·he caUetl "a super atlerial system" -fenced-of( highWay~ like Newport BoU!evard tieade\1 uP towarc Costa Mesa. None of the other councilmen saw it his \\·ay. . Councilman Donald Mclrutis CQnCtded y,·orldng wJthin the ·adopted route is the ~easonable way to go at !hll. pcifnl. "But 1r I S;'!t the engine,ring begins coming ou t like a Chinese \Vall to e1nasculate \Yest Nev.•port, there is r.o way I will sign," hf 1varned. SUGGESTED COURSE Parsonr,, chaim1an of the council'~ freeway commlttee. suagcsted the course that won approval. He also proposed 'hat Assembly1nan Robert Badham ( R. Newpt>'rr'Bea"Ctn go Shead and-iritrOOuce ~ legislation saying the Highway Com· mission should reopen in cases when' the J'l:J.<!P.ttd fre.eway..route lies enUre]y with.in the limits of the requesting city. t.fcinnis said that might prevent tht ~ame thing ·that happened to Newport from happening in other p18fJlls. . .. · Hi1hway Commission pQ\icy, Panons said he ill pretty certain from obse\-va- Uon, is that the commissic.n won't in· terpos_e betv.·een two disputing political agencies. (In other words, Costa Mesa killed Ntwport's chances). • Parsons said the first yriority for city staff attention should be work ing ~t 're- maining problems on the Corona del 1'-1ar Freeway, it being the ntost immediate and JtJost urgently needed. Other coun- cilme;: agreed. Shelton S'Uggested the city appoint an advisory freeway board of architect! and laodscape architects and · others or capabilitles not found In ~he city staff. "l think the state would not oppase but 1velcome this kind of participation," he said. His suggestion wa.s well rteeived by the rest of the council. • He ;s Just Part Of the Scenery When in doubt, a~k a policeman. That's just what a Costa Mesa woman did, arriving at the Civic Center and anx· ioue for directions about where to register to vote. She aske(I a handsome young' unifonn- cd officer, standing by with an air of i.uthotlty, while a cast of :haracters for a Columbia Pictures' release be:ing filmed on location bustled about. "Why don ·t you ask a policeman . lad y'" he replied, adding that his walk-:an bit part called for no spoken lines . Bridge Claiins 376th SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -A youth ·with Jong blond hair le.aped to his death from the Golden Gate Bridge Tuesday night as a bridge patrol car tried to reach him. The victim was unidentified. His was the 376th known suicide from the span connecting 1'-1arin County ,and San Francisco. • From c.r.fomia Artis•n s, Eng•gement Rings of Incomparable oeauty, DAii. Y I'll.OT Srtll fl'!Mtt Ready to Parade Sadd)ob1ck HJgh School drill t•am m1mbeu (from left) Robin Kuy· kendall, 16 and ~Inda Sujlshl. 17. help Fairview &late ffospltal dtill team ,preaidcnt lry on her new uniform 1t Costa Mha facility Tues· day. Marcbln~wllh thetn in a recerrt pa rade, girls of tho Santa Ana campus tlrlll am decided lo make brlghl, new out/l11 for all their performing c egeaues from Uie hospital for mentally rel!lrded. CONVENIENT • TERMS IANKAMUICARD . MASTER CHARGE J.C. J./umphrie6 JeweferJ I Ill NEWl'ORT AVENUE COSTA MESA - 24 Y!ARS SAME LOCATION PHONE &~l.)40 I I .,... __ . ' ' ----~··:..:....cc~-~-- \ ' l l s~r".t. NarttJed . . Kidiiaped Sisters · Found Unhai-ined ' ~ . '. _, • tmERTY,. Mo. (UPI) -J-'11 ar'~r ol Mn, Two littl;;-ltlti!Yi ~;kidnaped llelJllle !:il!P, II, of 1\l!ian, I f ' Aris:~ tbe moaber" If 1bi &om their Butler, Ala,, llc>me ·-· • r were /o<lild sale in • car park· Aulhcriles ~·ililo...J ed outside • residence in this lily thid'8ldenl.1 ol 0.. ..,. Kansas Clty suburb early to. w.bn i'OnH& wu ...,-apr d~ Cain, 3, and Tiffany but --. witla ..... Cain, 2, appeared ''well cared-.lion ol tbe ~. · i... and happy," ... oifker "We aK·a>..U .-.11"8 said. Jut oigbt frOm .tbeae _.., ~The driver of.,,the car, John ~bo said they . bad been. Gbartes Meai<:I: 21 Tuciio notified the liltJe clr8 '"''" ' ' · n, , ...... ~-,,..-·..., fo •~ • tho Ariz:., was arrMted inside the ~ '"•""6 .. ~ ~ hOuse. !le hsd lefl a .3S7 illfkii'.Wd today. FBI .,eats, mJ:l""um revolver, a . 3 a sUde ~ and ·men from "r· • Ille Clay Couiltf •Sborllf'I Of.' 0 • rli~tl~!~.t ··~i~sli~ 11ce o1a0 c1. ou1 tho ...... and Dies at 72 ' cltildrfl'Q, whea he ,went 'inaide. were ~. when Meulck lie of!ered .. .Wtince. ciro'(O' up al!Out 2 a.m. ln·. N"W yo•v (AP) Co d A seareh 1"¥ on for-a-.ec· pink car With Arizonl ~ ~ ,... ~Ul.' -nra ond nian ideotlfied as Dona.Id plate&. · • f~qtl, the actor who made \he Brad!Ql'd Ue JOOes, fi,1;-of They waited until be -'ftad ~ansltion from silent pictures. Jacksboro, T9t, th; FBI laid. gone inlide.ud wu separated '° talkies 1 and' who Was ~ . f~ tbe cblldren·before mov· founder of the Academy of ·~ ·ing m. He wu taken to the Mo · . • H , • OK ,.,-acaOn c.o.tmty jail in Kansu . lion P1~ture Arts and UWall. S .. Ctty.. . . Sciences, died Tuesday of a • An .. officer aaid the house · heart attack and em)ilysema. Ab where Meuick "waa arrested He was 72. • OrtWn waa lhe h-Ot "elo<e friend• Born in Keokuk, Iowa, Nagel or dist.ant relatlwa, I'm not began his stage career in 1918 Bwi Repeal ' HONOLULU CAP) -The Hawaii legislature has passed a bill virtually eliminating curbs on abortion. The bill in effect repeals a tOl·year-old present Jaw whicli penniU abortion only to save lll1l'e wtPch." in "Forever After." -the:..life--of the-mother;. Final - legislative action came with a 15;9 vote in the state senate Humphrey Ho ofed HeckleN .Halt·· University Talk -4 • • II AMHERST, Mus. (UPI} -delivering his prepared text my opinion thalthl• conviction Hubtrt H. Humphrey ·tried to ca11u;g for an "open wfndow" will ultlinately be ta.:en on to talk about foreign affairs. policy ln foreign aUairs. appeals to higher court! and They wouldn't let him .,The conviction of the ov~d." • • -.1..A Chicaao Seven is highly ques-~-·~can't continue this way," He tried to talk about ~K: t Ion.ab I e consUtutionall,y," he told the audJeoce. "I would Cblcqo.Seven coapiracy ,trial. Humphrey aaid. "It violates ask you all to 'o home at this They threw popcorn and blew e'Very standard d. justice. It is point. I'm leavm1." whlsUes. . A small group of dbsidellts at the Univenity of Massa- chusetts preVfSlled Humphrey for very long. A group of 100 militant studen"t S completely overshadowed a cro"'d or 4,000 persons who jammed ah auditorium Tues4ay night to listen to the rormer vice presi· dent. With occasional profanity, the protesters jeered and booed every time Hiunphrey tried to speak. There were shouts of "~t him ·~~·" and "Sit down and ~.'' but Ute militants kept up a running barrage of insults as Humphrey tried to deliver his address from a makeshift stage. Humphrey first agreed to student requesta to discuss the Chicago Trial instead of Alps Avalanche Threat ·Said Worst in 30 Years GENEVA (UPI) -Swiss: authorities warned today thatl the danger of aValanches inl lhe' Alps was greater than at any time over the past· 30 years. A general avalanche alarm went out· through the Swiss, Austrian, Italian and French alpi. Two avalanches Tuesday at Reckingen, Switzerland, and Lanslevilla."'CI, France, killed at least 21 persons and left 19 missing. Four persorui were rescued alive today 24 hours after the Lanslevillard ava~ lanche struck. An avalanche today in the • WedMsdlJ, Fobraury 25, I 910 C?UnNIE I . ---Tuesday. -----~~-lr----";orne-new -measure wootd \ , pennit aborti9n by licensed physicians in I i c e n s e d hospitals if the woman bas been a Hawaii resident for at least 90 days and the fetus is not "viable." Legislative 1 a w y e r s in· terpret "viable" to mean fetuses far enough developed .... to live outside the womb and say it would oover pregnancies up lo four or five months. Medically untie ensed persons perfonning abortions would be subject to a max· imum penalty of a $1,000 fine or five-year prisOi;i term . Gov. John A. Burns, a Roman ca:tbolic who personally opposes abortion, said earlier be would not veto an abortion . f:eform measure but would let it be.come law without his signature. Robert Pearson, • Maui Island contractor who led the anti;epeal forces said he would take the new law to the U.S. Supreme Coort i r oecessacy. Man J ailed ' In Beating Death of Tot ASHLAND, Pa. (UPI) - State pollce said today tbey have arrested on charges of murder a man they said beat his girl friend's young son to death and hid the body four months ago in an abandoned coal mine. Russell Snyder, 28, of Ashland was arrested late Tuesday night while he hid in a closet of bis home. Police !aid the body of Ronald hfcCorkle, 2·, of Phoenixville b'ad been recovered a short time earlier from the mine of Merriam Mountain, two miles weSt of here. The child's mother, Mrs. We've MNerannouneed a carat this tliate befol"e. BUt.tlaen nobody\ wannouncedacar like,thls befcn. ............ If. it· were· just· an-ortlinary~sportster, we· ~ht have.introduced_it at.the: ordi- nary time. . But we didn't , And1 asyou ,can~see,.time1was•on·our side. Because•werdidn't,ootherJwith1the si mulated air scoops. Or any•.other;put- ons that might put you off. Insteadiwe;took• the',time1to1 build •a whole new1carjfrom the ground-up.•_In four distinctive versions:·Standard;.Rally Sport, Super Sport and Z28. Compare the·new-carnaro-witlh· any competitive car in its field. If you can ·find one. 1WD extra lluclalts • Noeata. buc:kS. Most sportsters ·give·you ·two' buckets in front. And a sofa in,.back:~WeYe'done them two better. The back seat:sofa is -out:Jn'are·two rear bucket-styled cushions. Up front the buckets are deeply:·· con- toured to• put you firmly in' place, And keep you there. Even in tight turns. We started with a sleek new shape · The instrument panel is just as ~!!II.._~ functional. It's flat black and wraps around. With enough dials and in- strumentation to make you. think you're piloting a 747. and a low road-hugging stance. So it hovers a few short inches from the pavement. Right down there with Corvette. To that we added more hood. A faster fastback. More window.area..And ,wider doors for easier entry. On RS models, there's"even"Ta'resilient bumper that surrounds the'grille.~To protect,a.gainst nicks. and knocks. Only with this1one1you;,don't need a flight crew. The spe 1 z! tending is1M11trtgl1tln. Camaro always had a tough reputa- tion when it came to taking on tight turns. Now we made it tougher. . . With a forward-mount.ed's~ ing linkage and an improved front and rear suspension that give the new Camaro' a leech-like grip on the road. It's something other cars'wilthave~a touglt time coming to grips with:· What motivates all this? Six power plants up to the 3SO:llp Turbo-Jet 3~. you, can,order.1And.four transmissions. ~ Pick the combination·that'best-suit2' your driving. · • - Then go pick on an open road. . SCArid z d c111c bnll"&L ,_ smp •Wlll •JOll.-. It's onll natural. . • With all that go, you want an equal amount of sto11.. You've got it. Front disc brakes are standard. For less heat buildup. And more resistance to fade. New Camaro. The S4per H~), ~ Other cars always feared it rnigJi.e come to this. And they were right. .•· I l • . ,, " ' .. .., .nl ,., Cloria McCorkle, 20, who moved here recently from Phoenixville f o 11 ow I n g 1 divorce. was held u a material witness. Only their timing was wrong.. : Putting you first, keeps us·fust;, .. . ,,_ ...,. State Police Detective Gtorge Durilla said Mrs. McCorkel and her father, Fred W1llace of Phoenixville, reported the death to P~oeniJ:· \•ille police SUnday. They told tbe poll~ the child was beaten to .death in October i n Ashland, Ourilla said. State police and inspectors from the Slate Department of ~fines and Minerals Jndustries 'ed a search of abandoned Mp mines west of here Mon- 1lay and .Tueedsy.~ \I'· , ~Y !ound the bqdy wrap- ped in 1 blanket ud ·a oloeper bag. Governors l\teet • WASHINGTON CAP) -The N a t l o n a 1 Governor•' Con· terence amu1l winter meeting opened todly with education. crime, the environment and ftdttal-state relationships the key Issues of di8CUssion. Forty-five of the 54 11.ate and tc.rritorJal governors are on hand for · Ule three day meeUng which begins wllh a i erlei Gi .dosed committee 1e5$1Ms: ' ·- • • • -·- - . ..... M,....a.i lhllftt•~ • • • ' • ·. • '. • , ' • , ' • • •I . .> • " • ' • • • 1 ' • ' • ' •• T J •. • , • 1 ., .~ I I • \•·DARY PILOT EDlTORL\L PAGE ' Stretching The teacher. in front of hia clu1, rave a sptll~ul cheer of a four -letter word for forn lcatlon. He did not lose his job. A majority of the achool board members of the Newport-Mesa Un~lld School District felt that the teacher in question had ahown above-average promise as an educator and in their view lhe penalty for his first mistake -the first brouabt before th•m -was not deserving of dlsmi11al. So the teacher was bid< la th• cla&1n>0m tjle nut day after a reprimand . He bad uaed the vulgarity, It was explained, in an ·attempt to arou1e a class from ao apathetic display of Indifference. The IA!acher also bad 1hown contrltenes" tie brouaht Iha class back together on th• ••me day of fh·e incident and apologited to lhe atudeata. But contrite or not, he displayed such a .serious lack of Judgment that It Is hard to explain away. It c1111 be argued that some. or part. or all, of the students had heard the word and thU6 should not have ·been of· fended. But few indeed are '\he plrente -and, we would hope teachers -\vho would agree with that contention. At a time y;'.::::n education ls under microscopic scrutiny by the people who finance It, 1ltuatlont; 1uch a1 this hardly add l(I pu blic enthusiasm for our schools. In .... !act, they are fuel for the hard-core critics who spend their time chipping away at publlc trust in the educa~ tional system. The issue boils down to this : The ttachtr di splaytd extraordinarily bad judgment. The school board felt he deserved another chance. It obviously ~·as a difficult decision for the trustees Tolerance as they evaluated what action would be in the best in· terest of the students. In terms of community support for the school dl1trlct, there is little doubt that di smiss· al would have been 'the more popular action. \Ve hope that the trustees-and the school system they aovern -will not find that. they have stretched tolerance to the brtaking point. • The real quertion Is, did the school board, adminis- trators and teacher$ learn enough of a lesson from this so that there ju1t won't be a •1next time"? Status and Stability Take an outfit as large as Philco-Ford Corporation amt move the headquarters !9r a divi sion with world- wide operations to your community. You ha.ve a. real feather in the local cap . The commuiiity had that occasion to take Jtride last week when PbiJco-.Ford announced all space and de. fen11 operation~·· with 15,000 employes will now be di· recttd out of· Newport ~ach. John Lawson , who was head of the Ne~rt Aeronutronlc plant, beads the new division . · · Laws.on could have been moved to corporate head- quarters in Philadelphia to take the ne\v Ford·PhiJco executive vice prel!ildent post . but Instead 20 persons are being sent to Newport Beach to form his headquar- ters stall here. l·fs a mark of status -and economic stability - in the world or big business. .... I •- . -' • (CJ Manson 's Dear Saap .. eme Court V~teran Due for Deeper Trouble ls Not a Hippi~ Band Althol,gh I number no hippies amona: my relatives, friends , or even ac· quaintancts, I find it deplorable that tM band of vag1bondt chu-1ed with lhe k:Ul- Jng or the Sharon Tate maaae wtU 10 down in the record.I u a "hippie" group. Frnm what l can gather, Manton and his weird crew Of cuJU.ti rtHmble hip. piu onJy in the Wl)' that anUlmatter rtsembles malter -as a perfect mirror- fmage . And this is what confuses people, for we tend to judge only a superf.lclal appearance, and not by rubstance. !\IANSON'S U'M'U:: band wore lone hair. dressed unconventionally, and lived in an isolated commune -and these few surface characteristics are eoou&h to brand them, In the public eye. as "hip- pies." Nothing could ~further from the truth, or more of a libel on the hippies. Whate,·er their faults or excesses, true hippies are not hurtful people. They try In live by love. not hate, and eschew ''iolence as: lhe most important element in their creed. True. there are many thousands of synthetic hippie' runn1ng around, v;fto do not practice these virtue.&. but there is just as much hypocrisy and deception amone members Of the "r;traight" society. !\IANSON'S GROUP ·stems lo have been precisely a diabolic inversion of the hippie ideal. tr reports are accurate . they lived on hale and viol~nce, tr~ to pro- mote racial strife, al)d mcaced In dark practices that scerce.ly fall en thl1 side of sheer lunacy. Gloom v -Gm: !\Just all jobs go to the lowest bid· der? The .Ada.ma St. brldae wJd- tltlng wu unbelievable: Mon~ ct poorly·scheduled work w I t h •mall crewa, poorly·ll1hted (then demollllhod) banicadt1, 'cihuck holes In the new blacktop before the lanes Wl!Te even striped. Wh11t'1 more, only one liide or the bridae wu widened. -G. G. C. ' They ldotlted the l\iJIP!t IU~yl• 11 •n effecllve .. cover" fw their Olfariam ac· u,JU11, J111t u vUlalna and rwlrldlers in the Might world adopt tbf 'cover or mpectabilily and convtntleniltly. But to the frightened and out-r11ed onltnary cillzen. the Minson cite only goes to show what the "hippie.a" are really caplble of. ur·E IN AMJ;Rlq I• tbugh tnou1h for these social drop.outa without 1ddin, the onus of ritual murder a " «I psychopathic sadism. They are already unwelcome In most communi\it5, beaten up by hoodlums (who commit far more depredations than th! hippies ~o), pushed around by cops, and easy prey for biaoti, blackmailers, and punitive prigs. I happen to think that the hippie life- style is seU-defeatlna. unlt11 it is in· w1rdly illuminated by a high religious sef\ae (al it ii In too few ca11ts); but they have a right to live 11 thty wish and to look as they wilh, so Ions as they harm nobody but lhemi;elves. Aod, So far . the scoreboard ahows, they have the lowest crimJnal record for ·noltnce of any itlentlflab\e aroup of dissidents in the country. ----~ . Douglas' Little Black Book a .Bomb· WASH!NG]'ON -A littl e black book which is bound to aet Justice WillJ1m O. Dou1laa in deeper trouble circulated in Conires11 in advance of lt.s February 19 publlcitJon date. Random House is publi5hlng this 97- page lime bomb under the title of "Points of Rebellion··. It is an aslringently-vi:ord· ed tirade against I.he Amer I ca n ·•establishment." the Pentagon. the .FBI 4nd CIA, police, employers a n d educators, and concludes that "violence may be the only effective response" of outraeed yooth. "George Ill wa s t.ht sy mbol a3iinst which our founders made a revolution now coos!dered bright and g)ortotlJ," Douglas wrote. George Ill had not croes- ed I.he seas lo fasten a furei&n yoke on us. George Ill and his dynasty had esLabliahed and nurtured us and aJI that he did was by no means oppressive. But a vast restructuring of la"·s and in· stitutlons was nece•ry if the people were to bt conttnt. Th.at restructuring wsr; nol forthcomlna and there was revolution . "WE MU'1 llEAUZE that today 's estaDlllhmtnt Is the new George Ill. . ~ . ,,. Riciu'n.(J Wileok' ' ~ . • If< Jr Whether it will continue lo adhere to his tactics. we do not know. If ii docs. the rtdress. honored in tradition. is also revolution." Throughout hir; treatise Justice Dougla~ olfus a justification for vkllen~. He acknowledges violence has no con- 1tltutlonal unction but says injustices may pile so hl&h that violence is the only answer. In other pa11sages the Supreme Courl Juttice advi ses American protesters to ritk arrest becausr. the police have no right lo interfere wilh their frttdom . Douglas' book is a catalogue of the New Lefl's cOmplainla against the FBl and CIA -and the vut bureaucra· cy of the American system. He reveals aome information which sounds more JI~ Georgetown dinner table talk than judicially estabHshed facL In invelahing against the FBI and CIA. Douglas 11- serts that "certain hotels in Washlncton have aJlotments of rooms that are wi red for sound and even contain two-way mir· ror1 so that lhe occupants can be taped or filmed." EVERY GOVERNMENT conference room ii auumed to. be buged. he a11serl!. ind every emba111y phone is an open transmitter. Justice Dooglas does not reveal the source or this astonishing informaiion. but it is recogniiablc as or· rlained fact in the circles in which the Supreme Court justice moves. Few would be v.•illlna to quarrel with lhe right of a Supreme Court ju.tict in his old age expreMlng bls pet peeves aboul Washinaton even U they do fit the conventional 1tertotype ol what Spiro Agnew cal\1 the "limouslne liber11J." If Douglas wishes to excoriate the' Pen- tagon, lhe military-industrial cornplex, FBI snooping. the Vietnam War, In· dustrial personnel personallty test&, and lhe affluent society he Is not without company. The problem arise1 on the justification ol violence and revolution by an l.SIOciate justice or the United States S\l preme Court, ntlt merely c1mpus sit-Ins or wresttln& with the police In Grant Park in Chlca10, but violence intended to overthrow tht govtmment of the United Sti tes. Or, is that what Justict Douglas justifies! Is the "system", the ''establishment·• M>mething different tharr the established order under law? JUSTICE DOUGLAS concludes ill tiy piGUsly hoping tlrot !he revolution he is l3 lking about will not be a repetition of 1776, The revolution that is coming, ht ~ays, will arise from "the search or youlh for v.•ays and means of making the cor-· poration stale and of government th1t runs the machine-the servant of man." Thus when Justice Douglas concludes his treatise he is not so high on the ram- parts as in the middle passages when his· high dudgeoo eggs on youth to violence. Then. having calm ed down a bit. what bothers him is whether the ' "establ ishment"-whatever that i&-wlR be wise enough not lo use Its "sloctpiJ1 of arms" tO suppress the dissenters, for he thinks that would bring on an awtuf ordeal. !\fUCH OF WHAT Douglas has wriUtn is a summation of conventional libtral poppycock. It reflects the youth cult men- tality \\'hich entrances the 71-year~kt justice. This little black book may even· tua!ly take its place wit)l the little r~ book. ·'Thoughts of Chairman MaO'" ln the sacred shrines of the young. - Moral Behavior Laws Have Failed To the Edik>r : • -. "Caft\pU' Oisrupters·• left me fumiq al y&1.1r ability to straddle the ftnct. You CGt.1ld have interviewed vartous UCI students and tried prestnllng their opin- ions. · First. my husband and I have two IOns in college, one a senior ind the other, a freshman. _ Aldrich atltmpt! Lo be fair and far. sighted and deaerve1 commendetlon. My only criticism of him is his reticence to mention the many earner;t and slncer• students, wtto alr;o have a social con• iteienct. Bus School to the Kids When the mov ie "I Am Curious (Yellow )" is measured by the definition for pornography in the dictionary there Is no doubt tbal the movie is DOrnographic. Nor Is there any doubt that a seminude or nude entertainer is gu!lty of indecent eq>01ure and most likely lewd conduct. These kinds of human behavior have bee n around foi a very long time and all pr!:viou1 mt11Uf't1 t.h1t have been used to eUmln1te: JUCh ~h1vior have failed. t.etters from "readers are welcom.t. Normall11 writers should conveu the ir mtuaoe1 in 300 words or Le11. TM right to condense l~te-rs toJI& space or eltminat1 libel is "reserve . Alt let- re.,., must include .rignature and moil· ing cddreu. but namts ma11 be with- held on request if suffic~nt reason is apparent. Poetr11 will not bt' pub· l1$li.ed. Second, I agree that the UCI students who demonetrated 1111nn the GE recrulte.rs showed a lack of maturtty and respect for other's right, but I also feel that Chancellor Aldrich's dt:elrlon to hive them 1ppe1r before a student courl should meet with community and carnpus 11pprovaJ. Today 's college freshman begins his studi es equipped with m o r e un- derstanding than previous gener1liona of ecanomic, political. !i o c I a I and 1overnmentaJ ideas and ideals. A century after t~:. Civll War , the. North and South 11re at Jans last reunited. A majority In both aectlons Is voelferOUI· Jy against bualnc pupils to Integrated sellOOls. Unfortunately. the court.& are for it. 11lC reauJtant crisis once again threaten• to r;pllt our nation a5under -with the 1n· ti-busing fiction a e c e d I n g from the American judidaJ &yttem. Into the bre1Ch1 11 good fortune would have It. has leaPt the noted sociologist,. R. · Owen BasUen. · Aa ~1r. Bastian so accurate.ly points out, hardly anyone is against integration -al least publicly. What everyone i1 publicly and piously again:!l is the con- cept of busing the poor little ch11drtn all the way acr053 town to some dllt.aftt 1chool. The answer to lhe school bu&irta. crlsll. then, is liChOOI busing. Or , as Mr. lalttan puts It : "lnslud of busing the ltjd.s to tht schoOI, we 1imply bus the :school to the kid!.'' J\.lR. IASTl.\N"S ingenious solution tn- 'lli!ilOIU a one·roo1t1 schoolhoua on the. back of 1 flatbed !nick. The deslp alone tw immense appeal to all corwe.rvaUvts. wbo believt that the ont-room IChoolhouse, 5Ult•bly eulpped with MtGufrey's Rudtrs, w11 the high ••ater mark In American education. The savings wouJd ht tremendous. When you lltop to thlnl< that thett '"' ap- proximately J,OCM) limes aa many cbDdmi 11 1Cbool1, U'• obvlMu1ly far more ecooomical to bus the llChool than the children. e..t of all, the bull<d 6<hool would IChleve lnttgratlon. which everyone 11ys hey're for, whUe malntaln l n1 &hborhood school&, whtch everyone ' ' Art tio_j)pe t PORNOGRAPHY• l.ndewit expogure and lewd conduct 1bould be ronsldered from 4 reli1tou1 and a ·ctvtl pOint of view. I. • t •' . ...._ ~.. " A re:Ualtu1 polnt 61 •h ahould consider al!o favors. For the bused r;chool would 5trve several nelt:hborhoods each day. , ,... the relauon bf:t1rotb man .and his a:OO while the civil point ol vtew should look Into the rel~ bttwHft men. Since thert are many dllftrt:l\t rtllc1ous lf'OUPS and each CWf1 may have .. different view on thl• subjoc~ nethln1 could I>< 11lnod • by' ttylna to eloborat• on tht rail1Jous Point ol view. IT l'tllGHT START one morning in the ghetto. picking up black moppelli 1\ their doon, then proceed 11lly. aahool bell clanA;lnt:. to a WASP ftt!a)lborbood for a ii OUR MOOSl\N IOC.1ely has mal\y ways load of small W!lite fry. ' of dettrmlnina: opcrlment.ally what ef· Tht ntxt dlY, lt could revtree Ill route. feet pGrnOll"lphy, Indecent exposure: ind Thla wwld live black chlldrtn a c~nce Ind CGnduc:l has had on the 1bnonnal to Ht White enclaves without aetUne HXUll ~vlot of Ill cltlteN;. Then there IQted ~ wllitt c~Qdrtn 1 loot at U'8 art thole European nation• that have thtitoos without pt~nc muqld. Tbll la JIOppld enforcl~I llw1 pert1lnio1 to the E pportunlty at Its finest moral betiivlor of Its cltl1en11, The sum family ~Id llw Just acroli t1'e total of the• IOUtt'U of-inform1t1on has tldtw1 k from an inlt:lf_l\ed school. Car Indicated thtt very llttte ehll'I•~ In the ~la would become a U\1lll of the f! vtolt1tt au crtme• wtll re1ulL If savem- A)ld lnallofl ol plft!lll lllvlnc to ' 1111111 .i.,. ouf ol lryln& to onlon:e moral otr to school for PT~....Unts. lowt that should be !ell up to the ochoOI wootd COIN to ;'-lltul · · coin I vldloi Umt !or looctr·l A nttelillP. l ut roll&l<QI munlcy. . 0Vtr7 ~ hu ila l!Ule,'1rawblc~. · . IN CONCLU810N, when oo cl tty TIDI. Or coum, llii' 'di'~ oolu· Ubtlallm Ila 11wi on tile moral be~ovlor iion·to the crlllt. TM ulhar nl ~ a1 an •nll·bualftl nl!f In Nul\flllt. 1-. Bf tlnrire --~ by lhe f aniod locli:lan. Dr. --Scrimshaw. · • · , He noted thal •YllY white ht the \u- dience WU publlCly de:dlcltW to tn., tegratlon. neighborhood schools •nd J preventin1 bWilng. He thtrtCort' 1111· etsted that each of them mo ve into a black netghborhood -thereby ochle>lng all lhrte goals In one. fell ,woop. Or. Scrlm~haw w1s Llrrtd. (11thered ond bused to Dt<:atur. GeorRia. F.0 .8. coiled. Dt1t Tod : Nol r'81ly. Adl!llu.dly, I J!l 1 lot ()( questians r hOne•tlY can't anJWer. ttowe\'er. I an!Wtt !Mm 1nywJy .•. ' of ill cllliens, much wmecesqry friction will bt eliminated bltwle11 the enforctra of the ll'IOtal laws. police and Its cltllens. HARRY 8. McDONALD, JR. s.,.,1~1.,u, Tr•hll111 To the Editor: ~ I hope that Dr. Norman . i.ott1 ...,,.,, being facetious when· he 11111· that if there was an unpatriotic boy tn a clw ll\d sensitivity tr1inlng could make him patriotic then It wu vetueble ln that re1ard. (DAILY PIUlT, Feb. II). The lntt:nl of aen•lllvlty training Is not to change attitudes. nor Is It a "br1ln- wuhln1" device of any sort u Mrs. Pit Walker nid. The intent Is sugesttd in the name : i.e .• to help 1 person bec:ome more "senlJtive'' to. •nd In touCh with. hi> own 1 .. uo1• ond Ideas ond to tht fttlin•• and ideas of lh<>Je person1 he b Involved .with. SurrfY"lhls could be of 1001e v1lue. to a teacher faced with ;.:, or &o diverse and very Individual chtldttn tvtry d1y. ANDREA J. LING~E Dr. Norman Loaf.I, 1111iltattt '"P' t rintndtnt for '""tnu:tfd.11. in & h t Ntwporl-/11114 achoo! dlilrltl, ,'tGftl. "If ••illfdvlll/ lraJnlng _, chong· Ing •lllludf•, lllcn "'°" of fl •ho•41 t<lkt pl~• hi lhi cloutoom. .. • -' Editor Llaten to Stu n t• To Utt Editor: Your lukewarm ed1torl11l today on DESPITE pressures of THE difficu lties 1 n d his position . Cl'lancellor Quotes l'tfary Au Gay1l•o, H1ywarf -"\\1hy doesn 't the moUon picture industry ·limit Its ratlnas to Ju1t thrte: ""G' for general audiences. 'M' for matureiludiences of 18 or over, ind 11.stly, 'P.U."".'" KaUMriltf: McKee, Berk:elf:y, Oft ftlHOD 'I 51 mlll'-..,_ay tell i9 eae ytar - "Doesn't thlt call for mobs to \Ike to the street, for vtal ls. for suspending business. for studenta to stay aw~ from school s, workers to ltave their jobs ... for bum· jng drivu'1 licenses".'" H1 rrle t te H. fMpps, L.A. - "Pennlsslveness has been our downr111. Thert cannot be an honorable method of breaklnc a law without h&vinc anarchy.·• BltWt Ju1ee Olffl, BlrUqame -''By working togcthtr in the aame m•n· ner we did to send man saltly to the moon ind home again, the garbqe ind 11! other problems on earth couJd bt IO!Ved." Ev.tyn ~. Mutoo -"I much prefer lime with I UBSf of prJdt in themselves and tl'i•lr couritry to thole "·hose only eontrlbuUon to a troubl4!d "''orld is a sntcr •nd a 11rcas tk rtmArk." IN HIGH SCHOOL he discovers caust :s and effects at an adult level and thus enters college wilh intellectual maturity. Often his emotional maturity is In· complete at thl5 age. even if his parent.a have tried to instill qualities of honesty, responsibility, tolerance, respect for others' opinions. etc.. and it ahtayJ amazes mr to see how many youths do apply rer;traint and reason to the emo- tional event.s around them. I WONDER HOW many parents show their sons or daughters the respect they preach. by actively llslening to . their ide"tls and opinion1 and discuaslnt: mor11, political and social issues with them ! If we are disturbed about recent and varied sad events occurring al schools and rol. leges, let '1 really listen lo our students and. hopefully, CQl'Tlmunlc1te~ \ SHIRLEY ISERMAN --WWW... \Vednesda y, February 25. 1970 Tla1 cdltono:t po gt of the Da ily Pilot 11eks io inform mid sri'1\- 1tlote i:1o:dfr1 by pre.1enltnQ thii new1paptr'1 opfnlo'll a11.d com- n~nl41\f on topiu of int.rest and signlfl<011<e. bv provf4tng • forum for &ht expre11ion oJ our T"eadtr1' opiniom. and by presenting the dl~r•e tritto- points of itl/ormtd ob1erv•r1 nnd spokf.rmen on top{c1 of the dov. Rober! N. Weed. PuhU1her 1 . •. 1 \ • In the Cotinti11g Bouse · l Shannah Farnes (right ), students body treasurer at Laguna Beach High School, and her assistant. Lucy Boyd, count the cash collected last weekend dur· ing two-day Rodeo by the Sea on the hifh school alhletic field. Rodeo was designed as student body fun d raiser. After two days of counting. ofiicial tallies have yet to be released. "I think we made a couple of bucks,• said one school official. • Laguna CofC As lcs Dela y In Underground Utilities Laguna Festival 'Dart Shootout' Slra rp Cont,est Laguna Beach Chamber of Comme1ce diritto'rs voled Tues<iay lo aSk tile cilY to "(feb.y-·U" proposed undergrounding of utilities in 1he Heisler Park area for 120 days to permit 11 study or undergroun::ling possibilities throughou t I.he community. The motion was adopted on the su g- gestion of Robert Hastings of ll1e Chamber 's com mit lee on un- dergrounding, who said that, Instead of allocating the enti re $68,000 now due to Laguna from the utiliUes companies for undergrounding to one area, it might be advisable to use part of the money in other sect.ors. "ff we use this money to put ut ilities in this area undergr ound at no cost to lhe property owners, except for their own c..n- &ite ulilitles." said Hastings, "how \Ve will explain it when we try to form an assessment district for Wldergrounding in another area ?" Hastings told the directors he is ~n­ vestigating, on au~horization of the Ci ty Down t he Missi Trai Block P aren t Meeting Slated MISSION VIEJO -Anyone interested in the block parent program is invited to a meeting Thursday. Sgt. R N. BaWTigartncr of the Orange County Sheri(! Dept., will be guesl speaker at 7:30 p.m. in the Mission Viejo Swim and Racquel Club , 26211 Tierra Circle. The program already has been im- plemented in the Deane Home section of ~fission Viejo but organizers hope to ex- pand it to other neighborhoods. For information contact Mrs. John Kezel at 830-0128 or Mrs. Pat Getchell at &17-4793. e Gromlh Tal k Pla 1111ed CAPISTRAN'O VALLEY -Andrew A. Mauro branch locations analyst for Southem California First Nalional Bank will address a joint meeting of the Dana Point and Capistrano Beach chambers of C<1mmerce Thursd ay. The speaker will talk ~bout growtti pat- terns or the area and the effects or future industrial and commercial development. The meeting will take place at 8 p.m. in "'Richard Henry Dana School in Dana 1 Point. • Danre Carded' l'rldn11 • MISSION VIEJO -• Junior high · students in Mission ViCjsl ire inyitejf lo a. dance Friday. 1' The event will take place from 7 lo 10 p.m. in the recreation cehter. There will be a dance contest and a freeze contest with records and albums 1s pri zes. Admission will be 50 cents for members and '' for guests. e Jtl u110 E11l r les So119lat MISSION VIEJO -A Mardi 9 deadline has bce.n set for Sad<Oeback Valley organlr..ation1 wishing to run game booths at the Third Annual Ci.co de Mayo Fitsla at Mission Viejo High School. ~. which is limited, wilt be assigned fri order of application. Council, the pos5ibllily tbe Heisler Park project migllt quality, because or its com· munity value, under a program the $68,000 allocation available for use elsewhere. Also under investigation, he said, is tile posslblily of using part of the Laguna allocaJion (82.09 funds set aside by the utilities on ordir of the Public Utilities Comfuission) to finan ce an overall study. It wou ld cost, Hastings said, about $5,000. Noting that the Laguna 8209 funds amount to abut 122,000 a year, he added , "At this rate it would take us 150 yem to com plete the. job." Lloy d r..1ilne, chairman of the Chamber beauti fication C1'mmittee, qu estioned the '"isdom or seeking a delay in the Heisler. projec t. "This project is ready lo go," he said, "it can be completed by summer." Though vo ting in favor of the mot.Ion to seek a delay. other directors indicated they would not favor any acUort that would hold up t.he project more than 110 days. The largest assemblage of dart pl ayers ever to gather in ·the United States is ex· pected in Laguna Beach thi1 weekend for the Art Colony'1 ''Far West Dart Shootout," sponsored by the Jaycees .as Uleir conttibUUon to .the Wliiter Festival. Teams from as far away as San F'ran· cisco. Las Vegas and San Diego will participate in the two-day event in the Hotel Laguna's Riviera Room. MMy of the teams competing for the World CUp of Darts will be of British background, pitting the skill of centuries of training in the tradiUonal British pub pastime against American challengers. Single, double and team entries will begin elimination play at 5:30 p.m. Salur· day and continue at noon on Sunday until the ISlit dart has flown and America •a best have been determined. Entry blanks fl'e available at the Chamber of Commerce, 280 Park Ave., Laguna Beach. Entry fees are '2 single. $4 double and $10 for a 6-man team. Pri:r.es, including televl!!ilon sets, radios and trophies will be awarded. Clemente Seeks Relief For Landslide Victims c;i'7-.ll'icials of San Clemente will call eelin f persorui: financially involved 1n the Hille est landslide situation to seek agreement starting remedial action without Hxi g legal liability. After learning that a geological survey of the slide area would cost from '7 ,500 to $lZ,500, councilmen last week directed O· ty 11anager Kenneth Carr to arrange a meeting with parties involved to search for a solution. The backyard ol the Eugene Seets home, 717 Avenida Columbo, recenUy slid into the canyon below leaving the house Morgan Returns To CofC 1'eam Retiring Laguna Beach Chamber ri Commerce manager Warren Morgan was put back on the team before he had time to leave when Chamber directors ap- pointed him to fill a vacancy on the board Tuesday. Noting that the Tuesday session was Morgan's last meeting with the dlrector1, Chamber President Harry Lawrence commended him for 3'11. years o( service tO the community, presided over prescn· ta'tion of a farewell gift (a desk lamp) and promptly proposed his a;ppointment to a vacant dit-ect.or&hlp. · The proposal received unantmour ap- proval. along with apPointment of \Vil!iam R., Watt, director ol apartment <lev.elopments for lhc Irvine Company. r..1grgan and Watt fdll &eFVe ,Ol.I, Ule' · terms of Burdette Harrison, 'Who has left the area and Robert Shapard, whose work now takes him out or I.he city for much o{ the time. Chest X-rays Set for Lag una Reslderita ol Laguna Beach wll have an opporltmity to ha ve chest J-rays taken Thur5day from II :30 a.m, until 8 p.m. A mob\IB unit, operated by the Call!otnia Oest X-ray Surveys, will be open to the public in front -<>n Laguna Beach -Unified School District offices, !ISO BlumonL St. • Filmii arc read by medlcal doctors Spc!CializJng in diseases o[ the chest. Ahnormalltles tuch a1 tuberculosis, heart enlargements and lung cancer can be detected and reported. perched ...,-a 7$-foot cliff. Olher homea in the area are belleved endangered by the geologl<: instability. Councilman Thomas O'Keefe recom- mended a meeting of the homeowners and lenders to seek agreement on getUng repairs Immediately under way. He 1ald an agreemeat. might be reached that would shelve the question of legal Uablllty until later. "'Mle aooner the repairs commence the betler and let the arguing over·who's to blame come later," said O'Keefe. "It might take year1 to fix the legal resporuiibllity. The lenders have the mogt tied up and they are going to be the ones with the most to lose." He suggested that lhe cost of repa ir• be made a first lien against the properties with actual financial responsibility to be worked out later. •• wastline I Plans Told · -. To Laguna The Jrvlne Company ta "In • quan- dary" over its plans for coutllne develcpmeni, but if all goes welt! prob hms wiJ' be irooed out In a few montha and the shore between Corona de.I Mar and Laguna Beach will be one of the fines' ln I.he county. Laguna Mayor GleM Vedder passed lhil tdfonnauoo alOlll lo director• of the L8auia Beach Chamber of' qommeree Tuesday as be described a recen' all-day tour ol the proposed Irvine development. by land and by sea. Vedder JlnQ. ,Laguna City Manager James D. Wheaton were among a group of O:llcia1s briefed on Irvine plans during a trip that included lunch aboard a boat from whlcl\ they viewed tbe planning area. The" qqaMiry, he said, results from &J>' preherui.lon thaL the l!itate may sUddenly 0 come in and pluck .off 50 acres or so" and force them to re-plan the entire de- ""'"""""'L State represenlallv ... at the &,eSJ!on w~re noncolhitta1, Vedder said. A suggestion by Kenneth Sampson, county beaches and parks director, that a public beach and camping area might be appropriate In the El Morro settor of the coast "dldn"t bother the Irvine people at all," he added. "Irvine definitely wants lo kee p the beachto open for public use," Vedder said. "They plan two walkways for the public, leading from parking areas to the beach, so the cars will be kept out of the way. "The1 also think the state will lllvw a proposal lei mOve COasl Hi&hwpy .. lnland, back of El Morro SchooF," tO 11\Jke the shore more aUracUve and safer." Vedder estimated It may be two yean before the coutUne plan can be Im· plemented, but aald plans probably will be "solidified" In six months. "The whole development Would be a great asset to Laguna." be concluded. Hand Grenades ' Not Included In Trash Job Pursuing his morning rcunds in Laguna Breach Tuesday, traahman Sal Ortega made a hurried detour from 1831 ~ Glen- neyre St. to the police department. Atop one of several tralh containers oul8ide a groop ol apartm<nts. Ortega reported, was 1111 object that looked suspiciously like 1 hand p<nade ~ and he wanted no part (i il Approaching the problem with caution. officers decided It wu lnd'eed a grenade. but ~ly one cl tJlo pncllc6 .. rlety, deSgned to produce no more t.han a Jood "pop " H~. It was t.utned over to lhe Marine bale at El Toro for 1afe keeping. Police surmise a Camp Pendleton tralnee may have picked up the grenade u a soovenlr and dllpooed cl II In the Lra.sb, for lack ol any beLl<r spot. Lagunans to Honor Ex-Fire Chief Mann Friends, city offldal1 and fellow mem- bers of the Laguna Beach Flre Depart.- men' wiU honor former Fire Chief Homer Mann, who reUred In January, at a din- ner tonight in the Outrtager RestauranL Restaurant. Organized by Richan! Jahraua and Fire Captain Charley Kuhn. the dinner w111 at.art at 7:~ p,m., followtng a I::.> p.m. social hour. Tickets are avallable at 16. ' DAILY PILOT 3 •oear To1011iy ••• ' LA Chief Jab s Smotliers' Skit LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Police Chlef Edward,M, DaviB re- leased a sarcastlc,letter Tuesday in which be renewed bis feud wllll thf!i Smothers Brothers over a pro-marijuana, anti-police skit which appeared on their television 1peclal last week. The day after the show, Davis issu ed a statement scoring the skit. which featured an "Officer Judy" backed by a chorus of men dressed as police officers and made reference to mjrijuana. The Smothers replied that the police officers weren't real , ust like "the Flying Nun" on television doe~n't really fly. Davis' letter to Tom Smothers said: .. 11Dear Tommy, "Me and my kinfolk saw your press conference. where you told us about lhe Flytn~ Nun not fiyin' and the bear on "the Andy Williams Show" not bem' a beai and "the Beverly Hillbillies" riot Jlvin' in Beverly Hills. We appreciate this information. Bein' hill country folk all we know is what we see on television out here in Chatsworth. U you don't know where Chatsworth is, It's halfway between Devonshire D9wns and the Spahn Ranch. . · "I didn't really think tbat Officer Judy wa s a policeman aft~r T heard him talk a litUe, cause a policeman bas to pass a psychia· tric exam an' I can't imagine a policeman sayin' good things about young people usin' dope al such a place as the Woodstock Festival. "Tommy, you might have noticed over the weekend about the Salt Lake City youth who made a tape about his use of pot and LSQ and then drove to Wyoming and blew his brains ·out. You might also seen about three women in Nevada w)lo got rich seUin' heroin tq high 11Chool kids, and I reckon you might have seen the Feb. :ioth Life MaJ:azine story about a high school kid in a southwest city who got addicted to heroin. • "Me and my kinfolk are sort of old fashioned about dope and that kinda stUff, and I'm sprry if I was too offended at your show. I think you and yo ur brother have a lot of talent which could be used to help young people in America straighten up and fly right. 11 Best personal regards, "Chief Davis" (his mark). Sen.-Schmitz· Complains·- .On State Press Coverag e SACRAMENTO !UPI) -Sen. John a, Sehmtlz fR-Tustln), a supporleT of Senate Leader Jack Schrade, complained Tue.8· day about news coverage by lhe st.ate capitol press corp&. ln a prepared statement, he 1ald newsmen had shown "open faVtlritlsm., for ousted Senate President Pro Tem Howard Way (R-Exeter), and awrted that some reporters "let ~t be known that U Schrade won, they would publlclze it as a victory for the lobbyists." He did not identify the reporters. Way told new15men after hia defeat that Schrade's succeas represented a "victory for the special interests.'' "As Vice President A g new has been trying lo tell them, newsmen should get out of poUUcs .00 concentrate on report.Ina ttae news," Schmitz said. He aald he believed It was "trme some- one taJked seme" abou' the lobbyists whom he Identified ~ as 1 "man who work•, for pay, to convince legi1lat'or1 to support the bill:I bis employer favon and to OJlPOS'. the bill! his emplo)'!r oppoees. '' He said they "have plenty of money to apead." Winter Festival Shows 20 Works Work of 20 well-known exhibitors at Laguna's FesUval of Arta will be on displays during the lo.day Winter Ftstl· val. The works Will be on display at Challis Ga11erles, 1390 S. Coast Highway. The artltts represented are Ha1 Akins, Warner Bairo, Suzanne Blagg!, Bob Bishop, Jane Callender, Jack Dudley, Fontan and Unger, Ray Friez, Armen Gasparlan, Ken Knutson, Abby Koffs, Diana Hies, Lou Rankin. Mary Riker, David Rosen, Jacque Tatum, Jame., Tatum. Ann Von, Tbomaa Waddelow and Andy Wing. ~ •·Bribery and vot&buying are felorile:s under California law ." he noted. "1£ .reliable evidence can be found that either bas occured in the Seriate, the guUty: persons 6ho1.dd be prosecuted." -: Shortly after Schrade defeated Way tt Wlli dlscl~d be acctpled a $5,000 clieck last year from a lobby as a campaign contribution. He is not up for re~l&tion • unUl 197'2. Census Exams Will Be Given In J,ag1ma Area ExamlnaUoru for census enwnera'°"s will be 1 given in Laguna Beach Milrch 3, at 3 p.m. and 3:15 p.m. ln the Laguna Federal Savings and Loan Building.· The U.S. Bureau of Census is seekiag a numbe r of qualified applicants for three to five weeks of full time work during' the taking of the 1970 censiu, beginnin& in April . Applicants must be American cilluns, reliable and In good health, and ca~le of paning a written test demonstraUng ability to understand printed instrucUQns and do simp le arithmetic. ln Laguna Hills examinations wilL be given at the Leisure World Art Gallery Friday at 9:30 or 11 a.m. Spacemen lo Climb' CAPE KENNEDY (UPI ) -Apollo 13 astronaut Fred W. HaJse said today. he and James E. Lovell plan to explore a hilly region of the moon In April, collect valuable sub-surface sarr.ples, &'Jl d possibly climb a mound 250 to 400 feet hig~. at~ntittn I ·wy 17 DAYS FINAL llDUCTIONS ON . REMAININCi MERCHANDISE . • ' . . . • • . • . . ' . The uno Fiesta will Include a tradi- tional Mexican dinner, n1u11lc. dancing, cam es, conlesl, art 11how . parade and amusements. Refreahmc1lls and food booths will be operated by the PTO find tamput organizations. Outside organl7.a· tions are invited lO opera te game booths. For lnformaUon call &17-68&1. The service Is available lo anyone 1$ or older for a ltt ol •uo. Reporta an mat~ ed wllhln two weeka. .. l!!!~~~!!~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!:::::~ ... ~·~~~==:!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!:~!!!!!!!!!!.J ~ t • • > , ------T"- .. Reds 'Take ·Laos · Field .. U.S. Bombers Attack Invading Forces ., VIENTIANE (UPI) -North Vit~ -namele troopo have~ the air field at 111._ llool ,delpllo M&vy bombin& at. tacks by U.S. and ~ warpiua1, military -Mid lol!llY· • Tlia field !di late Tueaday, a few houra (~ .,. 1lii. ~ Plllt ...., ; . I ~after the ComJDuniltl had ·~ the . • ' ' &own•a mn.~ ... .,,., upandlna tbilr'CO .... ~b1er~ers ollbe FederaM1unau.-·teoi,I!> a po.int It mllea west ol the Pialll ~fil 11.e.reheved to note that -.of Jan. tertial :ll'evenue form 2031 has > It -U. lataot lllbadi,.. ~i..o . • fGrcll ii Iha Nartb )1idM1 , ,,,, that .. hti. 11, ....... jlle P!iia of Jan alt llald Salm'doJ ml_ .. ..,.. ail ---the ..,a1 ofpllal ·~ Lualll l'rllllDI-,... the ollatlalft ii wbal ialoiat """" -in Sal.-hm -• "ti~·-··°"' ol 111,, .. ln&o Lw f--vletnonL U.S. Bil bomhenl .... ~Ille""'"°" _ ... IJ. · discontinued. The fonn , was ·uw •"Waiver11 <lerlificate to eCt:~ Sec~r\\Y Coverage fur by Min isters;' .Cer.t.ain Mem- rs of1IO)leioul ota'ers and Chria- A~M Opponents in Senate From *"" bl, -lllo .....,.. --ltapt -of Ila Tll -plaMI, the c-n-111 -.... ell]ll!dod to J)Ulll -word alool ffllhway 7 to Ila ,........ wllll Jllp.rq IS. Science Practioners." A new f -, _however, has been introduc- ed.~($, -tiUe is "Notice of Acquisi· Uon Ot Stock Pursuant to Conver- Doo of an Original or New Japa. nese De~! Obligation." • . John Kennt'd!I Jr., with rister Caro- line (right) went skjing during a vi&· it to Mont Tremblan t, Quebec. Their mother, Jacqueline Ornusi&, had plan· ned to met t them un the slopes but changed l~r mind. The children are staying witll a secretat"JI of their mother. ' ' • When business began ·dropping off significanUy in the dining bolls at the UniversitY ·of North Car~ lina, Joe E •sales, chancel1or· f o r business and finance did some st.\I· dying: He said. the sharp drop in consumption' of cafeteria fare is probably due· to a . recent decision allowing dormitory students to keep refrigerators in their rooms. • Commenting of dU1ent ot home, Gen. Wi lliam C. West- moreland said Ttcentlt1. ..De· mocracy ll!. we know i t is lield in coiltnnpt bti s~ A.mt'ricani toho haOf! replaced picturet of l\7cuhingtml, Jefferso n and Lin- coln wi th' pictures of CM, Mao and !.tnin ... • In his message before the AFt, CIO Executive Council. President Nixon spoke of inflation. He said "ll is as immorctl to stop a man· from getting a job for which he is qualified as it \a to allow a worker to be robbed or his money by in· nation." . • Gov. Stan H•tft•w•Y of Wyom. ing bas announced that be will seek a second tenn of office. Ap. parently, he Is un~aunted by the fa ct that no Wyoming governor has won re-election .in 25 years. .. Renew Fight Ove~ Sites CGlllnl of 11111 junction would cut traf· nc between Vltntlw, 111 mUtt IOUth. anil Caaoi Prabaac, IO nllJes north. Nor1ll v~ .._ captured thil junctlal! tut -but • ourprile ;ovtrninent counteroffenaive dtove them oompietely from the Plain ol Jars for the lirll time in ""' ytars. WASHI!iGTON (UPI) -Pmldent Nlxoa'• -1 to tlllcftn and expand the Safepord antlboillltic mitllle l)'ltem faced rtoeWtd trouble In 'the Stnat.e to- c!Oy u opponenla began anotl!Or ~ aU.mpt to discord the coatroverilal ABM. Southern Solons Pushing Nixon's Y ote Measure WASHINGTON iAP) -Key SOutherit 1enlton appear mancuvertnt &o 1et the adni'liilifrlUori's l\at!Oiiwlde votb\c' rllh\I' b!U before the Senate rather than a pro- posed extensiori of aJNS act aimed solely at the South. nus strategy began emer&inc u the Senate Judiciary subcommittee on con- stitutional riahts continued hearin11 ·to- day .on \'.Otlna rlthta in \he fat* of a fut- aJ>Pn>Ocllln& Marcll.t.deadllni <•r...UOO. Southern oenatora lllOn(ly oppose ex- tension of the 1185 VG!lni RlibW Act IOCI, prefer the · admlni1lration meuure 1f eongreu Is going to p ... any 1egi1latlon at all in the field. LNt ' Deceml>er, after the House adopted ·the admlnillntlon '• bill by • five.vote margin, the Stnl\e tent Orie !egisl•tlon to Ila Judiciary Commlllee with .init:uctlOlll that H 1'por\ bock by Mardi·!. . Commiltee memben 111~ pl~. of civil rl&hls leaden lot i& musure U· · tending the 1965 llw for five J'llf'I hoped to subslltute,it fat'lhe'HOUll-(>Psed ad· min1stfalion bllLI \ ' • I But Sen. Salli J. Ervin Jr,~~.C.), chairman of the COllll!tutlonll,,.... 1111> commlttee, Mid there will t>O llO tlm< for committee ac:tion before the dpdllne. He 11id lllil i.W!.ct ~ the ad· minlstrlllon bill the pendin& bulinell in the Senate. School Funding Bill Approved ' W AS!!INGTON (AP) -lcnorinl ad- minl!lralion wamlngs of another vtto, a Senate subcommittee haa approved without change the $19.4 billion educaUon and health bW paued lut Wffk by the House. The measurt, carrying many of the same provllions to whi~ President Ntxon obJttced eulier, was sent Tutlday by the group to the appropriaUoni commlttet, which is expected to act on ~t today. The subcommittee chairman. Sen. W•r· ren G. M-, (J>.Wuh.), said his panel disllked the Idea, pn>poaed by the admlnlstraUon, of glvlfta Nixon authority to withhold spending of IOMe of the school lid lunds. Hooae-attached riders destcned to alow down desegregaUons erforts of the Department or Health, Education and Welfare were not touched so that the full commlllee might act on them, Mqnuson said, NllOlt'I plan to add a thinl lita to the syatem and •trenatba• two othan Ip. proved abt 7W' seemed ca1aln of av.,.. tual appnwal -Illa"'""' ta l!OlldlY in favor of U.. Allol. procnm. But • ...,.,.........,. propoaJ to bacln prellmloarJ wart u five addltloaal Safopard ati.1· --to be In hot watar. -coacm-cloot to the luue doubt .... Illa Sonata Armed l\erVlce• OOi!lmittee 'llOUjd -them. Salquord -" ~ a major floor fil!ll to ..-1 the eutlre -· Thia tJme Iba)' piaftl!Od to.....-on Iha e•·IM'inl cOlta of Iha ABM - -olfldall1 --a1 IU billl<lo lw • lull'lU!f'.,-.~ "What " are Wtb-.tnc:' Aki sen. Ph\!lp A. Harl (J).Mlch.). ."la a cluaic =~~~ .-pa ulde aD toclc and -toward l\ishe~ and blllllr npaodllunl." llatj and ilen. .,art 0. llatllald (R·. On.J, lllid fl>ey ~ not _. how a low 1be U.S. lntolvement In Laos became even mort obvioul 1'Je9day when American Embuly authoritlft took Into temporary cuatody three -sme• trying to micb 1 tecrtt U.S.·i.otfan hue at LOnC Tlane. Lona Tlane baa been offlimita 1loce it -the lonrord headquarters for tho .....ued "clandestine army" ol G<n. .vana: Pao, a Meo Hill tribesman aup- pon.d, acconlinl to Informed aoun:ea, by the U.S. Ceotral lnltili&eDC< Ai<llCY· Fecl,eral Judge Tells Ge(Jrgia Open Sc~'ls mlliloa dollan -· lw -and hospitaia woUid be Inflationary, wblle a Sy Uafted_....., l•-d-1 mUtUbllllon dollar wupcin ta not. · Ftder11 Dlltrlct Jud1e W. A. BoOtle Der-llercetary Melvin R. Laird, • ~ered a .Otorala IChooi dtalrlct. to r .. however, tertlfied Tueeday the ABM open today in deflance of a new it.ate 1119 wOuld «>1t the taxpaym only llGO mlllioa la lllll'U·IDOlllbl bq1nninC J111J L proi1ibtUll( ~lioa Jll'Oll'lllll bued Althoul(h ho uiied Coqria to •J> on racial beianc<. pn>prt.te $1.5 billioa f0< the system, he c-ata Gov. Lester Maddox had said said the bulk of that COJld not be spent any aChool boa.rd vlol.alln& the new stat· for another year, '?be reuon ii that ult would become "l1wbruken," but ~~ ,7t!! ~ 1;~~ '".;~;';; he indlcatect late Tuesday nl&bt be begun and bardlJ ~ of the initial ap-planntd no immediate action in the case. propriatton hu been lplnt. Schools in H-.0 County, Ga., had . But meantime, the COltl ol tbe l)llttm betn cloeed for 1 wttk .to-Implement a have conlinaed to 1Well -I>):, II.I billion lederal tntesraUon plan caWng !or the aa:ordill( to P~ llgurii. '111t IUD tranater of 1,500 studeois and JIO teachus JJ.tlle syafem WI 1UJ' WU lllimaled to -oaly •u bOJ1on -but that °""'· it to achfeve a racial bolance. Alter Maddox wu later dt.lcovered, did not InctUde . algned the new GtGrgia de1earegatlon ffiated .._ aach u the iaatllll <t act Mondas'. the """''"' llChool boord nudut warbeadl lcr the ABM:. lnllOUDCed achoola would be cloaed Jn. definitely. Court Supports Voting Decision WASHINGTON (UPI) -Tht Supreme Court midi elear todly that its "one man one vote" doctrine applies to nery government unit of any me which eled.s officials by popular ballot &o perform aovemmem luncti- Tht 5-3 rullng came on an appeal from a lfOUP of ~ City, Mo., nlidenla who lnvoted the principle in connecUon wlht-a junior ccliel' district electloa of trult.a. The JUl!lce Deparlmall, which came into the ""' .. behalf " the Kanas d· tilllli, loj!I tile court that about It stai.s provide lor community colleae or junior college dllt!lct olectlonl. 11it majority, in .an oplnlcm by Juatlce . Huao I. J!laclt, noted that the court lw conllllently held in a Joni wi.. ol ·-that the states ·mUll _,., 10 far u pradlcible,' Ullt Md!: penon's vote counts u much u any other person's. 'nils principle JIU bten applied in coo· gresaional tledlom, stat. k&f1l1tive olectloos and -attdlons. ~. Bootle, wl-relorrill( to Ille -1t1te statute, ordered HOUiton clnses re- opened today. Maddox, in W•shill(ton !or the NatlonaJ Govrrnora' Conference, said Bootle's order IUl'pl"illd him. And he ac. culed the federal juqe of "laklnf It on hlmself to declare the Georgia law un- constltutlonaL" Maddox II.id, however, he i& WKlecided •bout Jlla next move aDd hun't "thought much about" any active involvement in the Houlton cue. Bootl<, in another mlddlt Geor&I• d .. H~Uon cut, ordered white parenta: in Bibb (Micon) County not to interfere with Iha -ailon of tni.gratad clLuu under penalty of $1,000 fine or a year Jn prllOD. MllCOll Mayor Ronnje Thornpoon had been among tho parenla relualng to tranafer their CblJ\lrtn to other achools, but he nkl Taadlr, "I ban no choice but to •bide by tbk court older ... Israel ] et Sale Reported Near WASHINGTON (UPI) -Rep. llornan C. Pudnald (J>.lll.), predicted today that France would toon ship 50 fl1hter plant• to lsr1el and that Prelidenl Nixon also would ap-ee to aell another is &o the Jiraelis. Mild Spell Comes to an En~, Pucinald tald lie had learned this from .. authorltaUvt IOUr'Ctl" which he: relused to kl<llWr. -·the Wlite H,... pid that the Pr11ldeM hu not )"tt made a dtciaMn on aellin( DIOR U.S. jals to Israel Thil was in -to • teievtolon report <fBSl that the admlnlltratlon would announce Mass of Arctic Air· Mdves Over Midwest St.ate1 r ... ,... .... ,., .............. ,. " .. ,, .. Iba sale in • ltw - . .. . _, v .... . . U,1 T...,,.... FRll!NDLY DINN&R FOR NIXONS, POMPIDOUS Prt'.aldent Owtt Into F•ahion Talk; Liket Cl1ude's Split " Friendsh.ip~ Style Nixons, Pompidou~ <;et Togetlter WASHING TON (AP) -Exchanges of expressions oC friend.ship and talk about fa.Wons were a bigh!Jlht ol tbe While House state dinner President and Mrs. Nixon gave_ Tu.es;d~y njght for visiting French President Georges Pompidou and his tall. bk>nde style-conscious wile. In champagne toasts Ni¥ori declared that France, which came to the aid of America 200 years ago, "will .always be our friend." He said the United States is proud and thankful .. that 11;e shall be working with our oldest friend and ally" in building a new world where everyone will have the opportunity to live in independence and freedom that we have had." Pompldou mponded, speaking in J'renah,i with 1· declaration that "the United' States and Fr'1'tice cannot live in separation or lsolaUon from each other ." He said they had deep and common in- terests and ''we must live to work together and must not have ever any op- position." The 110 guests at the while·tie dinner included diplomaLs or· the United· Sia.t~s and France, senitCrs; tOp businessmen, newspapu e1ecutives and President Ni~· on's daugJJ.ter, Tricia, J.4,. making her first ptibtic appearance !ince a five.week illness with"the measles and flll. · The after-dinner cont/ersition turne.1 to fashion tmder the inspiration df Frariee's first lady, Claude· Pompidou, who turned out in four creatons by top Paris deslgnei-1 in apqearancts on her first'day in Washington: ~ · • · Mrs. PortlpidOtl introduced the lol\g hemlines ...... from just below the knee, the Jonguette took, to the tnaxi coal.· · · Even President NiXon got into the fashion discussion : · ·' "l 1ike color and high stf!e,'1 he com· mented. Asked if he liked the new ldng look, the American. President said, "Yes." ' And. Nixon added, •·1 Jikt the split," referring to a spilt in the front of Mrs. Pompidou's ·evening gown, ·designed by Pierre Cardin. lsrnel, Egyp_t Send Jets A.cross Suez in Attacks " By Unl~d Prtsl lntemalio~I A1r action fiared Up ·along the Suei Canal today and, ~ I.vttll apd' E~ Uan warplanes struck targets along the bank!. An Israeli spokesman said Egyptian planes struck tWG Israeli positions in the northern sectc>r of the canal arvund • p'.m. and that "there ware no cuuallies Guerrillas Get Arab Pressure BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) -Arab governments. alanned · at t h e in· temaUonal uproar over the suspected · sabotage of a Swiss airliner, were reported. toda y putting pressure on PalasUne guerrillas lo confine operations to Israel. Palestine sources said the pressure on the guerrillas was being 1pplied through · Al Fatah -the biggest and ·most ill", fluenlial group -which has always op- posed operations outside Israel's borders. Al Falah in recent .days appears lo have achieved an ascend11ncy over smaller groups In the new "unified com· mand" of 10 guerrilla organizaUon.s esllbtlshed in JordM. Pale.Unlan sources said several Arab g9vemments, who support guerrilla ac-- tlvtty against Israel wllh arms and money, were opposed to attacks on ctvtllan airllnen. The siources said these governments Were lupporUng Al Fatah ln Its attempts to pet'IUlde the sma11er organlzallons to stop the;tt-a~cks on civilian planes. .>l . • ..,.. ' among Israeli torces.,·~ • , ~ • . · 1 Israeli jets sW~pJ actoss tha~nal ;,o hours eatlier and hit Egyptian' mUitar, installations ln the central se,Ctor .fOr , 15 minutes. The raid followed fi erce artillery and mortar duels Tuesday which killed an Israeli arm officer and wounded th ree other Jsratlis. [ In other Mideast actions: -Baghdad radio sald Iraq pas refused a request from u.r+. Secretiry Ge.neral Thant to withdraw 'its troo~s' frotn ·the eastern rront in south Jordan and said 1he United ·Nations tiouJd qtmand again that Israel withdraW' from occupied Arab lands. Iraq is reporte d to haye 12!000 troops in Jordan, most of th eQl artillerymen. · -An Egyptian goVf:mmerlt 9pokeSnnm in Cairo said today Egypt dOes ftol lnteri<t to take action against Ametican oil a>m- panies operiting ·there even if the UntteQ States continues its' pro-Israeli pOflcieS. The spokesman, Dr. Es1na t Atklel f\.1eguid. said "this is purely cGmniercial busines.s." ,. · ' Chicago 7 Bail Backed CHICAGO ( UPL) -Congrc&Smen, lawyers, law professors ·.and I h e American Civil Llberties Onion ar.e: urg· ing bail for the "Chicago Seven'' and their lawyers during appeal OJ their con· tempt and riot con*tinns .. William· K\ffi51.ler, chie( ,defense a1- tomey for \he~ ~ven, announ~ '{uesda~ that seven Democra tic conger,smec afl circul1ting peUUo~ in the House which .say it is "oppressive and inequitabl~.': for lhe de.fendants to )'emafn in jail durlni; their appeal. ·~ · , ' . THE N-E -W '. ·,. .. 6 ' at Your Service for . 11 • , .. " ... " .. .... .. .. JI "' •A ... WE'RE HAVING A DISPLAY WIG NEW ·you! .. IN LESS THAN 30 MINUTES! • • SI 11 'Al SI M' .ti .... ..... ft JI "' 0 " .... ., ,, 1.0 .. -. " ~ ,. OI T .... .... :: = ~ .. " SJ 1.\1 .. ~ : ;: ( .... : :: n,. " .. st :W .N . " . " .... .. .. .. .. "a ,, .. ... " -1:-t . . .. CLEARANCE! SAVE 20% to 50%!' ' Mallie.'• MIRACLE WIGS! • , , for '"l11it•nl.h4 irdo" con,.111i1nc• - I 00 '.Co l<o111k~I•.~ ~b.r ""i ,9 r; .,... ''!' w•1h '11 "'•••. itylo vo11r1oli for •nv oc· t•d 111. p,,., •-=.•v 111•tly kor ,,,,.,1 •1111;1 It•. 34.tS • 2295 ·:. u•. at.ts; .. ~ Q " ' ' Wfdotrdq, f tbrillJfY 25, 1970 DAIL y I'll.OT I I . !SiUpect Nulled ; Hu mph re.y , Ho oted. QU~ .... Phll .........,,, •• ' ~iHnapOO Sisters ~ • ' Hecklers Halt University Talk ' ' , Found Unharmed Alt.fHE~, Mps. "(_UPI) -delivering hia pn:pared test my oplalon that thJs conviction Hubert H. Humphrey tritd to -c•!Uni foillQ "open .window" will ultllh&t<ly be taken on to talk about foreign affairs. policy in fottlgn affairs. appeals to higher courts and UBE:ltrY, Mo. (UPI)' - Tn ·!lido alat<n kidnlped ~·II!!* Butler, Ala.,~ weretfoimd aafe in a ur park· ed oulllde a residence 1n this ~· CllY 111burb early to-lay. • Tina Caln, 3, a.qct Tiffany Cain; t, appemcl "Well cmd· for. apd happy," an oft'kiefi l&id.,.: ' "n>e driYtr of the car. John Char* Mell:lck, 21, ~. Aril.,·was arrested .inside tbt home. II&· had 1e11 · • .357 inapnun revolnr, a . J I caJibar (llalot ud a'.D caliber rille ., hla cor with the ehlldnm when ha -lnaldO. He olfered no NIWIMP, . A leudl ,,m Gil ... a leC:- Dnd man idenlllled -llould Bradlonf l,ee JOoif, :D, Of Jacksboro, Ta:, tbl FBI said. ' A bottion • Bhn ·R~peal HONOLULU (AP) -The Hawali legillaturo has paasecl a bill virtually eliminating aifbs on abortion. The bill in effect repeals a 191:year-ol'd present Jaw wbldi' pennits abortion cnly to save the life of the mother. Fina] ~ve action came. with a ~-J~ in \be stat< .... i. '""""~ 'Thlt. &e'lf measure would permit abortion by licensed phy1~ans in licensed holptta11 if the· Womllfl bu been a Hawaii resident for at leut IO day1 and the fetus is not ""viable." 'biplative I aw ye· rs in- U!rpttl "viable" to mean fduoes far e"'"'h developed toi ll~e outside the womb aod say tt·would cover pregnancies 119,to.four or five montlis. ¥edlcally untie en1ed persons perfonnlng abortions would be aubject to a mu- imWn penalty ol. a $1,000 fine or five-year prison term. · Gov, JohR A. Burns, a -Roman Catholic who pitaOnally OJ>P09tS abortion., said earlier be would not \leto an abortion refonn measure but woWd let it beccme Jaw without bis signature. Robert Peanon, a Maui Island contractor who led the ~ forces said he woul4 tab the new law to the u:S. SOprem• Court t f _..y. Man Jailed • In Beating Death of Tot ASHLAND, Pa. (UPI) - State Poiice ·said today they have arTelted on charges of murder a man they said beat hia tfrl friend's young aon to ·death ml lid the body fOllr months ·aao in an abandoned coal mine. fRuaell Snyder. 28, of Ashland was arrtSted late Tuesday night while he hid In a 1 cloHt of his home. Police said the body of Ronakl McCorkle,' :. ol Phoenlxvlite bad been recovered a short time earlier from the mine of Merriam Mountain, two mJles W.stol~. The chlld'r mother, Mrs . GIOria McCorkle, 20, who rt)OVed here rect'ntly from P.hoenlxville f o 11 o 1' I n I a c!iVorce, "" held aa a material witness. State Police De tfi ct Ive Geora• Duritla said Mrs. McCorbl and tier father, Fred Wallace of Phoenixville, riPorted the death to Phoenlt:· ville polli:e Sunday. '111-Y to)d the police the cblld ""' beaten to dtalb. In October j . Alhland, Durllla said .. Stat< police and Inspectors · lrom the State Depo..U-t.<11 '!fines and Minerals lod~s 1~ a 1earch of atwmdoned atrlp mines west of he.re Mon- day and -y. Tiiey !lilnd the body wrap- ved In I ·blanlDll ond a lleeper bag. Governors Meet WASHINGTON (AP) -The ~· t l.o n a I Governors' Con- hireoct amual wlnttr meetlng ojleood today .-Uh educallon, cttme the environment and fe.le~·lllAI< ttlallonlhlps the kiy·ilaUeJ ol dllC\lllion. Yorty-five of the $l state . ' J-la.. ~ ol.lln. Debbie ~. 11, ol -· Ml., ""' • -ol 1be cblldno: -doclin<d In~ llf1 the -II ol Iha -,,.,_ -k wu J*llld·,. but ,,,_ -with. -llaaoljha ..... UltlT~ AC'TllR SUCCUMBS CO.rod tMpl, 72 . ' ' ._ 1be wouldn't let him. 1'The cont..icuon of the overturned." Y . , Chicago Seven is. highly quu-"J can't continue !his way," He tried to t:allr: about lhe t Ion a b 1 e con!UtuUonally,"'"" l1'! told the audience. "I would Chicago Seven cospiraey trial. llumphrty said. ..It violates · aak 'tou all to go home at this They threw popcorn and blew tvtry standard ol justlce. It it point. I'm leaving." whistles. A small group of dissidenb at the University 0( Ma65a-- chusetts preYented Humptny for very Jong. Alps Avalanche Threat Said Worst in 30 Years GENf;:YA (UPI) -Swiss ' Tyrol 1truci the Piz Buln authorlUes. warned today that! Hotel lil the winter resort of .: •• "We 1Gt a call -10:311 last nJ&ht-tr.m lbeM people, who aald Ibey had been notllled the Utile gjrla wm ..... tWougbt .. ll)em,. the altlcer aald today. FBI ....... --~admeolrom 1be Clay County _., Of- fice Uloe<( oal tfie -and wete 'WaltinC when Mesakk drove up about. J a.m. in a • piilk cv with Arb:olla license platu. Actor Nagel Dies at 72 A group of JOO militant students completely overshadowed a crowd of .t,000 persons who jammed an auditoridfil Tuesday .Ught to listen Lo the former vice presi- dent. With occasional profanity, the danger of avalanches inl Zuers, 40 miles west of !~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;~ the Alps was greater than at., lnns~ruck, and buried an ..,.. ·c a..r-.,.._ .... '"" * t any time over the past 30. AraenUne .couple. Mr: and . ....., ..., _,,,,._ •4. '1. NEW YORK (AP) -Conrad the protesters jeered and Nagelt the,actor who .made the booed every time Humphrey ·v1nsiUoo {~.silent pictures tried to speak. There were to talkies and who was• a>-shouts of "Let hi,m speak," founder of lhe• Academy of -and "Sit ~wn· and be_ quiet," years. A general avalanche Mrs. Jwm Szuzak. Mrs. 41'.t'a a aioe job, but I don't qult.e Mii 119to'7'11'111: '\ alarm went out through the S.U,,:r.ak, 24, was In criUcal a man I have to lhare an ott1ce-trltb. ':· 'They waited until he 'bad IOl1t inoide Ud was oeponted from the chlldren before mov· in& In. He WU taken to the JOcbon County Jail In Kan ... City. Swiss, Auslrian, Italian and condition but her Hungarian ----------------- French alps. bom husband wu unhurt . U S Emb P"ck ted ·· . . but the milltant.s kept up a Two avalanches Tuesday at Police In . lnnsb<uck said • .. assy, I e Reckingen, Switzerland, and 14,000 towisb were stranded MAN 1 LA (UP I ) -The demonalrltors c:arn,cf An olllcer aald the houae Where Memick WU arrested WU the )IOlliil ol "clooe friend! or distant rellUVea, I'm not IW'I! whkh." Motion Pi~ture Arts and nmning barrage or ipsults. as Sciences, 0ched Tuesdliy of ~ Humphrey tried to deliver hfs heart attack ,and emphysema. addttss from a makeshift He was 72. stage. . Born In Keotuk. Iowa, Nagel Humphrty first agreed to began his stage career in 1911 student requests to discuss the In "Forever Alter." Chicago Trial iruitead o f Lanslevillard, France, tilled Jn the area by avalanches that antigovernment demonstrators signs depouncing "U.S. bn· at least 21 persons aod left 19 blocked roads and railways. picketed the U.S. Em.fumy to-periall&m" and demand 1 d ml3&1ng. Four persons wtre · He11copters suppled some rtmoval of U.S. buu ta tM rescued alive today 24 hours areas but bad w e a t h e r day and smashed the auto-Philippines. They tbrt1tenld a after the Larulevlllard ava-hampered flying and remote mobile windshield of an em-rally Thursday Jll&:bl ·in:· 4e- lanche struck. vtUates were without bread to-bassy staff member they ac· flance of a ban qalntt mpt.. An avalanche today in the day. cused of nmnlng into a child. time demomtraUom. •• we've neier announced a carat t;bls time befol .. aut·a1.en nobodn everannouncecla"car 111<e t111s befol-. ,. ............ If it were just an·ordinary·sportster, we mi~ht have introduced it at.the.ordi· nar]' time. .But we didn't. And;as.y ou,canTsee,,time:was•on•our side. Becauselwe•didn't'botherJwith; th~ simulated air scoops. Or. any.other put: ons that might put you off. lnstead,we took the time·to•build ·a whole-new car.from the ground up. In four distinctive versions: Standard, Rally Sport, Super Sport and Z28 . We started with a sleek new shape and a low road-hugging stance. So it hovers a few short inches from the pavement. Right down there with Corvette. To that we added mare hood. A faster fastback. More window.area..And ,wider doors for easier entry. On RS models, there's:even•a•resilient bumper that surrounds the grille ... To protect against nicks and .knocks. • -·- Compare the new Camaro·with any competitive car in its field. If you can find one. TWoaba llucleots. tloe4•11ucks. ... Most'.sportsters·give·you two· buckets in front. ~nd a sofa in back.,We'.ve qone them· two better..'.," ; · .. · 1 The l:iack seat:so{a is· out.'.ln'are· two rear .bucket-styled ·cushions .• Up front the buckets are deeply.·con- toured to put you firmly in place .. And keep you there. Even in tight turns. · The instrument panel is just as functional. It's flat black and wraps around. With enough dials and in- strumentation to make you . think yo u're piloting a 747. Only with this .one;you~don't need a flight crew. The spe c:l1l lmdlnl Is bulltrtgllt In. Camaro always had a tough reputa- tion when it came to taking on tight turns. Now we made it tougher. • With a forward-mounted'~· ing linkage ~nd an improved front. and1 rear suspension that give the new Camara a leech-like grip on the road. It's something other cars·wiU ba!e~a.. tough. ~ime coming to grips with. What motivates all this? Six power plants up to the 350..bp Turbo-Jet 396 y ou:can.order .• And.:.four transmissions. · :,.. Pick the combination thafbest-·suit.S your driving. · · - Then go pick on an open road. SDMOI d clllc br1191111,lbll .. Uwell UJ'OU 10o It's onlr natural With all that go, you want an equal amount of sto~. You've got it. Front disc brakes are standard. For less heat buildup. And more resistance to fade. • New Camara. The Super Hu~er) ~ Other cars always feared 1t mig}I£ come to this. And they were right.. Only their timii;ig, was wrong. · Putting you firSt, keeps us:first;., ~ S.l&.MJllUF0-1111 .. 1 •lllf&l . . • .. ·' -. ,, ' ·. •' .. • •• '!'; .;t! ... p .:-!) ' q _, ;_ • ~ ~ .. , a , ... I, • ~ !: .o::;> . '" . ~!I\ :.· J] . . 'P . . ,, . .. ,j :: ' ,~ . '· ·~ ·~.,11 ... ;-"t1 •· 1· . Ji .. . . ... ' ,. ' . .~.' .. .... , • '" aitd terrttotia1 10Yernor1 are OI hand for the three day 11\""Un& which begins with a IOriel ol ck>led commlttto ..... ~-:-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--·--~~~~ ................................................ ~~~--~----;.!;: r, ---· ! J • ' • I.. .. ~ •DLY PILOT EDITORIAL P.\GE t 1 All Is Not Yet Lost POR SALE: 12S ml!Uoo ~11ur- 1t. a nice ntlfhborhood, near a lake. brand new roads hardly wed, good view of a valley and surround.in& hills from seventh noor, county flood control facll· ltlt1 lnsLa.lled, del.lgned by a prominent architect for the cream ol lht space aae but nevtr occupied ; make an offtr. '111e "For Sale" &ign placed on the parUally com- pleted Autonetic• plant by North American Rockwell Corp. last week is bound to have some economic side effects on southern Orange County. The plant was viewed as tomething of a godsend to the acceleratlng growth from Laguna Beach to Sad Clemente and from Laguna Niguel to Mtsslon Viejo. It represented both ta• base and potentill payroll for 7,500 persons. Jt pushed real estate ·prices up in surrounding areas and spurred developers. Now the plant with a million feet of noor Jpace ts a question mark. The county has invested a good deal in accelerated development of roads and llood control bt!l Qf cour,ae the corporation put out a areal deal also. The brighter tide of the picture is that the very existence of the fa· cUity sWl should stimulate more rapid econorriic devtl· opment of the area, despite the momentary .setback. And It could bring entirely new employers into Orang~ County. 11 Year-round Observation The Laguna Beach Chamber of Commerce made a belated but honest effort to examine and provide a ncomm1ndation on the school tax override and bond election. But the board was unable to reach a consen- 1us. This is hardly surprising. Schoof financing in an area that lends itself to confusion. misunderstanding and misinterpretation. There is no intent to confuse, but it Is difficult, for example, to produce meaningful com· parative figurea: on !Ufh · items aa: cost.per-studeht when one district is operating with 36 studenta:· to a teacher and another with only 26. Or when a di strict Is running a heavy ni1ht school program, or offering a great deal of special counseling, as in the area of narcotics .. .State and Jederal funds allocated for special proj- ects, and when included in overall cost averages. make il appear that the taxl>ayer Is carrying a heavier burd- en than, In fact, be may be. Apart from financing,.there has been much discus· slon about teaching metbQds. curriculum and the like. all of great interest aild concern. to the community - as well it! to persons considering movi ng to this area. The chamber could perform a valuable senrice by maintaining a year.round committee to keep abreast of· school matters and to sUpply accurate and objective infonnation when the need arises. Such an informed body could respond to unwarrant- ed attacks on the schools and, at the same time. keep an eagle eye on operations "'ith a view to making sure money is being spent wisely. Drugs at Mission Viejo . . Drug abuse problems on the 1'1isslon Viejo Hi~h School campus are on the decline, parents were told last 'veek. . School administrators and teachers indicated the drug problem in the entire community Is not as alarm- inc as had been feared in some quarters. This could be the nature of the community. for the school people reported no drug incidents at either ~he elementary or intermediate school level -where other communities have had. and continue to have some seMous problems. This is good ne,vs. bu t it should not encourage com- placency. A vigilant a'vareness of the na rcotics threat to youth, and sound counseling programs will continue to be needed in all school d istricts. ... . ' .. . -• ·\' ' . ~-· s Manson's ear Gloomy Gus: Stip,.eme Court Veteran Dt1e for Deeper Tt•ouble ls Not a Hippie Band Although I num~r no hipplt! among my relatives, friends, or even ac· quaintances, I find it deplorable that the band of v1gabonda charted with the kill· h\a: of the Sharon Tale menage will 10 down in the recordJ u • "hippie" croup. From what t ce gather, MIMOft and his weird cm cl. culU.U ruemble bJp- piea only in the way that a.nt1·matter resembles matter -as a perfect min'or- tmage. And this is what confuses people, for we tend to judge only a superlicial 1ppearanct, and ,not by subsW>ce. MANSON'S LrM'LE band wore long hlir, dre&&ed unconventioQally, and lived in an ilolat.tf cammune -and these few surface charact.erisUcs are enough to brand them, in tht publlc eye, aa "hip.. pies." Nothin1 could be rurlher from tbe truth, or more of a libel on the hlpPles. I read whert the Public UUllUts Commisaion said it will be only two more years before t can call toll free .Jp ndghbor!ng Laguna Beach . ~ks fellows. -T. F. J. Laruna Nipel ,...,. ...... ...,...,. ........... ¥1Nt, "" , _.._,.., fteM 9' fllt MWIHHf'. S1M ,_ Mt -.... • •'-v e-. Defir f'lltit They adopted the hippie life-style u an effecUve "cover" fir their nefarious ac- tivities, just as villains and swindlers in the straight world adopt the cover of respectability aDd conventionality. But to the frightened and out·r11ed ordinary citiun, the Manson case only goes to show what the "hippies'' are really capable of. -Douglas' Little Black Book WASHINGTON -A lfltle black book which is bound to get JU5tice William O. Douglas in deeper trouble circulated in Congress In advance of its February 11 puhlic allon date. Random House is publi shing th is 97. page time bomb under the title of "Points of Rtbelllon". It is an astringently·~'ord· cd tirade against the A mer i c a n "establishment ,'' the Pent.agon, the F'Bl and CIA, police. employers and educators. and concludes that "violence may be the only effective response" <lf outraged youth. "George III was the symbol against -.. which oor founders made a revohllion now considered bright and glorious." Douglas vnote. George Ill had nol crou- ed the seas lo faslen a foreign yoke on us. George Ill and his dyna.!ly had e1tabllshed and nurtured us and all that he did was by no means oppressive. But a vast restrucluring of laws and in- sUtutions was necessary if the people wert to be content. That restructuring was not forthcoming and there was revoluti<lO. "Wt ~1UST REALIZE that today's eslabllahment is the new George lit. ' WitsJiL \Vhether it will continue to adhere to his tactics. ~·e do not know. lf it does, the redress. honored in lradition. is al50 revolutio n." Throughout his treatise Justice Douglas offers a justification for violence. He acknowledge• violence has oo con· stitut1ona l sanction but says injustices may pile so high·thal violence is lhe only answer. ' In olher passages the Supreme Court jw:tice advises American protesters to risk arrest because the police have no righ't to interlere with their freedom, Douglas' book is a catalogue of lhc New Lefl's c<lmplaint3 against the FBl and CIA -and the vast bureaucra· cy of the American system. He reveals some information which sounds more lfke Georgetown dinner !able talk than judicially established fact. In inveighing against the FBI and ClA, Douglas as- serts that "certain hotel! in Wa shington have allotments of rooms that are wired for sound and even contain two-way mir· rors .so. that the occupants can be !aped or filmed." E\'ERY GOVERNritENT <.:onlerencr room is assumed to be bugged. he 8.!3e11.s, and every embassy phone is an open transmitter, Justice Douglas does not revea l the source of this astonishing information, but it is recogniiable a& or· dained fact in the circles in which the Supreme Court justice moves. Few would be \\'illing to quarrel with the right of a Supreme Court justice in his old age express:lng his pet peeves about Washington even if they do fit the conventional sterootype of what Spiro Agnew calls the "limousine liberals." If Douglas wishes to excoriate lhe Pen· lagon, the military-induslrlal comp le:t", FBI snooping. the Vielnam War, in· dustrial personnel personflity tests, and the affluent society he is oot without company. The problem arises on the justification of violence and revolution by an associate justice ol the United States Supreme Court. not merely campus sit-Ins or wrestling with the police In Grant Park in Chicago, but violence intended to overthrow the go..:ernment of the Uniled State:c1. Or, i~ tha t what Justice Douglas justifies? ls the ''system", l he a Bomb ••esta blishmtnt'' somethin&: difftr1ftt t2sn the established order under 11•? JUSTICE DOUGLAS coocludts au by piously hoping that the revohrtlon hi iJ talking about will not be a repetitien tl 1776. The revolution that is comiq, ht says, ·will arise from "the search ot youth for ways and means of maklnc the cor- poration state and <lf _government th1t runs the m11chlne-lhe servant of mu." Thus \\"hen Jtmice Dou1!1s concludes his !realise he is not so high on the ram• parts as in the middle passa1es when hiJ high dudgeon eggs on .Youth to vtolenct. Then, having calmed dOwn 1 bit. what bothers him is w hether tM "establishment"-whatever that l,_"111 be wise enough not to use Its "sloiC'kpU1 o! arms" to suppress the: disaenl.t!'I, for he 1hi nks that v.·oold brine on 111 awful ordeal. ~IUCH OF WHAT Douglas hi! Wrlttlll is a summation of convailional Ublrll poppycock. It renects the youth' cult~ tality \\'hich entrances the 11·ye1r-o)d justice. This llttle black book may tven-- tua\ly take its place with the Uttle red book. "Thoughts of Chairman lilao" in lhe sacred sllrint.! of the youna. Whatever their faults or excesses, true hippies are not hurlful people. They try \o Uve by love, not hate, and eschew ''ioience u the most important element in their creed. True, there are many thws.ands of synthetic hippies running voond, who do not pracUce these \"irtues, but there is just as much hypocrisy and deception among members of the "straia:ht" socicly. 'UFE IN AMERICA ts tough enough for these social drop-OUts without addin g the onus of ritual murder a n d psychopathic s.adlsm. They are already unwelcome In most communities, beate11 up by hoodlums (who commit far more depredations than the hippie• do), pushed around by cops, and ea!y prey for bigots, blackmaile rs, and punitive prigs. I happen to think that the hippie life- style Is self-defeating. unless it is In· wardly illuminated by a high religious sense (as it is in too few cases): but they have a right to llve as they wish and to look as they wish, so long as they hann nobody but themselves. And, so far , the scoreboard shows, they have the lowest criminal rettlfd for ·1lolence of any identifiable group or dissiden!.$ in the country. Moral Behavior Laws Have Failed J\IANSON·s GROUP seems to have been precisely a diabolic inversion of the hippie ideal. If reports are aeturate, they lived on hate and violence, tried lo pro- mOl.e racial .strife. and engaged In dark practiw th~t sc1rctly fall on this side of ahetr lunacy. To the Editor : Bus School to the [(ids \\'hen the movie "I Am Curious (Yello\v)" is measured by the. deflnilion for pornography in the diclionary lhrre is no doubt that the movie is pornographic. Nor is there any doubt lhat a seminude or nude entertainer is guilty of indecent exposure and most likely lewd conduct. These kinds of human behavior have been around for a very long Umt and all previou1 measures that have been used to eliminate such behavior ha ve failed. A century afler the Civil War. the Not'lh and South are 1t Iona: last reunited. A majority in both sections ls voclferous- ly qi.inst busing puplbs to intecrated -~-Unfortunately, lhe cou rts are for it. The resultant crisis once 11ain threat.ens to 1plil our nation asunder -with the an. tl-buslnc faction s e c e d i n g from the American Judicial system. tnto the brtach, as 1ood fortune v.·ould have it. ha1 le1pt the noted sociologist , R. Ow<nBalllu. Al Mr. Bl!lian so accurately points out, hardly anyone is against inlegratlon -11 Ieart publicly. What everyone is publicly and piously aga inst is the con· cept of'bwlln1 tht poor little childrtn all the way 1crou town to some dlslanL ochool. The &MWtr to the school busir\I crisis, tbtn, 11 IChool buslng. Or, as ~1r. 'Ba1tlan puta it: .. ,.,,..d or busing Ole kids to Ole tcbool, we simply bua lhe school to tbe tfdl." Ma. IA.S11AN'S lngenious solulion en· vilka a one-room 1ehoolhouse on the beet Of i flatbed truck. 'l1te dtalcn aloi'le hlit lmmenae appeal to aP CQDRrV1Uve1, who believe that the ClftHOllD IChoolhoUJe, aulta.bly euipped wttb McGuUey'a Rtadera, was the high .,,_. mart In American educaUon. 1111 uvtnp wouJd be trtmendous. When yw ttcp to think that there are ap- ~ly 1,000 times 11 many childrtn aa IChooll, it'• obvlooJly far more « 1 •"ical lo bus lhe IChool than the dlilm•o. -Of •II, the buM<I 1ehool woold eddi1'e fDteCraUoo, which eve:ryont 11y1 thlJ'~ for, while m1lnlalnln1t •SWtartlood ICbooll, whJcb tvtr)'one " ' '7 Art Hoppe PORNOGRAPHY, lnde«nl ex~ure and Jewd conduct should be ronsidered from 1 reUslous and a civil point of vie"''· l 1 A rella:ious point of view should consider c,1--the relation between man and his god while the civil point of view should look into the rtl1tlons between men. Since also favors. For the bused .school wou\d serve several nc.ighborhoods each day. IT ~tlGHT START <lne morning in the ghetto, picking up black moppell al their doors,· then proceed gaily, school bell clanging, lo a WASP nelabborhood for a load of small whlte fry. The next du-, it could nvttlt its route. This would give black children a ch1nce to see white enclaves without geWng busted and whJte children 1 look at the ghettoes without eettlng mUJ11td. This is equal opportunity al Its finest. Every f1mJly would live jusl 1cross the sidewalk from an lnltgrated IChool. Car pools would become a thin& of lhe put. And Wtead of partntl hiving lo trudp off to school for PJ'A metUnp, the achool would come to them -thus pro. vidlng time ror lonier PTA meetlnp. But every pl1n ~ lta lUtle drawbacks. TlllS. Of COUME, Isn't the only eolu- tion to the. crll.ls. The uthtr wu tdvl(ICed at an 1ntl·b!Wn& nlly'in Nuhvlllt, Jowa. by the lamed lo1ktan, Or. Scr1nton Scrimshaw. He noted th.It evuy white In the au• dienct was publicly dedicated to ln- ttgraUon, neighborhood tchools and preventing busin11. He lh erefort IUC· gested that each of them mo\'e Into a black neighborhood -thereby achieving .all thm goals In one reft Fwoop. Or. Scrimshaw was tarred, rcattK!rtd end bused to Decatur, Goorgla, t'.O.D. coUeCI. ' there are many different religious groups and each one m1y have a dlfferenl \'iew on this subject, nolhinc could be gained by trying lo e11borate on the rtllaiou• point of view. OUR MODERN society has many ways of d1tmninln1 experimentllly what ef· feet pomoaraphy, Indecent expo.sure and lewd conduct hi,! had on the fbnori\al sexual behavior of Ill cllltens. Then tllere are lhose European nations that. have stopped enforcing laws pertaining to the moral behavior or Its citizens. 'Ille sum tot.al of these 50W"CCS of lnformallon has indicated that very llttle change In the violent sex crime• will usult tr go\'ern-· iftenl 1tep1 oul of trying to enlOrce moral laws that should be lefl up to the rtllg\ou1 community. IN CONCLUSION, when to c I el y ·---811 G"""9e ---. Otar Ctor1e: Al an advice colwnnlat, do you have much trouble with quUUona )'1)U honestly can1t 1niwer? TED Oe11r Ted : Not really. Admittedly, J get. a lot of queatlons I honestly c11.n'l ans"'er. However, 1 1nswer them anyway ..• ' l · Leeters from r eaders are welco1ne. Normally writers ~ld cotivty tllei1' messages in SOO WOrds or le&s. The right to condense letters to fit space. or eliminate libel is restrvcd. All let· ters mutt include .!ignat11re ll'n.d 1naiL· ing address, but 11ames ma11 be with· held on request if tufficient reason ft apparent. Poetru wtU not be pub· li&hed. Uberallie1 Ill laws on the moral behavior <lf its cllliens, much unnecessary friction will be eliminated betwetn the enforcers ol the moral laws, police and II.I cllizens. HARRY B. McDONALD, JR. Luten to Students To the Editor: Your ·lukewarm editorial today on "Campus Disrupter•'' left me turning al your ability to straddle the fence. You could have interviewed \'lrious UCI students and tried presenting their opin· ions. Flnt, my husband and I ha ve h\'O sons Jn college, one a senior and the olher a freshman. Setond, I ag:rtt that the UCI students who demonstratl'tl ·111alnst the GE recrulten showed 1 lack of maturity and respect for other's right, but I also feel that Ch1nctllor Aldrich's decision lo ha ve lhem 11ppear before a sludrnt court should mett with commun.ltY and campus approv1I. ' oa _PITE THE dlfficullles I n d prt.Uurts of hit poslUon. Chancellor Aldrich 1tttmpls to be f1lr and far· 1lghted and deserves commend•tion. My only criticism Of him ls his retlttnce to menUon the many earnest and s!nctre students. "'ho also have a JOcial eor>o aclence. 'rodoy's colleite frcshmtn begins bis studies equipped ~·Ith m o r r un· derst:andtna: than prrvlous 11cneralions or economic, polilit·al, s ocial and goverrunenta.l ideas and ideals. JN HIGH SCHOOL he dlSC<1vers causes and effects at an adull level and thus enlers college with intellectual maturity. Often his emotional maturity Is In· co,mpl\!le, al this age, even if his parents have trie'a to Instill qualities of hanesly, respor}&Jbllity, tolerance, respect for others' opinions, etc.. and it always amazes ·me to Si!e ho\v many youths do apply restraint and reason to the emo- tional events around them. I \YONDER HOW many paren ts show the ir sons or daughters the respect they preach, by actively liste ning to their ideas and opinion5 and discussing moral. polilica t and socta1 issues "'ith Ulem ? tr \\'e are dislurbed about recent and varied sad events occurring at schools and col- Quotes !'11aly An.a Gayaldo. Hey·ward -·"\\'hy doesn't the motion picture industry limit · iU ratings .to just threi:_: 'G' for genera l audiences. 'M' for mature audiences or 18 or over. and lastly. 'P.U.'?" Katherine b-fcKtt:. Berlri.rley. on nallon's 5S mllllon blgh"ay loll In 011e year - ··Doesn't this call for mobs to lake to the street, fo r '1gils. for suspending businrss, for student~ lo stny ~1ray from schools, workers to Jca~·e their jobs ..• for burn· ing drlver"s licenses?" Harr It I le II. Phipps, L.A. - "Permissiveness has been our dO~'l1h11I . Thert cannot be an honorablt method or breaking a law ,1·ithout havi ng anarchy." Barbara Jeanne Dithl, Burl111gan1e - "By "'orking together in the same man- ner \\'e did to send n1a11 safely to the moon Qn9 home again. the garbage anti all othel' prpblems on earth could lM' solved." ' illrs. Ale11nder RJpl ey, L.A. 1oclal \\'Ork tXft., Otl l\ICCe~• flf loc11.I tl~lf·belp powrty program -•·Thf only ~'3Y ., . is ~·Ith people, not for people." leges. let's really lilten t.o N" ttudenta and, hopefully, communicate! SlnRLEY ISEllMAN Right or Wre,..1 To the Edllor: Now that a juda:e has ll\"atded. pO,eoe lo a burglar ~·ho was ahot by a mil\ wM found him in h1s house, and a Judce and llvo ether judges in two other states have been delaying the Leary trial and ketp picking on and grWlng a flne Llfld\I police officer, I'm wooderin1-would a judge say I ~·as a hero and tum me 1°* if I "'ere lo shoot a city manaitf, ft\.~ d· ty councilmen and a city attbmtJ because 1 thought I v.•as d6ini a toOd deed for the taxpayers of Laiuna Beadl? Tl{E OTHER NIOllT I called for help of the Sheriff's offlce. Santone had tried lo start my car and tried to aet .it M on the highway, but heard me and &6t scared and ran aa I got outlJde aftar hearing the noise. When the GM.cm aot here I 1vaa standina by the car with • flashlight and my 410.5 shot shottun 1a 111y anns. One asked me "ls thate I u a loaded?" I sald, "Are your guns to.dedt,. and they la ughed. I said "I'm too old ta * be out here with an unloaded ltUft." Am I, at 79, right or wrona:? CHARLES A. PEDDICOl\D _..,. __ Wednesday, February !5, 1970 Tilt editof'tat pagt Of CM Dctltt Pilot seek.I to inform 4nd ttiflil. ulatt readers bu prtstntbsf QLs newspa.pn-'1 OJrinfmu and eOM- mentar11 on to,nc1 of ~'1ltNt1 and .sigT1lficawce, by pnMdlfto.• forum for tht t%pf'tuf0ft o/ our readtr1' op{nfom, and bv prts'.ntino tht dtwne ftf1to poinff of tnftmMd ol.11'"111 arid 1pokc1mtn on topic. of tM day. Robert N. W•ed , Publisher ' " ' . ' ,. 11 s. Brown Henn N~sts in ,Enc~o .. B1i L. M. BOYD ' SPE~G OF lbe rat.race, II has i' n established sclen.o liflcally iJiat. girl rats can oulrud.· rats. By .outrun, I lntan 1 ib in the matters of apeed ..if dlstaoce •••• THE STA~CIANS insist a pi.an aged 3at~d o)i'er over the course ~ a year speods an average Rf t~ mlnuteS a day arguing \with somebody or other. Iribat possible! FE G DEPRF.SSED? - Let's 1100' •Itel 'fVaguely d<pre but don 'I know why. do you do to get over it? ere's the advice m the late · r Winston 'Churchill: "Write all the lhinis you can think of as possible an- noyahces. • 0 1tc e they'ie on paper, Ybu can dea1 wilh them. Tb.is one doesn't matter for six months. J know the answer to Ibis one. This is the only r e al difficulty that is crying for, an answer. Then you deal with it. You make them manageable the moment you break them into precise and concre~ issues. The only thiJl8 the t¥man mind can't &tand up ag.unst is mystery.·• ANOTHER ijTATJSTICAL STUDY SCfffiS , to indicate citizens boqt in the summer . months tend to be less apt to develop ps."'Cbiatric ailments, but the wly of it remains unexplaineG. • , • NO oouiiT YOU know women can talk more with ok!ss e f f or t. But maybe YOU[ dldn't know the scientific reason for it. 'J'.heir vocal cord!! are shorter. re- quire less air to vibrate. CUSTOM!JI SEllVIC&-Q. 1'How old rwas Paul Revere when he made the big ride?" A. 40. A year younger than Columbus when he discovered America, incidentally ... Q. "WHAT'S THE FASTEST a tap dancer can tap?" A. Believe 84{1 taps per minute is about as fast as it ever gets .••. Q, "IS QUEEN EUZABETB II ever referred to as Mrs. Mountbatten?" A. Never. lier legal name is Elhabeth Alexaodra Mary Windsor. IF IT DO~'T take you at least 1,240 llllmta to -· a good pot " pcrlc aad -· yoo aren't aoillll It ril)1t ••• roua NAME GAllB MAN sayi there's a Mn. Brown Herw nesting in ~ Col. . • • "WRY ·DO 8TllAD 325 desn<e• I'. while men don't?" Writes a cusklner: "Because steab don't awelt, dwn <Mn..'' •• , WBBRB IS the cheapest ..... in tho--. try to ·Uve? A cllml mdlls Austin. Teua, wtth t h a t di&linctlcn •••. IAIVE, .rutrr WVE is what mattna !DOit to Leo .jirls, and that b Ille ~ .. of oUr Planet man'• report today. OPEN QUES'nONS -L Is it I.rue there's tome sort of mouse th.It sings J..lke. a canary? 2. How do ,.u Ujllllo the 'fact that a miawate oven will cook the. )1ilit ti 111 egg but not the white? a. How btg is an o.Mfcb'a ~? l\APIDLY REPLY -Yes, sir, it's now reported Stradivari was the name of the violin maker, but Stradivarius was the name o1 the violin. Your que.rlfonl and com. men ts arl' welcomed o 11 d toill be used whenewr J>OI· sibte in "Checking Vp ... Please address yow mail to L. M. Boyd, in care of Daily Pilot, Box 1815, Newport Beach. Calif .. 928&1. Coast Nunes Given Grants Twa SouLh Cout nunes are among 12 Southern Callfornia nlJ!"SeS who have been granted fellowships of $2,400 t o participate in • nursing edtJca. tion program at California State College, Los Angeles. Ruth Zitnik <i 2'10 Albert Pi.ace lo Costa ' Mesa and Dorotliy Crummy Of •111 Aw:nida Deleo tn· Mlaion V)O. jo will be part <i Ille JWOl!fam which' will award them a master's deRroe ID 111r11nf alter ... ,.... thul qualilylnc them to teach an a "'"'Nmll)' cOllege _level. We'll take·· a large, lovely 11 x14 professional portrait of you alJll your child I • for a low, low 4 9$ . Now'1 lho fl""' lo '-Iha! "'..;., p ofslll: nal ' po<t111l11oken of ycu'and your chihl. Our falt •td. pholographer knows fusl how ID captufe tf>- wormlh of lhls wonderfvl dmt In r-lft. C:- in .-, lolo ad-ago of lhls ~low ' . price. Remember, you can tharge it at r..,.,..,'al PULLIRTOff Onllf'l•lr C.tn!tr 2n11 11oor, •n~ MUJf1'1Nef'Otil IUClf frtlWl"OllT IUCll Hwil'"91on Clrl!tr lnd !Joor' .,,,. " , I • , f SHOE SALE FOR KIDS !, Through Saturday onlyl Buy on Lay-away for . EaSter ••• iust a month ' away. ' A.tMIT"9 U&J ....... ks 01' .. . .... ,,_ ........ a I ........ tel _ ..... ' -.. NOW 4.24 & 9CllYllAf .. ..., ......... £ , ... .. G•'•ll ....................... . ........ C.lmSYQASSIC-.. _··-·' 'bl ..... ...,..,_,... .... _...._". n ' ......... ma."'· NOW 5.G9 D.l!ESllAPS---'-"' __ _ ..-~ I JIJloldWwllo--~, _...., .... m ut, NOW 4.24 [. -mAP-..,.. ""' ...... ... ____ ............. ... • ,,,, NOW 6.79 ' r.SMA11ooocm-.. ..,..-....,. .. .. ................... -...... .... . IEO. m. NOW 5.ot UKE 11' ••• CHARGE m ' • AVAILABLE AT YOUR LOCAL PENNEY STORE ' • • • ' ' : • . ' ?_Ii' ... .•. ! ,, :" ~ ' I . -.t ~·· r>...~~ .,t "l . ! • i' ·J "ll.l; " . tt ... .&. ,,.4 ·,lf,:1R •f;14 "'"' " 'Oil~ II ~ •1»1' ~E. ~· ,( .. !• ;. .. Jl'1v -C-f!f !9l ·~ ~::· rr~ ,j~i~ b,.,1 .:i .. ~ !lrli ""' - ' ,..jt • 9 "'" orf~ 'r,,.~ IJJll ~1~•'1· • j,.jl "'!'-· lll'-" ,, . ; 1'.!lf ,..,~ . '·q "" ll.!•"9 . ~ \.. ' 'f' • 1'ki:? . ' ·~:.fi ,. j .. I ,,, • l ' '' • WtdOlsda;/, F<b<ulrJ 2.5, 1970 · e1ao Miiiion Goal R eagan Planning Cuts in Welfare SACRAMENTO (UPI) - Gov. Ronald Reagan intends aoon to ·offer legislation to cut welfare·costs by $130 million, lncludilll a requirement tha1 Californians he.Ip pay for their elderly parents' as5istance. The Republican governor disclosed his plan Tuesday shortly after legislative analyst A. Alan Post ouUined ways to reduce stale spending by $365 million -lt39 million in welfare aJone. Post said 'his Ideas, which Included rOOucirig the C'05t of the state's medical insurance program for the needy by liberaliring the abortion laws, weie offered stricUy u ways to cut spending and that be was not nOCf:ssarlly "ad· v oc at iTI g'' their im- plementation. He also offered proposals to reduce local school aid by $40 million; mental hygiene, $3.6 million; and medical aid for the needy, $79 million, among others. program will include a lien Jaw under wblch1 the state would recover public assistanct grants from the estatel or dead~WeUue reci- pients. ,, s 1 m 11 a r Reagan-backed legislation failed in 111&1 when D e m o c r a t 1 outnumbered RepublicaDI in both houses of the Jqjalal;nre. Now the GOP is in eoiltnil.. Verne Orr, stat. dJroctor of finance, aid Reqan al.lo will . pr<Jl)Ole that ~ children be required to pay • greater share of their parents• asllltance. in the old age security .pr..,..m. P<ist ~ both pro- pouls 1o a meetln1 ol the Aslembly Ways and Means Committee attended by Orr. He said 'the lien law would recover $9.t million and the "relaUve responsibility" con- tributlooa would produce liU million. ,,.,__ • ·ML MUM ' .. Railroad· t~ De~~lop iI uge Land H.oldings • I ' 400UCSB·1 LA Land1nark·to • •1 ' • • • - Studeµts W recker• Start,on Famed Coconut · ":""~, •·r · -"' Ramniwe l l.Ol '.AllGD.ES. (AP) -· r~· ·JM•C~clWedlberein . ci3flelt0o -A boyish GOLETA (UPI) -About . Binc Qoobf ~!Joo.b<lo'd 400 11.-at the Unlvenily with the Rhythm Boys. No~ of Callfonua at.Santa Barbara the Ambasildor u 0 t e I • s went on a window-bruldna famous Cocolnut Grove night rampa1e throu~ the sma11 club is 1 bit creaky at ft, so collep community of Isla they've started turinC it Villa Tuuday nifht oetUn1 down • truh fira and vanda!lzln1 • . DWnerOU& bn•lnesses. A wrec~ng: party wu held ShorUl'a deputies said al< Tuesday rull>t for IOO psts arrests wre made. Ont of· supp~ with plastic con- flcer suffered cuts and bruilel structi<11 helmell. durlng the melee. Amid cries of "timber!" two A u t b o.r I t I e 1 said the of the Grove 's plaster-trunk disturbance was touched off palm tree• were toppled. In a Tuesday afternoon when Lnis dusty bedlam, wall panels Bryant, who ii not 1 UCSB were battered out b y ltudtnt, wu arrested on workmen. numerous charges lncllkllnc Actor Robert Conrad joined pub1ic profanity, suaplcion GI other psts In knocking inclUna: a riot and conspiracy. plaster chunks out of tbt rear Also amsttd was John, Trot.. wall of the st.ace with sledge ter, 21. . bumners. • tt was the start \of.1a slx-customers danced the bands w«;k "Operat(on.F~tt" ,to of Abe Lyman, Lewis, enltrge-lbe Gm• lalo ., GUI Arnbetm, !Juy bardo, super-supper 'chd\· -"the Phil Harris, Eddi! Duc:bin, a:reatest n!Pt chlb in the Ozzie Nelson, Rudy Vallee, country," hotie1p.re1 Iden t Paul Whiteman and Be.My Hugh Wiley promised. Goodman. But yesteryear'• memories, Master or ceremonies Sam- he said, "will stay forever.'' my Davis Jr. 11 appear · ••• • ol .... _ "M'I-regularly and Ip · select Born •t!uJ1111: start u"' ~. talent for \be newt b, In. he the ·Grove bu played' host to kings and p r e s I de n t s , called "The No Cocoanut aocialites and celebrities. Grove." The new r will · Under its stlrllt celling Los feature silver-and act walls Angtl .. aoclety first minfled and carpetlnf of e, pur· with Hollywood stars such 1s pie · and black. Mabel Nonnand, Dolores Del "J· think it'll ' ~ a 11roovy Rln Lu V~ p I N · tti\ng," Sammy sat ' pe .,,ez, 0 1 egrt, 'Mils year's 1.ttr Ions, Re. Charles Chaplin, GI or i a Swanson.,•Mary Plcltford, Joan salil, will inClu S't e v-. and Comtance Bennett. Lawrence , Eydie The Duncan Sisters at-Frank Sinatra, Bill tended, and M a u r I C" e the Blood, Sweat Chevalier, Wlll Rogers, Tom·-="=o=•=P·====;I====;;;;;= Mlx, J e an e t t e MacDonald, 11" Harold Lloyd, ..Fredric March, ' ' , lJonel and John Barrymort. Deputies aaid two of· Bryant's trlenda Went onto the campw and recruit.<! -Eurasia Bridge an appearance. dreds ol 1tudenla who then ' Afeer Ch a r I e s Lindbergh Even Greta Garbo once made atormec11n1olhe-W kS district GI Iala Villa and Or tarts new ihe Atlantic. ·1he city beian peltlnc a """" GI honored him at the Grove. Ameri~a bnnch wtth'~ ISTANBUL (AP) ~ Work Child star Shirley Temple Window• were brobJ1 at wu1 started today on the cave Walt Disney hJs Oscar numerous buaintsle&. Eurasia Bridie.. the rint apan for "Soow White and the •• cllHrfll. Tiii ,.... .. ..._ lr1v11111. '* loM wlJI H ..,..,..., ... .._. ... Ill ~ .. rt ''"' ... •lll llft ••• w•••, f'Rl"$£KT!'l:I •i A ,,, f'VBLIC SEllYICE IEVEll.Y DAY IYI Reagan, who has admitted "frustration" at being unable lo stop the Increasing cost of welrare, said his legislative Post said curTelllly only II.I million in geDeraJ fund tax money · is offset by relaUvu' contributiorui. SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - Southern Pactllc Co. • .,,. nounced Tuetday creation of a new management organizaUon "' ...,._nt ~1.-n--Seven Dwarfs" at o n e ·-1;311,000 ..... oold 'l1le lherifra department, across u~ -porous, .. --....... _ -"'-di-tcbed 12 M-tt'-to TUrkish warships fired salvos Aqidemy Award presentation LH Roofinl Co.. ,.......,._,,. ~ ... ,.... -,.--..--nd )'iel~' ~........ i' YNn 0. 1111- Bl• .. .H .. I Jeald 'the new land the acme, aaid several patrol and flag«<:ked ferries a :-·r· ~ iut s11,.,i., Ave. Mar7m to •C<:der•le· dev~lopment of irna;~t dlrecUon would r ~u~ru~·ts~w:e~r.'..e~struck~~bJ~roc~U.~-~l::ino~n~sounded'.::::::~w::hi:·st::t:es::.· ___ .:_·T:.::_h.:.t:o;.u!&C:h:....:.t;:.h-::•..:..Y:•.:•.:.•.:•:=======i====-' explore joint ventures with ~ surance companies or other firms with strong financial re....,,es. DA S In . • the railrNd syatem.'1 3,855,000 ets vest1gat1on ~;:;~nc1;\"'1":,c's;au;n1 said be exped.s income from Of Gif S S hr d land and natural resource · t to en. c '3 £~0~,..1~;.1f.~ll!!.'!.~1n ~.:y orty Still . SACRAMENTO (UPI) -his inquiry would last. 1.!r'' 0==· ~:"j;; ·u d •d d• e· nne• •J Senate leader Jack Sbcrade is Price said . although no million. ll eel e ... _;,_ (" . -•••ll'irv ..,. being investigated by tbe legislators had filed official A -a .. _;,.11 . .., _ _ MJNIN8 Ff1118f ___.,,. district attorney to determine complaint.s, "several citizens'' ~,..... ·--~- • whether he committed a crime had. • makes the Southern Pacific LOO ANG~ CAP) by accepting $5,000 from a ' ·'Gov. Ronald Reagan Tue5-Land Co. • dlrect subsidiary Mayor Sam Yorty, 1t111 special interest lobby. 8ay became the latest official of the Southern Pactflc Co., declining to announce whether END..OF·MONTH But the chalnnan of the ·to· urge a th or o a g b 'in-organized In holding company he will run for governor, says Lenislalive ELhics Committee vestigati.on. Iorm last November. • \ o G Linde " h h friends of Assemblyman Jess says his group will not conduct "I think that hb should be · · • '"· w o as Unruh have asked him to an i""";"" because it is iJl.. cleared up." Reao.11n told hil been SP's manager of in-.. ,~, -d ·a1 d I I stay out of the race . capable of giving the San wetkly news conference. . ustn eve opmen , was ed land . "Some or Unruh's friends, Diego Republican a "fair "The people of California nam company pres1. hearing." have a right to expect that the dent. who are friends of mine, have The committee chainnan, people in gover.nment. The company owns 38,779 asked me not to run," Yorty . .,. b I H h b h I said Tuesdii.y at his first A s s e m y m a n . arvey w atever ranc o govern· acres of strateglcally located Johnson. ([).El Monte), sug· ment, will be scrupulously industrial properties in major regularly scheduled news con-• gested Tuesday that Schrade honest and above reproadl. market areas. ference in nearly nine mqnths. s N on his own ask Sacramento There is a cloud a.s a result of The 3.1 million acies of "I'm going to have to ~e ave , , o.w on County Dist. Atty. John Price accusations that bave been. ~tlying lands in Northern some kind of announctment to investigate. made. I think the people have • Califomi.t mountain areas and 5000," he added, giving no Price later disclosed to a a right to expect .lhat cloud to desert re1ions ol Sou.thern clue as to what he m1gbt do. ' d •+-' ' If newsman he already has be cleared." California, Nevada, and· Utah Assembly miriCf.ity ""' O•I '.:A/'· ourse begun the probe. Reagan also suggested that are· holdings remaining from 'lea~r Unruh aJto lJ"i:lewood "I think it warrants in-the Legislature. ttghtm .up .its original .irants of II mi!Uon \ ~at, is t the. oruj .. '"· vesli8ation," the prosecutor conruct oC interest laws so "lt acres by the gOTemment when nOuriped gubernatorial.• cm1- said, adding he didn't have im't·even possible to have-the the systan wu buUl Mineral did)te for the June: put)' ~ • I f I _''the_1_a1n_ ... _1_1_d .. _·_· ho_w_1on_,~·-PflllAl~"'-"""-°'-•-•il_'_' ___ rlih'-ts_ .. _ .. _1r_alned_o_•_ .. _ac1-__ pr_1m_.IY'-·-----·• -":·VI n y 00f 5 •. .. I 11 ,Designs ,, . 49 ~Colors ' . ' . ' sq. yd. ' . @mstiYong CA&TILIAN; a asldlnld YlnyJ lloor \ • t· . . .. .... fait ..... _,. Siooply unroll -' '"'"· t'f'D .....,,_ nee1..ary ••• ond CostiJ.. 1 laft ........_ a apocial bvilf>.in foam layer • ~ •' 1'1 dftigns In a _, of <49 colon ·IO" ctio-frono ... a ll cloaronce pricod now! ............ _,_ .. .,....to ...,_ .,,. ufl . ..... COM1 .. OI PHOlll ~54er · FULLERTON 871-4343 ' . . HUNTINGTON BEACH 892·7771 LAKEWOOD 1134-7000 MONT'ctAtR 621-3811 , NEWPORT BEACH 833-0792 • I • • • I the r Susp ect ks Own Defense REQU EST STUDIED P atrlcl1 Krenwinkl• Lindsay Cas e 'P olttical' LOS ANGELES (UPI) - Emu!aUO, • Cllar!OJ Mamon alleied mulennlnd of the Tate..LaBlanca m u rd e r 1 • P1tricla Krenwinkel requested court permlsslon Tuesday to act as bu own 1ttomey to fight murder and con.splracy charl!$ againlt her. In her first ~t ap- purance here since her arrest in Alabama She told Superior Court Judge Geoge M. Dell it was "terribly important -1 be permilled to act as my own attorney." Mias Krenwinkel. who ap- Facilities Underpaid Says Court pear<d in, C<lllrt w,lthout S~CRAMENTO _ (AP) _ makeup and her long dart Nursing horbes ... H.... for hair bangine 111ra!Pt d!>wn --from a part In the middle, llald thoosandl of patient& undo tho rejectlon o( her motion troUld Medi.Cal program have been "deny me counsel of my underpaid .since 1966, the Jrd choice." District Court Of Appeal has Dell conUnued the ar· ruled. raignment until next Tuesday And the unpaid b!U may' be when Miss Krenwlnkel, 22, will as much as $10 million. argue her motions. In a unanimous aed$ion The young woman, who was written by Justice· Le6natd M. Indicted for the A u g u 1 t Friedman, the three-jud1e slayings with Manson and four coort reversed · a 1 I t I other of his followers, also Sacramento County Superler moved that she be allowed to Court decisiott Tuesday. act as her own attorney along The appeals court ordered with an associate counsel. the state to set up a rate Mason made the same mo-schedule for payin1 nlll'linc tions and ultimately won the homes for the apd. right to defend himself. He The judaa alao tbmr out a and three other defllldants KO Department ol llMllh can to trial March 30. Service rqulatlGn wll1dJ 1111 Say s De mo Dell appointed D. p u t y dally rates for rtlmbanlJ!c .. -: " .. ' •. , ' . ' • .. . .' ' ., • . , l W ... Ftli/w/ 2S, 1970 • l ... ..... , I Public Defender Paul nuralng homes. ·-sA~ (UPO -~~~.Ji':~ ~~~lb ... ~ Suddenly • · Joll_n_ IhdJAy Fitzerald said be would only ·Ing Homes, SanitarluiM, of New 11-a Political tentaUvely accept it un1eu be-Houiea and Hames for= '· . .. ' -. --. . omia. found there WU DO coafllct of ed Inc., which filed the 1 Reagan uld m,t.ml. The possible ....Old said the payment c!qt ·the Ii> '"'8enUunlv~rsJ.ty .<If · of ~.st.ms 1rom .-er stltutioos alnce llM ~ ... l•' may hav& murder Case in wtikb Manson ranges from $7S mll1iod ~1111 . . ' ... ,,.~ .. • denied an. ary degree to ~od his clan were Implicated mllUGa.. ~~ & 'If Lindsay I auBe; •,'th.ey &ndwllicbln~ve&'thepu6uc ·""' -.. J.~' thought s was Stttin& mto ~ilefendtr'I office. . ,,· 1 the field =·" A!Jo 1n court -1n 1'. -rn• R •· R<aga • to say h9!' 'RAlloer, who i. repreoenUnc r ;p-e · .UQ ·.7. he voted t the _ session. LesUe 'Van Houten. u., a ,.., · · last wee t whltb the regents codefendant. °'Wi'de . '-·-----'~,.. In an 1111 v<le with t.o ~A abstentl declined to ap- prove the degree for Liodaay. who will liver a charter day address ril 2. Traditl ally, charter day spukers 1 get honorary degrees~resident John F . KennW as one, Robed-I J:.. COate, former Dem ' c Party chairman and rl.lf a candidate for lieute..,. Jllvmer, supesled it was j the refutal tO' 'lf'aQt UndsaJ1 tlie degree that in- jected Jblitics intO the issue. "Can'I we stop the politi- cians tom inif:r£ering in every 1t.spec• o{ tbe univers~?" he asked. Coate 4&fd Lin$ay is "one of the "blic servants mOBt admired by today'll college you1h." He saldithe refusal lo award the degret was "another sad illllltratic•f of the tap that ex· islll betwetn the present state administrdon and'our facuJty and studenti. '' ' . NLRB Rul es In Tijuana PSA Wrong TIJUANA, Mexi<O (AP ) - Fire destroyed • ...,.,.. drum factory and eight aiirroondlfl4 WASHINGTON (AP) -A houses 'l\ielda. ll!sht '·.., ~ (llreHnm -I ol •the N .. lhlllslde in lbe·Diii<lnmt ·-" lional 'Labor Rdatons Boord •lion of this border dt,, lays two ltew8rdeues for ~firemen said. ' PadfCSouibwest A 1 r.J i n e 1 No serious ~~, ,w a ' were ;-~ tbe:b' rights io reported from the 'flr\ tr,Jait. irganile a .union _. broke out about t·p.m.~" ~id ha" bee!l~J.:drum factory on MI & u a I ed. ·~ • 1 " ... • -~Cervantes Slreet 1n Colon.la The ~I Tuelday ~:'Ruiz Valencia, Fire OUtl the fmdlnp o! -tilai·e~ Samuel Melendn Mtrln uld. Hennan Marx, who ~ ·lut· The eight famtliel « the Sept. 2.1 that the SaD Diego. l'.two-, three· arKI· f<JOl'-f"OOril hued airline engaged In un-· 'howes carrted belonglnp -lnto fair labor practices tu" rtring the street u names spread In the stewardesses last March a square-block area. . . and that they were to be About 20 city firemen, aided reinstated and paid any lost by more than JOO voluntetn, pay. , . !ouK)>t the blaze Will> ..... PSA bad ~ e1cep(ions to fire trucks and water from Marx' decisiOn, resulting Jn trucks which carry drlnkl.na: the panel review. water for sale. lfO SIZlS 'ONIY ...... Ss''oo .,... .. m -.:..-••I. .. •:6 , .. ,, ~ ·-· _,_ MOCll1UtlUI '' IG • ...., "'O ·-~TJllfOlTCllATS ... -·--··32 .. ~'wt•'-• ~4S.Ot , M~w ·-· -..... "" .... •12 ... ''·'' ... _ .. ....., ... ' DOH' LOflll MOll•l .~ ... ·•1 2.JO ,,, {NfXTTO CAMPl!ll'S) SAITl DCA -T .. LL --~··..-• DAllYTI(9 • SAT. Tfl6 ' . "I ' ' . ' . ' .1 ~· • , ' I .·, 0 '> • ' , ' • ,, -+ ~ .: . . ,,,,," f ; ,., . . • I r 1 ·. •• ... l ~r.f. . ' • . . SPECIAL B:OYj Ecuy-qireahifts in crisp cation prinjs and plolns. Zip frontt, bUtton fronts ••• A-1"11111 . and flounced skirts,, and ·more •. WqnderfU lly •wrsatila-w.ar )hem ' , ' ' ' I '. louagliig, 111111Wfne, liec!chli1Gnext sumr119r, onywherel.sizeS T0.18. • ... ' i ' ' r I . ' 2FOR~ Sizes 38-44, •4. ' ' .. ' . " . ' · WOMEN'.~ ~~AS ·OXFORDS ·FOR ALL 'ROUND WEAR ••• ;_......,....~.,~Air-~led ~ Army cluck upper,' With ~· balance ordi, cusl!ion n. sole, on rv~ ·outsoles; Collect them ' · in white, black ·~ blue at., ow great P.ice for quolity •. lii -'•Iii-. , .. • t ' ' 2a99 ' . ' • ' . ' AVAILABLE'AT YOUR. l:DCAL.! PENNEY STOIW ... 1't fl .. j • DAILY 'Ill'. Ill. Tll 9 . " m Ill s1m·•y ' t· -··-·---· ·---· ' - • • • -- .. • . • .... ... ~ • ~~ ... . •• -G• • • . ' . ·~,-·2$; ·191' . . ' .. . • Dissolati.on• of ltfarrU.ge ,\ I • ., ·:···· stn,anwut*ll ltemt wftb a DAJLY 1'JLOT· Clullfi.d Ad. '"2-5671 ' ' . ' ' • , ., ' I ~· • . . ~~'tt'ltllll.,ltll111J Trutll' . , • ·candidate B lmts Sherif ·~ " • bluled the>-~·1 <~~·~ the olfj~ ol ~and CllUDo ty corotitr. "Each offico hu j vtial rolt to pla1 in an extmntl7 crlUcal and lm~I am of !>Uf·ooclely and uci> olfice has been the IUbjlcl of muCh al><llebyeadtlclminlstnllvo h<ed," Nonil lllill. 'lltll aifuoe, Jodp Byron K. McMl~ lab.'1 clerk adtled, 40haf f'llUtt. e<i 111· ·-In maiipow.,. ...i lu dollars." I BE · READY FOR WARM WEATHER .WITH A . ' . ' HAWAIIAN AUTO AIR COND.ITIONER!· BUY . NOW, BEGIN PAYMENTS IN .jUNE ., . . . j., 1 • ' I , : ' I • ' • • High copotity cooling for 1ncuticnt.1m comf ort if' big con • P~· chill feature d.t'*' cool air in1tantly • .( ldr;t: rktonqulor froni &owe,.; ~~'°""' .stde IOUYeD • lllumino~ switch panel, luxuriota *8n• duign • 'Silent Scroll' pkn:tic blowers for ~·-.lei;,..., . 239 .• 95·· ~. ... . l • ~ .. ... \ \ . rJ ~. INSTALLATION ADDITIONAL . CAUFORNIAN fACTORY All CONOITIONft l-'>I• most foctory ·installed Models. 219.95 .,. , ,USE PE NNEYS .TIME PAYMENT PLAN . ' ·. f OREMOST" MI LEAGEMAKIR II 4 PLY NY LON CORD TIRE SIZI 600-13 630-13 70().)3 695·'' ' 735-14 ns.14 825-U • 16.95 llackwall hlbtl-520-11 plw 1.37 fed . tax: o"d elcl·t;re ILA(ICWALL TUiELESS PllCE FED. TAX SIZE PRICE 16.95 1.60 5.0.\5 16.95 16.95 " 1.78 560-15 17.95 ......... ,. 17.95 ' 1.96 ' .68S.l5 18.95 1'1.95 ' 1.9.f .. 735:15 .. 18.95 18.95" 2.04 775-15 19.95 19.95 ,. 2.17 815-15 • 21.95 21195 2.33 845-15 21.95 1 THESE STORES OPEN SUNDAY TOOi 12 to S P.M. FED. TAx 1.3.( •• l .75 i.BS 2.08 2.19 2.35 2.53 " . . ' .. ~I . .. ~ . .. .~ ~·~ I , I I /' r ' ' I ' • • . I CANOGA-PARK HUNTINGTON BEACH CHULA VISTA MONTCLAIR DOWNEY Fl;JLL,l;,RTON NEWPORT'l:!EACH VENTURA BUENA PARK ICLOSEOSUNOAVS) ("'::i::~:.:"l ,. • -!'.l 1 I • I • • i I • ! .. ! . ! '. i .. ' . " •• " ' .. I ' .-:. ·~ • v I '· .. • ' . ' • - + ~ ! • • • . . . .. ' • . I ' -' '" ! • • . , ' ...... ; ' ' . ' _;•I ,,j .• I ' "\I ! ' I " ' I .f j , I ' . I ~ ' .. I ' . : . . I . ' • ' ' • . . .n: ' I ,, ' '\ ' . ' ., ! .>I ". • .. . ~ •• •• " ' ~1 • '' I , . ' ... • ~ Jj.! PJLOT·ADVERTISER s Wtdntsday, "FtbtuarJ 25, 1970 DAILYtil¥ ,,, 111 ' • ' ,, • l I ' I l I I } • ' .. t . • t .. . . "' . . ' . . ' ' .. I ' .. } ': ·~ ': . \' I ' . ·. ·" . " ' . . ' .. <. . ' +°': .c • ' . '. " .. • • ... I ' . ~1 l • ~ ~ '" .. ' ~ i • , 1 . I ' ... l I ' ,;-. ; .... : .o I . ' .... ' • . ... 1 l ', I ·~ ; ' :r r < i , . I ... ' '· ' . i . ' " . .. I .. ' ' . : .. • • • ' } ·~~ ; ; : \ ' • , I ., ' • . ,. ! .(' ! ,, .. ' " ' . " ' -' .. ' ' ... ••• • ' •< ' ' ' ' ... : I ' ., : " I ' ~ : '. : ' '. " •I " .... ~ . • ' :y; ~ . • ••• ....-! I . . ., 'L I . /• " r l ' " '· r; • • . ' . ) , . , " ' ' ' , t: , j • ·, ' ' . : . (I' ; ~,· .. } •, .• .t. ~•I ' '°I . ,! l '! j :.'.'..!::1 ~ I • • t ' .. " STARTS ; : fHUU1)Al~10:00.kM. . ' . . . . " " . • • ' . I " ' " .. " , ' • • coME EA"1Y.,L.JMITED ~s. 9uANrrnls:AND cot.QRs · . 1 ,.. :.. -HUNnNG'roJt:eltnn o""y"· ' . '•' . I '. i i ' . . FIRST · FLQ;QJtj.-,--·"""" ·-· ·-. .......,.,.;;.' :...,·"_._ .. ·~ .. ·-.: ·-·-· .............. ___ . ;_ ........ ,,.~:· r • • •• •oi>• ,, ' ~ • WOM~'S STR•E PULLOYW . '-L . · JUNIOR .DUSSIS' : . "' . 0'.'1,.".''•·" ---······-··· ......... _ -···•ow S.88 WOMEN'S DRESsls · .,_..., '"''°" ·~·! ''' "· · . 51t1t L ---.. ............. ."SPORT$ .......... co~ .. DINA. "" . -11 •11 • u:....;.., .... ......:...:.11ow .......... ,.,.. .. I mi ...... ; .. , . ....,... """ ''"" · ,lfOMIN'S.GOLF.sHOIS'". '. '._ .... :·: conoN KNITS, 15 ONLY. . 3 88 . ·Ceirf•111o ......... r, ..... ~. "JI ·~~.,' . . . ' l, :.· , .... : OllG.10.00· '.' ._,_... .... -NOW • wa1 '1.00 ·%. Cotto. plaid jYmP<f''· ;1 ' .' -911• .... 1.6.tt ·-··-...---=-~ ... i---..... ·"°1•· ...... ~~: ~ ro "·'° Now-2.88 .. 7 .88 woMws 100TS · ·· . · . . · · ., ; . hr llMitl A 111t11rl11tif,·1~·•11)r ' ; ; ' 4.91 ; 6.18 •OllO. 6.ff ..... " ;.., ... .:. ................ -.:.-lllOW f• JitEN'S DRlSS SHOb . '" H • __________ ..,.,... ______ _,. Oii •• U .tl ..... -~-----.-... -"----'---·-'"'!W'1 ·~ I i. MEN'S swr·•ru sm COSTUME JEWE' •y' :. . , ... ::E°.:..".s·":.:.·o.,;.:;e;,:~-'---. ~.-... ·.··-.--...... -, .... ~.·2J· ·~ ·.·,• ·' ~~1;;:· ................ -..................... __ .. ____ ,_ ..... _.NOW 2.88 5"' ... su;."" ..... .... :':?,,MEN'S V-NICK PULLOVER 3 44 ::..~~L.i,.n _ ...................... -... NOW 9 .88 ~:."·d pi••· HrTin91, n.~i31"3"".. 1 66 !: .. N.'S~; .• soc':·:.'."'"_s".:.:.'.~.:~ ........ : ................. : ·1W .. o110. 4.M -............... ·-·····-·-·.:;·-----·-··-"ow • , I k h' • .J Ol1Ci·'1 M.,..~.00-.. _.NOW . • ,.~ • ~, . ~. . . ~ . , . . , ,., . : 1 .. , • Matchi~g or on nit • 1rt, 11a• moaium, ~. ~ C::;ttoM, .,,.11 .. ~.,,0'" , . · : . .~ . . ' WOMEN'S llNIT SHEW . 11,•Rly, 1 •• 3.88 OltO. '·'' _ .. ·---·-·· .. -.:.-... ·-·-·_ ..... -~ WOMEN'S A-LINE SKlltTS :,,;,lyJJ.ff -······ .. ·-·-·-···· .. ·-·-··--:._--··-·-·· .. -·NOW 8.88 WOMIN 'S SWEATER VIST I ! .. ., ., 'j. .. l " ' ,, + .... •stfELL ,_ , • ~ I t !~,,,. .... , ~ .. ,.,,:..,·,,-,~-• ·A( .... 1,ff .,_,_, .. ,,_,, __ .,.,-.. u·--·--·-,.--, .. ..., ~ ~.1.~'.... ............. ___ ...:._._~ .. --.•OW 4.88 . . ' " ' ! • . ·,~.,,..,, .. " '. MEN~S CARDJGA,N •. ~WU~ . ' 1' ~·· : . LEiP~. . 'WOMEN'S-IRA'SUPS -. . .• ~~Cl'!E!-5.¢~m, r·~ ... . . ~:: .. ;;_~,''M'''."".'" ~• : . -:~~~. ;::_ _ _:·: .. • ••• 1, . 4 88 · ~..-.:~ .. ~~~~-~:~~~ .. ~~~::: .. ~~:·: .. ~1-~~.-~:.0W 4.88 ~tio:i~~ ~.~~~~ I -·~~~--....... -..0. SOC t,t1M'S rLA1.1> WltmllW~ · ~··.. . . · · . · ·1 • 011 , 6.ff --··-.. -·t:-~1,_..------·---*'W ' · ·I , . J ... 11.,,.,,, 11 .. ir•11, .S.M-L.-XL . ·· '. ' · • ..... WOMEN'S s••lT·I ~..,i.Lo~.. ' IUSY .IODl: D£0DOltAlojT ' . :· ~ 'PUR$is'-Afl) '"""°"'~~' .. . .. ' ·._;_J!llO~_u.11 """"'~ .. ~-:·:.:.,...·=-=-.. -·•'!' . .,.,_~.--"'· ~_..__. II tnly ' '·l •, 6.88 All·t¥tf ,,.._.;" irl\. S1.9,.1 .... ,.t~J111-tnf.1tjlt1. • . 2n •MIN'S CASUAL PANT$ ·.' ' 0110. t..IO _ ... ,. -f!!'-+-.;>_,_ r: •"-I.-: Oii•. 1.11 .....:;.._·--·~---.. ---MOW . ~ " ... "6W° .. ___ ..:__....._. ____ . __ ...i_,.,_ ............ --.. --....... _ ' . ' .. '•ft11,;~tt. orr.,·, "-t•l4, 2f tt J4 w•Ut. . ., . . ...... ' ·-,.,. Olfti .... .,. __ ,,_ . ...:._:.. .. ', ' ·~.;_ __ ~..,.~ ' WOMEN'S &J'!!U,0:1 PANTS , DEMI WtGS , • . wnulff•s DusSES MEM'S SU'"' · · · .. : · ; · • , : , · .. ; . 0".,.•111r1·" .... --.--".;, 1 _,.._'"_· _'_, ___ 1.,.~~· _..4.18 IC>O 'J. •11••" ••;,. 1 ewly 15.88 c.;;;r,. "I'"'''· 1ia•• t4'h t• 14'h 4.88 l.D 100%·.,,..i •• .:,;\:11 ~iut, ~"'~ 'l~•..t.-'Le 00 . ,, .. _ _ -ot.I•. tiiM -------·---·--.. ttOW OllG. Lii .. 12.N ........... _._ ...... -... MOW ' T• . .~'f:O:,ILH ~ 1~:" _""'.'"";......:.""~ ~ f·~~ .', .. ~· . . . ' . . ' . ' . . . . .. . -------------------SECOND FLOOR--....----•"•, .. ~·-··-··"-·-... -.,-.-.. -... --·~· . ~ ' ' . ' . ( . IOYS' SPORT SHIRTS Ceito• eM bit., 1i-6 t. t I. MOW--·----.... ..:.. ..... ----·· ........ M••·····----··· 3 .. S.00 IOVS' PANTS c. ... .a P•ll'ts ..... ,......, tMu · 199 Oii .. i.ft --··-··~-·-----·-"·-- IOYS' SWIAT SHIRTS Fl•-ti111M, IOf. --'•' ll" _...,.. S-M·l OllO. 1.n -·------llOW IOYS' PAJAMAS . c.+to. fl•1111el1 a ••*" ._. ....... I te 16-1 99 MOW.--··--··-·-··--·--·--;·-··-·-·· .. ····~·· .. ··· ' GIRLS' ltOIES C.fte.ft t*"'Y "' t 11f, .. y1 .... J .. 1 99 .OllO. J.'8 -·----.. -·-···· ..................... NOW • G•LS' C01TON RIEFS L°"' w••""'' MM t.,, I te 14 NOW -·-:..··------·---4· ... 1.00 GlllLS' STRETCH GAITER PANTY W.~ 'i"ll, W•e, I tfze fit. II te ·I.• •. " '' \ . GIRLS' SLEEPWEAR &owns and h1by dolls, I 00 •;. nylon A11ort1d colors, 1i101 1 to 16 2 99 .OIM;. J.91 ............ --........... -NOW .,..., , GIRLS' DRESSES • Cotton•, 'dro11y 1tylo1, pl.ticl1, patterns lto6X 2 99· °'"' :a.tt .. 4.,. ...................... 1;1ow · • 7tol4 · ·399 otl ..... ,. .. s.n -... -.... -MOW • . IOYS' CASUAL PANTS Qr•11 •ncl lata1t 1tyling =· 7.~ 1~.~-~~-~-~~~~.~-~-~--~~-NOW 3. 99 IOYS' UNDERWEAR knit hriaf1 ind T-shirt•, 100% cotton, ,;~;~!~:.~~-~~~~---·--·-·· 2~~-"' I READYMADE DRAPERIES ~~ EYANS·n·~' .'. ·' '· ·: • St?tt"• 11yl•R1 li..M.4 '1Ut11"8", ~ t• ·t4 ' . -~ 54" ta 84" longths · •' '. · ottl•. t.11 to .1..tt ._._... _ __..,..:....;..;. .... _ ....... 1.JIOW 'J•.._. ·Single..+• triple width•, 10 only . '. .• . i , •• I '. ' • , •• , ' 1!" . ':' ..•. ·" r 5 00 30 00 OICORATOR COYIRUTS . ~ · . No .. w i.;.;. . -a., .... ·•·•..,.., 4'i1 ilw." Mi, .. :;"., t 1:. -a te • )f'~' · -··.I ' Olll•f'-tf.M ' ' . ' •. '" / ;-:-0 . ...:..u ...... · ~ • L,. ___________ ;... __ ;...;...--1 •. · . ' , . . . : . . . · MOtt•AN1'o.W,'f«, $1.ASSll!fiRE · ·,-·· · :· . ·. ' PINCH PLEAT CUllTAINS:: • ···.·'· : . c..,._,.._.1.~1;.,1.-..lt"""'*l.44. ; · •-. 10" t•·~·-·~".l•ngths , 1 ee·~.,.oe ~··. ~u+-."··. · · . .\;•r 1 •• J'·\!~·,)t,r ~r~~.~·~ ir...w oil,a. i".Jf'TO 4.ff-NOW . •ua:"1~W''. ' 1.()z. 'cd ,'AIR<'PilSHDia · . \ ·'. '" : · · , 72"xl .1.~· Valancing . "t 1 ·~'88' , 1.,"',,..~ fl.WI 9t llt~•"eiU..M, 'i0 .-., , f 4' , .1· .oo· : . 011•. 2:~ ................ -.......... __ .NO.W, •• · , ............ a.::....~-. .!....:......:. .......... ....:;.,..~,,. ""': . . · " .. ' .~ • ~·· t I'' ' • • " • . ' . , • ROOM . DIVIDERS . . ~J:. '?H'·--····-·····-··--····· ........ No~ s~•- Docor1ti•• tan1ion pola1 ~ 8 88 91 ... 11;50 ............................ -.. NOW' • . INFANTs' PLAYWEAR P11y1Uit1, Cira1111, it•nt tott, tops, · · · 11/J to J·;. ·; ·~ ·99c r . I . , ' ' 1111•. 1.n ro·1,91.._ ....................... ow · · . ' YARDAGE ·llMNANTS " . ';" ' .. · , . i••"'· "'"-" . , 'tftll~o "'°"'",Alb! .,.: •hlft l'f'ltk • • • • , • .,.., zc ,. .a ·¥rf' ·""" '. .. . .... . INF~' u•w~R ' . , -~ .. tffllli.i,... ...... irh, ~l..+k ,. •. ' ·~ . , .. ~, •.· NOW ~ .... _,.. .. ..,...~ .. -----··*'·-'--·...;.. ~ hf ,.,.,, 1:' ' I · • ·• • • • • " : .INFANTS' -'NIT, ~.1·$ . . . . . . . . · , ~ -~~ .. ~~r'_~~~-~.:~~~.,.,_,..~., J•.,;,. ,S.QDI . .. . . . ' .· ' ... ......... NTS. '"OYER"' ... ER "" .. · .... · · • ..... r,.. . ~'Iii" J.. " ~. . .UW:i.~: .. ?~:~~~~ .. ~~ ..... ~ ... : ....... ~.;·: .. w-·lJQ. ____ ..... ,,,,, .......... ~~-· _._. ------..o.i. THIRD '.FLOOR---· .. _ ... _,':'_: ·-:._·_: :._ ... _ ............ ·~ll!lioli; 1 :.: ••. ~ •........ : '1 i . ' ,, '~ i.. ,• ' . ' : ' • l Oii•• 1.Jt .. 1.lt -·--·--·-f' · ' u .. :.O,.:. ... llow • f, " . " . ' ' ,. DQOR.,CHIMIS · , ·. · · . , . '. .. v.ri ... ·"•'""'· 11 ••'r , · . •99 ... .& .. OllO ....... ~ ___ ,_; .. .,-.iloW.6' ... '\lo:J'l' ~WM' SWIEPIR · • . • . · , . · \ . . ~ . ' . . . . . ' l6 IRch•1._I ••ly . • .~ ".'1" Jjj.' .. '°' .. " ............. : .. : ...... _____ :... .. --.:..;. ................ ' .... • • . • " • ' : • • ' ! • J I nil tliRNUSA ST ARTIR '°"" . > · : 1 · l w•Mr. I lr•11i~ r ~.iily ' • ' . ·~~· ' .. • 9 -· • ______________ , •• _ _. ..• Oii ............. _.-..:. .. 1----~-:o...+:.-'• . ~.,.,. ... " .· ' • ,Ft:.!'OOI. '.l'AJl.E . .. .. : :· " CHANDLER HARPER CLUIS"-··· . : &.,.· ~%'. .. Oo4:J.: .. ~~;.o-,. " ... -.. ~ .. · ... :.~ J3J •. 80., St .. I 1h1ft, full 1•+, I _ ... · · , in' ·.~~'~l -- I only . 79 • SPllNG-SHOO:.,., Y, .. ~Cl(ll <,, , •· • " , , OllG. H.lt ..... -.. ~ ......... ___ NOW a I Yr. 9u•r•11te•, t"41ffl • · '1 • ' I H ' '• )• . \ ~ 7 ..... .'-•.. :.~_.!_. •' '' ' . ' I • ....l;.. .. NOW ~' t j : •1 ' • 1 , I •• I If 11.EC'IJllC ,111.T :UUAMR'' · , ' .,, " " '""" "H > I fy "'" ..... , ' I "~··.)., .~ .. ,., .. 7, ....... ,, . .... .. • OlltO •• , ... _ ... ....J.:... •• .!.'..! , • • • • ~ ,., • .... I j ...... .. • .. ~ " ,·~ 4' ""':"'. LEAN•'FO' JINT. , ·j . :·:'· ~ · . :~ ,•tJ ·:·: f ; , 6 ie-IY• ''it"ltl ... , , , ;., , , . I , 1 , , Q , -.Jfl' ,~, ''' A f -I • • • _,,_:-· ~ f ·.' .. r\': ~-..... ; ............... ..,. ' ., ?ODOUR •c>c•• .... ·:.; .... :; ' I '" t " PM4" , .............. I .......a... ':. · • • • ... *., :t :_.,-_, . .. . . \' ' . ~ ....... 1J.tl -11 j .. ' ~ ' '. ···-:.:-.!..._...... ; ' • ·' ' • . ' 1 I ,,,_ l" I f I .GER. ·HO ML LS ••'"'-· ..... lllr:·CltlD;.AAP ·. ': ,.., ;. ·::•' ,,, .• , .. SUPERCH,A . . TW l•IE. ,.•• ... ,it/.,.~,..,,,,,1 __ ,,,,.. ,....... J•·"'-,, . l.Tr11fftt,.16.ft.·Treck1 • OI . •·"-·-·-·"-.->-t-r"' • •• ...,. 1 ••• • " ... -,..·~,1 :' iMU'N .). .... ':iuiN Ur . . " OI•. 1.U ~ .. --·-········-·····NOW~ . "• ' , ~ , -.._ ..... 1 .,·, , • 1 a· '~ l -1 • 1' ... ,~. " • , ','lo , , • ,_.,..,., rt11, ~r• ~:"'., '-r'•" • ,. ). .. J '-___ _. _ _. ______ _. ____ ..... ..I ottca.•ft.fl . . . ' ' .! d • ..~. ' DISCONTINUED S . M.Mtr", tr1clitio"tl, J cw1hi I ON1Y ... -..... ,_ .......... _ .... _..; s ·. '" 200/o JOO/o _.......... ,. OfP 18" TAILE MODEL COLOR TV Wolnut cabinet, VHF.UHF Automatic do9au11r, IO'enly ~ 288 00 otllll. JD.ts _NOW • -·· 30" ELEC:rRIC UNC5E Self clMRirtt •van Push 'button cont'61 211 ·00 Oii•. 169.H .... ___ ........ NOW • .. ' 15.5 Cll •. FT ..... DZER 541 pouncl capacity I cloOr. 1h.Was, I only sncw. -""'---" ........... -........... .. 177.00 • 30" GAS RANGE lift .ti top and • .,... 4'oor S1•-tt.reu9h ••"'Hor -,.,o 00 1 .ot116. 249.H .. _ .. ____ NOW ~~ \ . ' PENNC:RAFT :J.ATEX PAINT ·' .. Interior l1tox flit, •t only ' 2 99 Oll4t. 7 .4' llAU.,,I( .................. NOW o . . #IA Exterior l•+e x, 12 enty . T7 Ollll. 6.H •ALlON', _ ............... NO~ 2, . , ' ·' ,, l' • FT. POOL TAiill ' . Slat1+ ... x.-..c1 1" "" ',, •. ·· !\·•. 1 onlj . 233 oo · .Ollll. 2ff.00 -.: ......... ..: ...... NOW . •· · r AUTO CENTER . ' 'I.\.· • "' ... ·-.. " . -.•.;· .... ; .. ;:-:: ... , ":/:~:\ .. r.·: . ' " -----------------------------., I .,,I I" • ,..,.,,,.~.., f -J:t'!";•'1 '1'1: 1\: .... •··•·< •''r,!f..t ·.J J ji .. !ij ,t1•· FOREMOST MA• WHEILS 2 Piaca whHI Dark canter --· -· ·• · ~--·· 14".15" 6M_, Ford & Ch.yola•- Ollll. 24175 ....... .._-r-4--NOW 19.88 MICKEY lllCE • H.r. •111111•, I ewlr 0110. 169.tl --·-··-.. ···-· .. -· .. ·······-.. ··-··•OW 139.88 ,, IENEW MOTORCYCLE 196t Modal, .1 ... nly 250 cc 21n1onth1or21,000 mile warrtnty 5 S,.ocl tr1n1ml11ion 599 00 otl ... 619.IO, -----NOW • MUSTANG R.OOR MATS ,, •• ,,., ... Yi11yf, ••.•• 1.,. OllO. 1.JJ ........... -......... 1-·---·----·-·-·-... NOW 1.88 . • ,_ _____ .... ______ ...,. __ .. _ ... \., i , t ,,, )·~ 1 J,~.,~ ,,I,•; ·-:~i"~Jf, .. '1 .:•"' FM MULTlrLEX A.Pi'PTOR 1 ''T t: ; CMl~•IMMtll, ;ms·~.·~ ' . r • ·'' -'SoUJ'Stat••. -,. . I I ~2. M ·~ueraftt.te. ,·r r/. ,.,... 1' !f , .... r Connoc+.1·+0,fM radiot -29' ....... ,. •;.Ply" , ~.,..r_,2 ~~',.-'' .. ! .. Siva 10.00, 4 only ..:.i.. .... 1 :M ~umlt1d1•u•,.,,...,~lw~lliil Mta.;.;. . 'rto'\.i L.:OI=: .. =::..· !n:::.n:..:··:·-::::::==:":::""~,:,.:.;:.=:·VO~~· .. : "". •· u.~·.i:. ~.::. 11:00 + "°".a-~ ' ' RAM INDUCTION MANIFOLD".Kd File 10111• V.W. e111i11e .. I e11lt • " Oii•. 1JJ.li ....... , ........ ~•·d••'··"'··,,····~-.. -.. !·-·: ..... ~ ,. . . . ,,. , "• '·"'CARCMl ..... 5111 TRUCK ···~ l 1~. J.~~,.,~·~-t.~:':~~:~ .. ~~~. •, /.~. . -} ~~ ... _, __ _ ! ' ·.: • ' ... ' - . . ''·" .. ,: .. •• 'fl'"'" . ~ . _._. _...,_ ... _ " " ' • • • . ' ., . I •• ... • ., ' ( .. ) . I . . : t i ~1 I .{ · 1 'f ... ' \ .. • ~ . '\. \} .. ·, • • • l • ~ ... .. Cl~ • M•~ . ' ... ~ "' ·~· '" "• ..... cS " " .,., .. ~ ':C:c ~~ ~ ·~ • 1.'J ':flr•11 ' .. ,. II·' ~ """ "'" ·i i ,,~ ... " lj W• •• '"' " Nm ·r " • ·~ oil Dl ol DISS ·-•m -s1.,. ~ ~ '"' •f!a ••• .,~ .. ''.I; ~~ • """ "~ ~ r.· r! t.i 11~ ~ "'II ~ij .... i= -- r.~1. ..... ...... .. _ Wltlcfll"" .Ntl. : PM, t C~MI. -M- J•'W. l1nC, I ·-...... """" ·-"'~' :::!'" ..... Cllt"~ AM, Int-....... t:IY• I ·-· -· ,..,., I"\ ... ' """"' ........ .... SS ..... " "• ' . ' ' " .. ·' , , . • ·- ( ' c I . JI DllLY PILOT Wtdittsday, F'ebruary ~. 1970 • I .• Terminal Island Catalina Regatta Saturd.ay · CG Safety Center Race Marks Beginning of LAYC 'Whiw:y Series J -Starts 3rtJ, Year Aftermath ol the mammoth the Los Anp1es H 1 r b or be&oa& lo a "oModellp " tlus race allowtd. 'nllrt 1ri11 bl a Southern Colilomla Yldll!nl Btt&twaler lo lllllliord 1114 la which at leul -1*ht In 'llltdalllon or ...,...to II Auool•tlon -W.r JloPlli; lllcl: '!' UW ..... ... lo 11111 dlu !Ill bee> lllWU1'ed lo eV<ry '°81 wltlcll • , ,, C t G -~ Bo ti amlned st f •""'---wlll be •ailed w.~ weetad ,. oas u~ u a ng , mo o u-were frml Los Anceles Yacht Club llnllb. , , tor u -nctng certlll-of the Whitney or Satcty Center will begin its easily corrected by the safety when the ~ Racing Fleet stll'tlni ru. for both fleets ~ate. Whitney nca with the thl>d year of operation 11 the conoclous boll operator after ahovei oil 00 Ibo annual ban been .. t up In the vlclni--Wldlllly Seri>s conslst.s lentloo ol compl<tlq Tmnl!laf headquartero 11 10 villlln(the <ecter. MldwlDter CoWbia 11·1,1 nd· •IY. o1 the Fhh Harbor Buoy,•°';;'i.;;';;";;":;,Wllb:;;:;°"';.;dropoou.;;.;t=ro•ce;;;;.;_===='"'iiitri a.m. March 7. p....,. .Squlmm member• r..O. < · ·No. I la Los Angeles Harbor, w Tbo C«l!er ,opena the ~970 opersle !he Boetlng Safety Once lmon .11 lhe "'*"' Ellclb!llty !or both rocei Is . U•IT ......... Royalty Under Sail Prlnl:e Harald of Norway (foreground) sails the ~onvegian entry Crest in the second race of the 5.5 meter world ch~mpionshi~s at Sydne)'.', Austra- lia. Prince Harald JS second in the standings. recreiUonaf bolll-. oeuon • _,,,. u.-Ibo -limlld by Invitation Io with -displays dellpod to lnlormlllnn CIO!et and tho c·~·~ lrliu-mOmben of recopiaed yacht &Ive qu1c1t and accut•te ln-Coat Guard and Aullllary ore ~-marb the nee-., clubo; Ooosn roclnr yochb rorma!Joo 1o the Soulllorn avalllble lo anaw"' sny queo· <ii LAYClo 1lbltoey Serits.!or must hovo • cumnl Crulsln1 Colllornla bolting'publlc. U0111 ,.pnling bOlllnl oDd to olllho"' radio( )'ICbll. · Club _ol ~ r 1Iln1 . cert111Ca1e. MORI" 1 •ch t I Besides a wide .....-1 provide lnlornuillon ao lbe . Al Ille. llllle llmt, the llll1ll haft 1 OCA rotln( or of educational p 1mPb1 e ts !toe bolllng -available Mid(lt 0... Rattaa Fleet devoted lo aafo boaUng Jl'IC-throogll USPS ol the CGA. will Sill In the Oil lllmls tices, -provided by various race, marking the atart of the organizations which promote The Boating Safety Center• Little W!i.tneJ SefiiH for, uiJ.. safe boating, the U.S. Weather located at ihe Coast Guard ing yachta of 30 feet and Buread will provide on-the· Base on Terminal Island, will under. Cheaper Fuel Bill Proposed spot marine weather informa-be open ewry Saturday and Cl.ul A octlll.Tlcing yachts Uoo. Slllldly and Oii major holidays will recelvo the flnt !lllrUng SACRAMENTO (AP) -A While visiting the Safety • from 10 a.m. to 4 _p.ni. signal at 11 Lnl with cius B, hill to mate natural gas a Center for the latest in-The Cout Guinl Base is C and D ltartlq at five die.aper fuel for automobllu formation on sare tioatlng. located on the aouth side of minute intervals thereafter, bu cleared ooe Auembty boat owners may have their the main channel of Los The course will take the fieet cmunlttie and lt1Q hu one to craft inspected to"insure that Angeles Harbor. U you are around Catalina Island, leav· go. It has the proper safety equip-traveling by automobile' and tng the bland to port, and . Spo!llOl'ed by Allemblymon ment aod that the boat meets traJlering your boal, take the fin11h bd 4t Log Angeles Peter• F. Scbabaram (ft. all federal and state boating nearest freeway or, city street Harbor, a dbtance Of II miles. Covin•l. the ineuurt )would . regulalioos. to Tenninal Itland, to west on The MORF will sail a ~ tu natural gas at 3 cents for The Safety Center ls Seuide Ave. (the maJn street mile CDW'll from the starting the amoUt .aqufvllelit to fft operated by the Coast Guard, on Tenninal Island) which will line Ju.Ying the Pt. Fermin pllon of lllOllne, The Coast Guard Auxiliary, U .s. lead you to the main gate of Buoy to port, Esther Oil Ialand gasoline tax is seven cent.I a ~ . I See by Tooay's 1 Want Ads ' • llAN))SOME? Loc1ies ntr J1nc with 29. tn plattllum IDr -ri!IOI • Kiekhaef er to F-Qrni PowerSquadronsand theSea_~the~Coul~~Go~ord~~B~ue~-~~_..:1~0~po1~n:,~the~center~~~aecll~~on~of~~g~alloo.~:._·~~~~~~..'l:===============;:========""""==""""" .. li!I! Scouts. It is free to the public. No citations wilfbe issued for • vio lation or the rederal or Business Venture state boatin& regulations. 1'Last year the pub 11 c response to the Coast Guard's plea for sa[e boaUng WU Vfry E. c. "Uncle Carl" Kiekhae. now has a ~'ell-equipped new · " ·d L Cmdr encouraging, sat t. . fer, foonder ol the Kiekbaefer plant that is getting under way Peter F . Sterbling, chief of the Corp, manufacturer of Mer-with new projeets -~ome oo llUi -Coast Guard Dl:strict qiry ~lboards, bas resi~ -power Plants and some on Boating Safety Branch. as chairman founder of Kiek-engineering s e r v i c e s -"Because oC the courtesy h.aefer Mercury ~nd lnaugura--jncluding precision wood and motorboat euminatiom coo. led a new b.usiness venture metal pattern and mold mak-dil cted by the Coast Guard known as K1ekhnefer Aer()o · g Auxiliary we were able to ma~ne "Molors. Inc. . m"\ve have 8 weU-eqUipped reach over 12,000 6oat owners K1ekhaefer. aft~r spending mechanic!I lab with modern on nearly 3,000 individual craft 31 years as president or the dynamometets 50 we are able during the summer of last co~pany he r~nded In 1939 to provide consulting and yea r," Cmdr. Sterbllng said. r.a.1d he be felt 1t prefer~ble to development services on elec-He pointed out that although completely s~parate himself tro-mecbanical devices,'' he discre-pencies were found . on from Brunsw1nck Corp., the added over 2,000 o( the bolls e:i· finn that bought him out a ---·------------------! number of years ago. In his oew line of endeavor he will be accompanied by his .son. Frederick, a mechanical engineer now engaged in graduate work at t be University of W~in. Kiek.haefer co.mmented that "there are many interesting opporturuLies in new fields as we n as ntW products in old fie lds for tomorrow's world.'' ··0ur new venture will have the name o{ Ki e kbae fer Aeromarine Motors, Inc., a Wisconsin corporation founded by me in 1964," Kiekhaefer said. ''Wh t ie Klek haer e r Aeromarine was started as a real estate holding company, and owns some 700 acres of Jand as well as other assets, it Winds Make Races Wild Strong winds off Adelaide , Australia. arc providing some wild saiJin~ in the world championship for the Flying Dutchman dinghy class. The1 battle for the world crown appears to be between two British sailors John Truittl and Rod ney Pattison. The latter was the gold medal winner in the class In the 1968 sailing Olympics. others Jn contcntioii are JeH Smale, New Zealand; Herm an l..eible, France and Craig Witworlh. Austral ia. The two American en tries. Chris Chatain or Michigan, aDd Lt. Scott Allan of Newport Blach are listed among the lir;sl 10. ~~eon Indian Inspired Brushed Leather Squaw Boots 57 R.,,. N.99 YM'tenever had it·so snft ••• or so~ .... ("a:mptlS; munlJY or iadooo:. 1'beso are a jof to \.\'ear, in lem.11cr sup1>io ns a :;upling ••• sli'tcbed to leatbct soles, Jo<lian. fashion. On top, oar twil)..ringed boot with lrioged collar ••• below, our high-rise slipoa. Both in bay .. ride brown. or natufil color. Sizes S to 10. Ali'Wl,..I•"' M..r .,.,.. • SHOP IYIRY IYININfor --T ...... ""9 Pn., Ullfll t :JO pnt S-. t• t ,_-M ........ I p• ti. trlmt et 5n Diet-Pwy. COSTA MISA 5outh roast ?tua enn----1--- AJJNIMJ FIRST ~ ... Exercisers and massagers ••• all sale priced thru Saturday! " • ' A. SAYI $10 Oii Gal .. iA6 2 A.Ii• .................. ... ..... .. J1l 5 ....... ... --no. st • ., NOW 34. 99 L SAYE $10 ... aWAT -c:taa fto.M.............. • ....... seat,hea'lrcluty .... CDillll ~._ pl·--· UO. $f,., NOW 49 o 99 C. SAYI $10 ON --•r -- D. ...... ""' ,, ........ -mllll\. qolol-....... loollot ,.. ... _ .. • .• l4HP,al11011--.2....., ,, J;a. IA6'.ttllDW 5 9.99 SAW $10 ON OUl-lllTar --Puaifflil 14 .. , 4ill llill caMfNdlftt It' -""· ..... 111. --·II\ --... "·"-79.9 9 I ' ' ,.. !'.~ .;, "I •• '· • NOW! THESE V~ES AT Af<f OH£ THESE PENNEY RES! CANOGA PARK LAKEWOOD DOWNEY FULLERTON Hl,INTINGTO,N Bi;ACH MONTCLAIR NEWPORT BEACH VENTURA SHOP SUNDAY, TOO 12 to 5 P.M.I \ .• bl. . ' .. * .. ~'~ r f • • ~~ . ~ • • I.:. :~ . t; -.. ,. ' " • • • • Wrdntsday, Ftbraury 25, 1970 DAILY PIL-OT Ji • ' . rants to ;Open Chain'~ Biggest Store ' < ~ • ... Shopper Stop One way to 1nake shopping at ne\v Grants a ''picnic" instead of an oi'deal is to include a quick snack or a "" complete meal at Bradford Hous~ the "built·i11:' restaurant at 01e new slore. Also mc luded in the planning of Bradford House for convenience of shop-. , pers is the restaurant's complete line .of "Carry Pac" lOOds, hot and cold foods packed Jn btlc~ets.· 'rake-out food s even can be-ordered in oovance by telephone to save waiting time When they're picked up . • l . . ' : It Al/1.Star.tetl 64 Years Ago· Sixty-rour years ago \V.T. that include fashions for every Grant invested a t11ousand member of the family, home dollars and opened his first cnterlainment and home-in1- store in Lynri, Mass. provement: ga rden and pet His keen insight into human supplies, and tire and auto ac- nature and his natu ral flair for L'CSSories and service. retailing resulted in the Most Grant stores also have present chain of o\·er 1.000 a fine restaurant thal. lhe stores that bear his name and whole family will enjoy. serve the .country from coasl The nation's newest Grant s, to coast. opening ·T h u r s d a y at Allhough' 11 ·began~ mOOe!lly · 'BrOokhllrst' and Adams in · with merchandise • 9filing for Huntington· Beach bears 1U.Ve. 25 cents, Grants h a !I resemblance to the modest mushroomed Wll~ today it orl~al store. ft offers 2!h stocks oa 'vasL rante of iteibs mi.le! or Counterspacp•.~Jlh. ... . . . . ' , CAMERA CORNER -l-lcre's \11hcrc new Grants store tries to keey up wilh the _pho~o '_'expl06ion," Everyone, inclutli9g youngsters, 1s clicking ·shutters I". l . f • • • 9Al!GAINS -Money.saving "buys" come In all sizes at Grants. l~ere in the cosmetic dcpartinenl , I m•e rch·andi se carefully selected from experienced. reliable manufacturers, and quality that is r i g i d I y supervised and controlled by Grants Quality C o n t r o I Department. Basically, there has been no 'Change from Mr. Grant's con- cepts of the highest quality and greatest value al the io:west possible prices. Many of the retailing praticeS which he originated during the six decades of his career have become standard for well operated retall stores. W.T. Grant over the years has received many honors in recognition of his phUan· thropic interest in youth and his widespread participation iD many diverse-f.illds. He is an a c comptished photographer and an amateur-painter of no mean ability. AU,bou&biretired today, he conliJ!Uf!I. t<t l.Npirt the executiYea: whom-h e selected and tl'llbed to carry, on the tradidads Of tM aerv1ce and value diblisbed hick' In. 1906. \Vith considerab-Je skill these d.8ys1and here.is where you'll find everything from new cameras to Jadg·ets, lilm and fl ashbulbs to keep \he hobby hopping. a giant bargain may be as small as a lipstick ... or as large as a H!amlly size" box of tissues. When the W. T. Gran! Com- pany o p e n s Its Hunllngton Beach store Thunday, at 11811 Adams Ave. (Brookhurst and Adams}, it w1Jl offer t in miles o( the newest fashions and furnishings. Facilities will ln- OPERATIONS -Part of t h e management team at new Hunting- ton Beach Grants is Ed- ward L. Robb Jr.,.per- sonnel and operations manager. He joined W. T. Grants Compan four years ago, starting on the East Coast. He's a native Qf New JerseyJ resides in Tustin w/th _his wife, ?wfary Ann~ elude a cllarmlng Bradlonl House restaurant to feed bUflll')I ahoj,pers. and 1r .. parking 10< IOO cars. General Manager R. W, Ive staled : HARO LINES -Rich· ard S. (Steve) Alexand- er is merchandise man- ager in charge of hard Jines for new Grants store in Huntington Beach's Grant Plaza ShQPping Center. Mar- ried and the father of three children, Steve lives in Huntington ~Beach. He formerly managed the Grants store in Torrance. r ''We will employ a~ proximateely 200 peraons in our salts force and the behind lhe scenes-staff." In addition. Ives will have the able assistance ot tttree executives who mike up his SOFT LINES -Mer- chandi se manager for soft lines is Frank Darl- ing, a veteran Grants e1nploye who joined the company in 1959. He has served Grants cus- tomers in Ontario, Downey, Santa Fe Springs and Santa Ana. He 'managed the Buena .Park store for a year and a half and the Tor- rance store for a year. management team. ~ are Mr. Franlc DarU.,. -.. dlse M.anager . • Solt 'LlneJ, Steve Aleunder, Merchf.ndite Manager . Hard Lines, and Ed Robb, Personnel and Opet .. lions. Manager. GENERAL MANAGER Robert W. Ives Ives Comes 'Home' for HB Post Arter a year and a Jialf or absence from the Oranae Coast area, while ~{M:ninl ·• . very successful new st.ore In the Victorville, Apple Valley area, Robert · W. Ives is returning to his fonne r home on King's Place, in Newport Beach. · Ht> has been appalnti;d manager of the new W.T. Grant store at dll Adams Ave., Huntington, Beach. He tw been with the Grant Company 34 years in various capacities including Dl~trict Manager, Direc tor of, Person- nel in New York, Central Regional Manager, and Vice President; but he and Mn. Ives love tbe Orange Coast •rea and are very happy toi be ba<;k, he said. ·He is a graduate of Ohio State University and Harvard Advanced Ma nasement School. He spent l'fo and a half years in the service. He is a member of the Apple Vajley Country Club aD{f his hobbies are bowling, fllh!Ag and golling. Mr. ·and Mrs. lves are members of the St • Andrews Presbyt~rlan Ourth . He has been active in the Chamber of commerce; Com- munity Fund and various service ctub5. . ' WHEEL DEALS -Bicycles, fire engines,' pedal cars; doaster wagons and tri- cycles are just a few of the offerings for tbe"r 11big· wheels" in your family to be found in toy department of Grants store opening Thursday 1n Grant Plaza (Adams and Brookhurst), Huntington Beach. He has a son, Caty, and a daughter, Cheryl, b o·t h graduates of Orance" Coast College, and a 11,i.year~fd grandson, Curtis, all living·in San Francisco. SHOES OF A(L HUES -Sl\.oes in every sba~. size, color and sty\e for every member of the Cam1Jy is what you'll find al the new Grants store. The nationwide st.ring of Grants stores has a team o( shoe buyers slalloned in New· York City to keep a lookout fo; bargain& In e~e~lnj from house, slip-, pers to rugged outdoor boots. This mulU·buOd view of sneakers is only part of shoe department In now Huntil}gton Beach Grants sto,re. 1 • -, ,1 " • ... • . ' . • ' I " -~ ... ' { ... ..... .. .•. • • . .. ·1 . ... • . • • t· .. .. ". •• .. t· . ., ,/ . < • '}. . , \ .. •• .. ·. \ I ' >,, • ). '• I " • I\ -· ., ! • • • ! I :''! -= ... '"II: --~ !'& oi w vi ·~ ~ ·m "£ ~.; ,,:i IJ. ol -Dtll · ,_ •m -·~ " Frl1 .... ..... ""' "" ... , ... klg '"Iii s:ii ... :! ""' ""' ~· ·= :-.& .... " i i:! '.I! l:l •11 "" ·~ Si - - "''1111 ,..,., U. Sur C111ffl Witldl, , ...... ... ' ~~ ...... JI .... A ,,,,.,I ·-Oflet; j rubs, I ·-.. ~, chhdri toN•llt ClllP9fl ""' . 1111- Slf'ltllt Cl,ffc I ••di. •IYtll I ,,,, ~ v .. ' ·-.-. ·-cllllcl!"I' ;o "'" ... -n ""'" s111s :':\':! .. ~, ., .... ts -'. :rJ 'C,. ,. • 111 ' " .. • ' '. •• • -.. ' Jf IWLY I'll.OT .-8oviets Luring Stenos -*XIW (AP> -'lbe lypbl--11-Will a slott, matronly -.lary WM rpendo boon DO tho phone, marls 11 vblton ond Im~ even ..,00.IDOl!ing, a Soviet ne\Vlpaper ·aaya. Jn a country where the ' buriu:raey flpta mm1pJ.ains ol -ond -DlfJC< ~-~am&, brlcht ,...,, --Giit .ol ~ 'IClll!>l, .. lia ... -.... .. .a:llaritl. 11111, lbe' ---~ Wn.di.Y, more .... -ol -... lbe Jow PQ and c1emun1nc status .,_ Ileoporalely lryio( lo lur< -..... oecrelary'• Ille. 5rrilt buruucnta are DOW ~ "or Ii coMlt1ons ...,...iilered fa bu 1 ou I by Rmtl•n ltmlardl. 'lbe paper, Komsomolslcaya Pravda, ..... of the Com· 1111111111 Youth League, uld ooe llJljlloJer -)it'd pay a IWtlu( ulary of ao 1o llO -I .-ii, 'lbat'a about twke lbe .,.,.... -.iarrs PIY. 'lbe ruble is ollldally ·-at $1,11, Analher bola prumised I full month'• vacatbi, lnsttad or the uaual two Weeb. And I tblrd offmd the pules! frtnee beoef1t any Ruastan could hope to rective: "after 1 ~ to 2 yean:, we will seod )'OU 01 an aalgnment..bntad;! • . The Communist youth paper u1d the lhortage of good Y<llllg eecretari.es has reached ci1Ucal proportloo> • It said M-1 stale-run eecretarial 1 c h o o 11 are lralninf 2,IOO girl.I, but the need u for U,000. 8oosel nted girls; the paper continued, who can handle not oely typina and sbortband but •lao 1ape r«orde111, teletypes ••and ••• vistton." "Yes, yes," Jt added , .. knowledge of etiquette it: no les1 needed ••• " It nierred to Iow ofiice morale resulting from the UJU.11 aecret.ary's lack of charm and heJp!ulness. Sooie!boaestearthelrbair," if they have any, over the 1tow-wittedntss of m a n y sr8dmtM of 1ecrelJria I scboola. One girl tat!ng • di<> talion tell misspelled to of the JIO -. the paper repor1ed, Tbo ,bricbler alrll whD """' pWe iocNlarlaf -¢ten -lo ...... Ill home. ... !his oe1y,-the,allortaP atthe-By doln( private typing wart at home, they CllD male up to 180 rubles a month - almoat triple the wages ol of. flce.....wles. Marina High Senior Gets Top Position Senior Jim Broomfield has been voled Marina Ht 1 h School'1 new student body prelldent during election.< held far spring temesttr officers . Joining him as vice prtSl- cknt II Bob Houseal, with Lin- da Werner, secretary; Rachel Schaffer, treasurtr; and Greg Narog, California Association el Student Councils represen· ta.live. New 1tudent body com- mlaionen are Rick Saeman, athletics; Mary Grou, fine artl; Barb Cravens. organiu- -; Robin Spicer, pep, and 1Cftb1 Feehan, public rela--· Tbale: elected to posiUom of dm pmldent are Rick Mork, .....,., John Maltby, juniors; Trllh Walen, sopbarnorU ; ml Unnle H..pa, frelh- Dol>bl -ml lllU V-wm el<cted to the )llllllom of Glrla and Boys 1-pnsldenL City of Hope Honor Given .f'tauda A. Costdlo, 110 '.Aldobonn Circle, Newport ._.. .... __ by llit -Club. a Jeadlng 8UI· 11117 ol b City of HOf>t, with t111•1N-ol1Fnl>cls ~ OWello Re1earcb ::r..~~~:.d Cart no ll cblinnan " the -ol Cllanco Medical and n tudalndustrlao1s.... la -· which ..... and ,, -11 lmplla!J in Ill • -ol llll -Ud -F~IR F•tt, f .. ,, ftch1I. Tli••• ..,,.. ..... ·-., f11t.r. 111 _,_.., ... " A. D~ILY rlLOT Mltwl.. .,... •""Y 4tY. 4 • • • ' Wt®tsdor, Feblu>ry 25, 1970 • .,. _______ ·-------------- GRJtNT PL'UA e BROOKHUIST ~ND :ADAMS e HUNnN$TOtr·IEAC'fi ,. • l"SIVE $5..95 ' .. .l.. .. • "' SPORT COATS-• • SLICKS .: ~· PRICE m~ ' ·-r•1s1t'2 ' Mu i ls4'1ft:.'99 HA•la11 -1pioclb).Zip-in nrmaayticliner.Sco~• -led to npel -.Kon- t ...... -Hd ... n .... needs ironing. Made of Ilat:tu\" poly- ..i.rl-Coloro.·:U,io 46, ----- .. DEEP COLORS! DRESS SHIRTS Allor Sale $3.99 Permanent Pru.s ••• Bta,ya friah and neat, never Deeds ironing. 65% Dacron• polyester/35% combed cotton broad· cloth. Assorted colo11, Sizes 14to17. STO RE HOURS: Mon. Thru S.I .. 9:30 To 9:30 -Sun. 10 To 6 .. • ' . ' .. SAVl'I MEN! . ' sun ... -l • ' '. , After Sele, ••s 1 If ' ' . ~' ' . : 1-"t: ·i'• ., . .. J' .... '.) ,, " • • • ' •• ·. • r . M A man needs to feel that biaj'' ,,~, s,uit is a part of him. Thia fine '~ auitof553Daeron•po!yeoter~I , .,.; 45%worstedfils~bibl . ir. .. U if it~ tailored~ '·• ',.; .I for rum; It's a 2 button, oiniJe• . "'I' breasted model with alightly l · ~•~ wider lapels for up-to-date '!tYl-1 ,~ ~ ing, pltts a high cent.er vent in. , • ~ tho back. as to 46. s.e ih•••f, .,.,.. NOW SAVE SIMILAR SAYllGS ,, ... .r • ........ • UP TO $16 ON THIS 'SAU.! ON TII ENTiRE sTOCK . ,. It OF GRAITS , , SUITS AND SPORTr.QAJS ·~t . ) ... -·"' •:;A ~,,~ ,.,. ' ··~ a FASHION COLLAR • SPORT SHIRTS Sale s334 Afler Sa!e µ96 Perm•n•nt Pr•1.1 k.n it shlrt. Made of 50 % Da· cron• polyester/50% cot- ton. Crest on pocket. S-XI. • • l DO YOU HAVE A GRANTS CIEDIT ACCOUNT? l/t9 il-·-d. ~14~ 1!. " •• GUNT PLAZA ··• lilOOKHURST · & ADAMS • HUNTINGTON BEACH · · • I j l ~: :~ • .t •) l • ' •• ri :;& ~ ' .I If" .u ' ca ~ ... I ,fl ' "~ ,,, ... "" 11• ·'~ ••• ··~ . ~ :t1 f.A ~ "' r.: ,1,~ "' ··~· "" "'' ,.,:, /'.!> I ·~ "!'' "" •A . ,, l "l ... . .,) . lt:J .. o\I .lo1 t4t >Id "" ... 1f. ' lll•rt1•7' Ever s,et this char~ let? 'H•'a the No .. 1 · Allen ~ accordlnc tio • iroUP of quaai·sc!• Usts headquartered Jn . Oklahotn& City. The cbmpjloil~ dnWing was con!IMlcted from d!J. tails of some Of th• 300 aJiln tJFo laMin(S ~ to the Intern•· ti~ uFo Bureau. . TOUJ' Ttade To Arctic ~a:rms ~p NEW YOAA' (AP) -Stllini thtouih IOO miles ol·tough st• · to · trt lb_,• <i""lln~t o1 lctbirfJ MCI pen~ JS not ~bodf" ldoo ol 1M 14'11 ~; iout.Mni v tcatle'n cnilst. But about 200 "vacationlNi'• th~ w!ntel' salltd abo11rd th6 M.t s. Undbla4 t:s:plotet, I 11p Pbsen1er shJp built for vt1qa throuiti thick id, te jOM UM ranb cf thi Uplorer1 er..tt.e Altardlc, tlw! huie ice W land mw surroundina the lllJth Pelt. the tour,, the tint of thtlr IOIHI Iii tM l•tt<Jy lllletptorOd ceotldm~ .,. Obit.It!! by Liftdliti4 1'r11ve1 lien, wlllch llftdtliaa "I• -·I tourist ezPtditloN." J,J,ndb!Ad C1abna less than l ,lloO' 111'11 ind. only a hanaiul er wtmtn i,.tvt set foot on the fl'edn Clon'Urftld which is dparit6d from the n.Vest ltnf ~y IOO inlier iii sea. A nu.hirt i>f n1Uonalities ~,vs , iii•~ up tM ex. ~iN, which btfan hi 1186, ftjf ltoistlle Howlnt, a staff tnembii!t. A f~W families hive made t!le trip, but mmi or the Anwetic toutitts ore m!dalO-i,.. ·tM rltlred persons who have the time ind funds for U. trtp, She explained. All ol the Ant.retie ... p<111u,,., Mfift In s o u th Atntrlca. Th! ,.,.i;, cx- Pedttl.Ms, aJmost i ntenth 1«t1.r~ ·vtslt th6 F a I k I a n d Jslands, se:\'dral other J!lands, and the AnW<Uc and cost Mt""h es,!lio and 13,6(!0. The shorter trip, ab6ut 11 days 10n&, exludes ij\e Falkland tslan14s and i:evfral Antarcuc '1ops and costs btt11'e<n lt,lllO and p,tot. Vac1Uentr1 pay fM1r own way to and from Sou~ Am<J1CL om.ed tn lo6k•tJike Tl<! pak'kas, '° they cm ~ easily .,,otUd, tho\ ~•-•a ltl o n mttnbets hike acro·!l the A.~c . peninsula i n d n\JAflit •-. tho\ pentutns . 00.. tlltJ Ylilt tho\ rdentlfic staU°"' .~ ~ Ullittd Stitis, Gft11 lrtta!n, and W Soviet Untori . "Some tourlsts JO . because tll<y've ..... everywhere ei .. -Just to "Y tho\y've l>Oen t}lett," NJd GMt1e ltollOit, a ph<>tol!1pH1t, frllo .. t his honeymooft en a tour. "It'• wonaeiful to wait throv1h t·he p6n1u_tn roOktrle!, 0 said Holton. "1be ~Int Iott up lt yeu in a sttanle •'>' but !My'tt tame bbaM ,.,..,. hu n e v e r ~tltim." '"!111! ict6erp !rt a..e.io-sp1r1n,.~· 111a M!sa Howard . ''It's SO ptictful doWll the~." "'TMN'1 ·ftO ltrfttl, no laws~ no l!'Jlce, 11<1 muwni. .... )'OV dO\i:t ftttd ..... y," Holton elaborated. •"Jt11 the ftllt best thl!f to Pini to !hf __ .. ~· II,'• a "'" .. tt lras -ind trM." 1tt ·eontuued. ltarn'I nlt,.t,f!t up -n • . :;. •IWilly t.;, Is YM Kind• 6uy , ' SHOP MONDAY thru SA TU RDA Y 9:30 am to 9:30 pm SUNDAY amto6pm Fashl• fHtnotes! Sale . $3 9~,..,, "·" L'llllie .... ; tntOOth roUed top he for bcuer fit; soft foam linina. lltack ,,.uem or :unooth leat her. 9.•hile or blue. 5 to JO_ • ' 'I' ' . . . ' . . Ml ... fast.lo•, ·lo., prlnl· DIESS 'FLATS Sale $3 1 ·~. DRESS -SHOES FOR LITTLE nKES Sale Little 1 lrlt' lov• th.e: $ 3 T-alnp. Palenlite• up-16 ptr1; c:ompofition. tole, heel. Navy, white, red, • bltck; aiua8¥.. le 4. .... .. ""'" I DAU.Y l fLOT 15 . . Hurry ill for top vales I MEI'S DRESS SHOES "J 'hi ar•at .Edwardian look is now in lhe tnon~ map with wini tip styli111 and ~vc "''•"The style or !Oday in utiqbt ~s browti; 6!1.:-J ::. After s.r., $9.f 9 ....... ....,..., l•t.btr •J>- fltl lopo t loat-.illJ _,..;. tloa .. le, rubbtr heal. Hidden ION for llluf fi~ 110 YOU HAVE A I RAlltS CRlDltic:COUtrf? UH It cNtt.tw1•t GRANT PLAZA • IROOKHU.RIT & ADAMS • HUNTINGTON llACH ' . ,, ' - • '• •• '· ' . ' ... .. 1 ' ~' I .d ' ' ' . , I ,, •• " j .. · .. I • I . . , • • • t ' ' • ' I • • • • • • : i { I j • J ~· -. . \. . ·-· .. . . If DAll.Y"PllOT Wedntld'1. 'lbMrf IS, 1970 tihe·rals Wince When Robert Fi11:ch Stu~s .His .To • WASHINGTON (AP) men! !hat would lepllu pt«edent-shatlerinc delay in And be lost bis batllo with "~e've hardly had a chance ~ _.rar d °"' --llAI In 1111 Wike ~ Tllo ildt ·~ When Welfare Sec rt tar y l.retdom of cbolce deM&rea.. Mlai&alppi 1dfsecrepUoo. White HOOK Po 11 t l"C a I on dvtJ r~ts," said a hi&h-Ult CllllllJ. 'ht .. ¢1ra of. Panetta'• Mier: .. , don't npreMilt . limply Jolt : · Robert II. Fincb stubo hit "" tloo and outlaw _.,. -an 'II< filled 'lo c.'Oll•b"" the mlqllu lo rell1n P-l1ld!nr · HEif ol f I c I a I * ''"'* Jl'.O 1111111...,.11 tblok 11111 -• 1ooo of _ .. at the Wbllo llouae, the lilltral ldmlniltralllll oppoollloa that Pmldeot lo take • ladlnc who hll brullled •I b • portlcWarly or.. \o rtnch, tf, Wlllle 8-~ o.peos pno11p. 11 1111\11 bo ._ In Bui .._.. tho··-"'1f' wing ol tbe NIJoo go,.mment bu lince le-. role after the Supttme Court's aenaibWU.. of COlllOl')lltive :'howm!r -we ,,.,. In !Ill party m opUt 111 ......, GI lbe cornpedms lllnlna .,_ . ....,. moro thq,"11o •ullen apoplexy, 1 It fell lo Jl'lndl, on White deaelrePlloo "II ooce" order Nol1hem Republlcw a• d · ~ or law. . 11111," bo Wil, evident In Ibo co'"!llJ, In Ibo -illllJT 1llo *"• ,o .... A FlllCb oelback -such u,_H ____ orde_r1,...;..._1o_nq1..;.110o1 __ • __ 1ut_N_,,,..,.ember __ • ___ · __ ·_Southemln_~-'-·-··--·. ____ 1'1!\lb_,.._•l_tle""'. ___ .. -'!tlon __ 1s __ Ao~·-·"-•-r_dooo.....;.,.alde_oll_erod_;_.:;.a.....;Coqnu=c:..:::.;ml.;_.:;._wlllilD=:...:.lbe_,.a_d-_.W-"":;....a"''"-'~-·---'-";'".""'-' the foreed ~tioa thlgl -I , f week of 1-E. p..,11o, the v11oro111 dvll rlgbu dU<I 1n tile Department of Health, Education and Welfare -in· variably sends shock tremor! through the thinning ranb ol administration liberals. However much he spurns the r o I e, the 4' .. year • old Callfomian. and r e p a t e d p....tdential c:oall~ ls lbe epirttull leader ol Republlcan llberlla In Wublngton -most of them percbed In New Y orl< and called, 1 o m e w h a t derisively, "Finch'• Crowd." They all r .. l thralened. "I wonder who'• nest," Wor- ried one YOWll government policymaker fretb from Proil- de~ Ni.Ion's New York law firm. uFirst John. Sears was eased out. Then Len Gannenl wu consigned to obscurity, and now Leoo. None of us is aafe." Sears, a liberal, was replac- ed, this year as chief White House political operative by Harcy C. Dent, a conservative Southerner and fonner aide to Sen. Strom Thurmond, R.S.C. Leonard Gannenl, another liberal and former Nixon l1w partner, while still at the White House, is little heard from. One of Finch's most trusted aides nodded koowingly when asked about lhe morale effect of-Panetta's \Vhitt Hou. ordered ouster. "People are diving far shelter,'' h e murmured. Jn an obvious show or solidarity, HEW topslderl of- fered Panetta, a younc, •&- gressive California liberal, a standing ovation .Jll the con- Clusion of his emotional news conference on bis resignation. No Cabinet officer is im- mune from pre 1 id en t I a I rebuff. But Finch's encounters are read extra carefully fot signs or a rightward or leftward lean within the ad- ministration. Jn fact, with the major ex. cept iOll of civil rights and the minor exception of the aborted appointment or Dr. John Knowles, Finch has had con- siderable .success in gaining White House support for his initiatives. Fioch pleased c on s dmt r protection advocates w l t b rapid action -later softened -against suspect cyclamate sweeteners. He woo support frtxn en- virorunentalists by movinJ: against DDT. other pestiddes, and exhaust from jet airllnen. He wooed civil libertarians and intellectuals with a r e s t r ained administration position on student unrest and a revisioo of HE\V security clearance procedures that had led lo informal blacklists or politically suspect scientists . He prompted the f i r s t presidential m e s s a g e in history on population control. But in all those areas, HEW Insiders oote, Finch did not have to buck politic.ally powerful, organized opposition elements within the White House, the Congress, the Republican party or the coun- try itself. With welfare r e f o rm , however, Finct. oot only met but overcame this kind of op- position. However eager for some ac· tion on welfare, it was little expected t h e middle-class Republican party would buy Finch's family assistance plan calling for giant increases in federal welfare spending, a form of guaranteed annual ln· come and a doublin& of eligj· hie recip ients. Now, the plan appears head- ed for congressional J>dSl&e, despite a rocky start. But Floch 111 u•n d •red mightily 00 the rock ol achool desegregatioft. The a~mtnt s lration's weakened school guideli~ ~aring the imprint of Atty. Gen. John N. Mitchell, were put forth in July over Finch'• strenuou! objections. It took Finch months to persuade the Presldent to op- pose a congressional amend- WANTED IOYS I.ND •llLS AMS J TO lf ................. Oii """"' ~M TV __ ... ·"81ff •IT.._ ..... AUDITIONS WILL II HILD THIS WBK llOIAIWI~ I .,.,. ..,. .. c-. ...,.._ . eo11547-6251Now1 ---· c .... ., TAU I PROIMICTIONS HOUYWOOD, CAI.If. I \ • •• • .. • ·--~...,..--.- er 1 • 1a • ~ ---Natioli's:LO."gist Federal ' -- guaranteed annual rat• guaranteed annual rate 90-DAY CERTIFICATE 'ACCOUNTS NO MINIMUM IAIAHCl lTOlOYEAR CERTIFICATE ACCOUNTS $1.000 -llliuM \ \ S.92% ANNUAL YIBJ> 5.39% ANNUAL YIELD ifell..-.ingtand intef'Nt rt'ft'lafft a year, • •l if oll so•lngs •IHI htterett , ..... 1,..,..,. , . guaranteed annual rate . ' guaranteed annual rate ' 2T010YEAR CERTIFICATE ACCOUNTS $1.GC!O MINIMUM 6.18% ANNUAL YIBJ> . ' 1-YEAR CERTIFICATE ACCOUNTS Aclf"'tff Rat.1 For Shorter Term& $100,000 MINIMUM :11 .............. ,.-,..., .. ,_,, 7.79% ANNUAL YIELD , if all 1avin11 ancl intwrHt remain a year. ••• and our.5% Passbook Account. • ,,...,. .,."'*,... ·No minimum depasit. Daily compounding. Interest day-in to day-out. More than ever,, qp.lifQmia ]federal is the place for the moneY' you can't.afford to risk. Th\rnation's largest federal pays you higher interest! Choose our regular passbook account -or from four new accounts with four maximum rates of interest, compounded daily. Withdrawals before matUrity per- mitted but subject to some loss of interest. Whi cheve r account you choose, our $1.6 billion assets are behind your sav- ings. How safe it is. ... . California Federal Savings and Loan Assoc ialion •Assets over $1.6 Billion '· • • , _ ~'s~rgestfederal ~ .-··· , , ~ CO.W.IMI OflGM lhl'OIJohOut Lr. Ang11t1, orang~ t nd \'1nM• cOunl•it • Accou11111naur1d llJI lo $20.000 b~ 1~1 ~daraJ $1v11;g & l o11n lni>~l'il11Ge' CofpQ1<1.1JOh, a permanont .. gft!IO)' ol lh• uni~ lil&J.M f lh'llnment . . . I • ' • • " ' . • ' ' ! -• , • '(.;> .,_,,,, • -., .... ':',. .· . · . . , C:.r· ;.: • r: • . . . • ., :- . -. . .. -• ·' .r ' 1.;.. .. ' . . ,· ·. ' . '-·~ ,,,., ·-·" . . . .. ' . ' \.>' . • ' -l .. , .. ' .. -· ' " ::11 ' . ' • - ;: • • . • ,, !·• ... . .. .~ > ! --.. . ,. '" ' ., ' ...... 1111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111 .......... ~,,.. .... ~,..,•a.., .... a..,•a~ ...... ~~~-~-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~----• ' i •. ', .. . lt .. !)t b.ak. :,Now-· Or · T ·heit··Eelipse Wtdnt~ay, .Fe~r~,,, 25, 1q70 , DAILY PILOf , 11 Fevej.J. -RL~ea·r: t=~ .... ~ .. -~ .. ==· l, 'Now ••• 61yn ,_ •~ ~~N' '(Ul'lt' -~ ....... , ond' oat 'illo~·litt-Whetllu lhet are ·inside or damage Is '""'urrlng becaUJe ~e t the P:1\f1 :or, totlllty. ,the retuia, though sensitive to Not' ,ev~ with 5U:f1_.lasaes, light, ls insensitive to pain. llD9k'll·~. orexpooed film. -Tl)e clan)••• produces a 'If they ·do,' they· r Is k blank spot' In ,a pe"°n'• held 'permagen\ Hamage tcr their ·or vlSii>n -at the vital area 'ejii. ' '· -.... · used for reading and unne ~ luiex •• not block lnlrared rs.ys that can cause damaging eye burns. calllnc 'It a day and gotn1 lo roosi, he c11n see anlmals bed- ding down lo< what Uley NJ> pose iJ another niJbi. " FALSE I EE I H1 ltavl•. Ho can'°"" the sharp ' -•Walch the J""'I' of Ille More ~IWlll' ~·~ l~k ~~y ·~the •· ··· Ii . Wjlo' ill<! -know ~.,,. ~-~ ........ r,·1KJr11eumea nu ·~~p, ol~~-~.IM,~~ a The t Vt o or&anlzatlons, seeing." .~ the advice c;f both organiaa\ions whe'n the eclipse comes is: Doo1t look at IL. drop .Ii) tem)Jl?ratiiro aDd Ille . eci!J>!e' by uims· a ,pinhole ,... ...,..... • COITelPondi!li sharp. r i 11 e device . u;e_ t:U"~ ~ ... ~.fil ts later, He o,an "A proector .for u.se In Murlont•: f!l"l:i;._ ... oornton.lll~ l~,..!!I!-~ ... m 11n some lotitudes the • WatchJng the eclipse may be ~.J:'!Powde..i::.;:;.; . .:; sudden deposit or ~dew . . •. : !P.•de· ~Ith. two pleces OJ_ "f~lte :=,~-=:r~ -=-o..-:a=-:Zt chance Is partlclilarly com- mon when large numbtrs of naman ~lngs come down With "eclipse lever." throullh the NaUooal Science -Tbe damage ls permanent. Foundation. have pointed out To say it a1ain for empha!i!, the following facts: ii Is Incurable. But the eclipse is a rich and rare etent, and there are ways for the layman to observe It without damage. ,And when the sun comes out a few· ntiriiite9 later he can see them reversing lhe pro- cess just as thou&h the hr terval between· dusk and dawo had been lbe normal 12 hoars. But he. must ilo all lfili cardboard. f. pinhole or pencil t" .... -u.J to ~UL. .... withoqt peeking at lhe sun. hole in the top cardboard will .:!"r~ns::n'..:' =: Patents of curious children project and focus the lmage ol may wish to heed t h e lhe ecllpse on the second American Association o f cardboard. Size of the image Ophlhalmology, wh.ich says ; may be changed by alterln& Penny Pincher Adi Turn S.- lnto Dollors -0.mqe to the eyes from -No IUD&lasses, smoked , An eclipse of the sun by the moon is an awesome and falr- ly rare ~vent. People get car- ried away by it. eclipse-watching I n v o I v e 1 glass, ot photographic films burnin& the retina of the eye&.. are absolulely safe. Though -You can't tell when such they may ellmlnate the glare He can look about him and see motorists turning on their lights, he can see flowers folding up (H there are any In his latitude, he can see birds He can see the moon's shadow approaching from the holizon, ripples or alternate light •nd dark on the ground, the · creecent • shadows o r "You can •see' the eclipse distance between cardboards. Millions of Mexicans, U .~. cillzens, and Canadlana ccrne March 7 will have an osr portunity to observe tot.al or partial phases or a solar eclipse. This worries the American AssociaUoo of OJ)bthalmology and the National Society for Lhe Prevention of Blindneas. Scientists have safe waya ol looking at eclipses. Loymen do not They had better not try, Child Cos~. j . $19,360--j .. At Least '·. " WASHING TON CUP!) -"' 11 .. you have a child one year old, you'll probably spend at least $19,360 to $25,000 to raise him (or her) to the age cl. 18 -if prices don't go up any more. 'That estimate or child-rais. Ing COt!ils based on 1969 prices and a "low-cost but adequate" living standard waa presented today by an agriculture department-economist at ~ agency's annual outlook con· ference. \Veallh.ier families probably spend more -tJian the ·t96&-ba1- cd estimates., poorer families le~. ·economist Jean L. Pen- nock noted. Other ezperts said the families to which the estimates applied had after- tax incomes between $5,400 1 and $8,!00 in 1961 and would have somewhat higher earn- ings -though not as high as $10,000 -al present. + ~ 1'1iss Pennock said lthe highest costs in familie.s u~ng the "low-cost, but adequate" standard would fall in western rural nonfann areas, and the lowest costs among rural non- farm families in the nortb-cen- tral st.ates. Costs for fann and urban children in these and other areas would b e somewhere in between. The ggvemment economist said her studies showed that raising a child on a "low-coat" budget between 1951 and 1969 took an average of IS and 17 percent of after-tax family in- come. China Builds Jet Fighters ,1 HONG KONG <UPI) - Communist China will have ils #- own jet fighters In service by 1971, to er with ila fully- i n e r continental ballistic missile, an English tabloid said. The Star, quoting its own Ct\ina sources, said Ch8lnnan Mao Tse-tung boasted about lhe new plane at the working holiday of Peking's top reds In Hangchow,Che klan g Province, last month, when 1hey were discussing Sino- Soviet a n d Sln1>Amertcan relations in the 1970s. "Our sources say the jet is built in Changchun, in !\Ian " the Star said. Dean's List Honors Six Six Harbor areas studtnts have been named to the Dean's List at UC Santa Barbaraforou ts tan din I scholasUc achievement. Four Costa Mesa students \\'ere honored. Two of them, Honald Fernandei and Geoglna Krelblch, e a f n e d straight A average.s for the fall quarter. Also on the 11.st from Costa Mesa are Donald Randall and Teresa Thomas. Two Corona del M a r residents also made the ll!t. They are John JC>llMon and Hohert Williams. Low Voting Age Bill Proposed SACRAMENTO (UPI) - The voting age would be lowered to 19 In California under JegislaUon 01ed Wed- nesday by Asaernblyman.Joll{I V. Briggs (JI.Fullerton),' ·l The bill and coostitutlonal a'rnendmenl, coauthored by five other Republican law1nakers, also would ael the age of aduJthood at tt with respect to liability for COO· tracts and debts and pro- secullon for crimes. ,_.,. __ WllJ, · feQPI• ~ different.Ideas ol l<(hal a ilports~•hould be. Incorporating all of ll'lose .tdlU lnto one.oar Is equivalent to putting 111' ei!IPhant',J lrunk, a camel's bump and 1111pes on a· giraffe. You end · up With a c;eetute that doesn'I do anything well. ~ ••• fO!lr F)reblrcll. Areblrd"(1t. An economical model. · 'Flretilrd Esprii (2). A luxurious model. Flniblrd Fonnuia>IOO (3). The Fireblrd bullt'for drlYers.. Areblrd T""" kn C•J. OUr ultimate. FO.Jr •I 'thdlJ'<Merent Flnblrds for ' . . . . . ' .. ~·-~ '·' -... ' • • r-? -' .. --~ I . . ". . . better by not watching it. "Do not look at the surl .Instead do wh~! lhe ezperts do lhrough the pinhole.'' tt'I • • • ' The all-new Firebirds are here. drivers who agree on only one thing. A sports car. Comlortable 1ealing for four. Period. Three have always been a crowd. Especially In the back seat of a sports car. So the new Flr&birds have two ~ bucket-type seats In back. Plus two .bucket seats up front. Four very comfortable passengers, each In an individual seat And a mori comfortable ride. The rear seats gave us room to raise the drtve tunnel between them. Which glYes the suspension room tb 1ravel when )'OU hit a bump. Which, In the Areblrd • , I • I and Esprit, produces a ride thal many a Engines lei match, lull-size sedan v1oul d be pro ud or. If you read our descriptidn~ol the lour FormlJla 400 and Tfans Am don't Firebirds, the engine lineU p makes have It quite as soft. Enthusiasls llke a •· supreme sense. The basic Firebird has stiffer ride. Stiffer springs and shocks • a 250-cublc-4nch Six. Es~itra , provide It. J 3SO:cubi6-lnch, regular·gd'V;a. A ride f• nothing without quick 'Formula 400 has a 4QO·cubic-lnch V-8. handling. And Trans Am leatu~s a And we·dldn't compromise handli ng 4,00-cubic·lnc h Ram Air V-8. one bit. We made the Wide-Track v1ider. End\lra bumpers lha1 ab1orb bumps. Made fade-resistant front dlsc:brakes POntlac's Endura material ls probably slandard. And for improved· cornering, the best thing to happen to bumpers we installed big, thick stabilizer bars up since bumpers. It's a res111ent, rubber· front And added rear stabilizer bars like material that looks like painted to the Formula 400 and Trans Am. metal. It resists dings, dents and chips. ' " ~ .. I J I And it pasitive!y won't rusl. A tough bumper. Covering the entire front end of each firebird. TM decl1lv• wiClol'J of funcllon1lt.m over faddlsm. Instrument panels, for lnStance. Easy to raad. With easy-to-reach controls. We even designed the panels so that any light bulb~~ changed In BO seconds. By you. Without lying on the floor. But you'll undoubt~ly want.to find out for yourself. Please do. At a PonUac dealer's. Then )'ou'U know our "beginning of Jomonow" claim ls more than a boast. ""'71 : ·'~ ' .... ---,.. I I I I • I • ,J • • • ' ' I • ' I : • s i • I , l • ---..... ~ --·~-. . -' . . ". . 11 DAILY PILOT WtdM>llY, Ftbn"'1 25, 1970 A. HOFFMAN T. HAYDEN R. DAVIS Clean-<."llt Quartet Cook Coun ty Jail Supt. \Vinston Moore ordered hair- cuts for six of the Chicago seven now serving sen- tences for con tempt of court. Before pictures (top row ) gave way to new images (lower photos ) aft er t.he barber took his toll. Lee Weiner and John Froines were also scissored. David Dellinger, 54, is balding and th erefore exempted. · Sears I Sean Regular $1.98 Vitamin "C" Tablets Save 36%! ~.;o Tablets 27 • \ itamin C is found mrurath in citrus fruib · • •Each tablet conb01n 8lh times daily adu.h n:quirements of\1itamin .. C..., CHARGE IT On Sears Revolving Charge Regular 13.98! Save SOo/c.! Multiple Vitamins ;Jo.,) Tab lei> }97 •Dietary supplement esetllenl for adults and children &•er 6 yeen of age. Pure and r reih ! Saw 35%! Multiple Viramins Wilh Iron '"•" 1"2 97 $l,j 9 365 Tot.i... • Each lablct cOf'.IUIJn, I Vs ti me& mi11imnm daily requir-ement.s pl u&. all othtt vii. ntim )'OU need dilly. Regular $4.69! Save 36%! Vita Plenty Tablets LOU Tab lei. 297 • For anyone ovtr l! yc.irs old. Eac h li1blct contains l'h times the minimum daily reqW.re~ Sa•eSO%! Re,War SS. 98 ! 1' .. ormuJa ''G'" • H".p.po1eney vii•· miHnilte.nl formu· 11. Yoa tan•t buy • finer villmin. ......... HlRM UL.A G '"---·- Prices Effective lk1innln1Today Sears -"""-......... , .. _ . -.. ...... -·-. ...... -.... \ .. -... l f l. ft-" ... _ -....... " (-""" ·-· .._ OI f·-• IP ••*!I «-I -•• f•H H -"' .... ln -CltMt • ..,. -JM --.. ••IU I, .. 1•1K t _._ -.. _, fO-.,..... l -0 •to .. f .Wtl --.. t•llH •,o~","-=~=·"-=~.,... -· ....... ., --t 41lU OUO-• •••H it, •ll•t11 oollto " -....... ••""1' ,. 1 .. ou . - ................. ....__hko ...... t•il tA.M.Mf!M, .... ~11"-"91, ... ,, .... .._0 __ ._.,,_...,._ ..... , --l'l•tfll .. AJl .Pl•lwtlve IJI04l,'NOl'ICB -AMl:JfffO ctrr ... l'OUJfTAIN VAl.Ll'l' CllT-=~ °' re' .._. ..... HI 'UILtc Ollfltcl •SU ..... NOTIC::c-sll ll•9Y 01\flN ht Wit Tltl UHOlltMOttfO .. -atttfY ......... fltft .._ ......... tllet ..., -............... -11 ..... .... .. .....11 ........ """*"'" .... Consumer Aide Getting WASHINGTON (AP) -Tile note of desperaUon ls penis- tenl In the letters to Virginia Knauer, presidential assistant for consumer affairs. "I am appealing to you as a last resort," says a letter from Texas. ••I am writing to you hoping you will be able to help me with my problem," says a Massachusetts housewlfe. 111 have appealed to everyone to no avail." The pleas pour in to Mrs. Knauer's office at an in· creasing rate, A year ago she received 11000 a month. By December the volume had in- trJ;aaed to 2,000 a month. By lhe middle ol this month she had aJready receive'.d 3,000. Jn one siJ:.week period late in 1969, 333 of the 2.42Z letters Mrs. Knauer f'eceived dealt with automobiles; 275 with ap- pllance11, television and radios, and Ill with packaging and labeling. Another 413 were re~ quests fo r information , and 220 were classified as consumer education. · "We sUTI ge't the greatest number of complaints about automobiles, everything t.o do with automobiles, whether it's the repair of automobiles or the misunderstandings about warranties, high cost o f repairs, s ometimes the unavailability of parts," Mr1 Knauer says. '"1'1en the second category deals wilh household goods - both the white Md the bl Ow fl. That would be like the kitchen eq'uipment as well as the radios and televisio ns." The wife of . a, factory workert--lo~ example, has a color television set which cost $500. She's paid $400 for repairs over three years. The set still doesn't work. Film Studio Selling Off/ Movie Sets _. _. .............. -.,_. .. "I.,_ -' 11'11 ...... MllllklNI Ei.en.i tit Mt1 Wt1t Co11it """"=t.:::..•ort ...... • llfM ill !flt (lfto .. .._,,,"' \1'4llity M c. ..... ~ .. firm ...... ,.,,..,, .. , ..... " Nrll 1nl. 11 #.AlllNl••a Mn.I MAIUM 111f ~ fCHll MIMtlll ... \'Ml CIT'f COUNCIL ~~ -=:-........... .:::: aDWAID I , JutT,V::.:: TMlll r Letters et rtellMflce enl .......... ....-it· GEOltJI I, ICOlT, I~ c:::.:=.~=~ ... t ~'= mti."' ':!'c~=:r~ fllt O.M. .......... 1MCf1. c.....-.. "':::.. a. HOlLIMOIN. •MIMtr- IAAM'OAO H, MIU.I~ m.lclllw ti JOHN J MANGANO. 'Ii'" Wrli.t' A bualneaman hu hid no regpmse from a railroad he claims owes hlm a SIJ refund because hia train was halted by a fire near the trackl and he had to drive to hls destlna· tion. 11 LllW ...._...._.,. ..__..c.m.m1t. · au•'""' T KAI A. IEW'IHO, ,...._ .. 1J71 E'•t ':-"" AUSMAN. , .. Officer Ckffll F~ ... I,_, C1"""'*i.. D•te4;.:~:.: l'10 LOUii A. SlllACUSA. r.ldlM It ff07 City Clift 01 tM W111 tol•I HllhWer • .......,. l lldl. Ctty tf "°'"'"'" v11111. Ctllfoml1, Ctllferflll LAltllY HAVJNI, ,,11•1nt ti 1SOI flllllll111M °''"'' C-1 D1llr ,llot, l"-dlttl AWlllll', I.on• •••ell,,....,,...,., is 1flf·Mmrcll c. lt1D »1·1' Ctllt«nla. 0.1.VID J, P'Hllll"' nMldlftf .t ,,,,J------------- Mtrflold, eor-dtl ""'· """"'ll. LEGAL N011CE The letters, some of which are addressed to President Nixon and forwarded to Mrs. Knauer, art. funneled to a staff of eight persons who 1ort them. DON llAY ADIUNION. retldltlf 11 1511 IE•ll CkMfl F,.,..,. ... bol. CI UfOf'··l------:.o,Mclc•c,-----ll~AltT IJIOWN. f'Mkllnt tt '"' C••n,tCAT• Oil' IUSINhl W•vt<rast DrWt CorOf11 Oii Mer PKTITtoUI Iii.I.Ml C11110rfllt. • '~IH:".::'=~~T~tt.:; CHARLES H, TUll:Nl!lll, ttaldl111 II El Ttr .. Ctlltonllt "'"*" fftt fldl!leu' 1'°7 H"'" flltu, N--1 It t c II ' fll'fl't -OI S40ot.1E1ACIC VALLE~ ~·:r-~IMr a lM' YELLOW CAI lllCI ttlel Mid firm 11~ Complaints sugesUng • • ,.VO INVEnMENT co., =-~ 1:'M1..._,~=":, ~ ~ possible legal remedy are • c.111on1J1 CGl'JIW.iton 1611-.: forwarded to an agency like •r Dmt• w. lOfll MhW .I.IV'"• "'-z, "44 Airt 1 the Federal Trade Com· :~a:' M. Miiier ~~ Llfll. C:O.I• M • • •: ICM Q. l!Wtlnt Dllld ,.."'""" J, lf71. miss:lon. ~tters protesting an t.ou11 A. Sl•tOIM Artlll.lr ""111rr1 Flllrer ag.ney •~•-"•e· I l1...., Htveni Sltt9 fll Ctlllon!ll, °''""' c-,,., . 1,;uvu, UA a recen Dnld J. P111111,.. °" ,..,,_,., J. im. befOl'I ,,., 1 Agriculture De p a rt m e n t Don ••'>' Adkll!IOll No4trY Putonc 1n •NI ""' .. 1111 s11te. I' · __ _.._ 1__ ltrt Brown H~tl'f ..,..nd Attllul' """Irr• pane s rtCOmm1C.1NOtM:1 that C!wle$ H. T11r~r Florlr k"°""" to "" to bt It'll """" some 'chickena bearing slim• STATE 01' CALIFOll:N1A , """'"' MIM It tllfltcrlbH ,. lht wlttiln , .,.-COUNTY OF Oll:ANGE J SS. lnslrvment 11111 1cknoWlldffd M U9Cll!ld of cancer virus be marketed °" Denmblr :>0. ""· ~ m•. "'' ftl9 ..,,.,, ar ·-bulated , ll~lnlld. • Nat1ry P\11111( In •1111 few. <OFFICIAL SIALI e 1oe1 • • ukl ltatt, HflOll.•11~ •-•rrct Omlr W. ,..,.,,., K. H1mv The Chick. I ~. knoWfl 11:1 m1 11:1 bl !tit Prfl!dMI ol Not1ry Pub1lc<1IHwnl1 n COi) roversy Aw lnw1ll'Mrll Co .. 1 C1Ufomlt CO"'°'.. Prlnc:.l,11 otllct1 111 drew over 500 letters Mr.s. 11on. lfMI cor_.111on tt1e1 ••eeuttd tM °''"" eevntr Kna • olll ·, """''" IMtrll,,..nl, ktlown to mt to bt llMI M'f Commission 1!'1t11lr .. ., uer s ce aay1. Al we.re o.-wt1o txfe:uted ~ w11111n 111-No-I. 24 1m answered wllh a form letter 11r-1 on blh111 o1 MM corw111on, ,111:111"'911 °''"" coe11 D1t1¥ ,11111. 11111 ldl.Mwlld!IH to "" tllll tllci'I <11r· F.WV.N 4. 11, 11, lJ. \f70 2t1•:-o after Secretary of Agriculture ""'"°" ••ec:ut• !ht within 1Mtr11m1111i1------------ C1ifford M. Hardin overruled :;':S:.":.,toofi~,=~ « • mo11,1tion o1 LEGAL NOTICE the panel w1n1ess tr1r 1111111 •nd officJ111~11. -----------, (DFFICIAL IE.I.LI NOT!CI TO Cll:I DITO.I But lhe letlers to consumers Marc9lll F. H4nn•h•n '"''''"' cou•T o• TM• Ho11N P111t1lc.C11t1ornlt "' who bavt no recourse 1o~1e .... 1 Prlnc:IJlll Otfk• In ST,lTI! OP CALl,OllOA POii: 64" Or C THI COUNTY DP OIAfrMI remedies are referred, dlrecUy M ... ~~n E•Pir6 ,. .. A-4*t to the presi(lenta arid board J1n11erY 17, 1tn !$1~11 of lle'TH 1. HAllWODD, c_ .. ch · of th firm STATE OF CALIFOltNt.1. I Id . airmen . e s in--COUNTY OF OltANGE I SS. NOTICE •• Hl!ltl!•Y GIVl!N .. "" volved. A covert,ig letter from ~~..!i":ri:r .!; • .!.r~u11~1~ ~ ';: ~-;'1r"':'.o:'"'~;·d9"::"' ... ~ Mrs. Knauer asks for a 111c1 stik. "''°"'11' _,.., •rMtord 11rd otec1111nt •r• '"111Td to ni. """'° H Miiier, Ket A. Ewlnto, L.oo.1l1 A. wltti illl lllCfttlr'I' '<Ollehe.., In Jt\t '°"IC9 response. sfrt01$1 L••f'f He'fleftl. o.vld J. ,11110,... ol fhl clerk If tM •bow• tntttllcl c.ourt1 ttr S · ' .. ~.-o rt o nd 10 ••111nl ......... wttll 1111 nec:elllf'I' he describes some of the °°" 11:1.. A ,.,_... ' rown • -..e111 ... ht 1111 11nde..itned 11 tM Oltket ul . Clllfiel H. TllrMf, -nown kl IM to be of ~ii Attorntn KttWDOd, lode'! &. res ti!. IM Ptt10A1 wP>oM ,..,._ •r• •vblc•lbed Adkinson "° NIWPOtl c:1111 .... cm. .. 1411,. On ho il n lo !ht wlfllln !n11r.....,ent, Ind ertnowltdt· 4"' ~ll'Orf ·~ Cellfornll. f'MO. e woman w se t e oor ec1 to '"" 11111 "'" 1J(t(!.lted t11e --wllidl " 1111 ..itct: ,,, bl.mlnns ,,, n. had cracked received a new WITNESS m'>' l!.INI •lid of'lklll iee l. unc11r111Mc1 1n tll ""tttr1 Mff•IMN 1o n COFFICIAl SEAL! 1111 altl• f11 "Id ~ltnt wtfhlll frour oor, even though the tile M•rc.1i. F. H111r1tll•n '"°"th' tfltl' fM tint P11t11kit1o1t., tt111 manufacturer said the fault ~!7 ... ~::o"" .. not0••· ,...,. , ,,_ " . "·-. 1-11 U' t th Ortntl Countr altd ,,., • •w was 1n u1e mskl a on, no e M '""'mllMoll Ex,ir~ • °"""'' w. H•rwead til r ·~ Ex'°''°' 11 IN wm "' e. J111111rv 17. 1m ,.,.. ...,1 111....c1 dtclld-eflf Another woman complained :=o:'!t t~•M AMD ADICIMSOH HAll:WDOD. IOO•M. -:••MJON • a can of vegetables contained m N-wt c..tw Dr1.,. ~i:_M:;::t :_:;.,Dtl t h II Id d I I lfP'l*'t •11ct1, c......... ,...,..,, ...eii C.llf ""' oo muc qu an too Ille '11bl1JMc1 o,,....., cud D111v ,11o1, T•I 1110 '44-1J11 · vegetable. The company prtsi· Frbl'll«V 2S ,,,. Mtrdl " 11, 11, ino A-..,,"" ••"•'"' d I I ·--• Id It 342-7D J>11bllshed Or•nt4 Ca11f D1llr Piiot, en apo og1£CU, sa must F1br111rv 11, 11, is •NI MM'dl 1. .1m have been a mistake tr it oc· LEGAL NO'nCE "1·10 curred, and sent the woinan J __ _:;::;:;~:;:;::,,. __ J---;;;;;:;--~;;;;;;;::--- two free cans of vegetables NOT1c1 TO c•1D1ro•s LEGAL NOTICE SUP•lttOI COUllT OP TH• and a bonus package or STAT• 01' CALll"O•HIA '011: NDTICI! TO CJtl!DtTC•I dehydrated vegetables. THI! COUNTY OP ORAM•• SUPl!ltlOlt COUll:T OP TM• E1t1lt cf H.1.~:=...11!, DecHSld. ITATe Of' CALIPOtlNIA. POii: LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE IS HEll:EIY GIVEN to llMI TH• COUMTT OP O•AN•I .......... NOTICI OP IHT•NTIOM TO •HOAOI f:t~~,,..:'~111~ d:°.:"'! .. ~ E&tlit fll LUTHElt 00W It. MAI.It. e. IN THI! SAL• DF ALCOHOLIC Cllffd. lfVEll:AO•l llld ~ ire ,_l.-d llll fill lflem, NOTlCE IS HEl.EIY GIVEN le tM F.tw11...., u, 1'7f wll!I "" nteeUtrY 'IOUdlen. "' me otllu crM1tor1 tf 111e 1bov1 Mmtd ~nt TOW~ IT MAY CONCElllN· o4 the tli!'rli of Ille tbiirtt _,.ttllll eo<irt, « 11111 111 ...,_I'll°"""' clll°"' "'Inst t'lll ...... , . to Prtlenf 1111m. wltfl flle neautrY ...,..,e-(f to ISMtllnA cf Ille llc11111 ... \IOIJCllerl.. te Ille ~lsnld II the ol'flu Mid ~ IN teellllr..S f9 1111 ,.,.,,,. Plied few, notlu II htrebr tl'>'~ till! tM Ill his Attoor,,..,. .. Hll'Wtlt. Httl'Wtl't el'd wit~ tM nKHH,.., Wllldle ... 111 1111 aflle9 \lllllltt'slllned ~ lfl •" 11caftallc 11:-, OD . l2nd Street. N-rt kid!, of tM dert; cf llll lbo<r1 tnttllld Cllfl'rl. Ir ibe'ffr-11 lht "'"'"'"'-cleKtlbtlll It C11Horlll1 wtik11 11 tbe pLKt: d klslnew tiot '~Hnl """'-wlfll tlle lllfC'tUll"f lollllws: al !ht ~fined. In 111 ""tfen "1'· ~ te Ille 1111den!"""' 11 tllt lf'flff HOLLYWOOD ( • ") -The 1'1' Ht-1 llYd., C11$ll Mesi lll"lnt !fl lf'll •hlh OI uld decflltnf, cf lllr Attornt'f LIJ!hef' It. Mirr, JOtl 11111"' ,....-P~nt hi such lnteflllon. llM lift. Whtlln tot.ir "'°""" •f!ltt' thl flrtt llUblleto 9~ VIII• llrtott, •11rblllk, Ct~ ri.tetro Gol dwyn Mayer movie ~ " """"'111 "' "" ae..rtrntm ti.. flf flllll "°'ke. '1505. 'll'hlc~ ,, t111 PIK• "' bwlM'9 " of Alalholk k'lltt' ... Controf tor I-DllM F..._., 16. mt !Pit lfftGlnlenM If> 111 m1ttln. Pltt'tMl!lll studio, plagued by financial w tr_,.,. fll 1n 11ctit1o11c btw••• JIOlll Fr.;."" Mr.:.C..rw 11 "' 1111 Ill•"' 111 Mid dtctd1nt, w11111n follr WO<.!, is preparing to sell a llc1111se for l"*"-1 tor ffln1 ..,..,. .... •• Elleculor-Of W.. WIH fll ..-ti. 1ft.r 1fle tlr1t ~lutloll .. fl'lb fl>I'-'' file 1bcW """'" deodltt'lf nollu , precious possession -its past ON SALi! lf:l!:lt 'WINI (I-FIN HUIW1TI. "UdfTZ AMO ••Miit, D•ltd JfebrlllrY 13. 1m. I · . t . 1"11blk E•lllll PIKI) 4» • 2'1111 tfntr J11U1 lee Mirr n a gigantic a u c 1 o n AnYOM 0es1mi. "' prollflt 1111 t111119nc1 .....,,,.rt a-11.. 'Clllfltonl• E~o.tl!'l• o1 the w111 scheduled to slart in May and °' llKh 11ain11e111 m•'>' flit • v1rttltd ,.. '•" '"'' ,,,.,.,. o1 tM •baft n1m..s dKlderi' mt II lll'f offkl of llMI D-rttrlmt of Artl""" "' e~1elfllr L•llllr It. Mat'!'. last at least three months, the Alqillollc: 111.,e•••• cont•ol. « 1w mtU to l'ublliltt<I O••nw Cont o.n ... P11o1, • 11vt11 •-v'''' s1rw1, sound stages of the hune lol TM D~""""1t a1 Atcollollc 11ver11• 1"1br111ry n, 25 '"' Mlf'th 4, u. ,,,. a.n.,"', ,•,.-.,.,, ""' ~ Cont-.!, 1215 0 Strnl, S1tr11M1'1to. 2f'l.7D Tlh II will open to the public and bid· c111torn11 ,.,.,,, so •• to bl rKtl.,... ArtlrMY M ••twrl'f• within :Jll din of the dlle "'-11'-•d P11bllsllold Or1111t Coe1t Dlll'f 'not, cling y,·ill begin. 11•...,r1e1 _. 11rst -""'· 11111111 LEGAL NOTICE F111ru8"' 11. u 11111 Mlrt11 4 11 . Virtually every item saved '""'nd1 for ~111 a P•ovldld b'f .11w. lt70 m.10 TM 'Nml-.,.. ,_ lleenHd"for thl"---;;;;;;;;;"°;;;:"';;;;;:;;;;;;--1~.:.:..-----------Up from MGM's 56 years of 111e °' 11co11e11c "'"'''-· TM fOrm .;1 NGTtc• TO n.orro11 movlemaking wtll •· on sale· wr1t1c111on m•r be obt1lned from '"~ 114. su,111:1oa COUit Of' TH• LEGAL NOTICE uc • flee Ill tM DeP1rlm1nt. STATS OI' CAl.IPOlltftA POii: Greta Garbo's white satin v1rnon E. lttl!kln TN• cou_NTY OI' ....,,.., P--Klt• chaise lounge from "Canu'lle" ,!.~~!~,., 01,"!1111 eo.t' 0•111 '1'°'· 111 "' .... c1•T1PtCAT1 o' 1u1tH•ss JC_""_"""'-"'-""-'------""!!!:!!1111 IElflt1 of AlB•ltT MFLl.IElt KLEIN PICTnlOUI NAM• ..• "The Uns inkable Molly LEGAL NOTICE ~~.,~L::.lt'I. =: :t{1':_ ~~~lll:T TM undln.IW' c1on airtttr w tt -Brown's" brass bed ••• a NOTICE IS HEll:E•Y GIVEN to "'' dll<:tlnl • ...,.,_ •I hll 1• ,.....,, I CllTIPICAT .. OP •UllMISS Uldllon .t !ht 11JoY1 nell'lild df«oltellt 9Hdl, C.ltloml1, undtr 1111 fldfl1all• oveseat graced by Norma ,ICTITIOUS MAM• 11111 •H ,,..,_ IM¥lrlf cltlir.,,.-1rt1t IN fll'l'n n-af .Jl!:ltl DI" CALIFOll:'NIA·•llCI Shearer and ~--Pow • T1'll ~"* ""'* ctrtff't lie ts cert-111d dlcldmt ,,.. ,..Jl"llll 111 tt1t t11tm. •Mt ukt trrm " CClmllOtltl " "" frlllow· '.J'"'"'" er m dvcll111 Ptuil!lfll •• Utt:! V1f'llni. w ....... "" n. MCIUIN ~In th• ottlai lnw ,..,_, wh7tl"""" I~"'" .n.i !Ille• "~1arie Antoinette" . and So. lit-, c11Homr .. ""°"' 1111 tlctttlMn 111 IM c1tft: Ol ltll lbtvt arHHMI -.rt, fJI ot rtlldltllcl is n fol""": thousands more . lll'll't -OI WEST CDAIT AQ\IATtcs to .,ffWSlflf """"' wttll .. nlCllll,.., Jlfl l'nllu. qf ~n •• Coif• MM.I tnd !Nol uld fll'll'I Ii alftPOffd 01 lttf ¥GUChlf1, 1'11 1111 lll'dlfsl ..... tt ...... cf. 011 .. FtbnurY 2. Tt1'. Dust was rising on three 1o11ow1111 ~ wt1o11 Mme 1n 11111 •net lkt o1 6-l¥ifl 11:. ic-. """""" ,, Ltw. Jeri l"f'eln h d pli(f of fftldlrla II fl fllllawl: ,,, Nortll Newport ea-i......,d. ~ $lilt: ol C1M'lom••· uge soun stages Tuesday as ?di WllPlll"ll. 3'1"2 Vlr11n11 w,.,, klci'I. c.111om11 ""°' ~ b"" PIK• 0r_. eovntr: onme 50 e I f lhe D 'd $1>11111 U.11n1, Ctllf. el blllltlltU OI the ~ "' 1n met-On Fe!Mvlt'Y 2. lf1t. ~ """ • _, mp oyes o avt 01tN F"""'" 2'· 1'10 ttn. Mrt1!nlrlt lo "" .,., ... ., Mid dee.. ..,.,..,., Putllk "' •"" tor Miii 1111e. Weisz auctioneering company z.. wbhlfF'd dtnt, w1t111n fllltr mon111s lflll" "" firs! ,.._,tr -rH J..t '""• ,_ lo be•an •·ggi'ng and ca'·loguina STATE OF CAl.IFOll:NIA. 11<1blleltlcwi"' 1111• """"· me "' bl tM ,..._ ""-' -~ ,, D 14 "" ~-e OfltANCE COUHTY: O.lecl: F*-'f 2. 1'10. svbtulbttl '9 """ lfl'ltllln lnttr11......-..-Ind the noslalgia·tinged treasures 0n ""'· 2c. 1m. btfor9 ""'· , Nollt"I' eora!llY P111nlils 1ct1MW11c111c1 "" nK11ttd ~ um-. H " Pllblk In 11'1d tor 11!d Shill, ttlfl.Ontll'f 1• E•etlllrhl fl 1M Wlft !OFFICIAL 511!'.AL) ove ring ove r them as they PMr" zn Wl9'11r• ~ ht "" to be cf 1t1e 111aYe fllmM fteedfnt M•rv IC. H111r'I" worked was chubby, baldlng IM "'son w11o11 "'"" 11 lllt!Kf'lbM 11:1 OALVIH 11:. ICll'INI Not•,.., 'ub11c-<:11!fam1t IM Wltflln ln11r-I tnd tdr;nowlldffd Att.r111r at Ltw l"rlM:l"I Olllct In Hugh Hunt, 68, MGM's retired 11e ••1e11t..s t111 -· 414 M. NllW-' 11W1, o'"''' COilllf'f set decorator. (OFl"ICIAl Sl!ALI N•WMff ... di. c.......ia nMt M'f c-ml111oft l!Q11rn M•rY '•"' Marton T.i ..... 1110 .... utt "°"· '' 1rn "I came here with Mr Not•,.., 11"11blk . c111111rn11 An.....,..., 1..mrhl P\ltlllll!H Or.n1r COlll Dlll'f 11.1191, ll"rlncl•1I Otflu In Publtll'led Ort-(Dl!I C1ltr ,llol, Ftbrv1ry '' 11, 11. IS. 1'11) te2·1D li-1ayer in 1924," Jlunt said, 0,,1111 COll!llYY Flbrlllr, 4, 11, u, 1s. 1na 207·1D LEGAL NOTICE referring to the late L, B M'>' COll'tl'nluion E••lr•s Mayer, longtime boss of the "ubl11hed ~~:;."~"'' D1Hr l"flot. LEGAL N011CE P·MM7 : co mpany. "Since then, I've FlbnllrY t!I lfld Merell .. 11. 11,>ol~~: ,,.,11 Cl!ll:TIPICAT• OP IUSIMIS I ' ' bounht sets p r a ct ,. c •I t y Clll:TIPICAT• OP IUllHISI ,ICTITIOUI NAMI ~ LEGAL NOTICE 'KTITIOUS NAM• Tll• 1JtM1er1!111fd OD certltr tll9r -everywhere in the world. I can TM undeni.ned di:lls certl1Y •he 11 mr1-cond11<lln1 • 11u11,,..1 •• J065 Joflnsan, be b 'T-nvt ductllll • bl.llllltll II 17f1 So. Mlln. Sin-Coll• MHI. C1tlfarnl1. 11nd•• !ht flt· remem r uying a Im 0 s l MOTIC~ OP .,.,AULT AMD •LtCTION II AM, C11t1Gmlt. undel' ttw fktllloon flllou• firm n1m1 of JONOll:A -011" everything here... TO ti LL UMDlll Dl•D 0' TltUIT firm ... me of AlllCADE •l!AUT'I' SALON CALIFOll:NIA •1111 fh.i Mid "'m 1• C-· TP\e fallOWIMI con of ~", IM 11111 t111t uld fll'fl't It; ,....,... 01 th<! ~ cf t111 loll"'1nl Ht'IOllS. .....,, He pointed l.? an ornate or1t1n11 o1 w111c11 w•• """' w _. on 111oow1n1 11trwn. ~ '*"' 111 fllll 1nc1 111m111 1n fllH 1nc1 •lie• cf r11 ldlllct •rt Chinese 'YI -· I rt Ftbtvlf'f 16. 1t11 In the efflA fll thl Ill<• "' l'llidenA ll •1 tol$11WS: 11 loltow1: s e pr ........ ss1ona ca •econJ« et°''"" """"' C.llfw'tll•, 11 hrlNI wir11-. JDM Trlnttr Drive, Jotin o. •""' Hiii"• A.. "'""' "itl65 from a wedding scene in u"t 11:1 '°" 1111""8dl n 911 .. '"""'"'" cos .. Mtu. Clfltlemlt. .klllnHn Ave .• Coste M"9, c1ltfot'lll1, • K' " H h ol the title lo uld lt\lll ,,_,,., tflowl D11M ,,.,,.,.,. 10. lfJll D11ed l"ebru1t'f If, lt11. · 1m. e ad found it in '°"' m•'>' 111w •n im.r.1 1n 1111 1rv111t'• hrlhl J. wn1111111111 Niii"• A. 1ett1e1 Pakista n as he was dn·v· 1111 ,,.c..01"". s••fl " Ctllforflll. '°"" o. Sdlln ing TITLE IN$Ull:AHC• AND Dr"'" Ctllnt1'1 $1111 ol C11ffornle. Dr""" Cwnly: along a road and met a wed· TRUST COMPANY, 11 Trwlll °" "'*"'"' 'IL ''"• brfot• ""' • 0n Ftbrvlry i" 1•10. 1111or1 "* • ding party. Elmltt' w. Htlnnr Nollt"I' 'Vllllc 11'1 W '°" Miii S111t. ""''"' '11btk '" •NI fer Mid st.It. T'hnt• Siii Otflar -llr _,._, 19\'t'"1 WllllMllCl!I M,_11Y _ .... No!'I A. Sltlttt •lid "I made a deal with them:;, Ts No.,.." klMMll ,. '"' t. '°' 111t ,._ wtioM J011n D. Stt1te1 ..,_.n ,. "" i. 111·1M • II d • I · Trv11'llt'1 Ille N~ "''"' It ~ lo tM "'111111'1 ,,._ --Mlotl ...,,,.. 1r1 wblattloM l'O o-11e reca e . ' paid them the HOTKE ti Hl!ll:EIY OIVIN: THAT ''""""" Mii lldln9Wllfd9ed tl!lf lllkllled tllt wltr.111 lnllrw!lltnt 11111 .o..-.... ed price of a new cart, gave them TITLE INSUfltANC!: Niii TlfUtT COM-""•o••~AL tl!ALl !M"ffOFl"t~~l!:~111m•, Id •-(t to PAHY, • Cor'llOl'lltln II ..... -..ollll'lll "' my o s.... on wagon con· '""'"' ""'"' • °"" " Trwt *led Marv IC. Hlnr'I' M•f'T IC. w.n,..,. tinue the wed ding processions Jt1111t'1' 10, IHI. 1t111C11t11 "'° cu.111.1. IE.. Nci.tv hll:llte-C1N1orn11 Nat1ry ~llbtle..C.tttorn11 • SWAI, 1 ,,,,.le 'A'Oll'l-lll " Tr1,1:11«, to l"rtnc:INI Oflla In 'rtnCINI Dffke In and 1 walked lhe cart back to 11C11ra cert11n 11114191~ In •-11 Dr11199 Countr er.nt• Cwnl'f town." CHAll:LENI! M. SOUTHAll:'D •• Wldew', •• MY Comrn!nlon Explr"' Mr Cll!tWnlllloll ,.,1re1 bltllllkll,.., rlCOf'dld J_., , .. 1 ... " Ho-nlltr tC. 1'77 N.w. 74. Tf17 An "GM spokesm aid 1n11rv>M111' no. 1,., "' """' Ult .... '~'''*' Onntl c...11 D111r p11e1. ~11b111hed o~'"" Cllflt Dtll'f '11o1. IOI an s .... ol Otlld•I lt~l'ds ·~Ille oMc. ef Fltlnllrt ti, , .. J9 ,,.. Mirth " lf1(1 l"ltlnl•N ''· JS .... M•rcll 4 II, 1'79 the studio wiU conUnue mak· 111e 1t1a1nlff,,, DrMM cCMl!lt'f. c..11rtntl•, 2si.10 m -10 ing movies and television dHC:••1:11111 llllCI "*""' 111 LEGAL NOTICE shows. but th at the sets. ~ ~ t: .?' ~: = ;-; LEGAL NOftCS crammed in dozen,. 01 Ml1e•ll•-M-... "' 1111 offlct et tM.l------,......,==-...;,....;,. __ l---;."•:To,."•c,.;;;-~,:,:1:0~1T:0:,o,-- _,.,. ..-dlW ., o .. ,,... c-tT, C•1tTtf11CAT'I .. au111tn• IUl"lltfOlt COUltT OP TN• y,•arehouse s. haven't been used .. ~'Z~i-lnc l-'lftt oht .. ,. for tht fl1CT1T1ous NAMI •:::•cg~Mc:.:-•=~~~~· ;.. in years and won't be needed •r1nc:1"1 ,...,,, " ..... Witt ""~,;:e;a::e.:e.,i::;:: J:: :;: .... _...... in the future. btntl'l~I ln,.,.., llflllll' Mii Otld fll 4AO,' l,..,IN, {~I t.illlM'!lll • ......,., tilt "'""'., l(;EMT SfUAltr ANDl.!llSOM. Iv · Id • h Tl'WI •nfl fM ClbllMliMt '*"""" fhef9b'f flctnllM n,,.., ,.._ o1 GftOUNDI AND Dect111d. e1sz WOU n·t say w at he .... , •• ..,...rr "'" '" tllt ~ ..... , •UllDING MAIHTt:MAHCI #411Xl,I,. NOTICl IS HE1tE•V 9l~eft "' u. paid MGM, but commented: !hit • lnKtl .t. .... llltlWll "" "" TIOH OF CALIFOfltNLA .,.,, ..... 1111 incltlon .t tlll ..... "'""" ""1clMlt "MGM must have spent 50 1o' loblffftteM ,., wflldt -" Dtlllll °' T"*" ttl'fl 11 Clll!!PIMI., tlll ......... --. ""'' •H ..,."""' lltv1n1 dllrnl "'""' lhrlf It; ileC\lrllJ 1191 ICOT"1f !ft tfl9I ~ l'i'*M -111 11111 ..... ..... "' Mid ftc*llnl lf't ,_lnMI fa fllt "*"" 100 mlllio' n dolla f n this llM""""" ~If: T1'll .......... " rftldltlltt .... "flln...a: wlfll tM lll(ftllfT 'fWdlltt's. Ill "'-~ rs or a JOffllclNf lflll '"""" ~.~, ,.. """"" L. ~ ,.,. Mlrtflll .,..,, Ol IN c11r11oit1111bcft>l .r>111tt11 mcrrt • ., stuff.., ~ 1, ,,.., ..,. •• . t i.... Cflttl Mita. et!tf8nM·""'71'. to 'f'IS9!f """'· wtfl'I fllfl ~,., So I h ' ta1 ···~ "' 9f'tftdNI ... '""'"""· Thi TllllmM J. (lf'P'llf\ -Wft""""' _....... .. lht _,....,.,.....,'II llllt-llfle9 Ill', e I C8 ogued Jn0re -flt 17'1.'7 lllNtofWI ~ " A.,.., s.flN Moe, call!WJlll tl10l. II ll'lllr Anom1,., lttr I. WldfMT, 1'1r than 5 0000 pl-s ol fumJ•·-Wnfftdlr'I" "' """"'"' ,., ""-"' Dllllf F..,,_., '· 1f!ll. Wtlklttf Orrw. S4llfl N\llPll:ltr 204, ' """ . ""'~; .... Oii I ~ ~,_,_ tlltl W Ntf'IC'I' l.. CltYtll NtwJOl't l•ldl. C1Hfllrnl1. wlllcl'I It; 1111 900 gun1, spears, arrows and ,.. ltlcftot, "" 41id11 •• •• flf'ltlftt TMlllM J, c:.rN11 ,,.(9 °' -..-"' "" """"""""' 111 .n other weapons·, llO vehicles lilMfklltn> ""*"'-" °""" '""'· "'-' '""'"' """""'· ~ c.unm m1tt"' Hrt•I"""' ,. "" "''" ., ,. ~ Mii ~ ft utl lflltr • 0.. fl"4wrf t, tm.. ~ !IM, I dlc:tftftl, wtllllll foll!' """"" lftW' M including Ben Hur's chariot "°"""" T,.,...., • wrlt'llll Dfil:"'""" " ,....,., J>.elc "' ,... ,. "'-1t1r., tint P11t111<.11to11 " 1111t llllka. and the Model A •o·• u--.1 1.u DttWll • ""'*"' ,.. sett • .., "" ~ .......,.. N-.. L. Climolr end O•tN 1"rt1r11e"' ,, 1m . r '" ~ 11z ._,,.. •Mt 11141 *" ........, 'Tlll!¥I J , Gar?WI . .....,.. "' -te • tM M, A. A"*'-•NI ~tl~key Roontj tn tbf: Andy T'"'"--11 0... « 'frvtt ~ ._ ...,_ ~ ,,_ ~ fa ~ A, 5trt1111 Hardy •••.'$, .~ ~,OOQ ..._ ilecviMtll1 t•IOlflcll• ~ IN •1111111 ""'""""*'' tlld ICll!Owl«llM Elleevlorl If 111t WI" ..,. a.JN -,,.,~ llltrftr, al'ld flff l«lfttll l4wl ... ~ tueirltcl llllf -01 Ille 111eft 111111H -...,,,1 tumes • .._ Jud '"""' Miit• •ti "'"" Maftll """"" {OFflCIAL Sl'AL I lttr •. .......,, . -mon1 ~n:m Y """'"'''"'"'· '" ,llCI ...,...., •llfl 11111 ,,,,.,., it, ....,,,. "'' wllk11t1 Dl'I• .. Garland's "Wliard or Oz" tllc!W ,n.i .., fllflWY •llr'I ,. c-111t .._, Notm ~nc.c111fort'l11 s"',. N_.., *· d-51 and ••-•-t_ ,~ of '"'' -rr to hi _.... " .. , .. ,., "" P•1n<.•1t Ollkl 1n M...,.,. ._r., c.11,.."'1' '" WR; WI llY'll;:J Gltllt•l~t tft11f'flt lhlrtbr, OrtnM ~ T1h tntl ~ Gl!tltJ• Murphy t onetime ' c111r1t"' M. lovlflll"' 11,1w COl'lllttlUIOrt r~11tru A""""' ,... ''"",.,., ' J>uMl111td o,.,.._ (Mii 01111 Pl~, NO'f. 2 .. 1'11 llloltll!IMll Dl'lrlft C111t Dlll~ Piiot. hoofer who now Is a U.S, Fttwv•rv 2s •nd Mirth '· 11. ''· 1r10 P<Jlltltflld Or•nt• c-1 D111Y 1111111, 11muerr 11. u n Mlrctl ., 11; Sf!nator. *""'° l'ttw1.111rv ., 11. ta. !J. "'° 1tt.10 1m ,,.19 --• '" :.::: ... ..... ..... UMCIL IMl11 ... ~-· • ·-..... ~ ..... t " t J \pt '· 1•1 t • -. '''"'· lfulrr1 --wlll!I~ IK llllcl • • .. llot. ..... .... ,_, ~ . '""" ~~ .. ,_ "" . 1. 1111'• llf~ ,..;. ta .... , ..... ' • • ' ~ ..... ..... _,, .. , "" ·-• efflct ,.,;f, "' -~ • offlc. ·-·----~ 1111teur If "11J " ·---· fl,\:.•!'d -· ti .;lee• ·--. Mii~. _ .. -" "" ... ~ ~·" ,,, .• • •• "-'""'"" ... flt-A -01' ·-..... -.,,. . ...., :tn1.l1. ~ ... , .. ..... • . ,' ·: " ..... '-n. ... ~ - ·---~~~~~------------------------------------- --' . ~:·McCatthv ... - :·.;To Stay, ·Not Bolt . -' ~ wtdnt1dlY, ~tbrutrr 2!, l YIU DAil Y PILOT'" JD Migration CJiahges Ho"Q.:se Del·egati~n Forecasts WASH1NG1'0N, (API originally estima ted In U1c been gaining as rnuch, and The new estilnales also In-each, and North Oakola, \Vt8l forec,sl Callfornl;i would gain Jersey, ConnccUcul, Tllinol1, People have not (Jloved ~m 1967 bureau forecait ·which slates with outmigration have dlcate Florkia will 1ain two Virginia, Ohk>, Iowa, arfd sla seat.s, New Jersey would Michigan a11d Okluhonia are state to • state ia expected, wa.s pegged lo mlgralion not been losing as much." seatt, and Arizona, Ttxas and Wtscormln one each. &aln one and ConnecUcut ex peeled to show no gain or 11.)'S the _Cen.su.s Bl,U'.eau_ in tttJ.l(b_QLJPe early 1960's. The fresh bureau forecasts Jotado one each. This would Gains or los1es fotecut for woul~ po1sibly-galn one:-1'be loss . rov!slng il& forecast for nine "The mlgration from state are baSed on a July 1, 1969. --"m"ak"e cauromla's delei ation Ar1zooa, rlorlda, Texas, North bure•u dldn1t m e.n ti on P.ollU~I ~U~lS of. sca t WASKJNGTON (AP) -Sen. estimate of state papu latlons. Dakot•, \Vest Virginia, Iowa, Colorado . It predicted one:-scat rcdJstrlbuUon art significant Eu1ene McCarthy1 the re.Jue-st.ate delegations to the Rouse to state' has changed from The actual census or April I, the l1rgest at 42. New York Pennsylvania and Wisconsin l~se1 for Uli.nols, AtJCbi.gan . -especially ror curre11t tant Democrat who only a of Representatives.• those trends," 3ays the burea u 1970, wUI set the basis for would be next at 39. are unchanl(ed from a bureau 'New )'ork and Oklahoma, aod Jlouse members who arr. ! .;inonth ago was talking of help. Californi a will liain four in· director, · Or. George Hay redistributing 435 House seats New York and Pnnnsylv1i1nia table dated March 7, 1967. said Phlo would 1~ one and thrown Into the same district :Jill form 1 new party, now stead of the six sea t s Brown. ''California has no t for the tm elections. are expecte9 to lose two seals But at that Ume, the bureau pq;slb.ly two ~ats. Now, New in stat~ losing 'eats. sayahe may stay. in the fold. •--------------------------------------,:"---'·-'~=-----------:...I.-'--~•--~·--------'----~--- In his most concllialory • geflUl't to the Democratic party Jn a year. the Minnesota : -:sen•tor said if the .party maln- ' · la1ns ill presenf course, "It : would ~ quite ea~ for me to ~y within lhe party In 1972." }Jefore, durln9, and after hl1 unsuccessful 19111 6id foi the presidency, I.here was talk In the A1cCarthy camp that he 'Would lead a new political · ruovemen t, pr-lly based on OpposJUon to the-Vletnlm war. Lut'Jan. 12, McCarthy told newsmen in Par.ts he might help form a new political par- ty in 19'12 but would not lead It . · He told American students ·there if the American people art' not given an adequate political choice in the next presidential campaign, "there may be an obligation on those concerned with political life" .. t~ offer such a party. Because of the George . ·\'(allaee movement, he said, · ipy new party ''1vo\Jlj have lo : be considered a fourth rather. ~ ·l~an a third par.ty." • ·'.But the senator spokt en- :,-Uiualastlcally about the 1 ·'"' Q.emocraUc party a,, he chat· ' ·led "With teporter11 in the ":~ate rad.Jo..televjlian gallery \Vednesday. He had just announced hi& dpposit ion to Pr~idenl Nix· on'a choice for lM Supreme Court . Jud~e er. Harrold Carse II. , _, ~ "The party ill beginning to · :1o0k pretty good," he said, "It, •is beginning to look like the party I waa describing back in 19811." McCarthy, who in 1968 Jed youthfUI legions 111 cnpositlon . , to the Vietnam war, had said · he \\'oak! not seek I h e · ·,.1;1e mo c r a·t i e presidenthd , ·norilinatlon aga:ln in 1m· - .: :nor will he run 'for -re-election ~ ~a Democrat· this fall . : · ·. He praised the statement :·;:put oul t:iy the Democratic ~·policy Council earllu -this week u "pretfy represen· "'iative of Democrats today. 11 was a very good statemenl" The statement called for total U.S. withdraw al from Vietnam within IS montha and urged rejection of t h e Safeguard .antiballi.atlc mls3iJe And the Supreme c o u r t · ftomlnatlcin ·of Carswell . But he said that the Party has a long way lo go in inl- Plementing proc edural refonni. He pr1iled the work .ol Sen. Harold E. Huehes (D-.~·l_owa ), in the effort, but didn't . .mention South Dakota Sen. -~"George S. McGo v ern , . c'haltman of the reform eroup ilnd a likely 1972 contender. As for his own p(il!tical pro- spects, McCarthy said "I don't have any re.election or l!lcc· lion plans at this time. 0 But ·.he 'added, in response to a question about ninnlng for the Se nate from New York, that "legally, It's possible." . N e\vport Man In LA Post Arlhur G. Andresen . of -NeWl)OJt Beach has bten nam· . : eel deputy superintendent fot' . bttalness a n d educational · services for Lo! Angelos City Schools. -Andresen, 63, .Ja mov ing up rrom his post a! head of the ·'.{,os · Angeles City School'' ; . .'Ptrlonnel DJvblon. ·• .. The depuly superintendent's • spot, one or two in the dlstrid., waa left vacant when Dr. Robert E. Kelly succeeded Or. J ack Crowther as supcrin· tcndent of the second largest school·distrlct In th P. country. ~ ·Andrea2n, 2421 Cassia St .. is -a Veteran of 40 years with Los Angel~ school1. BofA Gives • Youth A 'vard : . Patrick James Re.Illy of. • i.aiuna Beach is one ,of two Saddleback College students t.o :win $300 cash aw1td s. In the BJnk of America's Junior 'College Business Awards pro- gram. . Reilly won the award In b u I I n es s admlniJtraUon studies. The second $300 winner 111 Sh a ro n Lou~e Nel19".1or Tustin, honored In I 1 c «.Tetarlal s1.Hcnet div ision. ~tore than ~ Caljromj11 llqe.9 par'lic.ipilte, wllh two •• lnnert chosen ln each school y a racul.ty commi ttee. For Your Convenience. • • Shop Sears Seven Days in '70 • 0 l\elnfOPced Acl'llllc QO LA~f 0 F~~ 0 Gnnntnd OntCO'it Q ONE.GALI.OH $ OFF :;ears Rt>g ular Low, Low Price• On Any Sears Craftsman POWER MOWER With the 1'rade-in of Any Old Hand or Power Mower Regardless of Make or Condition Atk About Se•n (;on\f"nienl (:redit Plan11 ears Sears long-lasting One-Coat Paint Interior Acrylic Latex l°Coat Flat Paint :-... ,., (,t1io-. J,11,. Prirf''. 3~.?. • Co,tn lnyeoJor ill one Cl'lll e Clin11 to bruth or roller, dows 011 "·ith exception1l amoothne•t • AtsGrtmenl or c:Glor• plllJ '\lfhilfl •Stir• 1re1t val ue'. '7.99 Guaranteed One-Coat Latex Wall Paint :-.1,, \ L IJ: ' •Add fre1h niw b11111ly lo 1ny room in ~our ho mi with lllf'::r e1te or 1pplicelion • Fini~h i• 1111r1ntetlf 1•11tb1ble •·olorr 1111nd •pot r'!~ista nl • 1\l1ny dtcor1tor color• Ute Sean Re:volvin1 Cha1·1e: Great Values on Sears House .Paints Quick-drying California Latex Hou1e Paint ~•n (A.,., l~w Prirt'. • Un t r1 1-tme or aimilu colon Ua jv:t l one 1pplie1tioa • Driet to•1(qty1Dttn in\; ho1r • Choirt of1:olMrplu1whi1e Scan •s. 99 One-Coat Late" House Paint • Brlshttn ~our homt'tt•ltrierwi1h OflWOtl e11e • Ptlnt now. on tmoolhlr. driet fn jutt IA hour • Choiet of eolo" 1nll whlte Sears fUIHA PAI• tA l •44tl, IJl oll~O I~ MONTI et .1·1911 ' CAHOOA ,.,.._ i•o.o..t •uHtAU CM 1•1'104, Ct .... 111 (°"'"°"' Nt 1•1111, NJ 1·1111 HOlJ.fW'bot HO l •lfll IL\IJ, l !)llUl:IC AND CO, COYINA f'H.ot 11 tHOUWoot Ot l •Jl1t lh., Nltbtt Menlf•Y throuth Setwtl•r f 1)D A.M.:te f :~O ,,M,, Sunday 12 NMfl t• t ,.M. ' I I I :i;t1;\'DA\' HOURS-J 2 'i~n t.., 5 P.~I . ~tond•ythru S•lurd•1 9:30 A.M. lo g:J O P.~1. JANTA MONKA IJ: ... ,,, 10\ITM (0.Uf NU uo...M.U lOllANCI Jll•IJlt VAU.S'I' JO 41·1411, 914.111• V...oHT ~ •·lftl •• I I I t • ~ • t • < • I • < • • ~ ~ ~ • \ t • ................. UILV .IJLOT Try ]ob As Movie _r__lwtog , By JOYCE LAIN Dear M111 Lal•: Would you plelle tell me wbe.re I can gel illfemadoli •bout a career as 1 modem plcbtre cameraman? J .M., Su Diego, Cal. A new lean et, ''Careers In motion picture producllon ·• is a starter. Published by the Eastman Kodak Company. this publication lists schools ~ ~ o I ~~ and discusses va r:ious film producUon career activities. · These include script writing, cilrecUon, camera w o r~k , editlni, animation, sou n d r e c o rd In 1 1 reproduction supervision. lighting, set and t'OSlume design and con· structlon, laboratory opera- tions and film teaching. For a single free copy, send me a postcard at this newspaper -within :'.Kl days. Dear Min Lain: Which kind or up.eeriDg t e c .. • I c I a n make• the most money? rt1.T.C., Pboenh:, Arii. Starting salary offef!! for 1969 associate deg r c e technology ftwo ye a rs l graduates \\'ere surveyed at a number of larger schools by the Engineering Aianpower Commission of Eng i·n e er s Joint Council. Here are the average offef!! by fields ha v- ing ce.la!ed technica.l.J:xultents: the figures in· • parenthesis show the spread between the lo"•est and highest of!ers : Aeronautical. $622 ($52! to $11001 : electronics. $62q,'($460 to $780 ): mechanical. $6<XI (~433 to $758): chemical, $593 f$S25 to $817): civil and archilectural. $569 t $433 to $780): electrical, $589 ($450 lo $801): data: processing. $5i9 (147'1 lo $700). The Engineering t.1anpo"·er Commi55ion also notes: "The over-all median s t a r t i n g salary for technicians is about $600 per month. or $7.200 an- nually. This compares with about $820, or $9,800 for engineering graduates at the bachelor 's level (four years) in 1969. "Considering the fa ct that the associate degree program is only hair as long. and graduates can an tic i pate a\'erage salary increases or $700 to S:800 In their first l\\'O yea rs or employment. du ring "'hich the engineerinl! sludent Is still In school. t h e salarv prospects of engineer- ing iechnlclans are quite at- tractive." Otar tt11s1 Laln: Someday I would like lo be the prtsidenl or a larre company In an ln· dustry sncb u the clothlnc: In- dustry. or another industry. I ha\'t had the most problems In trying to choose a major in colle~e. I do not know whether it •ould be be1t to major in bu 1 I a e 1 1 admllllstratlon. uonomk:1 or perhops textlltA. etc. Enclosed Is a stU·ad· dres1ed, stamped envelope for you lo tend to any return literature. Would you also enclose a folder on market management and p o 1 5 I b I y merchandi se management'? T.Y., Clncinnali, Ohio Until you are certain or your career direction. keep your education as BROAD as possi- ble. 1 think you -and others in the same boat -would benefit from a rree 31-page book.let by the Prudential Insurance Company. "Facing Facts About Choosing Your Life's Work." Readers \\'ho want a single free copy should send me a postcard at this newspaper. I appreciate your thoughtfulness in sending, the retum envelope but I'm sorry, I can't send the material you ask for. t don't have it. The only literature requests my staff can process are those publications speclllcally men· Uoned as being available through this column, such as the ones above. We handle literature requests (forwarding them to Lhe ap- propriate resource organiza· Uoo. of which there are many hundreds) u a nonprofil reader 1ervlct because we know how fnistraUng it i& not to be able to obtain more in- lormalioll. OOcallonlllY I get a letter from an inte reader whose booklet dJd not anive. Booklet delivery often rtqU1tts lour 10 sJx weeks. After this tJme, however. plelse do let me know If 9Cllntbody nubs so we can follow up. STARS Svd111y 011t1rr 11 111111 of tk11 w1rld't tr11f 11fTo/091r1. Hi, colu11111 11 e11i 1f th1 DAILY PILOfS tr11t f11tu,11. I ' • ..,.,.,, __ ---_ .. 0 L .· .· . ,._, ................. . ' --;-;,-. .... ' • • . Wtdntsda,1 F'ebf'uary 2S, 1'*70 \ PILOT·AOVERTI~ER J:t . ~ , HAYE YOU VISITEO QUI\ ·tjEW STORE AT: 9861 A~ams at Brookhurst ·in . Huntington ·Beach · fOUHTAIH VALLllT-16141' ......... ..,_, 6 llln9tf "VMTOIGTON llACM-lltlt ~ llftl, ti Allffllt II. T~ll:O-ll T.,_ at tte«tWI RM• ~HTA "".:,.1406 W. 1 .... ,,J t-r1tWSt. • 'ftllTMIHITE•-MD W_.MIMlw Iii ..... WMt • COSTA ,._l"U.-!lll ....... atvt. el WllMll 51. MUHrlNGrOM IU.CM-a..~ 6 111~ FOUNTAIN VAl.LIY-llfM Ill~ St. 11 Tt9"fl $1 50 Adorn Hair Spray by Toni •1• & '2'!.Yalues! Fashion Jewelry .. COSTA Mil~ I . llltl II. \ 57'• Women's Double Knit Acrylic Cardig'ans 24x46 Inch B ig, bc-a11tiful 'II-over FtoSty rou print oo .-cl1·err c otton terry. Fresh Pink, $3 91 Viscose Pile Scatter Ru s ~ Thrifty l aclu1iv1 $9.-1 86c Ditcontd. Pk1. The best selling hai r spray •ith thC si:lf- SIJ'lin.g action. What )'Oii comb in - Adom l::c:(p!I in. 6.4 oz. Regular or Ex- tra Hold. luy 4 ett4 ·S.•c ·$S.OO., $7.00 Sp~in4 aroup ol swtng1n1 ropes. ropes, cnaindcd or .mique plo1 & b.o.cdm, ... u. dins biind md pietted styles. Fu.II f.uh1oned double knit acrylics in lovl!'< ly d.tuic and Jm1rc novtlry designs. Popu. Ju 26 and 27· inch lengths in fa.shion colon. liiet )6 to 10. ' Fine: quality 'fis- Cclc:slid BI u c or· fii'tfly Yellow. r>lakc up 11'1 ~~c ! cose rayon cut and Joo p pile with Iata coat- c:d bukin.r f o r $afc:r1. JO r 14'' •W•1h Ci.ths, 12a11" ..... 47& • $1 .19 H•M Tow•l1, 16.:21" 97, ·s1 91.s291 Values! Plasticware • Sf IUMI Wtllllltklh Yo111 Choi<• • 1\lt •~1hf1 l.111•*1 1n•111 • fllf '"' W11l••11k111 • ltc1.W1111# w1111nmtt s111 • 2t 1•"'1 UlllllJ Tuh Deluxe:, lop quality. hi·dnHUp plis- Liorarc in Avoc•do, Pinc:1pple, Tuf· qiwilc:, White:. So U SJ !O dc:an. ·Reg. s.14' Quihed Pillow Cov~rs . ~-·~ .. -79e ' I.usurious cowt1 COn\·Crt bc:tJ pii- Jo:ws into lou~sc p illows. Rich ~olid.s, stri!)t'. s391 Twin Size Indian Madras Bedspreads $2'' l>co;;ontor color\· Kashmir Gold, Bc:n. j:d Onn~, Aiuntl J\qua. Battery operated, w it h sending J n d rc.::civi~8 r;i.ngc llp «> Yi n11lc. 36 .. 1nlen· Ill . $3.00 Value! NO\cltybanb in choiC'C of m.ny strlc:s, brisht flo111es.cmt co J. on. A perfect gift for any 1ge! Aluminum Chaise lounge $7.H $599 Va Ivel .S11.1rJr ,.,·euhcr· resist~nt (ix 1 ~ ""'b ch•,i3 t lounge bu il1 for 1e1 t 1 of Stl'\'!cr. Jumbo Size Color Prints llill•.I• f,_ r-•M•ctl., ""'9tl.,. llMlll e .. IN r rl"h .... ·: • , , • 11 1511 Glass Door 30" Bookcases '""" ,.,. s12•a hoo\,;s l!ld knirk- \,;n~dcs 1n th 1'1 !!~'? fool lon,i; bookcase 11d th double: sliding gl.us doors. aJ1usublc center shelf. Sm'\fl Walnul finish. y,.,, , <;hoict E> r c: S.j. up closets, pro!e<:t clOihins with Ct>]orful Dai~y print- ed accessori~ at big ThriflJ savings. s 111 Porcelain lullp Bowls Qr,ng c:, P•tk of 4 )'C:l!ow, blue: $149 &. l1·ocsdo 1n ~I. SI.OD Value! Wall Plaques c ;m 77' }.!~ho any colc-r fork&: 'PU(lfl "'ith fruit. $2.39 Steel 11 \12 In, Griddle [,·~ bao. "$197 no scnrdung or bllrnins. $14.90 Value! Cornlngwara Set '-,--""'..._ ~ :orom ·Sa•• ~-.. uble 10 re:· ... E•' " 0 (i) -·. / frigentor for s1oring. &Be ... Wrenches or Screwdrivers ~!!oned 2 ~$1 l<'p qu~h()•. k lwy 1,1•"• J6c s 1.69 Adhesive Bulletin Board !:i~~~~~.. 99~ r :cn iuc:lf! Imported Sco•ts Glen · Scotch Whisky ..rr; Ip> ..... __ _ $349 Fifth Gallon Outnuidio.i; buy• •C o 11 r c;oeryday I n .,,. price of $7.98-no'w priced c: v c n lo•·cr for a lim.Ucd till'll:. New! No' ~ycfamalnl Metrecal Shape Diet Food 4~99~ s2so Shulton Desert Flower .... _. . $125 Wy Lotie11 Ei:lt.t.Jry 1kin lormub. 8 or.· Cosmetic uzy Susan I Mirror swnfnlullc $229 with dividtt 11ctlon.t. toOll1f bouom, mirror. I~~:__~ ·~ 39 1 Va(ue! Barker & Dobson Imported English Candy f inest toffee, choco- 1 a 1 c c:<lain, mints, licorice, onngc & lrnion slices, 1 o { t ceotc:r fruiu, sherbet fruiu ! 19c ~¢!.'.'> Betty Woods Facial Tlisues loa of 100 ·- All '"""'' $277 in offici~I .sitt and ..m ~t. $5,96 Tetherblll I Pole Sets ~d $4'' • s5n -. - .Mttching - Luggage. . . 1 !" CMJn1tlc C1111 &" Oot•tnife C Yow' Choice ' ·~:;r~-~~.~~fl s3aa proof, hca'T du tr zipper, del11Xc Jocks. ea, S•.tt '8 SI.ff V1l1t1 $44' l1"·24"·l'" 591 Tablets or E11velopes ~c::~~. 37' ··~l:: SpzinA Bouquet of Dok. f[O'll'tf de. sf.ens in 1ableb 'll'ith cn~elopci 10 ~.m. SS.81 Hujy Duff . Home Lablil' Gun · Imbos~ clc:ar white lettc:n on $1 ff ¥1" U.pt. 1001 ..... '$6,19 IO·PIKI Hair Cllpp1r Set Pays for itself :with just 3 11s~!$544 Easy to use, 1n. 1ttuctioru.. too r Reg; SllA9 Ba•1· Stroller P•d<k , $14'' scat, 3 positioru. 1$12.95 C.rs.ot $1-0.11 nlorfu1, oeautifully dc:rorattd porcelain! Stack in Airth1t1ticolly Scell41 Hauls 1 Hot cin. f or U$C •·ith ·Hot Whet ls, JohMf Li1hrning, CIC. lie ea. Plastic Poker Chips ..... 2~s1 100 • luy t 6' S..-• Sle Whitman's S11eckla Candy Choict of UllQJ' • Tatietict f Reg. s5ts B_oys' $ Girl•'· Nylon Jacket ' Qo_mfortablc ~ ':fc:"''"·r· 10& 1$ Ill popular ttylct lot bor• 111d girls. Sizn t, ~·,,,~. 6X. ;• Perma Pfesi Men's Jackets ~ • SALi~ $497' /~~ PRICf "' ;' ~-WI~ t ttpt!Jcdt' fmti· 1 2 button. slot ' collar •rid a.di e c uff. Zif ~Uon.t. Col. op. t.XL. L4idle1' . HI-Fashion Shirts Si .. ; $1'' JI.JI • .,.. .. , • J1~ot. fly fNltt •Tie Yltti llMMi . Nn.· roU-up sleeve 1t1 lcs in '~ polye1tcr blends. Men's ;ocket T·Shirts C•"" I $129 Doublt-needle 1titchc:d coll:ir & th!i\flden. S·~l·L la~• Sbt• 10 11 II , ,.tit Genuine Leather ladles' Billfolds n .u $117 Voht1I l.ali;st •!fies, col· or1'. in dunble billfe>lch witb all the fcatum rou -.i•ant. SAVE UP TO 113 & MORE Month· •nd m1an1 11n10° tlonal tc1Vlrtt11 t.r you In every ~epartmenll Look for the Month·lnd Sale• Tag& ••• they ldtnlffy unbeliev• ablt bargains at lncredlbly low, clearance prk91I • . ' .--·---------------------------------,,,.---·-------------------------- 7 ' PllOT-ADVEl!TlSER Wednt5da1, Februarr 25, 1970 W,est · G0ast G'ousins' Mq.squerade Over I ly JODEAN HASTINGS . °'""°'"'' ......... Californians, we Jose! · o·ur.~oasfal ~'lobster" r~ally is just a sea: a:oing 'er.ayfisb· masquerading as the effete ~cousin of North Atlantic lobster. · ' IL · jsp't olten 14at we purveyors · of women"s new s ,are assig-!1ed to ~ explore t_he . nitt[' .gritty of controversial topics , so With rea ruto I approach'ed .1~.e lsaken, .who with Elnar Rasmussen unports the Easl Cot.st variety for their firm. · "Tell me coJidentially," I inquired be- hind my note pad." ''IS there a difference'!" "There definitely is,'~ was his reply. ''North AUantic lobster is sweeter and the texture 1s less stringy -probably because of the colder water. And there are three flavors and textures of meal in the same lobster: claws, legs and tail au are difierent ... Isak.en, his Wife Evelyn and children Stev.,n, Bobbie and Linda live in Costa Mesa. Steven, 17, is preparin~ for a career in ocean· ography at Orange Co@st College. II'b.e:-Rasmussens, including David, 12: Donna, 9, and rear-old Karon, niake their home IQ Fountain Valley. ,,. , Th.e . two men have operfited the market which rues in North Atlantic lobster for nine years. BOtb Norwegians, they are from the East €oast and both are descended from old seafaring families. "My dad went to sea out of Norway when he was old enough to hold an oar -about S ..l.. and he's been in the fishing business ever since." lke explains. · .. Einar's father still operates his boat, the Cbarles S. Ashley, out cf New Bedford, Mass .. fishing principally for scallops. ''Can most people tell the difference in ta!te:between North Atlantic and California ..• uh, uh ..• lobster-?" -I-persisted, eyeing the· closet-sized, waist-high tanks filled witfl 1h~ basy green ·crawling creatures, >--Uteir claws neatly d~orated . with pretty pink bands -but not for aestbetic'ptirposes, I · was'"lo dfscover. _.,: . _ · t•oti; the majorily can't, but some are pretty particular' Alter they've tasted North Atlaritlc l~bster, they, usually come back for ~." lite shrugged. l mustered enougb courage to siict-my hand in a tank while Ike detly scooped up an . . ugly-looking 10 poWlder for my closer in· spection. ''This one here could break a so £t<>drink bottle with one claw," he said, almost proud· ly. ·1 removed my hand from \;he tank. f\. · "They're scavengers, you know. 11hcy even eat their own, shell and all. They just completely disappear. That's why .we band the claws." Not e'ntirely due to their ca.nniba1islic ten- dencies, North Atlantic lobster are becoming scarce even in eir own habi·tat. "They us to be fished in1 20 fathoms: now the ' shing them in 180· fathoms," c · lhe youthful looking man \vho e his first trip to sea on the rough. cold Atlantic at 12. ''When they're brought up, · they will live in a foot of water, a nd they can survive as Jong as three months on plank· ton" (If a fellow lobster isn't available, I thought). Th.e two brothers-in-law keep about ·10,· 000 pounds of live lobster in the tanks which almost fill the neat, chilly shop of the New Englani:l LiVe Lobster Co., Sunset Beach. Another 10.000 pounds are~ held on the East ~ Coasl They are air-freighted 'to California in styrofoam containers. ''The freight rate isn't as high as the mortality rate," Ike noted. Although th ey supply many area restaur· ants, 90 percent are sold (alive and crawly} over the counter. I also learned that a lobster pot is not the container in which the ocean delicacy is boiled alive pribr to being eaten by humans: it's that funn y-looking slat-and-net crate su s- pended by lines fro m . the celling over the tanks. The lobsters cra\\1l into funnel·:shaped openings on each end iq search of some juicy tidbit for dinner and then can't find their \\'ay out again. _ Although boiling them for approximately 15-minutes is th'e-most commonplaee method ofpr_eyaring lobster, they also may be st~:i.ril­ ed in a cooker (which enhances the delicate fl~o,r). Jm!iled .QJ.Jrnl'beCJ!~ UJ!lil the she\11 turn· red and tfte meat white. · Another East Coasl treat available in the lilUe stqre tucked way by the highway is Ne\v England clams, and \vhile I don't want · to start any controversy -did you kna~·.-that clams will live for 10 days out of water'? LETHAL W.EAPON - Ike Jsaken shows Ani- mal Shelter ()lficer An--~·w·~--~1"~* thony Gimbrone t b e claw that can break a J!OP... botUe witq_an easy snap-. -~ · • .. ~men '"' n TRAP' FOR NOCTURNAL PREDATORS .. I Aristocratic Fish A · True Delicac;y From the Sea's Depths ' Boiled fo .r Dish I Tht1 lOblter has • inspired some' of eur most. complex ~ but. there are many fine di.shea that are relatiffly •imply to prepare. LO!STER AU BRANDY • 4 loblten (1'4 pounds each) 2 lableapoo09 butter 1,~ teupqo,n cayenne :lJibfJ1'omt,Pll Black -to tul<o , .~~~um11111~ white -Ii "" bt"1<!1 l CllP Chicken stock. lresh or anntd J.iJio Jeal . II l..,... crumbled citied lll1me 2 ....... al portley :~~m , Plunp tobste1 held fir>l Into bot line water. AJ soon u they ham rtd remove c:l1ws. 1'elnow tal1t and cut each lobster Cl'Ollwile trM four. pieces. Split (orecarcass and remove coral and I i v e r ; reserve. H~t one tablespoon butter in a skillet anJ add lobster pieces. Add cayenne, salt and pepper. Cook and sti r for five minutes. Add shallots, wine. and 1~ cup brandy. Cover and cook for seven more minutes. Add chicken stock, bay leaf, thyme and parsley. Cover and cook for olddltional 15 minutes. Add l cup cream , aDd cook Jive minutes mor-e. Remove Jobst.er and remove meat from ·sbells. Add rema ining butler to cor- al and Uver. SUr in flour. Gradually stir in remaining cream. Heat •liquid in Which loblter was ~ked and gradua1ty at.ir Jn coral mixture. Cook over low heat, 1Utrlng COMtanUy until smooth .and thickened. , Sprinkle with remaining bran- dy and heal •lliblly. Ser" over a bed ottlce. QUICK CHOWDER WlljS F~ST ACci.,LM , • • Time was When the· Amer- ican lobster was conaidered far from enticing. ln lhe 17th Century, New England colonirl! were horri- Jfed by the sight of the bizarre- looking creatures that washed up on their shores. Enevltably, some adventur. ous soul began erperimenting with lobster and found lhat it was delicious if properly cook· ed and seasoned. By the mid· dle of lhe 19th Cenlury, lhe lobster had come into its own as the aristocrat of crusta· ceans. Ordinarily , the word "chowder" conjures up visions of a sleamlng ketUe of hearty fish or seafood sou:p, fare for the hard-working or Ute really h1mgry. But a chowder can b!e1 aa it ts in this recipe-rrom I.be Na. tJonal Flshenes lnsUtute, a true delicacy fit . to ttke Its place aloDgskle such legen- dary seafood dlshea a s Thermklor or Newburg. UnUke these d~or even the averqe chowder. you <:an tlave this one on the table In Just a few minutes. The seafood is convenient rrO"un rock lobster taUs: tl'lc b 5'. \1 mu1hroom soup mix, p1tjdantly perked up • wllh lemon and n111mc1 •. ROCK LOBSTER· MUSHROOM CHOWDER I quart hot waler 2 packages frozen rock lobster tails ·~ teaspoon salt 1/~ teaspoon pepper ~easpoon nutmeg I lemon. sliced thin l package mushroom soup mix \la cup cold water I cup milk Bring hot water to a boll in a large sauc:epan. Add. lobster tails. salt, pepper, nutmeg and lemon slices. Return to boil a11c1 cook abool 6 mlnutcs. Remove lobster tails and set aside to cool: discard lemon slices. Empty package or mushroom soup m1x into another saueepan. · Stir In cold water. then gradually add Zi.\ cups or the cooking broth Crom t h e lobsters, slirrlng lo blend. cut awaY undershell rrom lobsters with kitchen Shears. Remove meat and cut up wl\A shears Into l·lncb pieces. . • Reheat mushroom soup mix· lure, sUrrlng occulonaUy, un. Ul It comes lo a boll. Add mJJlr and lobsler meat. i:Ootc over low heal until healed U\roup <do not boil). · Serve In lndtvtduel bow'tl ;arnlshed with lcmoo .UC.s. • I I ' 11 a&aLY a.or w111 r;f& FtirWJ ~ 1m . Lunch Hour Pastime Sandwiches .in cntree With Dres~ing lllWI Al[!( IAJIDf;llSo My ....,,,... -··--.,--"""If Ii. -lmr. I ropliod. -E.al.lng -....... --be be!" Sbe WWl9'. ........ JG11 brfin'll m J'ilmr'I t I 1Mr"lhl"mvwl Sbe -•.lo a:plldo tlm filme·s tw• • r a.a. bearDr a la1'0ril.t plxt t11 "' -.,mi. --lhrr ....... sale OD df; , wtlic2 is CJl'tea. fe:n&}e blrpill---.. <i "'~ to In ... patia lo.., .. (be -- dllo. I -· "'11111 doo' (bey .,. the .i.-.. . .....,.,. Sbe ~ -n..,. dm't ....t io wail" 1fbea Dal< ....,. lanr f« cllm« I asted if nm J bit beard .. as trlX-Be ..wia.1.abe-."lwsim « -timosaodloll-· ANN LANDERS ~ u Dile .. la~ t cmM UD- -..... -.. -Aoo. be bas men the• em U:ndle. It llcmt. WIW'1 !he--·---· mdl • l!lioC! u be~ -BllOOIWll'E lllWI BJIOO&, 1i1oR - -lkt. ... -Dllt"I ......_ I s • 'llC M Gii& bis <WiMilJ ._ -.. ·•WW, • pat : llir: h owic • t ~ ~ ___ .. __ _ ca• s ...wcti • t8teAJ • We a tm: ll&B Al>'N LA.~' I ., a P1 17 -.. -.. -.Loll-I •tli. ell • bliad ~ ....... ~ 11'7 cami1L I Jmd TllD rtcJO ._.1 ... ,_ .,.,,-rm-. ..... ..-,. makio& ... Horoscope • , Al " • ---. ...,.. a. ~···---·-., illll. lie -. ..,,.., ...... IMloc • __ ,_ ___ I_ 11im -I amid ia¥10<t. lie Slili; '""Praclice. .. 1111 ...... --. Am. !'ft -!aid I .., a <try pad IODol-. -l'a .elf•o•W• _. ~ d. .,...,_ C. ,.,.. &ITe me --lldpflll hillD • ... to ._.... Sf tlolloC! -0. rt.\1'BD DEUO.:lony-.tlllo~--11 1•----_ ....... Dlid ........ _,_ -.-....-,..-.""',.. ....., ... .....,.-(_.,.._, ,...., .......... ,, __ .. -).,.._.. __ D&Ail A.'11 IAXD£RSo nm is ia :J I • "T.._ TWtlt _., -ti CUG)W ... W11S a p;t.: Al ___ .,.. ... .,, _ ........... ltodi>c <i the ..,. 1ke1 sel. bol -.,.. <i tbe ip«w *" ii Cbt tnde.. Too mtm -... , -. -od lhlll& aham .muis. And thm: ii DD rmDr f« Ihm' iparra.. Lib: &I its and. booli: -.... ....., d lnfonnltioL The --...., lo "' !he -aod ftall. J ma llll a dean, yd I bin that all -... -require --... -.. ol 15 lo•~ P. A.1111 ..... <i ... -.. ..... oJ the .... u-011 mrue load oa tbe awtd Im m toed ftlDr.. A lurtlr cm stcvf to -... I. Plea. prim !he lralli mt! WW vp -_... -COllllEU. L'NlVEBSITY DEUCOBNEY. ,.._ ... ,_Ill. .... 1 .... ,.... ........ ...,.-... .,, ... _..-... .,_....., ..... la ......., ........ ..--. ,... Jky odL How will yoa know wbtli Ult ruJ Jhlnc comes aJoog1 AU Ann Lapdera. ,&end 10< ber bookld "l.Dve or Su and Haw. Jo Tell 1ht Dif!ermoe," SeOO SS oenta In coin and a Joor. oelf .. ddJ-eslod, slamped ... dope witb your rquesl. AnD LaDClm wm be glad lo htlp JOU ..-ilh your JX'Obltm!. Send them lo ber in catt <i !ht DAILY PILOT, eocloo!q a eclf.addrtued, 1lamped envdope. Virgo: Travel Not ·Necessary Tomorrow's Leaders Recognized Swdent.s from lour area hid> IChools are participating ill an Qo.tbe.job training program sponsored by the Newport Harbor Bu!ines. and Profeuional Women's Club. ..\moog the 44 bw:iDess students who leave their school studies one aft.er. noon a v.·eek to receive prad.ical experience is Vicki Horst (right) who Ui guid- ed bi: Mrs. Stan Shivers. admininrative secretary. Costa Mesa Community Hospital. Cbarman of the project is Mrs. A. E. Naege!L Members Pour" Wine lltl.Oel~ cbede m:I other tWedaha •ill be offend for '""'Pline -lbe Sumhine Community NWHtY Sd>ool spcmors its filth anouaJ wir& wting party Friday. Ftb. rt. Mtmbm< and fri<llds of lbe parent -participation nursery 5Chool are invited to attend the benefit which ••ill lake plact in Robirulon's, Fashion J.sland. Pn:uecb from the par- IY trill be used to pll'Chast a~ ditimal equipment and sup. plies !or °" -A&filiooaJ infonnaOon may be obtained by calling >i1N. James Flanders, chairman, 531-1915, or Mrs. Douglas Coo- dil, codWnnaa. SJ&.%334. Parents Learn About Surfing l\1a\·es and Surfing will be lbe Jopic of a llide l!cwrt by Robert N. P&rSOll5. teacher ol pby5ics. pbysical sdence and utronomy a t Saddleback O>llege. His program '11.tfll be prnrnled at I p.m. Priday. feb. rt. 1or r ....... Without PartMa In Lagun. F..i.raJ &Mlil aod Loall bWldiJJ&. P.vtCD. who b act.ive in ~~and •klin& .... &eh =ted u Oraagt County 11J01 Sdloof Colo:IHif·UJe.year In baeblll kl ... and 11Jo was ~ u outstanding -by !he flnt gadualing CW. ol Costa ldesa Ifill! School THURSDAY FBRUARY 26 .,. llYDNBY mwta ....... -,..,..,. lllCll~---­_ .... UIEI (}lmlo D~ ltlo y.. mlJ find that CDD-** ntiW: wnciPe is ...m. 1111 lo part -cash. Pind ahe:asl1e mrf1wk of G • I*'"'" --will ....... lo be blessil>g in dilguia. TAUJWll (Aptil »-Miy lll)o Ycur P'•tesdnm ~ 1JU1h mart than )'CID: might imagine Be Sift to Cd money's worth. Ont -IAlb big could be bluffJng. c.n it. G.EMl1'1 (May 21.June 20 1: GuaTil bealth by .-mg ... tremes.. Tbere is IJ) need to -·· ,..,..ii. Thole who """' already know. The -. .,. not wmh !he -dfst, .-ionallalmoil. CA.'iCEJI (JUDO ZJ.Ju!J ZJ )o Good lunar asped Joday coiJ>. ddt5 with rrm.,,,..., bettn' --YOUlllpawll!L Utiliu aulive reswrca. YOQ can bruk lhrouib ...i lape lo ~ U!IO (Ju!J %3-AJI&. Zl)o You can make ammds to WniJy menber. Delqatc details ol business matter. Strtft: to drmonslrat.e tba1 )'OU do care -happens 10 ....,. - Thm yoa r..J -· VIJIGO (Aug. USepl. Zll: Avoid unnooeszary journey. Wbat you seek is cme to home base. Know this """ act aa:on!ingly. y"' could be plusaD1IY IUrprisod by .lift Ricll iDdk:aits mn tho mild afkrticm LlllU !S.. 12 -0d. ZIJ: A-lnllting Olhen 1rith ....._ .......,.. _..;cm. "" iS .. be raJillic -and do not pl..:ir: teupC1tMn in fl"anl <i ..... -""Ml" iocrusingJy dear by Joai"11. SCOllPIO (Od. -· Zl)o Mak., partnr:r" m&J 9Fem dopressed. Yai _... mab --~ Cyolo is · hi"1 """ ,.. am Of!ord 1o be -kind. Be • "'°""' -... SAGllTABlllli (No<. 12- Drc. %1): Some •ork pra.sures Me felt u dudlhw ...rs. Yoo get -from day by slaJing views In Jor1hrilhl mamrr. One who alb for M- 'ic:e ml)' not rt.allJ need it CAl'1llOOBN (Dec ZJ.J ... II): You gaiD additicnal knowledie ..tiidi helps you II· lain ..,.i.. A lrimd ma1 not be .. do!>mdable -.... llill nice to ~~ U'ClmJd: You ar- ril't ... munincfnl drri•"' AQUAIUIJS (Jm. -.Feb. 11): ()hCec\H art tJ: amf«m- ed iDto construc t iv e challqes. y'"' ""' pol lo t.est.Bul,..-- intuitive intdect. M e • D I -is likely 10 ....... valid. P15CD (Peb. 1Nlardl •lo lloa' _... efforts. Plnilb in one area bdcn apklrinc -11er. Yem ..,._.i is &ftll.. But manalf"""'l is ~ quiraL Applies to rm1nca - """ emolkm. IP TOOAY IS Y 0 U ll BUTRDAY you haw: n- ecutivt qualitiel. Y CKI aft: in-..__ _ .... __ notbinJ halfway. y.., will be pspmnng new nspmsilW.litin · Medical Group Emy .......i 1'IHday ol !he moaJh ~ ol Or8lll' 6boru Medical Alaillaall' Aaociatioa aaemblt: •l I p.m. Locllloo -be oblllD<d by eallbls lln. Jlllb -· ~IL Queen· of Hearts to Reign at Ball Women of the year from 12 chaplers ol Orangewood Regiolial Council, Epsilon Sigma Alpha, lnlemaUon- al, will be honored during a Queen of Hearts ball Saturday, Marcb 7, In Jhe Newponer Inn. Auendlng will be (lell to right) Mrs. WUllam Guthrie, Beta Gamma, Fountain Valley; Mrs. Guy Lan1Jols1.Ztla Bela , Huntington Beach, and Mrs. Tom Strlwand. Newport Beach. FUTURE lWIJllLEllS -Practicing baton twirling under the direction ol Mn. Gngory Reillker are (left to.rigbl) Patty McQueeney. Michelle De Mavisco and Laurie Ulrich. South Coast Junior \Voman's Club will sponsor the class. Pages Turn For Rev iew Boot RViiews or SrhMn Aleid1•inf1 tlat l7tcrin ud "Yoo -~ Eneythln(' .,,. -Babel will be ,..-... -lbe Orlng< Cmm<y w... c:l>apler o I Wtmm'I Arnrrican Orpniza. tioohr Bell.ab i llta t ion '!bioucJ! Training _.. al I p.m. tamoilOW. ,.. ~ Mn. Emory -wm ope1 bier RIWl!DC'Q' home for !he ....ty~ormod dlapler, and the public ii vrekune to at,.. Wld. Furth!r inform;tion may be ohC1ined by calilng Mn. il<Ery G<>thell, '3M240. HB Auxiliary Twice a month the Ladies• Auxiliary lo H1D1tingtoo Beach Veterans of Foreign Wan, Post 7311 meets •l I p.m. The lint Friday of uch month Ibey galber Jn Odd Ftllows llaJJ lor a blWness meeUna and tbe tbtrd Friday they m.Jize in various Jocati<rls. Fm1bet information may. be -by caJJJng Mn. LeRoy llmn&llll al - Club Sponsors Clinic Pupils Toss Batons llalao twirling f..-~ U well u advanced SCUdenU will be offmd -(be Sooth Cout Jtmior woman·s Club ipOOIOi'I • clinic Saturday, Feb. .. in Nleblas School. F OUlllain Valley. lnstruc:Jing lbe class will Students Honored American Field S e r ,. i c e students will be honored "'hen the Huntington Beach Business a n d Professional Women's Club meets for din- ner at 7 p.m. ~londay, ~larch 2. in !ht Seacliff Country Club. Ingrid \\·e.semann and Kris \\'llelan will describt life in Germany and Argentina and show coiortd slides, said Mrs. Atary Paxson. president Additional information may be obtained by calllng ~trs. Bruna Bra,·o. p r o g r a m cha.innan, at 147-4900. be ~lrs. Gregory Reinker, forme r baton ty,·lrling cham- pion from Georgia. She ii a National Baton t w i r 11 n I Associatioo ctrtilied teacher and judge and a twirltr with the Austin Peay Universi- ty Band. Nashville, Teno. v.·here she attended on a baton twirling scholarship. Known as the '1"'•ir\ing Queen of the South," '-lrs. Reir.ker also i.1 listed in Who·s \\bo in Na- tion.al Baton Twirli.r1g and holds other awards 11nd titles. The ftt is SI ptr chUd for each session. aix: chiklrtn ''ishing to enroll must have I.heir own batons. _Starling at 9 a.m. beginners will le.a.m basic fundamental&. From I to 3:30 p.m. in- termediate studenls will M:arn a routine to musk'ttllod from 3:30 to 5 p.m. advanced students Ydll r e c e i v e in- struction in trick twirling and ~'ith IWO batons, ~tonier; rece ived rrom the- clinic ~-;11 benefit scholarships in the fine arl.s secUon " tbt club, For Budget-minded Travel .. TrSYeliric mthusluts fnm tbe Udo We Woman's Club will be especially inl<r.sted In ' 1he .... -· to be ..-i>t<cf by a IJobe-traUln& -bod!elo<. -, M. -· JO.yur.dd •ttomey who cunuUy servn as lptC(aJ umswu .uom., g<neraJ lor !ht Stal<! of Arlmna, wUl discuss llY!ni on • dollar a daJ wl!lle lhrivlng on acitement and flllUCJ'. On tbJs kind oJ a budze~ Rosen lnveled lhrouib 11 a1U11tries. Mode of lransporta. tloo ...,..Umes Included both walklltg and -,, llmou.11ne, aod alllloltgh be canltd a l:napsac:I< Cl! his boct, he .... enter14tned -,, Prime Minister IndiTa Ghaodi, P r e. 1 I d t n t I nexp·ens ively DeGaulle and many othtr he•ds or :il1le and Im· bamdors. 1be luncheon meeuna: will lakt pl act Tuttd1y. Marth to. in the clu~se and will begin wllh an lt:• 1.m. punch bowl. R6erv1tions art bttn& takr.n bJ Mrs. Robert \Yahler at 673-5117. Dur!na the IT<IUP's la~ mMtin.s put presldenla were honored. lo'trOduced by thr cun-ent pl'Uldtnt.. t.lrs, t.1el Rlchley, ,..,. the Mmet. Hoy Lanatnhe.im, Nelton w. Niece, Allon CT1•11. Ralph T8"· dowaky, Thomas Letlo, Mortin Locllney. Hal Dike. Fronk Austin, Ralph Holden. C. E. Vandenoort. H. J. Met1ny, Donald Jacobi, Arnold Dovey and E. Terrence t.tor1nk ' I GLOll·TlllOTTllt Sklnoy 111- 1 I ' ' WedntSday, February 25, 1970 DAILY PILOT 23 Nuptial Plans Told At Chqmpagne Party Mesctns Marry A Ju• ~ la being planned by Ella llOlamond · Booth and Kiri W I I Jl am Urland. News ol tbe !ortbcomlng event wu announced by the brido-lo-be's parents, A Ir Fon:e Col. Jret.) and Mrs. Raymond W.W. Booth of Lido Isle during a champagne bl'eakfast in the Woodside home of Mr. and M"'. Floyd B. Emmans, grandparents of Mias Booth. · The future bride ls a graduate of Fort Hunt High School, Al<xandrlo; Va. and attended ML Vernon Junior College, Wubington, D • C • where &be wu a J 966 debutante. Currently she is studying economics lt UCLA where she is a member of Alpha Gamma Della and president of .\ngel Flight. Her Dance, son of Mr. and Mrs. Karl 0 . Urland of Palos Verdes, ls a San Pedro High School graduate and also at- tends UCLA. He ls active in ROTC and served as com· Cheese and Art ELLA BOOTH June Date St. Andrew's Presbyterlan Church, Newport Beach was the !letting ror t~ double ring ceremony linking C a r o I Anderton and David L. Larson. Parents or the bridal couple are Mr. and Mrs. James W. Anderton and Mr. and f.trs. L. G. Larson , all of Costa Mesa. Serving he r sister as llltlid of honor was Patricia Anderton, and bridesmaids were Kit Gustafson and Lisa Anlch, the bride's cousins and MRS. LARSON Barbara Frantz. Best man was Lars J. S.ys Vows Larson, t h e brldegroom•siil •L•,.• •• •.•,.iiii~iiiiiOiiOiiiii""il brother. Guests were ushered 110•1s to their seals by John Taylor, Dave Johnson and Bob Cha~ man. The newlywed$, who will reside in Costa t.1esa, arf: graduates of Costa Mesa High Schools and attended Orange Coast College. mander of the Arnold Air ;=========== Society. He plans to study_ law at the University of CaU!ornl a, Berkeley ne:r:t fall . The DAILY PlrOT- The One Thot Cares VIRGINF.l~A~'S~~~~~~ SNIP 'N' STITCH SHOPPE lllo$ e.,t Co•st Hwy. e Coron• d•I Mir Phone 673-80 50 Playhouse Pa trons Fete Playwr ight;s Aunt Mn. Wendell Q. Van Atta (left), president of the Costa Mesa Playhouse .Patrons Association and Hap Graham welcome Mrs. Richard Kean of Laguna 'Beach. aunt of Edward Albee whose play, "A Deli- cate Balance·~ ts the current produc;tton of the play- hous~. Following the perform"nce Frida,y night, patrons with their special guest celebrated at an after-glow party in Costa Mesa Country Club. Vintage Wine Event Com• S•• Our Compl•f• Spring Co U,clio11 Of F11hio11 f 1bric1. Sal•clff Fot Th• Oii,rimin t ting S•w••'• Of Orang• <;.ounty. •• • President-' s ~ iece --Wilt~ Marry 1n June 1\Je engagemen t of Lawrene Nixon and Thomas Elnier Anfinson of Balboa Island has been announced by Mr. and Mrs. F. Donald Nixon or Newport Beach, parents or the bride-elect. Miss Nixon, niece of Presl- dent1 and. Mrs. Richard M. Nixon, is a• graduate of Whit· tier College and presently is a teacher in the Placentia Unifled School Distrh.t. Her fiance , son or Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Anfinson of South Gate, is a graduate cf the University o! S o u t h e r n California where he was af- filiated with Sigma P h i Epsilon fr aternity. He is a certified public acoountant with Price Waterhouse and Co. To avoid disappointment, prospeCtive brides ,are remind~ to have their wedding stories with b.Jack and white ,glossy ~holo­ graphs to the DAILY PILOT Women s De- 'partment cine week before the wedding. Pictures . received following the wedding will not be used. . For engagement announcements it is imperative that the story, also accompanied. by a black and white glossy picture, be sub- mitted six weeks or more before the wedding date. U deadline is not met, only a story will be used. To help fill requirements on both wed· ·ding and engagement stories, forms ' are available in all of the DAILY PILOT offices. Further. questions will be answered by Women's Section staff members at 642-4321 or 494-9466. lmported cheeses will ac- compaJ\)' 1 selecUon of vintage wines provided by Brookside Winery In Dana Point for Laguna e .. cMlpera League's seventh annual Gripe FestivaJ WJne.lasllng oven! during the Winter FesUval. Under chalnn8nshlp of Mn. Jay 0. Pyle, wine sampling wtll be llaged In Bot<! Laguna on Friday, Feb. 'IT, from 7 tot p.m. at a cost of $2.50 per person. Artists In. attendance during the evening with a sbowtng ol their work wUl be Robert Armatrong, Robe.rt K u n t i , SaUy Christopher and Louise Cox. Hosts will be the Mews. and Mmes. William Wittman, Wales Wallace, Edward Tamblyn, Matteo N a r d i n i , Thomas Armstrong, George Bryant, DeWayne Hur at, Robert Lawaon, Col. and Mn. Wiiliam H. Bruuere, and the The couple wilt exchange their vows in St. Andrew's '------------.--------' Hospital Meet Fetes Old Board LAWRENE NIXON Betrothed Presbyterian Church n e 1 t June. Stretch and Sew Art League Presents Noted Watercolorist Technique Stitched Celebrating their second birthday will bt: the Happy Homemakers wben they meet at 10 a.m. Friday, Feb. 27, in t h e Community Methodist Church, Huntington Beach. Luncheon chairman for the meeting will be Mrs. Allen Marsh, and among those assisting will be the Mmes. Rudy Suggs, Clarence Stewmon,. Curtis .8.ut.tke , Ronald Miller, Emil Slechta and Frank Rubolino. Board memben of the Aux· illary of South Coast C.m- mun!ty Hospital were honored by Mrs. Jack M. Lyons, presi· dent, at a luncheon following lhe regular board meeting. Lloyd P. Harting, nationally known for his historical Indian compositions, C a I i I o r n i a missions and winlery farm scenes, will demonst rate dur· ing the next meeting or the Huntington Beach Art League . Open to the public. the meeting will lake place at 7:311 p.m. f.1onday. March 2. in the recreation center. A native of Minnesota. the watercolorist studied al the state university, the Mhl· neaj>olls School of Fine Arts, Marital Fight Can Be Righ t, Do you and your mate know how to fight constructively! If you doo't, constructive marital fighting will be in· eluded in a series of seminars conducted by the Family Service Association of Orange COunty. Grtllp discuMions of marital coofllcts will begin 0 0 'lbunday, March 5, at 7:30 p.m. in the Tuslin office. SMOKE CHOKE CROAK! .-or ·, .. QUIT, and , ;1uY£ -LIVE -LIVE ..r... how. YREE conaulta;. tw. and detail&. Spomored b1 . Natlofttl Antl·lmoktnt c:..cn. , , . can tor .Appointment .., ... ,.., er 67.M127 Guttant.eed lo help you quit. within 10 days! No' prob--1..,.1 lhe Chicago Institute of Art and the Grand Ccnlral School or Art. During his colorful career he served as art director for Wall Disney's "Bambi" and other s hort sudjects and participated in the productions of "Fantasia" .w11d "Pin· nochio." His paintings have been reproduced on Christmas cards for banks and in· ternalional!y k n o w n cor- porations and he is creative director for Brown and Bige- low 's Western Division. Art league members will hold a three-day exhibit at South Coast Plaza beginning tomorrow. Presenting a program on Stretch and Sew using lbe new knit rnbrics will be Miss Margaret ~errJn, co-owner of a \Vestminster shop speciaJiz· ing in sewing instruction for all knits. Mrs. Jaycees Huntington Beach M r s . Jaycees meet the second Mon- day of the month at 8 p.m. Location Information may be received by telephoning Mrs. Michael Brooks, 536-7022. · '('he public is invited but reservations should be made today by calling the Mmes. Marsh, 98'1·1611 ; James ·w. Dick, 962-5157 ; Robert Cardinal, 847-38981 or Robert Htibbert, 540-0997. • Those planning to aUend are requested to bring a table service and $1.50 for lunch. Liquid embrdidery will ' be demonstrated ,at the Miirth meeUng, and·a Mex.lean Juncb will be featured in :April A special trtbul< was paid to retiring gift. shop chairman, Mrs . Harry Sowden who has manged the shop in the holpllal lince H ~In 19S9. During those years, the ac- tive ho1plt.al worker per!Klllally accumulated more than 11,000 hours of service:, and the •hop contributed 137,000 to the aUiillary !or benefit of the hoopltal. Among thoee honored at the end ol thelr board term were the Mmes. Tandy Coltman, John Sbea, Georp Kennedy, Gordon.Fleener, F r' e e DI. a n Perrih, Mont McMUlen aad Mld Fm Randolph. 9peciaJ luncheon guet.t WU acting actm!Dlatrator Sta:n!ey Oppegard. ''The happy I am when I'm straight is more heautifpl than the happy I seemed to be when I was stoned.'' ,. \ Tho girl in the picture Is named Chris. For over a year, she was on amphetamines, powerful drugs known as ''speed." This is how she1describes It: "I think 4Speed.' is a lot w(>ne than heroin. Kids have got to know about it, because they can fall so easily into taking it through the diet piJ\ husie, or needing something to help the?' study. You.~ow, ~at's crazy. Became the com· bination of amphetamines and no s 1 e e p just blows your memory completely. There are whOle secUons of my life which I just can't remeD)b_er. It got to be just 'do a little more, do a litue more: until that wu all there was. And the 'crashing' •.. • sometimes the 'crublrig' II Just really awful! ''For me to stop. taking l~ I had to t .. 1 that people were caring. And they were. I was really lucky. I wu very close to two people that were really into amphot.amln .. very deep!y, and I loved them •·lo~ But u fir' u thoy were concerned, the only thing that !boy bad wu tbe 'meth,' and that was their life. AJid ·they're both dead now." 0 0exies," 14bennies/' ''meth" are called "speed" these days. And people who know 11speed" know •4gpeed" killst For more !acts about drugs, write for free booklota to: National Institute o! Mental Health, Box 1080, Wuhlngton, D,C. 20013. Drs. and Mmes. Ri chard OrexeUus, Anthony Orlandella and David Ericboll. Ti:Rts mil)'. be obtained from Olivers' TWist Fashiom, 1492 F., So!Jth Coast.llighway. S•• Yo11 Soon! VIRGINIA u .. Y-._kAmori-... Master c-.. OPENING SPECIAL .100% KANAKELON WIGS USE YOUR GRANT CREDIT ACCOUNT OPENING SPECIAL! P.re • styl1d FREE Corrying c1 .. 100°/o HUMAN HAIR The most versat~e hair-piece you ca" own. Wear rt •form· al or casual-no limit to the attractive 1 t y I e s you can create. VALUE $19.49 CASCADES Pre-styled -FREE styling block -FREE Carryin g c:ase. All for orlly • • • • • • • PERSONALITY STYLJNG BLOCK . Holds firm-no slip pin9. $1.49 Y•lu•. SAVI 4tc N.,.$1 SYNTHmc WIGS and FALLS Permanently curled faUs Brush and wear stretch wigs -Fashion flattery for every age. Many shades including blonde. sg~!. ,;4.99 SAVE $5.00 Wig FOAM STYLING Stand Holder BLOCK with 111c:tlo11 98c Yllue "' S..1 4tc Now3~ ~100 3 for 94f IROOKHURST AND ADAMS, HUNTINGTON IEACH ' 2f OAILV ,JLO' (5-L·N.C l Wtdr<tdol, F~ 25, 1970 ' • Meeti11gs for Parents,· ;Je-achers D·iversif iea • Adventures of Tom Sawyer Come to Life The "Tom Sa""yer" operetta will be enacted by Prince of Peace Lutheran· School students in Te- \Vinkle School auditorium at 7:3{1 p.m. Friday and Saturday, A1arch 6 and 7. The adventure is spon- so red by the PTF and the public is invited to the ad- mission free event. Taking time out from rehearsals are Amy Barraclough as Becky, Greg Prechel as Tom Sawyer and Scott Sutherland a s Injun Joe. Imaginative Junior Authors Display Works \Voodland ElE!menlary School has some mighty tal- . ented youngs ters. Students. '~o write and illustrate original books, will show their imaginative "·orks during the annual PFO sponsored Junior Authors Employment Agency Book Fai~ Wednesday and Thursday, March 11 and 12. Young authors in the making are (left to right) Karen, Alison and Sam Wille, whose mother, Mrs. \Villiam \Ville is PFO cultural arts chairman. Ex.;Nuns Locate Jobs Citations Presented Supporters of the Girls Club and Boys Club of 1he H.- Area gathered m t b e Newport.er Inn for a ValenUne daMer dance and presentation of awards. By PA TRJClA rite CORMA CK NEW YORK (UPI) -The nun in her late 20s wore her habit the fU"st lime she kept a buaiots:s appointment ~·ith Tim Fogarty in New York. 'lbe next time he saw her. thttt #eeks later, she wore a mini s k i r t, saucer • sJied sunatasses and a floppy.brim· med hal Tbe new clothes 'ftQt along wjth her new job in a Wall Street brokerage houst!. And her new job we:rit along with btr new w1y' of life: that of a leClllar ot ts..rellgious or former nuo. Fogarty, whose Su cc es~ ~-~ency has bdll!d "'""" .. ...,,..ice oJ. ~c.n In .... jobl. go! into the buslnell of !inding jobs fa< 0-t'.IUDI and ex-meg.-0(·1.be-- clot)I . Dino -.... His client. -come ....from mrt1)' denominations but the bu!k are Roman Catholic. Al t~e-suggestion of a Jesuit who has no intention of becoming a secular, FogaHy and hl5 colleagues s1arted the specialist personnel agency just for tht ex-religious. "The nuns are easier to plaei! than the prie s t s ,'' Fogarty said. "Banks. tn- suranct companies and brokerage houses attept the ex·priestJ readily, but most other employers won.'t e\·en interview lhem,'' One highly educated ex- pr.lesl Is a doorman. Anoiher who has two masters degreos and a coUe.ae professorship behind him is a counterman In a deUcalessen. •1The dell man specified he wanted that Sol an I.tour Job and nothing more.'' Fogarty tald. The priest wan ted something simple because, as he told Fogarty: ''I've had enough problems." He's \·ery happy al his deli job. Fogarty has 900 resumes from job-seeking nuns and priests. Some are wailing it out behind convent o r monastery walls. Their superiors cooperate. The oddity of being an H· nm1 or U·priest is belng removed, according to Foear· ty. He think! that's why so many are leaving. There are no accurate. staUstica on the: numbers of relfgious leaving but Fogarty says' the numbers leaving all denom1naUoos bas been i n- creasing. "The rwoos the people leave are as numerous as the • mdivldllala lhemselves," he said. Boys Club regional diroctM Raymood Dogden presented special awards lo the area club which wen accepted by Robert G. Leecb and Del Mangels. nie awards ware signed by Presidenl Richard Ni1on. Similar awards were given to the Girla Cillb, accept<d by Mrs. Dawn Bowne repre~ ting Mrs. Gleam Sm It b • former director. Tbe ·honors were bestowed by Mrs. Don Davis. west field aenice director. Guest speaker ror the fifth annual dinner was Diet Lane, film and television per10oall- lf. Bay View PTA ...... --""" Presldeal BEl'Oll'l'S: llooamy .. .....,. ...-,..... lftOOll!od· at ,._Day meetlnc. -i. ............ ¥!'-Anila But- terworth and Joba ?::·.::"'~ J: Opt.a f u D d • Nomln1tln1 eomrtlttee was e 1 e ct e d • SuYlng with Garlu Webd, principal ... 1he Mmes. Kmnetb Allgustus, William -William Fuller, R. c. Sutton and Thomas '111oropooo. Bear PFO Mn.J•- Pmideot REPORTS : ·Mn. Robert " Writer, room m· o t be r r.praealalive roporls class parties bave been hosted by ~~ Mmef-Deu1s Dokkel. Jack Temple, Peter James. R. G. Flnenan, Robert shafrer, Fredrick Barthe, ~1artin La.Van, W 111 i am Pochirowski, John Zilkow, William Rict, R o b e r t Downey, H. D. Pertle, Olar1es Mitchell, Br u c e Ballinger, Mel Packard, R.Obert Parra, H e c t o r NavarrelteJ James Harris. Russell satahor. J a m e s Sponagle. Robert Heodley and R. E. Wendlandt • . • _Mrs. Wllliam,Lockart, JeglslaUon chairman was in cbarl'•ol pole waldlers for ---. California PT A Mn. Ted BrUso President COMING UP : Herb Livsey, baskelbaD coach at Orange Coast C.Oilege, will speak at the annual lather-son ban- quet at 1:30 p.m. Thursday, ltfa r ch 5 , in the multip.irpose room . .REPORTS: Mrs. J o s e p h Meng. den rno4her of Cub Scout Pack 373 led the flag ceremony at recent unit meeting. 1'1rs. Lynn Bosen. honorary 11 f e dlairman ~ service awards to Richard Ogden, Mrs. Os<ar Brown and Miss Pat Albert. \Villi.am Hamilton, principal spoke on the Innovations in Learning. College Pk. PT A Mn. James Schafer President COMING UP : Board meeting at 9:30 a.m. Tu e s da y , March 3, in Ne~rport Beach. REPORTS : Mrs. W i 11 i a m Walton wu presented the honorary service award. Fifth grade student s presenttd patriotic readings. Mothen of fifth graders hosted. Girl Scout Troop 13S5 led the fl ag salute. Mn. Ray Gamtt ~leader . CdM Higli PTA Mn. Robert K~e President COMING UP: Narcotic s F.ducalian program will be presented by the Newport Beach Police Department at 7:30 p.m. tcmorrow, in the little theater. Parents and high school age youth are in· . vited. Harper PTA Mn. Bob Lindsay President COMING UP: General mttttng aDd scienct fair at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, ~larch IO, in the multipurpose room. REPORTS: Past presidents were ltoN>red at t b e Foundtrs Day and Americanism meeting. Mr. and Mt's. Haro1d Brownell were presented \be bondrary aervlce awards. Lincoln PTA Mn. Nicllol1 Kfoury President COMING UP : 'The Daisy Al· fail' la the theme ol Ille fathe:r~ughter 1 p r I n g luncheon frOm 10 to 11:30 a.m. Saturday, Feb. 28, in the cai.lortum. Sklu will be present..i under the dlrtt- tion of Mn. R i chard Jobn.Jton. Chairmen are the Club Marks Members d the Welcome Home Club of Loiaure World, Laguna llllls -"""""' to hear • report on acttvity since ttie club wu founded one year .... Treuirer Richard Wallen reported donations of Sl,000 have m01de It possible for the club to aerve coffee, cookies and juke to more than 56,COJ Vietnam veterans returning at El Toro Marine Base. Membe11 of the club, head· Paularin o PTA Mn. Nlgel Balley Prealdent COMING UP: Mother· daughter fashion show and tu, Everything'• Coming Monte Vida PTA \.. Up Dalsiea at 3,p.m. tomor- Mn. Mart Morris y row ••• Paper drive from 3 President to 1 p.m. Thursday, March COMING UP : lee cream 5. Volunteers are needed to --:.1 __ , .. _ 11.... measure papers . _. """'uuuu.o:oc meew.ug at REPORTS : "Sound of Music" t a.m. Tuelday, March 3. was presented to the Mn. David Goodsell is students today by Laguna :::i~ Cami,.ilj' "t':; Lyric Opera Company •.• place at t :l1 a.m. Wed--Mn. Johll Grauer, ways and means chairman aMount'ed nesday,__March t. i 0 the a profit of $IK> was.rea lized home of Mrs. Tom Herndon. [rom the intematiooal dime· REPORTS: Marine C or p s a-dip dinner, Color Guard from Santa Ana :::"'"~ta:: ~ Presidio PT A Student. In first lbroup third grades presented a patriotic program ..• Board · mt!mbera vote d to partiClpate . In lbe JllS\in Opta fund paper drive. Members were -taken on a school tour by s c 0 t t Paulsen, principal, to view the new program a n d fadlities available to · the student>. Newport Ele . PTA 1\-tn. John F~ PreSident REPORTS' Honorary I 11 e memb,rsblps wer e presented to Mrs. John Scapple and John Boulton aL Founders Day meeting. Nominating com mittee presented the slate-bt ... of. ficers for 1970.71. Newport Hts. PTA Mn. David CllavJs Preaidenl REPORTS ' Flag salute was Jed by lbe cifuellM>f.tJie. month at last wee Jt 's meeting. Thef are Joni Hulchism, Kay-Lynn Irvine, Jim Landrigan and Danny Sharp. John Clark, new prin- ctpa] welcomed parents. Mr. and Mrs. Elgie Armour were presented the honorary servi~ awards. Elected to serve on the nominating committee were AJ Walters and the Mmes. Armour, Lloyd Dennis. Harry Mellor and Robert Smith. Mrs. Ann Kroeger's fifth grade and Mrs. Cam HarUard's fourth grade classes tied for the highest attendance. They received pla ygroo.nd balls fur a month. Queen of Angels Aux. Mrs. James Davies Presi dent Mn. James Ramey President COMlNG UP : Association meeting at 7 p.ni.. Tuesday, Marcil 10, in D a v i s multipurpose room. Orange County Teen Ch a I le ng e under the direction of Bob Irmston will present the program on New Direction for Drug Troubled Youth. Mrs. Philip Kilmer, pro- gram chairman encourages parents and students to al· tend. Election of ofricers 1'ill lake plact. Mothers of third grade students ~·ill host. Pomona PTA Mrl. C. Darrfy Brodfey President COMING UP: Board meeUnr at 7:IO p.m. !looday, March 2, at school. REPORTS: Louis Simon won the honorary ~ce award. Conrad Scheafer " a 1 chalnnan. TeWinkle PT.A Afrt. Robe.rt Soteuell Presldenl COMING UP: Age.-01 Aquanus is theme or the mother· daughter fasbloo show tea from 2:30 to 4 p.m. Satur- da y, March 7. Tickets at St may be obtained from board members or by calllna Mrs. Ian Lynas at 546--1374. or ~1r.s. Joseph ~ at 549-- 4147. Eighth grade girls will model fashions from Pen· ncy's. Wilson PTA .. Pi.trs. Wiiiiam outlaw # President REPORTS: Past presidents honored at the unit meeting v.·ere the Mmes. Edith Met· calf, Keith KellDgg, Floyd Howard and Robert Sankey. Monorary life memberships v.•ere presented to Mrs. Ben· ny Butteling and M r s • Sankey. COMING UP : Lente.n meeting at 8 p.m. tomorrow, in the little theater. Corona de! ~1ar High School. The Rev. Chris Johnson will speak on ~1oral Challenge in the Jet Age -A Christian's Role in the Pi.iodern Chur ch. Nominating commi ttee will be elected. Mothers of third and fourth graders will serve refreshments. Fashionable Young Miss Kelly Magee shov.'s her mother. :tilrs. Douglas Magee what all the fashionable young ladies at Sonora Elementary School are '"'earing. ?\!others and youngsters 'vill be able 10 see the latest in fashion when Sears, South Coast Plaza. assists the PTA during a mother~aughler sho1,1,iing Saturday, March 7. at 3 p.m. 1n the n1ultipu rpose room. Tickets are 50 cents and e11tertain1nent and refresh· rnents are featured. REPORTS : Amblyopia e ye clinic was conducted by the County Health Department Mrs. Francisco AJvarez was chairman • . . School emblems were presented to the cbeer)eaders for their outstanding performance in the recent cheerleading con-1-------------------- lest. They placed eighth out of ~ schools. Composer Sets Music Series Instruction In orchestration H will be offered by ferde Q"-IT Grofe, composer o( t h e ' l f "Grand Canyon Sui le,'' • • • through a new ly in.corporated pnm1t1'~e non~t foundation, t h e l 1 Ferde Grofe Institute o f . 1t 1 ::· series which consists ()f can you two classes a week starting in t '. March will be in tht institute 01e ,, jn West~'OO<i. b' • Grofe, a Santa Monlca resi · dent, has limited himself to conducting and CQmposing in recent years. One of his most noted arrangements w a s Driginal orchestration o f George Gershwin's "Rhapsody in Blue." Samuel Dolnic.k is ei:ecutive vtce president of the foun- dation usisttd by secrelal'y Charles Goldring. In an age oE'automatic fct m.akt'rs and self-cleaning ovens, you r bottled waterfyStem'is about as modr:rn as an iCc box. F Y Besides taking up valuable kitchen spact, botUrd \Yater dis.-i rs t ear pensert are unattractive, uneco nomical and require frequent refilling. ed by seven dUefs in charge of There is a much better w~y • , • The Lindsay Company h.1t !td!h e=rs~k,~Ji.a:d dtvelo~ a Unique $t'lf<_ontained 1''alcr purif~cation sys~ niaht They arrange f 0 r that Js ll\Stilltd out of 11ght benearh your k1tchtn sinl(. It refreshments and offer a u.Ulizes tht process of reverse osmosis to rt!move 90% of the friendly smile and conver. fn\purities from your tap ,,·.iter <1nd provides a continuous aation a~ veterans land on 1upply of pure, fresh drinking wal!'r for about 1/5 the cost of,;: the.Jr native soil. '--t''ed 't Th • . _11 . h II l Other officers of lhe: club ln L'l" u , wa er. ere is no 1n,l<U1dl1on c arge -a you P~T addition to Wallen include IS S6.:;Q pet month (or the use of this modem r Harry WandUng, pmldent' Al purification system. For full d'1ails, call or LINDSAV~ Martinson, vice presiden~= write The Lindsay Com.pany, P.O. 8t"l'C '21001 ,, Howard Burle..n, purth Nowport Buch, Calif. 92600 (7Hj 042-6861. ~ qenl ...._.,.. I • • individual ll)' JODl'lAN HASTINGS Of "' Dalt)' "IM 1t1n "If you don't believe nucotics a re prevaleix In Orange County spend a couple of days around certain f o o d stands or the pier!." Thia ls the convtctlon or JU6tice Robert Gardner, who spoke informally before the Orange County, Town and Gown Auxiliary of t h e University of S o u t h e r n Ca_lifornja. "I followed a kid trying to make a b~y all the w a y down a pier one day -he didn 't succeed," continued the jurist, who for 22 )"!&rs served as superior court judge in the county. He is noted for bb work in juvenile and criminal law and family problems. Seeing the narcotics prob- le.m as one facet ~ the cur- rent social revolution, he cited examplta of 10ns a n d daughters of old and dear friends> who now are fn. carcerated tor naraiUcs or narcotic-involved offenaea. CAN'T WHIP PROBLEM ln spite of the valiant eUOl't$ of law enforcement agencies: schools, c bur c b ~ s and organizaUoos, he feels that society en mlS5e can't whip the problem. "What to do? l don't know the answer -1 nobody does. Orange County i\as be.en very severe in hahdling t h e narcotics problem yet we can- not bold our heads very high. We are &o:lnl to have to live with the 'fact that It's as widespread as the news media ;l;. ~ Holds clahm. Our kids are soinl to be upoaed and law en- forcement can't stamp tt out." JusUce Gardner's view of the narcoucs offender ts that the penoo has donecaomethlng Iha! Is agaJnsl ; Ibo law 'and therefore clelerYlog. of, punlsh- mect whether he ls a · first· time offender « pwiber. "But we're not' k I d d I n I ourselves -the big boys in narcx4ica are 11tUng around • f100ls lo Vegu Md Mlall)l and we'll !)ever get "'our bauds on them:" . RULE A HANDICAl' ' The biggest handicap''(aced by law enforcement b an e:r- clusionary rule against search and seizure. , U. referrtd to a C-In lbe cowrty where pollce om.... Zontians. -· Hono rt Each month d~g the school year Newport Harbor Zonta Club honors an outstan- ding glrl in each of the area high schools. From the ranks of the coeds chosen. ari annual· aw8rd of a $50 ~Tln_gs bond* is_ presented. lo the ootstandirig girl-of-the- year in each school. The · Misses Susan Shaw, Newport Harbor Hiih School; Rayli:ne c o,w 1 e y, Es~ Hll!h School; Barbara Klitz, Corona del Mar High School, and Patricia ~ogle. c06ta Mesa High School.. received honors at Zonta's awards luncheon. NEWPORT HARBOR • Wednesday, F•b<""J 25, 1970 DAILY 1'11.0T II Key to Drug Problem had ,._="'b"'1a=-::,.:::,°'M"-'"en=er,-----..·ie iiii!OfllcetrllerClll>lrt~ and search a houle. They come up -wlU. some wet -but could amell marljuna in a adm.luible -mal'.ijuana." bo:r so the owner wu tried If 11 w ~ la and convicted ol poue!'llon. virtually bamltnm&, 400iety The rullng wu .reversed f{ter must tum to edUcaUon, yet ti an appeal because "olflcera c'an't expec:l the ICboola to could not uly on their sense of ao1Ye the probJetr.. He feeJa smel~; they had to see the that schooU have £aken a lood evidence." attitude toward dn.11 educaUon He injected a bumo,.... note bul ochoola also have to. deal wllh bis descr!pl!oa of pOlice wtlh trala parenla. officers, equ!~ with a SYMPATHY l"OR 8CllOOU search warrant", knocking on_a "l ~have the utmost ~ door and annoWicllii they polhy-wlth IUchen wbo hive YI er e there to search the to deal with them; parents can house. be Irrational," be contlmaed "Then they must wait a with a broad grin. 'reasonable Ume before break-He feels cburebes a n d ing in, and in the meantime organizations can't combat the everyone inside stampedes for narcotic m.enace, so the final the head to dlspooe of lbe responsibility comes home lo ••ldence. one 11me a fink on-· lbe paren11. f~) dlseonnected the ban. "The most vital lhlnl a • molhen:an-do-Jrdevott-bor life to her child at an early age -and then sweat it out - when they're teenagers. You have to say 'I lovt my child more than anythlog elae In the world' and mean it -then your child will have a &1 per• cent chance,'' he s t ate d emphatically. The lean. tanned julll"'· who rtlen to himseU u Old Iron Pants, watched almost a generaUon of Orange County young people lfOW up during his leilure here. He swam and surfed with them -and listened to thtir views of the affiu(!nt society without m. terjecting his own oplntom unlesg asked to do so. IUDS CYNICAL "Tbey're a cynlcal bunch; they lake a cynical view of .. AT EDISON'S ELECTRIC LIVING CENTER :l ~j "BEEF BONANZA" diVC4'ti!d pcttitl o-, • Mil ff-'-ll--~'-1 :"~!:,' :.d =r.~ over: It bu hepocne rwlU, .. he admMlohecl Ille _, .t young ....n, . "11ley're C)'lllcal a boa t parenla' lack " r...,. .. Ille cblldren u people. P...U:-. are wrappid llP in ......,.. -not even each a&bs.'' Americanl .-& lbe· -organizaUOl>COMCloul lidolJ in the workl today, tte ~ ., Unued, polnUng out lbal wtdll - father Is becomlnl a .,.... perouo busintllftWI an•d mother Is out beinll Mn. Citizen, the childrftl are com. Ing home to cold, empty houses. U parents do !heir job In Ille early yura, lhe· tldl will -k ll OU~ he prophesied. Beef is essential in California meals and wilh the bonanza or cut& and methods of·preparation available, no wonder! The public ls invited to Miss Shaw, honor r o 11 member for four years, cur- rently is Associated Student ~ secretary aDd .member of the Senior Couricll and Ex- NH HIGH Susan Shaw ESTANCIA Ri1ylent Cowley • CDM HIGH Ba rb•ra K•tz CM•HIGH P•trlcia Nogle learn how to BUY, STORE AND COOK BEEF at a demonstration given by Edison Home Economist, Carol Heinz.1This is your opportunity to learn why srnart shopping and electric cooking are an unbeatable combiQ.ation. ecutive Council. · The daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Wiiiiam Shaw of Newport Beach also has been active: In the Girls' Athletic Association, aqua show and Medical Arts Junior Council during her junior year. Club and member of the During her senior year she G~ CWun of CdM High and American Field Service and has been-camp u a com-Orarige County, 1'70; California Scholastic Federa-missjoner and member of the California State SChotanhip Uon finalist, 1970, and earned the member of the Drama Club, Pep Club; drill team and was junior c]us lreuurer. The same program will be repeated on eight different days at the Edison Electric Living Center, 538 Main Street, Huntington Beach. The evening programs start at 7:30 p.m., on either March 4, 5, 9 or 18. The· daytime programs will be held on either March 11, 12, 17 or 19, at 10:00 a.m. Her fl.rsl two years at Harbor found her active in Student Congress, Future Teacbe.rl Club. a dance pro- duclloo and Fmhman Coun- cil. · ExecutiVe Council. C S F , school servt'ce award In 1~1. During her junior year Miss n Cowley was on the GAA :senior honorary society a n d 68 cind &t. cabinet, Student C o u n c i I , Ski Club. Miss Katz has been named secretary ol the French class The previ001 three years to the honor roll three years. and won the gold E award. In she was acUve as junior class COSTA M&U her .second year of high school vice president, sophomore and Miss Nogle ls pnsident ol she abo participated on the freshman class treasurer and the GAA, chalnnan of tbt Stu- drtll team and in the Vogue member of AFS, GAA tnd the dent Activities Council and on Club, and out!ide of school she Salling Club. the yearbook staff. During her was a volunteer at Fairview ln addition to being Zont.a first three yean at Mesa High State Hospital. girl for February she was the sbe was presented lhe GAA The senior co e d plans to outstanding Teenager o f sports award. Following her graduation she will attend Orange Coast College to study hl the dental assistant program. She Is the daughter of Mr. a n d Mrs. Frank O. Nogle of c.osta Mesa. N A THALIE 91 CMW1o1 Ml M•• CUSTOM BI KINl~- v-'"'"""' .. ..irt.. ;; 24 llMn. ...,. .. llllblll. IMt' L COAST Ht•HWAT c.-. .. ... 1714111 For additional inforn1alion call 547-7581, extension 278. Edisoo.'s borue economists will answer quatioos and show JQl admiqaes b thrifiy, tlme-sa,;,,g""' of modem eleari< tppl-l!ci"i. hlmd-molao - lrimk, ...J .u.co..rwlmbfo .... h_ .... blaa. Another commuroty service o~ , Soufh1rn Ca/iforni• Edison COllt!MllY Outaide activities have in- cluded Tri-Hl-Y for four years and Tioga Service Club for two years. The 12th grader plans to at- tend UCI for nurses training and transfer to UCLA or San Francisco lo finish h e r medical training. enroll at California State Amerjca nomJnee, 1969; OAR Jn previous years she was a College at Fullerton and ma-~~~~~::::._~::....'.~:__'.'C',."':~~~'.'..."'.':.:::'.'.'...'.'.'.!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'!!!!!!!!!~~-----~-----+-----------'------­ jor in physJcal education 1'hile ESTANCIA The daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert R. Cowley of c.osta Mesa presently ls presi- dent of the GAA and chorus class, treasurer of Crescendo earning her teaching de~. CORONA DEt MAR I Following graduation thla swnmer Miss Katz, t h e daughter of Mr. el Mn. Allen Katz of Corolla dil Mar, will enter the University of Callfonlla. Santa Barbara to study oceanography. Musical Auditions Set For County's Students Orange County Musical Arts Club calls , th• attention of young county lllUliclans in- terested in solo competition. Audition dates are fast ap- proaching for lhe 25th year of annual competition. Applica· tion blanks for all divisions Ac cessory Wards Off Drowsiness The newest accessory for the motorist: a g a d g e t are available in maJor music stores. The solo piano competition wlll take place Sunday, April 12, Jn Santa Ana 'High School; vocal and instrument.al com- peUtion will be SUnday, April 5. in SA High; cla.ss\cal guitar division on April 5, location may l>e obtained by calling Anthony Puzio at 53'1.w7, and du~ piano dlvision will be April 5, at Woodworth Piano and Org8'11 Co., Santa Ana. First place winnen will be presented in a p u b 11 c performance sometime in the future. Cash prizes, trophies and cerWlcates also will be awarded. lhe manufacturer says helps lo We ist Watchers ward off drowsiness or tension while driving. TOPS Waist Watchers Press this vibrating device as&emble every Thursday •t 7 lo temples or baCk or neck. p.m. In Circle View School, The manufacturer says the Huntington Beach. vibrations &timulate b I o o d ~--"------­ clrculatlon to the b r a l n , thereby reducing drowsiness. It stores in the glove com- partment and operates on two nrtlinary "C" batteries. Harbor TOPS H a r p er School in Co5ta h-lesa Is the location where membera of TOPS Harbor LlshlAora gather each Monday ........ 17:111 . BOOKS BOOKS BOOKS BOOKS .. -------miil _,._,_ .......... ...... ~~N SHOP PICKWICK "WE SPECIALIZE BOOKSHOPS IN SERVICE" -----..,I. C.OAIT tfM.HWAT •ttn C-.., M• 17J•111t "'*"*"'·.;,-.-~-~ ... ~O:WNOHltl \ . • • • . . • soup. Pepperidge Farm gives you: 10¢ to heat up and eat up. \ """""""""' ________ ,........, ______________________ ·----------···· -- l , • . _ . .'. . WALNUTS GIVE CHICk EN SALAD A GOURMET TWIST . .. New Salad Gets Star Bi·ll ing With the.eoiertaWnJ ....00• IOOd-iooJdn& Miid al a bulltl In fllll nrinl, we're all on the 110pper or luncb -jllll double . ' · ~ !or cieliciOU1 IDd the ncipi iuem ellhL bandaome main dlab Alads, In thal cut doo'I 1amW1 ...llllWlllJl.bul..with com~ Yf!J!l _afjy y.., ol iqredienia we know OW' have ur&Dled lhe tomato and lrtenda like. plnetpple liices on a platier 'lbia new walnut cblcten IDd lopped with the cbicttn. uJad fills the bill In every WIJ Wainui.oooclimenl miiutre. -with tender chicken, the l!avo • !Jal ..,..r lo WI the criap crnoch of I o a 1 I t d Njada IDd a . Mrvin& fort or wainula IDd a selecUon of con-IPOOD lo atudy them When llletla"""'themlelves. ~la wblcb usually are waliwu, make esoedaflY aerved with currl... 1<,11)' aallnl In all uJada llUCh Hot aeaame aeed roils or u poullrJ, iulooct. !rOll and wafers woald be a most com· meat camblnatiooa. Try patible 10-with, u 1'0Ukl a touted walnut· balva and cream aoup such aa .,... pea tarP pleca u lhe aoolool In or ahrimp, lil)IUy Jlavored loaaed ll'e<n ulad, loo. with CWT)', .. a nm""""" lo To -· dr1lP the wainut compliment the W a I n u t • -kemelJ intQ, rapld]y bollln& Chlcten-Olndiment SaI.d. water; boll three minutes. Yon could aiao pre-lllia Drain well. 'J'ben sprtad the walnu,t bmtll evenly hr· a aballow pan· aod bake at SSO degreet, 1Urring often, 12-1$ minutes, « un!ll IM. .k_e_rnels are golden brown. WAUWl'.(Jll)CKEN CONDIMENI' SALAD 113 Ctq> cbopped, toMled Callfomla walnuts 2 CUJll C1lbed cooked chicken ¥• cup finely chopped celery I labieopoons <bopped grten oillon 2 tablespoons ch o p p e d ral!lna 2 tibleapoon1 c h o p p e d chulDey Vt. cup maymnaise I/, teaspoon salt 2 teaspoons lenion juice Crisp lettuce ' slices tomato 4 slices plntapple Toasted walnut halves" for gamlsh C.otnbine watnuls, chicken, celery 1114 on!DD. Stir riilslili, chutney, .mayonna1.9e, salt and lemon Juice teipthtr. Fold into w1h1ut-chlcken mbturt. Arr~e crisp lettuce on chilled salad plates. Center each salad with tomato s11ct, top with drained pineapple sllce. Divide chicken salad into four equal portions. Plle or scoop on top of eacb pineapple slice. Garnls.h with toasted walnut halves. Serve wtth additional mayonnaise, ii desired. Makes four servings. ntUI PlllCIS lmCIM IN AU IAIPH$ STOllES TNUlll.llllU$UM.,fB; M,J711f.AMAICH 10 1'70. AllOTAX TOTAXA!llE IT!M$. ...._,,, .. _,~} - THOUSANDS OF .LOW~AS"'blSCOUNT lVERT· • ' ' I DAY S-RELY-PRICESI COMPARING IS BELIEVING ••• SO SHOP TODA)' AT THE «9 NEAR YOU AND PROVE IT TO YOURSElf!. ·•FR~H-~ACT fROllt-1 GRADE A · CUT OltfRENCH Ct.rr , GREEN BEANS 5 9.§I~!» PKGS. 15c CHIFFON TOILET TISSUE ~~ 27• 27' SOFT-WEVE TOILET TISSUE ,'.. 27' 27' AURORA TOILET TISSUE :~,ll 27' 27' ·ZEE TOILET TISSUE <IOll>ACI 38' 38' CHIFFON FACIAL TISSUE ,..,.,., 28' 28' - OOWHYflAKE FROZEN 2 25 ' WAFFLES ~ c FROZEN PKG. Of 2 DOWNYFLAKE 29c. PIE SHELLS PEAS~ CORN 5JJOO c l 11at0A51 $105 ll • 1 !i'1s LI. J:&H GRANULATED 'e&H BROWN :e&lt POWDERED GOltt' M'EbAL'F(OUR BISQUICK MIX . CRISCO SflORTENlNG WESSON OIL CRISCO OIL WESSON OIL I t a ' ~ll. 55' 55' 1-ll.17' 17' lll.17• 17' .~ ... 1111 1111 ~L 31c 31' ~ ... 87' 87• U<lL 50c 50c 2«1L 511' 50' 31-0L 11' 11' t°AMPBELL'S TOMATO. ,·,""L 12' 12' CAMPBELL'S =~· "o't 17' 17' · CAMPBEU'S VEGETABLE ,....,,,_ 15• 15' --SCHILLING BLACK PEPPER ~~ 45c STEERO BOUILLON CUBES ,~. 21' HOT SLICES BREAD ·FOLGER!S INSTANT COFFEE ·~.L $1 49 LOMA -LINDA GRAVY QUIK -1SC ,.._ ......... MAXWELL HOUSE INSTANT COFFEE ·~.:;L 1111 MAXIM INSTANT COFFEE ~; 11• !'_EIN ~ABLETS .rKt __ D ........ DY~S-.;.;P=-EC~IA=-LS-! Y:o::-0.,..:...U_:.;::R .::.::.:::CH..:::.::.O::::.:.IC..:::.E :.::.89-c .-VA-l-=UE~S ORANGE JUICE JLEND . SPORT0 fBALLS ,~gH 59c TOYRALCERS ucH 59c ' ' . . • / \ IVORY FLAKES ·~ 4SC ~~RY SNOW oomt $119 LIQUID DETERGENT "'... I -CAMAY SOAP : st-tOMET CLEANSER \ •, '• • . . • - • ·: .... ~ " ' -. • i \ I ~ •• ~~ :· -· -. '· • J - Forest Mushroom Praised as Pan,aceaJ . ANCIENT MUSHRooMs MAK! MODERN MAGIC It ts sajd that Wu Mini. the the folklore of Nippon itself. say the mushroom comes by eminent Cb1DtSe physician of Uow .. ellt might one account ltl plQUlllt Oavor and healtb- Utt 15th century, was ctvtn to for the superhuman swordplay givini qualities naturally. For lyric praise ot t.be ancient and of the fJerce Samurai? centuries, the edible fungus • 8t.ol"ied J~paoeae forts\ mush-wtlhln the past 10 yean:, grew unattended on the trunk1 fOOQl, Sbil·t.,-M. . aclentWc studies or ShU·Llt·ke's and branc:Jles of trees The delicate foodstuff V(a!1 chemical makeup indicate the lh~~~t Ja~. \ lle_SJlcL --~·for lhe_Wa gpod Dr. Ming and the The farmer inerely 1upplled of mankind, a veritable ellxlr Japanese tradlt.ionallsts were hewn notches u receptacles of Ufe. nol far wrong In their ap-for the vdnd-blown spores. Although not as e!Iective an prllisal of lhe mushroom. Other than prayer, he had no '1lnvigorator" as powdered · Ergosterol, a vegetable fat · con,lrol over t!Je natural pro- rbinoceros horn, it wa s found In abundance in the cessi the wind, the gentle rain thotJ3bt to be a powerful aient tree-grown fungus (LenUnu11 1Dd hwnldlty of apecUlc areas in pri'venUon and treatment .of !flodes), Is know known 111 an of Japan provided the ideal Cerebral bem01Tbage, not to agent Ulat Jowers t be enVironn)ent. mentlOQ blurred .vision and a cholesterol cbnlent in human In ltC. artlficial cultivaUon perslt:tent rub. blood. of the mushroom was initialed Be Uta&.. U-lt may, \he Shil-ta-ke Is an e1cellent by Dr. Klsaku Mori w~o Japa.neie people have from food source of vitamins D-1, developed the" myceUum in. time Immemorial prized ohll-and B-~. The mushroom. loo, oculaUoo· method In lieu of. ta-te not only u the tastiest of la W!:ll suited ror a d.labeUc'• wind and prayer. tidbits bat· aa a curative ind dle& ln that It contains no Pure culture Sb 11 ·ta -t e health food beyond compare. •larch, no lal and II virtually mycelium II applled to planted ,,,e story of the forest non..calor:lc. e:pom on standard length oak mu.shroom is intertwined wilb' S"'dent.s of Shil·la·ke culture logs. The logs are then atack· . . . IN FACT «4ft IS LOWER-THAN· DISCOUNT -ON· THE ITEMS ·¥GU BU-Y - MOST -WHEN YOU ADD YOUR _ CHOICE OF STAMPS OR 11/2% CASH DISCOUNT! All PURPOSE ed on f'levated frame.. in the I ta~ ~ ahade of evergreen trees. The l lB•cfe~f.JT muaiu'ooml au.Jn full growth I erOff ' · In lwo yean. 1''t:uP' ..... ,.. Sh.il-ta-ke bas become a ml· CoYer mU&tnclm ,,.. bot Jor crop In Japan throogb .. ,.. "aier· IAl1 Ulf •, .toe~ scientific method! ol cultlva-mh•dps Dnbl ,~ dlf ,.sq Uon. In 1951 more than'l01000 discard t\eml. -~" ...U tons of raw forest l't"u.ahrooma musbroaml wboll, eat Urp were marketed, almost all for ooes In ~ · domesUc consumption. .Mix b91f UcblJy wtall lllt Production or dried Shil-ta· and pe_pper. Gelt"1 lhtpe t.te ke that ..,.. Y!8' !Dtalid • or s pouto., ~ ....,..U, 8,200 tons, with 2,000 tool or grill 1mfil .._\ ~ d"tlned !or exporl. WhllO meat 11.......,:..· • ~·COll\to TERIY m BURGERS bin• aD remabllnc. lnlrod!ootl a Shil-ta-ke muabrooms except on1·0)11-. i dcl muahroomt. Slnimlr 1111ill •1to-1 pound be<f chuck, ground der, about 10 mliMeo. Oil« Add lJ'eea ....... 'l'l)Jd<en I teaspoon salt aauce very lllptl1, wl1!i 1 1Jt. \I let!poon pepper tie conlllarcli """-wil1I 1h cup beef broth or boWJJoa , cold water. . 1/3 cup d?J Sbeiry Pour muahroam -...,. 3 tabldpoons soy sauce meat patties.· Makes f .. I a tablespoons lime JUice servings • . , ~! BUTTERM.ILK DETERGENT OFFERS DECORATING MAGIC FOR YOUR HOME WITH ENZYMES GIANT PKG. 49~E ~ 1 :~ 29~UART15 c l1FINAL WEEKI \BIRTHDAY CELEBRATION HAVE /4 FlEE CUP Of COffEE WITH THE fl!ENDl.T PEOPlt IJ 0 !1AIPHS DURING OUR llRTHOA'(1 MOHlM. FROM 10,0014.M. TO·~,oo PM; .,.,, EXTRA FANCY RED VELVET YAMS FRESH CRISP 19~ 19~ 10! CELERY~~ ' SCUD GREEN CABBAGE HIALTH & BIAUTY AIDS C9UQUOR DIPT. VICK'S iuii& SAYE $3'' ! YAPORUB ~~ 49• NYQUIL -'1" VODKA 2 .. ~ . (OuGiiSiRUP73• FORMULA 44 :97• stiiiiiir'i0ut10N ...;$369 ~ i.1iCffiNs TOOTH PASTE '"i 63. c · ilii'Ei's .. sci1ca -$5" TUI uauo..oms. All• Allblllll llf8..., _.., . , . THEY'RE GOING OUT BY THE CA~TFULI TRI IOYAL ACADIMll cowmo• PRECIOUS MINIATURE WALL DECOR . CUSTOMER RESPONSE HAS. BEEN FANTASTIC ••• DON'T WAIT ANOJHER DAY . USE THE COUPONS BELOW AND START .YOUR COLLECTION NOW! iutTERMIUC. CV.ClcED WHEAT OR HERDERS lllllST QUAUIY -OHi llZI 1111 All. lllGfTONIOITAN 1'*' &·READ 3~v:~$1°0 ---......... -• ~ CllCllOCIOWI -25 ......... _.. c· """",....."' C JEUY '"°' C POUND · COfFEE ~• CAD ....., 45 CAKE ••CH 9 BISMARKS , PANTY HOSE PAI· ate: OSCAR MAYER ALL MEAT SAVI Ille WIEN RS~~ 6tc· l'OTl4!0, GllMAN l'OTl4TO, COUSU.WOIMACAIOM SALADS ... sucm-'1.'hlv.• . PORK 'LOIN .. . . ' . .. • YOUR NEAREST RALPHS STORE IS LOCATED AT 9901 ADAMS BLVD., HUNTINGTON. BEACH, Store Hours 9 a.m. t~ 10 p.m. ·~1ly .. • ----,..,-.--------:.-0-----,-----------------·~--------,...----------~--­' .. • -· ' I ,..,. l • ,_ 1l1J E I '.I' t'o N S WE All! "r.°-at ldlool~ ' ~, ..... ·• "•.'()N IUH' . . . .. ~ ..... -.. -. ~ .. -,., ...... ,.. ~~.,;. ................ the S.. .............. MM . . . , • • • • W-. F"'"'-r 2S, 1910 'BLADE ·.-CUT CHUCK --• ,, I \.'· Diet, Cause Acne FAMILY STlAK=.:t.::::.._ .............. ~ 98 4 ARM CUT POl .ROAST~: ........ 79•· U.S.D.A. CHOICE OR ALBERTSON'S . ~C-ROSSRIB •oAST=~~-.... =.:.98• Sirloin lip -ROAST . BO·l!~f JfA,M::~........... . .... ~ ... 1'' SLICEbl.ACON ,..., ................................ ~78•-- MEA T LOAF~;:._~_.......... . ... ~69• + CABBAQE ROLLS~;:.."'.':"_ ................ 79• :: Reduced Specials 'Bark or MulclJ:....;:;: ..... 1" · Neslles Quiktt.:"~ ... 79• Jun'8 Dasli .. -..; ...... .,_ 1" . . . Carnation :.W:..._ .. , ...... 58• .. -'1pp1 ---· 7/1 ... ·-. .-•. ~· .'. .. ..... • t--. . esa11ee~........ . •. Allbertson's -~Ollnais.e~r .. 45• Jan•I L•e To1•••• Juke~.4/1. WIEN.RI .Jlqily Diet Dog F~rA~l Tl ...... , ... 7•, P-......... -~""5 78• ..... . eriLLJM .. ..:. ......... ~ .......... ..... ·~· ... :..: 68·• ICIAFT SWISS ~ SHARP OSCAR MAYER Chetldar~1 15 ~86~20.. Slktil Belop :"..;.::;;:' .. wa. 631 Dry Sala11i .=:-:'.~ ..... 112 ... 471 Slked ChtOIO ::..-:::,. •• ,. .. 791 . ' Gre~.-. Gkint · I MiXED VEG. 3. / 1 ~ $I.I.BEANS NIBlETS IN . BUTTER S4ua , • Spinach=:.:'................. 3/1. · Vegetables=··-•°"""' 3jl9' Waffles De• , ... JOLftf.,,,, •• , •• _. 14C . -Dinners ............................... 37c Cherry Pit ;.._.,;.;., .. _ ... ;. 6fc Coffee Ric ............ .,...,".·-· 2sc. -· . ' HEALTH 1. Br.'.1111 fllllS Gll.llt 4.9fl. llltlf ............ uc PllCISOOOD .Fii. 25 •MAL 3 ·~:.::::.: In-Store Bakery LARGE· ICED ANGEL FOOD ·CAKE· """' YARE'r Of PASTE&. • At«>. CHOCOIATE ICINGS Glazed 8111111111 Cake Donuls ....... 20/1. Hot Cr~s Buns ~r...i1............ . ... 6/39• Farm Style BrecidWh .. 160..1oo1 ............. 5/1. FINE DOMESTIC WINES All American ROSE DIMMER WINI! · Choteau Rene Cold Duck . .FIFTH Wassan Mead WINE MADE f ROM 100%HONEY 149 . 179 189 1/20M. I . FIFTH Al-·· 80 ,_. 95 BLENDED WHISKEY1 12 Gollon8 Quorto Old l'ioforo . 49 BOURBON .......... , ................ --." 4 8 Y-Old Ootd Co«h . BOURBON fi~ ................ 3/10 .. H•tlNtlw liach-15511 So. Ed-rds &.111111 ll11dl -700 So. COcnt Hwy. Huntlngtan Beach -8911 Adams' Col'Ona del Mar -3049 Caast Hwy • • . ' •· I • - • . FILLET · P~RCH -------------------------· ~~ ---.. .. Wtdllfsd'1, Ftb'alH'Y 15,1970 USDA GRADE 'A' ..... M Wlsn•M STJ'l.I =~~~N .............. 89ib. YOUNG·N· TENDER FRYING I CHICKEN BEEF IAI M WUTllN ITTU BULK SLICED 5~ BOL~NA ........ lb. LIVER u.1,M wnmN 1m1 · · WHOLE BODIED ' CUT UP .................................... 33t~-P.OLISH .. ~:. 79' FRYING • • . ' C' ... SAUS~~t;' ·= .. . lb. CHICKEN iREAST ... ~ ....... ''·lb.'. '=: cHOib : :: . : USDA CHOICE · ··•· B1EF 1 .. , • • 98' ~~N;H·,~~~K~~ ... L.~~~ .. st:.~ :B~ISKl;r ~. . lb. . . . .,_ ,· 3 LEGGED . . . . c OSCAl M•'f• • ' CUT UP FRYERS '" ~-.... 39 tb. :~::l:~· 1 49~a. ·' . IONILUS ~N STEWl"G. Wib . BEEF - USDA GRADE 'A' ' CHUCK 'flUH . 10.0Z. JAR 79' OYSTERS STEAKS SPENCER STEAKS . FRESH LEAN GROUND • • •• ·-· I ·ag . l ) f lb. ' ' . ., ' ..•. ~ .. ' . _.., HEALTH & BEAUTY AIDS USDA CHOICf BEEF -~....__,. ~\Cr.~s~---.· ' ggc TOOTHPASTE REG. $1 .05 79c FAMILY SIZE TUBE RIB . ' . STEAKS .- ! 98ib. ·--.. ' ' -r:. . " t ••• : .. & . .- PILLIT 5~ .. ROCK COD ................. ··········".'·.:. . lbi. . . • • ' -~t ~ldiJf1:1:J:I·l·l•I_31 .-"' .. :·· ·,~·t .. · - GOLDEN RIPE ScotTowels GEBHARDT'S, -1¢300 3;s1 CHILI •rid BEANS DEL MONTE FRUIT COCKTAIL DRANO TALL CANS . ::303 51s1 CANS - LIQUID DRAIN ·OPENER · ¢ INDUSTRIAL STRENGTH ·eg JS -.,. PLASTIC BOTTLE ............ . PURR MINI -BITS GOURMET DELITE 1 0 $1 CAT FOOD FL~'¢ ~~NS . . . I ~[!§. ~1 · I I MORNING FRESH PACKAGED SALAD or SLAW With thi1 e11upo11, 110 mini'"um pur eh.t$• 1a~uirad, Um1f I pk,. per coupo" -On• coupon per cusloinar. Voio:l afttt Sund•y, Ma rch I . GOOD ONLY AT IARGAIN IASkfT_ HEINZ BABY FOOD ~ilh ih11. coupo11, nC"J mini"'""" purth•,• requited. limit IS per ir.c upo..-011e eoupo" per <eu1tomer. v.,;d afle, Su,.dey. Me re+. J1I. COLD POW ER - 9' BATHROOM TISSUE 4 ROLL PACKS ' F 0 R 112 IOLLS FOR $11 . ' FORIMOST ICE CREAM 12 Got. Flt! Carton FOREMOST IMITATION HOM~ENIZED MILK 1/2 GAL. CARTONS 59¢ ' GORDON'S BREAD - I Lt. LDAYIS KERN'S ' STRAWBERRIES 10 ... Pk .. ' .................. 0 D Nrr AT IA~G-AIN IASM - S'RINGPIELD , ·&·1 s1 10 OL PkliJ. BIRD'S EYE ORANGE JUICE ~.~~ e CUT GRllN llANS e FRINCH CUT GREIN IEANS e MIXED VEGETABLES 'MORNING FRESH 3""'"25(. CARROTS . ' ' . . . SWEET "N'1 JUICY s:~-1 TANGERINES ., EXTRA FANCY · 8. $~. DELICIOUS l APPLES · ~ ' · ' ' 10~ U.S. NO. 1 RED VELVET YAMS " ' . . . 4;s1 5;s1 l'lllCU ll'l'ICTWI ·c · • 1 " • THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATUIDAY-1·•· ~i!ND!'T ' Feb.i 26, 27, 28 & Mar~·I · • • r11c1s SUIJICT TO,ITOCK ON HAND WE ~~()EPT• t , " , i \ U.S.D.A. FOOD COUPONS .• I I " •~.:.I :_I ' .. WI GIVI ILU. CH" STAMPS COSTA M!SA PLAaNTIA I • • 3t • l.llt'V '1LOt ~ WtdntsdlJ', Ftbruary 25, 1970 Do ond Savt 7154 Id* Gld; ~·Iii lib NEW -do lt,wllh 'a/e,iQert ~Ip of lljlJ, ~ patjem. • , ~ 1tlrid chain, uve m~! Sltp-by411p din<· tion& ahaw how to r·e t I e •Prinp, .,. <0vm·ln ff11·lo- follow lnltructiona 70M. FllTY Cf;N'I'S for each pat· tern -add ~ cents for each pattern. for Air . M~ll 1nd 5'!«111 Handliftl ; oth<nrilo thlrtklaas delivery will take thf1t neks or more. S£nd to Allee Broob, tM DAILY Pl· LO'f, 105 Nttdll!CTlft Dept., · i Box 163, Old Chelsea Station. N.,._yrrt, N.Y. IOOU • .Prlnt Name, A.4drt11, Zip, Patttm N .. bcr. l!IG 1111 Ne<dlecralt ~ -40 pages, 200 dellll'li, S fttt patterns! Knit, tr«bet: filhiotis. ~t. em· bntider, weave. Toy1, &lfts! Said 10 *''· NEW! Ce•plttt A I & It a 1 loN: -marvek>\4s arpns. fashions , pillows. baby gifts, mort! 11. ' "• lntut Gifts'' Boolt. SO cents. ->'11 Jiffy Ru11" to knit, croehet, weave; sew, hook. 50 ceota. Book of l! trke AfP--50 mrts. Bargain! QodM l!oH" I hu II belulUul patterns. SO cenu. - M•-Qllll -% -PllWM foe IJ sop<rb qulli.. 50 cects. Book S. "QUlls for ,.,..,.., lJvlll. • 11 patterns, .. ctJliJ. Box Cake Mod·ern Dessert If yeu need to add to your dtsltrt, this cUt can be made front I mil. MOOEl\N LEMON POOND CAKE 1 p 1 c k·a I e (ll l:-ouncee) white We mlJ; 1 packNlt (3 ounces ) lemon 01you,d 1•\ltin II ctlp com oil "1 cup·•·ater l/.c cup fresh telnon juice 4 eggs lnto .laret bowl of electric miler, ernpty ca.kt mht Add atlaUn (ju.llC as It comri from pt.ck.ale), confoll, water, lem- on juice and eggs. On low speed of "Jlxer, mix onl)"until cake n'll1 ll molattn-ed: Beat 3 mlnutts at medlwn apetd. P1lur into Ufll'eued I by SV.11-lnch tube pall. r Bike In pr<helled 350- dt.cree oYen unUI cake springs bl<I< •·hon touched UsJ1lly Yfith fln&tr -so to ~ mlnu.tes. Cool ln pa.n on \\'Ire rack. 15 minuta. \Vlth a small spatula, loOlen edges .around oul!ilde and lUbt:; tura out on wire rack. Cool completejy. If cletirod. oprliilde, with <Ollllctiontra ....... Tangy Mix . For Game • J, . ' Alpha Beta's --Man-in Blu·e J says: MAITY Mml STOil llMMlt DllAllll MDI IUl!ll AVL · B1tt1r Produc1 at DISCOUNT PRICES! ;~~ · AIPAR~GUI TUDER ~ ALL BllEEll ~ iiiti--ivocADOS, 3:1 00 HAWAiiAll GROWN • RUSHED BY AIR EXPRESS 3:·100 PAPAYAS TOTAL llll,COUHTS {V(IO DAY Mltiil11"fb'UTHWASH pr 119 EXDHllll P.M,11 .tJt" 82 1 ~-OUNct IOlTU: RIISE AWAY DANDRUFF SHAMPOO pr 801 M:GU~ LEMON' Ml1'i Oft OllANQE urr1i11i1E. . ~OZllGES .89' $51 DEsITff DlllTMlllT JiV, .. ~ ---~-------~-~~-~~-VJCl<S lp!MULA ... '""'"-·~17' I COUG" SYRUP ..l"' I-OZ. IOnU µI" !.h iii~X·~AL SPMY pr 111 V\ou'ftQu1L pr 1 " l.!£.UN'i,E JAii :..'l!JillltllT 4owe Ylul1 ·VAPUIUI .W i.· sfl'1lti TABLE.TS ?'981 BOTTLC or 32 ,. AILETS ut UI ·---~-------------H.o\JNCt DETERGENT IVORY LIQUID ------------------@B +aww"""'Ja.-241 ~ 11111' TiiWEl."sC0LOJ1• . 'iiii( WITH llOLDEI ..W 4~ iifliillwR'A; .. 0 " .w 27' F'fc1TL"nss'lli"'a..o""'.211 19• a~m.ft·c~~oker Crust .38' 36' iiili"nc~t'Er: !O.()UNCEIAll .51' 5 21 s.oU~mu DRIED It.Er' .m • @iriit"li'Q'$;Ol~1" 39' @E~?~~~iii~~~Yir Mt'Sfo LOIS :W 6.1 'Pailcrirmu, JI' 39' SAYE WITH ALPHA BtfA'S 12.lll TUTAI. DISCOUllTS Save even'fl\Ore with Double DiscOunts Tilly lllffn exb1 m 1n11 for you. Made possible by 1peci1i purchaws with the cost reductions )>asstd on to you. look for them throulhOut lht 1lort. •• ·" ' ·. ~OSCAk!'.!,~·l~.!llOllAvY 57' ~llOAST 1EEf • @i'Lfr' rui°Lu'"" • 211 ~ilA!lfl'aNt~fi"~. KOT 33I ~(CHIU 0011 CAlllE 39c" ii;;+'cll'acllils"CE'Jat 211 ~i'Ninfn'ox •WITH"'" SAU<;:: ~ Dllllllll .ssc· 5 51 ~!{~'!HY J<ou•ct; 451 rl'l'.l l l ~ BANQUET DINNERS ,.·:',·S7c ~· •I• ' iiiT'ilitPo'TAtiiu .J8C" 91 · @s'lio"wlcil IAGS 31' 2~ t:&"\ Mlv.tll 1890 • I-OUNCE BOTTLE 291 ~-Freneh Drwlng .38C" · fl!SH CUI DAFFODJLS 4~.UllClt ·------------------ BATH S fZE BAR ZEST BAR SOAP SOME 20 STORES C CHARGE )It -------------------QUART BOTTLE LiQtJID LUX DETIRGENT INCLUDES 15c OFF l.AIEL s~fs 68c: CHARGE .)le •r-----------------35-0UNCE BOX DISHWASHER ALL INCLUDES 12c OFF LABEL s~fs 57c CHARGE .J"' ""'-----------------· 28-0UNCE PLASTIC llOTTl.E TOP JOI LIQUID QIANER @ 49c . 1 • •' m.~· &mi -met • • • • • ISCOllR S • WednesdaJ, January 28, 1970 • •·E" DISCOUNTS,. save you ·1.4.94~''· •• l ... ~'; ~. ( • p. " ~ ri ,_ . " J ' •• ~ J ,f . ,.. ,., - '· - Our Grownin' Is Showin' Again •.. with· our neiv Alpha B eta store openings in Cypress, . ~ .. ' ·'"'·· _,. ~-~-' . .. :~. ,,.-..-.._ 4033 Ball Rd. at Bloo111field. -andLaCresc~ntu,2667 Foot,., . .. . . hill Boulevard • • • · Your ALPHA BETA Neigljborhood Butcher (the Mon lo the Red Apronl proudly offers BUTCHEl'S PIIDE MEATS MEATS YOU'LL BE PROUD TO SERVE •DISCOUNT PRIC£0 •QUALITY & SATISFACTION GUARAN1tED • IJ.S. GOV£RNMOO' INSPECTED BEEF USDA GRADE A • CORNISH FRESH FROZEN • G~URMET FAV RITE ARMO RMttr: WILSON • l·LB. PACKAGE GAME HENS CRISPlllTE BACON . ALPHA BETA • JqTCHU'S PBIDE , LARGE END -!U. PACIWIE c ALPHA BETA ntcaaa HJll BEEF ~RATH HICK~RY :::~~s:nAK 98& .1 SMOKED BACON 79' STANDING RIB ROAST BEEF 43 c 1-U. PACKAGE •SUCED. !ASTERN QU!lllY 77' SHORT RIBS lb . 1Jlrt1111rtJOH1t BACON ' DUTCBE!'S HIDE• FRESH• ECDND PACK GROUND SIC J'-tBS. · · ; BEEF ,~r. rb. ALPHA BETA • DUTCHE!'S HIDE _7·BONE,Ac ROAST iYrb. -, . -' BONELESS $)57 ~FWllUOHNoSKllWl •.JGl.fl\11.•l'Ol'lt ·3' 100 TOP SIRLOIN . lb. ~LINK SAUSAGE : I QUICK MEAL FAVORITES I IV!CRU"I flml • COOIWJ IN THE BAG FOR ltNOEHNESS AND FUll FLAVOR BARBECUED WH<l!.68c CHICKENS BODY lb urnmn l'IJU • IN fO~ PAN lLIST HEAT ANO £AT PRE·COOKID ME~T LQAF 79& MRt PAI.ft.'$• 14-0ll!tE'PIUI. • BOWi FAMILY FISH FILUTS GORTON'S . 1.a. PACKAGE. raw FISH & CHIPS ~ fRfSH •FAMILY fAYORIT'E = FILLET OF IOCDISH 7~ '' 88;. 1HESE MEAT PRICES !fFtCTl'lt -~'®lh wmNl!Doiv)FUl!UARY 25 t!Uouth MARCH 4 . . • I I '• ; ' \' \ ro TAI DISCOUNTS EVERY DA! SOM( ALPI\~ tErA $.T¢R!S GlSCOUHT C.H>.A t l'RIC.£ TOTAt DISCOUNT S EVlRV DAY IUIA' OISCOUNI S tVI "' 01\V 101~1 l'I' LillJH!~ ('l'l~l OAr l~ME A. '""' ......... , JS-.duNCE BOX CASCADE DISH DETERGENT INCLUDES 12c: OFF LABEL ~~~s 57' CHARGE.JO! ------------------- KING SIZE BOX GAIN DETERGENT INCLUOE"S 2~ O'F ABEL SOME <11 STORES I CHARGE j.lS' . ·----------------. GI ANT SIZE eoxl BOLD DETERGENT INC:LUOES IOc OFF LABEL ~~!EIS 72' CHAllGfJaC ,~ ------------------· KING SIZE BOX RINSO DETERGENT lNCl..UOES '25'. OFF LABEi.. 1'' Jl<'101 ~ BrTTY CROCK'ER • 1~-0UNC't' CAil ~P'uil'D1Nils'0' ' 0 ""Ja<-291 ~'P\zz'A'~1'xE'sOZ.CHt.-54' ~ \7.oz. Pl:PPJ:!\01/l MDC ft 1lc oi~te're~kf~~' '0:19' 69c CHOCOLATE: .. DUTCH" CHOCOLATE VANILt.A. JJlD VARIETY fl.AVORS @ WISH!ON£ • 11..0UNCE" "8QlTLE •LO.CAL f"AENCK • RUSSIAN OR lTJ.UAk 28' Salad Dressings ..3•· ts) acc'Eiii'li&oil' 5CDfTS 'jiiOi( DEODORIZER . .39' 33f SNOWOlllFT • 3-Ul. CAii SHORTElllNG J-9' 75f )3'"281 ,.. .. .83' 59f ·---------------_...;,,;- KING SIZE BOX AJAX ... - • DETERGENT INCLUDES 2Se OFF LABEL SOME STORES 'CHARGE }.aa 111 ~ ll,AL< • l! COUllT PAC;l<~OE ~ .... 23c ~ ullllltR llAPICl11S _,..... ·-----------------· 25-0UNCE BOX .BIZ PRE-SOAK SOME 68C STORES CHARGE.;J; . GIANT SIZE BOX DRIVE DETERGENT :£:i SOME 82C -STORES • ,__ _ _. CllARGE J3C ----------------· JUMBO SIZE BOX DASH D.ETiRGINT INCLUDES iOc 0'1 I.MIL SOME 1'4 STORES CHARGE1/K 1 COITA MISA-141 L 17tt. St. HUMT1M•fON llACH-ff41 A'- HUNTIM•TOM IU.Ctt-1tH1 N :~9i'lf, IOUNTAIM YALLIT--tfll W..., SOUTM .LA•UMA-JotZI I. CHlt Hlwwy LA•UNA MILLS-UH1 c.1 .. M I• L11l1• llYIN~111MO C .. , ~M..nlfY .r~.,, COHTADINA •NO. XO C.W ~BABY SLICED 24c ~TDMlTDES .JI! @iR'Ei'D'oiilllirs"°~ 29' @TOMlTQ J~R"ft: J8' ,28C ol'Riatio11 CO.FFEt:-lllTI ~ .8fC· '=-'~cWit0ww"0 .w-3-r ' ' ,DAltY Pll.OT IJ . ' Butcher· .. ~ ., ' ' Resists • Ch.~n9e ;, .... , ' 1Dlfott'I fffkE", -ht • HY et "MtllfM," ,rtte-.flil°:iit• I• II Hr II •• d 1Mfd11nt •nd ,.. 'ltW fA!tll'ft owned ......... ...,.,. -i.. •• Of II.II Nff, 1111 In con,. ...._ tM ollf ,,-.,1. tl'f)I kl9 on 90lftl: Lr. '"~ • 11 " • ''fiMrtW." Ono Mia! Ii I h • Mllllbotllood btltclltf", Ind In ltllt fillllwlnt 1rlk ll H-wto lellll tolll wt\Y ~ ,, "'' -INiet! 11111/l-Ollillltu--..... eontllll.let 1o ftllt , N9W Yorti. "'' •. ··-..... . By H•NlllETl'A LEITH NEW YORK (APJ -Be wear& a sl(a• bat while he .. -. he ,f!irta '!ith lb• ~~ a11••• II or ., and ,... _ -· lo lb• m-.. ... pall bll llamp on • ljde fl. J"lme ti!il llolore. It lela Gil tlio.-JL. On hil salea 1llpa, cold cuts are .calltd-J''PfO\'lllonlli" II• still .,"""8Q wllh a heavy Germaq accent. his long white •fll'90 is "'1~Slied!Y btocld· apaitartd -and .bil..,knlvea art wlpljl.DIVB-.. ,..11 Ailhur Brul, botcher, Ud be' a ··•e ol a vaN1hlng 'bnod. a _...ltm Jn llleoe ·do.Ys 'Gf-pack•&•d ~ket nML Ttiere are ltUI • a1out 1,IOll irldfpondellt maWltore ·bolchera Jn all New York Clly, bot a lrede of· Ciclkl cin rerUember when "them Were 6,000. /llld the lbopl; lie says, are clo~na iloW!l ... "'J day for a vailit)' or.-...-Iii addi.Uen· ~ te'llipitmarbt ocbpeUUon - · lllib -111111; , lbelli and van- --d~Jim -1. chanilql IM'l(b"tdloodl, blib J ·a b o r COils. . • • · rn u;e iiamow ~iu~ allOp on E~th Aveque, Arthur a short, rouod, mu ""°'If a~ow hit hidts a bald pale, llpialns 11 Ile puts· a P9.' llill on a double lamb dwj> Jlliw he manip1· Ito ..., b I • atstomers. · "Charm . • • beauty ... mod_esty," he aay1. '"Ibey come from all over the city, Jn ca~. in can, we ,chlUffeur brtnp lloem ., tile dla!IUeur Pc~ up.the me1.t.1We deliver all over -wt even deliver to a·feW' old Ct&ltumtr1· on 'Long laland and a couple Jn New Jeney. ••we pt·rtch peopl.e -- _.,, aoclely ~··. atock bralllr.s, lnlporton, and poor ileolo!a. llopoeo ad '°"rto lliciils, .... in jujt llck. •!Id tired of aupemlarket meal. "We ctve .. 16 ouncta to lbe pound. If you care to pay ()tit price, you set aef'Vlce ... $1DCt. "our pttce" 111 llio ut. tlo buftllar -..1a 1rtc!1Jtntly ~ 1w prbao m1!0t IUn 'the au-..~ It paying for tupennarket ~ m e a t , theuSIDds.of New YOr)c:trs ,,-1 &Ull lhdh\s wtth butclien Ilka · Arlhur. • Illa imtlllf. •lob Ahles, who· U-. Al1har -hla trlde "'on tbe otlRr lkle" - A<1i1ur In GtmanJ. l!JlllJll'b In Vlelllla -la 111ll1i41 I box with (IOWIC(s and p;Uaila o1 meat. nx .-11va.mr1hlin In' ~ )D .tlio llcOnx. and he'll dtUver . lbi; order .. .,ttr Mu'ri. "" .. MIS no hmch hGut." say• Jlol>. "NO ~-.kid• dell~ want Ibo bailnelo •• :Wltll.,·-1 p~Bob · and Arihur '*Y thftr·pi1111• inar&Jn la "Dl\ICb Jill"' .... ~ ,!!!•• to man ii ap•Jn·,....._ 'lbla -·-r..v-o1111e ttf-7 lxltCbirina!' .thit' tlkea fulie -~ cutt1nr n ....... 1n Utt tat on a rult or...-. one !.lanhallan -· 11111 r.;1. l ..... hg · )hlffta . under tho iWjW;i a tunef, I • 1ndUltry io urtes ny bUtdlorlni will _... •• 111111 .. au~ ... Anil the bJc.cUtna -~.•viii,"" tbe meat' and put· If jill tho u n i f o r m , plastic-wrapped pac:bcH, but ·wlll pt It ~I WiJ rill>! !rom the pacldNI pJaal . -au "portJon-con-trellld. ti ~ lllil I«'• wbllt. a lot o!·peo. • wtll 4llllt lie ..... lo tl)e ~ •""' ..,. aaltbia lw"• -dlllr. .. 11 .. ,.a llloeo al,., ....... dpublt lamb .... "' -..... and ..... c .... lllr·!bl .... ·~ ,....'ta.ttllat a£• ,11io --""· l'lor \lo "1!(ja\ ·-,llce o.1 bol-....... ldll or •a <arJl It =,.•1me, w.you .~an at ' ' I ' I I • ' • • ,• • • ., ......... . ,, "·)< : ··~·-.. " ...... ''"" ..... " ' • " Another Super..Sa"4? of the World's most delicious cheeses! IBBll . . lfild and -creatay ••• and. so· many uses in faVo.rite recipes I Montel'ey Jack tor fl4vorf by tlie piece. • • • • • • • • ••• I I I I) lb . Ore.&00. ••• sharp, fof that touch o! authority! For rarebit. melted cheese, or table use! by the p~ece. ' Super Shopper Grocery Spe,cials! ' Danish Margarine _ ...... ~ ...... l 1b· s1~·. orr!)Snlca=1mp0tb!d1. ;-;-f!avuYth'aN!t&ndll-up-•o-'well in'<!reeoi~easert;-'>MH-ot-m!l!ge..-.--.pmt11a:so easDy:~-.. -b1i!li'dSfn -~,fil!eS•o Jt1>0'd ••• and sif much ea•ier on the budget! · Cracker Barrel ...... ~"~~~ ~~o~~~ ...... 7 5c Enjoy the flavor of hearty cheese from Kraft ••• great for cooking •• , or eating! Ten ounce stick. Baby Gouda ........ £~~ ..... ~:o~ ........ 5 9< The Dutch taught us how to make it .•• mild, flavorful, delightful w IIlaD,f. waY.SI laughing Cow ...... ~R.E~£~ ~~E ••••••. 4 9' Imported cheese ••• mild, 'semi-soft ••• designed to be enj~yed hY. anyone in the family! ••. 6 oz. Cream Cheese ..... ~~A!!'~: ~-.e:o.z: ••••• , 3 3c The famous "Philadelphia" cream cheese! Ideal fo r canapes, sandwiches or spreads! ••• So smooth! . Duke SL Paulin ..... '~~.r~~ ~~~,~~ .... 59' ,Semi soft ••• great dessert .•. or snack treat! Another of the delights from Denmark! ••• 7 oz. v.·edge. Sliced Edam or Swiss ...... 2 .. 49' Shredded Cheddar ................. 39' Proceued ••• from W,ei1t Germany! .•• 4 oz. pkg!. Miss \Visconsin •.. so convenient to use! 4 oz.. Cruwson's English .................. 49' Im.Ported na.tural cheese, mild, med., sharp! 4 oz. Natural Swiss ..................... 3 '" $1 Sliced ... from Utah's Cache Velley ! ... 5 oz. pkg. Mozzarella Balls ..................... 49' lllld ... for cooking Italian style ! 8 oz. ball. Sliced American ......... -.......... 75' Kraft ••• each slice wra.pped ! •• ,. 12 ounce pkg, Ricotta ..................................... 59' Italian style 'cotl:Age cheese' •• 16 oz ..• Precious. Woody's Cheese Spread ........ 59' Your choice of favored flavors! ••• 8 ounce cups. Caithness Cheese ................... 59' lmparUd from Scotland .• ..W-soft, mild! 7\fi.i oz. Baby Samsoe .......................... 49' Imported Danish skim cheese, less calories! 7 oz. EL Rancho Super Meat Specials ! ~HCHO llam Selected Pork leg5 ••• cured especially for El Rancho ... for more flavor, more value! SHANK HALF .......... . C:OOU SLIC£S ............ $1.29 lb. lb.. Butt Portion ........................... 69~ Whole Ham ............................ 69~ So much lean roodness for smaller families I Manhattan Roast .......... h ... a..1.29 Boae1c', ..-oned, oven ready top round J Clnldlan Sea Bass . . .. . . . .. . . . . . 89~ OcolA delilht ..... rve baked or broiled ! • ' Perfect aize for the a:athering of the clan! Sp Ht Broilers .......................... 49~ Fresh California Kinz med fryins chickellll I King Crab Meat .................. ,~ 2.89 Sw.et taa~ mat from Alaskan mteral . Anderson's Soups .............. 5 "'$1~ \Vonderful introductipn to the dinner! ••• Beef~Bean, Potato, Tomato or famou:s Split Pea! ••• No. 30~ Purex Bleach ......... ~~~~~~ .......... 49' The secret to whiter v.·hites 1n your wash! .•• but there's no secret to the-savings at this special price! " Ritz Crackers ............................ 33' .\ViUt soup ••• with cheese! •• , 12 oz. stack pack. Sunshine Coolers ................... 39' Delicious cookies ••• different? ••• 3 flavor!i, 10 oz:, Saran Wrap .............................. 49¢. Saves flavor and goodness! ••• 100 ft. rolJ. ' Orange Juice .. ... .. . ........ 5 ~ "t Treesweet ••• frozen .•• from Florida.! 12 oz. ·49e Ivory Liquid ............................. 49~ So gentle .... kind to your hands ! ••• 22 oz. · · ' Black Pepper ............................ 39' Schilling's ••• for quality and value! ••• 4 oz. Yuban Coffee .......................... 79~ Save on 2-lb. can, too ••• at .•. $1.57 Lux Beauty Soap ...................... 19' Package of four regular size bars ! · Cascade ................................... : 4r'. For automatic dish,vashers .•. 35 oz. package. · ~ International Vegetables ........ 39¢ Favorites from Birdseye ••• 10 oz. frozen. El Rancho's Fine Liquors: -. . El Rancho Scotch ....... '.'.'.111 ...... $5.79 Bottled in Scotland exclusively for El Rancho! El Rancho Gin ........ '.~~~ ......... $3.SS: Ninety proof for authority! ••• Quart •.• 4.85 .. Blended Whiskey ... :.~~~ ...... $3.99 El Rancho's own .•. 86 proof! .•• Quart •.. 4.99. • Straight Whiskey .... r'.~~ ...... $4.99 El Rancho's 6 yr. old so ur mash! •.• Qt. 5.99. - ' El Rancho's Produce Specials: ' App/BS ............. 6,. 'l' Crunchy Pippins , •. tangy flavor that ba~es so well ... tor pies. too .•. and crisp and tart for great ealing°! HUNTINGTON HARBOUR: Warner Ave. & Algonquin St. ' I ' . NEWPDR.T BEACH: 272-7-Newport-Blvd. 2555-Eastbluff Dr.(E:astbluff Vilmge center)' • Also conveniently located stores f n Arcadia, Pasadena,and South Pasadena : '-· \ ' "\ . ' . • • •. •• : • l 1 : •••• ~.. ,-. CUUNAAYC(INMILTATION · · M•11·-.,...,,, 9rlflltt ' • • • · He~s q Mullin . ' Peop l·e Lpok ·Like Food Clai ms ·Comic's Wife .. Tbe ,,_,,-bo)ra • lhem for tl!elr mh>er -.... ... --·-"'"~lot -ltnc:h.,1'1111" ...... .,. NEW YORK -"Ml wife thinka people look like food. She'• vtrY strqe' thlt vr11. ~ In Julllln'• ho!ne Alk Julaon-Jbolll Dorla »or t<»m ·ii 1r1111Mii>d ID ibe:Nortb and llM'll tl1 Dijrlt·lookt ~ _ WOOdt of .. lllddpo ·:llle7're a brad atlct!"·Merr Gr!lllll like ont of·-plDa pu:!on, said. bot Ibey don't ...., t0 11iw• "What c1oe4 Julann thlni<.ll!!L J>Nll.!' i1er. In .'I!"! Y<tk •• look Ubl" . LMI -'I the llnlti(lhe "Like· a inu!Iin." ht Aki GfJl!U'~ and tqmmer "' •~-'i .... H <11 ,Ulolr.ll'acre fllnll·ln !jew w1., • ~ .. ~·-'"' ••••• • ~mm> Ille '" .. oor ln· lhe doe,.:t nlal< people IO 100\I, kl-'.an day. -In ooe ~. bUt said, "I can1walt ln&o a tht'd mtdl'JG « 40 of thele restaurlnt and 1tU if tbt ~ "So riow lhe-1171 she's food's pod r.y the wad. The ~ w opm·Mr ••iland." ifellll -be crl•p and Merv·..,_ trom a lamlly c61d .. ... who IOYea i. peek 1t away at • lhe0 cllmtr1W>le.·run, of hiJ "You'd~betttr haye. irut ~: .un.~ llYe· "in Santa siladi a,t"Pi,p'a" (Merv'• MW Clara. restaun,f.4W',. due .to optn "When wt'tt ~ .to ....,, 11 locatod m tho, lfOWld Calttomla, wt Ii,. lhe family •~of ,,_ ofll ) The -~-· ..,. day's notict. Bel .... when -IUI .. • ~Knt wa'd ttJI them two ·-b in is nicbiamed for -advante, tlley'd • c:ooldn&· Treacber, Merv'a tideld<k ~ They )alt love 14 ___ Wt amltiuncer on Ill• ttltvialon alw•JI hl!d a er 40 people show. who mipl come 16 .Sunday "YOllbet.ch&! We'N1aoinlto 41ianer ·~ l'"Vlfl ba-.:e aiweet'1 dreN rebeailll never-. .mch'food and they and Invite all oor lrien!Ja. love It that way. We'll lock the doors and teat .. N°"· mkw.!'!e .ceob , the evetytlilng. _E....,..,.,. will .be """"' · 'lf\ll'llllie worklni. Thin wfll -pla!D way i;,am11y,...,.· £111 _. alloOI the. l"'1d llld .me.. we <llf -• • ~; but !Cl! be like New Haven!" Julanft iu!I·. W)lll'I ha\'.t ·one. TIMI man who'1 .a.pt al Wa ha,. llve:lil 1hdp, but enillini people I n con-thl)>'re not allowed lo c:o6k. verlliton (he clalml ht can She "'10b I« ~ too. tum on "slnctnc clop, com-"When ·we were flnt mar· muflill<, even famous ..,_ rte<( I lbauibl i'd llal'I lhiJ tors").proved a willln& Mlbjact thtol off npi. &r ~ ·latled for a dlocoune about video just two weob. And tO lhiJ and vtttlea. But hla best dtJ, J'ulann can only cOQk for miterial conct~ hls mate. • or·JI peOple and there's on-- He claiml Ille by to his IJ lint of ., (lbelr ""' TotlY ..,_. """""1tlonallf ii , II ll.). The leftown are "Beq a pod !itttner. 11'• uobeliev1ble and lbt cooking !iii< acting: you lltitn and poll _ ......... , .. react. It'1 alto maklnc people They entertain often' at. tile fetl·comfoc1ablt the aame way r It .UH-.-'-('~ you c1oa1·-or at • pthtr-ll'lll """,... ..... .,., ; •• of fri··•·." haw-two bqe peoda 11ial ·~ a-freae ... r cMlna !he-)" lndlrecU1, lt'1 hl1 rqml for or al twee ~I-down farm tht "powers of a relutd at· hoUlt dianen. "$0 ~.we've moapbare" lh1t Col him into p-lo play 1 ·lltllt,....., the rfftauml 11me, plus 1f&er dtnner but· After ·,n tbit Atthui Treacher and a chance !real> air and food, In me hour of thuten. .....1a1ow'oor .-q .,..llOinl Pip'• Pub will ba an -to say. 'Now;l'm jull 1oln( lo tJc EnsUa!I pub 1 er YIJ n 1 have· a-lfttlre mp:·• the)''r'll English llld A-Ibo 'lab. -"I·" "We'}\ Jaan:.ltffrll ~ · "Mi Wife bu • 9\ICWJOOUI and lllio UIUa1 ' -..i ~r ·Job. Our New chops. fd eftft llkt c:llfll on Yori< ~t b u bl&' as that IMll. J'd JIU I 111111 leO-lhi: faim• -· °''11\e(lift' In tiiln al ille 1111' like Ibey do In a lifle"cilipllol oil Olnlnol Engl•f whtrt you can buy Part Wal Muy of · lbe1r Uttl< pip In blanlceil or Utile lamtlJ pro)ecll' ·aft c:arlod paatla." oul ·a·111e·mm.·~ Cll.,.U Merrt bat tf«Y .-Did J<IUftlill .-oat tll!n. Al Juluo wllo'd •llM ·tO pl·ID-"""lde•naU,happenwhen ·~-llM ;utlM...S 1111 you'"! out or~" mtaurml. "Ibo fl1I lbe'• ,,..... came rroin a family · goln« tnto 1111 ·-~ lhA ,.,.,d 1n "lll•rtns Ilia' andwlll11J1tllilllim·tooilr ~W• both did," Mm rettallnlnll "I llid;• 'Jalan, said. ''1!e .both have 10,Gll .,, .. yoa~lllllCIT Yem .eaa't e1bt re1aqft.\ t11 eiu.r lide, ind for 1 ,....,....1-: .And Iba we're~_,. doll." Both said; 'Oh, ,... I OD!' • lamllltl -Pit IP lhtlr ow! .. ,,.. plldel .. pnce~. ~ anit ••• a.a-. '111ey lilot01"' hlll •pit 111"'1 ·:i,,. Grtm.i. otien• ai- wiill ,..at ml -polito: You .... c11o1. ··11-, becOa.. a • have anlJ lo Ilea! lhem fir ti. iJ jG1iO .w 1 : 1. W. dlll lor allGal minu141. !....,... who' i l bllll'I. 'lilm iht ltll oat In tasted· lllem"" .... out of the----wlliprF,. hil mtndl,tt . • --t1...... ... •· She .... tilt trlPia! reclpa """ -ind I'm-' ftom 1 womu Jn C«nwall. ed."' , ' . J-·· .. -,l!ilt swe.t Decor Come ...... In melalllc .... brtpt and putol -~ b availablt tn IDlllll,food Ma for decanllnl ""*'-lid olher conlecUcm. ·To man al i-, cru1h sug1r cubel or llbleta. coane- Jy, eil ·wped· paper with ba .. or 1 1min gtlsa Jar: tou w1th, or stir Jn a few dropr of food colotln(: when cley, 1lft. ___ ....... llw_ '** -.~ 11\irii' ~ to · ,rllu·•-ir-lt , pal-.~ crab ...... Ont jooftallit ~ a l!f<irY ..... I her ~ .J'l!ll, •. catI!l/C It the put -IO ~ "liht't · IOI illlnls .,.in, .., .down In lbat callar all Ilia Umt. ll's OM 1111 -ble.11 • ~ ln surnmln1 up, tt seems that Me 1lways has 10tne pro- ject under wq. "Ibo alw&11 seell!I 10 pl U all dUlt and ~rr · eull)r," Merv 111.d. "When• people arrive 1t the rann IDd 11he serves a ·JNct illnner peoplo say, I hlvq:'t ~.you cooking ~ day.' You DJ\'er c8'ch btr - 'i:ooklniJ ..... DWI, -poll m '°"" aitu.. time. It's.,. bit sUri&be'•·• plonetr"lad)'!" ._ Later In ti!e Manhattan apartmem. I dked I he pioneer lady about. her ..,.._ In&. WhJJe aealedon a~ comforlable tola.L;.rMnil a l•Ul• ol ll<*l"nclpu lllt lectei! Iron»' family a n d lrierida. . About !he pu11t1, U.. tald, "Our lrtondt hive ·trteil ·111em and lovad· lbem. It'• alwlj'I aollltlblniJ I've wanl6d to dO: open.~ own pull'-" lllpplly, her ·-bu alwaya -.rqod her ellorta. "H.-tlmb-.,.rylhlnf I do b nne rm· sun ht -.Jdn't be h-U I , wun'I buly. Ht llkein •-me·llUlly and hai>' py." "Merv coma from a. f1mlty a(;pod coob. To them, pvlq food lo friends .... family b llle .. ying hello. I tblBk 1tt'1 d'tm 'that way with 'modal ' lllllll!H. So often In -. hOma,. they Hll'm to conlUIDi Ie1t food lo< lhe silpplo r.0- thlt they've· nen:r b e • n ~~and _,bow tO c:i!olc la In your 10nlt. I ean th"1k my mother (Mrt. Robert Wrtfht o/ lrol1wood, Mich.) r or her auttuder towards btlnt a wilt and a mother. She'• a fllltutic coot. l remember lhe w.>dwrful smelll o/ --lnad that used t~ wait from her kll- then. Anyone who em came tO --will! -""""1. 11waya wu fed. After all, it'a lhe-who malwa-home and Ill ... lhlit •-.i.ii lee~ 1111 a1· teClll'lly IO.hor hulllltnd and children." She raada ....-. 'llke lllOll people ""' llteratw't. Her repertoire ii ·u vllt and a varied u cherry jam, lflpe cataup, bread Ind bQt.. l<r pickles, '°"'· rellah,:..- pepper jelly and -· 1n- cludln1 ·-pie" and -lot!. ,The ""'half baor-lntO • hwl1 nclpe ndla•· Somewbert!Mnmmt'obe·• hearHl!aped -"'lilt or lrutl --, lllrO lhll pioneer lady. .llJLANN mun1N'I PEACH CllVTNEY a I poond IJ CUDCtt: can lltced dlllc·pa- One -. cut ln·illln -llC\'J11 __ _ II C"P B&M -. ·"'Ill' (poi:llid) • ~ w1111e;ra111nt . cup .. • . • 'Ii .. , cldtr '1- 2 lablto"""~ -rniw ' WtlllPMm chopped CID-. alid -1ftlir .. Ii IM,.....,...., clove 1111•.P... ti:llld ~ llll:--..,_ P'i>' ··per .• ,. .• ..,wiq aatt V.11•-- .· .. ' ''Happy 21,stBi • , ' At Jell!;;;. .. it'• illppr, 1cbifj ... -Ill ·lf'lll6: . ' .... "':.r.=·~..: plecao with lortt: pol lllo • -wtlh llinm,- papjlar, ·-....... -· ......... tNonflUtl,atnaer, · 11111nidltpooplo1ID ldm for aboolt 35. lit'• Uooliog ........ -• ~llo--4C111P1Di:·--. ""IMllll!el ·&1111111•••- .... day .0 mahd* ,,., "lllah• lllll ...i.t•cnsldng. "It•. °""" how= a ear dalt'a niCtd ill DIOI« ca11hmoolll7 lor a,_. No-.., cloff! ·~11 OIJel'lnt ,._ per.::.. aocf P'i11*" Mir ... n. ""' ~ llt<!I. UlllU lhlditned, tUnlric often lo pltvenl cllldney. from 1lw'ninJ; C•bobt Ill houn.). A,d d reeenred ayrup }f necesalt)'. Poor lntO llerll!Ud llau Jlls: llll llcht17-Maw 2 plall. . ~ hOloob ~ Jac'1 da4:r for. S0,000 milo-111ul. . YOil""" ""•...,..r,a ,._ dca't-. ,._ &n't llol'{I,,.. don't • Wld-. Ftbnolty Z5. 1970 ,• • • J .. . ··- -' • . . ' I OAllY ,rR.Or • ' r . • • I ., ' '. . f .. ·; .,, nu .i ~.~~~. \ • • . ,, j • " . I . l .J ' .. " . ' ," ' : .. · ... • • • _ ............ ~..,......-~~~-----.,.--------------------=----~-·-----------. - , ft DAILY NJ.OT TAILEIRUD PACKED IY fA"IMfR JOkM' 1·La. PK•. Wtd ntsday, Febl'llat')' 18, 1970 THI ORIGINAL .UDDIG'S CllPPED ·.~.=""" MEATS~3~'1 1---.-.. ~,.~JOlll(--~~~------1 I 7th week t..Uupon ·FREE! ONE 12" x 24" PRINT MASHED POTATOES ~~;.39c FOOD GIAtff DISHWASHER DISH DOERGENT '!:: _55• GOlDENGR.A.INSTIR&SEIVE 2 ..... 9~ Macaronl&Cheese '~;.-~ PUSHllAm .. PORK CHOPS Clllnll CUT··· .. c ~ ..... S&WBEANS Al.PO CHICKEN & UVER DOG FOOD FlfSlt KIST 4 1I $1 Mandarin Oranges .~:~ • ~~CK.0.WAL< 3 46'. $1 Yegetable Cocktail ... ~ . VIUJ.GE INN-CHICKEN. SPANISH, HERB 5 •kl. $1 RICE MIXES pkg .. FRENCH ROLLS lOOTK'ASTf WITH SU ""l!AlflNCl. 6r Off LUn) 64c ULTRA BRITE '.:~ NOIMAl..04l'f'otDn" aac BRICK SHAMPOO ',;.~ ' ROMO CP ';~~ $1 17 atUl!VfS llNUS COMG6TION l 9 7c DRISTAll TABLITS :.:;. '""!.!!!!' 99 c Bur••••• TABLITs .. ·: .. lllAYT llUIT·HOUAllOLD BROOM QUALITY STltAW aac HEAVY DU1Y COIOllO SmENE DUST PAll~77c MAGIC CHEF 49 MAYONNAISE •;:," c ~ LIQUOR SPECIALS ROCKINGHAM ILENHD KENTUCKY WHISKEY FULL~ -299 QUART ~ iiiii'YVS OP NAPOlE~ Regency Room Califomia Champagne WHITE -PIN)( COLD DUCIC "'~~ C.AK 0,.12 f1 Fn4S S !9 27 ......... IMPOITED llfNDfD SCOTCH WHllKY ;~ COFm-All GRINOS MAXWELL HOUSE ' l.l. <-I ... -·· 1k 1 L-. CM ...... ti.ts t Lii, C.,. ...... n.11 VAA 0£.KAMP'S FROZEN MACARONI & CHEESE. 11 -oL pkg .•.•. 37c VAA DE KAMP'S FROZEN APPLE DUMPllNGS. 30-oL·pkg. of 4 .• 95c VAA DE KAMP'S FROZEN BANANA NUT LOAF, 16-oL pkg .•••.... 73c VAA DE ICAMP'S FROID! PECAN COFFEE CAKE, 15·oL pkg .•••••. 73c VAA DE KAMP'S FROZfN PUFF PAS(RY DOU.GH, 12·0L size ..••. 43c FROZEN SARA LEE CAKES fresh 8anono or DeWs Food lA-oL 89C pkg. ..,,. ..... flt ft.) ' ""' GINO'S FROZEn PIZZA. CHEESE, 6-oL pkg .......................... 3Jc DICAllLO RUG SHAMPOO GLORY FOAM 24-01. $179 con .43c WednttdQ, Ftbf111ry 18, 1970 N PI LOT-ADVERTISE~ 8 SPARERIBS . . PalSHPOaK 6-g· CO~Y C STYLJ · Ila. -FLA Y·R.PAC . . . . ' . VEGETABLES • CHCf'llfO lllOCCOU •CUTCOIN • MIX,OV!GnABlfS • l'l.U • l'IAS &CAllOTl • LUfwCH0f'PfOSP1NACH•$QUASH MIX.ol' 5. u•.•1 MATCll PK••· iiuiiii'Pililo1s 39c iiauc BREAD :;:: 39c G;.;i11o;P"cnAi'o1s 3 7c SALAD DRESSING WISHBONE ' lD Col French or ltolian a~~ 39c 23~ Harbor Blvd. at Wilson St., Barbor Shopping Center, Costa Mesa ----·------------ ' ·--·-----·-···-· .. .. .. ----DAILY rlLDT 1lJ • .,, ·.-~ GERBER"!'· BABY FOOD STAAINEO fJIUJTS & VfGS. • 3/+oZ. JAi< •-··········· CAMBILLS Soups O~A.MOfMUSHtlOOMOllC~CICfN CHICKEN &ST~_5.t-..~ I ~f Olr CHICllH nuu1AS 1016-0Z. CAN ·--------,----- $ for $ for , WfrfffHllCOWONGOOD fEl.l6fNIUMAl.4 • Tl,;,...._ ....... , ......... _ -----............... ._...,,.._o.;,.'--, ..-.... ................ 0... _...._, ................... ~ ·---...... .... SAVf 271WITll TllJS COU~ •. · GIANT RINSO DnERGENT GIANT DEAL PACK . UMITONl ' 5 a~ WUH THIS COtJ"°N , UM1r I COUpPN Pf:I: , ADULTCUSlOMll: fEB. 26 rHRu MAit,' . -ma]ifair fro.zui food--EVAP. MILK BANQ0£T DINNERS FROZEN AllVAJUETIES REGULAR SIZE PKG. CARNATION TALL CAN . $ <' fo r Del Monte PEACHES SI.ICED OR HA l VES NO. 2 V. CAN \ LIMrfTWO DOG FOOD Willi THlSCOUl'ON llMll I COUl'ON PUf .-.outTCUSTOMER fC&. 26 TKRU MAI:, 4 ~ THORO,FED 140%.CAN CHUNK BEEF $ for maJlfair VALUABLE COUPON SAVl 11 c WHIM YOU I UY•l WITH THI~ COUPON Carnation TUNA LIGftT ~Ul!K NO. '!&CAN . TOILET TISSUE Dai1t!(Sj;teica~ '""· -- AIDlll R.AVOlil'RiSH 1.CE ·CREAM HALF GAL. SOFT- ' WEVE , i 2 ROLL . PACK . HOFFMAN'S FUU Y·COOKED · WHOLE LEGS .. ,,. .. .. _:_ SMOKED ' ·HAMS LB. SPLIT fRYER w~~LE BREASTS ........ ,,,. 9 ~ · LB. SHANK HALF BEEF RIB STEAKS ~ wrr ronlOll LB. 69'• LEAN TENDER U.S.0.A.CliOICf Oii MAYFAIO BLUE RIBBON ......... , ........ .. CRISP CELERY TE1ClO ____ ........................ fAClt 15' BILL PEPPERS IMGETHltKMEAltO ................ LB. 39' S,P4NISH ONIONS U.$.N0.1 ........ ,.2129' NAVEL OR~NGES IARGEsUNKISr ___ 61s1 coFnE :~:-u_ .. ···--···· ... CAH 75' $ UMIT TWO 2 3~ 1 W\lH THIS c.ciuitON , . ' l1MIT I cou~ l'U ' AOUl fCUSlOMEI: · • ' ' ftl. 26 T~U MM.. 4 . . SA Yl 20c WHIM YOU IUY 1 WrTH TH.SCOUPON . ' Niblets CORN ·~ , llMrTTWO W lTtt THIS CotJf'ON l lMIT 1 COUPON ~f~ AOULTCUST~lr tE&.26THfUJMJ.4 maJ;tair VALUABLE COUPON SAYE• T.17 WHIN YOU IUY J WITHTHISC~ Asstd. PLASTICS HOUSEHOLD CONTAINERS .5 TO CHOOSE FROM UMITTHWll • • ~ Wl1HTH1SCOOIOW UMIT I COUPON I'll ..i AOULTCUStOME.t I .& "" f El.261..U MAll..4 • 1 • ~ ma Bil' VALUABLE COUPON ADVIRTtsiD PlllCIS £FFICTIY£ 7 FUl.L DAYS llfutlSDA Y RI. 26 llfRU WED. MAR. 4 MAYFAIR 'MARKO ~~~uu 175 East 17th .Street, Coste Me11 > ,1 • • ' ' . ' ' -OAA.1..rtOT WtdnHday, fft>nlarr 25, 1970 • THE GREAT JUICE 0 NGEI SWEET, ARIZONA VALENCIA ORANGES 10 LBS. $1 HOW ABOUT MAKING A PEAR TART? SWEET, WASHINGTON ANJOU 5 LBS. $1 • 3 LBS. $1 . PEARS . GARDEN-FRESH, LOCAL PEAS SPINACH MAKES A MARVELOUS SALAD! TENDER, LEAFY-GREEN SPINACH 2 BUN. 25¢ ~r~~~,:iv ~ ~-.'.:$. ~· ~~·· CRISCO SHORTENING 3 LB. 79¢ SUN SWEET PRUNE JUICE JJ oz. SUNSHINE OATMEAL COOKIES 12 oz. C&H SUGAR S LB. BAG KNUDSEN LA BON BUTTER 1 ti. MINUTE RICE II OZ. NU CO A 49c 63c 79c 79c MARGARINE I Lt. 2,., 49c YUBAN COFFEE 1 LB. 15¢ YUBAN COFFEE Ju. 1.49 JIF PEANUT BUTTER ,, oz. 59c KERN'S PRESERVES STRAWBERRY .. oz. 49c SCHIUING BLACK PEPPER • oz. 47c B IN B BUTTON Mushrooms 3 oz. 3 FOR $1 B IN B SLICED MUSHROOMS ' oz. 3 ••. '1 COLD WATER WASH WOO LITE ,, oz. A UTILE SWEET FOR YOUR DIET! CHRIS or HOOPERS DIET CANDIES YOUR CHOICE "THE COSTA MESA HAPPENING" A ioinin9 to9ether of rn1ny 9toups, fe tn•9• ind adult in an ew1r1ness of the growing drug problem! WHEN, Sot., Fob. 28, 1970 9 A.M. to 9 P.M. WHERE: Oren91 CouJlfY Fairgrounds 1.09 • , Entertainment, Spe•~en. Demon- ~\ slretions, Oi1play1. An interesting ·~ orogrem for the whole femily. ~~. ._ __ ~ PHONE 673-6360 FOR HOME DELIVERY IN OUR DEL!VERY. AREA PRICES EFFECTIVE FEBRUARY 26, 27, 21 ,,,, ..... ~ , .. ;• ., ..... ... . . ) . • ' ' I • 0 .· .. ' ' : \ ' I ... I , ...... • I • ' I '. ' I \. : \ I •., •; \ ' ', I ·... ..· \\ .. _.... .. . .. .... . •\ ·"" ........ , . . ... •.. '"' ' . .. . .. . . ' : •. ' ': ~ •••• • J • • . . . . ........ · 01'91n 5eren1d1 For Your PIHsur• by Bernice Fay LIDO MARKET CENTER· NEWPORT BlVD. AT THE ENTRANCE TD LIDO ISLE , , , . WHEN YOU B~GIN YOUR MEAL ·PLANNING AT RICHARD'S! BONE-IN Lift yoi.ir dir;iners O\,lt of the commonplace -- Richard's has so m•ny more things to tempt and inspire you. BON APPETIT! Sherry Jelapoho Stuffed Olives M1rin1ted Meat Balls Fried Noodles Green Peas with Mushrooms Chocolate Chew Cake Coffee A robust Chianti ·RICHARD'S TOP OF THE GRADE, U.S.D.A. CHOICE RUMP ROAST Try this for German S1uerbr1ten BONELESS RUMP ROAST GrHI Morin:ted ond Berbocuod ROUND STEAK STROGANOFF TENOER SWISS STEAK BroiN wilh on io"' in bee< Hamburger Patties s P•• lb. 2 LB. aox Lean GROUND BEEP 1h. "'°'' ...... 11. m .. 11 cflL~ Stuffed Round Steaks Richard's Meat Loaf ,.._,., ---4, ,. ..... 11 • hit ,.,.. Marinated MEAT BALLS ,, cMn ..... ' COOKED AND PEELED SHRIMP, COOKED LOBSTER TAILS, MAHI MAHI, SWORDFISH, HALIBUT STEAKS, SALMON , FRESH TROUT, FRESH OYSTERS 89¢LB. 98¢LB. 98¢LB. 89¢LB. 1c19EA. 53¢LB. 1.29 Lt. 79c, .. 98c "· se~lht~#ltd 1J/u'meu CANDLELIGHT MEATS ALICI WHITE, Newj09f1 IMch MRS. VON ZOLLltl, Newpert lhM."9 MRI. JOHN CALLAHAN. Newl'Ori IMch LEAH ICHWANIR, N•w,.rt IMch FlllNCH 1ou9um MltS. J, WATSON, (Oita MeA MltS. HOWAltO KNOl'P, WfuN Hlll1 THOMAS CARNEY, N""°" llMch •OSI ICHANLAIHLllt, NeWplWt .. .ch $U GIFT SHOP PR!D IVI KOWALlSKI, N..-pett ... ch ISAllL ltOHM, c ... .,.. lllel ~r ' -~~ • • : ' ~L~Jo,T HOUSE S'AUSBURY STEAK , "l .. . Hl;>Ll.OWAY HOUSE STUFFED "oz. GiJiij •Peppers 1~ ~%. 59¢ . \ . ' . . 1-!QµoWAY HOOSE CABB'AGE ROLLS HOLLow;.r1HOUSE STUFFED BAKED'. POT A TOES . \ ' 14 oz. 59c 12 oz. 59c TREE. TO, ~ · . ·, APPLE JUICE 6 OL 5 FOR $1 • STAR KIST AFRICllN LOBSTER TAILS • oz. 1.89 II.RDS EYE FRENCH CUT BEANS • oz. 5 ... '1 llRDS EYE CUT OKRA ,. oz. 2 ••• 49c BIRDS EYE < STRAWBERRY HALVES ,, oz. 49e f!/)~4ffllj;. PILLSBURY BUTTERMjLK BISCUtTS 0 I oz. 9¢ KRAFT CRACKER BARREL EXTRA SHARP Cheese Round 1 LB. 1 ol9 BAR-M SMOKED LIVER BRAUNSCHWEIGER LI. 89c RATH ALL MEAT WIENERS I LB. 69¢ CAN ADIAN S~ONED WHEAT THINS 10 oz. 49e - MADE WITH BUTTERMILK CHEESE & ONION ROLLS 6 ,., 39c WIH RAISINS AND WALNUTS MOLASSES BREAD Slc LARGE FRUITFFILLED DANISH 89c Topped with honey, brown sug•r and •lm onds Chocolate Chew Cake 89c READY TO BLOOM , WELL BUDDED ·RED AZALEAS IN Slfi" POTS 2.39 EACH ~d'.. . ·~~ ~ J'i;idtG;'~ ~ Cook 8 01. pkg. egg noodles in boiling wafer till tender. M•lt t T. butter in skillet. Spttad dr1ined noodles evenly' in p•n ind brown. Turn out on plate. Melt l T. butter in skillet end brown other side of noodles. Turn onto 1erving pl1te end sprinkle with v~ C. 9reted Sap "'' S•go c.he•s•. Cut in w•dges to ~ s•rv•. ~ ~~.. ~,, ·-._ __ ~ , • nu 39 33&0?! r ti! JW?Fi AL ZS 5 7 I £1 us Bzl)J f 7 2 j' , .. , SJJls n 7 ~;.J. .. .....t-MARKET HOME & GIFT' SHOP LIDO YACHT SHOP ffsP!OsffsJsotsz1£!2sZrzo:zzzSJs cu sa2ztz1tsna11 n ••an 7EJ ANTHONY'S SHOE REPAIR FLOWER SHOP CLEANERS OPEN DAILY 9.7, SUN. t .6 OPEN DAILY 9-6 OPEN DA ILY , 9,£ DAILY 9.5:30, SA 1. •.s OPEN DAILY 9-b DAILY ,,30 .•. SAT. a,10.s _? ______ _ -----........ ---~-------~~-~---.~-.-~.~~~~~~-----~~--. -· I 8 PILOT-ADVERTISER N Wednesday, February 25, 1970 '•'• • ALL GR INDS HILLS BROS. COFFEE;-. - W ITH 5 9c ~~ lHU:m?u·.,,, COUPON 784 FE~A2:¢~'·12• UMIT OHi LI, NI COUl'Olf l!. S. D. A. ••choice !t!t IJ,!el Stea,k Sale TOP :' S.l ·RLOIN•r·BONE o~ CLUB " • . $ 39 ! $ 17 .. • • LENT EN SEAFOOD .'JPECIALS FROZEN NORTHERN HALIBUT OR BROADBILL SWORDFISH STEAKS LB. BONELESS STEAKS :'1~0: TIP .... $1 ~.J • .. .REAL McCOY SPECIALS FROZEN FOOD : BREAKFAST SPECIALS LB. BEEF BACON ' 12-o" 69' '""'. , · i.r;,, 73': HORMEL'S RED LABEL OR MORRELL'S YORKSHIR E BEEF LINKIEs::.::.::·:··: ~;;" 33' ~~~~~.::~;;._:.·:.·: ... ·~~::: :::i BSLAICCEODN ~k~ 69c YOUR 9 8 C BEE~ SAUSAGE i .lb. A9c • ~'.:~~ :.:~~ns ....... ·~;•;,, ~L ·-. · -~ . ea . -- CHOICE . .lb. -II' . · -........ · Roll !!W ·• HALllUT OILLm ....... Pk,. , 98 , swim "° .... . 65' "TE""DER LEE" Fl"''E. "U<1L : c ... ,i;,. ""''· 98': IROWN "N" SllVE LINKS . .. .. .. .............. ·' l •' • l• ~ IT\' • flSK ~TICKS ••••. '" •.• Pkg. : .,. .. STERN I' llK fr••~ Fitl•h or ' -f , , f lc1lt nd1t t-llt. S 1 ]5 t Ill" 0 .. \ I OCEAN P.ERCH ............. I:'. ............. ~ .. ~.... -LEAN TENDER : HAL11ur PILLm ......... ,. : SMOKED LOIN CHOPS ""'h . '~ 10 ..... 79' c· ORNED --fc I ru;:1i·~~;r.:1.·.·~.~·.llt.,1:~61. s3'':-----' ---··t-rr-~ PACIFIC OYSTERS ....... ,,;'.':...................... • Kold ,;,1 8 "''" 99": RIB 98C :, LOIN $109 Fr•I~ ftf ROUNDS : Ill STIAIS ••••• St11•• : RAINBOW TROUT ....... ~;'.;': wt .................... 3,.. . • • • • lb i ~~1~i.11 ........... r:~~'o. 59': CHOPS lb : CHOPS LI. SUNSHINE STATE FROZEN ----LIQUOR DEPT. IRIS GRANULATED . ' HALF GALLON SALE 5 B~G SUGAR . ~ 10-YEAR~CHARCOAL PERFECTED s9ts DANT WHISKEY ••••• ·, I WOLFSCHMIDT 80° •• ,, DRY VODKA ••••••• c • • --- 12-01. Tin GALLO s1•9 SPANADA WINE ••••• SUGAR JAN·U·WINE OH BOY-TWO TO A PAC . 89" I CHINESE FOODS MR. SPUD INSTANT -39c POTATOES ..................... ii<~ CHEESE PIZZA : . .. ... 'b;~~: ' FANCY PUGET SOUND SOCKEYE SALMON 65C 42-0Z. DINNER PAC .. . - IMITATION ICE MILK 33c.: FUNFORALL ............. HA~rR~~~ JERSEYMAID-ALl .VARIETIES 29 C COTTAGE CHEESE ...... c~~sT .. CHOP SUEY BEEF, CHICKEN, PORK CHOW MEIN MUSHROOM OR SHRIMP R.E.D. SALMON ..... . .. ~0 1 iN c LAURA SCUDDER-13 • 3-0 Z. PKG S. 63C POTATO CHIPS .............. . ea LAN GENDO RF "K REAM KRU ST" 2 5c SLICED BRICAD WHITEo•WHEAT ~ .. ., .. I-LB. LOAF ~ . JAN-U-WINE -2'/, TIN 29C CHOW MEIN NOODLES ••• ASSORTED COLORS-NORTHERN 25C PAPER TOWELS ........ 1.45P~~: " I ·--Check These Produce Values--. ' BUNCH G·OODS SALE CARROTS, COLLARD . . . GREENS, MUSTAlltD . . GREENS, TURNIP TOPS, TEXAS MUSTARD, TURNIPS, ENDIVE, ESCROLE, BEnS Your Choice PfRK ~111it.4~ c EA. U.S. No, I SPAN ISH 3 7c: A GOURMET'S DELIGHT . ·29c i GARDEN VALLEY WILD 39c ONIONS ,.,!":;. !.SUNCHOKES ..... . . . lb! BIRD SRD .. ~:t FLORlqA RUBY RED a· s100 GRAPEFRUIT....... for Delicatessen Dept. Speci11ls ~ VAN DI KAMP'S OL' VIRGINIA ~ ·· ALL MEAT· or AL L BEEF :1 DRESSINGS : ROUND OR SQUARE ' ¢ ··~ •. oz.,.. -. • •49,.1 BOLOGNA ••• 69. t . ROQUEFORT. • • • • PULAIKI POLISH-ll·... 39' j 1.oz. "" ' 39· ' SAUERKRAUT, , • • ~ Bl.IU CHllSE • • • • ~ •. oz. ,.. 33, tli~Klii?li 33' ~ 1 000 ISLAND • • • CHllSI . • ' • • • . • • - OL' VIRGINIA TENDER JUICY FRA KS ' • PRICES EFFECTIVE THURS. thru SUN., FU. 26, 27, 28, MARCH 1 -2701 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA e 13922 BROOKHURST, GARDEN GROVE e · 1308 W. EDINGER, SANTA ANA . . 5858 WARNER; HUNflNGTON-BEACH " ·e 23811 EL TORO, 'EL TORO · .. " • ' ' ' I· I I ' ( I a DAILY PILOT Wtdntsdll, f""""1 25, 1970 Pokeweed Fancier~: S.hould Bewa-re of Roots and Berries • DEAR NAN: b. Me ot)'oot With so rich a m11ture It half of It in the paq can give called 'l!J'assles." Th a. t ' • rot~ the dough out on a a pastry cJolh. as well as a tough crust. an adverY effect. So does .,..,.., , rtM dtre wa&er In can be an ever-present prob-you ~ta. J learned I011g ago to where the mixture l! usually 1U1hUy nOW'ed pastry cloth,· rolllng pin cover. ll aomeUmes help$ to damp weatber. Wldi pMtweed b eoobd lem. Try this. Before cutting just bold a stick of butter or cream cheese butJer and • eut lt with a plain ro'und cut~ 1'bo&e thir.gs come In sets at refrigerate the dough before Nan Wiley gtvts you Ups on .., M ,......,, ta u. margarine in .my hand and nour. You ar~ supposed to ter, lheo it was a ctoch to fit tftusewaus departments, are roll\ng. And don't be 1 r how to make sucees!ful me- ...-.1 eftel._bl.y yoaq poke the pie or wha tever, dip the gtve ihe pan a light, quick nm-plncb off a small ball and use Into those Uni. For the first a gopd investment since ~ down too hard oa the rolling ringues in her book Jet (tlll ldad foud la woodl) •t pan bottom in hot water ever around, especially the sides, your fingers to press it into tJme they were absolutely ta.st practically f 0 rev e 'r. pip. Just light and quick. "Marvtlous Meringues." For a. marbt, cook It, Ulen so brieDy, just to below the before pattin& ill tbe crust. tiny muffin tins so tl:ley are even.'' Trying to roll 'rich dough on a Feather fingered people seem your copy send 25 cents and • wtdloat pou11a the water olf pan rim. That slight meJUng Several years ago a reader evenly llned before baking. A.s Whjle I have yet to find the bare board will ' surely have it to be able to press dough into long,_ stamped, self-addrused I add a )lttle Dtllk and buUtr helps loosen. pa!l!ed along a · hint on a she said "Easler said than book that recommends I.his, it sticking, you would need too tins with no trouble. Others envelope with your request for aad ..tl J ll•ve never hid any Even cutting u n b a k e d related problem -making done! One day J g o t mad certainly works i! you are much Oour to combat that. just never can. Even a certain it to Nan Wiley in care or th• W effeeta tr.m this. The dWt crumb crust! wit.hoot leaving those rich UtUe party cups enough to experiment. I just carerul. Just be aure you use then )'OU would aurely have a body chemistry ~a to have DAD..Y,PILOT. h a UW. blU.r bot good. 11---------''-------=--....:....-''----=---'----'-------'-'-~'-:_.:;::..:.:::..:.::;;:...:=.::::....::::.:..:.......::::.:...::.:=::.:...=:::...:..::::.:__:=.:::::...:..:::::.. ___ _ woold Ub a doclor'1 ftrlt. laud ,eptalol ea tlll1. A SATISFIED READER, LAN· QSTER, PA. You must have seen that ln some other column, nol mine, but I can answer your ques- Uon. For lhe ~initiated, pokeweed is a stronij ~smelling MOREY-SAVING WEEK-EID SPECIALS ·7 DAYS A WEEK! .J.M ... CllP rll/I. .. STAMPS! pereMial that grow1 four to eight feet tall. The roots and berries are poisonous but those first thick shoots coming up in the spring are quite a delicacy. Yes, Jocal markeU Jn your area do offer them and they are perfectly okay -just so you steer clear of the roots and berries. ~fany a farm child has happy memories of hunting pokeweed in the spring for a good mess of greens and cornbread. I think iJ you wtn drain the cooking water you will eliminate any bitter na vor. Another example of a plant that ls partly edible, partly not, is rhubarb. The red stalk b fine, ~th ly green lee are toxic so watch any tod- dlers in the garden. They do take a fancy to the oddest things. DEAR NAN: So many of my dessert recipes have a crust made up of one cup butt.er, a cup of sHCed Oour and a COD• pie of tablespooo1 sugar to be pmsed lnto the pan with my fingen before baking for to mloaLH 11 JtS degrees. After that It · Is fUled a o d refrtgerated.. It ls delicious but what a challenge w~en lt comes to cuWag that ilnt pie«! You really have to work to loosen tb1t crust and so tad up with a aad cut of dessert. How can I tolvt this'?' BETl'Y KINER, MINNEAPOLIS Skimme r 9065 "SIZES 7.15 i.., 1(f ,,.; .... 1ffr.."T' ... Skimming curves topped by 1 round of ruffles -prettiest way for a dress to look from January to June and beyond. Choose blends, wool crepe. Printed Pattern 9065: NEW Jr. Miss Siies 7, 9, II, 13, 15. Size 11 (bust 331;.?1 taku 214 yards 45-inch fabric . SEVENTY-FIVE CENTS for each pattern -add 25 cenls for each pattern for Air Mail and Special Handling ; olbenriae thif'd.(lass dtllvtry wlll taU three week! or more. Send to Marian t.1artin, the DAD...Y Pn.ct, 442 Pattern Dept., 232 West 18th SL, New York. N.Y. 10011. Pr Int NAME. ADDRESS with ZIP, SIZE and STYLE NUMBER. BIG, NEW SPRING.SUM· MER PATl'EllN CATALOG. 111 styles, tree pattern <OUJIOll. ID cents. INSTANT SEWING BOOK T·BONE STEAK TOP SIRLOIN luSOA! --$)19 luSiiAl -s1· 49 ~ ftA'«llM ~DICGllJAD PM111 ... 11 ... 'I'! 11. Tip 111r1t1 ... 't'! 11. Boneless Roast ...:::~""" 89~ o s LENTEN SEAFOOD HEADOllARTUS ••• FRESH DUIGENESS 69e CUBS ~. . fnsh .... Oplln ~ 79' c...t.~ ........ --1,JS 'W ....... a.. .... -.--1M O.W.M l Ol!lt_......,_ 711: ,.., ,....., .. __ __:. n: 1-kMOlllm-•-•-'l.or PRIMROSE 49;. Salatl Lettuce =: 2!291 Rmet Potatoes ,::-, 10:- nwt•wa•• LE BARON HOTEL 250 111111 cnle llri, Mlsslll y.., mnLY EllERfAllMEIT: ••• -IN1HIVJ.P.10UNGI, -IT _..,AT THI IND Of HOm CIRCU *:!:' .. --· ................. _ *D'll'0 lf....,_ .. I ~ .. ...... ·~ ........ .....,.o~·.\ --*..._ ....... .,, .... 1oc1ar. wear ID!nOtT0•.11. 34081 Doheny Park Drive Ca"1strano Beach INSTANT FASHION BOOK ' I" -whaM .. w .. r answers, ac· 1011 Adams "Aye at Brookhurst, Hun11Mton Beach cessory, Oiure llpsl Only $1. . '' '"'i' ), -........ . . ·. BUTIER-8All 1URllEYS:_Sf. ,..._,_ lURKIT PARTS ::=-.-.. -·39"• Green Giant Peas i11. 2:39' A·l Egg Noodles ~~ 35' Fala Detergent ~'= '='. 69' Pineapple Juice ~~ 3:29' Instant Breakfast ;: ""39' Prune Juice ..:::=..... 40 ~ 49' Friskies Cat Food :::m. 2iD Bumble Bee Salmon""~ 79' Schilling Black Pepper~35' Jerseymaid Buller c::.-a: 79' Vo.os &t/1sir1! Niw. 1R1WANT WNCIPI or STAINLESS FLATWEAR ... ....,., ............ .....,. ........... .... .. ....,,, _ _..... ............... _ ....... ... ...... ~ ... ~--.. .,.~......,. ...... ~-=••F•J~tlo._.....dtl ...... l!]f!Jh'i'J fROZIN fOOO BUYS ! l(llMIClll0-'0.W... ---. ... 3'1 _,... Olli-. ... --,,. ----... _."" ,,.,.. ....... -----··-··55e """lac.lol ---.... ,.. ........ 19c l!]f!JQliJ llQUOR5 flATUR!I OLD COLONR TTLllt BOURBON . GOLD MEDAL .FLOUR .... ~ . .....,,...., ~ --,. ""• \I. _,_._ ~-~ CU.IED - ~ -pEDS · ~ FlllCY FAM riiA1 ,......, ... ~ .1un YONNAISE ' -~ --·-~ :::''!=.s.. • ...... y .......... ........ _IONOID G·~ m WGCINll!D •• • ••• ~. ••, .. • UR•EliWIEI muua.,.. --. --. CHICH! GR 45' TURKEY '" .. Eadll' .... --·-'!Ir.. ~· NI.~ .a •• ., COC&iAIL !ih 3.~ °""' larl9 I• ... -.,~ .............. . "" 5111'3~ p;2 nOD l oyal VelwlZ 1111 -= f3" · • ;iJs'35• Andre Simon lmporled .. ;_;....;....;..· _____ ......,._, ~')~Ji'Jt'J QOKIRY '" IUREI' ICE CREAM .: . ' 75• ~·' ... •,( . ...., .............. _ ........ _._ .... . .....-· """"""' ·--................ U1'c ............ ff • ..,.,._ t\t, -_ ... l.2' T ......... 0....,. .... -'I...._~ .. -'1c ,..,.,.a,....w.~•e&Uill -.. Sk BEAUJOWS WINE YOllS CAIE SILE! --•-N $)91 --... ~ -"'"_....,. __ ''"'""" ....,lo.'" Ut GUVE'S WINE ... •1" ::.~:TN .... 75! ............ a.. •• 5922 Edinger Ave., at Springdale, Huntington .Beach 17950 Magnolia, Fountain Yaney 21082 Beach Blvd., Huntington Beach ... - -· . • -. , • SAFEWAY~S :-THE PLa • -COi g g < . . -POPULAR CIGARETTE·s .... $ .. .... orKJ...- 1 11 100 ~1 • lii' Ctn. '3 -a.. - ... - AS-o· MEAT PIES .....,.Hou11 Chicbn,Tumy '-*otTuna I K. Flaoh-Froun ... . iii= !?· ~!~.!,!~'L~&gc j s-Pork Sausage· ~·i.=4 ~stc ~ ~ Pork Links ':.."::;: 3:$)'1 -: I All-Meat Franks ~.:i Ste ~ ri Cook-.1 Ha-.... , ........... 5• --w= au ~ .. ••• Jups For SnacM P'lo '7 ... ~~ a11m PICNICS •••••• $ .... t:!.-co =--iii) -·~ .. _ 'a· .,. • ? ....... ~.:: -c: ~ El = RO. Additional Meat Department Buy s.' lliu• •a~~ ':: W W U.lkl .!i:. .. 7t' Clii1bl ~= = 45' .... SW."';.;' ..... Swill hni111":. '::It' htlill .. 't::. ":. ':0:-... ILL. --. Fiiiy C11bll 4"·11t . can / Swift 1:..L -·-·"" ._. .._L ...... , .... _ -.-1 .... ,.. wr ._ •-• .......... wr S tk-.1 ltl-t--...... -5ac Cliili :: =-~ :..i: 59' F'•llstilb ::;, ·:: ......~-rJUUU ,.._ .. ., w 11111 =· .. 1t' F'.wicks =. S :.-: '1 Fesllwal llaa11 .:::tit. .. •1" ...... -=-= .. II' si.n., :..,"':.".'.. .. '1" Polsh Sawsa9e = ... •1" qolden Yellow Cubed 1 ....... ,$ 0 • U.S. GM. 1111p. U.5.1.A. Gt1•1 A :~ ••c • 11111•• . r ... o.q ... S11cl••• Frvlls Or v....,.,... Your CholCle IOIRm • hll c ...... Cwt ••••• USDA Cllll11 ... .. Porll Ste*• ~,::.cm .. 79' Swiss ste1l11 =,!: . Fresh ,_. a.ops ~w .. 79• Round Stew ~ti~~ Ceater Pn Ciao• l! .. •1" Sirloill T• S~ak . ..., ....... -· c.> :s ..... • •• I 5 • C .. • • DISCOUNT PRICES LOW, LOW PRICES! 5.1.i . 4.4 JI SJ I S.4 .1 CD JE :z C"> C"> cg ON HEAL TH g BEAUTY AIDS M Yw fN1w Wt l1Js;'11Mt .... Y,11211 •» 11111• r11•d 4-SNMll'• ,.,.,.. ' ... ,. ..... •• lit .. ' PRE•llD COFFEE · .COTJAGE· ~· :CHEES.E· ... _., ·~nc1 Rldi Robwt 1 ... Fla~lool ... USDA CHOICE CHUCK ROAST ..... Cwt ..... Fer ...... USDA Cli1lce llr••• IMf ... Center 7-10•1 St11l1 .. 69' ....... .... ..... .. 69' ............. -=~ ...... Lulll"M Low Calorie, Chive, Fa11-... or Large Curci .... ·~ ~ ~ -~ -..;:~:..-=---.::i--~ .. ~ ~- @' D~~:A~~~!!~ ffA1Ullll lift ... c ·-=· THIS WUK'S .... • 33 SAUCER ~ . -- c cas 1 • • •• • • a-~ if :z: 15: ~ Ora J • ....,.,_ 6 SHI . ..,__, u1ce Fr~--=:,, :: . I - Ian Dry Spray Deellorant !:" 971 ·Union Sutar ='='--5 ...... 53c FtrT••C.-.'- UDEii MULCH ,.,...,·i · •• CAllllLW ..... • •. .... ,....... , -• I f11rl•• .••••• linr lsly IN Chopped Broccoli~ 5.:::$J" i Succotash ~==-'::?.... 5 ...... noe ::::s ..._ "-..,. ..._ • v .... c-. ,.... .... I i . Mixed· Vegetables~ 5~$J" g. ' /' I J .. ·11 •• z-z ... --..... ... ...... ••• --·!"< - ,. --·-.. ... -= .... .c:. -- -s-'1 6 .................... lf.fL_. ........... ,,.... ..... -....,. ._... ... ..... ---41' ,.. ..... --.... .. • ...-; ..... -----w;., -' . •az:cu~ c:zsza 100111• IJl8E "Al" FRESll EllS £':-:..~ ...... &1· --.... ' Sii ADS -· ..... = ~at --- LICEllE YOllRT ~-:: .. ~at -••I-On Delilorant ·~99c ----y_,,. :::::....... ~~ .,. vo-s·s....,_ ;:.•1 .. ..,_ Aapt• ~car= .,'\ • .......... ....... .::,-."";:.:.. 'r' ... •. ,.,. ... er-~ •;•.-•n• • _.._ C.--.... ,.. ---... .. -..11&11 a,.,. •,...·iw:i::.• ",:' 41' .... ---... ,.,. .......... . --.. ....... ...., ... ...... ... --.... ... 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WHITTlll-14212 MINES AVE. mCI lffU$ !fi; COFFEE r.01.1>c -.s.oa.11.st ~ell. CAN ... St.S) ~-·· " \ ., -~--------... ---------..-_,-................... --.--...--------------------~--------------' • UPI Te ...... FRENCHY WORKS OUT THE KINKS -Jim Lefebvre, Los Angeles Dodger infielder, goes throu8h limbering up exercises at Vero Beach, Fla. Lefebvre is one of leading candidates for third base S1arting as- signment this season with the Dodgers after BiU Sudak.is was moved to catcher. Crilsade Be9ins ' Bowling Legislatio11 U11faiI·, .Says Stoeffler Dick Stoeffler. the Kona Lanes (-Cosla '-f\!Sa) boss \\'ho bowled back-to-back 300 cames, is on a crusade lo alter what he calls unjust bowling legislation. Here's what he has lo say : Bowling stands completely alone in !he \\'orld or sports as the ONLY athletic endeavor to penalize imprOvement ! This Is the achievement of two unheralded rules of the Amerlean Bo\vling Congress, governing body for the sport, A drive emanatii1g in Orange County is rapidly gaining momentum. It calls for the immediate abolilion of A.B.C. Playing }~ule 27 and Tournament Rule 306, based on the fact that by destroying the in- centive to improve. the present legisla- tion could bring an end to all tournament competition. if not the very spart, itself. Originally intended to halt potential cheating by a bowler holding down his league average to gai n extra handicap in tournaments. the rules state that bowlers must report themselves at such t.iJne a new season average exceeds a prior season average by 10 pins, or at any time a bowler's tournament performance in a 12-month period is slightly better than his league efforts. or when m in i m a 1 monetary gain is made . IL is a complete faltacy and perhaps the poorest legislation ever (oslered on the athletic public. The cheater will not tum himself in as there is almost no chance of his getting caught, while the honest. improvinR: kegler who is a\\1are of the rules will bring himself to lhc nearest loca l A.8.C. associatl-on offiCf. and promptly be Cha111berlai11 Will Retm·11 rerat.Cd, a connotation in bovdlng circles of being a "cheat". Thus the qtresllqp, why improve! Or, why bowl? U the game could stirvive in . spite or the two Rules, it could bring about the biggest scan dal since the "basketball point shaving'' unco~ered in New York several xears ago. In order to avoid "re.rating'', honest bowlers would have to resort to en masse "average shaving". All-star teams might well be named ea~ year based on the "least GLEHH WHITE ------Tr' HITE IVASfl ------ amount of aver<1ge drop", instead of the "biggest gains". As ludicrous as it seem~. that is the situation in a nutshell. It is the only sport to incriminate by legislation against the person improving rapidly . The rules are not new, but have been bypassed generally, creating a lack of knowledge on the part or the bowling public. Only because of an individual situation lvithin Orange County. whereby a bowler in the t;anie for less than JS months was slated to be penalized by a rerate because he had merely improved. did the rules problem come to light. A letter-writing cam·paign to American Bowling Congress headquarters i n Milwaukee, as a follow-up to several articles in bowling newspapers. is the first step in what the bowling group hopes wUI be a short campaign before ac- tion is taken. * * * Area athletes compeltng in the USC spring sports program include: Ken Pianko (Fountain Valley} and ·Jeff Ryan (Huntington aeach) in crew; Greg Fink (Corona del Mar) swimming. .. • "';:filf'SOil), ~ril.H'y 25, 1970 O~IL Y PILOf <fi Allen: $140, OOO ·N ot Out of Line~ ., -. ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. IUPI) - Richie Allen Is all heart. H,e sees .oo reason to hold up the St. Louis Cl.rdinala, and besides he wants to do what he can to help lick inflation.. So instead o( 1f')'ing to get it all by deman- ding $200,000, he's going to be big about it and take only $140,000. Maybe Tom ,seaver put the bug in Alle:n 's bead. . · Seaver was dJscussing salaries lhis past winter and said he could foresee the day when a ball player would be getting '200,000 a year. ruchie Allen, who got $85,000 last year. must have figured Se·aver was talking about him. Besides, there's never any harm asking .. and Alle11 isn't shy about asking for things. When last heard (rom, you may rtn1ember, he had one other small Angels Honie Up for Sale; Lakers Lose ANAHEl?\-1 -"For sale. One stadium, four years old. With 43,204 seats and 12,000 parklng spaces on 140 acres. Nice neighborhood. Contact City Hall." Anaheim, a city or 175,000 hung a "for sa1e1•1 sign on the home of the California Angels baseball club the day it was finished in 1966. Somebody's · finally nibbling, City Manager Keith Murdoch said Tuesday, adding, "We've responded." He wouldJ\'t disclose the identity of the prospecUve buyer, said to be a major corporation.. But-Murdoch said anY report of a sale at this time "is much ado about nothing. The idea is being kicked around, that's all.'' lie also strongly denied reports that he has put out "feelers" for wssible buyers. Assistant City Manager Bob Davis sald the stadium and land art worth aboUt S2'6 million. Tom Leigler. city stadium direc- tor, put the value at about $29 million. The ' st.adium itself was built virtually next door to Disneyland fOr $16 million by the Del Webb Corp. and financed by a $21.5 million revenue bond investment. • INGLEWOOD -Jumping Joe Caldwell poured in 38 points Tuesday night as the Atlanta •lawks built a 22-point lead al the end of three quarters and coasted to a J 18-106 "'in c:wer the Los Angeles Lakers. The victory, before 12.991 fans at the Forum, gave the Hawks a three-game bulge over the second-place Lakers In the \Vest.ern Division standings. It also snap. ped a three-game win s t r e a k Loa Angelu had held over. the Ha\\·ks . Caldwell connected on 17 of 26 shotl! from the Ooor and scored 15 of his point/! in the first period. He was aided by a 23· poin~ performaoce by rookie Butch Beard and 20 by Lou Hudson. • 1'.1lA11I -The National Airlines Open Invitational golf tournament, last of five slops on this year's rich Florida circuit is in danger of cancellation. ' The $200.000 event, scheduled for ~'larch 26-29 at the Couritry Cltib of Miami. hes been threatened by the CUT· rent strike against the sporuior. National Airlines , by about 3.500 members of the Air Line Emnloyes Association. The Associated Press learned Tuesdav ~hat Danny Thomas was prepared to steP in as sponsor or an alternate tournament at that time should the dP1-'!s be vacated. The SC<'ond Danny Thomas.-Dip!amat Open, .which wa.~ to have been played early 1n December this year. also has been called off, tile AP learned. • HOLTVILLE -One of Callfornia'~ newest but oldest Angels, veteran pitcher Jack Fisher. joined the club Tuesday but the status of eight absent and unsigned playe rs remained unchanged. The 30..year-old right-hander. fourth oldest player on the roster, was acquired by the American League club last month in a trade with Cincinnati. Fisher is starting his 1 12th year In the majors. He was 4-4 with the Reds last year. • VERO BEACI~. Fla. -The status or the Los Angeles Dodgers Five remained unchanged here Tuesday as the Nalionat League club continued spring training. They are pitchers' Bill Singer and Don Sutton, catchers Tom Haller and Jeff Torborg and outfielder Len Gabrielson, wbo batted .333 h1St season as a pinch-hit· ter. requost. "All I ask is to get out ol Philadelphia." he said_, "and l'll be the :1applest man In· the 'world." Okay. So now he's out or Philatielphla -but he still isn't the h~ppfest man In the \vorld. He knows the ticklish position he has lbe Cards in. Some even say he has them over a barrel, inasmuch as they gave up Curt Flood, Tim McCuver. Joe Hoerner and Byron Browne in the deal. Gussie Busch, the Cardinal owner. isn't chJntzy about money. Neither are General Manager Bing Devine and•Assis- tant General Manager Jim Toomey, who deal directly with lhe players. The Cards tried making A:len feel like part or the family by offering him a raise. They boostt>q him to pretty close to the $100,000 level, following a year In \1'hlch he had a .288 average, 89 RBI's and 32 homers In 118 games. ~ Allen had some money taken away /rlJl'D· him by the Phillies last yep;r, and maybe he thinks the Cardinals should make it up now. Or maybe it's important with htm being the highest paid player ln Lhc ga1ne. Willie M:iys is No. I in the money department right now with $130,000, and Hank Aaron 's new contract puts hlru right behlntl with $125,000, about the same bracket as Roberto Clemente. Carl Yastrunlski is top man in the American League with $115.000, so Allen doesn't see where $140,000 ror hlm would be that much out of line. "He's a good ballplayer," Toomey says. "~le's woi'th a certain number of dollars and we havii: to work out a figure that way." Sounds simple, doesn't it? But it isn't. . -. Toomey and Devine tw;Ch are back 1n Sl. Louis and they'll be talllilli sboriif' with Allen. Befott that, -tbey'U be ta1tlnj with Busch to see bow he feels. · Last year, When the cardinal pay~tt' soared past the million dollar mark andc the club sunk to fourth place to the National League Ea'st, P,eOple caUed the' players 11fa_t ca.ts:" Outside.of a ,few Uke Mike Shannon and Dal Maxvlll, however, not many were cut this year. Even if the Cardinals were in- clined to give Allen all he!s asking for. there's still the matter of their other' players to be considered . • "\Ve feel lhe salary we pay 1 player" coming to us for the fin:t Ume has to be consistent with the salaries we are paying players who helped us win three pennants and two world series," Toomey explalns. Cal Statf (LB) to Face Weber State . . NCAA Playoff Pairings Set By THE ASSOCIATED PRF.SS tournaments. Kentucky , the No. 1 team The Nalional , Collegiate N t h J e t I c in the latest Associated Press _poll, Association invited 10 at-large team.s to already has qualified by winnini~ the participate in its annual championship in Soothe.astern Conferenc.."e title ":1( n d Aiarch Tuesday. \Vestern Kentucky has won the Ohio But Marquette University. rated No. 8 Valley Conference. in the nation, turned down the bid and The NIT will invite 16 teams for Its decided to go to the Natior.al Invitation tournament in New York's Madison 'Fournament in New York in ~a dispute Square Garden, starting March 13 and over its placement in the Midwest ending March 21. The NCAA competition regional. will be held on three successive Unranked Dayton, 17-7, then accepted weekends, Mlf-fCh 7, March 11-14 and the NCAA bid, replaelns Marquette. ~1arch 19-21 with the finals at College Cal State tLong _ Beach), wiMer .of 16 Park, Md. ·straight; accepted a-bid tO play lo the -UCO.:, 21·1 Bffer suffCriflg lts first Western Regionals on March 7 at Provo, defeat Sa turday, has won the NCAA Utah, against Weber State. The winner of cha1npionship three years in a row and is lhis oqe will meet UCLA, almost a sure thing to represent lhe • Long~ach ·~s 21-3-mimrtt,.,and will be ~ght this season. making its firsl appearance in the St '. Bonaventure, a leading Independent university division playoffs. wllh a 19-1 record and No. 3 ranking, was Allhoogh the NIT said ii would make invited to the NCAA along with . fifth· no announcement until this alternoon. ranked New Mexico State, 21·2, sixth· Coach Al McGuire of Marquette said his ranked Jacksonville, 20-1 , and eighth- team WJlS taking the Nllf over the NCAA. rated Marqueue, 19-3, which was rcplac· The NCAA invites 10 at-large teams. ed by unranked Daytan. plus 15 conference· champions, :-ome of Others receiving NCAA Invitations in- which have to be decided by pos\.·season eluded Nolre Dame, 20-5J Houston, 20-3, It's u Lo11g lfuy Up Big Wall BeUamy of the Allanla Hawks holds the ball high over the head or sprawling Los Angeles Laker Rick Roberson (35) Tuesday ni~ht at the Forum. The inj"ury-riddled Lakers lost to the Western Divisional NBA leaders. 118-06. Pa11cho Opens Tem1is Action ·· 111 LA Classic Can you name the Australiaii teML, player who posted the greatest record ot all as an amateur? lf you guessed Rod Laver, Lew Hoad or Ken RosewaJI, guess again because you are wrong. The man In question now lives bi Newport Beach and he rejected pr~ fessianat tennis until he was 31. His winning success includes t tbe following championshi~: Wimbledoft.1n 1964 and 1965 ..• Forest Kilb in 1961, 1od 1964 ... The French tiUe in 1964 and 1965 , • , and the Australian crown in ~le:J. 1963, 1964, 1965, 1966 and 1967. The player Is Roy Emerson who -w'1n meet Rosewall in the feature $10,000 win-- ner-take-all match at the Los Angela Tennis Classic at the Forum Saturday night. Action in the event gels under way tanight in the lnglewood sports palice that Jack Kent Cooke built wUh Rosemary Casals facing Billie Jean JC11* in lhe lone ladles match to get fest.ividei started at ?:30. .'. T\\'O singles matches follow on openlhg night with Ray Moore, the fun-loving hip- pe from South Africa facing ageleMJ Pancho Gonzalez at 8:30 and Dennf1 Ralston meeting Andres Glmeno at 9:3Q. Rod Laver of Corona del Mar. ttMt \l'Orld's premiere tennis star, will face Fred Stolle at 7,30 Thursday night In his opening match. • Laver and Gonzalez will play together as a doubles team and are seeded ,in\O the final Saturday night. Action in-'1h8 tennis tournament will ski'p Friday night when the Lakers are at home. Three matches are carded each ev~· Ing with the Emerson-Rosewall t.vent taking place Saturday at 8:30. ' Monarchs Get ;. <. Playoff Berth LOS Al'l'GELJ::S t AP) -The Los Angeles Lakers announced Tuesday night that' ceoter \Yill Chamberlain will be starting to work out wilh the c)ub March 5 and may play the final four or five games of the season io preparation for the National Basketball Association ' playoffs. the 7.fool·l ccnlc-r h3s been sidelined ilnce Nov. 7 when he ruptured a tendon 11n6cr his kneee;ap ln a game against J'hoenix. He unddrwent surgery the next rlay and has been working out on his own in recent weeks. Rams' Brown Relives Title Ganle Loss Mater Del High School. bu made the coveted CIF AAAA baskelball p1-yOffs. 11le Monarchs will' travel to 00 Rey league champion Loyola Friday olght. The Monarehs, lhird place flnlshendo the Angelus League, were .elected 11 the final eulrant of the :rt.team tournameni following llnal ClF regular sealOn actioft Tuesday night. The decision was announced just before the. Laker•' game !ifllnsl the Atlanta Hawks. Along wilh Chamberlain in the pre-game meeting al !he Forum were Laker owner Jack Kenl Cooke, General Atanager Fred Schaus. coach ·Joe J\1ullancy and Ors. Robert Kerlan and Frank Jobe. Schaus said Chamberlaln would begin practicing \\'ilh the club artcr Its re.turn from nexl week 'g three-game road trip but that \Vilt and .A1ullaney \vould decide between tht'mi'c.lve s when ~ .111perccnter would retum io actloh . Kerlan. who pcrrormcd -the surgery. said he. \Vas surprised ;it Chamberlain's qaick .recovery. CHERRY HILL, N.J: (AP) -Bob Brown recently underwent a knet. opera· I.ion, but lhe pain was nothing to what the huge offensive tackle suffered when lhe Los Angeles Rams lost the NatlonaJ Fool- ball League title lo the Min.-a Vlk· in gs. "f was crushed," said ·Brown. the frvslrauon-'Of the January title game defeal reappearing on his face as he sat in U1e den of his home here. "Nothing 'in my athlclic career hurl me more than that Minnesota gatne." Brown relived the post ga1J1e scene in Icy ri1inn·csota where the Rams bl«iw a 17· 7 halftime lead and lost 23-17. ''Guya jusl sat t11erf! for more ihan an hOtir, '' he recalled. "\Ve couldn't believe it." Brown k>oked at his hands and holding them aloft, commented, ''1 wanted that Super Bowl ririg IO bad l could taste iL Maney is great but there are certain things they can't take away from you.'' The .Ram•' lineman thump(!d the cast on his knee and said he had seen Herb Adderly ol Green Bay rectntly and when he not.ieed the Super Bowl ring on Ad- dcrly's finger, all the pain of the Min· nesotai defeat returned. "If we had beaten Minnesota we would have woo the Super Bowl," said Brown. "l honestly don 't think we could have been stopped. Instead we ,wound up In that tolle( bowl. NFL ninners up game, in Miami with 22 losers running around . My wife calls it the punishment bowl. •1 • Brown ·was injured during the second txhibition game and played the entire SCa.900 nursing a damaged left Ince. Or . • Jnmes Nixon. 1vho operated on the knee in 1967, when Brown played ror the Pblladelph.la Eaglei;, perfonned the · suritery. •111 was a common football Inj ury and t'm not concerned aboul it," said Brown. .. There is no doubt in my mind I'll be rtady lo go when training startA." He plans lo report at 300 or 30S pounds. "1'hir; year I slarted nt 275. ''hich is great lf you can slay there," he said: "The problem Jn Los Angeles 11 a heat fa ctor. ll's lough lo maintain my weight lbere. I losl considerable and midway o( the season I was going anywhere from 240 to !45. The weather in Southern Calllornla tlocsn 'l agree with me, I guess it's something you can get used to, but I'd rather not." 1--· Brown feels you need the exlra weight just to survive the rlgors of coach George Allen's lraining c11mp. "I'.,.-e heard about Vince Lombardi's rcput11tion for a toujh cam p," said Hrown ,-"but he must h11ve learned everything rrom George Allen. I thoujlht for 11whllc WC! were working ror Uic CIA and \\1t \vcrc going to be drop1lC<I behind the Jines 111 VleJ,na1n." • ~ Pacilic High of San Bemardlno crushed Sao Bernardino, 61-30, to knock the loeeri' down lo lhird place in the Cllnll Belt Lenue -thus enablinJl; the CIF o(flce to grant the llnal berth lo the IQ.t ~1onarclls. Mater De.i smacked Loyola Jn the wi~ ncrs' gym ln non-league acUon thU yea;; 74-67. ' Thll9, coach Jerry Tardle'a Montrchl will hove to unpack their duds Iller IOP, posedly ending Ibo campalp f'riila)1 wt~ their 20th win -a romp over St. hut the ~1onarchs are lht No. t rated le.uii in Orsngc County on the. basis of thdt victories over Los Alamlt.oe, Westrninsi.r And Ra"ho Alamitos, •t ,, l, I ' • ' • -.. -----~---·-~·~-~ ------------.....------------- Wtdo~ay, Febru17 25, 1970 -- =· ·- STRETCHING FOR SHOT <'orona de\ !\tar Dave !\Jorgan in CI F' .-\A.A.. basketball playoff ac· 1pgh's sophon1orr 1.:rntr r ;\l1"e ~l'\ ier. goes high lion Tuesday night in Sea King s' gym. Glenn posted to shool JU111p shnt n\ rr drll'n:-.11 r rt fort of Cl Jenn's a 42-41 victory. ---------'------------- Mi ss ion Viejo Falls, 49-38 ~ , Luli .4la11 1iLo.~ Advances lo Second Rouncl l ' I.\\' r11 11. nn,-,~; ~ O! iPlt O•!IY PolOI Sl•ll T~rseedcrl Los Alarn1!us and IUl"CC'dcrt ~ll~on V1eJ11 thre11 iden11c;1l '! :J 'tOnf' dcf~.!!CS :H r<Jch uthcr 111 the •11'lCn111g rouial of the Cl~1 AAA ba~kt'tball playoffs Tuc{day night ht1forc . .J puekt•d houSI.' on the winners' criurl rii: lfnlhn~. 1101\ 2~· l and top rankC'd in t(ie A.\A top IU. gol !ht nl •JSI out oJ thciJtzone . slipping 1n1u tht• '<e111nd round r·ridliy night aga1us1 l'un1rn;i 1~11h a -1~38 1, 1n tover the IJ1ahlo~ T1* Gn rl dL•li>n:-.•· "''a~ :.·1 ;ur 1lghl thal ~ri~•on Vic>JO •iid 111 t 1nt.1hl' :1 l1l·ld goal 1111\it Slc\·c \\('!>\ l;lllJllCl'!CU ln.1111 l11r (Ofl nf ~ ke:! 1\1tll 2 3;, lcri 111 th ' f1r:-.t • • <iuartcr with Los Alamitos on top, 10-3 . The l'A'O teams. who both norn1ally run potent, high.speed offenses. clawed con· t1 nually al each other's throats unt il the <i riffins had a brief scor ing string. en· abl1ng them to hold onto a 28-19 halftime lead. Los Ala1nitos took advantage of the ;1bsencc of Dlabln center Dan Kratz. and 11rtually washed the visitors' hopes dowtf Ilic drain al the start of the seco nd half. Kratz started the Unal half on the bel\Ch t1fter picking up four fouls in the first 16 inin utes. Holding !he upper ht1nd, 28-2.0. following :i successful fref' throw by Diabln Rudy AAA Pl11yoff Action .. ' . A viatio11 Ove1·co1nes • l ~agle s' Upset Bid, 65-58 li)' U,\\'E CF.:AIU.l·:Y 01 II•• D••IY P11GI ~t•ll l'.:stant!a lllgh'!I f1r1-1 1c11turc into 1!1r ·.iggtd 11urld of thr CIF 1\.\A b.1slil•tbal! Dlay6Jrs clldc1! sudd('nl) Tur•s!la~ nij:!l:1 :i~ hr Eagles telt 10 hca1 1l~· larnrl•d \11a· .:on, 65-53. \~Slallt lil dL':>t'rlt'(I :1 l.ir tu·;t~·r f,~tl' f he J::aglr) pfa~ rd :i 11 <·111••!11! 111, ;. un t' hroughout. Aviation .,.,as fiflh ran l.1'fl 1n the t'IF 1111d undcleatcd cha111p1on nf 11.r \'1io11t•1 r League. and the Fa kilns had \h·o1Jl>1.'d On· ~ fuur decis ions all sc:1so11 The con test 1Vll'l 111;1,\'Cd in lht 1111y. l1ngy F'11!con gy111 ,11111 .\11:1111111 i .. ul .1 rc>mendous heigh t 11dvuntaiir On p:iprr he Falcons flgurcd t11 ruin() Yet, Estancl11 ncarl~ plllit.'(I nll ;i l:lll· :1st ic up.o;c t. Althou gh tr;11Jl111: IHr 1110_..I of CIF Cag:c ~l·orc:; . . . lh<' game. the Eagles foun1t thrnisclves 011ly one dov.·n with 6 53 to play. f>J-~- Seconds bcforr , however. the Eagles 11·cre handed a big blow 1vhcn high-s<x>r· 1ng forward (;ary Orgill fouled oul. In !hr hrst three quarter.;. Orgill had pitched in 20 points. Aviation nearly µut 1h<' gan1e out of rcad1 in the next 1wn 1ninutes on SlK'· i.:isslvc field goals by .Jeff llolly. Rnndy Juhnson and .li111 1\1ontaguc. l'~stancia appcan .. '<l finished bul rall ied nn a 1xur of goals hy Le1i He:.1er in the next minute to pull back tu a lh rce·polnt dehclt. 51l-51i. ''!"he r,uglcs' 11C'n1l•s1.~ of the night. lhe rcrsonal foul. 1itruck ;.1gain in 1hc next 1ni11ute as the Fa!ton ~ hit on four free lhrO\\"S to 1n111 lo a :;;1!e li~-:ili l'dge 111ilh 1 211 left. 'rhe la st seconds '"'ere 1ncrelv anti- C'liroactic as bolh squads lratlcd biiskets. Eslancia fell behind early "'hen It was bc~t b;.i a st.'Oring drought for nearly rive n1111utc.s. The l!:Jgles led 9·6 wilh 5:29 to go in the openlng stan7.a, !:iul failed lo ~re another point until 38 St.'Conds tc- mainer:I 1n the quarter. The Eagles played catch-up U1e resl of lhe "ay and slOY.·ly chipped away at !he lend. rtnal!y tying the ro1,111I at 44·44 in tht> 1 hlrd period Hut /\vla11011 :;tarted another spurt. "park('d n1ostly by ~1ontagu1!'~ frtlr thron·s. t·nr0•ing 11 hack 1ntu lhe le11d . llS1ANC:l.l !~·l ,\\llATtON C•ll h II pl I• It II •I I• ,..,, 11 ' ' '" l~"~'O" ' • • ' ""'ff ' • "' l<D•I V ' I , " \!;/1toon1• • J 1 II Cllf•t ' ' ' " ... ,.\ • • • 'l·~~,·~1·• "" ... \o• ·~·. ' ' ' ' a,,.,., • ' , ' ' yQl!nr ' • , , t• 1•'• 1• 11 ' " /1• '1'! ' ' ' • ,, ' :• I 1' •· --... !16fO ~T 011t1+t .. I• ' ' ,, ,. • " "·•••·Dl'I " ·' " 11-~ Holn1es. the Griffins of coach Ezra Van J·lorn threw in two quick bueket3 on .a 20- fooler by sophomore Rlck Quinn and center Bruce Lehman's lip-in or a stray Mike Grimwood efrort and the edge was boosted lo 32·20. Despite not enjoying lhe services of 6-3 forward Rick Masterson. a good outside shoote r who was sidelined with a sprain· cd ankle. lhe Diab\os never let their con· querots build up 1nore than a ll·point edge: \Vhen Los Alamitos did go in front by Ill. ,45--32, with only four minutes left in the game. MJsslon Viejo experienced one of its-brighter moments of an 'otherwise dismal evening as Rick Wafls\ey made a three-point play to pro· vide the Dlablo cheering section with one of its new chances to whoop it up. \Vith victory only three minutes away. th e Griffs went into a cohtrol offense and held onto the baU safely fo r the better part of I.he final minutes. Los Alamitos· Don Soderberg was the game's biggest point-maker wllh 14. all in the first half, while Steve \Ve!t paced !he frllilld Diab\os (ll·for·49 from the floor) with only 9. Mlwl911 Vlllt 0111 U• •l•mltu !") ~IOI~' W1thlt • l<•llr .1,1,.,, Wn• A11'11:•1<t TOllls lt"Jlil I 6 4 I , , 1 6 1 l \ I J a • • ' l l • I 0 0 1 II 11 II JI SOOt•~•'< (~•lilt"ltn lrllm•ll Gr!m#Qlld Ouln11 ""'" llto.ruk Te11h kltl ~, °"''''"' !1 fl •I 10 • j " a o ) n 1 l l I , • 1 10 1 I 0 j \ 1 a n 0 1 1 I 16 11 11 4t M"floll V+t l<I I 10 11 I JI ol.01 •11m11... 1! to 10 11-'f Shortv S111itl1 •' Relay s Begi11 . - Tt1e annual Shorty Sniith Belays got under V.'<IY today at Santa Ana High School 1l'ith large school:-competit1011 followed by sinall si.:hools Thursday. Included in loday's rilenu is \\"cstrninstcr and l\1a rina in Oh i~ion I HC· lion along 'A'ilh NC'11•1>o1'! ll arbor in !)1l'ision 11 Act ion bt!gins at 3 p.m i)Jvision I I today \ !\lonlebcllo . \VcstminslC'r. Santa Ana. \'illa Park. Los Alamitos. ~1a rina. Orange. l\tagnoli~. Katella Dh•ision II ttodll)ll -Dolsa Grande , Clartmont. Tustin, Newport Harbor, liuena Park. Foothill. Los Allos, Garden t:rovc, Corona, Pacifica. DivisiQn Ill (Thursday) -J:;di90n1 San· 11ngo. Estancia. Loyola. Pahn• Springs. La Quin ta. Sanla Anu Valley , to.later Del, ~li11:iion Viejo. Sonora. c;anesha 01vl~1on IV !'l'hursd:.iy\ -Valencia, El \1C1dcna. Clucrtrr Oak~. l;ahr, El l){lrndo, Uamlcn. NorC(l, l.o~' .\n1igo:.;. lli)yal Oak. Suddleback. • • • • Blow IO-point Lead r Rustlers Fall To OCC, 4-2 111 13 l11nings Sea l(ings Drop 42-41 Plnyoff Tilt to Glenn WUh darkness closing in fast. Golden \'Vest-College's baseball learn committl•d two errors in the top half of the 13\h iri· ning Tuesday and Orange Const CoHc~f' captured a 4·2. victory in acllon on the h)t(ers' dian1ond. By ROGER CAJllSON . OJ lft• 0.11, P'llot sr1u Corona del Mar Hlgh's Sea Kings terminated their 1970 basketball cam- paign when a llnal !ft.second S<;oring at- tack went for naught and invading Glenn High hekl on for a 42·41 CIF AAA playoff victory. Coach Tandy Gillis' Corona del Mar outfit had blown a IO-point lead and found lhemaelves down by one with 15 second s t!) go when they made their last fatal al· tempt. And, lhe Sea Kings see1ned to get the ball where they wanted il -to junior Don Killian inside with five seconda lo go -but he was boxed in and passed off. T~e ball went awry and fhe losers finally got off an off.balanced shut with no time remaining but the attempt was 1Yay off target and that "'as all she "'role. ··r don 't kno"· if 1ve were flat or L!rcd · after tho~ last three games in league play or whet. We just played poorly." lamented Gillis after the game . The vict.ors presented Corona det Mar with a man·lO·man defense similar to the Sea Kings forte -and Corona del Mar Ctr'lftt dt! Mtr ft1 l It II ~I •• .\ I l II , • 0 • l 0 ' • • ' l ' Glt111t !421 kUllJn c.nwtY SeY~r GoMllr l<o!I•-· C.-1,.llY fo111S eoru<'ldt C~rri.. Mt99ll•<:I ...... 10t1AbMY I 1 1 I Morg1n i. ll 1' •1 TlbOS lo1tll Sct•t by O\ltrltrt! ,,,...,.,. Cltl .1,1,, ·~ G~"" t !1 II ti '- l 1 1 " 1 0 I 1 I G J 1 J I ' l l J ' • l 0 1 i 4 0 I I 11 •11Q reacted poorly, turning the ball over on st~eral ~ulons via bod p{lsaes. lfowever, despite the erratic play and thftt fauJ trouble that CdM aces Killian and Steve Hollander found themselves in ell,.('!y in tht third period, Corona del Jl.1ar h$1 seemlnaly put It awa y with a 36-26 lead with 15 seconds remaining in the third quarter. But a cold streak from !he floo r begin· ning in the third period that lasted throu1boot the final stanza fin hhed off the Irvine titllsts. Corona mlued 11 strai&hl attempt' and converted only one of seven In the final eiJehl·minute segment to keep Glenn alive. In all. Corona hit 14 of 40 tries for 35 perctnt while lhe Norw~k based Eagles of the Suburban League canned 13 of 36 far 36.1 percent. ~IA.RINA CAGE TILT SET Tl·IURSDAY (\,1arina High School's CIF AAAA balkelball playoff game wllh St. Anthony lligh School ha s been moved up one day to Thursday night and the site will be Long Beach City College. Tipoff is sel for 8 o'clock between the Vikings, the Sunset League 's No. 2 team and the Angelu s League champion Saints of St. Anlb-Ony. Tom and Ste.,.e King drew walks in llu>: 13,h after one out and Toni King ad· , .. Jnced \o third on an outfield fly ball. The Golden Y.1est pitcher then .attempt~rl a pickoff play and gol Steve King In ":t rundown. To1n King broke for the plalr: anQ Noel Paulson threw lo i\1ike ·Pen1· bcrton in lime but Pcnibcrlon tlropperl lht ball. with the run scoring. Roger \Vhistler then hil a shot :ii Paul:iOn thal took a bad hop ;ind bouore1I off hi::; chest with the St'<.'ond run scoring. Pirate shortslop !lab Lenl'y was lho game's leading hitter with three for fivl'. including a drive in the eighth frame 1r> knoJ. the count at 2-2 with Dan Clark scor· ing. \\'ildnc.s.~ on the p<ir! of Orange Coa:::l pitcher Steve Schocl11cr in the third ~n· 11lng ga1'c Golden \\'csl both runs. J 11n J·logan tripled after lwo W('re out with Bill Bo11•e11 , Pau!soo, Y.1;i~·nt' Keifer and Pemberton drawing 1\·alks to forte in hl"n runs. 0•'111t Co&s! '" G•ltt•n Wt11 01 .. ' "•bl .. r ~ r!ol r •ul. " • • • • Htq•n " ' ' ' • Cl1rk. 1h ' • • 8o"t" '" • ' ' • Fowen, "' ' ' • Fl~l ..... 1 " • • • l.ttY1. S• • ' ' Klett•, " I • • • Kint . ' .. ' • ' ' • "•ml'.I!"""' ' • • • l<l!lll. ~ .. <! ' ' • • Cornell. " • • • M<Net1Y, " ' ' • • c ... u111, 11 • • • Wl>i•ll.,, ,, ' • • • 11.uutl! "' • • ' • Pl111tr. o ' • • • Mer"." ' • ' • Lo•t, ~ ' • • • H111>•Y. O ' • • • ~l'IOfl1le1. ~ ' • • • "'tl\Ot\. ~ , • • • Cr•SP. • ' • • • ·-· • ' • • • Tota fl •• • • ' Tol•I• " ' ' • Wln111ft9 ,,,1c""' -C•ill>. L"'l"ll pdd'ltr -\'/ood!. REGULAR s74 2o ASET l lu•w11L '~~1!111 t ill i.~0 I JJ "Marathon" Tires 4 Ply Nylon Cord Contour Tread St! •I 4 Stl ti t ........ S1h ,,;,, '•itt • r .. 1 J•.20 4 It< S 50.00 ,IUI re~ l• ru,1rllrt. N:.!~~~t "' . '! .1 1 .J~ I 14 4 ••r 1 JI.IQ 4ttrS t500 $2 il4 1.1, I 14 4 ·~•I ll.00 41t<$JO.OO $1.l f t.2$ I )t 4 lot $ t4.IO • ''' s 10.oa l~.Jl NOW ONLY ••. •.5$ r 14 4 tD1 SI0).40 • ,., $ 15.00 1' SJ 5.§v 1 15 4 t11 1 11.00 4 !tr 1 ts.oo t1 7~ '.<5 I LS 4 far 1 IJ.00 • '"' 10.00 12 \~ 1.25 1 15 4 tr$ ,_.,liO 4 !Gt i SD.00 fl 16 l.S,115 • ,., 1101.40 4 ION s 1s.oo 1fJj ~.llUll~ 4 ltr112•.4 •1ors1a .oa "" • Tou11h Tuls>'n rubbr.r /or ~1ren$!1h 11.nd Jnng mileagl! '·' • J D1r1 Only ... S1V1, Off" End1 S1turd1y Nifht •~lore than 11,000 s:rippinit rrls:r• i:i1r J!IH·d lr~<:lion to St11rl-Stop rain or •h1n<> .!\:.').}\ 1\~}0lft' l)l Ii\ if\.·\.SY lPAY t>i .r\N ·' .......... .. I .............................................................. ......,,..._ PICK -UP, PANEL and CAMPER TRUCK OWNERS! GOOD/YEAR *25 -"'-'"'· RIB ''HI-MILER'' El.,,. I 1.00.1& Tll" r,.,. U 2.I' • s2.•' Strong and tough to take truck wort. in stride I •.SO.II Tllh'Tnot-$212'5 • S2 i l SERVING ALL SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA YOUNG & LANE TIRE CO. 1596 NEWPORT BLVD . Ph. 541.9313 COSTA MESA YOUNG . & LANE TIRE CO. 482 OCEAN AVENUE LAGV NA BEACH ' '1 " " 1· ' ' ' J. I. ; ' ' I• " ,, ,, '· 0 0 .. ,. " h d " " • • • • • • • • • • • • • '· .. ---------.--------.--,.---- ..J • ~- Wttfimd.111, Febraury 25, 1970 DAILY mOT 43 Eagle s' Williams Selected Brothers Dominate CdM Mat Team Irvine Loop Player of ·Year By PWL ROSS Of IM 0.11)' l'lltt Sti ff EvJdently th.e R a y m o n d Bandels 0£ Corona del Mar feel that with Wday's high cost of Uving, raising children nowadays is cheaP.!!r by the tain and second·place finisher M the 157·pound category at the Hawthorne Ta k e d o w n TOurney, broke his right wrist Feb. 2 and is out of Saturday's CJF sectionals at Manna. The Hilliard boya' parent., thoUghllully brought their 2tJ. foot trailer to the ~ent EcS&ewOQd Tourney in Covina and offered It as a rest haven to any grapplt>r who got lired or hungry. ' Baidel soni waitina In the wings if Morrb carts to sit tight for a few years. Virginia, 26, today 11• Mrs. Ismael Meire and lbe reside• In Costa f\fesa with her hu> band. an orange Coast Colleg• 1tude.1t. Skip Wiiiiama or Estancia High School was named play- er of the year in the DAILY PILOT'S olrlcial AU-Irvint League basketball selections. Williams led his Estancia mates to the school's fJrst- ever appearance in the CIF playoffs with a 17.1 scorin1 av- er!l&e- coach of lhe year went to Tandy Gillis of Corona del Mar High, who guided his Sea Kings to a third straight It· vine UUe in his first year at the helm. The Sea Kings turned the trick despite having no re- turning lettermen back and the varsity consi.sted entirely of last year's junior varsity team. Don Killian was the lone Corona del Mar player to make the all-league selections. Costa Mesa's Bob Austin also made the Orst team while John Fisher of Edison, Gary Valbuena of Fountain VaUey and Gary Orgill of Estancia garnered second-team berths. ALL-11\VINE LEAGUE First Team Playtr School Skip Williams John Boren • Don Killian Bob Austin Denny Nicholas Estancia Magnolia Corbna del Mar Costa Mesa Loar a Hetpl Cluo AVf. 6-5 Sr. 17.l 6-0 Sr. 19.& 6-3 Jr. 16.& ti-I Sr. 18,6 6-0 Sr. 17.5 Second Team Jotm Fisher Gary· Valbuena Woody Auld Rudy Sgonli: 'Edison 6-5 Jr. 12.7 Founlain Valley 6-4 Sr. 16.S Santa Ana Valley S.11 Sr. 8.2 Loara 6-2 Sr. 15.9 Gary Orgill Estancia 6-0 Jr. 16.0 Player of the Year -Williams, Estancia • Coach of the Year -Tandy Gillis, Corona de! lt1ar LA Harbor Trips Rustlers, 79-77 By CRAIG SHEFF Of fl'll 0.111 P'IMI Slltf A driving lay.in by LA Harbor College's Richard Hart with 12 seconds remaining gave the Sea Hawks a 79.77 victory over Golden West College in Southern California Conference action Tuesday night at Orange Coast College. The win kept Harbor in first place in the frantic confe rence race. The loss was the RusUers' 10th in 11 circuit outings. Behind 77-65 with a little over six minutes left in the game, Golden West battled back to tie the score at 77.77 with 3Z seconds remaining on an IS.foot jump shot by Chris Thompson. After Hart's basket, Golden West called a time out with 10 aeconda le!l. The Rustlers pro· City Cage Standings (Mii Mtol Wift!W lhkllll.IH ltl tllt o._" Lttflll LtHlftt Scortfl ~, . .,,, 1. Tom WJll !WllloCnl 1, J~lr. Kint (~lerra) 3, Fr1flll l ebot (JOl'ln&Onl •. Mllr.t Flahertv !Johnso~\ S. ltrrY M1ncirbo (Wt$1 Fr11lll I!. Gene Landoe (Howle1) 1. Tom Re~d !WP1t Fn1hl I, llrlan ,t,mbro1lcll (Wl!l.Onl v. Jim ltwtler (Jolln~l lC, Crt lg Fal~ (Jollmonl • ........ ''"""fll' 'MM !Kvrllv Pacific 81n~ ~1C111rd• lido Mtrke! 1-1v11111t Labs ~O~l'llll=~11nlc1!!cns 01n1 Labs lt1dlnt Stortr1 W L ' . ' ' , ' , ' ' . I ' ,l,Yto >U •• " ' 11,1 11.! 1i:~ 1,.0 1~.o I.I.I w ' ' . ' ' ' ' ' .. ' ' . ' ,l,Yf, IS,? IJ.1 11.l 12.S 11.S 11_! 10.7 10.l .., ••• All -Freeway Team Picked Billy Morris or Troy High was named coach of the year in the oHicial listing of All· Freeway League basketball choices after guiding his team to 11 straight circuit wins and & co-championship wtlh Sunny Hills. Sunny Hills' frll center Frank Dehn was named play· <!.r d the year. Edison, Barons At Huntington Host Edison aod Fountain Valley. High School w 111 belatedly end the I r v i n e League basketball s" a s o n tonight when the two collide t t llunllngton Beach High at 1. Site and date was switched due to Edtson's inablllly to come up with a playing site last-'<. ceeded to gel a shot off with one second remaining, but it was· blocked. Thompson led all scorers w;th 35, including 19 in the opening half. He now bas a total of 857 points in the RusUers• 26 games and needs only 24 more in the season finale aga'!nst East 'LA Thursday night · to become lhe all time Golden West scoring ~ade·r for one sea.son. Rich Van der Pol holds the record (61Kl), set in the 1966-67 season, The career mark is held by Ollie Martin who poured 724 points during lhe 1967-M and 196M9 se:asons. Thompson would need 68 in the fina l game to surpass Marlin's record. In a game plagued by fools, two plaYtlT from each ,club were whistled to the bench. Harbor entered lhe came with nnly eight players w h i I e Golden West started with nine. Thompson played the entire second half with four fouls. Four Harbor players HnJsh- ed in double figures, Jed by M John Dearman's 21 points in a non starting rolt'. Marshall Wade hit 17 for the Rustlers. Thursday night's final game of the season is set fo r OCC. •Ol.DllJ WIST 011 ~ • ~ .. T/'lom11&0n " ' • ll Wide • ' ' " 811!1 , ' ' ' 81rMt • • • • P1:1elk ' ' ' ' Whltfltkt ' • , • l-!1llo;tll • I I ' lotllJ " " " " ~ 1t1r111r un " • ~ .. JM~i"I~ ' ' ' " l-!1!let1 • ' ' " senii.n ' ' ' ' "'" • , • " Oe1rm1n • ' , " Hunl , , ' • l ol1ls " " • " H11fllme: H1rbor $o1. GWC U All-Orange Five Named Ezra Van Horn of champion Los Alamitos was named coach of the year in the of· 11cial all-Orange League ·&elec- tions. Van Horn led his Griffin basketball team 1o a 25-1 overall season arni 14.(1 In the Orange circuit. Player of U'lt' year honors went to Katetla High'a Rick Aberegg. ALL.0-:i::~~·u• ........... Sdllliltt Ml. Cl. ,1,.,.. Aberega, Ka1'rtl• J.10 Ir. '9.0 ConnofJY~ .K•l.e1l1 t-S Ir. 11.5 Morrlt. -• '"' r. l~.4 GrllTIWOOd, Lot ,t,l1mltot ._,, Sr. !!,1 SOOtrbtrg, lot AlllT'tlf<f• .. 1 Sr. ll.7 Set• TMfl'I El~, V11endt '"S Sr. 11.t •lrt.i, ''"' 6-l Sr". }Cl.1 Weirton. '°""'' J.lf Jt, J~t Q\llfll'I, 1.ot ,t,l•fll!IM S.10 k. t .0 Clll1tffnMn. l.os AIM!"'9 H Sr. 10.1 UCI Swim Team Wins Clt"""""°Mllol" Otl 00 UC t,..,IM «in '"""., rt ltv -Cl1r-..i~. 3:ff.1. 1000 ltffJl'f'!t -1, M1fflft fUCll, 101..s. SO lrettlVlt -1. ,.,..,..r (UCll. ' 01-tUCll, .0 fl'ffs!Y...._1 . Mtrtlll CUCI) 1; ... 1, 100 Ind. "'"''' -I, NelM~ IUCU, ' Otkt (UCJ). 7:!0.1. CW flltltr Olvlnt -1 ... flf'Ct IUCll 1'00 i,.,119"1'1 -1. C1r11111t~ IU(ll l :0.,0. IOll lr"'~lt -!. F•nl'tt r IUCll, 20ll b1tl';t1rtlkf -J, NtlMll'I CVCll l 0111(t IUCll, ':ot.1, $00 lrefl1Ylt -1 Mll'tlll tUC-11 J OhOfl l\1(1), J:CIU. * llf'9•tllh'tlh -... e..ar Nt.11, J mtttr lltv1ti1 -1. P'rln<t !UCO. ' tOO .ft"'l'l'lt rtlt1 -CltltifT\Onl Mll\W, l;lc~ dozen. - Jf that's true, then Bandel (811 aeronaut:cat engineer) and his wife Betty have hit the jackj)OI. Mpry Anita, now 27 and a Torrance housewife. v.•as the first child bon1 to the Bandels back in 1943 and, through the years, 16 more little Baodfls have aime upon th~ scene. PresenUy, three sons carry tbe family colors for coach Dick Morris' Corona del Mar High wrestling team. Tim, 17, John, 16, and Mark, 15, comprise the wrestling Bandels. Junior Tim, a team c.O<aJ> Brother John is only a sophomore who battled 1t 106 pound! for the Sea King varai· ty. He was sidelined part of tbe 'season with a minor ear injury. Freshn\an Mark competed in the l;.1-pound weight class on the jwUor varsity this season. The other Corona co-captain. Doug Htlliatd, I~ also involved in an interesting' family com· bo. Hllllard, tt.e lrvi~ague champion, bas only one loSs on the seasOn in lhe varsity 178· pound class and his younger brother Scott was unbeaten at 130 for the frGSh-s<?Jlh unit. Sea King mat mentor Mor· ris, whose varsity boasted a 13-3 overall mark. and a 4·2 slate in the tough lrvhle l~gue, claims still another brotherl)I duo. Jim Graham wresUes at 130 pounds on the varsity and kid brother John hQlds forth at 123 on the junior varsity. Looking Into lhe future, Mon-is says, •·we have a great outlook ahead of us with two juniors and eight sophomores on our varsity. Plus our top competitors in the lower divisions will return next year." There ·are another pair of Ol'EN DAILY 10:00 TO 10:00-SUNDAY 10 TO 7 "SPRINT GT WIDE OVAL NYLON .:. ..... .... 19°° fL1•• --.... ... --;;;--.... •• .... --;:;.- -=~ .... '" -,.,.--.... ~ "'"Lft ......... --::.:t-i .................. ,_ -... .,,~-· • ~ ,_, ftUou..&Alrn:S •ftlADnil.ocrt'ODALUl'n& ~··------­_,,.. ... _.,,_...,_ _ .. __ ,, ... ___ _ 11•1·· .... ._ --..... -'hoot ,,_ ... ,-... ---··----·----.. ·--...... ._ ........ _.,, __ .. _ ..... __ fill_ ... , __ _ ... _ ... -..... ,.,_,) •-T•i 11io u n OOAA11itrtn~ "'-111 .... ----· ___ .. __ _....,_ _____ .... _...., ....... ~ ---··--_.... ... . ..... .-.,-,_...a, .... -. ... -................. -____ .. _.,,.....,. -- 12-year old Gerard and Gregory, .1, attend Our Lady Queen of Angels parochial school In Corona del Mar along with sisters Joanne, 13: 1't>resa, 11; Viana , 10; and Laura, 9. , Meanwhile, fi ve-year old Bridget, the baby of the group, will begin kindergarten next falt. So she stays home and helps her mother around the house. Eldest of the homestanding crop of Bandel siblings. Tom, 18, a senior at Ccrona del Mar, is not active in athlt>tlcs. In addition to Mary Anita. five other members of the huge clan have already flown~ out of the home nest just a couple or blocks from, the shores or the Pacific. :::i IACM , .. Next in line are 2:4-ycar old Fred and Cecelia. 23. Fred is a bachelor and local resident, wbile s.ister Ce<:elia was recentJy married and now lives with her engineer hu~ band in Dana Point The military branch ot the Bandel family is represented by 22-year old Eugene, an electroni<:s specialist with the Army in Vietnam . ...ffe Is due home in Aprtl. • Pos.slbly the mcm ~ble member of the Bandel brotherhood in local circles ts a former Golden West 'COUe<ge halfback. 1, 1970 13.97 Sin ' "'"''·' 15.'7 '·'' 7..lS.1C 17.'7 1 .. 7,,.,, 19.'7 U7 7,S.15 J.tf 1.25-1, 21 .'7 ... , US.IJ(l.15) :t.» l..U..14 23.'7 .... t..u..1S ta.'5) ..., t.00-1;• 21.'7 117 AD prices plus Federal Excbe Tax. Jttl Jone-, Doro M.,1 ;11, '.\~i t.ini Cole, Joh11n,•· Ri•:e••, P1b~' l'liinf'. Jolt11.i~ CW, Hnk Tho"'P"""• D••c 011d· le• St•ln tfti1ttnt, lifhtly •<nen nyJ011, Your ehoi« ot co1o·n . SLIP-ON TYPE 41·10&0 . ·. , . •: .. ,, ·' ., ' WIPER ILA ES J77 .. ,. FISK OIL FILTER J77..,. SPORT GRIP 222 " ;,7. 21l)3.(W~f,.; T.,eESE SPECIALS GOOD AT THESE ~OCATIONS ONLY WESTMINSTER BUINA PARK BUENA PARk COSTA MESA SAN'JIA ANA u.o--. .. w.. 1400 """""' .. - 523-3040 • ' • 1 l ' I 1 I I ' ' I I ------------------------------. DAILY PILOT Wtdne~11. Ftbl'\lary 25, 1970 Boyd Not Expected to Play For Foothill Next Season '• .Foothill High's Bill Boyd. two-thnc player or tl1,e year in the Crestview League. apparent~y ~I not play for the Knights nex t year this ~er learned tod ay. USC coach Bob Boyd and !us fan1Hy wi.ll ~e residence during the course of tl\i.s Y.~ar -probably to the Glendale area. ., The impendin g move is ''99 percent sure according to an informed 50Urce. · Boyd led the Knights to a sccond·place finish in the Crestview circuit despite playing bri severely injured ankles for rnost of the campaign. The 6-~ junior a~·cragcd 23.2 111 Crestview h~Ulities. Y . - t * * * ;Estancia High basketball fan s ate stl!I s~aming o'·er the officiating 31 the Fouatalo '{alley crucial last \\·eek in Jn•ine League play. .Here's \\'hti t cwch Bill \\'eticl h~d to say about an incident "1th 10 sect1nds remaining i11.~tht ganR. :iour team "'as on a fast brr.ak and went in roi a• apparf'nl scere lhnl would baYe Ued the i:ime up, 51-il. ·' l·Hne,•er. thf' official !Bill JlicksJ blew the p~y ·dead from midrourl, d!Wlowiog the ... k ... -t-Appruully be thougbt the game was o\•er 11~ alter l"t'aliiin~ tbe mistake be ga \'t us ht(:k the ball at DJidcourt. )•ffe tbeo told oue of my players on lhe ufer. 'Doa'l worry. It's only a game.'" 'Estancia went on to lose to the Barons. 53-54,. tn a game that broke out lo a fight on the riilir. fhe Eagles finished one game out of second r1'ct. but fate was kind -they made it to Ute pl•yoffs anyway. , verdict over La liabra was the first Ume lhe Po1triots ha ve been able .to turn away the ~lighlaoders in ta previous tries. •* * * And Excelsior High's basketball team won lhe San Gabriel Valley League championship Saturday in the Channel 4 television game. It was lhe first loop title for tbe Pilots after 44 years of frustration. Corona del Mar athl U ·director Ron D•vis * ~ * nailed it on the bullo -just momews before ------~ ROGER · CARL.'ION tipoff at the Estancia-Corona det' !\.far Irvine League title decider Saturday night. When queried on tUs predict.ion o! the out· come, Da vis replied, "Corpna de! Mar by five, . 6ul irtl be tough.". Corona won. 51-4G. * * * Laguna Beach High's coach Jerry Fair is In the preliminary stages of organiiillg a sum· mer league at Laguna to accommodate eight teams on Tuesday and Thursday nights. Interested partles should cont.act Fair at 494-8541l. ':' . '= ~~+~ .... ·==ir-~-~-~~=~-~~* -* ~ speaking of Wetzel. look for him to ,Coach Herb Livsey anl:! Orange Coast t~ it in shortly as the Eagle coach. <;ollege appear to h.ave the inside track to the ~Vetzel has coached Estancia's basketball .services of a couple of outstanding area prep rdt;unes since the school opened its doors five basketball players for next year-Lee Haven ylJtrs· ago but will toss in the towel this time Qf Newport Harbor and Sklp Williams of ._.c:iuoc1. · · . 'E:stancia. · - ~unior varsity coach Wally Chute is also Westminster's Dan Broderick seems headed r:~mplating the move. for elPJer Stanford or UC Irvine. He's -a ~ slraighi A ~tudenl. ' * * * Mater De.i's Ralph Chandos is favoring :t.owell liigh's recent m-77 basketball Loyola University. ' t WHIT EVlALL • : ' ' .. N.W"78"81Rlea :WIDETIRE 29.50 •28.50 •25.50 ,,., SAYE DIC 37.25 33.50 31.50 28.00 ,., H78·1• 40.75 31.50 34.50 30.50 .... 856·1• • F71-15 33;76 29.50 28.50 25.50 Check the savings 7,75-15 ... G78·15 37.26 33.50 31.60 28.00 ... on your size! ti 2~·1 5 H71-I& 40.75 36.50 34.50 30.10 ... 8.55·15 M prioM ~ 11~n -11tM tff your ca ~ID-Point BRAKE OVERHAUL 88. Not just a reline ... we do an this work: L Repl~ brtte lillinc on all 6. &pd oat.r whMt-...... four wheelt nn both front wbett& ~Au· lining tor pt'rfect rontacl 7. INJpect braftbo9. with dtW'l'll! 8. Inspect bnkeabM '*m /.,,..~~~~~~~~ .... 1 • GUARANTEED 20,000 Mn..ES OR 2 YEARS 3, R-Obuill all <I wheel ftprin1t!\ rylinrlcn g_ Add Sgptt n..r,. Dey ~---...... -~----·---;::; .. -=--=-.::=::: -··- .t. Tum. and tiw bran ctrar.. fluid 5. ln!!plC\ mairter cylUwkr J{I. ~ tie.tear Price for drum-~ype brakes on most FOfds , ~ Chevys,j\merican c:ompacts and light tNCks. Others sl ightly higher . .~OSTA MESA HUNTINGTON BEACH • .. ,, l , 1111'1 S!<MI .... , ... Mf/11 F•! • 'm 6 JO i:i.m 1•1 I~,,.,., ~m. , ,, l'l ... 19'11 UON 1'111 •..Ch .,..,.. • '""°'' ""°" ~·! t • m ..• t-m. U1, I 1,tn,·5 11.m. .. ...,, """'· lff(fl . ....... Hllftf, .. 11(11 ----·· r--• .. ---\ I Pro Cage Standings ~ar, Edison ··spikers Wi~: ••• ••lltfll Olvls .. t Nqo Ylt'k MllwMll! .. ll•lt'""'• 1'1'111.0.llll'llt Cltlcl-11 ..... w ... Ht .•• » u JJt ... ... •T n ... I •I H .611 " " .... 31 ,, •• o " :II .03 ~ ..... Wllltf'I Ol'lkllo!I 11.ll•n•• • 30 .sn l• Anlltltt JJ 3l .~1' ClllCtto 31 )I • ..it ~·· 31 ., .•» s.e.1n1 2t d ·• $111 Fttnt .. «I 27 41 .lt1 S1n OIHG ,, 4 .:l.M •• .. " " ,,,., ~ ' .. •• ,,,., " ... -Steve Christiano turned ln a pair of mldseason marks in the 440 and 880, but Fountain Valley dropped a 6 5 • 5 l decision to Newport Harbor High In the opening track and fleld meet or the season Tues- day on the losers' track. Christiano turned t h e CNHJ, 3. Ml;#1 (NtO. Htigllt; 11.t,_ $P --· lbflil~ O'fH). :!. "-"• !NHL ), Hoc.lt11ltr IFVI. O!llln(t iJO. " '" FMlllllln V11llY 14U 1111 H--1 100 -1. C•1so IFV!, t. ~It \NH), l. Mtvnrt tl<VI. T ml'''10.J. 22G -1, Cl5IO !FYi. .2 . .$tolll1 INHJ, 3. MIW,_ (FV) Timi: , .. 660 -I. ~ff' tFV ,.J, NNI iFVI, :s, Sl'l'lts 1FV1:-Tknt: !;•'· IHQ -1. Cl"OM tN")• J. SllrtWlll IFV>. >. ·-"" '""'· ~ .... , l •U.O. 120 HI-I -t. It.el INHl, 2. Mc.Minn (trilHJ, S. JahMlon fNHl. Tlll'lf: lt.S. ll'O LH -\, lrlCI INHl. 2. Dlngm.11 (l<V), J, Cft.httrl IPV). Tlmt: IJ.l. 11111 lt1tt'I' -1. lloll1 '""'' 01 .. ~lltlfd. J -t. Cotem.n !FYI, 1. Oakl HJ, &. Cl5IO (FYI, lillaht: W. '" FWlllllll VllJ.n {.,) (Jf) Ht,,...., 100 -\, GltOl'I (FVJ, 2. ljllfll (NHJ, ), Mord• IFVI. rim., 10.t. 190 -I. GltOl'I (FV), 2. Llllfll tNH). ). Morrll IFV). T11n1: !9.t. 660 -1. 8111son CNHj 2. Pollltlll IN HI, 3. WOO!ilrutt INH). ime: 1:37.•. 1320 -l. Cl1tlr. tNH\• J, lll\IVh CFVJ, J. lll1cl<Wor1h (NH). T me; 1:J.i.t. 120 l H -•. Wnltcomb (FV), 2. Btl· man! (FY), ). lionl!YWIU {NHJ. Tlmt; IS,3, "'° R•l1y -I, Founl4!n V•l1tY. l lml': ...... HJ - 1. i..noo (FV~ ,, ~'t'WiJI (NH!, J. Cltr11 001). Jo/It: $.<!, lJ -I. t.\Dol'I (FV , 2 OlSl111l•l10 CNH), 3. 8 l111wen1tt (NH), Ol1l•ntt : 16-f'h. PY -1. L8'1111rCI (FV), no ~tl'llCI or lhlf~· H~~hv. )-OtlOlllYW"e"ll• (NtH:-1. llllltWlftUfl' (NH), 3. l llt.,, (NH1. Cll"•""' Ul'!ol,, V1nll, ldlfffl 1'4! 00 lll OUlllll IOll -1. Sd!NI (l Q), 1. llrOWl'I (El, J. UPlon (El. Time: !Q • .t no -1. Scholl (lQJ, 2. lr'OWll (El, 3, UP!on (E). Tlmt: 2J.0. '~ -I. H0g1n (El 2. Ounan llO), J. ll1feman CE). Tlme: Sl.•. UO -I, JDlly llQJ, 2. la Cluf! IEJ, J. Hlllton If). Tl,,.,.: 2:01.0. Mlle -I. A1~1re1 CE\, t O-v•n ffl, J. Mc.F•rl111C1 CLO). lme: •:«.6. 1·Mllt -1. WHIOI' IEJ, 2.. Jori!• /LO!, S. 8eerer tlQ!. Tlmt: lO:U.D. T-"t'I ltuli. 61111-121, S.n 0"9a 111 1 OltniH 13', Mllwtuk• 111 New 'l'Otlr ltJ, Pllotnht 105 Atl•"ll 111, los MHIK 106 S..Hie lJO, S.11 FrtllC:IKo 122 quarter mile In 49.8 and doubl- ed with a victory in the bailf mile in 2:00.9. He also ran the anchor lap on the Baron. relay tealTJ in 49.2, picking up 30 yards 00 the winning Newport team but couldn't gel close enough to win. Rustlers' Sivenson 1211 HH -l. Brook1n1re !E), J. W1r4 (lQ), 3. Hodll(.hl ILQl. Time: 16.L llO LH _, \, tlrookllllrt !El t. H0<!vchl, (lQJ, 3. Ward (l QJ, 1irr-e: 21.7. TMitV"• • ._ s.n oi.,. •• 1h11011 llalll"'°"' 1t 'Mlhlo'•11kee ~lrolt If Phlladelpl'ilt Clllctte tl 5111 Ft1ncl1CG ilit1111i. It le1Hl1 Dave Eccles won a pair of victories for ,..Newport in the hl&b hurdles and tbe high jump. Sets Swim Record 1<10 RtlllY -I. Edl&cn. 1'!me: 41.4.. Mlle Rel•Y -1. Lii Qulnt1. No tlmt. HJ -1. Elcllr llQ) '· W1ddel! fLQ), J Joli, (lOJ. Hekl/11: s.10. l J -1 .. tlrow" (E), J. llrookt~lrt (£), J. HorlocM !lOl. Dl•!1nu!: 10-1. ... 1.tllff111 Ol•l1iilfl 11111!111• l(.,,tucky C1rotlmo NIW Yorlr Pl!bliurvr> """' W L I'd. O• 4S " .,!O JI 26 .>M :rt JO .m JO l-1 .... •10 31 .).IS 16 "' .2'7 ,,. "" " ,. " WNI#~ 01vl11tft °""" Olllu H""' OrlMl'll Well'lfllir!Oll l"' 11.11..ia "u " " ll '' " " .. " .... .5'1 v. ..Mo! l\ii ·"' , -'" I UCI Tennis UC '"'"" (I} I" 1111 Di.tlo $111• '""' l, ~~.•Ill (~Cl) dtl. RocilwtU (5051. 6· N111Ht IVCIJ def. H-(SOJ'~1 , .. l, ... J•bllMkl cucu dfr. °"' csosi. '"'· 'tt1I {UCll ~. Mottl1 !50SJ, .. ,. I· l. 'P•Y•!I cucn dtf. Pritt (SOS), w. .. i. IUIQ 1$01) cltl. WIH CUCI,). '4, 1· D'Nt !n ll!d o::i:_, CUCIJ dll. ll:Ddt'iHIH an11 1~ 111os1, w. "''· J1b1Dl\tkl and Ttl IUCI) hi. OM ~J!!."'~0fl1:''1~h QI. Ht!Wff • 1...:1 Mom• 1s6li, w. "'· Edison's Chargers defeated La Quinla in anbther opening meet by a 64-54 margin. Jack Brookshire was the high point man for Edison as he won the two hurdle races and placed second in the long jump. Mike Brown won the Jong jump and placed second in_ both sprint races for the Chargers. Ntw"" {lfl l:fr'J...,.111 \111"' IOll -1. 8tood1NH), !. MQA rv>. ). #o°!.!1~~ 1,1r:1. '.f''tit-n. (~HJ, 3. ~t l,V), T me: ;a.,. .WO -l , Olrl1tllno (FV), t, HttM<! lFV), 1 REtfOO, Tlrflt: ,, ... MO -l. llllO (FVJ. 1, H1rdo!n "~' a. St1 INHI. Tim.: 1:00.t . M le -1, llt11!1el. INH), 7. Fulllls (P'V , ............ tFV , Tlmt' 4;'5.t. ' I~ -I, Flem :7i (NH~ 2. ~om­ror'u.J~NH), ). LM I (F ), 1 ms: 1• HH, -I. &:CIH !NIH 2. Y-hur1 (FVl, 1. HOOstH CNHl, Tims: 14..t ' '"Lr.-1. llttMr CNH), t. Holl..tl !Nit), . ti.arTll CFV). Time: 11.1. "40 11l1y -\, NewPOl'I Htrbar. Tlf':"\I!; U.t. ~I-~ 11.tllV -I, NeWClOl'f H1rbor. Tlmtl-3:12.1. HJ "-I. £c:cl6 (NH), !. Mt.U11tt (fVl, l. Hlvtrt CNHI. HelQlll: S.10. U -1. H11rTl1 !FV),1. Zervas CFV), S. Mtrlln (FVI, Ol1t111Ce: 21·1, f>V -1, l'trtllll&cn lFV), t. ~e Chris Swenson of Golden West COiiege set a sehool record of 4:38.0 when he finished second 1n the....fOO in- dividual medley in the Golden Coasf Inv itational meet last weekend at Santa Barbara. Don Lippoldt, swimming with a plaster cast •On a broken ha:nd, finished sillh in the same race and copped eighth in the . 100 backstroke. Swenson also finis.bed second in the 100 butterfly in 55.1. Keith Donaldson tied for first in the 50 freestyle In Z3.0 and the Golden W e s t backstroke relay team won its event in 4:02. The team was composed of Lippoldt, Swenson, Donaldson and Greg Feinberg. Feinberg placed fourth in the--1650 and Roy Bu(ll was 11th in the di&tance race. The 800 individual medley SEARS .soum COAST PLAZA . . . ' ~· SKI .. sBOP " CLEARAN~E! • .f. ~ ~ . . . Ski;·noots • <.; ~ And Skis 50io Off Sears Regular Prices Terrific Savings On All Sid Wear All Ski Pants ..... Men's Ski Jackets Ski • • • • • wer e 1/3 OH .. ~'::r1 ... $30., .... Now . . $20 f 20 '30 3.33 Women's Women's Jackets were $28 .... No\v Fur T ype Jackets were $59 .. Ski Boot$ wer e 5.99 ....• Now After All Sleds and Toboggans ... Go% 0[(Se•;:.,~:~ Quantitieo limited! Be early for best aeleetion ! /l#~J~~r. /.W.j,t relay team of Swenson, Lip- poldt, Cary Noah and F'ein- betg placed fourth. Golden West copped third in the 6x50 relay with Dave Grlf· fith, Lance Norris , Donaldson. Dave Miller. Al Rojas and Mark Johnson comprising the team. Baske tball ·Standings SOUTHeRN C:Al 5TANOINGS WlP'PA li\ HerbOr 10 1 969 J16 Li\Ct t f Hl'1 f:U tvpr"'~ t ' tos 115 LA S<!ul~wH! 1 f:J2 10~6 Rio HOlldo • T 932 9'9 E••! LA 3 I &l1 91)6 Golden WHI 1 10 IU la21 T•1 ... 'f'1 ScarW$ L~ Hltrbor ,,, Goklffi Wnl /1 ll:lo Honoo 1•, c~11rt1s 12 lACC 116, lA Sol/1hw~1! 91 ThwMl1y'1 Game• Eta! LA 11 CO.OIC!en Wfft Li\ ltarbor 11 LACC Li\ SouthW~l 11 Rio Hol>do PV -1. Clartl (lQJ, 1. UPIMOrovt lLOJ, J. Hlnolo.a IEl.·HeiQhl II-ti. $P -I, Tlmmerm1n (El, 1. D'Ann1 (EJ, 3. Noble (E). Ols11nce: ()-4'1>. '" llttlson Ull (1'1 la Oulnll rao -I. Mllcl>t>ll ILO>. 1. Ll(llKI• !El. 1 MIHWtl (LQJ. Tlmt: 10.1, nG -I. MltCl\ell (LQ), 2. T~ ~rwttn PntlllllS \El •!>d l1C11Cl1 ff>. Tl~;.!'·?; Giiiman (lQJ, 2. Cordovi CEJ. r.o ltllrd_ Time: 1:31.3. l:l20 -1. Sood•rOUro (El. 2. NtllOft flQI, J. 81ueg~man (f ). Tin,,.: J:'6.•. 170 HH -1. Powell (£), !. W1,d (Ldl, no lhlrd. Time: 11.5. 110 lM -1. PllWt'll (E). 2. Ar!11no ffl, J. MJllS (f), Tl"'t! IS,O. 810 R~1av -1. Edl<0<>. r,,,...., 1 :40.~. HJ -1. Wrlaf\t (E), J. CoalK!I! (lCI\, ""lM: t,.O. l -1. LaCasc!1 (E >, 2. JOllli llQ), J. PhllilpS (El. Dl111ncet 11_."•· PV -1. Marquez (lQ), l. Wright !El. J, Coa!!.On !LOl. .... kin!: ,.(I, SP -1. !'laylls (E}. 1. MatQUel (lQ) 1. Quin ClOl. Ol$tanc@: ~5 . '" IEdilOA (59) 120 l l OulR" 100 -I. Golo \El, 7. ICe!lh llO\, 3. G1mmagc (EJ. T me: l!.J. 111) -1. Gamm1ge (El, 1. l(el!~ (LO), l, Kaplan (E>. Time: 10.1 . MO -1. Mar$11 IE). 2. Douglas llOI. J. Carr !El. Time: 1:19.5. 1311l -1, Jolly !LQJ, 7. Vltl111 tEI, 3·1ia0''i..~'~1f 1c.~:r,,~'~·~·vo· c1:1. 3. Paul tEl. Tlmf: 15.•. ~o 11.ellY -I. Elll:;on. Tlrnt: so.t .. HJ -'· Browo (S.) 7. Mlftht ll tlO), J. M:e!sn (lQ) He!oM: •·10.. LJ - 1. ll•own IE!, 2. Uvemur• (LQJ, J_ K1lto (LO). Dlslt~: 11·•. PV -1. Galpln !f), rlO ~ or Jnlrd. Helah!: f.-0, ~P -! ~I<>~'°"' !El, 2. Jfftlllll!JI IE), J. 11.eM llQ), Dl1'1111Ce: 3M ..... I Sears [Sears I KAAMUlDAllDC. Costa Mesa 3333 Bristol St. Phone S<i-0-3333 ' • ----.----·--~-----. -----·-----~--------· -·-.. -...----.-.. -------------~-~ ----------- 1970 Orange Coast . Prep ~:·Ba s eball Sa•• Clc111c1tte Like so many other prep coaches around the county, San Clemente-baseball ·coach 1'.1ars.halJ Adair is in his firsl year of tutoring lhe varsity. But, Adair anticipates a good season for his ball club in his first go-round as varsity headman . The rookie mentor states, "The Crestview Le<1gue is \•ery competitive and It sho uld be a real tough baseball league. lt seems every learn in the league has good pit-~ng." >/''Like everyone else in the Crestview, Adair does have better than average hurlers. Two of the Tritons' mound. trio are returnees from last year's fifth-p lace club, Ron Allen and Glen Tsuma, both righthanders. Tsuma can also play in the middle of the in- field and in the outfield. A junior varsity graduate. Ruben Paramo, is the staff lefthander. San Clemente also is blessed ·with some experienced hitting. Ouliiclder Jack Kalota, first sacker Dan Cludy. second basemitJl Conrad Steiner and catchers Dennis Reese and Tiin \Vright all are proficient \\'ilh the bat, while Steiner and third baseman Bruce Jones anchor down the T r i t o n d efense with s tead y glovework. l~st.a1tcitt E:stancia l-ligh base b a 11 coach Ed \Vynkoop thinks 1.oara should get the nod as Irvine League favorite again \\'ilh its top flight pitching corps. But, he feels his Eagles should nol be cc;iuntcd ou1 of any mention for all lfle Irvine baseball rnarbles. Pitching is one of Estancia':; big Ifs , but tJ1e Eagles feature a good defense and, \Vynkoop thinks, improved hilling. The only returning hurler back from last year is Cl;iy ~1ahoney. 11!'ho posted a 2-4 1nark, despite so re arm dif- fi culties the last half of the can1pai@ll. Junior Cal Shores. :i transfer fron1 Costa i\·lesa. can play the outrield and will givr. Mahoney mound ht'l11. Junior sho rts lop Jin1 \Valson 1·outd be_ the Eagle~· lhird pit cher. \\'ynkonp has depth a t ratcher wilh !cttennan Greg J>owcrs and ju nio r varsity graduate Dave Denius. \Vith a .260 balling average. first baseman J\1ik c Lernkc gives the Eagle <it!ack ad{'- q u at c offensive firepo\\•er. while second base is 11·kk' open. Third sacker Steve V<i!icre Is a leller-11·inner. bu1 v.·<is ~idelincd part of l<tst season because of a hroken wrist. Eslancia's outfield is olso ;1 11ueslion mark, \\"ith a whole host 1>f former JV players in contention For s l a,r tin _g ass ignnlents. f.,ff!Jllllfl fJCll'-'11 'l"he Laguna Beath Artist~ finished 1969 <Jt the botLOnl of the Crcstvie1v League baseball heap and coach Da r re 11 !\1cKibban docs not ::-ec too tnu eh hope for 1970. J\1cKibban ~1ys. '"\\ll' nnly t1avc two lettermen b<.ick <inti 1·veryone else in the league i~ improved. so I have every reason to reel it will be even tougher to {·01npe!.t' on cqunl tcrm5,..1vilh lhc other school s this year." Andy Smith began !he last decade coaching N l' w p o r I Harbor's baseball tearn. and the Tnrs dlamond fortunes at the start Qf the '70s will fall into his hands. StnHh voices guarded op- thnisn1 aOOut his tCam-s "hances in the tough Sunset Lc:iguc, 1vherl' 1hc Sailors fi11ished second last season. lie sciys thal a lot will de- pend on the progress or p1tcher-0utfieldl'r Bob Staf! ford, current~y unde~going hip surgery. After-IH!ing brougl~~~ the junior varsity 111 the sec- ond round of league play in 1969 follo1ving ;111 injury lo all· county third basenian Bob Lcal'y. Stafford hit a hlaz.ing .444. Leavy is nov.· :ll Orange Coas! College along \Vilh <.illOlhcr Newport all-CQun1y basebatler frorn !e1s! season. pitcher Steve Schoettltr. So part of Smith"s problems will lie 111 replacing !hat pair ;.ind all-county second sacker 1-!ol'.rard Struble. also lost viu graduation. S1nlth lists lcttcrrnan Denny Rean as his fore1no s"1 n1oundsn1<1n and the veteran coach alsn has catcher Hon Marlin back for another year. First baseman Jeff MalinoH is regarded as a good all·coun- 1y prospect as is Gary Foster <it the hot corntr. In g,cneral. the Tars arl' s!rung in all taeets of the gan1e, except hilling. where doubl looms until Slafford·s slatus is k.i1011•n. \Vestem. last rcar·s chan1- pio11 ;:ind <1lso 11"in11er of the 1u1uor varsity crown, is the team to beat in the Sunset. Srnith reel s. tl'est111 i11ste1· \Vcst1ninstcr High be1::;cball t·onch Frank l\1u noz is anxious for basketball season Lo end, It's not that l\1unoz hates baske tball. but his entire pi1- i:hing slaf( 1s still eavorllng on the hflt"dwoods 11•ith bas<'b<11l season ju$t around the rorner. Sunset Lca~e strikeout king Eddit' Banc. fastbal l cr Richard Heed and pit cher · second bascn1n11 Curt Dietrich. l\olunor.'s top three moundsmcn frorn lust spn11g. ar(• r·urTcnLly in Lion llaskelbHll suil s. The svn1c holds l rul' for sophornorl' .Jeff Sien1cn-;. ;1 -C11!titfr !tlest1 Although Costa l\1el'ia High baseball coach Jun IJ;:igey is in ,.his fi rsl season of tutoring the varslt y. he should have no problem 111 gelli'ngiiCqun1nlc , 1vith his players. Last year, \\'hen Geor t:t'1 Selfridge \1'as the Mesa v;irsi- t_v ml!"lltor. Hagey coached the junior varsity. And most of hi.~1 players rro1n the I rv i 11 el League runner-up JVs gr.ice the varsity roster this tirne l around. 1 In addition to the group of! fonner junior varsity dian1ond ~;tars, Hagey has four varsity lc!ler \vinners back. Standing head and shoulders nOOvc the rest or th c! \1us!angs is Dave Barton. senior 1noundsma.1 and shin- ing light on last ~·ear ·s Irvine League cellar cilvelle rs. Barton is so vital lo the l\o1csa fra1nework that Hagey clai1ns, '"If we c<in hil and gel someone to help B<irlon, v.•e reel we have a re;1I con- tender."" Hagey notes that defense I will be the least of lhC' ~1ustangs' worries. I Senior Ri chard f' i e 1 d e rJ anchors do11•n the l\1ustang infield at second base, while the outfield leader is Ke vin Morro1v. who may help Barlon in the pitching department. Another hurler Hagey has is senior ~1ark Linder. a question 111ark ::ii lhe lime. The ~1ustangs also hl!vc one nr the fastes1 club.~ in the lc::igue, so Hagey think s they h<1vc 1he cdgr in :1ny close con!e~t~ CfJl'tllf(I tf(~f 11lt11' 1f Corona dcl :\f;ir baseball coach Totll Trager could have .1us1 one wish it 11•ould be fo r a scaso,1ed pilchl'f to lrt1nsfnr to his school. Th:it ont! n1i ssing ingredient. Trager fet·l~. ki>eps hi s Sea 1-;ings fnin1 ha1ing a clear tut shot ;ii the Irvine Lea gue title. Comprehensive d- evening programs toward Bacl1elor of Science and Master of Science degrees Systematic, dynamic instruction is given by on outstanding (acuity of practicing scien!1sts and engineers holding advanced degrees from top un)vers1t1es throughout the notion. More thon 12,000 technicians, en- gineers, end odm1r11st rotors -bot h men ond women -hove cont inued full-time employment while work.· ing toword'their degre~s. ot Weo;t Coos.t University. B.S. degrees in engineering , opplied phy1-ic s, applied mathematics, a nd computer sc ience. M.S, degrees in 1ystems engineer- ing ond monagcment 1citnc e wit h ei ght options for specializotian. Fo r inforrnation and t;atalog write or call West Coast University IN lOS ANGELES : )00! W, 1th St ., lo1 Af!91l1, fO OOS P~o"e' 1113 ) JBi -IJ7l, E-•t, io IN OR.\NGE COUNTY: ~50 ~o, M1!11 St., Or•n91 f2116A P~ont: {)141 &•7·5712, Eot, 20 I OT. CAN 29c I AUTO CARSURETOR: 3-PIECE FENDER & BODY REPAIR KIT SPRAY-ON ENGINE ENAMEL Sp•oy got. l~•o <O•"•'• b1u•h•• con t '""'"· Mako y~u• •"P;,,. loo~ hko ~e.,I .-.sso~r. COLORS OR MC';':" 6 OR 12 VOLT SYST:OMS POLY-FOAM SEAT PAD .-· SPARK PLUG TY.PE TI RE INFLA TO R LITTER BASKET SAIJDLE ELASTICIZED FOR PERFECT FIT-EASY TO INSTALL '"' lnl.,ia< wir~ •~••• a!lrntt,.e, la)" ca., Mal ui•et•. Mntl• 1a flt l.ACH ....... ""' 444 l!IM! fron! <It'°"' .. al•• BATIERIES •·VOLT ..... KIW ..... TRANSISTOR ,_, .... "• BA TTERIES Pl bon.,;., .<a•!l~o •DVIJ lwlo I• "'""h. SALE PRICE S 0 •IS 1 JS/Jso s so. is J l'l)~Jj ti 00.15 9~~-991 1.65 " 11 ;~ 1r1 "· 11~! . "''; ' 13~ 1 3~? 6 M x 16 <1.10, ts 7 ''".'I 14?!. 7 ro. '.'I a 1s.1s·, 15!!. 6 lf>q5 11s. 1.s 17!~ 18!~ 18?!. ' .,, I> '" '. 14~s., ••• 6.10 ••• 6 .SO 1745 Jt.16 I~~~-7.00 J *0''"'"~' o•n• A•""" •11 ''" <•• 1•.,•tl'"" .. ----- DAILY PIL.01 :;."'; ' ) ( I I \ I I ----------------~-----------~.--------------... ---·------......-......----·------·-... ..-------·-------· ------------. • • DAILY PILDT WtdM$diU, Ftbtu1ry 25, 1970 • THE MINI COAT lllt SOFT Fl.ANINEL 1687 22.99 value I . $ave 2b%! foilored to pl!'rlection, th11 o llne ,,,,,,; cool boosh s111ch"'Y n ... roil1ng ond sh1n1ng ,mooth bullora pl.,1 on invereed pl<"D!, semi b('llrd bock, ~ich wool ond oylo" flannel in JPrt"9 shades of grey or beig"; S 10 lJ, ZODYS FASHION MEN'S & BOYS' CASUAL CLOTllES WITH POL YESTIR FOR PLUS WEAR & EASY·CARE MEN'S ACTION JACKET A. Save 4 S'°! A yror '1ound !ov. oril• iocke1 with do11ic •tyl<ng in lightweight Pe.,l'lorient Prf!'n polv· e1t•r ond co!lon poplin blend wtth lull Iron• J•PPf!'t, convf!'r!ible collar. Ion, tile . blue, olive , moi1e; tilf!'l S, M, l, Xl. Suy now! 8.95 value 4a1 MEN'S NO·IRON SLACKS I. Sav• 3S%! Populor'l~y model 1lock1 with belt loop' ond lini1h,.d b ottom. Smoolh <ombed conon· polye1ttr clippl!'r poplin in bloc lo., olive, blul!', pewll!'f o• Ion, 79 to •7. 5 .99 value BOYS' KNIT SHIRTS C. S•ve lS,_! >. grf!'ol p!•le for these popular mock !unit rHH k short tlee~t •nil thit11, Complf!'tely machine wo1hoblf!', ~hope •l!'lo1n· ing polye11er knit in nn ouor!mf!'fll of bright 11ript1 in tilf!'I 6 lo 18. 2.99 value 197 BOYi' FLARE PANTS O. S•v• 401Mlf Flared leg denim ponlt with e•lro wide bell loo p1 · ol'ld four potch poc:ltett. Per'"'1nent ,.,ell polye1!1tr and co1fo11 in no"Y• !oded blue in boy•' 1ittt a lo 18. 4.99 value 297 FOCUS ... SPRING 1970 L. ) I ' I EMBROIDERED PASTEL ROBES 3 .99 values 2'7 K. ol'ld l . Save l6'¥.! A• brtery and ecay 01 o 1pfin9 morn! Polye11r• onri (Ollon robe1 with 1pt<n9 llowet emb•o1d "'Y Tou(hing 1ht fron1 o nd pocket\ l he.,..·1e moch1ne wo1hobl'!! ond oton f,,., in pink, blue und mo•te, 1tte1 10 lo 18. • ------LYNWOOD -------------------------SHOP & SAVE AT ZOOYS MON. THAU SAT. 10 A .M. TO 9 P .M.; SUN. 10 TO 7 NORWALK NORTH LONG BEACH ANAHllM·BUINA PARK ANAHEIM·FULLE•TON WEST COYINA CINf\ltf ,lVt. Al (JfNIM"W IM,lltAl llVO. AT 'IUllllAlll I iOUTll i lllll Al {Ml•tT OIANOllllOl'I Al ll"'ON AI USI 1 \11 11 •UINll ••MONA fOUNT AIM YALLIY LONG 81ACH HU .. TINGTON BEACH SANTA ANA GARDEN GROVE •OllONA VAllff (fNttl t.OIDIN ~Iii f, I DIN OI• N GIAND •YI Al 1 11 ~ 11 1111 .. \) . ' \'Jt(lntsd,,~, Ftbrll"ry 75, ll'J70 rJ LOT -AOVf.RTlSER f! --- . "-. ') TAILORED KNIT S HIRT f . Sove 57°A.! A. clas~•c sh1•I ho ndsom!'ly Ta ilored w1rh rrvlt1- b1.1tlon<"d narrow f ront placket flop !rimmed mock pockei o"d culled loog slee.,es, Te~!<.1red ocetore knd in liloc. mo""· block, white, s1ze1 10 IO 16. 6 .99 value 297 WESTERN PANTS G. Save .5 0 %! Stro•ght leg ponr1 w+1h flol!edng con1ou1 yo~e woi1r, double butro,, tlo•· i119. Sturdy cor!On bull denini on blot~. navy, be19e, while, !vr· quoi1e. oronge, berry, 6 !o 18. 5.99 value 297 2·PIECE GYPSY SET H. Sove 70 °~! An unbc·l•t'vobl•· price for thi1 lomo u~ mokrr 1"! wi1 h !ht> fun gyp1y !lorr>. U ,,,.ck long 1lreve blou1e top1 c. Ion~ Iorio 1wing 1ki1! with • le"''( pull-on ""0•11, s1 .. •1th n)lnn \e•1ey in b1own, "ovy bl~r ~.M,l 16.99 value 497 FLOWER SPLASHED TUNIC AND PANTS SET 8 .99 value 5a1 ). }OVt! 34 ~'o! f lOW"t <!r""'"n 1Wfl n•l't" \DI l"OIV•f'I o wco• <1 rilanr '""'< !!'p and \!roighl l,.g pull-on pon!<, Hornr<n1Jn t,.~lurrd royol\ lome1 in navy blut'. a•rl'•I or b•owri with whi!• pt1ri!. In 111e1 7 To 15 <•! all Zody1 ~rorc1. GIRLS' FANCY SPRING DRESSES Val vet to 4.lil9 2'' Sove 40""! D1euy, eo1)" corf!' o -hne 1!yle1 for big and liHlt 1i1lcr1. Preny flo10! print 1hi!h wdh pll!'oh crnrl 1uflle lace bib f1on t1, P1nL blue or mo11"; J 6~, 7 1: --------FULLERIOM·LA HABRA NOATHAIDG< llllOA l lVO Al tllV0NSl<tll •URBANK _ .. ____ _ NORTH HOLLYWOOD REDONDO BlACH l+AWllOOINI IL\ID II 10 Ill' {INTI• CANOGA PARK - ' • --~ ---.......... ---~·----~--.-~~--· ----------~-----------------~------,----- f PILOT -ADVERTJStR _____ ~'_!'.ln_:~~at. 'cbrulrt a 19-:'(') ' OAILY ~~~fr .. f-1. • INGLEWOOO (ltHUl!J •IYD Ill (ttl<SMAW POMONA , • & SHARPENER I ( 12.••599 I value WttH COUl'ON I opir"' ""r ,;,. o• I &hap• heu•e hold 1011. Hordened 11eel 111!• I 1i .. 9 edge "•ver lou<h· •H 1an <onle .,11. LIMIT 1 \\'llH COUPON <OU•O,. '"''Oii 11/U ,M&•C~ J, >•10 I I ri.1Iiji'{Q~;! STOVE FUEL I NORWALtt NORJH LOr'G Dil\(tl AffA ftl!'F.·OUri:HA PARK ANAHEIM~FU LLl.RYO~ WEST COVINA NORTHRIDGE REDONDO BEACH lhll~(•l•t ll'VO ., ~1vn11•'(ll' I )01Jl .. •l•I • •1 t .. ;r•• tllt>! \VII • llNCl'JlN OtANGl!>!Ot•l ., Lt~o... •LU~• .... , ., •UINT( •ISCDI llYO ll DIVON\Hltl HAWIHOtNI llVO, ... , ,0 , '"' ClNttt FOUtJTAIN VALUY LOltG r .. !iAC. --.·;:--~H:'::u~ .. ::,::,:: .. -:G~T:o;O::N~B~,~A:':cr.:.~-:·--o::s:":A:":N:T:-A~A:o:N:-::A---1~G:!'A~R~D::E~N:"!t\':R~O::V~E:!"i:"!'--:a~u~R='=a':A~N::K~--t---C~A~N~O~G;;A~P,;Ao;R~K~-~ l<AlBOl i•V!l ~r lt'll<Ol)J J IC'>\ rtl•<"l'I' ·~··"r• ., ,,.,, It>' ·11 no1:ut1 ,...,,,"I D'' ~-· N (,~ ... tlO '"" "' I Jlt< iynT"'"'" (>IA,.1'\t.N ,l Rl('JQNIHlr ,, '""' 'l•H•HDO ••VD ,lf 81.11! •• ,... to••NOil t•NVON llYO ... •offOt \ I ' I I l • ! l ( I ' .- I L • ·------------------------~ - I _ ff DAILY PllOf s Save o 1a Taxes -7 Investment, Ai1to OVER THE COUNTER ~ NASO Ll1tln91 for Tuesday, February 24, 1970 Mean De{luctio11s ~t0<-tt11w• lnl•N11111tr tutl"lent If IH•l~ll!Wltl~ 'AM l'°n! HMO Pnc:n .. Mt lnclllft •llt il ff nul'll11,. m1rt1.~•w" tr co111nw.1J.M. By SYLVIA PORTER (ln collaborauon v;1th The Research Institute of Alner1co) If you art a\stock market investor you n1av be able to deduct the costs of your trtps to your brokers orr1ce -de- pending on the reasons for your trips JN ONE CASE, a woman investor hved and did her work 1n a one room apart ment 10 Ne11 York City About once av.eek, she tra1 eled by taxt to and rrom her bank v; here she had a cust001aJ ac count for her stocks and about once a month she took taxis to and from her brok'.er The Tax Court accepted her estimate that it cost her $3 for a round lr1p to the bank and S2 50 for a round !rip to her broker -and permitted her lo deduct these amounts as expenses 1n connecllon "Ith her investment act1v1lies But 1n another case an 1n vestor drove to his broker s office during lunch hours pr1 manly to "atch the fi cker tape 1n order lo get a feel for the market He too de ducted his travel expenses lo and from the broker as In\ est ment expenses The Tax Court ho1ve\ er couldn t see how tape watching helped him In his stock transactions and decided instead 1hat 11 reflect ~ personal interest-enter ta1nment or cur1os1tv SO IF YOU claim a deduc !ton for trips to vour broker be prepared lo shov,. reasons more substanti al than watch 1ng the stock ticker tape A s1m1larlv tough attitude aga1nst deducllons claimed for the expenses of simply looking' at investment prop- erty turned up 1n the case of ~1r Hanley "ho hved Jn Iowa and owned undeveloped acre a~e in the vicinity of Tulsa Oklahoma where his mother 'tes1ded The propertv consist ed of limber and pasture land "htch produced only nominal income and during se1 er al \ 1s1sts lo Oklahoma he look cd at 1t llanlev U1en tried to rleduct 20 percent of hls lravehn~ coslS bct1.1een lo"a and Oklahoma on the basis that this portion represented cost applicable to his invest ment proper!} But the court turned do" n his dedu cti on be cause he simply went lo look at• hrs investment property ;ind acco1nphshed nothing else Hanley s chances of sue cessfully deducting his tra\el expenses would have been much better had he -on ar r1 v1ng 1n Oklahoma -asked brokers about developments in the vicinity, checked possl· ble malntenance problems on the property, etc \( )OU an an employe or self employed person use your car partly for pleasure and partly for business Ira' el 1 ou can use a short cul to figure your allowable auto de duction for the business por !Jon INSTEAD OF keeping track of and deducting all vour act ua l business travel CXJ>enses simply kee.p track or the number of miles vou drove on expenses business and then deduct a Next Ex pense DeductJons flat JOc a mile for the f1rsl ----------- 15 000 or business miles and 7c a mile thereafter as al lowable business travel ex penses For instance 1f )Ou drove 22 000 business n11!cs 1n 69 you can deducl SI 500 1 lOc per mile for the first 15 000 mLlesl plus $490 f7c il 1nile for 7 000 miles) 01 a total of $1 990 as your business car exr>enses But 1f vou boughl a car last year or are making time pa) ments 011 a car the optional 1n1leage method may not be vour best choice ~ t'\ en though it s so simple The reason 1s that the optional mileage deduction JS allowed instead of operating and fi x ed costs allocable to bus1 ness use of the-car -such as cos!s of gas 011 taxes nn gas 1:1nrl oil Insurance license tags and deprec1at1on ' The Treasury recentlv <idded to this list of items replaced by ' ,., •• ,,,,,,, t•fl the optional deduction an al 1 Jocable portion of sales tax hon1as J (ir<idy 41, and interest on purchase of vice president ol n1a11u the ra r ;ind the 1n~rructions fac\u1 in g for AJ\1F' s In lhe 119 Form 1040 no\\ \\heel goods d1\1s1on spec1f1 callv require lh<i t any ha!; been pr 01110\ed to sales tax and interest \011 the l1C\\ pos1 t1011 or 1 ice "ould otherwise claim as p1e s1de11t or opera llo ns 1tem1zect deductions 1nus! f1rc;f fo r \J\1 1 s \\ J \'011 be reduced bv lhe bus1ne~s Rubber ( nr p in S<inta portion co,ered b\ the option \na (Jra dy 1 e~idcs 111 al mileage dedt1c!1on Cos la l\lesa SO IF ) OU bought a car----------- Last Decade Shows • State Gro\vth 111 Ca hfornia population gro11 th :.lo"ed during the past dccad~ Security Paci fic N ;; 1 1 o n a I Ba 1k reports An avera_R<' an nual slatev.1de gain of 441 400 during the 1960 s 1s do11n froin 513100 per )ear du ring 1hc 1950 s Declir'les have octurrcd 111 Crossword Puzzle l1nnugrat1un 11hu:h netted <11 aver age of 22i OUtl ad d1t1onal Callfo1111;; residents a 1e1r du11ng !961 11uJ 111ti2 has 1clountcd for only 117 000 a \ rar (or !he past 111 o 1 l 11 s ACROSS l Suirounded by 5 Boo s rel ati ve 9 Bowler s p1obte m 14 Numbe 15 Ott!de 1 hat ;i.ppears 11 pnnt lb line11 17 Work oul 1n detail Isle Stra1! 20 As1a 1 mona1c~y Zl Part of lht he ad 2) Check 24 Most ban~I 27 J.la~1stra1e of \ltn1ct 29 Prepar e for increased product on Z words 31 Ktnd of c:r1 mlnol 35 Anc1e 11 Roman 9odde ss 37 Ca lftd 39 One cubic me\tr 40 Expre ss sorrow 42 Echo rdnj lng dtvlc e 44 Bnttsh 1sles nat1vt Ma cdufll 2 word s 47 Mall emal c~I tlallonsl1 p 49 N1mber SOO!ftt workt Informal 52 Cornn u 1c;i.l on 54 Not colorful , 51> Bellltl r 59 EllrOpe~n b2 A ffirmal vr reply b4 RestaurJ p;ilro 1 bS Removed t.7 Tht !oe 2 wordi 70 Ont p<l'par 1ng lor ii rainy day 71 Satyr 7l ~lelshma11 s namt 73 Of que s! on ilblenet 74 I 1depende 75 Span sli ar\ sl 00 .Vil 1 Conc e nlr10 l Fo 1r mioute m'" J I do l elltve ,, 4 wo1ds ~ Pio and toll d SCUSSIC!l 5 Possessiv e h State Abbr 7 l ocal10 1 0 Fram e c w 11ch a bed IS laid ' 9 Rela te/I by blood ll'J Donate~ 11 L vely tunt 12La1dbo ly lJ PtOOO\ l 1a c11v 1 New York St ail' 22 Steal ZS Span1 s1 l ~d •s r U T ( ' ~ f ~ 2 25 71) ~l s.oH sl! t~~~o r O!flll 11:1 Anrl 1 11 ~a F s rail 'J n ~ l " JlHa~p) 53 Removec; 55 A~ay1 2 words SI Sid1nt1 m~tr l~I 58Cty o1 t1ssur lt~l)I ta Anl'Stl l'I c 5~ Footba I Ahb lbMd>or abnoi n ~I JO srrv h de play JZ Tci1d n~ to liO Br19t Uy drts$ n 'olored fish JJ Oo a hot st bl t arly tiold ctio e slate <lf 3~ Ma! dt 1m1mce Headatllc bl Arcturi s 35 B rd~ 101 one 16 Fi ~I bb Annoy 'S P ass~ b8 Color ~ l 1 tio1 gl1t b~ Con oass se1 ouoly point rrr.rrr-rr " Nfllllral 1nrrc:asc lcll ll (Hll 113 257 1n J!lfil \o !ff.I 01\3 111 1\orlhrop f clb Salee Put , ,, (' 'A \'" lit T AXES u ith S1 /un Pu1 I P1 ', Nern Book MAIL THIS HANDY ORDER FORM TODAY Only $1 25 plvs 25c for • hand!tng and postage ------·-------·---------· Sylvh '•rt•t• ln,tmt T1r '1111d1 I f1wi1tt Pwb1"1tltn1 Oepl MM NO CA8H P1.•a•• I f"'ttt Pltct M!lr tlltck or Mon11 Order t l tttnwle•, Ca nn Oll30 '~ Syll 1 Porter Tt~ Culdaff 1 ' (nclosed •l $1 50 ($1 .25 plus 25t !or DOsla~t ind N~hnR) for one t op, cl Sylv11 Porte11 1970 l!ICOme T1i Gu1d1 P1e1st mill to me as lollows N1m1 AddrtlS City --- .St111 ............... .. 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" • " ,, • r .. • • " r"""'r . 1910 DAllY Pllof Tuesday'_s Cl .... osing PriceS.:..Complete New York Stock Exchange List ' Complete Closing Prices -American 8.tocli Exchange List I ICN Agenaa ' ' In Pl'ogress Oper1tlons att uadrr WQ at the new 16 n\UU0o m""1'Ch and produdlon lacWtia · of International Chetrik&I ind' Nuclear· C~. at the 1ntaa Industrial ~pier. ·-.... ~ .. --~~~ . ICN Is -al Ille _..,. ,,~, .. ~ tlnnJ; , tn111ed ID t b • manufacture imd dlltrlballon •I phannaceutlclb, dlemlc1b and nuclear produda, plua TellUrch 'ol llUCltk: tcldl. Ila Ir\llne r1cillty serves as hetitf- quattits for bOth the ICM fttstal'Cb and De'(elopm-:nt Dlvfdi>n and Chi!mical and Rodlolsotope Division. Apprwdmately 100 potlool are ..W emp!Oytcht Ille 1"tM •ll•, wmr proJ<clloll callllll for 2111. I l l l j If GAILY PILOT TUMBLEWEEDS .. • WEDNESD AY FatRUAltY 25 0 LA. TV DEBUT-"THE * SCAPEGOAr'-Bette Dari1, Alec Guinness O Six O"Ctodl Mowlr. "TM ScAllit" ,...-(my~~) '59-AI.: Guinn1u, •• Bcitt• Dal'il, Nicole MIUlef, M Ent· , lisll ICl'loalmuln i1 tricMd Into ' ,mine •• • frenc:ll flobllfflln 11\d Wtrdllt.Sday, retitv.art 2', 1970 o @moi-m (t) (30) "I Lewi Yiu, CMri'1t, I LM You, Abblt." Pitt 11'111 Ur: ltlrn of two st!Jdentt atcrll pl111 to llopt .tltn thty lrt i1Wittd to b1 but min -..!Id ''llid of llonof. llrad DIYid ind K1tlll11t1 Lla,d r1111t. • m VIHCtNT PRICE-lEROI * JONES--fROST 8:30 PM m-- -«1 ,.,, leltoi Jona, Vifttent Prict, M1dt· lln. K11!11, Johll Abr a11d Gerri Gr1npr IUISI. C1J Tiit lit Vllter fC) (6<1) fl) ...... {30) 1:45 fl Cl11111M11 (30) t;OO IJ QI (I)"'**' CMtw (C) (IO) Msctd•lilcClmb!1d11 ru-1.1 ts 1 d9diCattd held nur• wtlo lla1 suf- fertd *'ral minor llrokes 1nd is sltltidinc hw ieriou1 "1111 c.oM'i· tioft to Mid loli111 II« jotl, tinds llil 1111 fillld with ""IPIMI O KRA. FT MUSIC HAU tt. ltl tieaiin. tile ltlPllOlt al an .,;;entric flm\.. * Eddy Arnokt, Anili J:.,.. Fcf' C30J 1 Bryant, Artt Johnson '"' (Cl 160l D ID.@ m '"~ """ ... (C) .,. A1C .._ (CJ (30) flb) l cld11 Arft61d is host to Art• StocUa.n.t s.__,.{l,,_.ia John-. .wt1 11\'Jlnt ind Biwa- (45) (R) 1n1 Bryant. ' flt WNr's Jhlf! (30) "'\I.Pt Com· 9 Ct•••111JM, lt'r•ftll111 (C) muft!Catio!IL" (60) PERKINS JUDGE PARKER I Sllf'POSE I ~EE9 SOME ICl,WO Cf MOUL SllPFOff •• SC*EONE LIKE \IOO 1'0 TELL ME 'n.4;lT tr WOIJLO ~ gsr FOR CAii?\. TO &E PUICEP • A ~BIT.t.L HOSPITAL! ly Tom K. Ryan SALLY l~NANA~ I'P &E 1-!IJIPY lO STOP BY 'IOU ~ MOUSE-,.OMILlE ! By Frank Baginski STUFFEt> ~llZT !!! By John Miles _By Harold Le Doi.Ix I 'P lrATMER WOf SEE VOii !-!ERE. SAM~ COtJLO I POS518L'f STOP 8V YOU~ APARTMENT-? §I))"' -(C) (30) 0 @ IIJQI -"" -, ... Cl&lu (30) (C) (60) Guesll 1r1 lob Hoff.11~-.I '-' ... (C) (60) Jl<t Whtl t. M11111 Cul Elliott, 0. C. Smith Ind . Tiii ·-c ... (t) (30) Tht first Edition. m Tew DMlafs htll (C) (60) GllOI ...... (60) 1:15f.l .... T. ...,,• M"'i..kt (30) 6:301 MIC "--*-(C) (60) ~ fwnt Mlftil11 (30) '-'JM-(60) ~lril*ltr (C) <XII 1:30 0 ,._ rt) C301 B•X1• Wini. ut. ll( (30) ~ fOI* lo buy m .. )It.I ... (C) (30) I lil llld .m Up with 111· lfttirl ""' outllt.. Tl111 ind Pierri l'I t:U fl) PM F•• aeperalll! d11nn1 • aifht·•lin110:008Ql(IJMlwlil fM-0 (C) (60) , • ~r of Mvnlch. A 3Cltftlilt dislp111111 llom 1 to¥· •I (I) Tiii MtMln (30) •r•mlftl lab lfttr discowrin& 1 • ~ 34 (C) (60) biolocletl mutatioit wllith is hotltlt • IOlllR ,._. (C) (30) to fNtlJ fomt ol lilt. Mc6arrett II l:C5•TM$" lt!WI (It) ID LUCY TESTS HER SEA· * SICK RIMEDYI 11 7 PM T• .. UR S O A ' DAmME MOVIES 1:10 m ._ "*"" (fltfMJ ~ -""' °"""""" Jolt• 0111. . .,.,, ..... _ ... , ... - • •Yid t. ~ tht myttlrioua d11th el ttlrtt cowa, w+rictl ltffa lo thll lfrinl ilt Hl'fl'tii of !111 tott lciMIOfl fl'Oftl tilt Pt1111p. [If '1111. dtra. lonrtt SWit tn4 H. M. Wy. a oo mn.c. ........ ""~· (C) ( ''stlil Watws.'" A JmlU· fown ~per ICHIOI' f•ta dolur1 of ~• Jlfl* uni• lie bowt tit 1cfimtblrr -• COftttlllon tt11t WOUid COit hl11 t!lt rGCMCt ol his d111t11tw • .klll11 r..tic:o. 1nd Vll'Ofticl Cutwrifht pst, 1111) '41 -Jobtft You11i, SUI•• ,,,...... 1t• e ..... Mdll:•" <ntYtt•IJJ '5'- ,..111 DNa!ei. Rllffl hlM!I. II) "hCbt r fll!JIRflY) "lZ-ftJ WrtJ, Lie f1K, 4:)0 8 (() "1'M U111 1nJ lhlt • COit• d111io11 Cdnm~l ·s~l1'f'OM Pown, M1vt• O'fftrt . MOON MULLINS STEVE ROPER MISS PEACH T'Mf &OYS' IN fMIS CLAS) WOUl.O MA-;£ _,. ... MUS£M,Nt>S ... j(EL<Y $t.J'4.0lf.. l{U!9'NP I (VA<."'7,.., , COMl'lirrtf l1=,---i ~"'1. <I OH, fiE'S '>!>ONG /IND CUTE ·· LONG CU!<LY H.A1111 .. : 1'/oC» ..• iAKfiS HIM· '5otF \/fif'Y '5EFll00'5- 'THE DESK 60ES, TOO!-? WAIJT Al.I. Of iHIS MJ'USEATWG f.iQTEL MOOEllM • JWK OUT OF ERE BY 2 P. M • .' By Ferd Johnson NOW ~ET Ml' SHOW '{OU HOW TO ENf>,..N""' A c,Al.l., L,At>Y P. ! _ . e;'<--i :-----:::--\...S:::: lJ"'. "~: By Saunders and Overgard n<E IYAME 15 ALEXANDRA KL EFFT.' By Al Smith ! DoN'T LIKE TO BE CHEATE D AND I CHEAT MYSELF.' OH, I DON'T How COULD THINK I You CHEAT CHEAT BUT YOURSELF I COULDNT WITHOUT SWEAR KNOWING IT? MYHAND IS QU ICKER THAN Tl-IE ESPl!CJAl.\.'f l<A . Hf"t so L.,t,l "'f. TO IT! ~/t;,--EYE! ~tQj.IT, ~ GIRi.. C::OUL.D STARVE, ;it1,t.tR1(1) TO 1-l!M, ily Gus Arriola •r WELL ··! lJ GOTTA 1 ' HA.VE A. HE GE.TS Fllf?IOUS /FI USE SIR.OS! ;sl!EEE~ IS IT ANY Wl"NDEI::: I< '10'11/o/G Jl TA'?GET_F ;!hrnd~!r'.,.,,....-< ,1 CATS ••E J.JERVOUS? yol,J AJf NOT ,.t.M&rT'IOU S" fNOIJe~, !~A . \ ~,.,.eNCr ! ! •M VERY AM91TIOUS" • By Mell I STAND lll!ADY TO TAl<E OVfR AM'f G'!Rl.'S rATMER'.S &mNESS . ., ,. _____ , ... ly Charles Barsotti PEANUTS By Charles M. Sch11lz ~--~;.., TELEVISION VIEWS TV to Cover Sun Eclipse By RICK DU BROW ,_,, HOLL.-YIVOOl}..(.l,IPI) -One of the most spec· tacular and rare happenings of nalure. a total eclipse of the sun. \Viii be covered live and at lenght by the three commercial television networks March 7, The daytime Saturday broadcast of the eClipse. which \vill cut a path over Mexico across the gulf and up the eastern coast of the United States, will be seen in color. NBC -TV, \vhich plans to originate its coverage from near th e small village of Miahautlan in the southern coastal part of Mexico, has scheduled a 90-minute broadcast. starting at 9 a.m. PST. ABC· TV and CBS-TV will present one-hour programs, beginning at 10 :00 a.m. PST. Charles Kuralt will be the anchorman for CBS- TV. Frank McGee v.·ill serve the same function for NBC-TV, and Jules Bergman and F'rank Reynolds a re to handle the chore for ABC-TV. The rarity of the phenomenon to be covered ts indicated by the fact that it will be roughly a half century before another major eclipse is visible from the United Stales. A solar eclipse occurs when the moon passes directly in front of the sun and casts its shadow on the earth. ON THIS particular upcoming occasion . nearly an areas of the continental United States will be able to see a partial eclipse. But on the East Coast it will be totaJ or near that. New York City, for example. is expected to ex- perience a 96 percent eclipse. ln Savannah, Ga ., and Norfolk. Va .. it will be lOO percent. But in Port- land, Ore .. is will be about 19 percent. FOR THOSE \vho watch an eclipse in person !a_ther than ~n video, there can be the danger of •nJUry to one s eyes unless precautions are taken. Very dark filters. for instance. are considered the kind of minimum requirement to help avoid harm. But there is beauty too in this awesonle event. Robert \Vu ss ler, executive producer of CBS-TV's eclipse program. observes: "When the moon comes bet,~een the sun and the observer on earth, sunlight vanishes for a (e\v seconds. Birds and animals be- come suddenl y quiet. A brilliant red ring surrounds the ~oon, and the brightest stars and plani;ts ap- pear 1n the sky. It's a breathtaking sighl." NBC-TV executive producer Robert Northshield, meanwhile . is enthused aboul the Mexican origina- tion point for his coverage. The network says the vi llage_ locale "\\1ill be the ~athering place of about 200 scienlific expeditions" from around the \vorld. • . SAYS NORTHSHIELD : ''It is virtually thC first P<?1nt of land that the path of totality of the eclipse \~·111 cross as the shado'v of the moon S\veeps" In from the So uth Pacific. l·le adds the weather condl· t ions there fi gure to be good for seeing the sun. ~nd that the totality v.•ill last longer than any place 1n the Uni ted States. Deniais the ltle1iace --.--------..,.------------------·-~--~------------~------------ I l t 1 r ' t ; ' t t ' 1 - ' ' O"I\. Y l'ILOT '"" ,.Mii IM POSSIBLE Mirin111 Kaiser offers a cryptic comnu~nt about daughter Donnie llarries' r.i:ading niatcrial in this scene from "The lmposs~le Years'' at thC lluntington Beach Playhouse, closing this 'veekend. \.._ Theater Notes Three Plays Close Sunday "A Delicate Balance" enters Kids Create Valley Dra1na Class Set - -·- Wunp" for the Fountain Valley group. She also it acti \•e with the \\lcstminstcr Co 1n mun it y1 Th-.;::ter and has directed "Never Too Late" and "Under1 the Yum Yu1n Tree" for thatj group. Follo1ving the F o u 11 l a l n '.'alley classes, l\1r!i. •1ager1y 1 11•ill l'Onduct a children's dr1una 11'0rkshop sponsored by I the \\'eslminsler theater dur.1 iug lhe summer. I THE MIRISCH ' 01E i'RODIJC!ION COMPANY•" • Kii FA COlOR t,Drt ,. · ~ • u~ ... ~ ..... 1, ~ UT THE LUXURIOUS NEW IAll•A ~~.,;.:_TH::.:EATR E .. OMI 0' IOClrflll• CHAJI \001$ I 7119 £AST 8All0A llVD. \ \{,,,!Al !OA rt:PlllfSUU • 61lA0(l J/ HELD The most explosive spy scandal or this cenlury! OVER A UN1Vf R5AL PICTURE rZOt lfCHN!CO' ,...,_ ~ ~f) plin "HOUSE OF CARDS" a. .. ,.. ,.,,., .. l111t•r St•vefls DAILY PJtOT T.HEATRE HARBOR bl ADAMS, COSTA MESA. PHONE 546·3(02 ON HARBOR 9lYD. -ONE Mill SOUTH OP SAN OllOO FWY. ~ . . Caotr #OttJer 1t414' Uam.r. &/ltf ~1t 1te 81()l/{(Ot/ h;il'_NO""cmsr· ,;~ I . ~WALTER MATTHAU IS PERFECT!':,~ ' -NCW YOltK '°5 r ~GOLDIE HAWN IS PURE GOLDI'~; -NCW YORK MACAZIHC ~INGRID BERGMAN IS SMASHING!' By TOJ\1 TITUS O! ''" OtllJ l'llot 51111 The lights go down on three Orange Coast stage pro- ductions l11is v;cekcnd -but nol until Sunday A special wor~.shop pro- duction of the I r v in r Repertory Theater \\'iii be given Friday night only at the Studio Theater on the UCI campus. Jts second oJ three weckends1_...::=::::..::::_::::__:::=::::.=1'~==~~~;~;;;~~~~~~~~~~~~11 <1t the Costa 1\-lesa Civic ! Playhouse. The Edward Albee drama is directed .by I-lap liraham and features Bob Wentz. ~1arthella R a n d a I I Pali Tan1bellini and Julie r A.FRANKOVICH PRODUCTION WdL101· inoriu Three SllO\'.'S giving their final perforn1ances ~·ill be . "The Glass fi.lenagene" al -Soulh Coas1 Repertory. "A S1nile ls a Frown Turned IJpsldc Do\.\•n'' ill the 01>en ~nd '!'heater 11nd ' ' T h e Tinpossible Years .. at the 1-lun- tington Beach Playhouse. The ··impossible'· part uf "The Jinpossiblc Years" has been rinding an empty sfat during the regular Friday and Saturday pcrfor1na11ces. The :;how has been cKtendcU to 11 t111rd Sunday. this Lime a matinee at 2 p.rn ., y,·hich y,·ill 11·rap ii up al 13 st11gingS. n new pla yhouse record . Randy l\ecne directs thr family comedy which teaturt." St<1n Bell, Miriam Ka Uic r and Valorie Harries, Others in the l!unlington Beach cast include Borrnie Harries. Doug Gracey, Put ~-lullins, ~1arty Fuchs. Steve Uhler and John Phillips. The playhouse 1s located at ~110 ~lain SL. Huntington Beach. 11·ith rc~er1•3tions for the final 11·eekend being tak en :1 I 536·886 I. * Final evening performance~ of "Glass ~1cnagcrie'' will be i.;1vcn Thursday through Su,1· dny nights at SCR's Third Step Theater. although the Ten- nessee Willla1ns play con- Two one·act plays by . John Guare ll'ill b c Ji.resented at 8 :30 p.m.-"Son1ething I'll Tell You Tuesday," directed by llobert Cohen. and "The Loveliest Afternoon of the Vear," directed by l\1ichacl Van Landh1gham. linues lhrough Mar1;h on a special matinee schedule for high ~chool students. flal Landon, :\nn Siena. Elaine BankSton and Ja1nes Waring cotnprise the cast u11dcr the direction of James dcPrlest. The theater is al 1827 Newport Blvd ., Costa l\1csa. with reservations avallablc by callin1: 640.1363. * Al the Open End. "A Srnlle is a fr0\111 Turned Upside Doy,•n'' goes into its final three performancts. Friday through Saturday, with \Varren Deacon directing lht: musical salire based on Jules Feiffcr's car· toons. Jayne Hamil. Jl>C Del Ro.iSO. ~<Jund ra lt·laUhews -Deacon and Robert Vaught are the headliners or the fast-paced revue. The theater is located at 1825 Villa \V ay. Newport Beach, and lhc reservation number is 675-1120. 'f;t1 Jbuth Coast Re1Jertory U.ST l 'IJIFORM ANC!s-hb. 26·21·28--a:JO p.m. "THE GLASS MENAGERIE" by l•n"•ne1 Witli1ms SCR CHILDREN'S THEATRE "'tllnd In the Wiilows" -Sundays al I :00 & 2:.11'1 1127 NtwjMrt. Co1t1 M•H -646-1363 TELEPHONE 541·1552 FOR INFORMATION 9 ACADEMY NOMINATIONS 7 "BUTCH CASSIDY AND THE SUNDANCE KID" BEST PICTURE -BEST DIRECTO R BEST ORIGINAL SCREEN PLAY BEST SONG -BEST SOUND BEST ORIGINAL MUSIC SCORE BEST CINEMATOGRAPHY 2 For "THE PRIME OF MISS JEAN BROD IE" BEST ACTRESS ... MAGGIE SMITH BEST SONG ... "JEAN" --•• l'ftl\1111 OLOR-li.P. Ratin9 ALSO THIS FINE FEATURE Haas. Performances are given Fri-. day and Saturday at the Com· munily Center auditorium on the Orange County f'air grounds. Rc servatlolfs-3're being taken at 834-fl303. * 1'hc R a n c h o t:on1munity Players arc preparing their second weekend of t h e Heginald Rose drama "The Deuth and Lile of Larry Benson" al fl1lssion V\ejo's La Paz Intermediate S c h o o I auditorium on Pradera Drive. Performances are scheOuled for Friday and Saturday cvea- 1ngs. ' Janet t:ordon. Terre n cc l)oyle and ti1ichael Bielilz head Lhc cast. with Dikki Parkhurst. Joanne \Voleotl and Judy Deltenrieder in ma- An epic drama of adventure and exploration! T•lllitht at I FrlHy et l :JO 5ctt., 1 :JO 011tl 4:JO jor supporting roles under the'l-----------dirccllon of To·m Titus. Call 837-1753 for reservations. * Opening Friday for a six· \\'eckcnd run al the Long Beach Comn1unity Playhouse i5 "A Far Country," which ce nte1·s around lhe early life of Sigmund Freud. Bcrtran1 Tanswell i5 directing. Kathy Ladd of Ne\.\•porl Beach Lakes a major role in the dramo . which sh1rs Ralph Bowman. The playhouse is loca led at fl021 £. Anaheim Blvd.. Long Beach. w it h reservations availabll' al (213) 438--053Ei. EXCLUSI VE ENGAGEMENT licUtmf AWlrf Ntmln1llo~' "THE ltl!IVl!R ~" 101') (tllr '"' "VIVI. M.-.x" (Ci> C1ler 1 Acadtll\f l.w1r<1 P'lomln1Uon1 "MIDHICiHT COWIOY" 00 Ctltr ... u 1.1a11 "IATTLf_ OF llUTl.IN" (0 ) (tier -f, ..... , ...... , S4WJIJ ~,,..;f ~.. 672°6260 2905 Ea1r Coa1t Hwy. Un-•• ,. N•I l.<lm!Uetl Pe1tr F-1 Rllltl It Wild l llo;t "!"'' RIDER" llU C.lor "CASTLE kEEI'" 1111 Ctl<lr. Un<ltr 16 Mvll 11 Wit~ 1'1r"'1 1t11.,et Wtldl 0.11 Htr TM11t "LADY 01 CIMEttT" l ltl Ctf9r '"" ""IAllD COHTltACT" (Ill) C•ll• U!ldw 1• Miit! It Wllfl "•r.nl EXCLUSIVE l<REA PERFORMANCE FOR ADULTS 7 ACADEMY AWARD NOMINATIONS llST ACTO!tS -D1t1th1 Hoffm•R -J11t Yeltlit llST rlCTUlf llST SUl',OITINGo ACTRESS -Syl,i1 Mllu llST DlllCTOI -Jelt!I Schl"1"9et> * ''The \Vortd nf eter O'Toole Petula Clark "Goodbye, l!ST SCll!N,U.T llST FILM IDITINli I . Sandburg" continues 1',riday and Salurday as the latest produclion of the t 'u\lerta.1 r,ootlighlcr s al the r<.luckenthaler Center. I I 9 Buena Vista Drive, Fullerton. ACAOl!MY AW.&11 0 NOMINl!ll G1ldl• Hlwn ,1u1 W11!1r Mfll~u1-h•1rld l trom1n "CACTUS f LOWfll;" -11lu1-- "THANK TOU ALl YIRY MUCH" ,.lift SllMIW OW!n!s Mr.Chips" CINEJlOME A:.~§!). ~ "'"""'· "''" .. "''" W1ekd1ys Box Office Opens 6:45 -Show at 7:00 "'"''" SOUTH COAST FCOSTA .... a ""Ul ox PLAZA THEATftE CtlR~DIAllOM San Di110 Frerwar 1t l ri,tol • S48·271t , HELD OVER Sot. I S1111. -101 Offlte o,."' 12 Noon -Sho• e1 12:JO -~ I ( Unit a IEtt• Attl- HA•llt H:OOUCftOI ' llllil(O "-; ~ COLOR .. Of:l.li•e United ~"''''• ®·--· --· :Ado Eve. Show St1rt1 7 p.m. Continuous Show Sunday From 2 p.m. FREE PARKING TWO GREAT SHOWS •t•l'Otf NICI! -••• ~. ........ HELD OVER •• r•""'-w. 1.1. •• o•. J.11•1 .. ,, .. 2 ACADEMY NOMINATIONS B!ST SUPPORTING ACTOR .•• ... J•ck Nicholson BEST ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY Aman went looking for America. And couldn 't find it anywhere ... PETER FONDA·DENNIS HOPPER l ~116,_ I JA CK NICHOLSON•coo.oo ftt!ffld bf COl\IMllA 'ICT\JllfS -Al10 On The Same Progr•m - BURT LANCASTER-DEBORAH KERR "THE ~YPSY MOTHS" I I . M81TH8U B0rOlll8n . eBClUS FLOW01' 2nd OUTSTANDING HIT • (Oib'lif.l""!llU••R•SllP ~1~ .. moi • 10th WEEK ~ r/ BARBRA OMAR 01REcr FROM ~11 T ~~P .. J!1! LITOSNG RUN l' ~v ~-'FUNNY GIRL" . .. ,.. . l,.,.., .......... ~ ~ ROADSHOW ~:;:°'ll .. :·.-· ENGAGEMENTS! . \~·@'1: l. \~·!i1! COMINc; SOON -Ac.-'"'Y Aw•r• NMI ... '\:-"?%! "BOB lo CAROL &. TEO lo ALIC!" ... 1 .. ~ .. -;:., '-' ~!91 ... ACADIMT AWAID NOMINll .... s.~,_m,.. ,,~,., -a.,-CfflN llST MUSICAL SCOltl William Faulkner's Pulitzer Pri1e-Winnin9 Novel "The Reivers " is now a film! THE REIVER ••• 11 • scoundrel 1n oper•tor 11nd I br1wl1rl Steve McQueen "The Reivers· ALSO-~•beft Crou. 5her•11 F.nell '--' 1tr--··c-u.. .. , .... ,..._.,..,, • ,...,.,...~ ""'-... ~ 2nd TOP COMEDY ACADEMY· AWARD NOMINATIONS .En SIN. I ... ,,.,..,. ""' • ,AJ.LIN'ON tr"fttlAO" IEIT m!ECTlll IEIT DllllMY! HIT M ! IEITmt••··-. IElrSllnAlllllUY-:'r,::..~ b-....,.,.... ~,.,... llOllfllT Mlllf.illlll' llllN • * * ALSO ' • I I i ( I f 1 • • '· Q OA!LY .PllOT 'Pon't Take . . Breathing . . ~Normal WfldnH4l1, Fcbtuatf 2.5, 1970 ' Wtdn!Sday, Ftbrll<llJ 25, 1~70 LA Indian Skelefun 9"000 Years Old LOS ANGELES -Fill)'.fi\le and olher Jee Age animals. 9,000 years old. Th ls preserved U1t bones al:;o o! ard\aeoloiY at the the bones ·were found In years ago, wotkmeft laboring 1bose treasures made the establishes it among the oldest blocked use of the USllSI radio-Museum. also has been in-association with those ol ex- in an i:sf>baH-blackebed ex~ Rancho La BN!:a tar pits world found in tJle: W e st e r n carbon dating methods. vestigating the date of the La Unct animals -such as giant cavaUon ~ near WI 1sb1 re famous. Jlemisphere. Using the new process. the Brea skeleton, which had been oondor·llke vullures." .Bou~ ill Los Angeles, un-Now, half a century later. Dr. Rainer Berger, associate skull was dated to "'ilhin plus , determined to be that or an ln· When Ole sku.ll was eoYefed.,.tbe atull and part.Jal the scienUHc value or the professor of geophysics and or minus 80 yeE1rs. This is dian woman about 25-30 years discovered in 1914, one scien· skelel(llt'of a human. human skeleton ha:1 been history al UCLA, and other comparable to the accuracy old. and abou t five feet tall. Ust indicated Its age could be ' • PILOT -ADVERTISE• .'! Wbili scientists pondered Us significantly increased. scientists, Including Dr. T. Y. allalned ln other carbon dating "This date adds one more measured In "thousands of -'!f1 Plter l. lMdlcrolla, alD age, the workmen conUnued SclenUsts at UCLA and the Ho and Dr. L. F. Marcus, methods and provides in· piece or infonnaUon to our years, but probably not in lens , Dear Dr. .. Stetocrohn: Prople with the job of removilll from Los Angeles County Museum , perfected the techniques that vestlgators at La Brea with a very limited inventory on Ear-of thousands." Many years .._'t aeem to be using thi s the tar pits a great lreasure of of Natural History have used a en ab I e d tar-impregnated degree of dating precision ly Man in North America,'' later, in 1960. wood arllfacis '.':!'. ... much inymo-: "lt's:,_:bone~:'.:s~ot~:'~:rl=lnct~~··'.l'me~ts~,_'.n~ew~~d~a:_tl_'!ng~.'!p'.:roc~e:!:ss~:_'~~~r~os~si_'lsltl:_to_b~e~d~a:_te<I~. '.'.:P_re~v'.'.iou~·~·-•_•~"'::r~b~e~fo~re~pos~sl~bl'.'.:e:~~:":·'._~D~r.~R~o~':_ai~re~.sa~id~·~":_lt~i'.:•_' ~rou~n"."d~in~a~no..'ther'.1..:~p1~l.2w'.:e~r~e_!!:S:=::=::=:::::::=:=. ~ .... · sabertooth cats. mammoths determine that the skeleton is ly. the same tar wh ich Dr . Charles Roz.aire, turalor espec.ially interesting in that carbon dated at 4,450 years . • . • ) M·t.UY as breathing." I gue.ss -._ ruson ls that when one . .h.u .ten a heart patient, or one who auUen from asthma ~ emphysema right for his breath, he never forgets it. .. Breathing may ht natural, rrtwnd-easy ror normal peo- ~. but It's certainly a big .ji.bltm when the breathing .,,.,.tus loel out of whack. :.:'Mn. o. ~.CoMMENT; I go along with 10'1. Brulhlng Ls taken lot ~inted. J doo't mean that DOCTOR IN iHE HOUSE people should become self -con· ~ about their intake and ~of air. First thing we ~. we'd all become too '1_~ous, and foul up the T~less. I btlieve that sudera should know of a iiUthing problem we . call Nt\ypenentilation." Basically, all:U..meana 11 overbceathin5. ·Many people who suffer &<fin anxiety haye this com- lrl!~--Plaint and-doa!L •111""'1.;il 11.ey a~erbreathe u~ consciously by taking rapid sha]low breaUu when nervous, wtilcb only intensifies the nervousness. They sigh a lot or YIWn olten . ' • • 'What UUa doer. is create an fmbalance of oxygen and ci'fbon dioxide In the blood. Too much brtathln& forces out H · UMalw'll amount o f c.t>on dlozide. The carbon dioK\de tensions !nth< alveoli (of the lung) and In the blood become ab- normally low. AJ a rtsu1l there is a lessened blood sup- ply to tht tissues, especially to the brain. THEN COME such aymptoms as faintness, rapid pube, penplratJon, nwnbness in hands and feet, and ex· tmne anxiety. Rebre.athing into J paper bag for a few mLtiutes orten makes these sylnpt.orns disappear ( b y rebuilding the carbon dioxide balance). l have helped many anxious pauents by te1chin;( them bow ta breathe. Anxiety a n d breathing are so tied-in that htlping the one often improves the other. Many gave up lran· qo.llhera, sleepln,g pills and other sedaUve medications alter they learned how to bra.the normahy. · J suggest that a n y chronically nervous aod anx -JoOs patient reading today's colmnn check with his or her physician to make certain that hyptrvf!f'IUlation Isn't com- pllcating the problem. 'l'bfJ relatively simple pro- cedure has saved many anx - fOQI paUents from years of un - necessary suffering. It doesn't work In all nervous ,:ialients, but is ctrtlinly worth in· vestlgaUng . .. MBDICALETTES UleJI\'• to -) l}ear Dr. Stelncrohn: I am 31 ud for 20 yean have had m-o;:fngulnal hernia on my lert side that 1lktes all the \\'ay down. For the past six weeks It bll been 1Mng me lots of tqlUble. I'd like lo know If wllrlng a tnm, as I have been do1ng, will finally cure it -.Mr. V. OJIOIENT: A truu wiU not oft I blrnla., AA )'ClU havett't -....-..,..,., my .... u that.you· don~ like lo ... -r .,,....uon. Y~t. If It 1'lr'e '"1~• I'd choose =over the un- e ex-pectatlon ol tnasa: for anOlher 35 or• ,_.c Dur Dr. Si.Jncnm: Sup- ~ a -...wi has pernicious ........ Cln lbll ba helped by ......... btt -b lo olot> iW-poriodl Md loOI of Wood? -lltl. It ' ~:, Tben11 no con- nocllon ml II -id be a ...... _..... Rather. tht-ofllUorllm'bln- d,leatod In -lo make liJI r.r 111o· laN ol r,ormal flllilc -which i. ... qr the prime .,._ ol ......--. ' l!'or ....... lnf«l'natkn load Dr. lllilia\Jlio'• .... It!. ~'ti:~ ~':J':.. ~ 111111 a rrAMPED, SELF~ [)JIEl8&D E!IVELDPE ......... .,11111 Handi- Wrap SI04wick & food Wrap Mew llu Mire Cli11 litielt Sari! Ill fl ltlls 5i$1 ''Dash'' DffiRGENT .,. _ _,lllWUllDllllllDIHIWllHW "Pro'; ~:tr • TDD.~~~.USH~l. I b!Llt bfislfes polish tll!lh, outside white I bristles massage; gums safely! ~ 3i99c l • lllllllMHllllllllllllllMlllll~ Stir• Pfcl•ra ... Entertainment for tile ,ilKJle family In foll 3-dim- tnsicnal color. Chllos! from assort-1 50 ed sub ects. 3111/ r1k1121 sce1rs1 Pak • ··~:·:::-=-::-:::-;:-::----l' - "Pond's" COLD CREAM ~ aftd soltlRS •• , one IP9liu- . tiGn takes olf maU-up ••• second 011e 7 7 C tleans out l\idden irnne! 1.35 l.t tL Sirl IOYS'·ond GIRLS' Nylon Jackets Come 11in or s.hint these jx~ts wm brlahltft yGUr Uy. fealunng 11nh"9d waltr-r1pel!ent ny101 udl wlfli I fall fl~ lfOllL Gat!lered e1utie1l slesvn !lelps ketp •I winds °" bf~ u~ lhoy I.St -... color ex• wll~ u ln- llividPI Irita. Soni! hlv1 ... strlq -tt.t ,,.,_"+!:"ii ll"i* ""' ,,.-. Sl111 2·! I With NEW Natural Flavor! IOOl.Jor EQUI. "' .,,,L Baseball Bat LmtELusUE Baseball Bat tt~""""' s* 5 '1 1 Fielders' Glove Fielders' Glove "Carl Yastrz1111ski'' -tMge model w11t1 1~11 leJt~er l1nmi:. l Z flex ~alrn 9 69 hinge. foam padlled. ad)usl· able w11st strap. -#42-333 ~ • Fielders' Glove for tooi.e ~-lio perSJ•r~ hea~i11 & itiose w~<\l persD11e rri0~e1alel1 • , . fullv ellecti~~ is a drodor~nt. too. Hald Back the ll cments and the Years r tone ~ooo 1~ a t-·~'!j ~pper n~I ~ t"lt •1~"'" Y~ur ~~1n be~·~ 10 f1~!11en .!"d bl11hl~~-'f~ur ...... p16 K'" wa•es UD retre~hed, stlrnulaled -~·-Ul·~a loo~rn~. limited Time lntr1 d11cto1y C!!er 1 Ol. Sir e 2.75 .Cre1m tr li•ui• , • EACK 4 tr. Si1e "Tahiti" • Glass Tumblers Rcmtnhc as tts nil?lt ~e. C\1br1UI IS ih lot1le , • , I~ •Pl'flohRB A'!'O cado er t.old 12 tz. Size ·~·'""I' .,...., ,., ! Tll~rs•11. ~.~. 26111 ~ t~r• St~day, Mir,• 1st l I DRUG STORES I I OPEN! 1M 1111 PM - I j PllWPOltT IEACH J DAYS. A W£Eg ! 1020 h•IH '" Wtitcliff ''a•~~~~­i HUHTINGTON llACH I Spri119dal1 and Edlnge, BANKAMEAICARD I l'fUNTIN GTON llACH Adami nd l rocltll•rsl ,... _' _ .. i11111m1,1111rn1111111nn1"11;111111111llllllllllllll!IOUlllLIH PLUS "Gentle Strength" Cuticle Conditioner wttll PROTlllN f•moot~es: J11d evens o~t cut1~1esl Res. V1111 4.2s Now Just 3.00 Ice Cube Tray I MIRID -Makl II- •• , gimGlY poll ln'!lf i.-, t and 11:e t!lb9s llCD out. 1.69 Excedrin TABLETS CARYL RICHIROS ''Crest'' TOOTHPASTE ~ le11lar 1r Miat Flmr! 13c 5 IL Size ANTISEPTIC Kills Germs by MillioRS 011 Contact! 1.1914 oL Size ~·· ·--· "Happy Hair" SPRAT DRESSING & CONDITIONER A beauty ~akm fa;oritP! Brigtitent C1lnd1!1?1'.S ar.-1 g1~ts instanl·Sh!tn \o llull, Orr ha11 •. , ,nyl!rne - ani«heie. l.~9 13 ez. Size 99c • "New Dawn " sHAMPoo.1N •• HAIR COLOR How you can make ywr ~~'' most a•y shade you 1urt with t~is easy to 00 tia r r.olor. Apply it just like v~u \llOold a shampoo. .. 1.29 2.0Q SIZE ' . ,,. ' .... I i ' . ' ' • :· • t ' I ( • • • t • . • I ' I • I t • I I • I ' I . ' ' • • I • • I 3 BIG DAYS WEDNESDAY THURSDAY & FRIDAY! . . NEW '70 iiOIJIE · ·:w. ~ ~011.,1 ci r o1 $ " 11'19 l\tW lt10 mo<Hll. II 11•1 l<llgf(ltfl( !C~l$o.kln, -· -fl' 1lett"'9. 1!111ler. """;"' Melt •II", VIRyl '"" Incl ~~ -r'.t-t..1AJfe&!ff FW,. Hi· P erlormance Cent• 1968 DO-I Cust. Sports .... n ... ,.; -~ .......... $1888 .tnd ..,uc:ll more. 12Q1G'llli'I . I 966 SUNBIAM Alpl-Ribt. "'" ..... ~· ,~.. ... $888 tout. ,_0,, radio 11!11 ~11ter. A ~.I bMO~Ln - 1965 PLYMOuTH FURY Ill "" ... -· •""'::.~~ $588 wltll v.. ''l!': "r· 1lr -·· tr111'f'l"'"1::::111 ~~1111 r•dlo. -~=r .:'lttr. · 1966 RAMILIR -~ ... • •• ... -:::i $·n ·s 11_. nt rHlo , 0 't "°1:rl9r'I ,Ir "\.kenM No ~n!f '"·' · . Se Habla Espanol! .. N Beach Cit-. . 'Y Th is company cir comes with V-8 t n gin 1, 1utom1tlc transmission, power steering, power brakes ind factory air conditioning. DM23H9- Dl 20623. 1969 FOR ONl Y , -1960 VOLKSWAGEN ,,,. ·~ """ '--M " $388 · 1961 VOLVO ~388 1964 VW '1Bu1"' • ' ..... """ ...... "'" $588· lo PO OKS. Gil ti.f'Nlnlld prfc..i . Ind rtldY !o QO 1966 TO.TOTA CORONA f~j. It I r•tl shtr• (t r toUl -$788 W•tll IUl~!k 1r .... 1mlulcwi ••. olio ..... ~. flt ... )( t ill 1969 V.W. CAMPER W • .., tent·1N• burn••· $2688 !(~·s ~~'"· L•etns• No. ,,_, ..... ~,, .. ~. ... . SPlC/AlS DISCOUNTS ON LA TE MODEL Chevy's & Fords Take Your Pick of 1989'1 & 1968's 1~"vf ~J~J; NEW 1970 DOIKil CAMPER CONVERSION •3188 -------~-------- ------- --- MONEY BACK . GUARANTEE! . If you 1r1 not 11tbfled with tht_.HYtrtl;1d ·~t~ that you purch11f, bring It b1ck within 72 ho_ur1 and leach Cit-Y: Oodgt will give you yo'ur money back in lull. Wt ---· ---. know wt ~Yt 1ht best «11J1lit t c1r1 ind 1r1 not WE LEASE 1fr1id t11t1Dil behind 1 mo~ty ~1t.9..-r1nt11. 111 mikes & models ~ _j A ~~~ AT r.z ~~1. ;~~~~~·~~om· ,-.A~ . r~ ~~j 1c f~n11111111 ·dr.u ...... r. $1288 . PRICES r;;_ ~~.:;;wrf;.?:: -: . : I 966 MIRC, Vlllai~r ,W.il. REAL ECONOMY TRUCKS 1969 CHEVROLn 1967 DODGE P.U. Styleside ,_ ~-"' "'" '"'" ..... $1188 & ~Ir,. LIGlrlM No !USSIOOI I 966 CHEVROLn PICK-UP Th" 11~1esi<K model con11• ..,..111-wlr!> v.t tnalnt rt- d!o •nd ~ .. ltr !013$7~! . COIJNTY'S ; '""' N-'1 • · ~"~~~ ~.ua~~r; 088 ·, ~3'°'m':· •to'IO •llol ,,.,f., . I o • ' . . . . . · I.NJ PoNTIAC U MANS f . :.:::r~. ~·~:. c;:,-,..Jn,with ..... $1688" . . IOP, llii(-tt · l.t!ld1u ~ •• , .... !'l'ltl '!Yi· ."'11~ •nd • • •. -. . 1~9 FORD' TORINO GT , !~~1~':...':' •ytOl'l'lt llc tr•111-si3· .,88 1ldtow1ll1. rHlo :,,r~in., Wflll• "• 42111lolQ11 ff .. , ""· " ' . -. . 1969 .DODGE R.T. CONV'T. =·· ~ .. ·:;::.:.~ .. "~\. ""':;"'~ '2!'88 i lY~ j'J!i lll'Ti'1 on Mf. ""' r. . . . .. . • ' . r: ... ' \ J I I \ • .. ·-. -. . -.. -., ---, HOUSES FOR SALE /HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSISl'OR SALi!' 'HOUSES l'OR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE I HOUSES FOR SALE Gener.I 1000 G-rol 1000 Otnorol 1oilo Oontr•I 1000 0-rtl 1000 Gtnorol , 1000 HOUSES FOR SALE I HOUSES FOR SALE Oontrtl IDOO Gwntrtl 1000 HOUSES FOR SALi! General 100D FOREST E. OLSON INC., Realtors 26th OFFICE Now Open in Huntington Beach BAYCREST SPANISH S BEOROOM + VIEW 0000 sq. feet of magnificent Spanish archi- tecture. 1\uthentic in every respect. 5 bed- rooms. 7 baths. Family room. Game room. Maids room. Formal dining. Gourmet kitch- en with 4 ovens-3 ranges. Just 3 years young. Dial 645-0:W3. LEASE/OPTION . NEAR BEACH That's right! Lease with option to buy, Sev· eral 3 and 4 bedrooms to choose from. t and 2 stories. Ne\v \Yhite shag carpets. New drapes. New yard. Cul-de-sac street. Lovelv area. Very litUe money moves you in with reasonable monthly rent. Be first to call- 962-5585. EASTBLUff 3 + FAM + POOL + VIEW Hard to beat. Tri level. 27 ft. family room with cork waUs. and authelitic bar. 3 mas- ler-·3ize bedrooms. 3 baths. Pool + sepa- r ate jacuzzi bath. Loaded with extras. A must see. and what a view! Priced now at $59,900. 645-0303. 3 UNITS ON 1 LOT $21,900 1 house plus 2 apts. Fantastic money mak- ers. Only 5 blocks from beach. Summer rents raised. Qy,•ner will finance with mini- mum down. $ $ returns are great for the investor. This 'vo n't last over nie:ht. Better be first and call now. Dial 962·5585. LESS THAN RENT LIKE A MODEL Beautiful 3 bedroom 2 bath home. Just like a model! Deluxe kitchen with built-ins. Freezer. Plush drapes and carpeting. Only 5 years young and lh mi. to the beach. Your bonus feature is a low-lo\v interest FHA loan. Pay less than rent! Submit your down. Seller anxious! Dial 645-0303. OLD FARM HOUSE FANTASTIC LOT , PRESTIGE WAT ERFRONT HOMES SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT 15 Linda Isle Ori.,. New & beautiful 4 Bedroom, 5 bath home with large sunken living room• & tam. rm., wet bar. Radiant electric beat. Carpeted & landscaped. Priced . . . . . . . . . . . . '155,000. 45 Linda Isle Drive Nearing completion. 5 Bedroom, 4 bath home with 80 ft. on waterfronl 3 Frplcs., encl. a t r i u m with fountain. With dock. $225,000. 80 Linde 1111 Dr ive 5 Bedroom & maid's, 5 baths with family room & large rumpus room. 3 Fireplaces. 4,246 Sq. Ft. Dock & boat slip ...... $159,300 90 Linda Ille Drfv1 Beautiful 4 Bedroom, 4 Bath home with ex- tra large living room & master Bedroom. Car· pets &: drapes. Landscaped. Boat slip. Near tennis court & clubhouse. . ' ..... $120,000 W•t1rfront Lots Lot number 4: Excellent 51 ft. Linda Isle leasehold lot. Xlnt buy at only $35,000. Coh· sider trade. Lot number 41 : Long water view with 76.2 ft. of frontage !acing Harbor Island. L Linda Isle Development Co. 1-, ~ ... 1080 Bayside Or .. N.B. Bill-Grundy '75'3218 J READ .TJtlS lf you are in the market for a NEW ho':~e these outsland· ing custo homes, built by Frank H. Ayres and Son, locat- ed in a prline area very close to Huntington Stau Beach. The homes are .priced from $27,5&0 to $33,690 and vary in size from 3 to 4 bedrooms, 2 to 3 car gar- ages and 2 to 3 baths, with shake or mission tile roo~~1.tire­ places, underground utiuties, concrete driveways, built-ins, and carpeting. There is VA aild FHA financing available. There are 4 homes available because of credit rejections. Occupancy by March I, 1970 in this unit. our next unit is now on sale for occupancy in May aAd. June 1970 1tnd introduces · the new 3,000 sq. ft. "El Dorado" model p riced from $34,490. Rancho La Cuesta Hom11 on Broolc:hurtt at Atlanta, Huntintton Buch ffl.2929-961-1331 --· --------------- Gen1ri1I 1000 General ·1.000 General • 1000 'Genefal •. ' 1000 ------Loi Owners ••. A 3-Bedroom Home- FOR ONLY $10,995 BUILT ON YOUR LANO ' FEATURING: e 10So aq. rt. e Double garare • AJJ Jal.he and pluter e Pullman bath e Spacious wardrobes CALL 537-0380 L lvE & LET LIVE Waterfront CHECK 4 UNITS • 1 LOT t.J 'BR; >-i BR.; • u ,.....,. Fu.n Hnen! THIS , ONE lt)'i"& 10 ""'""' '°"' °""' $35 SOO-"'' Spaciou. ""'"'°""' head & want lo liw reot . ' ./ 2 Bathll free + enjoying a lax shd. ·A beach for )'OW' t>.ck;yard ./ f'onnal dining room ter, arrange lo aee these -plus 3 bedroom (ex_pand· ./ Brl~ Fi.replace units . idnt clofte-in Joe., able) ~~~ 2 lovely patios on ./Charming patio C.1''1. Full price $55,000. • no-ttpal.-ep lot: Fl'e•h spark-./ Newly remodeled kitchen * * * * lin&: paint -inside &: out; 4 BR. • 3 BATHS decorator wallpa~r. new r~sroom and bath g'Uest NEWPORT BEACH dra~•; 2 community. pools, Loe. on street of beaut. horn· U:~n.IS courts. recreauon fa-hou!!C. es, in prestige area_ FIR. cilitie1 and easy acceu to OR dbL t-•c. _ cpts. Ii .i-... _ the BEAUTIFUL B~UE PA· Comlder an inexpensiw re- "tn .... .,... CTFIC f f 1 tam modeling to a 4 Bedroom 3 beaut lndscpg. • slum-pe.tone , , or a un· ovina: -hath, fatnily room, formal BBQ .slumpstone & wrought ily.. dining room home .. •in most Dran11:e County and iron fencing -sharp cond. · Open for inspection other approved areu. favorable trnu. ca.n be ar-4·Bacfroom, Thurs., f'ri .. Sat.. sun. STANCO Builders Inc. OPEN 7 Days 10666 Weslminster A\'e. Garden Grove B&lanced Power Homes ranged. Asking S52.500. T Not h 309 Narcissus CHILT ROBINETT op-C Coro,,. d•I Mar REALTOR 64&-0128 Location! fl73.8550 * BASEBALL * Top-Notch Siar m"'t mow·"' ... o;,... Condition I He mua:t sell this 3 bedroom, • O THE REAL "-J.:STATF:](S LIDO WATERFRONT APARTMENTS 320 LIDO NOlilJ 6 Beautiful units. 6 Car garages & utility room, with 85 ft. fronting on excellent swim- ming_ beach. Units are newly furnished. Ask· ing '25(),000. Excellent te~s available. Unda Isle Development Co. lOIG Boysldo Or., N.B. Biii Grundy '7>3210 1000 10-rtl 1000 GOLFER'S PARADISE Beautiful executive 3 Bdrm. 3 Bath bonie. Tastefully carpeted, draped & furn. by dee· orator. Loe. on the green at 10th bole of Ber- muda Dunes 27 bole golf course, site of the Bob Hope Classics. Has 2 golf carts ~ swim pool. Bermuda Dunes Coijqlry Club member· ship avail. Ask $95,000. Xlnt terms available. Linda Isl• Development Co. 1080 B1Y1lde Dr .. N.B. Biii Grvndy 675-3210 -1000 Gorier•I 1000 Newport Heights Lgf! family home. 4 BR. 2 BA. painted In & oul, new crpts. No loan tees;-D\ll11Cr \YIU CUT)' ls! TD, ID';l. down. Newport Beach THE BLUFFS, adult occu. ,pied. 3 BR, 2 BA, dlnill&: area -one lewl view. · Ea1tside C.M. R·2 lot, 2 BR. 1 BA, pall1ted In Ii: out, new crpts, new driwway, garage. $19,950. 2 Hom•• on One Lot 3 BR's, 2 BA, family Ii: llvina: room + 2 BR, 1 BA, priced to Ril! Eutaide. Lochenmyer Re1ltor 1860 Ne'vport Blvd .• 0.1 CALL 646-3928 Eve1. 644·1655 ,~,, •• $750 DOWN ON FHA.IV A TER.\ts ""ill buy this cute 2 ti!m1 le ~ home near city park a · downtoYrn. Features -hard· v.'OOd Doors, heatilator fire. place-, fruit trees etc. 1!'1 vacant lmmedialc Posscs- Uon. $22,950 " - PEl=ll=ION ....... '""' 642.1n1 Anytlm• ___ .,,,,_ EXCEPTIONAL FINANCING 5 lArge bedrooms. 4 baths &: a heated & tilteftd pool, In Newport's best area. Only $69,900. !\fay essume low in- terest IDlln. Walter Haase TAKE YOUR PICKi Golf courH F•lrway Custom• $67,000 to $19,500 ' 3040 Ca pri Lane Lo11ely bli: .home ol concrete . block construct\(ln with e1e.. vated fairway view. 2 BR. 15"25, beamed Ct!illnp, radi.' ant htat, loll of Korea grau etc. QuUe wwsual eet up. 1816 Jam•ica Rd AbcNt 4,000 sq rt here • fea- turing black walm.it panel- ing galore, air cond. aame room in addiUon to famil.Y dining It breaklast roomL Vtty elepnL 301 5 Country Club Drive \\'rapped around an oven.ii-· ed atrium. ttWJ outstanding large family home is sltual· ed along the 16th fairway ot the r.1esa Verde Country Club. All large rooms, all . the e):tra.!J and easy-to.buy. GOLFERS TAKE NOTE! BEACH HOME OO&e to sandy belch 2 Bedrooms le o:mv. dca Living room with lli1h-cathedral cellins and brick fireplace BuiJt.!n appliances Private patio SZ1.500 Listed El:clu.sively Wit.It. REALTORS 673-4400 FANTASTIC oorne:r location. One of a kind with large family mom," oversized niaster ~ ma55iw fittplace and 1park- lin.g healed &: filtered pool. \Valk to school&, partc I \VestcliU shopplrJt:. Chl.'nf!r'g • family raised and &Ont - hard to believe at $39,950. · CALL 545-3424 South Cout , Real Estate. • PRE-TIGHT ·---•-•- $$$MONEY$$$$ -$2B 0 0 100 ft. frontage. Very d e e p lot. Over 'h acre. Lar~e trucks or he a v y equipment stora~e. Zoned MI. 2 or 3 hrs. Formal din- ing room. Giant country kitchen. Separate service porch. Owner \Vill finance with mini- mum down. This tvpe property in demand. Hurry. call 962-5585. Payments Like Rent 2\S bath beauty in Mesa \Valking distance to all trade-. Verde. 1980 sq. ft., 2 fire-if'vel school.9 includin& Or- ptaces, eating arta in ~ an&e Coast Co~Je~: e:uy kitchen + dining area. ar-aceeu to shopping Ii: tn:c- vice porch for the lady, wa.-'vays. 1futer ,bedroom suite ter 110ftner, landscaping with in Rp&rale areR from other sprinklers. You must see bedroomL N-1.C-E yard and this <1ne .•. it's sharp and patio.I $29,..eij). We'd love to SulUIY 3 BR on quiet cul-d,. Coldwell, Baaker & Co, • 0 --cF"'O"'R=E"v=E=R"'V"l"E"'W,,-uc, nr "'""'Is, ch=•· II· 550 Newport Center Or. llJ Acre brary. f\1axlmum privacy. Newport Beach, Ci11if. 4 bedrooms, en...., hall. hu ... IRVINE TERRACE s•· 1· 1a • '-~ u "' ..,ne 1rep ce. ra'°"""' ce • 133-070C ~2430 family rm, '~dth fil'f!place, PAY $141 MONTH WHY PAY MOREi Move in and take over 51A 'i'o annual % rate loan. 3 big bedrooms. 2 baths, deluxe kitch- en with built-ins. Beautiful carpets and drapes. Fireplace. Alley access for your cars, boat and trailer. ~1inutes !rom the sea. Clean. air living. Hurry on this one! Call 645-0:W3. NEED ROOM??? 4 MASSIVE BR'S, Plus 26 fl. living r o om. Adorably dec- orated. 2 full baths. Dream kitchen. Cozv brick fireplace. 33 ft. covered patio. Close t.o schools. shopping and free\\':\ys. Step in and take over existing loan and payments. No qualifying. Won't last this week. Hurry and call 962·5585. FOREST E. OLSON, IN C. HUNTINGTON BEACH 19131 Brookhurst 962..S58S . COSTA MESA 2299 H•rbor Bl vd. 6-4~3(13 DAILY PILOT WANT ADS BRING RESULTS Owner says sell this 3 Bdrm home on a contract with 6% % int. Payments could be approx. $224 a mo. with S5500 dn, or even" less 11.'ith a larger dn pymnt. Great BIG comer lot w/boat lt trlr acce1s, C'ncl patio loo!! Adult occupied & ready to move into, Owner anxious!! $28,250. Quick posse55Jon. ~COATS ~WA~CE REALTORS 546 4141- IOpon E-.lnpl ON THE CANAL Sail or fish from your door! Lovely 3 BR. 2 bath home. Only S,Jj,:ilO. George Wlllii1ms<1n REALTOR 673-4350 '73-1564 Eves. HAPPINESS only $39,950. sbow you lh1a one! ~2313 , 0 Tl!!.: RT:AL. ·"-ESTATl~RS STUNNING 2 br, '2 ba, w/a Cape C.od Atmoaphere. Near Irvine le 20th. New Custom draper-Colesw' ortlly &· Co. "'· ""H•bl• tor I ., 2 adult> . • l\10\/e in ~Ilion. Owner Newport Be:.ach Office may lease option or seU on 1028 Bayside Drive ~es contract. An outstand-6/a-4930 • 642-7777 mg value al S26,!MXl. Pete Barrett \ I~ ~V~cl':!!,, NB ·' 642-5200 ~ VIEW Professionally decornted 3 bedroom home will\ larre, paneled family room, wet bar, fonqal dining room &. !!!!!!!!!!""""!!!!!~!!!!!!~!'I den. 3 F'lreplact'a, beamed 2 Stary $35 900 ceilings, paneled aaragt' • • with cu.otorn ''""'"' oab;. i!I having a room for your Assu-,,,... neta. Pool site terrace with very own . .,ee this 5 bdnn 2 bath home at S32,950. S l/4 O/o Loan · sundt?cll. $74,950 CAUDELL REAL TY w;"";"• .,,...,.,. from en· john ·mGCft~b 546-.:>460 Eve1. ~JO lry hall, 4 bedrms, huge ~alty ro. DIAL direct 642-56'18. Charge \~mily l'ODm, with fireplace. (714) 642.S235 )'OUr ad, then sit back and dini~ rm, rear livin' nn, listen to the phone rin;! ~li'ZO. Now! TARBELL 29SS Horbor 901 Denier Drive, Su ite 11J Newport Be:ach \Vhat more could you ask'! Sep. matr. suite Ii 3 full ha. 4th BR. <:ould be oJc. or den. Lge. pool, spac. patio. SEE TODAY $17,500 "Our 25th Year" • WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO Realtors NE\vPORT CENTER nu San Joaquin Hilll Rd. 644-4910 NEED MONEY? To buy a new home~ ln1·esti- gate our guaranteed trade in plan. Let uS lllllwer your quf!.!Jtion with m <1bli1ation. Fair emugh ! ORANGE COUNTY'S LARGEST 2629 HARBOR BLVO. -0 OPEN EVES. TILL 1:30 5 Bedrooma a11um1 5%a,'. loan Elepnl home. 3 aeparate bnths, entry hall, family room. '1 fireplactti:. fUll din- ing room. !>J().1720. TARBELL 29S5 Htrbor ing, fresh new paint tbru· ""========:I dining roon1, huilt-in eppll-· out. 10% On, aalea contract, • ances. Park like 113 acre. · "Pre-tight Money Tmns." 5 Bdrms 3 Baths ow.mo. • Ideal location, ideal terms, SHAKE ROOF TARBELL 2955 Harbor , first time adv. Buyers only! 29 Carpets, drapes, built -ins, i ·950· fin'place, patio. Near a 11 ASSUME LARGE · 5V•Y· GI Thi1 \\'On't lasl long. Hurry! Hurry! Hurry! Bir 4 Plus Dining. Take over $19,000 GI loan Sl68.00 month Pm. t.1any n i c e appointments. $29,400. PAIJLowfillB CARNAHAN •l&LTY Ce. lCY.13 Baker. C.M. 5-16-5440 $39,950 2200 SQUARE FEET <If liv- ine area. F'ine resiclential area. ,Almos! immediate PDI· se1sion. Immaculate 4 bd· rm. home, dlnine rm &: lamily rm. Xlnt corner Jo. caUon -room fDr boat trail· er <Ir pool. Ad jacent to park and schools. CALL 545-8424 South Coast ReaJ E!ltate. &ctlools. $37,000 best of terms .. W1lls-McCardle, Rltrs. 1810 Newport Blvd., C.l'tf. 548-7729 644-0084 e\/t'!. Meso Verde 4 Bedrm + Fi1m ily rm. $24,950 Beauti(ul-Entry hall, large Jiving rm.. all modern kil- che!f, altn06t no down. 540-1720. TARBELL 29S5 Harbor A Prlv•te Glimpse lnto lhe excillng v.·orld or the most exclusive residential section in Dover Shores. 3 bc·and new models. <I Bel· rm1.. 3~) Ba. Sparkling pool. Roy J . Ward P.ealtor. 1430 Galaxy Dr. 646-1550. 4 BR. -$25, 9SO SpolleM! Ne1v carpets, Drap. e1, bltlns, hdwd . firs, 2 Baths. Comer lot. Priv. s1\1m club. \Valk to all schools! CORBIN · MARTIN REALTORS GT;i-1662 3036 E. Coast ff1,1y, O:l.\f Quick Sale Four bMrooms • lwo balhl . au built-ins -fireplace -: family room -carpets • sparkling condition. S2S,950. Good tenns. CALL 545-8Qf South Coul Real Estate. BEACH BARGAIN Lovely 4 BR. 3 ba. FamiJ,y rm. New cpts., drapei ; paJnt, bltns. I water htr. \Valk to ocean. On!:· $37,950. CAYWOOD REAL TY 63l6 \V. Coast 1-lwy., NB • 54S-1290 • $21,950 4 bd rm & fa mily rm Sharp & clean, entry hall, dining rm, fireplace, xtn baths. bullt·in applianoca, :'"10.17'.!0. TARBELL 29S5 Harbor 4 BR. 1-i.i, ba, tam rm. \Vestcl irt Plaza area, •ha.a cpts, shade trees. S28,~; Klngaan:I R.E. r.11 2-2222 l\E\VPORT Heights rambl- ing ranch 1tyle 3 bdrm, shake roof, frplc. S28,000. Kingaard R.E . ~II 2-2222 General 1000 I Generi1I 1000 I Generi1 I 1000 I Generi1I 1000 I General 1000 I General 1000 I General 1000 I General 1000 l General 1000 1r.,;)';;/;;;;1;;;;!~:i;;;=t~,EI!;;:·;;;· ~:_=t:_~~~~-==-N:_o:_w:_~1_s:r:_H:_E~:_1M:_~E:r .... o:_~a.:_";u_v:_::~;:;~~~;;:~.J ,; NEWPORT BEACH OFFICE 646·7711 2043 Wfttcllff Dr. at Irvine Open Evenings HIGH ON A HILL-NO DOWN G.I. hntuUc VIEW -fanl.nst1c TER?\IS~ Sparkling home with SLUt.tPSTONE FIREPLACE, Iainily roorn, built-Ins. The \IIB\V alone Is \vorth the price <11 ~ $27,000! ' NEWPORT HEIGHTS DELIGHT MUli\IC BEAt.1ED CEll.INCS and OO'l)' FIREPLACE lend charm to thl1 dellJhl- f f\l1 home. Larite, well landsca ped yard \\'ilh dt>tachl'd g~rai;::e. F.t.ly •troll lo 1-lar· : boflll&h and Wettcllff Plaza. At $26,500, y<1u better HURRY ! ) HAHOR HIGHLANDS llG FAMILY Sl'ICIAL ~ bedrooms. 3\t balhll, famJly room and delightful sunny POOL. DC!lllxt' featurn, too numerowi to mention. f or top value in an excellent family nela hbothood, try this tor tJu al ~7.500! WANT A IARGAIN 7 Ownt'1' moving next \\W k and hu priced for U.1 ?i1EDIATE SALE. FOR!''1AL Dl.'NING ROOM plus fa mllY room, 2 baths. built-ins brick P'IREPL/\CE. Btao- titul home and be'.f."uUfuJ r .k .A. loen tn assume at si;/ ':; annual rate. You \1•on't bell.e'Yfl thll much valur CQuld be olli¥ $23.9501 • COSTA MESA OFFICE-545-9491-545-0465 2790 HAHOR ILVD. Opte lwt•I ... •111 t P.M. SMALL DOWN PAYMENT Here's a. beauty "·ith 3 huge bedrooms and 2 baths. Gor geous brick fireplace. Dlshmaster kitchen with dishwasher. BeauUful carpets &: drapes. Older couple 1-eUrlng. Says sell with $1,400 total dov.·n on FHA uinns or NO DO\VN VA. Call for an appointment. COSTA MESA SHARrTE Clean as a whistle. Huit' 3 bedroom home "'ilh doublr bath1. Beamed c.ilina with gorgeom brick fireplaC(>. New car pet& I: drapes. Douhll' dC'tached &arllge. Assume $17,900 FHA 514 % &Mui.I percentage loan "'Ith pt1.Y1nen1& of Sl55«Xl P.L T.I. $1,240 TOTAL DOWN PAYMENT For FHA lf'rtnli on this 3 bedroom, 2 bath home thal needs 1ome Spic &: Span. l\todem built-ins for Mom. Carpel$ I Drapn. Ready for OCCUPIJlcy. Great (enced yard. Double Garagt. WHY RENT! ruu. PRICE of $22.900. TOTAL PAYMENT $1J4 PER MONTH Rn.1 sharp 3 bedroom, 2 bath home. fushly painted. GI loan of $15,800 at 5 % % annual inlernt. You c&n't beat It! S..rvice Porch. Double Ge.rage. Forced llr heat Compltte:I) fe.nc.d. Sprlnklen. Carpets It drapes lhroughout. Flmlly Room. Let u.s 1how it to you!! TOTAL PRICE $Zl ,tSO ror thl• ln1maculatf' 3 bedroom home on a beautiful tttf'·lined 1lrttl. Huie 1ivln1 room wHh romantic nrep.lace:. Ultra modern kitchen. 2 bllths. Completely Ce~ y•nt ,...,Ith Iott ot fruit tltt1. Double Gataae with elecUic door openu. Tcy $3,&IO dO\\'n. Total payment 1182 per month. . WI SILL A HOM• EYIRY 31 MINUTIS HUNTINGTON BEACH OFRCE-842-4455 7612 ldlnttr Open Evenings 01'1"0SIT9 HUNTINl3T0ff CINTl"a ANYONE CAN 9UALIFY 540-5140 for thi5 lovely 3 bedroom home, ankle deep shag carpets and custom drapes throughout Ta.ke over 51iii G.t. Joan of only $129 per n1onth or 10 G.I. with no cash down. Full price $23,900. Sl'ANISH HACIENDA IN OLD HUNTINGTON IEACH C.I. no cash need~ down on this scAsid£> gem, featuring carpels and drnpe!i. An ideal 11tarltt home for newlyweds. $2.'J.000 full prkt. Don't miss out on U1is once in a lifeUme \lalue. LAST ONE LEFT-$17,toO FULl PRICE Lcnv, low l)ftymcnls. $113 pe.r monlh, for this 3 bedroom, 2 baUt beauty wilh rich thick carpeUnr. Last one ln thil pric. r•nae. Hurry, immediate posaeulon. TAKE OVER roOL HOME Thl1 beautiful 5,. F.H.A. loan v.·lth payments of $156 per month pe..ys all on lhls 3 bedroom; 2 bl.th pool home. Lots of paUo and decking. $25.900 tu.u price: UNBEUEV AIL!!'/' , OWNU TlANSHUED-lMMIDIAR POSSISSION •.. ... on th\11 f bedroom be1ut.)', selllng for only $20.~. reaturt.n1 2 baths, eleco- trlc klkhcn, carpets: A drapes throughout. Total peryment of 1160 per monlh l"clud" SI: 14 r .H.A. annual loan. ' ~ ~= ·' - ' • • • . ~~~-~~~~-~-~--·~~-----~~---------------~~~---~~~~~~ .... - I: ' , ' •, ' " • ' t ------.... ,.~---,..-~ -~---~~ ........... ~--..-..·-----~-----~-~--·-r----~----·~~-·-------------~ -~-·· ·--·-~-.. -·---~-----. -./' Wtdntsda)', February 25, 1970 Wed...,day, Fobtuaty 25, 1970 OAILY Pl!,OT , HOUSES l'OR. SALE RINTALS RENTALS ---;-, REf:l'rALS RENTALS ,1aoo Unlvertl!;t Perk 1237 llalboe lllond • 1155 Logun• Niguel 1707 -Unfvrnlahecl ¥h-Fumlahecl Af>I'. furnl1hM ~11. Fuml1hecl RENTALS Apia. Fum..,.... ' 2 STORY * Iii RUBY * PAllOIWLIC Ocolll VI'* Coll• M.... tlOO 10;;';';";;;'°:;' ·;;;;;;;;;;' ;;;';;;.;'°;*;' ;G~e:;'"";':;"~' ;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;i•;;ooo; Coll• Mo•• 4100 c..,. -\ \ 41M 4 BR & FAMILY Thia~ the ONLY '2 story OPE N DAILY 1·5 cor. Jo!. Pvtbch. ~ 1MMAQ S !lr. 'Ba. CrplJ,I' 1 ;;~~~--~~~~i;;iiiiiiiiii~i;I 2ba,1600aqtt.1\lyra,......, home av,uJ&bl• ln Ule ""'Jiljtlbtnd,lz<.cbarmtngdu. Bay, $25,950. Ol·lSH, drpl, bl,.., Plllo.·Xlnt loc. II '4 tnl. to ocean, Very ~rp 1tra'ble TURTI..E R 0 CK plcx just 1teps to main bay • 4~ s= per mo. FamtUe, only. 1& clean. $31,000, area! 4 '?dm1* • tam~ upper unit has exli"a lge, RENTALS M6j386 aft &1 Ownr/Aat. Newport room 1 dlnu:ig room. 3 bathl. Hv. rm., trplc , ionnaJ din, Housu Furnlshtcl 2, 3 &: 4 BR wfpool. Xlat Less tN.n-· .one year old. rm., sunny kitch, w/brkfst. Loe. Near F'wf, Aatnt • S~ptnr ~ ot UCI • rm., 2 nice BR., one w/extra Rentals to Share , 2005 541).6213 countryside from upistaira. lounge or 1V room. Lower • ~==o-:=--..,..'"°" 3 car a:arage. FuU price unit bas nice liv. rm., trpl,, OEPENbABLE Middle Age 2 BDRM, New carpets A $45,950. din. area & 2 BR. Extra ~ Man with, 8 year old eon dl'llpe1, with atovt:. $1'15. PETTIT REAL TY CO, ba. ln 2 cu gar. Entire Wri1 wi,bta to 1¥bare '°"" home 2658 "G" ~A,.., C.M. (lnytlmt) ''The House of Homn'' c:ould be: U!ed u an ext.ra or rent estate cotta.ce. l BR, 2 BA, blt-m.. 2 &3J.0101 lge, 4 BR. home. TO BE 646--3716. flreplaota. draJ)H, C.OUep l'!~~~~~~~!!![iii"':~;:':~~"::"'""I SOLD nus WEEK. $85,IXXI. 1 _,,"'3-"nr=..,.-. l-to-,~.,'"""3~Br~ .. ~t. Park. $250. se.&OS l~to,ta Mesa ASSUME - -~nic Properties 675-5726 over 21. PrY t.r:n. Npt DELUXE ToWMouse 3 BR 2 i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;l;;l;;;OO;jAtmost new FHA loan on thlJ Peninsula. 673--0738 BA. Crpb, drps, bltm, pool r 4 BR. 2 ba. home in fbteat Huntington Beach 1400 LADY Will &hare 3 BR home $225 mo, 833-3.540 QUALITY BUILT -""" In Oran.-· w/ pool."""!. lady 5S-45. 3 BR"°""· Adwta only. No County! '.1'hi8 is your golden VACANT Rers. 642-7"5 aft 5. pets. $175. 1940 Pomona opportumty. $34,950. 3 ~·-•-•m•h Ha-'-nd A·-CM No down pymnt nendnd. OWi> e Red Hiii R 1ty ~ .. ~-~ a. ... . , er oU to Alaska. must sell! H Red ·tile Roof. Auume Costa Mesa 2100 -.-Co~ttag-,-,-,~BR.~-11-45-. -All Heavy shake roof, fireplace, Univ. Parle Center, Irvine $23,1tX! .• 6% VA,. loan. $1911----------util pa.id. Adults, no pets, down " Call Anytime 833-0820 per mo. incl. taxes. 2 Ba. oc•o: r""• 557 ••~ arep i.iv. rm., all bltn5, 2 BR. gar, patio. Quiet ~ or .........,,.,, cust covered patio, 3 large 3 BR Bonus rm. Cathedral 2 Yr.. new. 18 " 23 ft. liv. tropical settinl for adults. 1 2 Be.drm. complettl)' tt- Bedrm's &: family on corner cell~ Priced for quick nn. w/ Spanls)'I fi.repl. Pa-blk shops, $185. 544-002 painted, stove, children OK. lot. Full price on1y $27.500. sale by owner. 833-22M tio kitch, "'.'/ blt·ins. Tile -$lS5 rno. A.gt 642-4387 Na down VA or low flQwn entry & patio w/ fire.ring. Newport Bt11ch • 2200· $1S5. 3 BR house, fenced FHA, Heritage Real Es'9te,' I rvlne 1238 ~P carpet, custom drapes. l!~C;,all~54;\J.~ll~5~1..:;(o~pe=n:.:•ve:;•·~t;:~:=;~:;;:-J.;:-'h;;;~~I PVT. master bdrm., w/ bal. yard. $100 Oeanlng deposit ...,"" for sunbathing. 1 o•"-Mobile Home • Bayview. Call 645-2469. ~ 3 BR. 2 BA.. lge lam rm, --v ULll,. Adults $150 M Call OUT ot $t8.te . Owner: Must pool, tenni.11 courts etc. to park: · 67>17;· • 1 3200 Sell or Trade 4 br, 2 ba Crpts, drps, many other ex-...... :'l!l'llll!lll!l'I• "'='==='======I Newport Bt11ch home. 258 Sherwood St. CoU tra.s. color TV, tape deck, ~pj!f111Vjllj1 Balboa lal1ind 2S55 Santa Ana Ave, C.M,) Ph. etr. $42,SOO, 833-2899 ~ B/8 64S-8058. 1=========1 • .;..;:::~:.::~:..:.~ Adults Only 3 BDRM. 111 BATII. Lrg Eastbluff 1242 GI No Down so. BAYFRDNT ~BR. 2 ba ..... split , .. ~ $265 family nn, Range & refrlgl----~lji~~-~~I HOUSE" · 2 BR.% baths .......... $2'J5 1-incl. Will sell on low downjl BLUFFS *POOL* 2 Story, 4 lxlrms, For Rent AVAILABLE NOW <>r di scount f<>r cash. Owner. l"' ba'"-.. _ _.,........, ,,_ Little Balboa Isl. Bay & Beach Realty, Inc. '83S-83M · Ll~DA PLANS :w cp"t,,~' h,;;.;;;;: F~;_: Right on the water w/ sandy 901 Dover Dr. Suite 126 NB , ESTATE SALE Out!tandmg ~·Sty. 3 BR. 2 ed, cov patio w/ga.s BBQ pil bch & buoy. Comer hse, &45-2000 Eves. MU!l66 , Bedroom home-. Eastside ba., priy •. patios: choice cor. BRASHEAR REAL TY covered w/cedar shakes, TOWNHOUSE: 3 BR, 2~ , Costa Mesa. R·2 zone Lot ner ~tions" Ownen want 847..s507 Eves. 64Ul4%7 furn. Llv. nn, S br's 3 ba's, BA, frplc. patio, pool, 2 car ( 50 x 127 INCOME POTENT action. QUICK POSSES-511 ..,_ GI 1 B 3 2 frplc's, Modern kitchen, gar, all bllns, crpta, drps. ' IAL : · * SION Priced from $39 900 .,.. 70 oan. Y owner · root deck I ed Oc Lse $275 mo. 871-88U or 543-72~~~~,~~;~:· please. to $43,ooo. Call today • these NBr, 2 palea.,tam rmbe. !28·9.""tt' untU Jun~ 1::::: Couplecu:; 642-2497 eves or wkends. can't last! ew n , nr. a~h, o fa il $350 Pri CRIFICE! Leaving state. Eastblutf Realty fi44..ll33 Brookhurst, • 22101 c:Il &.1313. mo. ·v. pty. DELUXE Townhouse 2 Br, 2 Lo\Ydown.Twosingltfaml· Clpistrano l.n. $4000 dn, B&, frpJC, pool. $250. 'ly home! on corner lot, west $5,000 2nd TD. $168 mo. Im· 1010 SO. BAYFRONT Bayftont apt $350. Agt. Harbor Shopping Center. med posses. 492-3285, 1to10 yr. lease for best toe. 646--0732 5'8--239' alter 6 pm. ~~ dtl M11r 12501.;:968-41:::..:::"=-------Beaut. 4 BR. 3~ bath home EASJ'BLUFF exec. Jlome.... 5 EASTBLUFF~.600 RUN & 1 BR. 2 bath apt. & % boat Br. Immac. $395 Mo., tease 1110 Nothing better at Uris price, DOWN pier & dock. Furn. $1200. 2354 Alta Vista 644-1554 Linda Isle Development 3 BR "ea d l t 1-~-------· I size or location! 4. BR. + So 00 down G.l .. 1 or min. BILL GRUNDY 675-3210 , .. up ex. new cp s, IASSUME 5% Wan or $20,500 all purpose ram. rm. ~nter dn. FHA 3 BR + pool. drps; dllhwhr, bltna. Nr bch. on. 4 big BR's + tam hn. hall plan. Extra ba's., din-h R ' I E M $370 mo/yrly. Furn/unfutn. $230 mo be. 540-7573 µt!O aq ft, decor. drapes &: ett~ o!f ldtch. Good sized T e •:..7.aS~~te art Dellghtlul 2 Br. 2 Ba, frpl,.2 """· $28,5l\O by owner. lot, lncd. Sparidlng clean. A """gor, 2 pa!jo,, dock. Unlvenlty Porte 3237 'JW5-7700 real blty! tevn. 646:6227) $4N5oSOs.i::Ns • ~:so only, ·no peJs. LEAsES AVAILABLE ~ BR, 2 BA, family rm, 2 l klr 13 " •oo A~sume low lnl FHA loan, CHA.fu'1.ING 3 Br, Furn'-'"· All have frplc1., blt-lns I cs, l'iprn . ••-• uu I --2 ba •-Prine olliy, 54&-3518 $1M total per mG. lmmacu. ed, Beach house, S2!i0 mo, at e..,,., tu.:1. ' JUST· FOR SINGLE PEOPLE The Soutli Bay Club Apts. are an apartment/ resort built just for single adults. The apart· men ts are single, one · and two . bedrooms. ~ed . and unfumished. frofe&Sionally deoorated with air conditioning available. Automatic fireplaces available in selected apts. Th• resort It $750,000 worth of recr111tlon1I f1clllti11 futurlng: Night Llghtod Te11nl1, Volleyboll A llaakotboll Courll Ten~l1 Pro A Pro Shop Olympic SI•• ·Swimming Pool ond HNtod Whirlpool Men'• & Women'• Health Clubs With Sauna S.ths Indoor Golf Drlvlftg ~nt• Biiiiard, Card, and Conf1r1nc1 Rooms Party Room With Dance Ar11 Buffet and Wet Bar c;olor TV & Flr1plac1 Lounges luxury Elevetor Buildings With S.Curlty Guard S.rvlce And Ample Portclng Mode~s Open Until 8 p.m. Dally Rents from $145 to $300 lmmediett OccUJNncy Morith to Month Leaaes Available SOUTH_ BAY CLUB APARTMENTS Now Leasing In NEWPORT BEACH 880 lrvlnt {Irvine and 16th St.) 1714) 645.0550 late. Won't last! Hurry~ Avail til June 20. li7M685 'Newport Beach 1200 HAFFDAL REAL TY eves 4 BR. & lam, rm. Immac. ... ' 842 u•5 tond. Mov• ;,, TODAY @ GARDEN GROVE -4 BR hse, turn. $350 Mo, yr-$350 COSTA MES-A'S 2 Finest Gorden Apt Complexes F&ATURING ALL MODERN At!\INITIE5 " PALM MESA Ap•rl."1ents Next to tbe Santa Ana Couotry Club. Just East ot Saota Ana Ave. on Mesa 'Drive. Call 546-9860 VILLA POMONA Apartments South on Pomona Ave., at 18th Street Call 642-n&6 BACHELOR. I A 2 BEDROOMS Furnished & Unfurnished Adults Only -No I'm -~----· Costa Mtt• 4100 Cost• Mesa · 4100' : =.:...:.:.:=---..:.::::: .. * * S.UNNY * sus CASITAS >Um. I BR Apts. Adulla ACRES oi>ly, no pets. 2110 Newport * . . Blvd, CM. 642-9286 * Motel·Apts * BACHEWR apt. Furn. 1 ' responsible aduJt No pets. 2 ! blocks trom Newport•& 22nd , 1 algnal So. of O.C. St. SllO·pays all. 549--3875 : Falrgrounds LRG Bachelor apt, nicely , Stucfto & 1 ledroom1 furn, employed adull Mgr : $30 WK. & UP 2885 Mendoza Dr. Apt A. Day, Wffl:, Month 54>-5421 or 540-6338 •Kitchens .·.TV's incl. 1 br. Util paid. $105 •Phone aerv., hld pool month. Want mature ma.IL • Ma.id service avail. alter 4 PM * 6G6191 2376 NEWPORT ILYD. l=======::.I 541-9755 Newport ~•ch -·-··-----· 4200 CASA de Of!O NEW 3 k 4 br, 2 ba, trple, % Casual catit, Livlnt ln wann blk from bay &: ocean. furn Med. atmosphere, Spacious or unt. $275 &: $300. Mo. Call color co • ordinated apts, 1 _6_7>-~-~=~-----­ De11igned & turn. for l BR f\lrn & "unfurn .st:Yli &: comfort. * Pvt pa. $150-$175. Cpts, drpa, bltns, tio * B-Q-Q * Shag cpts pool, patio. 1525 {'omona. * Gar w/ storage * Heated 2 BDRM. $225 mo )'Urly pool * Kitchen w/ indirect lease. Owner/~nt. Mt. lighting, deluxe o v e n & Gundersen, fi73....6%10 i'ange. 1· BDRM. $175 incl, ========= utll, 2 BDRJ.t. $195 Incl. utll. Coronll ~ti Mir Adults, no pets. 365 W. wu: · 4250 aon St. 542-ffiTl. ---------LARGE studio apt. $100 mo. HARBOR TOWNHOUSE yeorly. Util pd. 6'1>-1055 oft 5 or wlmda. ~ 1 ROOM Bachelol' Unit. ~ Small, compact, clean. $80. / Utll incl. 613-2125 • J PECTACULAR VIEW FOR SALE BY OWNER E~TIVE Home .. 5 Jy. uut paid. Blt·ins. can mo. 13100 Cha£m1n Avenu. , of HARBOR House & garage aPt on I lo!· BR's, 3 bath&, a.'lsume GI, 1 ~";;&-:;;:"'°:=::,====== 3 BR.+ din. nn. +LARGE (4 blks.(;'14.) 63an!•")OA3n01 Fwy.) m1 lfarbor near Wilson j & LIDO ISLE E eh 2 b~, 2 ba. Rear uni! ~w::;e<::::;k::;mo:=,ve;:,::ln:;.,;"::'=--0=163:=,=,I-A·-·t li""1 e l BR. Town""u'' n'ln Balboa Island 4355 1 C"-nt ctm $215 D I F 2975 aep. rec. room. • .. 1 . ap-'"' """" ' .... e m e mo. up e•e1 urn. ll •-• pool Adu! ! . ,. prox. March 15th @ $360 mo. • eau." * t only :3 Bedroom + e.'<lra room. Charm~g front. unit. ~le, Huntington ANAHEIM • 'o pets. Adj lo shopping DELUXE Baylronl 2 BR, 1 · ·Existing loan 7%. 1st TD Vbay wind! &ow~J'me, paneh~g. H11rbour 1405 $130. UTIL paid. 1 BR.. Near 3 BR. +din. nn. Choice cur. Now I I f .,_ h BA, trplc, aarage. Avail Im· 1 aca.r reauy o move m. ocean. Child ok. ner loc. Avail. March 20Ui eas ng or m.rc occupancy DEL~ Condo. 3 BR. 2 med. ID June 15. $300. :·, Price $49,500 with $16,oooi---------2n S. Brookhurst St. BA 0rp / 231 Santa Ana .Ave, down. Call G73.52l8. LIQUIDATION-New 3 BR Bkr, 534-6980 @ $325 Mo. • s, w w crpls, 61:.-TI56 or fiTh-4000 " (S. of CliU Drivel IMMACULATE and cheer1ul homes. 4Ul1 Branford St. $110 * 1 BR. Yard & garage. PETTIT REAL TY CO. {1 blk. So. of Lincoln) dlahwhr. prv. patiG. S210 un· BALBOA Island* lBR upper :·: $·16,00J, BY OWNER. nLargice e2 :i~h~m;;th R·!nlngloL ~·:~! ~7~~~/Agt. Avail 1:';, 534-6980 ''Tht H=~l Homts'' (714) n2-4500 ~~~~ .. ~m tumthna Nr.~ ;~!:r~~::·:ri:35 mo l! 67a.3982 ~ area ---i.. dnpe• A RENTALS 2 Bdnm. 2 bath> ...... $250 RENTALS CHATEAU LA POI -~ , AQUARIUS pxl b;:""' • Santa Ana Hgts. 1630 Houses UnfurnlsMd Avail. tor 6 mGS. General 4000 NTE Huntington Be ...... 4400 ~; :'fou have an eye to the fu-MORGAN R,EALTV 2 BR. 2 ba. yr. lae •••• S290 Houses Unfurnished -""""--""----.;;;;;; 1 Lovety 2 BR apll w/ pool, NEW SOUNDPROOF' PRIVT :: • ture! Invest now tn o~ of ,,.,., ,,...~,. 3 BEDROOM hd d '' Gtntr1I 3000 2 BR. 2 baths ......., The GORGEOUS N carports, Walk to shop'g. '' • the few remaining duplex •·~~ E :.:.~Hwy CdM in-e lot, c'lose wto ue~'. 4 BR. 2 baths :::::::::: i3i'5 Fountain Valley 3410 VAL D'ISERE~ Adults, no pets. l15CJ.tl.60 Bil ~~toavail Feb • .20 &G Mar 1 !! !Jots in a quiet, beach loca·I~==~·~~=~',...;'"'_,:;;.:.... ~l. Furnished with cpts ** RENTALS * 3 Bdrnu. 2 baths. plus 4 BR, 2 ba. r.rplc., bit-ins, per mo. 1941 Pomona, CM. 202,\ 14:e~U19 ~ !; '.tion. $25,000 2501 OCEAN BLVD. f · * Bonus Room! •••.•••. $340 cul-de-sac. $230. Avai l Slngle-1 br-l br. Fum •• unf. SHARP Bachelor unit. Cl01'ie ' ' "" : : Hal Pinch in & Assoc. S OPElarN DAIL V 1·5 ~sh~~er, ~her~;:~: ~ ~~urn 1 BR cottage, 3 Bdrms. 2 baths ...... $325 3/1/70. Call 54o-68J7 Sauna, Aet'y Rm, Billiards to DCC & UCJ. $13S pay all. BACHELOR Unit, walk to :: : REAL ESTATE pccta~u , panoramic vlew S2l,800, Vets no down, FHA e RED H1LJ. REALTY !==========-Therapy & 45' pool, BBQs References required. Avail bcb, w/util, $85. Avail now.•: 3900 E. Coai;t H1vy. Ci'i"":>-4392 alof. entireF b~, plocean It Cat·1.::;Jo:;w;:dn:;:·::Br:==kr::·:;54s.-081:=,::;''=:= 1 s: ~~T; ;t ~~. hse, fnd Univ. Park Center, Irvine Westminster 3612 2000 Pa.rson1 Rd,, 642-8670 2/1/70. &15-4819 Call 536-3507. •! BLUF''S 3 B 2 1na. eoe sun e. 1; $170 1 ~ "d 2 B Call Anytime 833-0820 $95 • LRG 2 BR.. Avail Mar L LARGE 1 Bdnn -w tum. t -r. BA, 1 Rich Irwin Roeltor • ft-h un um £r<>• e R hrn, 3 BR 2 B ..,.,., Ca Child • ·~ L ft-ech 4-• '.J~v el , corner green 2413 E Co 't H Lagun11 PWaC 1705 trplc, families welcomed. AVAIL. Approx. April 1, 4 drape' s, b~t-i~;'. :'trig. ~5"'11 --~'~:::pekr:.:l..:?::.,.K:_.~:=":__ crplB drp1 bll·ins No pell agunll ._ ,_ •' bel~/vic\v. Cov. w a 11 ed-Mac Ar!.h~ ~M ~ $140 unfurn 2 BR Duplex, hr, 2% ba, next to park Nautucket. 633-3282 .w'l • J<>'t"V<IOV ,:1885,;;;.;'•::-le-nd':::'o"':";;".,."-754':'-21'-::-1----'------t,! patio, cus. drps "''shutters ' HANDYMAN stove, re!rlg, tot ok. area. $325 mo. 54.8-7409 aft ===,====== SU) • UTIL pa1d. Bachelor 1 Bdrm furn/unfurn. Drpg, THE NEW VILLAGE INN ·l -+ extras, Walk to shops, • Open Da1S'ly 1·5 e SPECIAL $SS furn 1 BR apt. Ulil pd. 5. L•nuna' Beach over garages. Pet OK. w/w crpts, pool, pvt bal. Fi:_nnerly trnSaddl128eback w!:'. :! 'Cdl\f Hi, O\vnr $32,500. 716 LARK PUR Here's a real buy. Oiannlng Adults only. --• 3705 Bkr, 534-6980 836-5794 aft 3 pm. CM gu.na, m a •: ·644-4265 Immaculate 2 BR. home ranch styl.e home, SITUAT· $140 furn 2 BR apt. Play Corona dtl Mar 3250 I====:;.,;:;_;;:;:;==-Lovely apll. All utll'a, :1 e DUPLEX e Dt.argeON v".'""' FRAredNP"KboL. 1 .N ED ON LGE. LOT, NE~ area for child. Avail now, ---------535 Mont~rery Drive: 2 BR. Costa Mesa 4100 I BR. FURN. APT. linens.1 maid, pool, laundry '; NEAR OCAN ED BENEATJT TOWERING MANY OTI-1.ERS DEWXE 3 BR. 2 Ba., cpts, den, 1%. BA, 2-car gar, Furn. 2831 S. BNtol, CM rm. S!eps to beach, 696 S. t• 3 Bclrms. 8t. 2 baths eadi REAL TOR SHADE TREES, WHERE Free to Landlords drapes, frpl. J290 or untum. Avail. Apr, May $135 PER in" Dlx Mobile F11RN. 1 br apt Incl utll. Cout Hwy. f94..SU5 :: :UJ'lif, Buy this deluxe du-e 673-2222 e THE COOL GREEN OF NA· Blue Beacon Ri?ntal Finders -===Ag='=e=n=t ="="='=6'2==::. & June (ow;lf:r occupies Home compl. furn, Htd Reck rm & pool. 1959 Maple OCEAN Front studio apt for 1.• _plex, Live In one & rent the TURE .ABOUNDS IN A 435 W. 19th St, CM 645-0lll --Crom July thru Aug); avail. pool, adults. 4 Season'• Ave., C.M. Mgr. Apt, 5. one available until July 1. ~: B Ibo P • I 1300 0 Huntington Beach 3400 tor winter rental from Sept. Mob. Est. 2359 Np( Blvd. • NASSAU PALMS • No garage. $105 mo. Mature ; •othl'r. $'.''l4,500. a a en1nsu a QUIET AIR F SECLUS. $14D • 3 BR. R/O, Refrig & 543--6332 Graham Rlty, 646-2. 414 BALBOA PENIN POINT ION. A pleasant wa1k from "'asher. Children & pet OK. TOWNHOUSE. 3 BR. 1\S on. Call collect after 6: 2U: :::::...::::_______ 1 & 2 BR. POOL person pref. 61-4900 :· N N n. OU th be h Bkr 534-698o d 275-3069. DELUXE 1 br. Just com-11'1 E. 2'lnd St. 642-3645 1 BR. avail. now. Single ......... ; ear ewpnrtrvst ice lBR 2 BAho e ac , '-=·~.;,,·=--~-~-BA, cpts, rps, carport,=========:::: p'leted. ~~ri&ldalro ap. nl ·~Inc UL-•~, ' . ' me on corner OF'-fashionl'<l. ~...1or type ~LAKEFRo·~ Lak• Fore•! -1 962-9911 4-6 PM Mon F1JRN bac•·•-r apt. 100 "tl 0 Y· ..,,, u .. v.-' · 4 BDRM DEN Vie of bch ocean & ts ""' ....,... "' ...,,,.. · · · ' Dupltnt Unfurn. 3975 pllance1. Queen 1z bed, """" " s~t <97 ·-• · : • w ' . m · liv. rm. H AS OAKEN new 2 Br, 2 Ba, plush crpta, Wed., Fri./Or 962-5870 Sat comp! crpted. Call· 548-7027 incl. E-side. single working u""'" · .......... . UPPER BAY• $35,500 ~n~unny~~rlv; .. ~~· 1f: PLANK FLOORS, WOOD & drps. SJOO mo. 494..8463 & Sun PENINSULA Point. 2 BR., art s. m;;:'"o;;;'"~l',Y·:,:54:.:":...::""::'=:,,....,~ BACHELOR, nioe, util. pd., %306 Redlands ... A .. A393 • ' ....... .,... • • • PANELED WALL, cozy d ' b h ----------' be h • to -to .,..,,..... h t h tiers hdrwd fin IMMAC. Ex. Ltg 3 br, 2 ba en, at , next to bay & $150 VERY nice 3 BR. Mob. near ac wn. _. BLUFFS 3 BR 2 11 ea' II u ' . . ' LOG BURNING FIRE-C I M 3100 -· I ~t d bit beach ••~ m y,., ... ,.,. 1 BR dup]ex, partially furn., 5 J"-'"' -• , BA, sp t· dbl gar, bll-tn ste~ winng PLACE IN ANT 1 QUE D ..2!_•-.,!.!~ ----"'-;.; uup ex ..... P , rps, -ns. E gJ"""boa B'tvd' uy. ~ water & lardener J>4ld. No Hm. $9 2 BR trlr. 132 W. .:::;-==:~·::~==:;=====E ~ level condo, $29,7:10 or & ant. Access pnv, bch ' DESIGN C te hall Lrg. lovely priv. yard. Gar. · • No. A children, no petJJ, elderly W~il.,~n:.C, ;CM~ . .;""::..:95=77"==--.. leasl'/opUon. 644-2039 bGat ramp. Sa1e by Owner. . en r . opens DESIRABLE + huge park'g. $195, Re· 875-6952, (213) 864-18t6 ·pref'd. $100 mo. 974-B W. ii65 BEAUT. furn. 2 BR ex* ,H;.;o:.;t.:el:.:• _____ 4.;.97:.;.;SCf:,'. BAYFRONT PENTHOUSE ($65 COO) 673-8413 to the 2 bdrml!., serviced by HOME spon. Married Adlts. 842-3276 RENTALS 17th S """ -.z.• d M b fl 133 E 16th " ' centra1 4 FIXTURE BATH. 3 Br., 2 ba, cptd, drps, forced t. ~.... pan ° 0 • m, · Lido Shores Hotel .... Oop~k,r.a~!~.SOOvi~1''io27~Rd,n27B~,•,· 504 W. BAY AVE. KOPPER KETTL::: KITOt· air heat. Garb-disp, blt-ins, NEW HOME FOR LEASE Apt1. Furnished •QUIF:I' 2 Bdnn Duplex. St. Sp. 16, CM. 646-773.1 Bayfront kitchenette iuJtes .' 1 .. 1~ Mcl~n:ric. Rltr ,,.,, ,,.,32 Charming new 3 bdrm, 2 ba. EN WITH ELEC. RANGE patio, ga.ragt!, water furn. 4 Br, family room. 3 Ba, car. Gtntrlll Bll·ins, pr, patio. &side. 1 BR turn Duplex In Costa 1rorn $255 mo. Sulte1 Ii ·~ ,·,===·======~=:=o'I &: OVEN, CERAMIC TILE, Adults <>nly, no pets. pets, drapes, l~SIJ than mile 4000 AduJta, no pets. Mesa. Quiet. No dogs. rooms by day or week. !' 1' M~iterranean style; build· ETC. OPENS TO SEPAR· RATE REASONABLE to beach. Only $l25 monthly, HOLIDAY PLAZA -=,;"';;,,;16;;th;,;P1,;;·:642';,;;,;1298~=..:_====""="'°==== Phones, maid, ooffee, lee. •tf Newport Heights 121C er 1 home, top quall!f thru· ATE BRKFST RM. Across from Country Cluh DALBEY REALTY 5J6.Zs:tJ DELUXE, Spacious 1 Bdrm ;;:: 617 Lltlo Park Dr. 613-Sll(X) ·: out. Top loc. {occupied). ...,.,__ · . . Ph 548-LEASE OPTION Lo I l N ft-ch 4200N B h 4200 ,. OPEN Daily l-5, 3 Bclnns & Linda Isle Development • ue spacious rear grounds 275 l\1esa Dr. * . ....,,..... ve Y ike Furn apt $135 plus util. twport -• twport eac Apts. Unfurnished i! . nd 6 have sheltered arbor type FINE 3 b 2 b ho I be 1 new 4 Br 2 Ba, frplc, blt·lnl, Healed nnn!, ample ...... lri .... , I~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; Pool. 3 car garage. Brokers 8111 Gru y 75-3210 pat·,, to--• -~en . k· r, a me n s crp•-drp• l•ncnd l''Kll ...,,,.. ,.._ ....... ,. II ,.,__ I 5000 ·-l-me. 522 El Modena. • ""'""" gcuu , p1c area near WestcliU Plaia & ..,, • • .....,.,. No children -M pets. nd n.... 1 I d' Oc ""'ntra · ..... ~.... t t t-T LOO 968-6382 1965 c Gra -,.....n ng -mme 1ett cupancy Vogel Co Ritts, 2667 E. e ence. TIA KS TO schJs. Lrg fam r111 w/frplc, eves. Pomona, .M. OOD Coast Hwy. Cd?il. 67l-21J20 Lido Isle 1351 :EB~~~ ~~~\~°.i'h~ ~~~h g:;.· c~;~y~o~~ 4,:·~o~is~~l~ltireplace. $~t! :i~~x. Chlldn!n 0 A KW Newrort Shores 1220 SPACIOUS ~~~:i,~~c~:e,r i::& ~::~ ~"=6-4~7ll,;;';:r,,;833--0;:;;;226;:==-====='":='-,:2950;;;,==="'-'==;::Bl<r;, ;::534<;=:;980;,== The best of two worlds • • NEWPORT Custom built family home It 's an ou l~tanding buy fnr General 3000 I Gtntr11I 3000 I Gtn•r•I 3000 your home and your country club , 4 Bdrna., den, 31'. batlq, $25,950 FULL PRICE SHORES S76.500 LOWER ON. PYMT. O.K, For your .,ome, t•lec.t from •sin9le, one and !II 500 LIDO REAL TY INC. MISSION REALTY S@ 4U~ ~ fl' two bedroom •p•rfment1. Furni•htd or un· ~25, 3377 Via Lido 673·7300 985 So. Coa~t Hwy .. Laguna "O -' 'C . C:::.9 furnlth•d, each is professionally d•c.orat•d 2'Blocks 10 the ocean '-'block Phone (714) 4~731 · I." Jj iJ end include• carp•ting, dreperies, 111-•l•ctric ., oomm. recreation conler ENJOY BEACH Tbe Puule witlt the Built-In Cltud:le w .. t;n9ho,.. •ppH•····· • I 0 ro 9 • op••• ·A pool. 3 Bcdroon\S 2 baths. LIDO ISLE CONDOMINIUM epltnty ond priv1te ba lcony p1tio. Jireplace, double gange. ~ This Summer 9 t ... 1ange ..,..,. of th9 t.owest priced home in this 4 BR. baytront home with SPACIOUS 2 BR· fO\Jf' ltiombled 'MWdl b. J ust steps from your door i1 t whole w,::irld llne area. Try 10% down. 1 & ·'I ,.._ .-.~000 2 BATH low to form four ·slmplt words " of •11clusive country club r•c.re1tion: Walk~r Rlty. 67S-5200 fuat 100 yanls from private K EC NOB "' Re•id•nt Tennis Prof•11ion•I and Shop 646-7171 per ,.. P. r(VQl. ~........ . Facing beautiful Large pool I . Profts•ion•I •ii• T•nnl• Courts 1-a·THEREAL \"'-ESTATERS '-r.•, • ' 3366 Via Lido, NB Open SUn. beach. Laguna area, perfect • I 1· r I I • Oly!"'r.ic siz• Swimmin9 Pool 3 BR. Den, 2% BA. Con. for year round llving. in· -• -• • • Whir pool Baths temporary, A re h 1 le ct vestment or rentals. Selling • Piddle Tennis, Voll•yball, Bask•tball designed & bll Lo int. completely tumltihed in strlk AU CC 0 I A Courts 1 Dov Sho 1 1227 transferable loan. By ill;( locale decor. Two stmi I I II I 1 er rt Owner. POOne ~ 6'J3..28St for with lower carport, slorap, ' f And • 20,000 •quart foot clubhous• off•t1 appt. laundry. Fully maintained • • . • • r th••• featur••= REGAL -SPACIOUS $56,500. 3 BR. 2 BA. Open i'CJrgeou1 grounds include 2 1 , • S•ptr1te M•n's •nd Women's 'COMPLETE VIEW Thurs 1-4 PM. 119 Via poob, te:inis, etc.; clOllC: to i-..:'F;..;.l.oT..;A~N:,-..,..~ SpMakJng obollt his optro-Heelth Clubs with Saunas ~y & Mtns. 4 Br, 4% Ba Yella. Call S.D. 454-6448 super mkt., &bopping, Coast I I I r floni.,... doctor removed my • ln·cfoor Golf Driving Range, •+ m11.ids. ltigh ceilings. Hwy. Excellent buy, mus! :=~-==-=~-==~....,•pine. After the operation, Billiards Room • 5000 sq ft bullt around court. see to appreclaie. Shown fhty c:arri9d me home In o * Theatr• TV loun9t, Art Studio, A car gar. E-Z maint Im-TIME FOR upon apptmt by owner, I p IC 8 ES 1-.• 'l•J.J Party Rooms lnnd occp. 1178,00\I. r..;,.1gh. phone <99-2152 or 837....,, ~-,;..;;..;_:;;.;;;.;r.--r-r_, A Comple!e the douddo ·-M d I 0 I A .. T p" D I ed. A""me 61111 loon. Own. 9UICK CASH FORCED SALE 1 I I I' I V br ft\""° In Ille ml-_. 0 ' 0 pen O ,M . 0 8 •M· •; Y *' 54~™9. EMERALD BAY Fab. Vl!W - -- -. ,,........,,,bono ... No.3be<ow. RINTS HOM $1J5-$310 Un;verslty Perk 1237 THROUGH A ~'.";' .::i:..'1.!i. ~~: e "\~~r.~~~~.lfTTfll.S IN I' r I' I' I' r I 3 BDRM BY OWNER. Lese than l yr old. Walldrv dillt DAILY PILOT ::'~ 000nG6~000· Now, a.'1<\n; .,. UNSCRAM8lf AOOVf tfllfll.S I I I I I I J • .....,, . .,.,.,, oan. Muat V TO GET ANSWER OAKWOOD GARDEN APARTMENTS • to schools 1:; sttopplna cen1er, 1 ft.U.2036 tor •PPL WANT AD be "''d by April Jet for hl&h- est bid. Fttll 6~ to Brn)ren. 0wner <!M-1385 or <94.ooso. SCRAM-Lm ANSWERS IN CLASSIFICATION 7800 1700 • 16th StrHI, Newport IHch Phone' 642·8170 . " • VEN DOME IMMACULATE AP'l'Sl ADULT le FAMILY • SECTIONS AVAn.ABLE CloN to lhoODlna, P•rk .; * Spacious sari, {Ba :: .. * 2 Bedrooml • : * SWim Pool, Pat/l'f'MD :• * Fop~ lndlv /lndey lac'll •: 1845 Aneleelm Ave. :: CX>SrA MESA &a-mt :l !!!!!!!~~!!!!!!!!!-I ~ • RENT • :1 • J Rooms FumituN .. ·! $19.95 & UI' ?:otith-To-Mooth l\efttall ~I WIDE SELECl10N ;1 110 DEPOSIT 0 .A.C. 'l ll1'RC Furniture Rentahe l 517 W. 19th, CM 5<8-3481 1l ., IJ,20) • 2 BR. 11/0, W/W l' ~. cbildren le: pet; • welcomed. .1; Bkr, 5.14.mo :; ., $75 • UTIL palct Batbetor. :• Yard re.trig, W/W, drpa. ~; Avail now. Bkr, 534-«MKI •l ., $96 • 1 BR. NEWLY ~: D£C0RATEO. !ii Bkr, 53US80 :: Coste Mose ., •• SIM ., " :· 2 BR Duple.,, Fully apt'd. drpd. c.rport. ''"""' -· 1 or 2 ch~ ok. No pets. Rt~. l13S mo. 66-2191 . - ~: " .. ;. •I ., l h l I I I ! ) I· ( 1· I I I I \ • 1 , ............... "'· ., .. ~ - ' See A-rd WlllllliMJ MERRIMAC WOODS! Orang• County's Most lentlfiil Apar1111ent C-multy · FEATURING A :cLUB A TMO~Pfµ:RE , F0R YOUR COMFORT AND PLEASURE Just completed 1 or 2 a.dl]Olll, 2 S.th. fumlstt.d or Unfurnished. "tr-conCI.; •m ceilintis. 'dishwHh.,.,, lush l•nd~_,Jng .~Ith strffm• & wat-.rfalls, elev1tor1, BIQ's, club- THE~'i': · Luxurious Spacleu1 OaWmAparlmefttl OU~dn(: -• • · · Private.' P.iliol ·:· · ' ,, .. -. .1 Keated Lanai Poot , , ',., •. ~Fettllmalellaa¢ : , I lledr'm • '$175•$275 : 2 . ...,r'm S2$ • 500 ' 2; ~".'.?' ;" r;>o~ 'f~ I • 91' lloyi!CI! Dr,. N.11. · : Pi.-67J.1414 . ' Wednad11, Ftbrill•Y 2S, 1910 PILOT -AOVERTISU 29 '!\; . , ........... IMJ .... fh* .. lfr tlll,.._ ~-Are Open 8:00 aim •• S:Jo· jl.m. -· 9 to Noon Saturday -Cloied Sunday DIAL DIRECT ••. 642-5678 -. WESmJNSTER & NORTH COUNTY DIAL FREE 540-1220 Hunllftllen ' lloach: $40o 1220 L19un1 lloach: 494-- Hours-Re9ul11tions-Pe11dllnes lllOl:lt .-.wwtllert eMuld check tMb! • dally and ,.,.rt lmnMlllliattfy _er"" er mltcSaMlflce....._ THI DAILY PILOT.., • ..,.. UaWllty fer •Nn wmJ the •xhi(it ti 1M1llillthln1 tht; a4wll'f'Ulfnent corrtttly ent tlma. , DIADLINI P'Oa COf'Y AND klLLI: l :M P.M. tM llay ...... puMlutMR, QCIMt '. '-WeakMll Mitton •nd Monday Ndlont wMn clNIRt ti.,.. II Isa PM , ... ,. ...._house with so:ei•I 4ctivltiea. .llUfll"-, Jec~I & swim pools, private gar ... ..i/stor .... FROM $140 • $210. Adullt plNM. Jutl EHi of 2600 Harbor Blvd., next te Nabers CiclJJ. , 1 lac at 425 Merrimac Way, Costa Mesi. 54> •SINGLES.FROM SWO 6300. Everything new. Move in nowt • 2 BR 1% BA FROM $2'25 5Hl ' . PRIV. Room. La undr y, KitcliUl A TV Prtvil. Gd YOU MUST HAVI KILL NUMllltl When kllllnt •n M Nn!M .t •kk !!'!'~iii ~ .,. te Mat• • ncanl ·of the kill nvmlttr 11Ytin YM .., Ytw M taltw • varflkatlM ef pur ulL ' ' J~~~~~~~~::!"j'~~~~!!!!!~~~le:BR2BA~OMS260 . Loe. fT5, 296 Walnut St., HA VE. ELECTRONIC 'oa.. C.M. pn worth $1f75, W ILL SLEEPING nn.. priv. home. SSNAP tor ~te model ear, For .MEN unly. Ruaged f Dodge Pwr Wan. Cm.pr Sis-1..,. ..,.,.. .. Mll4e •• klll .. cet"T'Mt • MW ... that NII ............. Mt .. -~ J';; e 3 BR 2'BA1FROll13tio Cott• Mos• 5100 Cott• Mo•• 5100 · Caro<l><liaf!OMbliwaihei 1::::::.:;..;;=.;;_____ heated pool-cauna-teimtt te.r to l ued by aark Gab-Mt 1•rantM te II• M vntll the M hu .,,..,.. In the ,.,... le ln African movie. Trd for ' HARBOR GREENS Fairway Y!'la A~ ...., ......,..;.w, -'' patios.ample Pl'rtrlnr. • stude'nt or. employ. man. or what tiave·YoU •.• r.o.seoo or 54&-0390 * . m.-9024 . * lmlr 4 whl dr veb MMIH3 DIMl.....,LINI"" Aft an atrfctly cuh In adv.nee .., mall er at any .,. .r ..,.. llfftrlm, ;;,,-.,.,,_,.=,...,--·.,..,--,~I NO ,.._ en1wa. ,1 , APARTMENTS SPACIOUS Near OraRge C.O. Airport It: Security CUU'ds HUNTINGTON Pl\ IV A"T E Entrance--neat School Bua Converted to bath. JOO' per mo. Near ua house ear. Self cont..lned '-CCX:. Phone 5'8-3696 • New ellflne & tires.. Have Lund 84" men's &Ids, · bind~ngs Ir pries. Want The DAILY PILOT ,....,..,.. the rJtht t. claulty, edit, amw ._ ,.,_...., ........ t m?n • ioU clubs. Have die· tlMfpant Mii t• chlln,. lh rahtl and NtUlatton. wfthout ,....... Mtk9. l TOWNHOUSE lJVING Separate adult & family com· munities. Bachelor 1·2· & 3 Bclrms, furn &-unlurn apts, SUO. per mo. & u;. UCJ. Adults only. 20122 Santa Ana Avf. ~ PACIFIC Prlv ........ both, ontr, 7U oc.:t:.AN A VE., H.B. • & J)atlo. $65 a month. Trade fo.· traile.r. • 637-6119 * tation ~. want eli:c-, ~·' l tric t;ypewnter. 833-1466 MaH Mii,...: lu 1175, Nawpert IMcf\ Callhrnla ' Call 562481> Palm Sprya_ 2 br, 2 ba 2 BR Studlo, Unt Newly (Il4.) ~l~'l S1S Ptt WK UP w/kitchen home. Va.Ju $39,500. Eq. decor. New crptl Ir drpl. * L.ARC~ nitW, 1 ~· with $30 WK UP Ai>tl 2l'l6 N w. $13;500. WW trade lnr borne 160 Aere1 major U.S. hwy ·frontage, booming San or. eeo Co. Trade $13),000 eq. for l\Dc home, TD'1, li!ted wtock, :r-acht! 646-1234 today! CLAlllP'llD COUNTIU att IMatM a1 follOWI: SJt.11.c, grou~. Adllaj. No loa~.s of ~~. drH&ir!a · port Blvd 54S-9755 . 0 bcb area. 12Tl Deepwell Rd. Pets. Sl40 Mo. 2283 F-ountaln, room, ~n b a t.b, · · · (1) Inf.) 325-3376. COSTA MESA 330 .w. BAY NEWPORT BEACH 2211 W. BALllOA . t 8 Large garden patios • Open beamed ceilings Way E. (llatbor, t.urn W. on. Dishwasher, 81t~lni, 5bq; R00¥° in borne with college Improved 20 acre horse \Yilson -Wib<m Garde!J·, carpetilll', Pvt· Pt&: l blk stu~entJ. Pvt $65 or Bhatt ranch, Nortbem Calif:, tor Apts.) 10 • stK)pJ?:inl , l w~ .$t5. ~·546--5703 yadit, houN or apt.•$46,000 DELUXE 2 BR. Ctptl, m-p., 'd~tance to ~ach. Adu1ta J{JTCHEN Privil. Man only. equity: Ownu. LOT in Grass Valley. HUNTINGTON BEACH LAGUNA ll!ACH • Firepl1t1..---e1 • Rec, Rooms e 2 pools, u.un~-12unery Lake Arrowhead, value $8500. Trade on, income unit Harbor uu. . * ~2432 * • ' I 7175 ilEACH BLVD. 222 FOREST AVE. blt-im, priv. pat Io. Adj.: only. 8262 Atl&nta. H.B! S50 .a month. Call &J!N289. (TI4) 675-6259'· · Daily Pilot Cl1tssified ocbooL lMMED. OCCUPANCY. 2700 Pefef'l()JI Way close'd gar., pool. lingle 536-2800 .. , , . . · 803 Govtmor St., C.J\f. 196.1 Custom hllllt -2.4' ~ story. No peta, adults onfy.' * PONTALSA AnSi * ..ROOM for emplo~ man or ran XJ.nt cond, nu rtninr, $165. Call 646-74ij . ' AU El~tric-Spacieus. l BR: lady. Quiel home w/pool. saiLs 1. paint Tra~ for LUXURIOUS 2 Br. 1% Ba, Frplc, pr, orpJ& It drp11 Call 6f24129, aft 1 P~f. . Mountain re.art cabin or Salton Sea lot I trir. $400! F&C for b>a.t, camper or CLASSIFIED INDEX Costa 1-ieaa 546-0.110 Nr. Harbor de Adams coach. a ;g 13,., lot FlC HOUSES FOR SALE $1500 for ? 2308 Plua ala HNllW. ail elec. Crpts. drps, GE $J?O. Adulta.. 8177 G&rfJcld, . prup. or ! vaJ $3600. 5'5-JJB2 LUXURIOUS-NEW kitcb .. patio, encl git, rit H.B. o;>.8904 · MOlelt. l'rlr. Crtt. 5997 Motor Uunch 18, So Coast. bus. Sl.SD adults. Mgr, 124 "f.. 2 BDltMS, 2 BA. pvt. pt.tic, WEEKLY ra~ Sea Lark lOOhp, ·ship' }o ~ radio. $1 SO & $170 lOth SL ' . heatod I!""·.,..,,.,.~ ui<r Mot.I, 2io1 i<..;,,.r. Blvd., Beautilully Maintained. V&l- Playa, San Clemente. COITA M•M _ Canyon Lake waterfront Jot, USA O•L MAJI clubhouse lr: plOI S21,950, ~~::":A•JllC clear. Will trade for condo WllWPOllT ••ACM MERRIMAC WOODS hook up. 962-89!M Costa Meu ue $1650 tor TV or r All OtilitiM P•1d Furn units avail. See ad nn. NEW • 1 BR. 4 1,.BR. w/ Call &M-0064 l & 2 BR. 2 o:wim pools d class 5100 425 !tkni- ... .,_,_ ·-·'· •A~ .. ~T M•IOMTI or unt " oov,.o::r -.._ .,,. IAUOA COVIii Ruth Launie. ~nn ••WPOllT IMCMlll -:=="°'=-===:-•llMYCaUT Adults only, nci pets. er · lrplc. Ctj>ts, d!'lll. Und)>ara Guest Hemes 5991 Wbat&>yciobavetotradeT mac Way. 54&-6300 Co. 53~2579 • --_ List ft here -tn ~ ENGLISH TU DOR IAYIMGa•t "High 0n Hill." DOV•JI IMOaU . ~e ~:: ~~c:~ TER~IC . 2 ~ 1% Ba, nlQMf.S Guest home in OountY• WKBt Md trad- (Behind K·Mart otf H.arbOt shirp. crpt,i/drpt; .. Approx Fountalfl '!alley J410 Costa Mesa ha.s vacancy for lQc poet-uwtmakeadeal. . w•nCLIPfl 6 rooms. beau. s mm Pua.· ...... Na Ml ... UWDt dena.. Trd NB/CM S4s.8532 UNIVllJISITT l'AJllC · d 1 1200 sq lt1, fenced. Avail ambulatory lady, private ~ * * at C'Ot'ner l\utgenr: Ir Avoca 0 znrro. $150" mo .. &15--4879 $260 lo-lo. 2 atafy TC>tPtlhoule, tQC>n1. Ucen.sed. Near shops w . 1:0i'i'.i"i'i.J535iii'.i'iv'j,,tl45-0283iiiiii l~!?.'.'!'~C'~~~~~ 2 8 2 B ., 11:1.n -. .._ " IJIVINI * * ' * IACIC UY UITILU,fl HARBOR TOWNHOUSE 2'217 llarbo_r neat W115oa • 2 Br 1~ Ba. Townhouse Sllj.$135 e Heat~ pool • Adults only e No pets • Adj to shoPPin& ELEGANCE a~ Hacienda Harbor l & 2 BR. SlS0-$170 Util included. NO PETS AdOlt Jiving in a Mediterranean Atmosphere Bit-ins; shag «!rpts, drps, gar&,ge w/storage:, POOL 241 Avocado 6'42-2'25 ·MARTINIQUE Specious grounds w/ park· like surroundings w/ pri· vncy. Patlos & pool&. Nr. abopplng. Ad:1ll11 only. QUl1'."'T DELUXE AP'TS BACH .. 1·2 &. 3 BR's 1777 Santa Ana Ave, C.~f. Mgr, Apt Ul 646-5542 SPLIT level 2 & 3 Bc:lnn aptl r. a. o-.....,; ·--.r ··~ 4 park. 646-8115 ~ bl . N ta frig. Dshwhr. Pool/rec lac. 91 Tl" REAL ESfATE REAL ESTATE ~~·::A'::~-=ri ----·----------- crp~ & ,.... ...,. DJl·J,D& r 0 pe Avail Marcll ~tli.. C.U (213) Mi.C. Reritalt 2885 Me~ 545-S42l 33Z.5407 oolleet. , . 5"9 . Gener•! G-r•J 1aL10A P••1•1vu , -------llACotll IAY . l BR ApL nSo· mo: No pets, ' "'"'835al(5pm.'' 2 Bit, lli BA. Crptll;. drps, garage. $152.!SO ut:il pd. l8M :r.tonrovta. 548-0336 M,.. Verde 5110 * 2 BR, bi(· ciogets, new crpt. drps.. Avail. 311110. Adll1, po pel!. $150. 557-3400 . Newport Be•ch 5200 BAYFRONT 2 BR, 2 BA luxury a,e:la Pr!. terrace, eltvakirs, .Ubter- ranean pk'1. All elec. Pool,• soft wate:r, boat docks. $350.1 up. 3121 W. Coast Hwy, Ne• port. 642-220'.? 1 LARGE 2 BR, 2 Bath. studio apt, crpts, drps le bit-Ina. Adults, no pets, $185. mmith. Mgr. 642-4387, 642-{)596 . ' 1-----------1 :::--"'--'---.~.--'-LINDA Ill• Sant• Ane J6it GARAGES (extra longl 10 x Office· Rental 6070 ._R_o_oo_r_t_P_ropo-'-'-'!Y-'---"'205= ~:~ 1~NDt ;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;,,. 30· -Nr. 0 .C. airport. LAGUNA BEACH CANYON LAKE: Vw lot by ru~:_::~~ACll ' hllaadts ltd. $20 mo. Air Conditioned ownr. $600 dn. ba! S102 mo. NUNTINGTOll HMMV• VILLA MAIJ~Ef.'-'~~$ S48-0044 ou roo•-'VENUE Ind inter•% 962-3803 .... ,OUlfTAIN WALUY BRAND NEW ll ~· A . • llU. IUCN LARGE Single Garage For De~;. apt,ce available tn -1uN1rr aucN SPACIOUS · Stonge. Near Harbor Shop-, newut otfi .... bufldin .. at Mount & Desert 6210 MIOIN ••ov• 1&2Bd ., ---... I LON••tACN rm. "'P s. pina: Center. 548-0580 prime location in downtown 0 . LAICIWOOO Adult L1vl-: .' 1 .. _,.... Beach, Air condi-G RGEOUS View • Desert 01tAN•1 coufrlTY ••• SI'ORAGE Garq:e for rent. .._ ... _ • • ., ' UT •• c " Fum. a Unfom. tioned, AA_.... beautUul u oorl « ·Sp•un. tns. 4 mi I E. ! ............ ,." New. Eutmde CMta Mesa, ,.......,.~ .-l -· Dishwuher. col« cOordlnat. entrancts: Fron ..... e on a m rings. mprove-nANTOlr S2> month. 642-2657 ._ ts · o. ed appliances ~ plush: aha.a: Forest Aw., rear IMds to men in. nclidentla.l acre. WllTMIN'ITIJI carpet • choice ot 2 col.or 2 CAR Garage &: Lot. Good MunclpaJ pl.lidn& loll. 150 !Ji down, carry bat. 'rii% ~~f~111'? schemes • 2 blths • lt&U for Storage. $5.5 a mo. Call -per month faf space. Desk Sll,000. Call 642-1641. WfTA UA ...,._ 1h0Wen· _ mirrored ward-645-2306 and chain available fer $5. I"=========' 1:~1:• robe doors • indirect lJ&bt. FULL y enclosed prq:ea. Buslness hooni urwerinl R. E. Exchange 6230 llOJITN TVST1" in& in kitchen _ breakfut $£;,per mo. lerViee available for no. ANalfllM •• h All u"""--..... .., ex-I GLENDORA. Country Club '•'•"•., .. uA~.s ...... ..._, -.. 1119 private 1enced 2135 Elden, APl &. C.M. i.wun _... ~-.. Build -t>atio • pllllh JudlciPln&' ~ =========! telephone-, &n!L tr'a home for O:· ~MA HILU • • . .t:ANI DAILY Pu.or change ol btach property LA•UllA "~" brick B&f.8.Q'1 ~tarp hea\. Income Property .uvv 222 FOREST A VENUE Northnst Costa Me!a c; ';:1~~1'::. ~1:.J'- ed pooh • lanai. . LAGUNA BEACH Newport area. Pref. tn-SA" CL•M•NT• · 3101 So. lrlttol St. INVESTMENT TAX-494-S466 come. ns,300 equity. 213: ~,:~:.:":::-:No ('A, Ml. N, o.t So;Coa:rt Plaza) SHELTER 963-1811 DAMA POllCT Sante ~ . Trades congj.dertd . Belt Locetion in CdM c;a•Ul~o . PHONE: 557..aQI Beautiful 45 unit -100% apart. ~! .!.~s."'AV:i~ 1!.!:,~ R. E. Wanted 6240 ::":1~:: ment comple:x. Manqer Fhone owner 642-9950 •rv••110• COVNTT $lD5 I<> 1135. .l.AJ\GE I 6 I Br. •tudlo ..... (trl-pla). er,ii.. "'1le. lr>le, .ln·!am!· Jy kltcbon •f!>!tn.a· 1 ~d o~. no ptta. Nr IChoola. 2230 So. dtnm-St.. <Nr Warner): ·wtU continue, 6"-% interest ' . NhEEO l BR 2 BA lSOO sq ft :::-r:ru•: MOVI~ rate. $50,000 cub minimum. 3345 NEWPORT BLVD. ome for CASH buyen. 0UPL•x11 Pott uu ·tMX; -me. owner P.O. Box ~ sq. ft. oppoatte New. Ebhtide Realty 496-4664 .._,AlllTlllt:tm lllO• IALI :tS61, N.B. <n<l 64>-1515, port City Hall. 675-16Ql BUSINESS •nd Mr. Lii• . MAJUNER-. CENTER FINANCIAL RENTALS · Hou... Furnished -"" "" Ult 1111 ... Ult U11 ... om '"' .., ,,. "" "" ,,. ••• ... .1U4 ... .... "" ... . ... .... '"' '"' .... ,. 1411 .... , .. 1411 .... ... .... .... .... 1•11 1'1t ''" .... .... "" .... ... ... . .. 1m "" '"' •m '"' '"' "" "" "" .... ... 1m .... '"' , ... 197J "" RENTALS Aptt. Fumi1hod ...... Al -COITANU .._ • ..., .. ..,.. 4'Jt • ......., llual ... NlwtoOIT INIOltT't OM lflWPOllT SMMll Ml WltTCL1•• aa UIOVlll1T'r P4JllC ' em aACIC IAJ .. IAJT llU'" Oct COaOllA 011\. MAa ... IAl.90A 4* IAY lllAllOt GM LIOO llLS Ql IAL,IOA llL.AllO GU NUNTIN•TON llACN .... •oUNTAIN VAU.IY .. 1. SUL llACN 4Gll lONO llACN 4$11 OJIANOI COUNTY .._ hJIOIN HOVI .Wit WllTMINST•JI .. 11 •IOWAY cm 4'1' ~~~ ::: .... .,,.. = TVITIW t64t COAST-.a. •nt U.OUNA alACN 41-L.AOUNA lllaVIL "91 MIUION Vl&JO crot SAN C:llMl-NTI 41lf OANA POINT •1• Tl:IPllfJL 9lc. ... C:ONOO(ll,llllUM ..S. MOTILI ········-•••···-····· "'7J ReNTALS Aplt. Unfumt1hod llNIUL .... COSTA M•Sa 11• llllllA VIJID• •nt NIWl"OJIT IUCll JUt NIWPOaT HllOHTI mt NIWPOJIT IHOJlll nit WISTCLI'' Jut UNIV•aSITY PAIK sm IAC:lt IAY 12• IAIT ILV'fl '2tl COJIONA Oil MAI: SUI IALIOA SJtf IAY llLANDt Alt L/00 llLI hfl NUNTINOTCHf l•AClt Mtt l'OUHTAIN VALLl'I' 1411 ... oLIOA !IL.ANO ms ll!Al llACM kM LON• llACN lift OltAN•I COUNTY 5* OAl:OIN OJIOVI Ult WllTMINITl!I "" MIOWA'I'. CITY Srl1' IAHTA ANA N2t SANTA ANA NllGHTI Sf• TUnlll S64t COASTAL fJW U.OUNA llAat l1tS LAOUNA fUOUl!L sm MISSION Vlt:JO S1t1 Ulll Cl•M•NT• tnt ORLEANS APTS. 2 BR. 1 Ba. Sm den, Gar, Sm ~d. Drp1 &:. c pt s~ w.shr/dryer avail. Adults, no pets. $175. 00..llM N.B. NEW 2 Bdrm 2 bath bi-level Corxlominlum. Pool area & fireplace. S225/rno. 642-1744 or Bay & Beach Realty Tustin =======::::;_;::.. Ot:rict or store md1. Rent or ·5640 l':!tlM11: Rtntal 6060 lse. 149 RJvemde Ave. NB. Bu1inet1 o••••AL -SAN JUAN CAPllTltANO sm: UM OANA POINT 17• 2 & 3 BR avail. Adults only. J-741 Tustin, Costa ~1esa Mc. ~frs. Canon, 6G400. 646-2414 _o~ppo~_rtv_n_l_ti_•_• __ 6300..._1~!:T~A~.:,.O 1""1• n• REAL ESTATE, DOWNING Am ; .20c SQUARE FT. COSTA M2sa ottices. AIC. Affiliate ::: ::~0';"• ::: General HONEYMOON view apt. CORNER OF Wil.LlAMS ~izoo.2400 aq. ft OfftCe or crpt&, drps. Parking. 1555 CANDY SUPPL y COLLI•• PAJlk !n1 rtt1,Lex. 11c. n• elegant carpeting, 2 Bdrms, & ALLIANCE Retail stores .. m.213 62nd Baker, M&-483.1 tr 5t8-4751 ROUTE :::=~ :::~N = i~~~~N~'!':-rro = fireplace, i8J'f.if' $250. $191!. mo. 16..\31 Alllance. St., Newport Bnch. Key LGE OUice; alao business. (No selling invol~l Nl'#ffl:T SNOJlll mt ltOOMS l'OJI ltlH1' 9"1 VILLA MESA APTS. 5'18-2394 Central air condltianiog. Up.. avail at "travel Lodge Mo-Gd location -42.5 31At St., :Excellent income for 1~ ~~':::~., :;; :O~J. ~~A~~ covl:TI :; 2 BR unfUI'1). prl patio~ htd I 2 BR Garage apt. Vic•. iwr 2 BR. 2 BA. Adults ov-tel. OwrieT. '213f 2f.4..3101 . N.B. (upstn). 673-1687 hours weekly work. (Days w11TCL11'11: m1 ou•n HOM•I '"' pool. 2 c&r encl'! gar. Chil-$150 mo. 7205 Seashore er 18. Private patk>, trplc, ot MS (n3) 246-0100. NEAR C.~t:. City Hall. 3 Rm. and Evenings). Refilling and ~,."~;',.'.11'" PAIK = ~1~M'~~~ITT = dren Wl':lcome, no p et 1 or'lve. 548-1059 pool. Traihed. •mall pet in· WANTED: Small afui'e, ap-Office!. Paneled, carpets, rolJecting money from coin 1ac1e UT n .. 1u11Nl!11 ,,.o,••TT ..,. ~;~!w?i:n also f~~ DELUXE 2 Br, 2 Ba. tervieY."ed. ~ ... ~ 1q. ft. Excluslve. dnpts. St.511. Call 64~ operated dl1pensen ln Or-:~.:.lu'P ~': ~~;:;::, P:::~Al = WestcliU loc. Pool & bit-ins. _Call=~ew..=o':::::==:::;"'"OO:;:;"":;:;:l lmpor\,.ed Gifts 6 600 SO FT OFC. ange Co. and surrounding 11v1N1 TSJIJIAC• ''"' 0'1"1C• •t:NTAL .. ,. NEW TOWNHOUSE Adults. S240 mo. 642-ti274 ... De c"orators Acceuories. .,..,. 2130 area. \\'e establish route. ~:~: OIL MA• !: :~~~:~~iLPROPllTY = 12 BR, ]I~ BA & l & 2 BR. Laguna Ba•ch 51G5 Phone 5f6..f608 $90 Mo. C.M. U'..,. (Handles n~ brand candy IAY ISUNOI tlM INoun•IAL llHTAL "" , 3 BR, 2 BA, nr ocean, frpl, and snacks) Sl625 "" cash LIOO 1•L1 tut LIJfl '"• Crptd, drps. itelf clng gas ds~wtu-, $23S mo. Yrly. No TOO CLIFF DRIVE" STORE FOR LEASE· In lndustti•I . • •UIJ . IAllOA 1tu .. o IHJ JIANCHll IUt oven. 64S-21<8. 377 W. Wilson pets. 5U--0897 wkdys 9-S. p mrlc Bld 1 to · reQUired. For personal infer. MUHT1110TON •IACN Mt cn•u• aaov11 1111 $170.1 BR, 1% BA. SUS-2 Br, a . g., nex Property 60IO view in Orange Co area l"OUHTAIN VALUY 'Mlt ACltlAOI mt r'EW dlx. 1 & :! Bit. Shr.g 1,L BA Crp b .u berkshirea Reltaurant. Ihq.1---'-...:------nd dd · _ __;••AL 11.t.cN ,._ UICI •LSINO•• '212 "Pt•, drp11. bltin• Immcd . .East Bluff 514t ~ . ts, drps, lunt. 6'B-9405 Mn. Franke NEW B'A ..... 11,000 .,. It f01• st name, a ress &UIJ LoN• llACM ,,_ •••o•T Pl:OPll:TY '* -. Vle1v of ocean. Walklna: dla-...., '" phone number to MULTI-Dl:AJM• coulfT'r '"' OJIANOI co, ,.ltOPEITV •m ~;~~-noo.uso. a4().I913, 1----------tance to town. Also turn. SMAIL ahops nr. Newpbrt We or leue. For details STATE DIST., JNC., 1681 W. ~':~~.~'::.. ::: ~~1~,:T:T:,::::· :: ~1. · e NEW DELUXE e Bachelor, very· larp $170. Pier; V~rioua aizu. ~ · ·•anfa &t:altg Broa.dway, Anaheim, CalL "''cwAY CITY •U 1u1orv1110N LANO m1 NICE individual townhoutt. 3 Br, 2 B. a ... for leue Incl,· 4~2449 or 4945303. Bajview Properties fornia 92802 CTI4) 778.soGO f.ANTA ANA NllONTI ua 1t1AL •STATI 111tv.c1 i2u ' •• ' 8 ·-··-642-6560 -:;;""';-;====~7"C-· COASJAL U• It.I. llCCNANOI 1"9 :::: I CONTUC'TOIU .. CMP•T CU.ANttl• .... CAll,IT lAYf ... a liP~rt: ._. o&AP••••s :::· t MMCK.fTtOll . 011tAn1No PlllVIC9 ... OaYWALl ... , i.LliCTilllCA&, -IOUl,MINT aaNTAl.I .. , PaNCIN• .... ...... -"UltNACa ••PAIJlt. .... MJrf ,UINJTUJll anTO•"'e & Jl•PtNtSMIN• ClAl:OlilllllO OINIUL &attVICll OIAOINO. OllCIMe ...... OltlEllll TMUMa OUN IHOI" HIAlTM CLUaJ NAUllNO HOUl•CL•ANll\I• INT.1.111101 DICOIATnle IHCOMI TaJC llllON, °""IMMlo at.. IJION!frtOI INSllUTIN• IMUJIAllCI INYSITlOA.,,..., DttMftWi ... . :: ... . ... '"' . :: -t 'ANITOJllAL "" f llW•lllY JlePAIJI, .... .... LANOSCAPIN• "" I LOCKSMITH MAIONlllY, lllClt ... MOVINO a uou•a -PAINTING. ,_, 11 JIM ... PAINTl .... 1111111 PATIOS ... PHOTOOJIAPMT .. ,.u1T•a•t1 .. l"ttdt,....,.,.. PlUMllN• ! PET Olt00Mlf!4e POOL llltVICI '"' POW•I IWlllP.... ft • PUMP s••v1c• .,. ; JIOOl'IN• .... ' UOIO, ........ lie. ... ' Jll!MOOl:LINO & llPA.. "'41 f ••MOOIUNe. ll'm:MIQ , N • ldla.t...,.. ..... lllWtN• , • lftlNe MACH•e alPAIQ llPTIC TMOClo ..... ... ... TAll.ClltlNO "" TliltMITI CONTlk lf'n ~ TILL C.-11 TILi, L .... _ & Mlrtll Tllil l•JIVK• TILIVlllON, IMn. n., V'NOUTIJIY WE LO I NO ' WINDOW C\.IANINe -·• ·, JOBS & EMPLOYMINT ! JOI WUJIO, M9 JOa WAN'l'IO. ...... .IOI WMTID, MIN & WOMl:N ICNDOlt & INIJTIU(TNNI JOI Pltl,AIAT~ TMlaTitlCAL MERCHANDISE FOii SALE AND TllADI ,Ul:NrTUJll OFFICI ,UalllTUJll Ofl'ICI IQUIPMINT ITOl:I IOUIPMINT CAFI, alSTAVtu.Hf II.I: IOUl,MIWT NOUSRHOLO OOODI OAltAOI IAll l'U•NITUJla AUCT .... A'PLIAHCU UITIOUll 11\lllNe MACNIN•I MUllCAl IWIT11VMUfT PIANOS a OJIOANI •AOIO TILl!VISlotl ttl-"'1 a STIJllO fAPI •ICOJICIJll CAMl!JIAI a IOUl,.MINT NOllY 1111",Llll IPOJITIN• GOOOI llNOCUU.ltl, S00,11 MISC:ILlANIOUI "'ISC:. WAlfTIO MACNINRJIY, IM. LUMl•JI ITOJIAOI IUtLOINO MATIAIAU IWAPI .. ... ::· : • "" . -· ltD, ! .... ::: ; I .... ••• ·~. -· -.: .,. 1 -· -.... 'l• ! 'l & BR. Ftplcs. a,>ts, !Pac. ma1ter ·llUi~. din· rm OCEAN v1ew, 1 BR apt, 5 2309 W. Bi.Ibo&, N ,.,.. #1.J COIN laundries-F'rizj(faire LAOufolA 11Ac11 t1*3 II'. 1. w.111T10 .,.. ;,~ .. ~:!a,',· "", .• :? !!~ngc Ave. k dbl praa-e, auto door blocks to buch, carpets, Small Store Old Newport Commercial a5 From $6,500 to $ 4 2, soo. 'j!~1~:i' .. "v7~L = BUSI NE:.~ and PETS •nd \.IVESTOCK : ~ •..rvuw opener avail, Pool i:. · rec. d t-~ tr Adult BJW. $80 or $100. Call Anshe:im, Costa Mes a IAN cL1M111T1 ,,,. Fl NANCI 'L ,.rr&. llNlltAL -~ rps, 1 """'"• re . S. -·-""--'· F I I ' UM JUAN CAPllTilANO !JU '"' CATI -Y l.D\1.ELY' 2 br. Crpt, drpg, area. I $145. 494-3839, 49f.-94n I 64>2306 FOR sale fl86.69l.&5 w. 19th ouo::na .1"8.l"ll, u er t 0 n . CA .. llTl:ANO II.ICM ,,,. IUSINl!SS WAH1'f0 ... OOGI -! gai:, washer, dryr. Adults. e ONLY $255 e RF.AL iSTATi St. Bethel Towers area. Gerden Grove, oANA POINT rt• ~·u~~:~:.1:~'°~:.: = HOJtt«I -No pets. 2260 Placenlia. Call ~ Amlgoll Way, N.B. • Office Rental 6070 548-1i68 or M8J7(14, ~ We 1 tmlnster · Huntington arveisro• COUNTY "" 1Nv•1TMINT WANTIO 6J1J Lrv•STOCIC , .. ' 646--.1160 Gener1I Beach. Santa' Ana. Tustin, ~:=::.,~~NT•u : MONEY '° L~"' mt C:ALIFORNIA LIVING · •DEUIXE 1 & 2 BR Garden Corona dal Mar 5250 Rmtalt Wanted 5990 HU~T:~c:!..C::!!.ACH l.,clustria( Rental '°'° c1an-=~· 525-783.1 l>UPUIC .. l"UIM. Im r~a..::~~~!... :: ::=~~~·POOU = Apes. m1-1n1, pnv patio, :'.jjjiiiiiiiiiiiiiimmiiiiiiiiiJ o. RENTALS ltlAL •STAT• LO.t.•1 .. ,AT•o• .,,, 'be1ted pool, frplc. Adu1ts • XI.NT lenanta, curnnt Joe ON IEACH· ILV RENT ~1-1, 1125 IQ. ft. SllO FOR Leue Retail Tire MOITOMl!S. '""' .... ,_,., AWNINGS .. ~ $145 mo. 546-5163 -owr 6 yrs, need partly bTI Detk .spac:e •vallable tn mo.· 13$ Lopn, ·cM · Store, heart of Costa !'11esa. HouM1 Unfurnished MOf$«T WAtn•o me vu:ATto1t1 -"' ~ ""'"t oUk• bµlldlng °' mom• · · TRANSPORTATION j 2 BR. bllnl, crplll, close« ii,. 8hse/dup2 °'+"'dndo. At leut 3 pr:line loCat1on bi Hubting· _.:.;;:,.;;_.,.,_~-=-~dJ Could b~'· used for al~ :S"T~uMLlla = ANNOUNCEMENTS to•n 1 v•c"" -, , garage. Mature adults. $130 r or . en. Npt. Laa ton Beach. Air conditioned, 3 ROOM office $15. A • ment. ,..,.e, tune-up or all)' M•SA OIL MA• 11• ind NOTICES " " mo. S48-45TJ or 548-2884 area ~t l\tar 14 to $l25 1n0, l>H.utlflfl entrance .. Front-aqWI office $50. Nwpt Bc:b. rela~ auto repair shop. MllA WllD• 1111 ... ;~::-'3.uis••& "" . ON TEN ACRES yrly. ru: 861--0052 aa:e on Beach Blvd.; ,J'eU ·Avail March 1. ~1'124 • Ideal set up for retail tire coLLEOI 'A11e 1111 r:~.:'D 1"""....., _.,1 s,.•ao-11e1 &OAn = 5 LRG 2. 3 BR. Crpt.s, drps, I 1 & 2 BR..~--•. Un(urn leads to private parkln1J========== openUon. 6 bays, 2 align, :::;::; :=.N !.': ............. ,'.'•••n .. tOAT Tl:Allla1 ... J. l or 1 kidl ok 22:14 Colleae ..... :u • !.tATURE couple wishe1 to lot. $50 per mGntb for .. '4tt I0.1-T MAINTllrlAMCe .,.. • · ' FlrepJAce1 I priv. patic.s: J leal!e 2 or 3 BR hou'M: or, ,,, .. .._. "·-·k •-en.Mrs l:..tt 6100 pitl, Ready to go! Contact ••WPOIT tNO•a• UM llJITMI '411 IOAT LAUNC:NINe ,.. Avt.; Apl 2, 6f6.-0627 Paola. Tennis. Contnn B"".. ,.... ... .., un ""' M. Ktnney, C213l 469-5354. =~~111°:=:... *"1 l"UNllAU .. 11 MMINI 1:ourP. • •-=G~ 1 an elec builllno. .. .... ._ apt. Unturn; Gilt. I yd. available for $5. Bust~1-~--------1715 N t 81 d ~i nu PAio oalTVAa• 1411 IOAT 1L1~. MOO•nte ,.. ·· I.AK ~ &M~ 000 Sea Lane, CdM Mh.'ltitl CdM. Und~r $:Kl0. 2U : hours a~werlna service 935 I,.aguna CaQy<irt·Rd. l!IWp v ' ...... W•ITCll,, = 'llNIJIAl Olll'ICTOJll ,n. IO .. T 11av1cn ... "1 ! nr 0CC A S. Ot Plata. $135 (MacArtI;µt nr. CO..it H\\!yl f.JS..8233 ' 11.vtUlable for $10. AJ.l,,\aWJ· 1 LAGUNA BEACH 7-ll FOOD Stotts Franchises ::.:~~ .. llSTT 'AJIW mt l'lOJlllTI .. 11 :::: ::::;~~ = w/ retrta .. $tMqO -r Ro r Es SIONAi Nurse ti~ ·pao"r•t•Lxv"'•"'1 ,'o'rll~• ~e. !Sawdust Festival Groundl) Avail. Call 778-5870 or IACk •A• _.. f:':r.:a~:_••• ::1 '1tN1Nt ao.•n --' e JlARGAIN Be l\ful I COROl.100 APTS. 2 BR. 493-1572 aft 6 Pl.! 11"1 TT-_!LVl"P Utt Cl!M•Tlll\' LOTI '411 IOAT MOV1N• . -BU ge L<>wer levei., ltUdios . wants small house or 1 BR 17175 llACH ILVO. 2.89 acrea, M·IA ,,rop., •PP -· :: CIMITllV CIYPtl .. It IHIAT ITOllAOI ... l 2 BR -.pt. 998 El Camino apt.· Nr ' 1 OCftif'' Yta:tly. .HUf11;1NGTO:firl llACH 315 ft fiilntage on tervkt RUG A Upbolgtery cleaning ~~1::.., i::~•,:. w CJ11MATotua1 "" •~Tl w.umo ,_ Dr, C.M. 637...-S Frplcs, pool, dbl cafllC)rta, Reas. Newpqrt 'or Laa:una. '42-021 + '"1bd !next· to •BeW Boyl' Co.· Old e&tabliahed·finn. IALIOA '* :::;.~=~~L "•••1 :g: :t~~::'iatlOMI :: ... 1BR.2 r,,.a deluxe~t Crpta, patios. S17W22J. m..ms .-~. ~ • Modem Offices <::fub b&da>~ averaae depth OM>U n:tirtng. 5f.8.'Tll3 ~~:O ~11" : ~~~~~ 11avte• : =~~ ~":i~' ,. drpl, bH•iDI, trplc. patio. HUGE older l BR. belt area, • NEEOl!:D ..... ~·-tATEiY t1I tl $22S,OOO. 25.% dollt'n. ... IALHA .. u... ni-• AIJI TJIANll'OIT•1IO" .... llCYC:Lll ::: ,. tSl'lS. go-as ltl>ps to ~~75. Unfurniahe4 isBft~ foio ~ ~~· ~.; ::,::~· Owner8"% ~.:~1 arr; ~) TIME FOR ~~~o:':~Ac11 ,.. ~~:l'=lc":'ATt0• !: ~~:f~~:.,c.u1 ,, • : 1 2 BR Studio, bJt& washer 1 BR Duplu w/pr. StCM/ couple and~ ytokl aon, 1'9rkine. centrally k>cited. S:Om .. ~~ran;nk. RW· . "u'!!~~~~::Ot•• =: 111MA11 a T'ITOIUN• ~ :g~~=~:~~:.. =-! ~ .. ~~&tASun rt.trig. Jui!lished . 603 ~·orCM.lOll ~._?MliflstNat.Bk.BldJ. tor.642.3344«,~pm. :~....-:".C:.W. =SERVICE DIRECTORY ::::~:nc:s,-_::.Ti ,."", ''Y -~tarlgold. 5'8-4661. 00-1470 ~tATURE widoY wjl:J'ju to ,.......... esa •$(2.1485 '-'UICK CASH L0tt• llACN ... ACCIOUNTIN• a. ru1L• .. TU>nl DELUXE 2 Br; blbll, C/0, ~nt linfuion. 1*m. Cit-1Pt. 3 GOOD silei1 ollicu each Acreqe 6:IOI .. T :=-.. ~:"N" = :::~::~".• :::::~t ,.M'tt !t: ~~,u. VtllfW ·= ! encl patk>, c.a.rpart. 11chlld Lido ltle SUI wtthln 10 d~•· Jteu. CM. S'IOO or all 3 adjolnin; for,_________ llll'UtMlllllT811 ldt A"'"All... tltl '''" "" ok. Reft Stto mo.,. C]J2 --------~----.. ~ -thl •. ~ .. I' MIOWA'I' cm .... At,HALT. Oh .. ,. CAM..... "" . • ·~ rnon. y. !!'. .......,,..,., 160 Picture book 1crt1 wtth OUGH A IAllTa AMA .. , .. Mn *"' aaCMITICTVaAL s11v.c1 ..u CAM"• •••TAU JUSf completed 2 BR. CrpU. 1 BR Apt. 1 adult Utll tum. e LAHOLOIOS • n1ua~. util Included. Rltr. u.s. biw'.,. frontaee ln THR cOMTAL mt Auto 11PA1•• -ouN• 11.10o111 drps. bit-lo.. UI& mo. 2'51 Closl' to bay. 107 Via FREE RDn'AL SERVI<=:£ ~ boootlnr San Olqo Co. LA•~:! =~::. = :x~~.,~~N:""° T-. IK. = :0'":;':,:.:uTOl = Elden Ave. &0'3)92 · • •·torenc:t. 6T>-119'1 8!"0Rt ~ EXCELLENT Oftict .apaO!, Owner must sell! 112.000 U!Ott "'"° I a. MAT MA11•T1NN1C1 .us 1J1r1eu11, cLU1ia ·M11 • H CLIMl!f'e 1'11 lllCIC; MASON•T. fie. d4' JIACI e.t.•S. 1tGOt ffJI DELUXE 2 BR. Deoftled. H • • lo h 1,,_ \\fORKiNG Col want• nice Dana Point, comer aiw ot· down buyM $4G-.l234 tocla)'I DAILY PILOT APllTUllO w 1u11N111 111wte11 "'' AUTO •vt:Nn tm • Spaclotl.t. PtlUo. Ada)tl. SJ10 untington •c _,., home or apt oo ).!any basis, ftce, 'J)M'klna. 18c" s.t Ebb-eusr£sr ~l'pleca In o1~::i': 11N11 :;: ;~~'I~~= :; :r.o~~JfTI• "" !• It lul 64-4760 l.ftll l ; ROO~lY 2 "-' br's, etptd & sl&t1'1 .tune .. SUO. MS-73311 ltdt Realty ~4 towp. The DAILY PILOT co1100M1N1UM .. tAllNll"MA1C1N• '* A.llTO LIAllN• :: i; 3 Bedroom, 2 Bath, ,sp.cloul, drpd. Nftwly .decor. ~ br.. NEED ~l'l.lfi If RcQt on SMALL ow~ on bUly cor. Claultltd aeadon. Sava WANT AD ,..,,..,..., VNl"v•a. ""' CA•PaNrtJltN• "" UtN> c-.u "" l· Modem. C'ntral loc:affofL · f4b) at1ach '&tr k . tr;le. S )'t'art, butt, ptu \Ji;atQl It ntr:1~1& Meta ~month q'lcne)', Uma A eUtrt. Look ~ JlfiO 1 mo. 54M16!1. ' _,... """' bch. 53&-lnt • • B&ktt· SI. 'Clll °16r·-u!Wllfl lncltided. 6G-6S60" t.nowc.;....;.;l'l"-1 -------------··-------------------------!} ' • • t • t I I I • • • • ' j • .. I l 1 • ' t l ~ I ' ' ' • , ' 'I i• .: I• :! i~ •l • ,. •• ... • ' ;· I• ~ ~ •• ' . -----------' • t.,;l~PlllL!JO~T-;-A;.DV~ErRT_1s_E_RllAINl~W~tdiia""ii""' r .... .,, 25, 1'70 l':'>INE•• ana A NCIMINTsr!-°jl•••• "NANCIAL and NOTICES " :-WN11tsday, Ftbf'llMY 25, 1'70 ,IOIS '.& IMPLOYMINT .ICllS lo IMl'lOYM a OAILY ,II.OT ' ' ....... " ·-. . ----~--' i ~w hl•~-~h~~-nM~~-~ JutlMlt , Of>e!rtunltlu 6IOO l~IOCi,ele I'. LT. MANUFACTURING ""'live w/ UT.500 ('l'Oducinc auto parta l distribution. Tops in 1pecla1 ~Id lot 2S years. $12,000 &alary + !share in profill. Must have managerial abilib'. Call hn· med. tn41 774-1052 Monay to Loan 6320 ltst TD loan \VE MAKE OR BUY TRUSf DEEDS 1 ~H381 anytime Bl'k. ~'7~a~broken. R.eward. aa!t11lttl!'! ~WO Ca,..tC~ .'"15 lncomeTax 6740 ~w;,1:=-:e 111o:;.~SL ·~.Traf"" Lake~Dcahlns, REWARD! for inlormation LICENSED ch1ld care, l!\l' DEEP !TEAM Ccotral 'Buabeu Sery1cu By appt, '""4911 IXK LCrtt•ry to •tart. 5 unit. In lodp, PNlrr home, ·~ 11tru Friday. CARl'ET 'CLl;ANING eTHK TAX ADVISORS * 500 Ne""°" C.n,.r Dr * · · · ' -· ~~ ~i~gfe= ~~ Pll.yroom A fenced yard WELDON'S · Perro. ~ Rat• (Fuhion ~) Suite 200 NB ~~~~A~~=: Ex~~'!i~==t•nt ,. -MISS EXEC. AOINCY 12th. 1 )T. "Ramie". No ~1Uh lll9 equipment. Soulh Rua '-u~ Cleanera. l28 No. Newport.Blvd. iSSIM81.iSIU er. Matu:N. ..... 410 \V, Cout Hwy. qu"LioNt ulicd . ..,__ Cout Plua '"'L Ol9-<038 Comp~t· Cvpet Servlco Oi>ooolte "-llo<plta! ,.,. Com"°r l'octwy MISS l!XIC. AGENCY K•y l'UllCh ·,._,. Newport "''"" ......s39 LOVING Cltlld care In my 545-4323 or <9l;59IO ' For Appl. O•IMCS.OIOO ..... SALES "SLIM GYM" $100 Re\\'ard for St Bernard. .......... _:_. ..i.;-410 W, Coat Hwy. l yr exp. Up to $450. mo. 1,.6 .. _, ... No quesUons uked. call horue, a.et• J.3. Near Crown CARPET STEAM Q..EAN. H.K. Clark -'tAX SERVICE r nu.er """"' "''O•·-eX'Pf't. Newport ~ ~ 64G.3939 Eu!Ht way to exerc..,., .,.._ Stev e or Dorina Valley ~ Lq:. Nliuel. ED No'°"" no brtubea. 23yn.in&re& Appl y t.I~&)' Trailer Credit Check onsJa:bt.TVleada. 673-T'":iGS * 6ui.I 0 , c bid, Lunches incl. A1an. lhru Fri. ror eat. M&-$11 Mt.52§ appt. ?I.fa, aet W, 11th St., C.M. I~. S.Cret•ry ""-•-· ;_,d HCA ff• * IJS.01.5" * CdM. Full or~~ dt,ys. G0093 A.()K Sbampoo~Special $1.50 e your bQme or offic~ • A~ANT Manapr 1or Mkfl. rip. helpful.. SH 80 .,,,.. .. ,. '""'t . -· mo. S..v""' A Loan W,:;O~'"~ ,--,,.-.~-~-~ liiBABiAiiY;;SlTTIN&rriiNi;G-;:my;;;""lhome;m;;;., -116·-...:._ .... ri .. etc. A1ao ./ STATE &:• Federal Tax Sptcla!Qr Shop, Must he up. &tper Shaip! Xlnt Co. Typlol/Clark IRANCH u ....... the little boy v.'ho .-... ,..,.,... --·--MISS l!XEC AGINCY Balboa Ialand, anytime, 1ots romp. hooledn'C 827-3182 Service. As low u $5. Your wil1inl I:. able to assume • Type 50 MANAGIR call!d me about a lost tiier ot toys, back yrd, JWina'.. home. Kay Haley 546-29l5 tt1PQl'ISl.bility. Retail eiper. . {10 \V. Cout H\\'Y +., Savinp .t; Loan Auodadon, When You w-7020 Dl!mAL Olli e• ~ ~ RIAL eSTATI! SALIS SMALL black t•maie doc -Wonf if done YOUNG_.,. dest n• tlonla!. Pleue 1vr1t• tloxATrR. """"""""sirlf to Actt .. O>ronetld,....omc. with whl1e markinp. we.,... ~ · General ofnce ~ Dip. 51M. Dall)I Pilot, N.B. meet publlc. No O>CP· nee., ~ lleenled .sea peno& 1.,. Wbltt llu <'Ollu • ._ ' right • md\~ lil>ruy. CM arw. -dinl , Y""'. Work '111 "*"'-Am In puoon. neL -"held In 1ttlctctl vlclnl,ty Alpha Beta at 17th ·• t 1 • • • J"ull time. 557-lm' Htat.iey A. Qullr. lA Sa>on de Traltment, 2930 eonfkStnce, St. c .... s.iuni., "· Nem-' Coll one. of w. c.. Hwy, N.11' ......... Call .,. _ .. c<I Jlhi. Pl<ue re\um. ""' • _,... ,,,..., W-71M 1 * DllYllS * . MIN *' WOMIN '7S.1'21S oully love be" 56-2!90 fh rf · · U... I rl lNTERESTEI) IN REAL -ialum•• LOST On Lido Ille. lonr· "l ' • expe $ _..... ' • .,... clip~-· AJ>DmONAL INCOME -· _ .. -Ille balrcd 5iamHc """e c•t • ~ ] ( listed belowll SIRY.l~I ~INTER N1ce11111I No -. .., """"'· --Ha•tl•s••• v.·e~ blue collar w/ bell. J lmfll1y1NM AeettcY Item Nattd IO tn.vel ~ ae.cb!' W• ~ train. Call Ans to "Sirnba.'' member or · .. _ Rfl\lter Now for lrJust have d9lll CalibTU duatry. Write P .O. Box 1830, PbD KcNamee V1Uqt Real ~':!.... tam~-·.~.!'n"~ '!IRVICI DIRICTORY ·sERVICI PlltlCTORY _SIRVICE DIRl<.'TOltY Tem~~·· ""_v';ft'.c;w'~:"'co. Cotta Id ... , Cal. m . Elllte 116).1471. r • Ra-MOMfO• LMI '4111 ~an,~78~as~:-1~ 6~2244 • Drywall 6631 TAX 'SERVICE in )'Ota ~ ... ~ .. ~PM'So :! .... cpb1tl1 Newport.Beach 64.6-3919 N.C.R. lkkpg. Opr. located in Nniport. 8Ncb ' n.or.y.,.,.,....ING .. ___ .,.._...., .. , · ~~ aza. r·-ay \\' 'I'; ~ .. 1 .. -. area bu ...-tiar. avail. b' ~ey W•nted 6350 Ann. Eves aft 6, 548-4537 ono ~ i e DUDDY Drywall Co . llUlfl'l:. )ut . .i. efflcle11U Ask f01' "Ml T .. · -..i v omen, em· ..-,, open. , ,..,,,. · 1 BLACK & Silver· ~ AdWt. Ewn1rip ~Weekends. Llc'd O:lntrutor. I..arae or * !131~ * 51 • poruy poaltion. Manpower, a Mil qualif1rd Savinga A lo?",, + participation~ $25,COl miniature poodlt, l )or old. Call ~. Small JolM. Pb. 841-8581 BABYS(ITER needed oecas. Inc. C4I W. 00 SL, Oil Telttyplst Loan Brallch Manager. Ex· 'needed on short term basis, Child's pet Rewai-dl BABYSITTING, MY home. "40 lroftlnt 67JS Dlyi In my borne. Refer 66-*3 $450. 6: "P· eel. pottnUal • frlnae ben.. , aeeured by I.at TD on choice 536-7149 =.~ ~ 4~o. Electrical IRONING W my home--:-~ist9WestelW area . * .. ,1·11ifGLASS * ·INDEPENDENT :8~ ~ ~~l:'~"'~~ ,ritobUe llome dev. ~1234 LADY'S w1ttnaeur wrist ELECTRICIAN. Ii~ & $1 Hr. Alterations 4 BAB;iSITl'ER wt·ref's., pt . 'GEL:Ci:OATERS PERSONNEL AGENCY perience ftl!ed app).y. For , today! watch, In or nr So. Cout CHILD CARE, fenced yd, bonded . Small job!, Babysit~. 545-7641 tl It ...,"-2 Or s day Min. S months ·ex.per. reczufr.. 1716 ~ 5 . C partlculan caa Mr. Henmy '.ANNOUNCEMENTS C.Omm. Hosp. Liberal re-lunches. Vic \Varner Ii: Spl'-maintenance & repairs. I-==""====== me, e. __.. ed Apply" 1631 Placentia via.nae Ave, wte (2!3) 84M2. ward. 213: 469-1833 coil. ;;;ln&<IJ;ya!Sj•Ff. ;:W;;;fcJ<Jy~~-;646-0839;;;-;;;;;;·;;: II "5'&-Sll\3======== 1 · ~:,.;:: :!._ · -,.,.,,., 5 ·pm. HW\t. ·Coit. Mesa'. · ' C.M. &U-0026 54,5.0979 .. ~.i.,--------1 >•d NOT.ICES Polntl119, ~~ -~ 1---'-'-'--'-"---lpARAJ<EET, lite blue, BABYS!TnNG"' my........ p ~ I ~so ~ ... UFACTURING ~ound (Frn Adil 6400" answer:_s to "Pretty Boy." days ooly, north Cotta Meaa Ftoen 6665 apern•ftl "I -BABYSITI'ER Needed vn * ll'LIXOWRITIR * •• loi1GR. 'I'RAJNEE ** '""'N Reward. 881 Joann, C.loif. area. 545-22m. SUPERIOR SERVICES Peninaul& .. JU PM •. Your Work ·wben I. where Ambitious responsible guys, REPRESENTATIVE • fART German Shepherd (!l, • t.3 month!, chain on neck, : tlea. collar, & red collar. . ~Vic: Adam11 &: Mesa Verde • Dr C.M, 54G-2087 )Ut,MESE kitten, about 6 . mos. old. Se:alpoint male, ~vie. \Vllson & Harbor. ~54~1cm l'El\1.ALE Ger. Shep. puppy, •..a wks. old, Brook.hunt Ii: Garfitld area. 962-5278 ~ALL pow der blue Parakeet on Dahlia St. ,:orn, 675-4008 DOLL found corner Vicforia J:. Newport, C.l\f. .. 6424494 MINI BIKE ?!lust Identify 6'16·5924 C.M. t'CJUND: Lo11J haired young ·white cat. Flea collar. Vic . ''-tesa Verde. Call 546-02'39 ~011 6401 :¢sr: Small blk male dog, ~fi'Un aftn, vie K-l\1art, Cl\I. ifteward! 54g...oo;)6 ~IAN Cat. ma.le. "'hlte, • yrs., w / leuh. Reward. ;'Pwner grieving. 49')..43.ot9 ~1 ; Old En111i1h Sheep ;~. sha&IY "'ht \\•/grey, ~iric Bal. Isl. Re\\o11rd 675-6068 kMAU: Yorksh\no: • Glen J,t:ar tract, 116. S:iO te\\'ard. 962-4035 aft 4 pn1 . _.,LACK sm8U shaggy poodll', !f.triid's pet. Vic. Adams l:. . ~khunt. 96l--l&ro Ju1lne11 · Opportunities 6>00 VENDING IS BIG BUSINESS We have enjoyed 20 years o( unparallelled lntearlty dealing with our customers. Our 'company Is •~pa.nd!ng !ap.ln and requires dis· trlbuton to service rroutea of vcndin& ma- '.~ines. ttOUTIS ISTAILISH!DI NO llLLINGI NO SOLICITING! JUST PLAIN, OLD FAIHIONl'D GOOD SIRVICll Qr is requlrl"d : Sb: to Jen hours per \Yttk can run a small route. b1come commensurate with investment and ef· 1-fort. Eamlng1 can grow to $1,000 per month with Investment start· 'lna" as little as $1,500. Yes. wt \\'ill consider ,part Ume operators who are looking for an ·ideal supplemental in· come 1ituatlon, but ~ or ahe must be ~)Cplln· 1ion minded. Ji.II lntelli· 'gent company ffnancinK: p;ian Is afforded after 1niUal lnvestmc11t. Please do not .,,aste )'our tlmt or ours if 10u'rc looking to "play With a few v~ndlng ma· ·ablnea." Sincere people "1'10 are prepared to follo\v thla company'• principle• or "a n hon· est day'• ~ for 11n honHt day'1 work" ma)' wrlle. Your first ltlter should contain 1ufflclent re:fer· ~ lo vertf)'. All letters are pt":rsona1· ~ revl~ by ifr, Ce· dJ Ussery, Prf!!:ldent and Chairman of the Doud, USSIAT ...... .,.. ... 1111 <HAHCILLOfl •ow DALLAl,TIXAI 11M1 '"'' V.,.IOI DI•· T"'· Ne.424S 64>1362 CARPET VINYL Tll.E home or mine. fB.-0695 . )"Oii. want. \\iork your way to the top w/ loifan 10 call on Vt'holesale ac- BABYSITI'ING In my home, Free estimate Lie. Contr. '42-4037 BAB~~ 1~rlm that,_~ 1 .... , R..!M countJ. Sport.lear trade. Un. SMALL TetTier Dalmatian blk & white dog, male. Red Oea collar & beaded collar. Reward! 541-7370 days only, north Coata Mesa PAINTIN~EXT x.,,.., 1~ n•• a co. u; '"" no =· _.....,, area, 54>2201 540-1262 546-U'I! -INT Saturday1 onl'y1-3 my hqme. 'ersenn.J Strvlce ~ Helen ltayts 5-t.().~ limited opportunil)', as com- Reuonable Rate1-Llc:. CALL 548--~ after 6 p.m. . «i £, 17th $1 .. 01 COASTAL AGENCY pany Is exrandU. national- \VJ.LL babysit v.ttkday eves Gar.nine 6'IO AVERAGE 1 1tory eirtmor Cak Decora1 · 642 7123 .,,00 Harbor Blvd C loil Iy, &qier oot nee. wW train. or Ftl Ii: Sat n~ts. Call $259. 2 1tory exterior $359. BAKER ~ e or .,,· · 1,.•m!!·.,· ~·!'!!!''!'!!~'!'·!!• ~· .,·..,.11'o $400. per 9.'eek to •tart . CRAY Ii: white youni Pe.nian f e m 1 J e cal. Broad~ay & Tustin, OJ. Rev.•ard. 548-2543 'l --.-.... --•HERRING'S'!•m plete Comblnatlori. steady**FORi:'M'.&M --•-1~ ... , ___ _. .. ........,1714) "arp ao.....,.,.,gOl'a•-•Ml Garden ~ce Bonus ;;cJOO Blue Chips, Eniployment. Good Sdu'J'. ·-~lf.f~ .. ..._,ex-per e ri10TEL MAIDSe .-ora.ppom ........ " l"""'"' BABYSl'ITING, mY l'lome; ExP£RTCLE:.AN.UP Interior prices avail: Applybefoi'e,OA.?ilCupcaM 3d. ~-~PM to 6:'5 APPiy Ben Brown's ?.lotor _,,,.._ ___ . _____ _ CM. Nr. 19th IE Harbor. Penonalised wort for _'37=.Qlll_.,,,=,.....,,.--,.,-...,-, Bakery 2'7311thtsr c·r,1 AM. Ap,,.ln .penon aft 'I' Hotel,3ll06S.Coast Hwy, \\leeldy. Reul 643-2989 YOU .. "° ' " . ' &M; 1631 Placentia, C.l!J. C'-th, ·-··· particular people, 962-4914 .111p""" the paint. Apts 548-3001. _, , . · ~ ._...,_ LOST; 3 mo. old female German Shepherd. vi c. Monrovia I:. Oak. Call ~2605 BESr care fer your Want • It moltls painted , -SlO . ) lo Gtneraf Qmce Day or Nl&ht. 566 Hamiltbn NEW lawns, re·• e e d in I, a''U'i· nn. Call ar(Y(lme Pal ~ .:,u~~· ~~ GENERAL office 'c I~ r ,k , St., No. 8, C.M. ~:~la: =h. ~ the Painter, 567-11631 Evans , $1Cl,. 21112 Goed typll!lt a.Dd ,:t LIC'D Babysitter. vlc Wllmn estimates. For info call ./ PA IN TING-INT/EXt. .::P:.""11'::::;:: . .::CoO'="d:,:',:;""":;;;;;·;.;;·H;..B;.._ ~n!~t ~ wt th I: Pomona, CM. Fenced 897-2417 or Mi-0932 Jack cut do that palntina: SEAO'N ' . rtplar n.llf:I and many ~ yrd. Hot meab. 645-0617 :.:::*~~~i]ri:Hil0Niii'it;;•!Ss::*~=t~jo~b-~tut~,~·s.1e~&ne-~·~,~-·~..,.t-:· :' I ts OUB.JWSIN?":SS frinae:s. TMpbone tlC-W1 -==-~----1'e"AB=Y"'SJ"TTIN==G'", -• ..,,-c;-a;...-&n• · ~. &u~ litake it yoars • Become and Uk tvr Ruth Leavitt tor * FULLY LICENSED * UBURBAN Patntin&/Decor . Renowned Hind 11 Spirit· home C.?i1. area. Fenced yd. "The beat COits no n;iore" S . an Avon Representative interv~w. Personals ul..llat Ad v is e s on all Hr, day or wk. 557-9826 Bud;et landlcaplnJ Expert Gu11n1tteed \Vork. No experience neceBS&J')'. Gener el Offlct Ma.iul.enance. ~ Free est. No job too·J.arp awn bOUrl.l Hlth eirnin; ,..~ ...... 1_ wUl bl _,_ matters; Love, Man'iap, Irick, M•sonry, APANESE or too small. 4!H-319Q potential YUUUcd ~..,.'"':I. . .~:= BUAineu, Courtship, Health, ttc , 1 1 65'0 J G ardenln I CAt.L 'IMN.EDIA1'Et.Y on ... , •• younc ....... .,, Happiness & Sllcceu. No--'------;..;.; Ser-vloe . Neat "'Ork. •Interior· Ext.rltr • 541).'f04l .'. ·, :54&.'.5341 call Lon.int, Wtltd.ltt Per. problems too large or too BRICK 6: CARPDfl'ERY Cle&lMlp 6: yard maint. ACOU:ltie cellinp ptd, U yn M1nnel AJt'ney,, 2tMS \Veit· newport. pnonllll agency ~rof•11MN1•,I S.rvic1 fw tho amploy•r ond tho applicant I» 0...r Dr., N.1. '424171 S4f.2743 1maJl. I CAN HELP YOU. work, planters, flrej,lacea, 968--2303 eXper, State Uc. Pltbbqh BEAUTY Operatpr wit}) clltt Drlve. Readinas given 1 days a blodc wallB, cement patiol.= .... ~.-G~.----·----.-,--wn _P:;;n,.".,· -".,"",,',,m=-.=--,-IOrne followin&, Xlnt. v:ork· ---------=roED · I l'M --• .... .. Ins· -nd\"··-. 1 .. -ulon. "'"fA" companion or ~k. 9Al'tf·9PM m N. El paUo_ roofs I: all type• of ••-•------. "'---i-1 INT&: Ext Pn ... Free eats. ........ ........ ......... GI•"-eld rl \ d 1· ht ~·~-· --Nt.M•el Hair '"'uhions. No. ".. , • Y a Y • 1 g Ca m I no Re a I , San repa1r&. 49'J...'l928 ladGatrlal 6:: riilidential. Loe refs. 30 yn exp. U c. I: 1! •·Monarch~ Bay Plua, hoUaework for 2 adults, live Clemente . 492-9136 , BUILD, Remodel, repair * &16-3629 * irmd.' Call Oiuck ~ l.aauna Nifuel, 496-572i. A.sinale'iirl.bneeded to .. ln. RefJ. nee. 494-Tl86 492-0076· Brick, block, c oncrete , COLLEGE StDd.ei\t To Do or Jbn 5C8-0:'05-499-2;21 mt ~ openinp: 6:: p~tloa NIGHll'· BROn.ER MAN *. Women carpentry, no job too mW!. Gardenln1. Dependable It EX·PAINn:R. now IChl * BEAtmCIAN, tor busy, actlV1ty at .ervlC\:. stations. Good wq:es a: benefits. A~ Lle. Contr 962..69C5 Reu. Call (Zl3) 433-8196 teacher will paint eves.A popal.ar· prictd C.1.f. aa)on. Education or exptr. nortm. ply: The Derby, 1262 FREE Est. Brick, block, eves, \\'knds. Xlnl \\'OrlanlNb.ip, Paid vac. ~ ~e portan.I. Bectnnin: saJary Paliade1 Rd.,.Santa Ana. stone, planten I: entry na"s Gard'"'1-1£ law:n Free est 6f6.4Sll, 540oOOD __ ,_.._ ~00 weekly. If irrterelted Sl'ART YOUR NE\V YEAR ,,..... ......_. req'd. New ~._._.,.... rt'°rt ·to the main office, ** OPERATORS ** \vrnt TIIE RIGHT MAN. ways. 531-613. State Uc'd. ~~~~* =~ ~ A com-CUSTOM Painfula. Interior-Call,tbe Manqcr. -SCl-9919 Vacation Vil.lqe, MT & Spec macbine, Exp'd_ on 547-6667 Bulidtrs '510 ntc1~ ~· =·~ i!!r~~ BIKINIS: Earn ovet $7.00 Coast Hwy, LagWI& Bch. al prments. Some trainees '.!4 hour l'K'O!"ding --------'-C JAP~ Gardener, per hr., ~llln&: Sandpiper 3 pm thb Suri. only, No 60-M12 IVITN==E"SS'°E".so-::T0,--:,-<rid-..-:-,.-::t I Jon ComtrucUon c 0 • eicp'd. Compt yard aervice. PAINTING, Paperlni: 17 l'fL cu.tom 'Blldnll at homO phone calla pJeue: Not aales. PBX CHIEF OPElt. 2121/'ltl. Approx S:lS to MedaJHon Builder, NewPort Fl'ff estimate. $.48-8255. ln Harbor &n'!a. Uc A·bond-parties, i-rt ttme. No in-GIRL l'rtday., 1 Girl Oflloa. Hotel experience. 5:30 PM Ortega H"'Y· 2 rni. Bch. Call &T3-9352 GEN'L yd. Clean-up, tree ed. Reta. tum. &C-23.56 ve1tment. Girls 16 ;,Tl. 6:: litat l)e exper ln pta board 644-1700 Ext. S44 E. of San Diego Frwy. V\V C b' k'-aerv. roto-till, Sprlklr re-PAPERHANGING up, call HkH Hansen wk l)'ltem thnl trial balance Van. Please call Monte \Vof· 1--a-•not_m...,.o.._ .. "'-,.--'-UIO;.;.; ".-in. Halli. Reuon, 646-5848 549-0449 CaU Mac 548-lMf days. ~ typtna-, letter wrtUni A i!!·,J~!~~L!~. ford, 547-9641 RESIDENTIAL & Comm. EXPER. Japanese Gardener. llOAT CA•l'l.-.IRS aome 1.h. &C-7308 · Good comm. I:. hrs. 540-6702 SINGLE P I ho Ilk t 0..tom· r .b'--t ' Furn. Com •-1 Yd C'~-"'-~-* PAINTING Int....,. '--• " "r· GIRL eop e w e o ..... u,,; & pu: e _.. ....... "'. "~= • . .....,. .. a.ucu ExpedencecL t.up· cu,tom , , tot teltphone, sale a. i REAL Eatate Sales Lady nieet & dance wtth People. Fum Re--F1nlahln.;. 643--0091 estimates. Call 5§0..1332 references. lmmed terVlce. eonstrucUon. Top 'RS"~ rnemberthl:p drtw. Work for Vft"f bU1y rental office Every \Ved 8:~to 12. GARAGE CABINETS. l-'CLEAN;::;:=;::-UP""'""'SP°"EClAL!Sr:.,:'-"'= ~ WILLARD BOAT WORKS mnrt-home or oWee. Ph: parantee. Full lime or pari Meado\',rlark Cntry Club, L6w a1 Sl per sq. tt. Mowttw, edgina, odd jobs. PAINTlNG .. Ext·I:nt. 11 )Tl:. 129S B&ktt SL. CM. Mr. Wud1ke eve11, 87M'l58 tlme. 54&4660 H.B. 3 mi. \V. of Beach otf/ • 549--0908 • Reasonable 548-695;; exper. Ina. Lie. Fl'ft est. HAIRSTYLIST · \Varner. Adi .. $2.00 1---------JOHNSON'S ~AfwENING Aet'Otllt. Celllnp. 5484125 BOOKKEEPERpenn. u .. ture wht.~= Xlnt worklna condUtons, top Restaurant LADY. You haven't lived till C•rpent•rlnt 6Jt0 Yard care. Clean-ups. Pron-*PAPERHANGING _., Ti"'i-. Welt ~ln4 comm. +. Must have clJen- you've had a racial le akin CARPENTRY hi&. plantinJ:, ~2035 &: PAlNTING. * &2425 .... ,...... -.-,, •· tele. &42-6857 trealment at Le Salon de MINOR REPAIRS. Ho lob JAPANESE Garden i ng • ·Ou:~!_!!::!!..:., HAlRSTYLIST wlfoll. Eam TraJtments, 2930 \V. Csl Too SmaD. cablmt In I&"" Service. Neat work. Cleanup Pla1terlnt, Patch, niN'Cl9 ui-• mart by rtrrtln&: space. J im H\vy, N.B. (TI4J 642-3IS4 qn 6: o t be r cabh!eta. • ..lt • ....-R-ir .Ila-h-C'-H• Hair ~•-r,. yu. ma.int. ....,.,.,, __ _,________ , ·--l!eadt. So. '--•-. ......,., I .,......,., \.Ql•f. l\IAN wants ride from 5681'15. If no anner let.ve E -..--.-t"" G7321 day1fl3:MWO e\•e1 Brookhurst & Adams to Seal mq at i46-2372. ft o . * LANDSCAP R * • PATCH PLASTERING DAILY PILOT Beach or Dcnvney, (No. Andenoa 12 yrs local e~p. SJ&.1225 AU t;)"peL Free e•timate1 6a..a:1l HOUS"EKEEPING help ,_,, o~•---------I wanted lmn>cd. "-Apply Amer.l Ph. for time , REPAIRS* AL-RATIONS ~ ~ •- *NIGHT* DISHWASHERS ancl IUSIOYS nHClecl e SAllS e Part time. ladie-1 clothhq:. Experience pttferrtd. Many employei bene.flts. App!y In penon 9:30 lo 9:30 Robarl Holl Clotho• ~ 1601 Nawport llvd., CM SAR.AH COVENTRY has open\np for lull OI' part time llllles. No lnve1bnent, no deliveries. For interview, • 54B-0614 * Secretary l girl ore. Good SH. typln; akill1. Take charie in boss' """'""'· Sr. Typl1t/Mlrt. Dept. Dlwnifltd 1eoeral olc spot for attractive girl v.·ho can type 60 accurately. S.cy./A11t. lo Mt•· Exdtina pos. for front ofc. &ol w/eood SH l typ\na "'""· SERVICE CENTER Emphtymtnt Afency 500 Newport Center Dr .. NB Suite 200 By appt. 644-4911 • SECRETARY (bosplraJ ad. ministration). Hospital exp. required, know medical ler. mlnology, take shorthand, accurate typist, m'ature and well rroomed. Westminster Community Hospital. Apply Pcnonnel Ofc. 214 Hospital Clrc., \Ve1tmlnsler. 894-4082 1--~-~---· S.Cret•ry Good lkilla, F/O appearance, able to accePt re1ponslbillty, call Lon!M, Westclitf Per. IODnel Agency, 2043 West~ cliff Dr .• N.B. MS-mo. SECRETARY-Steno. Exper neona.. Send rnume w/plc- ture . Pondetou.. P. O. Box 11383, Santa Ana. 546-!lm '•0 O.noral S.rvlce1 "'21======== IUS IOY ~ .,_ Jamaica IM APPLY IN PERSON * CABINETS. Any site job "'° l\lotor Hotel, 2101 E. Coul 00 YOU NEED A \VEEK · 25 yrs exper. 548-6713 SUNGUARD Window• llass Plumblnt Neat appeSftl'IOe. P /ttme or Hwy CID.f R ...__ E 1 __ SECRETARY. Construction END OFF? Leave child GEN. repair, add., cab. tintin&: F'rff estill)ale. · F/time •. Over 11. Apply in lNCO~ Ta 1 preparen:, 8UUW'ft1Cou •H .... oUice. Xlnt opportunity. with ex-teach/mother. Good Fonntc&, paneling, rnarllte. • ~ * PLUMBING, Re~ I: Al-perwon. 'd houn fl 1 151 E. t . wy. Call M>0550 Tom Goodlon catt &: meals. 968--2416 Anytb.ina! Dick, 673-4459 RAIN autten installed . lentlons at economy prices. WOODY'S WHARJI' ·~ 10 ~x bl•· Newport BeaCh tor interview " • ALroHOUC5 o\JIQQymOUI Dn1-. seuon almost here! * 646-12116 2311 W Newport Blvd. on ackler.l===""=====::....=========I --u•1211 •.. writo to CARPENTRY, cabinets • ......_,, PLUMBING REP••r. Ne~rt Beach H. R. Block Inc., 117'.i Harbor 'J•b1 Men, Worn. 7100 [Jni M.n, Wom. 7100 r......, _.. -Remod. No job too small. Free est. Reunl !188-2208. ~ Blvd, C.M. l4Mi9C(I . ---.. --,_ P .0. Box 1223 Costa M~ Qua1 work. Call 646-2576 No job too tmaD C•feterl•/Cewtter Girl JANITI)R, male. H,·B. atta. · 64TO CARPENTRY, Cabinets Hauling 6730 -=---•-~-=-·-~-1Hn· 5 to lO pm l\lon. thnl Under 45. 12AM-3AM. 7 Announcitmtnh Remod. No Job too amall. CARL'S 1.IoYU11, JU.Wing 1i: Custom Plambl.,. Fri. Off Sat. sun 1:._ hoU· nJ1hta per wk. Good pay. ---·-----~ .• , .. ~ '-'\ •~ -76 • ••i~u • ...., dayr. Call Mrs. Penninlton (Call 1~.14,. ,._ ,. ........ u, .... ......, .,,..,,.."" Cleanup, ~l Ton P.U. Rea.I. N......,.. m.Q600 lrt 2036 •w _..._, Spaghetti Plate T";;ic REPAIR. Partltlolls, Small Frff Est, 548-8918 =========I ' e · JANITOR, Male. ·0ranze Mlchelob Beer on Tap 25c 1 -'-"'~~=~-~-~ ~•"ING woman wanted remodel, etc. Nlte or "•·• • HAULING. Have v ton Roeflnt ffSO ... ~~ ' County area. Under .45. U a~ KO, 34143 Coast Hwy, ~ "" ..,,....-...need only! 4 hrs per Reul Call KEN 5tl)..4679. pickup, liceruied l l.rlsuted. ~~·"' Altl to 3 AM. 1' da,y1 per wk, Open ~~~-P~n~ p.m. REPAIR-remodellna.patios 4.%-1~ ~\· Roots, Repain It: ~e;:;.:r~~Td aJt:; GOod pay.' (2U) ~7 Oosed Tueadaya LET TIIE'SWEDE DO m JACK'S CoatinJ or all Types. Bo81 5:30 ~1, anytime JANl'l'OR Wanted tor C.M. Tr•vel **494-185.1•• 1110\TIN'G It HAt.n.JNG v.'Orlcs on the job, Free week-eMll. aru, trl.NI &: phone re-6435 CARPENTRY. Rep a Ir 1 , Real. I"ree, est. 536-l091 estimates. 6'>1691, 145--2550 .......... qui.red. I lllte• weekly, Must 24 hr. '-Nl1ft. be eqier, dtpendable le ---------Rernodellne, cabinets. No YARD/ Gar. Cleanup. bard--w CRUISING ADVENTURE job too small. Call 646-4224. Remove treei. ivy, trub. ALL typn l'Odt, wood • J c PENNEY CO ' apt open. - alt .... 1-les, LEAKS F·, • .;..,nN 1-,..__· C2l3) 923-5121) Panama. Miami. many C•ITMflt, Concrete 6'00 Grade. backhoe, 9624745 ...... AoXUY ~·.., -;;==:o--:::,.-.,==-:-I slops. \Vant 1or2 Part or a11 HAULING $II LOAD REPAIRED. Work cuar. LAS;ORERS. (2), wtlllna tu way. Vtta 36 Trawler. 2816 CONCRETE \\-ork ail typei. 6:: Tree 'Service, 'lf6.2S28 847-1136 Haa openJnc lot be· trained for plude mofd. LaFayette A~. NB MOii. I Sa · b akin& haul! * Roof !AW Repaired * Inc. Mlnlmwn 3:11> lb man to 10 pm or Thurs pm to 6 Skl";:ding~ Lic. ,Servken~ Housec&e.,.inti 6735 AU Typea, Gtlaranteed * COOK * req'd, U.S. Industrial Foun, ~-"cu JS159 Qliklen West Clrcle, JOBS & EMPLOYMENT Quallt;y. llG-IJlll) BAY • s.och Jsnitortal 0"'! >'!",..... , rl and w .. tm1nttcr l84-.r.tll2 r..tORE concrete patio for carpets., windows, floon:, with one expt ence Job W•nted, Men 1tOO lea money, Art1s6c setting etc. Res A Commc'l. S1wfnl' '''° willlnc to le&m ·oar limited **LEGAL SECY** Ii: !iniahiJI&. Lie. 6#-0687 M&-1401. ---------menu. O:>Japet!.tive wait•. Gtl w/lols (If moxy to work CEAIENT WORK. no job too COMPLET:,;,:;:.:.:E,-qu<I="ll>,,-;.....,._=::-DRESSMAKING, aattafac. optttandlnc M~tJts includ· tor. a terrific law finn, Xlnt 10 YRS. exp. Slcipper, Eng. Deck hand, need ya.cbt to "''Ork on or delivery. 6'15-0445. 673-4752 ~· reuorw.ble. Free clelJllnl. Experienced, Rt&· tlon IU&fUll!ed. Reuonab}e iris profit. lhlrlDJ. Joe. Super co. bent.. Start I Estbh. H. Stufllck 5CM615 tdnable. 631-2!54 rates. Call IU-1060 APP°LY IN PERSON :!..n H~ Ca 11 Jean AFtCHITECT AsA'I. 6 Yl'I· experience. Just returned from Europe. 3~1 :m exp. >16-1'260 l\IOR.E concrtle ""ilo for •resa 0 6 __ ,,._ .. _ .. _ • Drttsmakfhc • Alteratlonl 10 ,., _ S'PM ~ ~-~ ~~·-0e1•~ to Nit -~ •• . • COASTAL AGENCY leaa mohey, ArtlaUc aettln; Carpets, windows, floors, etc. ,....... 1'()NDAY THRU FRIDAY I:. finlshina:. ~7 Rn. l: Conunc'L 54Mll1 Call Jo * ""446 ~ • . , 271!hHarbol' Blvd .• C.!\f. UCENSED male beautician wou.ld like positk>n aa cha.Ir uahtant to stylist. 54"-1206 CUSTOM. CONCRETE Patios. pool dtclca, etc, Free lrliceme 'Tax 6740 est 91$.6516 • * CONCR>.TE 11oon. pa. llENE"CIAL tioo. m._,,. t.ny ,. Job. TAX SERVICE JM Wanted, Womon 7020 Reu. Don, 6CU51fi aft t. INSTANT REnJNO (if you. owe tax, INSTANT LOA.Nl. Computer guarantl!el hi_. eil tthuldlk>w'tlt tu. Fat a Um.lied lime, HOME tilJ.s Chllcl Ca,., EXP'D Galley Cook -L'--1 "10 postdon on commerda1 or ~--'------ pr\vs la """' short iripo NURSERY Sdtool, C.M. I pref.. but will -tll>I wk. g,30 AM~•lllPM. otbtt. Write dttaila tu C. FuU, p/time, att.,1 achl . Jay O'Neill. ~ Teti)' Rete• tor 2 or more. Rd, ........ S.1oh 9&11 Tnn. ... funt. So 0...... Co. b7 1ppt. 548-3196cr""'2! 270 E. 17th St:, C.l\f. S4S W. 19th SI., C.M. "74 J, C:. l'ENNIY CO. vm .·1 to> P.M Shift. .• • MNOll -.-v-,...--, -Thl-Tllc--M-.,,-* '24 'Fub\on hlyil.' • MoH Clork om. worl<. Install A npaln. F.qllll oppori\mil> ,employ"' Pmtlp ' Co. IJ\a typin(. No job too mnall. Pluter Must be MU iroomed. Dt- patlo, Lca\ttna -CXllm;rER :Hil}, '' ...... --Fantutlc - ....... -· Mon lltru Fr\. ~ "'"' · 111-19'7-"'' Chow 8'11, JStl MISS l!XIC. AOINCY Newpoc1, C.P.t CO W. Couc K)\I)'. TrM S.rylca -DELICATE!SEN •tan. "'11 N•--.,._ --------· Aft'lY In -a; E. MAHUl'ACTUltlNG TREES. Hcdf<1, ..... CQ~ 11111 SI .. c.11. ""',.. --INGINllR - Stumpe, ttJtwJ\led, hauled. 30 I')'. ~ M~t role in a '" up. Fui'1 Ins. l4MillO • DELIVERY BO\' .• felt ~ _..,,, Mee RESTAUIWIT MANAGEMENT .•. • fa1cinatin9 cair••r .. . not just • job OUTSTANDING GROWTH ••• Grant's, one _of the nation's largest retail chains, is rapidly expanding into the res- taurant busineu. Almost every new store will include a handsome Bradlord House restaurant! In ten short years Grant's res- launtnl aales have Increased 100% and will double agaln'ln far leas time. Over 100 men and ,_ wore appointed to reslauranl management last year. Advancement comes quickly, depentllng on ability anti willingness to accept responsibility. TOI' INCOME I ll!Nll'ITS •• , You will · find top Income potential at Grant's! qppi>rttinllles 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 service industry • , , and you enjoy a broad benefit program at Grant's Including • liberal reUreme.nt program. stock pur· chase olan. 'employee discounts and many other trExtru". GOOD WORKlNG CONDITIONS ••• Go . with a Go-Ahead company! EQjoy a work ICbadule that loaves you with Oma for . your family and frlencla. Tate the first step now : Call for an interview. PHONE 96U3l'I We are an equal opportunity employer. AIDES . for eonvel<!oconco, =~=UBI====== elderly care or family car.. Contrectwo Homemakers: Call 541.ai81 "20 Sliley Tu Senlce • J21h YEAJI 1.oc.u.LY • Qu&Jiflect • Reuonable C&l\>Oll Auto. 1!3 Bned...,., G-Y .. ht Con>. 1111 Uphelotory -La\IUna Buch. P'-•tia. C.M. Ill J GIANT CZYKOSK!'S Ou1m. UphoL DENTAL ASSISTANT, Ml!llcai . , "• • EXP. SECRETARY. Good lkllla. Pn.fer NB « CM. 6*-0032 lllt & Addldona • : :.emodtllrc rrtd H. Gmrick, Lie. . 61?.«>ll * 50-2110 W. A. IBWl SMILEY Certified Public Accoont't -~- -an Crellsnwtshlp Cltllntdo onl)', Aftmloon ii ' l'A"T TIMI Or•nl l'lau -'Moms and 11 ..... h•rst 100% fin! SG,J451 "'~ locNn, beach.,..... Ty;oltl~I Im. _......, had) un N~ m..·01 caudir•·ntt•,..,., · ·~•!!Jror~~·~·~··~·~}:_·:_!-!!:!•!!!!ili•••••~mll!iiliim;iii-•••• -11 . .. ' • • I I- J ' . • ' --...,...,.,, .. ----"""'--------...----·-·-----· . • twL\' "LOT W-, Ftl>rully 25, 1910 WtdnM<lAY, FtbtU&f1 25, 1910 PILOT·AOVERTSEI :~~~~R~~!!:::P!!~~~~I~;· Jl~RA~. NSPORTAT.ION JOBS .. EMPLOYMINT JOIS a IMPLOYMINT. MEltCHANDIS~ FOR MlltCHAND!SE F6RfrTI1t1ai1EiRfERHXANNl. Dffi1isisn oOiRr"Mi1slleR:AANl5Blnal ~~ C1n 9'00 u...i c-9900 Un.t Cora 9900 Jobo-/tlon, Wom. 7100 Jobi-Men, Won), 7IOO ,SALi AND 'ntADE SALE AND TRAD& SALE AND TRADE SALE AND TRADI ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;p;;;;;;;;;;;~ SECTY/lNS. W. or k . In ~Stat. Ty Isl i"t"';;n~ltu~ .. ~·:· ;.;~~ll~l)o~0-~0· 1·Fjiujimjilt~-~-~·iiiiiiiiii,iilOOOiiiii~iiFuiimiiiiilt~uiiroiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilOOOiiiii9 Mr~:~mtnls il'lt5 Corona dcl Mar, Exp'd lt1 S41'0: up. Beautr:; Ne:WJl(lrt 1 UIJf!d W,' ku ranee. u ts 8000 U'OKIN& CIRS gen, bli., Jor llitit u.n-~.icb Otes. Stable Ot Top $49.95. I Used .ao·~ cu CONTILLO I '. dorwri•ng. cta;ms & 1111.,.. boots. Ca t·I Ml" e.1ty. ""'"' '!Fll•lll condltloo ACCORDION Send resume Box 8, Corona 557-1122. AbiJ:aU Abbot Per-$19.95.•·"J~ Jted, SY·~; au 24 key, J.20 bul, with nit, .a..&. del ~tar. fk'ltmel Apncy. 230 W. War. 'ranges. l co,putone, l $600 ve•.ue + "euy to ' CQ,.. ..,. SELLING DIRECT ner, SUlte 11. Santa Ana, avocado~·~ Brand new learn" books&: sheet muaic Add OU< FabuloUJ Product WAtfJIESS.Attracti,,., ••· wood ventll&U.. "'°"' 30" DKORATOR GETS CANaUATION cue. &ODD Uo.1118 PRICES To YoU< Line. Eam Extra dgQre. .PllPh. oceanlro<lt A 36" .i-In l!"'luoise, OF 11 WXURY AP'RTMENTS PERFECT CO>lllmONI Cash & Bonus's + A Health reatiunmt. Apply In person, Yt'llow, sllvutone white & " $250 or Begt Offer Spa Prog ... m. Apply In P"· AllOY WeaL, :ll06 w. Ocw> peach 114.91 'il>e Factoey, SPlllllll & Modltwrantlll Furaltun &<O.S3!l8 Alter l PM Orivint 9n1 of thes• betjer· loolc'in9 earl n11d not cost rnore .. .in fact, it c1n tl'll you mon1y.~P,iced fer be- low whit you would !11Jtp'9'ct to pey, th111 first-rete, pre-owned cars will seve you money in upkeep end driv- ing costs. !!On, Holiday Health Spa, front. N.B. l88S lfarbor, 5fM842 All BRAND NEW GIBSON SG special w/cue 2300 Harbor. ell. WAITRESS Wanted: Over SOFA 8', never Uled, rever-A decorator dream house on display -3 $185. Fender ba&sman white SERVICE Statton mechanic 21. Call after t PM. •Ible eushlons, ~tch(Uard. room& of gorgeous Spanish furniture (was w/origina.l speakers $200. & salesman. Fulltime. 962--7112. 192QZ..A Beach ed 185 • s;;;~atcbinl' klveseat reg. $1295. 644-0785 ~.a~~e~;~ c~~hfield. 7~ Blvd., H.B. CO~ $ pc. full n. SACR·lflCE • • • • • • $425 Pianos & Organ• 1130 Sewing Machine Operators & Schoolt-lntfructton 7600 bdrm set. Good full u bo:o; Se8.l'l'Mftresses. E:tp'd .• ladies springs & matt's. Alao, twin Complet• Medlterrene•n Bedroom Suite in ....-.... Top ·piy, ideal IT'S YOUR MOVE n. """''0 Oak. IR09. $349.001 ····-----NOW $188.00 conditions with nice people 3 Large 2 drawer nJte Gorgeous Sp•nf1h Custom Built Sofe with e SALE e '67 JAGUAR 2 + 2 ).M.fM. W ir• wllt•l1, 4 1pe1d, 16,000 "'ii••• 'Vt •y 1li1rp. IVOT482) $3695 '64 GALAXIE 500 2 door fl•rdtop, ~·ap•ed. •h•rp, Vt,· r•die, ht1ftr. INGEOl41 $599 '66 CHEYELLE 396 •119fnt , 4·•Pted, 11'1•9 wh•tl1, ¥i11yl fop, 11dio, lit1f11, power 1le11in9. Cr11M Puff. ( 110973) $1699 '65 BUICK G.S. Rtclio, h11t1r, Vt, '4·1p1.d, power 1t111i119. R11I c:lttn low mil11. (RGC271) $1299 '65 CADILLAC Full p•wtr •ir conditiofli"9· k1;1-•h••I'· lNMA03 1 I $2199 -·5s PLYMOUTH Set•llit1, r1dio, lieal•,r, •11tom•ti"-I TUA 1691, $999 R1dio, lie•t•r, power it•••· in 9, •ir co .... itlo11i119. Cl''"• th•rp. tKFN26611 $799 '66 FORD LTD R1dio, h11!11, 1 ulom1tic:, pow1r d11rin9, Vtry c:l1111 lo mil11. CWWJ-4711 ' $1299 '67 RIVIERA F11lt pow1r, 1ir 0 c:otldltion- i119, Cl1111 • shtrp low mil1t, !lPTJ9Sl $2699 '66 PONTIAC GTO R1clio, h11l1r, pow•• ,!oer· Ing, pow11 br1l111, 1i1· c:onditio11i119, low 1T11le•91, Sh1rp. ! RVF96l I_ $1899 '65 AMERltAN . R1clic, l11t1le1, •1.1tom•lic. Clt•11. CVWT7SS I - $599 '67 OPEt R1lly• Sport, Exlr• 1h1rp, IVLXlt21 $1199 to work for. App: 1589 Discover • Great New sta.nd .. 2 antiquf' gold, 1 matching Love Seat-Choic• of b•aufiful Monrovia, C.M. Carffr W5th Th• walnut $9 each. 2 matching f•brict. (Reg. $419.95) NOW $225.00 SURVEYOR Patina gretnprlnt lounge Sp~nish Dining Sets -·-----·---··---···$75.00 SURVEY 'TF.CHNICIAN AIRLINES. cha;,, both tor 149, US<d Sohd 01k End r.b1 .. and Coffee Jabla. . .$19.50 Analyze !Ille re port!, like new Spanish corni:r Tall Decorator T•ble Limps research records. site in-A natural for youn& people grou_p with wbatnult.,..lrlm & I Reg. $49.951 ----·····---·~··-NOW $11.00 speeUon, cad11.1tnl survey who want eJtcltement plus! matching ta le '"· The Spanish Hinging Sw•g ;....mp1 Mal)'sis, calculate tract & Ticket agent ? Airfreight ? Factory, 1885 Harbor , fR •49951 NOW $2'50 parcel maps .. Exper with · t R 540-6842 . ' •a· • ' --·--··-····· •· programeomputer.Reswne ~~!~n.R~~ 1 or e:i MUST sell! Near New C EDITAVAlt. NO MONEY DOWN to, BoxTJE995XA, NS.BO. IL ~=~:r .• ~3'llm::,i ~: t~ Re~. din. rm. set, bd, mm -FURNITURE n,lte. We'll even give you arm chr, garden tools. COMPANY placement assistance. Ge t ~.....,=-"-'--~~~~-• Has opening in Beach Cities with security: $Cl away NEW exec. ofc. furniture. 1844 Newport Blvd (•I N · from dull routine. Travel M t u d t t u· area. o experience neces-f--" us se ue o re oca on •Harbor Blvd.) ~c~c:tai:!!:~:~ =~1r::.0:p:':v:,~:~ ~~;~~e"n.~:i. eit. Costa Mesa Only tra.1.n: Air mail W. A. Dick· Veterans. EUglble in1titu• erson. Pres., Southwestern lion uoder the 1federa.Ily Bll~~ngllTIFUroomL '.1 ~.s. ~""m-Every Night 'Tll 9-Wed., Sat. & Sun. 'Til 6 p trole ,..,,,_ Ft. w rth inlured student oan pro-Y• ••VM .. u • e urn """~l'.. 0 • gram, plete, wu }tlO, 00\111' only --------- Tex, b Phone now for details. $189. Used climplete 7 piece Furniture 8000 Garane Sale 8022 To 'erve you etter modern Uvin .rooin group;----------• ------ it'1 Airline Schools Pacific only $99. 3 used 2 piece sora AGAIN By popular demand! MOVING: Callers & Sattler JASON BEST 610 E. 17th, Santa Ana & chair sets only $69 each Used double & twin box range, hideabed, tennis tble, Ml-6596 set. The Factory, 1885 spring & mattress sets, all tools & other furn. 849 Employm~nt Agency 2201 So, Main. Santa Ana w..5410 Harbor, 540-6842 sterilized to meet rigid Governor St., C.M. 64&-6375 QUAUTY kins bed. quilt~ Calif. state bedding lav.·s WE MUST REDUCE OUR STOCK OF PIANOS I ORGANS BEFORE IN· VENTORY TAXES ARE DUE ! SAVE NOW!!! $200 . $300 Check These Values SPINETS, CONOOLES, and PRACTICE PIANOS •• ................ From $299 BABY GRANDS and GRANDS, rebuilt, refinished, guaranteed • . . • From ;895 SPINETS, CONSOLES, and CHORD ORGANS • • Save hundreds of dollars on some noor models! New and used. • • . Famous Brands. 11-IOMAS e YAM.AHA BALDWIN 0 \VURLITZER HAMMOND OPEN SEVE.i\I DA VS COAST MUSIC NE\VPORT & HARBOR COSTA t.1~ e 642-2851 Open Dally 11).6 BODY CULTURE Cl.ASSES mattress. Complete-unused $12.95 set. Used 9 piece cor-Appliances 1100 * TRAINEES * for ladies now forming $120, worth $260. 842-6536 ner group with tab I e. ::'::':-::'c~':-:----=c::.:: I •iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii""I Ltd member1hip. 642-3154 eves bolsters & fioraJ coverlettes C 0 PP E RT ONE delux Fri.. 10-9 Sun. 12-5 2! yr old Promot.'J, Adv. Le-Salo.n de Traitments · _ .. $&!k • .Ylifd COl1Jtr group dshw!hr, $150. GE .self finn. needs young men. Co 2930 W. Cst.' HW)'. N.B. RECONDITIONED Mat~ without table 1::;0, The Fae-, detrost relrig-Creeezr $80. Jlsted on ~ stock exch's, ~===~===="" & ho ....i.. frame with ...., Nat 'I TV. It .,,,.u earn less PRIVATE INSTRUCTION Xllt<••.,gs, tpry, 1885 Harbor, 540-G842 110 A.C. dryer, $25. Ga.s ,. JI 1 t t wheels, like new; $45 : DINING Roo stove 120. 64&-6792 *TYPISTS* than $150. call for info aft raa& ns rumen s. 64&-7521 m set by Salem 6 PM: 54«694. Certlllcated. 7 yrs. exp, • House, solid Maple table, 6 495-4445 · CUSI'OM Made Living room chairs and china cabinet. &: bedroom furniture for General -Electric stereo, Job Prep.1ration 7800 sale. Call 673-4018 walnut cabinet, 8..11 In Im- Register [or USED 7 p.iece antique white maculate cond. Must see to KENMORE auto. washer, late model. xlnl cond. rro. Whirlpool elect dryer, xlnt cond. $45. S47--8115 or ,...,.,., FINANCE Co. demands lm· riiedii.te liquidation ot a1l floor planned Spinet & Con. sole Pianos on a CC$1 • + basis. CJur loM iJ. your Jold. en opportunity, but you must act NOW! \VARD'S BA.LDWJ:; STUDIO 1319 Nev.·port, C.M. 642-M84 Open r ·ery Nite- & Sunday Afternoon a lemporary job today Western Girl Inc. SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS dinette tel with 6 chairs appreciate! Excellent buy! KENMORE washer ,1ri1h all $49.95. Used 5 pie~ antique 962--0847 wuh cycles, new pump $45. whl~e dinette set wltJ_i 4 s •p=e"c"'1A"'L""'T=H~l~S~w=E~E~K~ 1 _536-84ll==n-HB-'o--;=::-n::;: 1 'll::=::=::=::=::=::=::=:z:I chairs $29.95. U~ 5 piece 8' Sofa.Matching Loveseat WASHER & Dryer Pall'. Ii rubbed walnut dl~ing room Reg. $219.95 Sale Pl'ire $159.95 Good rki nd Both 4667 MacArthur Blvd. Beckon -Occur -Faint -table with 4 chain $59.95. A d F • wo ng co · Bie<P' -BUCKIT The Factoey, 1885 Horbor. pprove Urmture ooly $85. Call 54>-2306 DORSA ·MOTORS Newport Beach ..,..,,. Speaking about his opera-540-6842 USED Appliance & TV's, all lion: "The doctor removed 18 ,-7y~,-ur--,A~d,-~m=--,.,,,.u r 2159 llarbor m vd. guaranteed, Dunlap's, 1815 TYPIST W J S h o rt b 'ii: n d. my spine. After the opera· clusWeds'l' Someone ,viii be Costa Mesa 5-iS-9660 ,,.N~•~wpo~7r7t,7C7._M7•7540-_771~88--= Young sharp girl, ~25. 2 tion, they carried me home looking for it. Dial &t2-567!I G.E. reJrigerator, 16 cu ft. "'"";d;::•;ily'°'"$2;·='°=hr=·=675-51==";;.!.'.,"="==B=U=C=KET==·"====0:..::=========i Offict Furniture 8010 Avocado green. Xlnt cimd. CANCELLATION OF FRANCHISE Makes available, I l m I t e d quantity or all models of famous piano manufacturer. All at hua;e savings. Sale good 'tll Feb. 281". Orange County's Newest American ,Motors D ealer TRANSPORTATION 1 TRANSPORTATION I TRANSPORTATION AEROSPACE RELEASES -i..a.-!50=.G'°~"'"""'2°"G"'.~"'."R'"e7trl<=era=to-, 842-8340 11621 iuci:_.!:NYD:At":.!1c":ToN l~CH 842-8640 New C•n 9800 New Cars 9800 New Ctn 9IOO • ~~!i~e~s • 6-•350 150 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ;,;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiijjj 272 Steel & ~Vood desks • 85, =·~=====oo"'=6=73-=Ll64= GOULD MUSIC OVER 80 QUALITY CADILLACS TO SELECT FROM! '70 FLEETWOOD HOU!;HAM VSEO--V£11;V LOW MILE-S. Brlel'WOOll fire-SAL( PRICE mltl b,_,. wllfl klOI! ¥lnyl top & btlgc /::."' ~~ro~~.r,"'~-.~~eo~,~~~ $7634 ,-.w., P.0-IOdu, •Ir condlllDn!ng. tllt-fllt """'"'· trube conll'01, floor ""11, tru!lk m11. undfl"W.!, twtllgfl! aMt!Mt. •fd & Jff'Wlr.fd I ..., 111. l•UAGAI '66 CADILLAC eou,. .re vn1t, C•rlllbltfl •-wlltl Wll!t« fOCI encl ..,. clolll •nd lt•tl!tf' 1m.r11r. Full p0.,.,..1', .. C11CH'Y l!r, AM/FM rlcllll, !flt· t .. flKflPk ii.trl"9 ""1tt1, PQWlf' .,.., ioc:t<1, pn:mlutr1 ti• ... (SJL 1351 '63 CADILLAC f •qo.oltl .. *"~" S!l¥er wiltl bllc• ~ tocl •lld Plwh bllck l•ltitt lntarlDr, lull P<IWer' ..... fKtooy •1r confltlo!llnt. tYCT· ,., ·u coun DE VILLI SALi PRICE SALE PRICE SALi PllCE '69 CADILLAC $1111111 ell Villi. E•ml ... Wlll1• Wilh •••ul- $11• ••~ cloll! Incl IMther d'111hirtt ln!t•ID•. F~ll powtr, l1Cf0ry •Ir cond!lloniro;i, NA/FM ra<ilo. (lRFlll) SALl PRICI $5111 '66 COUPE DE VILLE SALE °"'"' 3S.100 m1111. Olym111~ bron1.1 11rem1,1 w1whl!r ~lled «IP & bton•t lntrr. Facto•)' •I•, tull po,...r. 1111-r.11 w!tftl, P-dDO• loc:k1, PRICED P•tn;nk ooener, AM-FM w/P .. nltnnl, Al> iffU!fl'I' IPQllCl$, (RT0331l '69 CADILLAC '67 CADILLAC FIM!woocl Brovlh1·m. ll;f!ll! Slt~•r Wiii\ b1•°' ~ IOp •r t11eck c101~ .. '"""r t&Plitr}'. Full PQW91" 1ec1ory air, 11er111 AM· "M· tl!1·telelcopl< •'"'""' """"'; p0w1r ~ locks. lwUIOM ....,rlne(, PQWfl" trunk OPfntr, lie, (IJl(2Jt) SALE PRICE SALE PRICE NABERS '65 CADILLAC Sellin ell Vlltt. $1b1t bllCk wllfl ml!chl"ll 1n11rlCH'. Full powtr equlptnf!fll plui l•dOl"'J' 1Jr condllJonlng, AM/FM rtdio, Ntw llrn. (TBYXl6J '67 CADILLAC SALi PRICI SALE PRICI < ""' Ho~ ... MO" ,,_ ""'"' .,. s29 9 m1ttlllng doll! " IHlfMr ln!1rlor. full llOW• 9 ,,,, lattory 11r, till wllftl, llO...,. cloor lock1, crul•• <:0ntrol, AM/FM, twlllgltt 111t1llfit l, tVCL.n•) '65 SEDAN DI VILLI SALE Pawa•r blUI wlblue do!~ & llelhfr. F&cfCH'y tlr, lull POwer, 1!1!·1111 '°"'"'· li!lf\111 •ttk• PR ICED Ing, tKIO, w/P..rin1..-in1, """ WSW, pkll much more. TnJI}' • t1M &llfQmabllt. (IWO ''" 2·600 Harho·r Blvd., Costa Mesa 540-9100 . SALES DEPARTMENT OPEN 8:30 AM to 9:00 PM l\'[on. lhru frj. e 9:00 A~'[ to 6:00 PM Sat. and Sun. ALL CARS SUIJECT TO PRIOR SALE. ALL SALE PRICES EFFECTIVE THROUGH FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 1970 5-Drawer legal file cabinets - fl' Misc chain, tables & cab-Antiques 8110 2045 N. Ma.in, SA 547-0081 ineb .. McMaban Bros Desk Inc. 1800 Newport Blvd Costa Me.9a•642-8450 ORIENTAL RUGS Unusual 12x22' K.:rman. 0th· er vllriOU! s~s. 675-3353 Office Equipment 8011 Sowing M1ehinoo 1120 llAl\Rr10ND Stelnway, Yam· aha, New & used pianos ol • molit makes. Be:st buys tn So. Calif. at Schmidt Muslc Co, 1007 N. M?ln, Santa Ana CLARY Cash Register $225. Tower Adder $49. Speed-o- Prlnt Photo copler $169. """""' Garage Sale 8022 * WED .• Storage unit, misc size 10 ladies clothes, new je"'eiled sweaters. Stroller, l\-1isc tum. & household Hems. 16132 Littler Dr. Hntg Sch. 847-.5316 GARAGE Sale Thurs, Sat, sun. 9-S. Gobs or goodies. Z76 Albert Place, C.M. SINGER 11.uto zii;i:-zag, 6 mos. old. No attach needed for zig-zag, button holes, designs etc. Guar. $40 cash c1· small payment.& 526-6616 '68 SUPER Delux Adler. Like new. Priv Ply, $200 or best oUer. 494-1235 Musical Instruments 8125 SELMER Serles 10 clarinet $350. Selmer Mark VI saxo- phone $300. Grelsch White Falcon guitar $700. A L L BRAND NE\V, 497·1634 STEIN\ VAY Con.sole. Nice tone & very good eond. $115(), (1) <Il4) 174~. ett 5 OLD upright piano, needs refinishing. s1;1, l o 8 11' La!onda Circle, F. V. 962--0218 PIANO TUNING &: Repair Expert, reasonabl~! Albert Aarness 615-6967 RICH'~10ND Upright. $125. May be seen after J, ll5l Paularino, C.M. 549-1206. VOX J aguar Organ. pa.Id $525, sacriJic:e S275. New cond. Eves 845-3238 TRANSPORTATION I ~SPORTATION I TRANSPORTATION Campers 9520 Campers 9520 C•mpers 9520 PRE~VACATION CAMPER SPECIAL (NOW IS THE TIME) 1970 Ford F·lOO CllS!om Pick-up D!to...-M 11 .. , ._..,. ,.oty, •l~yf !<la, '"'' -i'"' I. •II ,,.,.vii ·-· _, ... _,,_ 1 ... 1 ··-·· ... , ..... .. ... o1 ,,...... J.__, ll5alJ PID 11,.,, (~!Mk tole. 11161. SIX·PAC 1·'°°1' rtOIO & llDi DINml CAMPIJ: °''"" too.11•: ,,, .. O.or1I Mela~: 76\'I:'' Ci~ 1tl• tl'4" "' 2~" • O.trtll W1111: 71" ... , ..... Jl.ftM1 , ... • • .., '"". JD"..-" Walthf: ftJ h •ft $2999 FDR 1EW TRUCI +CAMPER ---cCAMPER STRUCTURE--... ........ lie- Ml CMS WRY 2 TW -24,000 Mill WARRANTY ( • s 0 c • • I. I I • E d 9 '· " d • • 1. .. u ) • • d >I . " • J ,. ". • c • • I. ' • ' 7 .. I l ' I ---·----------·-------------------------------....... ·~---------~·---------· -----. Miscellaneous * AUCTION * PUBUC ESTA.TE AUC'I10N + UNCLAIMED STORAGE FRIDAY 7:30 P.M. FEBRUARY 27t'1 SeaJed boxes & cartons. Dia- mond engagement r I n &". hfan'1 pocket watch, Camoo necklace, NI c e costume jewelry, Electric vtbralln&: chair. Antique marble top center table, Antique com- mode, Treadle i;ewtng ma- cltlne, ~lor TV, Walnut hutch,,Roclcer. Cf.dar chest a.nd many other itice item&. Bedroom seta, Divans, Sec- tionals, OWn. Maple din- ette set and Occusional ta- bles. Bel.utifu.I cherry Philco color 1V, Stereoa, Bunk ~. White & rold canopy bedroom set, Matft~11, Duplex refrlguator, Eye. l~el gas stove, Washers, Dryers. Stows and ~ruCi MOFlE!! WINDY'S AUCTION CO.l\1E BROWSE AROUND 2015~ Newport Blvd. Behind Tony'• Bldg ft1at'ls b>!ta MK& * 64&.8686 OPEN DAILY 9 to 4 22 Cues Of IAbelon Toner For Xerox 2400 Copier . .l\1ott than 50% off Call (714) St6-4610 AUTUMN Hull!' Mink Stole, S250. Relaxacl.ser comp!, $75. Color TV. J>ll!'rf. $175. Sz. 4li mll!'na sport coal• $10. Sz 4a mena su.its $15. Call 615-0253.. 3312 ft1arcus Ave, N.B. CONSTRUCTION EQUIP. !SALE) 30 sk:llu.ws models No. 77 le 367. Very r.lne condition. S55 &: $61'.l eL 841-2684 '11lmd!! or after 5: 30 wkdl.ys. PAIR JB' 1tttamll1>e wing tanks for houseboat or catamaran. New &. painted, still in lhipplng crate. I ·LO~V~AB=L~E-b~la-ck-l<_m._o:oc-k-1--------- 557-8181 8 .poo I yr old, loves EX PERIENCED, reliable LATHE. l\till, Drill Ptts~. children, hse-trnd, needs gd 1eaman .seeka Yacht Welding Equip, Air Com· home w/fellCfll yrd. maintenance ... 494-2131 prellOr. Small Tools & 962--0180 2/26 l-1\sc. 2062 Placentia, C.M. SMALL Female mixed breed Marine Equip. 642-2601 dof, excellent with thildren, 1--------- lol' ,Outboard w/trlr, '48 needs yard and good home. RAYTHEON Depth Finder. Buick '61 Cad. Bdl bed, 2-10 675-6027 2/'l1 DE-m. Raytheon Ship Shr spd blkff. desk. 675-3559 \VANT good home for radio lOJO.A & radio direc- Cocker, Xlnt for children. g tlonal Under Konel KDF· """' old. A 11 ~hols •· lie. 100, S300 or make separate eves. TWO 12' x 10' 0 .H. com-"'0 at DI by •« Lile 644-5785 2126 otr. 'l' ng ....,. mercial garage doan:. com· preservers $3 ea. or off. 'plete, you remo,·e S75 ea. FREE to gd hm w/fenced Call 493-.3158. Avail 30 days. 546-5392 aft 5 yard, 5 pure br-ed blk/wht . • Waler Spaniel pops, s wks 3 HP BrUilh Sea Gull motor, QUALITY king bed • quilled old 962--01.80 21'Jfi like new, $95. mattttu. Complete unused · 675-4747 $120, worth ~. 842--6536 3 AOORABLE mixed breed I===="='======:: eves. ·puppies, 6 wka old, lovable But Slip Mooring BALBOA BAY club l.:cuddly.NeedgoodhomH. membership $1(0) p I us 894-1593 2/26 1 SIDE SUP for rent. No tn.mfer fHL Box p.919 G 0 R GE 0 US Trkolored sailboats. Dally Pilot TaLby Call. Look like owls. f/ Call 536-3743 I NEWPORT Beach Tennis Call 61..-4738 2/'II FOR Rent Sl.75 per loot. Up Club Oiarter ~iembershlp BUNNY Pure white. Large to 30', no sailboats. S280. Call 549-3756 days on-m a I e k i t t e n s , C a 11 615-G872 I 6Th-4h8 2/'II y. LADIES 29 diamond dinner ring 611100 carats, pl&linum mounting, orig cost $500, Sac $195. 546-3215 HIDE-A·BED, Maple dinette, tni.tch, desk, dreuer, cheat, beds, !Of&, rocker, la.mpg, lable1, color TV. 543-861l BEAUTIFUL • panel Orien- tal K?ttn. Appraised at $1050. Call fl) (714) 631:-0208 WHITE unllonns, aius 12-13, 10me 10·1. Reul White lhoel, '7-B. 6f6-.5&15 HOUSEHOLD Furnl1hlnp for Sale. Call MG-2321 afttr 6 P!\I HAND Painted oil portrait of )'Oll or your children tram a ............ - POOL table 4x8 with ac- Of'uoriel $50. MT..1239 BOYS Stlnln> $10. 10x12 hooked nw $10. Power mov.'ff 125, Call 9624H6 Feeturin9 America's fin• est mobile e1t•t• homes di1pleyed in O renge County'• newe1t edult _P_e_11.,._G_one __ ,_._1 ___ 110G_1 perk1. $,ACE S -Yo.ir ckoic• o tpt~ 111 tllY of our 11•w ,.,k ... =========ISALES -Choott your '"""' "'-1125 from o••r I 00 11•W 111M1lt Young Amuon paITOt. Cap and •tand $100. M2-1U8 _....,.~-·-~-----totdy to rnOYt i" or k1¥• 9 PUPPJES, L ab L yourt r.1;1torn built. shephtrd. $5 eltch. Male k SERVICE -Full tl111~ ,,,...;,, fem. Black&. Brown & Blk. d1p•rtm•"' ,,,...1119 ••ck lo· 548-7306 c1flo11. -"ANAH"IM"-GREAT Pyrenee1, Puppies. ., AKC. Terms. 1 fem. &. 3 PONOEROSA MOllLE -• 6"" _.,,. EST"-TES miues. ,.,...,u,u 2JOO So. L1wi1 11 J-6J).1601 LARGE standard Siu Collie. Male. Sell ro good home w/ lge yd. 96Z-0204 OCOTI'Y • Purebred, no papen, 8 Wffks old. S47. Call MI &-1929 ADULT Cream female toy poodle. no papen $25. 546-7994 SAMOYED PUPS -AKC REASONABLE •147-8858• -"COSTA MESA"- GJIEENLEAF PARK • 17$0 Whitti1r A••· 714 ... 42·1]10 -"HUNTIN•TON llACH"- DllPTWOOD.IEACH CLUI 21-462 ,.,111, eo •• t ~. 114·1ll-111J USED Olehwuhrr, Ul«I £P BASENJ'l "Barkltu" oven, iu t&ble top. All AKC, 7 weeks. sbotJ. barplna. 54&4211. * 98S-1532 * ..... "YUCAIPA.CALIMHA" 50UTHWIST MOllLE MOMf. SALIS 1061 C1li1111•11 11"4. 714: ,., ... ,,2 BAY HARBOR Mobile -s.r .. ' YEAR E!jD CLEARANCE SALE NOW ON DISPLAY U, 16, :al, 21 4 30 Widet 10 Ir :II pllon aquarium, BOXER pup1, AKC pUm~ filter. W1VU&ht Iron reitstttfd, btwn colottd, stand, fish. etc. $40. 675-7238 aho• quaUty. 5364449 FOR Sllc, 8':lUl'x~· dog: run I :'11N=Y"°'Toi-yg-, ~nux7· -,ed,,...,p-"oo"dl"'e""& or 6'xil0' fenct:. S50 chihuahua 7 wk!. old m * 549--2371 * 842--1962 eves. HAMfltONO Olord Organ \Vhlle Miniature Poodles. Up To 6o Feet Long 142$ Baker SI. Co.ta Me .. % block Eaot ot'H1rbor 81Yd, TRANSPORTATION Molorcycf11 '* TRANSPORTATION Truckl ffOO '68 Ii TON Ford. !I/II, Afr, 361) vt. hd ... • ...... POlitracUon Gem t o p wtbol.t rack. Xtra tank, CU1tom cab. Xtra Sharp! WW tnde fOr Jeep Wqonee:r. 546-5392 aft 5. '6' FORD PICKUP '>' Ton, kmr bed xlnt cond., 3 rpd., dlr, med. blue ext, black Int. Take small tor- etan car or small dn, Will fin; prvt ~. For Info. call Phil 494-9'113 alt 10 am. '56 FORD P.U. 292 cu. in. Air cond. MT macs, buckets, cl\nlme. A classic beau~ " cll!an. $ 9 5 O. Wedntsdu, FobMIJ 25, 1970 TRANSPORTATl~:::j~~~~~~'!:::f!~!!!!~~~~:i ;.D.;.une""-"'"B"'""='•:;:.• _ _;;"21;;:; Imported A-9600 lmporttd ""* HOO EXPORT Co. -lmJ AUSTIN AMERICA IMW metal Rake, 4 .eat, tull Je>cth drlvo. ""°" demo. I--------e IMW e mso. All ......... loaded AUSTIN AMERICA ·~~1.i. 1o ~-with acctuorlea. lmmed. ..,,, _... d·'I -·~•·• II I Salel, Ser"Vke, Parttl for o.llvery iu very, .,......... nanc na: Immediate Dcllvery SALES. SER.VICI::• PARTS av&il. on IOOd """"· Phone All Modell Tl.M MOTORS, INC:. S4M186; alt. T pm I wkends 8081 G&rdu Grow Blvd. 4!1Ml45 534-2281 °""' ~ ....,_ MET Al.FLAKE VW Durie Buny. New wide !!res. bumpers, header1, chrome acctsaorte1. Sanital')'. Bcwt rea&0nable otter. 642-4689 MANX '69, All extras . $2495 or oiler T 6 M MOTORS 892-M.51 J2rtupon j\ 111 11>1'{ •, 3100 W. Oollt &..,.., N.S. -541)o176< Authorized MG 1>etltt TIIE QUICKER YOU CALL, THE QUICKER YOU SElJ. TIME FOR QUICK CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOT WANT AD BEAOI -1647. Ntw c.,. 9100 I New Cars '800 I New c.,. Auto Supply '63 ECONOUNE Pick Up liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim;;;:;;;;;:;;; .. ;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiimii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil 9100 w/ pow.r lift pie. See at II Wh~ ... ,. :;:: SW.~ ... SA ·SUNSET FORD, THE PRICE FIGHTER · Pr1a!t to AD '6T F.t'ON. Ford Super Van, =-~~ ~~~~·~~f·.-1970 MAVERICK RDUILT ENGINES '61 FORD '6. Ton, V-3, '4 1pd. 1125 Victoria, ai ~ Many xtru. Muat ldl. Call 113'1 0.och Blwl. HD M'!-G991 I =:64J.=1'151=alt=~===:=­* OPEN 7 DAYS * I" 9510 AM/FM stereo radio for Late Ford pick.up. Will trade for AM.. M&-5392 aft 5 ALPINE VACATJON TRAVEL CENTER Excel. -Golden F•lcon Olympie -Alpine Apache • Wheel Camper Worlds qe1t most com- plete RV vehicle .OOpplna center. 8352 Garden Grove Blvd, GG 534-6686 Cl.,.,sed Sat. Open Sunday ft1llJTARY Jeep $850 or of· fer. HeaV)' d·rty chrome rim.I &: Gate• tlfe•. li73-7792 C•meers. 9520 RENT $10 VW cam.per, stove, fr\(, ~p, all equip. SU a 4'¥. Sc mL 646-5266 28' CONVERTED BU S , POWER PLANT, 11£FluG, ETC. Dune llut~l'-•• __ '5_25 68 MYJl:RS Dune Buay. BOO cc VW en&ine, completll!'ly chromed. 1800 mi. M U I t Sell! Bff:t oUet! 476 E. 18lh, CM alt 4 -lZBZ9MI l!QUll'MINT!I Automatic, radio, hHt.r & delrost.r, windshield wHhtrs, vinyl trim. accent 9roup1 carpeting. Announces the beginning al tomorrow Pontiac's all-new Firebirds are here. lOY CAlYll INTlODUCIS l'llllflD! Thi true enthusla1t is convinced th1t 1 per· formence 1port1 c•r should ft1ve front ind reer 1t1biliz1r ben, • big en9ln1 l11y ••• 310· hp, 400·CU. in. V.I) Ind • fib1rtlt1I hood with 1coop1 thef function If you order e Rim Air v.a. Right? Formula 400 does. "' LOOK FIREllRD OVER TODA\'. AT CARVER'S. The front bumper 11 mede of Pontiee ENCURA. Endur• is the resilient materi•I th1t look• like peinted metel but isn't. It re1 i1t1 pin91, din91 , chips and It won't. ru1t. Tha brakes •r• front discs. Re1r drvms." And the styling it so clean we even hid the radio entenne in the wind1hield. Seen anythtn9 thet 1v1n su9gasts budgeting? .Yo11 won't until you chack out t~• ptic1. • •• • , , , , ROY CARVER'S PRICE! ROY CARVER PONTIAC 2925 HA'RBOR BLVD/C~STA MESA [[] ' • !YI~ I -·-"• • htodel S. Sl25. Orts. Caru• 6 wkl, nl pa.pen. $25. record. make offer. 67>-1+t5 * Call 847~1 * °'"" MHI mo IWOoMTOj'J!;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii t • l .. . , W~Y. Ftbruary 25. 1970 TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION 1-.W .._, -lmP9ffed Au1oo -1""""'9d A-9'00 •MW DATSUN ENGLISH FORD -BAYSIDE MOTORS 1200 W, Cout Hwy., N.B. DATSUN DOT DATSUN OPEN DAILY AND t SUNDAYS NEW '70 DATSUN PLCJWI'_ W/camper, 96 hp o..-erbead cam. 4. 11pd, db-, 6 ply tires, back up lights. You 1111.me 111 serlal No. 244009. Full price $:1ll99, Take small. dn or trade. can Phil, 494.sm or 56063C af~r 1D am. -rSY- .. Leader in The &ea~b CiUel'' ZIMMERMAN 2145 HARBOR BLVD. 540-6410 . . ' TIIE GLISH • GOING THING! AT ORANGE OOUN'IY'S VOLUME F.NGl:JSH FORD DEALER OVEh 60 NOW AT CLEARANCE PRICES! TIModoro ROBINS FORD 2CliO Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa 642;m0 • · 1B8:G Beac.h Blvd. 1969 DATSqN 1' :Dr. , Huntington Beach new! Owner must ~, .842-7781 or 546-0442 Make otter! 962-6263 LU..· BUS\Eln' -In lcll! town. 'Ibe DAILY Pn.or 'IMtle)', time: & effort. lbolr Claaified lt!cilon, S a v e now'l·ll .l)AD..Y PILOT Classitied -------- !_!iection NOW! CHARGE IT! '66 STINGRAY FASTBACK '427 •n9, '1 1pd, R1dio I "''''''• buption•I ••r. ISUA076) $3095 '66 RAMBLER • CONVERTIBLE Avtom•tic:, r1dio, h••t•r, V1ry nic• c:1r. !WIK 5011 $695 '63 VOLKSWAGEN lu9 2 Door. IGZM617l $695 '67 MERCURY CALIENTE SPT. CPI. F1c:tery •ir, •utom•lic:, P.S., r•clio, h1•i•r, only 20,000 ho11•1t pric.•. N1w c:•t Wfrr•nl'y {VOP 2161 $1895 CAMARO 228 COUPE READY FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY '68 CADILLAC DE VILLE CONVERTllLI Full pow•r & •Ir, low low rnilfl, Mlt• c:olor, 91111 tir•s. IWSHl,5), $4295 .: '66 CAPRICE HARDTOP Fvll powft I •ir, ••tfo l:iuck. •••h. 'fSTF6 15) $1595 '65 IMPALA HARDTOP' COUP'I VI, eulo., r•clio, ht•l•r, I ownfr, low 11'111••9•• IMPLJJ21 $995 ·'68 CHEV. 112 TON FLEmlDE VI, h'f(fr1m1tic, r1cl io, h1•l•t, cr••m puff, ! 154o 04AI $2295 AND Wtdntsda.y, February 25. 1970 TRANSPORTATION NSPORfA ·1 PILGT.AOV£RTl![ff !4 N l111portod ""'" ffOO lmp.-..teff A-l-.,_ _____ _ DATSUN JAGUAR -'"""'""" Autoo TOYOTA - '67 Datsun ' Wag. IK7 JAGUAR MO 1600 4 Door. hpd, dlr. Ex<;<C RARE 4 SPD W/0.D. lent condition Small down Leather Inter, rlr.h, chrome Will tina1'ICe Prwt pty dJi wire wh11, stereo, drlvinl aft 10:00 am ~ or ll&'hta, radial tlrt1. Fintat •••9773 or catt. 645-2051 aft S. Any. ~ • - ' ti.me weekends 1965 DATSUN 4 qr, ati~ ' shift. Xlnt cond. $650. can 1963 JAGU~ 3.8 Sedan. 968-6181 Black w /wtre whls & Plrelll! Eng. in xlnt cond. 1.967 DATSON 1600 4 dr rtfust sell thUi wk. $1250. Wagon, 96hp, 4 spd. GoQd 493-4223 da~s. Eves 493-S6ll cond. $951!. Call 548--673.1. '65 3.SS Sedan. Bel1e I blk ---,---,----1 lf'thr, pwr/air, chnn wire FERRARI whl" ""' ""lalL 641.4265 '62 XKE Roltdstu. Xln't PEiWI cor>d. New tires, valve&, NIW(ICll't lmpartt Ud. ()rl. uphol, etc~ $1600~ 548-4580. llttp CewltY• cm1y •utbcW1-----.;...---1 '"d ~ . SALES'SEaVIC!:-P.ARTS MERCEDES IENZ 3100 w. CoUt ""'" Newport Beach I 642--9405 540-1764 AutbOriz:ed Ferrari ~ai.r· 1 MG Sales, Servic~, Parll Immediate Delivecy, All 111odeb J1rtuporl 3l1npor 1~. a!QO W. Cout H"l', NJI. Toyota . ' Corolla $1876. • 30 miles to the pllon e Lifetime lubrication • 73 bOl'$H • Hits 87 mph when you want e 4-on·the-floor all synchromesh trans· mission ... • Bucket sea ts e Nylon c.arpeting DEAN LEWIS 1 tU "..,...." 11¥4. c. ............ ,,,., '~E 'r i, e •· 6,ti•~•. Whit• w,u Tir••• Ac,••· 1orieli, Fri•ght + T•x •1111 Lic:••u• Extr•. 642-9405 M0-17&111!!!!!!!!!!!'!!!1!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'!!!!!1!"'' Authorll<d MG Dealer NEW e USID '69 MGBGT Yellow, blk int. RECREATIOHAL AM/Fh1, wood steer whl, VEHICLES chrm wire wheels $3000. e ·=~· Eng. & clutch re· ' 100% "'"hlt:-t'OI Mr;->ofot-lights, ----1-~-- tape; mags & radio. Fac.tor,y Warr•nty Sacrifice! CaU 846-3238 Av•llable on Used '64 MGB. Lt blue. Toyot•s \Vr. whls. $1100 1000 Miles or. 30 Da.YI 536-0l92 • -. 1967 MGB-G T ELMORE * 847-53611 * MOTORS •51 MGA, $275. TOYOTA * 54.5-9457 • -========I Foetory Dlroct Dulor New Cars Usecl C•r1 894-3322 194-3321 OPEL Corvettes ARE -1968--0-PE_L_K-.-.-.. -,-Spo-rt ~Beach Blvd. Co 11400 \Vestmln!ttt upe. . 839-3679 '69 TOYOTA 2 DOOR PORSCHE TARGA 912. Sliver, 5 ~pe~d. A?.1/FI\f/SW . Biaupunkt, 28,00D mi. Like new! See at 476 E. 18th, CM ·aft 4 P?-t XL>n COND. 545-2647 aft 6 PM VOLKSWAGEN YW BUGS '66 DODGE YAN. CAMPER $1995 '67 PONTI~C IONNIVl~LE H.T. Full pow•r, f•c:tory 1lr; 29,000 •ctu1I Miles, $1795 '68 STINGRAY CONVERTIBLE 4 Spd .• r•dio, ll1•l•r, Ml c:ond. lVQUb39) $3995 '67 OLDSMOBILE DllLMONT HARDTOP CPE. f•c:torv air, P.S., A.T., ,,cr;o, htr. low ,,.n,.,,, IUTLl561 $1895 '67 MALIBU HARDTOP COUP'I J 1p1•d. VI, RlH, Pct•tt 1it•ri11g. IUEZ67ll: $1·595 '56 FORD PICKUP Good fondition. $~95 '69 NOVA 6 c:y1llld1r, po••r9lid1, P.$., RIH. 11 ,900 tn11er. • $2295 New Cars Used Cars 546-1200 546-1203 '64 C Porsche, Nu paint, Brand· nu rebuilt engine, 1oo~'o guarantee. moo or 01. fer. * 968-TI44 * FROM $399 GOOD SELECTION '62 PORSCHE C Coupe, new ~ eng, am/fm, mecha n . ~~. by '"""°"· Coll o~ ~ '65 PORSCHE C ' Xln~ co~~w ~res OL ,6' 1958 PGRSCHE 16008 Coupe, ,,.,.. mech. like new, good body, $1350 or best o1r. ~70 &19. 3031 Ext. &6 or 6'l 1910 HARBOR BLVD. rosu MESA '54 PORSCHE, $650 549-0058 FOR S&le. 1968 VW iiua, =========-! stereo tape, Porsche wh!ela, SUBARU rnd;al ""'" low ..... Xlnt ---------! cond. Call after i pm, THE ALL NEW 644-2406 SUBARU FF-I STAR ... =v"'F"B="'a=-·=,,,,-_...,.~I IS HERE u&. ean ms e auu out. Rum good. See at Top s~d !lO ·I· mph, up to Chevron Station at Harbor 40 mil_ea per gal. Experts & Victoria, Costa Mesa. 4 say this co..ild be the car of PM 'tiJ .d 't the year. Come 111 and test nn .u e. drtve one today. FOR Sa.Je-1969 VW Camptt. KUSTOM MOTORS Ordered in • Eun)pe, com· S40-S915 ple!e! All extras, Io w ========::.I mileage. $3300 or best otter. 546-5835 TRIUMPH ---------1 '66 V\V Bug. Green. Re-bit '58 TR 3 Roadster, good run-eng & trans, new batt, titta. ning cond. Must Sell. $450. brks. Priv. pty. $1225. 540.0649 eves. • .tr1, &16-3.198. 1"'96'°8,_,.V\;;;,,-,Squ=,c:.,:;:boc-,k-. ~Ex=--I TOYOTA cellent condition. !\fake of· fer! 548-3155. 242 E. 19th St. BIIL MAXEY -~.M~. C"5tom top. "'w ITIOIYIOITIAJ =~ ~e!~~an. 11111 BEACH BLVD. Fully Maintained'. Hunt. Booch 147-1555 1695. ""°"' 841-3496 I mt N. of O>ast Hwy, on Bdl I=-~-~---­'67 Conv. Red, AM-FM. Local car. Call !T!OfV'IOJT!AI 67>-12!!0 .it, pm. '63 V\V Convt. Very Clan . Mark II Wagons 1\fake OHer. Call - HI Lux Pickups 67~2847 Land CrulMrl '69 V\V. GOOD COND. Wagons $1900 or make ofr. PLUS OTHER Call 646-80t9 HARD TO-GET 1\tODELS '61 KARMANN Ghla, Nu NOW IN SI'OCK littll, brake1 & clutch. New Your Best Deals Are Still At oond $850 962-8685 DEAN LEWIS '70 .vw ~NVERTIBLE l96f. Harbor, C.Af. 646-9303 ONLY 700 Mt. • $2350 . l969 Toyota Corolla ~2526 ,Real economy! 35 mpg. White '68 V\V Bus. Xln't cond. t with red leatherette uphol· Owner. 23,000 ml '1, Muat stery. Bucket seats w/4 :..xi. sell. $n50. 543-4001 Ooor shift .. Padded da~h, CLEAN '65 vw. Xln't run· wsw tires, 2 spd elec. w1p. nin&' cond 40 000 mi's $935 ers w/wllldshleld washen, Call 642-fil47 ' · ' radio & heater. 1970 llce~.1'·=~_,~,.....,.,:_,= Pr1C"' at ooly $1400.'S.. and MUST SELLI '6.1 VW drive at 1013 Sien-a St., * 548-1468 after S PM • Fountain VaUey; 839-3826. 1966 V\V Squareback Priva~ ?arty, Low mlleag!'. llfili oHu . 2828 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA '69 TOYOTA Corolla * 837-2361 * Sprlntu, Deluxt. AMJTl\f '61 VW Sunroof. GOOd cond. radio, 17,000 mi's, $1300. all around. Rlldlo, &and 897-3604 alt 6 whls, $495. call 644-0064. '69 Corolla.. 7000 mi's. $1(MXI. l96T VW, :n.ooo m 11e1. -i tke pymti $29.19. Mf-nl radM>. Clean SWO. tw4-<151 Call S4&'0342 ,, Mow that VolYos . IOok this good; !hare's no excuse for not buying one. All 1970'• -r Nowli\sioe~r \Y~gonS • 59dan$ 4 spds. • Automatics ~ VOLVO DEMONSTRATOR DISCOUNTED $580 ~1r. No. 71~~ IURO,.UN oeu,.,.,. 1,.c111111t DEAN LEWIS 1t66 'H4R•Oll: ILVD. COSTA MHA 646-9lOJ 14S-WAG0NS 164 -SEOANS 1961 \VAGON Special. Needs ipmet ~pairs;. i125 or oiler. 515-!fil6 CADILLAC -.. COUPE DEVILLE 1969. Must Sell lmn1ed •.• Reloc.8.ting to Europe. P\vt, fully equip, air, lealher. Xln't cond. $5200. Call (71'1) 544-3'86. '6700 ;=·cAOif.'LAc co'u p.e· DeVille, ~extt. lse car, full Pwr. air, ·AM/r fl<, Convel"· tlble. Xlnt con d. $3150. 00·9360 or c··es 546-0417 aft. er 2/23. 'Iii CAD. Convl. Full pwr. Jmmac. New a:lass tires. $3195. 546-:-9206 or 642-~ CAMARO ---------, '69 CAMARO · R.S. Orange 350 V.fl. P/S, P/L, a.ir, auto trans. 15,0CO mi's. 673-5811 '67 Camaro SS 350 300 h.p. 4-!p<;. r.·lust sell. 6'16-59()3 or 548-1784 '68 CAM.ARO RS, p/s, p/b, air, auto tram , vinyl top, lo mi, like ne\v $2400. 633-8256 1969, CA1\1ARO 8.5 350, 13,lOO miles. $2000. 842--59'25 after 6 CHEVROLET All Qlher model" now ln atoCk. 4 11~1 & automatics .. -,,--c-,,.,-vy--Be-l _A_fr __ 327 Your Best DeC'l!ll Are Still \I ;utoniatic -runs ex~llent. . DEAN .L!WIS Radio -,,,.,., -..... tim 1968 Harbor, C.?.l ~6-9303 $500. Call 548-1369 VOLVO '63 B-18 Dependable! 64 CHEVY 2 bd Bel Aire V.fl. E.~cel ~ .. 673-7066 da. 214 Stick $450. Walnut ·st H.B. aft. 5 p.m. 646-6728 -CHEVY Van Camper 108. Sport Cars 9610 A"uto trans. ai r, r/h; sell 1966 SHJ!l.BY GT-350. See to cont. Xln't ct>nd. 675-5258 apprecl•te! 1965 CHEVY Caprice, 1 * G'fs--1597 eves. * owner, lo mi. PIS, P/B, air. $1200. 842-6395, 545-6331 Antiqves, Classics 9615 . COMET RARE Classic '46 1'1G-TC. ---------- Right hand drive. Musi 1963 COMEI' 4 Or. V·8, auto, Sacnpae. $1600. 64&-2562. $3M. Ai:.tos Wanted 9700 WE Pl.Y •.• CASH tor used ean I trucks fust can us tot fret. ntlmate. 6ROtll CHEVROLET Alk for Sales f.i:maier um Bea.rb Blvd. Huntington Beach KI 9-33n WE PAY WH FOR YOUR UR CONNELL CHEVROLET 2828 Harbor-mvd. * Call 962--2603 * CONTINENTAL '!H CONTrNENT AL. f\l ust sell ! f'ull pcl\..,er. Good cond. Below Book. 54&-3849 '66 Continental. M int cond! All xtra s. Priced to sell. 673-5655 CORVAIR '66 MONZA ,Sport CouPt wlrh automatic, One owner, locally ol'.'ned. Goddess gold exterior, plti.h cream interior. Si99 full pri~ or small dO\Vn. Call J .P. 49-f..9773 or Z45-063t CORYETI'E CMta Mesa ~1200 '68 CORVET'l"'E Convert. 427, WE PAV 'l'OP 4 S?d. >ant cond. Lo ml"s. 1--!MPO==a"'T»"·-.,,w"'ANTID==:--·I Must see to appreciate. ·0ranee Oxlntie.1 54().-5308. r.Jaria/ art 6, TOP I BUYER <92-MSO BILL MAXEY 'J'()YO'U C88 427 Convert. 4 speed. 1.1881 8eacb Blvd. New ti res. Xlnt cond. 284 IL Beach. Pb. MT-S Knox SI, CM. 645--2991 9110 COUGAR FORD AUTHORIZED '69 COUGAR XRT, !KXIO ml, LEASING SYSTEM many extras $2850. &13-1611 America's tariest leasing ext. 1891 , 8-5 pm ata;tem for finance or net!;======== lfa.ttna ot 'all type tars aoo trucks. · · DODGE e\lmmedlate delivery from '68 CHARGER, fUlly equip- . owr 30!! cars.and trucb pea, excellent condition. e rCcnnpebtlve rates 12195. * 646-91 4$ e i.New car dealership aerviCf: ====-,,.,--~--.,= e iF)tll "tradelo" \'alue tor '70 DODGE Super B. PIS. your ptesent ui· PIB. Save $1000. Take over .;All popular makes avail-payment!. $48-6523. "Olen" able !'or Complete Details Call ~Malcom Rekt Ltulns M.a:naaer FORD TRANPORTATION CAR '$7 FAlrla.ne convt. Good cond. 1250. Cati 673-71181 ·• Thoadoro 11.0BINS FORD '2060 Harbor Blvd. ~I FORD Falcon Sta. Wq. Cblta Mea. ... ~'.MIO SlOO or befit OUet. • . • . ,_. 968.1252 ·-.. ----. ' ·-------------------· --- • Wtdnelda11• Ftbrvarr 25,.) 970 TRANSPORTATION flµNSPORTATION TRAN$PORTATIO -•. SPQR N U1ed-Ciri" ......... 9900 -UMd Co'" 9900 ''' ' ·- -., Used Cors · Used ·tors 9900 , PLYMOUTH • • ~. ,Ofil:JIAC PONTIAC ·PONTIAC •. '69 llOAi>RUNNER, Stereo. . ' ffl1TtmJI!.•! Le '4\1n1: :te,PONTIAC Wag<in, ~·act !'loyzlu,.air SUllp. torslon.. ·, · _, .. !:.. -A tJlJ:t(l-'I ~Ul'O~iltt)l &lr, p,J,. p.b., ·S.seatcr, bars, nla.gs. M1.&1l aa.crilictf »68 ~NT~. Fli'eblrd., (alee wt th blk. l.:ndi.u too. Pwf. ~nUy overhauled, Xlnt Ca.U 642-1260. ( • over "'psymfl'.6t11, best ·oner. str. /and t:ie factory S yr, cond, Pvt ply. Middle bJue ,67 f\JRY ,11, 4 dr, air, p/s, -~lier 6, 1306 Oc.-ea.n!ront, w~ty book. book. $1650. 675-2226 c/h, 46,ooo ml'" 1 • .,,,.... ·O,, · Sale! $1899 Sale! '65PootU.c 6,'lown<Mriver. • Xln't cond. Ul.95. &iz..4736. 1964'"LE ~ANS CONVT. VS, 'Mister "T'' Xln 't cond·. PIS. etc. 46,000 nsol h mi's, Call 64ih3$rl of OLDSMOBILE aµto, co ~. p/1, r&, tur-645-1441 M>-8833. Aller 5,30 833'00Gt quol&e w/blt top, xlnt cond. CdM 644-1497 2100 Harbor Blvd., C.M. RAMBLER Son LINCOLN• MERCURl · IS having a RED T-R Used Coro • • !!Oil l ·BIRD '65 T·BIRD Full po1ver, fuctort air. A I ,rcat buy. dly, Take rorei,n 1 ca.· or amall down. Call Ken : nJ(~I\ 10' $«'J.063·.. I : T---.-1\'d-.----dr-· La-,iid-a_u_F-ai;:. l Alr.,'Fl,!11 Po..wir. Exe. cond. Prtv.pty, 5'8-:42Tl 8\\0lflt .-~~ A ·~ ... GREEN ,. No matter what color you want to call it • • • it's a Bonafide sale that ' will "SAVE . you . plenty of the right color ••• Green like in · money •.• don't wait, hurry -. in as choice is good but limited. 1970 COUGAR XR7 Deep Gold, 351-4, Brown Hound1tooth vinyl roof, emis- sion control, Sel Sf, WSW F70x 14 Belted tires, pow•r win- dows , power steerin9, power front disc brelces , air AM/FM stereo, tinted 9l•ss, delu xe seet & shoulder belts. Appe1rance protection group. OF93M515· 999 $4050 JUST ARRIVED FROM ,ORD MOTOR CO. (Special Purch•H) Wide SelectlOft Of 1969 Mm:ury Modols Coug11r1 & M11rc11ry1, convertf• bit•, 1t11tlon w11gon1. 4 dr. htrdtop1, 2 door htrdtop1. 1970 MARQUIS Med. Blue, bleclc vinyl roof, emission control, WSW H-78x 15 belted tire1, power side win· dows, 6-wey seats, power front disc br•ke1, t ilt steering, power steerin9, air, AM/FM stereo, dual reer seat sp•aker1, t inted gl11s, dlx. se•t & shoulder belts, front & rear floor mats, remote L/H mirror, power door locks , door edge 9uard1 & luxury wheel covers . OZ68K60~98 I $4670 Isl DEMO SALE OF THE YEAR ALL THESE CARS ARE PRICED TO SELL Many with 6000 miles or less!,! 1970 LINCOLN 4 DOOR SEDAN O•r k Brown. leather trfith vinyl interior, white vinyl roof, •mit· sion control, high•r retlo re•r axle, pow•r lock rel•ase group, WSW 91Sx15· belt•d tires, 6· ·way power 1e•t, tilt wheel, •u- "to. temp. control, AM/FM ster~ 1 eo , po¥\'er antenna, luxury wheel • cov•r1. Ap . prot. grp. OY82A· 803426 VERY ATTRACTIVE SAVINGS '6' PONTIAC CATALINA $2895 2 Dr. Hardtop. Automatic lransmission, - radio, heatel'. power steering, power brakes. Lie. XXA ·668 Colony Park Sta, \Vaa:ons. VTM -734 ''8 MERCURY $2695 medium chrome yc llo\v finish with all vinyl interior. Automatic !rans .. power steering & brakes. Factory ah· cond. BeautiCul cond. '67 CADILLAC cour1 DEVILLE Rieb MJdnight Blue metallic linish with contrasting interior. Exceptionally clean. Fully luxury equipped Including fact. air. 34,000 orl&inal owner miles. Lie. UVE-61 6 '65 T BIRD Beautiful Dcsc\'t Beige with matchln; in1 crior. Full po.,..·er incl. factory air. Lie. OSE-645 '64 T BIRD Beau tiful turquoise with matching in terior, shows exccptionaJ care. Lie. IE\V-178 $3495 . $1595 $1295 '64 CONT1NINTAL $1395 4 door sedan. Velvet black flniah with black leather interior. Fully luxury equipped including full power & factory air. Llc. OYS-525 4 Dr. Sed. Beautiful Be1111uda Blue me-'67 CONTINENTAL $2995 tallic finish wfU1 rnatclUni leather interior. 131nck landau roof. fully luxury equipped and factor•y ah· condllinninp:, A fl1·l'"M rAdlo, i;terco tape df'ck. One·O\\'ner car. Beautifully maln'talhcd. LIC. TIN-020 YOUR CHOICE $2995 '6t COUGAR CONVIRTllLl!S With air co11dllioni n9, power •liar· in9, pow1r bra~11, 11". 6 lo 9000 mil11. '69 MERCURY CONVIRTllLES With air eor1ditionin9, power 1!1er· in9, P-ow1r br•ke1, elt. '69 FORD TORINO GT $2195 '6f MOHTEGO SEDANS With air to11dition in9, pow1r 1i1•r· in9. pow1r hreket, •''· Corrvert. Altractlve CardlnaJ Red with • color matched interior, white top, auto. tram., P.S., radi o, heater. Lie. XXR-231 '67 IUICK LE SAHE Conv. Full power including factory air. Lie. Tf\iH-472 $1795 $5195 4 door. Deatrt Beige flnlsb with blond .,: '65 CONTINENTAL 41:11695 loothcr lntiirlor, Fully luxury equipped In- cluding fbll pqwer &: factory air. UnusuaUy clean. Lie. OUW ·953 '67 CONTININTAL Convertible. Polar while with white Jeath('r & white top. Full power equ!~ \Vith fact. a.Jr. Lie. VOV-252 • '68 CHlYSLll NEW YOlKEl 'I Or. Hardtop. full power including Factory >Jr. 22,000 actual miles. Just Jlke new. Uc. WXH 302 $2595 $3295 19.lO , MARQUll . noUGHAM 4 DOOl HAlDfOP ' l .. t1c•. 429-4 bl1c~ 'f'inyl roof, •ml1alon ... ,I. WSW H70.-1 5 W/T btlt•d N..f: power tlde willdow1, re11linl119 '1{M119er 1e1t, 6-w1v pow1r •••t d'rl v· er -!ifd t, pow1r front cli10: J,11•u. tilt wht1I, pow1r 1t1erin9, 1p11d ci ntrol, t.fn~t ~'onlrol lru,.k rele11e, t i •I•.:· .. l" rt 1r window d1fro1ter, Powtr o1n· ft""'· AM/FM 111110, 1111111 i.1r •tat 1pt1k1t1, Jnt1r¥a l wl11chhi•ld ·Wlpto, tinttd 91111, d1lu.-1 •••f Ir 1heulliar belh, front & r11r ftla h , ,.,., ... L/H mirror, pow1r door loe•1.· a.or•M!t• 111ard1 & lux. whl, co.,er't. OZl7Nlll· 115 ~ l $585P .. - • BARGAIN CORNER In Our l•t9aln Cofn•r, we ha¥11 nu111erou1 us•cl can. Sorn• cl•an, IOl'!I• not 10 cl11n. Som• that el'I tluplit•lion1. 10IY!1 we've had too lor19 -In tny event, th111 t•r1 art re1I bar91in1. LOOK 'EM OYEll:! '86 M,l'C,ry Mll!ldltl~ SM, lit. UOW 111. c ... n. '"" "' ltlft. •66 .•• ,, G•l•d • _ 4 C>r. H.T. SLW U1 {Nice Cir) '65 ......... , .... , '1175 Mtplci.lr H.T, '00 fO) IMM•TM•Ltlltl '66 ''"' ..... .. ·1•t7• t>Or"' .. 1~ SY.I' lft U U Otlct C111 •as l•lct Ii.cir• (11'!¥1111~•·· Lk. Y'U."'f, Nie• Cir. '66 "'~"" '"'"' '"' ·147• 1111111'1 w..-.. u John.son. ··s .on . . .. i1 2626 HARBOR IOULIVARD, COITA MUA ' • NEW CARS • 540·5630 642·091'. •' I Mlle South of I e hnDle9ofrH~ I ·540.1ta• UllD CAU. I , l ,• '' I . • " . .... . .. 0 Z'" -"' .. «ua: ~O:w J .... o~~ ~ J ... w .. . ' 't THE 1970 1/2 FALCON FORD'S NEWEST PRICE FIGHTlRI BIGGER, MORE LUXURIOUS THAN EVER--YET STILL PRICED AT PERENNIAL FALCON SAVINGS. REA .. DY FOR !~MEDIATE DELIVERY· ...... THE "GRABB.ERS". . A BRAND NEW MUSTANG -. AND A BRAND NEW MAVERICK IN THE EXCITING STYLING OF THE "MUSCLE CROW~." READY FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY Jo"' zU .... ::> z ,_ .. •"''" SEE THE,., FIRST --SEE THEM ALL -· AT ORANGE COUNTY'S VOLUME FORD DEALER --_, ::> J ~i· .. z ~ot= Ja:a: ~iii 0 OUR FIRST QHArt.GE OVER OF 1970 "D EMOS'' OVER 30 197~ MO'Dlli"~' 6 000 MILES OJI 'BRAND NEW · ENGtlSH 'FORD· New 11 flt. Navajo Camper_ ,U u 1-, _, STAFF CARS NO:* AT I . , 4 DOOR SEDAN ---,,~:::::~-~ LESS_ :: •• ~~E~Y-$1995 ~~~ =~kD1- Fully Equipped and ~~~. $2198 Reidy for You~ ·SALi $1598 Pickup or • New 70. Plier .. .. OVER 40 #111246 $ . _._. ____ ..c;.AMIWtS-lft.S.T.ocKUilstouN ' -. . INCLUDES ALL THESE EXTRA~: _ · •· _ -~-~ _A~t~·_lr•ns.,_ Fri>nf Dis~ Brakes.,J!~Qtr.~ ~"t!r,~Hvy. D!J·""' ~R,,.UT~GWllANGE -~ _ ... -T•BIRDS-=-TOR!N9S-; --- LTD'.s-STATION WAGONS MUSTANGS ENGLISH 'FOltDS1·. -· I-, la :.=. TO U • SOLD ON Fl .• 51 COMI, FIRST SHVED IASIS, HURRYI '65 CADILLAC CPE. bE VILLE fvll powM, f•ct.ry .tir, l•.tlh1r, l.tttd •ii top. IPJEOltr '67 PONTIAC LE . MANS .... 2 Dr. H.T., .ti~. 1ulo., lt&H, P.S., Vl11yl roo f. IVCL20l) -'66 FORDXL -$1090 '-' , 2 Dr. H.T., 1ufo., RIH·""'"""-·'-~· ·~ir '=""'~·~IS_VY_512~1 ---~= z I .66 FORD LT.D. $1490 I.I.I 2 Dr. H.T. f.tclory .ti•. 10!0 .. P.S., •i11yl roef, r.td in, h••I••· IRRD6001 A. I '69 MUSXANG H.T. $2490 t; '66 Foio"·'·6:4rA'xiE,. soo , ..... IYCN062! $990 ... _·-"·~~ti. v,, o.4m1tic, P.S.:_.r•dio, h11 ter. !NYS79ll ,~ '67 FORD (iALAXIE 500 • <4 Dr:. s.d. VI , .Jo., f•clorv 1ir, P.S., P.I., RlH. IZVf.7111 '~ '68 !T~i~~!~'-~l~~~r. f1 ctory air. IV'ICS201 .: '66 FORD GALAXIE 500 '"' 2 Or. H.T. VI, ·1..to"'1fic, P.S., r1dio, h11t1r. ISUYI 171 .,,. '67 MUSTANG H.T. i!: .,9 F·A1·iuNli'"coaiiA ... '", ... ,, F11!b1c~. A1!0., power tt11rin9 l disc br1•11. IZLMllll '67 FALCON VI, f•ctory •Ir, P.S., r•dio •nd li••ier. !TXS7071 '63-CHEVY NOVA $1290 $2890 $HO St11!011 W•go11. Auto!fl1ti~. r1dio, h11f•1. fGOC002) '66 PONtlAC CATALl~N~A~-~= St,tio11 W•90~. A1R, •11to.,•RIH, P,S., P.I . !-~"='"~"~-~== '67 FORD COUNTRY SEDAN $1790 ~IR, •uto., R&H, P.S. ITRf7S91 '64 FORD COUNTRY SEDAN $790 AIR, A.vto., R&H, P.S. INLl629l . A THEODORE ROBINS EXCLUSIVE LOOK FOR -THE DIAGNOSTIC CENTER SEAL ON THE WINDSHIRO! 100°/o PARTS AND LABOR WARRANTY 4000 MILES OR 90 DAYS C...,._ •II INCMRlcal ~ IMl#I .. "'""'' trw"'lul .. clrlTe llite, rear eH, PLUS ltNles. ......,. .... •IHnt •Ytl••· AO , .. r-tr W•rl dotM: ill I~! OWi .....,kl d1porf"'91lf. OVER 158 USED CAR·S AND TRUCKS IN STOCK TRUCK ANO CAMPER SPECIALS '65 ~~~~.... s990 ($521191 '60 ~.~~Y·,. :(.2-TON $690 •11to,..etlc tr•n1. (F3 0?04 l '66 ~'~~,!: .. :~~:!.~· _$1290 I' bid. IU29710l I 68 ~~~~~'" 1 ""'"$2390 1h1ll. Auto., R&H, 20,100 lflil11. 1211211CI . . 8111lry, 6:00/TJ WW'irrH, Aero Flow Ventr.l ~" With-W•1her1, Dix. Interior And Morel 15 To ChooM From At This Pricel rtMlJP612201 . OVER 60 ENGLISH FORD CORTINAS IN STOCK NOW PRICED TO CLEAR I GT's, 2 DRS., 4 ORS., STATION WAGONS. '67 FORD LTD ' f•ctory •Ir, •vto., lltlH, P.S., IUVR6111 . '68 DODGE CORONET $1490 $890 4 Dr. YI; .t ufo., ht.tlor. Nowport lch. Dtt•ctivo~"~'· '~"~"-"-' -~-~ '66 MERCURY . CYCLONE $1390 _ _,.H.T., AIR, .tufo., RIH, P.S .• P.I. I llVJ612l '69 FORD CUSTOM $1490 4 Dr. SH. 429 Vt; 1uto., ht•ftr, P.5.,P.clise b1k. CM 0 polict cori 1114011) 17DODGE ,DART $1290 __ 2 Dr. H.T., AIR, •kto., lt&H. !VTS4261 '65 T-BIRD HARDTOP $1190 F\111 power, AIR., 111to., R&H. !WAH94ll '66 CHEVROLET IMPALA l ,Dr. H.T. Vl •. f~ct!'' t ir, tulo .. P:S., R&H . !~L'l2Sll ~64 CHEVROLET IMPALA 2 Or. H.T. VI, f1ctary air. 11110., P,S., RIH. fOXZt66·1 '66 PONTIAC GTO 1 Dr. H.T. VI, P.S., P.I ., 11110., 11dio, h11t1r. !SYL611 I '63 CADILLAC Co11,1 D1Vill1. F!.111 power, factory 1ir. IOR69461 $1290 $790 $1190 $890 'lllCHEVROLET CHEVELLE S.S •. $990 VI~ 1vlo1111tlc, power 1!1otrift'J, r1dio, h11!1r. ITE621 I l '65 PONTIAC LE MANS $990 '63 FALCON $490 VI 1n9 ln1, 1ulo,,.,1llc tr1111tnl11lon. fJEA691) '67 RAT CONVERTIBLE~-~$1~49=0 4 1p••d, n1w p1int, n•w fop. (IE6SS9l '6/CblfFINA 1500 s:w. $990 4 tpt•d>r•lflo, ll1•t1r. IVTL41ll '69 VOLKSWAGEN $1690 1119. Aulolfl1lic, R&H. 10,100 mil•1. I XTFi-'7l""11.....-.,__,_..,~== '67 DATSUN STATION WAGON $990 RIH, .tic.• 1liift. !TWN0 79) '67 SUNBEAM '$490 ' ''·" ,0 1 ,. ., .,,,,,, IA' ••i'c·I''·•~''" IUo•'M PARH6.SfRVICEHOUR~ PARTS ONLY • ' . . . . ' 11. ' T .~ •• l : v ·.~ ···='Nf"AT .: A~t i 0 '. ' •• ~11[ ,.,,, 1 R'f'l/•' 8 .. , '.' ](._) 1_, l-'!-..1 . llJR['t..•' I ' • •