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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1970-04-02 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa17 I .. ·--··-- • _O er? .. Ci.I State ~pr nks" ' ·.:· .. :a~~om .e . Violent; -. -. ~ l -, -... --- BOdy of W 01nan ) . ' ( Found in Pond- ".T"-Wo . Arrests: Made . . ' In Huntington l • .. •• ' . •. THURSDAY· AFTERNOON, 0 APR1l: 2, 1970 . ' ., Countdowit.Starts ' . Westminster Medina Def ens~ .. _:'·,:: ~ .. .._ ..:.:J . . . . . 1 ~t)Zice· Seek ·· . ' Based on 'Truth' DAILY·l'ILOT St9ft' l'llel9 WaYI)e Marquis, a clerk at Costa Mesa's central post office, sorts cerisU:s•envelopes. Residents of Costa Mesa, Newport Beach, Hunt- ington ·Beach Westminster and Santa Ana are being reminded to mail their coinpleted 1970 Census fonns. by Friday at the latest. If you live in San ·Clemente, Laguna Beach, ~ssion Viejo., La~una Hills Leisure World, Sou'th Laguna, El· Toro, Laguan Niguel, or San Juan Capistrano, hang on to your fonns until the census taker arrive&. N~on:CI~ims Right to Put Own Choice on High Court . . . '· . . , . : WASBlNGTON (UPI) -President Nixon says at stake in the ·struggle over ·his nominal.ions to ·the Supreme Court u: the chief executiv~'s "Trad._ tional :constitutional'' right to put his own ·chf)ices. on the court ·~1ljoll l9llr ATLANTA, Ga. (AP) -Capt. t;mest L. Medina, now c h a r g e d with responsibility for all Vietnamese civilians Arrests No Joke 1-n CSF Campus Confrontation Trouble broke out again at Cal S41te Fullerton Wednesday and. two students were arrested on charges or assault on a policeman, resisting arrest and using abusive language on a college campus. What allegedly started as a111 April Fool's Day prank involving about 60 students ended i11 a full scale con- fronlalion between campus police and the "merrymakers". Windows in the campus security office were broken and police cars damaged. Arrested were Bruce F. Church, 31, of Fullerton and Eileen Jones, 19, o( . Cmllos. . . Church was booked 011 suSpiclon of felmi:y assault on a paliceman and Miss Jones on suspicion of resisting arrest and using abusive language in the presen- ce of minors and women. Church was one of two students ar~ rested for using abusive hulguage durb1g Governor Reagan's campus speech Feb. 9, an event which touched off tbe subse- quent series of riots on the campus. David McConnell, spokesman for the Students for· a Democratic Society and a partlcl~t in the confrontation said that security officers "took UJ seriously," when students wav,ed .water pistols as they sUrroQncled the iteCurlty office and "changed Indian style, like you see in the Westerns." Dr. L. Donald · Shields, coHege vice president, aald liter that he believed there was enough provocaUon by students for campus security police to 'Rebuffed in his attem.Pt to name Judge Clement F: Haynsworth Jr. to the court and facing a possible second-defeat on his nominaUon or Judge G. Harrold Carswell. the President says this ia • right th-'t wU "fnaely accorded to nly preckcesSOfs of both parties" a9'1 s~ tiehis; , ' ·• • ~ ·' react as they did. ~ · ~-R '>:'I;:. >-~ &._hields admJtted that "perhaps there Nl1on's ASW'tioos were challeQged by several sen8tors. · , ~ Senate Democratic Leader MJ k e Maiistidd said today that throughout history "It has been for the President 1 ~, • , 1 . (. • t· was a milUDCtentanding on the part. .. ,1 I I · <S" · i * of both prtles. We are still iovestigaUng to pr~ and the Senite to dispose." Jte s11d. that Nixon's presidential prerogaUve "Wasn't jeopardized when Jµd&e Haynswor.th w~ re:jeqtesi and_ it wui't be jeopardized regardlm of tht outcome of'the Carswe11 oominaUon." Sen. Robert P. Griffin, assistant Senate ~publict1n leader. said he understood the President's feeling1 ... •0i th&.-~eoo, but added: "The Senate ls still going to make the judgment. I still feel the ' ' .,. • • all the circumatalCtS " '/_fflY forpt.Canwell About $400 dam. waa. done lo 111e and let'• iplit hi1 1alary!' security holding ud campus pollce ears, a cotrege official aald. ' . ; ~~ *'haS ciH!c{ual resporfsibl11Ut3 in the ~ lppointine.nt of Supreihe Court justices." Sen. Alan Cranst911 (D-Calif.), com- mented:~ "l, :a& a. tenilor, will not. &tall<I· quietly by and see a racist appotntcd IS.. CARSWELL, P•I• %1 • I 2-month strike ~ds NEW YORK CAP) -Tugboat crewmen went back to work in New York harbor today t1fter a two-month &trike that ended when they agreed td a s:t5 per cent increase in wages and benefits over three years. " ' ... allegedly Slain during a 1961 raid Ofl _ My Lai village, says, "I will rely on the trulh to prove my innocence." The stocky captain, dressed In civilian clothes, comme•ted during _ a te\\'S con- ference Wednesday after lhe .Army an· nouoced its new charge against him. "I am. a professional soldier," 1'.fedina said. "I am loyal to my country and J have nothing to hide. My family and I will continue to rely upon the truth, aRd I am sure with God's help this will prevail." He told newsmen, "l did not order a massacre at My Lai and I did not see a massacre take place. I hope the American public will withhold its judg· ment until the true facts are established in a court of law." An Anny spokesman· at nearby Ft. McPherson, where the My Lai in- vestigation is centered, had ami~iDCOO the new charge against Medi•a earlier in the day . IL. ~e~l~r~s _U!e_ C?P.~in. wa;i:_i_:~ponslQlc_ . for lhe alleged murder or noncombatant persons allegedly committed by members of his company. The Army did not specify the number of deaths for which Medina was accused of being respopsible. However, Me.dina said he had been inf'ormed bY a superior officer that it was "not iess thu 175." Body of Woman Found in Pond Orange County coroner's investigators today are conducting blood and Ussue tests orr the body of a 46-year-old womal) found Th'ursday in a Hunlington Hftrbour pond to detennine the cause 'of· death. Believed by police to be a suicide, the victim was kfentlfied a11 Mn. Myra }(uJI, 46, o( 15.111 Vermont St ., Westminster. An autopsy already conducted Thurs- day failed· to disclose the exact cause of her death, according to Coroner's Deputy John Cale. Mrs. Jlull's body, fully clothed, was discovered about 12:30 p.m. by A11en Hughet, 402 Momlng11ide Drive, Hun_. Lington Beach, who was walking bl! dog In the desolate area, police said. The lime of death was esUmated by lnv,Stigators to be al'<lut 2 a.m. Wed· nesday-. ' U1'l T ....... DENIES MY LAI RAP Cept._ l;rnnt Medith1 Mailmen's Union President Hints Offer · Acceptance I WASHJNGTON (UPI) -The president o( the Letter Carriers Union strongly hinted today that a government , pay offer would be accepted later today, bringing an end lo the nation's mail dispute. James H. Rademacher, head of the NaUooal Association or Letter Carriers which triggered a series of wildcat walkollts ·by a slrlke in New York t.last month, said the union response to the government would be announced later today. ·After a meeting wlllr AFL-CIO•Presl· dent George Meany, Rademacher told UPI: "I think-everything will be settled Uils af{ernoon. ·Raden\acher amt heads· of otJier postal uniona met in clOled session with 1'-1eany on the latut government ofler, reported to provide. a six . percent PfY increase retroacUve to Jan . 1 and another six 1 percent"beginning July 1. S4'han Back in Cell SAN QtlENTlN !UP.I) -Sirhan Sirhan, condemned assassin of Sen. . Robert. · F" Kennedy, 'was back in his death row ctll . at · San Quentin today a(ter treatment at the pr:l.90!1 hospital , tor ditiy sJ)elli. • Olfidals said the young Jordanian lm· 1 mlgr11nt1 was In good conWUon but tests during his day 4nd one half In lhc ho&pl· tal were OOl conclu.s\vt. 1 Paraplegic A_.Westminsler paraplegic, charged •1 authorities with produCing fJlml tbllt press the alphabet far beyond X for a rating, is l:M.iing sought today, folloW"ing t~e attest or one of bis alleged starlets. Complaints issued by the Orange Coun- ty District · >.ttomey charge Verne ff. Testerman of 6831 Santee Ave. wlth conspiracy to produce obscene films, sex perverslon and three counts of selling obscene materials. The latter charge ls a mi~meanor. The complaints were issued Tuesday in West Orange County Judicial District Court to· cllmax a two-week undercover investigation by the DA and Oranae Police. Testerman and six other persons · - one in custody -are" named jn the complaints issued after seizure of the lurid malciials in a March 25 raid on his studio-garage. · •lundreds of film:i allegedly showing sex play · involving males, femalea - and even anif'l'!als -were •conHscated. plus nine movie cameras, several still cameras, projectors and film edlUn1 tools. Deputy District Attorney Oretta Sears requested the complaints following thei aUeged_purchase ·of 10 stag fibns, Marcb: 20 by a detective from Orange. So . rar, Testerman and four per10n11 listed as • Jane and John Doe -ther~ were. no film credits -are llill bein sought by Southland lawmen. Orange Voast 1''eat•er ' ' Had. enough sun? The •hllZJ. skies return Friday but the. temp- eratures will stay warm, wJth 15 readings predicted (or tbe coast and up to 74 inlind. INSl~E TODAY Ttvo ;years aoo ft was a potent factor t11 the 1election of 11 · president but today tht Ameri- can ladtpe11dtnt Part11 of , George Wallace U having trouble even getting candidalt'I for local offices. Page 1. J t J DNl.Y PILOT s • :JJadham Bill .. ,. .: J• - To Hit State r.Taxpayers Spocbl .. Ille DAILY rum ·.~ SACRAMENTO -A bill authored by .a Newport Beach ltglalalor may force ._•every Calilornian to pay tO percent more 1tate Income tax II Jandownen v o t e ~themselves a heavy property tu cut. ' The bill by Assemblyman Robert H. hdham (R-Newport Beach) will also '. ttck another J .25 cents in sales tat "On every dollar spent in the state. • • "The whole purpo11 of WI bill la ·.to keep Preposition 8 from pa11ln1." ~Jl.ldham explained Wednesday nJght In ·'the Capitol, after a special committee '"hearlnf. 11 Jt's 1 bill t rtally would not like to see become law," he added. Conskleratlon of the threatened legisla· Lion has been delayed for at least a month, howtver, after which time the Astembly Rtvenue and Tautlon Com· mlttee wlU vote on it. • Good Nef.glabor Polley ProposlUon 8 would ralae an tltimlted II.II bllllon In new loiet that ttate fi1eal 1naly1b report wwkl bt required lo pay for Proposltlon I on lhe June ballot, a ~rty ta:r relier tnttl1tlve sponlOl'ed by the C1Ufornl1 Teacher• • Assoelatlm and the County Supe"llor• Associatlon. : Committee Chairman William T • -.Bagley (R.$an Rafael), sponsor of Gov. ..Jtonald Reagan's rival tax revision pro- .. gram, denounced the teacher-aupervisor plan u an l•abortkln." He ac<:Uled the ,jwo group1 of tmploytng "polltlcll gut- ·: er" tactJc1 to dl1credit the ,covemoz 's .plan. "Princess" Massey and Cindy Rapp, l S months, take good care of 10 pups, five of whlch were adopt- ed by Princess, who added them to he! own brood after momma dog owned by Mr. and Mrs. Vlctor Rapp, 869 Governor St., Costa Mesa, was killed by a car. The pups were Just two weeks old it the time of their mother'• death and Princess, who belongs to i1r. and Mrs. Paul Massey 873 Governor St. volumeered to raise them as her own. ' ~ Proposition & would lower local pro- perly taxes by requlrlng the ltalo lo pay 90 percent ol all local.atate ... 1rm costs and 1t Just ao percent of local school com. The bomeowntr'• property tax exemption would be Increased from $750 .. fl,000. Badham told the committee passage of Proposition 8 threatened to throw the state into fiscal chaos and that his bill would demonstrate to the voters the conaequencet ol passage. He uid combating the propo1IUon re-. quired ertnordlnary slepl, ad d in 1 "anytblna.that we u re 1pon1 lb l1 let1Jlator1 can do -or, tor1et the rHPoMlb la -anythlna that we as lel18laton can do to p o I n l out to the "°pit ol Calli~ whit a pit In the poke they are buyln1, we should." But .u.emblyman lA!o McCarthy (I). San Francisco), told Badham, "I'm not prepared to use the legislative process as a campaia:n ploy to defeat Proposition 8." He llld he had no poaltion on the measure. Bagley, concedi.nl he wanted a tool to "dramattu" the consequenee1 of the CTA.Supervllcn lnlttaUw, oald 11 would not be "proper procedure to cavalierly put this bill out" of committee. Laguna Actress Sues Diners Club- Laauna Beach actrea Kate Saxon has sued a Diner'• Club afflll1te fiJr 13 mi!U.. In a Lot Anplt1 COunly Superior Court action which claim! that 1he was denied the rl1ht to develop a 1oLondon Square" complex on the converted. Queen Mary. Miu suon, who lo joined by La111na artist Maren Kirk In the lawsuit, ariuu that the Diners Club Queen Mary organlullon reJuted to permlt the couple to txercile thelr prevJously aranted op- tion for ta,ooo square feet on the aun dtek of the former Cunard Uner. Thal option w11 granted, the acUn1 school dlrector claims, at the time th1t the Queen Mary wa1 purchased by the Clty of 1An1 Beach for conversion Into a convenUon center. Mlu Saxon planned to or1anJu construct.Ion of the "London Square" with Miss Klrk mpon1lble tor art work on the concept. The flnl1hed project, M.lss Saxon stated, would have been an authentic model on • 10 percent tcale or • London square wtth iupportln1 art and racllltles geared to a British theme. DAllY PILOT Hrwpeft ..... ............. CtlN M•M .............. ....... ,...., ... ci-.m ll•~•tl H. Weel PrUOltflt ~ f>vMll- J•c• l . C111l1r \'kt l'ftllffftl -GcMfll IMMfl' lt.DMll ICtt~il lflltl' Tllo"''' A. M11tp~iftt M..,...IPlt 1111., l ict.1.J P. Hi ll '°"'"' Ot.._ c-•r ,,,.., --tot• Mt111 Ja Wu! l ty ti....t N..,.,l ll1Cfl1 :rt11 Wnl l tlWI IHt ... l rt latYM IMtlrlt m ,..._,,A- Mlll'ltlllil"' l .. c11 1 1111• l tHfl l:IOlllfftf W (llll*!ltl al Ntrill II Ctll'llflt •Mt Physician's Lawyer Raps County Jury Selection By TOM BARLEY 04 tlle O.llr '"" Si.ff Orange County's Grand Jury system came under fire again Wednesday as Dr. Robert Cummlnl Robb'• lawyer moved lo block Dl1trlcl Attorney C..11 Hicks' use of the panel for revived pl'OMC'Ution or the Laguna Btacb physi- cian on abortion charcu. Defense attorney Mote1 Berman of Santa Ana put Superior Court. Judge J ames F. Judge In to the wltnea box for testimony designed to prove to J\Mfge Byron K. McMiiian that the grand Jdry system in Orange County effectively bar-5 many residents lrom service. Judge Judge is currently presiding jurist of the Superior Court's ctlmlnal calendar department. He is, in that capacity, the court '• llalaon with the grand jury and it& adviler In many Jegll lau11. Btrman particularly llrtllld -and cften rot Juda• Judie's qreement - that Jt II almoat 1rnpolllbJt to ret wace earntl'I below th1 t l0,000 annual income level to even consider Grand Jury .sen1ct. Juda• Judi• •areed with lltrman that many coultty rtak'ent1 In that Jncome bracket faced the prospect of lo1ln1 their job1 blcaUM ot the time they wculd have to devote to Grand Jury duty, quite apart from the prohlblllve eccnomJc factora. or. Robb, 17, of 34617 Scenic Drive, Dana Point, wu Indicted by the Grand Jury on Mich' request after Judie Paul Malt of the Santa Ana Munlclp1I Court had n jected k1enUc1I charr•• th1t the ,Phy1tcJ1n had Induced aborUon s in women paUents. Four in Narco Raid Sentenced To Jail Terms Sentences ranging from one year to two weekends in the Oran1e County Jail have betn announced In Superior Court for four of JO perSOfls arrested in a Huntln1ton Beach home and subse- ouently Indicted by the Orange County Grand Ju~ on drug charges. Judge Jamea F. Judge sentenced Carol '-f. Hocker, 32, of 9351 Tahiti Circle, Huntington Beach, to two weekends in lhe Jail Ind ordered her to obey probaUon rules ror the ntxt three year1. The level earlier charges of pc1seselon of level earlelr char1e1 of posSeaalon of dangerous drug!. Her husband, Elerd Lon Hocker, ti, I! due to appear before Judge Jud&e ADrll • 11 for 1entenctnc on Identical charges. The couple and tight other lndlctee1 were arreated l11t Nov. a at the Tahiti Circle addte11 during a raid Jn which Huntington Beach poUce joined forces with lAll Angeles County 1htrllf'1 ln- vt1Ugator1. Downey police ind Long Belch police. Officers said they found nearly 17 p<Nndl of h11hllh, thr<e poundl of marl· juana, MO barbiturate capsules Ind t5 LSD 1abll!tl al lhe Kocktr home. Senttnct! passed by Judie Judae in· eluded : · -Victor Steven Svlmonotf, 111 of 11470 llarrisburg Road, ltossmoor, 40 days in Orange County Jill and three years probaUon. Judge Mast delivered his landmark ruling in fuU agreement wlt1• Berman's argument that Robb's prosecution under California's 'lllerapeutlc AborUon Act wu unconstitutional. Judie Mast concluded that the act amounted to discrirnJnaUon Jn tavor or Roman Catholic thinklnc and could not possibly be applied in the Robb case. That municipal court rullnc provided Berman with the second •hot of the double·barrelled argument he delivered belore Judge McMillan: He coritended that California Jaw on the submission of demurrers-a written form of legal protest to an accusatory pleading -clearly t!tabli!hes that the matter cannot be taken beyond the municipal court If a judge at that leve l has granted the demurrer. It most certa.lnly can not be taken tc the GraDd. Jury, Berman argued, and he asked Judge McMiilan to rule that when Robb was cleared by Judge Jo.fast the district attorney had nc right to take the aame charges before the Grand Jury. Benn an sakl /Hlckt: had the chance after Judge Mast tossed out the Robb charges to pursue the matter by what Berman called "mere normal chaMels" -through the appellate court. But the dlatrlct attorney, Berman told J udge McMUlan, declined to take such action and that door was now clo!ed .. him. He a!!ked Judge McMiilan to not allow the prClleCUUon to "persecute a n d harass" Dr. Robb by allowing them tc revive the cancelled charges by methods specifically ruled out by leglslaUve action and intent. That polnt was Berman'! major argu. ment ln the three-hour hearing but mO!t of the time taken up by his debate with Deputy District Attorney Michael Caplr.zi was devoted to lhe lawyer's hard hitting attack on the Grand Jury system. Berman argued that &o percent of Orange County re!ldents earn Its! than $10,000 a year ind he drew from a candid Judge Judge the admis!lon that it was ''extremely unlikely" that any membu or the 1970 grand jury was below that &Mual lnoome level. Judge Judge al!O confirmed Benn.an'! argument that grand jury selection was primarily a function er the superlcr caurt"11 21 judges who compiled a list of 45 nominees from whlch the subse· quent ta.member panel Is formed . And lilt judge quickly •ireed that many residents who might otherwise be Ideal candidates ror grind jury service wera ruled out by the fact that they could not afford to t1ke at least lwo days a wetk for 52 weeka a year from thtlr j<>bs. 1'U It lan't a matter of finance, then It tnight be a matter that they would Jose their jcbs," Judge Judge said. Bu1·glars Busy, Do Joh Badly Sloppy bura:lan broke Into. a Costa ~11!1.11. autorrioblle a1ency early today, look $1&,800 in valuelt!s checks and only $935 ln cash, a malnten8nce man dt&ccvertd upon arrl.vlnc for work. The safe Job at the Atlas Chrysltr Plymouth dt1lershlp, 2929 Harbor Blvd., ~·as markedly amateurish, according to Patrolman Cerry kochendorfer. Auto Pollution Curbs to Boost Smo g in County ? From Wire Services LOS ANGELES -Smog in Los Angeles and Orange counties may become worse as the next· step unfolds in attempts al cleaning up automobile air pollution. The 'rea!on~ . .o\uthoritles know that nitrou. oxides In small quantiUes are instrumental in pr od ucin g smog -through a pholochemlcal reaction with sunllghl - but in hl1her concentration, they reduce ii. Smcg control devices on all 1971 cars will cut the amount of cxides of nitrogen emanating into the air over the Southland, so lhe pollution may increase as a result. The California Health Department cautiously acknowltda:ed the p e r I t Wednesday 'in a report, while the automobile industries experts flatly state it as fact . "Most of the experimental findings indicate with with effec~ve hydrocarbon control, moderate reduc~ons or cxides of nitrogen may not further reduce smog effects. In fact, some of the laboratory dala indicate that modern reduction of oxides ot nitrogen emis!lons may negate some or th e benefits 1a1ned from hydrocarbon control," says . the Health Department Auto indusl ry ·-scientists are l e s s cautious. "Oxides cf nitrogen at very lo1v con- centrations are encourage rs of the reac- tion that produces smog ; at very high concentrations they are inhibitors of that reaction," said 1 top scientist at General Motors. The auto industry says it's the un- burned hydrocarbons, the amelly fumes from 1aaollne, Lhat are the chief vi Ila Ins. <:aptiv es" Release Due ( Jap.an Socialist I Aids Hijackers ( SEOUL (AP) -Su<eya Abe, Socialist member of Japan's parliament, arrived here Frlday to be.Ip government officials win rele1ae of 100 paasen1era and crew htkl hoatage ln an airliner hljac:!kod by ultralettlll Japanese stude_ntl Wi!9 want to go to North Korea. · He hurriedly new in aft.er Lhe hJjackers several hours earller agreed in principle to release the passengers in exchange for a new • hostaae, Japa.oeae Vice Tr an I port• t Ion Mlnilttr Shinjlro Yamamura, through talks with Abe. The Samurai sword-brandishing hi· jackers ask~ that Abe come to Korea and JdenUfy Yamamura, whom they Wd they couJd not recognize by sight In a reply to Yamamura 's proposal that he be put aboard the airliner, grounded since Tuesday at Seoul'• Kimpo ln~ma­ tiOl'lal Airport, in plaet ot tne pauen1er1. ShlgW Hor!, chit! Japanese Cabinet secretary, aMoUnced tbe agretment earlier In Tokyo. . Abe left at once for Seoul . .}le told airport interviewers he did noi know why the students named him to Identify Yamamura. Abe lut year villttd tbe North Korean capital of Pyoneyani at a member ol a Japan Socllallst party goodwill misalon~ · Hori I.I one of U1ree Japant1t aovem· ment officlala handling the case arising from the hijacking of the Japan Air Lines Boeing m by Jspane~ radical students Tuesday while on a !Cheduled flight from Tokyo to Fukuoka In southwest Japan. The plane refueled in Fukuoka and the students released 23 or the passengers Fron& Page l CARSWELL .•. to the hJghelt court In our land." Nixon's Jetter to freshman Stn. William B. Sax~ (R-Ohlo), uaerted the President's right to tlll the vacancy throu1b his own choice. It w11 1ttn as an effort to away slx Republicans still uncommitted on how they will vote in Mond1y'1 &howdown. Saxbe called Jt perausslve and said he would vote against the motion to resubmit the nomination to the Senste Judlclary Committee, where almost all agree lt then would be perm1nent1 y burled. He said he would follow Nixon despite Carswell's "weakness on civll right.,'' 1 Sen, Joseph M. Montoy1 (0.N.M.), cne ot nine pre viously uncommitted Democrats, Wedne!day said he would vote to recommit the nomination - and would vote against Car1well if It came to a vote. The anU-C1r1well bloc was buoyed Wednesday by the decl1lon of Sen. William B. Spon1 Jr. (0-Va.), to vote for recommltt1l. ''That was the one we had to hive." said an aide to a senator who J1 Je1 dJng the fight · 1gaJnst Carswell. He so.Id Spong'a move would make It easier for th ree other Democrats from border or Southern states -Ralph W. Yarborouah of Texaa, Albert E. ·Gore ot Ten nessee and Jennings Randolph or West Vlra:lnla -to volt for recommittal. The number of 1en1tora publicly or privately committed to vote to resubm it the nomination now totals 41 and com- mitted to oppose the attempt, 43. The office of Sen. Clinton P, Anderson (0-N.M.), said he would ml!1 the roll call becauae he I! undera:o.lng surgery on his rl1ht eyt today In Albuquerque. lie was likely to qave favored recom· mltlal. -mostly women and children -before flying oorlh\varJ for Pyongyan~ where the students indicated they wished to go. The pl11ne later chan1ed its course and l1nded at Kimpo Airport jusl outside the South Korean capltal of Seoul. Abe left aboard a special JAL plane sent to bring back passengers or the hijacked plane. The hijacked plant has aboard It 115 persons, including the hljackera and tht plane's seven-man crew. Earlier South Korta'! defen!e minister had told the JS hijackers his patience was wearing Un. J iiry Rejects . . Jail Death Probe A ppeal The Orange Ccunty Grand Jury today rejected the 1uggestlon of the NaUonal Auoclatlon ror the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) th1t it in· vestJgatc the death in Orange County j1!1 last Jan. 21 of Vernon Louis Wiiiiams. It refused to re:>pen the inquil)' closed Feb. 16 by the ruling of a divided coroner's jury that \Villiam s. 27, San Pedro died a' the result of an accident and th1t jall officer.!I did not exerclae undue rorce when they restrained the apparently berserk prisoner. It was testified that Williams died as the re1ult of a "choke hold11 app!Jed by a Jail deputy. Officers testified th1t their Negro prlaoner, who had a long record of mental Illness and narcoUc1 addiction, brcke free several times dur4 lnt 1 protracted struggle and that it took several deputies to subdue hlm . Williams had been arrested earlier In the day by a California Hlghw17 patrolman Who spotted him on the Rlver!lde Fretway In Anaheim clad ony In purple shorts und track shoes and "behaving In a suspicious manner." Dlatrlct Attorney Cecil Hicks subse- quently refused to consider the pos!lblllty of criminal ch1rges of anyone Involved in Williams death. The NAACP request was filed with the grand jury by Its Orange County rtpresentauve Clarence Jackson . Wllllams' mother. Mrs. Lula Ma e Wiiiiams. has announced that she plans to tlle a wrongful desth sult 1g1insi Orange County and the officers involved Jn the death ol her &On. 'Big Brotl1er' Watching Her t.lnsollclted mall lert a Costa Mesa woman unamused on April Fool's Day, according to police, A postcard allegedly malled by the '-foraUty Patrol informed the woman her home had been plactd on their nlghtry ob9erv1tlon rounds in 1n effort to shore up community !tandarda, The defenders of Costa Mesa morality said they received lnform1tlon she was drawing curious male crowds by prepar- ing for bed with the shades up. She told police somebody w a s mistaken. A Ny lon Shag That 's Young In Looks, an d Youn g Price ! Ill , 9.95 59. YD. IF YOU CAN'T COME IN-CALL 648-0275 I lor an expert carpet consultant who ·Will come to your home with samples without any obligation to youl -Stevu Frank HambUn, 18. of Bellflowu, one year ln , jail and three years pNb&UOn. -Tommie l\tlke Tbom11, 20, of Lona Beach, 1lx months ln Jill and three ye1r1 probatloo. Thdr fl•• companions In the Tlhlll ClrcJe arru11 were 111 1ente:nctd earlier lo )all ttmu rangin( from IO d1y1 to oM year In Oranae Cwnty Jill and probollon perlodJ r11111n1 from thr<e to fJve yearr. He aald a door had been pried tn gain entry to the rompa.ny'1 Inner office after the bur1lar1 broke In through the rc1r repair shop door. Olass had betn 1m11hed there, allow· Ina: them to reach through and unlock the door found open at 6:•5 •.m. by 1nalntenanct mM Elbtrt Wilson. H.J.GARRETf fURNITURE They atao 1ttemptcd to pry optn a mechanic's locked toolbo1 but "'·11 J unable to get Into I.be conttnt.s. • PROFESSICNAL INTERIOR DES IGN ERS o,," Mon., Thwn. & frf. 1,e1. 2115 HARIOR IL VO. COSTA MESA , CALIF. M6·0l75 6~6-027' ' I i I I i • DOniingio• l;leaeh ~DITIO N Steeb. • VOL 63, NO. 77, 3 SECTIONS, 36 P~GES ORANGE COUNTY, CAllfE>RNlA '· ' • ' TH URSDAY, APRll 2, '1970 I TEN CENTS Recreational Pier · Proposed at River Mouth By ALAN DIRJUN Of Ille 0.llf' PUM St.,, , . A Newport. Beach real estate broker and a group of businessmen hope to develop a recreational pier off the Santa Ana Ri ver dividing Huntington Beach and Newport Beach. 'Ibe plan would involve converfu1g a 1,700.foot structure already bu.ill for the laying or a county sewer line into a ~rmanent facility. The broker, Dennis L. Lynch, bopell • to buy the existing structure from the construction company. Peter"Kiewet and Sons of Santa Ana for about $900,000. The cost of strengthening the con- struction and remodeling It to ac- commodate shops and fishing-oriented activities would add another fS million to the cost. The cities of Huntington Beach and Newport Beach may well have reserva· lions oo the elaborate enterprise. Of. ficials of both ciUes indicated today I X O ll Japan Aide Intercedes In Hijack SEOUL (AP) -Sukeya Abe, Socialist member of Japan's parliament, arrived . here Friday to help government officials win release of 100 passengers and crew held hostage in an airliner hijacked by ultraleftist J apanese students who want to go to North Korea. He hurriedly flew in after the hijackers sevFal hours earlier agreed in ·principle to rtle~ the passengera in exchange fOr a new hostlge, Japanese Vtce Tranaportatjon Minialet Shlnjiro Yamamura, through ta.lb with Abe. The Samurai sword-brandishing bJ. Jackers asked that Abe. come to Koftoa and Identify Yamamura, whom they said they could not recognize by sight in a reply to . Yamamura~s proposal that he be put aboard the airliner. grounded since Tuesday at Seoul's Klmpo lntema· tional Airport, in place of the passengers. Shigeru Hori, chief Japanese Cabinet secretary, announced !he agreement earlier in Tokyo. that they want to know much more about the project. Huntington Beach City Manager Doyle Miller said he bad not c'ilscussed the proposal with his stair yet but will "take a good healthy look at it." Mayor Jack Green commented, "I am ' highly skeptical about the ~sibillly of private development there without proper cont rols. We want more information on lhis because it looks a little lhakey at the moment." s Tiie matt.er will probably be rilsed at M<Mday's council meeUng. Newport Beach'a harbor and tidelands coordinator George Dodds said his city would be anxious in insuring that the pier will not affect beach erosion and sand replenlshmenl rrom the river mouth and that it will create no litter problems for his city. "We've just written the U.S. Anny Corps of Engineers for more information and then we'll evaluate our position o r when we get a reply," Dodds· added. Lynch, who said his backera plan to have a '$50,000 engineering and planning study made or the project. ·has filed applications with both the State Lands Division and the Anny Corps of Enginers on the proposal. The corps notified rpore than 200 public agenclea of the application and solicited their comments. "Our notices "''ere sent out 20 days ago with a 30-day dead Ihle," Josepb Benson, corps engineer handlinl ~ ap- plicaUon .said today. "We won't start! to make an evaluaUon unlil after the: April 10 deadline." Quesliom th1t need to be ruolvtd art• whether the venture wiU affect bu.ch erosion, sh.lpping navigation or CIDle any flooding problems. Ben.son said \hat he had not rtetivtd any replies to the notices: sent out 20 (See PIER, Pap'2) arswe DAILY l'ILOT ,...... l1 TllTY Cewllll ' Says Solons Challengfug His Rights WASHINGTON (UPI) -Pr<sldent Nixon says at stake In the strua;le over his nomtnatiom to the Su_preme Court is the chief executive's "Tradi- tional constitutional" right to put his own choices on the court. Rebuffed in his attempt to name Judp Clement F. Hayruworth Jr. to the court and facing a poss.ible second defeat oa Ais nomination of Judge G. Harroi.. Canw~ll, Uie rrelident oV• Oiil is ~ right lhat was "lteely accorded to my predecess0rs of both partJes" and should be hU. Nli:on's aueftlon. were ch1lleqed b7 t.._ several senators. senate Democratic Leader M i t e Mamfleld said today that throughout history "It has been for the President to propose atid lhe Senate to dispose." He said that Nixon's presidenti al prerogative "wasn't jeopardized when Judge Hayruworth waa rejected and il won't. be jeopardized regardless of tht outcome of the Carswell nominaUon." Abe lert at once for Seoul. He told • airport interviewera he did not know why the students named him to identify Yamamura. Abe last year visited the North Korean capital of Pyongyang as a member of a Japan Soclialisl party goodwill mission. PERHAPS TOUCHED BY A BIT OF SPRING FEV ER, DON SPICER, 15, FISHES AND SUNS AT TALBERT LAKE Sen. Robert P. Griffin, assistant Stnlte Republican leader, aaid he underitood the President's feelings on the issue but added: "The Senate is still goin1 to make the judgment. I still feel the Senate has ~ual responsibillUes iit the appol.Dtment of Supreme Court justices." Hori is one of three Japanese govern· ment officials handling the case arising from the hijacking of the Japan Air Lines Boeing Tll by Japanese radica l students Tuesday while on a scheduled flight from Tokyo to Fukuoka i n i;outhwest Japan. The plane refueled in Fukuoka and the students released 23 of the passengers -mostly women and children -before flying northward for Pyongyang where the students indicated they wished to go. The plane later changed its course and landed at Kimpo Airport just outside the South Korean capital of Seoul. Abe left aboard a special JAL plane sent to bring back passengers of the hijacked plane. The hijacked plane has aboard it 115 persons. including the hijackers and the plane's seven.man crew. Earlier South Korea 's defense minister had told the 15 hijackers his patience was wearing Un . Body of Woman Found in Pond Orange County coroner's Investigators today are c0nducting blood and tissue tests on the body of a 46-year-ald woman found Thursday in a Huntington •!arbour pond to determine the cause of death. Believed by police to be a suicide. the victim was idenlilied as Mrs. Myra Hull, 46. of 1$311 Vermont .. St . 1 Westminster. An autopsy already conducted Thurs· day failed to disclose the exact cause of her death, according lo r.orooer·s Deputy Joh~ Cale. Mrs. Hull's body, fully· clothed, wa1' discovered about 12:30 p.m. by Allen Hughes 402 Momlngside Drlve, Hun- tington' Beach, who was . walking his dog in lhe desolate area, police said. The time of death was estimated by Investigators to be about 2 1.m. Wed· !'esday. ,'Jtock ~larkets NEW YORK (AP) -The stock market lost its small early ' gain in moderately ~ctlve trading late this afternoon. (See quotatlons, P1ges JS.19). I Beach's Queen Ready to Vi e For New Cro wn By TERRY' COVlLLE 04 lllt D•llt l'lltl Sllff Rhonda Martyn, the pretty California Junior Miss from Huntington Beach, is doing a Jot of bending and twisting these days with her chance at a national title just around the corner. "I'm trying lo build up my st renglh and endurance in ballet for the com- petition in Mobile," she said today. Rhonda doea her own b a 11 e t choreography to a' number called '·Hall of the Mountain King ." She heads for Mobile, Ala., and the natiohal Junior Miss competition, May 2. "First I'll fly to Washington, D.C., for a quick tour ol the Capitol, then to Moblle wher'e all the state winnera will meet," Rhonda explained. She m1y carry an annload of school books with her. "I'm a little worried about missing two weeks or school. I might take my books to study during free hours," Rhon. da , a near perfect student at Marina High School, said. Fifty girls, one from each state, will compete In Mobile for Uie natiohal title already held by a Huntington Beach girl, Jackie Henington, now a freshman al Stanford University. "I haven't talked to Jaclde .since 1 won the state UUe, but 1 plan to see her belore colp.ct . to Ala.a." Said Rhonda. The ·,trr. we.re tll11mate.t: at Marina a year ago and have been cloie friends. The girl wbo wins the National Junior Miss crown, $JXlll'ISOrtd by the {aycees of America, will alao capture a 110,000 college scholarship and other priz.es. But Rhonda says she "won't predict my chances unlll I'm there." Meanwhile she has a busy month of April ahead keeping up with classes. ballet, modern dance and upcoming song leader competltlon. "I don't fetl like I even ha ve time to turn around," she· concluded, before rushing to classes 1t Marina . l Squatters' Rights Ruling Mav be Beacl1 Claim Tool .I An old principle of "squatters' rights," declared legal by the California Supreme Court, may provide Huntington Beach officials with the tool s to take two-and-a· half miles or private beach free. ''It's an intriguing situation . I'.m look· Ing into it, but I won't lake any action unless the City Council requests it," Don Bonfa, city attorney, commented today. "I don't know what we might do. I'd like to see if it is appealed to the U.S. Supreme Court," City Manager Doyle Atiller said. '·I have no comment," said Bill Foster, general manager of tl'le Huntlniton Beach Company, owner along with~ Soothern Pacific Railroad Co. of that stretch or private beach in the city. In ess~. the Supreme C.ourt deci- skln, rendered Jan. 26, declared that if the public had been using a private beach for five years without protest from the owner, the beach had been granted to the public for recreational use. That decision gave a stretch of coast property to Santa Cru:t County. It was followed March 31 with a ruling by Superior Court Judge Lyle R. Edson giving 11 acres of private beach property to Redwood City. The two decisions, i£ upheld, could affect some 1,050 miles of priVately owned beach In Soirthern Cali· fornia . The only private beach In Huntington Beach is the .section from north of the municipR.I pier to the tip of the hluff area where Bolsa Cllica State Beach starts. "We have to check a Jot of legal rami- fications in it." Bonfa said. "I'm sure private owners of beach land are also checking It." Foster said he could not answer ques· tions on it beacuse it is a legal matter. No city action ls expected on the priv- ate beach matter unt~I It ls thoroughly researched, said city officials. Huntington Cit ies Pacts ' ' For 6 Small 1 P,a~ks Jobs ' ' • Six pl•OJie4,.il!>b,orhooctparlcs1n mm. ~Tlle:'eosl Is 135,000 each for the lir>t UngtonJ1.<jlC!tma1 get lresh lifl't• coat. ·two and llll0,00 for Ole ll·am Springdale Jn lbe 11ext few .months. .· · 1 City olliclals have awarded •Conl.racls Park.·'Arc~itedural lees tot.al~~- for design of the aix parjts to two l While,, city olflclals are Ranc:b.Of1 out architectural finns, as the \flrst year •· co~t&'on 1111111 Pifks, city parka and of the city's new park bulldlna program recreation &mm1Ufonera are preparfna" nears the end in June. for Uieir !irft 'View of the tota1 ttntrll The Pasadena firm of Eriksson,. Peters park ~rat 7:30 toni&ht, in cltJ and Thoms will etch the cmtoors for , c;:ounctl 1thember1., parka at Gisler. Bushard an4 ArevalOs • ~ hA•e a cha Oct to thumb throu&h schools. Gisler t.tiU cost the dt7 $$4,ood 114 pafll o( reports from the attJU&ec. to develop while the other two .Ire prlceCf. ... ·luntl•f'frin (If !:ckbo, Dean, AusUn and at $35,000 each. A 19,920 archltecl's Will iams of Los Angeles. fee wtll be charged. The three-volume report lists an Courtland Paul and Associates, also aspeeta proposed by the Urm for the of Pasadena , will design Colltl'(e View, cJty'~ large cenlrsl pork at Talbert Lark Vlt!w and Sprh'lgdalc-IJell park.I. Avt!nue al1d Golden West Street. , Sex Film Raid In Westminster N ets 'S tarlet' A Weslmlnster paraplegic, charged by authorities with producing films that press the alphabet far beyond X for a rating, is being sought today, followina: the arrest of one of his alleged starlets. Complalnb lssued by the Orange Coun· ty Dl.!ltrict Attorney charge Verne H. Testerman of 6831 San~e Ave. with conaplracy to produce sc ne Olma, sex perversion and three cou o ·selling obscene materials. The latter charge Is a misdemeanor. The complaints were issued Tuesday In West Orange County Judicial Dl~trict Court to climax a two-week undercover investlgaUon by the DA and Orange Police. Testerman and six other persona - one In cuatody -are nam~ ln the complaints issued after seizure of the lurid materials iri a March 25 raid on his studio.garage. Hundreds of films allegedly showin1 sex play involving males, femalea - and even animals -were conflsc1ted, plus nine movie cameras, several still camer8s, projectors and film edlUng tools. Deputy Di.strict Attorney Oretta Sears requested the complalnt.s rollowlng the alleged purch~ oJ JO a&a,1 films March 20 bf a detective from otange. So fa, 1 Testerman bd four persons ll•le!I u J ... and John Doe -there were no mm ~u -ere llill belnc '....Pt by Soutllllllld lawmen. ' . OCC ·to Get Offi ce11 • • Soon for Officials The Or•nge Coasf Junior Colle1e DI,. trict wilt .have new admlnlstratJve olficts ~· Aµa . IO, accordial td' spokesmen for ilie I( ·c. GaTiyob Compony. District trustee& have approvfd the company's low bid of $410,000 on con- atructlon of a relocatable bulldlng. , Site preparaUon on the OCC campus In Costa Mesa will begin in mid-April · for llle pnofabrlcated building. • ' Sen. Alan Cranston {D-Calif.), com- mented: "I, as a senator, will not stand quietly by and see a racist appointed to the highest court In our land." . Nixon's letter to freshman Sen, William B. Saxbe (R-Ohio), asserted th e President's right to fill the vacancy_ through his own choice. It wa.s seen as an effort to sway six Republic8111 still uncommitted on how they will vote in Monday's showdown. Saxbe called it persuasive and aald he would vote against lhe motion to resubmit the nomination to the Senlte Judiciary Committee, Where almost all agree it then would be permJrient1Y buried. He said he would follow Nixon despite Carswell's "weakne.sa· on civil' rights." "' Sen. Joseph P.1. Montoya (0.N.M.)1, one of nine previously uncommitted• Democrats, Wednesday said he would vote to recommit the nontinathiia , • and would vote against Carswell U lt1 came to a vote. Oraage Weather Had enough sun~ The buy skies return Friday but the temp- eratures will stay warm, with 85 readings predicted for the .coast and up· to 74 lnllnd. INSIDE TOD-'l' r.wo uecrs ago 't WCI a. po~e fattor in the aeJtcUon of o prerident but today the Amert.' can Jndtptt1d1ni Po"rt11 of Ocorgt Wallact ii hat>ing troublt eutn getting ccmdfdatc1 ,r /tw local oflicu. Pogo 7. C•flttnlll I "'""91 , ..... " \ Otn• u. ' ..--.. '"'"' .. »·• .. __ • CM!kt • Sytm ,.,_. .. ·-• ..... .... o.• .... ~ • .... Ml'1ltttl , .. 1. •flflrl•I ..... • ,_ • •Rtwt.lnlMfll " ,_" • ,_, "'" -• -" -· ... .. ... ,,_,. " ........ """ "''' ..... n .,., .. ,._ .. , -· ;? DAil V PllOT H ~».,nest Record ~ Kopechne Case • ~ Key Notes Gonr •' '"BOSTON (tfJ>I) -An element of mys-UPI learned today the notea have not '.tery ahnluds the whereabouts of the court been Impounded at Suffolk Superior Coun atenographers' notes containing the test!-here where the 764-page tra.nscrlpt and the mon,y ol Sen. Edward M. Kennedy and report of Edgartown District Court Judge other witneas'es at the &ecret lnqueat into James A. Boyle were sent on order of the &fie death of Mary Jo Kopechne, and Masaachuaetts Supreme Court. ~hether the notea have been properly AU of the Inquest document& were to impounded. have been Impounded Feb. 18 when Judge -Boyle filed hls re port. U the stenogrs- Jury Rejects :Jail Death .• .Probe Appeal ,,. The Orange County Grand Jury today ~~jected lhe suggestion of the National ; J.ssociation for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) that it in- ;"fesUgate the death in Orange County ~Jail last Jan. 21 of Vernon Louis ,Williams. It· refused to reopen the inquiry closed Feb. 16 by the ruling of a divided ::-Coroner's jury that Williama, 27, San ~"Pedro died as the result of an accident *lnd that jail officers did not exucise , undue force when they restrained the :apparently berserk prisoner. ~' It was testified that Williams died r as the result of a "choke hold" applied 'by a Jill deputy. Officers lt11111ed tlal 'their Negro prisoner, who had a long record of'mental illness and narcotics iddictioo, broke free several times dur· ing a protracted 1truule and that it took several depuUes to subdue him. Williams had bef:n arrested earlier In the day by a callfomia Highway patrolman who spoUed him on the Riverside Freeway in Anaheim clad ony in purple shorts and track sboe1 and "behaving in a suspicious manner." District AUorney Cecil Hicks subse· quentJy refused to consider the pou!bllity of criminal charges of anyone involved Jn Williama death. 11le NAACP request Wll filed with the grand jury by its Orange County represeotaUve Clarence J a c ks o n , Williams' mother, Mr1. Lula M a e Williams, has announced tbat she plans to file a wrongful death suit against Oranae County and the officer1 involved in the death of her IOO. 2nd Drug Course Again Faill To Bring Crowd The second of a four·part adult drug lnformatloa course again falled lo draw a aatlsfactory attendance, with only SS reaidenb showing up at the Huntington Beach High School cafeteria Monday. Sgt. James Mahan, of the Huntington ....Beach Police Department, examined the Pdrug problem from a police polnt of view. He wu: asal.!ted by Jane R. Salem, Orange Couiity probation olflcer, and Brian Hanrahan, formu atudent body president ln HunlinJton Beach High School and now a 1tudent of polict &Cle.nee. They brought with them a display ol different drugs used by teenagers " and explained their names and ap- pearance t.o the audience. The third session or the Drug Use and Abuse Forum will be held at 7:30 p.m. next Monday In the Huntington Beach High School cafeteria. Guest speakers WU be Dr. Leo R. Anderson or the Orange County Com- mission for Mental Health Servlcts, and Norman Sprunk, ex-convi ct and current counselor for the Los Angeles C:Ounty Narcotics prevenUon project. There is no admission charge to the forum. DAILY PILOT ClttANOI COAST l"UILIPfltrtG ((IM,.AHY ill•~•rt H. Wt~ l"rt.lldttol •~Al "'*'!""' ;,J,,k I , Cu1l1y i ll.I 1'11\:.ICJ\I 1N G-11 Mllllftr Thofl'l•1 K11•ll E0110r Tli'"''' A. Mu•l'hin1 M~lftt Et11.,. Alb11t W. l1!1t .Auoclttt Etltor H•""llff•• '"'ti Office 17175 l1tt h 11111•···" M1111Rt 4.d.i1111 : r.o. ••· 1,0, ,J,41 Otller Offlt11 \.tfllM 11:<11: in '"'"' """'.,. C..11 Mt\11 DO Wut lty lt•ftl trt,_1 INcto : nu Wtll 111t11 1iw1rv1'f ltll Ck,,.,.1111: JO.$ Htrt~ l l C1mir.. ltu l phers' original notes, from whlch othu copies of the transcript could 'be made, cannot be found, or lf they have not been impounded u dirtcted. it could have 1 rar reaching effect on the inquett 'and on the grand jury invest14aUon of the cue which beglm Monday m Edgartown. Superior Court Clerk Edward V. Keat- ing said he hu not recdvtd the notes frolh Judge Boyle. "AJI I received wa1 the report, the transcript of evidence and the exhibits -physical things." A reliable source said the stenogra- phen' notes were turned over to Thomas E. Teller, clerk or the district court In Edgartown where the inquest was held, at the end of each day of testimony. The inquest ended Jan. 8. Teller, when asked ii he had the notes in hl1 ]>0Nession, sald: "That'• a matter I cannot discuss. I wlll say nothing about the stehOgraphers' notes. The judge (Boyle) is aaying 'no comment' too." Nevertheless, Teller said it was his un· derstanding the Massachusetts Supreme Court intended for the notes lo be im· pounded along with the other inquest doc· uments. Teller quoted from lhe court ruling itsel!. Mrs. Sophia Campos, clerk of :he su- perior court in Edgartown where the Im· pounded inquell document. resided tJe. fore their transfer to Bolton, aaid the stenographm' note! were never turned over to her. She aakl 1he had no know!· ed,ce of their whereabouts. When the llale bllh court lel ground rules for the lnqueat lnto the de&th of the 28-year-o)d Wuhington aecretary in Ken- ned.Y's car, it a.aid: "Upon the compleUon of the Inquest, the inquest documenta !hall remaJn Im- pounded and the inquest judge shall traMmit hl1 repcrt and a tranacrfpt of the evidence received. by him to the ap. proprlate clerk of the 11lptrlor court." Frederick J. Quinlan, clerk of the state Supreme Court Ii.Id it wn his Jnterpre-- talioo of this passage tlal the court In- tended in ill declalon to include the lten. ograpbm' note• in tbe impound.in& order. Tbe sttnograpllera, Harold T. McNett and Sidney R. Lipman, both of Boston. have tried to find out where their notea are but have been rebuffed, tt wu reU. ably reported. Youngsters Plan City Hall Toilr Fountain Valley city hall will be turned fnto the "lltUt red school house" and Mayor Edward Just will become the teacher for as youngsters from Gisler School Friday morning. · The stude.n~. in grades seven and eight. will tour city hall and other civic center facilities from 9:30 to 11 a.m. It's part of their civics study in which they compare various forms of mwticipal government. The Fountain Valley youth& will be shown city hall, the police department, public library and the community center. . ' \ DAILY l'ILOT Si.ff Plltlt ART TEACHER CORNABY ADMIRES DAUGHTER PAULA'S 'PSYCHEDELIC HORSE' At Fountain Valley High School, a Famlli•r Story -Like Father, Like Dau9hter1 From Page J PIER ... days ago. ;<We'll be making our own study as well as checking their comments." Benson ex-plained, "but at the moment nothing has come up against the plan. ''If we get a lot or CQmments against It we'll bold a public hearing," Benson added. Fred Harper, superintendent or the Orange County Sanitation Dlstrlcts, tald that at present he had no objection to the construction company selling the trestle-like structure to Lynch and con- verting it into a pier. The trestle haS no deck but has rails to move pipe-laying equipment to lay the sanitation district's sewer outfall. The tre1tJe reported ly cost about $1 • million and ls part of a $9 mUllon project to carry trestesd sewage five miles out to see. Tbe other major agency involved In the application is the State Lanell Follows Family Valley Senior Top Artist Paula Cornaby, a 17.year·old senior at f'ountain Valley High School, is [o\Jow- ing In the brush strokes of her dad and her four sisters. Which means she is a fine young artlat. "Perhaps the best in the £amily," says her dad, Floyd V. Comaby, head of the art department at Fountain Valley High School. She proved her father's point this week by capturing first place in originality with an acrylic painting, "Psychedelic Horse," in Ute recent Teen Art Exhibit at Huntington Center. The high school picked up nearly s dozen awards for vari ous student artists, Jed by Paula's first place. "She's the fifth daugh ter I've taught in my art class." Cornaby said. ·'I've studied under my fathtr for four years," added Paula. Paula's "Psychedelic Horse" features a rainbow colored colt on a bright background and mounted on a cork board. For the effort she received a $25 cash award from the Huntington Beach Art League. The Teen Art Exhibit was cirsponsored by the art league and the Youth Coalition Committee of Huntington Beach. .. Paula's four older sisters have all migrated to Brigham Young University, where two of them are still art majors. "Yes, I'm going to Brigham Young too , and l'll major in art," she said . Division. 102 d A • f UC Chuck Kirks, land q:ent for the n nmversary 0 :vi~~~:i:~.~;.~:':r~ w:~~ Lynch filed an appllcaUon with the State ~ Landa Division for a Jong-term lease M k d h T lk M h :.;"' ~:~~ ~~ ':::1~'1~ 1 ·;:: ar e y a s, arc es state owns all the Janda three-miles oul Ii"'· .~ -i. j"The llale Lailds Climmtsilon would r' BE~Y (AP) -ThO Universily have to act oa thil lea.te before anything of California marked Its 102nd an· could be done," Kirks said .. "There'll nlversary today wlth speeches and a be many months of investigative work procession with faculties and . students before a recommendaUon can be made from JI.I nine campuses. to Uie board." The list of speakers lncluded New The commiSi.!ion would not re ach a York Mayor John Lindsay and UC Presi· decision until after a public hearing, dent Charles J. Hitch. Kirks added. Flying Jn the face of a precedent Critical Boy Abducted KINGSTON, Ont. (AP) -A two.<lay- old boy rtported to be in serious coodi· lion with a blood disease was forcibly taken from Kingston General Hospital by a groun rf people in early morning darkness today. -------- OAIL'I' •IL.OT Sttfl l'lttl begun in 1922. the university 's Board or Regents had refu sed to bestow an honorary degree on Lindsay, the day's principal speaker. Berkeley Chancellor Roger Hevns. however, approved a UC BerkCJey Academic Senate recommendation that Lindsay receive the Berkeley Citation "for dlstingul!hed achievement, and for notable service to the university." The citation is lhe second ever a\vard. ed . Poet Archibald ~1aclelsh received the first last year. The day commemorates Gov. Henry H. Hslght's signing of the 1886 legislative act which created the university. Aside from Lindsay's citation award, oceanographer and explorer Jacques- Yve1 Cousteau and UC physicist Robert B. Brode were named for honorary degrees from the university. -Receiving the Elise and \Valter Haas International award from Hitch is Dr. Sun Fo, 79, twice prime minister of the Republic or China and the son of the Republic's roundel-. Dr. Sun Yat·Sen . · In the past, each campus has held its own Charter Day celebration but this year the nine campus chancellors led groups of administrators, faculty and sfUt!Cnts in the traditional academfc procession at the start of the ceremonies. Other activities include the annual Charter Day exhibition in the Doe ~rlemorial Library of "U.C. Student Publications, 18S9·1970," a multi·media art show, "Projects for the 1980s" in the Barrow Lane Gallery, the opening of the Berkeley Blues Festival Concert, and the annual Alumni Charter Day Ba nquet. Auctlo11 Coining V p ' • OUicer Jim Rotheermel adds another bike to pile of 75 unclatmed two wheelers lO be auctioned of! Aprll II by the Huntington Beach Police Department. AucUon Is scheduled or JO a.m. in police park· ing lot. Business will be st.J1cUy cash and carry. Bikes will be on dis- play for 30 minutes before auction starts. PROFESSICNAL INTERIOR DESIGNERS Optn Mon., Thvn. &-Fri, Ives. Clemente Joins Oil Ban Drive By JOHN VALmRZA 01 l~t Ot llY l'l•t Sltll San Clemente pledged jts interest Mon· day in a campaign by coastal cllie!I to hire a Washington, D.C., lobbyist to fight offshore oil drilling, but Wed- nesday night the city council balked at the idea of spending any money. The council orcff!red •·received and filed " a letter or appeal from Laguna Beach Mayor Glenn Vedder who asked the city's financial support to hire a_. lobbyist to fight for passage of the Cranston-hfurphy anti-drilling bill. San Clemente's council lndlcated it would like to wait for more specifi c data on the cost and the role of a lobbyist for the anti-drilling measure -information which is being received today In the nation's capitsl by Newport Beach Mayor Doreen Marshall. Mrs. Ma rshall left for Wu:hington th is morning to meet with several lobbyist.:;: to find some facts about the issue. The San Clemente ;eticence over a potential expenditure of as much as $5,000 as its share for the lobbyist was spiced with a little politicking. Councilman Dan Chilton said the city should refrain from spending rnooey for •·purposes which are clearly lobbying." "I think we should pass on it and leave the job up to our next Represen- tative in Congress. the Honorable John G. Schmitz, our next Congressman." The p~liminary plans for the lobbyist project involve the total estimated ex- pense along the coast of about $50,000 for the services. The county, the council leamed, would possibly pick -up $25,000 of the bill, with the other half split up among the five Orange Coast cities. Mayor Wade Lower related a call from l\lrs. Marshall earlier in the day. "She is asking £or our support. Not only moral support, but help in the ronn of money. She will be checking on the plan in Washington Thursday," he said . Councilman Thomas O'Keere agreed With the \Vait·8\1d·5ee posture or the council and said he would like to see copies of the Cranston-Mu rphy bill before making a decision .. He also said he wished to find out If the lobbyist's bill could be split even further than only among the flve coastal cities. ;'\Vhen Mrs. Marshall comes back from "'ashington we'll have another chance to look al it." htayor Lower added. The motion to rile the letter drew all ayes. Movie Planned For Retarded Jerry Lewis will tumble and trip across lhe screen Saturday afternoon in Foun- tain Valley so 100 mentally retarded yout h can have a chance to. attend day camp for two weeks this summer. His movie. "Who's mi nding th 1 Store?'', will be shown al 1:30 p.m. in the Robert Gisler School, 18720 Las Flor~ St., Fountain Valley . Price 0£ a seat for the film is 50 cents. It's part of Project Camp, sponsored by several parents in the Fountain Valley School District who hope to make it possible for the retarded children to attend day camp in Midway City. Their goal is to raise $5.000 before the summer season starts. Co-chairmen of the drive are f.1rs . David Abbott and 11-frs. Peter Barbolak. A Nylon Shag Thar 's Young in Looks , and Young in Price! 9.95 S9. YD. IF YOU CAN'T COME IN-CALL 646--027S for an expert carpet consultant who will come to your borne with samples without any obligation to youl 2215 HARBOR ILVO. COSTA MESA, CALIF. 6~6·0275 646·0276 ) H , , DAil Y PllO~ ,, League Dears Voi~e of Murder e d Ofii~er - By TOM BARLEY Of ... Otll'I ... .., SlMf Officer Nelson Saucer'• voice wu heard again today 1n Superior Court just 10 months alter tho YOlll1( Banta Ana patrolman wu shot and killed on a downtown street. He gave again, via a tape recorded by b..l.s hiadquarters supervisors the Wt ~message he ever gave: the tersely coded BadhamBill To Hit State Taxpayers Spoclal to Use DAILY PILOT SACRAMENTO -A bill suthor..i by a Newport Beach legislator may force every Californian to pay 40 percent more state income tax if landowners v o t e themselves a heavy property tax cut. The bill by Assemblyman Robert H. l3adham (R.Newport Beach) win also stack another 1.25 cents in sales tu on evuy dollar spent In the state. "The whole purpose or this bill is to keep Proposi lion 8 from passing." Badham explained Wednesday night in the Capitol, after a special committee hearing. 1 "It's a bill I really would not like to see become law," he added. Consideration of the threatened legisla· tion has been delayed for at least a month, however, after which time the Assembly Revenue and Taxation Com· mittee will vote on it. Proposition 8 would raise an estimated $1.13 billion in new taxes that state fiscal analysts report would be required to pay for Proposition a on the June ballot, a property tax relief initiative sponsored by the California Teachers ABsociation and the County Supervisors Association. Committee Chainnan Wllliam T • Bagley (R.San Rafael), sponsor of Gov. Ronald Reagan's rival tax revision pro- gram, denounced the teacher-supervisor plan as an "abortion." He accused the two groups of employing "political gut- ter" tactics to discredit the governor's plan. Prop:>Sition 8 would lower local pro- perty taxes by requiring the state to pay 90 percent of au local-state welfare costs aod at least SO percent of local 1chool costs. The homeowner's property ta:z e:zemption would be increased from 1750 to $1,000. Badham told the committee passage or Proposition 8 threatened to throw the state into fiscal chaos and 'that his bill would demonstrate tO the voters the consequences of passage. He said combjing the propoSltion re- quired e:ztraordlftary steps, adding .. anything that we as responsible legislators can do -or, £or get the re:;ponsible -anything that we as legislators can do to poi n t out to the people of California what a pig in the poke they are buying, we should." But Assemblyman Leo McCarthy (0. San Francisco), told Badham, "I'm not prepared to use the legislative process as a campaign ploy to defeat Proposition 8." He said be .had no posiUon on the measure. lodlcltloo tllal be had 1poti.d two llllpecto from hll patrol car and thal be w~ pulllft& lo to '1Check them out." And while operations 111pervltor Aro! Medloy pl~ed back the wt 10 minutes of Sauctr'a duty, murder ltllpect Arthur DeWllta Leque sat with bowed bud at tho ......i table. The youni Black Panther aat back aJ the tape ran out, smiled and tapped hll llngera on the ed(e of !be table. . Ul'I T9"""19 DENIES MY LAI RAP C•pt. Ernest Medina Medina Denies Army Charges Of Massacre ATLANTA, Ga. (AP) -Capt. Ernest L. Medina, now c h a r g e d with responsibility for all Vietnamese civilians allegedly slain during a 1968 raid on My Lai village, says, "I will rely on the truth to prove my innocence " The stocky captain, dressed In civilian clothes, commented during a news con- ference Wednesday after the Anny an- nounced it.s new charge q&:inst him. "I am a professional soldier," Medina said. 111 am loyal to my country Md I have nothing to hide. My family and I will conUnue to rely upon the truth, and I am .mre with God's help this will prevail." He told newsmen, "I did not order a massacre at My Lai and I did not see a massacre take place. I hope the American public will withhold lt.s judg- ment until the true facts are established in a court of law." An Army spokesman at nearby Ft. McPherson, wbere the My Lai in- vestigation l! centered, had aMounced the new charge against Medina earlier in the day. It declares the captain was responsi.ble for the alleged murder of noncombatant persons allegedly committed by members of hia COml'.'any. Phy sician's Lawyer Raps County Jury Selection orange COUnty•s Grand Jury system came under fire again Wednesday as Dr. Robert Cumming Robb 's lawyer moved to block District Attorney Cecil Hicks' use ol the panel for revived prosecution of Ule Laguna Beach physi- cian on abortion charge!. Defense attorney Moses Berman of Santa Ana put Superior Court Judge James F. Judge into the witnw bolt for testimony designed i;, prove to Judge . Byron K. McMillan that the grand Jury system in Orange County eUetti.vely bars many residents from service. Judge Judge is currently presiding jW'iat of the Superior Court's criminal calendar department. He ill, In that capacity, the court's liaison with the grand jury and its adviser in many legal issues. Berman parUcuJarly stressed -and often got Judge Judge's agreement - that it is almost impossible to get wq:e earners below the fl0,000 annual income Jevel to even consider Grand Jury service. Judge Judge agreed with Berman that many county res)llents In that Income bracket faced lhe prospect of loslng their jobs because of the time they would have to devote to Grand Jury duty, quile apart from the prohlbJUve economic factors . Dr. Robb, 61, of 34567 Scenic Drive, Dana Point, was Indicted by the Grand Jury on Hicks' request after Judge Paul Mast of the Sanl.9 Ana Municipal Court tiad rejected Identical charges that the physician had Induced aborUons in women patients. Judge Mast delivered his Jandm11t ruling in full a.greement wit' Berman'• •rgument that Robb's prosecuUon under C1llfomla's Therapeutic AborUon Act was unconstitutional. Judge Mast concluded that the act amounted to diScrimtn1Uon In favor of Roman Clthollc Utlnking and could not I Possibly be applied In the Robb case. That municipal court ruling provided Berman with the second shot of the double-barrelled argument he deli vered before Judge McMillan. He contended that California law on the submission of demWTers-a written funn of legal protest to an accusatory pleading -clearly establi.shes that the matter cannot be taken beyond the munlcipAI court if a judge at that level has granted the demurrer. , It most certainly can not be taken to the Grand Jury, Berman argued, and he asked Judge McMillan to rule that when Robb was cleared by Judge Mast the dl.!trlct attorney had no right to take the same charges before the Grand Jury. Berman said Hicks had the chance aner Judge Mast tossed out the Robb charges to pursue the matter by what Berman called "more normal chaMels'' . -through the appeUate court. But the district attorney, Berman told Judge McMillan, declined to take suclt action and that door wu now closed .. him. He asked Judge McMillan to not aUow the prosecution to "persecute a n d harass" Dr. Robb by allowing them to revive lhe canetlled charges by methods speclfically ruled out b y JegislaUve action and Intent. That polnt was Berman's major argu. mtnt In the three-hour hel.flng but most of the time taken up by hlJ debate with Deputy Diltrict Attorney Michael Capizzi was devoted to the lawyer's hard hitting attack on the Grand Jury systtm. · Berman arlUed that IO percent of Orange County residents earn less than Sl0,000 a year and he drew from a candid Judge Judge the admlulon that it was •1exttt:mely unlikely" that any ~ member of the 1970 grand Jury was below that &Mual lncomt JevtJ • • of'flcef.s ·who raced to th~ colleaaue'a ald. ' the panel'• ll<arlnl ol the taped ..enta 'll>o prooocutloo Clabo& that he WIS cme ol the two auapecta l!pOltad bJ1 the crulalni patrolmu. And It lurll>or claims that League reluaed to produce Iha ldentlllcaUon demanded and lhot Iha olllctr ID the cheot. Tho man, who baa tellllled that he hew Suscer weakly calling "Help me, won't you please hllp me," selJ.ed Sulcer'• mUo .and called in: "Get an ambulance here quJct • , • thtte's a badly wounded pcllce.man." officers raclnc to the tetne, the stailc created by numerous callers to head· quarters and the final comment: "Officer Su.seer ls still alive ..• •e're aotns to get him to the boopitaJ." The tape er.els •t that point Just lO minutes before Sasscer died In a hospital bed-without regaining consciousness. of lut June t mJlhl blinJudlclaL Judge Dre!Jon'• nillnir Ii .... u an Indication that ba would rreler .. limit \ the juron i. direct teatlmOl1)'. Medle1'• tape lnclude.s the subsequent comR'lunJC1Uon between the nearby resl· dent who found the dying Sassctt sprawl- ed In front of his patrol cli' ,and the A rrests No } oke In CSF Campus Confrontation Trouble broke out again at Cal State Fullerton Wednesday and two students were arrested on charges Of assault on a policeman, resisting arrest and using abusive language . on ~ college campwi. What allegedly started ss as Aprtl Fool'• Day prank involving about &O students ended in a full scale con- frontation between campus police and the "merrymakers". Wlndows in the campu.s security office were broken and police cars damaged. Arrested wel'fl Bruce F. Church, 31, of Fullerton and Eileen Jonei., 19, of Cerritos. Church was booked on suspicion of felony assault on a policeman and ti-liss Jones on suspicion of resist ing arrest and using abusive language ln the presen- ce of minors an d women . Church was one of two students ar- rested for using abusive language during Governor Reagan's campus speech Feb. 9, an event which touched off the wbse- quent series of riota on the campus. Medl1y'1 ,cr1ickllng tape then reflects the urgency ol the olt\U\Uon , wltb con· Dieting nports, jbe COl\lffienls of shocked J Judge Samuel Drelzen today barrt<! the jury from the courtroom while the tape was played with the ruJ1ng that Smog May Become Wor se In Try to End Problem LOS ANGELES -Smog ln Los Angeles and Orange counties may become worse as the oext step unfolds in attempts at cleaning Up automobile air pollution. The reason? AuthortUea know that nitroWI oxides in r!IJlall quanUtfes are instrumental in producing smog -through a photochemical reaction with sunlight - but in hlgher concentration, they reduce It. Smog control devices on all 1971 cars will cut the amount of oxides of nitrogen emanating into the air over t h e Southland, so the pollution may increase as a resull. The California Health Department cautiously acknowledged the p e r i I Wednesday in a report, while the automobile industries experts flaUy state it as fact . "Most of the experimental findings indicate with with effective hydrocarbon control, moderate reductions of oxides of nitrogen may not further redace smog effects. In fact, some of the laboratory data indicate that modem reducUon of oxides of nitrogen em1sslons may negate some of the benefits gained from hydrocarbon control," says the Health Department. Auto industry scientists are J e s a c.e.utlous. "Oxides of nitrogen at very low con- centrations are encouragers of the reac- tion that producea smog; at very high concentrations they are inhibitor! of that . reactioo," said a top scientist at General Motors. , The auto industry says It's the un- burned hydrocarbons, the smelly fumes from gasoline, that are the chief villains. And the Callfomla Health Department agrees, to a point. 0 Control 0 f hydrocarbons alone will reduce eye tr- rltaUon, vegetation damage, and o:.one and ael'0601 fonnatlon; and the greater the degree of hydrocarbon control, the greater the ffiiuction of the smog pro- ducts." Medley's testimony camt tn tbl tecond. day of what Is expected to be a sla-weet trlal ol the ll·year..id Nell'O. The pro- sectulon expects lo produce II w11ne,... In aupport « lie cootentlon thal.Leque shot and killed officer swcer. Mailmen's. Uni.o~ President Hints · Off er Acceptance WASHINGTON (UPI) -The P""ldmt of the Letter Carriers Union strondY hinted today that a government PIY ofler would be aa:epted law ~· bringing an eod lo • tho nallon 's ni&il dlspute. Jam., IL Rademacher, bead « the National Auoclallon « Letter CarTleh which triggered a wles of wtlclcjt walkouts by a ltrlke in New Yort tut month, said the union ~ to UM ·government would be lllDOUDCOd taler today. Alter 1 metUnl with AJ'L.CJO ~ dent George Meany, Radem.aeber t~ UPI: "! think everything will ba Mltljd thls afternoon. • Rademacher and beads o( other poei.t unions met In clooed ...,100 with Mtaiiy on the latest govemmeot otter, reportc:d to provide a sla percent Jl91 ·m9'f: retroaeUve to Jan. 1 aod another alz percent belllnninl July I. '· •, ,• PACIFIC COMPOUNDSINIEREST IAILY even on new high rate accounts take your choice ANNUAL YIELD ANNUAL RATE MIN. BALANCE MIN. YEARS l79\ l50°1o $100,000!Q ONE 6.18°1o 6.00\ 5,000!Q TWO -5.92\ 5.75\ 1,000!Q ONE 5.39\ 5.25°~ 500lm %th 5.13°1o 5.00°k )!Q ONE DAY Interest from date of deposit to date of withdrawal on passbook accounts ASK HOW YOU CAN RECEIVE, SERVICE CHARGE FREE 1. Safe Deposit Box 4. Tickets to Sports 2. Trav•ler's Checks and Theatre Attractions 3. Collection of N.otes (llcketron) 5. Many other FREE Services SOUTH COAST PLAZA 3333 BRISTOL STREET • COBTA r.11SA, CAUP'ORNli\ HOURS: 1:30 A.M. TO 8:30 P.M. • SAT.: 10 A.M. TO I P.M. • PHONE 5411-41118 MAIN OFFlCE: 1401 WHITTIER 'IOU!.EYARD, LOI ANGl!LQ, CALIFOl\NIA ' ·' • ; " • • . . • . . • • . . • • , ' • • • • • • • • • • • • • • l • • • ' • ' • • ' ' • • • • • . . • \ , • I - Shows Exasperatio1a Judge Recesses 'Stri.ke' Hearing (~ W .... IHlllJ ,L ... ll•Hl An artificial banana ripening ma· " chine In La Spezia, Jtaly, exploded !, in a warehouse Tuesday de stroy· : ing $16,000 worth of bananas. Auth· 1 orities said the blast 'vas the re-i; sult of a malfunction in the ma· ' chine's beater. Other than the ba- 1' nanas, no one else was injured. l! • f+ Div• H1wk11, owner of a Co rn-~; wpll, England nightclub sa.id he i~ has reinstated strip tease artists at j! his · club because of a threatened t'. boycott by women patrons. He said ~ no complaints were received from mo1m and noted ~'The women seem "'Y I fl to be far more interested. ~ . "' J; r ·? ~ ~ ~ ~! • •' ~: • •' ' • l : .. Dee Hudson was reu1iited with he r !·fianct , Army Sgt. Mark Ha11·11an itl • Hawaii Tuesday tlianks to 15,300 l1 ?OP bottles. 1.fiss H udson, a sopho- =~more at Ohio Dominican College, Co- : ' lumbus Ohio collected the bottles to :. finance' heT trip here for the ~eu11io11 ~·while he was 011 leave from Viet1wm. :. . :+ '*' K•nntdy of Cambridge , Oh io, !·recently dug up a 1912 recei pt from : ?11t. Cannel Hospital shou•ing he : had paid a total Of $4.65 for two • days o! treatment. $4.30 went to :...room and board, 10 cents for medi4 cine and a quarter for ether and aurgicat dressings. Similar servi- ces today at the hospital would cost well over $50. __ .._..,..• Two Charleston. \\r. Va .. de· tectives emplo11ed by Loga11. \V. ·va., officials to obtain evidence of alleged gambl'i11g at a local. pool hall, have been tl1em.selve1 arrested on gambli11g clwrges .1 by I~ogan County Sheriff's De· f. puty's. The pool hall i11 owned if. by a Logan policenwn. • When radio station KFXD, Nam-. pa. Idaho offered on the air a rec- ord album to any girl who showed up al the station in a bikini, six girls came and got the ir records. However, about 1.500 men also ar- rived but got no more lban a side· long glance. • T\vo Sedalia. Mo., youths, Char- 111 Bryant an d Frank Ooogs stOJ> ped to admire a new bulldozer parked near the road. They got aboard and started the machi ne. It rumbled backwa rd. over Bry- ant's car and through a fence be- fore stopping. The highway patrol said the 1964 model car is nO\V about tbe size of a desk. WASHINGTON (UP I) - A Jedcrnl judge siid today the slo wdown by air traffic controllers nlight not be solved by any ruling on his part. After a round of argumf!llts in open court, U.S. District Judge George L. Hart. in apparent exasperation, recessed a co11tempt of court hearing against the leaders of the Professional Air Traf· fie Controllers Organii.ation, saying there were some things "the court caMot or He said, "?i,fy decision on this mailer may not be.lp at all." The government had obtained a court injunction lo halt a "sick-out" by PATCO members -described by the goverameoi as aa illegal strike. Today's hearing was based on contempt charges brought against PATCO's exec u ti v c director F. Lee Bailey, and two olher officials who were accused of encourag· conUnuation ot the strike. Hart quashed subpoe nas by Bailey for 90 air traffic controller! lo appear at the hearing. Hart said it could create a safety hazard if they had to lea ve their posts to attend. Bailey said the ruling "destroys my case.' There was· 110 indicatio11 how many of the subpoened controllers w e re ing continuation or the strike. Bailey contended that none of the con· trollers he subpoenaed would have been working while the court was in session. Hart also denied Bailey's request for a trial by jury. The judge also questioned Bailey, with some exasperatio11, about several . other subpoenas Bailey issued h1 an attempt to back up his allegation that the govern- ment bad "bugged PATCO lines." The Federal Aviation Administration said there has been a small but steady return to work today in some areas of the eountry, but coiitrollers in the lfurd·hit East, including New York, show- ed 110 signs of retur11ing. The FAA said 1,629 controllers were off the job nationwide Wednesday com· pared with 1,728 on Tuesday and l,332 on Monday. * * ·t.t More Teamsters Walk Off Jobs WASHINGTON (UPI) -W 11 d cat Teamster strikes spread in the South and lo the Far West today, while truck drivers in some other areas faced layoffs because of a lack of incoming freight caused by the walkouts elsewhere. U.nion members returned to the job in Kansas City and Minneapoli!-Sl. Paul. but new walkouts occurred in Los Angeles, Charlotte. N.C., and in Des 1"foines, Iowa. Additional truckers walked off the job in Ohio. No strike was reported authorized by national union leaders who were meeting in Washington with trucking industry representatives ta try to iron out a new contract. The old contract ex pirrd at midnight Tuesday and thou sands of dri\'l!rs refused to work after that, pro- ctaimi'i1g "no contract. no work." In Chicago, union members remained on the job. but officials said there may · be layoffs soon because incoming fre ight has been decreased by stri,kes in othl'r areas. Turkev Toll , 1,1130 GEOIZ (UPI) -The dealh toll i \Vestern Turkey's earthquake reachc< 1,080 today and I, 142 persons we rt' l'eported seriously injured. A health ministry spokesman denier! rcporls of disease in the area but local officials said JO children died of influenza in the ,·illage of Kaya, about IO miles lrom Gediz. Normally a minimum of 10,1$0 con· tro llers are on duty at 2J traffic control centers and in airport control towers. The control. centers have bee• hardest hit by the w :i t k o u t with an absentee rate o! about 25 ~qi. Ohio's Rhodes To Sue Life Over Article . COLU1"tBUS, Ohio (AP) -Gov. J ames A. Rhodes said today he will bring a libel suil against LUe magazine because of a story about him last May he said "was designed to eliminate me from the race for the U.S. SenSte." He said the action will be filed in New York State by Attorney Louis Nizer of New York City by April 18. He would not say what relief \\'ill be sought or discuss any other details of the action, saying Nizer would be available in New York next J\1onday to answer such questions. Rhodes gaid the Life story, entitled ''The Governor and The ~obster," brought up the 1970 Senate race and he said information for the story ''came from political interests that I \\·on"t reveal at this time." Rhodes. concluding his second term as governor, is barred by law from seeking re-.election. His primary c_am· paign opponent for the Republican Senate nomination is Rep, Robert Taft Jr. (R· Ohio). The Life story questioned Rhodes' use or campaign funds, said he was forced to pay $100,000 in back inoome taxes and penalties, and noted that Rhodes had commuted the first-degree murder conviction of Toledo mobster Thomas "Vonnie" Licavoli to second-degree. Rhodes oommuted Licavoli's sentence in January 1969, but the onetime mobster -sentenced in 1934 for four gangland- 1lyle slaying! -Jost a subsequent re- quest for· parole. .> Troops Disperse Catholic Looters BELFAST, Notthem Ireland (1.JPJ) - British troops today dispersed a group of 100 Roman Catholic teen-agers who broke into and looted -abandoned Protes- tant homes in the Ballymurphy housing district where major Catholic-Protestant righting broke out Wednesday night. The Wednesday night outbreaks were the worst since widespread religious fighting last October and Brltish soldiers fired nausea gas for the fi rst time since then. The Rev. Ian Paisley, a militant Protestant leader. began the project to evacuate 60 Protestant children from their homes at the deve lopment because "they are being attacked and inimidated by Roman Catholics." As the child ren were being sent by bus to temporary shelters several Protes- tant families also left their homes. When they did the Cillholic teen-agers went on the rampage with yells of "the prods are gone! The prods are gone !" they ca rried fu rniture and food from the houses until troops intervened. \nswerers to Strike'? NE\V YORK (UPI) -The A1edical iociety of New York County warned i .000 physicians in Manhattan to be prepared to man their own phones because of sporadic wildcat strikes by o p e r a t o r s fo r telepho1e-answering services. Marooned on 'Island' This young couple appears stranded on a safety island in the middle of Chicago's Michigan Ave- nue, during the drivi ng snow s which hit the city Wednesday. It was no April Fool's jo·ke as motor- ists tried to keep from sliding of( slipp~ry roa~s. Al least 12 more inches of spring snow is predicted , surpassing all seasonal records. Rogers Says U.S. Seeking Cable Car Crasli Boosts Sex Life -And City Sued N eut1·ality iii Cambodia w WASHINGTON <UPI) -Secrelary or State William P. Rogers told the Senate Foreign Re lations Committee today that the Nixon adminislration wants to main· tain neutrality in Cambodia and avoid involvement in v.•hat could become another Indochina war. After Rogers testified in closed session bel"orc the committee. Senate Democratic Leader Mike Mansfield said he ,1·as "very pleased and impressed"' with the testimony. ''The attitude or the administralion 111 a correct one," ~1ansfield said. "Our profile in Cambodia is about as low as you can get it." Reds Urge Fight By Indochinese . Against U.S. PARIS (UPI) -The North Vietnamest: and Viet Cong negotiators ;it the Paris peace talks called today on 'the peop les of Laos, Cambodia and Vietnam to unite against what they called American "ag· gressive designs." The Communists all but ignored the Vietnam war in today's 6lst session and refused any comment on the French government 's proposal for a general con· ference on Jndochh1a to neutralize the entire area. Saigon Ambassador Pham Dang Lam said Hanoi's actions in intervening in both Laos and Cambodia had only made more difficull the search for peace in Vietnam and that Communist declara- tions of "solidarity" \\·ith the people, of Indochina were pro pa gan da statements to cover up intervention. He demanded the Communists v.1ithdraw the 67,000 North Vietnamese reported in Laos and the 60,000 reported in Cambodia. Once that is done. he .said. "meaningful discusgions" can star:. Hanoi's Nugyen Minh Vy said the United States had a hand Jn \\'ha! he called the "extreme rightist coup" in Cambodia that deposed Prince Norodom Siha nouk as chier of stale and once again accused the United States or ex- tending the war to all of Indochina. He added : "All the administration wants -and all I want-is maintenance of neutrality and no involvement in what .could become an Indochina \\'ar." · Sen. George 0. Aiken (R-Vt.), another committee member. said after hearing Rogers he \\'3S salisfied that the United States would not supply weapons or other military assistance to Cambodia. Even if lhe Phnom Penh government were threatened with a Communist overthrow , "J don't think we would make any move without the administration coming to Congress." Aiken said. Asked if he felt assured by Rogers' testimony, Mansfield replied "Yes, r did." ' Mansfield said lhe United States should "keep at a distance" and hold to the "low profile" currently maintained by the adminislration involving Cambodia. He was also asked the possibility of allied troops -perhaps South Koreans, New Zealanders or Australians -moving into Cambodia. Mansfiekl opposed the idea. "That just would be the shadow hiding the substance," the Democratic leader said. "We are all allies and all allies should stay out. If one goes in we are all tarred." State Department officials indicated unofficial interest in a French proposal for international ne got i at ions to neutralize all of Indochina. At the White House, a spokesman said the French proposal is ''still unclea r lo us'' and said the State Department v.·as seeking clarification. He said Nixon learned of the suggest ion from ne\\'S reports and deelined to com· ment when a reporter asked, "Doesn "l the White House consider it odd that a close ally wou ld not first inform the President?" SAN FRANCISCO (U PI) -Witnesses told a jury of eight women aid four men Wednesday that a proper and relatively chaste young lady radically changed after a cable car accident into a woman whose sexual need was un satisfied by 100 men. Courts previously have a w a r d e d damages because impotence or frigidity fallowed an accident, but· the case or Gloria Sykes, 29. is believed the first in which damages were sought for in· creased sexual appetite. On the first trial day, Lawrence Leonard , a high school teacher, and Mrs. Leslie Armbrust, a telephone com- pany employe, testified about Miss Sykes before and after. Leonard, who went steady with Miss Sykes a decade ago, and Mrs. Ambrust • a longtime friend, both said the pl aintiff was an uprighl, religious girl before the accident on a Sunday in 1964. Miss Sykes was aboard a cable car which plunged thrte blocks down a steep hill v.•hen it lost its grip on the cable. Her physical ·injuries were 11ot se rious, but she laler sued the city of San Fra11cisco for $500,000 because of mental injuries. Mrs. Armburst said her friend kept a calendar book after the accident with details of affairs with 100 men. "I asked her how she met so many, and she said, It's easy, you go up and talk with somebody," ~lrs. Armbrust said. ' ~1iss Sykes never really enjoyed th~ sex, ~!rs. Arn1brust sai d. "All she really \\'anted \\'as warmth and arfection." "This is unbelievable," said Deputy City Attorney William Taylor. He blamed the pain on a kidney problem and the sexual appetite Ofl birth control pills he asserted may lead le> ''promiscu ity and uMatural sex drives." Goldberg Rejects 'Push' As NY Gover1101·Candidate LIBERTY. N.Y. (AP) -Former Supreme Court Justice Arthur J . Goldberg has won selection by the state Democratk: Commjttee as candidate for governor of New York: -but says he prefers to get into the party primary June 23 the hard way. New Storm on East Coast Viet Cong Ambassador Nguyen V11n Tien said the Cambodian government of Premier Lon Nol, a lieutenant general, was acting as agents of the United States and had killed "hundreds" of CambOdians in repressing pro-Sihanouk demonstratia.1s. Both the Viet Cong and Hanoi represen- tatives brushed aside questions on the French Indochina proposal as they en· tered the session. The committee's tndar semen t automatically entitled the o n e I i m c secretary ot labor and U.N. ambassador to a place on the primary ballot. Snoiv Continues to Fall Over Vpper Midwest Area C•llfomlc TM ae<t'"" !Mi« llW"' I" • ""'"" l•sltfel lllt Htfttft l'ltH of IM ~·llfn fOilll•• w!lll wlncly, •MW, or ••Inv ... ll'll'let. G•I• w1rn11111 wtrt fl\lln1 "" l•kr• Hul"Of! u1cl Oo!t1tlo •"II Mrlh••" t1k• M1dll11n. On lh• Ell! (Hll Go ,. _.tm l""I Wtrr dl111l•••cl !tom M~"' to "*e 111111\0 •net •moll c••" w1m lP111 '"''' P01ltct 11 t1r •O~Th •• ll'lt C1rellfttl. SOUTHERN (Al!l'ORNJA -~vn~y 'lllurlCllY tnct Frid•• bur ln<.•tt•I"• low CIM• 11\0 hit nr1r lht tOl•I TI!llrtcJI• nt1111 tnct Frid••. w""'" TJWrtcJIY tJICtltl Mlf 1111 (•Ill. LOS ANGELES AlltE"° -Htrw 1un- ..,,,_ TIM!o.dtY l lllf l'tlcttY ti.II •n· a.Nd ,_ ..... low CIOUOI TllUtMtY f11tf1f t nd l"rldf., IMl'ni.... Lllllt ,.,... ...... "''' cM"'" .,,,,. hit>~ ,,,.,,tct ... ...., , • ...,. '°""' "' 11i.ht n. "°fNT COHCf .. 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W•ltr '-•!wt1 ,1 , SHH, "'"""· Tide• THUllJOAY s.c .... lli9't .. ........ •lllOAY Finl 1'1191! •.• , f'lnl '""' ........... . ll(8lllf ftltl'I S.COll4 ~.. • Sllft "ltt1 .$1JJ t .,,. "'-•h•n J1'7 • "'· In ti!' 1 I U••"'·O I 'Qa "' ~I U;S-•"' Ot 10 ..... J.1 111 ...... 01 S•ll I !( •f"- Jtll J Cl1101. . ' Temper•tuf'f!s "'lbu•ll!fflllUt .. " Al!C'°tot•lt • " Alllln!I ,. " 8•-er1li•'d " .. l'l••.,,ar(k " " !ICIN .. " lies~ .. " llfOV<l'IVJllt ~ .. Cl'llC•fO • " CIMlnntn " ,, ... _ " " ~ M•lntl .. " Ottrl)lr " • l'•l•lltnlll " " Fed wor1rr .. .. Fr•wio " " ..... .. ,. ..... .. " l(f!Uh Cltr " " ~•• v..-1 .. " LOI Mftln " " "'"" " • MlrwitHOlll ' H " Ntw Dr4'MM n •• !Jo'" " " II " .. ..l!etM Cll'I' ii ~ .. ::1:1:1 " " ~ H ~,r !i " " ii ~~ .... ~\7 ii .. ·-" ~ft!tl;1., ll u " • S.ft r1ntJ11CO .. " $ .. Ill• .. .. fl\otf~•I " :l We llllOI! H 'Arsenal' Proves "' No Big Thing PITTSBURGH {UPI) -Afrs. Phyllis ·.:~ Martini called the sheriff's o f f i c e .1• Wednesday, said she was moving le> 1 11'1 a new home and asked if it would be 1afe lo move some ammuri"ition stored .ei in crates in her basement. • 1.11 Sheriff's deputies who arrived at her .02 house ta take a look immediately evacuated houses in a two-square-block .w area . ·°' The deputies rerooved \\'hat thty called ·'' lwo "live" 100-pound f>ombs, a Viet Cong grenade and a 60mm projectile and sent .21 them to the U.S. Anny Corps of Engi· nws at nearby lrwln. Pa . .. A spokesman for the engineers said they Yo'ere duds and were: harmless. They said lhe two "live'' 100-pound bombs actually were .51kallber artillery 1.n shells. 1":frs. Martini said her h11sb.1nd. Carl, brought the ammunltlon to their home In 1uburban Castle S ha n n o n by automqbile from hit Army bast in .u Georgia 1 year after his return from .n Vietnam. \ Two hours after he had been chosen at a stormy convention Wednesday, Goldberg said he would waive this ad- vantage and instead circulate nominating petitions among the voters. Getting on the primary ballot by peli-· Hon requires 10.000 signatures. inclurlin~ at least 50 from each of 47 of Ne\v York 's 62 counties. Goldberg said this was his reply to assertions by some of the 345 delegate~ to the state committee conclave that be \\'as "a creature of the bosses." Goldberg had received the committee's selection, vanquishi ng four contenderli, on the first ballot with 63.2 percent of the vote. The convention also designated State Sen. Basil Paterson of Harlem la be the first Negro to seek the nomination for lieutenant governor of New York. Some of the state committee members applauded Goldberg's decision to \\'ai ve selection, viewing it as a show of strength on his part. Others protested. questioning the lcgallty and the propriety of the move. A general hubbub follo\\·ed led b)' one rtelegate who shouted : "He's making a mockery out of our convention ." Goldberg sought to placate 111 t disgruntled, booing assemblage b y returning to U1e rostrum to explain that he never lntendt:d to Mcllne the dcstgnR· lion, but shnply to waive Its advantage -ao that all &ubernalorial candidates .6 u.-1T ......... SURPRJSES DELEGATES NY Candidate Goldbtrg would be on an equal rooting. Goldberg gave a hearty endorsement lo Paterson's-candidacy saying "it i~ about lime'' the party advanced a Negro cA ndidate far high office in slate govern-ment. P ol io Cr n ~ad e1· Sa lk Now Ont of Ho~pilul SAN DIEGO (UPI) -Pollo vacelnt de.\'e.loper Dr. Jonn~ Salk ha$ ~n rele•~ ed lro1n University llo.splt11I :ift<'r thrre days of obser\alion for a po:i-'ilble heart allmenl, officials revealed today. , I 7 FOuniai11 v ·alley N.Y. Steeb .. • VOL. 63 . NO. 77, 3 SECTIONS. 36 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, APRIL 2, 1970 TEN CENTS Recreational Pier Proposed_ at River Mouth· By ALAN DUUUN Of 1M 01llY ~Ult Slaff A Newport Beach real estate broker and a group of bus!nessmen hope to develop a recreational pier off the Santa Ana River dividing Huntington Beach and Newport Beach. The plan would Involve converU·11g a 1,700-foot structure already built for the laying of a county sewer line into a ~anent facility . the brok"er. 'Dennis L. Lynch, hopes • to buy the exlsUng structure lrom the construction company, Peter Kiewet and Sons , of Santa Ana for about $900,000. The cost of strengthening the con- struction and remodeling tt to ac·' commodate shops and fisbing-orJen\ed aC'tivities would add another $5 million to the cost. The -cities of Huntington Beach and Newport Beach may well have reserva- tions ui the elaborate enterprise. Of. ficials of both cities indicated today that . lhey want to know much mor~ about the proJtct. Huntinaton Beach City Manager Doj•le Miller said he had not discussed the proposal with his staff yet but will "take a good healthy look at it." Mayor Jack Green commented., t•1 am highly skeptical about the possibility '(If private development there without proper controls. We want more informaUon on this because it Jooks a little shakey at the moment." The matter will probably be raised at Monday's council meettna. Newport Beach's harbor and ti~ands coordina tor George Dodds said his city would be anxious in insuring that the pie r wlJI. not.-'iffect beach erosion and sand retlltnlshment from the river mouth and that it wlll create no Uitei: problems for his city. "We've just written the U.S. Anny Corps of Engineers for more lnformaUon and then we'll evaluate OW' position when we get a reply,11 Dodds added. Lynch, who said his backers plan to have i $50,IXW.I engineering and planning study made of the project, has filed applications with both the State Lands Division and the Anny Corps of Enginers on the proposal. The cotps notified more than 200 public agencies or the applfcation and solicited their comments. "Our notices were sent out 20 days ago wiUl a 30-day deadline," Joseph . . Benson. corps •naineer handlJq ~ ~ pllcatioft said today. "We won't ataJ1 to make an evaluation until after tht April 10 deadline." Questions that need to be reaO.lved art whether the venture will affect beach erosion, ihipping navigation or caUM any l1oOding problems. Benson said that he had not reoetfed any replies to the noUces sent out 20 (See PIER, Pap II IXOD or ......... arswe Japan Aide ' Intercedes In Hijack SEOUL (AP) -Suil:eya Abe, Socialist member of Japan's parliament, arrived here Friday to help government officials win release of 100 passengers and crew held hostage in an airliner hijacked by ultraleftist Japanese students wbo want to go to North Korea. He hurriedly flew in after the hijackers several-boon earlier agreed in principle to release the passengers in exchapge for ~ ne' bot:llce, JJPlftll! Vice Tr .ans po r lat I o·n Ministef Shlnj iro Yamamura, through talks with Abe. The Samurai sword-brandiihing hi- jacktra uked that Alie C01De tb Korea and ldentltJ' Yamamura, whom ibey •id they could not recognize by sight in a reply to Yamamura's proposal that he be put aboard the airliner. erounded since Tuesday at Seoul's K.impo, Intern.a· tional Airport, in place of the pabengers. Shigeru Hori, chief Japanese Cabinet secretary, announced the agreement ·earlier in Tokyo. Abe. left at once for Seoul. He tok! airport interviewers: he did not know \\'hy the students na{ned him ti identify · Van\amura. Abe last year visited the North Korean capital of Pyonaang as a member of a Japan Socliatist party goodwill mission. Hori is one of three Japanese govern- ment officials handling the cue arising frGtD the hijackin(S: of ~e· Japan Air Lines Boeing m by Japanese radical students Tuesday while on a• scheduled flight from Tokyo to Fukuoka i n aoulhwest Japan. The plane refueled in Fukuoka and the students released 23 of lbe passengers -mostly v.·omen and children -before flying northward for Pyongyang where the students indicated Uiey wished to go. The plane later changed its course and landed at Kimpo Airport-;ast outside the South Korean capital of Seoul. Abe left aboard a special JAL plane sent to bring back passengers of the llijacked plane. . The hijacked plant has aboard 1t 115 persons, including the hijackers and the plane's seven.man crew. Earlier South Korea's defense minister had told the 15 hijackers his patience was wearin& tin. Body of Woman Found in Pond oranze County coroner's investigators today are condUcting blood and tissue tests on the body of a 48-yea.r-old v.·oman ro'und Thursday in a Huntington Harbour ·pood to determine the cause of death. Believed by police to M 11 suicide. !he victim was identified 11s Mts. Myra Hull. 46, of 15311 Vermont St ., Westminster. An autopsy already conducted Thurs· day failed to disc.lose the exact cause of her death , ac'cording to Coroner's Deputy John Cale . Mrs. Hull's body, fully clothed, was discovered abOut 12:30 p.m. by Allen Hughes 401 Morningside Drive, Hun- tington ' Beach, who was walklng his dog in the desolate area, police said. The time of ,death was estimjlited by Investigators to be about 2 a,m. Wed· 11tsday. Stock /tlarkets NEW YORK 'AP) -Tht stock market ltlst its small early gain in moderately 11ctivt trading late this afternoon. (See quotaUans, Pag" 11-111. • , DAILY PILOT~.,. terrr c ... 1u. PERHAPS TOUCHED BY A BIT OF SPRING FEVER, DON SPICER, 15, FISHES AND SUNS AT TALBERT LA!CE Beach's Queen Ready to Vie For New Croivn By TERRY COVILLE OI tfll 0.11'1' PllM Slaff R..1onda Martyn, the pretty California Junior Miss from HUntington Beach. is doing a lot of bending and twisLing these days with her chance at a national title just around the corner . "l'm trying to build up my strength and endurance in ballet for the com· petition io Mobile," she. said today. Rhonda does her own b a 11 e t choreography to a nbmber called "Hau of the Mountain King." SP< heads f<l< Mobile. Ala .. and lhe national Junior Mfss c.ompetiUon, May 2. "F irst J'll fly to Washington, D.C., for a quk:k tour of the Capitol, then to Mobile where all the state winners will meet," Rhonda explained. She may carry an armload of school books with her. "I'm a little worried about missing two weeks of school. I might take my books lo study during free hours,'' Rhon- da, a near perfect student at Marina High Sehool, said . ' Flrly girls, one from each state. will compete in Mobile for the national title already held by a Huntington Beach girl, Jackie Benington, now a freshman at Stanford University . Squatters' Rights Ruling Mav he Beach Claim Tool . " An old principle of "!quatters' rights," declared legal by the California Supreme C.OUrt, may provide Huntington Beach officials wlth the tools to take two-and-a- half miles of prt~·ate beach fre e. "It's an intriguing situation. I'm look· ing into it, but r won 't take any action unless the City Council requests it," Don Bonta, city attorney, commented today. "I don't know what we might do. I'd like to see if it is appealed to the U.S. Supreme Court," City Manager Doyle Miller said. "I have no comment," said Bill Foster. general manager of the Huntington Beach Company, owner along wilh Southern Paclflc Railroad Co. of that stretch of private beach 1n the city. In essence, the Supreme Court deci· sion, ~r~red .Jap._2§, declared that if the public had been uslne a private beach for five years wtthout protest from the owner, the beach had been granted to the public for eaUonal Ulle. That decision gave a stretch of coast property to San~ Cruz County. It was followed March 31 with a ruling by Superior Court Judge Lyle R. Edson giving 11 acres of private beach property to Redwood City. The two decisions, if upheld, could affect some 1,050 milfll of privately owned beach In Southern Cali· fomia . The only private beach in Huntington Beach Is the sec.lion from north of the munlcipl'll rl.er to the lip of the blutr area where Bolsa Chlca State Beach starts. "We have to check 1 lot of legal rami- fications in it." Bonf1 said. "I'm sure private owners of heath land are also checking it." Foster said he could not answer ques- tions on It ~acuse it is a legal matter. No city action is expected on the priv~ ate beach matter unu1 it is thoroughly researched, uid city officials. · Hunt~ngton Git Jes Pacts • For 6 Small Parks Jobs "I haven 't talked to Jackie since I .... won · the. state title, but I plan to see Six planned neighborhood parks In Hun-The cost Is $35,000 each for 1he Ont her before &olnB to Alabama," said tington Beach may get fresh green coats two and $200,00 for the 11-acre S°'""~·le. Rhonda . The gb:ls wei:e claumates at in the next few JMnlhs. .,.,.~ Sex Film Ra.id In Westminster Nets 'Starlet' A West.mlnster paraplegic, charged by authorities with producing films that press the alphabet fJr beyond X for a raUng, ls belng sought today, following the arrest of one of his alleged starlets. Complaints issued by the Orange Coun· ty District Attorney charge Verne H. Testermari of 6831 Santee Ave. with conspiracy to produce obscene films. sez perversion and three counts of selling obsctoe materials. The latter charge is a misdemeanor. The complaints were issued Tuesday In West Orange County Judicial District Court to cllmaz a two-week undercover invesligallon by the DA and 6ranie Police. Testerman and six other persons - one in custody -are named in tile complainta issued af\er sei;ure of the . lurid materials In a March 25 raid on hlo 1tuc110-1ar1ge. Hlu>dreds ol film1 1llegedly showing sex .. play involving malea, females - and even 1nlma.ls -were confilcated, plus nine movie cameras, several still cameras, projectors and film editing tools. Deputy Dil,trk:t Attorney Orella Sca:rs requested the com.plaints following the alleged purchase of 10 stag films March 20 by a detecUVe from orange. So far, Testennan and. four persons listed as Jane and John Doe -there were no /Jim credits -are still btln& 10111hl by Southland lawmen. Marina a year aeo and have been close City officials have awarded contracts Park. Architectural fees total tl.500. friends. for 'design of Ille six parks to two Whlle . cily offidall are · handlna out OCC ·to Get Offices The girl who wins the National Junior architectural firms, u t)Je first year contacts1>n small JN1rb, city parb and : 1.11.u crown, sponsored by· the Jaycees of Ule.~ty'1 new parlc)>Ulldlna P"°fram .. recratlow~"*'l ar;e PflPll'fll ~ nn "J or Officials o! America. will oloo capture 1 110,000 nears Qie end in June. • • lol llitlr 11ft1:vrew of'lhe'tollf C..lhl , "" tollege scholarshi p ~nd ~O~!t P\lteJ. . • ~ The ·P~s!_d~na firm of Erlks$on, f,~ter:s 1 1p•rk c.~n6ept at 7:IO tonl1ht, ~ cU1 ;rhe 0r•ncc Coast Junior Collqe Dis. But Rhonda nyt she ~on t ~, f aod -~~-:.~,the COl'lt,ou~ ·ror 1 coohd,l .chafrU)ttr. 1 .: • ltk:t will tiave ne)lr' admlnbtraUve of(fces my chances until I'm tl\ert. 1 ., perkJ.l..J,(• t ler; fl:u1hard and "A'ioeva~.5 . T!K1 tuure 'a Chanc!~\o thllmb throuch ... b)" Aur 10. accordl'l( toi51!9kwntn .. for Meanwhile she has a busy month ol schools.' Gliler wfll cod the citY $$4,000 114 )>tie!' .Pf reports from the atchltec< the .R. C. Ga\Jyon Company. • April ahead keeping up with classes. to develop while lhe other two~~ priced h1r1l firm . or Eckbo, De.an, Austt,, aind Dllll;i~ trustees have approved the ballet, modern dance and upcoming song at $.M,l'.XMI each. A $9.'° arehitecf1 Willlams of Los1Angeln.' ' •• ~ companyJi Jdw bid of '4iO,Oli:l •on con-: leader competition. fee wlll i>e charged. \ • ..t • The t.htee-vo}Umt. report l~l.S ill . structlon of a relocatable'lklildinJ. "1 don't feel like t even have lime Cou rtland Paul and Ahocl~s. also aspects pr9posed by. !he firm •ftr the 1Sltt preparation on the OCC campus In tn turn around,'' she concluded , before nt Pasadena. will design College View, city's lpr,e central •. t>ark ,at Talbert Co!ta Mesa will begin In mid-April for rushina lo cluses al Marini. "'1rk View and Sprh1gdi1 lkU park;. •Avcnu~ and GOiden , \l''lt Slr .. t. • Ille prtflbrlclted buUdlna. ' ,, r • ' ~ ,,. ' ;,..,· ~ •• ' ~ ><· \• ;.,,.,"* ..... -J f ~· ••• f Says Solons Challenging His Rights _' WASHINGTON (UPI) -President Nixon says at stake in the struggle over his nominations to the Supreme Court is the chief executive's "Tradi- tipnal constitutional" right to put his own choices on the court. Rebuffed in his attempt to name Judge Clement F. Haynswortli Jr, tO the r.ourt and facing a possible secood "defeat on his nomination of Judge· G. · ·Harrohl Carnell. t"' Pmident ""-t1!1f1 is f right that was "freely accorded to 'my predecessors of both parties" and sbou1d be bis. 4' Nlxop's ""rtlbno """ clilll...;.t by several aen8.tors. Senate Democratic Leader ~ M t k e Mamlield oakf today lll1t throughout history "It has been for the President lo propose and lhe Senate to dispaae. !' }le said that Nixon's presidential prerogative "wasn't jeopardlud when Judge Haynsworth was rejected and it won't. be jeopardiJed regardlesa of thf oo~me o( the CariWell nomination." Sen. Robert P. Griffin, assistant Senate Repu'11ican leader, said he undc!rstc;>od the Prtsident's feelings on the i.\llle but added: "Tlit Senate is still tolng to make the judgment. I still feel the Senate. has co-equal responslbiliUts in the appointment o! supreme Court just.ices." Sen., Alan Cranston (0.Calif.). com.. mented : "I, as a senator, wlll not stand quietly by and see a racist appointed to the highest court In our land." Nixon's Jetter to freshman Sen. William B. Saxbe CR-Ohio), asserted the President's right , to fill the vacancy thr()Ugh his own choice. It was teen as an effort lo sway six Republicans still uncommitted on how they will vot1 In Monday's showdown. , Sobe called it persuasive and uid he would vote against the motion to · resubmit the nomination to the Senate Judiciary Committee, where almost all agree it then would be permanently buried. He said he would follow M,;on despite Carswell's "weakneaa on civil rights." Sen. Joseph M. Montoy1 ([).N.M.). one of nine previously UDCOmmltted Democrats, Wedl1esday said he would vote to reeomnUt the nominatiori - and would vote against Carswell if it came to a vote. Orange l\'eatller 1iad enough sun? The hazy ~kies return Friday but the temp.- eratures will stay warm, with 6$ readings pmlicted !or the coast and up to 74 inland . . INSIDE TOBI\ V Two years ogo it uw 11 Potent factor m the •tlfction o/ 11 1 presidt'nt but today the Amerl· can lndtpe:ndtnt Partv of George W11Uocc U 1&aving . trouble even atttlng candidotc1 for local offkeSI Page 7. C1llf9f11le I ! C~tc-1.. Ill , c1e .. .i-11tt II·>' c-·n • H Cret~ H Dt"" Mttttt'I ' llf""41t1 ''" • lllPwt•""'-• u ,Jllllltt t•lt "·-11 Allfl Lillt9" l ...... ,,.. u ... •· 2 DAILV PILOT H ••• J o .. Kopechn~ Case Key Notes Gone :. BOSTON (UPI) -An element of mys. !'.tety lhrouda the '"-•boots of the court stenoaraphen' notes containing the testi- mony of Sen. Edward M. Kennedy and othu wltneaaes at Ole aecrtl inquest Into the death el Mary Jo Kopechne, and trhether the notes have been properly impounded. Jury Rejects :;Tail Death .Prpbe Appeal ~: The Orange Cotmty Grand Jury today -.!!ejected the suuestion or the National ~~atJon for the Advancement of WJored People (NAACP) that it in- .:"vestJgate the death in Orange County ..:jail last Jan. 21 of Vernon Louis -.lllllllams. It muled 1" reopen the inquiry closed feb. 16 by the ruling ol ll' dlvided ·coroner's jury that Williams, 27, San ~edro died as the result of an accident ~ 1nd that jail officers did not exercise ..._qndue for~ when they restrained the • apparenUy berserk ptlsoner. ·' It was lestirted that Williams died "as the result of a "choke bold" applied 'by a Jail depuly. Offlcera testified that "their Negro prisoner, who had a Jong iecOrd of mental illness and narcotics addiction, broke free several times dur· ing a protracted •truale and that it took several depu Ues to subdue hlm. Williams had been arrested earlier in the day by a California Highway patrolman who spotted hlm on the Riverside Freeway in Anaheim cl1d ony in purple shorts and track shoes and "behaving in a suspicious manner." District Attorney Cecil Hicks subse- quently refused to consider the possibility of criminal charges of anyone involved in Williams death. The NAACP request was filed with the grand jury by its Orange County repfesentaUve Clarence J a c k so n • Williams' mother, Mrs. Lula M 1 e Williams, hu announced that abe plans to file a wrongful death suit against Orar11e Co1.mty and the officers involved in the death of her son. 2nd Drug Course Again Fam r To Bring Crowd The RCOnd of a four-part adult drug lnfonnatiott course again failed to draw a saUsfactory attendance, with only 35 residents showing up at the HunUngt.on Beach High School cafeteria Monday. Sgt. James Mahan, 'of the Huntington Beach folice Department, examilled the drug problem from a pollct point of view. He was assisted by Jane R. Salem, Or1nge Cowity probation officer, and Bri1n Hanrahan, former student body prtsident In Huntington Beach High School and now • student of police i;cieJtee. They brought with them a display of dllferent drugs used by teenagers and explained their names and ap- pearance tu the audience. The third session of the Drug Use and Abuse Forum will be held at 7:30 p.m. next Monday in the Huntington Beach High School cafeteria. Guest a;peakers wil be Dr. Leo R. Anderson of the Orange County Com- mission for Mental Health Services, and Norman Sprunk, ex-convict and current counselor for the Los Angeles Counly Narcotics prevention project. There is no admission charge to the forum. DAILY PILOT Ol:Aiito• COA5T P'Ult.ISHlfrfG COMl'lltY a,i.,,1 N. W1t4 ""-•lclwlt..., ll'lltlllsrlw ..,,,Ii a. Curl11 Vi<.• P'1nld1r11 •~..d c..n. .. 1 M111ttt• 111111111 ic,,,;1 (Oilor lho..,11 A. Mur,.hi"' M ...... "'9 (Ol!Ot Alb1rt W. 11111 AHOC:llM ltll• HntlJttfM .._Iii Office 11175 l11c.h l1ul1•1•d ltll•il1"t "''••n• r.o. 101 1,0, '1'~' Otller Offic" t.••-111<h: m 'or111 ,,_ ~It Mto1; »O Wtll Ill, ~l•ftl N-. ltJ<ll~ nu Wnt 1110.1 lour..-.•• St" Qlrn1nl1: :IOJ Ntt!ll ll Ctm"'9 I.Ml .~L . DAILY P'H.DT, w;l/I w1ICl'I lit '""""""f ,,... ,.,.. .... ~M. It WM'-"<• ••If' •-<--' "'°" d*" Ill ••t•le tail""' fol' utuM 1Hc1'1. H.-9 .. K'I. (Ml• '-'"'• .... lllof:M 9-tdl -f-Mlfl Vllle'f', '"'-wl111 1w.1 ....... 91111 ..... er.,. C.!11 ~"""" c:.....,.,. ,.wi..e ,..,,... ,,.. 1t nn w..1 ..... IM!.. ,.....,., llkll. ...... :at Yl't•I ' .. .,. llf'Wll, C..le -·· UPI learned today the notes have not betn Impounded at Suffolk Superior Court here where the 76f.page transcript and the report of Edgartown District Court Judge James A. Boyle were sent on order of the Massachusetls Supreme Court. All ot the inquest documents were to have been impounded Feb. 13 when Judge Boyte fUed his report. Jf the stenogra· phers' original notes, from which other copies of the transcript could be made, cannot be found, or if they have not been impounded as directed, it could have a far reaching effect on the inquest and on the grand jury inves04auon of the cu:e which begins Monday 1n Edgartown. Superior Court Clerk Edward V. Kea~ ing said he has not received the note!! from Judge Boyle. "All I received was the report, the transcript of evidence and the e1hlbita -physical things." A reliable source said the stenogra- phers' notes were turned over to Thoma!! E. Teller, clerk of the districl court in Edgartown where the inquest was held, at the end o( each day of testimony. The inquest ended Jan. 8. Teller, when aaked if he had the ·notes in his possession, said: ''That's a matter I cannot discuss. I will uy nothirig about the slenographers' notes. The judge (Boyle) is saying •no comment' too." Nevertheless, Teller said it was his un· derstanding the Massachusetts SUpreme Court intended for the notes to be im· pounded along with the other inquesl doc· wnents. Teller quoted from the court ruling itself. Mrs. Sophia campos, clerk of the su- perior court in F.dgartown where the im· pounded inquest documents resided be- fore their tran&fer to Boston, sald the stenograpben' noUs were never turped over to her. She saJd ahe had no tnowl· edJJe of their whereabouts. When the Jtate h1gh. court set ground rules for the inquest into the death of the 23-year-old Washington secretary Jn Ken- nedy's car, it said: "Upan the compleUon of the inquest, the inquest documents shall remain im· pounded and the inquest judge !hall transmit his report: and a transcript of the evidence received by him lo the ap- propriate clerk of the superior court." Frederick J . Quinlan, clerk of lhe,ltate Supreme Court said It was his loterpre- taUon of th1I pusqe th.It the court in- tended Jn its decision to include the aten- ograpben' notes In the impoundini order. The atenogr1pba'i, !ilrold T. McNeil and Sidney R. IJpman, both el Boston, have tried to find out where their notes are but have been rebuffed, it wu rtli-ably rtporled. Young~ Plan City Hall Tour Fountaln Valley city hall will be turned Into the "liWe red school house" and Mayor Edward Just will become the teacher for M youngsters from Gisler School Frldey morning. . The students, in grades aeven and eight, will tour city hall and other civic center facilities from 9:30 to 11 a.m. It's ..part of their civ:ics study in which they compare various forms of municipal government. The Fountain Valley youths will be shown city hall, the police departmenl, public library and the commurUty center. , DAit. V P'lt.OT ittfl P'llot• ART TEACHER CORNABY ADMIRES DAUGHTER PAULA 'S 'PSYCHEDELIC HORSE' At Fount•ln Vell1y High School,• Familiar Story -Like Fether, Llke D•ughters Fron• Page 1 PIER ... '\ Follows Family days ago. ·'"\Ve'll be making our own study as well as checking their e<1mments," Benson explained, "but at the moment nothing has come up against the plan. JI alley Se nior To f> Artist "If we get a lot ol e<1mments aga inst it we'll hold 1 public hearing," Benson added. Fred Harper, superintendent of the Orange County SanitaUon Dlstricb, said that at present he had no objection to the construction company selling the t.re1t1e-llk.e structure to Lynch and con· vertlng it into a pier. The trestle has no deck but has rails to move ):>Jpe-laying equipment to lay • the sanltation district's sewer oulfall. The trest1e reportedly cost about SI million and is part of a $9 million project to carry treatesd sewage five miles out to see. Paula Comaby, a 17·year·:Jld senior at l''ountain Valley High School, is follow- ing in .the brush strokes of her dad and her four sisters. Which means she ls a fine young artist. "Perhaps the best Jn the family," says her dad, Floyd V. Cornaby, head of lhe art department at Fountain Valley High School. She proved her father's point this week by capturing fir.!ll place in originality with an acrylic painting, "Psychedelic Horse," ln the recent Teen Art Exhibit at Huntington Center. The high school picked up nearly a dozen awards for various student artists, Jed by Paula's first place. "She's the fifth ~ughter I've taught in my art class," Comaby said. "l've sludied under my father for fou r years," added Paula. Paula's "Psychedelic Horse" feature.! a rainbow colored colt on a bright background and mounled on a cork board. For the ef!ort she received a $l5 cash award from the Huntington Beach Art League. The Teen Art Exhibit was c<>-sponsored by the art league and the Youlh Coalition Committee of-Huntington Beach . Paula's f•r older sisters have all migrated to Brigham Young University, ·where two of them are 1tl\I art majors. "Yes, I'm going to Brigham Young too, and I'll major in art," she said . '11le other major agency involved in the application is the State Lands Division. Chuck Kirk.!, land agent for the divialon, confirmed that h1s agency would be mating an invesUgaUon of its own. Lynch filed an application with the Stele Lands DI.vii.Ion for a long-term lease of the Udeland.s and submerged lands over which the pier 'NOUld run. The _,t.ate owns all the lands three miles out lo au. 102nd Anniversary of UC Marked by Talks, Marches i,"1be lllite Lands Conuftlutoft would have to act oa this lease before anyth.lng could be done," Kirks said. "There'll be many months of investigative work before a recommendaUon can be made to the board." The commlsison would not reach a decision unUl ..afler a public hearina:, Kirks added. Critical Boy Abducted KINGSTON, Ont. !AP) - A lwc>day- old boy reported to be in serious condi· tion wilh a blood disease was forcibly taken from Klnpton General Hospital by a groun ... r people in early morning darkness today. -------- ' 81!:1\KELEY (AP) -,,,.. Univeroity of California marked Its 102nd an· ntversary today with speeches and a procession with faculties and students from its nine campuses. The list of speakers Included New York Mayor John Lindsay and UC Presi· dent Charles J. Hitch. Flying in the face of a precedent begun in 19'22, the uni versity's Board or Rege nts had refused to bestow an hono~ary degree on Lindsay, the day's princ!pal speaker. Berkeley Chancellor Roger Heyns. however, approved a UC Berkeley Academic Senate recommendation that Lindsay receive the Berkeley Citation "for distinguished achievement, and for notable service to the universily." The citation is the second ever award· ed. Poel Archibald Macleish received the first last year. The day eotnmemorates Gov. Henry 11. Haigh t's signing of the 1886 legi slative act which created the university. Aside from Lindsay's cilation award. oceanographer and explorer Jacques· Yves Cousteau and UC physicisl Robe.rt B. Brode were named for honorary degrees from the universlly. Receiving the Elise and Waller Haas Tnternatlonal award from Hilch is Dr. Sun Fo, 79, twice prime minister of the Republic of China and lhe son of the Republic's founder, Or. Sun Val-Sen. In the pasl. each campus has held its own Charter Day celebration but this year the nine campus chancellors Jed groups or administrators. facultv and studenls in the traditional academiC procession it the start of the ceremonies . Other activities include the annual Charter Day exhibition in the Doe ~1emorial Library of "U.C. Student Publications, 1859-1970," a multi -media art shoY:, "Projects for !he 1980s'' in the Barrow Lane Callery, the opening of the Berkeley Blues Festival Concert, "nd the annual Alumni Charter Day Banquet. Clemente Joins Oil Ban Drive By JOHN VALn:RZA OI 1111 D•llV P'lltl ll•ll San Clemente pledged its interest ~1on· day in a campaign by coastal cities to hire a Washington. D.C., lobbyist to fight offshore oil drUling, but Wed· nesday ri!gbt the city council balked at the idea of speodl.ng any money. The council ordered "received and riled" a letter of appeal from Laguna Beach Mayor Glenn Vedder who asked the city's financial support to hire a lobbyist to fight for passage of lhe Cranston-Murphy anti-drilling bill. San Clemente's council Indicated It would like to wait for more specific data on the cost and the role. of 1 lobbyisl for the anti-drilling me1sure -information wh ich is being received today in the nation's capit1l by Newport Beach Mayor Doreen Marshall. Mrs. Marshall left for Washington this morning to meet with several lobbyisl3 to find some facts about the issue. The San Clemente :oeticenee over a polential expendilure of as much 1s $5,000 as il11 share !or the lobbyist w1s spiced with a little politicking. Councilman Dan Chilton said the city should refrain from spending mooey for "purposes which are clearly lobbying." "I think we should pas.$ on il and leave the job up to our nexl Represen- lative in Congress, the Honorable John G. Schmitz, our next Congressman." The preliminary plans for lhe lobbyist project involve the total estimated ex- pe.1se along tbe coast o( about $50,000 for the services. The county, the council learned, would possibly pick up $25,000 of the bill, with the other half split up among the five Orange Coast cities. Mayor Wade Lower related a call from Mrs. Marshall earlier in the day. "She is asking for our support. Not only moral support, bul help in the form of money. She will be checking on the plan in Washington Thursday," he said. Councilman Thonia.s O'Keefe agreed \\'ith the wait·a-t1d-sec posture of the council and said he would like to see copies of the Cranston-Murphy bill befort making a decision. He also said he wished to find out If the lobbyist's bill could be split even further than only among the five coastal cities. "When Mrs. Marshall comes back from \Vashington we'll have another chance to look at it," Mayor Lower added . The motion to filt the letter drew all ayes. Movie Planned For Retarded Jerry Lewis will tumble and trip acrosa the screen Saturday afternoon in Foun· tain Valley so 100 mentally retarded yo uth can have a chance to attend day camp for two "'·eeks this summer. His movie. "Who's minding th t Slore?". will be shown at 1:30 p.m. in the Robert Gisler School, 18720 Las Flores St., Fountain Valley. Price or a seat for the film is 50 cents. It 's-part of Project Camp, sponsored by several parents in the Fountafn Valley School Districl who hope to make it possible for the retarded children to attend day camp in Midway City. Their goal is to raise $5,000 before the summer season starts. Co-chairmen of lhe drive are Mrs. David Abbott and Mrs. Peter Barbolak. A Nylon Shag That 's Young In Looks, and Young In Price! 9.95 59. YD. IF YOU CAN'T COME IN-CALL 646-0275 for an expert carpet consultant who will come to your home wilh samples without any obligation to )'OU! T ........ (f14l 641-4\JI "-t w .... 1.,... e.tr 541.1 JJI c~ .w...t1.i"' ••2·R•1• C'"1'lffll. lt1'. Or911H C>tt11 """';"'"" ~,. ,.. -....... 111 ... 1 ......... Ullwll• _...,. .... •"-'"""'"" '*"~ fNY bt fl,,...... .11,.,, .. ltl ...... OAU,V ,.ILOt SI•" ,lltlw Atcct~on Couaing Vp Officer Jim Rothaermel sdds snother bike to pile of )5 unclaimed 1wo wheelers lo be suctioned off April 11 by lhe Huntington Beach Police Oepartmenl. Auction Is scheduled or 10 a .m. in police park· ing lot. Business will be 1trlcUy cash and carry. Bikes will be on dis· play for JO mlnu~s before aucllon stsrts. H.J.GARRETT fURNITURE ,.. .... " ''"' ... ·-· ..._.ti. ........... If ti ,,....,..., ... ti! .,,. c..11 ..._ Ct ll19rnlt. ~-'left ~ lortltt' U,• 1119/lf!llYI .., -ff It.it mMllll'f'I fl'l/11ttfY ftttlMll••· ..... '""""'1,. • ' PROFESSICNAL INTERIOR DESIGNERS Open tAon., Th:ar1. & Fri. EY11. • 22 15 HAR80R !LVO. COSTA MESA, CALIF. 4~6-0275 6~6-0276 • Ne rt Beaeh EDITIO N N.T •.. Steeb VOL. 63, NO. 77, 4 SECT IONS, 38 PAGES ORANGE CO'!NTY,. CALIF'Ol{NtA • TiN CENT$ / Recreational Pier Proposed at River . Mollth By ALAN DIRKIN Of 1111 Dllllr 1'1191 Sier! A Newport Beach real estate broker and a group of businessmen hope to develop a recreational pier off the Santa Ana River dividing Huntington Beach and Newport Beach. The plan would involve convertL1g a 1,700-fOQt structure already built for the laying of a county sewer line into a permanent facility: The broker, Dennis L. Lynch, hopes to buy· the existing structure from the construction company, Pe~r Kiewet and · Sons ol Santa Ana for aboUt SS00,000. The cost of strengthenlnt the con- struction ind remodeling it lo ac- comrnodlte shops and fishinf'Ol'ieirted activities would add another '5 million to, the cost. The cities of Huntington Beach and Newport Beach may well have reserva· tions oo the elaborate enterpriK. Of. ficials of both cities indicated today THIS MAN IS CATCHIN G CROOKS AND SAV ING MONEY. PAGE I' Japan Socialist in l{orea To Ask Passenger Relea se- SEOUL {AP) -Sukcya Abe, Socialist member of Japan's parliament. arri11ed here Friday to help government offi cials wln release Or 100 passengers and crew held hostage in an airliner hijac ked by ultraleftist Japanese students who want to go to North Korea . ffe hurriedly flew 1n afte r the hijackers several hours earlier agreed In principle to release the passengers in exchange for a new hoslage, Japanese Vice Wa r Challenged By Massllc liusetts BOSTON /UPI) -Republican Gov. Francis \V. Sargent signed into law today unprecedented legislation challenging the constitutionality of the Vietnam War. The governor added an emergency preamble making the law effeclive im· mediately. The historic statule authorizes Massachusetts servicemen to refuse com~ bat duty in the' absence of a congressional declaration of war. It ma rks the first time a state has challenged the federal governmen'ts authority to conduct the Vietnam War. The ultimate purpose of the legislation Is to force lhe U.S. Supreme Court to rule on the constitutionality of the war. Sa rgent could have vetoed the bill, returned it to the legislature with recom· mended changes, seek a court ruling on its constitutionality or let it becom e law without his signa ture. Trans port at Ion Minister Shinjiro Yamamura, through talks with Abe. The Samurai sword-brandishing hi· jackers asked that Abe come to Korea and identify Yamamur1, whom they sa id they could not recogni:re by sight in a reply to Yamamura's propo!&I that. he be put aboard the airliner, grounded since Tuesday at Seou1'a Kimpo Intema· tional Airport, in place of the puSenger1. Shigeru Hori. chief Japanese Cabinet secretary, announced the agreement earlier in Tokyo. · Abe left at once for Seoul. He told airport interviewers he did not know why the students named him to Identify Yamamura. Abe last year visited the North Korean capital of Pyongyang as a member of a Japan Socliallst party goodwlll mission. Hori is one of t.riree Japanese 1overn- ment officials handling the caM: arising fro m the hijackin5 of the Japan Air Lines ,Boeinl 7r1 by Japanese radical students Tuesday while on a acheduled flight from Tokyo to Fukuok1 J n southwest Japan. The plane refueled In Fukuoka and the students rtleased 23 of the puaengers -mostly women and children -before flying northward for Pyongyang Where the studentJ indicated they wished to go. The plane later changed its coune and landed at Kimpc Airport just outlkte the South Korean clijlital of Seoul. Abe left aboard a .lpecial · JAL plane. sent to bring baclr' passengers of the hijacke(f plant;. , .. .;J" .-,.\ n...., • The hijacked '!llaneThal •l!oai.t-it US persons, including the hijackers arA:f the plane's seven-m an crew. Earlier South Korea's defense minister had told the 15 hijackers his patltnce was wearing tin. , lh1t they want to know much more aboot the project. HunUngtori Buch City Ma!iqer Doyle Miller said he had not diJCuaed the proposal •wilh his · staff · yet but will ·•tate a tood healthy look at it" Mlyor Jack Creen conunen~ 111 am highly 1keptlcal lboul the ponlblUty ol private development there without proper control!. We_ want-more infonn1tlon on this . beca\Ue it loolu a little shakey at the moment." The matter ytill probably be raised at Mooday's couDCll pltf:Ung. Newport Beach'• harbor and tidelands coordinator Geor1e Dodds said his 'city would be anJ:ious in insuring that the pier will not affect beach erosion and sand replenishment from the river mouth and that it will crtate no litter problems for his city. '1We've just wrttt~ the U.S. Anny Corps of Engineers for more information and then we'll evalw:.t~ our posi~ when we get a reply," Dodds added. Lynch, who said h1a backers plan to have a $50,000 ena:ineerina: and plann ing study made of the projtd., has filed applicatlons With both the State Lands Division aod-the Army Corps of Ebglners on the propoul. The corps notlfied mof!: than 200 public ag,ndes of the 1pplicaUon and solicited their comments. "~r notlc"'q wtre sent out IO days ago with a ~:J-day deadline," Joseph Benson, corps engineer handlin, the ap. plication sahf today. "We won't tbrt to make an evaklaUon until after tbf' April 10 deadline." Questions. that need to be reaolved an whether the venture will affect ~. erosion, shipping naviaation or caUlt any flooding problems. Benson said that he had not rectived any replies to the notices sent out to (See PIER, Pqo I) Nixon Def ends 'Rights' Says Court Choice Guaranteed in Constitution WASHINGTON tUPI) -Presidtnt Nixon says at stake in the struggle over his nominations to the Supreme Court is the chief executive's ';Tradi· !iooal constitutional'' right to put his own .choices on the court. Rebuffed in his attempt to nam~ Judge Clement F. Haynsworth Jr. to the court and facing 1 possible second defeat on his nomination of Judge G. Harrold Carswell, the President says this Is a right that was "freely accorded to my predecessors of both parties" and should be bis. Baker Wants Renegotiation ' Of Bay Issue , Supervlw Drdd L. Boker In a lettu to hll fellow ·-.i memben dated April 1 made 1 stroOt call to rene1otiate the Upper Newport Bay land exchange ~·Ith the Irvine 'COmpany or unilaterally re- scind it "because of erroneous data." Baker, who emphasii.ed his action wa~ "no April Fool's Day joke" called for the drastic action for three reasons: 1. The public shoreline is substantial· ly more lban the 1,088 lineal feet at New· port Dunes. 2. There is a beach of some 16 acres with some 1,500 lineal feet of shoreline on the west bank (North Star Beach) thal is shown in alJ reports as subn1erg- ed tidelands. 3. The frontage on the public tidelands provided by.Back Bay Dri.,.e is ignored. Baku in January first served notice on the board that he wanted the land swap reviewed and said Wednesdny's request waa formal notice of that desire. Irvine Company President William R. Mason said Wednesday, "On the sur· face it does not sound like anything new, but I cannot connnent further Ull l have a chance to review Baker's findings:' Baker's request comes just a week before the supervisors are scheduled to hold a public hearing on seven alterna. tive proposals for development of the Upper Bay. They resulted from a re· quest by Supervisor Robert Battin that the county study "other methods of de· veloptng the back bay tidelands." The land eXcllange, which is now be- fore the c.ourts for judgment calls for the t'OUnty to trade 157 acres of tide· lands for 457 acra of lrvine patent tide- lands, uplands and islands located in and an>Uncl the bay. Baker said, "My decision to recom· mend this courst of action WI! not easily made and I am not unmindrul that the proposed development and the exchange agreement are productc of plans, dis- cussions and negotiations that date back to 1112S and Iha! the proPoled harbor develapment ls in keeping with the con· ditiom of the county's tideland granl (from the state). "To my mind. one of the principal factors in the exchange proposal was the question of public shoreline ownership." Baker continued. "Information· on this subject is Inaccurate regarding both ex- tent and location. "Not considered, however, was some 1.500 linear fttt ol shoreline on the west bank which wu created by the partial fiIDng In 1"2 resulting in a be.ach of (he BACK BAY, Pop I) OCC to Ge t Offices S~n for Officials The Orange Coast Junior CcUere Dis- trict will have new adm inistrative offices -.. by, ~ug. 1.01 a~dlng to spokesmen for illt R. t:. Gallyon company. l>itlrict trustees have approved the Company'• low bid of $410,000 on con- struct.Ion of a relocatable bulldlng. Site preparaUon on the OCC campus In Co«ta Mesa will begin In mid-April for the prefabricated building. ·' Nixon 's assertions were challenged by several senators. Senate Democratic Leader M i k e Mansfield said today-that throughout history "It has been for tbe President to pro~se and the Senate to dispose." He said that Nixon's presidential prerogative "wasn't jeoR,ardized when Judge Haynsworth was rejected and it won't be jeopardized regardless of thf' outcome of the Carswell nomination." Sen. RotJert P. Griffin, assistr.nt Senate Re~an leader, said he understood thel'fesident's feelings on the issue but added: "The Senate is still goinJJ: DAIL T PILOT Sl9fl ....... CHEERE D BY REACTORS' '. VIVA '• Steve Fr•nk · VIV A Spokestnan Gets Applause From Realtors By THOMAS FORTUNE ot Hit Dllllr Plltt Stiff An earnest young man today t01d 100 member,ci of the Newport Harbor-Costa Mesa Board of Realtors campus radicals want to act like revolutionaries yet re- ceive amnesty, and they Want free speech for the left but not for the right. He received a standing ovation and money for his cause. Steve Frank, ~year-old student. at Glendale School or Law, sPoke on be- half of VIVA (Voices in Vital America). VIV A is a student organization with chapters on over' Hit' campuses including a new one at UC Irvine. JU purpose is to redress grievances without violence and teach American heritage and the bene- fits of capitali sm. Frank spoke fervently about campus· militanls, holdlng his audience at thi . re.11ltor's breakfa,ci t In rapt attention. He pleaded with the realty board mem- bers to get involved with students. "USe this informalion, do 1omethin~ or I have v.•asted my time," he said. "We are the coming generation. We need to know you are with us." Carl Thomas, ot Newport Beach, said the realtors' education committee should stan VIVA programs Oll the local high school c1tmpuses. Charles Ferl\J.Son, of Costa Mesa. 1u1· gested a SJ per realtor assessment. Both 11u1gestlons will be ttferred to tht realton' Board of Directors. A co llection was taken at the breakrut and Frank received $137 for VTV ~, · Frank related how he went to Santa Barbara the acte:rnoon the Bank of Amer· lea Was burned. 0 1 knew It was gOlng fo hA:ppen." he · said. "because t read It In the Herald Examiner I.he momln& ~ Ion. . ''This w•~ not spontaneous. 'J'hCy hld (See VIV A, P11e I) to make the judgment. I still feel the Senate has ~ual respcnsibilitles in lhe appoiabnent or Supreme Court justices." Sen. Alan Cranston (0-Calif.), com· %$Cnted: "I, u a senator, will not stand qu ieUy by and see a racist appointed to the highest coo rt in our land." Nixon's letter to freshman Sen. William B. Saxbe (R·Ohlo), asserted t be President's right to fill the vacancy through his own choice. It was seen as an effort to away six Republicans sti ll uncommitted on how they will vote in Monday's showdown. BUls Rapped Saxbe called it persuasive and uid. he would vote against the m~ to resubmit the nomination to the Senalj Judiciary Committee, whe.re . aln1oet an agree it then would be pe:rmanenU, buried. He said he would follow Nb:o11 despite Carswell'll "wealmeal on clril rights." Sen. Joseph M. Montoya (~N.M.), one of nine prevlou1ly uncommitted Democrats, Wednesday said he would vote to recommit the nominaUon - and would vote against Car1well If it came to a vote. Newport Mayor He·ar fl.-·in 'S~nate . ' lljledal to Ill< DAILY . PILOT hanclng coastal reoources wlllle retainbl& , WASHINGTON, D;C. -Newport Beach local control," she said.. , Mayor Mrs. Doreen Marshall 11id U.S. She said senators were "very ~ Senators listened intently and questioned ested In the concrete ·concern and study her at length this morning about her and work that's been done UrCalJfornla on testimony on coastline plaMin1. the subject." She said she was encouraged by the re-She noted, however, "I think it Js clear ception her viewpoint got. the conditions vary consjderably from one Mrs. Marshall spoke to the Oceaootra· state to another and actually from oat phy Subcommittee of the Sen.ate Com· county to another." merce Committee In oppoaition to bills Jn prepared remarlrs, Mrs. MarlhalJ th kl Id I 1 I Wled consideration ol coastal pla.nnirfg al lwou taprovk e or .... ~.!~ plregnlona. according to a program r.commended by agenc e1 to e over coa111.lu"" an nc. Caluornl u. Gov Ed Reineck '• T k The bllb propose withholding federal • 1 . · e u funds except where such state agencies Force. for Cout!me PrelervaUon, of which have coastal ion control. ----lixl Hun!!Agton Beach Mayor...Jact e Grten are membeni. Mrs. Marshall 11 repre1enUng the City That program calls for local gomn- ol Newport ~each and al5:0 the Lea1Ue or ments to prepare shoreline m.a.ster plans ~lirornla Cities, the National League ol to be submltted to reitona.l council1 of Cities and the U.S. Conference ~f Ma~. government, with state government boW.. One other person ~stifled this monung ing a veto power. 1, on behalf of retaining ~ocal city and This approach contrasts with bills be. county c~ntrol over shorebnes, Mr~. _Mar. fore the state Legislature, 1t1pported by shall said. H~ was Barry A. Williams, the U.S. Senate bills, which would create county commissioner of New Hanover reiional agencies of state 1ovemment to County .ln North Car.olina, on behall of pass on new conatructton permits within the National Association of Counties. a coastal ione. Mrs. Marshall said senators took In-One of three Senate bills on the subj~ terest in her request for more flel.lbllity the bill by Joseph Tydings (0.Md:), in the federal legi1latlon and asked her would define coastal zone as stretchiq 11 to come up with sugested precise wont. far as 20 miles inland. in1 from local conlrol proponents. Mr1. Marshall, in a telephone interview, lndlcated she is accepting that challenge. "I think it is incumbent upon us to get legislation that accomplishes the objec· lives of protectlni, prese.rvlng and en· Police Probing Attempted Rape; Beacli Beatings The ittempted rape or a vacatlor:iing college student at Aliso Beach at-South Laguna and the bludgeoning of two others was under l~vestlgatlon by Orange County sheriff's deputies today. Investigator• said an 11-ye"a'.r-ald Madisol't', Wis, girl was dragged from her sleeplne bag at about I a.m. Tues· day by 1 group or five or six young men who had professed to be Marines. The girl waa carried dowii the beach and parttally unclmaed by force when other campen responded to !lie conuno- don and the attacken fled: A sheriff'• depoty said they had first bludgeoned l•on Kalin, '22, Madl!on, Wis .. when he tried to Intervene. They 1truck K1lln In the mouth with 1 !by-4 Inch board and ~ Barbara Wetzt!:I, JI, M1dieon. on the head causint a 1.Sh that required II 1tltchel. lnvestJ11tor1 Hkl the vldlms. students from lhe Univer1lty of Wisconsin, were ciimplna at the South Lacuna beach. E1rller, In lht eveolna tl)ey had t1lki!d to the unidenutled attacker• around ·• camp fire. • NEW YORK (AP) -The stock market lost its small early 1aln in moder1tel1 activt trading late this afternoon. (SH quQ!ations, Pages lS..19). Advances and declines were about evn among issues traded on the New York Stock Exchanie. Orange Coast ' Weat•er Had enough sun ? The hazy skies return Friday but the temp- eratures will stay warm, with 8$ readings predicted for the coast and up to 74 inland. INSmE TODA 'l' Two ~tar• ago it waa o potent factor in tht 11lection of a prttident but todo~ the Amtri- can Independent Partv of t George WaUacc ia having trouble tvtn getting ea1'didatc1 • for local offic11. Pogt 7. (IHferllll • t '11«•""" ~ 1 ( ..... ,,,.. tl•:M Ctll'lla H • JCm_,. ·ff Otltfl ... lkt11 ' ''"°"l•I .._ • l•tti1i111Mtf!t ts l"lllMcl 1 .. 1. ... __. 11 AM l..,..,. 1t -u MtftMI ,..... 11 l ....... ""'" ... 0r-.. c...,. • '"''' ...... \I • """"' ' -• ! =--··11·1 -.. Wiii .. WMll ti • W-•t flleWI 1)11 -·-.. L N . ' Kopechne Case • • ' ,. Key Notes Gone (• ,, ., , BOSTON (UPI) -An element of mys- . tery shrouds the whereabout.I of the court ste:oocraphen' notes containlnc the testi· mony of Sen. F.dward M. Ktmtdy and otbtr wltnuaa at the secret Inquest into !. tht death ol Mary Jo Kopechne, and whether the notes have ·been properly impounded. :;Jury Rejects ;Jail Death ,, .: Pro~e Appeal ~" _ 'fbt. Orange County Grand Jury today ' ?ejected the suggestion of the National • -Association for the Advancement or :~>:Colored People ·(NAACP) that it in· .:·1vestigale the death In Oran1e County ~·jail last Jan. Jt of Vernon Louis • Williams. It refused to reopen the inquiry closed ~·Feb. 16 by the ruling or a divided 1•1 coroner's jury that Williams, rT. San :-·Pedro dled u the result al an accidtrlt and that fall ofricers did not exercise :, undue force when they restrai.nf:d the ' · apparently berserk· prisoner. .. • It was tesUHed that Wllliatn! died .... as the reslllt of a "choke hold" applied ·:'by a jail deputy. Officera: testified that their Negro prisoner, who had a long -·record of mental illneu and narcotics addiction, brote free aeveral Umes dur- ing a protracted .struggle and that it took several deput.ies to subdue him. Williams had been arrested earlier tn the day by a California Highway patrolman who spotted him on the Riverside Freeway in Anaheim clad ony In purple shorts and track shoes and "behaving in a suspicious manner." District Attorney Cecil Hicks subse- quently refused to consider the possibility . of criminal charges of anyone involved in Williams death. The NAACP ~st was filed with the grand jury by its Orange county representative Clare.nee J a e ks o n • Williams' mother, Mrs. Lula Mae Wtlliams, bas anno~d that she plans to file a wrongful death suit against Orange County and the offlcer1 involved in the death ol her son. UPI learned today the notes have not been impounded at Suffolk Superior Court bUe where the 764-page tran.script and the ,_. GI Ed&artown District Court Judge James A. Boyle were tent. on order of the ~Su-Coull. • l'rona P .. e l BACK BAY •.. some 1& acrf:s. "Not mentioned in lhe exchan1e re- porta nor shown on any of the present condition maps is the ei:lstence of Baek Bay Drive, a 40-foot public road e.ase- ment that generally nins along the toe of the east bluUs," the supervisor con- liml<d. "lt appeus that the: public could coo· trol the east bank becauae the road touche:e on public Udelands at 1 number of points. The importance of this omis- skln cannot be minimized 1 i n c e it subat.antially bears on the county's abll· ity to develop the Upper Bay." -Biker also touched on ecology. "Com- petent authoriUts say the unique natural v11uts wlll be destroyed if tht proposed plan ls implemented. Thus these is.!Ues must be resolved before any e1change takes place and without slavish adher- ence to costs/benefit analysis." Baker concluded. "I hope that the Jong tradition of cordial rtlaUons be· tween the Irvint Company and the county will prevail and that we can join togeth- er in an amicable resolution of a mutual pn>biem." DAILY PILOT Ga.ANOE COAST "Ull.llHING 7'"y ll•••rt N. W••4i "•ulittftl •"",.,.._ J1c\ It, Cwrl•y have betn hnpoundtd Feb. 18 whtn Judie Boyle filed his report. If the stenogra- phers• original notes, from which ot.her copies of the transcript could be m1de, ClnnOt be found, or if they have not been Impounded as dlrecttd, it could have a far ttaching effect on the inquest and on the grand jury invtstllatlon of the case which begim: Monday 1n Edgartown. Superior Court Clerk Edward V. Keat- ing said he ha1 not received the notes from Judge Boyle. "All J received was the report, the trlnlerlpt of evklenct and the uhlblts -physical things." A reliable source u id the stenocra- phtrs' notes were turned over to 'Jbomas E. Teller, clerk of the di.strict cotlft in Edgartown where the inquut wu held. at the end ol each day of testimony. 1be inquest ended J111. 8. TeUer, when asked H he had the now In h1a pouesa:lon, said: "'I'hlt'1 a matter I cannot di9c:uss. I will say nothing about the stenographers' notes. The judge (Boyle) is saying 'no comment' too." Nevertheless, Teller said It was his un- derstandJng the Massachu.Htts Supreme Court intended for the notes to be im- pcunded along with the: other inquest doe- wnenls. Teller quoted from tht court ruling itself. Mrs. Sophia Campos, clerk of the su- perior court in Edgartown where tht im- pounded inquest documents resided be- fore their trlll.!lfer to Boston, said the stenographers' notes were never ~ over to her. She said she had no knowl- ed1e of their whereabouts. Sex Film Raid In Westminster Nets 'Starlet' A We!tmlnster paraplegic, ·charged by authorities with producing fllma that press the alphabet far beyond X for a rating, is being sought today, following the arrest of one of his alleaed starlets. Complaints Wutd by the Orange Coun- ty District Attorney charge Veras H. Testerman of M31 Santee Ave. with conspincy to product obscene films, stI perversion and three counts of stiling ob.sctne materials. The latter charge la: 1 misdemeanor. The complaints were issued Tuesday in West Orange County Judicial District Court to climax a twl)>Wet:k undercover investigaUon by the DA and Orange Police. Testerman mid six other penons - one in castodJ -111 111111ed in the Comptatitts l51Utd after sellure ol the lurid materials in a March 25 raid on his studio-gara~. Hundr!dl ot film• 1llepdly. lhowin1 aex play involvin1 males, females - and evtn anirnall -were confiscated, plus nine movie cameras, several 1Ull cameras, projectors and film tdlUng tools. Deputy District Attorney Orella Sears requested the complaints following the alleged purchase of 10 1tag films March 20 by a detecUve from Or111ge. So far, Testerman and four per10ns listed as Jane and John Doe -there were no film credits -art still beinc soueht by Southland lawmen. Police arrested Mrs. Arlene Carr of 2622 N. Laird St Tutsday as one of the alleged 11c:reen llar1, it wu revealed Wednesday. She i5 charged with me count of se1 ptrvf:rslon and alao conspiracy to produce obscene ftlms. . Rotarians Slated To ~feet in Newport Rotarians from 67 Southern California communiUes will assemble at the New· porter Inn In Newport Beech through Sun· day for an aMual Rotary Club confer· ence. Thursday the Rot.ariw will golf 1t the Costa Mesa Golf Md Country Club, bowl at Kona Lane1 and play tennis at the Newport Tennis Club. Business meeUngs are scheduled Fri· day and Saturday. Eleetrie Fire Extinguished Newport Beach fireman douses burning wires in a street vault with C02 extinguisher. Cause of fin'f . which started underground shortly before 9 p.m. Wednesday was under investi~ation today. Location was in front of linancial building at San Nicolas and Newport Center Drive in Newport Center. Tough Air Noise Control Introduced by Re~n From Wlrt Savlce1 SACRAMENTO -Tough new cofttrols dealing with airline noise have betft 5Ubmitted to the state Legislature with the endorsement of Governor Ronald Reagan. Airlines would bt subject to fines up to $1 ,000 by Jan. I, 1971, for exceeding .acceptable jet noise standards i { legl.!lators approve the measure. Based on a rated decibel system of meesuring noise, the suggested law is 1lmllar to those urged recently by the Costa Mesa and Newport Beach City Councils. He1ring1 on the matter ·will be held next month in San Francisco and Los Anaelu. -Governor Reagan said Wedne.sday the legillation he proposea is the first of It.I kind in tbe nation a1d wUI ICCOmpli.Jh aevtral major objectives if adopted. "Not the least of which is to bring rtllef to the ears of people whO live 1tear airports.'' he said. U made into law, the noise pollution oontro~ would state uactl{ wbfl con- .U!utes f vlotation. · Previously, cltlz.ens -like those in the Upper Newport Bay area, objecting to Orange County Airport operations - have been forced to sue for damages. 11te Orange County B o a r d of Supervisors cunently faces 1 mass litiga- tion running into millions of dollars, while similar action bas betn taken qalhat Log Anaeles l n t e rn at Ion a I Airport. Old.day Newport Seen in Photos Slides and photographs of Newport Beach before the turn of the century will be presented Monday night at a meeting of the Newport Beach Historical Society. Mrs. William Lte will discuss tht old Newport Landing, located where the Pacific Coast Highway bridge now separates tht Upper and Lower Bay. She will review the period from 1875 to 1900 when Newport was the seaport for the small farming towns of Santa Ana, Orange and Tustin. Special guest of honor will bt Arthur J. McFadden, son of Robert ~le.Fadden, who bought Newport Landing in 1875. ~estionnaires will be handed out to seek the "firsts" in different occupaUons in Newport Beach. Everyone Is welcome, new a n d oldUmers alike, to attend the 7:30 p.m. Monday meeting in the recreation hall ol Newport Harbor High School. Dick Dyer, an engineer for the state Department of Aeronautics said many jeUlners now in use are not equipped with noise control a'ar and would bt in violatlon. •State Aeronautics Director Joseph R. Crottl praised the proposed legislation, saying it will result in a vast reduction In jet noise around all alrports. Not only general airport operations measured over a sjlecified time period, but individual flights could be penalized and fined for undue noise. A panel of seven technical experts and a commercial acoustical engineering firm provided Gov. Reagan's basic package, which would pressure manufac- turers to develop quieter planes. Coast Bo ys Club Officers Named Ntw officers of the Boys' Club of the Harbor Area will be in1talled Friday ·night following a gala, 7 p.m. dinner party at tht Mesa Verde Country Club, Cost. Mesa. "Clipper" Smith, former head football coach at Villanova University will be guest spea ker, with Dr. Robert Moore, Or8nge Coast College president. the in· stalling officer. Banquet chairman Dick Smith has ar- ranged a program beginning with a social hour and including awards for 1969 service, plus entertainment. Pianist Daniel ~1iller, a Boys' Club member and recent Epstein Scholarship winner, Will play several selections. QJficers and directors to be installed are : Michael L. Manahan, President; Clarence "Chic" Clarke, Isl Vi~ Presi· dent; Erwin de Mocskonyl. 2nd Vice President; Don Ericson, Secretary: Don f. Huddleston, Treasurer and Directors Blair Barnette, Kenneth Hartley , Leon Meeks, Hugh P.fynatt, Claire Nelson, Roger Neth and Dick Smith. F rom Page l PIER • • • days ago. "We 'll be making our own study a.s well as checking their comment!,'' Behson explained, "but al the moment nothing has come up against lhe plan. "If we get a Jot of comments against It we'll hold a public hearing," Benson added. Fred Harper, superintendent of the Orange County Sanitation Districts, said that at present he had no objection lo the construction company selling the trestle-like structure lo Lynch and con- verting lt into a pier. The trestle has no deck but has rails to move pipe-laying equipment to Jay the sanitation district's sewer outfall. The trestle reportedly cost about $1 million and is part of a $9 million. project to carry lreatesd sewage five miles out to see. The other major agency involved in the application is the State Lands Division. Chuck Kirks. land agent for the division, confirmed that his agency would be making an investigation of its own. Lynch filed an application with the State Lands Division for a long-term lease of the tidelands and submerged lands over which the pier would run. The state owns all the lands three miles out to sea. "The State Lands Commission would have to act on this lease before anything could be done." Kirks said. "There'll be many months of investigative work before a recommendation can be made to the board." The commisison would not reach a decision until after a public hearing, Kirks added. Sirhan Back in Cell SAN QUENTIN (UPIJ -Sirhan Sirhan , condemned assassin of Sen. Robert F. Kennedy, was back in his death ro\'/ ctll at San Quentin today after treatment at the prison hospital for dizzy spells. Officials said the young Jordan ian im- migrant \\'as in good condition but tests during his day and one half in the hospi· tal were not conclusive. Va "'•;frnt IM G9!er1t Mlfllltf' n,..,,, K•1•il , Elllltr Th•MH A. Mwr,hl111 "'-'""' lllllOI' Tli11W111 F•rtw111 ft"""" l~Kll Cttt 1id1111t ....,.,. .... Offi•• 2!11 W11t Iii••• 1,.,1, .. ,,~ VIVA YOUTH CHEERED ••• M11lli11t A44ir111: ,,0. l e• 11 7S, t266l ...... """" c .... M ... : no We\I ••v si ... 1 l...,...,...,.,,m,._,,._.._ "llnlfllfllfl lttoell: lllU ltNtl l:1Ult•lt1' $111 oi-11; al Horlll I.I Cl"'IN lt .. 1 blow horns, rocks. gasoline cw. ln- !!tead of I demonstraUon I saw a riot. Instead of college studentl I saw a mob. "The purpose of going into the strttt~ is to cause a confrontation. Traf!ie is blocked and the cars back up. Then the police come and thty are stoned," Frank said, He said militants arf: created by a per- missive society He aald he airees with Or, Bernard BetUehelm of the Unlver1lty of Chicago lhat It starts w:lth Ju potty training. "Junior has 1 perpetual load In his pants," he said. ''Then he ps to nursery IChool and i1 allowed to tat S7 graham crad:er1 be- fore tht teacher tt11s him to 1top. In h!1h IChool he ~ llUght ·~tu1Uoo tthlca. · That is why he can oppose tht. "War In Vlttnlm but want to start 1 war at home." Frank sa.Jd mlUtants before they are cau.aht llY lhty are revolullonarlts. Af· ltrWard they are weak little students who "''ant their atMesty. They say they are idealistic like the foundln1 f1lbtr1 . "t don't believe Patrlclr: Henry said. 'Give mt llbtny or 1lv1 me amnesty,'" Frank old. He called colltie 1dmlni1trator1 who fill for the tadlcal's llne, "weak, milk- toa&t pensionus." Frank charged that freedom of speech no longer exists on campus. "If you are to the right of Mao Tse-tung, hang lt up." he advi&ed. "You a.rt not 1oing to be al· lo\\·ed to speak." He said Governor Reagan was drowned out by hecklers when he spoke at Cal State Fullerton. "And the students don 1l ans .. ·er back. Thty art the silent major- ity." He remarked that U . Cov. Ed Reinecke said it best: "The slltai-majorlty Is In danger ol becoming the silenced major- lly." Frank showed a YrVA brochure with a cover page saying, "'The Bill of Rights 11 reserved for the New Left.'' Ht spoke to what he said was the other campus luut -"pig brutality." He said he !Ikea tht acronym PIG, standing for Personality, Tntegrity and Guts. "ThaL's what It takes to be 1 policeman th est d1ys, ·• he said. He s1kl the brutality he his obsuved h•s been on tht pan of the: militants. He s1ld ht enrolled in an Afrl)>American llis- tory class at t..os. Angeles City Colltge 1nd he w1a twice bta.t up. "I needed police protettlon, a policeman sitting be· aide me in the classroom." PROFESSICNAL INTERIOR DESIGNERS t ' Cl emente Join s Oil Ban Drive By JOHN VALTERU ot l!Ot O.Ur ,lllt IMH San Clemente pledged its interest Mon- day in a campaign by coastal cities to hire a Washington. D.C., lobbyist lo fight offshore oil drilling, but Wed· nesday night the city council balked at the idea of spending any money. The council ordered "rece.ived a1VJ filed " a letter or appeal from Lagun.! Beach Mayor Glenn Vedder \\'ho askea the city's financial support to hire a lobbyist to fight for passage of th0 Cranslolt-~furphy anti-drilling bill San Clemente's council Indicated l: would like to wait for more specific- data on the cost anQ the role of a lobbyist for the anti-drilling measure -information which is being rece.ived today in the nation 's capital by Newpor! Beach Mayor Doret'll Marshall. Mrs. Marshall left for Washington this morning to meet with several lobbyist& to find some facts about the issue. The San Clemente ;.·eticence over a potential expenditure of as much as $5,000 as its share for the lobbyist was spiced with a little politicking. Councilman Dan Chilton said the city should refrain from spending money for "purposes which are clearly lobbying." "I thiok wt should pass on it and leave the job up lo our next Represen- tative in Congress, the Honorable Jobo G. Schmitt, our next Congressman." The preliminary plans for the lobbyist project involve the total estimated tX· penst along the coast of about $50,000 for tht services. Tht county, the council learned, would possibly pick up $25,000 of the bill, with the other half split up among tht five Orange Coast cities. Mayor Wade Lower related a cali from Mrs. Marshall earlier in the day. "She is asking for our support. Not only moral su pport , but htlp in the form of money. She will be Checking on the plan in Washington Thursday," ht said. Councilman Thomas O'Ketfe agree,j with tht wait-and-see posture of th:- couneil and said he would like to se.: copies of the Cranston-Murphy bill befon· making a decision. Ht also said he wished to find ou' if the lobbyist's bill could be split ever. further than only among the five co1sta! cities. "When Mrs. Marshall comes back from Washington we'll have another chanct to look at it." Mayor Lower added . The motion to file the Jetter drew all ayes. OCC Sets Dinner, ~itizens Meeting Orange Coast College will host the Citizens Advisory Comi:nittee in a dinner meeting at 6:1S tonight at the OCC Student Center. The informal meeting Is desigiied to encourage tw<rway diseus.5io1 betw~en the college and the community. Followilg dinner, the group, including citizens from the community, instructor, ad· ministrators and students, will split up into small groups to discuss relations between the campus ·and local residents. The discussion groups are sc heduled until 10 p.m. A Nylon Shag Thar's Young In Looks, and Young In Price! 9.95 S<i). YD . IF YOU CAN 'T COME IN-CALL 646-0275 for an exp,rt carpet consultant ~·ho will come to your borne with samples without any obligation to you! 2215 HARBOR ILVO. COSTA MESA. CALIF. 6~6.027S 646-0276 I J LADDER TO SUCCESS -First Nighters (lelt to right) Mrs. Adele lpsen and Mrs. Colin Timmons view the Forum stage with Doyle McKinney, direc· tor of the SJddleback Players. The trio is working toward a successful weekend production of "Hansel and Gretel" in the Festival of Arts theater. Funds raised will be used to establish a Children's Theater for youngsters from 6 to 16. -Your Horoscope Tomorrow Gemini: Ambitions Are Strong FRIDAY APRIL 3 By SYDNEY OMARR Leo 11 the 1bowman of 'tbe zodiac. Thue people love tbe thea ter and often are theatrical. Nothing h halfway witb Uo. ARIES (March 21-April 19): Air of mystery prevails. Some hidden matters come to fore . Work q u i e t I y . Clandestine meeting may be on agenda . You deal with charitable in- 11itution.s, hospitals. _ TAURUS (April 20-May 20): You get paid. for doing what you like; much satisfaction in- dicated. Older individual may offer financial backing. But don't give up too much for temporary gain. GEMINI (May 21.June 20): Be wary about signing papers. Thtre may be clauses which are deceptive. Your ambitions are strong. But patience today can be a proritable virtue. CANCER (June 21-July 221 : Money you e1pected from long-term commitment may bt delayed. Plan aceordingly. New ideas are desirable. Some of your methods may be wear- in1 thin at the edges. LEO (July ~Aug. 22): Some young persons could make unreasonable demands . Know where to draw the line. Your intuillve judgment today serves as reliable ruide . Don't fall for line: of fal se flattery. VIRGO (Aug. 23-&pt. 22): The Tee 4 Edl!or'• Nltlt; A column cf women'• lap toll 1co••• wlll 10Pt11r n el! wttk In t111 DAILY PILOT. To re11<1•! 1caN!l let Tllf w1t11:. Pl••~ mill 111,m to P. O. Sow 1$60. Cc1!1 Mt•I. Tl!r~ mull be rrc1lvtd bv Mond1V. I Ml!5A VEltDE THltll aLIHD MICE -(111$ A, Ille ft\mll, Tr.,,11 P1111ff. 7'\lt; 0.1 Mll'lln. wnn1m 0 •11rr. 1111_, Tl.11111111, Tl .... , Cl111 I , tilt Mmt... P111I lllll:JllllOll, ffl Wltll1m Ntll!, •tl'J1 Kll'I LMWrll• P:r1nk 1'1r1n1r, Wllll1m M1nt1V. 72\IU Cllll C, !fie Mmfl. llobtrt l\tllnti. 70\.'11 W. C. Wltlltmt, 721 PMfl l lbl1, 12V.r Lowtll Stirk, n. UOUHA a1ACM Tt ANO Pt -A Pllt llt, !Pie Mmt1. "•vi W1ttrm111, •; Corne1Fu1 TOOIT't Y. Jl\.'I; Johll P-. 31\o\r I Fll91\I, 111• Mlolll. W11111tn C111Mrl1, 'll'J1 Edith Mtrt:.1, 2:21 l lt ll(.111 .t.d1m1, 1'1 Ar1 TtlHln, )II~. LOW 011011 -A F-llgM, M". WttttmtnJ I F-ll1M, Mrt. Mtrlu, "Low HIT -... Fn1111. M,,, Wllfrm111 Ind M ..... C11n11!h11 TflO'T'IY. U1 I , ""-llf• Mrt. Mtrt11, 62, llAHCHO SAH JOAOUIH l'LAI TOUlHIY -Tiii ~' llkl11nl lMntt, WCIOdr-l1c-11t<, (. F. lwfholomeW, J1mt1 ICtrllr. TI\etrln IWM• TPlo!MI MoOl'f, I. w. Sl""911, Hcr#trd 1'1rwttl, lt"I' H1bert'llN!I', Htrvn' 01llt111tr, J. I!. W•l!tltlt, Blmltd E1bert, Ctrl'l'lt OtltH, l'nllll; AlklllllOllo Ht,.,., Cott1m. '"!Hiii JIMllM.. easT ION• -Fll1ht A. MA. ,1111119 !+ollt1 1'1'9M a , Mrt. l•m.tri l'llthl C, !ho Ml'llf1. Udfl'llf', Phlllll (et!Mtlh 1'1'9ht 0 , Mrt. M1rl Sllefler,' 1•YOt• COAIT MATtN VI PAl -Cl"t A, fl'lt .wntt. Orct llflll". loblr1 GtMIMI", 't Httl 01rn, n'lftl WtllKt , ... ,, 111"1' Htllbt"' J, •· ~llrf', ·11 CltH •• ""' M-.. G. T. '""''' Poncho Ole 'The poncho crt1tts cover-up excitement thla spring as designers adapt J.hls youth trend to high f111hlo11. It goes tormal aa I sheer veil-like cover-up or casual In lrilged wool over pants. Lie low; play walUng game. Permit others to call the play. Time your moves Jn cartful manner. Protect assetJI. So- meone may be tryin1 to pull wool over your eyes. UBRA (Sept. 23-0ot. 22): Be sure of directions, in- structions. Message could be misinterpreted. c.beck facts . Ask questions. Answers are obtainable if persistent. Some details are elusive. SCORPIO (Oct. 23 ~ N o v. 2f): Money may tend to slip through your fingers . Heed ad· potential. Be subtle in dealing with those in authority. Cycle remains high, bi.it don 't for~. IF TODAY IS YOUR BlRTBDAY you have fine sense of humor, are versatile and can be aggressive if necessary.DJ p Io ma c y re· quired now In dealing with domestic situation. To ft>ld 11111 ..,.re 1bout YO«rtt ll •1141 1Jlnllo!IY. ordt< $tdntY Om1rr'1 .SO. o .. e "boakltt, Th• Trv!h A b o u I Ml••lot•• t.tnd bl•INltlt •1111 50 c1nt1 10 Om1rr &ookltl, fllt O.t.ILY PILOT, •ax :1241, Grind Ctnlttl $1t!lon, Mtw Yorlc, N. Y. !0011. Orange County Hosts Overseas League Meet vice of family member. Shake National president of U1e Mrs. Inez Randall , Laguna off tendency to comm i t Women's Overseas service Hills. food, and Miss Doris yourself to payments which titiller, Costa Mesa, publicit y. are beyond present means. League, Mrs. James J. Tallon The conference will open SAGmARIUS (Nov. 2 2. o( Phoenix, will attend an area with a noon luncheon followed Dec . 21): What appears solid conference in Hotel Laguna on by a boat tour of Newport may be lacking in basic fac-Saturday and Sunday, April 4 Harbor. Cocktail hour from tors. Some objects are shiny and 5. 6:30 to 7:30 p.m. will precede on outside but chintzy when Oranae County unit will host din ner in the Hotel Lquna. cover is removed. Know thi s the parley joined by Los l\.1usic will be provided by and act accordingly. Angeles, Long ·Beach, San Mrs. Marie Muller, Laguna CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.Jan. Diego and Pasadena units In Beach. 19): Obtain hint from S.&lt.-addition to Tucson and Dinner speaker will be Miss tarlu1 message. Much of what Phoenix units. Paula Dahl, a 17-year-old you want to do has to wait for Mrs. Grace Soderl8'Cld, area senior In the Long Beach approval. from one who may director, wlll preside, assisted school system whose subject be in transit. Don't offend by by Mrs. Charles Gavlock of will be a Volunteer With the going over anyone's head. Laguna B t! a ch , chairman ; Amigo de las Americas Proj· AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. Mrs. Alma Akeroyd, Orange. ect in Guatemala . 18): You get better financial advisor ; Miss Edith Weir, The conference will b c break than origin a 11 Yan· Laguna and Miss Ruth Winter, resumed at 9 a.m. Sunday in ticlpated . Friend Intervenes on Mission Viejo, re&lstration : Hotel Laruna. Coffee and rolls your behall. You have more Mrs. John Fedor, Anaheim will be served preceding a talk allies than might be ima1lned. and Mis11 Mildred Saylor, on national trust funds 1iven Conduct affairs accordingly. South Laguna, ~ecoraUons; by Mrs. Tallon. PISCES (Feb. l~Moroh 20): 1----"~c-::''-----'---------11 More appeal for your product indicated. Spread influence; broaden horizons. Recognize Tattler ·11 WUt11m le1lt<, H. J. SWIMOl'I, Ed Goddtrd, f'IU1 1 111, •21 Cl11• c . •~• Mmrt. Wllll1m O. lv•nett, 11 11100.rt llulltr, 1vtn1 00!! Ltnlt, -It llcotr Poalt . -1; MIU M.trffl!f M11•~er, ·I; (l1ss 0, 11\e MmM. Wltl'911 Gibbons, l ; Johll T~ion, W1lttr A. Wint, Wl1tl1m McCord. G tort t C1!lht ml, -1. LAD1•S DAY -CllK A. ttlt ~. Cltr-5omtr1. l!1 J. W. Slomblu91'1, Mld'ltel o·erll'll, »1 •Dblrt w. lmlfll, Mtl"'CO A11ldl, Grfft l ll\lr, S21 Edwtrd Mfllilfn, '11 Cl•K I , f!lfr Mmt1. Gtorllt T, l'fl .. 1r, J.t1 Doll ltnlt. »1 l"tU1 Itri., :IOI E. V, Mortll, 2'1 Miii Mlt'Mnt Mv.tr. lO; CllU C, !Ill Mmll. lllfY lul"llllt, lll T. W, ltlln, ill Lim Htwtrd, "•u• •~"off, l. e. l1Wl11. "' ca. .. 0 , !tie Mml!I. JICk C. lllltY, J.S1 Ollrtlh"I' IMW1l1. n i Cl'l1rlt• o ..... Joh11 T"l'IOll, Wl l1tr Wint, •· H~T l'lUf l'llTTf -C .. ll A, lht Mm11. Grtll Liii.it, 100/ Thtl!l\t G1tlord. 10f1 E. H. Hewl111d, 1101 0 1v1111 11111ntlne. 1111 W11!1c1 Flttr, 11)1 Miu D" 0.t W'lllll, 1101 Cit .. e, th• Mme•. P11 MOrrls, 111-'1 Wlllltm l1111r, 112; M. J. $.,...,_,., '•vi 11119, 11)1 w. L. M11.....,., 11Ar J. l . '°"''· IU1 Clltl C, 1111 Mn\ll!t, • ltti.tr Com111111. 1101 I"*' '•"· 1111 G. l . l'lltnMI\. 11A1 1'1111 lt~dtlft, 1U1 FtM 'ltlffJM, II. W. lArkln, lloblrt l ullfr, 1151 V1'111 O, the Mmt1. J1dt llllt'f', W!11l1m MtCD!'d, 110; .. "' Kl't'ft, 1111 Jtmtf Gtll•1l111', 1111 11!1 .Armetl"Oflt, • 1IA1 D. M. HV'!T'tmtl, 117, MCKT PA•I -CltA ~ .. !ht M"*· Httl 01,.,, lJ1 llot OtlY, IA1 0,... lNur, 131 CllA 1o1Mrt. 111 (Int I , flit ,,,._... 11 ... r Tllffltl', M,.,.Oll M11W11'111, 111 $hlrmtll Smltll, J, II. l'"'btl"" H, J. S\tlt nttn. 111 W . l . Mtldt!WI, ltl It. •• ~. 1•1 (1111 C. !Pit Mmtt. l . I. ln'lt, IJ1 l1!~1'1 CamPlon. 1'1 I". Ole!! llffhtl'!I, l'tl l ur11111111111. JKk I Jtm, lfl (IJH 0 , tilt """'"' Chtrltl D11l11, IJ1 J1c11 IUllY. C1rl Hll!9rt11. 1)1 W!lllt"' Tri1""M. S.111 Kt»t• lt1 Wtl'-r W!M, II. .'ulttd beauty wi1h a Mtdittrrannn 81ir , ..... ... 1 design to versatile it works maJic ia 1ny 1etting! .Eaciciog1y' comfortable.. too. MetiQio lously upholstered. in rich, laxwiou velvtl wi1h 'antique fruitwood finishes. AtMl Kl modatly prictd for the tuperior ~·w17 oocl craf-•lhlp. ,21 ,ID Oholr & on- ------~ '."""..:''" ....... -. Thund17, April 2, 1970 DAILY "LOT BUBBLES THE CLOWN • First Nighters Work For ~hildren's Play CHILDREN'S PARTIES > MAGIC SHOW -PVPP!TS -FAVO~S ·: REASONABLE AATES 644 • 4290 ·~ be reserved at a cost of s11~!!!!'!!!!'!!!!!!!!'!!!!'!!!!'!!!!'!!!!'!!!!'!!!!'!!!!'!!!!'!!!!'!!!!'!!!!'!!!!'!!!!!!!!'!!!!'!!!!~ ~ per Ucket at the box ofllce1,,_;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-;;;;;;;;;;-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-.i A_Jund·ral1ln1 productloa of the classic fairytale 11Hansel and Gretel" will kick off a drive to establl1b a Children'• Tbe11tr proer1m within Ille conflnts of the L 1 8 u n a Moulton Playhouse. through tomorrow, at 494-07431 II J, or may be purchased at the COSTA MESA door on a space avaUable Member• ol the F l r s t NIJbters have been firming plans for four shows thi1 weekend In the Festival of Arb Forwn. The cut are members of the Saddleback College Players under the direction of Doyle McKinney. bass!:;, loaned by the Lyric GOLF & COUNTRY CLUB Opera Auoci1tion, have been :::~f:.'d by Saddlebaok ALL FACIUTIES A hot dog and soft drink concession under the dlrecUon of Mrs. Adele Ipsen will be open between shows on Satur- day, April 4, at 11 a.m. and 1 :30 p.m. and on Sunday, April S, at 2 and 4 p.m. · Ttckets under the direction of Mrs. Colin Tbnmons may Eastern Star Order or Eastern Star will meet at 8 p.m. in the new Masonic Temple, 680 South Coast Highway, Laguna Beach tomorrow. Worthy patroa and matron, Mr. and Mn. Norman Christensen, will preside. Star club will meet Wed· nesday, April 15, at 7::ll p.m. in the temple. OPEN TO PUIUC N•• A,,..,hlt VIC GARCIA LTD. YM•h ~ GERMAINE INTllTAINMINT • DANCIN• THUUDA Y·•llDA T·IATUI DAT 9 p.m. 'Ill 1 :30 1.m. •' I FRIGIDAIRE ._ .. Ntfltr1" •' _,, .,,,.. ... " Either Side-by-Side or Top Freezer. Buy now and save during our Either-Or Sale. Limited time only. Hurry ! Frigidaire 15.9 tu. ft. Side· by-Side. Just 32" Wide. 1 ~·-· H111dy Sltlt-by-SIGtput1 ~!"O \1111htn • ..,. ... ch. I Mort rootll. lS.t cu. II. lill •Ith $.&I eu. ft. lrMl1r lh1I hold9up101N lbt. .. ,..,~""'"""" $418 88 Ft01loP1oor. t Elf)'1nOYl119. Smoolh· glld1 nylon rolf1r1m1~1 ~111nlng 1Jld mowi119 •••Y· Frigidaire 115.6 cu. ft. Top Freezer with 154 lb. Siz ... Freezer. • lo11 ol room. 11.1 c.111. ft. t111 wllh t.3!1 Cl.I. ft. flffH r, Holclt up lo 15' lbt. • Oou 1lortg1. [ff 1hlll, •utter tnd tNctl COll\llll,.,,tnlt. •~I••~ tl!ell lothtll· g1llonrnllkclfl-. • Nocllfro1li1111. l1'1 100% F1ot1-Prool. • E••Y moving. Smoolh- 1110• "Ylon ro!l111111111to rno'tl11g, ci..111no "'Y· FRIGIDAIRE LAUNDRY PAIR This Fri9id1lr1 Jet Action W11her 9ive1 you 2 speeds 11 1 budaet price Molll1I W.t.11'1 • 2 illffOtl •'lul•• 111\lf Dt!l<•i. tttlk\91. • ON' Action t llllitr, Cr11tn tYr....,11 m11 pl11119• clotlltt dH11 lnlO 1U111r wt11r lar thOroutl'I w11hlt111. • 2 Jll•A\lllY 11111 ... $. Git r~ ol !lnl, KU"' 1u!Ornlllc•ll'f. • Jtl<flrrr,11 Mtcll1nl1m. Na Dtllt, No 1•••1 Ht Otlrt. No 11ull1y1. • Ctld Wt1tr W1111 Stl1l1141. Stwtt !IOI Wl!t rl Stv•• clolhtl lrtm 1hrh'l•l110 l lllf lffl1"'. Mltchlng Budg•t·Prlced Dryer hat 2 cycle• for drying flulblllty Molllt1 O.t.H, t ltcfrlc I I C11t!H. Ont !ltntel lo 111 fer 1111 te US mlnul" 111~ • HO.HNI -!Or tlulllng! e N••laott O.cron Uni Krttn. ll!tht Of! 1111 ,_, • Our1&11 '••n C•rt . ''e"' ltmplrtlurt f !u1 tfld,Of<Y<:lf cotl.OOWll Dr1nt Dur1bl1 '"'" lltt!\I ""' rt••r IO •N• ,, PUI '""''>' vtllhovl lt1i11Jrii, s1 gaaa s14aaa . Why Not Buy the PAIR ••• and. SAVE! 411 I!. 17th St. COSTA MESA " I, ·~ I ! ! i f I ) ., l 1 "J• DAILY PILOf IN) Th11tsd11y, AIWU 2. 1970 Clo8ed Circuit System Saving :Money .. ;Mesa Takes Candid Cam~ra Appr.oach to L.aw .. ' • • ' ,, . r ·I ... • . ' .. b • r.. ~ . -' . • . . . . ' . . ' . •• ~ ~: Jt costs $1.98 to put a two-b it drunk on ,~ pPsta Mes~'s own candJd camera. :·.·None or them smile. l. Imprisoning the lmag"e of an fn. • t oxicated motorist on videotape ·-a ~ dee1dly weapon tha,t saves pro"secut'ors time and money -is only one among .. :scores of w3ys police use this modem : :media device. ~ • Closed-circuit television film shot by -. \he Costa Mesa Poli~ Department can !' bring a bloody murder to black-and-while ·ure in the courtroom, train officers com- -ing on daily duly, or show a drug -user "'tiat i..nd or trip he had . • ·'My God! Was I lhat bad?'' said o~e : offender who subsequently changed his plea to guilty when officers premiered his performance, bouncing off the walls o{ • Studio 502. -Thal's the room where drunks are film- , ed, titled for the old California Vehicle Code section covering driving under the , tnfluen.ct. • "Nobody minds but the guy "'ho gets .. convicted," says Ll. Austin Smith, coin- ' J.:. .. .. • -· 1 runks i11 Costa Mesa wind 11p OJl rtme'llt's own candid caniera pro· • 1. "\V os I that bad?" is oflen tltc : 011se of sobered 'stars.' The f ilm· : qpproacli saves prosecutors tirne :and ntoney. J. • ... • Jounity relations officer. one or many :policemen who consider closed circuit • :television a fanta stic modern law aid. The initial purchase, involving a recording camera. sound equipment, playback machine, monJtor and variable lenses two years ago was a little over $2.000, but has since saved a fortune. Back in 1962, a secondhand, 16- millimeter movie ouUit !Ile departI'!lent used in pioneering the [i\ming or drunk ·drivers cost $5,000. ·while the videotape gear is used in every facet of municiP.al business besides police work. "And il hasn't cost us a dime," adds Lt. Avery Smith, director of technical services. the Department which includes the Sony videotape i;:eili' v.•ithin its jurisdiction. ··in !ivc·years. Uiey'll be cheap enough for the average family to own and use," he adds. noting the cost of filming a drunk drivers dropped from $.S.87 'vilh the one.:;hot movie to $1.98 with reusable tape . "All you're doing Is shifting patterns in molecules," he explains. saying the tapes c:an be used hundreds of times -up to 1,000, according to the manufacturers - but none has been tried lhal long. Simply stated , Ille videotape outfit is so easy to use that it transforms the I !O- man police force into a 110-man team of television producers. And the system itself -incorporatirtg a separate security network within the police facility 31 99 Fair Drive -is also a law enforcer. The station watch coin· inander can flip a tuner switch and check ' System itself serves O.! lo w enforce.,. toil.hin the Costa /Hes a facility With a flip of a-!Wit·ch. tile watcl•- tommander can zero Ttt 011 what's :Jtappe11ing llt the front' cau1'ter or tr1 tlte jail. ~ 1 what's happening at the fr911t counter, in the jail, or at three otbcr critical ·JO(!• , ~tions without leaving his desk. Besides the otivious intemal uses, the \'ldeotape is v1iklable for shooting short lraining films shown to officers coming ; Onto their sWfts three times each day. f They may range rrom de.mons1rating ~ lnlUal invesligatlve. procedures al the 1 acene or a murder -the cameraman ~ himself round a clut that 90lved one case t wh.ile filming It -to a pep talk by Chief • Roger Neth or District Attorney Cecil • JJicks. • · • tn one case -an automatic car wash in another town, The city council viewed that operation and the man'who applied to install one in Costa Mesa evaluated \heir reaetion and dropped the project before they voted on it. No actual additions are planned to the videotape system now used, only im- provements in· the production quallty and more widespread applicallons. actording to Police' Capt. Ed Glasgow. Specialists in the television cOncept pioneered by the Costa li-1esa Police Department say it can prove a m'jar tool in reaching Newport-Mesa Unified School District pupils with programs. On~ videotape ~wn by one man could elifninate time-CbhSuming visits to the district's many campuseS<by oUicc rs giv· ing bicycle safety4or anti-di-ug use talks. And.students. !Or example, can be film· cd while letting their ha ir down to com· plain about poUce procedures that bother them, \Yhile they might feel inhibited by a race-to'face discussion. The o~ficers can reply, explain and answer their questions in the same way. Jr it au sounds like something you read In Dick Tracy's Crimestoppers' Notebook 15 or 20 years ago, you haven't heard the best part yet. Ne.it lime you're watching Dragnet's veteran lawmen tracking down a bandit through <lid-fashioned legwork. the latest in criminology coocepts may be transmit- ted over the air simultaneousl¥ . Telecast by Los Angeles Co u n I y .· authorities to) local I Jaw enforcement agencies from lime to time, these pro- • ........ Television set up sounds like so nre· thing .from Dick Tracy's Cri niestvp· per's Notebook of 20 years ago ~o ?na11y. Uses vary fro m pict11res of suspects a11d internal security to pep talks from the chief. p ··--~-·-grams are riot for public consumpti<ln. They stay that way -aired ln scrambled, nonsensical sequence in case they might be pfCked. up on home..~ts - and are put into . coherent order by an unscrambler on the Costa Mesa reCetvi.r · unit. • PHOTOS BY PAT O 'DONNELL and ' STORY BY ARTHUR R. VINSEL •• • MESA POLICEMAN TURNS 'TV PRODUCER' WITH CAMERA IN HAND OFFICER PALMER MAKES RECORD OF FINGERPRINT SEARCH DONE BY GARY BARWIG And lhe portable tinil lf lr<qucnUy loaned to olhcr ·departmenli wkhin the city for MJCb purpoea 11 videollplnC -JAILER WEBSTER AIDED BY TV MONITOR CLOSED CIRCUIT TELEVISION AT UIEFING CAN MEAN DEMONSTRATION$ OR A.PEP TALK I t • • Teday'• n.al .. . . l N.Y • .St.Hlm .. 'VOL. 63, NO. 77, 4 SECTIONS, 38 · PA'GES ORANGE cbONJY, ~LIFORNl,A . I THURSDAY, APRll ~., 1970 , J TEN.Cp.n'S • ·, 4 . OlilLY PIUT St.tr ...... THIS MAN'IS CATCHING ~OOKS AND SAVING Mp!EY. PAGE 1' Tests Still Under Way · . • • Nij,on . Def ends 'Right~.~. Says Court · Choice Guaranteejl .,in lJ.ons .tiiu,tiO.n · I WASIDNGTON (UPI) -President _ _,.of both parties" and should Nixon says at atue. in the· stnJi:1Ie be his. over his nominations to the Supreme Nixon's assertions were challengtd by Court la the chief executive's ''Tridi-several senators. Uonal Constitutional" right to Piii his·-Senate Democratic Leader M I k e own choices on the court.. ' Mansfield said today that throughout Rebuffed in his attempt to name Judee history "It has been for the Pttsli:lent Clement F. H~ Jr. to the r.ourt to proppse and· )lie Senale to dispose." and facing a poulble second defeai on He said that N~on's preside n·t i a. J his nominaUon of!'> Judge G. Hanold p"ropUve .. wasn't jeopardized When Carswel1, the Pl'l!sident says this is a Judge Haynsworth. was rejected and it right that was "freely accorded to my won't be jeqpar~ regardless of \Pf' . . . ~I'm Innocent' Savs St. Clair • On Poster Rap A Costa Mesa city councilman cbatged with placing political posters on public property plea9ed innocent today in Harbor Judicial District Court and re· quested a jury trial . . Prciceedings in v o Iv i ng Councilman William L. St. Clair were set for May S at 8:30 a.m. in Division One, despite a major legal technicalit)'.. Re.search of city lawbooks indicates St. Clair's offense is apparently no crime. Judge Donald Dungan released St. Clair on his own recognizance, despite expressing mock fears that some--com.: munity elements might urge him to leave town in the meantime. Maximum penalty under the law ls cne year in jail and a $500 fine. Judge Dungan added, bow ever, that many others would be urging ' him to remain and face the music. As J~r c\ty •~ey, the jUr.is\ is familiar with ~'1.tesa eltetiOnS . Councilman St. Clair was 'aerved the citati~ charging vJolatiorr of the municipal «>de Tuesday, algn<d by Tbomas Manua Jr., 21, currel!Uy seeking office in the April 14 council election. outcome of the Oar swell· nomination~" Sen. Robert P. Grlffln: ass!sl.lillt senate Republican leader, said he lJllderstood lhe President's f~Ungs on ·the issue but added: "The Stnate is •BtUI · goinJC ·to mak'e tile judgment. 1 ·<1111 !!el the Senite has co-equal responilbillUeS 1n the aRpointment of"'; Supreme Court justices." • · ·- , Sen, Alil.n Crailrton '(D-Calif.), com:- mented : "l, as a senator,.w1n not 'stand quietly by· and see a racist apPointed ' . . : .. to the.highest court, in our land. ... • Nixon's letler to freshinan Sen;~illllPI B .. Saxbe (R,Ohio)," Userlia •lbt President-'s ·~fight .· to , fill -~ L~ICl1'C1, through ·bis' own chOJce. It •• 1_. as an. tj'fort , to sway-Iii hpubJam still uncommitted, ott;htt..t tbej)wlJ!,YOtl Jn Monda)l's showdo'Wa.-, , , Sax!le ca lied 'Jt persuasive Md~ ui_d be would vote ageJnst the' mOUoil 1to reSujnnit the. nomipation to ~ Senate : , • (See·CAR8)¥ELL, P .. e II'-.. -' On Mesa Baby Remains Manus -and his brother charged they watched SL. Clair put two Signs sup- porting the candidacy of incumbent Coun- cilman George A. Tucker in rront of his barbershop. , A check with the city Engincer1ng Department revealed the signs lay in th~ public right-of-way outside Pioneer Barbers, 2340 Newport Boulevard , so they took legal act.ion. 1'Princess". Massey and Cindy Ra~p, lS months, take good care of 10 pups ,. five Qf wPtcf1 .we{e· adopt· ed by· Princess, who added them to he!\ own brood 'after momma dog owned bY ·Mr. and Mrs. Victor Rapp. 869 GoVernor St., Costa Mesa, was killed by a ca.r. The.pup~ were just twQ ~eeks 014.at thre time of their mother's death and Princess; who ~gs 'to Ml". arld Mrs. Paul Massey, 873 Govemor· St., volunteer'ed to raise them as her oWn. Orange C-0unty coroner's experts. have still not completed chemical tesls on the remains of a dismembered baby girl found a week ago in a freezer taken from her paz:ents' r~possessed borne, police said today. DecompoSition makes·it extremely .dif· ficul{ to· ev.aluate the butchered body for an . exact cause of death, which is needed for evidence in prosecution of her· father. Dr. Wesley G. Slocum. 44, is held without baH at Orange County Jail on a murder charge, pending an April 22 preliminary hearing in Harbor Judicial District Court His wife, Marian. 45, was also arrested last Friday, but released w i l ho u t issuance of a complaint and admitted to an undisclosed treatment center for alcoholics. The freezer containing the remains e1f Cynlhia Slocum, who was 21,~ months Services Slated -For UCI Student· Catholic funeral rites have been set f« a young Costa Mesa ham radio operator electrocuted , Tuesday while erecting a tall antenna that toppled into power lines. Rosary for Lawrence F, Bandiera , 20, cf 2726 Lorenzo Ave., will be rriday at g p:m .. with Requiem Mass Saturftay at 10 a.i'll .• both at St. John the Baptist church. The VC Irvine student !'as killed _!.n· .--stantty wbeil a rope holding the 45-foot antenna brole as he was maneuvering it into permanent position at the family home. He leaves his parenls, Mr. and Mrs .. Francis L. Bandiera and two sisters, Mrs. Gail P. McConnell and Suzanne Bandiera, all of Costa Mesa. Arrangements are under direction of Bala Mortuary. Stock Markets NEW YORK (AP) -The stock' market )osL its sma ll early gain in moderately Active trading late U:lis aflernoon. (See quotatiqns, Pages 18-19). Advances and declines were about even •mong issues traded on the New York Stock E:rchJnge. cld when she died in early 1964, was removed from the home at 2037 Calvert Ave., nine days ago. Or. Slocum. chose to allow the second mortgage to lapse, although be' had plen· ty ·of money to pay it, and moved into ~n apartment in l\naheim with his two daughters. Mrs. Slocum was removed from the house and went to the Salvation Army in Santa Ana, which placed her in a Long Beach alcohclic treatment center. The House or Hope refused to re-admit her following her highly publicized arrest on suspicion of murder, despite subse· quenl release, so police-arranged for ' entry to another, undisclosed home. She is expected to be a key figure In the case against Dr. Slocu m, who was in Superior Court for a pre-trial settlement hearing on his $2.2 million lawsuit against Santa Ana police when arrested. His caree..r as a surgeon was ended by band wounds suffered in an April 12, 1968 shootout with lawmen at bis Santa Ana off&ee. Shortly'-thereilfter -unable to practice -he and his wife began to dtvelop Mesa police and culrdinating in the grisly a pattern of problems involving Costa case whjch. came to light seven days ago. A check of municipal code books later in the day, hOwever, turned up evidence that political posters are not mentioned in the city ordinance on signs, thus malting them legal. St. Clair was <lliginally to answer lhe charge on April ·14, election 4ay, but went to court early. He expressed some displeasure that his trial is set for May 5, which is Cinco de Mayo, Mexico's Independence Day and the occasion for wild revelry. "This might deprive my friends from south of the border of an opportunity lo observe American justice In action," he explained. Pancake Feed Slated By Estancia Boosters Estancia High School's Booster Club will aponsor a pancake bteakfaat from 7 a.m. · to lJ a.m. Saturday at the high ocbool cafeteria. Sausage, eggs a.nd pancakes will be served at $1.25 ptt adult aild fifty cents per -child under 1%. The funds received for the breakfast will be used by the club for school activities. Reagan Proposes Tough' Jet ·N9ise Latv to A.ssemb.ly F.rom Wire Services SACRAMENTO -Tough new 'cot1trols dealing w:ith airline noise have beeR submitted ta the state LegLslature with the endorsement of Governor Ronald Reagan. Airlines would be subject to fines up to $1 ,000 by Jan. I, 1971, for exceeding acceptable jet noise standards I f legislators approve the measure. Based on a rated decibel system of measuring noise, the suggested law is similar to those urged recerYUy by the Costa Mesa and Newport Beach CUy Coulldls. Hearings on the matter 'Will be held next month in San ·Francisco and Los Angeles. Governor Reagan said Wednesday the legislation he proposes ls the first of its kind in the nation and will accompllsh seve ral major objecUves if adopted. ''.Not the leas~ of which is-to bring relief to the ears of people who live 11ear airports," he said. lf made into law, the noise pollution controls would state exactly what con- stitutes a violat ion. 'So~k it to "E.lll" Tliird Mesa Topless Act Raided Previously. citizens -like those in lhe Upper Newport Bay area, objecting _ lo Orange County AirpOrt operations - have been forct'd to sue (or dalnages. The Orange County 8 o a rd ot _ Tem_po and atle~¥lce were up _ ____Th:ey_:_iaid the tall, lOl!l._ess performer Supervisors currently faces a·mass litiga-· Wednesday night as: Costa Mesa police was playing to a packed house atop -----iion running into millions ~of OollarS:- issued citations charging the third topless • her platform Jn the center of the room while s.imi1ar action has been taken - entertainment ofrense Jn five days at when they arrived. · against Los Anieles J n t e r n a ti o n a I a Lavern testilg the city's .. l·oontr1>1s. Miu Madrid and Vaughan are scbedul~ Aifport. . , Statuesqiie Anneliese A: Madri~ 30, cd to appear April JI, _pt ,1130 a.m. .Dick Oyer, an engineer for the·.state. or Gardena, was accused of dancif1g in Harbor Judicial District .Court to '.l}ep,~ment, ot .A!t'Ol}autics said .. many bare-breasted at The Ftrebouae1 iT? E. answir the charges. · , .. 1 ' JeUln!!:rS now. i{I use · are Mt ~tpped , 17th St .: as a near~apacity aowd ot Vttllhu JJ alao .achedultd fa(." APril Wftb"nbise -;cortfrol gear'.and viouJd .be 26 men watched. e and -April ts court datea, respectively;. Jn violation. · · . i Doonnan Dennis o .. Vaughan, 23, was accompal'iied _by Miss Diane t~ Brawley, State Aeronautics Dir:ector., Joseph R .. issued his· third citation charging him 25, of Anaheim, apd Miss JudJ'~ A. €rotll l}J"alsed the proposed legistaUoq, wtth allowing entertainment without a \Vaiden, 26, or Diamond '3ar. , __,.. saying it will resull in a vast reduction ciU' permil · City Attorney Roy June says well-in jet noise around all airports'. ' · Miss Madrid -spectacular in a silver known tavern enter ta In men t law Not only general airport operations bikini' bottom studded with red specialist Berrien Moore is attempting measured ov~r a specified time . periOfll, rhinestones and writhing_ to a rapid to test constitutlonalily of the citr but Individual flights ·could be penaliztd rhythm -was the third woman cited ordinance requirirlg permits for any ~od lined f9r~ undu' noi8e. . · for entertaining without a permit . entertainment. . ,. I pa Ml 'ot MVen iecbTiical experta1 "We'1e sockfng it to 'em," said vice He said Wednesday ttlat 'the )ft.Wilt aNt 1 comin:ercl41 at'bUstlcat fngineering officer Dave Hayes, who showed up probaDJy be evaluated ~ blP! 1cOurt ' Ut1n . provtifed . Gov:. · Rebgan's. · 'bulc , ;it 7:30 p.m .. along with Detective Sam levels before any penalttes can DC lm'· package, whtCh would 'pressur.e manttlac· Arnold to issue court appearance orders. posed on the alleged violators. turers to develop quieter planes. l . Japan Socialist in Korea . ' . . . . To Ask Passenger ·Release SEOUL (AP) -Suic.eya Abe, Socialist member of Japan's pa.rliament, ·arrived here Friday to help ·govemtnenl officials wln release of 100 passengers and crew held hostage in -an airliner hijacked by ultraleftist Japanese students who want to go to North Korea. He hurriedly flew in after the hijackers several hours earlier agreed in principle to re~ease the passengers in exchange for a new hostage, Japanese Vice Transport~tion ·Minlater $hinjlro Yamamura, through talks with' A,be. , . The Samurai sword-brandiahing hi- j_ackers askedi Uiat Abe come to Korea and Jdentify Yamamura, whom they said· they · could not reccgnize by. sight in. a reply to Yamamura's proposal that he be put aboard the airliner, grounded since Tuesday at Seoul's Kimpa Intema· lion al Airport, in place ·of the passengers. Shigeru Hori, chief ' Japanese Cabinet secretary, announced the · agreement earlier in Tokyo. ' Abe left at once for Seoul. H'e told airport interviewers be did not know why the students named him lo identify Yamamura. Abe last year . visited th! North Korean . capital of Pyongyang as a member of1 a Japan Soclialist party goodwill mission. ' Hori is ..,,one of 'thiee",JaJ!alle~~m-. ment ofliciils handlill,g .1be caaa.arising;- 1rom the Hijacking of the Japan Air tln'es Boeing tiT by Japanese radical I ' I '! • Bt.IJ'.glar Hits · 1\f esa Phoio Shop . Owners ot a C~ta Mesa photogr~pbic , ttQuipment shop ' today ·are· ptoJ~tJng ideas about the Identity and wher.eaboutt • of a rental customer who dropped In last SiiturdflY. · '.r : lie took 1 $3.50J ~e mm · 'IOUnd movie JVOJtctor and left behind a· phOny n8me and address. : ·eatricia Hegwood, of Cal's Caineras, 1780' Newport Boule\tard. repoked1 the .1rand'thell ca,. to pollce·Wednesdaf. • students Tuesday-while on a scheduled flight from Tokyo to Fukuoka r I n southwest. Japan. The plane refueled in Fukuoka ·and the studenfs released 23-of the passen1tr1- -mostly women and Children -~fore flying ~orihward for Pyongyang where the students indicated they wiahed ·to go. The plane later changed Us course and landed at Kimpo Airport juat outside the South Korean-capital of Seoul. • I r ·Abe left aboaYd a speclal JAL' Pline sent tor' bring back passengers of, 1hi hijacked plane. ' · The hijacked plant bu aboard it, 115 ·persons, inclUdlng .the hijackers . and the> plane's seven-man· t:;~w. · Earller South Korea's defense ministert had told the 15 hijackers h1li paUenctt was w,earing tin. Orange Coast ·Weather Had enough sun? The haq ski~s return Friday but the temp-er~tures-·w111 1~ warm, With 15 readings predicted tor the col1t and up to 74 inllnd. INSIDE TODAY M~h•tl '\llltl II "'"91W!I ...... •t •<~" ._ F. S'llvlt ......., • '""' . n;. S!telr ~ t•t ,~ ..... ,......,. . =:ww .. , ' __,.,,..,,. .. .. .... ~ ...... .. • ' I , ~- ----------====~=~~!!!'!!"!!!l!l!!!"!"'!"'!!!l!'!l'!!l!llllllm ____________ ......,. ·2 DAILY ~!LOT C ' Upper Bar. Issue Review Called • 4. SU.pe'rvilor David L. Beker In • letter • to htl fellow board memben dat.<I April I made a strong call to renegotiate ~ Upper Newpor\ Bay land exchange \tlth the Irvine Company or unUaterally re- scind tt .. becaute of erroaeoua data." Baker, who emphubed lits actloa wu '"no AprU Fool'• Day jolle" called for the drastic IC1k>n for Uftit nuons: I. The public shoreline is substaQtial- ly more than the 6,088 lineal feet at New- port Dunes. !. There is a beach ol 1omt IS acres with '°""" 1,IOO lineal feol ol ll>or<llne on the west bank (North Stir Beach) that is shown in alt reports as submers· ·e<I Ud<landj. • 3. The frootar• on the public Udllands ~vlded by Back Bay Drive Is '-ed. . Baker 1n January first atrved noUct on the board that he wanted tbe land swap reviewed and a.Id Wednesdly's ·rtqUtst wu fonntl notice ol thlt dttlf'e. Irvine Company Prtsldent WIUilm R. Muon . said Wedhemlay, "On the sur- face It does not IOWld like lll)'lhli'f n<w, :but 1 cannot comment f\lrthcr till have a chance to review Baker's flndlocs." Baker's request comes just a week before the supervisors are achtduled to hold a public hearing on Mven altern•· 'utive Jll'OflOll)I fO( devoloplnent of th• -Bu.,,,., -,_.re-quat by SupervllO< llobirt -that tha COllllly ~ "ad>er -ol .. . ·Sex Film Raid In Westminster Nets 'Starwt' A Weatm!Dller paraplollc, clllr1ad by aulbot!Ues with produclnf fllmi that p-the alphabet far bt1'IOd X for a raUnr, Is belns l<Ml(hl fodaY, followln1 the 1m1st ol one ol his allepd atarlets. Complaints !Jsuod by tbe Orlll(I Cou"° ty Dbtrlct Attorney cbar1e Verne H. Testerman of taSl SanlM Ave. with COllll'~l!CY to produce oblcene ftlml, se• perversion and three COWlll or ..mn, ob.loene m1teriala. Thi Jattar cbarp b a mladlmaoor. , Tllo complainta. wera illued 1\Jtaday In Weal OrlD(B County Judicial Diltrict Court to climax a two-wttk undercover invllllpUoo by tbe DA and Oronp Police. 'l'ollennln IN! al• otber pmoos - one ii aa1ody -aro named In the complalnU bl&aed 'alter ltlzure of the lurid matartlll In a Mardi raid oo hit--.. ·~ . ~ ol flfml ·allapdlj ~ se• JJ!a1 lnvolvinc ma1a, lemalaa - and even anJmalJ -were confiscated, plus nine movie cameras, several sUIJ cameras, projectors and film editing toola. veloping the back bay Udtl1ndl ... The land exchange, which 11 now be- fore the court! for judgment calls for the county to trade 157 acres of tide· lands for 457 acres of Irvine piltent t.ide- IAndl, uplands and tslanda: locited In and around the bay. · Baker said, "~1y decl!ion to recom· mend this course or action was no t easily made and I an1 not unmlndf\JI that the J>t'OP)Sed development and the erchange agreement are producta or plans, dis· CUIJiON and ne10Uationl that date back to llQ.S and that the proj)Oltd harbor deve lo{)lnent is in ketplng with the con- ditions of the county's tideland grant (from the alate). "To my mind. one ol the Jrl!cipal factors in the e1chan1e propoul wu the q\ltilUon of public ahorellne ownerahip." Baker conUnutd. ••Information on thla subject ls inaccurate re1arding both ti· tent and location. "Not conskttred, however, was some J,500 lil'lear feet of shoreline on the west bank whJch was created by the part.111 nwng In tMZ rtauJUnc in a beach or aome lJ acres. "Not mentioned In the exchange re- J>OIU nor shown on any of lhe prutnt rondiUon mape is the existence of Back Bay Drive, a 40-foot public rHd e.,.. ment that 1-al!I' r11111 alol1I the too of tbe eut bluffs,' the 1upervllor con- tinued. "It appeara that the public could con· trol tbe eat blllk becalllO the road touches on public Udelanda at a nvmbtr of pointii. The lmportanca ol this omlt- •ion cannot be mln1mlzed 1 I n c e Jt aubltanUally bears on the county'• abll· tty to develop the Upper Ba y." Baker aleo touched on ecoqy. "Com· petent autbortUea uy the unique natural "'"" will be deatroyed If the propooed plan I• lmplementad. 'lbUJ thaae t11uea must be resolved before any e1chan1e tU:es place and without 1J1vlah adbtt· ence to coefllbenefit analysts.'' 'Big Brother' Watching lier Unt0Uclttd man left a Costa M•aa woman unamueed on April Fool's Day, accordin( lo police. 'A postcvd allegedly mailed by 1be Morality Patrol informed the woman her home had baen placed on their nlthllY -"atton rounds In an eflort to lhor<1 up commwllty llandardl. .'!'ht defanden of Coota Mua moralii, did Iba)' recelvad Information the wu 4r'lwll( curious male crowd• by propar •. Inf for bed wltb Ille &hades up. She tol d pblice somebody w a s mistaken. ,. OAtl.'r' f'ILOT Sllff f'lltM Car Dents Building Heavy damage resulted at 7 a.m. today when Costa Mea1n James E. Darrow Jr., 22, of 916 W. 18th St., Jost control of bis car, crashing into realty firm on Placentia Avenue at 19th Street. Darrow wis hos· pitalized. for observation. Police are investigating the accident's cause. Mesa Ex-Marine Faces Probation In f.ounty Center A Co1ta Mesa man who fought two police officers interveninc in hla alle1ed aulcide attempt today faces one year's probation, with psycltiatric care a strict condition. He will be an outpatient at Orange County Medical Center. The heavily buUt ez.Marine pleaded tullty Monday to a charge of auault and battery when be appeared for prellmlnary hearin1 in Harbor Judicial Dlltrlct Court. He had betn charged with assaul l with a deadly weapon against police officers and aasault a1ainlt police of. ftcer1 In the melee 10 days ago . Patrolman Don Caley choked the 1trua:Una: Vietnam combat veteran un· c:on.tdoul u be wrestled with OfOcer Bill Bechtel, who had broken the ~·1 VIP OD a knife. _ .. , .... Qnoet stabbed in tbe abddmen durlnf the struute on tllo kitchen Door, during w h I c h the despondent would-be sulclde almost pull· ed the officer'• pistol from its holster. Mesa Bartender Facing Felony Forgery Charge A Costa l\1esa bartender who called attention to himself by boastinr of being a fed eral agent is held in Los Angeles County Jail today, facing a felony forgery rap. Laurance J. 'Belt, 42, of 127 Flower St., was arraigned Tuesday in Citrus Municipal Court, where his bail was dropped from $12,750 lo $2,750, which he couldn't post. He now faces an April 14 trial in the Los Angeles County Superior Court's Pomona branch, charged with tv.·o counls <>f forgery or wills and conveyances. 'I"he action originating iJl 1967 ap- parently involves a Glendora tavern in whlch Belt, \;ho used a variety of aliases, had an interest. Auth<>rltles asked Co!ta Mesa police lo check Belt out when the U.S. Defense Department learned he had been telling people he was a federal agent. Costa Mesa police vice and intelligence detail Sgt. Jack Calnon arrested Belt at his place or employment , 1824 Newport Boulevard after disco vering the forgery wa1Tant. Federal charges of violating the Dyer Act were dropped after his forgery sr· rest, since he was also-Wanted for leaving Arizona with a rental car · 1 in years ago. The automobile which crossed state lines in violation of the federal car theft Jaw was confiscated and returned to the owning agency . Burglars Busy, Do Joh Badl y Deputy District Attorney Orttll Suri requested the complaints lollowln1 the aUtged purchue ol 10 st.as films March 20 by a detective from Orange. So far, Testerman and four persons listed as Jane and John Doe -there were no lilm credits -are still being sou ght by Southland lawmen. Pollet •nested Mrs. Arlene Carr of 2622 N. La.ird SL 1\lesd1y u one of the alleged screen stars, it was revealed Harbor Realtors Applaud VIV A's Rap of Radicals OCC Sets Dinner, Citizens Meeting Orange Coast College will host the Citizens Advisory Committee in a diMer meeting at 6: 15 tonight at the OCC Student Center. The infonnal mettlng ls: designed to encourage twe>-w11 discussia1 between the colle1e and tht community. Following dinner, the group, including citizens from the community, ins tructor . ad. mlnlstrators and studenl!, wlll split up Into small groups to discuss relations between the campus and local residenll. Sloppy burglars broke ln!o a Costa Mesa automobile agency early today, took $16.800 in valueless checks an d only $935 in cash, a maintenance man discovered upon arriving for work . The safe job at the All a~ Chrvsltr Plymouth dealership, 2929 Harbor Bl vd., was markedly amateurish, according lo Patrolman Gerry Kochendorfer. He said a door had been pried lo ga in entry to the e<>mpany's inner off ice after the burglars broke in through the rear repair shop door. Wednesday. , She Is charpd with Ol'M!:, count of ser pervtr&ion and alJo conspiracy to produce obscene films. Sirhan Back in Cell SAN QUENTIN (U PI ) -Sirhan Sirhan, condemned assa ssin of · Sen. Robcrl F . ..Kennedy, was back in his · dtath row cell at San Que ntin today after treatment at the prison hospital for dizzy spells. Officials said the youn& Jordanian im· mlvant was in good con$11tlon but tests during his day and one hall In the hospl· t.al were not conclus ive. ( DAILY PILOT OIANOI COAST f'UI LISHING COM~AN'r' lt•b•rt H. w ••• ........... , ..., il'vlWhlW J1c\ It. c~rl111 t:flltr C•1N ..... OHie• JJO w ,,1 1111 Sl•t1t M1 iu~, A4111tu ; P.O .••• 15•0. '1•2• Otlter Offlce1 N~I ••at~! nn WHI ••IM• '°"'t¥••41 u ..... 1Mc11: m ,_.., ,.,,_ Nlll'lt .... l9fl lff(ll< UUJ lttcfl I Jolln lld It• (ll~li': llJ Ntrlfl l'I Qff!Tfil 1'HI ' By THOMAS FORTUNE 01 ftle O•llJ' f'lltt lltft An earnest young man today told 100 members of the Newport Harl>oroColta Mesa Board of Realtors campus radicab: want to act like revolutionaries yet re. ceive amnesty, and they want free speech for the left but not for the right. He rtti!ived a standing ovation and money for his cause. Steve Frank. 23.year-old student at (flendale School of Law. spoke on be· half of V!VA t\'olce1 in Yitai Amtrlca). VIVA is a student organization with chapters on over 100 campuses includlng- a new one at UC Irvine. Itl purpo.e la to redress grievances without violence and teach American he.r1ta1e and lhE bene· fits or capltillsm. Frank sPoke fervently about campus militants, holdin& his audience at the realtor's breakfast in rapt attention. He pleaded with the realty board mem- bers to 1et involved with students. "Ute this inform1tion, do somtthlng or I hive wasted my time," he said. "We. are the coming reneraUon. We need to knOW' you are wtth us." Carl Thomas. of Newport Beach, 11icf I.he realtors' education committee should start VIVA programs on the local htah school cJtmooses. Charles Fereuson, of Cn'll• 1'.fesa. sug- ge~ted a SI per re1 ltor ISl!Usment. Both sugj:!estions '''ill be referred to the realtors' Board of Directors. A collection ll'as ta ktn at the breakfast and Frank received $137 for VJVA . Frank related how he went to Santa Barbara the afternoon the Bink of Amer- ica "·as b~rned. "J kne.w ll was golnc to 11appen. r. he said, "bec1u9t I read it In .t!Jt Herald E11miner the. morf\fn1 bt-f ort . "This "'a~ not sPonlaneous. They h~d blow horns. rocks. gasoline cans. ln- ste11d of a demorutratlon J ''" .-riot In.~tead of college studenl.!I T saw a mob: . Tilt purpose of going Into lhe streets 11 to cause a confrontaUon. Traffic ls b~ktd and the cira back up. Then the ~ice come and they are 1tontd," frank said. He. said militants are crested by a per. ml111ve soclely He said he a~s with Dr. B~rnard Bettiehetm of thct Unlvtrslty of CJ:iicago tha t It slart.s with l1ic polly trahnng. "Junior ha11 ptrpetual !Old Jn h11 pant.I." he said. "Thtn he gOts lo nursery tchool and Is allowed to eat 37 gr1h1m cracktr1 be- fore the teacher tells him to stop. Jn ht1h school he is taught 'situation ethlCJ. • 'l'hlt I DAILY l"ILOt Stefl l"htl'I CHEERED BY REAL TORS VIVA'• Stevt Frank I~ "'hy he can oppose the war in Vietnam but want to start a war at home." Frank said militants before they are caught SI)!' they are revolutionaries. Af· tenvard they.are wW-UlUe students who w1nt the.Ir amnesty. They say they are Idealistic like the foUnd.ing fathers. "1 don't believe Patrick Hen ry said, 'Give me llbeny or &1ve me amnesty,' " Frank said. He called col111e administrators who ran for t.he radlcal's lint, "weak, tnilk- toast pensioners." Frank charged U\lt freedom of speech no lonier u lsts ot1 campu1. "Jr you ire to the rlaht or Mao Tae-tunc. hang It up." he advtMd. "You are not 1oinr to be •I· lowed to speak." He u ld Governor Reagan was drowned out by hecklm: whtn he spoke at Cal St.ate P'ulltrton. "And the studentl don't answer blclt. Tbey are the silent major- lty." . Ke remarked \hat U . Gov. F.d fttlnecke aald it best: une: tllent majority Js in danrr ol becomlns the slleheed major- ity .' \ The discussion groups are scheduled until 10 p.m. ,RO FESS IC NA~ INTERIOR DISlwNERS Glass had been smashed there, allow- ing them to reach through and unlock the door found open al 5:45 a.m. by maintenance man Elbert Wi!fon. They also attempted to pry open a mechanic's locked toolbox but were unable to get into the conlent.s. Optft MOft .. Tllurs. Ir Fri. IYc:I. J'rom Page J CARSWELL . • • Judiciary Committee. where almost all aaree It then would be permanently buried. He said he would follow Nlxoli deaplle C&rswell's "weakneu on civil 111ht.s. '1 Sen. Joseph M. ~1ontoya (0-N.M.), one of nine previously uncommitted Democrats Wednesday .said he would vote to r~commit the nomh1alion - and v.•ould vote against Carswell Jf It came to a vote . The anti.Carswell bloc ll'a.!$ buoyed Wednesday by the decision of Sen. William B. Spong Jr. (0-Va.), to vote for recommittal. "That was the one we had to have." said an aide to a senator who is leading the fight against Carswell. He said Spong's move v.·ould make It easier for three other Democrats from border or Southern slates -Ralph W. Yarborough of Texas. Albert E. Gore of Tenneasee and Jennings Randolph ol West Vir1inia -to vote for recommittal. The number of senators publicly er privately committed to vote to resubmit the nomination now totals 41 and com· mitted to oppose the attempt, 43. J\[o l !l~l lr 1 I Fll~J; '/ 1ay forget Carswell and let'• 1plit hi1 1alary{' Old-day Newport Seen in Photos Slides and photograph• of Newport Beach before the lum of the century will be presented Monday nlght 1t a meeting of the Newport Beach Historical Society. Mrs. William Lee will di!CUSS the old Newport Landing, located where the Pacific Coast -Highway bridge now separates the Upper and Lower Bay. She will review the period from 1175 to 1900 when Newport was the sea.port for the ' small farming towns of Santa Ana, Orange and Tustin. Special guest of honor will be Arthur J . McFadden. son of Robert McFadden, who bought Newport Landing in 1875. Questionnaires will be handed out to seek the "firsts" in different occupations in Newport Beach. Everyone is welcome. new 1 n d oldtimers alike, to attend the 7:30 p.m. ~1onday meeting in the recreation hall at Newport Harbor High School. Rotarians Slated To l\leet in Newport Rotarians from 67 Southern CalifoPnia communities will assemble at the New· porter Inn in Newport Beach lhrou1h Sun. day for an annual Rotary Club confer· ence. Thursday the Rotarians will golf at the Costa hlua Golf and Country Club, bowl at Kona Lanes and play tennis at the Newport Tennis Club . Business meetings are scheduled Fri· da.v and Saturday. A Nylon Shag That 's Young 1n Looks, and Young Price! '· 111 9.95 SQ. YD. IF YOU CAN'T COME IN-CALL 64!>027> for an expert carpet consultant who will come to your home with samples without any obligation to you! ll lS HARBOR ILVO. COSTA MESA, CALIF. 646-0175 616-0176 f I f Saddleha~k VOL. 63 , NO. 77, 3 SECTIONS, 36 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, AP~I~ 2, 1970 Mayor Dissolves, 'Undi·ssolves' CAC By BARBARA KREIBlCR OI tllt O.llr Pli.t 11.tf The much-commended, but now con- troversial Citizens' Advisory Commillee, appointed in August of 1968 to determine community goals for Laguna's general plan, was dissolved -and then rapidly undissolved -by Mayor GleM Vedder Wednesday night. Vedder startled his audience and fellow councilnlen bY stating suddenly, at lhe close of a dissertation on the future • or the gfl:neral plan, "I now terminate the CiUzens Advisory Committee, and commend them for their work." Councilmen gulped , launched into a lengthy discussion on the pros and cons of such a move and finally agreed lo defer the Alalter until April 15, date of the last meeting of the present council. Th~ 2f>.metnber CAC was ~!!:ited by the mayor, with approval of the council, and made up of c i t I z e n s nominated by each of the five COUD- cllmen. Its prlnellfal task was the completion af a comprehensive co111munity survey and the preparation ol a goals statement, guidance of tile planning Urm of Danlel. Mann, Johnson & Mendenhall, engaged by the city to revile the general plan. Leading up to his' termination a11- n9lJ.!!£_em!mh Y~er .said, "Citlzen com· m.lttees will be needed f o r hn· plementaUon of the aeneraJ plan, soon ' to be completed. There may be need of st\•eral ~parate committees for the various goals. I do not feel the CAC is capable of this task. The membership has dwindled. The original CAC can be a source of talent for the new ar~ rangemeot, but we need a new start, a new name and a new vigor to put lhe plan inlQ. effect." Rising to a point of ord~, Councilman Richard Goldberg asked City Attorney Jack J. Rimel if the mayor's 1cU011 In announclng termination of the CAC was legal, Rimel gave the opinion that if the committee had peen created with the approval of the council, Its dissolution also should be with COWlCil agreement. Councilman Charlton Boyd said he was "disturbed to get into areas of' this kind at the maycir's swansong meeting." Veddec,:wbose term of office is expiring, is not running for re~leeUon.. "1 did not know yoo were goinJ to ' • 'l'oday's Flnal ; N.Y. Stoeks TEN CENTS Group take this action," said Boyd, "This com- millee has not finished its job. It has been our Intent and that of the planning staff to keep the CAC and I Jiave heard no objection to this. The people deserve a group that works right next to them to get the general plan into effect. 1 do not intend that the make.up and personalities could not be changed, but it is not fair· to make a quick, last-minute mo~·e ·of thi s kind. I ask you to refract (See CO!\-fMJ1TEES, Page Z) IXOll s or arswe Clemente .Joins Oil Laguna•• Protests Grand Jury Hit Loitering LawOK'd Ban Law In Abortion Case 111 Laguna By JOHN VALTERZA OI lhl U.llY ,UM 51tff San Clemente pledged its interest Mon· day In a campaign by coastal cities to hire a Washington, D.C., lobbyist to fight offshore oil drilling, but Wed- nesday night the city council balked at the idea of spending any money. ·The: council ordered ''received and filed" a letter af appeal from Laguna Buch Mayor Glenn 'Vedder who 11ked the city's financial support to hire a lobbyist to light for J>aSSNe of the Cranston-Murphy anti-dri!Uni~bill. Sa n Clem ente's council indicated il ~:ould like to wait for more specific data on the cost and the role of a lobbyist for the anti-drilling measure -infonnation which is being received today in the nation's capital by Newport Beach Mayor Doreen Marshall. ti1rs. Marshall left for Washington this morning to meet with several Jobbyisl3 to find some facts about the issue. The San Cleme nte reticence over a potential expenditure af as much as $5,000 as its share for the lobbyist \\'as !ipiced with .a little politicking. Councilman Dan Chilton said the cit.v should refrain from spending money for ''purposes which are clearly lobbying." "I think we should pass on it and le<t~~ the job up to our next Represen- tatlve in Congress. the Honorable John G. Schmitz, our next Congressman." The preliminary plans for the lobbyi st project involve the total estimated ex· pe'{l.Se along the coast of about $50,000 for the services. The county, the council learned, would possibly pick up $25,000 of the bill, •dth the other half split up among the five Orange Coast cities. Mayor Wade Lower related a call from ti1rs. ti1arshall earlier in the day. "She is asking for our support. Not only moral support. but help in the form of money. She will be checking on the plan in Washington Thursday,'' he said. Councilman Thomas O'Keefe agreed y:ith the wait -a11d-see posture of the council and said he would like to see copies of the Cranston-to.turphy bill before making a decision. By TOM BARLEY . 01 !tit Dtillr 'llltt ll•H Orange County's Grand Jury system came under fire again Wednesday as Dr. Robert Cumming Robb's lawyer moved to block District Attorney ~II Hicks' use aC I.he panel for revived pr~tion o( Ole Leguna Beacb pbysi· cian on aborti<>n charges. Defense attorney Moses Berman o( Santa Ma put Superior C9urt Judge James F. Judge into the wiln~ box for i.timony designed to prove to Jud.le Byron K. McMillan that lhei 1tud' Jur1 system in Orange county effectively bars many residents from service., . . Judg"l Judge is currtntlf presiding Police Probing Atternpted Rape, Beacli Beatings The attempted rape of a vacationing college student at Aliso Beach al South Laguna and the bludgeoning of two others was under investigation by Orange County .sheriff's deputies today. Investigators said an 18-year-old ~1adison, Wis. girl "·as dragged from her sleeping.. bag at about I a.m. Tues- day by a group of five or six young men who had professed to be P.1arines. The girl was carried down the beach and partially undressed by force when other campers responded to the eommcr lion and lhe attackert fled. A sheriff's deputy said they had first bludgeoned Ivan Kalin, 22, f\-1adison , \Vis., when be tried to intervene. They struck Kalin in the mouth with a 2-by -4 inch board and struck Barbara \Vetzel, 18, 1t1adison, on the head causing a gash that required 14 stitches. Jhvestigators said the victims, students from the University oI. Wisconsin, were camping at the South Laguna beach. Earlier In the evening they had talked -lo the unidentified attackers around a camp fire. Residents Launch Drive ToClean WoodlandArea Trash by the truckload has been mov- ing oul of Woodland Drive in Laguna Canyon during the past week, in a major clean-up drive launched by residents of the blighted area, council man Richard Goldberg told fellow council members \\lednesday night. "I was approached by a representative or the \Voodland Drive community, who said the people living out there would sincerely like to clean up the arta," said Goldberg . ....'...:.He said they were upset by many of the things happening in town and did not want to be equated with those who have betn causing trou- ble. He asked if the city would help with the clean-up and I told blm yes." A large city dump truck and driver \\'ere dispatched to Woodland Drive at 7:30 a.m. ~1arch 23 to start the clean-up drive, Goldberg said. On that date. four truckloads of Assorted trash ~·ere hauled to the dump. The drive..-continued through AprU I, by which time . Ii truckloads had been , taken lo the dump. Among the items hauled a w a y , Goldberg noted, as he perused 1 report rrom the PubUe Work1 Department, were old m a t t r e s s e s , stoves, trunks, refrigerators, tires, clothing, chairs, davenports, tree branches, flower pols, broken glass, boxes. paper and garden limmlngs. The major par.t of the c)ean-up I now is complete, Goldberg 1aid, and the city truck will be made ayalJable at needed for final efforts. He also noted that the WoodJand residents are attempt.Ing to line up pink slips for abandoned ears in lhe 1rta so they may be towed away by the polic< departm•nl. "I feel all Ws Is a st<p In the right dlreelion," said the councilman. "and we may be on the way to solving some of our problems." Other city officials commented lhat the clean-up, Jn addition lo improving the appearance or the area. ~·ould ,aubSlanllallt reduce fire,haz.ards. jurist of the Superior Co\,lrt's criminal calendar department. He is, in that capacity, the court's \iaison \\'ith the grand jury and its adviser in many legal Issues. Berman particularly stressed -and often got JOOge Judge's agreement - that it is almost impossible to get wage eamers below the fj.I~ annul inc.cine level to even <.'OflSider Grand Jury Jervlce. .-' Judge Judge agreed with Berman that many county re~enl1 in that income bracket faced the prospect· of losing their jobs because of the time Ibey would have to devole to Grand Jury duty, quite apart from the proh.ibitive economic factors. Dr. Robb, 67, of 34567 Scenic Drive, Dana Point, was indicted by the Grand Jury on Hicks' request after Judge Paul Mast of the Santa Ana Municipal Court had rejected iden tical charges ~t ~ physician had induced abortions in women patients. Judge Mast delivered his landmark ruling in Cull agreement wit1 Berman's argument that Robb 's ~osecuti~n under California's TherapeuUc Abortion Acl was unconstitutional. Judge Mivit co~clude~ th~t _the act amounted to discr1mlnallon 1n 1avor of Roman Catholic thinking and could not possibly be applied in the Robb case . That municipal court ruling provided Berman with the second shot of the double-barrelled argument he delivered before Judge McMillan. He. contended that California law on the submissian of demurrers-a wrlllen form af legRI protest to an ae<:usatory pleading -clearly establishes that the matter cannot be taken beyond the municipal court if a judge at thal level has granted the demurrer. It most certainly can not be taken ta the Grand Jury, Berman argued, and he asked Judge McMillan to rule that when Robb was cleared• by Judge Mast the district attorney had no right to take the same charges before the tSer ROBB, Pagel) Census Beginning For South Coast; Hold Your Forms The 1970 census is alt over for mo.st U.S. residents, but in Southern. °!'an.ge County April 1 was just the beg1nnmg. While householders In most other areas were instructed lo return their_ complel - fl:d census forms by mall, re:srdent.s of the so-called Escondido Censu~ Arca were instructed to hold their formt until a census enumerator called to pick !hem · ur in person. The ceMUS takers beglln their rounds on April I, but the going Is slow. "It probably will take up to four weeks ,to cover all the hoµses," said one foot· ,J"Oft enumerator, who added she'd managed ta plek up ol\ly 24 completed fonm WedntAday, and sUJI woul.d have 'OIJ of callbacks to make, in addition to covulng the rest of her territory. Hold on to your forms •nd be patient . say the census officials, wc'li be around eventually. Communitle$ Included in the foot can· vass ·are Laguna Btach, San Clemente, Mission Viejo, El Toro, San Ju.an Capl4· trono. Lagtn~ '"Nlpel, na 11)1b and Lels'ure World.\ •• • ' '" • t At the suggestion of Vice Mayor Joseph O'Sullivan, UJ.e Laguna Beach City Coun- cil agreed \Vednesday night to adopt an ordinance designed to ·give owners of business firms , especially f o o d establishmenls, some positive city back~ ing 10 their effort's to prevent loiterln& on th~ir premises. S~h an o~e. 111d Q'SulUvan. h~s . been uaed'';dfectiftlyr i.. 1lenno1a Beacb. · , '1t 1oes aJonl: with C • u n--c 11 m t " (RJehard) ObMWa•s seven-point pro. gram and with efforts like that of tht Taco Bell in providing a private guard lo discourage loiterers." \\lith adoption of the ordinance ~ hibiting "loitering, standing or sitting on commercial or private property con- trary to the wishes of the owner," pro- prietors ol businesses could post warning · signs lo remind would-be loiterers of the existence of the law," O'Sullivan explained. .This would back .UP their reque1ls for loiterers to leave the property. Upon refusal, they still could summon police and make a citizen's arrest, directly lied lo the loitering violation.· Such citizens' arrests heretDfore have been feasible only Jn a case of actual disturbance. Police are not permitted to enter private property to make arrests for minor violations. "It would give the property owner a little better chance: to utilize his pro- perty as he wishes for the conduct of his business," Mayor Glenn Vedder commented. Councilmen voted unanimously to add the loitering provision to Laguna's laws. It will come up for final action at the next council meeting and-become effective 30 days thereafter. .<Jtoek Market. NEW YORK (AP) -The stock market Jost its small early gain in moderately active trading late this afternoon. (See quotations, Pages 18-19). Advances and declines were about even among Issues traded on the New York Stock Exchange. DENIES MY LAI RAP C•pt. Erneat Medin• Medina Denies Army Charges Of Massacre ATLANTA, Ga. (AP) -Capt. Ernest L. Medina, now ch a r g e d wilh. responsibility ror all Vietnamese civilians allegedly slain during a 1968 raid on MY Lai village, says, .. , will rely on the truth to prove my innocence " The stocky captain, dressed tn civilian clothes,. commented du ring a 11ews con- ference Wednesday after the Army an- nounced its new charge against him. "I am a professional soldier," Medina said. ''I am loyal lo my country and J have nothing to hide. My family and I will continue to rely upon the truth, and I am sure with God's help th.is will prevail." He told newsmen, "I did not order a massacre at My Lai and I did not see a massacre lake place. I hope the American public will withhold its judg- ment until the true (acts are established in a court of law ." An Army spckesman al nearby ·Ft. McPherson, where lhe My Lai in· vestigalion is centered, had announced the .new. eharte against Medina earlier in the ~ay. It declares the. captain was responsible for the alleged murde'r of noncombatant persons allegedly committed by members of his company. Bus Traffic Congestion Stu,dy Asked by Council Laguna Beach city councilmen pon· dered the prospect or adding more buses to Octan Avenue'il traffic congestion and1 decided at their Wednesday meeting. that the city traffic committee should · examine the situation. The C$)Un~ll received a requesl from , Hanway J. Thomas, district s4pervitor for the Greyhoutid Bui Company, an- nouncing ~ con:ipany•g tnttnlion to ltave Its Broadway depot and move in with Conllnental Tr:iUways at 213 Ocean Ave. To Iacllltat.e movunent of buses at lhls location. Thomas asked that thrtt parking metert betwetn coast Highway and the city parking lot on Ocean Avenue 00 removed. Councllman IUch11rd Goldberg Mid ho , was concerned about ,both the conge$tlon .. '. • problem encl the removal of • parking f\'lettrs. · , Countllman Charlton Boyd said he too felt the move wpuld add to Ocean Avenue congtlition ' and added that .he already was.disturbed about letting buses make l~ft turns from Coast Highway onto Ocean when cars are not permitted to do so. "Actually both lcicatlons are Inadequate for handling buse•," said Boyd. "It would be well i! both bualines could be helped to rind new locations with offstreet loa(llng, 1 take a dim view of this." Vice Mayor Joseph O'Sullivan said he too found both locations undeslrablt, "ilod adding to the Ocean Avenue slop IS.. DEPOT, l'llge, ZI • Says Solons Challenging His Ri~hts WASHl NGTON (UPI) -President Nixon says at stake in the struggle o\•er his nominations· to the Supreme Court is the chief execu tive's "Tradi· tional conslitulional" right to put his own· choices on the court. Rebuffed in his allempt to name Judge Clement F. Haynsworth Jr. lo the ct'>Urt and facing a possible second defeat on his nomlnaUo~ of Judg~ G. Harrekt Carswell. the President says this is a right that was "freely 11ecorded to my predecessors of both parties" and should be bis. Nixon's usertions were chaJlenged by sever1I sen1tors. Senate Democratic Leader M I k f ft1ansrield said today that throughoul history "It has been fdr the President to propose and lhe Senate to cHspoic. '' He said that Nixon 's preside n t ia I prerogative "wasn 't jeopardized when Judge Haynsworth was rejected and if won't be jeopardized regardless of the (See CARSWELL, Page ZJ Laguna Actl'ess Sues Diners Club Laguna Beach actress Kate Saxon has sued a Diner's Club affiliate for $3 million in a Los Angeles County Superior Court jtcl.ion which claims thit she was denied the right to develop a "London Square" complex on the converted Queen Mary. Miss Saxon, who is joined by Lagulll artist Maren Kirk in the lawsuit. argues that the Diners Club Queen Mary organization refused to permit the couple to exercise their previously granted op- tlon for 15,000 square feet on the sun deck of the former Cunard liner. That option was granted , the acting school director claims, at the time that the Queen Mary was purchased by the City or Long Beach for conversion into a convention center. Miss Saxon planned to organize constructton ·of the "London Square" with Miss Kirk responsible for art work on th~ concept. The finished project, Miss Saxon stated, would have been an authentic model on a 10 percent scale of a London square with supporting art and facilities geared lo a British theme. Orange Coa~t Weather Had enough sun? The hazy skies return Friday but the temp- eratures wtn-stay warfn. with~65 readings predicted for the coast and up to 7~ inland. INS IDE TODAl' Two ~ears ago it wa1 a pote11t fac tor hi the .selectiOTt of a president but today tilt Amert· can lndepende;it • PartJJ of George lVollace i.s having trouble even gettirig condidate1 for local olflc.,. Pag• 7. C•ll!etlllt t Clift-I"' U• , (l•tttlltf• ''·M Ctmltl ,. CrtH'#tN M C>tttll ... llcH t l&.tl'.left.al ,... f l11tfft•~I U l'l .... 11(• 1•1• Meom.t-II A!\11 Ltneltt1 IJ llW'fft1 11 • • MlltMI ,_., It H•llfltl ..._. W i'.trllltt (tllftty ' J'fl¥l1 "'1tr II '""' ,,.,. Slk'll -tll•lt 1•1t l t'nllle!I H 1'11fft1n H W1"11tt t WPl'lt Wl•PI \I w..,,... .. H4W'I )J•lJ w..-!f H4W"I "' ' ' I L __ -:.:..;_~::===-=====;;::;;;::=====::::::::::::::: ---------- r J DAILY PILOl ~-SC f'ro• Page I J MMITTEE .• to we a.n consider the matter further." o.r....., h1I aclklo, Vtdder cit.cl lta1emenLs made at the lime the CAC • "'"•,II. ~'nc tu dutle1 r lillO lo Ibo pwll plu, wbldi lie uld had be<n romplete<I. , "I thought lt was my prerogative lo 1 diJsolve the committee," he said. "l ·brought It up at this time, rather than .1 on the 15th because I felt this constraint ahould be removed from the ne1t ad- tnlnistrallon. One prominent member or 1 the committee has said lhat it is frac. • turtd. J don't believe all the king's 'hone1 and all I.he kine's men could put Jt blCk together again. lt wu sad lo * It fall apart. The city could 'never have afforded all lhe skills, all ~lh~~le~~y~rat:e~ c:e~1:··~forts ·i. "hold the commllt,. together" say1n&, ''I had many phone call1 sQ!ng that ,Jhe ateef'inl committee w11 not reflecting the wishes of the membuahip. We Jolt loU ol the original 25 alt<r the flrat few meetinp. 'Ibey complalned a small group was trylnc to Utke: over." The mayor said he would look forward Jo havina: c.iUzen committees conUnue to wort on the general plan, but felt they should be smaller committees. Councilman Roy Hohn, who noted that he too had been unaware that the mayor planned to diMolve the CAC, said, "I have had my own thoughts about the effectiveness or lhe CAC In recent months, but I do admire the work lhey have done. I think it'1 amazing that any 25 people in a situation like thl.s iUll can apeak to each other after 20 fnaoths, and most of them ltlll are speaking." Performing for Children Holm suggested that the matter be placed on the April 15 agenda. Councilman Joseph O'Sullivan said he felt citizens 1roup1 would be needed to work with the general plan "including people from the present group to ;ive continuity." However, he noted, a pro- blem with citizen committees is their tendency to be offended if all their advice Is not taken by law·makina; bodles. Bob Yount of Laguna Beach, Pam Downs of Tustin, Diane Lysiak of El Toro and Mike Bielitz of Laguna Beach (from left) rehearse scene fro'1J 0 Hansel and Gretel," which \vill play at the Festival Forum Theater on the Festival or Arts grounds Saturday and Sunday. The children's sho\v will be performed a1 11 a.m. and 1:30 p.m. Saturday and at 2 p.m . and 4 p.m. Sunday. Titkets are priced at $1. "I feel we should survey the CAC at least as a nucleus for the next group,'' O'Sullivan said. Goldberg said be wa1 in agrtement ~·ith Boyd. "The basic quesUon," he said, "is how we feel about a citizens' advisory group. l feel very grateful to this group and in my opinion it should be expanded, not disbanded. lt could include neighborhood representatives and the chainnan should be rotated on a regular basis." "We · all agree the CAC has done a tremendous job," Vedder concluded. "It will be a areat .source of talent for new committees, but l don't feel this group can be brought togelller. I agrte the matte.r lhould be put oo the qenda for the neit meeUna:." Spanish Beams - T oo Expensive; City Nixes Buy 8eller1 that a set of historic, attractive Spanlsh celling beams might be a bargain for Sl.n Clemente'• new communJty club- house fell to the around with a thud Wed- nesday. "They're going to be lhe most expensive toothpicks In the world,". Councilman Dan Chilton told his felloWI after hearing that the elegant braces Jn the nearly de- molished Capistrano Beach Club were no bargain at all. The development nnn which owns the remains or the former home or the Do- heny oil famlly wants a cool $15,000 for the timbers. "That's the end of that idea," came an- other councilman's reply, and soon after. wards the council turned to less frivolous ldeas for a replacement to the city's burned out landmark. The lawmakers refined and embellished" a quesUoMalre whi ch will be sent to organlz.atlons in the city -a query which will seek suggestions for the facilities which should be in the new clubhouse along with indications of how much use it woµld get. The questionnaire was prepared by City Manager Ken Carr, who said the project would be an ln!ormal sampling or com- munity oplnion on the new structure. DAILY PILOT Hntl.,._...._._ ha'"91• ,....., ... c-... 01111.t.HGE COAST PUILISHING COMPANY 111.-11 •• t N, w,,, ''~l~~I 1r,d 'utlllhtr Joe• Iii. Cvr1,y Viti ,,,,_...,.,, ..... Gt,,.<tl Mt" .... 111011111 K11wll l!0110r 1"o"''' A. Mu rpl.iftt Ml .... '"9 EOllor -icht r' P. N1tl lou1Jt Ott ... COU<tlJ lOllW Off1uo Cost• Mr~•: lJO Wul ••Y ~""' Htw~rl lt&cll: 1111 Wetl e1IM1 1Gul"'8r• laflllll •fff.Jt: nt FM"! AV..,Uf HUl!llntl ... IHCll: 1111J l•H~ l ::out""o ... la" (lem9nle: JllJ NorlJt 1:1 C:l't!IN IHI I Curbs for Bikes? Clemente Hears Noise Complaints Noisy mJnlbltea and "dirt" motor· cycles are facing some rocky trails in San Clemente. The City Council Wednesday agreed to submit strong complaints of the noisy cycles on private property to a full study by the police department with the goal in mind of adopting a new ordinance controlling the growing nulance. And the leaders in the fight for bike cantrol (one a councilman) were for the most part cyclists themselves. San Clemente lawyer Norman E. Rudolph launched the flghl qllnat the loud cyclts In a letter followed by a per- sonal •ppell to the councll Wednead1y nlghL Rudolph, admitllnC ht, hlmlell, owned a qiotorg>cle, said the mlnlbll<ee and dirt bike variety of vehicle are the prob- lem. ''About the only trung you can do ~·hen they start up -especially on the week- ends -is turn up your television. The noise just drives you up the wall." he said. "I'm not out or sympathy for the kids, but moat of the riders of the noisy bikes are too young to drive on the streets, so they bounce from lot to lot with their cycles." Rudolph said that there are few places where the fa.st-growlng trail bike sport could be pursued in the clty without problems. "We hear of planJ for a cycling park Jn the Reeves Ranch, but that 1eem1 a long way off. ln the meantime daylight saving time and summer are rapidly ap. proachlng and the problem ii going to become much worse," he said. Councilman Dan Chilton, who said he too owns a motorcicJe, 1aid the biggest problem comet not from the street cycle which must have a lawful muffler, but the noise comes from the stripped-down spectalized dJrt bike with either a "tun- ed" muffler or none at all. lfe and some fellow councilmen said they might favor a formal ordinance en- forcing lbe ban on the bikes. Teachers, Parents Protest School Official's Dismissal The di.sm1ssal of Dr. Stan Walters from his post as director of special services for the San Joaquin Elementary School District has brought a flurry of protests from teacher1 and parents. At a meeting of the Board of Trustees \\'ednesday night, a representative of the executive board of the San Joaquin Teachers A.ssoclaUon read a Jetter from that group asklng for an explanation for Dr. Walters' dismissal and reassign- ment to another position. Similar letters were read by represen- tatives of the learning disability teachers and from two parents who demanded an explanation. Board Chairman Gratian Bldart told a standi ng room only audience In Irv(J1e School that a public statement could not be made without first dlscusalng it with Dr. Walters. "But we wUI make a public statement on this matter at a later date," he said. Dr. Walters, when contacted today 1ald that he too would make a public state- ment but did not care to comment at this time. Walters has been with the district for two years serving on a part time basis for two years before that. His duties as director of special services included 1upervisi111g programs for the educationally and mentally retarded, the educationally handicapped, a program for gifted chUdren, speech therapy and coordln1ting related school nurse programs. The board assured the pL·bllc that these pro grains would be continued. Dr. William Stocks, assistant superintendent, said a replacement would be sought to fill the special services' post. The letter from the teachers' assocla· lion stated that the group fel ( the c:lismlssal lowered their morale. "We wa11t to know why. We feel special services will be ac:lversely affected ." One of the parents protesting the reassignment said "it's an enigma to me why Dr~ Walters, who initiated new programs is suddenly released from this area. We are entJlled to comments on why he was released , comments which are not shrouded ii poll Uc al jargon." From Page l DEPOT PROBLEM •.. ' C\'en less desirable." In answer lo a question from 1tfayor Glenn Vedder, Thomas said the mOve would inv!lve stops for 42 buses dally, ~ GreyhOund buses and fou r Trallways. but the local bus (Laguna Transit) would not necessarily continue lo use the stop becauM it does not need a depot. "Big buses do not. cause traffic con- gestion, they move right on," sald 1t1rs. Regina Reiner of Laguna Transit The local bus now makes "about 40 stops a da.y,1' she~. Goldberg noted thot the city hed gone lo "quite a bit ot expense " creating islands lo facllita.te bus turnaround from Lhc Broadway depot. "Now you ask for three parkina meters," he &Jld, "11 this the ,nnal &elution!" Thomas said It would be soluUon "for now." He 1ald the Broadway depot, bulll . on city property, had be!n In le Med I! a union depat for all bus and taxi servlcts. but Continf!nlal Tl'tllway1 had moved out "becauie at that time we .,"tre in compeUUon, but now the sltua· lion has changed.·· Jt had been necesary to nlove other businesses into the Broadway depat, and these were •fnot comPallbTe" "'ith i11e Greyhound operalion, Thomas said. A member of the audience noted that the Santa Ana bus also stops at the Ocean Avenue depot. A spoktsman from Court9'y Cab Com- pany, which also uses lhe Broadway depot. said he did not think the council had been given a true picture or the bus situation. "Somellme1 they stack up two or three at a Ume. all wllh lhtlr motors running," he 1ald. '""'ere ~'OUld be many hazards on a narrow .street like Ocean Avenut. 1 urge you to come and see wtu1t happens at the prestnt depot every day and every hour and 1lso at night." City attorney Jack Rimel 1dvlsed the council that the city has no cont.rol over ttie location of a bus depot In the ~ zone, but does hav111 control ol use of the 1treet1. • Fro11t Pt1ge J ROBB. • • Grand J ury. Berman said Hicks had the chance after Judge Mast tossed out the Robb charges to pursue the matt.er by what Berman called "mar e normal channels'' -through the appellate court. But the district attorney, Berman told Jud ge McMillan, declined to take such action and that door was now closed to him. He asked J udge r.fcr.tillan to not all ow the prosecution to "persecute a n d harass" Dr. Robb by allowing them to revive the cancelled charges by methods specifically ruled out b y legislative action and Intent. That point was Berman's major argu. ment in the three-hour hearing but most of lhe time taken up by his debate with Deputy District Attorney Michael Capizr.i was devoted to the lawyer's hard hitting attack on the Grand Jury system .. Bennan argued that 60 percent or Orange County residents earn Jess than $10,000 a year and he drew from a candid Judge Judge the admission that it was "extremely unlikely" that any member of the 1970 grand jury was below that annual Income level. Judge Judge also confirmed Berman's argument that grand jury selection was primarily a function of the superior court's 21 judges who compiled a list of 45 n-0mlnees from which the subse· quent 18-member panel is formed. And the judge quickly agreed that many re!idents who might otherwise be ideal candidates for grand jury service were ruled out by the fact that they could not afford to take at leasl two days a week for 52 weeks a year from their jobs. "If it isn 't a malter of finance, then it might be a matter that they would lose their jobs," Judge Judge said. PROFESSl<:NAL INTERlOR DESIGNERS .. Matter Dropped 1 I Council Flares Over Slide Issue Reports In a Los Angeles newspaper detailing a year-old state report which cites the unslable soils of San Clemente•s undeveloped hills drew fire from the city'1 councilmen Wednesday • And the 1n<1erth story in the Los Angele. Time1 abo 1parked sevu al abortive moUons to include soil stability maps In the city's general plan. When the hall-hour discussion ended, councilmen abruptly dropped the entire matter. · The issue grew from lnillal comments from Councilman Thomas O'Keefe, who first lnqufred about soil slabillty under and near the Tri-CJtJea Municipal Water District reservoir. Thew the 1uue switched to the &~bility of dirt under city hall. City Engineer Phil Peter adml tted lhat the state Bureau of Mlnes Report in- dicated a chance that city hall was located on an old slide bat not on an earthquake fault as the councilman sug- gested. That exchange UK!n grew into a motion from O'Keefe that a sO!ls stability map overlay be included in the general plan so that developers and home buyers alike could know, he said , whether their land was: 1table. It won no second. "It seems a little strange that you Cle1nente Official To Meet PUC Over Railroads San Clemente City Manager Ken Carr will fly to San Francisco on election day to meet with staff of the Public Utilities Commission, the League of California Cities and rail road represen· tatives to see what could be done about ugly railroad rights of way. San Cleniente's counciltnen au thorized the April 14 Carr trip Wednesday night after agreeing "'ilh Mayor Wade Lo1\"er that the city should be represented "because, in a way, we are partly responsible for lhe meeting." The talks, which will be on an informal basis, stem from letters from San Clemente and olher California ciLies con- cerned over the ugliness of railroad property. A staff 90Urte with the PUC in San Francisco said today the matt~r is the first time railway beautification has come up for the commission's study. ''We scheduled the metllng just to get the interested parties together to discuss the over·all i s sue , ' • the spokesman sai d, "and if something pro· fitablc comes from it we will refer the issue to our legal stafr to see if it is a proper matter to come before the commission itself." Problems with ugly railroads vary in different cities. In San Clemente, the most pressing beautification issue Is the line of huge boulders which parallels the Santa Fe Railroad tracks on both sides of the roadbed as the route follows the line of the beach. The initial contact from San Clemente to the PUC came in lhe form of a resolution rrom the council asking if anything could be done to upgrade esthetics of the railroad. Carr. in accepting his mission to the bay city, had only one comment : .. I have to make plans to get an absentee ballot, I guess." Op•• MM., Th11rs. & Fri. fyu, bring this up at thl1 point," Councilman Waller Evana told O'Keefe, "I've had that report tor the past year. Wouldn't you say you're just reacting to the Times story? "The (newsp.aper) casts a grave doubt about the future of our city," he added. Councilman Chilton, ~ho said he agreed "philosophically" with some of O'Keefe's ideas, joined In the damnation of the fealure story, which included quotes from Peter. .. I will agree with your words or derogation for the newspaper, They do these types oI stories gleefully and J denounce them for it," he said. O'Kee!e then iook l new tack and moved that the matter be turned over to the city staff for study and a report on ways to improve the city's grading ordinance to include more safeguards against earth slides. But Peter said the ordinance already had such provisions and that the neW city policy is to require a geologist 's affirmation of soil stability on tract maps bef91e they become fina l. "'nle motion's almost a waste,11 Coun· ctlman Stanley Northrup said. "It's ob- vious the engineer doesn't need staff recommendations to himself." The motion lost by a 3-2 VQte. From Page l .C_.\RSWELL . • • outcome of the Cars~·ell nomination." Sen. Robert P. Griffin, assistant Senate Republican Jeader, said he understood the President's feelings on the issue but added: "The Senate is still goin1 to make the judgment. 1 still feel the Senate has co-equal responsibilities in the appointment of Supreme Court justices.'' Sen. Alan Cranston (0.Callf.), com- mented: "I. as a senator, ~·ill not stand quietly by and see a racist appointed to the highest court in our land.'' Nixon's letter to freshman Sen. \\'illiam 8 . Saxbe (R-Ohio), asserted the President's right to fill the vaca ncy through his own choice. It was seen as an effort to sway six Republicans still uncommitted on how they will vote in l>-londay's showdown. Saxbe called it persuasive and said he would vote against the motion to resubmit the nomination to the Senate Judiciary Committee, where almost all agree it then would be permanently buried. He said he would follow Nixon despite Carswell's "weakness on civil tights." . Sen. Joseph J\t ~lontoya (0-N.~1.). one of nine previously uncommitted Democrats, Wednesday said he would vote to recommit the nomMation - and "'Ou ld vote against Carswell if it came lo a vote. The anU-Cars,vell bloc "'as buoyed Wednesday by the decision of Sen. William B. Spong Jr. (0-Va.), to vote for recommittal. "That was the one we had to have." said an aide to a senator who is leading the fight against Carswell. He said Spong"s move would make it easier for three other Democrats from border or Southern states -Ralph \V. Yarborough of Texas. Albe rt E . Gore of Tennessee and Je,1nings Randolph of \Vest Vireinia -to vote for reeommittal. The number or senators publicly or privately committed to vote to resubmit the nomination now to!als 41 and com- mitted to oppose the attempt. 43. A Nylon Shag Thar 's Young in Looks, and Young 1n Price! 9.95 Sljl. YD. IF YOU CAN'T COME IN-CALL 64~275 for an expert carpet consultant \VhO \Viii come to your home with samples without any obligation to you! 22 l5 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA, CALIF. 6~6.0275 646 -0276 ' Laguna · Bea~h EDITIO" - • •' VOL. 63, NO. 77, 3 SECTIONS, 36 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA I . THURSDAY, APRIL 2, 1970 Mayor By BAllBAllA KREIBICR 04 tM O.llr P'lllt Sll'ff The much<ommended, but now con- troversial Citizens' Advisory Committee, appointed in August or 1968 \o ,detennine (.'Ommunity goals for Laguna's general plan, was dissolved -and then rapidly undissolved -by Mayor Glenn Vedder Wedhesday night. Vedder startled his audienet and fellow councilmen by stating suddenly, at the close of a dissertation on the future • or the general plan, "I now terminate the Citizens Advisory Committee, and commend. them for their work." Councilmen gulped, launched into a lengthy discussion on the pros and cons of such a move and finally agreed to defer the matter until April 15, dat'e of the last meeting of the present council. The 2$-member CAC ·was appointed by the mayor, with approval oI the council, and made up or c i t i z e n s nominated by each of the five coun- cilmen. Its principal task wai the completion of a comprehensive community survey and the preparation of a goals natement, guidance ol the planning firm ol Daniel, Mann, Johnson & Mendenhall, engaged by the city to itvise the general plan. Leadi.'llg up lo his termination an· nouncement, ~vedder-sald, "Cititen com· mlttees will be needed f or im- plementation of the general plan, soon to bo completed. Tbere mly bo need of teve.ra1 separate committees tor the v11rious goals. I do not feel the CAC is capable of lhl.s tut. The membership has dwindled. The original CAC can be a source or talent for .the new ar- rangement, but we need a new start, a new name _and a new vigor io put the plan into effect." Rising to a point of order, Councilman Richard Goldberg asked City AUorney Jack J. RJmtl if the mayor's •~lion CAC ln announcing ttrmlnatlon of the CAC was legal. RJmel gave the opinion that if the committee bad been created with the approval of the council, Its dissolution also shoold be with council agreefncnl Councilman. Charlton Boyd said he was "dlslurbed to get into areas or this kind at the mayor's S'tfansong meeting." Vedder, whose te·rtn of office is ei:pirlllg, is not ruMlng for rMlecUon. "I did not know you were going to ' To0y 's l'l•al TEN CENTS Group take this action," said Boyd. 41'J'h1s com- m.Jttee ha1 not finlshed !ta job. It hai been our intent and that of the planning staff to keep the CAC and I have Beard no objection to this. The people deserve a group that Wi>!'ks right neJ:t to them to get the general plan . into efrect. I do not Intend that the mate-up and ~rson~itlts cQUld not be changed, but ifis not fair to make a quick, list-minute move ·of this kind. I ask ycu to retract !Ste COMMITl'EES, Pore •> IXOll s arswe Clemente Joins Oil Ban Law By JOHN VALTERZA 01 lllf 0.1,., l"Jlfl Sl11f San Clemtmle pledged it s interest P.1on· day in a campaign by c-0astal cities to hire a Washlngton. D.C., lobbyist to figh.t offshore oil drilling, but Wed- •nesday night the city council balked at the idea of spending any money. ' 'Phe council ordered "received and filttl'' a letter of appeal from Laguna Beach Mayor Glenn Vedder who asked the city 's financial support to hire a lobbyist to fight for pesa,ge of the Cranston-Murphy anti-drilling bill. San Clemente's council indicated it '"'ould like to w11it for more specific data on the cost and the role of a lobbyist for the anti-drilling measure -information which is being received today in the nation's capital by Newpor~ Beach Mayor Doreen Marshall. Mrs. Marshall left for Washington this morning to meet with several lobbyists to find some tacts about the issue. The San Clemente :•eticence over a potential expenditure of as much as $5,000 as ils share for the lobbyist was spiced with a UUle politicking. Councilman Dan Chilton said the city should refrain from spending mooey for "purposes which are clearly lobbying." "I think we shouJd pass on it and leave the job up to our next Represen· tatlve in Congress. the Honorable John G. Schmitz, our next Congressman." The preliminary plans for the lobbyist project involve the total estimated ex· pe11se along the coast or about $50,000 for the services. The county. the council learned. would possibly pick up $25.000 of the biil. with the other half sp lit up among the five Orange Coast cities. Mayor Wade Lower related a call from Mr!. Marshall earlier in the day. "She is asking for our support. Not only moral support, but help in the form or money . She will be checking on the plan in Washington Thursday," he said. Councilman Thomas O'Keefe agreed with the wail·m1d-see posture of the council and said he would like to see copies of the Cranston-Murphy bill before making a decision. Lagunan Protests Grand Jury Hit Loitering LawOK'd In Abortion Case In Laguna ·. By TOM BARLEY 04 IM D•ll' "1111 1111! Orange County's Grand Jury system came under fire again Wednesday as Dr. Robert Cumm ing Robb's lawyer moved to block District Attorney Cecil Hicks' use of the panel for revived prosecution of the Laguna Beach physi-. clan on·abortion charges. Defense attorney Mo~s Berman of Santa Ana put Superior Court Judge James F. Judge itito the wltness box for testimony designed to prove to Judge Byron K. 1t.1cM111an that the t;rand Jury system in Orange County effectively bars many residents from service. . . Judge J udge is currently pres1d1ng Police Probing 4.tternpted Hape , ' Beach Beatings The attempted rape or a vacalloning college student at Aliso Beach at South Laguna and the bludgeoning of two others was under Investigation by Orange COUnty sheriff's deputies today. Invest igator! said an IS.year-old ~fadison. Wis. girl was dragged from her sleeping bag at about I a.m. Tues· day by a group of five or six young men who had professed to be Marines. The girl was carried down the beach and partially undressed by force when other campers responded to the commo- tion and the attfckers fled . A sheriff's deputy said they had fir~t bludgeoned Ivan Kalin, 22. Madison, Wis., when be tried to intervene. They ,struck Kalin in the mouth with a 2-by-4 inch board and struck Barbara Wetzel, JS, Madison, on the head causing a gash that required 14 stitches. Investigators said the victims, student! from lhe University of Wisconsin, were camping at the South Lagun1 beach. Earlier in the evening lhey had talked to the unidentified attackers around a camp fire. jurist of the Super ior Courrs criminal calendar department. He is, in that capacity, the court's liaison "'ith the grand jury and its ad vise r in man)I legal issues. Benn.an particularly stressed -and often· got Judge Judge's agreement - that it is almost impossible to get wage eamm be.row the ttt,«KI annal hK:orne level to even considi!r Grand Jury service. • f Judge Judgt agreed •1th Berman that many county resit'ents in that Income bracket faced the prospect of losing their jobs because of the time they would have to devote to Grand Jury duty. quite apart from the prohibitive economic factors. Dr. Robb, 67. of 34567 Scenic Drive, Dana Poiflt, was indicted by the Grand Jury on Hicks' request after Judge Paul Mast of the Santa Ana Municipal Court had rejected identical charges ~hat t~ physician had induced abortions 1n women patients. Judge Mast delivered his landmark ruling in full agreement wit' 'Berman's argument that Robb's i:>rosecutl~n under California's Therapeutic Abortion Act "'as unconstitulional. Judge Mast concluded that the act amounted lo discrimination in favor or Roman Catholic thinking and could not possibly be applied in the Robb case. Thal municipal court ruling provided Berman with the second shot of the double·barrelled argument he deli vered before Judge McMillan. He contended that California law on the submission or demurrers-a written forn1 of Jegal protest to an accusatory pleading -clearly establlshes that the matter cannot be taken beyond the municip11I court if a judge at that level has granted the demurrer. It most certainly can not be taken to the Grand Jury, Berman argued, and he asked Judge McMillan to rule that when Robb was cleared by Judge Mast the district attorney had no right to take the same charges before the (Set ROBB, P11e l) · At the suggestion of Vice Mayor Joseph O'Sullivan, the Laguna Beach City Coun- cil agreed Wednesday night to adopt an orrlinance designed to give owners or business firms, especially f 0 0 d establishments, some positive city back· ing in their errorts to pr~ve.nt loiterina on thr.lr premises. ; BllOll· II\ ..... ··-'!' il'9ulll .. n. has. .been ·uSea 'eflectivety ln~Hennosl Beach. ' '1t goea alone with °Coun c tJm1n fRichard) Goldberg's seven.point pro. $!'.ram and with efforts like that Of the Taco Bell ln providing a private guard to discourage loiterers." With adoption or the ordinance pro- hibiting "loitering, standing or sitting on commercial or private property con· trary to the wishes of the owner." pro- prietors of businesses could post warning signs lo remfnd would·be loiterers or the ex istence of the law," O?Sullivan explained. This_ l\-'Ould back up their requests ror loiterers to leave the property. Upon refusal, they still could summon police and make a citizen's arrest, directly lied to the loitering violation. Such citizens' arrests heretofore have Deen feasible only in a case or actual disturbance. Police are not permitted to enter private property to make arrests for minor violations. "It would give the property owner a little better chance to utilize his pro- perly as he wishes for the conduct of his business," Mayor Glenn VeGder commented. Councilmen voted unanimously to add the loitering provision to Laguna's laws. It will come up for final action at the next council meeting and become effective 30 days thereafter. - U"I T.._.... DENIES Mrt:JO R,t;P - C•pt. Ernest MNln• Medina Denies Army Cliarges Of ·Mass hcre ATLANTA , Ga. (AP) -Capt. Ernest L. Medina. now c h a r g e d with responsibility for all Vietnamese civilians allegedly slain during a 1968 rl[lid on My Lal village, says, "I will rely on the truth to prove my Innocence •• The stocky captain, dressed In civilian clothes, commemed during a 11ews con- ference Wednesday after the Army an· nounced its new charge against h!Jn. "I am a professional soldier," Medina said. "1 am loyal to my country and J have nolhin/ to hide. My faml~ and I will continue to rely upon the truth, and I am sure with God's help this will prevail." He told newr;meR, "I did not order a massacre at My Lai and I did not see a massacre take place. J .hope the American public will withhold its judg- ment until the true factg are established in a court of law." , An Artriy spokeaman at nearby Ft. McP:hcrson, where the My Lai in- ~!Ugatlon is centered, had announctd the new charge against Medina earlier in the day. Residents Launch Drive Census B·eg innin g For South Coast; Hold Your Foniis NE\V YORK (AP) -The stock market los t its small early gain in moderately active trading late this afternoon. (See quotations, Pages 18-19). Advances and declines were about even among is.!Jues traded on the New York Stock E1change. ll declares the captain Was responsible for the alleged murder of noncombatant persons allegedly commJtted l)y members of his company, ToClean W oodlandArea Bus Traffic Congestion Study Asked by Council Trash by the truckload has been mov· Ing out of Woodland Drive in Laguna Canyon during the past week. in a major clean -up drive laun ched by residents of the blighted area. councilman Richard Goldberg told fellow council members \Vednesday nlghl. .. , was approa~d by a representative or the Woodland Drive community. who said the people living out there would sincerely like to clean up the area ,'' ·said Goldberg. "lie said lhey werf' upset by many of lhe things happening in town and did not want to be equated with those who have been causi_ng t~· • bit. He 1sked If lht city would betp wllh the clea.n-up and l told him yes." A large city dump truck and driver v•ere dispatched to Woodl11.nd Drive at '1:30 a.m. March 25 to start the clean-up drive, Goldberg said. On that date. tour truckloads of 3ssorl.ed trash were hauled to the dump. The drive conUnucd throush April I. by w.hlch time 11 truekklads had be<!n • I The 1970 census is all over for most taken to the dump. U.S. residents, but in Southern Orange Among the item! hauled away, County April I was just the beginning. Goldberg noted, as he perused 1 report While householders in most oth.er_areas fro m the Public Works Department. were were instructed to retum their complel· old m a t t r e s s e s , .!Jlove:.!J, trunks, rd census ronns by man, residents of refrigerator!, tires, clothing, chairs, the so-called Escondido Census Area davenPorts. tree branches. nower pol!. were imtructed to hold their fo~ms until Laguna Beach city councllmen J>Oll· problem an<f the removal or parking broken glass, boxes, paper and garden a ~nsus enumerator cal1ed to pick them dered the prospect of a~dlng more buir.es meters. timmi s. ur 1n person. , to Ocean Avenue 's traffic congestion and . Tbe ~ajor part of the clean-up now The census takers bega~ their rounds decided at their ~ednesday meeting, Coooolman Charll~n Boyd said he too is complete Goldberg said and the city on Aprll 1, but the going is slow. that the city traffic committee should felt ihe move would add to Ckean Avtnue truck will be made available as needed "It probably will take ~.P to. four ~eeU examine.~ s~~6!'· . _ congesUon _and added that ~~ aye.ad~ r Tor Imai efforts. Bt also noted that .~;·~!eru;or~ ~~· r~T°l"COJVeit • ~ J~· ~~~ ~~eltliii ~~ .,,.u l the Woodlond resfilo!lls ore attempting • .managed to pick up'ilt/ri,il • ,J, ThOmu, 41llrl~. ,.,..., , ell-.~~.,., tl\lhWq •pqt,>· Lo ~O• up, pio,k ,slips Joe abandoned : (orms Wedot.Sday, a114 {&Iii g· ·~eyl\<>'llld , l/"S, , ~Si <!<Jin i"-•ll>'at .. 6't lptemttleil tO.' cm In thc •1re1 '° th'7 m111!1.-.si lots or'calihcl!S to mde,'i~ ~ ~-~· llo'lio rJ dO ~. '• " • ·. ~· \ • ''"'Y by th< police<Clepart>nelll. ' eoveriog-ti'e '"'of II« ~ery. 1 • ' • WI)' Jtepol •lid roqO,,;in wl 1 "Aclu1riy both locall•n. are lnldeq_ute "l feel all this ls a step in the right Hold on 10 your forms tnd be pal.ient, • tlpen ) Trallways at 21! Ocean Ave. f0t hanc@riii bu5es," said Boyd. "It would • dirtttJon," said the councltman, "and ~•Y the census _offlclals, we'll be a nd Td· facDUate movemeqt., of boHs at>'. well:)f botfi buslino could be helpM we may be on the way to solving some cvcntuoUy. ,1 thls k>c:aUOn, Thomas asked tha.t :tllrte to flJ>!f;~ new locatlons wtl>I orfstrett - of our problems." Communities included ln the foot n-1 park\na met era. betwetn ¢oast Highway I011rfing. i1 :ake a dJm view of lhls. •· Other city offici als commen ted that vass are Laguna ~ach, San Clem~. a~ lhe city ~rklag lo\ on Ocean' Avenue, Vlce. .Mayor Jostph-O'Sullivan sakt Jtt the clean-up, In addlllon to Improving ~1ission Viejo, El Toro. San Juan CIJ*· be ~oved. • • r too fo'"-cl bolh loeallons undeslrai,}e, the appearance of the area, would trano, Laguna Niguel,' Laguna l:lillS·lid Councilman Richard .Goldberg Uld he "lod 1ddln1 to the Ocean Avenue stop substantially reduce fire haiards. Leisure World. was concerned about ,boih ~e ~estloa • (h DEPOT,, Pq;eJ) . - Says Solons Cl1allenging His Rights WASHINGTON IUPt> -President Nixon says at stake in the struggle over his nominations to the Supreme Coust is the chief executive'• ''Tradi· tional constitutional" right to put his own choices on the coort. Rebuffed In his attempt to name Judge Clement F. Haynsworth Jr. to the court and facing a possible second defeat on his nomioation of Judge G. ·H1rrokl Carswell. the President says this is a right that was "~ly accorded to my predeceasors or both parties" <and should be his. Nixon'' asser:Uons were challenaed by aeveral aenitor1. Senate Democratic Leader M I t t l\1ansfield said loday that throughout histor;y "It ha! been for the PresJde:nt to propose and the Senate to dispose.'' He said that Nixon's presiden t ia l prerogative "wasn't jeopardized when Judge Haynsworth was rejected and it won't be jeopardized regardless of the !Ste CARSWELL, Pore •> Lag tma Actress Sues Dine1·s Ouh Laguna Beach ·actress Kate Sa1:on-w sued a Diner's Club affiliate hlr )3 million in a Los Ange)e1 County Superior Court action which claims that she was denied the right to develop a "London Square" complex on the converted Queen A-iary, Miss Saxon. who ls joined by Laguna artist Maren Kirk in the lawsuJt, argue1 that the Diners Club Queen Mary organization refused lo permit the couple to exercise their previously granted op. lion for 15,000 square feet on the aun deck of the former Cunard liner. That option was granted. the acting school director claims, at the time that the Queen Mary was purchased by the City of Umg Beach for convenion into a convention center. Miss Saxon planned lo organize construcUon of the "London Square" with Atiss Kirk responsible for art work on the roncept. The finished project. Miss Saxon stated. would have been an authentlc model on a JO percent scale of a London square with supporting art and facUitie1 geared to a BriUsh theme. Orange CcNist Weadler Had enough sun? The: hazy skits relurn Friday 6ut Ile temp- eratures will stay warm, with 15 readings predicted for the coast and up to 74 inland. INSIDE TOD~ l' ' ' fl DAJU PILOT SC Fro• r.,., 1 COMMITTEE •• IO we can consldtr tbe mauer furlher." Dtfeadlna hla 1cOon, Vedder cited 1t1&an•111 rude It "lhe 11me the CAC -ljlpOinlod, aoilllnl1li Ill d u ti 11 ..i-lo the .....,..1 plan, which be said had been completed. J "l tJXlught it \Vas my prerogative to .dissolve the committee," be said. "I ,brouaht It up at this time, rather than • on tht 11th because J felt this constraint • ahould be removed from the ne:r.t ad- • lnlnla:tratlon. One prominent member of 4 the committee has said that it is frac- tured. J don't belleve all the king's horae1 and all the kin&'• men could .. put it back to1ethf:r 1gl1n. It wu sad ' lo set II foll 0parl The city could ·never have afforded all the skills, all .. the talents that the CAC provided." The mayor then detailed his efforts .to "hold the committee totether " aaylna:, • 1'1 had many phone c11l1 saytnc that the ateeriq: commiUee wu not reflect.in& .. U. wlahts of the membership. We lctlt · Jota of the ortJ.lnal 2J after the fu-1t • lew meetlnp. 'Ibey complalned a small IJ'OUP WU tryinc to take OVtt," '1111 ma)'OI' said he would look fof'!'•rd to baviftc clU.n commlttff1 continue to work on the 1encral plan, but ftll they ahouJd be smaller commlttee1. Councilman Roy Holm, wbo noled !hat he too had been unaware that the mayor planned to dlssoJve the CAC, said,-"I have ba.d my own thoughts aOOut tfie ~et!ecUveneu of the CAC In recent ,months, but I do admire the work they have done. I think lt'1 amazing that ·any 15 people in a sltuaUon like thl1 .atilt can tpeak: to each other after 20 ·months, and most of them ltlll are oa:peaklng." Holm suggested that the matter be ,:Placed. on the April 15 agenda. • • Councilman Joseph O'Sullivan said he :.felt citizens lfOUPI would be needed J.o work wHh tht 1en1t1l plan "lncludlng: people from the pruent aroup to &l\'e continuity." However, he noted, a pro- blm with cititen committees is their tendency to be offended if all thtir advice 11 mt !\ken by law-makina bodie1. "I feel we thould 11.1rvey the CAC at least as a nucleus for the next group,'' O'Sullivan said. \. Goldberg sakl he wa1 In agrMmtnt with Boyd. "The ba.slc que1Uon," he said, "la how we feel about a cltllen1' advisory group. I feel vfry grateful to this group and in my opinion it should be expanded, not disbanded. lt eould include neighborhood representaUve1 and the chairman should be rotated on a regular basis." "We · all agree the CAC hu done a tremendoua Job," Vedder concluded. "It will be a areal IOUrct of ta1ant for ne.w commltteu, but I don't feel Ibis group can be brollghl logelher. l qrM the matter should be put on the agenda for the nut meeUn&." ·Spanish Beams Too Expemlv~, ' City Nixes Buy Beliefs that a 11t of hlttoric, tttracuve SpanJlh celling beams mlaht be 1 bar1aln for San Clemente'• new community (!Jub- hquse !ell to the around with a thud Wed- nesday. "They're going to be the most expensive toothpicks in the world ," Councilman Dan Olllton told his fellows afttr hearing that the elegant braces in the nearly de- molished Capistrano Beach Club were no bargain at all. The development firm which owns the remains of the former home of the Do- heny oil famll1 wants a cool $15,000 for the limbers. "That'• the end of that Idea," came an- other counc llm•n's reply, and soon after- wards the council turntd to less frivolous Jdea1 for a replacement to the city's burned out landmark. The lawmakers refined and embelll!hed a quettioMalre which will be sent to organlzatlon1 In the city -1 query \\'hich will seek suge1tions for the fa cilities whlch should be ln the new clubhouse along with Indica tions of how much use it would get. The que1Uonnaire was prepared by City Managu Ken Carr, who said the project would be an ln!ormel 11ampllng or com· munUy opinion on the new atructure. DAILY PILOT "..,"' ··-· Let• .. '"ell ClllfW M"• "''' ... "" ..... ........ ,....., ... c ....... 0 .. AlfOI COAST l"Ul\..ll HINCI COMfOANY lt~ttt N. Wtti fOru"'"'' 11111 l"llllH111tr J•e• l . c.,.1., \"let f0rt1--Gfnfl'•l "'"'""'" lhol'flt1 Ke t•ll l dllO<' Tho"''' A. M•rphi~• MtMlllll E•H11t tt!1h114 P. Nill ltvtk Orwl'lltl c..,,,,1, Ell"' Offlc" Cost• Mctt: no W<JI ,..., 11fMI fit...,..,, ... ell; n 11 Wtll ." .. ' I OU .. .,.,. Ll9llM ... ell! '" ,..,.,,, "'"'" 1'1111'1t111fltll ... di: tlt11 ltHll 111111"'1 ... 1111 tlfrMnlt: JDJ Ntnk II C1ml"9 lttl -~-~ -- Pertonnin9 for Children Bob Yount of Laguna Beach, Pam Downs of Tustin, Diane Lysiak of El Toro and Mike Bielitz of Laguna Beach (from left) rehearse scene from '1Hansel and Gretel," which will play at the Festival Fonun Theater on the Festival of Arts grounds Saturday and Sunday. The children's shO\V \11ill be perfonned a1 11 a.m. and 1:30 p.m. Saturday and at 2 p.m. and 4 p.m. Sunday. Tickets are priced at SI. (;orb s for Bikes~ Clemente Hears Noise Compl.aint s Noisy rnli\.l blku and "dJrt" motor· cyclu are faclna aome rocky tr1ll1 In San Clemente. The CJty COuncll Wedneodoy •lfeed to 1ubmlt 1tron1 complal ntl ol the noisy cycles on private property to a full 1tudy by the police department with the 1oal in mlnd of adopllnl a new ordinance controWna the rrowlnl: nulsan(!e. And the leaders In the tl&ht for b.lke control (one a counctlrrian) were for the moo! port cycllotl lhomMlvet. San Clemente lawyer Norman E. Rlldolph launched Ille flahl qalnol Ille loud cyclK In 1 leller followocl by i pe.- sonol appool lo Ibo council W-odoy '"tii?'l'h,~~dmlttln1 h•, hlmooll, owned ·• _.,, ufcf Ibo mlnlhfh• and dlrt bike vatiely of vehicle are the prob- Jem. "About the only U\ln' you can' do when they start up -e1pec1ally on the week- ends -Is turn up your television. The noise just drives you up the wall," he said. "J'm not out of l)'mpathy for the kids. but most of th~rlder1 of the noisy bikes are too young to drive on the streets, so they bounce from lot to lot with their cycles." Rudolph said that there are Jew place! whfre the fast-growing trail bike sport could be pur1ued in the city without problem11. "We hear of plans for a cyclinl park In the Reeves Ranch, but that seems a long way off. Jn the meantime dayl11ht saving time and summer ll't rapidly ap- pro1chln1 and the problem 11 goln1 to become much worse," he Wd. Councilman Dan Chllton, who said he too owns a mot.Qreycle, aid the blsgest problem comt1 ftot ftOm the street c)'Cle which must have a lawful muffler, but the noise comes from the strlpped-Oown specialized dirt bike with either a "tun- ed" muffler or none at all. He and some fellow councilmen said they mi1ht favor a formal ordinance e~ forcing the ban on the bikes. Teachers, Parents Protest School Official's Dismissal The dismissal of Dr. Stan Waller1 from his post es director of 11pecial services for the San Joaquin Elementary Schoo l District bas broua:ht .a flurry of protests from teachers and parenll. At a meeUng of the Board of Trusleea Wednesday night, a representative or the e1ecutlve board of the San Joaquin Teachers Association rt!&d a letter from that group asking for an explanation for Dr. Walters' dismi ssal and reassign- ment to another position. Similar letters were read by repreaen· tatives of the learning disability teachers and from two parents who demanded an explanaUoft. Board Chairman Oratlan Bldart told a st11ndlng room only audience In Jtvl"e &hool th11t a publlc statement could not be made vdthout flnt discussing it with Dr. Walters. "But we will make a public statement on thi1 matter at a later date." he said. Dr. Walters, when contacted today said th at he loo would make a public atate- ment but did not care to comment al this time. Walters has been wlth the district ror two yeara serving on a part time ba1i1 ror two yeara before that. Hia duties a1 director or special services included 11upervising progrems for the educaUonally and mentally retarded, the educationally handicapped, a program for gifted (!h\ldren, speech therapy and coordinating related school nurse programs. The board assured the pt·blic that these programs would be continued. Dr. William Stocks, assistant superintendent, said a replacement w.:iuld be sought to fill the speclal services' post. The letter from the teecher11' as!locia· lion stated that the group felt the dismissal lowered their morale. "We w1nt to know why. We feel 11peclal servicea will be adversely affected." One of the parents protesting the relljslgnment said "it's an enigma to me why Dr. Walters, who Initiated new programs is suddenly released from this area . \Ve are enUtled to comments on v.·hy he was released, comments which are not shrouded 11 political jargon." f'ro110 Page 1 DEPOT PROBLEM ... even less desirable." tn answer to a quesUon from i1ayor Glenn Vedder, Thomas said the move \\'Ou\d Involve stops for 42 hoses dally, 2B Greyhound buses and four Tr111Jways but the local bus (Laguna Trans.it) ,,,.ould not necessarily continue to use the stop because it doe11 not need a depot . "Big buses do not cause traffic con· ge11~ori, th.ey move righ~ on," ••Id r.1rs. Regina Reiner of La1111na Transit. The Jocal bus now makes "about 40 slop! a day," she said. Goldberg noted lh•t lhe city hod lion has changed." It !lad been ntcesary to mo ve other businesses: into the Broadway depot, and these were "not compaUble'' with the Greyhound operation, Thoma s said. A member of the audience noted that the Santa An1 bus also slop! at the Ocean Avenue depot. ROBB. • • Grand Jury. Berman said Hicks had the chance after Judge Mast tossed out the Robb charges .lo pursue the matter by what Berman called "more normal channels" -through the appellate court. But the district attorney, Berman told J udge Mcl\.fillan, declined to take such action and that door was now closed to him. He asked Judge McMJllan to not allow the prosecution to "persecute a n d harass" Dr. Robb by allowing them to revive the cancelled charges by methods specifically ruled out b y leglslaUve action and intent. · That point was Buman's major argu- ment Jn the three-hour hearing but most or the Ume taken up by his debate with Deputy District Attorney Michael Capi1:li was devoted to the, lawyer's hard hitting attack on the Grand Jury system. Berman argued that 60 percent or Orange County re~ldents earn Jess than $10,000 a year end he drew from a candid Judge J udge the admission that it was "extremely unlikely" that an y member of the 1970 grand jury was below that annual income level. Judge Judge also conflnned Berman's argument that grand jury selection was primarily a function or the 1uperlor court's 21 judges who compiled a list or 45 nominees from which the subse- quent 18-mernber panel is formed. And thft judge quickly agreed that many re!ldents who might otherwise be ideal candidates for .grand jury 1ervice were ruled out by the fact that they could not afford to lake at lea st two days a Week for 52 weeks a year from their Jobs. "l! It im't a matter of finance, then It might be a matter that they would lose their jobs," Judge Juda:e said. Matter Dropped Council Flares ·over Slid~ lseue Reports In a Los Angele1 newspaper det aili ng a year--0ld state report which cites the unstable soils of San Clemente's undeveloped hill s drew fire from the city's council!DJ!n Wednesday. And the in-depth 1tory In the Los Ancele1 Timas alao 1parlt.ed several abortive moUona to Jnclude soil stability maps In the city 's gerieral plan. When the hall-hour discussion ended, councilmen abruptly dropped the entire matter . The luue grew from Jn.IUa l comments from Councilman Thomu O'Keefe, who ~ lint inquired about aoll 1tabillty under and near lhe Tti-Cltles Municipal \Valer District reservoir. , The• the lsllue switched to the stfbility of dirt under city hall. City Engineer Phil Peter admitted that the state B\lreau of Mloe.11 Report in· dicated a chance that city hat.I was located on an old slide but not on an earthquake fault as the councilman sug- gested. That exchange then grew into a motion from O'Kee!e that a soils stability map overlay be Included in the general plan so that developers and home buyert alike could know. he sa id, whether thelr land was stable. It won no 11cond. "It se4!ms a lillle strange that YQU Cle rn ente Official To Meet PVC Over Ruilroads San Clemente City ~tanager Ken Carr will fly to San rrancisco on election day lo meet with staff o! the Public Uti\Jlies Commission, the Lea1111e of California Cities and railroad ~epresen­ tatlves to see what could be done about ugly railroad rights o! way. San Clemente's councilmen authorized the April 14 Carr trip Wednesday night after agreeing with Mayor \Vade Lower that the city should be represented "because, in a way. we are partly responsible for the meeting:• The talks, which will be on an informal basis, stem from letlers from San Clemente and other Callfomla cities con- cerned over the ugliness of railroad property. A staff sou rce with the PUC in San Francisco 11ald today the matter is: the first time railway beauUOcation has come up for the commission'! study. "We scheduled the meeting just to get the interested parties together to dlscuts the over.all issue , ' ' the spo kesman sai d, "and if something pro- fitab le comes from it we "'ill refer the issue to our legal staff to see if it is a proper matter to come before the commission it.self." Problems with ugly railroads vary in different cities. In San Clemente, the most prtssing beautification issue it the line of huge boulders which parallels the Santa Fe Ra ilroad tracks on both sides of the roadbed as the route follows the line of the beach. The initial wntact Crom San Clemente to lhe PUC came in the form ol a re90lutlon from the (!OUncil asking if anything could be done to upgrade e5thellcs of the railroad. Carr. ln accepting his mi9sion to the bay city, had only one commen t: "I have to make p I ans to get an nbsentee ballot, I guess." brlna this up at thl1 point,'' Councllman Walter Evans told O'Kcefe, "I've had that report for the past year. \Vouldn't you say you 're just reactin1 lo the 1'imes story ? "The (ne~·spaper) CaJls a grave doubt about the future o[our clly,1' he added. Councilman Chilton, \\'ho said he agreed "philosophically" with some of O'Kee!e'.s ideas, joined in the damnation o! the feature story, which 'included quotes from Peter. "l v.·ill agree with your word.I of derogation for the newspaper. They do these types of stories gleefuUy ind I denounce them for it," he said. O'Keefe then took a new tack and moved that the matter be turned over to the city staff for study and a repart on way11 to improve the city's grading ordinance to include more sare1uards against earth slides. But Peter said the ordinance already had such provisions and that the new city policy is to require a geolo1ist 's affirmation of soil stability on tract maps before they become final. "The motion's almost a waste." Coun - cilman Stanley Northrup 11ld . ''It'• ob- vi ous the enaineer doesn't need staff recommendations to himself." The motion lost by a 3-Z vote. f'ro1n Page 1 C_~RSWELL. • • outcome of lhe Cars"•ell nomination." Sen. Robert P. Griffin, assistant Senate Republican leader. said he understood the President's feelings an the issue but added: "The Senate 11 atlll goin,e to make the judgmenl. I still feel the Senate has co-equal responsibilities in the appoiotmenl of Supreme Court justices." Sen. Alan Cranston (J>.Calif.), com- mented: •·1, as a senator, will not stand quietly by and see a racist appointed to the highest court in our land." J\ixon·s letter to fre!lhman Sen. \Villiam -8'. Saxbe tR·Ohio), asserted t h e President's fight to fill the vacancy through his own choice. lt was seen as an erfort lo sway six Republican' still uncommilted on how they will vote in Monday's shOwdown. Saxbe called it persuasive and said he would vote against the motion to resubmit the nomination to the Senate Judiciary Committee , where almost all agree it then would be permanently buried. He said he would follow Nixon despite Carswell's "weakness on clvi l rights." Sen. Joseph ri.1 . Montoya (0-N.~1.>, one or nine previously uncommitted Democrats, Wednesday said he \\'Oufd vcite to recommit the nomination - and \1•ould vote againsL Carswell If it ca1ne to a vote. The anti-Carswell bloc was buoyed \Vednesday by the decision of Sen. \Villiam B. Spang Jr. (D-Va.), to vote for recomm!tta!. "That was the one "'e had to have,'' said an aide lo a senator who is leading the fight against Carswell. He said Spong's move "·ould make It easier for three other Democrats from border or Southern states -Ralph W. Yarborough of Texas. Albert E. Gore of Tennessee and Jl!'nnings Randolph of West Virginia -to vote for recommittal. The number or senators publicly or privately committed to vote to r esubmit the nomination now totals 41 and com- mitted lo oppose the attempt, 43. A Ny lon Shag --'fh-a-r's~- -· Young 1n Looks, and Young in Price! 9.95 SQ. YD. IF YOU CAN'T COME IN--<:ALL 646--0275 lor an expert carpet consult11nl \l'ho win come to your home "'Ith 11amples without any obligation lo you! gone to "quite a bit of erpense" crtallng lslafl41 to facilitate bus turnaround from the Broadway depot. "Now you ask for three parkln1 meter1,'' he Nld, "la this the final solullon ?" Thomes 111ld It would be aoluUon "for now ." "e said the Broadway depot, built on city property, had betn Intended 11 11 union depot for all bus and taxi 5ervlcts, but Conllnental Tr11llw11y1 had movtd out "btcause at that time we wert In compeUUon, but now the situ•· A llpokesman from Courtesy Cab Gorn · pany, 'vhich allO u.ws the Broadway depot, said he did not think the council had been given a true picture ot &he bu1 situation. "Sometimes they slack up two or three at a Ume, all "'Ith thtlr motors ruMlng," he 11.aid. 0 1be.re would be many hawd1 on • narrow street like Ocean Avenue. I ur1e )'O\I ,to ct1me and lt't ~1111t haP.peJU at llic present depot every day and every hour and al!IO Rt nl&ht." H.J.GARRETT fURNITLJRE " Cit)' attorney Jeck ft.Imel advised the council thtt the city h11 no c:ontrol over the loc•lion of a bus depot In the C·2 t.Ont, bill does f\avu #control ol uot of the llreett. PROFESSlt:NAL INTERIOR OESllONERS ' Open Meri., Ttrlun. I Frf, IYts. • f " I I 22 15 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA, CAL IF. 646i.Di75 646·0276 \ \ ..--. . . D.t.ll &LOT Stiff BEAUTY POSTERS -Mermaid Dorotha Anderson enjoys two prize- winning posters. Bottom poster chides litterbugs. Top offering iJlu strates a slogan -"My Trash Cans Are Happy Because 1 Feed Them. Are Yours?" Laguna Mayor Launches Ci vic Cleanup Drive An aJl-OUt drive for beauty in Laguna Beach was launched Wednesday with the reading of a proclamation by Ma yor Glenn Vedder urging citizens to spend April as Civic Beauty li-1onth in cleaning up, painting up and sprucing up their homes and businesses -and also picking up Hiter. Following presentation of the official proclamation at the Wednesday Chamber of Commerce breakfast, Mrs. Pa t Peacock, spokesman for tile Mermaids, Women's Division of the Chamber of Commerce, told Chamber members, "We consider you all missionaries in the clean· up campaign to make a more beautiful Laguna ." The breakfast setting in the Hotel La· guna was enlivened by a display of post- ers by elementary school children em- phasizing the anti.Utter drive. ColOrful art work by young participants in the 1.fermaid-sponsored poster contest was combined with such original slogans as. "My Trash Cans Are Happy Because I Fed Them. Are Yours?" To remind residents of their beautifica- tion duties, the Mermaids distributed a chec:k list with a few suggestions: -Sidewalk .•. swept, hosed. -Windows clean. -Trash area ... neat, painted, bidden. -Attractive display windows. · -Fresh exterior paint. -Alley clean .•• back painted. -Landscaping • • • weeds removed. plants watered, trimmed, room for more potted or planted flowers. Laguna Students Seeking Pollution Problem Effort By FRED SCllOEMEHL 01 rtHo Dill~ Ptlol Sltll UP ON THE mLL above town there ls a campus that somewhat resembles a refuse dump. Papers lie strewn along the walkways, and many a planter has its fill of rubbish, all put there by the thousand-odd people who traipse around every day. Down the hill from the campus is a beach , :spread beneath the warm sunshine. Heaven only knows how many people pass over it each day, but their calling cards are left in the form of bottles, cans, papers, and sometimes even torn clothing. 1'.1osl or it remains through shine and storm. THE AIR IS EVERYWHERE ••. " says the play ''Hair.'' And we see it polluted by the poor gasolines and the inefficient engines, and the industry that produces for the demands of the American society. And we wake up to one of our nation·s primary problems: l)OLLUTJON. Laguna Teen Corner of pollution 1n the Laguna area Ls yet to be announced by the group. BlIT THE BIG day is Saturday, Bowman and his colleagues wiU h o I d -of all things -an Organic Car Wash. From 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. in the high school parking lot, all those dirty cars, will be washed with ''Basic H'' which is a bio--Oegradab/e soap, that deteriorates, rather than pollutes. Charge v.'ill be $1 per car. ,. To help solve that problem, a group of Laguna Beach High School students are banding together to respond to this ---dangerto-people'1md·1ratural"l'esources. Other students joining Bowman ln the desire to clean up our world are Jenny Jahraus, Mark Reslg, Tony Fryer, Mike Weizbowski, Brad Jones, Dave Hustwick, Anita Haro, Rick Steffgen, Tracy Stice, and Stuart Rabinowitsh. For more in!ormalion on lhis anti- pollution week, students are asked to a[{end fhTYoutb-roi'C o n s er v a tT o n meeting tonight, 7:30 o'clock in the Activities Office. The club, Youth for Conservation, is directed by high school senior Chris Bowman. Starting April 6, the club's "Anti-Pollution Week" begins. FOR THE ENTIRE WEEK, students are encouraged to ride b i c y c I e s , skateboards or walk to school , as a means of shuMing the automobile and its pollution of the air. On Monday, dubbed "anti-pollution" day, students will join to clean up the high school campus, while listening to antJpollution music over the campus pub- lic address system. Songs on pollution done by protest ~ng writer Pete Seeger and musical numbers from the American tribal-love rock musical, "Halr," will be heard. Tuesday, students will take to the streets during noontime, wlth a bike ride from the high school to the downtown area and back agaln to the school, Jn protest of the automotive pollu· tion. A PAPER DRIVE i.s in store ror Wed nesday to help get rid of all ttlat junk that is piling up around the home. The papers will be ta ken to Orange Coast College to be reprocessed lnlo newsprint -a way of conserving our forests. 1'.fain Beach will get a good going over on Thursday after school by the oonscrvation people. Directly after school 11t 12:30 p.m., students will rally on the beach, then clean It up. Friday, •some lucky student wUJ win the be~t pollution photograph award, Students \\•llh " photogrnphlc flair are 11sked to be in lht! se.nlor patio at lunch wllh the finished print. The prlze for the picture depicting the best u ample Who knows -it might get you behind the anti.pollution drive and get this world CLEAN. Lag'b,nan Found Dead in Car • Near San Juan A 67-year-old La~na Beach man, en route to San Juan Capistrano where he had been working as a voluntur aide~ tn a program for Mexican-American pre-school children, was fOUJf(f dead in his car Tuesday aftem&on. A coroner's· investigator said Rodney A. Kimball, 1585 Temple Hills Drive, may have 5\lffered a heart attack before his car left .the San Diego Freeway near San Juan Caplstrano and plunged into a culvert. An autopsy b being performed tod•y to detennine the cau1e of. death. Kimball , who had lived In Lllguna Beach for eight years, formerly was an ~nglish teacher and school principal in Oregon. Since his retirement he had volunteered his help in the San Juan program to help prepare Spanlsh·spcak~ Ing young5teri1 for schoOI. He ts survived by hls widow, Ruth, "' th' home, and by one son. Alan. No funeral arr:ingcmcnts have yet been made. --, . ""'"1dq, •Piii 2. 1910 L OAJl Y PfLOT' 8' Laguna __ Facl1ons Map Strategy Two Downto1.vn Business Groups Plan l n11esti 1J BARBARA KllEllllCB Of llll wNr Pitttlteff Two -ol Lqunanl, ...... king cl01Ure of "business establbhmenb that 1ttract an undesir1ble element" to Leguna Beach, the other made up or owners of target stores. met Jn the beach community this wee~ to map strategy. On Monday evening, 1 group of about *> bualnesa people and representatives ol dvic organlaliom, decided to lili'e private investigators to check into "federal, state and b:a1 laws that mlJht be used to di>courage the town's hippie e:Jement and the stores that cater to them. An attorney speclalizin, in pubUc Jaw, Rodger Howell ol the Santa Ana finn ol Rutan &: Tucker, volunteered hi.I time to addtts.s the group at the meeUng, whleh had been propo9ed earlier at a Chamber of c.ommerce session. At that time a suit against the city was dbcuss- ed. However on Monday it was agreed that the mere launching of an in· vestigatton under p!'ivate auspices might be sufficienUy effective and probably could eliminate t.be need for an actual court case. A maximum of $8.000 t0< $10.000 would be needed for a full dress campaign. but the investigation could be started with $2,000 to $3,000, a spokesman for the group said. Th'e three-point investigation would seek to determine what federal state and other laws have been a\'ailable, but have not been sulliclenUy enforced; that new ordinances might be enacted; and what evldenCe ex11Ls that would enable closure of the offending businesses under nu.bance laws. For the sake or fund·raliing, the group decided to adopt the name of Laguna Beach Aasoc1at1on. Contributlons to the fund coold be placed in the law flnn's trust account, Howell ~d. Donations to the association may be sent in care of Rodger Howell, Rutan & Tucker, 401 Clvle Center Drive \Vest , Santa Ana, WIOI. On 'I'Ue!day night, 48 members of another LBA, the Laguna Business ~iatlon, voted to finance a private investJ&aUoo ol their own to look into 1 the laws In question, with a view to sceldng equal enforcement for a I J elementa of the community. Th1s group, fonned Ian rt•r· ts made up of owners of youth-oriented businesses In the Art Colony whole motto b "com· munity harmony." "We woold like to establish official commun!cation with the new LBA," said spokesman Ron Kauffman, "perhaps through a joint committee." Among other things, Kauffman said, the I.BA is interested In establishing, with the eooperaUon of senrlee groups, a communJty citlzena:' patrol that could approach )'oung people and persuade Laguna Teens to Share Club With Old Folks • Laguna teenagers have decided to 11hare their new beachCront teen center with the community's senlor citizens. A new Senior Citizens' Club, sponsored by the Revival Teen Club and th' city's Recreation Department wUI hold lb first organizational meeting at 11 a.m. Mon· day, April 6. in the teen center on the boardwalk at the end of OCean Avenue. Interested persons are urged to attend. The teens moved into the fonner Bartfoot Bar quarters in January and are offering lb facUIUes to the Senior Citirens Club. 'Ibese now Include a pool table, dart board, table games and cof fee urns. The teens use the center after school and on weekends. It was decided to open It during the earlier daytime hours for the benefit of the many older persons who like to stroll on the boardwalk. Activities for the Senior Citizens Club will include pot lucks, card parties and field trips, according to city Recreation · Director George Fowler. For further informAtlon, call the Recreation Depart- ment, 494-1124, Ext. 45. their dlsrupUve behlvlor In the in of hannony. ••we feel such a patrol could reach them," Kauf· fman said. , His group also had cliJcuJled the preyaraUon of brochures for youth, similar 10 ~ banded out bl Palm Springs, be said. He added that the YOllnl LqUn• businessmen "strongly support" CI t y Councilman Richard Goldbet1's aeven- point program for resolvlng the trana:lent problem, "especially the par! about hlv· in'! policemen on foot." Kaufhnan said it wu felt that an officer on foot would be the mo1t ef. fective deterrent to misbehavior. The group also Is looking into the possibility of setUng up a "blue zone" for hitchhikers 10 the city could regu!Jt• this activity, Kauffman Wei. Laguna Planner Briggs Resigns Tbe resignation of architect Fred Briggs from the Llguna Beach Plamlng Commission was accepted by the Qty Council Wedneaday night, with ex· presslons of regret and commendltioll for his eight years of service. Mayor GleM Vedder said Brigp, now chairman of the commission, had 11.1b- mitted a letter of ruignaUon JOme months ago but had qreed to mnalft oo the job In an informal basis until the general plan study wu further ad-- vanc<d. PACIFIC COMPOUNDSINIERESI DAILY even on new high rate accounts take your choice ANNUAL YIELD ANNUAL RATE MIN. BALANCE MIN. YEARS Z79°1o l50% $100 000!!.!! _, ONE 6.18\ 6.00°lo 5,000!!.!! TWO 5.92% 5.75% 1,000!!!! ONE 5.39°1o 5.25% 500!!!! %th 5.13°1o 5.00°lo 1!!.!! ONE DAY Interest from date of deposit to date of withdrawal on -passbook accounts ASK HOW YOU CAN RECEIVE, SERVICE CHARGE FREE ' . --r 1. Safe Deposit Box 4. Tickets to Sports 2. Traveler's Checks and Theatre Attractions 3. Collection of Notes (Ticketron) 5. Many other FREE Services SOUTH COAST PLAZA 3333 BRISTOL STREET • COSTA MESA, CAUFORNIA 1 HOURS: 9:30 A.M. TO 9:30 P.M. • SAT.: 10 A.M. TO 8 P.M. • PHONE 540-4Dee ' MAIN Ol'l'ICE: &401 WHITTIER 80111.!YARD, LOS ANG!LES, CALIFORNIA ,( J , • • I I I 4 !Wl Y l'llOT (C._11 .. W .. DlllJ •1t1tr Stiff) j An artificial banana ripening ma· •chine In La Spezia, llaly, exploded in a· ~arehouse Tuesday destroy· Ing $18,000 worth o! bananas. Auth- ' orities said the blast was the re· sult•·O{ a malfunction in the ma· J,chine.'s heater. Olber t~a!l the ba· • nana.s, no one eJse was JDJU!ed. I • ~ oave H1wke1, owner of a Corn· ( v.•all; England nightclub sa_id he , has reinslated strip tease artists at • his club because of a threatened t boycott by women patrons. He said 1 no cOmplaints were rece.ived from 'men and noted, "The women seem to be far more interested." I • • I • : • . I l • • ' Dee Hud.Mon was reunited with her ~fiance, Ann11 Sgt. Mark Han·nan in •Hawaii Tuesday thanks to 15,300 }pop bottle1. Miss Hudson. a sopho- !'mort at Ohio Dominican College, Ccr !tumbw Oliio collected the bottles to 'finance' her trip here for the ~eunio1~ !while he was on leave from Vietnam. • • : Don Kennody o! Cambridge, Ohio, 'recently dug up a 1912 receipt from :P.1t. Carmel Hospital showing he had paid a total o! $4.65 for two 0days of treatment. $4.30 \vent to room and board, 10 cents for medi- cine and a quarter for ether and surgical dressings. Similar servi- ces today at the hospital would cost well over $50. • Two Charleston, lV. Va .• de- tectives employed by Logau, W. Va., officials to obtain evidence • of alleged gambling at a local pool hall, have been themselves arrested on gambling charges · • by Logan County Sheriff's De· put11'1. The pool hall is owned 1 by a Logan policeman. • When radio station KFXD, Nam- pa, Idaho offered on the air a rec- ord album to any girl who showed up at the station in a .bikini, six girls came and got their records. However. about 1,500 men also ar- rived but got no more than a side- long glance. • Two Sedalia. Mo .. youths, Ch•r· l•s Bryent and Frank Ooogs stop- ped to admire a ne\v buUdozer parked near the road. They got aboard and started the machine. It rumbled backward. over Bry- a nt's car and through a fence be- fore stopping. The highway patrol said the 1964 model car is no\v a bout the size of a desk. Shows E:rasperati o1a Judge Recesses ''Strike' Hearing WASl{INGTON IUPI) -A Jederal \ judge said t.od~y the 1lowdown by air traffic controllers mighl not be solved by any ruling on bis part. After a round of arguments In open court, . U.S. District Judie George L. Hart, in apparent e:a:asperation, re«ssed a coltempt of court hearing aga!Jlst I.he leaders of I.he Professional Air Traf. fic Controllers Organization, saying there were some Utlngs "the court cannot (J(' •• He said. "My decision on this matter may not help at all." The government had obtained a court injunction to bait a "sick-out" by PATCO members -described by the gover•ment as a111 illegal strike. Today's hearing was based on contempt charges brought against PATCO's e :x e cut iv e director F. Lee Bailey, and two olher official1 who were accused of encourag- continuation of the strike. . Hart qunshed subpoenas by Bailey for 90 air traUic controllers to appear at the hearing. Hart said it could create a safety hazard if they had to leave their posts to attend. Bailey said the ruling "destroys my case.·· There was "° indicatio111 how many or the subpoened controllers w e r e ing continuation of the strike. Bailey contended that none of the ron- trollers he subpoenaed would have been working while the court was in session . Hart also denied Bailey's request for a·trial by jury. The judge also questioned Bailey, with some exasperatio111, about several other subpoenas Bailey issued i11 an attempt to back up his allegation that the govern· ment had "bugjed PATCO lines." The Federal Aviation Administration sai d there has been 1 small but steady return to work today in some areas of the country, but controllers in the haid-hit East, including New York, show· ed JllO signs of retundng. The FAA said l ,629 controllers were off the job nationwide Wednesday com- pared with 1,728 oo Tuesday and 1,832 on Mooda)'. More Teamsters Walk Off Jobs WASHINGTON (UPI) -W i Id cat Teamster strikes spread in the ·South and to the Far West today, while truck drivers in some other areas faced layoff11 because of a lack or incoming freight caused by lhe walkouts elsewhere. Union members returned to the job Jn Kansas City and.Minneapolis-St. Paul, but new walkouts occurred in Los Angeles, Charlotte, N.C., and Jn Dr:s Moines, Iowa. Additional truckers walked off the job i\1 Ohio. No strike was reported authorized by national union leaders who were meeting in Washington with trucking industry representatives to try to iron out a new contract. The old contract expired at midnight Tuesday and thousands of drivers refused to work after that, pro- claiming "no contract, no work.'' 1 In Chicago. union members remained on the job, but officials said there may be layoffs soon because incoming freig ht has been decreased by strikes in other areas. Turkev Toll 1,080 , CEDIZ (llPI) -The death loll i \Vestern Turkey's earthquake reachc l,080 today and 1,142 persons werL reported seriously injured. A health ministry spokesman denieri reports <>f disease in the area but local officials said 10 children died of influenia in the village ot Kaya, about 10 miles from Ced.iz.. Nonnally a minimum of 10,150 con· trollers are on duty at 21 traffic control centers and in airport control towers. The co11tr<>I centers have bee• hardest hlt by the w a I k o.u t with ao absentee rate of about 25 percent. Ohio's Rliodes To Sue Life Over A rttc"le COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -Go•. James A. Rhodes said today he will bring a libel suit against Life magazine because or a story about him last May he s8.id "was designed to eliminate me from the race for the U.S. Senate." He said the action will be filed in New York State by Attorney Louis Nizer of New York City by April 18 . He would not .say what relief \Vilt be sought -0r discuss any other details or the action, saying Nizer would be available in New York next ~fonday to an swer such questions. Rhodes said the Life story , entitled ''The Governor and The ~lobster,'' brought up the 1970 Senate race and he said information for the story "came from political interests that I won·t reveal at this time." Rhodes, coneluding his second term as governor, is barred by law from seeking re-election. His primary cam· paign opponent for the Republica n Senate nomination is Rep. Robert Tafl Jr. (R· Ohio). The Life story ·questioned Rhodes' use of campaign funds, said he was forced to pay $100,000 in back jncome taxes and penalties, and noted that Rhodes had commuted the first-degree murder conviction or Toledo mobster Thomas "Vonnie" Licavoli to second-degree. Rhodes commuted Licavoli 's sen tence In January 1969, but the onetime mobster -sentenced in 1934 for four gangland- style slayings -lost 1 subsequent rt· quest for parole, Troops Disperse Catliolic Looters BELFAST, Northern Ireland (UPI) - British troops today dispersed 1 group of 100 Roman Calholic teen-agers \\'ho broke into and looted abandoned Protes- tant homes in the Ballymurphy housing district where majQr Catholic-Protestant fighting broke out Wednesday night. The Wednesday night outbreaks were !he 1vorst since widespread religious righting last October and British soldiers fired nausea gas for the first time since then. The Rev. Jan Paisley. a militant Protestant leader, began the project to evacuate 60 Prolestant children from their homes at the development because "they are being attacked and inimidated by Roman Catholics." A3 the children wert being sent by bus to temporary shelters several Protes- tant families aJ90 left U!eir homes. When they did the Catholic teen-agers ~·ent on the rampage with yells of "tbe prods are gone~ The prods are gone!" they carried furniture and food from the '1ouses until troops intervened. \nswer er s to Strike ~ NE\V YORK (UPI) -'fhe Medical ;ociety of New York County warned l ,000 physicians in Manhattan to be prepared to man their own phones because of sporadic wildcat strikes by o p e r a t o r s for telepho1e-answering services. New Storm on East Coast I Sno1v Continu es to Fall Ove r Upper Mid ivest Area California COUI " ,,. llMltllCf ~ •••• l'--+::C:-. .......... J ~ U·,.. IJI\. !" 119 ..... ' 1.11•.m.I1 )•h I II 1.m. htt 1 .• 1.m. Temperature• Hlfll I. .. PrK. ,..lbu~uer~ut .. " "'"""°'''' • " ... ,1.~t• " " ·" B11terlll•!d " .. 8l1m1rck " " ·" '"" • " ... eos1on .. ~ "' 8rowr11w\lll ~ • c~rc,,o • " '" Clnc:.1""•11 ., " .... _ " " " Ots, Moll>tt • " • ..... d • '"' F1lrHW ~ " •• Fort Worl~ .. ~ ,,_ " " Hele ... .. ,. •• H-lullr u " •• IC.IMll Clll' " " ·" &.11 V-1 " " L• MMln " ~ M!ttnl " " MW-.flollt • ,, JO -"'-" .. ·!,vr.,. .. " " ~ JI 't.'f::w Cll'I' .. " tt .. " ,.::.-=:r n n .. .,...,.!~ t 'I .... f'!llWU.,J'I lb itJ\~i7 .. " ~ " .... ~ r:cr1mtfl1: ~ &r.:O hv S.11 l'r1M.!KO .. •• Suttle n ~ ... lPier .... 11 ,, :I WMNfltl.,. .. .~ ''\ " . Maromied oia 'lslatad' This young couple appears str3nded on a safety island in the middle of Chicago's Michigan Ave- nue, during the driving snows \Vhich hit the city Wednesday. It was no April Fool's joke as motor~ isls tried to keep from sliding off slippery roads. At least 12 more inches of spring sno\v is predicted, .surpassing all seasonal records. Roger s.Says U.S. Seeking N eutralitv i11 Cambodia • \VASHlNG'fON <UPI) -Secretary of State William P. Roger s told the Senate Foreign Relations Committee today that the Nixon administration wants to main- tain neutrality In Cambodia and avoid involvement in what could become another Indochina war. After Rogers te stified i.n closed session before the committee. Senate Democratic Leader Mike Mansfield said he \vas "very pleased and impressed" with the testimony. "The allltude of the administration Js a correct one," Man sfield said. '·Our profile in Cambodia is about as Jo...,· as you can get jt." Reds Ur ge Fight By Indochinese Against U.S. Hr added: "All the administration wants -and all I wanl-is maintenance of neutrality and no involvement jn what could become an Indochina war." Sen. George D. Aiken <R·Vl.), another committee member. said after hearin,g Rogers he was satistled that the United States would not supply weapons or other military assistance to Cambodia . Even if the Phnom Penh government \\'ere threatened with a Communist O\'erthrow, "f don't think we would make any move without the administration coming to Congress," Aiken said. Asked if he felt assured by Rogers' lestimony, .i\iansfield replied. '·Yes, I did." Mansfield said the United States should "keep at a distance" and hold to the •·1ow profile" currently maintained by the administration involving Cambodia. He was also asked the possibility or allied troops -perhaps South Koreans, New Zealanders or Australians -moving into Cambodia. Mansfield opposed the idea . "That just would be the shadow hiding PARIS (UPI) - The North Vietnamese t.11~ s~?stance," the J?emocratic lea~er and Viet Cong negotiators at the Paris ~aid. \Ve are all allies and all . allies peace talks called today on the peopleS-should stay ~~t. If one -goes 1n \l.'e or Laos, Cambodia and Vietnam to unite are all tarred. . . . against what they called American •·ag-Sta~e. D~partme~t o(l1e1als Indicat ed gressive designs." unof~1c1al 1n~erest 1n a Fr~nch. proposal The Communists all but ignored the for int~mallonal neg. o I 1 a t 1 on s to Vietnam war in today's 61st session neutralize all ~f Indochina. and refused any comment on the French ~t the \Vh1te Hoose, a s.pokesman government's proposal for a general con· ~aid l~e French. proposal ls "still unclear ference on IndochMa to neutralize the to us a.nd said. ~he. State Department mtire area. \\'as see.king. clar1f1cal1on. . Saigon Ambassador Pham Dang Lam He said Nixon learned of t~e suggestion said Hanoi's actions in intervening :n from news reports and declined .. to co~- both Laos and Cambodia had only made ment .w~cn a reporter . ask~. Doesn t more difricult the search for peace in the \lfhite l.fouse cons1d~r 11. odd that Vietnam and that Communist declara-a cl?Se a!\r would not hrst inform the lions of "S-Olidarily'' with the people-; President . of Indochina \•:ere p r o p a g a n d a Cabl e Car Crash Boosts Sex Life -And Cit y Sued SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -Witnesses told a jury of eight women aJlld four men \Vednesday that a proper and relatively chaste young lady radically changed after a cable car accident Into a wo1nan whose sex ual need was unsatisfied by 100 men. Courts previously have awarded damages because impotence or frigidity followeri an accident, but the case of Gloria Sykes, 29. is believed the first in v.·hich damages v.·ere sought for In- creased sexual appetite. On the first trial day, Lawrence Leonard, a high school teacher , and Mrs. Leslie Armbrust. a lelephone com. pany employe, testified about A1iss Sykes before and after. teonard. who v.'ent steady with Miss Sykes a decade ago, and Jl.1rs. Ambrust. a longtime friend, both said the plaintif( was an upright, religious gir l before the accident on a Sunday in 1964. l\iiss Sykes v.·as aboard a cable car which plunged three blocks down a sleep hill v.ilen it lost its grip on the cabla. Her physical injuries were ftOt serious, but she later sueri the city of San Francisco for $500,000 because or mental injuries. ~lrs. Arrnburst said her friend kept a calendar book after the accident with details of affairs with 100 men. "l asked her how she met so many, and she said, It 's easy. you go up and talk \Vilh somebody;• Mrs. Armbrust said. Miss Sykes never really enjoyed th~ .sex. Jl,frs. Arn1brust said. "All she really wanted was warnith and affection." "This is unbelievable.''. said Deputy City Attorney William Taylor. He blamed the pain on a kidney problem and the sexual appetite 011 birth control pills he asserted may lead to "promiscuity and unnatural se:a: drives." statements to cover up intervention. He demanded the Commun isl s withdraw the 67,000 North Vietnamese reported in Laos and the 60.000 reported in Cambodia . Once that is done. he !laid, "meaningful discussions" can star:. Goldberg Reject s 'Pusl1 ' Hanoi's Nugyen Minh Vy said the United Slates had a hand in what he called the •·extreme rightist coup'' in Cambodia that deposed Prince Norodom Siha nouk as chief or state and once agai n accused the United States of ex- tending the war to all o( Indochina . Viet Cong Ambassador Nguyen Vdn Tien said the Cambodian government of Premier Lon Nol, a lieutenant general. "'as acting as agents or the United States and had killed "hundreds" of Cambodians in repressing pro-Sihanouk demonstrati00r1s. Both the Viet Cong and Hanoi represen- taLi\•es brushed aside questions on the French Indochina proposal as they en· tered the session. 'A rse1ial' Proves No Big Tliing PITTSBURGH IUPl) -Mrs. Phyllis ~tartinl called the sheriff's of fice \Vednesday, said she was moving to a new home and asked if it would be safe to move some ammunition stored in crates in her basement. Sheriff's deputies who arrived at her house to take a look immediately evacusted houses in a two-square-bloc¥. area. • The deputies removed whet they called two "live" 100.pound bombs, a Viet Cong grenade and a 60mm projecUle and sent them to the U.S. Army Corps of Engi· neers at nearby lrwln, Pa . A 1poke.sman for the engineers :iiaid !hey were duds and were hannless. They nld the two "live" 100.pound bomb1 actually were .50-caliber artJllery ahells • Mrs. Martini said h~r husband. Carl, brought the ammunition to their hoine in suburban Ct1stle S h a n n o n by automobile from his Anny base in Georgia 11 year a rte r his return rrom Vlelna.m. • As NY Gover11orCa11didate LIBERTY. N.Y. (AP) -Former Supreme Courl Justice Arthur J . Goldberg has won selection by the state Democratic Committee as candidate for governor of New York -but says he prefers to get into the party primary June 23 the hard wily. 'The committee's end ors t men t aut001atically entitled the one ti m e secretary of labor and U.N. ambassador to a place on the primary ballot. Two hours after he had been chosen at a stormy convention Wednesday, Goldberg said he would waive this ad- vantage and instead circulate nominating pet ition~ amon~ the voters. Getting on the primary ballpt by peti- tion requires 10,000 signatures, including ;it least so from each of 47 of Ne\v York's 62 counties . Goldberg said this was his reply to assertions by some 4lf the 345 delegates to the state C-Ommittee ronclave that he wtf'~ "a creature ()f the bosses." Goldberg had received the committee's selection, vanquishing four contenders. oo the first ballot with 63.2 percent of the vote. • The convention also designated State Sen. Basil Paterson ()f Harlem to be the first Negro to seek the nomination for lieutenant goveroor of New York. Some ct the state committee members applauded Goldbe rg's decision to wah·e selection, vie\idng it as a show of strenglh on his part. Others protested , queslioning the legality and the propriely or the move . A general hubbub followed led by one delegate who &hoot«!: "lte'g making :i mockery out of our convention." Co!dberg sought to ptai::ate t h c disgruntlrd, booing assemblage b ':I returning to the rostru1n to explain that he never inlc.ndcd to decline the deslgna· tion. but simply to ~·alve lls acl vanlaJ:le -&0 that all ;ubernatorlal ,a!1didate1 ' • UPI T,...._.. SURPR ISES DE LEGATES NY Candidete Goldberg \\'Ould be 4lo an ~ual fool lng. Goldberg gave a hearty endorsement to Paterson's candidacy flying "it is about time'' the party advahced a Negro cRntlidate for hij:h office in state govern· menl. Polio Cn1sad er S;i lk Now Out of Jlos pital SAN DIEGO fUPl l -Pollo vaccine flC\'elopcr Dr. Jonas Salk has been rclea,s.. f'd rro1n University Hospital after three days of observation fo r a possible heart ailment, officials revcalod loday. • San Clen1ente Capistrano VOL ol, NO. 77, l SECTIONS, l 6 PAGES EOITIQN ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THl' . . ~ Y, APRIL 2, 1970 \ Mayor , DissolV-es, 'Undi·ssolves' CAC By BARBARA KREIBICH ot ,._ DIUJ 'UM S..H The much-commended, but now con- troversial Citizens' Advisory Committee, appolnteO in August or 1968 to determine community goals for Laguna's geoeral plan, was dissolved -and then rapld.1y undissolved -by Mayor GleM Vedde.r . Wednesday nlghL Vedder startled his audience and fellow councilmen by stating suddenly,...at-lhe close of a dissertation on the future • . of the general plan, "I now terminate lhe Citlzens Advisory Committee, and commend them for their work." Councilmen gulped, launched into a lengthy discussion on the pros and cons of such a move and finally agreed to defer the matter until April 15, date or the last meeting of the present council. The 2S-member CAC was appointed by the mayor, with approval ol the. council. and made up of c i t I 1 e n s • nominated by each of the five coun- cilmen. _ Its principal task wu the completion of a comprehensive communl\y survey and the Pff:paration of a 1oals statement, ·guidance ol the plannlng firm of Danlet. Mann, Johnson ' Mendenhall, engaged by the city to revise the general plan. Leadin1 up. to. his terminaUon an· nQJmCement, Vedder aald, "Citizen com- mi\teea will ...-be-needed f o"r lm· plementaUon ol the general plan, soon lo be "°"'pitted.' There may be DMd of 1ev.er•I aeparai.e committees for the various goail. I do not feel Ille CAC Ls capable of this lask. The member8hip has dwindled. _The orJginat CAC can be a source of &a.lent for the new ar- rangement, but we need a new start, a new name ahd a new vigor to put Ille plan Into dfecl." Rising to a point of order, Councilman Richard Goldberg oked City Attorney Ja<:k J. Rimel U Ille )''' action In announclnr t•rmlnatklf! ol' Ille CAC was legal. Rimel gave the opinion that if the committee had been created with the approval of the council, its dis!:olution also should be with eouncil agreement. Councilman Charlton Boyd said he was "disturbed to get Into llUI of this kind at the mayor'a swansmg meeting." Vedder, whose term Of office la expirin1, .. la not ruMing for re.elect.Ion. .. 111 dJd not know JOU were &OiD& to N.Y. Steeb TEN CENTS Group · take this action," said Boyd. "ntis com- mittee bas not finished ita: job. Jt bu been our intent and that of the: planning staff to keep the CAC and I h~ve heard no objection to this. The people deserve a group that works right next to them to get the general plan into effect. I do not intend that the make-up and personalities could not be changed, but it is not fair to make a quick, last-minute move or this kind: I ask you to retract (See COMMITrEES, Pase I) IXOll I s or .........arswe Clemente Lagutian Protests Joins Oil Grand Jury Hit Ban Law In Abortion Case By JOHN VALTERZA OI 11111 Dlolfr PIAtt Steff San Clemente pled1ed its interest Mon· day in a campaign by coastal cltles to hire a Washington, D.C., -lobbyist to fight offshore oil drilling, but Wed- nesday night the city c<JUDCil balked at the idea of spending any money, 'Ibe councp ordered "received and filed" a letter of appeal from LajUna Beach Afayor Glenn Vedder who asked the city'• fmauciaJ. 1Upport· .to bire a lobbyist lo fight for passage or the CrllJl8loD.Miirpby anlkiriW., ~ill. San Clemente's council indicated it wou ld Jike to wait for more specific data on the cost and the role d a lobbyist for the anti-drilling measure -information which is be~g received t.00.ay in the nation's capital by Newport Beach Mayor Doreen Marshall. Mrs. Marshall left for Washington this morning to meet with severaJ lobbyisl.5 to find some facts about the issue. The San Clemente reticence over a potential expenditure of as much as $5.000 as ita share for the lobbyist was spiced with a little politickJng. Councilm'an Dan Chilton said the city should refrain from spending money for "purposes which are clearly lobbying." "I think we should pass on it and leave the job up to our next Represen- tative in Congress, the Honorable John G. Schmitz, our next Congregsman." The preliminary plans Jor the lobbyist project involve the total estimated ex- pense along the coast of about $50,000 for the se rvices. The county, the council learned, would poss.ibly pick up $25,000 of the bill, with the other half split up among the five Orange Coast cities. Mayor Wade Lower related a call from Mrs. Marshall earlier in the day. "She is asking for our supporl Not flnly moral support, but help in the fqrm of money. She will be checking on the . plan in Washington Thursday ."' he said . Councilman Thomas O'Keefe agreed lvith the wait-@d-see posture of the C'OUncil and said he. would like to see copies of the Cranston-Murphy bill before making a decision. By TO)t BARLEY Of tllt DellY PIAtt Shit Orange County's Grand Jury system came under fire again Wednesday as Dr. Robert Cumming Robb's laW)'er moved to block District Attorney Cecil Hicks' use of tbe panel for revived prosecuUon of the Laguna Beach physi· cian on abortion charges. Defense attorney Moses Berman 0£ Santa Ana put Superior Coutt Judge Jama .F. J~ into th• witness box lo< testimony deslgned lo prov• lo Judge ~JC, McMillan Iba! Ille grnl Jury systeoi .1n· Orange COUnty effectively bars many raldents from service. _ . J udge Judge is currently presiding Police Probing Atte1npted Rape, Beach Beatings The attempted rape of a vacationing college 1tudent. ·at Aliso Beach at South Laguna and the bludgeoning of two others was under inve.stigation by Orange County sherift's depoti,s today. Investigators said a:n 18-year-old Madison, Wis. girl was dragged from her sleeping bag at about 1 a.m. TuM- day by a group of rive or six young mr.n who had professed to be Marines. The girl was carried down the beach and partially undressed by force when other campers responded to the commo- tion and the attackers fled. A sberifi'1 deputy said they had first bludgeoned Jvln Kalin, 22, Madison, Wis., when he tried to intervene. They struck Kalin m the mouth with a 2-by-4 inch board and stnK:t Barbara Wetzel, 18. Mllllson, On the head causing 1 gash that required 11 stitches. Investigators aaid the victims, stt1dents tro01 the University of. Wiaconsin, were campinl at the South Laguna beach. Earlier In the evening they had talked to the unidentified attackers around a camp fire. .,, Residents Launch Drive . ' ToClean WoodlandArea Trash by the truckload has been mov- ing out of Woodland Drive Jn Laguna Canyon during the past week. in a major clean-up drive launched by residents of the blighted area, councilman Richard Goldberg told fellow council members \Vednesday night. "I was approached by a represent11tive of the \Voodland Drive community, who said the people Jiving out there would sincerely like to clean up the area,'' said Goldberg. "He said they were upset by many <if the things happening in town and did not want to be equated with those who have been causing trou- ble. He asked if the city would help with the clean-up and I told him yes." A large city d\imp truck and driver "·ere dispatched to Woodland Drive at 7:30 a.m. Much 2S to atart the ctean·up drive, Goldberg said. On that date, four truckloads ol assorted trash were hauled to the dump. 'nre dr1ve conUnutd through Aprl.I J, by which time If lruck5GJds had betn ,. taken to Ul6 dump. Amon1 the items haulid away, Goldberg noted, as he perused a report from the Public Works Department, were old m a l t r e s 1 e s , stoves, trunk$, refrigerators, tires, oc:lothing. chairs, davenport.a, tree branches, flower pota, broken glass, bOtes, paper and garden limmlngs. The major part of the clean-up now Is complete, Goldberg said, and the city truck will be mtde available as needed for final efforts. He also noted that the Woodland residenta are attempUng to line up pint sllps for abandoned cars in the area ao they may be towed away b7 Ille police deparlment. "I 1 .. 1 all !hit ;, a step In Ille rilht dlrectlori," said the counciJITian, "and w& may be on the way to solvlitg some or our problems." Other city Clficlals commented that the clean.up, tn addiUon to improving . the 1ppeat1nce: or the area, would iUbstanllally reduce fire hazards. jurist of the Superior Court'i criminal calendar department. He is, in that capacity, the coort's liaison with the grand jury and its adviser in many legal issues. Berman particularly stressed -and often got Judge Judge's agreement - that it is almost impossible to get wage earners below the $10,000 annual income level to even ~ Gr~ .fury service. Jud!!Wlldee agreo.I -kmaO tlaat many county resiclents in that income bracket fac"ed the prospect or toeing their jobs because of the time they would have to devote to Grand Jury duty, quite apart from the prohibitive economic factors. Dr. Robb, (tt, of 34567 Sceilic Drive, Dana Point, was indicted by the Grand Jury on Hicks' request after Judge P&ul l.1ast of the Santa Ana Municipal Court had rejected identical charges that the physician had induced abortions in women patients. Judge Mast delivered his landmark rulini in full agreement witi Berman's argument that Robb's prosecution under California's Therapeutic AborUon Act was unconstitutional. Judge Mast concluded that the act amounted to discrimination in favor of Roman Catholic thinking and could not possibly be applied in the Robb case. Thal municipal court ruling provided Berman with the second shot of the double-barrelled argument he delivered before Judge McMillan. He contended that California law on the submission of demurrers-a written form of legal protest to an accusatory pleading -clearly establishes that the matter cannot be taken beyond the municipal court if a judge at that level has granted the demurrer. It most certainly can not be taken to the Grand Jury , Berman argued, and he asked Judge McMiilan to rule that when Robb was cleared by Judge Mast the district attorney had no right to take the same charges before the (Ser ROBB, P11e I) Census Beginning For South Coast; Hold Your Forms The 1970 census is all over for most U.S. residents, but in Southern Orange County April 1 was just the beginning. While householders In most other areaa were instructed to return thelr complet· ed. ctnsus fonns by mail, residents or the so-called Escondido Censut Area were instructed to hold their rorms \Inti! ! census enumerator called to pick them up in person. The census takers began their rounds on April I, but the going Is slow. "II probably will take up to four weeks to cover all the boUse.s," said one foot- sore enumerator, >A'ho added she'd managed lo pl<k up only 24 completed forms WedMSd1y, and stlll would have lots of callbacks to make, in addiUon to covertng the rest ol her territory. Hold'On to your forrna and be patient. say the census olflclals, we'll be l!OWld eventually. Ciiliunun!Uel Included In the foot con. vase are Lecuna Beach. San Clemente, ~flssion Viejo, El Toro, San Juan Capis- trano , Laguna NJgutl, Laguna Hills and Leisure World. ' Loiterin_g LawOK'd l1i Laguna At the suggestion of Vice Mayor Joseph O'Sullivan. the Laguna Beach City Coun- cil agreed Wednesday night to adopt an ordinance designed to give owners of business !inns, especially f o o d establishments, some positive city back- ing in their efforts to prevent loitering on thr.ir premises. Such an ordinance, said O'Sull1van, has been. ~ e!lect1v.iv ID ~ BQCft. 1-r ~ .,... "' • ' "It '°'" lll0n1""wllh Co• ll e 11 m • n (Richard) Goldber1's eeven-polnt pro- gram and with efforls lJte that of the Taco BeU in providfnt 1 private guard to discourage loiterers." With adoption of the ordinance pro- hibiting "loitering, standing or sitting on commercial or private property con- trary to the wishes of the owner.'' pro- prietors of businesses could post warning signs to remind would-be loiterers of the existence of the Jaw.'' O'Sullivan explained. This would back up their requeals for loiterers lo leave the property. Upon refusal, they still coold summon police and make a citizen's arrest, directly lied to the loitering violation. " Such citizens' arrests heretofore have been feasible only in a ease o( actual disturbance. Police are not pennitted to enter private property to make arrests for minor violations. "Jt would give the property owner a little better chance to utilize hJs pro- perty as he wishes for the conduct of hi s business," Mayor Glenn Vedder commented. Councilmen voted unanimously to add the Joltering provision to Laguna's laws. It will come up for final action at the next council meeting and become effective 30 days thereafter. Stock llforket• NEW YORK (AP) -The stock market Jost iL!l small early gain Jn moderately active trading late thls afternoon. (See quotatjons , Pages 18-19). Advlnces and declines were about even among iasues traded on the New York Stock Exchang~. u .. ,, ...... DENIES MY LAI RAP C•pt. Ernot Medin• Medina Denies Ar1n y Charges Of Massacr e ATLANTA, Ga. CAP) -Capt. Ernest L. 1'-fedina, now c h a r g e d with respon sibility for all Vietnamese civilians • allegedly slain .during a 1968 raid on My Lal village, says, "I will rely on the truth to prove my hmocence " The stocky captain, dressed In civilian clothes, commented during a news con- ference Wednesday after the Army an- nounced its new charge against him . "I am a professional soldier," Medina said. "I am loyal to my country and I have nothing to hide. My farnUy and I will continue to rely upon the truth, aJll(f I am sure with God's help this will prevail." He told newsmeR, "l did not order a massacre at My Lai and I did not see a massacre take place. t hope the American public will withhold its judg- ment until the true facts are established in a court of law." An Anny spokesman at nearby Ft. McPherson, where the My Lai In· vestigatlon Is centered, had aMOUnced the .iew charge a1alnst Medb1a earlier in the· day. Jt declares the captain was responsible for the alleged murder of noncombatant persona allegedly committed by members of his company. Bus Traffic Congestion Study Asked by· Council I Laguna Beach city councilmen pon- dered the prospect of adding more busu to Ocean Avenue's traffic coo1estion and decided. at their Wednesday meeting, that the city traffic committee should eta.mine the situation. The council received 1 request from Hanway J. Thomas, district supervisor ftf' the Greyhound Bua Company, an-- nouncing the company's lntenUon to leave it.s Broadway depot and move ln With Continental TraiJways at 21S Octan Ave. To facllitate movement of buH:S at this Jocatlon, Thomas isked that three parking meten between Coast HJghway and the dty parking lot on Ocean Avenue be removed. Councilman Richard Goldberg said he was concerned about both the conieslioa ·. I .,. problem and the removal of parking meters. Councilman Charlton ~d said he too felt the move would add to Ocean Avenue congestion and added that he alretdy was disturbed about letUng buses make left turna from Coa.st Highway onto Octan when ca.rs are not permitted to do so. . "Actu"ally both loG:aUons are ,lnadequate for hanclllrtg bu1es," "id Boyd. ·~t would I>( well , ll both bus lines could be helped to flod new locallons with offslret:t loadins: I take a dim view or this." Vic< Mayor Joseph O'SuUivan said ho too found both locations Wldesir1ble, "and adding to the Ocean Avenue 1top \Set DEPOT, Pan I) Says S~lons Challenging His Ri!!hts ' WASHrNGTON (UPI) -President Nizon says at stake In the struggle · over his nominatiohs to the Supreme Court is the chief execuUve's ''Tradi· tional constitutional" right to put his own choices on the court. Rebuffed in his atterhpt to name Judge Clement F. Haynsworth Jr. to the ·court and facing a ~ble 5eCOnd defeat on his nomination of Judge G. Harrold Carswell. the Pre-sident says this is a right that was "(reely accorded to my predecessor• of both parties" and sjloulcl be his. Nixon's assertions were challenged by several senators. Senate Democratic Leader M t k e Mansfield 1afd today that throughout history "It has been for the Presidalt to pr'opose and the Senate to dispose." He said that Nixon's pres id ential prerogative "wasn 't jeopardized when Judge Haymworth was rejected and it :won't be Jeopardized regardless of tht ll>« CARSWELL, Pa1e ll • Laguna Actress Sues Diner s .Club Laguna Beach actress Kate Saxon has sued a Diner 's Club affiliate for '3 million in a Los Angeles County Superior Court action which claims that she wa!I denied the right to devel op a "London Square" complex on the converted Queen Mary. Miss Saxon, who is joined by Laguna artist Maren Kirk in the lawsuit, argues that the Dlners Club Queen Mary organization refused to permlt the couple to exercise their previously granted op- tion for 15,000 square feet on the sun deck of the fonner Cunard liner. That option was granted. the acting school director claims, at the time that the Queen Mary was purchased by the Cjty of Long Beach for conversion into a convention center. Miss Saxon planned lo organize construction of the "London Square" with Miss Kirk responsible for art work on the concept. The finished project, Miss Saxon slated, would have been an authentic model on a JO percent sca le of a London square with supporting art and facilities geared to a British theme. Orange Coast Weather Had enough sun? The hazy skies return Friday but the temp- eratures will stay warm, with SS readings predicted for the coast and up to 74 inland. INSWE TODAY Two "ears ago it was a pott+llt factor h1 tlh!l selection of a prerident but toda11 the 'Ameri· con 11ldependent Part11 of George WoUace b having trouble euen getting condlda.tei /fJT local ofJiCes. Paoe 7. • • "l:· .. • • u , .. It .. " .. ~, ..... 11 N.ntM! Ntwt ... 0r ..... ~ .. ., ..... ,.,.._ 11 s,.m ' ..... S'9dl JMl'llttt t•lt TMt<ri.... 11 -11 , WMl'lltf f '#11111• ..... ll "-w ., ,..... 1>-1i "" -.. • '. f • I ~ I DAILY l'ILQT SC ,, Fro• Page l COMMl'ITEE •• IO we can eoulder the matter further." Delendln& his acllon, Vedder cited at.att.meots made at the time the CAC wu· appolated, outUntns Ill d u t I e s nlaU.. lo the 1<n<r1l pion, which he said had been completed. 1 "I thought U was my prerogative to 11 dissolve the committee," he said. "I brought It up at this lime, rather than 1• on the 15th because I felt this e<instraint • lhould be removed from the next ad- ;mlnlstration, One prominent member of the committee has said that lt is frac- tured. J don't belie\•e all the king's , horses and all the king's men could put it back toeelher again. It wu sad • to aee it lall apart. The clty could '" never have afforded all the skills, all , the talents that the CAC provided." , The mayor then de.tailed his efforts ·,to uhold the committee together'' saying, ","I had niany phone calls saying that . ; the steering committee was not reflecting the wishes of the membership. We lost lots of the original 25 after the fir1t few meeUngs. They complained a small aroup was trying to tak' over." Tbe mayor said he would look forward to having cltlz.en committees continue to work on the general plan, but felt they should be smaller committees. Councilman Roy Holm, who noted that Jle too had been unawa re that the mayor planned to dissolv' the CAC, said, "l have had my own thoughts about the effecUveness of the CAC in recent months, but 1 do admire the work they 1 have done. I think it's amazing that . any 2S people tn a situation Jllte this ·Still can 1peak to each other after 20 · month!, and most of them still are I-speaking." • Holm suggested that the matter be placed on the April 15 agenda. Councilman Joseph O'Sullivan said he ~felt cltiu.ns groups would be needed . to work with the general plan "including ~people from the present group to give continuity.'' However, he noted, a pro- blem with citizen committees is their fende.ncy to be offenaed if all their advice Ls not taken by law-making bodies. "I feel we should survey the CAC at least as a nucleus for the next group," O'Sullivan said. Goldberg said he was in agreement with &yd. "'Mle basic question," he said, "ls how we feel about a citizens' .advisory group. I feel very grateful to this group and in my opi nion it should be expanded, not disbanded. It could include neighborhood representatives and the chairman should be rotated on a regular basis." "We .all agree the CAC bas done a treinendous job," Vedder concluded. •·Il will be a great sourct of talent for new committees, but I don't reel this group can be brought together. I agree lbe matter should be put on the qenda ror the..nei:t meeting." Spanish Beams ,T qo Exp~nsive; City Nixes Buy Beliefs that a set of historic, attractive Span11h celling beams might be a bargain for San Clemente's new community club- house fell to the ground with a thud Wed- nesday. "They're gOing to be the most expensive toothpicks in the world," Councilman Dan Chilton to1d his fellows after hearing that the elegant brace'5 in the nearly de- molished Capistrano Beach Club were oo bargain at al l. The development firm "'hich owns the remains of the former home of the [)o.. heny oil family want.s a cool $15,000 for the timbers. "That's the end of that idea," came an- other councilman's reply, and .soon after- wards the council turned to less frivolous Ideas for a replacement to the city's burned out landmark. The lawmakers refined and embellished a questlonnaltt which will be sent to organJzaUons in the city -a query whic h will seek suggeslions for the facilllles which should be in the new clubhouse along with lndlcatlons of how much use it would get . The questionnaire was prepared by City Manager Ken Carr, who !laid the project would be an Informal sampling or com· munlty opinion on the new structure. DAILY PILOT Newp.n le•ll L.,..._ ... c.11 c ........ . H..iri""" hocll ,., .. ,,,. v.11.,. s ... cr.-i.t. Oll:AHGf. co.ut "UILISHING (OMl" ...... Y ll:oberl N. W11I '•u!ffnt '"" '"111!11\er J•c~ II:. C11rle11 Vk t l"re;:oent ....., ~·••I Mlft ... 'lllom1i K,,.;1 111111• Thomt1 A. M11rpllift1 MtMllllf EOl!ot lic~1r4 '· Nell s.ov111 Or•noo c-•r Edl'°" OfflcH Cltll1 Mt11: JJO wot 111, St•""' HtwM!I .. acll: '211 Wttl 1111111 l tt11l11W ... ~ ''"'~' 222 '''"' ....... ... l'!llltliitttft lffctl: 11tlJ thecfl •~1 ..... ,.. J.~ C""""l9c JIU Hotlfl II (°"'!"' llH I ---·-------... -··-_,,_. Performing for Children Bob Yount of Laguna Beach, Pam Downs of Tustin, Diane Lysiak of El Toro and Mike Bielitz of Laguna Beaclt (from left) rehearse scene from "Hansel and Gretel," which will play at the Festival Forum Th!!aler on the Festival of Arts grounds Saturday and Sunday. The children's sho'v will be performed a1 11 a.m. and 1:30 p.m. Saturday and at 2 p.m. and 4 p.m. Sunday. Tickets are priced at Sl. Curbs for Bikes? Clemente Hears Noise Complaints Noisy minibikes and "dirt" motor· cycles are facing some rocky trails in San Clemente. The City Council Wednesday .,reed ·to submit strong complaints or the noilly cyc1es on private property to a full 1tudy by the pollce department with the goal in · mind ol adopUng a new ordinance controlling the growing nuisance. And the leaden in the fight ror bike control (one a councilman) were for tbe most' part cycll!ts themselves. San Clemente lawyer Norman E. Rudolph launched th< fight qoinll the loud cycles in a letter followed by • per- soo al appeal lo the councll Wedneodoy ni ht. ~ l!!dotph, admlttlng he, hlmlelf, owned 11 motorcycle, said the m1nlblke1 and dirt bike variety of vehicle are the prob- lem . "About the only thing you can do when they start up -especlally on the week- ends -is turn up your television. The noise just drives you up the wall,'' he said. "I'm not out or sympathy for the kids, but most of the riders of the noisy bikes are too young to drive on the streets, so lhey bounce from lot to Jot with their cycles." Rudolph said that ther'e ate few places where the fast-growing trail bike sport could be pursued in the city without problems. "We hear of plans for a cycling park in the Reeves Ranch, but that seems a long way off. In the meantime daylight saving time and summer are rapidly ap-- proaching and the problem is going to become much worse," he sald. Councilman Dall Chilton, who said he too owns a motorcycle, said the biggest problem comes not from the street cycle which mwt have a lawruJ muffler, but the noise comes from the rtripped-down 1peclalized dirt bike with either a "tun· ed" muffler or none at all. He and some fellow councilmen said they might favor a formal ordinance en- forcing the ban on the bikes. Teachers, Pa1·ents Protest School Official's Dismissal The dismissal of Or. Stan Walters from his post as director of special services for the San Joaquin Elementary School DJ.strict has broug ht a flurry of protests from teacher• and parents. At a meeting of the Board of Trustees \Vednesday night, a representative of the e1ecutive board of the San Joaquin Teachers Association read a letter from that group asking for an explanation for Dr. \\'alters' dismissal and reassign- ment to another Position. Slmilar letters were read by represen· tatlves of lhe learning disability teachers and from two par,nts who demanded an explanation. Board Chairman Gratian Bldut told a standlng room only audience in lrvlne School that a public statem,nt could not be rr.ade without first discussing it 'il'ith Dr. Walters. "But we will make a public statement on this matter at a later date," he said. Dr. Walters. when tonlacted today said that he too would make a public 1t.ate- men1 but did not care to comment at lhis lime. , \Vallers has been with the district for h~·o years serving on a part time basis for two years before that. Hi! dutltS as director of special services included supervising programs for the educationally and mentally retarded, the educationally handicapped, a program for gifted children, 11peech therapy and coordinailng related school nurse programs. The board assured the pl'blic that the~ programs would be continued. Dr. Wllllam Stocks, assistant· superintendent, said a replacement would be sought to fill the special services' post. The Jetter from the teicbers' assocla· Uon slated that the group felt the dismissal hlwered their morale. "Wt! want to know 1A'hy, We feel special services will be adversely affected." One of the parents protesting the reassignment said "it's an enigma to me why Dr. Waltert, who inltiated new programs ia suddenly released from this area. We are entitled to comments on why he was released, commenta which are not shrouded la pollUcaJ jargon.'' l'ro11t Page 1 DEPOT PROBLEM ... • el'en less desirable," In answer to a question from l\.1ayor Glenn Vedder, l'bomas said the move would involve stops for 4J buses dally, 28 Greyhound buses and four Trallways, bul the local bus (Laguna Transit) would not necessarily continue to use the stop because it does not need a depot. "Big buses do not cause traffic con- gestion, they move right on." said ~frl. Regina.Reiner of Laguna Transit . The local bus now makes "about 40 stops a day,'' a.he sakt. Goldberg nottd that the city had lion has changed.'' It had been necesary to n1ove· othe r businesses into the Broadway depot, and these lverc "not compaUble'' with the Greyhound operation, Thomas said. A member of the audience noted th1t the Santa Ana bus also atops •t the Octan Avenue depot. f'ro1n l'age 1 ROBB. • • Grand jury. Berman sai d Hicks had the chance after Judge Mast tossed out the Robb charges to pursue the matter bv what Berman called "more normal ch3nnels·• -through the appell;.te co urt. • But the district attorney, Berman told Judge McMillan, declined to take such action and that door was now closed to him. He asked Judge McMillan to not allow the proscculioo to "persecute a n d harass" Dr. Robb by allowing them to revive the cancelled charges by methods specifically ruled out b y legislatlve action and Intent. That point was Berman's major argu- m,nt In · the three-hour hearing but most of the Urne taken up by bis debate with Deputy District Attorney Michael CapJul was devoted to the lawyer 's hard hitting attack on the Grand Jury sy1tem. Bennan argued that 80 percent of Orange County residents earn less than $10,000 a year and he drew from a candid Judge Judge the admlsslon that it was "extremely unlikely" that any member of the 1970 grand jury 1vas below that annual income level. Judge Judge also confinned Bennan's argument that grand Jury selection w.as primarily a function of the superior court's 21 judges who compiled a list of 45 nominees from which the subse· quent IS.member panel is formed . And the judge quickly agreed that many residents who might otherwise be ideal candidates for grand jury service were ruled out by the fact that thty could not afford to take at least two days a week for 52 weeks a year from their jobs. "If It Isn't a matter of finance, then it might be a matter that they would lose their jobs.'' Judge Judge said. \ lflatter Dropp~d Council Flares Over Slide Issue Reports in a Los Angeles newspaper detailing a year-old state report which cites the unstable soils of San Clemente's undeveloped hills drew file frqm lhe city's councilmen Wednesday. And the in-depth .story In the Los Angeles Times also sparked several abortive motions to Include soil stability maps in the city's general plan. When the half-hour discussion ended, councilmen abruptly dropped the entire matter. The issue grew from initial comments from Councilman Thomas O'Keefe, who first inquired about soil stability under and near the Tri-Cities Municipal \Yater District reservoir. The11. the issue .switched to the stability of dirt under city hall. City Engineer Phll Peter admitted that the state Bureau of Mines Report in- dicated a chance that city hall wa.s located on an old slide but not on an earthquake fau lt as the councilman sug- gested. Thal exchange then gre\V into a motion from O'Keefe that a solls slabilfty map overlay be included in the general plan so that developers and home buyers alike cou ld know. he said, whether their land was stable. It won no second. ··1t seems a li!Ue strange that you Cle1nente Official To Meet PUC Ove r Railroads San Clemen'te City Manager Ken Carr will fly to San Francisco on election day tO meet with staff of the Public Uli!ilies Commission, the League of California Cities and railroad represen· talives to see what could be done about ugly ra il road rights of 1vay. San Clemente's councllmen authorized the April 14 Carr trip \Yednesday night after agreeing with Mayor Wade Lower that the city should be represented "because. In a way, we are partly responsible for the meeting." . The talks , "'hich will be on an Informal basis. stem from letters from San Clemente and other California cities con- cerned over the ugliness of railroad property. A staff 30urce with the PUC in San Francisco said today the matier is the first time railway beautification has come up for the commission's study. ''We scheduled the meeting just to gel the interested parties together to discuss the over-all iss ue . '• the spokesman said, "and if something _pro· filable comes from it we will reler the issue to our legal staff to see if it is a proper matter to come before the commission itself." Problems with ugly railroads vary in different cities. ln San Clemente, the most pressing beautification issue is the line of huge boulders which parallels the Santa Fe Railroad trac ks on both sides or the roadbed as the route follows the line of the beach. The lnitlal contact from San Clemente to the PUC came In the fonn of a resolution from the council asking if anything could be done to upgracle esthetics of the railroad. Carr, in accepting his mission to the bay city, had only one comment : ··1 have to make plans to get an absentee ballot, I guess." bring this up at this point.," Councilman Walter Evans told O'Keefe, ''I've had that report for U1e past year. Wouldn 't you. say you're just reacting to the Times story? "The (newspaper) cam a grave doubt about the future of our city,'.' he added. Councilman Chilton, who said he agreed "philosophically" with some of O'Keefe's ideas, joined In the damnation of the feature story, which included quotes from Peter . "I will agree with your words or derogation for the newspaper. They do these types of stories gleefully and I denounce them for it," he said. O'Keefe then took a new tack and moved that the matter be turned over to the city staff for study and a report on ways to improve the city's gradinc ordinance to include more safeguards against earth slides. B:.1t Peter said the ordinance alrcadv had such provisions and that ·the ne\v city policy i~ to require a geolo11:i1t's alfirmation ot soil stability on tracl msp!I before they bcCilme final. "The motion's almost a waste," Coun- cilman Stanley Northrup said. ''lt'1 ob- vious the engineer doesn't need staff recommendations to himself." The motio11 lost by a 3-2 vote. ' f'ro1n l'age l C.t\.RSWELL . • • outcome of the Carswell nomi nation." Sen. Robert P. Griffin, assistant Senate Repu blican leader, said he understood the President's feelings oo the issue but added : "The Senate is still golnl( to make the judgment. I still feel the Senate has co-equa l responsibilities in the appointment ot Supreme Court justices.'' Sen. Alan Cranston 10.Calif.), corn· mented : "I, as a senator, will not stand qu ietly by and see a racist appointed to the highest court in our land." Ni1on's letter to freshman Sen. \Yilliam B. Saxbe (R-Ohio), asserted th e President's righ t to fill the vacancy through his own choice. It was seen as an effort to sway six Republicans still uncommitted on how they will vote in Monday's showdown. Spxbe called it persuasive and said he would vote against the motion to resubmit the nomination to the Senate Judiciary Committee, where almost all agree it then would be permanently buried. He said he would follow Nixon despite Carswell 's "weakness on civil rights." Sen. Joseph M. Montoya (0.N .M. ), one of nine previously uncommitled Democrats, Wednesda y said he would vote to reco mmit the nomination - and would vote against Carswell if it came to a vote. The anti-Carswell bloc was buoyed \\'ednesday by the decision of Sen. William B. Spong Jr. (0-Va.), to vote. for recommittal. "That was the one we had to have,'' said an aide to a senator who Is leading the fight against Carswell. He said Spong's move would make it easier for three other Democrats from border or Southern states -Ralph \Y. Yarborough of Teias. Albert E. Gore of Tennessee and Jennings Randolph or West Virginia -to vote for l'ecommittal. The number of senators publicly or privately committed to vote to resubmit the nomination now totals otl and com- mitted to oppose the attempt, 43. A Nylon Shag That 's Young 111 Look s, and Young in Price! 9.95 SQ. YD. IF YOU CAN'T COME IN-CALL 646--0275 . . :!!·~~1·1' UTVI; for an expert carpet consultant \\'hO \Viii come to • ' , your home "'ith samples \\'lthout any obligation to )'OU! gone to "quite a bit of expm!t" creaUn& islands to (&cUitate bus turnaround from the Broadway depot. "Now you ai k for three parking meters," he said, "Js thiJ the final sohJUon!" 1'1omas said It would be solution "for now." He said the Broadway depot, bullt on city property, had bet!n Intended 11 a union depot ror all bus Md taxi services, but Continental Trallways had n>0ved oot "'because at that time wt were in comJ)f'tltlon, but now the 1itua· A spokesman from Courtecy Cab Com- pany, which also uses the !roadway depot. said he did not think the council had been &Jven a true picture of the bu.a 1itl.llt1on. "Sometlmel they 1tack up two or three at a Ume, all with the1r motot1 ruMing," he 68.ld. '"There would be many hazards on a narrow alreet Uke Ocean Avenue. I urge you to come and set ~'hat happtna at the prutnt depot every day and evuy hour and allo al night." H.J.GARRtfT fURNITLJRE • City attorney Jack Rimel advised the council tt111t the city ha s no control over the location of a bus depot ln the C2 zone, but docs havt control of USC or the :itrects . PROFESSIC NAL INTERIOR DESIGNERS Op•" Mon., Thurs. & Fri. (111. ---------------- 2215 HARBOR llVO. COSTA MESA, CALIF, 646°0275 646-0276 I :AIP PARTY FAILS ..• (Continued From Pq:t 1) "ill Mptnd upon • ' t h e 1vaUabillty of a candidate and, or coune, financing." The survey turned up only one st.ate -~Tennessee - where Democrals and Republicans express concern about the growth of the AIP. Officials there say the party now has orgai:iizatlons In 70 of Tennessee's 9~ counties, and "solid commitments from several big contributors lhat they will back us In elections this year." Although no one has an- nounced, the party Is expected to offer candidates for governor, at least two con- gressional seats, possjbly a U.S. Sen11te seat and many of the state's 132 seats in the legislalure. But t!ven in Tennessee, pro- spects or success are not bright. Elsewhere they are dimmer. ln North Carolina, Ohio, California, Michigan and Tex· as, the .party is i;pllt by fac- tional fighting. \Valter Green. a Burlington aUorney, and ' Reid Stubbs, a Charlotte restaurant operator. are in the midst or a court battle for control or the party In No~ Carolina. NOT HELP The conflict will not help the chances or the party's two announced candidates for congress, Gene Leggett of New Bern and L y nwood Bullock of Greensboro. The Ohio party also has two announced candidates - both of them for governor and both battling for control or the party. The candidates are Robert W. Annable of Parma Heights. a Cleveland suburb. and Edwin G. Lawton or Columbus. Both are at· tempting to have the other's name stricken from the ballot In California. the fight is between Williain F. Shearer of San Diego, a consultant In political mana gement. and Keith Greene of San Fran· clsco, a used car salesman. Greene Is recognized a s· chairman by the secretary of state, and is Wal\ace'is man. Both have filed as can· did ates for governor, with the STARS Sydney Om1rr i1 Oft• of tk1 wo1ld'1 'Jll lt 11trolo91r1. Hit column it on1 of th1 DAILY PILOTS gr11t f11tur1t. winner expected to lake a firm grasp ol the party reins. Shearer has running mates for liealenant eovernor, secretary of state and U.S. Senate. BAD DISSENSION The American party of Texas not only has had dis· seMlon in its own rank.a. but difficulties with Wallace head· quarters as well. Bard Logan of San Antonio resigned as state chairman 1n January, declaring that ''\VaJ. lace wanted to control the state of Texas and resistcli any eff6rt to organize siate parties on the precinct fid -·----------county level." Jn some states, such as Pennsylvania and Iowa. the AIP may attempt to run write· in candidates. Party activity e\sev.•here is varied. Some examples: Harvey H. Wilder of Hag. erslo\1'll, tl:d., has announced for the Senate seat now held by Joseph D. Tydings. a Democrat. and party officials say canc:tidates for governor and other state offices will be announced. But La11•rence B. Scalley, executive secretary and gene· ral counsel for the Maryland party, mentioned one problem lvhich aoparently has plaguPd the AIP everywhere. "We got 30 cents in the mail the other day," he said. OFFER CANDIDATES AIP officials in Indiana say they will offer candidates for seeretarv of state, state trca· surer aiid stat A auditor. as \\·ell as local offires. Jn Mis· souri. candidates have an· nou11("f'd for the U.S. Senate. the U.S. House and one le,e:;s· Jali\'e se<'ll, but chairman El· mer Smith says thi~ is iu~t to kero the party on the ballot. There are other candidates and oott?ntial candidates seal· tered throughout the state.l. and in a few instances-Idaho and L1tah appear to be two of the best examples -ef- fort.~ have bern made to or- ganize from the grass foots up. ld:il1t1 has AIP chairmen in 34 of the state's 44 coonties 11nd plans an assemblv in June to endorse canrlidat~. Utah has organizatloJl<i. in 16 of ~ countie~. State Chair- man Clyde B. Freeman savo; the pnrty hones to have a full slate of candidates this yc;ir, declaring. "\\'e realize we're small now. but we've come a long way." 2nd Annual Festival Set by UCR The second annual Spring Festival, h o s t e d by UC Riverside. will run simultan- eously with a campus -wide open house. beginning at IO a.m., May 9. · Southern Callforrila hi g b schools are eligible to enter the day.Jong festival whjcb will give st udents, individually or in groups, a chance to participate in a number of professionally j u d g e d com· petiUve activities. Festival events include an art happening, a band com- petition, a creative wtiting workshop, a one·act play con- test, a foreign language field day. journalism competition, a modern dance workshop and a painting exhibit. Deadline for entries I s Wednesday, April I and a $1 fee is required for each high school student entered in the festival activities. All festival participants will be guests of the university for lunch. The general public is invited to observe the festival ac· tivities and also participate in the campus open house which "·ill include tours, special displays, lectures, concerts and personar discussions with students, faculty and ad· mtnistrators. r~urther information about the fest iva l or the open house is available at the Office of Relations with Schools, 1111 Library South, UC Riverside or telephone 787=-4531. All That Glitters Is Not Gould Or •.• Tracy Is Hard to Capp And Ink Deep FEARLESS FOSDICK, Plaincloth· esman, is Li'L "Abner's ideal -as he should be. In fact, he should be the "ideal" of every red-blooded American boy as he unfolds one daring exploit after another in his battle for la\v and order. DICK TRACY, Plainclothes Detec- tive, is the \\'orld's number one po- liceman. Relentless in his pursuit of wrong-doers of every~kind, Tracy and his companions use fantastical· Jy modern criminal catching devi- ces to triumph over adversaries. 1's Any Fool Kin See • • • These are the pictures and descriptions o( two world.famed detectives, each Invented by a different cartoonist. Fearless Fosdick Is the brainchild o! Al Capp and he often appears in Capp's Li'l Abner comic strip. Dick Tracy, of cours'e, is one of the world's oldest and best known detectives. fie was in· -vented by Chester Gould in the early 1930s. Obviously, one fictitious charac- ter has nothing to do \Vith the other-at least that's what both artists often proclaim. O . .\ILY PIL'oT comics page readers can decide for themselves. Both Capp and Gould contribute to the_ page. It's all in fun, as Li'I Abner often says: Any fool kin see that .... • • • We Sees DAILY PILOT (Won"t You Join US~) Thursdiy, Aprll 2. 1970 DAILY ,JLOJ J7 ' Parole Sysien1 (;hanges Proposed SACRAMENTO !UPI) -An .Assembly committee had recommended a reorganlia· Lion of the California parole system, including freeing a convict. after he had served his minimum term. ''The parqle board is one Of the last 1 bastions Of Un. cheeked and1 arbitrary power in America," declared the Assembly Select Co1nmlttee on the Administration or Justice in a\ report. The commi~tee, chaired by Assemblyman W. Craig Biddle (R·Riverside), was appointed to recommend improvements In the speed and elnclency or the way ju.st.ice b ad· ministered In Calllomll. In i. re.lated development, Asserpblyman Alan Sleroty (0. Beverly Hills), announced he would inlroduce a bill next week authoriz.lna a prlsonu's release for up tOt three days so he could visit his wile and family. "One of the aspects or prison life most dtimaging to a persoo'I chance of future rehabilitation is that Impact it has on his sex life," Sieroty said. The committee said that prisoner:i ahould be released on parole after ~lng their minimum terms unless there ts 1 spectnc reuon for further detenUon. If a convict ls denied parole, he should be told wby In writing, the com· mittee. said. Currently, an Ima e Is released at the dl.9ere on of · the parole board after . rvlng a minimum sentence. The board isn't required t tell ' him why he has been rned down 'for parole. The current minimum term prescribed by law for first degree murder Is seven ars. Olbers include forcib le pe, three years; armed ro ry, five years; first de Ire e burclary. five years, and se-cond degree burglary, one year. • The committee charged that for year1 the legislature has "neglected Its resj>Onclblllty of provkUng .guldellnes for boards charged with parole decision maklng." It saJd the consequence has been • ' a parole decisSon making ap- paratus: that has no clear and rationally justified basis.'' Biddle said he would in· troduce leglsl ation lm· plementlng m a j o r recom.- mendaUo!lll of the committee, Including r e d u c i n g the membenbip On the 1 d u t t .authotJty and tbe women'a board ol lenm • lllld pon>le fron\ Jdne"{o five and mtrl1nl the two ~1. The bJU also would make the dlrector ol -the chatnn!ln of the ldult authcirl- ty. Pr!Jon programa would be required to prove to the leglslrue µtat t h e )' co.n- tr!bute to lnm1te rthllblllta- ·tion fare they would be fihanced. ., Sieroty, not a member of the select committee., Aid that ahort v\l)la ..,,.,, lr0m tile penlleUary would beljl rehlbllllale ~ Jump ioto Spring • • • With these Savings!!! ·1¢ ale! BUY ONE at the Regular Price GET ANOTHER for ONLY 1 cent amfl.llO' un .. llClllllDll Rlll!I DIT1111·11G ' LIWN 111 DICllllRllll FOOD GROW A GREEN CARPET. ORTHQ.GRO Lawn and Dichondra Food provides high nutritional food for blade grass and dichondra lawns. Ifs recommended by turf experts. won't burn -A'hen u.\Cd as directed. Just apply the fast-dissolving pcllets·through an ORTHO WH IRLYBIRD or Two Wheel Lawn Spreader and water. THE NOW FAMOUS W HIRLY BIRD The easy to use hand spreader for Ortho Lawn Food or any other pelletized plant food .. For lawns or ground covers. Special $4 98 REG.. $5.95 FINEST GRADE I 00°.t. PURE DICHONDRA SEED We 'll show you how to plant. REG. $2.95 $149 FULL POUND DECORATIVE BARK For more beautiful garden areas. Long-lasting -easy care. LARGE J CU. FT. IACO $1 33 DWARF DAHLI AS Ea1iait of all to 9row, R••I husky pl•nfs. Special 49C DOL Buy ISOTOX· AND GET A FREE Sprayer! Buy 1 quart of ORTHO ISOTOX. th• Muhi..f>urPOh •Yt-temlc garden Insecticide and get an ORTHO Spray.ell• <4 lree. ISOTOX kills almost all aucklng and chewing !fl-. sects. The ORTHO SPRAY·ETTE <4 al11che1 to yoor garden hose, applies up to lour gallont of •pray with one fllllng. BO TH FOR '5 " REIO. 79c Special UC HS I AS Plan now to have exotic color all summer. Fine qt. size plants. 39cEA. REDWOOD ROUNDS Design your own garden path. All sizes I oc ,N~~ HANGI NG BASKETS All Redwood. Sturdy ConstructiOn. Perf•cf for our Special Fuchsi11. Special Ret.$169 2.95 FROM THE FLORIST ••• Freshly cut bee utifu I long stemmed red roses. (Very Effective) Special DOZ. HOUR.S t MON. thru FRI. t to 6 SUN. ID •.111. te I p.11'1. SATU~DAY t '""·to l :JD P·""· SPECIAL l'•ICES 6000 TH~OUGH SUNDAY, APRIL I 2640 Harbor Blvd. COSTA MESA CALL . 546-5525 $198 I \ I f Ja DAllV PILOT 5C ThursdlJ, APfU 2, 1970 Worth Complete-New York Stock List NY Stock Exchange for Sale 1-oVER __ ·_rn_E_c_o_u_N_TER_ "== ....... !:;! '"M~·r. ~~-:~';"'~ .... , ... :~~, ...... " :--~-:.:;;:;::: NASO Lllll"fl hr Wtdnosd<iy, •·rll 1, 1'7t ••w.vo• .. ,,. ,_,.. ·-1~,.;•.1 , jl'l =" "'\I:: 1: • ::.. ,::: ,:: = :: ...,. Ntw •"11 II. llll.Cl'oe,._ IN!dN i;J" •ii. J -1\11 • 1.)0 2t •1t 7f + '-._.,.,.~ ................... It .... ..._.,..,,..,.._ tNM WD. I '!~ /'rl.. t't' l"• AO N ~ ~M .... _~In .. Ji: ~ ~.,, ~ •·•'-< BJ SYLVIA PORTER 1n Wall Street, there ts no shares very soon. ,,..._ ..... ..,..,... • ._.......,.._.,IMll'lll..,. ~."r.,1 · p~·t.1. l:rt.1 !111~ '• flU ~r,·~ J:r "''.'. 'io!c:K_.1-" 9 l U11o ~f"° ="" Soawtime thla ' IPrinJ, you IUCb thins IS l broker~IH· In sum, study the firms H.W 't~< 1~ • -r 1..., t tf:Ji': J;. 1:" J:...°"iVfl\ \1 J n tC .u~ !1.\11 ~ ~:0"° J fi~ 1' : + !: wW for th! first Ume in broktr-iS·B·broker. Some or tt1emseJvcs their e"'-'""S fit,.. lllMI tl'l"h ~ • • I"" \!? "' ... ~ ... , .. l .... ltY p .. 'lj j1' ... ""° t~ 11 ... ..:. 'II 43\l-1• hlMJ be able to buy shares the NYSE's member flnns -growth prosped.!I, manage-1i1,J~1.A1 · i·:111 ~ .. ..,. ~ 111 t• -411 ,.1 "' ·· ·1, i.n1Pc ,. 1o th '"' + ,,. . .. ....... -i I.. JV. I ~ , lrA Mlll M m n· ") I I :;•t" kit",,~·· . "' l!4'i ,,~ -~ Gelt'I' ptl'. J 11" 1ri. JJ\ .. •10 • of flock in a new industry rlltb as Merrill Lynch, Good-ment -and the prlct of the 111 Oi"'-&1'11:\11',~ •01 "" ~ IC , Vi t m I 1. \\ -.... ~llJAlf. I 1' a Jti" = . lbr•ll ~" .. It JI '1"° -1 •·-firms ol ••-~ nd B -• II h The h l °''"'°1 iroe.. .,, uu un:: l#l•uY a ao1C -are &O<a • new s ares. n, w Iii ever ~ •lj!,~I 1r1111ac-•• 1 1 li H '"r;:' E ''l , "• "•"' i. ~ ' ; ... .. ~' 1 ~ "' 7,1, 111,, _ 1, lmbtl 1r 1 u 1t11\ ff!• "°"' -•. Stock Elclwlge. ed retail firms. have networks your decision. you'll make It~ nt1ih1 •rt 1..'i:r. 1!1 ,, .. 1-'i •rri ~ CllOll '" I' ~ ~Jf -= ' ' :; l. \\ s"" ~Sf·~ ..... ::-All~n l~ 1:~ ':n 31·it -'• \WW lbese. be good In-of branch offices •nd do a intelligent!)' and you shouldn't :a!.~1:!f:1J •1 0! : '!" '!" 1•1c./ 1 :Z 1 ~~ I fr:/' ~ '°" ~r. 'S'!r;J~"" , g :: o l. 11 \l ~ :!'f& !""Al ~11 i •1 , ,, ,, 1··3·.• .... b . Ith d regret It. '"',······-...I Wflltll ~ ~11:•¥ Vo !!\!! Co ~ 1111 col rs ' 1-'i Al•P• ,,,j: \\ i.a -A ' ~ 1-lo ""A cl 3 ' 51'• 51\ii 51\t 1, \f¥lments ror you? Whit :~ro:~:ss w .J:. a:, ~Y• ·! n ~:ii~ ''f",va '~ ~: •18 14~ ~~= ~ "~JI~"'· • _m ~+!a ,.,· 1 ~ •l ,,_:t~ J::.1 J,f! ,; ~~~fl~ t! _1 ,4 ~ellnes ahould you use in :.~i1illl••\ 110~ FJ.:f, 1 1 1f• • .. '?.'1' 1 1 A ~:;:.,.•u 1. Jl"" j';,f t :.\l ,... \If ""+ ~· IObt~ lt4 J 1110 l• At , J judgtng tbelr valuet Goldman, Sachs, Salo m c n 6,';t., ..... N.h y~to!':'1£;~angthee ~~~ ::Oc!m"-H:O~tt~ o~~: CAB Okays ~~~rv·fl.:i. :~rf• 1J\'f ." , ~4 ' lm tiI 'Ail"~~~~ 'l ~ j ~!1 •u/Jr IJ! ~· ~.1=u .. K .. ~~":,tfl J;,,1 J~ ~~ a·~.-t .... '· .utuuon.1 •• ..,.... -~..i d ,, mrkfOwl'I • t-ntwl!I 1 ,., NI \\ ~ • r. Al ii: . ~ • "" H"' + f1l ... If;? "' + \.'J r y ·-..... --. founded, one of tb cardinal ., lnvw•urs ai.N '.u m "'°,, on ;,_.,r ut •• ~" w ni ' !iii "l~fil 1 '• rt -" l"' "" IJ'-' ·~ -"g•IOdU" ·" tl ff~ f~ .,. '• nilu bu been lhat the stock In lat1e blocks of ltOck. Fare Change ·.~.,c.~1 "'m : .. ~I,...~ 1 -''" = ;1: : :.c.~w 1,..., ~: .~ ~ ~ ~ = ~ of ·l . ;rt: •y" =Ill w.:~:~u;1\ lj l~~ 1fi: lJ~ ·+~. of its member firms 6hould SLUI others -for example, f 2 2SYi ~.,~o •"• :i:.., A~,'~ i:: ~ ~ :r,i!: »• • ·~ s~ir lii l" m"° "',:t1i.t L1'.I ~ ~ !: i~ CO:!~~" 1.: 40 lo~ ~i~ ~~ !_ ~: ~ ..... ,. ~Id. ~~ iii ••· Wllllam o. W t t t e r and ~i'.! f· 1 ·~ ' ~ ,. ' ~ itt !" "" •• " • "' .,. r. -' ' -,.,,.., 'i5 " "" "" "" .. -~ IK ~ WIS ~ ~·ii ·~· ~ ,•1, 1 I , --¥r ~ 1nl PMP ,.10. \lo \'J 1·-,.. ~-\<O!Norlrl. 1 ll\11 IJ'4 J]\loi" - """' t.nn'I:" Jinns a r e Faulkner. Dawkins & Sullivan The CJ vii Aeronautics Board A~A •r ,. .. •JO f) ~ ~.~~ 4l A (M u t ~ + J .. -\lo 01N0Nt11 1. t 4' ,51, ,. ·, ..... i••IJ.EI -are re•earth-orlented ... ii-IM'i11 P.! ..,Mt 1 1fu. :1,Mf: .., ~1 'l tt itt~li4Ir.Jo .. 'I fi·~ :"" ttt~= ·~~:1 u lo ~~.!'~&~~~~~~.& fl~~ t1~ l1~ ~ .. putDll'lhipc; tha stock or the has approved the removal or: ~:3• 1m, ,r~IL~ YI '! l: ~:, ~v. 11tio ..-. ~ I" AmerE1 1.10 ll\l-~ :: :1~ itt, 114 + ~GI w,., '1"1 11, ''~" '1\li 1l -+. l, -'-·• ,., closely held are naUDnwlde f1rma bearing ' ,. 'l 1 Jtmu "' l rmcnt " \l :•w w ~ ~=-~,·~·,,· ' ~ ii~ '1 ~ ~il +1\.) 011,.{•ro11 ~ +.,. 1w•~Mn .!<I I •111o U\• 1"l + '• ~ttve rew Yo'hich are houses. Whit'• more, there certain lrawl restrictions on ~ f1" m I ~nll lt \II • Sein 3 -~ . ~ Amrli!• pf2i ' -:1. on oJ 1, ·I " " glWnUnll tG ,, "-... '~ -\o -.-·--the 0•.SCO"er America and' o (' t WPll'I ''I ll&r TP '! H \ v , •• ,,,,, · >I tt' >• • ,,., LUllll !iv, rttnGnl .H 2 ~ Ulo 26\i-•o oq exe cu ve an ey f 'J I I f u It dAll(I Oto u: oad FP v; ·~Cit 17\1 ~ rn 'a A lk . ' . ~ \Ii-{' Oftl PO"lr ~ ru +~Orev~cxino I ... ,, .. 1649 11)')-'o a... t i d k household names 1nd there • A td er 11.1 11c111111 1" '!\i ~··NA tj "~!:~:n~ 'hMi'A1,11" ~ 1 r ~·41. onN•1a 1.11 ~ 1>i ·:..:_,~G•••nS111.1a 12 11\~ 111~ 1•y. +'• employes. And the NYSE ls are small regional nr1ns. am1 Y Pan ares o n e A~ 5\4 ~ or~• 011 u ' PEc 1n1 iy"" , ":' • 1~ l ... f,.=.,11, ~ 3 ~ " .. + ,, Ol'l":f. pl~ , 00 H? ti'.., -10 Groi1t, ·"' 1t 21,,.,, ,,~ 211. -lo ly · II f th fl • b •-· nd •m I"' ;ji FotoclV l'J , •"I l'•E :ll r1c Coo AC11< p1 6" -'i on ~oo • 1 \t ~ + to GtlMotl 2.~ ' 70l.~ ''" "" -•1 I jealous guardian, insisting You must study the "mix" Air Lines. ~"'et 'r.':i 1~"' ~1 ~:r'~rlll )1:1 J~.~ ~:~·A~~ '.~~ s = r:"w o: m ~'t~J ~· •fi • ' f#!l = ~ otli~~~ 1 1 I" YI!.+~ gr,r.=;c.~ ,ff !r~ :u. !?4' +· ... Clft Individual approvmg a 0 ~ rm s U.IUJ11SS • One or the CAB-approved o\m 111'11 Fotam t c• " co 5 \') tnenl r; 1 , Am Ctm . ,~,. 4 ' -"' ~ Co1 ~t • I . -... GuUMOPI pl s l ... ... .. + ·~ _.,•ers, ofUcers and voling decide Yo'hetber thil is I.he ml.i ' 0""1 ~°"~'I 'l: 1 ~1 't~ r.:~ M ,:" 1~ r~• o ~ '" • ~111 1. • Ir.!°" 2H't + ~· 1 cl~IJlfrl "/: • 2 , ~ 2~ + ~ Gut1 on I.JO 111 nv. 111, 2r1o + 1oo ..-... chan•ts eliminal•• Monday •,m '"",,. _ • ,, " I , 'l" ,,,, , ~ •= •Mob H \It 4-'!i AJ "' ' •""•• •+• , _ u•~ • Gu11 •ttr(11 24 1011 101t '°"~ ... . •-kholder• you went to stake your mont" r. ~ MMltt ,, 'Jo .,._ , ~ ~ • 111 t '°° .. • -2 s, ,.~ 2 14 ,... -... Gu~Jt11 111.20 4 u u 1s ... , -~ ' I t I , •. l' I A SI Gob "lo loll vtw P1wlle I lt •IClttr ~ ADlllTtl .Hilt 1• lO 2t\~ 2tt~ --onion ~ I .. p,:;-" Gttltn oll.lO 1 11~ 11'11 ttit-'' But l·n -·l years, •• Wall on morn ng rave res .. 1c ions or AS1 G DI t '" uOIHI 12 "'!'! AO Peer1 .. T 2•\.S 26 '1IO!ct """ °"''"•" 1 ,,. t11 ,..., -~ 1 111 1 1l JO ""•U. gu11s1 u• " :u 2,1, ,3 , 2,11 +o.. ........... , ..... • Am Ttlv l W. 11\lo uol!1. M •·· E P111 Dl•l • ,..., 'nllll fd 0 ,.. , '' n ll -el .n 12 I" 'J" j'~ + n " ' Street's need tor new capltal (%1 EARNINGS. \VaJI Street all passengers. The sectind :~~ca 11~ 1 1.1 :~".ih ~it; I ': ~: ~':~ 21:! ,f~ H~n~lu'Tt . ~'ti,:' 1,'"4 211 111ot ~~ ~ii. :..:. "" ~': o.i~ 111 to l 1. s 1. +f G~:~~"111.~ ·~r. tt ~n tt~ 7 ."' Us become overwhelmins, ls indeed • street of peaks change permits S1.mday a!-A~I lr:cl ,1m ~t: t/~'!i!~ ·~~ ~:~ ~~i I~ ,1~ H" McGiii j• ~i :::: :li:· • .:: !~ n~ lJ'~ 1)'11 ~·v. Dn~l.90 ., " l!\ .. n~11 -tt g~J~ ~~\ 1l ff~ tt"' r,04 +~~ members Or ••·" pr i, 1 te and panics, for tts prolltl de-ternoon and e"enln• tra"el on!,;;,,:~.~. JI' v. 111:r 11 v. P1~1 w. ~. '"' uj i~~ l.,. Aii•INI lllA• 130 •1111 6)1~ '31"11 -++'•'• :=e,r~1 1·~ 1! l ~ ~¥: l~~ :t. •. , 0~1w p1,·,, 1 ... u 'O\i 4'\I + •• u..:: • e • M 13' \lo m" l" Petll'lf ~ 7 U 1111~ U AGt"ll'll SO l2 ' 2C>1i 20~ .JR , ' I''-11111 1v. \t GuUW pfS.1S 4 64\/o 64 U'~ + •.r. club" have becotne ever more pend primarily on com· cer t a j n tr a rucontlnental A.,','·![-H M v. i ,,.. ij" 11 'ii Ptt•o111 •1 '!" ~ rk 111<'! 1.c;~1n 1111.10 l! l H• jl'I 31\t -"' =~· 110 1 '"' j•~i 3 •:. +1•, Gunon 1nc1 1• JJ'' u~ u~ -1. I . I t di l • '! 11i.11 PMldo of 611 • 0 P•" 'I •~obi '° • uto sv. u,,., . 1 liob 'I , I .,(i, \., H 1 eaoet to reach out and tap m ss1ons rom ra ng n segments for international A1c llftl 2 ..., 'I l1J'"R w "' 4'~ P~~ suit " 'I"' 1~~ std . "' A ome 1.50 l•J .. 111 u W • t'""' _, 1T i 10 ~"' 111A 11V• + ~. -· -• lt' d t d' fl . ' Auto St• 10'' I "' ub • • •,,-·~., a: l I\ Ill lfld t' A -2 l n\.'o ''"' ti/I '"' Ot~l~ll 01, 1 ~ 2'1\ >Jltl -ll H•tkWlt t.:a I ,, 37 !7 + •• ~r ....... ketbook. Also, the Big secur 1es an ra Ing UC. passengers returning to the Avtmc~ ''• ..... cl' I m c '"'' 11 LD ...,,. 0 ·'' J02 l9V. 31;~ l9 -'" -· w ,·-. •• ..., ,,, ' • Hiil Pt! 1.611 lJ ll':"' lll't lll'h +•, """ t t h I d 1•1rd Al 5~ ·~ ;oc!WYLC ~--~ln~rlnHK 1"'n"'1;.(,r>ct St 1 M'ltnvll 110 ,, IPI UI~ UV.-1.4 --11n"':'22 if 2"'" .... +"k11111turil.OJ 112 JI ... JI\~ lit~+·· oanl's members are equally ua es 5 a r p y an un-u.s ·r·· t l.,. Ill! ~ ~\ 1• ,.err Gell I m vJ~l•fln AWIMF'1 " 1!1 211\ 21~ "" .. 1owlet Cam ~ II\ I I .. '"' H1mw11 .lilt u ..... t ... -'• eAoer to attract and hold prectictably from year lo year. The change• will be el· f:R:nti~1~ f .. , ~ ~:pti " ! ,::o i \i w:ft~wl: AMttC•• ''° us J'" ',' ,',1': t+''A ox lld<•' ·'° l!"' '° JOl~ :::111. H•mm P1p 1 ,, 21 24~ 2s -t-.\li ~ T Ill ~-•· l963 -1~ 111' '"fl M Prllcl 1~ w • 11 AMelCI• Ill I 11 '3\'I ' " PC Intl I 1'0 " :Ml\ 3441 ... H1mmnc1 .70 30 12 11.,, 1110 -·,. -·ng executives with stock o U;,u111r.o;:, \\.'U a feclive Aprils. Dis cover.~,. 1~ ~ l'ftf'I R. '41 Pubs 1o4 ffi"~ w ~·· NnMotot1 1lt1 11" io~ 11" ...,~1 ... 160b " .,,. 'I -'~H1nc11 ....... .o 11 t4V. .,\~ 4 \,-1., ,__ ~ nd fit f rt U\; ••wi •• ~ j PubS ~ \!, "w:;J; \r. 1 I A"lllG•I 2.10 1.., "ltllo JI :11, ->,, reclith Fin 1 'i It~ U~ I V. + '·• H1no H•• .1'! ' '"' ''" 27.\t + \o options and Other devices -u..:me OUS pro I year Or America fares Offer a 4() -r· 1:!1!~" 1714 1 rw! 1~ ... Ill P\111 S NC fa \t Willi RE l A"" Pha o 1l II' 1ot~ 100~ I~ -2,. romoKn.1IO UV. 1R. 1• -~ H-J C~ ,loO ' llt'o lJ\lo 1Jb ,, . d .... ••• uld d ly most NYSE f'" ns Bul 1969 t"' ... ~~ Vi ., II !'1 , .. Publlhr \\W•I Tr 6 AltelOw ·°"' lot '214 "~ """' -.. ou1,H1...,. 1 7' .... 71 14\4. +"' H•n ... M 1,)0 2J "~ ....... ~ +v. an UIJ.Jo un:.y co 0 on . ul • cent discount on round-trip .. 'tr.II 11 I ull 1111 1, 101,l~-!l ir:·~ .. I"'~' ·-11 1.90 2tJ 3'\11 a· ~ •... r-Cel 107f -JYI 241. ,, .... Htl'(llUrt I 2J 51"" Jt 51~ i" y ave pu c • oc 1 coach fares. Family plan farts trtl • ., " trMWr I I ! II""' SI 4 "''I"" M 2' IE $N I ., n ",) :U'\ -......... z.11 I.to Jf "~ u +1~ Hlr$CO CD t 10 ll"' It" '°"" ... -•~and· must be aware, several firm.. . . e11 L•b .., ,. or•"" J "' 1.1 ouo c:o 1" (i we • G 11 • Std 1111 n • 11o u. """ -~ '" z ... :oo i611 llo 51 Ml) + 10 H1rtiM•~ ,10 ~11 '• ~ ~ ' uu'"'• mg. • provide discounts of 25. 33 1-3, 1111111 w t\'1 ••1, t-llY1n •~ 1~ 7"11~• ~M u 1~ ~ near 11 11 I'll s1.r11 ... f •'• j • j' -vo Tli Corp .• n 1•11o ll n1< -v. H•rv A1 1.:0 s 1,. • 7: .. ,., U the h bl] I k bombed and as you surelv •"" ' \'I v""" "" !" ljen""t we t•n ' M'ISoA r .1G .o •H\ h 41l\ ~I,_" con .,. '"' 16\0 Ult -'It H1rr11 tn1 1 21 •1 '6'' '' 11 So br er$h' f their.e -including aome big names 11• s.,,. 11 11 H•"'"' F 11 ,..,. "' vn 1• :oo w11n NA tt u A slfj' 1.io 2 514 "' -" u _,,r Mt 1' 1j.l.j, u•·• 1).11 + '• H11C1H"11 10o r 1h i pu IC own Ip O • and 50 percent on either firsl I••(~• 1•• , Hril\' \' •1 ~llo R111 '"' ' lo W•t" M1i:i \'Am ti.' M •~ fil s!'~i + ~~ u<1~r o11.1s • 1•i'i 1t~1 1•1~ + v, H1wn E1 i.12 1 ,., JO •1 "u!I -¥• ••• ~·j 1 •" I ~ j! •v<h D 11! H I"" w~ · Amw 1 I tit. E umm!" .m 1 j1.V. 11v. l'" ft~ H1l!l!ln1 j! 14 1:w. 11\1 -~• Orms is imminent. And among -have gone under, been class or coach la•es (one way !!~~ .. ,,, )1 )2ti ! "' '< ~ 1•n11t f 1 24 .s w~'" Pub 1 ~14 Am 2.H "° su~ ' •' -. uH1t111 .li • ' u~ """ -h H•Ytt A1~ 1 ~ 11~ Ht., u~ ~. the first to offer Its :rtock taken over or been mercU Y or round-trip) with the ex-ll:.'1t1:•c 1:• 1r H~~.,E P j~~~ ·~ ::: ~ ?, !~ w~Ni;.L 1 l :~,Dl:l 'iA ::&i 1j'b 'j lt + ~ ~r~~·:';i.J 1J 2~lt ~1:·: 1t 1 ~?~:;: .. :MM..., :11 , 1:1~ ff0~~ ~t: ~.~~ to you almost surtl• wfD be merged . t fH · dC oot AH •'' 4"Howrd GI ll\O l•'• to Mo 11uU•t1'N1dtw E ""'ff~" .60 6 't 1j"°'+~~ Y(leet I.to 'J:l>'o ah 3Jio \'I H!Jlllllur! 4:1 1611 i,. lf14 -'" Donaldson, Lufkin &VJenrette, While their prolill have dc•,.,Pn"pon ,·0n•·. awauan an ana-:.~ .... ~s~} ~ ... 5; ... ~:::ik ,'~' TI"• .! ":r:circ'?!u "1.4'1s r:dki,.~' r \\ ~~~k ~14• 'i ~il -~ u:1 ~ =. •," C~lll'UIM '·'° Sl ot~ •• HU •.•. ~:ii •• r..1 ·~ J il" y~ ll"' +I': bee • d' the fl ~ ~· G "-''" .. \Ii; Huo 011 ~ "f4,,. A.MK Co ,30 h 2t" I \~ - -H•t~r pU OJ ! !Un IOQ 1eO Inc the JI-year-old f Ir m n tn a nose ive, rms 11rkJ su it..., 21 Huttt P 1 '" 1•'• AMP lt>j, sa 111 • S-1\.lo '" -"oinltl•r 151 ,. JIL\ IMO 10l~ ~. ti•r,.,. ,.a.·..r 11 1tl~ n1:; ni.;, :::·'. whi~h kicked off the whole. also have been forced to spend 1;~~ ~ ~14 k~~~:n ~ '::! l~'~ ~rr· )Ol'J ~~ ~t I~ Jri? :t.1"" O•n• C11 ~ ,,3, 2•'4 ,,"' 7,\\ = ·~ ~·1::1~ e.1 1 ,,., 11\~ 'r~ -,,. fort pd Un th • ba k 8\IC:kH T'4o ,..., lflcl G•1 21 271.< ~;. ll2 J 1'o ll~ -\\ Oti! Ind _....., '9'\ 4'1• •It~ -1'°' Homllnc 11: If j°' '4 t "• drive for public ownersbJp unes u a g e1r c B , lll'"rtVO s 11114 21 Iner Muc:t "~ .01, MUTUAL """""' 1" 1n 11i \.') v1 -"'Di • ..., "'J ala H'? SI, J.t\'o -~· .. ~inc '.2~ II 111·, !~' ~ _ ~~ !lice' _, b1J ••· h S IC le•1 1l) 1•t lllottc ~-J•o Anc:~ Moc:• 1 jl1 \1 l -l>i OI 1 PtOC:HI .,..J IO.:. :IO-20\--o Hersllfcl 1.10 21• 11( \'I well over a year ago. O • J.UJS Suit:SI a llSffiess :wz sMw if'-1 ~'II ~~:"(!..t 1 1~ t~~f.Nv!"i.ii ' ~':J: 17 f;1t!! = f; ~·~~~1 _u lf ~ ~~ Jil'I:; ~ ~111b~~~ ~ N'f !Jto mt :_1}! Back to the initial queaUona, glamour but it's like the 1_ 7, 'I ""''1 s~ 4\'t ..... ci.eeo .15 11 ti 291, ~it_.,. y!ft'L 1.to JJ :m• i'f'~ 71.1,1 + '4 Mr:fi vonite , '° n1tt io!\ _ ~ ••en, Should you consider ldvertising (ie)d in many ways ~,"JIM I 6'1'17 ,,, l111rm I~ • ' '~'' "" a lt l \• •• llNrP I U •I 19'~ lll• Jt\i -~i H)ii'MHcltl I 1 MRo ... .16'0 -1\o .. c s !'"'1.: • m "' llW\ " 71• FUNDS ... '°"' 2 I.II ... _"' 0.1 '"""1· I.I D ll lllft 21·1o ,~ + ., H-rl 1.20 ,, .., ·1~ •l'M -v. ~. · th bar 'Th t and that mean& Jook out I t ID w l~:f4 I ~ nl Mun1' a '1 A L 11fCJ.06 \4 i '' Dth1Ar ,411\ l J~ Ulo ;rn1 -Y. k w 1 .., 6 22• tt -· + uuy1ng e S es. a , say -• · 0 u1•se e •t ntA ' "" 'li y" • !\I Atu• 'i:hffll . 1 ~ 14 1f. ''1 0-Mlt .tt l 1 !'o U\.lo It'" -41 11:Ji"'E1:C1;n 1.1 l ~ 1 i \o depends on whether you°';~;t crucial A firm which baa only :n~ '~ 11' 1#1\< ~11 .,: ,,,., .:: ~~~IJ:n fit 41 ~ ti ,.,l + ~ B:~:11i:lni~ • 1j~},; ~t'' i~~ :; ~ ~:,~:.,; ~ •• f ~~ 11"' ~ -1"" Wall Street's own an·,._.•, (3) &1ANAGD1ENT. 11tls Is 10Tth • "I n .,. 1 I " All.A $vc .tt • 1 •i. 1 1~'4 ~. De nee 1n1 ~ t \11 "' t1• . . . ttol c1Yll'll1 .22 1'5 , o,;, ft"' J:V. = : : tw k ti A free One •ay workshop gA·~ HG , 1:m n ~ •• ,. "l'PSvc 1 Oii n ' + ~ DUtcjl pl II • SI _, +1\.1 l-lomt1lkt .a 1l ll tl UV. JI\~ :.:· .. ;: to be In a business whidl ~oes one or o ey execu vci; "\.! '""~ " 47 on • l "j .... 1n• os 20 • ' I" . ~"""G• 1.10 • "" u" 1th ... ... __ , 1\f.· ,,, , ~ 'n~ 11r',n-.. •'.'· from year to year an w ,~,· ft' j" t :it 1 • Th• follow ! ... QUI> l"'h'"' ' Armco ol2.1D ti "' '11 \\ -::-' ti ell• 1111 31 ?•• 17Vo 27'~ 1• Ho" '"" I •H-• ·~ •I + v. d !ch makes the anaJy•tS squirm Will ))e COndUCted AP.ti! J3, for ~.",1',•,s 1tli 111'>11 • oi.1111 l'4 J, N~W VOltK f.l.,Hnd Ttlld 1li ·m ArmceSI 1.611 1 ~'' \4 \lo -+' \'o 1S~toln1: .to 11 Ill\ 21•,;, 17\o i al. HOOY 111 I. 1 114 ~ 16 llr . ff · .,. '"·-because the house could ao prospective s ma 11 business h•m" 1,o, 1 •ou n ~ ~uaollrtl 1w NTON I · 1 Armour 1.611 1 '' tt"' '"" -~ Det d P LIO 1 'h •~ "''" Vo Mot11 c~ Am , • 1\:. n1 -t 11o mlSO er1ngyou1~1_.es. " 1\·~ 111::1 •m w.1 \.., .iu91W'r "'loc:f·l~v caA If .1r""l'n .10 11• ,,. \~ '•+:~0.1 s1"1 ~ l4l• it'~''"" '•MOUd 111c1 .10 2t !'~'" 1, -•·1 To •-mo--•fi'c, you under if these executives left. cwners by a gro up of "" ur', 1 .. 1 ~ imtt .._ of s..:ur ''" '"" Gutll '· , . , Arm ~ a\J" i1 o ',i ,,. " ~ Dt•ier .u u ll ~~ Jm ll . -~ Hcxio Miff .•o lj ' 21'• ,, -111 ahould o:insider: Here, you should seek a firm management, ega ' an 1nan-~~I rrt ~ !! 'Iv ,F\\ q"" ( .. 11 wh t~ ntlfl IOI '. 1 .• , "rvl" l]l'I 1 I~ I ... i'f!' t ~ 01 ..... ll'lll l.IO •1 'to •• •lli +.,, Mcxi1" pr2:i! 1 ! 6'.4, Mt) &j~~ + ·~ ~ •• • ... -I I d f' ~" I • lri'"•bY i· . Inc:. ~In¥ INlli: 1 " Ar"" u~ ·'° J .. a:• -cr1tFlntn !O I 110 ro.:. 11\• -~. Mcxi1F ~n so "" ~ ... ~ -,, (1) THE TYPE of business. w c as a group 0 op ,..~¥ I lldl ..m J" :,,w•'Gm ~ i.111'l'': -~ lru"t "" ~-! to:nl !:~ c'b''? :rt 71 ~~·' •,1 ~ .rz1,•, ~ ol!i" J"o~?20 2l l1,l? l ~~ ltt :.. \~ ~:::.·~~J .71 il r1;..; fr.: m = ~ people or an executive team Small Business Admlnlstra-Iii~ H c i!U ~\~ •:rt .... ll w1'1r·•·~ "i::. 11' 1i· 1 ::::-rs::. 1: ' ;!'! :\, ~Vo 1~ ,, l!~l:,~ ...-:• ~t l,., i~:~ l1).~ + ~: =~t' ,·~ :: n~~ ll~ n~ .: ~ hi h h f t cial Sl'll'<'ialisls provided bv the ~ •• ~', of "'11)4 : :J, .i "" 1..:vi:11 nm1on1 ••1• 1o.1~1c1 o 1 :rt il ,; 111 11 • ..-g11s"'m l.•o 11' 11 1!'' u~. -1. Hcxi11LP 1 o ,, "''~ .. ,, _ .._ plusaprogramofdeveloping lion sl:k'"M1 ~ .... lt~ ~f'" l~ln .~:De~~ /;°' '·" 1.1.cr .. ,·u ... w. ... ~1 11.1 It ''s u~ It-.t,:z!S'.~~..r.1!·/j(I n 17 11' ll~1+\1 Hu.t~~~1 ·<0 .. ll I• 1' -\t Don't l1f your phone •in9 in 1n ''"pty totm, J,t 11 rl"9 your c•th r•gili•r TILIPHONI AHSWPIN5 1UlU.U-IJl·77n HAPPINESS IS GOOD HEALTH Q TEllltY GltANT, lt.P'h ll ttle ctiMdf .. .,. elwep _, e.,,_Jft. Whff ttMty tlr9 Mt,py tfle'r .... ...., nd m il" .. lltllt ., ..... ,. '°'"'· 111•. ... •My .,. .. , Je.111111 ••" ....,. ............. ,, ... . ,... Tllelr or.tl•ftJ will let yo• kHW that thero b •0111othi"'f lletlwrlltt tflo111. kMp .,.,., ~hlldr111 hoppy by w,1119 ,. '"' ti.-Mcil•hr". ... ,,. ctledu1,. .,. • 1111r1t lty .,._ foMll'( phpiciO!I. y,,., •ft· • tlo will PffU,rlbe • d<1lly 91'· ...... t • .. ,,,_, ttieif diot. le eor Yltoftllo o.,.t ... 1 we l.nf ...... ,lotto ltod ., "' ..... .U. 1""od11<tt that •ro 1,.clflcel-tr P'~d far childr111. They .,.. 1oocl-mtlRt ond clll14r.it -fey tcll1in1 tho111. YOU OR YOUR ooc·roR CAN PHONE US wh1n you t1•1d 1 dtliw1ry. We will dtliv1' ptG111pl1y wit+iowl •rir1 tht"J•· A gr••• 1111~y .,.11ple r•I• on u1 for th1ir he1lth J1•td1. We ""Al• c0wtt r1que1!t fe r -'•liwerv ,,, •• Ice 111d cll1r1• •tto1o1nh. PAltl< LIDO PHARMACY 151 Hoapthl Ro.1d Ntwport l••ch 642-IDO a continuing supply of young, Gilbert M 0 n tan 0. Lo! ~:~•Ion ,gn ,r :!:lr' I!: nl't .~ MG~.:r~w l~1intn~·· • .:~ ~· ~17 i t :rkl.t~'l ;~ 'n':,. '~,· 65h -.,ll 811~;"~ 1, 7~. n~: ll .... ::: 13!&T8i11:·t!f J i!~ l\~ ~~~ :·:·: qualified executives. Angeles Distric t director of 1l~lct"'tg 1 114 kn• !'lb '''t •v. tn<c"' Jl1 '" t~1o1 "· 1~ .... ! lit(~ ..n 1 tlto ~ .s11 " 01neri ciui. 1 11·. l ''' u•. ldt•l& o!l,7s 1 " Ml, ~~·~ 1, law en 7>>s. ,.:i,o IC•v• c.... I' 21 l~1w• J • io •vv 1. 1,n ~ !tic~ pl 1 ' 1 ~ lot•~ 10tu, -1;~ Ol!MV .JOb 11 l}O'o 101~ 1~·, -'• ul Cent 1 !• l "'" Ji:, 19', _ , (I) PRICE. The prices put SBA, announced today that °""' o I" ' •i••t PC "~ 1n• • Aall~" J"' too J tl•~otk '~ •,. A "'~ 1112.ld M '\ ,,,., "' -• 111so•• 110 1 SO'~ so·.., ~· • + "' 11 c, .. p11 so • H" 52'• s2>t ~ '• 001, en 1 IS I(,.. '"' 6\, 7'~ fl lld 7 Jo~n11n 10 20.SI A 11 Cl<om I 1' J _, 20'i 2Ut + '> tvonlncl Jt t~ jjl• \'\" 221. -'i Iii Pow1• 2 lot JU, JS'" 15., -'• on the first new brokerage this pre-business \\'Orkshop is 011 ... E J'< , Kln<11 El I'• 1 All li t1d 'f '·~ K• .. 111roe F'u 1: At11i cor11 61 y, l'i l"f .... 1vrMt1 ,7le tt , ! l Jb'• -'' 111 Pw ol?.c' tlOO n 1, 21~, 'lfh _ '• pill"' F 11 11'41(r~ CD fqAhrtrt I.II I 41111110 tO j.tflAl!ICo olJJk 1jQ jf'4 lt1~ 1'\~ ... tPtl>Pf!' Ot 31 5'''t ~l''t 51\t-\l mp Ct Am 11 1Jl ljtl> lJ o issues will be far below the "specllically designed for pro-allm Str 1~· ''''>K111f. vot 7<1\i 71" All f"' " ·~" 1 . ~ $u' &1 1\ 1 ·P, ATO Ill( .Oi1 " 'It i1v, 11~ -·~ PtPl>lf' Yo'I so 'l'O\"o 'if'I' 19~• + '• tNA CD 1..a ,., lti: l ~~ ""' -t .: fancy tags which the firms spective 0 w n er s in Loi ::'11· l n ... l(~c11rp., '~ f~~ ~1~~. Efd ii: I . ~~ B! 1• ;2. ~eWm'1nP/~ u 1i~~ ,,~ 1:\0 :!: a eoml~n is: 11; ~~~ ~at i~"! -~\ ~~'ru~ c~:~· ,,J M~ ~~: {~t; t:.: mlghthavewornl8-?.0m1Jnths Angeles,Oran1e,andVentura :;::: ~~ ,\')!;~ !::i'11~' \t ~::::;c•ka l: 1 i~~ ~1 !: l·J~~~:pfi~20 '·li01li~ 'iJ7'~ U"=• °°"§E~1~:~ ~ ~ol'" 1 1;r: 'fi,\:.n:~~iz~Ht,4·tg 1 1 1~n, i~ i.l'h;r,i• ago. Most Profl·t statements Count'ies." 2:::! ..,e1•, '' •1' '"' wa 1 ~ 1 ~ :E' .. ,~i" ~·~1 1 •l • ~· !,' '•'• "j'u Avtrv Pct .20 I :u " ?,i•. -"' r 011~r s 1 111 "' 11~1 ...• •nctPl•Pl 1'.so , v. 2,,11 2sv. _ ~ ~ .. ,,11 ti\ 1~, rton ! !'" G th S 11 i'~I Ill 11.'4 Avnll l~c .Ill ' 10"• . tr Co 70 2611 • •t~ •l +I Ind Pl PH lt 1 •\ '11\ 91\\ +I wh ich have been released so Nine business S"""ialJsl& o,mm•'•'"' 1:114 14"" •rwn M ij;"i ' ,,.. :m I , •'12 •ii ~111 11 , ·ft AvOtl Praa 7 •s 161lo 1w·~ "'..., -"" ewct<m 2tt no n1: n•a 12•,; .... l"E!Mu: 5,, • ,, ' .,, + '·' r~~ Sloli"'"""t' I· ni,;.v, 1.11 ,1, p::f •' , Atl«OllG1 :ltU'\14 14 ..... OrivoCpl . .O 23\ .. l1 •1 :;1•0 -3~1nd811ftc•".t0 2:00''>l'O"t 'l,,,-t\,\ far in 1970 have hardly been wlll conduct the workshop :;:: f"'a ~ 3t :rt1111f 1r. !~ ... :;:Jot ~111 J,n Knl~k'b l· ~i' ' -B--Dr•111ncr 1 . .io JO 11'111 rim 11111 -·-~ '"'l'"•...i 2 11 ... ~ • .u>, •1~. -'" . . . . hi T S\\ J •IHI!" G 21·• ,m Am Pit UlllYlll l(nlcli GI tt1 'j· 1D(.k w 1 3' tll mi ll"" 11\\ +. t~ !" pf2<JO ji N1,. i~ it~:!:~ 1::! cl ofJ.J/ 11 ~ :M'• 36'~ -'Ao 1ntr1gwng. Ag a 1 n s t t s panel and discussion!! during ~r~' K rv. 7:w. 1 .. 1r, '" !"" .i~ 'l!~, G•rra 12 11 lo' Gr111 , .. 1 . •-rouT •s 11 1 .. 1 l\ 2p,., _"" ~!~ :Ji12 1 !ll; lv. •'l _"' /~1cs:1 .,. 111 IZ" 21~. '911 +-1• there'll be a rush to sell he l1eld In "e Aud•'torlum ol ontnon ob 1w , , ,. '' · · ' nv •ltG PK' i o !'" • !tv. -Ui nlrd 1.10. •• 52"' s11~ 1• 1n1.rco 1 10 s• .... ,,, ,,,, -+ ,, background lt'S Un)J'kely thet th ·, 1'5 1' iJi·" 1'11 Otl lt111:t 3' 3' ~ If ' ~U "''"' t•~ it1cll U It 1 1 1!f GE l .• f S1 t~ \\ 30'0 . Co"W 1 I 171~ lllj, 6'o I lie; 70li ~ lo 'i U -'• , eOnC'"Uay SOn W u1W I Slr1!0 r: ~~ 11~ El lOj~I ~ ~~"l~ 71.* 1·"~,·ir•rr ~at 11G ot8450 1110" il 6!' .. +lt:. .:I" irtt l 3.1101'~1 IOl'~+··,'o1!::p1r0cOp31 100 70 l1:~ !; :\4 "' -• L '~ 2~ on Cow • -'I 1.:'oc:t• \'' Jf flC Nil t I . IMl"Unl ~ 4 II'• 1\t l•l'I MIT 1 "" l'l ll~, -•o lnlerlkSI ·1.10 •• ~· the Los Angeles Po 11 c e :~ \, i~Vi Uv. hf.Ir" j~ :l 11..., ·~ t7 flll ~ s 'i ' in•" e11. I 111• ,,,, 1•~ ... cnt 1.u. t "'" 1 "'" !"" llM • llD ~ ~t~ s~~ ~~·· =!~ wt d "'" ~ vnc S: r ;\ A>:t HoUQhll" _., d I Y ~· No. al C1I W ! > l"" ?N -1'< duP""' Di• }O flY. t i.r, !I\.} \~ ln!Ft1Ft SOb n 6J 14•\ 6''o + , it .. Building, 150 North Los ~fir Fa r"''~ •• i1~' t ,,, Fu:= A ff 'J: ~~~t i3 ~ kofC•l~OI 41Vt 1l• 41h -lt oul"onl rfJ}O ~r,.• .s.J\4 J•'i '''"I M•rv ito Ill 71'4 28 ~·\·-·· Angeles Street, slarling at ',",,',cl) t (,.,1, :11kf!Y 1"'! l'w l .1, •J ,::, 'j. 1 : :~~9/,N111 lo :g,., ~:; r,.,;t ~~oik.;r.10 ij& ,:·~ ~" '!j"~ ''']n'H~~1.i:i. 11 1•1. u•• u~+· .. ul II 1t}1 ,t,~M"'l' r :: :: ic'fkCP :1. '.;.;~QI::''" .1 • lrbO I! 1011 I ''to 11'• r)1~-1o ~ •10Gr701 110 l! 11 .,;.·~l 1~l 1nd"'~\70 t.11 71 23\o 1J'r -!' lm!AB. N 9:00A.fl.1. ::~:'~ 11 ,~1~.:::; ·~f'"I" !ill~•'•"••"~,·«, 1rdc1t 1~ 1 "'• "''1 "'~-•i 0L1~11 1100 I.lo 21•r. 1 •r..,.,1ntMlner · 1Jl ~., f: ~,,.,=~. _., 0. '' I ' > ' 0 1 1· ISIC lrn: 0 17 UI~ ll'o I' 7.U)Of210 J10 " 7r n -I •M• -d ' !I (I 1 ~•r M '!'' ~" tic" ' M•Q Ill 1 1 ••I~ Of 2S0 1•0 :ltV. >t') 30') vmolnd •II II U'1 l't u >; .._ >o n T'lft "' 46'~ #"'I ~II,•• ~?:"F: s1\fo ,tt".1'~,.·; j(? (~ f1i ~~'10~11i~ ..... li:' "•"•' 1•t•1 Mlo 11 ''\I'• t\~.i-"OvntA"".40 1• I'• I\• l'>+l •l~l~i~ii1~ 41 lU• 1•1• 16\\-!< • Ml 1 ~ M 0 t•~ DNlolk I"·~ 1 l · •!•1MI 01 1 I IJ"' llll IJ>i .<.. '' E F lnl P• 1'fou -47' il" '5'1 46 + \i r ' 11t t •vor 1" llmton St ]J ! '4 "1 1 I ~ 11 . ll!h ll'ld '' 11'~ '71f '"' + \o -• -n11 it P 111' .>J: 1 ,~ ~:: ~:; :_ (,' rJ • hr.__'" Sl,000, tw ... f'M'• P911 '8W l••••t••llf 1\rtft Cenffll .......... ~· ...... ,tty. 11/1.,_ ,.w .. PoAIMolt: Acco...,, of 011r -•••· Y1• •lttidl'hol1 ._,.., l1111Hdl....., ..... __,, ''""' ... ... 2Mt ... ,,_ rh 1• • 170 I. 11th St .. CMt9 M ... 646-5041 '~( ;~ 11~ ,U :~I":' G 'I 11es1 Fein 1~ 'It 1 '< M ~v ~~ 1/ Jr f· •t~1" mil so ' s.i so s• -1 Eatl«l"ch 10 •2 16'1> '"' • 760,' • -+ ·,-lnr ;•ff 1 .o :1! 1~ 31.,, JI!•, _ , , I.,. C.. ft\, SO\l Mf!l c H t>~ llOJICll 71• t 57 M , l? 11··1 •UIC~lb ,IO 6 J.6t'o SS'1 5-1\/o + \. •lCO c;o jO 1l 1''• II" 1 ' 1 Int & T f Ill n;. » .. a ~l' C•nT ~ """ MHI Ml~ '6\11 ,, l'oa" ,, 110711:11 ~rrv"d • t! u ·~••L•lt .10 1 7l it'-311>.i. 11 -,, 111 ..... \" 161 11'• l l' ... , 1n1TtG pl(' 0 11 111' u 1'" -\• 1 18r 26\oiM~ltrll I.I ... 11.lk~k C1lvln· Y.IF Gth s§i 1 ll1vukC•• ,50 t 11~• Ill.Ii H\-\'t •11 GF 71 61 ll't ll 1 -11"tT r PIHi 111 \ 1, 07 107 • Am 2\1111 Id Cl llH•I!'• Bul!I< 1J1'1~1~ .... u Omo Soo l'l•1rlMS I 1] U 1) •71l d•o-\11 ·~•IJtll 1.<IO n 1t \O i.;. +~~ITT P!llSG OJ~ l)J I -1 wtv E f1Ao 1 lea O 6'1, (1 n U l"I 1<'I 1f O• , 'ti I • leaf Fds I ~1 :lS~ U 3.!lit + ~· 11Kodlk II "1 7''o 1&.. ' lntTlo.l pjJ 4 t ff i,,,'.:° 90Jlt · • • 1m er 1• '1* 1aw GT U'.\ 1•·1 D•wld j o > ij ~ 11:,.: 1 · 11·~ llt•• Fd1 o1 ' I ttUi ._., ttlo'J _,.., ''°"•'" ,' ~,, ,'~' "n'' ,•,,., "'' i )! I"! T~ T 01ic4 ) '" '" -'" It Inc j'11 el1 G~ f!lj-' n NMW S 1! 10 I · lled!"''" 50 , O'' "" ,, -\'I c~I n M )2 • vo 1 ll s loO ' ll tl\if t5 + lj Ytr CM \t • Min \11 jOo~ WY Vnl I lf, "~~ ~~11 10' I lltc! Olck ,)II 11' Sf'lol S,1~ !JV. -\io c~n<0J ,;hi '" ~r.• n~,• ~ f~i ufi1 I 'a t~ lnll'i n ~-~ i \ utf! 1 d Me ttH" 1 s u!M I'd I· 1 n •I ,,... ,~ ' l""llA' ,1Jb 11 1-"' 1$'' u·~ -" son0 •1•0s 7t i~•. 1, 1 1,, -1111 Ulil i.. :i,. 111 n>' 21 , +•" IP Mel '"' ocl Sci ' N G Fd 14 'ff 'I I ' • eeem cni I t.O ,, ,, ,, ' ...... I I I l 1 ~ JO'l •1"°' M~ It ltl4 2C>1o\ •l)lmt 7'IO I N~! n~ur ' ,: llelco Pt! JO Jiil 1tVi 111\ 11''1 _:·b I u.ic 1h tl -~ jl' S"! ·· i 1~1'~~~ ~; i~\~ u;: + 1, ¥11 oe 24'• Monm Pk IJ'.I 14 ·· 10111.n• lH 4 ~ 1101011 10 'l·n lltlcl"'H '°b • ""' »10 71\0 +\Ii I'S'."'~, ll ~'· ~~ 7ft.OI' = ~ l"'""DSlr 1l 11 1r 20·, '°"-I jt hr 'Wit.I 1I:4l ~or>d S 1j lltlt Hnw Ml ll )I )1\o l1'h + \t )MM~ DI I 11 ,,:, ''> n i +''• "ftrSPw 1.14 10 tl~ ll~" u ; .. + ~ ~nnl:: f 1• 4 (vld •.! 4.!J !loll lntorcol'I 4 11~11 ll'll' 10'11 --~ kllnN•1 Incl 1t 1\ '•' I"•-\~ IDWt 8"1 It l1"1. :JI lt g I 1 h 01 •l"WI~ t,CM .... llemli Co 1 l 72\, t)ll '1'J>.4o -•• 1"''1NG I 15 l '• lt\. 191,) -'I I• El hp I.JO 1 1f>• n:i. lt•• : : . : :~ft 11 ' $1 ,.,, P, I SI~ ', "• l·j•, •,eMll• 2,60 tJ 21·~ fl/ 111'o -"' ,,.., p l 20 13 24 Jllo ,l .. -'. /• Ill e \.JI 7 , K, 1Ho 1110 ... ' N N r th SAi Jff "com 24 j PndlX "' J 6 jO'~ ,!a SO'~fl l!rl ol!•O UO UV. .,., 26'>-16 owftPlf1.611 I 2~ /jl, 11'•-'~ tnc':m 7 19 116 5TG~~ I j1 l.t le"<!'l"I" 1 60 ,01 '111 $2''~ .l2'J, -i,\ I""' El•< I 1,•,1 !'~ j1'~ 61~• -'·~ lowaPSv 1.lt lt g 211• 1? + '" e'v ame Saecl 7 U. 16t Ntl G11~ I; 10.lt llenlll' pU 50 t50 :U J.6 5" +I mtrr ... lr .tO ...,. f \• ~91, + h !pi:o Hotp .3' JI 'I ll'\ Jlll + t\ Cll~H Gr 901 ~IUWI~ 11 17 l" 11ntll' pU 10 l ~It ~14' ,..,,. -\\ mhtrl 1,70 111 ... , ,' l~'~ ·~~ ITE Imp 60 ', 1f' 1 l~' • -\II (foll 1 1j llSNew1 Wlcl 1 1!!J1 1 1' tnF !pl)JO z!IO :11 )J l? +•) mDOl~!.._ll 21'!.. ~''-i~i·:t~•l!fll.Corp 2 61• ~·'• ~•'l•-J F....ct 10toll.UN:';"J':'1 <~ o, 8•"9utt tll 10~ "4\ tlto +'It mPGf ·"' h ~?~ ,.' ,,,!of.•• ITT$¥ oU.50 1 U2 l:i2 l:i2 ., ... F U h Frnt ffUji 1• •·· • ~ 11•"9\Jtt '" 6J t I•) 114 "'I J "'n 1 ;i:\ 1 " ·' -J K 01· 1· 811US !~i. ;;.:; ::·ll ~;1 ,j « 1i:: ii~pii~ 1~~ :~· ~' ;;:; :r~ ~ ~ ~tr~~,:» 1!i it:~: 1µ,~ 1H:: ~.: 1:CJ~1t1~.1~ ; . l!! ~~! ~·-~ + .. ~~ 0Eo'::rJ· ·~•M F'Ntlrms1,•7J1•,~:1:.:i~:e,·: ~ :r ~: ~;~:::~1'ii1G~t,:oo 111~~~ ~. n ~-~1::.t:..~~ 11 lfr: l~t :~::~~ A corporate name change ~~11 1o 1l~ _,,, it :n e1~1rJo11"., 11 20•i 201t »11io +.__ ..,,,1:~.1010 ,~ 111~ u •! u•1i+tt1:0:~F111~·~ ~ f..: ~1· "~•-1• from Urbanus Publi shing Co. ,Y"'&,111 11· 1f·~H ~f,'J<1111'G,f,\'1~Jll:i::\~r"'.~: n ~~ J::~ r.~:::2 ~~~12~11'! kl ff~: it;.: ~f•:-:.:·1:f"'!:,.'!r··f3 >i li\.., n'"" ~ .:...; Inc 10 U r ban us Com-Ofl'f!lC 1 tt P•r111 !.t. 7.'1 ·~ l •u1 lo11 , 20 s .a ~·· lt'i -i, 111,1 1112 .., 11 u•.-jl n . Jer Pl 111·, 111 56 • ,. )6,','.'.,• ·· ·•• · ornl Bel ,.fl t' Pt Mvl l" 1· 4 91>hC•s ?5b '6S "~ ''l' t5 _,.,., urofnd t 109 4 If l't It + V. Je.,.,t1 Co 1 loO 1 ''"' •1 nlunications Corp _to reflect ~-• "'• 'll•"•r 11 g' 1an1""' l 20 15l 7J 74't ?4~ . 1v•MP .6Gll " 36 l,1~ ls -"Jim w.11 ·,. 1'19 '°" ll'~ 30 ... .._ • ~ I'd I" ·I' P ''" • o,...war l 1! •11 '.5'~ '•ll 15 ..f. ·~ wrlhJl•P so 7t11i j• l1':• + v. Jlmw plJ j,o 1 )l\lo " 31•4 + ·~ pJal1ned expansion Of service! MDm .n t I !:.\IOI SI 1l 11 1 lor...,•n• Ill '6 1~o 13'1 1;n, + '• XCtllO 1 Jf 11 n~• 6111 16'• -'~ Jlll\~Mt11 i.lO :It J.lllo ll'• 3.1., + '\ n~eu i"° t .MI p1~ ,~ j aos Eel!• ? ~' 26 J.s\1 :uv, Jiil + " •be••• .Ill '°' 7 \l 2• 24~:. -IV. ~~n ~ SJ ljl\"t 001., l}O' ,, -was announced today by IOCk ·" f·l'p:~ Fnd 1fg 1 ·1 lou•n1 In~ 11 lP~ 11•1, 11'\-'l.IF1~1or.1. .~ lit• •1'• •1"•-~Joh"iSvc .la 16 1 Jcp, :JO':::,z \V1lham L. Pereira Jr., board !:u~ ~8 1 ·lJ r: ~rt;t~ 1"U i~ :4·E =~r."~~~1·1 c~ 'f s;11 ,~:~ 5!:t !. :~ ~=1~'i!lfi1 -'f~o 3ff '1',~ 1 ::: ';~: =1 :·: j~~~" P!,i 1J 1'" u;: f,11 ~\~ h · om11 A.1 114'1•.73 M Et• ,4 9 8di!M¥ !)O tS tl'1 6)•1 6l +·~F1lrm1'/'t I • l l.o 16!• 11 .._,~Jonelau l JS 10 11'0 11\o 17•• ca1rman. 0""0tl Bl'll NHor 2l'ff'' :r!llMVP!1 ltJ ri ••4?'4-1'11F•l1!1!lCp I•,,, 1:--l''t-"-'•Joot~&l11°f .S 110 6) 6J •l -·~ omo ,cl XI Pra Fu"'1 t• •!I Ptt l7t •1 11•o 11•i 11•t +'A l'amll¥ Fl~ 1 16 1\l• ll l u ;o + '·' Joi.ttn' 10 .s1 l5 ll' J.S -1-1• Urbanus Commun.icaUona In ~:,~ d • 1f 'ii Provc1n1 .~, t:n llclW¥ H•le 1 u 31'1\ 1114 i1~ _ 1~ F,'"'w"'i, ,",' ,.' :,,, 1,1~ 111 •. + ~ Jov Mt•" 11'11 ss •t<I ., ' o•o .,. ,: N t Be h ... ,, ·u Pu•lll" •u10.11llwH1 ""1 s 4!'~ d "" .,., '• 1r fl n •• ..-1-"ICllH•At t !O ll'/o )61i Jr<.,J.p , Standard Oil Co. ol e\\.'por ac 1n1t1a y w1 g~~•n l~ 031 !! P1:"~"' F.....ii: e~iv"uG 1 n u ,,.., ,av. 7~1; = ",'"•'"•"', ·"'• ," •,.',. s.,.: .. 56,.:,• + :~ "•I• ""'•.11 l llD '° llD _ \'o h t ti d. . . i I . i'1I OUll f« i.n lrown Co • 10'\ ··~ ~-A nl .. ~i • ,\ . -. Kill UPll 1.S ' IO AO IO ,. ,, California ha s named ave WO opera ng 1v1s1ons. Gft~ r I~··;, -· 1 '1 ".. row~ Ct pf ' 16'• 1•~ 16"1 "'FeOdffl ·i1o •rs J2 JI ii•• -•• K1l1A~ pt .. )? 1 66'• '6'~ "" + \~ G. L. Laurent to dis· Urbanus Publlshlng Co. and ~ G1;! 1~1i\1;.2; :,~... ~·li·1·Q t=s~'fJ l ~;; Ma ;;~ ::._. ~::~:: i·11e 1• ~l~ U1. 1~·~ ::.'.' ~:r:~ r;;,~ ~ j~:,. u.~ i~}: ~l·~ tr''ct Sl1per1'ntendent, Urbanus Press. The cor-~;:~o 112113.~···-· '· ,.n&runsw110St tu 1tl~ 11 ii ::: ~t'Cif••11r.0,1, ,,M nl;{ n" ~:~+~:K•]kp~1 .?1, ,', 21:111'/• ,,.,• .. • • r11 w !! a.n l. I !1 • t t:! eucvEr I,~ JI 71'4 !'" j!~ -•i Ftc1$fg to ' 1 io l.!Vi l.!l' ~! ~ ti • ~ + 'Ir. produC"lng department porat1on al~ plans acqu1sluon 'Cw~ ,.:*fi:oo1t~e"'~:C~ !:U 1·~ 1= ,001. 'I 't.~ ~:: N + 1.4 ~Nb!;t tr 1 tt2 3 :~ 36'; .u:! :::;." ~t :,!~ ~t: b'' ~I'" ~~\· :;-1:~ in the Huntington Beach of controlling Interest In :r. tnc l~·11 1jji ::::~r~ 11·1~ 1 :V ,~ 1" i' ' u ,~\? 16~ l:"' :+'.'v. f~"' Ml'.''}; r: J..Z ,11• J,: .:..:·,, ~ ~'~1 I 11J ~~ tt:· tt~ -'\ office. He ,viii be in Metropolitan Data Contr.ol !:,.'*;~; ~itl j'I ~~11~,,'c1 il::J,,:J: ~l,\"~~-J 2141 1~ 1~~ "HU ·:~~~lir.i~: il ,jg i1 .. ~::: ~~~~~;~Pw~ l.~ U fll: 1f~ 71:~:.~1. h I II d .11 . lnc .. ofDallas,Tcx.,Pere1r1 ,...x11 1~11•. uOdfl"fur>dl: u"~Ren so ,,,.,._~ v..1..\iFfl.'1!.J,,,1n 3~\lt}4ft~11::! 1.1.1 ~,•!.v,,"', .! '"'H '_, c arge () a n 1ng 'd •t ... bd 11. '• 11 • I"' t'IV un.1111 u•11NI 1 10 l'J )t\11 .... ...., t .... . ,. -. ro.1 -1\l'l 1\ JtV. ... •; · · sa1. j•etropolltan 11 a com·or•vf "11:\l JI ec1 j'"'j "l"'INor .70. 1w ""n ~ oou ~ re11ne 1.611 1n •''" .. ••11+'.• •weca .JOb 11 7? 1~ 21\0 +1•o and prodllCiJlrf aCtivi h' d (EAton• ow1r~ ol 0~4tt vrN0tollJ ,, 1 \~ 7"°' '\I'll ~rtJl'tl It Jtio Jl>o 31~•-'• •VlftAe d.I 6 7~ 11'l ,,,. ,, b • puter grap !CS 8'1 genera '~'·~ '· l~' co ... $! 0 I~ au•ndv 711 r ,,l 7? ,,., -\41 ~llNC!r 2~ l'j ~1 )• re•. ~0'• -~ ~ .. ~ltr I.JO 19 ., QI, 4l•: + 1, ties in the district. The pr Jnt1ng Company end G~~ 12. flC r"~ll J • urro~I .60 '!71Sl'11 1 ... "il'91i-2 l':;~l'I~ '.llO 17 !!,: ~'! ~,,.:_,,K::::~nci.70!o0 ~ ~~''• :t~ !6;1 -'~ J t 'd " 1 I ' I ,i'A:A'" t I -C-~llhrFG .O!.t I f:ii, 1•'• l•'l -'ol<•l~IV l.lO t '1'o t•i.. 2~.: , ~auren s res l e in manufacturers press control ~:fl: , 1 1'. 1 PltS 14:t I : 1bol co to '! 15,, ,.,, 34,. _ \11 Fl111trsc1 1• u 11 •• 11•, 111. -w. ic~...i111 ,60 31 J'I'• J.e·, ,.~. :;-1'~ Ne"'"ort Beach u t 1i!f•'' 1 M11. '"Ill •! Fln1nl j 1G•o 1011 10••-tiFtmlno .so Jl n 11>1 11\,_.,..l(~n~mfl .10 • ~ J.4 34 1 "l'' · n1 s. a••• 1 · 11 , "ij \ , •H•llM . JI , ,.,, 1411 n'' + "'-'l'"l'' 1 :oo h '1 J•lt , • .., -~ Ktn'!<oTI 1.60 511 S.Ji Sl't 'i" -1 1--------------------------I rnra St , f i:im1 t, ,. ttncJltl .•Se 44 tlV. 11\o + o.a t • C,,_~I 1J :!f'• * lS -1" ~FCh DP! .1 0 :k-IJ !l 2t>, 30\~ ,, • • In Benc/1 l\low!PSA . jets every 9U minutes to Oakland! 11'".,l'"'"'l'~'!"-i-.,-.,-,.-T'""'ll'""I"-,."'-· ~~:. 1 r;'1•11 =rn~"·rr '1°·« '!:" ~;i:i.~ ~J: lJ 7~ ~~ 1\i =it ~11~ ::. r"° l:Y it• ti~ n~: }~ ic!.ru:i~ 1i~ ~ r,:: n:: n1· :-1 ~ Eoullv t r .~ mllh 8 . ·~ ~ ''I J.,o u u •• 1·~ •1' -t l'ltPjwll J JO 7J'I 73 7J'• -~ t<:trr~ Dlf,SO J 11 ma 71 _.1 f'alll Giii 17 I .Cl W'1 In~ \• clPlc 113.fO I '1"i I ti~ ... Flt IHI 1 6 111\ J\lo 71~1 + \0 KPYll onln 1 t 111'~ 71 \i ?l'o <U• 'I· . WI"" GI ot ' •n.tlltcl 1.10 ll Im -l• FkiorCp I lit 14 n1• JH. J) -l ICkldP e 1 l'OI 131 )''l U\\ )Ill\ ... 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I ' tf<:g¥ • ~,c111 ~ J1 1.. ll! t.· :_ \1 i"JtOI~ qg I n. 1•14 - '. 1/911¢ •nci Uif l "' full. ,411-l•·d!l!flo m,,.. J:r. ~·~ f,f';"::r,' I . ll:j ~r, c:!lrr ~11;: lt : /~ ; :: GtnPr • ..., ... .: n. I 1'::: ;~· -'. 'tJllOll ·r-r· r1tl!! --W1"'°'1f ... ~. ,. ti! ~PubVt 10 1:;1 741, )•, tr• ,., ' ••'l'tt --w1n. \</lf!l"lt, Wll-W~•~ Gr, 4 , t • , ~rOIT'~I! .!O ' '• f("• 7t'I -'' &;" ••"', ,1 ,1,, '''• , • _ ,•jlllttr!bll!rd, w1-W~~n !Hu•o. nO-"••I 1, ,, I r-. . h'~"" Ao 11 '•~,ff'·-·· e .. ..: ._.. .. -m, < •, '\·. ·.i 0 , I .\1"·. I:",'~"/~'! 1 ',,' ,',• ~! 1 I\ 0,: /~ ,","• " •j !\!' U'i _ -; • t11ii,...,~ •l-•n n•n~•uolcw or r1u 1,.. ' j M ! ' ,. 0 " ':! ~ .,. " "' 6 IG I • !01 ·,1 ••1'> ~ ar bol"• f'<llOAt.11'11 Mni1tr 11-""o I~ , '' W nil• •' , In O •I • -1 GtnSltllld •10 U ll '"' lli + ~ 11111.-· ... ••t, Ac!. tr lttlll'lllts tiv Ill(~ 1'( Fiil ' i .).4 IC cl f·.ff . In M I 110 ; o •fl ilh G Tf1 l"t Ill 1.50 D'o l?'t 1'•o -.. C'<l!I"""" 11'1-•C•tl•n IUue 1\lb!td 19 nd•-.t ,If Ill 17 . IT,ln 1.111 , ''.:: " -\oGT•IEl,,,$0 I •11 1;, \%':-\1 ilnftltol <tj1Ul llflt10l'l l•~. I [ I Ir I \ Th"'4.,, Aptll 2, 1970 Thursday?s Closing Prices-Complete New York Stock Exchange List ~':'Ii':! 'm=~ u 1$') n~ nv; _,,, 111 j,S .. ,<L •J +Vt .. , .. ,,,,,v;_,,.. ' liV. I"~ li -\lo .. 1•1~ .... lllo --' u 41"' ,. 1i fa 11 ~\S 11 S311i ~ml -VI SI '"' -.. -l u : ~,..ff~ tt~-i. ,. 71.li 1\, 1\t '. 3' S"-' J7 ""' :l2 llh 11 11 -~ I ""' !JV. 2~ -1\ti JJ!~~~ ... =~ ... p '••'• Ir" + ~ 31 Uft. 111'11 +~ 14 '"-'~ Hi -14 J 24~ ''"" 24i'I ,,. "3\;o 41"' 42!• +1" 1: 11~ l~~ 3Jlt + .. 'n ,, 311 -" lS <11!4 ~ .i\li +"t tl, ~f11, Sllio r.l.l !_l~ 3 '" ·--·~ + ,, '11•1 11\lo 111-t;-~ 111 11 .. 11\li ,, ... I Al\~ '3~ 4]\i -I> ] ,, 11'1< 1, + 'r 10 41 .. «l>l '°" -h Prices End Mixed; Declines in Lead \ NEW YORK (UPI) -Prices fmuhed mixed In IT!oderate trading Thursday on the New York Stock Exchange The UP I markel indicator was ofl 0 JO percent on l 590 issues traded Declines had the upper hand ov~r advances, 661 to 628 The Dow Jones industrial average was oil o 3.'! at 792 37 Analysts had S8.ld earlier the market's u,pward movement stemmed partly from carryover strength from Wednesdo,y and partly from the ab'sence ol any discouraging news develoements The list ap- parently couldn t sustain itself on such shaky props Most group s were mixed with electronics among the weaker segments In this gtoup Burroughs IBM Motorola and National Cash Register led the retreat IBM closed at 332 of! 5-3/4 Jf, ~:1i ~~· !.'":.~ Kentucky Fried Chicken was the volume lead r.11 e c1 i.o SS 1~ 1t ~ 7111~ 11 Tt!col!N 0 1-.. 11119 t i)\, ., • ,, er on the basts of a 173 000 share block The issue r.+ ,, 1"41 U l DJ 'J lG! IOJ'lo ?'-J TtmPt El 16 l ~:t{ Ps~ ff~~ i! \vas down several points The company has a $2.5 i:~:"t: P., ,,~ 2s '~ 's +u:. ll d Ii f h I lh k d TK11M11 u1 10 :u, ,!\, 36 , + ,1 rm ion o ar ranc 1s1ng p an In e war s an an TK11n1«111 cp 11 U 1 ?}Sit 76 ~ .+h d th Tta;trOllb se nlll n1, s>\O _,,.. executive sa1 e arrangement fo r the deal was Ttltcl'fn 1 Oft 1 2 20lo 21 + I TtlH'r' .,n 50 •s 11.-u~1 u~ "" not as favorable as the f1rn1 would have liked r11t• ct.r, s JD\o )l 3(1 o :+ \ Ttm,ll!tft '5 1 11 u 16 t•nMCo l :n sJ '6' '' '' ~ + • A1r1Jnes turned lo\vcr Aircraft see med rudd er-TeMK pUJO lS 2( 2( 2( -\ TtXftCO l to u Jl'' 1l 1 JlW -"' Jess T1xETrn 1., • :JO :JO lCI + Tfl!G1tT I 4 6 1'""' 1• ''~ + .. r.-c. 1111 50 lU ~J~: ~!: ~~ = tt Prices on th e Amcncan Stock Exchange were t:~~i',.., 'f,, I 31 !l > l1Vi ed [ d To•~lns! 10 ~ ~·' ~. ~:"'! + -· mix in qu1e tra 1ng i~~!t9• .J!l 16 ""'" .. -.i};l1 1110 1 u , u . u. ••fl'Dn M u 1111 u . 11 -\~i,.,.C,,.,c::;,.:i:=::i::BDmlll .. •••<=DE:"'•m••-=•' ••trn rif:i" St 17\~ 11 • 121'.. "' Tu:trn llff.«I SC Complete Closing Prices -American Stock Exchange List DAILY PILOT }9 I I I ,...., ............ ~· .. -------~--:-::-:-::-:::::-:--:-~~-:--:"":""."~----------... . .. -................... . . .. W ~AILV Pll.Of l ltUrSdl)'' April 2. 1 ~ Sup1·eme Court Decides-T~at .Order Must Be Observed WASHINGTON CAP) -The ··problems ot po I l t I ca I ln-preach a sermon on Grace ordtr men of their day," "Would we uphold contempt 0nty Braman. and be by by placlna; the unruly def en-with his attorney and. If PQW· Supmne Court'• rtspoMe to diehnents and of politlcaJ Churth Street. Douglas asked: "Would -.fe In that situaUon!" Douglas bldlrection, noted there may dant in a aoundproof booth ble to keep appraised of the the tumult and shouting ln judges raise profound ques· When Penn peralsted ln to1er8tt removal of a delen-· 11reed with his colleagues be ways to obeerve both 1 in the courtroom' or televising pr~gress of bl! trial." the otUon's courtrooms ls lions going lO the heart ol the quesUonln& lhe legality of hli ~ from the courtroom dur· ~t a crinilnal trial cannot need for decorum and the the trial to blm outside. "Once the court ha.s remov- that. above all, three must be social compact." lndlclrnent be was jailed by Ing a trial because he was exist lri bedlam. But he said ri&ht granted by the •lb Brennan did not supest ed the contumacious dffeB- order Douglas recounted the story the panel or judges who tried Insisting on his constitutional Alltn evidenUy wu mentally Amendment to defendentl to eJther method cUrecUy. But dant," Brennan said, ''It 11 ~virtually unanimous ap-of William Penn. the gentle dhlmuct.'!or "contemptuou; con-rights, albeit vocl ftrooSly, no Ill and a ruUnc on the aen1IUve face thier ac..'CUaers. he advised trtal judges to not weakness to mitigate the provat Tuesday ol the removal Quaker, who was tried In Lo~ matter how obnoxious his lsapea of courtroom order Allen's own appeals lawytr, ''make reasonable eff<ris to di!advantages of his ezpulsion o( 1 madcap Chicago defen· don in 1670 for causing a 01>.'!ervlng that the Judgts philosophy might 'have been should have been put off to ff. Reed Harris of Chlcaso. enable hlm the e x c I u d e d as far as technologicilly poW- dant should gratify and en· 1 _ri_ot_w_be_n_a_ll_h_e_d_id_w_•_• _to_"_w_er_e _11ncere __ 1y_,_1 _a w_· •_n_d_·_t•_lh_e_be_nc_h_t_ha_t _tri_ed_h_Jm_. __ •_no_th_e_r _d•.:..Y·------="=ld:..bo=lh..:needs==-co=uld:...::be:..me=t ....:;;d•..:f'..:"d=an:::t....:;;l o:_:co=m=m=unl:::;:::c•:.:;t•_h_le_ln_t_he_c_lre_u_m_sta_n_ce_s.'_' _ courage trial judges whose nerves are frayed quickly. Strangely, except for Justice Wllllam J . Brennan Jr., who spoke only for himse.U, no judiclal notlce was taken of modern mea:M of mainlaining both decorum and the defen- dant's right to face his ac~ ewers. And but for a single, vague sentenct in Justice Hugo L. Black'• opinion for the ma· jority, only Justice William O. Douglas recognized that a trial judge may be wrong and the defendant may be shouting to assert his constitutional rights. NOW IN J.\IL William Allen, who is now sittl1!8 In a New Orleans jail awaith~i trial for robbery, was a most unruly defendant Jn Cook County criminal court 14 years ago. The judge, Grover Nlemeyer, was a very patient man. Allen, whose. defense to a $200 tavern holdup was in- sanity, interrupted the ex· a m i n a t Io n of prospective jurors, tore up his file, ignored the judge's warnings that he should behave and finally told Niemeyer : "When I go out for lunchtime, you"re going to be a corpse." The judge ordered Allen removed, the trial proceeded without him and the defendant was convicted and sentenced to 10 to 30 years in prison. Last July, the U.S. Court of Appeals In Chicago in· validated thee on v I ct ion, saying Allen's C<lnstitutional right to face his ace.users had been violated. If . necessary, the appeals court said, J udge Niemeyer should have bound and 1a1ged Allen. This suggestion later was used by Judge Julius J. Hof- fman in Chicago to bind and gag Bobby G. Seale, one of eight radicals charged with inciting riots at the 1968 Democratic convention. The net result of t h e Supreme Court's ruling is that all ·the judges evidently did the right thing. If a defendant ignores the judge's admonition that he should behave and makes further proce edings lm· ' possible, he can be forcibly removed, If the judge decides the best way to deal with a rebe llious defendant is to bind and gag him -that's all right, too. USE CONTEMPT And of course, Black's decision noted, trial judges may use their old standby contempt powers to cite a stubbornly defianl defendant and throw him in jail. The heart of Black's opinion, in which technically a 11 justices except Douglas joined, Is this observation: "It would degrade our C<lun- try and our judicial system to permit our courts to be bullied, insulted a n d humiliated and their orderly progress thwarted and obstructed by defendant s brought before them charged with crimes." The only notice Black took of the fact judges sometimes provoke the outbursts b y short-ending defendants on their rights was the observa- tion that "being manned by humans, the courts are not perfect and are bound to make some errors." SOOTHE FEELINGS Brennan 's . concurring opi· nlon sought to soothe liberals' sensibilities by counseling that the guarantees of liberty. justice and equality "cannot endure if we allow o u r precious heritage or ordered liberty to be ripped apart amid the sound and fury ol our time.·· Significantly, though. even Brennan, a recogniud liberal. coupled liberty v.•ilh order . Only Douglas, in a separale opinion , s tressed that Gridder Get s Political Boost BUFFAW, N.Y. (AP) - Quarterback Jack Kemp of the Buffalo BUls professional ... football team has been en- dorsed by Erie C o u n t y .RrpubUe1n leaders 11 can· didai< for the 19th District aul In the U.S. Hou!< of ~uve1. Kemp baa no announced op- poslllon In the Jun• party pr111111')'. The •t now 11 held by oemoeretRJchardD. Mc C!arth1.• a candldale for hb party 1 nomlaallon to Ille U.S. Senile. \ California · Federal guara11lees $1,236 a year on a $20,000 invesl1nent with absolute 6% guaranteed interest is what we're talking about. A guaranteed annual yield of 6.18o/o. That means $1,236 a year on a $20,000 investment. ~d not only is interest guaranteed, but your principal is fully in- sured by an agency of the 'fed- eral government. It's one of the world's safest investments. Naturally, there are some conditions. First of all, to qualify for California Federal 's guaranteed 6% plan, the minimum deposit is $5,000. Second, yo u leave your money with us for a period of two years or more. Withdrawals are permitted at any time, however, with some loss of interest if with- ' drawn prior to maturity date. Is it possible for a fami1y to invest more than $20,000 and still have the principal amount fully insured? By opening three separate accounts, a man and wife may have up to $60,000 fullyir.isured. What if you don't have $5,000? California Federal has a wide variety of plans for invest- ments under $5,000. Interest ranges from 5% to 5.75°Ai. One ' of them undoubtedly is ideally suited to your particular cir- cumstances. Can you earn more than 6.18 % yield? Yes, you can earn 7.79%an- nual yield on $100,000 or more if left on deposit for 1 year or more. That amounts to $7, 779.00 guaranteed interest on $100, 000. And the 7.5% yearly interest rate is adjustable for terms shorter than one year. Does any Savings and.Loan Association in California, under any circumstances, pay a higher interest rate than California Federal? No. Do you have any other questions? Call any of our offices in Los Angeles, Ventura or Orange Counties. Or stop in. We'll have the answers. Helping savers earn more money on their savings made us the nation's largest federal. Califomia Federal·. Nationi Largest Federal. .For the money you can, afford to \ Canfomla Federal Savingsond Loon Association • Assets over $1.6 Bimon •Head Office: 5670 Wfl5'11rt Sotil9\'0t'd, let~ Anaheim Office: 600 N. Euclid Ave.· 776-2222 Costa Mesa Office: 2100 Harbor Blvd.· 546-2300 Orange Office: 4050 Metropolitan Dr.· 639-3033 Down tJae Mission Trail Cle~ente Women H~r C~ndidates SAN CLEMENTE -S•n Clemente Area Republican Women. Federated will hear talks by two candidates for public office Friday. · The session ls public and will begin at 8 p.m. It is to be held at the San Clemente Beach Club1 106 Avenkla Trabuco. William Wilcoxen, Laguna Beach at· tomey who waged the fight for public access to Salt creek Beach, will be one of the speakers. Wilcoxen is a Republican candidate for the 35th District congressio"nal seat long held by late Rep. James Utt. James E. Heim, county public ad· ministralor and San Juan Capistrano resident, will also speak. Heim is a candidate for re-election and will outline the duties of his office. e Kite Contest Set MISSION VIEJO -A kite flying con.. test will take place Saturday at tha Recreation Center. · Mission Viejo youngsters have been preparing for the big day by making their own kites of all shapes and 11izes to fly at the contest. Categories wiU be held in each age division -box kite, smallest, largest, best decorated and dog fight. Rules for eadl divisicin will be available at the center. Register for each division a half hour before. The first event is at 10 a.m. For further Information contact the center at 837-4084. 9 Lato Address Slated CAPISTRANO -A Superior Court clerk" will discuss aspects of Jaw enforcement and police protection for the general membership of the Capistrano Beach Chamber of Commerce at a regular meeting next Wednesday. Marshall Norris will accept questions from the audience after the noon Jun· cheon and talk at Pete and Clara's Restaurant in San Juan Capistrano. Reservations are not necessary for the luncheon. · e Booth• Designated MISSION VIEJO -Booth• ,for the annual Cinco de Mayo Festival will be drawn on Tuesday at tbe Mission· Viejo High School Parent Teacher Organization meeting. Booth assignments for an organizatfoM applying for one will be made, via the drawing, by Vince Esposito, Cinco de Mayo chairman. This year's festival wlll take place on Sunday, May 3 at the high achoo! grounds. e CBCA Raises Funds CAPISTRANO BEACH -~!embers of the Capistrano Beach C o m m u n i t y Association are sponsoring a fund raising event on Saturday, Aprll 11 . A chicken dinner with all the trim· mings will be served from 5 to 7 p.m. at Palisades Methodist Church, 27002 Camino de E!ltrella. The fees will be $1.85 for adults and $1 for children under 12. Beautification will be the program topic. e Planned Area OK'd CAPISTRANO - A revision of the Thunderbird Capistrano Planned Com- munity Development Plan was approved .Wednesday by the Board of Supervl30r1. The 450-aere planned c o m m u n I t y , located in the north part of Dana Puint , w<iS first approved in 1964. Since that time the state Division of Highways has cut a swath through the development for the Pacific Coast Freeway, deleting 80 acres. The new plan calls for an increase In park space from 3.6 acres to 32 acres and 26 acres has been set aside for schools. DAIL 'i PILOT 11tte ltr Jo!IR Y11ttn• Thur!dOY, April ~. 1970 s DAILY "L()T ~ ' State Cl~h -Buy As.l{ed . I County G:roup Urges Capo Purchase •An Or•nSe County commlttee bu urg. direct~ of the state recreallon agency be \ea publk properly," J sold. ed that lhe State" of CaWornla buy the William PeM Mott, to relay 'the countf ~county' commlttee'1 formal report Bite of the former Capistrano Beacb SUl?~estions for purchase of the eight on the Issue 11, due to be rubmtt:Jed \Club. acres 1owncoast from Doheny State to the aupervlaoi'1 April?. l The Recrea:Uonal Beaches Study Q>m· Park. The beach purchQe by a ~t jn)t\ee this wetk ask'1f Kenneth John Klllerer, aide to Fifth District \ •gency "wouldn't be a tlmp ina ," ~son, ' county director of Harbors, Supervisor' Alton E. Allen, tenned the said Stanlei Kraute, bead of the ty '5eaches and Parks, to ~tact the head bea ch "a natural for eztension ot the Departmen of Real Prope¢' ~· . of. the state Departm t of Parks and state park.i' He said that co mlttee "To have a usable bea ave Recreation and urge th~11tate purchase. members agree that the proPerti° should to have park.Ing, restrooms f.!'nd ess," The valuable beach acreage had been be a J)ubllC beach, but they consider he added. eannarked for a huge,, tower apartment that the state purchase would be "more Besides consideration of purthue of com plu:, but a variance to allow for reasonable0 than a purchase by the the Capistrano Beach acreage; the com· the conatrucUon has lapsed and IAst county. mJttee is meeting with repreaenUIUvtt week it was announced that the towers Allen, who asked that the committee of the Laguna Niguel Corporation and would .not be built. It was then that reconsider, the parcel for the county Chandler Shennan C or p o r a t 1 on to the ideas for purchase of the closed or the state, sald that either alternaUve negotiate for access areas to pubUc beach for the public were advanced. Ls acceptable. tidelands between Monarch Bay· and Sampson is eipected to contact tho "It's acceptable as long u that parcel Dana Point. Pm·k Landscape Dedication Set Who~s the Head? Feminists Score Census Form PRESIDENTIAL AIDE HUGHES SPEAKS AT SHRINE .DEDICATION Thoughts on Our Htrlt19e •nd • Promitt of • Ntw Flag The $1.5 mllllon redesign and landscape project at Doheny Beach State Park will be dedicated in public ceremonies May 14, the event coordinaror announced today. LEXINGTON, Ky. (AP) -'!be Lex- ington Women's l.JberaUon group is ad· vocating massive civil disobedience from America's women to protest what it "discriminatory" nose-counting forms. the role of "head of the house" whenever a man and woman JJve together. Forster School Awarded Franklin MetzJeur, chairman. coordinator of the park dedication com· m1uee, said community and county leaders will be invited to participate. The park will be open for public use May 15. They further prolelted the Wlll'd "bead," saying It ii 11yD00011tOU1 wllta "leader," and to infer that the woman doesn't asswne the rote of~ the house is to infer· that lr capable or competent in such a role. Shrine, New Flag Due Facilities for 700 cars and t h e beachgoers they bring to Doheny wil be provided in the new day-use area between the San Juan Cteek channel and Del Obispo Road. The new entrance to the park will be off Del Obispo Road. ' At a meeting Tuesday, members of the group criticized the form that pro- vides a space for "head of the house,'' followed by a space for 11wife of the house." ... "We feel Ille government la acting 11. a discrlmlnatory· manner became "ol the discriminating fonn, when It purport.t not to be dilcriminatory ft all,,. said Marie Allison, a first-year IA atudent. Marco Forster Junior High School rece ived a freedom shrine in ceremonies Wednesday a·fternoon, then won promises of a surprise patriotic gift from President Nixon's top military aide-a new flag whic.h has flown over the U.S. Capitol. Air Force Brig. Gen. James Donald Hughes formally dedicated the award of the doiens of replicas of America's historical documents then unexpectedly noticed the school's nag napping in a strong westerly breeze. To the several hundred students and community leaders the affable general said, "As I look out there I see your nag whJch I understand once new over the Capitol. lt seems a little tittered so I 'll see to It that as soon as I return to Washington, you'll get a new one." The top military aide was the of!icial representative of the President to the ceremonies sponsored by the S a n Clemente Exchange Club, which donated the shrine to the school. The dozens or replicas of documents, mounted behind protective materials, will be built into a wall at the school It was the first shrine dedication of 30 expected this month in schools and other locations throughout California. Each April the international Exchange Club organization dedicates the patriotic additions. Gen. Hughes dwelt on two of the document.s and their significance in his address to the students Wednesday af· lemoon. "'Mle Declaration of Independence was not written by politicians, bu t by doctors, farmers, lawyers and other citizens who were willing to admit that their heads were in a noose, but they knew they had to sign that famOl.L!I document." "The historic documents in general," he added, are not so much a testament to our natlon's freedom, as they are graphic reminders of the many times America's freedom has been in jeopardy. "In my travels with Mr. Nixon when he was Vice President and President I have heard the National Anthem pla yed in a thousand different ways-with bongo drums or any number of strange in· struments-and some Umes the ren· dltlons were Just awful, but no matter how badly played, it still was an in- spiration to me and all who heard it,'' he said. Exchange Club President Herb Hively and Marco Forster, Principal Walter J. Spencer were among individuals a~ pearing in the afternoon dedication near. the &ehool'a .outdoor stage. The shrine iii tbe third in the South Coast area to be donated by the Sau Clemente Club. San Clemente High Scbool and Sad· dleback College are fonner recipients. The women said the wording implies that the government feels a man assumes PACIFIC COMPOUNDS -IN I ERFS I DAILY even on new high rate accounts take your choice ANNUAL YIELD ANNUAL RATE MIN. BALANCE MIN. YEARS Z79°1o Z50°1o $100,000~ ONE 6.18°1o 6.00°~ 5,000~ TWO 5.92\ 5.75\ 1,0002! ONE 5.39\ 5.25°~ 50'02! %th 5.13\ 5.00\ 121 ONE DAY Interest frdm date of deposit to date of withdrawal on passbook accounts r Hospital Advisers Study Invalids and Ainhulances ASK HOW YOU CAN RECEIVE, SERVICE CHARGE FREE 1. Safe Deposit Box 4. Tickets to Sports 2. Traveler's Checks and Theatre Attractions 3. Collection of Notes {Tlcketron) Topics ranging from honor among nurses caring for invalids to first aid , rellpontlbillties In the ambulance field wW·be taken up tonight by South Orange County Hospital Service Area advisory bolll'd. The board Js to meet at 7:30 p.m. In the board room or the Niguel Proresslonal Building at Monarch Bay Plaza, South Laguna. The boll.rd is seeking state legislation that would require that ambulance at· tendants be trained In first aid. Pretently the state requires only that either driver or attendant know first aid. The board established a committee to investigate the problem rtcently after hearing testimony from representatives of both Wind and La Paz ambulance services. They held that it is more practical to require attendants to know first aid 1Jnce they are with the patient while the driver i.9: drlvina. Aasemblyman Roberi Badham (R· Newport Beach) has agreed to in· ves:tigate the sltuaUon and )>OSsibly ln· _traduce legis/aUon, .said Dennis Paqu!n, board aecretary. The board Js also working with county supervisors on the possibility ol county ordinances to control licensing of am· bulance persoMel. The group Is also to take up the question of the question of background infonnaUon on nurses caring for invalid patients. , President Richard Mudge ttported recenUy that licensing and registration is a severe problem. He said many cases involve thievery and cited tX· amples ot losses of valuables by the elderly, "The screening and placement of nurses to care for invalids should be handled through· some agency," said Mudge. ''Our board could possibly un· dertake a study in this area. The prime prerequisite for nur.ses in this field should be honesty." The advisory board will abo hear a report on Project DAFFY (DtntJI Assistance Fund For Youths). The pro- gram at work in southern Orange County benefit, youngsters whast parents might not be able to afford dental work. 5. Many other FREE Services SOUTH COAST PLAZA 3333 BRISTOL STREET • COSTA MESA, CALIFORNIA HOURS: 9:30 .A.M. TO 9:30 P.M. • SAT.: 10 .A.M. TO 8 P.M. • PHONE 541M088 • MAIN OFFICE: ll401 .WHITTIER BOULEVARD, LOS ANQl!L!8, CALIFORNIA , •' ' r ........ , CE Shows Exas peration Judge Recesses 'Strike' Hearing \ViHINGTON (UPI) -A federal ju48 said. loday the slowdown by air 1ratf controllers might not be sotved by any ruling on his part. An artificial banana ripenin& ma-After a round of arguments In open ehlne in La Spezia, Italy, exploded court, U.S. District Judge George L. in a warehous& Tuesday destroy-Hart, in appannt exasperaUon, recessed Ing $16,000 worth of bananas. Auth· a 001tempt of court bearing agaiftst orities said the blast ,vas the re-the leaders of the Professional Air Traf· • sull of a malfunction in the ma-fie Controllers Organitation, saying there 1 chine's heater. Other than the ba-were some things "the coort cannot ; 118?&5, no one els.e was injured. ~ aaid, "My decision on this matter · • ,may not help at all ." 0.Yt Hawkts, owner o( a ~orn· The government had obtained a court • w"'" . England nightclub said he injunction to halt a "sjck-out". by -. · t t PAT.CO members -de.scribed by the has reinstated strip tease art.Ls s a gover111ment as aa jllegal strt.ke. Tod~'s hi& club because of a threatened hearing was based on contempt charges boycott by women patrons. He said brought against PATCO's executive no complaints were received from director F. Lee Bailey, a0<1 two other men and noted, "The women seem officials who were accused or encourag· to, be far more interested." continuation of the strike. e Hart quashed subpoenas by Bailey for · 90 air traffic controllers to appear at the hearing. Harl said it could ere.ate a safety hazard if they had to leave their posts to attend. ' ' I • • j' Dec Hudson was reunited with her l Jiance, Army Sgt. f.1ark Ha101an in ' HawOii. Tuesday thanks to 15,300 pop bottles. Miss Hudson. a sopho- more at Ohio Dominican College, Co- lumbus Ohio collected the bottles to J fituJ:nCe' her trip here for the reu11iori t while he wa.s on t;ve from Vietnam .. l Don K•nnedy of Cambridge, Ohio, recently dug up a 1912 receipt from Mt. Carmel Hospital showing he had ·paid a total of $4.65 for two : days of treatment. $4.30 went t.D · room and board, 10 cents for medi· cine and a quarter fDr ether an~ surgiCal dressings. Similar servi· ces today at 'the hospital would cost well ·over $50. • Two Charleston, lV. Va., de· tectives employed by Loga11, 1V. Va., officials to obtain eviden ce o/ alleged gambling at a local pool hall, have been themaelves arreated on gambling chargea bt1 Logan County Sherlf/'1 De· putu'a. The pool hall is owned bV a Logan policema1i. _ • When radio station KFXD, Nam· pa. Jdaho offered on the air a rec· ord album to any girl who showed up at the station in a bikini, six girls came and got their records. However about 1.500 men also ar· rived bui got no more than a side. long glance. • Two Sedalia. Mo .. youths, Char· Its Bryant and F rank Doogs storr- ped to admire a new bulldozer parked near the road. They got aboard and started the machine. It rumbled backward, Over Bry· ant's car and through a fence be- fore stopping. The highway patrol said the 1964 model car is now about the size of a desk. Bailey said the ruling "deJilroys my case.·• There v11as 110 indicatio• how many of the subpoened controllers w e r e lng continuation of the strike. Bailey contended that none of the con· trailers he ·subpoenaed would have bttn working v.·h.ile the court was in session. Hart also denied Bailey's request for a trial by jury. The judge also questioned Bailey. ·with some exasperatio11 , about several other subpoenas Balley issued i• an attempt to back up his allegation that the govern-- ment bad "bugged PATCO lines." The Federal Aviation Adminlstratlon said there has been a small but steady return to work today in some areas of the country, but controllers in the hard-hit East, including New York, show· ed 110 signs of retuniilg. The FAA said J,629 controllers were -0U the job nationwide Wednesday com· pared wilh 1,728 on TueSday and 1.Sl'l on Monday. More Teamsters Walk Off Jobs \VASHINGTON (UPI)• -W i Id c at Teamster strikes spread in the South and to lhe Far West today, while truck drivers in some other areas faced layoffs because of a lack or incoming freight callSf!d by the wal.touts elsewhere. Union members returned to the job in Kansas City and Minneapolis-St. Paul. but new walkouts occurred in Los Angeles, Charlotte, N.C., and in Des J\,foines, Iowa. Additional truckers walked off lhe job in Ohio. No strike was reported authorized by national'llnion leaders who were meeting in Washington with trucking iodustry representatives to try to iron out a new contract. The old cOntract expired at midn1ght Tuesday and \housands of drivers refused to v.·ork after that, pro- claiming •·no contract, no work." In Chicago, union members remained on the job, but officials said there may be layoffs soon because incoming freight has beea decreased by strikes in olher areas. Turkev , Toll 1,030 GEOlZ (UPI) -The death toll i \\lestern Turkey's earthquake reachec' 1.080 today and 1,142 persons \\'Crc reported seriously injured . A health minist ry spokesman denied reports of disease in the area but local ofricials said 10 children died of influenia in the \•illage from Gediz. of Kaya, about 10 miles Normally a minimum of 10,150 con- trollers l.l'e o.n duty at 21 trlfllc control centers\ and in airport conuol towers. he control centers have bee1 hardest il by the w a I k out with an ab5entee rate of about 25 percent. Ohio's Rhodes To Sue Life .Ove r A rticle COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -Gov. James A. Rhodes said today he will bring a libel suit agains:t Life magRl.ine because of a story about him last May he said "was designed to eliminate me from the race .for the U.S. Senate." He said the action will be filed in New York State by AtUiriley Louis Nizer of New York City by April II. He would not say what relief wiU be sought or discuss any other details of the action, saying Nizer would be available in New York next Monday to answer such questiOns. Rhodes said the Life story. enlitled "The Governor and The Mobster," brought up lhe 1970 Senale race and he said information for the story "came from political interests that l won't reveal at this time." Rhodes, concluding his se<:ond term as governor, is barred by Jaw from seeking rHleclion. His primary cam· paign opponent for the Republican Senate nomination is Rep. Robert Taft Jr. (R· Ohio). The Life story questioned Rh<1des' use of campaign funds, said he was forced to pay $100,000 in back inoome taxes and penalUes, and noted that Rhodes had commuted the first-degree murder conviction of Toledo mobster Thomas "Yonnie" Licavoli to second-degree. Rhodes commuted Licavoli's sentence In January 1969, but the onetime mob!ler -sentenced in 1934 for four 1angland-- style .slayings -lost a subsequent rt· quest for parole. Troops Disper se Catholic Looters BELFAST, Northern lrelaDd (UPI) - British troops tOOay dispersed 1 group of 100 Roman Catholic teen-agers who broke into and looted abandoned Protes- tant homes in the Ballymurphy housing district where major Catholic-Protestant fighting broke out Wednesday night. The Wednesday night outbreaks were the worst since widespread religious fighting last October and British soldiers fired nausea gas for the fi rst time since then. The Rev. Ian Paisley. a milit.ant Protestant leader, began the project to evacuate SO Protestant children from their homes at the development because "they are being attacked and inimidated by Roman Catholics." As the children were being sent by bus to temporary shelters several Protes- tant families al!IO left their homes. When they did the Catholic teen-agers -1ent on the rampage wlth yells of "the prod& are gone! 'nle prods are gone!" they carried furniture and food from the houses until troops intervened. · \nswerer s to Strike~ NEW YORK (UPI) -The Medical ~ociety of New York County warned 7 ,000 physicians in .Manhattan to be prepared to man their own phones because of sporadic wildcat strikes by o p e r a t o r s for telepho•e·answering servlces. Marooned on 'Island' Thi.s young couple awears stranded on a safety. island in the middle of. Chicago's Michigan Ave- nue. during the driving snows which hit the city Wednesday. It was no April Fool's joke as motor· lsts tried to keep from sliding off sli pp~ry roa~s. At least 12 more inches of~spring snow 1s predicted, surpassing au seasonal records: Roger s Says U.S. Seeki11g Cable Ca r Crash Boo sts Sex Life -And City Sue d Neutrality in Cambodia \YASHINGTON CUP!) -Secretary or State William P. Rogers told the Senate Foreign Relations Committee today that the Nixon administration wants to main-- tain neutrality in Cambodia and avoid involvement in v.·hat could become another Indochina war. After Rogers testified in closed session before the committee, Senate Democratic Leader Mike J\,fansfield said he "'as "very pleasec:J and impressed" 1vith the testimony. "The attitude of lhe administrati on Is a correct one." ft1ansfield said. "Our profile in Cambodia Ls about as low as you can get it." Reds Ur ge Fig ht By Indochinese Against U.S. PARIS (UPI) -The North Vietnamese and Viet Cong negotiators at the Paris peace talks called today on the peoples of Laos, Cambodia and Vietnam to unite against what they called America11 "ag- gressive designs." 't'he Communisls all but Ignored the Vietnam war in today's 6lst session and refused any comment on the French government's proposal for a general con- ference on Indochina to neutralize the enUre area. Saigon Ambassador Pham Dang Lam said Hanoi's actions in intervening in both Laos and Cambodia had only made more difficult the search for peace in Vietnam and that Communist declara· lions of "solidarity" with the people'> of Indochina were propaganda slatements to rover up intervention. He demanded the Communi s ts withdraw the 67 ,000 North Vietnamese reported in Laos and the 60,000 reported in Cambodia. Once that is done, he said, "meaningful discussions" can start. Hanoi's Nugyen Min h Vy said the United States had a hand in what he called the "extreme rightist coup" in Cambodia that deposed Prince Norodom Sihanouk as chief of stale and once again accused the United St.ates of ex· tending the war to all of Indochina. He added ; "All the administration wants -and all I want-is maintenance of neutrality and no involvement in what couJd become an Indochina war." Sen. George 0. Aiken (R·Vt.), another CMlmittee member, said after hearing Rogers he was satisfied that the United States ."".ould not supply weapons or other m1htary assistance to Cambodia. Even if the Phnom Penh government were threatened with a Communist overthrow, "I don't th.ink we would make any move without the administration L'OOling to Congress,'' Aiken said. Asked if he felt assured by Rogers' testimony, Mansfield replied, "Yes. I did." ~1ansfield said the United States should "keep at a distance" and hold to the "low profile" currently maintained by the administration involving Cambodia. He was also asked the possibility or allied troops -perhaps South Koreans. New Zealanders or Australia~ -moving into Cambodia. ~tans!leld opposed the idea. "That just would be the shadow hiding the substa~." the Democratic leader said. "We are all allies and all allie." should st.ay out. If ,pne goes in we are all tarred." State Department -0£llcials indicated unofCi cial jnterest in a French .proposal for international negotiations to neutralize all of Indochina. At the White House, a spokesman said the French propo.sal Is ''still unclear to us" and said the State Department was seeking clarification. He said Nixon learned or the suggestion from news report& and declined to com· ment when a reporter asked, "Doesp't the White House consider it odd that a clo.se ally would not first in!orm the President ?" SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -Witne11ses told a· jury of eight women alld four men \Vednesday that a proper and relatively chaste young .Jady radically changed after a cable car accident into a woman whose sexual need was unsati sfied by 100 men. Courts Rreviously ha ve a warded daiTiages because impotence or frigidit y followed an accident, but the case or Gloria Sykes. 29. is believed the first in which damages were sought for Ur creased sexual appetite. On the first trial day, Lawrence Leonard , a high school teacher. and t.trs. Leslie Armbrust, a teleph-One com- pany employe, testified about lt1iss Sykes before and after. Leonard, v.·ho went steady with ?.1iss Sykes a decade ago, and Mrs. Ambrust. a laogtime friend, both said the plaintiff V.'as an upright, religious girl before the accident on. a Sunday in 19&1. J\,liss Sykes was aboard a cable car which plunged three blocks down a steep hill when it lost its grip on tbe cable. Her physical injuries were .iot serious, bUt ·she later sued the · cify of San FrallCiSCO for $500,000 because of mental injuries. Mrs. Armburst said her friend kept a calendar book after the accident \Vith details of affairs with 100 men. "! asked her how she met so many, and she said. Ifs easy, y0u go up and talk with somebody.'' fwtrs. Annbrust said .. Miss Sykes never really enjoyed the sex, t.frs . Arntbrust said. ·'All she really wanted was warmth and affection." . ','Thi s is unbelievable," said Deputy City Attorney \Villiam Taylor. He blam~ the pain on a kidney problem and the sexual appetite o.i birth control pills he asserted may lead to "promiscuity and unnatural sex drives." Goldberg Rejects 'Push' As NY Governor Candidate New Storm on East Coast Viet Cong Ambassador Nguyen Van Tien said the Cambodian government -Of Premier Lon Nol, a lieutenant general. \\'as acting as agents of the United States and had killed ''hundreds" of Cambodians in repressing pro-Sihanouk demonstratio.1s. Both the Viet Cong and Hanoi represen· tatives brushed aside questions on the French Indochina proposal as they en· tcred the session. LIBERTY. N.Y. (AP) -Former Supreme Court Justice Arthur J . Goldberg has won selection by the state Democratic Committee as candidate for governof of New York -but says he prefers to get into the party primary June 23 the hard way. The committee's endor sement automatically entitled the oneti me secretary of labor and U.N. ambassador to a place on the primary ballot. S1wiv Continues to Fall Ove ,. 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" . ).j 1:1r Sheriff's deputies who arrived at her u ·" house to take 1 look immediately ~ evacuated houses in a two--square·block ,. .ei area . ; :: '.!J The deputies removed what they called ,, ,,, two "live" 100-pound bombs, a Viel Cong ,., a grenade and a 60mm projectile and sent IJ 1' .2t them to the U.S. Army Corps or EngJ. : ~! netts~at nearby Irwin, Pa. o ,, .ot A spokesman for the enginee.rs said t: :l they were duds and were bannless. ll." rf They said tile two "live" 100-pound ~ bombs actually were .50-tallber artillery P. tl 1.U shells. Ji fr Mrs. Martlni sak! her husband, Carl, !~, IJ,4 brought the 11mmunltion to thtlr home •0 ~ In 1uburbl:n Castle S h a n n o n by ~~ i:. automobile from his Army bast in J:t ,,. .» Georgia a yur a t le r his return from ~ ~ .rt Vietnam. \ T\\'o hours after he had been chosen at a stormy convention Wednesday, Goldberg said he would waive this ad· vantage and instead circulate nominating petitions among the voters. Getting on the primary ballol by peti· lion requ ires 10,000 signatures, includin'1: at least 50 from each of 17 of New York's 62 counties. Goldberg said this was his reply to assertions by some of the 345 delegatl'll to the state committee conclave that he was ''a creature of the bosses." Goldberg had recei ved the committee·s selection, vanquishing four cootenders. on the first ballot with 63.2 percent ol the vote. The convention also designated Sta te Sen. Basi l Paterson of Harlem to be the first Negro to seek the nomination tor lieutenant governor of New York. Some o( the state committee members applauded Goldberg's deci sion lo wah•e selection, viewing ii as a show of strength on his part. Others protested, quesUoning the legality and the propriety of ·the move. A general hubbub follo\ved led by one delegate who shout~: "He·!I making a mockery ool of our convention.'' Goldberg sought 10 placate t h c disgru~lled, booing •ssemblage b y returning to tht mstntm to explain th 11l he never Intended lo decline the deslgna. lion. but simply to waive its advantage -ao that all (Ubernatorlal candidates would be on an equal .footing. Goldberg. gave a hearty endorsement to Paterson's candidacy saying "it is about time'' the party advanced a Negro candidate for high office in state govern· ment. PoHo Crusader Salk Now Ont of Hospital SAN OTEGO (UPI) -Pollo veceln1 c:ltvcloper Or. Jona! Salk.has been relEa~ td from Univer11ily Hospital after three days of observa tion for a poo.slble heart ailment, officials revealed today, a • • thursday, Aprtf 2:, 1970 DAILY 1'11.1! S Smoking TV Ads Ban Ol('d , . ,WASlnNGTQ N CUP!) - WJlh nitither fanfare nor com· ment, President Nlion has signed a measure endlng all rildio· and televisjon cigarette commercials ns of Jan. 2. It opened the way for the gov- ernment to 1·equire hcallh \1•arnings on ull ren1alrung forms of cigarette arJvertising. The bill, \vhlch dre1,1• final congressional approval March 19, will deprive broadcasters of a big revenue source - $238.5 million in 1968, by gov- ernment estimates. Bu t they wi ll be allol!ed one final big day -Jan. 1 \\'l!h its New Year's Day football bowl games. The ne\v la1v requires. six months from no\\', a new and stronger \\'arning on cigsrcue packa ges. And it also allows the Federa l Tr ade Commission (FTC), if the agency so rlc· sires, to require prin ted v1arn- ings on other forms of cigarette advertising, such as billborirds and magazines, a!ler July I, 1971. Nixon signed the bitl \Yednes- day night without comrnent. Ne1vs of !he signing came out only after the tob~cco industry issued a slalen1ent s<Jyirig ii \vould con1pl.v with thc JJ11. The quiet or !ht> signi11g C('rl- trastcd sharply with the Jong and loud drbatc arid lobby ng ca1npaign th;it .'lrcompanird the meas ure lhrotigh Congress. The new cigarrlt!' pac~age \varning \l'i!\ read: "\Vornint~: The surgeon general h:is d1:· termined that cJrarc!tc s1nok- i11g is d:t ngrrous to your hralth." The current v.'arni ng says only '·Caution: Cigarette smoking ma v be hazordous to your llealth." The FTC already has said It will impose a warning on all printed ads if the tobacco m:tk· ers funnel their bro.1d<:asting advertising monrv into th<-Jt area. That v•:irning. the FTC . said, will read .. Viri rninq: Cig- arette smoking is d:inr:t'rOU$ 10 your heal1h and n1av caLJse death from cancer, c\lronary heart disease, chronic hronchr- tis. pulmonary emphysema and other dise:lses." Morocco.Air Crash Laid To Altimiter CASABLANCA, M o r r o c o (UPil -Aviation officials ~tiid today a faully altimeter or ground fog might have been responsible for the Royal Af.r l\1aroc crash that killed 61 persons Wednesday. Twenty- one aboard the tw in-jet Caravelle survived . \Vitnesses said the aircraft appeared to be on a course lt1\l't>r thun normal for planes approaching the ai rport when it dipped suddenly and hit lelephone \Vires, breaking in l\VO in names 1.5 miles short of the run1vay. Il narrowly n1 ic:sed a village. Yet au tho r i t ies said evcrythlng appeared normal to the pilot. Capt. Roger E m o n d . 50, 'whose last r :1 di o transniission \\'as : '·Everlyhing is okay. \Ve're con1ing in to la'fld." P re I i minary speculation :1mong officials was that the altilncter might ha v e been faulty, deceivi ng Emond into thinking he was higher than he \\'3'>. or the ground fog nii ghl h<fd;~-had the same ef- fect. The plane's black box flight recorder was flown to Paris for closer inspection. • Difference Ill Bias Senate Cites Separate Segregation WASlj!NGTON (UPI) - Ove!i: Southern ffeotest.t-1 the Senaie has joined Pruldeot Nixon in drawing a line between discriminatory oChool segregation and that re~IUng from separate white an<fblack neigbborboodJ. The House is expected to Collow .suit when It con!lders the three-year, $24.6 billion school aid authorization bill the Senate passed 74 to 4 Wednesday. A House vote ts tentatively scheduled Tuesday. Before the finaJ vote the Senate rejected 43 to 32 a motion to return the bill to a Hou.Senate conference committee for another rewrite of the schooJ desegregation amendment. The volt locked in the con- ference cOinmlttee's version, which largely reversed the original Senate amendment adopted with much fanfare Feb. 19 Wlder sponsorshlp of Sens. John C. StlJlllfs (0, Miss.), and Abraham A . illiblcoff ([).Conn.) Riblcoff, again wpportlng ,So~themconten~ion1 l.n- tegraUon is forced on the South while f'forUiern schools become more 8nd m o r e segregated, complained the rewritten amendment "puts us In a worse position than ever before." Ribicoff, wPose denunciation of "monumental hypocrisy" in ,the North sparked approval of the original amendment, criticized the revised ·version as "another step towafd lhe division of our society into two camps, one white and one black." Stennis' criglnal amendment ordered the department of Health, Education ·and Welfare (HEW) to enforCe sch o o I desegregation g u i d e I in e s equally North and So u t h , disregarding whether a school 'Monkey Trial' Figme Urges School Freedom NASHVILLE, Tenn., (AP)- John T. Scopes, whose 1925 "monkey trial" ended his teaching career and earned Dayton, Tenn., a place in history, says upholding the right to think is the only salva- tion for this country's educa· tion system. "We are so uneducated was segregate4 by ofllcial ac- tion (de jure) or as a result of residenu.al patterM (de fac- to). High Court Gag Ruling Put to :Work PHILADELPHIA (UPI) - Just 24 hours after the U.S. Supreme Court· ruled that a defendant may be gagged in court if he failed to behave himself, Judge LeO Welnrott ordered George Kenney gag- ged Wednesday for telling the judge to "go to hell". Kennedy, 21, charged In the fatal shooting of a state liquor clerk during a $200 holdµp in M~y, began his boisterous1 actions during the questionJng of jurors. I He shouted questions to the jurors while his defense at· torney was trying to question them. When Weinrott told him jurors could be questioned by his counsel only, Kenney said "he can go to hell ." Weinrott admonished him t h a t disciplinary measures would be taken unless he quieted. Kenney retorted, "go ahead and take the measures." Kenney continued speaking loudly with h'Js attorney and arguillg with the judge and telling him several times to "go to hell." because of the restrictions we L Er have put on education in this ake ie Fish country," Scopes told an au-S 1 S d dience of more than 400 ' a es toppe studenl3 at George Peabody College for Teachers Wed· TORONTO (AP) -The nesday. Canadian government h a s The restrictions, he added, banned the sale and export usually are placed on teachers of perch and pickerel Crom through pressure groups. Lake Erie because of possible Scopes. 70, dropped out or mercury contamination and is the public eye shortly after Ul'I T•lfftlt'-a r r a n g 1 n g discussions on that hot July day 45 yeers BACK IN SCHOOL further controls with officials ago when a jury in Dayton 'Monkey Trial's' Scopes in Washington. found him guilty of violaUng The government announced a new state law prohibiting the ban Tuesday and also said THE WATCH A$TRDDAUTS \ WEAR ... 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Tiii t ,.m. * '(:( * FDA Bowccl Isra el Hits .Syria I-lard On Border the teaching of any theory away with anytltlag is to say all commercial perch and that denies the Biblical a,.c-this is good old Ya 1 k e e pickerel catches would be seiz·i~~~===========================~~~ Dy United Pres!l International count of creation. technology and ingenuity," he ed. George Kerr, Ontario's\! Israel lau nched a major air He spent a full day on the .said. ministry of energy and and land retaliatory attack Peabody campus, plugging for "We build great arsenals to resource1, said fishermen Somebody fights Back against Syria today along the academic freedom and urging destroy the world -and would be pennitted to con-Who fl9hts city hall? Tht DAILY PILOT dots. fhat's who. And whtrt t1se can you find entire length of the 00-mile would-be teachers to attack justify it in the name of tinue making catches but cogent commentary on your community? Check tht tdltortal paRf of YOUR community's On Pill Bill -•oc-ri··c line ,·n the Golan what he called "Amertca•s god technology. We accept it on .. would have to freeze them "-' f hno] " f ·lb • lb t ·• •t ti! f ~-f Je·-' dally ntwspapH, th• OA.11.Y Pll.OT, of course. lkights and tank battles and --o~te~c~'.:o~gy~.::_l~~~,!!~~·~·~~~an~u--•-_m_~_e_'_' _ _c:"CJ1"~~e:0~~:or~m~e~rcury:._:__·_~•:================================= · 1 d r· hts ed I "All we have to do to get_ our religion. could be carried out. WASHINGTON (UPI) -·aoria og 1g rag or 'J'he new commissioner of the hours. Food and Drug Ad1ninistr::i tion Israel said its warplanes apparently yielded to his shot down three S yr ian superiors and othC'r doctors J\!1G2ls in the .h ea viest in toning down the \VJrning fighting in that area since label for birth control pil!s. the 1967 war. A Damascus "\Ve-never intended to pl;1y military spokesman said two the role of doctnr in this Israeli planes. an F4 Phantom particular C'asc," FDA Con1· nnd a ri.tirage, were shot down. missioner Charil'~ C. t::dwarr!>; He said Syria lost two planes. said \Vcdnesd:iy. He spnkc at Six hours after the battle the· annual rr:{'c\ini; rf thr starled the Dam as cu s Commission c d Offircrs spokesm::in said. "our a~· Associalion or the Pub ! i ~ -tiaircr:ift batter~es are still Ilcalth Scrri{l'. heroically engaging en e ~ Y One of the doctnrc: presr11t p!anl''l '''hich fire attempting risked \\·!1y the Fni\ b:id slt'11-1n :1:~al'k_ ou; t,~ound fore~; ped into an area "tr:>dit\1'1nalh· 'The l1ght1ng_1s still golng on. the p re r o g a t iv e of the Oama!':\US a1rp_ort was closed: prescribing physicinn.'' <ind _I~ 1 cl Aviv the Isra~b \Vl1cther 'U1i" wo11ld sc! .1 m1\1tnry spOkesman s a 1 d preccdrnt fr1r flll11i";.: •1.:inP'1g tod;i,v's attack \l'a~ laun ched labrls on other ctnn·~ because of 185 Syrian at.tacks ''Emph~Lic 3 11y 00,·1 1H'llinstlsraelin thepast three . Ed\v11rds said . rn11nlhs. . Sure-t'f1n t:t'tll'r"I .Tr~sc T. "Syrian military aggression Steinfeld onr of J:chvnrLl"' has been esca lating recently," superi or; and a corirer{'rH·(' lh L· s~~csmnn s:iid. "Syrian moderator. turned to lhe qucs· aulhonlt('S have bee n ac- tiqner and s:iid "f'n1 gl11d ynu 1h:~ting terrorists. and regular asked lh:i L question. It \\'[lf: m1htary forces in order to on my 1is1.'' <1c~le\'e this aggression," he Steinfeld said the FDA m1)\'e s:itd. was ''.a departure from usnl'l "T~r S_Yri~n~ 01'17nly admit practice" and "11. hrl·flk ,1·!th the 1 r . 1. ~ 1 1,.1 at 1 ~ e ~ ~ d tradirion." Ile said Edw.1rds rcspon-;1b1hty, he s~ud, citing bad not clrarc<l thr trxt of Uamascus radio broadca.sls the warning \vith eithrr hi•n and annnu nccmcnls of Syr1nn .or the go.vernmenrs tori hr:dth uttacks by the Syrian army officer, Dr. Roger c;, Egcberg. spokesman as proor. " Sad 11y att Jail I tt1nctt.e Blood Brigcule Fails POMPANO BEACH. Fla. (A~) -They buried ll·yl'nr-old ncth Sclioepp \Vedz1usll:.y, an d ft was a s:id occri'.'rion !or 113 jntn.ntcs of Ute county j:ill. Jn large pnrt, it \\l'I~ \hl'ir blood wllich had kept her all\ e for n1onths. Beth surfered from aplui;iic p,11cylopeniS,111 form of snr1ni a caused by C1e body'!l failure to gcnc.r:ite a norn1al supply or red ci•lls. She had n<'edcd 15 pint!> or transfused wlto!c blood every u·cek i;Jnce she \\'nS ~trlcl:cn last DcC<'l!lbcr. \Vord of her plight reached \Varrcn Nicholson . D f(1rn1rr 1 tire salcsinon :l\\•alti n~ !'irn· tcnce tn connection with ll1c . tr:i!f!c dculll or a 2-)'c11rof'lhl ~hlld. J{e orRJnizcd tJ1c: P:iln1 , 6eACh County Jo1l lnn1:lll!'S Into a rorps or 1.Jlood drinors. ''I didn't clQ this aut or a sense or guill.'' Nicholson snid. 111•m !!Of'ry J was involved in s11rh ll terrible tragedy and 1 ca11nt1l express the sympathy f fee l for the parents of the liU lc 11irl \Yho died in that :irridr11t. But t did this strictly 011t or n1y hcarL and mind us n hun1an being.'' An i11m3tc said he and his fellow donors were tiware lhtrc "':l!I little hope for Beth. .. \\'c knew there was very little we could do." he said. "Hut we wanted to try aod help ." Hrth's rather. ltcnry fchOC'flJ"l nf Lighthouse Point, f li-1 .. Sl'lid ·he was astounedd at l!1e outpouring of sympathy Jr\'m the public: · "Tnta l strangers walked In c!f the street and don8ted hl001t n! blood banks from ~liami to \V<'SI Palm Bench," he S<tid. ''"1e will neve r be ~tiln lo thank people for their kin.tness. "She knew she w;:is very ill.': her mother said. What Is back of the Home Shield? Assets are hundreds of millions more than the next largest, at least three thousand million more than the average association. All this, plus insurance. You can have this protection for your life savings t.oday ••• and for whenever it might be needed .•• by moving ro Old Dependable Home Savings. Meantime you can be SQ.I'll of the highest int.erest anywhere on inslfted savings. We invit.e you ro Be Sure at Americas Largest r \ -.. -. . . . . . . • -----. ! .. -------2 . J£ DAILY PROT EDITORIAL PAGE ' ' • P ublic Interest First I • • ' • . '~ ~ :' ,_ ·~ ···~ .. Increasing mililance and defiance of Jaw and lbelr oaths among federal and other government emllioyes have disturbed. lhe nation. -· '\ The striken have long been thought of as public servants w·ho took their jobs on a oo-strUce basis in re-- turn for a degree o( se(urity unavailable in private in- dustry. That Image ha• suddenly changed. They hnve equated their rights with those of strikers against private Industry -except that they yield a vast· ly greater power over public weliare. When postal \\'orkers strike, it ls with the effect of a general strike against every person in the nation, in- cluding themselves. \Vhen air controllers strike, in an age 'vben alr transport is the lifeline of the nali.on, dollar losses mount rapidly into the hundreds of millions while dis- Jocation of the nation's lile becomes incalculable. )~eq f!oachers s,lrike, th~lion'a, children become pawns· qr Ojr, ec,onomll'-'•lro " • •• ,; And il'and """'"" p(ll~ . , • · 11\0n 'ltike, the situ-ation 'be&itqe& ·even t 1r1~-in~erabJe:.' for a strik'fl' · against public safety is a strike against the security of eveJ1'one . Settlements under such pressure become strong Jn. flationary infl uences. Excessive wage and other con- cessions only feed the fires that make everyone's dollar worth less. including those won by the strikers. liere in California, police and fire representatives !n Sacra1nentc. are demanding passage of a bill provid- ing for con1pulsory, binding arbitration. Th~ League of California Cities takes the position that this \11ou1d be far inore serious than a strike. The Jeague says: ''If a norrelected, non-responsive individ- ual selected as an arbitrator can determine the nature and extent of more than 70 percent of a city's operating budget (salaries and fringe benefits} and the tax rate necessary to produce such revenue. then elected public officials and taxpaying electors have lost control of government.'' California has a new Jaw , the Employe Organization Money Abuses Dear Gloomy Gus: Of ·Some ' F ou1idations ey J. IIarris Let's .Julius nominate Hoffman Chi cago Judge to the Supreme -H.J. B. I r Court. T hil INhl.-. tf!IH11. tNdtn' "'-' Ml ""Jt>i.:;.,.,,.t!'-4 ~ •w;HNlfily ~ ff t"4i et..,._. stft4I ... ~ ' -. ' ~ • ~ "'~.-..... • 0...., G-. IMlll'J ""'"-Spe•diiJ ...C.tl!O lmle~'lll •. PoMli<~J i" .:c.. __ .' _ ~. . and public organizatioTl! to spend every ·="""=.;,,,..;;,.:;,_ _________ , cent t.liat is appropriated. as I was recently, brought to mind the exactly op-Rosenwald. who was as shrewd about posite.t~ency or qw.ny charitable trusts people as he was aboul money. and Mations. WHEN HE SET UP the &senwald Heftf'We find ont of Parkinson's Laws FU.nd i111 the 1920s. ht stipulated that it nper~, in reverse : the payout of the s~u1d dissolve itself tn 35 years, spen- trust ~~tioo ls as s·mall as possible, ding all the principle witbin that period. in order to build up the as.scLo; \and the Thus , there was no reasoil for the fund 's influence) of I.he organization with in directors to maintain themselves jn itself. • i · · power or to augment the fund . ' • r I am not suggesting th8t the Ford or PR.l!'SlJMABLV, a founoatio" is scl up Rockefeller Foundations s hould do In oriter to make grants and disbur!e likewise ; their payouts have bef:JI larger ~arge surils of money ,to pcoplt~ and pro-than average, and most or their projects Jects thaL conform to the purpose of the have had a socially desirable purpose. founder. But there are hundreds or other foun- ln actl!al\l!l'aC~ J1.ow~yer, _as 1.i.~~;· ~·1!!!!·-~· ~.:el.isi 'IJlOle · Jor the CongretSK>nal .hearings disclosed. mB.l}Y benefit of their employeg than in the o( theSe "c.haritable'' groups have public interest, and these should be made become thefr own greatest benefactors, to pay out or close up. giving a miltimum payoot and retaining a maximum share of interest and dividends :-'SA DISTRESSING ex~ple, the fund on investments. with which former JusUce Fort.as was TIUS lS NOT dishonesty (in the legal sense), or even rorrupUon; ii is, rather. lhe working or an i ne i:orable psychological !av• -lO build up an em- pire and to retain control over a con- stantly increasing sum 0£ money. One of. the rew American philan· lhropi.sts who understood this natural and deplorable tendency \\'as the late Julius associated has an abmlrd1y small annual payout compared with the fee it Jiad agreed lo give him. lt is hard to avoid the conclusion that a foundation of this sort violates the illtent of the law that alows tax~xemptions to charitable trusts. A charitable fund that becomes richer ev~y year is Mt doing iti job properly; which only proves it is harder to give away money intelligently than to make it. • • -·---·-- 'T is the Yowli ng Yorty Well, children, <ls you remember. Sir Ronald of lloly ltood iind hi$ faithful squire, Sancho Reinecke. had plunged deep into The Tangled Thicket in quest of that fnmtlnous beast, The Dread Unruh! Art Hoppe ' ' ' At long last, the I 'nruh h:id waddled forth from its C\•il dl•n 10 g1\·t: mortal combat., • Sir Ronald t'agcrly girded "BE NOT DECEIVED, Sire, by its himself for ballle -~·hne shirt. sincere looks." said Sancho." 'Tis a spoiler that tie, Man Tan. And shouting h1s famed ~ucks the blood_ of. honest men. Some sa_y battle.cry, •·for D«-enc'. for l'urilv :ind lt ha~ venom in its fangs. Some say 11 for Just Pia.in Goo<lnc~~ .. -hl' Sallied pr~ctice_s secret _alchemy and can turn forth to the fra,r, .. --_ ~tced-pa~ns into golden volts. Tis a But jusl as he ar\d Sancho iunied a dn~ger~s creature. Sire. Run it through bend, ,a &:!range little crcalure ~urril'd quickly. acrOS& lhteir path. Its spiny hair brislled ."Poor me." wailed Tht Yowling Yorty every whleh way. its <·yes J:li\\ert-U \\'11h p1ttoosly. "Nobody love$ poor me." . cunning, ·and from its thrn;it there e1nit-"Listen not. Sire," said Sancho. ''This ted a .cmstant \\·all : beast is upder a magic spell. Every four 11NOBODV LOVES poor nu•. Rnt poor me wHJ llhow them. Poor n1e \1'111 show them ~U." "'llo!a,~ crit'd Sir Ron:1l1!. hi~ hand on the hllj ol his S\vinglng :\i1·orrl. •·Whal man.ntr of evil ness Is 1his"" ··Canlul, Slrt. treoid not l()o t·lo,f;('." Mid SaDcho with a shudder. " ·r~:s 'l'he Y~lN Yorty. Run it through with ~011r · Spuklial Spe.'.lr and lcl tis be on our way. t\. · At &be tnentlnn of being run lh,,-.ugh . The Yowlin& Vorl y had rolled over on ii" bac~ .... ntrN g11t.ed up at Sir llonald with -a fnnln& look. ••Rdf1Ws creature through'"' said Sir Rooa.111.,;.r;tinc "111.11 gingBI)'. ''Think you tl 1 advenary for :i noble knight, _,,, Quotes s t•••1 CllJ1b1lm •• bl ack c.. 11111 fma 8.JWklyn, Ot1 c.111. , "'111cre'' mott !iC '< di "' --ry tll1lll ..... dl1tili!1 'q ,._ ~ -\ -- years it mu~1 sally forth from its brown- tlouded Southland den t.o seek the powers you now possess. And whilst it never \\1ins, it sullies the honor and weakens tht strength of t.hose who engage ii in com- bat.. Run It through.'' AS SI R RONALD dlsta.Stefu lly drtw bac.k his spear to strike, the creature wailed louder. "Oh, ~taster,!.!.. it cried. "hast thou forgotten poor me in four ahort year!!? 'Twas I \lo'ho so weakened !he Evil Governor In primary balUt that thou didst di.1patch him wllh tase, thw freeing The Beloved People or your Golden State. Thou owtst poor me a boon." Str Ronald thought for a · moment, helped tM creature to ita ftet, patted It on the head ind sent it scurrying off. "l was wrong, Sancho," he 11Jd. " 'Tl1 a "or thy <>pponent after all.'' ''Then Why. S!rt. dldsl thou nol run Jl through?'' Sir Ronald smiled. "Not 1 Wbrlhy 01>' ponen1 for me, vsrlet, '1 he said, as the shrieks 11nd crunn$ of bloody battle resounded through The Thicket. ''Out a w(lrthy opponent for Tht Dread Unruh." All! ,,._ <lnlll:il llld he •mllod ,nd ne 1i lltd• Act which provides for mediation and permlll arbitra- tion and-other means of resolving dis;nrtes -but not binding arbitration. II deserves a thorough ti'W before ·-going any other route. That binding arbitration keeps the two parties apart instead of bringing them together is abundanUy evi· dent .iri both industrial and governmental labor dis· pules, where it has been used. Hoping for more than ii could win by bargaining, the wtion demand~ the moon. The employer offers little or nothing. Both sides know that compulsory arbitra· tion is likely to end in a split down the middle. If government employes will recognize that tbey do, in fact, have a security advantage over private industry employes as compensation for their "no strike" pledge, then a mediation board becomes a possibility at all lev .. els of governn;ient. . II California's new law proves to be effectlw, per- haps it could be adopted In other slates and a!'ll!e ~e<l­ eral level. ... Wildcat strikes that paralyze the .nation will not resolve Ille problems lhal brought them about. Some other means must be lonnd lo put the lw o sides logeth· er. Endorsements: Guess Who Politics makes strange bedfellows . Oh it does, does it? Here on the Orange Coast we have evidence that this shibboleth may have run its course. r : .. In Huntington Beach, where 18 candidates are seek· ing four city council seats, the local Board of Realtors has endorsed two candidates, They are distinguished by the fact ithey are the only two realtors on the list. In ~an Cle~ente, l~al Jaycees are endorsing one of 15 city council candidates. Guess what organization he belongs to. ~-, ·""' -~·~_N' "WIT!I £HWIB mt POMtOOU »lP FAJ!NP} LIKE NIXON, W~ IN TRouBii: Chief .Justice May Address Co1agress • Crisis Ill the Courts Is Worsening WASHINGTON -The crisis In the courts is so great that Chief Justice War- ren Burger has et:plored going before Congress with a state-of-the-judiciary message outlining broad reforms in the administratio• of justice. ' Leaders ln Congress· were cool lo the idea and It. has temporarily· beea set aside but there would be ample time later this year after the congressional elections or iJ1 the new Congress early next year for such an wiusual and precedenHhattering appearance by the chief justice before a joint sessio• of Congress. Chief Justice Burger, in the meantimt. will deliver in two sections on two sue· cm1ive days a state-of-the-judiciary report to the American Bar Association at its August meeting i• St. Louis. CIIlEF JUSTICE BURGER h as discussed his aims with nUmerous of· ficial!I in the administration or justice and they report him ready, when invited '. to go before Congress to emphasize a11.d dramatize what be believes to be the · urgent needs rot reform. All this is very unusual. It leaves the legal tradi tionalists aghast and heavy with words about the separation of powers, the independence of CoRgress from the judiciary, the desirtd aloofness and detachment of the high court from pracUcaJ affairs. But that does not diaturb the cruet justice and those who • . • j' . .• Richen& Wilioli. • lhare his views because they believe the criais of the courts ia: so great that tradi- tion can take second place. A.Byway, there has been diScussion of a state-of· the-judiciary m e 11 a g e , like the President's constitutional State~f.fhe. Union message, siltce the days of Chief JusUce Charles Evans Hughes. THOSE WHO HA VE talked to Burger say that what he is interested in is mak· Ing the c:ourt.s work better at a time when they are swamped with cases, procedural barriers, administrative problems and paralyzed in the kmd of adversary system whJch ts long out of date and has been drastically revised in other ad- vanced counlrles. Revision of the adversary system - ·that courtroom drama in which co11:lest a~ ~ tal[e ~t ~yer _g~~µ.ng quickly to the question of guilt or in- nocence -is probably far off. But the improvement o f admlltistrative pro- ~ures can be done, and is being done, quicker than the. nay sayers ever ex- pected. Only a few mo•ths after Burger pro- posed that a oew generation of court ad· ministratora be trained in advanced methods of operatin~ the courls, the first inteASive course, financed by a Ford Foundation grant, will open June 15 at the University of DeEver. Five hundred aspirant court administrators have ap- plied. . IN ANOTHER FIELD, imp r o v l n g methods or legal education, former Labor Secretary Willard Wirtz will be named executive director ol a tw<>-year program for the Americ8JI. Bar Association and Law Institute. With the help of various agencies, Chief Justice Burger has amassed a vast amount of material in three major fields-the trial collrtS, probation and parole, and the plate courts. Those who have consulted "'1th him report he is now drawiJlg loiJtliher this material, analyzing it, and preparing to present his recommendations te· the bar association and Congress, if Congress desires. Chief Justice Bur'ger is impatient arid dissatisfied with the way the judicial system works. He recognizes recent im· provemenf:s but nOnetheless he is ap- palled by molttple trial and appeal cases in which the ac~sed carries on his warfare with socl~y for 8, 9, 10 years and more. , HE CITES ONE. CASE in which more than 60 jurors and alternates were in- volved in fivt tria!S, a dozen trial judges heard motions and : presided, more tha11 30 lawyers parUcipated and 50 appellate judges reviewed the case on appeals. He calculated the cost of that one was $250,000, 'and added that the tragic aspect was that every judge and every juror was fully convillced of the defendant'• guilt from beg¥ining to end. "What we must weigh in the balance." said Chier Justice Burger in a recent speech, ''is the ratioRality or a system which is all contest and conflict. •• Our system is opeg to the criticism that it is loo much sail with too light an anchor." TlllS IS A CRJTICIS!\f of the hallowed adversary system, an example of which millions of TV viewers recently witched 011: National Education Television in the documentary on the city of Denver vs. Lauren Watson. Four trial daya were consumed ·in detennining that this mill~ tant Black Panther was not guilty of resisting · arrest after an alleged minor · tra!fic infraction, a jury finding rather damaged by Watsow's post·trial state- ment that he should have murdered the t"'·o officers who arrested him . However Chief Justice Burger present! his views to Congress on the ad· ministration of justice, whether In person or iRdirectly, there is ample cause for him to do so. His views would be dramatized 'in a personal appearance before CongreSll and it is really hard to see how the independence <J. either Congress or the judiciary system would be harmed. Sord"id Crimes of Black Panthers 'WASHINGTON -There is a highly significant omission. in-the clangorous agitational and promotional propaganda now being aggressively pushed by the Black: Panthers a~ their socialite, New Left,and Communist supporters. All are completely silent about the ~hockJngly extensive and vicious crime record of the Panthers. While they and their jet-set and radical backers are strenuously raising a loud hue and cry about alleged civil rights violations, police "persecution" and sun- dry other com-Plaints, Panthers are piling up a steadily increasing and reeking at· cumulation of vice and criminality. FOLLOWING IS TRIS sordid account as revealed in official police files: "Since 1961, wben the Black .Panther Party first gained national notoriety, o1: ficers and-members of this Marxist revolutionary organization have amassed the astounding record of more than 400 convictions for major crimes. And that Isn't all. Panthers art awaiting 1.rial °" another 310 ciiminal charges. Their con· victions and pending charges range from armed robbery, aggravated assault, rape, bank hold-ups, child neglect and arson to murder and airline hi-jacking." Thus, Blaclt Panthers pose as bene!ac.- tors and defenders of Ghetto residents. Ofbc1al records of their acts are scarred by murder. robbery, drug add.Jction. rape, hoodlumism and lhuggery. BLACK PANTHER offenses and con- victions run the wholt gamut ol crime. In addition to those already listed they lncludt forgery, sboplHUng, stoltn credit cardJ, auto tbef~. every type of narcotics violation, possession of bombs and tx· plosivu, contempt of court and numerous desertions from the anncd forces. The ~--B11 Geor ge ~~~ CONFIDENTIAL T 0 POM· PIDOU: N1h, go bo.rtht1ded. Chuck De Gaulle did the hat bit to death. (Problems solved cheap. 'One nigh! up.) f ~~ ' • Allen-Gol d.smith " Black Panthers' record Is literally a crime catalog. The Black Panther Party is also unsurpassed when it comes to extremist rhetoric. , Offici_a ls , members and BPP publica- t1ons give vent to the most fiercely in· fla~matory pronouncements and decla- mations. La t e I y these fiery outbursts ~ve b t c o m e distinctly Communist 1n tenor and lmpod -~-as top .. Panther . leaders move increasingly jnlo the Com- munist Parti orbit. Several weeks ago this column revealed that ,lhe Communist Party is aggressively seeking to gain conlrol of the gun-toting \'iolence-prone BPP. ' SIGNIFICANT exa mples of the in· ctndlary nature of BPP rhetoric and literature are the following: Douglas Paul Miranda, Boston area captain, in a speech in that city; "The nnly way we are going to get peace on tarth Is by anned struggle, and that means a lot of us are KQlng to die .• , so 111 you women get those guns for I he brothers and a:et guns for yourseh·e.s becau~ we need· revolutionary women. ~~.1shoukl ill be able to use those guns, David Brothen, chairman New York Statt BPP, as quottd in a. Chicago ne\lo'Spapcr: "You put a .38 on your hip and yoo get reapee:t." ~Y Seale, BBP national chairman now btln1 tried for murder in eon: necllcut, in• rpeecb at Vale University· "We've got to teach kids to use guns ~ that when Ole racist pi~s (pollctl come down Into our commuruty and brutalize our pcGplc we are gonna kill .... tf we catch a pig brutaUilng our people in the black commw11ty, we art gonna kill him we 're gonna stop him... • GEORGE M.uoN MURRAY, err minlllv of <doc&U.0. in ln edlt«lal in lhe B18ck Pinllier, official publication or the organization : "Black people, colored persons of America , revolt everywhere -arm yourselves. The only culture worth keeping is revolutionary culture. Dynamite -black power -use the gun -kill the pigs everywhere." The Black Pan!IJer Publication - November 22, 1969: "~1arx ~m-L~ni~ism is oot a philosophy for Russians, it 1s not a philosophy for Chinese, it's philosophy for any people that's m<>vlng against an oppressive power structure such as the capitalistic Fascist system of the American society. We have adb(ted lbli.t philosophy. And we are putting it into Jll:actice because it has proven beyond doubl thaL it's truly in the service of the proletariat." Black Panther Pub 11 cation - December 6, 1969 : . •·oN_E GUN IN THE hands o! a guer- rilla 1s the seed of rtvolution," December 13, 196': "Son, what do you want ror Christmas? Answer : A machine gun. a box of hand ' grenades, a box of dynamite and a bot or matches." June 28, 1969: "We're Out to destroy the presenl machinery of the ruling class. That is our task. and that's what we must he about. We will do this by any means _net;essary! We.must, do this by the only means possible. btcattte the only means possible is the vio101t o\terthrow or the machinery ol !he oppressive ruling class." !\lost Crequently quotCd BPP 0Uici11l in the party publicaUon ht ~roy Eldridge Cleaver, fuglllve minister of infonnallon. ln I~. he was candidate for presidrnl of the Peate and Fi;tfdom Party, made up of black and white radicals. Cleaver is author of the w~y,·sclllng "Soul on Ice". In April 196& Cleaver and olher Panthers were lnvo · l'tl In a gun battle \vlth Oakland, Cal., .IJOllce. Cleaver was arrested for assault ·wlth Intent tn kl/I, and hl~ parole for a previous jnil sen· tence on a mllfdcr ctiargc was revoked. ' ' lN.NQVEMIIEll, l'lu, Cloaver jumped bail and fled lo the Cuba, then to Algien. He reportedly left Cuba because of a rape charge. Cleaver spews radical and rtvolu- lionary venom freely and ferociously.'A lot of it is published in the Black Panther and other extremist organs. Following are examples of his berserk fulmina- tions: In a speech in North Korea last Sep.- tember : "The revolutionary forties inside the United States must be supported by the revolutionary peoples <ll the whole world, because whereas the peoplts outside of the United States will slice off the tentacles of the hideous octopus of U.S. oppression, the revolutionary ins.ide the United States will cut out tt.s wicked heart and give the decisive blow to U.S. · fascism and imperialism." In an interview in the New York 'nmel, July 21, 1969: "Violence in the United States win fn. crease. We have s war going on In the United States and the casualty rate ii ris- ing. The capitalist sy,stem in the United States must be dismantled over the dud bodies or its supporttn." By 216btrt S, ADn and JolmA..GtMamZtZI --~-- Thursday, April 2, 1970 Tht edttorial page of the DaHv Pilot lttks to inform and itttn. ulatt readers b11 presntino thU Tltwspaper's optmons and com- rncntary tm topici of inttrr1e and significance, b~ prooUUno • f onim for the nprcsri<m of ,,. our rca.ders' opinions, and br pr1stnti1111 tht divtr11 vitto- points of fn/ortntd obs'"'''' and spoktsmtn on klpici o/ the dcy. Robert N. Weed, PubUiher 2 • c ,f • • Q i ·: " .. ·: • ·: ·. •• ' ·: .. • . , . • ' Thurtdlr __ -"'-. A...;pr_u_z'""-19..,.10 ______ -•• D.All.Y ~~t. Buss ·'A.wesome9 " CHECKING • ·up. For Athletes-Red; lntellectu,als -Blue Show WASHINGTON (UPf)-A One was a small rocket narrator, 0 and perbap1 gives Soviet film recently received which skittered Uke a jack a mesuge to the mt of the in the United States deplcta · rabbit a few feet off the world." what It calls · Ru 11 I•'' a • ground for about a half-mile One scene shows tbe inside ••aweaome arsenal" '-, and homed in perfectly oo a of a silo hoUJlng a Soviet m. including a small rocket that tank which was left a smoking tercontinental ballllUe mlssUe Hitters just oil the ground In ruin. (ICBM). Theo the rocket n.... starch of enemy taob: · 1 Another item not possessed out of the buried ailo atop an Film first American ftUcleat IU~ nwiDe, the NauWus, Ooau .cross the ICl'ffll u the nar- rator says, ullils II the fltst Russian nuclear JUbmarlnt. It's name: 'lbe S u p er. nautilus.'• The half-hour movie was by U.S. military men was a orqe Oame. made to show the Russian r<tro-rocket parachute. It was "Theae ICBMs are capable Kopechne Judge. people the power J>O&Sesstd by used to provide up .thrust to a of hitting the UD.lled States/' the Soviet armid forces. 1( des C<ndlng parachute, car-says the narralqr., Will Retire has been purchased for the rying heavy and d e I t c a t e Another scene llhowa the , U.S. market by an American equipment, just before It hit SukhOI fllliler plane In flight EDGARTOWN, Mau. (AP/ . , . " dia:tributor who translated the the ground. with ita IWinf wlap slowly·· -Judge James A. Boyle, who Russian n a r r a t 1 on into Most of the scenes were foldlnc' bact. But the DUTator presided at the Mary Jo · " CUSTOMER SERVICE -Q. Enallsh. filmed during l~e October, did nol -the plane Kopechne inquest, saya he ls ., (. By J. 111. BOYD "How far can a grown rat-The sophisticated weapoll! 1967, maneuvers along the with the U.S. Flll, the retiring from the bench April ... AM ASKING our Planet tlesnake strike?" A • .About a """-11 ed Dnt RI th tar ... ._.., .. ,_ -p•·-~ all • N,.~ 30. , • Man to explain why men born third I ·is t••m• Q Suvwu genera y are.compar eper ver, e ge,,~ war ... n""'.w.~ 1.....-..._ber_... ~hlch ..r;::.-;::: in February tend to live on "lS !TOA F'Acr_tba,._t h .• ..:....:'!......: with American wepponry, but games in Ruulan hlst~ri. 6 .. 1e1-uuu1 " -u-., Boyle, a , ts presiding judge ; th l :r.,.,......,..-there were two items the ''The.purpose of the maneuver awl.ngwinp. of the Dukes County Dfltrict ...... t.,n..iJftwd"8ttC:..1*11•IO....,•*".._.....,....., e average four years onger driacs almost invariably are United States does not have. ls preparedness," aays the The Soviet version ·o1 the Court. , . . 7 ·.;: than men )lorn in June.·• meticulous dresses?" A. So•1-:__.:.::_:_:_ ______ __:__:'---'--'--------------'-:......:.::=::_ _______ .:_ _____________ ....;. ___ ,........:..,;..il; A PSYCHIATRIST contends · Q • D OE S his studies show conclusively it's wd · · · · ' ANY SOCIETY condone that athletes generally prefer adultery?" A. Checked this the color .red w bf I e in-out with an anthropologist who tellectuals like bl~. said only five out of f4& dif· Q~ -: You might spriifg ferent societies have approved th ls wqu1ry at ~~ dinner ol such. , . Q. "WASN'T SAN· table: How much JI a. ton TA FE NM founded before of pennies worth? Wh~ver the Mayito;er landed at comes closest to $2,750 wins. Plymouth?" A. That is wa's. CONSIDER TBIS -Hard About 10 years before. ' work makes men sick, that's • clear. WaJt, I can back up IF. YOU DON'T UKE the this claim. An extensive cooking odor of brussels survey ~mong executives sprouts , ~uggest~ our shows thOse gentlemen who Househol~ Hints Spec1allst, work their way up through toss a. piece of bread In the the ranks have a greater in-pot with them. . • WHY 1 cidence of illness than those DON'T know, but cats are bright boys who go into said to be far better air tra management straight out of elers than dogs. Airlines peo. college. Much greater. pie say cats do ·not set;m MEN ARE INClJNED to to get as shook up when sh1~ leave their wordly goods to ped. . . THE. SL~ E .P universities while women are SPECIALISTS still mamtain more apt to leave Ulelr be-th.at only one out of every quests to churches , .. · THJS eight grown.ups SJ¥>fes regu. MORNING I saw a hippie larly. That figure sounds low. wearing a glass bowl suspend· RAPID REPLIES -1. Cor· ed £rom a chain around his reel, Mr. G., Abe Lincoln was neck, and in that bowl, sir, said to have worn shoe size was a lively rainbow trout. 14 B. . . 2. Do not know ••. POLL AFl'ER POLL shows about Boston, Mrs. B., but female English teachers seem the old ordinances of Hartford, to live longer generally than Conn., made it illegal there anybody. to kiss your wife on Sunday QUOTE -"Man is the only .. , 3. Yes, sir, in two out animal that can stay on of three cases of criminal friendly terms with the vie; assault, the records show the tims · he intends to eat until victims and the assailants he eats them." -Samuel Were previously acquainted. Blltler .•. "Better buy all the land you can get -they aren't making any more of it." -Will Rogers. . . "There's no way of knowing where the DDT's leave of[ and Hollywood begins." -W. C. ·Fields. Your questions and com- ments are welcomed and wilL be med in PASS IT ON wherever possible. Address letters to L. M. Boyd, P.O. Boz 1875, Newport Beach, Colif., 92660. Wallace Party S1wws It Might Not Make It ATLANTA, Ga. (AP) -Two years ago, George Wallace or Alabama won a place on the ballot of all 50 states as a third . party candidate for president. He did It through the efforts of a group of state organiza· tions using various names, but referred to generally as the American Independent party (AIP). At the peak of his campaign, there was speculation that Wallace's organization con· ceivably could form the nucleus of a major permanent third party offering state and local candidates and com· peting with Republicans and Democrats In some states. As the 1970 elections draw closer, however, the AJP, almost everywhere, is sur. fering from a lack of fund s, a lack of organization and from intra-party squabbles. lls chances, according to a national survey by T Ii e Associated Press, of electing anything more than a handful of lociit and/or state officials are extremely remote. LITI'LE HOPE In many case! where can- didates are being offered this year, party spokesmen acknowledge that they have litUe hope of winning, Even Jn the five Southern states which Wallace carried in 1968, ATP activity is e it h e r fragmented or nonexistent. Jn Wallace's home state of Alabama, Ironically. there is no AlP. In his presidential campaign Wallace used the regular party machinery there -Gov. Albert Brewer was one of his electors -and Hubert H. Humphrey was listed as the candidate for President of two s p 1 i n t -t r groups , the Nation a·l Democratic Party of Alabama and the Alabama Independent Democratic party. W a 11 a c e and Brewer are now fighting for the Democratic nomination for governor. In Mississippi the situation is much the same. Regular state Democrats formed the basis of Wallace support, and the majority of them are eJ· pe c ted to back st ate Democratic candidates this year. In Georgia. chairman Roy V. Harris says the AIP is "laying low and waiting for '72," when Wallace may try for the presidency again - has announced that he will fun for governor. But indications at the mo- porter, Dr. McKee Hargrett, ment are that if Hargrett, a state ligislator, makes the race it will be in t h e Democratic primary. A fight between Walter Car· if he wins this year's bid for governor. One strong Wallace sup- ruth. Ark a nsas s tate chainnan, and J im Johnson, national committeeman. has split what there is of the AJP in that state. which elected a Democratic senator, a Republican governor and went for Wallace for president in 1968. • EVES CHALLENGE In Louisiana, Dr. S. R, Abramson, state chairman. said the party is considering ch a I I engi n g Rep. F.dwln Edwards. a DemQCtat from the 7th District. But Abramson said the decision (See All', Page 17) WANTED! Mtn And Womtn With A Desire To It On Television. ARE YOU OVER 21? CAN YOU TAKE DIRECTIONS? T1ke 1 Productions, Inc., 11 Proud To Announce The Opening Of Our New HOLLYWOOD TALENT POOL for' ADULTS TO AUDITION ON.CAMERA CALL 714-547·6251 TAKE "1" PRODUCTIONS,,INC. HOLLYWOOD, CALIF. • P.I. c..,..., M•• .............. CllllNctt fef Newt.....,. 26.66 HARBOR .LVD. 546·7080 COSTA MESA WEEKDAYS 9 to 9 SATURDAY 9 to 5:30 SUNDAY 10 to 5:00 ,..,..._..,,,.. . ..,......,., i Pillow Swag 0 Very ol19tnf 9l11t bill for o 1!11n11i11q fi.+11r1. 0 Complete with chain, hoo•1, i11 lint twitch, 0 . In ruby or a'"ber. 911 S-101 1195 0 For wipl119, 1t1i11i119, or wk1to .. •r. 0 119 p1cko9• co11t1in1 111 you'll 11ood. If not, com• buy moro, w• liko 1oll in9 hol11 , 97c 0 For doin9 your owft plumbing. a lool1 foulillf up the pip• witk on old 11w bl•d•. 0 Now, you c•n foul lt up with • 11tw tubJ119 cutt1r. BLACK & DEC::KER V• INCH DRILL Lwc•v winnor from ll•c\ a D1c••r. Writ! •cco11ori1J will polith, buff, 11114, •l'ld 1lo1n. Woll b•l•111ff, cemfort•ble f dp. ··~o. 1000 • RIMA IS THE NAME .••• ' ·PLYWOOD IS · OUR GAME • VENOIAN GLASS ·SWAG LAMP 1 &lowi119 cylind•r •11c•1•d i11 cr••tiv•lf 1h•p•d 9!•11 9lob•. 0 ISou!!d lik• th• "'iddle •Y• of • f•rociou1 dr•fOft fo Ill•.) 0 Cl<ioic• of colort, p•tf•ct for •c<•llf er•• i.i.... .......... :jf ....... ~J 8 88 S-1131 GLIDDEN GLID·TONE WOOD STAIN 0 u,. to .. 11h•nc• woodwork, doors, ponoli119, floor1, Uftfini1l<i•d fur11ilur•. 0 A .. 1i11bl1 in lr1llition1I wood 1011•1 plu1 rich Dr•m•lon• ti11tt. 193 GLIDDEN SPRED GLOSS ENAMEL qr. 0 Rtl•in1 ih color without yellowi119. 0 Dur•blo for in1ido •r evf. 0 Stf• for chilcftoft 11 foyt. 263 qr. FLUIDMASTER BAUCOCK Et1d toil•t 1ci11•ol ond drip (build eit evtho1tt1.I Corro1ioft pr••'• ltet l"tt•ftt 1kut·off. O 111 11 'or l•J htch l•119th1, for low boi or •l•11d•rd. 299 1 r PIECE SOCKn sn D H•No11ff, t•mportd, orlt• 1tT111f, llghtw•ltht. D E1cotd1 9ov•fl'lmol'lf torque 1p1c1. D Poclt•t•d 1,. tlwrdy tiff.-! c•10. 11 95 ' Yz INCH . SHOP GRADE EXTERIOR .PLYWOOD 0 $hop 9r•dt plywood for h1.11Hir.d1 of p~•fM+.. . D Li•• '"ayb. • 1•mo111dt tf1..d to."M the kid t. collich. · · D · Or • homo b•r ,fo·ttnd th• wif• "'°"'' to 111ott..r. 0 Co1J1.-buy, build, 1uo-yo11r·i1t1 19inriiN ..... Mw: or two. .99 4'x8' SHEET 4X8 PREFINISHED PANELING D ct..-.... '"'·-.," ..... ..i ... t.ML 0 J.-11 Pf•fiftl1W, .11 ,..,, ...... 1U reMy N- odd cl••• '"' vah11 t. .,.., .. ,....... . 2 57 PANIL NEYAMAR ROUND TAB .... TOPS Now, 111•k• your •'IU t·•bl• •r ti•• olll f.ttiibl .... ..,. Cll<tic• ef colen 'lk tfiet ri9ht, Diclc1J • 11 i11eh 4li•111...,. N•••flll•r ... , ,.,+life M•rtl rouMt. Got fvmitur• tfi•t"INb tirtd7 F1~1h•11 up with ••tY t 1l•p ~ntiqu• •it. h•rvthi., lnc~M, cltoico of 1olcm et Woocht•iu. FREE CLASS "HOW TO STAIN FURNITURE" • Tuesday, Apt;I : 7 . 7:30'·8:30 P.M •. • ' DEMONSTRATION IY PAT HOPP.ER • ~.,. l,1_ ,, ' ii'":' I'' •· ' .st11~ 1'11 Stain With 1 Bri/nl · ' . • I 1• I • • -- I DAILY PILOT Thut!d>Y, April 2. 1970 Death Penalty Ban Fails in Assembly QUEENll ly Phil lnteriandl Unruh Replnceme_n~ Effort Fails , SACRAMENTO ( A P ) -newsmen after the closed reluctant to change t h e Ir Gonsalves of La Mirada ~ ---andid te k' to meeting '' t be re w11 a votes, apparently,'' he Robert W. Crown of Alam • ''"~ c 1 1 see mg deadlock'' between the three reported. Zenovich said anothe r replace Jeu Unruh u leader candidates. 'Ibe candidate• are Assem· caucus would be held at 4. of the AMembly Democrats "There are three 1lrong peo. blymen Willie L. Brown Jr. p.m. Monday in an attempt today headed into a weekend ple in hJs race. People are or s&n Francia@, Joe A. to resolve the impasse. IACIWIENTO (AP) -A 11111 to lbolllll the dealh ~ la Calllomla la dead Hr Ultbtr )'elf -even tt1oup no wltittsau 1ppeared to oppose tt. , Jn what has become aa an- nllll rilual o[ the Aaem!llJ Cr1mlnal -.... Com- mltl>e, opponenll of the dHlh penalty argued wllh aubdued l emotlon .Wednaday, IUP" ponen were alien~ and lho bill was tilled on a pariy·lloe vote. Commenkd Aloembl)'man W. Craig Biddle of RJverslde, one of the Republlcam: favor- Stanford Hit .1'y2ndNight ; Of Violence . ' rrANFORD, Calli. (UPI) - L l koDd night of random van- ~ dll1arn and violence i t St,an. fard University resulted in the -p!<lld<Dt being doused with red paint and f o 11 r persons arre&ted for assault rill a deacll)' WHpoo. ~ President Kenneth S. Pitzer 'WIS dining with st'udents Wednesday night when an UDldenUfied masted and robed auJ1ant walked up bthlnd him and spilled red paint on bla shoulders -i ba<lt. Re dropped a not! reading "April .fool" before fleeing out a door. Ing tttenllon ol lh• dealh penalty: "What ctlaturb1 me Is that the proponents don't eom,e and express their views ••. Law enforcement ts very derelict. I Maybe we ought to pass It , out of committee some")lear 1 of more vote-seek.lng after the 1~:=...::...:::~:::~:'.".'.:..:'.:_:'.'._~:.._:_::~:::c_:'.:'......::_::...:.=::.::..::....,...:....--- and ,.. where lhe chips Cail ." ll~~i But Biddle voted w 1 t h Assemblymen Frank Murphy (R.Sanla Cruz) and Floyd L. Wakefield (R-Solllh Gate). I<> keep the bill by Assemblyman Alan Sleroty: (D -Bev e rly Hills), off the floor. Sieroty won support of three Democrats on the committee, but that did not give him the required majority vat.. Tbe're are now 92 men and one woman on Califomla'1 death row. Testifying for Sieroty's pro-t2i~~~~~~:;~;~;~;!=:::=:::.:::1 posal to subsUtute life in prtson 'for the death penalty, "Mr. Parker ea.ya rou'U ha.ve to forget you're a. re- attomey Melvin Belli of San tired colone and use the intercom like Franclsco siild the death everyone else!" penally la not applied lalrly _________________ _ first effort to chose a new leader failed. With 37 of the 39 Democrat! present Wednesday, four ballots were taken in an unsucce3sful attempt to replace Unruh. He quit the post earlier this week to devote full time to his cam- paign for governor, ending a long reign as he a d of Assembly Democrat!. Caucus Chalnnan George N. Zenovich of Fresno t o l d Fiery Death Said Suicide In Capital Ar C h D• d SACRAMENTO (UPI) - .A. * * ms ac e 1scovere Coroner'• depul ies said H Wedriesday Karen L. Smith, and .la not a deterrent. Gas Chamber 19; Sacramenl<>, apparently SANTA BARBARA (UPI) -the State Bureau of NarcotieJ committed suicide when she A large cache of military-like and lbe Federal Alcohol, TIJ poured g a a o 11 n e on her Rap Fought explosives and devices was and Tobacco Div islon clothlitg and set hersell afire seized by Federal, state and participated in the raid. on Tower Bridge. local aul.horlties Wednesday Arrested on various chargl!I DepuUes said Miss Smith, B Co • culminating a I e n g t h y in· were Thomas Farrell, 24, A,.. who burned to death Tuesday Y nvict vestigaUon that resulted in toine Peter 1.omora, 2 \I night, apparently took her lir~ four arrests. Marvin Lindsay, 21, and suo as 1 resu1t of a long-standing LOS ANGELES (AP) Among the weapons seized Morehouse, 21, all of San\I feud with her plffnl!. AT YOUR SINGER CENTER NOW when you ouy ne Golden • zig-zag sewinQ machine In cabnet of your choice. And the SINQER 1JQ.all• cred it plan is designed to fit your budget. SINGER · . Mioli-Jr-••tlNCilR.-..i• For addressol ~store nearasl yoo, st:e white pages lf'l($er S1NGEB COMPANY Donald F. Ketchel, fighting at two residences were 94 Barbara. B r I d g e t e n d e r Irvin a death penalty in Caliiomia's sticks of plastic explosives, Authorities said all fOllr Williamson said he saw Miss gas chamber for eight years, eight fragmentation grenades, . suspects were charged wJ\tl. Smith being engulfed i n faces a fourth go around fu 19 smoke grenade11, 10 anti· suspicion of possession of flames after 11 g ht in g a the courts. A jury deadlocked tank weapons, 57 grenade st o Len P.roperty, possesslOf' cigarette but could not reach on his penalty Wednesday. simulators, electric blasting and possess.ion for sale fl her in time to save her. c~~~ ~!,." Convicted of murder in the caps and blasting...-cords and destructive devices and th(! Deputies sald chemical tests '"""'- CllA llllSA UCll ,,.., ltft. HUNTINITON llACH ltllltff I I I NCb "l·IMI MVll!lftlllll IMdl C ...... SANTA ANA oownllWfl Kl 14HI JM W. Ill JI. 6AIDE'N GIOYI tfJI Clll""'IR l)Mllt o.._ Ctv1111 Pl•• I t.11N Mf C•Nr Embarriwed OJ'Olle House lludents apologized to the president who returned home lo change clothes and take a shower. The paint turned oat to be soluble ln water and Pitzer was not Jlurl:. 1961 slaying of Monterey Park 14 marijuana plants. sale po s a es 11 Ion and of her clothing showed they 1owtt11~~ ~ ... policeman George E J de r , ~~Th~e~Sa~n~la~B~arGb~ar~a~S~h~er~if~[·~s jtr~an~s~po~rta~r~1on~ol~=·h=e=U....::ca:r-,,_~h1~aa~~i~ln~~~."~n-"~so~a~ked--w-I t_hJ:=============;================ Ketchel was originally sen- 1 _ Department said their agency , trldges or bombs. . tenced to death in the gas :is · Later, a band of about 150 m.Wlauts again attempted to boerd up the campip ROTC balldlng in a repeat of Tues.- di)' n i g h.t' a demwtratlon. Once again, a group o f atbletes intercepted t h e demomtralon and delayed them. until 5b policemen dbpened them. Abolrt a ~ Wlndowt were smashed for the IOC9"d night ID a tow. Although the demonstraUon WU smaller than Tuetdiy'I, · It pr0duce6 a more serious injury when the four persons were arrested oil the assault clwlel. Police did not glve dotalls. chambtr. But in 196.1, the s t a t e Supreme Court ordered he be retired as to penalty o n I y . He was -and was sentenced again to death. Then in 196&, the conviction was thrown out and a new trial was ordered. '11lete was a new conviction and again the death penalty was assessed. Last year, the State / Supreme Court once again reversed the death penalty on the grounds jurors who op- posed capltal punishment were Improperly excluded from the jury. Staie Split? Dolwig Sets Final Effort SAcllAMEN'l'o ( A P ) - Sen. Richard J. Dolwlg, Is making his fifth and last o~ tempt as a legislator to cleave California tnto two states. Tb e Atherton RepubUcan who plam to retire for health reaons after the 197 0 legislative session again pro- p>sed creating separate states of Northern and Southern Cllifomia Wednesday. lf approved by Coalf!.ss and California voters, a jagged "M" lhaped bowulm' would cut populous Southerh California off from resource- rich Northern Califomla. "The Senator says he is convinced this will come to pass within the nezt few years," saJd Mickey Baily, Dolwig's admlniattaUve aide. "He's 1Ure there's a better chance of tt happening this year than there ever has been before." "He'.1 been get.ling much more legislative support this year," added ·another Doi wig aide. A Democratic Assembly· man, Wallace L Brown Jr. of San Fraocllco. has inlr1r duced a resoluUoa calling for creation of a '4!011Unis11ion to study the proposal. But Oolwig has launched a thrtt-l!TP!ll@~ lrY al @£\uaiiy effectfng the ip1it, Including a resolution, Constitut.ional amendment-and a bill. The change would require Congress.ionat approval and approval by the California electorate. l))lwig ls convince.4 it's "inevitable." ONLY 14 CAYS LEFT TIRED 0 F THE MUMBO JUMBO ON YOUR INCOME TAX . . Tox" ore cOf!lplk:ottd, IOTH $ Why brew up • •lorll'I? T•k• yovr r-'""' to H & It flDllAL ' llO<k. ·They'.,• clrreloped the mogk for11111loi foil AND a.Mu ;uaroni.ed ouv-STATI rcrt. by troln-4 fox prf'-!Im por.,., You'll 11ftff -It'• i"9f wNt thto "clo«or" ........._ UP P'!!!"ll111~~~~ OUAIANTQ ""l""'""'"""""'""'"lil We ...,...,.. OCCVfOI• P'•PGfotioR of •~•ry tax rtturn. K ,,. _.. Otrt .,-ron thcrt cott )'°" a11y penalty or lrrMrd, we wJll the nolty ot mterett. •«[3~[!1Co. A....nc..'1 &..-Tax hnlce with Ovw 4000 Officet --1171 ....... '!'!"· .......... ..,. c.r. .. Mt M• 244t I. CMtt Hwy IM MkArtller 1 11'111,I - AT Wi tch for Newport Balboa Savings' c1ble car. RIDE IT FREE for 1 shire in the tomlne9 •nd excitement of the flbulous GOLD coest right hefW In Or1np Cot.lnty, Dependabe and Smart San Francisco's cable cars have aiways had a little something "extra" going for them . Boiled down (if you 'll pardon the expression) the cable car operational principle is "not to put ail your eggs in one bas· ket." And so the cars "grabbed" onto something solid as well as depending on normal motive J)ower to carry passengers smoothly uphill, no matter how tough the climb. And that fact Is a rather good reason for "grabbing onto" one of our many savings plans. Newport Balboa Savings will "wire" you 'in on a plan especially designed for you. Come in, call or write. • Sure-we have these high rates! Bonus Account Guar1nleed R1t1 Account Guar1ntet>d R•t• Account Guaranteed Rate Account 5.13!)6 5.39% 5.92% 6,18% 7.79% Mlnlmufl'I Minimum Amount Term 5% $25.00 I doY 5.25% $500.00 90 •• ,. 5.75% $1 ,000.00 ..... ,. 6% $5,000.00 7.50% $100,000.00 Est•blished ii! 1Pil6 · •• NEWPORT BALBOA SAVINGS ANO LOAN ASSOCIATION Main Office: 3366 Via Lido. Newport Beach , California 92663 •Phone 714/673·3130 Corona del Mar Office: Financial Plaza, 550 Newport Center Drive, Corona del Mar C11ifom'1• 92625 •Phone 714/644·1461 • • ( ' dilly daily dallJ > • . '. . ' , . •' I .. • . ' • I ' l • • I \ I • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ' ' ' ' • • • ' -. ·-- County Adopts • Policy on Parks -. SANTA ANA -County s upervisors Wednesday adopted a new policy on local parts tn unincorporated area:s that commits the county to provide only local park lands Jn such areas with no responsibility for providing recttatJonal activities. Such organized recreation acUvities would have to be provided by voluntary associ• tlons of n:sidenls. The policy, presented by Planning Director F o r es t Dickason, is the result of three-month study ordered by the supervisors last Dec. 16. The study is to continue with a final report slated for next June 3. Previously the county had concentrated its efforts on regional park.s with the i'm- pllcation tbat cities, special districts and school districts would provtde for local park ne<ds. The regional park concept has resulted in a grei.t defi- ciency of-local parks in unifl. corporated areas which has only been partly corrected in receiit years by requiring· dedic11lion of park lands at the ratkl of one acre per 1,000 residents in planned com- munities. To date the planned com· munity concept bas yielded four local parks, witb six !Cheduled for acctplanct in the next fiscal year. Dickason said that, based (In the nu~ber of local park sites in approved tenatlve tract D\aps, 30 or m(lre sites are likely to come into being in the nut five years. · The supervisors . also ~ dorsed a statement of policy and principle.s on IOcaJ parks s ugge sted by the T n t e r ·d e partmental Policy Review Groop of department heads with County Administrative Officer Robert E. Thoma s acting a s chairman. 'The policy stated require$ that tbe county acquire . develop and maintain local park lands in addition to regional parks. Principles adopted include : 1. The county's primary · respGnsibility is to . provide regional parks and o th e r countywide recrtation facili · ties. 2. The county has secondary responsibility to act in a. stewardship c a p a c i t y for future cities by proViding klcal De•th Not.lees ADDISON l!lmtf' A. Addison. Ap 'JO, of .07 P1,lllc P1rtf, HUflllntlon ... di. Dile of $th, M1rcl'I 31. 5urvlvtd W wlft, Mlldrt<I; IOl'l. R_.,; btoll'ltrs. Ard'li.. ~Ind Ed· wtrd; 1J11er, 169 ,lckl .,.tndclllldren, IStrn' 1;119-, llr.ncl1 tnof Oebblt AO- OllOll. Clluel ""le• IM lt!ltm•••H. Frl- 111•'" l :lG PM, Wn1Tnln1tw MtmOtllll P111t MorlLlilr'I' I nd C.....iery. IAHOt••A l1wr.nc1 Frtm"lt BtndJ.,1. ...... 10. 0.lt ol llflllh, M1rch SI. SurvlYtd by"'" •nit, Mr. Ind Mrl. Frll'ICll L. IStndltrl ; tw1 lllil'l'L Mn. Gi ll P. McConMlt tlld ,.,,,,,,. 1tndl1r1. 111 of co111 M131, ROHN, ,rkllY, I PM/ lteciv!lf'll M111, SllllN:ll'f, 10 AM, bolll 11 51. JOl>n 1111 l1J'flll C•lllOl!c Clwr'h.. 81~ Cmll M111 Morlu•O'· Olrecton. w•••• Mt~ E. Weber. Age U , ot ?tl6 Ortfltt! Av•~ COllt """'· Gr1v111dt Hrvl«•. Frldl~. 10 AM, Ptelfk vi.w MltnOl'illl P1rk. wfltl Rev. L.ortn Fllctr.ll!Mf olli- cl111"', 11.il llr~llwl~ ·MortLl1n', OltlC• Ion. ARBUCKLE I< SON w .. tdlfl Mortuary C7 E. 11~ St., Costa Meu -• BALTZ MORTUARIES Caraaa de! Mar OR 11-1451 COiia M... AU Mill •• BEIL BROADWAY MORTUARY 111 Broadw111 Costa Mt11 IJ~ . - DILDAY BROTHERS Hutla,... Volley M-.., 11111 ..... ai..i. Halla,... leadl IU-7771 • PACIFIC \1EW MEMORIAL PARK <:.-,, • M-ary --~ .. -· N...,... Beadl, Calllonla -• PEEK FAMILY COl.ONIAL FUNERAL HOME 11tt Bol11 Ave. w .. ..-.-• SBEfFER MORTUARY t..pna Be1cll 4N-t5SS Su Cl ..... te UWlll • SMITRB' MORTUARY tl1 Mola SI. eaua,...1eldl - Only o,,. recruUon facilities In ·unln- corportted areaa. 3. Priority sboul.d bt given to lhe acquisition of land so that futuR residents u well as present residents will have recreation ·opport\m.ilies. 4. AU cost for Jocal recrea-· lion facilities $hould be charg- ed to btneOciaries in the local areas served. S. The lime for development of the neighborhood park and the proportion of the park to be Impro ved, should be related to the anticipated time Jor clJl\Pletion of a substantial portion of tbe residential units to be constructed In the· neighborhood. 6. Plans for local parks should be integrated witb ()pen space plans as they are developed. 7. Wherever possible, local parks shall be localed ad- jacent to or near school sites, thereby augmenting tbe Open ' space and recreational aspects of school grounds. Supervisor Robert Battin told Dickason he was "headed in the right .direction but. not moving fast enough." He said he would introduce several ordinances soon to expand the program. Shrines Due For Com·t And School River Work Bids Called Engineers Set ]\feet Tonight 211•.1-~ toll w. lrtll ,,.........,'" "" ,...,.,. .,..-'Cl,,.,. Ce1isus Day Marks 103rd Birthday ORANGE -Orange County census tab\llators may look twice at a census• form sub- mitted from 454 South Center_ SL here, 1be form shows two residents at the home, o.1e of which is 103 years (lid. Mr s. Anrla Tiemann celebrated 'her 103rd bitthd11.y Wedi'lesday with her daughter, Ann, at their Cente r Street home. She was boi'n on April Fool's Day, 1867 in lllingen, Germany. Mrs. TiemaM came to the . U.S. with b.er parents in May 1881. The family of 12 settled in Fort Madison, Iowa, later moving to Kansas. Anna and hE!r husband Fred. moved to Orange in 1920. Her ·husband .died in 1H7. Mrs. Tiemann h a s, 25 grandchildren, 62 great · grandchildrm, and five greal· great grandchildren. Law , Justice Session Set FIRESIDE Thrift COSTA MW · 2200 MAnot •YD • , .. Mart, 1•1 W, L~·nM 11ff W. Lt ,.,,_.H-llM tMl w. '""'""' ... .,......,..11 .. Final 1Lockt /II d flOfM MIU-. Thlt's a !Mt *"'? 1t It 111 Or .. County. Tiit DAILY PILOT IS the only daily newspaptr Oil& dtllv- 11'1 the PICbte. OHi!: t1,111.-t '°'""I D<iiy1 1 WMll Thundat, Aptlt 2, 1970 DAJlY P,ILOr , 9 C.ourt Closing Bill ' t()~ Be Blocked . B1 'ACK BROBACK Of ""' DIJIV "11•1 Iliff • f SANTA . ANA .-County supervisors voted 3-2 Wed- =daf lo close the Supe(ior Court branch in FuUerto\i, but It m•Y tum out to be an e1erclse in futility. Ass em b I y man John V. Briggs (R-.Fullerto.n) has a bill now being considered by th~ State Senate that would pro- hibit the supervisors from closing the court. Brl8gs' bill ii scheduled to be heard by a senate com- mittee nei:t week. It has already passed the Assembly as an urgency measure which would become e!fective im· mediately. Fullerton officials hauled out their biggest 1uns Wednesday in the battle that has· gone on for more than i year over the filte pf the court. But they were not ab.le to convince . supervisors Robert Battin, William Hirsteln and David Ba~er. Board chairman Alton Allen BJ)d supervisor William Phillips ·voted to re- tain the court. There is another factor which may au~ the future or !he court. The county entered into a contract on Nov . 17, 1965. with the City of Fullerton which activated the Regional Civic Center in that city and slated "the city particularly recognizes t h e . benefit of a complex o ( municipal .and superior l'Ourts. and offices for other county services that would relate to the needs ot North Orange County.'~ County Counsel A d r i a n Kuyper. noting lhat Fullerton invested in excess of $200,000 in the center, has .ruled that Fullerton has a contractual .. *FULL 4flLY right whljcould be enforced Newport Beach, president ot Batun· moved to tcrmlnate the. Briggs, the State senate aqd In court. the county bBr as90Ciatioo , ado court and the motion carried Fullerton oNlciaJs .If t h e 1 by the '2 marg'1n decide lo take the matter to Fullerton Mayor L o u i s milted that there _w.ould be <J-• "Red " Reinhardt ))leaded in a need "In the future for _..:Th:::.:•...::.ne::•:;•_m.:.ov_e:_ts:_u:.:p_t.:.o_coor __ i. _______ ,.. valn for 1 45-day delay In branch .courts... f decis.ionbylbesupervisors.. h '*"**"'**"**********'* He noted that the north county Baker thought perhap!f t e .,., "°""'. popotaUon o! matter should be left lo the MERCURY SAVINGS 2$8,000 and that stale stan-courts to decide, but Allen isards for a s,uperior .court rejected thJs posture saying, and loan association call for one for every 65,000 "The image of the board is .......... '1111pl .... pll peoPle. impGrtant, if we have entered Reinhardt was backed by into a contractural agreement Slu.ley B. C h r I s' t e n s e n • we sbollld keep it,'' former city at l o r D e y of Battin, principar opponent of FuUerton who related the the Fullerton facility, charged history of the court going back that cost figures on the court tO 1955. had been "manipulated" and Llned up ln opposition to that County Administrative the court were I.be State Officer Robert E. Thomas was Judicial c.ouncil, the Orange "not competent to advise in County Superior Court judg~S , this area." Thomas h a d {1$-4) and the Orange County recommended retention of the Bar Association. court. They called the facility in-Arter three hours ot debate efficient and expens'ive . Supervisor Phillips rebutted that county figures show that the Fullerton court c o s t $91,104 a year and the average oost per court in Santa Ana is $125,845 a year. He argut:d ~at other county services were being decen- trali'zed and that the real con· cern should be "service to the public.'' · Baker called attention to the fact that Superior Court judges have limited use of the Fullerton facility to one day a week and that If the supervisor:s continued it the judges coul d negate its value . . ·John Pitts, a longtime Fullerton attorney, a r g u.e d that the branch court concept does work well ·"when pro-1 p ·e r I y administered." He charged . that the Superior · Court administration h a d treated the facility "like a stepchild ." R. S. "Sam" 1"9UV Ul-'t:I EVERY SATURDAY '10A.M.-4 P.M. ' Open Mon .. Tlwr•. 9 i.m . .,I p.m.; frl. 9 a.m.-6 p.m. auENA PARK .. ~· 1~ Mercury Snin11 Bldg. • Valley View at Lincoln .... * * * * * * * * * HUNTINDTDN 81ACH Mercury Savings BlllJ. • • • • Edinger at Beach • ·* * * * * * * .. $7,95 ~ .. 3.00 . t HOURS New $ 500 ,000 Costa Mesa Every Nite 'Til 9 'SAFETY SUNDAY 9-6 . Tire CENTER 3005 ,.,, * 1$1 Quality H•pdquort1rs for Armstrong TRUCK CAMPIR& JRAILIR flRISI **20 Month Guar. 1295) I , 7,tl.IS 1.u .14 1.2s114 • IG7t/141 l .2J1l J 5·95 l .SS114 IH7&!14) t .SS.tlS IH71/1J) 1 795 9.0011 s U71/1 JI 1.&5 11 s (J71/15) . POLYESTER & FIBERGLASS Punctwe , Sealants !Ct 11/1 SI '""' • ll.,11.11.111.1.f, """""" "·" 111 •• OPEN 7.DAYS a Week ... Open Niles 'Til 9 ••• Sun. 'Til 6 PM YW Datsun -Toyota & Opel TIRES s.w.1ss.tt11s 4.H•IJ 5,tf/J,H/4.Nl1 J 2 ~$3f!§ R '"~'" hd. "·" "' h, , ..... $249 5 1$2]?..~ .. 11/141 4.SG•ll (C71/1Sl 1 2SilJ !01111 S/ 1.1S•l4(f71/141 ' . -·· lwt •\l1t11 u i1 1•r11 .. no $2 9.!.~1'11h4I I.Sf~ l S 0111/1 SI Gard• .... 14040 IROOKHURST NOW OPEN in COSTA MESA 1c1r11•r If l.....,.wnt a W•1m11r11tr1 U0-3200 A ... elm·h-P•k H'2 LINCOLN llYD. ICll'Mt If llllfflll •Ml Klltltl 126-5550 3005 HAR·BOR BL Vp·. CORNER OF BAKER & HARBOR ••• 517 ·IOOO 1 ' I j I • • • jf DAILY PILOT ,... . . ThundoY, Aprll 2. 1970 l ·Russian Hero Dies {Red Army's Timoslienko Succumbs at 75 i .• MOSCOW (UPI) -Marshal Se m y o n K o n sta.nUnovich :: ·Timoshenko, the Soviet ·~ar hero who led the Red Arm1 to glory in 194~ after sharing th& blame for some of its defeats in l!Hl, bu died, the Soviet news qeney TASS 8J'ioo I • nouoced W~y. He was 71, 'nmoshenko died Tuesday alter a grave illness, TASS aald. Allbough he had been In- capacitated for stVeral weeks. a few hours before his death Tlmoshenko received Soviet Vice President Malhm.abullo Kholov at the Kremlin Hospital to accept his fifth Order · of Lenln -highest award in the land. Timoshenko, c 111 e d the '1bald eagle o( the Russian St.ppes" both for hh military record and Lor his smooth " held, began bis anny career , as a Tsarist private. He rose •· to become second only to Josef V. Stalin in the Soviet military " hlerardiy. . .. . • .. .. ·. . ' :· • • • . .. .. :: .. .. .. .• .• .. ·: • • • . • • . • • • . . ' :: ~ ) •' • • Timoshenko's close ties to Stalin were rein.forced by the marriage of the marshal's daughter to Stalin's son, Vasi· ly. The couple had two children, a girl and a boy. They were divorced before Vasi ly's 'death in 1957. As U the custom among Soviet leaders, little bas ever been reported publicly about Timoshenko's private ure and it was not immediately known who 'of bis family survived him. Timoshenkt> was S o v 1 et mlnister of defense in the 1ast year belore the G e rm a n onslaught ln lMl, when he took over command of the troops in the field. Though he later WR$ among those blamed for inadequate preparation for the attack it is still the custom for Soviet war veterans to say, "I fought with Timoshenko," rat be r than, "I fought in the Second World War." Timoshenko was born in 1895 in the village of Furmanka on the vast Russian Steppe, son of a poor peasant family. He entered the Tsar's army and bad become an nf- ficer by the time revoluUon swept Russia in 1917. He lm· mediately joined the newly formed Bolshevik Red.Army. He joined the Communist 'Party ln 1919 and won military glary and legendary fame for his civil war exploits as a brigade commander in the I See by Today's Want Ads i From soup to nuts., or A to Zzzz b;>me1 thoroughly cleaned .•. check the Ser- vice Directory. • By the peck or pound, for ground as bard aa a brick, TOPSOIL, bltrogen fort!. fled, has redwood added. Have the beat dirt in the block! e Put some ting in youi day, string along on thir'RICK- ENBACKER guitar with amplifier and accessories. • You can buy the best wa. ter in the Pacific too; a mooring at Avalon Harbor la far sale. . ... '1First cavalry Anny" of Marshal Semyon Budenn)'. In the final turmoil before World War JI, Timoshenko took personal command of the attack on Poland iD 193t and in the Sovlet-Flmililh war of I93t-1HO. The embarrassing failures · in the Finni.sh cam- paign demoustrated the need for reorganlzaUon of t h e Sovlet mWtary and the task rell to Tlmoshenko when he succeeded the late Marshal Kliment E. Voroshilcw as Peoples Commluar (minister) for Defense in IMO. Thus, T !m o's hen k o was leader ol the Sovie! military establishment ln latl whe.n Adolf HtUer's annles crashed VPITe ....... Into Russia and drove the WAR HERO DIES stunned Soviet army deep into Marshal Tlmoshenko their own ierritory. However, -----------he lmmediately be c a m e Stalin's deputy when Stalin assumed the UUe of supreme mWtary commander. 'Mmoahenko later won. credit for rallying the Soviet armed forces and organWng the deiense and counteroffensives that destroyed Hitler's dream of entering Moscow at the end of a two-week blitzkrieg. Talk Slated By Student Roger L Bick, a UC Irvine student, bas been invited to address a meeting of the American Medical Aaoctation this Jwie in Chicago. 'Ibe 2'1-year old medical stu- dent was asked to present his research findings lndlcaUng a new cause for coronary artery dlstaati at the a1mual con- VenUon. Bick has had previous research papers published in medical journals. While in medical . school, he has been president of his class and of the student research society. He is also a member of the American As.wclatioo for the Advancetnent of Science and the Society of Entomologists. Bick and his wife, Carolyn, live in Fullerton with their 19 moo.th old daughter, Michelle: Pendleton Will Host Marksmen Some tlf the Marine Corps' best marksmen will begin cranking oU rounds n e 1 t month as Camp Pendleton prepares to host the Corps twestem Division Matches. The tournament will begin April 13 to 17 with a 30 hour advanced course in marksman.shlp taught by in- structors from Quantico's ~farksmanshlp Training Unit. All competitors must com- plete this course as well as the three weeks of daily pracUce that follow in order to com~ pete in the match running the week of May 11. The match will feature in- dividual and team competition with the M-1 rifle and .a caliber pistol. It ia estimated that about 250 Marinea will compete. 1 About 35 of the best will go to the Marine Corps Matchts in Quantico June 1 to 5. From there the best will be chosen to represent the ~farine Cori:e in the NaUonal Championships at Camp Perry, O. Aug. l through 24. CRAWFORD'S PHARMACY 1'04 NEWl'ORT ILVD,. COSTA MESA PHON! 541-0950 I I • Diekens f;liagrined Names Changed ST. JOHN'S, Anllgua (AP) -1'1le Afro.Caribbean Move- ment bas preyalled on the cablnet to change the names of streetJ to honor Wtst Indies Letter From Author Pans America N£W YOJIK (AP) -An un- publlllled letter C h ar I o s DlcbN wrote from America, upnowr . bf t t er dlsap- Pofntmetl\ In this eountry, went on di.splay here today. "l bellefe the heaviest blow ever dealt at Uberty's head will be dealt by this nation in tts ultimate fallure of Its ex- ample to the earth," Dickens 1a1d in the letter written April l, 1842, on a boat between Pltl!burgb and Cincinnati. The letter, Jent to h1a close friend William C. Macready in April Fool For Solons SACRAMENTO (AP) - Five senators showed up e1- j>ectantly In Gov. Reagan's 'off 1 c e Wednesday, won- dering why the chief e1- ecuUve had 1ummoned them. Then S(lmeone caught on. April Fool! Sen. Lou Cusanovich, R- Sherman Oaka, announced the fraud In the Senate. He warned legjslators getting reque!UI to vlstt Reagan to check ahead by phone to verify the invitation. One of the dece.lved Democrat.!, Sen. G e o r g e Danielson of Los Angeles, took it good-naturedly. "They had a reguJar parade going in d o w n there,'' he said. "But I'm not golng to blow my cork about it. I feel good today." Englaod, went on dllplay In he had tound "many Pleasant heroes instead ol British naval the Plerpont Morgan Llbrary thlnga" in Amerlca. immortals . Streets like aJnn• with othtt DJ ct e n 1 Hawkins, Hood and Drake, for ....... "J speak to you as r would instance wUI be renamed for memorabilia bl com-to myself,'' he wrote Marcus'Garfey, Sir Frank memoratlon ol the centeriary Macrtady. "I am a love? of Worrell, Bustamente, etc. of the liOVt!ttln death oa June f r e e d o m , diiappainted -.. ~========= f, tbat'I all." I 0 Look at .the exhausJed, Dickens expressed 11imllar treaiury, the Par a I YI e d 1entlmenU: in his "American LET'S BE FRIDIDL Y iovemm.ent, the uncouth Notes," "''b11-~-.. after h'• h'--t ti -• f -~ "' U you have l'ltw nel& -· repre!!f!n a ves "" a ree peo-triumphal Americin tour, and I th d t or know of lll,)'One movlna p e; e espera e contests in his novel, ' ' M a r t I n bet the rth d to our attL please tell us ween no an the Chuzzlewlt." -south; the Iron Ctllb and 10 that w• ma1 extend • brazen muzzle fastened upon Dr· Charles A. RY!kamp, h1end1y wekon.e and help bo .......... 1... director of the M o r g a n them to become acquainted every man w .. .,_...... hls library, saJd the letter was ac-ln their new iun-oundlnP. I mlnd • • • quired in 1950 in a lot of 1,375 "The •tab b In gs and letters purchued from J . So. (A•sf Visitor shootings, the course and Pearson, a L<indon dealer. U1I • brutal threatenlnp ucbanged He said the fact t b a t 494-0579 4M-9UI between senators under the acholars had ignored it so far very Senate'.s roof, the In-was just ...... of I b 0.. Harbor Visitor tru.!ion of the most pitllul, mysteries that occasionally 646-0174 me a n , mallclous, creeping, li~ha~p~pen~~tD~ICl~bo~l~ar~ly~re~se~a~r~ch~.~ .. ~~~~~~~~;;~; crawling, sneaking party 1plrlt into all transactions of 1ife - even the appolntmenU of physicians to· pauper madhouses -the silly drlvell· ing, slanderous, w I ck e d , monstrous Party Press. "The 111Uon is a body without a head, and the arms and legs are occupied ln quar- reling with the trunk and each other and exchanging bruises at random." In a postscript, Dickens said Ceiling in Gold YORK, England (AP) - More than 100 15th century oak carvings in the celling of York Minister's central tower are being illuminated with gold bordering on a red background so as to be more clearly visible. BIBLE THOUGHTS SU:•lll IMMet"allty h to11dem11.d by "fh• l ibl1, Rom. 1:24·l2, Heb. 11 :4. God mad• ONE MAN for ONE WOMAN t• b• •••11el compa11io11t, for life, i11 lfl.tr• ri.tlJ•· l11terco11r11, ouhid• of wedlock, 1111 SIN, No fornii;alor or adulterer 111111 en• t•t H.eve41! I I Cor. 6:'1 Homo1e•u1lity h .111 ebomln1bl• ,;,.. llevillcu.1 11:22, R•m. 1:27-21, I Tim. 1:10, Gen. 1':4·1 l, Jud9e1 1':22-231. New1p1per1 lodey report immorality of the body 011 every hind arid in ma11iv• a11•mblie1 ("Lo"•" i111, nudi• 91therin91, rock mu1lc ct•wcl1, •+c.l; •• much 10 the! we .tr• reminded of E•. Jl:6, 22-21, a11d Gen. 6:5. How 10119 c111 God tolerele 111ch wid e1pre1d immorality a1 he 1•e1 thro119ho11f the world7 Pot• 1ibly the •11d of time it 111er; CERTAINLY J11d9me11t of m1ny i1111nor1I 01111 i1 nee r, for many of them die d1ily ind ljlO to th•ir •+•r11al d•1ii11y UNPREPAR!:O. 1611. 6:7.11. 011r n1ti•11, or ANY 111tion, i1 doomed lo decey u11le11 It ti" i111tlll i11 it1 publii; an intol1ra11ce for fla9ra11t "iolatio11•of prin- clpl•1 of dec•n1y. let ut M1ke a fight for COMMON DECENCY 111 av1ry .t \<'e1111• of life, i11 our prival• actiwiti11, in our public beh1 .. lor, jl'I our politicel 111d VOTING life, i11 our SHOPPING fo11r1, in the pla1;e1 of AMUSEMENT we patroni1e; lei 111 put pte11ure for dec•l'!Cy wher• it will COUNT al •very opportunity, Church of Chri1+,. 217 W. Wi11011 St., Cotf1 M•t.t, Ca. 92627,- TUNI 1Y CHANNll t, 7:JG A.M, SUND.AH LES MAM'SELLE • NEWPORT ; BEACH . 28,17 LAFAYETTE AVE. 2 Blocks East of Newport Blvd • Corner of 29th & Lafayette WOMEN'S A p p A R E L, SPORTSWEAR I AND ACCESSORIES • • • ALL PRICES SLAS.HED.FOR 9UICK DISPOSAL FIXTURES FOR SALE I STORE HOURS: Daily 10 am to 6pm Closed Sunday ,.. ..... ..., .._. fat .... .. .. .... Ftiel.1 Deft.... _, c ... ,. ... DltpOIOI .t tMI .... St.d el w ... .................... •h•rhlt ,... .... tt •• Af!Nr certfll ....... , MriHI 4-iht- emt.,, .... c.......... •f ... .... .... tMt ...., " l11emT'l'e4 .. a.-1., on ttiis ...u...... - ..... Mdcl.d ,.... ...,. " ... y ... ....... MMIMe "'"' .. 4o. Pl .. tlte llltlre Stock " Sole , , • M fM ,..,.. of tlll1 """ , , • AT DTllMILY DRASTIC PRICI UDUC.. TIONS • , , Ar ptltn M lo,., ft. ltMlt .... Id aell ud WI QUICKLY , •• Ut tile ..rchndhe 1w1., wHt It wlll eH tile 1 .. be wltat It MQ. LADIES AT HOME WEAR 9 •1"91 ..,. ........... ·-··· .....,.... ••l•rs, ..... , ...,... & ,, •• ,.. r19. $31.00 to ~ $76.00 SALE PRICE .. . 2 LADIES DRESSES OFF Dre.y.se,.,.c-.i.coch9fl """ liy "OLI• CARINI" "Ml. ILA.CkWILL" "CAlltAel TU.DI" "CAPRllL .. "MR DINO'" .,HOYIS DINN r • "JULll MIL• Lii" "MR IOlllT" "LOICH kN1n• .,ALllANDIR" tflle "'Y 1-t &olon oJHI ...... lw .,~ ...... ,.... .,.11114 .... W ..... wMI bl .... hits, tUb, 11-. ......... ' .. ''· J ,,..,._ , ... to $29.9S $10 88 SALE PRICE ...... e •ot· to $33.00 $12 88 SALE PRICE ...... e LADIES SANDALS "MAGDISIAN" "SllfN'" .. w ., wlllte .....,.. .-... wltll fl•, lllod ., M4 ...,. la th "" ,.._, ttJ*;. Slaet I t• 10. Ow _.,.. lf"Klt. r19. $12.00 i. $5 88 $13.00 SALE PRICE ....... • LADIES COATS "MAIGUlllTI IUllL" "CAlllAOI TU.DI'' "MAYFAIR" lotnt 1tylft encl t1l1n ht 1'1111• ,.111..._, wnh, tllll ,.,, .... .ti:. SI• 6 te 16, J 1r•1pt. r19. $36.00 $16 88 SALE PRICE ...... e '19· $51.00 $26 88 SALE PRICE ..... e r ... $9'.00 s53 88 SALE PRICE ..... e LADIES PANT SUITS "HOVIS DINNI" "MATPAll'" "CAr • lllL" "DAIUI'' tW "'1 letett 1ryMs, ................... ,. , • ., ....... 16. J r19. lo $39.95 $14 88 , ... to $91.00 s43 88 SALE PRICE ...... e SALE PRICE ..... e JEWELRY -~ PRICE OUR INTIRI STOCK LADIES BETTER DRESSES ..OLIG CASSIN!• "'Ml ILACKWILL'" "CANllL"' "CARllACJI TU.DI" "Ml DINO" a lilt MNcriM .t ..... 4ffllty *-'°1 uy ecc.11 ... Si....-hftt.r ...... witli coata, lhllla tllb. M..,. tftMt 11.... *""· L..,... 1trt-. .....t' colors, 11 11 ... ' hi ''· 4 ,,,.,._ r19. to $59.95 $22 3.3, SALE PRICE ..... e r19. to $65.00 Sft6 88 SALE PRICE .... .' J. e · r19. to $79.00 $28 88 · SALE PRICE ..... e · • r19. to $98.00 $36 as·· SALE PRICE ..... e ' OTHER DRESSES TO $189.95 NOW REDUCED 'h. SKIRT SAVERS & SLIPS "HYlllT Y06UI" M••• wMte., W..., ..... ,_Hiity 11 ... 24 .. J2 • r19. $7.00 $2 88 SALE PRICE . .. .. .. e ' r19. $10.00 $4 88 SALE PRICE ....... e PLEASE NOTE Our entire stock Is on sale at TERRIFIC PRICE REDUCTIONS .. .,...., '"-· S.., Mrly ,., .._ _.ec t1 ............. flnt ...-..4, _,.,.,. ...... *"'".. MtW,_, held ._.. USI TOU!l U.NllAMlllCA .. D 01 M A S T I It CHAHI. • , HOii PINS, U.RRINaS, NICkl.ACIS, RINGS, ITC. llTTIR 9UAUTY I LES MAM'SELlE • 2~~?..~~~!~.!!E. • NEWPORT BEACH \. BraM Attacked -·· ProxmireAccuses Pentagon of Lies WASHINGTON (AP·) - Sen. William Proxmire, ~c· cusing the Pentagon of lymg to justify the c o s t ol multlbllUon dollar we a p on s .• systems, has urged. the power • of the purse be stripped from • tbe genera~. r T h e Wisconsin Democrat 1aid he wants an independent civilian agtncy to take cha rge of the procu.'.ement of military e q u i p m e IN. under these marching orders: End "'aste, make sure weapons work and are ready on time, preven t the billion-dollar overruns of the past and knock heads if .:-~necessary to do the job. "The disgraceful fact. is that neither the contractors nor the Pentagon tells the truth about the cost of weapons," Prox- mire said In a new book. "Report From Wasteland," his views of the military-in- dnstrial complex. UE ABOUT COST "They deliberately lie about the cost," he declared. "They pruposely undere stimate the cost of these weapons systems in order to get them establish· eel and to get the Congress and the country committed to them." .. At the present time," he wrote. "It is not inaccurate or unfair to describe the U.S. weapons acquisition system as a kind of welfare system for MONEY TO LOAN PAWN SHOP Ci1111 e DlalllO .. e TMh RACITl'S JEWELRY & LOAN SJZ Meli St, IJ6·2610 Dew11towe H111thttt91111 IHcll ates ,, STIVl, DAN & ITRON PINLIY Tw ll•v• lllf ,._ llMnl IM ••,.._ lllfl "wllll'I ill • MlftL" A tr"! ... lo ............ 11y, .. "'' ............ "' • _..._ '"" 1111"191f ""'"""' .... -, ........ "" -...y...-. llloell• .. Ill!• I-., ..... If Y•• MYI I D91'111t ltll_._ Mtlll : ... INiy Y9U Wiii lllMll tltll flle Miii lftlll '. "'' .. is I lKI lupl, Tllll' ... I I ·- • ltttftlll WM'tl M 1111 IHI 111ylMMl1"1 • citntl llo!1. We llM l'Md '°"'' lllM N et wh1r1 !IHI ''''lclettl If w11111 Miter Ct., 1 Mr. l l1clr, ,,...1111tc1 111 11111t1nt '"'"''~r '"'"' -"'' .,., .,....., 1tvt Orly. TIMll fllll' ... I fht lllrlc-tcl HIW Ttn .... , wlMM h.ni.-..0•1 MNllmH -. l"AMll, lrhh tllll l!ntUt.11. T"'"°I ... u1m•lt If ,...IM!lnt llt- ""'111 .. 111 tMdWln. TllH. ,_, tltlrt'I I c1,.~ltr ln ... ,,... .... "°tf gl!Mf. fJltlY _..,., l1lh. l •I IMlf loot1r11ll11t "' 111 II 1M S111der J{. llll Wiit ,.tit~ '111 '9Urt le CMl!te 1111 l•llM le Mmellllllf ltH ctn!nillt -S11111ff Y. 5111. YM -1111'1 ,.;di I Mttll' nlfl\t flt' J"llr lfl••rlrKI """' !~Ill I YllON f'IHLIY INSUltAHCE, ff2 M1!11 ' 1tlrtcf, H11111!ntl"' IN<h, llMM 0SJf.7SU. ··~miter lhll INSUllAHC• t. !IHI HU ASSURANCE. W1 lllW 1 '''"11111 ln111r111~1 ,,,..,r1m "' .~. ,.wr 11m!l1 "'" "' ywr lvli· ' ... ,... the military brass and the defense bureaucracy on lhe one hand and the t o p aerospace and munitions manufacturers on the other." He said the system goes far beyond a simple alli8Jlce between Pentagon and defense contract.ors: "It is a military. industrial • bureaucratic • tr a de associaUon~ -labor union • intellectual • technical -academic • service club • political complex w h o 1 e pervasivness touches nearly every citizen." He said this combine of powerful interests serves to justify further spending for weapons systems that either do not work or fall far short of specifications. "The frightening truth about our weapons ~urement system iB that one 'tan search in vain for a weapon that was produced on time. worked according to. its specifications and did not exceed t h e estimated c o s t , ' ' Proxmire said. LAY DOWN LA \V "\\1e need someone to Jay down the law, pound the table, crack heads together, cancel a few contracts, deny pro- motion to military managers and cut an agency's budget," Proxmire said. "Then we ~·ill get change and .action." Ol1er the past year Prox· mire, co-chainnan of the joint congressionaJ EConomic Com· mittee, held hearings disclos- ing the Air Force's C • 5 transport, b e i n g built by Lockheed Aircraft, would cost $2 billion more than original estimates. He was also a key figure in Senate debate op- posing deployment of the an- tlballistic missile system and other we!lporui: proposals. The book called for a reorganization of government i(lstilutions on every level - White House, Budget Bureau, Pentagon, C.Ongres.s, General Accou nting Office-"in order that we may judge, analyze, criticize, review and recom- mend policies to control the procurement or m o d e r n ":eapons systems." INDEPENDENT AGENCY "Procurement of military hardware and contracts for military researeh and develop. ment should be carried out by an independent civilian agency," he said. "The principle should be to let the military fight and de- termine the weapons il needs to fight if it can convince the . President, Congress and the Amerk:an people they are needed," Proxmire said. "Let the civilians procure t h e weapons under rigid, busina~ like procedure." Prom.ire insisted his pro- posals would not w e a k e n national defense. "The United States Is better served by the truth than by sweeping unhappy facts under the rug." he said. "It may sound absurd to say such a thing, but surely we are .stronger if our weapons work than if they do not wo~k. "We are more secure facing facts and subjecting Pentagon actions t<> criticism," he said, "than covering up the pro- blems." HUNTINGTON VALLEY STATIONERS Museum Nixed Smitlisonian Rejects SF Site SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) - Re1ent1 ol the SmJUuonian Institution in Washlnaton have rejected • suggestion to turn San Frandsco't old m i nt bulldllll into I "SmlthlonWI West." Hep. Phillip Burton (!)San Francl1$()), said he had received a letter from S. Dillon Ripley, the regents' secretary, declining the offer made by a speciel adviaoey committee . Rip~y said Ute regents believe ·~the crowing com- rnitmeY1ts ol. the· Smithsonian in Washington, as well as the inherent di(nculties Involved Jn assumfilg the respomibility for so remote an operation as the San "Fiancisco Mint as a national facility, argut Saloon Saloon Claims Solon against our commitment to such an enterprise in any part ol lhe country at thls lime." Burton said the decision "shou1d not discoura1e San Francisco from conUnuln& 1~ efforts to save the old mint." The clasa!cal structure was built ir. 1874, but has not been used 1as a mint since the new San Francisco Mint WIS open- ed in 1937. Francl! Barnes, chairman of the special advisory com· mittee appointed by Health, Education and W e I f a r e Secretary Robtrt H. Finch, said he would call a com- mittee to discuss the decision. "But we're not going to move hastily," Barnes said. "l think we'll let this thing distill for a whilt." A spOkesman for Finch said no action 1\'ould be taken on the mint until the committee makes further recom- mendations. Fish Scuttled SACRAMENTO (UPI) -AJ;;:::========;il sak>on is a saloon no ma tter what the law says it should be named, accord i ng to Assemblyman John T. Knox More than 1 mi llio n young salmon, due for release in the Columbia Rive r near Washogal, Washington died when their pond water supply was cut off. The feeder creek had been blocked causing the fishes to suffocate. They were valued at $250,000. Campus Cooperation Urg·ed by Rein.ecke SACRAMENTO (UPI) -Lt. sweep clean California's en- Gov. Ed Reinecke says it's vironment and preserve it time politicians and the from pollution in the future . troubled California academic ,;We'll make it a blue sky," community discard "inflam· promised Reinecke, the matory" rhetoric and agree leading spe>kesman for the instead to cooperate. governor\ on the environment "The polarization appears to issue. be between the administration "We certainly hav'e n o in Sacramento and faculty on reason to run from any of the campus," Reinecke said in an attacks of the Democrats," he interview. "I'd like to thaw said. "If they want to com· that freeze." m~nt or if (D emocrat i c The youthfuJ.)ooking 46-year-JtUbernatorial candidate) Jess old lieutenant governor, run--Unruh wants to claim he's a ning for election to the office great envirmmentalist, we'll to which Gov. Ronald Reagan be glad to straighte n out the appointed him in 1969, said hts tacts on that situation, too." role in the thawing process When R e a g a n appointed can be that of a ''liaison" Reinecke. the govern o r man. described their · p o 11 t I c a I "We have to slart by saying partnership as a pair of "gold let's not Lalk politics in tenns dusl twins. because both are or inflammatory issues," he fonner members of t h e said. "We should be going out Democratic Party who now of our way to find ways of espouse similar conservative mutual cooperation and shar. philosophical positions . ing or c a p a b i Ii t i e .s and Reinecke said that cl03e resources." relationship will continue as (0-Richmond.) Knox Monday introduced a bill to repeal the 35-year-old ban on the words ·•saloon" and ''bar" from tavern signs. Originally the 1935 law forbade the _pubs from ...c a 11 in g them se l v e 1 "tavems" or "cocktail lounges," but that provision was removed . Scientific Pra.yer a.for• m•n could fly th• first •irpl•n•, th•y hid to do mor• th•n w1nt to fly , they h•d to le1rn the l•ws of fliqht to set them fr•• from the eerth. Similerly, when men pr•y •nd •••m to receive no enswer, c•n it be thet they heve something first to leern •bout preyer ... •nd •bout the benevol•nf l•ws of God7 He•r Herold Ro9er1, C.S., of The Christien Sci•nc• Bo•rd of Lecture ship, •p••lt on "Sci•ntific Pr•yer." You •nd your friends •r• most welcome to this fr•• lectur•. SOU'I'l.1 con .ST 0,.. Nl1tirty, 6:41 , .... M•rt-l•Mlay ,1:41 ,.111. 0.. ,.,.., ........ l :ot ,,,, & s.t .• ,.. 6:41 I••· c...i-,,_ I ACADEMY II AWARD WINNER! I BESTAmESS i • Reinecke said 1£ the ad-both work as a team during · aw.....1...-.. ministration· arid academic lhe 1970 campaign. WINI~.-. , I Christian Science lecture community continue to draw • "There's full accord and swMay. ""11 1~1" ,.111. SARBRA OMAR j farther apart, gov~rnment will agreement between our cam· ,...,.." "'" 1 C'TDDC\A~ID · (IUADlf lose an invaluable assistant. paigri managers, campaign 1111 c1tno1n1• u111t• I \llr\Lk.Y'U1 • \XWY I "I think the University of d ire ct ors and general ,,..~tttilfl crtwc11 · t') 1t1.~li~ California is a tremendous chainnen that there will be in A'f• .... L• •11,.11• ' ~~ resource of this slate that is very higtrlevel coordination," "" C"-1•· cint.rnll I ill .... ~ I not being .adequately used in the lieutenant governor said. .,__ .. "' l'lnl (ltllfd., Chrtit, ~-~l'--.· o·.·· I advice to government." he He said he and Reagan will k1e111111, "• ci.-r. -:. ;ii ...._ said. "I don't think we're get-be running "virtually one C1r1 .,.. 1m.1t1 dllldren ~ _.._. ting all the cooperation that campaign." wut " ,,.v1c1..i I might be available." ii~~:;i~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;..iliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~!I Reinecke said the estrange-Ii I ~~~gispos~~i~ns!!' ()fl R~=~a~: M-a:ybe 1·t's mn· e I unrest, but added l h a t "probably 80 to 90 percent of the citizens at large'' agree \\'ith the governor. e eel • littl "I would like to unfreeze lhe t ID a e situalion between the ad-uou 1n~na.s ministcatlon and the universi· J · l Y" ty ." Reinecke said, noting he believes there Is belier com· teal · tat munications between the stale ' es e. colleges and the ad· ministration than exi sts with UC faculty and staff mem· be rs. Reinecke, when he resigned from Congress to join Reagan as the state's onJy appointed lieutenant governor, sai d he Intended to support Reagan down the line. He still does. Tlu11'Sday, A.Pfll 2, 1970 DAILY PILOT JC'~A Cf'AIO l'OLITICAL AOV,) . ELECT JOE TOMCHAK LAGUNA BEACH CITY COUNCIL Dedicated to: I-' Efficiency in City government. I-' Protect end preserve our hillside• and beache1. I-' Fair and effective law enforcement. J'1 Responsible expenditure of city fund•. I"" Citizen participation· in imple,,,en .. ting Laguna's new General Plan. V Maintaining the integrity of our town's unique character. NOMINATORS ' ' Williem Wikox•n Alice King Dr. C•rl •Johnson Deen W.est91•rd Dr. A. E. "Pitt" Worthington Or. Rob•rt French Donn• D•metri•des Morgep Cuthbertson G.olfr1y Riker Louis J, Zitnik CITIZENS FOR JOE TOMCHAK: Dr. 11111 Mr1. ltllblf1 lrctlPterlOl'I FrlftCa K1ll1y Mr. •1111 Mrt. fllrnvr'MI VIII Mr, 11111 Mr&, ,IUI Grllnt Dlwton Mr. 11111 M.,. ltoy Holm l wclll• Wllltlkw Mr. 11!d Mfl. WllU1m Mortlmtr M•J. Audrey ''"'" Mfl, C1th1r!n1 CMmbttn k1v. l"r. '•!rick C.111111~ Mr. lollCI Mrl. L1rry HIJtll Mr. 11111 Mrs. fl r1d Alwoacl JOI! lr11M1 Mr. Ind Mn. Arlllur WlltY Mr. ll'ld Mr1. J1mn l11n Dr. I nd Mrl. H1reld Toll~•· Ja111 Gltttt JINI~ Jettun Mo. 0. L, l trld Mr, Ind M11. Art W1lll JCNI I(. fllrntr Mr. I nd Mr1, lorl1 l w11n Ot', i nd Mf'I. Fr111t; M1y1r1 Mr. 11111 Mra. Qt1rh11 Morr1111 Mr. 1nd MrJ. IOlll•I w. Oo1111h1Y Ml•!M Trlmltlt HUllt Mc.Cor.,..cti: Mr. llMI Mrt, L_,, E1111lll'l1rdl Toni Florn Or. Ind Mii. ltOOIJ1 Sttlf Mr. Ind Mrs. Dlrek Dl.lt\Ylll'ltr M•ry Llllfllbttfy llOH Mlrlt flrwltl Slllt'lly ltll'IMCly Ml. lfl!I Mt1. Amolll H- Mr. I nd Mn. Al H1¥111 C•rol 8yron Dr. Arnold L1Nrm.111 Iott Hllllmen Mr. 11111 Mra. H1rrold W. lelt Mr •nd Mrs. Mer•llJ T•lltl \ • • ' " •, .. ·. ' ·. Feature• the Finest Quality Wedd ing Invitations et a Price That will Even Please Dad • "f've no compunctions about It." he said. "J've always spoken on behalf of t h e governor and for his pro- grams. And, if someone at- tacks him , I'd be delighted to step in and pick up the.fight. I like a good fight." 1 · MrJ, J-I O'fCI tn.rlel McCllM"-" Or, •1111 Mo. vemon l 1Kkm111 R.obtrt S, HMCll ,• . l ' '; FULL LINE OF e WEDDING ALIUMS • -.uesT IOOKS e 'HOT06RA'H ALIUMS Order now (or your Summer Wedding tH-2242 Ce,...-A'-' & M~fe -111 Afpk let9 C....,J ''Artistry in Moving'' • A Democrat· turned· Republican, Reinecke said he was eager to begin his fir campaign for election to the office. Asked what he thought the administration's long suit for voter appeal is, Reinecke replied : "f think the awareness and the sen.s\Uvity for the feeling of the lit.tle man, of the pocketbook of the taxpayer." He said the admlnistration't No. 1 unfinished las); Is to for the BEST MOVE of YOUR LIFE Call: ' 494-1025 580 Broadway Like America. Jn ·a ICOPJC., that'• 'lfM:t you'n doing when yo. buy U.S. Sa'rinp Banda. Investing ;. the tndilion1 that made America grttt. And pf'O'fid iog the a.'OnOmic •trength it tt.kce: \o keep the ayslem going.-{o boild highwaY't SO im~ llChoola, to eliminate 1lu~ lhi.., .... -i domg .. keep America paL Do.. die --per .r. Yo• bet it doa Yoo and mill.ton1 o( ~ Americ:&M n!8p tbs benelitt of your 8oftd ill wetttmeut . t . •Dd JOU pon0n•Ily rewp • • ......wy bene6t -r-Boado ......... buity. All becmo 1,00-''" ...... -abetler p1 ..... 1;...1e~ it wort1i it? Take stock in America Buy us. Savings~ .. _.... ... ,_ .. .............. - II!:. H, l"••le'I Gtll ~llellw l llllt T11d>out Mtrr l1v1 M•. ll'ld Mn, Jll'OITll '" .-.ndrnn Mr. 1nd Mrl. It~ A. Mr. '"" Mrs. 11111 kl'l1el1r SWftll11'1d EWll'fl M. SttYllll JOln Col!lnl Mr. 11\d Mn. Jldl M, Miiier Or. 11M1 Mrs. Hormtn ·- Hti.n Cllhlt' Mr. ll'IO Ml'I. Gtol'OI Htllll"tlfll Clll'llt!'kll It. IOWff'I Mr, ll'IO MrJ. Jlll\ft IWMlllW VOTE JOE TOMCHAK APRIL 14 H1m llton Mtln1rny C1mp1l9n Ch1Trmen 1030 E11tmen W1y, l191.1n• le1ch. 1 ! r -.· ------·---·_ ... ___ ,..._,.._.,.," ....... :_..-'--~- DAILY PILOT '~ Off ·season Park Visitor ... ~ . :: This bus is stuck in a park in Kansas City, Mo., af· :: t er the driver was unable to keep it on snow and ice ;: covered street. Traffic jams and stuck vehicles were common throughout the area as up to seven inches of wet snow fell. J .. I 7' •• 1 1 'I : qf ·-· 'Mao Sparks Debate Soviet Hawkl, Dove& at Odds on Ch~na By WlLL1AM L. RYAN an arUcle proml.nently question here Is: Row would •" a-r.i cm, '' •• , diJptayed In Pnvda March it look to the rest or the The Soviet pre11 bq made lt and signed 1'l. Alexandrov,'1 world if the military powerful so many attacks on Red China which may be a pen-name Russia~ launched a p r e • recently that apeculaUon is for a bi&h-rankln& So v I e t emptive strlke against a •rouaed about the 11\etlhood politician. 'lbl., article could militarily weak Communl!l of a debate in the Kremlin be a warning to Ptklng that neighbor? Would It, in fact, between hawks and doves on Soviet paUence was wearing signal the end of International wtia.t to do about Mao Tse-thin, but there was another communism as a movement? tung'• regime. arresUng aspect, "We have everything Military men may fear the APPROVE WAR TALK necessary to defend the in· consequencts of a preventive The article atreued ovrr terests of the Soviet people etrlke Jess than the civilians and over that w e st er n ... from all encroachments," who, ln fact, swn to be argu. caplWiatJ approved heartily the Alexandrov article argued, tn1 earnestly against such an of Peking's war talk and "are as If suggesting that some Idea. rejoicing" at the di!lerences people were much too worked The Soviet anny newspaper, between the Soviet Union and up about the Chinese threat. • .. ANTIQUE ANTICS .. oe....i ..................... ................. ldod . ....... Tony Tovatt Sez Red Star, tens· of a Chinese Red China. 'l11ui, this seems From the k>ok or things, mllltary buildup. It singles out to say, to accept a line that the argument is yet to be for abuse such things as •'--t c b · llitaril resolved and the result could Nol H yo;i 111 .... • _. 1 .... ,,.,.,.,. uuea ens l n a m Y lth *""• • ..,. iw.1 •anoto 111 GaHtr• • Chinese military construction would be to do exactly what go e er way. satt1t• 1rom 1ovATT'5. 1an111r. ,,. in ..__der. areas and other the "U.S. 1m-n·a1•·ts" want. ----,-------·II 11c1oui mr111 ,......, c.rne1 11um111> '¥ ~ l.:I ••• 1 cinch to coolt wllll Giii of ....,.., "saber ratUing." The paper Pravda and other papers pie-rrom 1ovArr·s. seeks to draw a contrast: ture the Americans happily "Soviet troops in the Far East rubbing their hands at the and Central Asia carry out pl'O!lpect of a Soviet-Chinese their routine duties a n d military clash. perfect thei r mllllary skill . The argument seems to be, within the framework of usual then, that if the "Imperialists" plans and programs . , • to tvan t it, it must be a bad guarantee the inviolability of idea for the Soviet Union, their borders I r om en· somethlng to be avoided. Th.is croachment.s by a n Y ag. appears t.o be backed up by gressor." implied arguments a g a In s t One can almost hear the war with Ch.Ina. generals saying that if they The article says the U.S.S.R. had their way they would "unfailingly acts as the cham· 247 BroMlway know just how to deal with pion of peace and frien dship Hours: 11 •.m. to 10 p.m. TOVATT'S APPLIANCES 401 M•l11 St., Hwllti .. tu Y.i•h 5J6-75'1 lreolh•nt It WllflWf huhli• Valley 96212456 B:iy The DAILY PILOT Just for 'Peanuts' the upstart Mao and his ilk. among peoples." The implicit Let .. a..u-4t4-t174 The civilian politicians seemriiiiiiilii-------~~~~~---~~~~iiiiiiiii __________ ~, t() be taking another tack: complaining that the Peking T H E WAY bem ln~umhen1s Get Funds regime, by m ak i n g the P.C.S. • • • • . • . Primary Foes Protest Senate Campaign Donations U.S.S.R. its archenemy, ac· tually is serving the cause of "Imperialism." The capitalists, this argu· PROFESSIONAL 1 STOP SERVICE CARPETS & FLOOR CLEANING 492-2993 CALL COLLI CT :; WASHINGTON (UPI ) - :Senate Democrats openly are ;Using their private campaign :War chest this year to help ins :Cwnbents survive primary :eJeetio n struggles. : Eleven Democratic sena- ;tors, including Sen. Thon1as '..J, Dodd. (DConn.,) have rt· ::Ceived contrlbuUons from the •:senate Democratic Campaign ::Committee, toochlng of r pro- ::iests acro ss the Ct>Untry. :,>emocrats seeking to bwnp ::senate incumbents regard the :-contributions as unfair. But ::managers of the fund insist the ;:tncumdents earned the money ·:and they are free to use it ru :they,.. DL : Dodd, censured three years :Zain for diverting $116.083 in IN LA BENA GOUCH boon VJppod, taken or fooled lately? BE CODDLED by • COLLEN'S CARPET ,.., Mill WI""• C1v1t111t1 C.~•.,...._WtH 1'•"'1 LllM1W111-Tr•~1,.l"lllt WlrHlew ..,..._,...,. & 0 "1 ... r C..r"lilll ~ fet"•t A••·· L11un" 494-6701 campaign contributions lo meet his personal expenses, was given $10,000, according to records kept by U1e House of Representatives. The gift -in two $5.000 In· stallments -v.•:is made Ja11. 14 after the Rev. JoSf'p h Duf· fey and state Sen. &.!ward L. Marais announced they would oppose him in the primary. Connecticut Der:.10Cr<1ls who oppose Dodd have protested the contribUtions, a~ have Texas oppooe.nts cf Sen. Ralph W. Yarborough , tO.Tex., l who has received at leart $500 so far. With primary elcct.iom or state· conventions yet to come , the Senate committee !Jy lhe end of January h3d handed out at least $1,500 t.:1 Sen. John 0 . Paatore, (R.1.); 14.tltlO to Sen. Joteph M. Afontoya, (N.M.); 13.000 to Sen. Gale W McG<!e, (Wyo.): 12.000 to Sen. AJberl Gore, (Tenn.): $8.000 to Sen. Quentin N. Burdick, (N.D.); $g,ooo to Sen. Frank E. Moss, (Utah.) $5,000 to Sen. Stuart Symington, (Mo.); Rose Parade Theme Chosen PASADENA (UPI) -"Thru the Eyes of a Child" has been chosen from 7 ,000 suggestions to serve as the theme next New Year's Day of the 82nd annual Tournament ot Roses and the basis for the design and decoration of the eo floats. The theme was submitted by !\frs. James Fahey, Sierra f\.1adre, who will be a guest at the parade and the Rose Bowl foolball game. WHY VISIT • • the APPIAN WAY Beauty Salon • ,.,..,. yot1 are "·"' I• the •• • P .... ps your stylht has movotl. • Pert.ops JOI •• dlssotlsfllCL Try U1 & h l'i-ntly SurpriHd 16377 lolsa C•lco IAt Holll OffN MON.·SAT. EVENINGS IY APl'T. _r · $8,218 to Sen. Henry M. Jack- son, (\Vash.}. and $2,000 to Sen. Howard W. Cannon, (Nev.) Primary opponents of the Incumbents claim t h a t the fund was designed to preserve Democratic majorities, not to mobilize for fratricidal warfare. ment goes, try to hinder policy that there is no such "Socialist" p r o g res s by thing as forgiveness, that par-portraying the Soviet Union don and parole are hollow as aggressive. This h e 1 p s Words." il "imperialists" to just y an WALL Te WALL FLOOR Te CllLIN• GINllAL HOUSI CLIANIN• CDMllNID IXPllllf:t'-1 FREE l'ICK-UI' IN THI INDUSTIT OYlll 30 YIAIS & DELIVERY FREE ESTIMATES Inouye said he did not re· arms race and thus the story ga rd the gift as an act of of a prospective S o v i e t. forgiveness by Oodd's col-Chinese war is just what leagues -including the nine western wannongers want. so · members of the ctimmittec the thesis goes. China's car-Associated S.rvicu of LANGLEY JANITOR SERVICE who voted for cemure three ryingHn are "a wi.ndfall for and REUKEMA RUG & CARPET CLEANERS years ago. He said the com-the Imperialists in their stxug-SERVICING SOUTHERN ORANGE COUNTY Said Duffey: "1 wonder if the contributon to these cam· paign funds were informed at the time they contributed thJ l such funds would be used for primary fightA.'' Duffey·s campaign manager. Ann \\1ex- Jer of Westport, Conn.. said "1 cannot understand ho\v a Senate campaign commlttee can give mo11ey to a candi· date, incumbent or not, until he has been endorsed by his own JM.MY." miltee simply was bound uot gle against the countries of to play favorites and "detcr·,i~soc~l~al~ls~m~.·~· ~~~~~~~=~==P=L=A=N=T=L:OC:A:T:l=O:N:::1:5:2A=·=L=H=Mo~ll=n=H=,=S.=n~C=l•:mo=:n:I•===~= mine who is a good or bad This was the tine taken by Democrat." Dodd also is bl!:ing opJX15e.i by Rep. John Monaghan, (0. But Sen. Daniel K. lnotlye, ()).Hawaii), chairman of the campaign codlmittee. said "if a senator participate!! in selling tickets and raising money Jor his colleagues, why should we deny him \'/hen bis turn comes up?'' Inouye said the policy of de· laying gUt.s unW after the pri· marles has changed because the money was sorely n1?-edcd to get a head start on'the cam· paign this year. He ncted he had to "plead" with the cam· mlttee to get it to release funds to his campaign before Hawaii's 1968 primary r.lec- Uon. Inouye also defended the release of funds to Dodd. "I see nothing inconsistent with that, unle!S we have sud- denly adopted a policy that he wou ld be forever damned and held in contempt from th at moment (of censure) un- til he dles and we adopted a Conn .) The campaign committee i:;ets its money from contribu- tions from individu~ts and or- ganiz8.tions as well as from fund·raising d.inneri1. Art Project On Display Rober1 S. Thorn. a graduate student of Cal State, Long Beach, will display his master's project on luminlstic art through Thursday in the college art gallery. The Laguna Beach artist constructed the eight art ob- ject.s from plastic, aluminum, glass and electronic com- ponents. Inc and esce n t, fluorescent, neon and natural lighting were used to create lhe works, utilizing projected, reflected and refracted light properties as a basis of medium. The art exhibit will be on display from 8 a.m. to noon and from I p.m. to 4 p.m. through Thursday. IN A RUSH FOR FAS· PRINTING 50 -$3.50 500 -$ 6.70 100 -$3.90 ]000 -$10.20 8Y2 x 11 -20 Lb. White Bond -Block Ink CA.MIU llADY COPY A "ONl ·STOP'' lftYICI POI ALL 'YOUI PllNTINe ..... OHICI SUPPLID .J.laJfe'I~ •••1tfweftl '"'""' c..tfief' W.......,IAlfe11111l11 846-9200 -f StalionertJ MUTUAL TICKrt AelNCY Tltl(•n POii 1,.,..1nt •""" e c-.m 51 .. 1 ~''" e Me't'lu 846-2030 c IP'l lil J'•llllcl l Ml¥1rtlHmt11l1 PETE OSTRANDER CANDIDATE FOR LAGUNA CITY COUNCIL APRIL 14. Statement: n..r. k 11• olt9'Mtl•• bit tttet of eltforcemMt of tfric• l•w whll••t fe« ., fcrHr. I pledte in,1elf t• t i'• tfle ,.lie• ... b«klitt "'-' req.lre •ltd I c11.,,. thllt ttN COM .. lllJl lty Mldt beck ttt. ,.11ce nt1 Co111cll tf •• •r• t. ,...,.. 011r preMl!t ll"'IJ·erlewte4 h'eftds, PETE OSTRANDER WITH VERNER BECK PEOPLE FOR PETE Le1ll• Mlklo11 .HTICI lattf!IOll Nffl Yollftnfet Kory Sor11wat11rl Fred..,lck I. lllchmcu1 l . •· Ottrelld1r I. D. Tlt11er DYM Shlrl11 CorJ'lfll Noncf Joh111011 C•rol lrcnul J11..,.. G•rd11t .lomn f, ledd'( Carlyl e 0111111!1 M11 rll. G11mblrter llobert M. H11ddln to11 A1111e I. H11H Howlo11d Parker n..M norp• Hant'y DI' Yore Ylr9i11io L•l"IOll 111.,... a:. llllrlaer Duetd A. S.Nllt Mort ••rlte l . H"ry llto h •in•y Jo• I . 1111r1..., Ly11 01tJeftdef f;roco klftM!boc• Slllrl•y M•ym lie ... '°''"' Leny MllM htt• Lht ... 1,..i f l'tn l ondolpll , .. '-"' Joo F. hyll Do•ltl flo1r11..-Dr. fra11t M.t'y1rs Alrr.4 Dytert F. N. Ceslty LloTd J, ~IMt Htlt11 H. Tllo111p1011 •emMo l111Miff l . I. Molo11e Wiii-" M...,1_. (J111n• I . Hy111011 .....,._ wnu ... '· SW.14t OSTRANDER CAMPAIGN COMMITTEE 333 Third Street, Laguna Beach 494-0758 Robert J . H11tin91, Cos0rdlnator stereo103FM the sounds of the harbor youve never heard it so gopd • . • . ' • ' • • . . :· ~ Youths .Nearer Vote Tougli Foe Changes on Lowering Age WASHINGTON (AP) - Stronl aupport amona House Democrala for towering the voting age to 18 hu overcome t,lle resi1\1nce of Rep. Emanuel Cefier (0.N.Y.), the proposal's chief foe. Celler la now prepared to seek a House vote on ac- cepting both the ti-year-old vote and an exten1lon of the 1965 Voting Rlghll Act, earlier passed as a package by the Senate. The Bl.year-old chairman of the Judiciary Committee has not shilled ln hi• oppo1IUon to teen-age voting, but a 5-1 margin among his Democratic <..'Olleagues In favor of It has persuaded blm to drop his erort to separate the age issue from the voting rights legisla- tion. Celler's main lntue1t b in passing the Senate version of the Voting Rights Act. The measure retains the essentlal provisions Of' the 1965 act under which nearly a million blacks in seven Sou th ern 1Lates have been registered to vote. Celler lost by five votes last December when be tried to &et a similar bill throujh lhe House, which Instead passed a n ad m J n i stratlon-backed subsUtute civil righta bill lead- ers regard as weaker than the present act. Although a Poll or House Democrats shOws topheavy support for the package, the Republicans are much more closely divided, with tnost of them declining to 1ay how they will vote. The administration not only favors its own version or the voting rights act, but opposes lowering the voting age by federal statute. Jt believes a constitutional amendment is rtquired to set a voting age limit for all the states. The Constitution gives the states the right to set voler qualifications as long as they are not discriminatory. Only four states permit persons under 21 to vote now. Celler, who is alxo convinced a conlltltuUonal amendment Is needed to low~r the voting att, bopn to 1lt apetdy en- actment of the statute so the l&-ey1r-old Wue can be teated in Ott Supreme Court before this fall's elections. In preparation for the com- ing vote a IJ'OUP of youthful backera of lttn·lll voting, banded together In the Youlh Franchise Coalition, r'•ns to descend on Capitol Hll as soon a1 Con1re11 aeta back In ac- tion April 8. Co11ltion workers havebeen polllng lhe Republicans and have found only 45 who 11ay they definitely will vote for the combined measure. That may not be enought. When the voting r i g h t ! legislation was up the firat time in the Hous e , 49 Republicans voted against the administration and supported an extension or the act. But the vote was 208 to 205 against them. But a lot depends on how much of a fight the ad· ministration puts up. Grodins saves you s31 to $46 right now .. on new spring Regul11tr $11G-$12S ~ightwelghls and All·,e•r W91ghla Onl)' at Grodins ... a remarkable clothing value like th le, In Jfie face of rising prices. Select from newest 1970 models in wool worsteds, Dacron poiyester- worsted and other fine fabrics. Your choice of Jong wearing sharkskins, herringbones, etripes, plaids and solid colors. Every suit with two pairs of pant s to make your 1970 clothfng dollars go twice as far! 1 WA'ftTO CMA'l'tOr m GAOOINI CHARQt 9.UntAlllJUCARD MAIJDCHMO! OPIH lHIS SUNDAT lJ TO I P.M . COSTA MhA ' ANAHEIM Thursdq, Aprll 2, 1910 DAILY '!LOT JJ· 3 9 C •1 99SAVEUP TO • TO 70% REGUlARL Y 65~ To $3.50 EACH! Texa .. ware 11 atw1y1.ln ele11nt taste. An all whit• th·•t blends beautifully with 111)' dinnerwar .. Now you can start, or add to, your TEXAS·WARE Melamine Dinner4 w.are at these supe~special savings. All first qua\lty. Chlld·proof and dishwasher safe. Quant ities are limited ••• so buy today! 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Fcxw separate Ml• to choose from. 6 LleHT llT WITH TIMIR $6294 AnotMr Llttlt Glent Product I I ' ' t r j I ,la . DAILY ,!LOT GWC Sets :: ~l Ptogram For Deaf . '. Golden Wes! Co11e1e plans • to laand> a pilot program this ·; momb &o open college doon to : deaf students and t h o s e :• llveroly bard ol bearing. :: lt )Jill be the first time that :: • Southern ca11rornta junJor :; . coUece has offered special :· ua1Jtmce to allow de at ·: students to participate in : : regular classes. • Orange County and other -: ateu have provided help lor : : these students through high : school. But for them to go on •; to collqe hu been more dif- :: ficult. ~~ st~e= ':ki~an!e ;:i~:~~ Thowsda1, Apri 2. 1970 :. educaUon have attended :· Gallaudet College,tbe national ~: :::hi!~10':, ~c.r·M~r~ Tiger Cub and Frietad _Florida to Okay Gambling? . MIAMI (UPI) -Support tinues to be an Issue in ·parts Committee, la an outspoken million In i~es, 1613 million for legalized Indoor gambling of Florjcla, oppOnent of casino gambling. iri gross winnings and MIO in Florida seem to be getting Miami Beach civic leaders, Hert Is how the big gambl-million in parimutuel handle. !lrOnger, although the state's worried that gambling at-ing states stacked up for the a. 1111MU, :Wl969 ~e.ndar beUlng industry ls second only tractions ln the Bahamas are last fiscal or calendar year year, $43.3 on ln ~ to New York's and does a draining away tourist$, have (total parimutuel band I e ~I f;!.~e~lllon in par mu. bigger business than all e schedllled a referendum for unavailable ror Nevada and casinos in Nevada. April 13 to fina out how Cllifornia which use the total 4. Nevada, for fiscal year en- residents feel about legalizing amount of money won 85 a dfnil: June 30, $41.! mUllon Florida race tracks and jai gaming tables. yard~lck): to the state and county and alai frontons returned $66 State R'ep. Dooald E. Heath l. New York, for the 1969 local governments in taxes, million more in winnings to has feadled a bill in the calendar year, f l51 million in S7.7 million to federal govem- gamblers last year than did leglstaJ!Jl't to take. d1ce._ roulet-taxes, $1.5 billion (B) in ment in taxes, $48.9 tnilllon all the gaming palaces in te and 'Card tables out of back parimutuel handle. In ad· In total taxes, iross winnings Nevada, and took in $5.4 rooms, bUt it is conceded. no dition, the state received more '456.9 million. million more in state and local better than a 100..~1 chance than $25 million from its lot· 5. CallfornJa, for 1169 calen. tax money· of passing. tery. -dar year, $36.2 million in taxes Tourists and residents in Ralph Turlington, chairman !. Fitrida, for the fiscal and '522.5 milli>n in gnm Florida never have to go too of the House Appropriations year ending last June 30, $46.f winnings. far to put $2 down on a horse, I)';;;,;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; dog or jai ala! player at one11 of the 17 greyhound tracks, six jai alai frontons, four thoroughbred tracks and one harness track which dot the landscape from Pensacola to Key West. S·T·R·E·T·C·H· & SEW 724 E. K1tell1, Or1nge Phone 633-2842 Hrs. Day, 9.5 Nita 7·9:30 NO FOOL'N • · CLEAN SWEEP CLEARANCE SALE : recently, opportunities have Noni surviving white maJe cub o! Mohini. the rare white tigress in the \Vash- : oPened up at San Fernando ingto'n zoo. plays with a stuffed tiger in the home _o~ Dr .. Theodore. Reed zoo :; Valley State College and the keeper. After Mohini crushed three cubs to death g1v1ng birth_ to a ~tillborn cub -Technical Institute for lhe 48 hours after the birth of four cubs, Dr. Reejl brought Noru to his home for ·:, Deaf, Rocht!ter, N.Y. af k . A few of Florida's smaller counties finance their govern- ment almost entirely fr om the $370,000 received from gambl- ing taxes which is distributed equally among the state's fl counties. April 2 • 3 • 4 -20°/o • 50°/o OFF ! ! ! Cotton Knits, Nylon Knits. Polyest•r Knits. Wool Sweater Bodies, Ski Pant F1brics. Merceri1ed T-hre•d 12c per spool plus MANY OTHER VALUE5111 ! Th_e Golden West program _c5.=..':..c...ee'-!p_m.;g:... _______________________ _ New York's betting tax in- come is the biggest in the nation at $158 million, with Florida second at $ 4 6 . 6 million, Illinois third at '43.3 million and Nevada fourth at $41.2 million. : will provide support personnel • to help the deaf to become self· : sufiicient and integrate with .: the rest ol the student body. :· This means interpreters • who, through manual cam· Concerned Mo1n Turns Cop ch 1 · t call lhem names beeause or Gamblers in New York put Su c assroom Pro J e c s down $1.5 billion compared to SPECIAL CLASS -R99ister Now Men's Pints -April I Ith & 18th; 1-3 P.M.; Fee $4.00 Lingerie -April 15th, 12:30 • 2:30 P.M.; Fee $12 for 6 2-hr Lessons • munication, t r a n s I a t e lee- •• tureS ; note takers because • students cannot watch in- ·: terpreters and take notes at the same time; a counselor ; and an instructor for those :: who need remedial atudy in ·.: language and mathematics. SANTA ROSA (AP) -Like .most mother s, Shirley Andreatta is concerned about the health and happiness of wo::ld "require much more their mother, then they aren'~ $630 million in Florida . money" to increase 1nan· -~·~u~cb~good~'._'.'.rr:i•:•d:•~•:fl:er:_:al~I.'_' _ __IB~u~t_ca~si~no'.'....!g!'.a~m~b~ling~..'.co~n~·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ power, she adds. Mrs. Andreatta say s one her children. • Unlike most mothers, Mrs. Andreatta is also a coP. • "They will not be in speci al •• clas!;eS e x C ~ p t for the : remedial courses," said Al The 115-pound Mrs. Andrea1· ta, S feet 4, is the only woman investigator in the Sonoma County sheriff's office. • result of the "loss of contact" ~he finds is a certain loss of re;.pect for both the police and other symbols of authority by the young. · -: Jimenu, coo rd in at or or ~: special services at Golden ... West. "'Ibey will be preparing :: for transfer to four-year col· :: ieges, upgrading sk!Jls in oc· :· cup at ion aJ.technical pro- ... ; grams, or pe?haps completing .; high school requirements the Eight other female deputies in the sheriff's office are matrons for female prisoners. A.side from rearing her 16- year~ld daughter, Kin , and a son, Bob, 12, Mrs. Andreat- ta, a divorcee, spends much of 'her time tracking down leads in criminal cases in- volving female suspects or victims. ''To me ii. has to come from the campus troubles and our police ... bad pi'ess," she sai d chuckling ,"and radicals.'' One haunting aspect of her professio n affects her children. same as other students." -· Money has been provided to fund the program through :~ June, with the prospect that it ·: will be continut.d and ex· :· paneled next fall , She says one of the most persistent maladies affecting police image and work - especiahy in juvenile division11 such as where she works - is ''the lack of contact.., between the police and the young. "My son,'' Mrs. Andreatta explained, "sometimes jok- ingly says, 'moal's a pig' and you have to take these things as a joke. He often deliglits in bringing his friends home and shocking them by saying : :· "We are beginning with only :; eight students on April 13 ." ;. said Jimenez, "but it is not •: likely we will stay small very ~ long. 'Jbe ward is out and by next fall the number may tri- ple.'' 'This is my mother. She's a cop.' It bl estimated th~ there.• are more than 70 ktudents right now in Orange County eligible for the Golden West prosram. "I would like to see closer association with the schools ," she volunteered. "Jn my opi· nion, it is the only way to get away from ·the 'pig' im· age." "Twice," she recalled , "my ·daughter came home and told me that she had been singled out by the other kids because of my wO'Tk. I just explain to them that if their friends CALENDAR OF EVENTS FOR THE -WEEK-END SAN FRANCISCO CABLE CAR FRIDAY, APRIL 3, 11 a.m. TO 8 p.m. AUTHENTIC CABLE CAR. RUBBERIZED AND MOTORIZED FOR F R E E RIDES AROUND OUR PARKING AREA. COURTESY NEWPORT- BALBOA SAVIN GS. MOBILE CHEST X-RAY - • • FRIDAY, APRIL 3, NOON TO 8 p.m. SATURDAY, APRIL 4, NOON TO 8 p.m. SAFETY FIRST CH~CK • UP FOR POSSIBLE EARLY EVIDENCE OF ANY TUBERCULOSIS, EMPHEYSEMA. TUMORS, ENLARGED HEART • OR OTHER ABNORMALITIES. FEE 0 NL Y $1.50 • PORTRAIT PHOTOGRAPHER FRIDAY, APRIL 3, 1,0 a.m. TO 6 p.m. SATURDAY, APRIL 4, 10 a.m. TO 6 p.m. SUNDAY, APRIL 5, NOON TO 5 p.m. 8 x I 0 PORTRAIT IN NATURAL COLOR OF CHILDREN OR FAMILIES, FOR SM~LL FEE. 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A fiberglass hood with functional air scoops and special paint accents .•. new urethane· coated bumpers and painted wheels ... two-tone striping ... blacked-out grille ..• cuslom- sport sleering wheel .•• Sebring Yellow paint .•. bias-belted tires for longer !read life ... all part of the Rallye 350 option available' on three Olds models. See lhe besl "escape art·· • ist " in town -your nearby Los Angeles-Orange County Olds Dealer! Lei him show you the magic in every Olds model •.• from the front drive Toronado to the luxurious full·size 88s and Ninety-Eights to the nimble Cut.' lass models. Make your escape · from the ordinary .•• today! You can win a Rallye 350 in the Olds Rallye 350 Sweepstakes at your greater Los Angeles-Orange County Ol'ds Dealers -·- ' ' \ • • • . , ' I . I ' ' .,, ' r Composers . \ ,j .. :a;ll":•:;:;~:;::;:::;:-=-----·----·-------------------~ -----r--~-• ..,, .. ~------~--------~---·---~--~­' • Beethoven, Bach, Llzst and Brahams are living and weJJ so • where in another world . Or is someone kiddln11· · · According to StewaN Robb Of · Anaheim, musician and in.ve U- gator of the psychic world , the.y are· "alive" and busy with their work of writing music. , Robb, who will be guest speaker for the final preview of the current season' spo;ns9red by the Orange County Philharmonic Soc· iety Wednesday, Ai>ril s; at 110:f5 .. a.m. 1n Edwards Cinemain Fa1)1. ion Island, feels that 'the}r • are communicating through an Engllah- woman, Rosemary Brow_n. A tr~slator of Wagnerµtns operas , bolder of masters degrees in~ English and a performers degree in music and a former social worker, Robb became interes;ted ih .the psychic aftei: seeing a movie short on NostrOOam·u:s ,1 a French prophet of the 16th century. He questioned the valilji!Y of the movie and started a rt1eerch project that led to three bOoks on1he prophet. Following those he wrote a book on the psychic phenomenon, ''Strange Prophecies That Came. True:" His. newest, "True Spirit St9ries'," 'an anthology, will be ppblished next month and another, "Reports ,from Beyond: A. Boo~ of Evidential Conununication" is Sla. led for release next year. · Robb also has visited palmists, fortune tellers, tea leaf readers and gypsies in his quest of psychic koow'ledge. He began corresponding with Rosemary Brown, then traveled to London to meet with her and record the more than 400 works of music she has transcribed. After consultation with other musical experts, he is convinced that the music from the other side is .. for real," and that Beethoven now is penning his 10th symphony through Mrs. Brown's hand. The psychic Mrs. Brown, who be~an talking to the composers In 1964, says she shares her ability to 'see and bear" the departed with her mother, her .grandfather and her two children. She said that the composers all looked older when they first ap-~ared to her and felt th'at tliis was1 done so she could more readily identify them. Now. however, they appear younger-some as young as 35. She begins her day o[ writing about 10 a.m . and works until 4 p.m. with an hour off for lunch. The composers, who do not join her for lunch, dictate in various ways, some at the piano and some with her sitting at a ·table. · "I am always at ease with Schubert and Chopin, but I am still In awe of Beethoven and very polite,to him," she says. "Debussy is a real comic. He wears the most extraordinary clothes, sometimes a sbeepsJtin coat and straw hat. I suppose he is the equivalent of today's hippie. "I didn't think I'd like Ractlmaninoff when I first met him. There \Vas almost a host'illty between us, but it has gradually gone." CS.o COMPOSERS SPEAK, Pogo 14) " ,. " ' .... '. , . STEWART ROBB PONDERS MUS I.CAL MYSTER Y . . Curtain Ririgs Down On Sixteenth Series Works by Webern and Bruckner will be on the program when tile final concert of the 16th season is presented by the Orange County Philhar· monic Society. On stage in the Orange Coast College auditorium Sunday, April 12, will be the Los Angeles Philharmonic Orchestra under the direction of Zu· bin Mehta. Webern's Sommerwind, Idyl for Large Orchestra, Op. Posth is pro- grammed along with his Six Pieces for Orchestra, Op. 6, and Bruckner's Symphony No. 4 in E Flat. Mehta achieved prominence in t~e mu~ical world when , at the age of 24, he filled in for two ailing guest conductors of the Philharmonic. Two years later he was appointed. music director, the seveilth and youngest ev· er to be named. Simultaneously, he was named musical director of the Montreal Symphony, becoming the only man to lead two major orchestras in North America as well as, the youngest leader of a top United State6 .orchestra. Under the baton of the young India·bom conductor, ·the Philhar .. monic has been brought to a high status and now is among the leading orchestras of the world. j The orchestra has just concluded one of its most ambitious ... record· tng schedules, three LP albums for London Records including 162 minutes of music from three works. Plans now are being finalized for the society's 17th concert season when the Los Angeles Philhannonic will return for at least five concerts. Also planned are appearances by the Philadelphia Orchestra and theCon- certgebQuw of Holland. - './:ickets for 'the April 12 conc~rt may be obtained from the Philhar. monlc Society office, 201 W. Coast Highway, Newport BeaciI, phone 64Uffi. Adult tickets are $4 and stµdent tickets are $!. 75. UNUSUAL TRIO -One oJ the many activi- ties ot_tbe ,llighla,nder C_ommittee_ of the Orange County Philhannonic Society has been the formatioR of a recorder society. • 'Preparing for their appearance at the com- mittee's May lnstallation.Jµncheo11-are~(left to right) the Mmes. Ralph B. Conn, Fred- erick M. Grazer and Fritz Westerhout Jr. Flourish Finishes Season . It wlU be an evening of dou- ble enjoyment r« members 'ot ' . the Highlander Committee of 'the Orange Count·Y Philharmonic Society Sund1y, April 12, for a gala ~o:ncert by the Los .Anseles Philharmcmic Qrchtstra will be pi.ceded· by a festive champagne party. The party, a beneUt for lhe Philharmonic Societyi w i 11 take pla~ between 8 and 7:30 p.m. in the home of Dr. and Mrs. Alan Andrews. Following th e festivities· members and guest..s will ad- jour:n to the Orance Coast College auditorium for the 8:30 concert. The committee has bee.i busy with the format.ion of a recorder society during the past year in addition to its many other musically--0riented activities. The recorder lri04_ wjlt perform works by B a c h , Handel and other compasers cf the Baroque-era for the comm I ttee 's installation luncheon in May . Jack Sprat Could Ea·t No Fat;-Neither Will This Dau.ghter DEAR ANN LANDERS: I'm a Registered Nurse who reads your column religiously. From time to time you deal with letters from molhers of overweight daughters. You always advhe these mothe r! to stop nagging -to say nothing about what the girl eat..s or how she looks. Ynu Insist it is an emotional problem and the girl shoo.Id work it out with a pro-- fe sslonal under the watchful eye cf a physician. My problem Is the opposite. My daughter Is not an eafer -lhe la 1 starver. The girl is 17, skinny as 1 rail, has one cold after another, always is tired and irritable. I've tried everything under the 1un to make her eat I prepare ANN LANDERS ~ beautiful food but she pushes the plate away and says, "I'm not hungry.'' She in- sists three meals a day Is an old·fashlon- ed habll and most people could live en one-tenth · of what lhcy eat and be healthier for it. Whal can be done with a teenager who thinks she knows Jt all? -WORRIED IN NEWARK DEAR WORRIED: Yoar baa~ problem Is the 11me as the mother with tbe obese daugbten. My actvlct Is there -In your letter. I beipe y11 beed It. DEAR ANN LANDERS: I have been married only a yea r to a man who has has one ttrrlble fault. No matter where we co -to a restaurant, to a movie1 to the theater, a concert -wherever people gather -Jerry starts a conversation with anyone who will talk' to him. Tbe other evening we went to the ice show. He became so chatty with the woman on his left you would have thought she was his da te. Her husband didn't like the way Jerry moved in on his wife. I sensed it immedlateJy but Jerry gabbed en and en, totally insensJUve to the man 's tiost.illty. Last night Jerry st.arted a con\l'craallon wtth 11 gentleman in the grocery store. The man was very cool. I was em- barrassed. When we lert the ,store I asked Jerry why he does this. His answer: "l've never met a stran&tr." What do you make cf It? Holot can T cure him? -PUZZLED WIFE DEAR WIFE: Yl'.Mlr husband Is a lrlendly reUoW w~ assumes everyo1e ap. precla1e1 being spoken So. He ii wrong. Some people cherish lht'!l r prlvaty and resent lntruslo~1111«ially by 1\ra11gen. There Is no known cure 'for ,super· outgoing types like Jerry, Accept ttll1 perttnallt}' dtfeci 1ad ttttp yottr.ietf • the f1rt th11t H wlll condnut t. 1iart cw- ven1dons wherever tte goes bttl11te II 11 a com,palsfol wllitll be cannot eo.trol. Dt>AR ANN 1.ANDEllS: Whal can I do about a lovely mother-in-law who drlnb like a fish and smokes JW-.a crumney talks incesuntly about her headaches: backaches, side-aches, gall·bladder a\. tacks, asthmatic attacks and hlv~.; refuses to go lo a doctor because the1 are- all "quacks" and runs her llle aocor~ to whal she reads in her horoscopet · . ' . -UPPUGENBTrt• DEAR UP: You Cll!I llsW:1 . , ~ CONFIDENTIAL TO OONT KNOW: WHERE TO TURN : Turn to GIUllbl~ Anonymoos. They have belped • ""'l many people and chanted their Bves. \Vrit.e Gamb~f!rs A'l'ltiymoUs, P.O. »oz l717l, Loo An&•les, caw. 1111111. l l • ' I l Jf DAllY PILOT Thur5da,, April 2, 1970 .. ·-New American By BAllBAJ\A DUARTE , ____ ltf ... ~..,, , .. lteft camps in Siberia where the other members or her family were to perish. . .. ' • " RUSSIAN AUTHOR Nila M.1hloff To aay that NII• M11ldofr. third speaker in La1un1 Btac~ Aaalstance Leque'1 Tow n Hall 8eriet, completely chlrmld her audienct Monday morning would be only part of tbe story . What J1 more important, the Ruu~ co n vert to Amtric&nllm made her au· dJenct acutely 1ware of Jt1 mOlt precious poeaeaaion. • .frMdom. Her watm personality and quick wit bely the feet that !ht grew up under St1Un11 relime of fear; that she was railed In extreme poverty, or that the aurvlved hard work and et:Ue In concentration At she describes it, her .story ia of "one who adopted 1nd wo.1 adopted." But that wu to come after Pearl Harbor. DREAMS OF TRAVEL WW.le atlll a youngster ln 1 R.usalan village, she dream· ed the dream of m a n y Rusalaru -travel and a life In Moscow, Setting forth one day, she beaded for Moscow wtth s loat of black bread , three rubles, a dress made from a curtain and handmade Ahott (now an expensive item touted by Vogue.) Her spirit was high and her Pays enthusiasm undaunted. S~ took a job in a factory by day ; at night she studied at the universily. But all the while, she dreamed of travel· ing to America to see the country with her own eyes and acquire some gadgets. In ensuing years, following marriage to fo rmer NBC cor- respondent Robert Magidoff who broadcast from Moscow during "ar years, she was to acquire her first gadget. The oceasion of owning a toaster was comparable lo anything Alice discovered in Wonderland . She rushed out and purchased 10 pounds of bread, invited he r friends in, and cooked toast until it was gone. Freedom's A :• nt as a Merchant , America came as a speaker Marin~PSallor Third Clua w11 at War Bond rallies from "hard work'' and didn't take Madison Square Garden to the h~r beyond Asia. Her initial &le Bowl. But the hectic discovery of America came pact made her dete rmined to at an ice skating rink where return with her husband and she met her husband·t.o-be, plant a tree. "1 knew the She lifted h4n up when he dHper the roots, the deeper fell at her feet, and "wUh the bond with my country the usual American efficiency, would be," she declared. he managed to fall d<>tfn When her husband was el· twice." pelltd from Russia in 1943 Two years later they were on trumped up charges of married, yet several yeani 1pyln1, they s e t t I e d in elapsed before she received LoUi!ville, Ky., where she a visa. She left Russia just u.ught languages in t h e before Pearl Harbor, one or university and revelled in her the few women in the world life as an A m e r i c a n to know her volume - her homemaker and tree-grower. visa was acquired for two tanks of high octane gas. YOUTH l\1AK~ DD1ANDS Ht!r real d i s c o v e r y of Mrs. Magidoff revisited Price Russia in 1958 and 1967 to compare living conditions and gather material for lectures and books. While the Russian people are still not free, she fetls youth now is making demands and acquiring more rights. Hippies are unknown in Russia, she main t ains , because young people have a better life to reach for. She tees hippies as empty people who have had everything and desire nothing. Speaking as one y,•ho has li ved under the shadow of fear, "l hope as long as we live we will be free ," she declared. "For my mo st precious possession, freedom, I will fight until I die.'' 111 ........................................... IDl .. Sll ............................... ..,,.i!"il:. 7 ,-\ .............. .,. .............. ,... ................................. ,.. .................. ,..,,.,,'""'""' ....... """"'""'""'~l!f~ From Page 13 • • • Composers Speak • 1.frs. Brown 11y1 the com- posers !ptlk EniJ1'h (why not, she addt-tbly attU can leam after they get on the :other side ). : The medium is n o t ac-. · complished enoup •• 1 mwl· clan to be comPClllnl the works hersell. Musical eiperts have testified that her piano playing accompliahmenl I s between third and f o u r t h 1rade level. Some musicians feel that , the works she bu produced are not representative of the quality of the works of the compo s e rs. Believers,· however, say that their defi- ciency is due to the problem of communJcation be t w e e n Mrs. Brown and the com- posers. Mrs. Brown sayl that when the was seven years old a distinguished looking s p i r i t visited her and told her he •was a composer and that he was going to make a famous musician of her. Ht wa1 whlte haired and wort a bllc.k cassock. •Professor J , Eyes Power Stanford history professor Dr. Claude A. Buss will speak ion American foreip policy, ·dilemm as and ruUtitt or •power at a g~neral meeting of the Laguna BeaCh Branch of the American AssoclaUCIJ of ;University Women. When the w11 In her teens 1h1 dllcovered that be wa1 Llllt, Iller "''"' a picture of him. •Tiit eompoaert wu.lly ll!ck to the 1ubjtct of mllllc when they work with Mn. Brown, but once Lo a while deviate. Beethoven, for example, 1aid "Mein Gott!" when the doorbell r a n I , Interrupting their session. Llut tried to wam her ~ the up!t1lrt bathtub was about to overflow. Psychiatrists believe th at the psychic woman ha! an unusually retentive memory and that the music she is writing is something she is bringi ng up !ram her sub- conscious. Why haven't the composen updated their music? Mrs. Brown says Liz.st hU Aids Aged 11ven her the answer: 1'Ttie mutlc of modern composers Is a 1trle1 ol vaply in· tere1Ung but lnflnltet1 gr1> leaque 10unda." Chalnnan for the preview is Mra . Edward W. Schwn1eher1 and aa1!1Ung her •~ the Mmes. Gilbert 1bomp10n, 1pe1kers; Frank A. Cooney, public relations; Kenneth M. Smith, tickets; E. Morga n Quinn, programs: Herman Johnson, hostesses: Ri c hard B rockm eyer, treasurer, and J. Don a Id Ferguson, advisor. Diamond Date Feted An Eleusinlan Luncheon in the New porter Inn Saturday, April 4, will mark the Dia- mond Jubilee of Chi Omega sorority. Members of the Orange County Alumnae group will gather at 11 :30 for the event, which will feature a talk by a candidate tor the California Congress. Hospital Premiere Attracts Star's Parents The H. R. Golenors (center), parents of motion pie. ture and TV star John Gavin, and the Richard Conklins of Corona del Mar attend the Martin Luther Ho1ptta1 premiere of "Hea rt of Tom orrow" In which Gavin stars. The film. whlch was prO!ent· ed In the Anaheim Convention Center, depicts Orange County, Its growth and progre11, and Its need for more hospital care. To benefit their m a i n llZl;;JoO!l""'"""''" Abilities Determined philanthropy, the Albert Sitton ll:ome, the alumnae will offer a boutique durln1 the lun· cheon. FelWUtChed owl p 11 J o w 1 Peering Around mated by members of the ..... -..... A Vixen Frisk, a proficiency cording to Mn. Ri chard Culp , contest, will be sponsored by contest and racing chairman . . .,....., .... .., ... ,.. .. ..,.,,. • ., •· the Orange County Chapter for U1e group. She estimates -, of the Ninety -n i n e s, in· Ii planes will enter this year's lf'OUP and oil p&lnt1n11 by Wlllllll1\ Bl1ckll0ne will he of· fered for 11le. temational organizaUon o r contest. FOU.OWING A tradition he The Mlke1ells hive bee:-i wome11 airplane pilots, Sa tur-Following the conte st began 2$ years ago, Adrian Co1l1 Me1a resident.I tor 21 day, Ap ril 4. awards will be presented dur· Mikesell again played for the ye1r1, and for lhe past ID The contest winner will be ing a late lunch in the ~1ills Easter sunrise service of !ho years Adrian has entertained in detennined by how efficiently restaurant, Fullerton Airport. f lrat Church of Ch r I s l the Capt.aln's Inn, Long Beach. she fl ies her airp lane from The Vlxen Frisk was Initiated Good Eggs Get Prize \I/inner or the Golden Egg award at the Newport Beach Fire Department Easter Egg Hunt in ~1ariners Park wa! Perry Palmer who received" a ~ U.S. Savings Bond from Mariner• Savings and Loan. Second Golden Egg wiMer waa Rickie Hoerger who won 1 S25 savings account from Newport-Balboa Savings and Loa n. Chairman of the hunt was Mra. Tom Dalley of the fire department auxiliary_ a~isted by the Mmes. Dick Ellerman, Cecil Kight , Al Haskell , J ohn Brannon, John Kr1lr:, Ed Roy 1nd Ray Brown. Proceeds wlll 10 to the burn unit In Orange County Medical Center. Music Section Plays Program Mualcll aelectlona rendered by the Mualc SecUon of UC! Town and Gown will enttrtaln member• and gueall at the Tuesday, April 7. meetm1 In the Corona del Mir home Gt Mrs. Wllll1m Muon. AsslsUng the hoste11 at a 10 a.m. coffee hou r will be Mrs. Dominic Shelton and Mr's. Wilson Little. BEGINNER'S PIANO CLASSES Reoltter now for e11lldre11 t .,.,.., thru 11. St1r1 ~ur chlllf Oii I "'uikl l (• rHr ro111v1 'HONE 540-3115 WALLICHS MUSIC CITY • The session will begin at :t0o30 a.m. Saturday, April 4, ·In Clubboute 11, Laguna Hlll•. : A Stanford profe1tor since : ltff, Dr. Buaa has tr1veled ex· :tenslvely and spent a sab- b1 tlcal year tn Hong Kong :with subsequent summtr1 in 'Mala~•. Ind.la and Pald1tan. Laguna llllla realdenl Mrs. Sam Hoffman, the only woman vice prul- dent in the &8-year his- tory of the Loa AngelH Jewish Home for the A~ed. has been reelec- ted to serve a 1tcond term. Mr1. Hollman has been an official for more than 30 year1 and helped found two 1up- porllng auxlllarlea. All Chi Ome11 alumnae and thtlr suetta: are Invited to the event. R111tV1Uons may be made by <!allln& Mrs. HUtoll' McCabe It MO.a2?. Epltc0pal on ML Roubidoux . Fu 11 er ton Airport, by bu the Orange Countv chaptor ru I ~ ~ hllt!I CNll ,lot1-CMI• M- Vtlrl de. VACATIONING In the Harlr· r~P~o,~t•~cv~ill~e~a~nd~b~a~c~k_;,~"~·=f~ou~'~ye~a~rs~a~go~.====:=:~:;;:;~~:;;:;~~~~~~ The Costa Mesa organ ist or Atta are Mr. and Mrs.II Soroptimi•ta rec11led that In li35 they lu1-A11chael Sherwin of Brooklyn, ged a new organ up lhe craggy N. Y. The fonner Ro s e A writtr and lecturer. he has served in numerou s Io v e mmental poslUons In· eluding duty aa a languaae of- flcer in China and 111lgnmenls 1n Japan during the occupa- Uon. N1wport Harbor Soroptlml1t hlll for the first service, and Anderson and her hu sband are Club mttll the flr1t three he his played every year e:t· aueals of her mother, Mrs. Wedneaday for 1 luncheon In ctpt while ln the armed C. Orby Anderson of Costa the Prime Rib Inn, Co1t1 forces. Mes•. J M111. The laat Wedntsd1y of!l~iii0iiiOiiiOiiiOiii0iii0iiiiiiiii0iiiiiiiiiiiiOiiiiiiiiiiii __ _, the month membtra mtet In various loctUons for dlMer at 7:30 p.m, Sl-\0ES IN 'f.f\E NEWS Brand Name Shoes • Discount Prices COSTA MESA'S CANCILATION SHOE STOllE We Speclallle In Hard To Pit 51111-AAAA To D 4. 11 -NC.11111 You Know At CllAZY PRICISI Sl'ICIAL GROUP MIN'S JARMAN HUSH PUPPIES Vil. 22.H SALE .......... saoo WOMEN'S DRESS SHOES Life Strid• a Naturallnr Clni-flO • Ml11 A-rlu • Air Stop s711 SALE ......... . WOMEN'S SHOES DRESS & CASUALS Val. U .90 Pink e Yellow • White a Beno SALE .......... ssoo SPECIAL GROUP WOMEN'S CASUAL SHOES V1lue1 To 10.99 Auorted Col•r• And Sl111 . SALE .......... s200 • SAY·q4~,11~HOES HAllOR CINTIR e 2300 HAllBOR e COSTA MESA • Large Sizes Com• 10 tweater country - thor• Holf0 Slz1 Shop. long ond 1tiort length, bulky and flat knit1, bu11ons a nd open front, Cotrol yours he re. Fr~ $14.00 ' -.. ~ o. "· I 1805 NEWPORT BLVD. Co1t1 M11a 1112 Blk. N. 1 Ith St,) ·u 84 HUNTINGTON CENTER HM11tl119t•11 ..... IN•at t• l•tllft Ir••· ••t11lt11t•I .ltt11 t!f CllANO l ;A1-MALL. P'ULLl•TON , ' • .,.. fffty It•·"'• 'fll l , ••• 1 fllllll. a11tl ftl. 'til t :JO '·"'· AFTER EASTER LINGERIE • LADDER TO SUCCESS -First Nighters (lelt to right) Mrs. Adele Ipsen and Mrs. Colin Timmons view the Forum stage with Doyle McKinney, direc- tor of the Saddleback Players. The trio is working toward a successful weekend production of "Hansel and Gretel" in· the Festival of Arts theater. Funds raised will be used to establish a Children's Theater for youngsters from 6 to 16. Your Horoscope Tomorrow Gemini: Ambitions Are Strong FRIDAY APRIL 3 By SYDNEY OMARR Leo ts the showman of the zodiac. These people lo\le the theater and often are theatrical. Nothing is halfway with Leo. ARIES (March 21-April 19): Air of mystery prevails. Some hidden matters come to fore. Work quie t I y . Clandestine meeting may be on agenda. You deal with charitable in- situtions, hospitals. TAURUS (April 20-May 20): You get paid for doing what you like ; much satisfaction in· dicated. Older individual may offer financial backing. Bul don't give up too much for temporary gain. GEMINI (May 21.June 20 ):. Be wary about signing papers. There may be clauses which are de~pUve. Your amb itions are strong. But patience today can be a profitable virtue. CANCER (June 21-July 22): Money you expected from long-term commitment may be delayed. Plan accordingly. New ideas are desirable. Some of your methods may be wear- ing thin at the edges. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22 ) • &>me young persons could make unreasonable demands. Know where to draw the line. Your intuitive judgment today se rves as reliable guide. Don't fall for line of false flattery. VIRGO (Aug. 23.S.pt. 22) • The Tee (Edlk>f'I Natt: A cotumn of womtn'' too golf 1t"Ort1 w!!I tl>Pt•r e1c1> w•tk In the DAILY PILOT. To re1>or1 scortl IOI' 1ht wetk. PlllH mill tllefri 10 P. 0. aox lSMI, Co1t1 Mtse. Tllflv mUll be received br MOMllY.I MISA VERDIE THREf •LIND MICE -(ltH JI., tllt M~s. Trevll Psvle,, 101\: .0~1 t'!amr1, Wlllltm O'Ba<r, R11ol> TlPP<no. nv.1 c11u 8, !he Mmt1. Peul Robln1<1n, 69; w11111m Heth, 6'117; Ktfl Le11urt. Frank F1rmtr. Wllll•l'I M1nlev, n 1111 c1111 c, lt'lt "'"'''· R~rt Ewfng, 1~'h: W. C. Wlll!lfl'll, n1 Peorl lllDl1, nv,; Lowell Stir~. 7]. LAOUNA l!ACH Tl AND Pl -A Fllef\!, 11>1 Mmt1. Ptul W11t!rm1n, 30; Cornellu1 Toom1v, JIV,· John Poer, 32VI! B FlltM. th~ ' Mmn. w 11111m C111111r11. 21'~: Edllll M1rtu. t7; 81tfKht ,ld1m1. U1 Ari Trlf!ln, :MVI. LOW GROSS -A Fliol!I. Mro. w11trm1n: 8 Fllol!!, Mrs. Mtrk1, t(li.ow NIT -A Fl11hl. Mn. W1term1n ind M!"I. Corntll111 T-r. 12; B. F!lohl. M!"I. M1rk1. 62. RANCHO SAN JOAQUIN FLAQ TOURNEY -The Mm~•. lt lth11rd L1m1r, Woodrow L1tlc11er, C F !11rlf>OIM\fW, J1mtt KHlll, T~omi1 !loll'H, Tllomas .Moorf, I. W. $1.W.1., tto.1rd F1rw1ll, ltA, Hat1err1lltr. M1rv1!, Gl!ltthtr, J. E. Wt1!1>111, lltmlnf Etllert, (1r1Y11 Osk~t. Frink A1klnton, Herrv Colllrn. Phltll1> Jo1>11sW>n. •Elf MIMf -F1lgM A. Mro. P~U!I• HolMl Fnohl e , MrL L•m9•1 l'lltM (, 1M Mtne1. L•Ckntr, Pl>!!lhl Corn-I!: Flloht O, Mr.. M.lrk SMiier, IRVIMI COAST MATCH VS PAii -CllU A, Ille MIT'rt. G••• Llfl!r, Rob'r1 c;ardntr. ?: Nttl Gtrev. '"""' WllllCf F~tr. R~ Htllbfrg, J. II.. Lanoie'/. ·1! Ci.ti •• '~ Mrntl. G T, P!lew•. Poncho Ole The J>Oncho creates cover-up excitement this spring as deMgners adapt th is youth trend to high fashlol'I. It goes form al as a sheer veil -like cover-up or casual ln ~r!Jlgcd wool over pants. Lie low ; play waiting game. Permit others to call the play. Time your moves in careful manner. Protect assets. So- meone may be trying to pull wool over your eyes. UBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 221 • Be sure of directions, in- structions. Message could be misinterpreted. Check facts. A!k questions, Answers are obtainable if persistent. Some details are elusive. SCORPIO (Oct. 23 • Nov. 21 ): Money may tend to slip through your fingers. Heed ad- potential. Be sublle in dealing with those in authority. Cycle remains high, but don't force. IF TODAY IS YOUR BlRTIIDA Y you have !ine sense· of humor, are versatile and can be aggressive if necessary.Di pl om a c y re- quired now in dealing with domestic aituation. to nlld wt mor• •bout vouneH 1nd 01troloay, onlef' sr dnu Om1rr'1 » "le liciolllft. Th• Tnlfll A b 011 I M rololv. Qlld blrll'ld•I• •fllll 50 tent• lo Ol'l'lll'r Bool!.11t. 1!'11 OA1LY PILOT, !lox 37.0, Gr•'l!I C1111r1I $!1llon, N1w VOit. N, Y. 10017, Orange County Hosts Overseas League Meet vice of family member. Shake Nalional president of the Mrs , Inez Randall, Laguna off tendency to commit Women's Overseas S e r v 1 c e Hills, fond, and Miss Doris yourself tO payments which Miller, Costa Mesa, publicity. •·yond resenlmeans League, Mrs. James J . Tallon are 1.1'1; P · The conference will open SAGI'M'ARIUS (Nov. 2 2. or Phoenix, will attend an area with 1 noon luncheon followed Dec. 21 ): What appears solid conference in Hotel Laguna on by a boat tour of Newport may be lacking in basic fac-Saturday and Sunday, April 4 Harbor. Cocktail hour from tors. Some objects are shiny ands. 6:30 to 7:30 p.m. will precede on outside but chintzy when Orange County unit \Viii host dinner in the Hotel Laguna. cover is removed . Know this the parley joined by Los Music will be provided by and act accordingly. Angeles, Long Beach, San Jl.1rs. Marie Muller, Laguna CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.Jan. Diego and Pasadena units in Beach. 19 ): Obtail) hint from Saglt. addition to Tucson an d Dinner speaker will be Miss tarlus message. Much of what PhoeniX units. Paula Dahl. a 17-year-old you want to do has to wait for Mrs. Grace Soderland. are a senior in the Long Beach approval from one who may direct.or, will preside, assisted school system whose subject be in transit. Don't offend by by Mrs. Charles Gav lock of will be a Volunteer With the going ove r anyone's head. Laguna B ~a ch, chairman; Amigo de las Americas Proj. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. Mrs. Alma Akeroyd, Orange. ect in Guatemala. 18 ): You get t>etter financial advisor; Miss Edith Weir, The conference will b c break than origin a 11 Y an-Laguna and Miss Ruth Winter, resumed at t a.m. Sunday in ticipated. Frien d intervenes on Mission Viejo, registration; Hotel Laguna . Coffee and rolls your behalf. You have more Mrs. John Fedor, Anaheim will be served preceding a talk allies than might be ima gined. and Miss Mildred Saylor, on national tru st funds given Conduct affairs accordingly. South Laguna, decorations: by Mrs. Tallon. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): 1----"----------------·ll More appeal for your product indicated. Spread influence; broaden horizons. Recognize Tattler ·l; Wi1111m LUlflr, H, J, SW1nt0fl, E:d Gacldlrd, Peut R!l1, ·2; Cl111 c. lht Mm••· wunam 0 . ll11rr>t11, 1; Rabtrt llutler, tvt!U Dcl!'I Llftk, .1; 11.09er Poole •• ,, Mln M••Otllt Munflr, .1; C!111 0, !I'll MIT\f'S.· W1rrt!I Glbl>an1, l; JOI>!\ Tv!an, Wt!ltr A. W!tw. Wln!ern McCord, G t• r o t Cellllaml, ·1 , LAOIEI OAY ....., Cl1s1 A, thtl Mmn. Clerk Somero, 35: J, W. Stomb1111h, Mldl&el O'Brien, 33, Robert W. Smith, Mtn:o M ich. Grttl Llfur, :D1 EOW1rd Miium, iii CllU 11, lt'lt Mm11, Geart e T. Pfltttr, :Mi Dan Lenk, 3'J Peul 11.!ff, 301 E. V, Morr1t. '2t1 Mi!' M1111e,.. Muuar. 30; C1111 C. tri.: Mrne1, Bettv aurMll, ll; T, W. Latin, 321 Sam KOw1rd, P1ut Rvc~oll, L. 11. Ltwll, 2'; Clllss O, the Mmes, Je~ c . RUer, 35: Dllf(lll>r lltowen. :n: Ch1r1t1 01Aos, Jol\r\ Tr'°"' winer Wlnt, •· Ml!T PLUS PUTTS -(1111 A, 1h1 Mmts. Grn1 LINr, lCI)/ T11elm1 G~rford, lM: E. H. Ntwl1fld, 110/ Oavld 81ll1n!lne. 1121 Wtl11c1 Flter, lll; Mist Ott Ott While, 1101 (lllM 8, 111, Mm1s. P et Morris. 10.: wnn1rn L"Sltr, \12; H. J . SWllllCl!I, ,.IUI RI.,, 1n1 w. L. MeadoWI, 11•1 J, L. Por15, 1U1 C11SI (, tM Mtntt. Fhloll ComolOI'!, 1101 Aoeer Pocll, 1171 0 . l . Pei .. Jm8'1, 1111 P1vl R,t~Gff. 11•1 Frtd J111ttr.ori. 11:, W. L1r1tln, ltobtrt llvtltr, 1151 V1111 D, lM 'MIMI, J1c• Rlln', Wlllltm McCortl, 1101 Stm l(ev11, 1111 Jtm9t G1!!11h1r. 1121 l~t Arm1trcl\9, JU; O. M, Hummel, 111. MOST PAltl -CltH A, tM Mmu. Niii Otl"/, IS1 A11t Oray, U1 Gr"f Llf11r. U; (t1r1l Som,n, 1JI (1111 fl, "'~ MmQ. Rott• Tur~r. Myron Shew~rd. 12: Sntm'lln Smllll, J, lit, F'ff!Molrn, H, J, $Wll\SOll, 11; W. L. M11dow" 101 R. R. KtY •• 11; CltH C, t!lt Mrn,s. L, II. Lrwt1, lS: R1loh Como!an, 1•1 f , Die• 88dl>am, 1>11 ll urlf1191>1rn. JKll El1rn, 1?1 C!ft9S 0, Ille Mrn11. Cl'llrltl Dlltot, 15: J1tk llnev. C1r1 HUi,ren, 13t w11n1m Trumbo. Stm Ktv11, 1!l W•ltl:r Wine, 11, ·ruf1ed beauty lrilb a Mediterranean flair ••• il desip 10 Yusatilt it wotkl •sic ia. aay settingl E.ndcinglf comfortablt, ,too. Metiat- lo uslr upbolttend in ticb1 Junrioua velvet, 11•ith 'antiqut fruitwood 6Gisbea. Aod so mode1d1 priced for the tuperiot qualicy and cttftSmltlship. ,219IO Choir & ett-o First Nighters Work For Children's Pla.y ,. ,_ .. . Thursd&1, A11tll Z, 1970 DAILY PllDT BUBBLES THE CLOWN CHILDREN'S PARTIES MAGIC SHOW -PUPPETS -FAVORS REASONABLE RA TES 644 • 4290 , ' .. A rund·ralslng production ot the classic fairytale ••Hansel and Gretel'' will kick off a drive to establlsb a Children's Theater program within the confines ot the L a I u n & Mou1 ton Playhouse. bt reserved at a oo!t of •11:~~~~~~:~~~:~~~~~~~~~~· per ticket al the bo:r offlce ·!· through tomorrow, at 494~743, or may be purchased illt the door on a space available basis. Member s of the F i r s t Nighters have been firmlng plans for tour shows this weekend in the Festival of A.rt.s Forum. The cast ere members of the Saddleback College Players under the directlon of Doyle McKinney. A hot dog and soft drink concession under the direction of Mr s. Adele Ipsen will be open between shows on Satur- day, April 4, at 11 a.m. and 1:30 p.m. and on Sunday, April 5, at 2 and 4 p.m. Tickets under the direction of Mrs. Colin Timmons may Sets, loaned by the Lyric Opera Association, have been redesigned b y Saddleback students. Eastern Star Order or Eastern Star will meet at 8 p.m. in the new Masonic Temple, 680 Sou th Coast Highway. Laguna Beach tomorrow. Worthy patroa and matron. ~Ir. and Pttrs. Norman Christensen, will preside. Star club will meet Wed- nesday. April 15, at 7:30 p.m. in the temple. COSTA MESA GOLF .. ~'UNTRY CLUB \1 AL~\ FACIUTI.ES L OPEN TO PUBLIC I Now "1.ppHri1t VIC GARCIA LTD. YN.i1 b't G.ERMAINE ENTllTAINMINT e DANCIN• THUUDAY·fllDA Y-SATURDA Y 9 p.m. 'tll 1 :30 1.m. FRIGIDAIRE ·-" " .. 1'.l!i"·-...·· . . ·=-------~-=====--=== ------ --------------- • ·--. .. '"""• ........ Either Side-by-Side or Top Freezer. Buy now and save during ou r Either-Or Sale. Limited time only. Hurry! Frigidaire 15.9 cu. ft. Side- by-Side. Just 32" Wide. • Corw1nltn(;I. H•ndy SldHy-SIOtpvt1 ~Int llri\l1ln 18JY reeell. •Mott room.15.9eu.·4'1.1iiowlth5,MGU.fl.fl'olll1r met ho1diup IO 198 lbl. '"°'"'~'"·'""'% $418 88 F1ost·Ptoof. • l'as7 mo¥1ng.Sllloolh- Glld• ny!Oll rotl011 mtk• el11nlng •nd mOlllngfftJ'. Frigidaire 16.6 cu. ft. Top Freezer with 154 lb. Size Freezer. •Lett of room. tt.t•.lt.*'wl .. 4Mev.n, freGor. Holdt up 1c l$4tbl. • Doot olo•• £1111~ell. INllW•lld..ck c«np&l'tnllfllS, tXlrMloop IM!f lof 11111· G•llon milk e11rtont. • Ho dllro.tlng. ti'• 100" Ftoel·Proof. • Eaay "'°""'9· ~ f(ka nylon rollwl """- rnOYtng, tlMnlnt-r• $288 88 FRIGIDAIRE LAUNDRY PAIR This Frigidaire Jet Action Wa1Mr glv•• you, 2 1p..d1 •t • budg•t price Modtl WA2H • J $""'11 llf!IU!lr 11111'1 Ottlc•l9 tllllnfl, • Offlt Actloh Ag!lltcor. Cr111u c11rr1n'1 llllt IJIUOOI CIO!htl dti'll Into 1ud1r Wiler for ttMlroueh wt1~lng, • 2 Jel·AWIY Rlnlfl. G•I tlcl of llnl, 1cvm 1uto<Mllc1ny. e J•l·tlmrilt Mec:h1nhm, No :tills. Mo ...... No 1111r.. No pu11ey1, • Cold W"tr Wtlll Stiling, Slvfl l'ltl w1t1rt S.vtl c1olllll 1111m 11>rl"klllll Incl fldl"', s193aa Matching Budget-Priced Dryer h.11 2 cyclea ~=====!ii for dryin9 fl9xlbillty W'. Moc11t OAN, 1lec:!rl(: • J Cycl11, On1 timed to ill for uo 19 13S ll'llllultl ltlUI I MO-Hiii -for llvl/lfllll • N04!0Cp Otcton llnl .crt tn. ltlthl on the -· • Durlbte "'"' C1r1, Prt111r 11~rt111re OIUI fnd.of'.crcl• cool-down tll'lnO Durtl>tt ll'rn1 lttn'll 0\11 rlldy IO W9t• or ""' IWIY W!llloul ll'Olllfllil, Why Not Buy the PAIR. • • s143aa and $AVE! .. 1 ~l ·. J , , , , , j ' : l ' i , • ' l ' I I I ' I I I I I I L _ -. ·-·-------~---------• • ... -.... __ -~· '!NLY PILOT s ,.-state High Court Justices Have Some Candid Ideas · Ubtral declslans, said Petera. conservative but not the most T h e j u st I c e p rai g e d or ' petltlons, b r I e f a and diUicult ct1e1 wu the ma· • MCComb and Stanley Mosk decisions was one w h l ch "Our biggest problem ls to conservaUve man on I b t California 's method of selec· decisions belng prep 1 red, jorlty decision he wrote last JUllice Sutll.vau, on 'the broadened the .,·allabiUty ot make tht law ol lt70 nlevant court ting appellate justices. Bu.rte said It would be im-w 1 e k · w h l c; hf: l d u n-court since 196e, sald be had class action. 1'be case lnvOlvtd SAN FRANCISCO !AP) -to the 20th Century LIBERAL COURT U he 1 the ·••· 1 Jud •• d constJlutlonal a 1969 law re-glven no thought to whtlher lnCOn'eel meter operation in 'nlre CaHfomil S u p re me · · ndcr t 1934 aw· possiwic or 1 ge w 0 quiring public officials and he wlU leave the bench at ·I ~-. 4. ... 1.._ sav they'll ask "CourU are being crillcized •·this court bu always been goveroor names judges to flll the job if he hid to spend candidates to dlscloae finan. 'IU. 1 taxlc8bs andu theknodecisloa waaU """'' ,_.....,_ 1 by so-called llw and order noted as a liberal court he vacancies with approval of the the tbne -··•~ 1 appUed to a un wn II we ~ voters for endorsement for people because of our crimlnal said. "I'm to the righl of Commission on Judicial A~ ·gn1n 1 .~,b~t or ~~le· cJaJ boldlnp. · FJVE CHILOf\EN as known customers. 11~ 1 .-••ye•• tenns, eve 1 decisions," he said. "The real the rest of the court except · __ .. r th pal g n sue a arge -• So~ observerii said thla Tht 1'usUce, who has five The 1·udge said thia has now ,, .. '"'" u--1 pointments, compoKU 0 e "A judge runs on his d 1 l i lind · \ h: • tbo\&P t..O ol them plan to iprob1em ii· to be 1ure de en-~;~~b~·t i c e M a r s b a 11 chlel justice, attorney general record,.. said Burke. "flis ~iJ n r i:be al ;:J, 1n· children, said ~e generally been applied to cases invoJvJnc !-reUre. witbln 1 fe:w yean. dant.s gel a fair trial. · .I'm and a presiding justice o! the qUalificatlons are investigated U J~.~~\ r the con-voted wltb the liberal ma-welfare aod consumen fraud. sure no one feels a person Burke, too, said he planned appeal -urt When the term "· rva ve 1111i....~ on same t...r\ty on Lbe Traynor court l.fe also evnressed pride. in 'lbt announcemenll wtre ... v • prior to •ppaintment and the ski ,.., ·~ -,. 'r made la 1 joiot lteWI CQft"' abould be railroaded to prison. to step down when he reaches to which they were named Commislion on J u d 1 c i a 1 e. but that he voted for the death a decision last weell: w~ch l'-ference by Jmticts Louis tt. Llw and order people lose 70, because be ''i1 a man expire!, judges seek re-elec-QuallOcaUons can recommend Burke noted he also wrote penalty. gave voUng rights to S~ ~ 15 1 Ra·___,14 8 sight that they might at one of modest means" and has tion to the unopposed terms. the 1968 decision holding the "YoU have to lake the cases speaking American citm:ns ,-' ; Ra, .. _ond i.. time become defendants to consider his famiJy·wlfe, 1 his removal for variou s st.ate'I dealh pen.a1ty con-the way they come." who could not read-English. ~· t Pettra, ts, and rm · themselves. five children and a even ThtPOSSI:BLE TASK causes.'' stituUonal and was joined by Sullivan said he believed one providing they were otherwise SuWvan, SS. Justice Burke said be is grandchildren. Pointing to foot·high stacks Burke said one of his most J u 1 t l c e s S u 111 van and ot his most. I m p o r t a n t qualified. ~ All three were appointed to _::=:::...:::::::_::::..=...:::.....!:====-------'-==-=-==:......:==-----------'-.::..:..:..:..:..:.cc...c.-.--.-.::.....:..:__.:.:......:::.....=..:::....:..:::..!:..:..:..:..::.:::..:......:::=:::.------ fill unexpired termJ by former ; Gov. Edlmµld G. Brown · . ; Pet.en la 19St, Burke in 19&1 ··~ SuWvan in !Ml. , :.~~ere~ ~~~e S:Old un~~ protislions of 1 new state law which gives them h I ~ h e r penSions U-.<:n they would gtt by staying on the court past that age. Su1Iivan said he has not decided when to retin:. N. in all Suprtme Court elecUons, voten wUI be able to cast only 1 yes or ao vote on the justices I n November's 1eneral election. All will be unopposed. VarED NO A 5upmM Coor! justi<e never hu bea voted out of office, but la t• 30 peretnt ' of Lbe voters voted no on ' ·court members who ruled un- constitutional Prop, 14, which :~~e'~v~Jo: housing-Jaw. The justices rev,ealed to ._ •ewamen tme%)>eded candor, 1 judiciOU5 sense of humor ud keen awa.reoesa ol current problem.1 cl. aociety. Ea<h expressed . doubt that Gov. Re a g an ''s coming replactment of r e c e n t I y retired Chier Justice Roger J . Traynor would bring 1 change in lhe court's generally liberal posit.ions. The actillg c:hief justi<e posi - tion is now beiltg rotated among current judges every two months. Presiding appeal court judges sit in as the seventh member. "We can't predict how a man with certain phllosophical views wi ll react on the court," said J ustice Sullivan in re!er- ring lo new justiCf.S. "There are naturally built into him some of the characteristfca which will detennine how he meetl new chaUuges. MAN CHANGES "But mu himself changes and ont must learn to work ~ilh hit: colleagues. This court has been an ei:ciling ex- perience. We le8J'I to respect the other man's views. We ' find that after we have con- lerred on .a case, our indicated views may have changed. What results is an amalgam • of decision. "The chief justice Is respected and the court loois to him for policy where there .are 1lO precedents," aaid the jovial, 1 l lg h t I y baldfng Sullivu. 1be chief jusUCi! must have strength 1 n d idlolanhip to """"' th e c:ourt... ·--, Sullivan and tM others laud- ed Just.ice Traynor and said there was J1atonwide respect among jurists and lawyers for Traynor, now teaching Jaw in Virginia. . Justice Peters said he plans 1o leave the bench in 1973 . ·because of what he lauihb1gly referred to as the "bribery reUrtment law." I GllANDCllILDREN Peters, who has a daughter ud four grandchildren ; said he helped draft the law-"in 'act was sort of pressured into It." He ei:pla1ned retirement Is made more feasible at the 1ge of 70 by providliig judges thrtt-fourths of theit~pay and their widow• three-eights of the salary. l! 1 judge waita until after 70, he gets only one-halt pay and his wodow only oo«j118rter. "Of course," he quipped, "my decision is alw1y1 sub- ject to change.·• The JU!Uce said he con- siders himself a liberal but "bates" lllcll labels and fee ls they art mianomers. • ''I've fought all my life for Mrs. Ke~edy To Aid Teddy , SAN JUAN, P.R. (AP) - )In . Roae Kennedy AY• she wJll camj>l.Jgn for lhf: rt-tle(- lloo of bot y"""tll aon, Bdwool M. ltennody, 11 Dlmocrlllc U.S. Stnalor from M•uechuwttt. "I nner min a campaign. Tiiey -lei .... " the .. ,....-old '#Wow told newamt:n Wldaeodl1 llW I two-doy ks t:A Puerto Rican faclllllu for u. -.lb' .. larded . .. sald,lhe: would II.art her canpaiplnc with 1 tpe<<h 1t a bn 1'111 Mal 1' 118oltoo.i I I "''~1 s~'-' SPECIAL -OF THE WEEK! l0~:~Q~1 ~~~f'-.... IFYOU BUY IT? Many meat advertisement$ sound too rood to be true ••• and they are ! Have you found ·that the bar1ain you want is always ''SOLD our• or the SELECTION IS SD DISAPPOINTING ••• the quality so poor ••• that you were forced to buy a more expensive cut and sacrifice the saviors you were seekin1? · You'll ALWAYS find the quality AND quantity you want at LUCKY, where a bar1ain means sav- iors AND selection. There's a rreater choice of EVERY cut, and LUCKY meats are a better buy! Smart Shoppingis&'449u 1-2-3 at LUCKY! " ' .c;;;..• ...,.., THEN YOU HAVEN'T BEEN SHOPPING AT LUCKY! il!A. .... ~ ~ ·.....-; HONE'S1~·[l~rABELED DISCou·Nr·r RICEO • .(-:JP QUAlf 'Y "BONDED STA•DIH CHUCK RO~SJ ROUND STEAK RIB ROAST .:ig:. FRYERS 55~ CIOTU CUT 9 3 c lUCIT IONllD LI lllf • ........ Ile l UCIT IHOID ll IEU ' """ 29c WNOll IOO'f CHICl lNS LI. I~~.J.1.2~-..... $]~ ~!~7~~~!~ ......... 33~. APPLESAUCE l!':I'l'.. .... : .•.• _,_21 • APRICOTS :::l."J.~'.~'. .... -... 28' RUIT COCKT All mu ........ --.25' GRAPEfRUIT~~ ............ 30' DEL MONTE PEACNESlr.:.wo .... 29' ASPARAGUS ::"::'..Tf..~.~-......... 43' BAUD BEANS=~-... -.• 27' TOMATOESl:'.'l.'1'..'.l ........ -... -..... 27' POTATOES ;'t:~~~~~ ........ -.14' V-1 JUICE l!W\:': ........................ 41 • ... KiyB,/.·--. AUNT JANE PICKLES ~~59c JAi GEBHARDT TAMALE ,. ............ 33' CHUNK TUNA l::::.'l: ....... -... -31' MAYONNAISE ~":t::.:~ ........... ss· OLIVE Oil ::'l.':ll:'. ................ --47' PEANUT BUTTER :".l.' ........ -... 17' LOG CABIN SYRUP ................ .68' PRESERVES :::'.'.:.~'.~~ ...... 59' .t+ SPECIALITIES ml:l:.~ ... 32' PICKLES ~~~~.~-H ............ 51 ' CUCUMBER CHIPS l:'t'l'.'Jl':.~ .. 33' Our LOW Evef)day Price! IVORY DmRGENT 12.::m. 62c llKl ..... .., Ol.IVES '*""''mosrin..W. 32' ·~U.C.t.11 ................. -.... " TAllG DRINK :'e~~~ .. -............ '1 "' WELCH GRAPE JUICE ............ 42' SPAM~~~.' ..................... -. 59' PORTERHOUSE nu•-"" '1 " ........ .... _ ......... u. GAME HENS =.'.'.-...... -......... 79:. CRAB MEAT ~l'tl"~-~-~ .. -...... 'lft. LINK SAUSAGE::::.-:: .......... 37' ... J:Jy S,/.'-- Hl-C FRUIT DRINKS 46-0UNCf 3oc , .. FOLGER'S ::".:.' ... _ 83' FOL GER'S l.0:1.' ...... _., '1 " FOLGER'$ ~.'l.' ........... '2" FOLG ... s-... '"'" ., .. ~ 1tOL JAI ....... .. FOL GER'S :'ll.':1.~.~ ... 99' TASTERS CHOICE :'ll.'l'I.~~'.'. ...... '1 " TODDLER MEALS~--·-23' CHIU BEANS lr."L'::l~.~ •. -.... 1 B' NII LETS CORN :;~~".'. ............. 22' -•·1,! SOUR CREAM ~~~~~~-~~ ......... 29' CREAM TOPPING ~:~t::~ ........ 43' COTTAGE CHEESE \;W:\. ............ 57' BUTTERMILK \;~~:g,. .. _ .............. 20• ···/:Jy&rt.-- YELLOW ZONKERS 101.IMINC 3 3 C ·~·OUNCE IOI ' CALO CAT FOOD ll::l:'~• .... ::: 17' LIV·A-SNAPS m.W:'. .. : .............. 31' ~KIPPY PET STEW ................ :.14• '" ~ ~ .. TURKEY llOlmMICIUkltnwn• 38' elll.lllU ¥l, I eL• .............. ,. IEE• snAKS .°' ... '"'""''~·(,.J 93, r 1401,N ................... ,, CHILI & BEANS :~ ................ 27' HAWAIIAN PUNCH ::uu ......... 19' ~~!~~~Jc!~~~~~.12 ~.I RUSSET POTATOES '·'· "'·' tlAOt ••••••••••••••••••••••••• ROUND STEAK ,...,u .•.•..... -.'llf. SIRlOIN STEAK '""--..... •1 ~ NAM et<AI IU.YU: -IOIBUI '1 " .... ,, ................................ -. lA.. RA TH BACON l':l.':u ................... 77• FISHSTICKS~o't'::' .............. -.... -66' SOLE FILLETf~~r=." ....... , .•.. --.96' ZUCCHINI STICKS :~:.o'.'.-..... 43< AVOCADO DIP ~~m. ..... --.. 53• SWISS MISS PIES ....... -........ 29' CHICKEN PIE 1:.!:'.'::'.'. ..• -........ 39' ALASKA coo::.-:.~ ............... 63' ENCHILADAS~:~=-~~~~. 40' ... Kiy s,t.·-..... ALPO DOG FOOD 14~·~-;lfCI 29C CAN ""'------~. APPLE JUICE !~:.~~ .......... _ ... 2oc S~NDWICNES:l~8.T.'.'.~~,-.79' GINO'S PIZZA f:"::~ ................... 62' GINO'S PIZZA r,"::::..~.~~~~~-19' ONION RINGS f::'.':: .................. 45• ORANGE JUICE !'i:r~:'. ........ _. 24• MEXICAN DINNERS ::':~~ ...... 44' 4CllfUI rtl<ll~ flll PICJl. MIXIUll. <--..,TM M T1l VEGETABLES :::r:,~~r.':.~.~.-.. .33' !f tUJI IU.111, ,1.U. COlll, MllD Yff.J BANQUET DINNERS ........... _ .. 37' .~ . SCOTICINS NAPKINS::W. .......... 19" SCOTT TISSUE:m:" ................... 38' ""PHASE Ill ::i:=.'. ................. 20• BORATEEM ::~•:.\~-: ....................... 67' WAX REMOVER ;:r,'.~~~··-····89' BORAXO HAND 50AP our.uo ... J3• Our LOW Evcl)l'.l<ly Price! LADY LEE BUTTER l1t GUAUTY 79c l6-0UNCl CTN. ~~~!~.!'..!!.'!!. ............ 88f.. ~!!!~~~-lkl'f...;. .. ,, .. , 98f.. !!!!~~~~~,., .. ~~.'.~.". .......... 89• FARMER JOHN BACON 77' iuc:-. loll. PIG ••••••. ,, ................ ,.,, ~-~•lrCJ!.!'.~-~~t.~•'············"···· .. 79c ~~~~-~t.!~.R8.~'.~". ...... 88< GROUND BEEF 55c LICIT IOMDlD , ....... , , • • • ••• • ll. llU GIOUND lllF 7'> C CHUCK IUAUTY • • • • • •• • • '1J1. l l T•A LEAN GIOUND l lEF 93 C IOVND IUAllTJ ••••••• ,. LI. : '~ liii?J•nM'\ '~ ~-.. ,Bl!l!M:..~ PUNCH DETERGENT ,..,. .......... 'l " SALVO PELLns :r:=.r ..... _ ...... 74' CHEER omRGENT ... L ............ 82' DRm omRGENT ................ 82' BOLD omRGENT ... L ............. '1" DASH DETERGENT moLNJ ......... 12" IVORY SOAP :~~~~.'.~.·-·-·-2B' SPIC & SPAN ~i .... _ ........... 31 • -' 1 'I "' ,, "'' •·, ' : . " ' . ... ' , . ' PREMIUM CRACKERs :::'l:':oi .... 36' Rolls llUYnteAT,._ll lllowtl'l lllYfJ 33' N tUtl TO UT It (l. PICO. .. n•~···-·- BOU ILLON CUBES ~~ ................ 22' UPTON TEA BAGS .............. -.63' Prices ar• DiKounted Except on foir-lrode"d and GoYernment Controlled ltemi. 4-2-70 ~~.~.~.!.!~~~~ ....... : ... 69c ~u.~~1~!~~~1 1~ru ....... _59' ~~:~~i~~!~.~-l~l~llt~~~-~ ..... s 5 c ~~~~.~~~~!f.~1 ......... 65' LONGHORN CHEESE """" 69' lllH WISUISll, ..... SM.IP mllll ..... .. ~!f ~ !t~~~!M.!, ""'"-48 c ~~~!~~l~~~~~.~~KL ........ 45c LEO'S COOKED HAM 59c Sllt:ll. llll'N1tl.' ll. HC ................... -••M SAUSAGE CHUBS ~~~·~t~, 33c TllHlll.O. UlllUM lllKIU 11 HIMIJI w.I .. PILLSBURY BISCUITS 9' MTf(tlllU. 'lttlTU.1,l ll. l'IN. •••••• - KOSHER FRANKS ,, u "'· $) 15 N UIUlllUf I SALm lir llDl("l llTlllllt •• , POST HONEY COMB uoL"'--56' MINUTE RICE noLM<. .......... --87' KRAFT DINNER ~~?.:::.~~-.37' WONDRA FLOUR :~.':'.~~ ....... _ 69' <>'"CANDY BARS ~:::.~?. ...... 44' MAHATMA RICE•oL .. , ........... 57' , ·~· .. ' LDW OISCOUN' PRICES ON HOLlSEWARES <: BEAUTV AIDS SHAMPOO YOUR RUGS & CARPETS ••• As Easily As Vacuuming RENT AN HI' RU& SHAMPOOER AT LUCKY OHL y $ J !!uos1 Hl-2 IUG SHAMPOO· fi!llllJllji :~· ................ '2'' r.:k. ... _., ...... '1 '' VISINE EYE DROPS l'hstlc ••••ut .. t111 · ltt Urtll, 11111••11 $) 18 -=:E tJts. DUI LOW Mn· • WPJICC ......... , SCHICK INJECTOR BLADES ,.,,ct ftr cl•ur, 11tr. c1•f•rt"'' •t• s•"'s. CHARCOAL &RILL STOWAWAY fOlDlll& U1ttnlpt 1U tHllJ ,.mMt wit• 1rtr1 laria lfllli11 area. OUllOW 99c IVEIYDAT PllCE LISTERINE ORAL ANTISEPTIC Ii .......... """''" .. -... '11:lt11. IMp 1" MID fmll *cl•• -ler "'"'· 14-0Z.IOTTll 81 C '--~ INnUDIS 7c OFF Shop Any Day ••• Save Everyday ••• with Lucky Low Discount Pricing Policy. • Thursday, AprM 2, 1970 DAILY PILOT J7 'AIP P AltTY FAILS .•. Parole Sysie111 (;hanges Prop•sed (ConUuued From P11t 1) . winner expected to take a °SACRAMENTO (UPI) -An --five years: first degree firm grasp of the party reins. will depend upon ' ' t h e Shearer bu running mates for availability or a candidate Ue:.tenant governor, secretary and, of course, financing." of state and U.S. Senate. The survey turned up only one state -Tennessee -BAD DISSENSION where o e m o c r a t s and The American party of Republicans express e-0ncem Texas not cnly has had dis- about the growth of tbe AlP. senslon in its own ranks, but .. Assembly committee h a d recommended a reorganiza. tion of ~ CaUfonrla parole syStem, including fn!elng a convict after he h8$1 served In the speed and efficiency of the way justice is ad~ mlnlstertd in Caillornia. In a rtlated development, Assemblyman Alan Slerotf (0. Bev'erly Hills), announced he would introduce a bill next week authorizing a prisoner's release for up to three days so he could visit his wife an<I f"l"llY. on parole after servlng their minimum tenn1 unless Ulere is 1 specific reason for further detention. lf a convict is denied parole, he should be told why in wrl!ing, the com- mittee said. J>urglaryl five years, and se- cond · degree burglaey, · one year. The-committee charged Iba! for years the legislature hu "neglected its responclb!Uty of providing gutde l tnee for boards charged with parole decision making." Jt said the consequence has been ~· '\ parole \ decision makiJll ap- piratus that has no cle1" nd rationally justified ~· '' membership on the ad u 1 l authori~y and the women 'I board of termi anll parole from nine to five and merctrc th.fl two bo,ards· , The bill ailo would mair<> the dirtclor of com<llool lj>o chalnnan of the adul\ author!· ty. Prisi;>n programs would \be required to prove to the legi.!llature that ~ h e y con. tribute to inmate rehabilita- tion before they would be financed. Officials there say the party1 difficulties with Wallace head- now has organizations in 70 quarters as well. his · um term. le board ls one sf bastions ot un- checked nd arbitrary power cf Tennessee's 95 counties, I Bard Logan Qf San Antonio and "solid commitments from resigne·d as state ch~rman\in , several big contributors· that January, declaring that "Wal. they will back us in elections lace wanted to control the thi.!I year." state of Texas and reslstid r1 in Amer a," declared the Assembly Select Committee on the ministration o f Justice in a report. "One \ of the aspects of prisOn lUe most damaging to a person's chance of future rehabilitation is that Impact Jt has on his sex life," Sieroty said. Currently, an lmate is re.leased at the discretion of the parole board after serving a minimum sentence. The board isn't required to tell him why he has been turned down for parole. The current minimum term prescribed by law for first degree murder Is seven years. Others include forcible rape, three years; armed rob~y. Biddle said he would In- troduce legislation Im- plementing m a j o r ·rttom- mendatlons of the committee, Including red uc Ing the Sieroty, not a nY~mber of the seitct committee, sajd that short vialla awey lrom the penileliary ~ http rehabilitate inmates, Although no one has an-any effort to orga!Uze state nounced, the party is expected parties on the precinct and _· --------- to offer c a n d i d a t e s for county level." governor, at least two con-Tn some states, such as gressional seats. possibly a Pennsylvania and Iowa, the U.S. Senate seat and many AIP may attempt to run write- of the state's 1:,2 seats in in candidates. the legislature. Party activity elsewhere is But even in Tennessee, pro-varied. Some examples: spects of success are not Harvey H. Wilder of Hag- bright. Elsewhere they are ersto1i\T1, Md., has announced dimmer. for the Senate seat now held 1n Ncrth Carolina. Ohio, by Jooeph D. Tydings, a California, Michigan and Tex· Democrat. and party officials as, the party is split by fac-sRy candidates for governor tional fighting. and other state offices will be \Valter Green. a Burlington annoonced. attoi'nty, and Reid Stubbs, a But Lawrence B. Scalley, Charlotte restaurant operator. executive secretary and gene- are in the midst of a court ral counsel for the Maryland baUle for cootrbl of U1e party party, mentioned oile pl'Oblem in North Carolina. whlch aoparently has ptap:uM the AIP everywhere. ''We NOT HELP got 30 cents in the mail the The conflict will not help other day," he said. the chances of the party's two announced candidates for OFFER CANDIDATES congress, Gene Leggett of AIP officials in Indiana say New Bern and L y n w 0 0 d they will offer candidates for Bullock o( Greensboro. secretary of state, state trea- The Ohio party also bas sUTP.r and state auditor. as two announced candidates -\1;ell as local ofrires. In Mis· both cf them for governor souri. candidates ha,•e an- and both battling for control nounced for the U.S. Senate, - of the party. The ci;indidates the U.S. House and one tei(is· are Robert W. Annable of lative seat, but chairman El~ Parma Heights, a Cleveland mer Smith says thi~ is ju~t to suburb, and Ed~:in G. Lawton keP.o the party on the ballot. of Columbus. Both are at-There are other candidates tempting to have the other's and ootC!ntial candidates scat- name stricken frclm the ballot. tered throughout t.he states. Jn California. the fight is and in a few instances-Idaho between \Vifliam F. Shearer and Utah appear to be two of San Diego, a ccnsultant of the best examples -ef· in political management. and forts have bef!fl. made to or· Keith Greene of San Fran· ganize from the grass roots cisco, a used car salesman. up. Greene is recogni1.ed as· ldahn has ATP chairmen in chairman by the secretary or 34 of the slate's 44 countie.!I' !slate, and is Wallace's man. and plans an assembly in Both have filed as can-, June to endorse candidates. didates for governor, with the Utah has organizaUoroc; In · 16 of ~ counties. State Chair· STARS Sycfnty Omarr 1, Oii• ef fhe worlc:l's <Jr••+ •1frolo 91r1 . H+, column h on• of fhe DAILY PILOTS 9r••t ft•lurt1. man ClydP. B. Freeman s11 vs the p:.irty hooes to have a full slate of candirlates this year, declaring. "We realize we 're small now. but we've come a long way." 2nd Annual Festival Set by UCR The secoud annual Spring Festival, hosted by UC Riverside, will nm simultan- eously with a campus ·wide ·open house. beginning at 10 -a.m., May 9. 1Southern Califoi'nia ·h Jg h schools are eligible to enter the day-long festival which will give students, Jndividually or In groups, a cha~ to participate in . a number of professionally j u d g e d com- petitive activities. Festival eventS include an ar.l happening, a band com- petition, a creative writing workshop, a one-act play con- test, a foreign language field day.. journalism competition, a modem dance workshop and a painting exhibit. Deadline for entries I s \Vednesday, April t' and a $1 fee is required for each high school student entered in the. festival activities. All festival participants will be guests of the university for lunch. The general public is invited lo observe the festival ac- tivities and also participate in the campus open house which will include tours, special displays, lectures, concerts and personal discussions with students, faculty ·a n d ad- nlinistrators. Further informalion about tl1e festival or the open house is available at the Office of Relations with Schools, 11 18 Library South. UC Riverside or telephone 787-4[,JI. All That Glitters Is Not Gould Or •.. Tracy Is Hard to Capp ' And Ink Deep FEARLESS FOSOICK, Plalnclolh· e sman, is Li'l Abner's ideal -as he should be. In fact, he should be the "ideal'' of every red-blooded American boy as he unfolds one daring exploit after another in his battle for la\V and order. • OICK TRACY, Plainclothes Delee· tive, is the v.•orld'5.number one po-- liceman. Relentless in his pursuit of wrong-doers of every klnd, Tracy and his companions use fantastical· Jy modern criminal catching devi· ces to triumph over adVersaries. j\s Any Fool Kin See • • • These are the pictures and descriptions of two world·famed detectives, each invented by a different cartoonist. Fearless Fosdick is the brainchild or Al Capp and he often appears in Capp's Lt'l Abner comic strip. Dick Tracy, ot ' c ourse. is one of the wor ld's oldest and bes t known d~tectives. He was in- vented by Chester Gould in the early 1930s. Obviously 1 one fictitious charac- ter has nothing to do 'vith the other-at least that's what both artisls often proclaim. DAILY PILOT comics page readers can decide for themselves. Both Capp and Gould contribute to the page. It's all in fun, as Li1l Abner often says: Any fool kin see that ••• • • • We Sees DAILY PILOT (Won~t You Join_ US?) The co "ttee, chaired by Assemblyman W. Cralg Biddle (R-Riverside), was appointed to recommend jmprovements Tbe committee said that prisoners should be released Jump into Spring . With these ·Savings~!·! • • 1¢ ale! BUY ONE at the Regular Price GET ANOTHER for ONLY 1 cent llTINIO' I.All• lllCIUml 11111 lllllD·UI' l:IWI IM Dmall FGClll GROW A GREEN CARPET. ORTHO·GRO Lawn and Dichondra Food provides high nutritional food ror blade grass and dic:hondra lawns. Ifs rc:commc:nd c:d by turf c11pcrts. won't burn when used as directed. Just apply the fast·diss_olving pellets through an OR THO WHIRLYBIRD or Two Wheel La...,·n Spreltdtr and water. THE NOW FAMOUS Special The easy to use hand spreader for Ortho Lawn Food or any other pelletized plant food •. For lawns or ground covers. REG. $5.95$ 4 98 FINEST GRADE 100°/o PURE DICHONDRA SEED We 'll show you how to plant. REG. $2.95 $149 FULL POUND DECORATIVE BARK For more beautiful garden a·reas .. Long-lasting -easy care. ·LARGE-l-CU. FT. IAG ~] 3~ DWARF DAHLIAS Eas iest of 111 to CJrow. Real husky plents. Special • • Buy 1 quart of ORTHO ISOTOX, the Mult1-Purpos8 ,y.,. · temrc garden Insecticide end get an ORTHO Spray-e1.1, 4 free. ISOTOX kllts elmost ell sucking and chewing '""" . sects. The ORTHO SPRAY·ETTE 4 al\aches to your garden hose, 1pplita up to four gallona of spray with one filling. ' • • BOTH FOR $5" REG. 79• Special FUCHSIAS Plan now to ha~e exotic color all summer. Fine . qt. size plants. 39cEA. REDWOOD ROUNDS ' Design your own garden path. All sizes 1oc ,,:e~ HANGING BASKETS All Redwood. Sturdy Construction. Perfect for our Special Fuch1 i11. Special • ...,,$,69 2.95 FROM THE FLORIST ••• Freshly cut beautiful long stemmed red roses. (Very Effective) Special . DOZ. HOURS1 MON. thr11 FRI. t te i SUN. 10 •·'"· te 111'·"'• SATURDAY t e;ftl, ~ l :JO p.m. SPECIAL PRICES 6000 THROUGH SUNDAY, APRIL I $198 2640 Harbor Blvif. E COSTA MESA CAL~ 546-5525 BB I I •I l ' I lf DAILY PILOT ., TERIY GRANT, R.Ph L I t t I • chFkl,.... .,. .tweyt -• up,..S ... Whet! they •N Mppy ~r l911fllt.r eff 1Mll• •• llgltt •P • wtle .. '""'· l•t, """ tlwy are aot fftfl'"I well ...., do fft "" ho.,• to ..ti ,.., l i..lr .Wo111 will lot Y•• k.w that ""• It. 10111tthl1t1 IMttlerl'"J l'tteM. " •"' y.-r dilldNJI lurppy "' llillpl.. hi • .., tMfll hfflthy. &.t1lw ckdi.,. -a """' bf .,.... t-lly pllJ'lltl•. Yert aft• • .. wlll prncrlb. • dolly •I· '-'• t9 Mlpplo-.t ttt.ir di". 11 atll' Ylta11ti11 D1ps:lm11t - • ..., • co111pl4'fo ltOClt af wit.. • prod•cts ttiet .,. t,.elflcltf. )y preporsd for children. Th., .,.. good0tosth19 cind clrlJICfft 19feV toldJtt thoin, YOU OR YOU.. DOCTO" CAN PHONE US wh•n vor.1 "''' O tlolivory. We will d1livtt ""'"ptly witho11t 1ll1t• c.h1rgt, A tt11t ft'ltny p.oplo rely on u1 fot their health 111-41. Wo w•I· •-• requ11h for delivery '''"' Ice ••u:I ch•rt• •<Co~ntt. PARK LIDO PHARMACY JSI Hotpltal RM4 N .. port IMch '41·1JID fl'el DtltVHJ s Thursda,, April 2, 19~0 Worth MAN "'"--" ............ <· ~ .... ,... ....... .......... "' .... JM1 ... ,,.. ... , •. 171 I. 17th St .. C•tt1 M .. •44-5141 ~ow!PSA _Jelsevery 9U minulesto Oakland! 7:15 am to 1:45 pm. Botti wtys. 7tlM:tl-10:1S.11:U •m-1 :1W:CS-4;1 W :4S.7:1S.S:CS pm. More on wetktndt. Why WOflJ lbou.t. ,..,..Hofl......, ltSA h• ~ 180 fllightt • day? ltlctl -..,..1o1 ..... btt ICMdul• Y'OU ctn Clrry rt ll'OUnd In 1'M" htecl. WhY ilft ....... lcrftlt ,.,.., Ot all J•b? OrgrMl ...... oo •San F-... ._, ... Dlqo, •I'd Seoramenio? Ot ll'llt kid• uncf« 12 lly P8A (WtUI ..... P1191l'") lor hill l1ro? Slid Wll'/ta rwf'Ylllent -"ill~~ tmef qMt or whafll'llnlml atrtlna .......... ,... & 1 New Name 71 ;;:::=::==;:~=;:=::;=g~=;=~;:::::J 68 65 62 59 56 53 so 41 44 0 wmplet~New York Stock List , Aprll 1970 DAILY PILOT Wednesday's Oosing Prices-Complete New York Stock Exchange List Complete Closing Prices -American Stock Exchange List I . • l I • -~----------. .... .... . . . -~· ... • ~J DAU. Y PILOT llmrsday, AJ)l'll 2, I~. • Supreme Court Decides That Order Must Be Observed WASHINGTON (APl -The "problems or po 11tIca1 In-prtach a sermon oo Grace supreme Court's response to dlctments and oC poUtlcal Church Street the tumuJt imd shouUng ln judges raise profound ques--When Penn persisted in the naUon't courtrooms is tlons going to the heart of the questioning the legallty of his tJl&t. 1bove an three must be . social coml>'lct." lndicbnent M was jailed by order men of their da.v," Douglas asked : "Would we tolerate teUlOval Of a defen- dant from the courtroom dur· ing a trial because he was insisting on his COMUtutional rights, albeit vociferously, no matter how obnolloul his ph\losopby might have been to the bench that tried him. "Would we uphold CQlllempl in that situation?" Douglas agreed wllb hla colleagues that a crlmlnaI tnaJ cannot exist !n bedlam. But he said Allen evidently war mentally ill and a rullnc on the Jen&itive lsaues of courtroom order should have been put off to another diy. Only --and he by indirection, noted there may be Wayt to obterVe both a need !or decorum and lhe r\ihl l'ADted by tho 1U1 Amendmenl lo delendenls lo face thier IC<.'User.,. by olaclq Ibo unruly dole .. dan! in a aoundprool booUi in lhe courtroom ... lelevi1lq lhe trial lo him oullide. with hiJ allomey and, U poo~· ble, lo keep appral!ed of 1\1< pro,_ of his trial." • order. • Douglas recounted the s~ -the panel or judges who tried The virtually une.n1mous ap-of William Penn, the gentle him for "contemptuous con- proval Tuesday of the removal Quaker, who was tried In Lon-duct." Btftlllan did nol SUUUI e!Uitr method dlrec\ly. Bui he adviJed trial judges to ''make tUsonable effort.a to enable him th& excluded defendant t o communlcal! '1lnce the CQlb't bu remo,.. ed the contumacious "defeq.. dant," Bttnnan said, "It Is not weaknesa to mitigate the disadvantages of hil expulsion as far as teclllologjcally ~ hie In the clrcurmt.ances." of a madcap Chicago defen-don in 1670 for ~ausing a " Observing that the judges \ dant ahould graUfy and en-riot when all be did was to were sincerely, I aw. and. Allen's own appeala lawyer, H. Ree<! Harris o! Chleqo, said both needs cowld be mtt: courage trial judges whOM: oerve1 art frayed quick.1y. Strangely, except for Just let William J. Brennan Jr., who spOke only for himseU, no judicial notice was taken of modem means of main~ning both decorum and the defen- dant's right to face his ac- cusers. And but for • single. vague aentence in, Jqstlct Hugo L. Black'• oplnion for the ma- jority, only JusUce William 0 . Douglas recognized that a trial judge may be wrong and the defendant may be shouting to assert his constitutional rights. NOW IN JAIL Wllllam Allen, who is now sltting in a New Orleans jail ' awaiting trial for robbery, was a most unruly defendant in Cook County criminal court 14 years ago. The judge. Grover Niemeyer, was a very · patient man. Allen; whose defense to a $200 tavern holdup was in- sanity, ·interrupted the ex- am l n at Ion of· prospective jurors, tore up his file, Ignored ' the judge's warnings that he • should beha"Je and flnaUy to! Niemeyer: "When I go OU for lunchUme, you're going to be a corpse." The judge ordered Allen removed, the trial proceeded without him and·the defendant was convicted and sentenced to 10 to 30 years in prison. Last July, lhe U.S. Court of Appeals in Chicago in· validated thee o nY Jct ion . saying Allen's cof18lltuUonal • right to face his accusers bad been violated. If nectssary, the appeals court said, Judge Niemeyer should have 1 bound and gagged Allen. 'Ibis suggestion later was used by J udge Julius J. Hof- fman in Chicago to bind and gag Bobby ·c. Seale, one of eight radicals charged with inciting riots at the 1968 Democratic convenuon. The net result of t h e Supremt: Court's ruling Is that all the judges evidently did the right thing . U a defendant ignores the J1,1dge '~ admonition that he should behave arxl makes further p roceedings im- possible, he can be forcibly removed. If the· judge decides the besf way to deal with . a rebellious defendant ls to bind and gag him -that's au right, too. USE CONTEMPT And of coorse, Bla ck's decision noted, trial judges may use lhelr old standby contempt powers to cite a stubbornly defiant defendant and throw him in jail. . The heart of Black's opinion. in which technicaUy a 11 justices except Douglas joined, is this observation: "It would degrade our coun- try and our judicial system to perm.It OW' courts to be bullied, insulted a n d humiliated and their orderly progress thwarted and obstructed by defendants brought before them charged with crimes." The only notice Black took of the fact judges someUmes provoke the outbursts b y short-ending defendants o n their rights was the observa- tion that "being manned by humans. the courts are not perfect and are bound to make some erron." SOOl1IE FEELINGS Brennan's concurring opi- nion sought to soothe liberals' sensibilities by counseling that the guarantees of liberty, justice and equality "cannot endure If we allow o u r pi'ecious heritage of ordered liberty to be ripped apart amid the sound and fury of our tlme." Signifteant1y, though, evtn Brennan. a recogn ized liberal. coupled liberty with order. Only Douglas, in a separate opi n ion, s tressed that Gridder Gets Political Boost BUFFALO, N.Y. !AP \ - Quarterback Jack Kemp of the Buffala Bills professional footblll team has been en- -by Erie County .Republican leaders as can- dldale !or tho 39lh Dlslrtet tt1.t in the U.S. House of R<~Uves. Keinp ha.1 no announced op- position Jn the June party prlmtry. Tho ... 1 now Is held by o.mocratRl~h1rd D. Me-e~ I Cllldfdale lot blr. party I oomJnlllon lo Ille U.S. Stolle. \ \ Califo • I Fed ' 'I \ I . m1a era guara11lees . $1,236 a year on a $20,000 invesl1nent wi1l1 absolute 6% guaranteed interest is what we're talking about. A guaranteed annual yield of 6.18%. That means $1,236 a year on a $20,000 investment. Ang not only is interest guaranteed, but your principal is fully in- sured by an agency of the fed- eral government. It's one of the world 's safest investments. Naturally, there are some conditions. First of all, to qualify for California Federal's guaranteed 6% plan, the minimum deposit is $5 ,000. Second, you leave your money with us for a period pf two years or more. Withdrawals are permitted at any time, however, with some loss of interest if with- drawn prior to maturity date. Is it possible for a f amiJy to invest more than $20,000 and still have ,,.. ,. the principal amountfully insured? By opening three separate · accounts, a man and wife may have up to $60, 000 fully insured, What if you don't have $5,000? California Federal has a wide variety of plans for invest- ments under $5,000. Interest ranges from 5% to 5.75%. One of them .undoubtedly is ideally suited to your particular cir- cumstances. Can you earn more than 6.18 % yield? Yes, you can earn 7. 79% an- nual yield on $100,000 or more l if left on deposit for 1 year or more.Thatamountsto$7,779.00 guaranteed interest on $100, 000. ~nd the .7.5% yearly interest rate is adjustable for terms shorter than one year. Does any Savings and.Loan Association in California, under any circumstances, pay a higher interest rate than California Federal? No. Do you have any other queStions? Call any of our offices in Los Angeles, Ventura or Orange Counties. Or stop in. We'll have the answers. Helping savers earn more money on their savings made us the nation's largest federal. Califomia Federal. Nationi Largest Federal. For the money you can't afford to Collrornkl Federal So'f4ngs and Loon Assodatton •Assets°"'' $I .6 8i1Ti0ft • Head Office: 5670 Wllshlrti Boufe"t'Ord, to. Al'IQlht / Anaheim Office: 600 N. Euclid Ave.· 776-2222 Costa Mesa Office: 2100 Harbor Blvd.· 546-2300 Orange Office: 4050 Metropolitan Dr.· 639-3033 ,, I I I I I ....... ------------------~---------______ ..,........ __ , ______________ ----------~----~--...._.._ .. ~---------~~~~~-~~---------~~ --. - ThurldM, Aplll t 1970 .IAll Y PllOT ti Suicide Thoughts, Sleepless! Nights-'.Are· Over ' LAKELAND. Fla. (AP) :.._ A fleetlnc thoqllt of iuldde for Oeeny McLain ., drllted JnlO lix ·-of sleep! .... worry. • ft11ed ~--•• • But that'• In the ~ -· The • J)e\rol! 'fiair JUP"'Pi~ bas puled throuch 1'hat . be call«I "the datlleat .i•••nent .oC roy .Ill•" _and_ ha< come oot better than most observers, excep\ Denny bim!eK, had antlcJpaled. \"I'm very dlankful1for the investigation Mr. Kmn carried oo because it cleared ~P a lot ol things," said a lmllin& ...._and relaxed MCLaln 1t a near midnight news coof'ereoce. "I dl!f!>~ !b1nk I would be llUSpenckd, , I wai . opt1mlsUc rlibt to the end," he added. . Some six 'houri earlier McLain ipoke Jn .a .JS-minute paid television IDterv~ live in Detro\t. He new there from' LakelaM iii a private jet and piloted the plane back hlmlelf immediately afterwards. Ex-star Andrade· ' I Works ,With Kids By HOWARD L HANDY Of ... o.llY ,. .. llMI' When a prol'esslonal athlete hangs up his tack and turns to other fields, one wonders about hia future success. Not so in the case of former Ughtweight title contender Robert !'Cisco'' Andrade, a young fighter who was watched by more fans than virtually all of today's ring greats. Andrade was in his prime from 1952 through 1958 and continued bis fistic career until 19&2. Durlng those • years boxing shows on televisioo were seen every Wednesday and Friday n1gbt and Ci:sco had his D'hare of notoriety via the tub!. After retiring from the ring, he turned to operating a boxing camp in San Jacinto, tbeo sold. automobiles for about seven years. Recently he turned to a new field, one in whidl be fmds great joy and satisfaction and one that couJd pay rich dividends if those he is working for are any judge ol the situation. Cisco has joined the correctional staff of the California Yooth Authority's Fred C. Nelles School for Boys in Whittier as a group supervisor. "This js very rewarding w9rk and t enjoy it immijiself,~ ·cisco_sa;.s. "I am sure 1 can help some of tfiese boys and l knoW they ha ve· already done a great deal for ·me." Cisco began wart 1or . tbe CYA in January. A!!. a group supervisor, he works directly with the wards at Nelles in their cottages. . • . C. A. Terhune, sdptrintendent at the school. say s: "lje is d~ng a tremendous job. He relates to the boys, and they look up to hlm and listen. And he tsn't dotng it because he's an es:-ath1ete, either. lt's his great personality and sincere nature that does the~most good." The Cisco Kid bos:ed out· of Compton and was known as the Compton Comet at one time with i~ted ·citlzem furnishing a robe Widi tfrls t i t 1 e emblazoned on its back. During his professional career he defeated many top lightweights but was denied a shot at the title in biS pri!Jle. He was undefeated In 28 consecutive professional fights and won 10, lost 10 and had one draw. Included among his victims Jn the ring were former lightweight title holders Bud Smith, Lauro Salas and Jimmy Carter. He also remembers his first pro- f esslonal defeat, a questionable decision to Ra1ph Dupas, a-New Orleam string- ' bean ~ilo loot a Ip II I dtclaion on a New Year's nlgbl _ Cisco also boaed Art Angon and <>lhera in heavier weight dlvisjpna. When be did finally get a shot at the .llghtwelght title, it was in 1961 in the twilight of his bos:ing career. Joe Browir won by decision. His firlal fight was at' 0 I y mp i c Aqditorium in Los Angeles, March 9, 1962. He lost oo a technical knockout to Davey Moore before a packed house when Referee George Lalka siopped the fighl. Althoogh confused by the suddee decision ol Latta, Cisco left the ring without protest. A few moments later, he said: "They stopped the fight. You have to take it like a man. t think he (Latta) was hasty in stopping it when he did as I had my senses. I just. coukin't get started -I didn't have any :r.ip in my punches." In the dressing room after that fight (which proved to be his last), be asked several visitors (including his ratlier) if he should quit the ring. The elder Andrade replied, "No comment." Aragon was also there and was more outspoken. "You better quit before you get killed." · , Andrade's fa ce and shoulders were covered With 'red marks he described as glove burns but he showed no other effects from the battle and was in com· plete control of his senses. . He reUred Crom the ring shortl)' thereafter and Is Still in complete control ol his senses and a living example of a finely conditioned boxer who quit the ring in time. His wO!°k at Nelles calls for 1t1pervision · of reereaUon as well as cleanliness and other per9onal habi ts of the youngster s confined there. "I work different shifts here," he ex· pl~. .''When I ha ve to get up_ in the morning to be here at 6, It reminds me. pf. road work," he says with no trace ot Oostalgia.~ . "That wasn't my favorite part of box· ·tng," he reminds one afid all. Cisco and wire, Mary Lou have two married daughters and a son who attends La Habra High School. They are also grandparents. ls · the youngest AOOrade interested In b:oling? "No, he's studying to be a magician," Cisco says. He will have to go a long way to surpass his Dad, a magician indeed with a pair or boxing gloves during his heyday in the ring. Return to Preps? Ernie -Johnson Eying Vacant Newport Post . - Ernie Johnson, one , of ~ o u t.h. e t.n California's most !luCcmful -tiigh School football coaches the past two decades , may be· the next grid boss at Newport Harbor High, this column has learned .. The 44-year-old former FuJlerton High School grad is currently getting his feet wet iJt college ranks, assisting Jim StangelaJld at Cal State (Long Beach). However, he admitted to Utis column -------WHITE WASH -___,__ - OLIWN,WMl';tl ' . . that he has talked to. ·Newpott._officials about the football coaohlng vacancy and says he may apply for the post. "I don't know that t could get the Job if I wanted It," he says. "Anyone with good sense would probably stay away from the Sunset League because it'll the toughest place I know of to a winner." o of Johnson's former a&sistants Sunset head coaches, including a's Leon Wheeler and Weste.rn's Everett. ~ ked why he left · gh !Chool ccachlng year after cha king up 108 wins ·1psse.s and four ties in 15 years the ranch (El Rancho), Johnson ate . s!mplf had to find out what lite at:ll>t higher level. hid .ofDe college coaching offert \be ·Yt•a but I kept tumb!.g them , tall"" myself I had to coach one more bunch or boys. Finally -realized I'd be ending my coaching r someday, alway1 wondering if m11de a 1'Ql8take. ow 1·.ludl IUIJW What I'm comparin1 as t co~ider. the Newport ,jqb. 1 have a good setup here and· there'll pros and,. cons to both levels of C{lachlng. The promotion system is e.omplicated · here and" I di>R't know whether J, like thal . "It would take-a good situation for me to leave. But there " are certain. advaatages at Newport. Too, I like that area to li ve (he currenUy re&lde11 in Seal Beach). I know the prihciP.31 (Chuck: Godshall ) from the days when he coached' at Cal High and I like Orange County. "I haven't applied for any other job," he adds. Johnson's teams won two ClF UUes., tied for another all! were ii the playoffs evrrt year from 1959111. Yet he says success isn'lmeasured 11trlcUy by win· ning. _,, '"Football is to aerve the players. 1·Ye-never asked a kid to lay it on the line to make me a better coa ch. I believe that \£ you get the maximum from the players and if they profit by it. then the C{l&Ch is a helluva suc- ceM, '' Johnson philosophizes. "Reminded that Newport has won only one varsity grid title in the achool's 4G-year history, Johnson says, !'boys-are boys everywhere -11hort, fat, rich or poor. It lakes bard work and a lot of luclt to win. "We were k>sers my nrst Un'te years at the roch-we lost 15 games my ntst 1lJtte year'!"-there; including a 1'"' first season." · · ,. Johnson aays one"Of the mO!t enjoyable· prep rivalrieJ Ile participated in was the series with Anaheim. "U ever there was a good seuon for (ootbJ].I It Will shown the nigh ta: we pl1yed · Afiaheim,'' he says. So, there you have It. Ernie Johnson may have had bl! fling on lhe collegi ate level and now he may come to NewJ>Ort Harbor, &llhough he has the option of returning to El Rancho on a leave of absence. "A)l lhinis belog equal, Mr. !6ihn did wha! he had to do. I can'\ 11.l' I •areed with bis decl.slcin, ·-I want lo · play liuoball ·~t --But I will abide by his d<cislon." n.e FebnW'y day 1n l'jew van ~· taUid McLain wllh 1ht f n d ~Ila lt.e suspension was a bl k ooe for .. Ute star pitcher. "I WU 00 the 20th lloor In Kuhn's office and I was mndlJli by the win- dow," he ttlal~ solemnly. - "That was ·the darke:IL m°'l'tDt ol my life. I would have jllmptd oiit of ui1t Window U I . thought abou\ H mudl looger; I think the ~rlhlnl that stopped me was thiiiklng tllatt m1ybel. I would land OD elsflt, ot •nine. boy ' eeQab Hll kill 'therri." . . • In Detroit, McLain said he hami't slept in the last sis: weekB. But he said he would now start trying to arTange' ' for nightclub and tdevi.slon appearances u organist,· lincu, or just a · plaJ.u ,peraonality. • ' ~ ••we've got. booklrlgs for this fall ,\ but .no one ki\ew wt'd •need boo~p lo the l1ll1)!l\er," McLain said, ID' Lakeland with a broad fF.!n. . , 1 _ • +· ' '!be fibi.nclilly-Foubled hurler, who won ·a total of1 55• games. the lul1 two seasons, apologii.ed to newsmen• in Lakeland, claiming he lf'&nled the ex· \l'I T ........ YOUNG SEATTLE FANS LAMENT LOSS OF PILOTS TO MILWAUKEE Bucks Zoom To 3-1 Edge Over 76ers PlliLADELPHIA (AP) -seven clutch Points by JOn McGlocklin in the final 11h ntinutes·cariied the 0Milwaukff•Bucks lo a hard earned 118-Jll victory over the Philadelphia ·?Gers Wednesday night, and a com'manding 3-1 lead in their National Basketball Association Ea.stern semifinal playoff series. The game was deadlocked at 111 with 1:33 remaining when McGlocklin wai fouled by Phil8.delphia's Dai'ran Imholf. He made the free throw to send the Buck's ahead-by a-point-. Philadelphia failed to score an d McGloc.~din hit with· a long jump sliot to make it 11~111 with 50 seconds ta go. Before it was over , McGlocklin calm--' Jy dropped i11: four more free throws as the 76ers fouled in desperate attempts to get the ball. The series now goes back to Madison, Wis., for the fifth game Friday night with the Bucks in position lo close it ou t. Lew Alcindor scored 30 po!Jlts, but the 7-fool-I Milwaukee center w a a neutralized on lhe boards where he w11s held to seven rebounds, only two ha the second half. Imhoff and Luke Jack90n took turns battling the Bucks' giant. . Billy Cunningham was a one.man task force lor the 76ers as -be scored 50 polAIS on 22 field goals and six from the free . throw lioe. Cunningham scored J.f in each of the first and second periods, six in the third, and 16 in . the final quarter. He wu ilvolved, howe ver, In a play that may have cost Philadelpttla the game. 4 WJtb the 9COfe tied at 109 Phlladel~. IJhla'< Arcbie Clark passed to Cunning· ham, but ·the ball rolled off Billy', hands, abnost the length ·of the noor. The BuckS' G'reg Smith· picked it up and scored -with 2:22 on the~ck>ck. Jim Washington tied it at 111 with 2:09 to go, and·the1 McGlocklln took over. ' The 76ers, who were humiliated in Monday 's'tbird game by 3S paints; made up a point second period deficit to · ue the game at 80 8nd led briefly at 8U9 before falling ,behhld 16-83 at the end of three quarters. LITTLE CHANGE NOTE.D FO R RO JAS MIAMI (AP) -Minnie Rojas, an ace rellever with the California Angelll three years ago, was stlil in critical condiUon today from a Wednesday auto accldent"lhat tllle(l hi& two dilught~. A spokesman at Baptist Hospital said "there has been little change in Rojas ' coodilion." RQJa~· daughters, Lourdel , 9, and Barbara, a, died tnstanUy when the fami· ly station wagon went out of conlrol and overturned on the overseas highwiiy nc.9r Key t.argo. · Marla Rojas, the fonner baseball star's wife , was treata:t ror shoclr:. Their 7· mont!H>ld aon was unhurt. Low Level. Flight • ' 1 .......... "~-t.".J u;11.-...i. Astron;iut Scoit ·ca.rpenter teadies for. his first ride in an lndy~type race car, normally driven by ·~an Gurney (left) of Costa Mesa. . . Sellout Phoeiiix uo,wd To See· Lakers Tonight . PHOENIX (AP) -Phoenix sports fans. get their flrst look at champioosbip play tonighl when the Phoenix Suns and L<ls Angelet ~kers CQllkle in the thir-d game 1 ol the Weste.m Division Pla yoffs of the National Basketball Associa tion. The Suns, in their second year as an NBA team, · finished at the bottom of the lilt last year. A sellout crowd 'is e.s:pected at the Ve terans Memorlal Coliseum to see the game, whJch is on Chatmel 5 at 7. The teams will clash again here Satur· day nigbt before ret.urniJlg to Los Angeles ' for the Hfth game Sunday, Both teams have one win under their belt in the best of seven series. "And I'm hopeful," said Suns general manager~oach Je rry Colangelo, "that our fans can play a big part in these two games here. '"'ey are the most enthusiastic and vociferous In the NBA." coian,eto 1ald things now stand the way he wants them. "We wanted a sp lit and I'd say we're In pretty good shape now," he said. Colangelo praised the · play of Paul Silas and Connie Hawkins. The general manager-coach said he e:ipected the outatandn& play rrom Hawkins, but Silas bad surprised him. Silu is averaging 25~ points for Ute first two contests after sinking only 12.1 point. per game through the regular 5C8SOO. "Silas has played well," says Laker ~ Joe ~fullaney, "b~t he't benefltted by Hawkins being IO tougb." · And what does tltie m!'fwM ls assigned to stop Silas say? "The play ol Paul • Silos has been the big alory of the seriet," said Elgin Baylor. ''We ~xpected Hawkins lo aet his share ·of points ·ind rtllc>Unds, But Silas? He'1 bun 1 lltUe tot much.'~ . . cluslve TV lnlervle)r for 11n1ncl11 le&IOOI. \ 1•11 wu a matter OI economlcl." M aaid. •'I WU pUi enougb. to lvl A couple Wttkl.'1 McLain'• furniture' at hll 111borbon 9everly Hllbl, Midi., home ls IChldulld IJ>.go on auclloo April t for back la'I"! of more than 18,119t owed to the Jnlc1ial Revenue Service. McLain alJO said bo had ne•• 1"' oo a baaeball aame. Tiger Boss, Players Tell S'eiitnnents •• LAKELAND, Fla. (AP) -oelroit Tiger manager Mayo Smith old there was "no wx:ertalilty" in hlJ mind on the outc:ome of the Denny M~ cue, because !'I made DO plans." ~ that doy, whoa. New York play• at Detroit, Smith aa1d he plana to atart MciJaln. . "Everytlling wlll be ,.ttled down now unW July 1," Smith uld. "TheU July 1 when tie slwts •out the Y11Dfte1 .••• ," he added, his vcJce driltlnl off ~t completing the aentence. McLain also said he !'iabed ' to pitdl July 1 and said be would be In cond1dtlon to do ao. The aMOWlCt!ll)f:nt of the half-eeaon swipeuion wu received by· rather modest reapooau from the ptayon,.wbo have mainly remained aloof 111nOt McLain's first aua~on. "It'll help the clilb. Tbert't no doubt about that," said first buemu Norm CUii. "We've IOI everytbin& ..uled now," be added . "It's cut and dried and ... rythina ls out of the way. That'll ~p." Catcher Bill Freehan, whet crlUclzed McLain ID a just publlalled ·book aboul last season saying McLain wa given favored treatment, flnt said "no com- ment." But then, he paused ,and !Wd, ••t•t;n hapeJ it's not u bad u everyone pre-- dicled and I'm -rt that he'• not pt11- ing with us right now." McLain laughed earlier Wednesday when asked about Fttehan's book, but then said it contained a "few thlnp that made me mad." McLain said Freehan should Mt have broken the lock.er room confidence which the pltchtr said were u "secret as a grand jury." ....... · . McLain altc,.denied being giveo favored treatmeat, e1cept in being allowed ·to get treatment for hb: teeth. He laid the dental problems allo contributed to his other physical problems lut )'tlr, which included a IOf'e arm. Catcher Jim Price, the p ~ayer representative for the Tigers, aakl "I'm just relieved. I think all the. l'JYI felt that way.'' ' "A Deimy McLain you'll mills more than anybody," he 1dcled. Fan Reaction .- 1 Not in Favor Of McLain DETROIT °(AP) Many Detroit Tigers fans expressed IW'prile at ~ three-mooth tuspension alapped oo Kif pitcher DeMy McLain Wellneaday - and some expussed the belief thlt Baseball Commissioner Bowie Kuhn ~ McLain oU too easily. : "He's a bum " said one man whci ' . . . Identified bimself only as -Roc!iy: "A great pitCher with a IO-tent brain.''. Kuhn banned McLain for his fU: volvement In sports betting -not ilr volving bets on baseball 1ames -q{ 1967. "He should be barre'd for life,'' uld. construcUon worker F.d Flanna1an1 a patron of the Lindell A C Bar, _,. Tigers often party following home sames. "He's not .setting a very good eumple for the ylllmg kids coming up behind him.'' <:: Carl Kagnac. 41, overheard the ~ versaUon and came to McLain's defenM('.· ''The good Lord 1ave him a gpcjf ann," said Kagnac. "[.feel aorry 1foc him. It's not his fault. Blame. tt Qir the ones in the front office. Whtre wJI Jim Campbell? Where was Mayo Smltfi •. You've got to remember he won SI games!' --: "I thooght he was going to be SUlptDil. ed for a whole year," sakl Mr1. lJbda Robinson, a housewife. 111 think he ~Ill have gotten a year, but then a1alo he needs the money." , Not everyone felt the suspenaion wu called for. • "He s!Jouldn't have beee au•p«ld~ In the first place," said Freddy N~ interviewed on a downtown street. "Some people art not even sure the ~ he was 1eeused of were true." · GONZALEZ UPSETi LAVER TRIUMPHS ·· ·. JOHANNF.'lBURG, South Africa !..: Fred McMillan of South Africa ~ 1 major upaet ln the South Atric1n Tennis -Cbamplonahlps 11'-y by defeaUng Pancho Gonlaiel of L. I Angeles !iJ five sels In tho aemlllfla1' .. McMJllan . quallrled to mee' Corona_. del Mar's .Rod Laver, No. 1 aeed In the fintil. Laver earlier d et ea l ~ 4 Australlon·bom Bob HllWll~· M, 14, ~L .. I " . . 1 • • • -•' .. • • .. DUl.Y'l'ILOT CdM Lone Area lq All-time Swim 111 llOG£11 CAllLION .... ...., ......... oar-de! Mor Hip Scbool"s 400 yard friiOllYlo nlay team 11 Ille laae leldu ,,_ Ille Or ... e Coast ma in tl>e DAI· LY PILOT"1 lint 11111111aJ bypothetJcaJ l1rim meel The results: wtrt compiled by com- paring swim records from 39 Orange County blCJI """"'"· 'l1>e IOUrlOIDI of Bret Buurd, BID ~ ... ~ Krumphols and Bruce Black f•sblontd a nifty S:17.7 at the rtceit CIP llnaJs to pace 1be Sea Klnp to Ille vanity, Utk0 and in .-. so rtpla<ed lbelr own team of jlll for Ot1a19 County laurels in the eve11t. Rancho 4Alaml&041, bebiM tbe ovtrall ouperiortty of llvJ HaD. wins Ille tam cbampkinlhlp wllh 31 poinll to l'lllllltnup Au""m . "'4· lf•llmon, each a poillt bacll·•t. . Tlat tGI> Or-Cout orea team la the DllllL~~ dd Illar wllh II, (Q!>d for an& JJllQ• I co.ta Maa, ... Ille llmlgth of • I :IU In lbO IDO ._,. nlay event, OhlahOd .. -111-15. . ....,.. WU baaed 00 lbe slz 1leat -In· -e•eot wllh divln( ... -M ln normal lnv!tallOnall, polnll were &1!llded fer am tlll'C>uct> liith on a 7-6-4- 1-S-l ball. Rolay pobdl an clnuble the --· JlaJ1, -ltn IDdivldua1 lint place * * * ......... ltllel' ,.. '"" ' . '"' ...... -,. ,,., ....... ...... ....... •• _8"etf -,,. . ...,. = ,...,. lll.lll'f .... . .... .. , ... ·-,_ .. ...... ,_, .. _ ........ ·-·--Pu.,,.. Brea .... ........ Vo-- l :!l,I l:IM.J ,,, 2:2'.I 1:01 .t "" ,, .... ,,..., l:tf.I 11a.1 l:ft.J 1:n" M> t :n.i "" "" "" .... "" "" "" '"' 1M• "" "" "" "" , .. "" '"' "" , ... "" '"' "" r. .. Hirt jf.t "" '"' '"' "" "" "" '"' "" '"' ••• ...... ...... ... , ... Cl8111: tu h11ooi. 1~..I ia.11 •:Jt.• --Cllt) Or'ftcfl 1:11..1 ....... 1:11..1 "" "" -,,. ll•l•'I J:>f.1 •-P•rlc = ,,.It, ... ., ,,.. Martl11 • ...... Sdl9\llftlllf'9 -,,.. "~11911 DI....... BtH 1:64.1 ,, ... ti.I 1:11,1 1:'2.t 1: ... • ttA 1:6'.I "" "" "" "" '"' "" ... ,., "" '"' ••• '"' '"' , .. 1111 "" f'lnt S1.I ,., ... "" '"' "" .... ICID p,.._ •1.a "·' ,. h ell ,,_, S1 ... M PrM lt~I J: ... I ioo Brwtt Jol'Noll 1 :OJ,, • ,-r• Rtln' 1:17.1 "" Cesta Mesa ---,. "'" ...... ,..,_ Dlvlrie 100 ,,, 100 , ... 1'0CI ••rt ....... 100 .... ., -,, .. llllay """'w W!llltk11' Mlllol9k ·-01"''"°" Wllrtllll•r M,,_ Whll1k ... J, 1-111 • Ellison .. MMIW lbllr .. ,,.. Wur1W • ,,.. l!llOY • "* W11r1t1r .. '"' Wvnt.,. ttD l"rM W11.....,. 1• hct Wirnt.r -,,.. Bllkol'I ... ,..., •ddY • l'rtl Rt111 El Dorao -~ ""'' .. ,,.. ttftd • ,,,.. hrMtt ,.._ ....... -.... ,. ,.t., ...,""" NI ,,.. Ofel lvr,...tt --....... ---,,.. It*' ......... ,., -·~ .... ....... FoothlU .. ,,. ltr«'M • ,,. oi.1 w• ·---- l •ft.I ,, •.. ., 1:10.0 SJ.I ~ .• .... •:ot.S l :OJ.1 1:tJ.t , ... "" ••• "" ... "" '"' "" ... "" '"' 1 :~.6 1t70 1:01.1 1'70 11.t 1t70 2:1J.1 '"' Jt.• '"' "·' 1111 l :OIA lt71 ,,,.,, 1'70 1:14.7 1'7'0 3:'1.1 lrl'O '''°·' l tl'll ,,,,.. 1'711 n.1 1m 2:15.1 ,..,. "'' 51.1 1'111 51',, ,,,. ,,,.. . 1'10 1:01.1 ,,.. ''"·' 1'70 l :tl.S '"' ,,,.,, lrl'O I :4' S 1N1 1:5J.J lfff 22.1 1N1 i :U,) 1'70 ".. 1N1 n .1 , ... Jf.J 19" •:II.I 19't l :M.• 1NI J:st.1 1'11 1:.51.f ,.,, . 14.1 2:11.6 l:ot.t "" l~A •:XI.I I :It,• l :ilt.I 1:42.J 1:~.6 ••• "·' '''"' "" '"' '"' 1:: ••• "" ... '"' 1'# "" "" "" "" "" .... "" '"' "" "" '"' '"' '"' ,., "" "" .... -.... "' ,., ,._.c. J.l.S =::: ~ ;::: "" '"' '"' '"' ,., .. p,_ '""""' t: ... I .. ...., .... l:OI .. .,,. .... ):11.1 fil .... •• Grne ......... 1:44.1 ..... ........ ,, ... • '"' ,., ~ 2'.• -"·' t rN.J "' ... =~ .. """ --------C'.4:. -.,,....., "" '"' "" "" "" "" .... '"' "" '"' "" '"' "" ftnlahu, llnplarly domlnateo the meet. Hil five fintl are worth S5 of the Va- queros• 39 counttrt. Hall wu a otlver medall.11. In the Jl88 Olympica al Mulc9 City and boldl two prep •1Um11 mark& (the JOO ind.lvldual mtd1ey and Ille 100 ba<btroke.) Foolhlll Hllb't Slove Furniss, a Junior, moved Into atCOnd behind Hall in the 2lO illdo and Ute 400 free after wlnnln1 twice at Ille ..... t CIF llnalt. He'• about four leCOOdl behind Hill in each.-. .U.Tlmo Orap <:-, -:lllO medley relaJ -I. Anallelm !:fl.I 2. Colla Miii l :G.I J. FulllrtOn l:a.s .. CorGW de! Illar l :G.l l llancllo Alamllol 1:41.0 •• Sim1Hl1ls1:43.J. :lllO fJw -I. Hall (RandlO AlamllGI) I :fl. 7 2. Strenk (1'ullertoo) I :46.1 I. C. F'umlla (l'oothlll) 1:4U f. (Ue Morlln (CdM) and Laahlsook (Anaheim) 1:41.4 6. Corey (~ Hllls) 1:47.0. . 50 ·!Ne-L Cany (Sunny Hllll) n .t 2. (tie) FrowJer (Servile) and 7.orn (Bueno Pork) 21.5 .. Farmer (Newport) 21.J 5. (lle) Kooiun (Anaheim). and Donaldaoo (Mlflna) 12.f. :IGO Individual medley -I. Hall '(Jlan<ho AlamllGI) 1:13.1 2. s. Furnlla (FoolhW) J:IU s. CO..ley (1\Utin) 2:0J.O 4. Reldenbaqh (Sonora) 2:0U I. Betk (Fullertoo) 2:03.8 •• (Ue) PGrter (Santa Ana) and C....y (Sunny Hllls) 2:01.1. 100 IJy -I. Hall (Rln<bo AlamllGI) 51.I 2. C-(La Habra) IJ.7 s. Arth * * * 11-tl ... toa Beu• -Mllflw ..... , 1:#.1 '"' JOI ,t.. l.,.M t t•.7 ,,,. .so ,,... McK.l"I' 11.2 1H6 "' ..... 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Jl.1 , .. , lOI ,,... °"''' .... ltJt IOI a.ct Cl-. •.7 INf -,,.. Siii,.... •: "' ,,.. lOI lretlt Jll'IMtM l :H.2 IHt .. ,,.. ........ J :ll.O IH6 . f.ct Qlllata 200 MMIW ltttet t :•I.! 1t .. :Jot ,,_ ,llMfl<t 1:11.4 '"' • ,,... """' n.• 1t11 20I 1119 '""""° l :•..I IHI ~ lltretm ,,., I• '"' , ,. .. ,._. Jt.4 INf lot ,,.. "-'°·' ''" IOI lldl; ,,,.....,.. ,... ,. .. 400 ,,.. , .. """' l ;Ot.J "" IOI lrtltf IC:Wllll I :tf.1 lfl'O IOI ,,_ •t111 J:J1.7 IHt Les_ illlllps -MWleY .... , t 1t1.1 ,,.,. 20I ''" ,,...,_,. l rOl ,I 1t71 SD ,,_ l'r1"""' JI.I 1f11 10f '""' , ... lllWll J:Jl.I 1t10 Dlylne Mlllltk 1170 to; 'It Klick 1:11.S lt70 lOI ,,... ,.,_,.llfTI Sf.I Int IOI a.ct Dullfln l:lt.1 100 ... ,.,... '''"tom •:•.1 ,,,. 100 l,...rt Huff 1:17.. lt10 a ,,... Rlfl"I' J:U,J HIV U-11 200 Mtdlt"I' kti.r * ,,.. "'•"'11191'1 • ,,.. v...-..rt 20I ,,. ...... OMM Ml.,.. 100 ''' M1mllt111 IOI,,_ Wll- IOll .. Cit M9H• -,.... 0"11111"1' IOll lrtollt ..... -..... llttl•"I' 20I Mlflft' ""'' _. ,.,.. u...i.r .SO ,,.. DINltl- XIO 1119 LIHl!ltt DIYI"' Avtm tao ,,., l\tlln1 lOll ,.,.. DonlltlMll lot a.ck L'-"'d'I 4 ,,... L ...... 1411 100 lrMrt WltHlll'I a ,.,.. kill• 1:47.f "" 1:01.4 ,,.. n.1 '"' 2:17.t ,,., , .. n.1 '"' '1..1 1H7 ff.4 '"' •:U.I IHf J::M..S 1"6 J:M.f IHI 1:4.J.I 1m 1:•.1 Ifft H .l !Hf t :t4.• I ... ••• ,... lfff .... ,,.. "·' '"' f:ff.! '"' !:OJ.I ltlll f ;2t.J 1Hf Mlsslon Viejo 20ll M«llt\t 11.ell\t !;SI.I lt7fl :llDO l'l'M Coll 1:11.0 100 :911 l'tM L•llf tt.t lfl'O 20CI 1"81 "Tu"I• 1:a.t 1'11 DIY!M Me<:•rttw lt111 100 l"ly L-w 1:02.J lfl'O IOI '•M L-IH U ,! 100 100 lick Lundin l ;Ot.I 1'11 «IO FrM l tldt•IOM 1:17.4 lfl'O lOll lrt11! ~Hiott l :lt.) lt10 -"'" 1111111 4:01.2 lt70 NlltllpM't ll•rlH>r 200 MHl.., Rtl1\t l:d .I 1t£t 70ll l'rM LI l ll llCI 1:U .! 1Nt ,. Frn F1trr1tr 22.I lfU 200 1""9 Wiien 11".t Ifft 100 ,.IV ,._. .51.I lfU 100 l'rM LI lllllCI ... I lt6' 100 IHk W11'1"t11 l:Ol.I 1Nt G f'rM AW •:11.1 lt1t Ille ltHll Oet"'1rw I :CM.I INO 4 FtM 11.tll'I J;H.) IHI Paclfle• * MMlh" 111111• JOll '•ff Htwtll JO frM M•Ytl at llMll M-111 DIYI"' Hll'IHn 1111 'IV l1rcl1'1' IOI ,,.. J, M"'IJI 1• ltdc Keel .00 ,,_ M-11 lot ar1a1t Mw.11 • 't• 111r.v 11.,.I 1111.a '" l:UA ., ,.,, l:tl.t 41n.• 1111.a ~1•1.• ... "" "" , ... "" "" "" '"' .... :::: Rattcfao Al-Ito• 200 Mltlltr Rtll' 1:4.0 , .. , ilOf ,,.. HIH l:Cl,1 1Nt .. ,.... H1Mlltt H.• ltJt * h• Hilt l!U,t 1Hf TM 'If HIM JI.I !Mt IOI l'ftol Hlnc!IM JO.I 1'10 IOI l1clt Hit/ D.I ltft d ,,.. Hiii J:)t.t lt .. , ....... , ... , 1;01.1 ,.,. .. ,, .. ~flt'!' .,.,,, '"" Sflfllllefluk M Mtdlt1 Rtltr M ,.... ll:IM a ,,.. GINlltf' 2" I'* M•.-...11 1• ''' Muwttl ,.. ,,.. MKlll ,.. ... M91'111'9t! -,.,.. ..... IOI 1~11 AllM Cll ''" lltlt'I t r•.t INt 1:01.1 "" ,... ,,,. JilJ.f lf7' t:OJ.• lt1t JI.I lt71 l;M,t lfl't •:kt '"' ,.,,.. , ... 1 .... 1 ,,,. Winner Meet (Anlbeiml SU f. Eveoa ( onUqton Baacb) 11.l 5. G-(Colla Mell) 11.411. Cade (Garden Grove) lf.O. JOO free-I. Carey (SUMy 111111) f7.I 2. 7.orn (Buena Park) 47.1 3. Brown (l'ullerlon) fU I. Laahbrook (Anabelm) <U 5, Frawley (ServHa) 41.1 I. mack (CdM) 41.1. JOO back -I. Hall (Rancho AlamltOI) 51.5 2. Jteldenballlh (Sooora) IU 3. s. Furnlu (Ji'oothW) 11.1 f. Mlalolet (Colla Mua) llU I. (tie) Llppilldt (Marina) aod ,.._, IL& Qulntar11u. 400 lrel -J. Hall (RandlO Alamlloo) 3:31.J 2. S. Furnlla (FoolhW) S:fl.1 3. Slrenk (Fullerton) S:IU 4: I.ubbrook (Antbalm) S:ll.O 5. Krwnpbols (CdM) 4:41.1 I. Carey (Sunny Hl11a)·J :5U. 100 breul -I. Webb (F1111ertoo) 1:01.1 2. (lle) Corey (Swmy llilla) and J. Nock (W .. tem) 1 :OU f. (Ue) S. Furn111 (FoolhW) aod J-(CdM) !:OU I. Bruner (ltennedy) l :llU. 400 fJw relaJ -I. Corona del Mat 3:17.7 2. Anaheim 3:11.1 3. Fullerton 3:11.1 f. Simy Hl1ls 3:11.1 1. Newport Harbor S::IU I. Foolhlll 3:11.1. Final ICOl'fng: (I) RallCbo Alamllot 31 (2) Anaheim and Fullertoo SI, (I) Sonny Hl1la It, (I) CorGW deJ Mor 11, (I) Sonora I, (Ill) Newporl Harbor 7, (II) Scrvita I~, (12) La Habn I, (II) · W.,tem f\I, (II) Ttlalln 4, (II) HllJlo tinctoo Beach ahd Mlflna 3, (17 La Quin- ~l~~~ :::ii~ and Ganleo Grove I, * * * S•n Cle11-te • Mllllllt'll' ••11"1' 1:11.t 10e ,,... KllKPIM 1:0.4 '"' '"' '"' '"' '"' ,., • ,,... .C.1KMll ,,., M lllM Rtl'lf,.. 1:11.' ot\11111· ,.,,_ ,. ,,., Yltltlllltl IOI ,.,_ KtlKlltd , ... dl '"'"' ... ... ,,... Jt, ltrlftl'llf llO ,,..,, l11rrll ... ,,.. Rlll"I' ValeRcla * MfdtlY Jltl1J1 100 PtM Mtn1• $) ,,.,, 111«111 ' 200 ... 01'111111'1'1 OIVIM kH•Y , .. f'I• ·-It 100 ,,.. Memt 100 l1t11 Orttlletr1 ... PtM ~ JOG lrN1I Dlrl'l1t .... ,,.. 111111, Western t:4.l.f 1:Jl.1 n.• '"' 2:01.I 1:•7 .. ''"·' U.o J;ot.1 .. .. ... ... •:16.t l101.t ..... l:,..t l:Jt.I .... 1:0l.I J;ot,J .... l:lf.I •rll.O l1H .I J :H.O 1:•7.1 l:Jt.• 21.J 2tDt.• ».• ~· I :II.I •:Q.t l :t.l.t J;Jt.• 1:44.t l:JI.) n" J:OJ.• .... •1.1 ns l :U.I 1:0l.l J:lt.• 1;11 .I 1:ft.1 n• 2:1!.7 ••• ~.· 1:01.0 4:M.7 l:W.J l:)l.0 '"' • •• '"' "" "" "" , .. '"' '"' , .. '"' , .. "" "~ . ... .... "" '"' "" "" "" '"' "" , ... "" lffO .... ... ... "" ... "" "" '"' • •• "" ••• "" ... "" "" "" ... ••• "" "" "" ... lt11 , ... '"' '"' "" ... '"' '"' , ... "" ,., It&' ... ••• ••• .... ... ... , ... ... ... ... ••• ,,., ' ••• ••• "" ,,,. "'' ... , .. ••• .... "" "" "" '"' • •• "" "" "" "" ••• "" l:•!.I l'IS 1:5J.O lt.S 1J.O lft:I 1:01.0 ,,,2 .M.I lNI n.o 1"s ft.I ltu J:ll.O 190 l :Of.I lMJ J:l,.O ll'U 1 :•1.? ltl'I l:U.I lt1t 1J.I 1'1'0 l:IJ.I lt1'0 1t6l St.o '"' .... '"' l :Ol.t 1111 •:ft.I lt1'0 1;06.1 lt1' )1:a.1 ltlll 100 MNltY Rt11Y 1:47,S ltU 20I ''"· Lint l :J1,I U IQ tll ,,... Sfl"Tlllel'tl n .1 '"" XllO 11* L111t Jill.I lt11 Ohtlllt Jt wtfMI 1t11 100 Fir SWiii"" !M.I 1t61 IOI ,,... l fflll'otlr111 90.J INt 100 I m C-r 1111.2 1,.1 '* 'rte L1l'lf 1:•.I ltl'O t• lrutt J. NIU I'°'·' lfU .00 l't" Rtl111 J:lt.t !Hf Westtab1ster 10I Mfftt"I' llttll"I' I: II A "'' * l"rM H1111tlllt-l1W.1 1t1t ,., ,,... 111•1•• 11.J .... 2GO IMO Htftllltttt1n t :H.I 1Ht DIYllltl f'I-~t70 100 '" Klltllln ,,_, lHI I .. '"" Ot rff\11' 11.J INt IOI l1ct! M-1"'tlfl t:Ol.I lt11) .... ,,... H"'1111111Htl .,, ... , lt1' '°' tn11t w.1111'11 l;IO I IMt -,t .. ~•111 ):11 .4 , ... . -..... OUT AT SECOND -Golden West College second baseman Noel Paulson hurdles sliding Rick Nelson of Saddleback after stepping on bag for force out . ... ··--~·~ .. DAILT ,ILOT hltt n ll:lcMnl KMlllW during action l;letween the two teams Wednesday on Golden Wes't diamond. The .RUstlers won, lf>..8. Rustlers Trip Gauchos; Bucs Upended by Mesa Anteater Nine Captures Pair TURLOCK -Bob Barlow pitched a complete game victory and Tom O'Con· nor posted his first win of tbe season. Wednesday afternoon as the UC Irvine baseball team continued its march through Northern California opposition wUb a doubleheader victory o v e. r Stanislaus State College, 6-2 and $-4, Golden West ltimmed Saddleback, 16-8, and Orange Cout fell to San Diego Mesa, 7.-4, in area junior college baseball action Wednesday. In the OCX:: cont.eel, the host Pirates 1ot behind 7-1 in the South Coast Coo- f erence encounter, before scoring a pair of runs in the eighth on Roger Whistler's two.run homer to right. OCC added its final tally in the ninth. Dan Clark, Bob Leavy and Whi.sller had two hits each for the Pirates with Leavy getUng the other two RBI. OCC outhit ~Iesa, 8-7. The Joss was Orange Coast'• eighth In nine conference ooUngs and its ninth in a row over a three week span. In llle Golden West game, played on the RwUer diamond, the winners jumped out to a 13..0 lead af~r three innings, scoring seven in the opening frame and six in the third. Saddleback came roaring back lo cut the deficit to IU after ~even Inning s, but the Rustlers put the game away with a pair of runa in the eighth. Shortstop Buddy Moen paced the RusUer attack, hitting for the cycl e and collecUng six RBI. Moen's home run came in the first inning with the bases loaded and his triple followed in the third with one man aboard. . Noel Paulson, Wayne Kiefer and Rick Russell had three hits as Golden West collected 22, a school record. 511NleNdt UI 9'kl• Wnl 1111 Ill t 11'111 •rllrM lMOftKll.r, f;f t • 0 o Jiii' Hoot"· cf t I I I ,c11r111m1tn, u 1 o o 1 9........,, 111 • t t 2 Nellon, u 0 I 0 0 P1ul10n, :Jt>.p I J J J Smf11!, c 5 2 2 2 Ptf'llOtrlofl, c I I 2 l HOyl, II $ I I 0 l(lef1r, rt l I l I Stubbl, 2b l I I I Mtnry, p J 1 t I Dtrby.,.lr1, l'f 2 O O 1 COrl'lfll, II. • 2 2 0 WllU1m1, rf l 0 0 I ll!UHl ll, lll S t J 0 Sllap.ord, rt ~ I 1 O Moen, •• I J • 6 llloylt, lb J 0 t 1 JoMtllll, , I I I 0 Edw•rd•, »P s 1 2 0 Clroll. If I • • D Wl"8,P 0 000 Pr0t>I, p l 0 I 0 80111••· Jb l l l I Tot111 JI' In I "Tor.11 ... 1• nu Sate '' lllftlllll • • • StOdlltllclt to1 %70 o100 -I U J Goldin WHI 1116 010 02" -I' 21 l S•" 01111 Mnt ~1) Otlflfl (NII 10 .. . " "' •• r II rtol Rodo~1cn, 10 1 ' • • Paul , 111 ' • ' • Fl1h1', t ' 1 1 • Cl1rk. 211 ' ' 1 • CaPPtl•ltl, cf ' ' ' , Powt!I, 311 • 1 • • Killer, u ' ' ' • LHV'I, II ' • 1 • Minion, U·P ' • ' ' '· Klog, r ' • • • Bower. 711 ' • • • '· ICl.,g, cl , ' • • Kull~, rl • • • ' Wl\11111<", ,, • ' 1 ' HalJ", )b ' • ' • Pl!I, " • • ' • P..-cl~ll. !l'tf • • • • Crisp, • • • • • 0U1Mnll9f"ry, p I • • • McNnty, ph I • • • kholl!ltr, p ' • • • Toll ll " 1 ' ' 10!•1• ~ • • • Scort by lnnll'ltl • • ' Sin Di~ Ma• lOO .. 010 -' ' ' o .. 11{19 °'" 100 .. n•-• • ' Barlow hurled a full nine innings, 1iv· ing up seven singles, four . walks and one earned run in the opener. It was his thlrd complete game and likewise his third triumph against three losxs. O'Connor, a relief specialist to date_ made his first start a winning effort. He went 5 1-3 innings, giving up aevm hits and three runs. Dave Wollos finished the game in a relief role. The double win brings the UCI .season record to 17·7·1 and gives the Anteater1 four straight wins on the northern trip, Sl!COND GAMIE PlltlT· OAMI UC lllVINI CU uc; lllV1NI 10 .,,11"4 4 1 I I l l I 1 s 2 2 2 • 0 I I 1 0 0 II 0 0 0 0 4 I 1 o S I 1 I • a o i 4 ' 0 • 4 O I I Fttt1r, tr s.o.ntkl, XI HINtn, II Pll111rd, lb S.1k1, rl ~ ..... 211 And1r1C1n. c B1rlow, cf 5"nct, Pll O"(Of'NH'' P WollDt, p "Tot•I• •''"'" l 1 O O F1rr1r, II l 1 1 I Sykora, Jb 42 l1Crtlt ,cf J 0 2 1 SPlf>Ct, 111 • o 1 a f'l•n••"· U• l 1 1 1 Dadd, Pr 2 o oos11k1,r1 1 a 0 0 HtnHn. II 1 o 1 o Gteenw1v. 211 l 0 I I ,l,ncl•non, c. O II I O lltrlow, p 21 5 t • Tott ls JI ' ' ' •• Duck Feet Fins $6.95 & $8.95 Masks -Snorkles -Floats Cressi Full Foot Fins -$5.88 Cllampion Handball Gloves $3.95-$4;50-$5.95'--$6.50-$6.95 Handballs -Dutdoor 95c Indoor $1.10 Slee~ng Bags- White Stag Nylon -Spec. $14.95 Other Bags to $79.95 Spec. Nylon Bag & Pak $19.95 Rollo Gymns -Chest Pulls Door Bar Gyms -Hand Grips Trim Wheels -Barbell Sets Baseball Warm-up Jackets Boys-$5.95 Mens -$6.95 Baseball Hats, Caps -Hose Shoes -Batters Helmets Little League Shoes -$4.95 Swim Trunks -Cotton -Nylon Plain & ficured Speedo Swim Suits & Trunks $3.95 to $11.95 WHson--Davis:-Bancroft Dunlop Tennis Rackets Wilson T2000 Steel Rackets Pennsylvania Xjra Dull Tennis Balls Doze~ $7.50 . Wilson Heavy ~ Tennis Balls Dozen--$8.35 Slazenger Heavy Duty Tennis Balls 00zan-$1.oo Tennis Dresses . $13.95 to $20.95 . Men's & Boy;s Tennis Shorts White or Ivory-$4.95 to $12.95 Men's : & Boy's Tennis Shirts White or :Ivory -. $4.95 to $8.00 Converse . Tennis Shoes -Mens $7.75 Converse .Tennis Slides-ladies_ $7.25 Jack Purcell Jannj$: Shoes '-.SB.95 Open 9 a.m. to 6.p.m.-Closecl Sundays I I r I I • 1 1 ' I I • r1wrs11ar. Aprn ~ 1910 DAILY PILOT J1 \ At Bench Cities Meet Vaulters 'Ev.enly Matched I PlJ.Y IAU OffUHIU Of·Cl.UIFACE n'1NG FUN! t ,__br_w_A_v_N_E_c_H_AS_E_• --------' •• f1111lly, tll. .,,, .r tti.,,..,,. 1rriv.J. 011 D1cff\b.r 17.i: 1901 • 11'11• w•1 1lrbCtt .. 11. 11coiMf1 4or • flJ9Jit •f 120 I f1•t J11 • lfllll•Mt4• •l"lr.ft, A11 ' 191 of l11eredlblo 1cJi1 .... 111111t ''"' ,.,,.,..1blllty 11.4 .,,1 • .c1. It ,..Y -loo. o1!viaU1 ID mention, but the blft should bo Just In front al tho ctntor al tho dubfoco wh9n,... edcfreu· tho balL It Is 1n11J amul• ,_ ' many .,ittors foll' Imo thl·hablt of posltionln1thoballcorolQSiy: and thus suffor from ftliu.llit shots. · You will find tho! tt you alart with proper boll position In&, 1nd then conc:entralll durin& yo_ur swin1 on striking the ball squarely, several other swine fundamonlals will foll into ploco. Not tho lent of lhlsl is th'll such o proi:odurewill precticolly force you to keep your hood relatively still on both your bock· swing and downswint. ' Bue Crew In Action Saturday By CRAIG SBEFP Of tfM o.ilr ,..., Sllff Orange Coast Co 11 e•g e's How Pros Stand quest for a nationaJ crew championship gels under way Saturday in Newport Beach when the Pirates host San Diego State and Loyola Uni- versity, .... -fllltAf ..... ................. l•tftnt Dlri ........ HIMlf Mltwtr~ 111. 1>1111--lt 111, Mli. w1W:e. IMdt llllld1'11·7 ....... >I ,_,_ ''"'"' Df.,... ._........ los A"""5 It ~ Mtt-ol·1 1eri. Ila 1·1 -......... _ •11•1 0tvttM s.lf!M9 MU••"*• l't f'trllldlttlfrllr Walln OMIM ~ Alltnll 11 CllkllOt AlllMt lllds bttl~l-l 111'lt1 u . ... ....... 01...-. x.111c111n1 ......... Carolina N-Yortr Pflbbureti M""C W L Pct. Ga 1521.124 -· ,, l5 ,g, 1, 313'.J0tl7 3'(1 .... lW. 24 SJ .l'l6 .31 " u .V• l4 Wtstwl D(Yltlo• Otnver 45 33 .m W11lllnrkn 4 l4 ..ll3 1 Dtllll ., » ...$.12 Jl .. lOI Altltlft Ml JI .51l S ,.._ Orlllnl ll 31 .JOO ' X-Cll111:htd Olvlslon Tiiie ... lllllllY'• "'""' Lw Anliltel HJ, ,.._ Torti 101 ,_.._ lndl-11 K..,lucl<Y Pln1t1ur"1 II Ml.ml WHhlnt!Dn II "-Orluns .. ,....,.. . ._ N-Yori!: 1t °'11vw Pllbbul"llll Vt, Clrolllll -9 lllltlth. N.c. Wlllth'rf11t!t llf 011111 ••lllMflllt ..... " A-ice. .... _ WH Nfw Tort 15 w1.ii1...,.. 12 lllllmclr1 11 Bos loft 11 Clllc.tll'CI 10 MltwlUkM 11 Clev1l1<'1d 11 C1 llfomi. 10 OHl111d t Ottrolt t K1n111 CllJ' 1 Ml-11 S ... _...._ Liit Pct. ..... . ·"' • .m " ... ,. ... " ..,. " .... " "" 14 .Jn 16 .:WO 15 .Jll " "" W• \.At Pct. J'lltlbllf'llll It ' .'67 L• Anftl" 14 I .'36 Houston 1 J t -'ti CMClll'CI l' lG .•1S Clntl-lf 14 t .'°9 Sin Oltto U t Mt All1nl1 12 10 .Sd Plli11del1>M1 11 10 .J24 New Yori! II 10 ..$24 $an Fr1111:IKO 6 ' .50CI St. LOUii IG IJ .Cf lo\OtllrHI 7 It ,UI ........... , .. 11 .. tl'I k1n111 CllJ' •· N-YOl'tl (Al .t Clnc1nn1tf U, W1llll""°" t Pllll1delP11l1 •· Min-'• I Oe!roll '· Bolton 4 Chiu'° (Al S. Pltltbuf'lh I Sin OJ-7, O.kltnd I MltWtllkH t, (llftllnd t Sin Fr1nclK111 4, C.llfornl1 .t. (lO ln.J liou1ton 4 l•lll!Mrt J Baseball ~Standings La Al!Mllt .. Cl!I~ (NJ I HM Ytn; IN) J, SI. Loul1 I ·~­lll•lllullel-••t OM"""' .,, ... ..... Monlrlll Otlrott -v ... "'"" W l T l"tL eF GA (J 12 t ts JJll ltl 31 17 It ts 210 713 ll ~ 1• ,, 241 111 311 ' 20 lJ '1 tll IU '7 21 .1, M :m.111 2' 31 13 11 111 :t31 W•t Dfl'tlilol X-31. l..GUls J5 V 12 12 1'lltlbur"1 2' 3" It U 1'hll'"1Pillt ,, :n ,, st Mlnnno!1 17 U 22 56 OllU1nd 21 :Ill 14 5' lm AnMlls IJ 51 10 " X<llndlld 0 1,,,.11111 Tftt. ..................... Montr .. I 6, ... ton 3 Ntw York 2. T-to I Dttf"lll S. Cttlc;av9 o fflllbwll'I .. ,.PlllldtlJllll• 1 OlllllftCI t. SI. lovll 2, tr. T...,..,.._ T-fl:> et Plllllldllr>tli1 ............ _ LOI AMells .t Oelr.llnd' DI 111 .• "' 1t1 m 211 256 ·~ "' 1'3 2U CoHege, JC, Prep Tennis Summaries The first race will begin at 8:30 a.m. 'The best vantage point for spectators is the OCC crew base, adjacent to the Balboa Bay Club. Three races will be run over the 2,~meter course. The frosh event will lead off, followed by the JV. All thrft schools will be featured in both events. The varsity race will include only Loyola and San Diego State. The OCC boathouse, now of4 ficially the Intercollegiate Sailing and Rowlng Base, represents the halfway mark. Coach Dave Grant's °'C crews have finished second in the nation for the past two years at the lnterCQllegiate Rowing Assn. Regatta i n Syracuse, N.Y., the world series of crew. OCC placed second to the 1..Miversity of Pennsylvania in eight.man comretitioa in the junior varsity category in 1918. Last season the Pirates went back in the varsity four UC 11'\'1"' "' Ill W""'1" CQmpetition and finished sec- (J'c'ri ~ ~'r'':r. E1rt O'Hrrtt ond, losing only to Rutgers. 01~f:"!w1•£~ 1uco *'· H•l'lllll This season Grant will have H~~!I.' .... ~'J\;l: 7.J_Ufl~ dtf. 1v1r a varsity boat with only one strte T•I cuco def. Scott Ford freshman , s t r o k e Steve (W) u. ~ 7-5, Reichert or Corona dcl Pttar. cw;r:z f.:;r~ cucn "'· Jot Ac1""1 Three veterans of last year's Tri: cu'tt{•t:!~~~t: °''· 111cti•rd mA will be .in the boat. They O'N1111 -i Na1e111 1ucn drf. Httn• include Jim Haddon, L e n Ind l+t ..... C'*/' "J:..M· w k ' -M B b ou"',..•nd 011 ~ -(I ..,, Jtb1on1t1J arne e, ..._.rry oore, o '11v1n ~~11 cturt 'N~nd' cUctJ White, Brad Shoemaker, Doug rJ; Adam• n M1r.ii111 <WI u, Schaumburg, Greg Amestory, .'!-. <•i 111 ...._ w"' and coxswain John Nielson. Mltilel Haddon and .Shoemaker are ~~~ :!~' .:;1._:-i. "1 • Newpart Harbor High pro- Trm 1ow1 io.r. ~ ._.. du cts while Schaumburg ls ~::i-,J.;~l.,.~'w."~'°2 Crom Corona del Mar and H•~-1ow1 io.1, .,1, .,. White prepped at Mater Dei . Trm •nd T=:: <GWJ '°''· '°'• Warneke went to high school 6-2 at Lompoc, Moore is from WHI •NI ICHM CGW) loll, .. 1. f.J Whittier and Nielson is a La H1111,...,1 I PICI' orr IGW) -· •. ,, "1 ·~ on s/.::I.. WllfMIMtw Canada product. ~ 0 -•··· ,, The freshman boat wlll ln· • ••-J loll lo Jal'lnion IW •cJ:' ~ ,.,,,.., .. 2. Krottr elude Mike Mills, M i k e "l.'.,,,.tt -':·E1 ·io.t to ~ ,..,, DeSilva, Dennis Wallace, Gary !lid fr1Me U. dtt'. ICroTtr .,2, Doughe Ch k GI c-n "2. rty, uc egern, ,:!~~2~ \t'~:.f,'°~~':t '"" Bob Fowler, Clint Reynolds, """' El 1m1 10 Jal'lnlOI) '"'· John Davidson and CQxswaln Fr11'11!1 l , dtf, ICroTer 1·f, Corvtll 7-S. Art Addeman. K....t 1111t K~.i-t IEJ dlf. Following Satu_rday's event, . :;us:~::: .• ~ w~='1vJ~!1.'t. u1 OCC will fa ce Cal State (Long aowm1n Ind 1os1rc1 <El 1o1t 1o Beach) and UC San Diego Gr11tb11ttll Ind' l•ron U. H i lied ( Lo Beach 'I ' FltllWAT L1Aeu1 1CJ1rw11 11111 w11111 u . ...._ a ng n a r 1 n e KennlCtY ':' ~ •• 1.,_ tm"f1~~1Mlll' Stadium on April 11. 'Sev1nr. 1 o ""'"' On April 18, Orange Coast u H•br• 1 • hlrbl111 IEJ 11t1. c11o1 1w1 .,., will host UCLA. Lowrlt 1 o IMI to Mtvrrett IWI W. dtf. Slvclley Fu11........ 1 1 ~ c1111i111n ..o. Other highlights of t h e Tro'f 1 1 HllTll• flf. Chol ol·f lost to 811tn• ,.1111 0 1 MIV-" _..., ltvdl.., u. 'd:I. c1111t11n /Jfason include the San Diego Sunn, Hrn1 o 1 ..,.unttr IE) dlf. Chol "'· '°'' to Regatta on Aprll 25; t~c l• ~:~...:, .. :" ~ H *'· Stuck.., f=a C•1t1i.n Newport Regatta on Maf 2; t-H J. Tm 1 c1t1r 1e:1 Kid Chol M 1_!11d MIY'•rttt and the We.stern Sprint g frldlY o U. dtf, JJvdlty ~ C1h1111n M, : Kenne<N" ., ._ -.:= ~ championship at P.1 a r i De s...n..., HHl1 11 11v._ like •"' Wl'-tEI Iott "" lv111 Stadium on May 15-16. ' -,, L• H .. , 1M *mllll lWJ1 ':'il U: lltf. $peer "" • •I'd """""" ,.,., ~ k The IRA championship will ~ l-11 et l'ufltr"lell s1--tM ~rltaltr l!l lost M, SOUTMlltfll CAL COM,llllfllCI W1 -.... "'· ...,..,._ be held June 11-13 ln Syracuse, w L fie!. •• ..,.........~;I =· N.Y. &.Act: ·--· (I) cu ............. ' 4. 1.llDll •• : ____ '-...;;;__:;;__.c.=.....; ____________ _ U Hll'tlor 4 1 .D \o, Hondo tt .JDI! ....... ti ... "" Witt I I .201 n!o u 1••m .Jo. T~..,..I 9- 1.ACC 11 Rio Hll!ldo ,....,.._ 1.ACC ti Goldrtl Wiii f Cl'ltflU 9f E1st U. -I.A lill'tlor tt 11111 HtrlM • SOUTH COAfT CONfllt•MCI W L J'ct. •• Crrrtto& 1 I I.ODii ••• 'ul1t<'h:rft • t M7 ~ Mt. San Amonlo s J m 7\t StnOllM .tf,,..J Sin 0"9o MIM t J AO • Sll'll1 A111 I S ,1,1 lit °''"" COltf I r .111 1 w ....... ,,.~ Sin 01111 Meil 1, or.,... C•tt I C.rrl!M 11, Slnlt A111 4 S111 01190 t, Ml, SAC I l'ulltrtton. lml --Slnll A"I 11 San ~ tn S.11 Oltto Mftf 1t Mt. SAC Ill Ctn"llot 11 fvll«IM Ill Drtlltl C:0.1!, bl'I DlllllT COfn'lllllKI . W L I'd, II $t. Sin JK'"" f 1 .171 , , , M!r1 CO.It J 1 ,7to .t e-rt •tM7.I ~'= \111111 4 t M1 .. Ill \ltlllt' 4 ' .. J .. ,....., IS .Ml lllld~ I 4 .m I Clrlwlflt 1 I .... I ~,. \ltnlt • ' .... . ·---Mt. Stn J1C.1t1i. .1, 1ten• M ·--CtrtYlnt w1. SllllldltHdl It UC lrv1M '" lm-111 V1/ltll tt ltn19W ffl Ml, Sift Jfl(llllrt .. Mlr1 Ctill UJ (\li<for Vllltt' ti 01Mtt (tJ tll Vllr6ft brt ' ' . ~TIRES I~ TIRES ' BUY IN PAIRS AND SAVE 20,000 MILE GUARANTEE BRAKE REUNE 21 95. M°'t Amork•n <•~ . . l*c~-.·, 700.13/69.S.14 73.S.1 4/ 68.S.15173.S.15 2 for '34 , 77.S.14/82.S.14 77.S.15/825· I 5 2 for '40 85.S.14/88.S.14 C)Ol).15/91 S.15 2 for '48 This is not• prmt• auamttH. Nfw "1Mt will bl instilled withotlt chltll flf P1rts Of Slbor -sllould Hlest br••ts wtlf out or f1il U to material Of workmlfmiip Ui!W tfle 20,000 111ilt period. Tiiis eu«lllltt is IOl trnlerablt. ma mm:m Em· mm:m , 7S14/7.71-14 7.71-11 &.Q0.14,tl.Jl.14 Wbll di ... off# VOii •I HAalOll AVIATIONt VA fllllr ,..,...... fly. IN cwrw. tllr\I All' Tr.-port • .,. Int. tl!O llllt c!Ub r•llt 111 °''""' eounw. 1ns1ruc'°" w11o urw ....,. pro1 ... 1on1u1m tlld ltMI 1i,i.1 .. .,.. mocltl 11rcr1n. "lrlnl lri -C!llo -• • V1'1W1 Ind ftl .,,_. Isl fttolrt fllt 1 1nly U .W'. HAll•O• A\llATION, t J141 WarMr A.ft., ,_.llllO. 0,.. t ~ from Wl!l'IM tu ''°""" dlllr. 7a.11 . ·' , . 1 • ) .. " ' ., .. .. ... -' . .. .. . .- ,, ....... ·2a-a8 ' -~ ,. . 2:;~2 l',ll I ~]Q 4'i ,_, ... lb.T• $Z.17to2.2J ~ .... ,, ......... ·"-r...lb. Ta f2.47•2.IO ... a.. ••• . . ., ... -. ..,., ..r -. ' ..- NON=·•N . UNI~-~ IV ·WHILE THEY LAS'r SPECIAL PURCHASE-:; /SLIGHT BLEMISHES MS1RAI( GI.AS-BELT ;~ . ·' ·-· .. , ". ~;· ')· :un.n.u ,.,..*!e ... .. • ............ ,,... ... . . . " ,,..~·"''" -·'t:=t: .·. 978-1 /Ul-lS ..,.. .. ... . ,. l'h11 FM. la. Tall l'h11 rN. b , Tall •' ,.11 .. "'""' ,_11r1 $2.'3 fo .. " . $2.77 hpn4l111 PM-.,_ii.t: on •Ir• ... 1111 DUAL WlllTEwAU.DNLY $2.95 MORE "' .. _,,1-•-· . . 2for$48 e,H 11 $27 95 J71..1.t/7.7S1\4 17'-IJ/&.UdS · 170-14/LU114 ll70olS/WJll "",'-'~~t'At~ p .os no.111111111 "' .. _.,,,, ...... Your cholct Red' ot WNt9 Stripe. MOit ._ Jn ltOdc. , 4-U.S. $ft~9- MAGS T · (Sprint Type) " 14/7 ~UtiE$ MOUN'll~G· '" •• TRAJLERTllilru:i:::~:--..-. __ ~:ii$~ •FOREIGN CAR TIRES• WIDE'l'IRES• WIDEUVALS • Si'EELREINR>RCED • 78SERIES • 70SERIES • -~:: ~itp Tire Stores I EASY CREDIT TERMS ·I SANTA ANA I KARIOI AT IOW. 13'~700 r~J UNIROYAL r ' ANAHOM I 1961 l•OOKHUIST (AT llllCOlHI '3~1110 CORONA U6 W.6'11 IT. ns.io10 SANTA ANA 1211 W. WA•ND Avt. (WARl'lft AT IRISTOU s-I TUSTIN I 111 1. 111 snm (hi AMD "0" JTJ 544-9431 I GARDEN GROVE I HAWAIIAN GAaDENS UOl WUTMINSTll 119n CAISOll IT. Oi llOCKS fAST Of llAtlQ •nwEO. l'IOIUl~ a llOCWN.I) 193-3595 165-0227 W!STMINSTIR -, WISTMINSTI• AT CIOA• d 11.0(l(J I. OF GOLOUI WfST) HWS21 COSTA MESA- NEWPORT BEACH tD WT 1111t·IT. '4M1Jt Ull TOUI MA.IOI CUDIT CAID I OPEN 8-8:30 DAILY/8-5 SAT. I lftJNTINGTON RACH 1M11 llAOI tLvt. M Mlll IG'lll Of Mtl.MSI SJ6.7Sn I I SAN CUMINTI t27 ll n CAMINO II.II ~ 492 .... . ·. ". • •• .-.. •• ... •• .. l ·• ., .• . ' . . , ., ,. I .• l • I I ..... _ •• . ~..;. ·. " ~LY PILOT Tll11rsd17, April 2. 1970 ~11. . of the lakes ln lhe S«lthland have •tarted lo perk up\.~ ·are providing 1ngler1 with good catches or bass, cr•e. µwt, bluegill and call~. 'The outlook for thls weekend is ucelle:nt, provkling the wealbiei:. holds. , : imn. Like. Is prodUcing ...... good slrln&en of bau to •Ill """"11 ·on 'Smlthwld< Wator Galen and IW'face plugs. 'Thia writtr fl.shed the close by Jake this past week with Dielc Morril of Canoga Park, ud we found plenty of acUOn c1 ... to. lhor" ;. 'Ibe -water temperature, acootdiq to our flsh-temptor •. was :CS degrees from the gur[llct down to lS feet, and thit b wl)m ,.. found !be fish. , ' At this time of the ye1f the water temperature is very • .. lmportaat, and all bass analeri sb<Aild carry some sort of ~ • temperature gauge wtth them. 1. · · '!be wind and cold wulher did not ,..m to dlmptn , eplrlt.s of the fish nor the anglen as ll1lllJI llmlll of trout ('~.~ -;::e~~d<;..~lllB Predletetl 1 :: .._ Qeary, oner u• operator of the laU, predkts I lMI· Wl6la o.O t101t 11ne -.. 11t11m1 for all t11e tpedH ~ :11111111 ,_ m 6e lab wUI be ucelent '-~ · CJwy • -lllat some Jarte erapple •N .,,,_. _,ht la -It feet ol ...w .• ,.. 6e -· ·-"""'' the ........,~ CMftlll are .untq" · -1 11 rew wiltirftM to 11 I f I ! I • • I I • I ...... ue WD1 eaqht • dlftll+ .. Mena Cove. Boal retemtlom are DO leecer .eee111ry, t.t aailen •z ¢'11 iaftnDatil9 fll Jut JDmte lllldag rtperU CID pbooe .... ... Bu~ LaHetl •t Vall Lake ~ Earl Malthewt of Santi Au led ~ big l~h parade at VID ~ this put .... it by cal<blng 1 Ill~ brollleback. ¥atlbewl ""14ht the fish jurt oil the llnt po..., goinR bolo Ciao. BIJ .., a Bus Bua1er, end fllisbed the day~ with • nice 0.. llsb Umlt Tbe incruaed bla bite tfflDI ·.to be spreading to all .. cton of the lake. George Li>ballgb ot Newport Beach and Nels Tn!lolr of Downey corilblned fishing talents lo ~ two lbnlts of baa averaging close -to three p;ouftdl· each along the north lhore. The duo · were castblg ~I the shore Md rttrievinl :sem1-delp NIUllng lfeUbendm ond Smlthwicks. Crappie are also keeplilt anglers busy as the black~ .are ~ng to regroup . White and yellow Jits and live :worms ire do.ing the job on these ~ood eaU11.g pan fish. van Like is located only ei~ht miles off Highway 395, '.\.<la Hlgh,__w1y 71 , and Is open daily from a a.m. u11UI sunset. '.For boat and. motor reserv1tions, whlcb are nec;essary c11 ~keods, phone (nt) 676-Utt. • • s... Dl1!1JO JAllce• Gao.r IJ'IPmnen who plan to make a short trlp den to tlte -:J01111 llllet In San Diego, can expect 1ood. flalrlar ftr bli•• . .-en,ple at moat •f dal reterVOin. Lilies -."ll'ObM, c.,am-; 1'1 Clqlltlo ... Lo- otoy •re 111 prodUctac ttnc llzff bin to 111< JIOODdt. Black and purple plaJtk! worm ftlhmne11 are. 1tttlnK lbe 1D01t ud blqest fish , but u1lm flllHDS Uallow raiinier: plagt are getting plenty of action, too. Large BM• Folfn~ Dead One of the. 1a1*nl Florida ban ever to be taken out oF the waten of Southtnl California, WU found dead llld netted b7 a San "1>Iego warden early this week. It's too bad that an angler didn't have a chance to catch the bm bef""' lt died of old age. But as the old ·~aying goes , • • If there Is one big bass In a Jake, then there is a good chance that there is a bigger one. The ~s was fOUftd In El Capitan Lake so go get 'em. Big Bear Lake w-lng Vp ' \. 1 . ' • Big Be1r Late II w.nntai ap ·ahtr 1 eeld winter. and ' , • • · feW ludhip have-optped ap '* Cite .euon. Mott action f; Is by sbore" u1Jera flDlllg wtth TNT noaUng cheese bait l. . and salmon ew, but • few boat fllbtrmen are pJct1n1 ap . trout to %~ poulb trolling blades ad nrm1 deep la tbe bays. The beat aha al the lake to fidl ue la Metcalf 817 l ~ and Rookier B1y, with a fair number of bows belq: caaPt f , around the Stanfield· catoff. I' ~ Ba11 have not started to bite yet u the water temperature 1 • Is far too cold to liven ap tbete wann w1ter 1ame 11111. i According: to Homer Moore, oWBer of Bolloway'1 Landing ud ·,·:•:Jtng tbne ftlldent of Big Bear1 the belt bite 01 treat and J9an wfll be IJ'Omld the leCODd we$ bl M1y. Moore also -bid that the tro.t !loeldng prqn:m at Big Bear wW besbi • around the flnt or·May. J Stead11 . Run of BarrfU!tldo ' ii • -• • ~ ~ -. I Chapman.COllege overcame a 6-0 dellclt and went on to out.toOre the Vnlvenlty of southern California Trojans, H , Wedntsday nlg!rt at La Palma Park, Anaheim. It wu a.match of the na· tlon'f~two No . .1 ranked col~ 1tal1te baseball team• and when USC jumped out to Jix runs In Ute flnt Inning, it appeared the small college d!vilion leaden were in for a maulb\g from Ute Iara< schools' No. 1 power. However, co1ch Paul t>eese1s Panthers m • t c h e d those till runs in the bottom or the first, addecl another In the leCOnd and two more in the fourth to post the v)c. tory. 'Ibey outhlt the Trojans, IS. '· • BATON ROUGE. La. - Buk:etball stars Pi.9;to1 Pete Maravkh and Danny Heater have been dropped u students by Louisiana State because they haveD't been to clu.sts lately. Maravlcb_ - a b.lsy fellow during m:ent weeka, what with negotiations on a $1.t million pro ~ketball contract -uld he was too far behind in his studieg to catch· up. Bplh Maravich, who ls the top~. in major o\lleae hlslory, and Hester were aenJon. • \ PALM SPRINGS -Center fielder Jay Johnstone'• error on a hit-and-run single by Dick Dietz gave San Francisco lhe wlMfng run in the tenth lnning Wednetday a.s the Giants edf" ed Calilornla, I~. In eihlbltlon pl1y •. It was the first game for the Giant s, 6-S, since they returned from their !prlng tour of Japan. 'The Angels are J0.13. California rallied for two runs in the ninth to send the game into eJtra innings. • 'TUCSON, Ariz .• -The Miiwaukee Brewers of the Amulpn Le1gue -t h e former Seattle Piiots -won the first game In their hlatory. a M romp over the Cleveland lndlans In a Cactus Leaaue exhibition contest. • ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. - Len Gabrielson and T o m Haller slugged back-to-back home runs in the sixth inning Wednesday, breaking a 2-2 tie and leading the Los • Angeles Dodgers to an IJ.3 e.thlb!Uoo EVENLY .. 8342 Pilot ,_ Ct,.lflllfft ·-WhU• .... St.,n1n1011 ••• ic ..... 11 Ttttlt P1c.t Hiit O.OOM• HtlV9r.o~ L!trtll '"' S1.i>h'1'1 Mllltr M1l1bur)' ""' ll•ndff C11!11\tn T~t1l1 .---. .••• l . --• • I .... . ... , . . , .. •.' ....... ,._ .._ LIGAI• N<mc& " • M • ~ " • " ,. .. " .. •• M •• '" •• ... ~ .. " '" J. " .. •• "' .. .. .. 10. .. ~ • .. -•• .. '" '" ... ... .... ... ~ ... .. 111, ·~ ... >M ... "' .. M .. .... .. " ·~ .. ... M• ... ... ..., ... ,,. ... b• "" "' , .• "" "M !111 .... ·-'~ '~ ' " -••• . .,,, .. ~ ""· '"' ~·· "" "'" .... .... ~" . ,, 'l\ll, ... ••• "" ·10M "" Dr,, ... 'tNf! ~" !Ion, . .. co .• lit~. " ""' "'" :tah' • ... .... . .. \!Ar, ' tX• .... ... ..... .. ~ .... ..... , •r• , ,,,. -Cll.'I --.. ~ Pit.I, .... ----------.--------------------... --.... --.... --~-------~··---·~·-:··--·~~-~--~---------· ._---.-,.~----·--~-. -. f•·..J~)~:.• APRIL ! t:tl 8111 ._ (C) (60) >tttJ Dunphr. DID MMllJ W le1 (CJ (30) 8 CH YN 1., 1'11? (C) (301 SMiiey 11tm111, )trty Y11 O,kt. Mort1 Amst1rdtm 1uts1. D "THE GHOST AND MR . * CHICKEH"~OLOR stlrrinc DON KNOTTS! D TONIGHT'S IEST BET * M,wlo'• lOoth and funnlnt THAT GIRL! n IUH1J ai"" .., (Ct (!OJ (Tj "H•riq Toity. GoiM Ttrn0r· row.• Alwl'I ... ,. cold tlftcb lier 11rs and, t1N bl1 t. 11111 cun. lh• Nllls 1 sh1mbl1& of • fihMd COl!ll'Mrtill 111dltitn. GI T1 T• 1111 Ttltlt (C) (JO:\ flJ ........... lillllllt m • ..,..... ..... .._(C) I @II .......... (Cl (!: llf') 't.I Grin r11111t11." A1btrt1 ao.1, Am· PllO Soi« 1114 .ta. Yuqlltl, 0 Ill: D'Glct ....W. ttl "1\t -r• 11 i1e1 ...... (IO) CliiNI: _. llt. Q icUfl" (CO!lltdy)I w.:1• '66-0ofl 1tnott1. Join s111.,-. L~m 1:1se0Mce et t11e ~ (30) R$dllllllld, Dick S1raent, Sllip Ho·! 1:30 0 Q@ fl 11'9111W1 (C) (60} 111tler, Lurtne Tattle. A 1m1ll town •tiftie Doc. &oftt." A do&MPPll 1t1W!JPt 0tr tninett• w1nls to .tic-whose Ticttms 1r1 ptts of Sin Controversial Gift tlMll 1 11portlf i nd 1111 editor f!lricicl .ailhM tums lronsldt aui111s ~1"' '° aw~ 1111 •DIY 01 into 1 doautcM1. M1rst11 Hunt Elizabeth Montgomery receives an anniversary rrift, 1 ~1ut1led llo1151 bt1n1 tofn down, il\d Lio Ci. Clnoll ltllll. e.• CIM Yll ""* (30l D lt!CIJ IBa.+td!M (Cl (30) a painting or her great aunt. done by Leonardo da· ID nit~ (t) C.Jll •'Th. Mone S11MJ." Elldot•'• iitt Vinci. on "Bewitched" tonight at-8:30 on Channel 7. IDSt.,. TrK (ti (60) ot 111 trifinll 1.1Dq1rito 111 Viftd The present threatens to break up her marriage. Q}J (}) AIC ENl!illl Ill ... (C) (30) POttr1jt of S.~1!1'1 lflll 1111111---------------------- &J Nen/SW q.tltlM TtlltllH )IOp1rdta:• O.rr111 1 Job. c3o) CD._. '"" ._ (Cl (90) Gl)WW1Newf (SO)"S1ilin1 ~1 .~ en. lit,..., (C) (60) 8CIJCIS N ... (C) (JO) !~~f~ ·:,,.,':{:: Ill-(JO) ....... mo c.-. c3m S .... It Iii hlHld (C) (60) t:G0 Ject Whitl, Glori• Greer, P1tti 11 FATE IS THE HUNTER ""'· * GLENN FORD l :!OCI-""'""" 1c1 (IOI ROD TAYLOR 1J'"""' ........, (<) (3 oo CBS THURSDAY MOVIE L1Mrs n . Ph0!111iJ Sllrtt. 1J QI CJ) en """"' llltfif: 0"' ........ (C) (30) lllll\· .,.. h ............ (...,,twy) '64 cy Walklr, SllldJ laroft tnd Ctr· -GI•• fonl. Jtncy 11'11'111, Rod "'" MldlH llMll T.ylor. Smt1111 l'hll'tlttt. st&ry ol m lft rl'llrite llll!tiH IC) (l!l) an tir llit9sttf. ~111111 1U but I @(])Piny 111 .... {60) 3t1w1rdtst. m 1'ld: 111.,.. s. .. .., I a cm m aa T• *" m t&Ol ~ ~ --~ (30) S1"""' 11.it .>r , tnd Tht B111d -1.11 J '"' an4 Clloit of TIM Wtlsll Gu1rd1 ~ :ni" ~1:~1\;~ C:~11 ••. . r\1111 Pl'Olflllt. fo1turin1 Mttrvpoll· II> Al9ll '* , .... (30) !111 f$lfl I~ 11111111er Rudolf 1;30 D 0 (j) Im...,_ tc) (30) Bhlf. "R~The HllHSl111 W1l1." Qt Cl) TM 11.-.a f3(1) Sfl:. fndlJ tM Officlr 6111non in- a> Jllttdn l4 CC) (60) ::sn,-:;, ::":11~:' 11e~11~~ l!J QUI Nnt (C) 130) wrmet tiuablrtd. Pim Wtbbtr and GD~ ,, (30) Ht1' Elli& ..... 8 .... (C) (90) lllllM NMf/O Y.S, [lJ Yum. 0 "'-«t) QC)) l ultt W1rL , •• cas (""ill( "'" (C) (30) at.._ (C) (30) 1111 .lohns. W1tt1r C~ijt1. Cl WW1 MJ LIM? tel (30) Q'£) E*6I • Mlftlf (C) (30) GI I .... ""' (30) 10:00 B @(!)ID --(t) m ..... ·~ ~ (30) I (60) 611.m .,. fonnt TtlQ.tf, -1"1 Gill M111:i111, G1M lll}lol, NOl'm fl)C..llMltJ l'l*t I llllllM~ Crosby, Ch~ Nel1011 R!illy 111d w--(JO> I J111a "'""'· ID C!J "' -•nt m 130! O tlll CD l!l '"" "" 1t1t60I m ~ (30) -I 1111 "A Tm11 tar lyinr." .latk Bien· QI (J) Tmtl • C.....llllClll (ti 111~ toll ti ttM 1MI-ef 1 U.S. S11p<t111t Oii.Ht tefjc. 'll'ho h Hhll dJlnMI ~ (C) (lO) blacknlliltd. E. C.. Mrrsfl11l 11\d tB S111pl11111t M1rll (60) An111 Btmr 1uet. G n11 1111 fCl 1101 o t "' rel 160) J:llBfB(J)F•ltJ Ml111' (C) (llll m""" «C» f&O> BUI Onli" prooaMl tn1rri11e to ID..., ,._ (to) .lllliM Ptrriw, •~ ltlracliw rrench fDTlll ""-"' (C) (60) (R) lirl ti! Tahiti, tfHI 1111 Ol¥il c.l1n B:f 111115 (30) llNtt "9ti6I 'l'lllttltf or "°' lo m i.. c ....... (60) llltlit I 111nn1111ftt lllOVI lo tM lsl1n4. Co nd1111io!1 of two ,.rts. )ID:!OIE..,. (30) amm m 11r1cp;L1 tli11:11naauem• "••• t.Mlft1-ie D191 (C) (60) A M· ("fj ltll• tll IM """ wllo bYI cre~ttd G ....._ -.... !Wiii ~ D«1)1d1 OllCll thouttit lmpmrblt (comedy) "S2.-Mtttall• Mntr. A11111111 the ldllMmlflb wml~ itnni, DMill1 hcct. 'Applause' Lights B1·oaclway Tl1eate1· By \\'IWAt.1 GLOVER NEW YORK (APl - ''Applause," a musical to cheer for exceptional anti ex· citing accomplishment. lit up lhe Broad\vay season ri1onday night in premier at lhe Palace Theater. Lauren Bacall gives one of her finest, most fiery performances, with a lot of superior talt>nls around \'Yin!: for attention in the unusually strong story . To complete the prime cred· Jts, also note the brilliant cos· turning of Ray Aghayan; the cleverly Cilmplex settings by Roberl Randolph that evoke the midnight w or 1 d of backstage showbiz: a sensible, meaningful score by Charles Strouse and Lee Adams: lhal aclapt at ion by Betty Comden. Adolph Green, and shrewd directing by Ron Field. The production is ~n unusual combination of tried aod new craftsmen. The story, derived from that cinema classic "All About El'e," tells of the sweetly viciou11 rise or an ambitious ~irl to theatrical eminence. The essential familiarity ill transformed Jnlo interesting credibility by the Comden. Green dialogue and those smoothly perfected portrayals. The singing collectively is a lol better than in most recenl musicals. Miss Bacall , as the established star who unsuspec· tingly fosters the upstart, handles her tricky emotional gamut w.ith ingratiating poise • Romping wilh abandon in jiv· ing. don't-care dance routines, or suddenly tormented by the rears of a lost career and love. she is tot.al and spectactilar femininity, Penny Fuller does t h e amo ral minx with quie t elo~ qu,ence. Len Cariou, as Miss Bac4ll's amour; Brandon Maggart, Robert ti1andan and Lee Roy Reams, a .!I playwright. producer a n d makeup man , avoid caricature that could easily harm. Directors Sought by Playhouse Directors interested in stag· Ing one or more plays at the Laguna Moulton Playhouse next season are urged to .11ub- mlt their resumes as !OOn Thursdu, Aprll t, 1970 No. Cash for •cadila~' . . • ' • I ' \ Cou;ntry Singer Edgy at Nixon Off et •··But thi11a1 ore 1ti!l aon- no oet betttr, at le°'t that'• wit.at f-unden&Gnd. , ''They tett me thk new Pterident 1Mis put in a whole ·11ew p_overty plan. "He's gonna send 11,• poor folks mone11. mc1i; tl1ey ,-aW We're gonna gee It out here in .stacks. "I" fact, m1.1 ·wtft is al· read11 &hopninn 'round for htr" CAdilac. '' -From "\V el/are Cadilac." WASHINGTON (UP() -A "'hlle back fresldent Ni:i:on heard a Lape of cOuntry mus;t. One song, ''WeUare Cadilac. '' so fascinated him that he ask· ed country ·smger Johnny C-.sh to sing it during a Wbite House social April 17, \\1el(are and civil right~ leaders protesled, They said "\Veliare Cadi\ac, '' s p e 11 e d with one 'L.' pokes fun at peopie on welfare and depicts 1 shiftless father who relies on •·rool" taxpayers . Mrs. Connie Stuart. i;tart director to the first lady, said . despite the controversy Nixon did not repudiate his request and was leaving it up to Cash. li1rs. Stuart said she talked with Cash by telephone and he made clear if the choi~ 'vere his alo111e he would rather not sing 'Welfare Cadilac.'' Nixon also requested Cash sing "Olde From h1usgoget" and Cash's Grammy award winner, "A boy Named Sue." Mrs. Stuart said Cash said -. . to perform "lhb song at the White Hdusc, subject o l course, to PresldtnL Nixon's , , de8ires 'a.od Mr. Cash'• •P· prov al." ' \Al~H- he woukl be more than happy •1Ttif: to sing "A Boy Named Sue," C()MIC•• but "ht? had rt.servallons about ro litDflf UO<Ff• "ll'ellare Cadilac," which be VAN DYXf/lEE/ROOll Jaid ~ has ne\•er sung. 1:1.-r..i "'lY,elfare Cadilac,' sald1c,:..-:;:,,====""'=;:"":::;,,,;::;::,;I Teunessee \\' e I f a r e Com· I-= missioner Herman Yeatham, "degrades ·everyone · who has found it necessary to become a recipient." Sales of the song. composed and recorded by Guy Drake, reportedly have jumped from , 5,000 to 15,000 records 1 day. After Cash decli ned to llins it, Don Hosea, Drake' s manager , disp a tc h ed a telegram to the \Yhitc Hou11e v.·hich said in part : ''Should the news report be true, and should the President still desire to have 'Welfare Cadilac'' perfarmed on the program, "'" humbly ofter the s'!:rvices of 1'1r. Guy Drake HOW iSHOWIN• "F.ANTASIA" An epic drama of adventure ·and exploration I June Budd to Solo In Laguna Cantcitci T•litM et I ,rhl•Y et l :JD S1t. 1:30, 4:SO & 1:30 • DAILY PILOT U Steve McQueen lheReiveri ~~nlC'f ftlm~P11!~l,lt ~"' •"-•t•l~il~ PICIWf't) Rtltoll)< .. ALSO '4•ST •UH •10••1 klHHIOY JIM llOWN "Tick ... Tick •.• Tick" 1.,.. SH• Stwtt. ~ P.M. C..t. Sell.,,_ 2 P.M. 6reete11 o •• ~i. ,...,,. et All TllMI "THE REIVERS" J Ac.._y N•l'""'9• Steve McQueen lhe Reiveri / "" s..eH tit ,..,.,. .... L 111 .... ..., ........ .. Tiit WCI a" 1 '1-·--- ENGAGEMENT 2 •• HOW IN ITS WUI • TtE ADVENTURERS : ON THE TUBE Fer th• i11tf 111ilf1 to' .,.hit'• h1pp•nin9 1111 TV, t••• T'I WEEK -.u,+rlhut11f ... ah 11>1 S1turlfty 1diti1111 •f th1 DAILY PILOT. To ___ ..,_ .. _, ·---·--........ -M·--' 1rt the P11111M Clntl, Ute Cialdtn m --... -..... Gilt Btid11. t111 Holl111d TlJTlllll. Mount RllSlll!IM M11!10rill Mid tM (d111111) '56-GIM Berry . wi11nin1 11 the 1969 World Strits ID Ill s.N, DI Siii IC) bf the Kw Ytlft Mm. l " .Mtmn @CJ) ID (}) QI (J) ,.._ ft) If IWll!lt •nd 111mlof. 6t11sh 1.-dlldt m ............. ii llril'll' (C) GWC to Get Neiv Theater Next Fall as possible, , according to \VUliam Harcum, president of the pla)'house board. Seven plays are scheduled lr~:;;~;;~;~~l!I and will be selected from a groop of 15 recommended by a play production committee. ~m 'il\>l'':t They range rrom musicals to ·--·. • ·~~ .... LLWf 111'9~~,...., ii TMADVDmJMllS '\ ..... -.............. -1~r·1rctlitlct Buekminster rol·, 1er, 111ic1-1ter nptor1tio11 •xP11t 11:15@(])C'-"""""';"Mani· loll li!tdb1111!. lfllintu Dr. l Y. «." L•fll 111d Thi flftk DimeMiot ai111, -.,... ~, i<ll lfOun. lJ:JDfl 'ao((}.... , .. D tlll CD Ill '" ,,,.,, "''I B (!) C!J ID""" ..._ tel A C01M1fJ """ (Cl (301 Joey o Mi....., Pltrtl Ht1TM"°11 psh IS P1ulsen'1 tet·' 0 t!l)M C...U "(t) fltary. Q) »wit: ... ,. ... It St. D lllillio• $ Mottt: ft> "'ft C..tttl Tri11i111'1" (f.O!Mdy) '58 -T.,y· 1Ttilaf' lcomtd1l '55--Gary IO~tnl. 111omn. Altlltir Si"'. JoJtt Gren· f:itKt KtllJ. 0.. tllt Fr111th Rtvitr1 . ltll "' lll·COll. ll·Je•" tllitf hll• in • 1-ri.h 1 '!l'Mllhf American 1itl t Z:OO O c.w..ilMIJ hlltitl '-' CCI i lld flncll. hi ii ~sptcttd tf COii· 1:0011 MO'rir. """ rM ........ (com· 'm''""'-'" ..... tll!t¥1f1. -(30) 1dy) '53-h:r: H•rri.on, Ulll P1l111-• flMllUMC.• \"' 11, lndudtt eertooll MQUlllCI • m""1111.-160J OD .... ft> fETedtllk:ll IArMI' lbAct• T1IMtrt!: "'flit ltUtll m r.n hat (C) flO) ''GIOfltl llMI ...,,.. (d..-) '51)-jlftll!I M .. A prodlldlon bJ IM jlurblnkl DllMI, DfW1J Ml!Tifll, Cftlk llllrt D111r1 Compurr. hi h'.llll'der 1M diflthlr • .)cllfl E!!t" 1:30 m ~ Sllw: ~ Otlflbel ,uesb. M111." ".hJ"ll• Gold.~ "Mr. Pen1n !D C11l ~1 ~11111' t3(rl alld Mr. T11iH." FOR ADVERTISING IN THE WEEKENDER PHONE 642-4321 light· comedies la s e r i o u s l 0 Golden \Vest College is still dramas. Th e 1970-71 seuon grov.•ing. The next building on opens in September. campus will be a 250-seat com-The unique playhouse b<lasts munity theater. 11 IOS-foot space stage and The facility will be built to unlimited technical facilHies. hand le full-scale musical pro-Resumes m1y be sent to ducUons, lectures and Cilncerts t he La gun a Mo u It o n as well as drama . Playhouse, 606 Laguna Canyon Construction is expected to Road, Laguna Beach 92651. start in April. ..========,.::=;;;;!I Borrman Construclion Co. of Chula Vista received the con· tract on the project as low bidder among six firms. Target for completion Is July. 1971. in time for the opening of fall classes that year. The theater building was designed by William L. Pereira and Associates. .. ll1rbr1 StNl .. "4 "Funny Girl" Ctnrlnuou1 Sun. l :to r.M. SPECIAL P.T.A. MATINE E SATURDAY , 12 NOON "MISTY" pin ••rt•t 111 11 ....... IMOI -.,"--,. ......_UR , ... --. 1·1'31 HELD OVER PACIFIC WALK-IN THEATRES --.:.=) ' Ac""91t' "" .... N""lllllllfll "TMI llll"IYl'llll,. llf'I Ctllr ... "VIVA MAX" Ctl Clllr Shows St1rt at Dusk• Childrtn under 12 frMI t ACHtll\y A'll'IN NlrfliN llllll ... I , ........ ,..,1 "THIY SHOOT MOll:l11, DON'T , ......:,.~ T,HIYt" -COf'I Ctltr •----"-·"'="::'::'.1 ''fAlli.l THI MONI Y ANO lllUN,. 10~) cw 41111t T,i,11 •Ill .............. lit (lltr "ADAM I I VI " C ..... Cl.AY-MAllCIAMO ,I.NT -~llf' Ufllw 11 _. M wlltl f'IAlll "MANe YOUlll NAT IN TNI WIND" lllCtonln Of'•lllll Cl. Ea ~,] .. :0::r:f.~:;~n~i~ ... -·-· -_ STOC•IMOI" 111:1 f Ullfer 11 M•tl Ill '11'1111 f'1rvi1 ..... (tit( ... ,,., '""' "'•Altl(lllfSt lllt MUST ti OllTllOYID" (6,) ... . "DlllACUt.A N .. & ,11\IN P'IOM THI •RAVI" 10) .; __ _ ! ·---· ........... .--;,.-,_._..I 0-·~- j _... ............. .-·-·--" i ,... ..... .-~ -,__..,.._·Ui1Ui~1-..u:..-=-- ""'r.:.~: ·• POSSIBILITIES l•d BIG WEEKI NATALIE WOOD • ROBERT CULP ELLIOT GOULD • DYAN CANNON l ••ACM.•l • AT el.Lie MU .. TINOTOllll 81ACH ,~..., ..... Acod. A:w•rd Wh'"" THE OUTSTANDING MOTION PICTURE MADE IN AMERICA I - I I -~-·----------~ ~ ..... , .......... '\. ........ ~.\··,. . . • ·. OAllV I'll.OT ·:,.DICK TIACY ' TUMILEWEEDS PllOP 1'HE TOMAHAWK! MUTT AND JEFF JUDGE PARKER • YES, I nmll SO!' JS lMEU: A COFFEE 5'tOft ~ERE • n.tE. ,M05PlfAL? Tlwl'SdlJ, Aprll 2, 1~0 ¥00 \\!XJLWT SHOOT A lJNARMEtl MAN \l\Wl.VJA? • --· 11-IE SIRDS ARE OUT! ~ 11-IE BEES ARE OUT.' THE A.OWERS ARE OUT! ws. 1WEl'E tS! LET ME WM.k M.Qll6 WITH ""! t'P APPfECJATE IT .. lllT CAM YOU LE~ lltlCL.E CARL MDN E { By Tom K. Ryan By Al Smith By Harold Le' Doux ME'§ A.SLEEP! I CAN LEA.VE MIM Fotr FIFTffW. TWENTY MINITES ! • YOll HAVEN'T' ml.P ME 'YOQR WA.ME! ~EVfl.Y-,. VERY NICE! i I PLAIN JANE Crossword Puzzle At ROSS bt ff • Fool 10 Zodiac sign 14 "Message received and und ers tood" .1~ ~usten ·' •. tlOVel 1• r .. ,. .. ., ' .• • J'or111er PGA great 17 Stubbor11 42 "Say······!'' Photo· graphrr'1 phrast ~5 Of a mt1od ic subjtcl 48 To !ht point 4'J Hawaiian co111munity 50 Within: Comb. for m 51 Caust of many crlmt' 55 Eyt cover s S7 Movln11 -•.s · ···· hom plact 2 wDfd' lo plact 11 Truth 58 Brt vt tlislorttr 113 StrYt •t 19 L;ugt bird ~ tilt urn 20 ''Tht world fi4·Frag11ntl' will········· !iS Body of 10 his. rrllgfou~ doo1": wOl'shipprrs ·l WOfdS fill Noun tnding 1J Tranquil !i7 Ftvtr • 1tlf· 118 "Tht Grttn •'co~lldtncr Hit'' author ?) Conttmptlblt 6' 81cl: 7 Lt1vt out 8 Western US city ' Pub's relahvt 10 E9ypli1n ruler 11~nd1 chtct 12 Wake l1u11h ll Established 21 Brice 40 Young onti 43 Land poinl 44 WW·H command Abbr. 4• Essayist ol old 47 Planned on basis of standard dimfnsions J By Frank BacJIMlci PERKINS MISS PEACH ~I.Cf ScMooL. .Auttn>JIUI\ "fot>A..., A~'Tl41J"-STP..•.M .... \A/II .• \. i ~ I I .... .. ... . SAU Y BANANAS GORDO ANIMAL CRACKptS . ~ . . ". -. NORBeRT,Yov J€RK! WHY DON'T You Ger Cl JOB LI Ke ReGuLaR peoPLe[' ---BCIJ, 0000-F ~A Ellet1' 6U"fb ff.filllb 1fiAr c,txil2E ~ Dllf1l.J 1"1A:lfl'rMJr~ By John Miles By Men SO WHAT If A GALE OF LAUGHTER SWEPTlME AUDIENCE? THI STlAHGt WOll.O · MR.MUM ly Al Capp By Charles Barsotti @ . . By Gus Arriola By Ferd Johnson -• ., ll 4 ;.; •• .. - •.person 70 State : Abbi. 24 Too,t as 71 For111er one s own Dodger 22 Afftctation 2S PoOI 90Hrr 2• Sp1n's p1rtntr 21 Pltd!lt 51 New York Post or Toronto Stir ~2 Ory IS AJr:iNOV»C.E 111 s CoRE I f"OtL "fl\E lLLS ~ 1 ( • !4_: J opet great ~1tllnt .:,:t W. Ht111l1phfft DOWN ·>:·)lation: ·.'•'-Abbr. :'"t.orna•t n11I ' ..... "°"'' :•::111rden :...•3( ltQ(!t ' •, pf1ytt - ll !'o.•n 1oad '' l'ouc:ll 41 8adge1ed • l Nol colorful 2 11111111 city l --· C1tl1nl1 4 H1tm1t1r's. rllfl' 'iiflltrl al S Sweet m1\tri1I Ii Works on to ibSml lengthl 21 Cottonwood, ,_,_ JD Pottie eontr1ction ll Corporallon executlv• 35 Haul frOill one p11cf to anolhfr 3• One ... ytd ,,, J7 Strlh;hl· CoMb, '°'"' I -·-··: 2 words 51 M1rch King 54 Prod llghtly 511 Trap s• Part of speech liD Ctr1t11ic sl1b lil French \ti son 112 Unit In physics ~4 Cer111 911 in j ·rHe WorU.p . ! STEVE ROPER · YEAH/ ... LO'TTA-THIMiS WELL/ 'JaJ MUST HM HAPPENED, ZAN.' .. AND t4AO AN EXHAUSTING THERE'S SMTHINf I DAY. FRAtf<IE ! fiVNIT '10 TAA'E UP ;=>..__, WITH lQJ ! PEANUTS By Saunders and Overgard DENNIS THE MENACE ~ f 1 I I ly Charles t.9 . Schulz '~----; I _, • I I I I . . , • .. • IM .J ~· -· , ->· , . • -. ' .. , ·; ' --. •• • . .. . .,~ • -., '-. .. ,. .. :l ~ .. ., ' I l ' ' • ' t• ... " ·J ' ' -" > ! • -, •• -, • ··.; .. .. ., . , ... " ... ,. . ·! 1 ., " I " . I ~~ FOR SALE I HOUSES FOR SALE O.wrl 1000 Gener•I . 1000 j efinJa J j/e ·PR~STIGE WATERFRONT HOMES SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT 15 Linda 111• Drive Ne & beautiful 4 Bedroo1n, 5 bath home ,,I( large sunken living-room & fam . rm ., \Vel bar. Radiant electric heat. Carpeted & Ian caped. Priced ................ '155,000. 16 Linde lilt Drive New' 5 bedroom, 5 bath home witJ1 upstairs vieW. of Corona del Mar hill s. 3 Fireplaces & BBq. Luxurious carpeting & paoelllng. Land· scoped. With dock ................ $145,000. : 77 Linda 1111 Drive N.ew'. S Br., S bath home on lagoon. 1'1arble en\r~. Wet bar, AM/FM lntercol!l. Mstr. Br, has :beam cell. 3 Frplcs ........ ~ .. $175,000. 80 Linda Isle Drive 5 Bedroom & maid 's, 5 batla with family room & large rumpus room. 3 Fireplaces. 4,24Jl Sq. Ft. Dock & boat slip ..... $159,300 ' Waterfront Lott No. 4: Excellent 51 It. Linda Isle leasehold IOt. Plans avail. Consider trade ..... $33,000 No. '41: Long water vie\v fa cing Harbor Is- la'nd \V/76.2 Ct. of frontage. Plans avail . No. 88 : Point lot wilh 118 ft. of frontage. Long \Yater vie\V. Plans available: BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR (Our New Address) 833 iDover Dr., Suite 3, N.B. 642-4620 0. ..... 1 1000 I Gener•I 1000 'UDO WATERFRONT .APARTMENTS 320 LIDO NORD 6. Beautiful units. 6 Car garages & utility. room, with 85 rt. fronting on excellent S\\'inl· ming beach. Units are newly furnished. Reduced to $200,000. Xlnt terms BILL GRUNDY, REAL TOR (Our New Addr ess) ' IJl' Dover Or.,1Sultt 3, Newport Beech 642-4620 1000 General 1000 ESTATE SALE OCEAN VIEW Th~ home 11·as pf"evioualy on The mlrket at $41,SOO, oow l'tdoef'd $6.SOO. It's a. bf'au- 11tul S bedroom, 2 bath hOme oVt'rlooking the Pacillc Cout, \\'Ith a spectacular un- 001tructed vle\v of_Calalina. 1 located on the bluUs ol Costa 'lesa., it has a courtyard Pntry, richly pflne.llcd and 1'llrpeted, appealing buill~in kitchen in ext!(utive neigh· I OOrhood. C8ll today and steal It'. ORANGE COUNTY'S LARGEST ' 262' HARBOR BLVD. 546-1640 OPEN.EVES TILL g,30 6% GI LOAN! I ;\lay be taken subject In, on thi!I lovely 3 Bednn Sl-lAKE I roof home in a prime Costa MC!U neighborhood. Total I payment incl taxes & Insur- ' ;in~ is only $187 per mo. Don't Wlllil , GRAB THl.5 I.OAN ·NOW!! Total price $23,900, • co:Ts • WALLACE < REALTORS -546-4141-, NEWPORT HEIGHTS ESTATE On double lot with large greens. large 10' dttp wen landscaped private pool. 2640 .11q. rt . c big BedroollVi, 3 Baths, Forn1al Dinl11g Room, Breakla~t roorn. Laundry roo111, 3-car sized attro.ge \1•llh power openel', panelini, decorator 11·a!J paper .. ,Lu.'(. urioui; Living on a Shady. Tree-Lined Strtf't. No!hini:' like lt for 552,000. 546-2313 \-0 T HE RCAL \" ESTATER.S ~ ' fr, ''I, • I '.' *TAYLOR DOVER SHORES Nr. new, lop qual. 2 Sty. !\\edit.: 4 ER. ran1ily rm. "·/ 11el bar; lg. din. rm. 4 ba .. pwdr. rm. 3 Car JIU'. F'ine de!!lgning. $118,000 "Our 25th Years" WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO Realtors NE\VPORT CENTER 2lll Slill JO!tQUin llills Rd. 644-4910 HOUSES FOR SALE I HOUSES POR 'SALE • Gen.ral 1000 GeMr•f •t 1000 ' READ THIS If you are in the market for a NEW home, see these out- standing customized homes, built by Frank H. Ayres and Son, located in a pri11,1e area very close to J-luntlngton State Beech. 1'he hon1es are priced from $30,290 lo $33,690 and vary in size Crom 3 to 4 bedroonis, 2 to 3 car garages and 2 to 3 baths, with shake or mission tile roofs. fire· places, .underground utilities, concrete drlveways, built-ins, and carpeting. There is VA and JrHA financing availa· \ ble. There are 5 homes avail- able because of credit rejec· lions. Occupancy by May l, 1970 in this unit. As added features these hon1es include such additional extras, to ex- pedite our sales as : shag carpets. front lawn landscap- ing \vith sprinklers. Our next unit is now on sale for occupancy in 1'.1ay and June 1970 and introduces the new 3.000 sq. ft. "El Dorado" model priced from $34 ,490. Rencho L• Cuest• Homes on Brookhurst at Atlanta, Huntington Be•c.h 961-2929 -"" 1338 Gener•I 1000 1 Gener•I 1000 FAMIL y FUN I BLUFFS IN THE SUN NEWPORT 5 BEDS· POOL I FOUR ~~!;~S. tho oo This IJeautlful IK1n1e in pre>!· bath11, 225() squai·e feel split tige areu of Costtt Mesa liM level home surrounded by 5 master-sized bcdroom11, 2 10·ell kept lawns. !lowers and tiled baths. lush wall to \Vall lihrubli. Upgraded carpets, carpclini:' tl1roughout. lal'gf' drapes and bcoutifully deC. <-ovel'ccl patio and a erylitul orated kitcll(!n gives you t1 clt'ar ~autilu!ly landJK:<1pcd feeling of spaciousneu and pool, t.'On1plete with !Olide. See ('legant living. Second !!IOI')' ii to bf'lievr i1. Priced low patio ,,ilh VlE\V 01'" BACK at SM.950. Hurry! BAY , AND OCEAI'{. t.1any j . ~ . closets and lots of sloragf' I space make& thi.! one oC tM 1nost desirable hon1es in the . ' HOUSE~ ,OR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSl!S FOlt SALE HOUSll FOR SALE I HOUSES FOR SALE Gener•I 1000 Goner•I 1000 CMta Met• 1100 S.n Clemente 1710 Son Clemente 1710 -.. BEAunPUL COU,EGE PARK ·· c s Just Ma· . d Aaaum~ :il,4 % loan nsa mo ' BAY RE T rrie .. ,,'a11. 3 BR, 2 "'· i&mn, SEE US FOR THE IEST VALUES 4 · BEDROOtlf, 3~' BATIIS. S&PARATE CUEST SUITS. L..arge COl'N't on quiet stl'Cf'I -many custom extras - and bf'1t ot ALL -owner \\o'W cany low-intertSt lof.n! Atikiua: $8.l.000. Colesworthy & co. REALTOR Ne\\'flOrt Beach Olflca 1028 Bayside Dl'l'ie 67>-1930 FOREST ·E. OLSO .. N Inc. Rel:litol's 4 BEDROOM PLUS FAM. WHAT! $21 ,500 Scal'Ct' as hen11 !~th! 4 larae bedrooms. 2 baths, Family roon1. Deluxe kitchen \vilh 11.ll latest built-ina. Carpeting . Ila.rd to lx'at at $21 ,500 and only ~ yclll'll young. tlurry to .St'C. 645-0303 at 1-larbor CenlC1· 2299 Harbor Blvd., C.:\t. HARBOR VIEW HILLS Spacious family home with Wl\at a cute doll house thil: I.a for newly wed•. Features" 3 nice llze b@d. rooms, w/w crpt, drps, floor to celling stone fire. place. If the anx>m la: a Vet $100 total cuh need- ed. $22,500 f\Jll prlct, Thh ":on't last. A Pool Home 'Vllh 3 muler size bed· rooin.S tarae family room, "'•led. &: tillered pool w/ lots ot decklni. A fan. tu tic buy on this IUJlf'r sharp rancher. SZl.900. GI no money down or take over. th is low 5% VA loan or nu per month. Unbelievable 'nils 1harp 4 br rancher in xln't cond. Ideally lo- cated in a tall shadt" quiet area. Can be youn for just $23,00J. GI oo money down or FHA ju5t $100 down incl closing COlll. TAKE OYER LOAN S2500 ·rota! caah needed to take over 101v interest GI Joa.ri of Sl!IS pf'r month 4 l\IASTER SIZE BD- Rl\lS. 2 full baths, llf'p a.aver kitchen. close to :IChooli ' shoppina;. lt'I a Beauty! Hurry! Call ORANGE COUNTY'S LARGEST SM-5313 l i'i:.l66 Colden \\'r.~1 1-funtin:-ton Beach 3 bedrooms & family4 room 1 .. .,..,..,..,..,..,..,..-. lormal dining area sunny breakfast nook. Hoon1 for a pool Prrfcct Eastern exposure and lovely canyon vie1v $51.500 REALTORS. 673-4400 BAYFRONT Ele<'trieally c:ontrolltd gates leading to garden f'llll)' ol lhi~ beautiful J bedroom 'bonie. Larie Uvfna room '1•ith marble fireplace,' !!.pae- iou5 [amily room & :sunny brealdul room, all overlook- ing bay. Luxurious master suite with elegant dressing room & bath, Custom carpet. Ing & decorator wallpaper. Pier & float. $129,500 rm. S27 ,.500. Owner. 549-3738 3 BR, 2~ BA Townhouse. Palkl, pool. all elee. Ap. plla~1 Inc. Owner 54~2037 Mesi Verde 1110 *HOM! TOUR' BEAUTY * Lnvllhly decorated • cu111tom dl>J: doot enll'y, huge LR. 3 BR, 2 HA, dbl frpl, Sprink. lel"t!(j Fl:B ya.rd. Owner x:'ferred. Sacrifice $33,900 . ~-tG-3013 Outstanding view homes -good ter111a. Residential & commerc:lal lots • from $7 ,000 Triplexes • from $39,995 4 Units • from $q2,000 Commercial property • from $35,000. \Ve also specialize 1n apt rentals • starting at $135 month. ·-Realtors. \Vith Pride \Ve Serve You n FOR sale O\vner 4 er, J Ba. 3 (iO l car Gar.. frpl, blt·lnR, Jn. tcrcom. e It-c sprinkler!, ._,,. ~!1!11!!91!!11!!!>,d~il'l!l:!O!ii!l).~- elect car. cloor opener , -.;· S~>l.950. 645-1848 431: N. El Camino Real 492-2030 Evt1. 4'2-4202 3 Bed~m l family room. . Flreplact, covered patio. -cLo;:;w,;d;;o:;;"';;",;',;'ll;,;A;;·~-~7~269;,,. l.:C;:;•:.;'°"::=::• del Mar 12.50 Huntington Beach 1400 ----·----' CASH OUT $24,750 BY OWNER e POOL 17 X 35 e DUPLEX PLUS 219 Poppy Ave: Cc1t-.t •. Ocean 4 BR, I* BA, frplc, like new Ntwpart Beach 1200 -view l br, pr1v, patio. Jwit ONE LOT FROi\1 OCEAN "-above little c.orona Bell crpt... Sparkling clean! L& \\11h Ocean View. 2 BR, & Moving to Ha"·all ' patio, boat door, nr bch. 3 BR. with tarn. rm, PLUS MUST SELL BRASHEAR REAL TY 1-BR. &: bath gUe.!11 rm. Good $52 400 847-8507 Eves. &l2-0U1 rt'ntlll .area. $51,500 Phone 'S7S.TSJT O\VNER: Al!umc 6% VA. Grah11m Rlty, 646:-2414 Spacious 3 Br, 21,; ba, tam NearNewportPo1tOfflce A RARE ITEM rm. w/frple, landsrped, THE BLUJ"f'S 3 Bclnn 3 Belo.w hlirtlway income! 2 gaJ·dcn kitchen, I mm a c, b.th l·t 1 1 ' B<hm. hOme, frplc., neat & 96" -3 , 1p 1 eve , on ,..,., + 2 BR ~ · &reenbelt . Cu1tom co .. ....,, , nea~ '!f'v ========= deco1·atecl &: lmmaculat apt, & guest gtn. $52.r.oo. Huntington L&rft' k·1 ne 137 90 e. SlO.ooo Down. H bo • 1 c n. • O · Unlvenity Realty 673-6510 Ir ur &«--051~ aft 6 pm weekdays 3001 E. Coast H" Cc.If\! --------- 1405 BLUFFS, "Ll.nd11i" Plan , , ~:· . FOR SALE BY O\VNER: Cboice1l grttnbe-ll J 0 c., CORONA Higb.lpich view o'looklng Jake. 1-St.Y. 3 Br. home. Ideal for couple 2 Ba., lanai. Exe. lge. wall-w/po11ible ruei;t qln .. or ed patio. -1:.aat chance lo more , bdnn11; overlookina' buy from oivnet·! 644-4il58 lhe lo1vn. SEE '.fHIS~ _ O~n Daily 2-5 BAYFRONT: SIS,500. 3 5, 412 1.Iendoza Terraccl' Beautiful \Vaterlrnnt home. 45· of water fro nta ce 111/pl'iv, dock. 3 br, 2 ba, nell'ly !'Wee. S82,SOO . 8<J6..504l or 644-2260. 16992 Baruntt Ln, H.B. {Daven- JIOl't lsandJ Cabana, trplc, new crpl, Stan Smith Rltr. 613-2010 cusfom drp1, covered patlo.1;o:~:;:,c7.;·.;;,:::.:.,...;;:::.::;: A-3 Anc:horagf' \\'ay, Lido CORONA lllghland1. Tasteful Fountain Valley 1410 Park. Call 613-2896 ly decor. J BR. home. 1% GARDEN fiOUSE Btt. Lee. 'liv, nn. w/lrpl. 6"/. VA VACANT Pool sl~ lot. Xlnt finane. 4 Bedrooms, 2 Baths + over- Sl9 500 MORGAN REAL TY !!b.ed sei)arate 2 cal' garage. l BR. Pool. Putting grttn. 613-0&l2 6'15-&15!1 Featuring Indirect ceiling Bier. 675-0014, 642-8223 34ll E. Coast Hii·y .. Cdl\t lighting, Upgraded Thcrma- LE ASE /optlon $15,000 Balboa Peninsula 1300 -dor ·cli;c range & ove.n w/ &ycrest rxec.....,homc. Full -__ ~· d.ble v1e'v doors. Exohc at. view Back Bay $750/mo. rium compl Jand11cpd. Cer· Owner -fi42....4715 504 W. BAY AVE. amic tile sunkef'I Roman tub , Charmlna; new l bdrm. z Ni. oU priv master suite. \Y/W BLU1' F'S, l Br, 2 Ba, 1 lt-vel, Mcdilemincan !ltyle-build-criits, drpri. thn.i-oul. Exisl· cho.let: . corn. lot, wall~ er'1 homl', lop qualiiy thru· Ing S30, 700 loan PB)'&ble :_ro/vie';x, r-.i:Zafsus. eJC· out. Top loc. 'occupied!. $252 per mo. ind taxes. ~ $32, · Bill Grundy, Realtor If CON00-2 BR, 2~ BA, pool, 833 Dover Dr., NB 6424620 We1tclltt Area. Trade ??!~~~~~~~~~~ Myers 673-m&I: t62A471 ( ::::.J 54M10J -Farr,pW- ORANGE ·COUNTY'S LARGEST Bluffs. PRICED AT $49,500 • z-;:-::i-=z-;-;:;:=r====I FOR QUICK SALE. MACNAB-IRVINE Really C.Ompany (714) 642-8235 Lido ill• 1351 Newport H1l9ht1 1210 DECORATOR'S 1640 Tu1tin -----1 2629 HARBOR BLVO. 546,3291 Open 7 days to 8:::0 P.1\1. OWNER TRANSFERRED HOME 2 Br Twntue 11,1; Ba, frpl, COZY 1 Br + guPS_t house I by owner. $2!,Sj(). Ca 11 Beautitully do™t. 5 B<tnns. Wshr-D, dis hw, a/c. poo s, 64&-9160 aft6PM&"•kndJ. Family _rm. Xlnt street to c.tubl15f', patio. Owner stl'e<!I 4:i ft. lot. ii5tl:O ..... .;='====== 1227 S!lS.r.oo LIDO REALTY INC. L•guna Beach Opportunity REGAL * sPAc1ous 311 ' ~~R~; HoM':,.,,,, \\'anted REAL ESTATE Sales COMPLETE VIEW 901 Dover Drive, Suite 120 (714) 675-3210 11:: Acre lot in Upper Bay + 1080 88.)'!!ide Drive 3 Ccdroon1 home + ni<.'f' Ne.1,port Beach 1:1:..:ZO pool + owner "till scJJll :::========z::i -no do11·n GI or FHA ...... l $27,500 Exc:lusivc 1vilh: BREATHING ROOM Dover Shores 1705 Newport people. Private cle11k & Bay & ~ftns. 4 Br, 4li Ba LAR~E LOT Go1-geous 4 BR hon1c in 11h-WESTCLIFF phone. Top commlaslon. + maids. Hiah ccillngl, 4 BR. & fnn1iJy rm, Huge liv, solute lni111aculate conc:li-HARMER at Floor lime. Goorl 1110.lk-in 5000 sq JI bui.lt around court. rm. 3,000 Sq. tt. 45 Ft. lot. BLUE LAGOON CONDOMINIUM Beautlful 2 BR. 2 BA, ju1I steps to beach. 2 swlmmini pooh and tennis <.'Ourts. Pric· ed lo sell at $49,500. Call Turner A~aociates <f94.trn. tlon. l!XlO Sq fl of living a1'1!a Victoria . 1 4 4 car gar. E·Z malnt. Ideal ·Reduced to $61,500 . huge covered ,.,,110 • fan· fine h ne in good area. t lt11'· lraf11c. Same ocation l yrs. W lk RI 6 , ~ .j_j>oV ... h dist 4'BP. I ,., "'II Call tor tntt>rVie1v. fc1· entertaining. 1178,000 • er ty. 7~5200 l:LS!lc night lighting • fullv " · ... am. _. ., • ..,. VI L =~~~~--~~ crpld _manicured re.~ldenll11.I rn1. -v•11.llcd entry 1..'0urt· furnl1hed. As1wno 61,1% ~ a ido, NB Open Sun. 2~~ en. l \~ BA . view, So. Le.- area. Priced for immcdlate yard -nicely landscaped. loan. Owner 548-1249. 3 BR, Den, 2~1 Ba. Con-IJl.l/U!., older. good cond. We at $31.Sj(), Call 5'1.).8424 SZ>2, 7:icl. I "i::=mczr== DOVER SHORES V 1 E \V temporary, A r ch I t e c t $39,500. 213: 790-5961 coll. \011th . Coa st - Cathryn Tennille .-LOT, CORNER GALAXY & designed & blL Lo Int. Golfer's Paradise MARINER. $35,000. 1 - 3 transferable I 0 an . By l.agun• Niguel 1707 Cold1'ell, Banker & Co. 550 Ne wport Center O r. Newport Stach, Calif. 83:1-0700 644-2410 Lease/Option One of ~Iesa del ~tar's finest 4 BR ho1ne11, fuJ.ly crptd & sharp, sharr~ $27'1 nt0. $32.500 lull price. Call: Newport ' lOtb 1860 Ne\vport Blvd .. C.lif. YRS. F1NANCING AVAIL. owner. Phone • 673-28St for Scout. home on areen CALL 646-3928 Eve.s. 613-4517 54~1936 J~';,";t,.. ======= * By Owner -unu!!ual 3 of "Bermuda Dunes • fl.nest bf'droom. 2 bath home desert course! Roomy 3 BR. -3-H I B h .111111 near Beach. 2 yrs. old, !! Ba .. pool. furnl9hed home. 3 Bedroom-Home Unlve_rsi_ty_e.rk__1_23_7 unt ngton e•c l"IYU prPstige Niguel are;& Incl.'.! 1101r cal'ts. dub mcm· 5 BEDROOMS SEA BREEZE WITH Bclo1v market. 496-3714 ~1'11hlp avail. A!king $95,000 ELEGANT POOL! I • Xlnt. tcrnis. Hardwood .floors, dblc ear Plus family room. 2% BathR. garagt' patio flfl.illOne BBQ Thi,.; 2-Sly. homt-is SPOT. Fountain and private court. M ission Viejo 170I Biii Grundy, Re•ltor ·' ' · LESS • just completely ~ yard Pntry to this spaclou!I ----~----833 Dover Dr. NB 642-4620 EMi11de. Costa P.lesa. $22,SIJD d I -II 4 bed 3 4 BR, 2 BA. crpts. drps, ' Wtlls.McC•rdle, Rltrs. ecor. nside, i\fany extru: ww 11q. • room, bath tlccorated. I ands ca ped . 1810 Newport Blvd .. C.l\1. Incl. extcl\li\·e l&ndtcapl~ beauty. Luxury featutel such Eldorado C'"" plan. S2'7.500. 1l16 Jemaice Rd. 548-7129 644-0684 Eves. & concrete work iii front & u CUilom draperies, extra 6%c;: FHA. S3l-408J The "Ultimate" in aott course ·-rTat )'atd1. Variel;y of bear. 'thick carpets throughout, -====;:==== oriented living . 4.ooo IQ. It. Ing !rult trees. Vacant &: t"lectr1c kitchen, FMf.ILY of custoni luxury. Meaa Ver. Dl,.,orc.t Sale walling 101· YOU. Very real. R00i'¥f, dlahwuher. and de showplace. on this CQte 3 Bedroom East-l11ieally pt1ced at ·ju1t $33,450 maintenance • tree yard and San Clemente -··-----1710 BY OWNER (Open Evenin9t) EASTBLUFF PERMANENT VIEW All the aclive fan\Uy coultl "'ish! 5 Bdrms. 3 baths &: famUy I dining arefl. Lots of space around. Immacu- late! $4'3.500. •t wllh as Jmv as $5,000 down! decking. $37,900 FULL 4 be<lrm • 11~ baths, la.rec fenced yard. $24,000 • $.1,000 minimum down. 4!)2.7516 \ ~ 54,·5110 iiclt-home on large lot. FHA PETTIT REAL TY CO. PRICE. SUBMIT TERMS. •r;' ---~ Victoria (nNrclnen..UlatllJ tei·nui. "The House or Homelli" WE SELL A HOME . 1. df.y \,EN;w ? LLEGE RNA\;TY $22,950 1)3.0101 EVERY 31 MINUTES in I RI 11 1so;; \Vl'stcliff Dr .. NU :. _ _ 6464811 1 ,..:.,;;;;:;""'~"";t,'"~";;:·Cll:1 :P~li~R~R~O~N~~~64~2~-l~7~7l~ I '.5!~~::~~~~ W lk & L Capistrano Beach 1730 I ho "2·5200 "---' (•'nyto'mol $23 500 ATRIUM MODEL a er ee Pete larrett REALTY BEAUT!f'UL 'E:XECUTTVE J.10:\IE on 11• ac, No. Sa n Diego Cnty • Nr. Pauma Valley, Sur r o_ u n de d by orange & avocado ltct"I, overlooking !he be ti u I . Pauma Vallry w>lt course & CC. This eqtertaining home w/11'et bar. sun room &. many extras is priced 111 SW.000 for a short time only \\rilh 1ern1s lo sui!. Owner 1nu1t1f. to Hflwaii. John Conley, Bkr. 510 \V, Chap111an Ave .. Orange, Cll. 92668 or call 1n4J Ml-5050. Osoo•w w you"" o.n ~ '< COZY CORNER FOR CAN YOU QUALIFY? >utr oi.vn 3 er.. home. llow l .::iC:::ll!:limC:Z:::l:C~ THE HORSEY SET ' Cost• Mesa 1100 3 br, 2 ba " 1lh Iarae but 1682 Edin&er ror a S2S50 VA loan? .c •. ,_,., :=========I main le~ tree rtar yllt'd. 8"2-445.i ""'0.' l•IO you c11i11 uu~ save molll'y, FHA Rei•'· 11 )'OU 1\'ant ho~s """1 n1us1 Er·' unit wl"· to" ol •hann. .Pl " CLOSING COSI'S ONLY! •-·1 s oil -• ._ J~· Back Lily' AJ'f:a, 3 he<iroom. "' uo .. not "''4'"' 1 rn mvtp '"' oui..taililltiJ:-mOOeFlik"1, Jlei\' sec thil1 <-'OlY Z-BR hon1C + * CALL * New wl w CMrpel-,-BT kitchen, SOMETHING 531 ,000. BY OWNER· Presti~ homt N~ 3 bedroom, 2 balh inent, ~1"1ky quali(yiBng. AY· listing of 4 Br "California 1 bath. TM hOme Ill "-ell -flre11la<.-c, covered patio, DIFFERENT! • Red Hill Realty •Pacific Sandi lrnperial. 2 hOmc. Principn.ls only menb• e rent, e your mol•t·•·-• ·-I h•• owm •to-4 BR 1u BA •-~on o~-r 492 3816 ·'-'I rd nd lo II Clru>sic". OUercd al $l2,500. "...,,..,.... ...... " LACHENMYER REALTY double """""ae. Boat&. camp:. "HOBBY HAVEN " for niany Univ Park Center Irvine '" • ,. ' .... u -~~~~·~·~-·-~~ own Iauu o a ve . .too· ,.,·,1,·,,g I• ti-,-,r. ,.,., •·~~ · ' kltch huao patio & awn•·"" ' -•• , F 11 · Full 1 0 1vner moving !10l'lh. 6~!!% " ... " er parking. Trafllc ftte euJ. uses in this bl; separate Cail Anytime ~ " .,., BIG 3 Bd, 2 Ba + attach. ~··""'· u price. Y m· ._ Ilk• g<lllo•• lh• hO""" r•• 1 ~'!!!'~~~!!!'l!!'l!!!'!'I P-ff ld••pd oow •"·g · _, with d Lo.an, down"'-lern1s fl exible. " '6 ...... .,. dt>-Me. \Valk to school, FHA· beamed Cf!\1\ng bu ldlna: com-•u ' " • '"" apl + gar. Not a m1. to prov~ crpla, l'P!I, pa. frt.'C whun you boy tl\13 G6x \Vhen you \11an1 ro li st or 11~·!1 v A tcrins or sllbmlt doiV11. plelely private trom the ·---catptl thru.oul · Cu s lo m l\larlna, Beach, S t a b I~. tlo a~ltadc ~es. Heritaa:e ~ JOO lot, your hl'>rril'. \Ve are in con. 1 .._... El Toro 1244 drp1. $33,900. All otters con-•~ti,!m lo dn. 496-3.171 Real tale, call !)4().ll5L StS ·5110 Bkr 642-9J.jj, arge -4 ._..'OOm. 3 bftth de-'-----= 11ldertd -bet"'" traruiterred. ..,., ( I (nearcintrmlhelflt} tuct 1vil11 62 !a1nilie1!. tnovl ng _... --"""'---_......_ ... luxe home, Double garql' ~lODERN n•~CH ·• optn.eve>s. LLEG£ REALTY PAUL •WHITB Into lho Ne\\'J)Ott Beach A B:chHifuW'"iy ~ PLUS 2 e>t:tra walled • in " nlW~ Open houM! Sat l Sun U-3 Dana Point 1740 l500AC11M1tHaibot.t:al CARNAHAN Cost.a t-.1c1a area in the next 1 BR. f\uitlahed Townhouae. s11aces for boat or trailer. Custom home cunt hae . PM. ~131 lmJ>f'rial Cow ---------1 a &Al.TY c o. 60 days. Cali for awt · Creal for weekends or vaca. Courtyard entry with mu-Barn w/stall . .Alt llS-2?-tl Lane. 968-6958 IY OWNER NEWPORT ~EIGHTS Sn.nil tl'leW eKdtlng 3 bed. room, ,2 bath wllh larae II\" in&1'00•1'with hrick fJ1·r.pl8CC. lJl.tho l,nd pltLJ!t'r L'Ollllll'U\:· lion,. $ee this mul.!h \l'Ai1\etl t.11rnti lot. • $36,GOO. . • • 646-7171 -THl'. RT:/\ I, ~ rsTATERS {!DO SANDS .J Bedrooms i BaU11. bullt·l.ns • $26.000 • :G.orge W illltmton REALTOR 67Jitlll0 67:1-1564 Evu. LARGE FAMILY? t~ Baker, c.r.1. This 2 ~lory, 5 Bed1·m. l Ba home "'Uh lorml!J dining rrn ,...,,..~!"'~""'""''""' & fan1ily rm is the best dol. $28,950 Lochenmyer p .. 11'"' 101· vnlue in the at'f'n. $lG,800 4 Bdrm., 3 Beth 1860 Newport Blvd .. 01 1''111\•VA 1Cl'lllto l4.l'l•ilablP. QtHlli1 y! Entry hitll, fttn1lly ' CALL fl<t(l.J!Y.18 Eves. 642-018.'i FUlll!R REALTY r1n mn. rull dlnlni;; tin, EIZS-~ ---- S4t'r01l4 buil0-1"" purk llko '""'· i POOL-VIEW LUSK EASTBLUFF .rt~':'ELL 2155 Horbor 4 Br. F•m. Rm. Stody REDUCED $1500 _ \Yell carrd tot. Qual, cpl.I.: l.ct 4 Br:2\i bl •. Owner lc1v. DOVER SH ES ex~lve vleY.'. O"slztd ltA inl city. To view ea.11 • S('l8.rk11nc oow Ivan ''r'ell1 F pOOI \1·/&pc!e. !!Quip, F'lft.. MAL TC• -Co1t•IH·MA1tTIND 111·1111 Tllr. QUICKER ~·ou CALL. TllE QlIICKER YOU SELL -------- Vk!¥.: hornrs. 4 RR, 3 BA, est Eaatbluff loc. S:i43,500. p()Wl'\e-r m1, fam~y rm w-/. 6~ ff11lt'. v.·~lk ~11 v.eL t..Ar, t:.1. Bay & Beech Rlty., Inc. In~ at'l!a In kit + h1nnal I S YOUR AO J N d in rin Cou11 y111'1'.1 poolll. CLASSfl"IEO? Som~ wlll Roy J, \Vllr<l Rert.llOl', )431) btl lookil'i' for it. DlaJ &12- 01\Jtx¥ Dr. IHG·l~ Opc:n W71 Dally, Uon. All thli tor $11,50'J. sl vt tron a:ate. Tremtndoua Corona del Mir lUO HILPI HELPJ HELPI 2 bedrms. large fenced P•ci,ic:t Shorti R•alty po111~bllllies at '39.500 \\'ml We ct.n pt )'OU io, dOll•r In yard. $23,000 • $3,000 536-889-t Eyes, 841..00CS VA AND FHA TERAfSI DRAMA &. flLAIR the u1e of your bomet Why? n\inlmun\ down. 492-7516 ......--...~ WI S!LL A HOME One-o\·o.·klnd conteniporary , We're CaUtornia'1 No. 1 m.--.. $21,950 EVERY 11 MINUTES o .. attn.n glde. EM:Jtlna 2. kttntl" REALTOR and have Apartments for 4 Bdrm + F.mlly rm. Walker & Lee atory 11,;ng room. 2 BR., 2 t"" ls}p1\ waiting U..1 of Solo 1980 ba. & den, t\ll this 4'lncome. Rt!:ADY, \'r'ILLING and Prim~ ar~a. Owner desptr· too! $57.500. ABLE BUYERS ! To s ell ttl4 DELUXE APTS ate. N11.!ura1 brick tireplact. )043 \Vtatellfl Dr. Ha l P lnch in It Atsoc. Wte11 for the most~51, ell.II J>rincipal11 Only. enlry l\lllt, bolll·lns. 540-1720 64G-T111 REALTORS 'fVE SILL A HOME Call Mt-0315 TARBELL 2HS Hubor DELUXE TO\VllJ!OUSE .•J :!SOtl I}, Coast Hwy. 67S-<391 EVERY 11 MINUl&S RENTALS JN Ontario, charming l BR dream bou&e. patio, car. lee lndfC'Pd back yard, many Pxtru. l\1u,4t be aeeti 10 br apprtcialt'd. !Ha-45<17, (11 986--43j9 DIAL dlrecl 642-5678, 'Cl\Al"Rf' your 11d, then alt back and Hslen to the phone rtnst. BR. 211"'"'·11u •uut.ina Walker & Lee Hou• .. Fornilhecl • many xtru + PoOI. UNEXCELLID VIEW -· - clubhouse • ..... i:e: ftcUltle1. of ~larbor 1 ocean. Altt. 7682 EcUnpr Co1ta Mesa 2100 No. C.M · '-'-' 10 ~ ~~ 11pllt 1 vtl homt on M. 5100 541).5140 8tl4U5 2 Bdrm p r potlo Quiet h'l>o loan. By Owner.&&-~ Mf. ft lol. tdeaJ fo~· 4 Apt . teal ti .-_ d'" I Slk • "EAT AS A Pl" * It 1-000 ~~1 n...-7\i'Ar CJ resale. Frltlcitc&ll P lltl n& ..,~ a \u.ll I• ,, IUI $. ~. • ..., U\.-.Oatl lhOpa 1185 5#.Gl'i2 4 DR, Me•a del ~far Dlvd ., Cd~I. By "PPL only, ~·011ntaln1, S BR. 3 BA. 9 • · ' Carpeted and draped Biii Grundy, Realtor rt101 old, rom1 din rm, Full .i1 Your ~d in our P.ICM In condfUon 133 Dovf'.r Dr .. NU &f2.4620 pr1C"t" $45,900 Krystonr Rh~ clusttledl? SomeorM will be * Ml Sonorti 1\oad * ....... .,. •• ,.,.,,,J 897·l<H4 lookllli for It. DiaJ 642:n ) I . ~ .-: (': .. .. _ • ... ' .. :· -·· """ 2, 19711 mrr:..o;;:_:___lli'lliml'1-"-';_.;..-Tiiili1AlS RINTALS ........ Purnlthed ...,.._ ~umfohtd . . .. • RINTALS'' RINTALI RENTALS RINTALS ~· Unlvmllhtd !P'*= Unllimilhtd Apto. Unlvmllhtd Ari!· Uafumlollad RIAC.: l$TATE 0....ral ~·~••!!!n!_!l•!!llo~-!! .. !....:_!nss~ -l*i. leech -0-al. '4000 Cltta -. ~~--~--~--~-~-Rentol1 Wonttd : H9I OLDtR. O\riltlan equple bHd1 2 bedroom ~ undtr • • .... ~!!-~~~. 2 ...... , Br, ,...,, •"'· .... ""'· s·ingle * SUNNY a ., .. -.,_ pt.tlo. Avail t/15,, Evft'2JJ: m.mi. m.acm :m-1'07 ia. ... a• '°"' * ACRES ...__,-•la 2'10 Pwt Al .... Cir .. Harbor * * * Motel-Apts * "GRAND OPENING" Villa Pomona LIDO t 1 I e Rntrvatlons. -11ame • apt July thru tabar ~ Wttk. 6T3-39U ltlNTALS View Home• Ad I OCEANFRONT dupk:ic, s u ts BR, 2 BA, $3lt ""· 3 BR. "NEAR THE IEACH"' H-Unlvmlthed 0-ral - 214 BA. $400 mo. NEW. Eu)' acteES. Agent 54&-4141 LEASE J'lS:OOO Baycre1t ex- ec. home. run view of 3aclc Bay, $500/mo. Owner 642-4lli **RENTALS** GARDEN HOUSE. S BR 2 2 Br, tot/pet ok •••• , • Sl~O BA. 2 poola. &cl 8&)' S325 J Br, duplex, nict: •••• S16S mo. 3 Br, '""''d yud .... SISO Bia 6'><;044. '4U223 2 Br, turn tv.'1lhsc •••• $180 FRESHLY painted 3 Br. 2 1 Br, turn apt .••••••• $125 Ba Duplex nr heh. Nu Cpts. F\l.rn. bach, nr brsch •• $llS Bltna. $2,;Q mo 1 e a 1 •, ROOJ\IMATE SERVICE ~7573 * MANY OTHERS * 'J~B~R~Ba~,k~Bay--.,..-,-, -, .. -,. Free to Landlords mod., 2 frpl'i, 2\1 Ba. $325. Blue Beacon Rental Flndm mo lt:AR. 213-968-59.f5 (35 ,V, 19th St, CM 546-0W ======== COSTA Mesa Rental at $185 Newport Heights ptr month. 3 ~roon11, 2 --''-----"---- bl.ths. COYt:ttd patio, lerud NEW house, 2 Br. 2 ba., fam, yud. Double garaae. bltn1, ref. Grdnr. inc. Av. Freshly paint~. It's in our c':'"":;,,;L;$300;;:· =--===== 3210 Rental Book at ~ 3241 \V Al.KER & LEE 2T90 Harbor Blvd at Adams l BR. crpll, drp&. blt-1.ns, $16-2 BR dplx, gar, w/w, patio. N<> children. $140. stv, pool, chldm ok. Lfsa Cal.I S4Pr319'1. rent if pool maintn. Bkr. I=========-= 534-6980 Coron• •• Mir $151)..2 BR, l~~ bath duplex, --------- w/w, r~ & ovr:n, drapes, 4 BDmf. Split-Levd child ok. Bier. 53H980 2~> Baths. 3 Deck.~ Don v. Franklin. mzm Costa Mesa JIN UKE New 3 Br, 2 ba. all bit-ins 1.faint. pool. Ocean vw. Adults, $330. 67H&35. Luxury 1inaJ.e, 1 I 2 bed· room apartments, furnish- ed and unntmished, with complete privacy and land- scaped country club atmos- phere including $750,000 worth of recreational facil· iries de1llf1ed. 11,1\\; operated just 1or ahl;le people, Rents From $145 to $300 l~iate Occupancy :r.1a. to lifa, Leue Avail. ANAHEIM :rn So. Brookhunt (1 bllc. So. ot Lincoln) (nt) m-4500 GARDEN GROVE 13100 Chapman Ave. (4 blka: W. Santa Ana. Fwy.) cn4> 63&-3030 NEWPORT BEACH l80 IRVINE AVE. IRVINE AND 16th 1n4> 645-0500 1 ll:nal So. .. o.c. ..._.. Sfvillfe • 1 ••••••• $32 WK . & UP Dey,W..it.M- • Kitcben.s '. 1V'• tncl. e Phone .-iv., htd pool. • Maid "rvtct avail. 2376 N!Wl'OIT ILVD. $41.'755 CASA DE ORO Casual Calllornia livine in warrr f.Iedit. atmosphere. Spac. color co-ordinated apt:i designed & turn. for 1tyle A: comfort. * Pvt. patio * BBQ * Sbq cpta * Car w/ 1torap * Htd panl * Klich· en w/ indirect lightlnJ: * Oeluxe oven 1' ran.,ae. 1 BR .• $175 .incl utll. 2 Bdnn. $195 incl. util. Adu.lta, no pelll. 365 \V. Wilson St. 642-1971 I BR. BacheJor apt. Adultll. No peta. Sunken Roman shower ba. CJose to Frwy. Check l\fate Apts, .2 I 3 I Bristol, C.1-1. 546-8791 1 Bdrm. Pool. Util. Paid. Adults, no pets. Nr 1hop"1 $150 ma. GENEROUS MOVE IN ALLOWANCE . SPECIAL 1 MONTH'S FREE RENT COMPlETEL Y FURNISHED FROM $140 ALSO UNFURNISHED AVAllABLE * NO RA TE INCREASE FOR SUMMER Bachelor, 1 & 2 Bedrooms Adults Only Please -No Pets • LUXURIOUSLY FURNISHED • ALL ELECTRIC APARTMENTS • PRIVATE GARAG~S • 2 SWIMMING POOLS 1760 Pomona, Costa Mesa IWOll of Nttwpon, botw-17111 l 11 .. St.I ;)48..3348 or 675-l650. RENTALS f1.JRN. l BR. Qu iet 1' nice, · Apt1. Furnl1htd So .. & I Cl b Sl.7.0-$130. Furn. Studio, $110 11111 ay U ''" mo. Adults, no "'''· Huntjngton BHdt 4400 STUDIO APTS. -__:Apa~~rt~ln::;le:;;n;::h:,:_ __ 1..:m;;=· ijEld<[ji'n';'Ai;'~'·;,;• A~pi;t f6 • ..:C=M:·· i -. SUS CASITAS L_RG Bacbeto" Ulil pd. N"' 2 Bedroom! • 2 Bath.! 3 BR HOME $215 Just ttnovated • new crpta &: tile, fully painted&; f!lc. 1'4 BA, bll·ins, frplc. Dble pr. age. Community pools It dub. RE?llARKABLY :> Pts. r.1aturt, single adult Lido lsfe 3351 UNBEUEVABLY Furn. l BR Apta:. Adults only, Refer. Clean Depoe. --------EXTRAORDINARILY only, na pets. 2110 Newport Req. $97.50. 342-2219 Carpets I drapes. Garqe 339 & 343 Cabrilla $115 Per 1.1onth • or $165 On Uase 64z.222l anytime Ml)..9666 BEAUTIFUL LIDO ISLE BEAUTIFUL Blvd, CM. "2-"286 4620 3 Bdrm, ~ Bath. nt:wly V•I ·o'iHre Gerden Apts $140/mo. Dix, Mah. hame. Sente An1 decorated, large double pr· Pattinc ll'ffn ·~:a~rlall "-Comp! turn, htd. pool, adJts,1--------- age. $.175 ma. 8J2.003l itream lJowen everywhere no peta. 4 Seuons J\lob. Est, $140. Lr& cht'ttful ~wly ,, &7UOH 0 -. La * *- EL PUERTO MESA ftst MAPLI STREIT, COSTA MESA ADULT LIVING SUN DECKS & PATIOS CARPETS, DRAPES, LOADS OF PARKING -GARAGES POOL -REC. ROOM CLOSE TO EVERYTHING ALL UTILITIES PAID 1 & 2 IR'S FURNISHED & UNFURNISHED * * $100 I Coste Mesa 5100 Orange County's lf03t Btau£iful Apartment Community Ft=aturing a c I u b atmosphere for your comfort and pleasure-just completed 1 or 2 Bedroom, 2 Bath. Furnished or Unfurnished. Air-Cond., soundproofed, self cleaning ovens, beam ceilings. dishwasher, lush landscaping with streams & waterfalls, elevators, BBQ's, clubhouse \Vith sbcial activities, saunas, UNF. 1 Br. House. Lri fenc- ed )'d. $130. lat &: tut + $50 Cleanina depos. See at 310 La Perle Ln. Aft llAM or call 494-23!4 aft 6. 45• paoi, rec. roam, billiards: 2359 Newport. 548-6332 furn. l BR. apt. (triplex) Huntington 811ch MOO BBQ's, Sauna. tum .. unfurn, $14<t A: up. Attrac. 1 BR. Bltn1, gari. l child ok. Nr •inP&. 1-~ Br. from $133. Poot uw pd. Garden Liv-ach1s. ~ S. c:e~ter St. S.A. See it! 3XJO Parsons Rd., ing. Adults, Na pets. 1800 INr. \Varner) 34~ .AVAIL MAY 1ST J acuµ:i & s\vim pools, private garage with 2 Br, 1% BA. Fireplace. Cpta, storage. From $140-210. 4 BR. Con t ine ntal TownbouJe. New p a i n t . CJ'pta:, drpf, all appliances M2-367Q. Wallace Ave. C.1.f. Legune Bt•ch 4705 I: laundry. Ooee to ~ O:IATEAU· La Pointe. Love- Brookhurst il Adanul, HB. ly spacK>us 2 Br apt. Furn'l'N:-~port::..:•:e:Kh:::_~4~2:'[iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiP.!iiiii (21ll '31-2'08 il un furn. Laundry!. drps, bit-ins inc. dish1V1.Sh... Fer •loy.ltlt Hrroultdlnt• cateril11 te tlis- er. All th.is plua a "COOL c ........... COnlt to Mlll™AC WOODS ••• POOL" and recreation room. Jv1t •st If UM Harlter l lW., nr. Na1Mr1 C•dlllac Sl85 mo. l•t and'"' + ,._ 425 MERRIMAC WAY, COSTA MESA e 545-6300 curity deposit. 549-0674 IVl•YTHING NIW-MOVE IN NOWJ ~=j :l~;M~ -- uptrlence rennna -cotlflc lJ1I apartments. Lilh( m&Jn. te_nance. &15-1052 · : u:.A.VING Town hi !J~ \Vant middle ege «M)ple to rent your borne oq kq termr Bt:at cue fol' rta1. ttnf. City or country, (21.3) +t8-37«. ; TRANSF~D. Need 2 or 3 Br tiOuse for famby by April 13. Up ta $14d.. Call (209) 5..'6--19n collect &ftct U:30 A.M. J\t01HER, Child and ..... eu behaved do1, need l bdrm turn. apt., rm Y.i th ltltchtn piivile~1 or? 492-C2'11 BALBOA Island, .i. or; 2 BR. ...Yrly lease, for e Ider I y widow, No car or peta. 67s.6342 e LANDLORDS• FREE RENTAL SERVICE Broker 534-6983. GARAGE Needed far.-stock room. N.B. or C.M. • ~a. ?itr. Ide. <n41 774--0330. FA..,flLY Wishes to 1t;tM a -4 °".a Br home. &16-0067 ] Br Apt or hou!e, tum. or uni. Yrly lease Beach atta pref. 547-8487 · Rooms for Rent ,,,, ROO:\f &: bath tor gentlemen, ' pvt. entrance & pat.O. Nr:ar fl\')'&-beaehes. LintrtJ ·tum., $75 mo. 962-4173 H.B. COLLEGE Or \Vorkin& Girl . Bal. Isle. Kit. & TV rm. incl. SS-$ mo&: up. 67$,-3613 $15 per wk up .,,., kik:heft. $30 11•k up apt:i, · 2316 Ne11port Blvd, Ori. ~r:» SLEEPJNG rm., priv~'J;iome, nlce area. Employ. J2\&.n. W-5000 S48-03il; £\•es ROO?il w/priv. ba. 4 I.Jib' • No ooaking. $70 a mo, Phone 675--07Tl.. ROO~t &. bath in Private home, Ci\f . Female: ,pref. Call 546-8240 • 2 BR unfurn Me, w/w crpt., pr attached, 2 small chldrn. $148 mo. Call for appt. .....,,. J Br. hse, W/W crptl, fal' If• tached, l small child or pet $ill ... ~. 3 Bt:dnn, 2~ baths, freshly tacillties, heated pool, $35 WEEK EL CORDOVA painted, new carpeta/~ carporta, Adults. no pets. Newport leach c ~ u. '100 H 1-n .. h .... Brand new delux apt!, spae-O••• mo.•• ~ un 1ngton -c """" "· Pool A: Clubhoult priv. 19U Pomona,. C.M. "RAND t..wrury Apts. Year-round tts-Jou Motels, Trlr, Crts~.5997 2 BR. l Baths: cpt11, drpg, bltns: Westsidf!, Children OK. $165, he. 642.-6943 days 3 Br houtt Eutslde, aloM on lot. $115 mo. Call after ~ 640-0468 TOWNHOUSE l\lonticello 2 sty, l Br. 2 Ba. Pools. $197.50. 968-4793 aft 5. $135. b1o + $35. Deposit 2 ~n only, no peta 22'18 Placentia 646-5637 ileees. ~.or 961-1097, HOLIDAY PLAZA a idence:.nteauaranteed.The ~:~t!u!,:;h:.m~~ --------o·N BEACH' uk for ' '. DELUXE, Spacious l Bdrm Nr:w Village Jnn. ~94-9436 are the btst in the atta. See ~~ ~~c~ ~a~;rp~ • NEAR New, l Bdrm, FurnH • .'poolpt $U5plplu1 k~til . OPENING BA~ 1 ~h • 1 them at 2077 Charle, manag. pool. $195. 540-4179 • SINGLES FRO?ll $l40 ca.rpetln;. b!t-inl, double l!l.t= •am e par llli· '-C), ap · nr . ..,.. · "" own. er John a: Louise Sellen, garaae. No children· no pets. Util. pd. Avail, 'tiJ June 27, 64&2118. 3 BR Upper Fkm. No pets. e 2 BR l ~li BA FROM $225 $210 * * 544-m 1965 Pomona, C.l\t. $95 l\fo. Reter's. ~94-4925 l'~ ba, crpt. $145. Cail e 2 BR 2 BA FROJ\f $260 IMMEDIATE HARBOR VILLA APTS 5.11-9391' e 3 BR 2 BA FROM $360 $225 Ma., gardener paid. 3 $UO-Bachelor apt, all util. San Cltmtnte 4710 JO min, lo beach. adults only. Carpets.drapes-dilh1vasher Br, 2 Ba, c,rpta. drp&. Avail p.aid, cla11e la •hopping, Avail i l & 2 BR, 11" Bath. Cn~ts. DELUXE 2 &: 3 BR unfum healed pool-sauna-tennis Aprll 15. -· _,, now ~·-••• '980 -~ apts. 9IJ8 El Camino Drive , -.-..... ·.DAI . _.,....;i drps, bltm, ·Priv patio , tee room~an vlc11•g. O..EAN 3 Bdrm fenced yud $12>2 BR duplex, 1araze, ,. OCCUPANCY SPARKLING 1 bdrm, pool swimming pool, laundry rm. C.?.J. Ph.546-0451 patios-ample parkil\:. $DJ. 4782 Sttnuio, HD ' yard, lood locafilon. Bkr. built-ins 2 bloc.ks Ir 0 m From $115. 2621 Harbor 2 BR unturn. $130 mo. No St:ru.rity ruanls. • 96"'5U9 • ~ Luxury a:arden apartments beach, ocean view, year Blvd. Ph 9-l, 534--UTI, aft 5 pets:. Joann St., O f. Call FURN. alao Avail. .-;;u-;;;-n:--.=-;;=1-========I If · pl t rl ''"'· No ohildffn °' "'"· pm. 546-""1 54>-3437 HUNTINGTON 3 BR, ll( Ba, 1 mL from o '""" com e • P vaey, II<O 0 beach $195 per mo. Cllfl Mlie 4100 beautiful landscaping I callm492-4!>4l or '492-4388 3 BDRr.fS., 2 baths. Ea 1 t PACIFIC HOLIDAY BEACH ?il6TEL Rooms • kltchenettH, •100' ta Beach. F r ee Continental brcakfall. 1832 N1 LI. Ca.mine Reh SC. 49"~ \VEEKLY n tes St:a· Lark l\1otel, 2301 Newport; Blvd., Costa Mesa . ' Misc. R1nt1f1 ·. '"' FULLY encltJsed. cinces, $2q_ per mo. 642-6391 ; . ·: MaH Verde .,._,,., unp..-alloled .-.antional _.:;:=,,::c_;.::.._:___ _ _;_ ORI.WIS .APTS. --_,!!''!.!· G ...... Ad.·~~ !!1,;, NE\V 3 Br, 2 Ba. Walle ta1 ---------1 tacilitlea in a country RENTALS -~''" ~ 7ll OCEAN AVE., H.B . bch $250 Call 96MDl, LOVELY l Br. Garden club atmoephere. No'v Aptt. Unfurnisftecl (7141 536-1'87 3111 :?135 Eldt:n, Apl 6, C.?.t • • WXURIOUS Tri-Lew:l 4 br, 3 ba w/2 frplc'1, lrr tam rm., sep din rm, .front & tt:ar patio. Rear hu -au fire pit. 1ardene:r. $315. ..,_.,,.. • • •ff9.. Duplex. S125 ind util. Quiet 2 4: 3 BR &\o-a..il.. Adults _°"41. N-rt le1ch 5200 NO\ RENTING day1 833-1511 ext. 1'711. mature adults. Refer. Alao, leuins in Newport Beach. Generil 5000 V : new deluxe 1741 ---tin ~-sta apts. Adults only. All Utu. RENT Or leue with option. small bachelor $89. 548--800'1 Models·apen 10 am to 8 pm !,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; •..,, . o..u ~fes. pd , __ • B •a .. _ .. ., .......... __ ._ •.,.,.;: M .... li1rs. ,..;..__ "~" ...... BAYFRONT . Furn. if de11u"'d. 1 BR. r, .:> ...-. o;iWUJ.-.:i• ..... -SPACIOUS 2 Br apt. $153. Rents from ~O •·· ....... -wn. ~ fron $135: 2 BR: from SlfiO. mo. (800) Sl!MMTI collect CarpeU, drapes. pool. Ask J'w'nished or unfurnished VE. NDOME 2 BR. 2 BA Luxury Apts. Cambridge, Bolsa Chica I:. &bout our dl9count plan. 2 BR Unfurn, Newly dee. Priv. tern.ce, elevators, sub-\Varner, H.B. !fewport Btach Fountain VelJty 3'11 ?ilgr. Apt. E, 1846 Placentia. Oakwood ~~·A~" •TE APl'S•. New erpta. A: drpe. Spac. tr:rranean pk'g. All elec. --.u.w.n ..,..,"" AP'l'S. Furnished or un· ~"-3 Br + Bonllll Rm. Club-S?.fALL l BR furn. apt. All ADULT 1' FM.llLY grounds. Adllll, no pets. $140 Pool, sort "'ater, docks, 3121 furnished, 2 bed raa m BLUFFS. Lt:ase-u.le option. bowie, swim min 1 pool, util paid. 998 El Cunino SECTIONS AVA ILABLE mo. 2283 Fountain \V~ E. \V. COast Hwy, Ne\vport. private patio, 5 Points AP"· D C., °"' "0 1 Garden Cl t h pl p k <HAI'bor, turn \V, at 642-2202 1850 11q It Condo Huge tennis I: putting greens. r., ·" . J'fV"'V'W 011 o I op ng, •r 7721 EUls. 1 block ·west of deluxe r'nuier BR ~uite, &. Bit-ins, new crpt I: drps. NICE 2 BR. Duplex. o,>t'd. * Spacklus 3 Br's, 2 Ba ~'il,son). \Vilson Gardens YEARLY 3 Br, 2 Ba, "'/w Beach Blvd at Oela1vare. spacious second or pest Fl'om $250 ma. 968-4004:. Adultz. $ll5. Aparim f * 2 Bedroonu P s. crpt. drps, blt-inll, patio, ') $145 pr. mo. open daily. BR, 2~-batha. Dramatic Phone :>49-0833. en 5 * Swim Pool. PuV1tten Harbor Heights Apt1 , blk to ocean, no pets. $275 CHEZ ORO Apl!. 8234 AUan- split-levr:I. Unusual kitchr:n Santa Ana 3'10 * fl'l>L Indivllndry fac'il Roomy-Del.wee 2 I: 3 BR. mo. Ca.II 642-948S. ta Ne1v J-2-3-BR. priv. & other l ux.ur.y ap-·----~--MOBILE Home, completely '1700 16th StrHt 1145 Anehtim Ave. Home atmosphere incl garg, DEWXE 2 BR. \Ves lcl iff garages. Pool . Util ity pointmenta:. $450 per mo. 2 'BR. La:. encloRd yd. 2 furn. Adu1ts only, April CDSrA MESA 642-2824 frcd air htg, bltns. Cislo Loe. Pool a: built-i n s. rooms. $49,500 ternu;. Ov.·ner. itr. car gar. Cki@e to lhopa I: 1.>Sept 30· ~~2436 714: 642-8170 S.D. fnr.y, l>hopg, sch1, park. Adults. $U5 ma • no least:. 536-8038 or 536-2727 Christopher, rn4) ~7. schls. 1·2 chlldnn $145 mo 1 BR. Pool. Shtdfie board. • RENT • {Btwn Baker & Gisler, \V. or 642-6274 <2lJ) m.llOO :r1s~~ dep. Ina:. m 7 s. ~~~:.ui:~~ pd. 1884 BA YCLIFF MOTEL 3 Rooms Furniture ~=an ~~:-1 sZ~ m 7•l -N:.:E\:.V,::;3,:_B-,-.~,-B-,-,-"ts, 1re~~·., ~~1: l ~rp~·co:.:::: WESTCLIFF 2000 sq. It. $l9 95 & UP families only. From $21J. Adults only. no pets. $135 Income Property "- TAXES GOTCHA? rr you had purchased this low maintenance 4-plp: ear. ly in 1.969 you'd be Pil'inc less taxH on AprU 15th. IT'S NOT TOO LATE THI?-;'K ABOUT APRIL 15. 1971. Down: $8000 ~ AMual Gl'OSll: $61511 IF.aslly Increased to itm1 Price: $50,900 AND Some Very UniqUe Depreciation Advant.a&;t:J Call '7J.IS50 Now horlie. Many exlt'as. Vacant. SPACIOUS new 4 Br Ex· NICE 1 BR D UPLEX . * LO\V WEEKLY JlATES * • Call Anita, 67~2:10, Jones per mo. incl. utilities. Open daily for inspection. ecutive home nr So. Cout Adults. $115. ' KHcben, TV's, maid servlc:e.. l\tonth-To-1.lonth Rentals Fa1'rway v1·11a Apts Realty. Trade11.'ind! Realry,. 847-8511 -========= Avail April 1st. when Plaza. Uase opt. $350 ma, *Phone 54.9-0835 • Hr:ated Pool. \VlD£ SELECTION decon.tina: complete, l607 _B~la=540-=-;1667===== 646-3265 NO DEPOSIT O.A.C. LOVELYTWNHSEw/viewot 3 BED R M J\fadcrn 5 '-0 THE REAL '·:'"'\.. ESTATERS . . u-t • ·--~'Kn ,..,_,, -c to ~. ., R t··· Ne~-o--· Co A'·port • pool 2 Bdrm 2 Ba frplc, Ira To11Tihouse, 2~.· BA, .,,..~. SEPARATE no:n ....... "'. ~· .....,. owner "lOO LG, 1 Br beach apt. Furn. us m r urnt un: en 11.1 "' ·-·• • "" .: .§73-3293 or leave n&mr: at L•gune leech 3705 Coste Mt•• " decorated, c•-t~. ll60 'ti.I 517 \V, 19th, CJ\t 54.S...3481 UCt. Adults only. 20122 patio $250 Agent 646-0732 drps, prtv patio, 2 car gar. -r-Santa Ana Ave .,A:: .. enA 2 BR 2 BA ATR""I CID Pool & Clubhouse. $210 ~lo. HOUSES hoUAe. . Jul)'. 548--5080 before 9, alter $16.>-3 BR, 2 bath studio, • ~ · · ...... · · B/B 3 BDRMS. & OEN VILLA MESA APTS. 1 range & oven. ".1 w, Bltns. t'ncl a:ar. Adults. $1!111 Lease. 64-14l33 ~no on spacious 1,1 acre nt'&r S.A. Adults Only Fireplace, carpeUI, drapes, 2 BR Furn. Priv patio, htd STEPS To Ocean/Bch y 1 children ii•elcome. Bk r. * MARTINlftUE lse. 543-3708. 673-2370 ATI'RAC. 2 Br. No1v avail., Country Club • 2 3 Bdrrns. 2 3 BR.. 2 bath split level $2S5 built-In kitchen. A Fine fam. pool, 2 car encl'd gar. Child-w. Newport. S2Z mo: 2 ~~: 534-69SO T 2 BR, l~S BA. Crpll. drps, all extras. Pool. Kids OK. baths and 3 2 Bdnns •• $150 AVAILABLE NO\Y ilf home. P.n."·elcome, no pets plea.set 1 Ba. Couple, no pets.1=''=="'=-:c.===== QUIEl' DELUXE APTS. bllns, patio & pool. $160 mo. $149 mo. 174-0l·A Keelson per mon th incom~. $69,!i(IO • Ba .l St: h Rally 1 $26.S f.fonth . Lease $185 mo. 67:J..3345 Cost• Mesa 5100 1·2 & 3 BR. 152a Placentla Avr:. NB Ln. HB. 968-7510, 8-17~ 011•ner 11.ill help t\Jlal'U •• y ac e ' nc. •1tSS!ON REA'TY 4•• -31 TI9 IV W" &1•1•~1 P . 1· '1 t·• I 2 BR R d Du t ,.,7171 901 ~--Dr Sulte 126 NB " .... ;>'Ml< • san. * .,.. ~ S G nv. pa 10~ •• ea ni pao s. . e ec. p ex w/iar. _... ~·~ .. •!!!!!!~"'!"~~!!!!!!!!'"''" --------~ IN LES - l Br, pool, blk to QU!E'l' & LUXURIOUS N ho '"" Ad l n1 E t Bluff '242 C d ... .:. 2000 E 548-6966 $30 PER WK & UP r. s pp .. ,.. u ts o y. ill ~ rpts, rps, stove. No pets . .,..,. ves. 1 BR DUPLEX, ilave, ttf, "'·~'--t l l BR. htd I ocean. $125-$13 3. Call ADULT LIVING AT... 1777 Sanla Ana Ave .. Cl>f. ---------Refer req. $140. 71 5-8 uEWPORT Shore 1, 3 ""1,utilpd.Seeat2817"'-·· ... oa>-r11::ar · pao , 833-353:i.Eve11.644--0637. uaCIENDA HARBOR ''-A IJ3 * "'"""'" -ca1·1 · St·•••~ 1" -.-"""''"' aJd · K't he & ~ n'6' pt · ~ 2 BR Studio, 2 Bath. PowdeT 1 omia · :>l\r't"~ evr:s. Bedroom, l;& Bath, Ground IT So t .......... 213 :_, seUI'\~. y· '1'. "'!N LARGE 1 BR, nr ocean Brand New I & 2 BR. n -1 ~ti·o N. Sl!\'e err, · _ ... _, : , v ava ......, 1c ona r · GRACIOUS Adult Ltvln• r m, frplc, plush crpt'g, b;1. NE\V 1 BR·blk to bt:ach. oor c•1va e ..-. • ice 944-5141 collect. Harbo•)' · Upstainl. Sundeck. $1 40. $150 & $170 per mow/ ~--t l ~ n •---d • 2 BR. wl-ts, d•pa, blt·•·n ins, amall palk>, 2 car a:ari. Prlv patio. NICE! QUIET! """'V" u1ape11. e c"""' · yearly. Studr:nta ok. 673-8088 all uW llies incl. ~·.-.... "'92 S251J pr:r month DLX l e s tu All RIO, spiral strcase. frpl, $250 mo . ......-.... Car, singl e adults, couple Bu1ines1 Property: '6050 FOR Sale b)I 01vner, 'T-unlt modem MEDICAL ·~bE.N'· TAL CENTER. ··Gaod return, &ood wr i te-aft . Consider home or '? tn trade, Stt: 59U Heil Avf'., tl.B. Call 01vner (Tl4J ~mi e\'es. (713) .._1810 days. ~~i . Dupf1x11 Unfum. 3975 ' r., pee. . rn. I OCEANFRONT I Bltn~. shag crpts, drps, gar, 145 E. 18th St. 645-0092. 'I'O\VNHOUSE • Neiv lrg. 2 .202-A 14th 53fr1319, 673--1784 elec., frost.frff re:frii. 'v~w \Veekly untU summer beaut. landscpg. Sorry no FANTASTIC view of harbor OIEERFUL 2 BR., garage cpt. Full Gar. w/stor. Quiet OJI 642-!265 pell. lnq at Ofc. by pool or ~'~1~00~. ~~-~~-~ BR, 2',~ Baths. frplc, encl 3 BR Condo, all appliancr:s, A. Udo. S Bedrooms + na peUI, adults. $133 mo. 773 Adult1 only. ?.1o/ma. $160. apt No. 9. 241 Avocado. 1·2 BR's. Furn & Uni. $125 pr, pallo. 675-0033 [rplc, crpts. drps, patio, s:ns Month 67>3932 W. Wiltan. 54S-2fm 2220 Elden. 1546-9278 Eves. l BR. furn. apt. Util, pd. 642-2925 Eves 646-0979 up. incl uW., ne1vly dee., pool, Sl80. 962-1Je7 •:;=:=======--========:::.!..::::========'=I Pool. No chlldttn ar pr:t.s. ' · be 1 d 1 Corona de1 Mer 5250 =========-,. ' LUXURIOUS NEW au • 1iar en, poo. rec. ·0.ntref 2000G.nar1I 2000G1narel • 2000 24115~: 16th, NB 64fr.1fr64 -Ad ults, no pr:l!. 1959 r.Iaple iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ~ A11• 5620 S@\\4.\1A-~£~s· Tlte Pnzle wfflt tlte l•ilt./n Clilldfe 1•-·-_ .... ,_. == 'h• wordt .. ................ ~ I GA1~'j" 11 I I I ·I KHCEC I J t· . I' I I I' _ i •..-..,...,.,...,.....-~-~ 1•Ar1i• ,. I 11 ~---...... ....,, :ILATJllE I, __ , .... __ ,"";:;- : I I' I I' I : ~$!=.~'$. •-.. a-r l!!!J!! .. agy.un rrrrrrr1 1-.1 I I I I I I • 2 BR. -Oct:anfront: to June Ave, Ct.I. ?lfgr Apt 5. .;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; 20th. Othen available! Q . Ad J L ' VILLA u•RSEILLES ABBEY ·REALTY .. .._ u1et u I ivmg I BR. uni. w/w, ""''· ''"· ~:; ~ stove. dispO&al., l20 Center Q. BRAND NEW QUIET Bachelor Unit: Prtv., St. Nr. Shappi"" Center. ll!rt• SPAC10US Adult nl Ill• w l .il 2 BR. 2 1wim pools ... gar. 0 Y· J u $1211 mo. I & 2 Bdrm. Apts. incl. Call S4s.-05M Adults only, no pets. ON' TEN ACRES 307 Avocado St.C.l\f. NICE l Br apt. $1 25 ma., utU l A 2 BR. Furn Ir Unfurn' Adult Living SPACE For b11.rber 11!19p in Coron• dtf Mir 4250 ~ r.tgr on premises turn . No pet1. 2652 Oran:e Furn. & Unfurn. plaza centrally loCated 1----------1 tBehind K-1.fart olf Harbor Ave. Call after ;;, 543-8428 Ftreplacei I prlv. patic;s / Dishwasher. color coordinlt-among the 1302 1u:cuf,.park t R t & A do) or 67:Hi662 Poob..l'erznls • O>ntnrl Bkfat., ..,., ap"""-• ph•h ,•-a Nt:11"""'rt Apts be1 .. -; buil t 2 BR. ?.tarruer!te, So. af a corner u gers voca I ~'=~,C....--~~-900 Sta La.ce, CdM 6H-26U CoA _........ ,,. .,., .. ,. Hwy. $200 ma. No children. Day 642-.'G.l.>, eve 645-0283 2 BR. Upper apt. $140 JM. (1.facArthur nr. <Nat Hwyl carpet -choice-or 2 colOr at Jambartt &: San JN.quin * 67~676 * HARBOR GREENS Gu. •'"'· • wale• furn. No "'h•mea • 7 hatlu , '""I ="~""==Rd::,c"':;N~.B=·=644-==1900""'=-I pets. Adults only. 169 waJ. NEWLY DECOR. 7 en. 11ho11.·crs • mirrored ward· LOE pvt bach. '°. • of hwy. ap•RTMENTS robe d ind'--t ltgh• Office Rent1I .1.•71 Crp .. d ~ hot t "' " nut, Apt E. Call S48-695ol. WJ""I. Blk. ta !hoppl""· oon • """"' '" .., $ll5 ~ ~~g, pate. Bachelor, l-2 & 3 BR. Fum/ * DEWXE 1 & 2 BR siMJ' r-.10. AduJb preferred.. ing in kllchc:'I • breakfast * ATTRACTIVI * ' unL From $110 & up. Car-Gani A 81 . rl HaJ P'-hln Realtor 67>4392 ba r • hu:;::r: private fenced den patios e Beam ceilp en ptJ. 1•1n.s. P w. .... pa tio • plll!lh !rm.oacapin: • Modern Office Suftea l l_11_i... ______ 4300_, I Frplcs •Rec Rm&• 2 Pools patio, heated p6ol, trplc. 2 Br Arlt, new tTPt A: bricR Bar:B·Q'.1 .1up beat. Carpelfd and ~ RENT Free ta female in Saunaa • Nunery School AdulU. Sl 45 mo. 546-3163 paint. $180. Call ed poob It lan11.t. J\talntenance lndudtd Oceanfront apt. For return Fam A Adu1t aec:Uom. Im· NEWER Eut1kl~ 2 Br., 673-9183 llOl So. Bristol St. 300 to looa aq. ft. at keeping house and cook· med. occup. 27'00 Peterson cpts, dJ'P5, bll111, dlhwhr. 2 BR. ?.fquerite, So. of (\~ MJ. N. of So. Col.rt Plu.a) :roi1nd and 9e'cond nCM>r inr. 9'J6 Oceanfront, BaJboa \Vay, C1.f Nr Hrbr" Adama. Encl. 1ar. Prlv. Pat Io H"Y· $175 mo. Na childn-n. Sente Ana 17612 Beacti Blvd. Oownstair. S46-0370 642-6257 * 673-4676 * PHONE: 5S74200 Huntinflon Be11ch e M0-51'24 YnLY 1 Br. Adults. no peta. 2 Br, l~' b111. crpt, drps, NE\V Dix t It 2 Br. Sil& crpt, 1-BDRM .. cpts. drapes I :'!'!'1"~~~""'~!,;,,~ I Modem Offlaa $l30 mo/inclda utll, 507 E. bll·IM. 1 Child OJ<. $150. drp$, bltns, lmmed. occp. Furn. or ullf. $140 .. SlfiO $ll5. LARGE Chttrlul newly Bal~-Blvd.-· .. M ·"c~.i,.1~96Z-38S6~'""'-~--~ From$~. 540.1973." ~2321 Scenic Pn>pe.rtle.1 67>5726 turn. or unf. 1 BR apts. $75 slnale. S173 2 rm suite. -"~ Cr .. Air cond, .5e\.1')' •Mte. LRC 2 BR Gar k> LARGE 2 Br, 1% Ba stud.to pit, urps. bllnl, Pl'i· 1 · apt. ' pal ' apt. No pelll. Jl50. 726 JO&M Huntington Buch 5400 child OK. Nr schl1. 2230 s. r:-rldriv. ccntr&ny located. 4155 Ell.st 1lde. n1~ mo. (213) St. 846-li&I ---------Center St, S . A , lNr. So. Callt lit Nat. Bk. Bld;. I---------_664-'308_-'-'-------\\'arnerl. s.&.l--O'JS9 Costa ?\lea &U-1~ ALL new delwct 2 Br T 1 BR. Crpts/drpa, stol"t', di~ LARGE Bachelor, bltn1 , N'!:\V 1 BR. CARPETS. DELUXE OH!cc S p.Cc•: .... 1undtclt. To June ». $200 Inf atta. 1111110. Pr refer ~ .. ~0Cl'J!~; ~~rr: JllO mo. DRAPES. L19una Btach $705 Ctptt'd, paneled, etc. 10 In· mo. inc utll. 6'fl...U94 single. stna. &12-&179 ,,_...,.., • .....,..,,_,., The Llndborz Co. ti)6...2.)~9 dlviduo\I office&, over 4000 lafr... l1f1nd Bu1in111 Rental 4060 BOAT Slip • 2 Bdrm. 2 Bd. Dt.luxe Ip . c I 0 us. 1 Stdroam Duplex. l..aJ"IC 2 Bdrms. 2 bath. Prtv patio, OCE.>\N rRONT new lUKW"Y All ft. Localed in N....,,1 lkh. Sc• & u I Sft ANSWll IN CWSIACA noN 9000 ....... apt. I hath ml Bit-ins. Cpl"'. Pot~. Xoond.. yanl. !Ill mo. on· '""· '""'"' pool. wube•' tll"yor apt$, I BR. 2 BA. Adulu, no ""' I mo ind utll. Mr. I-----------'.._'!' ________ -:-----------Bill Grundy Rf&ltor 642-463:1 SISS, 646-07~/6"6-4760> gs&.iJ&t ~up. 962...mf ~11. 491-,~1 Gll.llup. &12-9470 • • I;_---~ F ... r-"' I • ' .. ' I. i'. " --,; t. '. • • . -.. . . '· ., ' - .. '• ~-.. •:-·.r; " " " ' ; ., • ... •' .. .. ' .. ' I .... --· --··· .. -----------~---..........----~-------~~--·-·. ·~ --·. ---·-·~· ·-~ --·' ---~------· .. ---.----------· -.. . . -----""""-"" Thurt<fq, Ao•ll 2, 1170 DAILY I'll.CIT -------------"'•·•-----..--mi--11!1--... !l!REAL: ESTATE BUSINESS •nd DAILY PltOT ~ * * .... q..,.1 l'INANCIAL INDEX ,_L_«_• ----"-°' MoMr -;;·-..._-"---mo= Newport R·l $1tl00 TAX PROllL!Mf 1iny lot, t \i bib, to oowt. Nttd 1l'ICllM)' tor rtt.l atate I j;;:1: I ,. _,,_ CLASSIFIED I . Uillld 1 or '2 Ulllr or lnoOmt taxtt dut btXt ~ · ·;; ~ We1lty N. T•yler Co.. ipmthT Rcflnance )'our "al -r,-~111t!:mrn"ll~M'ltl"-~·~·w~"!'i!!r.~:-fu.~·'!!!1!r REAlil'OllB ---... ta.ft With a lit or' 2nd truat • -.11t .... OTEL$. TltAILEa '°UJtTI '11tJ 2111 San Joaquin Jl1llt Rd. detd.' 1 • of.H1-.aL ...................... , ... Gues1H0Mes "" NEWPORT~~·-o •-ttl "·"'-c When You Want it d.one fight ••• - \ •' t'fl COITAMISA ,.,. .............. 11M MIK.Rt:HTAC"S tttt -~~·.,.,,,,~• -trfTIV•••• •• '~ M&SA-OIL MA• .............. 1111, INCOM9 ,J1:or1atY .J............ 60-21n ' Calf one of , ' ' MIU. Yl!ltOE ....... , ....... Ill &V51NESS "ltOPl llTT t0.W cOL.LtGe '"" .............. uts 1111.-1LER PA1t.c.s .e:1 Acrt•g• '200 Servllll Harbor au. 21 yn. I,~ .. l f,IEWPORT llACM ............ ::;-: &USINISS llENTAL ............... I--~,_ ____ ,....._ '-Nl!W">ltT Hl ,.NTI .......... Ol'FtCE llEICTAt. ........... tilt ROGUE Rlvtr v: .. n-·, 9.S WE MAKE OR BUY the experts listed belowll I' r. ""' 1.t.l.IOA cov1s ............ 1ru uo1Dun111Al PllOPllltT' .... ,-~~ TRUST PEEDS • H•WPOllT SHOltlS ........... lm COMMlRCIAl . ........... ~ acres jolnin& dty Of Med--ln)'\ime ! 1 ' • •' ::~:::~$ ··:::::::::::::::::::: ~~~~ST~·-~~-~-~-~~~~.:::~:::::: Whaiddy1 Want? Whaclcty1 Got? ford, Orqon. view pro-~ Bkr. oov•• s1to111s ............... 1 ' ltANtHES ........ -............. .-... SPECIAL CLASSIFICATION FOR perty, minutes to 101t, lli!'•lll!•m••••m!i•m,,jlii•illl•••••••••I -• wEsTcLtfl" , .. :.o"·""' 118: c1T11us oaovts ............. '1" NATURAL BORN SWAPPERS skiing, tilitltng. Glffl potel'-Minty Want.. 6UO , .. A••011 "10Hu.ND• ........ •c111"01 ··· ................... ... ......... -"'==--="'ts1 v1 1 o 01111CTORY s1Rv1c1 DIRICTORY • _ -uNWEllSITY 'AllK ........... isn L.AICI Eu1 Notte: .............. ,m S I Hal Sl3,500. Oinr.ct Ke~tb l2% • Seeurtd .. M u 0_ R Cl Dllt CT , RY Sl"-VICI . _ I ,, · 1111v1N1 ...................... 1ur 11EsoaT 1"110,111tTY ......... •• ptda Rat. Sooke <•ll) l71·!2 I w •• . ' cK tAY .................. ,. .. 1,.. 011AND• co. P•oPr•rr ..... m1 s Lints _ 5 ti-_ 5 bucb •-·-• It~•-opp~ to lo!!x 1 .,_ D n .... J 1~-1 I 6790 ••• ,,,, .. , .................. 114' DUT OF STATa l"ROI" ........... Ht ,...., N rt .-. ...... ~ ,,...,... . V I ttl., -rvw•. , -aft n..-a -• '''' -.,,'",.'°'=.,.·-=,..,.==-I prtva/e lnvto•-~ oul,ol'---~-_,,,_ ___ _ ' ' S:I T•r• 'o\OUMTAIN • DISliltT ........ •t1• RULl"t -AO Mun INCl..UOI! -~ I '.·: •. u1:v1N& :tE••Ac• ............ 12•1 su101v1s10N u.No ......... -•tn .._.,...,""' ...... to,,. .. , 1-Wl!at 10v....,.,. ~ l'ttul!lple z.o~ aettap 1ta.te motel ~roperty,_ BABYSITI'ING In vour •DUDDY "---11 Co. Uc'd RELIABLE Janttor tor ,.. • .:. CORONA DEL MA• .•••••••••. 1250 t.EAL l!STAT!' Si.AVICll .... ''u ... YOU• "'*-•lldfw ....... •4 ""'"., MWrtll..... ....~ " ...... ,. ..... IALIOA f'ENINIULA ......... l:IOO ~.E. IXCNANOll .............. ~ ~OTHINO llOA U.le -TIV>O•• ONLVI * Costa Jlll<tl • su.ue attu-u noon. homt by the week. YDl.f Contn.ctor. Lara• or Small BuUdtna: Malntenanct. t>l)t -1eAcoN •AY ............ -••. isu '· •· wAMTll!o ................ .-To Place Your Treder'• P•r•dl• '' ANNOUNCIMINTS turn. lnlnlp. 642-1401 ~J=""'-==Pb=;81=1-0581====::: I =·='="=l·=h='·=c=.n=im.==SIJ=l=I== . !r;o 'rs'i:'eND~ ·:::::::::::::::::rn BUSINESS and PHONE 642-5678 -llanfa &taltg anti NOTICIS CHILD Ct.re,~ home, dt.)'1 -• '~I ~t~~~:o~~"a01!ACM···:::::::l: FINANCIAL 6'12-6560 --Or eves, Ne"'POi't Bcb. l'loon 6665 P•lntlng, • .i HUtrtTINOTDM NARaou• .... 1405 tUl!INE~s ol",01tTUNIT11s,.•S01 3 BR. 2~~ BA To.,..·1it10uu, 5 BR. 3 .BA. din rm, fa,um!l;;;;-;-=::::-00::-n:::::"';;;;;;;:: Found ll'tH Adil 6400 * 6~ ="" * CAIU'ET. VINYL TILE P•-. rh•-1-. LINDA ISLE '* IUUNESS WANTED ..........•• , N 8 p . ,. I l I I ·~ 950 " " A~-s bv Owntr Utllltie1 •.r-•~ I""' ....... ; fOUNTAIH VALLt'i' .......... uu INVESTMENT o,,.,1u111t1u ... !Ult : . n. p!I 10, poo' e e-c. rm. poo. e c. ....... \' ' f2 .... " I'. • -• , t SEAL aeACH ................ 1~so 1NVEJTMENT WANTai> ...... illl kilchen. $32,000, Take Jo w \Vlll trade for small<>r hOuae near ronnina water 6 GoU Htirbor View Homta-1"" 01tlmate Lie. Contr. CUSTOM Paintt"" _ "Tbe Elt->UHSET al!ACH ......... ,uss MONEY TD LOAN ........ -... •n• d 1 '" mod 1 T 0 , , C 1. Cou-• .~ dn 11• 900 FOUND Sat tadlei Tt.mtx ·Bab-lttlng ..... ....., .... -•A"'·-·-. • !' OAllDEN GllOY•:::· ........... l•IJ l"EltON JAl LOlNS ............ iUU own, a.,.. c ~ar. ' . or . • an 1ruuice. '" • ........ • ' • • • ... • -""""'-'U .._lo tenor ... ; Interior SpeclJ)ilt" ' LONO I EACH ........ -....... ,_1s• JliWELltY LOANS , ............ me or?? 0'!1.11er64$.6654. Bkr. 83S-6341 (213) 782-2727 wrbtv.·atch., leather band.I====="'===== u-1tden"·" • Comm-··· .''wooo , .................. 1sH COLLATEllAL LDANt ......... •w -~--~-~--• = 1-Vic Femleaf l Goldenrod Boat M I 1 ,.,5 O ,_ I ""•" """" 1... ,.~ .. "'""' i•ANG• COUNTY ............. uoo •E•L l!STlTE LOANS ........ ,,... $100 acre-valur-, 160 ec in 'M COUGAR A-1 condition 10 ACRE p~ .. raw -_n . an tn•nce -ar-n "' -No Job too h1;rp or iOo llmdl "' ~UT OF COUNTY ............. 1'°5 =:~~A~~~T~·~H o .... ·::::= No. D. Wl ineome, clear. $1300 equ;t,y ~·-"""ments de,·eloping laJot .,.,. _Terml 0,~ p..!~~fic Cout ~W)'. CdM. NE w· p 0.-R-T u •• , M-aln-.-EXC _E_L_S_l_O_R__ Lie. Bond. IN. Won't be un-. ' OUT OF STATE .............. ,.16111 TS .....,,. $29 89T44T8 ,...__. uua -.\. &TANTOIC .................. 141! ANNOUNCEMEN FOR property in Southtl"fl for A-1 sn1all tl'ltt!porta· to mo. -)!ROWN Pup"" wJ11ea col· tenance •. Lo Rat t" on derbldl 646-3619 ~~~~~~N~~~: .'.:::::::::::::;:::u and NOTICES Calif. LYNCH REALTY tion car. Resort p-rty 6205 lar, found rSunday on aeneral up-keep. MonthJy, PAINTING·lnt.l:tiCt, SANTA ANA ................ iut FOUND IFr .. A.ibl -..... , ... ..-H 838-5361, 642-3106 67;..2895 afl 6 pn1. ·--MiqJon V~e Go" "-·-. ,, wkluofby ~b. Call 645-2291 • u2.••1• AFT 6 PM H'~·1t ~·-'lly. Lowe t i s' SANTA ANA NGTS. .... ,. ..... .l&Jt LOST ......................... f.ltll---'-------q. """""11 " I"' - -.. ,.,,.. -.,.,~ 0111.NGI: .................... •·1'15 f"lliit,SONALS ...................... Exchans;e Large Spanish C-190xtt7 Cor-2 Bldgs 68M Lake Arro_:..a.:._..1 Cla.lm at Via Vienlto, I I k M--If )'Ou want a RELIABLE Price•. Fully 11xp. IM-John . TUSTIN ................... , .... 1 ... ANNOUNC:IMINTS , .•.. ,.,., .. '410 R MK Pm $130 ·-· C sonrv -~-1...:0 ~ 613-11"" · lu>11TH TuSTIM ............... 16'5 a1RTHl ........................ '4n vw home. clear, Ventura, en!t ls. + mo MV r , • • ''· e.uw:ner ,....,-restdentlal or vv NAHl!IM .................... 1,"'.,.-•UJrilllltALI ................... -412 val S60000 tor >'&cht/prop $42,000 Nf for CLEAR Jii-Chalet MALE Dae"·hund/Be••i• etc 65'0 COrnnM!..,lal. -~-p-.-,."---.p-,-.. ---••• -,--~-' lLYl!.RADO CANYON • .,,. •• ,. ,AID OllTU.ltt'I' ,., .. , ... ., ... '41J • • • ,.., ...,., ~~ JI" .... ,ua.. "'-...... LAGUNA H1lLS ................ :: tl&IN•••L Dl'llaCTOll ......... 14 6'8-9183, See.L. Carver, Slip Desert prf Kern Co. Rsmnd 2 yn old -furnithed Spllnlab mixture. VeP'U fr lend I y . BUILD, . u-mod•I, .... .:.. NEW Lawn.. re-stedl.... lnttrior-Exterlor ' LAGUNA llACH ............ .; .-JILOltlST$ ..................... ..-ii" IDT ····'de -on Rd \Y/u.til 616-8558 ... _.Li. ... ' ... ....... ... ..... l:.......clal Prt p Lt.GUNt.N1ou1L ...... .,_ .. 1,. CAltOO,_TMA,UtS .............. 1' • .· ua.r ... ...,,, -· -5Bdrms-.. -.UJ11 .-n. Leathera>llar&:fleacolle.r. Brlck.'block, concrete, Complete Jawncare,Clean "'t"' ce1on aper --MISSION YIEJO• ............ 1~ 1"' MMa•,•,0.•,"Mot1••• ........... ~,' 2 Br 2 •• bl"·· -1 Smoglcss • Trd eq./beaut. · lge fireplacet. Thermador On 'Bal. Penln. Cannot keep e•>-n~·. -~b •-sm·". up by job or n10ntb. Free Call Larry 642--45:18 AH CLEMl!MT • "'"..:'. Cl L ...... , •• , ... -. , -,...,.,., "1' C, Pft> ,.1.,0... ) ..,._, -.--'"'J" .,,., I" _, au ~=~..,,==,,..,,-,.,,.,-1 , AN JUAN CA,llT•ANO ,-<''1'21 ctM1T11tY c•Yl'TI ........... 1t Uo _,.be"-in a •. -i.ie Vil Ocean!ront 4 Br, .f ba, 2 1ty kitchen -com_. .... au ..... ,.• .dot. Downey (213) !161·7940 Lie. Contr ~ eatima.tes. For -Info call APTS .l MOTELS Painted .. ' CAPIST•AHO tlACM lJM CIMITlltV CR'IP'TS .,,., .... tilt ' .I''" ,,. _lu.J....,_ • hm n .. Jd ••• •·~ "·hop l/J .. ..;.... lot on _.. '411 ••• -•• DANA POtNT 114' e111MAT01t1•1 , ............... •!age. $14,!IOO VAiue + a.r. • vu::ans e.,.. v1.c-... , wor.... • _.,. FOUND Poodle Terrl~r Pup, FREE Ell. .Brick, block, oiil'i~ or'"~ $10. avtl'I'· rm. Cal 1 -·~ CEANSID& ................... 11• oUMOIUAt. P.tltQ ............ H!I FOR lot a,._...,, or fixer. Income or smlr hrn, Oranae hilltop with IQl'POUI panor-approx. 4 mo'• old. Corner •lone, p·lanlera • '"""" GAiiDE.NINO anytime Pal the P&tnter, SAN DliOO .............. '!'" •• !711 'UCTIONS ~···· ................. • ----· c \Y u 1-·• ... ~-amie Joke view Boat dock -~.. ., ;~' ··:· lttYERSIDE (:'ou•TY ., ....... 1 .. AVIAnott •••VICI ............. ·upper. 5$.4241 n . ""'"\IW .... ~Id 10 and pn'v•I• ...:~.. ..... Of Oranat: Ave. " 18th St,1·=w=""'=·=5.ll= .. =m=. =Sla=''=Li='='d=. Trees, "ShNhl. Ivy removed. ""'"'='=-'638===.,,....,._,.....,-HOUSES TD •• MOV•D .. , ... I ... fllAVIL .......................... ~I~'--------~-" i c.... ..,. r e .,...o,;nic ..... C.M C&ll ·-~alt 5 N la Ro' tolilU F •s RBURBAN p I t I -.: coNOOMINIUM .... 1. .......... 1,.. At• TJtANsPOltTATIDN ....... ""WILL TRADE lO Irrigated ome n .n~., s:.r01 • able. HURRY! flT,500. Own--i;i;.;'':;i;;.,-;;;;.,.-.-".::~·.-.I ew wns. ng, tte U a o a r 1 oul"LEXES 110• SALi ........ 1'11 AUTO T1tANIP01tTATtoff ..... 6MI 11 ac'a clear & T.D.'1. TraM ,, ... '•••, SHELTIE-COWE, onld Ca-ntirt-'590 eat. 548-8918 Decor. We take the pa1rl "• ' Af'AllTMENTf '°" 11.1..• .... 1M tlOAL MOTIC•S , ................ acres in emet w/3 rental• f I In ..... area or vur<IO<lll .y . -.... 1 ..... ;;-:-::;;;=-=--=---~ .:·RENTALS OERMAN&TutoRtNct .. ·""'tor()rangtCo.incomeprop; or ap1 . ""'' I"'======== white, male, w/Oea collar. CARPENTRY JAPANESE Gardener , ou~ofp&intlrll.Expertwork. , 1 htcf SERVICE DIRECTORY rty large home. Real Estate Vic Victoria &: Maple. ob exp'd. Comp!. yard aervice. Free est. • '94-3190 ·--. E!!:~~ .... ~~~.~ ........ t• ~~i~u1N•~~"l1i•VIC9 '.'.'.'.'.'.':·: e ·can (714) 962-2561 Call. 543-3873. Service 6215 642-G69 ~Tooo!l ... ~~blnall'llno J Frff estimate. 548-8255 PAINT NOW SAVE $$ '-EMTALS TO SMAii ......... 1005 Al'l"LIANCI Jtal'Al•s. Partt .. 6'U'I~====-'~==~~ Commerc. income· free &1-.:o;""-='-----'-"'-'·I FOUND A cute poppy, ))el-oii-. -Ill'-JOHNSON 'S G'nDEN!NG Call Jack NOW !! osYA MESA .................. nM Asl'MAl.T. 01is ................. ...,.BEAUTIFUL. ENGLISH 6 1 . 1425 M ""OOO TY ~· -• other cab'-11. ~ •" MESA DEL MAit .... , ......•.. !1H AUTO lll!l'Al•S .. ··-·· ... UM R H p d c ear. Ult'. o. ~· p R 0 p E R w/whlte p&WI at Natlona.I .. -Yard care, Cean-, upo, Pru.n-894-3895 or 847-1358 •" MESA ve:ao11 ...... -........ u•• AUTO, s"' t1111, T1,., 111c. •H• m, ome near asa rna Equity. \Vill trade up for MANAGEMENT 11 se:.tl75, If no.,.,.,...,. ... vt .,.., COLLEGE l"A•K .............. !p•s eAeYS1TTINct . . ......... mt for N.B., CdJ\1 C.M Duplex · & Oak St., C.M. Ca -· at ~ H. o. Ing, pJantinr. 962--2035 COLLEGE Student. 2 yn ex--.. eWl'ORT IJEACM .............. &OAT MAl,..TlNANC• ...... 6111 nits H • al . $29 500 units, L"Ommerc, or ! fDr apt. OI' income unltl u s.5923 rr NEWPORT HOTS ............... nu llltlCK, MAfONRY, tic.:: ...... 6UI ()r.u -. ome v ue • Farel \Valker Rltr. &46-7414 6444>244. evem,.s AlldenoD Al . .'S G&rnenma • Lawn perien«. Low prlcea. EWPORT SHORES .......... tt21 •USINESS SERVICIS ........ ""clear. Call 548-8.')32. BLACK Toy poodle w/whlte QU" -A-··-_ ... 1.0. Matntenanoe. Ccmmerdal, 1---=s="~""::..:-:.::..::c='-~ AYsM01tes ................. 2m au1Lolii•S ................... .-11 ---------Mod J · I• 4 h digital BUSINESS nd' ---' ft.Wl..1.-1. • ...,, uw .~_... tlOYEllt SHORES ............... = CATEIUNG ................... ,,s $10,0(X) Motor home + boat e lllt'Cl'll • c . ' a 9P0t on ne c k, atrl~. or new constructton. Rel. ·or ~ustrtal Ar realdentlal. PAINTING ID reuonable :~fJ~~~~:v ioARK ''.::::::::::22i1 ~:=~~E,.TT~~~~· .::::::::::::::.= trlr & 35 hp motor. $6500 prop. radio control ~Y5lem FINANCIAL male, in Newport artL Com. By hour or contract. * &f6-3629 * you won't belleve •IU 1 IRYl/rlE ........................ nu CEMENT, CD11cr111 ............ uot eq. house in Pasadena. Trd &A·,::: .• ""• 0,.h?,~~i,.',,'°,'1,yp~~slnFOflaRl· Buslnett Wll638-TE23l7KI . So Cout Lie.&: Bonded. 6.fG....3'42 EXP. Ja .. nese Complete * 6~7153 * · !ACK &AY ......... ,. ........ 224• CRILO CA•f, l l<tl'ltff .......... 11 11 " • ....,,... IC J ft EAST ILU,, .................. 22•2 CONTJl:ACTOlll .............. n lor Real E!late or . bl d" . boat 837-8910 0 rt ltl uoo· en. Ill . CARPEN'IlRY -CABINETS 'Yard Service. Reas. NB A-RETIRED Painter: • yn El T••• n44 CARPET CLEANING ...... till 1213) 68l-5M2 a e iving · PPo un, ff _ Plua puklnr·IDt, 645-0928 "-mod Jin in N job CM -·-a.·540.-7373 expo•, N••I • •--~ Non tRYINe Tl!llRACE" ........... ,,., CARPET LAYING & 11£1"AIR ''H ' .n.c e ,.rep& 0 ...... • -, ... ~ .. coaoNA DEL MAR ........... !!?! o•Al"IOalES .................. ux Eq. $21.100 2nd T.D.'.a. $2750 Dover Shores view lot, cot-* FAMOU.S BR.AND after 5 · ·too small Call 84M2:l4 CLEAN·UP SPECIALIST drinker. Call 5.16-aOl. IAL80A .............................. Dl!MDL1T10N uu ner Gala.~y &-J\.tariner NAMI * JlEAOINC GLASSES. Pre1. : ·· · 1Do ISLE ..................... 2"1 o•AFTIHG sei:Vicli":::::::::: .. 31 '69 V\V Sq, Bek, auto, air, T d 1 · PATIO COVERS DECKS Mowinf, ~. odd Joba. * PAPERHANGING 8AY ISL.ANDS ................. nst l!t.ICTRICAL UM •Ao.IV\ v nd h 1 $35.000 value. ra e or 111o CANDY • SNACK R""'-.len.s. SUnday 1.t Beacon .l • a. bl •• ,...,5 uL101. •SU.NI) ,. ............ ms eou11"MENT RiNT:t.LS ·:::::::MJ• Fb"'V e ·mac· on oc. come property or home. .. vu•~ Tllltln NB 646-3l42 Remodelin1 -Cen. Repair ...... asona e, '" ;!,J & PAINTING. * 9111-24.25 HUHTINGTONIEACM ............. , ••• FENCING ...................... uaJ'rd for Real Estate or? IPAJtTORnJU..TIME) ....... I ~·-·11~ UJ•-JAPANESE G d In( J'OUNTAIN VALLEY .......... FLOOltS ........................ uu 12131 6815542 548-l936 ALLPtt 1 . hOrn noy tJ:epuvo..,. "" •l4M' ar e n PAPER HANGING . . .-: ~~~ ~~~~~ ·:::::::::::.:-:: .. :: ~~==r1cul!11:'.'e"s1::iu~':' -.. ·""·•,-n~R~2~:~,B~A-.r~-.. --BEAR \VHEEL .ALIGN-We~y a1!:~:i~~ thla S:m Child'~-~=e•verde REPAIRS* ALTERATIONS Service. Neat work, Cleanup 20 yn: exp. Free e1Utnate. \ '' DRAHGll! COUNTY ............. f.00 & 1tEFINISMINC1 u1s · n oirn use, \TENT '"ACIUNE I "· w • • .. n••" * CABINETS. •-· 11ze 4-..b yd. malnt. ~2303 C&Il Kellh a"·.time 6f.2..2509 ' ' SANTA ANA ................. Ult GARDENING .. . ......... '60 N.B. Pri. na !Jo, pool, elec. ' ,., ' huo· ne . arra for our eandy (Nestles Prk r1r Adam• Sch. 54r-""" "'"'V "' .. ,,. .. ESTMINSTER ................. Ul? GENERAL SE•YICl!I ..., ,. h $32 .. -000 T k I Cost $4200. Will trade for Planters, Toot.lie Rolls, Milk SMALL Brown D"'~"-liund, 25 )Tl t:xper. 5'U113 JAPANESE Gardener. exp'd. 1DWAY ctTY ................. u1' ••••'"' 0,,,,,, ......... ,.., 1tc en. , . a c ow f " ol -·~ Compl .... serv Free e•t. Pl••l•rlnt P•lch · ANTAANAHlflGMTs ........ 1•10 "' ........... • • :ampero equ v ue, Duds, etc.l. No telling in-m&lt.FoundlnMesaVerdeGEN. repair, add., cab. · 1"· • , ' .-COASTAL ...................... 21H GUSS . . ..... o ........... 6'ff :lown. lale model ('81 . T.D. 549-W.1-4 ''ol··-·. \Ve ~··· ... ·-·-·· ... ~,, Forml••, plntll"·· m••JIJe,· Reliable. 642-4389 ' Re-Ir UGUNll. S!ACM ,., ........ .,.11.S GREEN TMUMS ................ 41': l1' ?? Owner 646..Qro.I. V""-' '""~"" tw .. -~" '"........., ..... .,. ..... r-' LAGUMA NIOUIL _,, ......... 1111 OUN SMOI" .................... ,, ·~'""=~-,.~~-=-1 FlOO "-I Anything! Dick 673-4459 JIM'S Gardening &. lawn l---"--------1 MISSION VILIO ...... _ ....... 1111 Mt:AlTN CLUtt .............. '"'11D UNIT 11pt in Van Nuvi> f'ord 6 -Ranger 7J. _cn count,;. Yoo must have 2 to FOUND: Sat. !rown •ha&IY ' maintenance. Rei. "--com-* PATCH PLASTERING .,. C'•ME-a 111t NAULINO ................... no . P.U, V·S • Auto trans . ....,w 8 h-. per -k --"me female· ~·p~, Mtl&· n .I QUALITY Wood-I' --• _.,__._, * ... ·-~ All "-s. ~, eo"ma'·o • .. "' ············•· HOUS&CLl!ANING ............. •nJ exchange for impl'OYC'd un. '" '""" • .,....., u ry r.r Ll'll' ..... ., aii1& .,..,.,~ ~1 V l"' ,,.,,., u "" St.N JUAN t:A,.IST•AlfO ....•. !JU INTElllOllt OECORATIHO """'"' . : . :o"· miles. 8' bed. Need ser-(da,Ys or eves). Mar ........ -pn'l constr. 4-carpentry. c-" ••• ·-CA .. ISTRANO tlACH ···-····'no INCOMe TAX ................ 6HO 1mprov~. con1me1 c1al, ~,.. ... ~ DANA l'OtNT .................. 11tt 111oN, °""'""'""L lie. ........ ,,,, honie or apt in Orange Ol' •icrable small<'r Ste \Vagon $1150 TOTAL CASH SMALL Bl k do Call Ken 6t5-()()4.4, 548-4235. EXP. Japanese m&iritenance. 1uvt:•s10E c1o,u,"',LYS ........ ~ 111tON1No ..................... •1111 SD C t 49214~ Bk lr PU, 646-42'24 REQUIRED ac 1. approx.I-=========::. I H.B.• F.V. Area VACATION • • .......... -INSULATING ................... ,.. oun Y. . • u;) r. 6 mo'• femalll! Vic 19th .. ~ ...... .. suMME• llENTALI ......... 2'11 1Nsu•ANCIE ................... •n• . 3 Br, 2 Ba. Beach Home. F'or more infonnatton write ' ' · Cement, Concrete MOO * ~ * -· : ONDOMIN1UM ................ 7951 1Nvr:sT1GATING, otlftllYt •.. t 7M 2 Newe1· duplexei;, side by 11 3~1 solid l'Q. Leasehold at "Di!itributor O\v111on No. & Pomona, C.M. 642--0261. JAPAN~ Gardener ierv· PLUMBING REPAIR .. • DUl"LExr:s r:ullN ............. l'1S JANITORIAL · ... . ........ im side 3 Br 2 ba ea fplcs· FOUND Sil Ml Poodle CONCRETE work all --. ·No· ~b too om·" Plu"1bln.~v,_ ___ • -"'°-i ··' RENTALS JEWELRY REl"AIR, Etc ....... •eot • • : ·• • t-.lokuleia, Oahu. For T.D., 23'', P.O. Box frS, Pomona, : ver n. · •.-r.I"<•· ina F. Valley, H. Bch. Cotta "' ~ H U I • h-.1 LANDSCA1"1NG ................ •110 nr. bch. Eqwly app1-ox. slnck, re110rt prop. b:>at etc. Calif. 91TS9 ~ Include phone Vic. HeU &: Bushard, F.V. Sawln1, breaking, hauling, Mela, Npt Sch. 645--0~S e, &U-3128 e • OUlft n urnis ~ LOCKSMITH · · · ............... m o $27 000 ~ade for land or 531-6590 Sldploadlng· Llc Service &: , l G•Nl!UL ..................... 10tt MAIO SERVICI! ............. , 4IU ' ' ~:on Mr. Frank, &42-9206 Eves. flO, " ' • OSTA MESA .................. 1100 MASONRY. ••tCK ............... indust. Realtor 673-4.JVU WHITE Male to". -le, vie. Quallty. 842-1010 Hauli-Remodeling & Mt:SA DEL MAil ............ ,.;nos MOVING a STORAGE ......... A"'l~-,.-~""'°"'c-oc.--;;, \'"-~t do "OU have to trade? MANAGER "· .. ., 6730 MliSA VERDE ................ Silt l"AIHTING, P.1-h1n1l1tt ...... mt ~~ Ac· Pool, 3 br. 2 ha, lSx •1-" 19th & Meyer 646-0890 * C9 NC RE TE W D t le , -------Repair 6ff0 DLLt:OI! l"A•K ............. JI U PAINTING,'"'" ............... ast 36' pool horse prop 2 units OWNER J..icerl.SE'ri. Patkl5 f drvv.:ys, AMBITIOUS College boy has -· . '4lwl'ORT •EACM ............ not l"AT1os .............. -.. 4Mf • • • List it here -In Orange E THE REMODELERS \V .,. Nt:Wl"OlltT HG HTS ....••....... nu f'HOTOGRAf'MY" ........ i ...... 10 20M P(J, Tn:I for home in NB County'• t·-sl ,.ad trad· National cor--ation, now Jn. Lost 6401 etc. Phillips cemen t, truck: will hau l, move. x-"1' NEWl"ORT SNORl!I .......... :ma l"U.STERIHG, '.ilCll. •utr •. 4'IO oi• Cr.1 01' il'l(.'Ume prop .._.,.~ ..-. S.18-6380 per, dep , Call 83J...6075 for Quality Home '· ·-•AYSHO•Es ................. ms f'LUMSING ................. "ff • tervlewing, for owner man-·---------·l ;=n.;c-,==,..,--==-.~ DOVl!R SHOii ES ............... :m7 Pt:T GltOOMING ''°° O\\'flel' 531-7636. jng post-aM make a deal MORE c I r f free est. Improvement Contractors WESTCLIFI' ................ :mo POOL SERVICE . '··~······· .. 4'21 ager or l.'omplete family rec-LOST: Sat. Lrc German I oncrcA '· ,P,. " ,. °' ·s=E~F~O~R~E~Y~o~u~H~.~,~.L~TO~ • ADD-A-ROOt-.1 -" " ' '· UNIYERJITY PA•K ........... Hl7 f'OWER SWEEPING ........... 4t1J .. * * * * * reallonal sport center. Ex· Police dog type, ma I e. es11 i_no?ey. r!JS c set 1ng RYINE .................... -.. nu l'UMI" SEii.ViCE .........•..... •m Jy hl h . Gray/btk -lo•, l•'lo ,,--.. ... & finishing. 644-0687 THE DUMP -CALL * COMPL REMODELING IAC'IC 1.1.Y" ................... :r.it1 11tOOF1No ... , ................. •ntl!!!IJ!~l!!!!!IJ!!!!!!!!'!![!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!"!!l~!!!!'!!!!!'!!!!!J!!!!!'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I treme g return on in· '-" • '""" cAc .,......... So ,1 FREE EST 100,,;: FINC. AST eLUl'P .................. ml RlDIO, RtPllrs, Etc ........... ,,,. vestment of $12,500. Secured. hu•ky mask facial mark-CEMENT WORK. no job too <1"n>""<U::r.r. Ve • -'0 · El Toro :r.i•• 1ucMoOELtNG & aeP1.111 •tjo E ~STATE R'EAL ESTATE * 642 3660 * •RVINE TERRACE .... -...... :r.iu JtEMDOl!LING, KITCHENS .... •NJ R AL ~. Rigid investigation invited. lngs. Flea collar &: blk Sn1aJl, reasonable. Free HAULING SlO A LOAD - cOllDHo\ DEL MAii ........... mo scisso11ts IMARl"EN .......... ,tu General General Must have management & Jeathrr metal 11tucf collar. Es!lm. H. Stuflick 548-8615 Clean up, Tl't'c Serv. Gen. i;tuss·s Hauling. Repairing. ::;•~s"t..N'oi··::;;;:::::::::::::= ~i:\~~ MACMiH'ii"li"P.llitS ;:;ti-~""-------~70 PR ability. Reply to Box 580 $250, Reward. 177 Cecil Pl.I"'========= Pruning 646-2528. 543--8043 Fences .Painting .CJeaning. "' L•oo ISLE .................... "" SEl'T1c TANKL s-.. ~ .. tMs Ollie• Rental 6070 Office Rental -!ho oo'ny Pilot or calt >tr. c •1 Calt 64"2162 Child c CAR Anyth>'ng ••• "43 •, ' JALIOA 1sUHD .............. nM TAILDJttNO ................... tt,, ·" . "'" . ·are, L'S Moving, Hauling & • ,,........, HEWPO•T WEST .............. nn TERMIT• CONTllOL .......... •m1----------Mark Rice (114) 774-7050. LO ST: Bla c k me le Licensed 6610 .Cleanup.~~ Ton P.U. Reas.I""='======== HUNTINGTON &EACH ....... i.eo TILE, c1r1m1c ............ -... •t14 HUNTINGTON BEACH 52;) lo 1500 Sq, fl., Furn ,. .,.~ ""0 8918 Sewing 6960 HUNTINGTON HAlllDU• _.,.HO' TILE, Li"ti.um .. M1r~r ....... ,'7f or unfurn, crpts, rlrp11, park-COIN LAUNDRIES Chihuahua, beige c ~ 11 a r' Pre School ttrvinr So. Or-ree .,...1. .rtO-:~cT:~~c~ALI;~-~ .. ::::::::::~~: ~=~~v~:,~~'.c:.~i.:S."Ei'-".' •. :: Air Conditioned lng. Rea1ionable. 646-2414 Frigidaire 3/24, San Juan Capistrano, ng c 6.30 1 9.30 YARD/ Gar. Cl ea nup. CARDEN GROVE ........... ; .. i.JS UPHOLSTEllY ..................... ON 11.ACH ILVD. F •ci:M I $42 500 ans "Sonny". Rew. rd ! a ~, do, 'k F•m,, Po/I" . Remove rrtes, i"", tr&sb. LONG IJEAC!f , ............. Ult WELDING ................. fftl Deck space available In 2630 Avon St., Newport Bch. rom .,.......... 0 • 831-1492 pm ays w • u . 1me. G d b kh 962-874. ~::::~Jf~~~~.::::::::::::::: jQBsw &lEMPLOYMEN'T nmvest office· building. ·at nesr,:-U-C"'!Offla M",.~•$50bus/ymoor-o·th ~ypsu;:: p:~:s~:~es~orn : =P~E~A~R~L-;~,-·-~ln-,-.-.-,~.~p~,:I ~At; . .,1ac06hlo.r~~'~-'1m'°'. 2 A up. ra e, ac oe, ::> . W&STMINSTl!R ................ ,.12 •o• w••••• ~. '"' mime location in Hunting· ' -" c.«1• <>"tO-ol ...,.. . .''WAY CITY '.Mil• ~ ...... II ............ . di i -· I • ·-· Huotington u ••••• c.-.-d ' v· H I' -• Housecl••n•'ng 6735 . SANTA ANA H&iGHTi·:::::::::wo JOll WANTED, wom111 ........ m• ton B~ach. Air con ton=, uti ities included. 64~ oi: .. ru " es1gn. IC. P IOuupP OASTAL ...................... nN JOB WANTEDfN 7039 beautiful entranc~. Front-Grove e Tustin e Santa Goldenrod. CdM. Rey,·ard t11Y Hom(', 18 mos up. ., LAGUNA 11EACH .............. ins M50•~00~,•,o•,,,,,,,·,·,·0,··::::1,11 age on Beach Blvd., re.ar l\tE_D, De!1tal sui~es avail, Ana e Costa MHa e Ana-644--4776 9--5 hot mt-als. nap, superv1.sed Alterations Fast aervice 842-4785 e Dressmaking -Alteratiom Designed to suit you. Call Jo * 64~46 GUNA NIGUEL ............. 1701 " ._ J ds t c at ~•k,ng 725 & 121;, en ft 35c fl sq fl pf'·'· Mon-Fri, 646-0352 i1 . -MISSION VIEJO--··--····" S708 JOI f'AE .. ARATION ........... Jiit ea 0 pllV e ,.,.... ~. . ' hfoim • La Mirada '. ••••• H CLEMENTE ....... a111 THEATRICAL . . ..... ·-·""lot. $50 per month for 5911 Heil Ave, H.B. 846--3221 CALL CHARLIE .525.7833 2 Yr old Beagle, male, tan C.l\1. !.AN JUAN CAl'tSTJtt.No lllJ MERCHANDISE FOR space. De.5k &no CfilUrs NFARC M c· Hall lR &. wht. Silv. choke chain.1~========= 1 ·h i..~ Al"ISTRt.No IEACH ......... l7» SALE ANO TRADE available for $5. Business ~. .i · ity · m. FRIGIDAIRE coin laundry, Sa t aftn vie Sun View Sch! Contractors . 6620 hTesa Cleaning Service Carpet11, windov.·s, floon;, etc. Res. & Commc'l. 548--4111 BAY & Beach Janilorial Carpets; windows, floon, etc. Res & Commc'l . 646-1401. Tile, Ceramic 6974 I ~ ·.. Alft. 'DINT .................. i,:~! h •rln• ,--'-0 !!1ce1, Paneled, carpeta, remod. 30 y,•a•h•r•. 10 HB. "·•·•·" .•• 1_5135 CONOOMINIUM . . ........... 40 FURNITURE ' . . ........... ION ours ansy,. .. e1·v1o... d $150 Call 642-6560 ..., . n.o: J U '" DUl'Lt:XES UNJOU•H .......... lt7s OFFICE FUllNITURE ........ 1u1 available for-$10. All uttll· rapes. · dryers. Real price $7500, sm SMALL Doxl•·•-m, 1, Addition,; 1r Remodelin11 * Verne, The Tile Man * Cust. work. Install &: repairs. SUMMER RENTALS .......... nn OFFICI! EQlllll"MENT ......... eou ties paid except 1elcphone. CM OFFICE $90 d A h I '~ d ltENTAL:, ~l~~~ ::s~':/f'RE:NTT .:::::::::::/! DAILY PILOT n pymnt. na e m. riog Vicinity FtJrvlew· o.nd !'re U.,Gtrw:lck, Lie. Apt1. Furnished SAR EOUIPMENT ............ eou 17175 IEACH BLVD. Call 646-4833 i-"~;._7~833=,......,._==,,..-Talbert in SanlA Ana. Very 613-6041 * 549--2170 Gt!HEllA'-, ................... tooa ~~~l~~~:L:00°~.::::~::;:::m HUNTINGTON IEACH OF'FICE Or i;tore opposite LAZY SALESMAN friendly.-546:o187 CARPET STBA-M-€bEANED COSTA MESA ................... lOI ,,,. '"'''o' "" ..... ,,, 0 ·'boa Bay Ctub 1610 IV s -•1 'n tme ' ·-I . lOc p s Ft MESA YERO! ................ ·411' FUllNI ........ P<lJ • • m11..1 I ves n pu..,. you n BROWN & Black small shag-er q. • ... 'ORT IEACH 420D Al'l'LIAHCfS ................ ·''" .. I c-·t Hwy N B "A" A"°"' .,,.,, .. own bualne·· Wt lnl>'n Nn ···p N b ·--u hol Hl!WPORT MEIOHTS ·:::::::::;,,io •NTIQUES .................... ,1111 DELUXE Ofuce n Corona ....... • · · '"',.."101 JYY• ""· • gy dog. 2 collars. Mixed .,.... • o rus, ...... p • Ht:Wl"OllT SNORES .... , ...... 4220 SEWINO MACHINE _, ......... lltl del Mar Near Post Office-3 RM, 0~, $85. Crpted. 1\-look Food, $44-2302. Terrirr breed. Vlc. Begonia ,;\ery cleaning&floonscrub-; ESTCLl~F ................ ,42St MUSICAL INSTllUMl!MT ...... tlU · . bed le ed G teed UNIVERSITY , ... IC _ ......... .nu , ...... o, & ORGAN' ........... ,IUt Snack Shop-a1nplc parkmg. Ground fl " pkng. 1 Rm. OWN Ave, CcThI. Rrward. 67?-2369 wax • uaran =~~~ :tu~F··~:::::::::::::::::::; '=~~~11iOii "'.::::::::::::::::::: S60 per m_onlh. Ofc. $50. 646-1124, N.8. A SHIIT SHACK WSI': Falcon, has jeuei. result.! 646-5971 CORONA DEL MAil ........... wt Nl•l'I a STlllEO ............... ltlt Realonom1cs Corp.-B1'0ker --DRESS SHOP. Vlc Brookhul'!!t & Adami, EXPERT Carpet Work. l /3 ••o• ,,.. TAl'I llllCOIOEllS .. ' ....... mt 615'"100 I d I I c . .. ' ••••••••• ., •••••••• SM CAMllltAI • l!QUll"Ml!NT ····'"°' .,.., n u1tr a ALL. LA JOLLA (]) 459--8555 1-IB. Reward! Ph. 96Z-7382 coat steam clean. Comm rat. Y 111.:AHDI ................. 4 MOI ----------·;;;;.,;itt;"'"-':c;C::::T:C: 1,c;;;,,;~~:,,:,;;.-;;.:.,,,., •100 isLI! ........... 4i;1 H01tv IUl"Pl •ES ............. CO 0 EL AR Pro-rty ·-·BOUTIQUE Sto f ·• i 2•t nHarborD!acoun• .,.,,.,.... '" LIDA 1siaif0''. . .', .......... •ass tl"O•TtHG OOODs ............. 1s11 R NA 0 M r• ' -re or e:i:ue n 2 GERMAN Shep. Pups, 711 ., ,,_..._., NTINOTON.slACK ............. •"•'sc°'1",.~,'1'•0'0'5°1"Es ........ =Immaculate 2 room. Private --Laguna Beach. $1000 + in-mos, blk-brown mrkgs. Nr -UNTA•N vALLIY .......... u10 ..... ............. . . NEW Bldg., U 000 .,. ft tor C u (213 ~o" 44 C•r-t Cle•nlng 6'25 AL SEACM .................... ,, MUC. WANTED ................ Nu 0U1ce, Ground floor. Private Mie or leue. For d~tlll ventory. a ) 1....--ul Victoria, C.M. 645-Zl26 evts --t= ".\: ~:::0:e:~~ .. n·:::::::::::::: tt"~:~':t·~~· .. ~~~:::::::::: .. :::;;: hath .. $135 '""?· Util pd. II f "' lf SILVER Belge Fem., Shep., DIAMOND Ca.rptt Cltantn : SA1tol!N GRDv• ................ 11 ~~~~~fNE• MATEilAi.·s·::::::::;~ Parking. &73-67a7 Owner. att a afa IJ Business Wanted 6305 rectntly spade. Vic. Hunt, e Spring Ceanlng Special • • WISTMINSTE• ................ iWI' SWA.,S ..... .. . , ·· · 11H OITICE OR STORE 64" "°"'n Pac. Apt;., Reward 53&-6357 3 "'''· .tize --· -'AIDWA Y CITY .................. " E S d LIVESTOCK --.. FINANCIAL advlwry & CO(!• ............ _.. •• lAHTA ANA,., .................. .m P T an 15 x 35' or 30 x 3:i' BLOG. l250 .,. ft ii' small irulting service catering to BLK German She pherd, 5 64~1317, Frte ~t. :t;~rN"~~.~~~~.~~.::::::::::: ~:~ ·~~.~~~.~~.:::;;::::;::::: oU st pking & ult! turn house. Roo;-for 3 more In ri Iv id u a'I 1 & small mos..-male "Tito". vie 23rd REM ARC Services. 3 rooms ' COASTAL ........................... DOOi ..... · ..................... .am NC'\YpOrt & Bay Cenlt'r, Cl\-I bid•'•. J..ot jOOxJ..35'. Call buslncsse!i. Re llre rl ex-& S.A. Ave. &16-2547 $21.;50. Full """araft. ....... di! LAGUNA llACN .............. C7U NOltlll ...................... ·-2tr2 Newport Blvd 616-1252 . .M ..... .., LAGUNA NIOUeL .............. cm Ll\llSTOCK ., ........... 'l-.cll ~='==""'--.,--.,..~ 64&-6534eves. eculive setltlng addt 'I BLACK Cut velvet bag con• cardsOK.U1~ Walls-Floors.Windows & Rugs Cl~ar Vu Window Serv_J~­ R.es. & Commc'L 646-2698 HOUSEKEEPER. Live·in, .some En&lllh $50 a V{eek. 643.3355 No job too amaU. Pluter patio, Leaking shower repair. 847·195.1/846-0206 TOPSOIL ........ 6977 TOPSOIL. Nitrogen fortified redwood added. 837~. S:ID-2050 or 495-4632 Income T•x ·67•o __ Central Busint_u_Se_rvl_ee_•_ Trff Service 6990 eTHE TAX ADVISORS TREES, Hod<t1, trim. eut. Perm. office-Reas Ratet stumps, .removed, hauled. 30 ~ No. N~ Blvd. yrs exp. Fully Ins. 642--4030 Op~tt Hoag HoSPIW For Appt. Call 645-0400 H.K. Clark TAX SERVICE Uphol1ttry 6990 I-'---'-----' 22 )'?'I, op, ln area 548.5285 or 673-6360 appt. • )'Our home or ottlce •· Ironing 6755 CZYKOSKJ'S Custm. Uphol. European craftsmanship 100% fin! 642-1454 1831 Newport Bl\!, CM '; :!~5~'!_~M"J:i~ .. -.. ~:::: .. = CALIFORNIA LIVING OFFICE Spa.ce for lease, clients, 42 yrs l'!Xp. In ta!nlng knitting. Westcliff nr - " ~ JUAN CAl"ISTIIA"'o 4ru: NURllllllS · ................ nu \Vorld Savings Bldg, Pacific Commerclal 60U comm. banll:inr to Pre,;, of Dover last Thun:. 542-24.58 Car-t Layl~ & • . """'•ANO tlACH ,,,. swtMMING POOLS ............ ., .. Co I H & F t -------b k 5 k r--•• ., \VlU. TAKE 1N Window Cleaning 6997 DANA POINT .................. •741 l"ATIDI .......... ,_ .•... -..... n11 u wy or re 1 , an . Yr'I extc. sloe ENS R . t 1 Re-Ir --..-"26 _IRONING" _ · _J.R.IPLEx ... c ..................... t.WNINOI .................. ., .. ..,. Lat;unaBeach.494-9481 PRil\fE LOCATION a~atort lfl"OKer. Reference"i furn.On M ' . eadtng -gaues n r:-: r.<1NDOM1H1uM ............... ""' VACATtOHS ······ ·· · ·· ··· .,.,, •="-~-,.--.-.,.-,,,-· 1 E J J cue. Balboa. lslAnd. · C,\LL 0 •• "521 WINDO\V WASHING ·:.· HOTELS ..... ,1 ••••• -•••••• , •• c9'1 TRANSPORTATION 1 8111 Location in CdM commerc1a · x c e en I request. Consultation by • 646-5177 • EXPERT CARP£1' lNSTAI,. .,...,..... .: ENTALS IOATS A YACHTS ............ "" 800 to 1400 .... f .. Deluxe OU-tenants. Out of lown owner appt. only, Phone 675-7377, LATION &.Repair, No Job .Commercial -HOME A ts Unfurn.lhtd SAILllDATS ................ to1• ~... . ed priCf.'d for immediate elf' at or mail replies to 362 Even-"""S too small. 646-5971 ~ING to move? You'll CaU Pete -492-1207 ' 11 P • 1 POWE-It CltUISEll:S ............ ~o ice Sp11.Cl'5. Ava1-Imm · '"~.ooo . .f<'antasHc financing Ing "--Rd Co ,.. Per1onal1 -find an amazing number of 1----------, Nl!!ll:AL ..................... SOOI s11e:s1>-sKt aoAT ........... ttH Phone Owner 6429900 """ ._..,,yon ' rona o:i CARPET. LA,Y,ING ....__ , .............. ,CJ-••'"-" THE SUN·~""" SETS •n COSTA MIElA ., ................ iuo tOAT TRAILlllS ........... toJt • • arrangement! Ca!l 54;;..842-4 Mar . l·-'---------·I I • --:~ .. , .........,. -u~ ... ~.~ . °! 111:~0";.\"~~AcM .. :::::::::::::~: :g:; ttJ:t:r::~~ .. ::::::::::: 3 Lr( offices: 2 rti troom,;, WA~ED: Small ln!urance *FULLY LICENSED* C.A. PAGE . 642.2010 . Ads. Check them riow. J>AILY-PILOT WANT ADS' NE"Wl"OllT HEIONTI .......... f211 MAlllNE f_OUll'. . ........ ·'°" all utU Incl, air rond. sr..ro P.enowned Hindu c .. lrltuallst. ------· -----· ------------, Nl'Wl"ORf SHD•l"I ........... JUI •OAT SLlf', MOORINct ........ fC'H II 3 2400 w Co11.sl Agency to buy in Coata 'W ' l!ITCLlf'" ............. JUI 901\T ll!llYICIS ' ......... toJ1 1TI0-4l • • J\lcJle/Ne\Yport Bch a~a. \dvice on all matters; .'t HIYtllSITY l"AllK ........... ,n: tOAT lltENTALS .:::.: ......... mt 1-fwy-, No. 9. N.B. M:Z..2813 Rtpty o-. Mu, D•ll• Piiot 1..ovl!', Matrla"e, nualne!ll, ANNOUNC"MENTS l'Cl(IAY .................... IN IOAT (MARTIR ,.,. ........... fC'Jll 0 ....,,. .,.,.., ,, II IO ~---~------- ·,·EAST 1Luf F ............. sm Fl$HINO sor.11 ............... ,.., LAG NA BEACH NB CourtshiPi Health , Hap-and NOTICES .. ~OftONA OIL MA• ........... C:: tOAT MOV1No ................ .ou Air Conditioned -=·=· ======= plne$.I 1 Succe••· No pro-•---~-----" •.1.t.aoA ................... aoAT sro1tAGI ............ ··"" . C-2 Building near 19th & -1 ... &Y 1suNuS ................. mt aoATI wANTID .................. ON FOREST AVENUE Harbor ~~000 gq. ft. • Investment blems too lara1 or too ANNOUNCEMENTS •nd NOTICES 6411 L10D ISLIE ................. .l>Sl r.1•c•A11T ................ ti" ....... ,. II ble ·tn· • -small. I CAN HELP YOU Personal1 ~5 P-•en•I• • ~ IOA ISLAND .............. sw ,LYING L&:SIDNI ............. nH -LI!: apac' ava a a!t"1:0ndilloned. \\'ill leue, Opportunltilt 6310 •• ~MT1NGT0N 1KACM ......... ~ Mot1Le HOMES .; ............... ne\ftll offJee bUildlnc al leafte/op:1on. or trnde for --'-'--------Readings given 7 da,)rl a 1__________ DOUBLE crypt In PaclUc ' UNTAINe'•A"tv ........... ~: MOTD• MOMfs ............... t1is "rime loc•"on in downto\vn $"~ MARINE H·~ M f week, 9 AM-9 PM 312 No. E. SA UNA . MASSAGE SJNGL~ · n-·pJe meet • Vlow •ttmor•'ol. 0 ·crifl-• 6405 Cemetery Lots ' ll!AL tEA .................. t1CYClll ................. '1.U .. u units. Pott-ntial incoml'!, .,,,.., o.auware g, i:. rTl\I °' ,. .,.. .. ... ~01>10 tl!ACH · , ............... = l!LECT•IC CA.al .............. mo Laguna Beach Air ce>ndl· mn, Agl. 675-4030 with msny palented k pro-Cam l no R~a I, San d Wed 8 30 1 must 5ell! 54~2136 , .;~~~= ~~~~1: .:::::::::::::s.11 :~~~=~~~tis'"'.::::::::::::: !',:: lioncd. cvpettd. hcautlIUl r'On ~ale. store bulldlng. priet~ry 1t1ms need,. ex-Clemenic. 492--9136 49UJ076 WHIRLPOOL. GYM 1;.n~~11:~rk cniry.: aub~ i-""----" ..... ....,'--- 1 lllf!STMll'ISTI!" ............. -·~:2 MOTOllJCOOTSltl ... ,, ...... •lH ent1'tlnct1• Front~ on ~= """ IV. l~h St. "·.t"I paru;1on . capital. Xlnt I.ax T G J L Sal d T ltm I• 11.B. 3 m>', W, of Bcaeb off M10Wt.Y CITY ................. .-' AUTO Sl!llYICEI & ,A1'TI .... t4" . I d .,.,,,...,....., '" 1:><: .m: om QWfte, r • e On e ra en 1 ,,,...TA ANA .................. kB AuTo TOOU a eau111 ........ Mn Forest. Ave .• rear e11. • to ·row~n area. 54g..1768 Ag:.. 1.1nd \\T1te-ott pos$ibllitie1 r>-JJ 2930 w. Cit. Hwy, Npt. Bch.1 ,w,a~r0oe~r_A_d_m""_l2~~::-:c~ 1• • · ~NTA ANA Ka1eMTf ........ ,..,. fllAILER, TllAVIL ........... ...,. MunclpaJ pa.rkini lots. S50 I==========. J fflr boat owntr. Box 1.1101, "" • · · · TIME FOR Cj)UICK CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOT l . ITIN ............................. TRAii.tits. ... ......,. ................. th t °" k N .A I truckl °"Uy 10 •m·l am 642-3154 JEAN ••. ? 1 formerly AJTA l -: ................. fJ'tl tAMl!'lltl ...................... tnt per mon or space. s lnduitr'tal Renlal ..__ Dally Pilot. ~w .l u1""' cart We accept all Cftdit carda ouNA aeA\;M .............. := r11uCKS ........................ ,,,.. and chairs availablt for »· _.,., ..e..... •t Connell Chevrolet Galleg'0(!11 ot Siml,.molher of 1 u.ouc"t"IE:~oHuT~~'.'.'.".'.'.'.'.:.::,,,, ~~~:ii "i9W"tli.r"""""'":1: S111ines1 houn amwerlfli NEED $ ... ......, now! \VI I I 2828 Katbor. C.M. 546.U)J Sin&le/DJvoroed!Widoy,·cd 1'1ark & Eric. call Pat "" JUt.N CAPllT•AIM ...... sru ou1>11 1uoe1 a1 "2t lttVice avtllable for .$10 2500 gq, It. J\[ • .1 tel\lrn $5000 In 90 days! id DPI Hutchison 891--2969 ' ' I !''CA,IST••NO •IACN .,. IMPD•T•D AU-Tot ................. .0.11 till " "d i JGM &boock, Coslti ~f('!;A Gu11r11nt ee dl 646--1234 'l1le pm:eedlnc ~~·pa "";; OAltA l'DINT • , ........ .1141 ll"OllT CARS ................ ,. (Ml u Ues pal excep 0WllE'r 64\-2228, &lfrl252 rlay/f!.\'(! .a1uman survival advtrtlse· 11 Deta Prb«M ltttrociuction AtCOHOLlCS Aoonymons • ,. REAL ESTATE, t.NTIOUls, CLA1sic1 -....... '61' telephone. l:o,,.,.-,,.-,:,,..,.,===-ment I SI I dull -• ho Phone 542-7217 or write b:I • -. •v "--I JtACI CAllS. •oos ........... NM DAILY PILO'I' IT'S Bc<-1cb bouliet time. Bl;:· DIAL direct 642-5618. Qw-a-e , or ng e A s, auu. ot r ~-vwner• •uTo •VENTS ................ tus PATr\' LOU!! uKtuJ appUcatlon ot-.ctence. P.O. Box 1223 Co!ta r.1csa. t-•1,L1:x. ''" ................ ,,.. r.uros wt.NTID .............. ,,.. 222 FOREST AVENUE gcsl scl«:Uon ever! See the your ad, then 111 back and 1 • CONOOMINIUM ............. ltM Ntw CARI ..................... LAGUNA BEAQC your ad, Uien tit back and U.ltn to the pMne rin&I I Im"!! you "lli'ilh my who c 547""'67 nu: SUN NEVER SETS on !llllTAU WANTID ............... "UTe L•AllNct ............... Jtll he rl M•'~a•I P•ul "' ..__ -~......01 DAILY pn -WANT ADS' IOoMS flOll: .. INT ........... '"5 IJlliD CAllS ., ............. ,..,.,., .(9.J.9466 !l~!en 10 lhe phone rln&! Now! a -i ..-u kt 111111r '"""""'"'"I 11A11 • I· I • --~------------------------ WANT AD • , ' ' i • ' • • • .. "" .. , " ' i I ) i . ~ l ' ' l J ' :- ' • ' ·: . . . . . . . ;. '· . " ' • • • - I'' ". I . -. 1 · . . . · . . .. 1; i . , . ,. , ol•. I .·. • " '. ... , . ,. ~ ...... ' . "" . :·, ,. .. ' .. . . ' ' " . . . . I· ., t · . I I. " , . • • • ' ' . ' ' • • • . ' ' I . ' ' • • . t . . . . • • • " . . • . ' .. I .. ' . . I • " . • . l I ,, • - • I· •' . t . ... ~. ... . .. ' ' . . . ,,. ... !"· .... I " . l ... ' • .. '' , . ,• •. ! , " . ·. . . . ' . l . . l . . •' • • • • Almost Eve1•yone . Reads The Newspapers deliver massive coverage of ALL occupation groups each weekday OCCUPATION OF HOUSEHOLD HEAD Professionals Managers Clerical, Sales Craftsmen Other Manual F'a'rmers • 88% 91 85 80 71 70 Sourtt: Opinion Research CorP<>flliOll Newspapers reach, in-d epth, into all occupation groups every day, as this graph indi- cates. But what should be even mere interesting to advertisers is the high precentage of management, prbfessional and other hig h·salary -earning types who read a newspa- per every day. They make more money , travel more, buy more, set the standards for others to follow. If you want to play "Follow The Leader," i!ldv8rtise in some other mediumj if you want io lead the leader, put your message where he'll read it ... with us, the newspaper. DAILY PILOT ---- - New.spapers Tat,:e Your Message Where The Money Is Newspaper readership increases with income Under $3,000 $3,000- $4,999 $5,000- $7,999 $8,000 · $9,999 89% Source: Opinion Research Corponltion Almost nine out of 10 affluent Amer icans-those who earn $10,000 or more annually -read at least one newspaper. And more than half ·of those who earn even less than $3,000 also read newspapers. And the more money the reader of your ad hat to tpend. the more likely he is to see the message in a newspaper. If you've got something to tell some body (or sell somebody), slut with us, tho newspaper . DAILY PILOT Ne~vspape1•s: Number One In Adve1•tising! Newspapers are the primary advertising medium 1949 (Millions ol Dol la rs! 1969 TELEVISION ,, , .. , .. , .. , .. , .. , .. ,,, MAGAZINES .,,,, .......... ,.,,, ....,~~~-~ ---RADIO ... .. ;>"'"~~ OUTDOOR ... ......................................................................... .. Total advertising fi gures art in for 1909 anil , as the chart above shows, newspapers continue to be the nation 's number one salesman. The only other medium showing any dramatic growth in the chart is television and -did you notice -the increase in newspaper advertising investments since TV came on the scene is more than the cur· rent total television advertising volume. Shouldn't you "hire'' the nation's mo st power~ ful salesman? You can slut today by calling 642-4321 , the , ' DAILY PILOT ·• ~ • ' • t I DON'T PINCH ;'. ~ , , ~ , , f f r I • • • I l • : . . . . • • . • • • . " ' ,· " . ' . .. .. '· YOURSELF (You're Not Dreaming) But You Can PINCH. ·YO.UR ., ' ftNNIES with a PILOT PENNY PINCHER :classified ~d l LINES •• 2· TIMES DIAL DlltlCT 642-5678 ,; YOUlt CllDIT IS GOOD I , / CAPABLE, ma-_.. BOAT CAltPl:N'l'ERS, EXP. .INDEl'J:NDl:NT OnlW ol 'MOTIL MAIDS ~· with .~ .... In ~-GELCOATl:M Dofttol -· J\notm II _., "" I ' • '611-THI • I PRE SCHOO• ' _,,,...,. --rlllt, xll>C _,, ••• -MOTEL -· ·11111 'ot ""~ ' t < • ........:::;'_::::l:v!.:.".'.'. MECHANIC $300. mo ~.up, N....,..... 111<1 -ea-.... . . ' • I'> ;: -job -:rouaUIP..JIEN • -JASON llST _. -~. :---..... ·A>P)y l9IT ~ ~ INTRODUCTOllY OP D . ~ =.'::i w:::SSE STOCK CLK. En\ploJmeal.......,. : INl cLllM Blvd., C.M; ' I 11ST _WOK 2 ~ltiCl'."~-.1.-..-"-J.I eatate ll<eJm, am bondable * HARBOR YACHTS' * 2207 So. "'1n. SIJllA Ana ASSISTANT , '1 If A 2 • and .... -and..... J.51tl -C!tt. -' IE>oolll !or . ' ~ •• ... ., ' --·--W-. Calif. IM-<T<T DENTAL .wia, • "llfb -~.:: · ,,..... fOR INl'OltMA'rlbN fli:tbill 14wfl ' Ina In Lqmia ......,, but iiilOl llftr. · adlool rlrl. :no ....... will ""~ i.rllli ...Ver ..,.,.. / 1 MrL SyWI -· ' dtaire a jolt wttb a futuN Expn1enctd fra1n. Must be 1•nlor, ..... DtldMvaried-=inter'el.t. , llant'f t ' • • l and rood ""'1. Wrlle-• CAllPENTER8 Plllme. Se>dletter to 2'1115 1na:s"°""""'l:IM:!llJWI ,,.,..aloMI so -~ CENTRAL' IAPTIS'r• filtE ."S.CHOOL ::'roan.. i::. i ~ : ~ .... D:...... ~=l °';.~~fANJ, ::-,; ~-· · ~~ i= 'l!.!!!l!!,'4!l.!!l,!!W!!!1!!!, ino!!'.!!t!!}!!!1, .. !!·~ .. iiJ!H!!u!!n!!!tln!!if!!~~· ~!!!~•!!!!. -.tf:!. ~-~~; ~i --·•....W. .,.m Chair -· -~ 1414121 ·w ......:.. NI. job dettred, 531-.,,. or RANG~ YAalTS ; -......--pa. PERSONNEL ·~l"'" !•1 . • . • _,_ ·. 30IOPullm&asf .. o.ta,._ =..i_x.::-$~ J4 ·uN&~ARD INS. MJ.mt · ·.~a,.., '-.w-1100 .1o11o Meli;w-r.r100 Alba • w COIM!iOCor,.., lldqw/Secy $iiii + C.r DENT AL J, 1. . OllOUP . MIW, OliJi&ri'UNlfY1 . • · • • ·.~~~~~c&N. i::,.,ot ~ ~~ chalt•iide.· ~~;:0~1;i An ~epportwUty AJt;IN ~· T~, i UCEPIIONl!r/ T7pi1t s.it~.w Ap.Dt ~ ,,·-...,.,-=-=-':':---~-mon • ,.. duUta Full •time exptr, enuilo)w ~ COUPie or~ Wanted ·"by • Local OrU. ; TEXAS OJt! OOMPlNt PRACI'ICAL Nurw (2) • JASON 1aST m."8& • . Jftw.tltetlw TrelftM ca n lnCr~al, tla•lr don1lt. Mature rw/qp. bu ~fu& In ~:dt1et: Exp. Ref. Uve in or ou.l "¥111 ~"'8.t ~ D'DffAL 1 EXECUTJV!l Come oa .&11 ·)'Olz mncb&ir :;:a:nt or": :!t~; laJ. o~.\ stai. _qyaAfi~• ana.l No ~~P•,r!tn.ce -' aln, Ana SECRETARY ~-. with OO!'a•"'1a la -hie....... .-....~-~ ~~-. . · "'"''P.O. Box 161&, N.B. oectaaary. ~ ,oo.\ .,.. HOUS 9264 W. KattU.. Anahtlm • __.,. $.fNO Call Htlt ~· -\=Ulnl: wn:r pre1enl Restaur&nl. -pPftanf Good ,~a ed bEKEU'EJt., tQtJ1enc.. 5tS-5f!O or 821..u:r> ~nt delk. J ... 2121 a·rt .~ n , • • bow-a « ~. Me•i · 1 • • '~~t. ir41'!f'l.ln. w. ,.f.~sn-~·-k. ~-ER wanted , !.30pm.-/1-5Pll COASTALAOINCY :.t".:":.i:t::.."n~~ 11EUll!N E..LEE ~,,?l •!!_•p•0'.!,·,~" _.. , :I) bn a wk. * 2190 Hu1lor BlYd. Cll 830-40IT · • .,-Ml\"'"" p1r,.....,um ""~' .Mor~ w-1100 w°"' •• """'· .,.,... DISHWASHR ' . ' ' · . . STl!INWHEELER · '°"""rt w-. Tmt.: . PAL. Call f.Q'll' ooi,: •JON~STIRESl;l\VICE,* Num.,._ . · • SAtzS.S.rvlCe-'j\111;; AGGRESSM: lehphont "6-&311 DAYS .• .!,to C PM • ' la -In°"'!&' :lllOllTIRl'D J:IURSI LUNCU Enllh route; llJ$ 'l wit, aollcltcra nq. le< npaodinr IOYI II 14 Apply In .. -Counl>' and """""' , . , l.C..C.C.U. ' ' • ......_ to atu\;: Call _....!Ion. , Im med. CUrlor Roa..; 0pao * ISADORIS * . . EilP!:RlENCtD · -Ina Wllt.'Cballenli.I WAITRESS 546-$145 • : ......... Unllmll<d poy, ... 333 Bayaide D>:lva *~rat..... epportwollleo, -od. §& .... •: PH: l·! PM o nly, 1.qum. Be&cb. So. l.qlml Newp;rt Beach * Tlr'I.~ • uca&n Pl'Oll'Ul· ,Qintact Aftpl_y in penon· v le :t:Hctt. . ,;-,;,,,,~-;.;;...=---!. DAILY PILOT DJSHWASHER.PART-Tiii£ :::.:i~ ;iu:· = ~ · 151 E,-CM1I H'f'I, ' ~:.:.i Al&:·"""""· &CUm Swlu Chai.~ CIC N. Ntw. • ·1a1ary ;1iia -. 11..,. So. toiwia (Tiil <119-Newport Buch S1""1P 6 1-11 lion, -~~" r.md. -~ -N.e .. ' ' '. .. \ '°""""'4' .. ~.,.. .131\'E>tt. 351 . Rulaurant ~lad ID N~ ·- 35 ' . r.~ '..;.;.. * IUSIOY DMV Contq.ct, 1'lrL .Mual ht Comp<~'"" htnollt<. ~·-'"•: ..... baa poaflfi>r. avoll. fer S.:.'::"~~".1iiii ·-"""d., ...... .,. •. •1"'1: ---· .. --... LVNM/F .. H. o· STESSES· • ...u .-s.Y1DD' -. . *. OISflwASHEI Call Mr. &inn 'll:ll!OS OR -Charp ...... • Tep ...... Loan' -,,... ... Es- -A:SmSTANT 'l"Or PRODucyION FORE!dAN· Ex'perlenced on m a c b I D e 1 (E.,e;.ltMM' l NHIJ * DllYllS * , , and ....-1>ene111a. (Doy I Night) !7f'11.~tlal ~::= :: No s~ . KITCHIN BAYVJEWCONVALESCl!?IT •min°'' ........ -... APPLY and""""' _.11on:eqw1.. . COCO'S mmt deslnd, WW. train for nJrht lhlll. Am Iii ""°" '# 71 fuhian lslond hel. Mpm .SAE Ad'lanMd , . Pac-mi, South NewpOrt IHi:h Grand, S.A. I -c.:-1:-.,-bo----- ASSEMBLY ?l'alnfft, day« us 'fl nJPt shift, female a 1e • Dishw11htrs ,...,., "' ""' nec., but m"" • I-Doy Dishw11her have aood eyell&ht &: lin&er dexttrity. Apply in pel'IOn Part time. 17 yn. or older SAE Advanced Packqini, * APPLY * "'3 Soull> Gnnd, S.A. SNACK SHOP # t .ASSEMBI-ERS Far camper laclotl'. Apply Majonvay, 1169 W. Utb, Coata Mesa BABYSITTER need • aubltltu.te rrandmother t))le, 4 dayl wk. t mo old hoy, my ...... - after 8:30 BABYSITI'ER Needed Im· mediately. 3:30 'Ul mid· ni&ht. Mt11t bf: rella. S44& E. Cout Hwy, c.nm. ... Mar BUFFUM'S NEWPORT HAS IMMEDIATE OPENtNGS FOR "'"r'!-HILPEllS ·HOSPITAL-DISHWASHERS ---.,,,, Nec ... ryl ( IO...-....t-) l055 ~" M•-. (Doy I Night) put1cu1ara e&11 Mr • ..., ..... "'"" --~ ~-. (2131 ~ .' . .. ' drtvtna nearct ppl;J' , NURSERY HELnR •. Kan YELLOW e:~. co.' A,,LY to -will> ........ dayo BUSBOYS Ill E. -It. • wk. Exp not nee. sat.., (D & N' h ) Secretary ~ °'"""-L-'•·-Pit llQ ... n.~HllloNuratry. oy 19 t . "' 3CMI Call ... PM, 13M653, 23002 1 n .. ExKutJve HouMk..,.r . ::~t., El Toro ltd1 El Toro, Calif. ~Y IN PERSON Ha f. ff1le, ~ Train -· NURSES~ -ewn-.. • ..... dept Ina • o1r111 lhlllL ""· ReuL-n E. ' --TO ~ Min. 3 yrs.· 'W· App: LANDSCAPER ua ..._. lll Penon .. 1.-oept • ...., Exp. ,..1 •• wtlli ·mrm•: benen1a. Am PenonneJ JS1 E. eu..i a""'. Vice Preside II 1•·• N.B Dlrector, So. Cout Com-N ·-~ n ... b • otp .... • potenttal. Nti.t appear1q', mun!ty Hotp., 31111 Cout e-r-• ~c _..__..:....__._;,: FRY COOK. -• Jut wltl -· publk. Cood .... , lhry .. So. """"" -1311 * . REUBEN'S Moat take -100 Salaryope_n. Co~tact Wait W/~ btne.Dts .. ext 351 . 1 * wpm. I~ varieb' # ftc. ?i.fana,cer,497-ll81 • 13f&eh' ApJ)bo 2?21 l)Jrv1e•, CK.. **NURSE AIDES** Gosta Mesi Uft&, type liO ..;., • House tnri, <19 SI• 1" v Mr stmM. ttr, Many mmJIUQ' ..._.. •" · ..,. Experien~. 7-3 pm •bill. SQCh u pU:I v&C&~~ HolJow Ln., L.B. . . . LIT.I * 549-3061 Now interviewing lea~. P.,M:i ~ · IJtt GAJtDENERS fACTOllY WDltK *.,IX Adm * .......,.., credit . ele. Helpen, .,..er .. l<i hr wk. Metal Cot.tlnr Plan~ l'.V. IJto .,.., _.. hr.. 1'1'· DAYTIME Homa nwble.'Said.11jwme Perm. 61>-2950 alt 5. ·Mech. ._ holplld, """ rlllc · buda, ...._,....., BUSBO to Doily Pilot, ~ ~IDO, GARDENER TRAINEE 12.>1 per hr: Xln'I -· l3IO •tart. Call Gloria K&Y' . YS Dal!Y Pilot. :' No exper. nee. Xlnt opp. ~ ~-eal~ ~-=~ 5tfM06.; • ' l55r5 W~ ~~. c.r.t. · · · ·~ <n<l ·-. 0 ya • " COASTAL AOINCY SICl'tlTAR'if 1 GIRL 0ff 1 c.e , local before noon. 2790 Harbor Blvd., C.M. Set ·Betty Bruce at Project . e~ ficper., BABYSITI'ER Wanted, N.B., Orthodontist varlet Y ot LIVEtehooim .... mon~1 1:!~!!~-l PfPC RE C.E PT I 0 N 1 ST m 6 including pf'IP¥f.utfi of MacArthur Blvd are a , duties. S-ll, 1~5 Mon. thru. ' ,,. •· -.-...... TYP.IST. Attractive ..i..t :n. • · · technical np:1rts, ch01I I. Sam--'pm. 6"--0860 aft 6 pm Fri, 181 E. 18th St.,.Suite c, m-ouo or ~1117 30, rw buutiful &;front . t.i~ .xec ir&pti. ShorttWid ft ae- or Sat. • IUSIOY. C.M. ' MAINTENANCEAI>dlve1')'. office, wk •. endt only, >.cenC,torClreerGlrls curate lyP"l:nl 'nl. 540--0613. ·COOK· Experienced Grill Cook 5 day wk -No SUn. BARMAID: Attract. BOOni. 9:30 .ill to 4:30 Pf.I General Office Male, ear pref. Mlltqe ·1Q..6Tl5 410.w. Coast Hwy., N.B: .lnt.?lltin& work fOf' aeU. Full or pftlme. Top pay. Mon. thru Fri, Sharp you111 .pl with lhort pUL Full thne. Apply l10 PBX OPERATOR By a.ppolnt. 641-3939 itarttr -:: onl worlc backgrouna ProdGCdoa Pl, C.M. N.B. Eipe pn.1 Oft 30 Mrt. HI>'" ~ =·y '~:: ~~S::; EXCELLENT BENEFITS 50 WPl\f, beach ~ typ~ 1liALt adult with woodMlll-c:.i 54G.w r * . $750.ao SALARY SYSTDIED COPR. Slo--Gm l.uly, :lSOl Harbor, C.M. Loraine, Wt!tcliU Personnel ~I:~ ~ PIUJ eirpef'lltl &: car l bene-* Secretary ~ Callaftl49S-GOO. -APPiy -~ency, 2043 Wn:tclW Dr., s.-2 betw. ,ltODUCTION flt.s.prnductaaleaman,mar. Sotm exp.+ rood~ A BARMAID. Exptr. to work PERSONNEL OFnCE N.B. 645-2770 · p.n;t. _ WOltKlltS _ rled • aood work record, fee P~~~t phone V:~ rxh nl.rbts:. Apply in penon 2 TO 4 PM ONLY HEAD Start appllca.Uona now Man tor relmbwvd. (alao tee jobll) tiwt Joca1 IPOl .....,. Call ~Tide, '777 W. lttb St, available at Community SICTION eflfl,.re1ttewemen Call Ann. WMtcll.H Penon-J001s1Tl"i:, ::J:5 ' y C.M. 2PM·!PM. No. 1, Fathion Island United MethOdist Church, l'OltlMAH nel Apncy, 3'.M3 We1tcUU ieRty 0,r. W•ntH Newport Beach fi662 Hell Ave.. H.B. for Experienced tn Covmuntm THI HARTLEY CO. Drive, N.B. &G-2770 2700 Harbor Blvd., cit N H B M I ha·-ell 1... .,.,.===~~~~ positions In procram to Arsenal Inlped.lon equip. "'·'--S.c ... UOO. , o. . . 1.11 • .., en ~e. -::: be I t ad1n bl prtnta ~ Pluah 1bop, tu-112>. CAFE'l'!:RIA Hetp Wanted: 1fln next Fa l · Ap. m5y~~ • -~ .. ,.!,_ ·~uehr k. 1987 Placentia NEED EXTRA S/H 90+, twine 65 • en,r. ILUI! DOLPHIN See cateteria Manaier at plcatlons must be In by ...... , ....... ro.u1.,. w. Colla Mesa MONEY? bac:kground,beac:hare.;c.U AITRE.SS Exp d Oft? 2S. New Safeco 1n1un.nce B1da April 10. :.a.ry to $3 hr. Xlnt Ilene-PtJ}.fP Ialand Sa I e 1 ma ri • Sundays Only Loraine, WettclW Pmi0nnt1 W • ' · on Brookhunt, No. at San HOSPITALITY HOSTESS · Appl• In pll'IOn Over 20, e..--r. pre!~. No. expttienct necessary AgN.s'""' ... ~~ Westdllt,IX .. 3355 Via Lido, N.B. Dlf:ao Fwy. Or call ~265f SERVICE, bu openlnp tor # ",,.. '"'ni Guarani d · .,._.,,,,, BUSIEST ~ce in bdoft 9AM or aft 5PM. mature women lookinr for Z. D. PRODUCTS 2801 E. Cout Hwy al · tt incom~ + bont11 SERVICE SIA!Jon Atte~t. -· D"' v PILOT I 1 tl ~ Ii k • 3190 Pullin•" CM Goldenrod, CdM 675--0533 Age 21 or over Qian town. •ni:r ~& CAR ET AKER-Coup le n eres fll, pa.-, me v;or • _, -.. · • Retirees Welcome eve work 4-ll Mon :thn.t Oullfted llCtlon. B •Ye Hve--in. Must have mer It w~ming ne\l:comus to equu opportun.lly employer. :ng,r:1~~~ Js~ StlJ Men's Wear Retail Fri. Exp'd. Apply t money, time 6 .aort. Look beaper.893-tSIO. your area. Sales e xp . MANAGER, weekend, public relations 11tm. Muoi No canvusing, Che\'ron, 3531 New ort riowlll CLEANING 1 d . de1irable. Must have car. Mature woman small f&ml No door to doo Blvd NB reUabJe f1lr ~f,· cJ!'~'. C~ 557-3686 ly type recrtation club. A;.. !~~ ~n~= ::~ typ~ Local pogiUons av~ble ·sra==Vl=· CE~· ::·9-.. -tlo-n,-Cl>emn,~~ I l9&9 Maple Ave., C.M. HOTEL · CLERK/CASHER, ply betw. ll A 3 pm Pacltle pie. Good itartinr salary Reply a fter 7 pm. full time help nffdtd. ~ =m·G· "•h _ _._, Male. Exper'd. only. Muat Sands Cabana Cub, &1U . with IOUnd lf:CUl"9 future. 714/968-8195 salary le Comm, and "'"'· ~~ • ._ I, muue>. know NCR 4200. NeWporter Atlanta, H.B. home•, part-time, for con-Inn 714 : &44-1700 --,,""'====--·I Medical plan A fine workln1 SALESWOt.tAN-For womens ing conditions. Apply::»a 1elentlous lad lei. 5U-2106 P.IANAGEMENT condlUom. Call Mn. Jaepr apparel store. P.tust be Bria:tol, C.M. • a.ERICAL TRAINEE HOTEL P.fAIDS. Opportunlcy, FW1 °" Part for appt. 714: 6S3-aQ1 exp'd &: auressive. Gd. SERVICE Station Att'Mnt. Women 18-35 'N'.Ith cood J.Q., can hous~;: Hot e I time. Car M«llU')' 20 hn. * ReceptlMl1t * Wary + comm. Ask tor needed 4PM TO 12 )bttt. 45 wpm tw. A 10 key adder * * 494-llSl \* * ;~ N~ &.f Ji; NT 6,. Sharp 1al w/medical bkpd, mar. only 546-48l4 2JfiO So. Harbor, C.M. • accuracy need~. $175 to HOTEL Maid Full . portunlcy. Full or Part time. Pleuant beta, prime loc. SALESMEN! Grow with ua! ! SEWING f.fachlnf O)en. start, with advance le com. • , time. Car bn .. $400. Call Jean Bruwn, Immed. openings w/ lop Erp'd, 1tngle needl~. puter train. oppor. 4301 Permanent resident prefer-nee. 31 · w ... 50«lli5 organization. Exp. pret'd muh. Only i>el'90ftl mildnl Birch St., Suite 1 (nr. red. 494-ll96 ll&-"302 CGASTAL AGINCY but wUI train. Ph 1-3 PM $100-$12!1 needed. ~ airp>rt) N.B. HOUSEKEEPER. 1.fature, M.At'URE MAN (1), for -mo-Hubcfr BIVd., C.M. -only 645-0243/~ SKIPPER: Wanted-Full~ COMPANION HSKPR live for cook'1 &: llte H1kp1 for stock room. Slml-nUred J\ECEPTIONIST·TYPIST SALES Girt, in twi~ 2:!'1 Skipper tor motor ~t. in 4 cook tor elderly' lady. elderly widow on Bal Isle. OK. No •xp nee but helpft.tl. Ntat attr. &trl, p 1ea11 n g for boutique shop in l..a(una exp'd in Afexlcan waten. pao, per mo. '75-UlT Rm &: board It US wk. 770 W. 17th. C.M. ~voice, pd hrl1 wage Beach. Exper neee11. (213) Call tor Int e rv I eW· ap- . 1)13...5703 ** MoLDIRS wfcom~ bendlts. Apply . '121--0144 polntment. Mr. Chai'lea HOUS~EPER • Compan-Flberrlau experience. 2221 Fairview, CM. Mr. SALES PEOPLE, full, part. Howard. 213/581-4233 : C0.01( . (lxporlencod l'ry Cookl APPLY IN PERSON DDINY'S IESTAilRANT ' ' ' ~171 H1rloor llvd. Cllto ·Mo .. * C:OOK * APPLY COCO'S '#71 Foshion• lslond Newport leoch COOKS**** EXPERIENCED part lime suftF A SlltLOIN 5930 PacUlc ~ Hwy., New;port Beach COUPLt tor cluninc 4 cook1na Qends a t Mach: Live.In Re:lll'ed couple pref. ion, own tranlpOrtaUon. live LUHRS BOATS Wall time, Slim-Gym. L eads STDfOGRAPHER • ~ In. 4~ 849 \V, Uth Street, ~.1.J. . Real Estate· available. c&u 897-1986 neerina OU1c:e, but e~ HOUSEKEEPER-Uve In 2 MOTEL MAID. Exp'd. Our· buainess bu incrwed SALIS ORDER CLERK ing exper not ttq. da ti 1ehool q-e children, N.B. ?i day• a wk. apply: to where "''e have ope.nlnp Experienced In sale• order 5#-7723. 136 Rochtlter lve., Spanilh OK. 673-tm D>S Harbor, C.M. for two qualified, llcenMd proeeulng. Maintaining or. C.M. ; HOUSEWIVES MOTittR Repla c ement tulltimeu.lesmentohtndle d~ tors and record.I. Type TELEPHONE Sales •• fin OR STUDENTS wanted. l.owl,y hWtop home the addlUonal activity, 11 6(1 wpm on electric. Deal, Paid daily. Calf. Mr. Jn t.runa Beach . 4 your b\qjne111s 11o?1 where CALL (714} 494-9401 Rya.n, 836-4:.67 ,. Lady w/r.ar, 4 hn J1er day. chlldftn.5yntol~.S&lary )'OUanandyou'nrnatmak-Approx. sis oer wt<, No .. n. .,.n. Stnd ......,. A ""· Ins -ll~~ per mo. ' TELONIC TOP EXECUTIV inc. Local work. Call Mr. to P .O. Box 901, i..auna come to where the actkm Is lndu1trle' Thomp!On, betwn 11 AM 6 l Bneh. Ori!y llc'd drtvm Farrow Realty Cotta Mesa, LaguM Beach Pl\f 54G-AT6. OW'ftiltl an auto need a'ppi,, ottlce M6-INO An Equal Opportunity Employer mots J.'fln-Wlth-uler e:xpe.r. to •rl as out1lde contact to all the design service of • lonr e1t1bll1hed qua.lity Interior decorating f I rm . Refer. Write. Box 59M. Dally Pilot, N.B. * S1lt1 Rap* Co. expandirw 111.tion'Nide. Needl exp. outaide aa1Hm11.n lot smog lrTe terr. Gt't'&t benfl, comm. + S7200. cau Pat O'Bclen, '40-6055 COASTAL AGENCY 2190 Harbor BIVd, C.M. * SALiiS * For Recorded lnformat!Gn, . Dial ~. Manqe Accountinr, Mtjlru.. trative systems, opera_tiona lor naUonal hdquarteN of wholesale distributor ... yn eiper min. Incl 5 yrs w/Data Process~. • Trolneo ·NCR I $361 • Send confidential ~ 10 .A. Muek, 1062 ?ofcGawt saa. ta Ana, Calif. 92105. _ Pleau.nt, ~ly ~Ina conds. Beach city. co. top henfl. Call ""' .... beth, MT-612:1. Ab\lf.tt ~bbot Penonnd Aae.ncy, 239 W. Warner, sutte 211, ianta Ana ' -Clo11rfllitlil"'· --,.· 11 Ropty s.. 121>1, Dally PtloL E N.B. SAl.ES/SlJM GYM ~1t WlJ to u1rclte. Loote lnctie1, feel better. sen. on •laht for $103..50. UNUSuAL opport\U:lltJi h talen ted, per1odab5e h&lnli'euer. P.1tmll !ffatr Dt1"'1, CdAI 1T1.1m l WOMEN: Apt 11-3)~ tr p/llme modellnl prtlftlile S'S'' I-ovtr for (116duct ad1, fashions • 0 ~1'11 r pboto1 r aphl c w9rk . Academy of Hlah Falluon hr qtert -D~ELIVER~-;,-MAN--F-ul_l_t_ime AullNllCe for N"""". I<, at ,,. AA_ LAAA pfaranc., aood hrl)r W&I' 61...,..Y.,, w/eo. huieflll. Apply 2221 In .... ralnltw, C.M. Mr. Wall UAllY l'ILOI bEIJVtily jj(jf CWon Auto &t!Jl>ly. !C3 Brotlhn.y, Las. Bch. Alao lor Llpn& Niruel 1-. We1tmlnattr UZ-7978 Sania Ana SG-tOTl NtWpOrt Beach 6TS-1279 11a1 .. POSITIVE THINKERS tr you lll•t people • If 1Ml Jib mooey. Call Afook Food, !544-2302. Modd1, 53&-1911 ~ WOMAN To W01i1 In .... 1hop, owr 21. No ._.. calla ,, .............. . °"""' llouat, Jll4T -Blvd, C.~t. . ' I I I :- • ' : . I • • • • ' ' ' 4 ,. '• • . :· ;. " . ., • • . • • • MIRCHAHDISI POR SALE AND TllADI MlltCHAHOISI FOR SALi AHi> T1tADI FREE TO YOU TAANSPOll;rATIOlf RANSPORTATION TRANSPOltTATIOll -;--;::=-:-::;;::;'-:::; l ?JSp1~1·~Sl<'!!;l~le~""-!!:_~fD! Aut. So....... Im,..,... --Fum~-IOOO Gar.,. •·1o C.Mtr•• & -~M~l~~~l&.~111~1~u~·~=~l~llD~j ro home • w/lr• ~ ~ & Pa~ -j;;;~~~~;;~;I;~~~-;~~~ 13111 -,... ....:;. ~ BOSTON -• 1511 ,..., •• ... AUSnN AMERICA GAllACE Salo; ReJ•l1, _!l!.!!l!l~!ff!!!!~~!!!!_-..._,!!!! allvu Gtt/Sbep all Ibo<.; ..... otarter, 2 II" tanb. 4 CRAGAIVGT .,_ 5 ~1--------1 ,,.,,....,....,,, ""'" tbU, llASSEL8LAI) !00<: wllb e POLYISllEll SHAG calm, Id ,.-. -. Lib ~· ,.... otr. dial 990 Uns, 1...,... -AUSTIN AMERICA din. tbl. 5 almolt new red ltn111 • a cce11orie •. Clrptt • ntOM 15.49 yd. 539-4761 414 5fl..Of1I m. ~ I AM to,S PM ""'''" nylon cbn, 11,cbted ..;511-':=:mT-:::!:i:alt::•:•:::I=== e NYLON '~ 4 Atxl!WlL!: -· lilF 1'-"f, iiiliiOl-ilil boal ~ ~~ Partl medieine ab. Yllc:. chn. ... 1009' coatinuoua filament tens, 1 lobfr, 2 abort-balre4. RP clec.: Jae. wtl1. trlt. Trailer, Travel M25 AU ~11 f!r'1 fine titted 1pruda, hi.by Mltclllw•"t '600 FRON Sl.25 Pft' yard. nted 1ood home . ~X;;tn="""'::;,:f·;.:lllli:;;;:;;.:·,.._~;;"'111;;;,~1·------,---I I • lltt•"' & ••1w1 •1• hnitw1 , . • AU. llAlll NEW 'A decorator dnam DOUH on dilplay -3 qlOjnl of iorceoui Spanbb fUrniture (was SACiiFICE . . • . . . . $425 , .. c..plete Mffit.,,.•neeR l•droom Suite in .,. Oak. I Rog. $149.001 ----NOW $111,00 6irteov1 SjMftish C..1tom Bui~ Sofa with Ntching loff SHt-Choice of be1utiful fobric•. I Rog. $419.951, _HOW $225.00 Se!!ohh Dlol•t s... $11.IO WHI Oak End TablN and Coffoa Tobloo..$19.IO ToDDoco.-Tobie Lampo ·'' l,RO,. $49.UI • 'NOW $11.00 S,.Ooioh Ho"l;"'I Swa9 I.amp• • ,IR.,. $49.911 NOW $2ZM lttnu, paJ.ntiDo by 1amoul lnstallat)on Avail ' 64M558 V2 ™ - artlaL s ...... dn>m. -5.11·1'U Morine I I MU AlllNE ' -~ stanl clam, nhlti 3 YR old Dalm&tion AXC, • "" P• • dance eo1tume, coflee * AUCTION * PROF. Mower 25" aimmer, papert, ~. Lea~ MARINE -· lor ..... t~: ltl l'Ll i i _ii; ii f' 0 ' ; '.• grlndtr A food Jnixtr, .s 4 b.p. ere. xlnt •cond, $150. ~Good chlld'1 .pet. tape recordeni, elf ~id FRID~Y 1:30 P.M. 1 po..-.'tr tdO!t $25. l su.~ 414 cam,·1W2 rtd nylon crpt. APRIL 3rd beam rotary mowtr 19" FREE Mile Siam~ Cat, MOy otbtr item•. 53&-aT Repoasessed 1963 Corva.lr and pi. 1 20" .Rotor mower PS, 2 m Old. Veiy 1ood Mercedet Bem: Det.d. Dp, I VACA'nON very ad cond. w/11 Pendl TRAVEL CENTER 3100 W, Cout Hwy., N.B. ~ar. 9Q..l:m. -lxcel. yG1l•1n Falcon ™, M0-176t GAR.AGE Sale: Sat'l' Sun 1963 Ford Station Wagon. 56--2!H3 wfebildrca Call GL.U.Cntt'°""'"' Comp!. ()fysW!a -Alpine All~MG Dtaler 'Xln"t OOlld. tm. BU! (1U) Afad.S; wt-el,CM'lper 'e AuUa ~ brown c~===Coll=:,:ect..:=::===I Worldl ....... ibo.t COD ·wltb bl1r1t_ 1nterior, stick 10-5.. Clothe• d'f7er, dbl bed, Bedroom lets, Dlv&nS, Sec. ~B"E"a=E"T"T;:-A-,.-"•"•-,-.~,.,., b~. 64J.0588. '4/S Filhtr a:tereo, tawn edpr, tlonals, Slant front desks. au,tomatlc. 6 inch bam!l, PETS ~ LIVISTOCK lamps, chrt, woman'• I Cocktail table•, Commodes, modtl 72. Xlnt cond. $60. cb.UdHn'a clothe .. bike1, Ii l..am ~ chnts, Hutc~, Unprimed 38 lp@C. brua 3c; speclal junk. 29731 I v Y China cabme:u. Butfets, Din-Unprimed 45 auto. brt.U 4(, GltM. Lapna NI I u e I • eltes, Lampl!, Mirrors, 2 Iate Call after 5 PM. ~7 -plete RV veblcJe .. aboppf.ile <.ahlf\.. 8J0..1'40 Pm, O-ral -INI Slip -·Int ,._ ,...., ---"-~-""'..;;;..--"= I ' . l3Sl Cordell Grove mw, GG FOR Sf!e: -at 534•6616 SJ0..3875 model Meditenuran 1ter-I,,===-,,,,-~-~ fOI. 3 color TV' Portable HOUSEFUL Of furn. Ex· Avalon. Call ~ -· Oo-s Sl~ Open -thru Frt. 10AM~. $ttteOI,. Hide-a-beds. Mat-ecutlve office desk, Color -tttalH. R.ttriguators. Stov. TV, Oak 4-poetu bed. Muc.b C•tt 1121 MMllt Hemet t2tl es, Wuhen,. Gas dryen &: more. 14lll B&rt>tr St, MUOI MORE!! WeatminJter. aay u•lllOll WINDY'S AUCTION 1 ELEC. D.,.., almoot new = .. Ki= ~lo H;,,. S.loo TRAILER SALES S 5 O. 1 ta ck o 11 u n l t $35-iSO, Call 56-4522. YEAR IND Strum Line e Ideal 1100 I IMW BMW'S #1 DEALER IN CA~lf'PRNIA AND ORAN(;E COUNTY'S LARGEST ". t CREDIT AVAIL. NO MONEY DOWN -·mm RJRNITURE PHILCO auto. washer, late model. xlnt eood. $65, K~n. more elect. dl)'ft', I• t e model, xlnt cond. $65. 847-8U5 or 546-f672 KENMORE,600 auto . washer, late model. xlnt cond, $'75. Frigidaire elec dryer, xlnt cond. $ 4 0 • 847-8115 or 5f6..8672 COME BROWsE AROUND wubu/,,,,. $35. atul BLACK Smob Puttu Ki> CLEARANCli SALE Tarry•No!Mcl•Oa•I• 2115~ .Newport Blvd. ~:1!.r~ ~=·I: tooU. tens. ReKilteml $15. 'NOW ON DISPLAY lxpleNr Motor Hornet :1:'' ~~ ~li= Behind Toa;y'a Bide Mat'll NEW Drps for 12' &: 6, c.J.l 54&-llM 12, 16, JO, H le SO Wides C•m.r.:r• and Shells TIM MOTORS ~~P~esatwJ.~ 9 ~ atidlng gtau dn. Jus t DARUNG stameae Kittens l'2Su~ ~~ "':eaa 1Sl~1' = ~wloi G.G. 8'11 ~ Gl'\Wt Bl. G.G. '!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~I bought $400. Muat atll. Will $20 ea~. 962-0936 * % blockEut OI Harbor Blvd.. ~ GnWe ~ 1"4' Newport Blvd.H.r11o~"a1v.i.1 :"·-·_ Costa Mesa Only ; lvwy Nithl 'Tll 9 -Wad., and Sat. 'Til 6 ii OPEN SUNDAY 12·6 I EMPLOYMENT IOOO AMANA Rada.range LI st $595. Sacrlfice!. $395. Won in contest. SCS-1851. 636 Joann, C.M. RFRIGERATOR $45. Near new. Kit. ranp. M-.ytag washer % 114 Continental, C.M. JEWELRY l SUPPUES .... $95. !82( Oriole Or, Coota Meil\ mn 540M10 ' 5'7-4111 ........ A-CM. 557-8140. . -~~" -mont • ...,. , ________ Doti• 1111 NEW 20 X 56 KENSKILL 1988 '2' Muk din& rilWs made tD your or-Mile. W•ntecl u1• 1--:-...,..,_.,..___ J. BR. 2 BA den euvtH-II, twin bedl, tub ' ahowt.r, der, Ally stone or combtna. -NOR}VEGIAM E.t Hound. tbrU-out zi• fat~ po;"~ many xtru. '70 lie. New ,lion o1 stones. Cutine 1!JP-WANTED : L 9 BS TE R l~ -, lemale, w~ N··•· -~rt• .. paUo ·-cond in a: out. Bi& aavinl:a. plies &. machines. lapidary TRA~. In Good Cond. Call ,.... ""'""' ~ -ro:-961-3259 supplies -, equipment. tn•> 983-2974 befwn 5' 7 tam. w/chit•d f.en ·sso. M'.Myext.ru,$11,fiOO.Ontbttl::O;:;:~·:,,.,,.-~~~ Rough & cut stones, iold' PM. Uplud, Calif. 84T·'I05f· beach at DRlFl'WOOO FANTAS'l'IC Buys in 4 at;r. silver setting&. BEAUI'IFUL Rqi.stered fe-BEACH a..uB, H.B. Grttn-Westwa.y1 Ii: Funtlme REPAIR Man ha• .recon-FIVE _,. GEMS & FREE TO YOU male Webna.rane.r, 2 years leaf Mobile Home Sale .. n.. Campen. Scotta. 9lC N. LIVING ROOM SALE ditioned Kenmoft washttB, LAPIDARY SUPPLY old. !flt. Hunttna:. $50 , 536;75U, jornkn. inc. '"'-=-~·,:;S:c.A::,·,-.,,,.....,.--,.,1 : • WOMEN guaranteed I: drlivtrtd. m. Reu of Qillqe Center 8 WEEK Old pup p le 1, 646-2132' •SACJUFICE KENSKILL I: Kit ~ Fumiturt j,bi Min, Wom. 7100 646-51155 BAYSIDE MOTORS 1XlO W. Coast Hwy., N.B. Irnmed. .-n;..,.. for child 1 8' grttn & black Spanish $45. 962-5009 Shoppinlil: Center Mother Terry Poo, Father 1 Male Cl.ifn. Territt,' 3" Owntr SaY. Sell prices on lot models. Scotts. ca.re/CO.:._ .... -..... v... ... area Sola • 3 Spanish table! • 2 .::o:..:=Lui-=e::.,,H-ot_po_ln-1--:lr:;iO Harbor Blvd, 11-A Cockapoo. In te 11.i&e n t' mo. old, AKC champklnahip CUltom.'68 Gold Medal .sl, 91' N. Harbor, S.A. DATSUN at ;.ill' t.iP'e. w:Sit Bet-Spanish wrought iron lamps, ftfri&entor $65. Costa Mesa * ·se.2039 1.rleodly. Very cute, come lines. C&ll' only 4:l> pm all eidru, 5 Star. Part. WANTED: ~20" t.ra ve ''1---------· I 1'r!::.tnc. 6C-3274 ~&~mi = ~~~ 54M448 3E5 Tbm1n. CM l 2)" apt,..giu gas atovt $20 tee! 3'.l9 JoAnne Pla~, Lido 1o 8:00 pm 5.1&-3616 $11,850. trail• r:aLned in&ide, Jor ~ ·~;"o"UN=c-Man""°_u_ll'_.,_~.--.. ~I bed sleeper sofa, like nrw, LADY Kenmore Auto or ~ otter, 1 30'' Sands, N.B. 4/2 NOVICE CJau: Forming S & K MOllLI sWraP.&U-e336 circulation department Full $300. now $149.95. 1 r blue Wuhtr. Xlnt cond. SSS. apt-1iu gu stove $10 or WANT good home for Kelly, March l> -can 546-0989 HOME l~OKERS 1965 TERRY 17%' 1elf con'!, 1Ua MTSUI --•. ,,· lime, Perman e n 1, with green IOfa .& chair set • Uke 1-tovin&. Eutbluff. 644-4133. make offer, Child's chest AWe German Shep., 18 MARTINCREST KENNELS 12362 Beach mvd., G.G. fully 00 zip on rm. $1625. .. _ regular r a I 1 e •' vacation, new $216 • now $99.95. 1 8' USED Appllanotl • TV's, all SlO, J red leather chain lTIOI. Needs companionship I WH,ITE Toy Poodle Stud • -6.16-0Jn • 84T·µJ6 "Leader 1n The Ce.a.ch Cities" "'· and the• penonal ""' .,..n sota. $199. now $69.95. _, •• .,....,. Duola_ p'• lJ15 13.511 or mak• oiler, I 6& '"~'· Rth . .-.qulred. All s.l'YI . AKC . NEW 24 X 60 PC,LA"-'YMA;::,;.=TE~-~n~--.. ~full~y· I ZIMMERMAN oJ a compeny automobile. 4 7' Spanish aoJu, 2 reds, 2 N~ C.M. 541hnis straight back liv'g rm 'chair p.m. 646-9067 414 ce, M7-TI.76 · · · equjpt xtra .~;vCiean Contact Kenneth Scott al '249 each $10, 2 ,inlet toileta S3 ea, BLACK Female Ge.r/Sbep, 2 Bl\ 2 B.\ den. carptl:q ~ K1:I\ ~ ' 2145 HARBOR BL VD. greens, • now KENMORE washer xlnt z Floor ·1amps, no shades CHIHUAHUAS, AKC, thni .out patio 6 carporti-;•:'·:;¥·,;-;;;;,;· ~~l~~l-~,-,,~-~~~~==:_1 the.l>A1LY PILOT, 330 West ·'89.95 each,-~ 7' crttn da· condition, Can nenv'er. $65. Ger/Short haired combo, 10 housebrok lov a'"-l"'-•28, _, __ .. ~1. -?' • • Coota M•,. venos & chair seb,· can be Sl ea. 2:m5 Canyon Dr, C.M. moa. old, needs hm with . en, ablt_pets, "' ... •• l"¥.IKU ..., ...... Truck 95DI ... 59'2-1764 (off Victoria b .. ·-p•·-ntia reasonable, 547-3874 I M11"" extru! In· Gft"""""' 1 • -DOT DATSUN made into beds • now $69.95 '"'" ,..,,. large 1rd & lots of attention. -·~ """""""~ '"'--"""coo'".cg~~~ each."2green sofa sets-now Antlauel lllO I~&~-=~""=';,,>=~=~ 962--5359 4/2 PUREBRED lri!h Setter & LEAF PARK iii. C.M., only, ''5 ·INTEltNATIONAL OPEN DAILY ao ~the public in a l'Ctail $49.95. Several end & coffee :.;;.:;.:.;:';:.c:-----'-' VW. BUS CAMPING 'EQUIP· LOVABLE pure-bred Ba&&et black Lab,• ~· Must $15,500. jomlcra Inc. TRAVILALL AND •• Good with ficurea;. tables from $4 up, Table UNUSUAL. very old Prints. MENT hound, 2 yn. female, needs seU, brokt'n tiorn!· 642-4983 • '42·l350 • Loaded.. air comli~ing, OV· SUNDAYS •'tOifndn•ter area. lamps from $5 up. see to appreciatr. Partial All in one Unit -2 burner good home w/fe~d yard. MINI dcmes, long A: lmOOtb TRAILER, Cab a'n a Bay. enl.ri~,\ power steering & 18835 Beach Blvd. ~·~-Contact BEDROOM SALE set old Bavariab China. All stove with big propane tank, loves children. 846-3818 coats. Must reduce •tock. front. 2 BR. frplc., patio, brakes, VB, low mileage. Huntington Beach Gt P.ErR.OCELLA 3 beautiful walnut bedroom are C.Ollectru"1 1tema. 50 pound icebox. water da.ya 53&-860f att6. $35-STS. 531-3424, 531-4072 washer/dryer. Newly dee. (RIA946) See this & others 842-7781 or 540.04.42 642--9470 .eta, like new, 199-$139.9!>-646-6545 storage, place to hang WOl:JLD party that SILKY Terriers, tiny, darl· Adult prk, pet ok. Owntr at '.\ '10 Datsan Sedan $149.95. a beautifUI walmt clothes -can makr into · we gave an xi o u 1 • $ J. 4 . 9 o o cash. Kustom · H-~n woman w an 1 e d. 2 bed ·t be ved Skye te!Tier to, plrase ca.11 ing, AKC 6 & 1 wks. $125 up. lftVTU 8 1 4 door 96 h f'• Coffee Shop chest .l dn.wen. $29.95 '.l. Siwi"I MachlMI 11 0 • uni can mo !J62..6368. Do& ill t\ requires Stud avail. ~'1335-67S--0250. ll Terrace, Lido AUTHORIZED g p overhead $39.95 each. Bedroom lamps easily. Prict $100. Call edica . Trlr Prk, NB cam, diAC brakes. 4 1pd, dlt. 1:30 PM &:: 4-T PM. $4.9S. URd rriattreu I: box SINGER Auto tl&-iag, fi &u.-0297 m tJon. 4/2 RARE long coat Chihuali.uu. iii0ii0iii;;;;Oii0ii0ii0ii;m,I INTERNAnONAL DEALER wsw, back up lights. Sacri· bU.sp. Apply :mt B, sprine setl S:U.95. mos. old. No attach needed ~~~~Ti1niiiiiiP;o,;i LOVABLE Young 1 pay t.d l.fust .reduce stoc:k. $50, le ~ OOUBLE EXPANOO MS Baker,·c.tl. 541).5915 fice, Take trade, wW finance • C.M. KITCHEN SALE :i:"'e~' G=~~ur ho!'h ~ma!: ~;ftdgra,y~hlt! .... "; ~~TESE53l-M24 :~ • ....,.. AKC F~:JrooirARK, '67 Chevy Pickup l~~te(60~E).~p;: •..L..:.-'-1 ..-...a1on 71DD 1 30" white gas ~. like mall ·--6 '"'6'" • .. _.-c I f t bed 4 pd, dJr V-8 ~-"••• -• $49 95. Dinetk Jeta:b'om or I payments. ~ 546-7009 . 4/4 reg., 7 wk old males, show OWNER HAS TO MOVE 00 • 1 • ' 494·9773 or 545-0634 aft 10 am ·:•' ntw, · WONDERFUL ••· ,_ qua1,·1y t.•" ~ A p.f S. "~"' -~.. Custom Cab. On!y 32,000 mi. . $IJI to $44. M • I rnou..,r ca... · ~ •!!!!!!!!!·!I!!· !!!!-!!!!!!!! . ..,.,.,1 Xlnt cond. thruout Small 1600 Datsun Roadster '67, f All retumtd from .rental u1ac• & 2 male kittens need lovtna 1 'SAM""'-o~YE==D~AK~C.~6-mo-nlhL-dn. Will finance pvt. pty. speed Sl400. AIRLINE* Vl!L CAREERS apartment&i:mod~bomea. ln1trvment1 1125 hm, All are b eau t, noo or MAKE OFFERf 1965 Amef.,.lilXSS Expando (XW46M) can Ira aft 10 Call 6TX664 after I Tbe Used vox Euex Bau amp, 4 968-4397 4/2 646-7264 after 6. n¥>blle tiome, 2 bdrm with am, f94..9'Tl3 or 545-0634, ·~· ! . . fi91t1' Agentt month old. Excellent con-BEAtrr. puppy % Lab, % % GERMAN Shepherd • ~ ld)'cabua, carpeted I: dition $250. Baa •uitar and -=========:I Shephenl.. Very intelligent, Lab puppies, both --nta panelled. Carport! awning, USED TRUCKS ENGLISH FORD '• ._,, i Ticket Sales ~-• Re-11ervatiom :<4lr ,.,.,.bl • c...o •":~ OommurUcations furniture Factory •· • •·----b "' all r-~ porch Ir f' awnlna, eaae, good condltio'9 $75. UIJl.IK' ro n, &hots, &ood AKC. S5 each, l45-08T3 ldrtln • % Chevy JM. Tons • ......, taket all! 5tl).559S ·Ask w/children, 525--3428. 4/3 1 ~::..c:,:,..:;...:;=:...:.::..::.:.:_ 1 a:. A •torace shed, In e 2 Chevy % Tons All New English ..,.,.., SILKY Terriers, champ. 1tk. nice Jamlly park In H.B. Fon! I O B' for Chris FEMALE Schnauzer/poodle, $250. _ 8.fZ.1504. $5975 • 1 Dodge % Ton s n ur 1i : : ; Travel A&ent 1885 Harbor Blvd. at 19th St., C.M. 548-9457. 6 Id .. ~ ho ==-==:,· -'"'~'~---I . e 1 Fo~ u ~on Stock Now Al RICKENBACKER Guitar mos. o , ........... me. Call 646-35U '" 711 •' 61"1385 BUDGER 17x50', unturn. 1 e 1 Chevy 60 Flat· n • .o FACTORY . ~'.~ ~IRUNE :::scHOOLS GREEN Vinyl 1' sofa $75 • Yellow vinyl recliner chair SIS. Green vinyl wing chair S25. Simmons trundle bed $65. 439 62nd St., N.B. 642-1548 w/amp le accr1R. Excellent -AFGHAN PUP~ _..KC Irr bdrm t, drpa """" VO CE condition. Call an 3 615-7718 9 MO old mixed brttd d _._ • crp •bit-ins, • 1 Chevy 108 Van IN I ! Lo bl og, $150-$200. 846-5t52 awninp, Many xtru. Nr. Many Othert • From i 799 Positively No Added va e le good w/childttn. .... .. E<o..n --1-Call Deal ~--• .. 0 1-Had a11 , ..... ~·ss•• 412 ENGLISH COCKERS ~:.'" ~-· ·-· Kustom Moton Choo" "Fro_,,'· ~:: PACIFIC \. Pl•not f'llftl I -LADIES Diamond D i nner "' ;ivo--,,. AKC L. t1-...1 ..... ,,_., ~ • se m Ring, stt with !" ka-t GERMAN Shephenl. Pointer, U>e-DJ.~. ~-.. AUTIIORIZED Sed. ns Sta Wg Ol'ftan Shopn.n• 76 ..... T••wsPORTATION 20'x40' W/ 10x20 addition. INTERNATIONAL DEALER a ' ns, t.Y A: Night Oaase1 . .,, r-• centcrdiamond,2diamonds AKCmalel1Jn011.old,ha1 "'-ftn New crpta, combo GT'sAtOurCost SACRIF1CE! Sofa, unusual Did )'OU know that we art • % karat on each side. shots, Hsbrkn ~lBS 4/4 Bo.ti&. Y~ts fOOI washer/dryer, carpor t . 845 Baker, C.M, Sf0.5915 \Vbile Overstocks Contemporary, incl walnut having FREE ORGAN Brilliant cut Sac rif ice ! l YR. old Cockapoo.~ Atany extras! New park, '65 CHEVY Van, excel run-Last. end tbls. Blk tufted chr CL.ASSES and that )'OU can Rt.ply to :Box P360, Daily tra ined, all shots , SCRAM LETS CM. 6,850. 6tUf95 ning cond, Good tires 44M Theodore ·!· SU-6596 ~t. 17th St., Santa Ana . -..iplANO LESSONS • ~0;~~~-~~i~~·~T~ ~n!, au!'1:n~l~ ~ ~~ Pilot 893-7309 '4/2 • 21xm' VIKING SCANDIA z mi. Must sell Slim/belt of. ROBINS FORD , intennedi&lea " CARPET I~ from Comm'!. DOXIE Terrier, 7 wks. to BR, 2 BA. 5 Star Adu1t fer. 1352 W. Balboa (Allen) 2Ql'i8 Harbor Blvd. . ..-ee . THEORY • lM· HOUSEFUL Of new model ~:;,~ BALDWIN STUDIO contracts. $1.98, $2.88, ahag a:ood home w/yard. 546-8259 ANSWERS Park. Owntr 548-4142 att .,""~~a;ip~l~~]~fl§+eo.;;;ta~M! ... ~~~~642'J01~;•1 PllOVIZATION, Reasonable. home flJrniture. Reg. $683. $3.99 -ci yd. Drak~ Carpet alter 5:30. 412 6. ·~ GMC "Ton. Heavy duty ~after 5 p.m. 54&-™8 :~197• 894-4417 or 1819 ~~~MN1~ 17206 Beach Bi.vd, H.B. BEAUTY. Long-haired Apncy-Oleek-R&ln)'-50xl0 Vildng w/ awninp in equip. Campu wiring, P/S, PJ»o LESSONS. your ,,-==----~-&: Sunday Anemoon 842-5114. ftmale cat to good home. Entail -nuNKING aood cond. Adult park. P/B, radlo, -y-a, hydro. FIAT :bltle· Day or evening. Ca11 MAPLE loveseat, match arm -~P"'lAN=o=s="'~-o=R=G=AN=s~-' FIREWOOD for We at sutn· Calf d8YI 548-3143 4/3 Ever notice thole who kttp 968-7Ut aft 7 pm, .~AJ~i.~•~6,;642-6311~~'~,-~~l-;--;;:::=::;::--;~::;:::-:;:J 'a0¢ 3 PM. 644-26.19 cllr $50. Solid maple din. tbl NEW A USED mer prices. United time MATI'RESSES _ You haul frownlng get credit for 30• Owe'nl Twin Screw radio '66 BRONOO Roadster, 6 cyl, * Fantastic Fastback MficHANDISE FOR ~~~c.7i 6~;;;~s, 6 chrs, e Yamaha Pianos Orp.nt call now! $45 cord, $22.50 ~ away, 22({) Canyon Dr., No. IBINKING! synchronizer, depth finder'. tow bar, R/H. Sl550. Aft 7 FIAT sAJ,:E AND TRADE e Thomas Org&M cord. Deliv. &: t tack'd fret. c, Costa 1ife11a 4/6 11' SEAMA.STER Asking price $7900. 673-8158. P64~ ~~5• anytime wknds, 1967 Popular "850" serie11, :i · •Kim Pianog FREE Tired Couch. some moe new ~ a.c.... .....,, ~ dr, 4 pas1 SedRnette. Spark· ~, A SfEAL. Lg. 2 pc i;ectional ball ll) 688..o846 Al t • -·-• .,__ • .........,.,. F ;_ lture 8000 $75. Day bed $10. 1572 e Kohler&: Campbell CARPET Installer ha1 one used crpt, child'• red tanks ot gu used. Volvo Mini 8Jke1 '275 '61 ENGLISH Ford Panel, ling ennlne white ,v/plush Orchard apt, _6~ C .M • COAST ·MUSIC roU avocado carpet....double v.•aion. 54.9--0833 '4/4 powered with inboard/out._ _ . _ ~· little body work. Best red vinyl bucket seal inter. N~Y New G n. bar, nt-540..7760 NEWPORT 6 HARBOR jute back,. will sell all or 11 l\fonth old woolly male board drive. 2 bunks, bead, BONANZA Mini·Blke, front oUer over $100. !1172 College A 11mart looking penny pinch- , dark finish, 3 stools ETHAN Allen Maple tables, Costa Mesa * 642-2851 part.SJ per yd. 54(}..7245 dog, aUectionat.e, loves bait tank, new trailer. Too Ir back ahocka, 3% hp, make Ave., C.M. Anytime. er! ONl.Y Sll99! t.-1ARQUIS . nging back shelf $200. immac cond., Lamp table Open lG-6 Fri 10.S Sun 12-5 ./ NE\VPORT Beach Tennis childftn. S.5-4!165 '4 /2 busy to use, must aa.crltice offer. 644-~ WANT: '68, '69 or '70 Ford MTRS; 900 So. Cs! 1-Twy, La. tble. 48'', 4 chairs, $25. CoUee table $40. Dough Club family membership. NEED Good home fOI' ,1 wk $2895. Ask for Steve aft 10 ._.___.._ I 93DD or Chevy Van, lo mlg. Cash. guna Be a ch, '494-7503, $'l8l. 2 Swivel loungr chairs, box end table S35. MB-5106 PIANO RENTALS $400. 0y1 ~ eves .,.... an:. 491-3515 or 5f9..3851. mvnrrcyc II 642-3490 anytime 540-3100. (~tian print), ottoman, AlAPLE BED SET old puppies, Cock ... -poo. I"°""'"°'"""---,.~= $1ll8. Lamps, oil paintings. RM • New and Uled 5'»-58«. call aft. 5 ~2579 4.ll zt• Dory Inboard, w/trlr, SUZUKI 1960 Chevy Pick ~ up truck '69 Fiat Cou~, only 11,000 : S:>r tlools w/cane back. Al!O, lite chest &: All moffit1 paid apply to pUr· I NE\VPORT Beach Tennis FREE To aooi1 home 4 mo. needs aome work. $250 or w/10' camper. $750. full miles, $300 I t • k e over :tia:: naug, seat& $2.5 ea. mirror. 642-5931 chase. Oub family membershiP. old puppy, Alt ihott. rood ~~oner. Call aft S: prl~. 541-8432 or 673-t&tS ~nil. 491-2942 ;~ TWIN 8'do w/mal....,, ~ GOULD MUSIC ~~ •• !'>' 54 .. :J286, •YH with <hildn'". 535-3<28 4/2 1,-;;====,-~-Toke°""'-""· b aO;;;; box springs $30. Eico F'.M. 2045 N Main s A 547.o681 ~ 16' WHALER TS hp Jolwon. IS HERE 68 blue Ford F100 FERRARI ~AN Phyfe t.1ahogany tuner SIO. 968-4951 · ' · • LONG-Haired kittens M>n:ie Traller, Excel oond. Maey JAMES LT-D. , ~=-='646-""IBOl::;:;.•::;«c...;.S~-: Hdnal dini"-" ta bit and 6 H 0 LI DA y Health Spa bl k oa'ytl " • ., M•m•·nh•'p lo• ·"•. Call ac llOme gray. me: extru. """""· 175-5169 l' T p U ~-vy 6 mo'• FER• "ltl • ctiil_jr1, matching buff ~ t " uc • ""' S3S-3t30 aft· ~ 414 I===~=·-==;;:;==:. '' · · · ''·"" • -·a electric lawn edger Office Furniture IClll HAMMOND Ste!linY, Yam-Ge<>rge 548--9691, 5:3Q..3:30 ' · ISM Newport. CM cc..OO«I old. 18,000 mi's, Xln't cond. N'~ lmporta Lid. Or-. 1 condition SlS. Danish aha. New • ultd pianoa of I -'PM~·'=~~~~-~-SMALL Mbed terrier puppy, S1ilboetS tG11 ::;:....:..,==;...;:=· ;:'c..;l•::..::=::r $1500. 836-6611 dayt. ._.. Coa:nty1 oab' aatbot- m 9 ft. beige couch. USED ttttl desks $39.50 • most makes. Belt buya in FURN. ' Collectors Items. 9 wtt:kl. needs lovinc borne. I-----.------'66"' Honda. 30! Scnmbler tzed dtt.18'. sJO; dooblr Long Boy bed Polture chain Sl2.50 &; up So. callf. at SchmJdt Music Pleau call. will read list 549-1369 4/2 I ~ Xtru. $300. or beat otter Jeep1 '511 8.ALES.-SERVJC!..PARTS ~t headb oard $65. e Used2 &-4drawrrtill~ C:O.l!KITN.MPln.SantaAm &:prices.644-4n4. HEAL1llY White .Gu inea Soing Tempest ~:1sc~~~lA.JEEP "46. Civillan-283 31~~eoa:!.1:.iwy. '~ cabinetlJ • U&l'd "'OOd deskl 10 Gal aquarium, ftllector, Pigs, 645-0045 days. &4&-8749 14' PI'Oll Ctaa of 15000! erwine, poai-rear end, Ca~1 M2·9C05 540-1764 ·diU:Y Amer: Liv. nn. cof· ?itcA1ahan Bros Desk Inc. PIANO TUNING ' Repair filter. Hawaiian bellyboard. aft 2 PM. 4/2 r.tain, jib, spin, etc. US74 HONDA 305 Scrambler dirt tires, 11 inch brakes. roll Authorized Ferrari Dealer ' r•· tb! Sl9, twin b e d , 1800 Newport Blvd . Expert. T'eason&ble! Mr . 67>5049 PURE-BRED Gennan Padlic Yacht Sales 673-1571 bike. $250 or trade for Hon-bu, 2 tops, spare rack and dfhser &: ~na tbl set $65. 1.,,:;;°";"'::'::'::',.:=*="=~=·=. Aarneu 6ToMi967 or 673-8930 SMI1'H COroni. E 1ec1r 1 e Shepherd, 11 mm. o Id , 3446 Vla Opor+.o, Newpt Bch. da T.ra.ll 90· "5-099! day. cana. back seat, etc. $1395. JAGUAR ,l.Jy. rm llOfa S99. rocker 1Household Goods I020 KIMBALL Baby · Grartd portab~,typewrlter. $100. maJe. 847-9936 4/2 I S' GLEN L, SJoop, .:~:vends. 5'5-2083 : $~ t..nd tbl w/lamp $25, Plano, walnut finish f.llO, · 2515 Elden, Costa Meta 3 PUPPIES, look Ii k e fiberglass-over ' hard"'OOd,· -"'"~Ai r. uro w/brand Take over -~Qt1 JAGUAR •*crib compl w/miitt HOUSEHOLD GoodR,l ~==,:.ca1,,_1.=615-c..;l.::!28::_~-LOCALEggsWholeA8lefmm Cocker. 6 wks. old. dacron sail1, all stainle11 new Gyt Kit. $575. <>vtr 69Bronco,b1Ue•white 6 sdc' 1824 Oriole Dr, C.M. fur n itutt, "''asherl<lryer, HAMf\10ND Electric Organ, Ranch to Restaurants l 548-283.l "4/l stell rigglr;a: &. hdwe. Xlnt twice u much invested. 646-1802 an 5· HEADQUARTERS )$J;st40 refrigerator, 1V. All le111 Spinrt M-2, walnut. .........i convalescent Hom•• PUPPIES 6 k bl cond.onhwy.trlr.Sacriflce Call64i..2'76:1. TbeonlyauthorittdJAGUAR BRAND NEW than l l\-10'1 old. 644--1791 cond. $450. ~91160 aft 6:""' 548--3?~ aft 6 PJ\.1 &: white i.: ra7. ;g7~1 ~~; =-"~"~·-64>4165,.,..~~~~~ '66 YAMAHA 250 Blc Bear C•mper1 9521 dealer in t1le entire 11arbor ·.~'J. ROOM$-G7ROUP ID"'" R1dio '200 HAND.Pa.intedollportraitof NJCE female Cock-a-poo, 6 23'DanlshDoobleEnder,tull !:::'~·s::..:1m Ca-r s-:..1 ma. Compl•t• ;; ,., G1ra9• S•I• ,, you or your children Jrom a mot1 old 'MS-0729 cover, inbrd eng, sa.ilJ flew ··-r-r--"" : ~Sen.I reavlar ~ --''------AM/FM RADIO photograph. 646-3629 '"°".""""·=:--7."o=--in '67, dbl moorln: In No. '66 650 cc TRIUMPH TR fi New International. V8, 4 SALES ' •nn-y our own contracts GARAGE Sall": Bdrm IM"t, 540-1413 4 Utt1e Kittens, * Siame.!t. Bay~ Just overhauled boat must sac., been Uled 'u a 1pttd w/rrew Harbor Light SERVICE -~~-"1 Oitc:CMmt Furn. bar •tools. llOla, 18.l'l'lpg. car ========= OLDVJCTRSTRANOLAD Call 548-5068 '4/2 J,._ mwrtng. $3500. 6'i~l909. dirt bin, $495. MJ..nM Delun C.mper, Slttps 6 PARTS rooler, tools, 1oy1 a: long: ~ ' "Y/. •th SI, S.A. 541-2412 brown fAll. Mi.at. 19.10 Swan .T.;o"-l•;.•c.c;.;;,lon=----12=05 1-'ew records~ 646-ll.54 SCRAP LID.lBER 369 E. 19th ISLANDER BAHA..'M 24, '6'9 Honda 300 Scrambltt. oornlortably. Double atain. Poole '·~·~_.1.o:' .: ,. Sat 10-fi Dr .. ?.teu Verde. C.?.t. Sal GEIGER COUNTER 13 5 St. C!'tt 4/2 1leeJ>s, 4, xln't shape, Priv. Xln'l cond. !ft& •~ .. ~. ~ water BUICK • ~ ........... ..,.,..., Ii Su.n 9 AM-4 PM. GE TV t1ffdl \\'ork izl. ...,., ~""" · 3 Fl.UITY mixed pupplei. 6 Pty. Call 6«--0558· * 5.f6...-0163 aft 3PM. 1'r pump.;.._...,, u .... 1,7 futur-IN O"" w-~ oal CoMOle w/rtmolt control. ,~;;;..;=,;c:,--,.-,.,..,-.,--,-k ... -· 412 ~ las es. No H90U59 KmM ,~ .. ,"'r. y UI-TREASURES Calott from \\' l. ~-' anytime. ......... .,, c I 9ailboet. Ne'll' 1969 Yamaha BT 1, m klt. • .uM. COSTA MESA' 14-;f znoc.. oak drop tronl the 102 mrmben of Ntwport P!ULCO cont0le TV need.I sin· Sofa • r.tatch. chr. RABBIT, Female, 3 mo'i, mut l entrt:iom:t Trtr I: Lott or extru! Put eond. """'"'" , I! maple coUee lablt. 1-larbor Enibhim Club. April work u. ~ Contempon1ry ' Spanit.b Very friendl.1. ~1982. '413 saill lne. $100. 8C6: 962-9961 5f6..0301 Kustom Motors 234 E. 17th Street drtsler. Brff.kfa111 lamps. SU-7068 ·scs.7765 • 1 ·•··,-......,,,,_ 3--4, 9 to 5. 203i E. Balboa HI-F l & Stereo '210 ==~:o,.:,:.;;,_-,-.,,..,,, FREE Pupp!n, 6 \\'ks, 3 OLYMPIAN 32' F/G Sloop, 1966 Honda 160 Hi Baker, C.Af. 540-5915 "',. • ., _...,. "' Blvd., Balboa =""'--"-;;.'-';..::.;'-....;= NOR WEIG AN Foll shrug $ll. bl ·• I b -·1-4 3 t\>:er upn.•, flOOO. Wt I J 1-' -· "· I,~· ~ io ... ~• Beautiful '"'"""°"· .,..:n&< •-"""'· -~ I ~ ~. ~· m ~.,. '14 vw Camper. h<tory UO:•C"'"ES IENZ lijm SAT I: Sun. IOA~l. Sofa bed. MARAN'I't Mod, 7T ore-amo after 6 pm SHEEP-DOC puppies, 7 negotiate. 646-3133. 968--3W re-obit enrlM 10,IKX> tni'l:,,1-'"-;..--...;...-___ ...;.;.;;;:~ l .• : G1D1•1EO c.a C.olM'~-~-~d~.....!''F· ::e..!k., .• ~k~c:~1~eJ~!1 ~: WEBCOR H i-F l tape wU. old. 549-3906 4/3 SCHOCK Snipe No.· 14679, 1967 HONDA 00 TRAIL $195 cu1tom interior, 5lps 2. ft f"W ..... -.iu ~'"° ....... I GOOD TOP SOIL. ul com. w/trlr, xlnt eond, mOllt firm. 54:8-USl. a& Joami, $1250. ll4l-«i8t Lu. CM ~1378 Dua JOA!ll9 tum. Sure 9lE l"tc'Ol'dtt US. Pth\·tr mower tt:.. W •&h St you ha . sell. $495, 5f6.-0370, 96!1-0460. c .M. * gn..2327 * uk for P•t 6£ACK aaU&AhYde bk!H-· GARAGE Sale: Dbl bed, ~~m or p&rt $500. $2S.2G"biltC"$1S.M2--5666 ""' ,.._., 'CM 4IS '26 Thundublrd. Com p! 69 HORTON 00W.IAND0 I FI' CAMPER :w. q1tetn me, like new couch & othf!r mt1e ltrnu. AM/FM RADIO 2 PUPPIES, Part Cocker, equip, slffpa 4, nffd1 paint. TllO' SUper ,amclltlonl Call $100 or Sett otrer! : QIS. Call M6-l284 3S3 La Perlt l.n, C.M. . Came.res a 540-74U l ~·kl old. M&-4310 4/3 A.sltfl $3500. 96.M.-->7.I. 54&-1548 after I pm. 540-3503 alt 4:30PM filtAri Hdhrd •t. Jnd@r lJ11i 4, ~: W.ldte wool l'Uf, Equlpm~ 1300 Pool Table FREE pupplei mlxed. La.b 2.1' CORONADO, Uke new. 'tr YathaM JOllCC, wry S.1t. NO m.11.tter wMt It 11, you ·~ 110rqt, Kine Bt&U· chair. ski&. clothet, ttc. 00 ....;::;_:i:.;J::_::.:;_"'---..::::::: •·~· Branr#lck. $140. ~1306 '4/4 S1t~ps ts, head, dduxt Inter. Xlnt•t dirt \Ile. Bett otter. can ae:U Jt wHb a DAll.Y :.J. .H1'J'' (;:iu"'V ~ .. ,. s ... i.. !o'),, r-;. .( LJ,, d ,'.\l'r r"d•·•, fl, 1,; Jim Slomons Im ps. \'1 .11nr r S M .1111 St 'IJ'R.tit. All A•l MM871. Via Conlca. LI.a: Bch t.-IOVIE Camert $8. '46-C!ill9 , ____ so.o<:.::,;:,c:49:.___ FREE Calico cat 66-0127 4/3 Comp!. ~tany.xtru. 642-1621 ff$..Dl9 alt I DOWlll l ' . :;;;;,;._~~~~===== • S,11•t , A r1.1 546 4114 l. 1 ' , I 1 I TRANSPORTATION _1~l'lllpllrt !l111p Lll I•:, MGA '$2 MGA, red. New top. Body in xlnt oond. Best oUer. Call be seen ai:iYfune ll5 E. Balboa Blv~ .• N.B. NSU OPR BILL MAXEY RED '68 Opel Kadett LS. Xlnt cond. Sacrifice! Best oUet take1. &U-5289 fTIOJYIOITIAJ ~:.U:ee; ~:~~:-:~ 18D1 BEACH BLVD. "'~ $!840 • .,,_.,,., . PEUGEOT Hunt. Beach 147..asss '62 VV: Sunroof, Nu paint 1 ml N of O:>Ut H Olli Bdli Lo mileage, Clean $650 Call · 'flY. alter 5: 30. 546--0.104 '62 P"""°t • dr. Llght VOLKSWAGEN '69 vw .,.,, ........ .,. rreen. fairly new clutch. Warranty. Xlnt cond. $1495 Very clean. Economical sec---------6T>0691 eves. ond car $315. 54g.0074 '57 Ghia, re-bit '00 VW eng. '65 vw. Very Good cond. I========' I $400. Must see to apprec. $T:i0. PORSCHE 6T>2802 or 673-2678. Call 548-3148 '63 VW B~g. Immac. Xlct VW,:.;:~V;_,AN;_,:.,'~60~. ~.63~5"~pe-r "'75°,I cond . Gd tires. ExhaWlt sys. Pol'8Ch& eni. zero mi's. xtru $'195 or otter 642-6919 Real sleeper. (714) 776-2406 '60 VW. Recent trans & eng. 'Bf vw top J'\l1lJling condl. nblt. Good interior. $325 tion, R.wo, new paint job. '65 Porsche, BeauUful cond. AM/FM. rad. Stt to Ap- pree. $3100. 642-1037 BU~ marketplace In town. TM DAILY PDhI' Oualll.ed section. S a v e money, time A effort. Look Now! or oHer. 64&-1806 &4U'70I, 65 vw. sunroof ,66:.::.vw=::..1-300CC-~, -Good--con-d"1 lat Owner $795 6(2..-0350 or 646-7670 & lire•. SlOOO. Call 642--4f28 Imported Cars 9600 Imported Cara 9600 HARBOUR VOLKSWAGEN '88 WESTFALIA CAMPER $3499 - ... , '-"'· Ulftt. c911d. (IST mi '87 WESTFALIA CAMPER $2496 '84 VW BUG .......... . CNMP' nu -'66 VW FASTBACK ~~·~, $1296 '87 DATSUN ~,'::':.~ .... ~-::;;-'" $1096 '68 vw BUG ~;::-.;::"'· ffW "~ $1196 '63 VW BUG ..... """'· l\ll'M 4111 $896 '86 VW BUS ..... "'"'· ....... $1696 Wfllte ftrlt. UIP'A •n '&7VWBUG '&8VWBL!G l"tci.ry AIP, Redle & Htattr. CYCL llJI $1496 $1696 '88 OPll UDE 11 E :::: ':::."'· $129& .... CWIL '411 $189&. '87 SQUARE BACK m;.·;7"'· $1396 '88 VW BUG ~~~.;:.-~;, ... , $1796 HARBOUR V.W. AUTHORIZED SA~ES & SE RV ICE 11111 .. och Blv4-. Huntlntton B11ch 142-4435 VOLVO 145-WAGONS 164-SEDANS All other models now tn stock. 4 speeds & automatics. Your Beat Dea.la Are Still At DEAN LEWIS 1966 Harbor, C.M. 646-trlOO Antlqu11, Cl1uic1 9615 1935 PLYMOl.ITH, 4 dr sed. new eng, xlnt, cond. Call ......... Autos WantH '700 WE PAY TOP CASH tor uied CU'S &: truckl juat call u fDr free estimate. GROTH CHEVROLET Ask ror Sales Manager 18211 Beach Blvd. H~ttrvton _Bea~ Kl 9-3!31 WE PAY CASH FOR YOUR CAR CONNELL CHEVROLET 2828 Harbor Blvd. Colta Mesi. 5'6-1200 IMPORTS WANTED ' Orange C.Ountiel TOP I BUYER BILL MAXEY TOYOl'A 1888'1 Beach Blvd. H. &ach. Pb. 1347-8555 Auto Lo11lng 91I0 FORD AUTHORIZED LEASING SYSTEM Ame rica's J.arrtst leasing system 1or finance or net leuln& of an type can and truckt. • Immediate delivery from ovtr 300 can and trucks •Competitive ratt1 • New cu dealership 2rv\Ct e Full "trade!n" Villi.le for your present car •'All popular makes • vAil-•bl• For C.omplete DetallJ Call Malcom Reid IAJ.1lna M&naa:er Theodore ROBINS FORD . 2060 Harbor Blvd. 0>Sta Mna &12-0010 -'GS _,.,.. 'cq, °"""' '" l'llllllRD 4111 '°""'111-11>1 <ir. .... - VII .... ·~ ...... illiifni: " "'~ ..... aoodlto • JIM, cllr, Ill --· auto tnN, rlh. WQl:\h a Xlnt lbl&>t 1n and out. n. lot more lki'I Sl<XIS but l Book $UOO •• Make aa.r • l1ffd • the aance • P • c •. ,.._ tON:lp CU' in trade. '""--0238 WlU -DYi. ptf, (WGL. ·as Mustana" deluxe v.a, JOiA. 212> Call Lloyd an 1D am ed, ydlow/black top. deluxe 545-0834 or 494-9173. / interior, new lifts. lmmacu· '69 Pantlac Grand pf1X, late. $:00'.I. Private party. AM/FM 1tereo radio, .Jfl•, 494.1039 p/bi windows, &tr ~~ ' OLDSMOllLI ml'•· 141..oa15. ICWllt.' • 1969 PONTIAC L·E MANS FACTORY AIR CONDITIONED THIS 1969 PONTIAC LE MANS HAS tar Bob. 350 C.l.D., V-8, Autom•tic Tr•nsmiuion, Power Steering, Consolo, Rtdio, H11tor, Decor Trim, E-Z-1 Gl1u, Co"" dov• Top. XTK • 873 Used. IMMEDIATE DELIVERY 52525 Plu1 Ttx & Uc, BRAND N·EW '69 FIREBIRD THIS 1969 PONTIAC FIREllRD HAS Zero Miles • , • Equi~d With Automtlic Tr•nsmission, Ra~io, Heater, Power $teerin91 Console, E·Z·I Glass, De- luxe Wheel Oisc1, Decor Molding, Deluxe SIHring Wheel, Trim Pockogo. Serio~N603323. 52525 r1.,. T•• a Uc. IMMEDIAR DELIVERY RememlJer ••• We Sen>tee All Pontlee WaM'ant11 Work • , • .Rqarllle•• of Where You Purcfwuell Jt. BosLoNOPRE 13600 Beach Blvd. · Westminster (Beach Blvd .• it Garden Grove Fwy) Call 892 6651 or 636·2500 . . ......... -... ,. , ' :. • .. [ • • • • • • I :-• . ·' ,· " " " • ,. •' i . • . .. • ... . -:~· ·:· . -- • ·Thur1., ,1,prll 2, 1970 •• ... TODAY • • • THURSDAY 10 A.M. TO 10 P.M . HERE'S WHY •••••••• Imagine ••• hundreds of exciting new bedroom suites at saving'1 like thi1 ••• MOO suites sole p riced from $237to $1971 $1000 bedroom •uites at $597 and $250. Small suites at $127 and $147 ••• even one group of Bassett three piece suites offered at $100 a piece. $329Vectra Kroehler Sofas priced for $167. 10' Velvet $400 Kroehler Sofas for $197. $800 Span ish Sofa and Loveseats with carved wood trim i?. Vectra with con· frosting welts at $397. Qlle' to preserit national business conditions, furniture monu· fact'urer~ across the nation hove huge inventories of 1969 me.rchandiH left in their warehouses. Only a company with th!t hUge national buying power of Levitz could take ad· Yantage of this prime opportunity. ' ··.We .have bought thousands of brand name nati~nally ad· verti1ed first quali_ty 1969 Dining Room and Bedroom Suites at discounts of 2.5% to .50 % off! We've bought thou.sands of sofas, chairs, sleepers, loveseats, and recliners at 30% to 50% offl What does this mean to you? 1969 FURNITURE AT 19~? PRICESLTha(s right ••• Hundreds of thousands of dollars of,;furniture Dt 1959 so le prices! Never before in the h!story of:c;,r company hove as many truly sensational value1 ever b~'n offered at one time! Hundreds and hundredt of exciting chairs in every co lor style a~d fabric at V2 price. Sound impossible? One great buy we mode was 300 Vedra queen size sleeper sofas with loose pillow.bocks $350 value at sale prices. We will sell these° 300 at $19.i.' Come see and compare ,,, there has never been a sleeper buy like it! And there have never been furniture buys like this and may never be agoin. Don'~ miss itf This p1v~h un iqv1t. choir comes in elegant Gold Crushed Velvet ••• Frame 15 Carved Distressed Frvilwood .... Cht:Jir feotwes deep tufted seat, side, and back cu~iollS , •. Gold colored ::," louels hold arm cud.ions in ploce,,. IGdc cushioft ii held by loops tho! hook to anchor bunons in the ,.9r of th• chair. SllQf cu~ions ore reversible to eose weorl ShePo ~ casten odd the final touch of qualify lo make thi1 a wry .pp.aling piece of furniture in any home I • • •J 49.95 2·Way Recliner LMTZWHSE. PRJCE' $77 Aller a long My day whot better way ta unwind ond let your len- sions melt owoy thon In rills big handsome Recllner. AVC1iloble in Green or Gold Conoberry Her. culon for long lasting appearanc9 •.• Front casters for easy moving. This remarkable recliner hos 2 pruitions fo r wolching T.V .. reading or ~.,!!;;;;:!~:=::m sleeping. The perfect choir • -=---- 7·Drawer Li.11gerie Chest Jiy "Krebs" $52 forony busy home. Wirh today's low low price why not buy o poir ond reknc togellierl '69.95 Black Wrought Iron Baker's Rack lEVITZ WHSE.PRlct $38 •389.95 Mediterranean Sofa Plus the Matching Lounge Chair LM1ZWHstPl1ce You'll love owning this 8 foot long luxurious sofa ond matching chair $ of foam fllled comfort. Custom uphals!ered in lavishly quilt&d fabrics. 2 5 7 :.: l uxury feaf\Jres such as reversible seat and back cushions for longer wear, IO~ spring edge construction plus Shepherd costers for easy movement. Come lo Levitz. today for quality, and prices to fit yOYt budgetl I ' ' '459.00 5-Pc. Mediterranean Bedroom Here's o magnificent Spanish styled Mo~ter Bedroom. Priced at great ~ingi. fl:ich mellow. Spanish ook finish. You get the spacious Triple Dresser, Fram&d Mirror, Klngsi1e Headboard, plus two 2-Drawer Cornmode1. All lot one Jaw, low price ol levit1I LEVITZWHSE. n ice :1 I ~! '499.95 Elegant Contemporary Sofa and Loveseatl fl:emorkable quality • , • ot o remarkabla special Levitz Warehouse pricel ThiJ beautiful sofa a nd loveseot ore upholstered in nutmeg decorator fabric:. Both pieces hove reversible bock and sect cushions of thick foam ••• wrapped in Kodel for extra comfort and style. All the luxury touches you appreciate ••• soft .spring edges, sell covered decks for longer cushion life ond protection plus Shepherd casters for eosy movement, For comfort, quality and styling, you will find LEVITZ WHSE. PRICE them oll in this outstanding Solo, and loveseot. Best of all, bolh con be you rs{($ big so-vings today at Levitz Whse. where quantity buying saves you moneyl ., ~--·-"BA55ETI" "-\.Li . UP TO 4·Pc. Mediterranean Bedroom i'lcster ctof!ed by world famous "Bos.sett." feall.Jrl!l lovish use of wrought iron, chain type hardware, luxurious ond richly cal"\led drawer and door fronts. You gel the massive 72" triple dres.ser and londKXtped mirror, king.si'ze Ht:Qd· board CJnd 2 drawer commode. Mo!(o today your day to come lo Levitz ond savel REG. ·ss•9.95 '599.95 Luxurious Contemporary Sofa and Loveseat ·This Solo and Loveseot hove oil the feotures you could desire •• , styling, quol~ ity, ond most important Value! Upholstered in costly, eosy to core for "Vectra" , • , in o blend of green, yellow. ood white it will brighten ony room! Kode l wrapped, reversible waterfall seal cushions for the neweSt sophisti'cated styling ••• loo1t: pillow back. for e11:tra wear •• , soft spring edge construction for ionger cushion life. Hardwood frame, corner blocked ood glued for added durobillly ood long lile. Exterior woodwor,;; is walnut finished. This :.ofa ond loveseot wi ll provide comrort and maintain ils oppegrance for mCJrry years to comel Come to Levitz today ••• its volue can't be beo1I '699.95 • .LEVITZ WHSE. l't:IC' , $298 tEVITZ WHSE. PRICE" Includes China - Magnificent· Mediterranean Dining Room by "Bassett" Discover the spleodor of grocious dining with this elegant master crafted suite by fomous "Bassett."' Richly carved Trestle Table, Spacious Breakfront China with 1t:I of four (-4) high bac!( luxury upholstered chain (3 side & 1 arm). Solid Ocie frames, hond rubbed, hand d(slressed and hand wo11:&d fin ish. Hand crafted details that have mode Bas.set! the world 's largest furniture manufacturer. lMTZ WKSE'. PRICE S'hoft on 'PO(e ond storoge, ti,1'9') the answer. Th11 lino gww-che~ b but I &"-wide, $4'"'-high but will provld• omple storog• with its deep, 4"p drower1. finished In AMque Wh!le ond Gold. cent.r guided, with do~ toiled drawer construdlon. A reol collector's item y.i useful for any room lliot needs a plocs lor-Doob,-unusuol 1temS-lhot you with to display or that love· ly plant that you received, A convcr10lion l!e m thot will bri"g warmth and charm lo your home. Hurry for this one. don't be disoppointedl OPEN DAJ!.Y J O TO 10, SUNDAY NOON TO 7 co..srroCOAST FURNITURE WAREHOUSE AND SHOWROOM San Diogo freeway At leach llvd. . .............. -~.... Easy to !leach from At lftitt oil the •retail frill•" are taken out of the Woreho111tt Sale Price. TM price you pay 11 in th• Co,.... ton on 011r Dock. Take it honteyovrself or hO\'e ltdell'ftll'tld by leotiti:.,, There will'be a 11ttGl1 deli'ftlry charge due to the .. Incredibly low Worehoute Sole Prkett EAST CREDIT TIRMI AVAILABLE Anywhere LEVITZ WAREHOUSE AND SHOWROOM •BEACH BLVD ., Ed inger Ave., Next to the Huntington Shopping Center! • • • '224.95 "Vibrante" Corner S•t by "Bassett" Th is ''Vibrante"' group by Bassett lightens ond brightens any bedroom. The low-to-the-floor styling with handsome piloster l.CVIT? WHSE. PllJC[ posls gives an eldro omoont of on::hitectural Interest, Mott:hing $9? tops of high pressure laminated pla$1ic and durabll'l to p cool$ of DuPont 0.lux moke this a near indestructible fil'lish. Select&d \leneers ond hardwoods ore an off white: with wood groin showing through ••• lrim Is Sky Blue with appropriately brass flnl1hed hordwore surrOYnded by Classical mouldlngs of high impact Pol'f$1yrene. You hove o choice ofr bk Chl!:st and Open HU1ch1 Bock Cob!ne l ond Door Hutch1 or Double Dresw ood Mirror ••• l .